Mideast Quiet After Attack By Tho A ssoria I od P re s s T he Suez C anal w a s re p o rte d q u ite S unday a fte r w eekend a e ria l a c tiv ity th at n e a rly w reck ed th e 13-month-old M iddle E a s t cease-fire, b u t Is ra e l w a rn e d it w ould con tin u e to m a k e flig h ts in th e c a n al zone. Isra e l D efense M in ister M oshe D ay an w as quoted as say in g he would not be su rp ris e d lf an a c tiv e M iddle E a s t w a r re s u m e d before th e end of the y e a r. Isra e li officials said th a t w hile J e r u s a le m w ould o b se rv e the c e a se -fire , it would not allow E g y p t its a e ria l m o v em en ts o v er the Israeli-h e ld e a st b ank of the w a te rw a y . in te rfe re w ith to T his sta te m e n t followed th e dow ning of tra n sp o rt p lan e by E g y p tia n Is ra e li an m issile fire F rid a y . C airo said Isra e li P h a n to m je ts then a ttac k e d E g y p tian can al-sid e e m p la c e m e n ts S a tu rd a y w ith Shrike ro ck ets. T he Is ra e lis said only th a t E g y p t fire d m issiles a t th ey w e re th e ir p la n e s w hile o v er the Isra e li bank. A m ilita ry sp o k esm an said la te r, “ The situ atio n on the c a n al h as re v e rte d to n o rm a l.” E g y p tian so ld iers a g ain w ere seen w ith o u t steel h e lm ets, c a rry in g out re g u la r c h o re s outside th e bu n k ers. The U nited S tates an d U.N. S e c re ta ry - G eneral U T hant both voiced concern a t the in cid en ts, and u rg e d p reserv a tio n of th e cease-fire. In a n interv iew p u blished in n ew sp ap er H aaretz, D a y a n blam ed U nited S ta te s “ d e te rio ra tio n in the M iddle E ast. th e the a th e b a la n c e of p o w e r” for w h at te rm ed he in mnRittmmi^Kitmitniintuntttiit1 time- for being to re su m e its s u p p ly of F4 P hantom W ashington h a s declin ed th e fig h ter-b o m b ers to J e r u s a le m , w hile C airo has receiv ed a co n tin u o u s flow of a rm s from the Soviet U nion, the Is ra e lis say . T u rn in g to p o ssib le fu tu re M iddle F a s t b o rd e rs. D ayan sa id th e Is ra e lis w ould not th e y hod o f : a bl'stied ab an d o n se ttle m e n ts in the 1937 th e occupied w a r. te r rito rie s sin ce include a T h e se se ttle m e n ts strin g of p a ra m ilita ry fa rm s a lo n g th e J o rd a n R iv er c e a se -fire line, so m e of w hich h av e a lre a d y b een converted se ttle m e n ts, an d th e w est b an k tow n of H ebron. into civilian D a y a n said his a r m y would not pull back the fro m “ even fra m ew o rk of a p e a c e s e ttle m e n t.” J o rd a n R iv e r the in T he Is ra e lis w ere likely to k ee p th e oc­ c u r cd G olan H eig h ts of S y ria a n d th e G aza S trip , but would p ro b a b ly w ith d ra w fro m th e Suez C anal, he add ed . T he S hrike air-to -g ro u n d m issile used by firs t th e re p o rte d S u n d ay Is ra e l S a tu rd a y w a s a p p e a ra n c e sam ‘-official A l-A hram from Cairo. in Suez C anal h o stilities, th e w eap o n ’s c-fire. Al A! m said tho U nited S ta te s d e liv e re d S h rik e m issiles to Is ra e l b efo re th e A ugust, the E g y p tia n 1970. cr ta co u n ter th e c a n a l, an tia irc ra ft, m issile buildup in “ th u s m aking th e firs t U.S. ally to receiv e this so p h isticated ra d a r - hom ing d e v ic e .” Sa turd - y. ho the V ietnam -' actio n in the o .'.ever, m ark e d tile first tim # into ro d m issile w as put m al zone, the p a p e r said. th e Jew ish sta te T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University c Vol. 71, No. 49 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, MONDAY, SEPTER Of 471-4401 State Court Asks Briefs In LRB Suit By JOHN PO PE General Reporter The T e x a s S u p rem e Court F rid a y th e and req u este d Sen. O scar M auzy to (ERB) L e g i s l a t e R ed istric tin g B oard p re s e n t b rie fs a rg u m e n ts on and o ral w h eth er the S tate C onstitution req u ire s th e itself o r 62nd L e g isla tu re (•ails for the n ext re g u la r session to re d ra w d is tric t lines. to reap p o rtio n Tile high co u rt ask ed for th ese a ctio n s a s a p a rt of M auzy’s su it, w hich see k s to re d istric t. A h e a rin g to com pel LRB on M au zy 's petition h as been se t for 9 an d T h u rsd ay . to job th e th e ACCORDING TO is em p o w ered if two houses fail session first the S ta te C onstitution th e reap p o rtio n to do following L R B le g is la tu r e th e in publicatio n of the d ecen n ial census. tak en in 1970. a v ailab le until th e 62nd fig u res w ere not fin al F e b ru a r y , 1971—a m onth a fte r le g is la tu r e convened. the c e n su s w a s Though if T he C onstitution also stip u la te s th a t LRB can n o t a c t the L e g isla tu re h as p a sse d a re d istric tin g plan for e ith e r house T he 62nd session p assed a H ouse re d istric tin g p lan , w hich House S p ea k er G as M u tsc h e r’s c ritic s d e c ried and w hich th e S u p re m e C o u rt d e c la red unco n stitu tio n al .Sept 9. No S e n a te re d istric tin g bill w as passed . R E P . F R E D H ead of H enderson, who so u g h t un su ccessfu lly to g et a n injunction to keep LRB from a ctin g on these g ro u n d s, filed a m otion to in terv en e in M auzy's su it th is F rid a y . A w eek. is e x p ected e a rly ru lin g If th e S u p rem e C ourt p e rm its H ead to in terv e n e, he will bp allow ed to file a b rief on th ese two issues. in la te A u g u st—w hile Tile d e te rm in a tio n of fa c ts not p resen tly b efo re the question of publicatio n of the cen su s fig u res dep en d s the co u rt, on w hich w ere developed in h is su it ag a in st LR B . H ead said . LHB MET the H ouse plan w as still a m a tte r of litig atio n — re d ra w S e n a te d istric ts. H ead got a to te m p o ra ry injunction Aug. 23 from B ist. Ju d g e H erm an Jo n es to p re v e n t LRB from a c tin g , b u t Jo n e s denied his req u est Sept. 9 for an ex tension of the o rd e r. th e scions h ad the cen su s s ta tis tic s “ a re aso n ab le am o u n t of tim e ” to work out a plan for red ra w in g d is tric t lines, even though they had not had them fo r a full session. Jo n e s said H ead h a s announced he w ill ap p eal th is decision. T he C onstitution p rovides th a t e ith e r a if sp ecial session o r LRB c an re d istric t a re g u la r session fails to do so. IN THE STATE suit a g a in s t the House re d istric tin g plan, both p a rtie s —th e S tate R epublican P a rty and A tty. Gen. C raw ford M artin ask ed in th eir b rie fs for a sp ecial session. In the d ecisio n < th e S u p rem e C ourt said th e Housp plan w as unco n stitu tio n al, but. it did not sp ecify w h eth er LR B o r a sp ecial session should reap p o rtio n th e L eg islatu re. Gov. P re sto n Sm ith h a s saiid he will not co nvene a sp e c ia l session for re d istric tin g . LRB h as held .several h earin g s possible S e n ate re m a p p in g plans, but h as not touched the House p ro b lem yet. on it A g nich for Governor? hoto by M AHLO N T A I LOR. S t a t e R e p . R e d A g n i c h o f D a l l a s a p p e a r s t o b e p o n d e r i n g c a n d i d a c y f o r th e g o v . ^ r n o r s h i p a t t h e T e x a s R e p u b l i c a n E x e c u t i v e C o m m i t t e e m e e t i n g h e ld in A u s t i n d u r ­ i n g w e e k e n d . A gnich, a s t r o n g a d v o c a t e o f th e H o u s e ' s a n t i - M u t s c h e r c o a l i t i o n la st se ssion, w a s a s k e d t o run f o r t h e g u b e r n a t o r i a l p o s t b y s e v e r a l R e p u b l i c a n le a d e r s . Student Draft Deferments Endangered by House Bill the U.S. H ouse and A proposed d ra f t bill w hich h as passed in is being d ebated in th e S en ate, m a y “ p h ase out all stu d en t to Dowden K. d e fe rm e n ts,” K oeninger, m a n a g e r of the o p eratio n s division of Local B o ard 119-120. ac co rd in g If p assed , the bill would allow a college stu d en t to finish a c u rre n t sem este r, o r if he is a sen io r, to finish his la s t a c a d e m ic y e a r, should his d raft n u m b e r be called. lf the provision is not e n a c ted , all college to receiv e d efer­ th eir stu d e n ts would continue m e n ts for college instru ctio n . the e n tire four y e a r s of “ T he situ atio n is v e ry sh a k y and u n ­ c e rta in ,” K oeninger stre sse d . “ We re a lly don't know w h a t’s going to happen until th e new law is p a ss e d .” S tu d en ts who think th e ir d ra ft n u m b e rs a re high enough to avoid being d ra fte d d u rin g th e c u rre n t y e a r m a y request th e ir classificatio n s be ch an g ed to 1A a fte r th eir y e a r of elig ib ility h a s p a sse d . T his would put them into the second d ra ft c a te g o ry w h ere th e ir ch an ces of being d ra fte d a re fu rth e r lessened. F o r e x am p le, stu d en ts born in 1951 m a y th e ir classificatio n be ch an g ed req u est in D e cem b er of 1971, 1971 being the y e a r of eligibility fo r those stu d en ts. Such a c h an g e in th e classificatio n p la c e s the stu d e n ts in th e second d ra ft ca te g o ry , m ean in g th a t all those p erso n s first su b je c t to call d u rin g a c e rta in y e a r m u st be second stu d e n ts d ra fte d b efore ca te g o ry m a y be inducted. th e in th e U sing all sa m e e x a m p le stu d en ts w ith d ra ft n u m b e rs for 1972 would inducted b efo re a n y second- h av e cate g o ry stu d e n ts of 1971 could be d ra fte d . above, to b e H ow ever, all of this is fogged w ith u n ­ c e rta in ty an d nothing can be a ssu re d until a fte r th e new d ra ft bill is p assed . Section 6 (IO) (2) of th e proposed M ilita ry S elective S erv ice Act would be am en d e d to re a d : “ Any p erson who w hile sa tisfa c to rily p u rsu in g a in stru ctio n fulltim e co u rse of at a college, u n iv ersity or s im ila r institution is ord ered to rep o rt for induction. . .shall, upon the a p p ro p ria te fa c ts being p resen ted induction to th e se m e ste r postponed until o r the c a se in of his last a c a d e m ic y e a r, o r until he c e ase s sa tisfa c to rily to p u rsu e su ch a co u rse of in stru ctio n , w h ich ev er is e a r lie r .” the end of te rm , o r ac a d e m ic y e a r local board, h av e h is th e W eath er is ex pected to be p a rtly cloudy M onday w ith a 20 p e rc en t c h a n ce of ra in . te m p e ra tu re s will p re v a il w ith n o r­ Cool to 18 m .p .h . High th erly w inds g u sty 8 p red icted is in the u p p er 60’s w ith a low in the lower 60 s. Bush Sees Good Chance O f Seating Two Chinas WASHINGTON (A P) — A U.S. sp o k esm an ch an ce S unday th e r e 's good a said N a tio n alist C hina will re m a in in th e U nited is N atio n s even a fte r C om m unist C hina a d m itte d . And a T aiw an d ip lo m at refu sed to say w h eth e r his g o v ern m e n t will w ith ­ d ra w if P eking com es in. G eorge B ush, U.S. a m b a s sa d o r to the U nited N ations, said he sees an ex cellen t c h a n c e fo r adoption of th e U.S. resolulion to m a k e the question of expulsion of N atio n alist China officially an “ im p o rta n t q u e stio n .’’ If given th is sta tu s, it would re q u ire a tw o-thirds m a jo rity in tho G eneral A ssem bly to expel T aiw an. W ithout such s ta tu s a sim p le m a jo rity could te rm in a te its m e m b ersh ip . N ational C h in a’s F o reig n M in ister Chow Shu-kai in a n o th e r Sunday in terv iew refused to say w h eth er his gov ern m en t would w alk out if P eking is g ra n te d re p rese n ta tio n in th e G e n eral A ssem bly a n d a se at on the S ecu rity Council, re p la c in g T aiw an . television- B ush a p p e a re d on ra d io p ro g ra m “ F a c e the N atio n ,” and Chow w as questioned on N B C 's sim ila r “ M eet th e P r e s s ” p ro g ra m . the CBS Busing V t 'ages 3 * * * » % * L ^ n G O P Supports Backing Tower's Resolution Amendment B y DOTTY GRIFFITH G eneral Reporter T h e S ta te R ep u b lican E x ecu tiv e C om ­ m itte e vo ted u n an im o u sly Sunday to a d o p t reso lu tio n su p p o rtin g U. S. Sen. Jo h n a T o w e r's pro p o sed co n stitu tio n al am e n d m e n t to p ro h ib it crosstow n b u sin g to a c h ie v e school in te g ra tio n . T h re e H oustonians, how ev er, broke from th e o th e rw ise solid m a jo rity and re fu se d to e n d o rse P re s id e n t R ic h a rd M. N ixon for re-electio n in 1972. se v e ra l c o m m itte e In a one a n d on e-h alf hour m e e tin g , th e o th e r p asse d re so lu tio n s co m m en d in g R ep u b lican s w ho led the fig h t a g a in st T e x a s H ouse S p e a k e r G us M u tsc h e r’s re d istric tin g plan and h e a rd re p o rts fro m N atio n al C om m itteew o m an M rs. Tobin A rm stro n g on the p ro s p e c ts of th e stu d en t vote in T ex a s. A CLOSED SESSION followTed in w hich th e G O F le a d e rs d iscu ssed fin an cial m a t­ te rs an d possible c a n d id a te s for th e 1972 to G eorge W illeford, elec tio n s, a cco rd in g th e d ay . c o m m itte e c h a irm a n . E a r lie r in c o m m itte e m e m b e rs a tte n d e d a co ck ta il p a rty u rg in g S tate R ep. F re d A gnich of D a lla s to ru n for gov ern o r. T ow er, sp eak in g b e fo re th e 6 5 -m em b er group, u rg e d su p p o rt of N ixon’s eco n o m ic policies, th e 90-day w ag e a n d p ric e free z e and th e still u n c le a r p o st-freeze s u p p o rt policy. w h a te v e r follows th e T e x a s R ep u b lican said, ad d in g , “ We m u st g iv e It a c h a n c e .” U n su re a s to to w h at m e c h a n ism w ill be used im p le m e n t N ix o n 's plans. T o w er said Nixon will a tte m p t to sta y w ithin th e fram ew o rk of ex istin g le g isla tiv e a u th o rity , and co n sid er “ e v e ry sp e c ia l in te re st in th e U .S .” th e fre e z e .” including in itia lly should “ We M rs. A rm stro n g conceded D e m o c ra ts w ere w inning the re g istra tio n fight fo r th e youth vote, th a t is “ u n til J u ly , 1972. a f te r th e D em o c ra tic co n v en tio n .” She said th e n u m b er of D em o cratic a s p ira n ts in flu en ced youthful v o te rs who w ould la te r v o te on the issu es and “ the a u ra of R ich a rd N ix o n ’s re a listic a p p ro a c h .” STACIO, p re s id e n t of T e x a s Y oung R epublicans, c o n c u rre d w ith M rs. A rm stro n g say in g , “ Y oung people a re m o re in honesty, c a n d o r and re fo rm in te re ste d fa c e in S ta te g o v ern m en t and high rh e to ric .” th a n a p re tty DREW The th re e d isse n tin g v o te s on the N ixon re-election resolution w e re c a st by Don W itt. M rs. E lm e r L in d stro m and M rs. J . D. Boggs, all of H ouston. W itt said it w a s too e a rly to pick a p re sid e n tia l c a n d id a te and th e o th ers ex p re sse d d issa tisfa c tio n w ith som e of N ixon’s p olicies including his proposed v isit to R ed C hina. A n o t h e r resolution w as unan im o u sly , how ever, u rg in g N ixon ad o p ted to th e S uprem e C o u rt ap p o in t a “ com petent s tric t c o n stru c tio n ist” to rep la cin g Ju s tic e Hugo B lack, who announced la is re tire m e n t f r i d a y . T he resolution fu rth e r u rg e d th a t to bu sin g a s a th e ap p o in tee be opposed m e a n s of achieving ra c ia l b a la n c e in public schools. S p e a k in g on R ep u b lican p ro sp e c ts in 1972, T o w e r said GOF “ su ccess re s ts alm o st w holly on the sta te of th e eco n o m y .” He d esc rib e d w ell defu sed “ g e n e ra l sa tisfa c tio n " on A m e ric a n people w ith a tte m p tin g to b rin g the w a r to an end. th e V ietn am w a r a s a “ p re tty the p a r t of th e th e part, of th e is th e w ay Nixon is s u e ” on A lso sp eak in g b efo re th e c o m m itte e was I S. R ep. Jim C ollins of D allas, who e m ­ th e im p o rta n ce of p rim a ry e le c ­ p h asized tions a s a m e a n s to g ain a tte n tio n a n d o rg an ize c a m p a ig n staffs. Panel to Reissue W ilson Invitation By The A ssociated P re s s U .S. Asst.. A tty. G en. Will W ilson will b e given a n o th e r ta lk w ith th e T e x a s H ouse In v e stig a tin g C om m ittee, S ta te R ep. M enton M u rray of H arlingen sa y s . in vitation to investigation M u rra y said th e H ouse co m m ittee, which is co n c en tra tin g on a n into S ec u ritie s and E x c h a n g e C om m ission (SEC) c h a rg e s th a t S ta te p o litician s w ere en ticed b y quick profit sto c k m a rk e t d ea ls to in­ leg islatio n , h a s a n o th er m eetin g fluence te n ta tiv e ly set fo r O ct. 7 and 8. At th e last H o u se co m m ittee m eetin g , Aug. 18 and 19, fo rm e r S ta te A tty. Gen. W ag g o n er C a rr in­ v estig a tio n w as “ nothing but a calloused, c o llo ssal, p o litical h a tc h e t job d ire c te d by t h e in W a sh in g to n .'’ R ep u b lican A d m in istratio n th e SE C cla im e d A t le a s t tw o c o m m itte e m e m b e rs m- d ic a ted they b e liev ed th e sa m e and asked th a t th e c o m m itte e ca ll W ilson, also a fo rm e r S ta te a tto rn e y g e n eral who w as turn ed elec ted a D e m o c ra t a s ra ce R ep u b lic a n in 196< a fte r he a for U.S. S en ate D e m o c ra tic c a n d id a te . then lost a g o v ern o r a n d a s A fo rm a l c o m m itte e “ in v itatio n ” asked th e next few w eeks to a p p e a r W ilson in “ a t h is c o n v e n ie n c e.” “ M r. Wilson rep lie d th a t since th e SEC tr ia l in D a llas w as u n d erw ay and v ario u s g ra n d ju rie s w e re co n sid erin g the ca se . he th o u g h t it hest th a t hp should w ait until th e g ra n d ju rie s m a k e th eir re p o rt b efore he m a k e s any a p p e a ra n c e ,” sa id M u rray . H e did not se t an y d a te an d sin c e the I intend to renew SEC tr ia l is o v e r now o u r re q u e s t that he a p p e a r before u s .” M u rra y said th a t su b p o en aes havp been s e rv e d on John O sorio, a fo rm e r S ta te in­ for­ s u ra n c e c o m m issio n e r; Jo e N ovotny, m e r p resid en t of th e defunct S h arp sto w n S ta te R ank and J . Q uincy A dam s, a fo rm e r D a lla s sto c k b ro k e r, to a p p e a r a t th e O ct. 7 a n d 8 m eeting. " W e also will h e a r th o s° leg islato rs who h a v e been invited to a p p e a r.” M u rra y sa id , “ including S p e a k e r Gus M utscher, R ep , T o m m y Shannon of F o rt W orth and R ep. B ill H eatly of P a d u c a h , an d m ay b e so m e o th e r s .” MAYO Head Explains Administrative Actions A quote in F r id a y 's T exan sta tin g th a t th e M exican -A m erican Y outh O rg an izatio n b oycotted c la s se s T h u rsd a y “ b e c a u se th e a d m in is tra tio n h as not both ered to respond to la s t s p rin g .” w as m is-attrib u ted to P au l Velez, p re sid e n t. T h e quote w as m a d e by a MAYO m e m b e r W ednesday night w hile th e p re p a ra tio n fo r th e boycott w as bein g m ad e. th e pro p o sals su b m itted H ow ever, Velez said the s ta te m e n t w a s em o tio n ally c o rre c t in th a t “ the U n iv e rs ity h a s not sp ecific ally co m m itted itself to th e education of all people of T e x as w ith re g a r d to p roviding m in o rity aid p ro g ra m s a n d in essen c e m ak in g a d e te rm in e d e ffo rt to m a k e if known th a t this U n iv e rsity should be atte n d e d b y th e w hole s tr a ta of so c ie ty .” in c o r re c t,” th a t “ th e U n iv e rs ity did th e ' firs t th e Ad- R e g istra tio n C o m m itte e in Velez ad d ed th e p ro p o sals an d ack n o w led g e to hold h e a rin g s w a s co m m ittee m issio n s an d h e a d e d by G .J. F o n k e n .” “ T he sta te m e n t is fac tu a lly is “ T h a t th a t h a s th e o n ly c o m m itte e held h e a rin g s an d th a t h a s even a tte m p te d to d e a l w ith th e p ro p o s a ls,” he sa id . Prime Time Requested iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Army Seeks - W ASHINGTON (A F ) c o m m e rc ia ls offerin g A rm y re c ru itin g 16- m o n th E u ro p ean lo ts of la te-n ig h t tra v e l m ay be re ru n s unless th e ra d io and telev isio n n etw o rk s respond to an A rm y a p p e a l fo r fre e p rim e tim e . to u rs and lim ite d to S e c re ta ry of told b ro a d c a st th e A rm y R o b ert F . F ro e h lk e has in d u stry e x e c u tiv e s that b u d g e ta ry re s tric tio n s resu m p tio n of p aid m a y ru le out a p rim e -tim e a d v e rtisin g for w hich th e la st s p rin g A rm y sp en t $10.6 m illion in an e x p e rim e n ta l M adison A venue- d ire c te d cam p a ig n . le tte r In a perso n al the b e a d s to the m a jo r radio and TV of e a c h of th em n etw o rk s, F ro e h lk e th e ir sta tio n s “ a r e the U nited S ta te s g o v e rn m e n t’ and “ should p ro v id e effectiv e p ublic se rv ic e tim e to su p p o rt essen tial n atio n al p ro g ra m s. fo r rem in d ed licensed by “ T h erefo re, tu r n y o u to I in c rea sin g su b sta n tia lly in a s s is ta n c e of a n ­ pub lic-serv ice th e am o u n t n o u n cem e n ts, in p rim e p a rtic u la rly tim e, provided by y o u r netw ork a n d its affiliated sta tio n s to support A rm y r e c r u itin g ,” th e s e c r e ta r y ’s le tte r sa id . “ I a m not thin k in g in te rm s of ju s t d o u b lin g the w eig h t of p u b lic-serv ice a d v e rtis in g ; I a m a sk in g for a c tiv e to tenfold in c re a se .” T h e A rm y said to th e re sp o n se A copy w as m a d e av ailab le A sso ciated P re ss. le tte r d ated Sept th e re h as been no I. to T he p ublic F e d e ra l re g u la tio n s B ro a d ca stin g sta tio n s a re o b lig a ted C o m m u n icatio n s u n d e r to devote a C om m ission tim e th eir a ir c e rta in p e rc e n ta g e of an n o u n cem en ts. to ru n H o w ev er d u rin g lu c ra tiv e p rim e view ing h o u rs of 7:30 to l l p .m . D uring th ese h o u rs one m in u te of c o m m ercia l tim e on th e TV n e tw o rk s sells for b etw een free a d s seldom a r e se rv ic e the ark A id to $65,000, depend ng on the $15,000 p ro g ra m . A lthough F ro e h lk e cited b u d g eta ry re s tric tio n s fo r not ren ew in g the ads, lead e rsh ip s o u rc e s sa y is n ot as im p re ss e d w ith the resu lts, c o n sid e rin g th e high cost involved. the P en tag o n ju m p in en listm e n ts in F ig u re s su p p lied by th e A rm y show a tenfold the c o m b a t a rm s as c ite d by F ro eh lk e but also d isclo se th a t o v e r-a ll e n listm e n ts this y e a r through A ugust totaled only the 1 0 . 0 0 0 m o re c o rre sp o n d in g p erio d last y e a r. diming th a n I h e o th e r m ilita ry se rv ice s h av e th a t so m e ra d io an d TV c o m p lain ed sta tio n s d ro p p ed th e ir p u b lic-serv ice a d s fo r those se rv ic e s in fa v o r of th e A rm y ’s p aid c o m m e rc ials. And th e re is opposition from H ouse A rm ed S e r­ v ices C o m m ittee C h a irm a n F . E d w a rd H e b e rt, D -L a., who is a g a in st sp en d in g th e a n y m e re m o n ey an d co n ten d s n etw o rk s should p ro v id e fre e a ir tim e. "The always impious Texas Observer . . . W e recommend it. ’— I. F. Stone's Biweekly, M ay 31, 1^71 Under Last-Minute Ruling Students Obtain B-Taxes J* ^ Y <> O O o 4* 4> <► Enter my subscription as -follows: o $2.10 to r rem ain der of sem ester through D ec. $4.99 for tw o sem ester through M a y $7.35 for one y e a r (26 issues in al!) (p rices include 5 % sales ta*) Nam# chicle enclosed Addre« ..................................................... r bill me ity, State ....................................................... Z ip ................... ii THE TEXAS OBSERVER, 600 WEST 7, AUSTIN 78701 ii Telephone 477-0746 their Approximately 200 students who lost auditor's original receipts took advantage of a last- minute ruling by University of­ ficials Friday and secured their blanket taxes with duplicate auditor's receipts. Originally, students who had lost their receipts would have to wait until after the Texas Tech game to get their blanket taxes. However, after a large number of complaints to University of­ ’ ' - cham-'-t fices, and T h u r s d a y d Friuc , . duplicates were acc; Proof of purchase had to be obtained at the Bursar's Office before the pictures were taken in O ~'tt ' y Gym. Friday was the tho ruling afternoon SAVB A LOT , ct PRIVE rn ct. ? f 31.50 41.00 125.00 225.00 27500 CAPITOL D IA M O N D SHOP 603 OanmMor* fVrrf Hotel • I i i - AUSTIN . , . ; 476 0178 Asked to have blanket tax last day pictures 25,800 with taken students responding during the threp weeks of operations. Ap­ proximately 3.500 other students have purchased blanket taxes but did not have their pictures taken. if these 3,500 students would have an opportunity to have their pictures taken in time to draw Texas Tech game tickets, A] Lundstedt, business manager o f Athletics, replied. “ That’s debatable. We feel we’ve given them plenty of time (since Aug. 30) to get their blanket taxes. But there is a possibility the photographer will be back later this week. Intercollegiate “ We also need to look at our ticket situation," hp continued. “ If any students must do without a ticket, it should bp the ones who didn't bother to have their pictures taken during the regular time.’’ Thirty-thousand student tickets the Tech for were set aside game. s a i d L u n d s t e d t t h e photographer would be brought hack during the semester when the need arises and 50 cents will be charged per ticket. Blanket tax ticket drawing for the Tech game will he held from 9 a.m. to noon and I p.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday ir Gregory Gym. Date tickets may he drawn until noon Tuesday. The tax numbers were drawn from date ticket applications for the Texas Tech football game Saturday. Date tickets must be picked up at tho window inside Gregory Gym. There is no cost fcr the following blanket costs blanket tax ticket, but the date ticket SR. Tickets not claimed by the deadline will be student for returned ticket drawing. regular 1652. 14."»T5. 14.731. 140.'0. 14900. 1 4948. 15114. 15255, 15311, 15411 15455, 15558. 15598. 18915. 15977, 18227. 16331, 16402. 16642. 17016. 17175 17216. 17333, 17582, 17968. 18139. 18298, 18514. 11558, 18612. 19288, 19963. 19573. 19620, 19854. 14918. 11515. 16195. 170335. 18030, 18263. 19700, 20091, 20179. 26 6700. 8737 8740 8553 9204. 9295. 9392. 9413. 9423. 9452. 9048, 9631. 9657. 9761. 10OO5. I ivy's. 10061. 10407. 10870. 10557, 10568 113S 11218. 11282. 11286. 13680. 1 ’870 ' 13960 13992, 1 1161, 14343, 1 4358. 14500, 14550. 8371 8816 o i l i i A L F f n i i C L A S S IS L \ ( . * L IF E T IM E G U A R A N T E E 0 FO U R W E E K D E L IV E R Y 0 YO U R D IV ID E N D NO D E PO SIT • T IM E P A Y M E N T Jew elry street floor STATMAN PHOTO • 19th at Lavaca • Cameron Village HANK's GRILL Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2532 G U A D A LU PE 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only 95 Reg. S1.3S Happy Hour 2-5 p.m. Daily Light or Dark Eg. P itc h e r................................................ 1.00 Sm. P itch e r.................................................... 75c Appeal Sent Decision M ay Exempt Housing Fee Increases Student Government President Bi b Binder has sent a second appeal of dormitory rate increases to the Office of Emergency Preparedness (O E P ), seeking a decision which could result in an estimated $80,000 to $100,000 rebate to University students. “ We are (University simultaneously asking Dr. President Stephen) Spun*, by letter, to give a rebate to all students living in dorms,” Binder said. “ We’d also like Dr. Spurn to rebate any exerts foes to students suf­ fering any hardship,” ho added. B IN D E R , retum/ng in from a visit with officials Washington, said in a press conference at Austin Municipal Airport Friday, “ They (O E P ) didn’t indicate whether cr not ii (the decision) would come up in our favor. They said they will decide within two or three days after receiving the appeal.” Tap second appeal accepts tho wording of the O E P national ruling and poults out with this acceptance, In using rate increases still are exempt. In tho first O E P ruling, IO percent of the total number of students were required to have paid the I gher rates before Aug. 15 f; r the increase to be valid. A later ruling held only one student need to have paid the new rate for tho increase lo bo applicable. B IN D E R noted Mio inconsistencies in these decisions as exemplify ! in Cest cf Living Oounc I Director Alex Weber’s judgment on teacher salary increases. Weber said if one De -lier receive I higher wages before Aug. 15, it would bp unfair for that teacher’s increase to pull up all others’ salaries. “ Tr.o biggest excuse I hey (O E P ) gave," Bulder added, “ is this is a response to Gov. (P r r o >n ) Smith's asking for a Texas exemption.” He reflected, “ It is absurd to think that Guv. Smith was asking that dorm and tuition ra'cs hp raised and nothing else.” With respect to the first O L P ruling, Binder explained there w” re 1.6 >4 persons paying h r University housing before Aug. 15, with 65 having paid the increase. He asserted 65 is net the required IO percent < f a1] tran­ sactions concluded by lhat date and the remaining 1.599 persons paid tile old fee July 21 through 23, sui ll V before the Aug. 15 deadline. anni! Panel to Discuss Admission Rulings Tile University C at 2:15 p.m. M n! Building 202 to dr -a admission f< coming freshman. T are acned prim ar: I; minority groups. rules establish rn visi' clo T h p U niversity among Texas hie i will he considered at G .J. Fonken, cli a i Admissions C o m m i t t e e and meets uncil LL v n ay in anging iss ch r SOI in- )p hp up visions at wiping of a ent piMgram n schoo Ls also the rnpo ing. rnian of the Beg:? brat ion ibmitted h- proposals MAYO, after discussion with the Moxie an-American Youth Or ^alligation. Tile vi citation program would . us on high schools and is which have not dr sc it many .students to rs i t V put cmph s I loo I d recently the Unive Fonken s committee suggests de-emp: izi! g the weight given to admi' • <>n test scores ani reiving nlore on individual far- Jewish Halide? Services Benin Tile traditional Jewish Holidays began at sunset Sunday with s e r v i c e s various at synagogues in the Austin area. the a joyous atmosphere The High Holidays, which continue for IO days, commence with Bosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year. Bosh Hashana is particularly marked with joyous and festive mood. The holiday began at sunset Sunday and continues through sunset Tuesday. The that surrounds Bosh Hashana in sharp contrast with thp somber tone the culmination of the Jewish High H o l i d a y s . Kippur, traditionally known as the day of attonement, is marked by long meditative services and a twenty- four-hour fast. The holiday begins with services at sunset Sept. 28 and lasts until sunset the next day, at which time the fast may be broken. Kippur, Tom Yom of is Rosh Hashana services were held Sunday night and will continue at 9:30 a.m. Monday and Tuesday at the B'nai B rith Hillel Foundation. Yom Kippur services win be observed starting at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 28 and cont nuing through sunset Sept. 29. with services beginning at 9:30 a.m. each day. All students who will be ob­ serving the holidays are urged to attend, a spoke, man for the Hillel Foundation said. DIP YOUR OWN SCENTED CRANBERRY CANDLE In the G if t H orse on the second floor w e’ve got a vat of hot scented cranberry wax and wicks. You can dip one of these wicks into the wax and create yourself a cranberry candle absolutely free. T o d a y O n ly lf you decide you really like cranberry candles, we've got ready-rnade ones which we're going to sell today at 10% off. G ift Horse second floor o n e s e l f d i p p e d c r a n b e r r y c a n d l e f r e e S S * B s a winner And ArtCarved will m arry you. We have the entry blank that can make you a winner. Come in and look at our exquisite collection of ArtCarved diamond engagement rings. And, if you’re the lucky winner, ArtCarved will pay for your wedding up to $3,000. Good Luck. A — AMARANTH B - ESSEN C E C - T A N G IE R 3 D — MONTESSA E - GOLDEN VOW JOE KOEN & SON Since 1 8 8 8 . . . %JC'UDClCT'S “ ll here Au st ini let Sh'ip IV Uh (......... te” 405 E. 6th Conveniently Located Just O ff the Avenue A fter the game, leave y o u r f o l k s w i t h us. W e ll take care of good old Mom and dear old Dad this weekend. Rest assured, as you fight the traffic back to your crowded little apartment, that Mom is relaxing in our heated indoor pool while Dad brushes up on his billiards game. And you can be certain, as Thursday s meatloaf burns in your oven, that Mom and Dad are sinking their teeth into one of two succulent meals Then it s off to their cozy air-conditioned hideaway, complete with fresh linens (how long has it been?), towels and wash cloths, and maid service. Sunrise will find our happy couple out on the sundeck sipping coffee and breathing the fresh, clean air high atop our 22-story building. What nicer way, we ask, to show them that you care? S m W eekend Rates The Castilian, 24th & San Antonio, Austin 78705 £ ■ WITH 2 M EALS D A IL Y * Dc ;ble—8 00 per person S ogle -10.00 per person Ch aren.under 12;—5.00 i c r a n d brunch. WITHOUT M EALS Double- 6 OO per per Single—8 OO per pers Children.under 1 ■on on 3.00 For reservations, call 478-9811. (O f course, you could leave them the keys to your apartment and stay with us yourself') th* ca/Tiuan A place for them that even yo :an afford. Page 2 Monday, September 20, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Congressman Rangel Claims A ttica Gunfire Indiscriminate ATTICA, N.Y, CAP) — A member of a congressional panel investigating the riot at Attica State Prison says he thinks there was “ indiscriminate shooting" when authorities stormed the maxim um security to quell the uprising. M embers of the House Select Committee on Clim e spent seven hours at the prison Saturday, and afterw ard Rep. Charles Rangel, a Democrat from Harlem in New York facility (Related Comment, Pages I & 5, S t o r y , P a g e IO.) City. said: "I believe there was in­ discriminate shooting. . . that much of the gunfire was unnecessary.” Rangel said what happened at Attica when the prison uprising was quelled was a “ proper subject for a grand jury.” New York G ov. Nelson Rockefeller said earlier in the week there was no indiscriminate shooting as the law enforcement personnel moved in on four Hie sides. rebellious inmates from T h e completed headed Washington. congressional its visit delegation to Attica and then for New York and Meanwhile, six prison employes who had been hostages during the uprising were buried Saturday after authorities made a final examination of their bodies in the official Stale investigation of the rebellion and the way it was put down. The prisoner rebellion and the Sepl. 13 assault on the prison by a heavily arm ed force of State troopers and .30 prisoners backup personnel left and IO prison employes dead. Rep. Claude chairm an of Pepper, D-Fla., congressional the Larry Jackson Protests County Jail Conditions By RICK CODINA News A ssistant si pp-, of Approximatf ly IOO persons 'assembled on the north \V< jldridge P ark S aturday aft*moon to h e a r speaker L arry Jackson “ brin:: home" the recent prison riot in A ttica, N.Y. The rally, ti reaction to the riots in which inm at i; and g u ard s w ere killed, was the po 'Ret p ark near Austin's the 41 staged in downtown because T ravis Courtly Courthouse and Jail. is adjacent to it invisibly, Whi l e som e of the institution’s inm ates w atched rows of g rille d fro:ti windows above the courthouse, Jackson told isn ’t any difference the crow d, "T here b e tw e e n Attica and b ere . The only thing is th at Attica it arle it on CBS. O th e rw ise, tile conditions are just th e sam e.” The Community lh ted Front organizer too involved said he “ could not becom e w ith w hat happened a t Attica. What I’m m ore concerned about is w h at's going on up there, he s id. gesturing to the County Jail. Then, Ii * king up at the black, barred windows, he called, “ F o n tain e!" “ Ac a ! ” a voice shouted back, to which Jack so n added, “ T h at’s w hat if s all about.” Claude Fontaine, a form er w orker with Jackson in the CCF, is under a 101-year sentence for arm ed robbery. Tile CCF ma im ains lie was convicted on inconclusive evidence and therefore, a political prisoner. is, a t levelled criticism Lo Ut Jackson and .speaker D avid Ross also the m ed ia’s coverage of the Attica affair, p articu larly the ABC and CBS networks which they claim ed suppressed the underlying dem ands of the and inm ates “ savagery of the prisoners.” exagcrrated the P rio r to the speeches, m any in the group entered into a shouting dialogue with the prisoners acro ss the street. While some sim ply exchanged political slogans, others inquired about the conditions inside. As the shouting Increased, two men who them selves as sheriff’s officers identified met the crowd with the w arning th at should they continue to provoke the shouting in the jail, charges of “ creating a distur­ b ance’’ might bo lodged. However, the officers rem ained to answ er questions on housing, sanitation and health conditions of Ute inm ates. committee, said, “ Had there been enough money, much of this tragedy could have been prevented.” He said that because of inadequate financing “ all of us are responsible for what happened here.” A meeting of the New York Democratic Committee in Syracuse ended after passing a resolution for prison reform. State Sen. Waldaba Stewart the of Brooklyn Legislature and the State were guilty said of “dereliction of duty” for allowing conditions to develop that led to the rebellion. The rebellion began Sept. 9 when prisoners prison employes as hostages and ended Sept. 13. several seized A spokesman for the State crim inal task force investigating the distur­ bance canceled the daily briefing Sunday and again refused to give specific answers to questions. Firebase Learning By HOLGER JENSEN Associated Press Writer FIREBASE SIBERIA, Vietnam (AP) — The GI’s around here are combat in­ fantrymen, in turn the bravest of the brave and the lowest of the low’. For some die thing they have learned best is to hate. Spec. 4 Gerald Dupasquier hates the war. He hates his officers. He hates Romfs, the rear-echelon men. He hates back-breaking mountains, steaming jungles and his 40- pound pack. He hates Washington politicians and an Army that says it’s withdrawing but still has him humping the bush in a God­ forsaken comer of Indochina. He hates being here. BUT HE’S still here, still fighting, still dying a little each time a friend is killed or maimed. “It’s so easy to build up a hate out here.” from Ben­ said senville, 111., as he waited for a helicopter the 21-year-old soldier Student Found Dead In Leon St. Apartment The partly decomposed body of Bruce David Label. 201 was found Sunday morning in his apartment at 2407 Leon St. by a neighbor. Tile University junior's body w’as found lying crossways wrapped in a sheet or. the bed. Minicipal Judge John Coffee called for an autopsy to determine the cause of death. Lubel was last reported seen by a neighbor at midnight Wednesday. Soldiers to Hate to take him on a combat assault boobytrapped enemy terrain. info “ I've been in the bush for wreeks, I came out today and here I am three hours later in. For a year now’ they’ve going back been promising stand-down. ‘The unit's going home,’ they say. ‘Just a few more w’eeks in the bush.’ Promises, promises and guys are still getting killed. SPEC. 4 Jack McCullough of Lovington, N.M., is blond, baby-faced and only 20 years old. He explained why he hates Martha Mitchell and Melvin Laird. “That Mitchell woman said the war’s over. My mom writes to tell me how lucky I am not to be in the bush any more. But I'm going out on patrol sam e as before. There might not be so many Gooks left but w e’re still stepping on their booby traps. “ Laird said I’m in a defensive position. What the hell’s so defensive about a combat assault? Spec. 4 Terry O’Brien, a 20 vear-old Irish­ man from N ew York City, hates officers who want to climb the promotion ladder on the bodies of their men. “ KILLS, KILLS, all they want Is kills ” he complained. “The war is winding down and they're grabbing for a last chance to kill a Dink and win a medal. But they’re killing us instead.” Do they hate the enemy, too? “What’ve the Dinks ever done to m e?” asked Dupasquier. “Sure, they shoot at us and we step In their booby traps, hut they wouldn’t if we weren’t here. It's the Army that pushes us on to them .” nfuuiiir ■1 • 'HiiiiiHini 1 1 uiiiiiC'inii iiiiiii .rn®,, w: innniiiinnniirTmmnniTiinriiBiiiiiiprniiriiiiiiihiMiiiii ... Chili CookHondoCrouch Owns Own 'City,' Ranch By PETER ELLIOTT Hondo Crouch tile archetypal is Texan Easterners have come to know and love. He owns his own “city’,” his own ranch and his own chili recipe—one featuring armadillo and rattlesnake meat. What else could a guy need? Crouch in San spent Saturday Marcos at the second annual Republic of Texas Chilympiad. It avos not a good day few Hondo. He was late to the cookoff, he got rained on, and a stray dog ate his chili ingredients. “ I sure hope that ’ol dog’s OK,” said Crouch. WITH CROUCH out of the running, the cookoff was won by Alabama- Coushatta Indian chief Fulton Battise, who outspiced Ronnie D annelley’s “oil field” chili and a brew by Bob Eason and the Brazos Barristers, a group of law students fron San Antonio’s St. Mary’s University. But Crouch made his presence known. He fully looks the part of rancher-cum-high-octane chili cook. He is lean and weatherbeaten with a sparse white beard and matching hair which he wears in a style which could be termed early Albert Ein­ stein. He has a quiet, down-home manner and a slow, contagious grin. Mainly, he is typical of this entire chili-cooking crew. Saturday, he was dressed in worn work clothes, faded but comfortable, just like his manner. A mangy rac­ coon skin dangled from his breast pocket. He said he found it on the highway and was either going to wear it or put it in his chili. CROUCH lives outside Luckenbach, a small town near Fredricksburg. It is his town, literally. He bought it last year for an undisclosed amount. Crouch’s friends say he is a rancher and a good one. But when asked about his business Crouch is reticent and says,“ Ah, I’m through working.” Crouch will hardly admit it, but he has a business degree fron the University. In his quiet w ay he says, “ Yeah, I went there . for about 30 minutes.” in the 40’s, His friend, Andy Bryan who was a tasting judge at the San Marcos contest, paints a different picture of Crouch. “ DON’T LET Hondo fool you,” Byram said. “He w as a good student and a hell of an athlete. He was a great swimmer and could have made the Olympics except for the the war. He w as one of fastest a n y w h e r e crawl and the backstroke.” in Everyone at the San Marcos cookoff seemed to know Crouch. He prowled the grounds with a beer in each hand saying hello to the other chefs. He tasted the winning pot of Chief Bat­ tise, and the armadillo chili of a Uvalde group headed by Enrique Vasquez, w’ho is also author of the song “ Armadillo chili will make you silly.” Crouch has a Will Rogers w’ay about him. He loves the wide-open spaces and has a disdain of the city. “ Why, T went to New York once,” said Crouch, “and just didn’t much see why people stay there. WTe have everything seen they have. outhouses in Hondo county as big as that Empire State building. And w’o’d have subways if it wasn’t for the oil.” I’ve A FRIEND cam e by with a pet skunk. Crouch knew exactly what to do with it. He picked up the skunk visiting it and presented dignitary’, Waggoner Carr. to a The skunk reminded Crouch of the time he gave a gala party at his ranch and served a large glazed cow chip as an hors d’oeuvre. to And Crouch was but one of 50 such chili chefs, that were characters cooking chili out of everything from snails. There were g o a t millionaires and law students, airline pilots and Air Force colonels. And best of all they will be doing the whole crazy thing again Nov. 6 at the Terlingua World Chili Cookoff. Ecologists Considering Coalition E nvironm entalists from across the sta te r fo: mi;:g to bring about effective m et S aturday in Austin to con ai two associations environm ental reform s. M eeting at Inn. 35 such the C h a rio t enthusiasts discussed forming Texas E n­ vironmental Coalition (TFX) which wa kl an effort in to cl vclop unite groups “ common concerning positions policy m atte rs affecting environ mr , ! quality.” As proposed, TEC would conduct re so: reb projects and other inquiries to activities th at m ight be considered dam aging to the environm ent. However, a nonprofit corporation n u n not act as a legislative lobby. Therefore, a i offspring association. Environm ental A- ti in for T exas (EAT), m ay also lie b r r ml. ‘o EAT w orkers would lobbying efforts or be assign I as a Si, >n to legislators or other S tate off if ills. cither ec-or O ther task s of EAT would the public about I- . a ion affect forming would publicizing voting law m akers on environm ental bibs. environm ent records the of t inclu Ie in­ t I State TEC. if incorporated, wot;11 he open all civic and professional groups intone; in and w ith reform m em bership g rea ter than 23. environm ental to I a legislators As outlined. TEC would seek to work with its goals. Dr. to secure A rthur Atkinson, of TEC’s d raftin g com- m m itte, said desired im provem ents would be more achievable if one “ om nibus” bill was presented to the Legislature. I Cl 'ie!* photo. Silhouette o f War the A gas-m asked rio t p o lice m an is silhou et­ flam es o f a bu rning te d a g a in st U.S. A rm y jeep as r io tin g students de m ­ o n s tra te d to p ro te st President N g uye n Van Thieu's m anagem ent o f the u p co m ­ in g electio ns and U.S. in the war. in vo lve m e n t Police Arrest Vietnamese Students SAIGON National police raided the Minh Mang student housing complex in Saigon early Sunday and arrested 380 persons in a move aimed at quelling further student-led antigovernment disturbances. The Interior M inistry said all 232 students seized in the predawn raid were later released, but other sources said some of 45 m ilitary personnel and 103 other persons arrested were held for questioning. These informants said the raiders apparently failed to capture any of the ringleaders of the student faction responsible for Saturday’s day-long demonstrations in which two students and five policemen were injured. The raiders did, however, seize a quantity of explosives and weapons including 30 gasoline-filled bottles that could be used as fire bombs, five blocks of plastique explosive and a grenade. Terrorist Kills Arab Girl, Wounds American J E R U S A L E M A teiTorist hurled a grenade into a group of American pilgrims inside the walled old city of Jerusalem Sunday, killing a 5-year-old Arab girl and wounding 12 persons, police reported. Seven of the injured were Americans belonging to an 18-member group of pilgrims headed for the Via Dolorosa—the way of the c r o s s - traditional route of Christ to his crucifixion. None of the Americans was seriously injured, and all were released after receiving first aid, police said. A group of Arab school children, most of them girls, was surrounding the Americans when the grenade exploded. One of the girls, Im an Talhani, died of head wounds suffered in the blast. Another girl lost an eye, the state radio reported. Police detained 15 persons in connection with the explosion. The seven Americans, all hit by flying grenade fragments, were identified as the Rev. Buddy Murphy, 39, a Corpus Christi, Tex., Evangelical pastor; Joe and Edith Boyd, both 54, of Corpus Christi; Dana Itm an, 17, of Corpus Christi; Alex Noble, 33, and Bertha Fi ve, 52, both of Tinley Park, HI., and Glenn Braswell, 50, of Denver, Colo. Alioto Trial Begins Today SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco Mayor Joseph L. Alioto, who is in the m idst of a re­ election campaign, continues another battle Monday as a $2.3 million civil trial opens. Alioto. 55, is one of three defendants in a suit brought by the State of Washington and several public utilities districts, seeking to recover legal fees paid for antitrust licitation in the 1960’s. Alioto, known in legal circles as a highly successful antitrust specialist before becoming mayor in 1968, represented the utilities districts in suits between 1962 and 1967 against m ajor electrical equipment manufacturers. Tile original fee for Alioto’s services w as to be a contingency fee of up to $1 million but after he won one settlem ent of S3 million, the SI million limit was lifted and his fee raised to 15 percent of the total final settlements. Altogether, Alioto won $17.2 million in refunds for the districts. The civil suit was filed after it was learned that Alioto had paid more than $800,000 of the $2.3 million he earned to the Washington attorney general and an assistant attorney general in 1967. Sam Houston State Seeks Student Narcs H U N T S V I L L E A dean at Sam Houston State University has sought funds from the City of Huntsville and W alker County to pay undercover student narcotics agents, the Houston Chronicle said in its Sunday editions. The Chronicle said also that Walker County Dist. Atty. Jam es W arren has been allowing persons charged with m arijuana possession to plead guilty to phony charges of possession of a dangerous drug—a misdemeanor— so he won’t have to prosecute felony charges against him, the newspaper said. The Chronicle said Huntsville Mayor Ben Blalock J r., said George Morton, associate dean of student life and formerly dean of men at the university, approached him recently to ask the City Council for “ in the neighborhood” of $200 a month to pay the undercover student agents. Blalock says no action has been taken on the request. The Spirit of Chilympiad D e sp ite some h a rd luck Sunday when dogs consum ed his chili ingredients of ra ttle ­ snake and a rm a d illo m eat, cook H o n d o C ro u ch portrays the mood o f the week­ end C h ilym p ia d fe s tiv itie s in San M arcos. Photo by PETE ELLIOTT iiimMAa Monday. September 20. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 Editing! Prisons, tragedy and Attica State L ast sum m er, I traveled to F erguson U nit in E a st Texas, the State pen iten tiary for youthful first offenders, for a m agazine article. It was the first tim e I'd been in a penitentiary, and, as would befit any young jo u m alist-w riter, my m ind w as flooded with expected visions of d ark dank cells and su b terran ean depths, all appropriately in black and white, and all no doubt draw n from the countless g rad e P> flicks that s a tu ra te d m y adolescence. Not surprisingly, the p o rtra it of a p e n ite n tia r y I h a d so long c a rrie d with m e fell fa r short of the actuality. There w ere cells, but excepting those “ reserv ed for so litary confinem ent” (an ironic phraseology used w ith am azing sobriety by the w arden), they w ere m ore dim than d ark and not at all dank. S ubterranean depths w ere curiously absent, the m ess hall painted a Cheerful orange and w hite, cells and b ars a nau seatin g enam eled green and everything else in general an­ tiseptically clean. PICKING THROUGH the sh attered rem n an ts of m y g rad e B m ovies. so long ingrained, w as difficult. Tile w arden seem ed an affable enough sort, however studied his facade might have been, his greatest sins being an overwhelming belief in the Puritan ethic, a dedication to institutionalism, a propensity for Ferguson’s 1,000-odd inmates and a jarring ignorance of much of the low-level workings within the prison subculture. father-figure for playing the The la tte r flaw w as especially disturbing. And, as I spoke with more and m ore inm ates, it became increasingly apparent that there w as an o th er distinct, and somehow sinister, world beneath the glossy ex­ tern a l facade of the prison. There was a world where prisoners spoke in w hispers about the fields, surrounding countrysides where inmates worked on crops under prison guards, where atrocities and brutalities w ere allegedly com m itted safely away from the watchful eyes of the w arden. T here w as a whole subculture among some of the more illiterate and disadvantaged prisoners, a subculture where fighting am ong inm ates and with guards was not uncommon, a subculture firm ly convinced th at the institutionalism of the prison was out to choke it. Here, it s ta y intact. The inm ates were the prey, the guards the predators. It w as as sim ple as that. a gam e of dog eat w as When A ttica State Prison in New York burst into the headlines last w eek, it im m ediately recalled m y visit to Ferguson. Mentally, I m ultiplied the subculture, by numbers, age and percentage of, and im age was I wince frightening. term , “hard-core felons.” The to use the DIRECTLY* AFTER the disastrous riot, m y reaction w as that of any well-m eaning if inept liberal. I was horrified. I indiscriminately cursed e v e n one from Gov. Nelson Rockefeller to State Corrections Com m issioner Russell Oswald to President Richard M. Nixon for planning and-or condoning the rash storming of Attica. Concurrently, I shoved aw ay persistent and nagging doubts about the situation. It dog, and the trick was to w as slightly impossible that the prison system eoufl! g ran t the rioter* complete am nesty. It w as deplorable th a t the riot h ad assum ed uni- necessary shadings of a political uprising, a call to a rm s for the black and far-left revolution. And it w as unreasonably barbarous for the prisoners to slit the throats of the hostages. These thoughts, how ever, w ere not in keeping w ith m y appropriately outraged sense of in­ dignation, and so they w ere conveniently sm othered. Then la te r, m ore inform ation filtered in. An autopsy report revealed the hostages had died of gunshot wounds. Oswald also testified th at, while m any o ther crude handm ade weapons had been found, no guns had ap p aren tly been in the hands of prisoners. I ordinarily would have needed little else. H ere then could have been m y visions of d a rk and dank prisons m iraculously rein carn ated . W hat could be clearer. No doubt intolerable conditions had driven the m en to riot. P ro m p ted by the ab ject desperation th a t pervades prison life, they had m ad e a passionate bid for release, and in the process had been brutally pushed back, 27 of them lying dead at the incident’s close. BUT THAT WAS oversim plified, even for one usually given to a n a tu ra l reduction of problem s to their black and w hite gut level. In the end, all I w as left with w as an acrid taste in m y mouth and an unpleasant tightness in my stom ach. There was and is no easy answ er to Attica. One m ight chastise the foolish rashness of tile governor and the com m issioner. It w as an explosive situation. They should have recognized this and exercised infinitely m ore restraint. One m ight deplore the unnecessary, surely it m ust have been unnecessary, d eath of 41 persons. One m ight bem oan the tragedy, absurd in its sick senselessness. One m ight even feel a sharp and for the m ost p a rt inwardly directed flash of a n g er at his own im potence. Beyond th at there is nothing, and perhaps th at is the essential and existential tragedy of A ttica. A DAMO; TO A U TUM N f " 1 IK) THI5 DAUCg I CSLtdRAZ- iceLe&SATe- y M - 1 raesRATe- r Guest viewpoint UT costs , but aid falling By DIANE WOOD Student F inancial Aids to Increases in college costs and decreases in financial support have become only too the student of 1971. F u r­ familiar thermore, the Office of Student Financial Aids believes this trend will only get worse. They estim ate the four-year expense for a student entering this fall will be $8,827. In five more years, this figure will have risen to $11,271; by 1980 it will be $13,698. On the other hand, the National Science Foundation recently reported support from 13 federal agencies has dropped over $227 million in one year. Scholarships a t Texas normally do not exceed $150 to $200 per y e a r even now. In this context, it is un­ derstandable that approximately six out of every IO entering freshmen will have to seek some form of employment prior to graduation. To answer die needs of students unable to secure financial help and unable to stay in school without it, the Job Development Division of the Student Financial Aids Office has been greatly expanded. The informal system of posting all new jobs on a large board has been abandoned. New forms requesting detailed information about skills and past experience have been in­ troduced. The hope a clearinghouse for students and prospective employers. Jobs and the skills they require for effective can be brought matching. to provide together is Publicity is a second sendee the Job Development Division provides for students. Many employers are not aware of the num ber of students seeking employment, or of their varied talents. By increasing thL awareness, the student's search may be facilitated. Recently Gov. Preston Smith proclaimed “Hire-a-Student Week” in co-operation with this program to inform the community. Representatives from the Student Financial Aids Office visit business organizations and civic clubs Sept. 5-11 their attention. In personally in a continuing effort to bring student needs to the beginning of October, the Fall Job Round- Up will take place. Students from various on call service in order businessmen all over to encourage the problem. A telephone campaign will sup­ plement their visits. frank discussion of organizations will the city, Obviously the present ratio of jobs offered to students desiring them is not as good as it could be. Since Aug. 4, when the new system of matching was put into effect, well over 2.000 students have registered their need for a job. Since then, 380 per­ manent part-tim e jobs have been offered. as well as about 270 tem porary part-time jobs. There is no substitute yet for the job. student's own initiative in finding a Nevertheless, the contacts provided by Job Development can be useful for future jobs, and m any students have been successfully placed. jobs through Feedback from students who have applied for part-time the Student Financial Aids Office Is needed and en­ couraged. The system can be improved only with the help of those who have used it. Interested students should write to either F r a n k Campbell, Job Development, or Diane Wood, both a t the Office of Student Financial Aids, or come to the office’s new location at 2608 Whitis St. director of This program can serve the student and the Austin employer simultaneously, by developing a mutual understanding. It provides a way in which the student can serve his own financial interests and, at the sam e time, help to eliminate the un­ fortunate division that exists between the University and the city. Working with students, job development will help to meet successfully the challenge posed by con­ stricting in today's university. funds and expanding costs (c) 1971 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON—The history of labor is lilied with m any heroes and innovators in addition to George Meany and President Nixon, and now that those two have had their day how about a cheer and a half For some of the oilier'? Labor’s first great original thinker Was A ntim acassar, who invented the hard hat while working on the construction of tho hanging gardens of Babylon. Antimacassar and his best friend, Prom aoassar, were unskilled laborers in the mud-mixing crew which worked directly under the geranium hangers, day stories the mud PromacaSvSur was standing by m ixer whistling at two passing secretaries' when a potted geranium its hanging and strack him on the head. up. One from four fell this heavy ANTIMACASSAR said, “ a man could get job.” and next day came killed on to work wearing a bronze hat which was him verv terrible gave headaches so th at he had to stay home sick a great deal. Many labor historians believe that if this creative brain had not been so preoccupied with headaches he might have invented sick pay. and Tile first great labor hero in the se rv ic e industries was the Egyptian, I ’tmose, who worked for a cam el-repair busine® in the suburbs of Cairo when the Sphinx was being built. Many middle-class Egyptians would get un their cam els and go out to watch the Sphinx going up. so that w ear and tear on cam els was unusually high at that time. Utmost 's boss always sent his workers out on house calls with a small kit of camel parts to make repairs on the scene. Utmo.se saw that neither labor nor business could < et prosper under tills type of operation. One day, while looking at a camel that needed a minor hump alignment, he had an inspection. “This camel," he told the owners, “ will have to go into the shop.” When it came back it had had a major tune-up. four new shock absorbers had been installed, and Utmose had thoughtlessly left his pet asp under the saddle. A NEW WAY of life had bren created. Oddly enough, the first great hero of government work fix’s not appear in history until after the Babylonians and Egyptians bac • declined. This is iro a u se neither cuneiform nor hieroglyphics lent themselves easily in quadruplicate. With the Trojans, however, the spirit of government to mankind. Three men are generally credited with the feat. Their names were Amjax, Reshak and Awayougo. reproduction labor was introduced to Tis* historic moment occurred on the night the besieging Greeks left Troy and sailed for Scorpios, leaving behind a large wooden horse. A Trojan shepherd came lo the department of war and told Amjax, who hi d the duty that night, that the horse outside the wall was full of Greeks. he said. jurisdiction of As soon as the shepherd said “ horse." Amjax quit listening. “ Horses are under the Department of the “ It's not my Agriculture,'' the Department of responsibility.” At Agriculture, Reshak the shepherd said “ Greeks,” and then shut him off and threw him out, explaining that Greeks, being foreigners were under the jurisd ction of the Foreign Ministry. listened until AT TUE FOREIGN Ministry, Awayougo listened unhappily. “ If there are Greeks in the War Department’s responsibility, because we are at war with Greece. Go see Amjax.” the horse.” he said, “ it’s Page A Monday, September 20, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN R l i carnie & A TO AUTUMN i - n • t i n t * William V. Shannon More convictions, less polling (c) 1971 New 1’ork Times News Service the WASHINGTON — The season of pollsters is again upon us. Dr. Gallup, Louis H arris and their many competitors are busily at work all the time, but it is in to a presidential the y ear election when they buzz most persistently into the public consciousness. Is it too much to hope that this time they will be ignored, or at least relegated to the periphery of the political scene? leading up T h e i r popularity is fortune readily un­ derstandable. Uke tellers and astrologers, they appeal to the deep human impulse to know the future before it hap­ pens. Why wait until the votes are counted in New Hampshire if Gallup can tell you six weeks ahead of time that Senator so- and-so is already the choice of 62 percent of the voters? THERE ARE pragmatic and principle objections, however, to this election-year preoccupation. Pragmatically, past elec­ tions should have taught us that polls are an undependable guide. Harry Truman's upset victory in 1948, Hubert Humphrey’s near-victory in 1968, and Prime Minister Edward Heath’s unexpected victory in 1970 are examples of elections where the polls gave a misleading impression of coming events. Polling Is particularly hazardous in presidential primaries because little-known candidates such as Eugene McCarthy build support as they and their issues become more familiar. Moreover, many voters are Amjax, Reshak and Awayougo were all killed next evening during the attack of Troy, but tile shepherd, who had seen the future of government before his very eyes, had already left Troy for Greece where he soon became a multimillionaire shipping m agnate and often entertained Ulysses and Penelope aboard his many yachts. Tile first hero of white-collar labor was the Welsh bard Cwffldyw, who served King Arthur and the Round T abu knights before myth had given inflated sense of their own importance. them an The great moment in the history of white- collar labor occurred one evening after dinner when the king himself called for a bard. turn. “C- It was Cwffldyw’s wffldvw.” said the king. “Tonight I want you to compose and sing a bardic lay ex- thinker pressing a sense of weltschmerz tinged with gay sophistication.” CWFFLDYW, who had anticipated going to a body-painting that night at his Druid temple, was furious. “You’re making me miss the last oxcart home,” he fumed, “and yet you expect me to take a dreary routine job like expressing weltschmerz and then tinge it with gay sophistication!” “ There, there, good Cwffldyw,” King Arthur said. “There are no tyrants here. We shnJl grte you a break.” And the king o rd e re d the cook to give Cwffldyw a cup of coffee to make him feel better about having such a dreary job and missing his oxcart. The coffee break immediately caught on at Camelot in lieu of wage increases and spread around in except England, where it became the tea break. the world, genuinely uncommitted and therefore ex­ press preferences to pollsters which may be shallow or volatile. It could also be argued that there are only two kinds of elections: a landslide or a dose shave. If it is going to be a landslide, nobody needs a poll to predict the outcome. If it is going to be fairly close, it will be too dose for any poll to predict with dependable accuracy-. Polling accuracy within a margin of error of 3 percent Is good work, but not good enough to pinpoint the outcome of the Nixon-Kennedy election or contest. All evidence points to a third Nixon campaign being just as close. the Nixon-Humphrey EVEN IF THE polls were unfailingly accurate in their predictions, however, their influence deforms the democratic dialogue. They encourage politicians to make prac­ tical calculations when they ought to be examining their convictions. Thus, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York told a group of reporters in 1959 that he would run against Richard Nixon for the GOP presidential nomination the following year if the polls showed he had a chance of winning. The whole political history of the new past decade might have been altered if Rockefeller had never consulted a pollster. Journalists campaigns. Pollsters are not alone in debasing political and academics share responsibility for turning political discourse into a guessing game— than a debate on who’s ahead?—rather substantive issues. When a nation sets out to choose a President, it should be en­ couraged to consider .seriously the possible alternative courses of public policy. Instead Increasingly, American voters sr* and having their tem perature taken and their pulse rate counted. Political hypochondria is as bad for a whole society as it is for an individual. I .et us have an end to all this nervous studying of entrails and these attem pts to m easure where the Wallace vote might go or whether the Democrats can close that three-point gap in Ohio or wherever. THIS KIND of scientism applied to the political sphere is a modern disease which originated in the United States and ha* in recent years spread to Western Europe. It is part of that larger and curious in­ tellectual effort to convert politics from a humane study of means and ends into a value-free “objective” science modeled on physics or biology-. As Prof. Harold Lasswell, one of the most influential American political scientists, has said, “Americans respect technology and science: Political scientists envy authority that can be based on experiment not argum ent.” But society is not a closed laboratory and free citizens do not lend themselves readily to experiment. Moreover, there is much that can he measured and quantified about human behavior, hut much that cannot. The study of the physical sciences is not the proper model for the study of politics. Now, as in the days of Aristotle or Thomas Jefferson, human experience and human aspirations are the m aterials of politics, and reasoned argum ent and honorable compromise are the civilized way of conducting politics. time As another presidential season begins, it scientific aside ia is soothsayers and recall what politics really about. the set to T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper of UT Austin th o se of O pinions ex p ressed Sn The D aily Texan the ed ito r or the writer of the a r e a rtic le an d are not necessarily those of the U n iv ersity a d m in istra tio n or th e Board of R e­ gents. The D aily Texan, a student new spaper at T he U n iv ersity of T exas at Austin, Is pub­ lish* d by T ex a s Student Publications, Inc.. Drawer D, U niversity Station, Austin. Texas. 7X71- The D aily Texan is published Monday. T u esd ay . W ednesday. T h u rsd ay and Friday e \- ■ opt holiday an d ex am perio d s August through day. S eco n d -class p o sta g e paid at Austin, Tex. N ew s or.nfributions w ill be accepted by tele­ phone (471-4401), a t the editorial office (Jour­ nalism Building KB) o r a t the new s laboratory (.loum ollsm Building 102). Inquiries concerning d elivery should be m ade in Journalism Building 107 in Journalism Building 111 (471-3227). ( 471-5244) and ad vertisin g The naUonai advertising representative of The D aily Texan is National EducaUonal Ad­ vertising Service. Inc., 360 Lexington Ave., N e-/ \o r k . N .Y ., 10017. The D aily Texan subscribes to The Asso­ ciated P ress, The N ew York T im es N ew s Ser­ vice and United P ress International T e l e p h o t o Service. The Texan is a m em ber of the Asso­ ciated Collegiate P ress, the Southwest Journa­ lism Conference and the T ex a s D ally N ew s­ paper A ssociation. Cyndi T aylor David Powell n a g j n g E p r r o R ............................................................................ ......................................................................................... Lor-I Rodriguez R^ etz ED ITO R ^ NEWS E D IT O R ................................................ ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R ................... V . V Z . V *’ Mike F resnues ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR ............................................... ^ S T A N T TO TH E EDITOR ........................................... V Lyke Thompson SPORTS EDITOR ................................................................................ Joo P hiiliDS EDITOR .............................................................. T heresa K ane F E A lTJRES E D IT O R ......................................................................Robin B rach er Issue News Editor ........................................................................................... ^ Bass General Reporters ........................................... steve Wisch, Dotty Griffith, John Pope News Assistant#; .............................. Sheila Francis, Carol Friedman, liana Sheilds, A Jorden, Rick Codina Assonate Amusements Editor ............................................................... Susan Maxwell Sports Editor ............................................................................... Roy Mark Make-Up Editor miff a Wire Editor .................................................................................................. Alan Truex „ Copy Editors ............................................................. Tom Kleinworth, Toby Radasky ............................................... * T-i- . . a Russell Baker Antimacassar — labors first The firing line: A ttica counterpoints their cause was unjust, was their way, killing it proved if necessary to the restoration of order? Answer: Completely. justified studies, To the editors dispatch learning of With the greatest dismay I read the the Young of Socialist Alliance concerning the events at Attica State Prison as printed in the “ Guest Viewpoint” column of your paper. Not only was I dismayed by reflecting the most unfortunate oc­ upon curences at the New York in­ stitution (one is always dismayed upon the needless death of so many people), but I was further troubled by the Interpretation which the YSA made of the circumstances which brought deaths. Having spent the entirety of my youth living on the reservations and federal penitentiaries of rn y correctional institutions. father being employed by the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, I am not completely the workings of such institutions nor of the conditions which prevail therein. I would like to say that m y experience has directed me to hold a quite different view of the Attica affair than that which the YSA representative presented In the column which you printed. ignorant those upon of I the suspect that anyone In the column which appeared Friday political activism is cited as the only reason for which persons are Incarcerated in this country'. Nowhere is there even is the suggestion •‘jailed” for having committed crimes, crimes such as rape, murder, assault and like, Which rightly w arrant conviction and imprisonment. Angela Davis, as the YSA well k n o w s — b u t for propoganda purposes is compelled to deny, has not been detained by the California authorities for political activism, but rather to await trial on charges of conspiracy to m urder. Neither was George Jackson “ m urdered” for stealing in $75. But the YSA’s c a t a l o g u i n g misrepresentations. R i g h t thinking persons will recognize them as such without instruction, and the misguided will cling to them as the gospel despite all evidence to the contrary. What we is whether it Is true or untrue that the New York troopers and prison officials who “ stormed” Attica are guilty of a) faulty judgment, b) murder and c) should be prosecuted for crimes committed during the course of their action. really want is no point to know there IM W I I S P5*3UA7W|C USI* S$ in the that believe resulted unavoidable. Having First of all. not having been inside the confines of the prison during the trooper invasion (I do not a YSA representative was granted en­ trance to cover the event, either) I cannot begin to speak con­ cerning the judgment exercised by the troopers. It may well be that in the heat of the campaign foolish acts were committed, acts which loss of hostages’ lives. On the other hand it may well be that these deaths were a general sort of faith in law en­ forcement and riot control at­ tachments, I am willing to give the troopers the benefit of the doubt in the m atter until such I should be proved time as otherwise by less investigators biased than the YSA. As to the m atter of murder, we must distinguish between the killings of the hostages and the killings of the inmates involved in the insurrection. I scarcely think that either the troopers or the prison officials would have cut down the hostages with intention of doing so. To think that (even in the YSA mind) Is nonsense. So, speaks of when Dotti Bolieu murder, the murder of inmates. she must mean the as the that little them to know things. Things I have seen enough inmates to they are not all know c o n g e n i a l darlings positioned under the boot of an oppressive regime. I have seen enough of that some of them are in fact (I do not exaggerate) quite naughty. Some of them do all kinds of naughty like murdering citizens, molesting children and the like. Can anyone think that they passively sat by troopers whimpering s t o r m e d barricades the (barricades which, no doubt, the YSA will contend were built only for the purpose of holding a peaceful political caucus without violations agaiast. their freedom of speech)? These inmates were fighting with every ounce of energy which they could muster to kill as many troopers as possible. Remember, criminals do that sort of thing. Naturally, in the raging of combat (that’s what it w-as) people die. It is a hazard of that type of thing. So, their cause a just one? Answ'er: The holding of helpless hostages and threatening their lives cannot be justified on any grounds. If then the question is—was David Prentice Mills to wait to for an exonerate (Editor's note: We question the efficacy of Mr. Mills telling one in­ and all vestigation or condemn prisoners and guards turning around and and then telling us the the killings of guards by the troopers was a mistake and the killing of the prisoners was justified. He seems to contradict himself.) A trade? To the editor: of Please inform Mr. Frances K. Caldwell of Rice University that many University Texas students would be quite willing to accept Dr. Hackerman back at the Austin campus, provided Rice is walling to accept Frank Erwin in exchange. Philip MacNaughton 2207 S. Lakeshore Drive Spurr sincere? To the editor: I n appearance, President Spurr's ideas seem to be very fair and im partial to both regents and students, but what he does not say makes one wonder at his sincerity. President Spurr nominally supports a free and uncensored Texan, but he does not say how this will be achieved if a regent like Frank Erwin can boast he will “ get The Texan” and then systematically go about that. What will doing do actually president Spurr against opposition to like keep Tile Texan free and un­ censored? just this Next, when asked why he took this job, he said in essence that the “University is his life and he w’ants to do what he can to preserve it.” This sounds fine, but he did not utter one word on how he is going to keep the if one power University great hungry to decimate an entire department as the Comparative happened Studies Department and to force such John fine educators as Silber, Thomas Gould, Roger Shattuck William Arrowsmith and others to quit, just because that regent in his own narrow minded apparently uninformed is allowed regent to answer to Saturday's Puzzle saw no reason for those President Spurr will not be able to pass over these problems unconcernedly as he obviously just because University thinks, term s of office are presidents’ historically short-lived. These problems are here now, and the students are not quite so naive as to be led on by his Pollyanna attitudes. Name withheld on request Hodgepodge To the editor: The American people have come to expect hyperbole from society’s extrem ist elements, but students at Texas recently have been treated to an overdose of it campus Young Socialist Alliance. Latest YSA handouts proclaim “ ON THE ORDERS OF NIXON AND ROCKEFELLER 30 PRISONERS MURDERED!” from the What tripe. The President gave no orders and the governor’s action, though debatable, was at the recommendation of prison officials. Whatever the facts of the case the YSA goes too far with its rhetoric. sexism, In a condemnation of American capitalism, YSA literature lists as the problems war, some of r a c i s m , poverty, pollution. These ills, however, are not inherent in a capitalist state nor are they causally related to Such free-market problems, in fact, also occur in command c o u n t r i e s with e c o n o m i e s , extensive e.g. pollution of Russian rivers. economics. appeals That the YSA does not seem intent on serious advocacy of an economic doctrine is reflected in its for membership. Besides antiwar supporters, the I group urges recruitm ent among black and M exican-American1 militants, feminists, homosexuals J and adherents to these groups' causes. Seemingly, the Alliance | a hodgepodge of assorted J is dissidents—grinding their axes with loaded words and trumped- u p the a m u s e m e n t and occasional disgust of many, more moderate S t” ’ ' " ’ S. phrases—much to J. Michael Haynes Government, junior Crying wolf To the editor: . .and the little boy cried, ‘wolf,’ but no one paid him any attention because he had cried wolf so many times before.” Apparently the members of our generation did not the moral of this story when their mommies told the story to them. learn 0 rn 0 0 o © © © it is that the cries How sad because of the real “ wolves” are being stifled by daily indignation for any order. What true social or political impacts have the people within our own age group contributed to the world? Only possibly two. We joined in the tail end of the civil rights battles and we may have helped to bring an unending war closer to an “end.” But, oh, the pride we have in ourselves. We are going the world. to change Have we actually shown the peoples of that our the world ideas for brotherhood, love for one another, and peace can ac­ tually work? Have we proved that a person can really be happy without an emphasis on status, money and possessions? The answers are unequivoeablv no! We may love one another—if certain is within that other confines certain and meets standards that our generation has set. We are too busy complaining about small, unimportant trivia to bring any attention the really significant matters. to A case in point is the situation with the shuttle buses. So many students are crying “wolf” by the continually griping about procedures and service and by passing out little petitions to be presented the City Council, that the situation is approaching the ridiculous. to Actually, what is so different about the shuttle buses? A meal ticket must be shown and pun­ ched in a dorm before obtaining a meal. A blanket tax card m ust special tickets accompany events. What is so different about presenting a student identification card to a bus driver? to at in dorms, Students must suffer through long lines at registration, at meal tim es football games, and at almost anything else in a university of this size. Why all the complaints and snide rem arks while waiting for a bus? Our generation wonders why our petitions, our committee actions and our voices are not j given more credit and attention ! than they are. It is no wonder are not heeded—we cry we “ wolf” small so many “ problems” that when a really important along neither we nor those who might hear us can tell whether it is really a w'olf or just another imm ature, unintelligent yelp. comes one at David Fisher A student bus driver WE WILL BE CLOSED M O N D A Y SEPTEMBER 20, 1971 (only) BE­ CAUSE OF RELIGIOUS H O LI­ DAY. WE WILL CONTINUE OUR GREAT SALE TU'EDAY MORNING. J4>e n r y 2222 Guadalupe NEXT TO THE TEXAS THEATRE FREE! FIVE COPIES FREE Bring this ad and receive fro m any book or docum ent o r your choice. Make as many as 30 copies per minute w ith our new H IG H SPEED D E N N IS O N copiers. The cost? 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For beautiful gifts shop at the: HOME OF COLLEGIATE DIAMONDS* Crossword Puzzle ACROSS I Music: as written 4 Short talk 8 Vessel 11 Mark left by 3 Skit? 4 Defraud1 5 Pronoun 6 Limb 7 Athletic group 8 Stroked 9 Native metal wound 10 Spread tor drying 1 1 Thick site * 1 6 Exists 38 Flap 2 0 Animal's foot 1 2 At this place 13 Exist 14 Note of seals 15 Cravat 17 Tangled 19 High mountain 2 2 Intoned 21 Algonquian Indian 23 Small rug 24 Trinket 26 Definite arite?# 3 0 Number 28 Strip of leather 3? 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High trebles and low bass tones come out like they were played in the stud.o—sharp and clear. A na that's a ll we want. E w il Audio Concepts 19 Dcbie Center 4 7 8 -8 8 8 0 Ask tor Dave id Paper! ^5tickb This little slipstick could increase your typing speed by two or th ree days. Students win De elated over a com pletely new way to correct typing errors: Liquid Paper’s® new dispenser, slipstick. When you're typing the big one, the 30-page paper you’ve been sweating for weeks, that's when mistakes bug you the most. So you slow down. And the closer you get to the bottom of the page, the more you clutch up. Mess up now and you've got a whole page to retype. When you've got a slipstick handy, you don’t worry about mistakes. One easy touch releases a special fluid that buries the mistake and leaves a clean new surface like the paper itself. So you type relaxed. And make fewer mistakes. On the big assignments, Liquid Paper's new slip- siick could put you days ahead. Liquid Paper Corporation Oept. CS 9130 M aryville (V iva D a lla s , Texas 75231 Name_________ Address_______ C ity/State/Zip. Totel amt. enclosed S_ (Taws residents, sad 4 Vj % state and local sales ta*.) Liquid Paper Corporation I W u . Saolember 20. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page Mod*! LWC t ASK FOR LIQUID PAPER SLIPSTICK AT YOUR BOOKSTORE OR ORDER DIRECT WITH THIS COUPON. Crowns Stop 31-0 C L E V E L A N D ( A P ) - Quartcrback B ill Nelson’s pin- po.rit pas : coupled with stout do;onside line play enabled the Cleveland Bi owns to bury the Houston Oilers 31-0 the American Football Conference opener for both teams Sunday. in The Oil' s didn’t get. past tile Browns’ 21 in the game as die rebuilt Cleveland defensive line completely throttled the Houston running game and the Browns picked off five passes, two each I rookie Clarence Scott, Wall Sumner and Nelson's passing set up two one-yard runs by touchdown Leroy Kelly, and a 24-yard field goal by Don Coekroft, all on long drives, as the Browns took a 17-0 half-time lead. N ELSEN P IC K ED on the middie of Houston’s secondary as he hit tight end Milt Morin twice for a total of 43 yards to set up the firs! score and completed five passes for 65 yards in the second drive. N ELSEN , who completed 17 of 31 ii -M-, for 254 yards, com- pietod three tosses for 52 yards as tile Brow ss opened the second their fourth scoring half W it h dc.vc six ball possessions, cl maxed by an eight-yard pass to Gary Collins. The final score came with less than two minutes left to play when backup defensive lineman Ron Snidow grabbed a loose ball and was tackled at the Houston IR. Rookie Mike Phipps threw an 18-yard touchdown pass to Frank Pitts on the next play. Standings A M E R I C A N C O N F E R E N C E E a s t Division W L T Pct . .......... _ , . B a lt im o r e I 0 0 N e w E n g la n d . . 1 0 0 M ia m i I I) B u ffa lo N . V . ............... o 0 ................ 0 I Opp. I.OOO 22 0 1.000 20 6 .OOO IO 10 .OOO 57 49 0 22 C in c in n a ti C le v e la n d Houston P itts b u rg h Je t s ---- n i n OOO Central Division .......... .. I o 0 I 0 0 n ............. 0 1 0 .......... 0 1 o Western Division I . OOO 37 14 I OOO 31 o OOO 0 31 OOO 15 17 San Diego .......... D a n v e r K a ii. C ity O ak la n d I 0 0 ............... n 0 0 .......... 0 1 0 ............. 0 I o I OOO 21 14 to IO .OOO .OOO 14 21 6 20 OOO N ATION t i . CON F E R E N C E E aster n D ivision Dana* ............... N Y . G ia n ts . W ash in g to n ---- P h ila d e lp h ia St. Lo uis . i o o W L T P c t Opp. i ooo 49 37 I O O 1.000 42 40 I OOO 24 17 .000 14 37 .000 17 24 1 n o I 0 ft . . . 0 ............ 0 I Central Division I n 0 C h icag o ................ ft 0 n .......... M in neso ta D etroit ............... 0 0 O G re e n B a y ---- 0 I 0 1 ooo 17 15 OOO OOO .OOO 40 42 Western D iv is io n ................ I n 0 A tla n ta I O O N e w O rle an s I-OS A ng eles I 0 0 S a n F ra n c is c o . 0 1 0 .. . . . I OOO 20 17 I OOO 24 20 OOO 20 24 IT 20 OOO S n n d a v ’s R e su l ts M I an ta JO San F ra n . IT D a lla s 49. B u ffa lo 37 Cire am ati 37, P h ila d e lp h ia 14 C le ve la n d S I. Houston 0 N e w E n g la n d 20. O ak land 6 N Y G ia n ts 42, G reen B a y 40 C h icag o W ash in g to n 24. St Lo uis 17 New O rle an s 24. Lo s A ng eles 20 M ia m i IO. D e n ve r IO, tie S a n D iego St. K a n s a s C ity 14 B a ltim o re 22 N e w Y o r k Je t s 0 IT, P ittsb u rg h 15 • Inly G a m e s S chedu le d Los Angeles P/2 Gam es Back Giants, Dodgers Win SAN FRANCISCO (A P) - Hal L a n i e r ’ s high-hopping single drove in a pair of second-inning runs Sunday that gave San Francisco a 4-1 victory over San Diego but couldn't prevent the Giants from losing ground in the torrid National League West race. swept the Dodgers San Francisco’s load over socond-place I/>s Angeles was trimmed to one and a half games as a doubleheader from Atlanta 12-0 and 4-0, dropping the third-place Braves seven games off the pace. The Dodgers took the opener 12-0 on Al Downing’s three-hitter dealing the Braves’ pennant hopes a severe setback as they fell seven games back of the Giants. Crawford got his double In the second inning after Richie Allen had singled. Allen had words with Rich Reed, waving his bat at the Atlanta starter after an inside pitch. The double moved Allen to third, and he scored when Jim Lefebvre grounded out, Crawford taking third. Sims slammed a home run to lead off the fifth, his third of the season. In the sixth, after two were out, Crawford lined a Lefebvre single followed with a bloop single down the rightfield line and Crawford scored all (he way from first. center. to Sutton chalked up his victory as the Dodgers won their tenth game in their last 14. Their 19-hit assault In the to enabled Downing opener breeze to his ninteonth victory. Willie Davis, meanwhile, led the Los Angeles bombardment with two singles, a double and his eighth hemp run, driving in Jim three runs. Bill Buckner, Lefebvre and Tom Hailer each had two hi Us. THIRD Lanier, BASEM AN making a rare start as Manager Charlie Fox continued to shake up his line-up, hit a ground ba’I that hopped over second baseman Don Masons head, scoring Bobby Bonds and Dave Kingman to put the Giants ahead 2-1. San F r a n c i s c o ’ s Don Carrithers, 5-3, survived a reeky sfart-yield seven hits in the first four innings—got the victory, only the Giants’ third in the last 15 g a m e s . He got relief help f r o m Je rry Steve Hamilton Johnson. and The Giants added an unearned run in the third off the Padres’ Dave Roberts, 13-16, when Willie McCovey sent Willie Mays home with a sacrifice fly. The fourth Giant run came In the fifth, when Carrithers doubled and scored on a single by Tito Fuentes. iiiiitiitiiiiimiR^tiwntniii^itiimnmmMiiiMuifitniiiiiiininiiitniHMiii'iiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiHiininitiiiitHiiniiiHiiuiiiiiiimfinMHniiititiiitnmitGRMiai Major League Standings j rn A M E R K AN L E A L I K E a s t W. L. P ot. G B. B a ltim o re ............. 91 57 ................... 88 OH D e tro it ..................... so Ti Boston N ew Y o r k .......... 79 74 .......... 59 90 W ash in g to n C le ve la n d ............... 57 94 Vt est O ak land ................. 97 55 K a n sa s C ity .......... 82 71 C h icag o ................... 72 80 81 .......... 72 C a lifo rn ia .......... 70 8] M innesota M ilw a u k e e .......... 61 88 S u n d a y ’* G am e s .615 .571 6 .519 14 .516 141 . 396 32** .377 35V* .638 .636 15*4 IT I 25 .471 25*4 .454 2613 .421 33 B a ltim o re 8, I introit I Boston 4. W ash in g to n 3 N e w Y o r k 3, C le ve lan d 3 C a lifo rn ia 2. C h icag o 2 Minnesota 6-2 K a n sa s C ity 3 5 O ak la n d 6. M ilw au k e e 2 M o n d ay '* G am e * M ilw a u k e e (Lo ckw o o d 9-11) at M in ­ nesota (Corbin, 8-10) B a ltim o re (Dobson 18-0) a t N e w Y o r k (K e k lc h 10-8», night (M c D o w e ll and C le ve lan d (M c ­ F o s tte r 7-11) first gam e L a in 9-30), 2. com pletion of suspended gam e In 17th Inning. 12 15 at W ashington tw in ig h t O n ly G a m e * Scheduled N A T IO N A L I . E VG I R E a s t Mi. L . . . . . . . . 93 61 Pittsb u rg h St. Louis ......... ___ XI C hicago ......... ....... 7? N ew Y o r k . . . . ___ Tit 71 .Montreal ......... ___ 67 S I Ph ila d e lp h ia .. . . . . 62 Pet. G B . 604 69 519 8 % 74 .516 1.3% 516 13% 414 21% 91 .405 30% W est S an F ra n c is co . . . . X5 68 556 __ .. ___ St Los Angeles 7ft 1 % ........... ___ 79 76 A tla n ta 7 ......... ___ 75 78 .490 IO Houston 4X4 l l C incin nati San Diego --- . . . . 58 95 .379 27 . . . . ___ 75 80 545 510 S u n d a y ’s G a m e s C hien.' i 6, P h ilad e lp h ia 3 N e w Y o r k 5. Pittsbu rg h 2 St Louis i i , M o n treal 0 D is Angeles 12-4. A tla n ta A-f) Houston 5. C incin nati 4, l l San F ra n c is c o 4, S a n D iego I innings Mo n d a y ' s G a m e s Ph ilad e lp h i (C h am pio n 2 8 and F r y m a n 10-7) at Mont real (R e n k 'i 15-14 and S trn h n in y e r I 5, A tw Knight Univ f l a m e * S c h e d u l e d That's the W ay the Sa il Bounces U P I Telephoto. Oakland quarterback Daryle Lamonica fum­ winner Jim Plunkett led the Patriots to an up­ bles the football in the first quarter action set 20-6 victory. (Com plete pro results, Page during the Oakland-New England gam e 8). played at Foxsboro, Mass. Heisman Trophy C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G K A T E S E a c h W o rd (la word m in im u m ) S .07 tune ..........$ .06 E a c h Additional T im e ......... $...75 '-tudent rate one E a c h ad ditional w ord .......... $ ..0 5 20 C o nsecutive Issues IO w ords 15 w o rd s 20 w o rd s I col. 2 col. 3 col. 4 co l. ( 1 tssified D isp lay I co lum n \ enc inch one tim e $ 2.10 .......... $ 2.00 E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e ........................ ..........$11.00 ........................ .......... $15.00 ........................ .......... $19.00 ..................... .......... $38.00 ................... ..... $70.00 .......... $96.00 ................... ..........$120.00 ................... In ch in ch inch inch ( No co p y chang e for co n se cu tive issue ra te s.) • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S less for 75c the first 15 words or tim e, 5c each ad dition al word. S tu ­ d en t must show A u d ito r s re ce ip t and pay Jou rnalism Bldg. 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y through Frid ay. in ad van ce in D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E M onday T exan 3:00 p.m . T u e s d a y T e x a n M o n d a y . 11:00 a m. VYcdnesdaj T exan I rid a y , T u e sd a y , 11:00 a .in . T h u rs d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y . 11:00 a rn. F r id a y T e x a n T h u rs d a y . 11:00 a,rn. ' ‘In the e ve n t of e rro rs m ad e In an a d v e rtis e m e n t, im m e d ia te notice m ust be g iven as the p ub lish ers a re responsible for o n ly O N E in c o rre c t insertion. A ll c la im s for ad ju stm e n ts should be m ad e not la te r than SO d a ys a fte r p u b lica tio n .” F o r S a l e P O R T A B L E T V s : 19" A d m ira l B il­ ch u n in -I. U ltr a c lo u t, little used B / W , le ft). P h o n e 444-1345, 442- $6i Vi - ow 7477. 4305 M a n c h a c a R o a d . sa S U N F I S H — A M E R I C A S m ost p op u lar I n it- N ( • sto ck rd S u n iish p arts ju s t a rriv e d . N e w and used sailboats a ll size S Dili ; Im p o rts, 926-5601. T O P C A S H P R I C E S p aid fo r diam onds, old gold ("apii-(I D iam o n d Shop. 603 C o m m o d re P e r r y . 476-0178 B I O ! ' E G R '.D A R L I . Sh a Rico home and p e rs o n a l c a te products A sk about m ono.' b ack g uarantee. E v e n in g s best, 4 7 4-44 47 CO UNTRY LIV IN G lh 2 I, bi am cd L a n e ca th e d ra l ce ilin g s, t replace, la rg e d eck w ith fan ­ t a s t ic view of lake. W a t e r steps a w a y , pool, dock, 13-20 m in ­ a i> pi vileg f u te s out. $15.750. fin a n cin g a v a ila b le . W il l le a s e to rig ht p a rty . 451-1000, 266-1767. ’68 C O U G A R . E x t ' bent condition. F i v e -k '. stai d rd shift, n e w tires. net. 8 t r a c k tap e deck $ 160ft 472-9939. S O N Y M O D E L 6055 A M - F M R e c e iv e r. D u a l 1219 C h an g e r. D y n a c o A 25 S p e a k e rs . R e a s o n a b le 476-6733. 454-6111. in ca rto n s. .Singers tre m e n d o u s new buys PUBLIC N OTICE U n c ia l rn- d fre ig h t has n cc w ed s e v e ra l are re la y in g n e w sh ip m ents, arui wa these the to p u b lic. 1971 S in g e r S',.-w ar’ M a ch in e s (5) some s till latest m odels, e q u ip p ed to zig-zag, buttonhole, m ono­ g ra m and m u ch m o re . $49.95 < ach, ca sh *ir te rm s R f ; F R I G E R A T O R S — 1971 M o d els $75 & up. C O M P O N E N I finish , G a r r a r d 1 mutable lid s ta te ch a - A lso 1971 C ol B S R tu rn ta b l' $69 95 8 ft I A M - F M m u m p tru c k , r e t a il S.?1*'1 - B e d ro o m sets, J J O L L Y M A D I SC)N d ouble dresser. b ra n d n e w inclu d e lied. T o be m ir r o r , c h e st and double sold fre ig h t and storage ch arg e s. $7 i 93 tier set. A U '. 7 liv in g room groups W a ln u t . P o w e rfu l se .speakers $19 95. , w a ln u t w ith id stab . 4 speakers, v. it! R a d io ' < o it $299 .md :e S o rec em it st* ;■< • cd h JI- in 8 S Y S T E M S fo r . be '.old fo r $79 9 C h ,sing o u t all ia e rc h o n d is e th is w e e k tit m a k e ro o m fo r new sh ip m ent*. F i n ­ a n c in g a v a ila b le . L n k - A m e r ie a r d & M a s t e r C h a rg e . Ora n T o T h e P u b lic 9 A M 6 P M Mon. T h r u F r i . , S a t. T i ll I OO 6535 N. LAMAR S T E R E O • SPEAKER SALE • C om e and get them w h ile they last. C onsid ered " A B U S T B U Y ” by top test co m p any. D y n a c o S C A - 80 kits. B u ild y o u r ow n high pow ered stereo am p at low cost. M a ran tz re ce ive rs, So n y re ce ive rs, D u a l changers, G a rra r d changers, M ira c o rd changers. A R turn tab les, and m a n y other top brands. S T E R E O C E N T E R 203 l a s t 19th A- toss P ith from Je s t e r C enter 1970 H O N D A CB450 7800 m U M ~ E x - 1 < d b nt condition. $750 or hest o ffe r C a ll 178-1217. ask for R ic k , M - F 12-3, weekends 9 a.rn.-2 p.m . E L E G A N T A K C d a lm a tia n puppies. Top leading cham pionship lines. D am n a tio n a lly in obedience. $50-$75. 327-1875. j 1967 S U Z U K I 250cc. 4600 m iles. N e w j Im m a c u la te . W ith I paint and seat helm et. $300. C a ll 441-7767. 1971 K A W A S A K I 175cc E n d u ro . F iv e speed. Ilion m iles. E x c e lle n t condition. Helm et. $525. C all 441-7767. B R O W N B U G . 69 V W w ith fac to ry air. tape p la y e r, au to m a tic transm ission. 25,000 m iles. P e rfe c t condition. $170*0 4(6-2633. A fte r 5:30, 926-8671 1965 V O L K S W A G E N R e b u ilt engine Good condition. $695 or best B U G . o ffe r 217-2510 L E A T H E R P A N T S ! B e tte r th a n L e v i *. L o t s ch e ap er. C all T o m afte r five at home. 263-2452. 1969 Y A M A H A 250 En d u ro . 2300 m iles. M a n y d irt and moto-x accessories $500. 478-7108. 1970 442 O L D S M O B I L E co n vertib le. AC, I P S - P B . B lu e , w h ite top. 15 months old. ("a ll 327-1361, 472-9938 '70 C H E V E L L E SS396. F o u r speed, ac, condition. $2950. 327-0462 e x ce lle n t 1701 C h an n e l R d . a fte r 4. '64 I , E M A N S . A T , buckets, V A , belted j 1 tires. $650 cash. 478-6776. V in y l roof S O U T H W E S T S T E R E O . W ho lesale A n y tim e . 441-2194. P h il 1970 T R I U M P H 500cc. E x c e lle n t con­ dition. O ne helm et and accessories Included. $895 total. Ph o n e 441-2146 A K C R E G I S T E R E D saint bernard Six m onths old O ra n g e and white $125. 1901 R ndberg. l l 1970 O L D S 442. gold w ith W-30 hood, extra* condition. m a n y exce lle n t $31 ex i 1401 R o ndberg. 14. F R I D E N M O D E L DIO calcu lato r, $60 K o d ak m o del B V e rifa x copier. $40 441-7533 8-5. 1971 Z E N I T H C H R O M O C O L O R T V . Six m onths old. $350, w a s $500. (. all 454- 1136. 327-0484. H O T M C B . N e a r ly n e w engine, tires. Ro! I bar. B o d y O K . C a ll Jo e , 475-2782 D U M P N IX O N '72. L a rg e . Red, w hite, blue O u trag eou s dec ii. $100 Box 9?! ( ullcg e P a r k , M D 20740. Prom p t 1971 H O N D A for sale. Model CL100. o n ly 950 m iles. C a ll 385-3272. F R O S T P O IN T , ~ S E A P P O IN T ehoeolatepoint S i a m e s e R e g iste re d , w ith shots $35 double ch am p io n at stud. 4725058. kittens Frostpoint Y e a rb o o k s E N C Y C L O P E D I A B R IT T A N IC A J5 and E x ce lle n t condition. $195 fa s h . F o u r y e a rs old E ve n in g s . 452-6987. through 71 D U N E B U G G Y , 1961 V W engine, green top, co n ve rtib le m e ta fla k e body. si d ec u rta in s $650. 441-2805 1961 C H E V Y , F O U R D O O R hardtop. cle an . N e w tran sm ission , good tires. 385-3111 a fte r 5 30, a n y tim e weekends P R I V A T E D E A L E R , student, w ill sell a ll m a jo r brands of d ive equipm ent for IPS" ('a ll Kent, 4 (2-4609 '62 P L Y M O U T H F O U R door. Stand ard . reb* It. 6 cy lin d er, R im s good $200 465-7891 a fte r 6 p rn. P I L L O W S . 36" sq u are velou r. S e v e ra l co lo rs $15 cash. 267-1758 afternoons engine. 1966 T W O I 'O O R V W sedan N e w paint, tw o door. N ew engine, e x c e lle n t tires, rad io, new paint. Bo th i x tra cle an . 1621 E a s t 6th. Bob, 477-6797, 474-4706 1963 V W S E A R S connections, au to m a tic, P O R T A B L E W A S H E R . No load 444-3766 ]Q $175. tw o months. lh L O S T W H I T I S H C H IH U A H U A In a re a . ad A irp o rt. R e w a r d , of E a s t 4fit ii P le a s e < ill 474 INO! L O S T G I R L S ti a m u ral field ( L A S S ring lr Cals It M L . In- on Ite w a rd offered. C a ll 411-7383. . i a •'cie*. L arq e dc ’ole or s'r-a’e Fa carpeted serv e r o o m A / C , maid re frig e ra to r in each room, color TV in v-.nqe, free pa king. C a 4 391 7 rflp/Oi(ia P A SO H O U S E 1808 W e s t A ve. M E N Just North of 27th & Guadalupe 1967 V W . C L E A N A M - F M radio, h e a t­ er. C all a fte r 6. 472-0574. EARN $'s W E E K L Y W A N T T O B U Y used Volksw ag ens. G ilb e rts Am (motive. 1621 E a s t 6th TO PLAC E A TEX AL C LA SSIFIED AD C A LL 471-5244 S e r v i c e s N O L E A S E S T A T T U T O R IN G . A U business m ath. COPIES — 4c 38th s tre e t P h a r m a c y 1008 W e s t 38th I a rd 7 bedroom , fu rn'thed or ta ro s unfurr • c d. C arp e t, air, G .E . d s cash­ er, a sposel, Tappan range, ba cony, pool. 2 blocks from R eag an H ig h . 453-7608. 1965 P L Y M O U T H F U R Y . F o u r door au to m a tic, p o w e r brakes, new tire s / s ta rte r/ b a tte ry . $525. 441-4781. au tom atic, 1971 B U I C K G S . AC, p ow er steering . brakes A M D ! , B u rn t orange. 10.000 m iles. F a c t o r y w a rra n ty . A ssu m e loan. A fte r 5:30, 836- 5254. disc 67 V W S E D A N w i ’ h E x ­ c e lle n t condition. $1,000 . 9 a rn.-3 p m., 'TO engine I 444-6891 A fte r 6. 258-2355. B A S S E T T P U P S . Reg istered , w o rm ed . fe m a le s: brown and w h ite. lines. 441-6122. $50-$75. M ales, Cham pion m ags, w ide o val 1955 T H U N D E R B I R D . 312, three speed. tires, stereo tape M a n y extras. 81800 o r best offer. M i 4102 before 3 p.m . S O N Y 650-4 tape re co rd er Unopened- dupllcated gift. R e t a il $150, w ill sell for less. 444-5076. 1966 C H E V R O L E T M A L I B U c o n v e rti­ ble 283 VS. standard. R A H M u st sell. $600. 475-2940 a fte r 7> p rn 476-8081. S A I L O N TO W N LAKE p® rf a sailboat or c c ~e. 2-9 w ee - vs 12 ? ...-eelter.d* 178-2079. S ’ jr-m fs take S h e .' ob P 8 t taco S. L e ■ esr ore. SKYDIVE Alison Parachute C e- 'er For further information after 9 p.m. C A LL 477-2416 tim e g ara n te i W o n ’t S A P P H I R E ( ' J I R O M A T n a il file. L ife ­ lose it's cf H en ry. $1 50 postpaid. Ilu ie x , Box 17231, D a lla s , T e x a s 75217. ru st or six ch airs. $230 M E D I T E R R A N E A N d in e t t e , tab le and E a r l y A m e ric a n ch air, gold upholstery. $65 G E v .a li­ er. white, m ini basket. $75. C a ll 472- 4200 after 5:30 or w eek ends. B od ■ or serv.ee’.. • U t --I L o -la/ t' 3 o.m. d r - -* needed. Cash polo attend an ce. ..on S a tu rd a y , 8 a.m.- . cian in AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC., 409 W e - ’ 6M 477-3735. Zuni N E L S O N S G I F T S ; co m p lete selection je w e lr y ; A fric a n and M ex ican im ports. 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. In d ia n L E A R N to p la y G U IT A R , beginner. ad van ced. D re w Tho m ason . 478-7331, M A L E K I T T E N S to g ive a w a y . T ig e r striped. Spoiled, but cute. 444-9474 after 5. H I L L E L — O P E N for studying, smonzing 7-10 weeknights. 2105 San Antonio. F R E E K I T T E N S . 4-11-7492. w e a vin g F O R S A L E : V E R I F A X Sig n et ro pier, loom, three cases, B a k e N S e rv e w a re , (38 p ieces p er c a s e ), fish, tern 30fti G uadalupe. 472-1676 fossils. m e tal detectors. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r i v i . M A I "N A K A I A p a rtm en ts. One bedroom e fficie n c y n o w a v a ila b le . T w o blocks to Cam pus. Po o l, st dy room, p a rty room. F ro m $135, a ll b ills paid. 40.7 E a st 31st. 472-2147. s t u d i o two bedroom S E E T H E L O V E L I E S T A ustin. a p a rtm e n ts Reaso nably p riced. F o r in fo rm atio n (.ill 171-2465. in H A I R L T D . C a ll fo r Info rm atio n on I Prescriptions — C osm etics — Free C u ts lr454-0984nK ^ SPlU PndS Und Sh&g De ,r;ry ~ M C '' E A C ' U S A C a rd T H E B U G inn re p a ir. rates, student operated. 1816 V o lksw ag en Good W e s t 36th. 465-0517. P A R K I N G B Y S E M E S T E R . $70. 2118 S an Antonio, one block fro m Cam pus. 476-3720. IDA PRESS 504 W est 24+ h Multicopy service. Specializing in handbills. Call 477-8351. P O R T R A I T S IN O I L by M antle at The A rk . C all or co m e by 477-0629. W I L L Into U n i­ v e rs ity a re a hom es and a p artm e n ts I N S T A L L S H O W E R S C a ll 474 it t v LEA R N TO FLY G u aran te e d solo — $125 in the N EW BELLAN CA CHAM P. G EO R G ET O W N FLYIN G SERVICE E A A anpcoved scroo 863-2220 P a r t s E X P E R T V O L K S W A G E N R E P A I R S . to se rvice . students. G ilb e rts A uto m o tive S e r v ic e 1621 E a s t 6th Disco! nt and M e n 's h a irstylin g hy skilled p ro fe s­ sio nals without gels, nets, or o verh ead d ry e rs la y e r cuts, hair straightening, b eards and m oustaches trim m e d . selection of m en s w ig s. Open T h u rs d a y Shag s and L a r g e 'til 9. RIVAS O F TEXA S 3004 G uad alup e A pp o in tm en t 474-2666. F o r T r a v i s . R E N T .S A IL B O A T fun Bo ard b e a u tifu l L a k e through keelli cits, acco m m o d atin g 1-8. M arsh Y a c h t S a le s — by M a n s fie ld D a m . CO 6-1150. b o a ts BE A BARTENDER N E W C L A S S F O R M IN G N O W SIX-WEEK C O U R S E — LIMITED E N R O L L M E N T — Bradley School O f Bartending - C O B B Y S U I T — C O M M O D O RE PERRY BLDG. TEL 478-7488 U N S I G H T L Y H A I R ” R e m o v e it per­ m an ently w ith m e d ic a lly approved C a ll 477-4070, U n iv e rs ity e lectro lysis E le ctro ly sis. B i I I ’ i R .STI 'K E H S D e sig n y o u r own w ill p rin t an yth in g cheap. 154-6907 TO PL A C E A T E X A N C LA SSIFIED A D C A L L 471-5244 R o o m & B o a r d N O W AVAILABLE Graduate Student- Single and Double Accommodations Apartment Cooks 14 Meal Card — $22.50 Mon rhly Card — $75.00 W O O D W A R D APTS. 1722 E . W o o d w ard • S p e cial • .Swim m ing pools. • M oderate p ric e s w ith all u tilitie s - no hidden c h a rg e s! .student o rien ted clu sters. paid 411-7555 • O n ly 5 m inu tes to U T. • C om plete on-premises w a s h a te ria . • F r e e a ll- c h a n n e l T V . • A m ple p ark in g for tenan ts & guests. FALL RATES $129.50 | Large two bedroom near down- I lown. Swimming pool, carpeted, ; a./c, wood paneling. 442-3910 472-9147 C A M 'N O REAL 6 blocks to U T. J U S T R E L E A S E D L A R G E I B E D R O O M F U R E S H E D A P A R T M E N T All bills paid. cable, dish w asher, dis­ lau n d ry rooms. Shu ttle posal. pool, 2 Bus route, co vered p arkin g a v a ila b le . 2810 S a la d o 476-4095 C A M IN O REAL — EL PA TIO 6 blocks to TLT. 2 bedroom 2 baths. A ll hills paid. N E W L Y D EC O RA TED — S H A G C A R PET la u n d r y Cable, washer. disposal, covered p ark in g a v a ila b le . room, 2 pools, dish­ s e c u rity g u a r d , 2810 S alad o 476-4095 j two bedroom a p a rtm e n ts w ith UA F O N T A N A A partm e nt ,. One and fu lly appointed sw im m in g pools, p riv a te bus to C am p us. F ro m kitchens, lo u r I $144. 1230 E a s t 38-%. 454-6738. N E E D A N I C E ap artm ent'.’ A m unable to fu lfill m y c o n tra c t at Hardin-North. | S a v e m oney by c a llin g 476-8947. ! M U S T R E N T new one bedroom apart* I men* O cto b e r first 1200 W e st 40th. 1 $232. C all 465-7817 a fte r 5. T H E B R I T T A N Y A P A R T M E N T S has townhouse, two bedroom stan dard furnished w ith lo vely i C om pletely a equipment C a ll 452-3096. : G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T , tioned E ig h t blocks $65/month. C a ll 476-1334 a ir condi­ from C am pus. A U M A D E P G O O D P I A N I S T w ants w ork d in n er m u s e , R u s se ll. P r e f e r club, 68 • 6. co n tem p o rary. ("an p lay Leon i o t a rant. -172- r T E C H T I C K E T S wanted. C a ll 452-0307 a fte r 5. N E E D T I C K E T S Te ch gam e < all for the Texas-Texns 174-2! to o r 453-0941. TEXAN D O RM FOR M EN 1905 1907 N U EC ES p c Ie / 'e m c d e r d. $44 44 - o. for t a rd .or ej cer” r*' a ma d ie- , -o D S : i * o blocks fr rn C am p .,j. C a l rev deaf managers, 4 78 51 I 3. v - .rj a ra p a n ty p-v« re*- I N S T R U C T O R lessons . Cal V A N T ! I) 441-1632. for singing R o o m & B o a r d ^ T u t o r i n g L E A R N to pie ads meed. D n y G U IT A R , beginner, vv Thom as.,n, 478-7331, 478-2079. 451-4557. often as net-es a ry M A T H , S E M E S T E R R ate s. A \ u i!ab !e !■ >r Business, L l b e r a l - A r t s C. R E . P re p a ra tio n . G u m in teed R esu lts G roup R ate s. M A T H E N A M IC S, 452-1327. M Hors. G U IT A R L E S S O N S . H a v e g u itars for sale. C a ll Bob, 411-1485. C E R M A N tutoring. G r a m m a r o r conversation. A ll levels 477-5435 L A N G U A G E sp eaker. n a i v e C a ll b y an ytim e. U N I V E R S I T Y P e rs o n a l I U T E R A R Y S E R V I C E S in expository, instruction business w ritin g . 477-9043 H E L P i W a n t e d i H A N D Y M A N -d lsh w ash er w an ted p art tim e. $1.7., ( n r hour, m e a ls furnished 264 1966. thousand. H a n d w ritte n O P P O R T U N IT Y , sp aretim e, ad dressin g envelopes an d c ir c u la r s ! M a k e $27.00 typed, p er in y o u r home. Send Ju st $2 I N ­ I . IS T O F F I R M S S T R U C T IO N S and a U S IN G S a tis fa c tio n G u a ra n te e d ’ 13 & V En te rp rise s, Dept. 9-32. P . O. B o x 3.<8, P e arb lo sso m , C alif. 93553. A D D R E S S E R S . for rn F U L L O R S e r v ic e P A R T F u lle r tim e. .ii B r $1 75 hour. custom ers. S a la r y or com m ission. C a ll 454-6971. W A N T E D . B R O I L E R C O O K , counter hell), and d ishw asher. F u ll o r p a rt tim e. A p p ly in poi on betw een 9 a.m . and 5 p.m . at Bonanza S irlo in P it, 5209 C a m e llin R oad. Ask for M r. M alo n e or M r. M el) N E E D J U N I O R O R S E N I O R m en 21 y e a rs or o ld er for full or p a rt tim e w ork. C o ntact R a n d y E r w in 478-7341 o r 411-7586. Y O U " UT N E V E R H A V E A J O B T H I S E A S Y A G A IN ! ' E a r n un lim ited m oney | spare tim e bv I P e rm a n e n t positions a v a ila b le in your own students. lo in O c t­ ober for those who enjoy them selves. t lik in g C i d or co m e by U S A offices, 901 W e st 19lh 478-2525. PART TIME V/anfed. A ttra c tiv e qa's and hard w a r in g h r , rv/week 5-10 p.m. A p p ly L O N G J O H N S IL V E R 'S in p e rm ". 10 20 g u y ! R L S T A U R A N T 520? B.: ’ ct Road Ask for Bob A N D R O O M B O A R D , students 20 m e als per week U n iv e rs ity F re e p arking , facilities, m aid se r­ vice. sw im m in g pool, a c. Phone 477- 9766 or visit 2706 N e< es. la u n d ry S I N G L E R O O M S U n iv e rs ity House m en - d o rm R o om and board for h a ll reaso n able sem ester Good rates. T h re e blocks from Cam pus, Shu ttle B u s route A C, m aid se rvice . 2710 N u n es, 477-8272. food and R O O M AE B O A R D . U n iv e rs ity students. 20 m eals per week. F re e p arking , lau n d ry se rvice , sw im m in g pool, a-e Long session rate s from $1,060. Ph o n e 472-7850 or v is it 2700 Nueces. fac ilitie s . m aid LIVE IN BABY SITTER f - father w ; o hxr custody of 4 -yoni- o*d son Fath er in A r Force, occasional tem porary d . ’ y outside Texas. M ust be depnndab e and h a .a references. W have days free. I va at Bergstrom. C a 385 4658 af ar 7 p m. R o o m m a t e s N E E D M A U E room m ate to sh are one im Shu ttle. $65 plus e lec­ bedroom tric?,y 465-9031. N E E D M A L E room m ate. $75 month, all b ills paid N ice, quiet ap artm e n t. C a ll Ted, 451-3724. F E M A L E S H A R E two bedroom a p a rt­ m ent w ith two others. All bills paid. $55/month. Sh u ttle 4-11 6135. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed. Shu ttle Com e by 311 E Bist, 207B o r go to m a n a g e r's ap artm e n t. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D two bedroom ap artm e n t w ith two la w stu­ dents. $7 2.50/rn on th (all bills p aid ) Deposit, S e p te m b e r rent prepaid. 465- 5918. S h a re M A L E . Q U I E T g rad uate or to sh are ap artm e n t n e a r C am pos. $77.50 plus e lectricity. 478-7832 477-5282. u p p erclassm a n N E E D E D : M A D E room m ate to sh are nice ap a rtm e n t n e a r C am pus P r e f e r up p erclassm an. C a ll Bob M u llins, 476- 0976. M A L E R O O M M A T E needed for nice one bedroom ap artm ent. Shu ttle Bus $55 plus e le c tric ity , C all M ark, 47s 1810 M A L E or professional person to share larg e two bedroom ap a rtm e n t. $85-month. 451-2337. G R A D U A T E student N E E D porclnss S T R A I G H T up! fem ale room m ate to share larg e ap artm ent, AC. Shuttle $53 33 bills paid. C a ll 478-5810 S T U D IO U S T H R E E R O O M and bath, n e w ly fu r­ nished. W e s t 32nd Stree t. C arpeted. co ve re d porches, y a r d , fireplace, parking. C a ll 477-5654. D R A F T S M A N N E E D E D . Must have L e ro y experience. T e ch n ica l d rafting , for reports. N ‘cd at least 25 hours p er fo r ap pointm ent. week. C all 477-9901 No agencies. T y p i n g C A L L 471-5244 TO PL A C E A TEXA N C LA SSIFIED AD W A N T E D I M M E D I A T E L Y . P o lis h tra n ­ s la to r for sc ie n tific tran slation s. C all 472-6753 D E P E N D A B L E M O T H E R to p ick up first g rad e r at noon and p rovide a f­ ternoon ca re . 444-3766 evenings. S E R V I C E . B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G dissertations, Theses, H i T t i 84 M im e o g rap h ln S* R e aso n a b le . T H E M E S , R E P O R T S , lecture notes. R e aso n a b le , M rs . F ra s e r, 476-1317. 9 Typing. Mul UU thing. Binding M B . A 9 T r9 Complete Professional FU LL-T IM E Typing Service to tailored the needs of U n iv e rs ity s (dents Special k<- board equipment tar lArtftu&K**. s«*if*no\ and 6nuint' mg theses and a r s e n a t io n * . F lu m e G R 2 3210 and G R 2-76TT 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k T Y P I S T E X P E R T i h <* s o s , S e le c tr ic ! rep o rts briefs, p role*" aal reports. P rin tin g , binding' M rs. Tullos. J73 .7124. I B M H SAVI-. M O N E Y ing. printing, F u lly equipped; ty p ­ te rm Papers, theses, (bs .•elation*. C ity W id e typ in g , 476-4179, 6 a.rn .-midnight an y (anding All E X P E R I E N C E D dissert .ti, os. T Y P I S T . I B M Theses executive! etc (. harlen e Stark . 453-5318. W O O D S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . n 7«7 47’’ 4R” 5 US I 'aW ‘ T h f's,s’ "M rs - W oods, CLOS!-; Si 13 .Kl IN . Be au tifu l, p erson al typing »ym ir work U n ive rs ity birding. L a u r a Bodour, 47*. Jus) North of 2/th & Guadalupe M B A T y p in g . M u ltlllth ln g , B in d in g ( J The Complete Professional ( A R B O N - R I B B O N S e le c te e . In m1!.» K oenig Lan e. T e lep ho ne; 465-7205 and | ACCURATE TYPING.. Reports, brief*! theses-, dissertations. S ym b o ls M rs . Anthony, 454 3079 r v r i N G W A N IUD. L e g a l and oil ex- r I bbl Jiru' 345-3 R)5 PlP,' , n ° Carbr,“ E X P E R 1 E N C R n IB M A ccu ra te , rates 327-1534. T Y P I S T . fast se rvice E le c t r ic I VI VV sires P A R T I A L U Y H A N D I C A P P E D lad light hookke. I-nui \ e a rs collage, tw e lve mon ti J.T'L * se cre ta ry business course U (07. typing or Just North of 27th & Guadalupe M B A T y p in g , M u ltillth in g . B in d in g I he Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to the needs or U n iv e rs ity tailored students. S p e cial keyboard equipm ent for language, science, and eng ineer­ ing theses and dissertations. Ph o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k U N I V E R S I T Y L I T E R A R Y S E R V I C E S IB M S e le n id e , carbon ribbon, sym- bols-Dissertatlons Theses. P R ' s ’ B e * Brie fs, Themes- 477-9043. ’ S O M E O N E T O A S S U M E Je s t e r 's m a n 's co n tra ct R o om and board. S even th L o w d ra ft floor. num ber, m ust le a v e »7l-29x7 E x ce lle n t facilities change F R E E R O O M A N D B O A R D In ex­ cooking for housekeeping, P r iv a t e room S tra ig h t. Own tran sp o r­ tation. 385-4783. FULL-TIME Typ'nq Service to the need j o f U n iv e rs ity Sp ecial ke yb o ard equipm ent language, science, and en g in eer­ tailored s id* aes lo r ing theses and dissertatio ns. P h o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k S A I L B O A T . G L A S T R O N A lp ha 17 foot A t r a ile r B o th fo r $450. 478-5464 U cd 1410 W e s t 29th St evenings. 21st and Guadalupe Page 6 Monday, September 20, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Bruins Revenge Hopes Spoiled Texas Whips UCLA PROTECT FROM BICYCLE RIP-OFF With C H A IN S A N D L O C K S F R O M EVERETT HARDWARE Co. ALL CASE HARDENED CHAINS V* ” x 4’ RUBBER COATED Va"x 4’ N O N -COATED Va” x 6’ N O N -COATED MASTER LOCKS WITH CASE HARDENED SHANKS SESAMEE COM BINATION LOCK WITH CASE HARDENED SHANK Everett Hardware Co. 2820 GUADALUPE 478-5365 And our blocking was ceptional.” e: Royal also was pleased with the Texas running game, and particularly the several sophomores who were playing in their first varsity contest. the poise of “ They showed a piece of heart after the UCLA field goal in the fourth quarter when they took the ball and moved it the length of the field in 15 plays. They hung in there and maintained their poise.” Royal admitted he was not satisfied with Texas’ passing, but blamed part of the failure on himself. JIM M Y (M O ORE) got open pretty deep in the second quarter and the ball was a little off,” he explained. “ And after that, we kept trying to go long and may have tried to get rich too quick.” | As for UCLA, Royal described the Bruins as “ every bit as tough as I thought they’d be.” But tough is a relative word. And this time the Bruins were not quite tough enough. 2350 GUADALUPE Clyde Campbell We're Gant shirt headquarters in the southwest. Clydes has the widest selection of shirts for you to choose from. Colors, stripes, patterns and some without names. Clydes also has ties to bring it all together. . . you can get it at Clydes. By JOE PHILLIPS Sports Editor L O S A N G ELES—Throughout last week here, fans and players alike had been vowing, “ This time the game won’t end too late.” Never mind the 29-25 loss the week before to lowly Pittsburgh, they said, and ignore the talk that this year’s Texas Longhorns, although inexperienced, could be as good as last year’s squad which went 10-0 regular season. in This year, it was said, UCLA would avenge the 20-17 defeat the which Texas instilled on a via Bruins last season desperate, 40-yard touchdown pass in the final 12 seconds of the game. BUT, ALAS for those who believed in the Uclans, history was not to reverse itself. And this time Bruin fans would not even be provided the excuse of a “ last second robbery.” For on Saturday, before 35,000 spectators, most of whom were in Bruin Blue, Texas clad thoroughly methiodcally whipped UCLA, 28-10. and Texas The game began with both teams showing signs of strength, and UCLA still had a chance until late in the fourth quarter. But t h e was nonetheless a solid one and never really in doubt after the ’Horns took the lead 14-7, on a 36-yard touchdown pass with little more than two minutes remaining in the first half. victory the queasiness In the first quarter, before Texas’ sophomores and veterans alike had cleared their stomachs o f which t r a d i t i o n a l l y accompan’es opening games, the Steers’ play was hauntingly reminiscent of last season’s Cotton Bowl, where Longhorn errors were largely responsible for Notre Dame’s 24- 11 win. TEXA S BEG AN well enough, moving the bail 37 yards to the ’Horns 42 in only five plays after the kickoff. But then Steer coach Darrell Royal decided to gamble, and sent fleet split-end Jim m y the Bruin into Moore deep secondary on a bomb pattern. And bomb is exactly what the play did as UCLA safety Ron Carver grabbed the first of three interceptions he was to claim during the afternoon. The Uclans, starting with the ball on their own 17-yard line following the interception, then did what Texas teams are famous for and slowly, carefully, mar­ ched 83 yards for the first touch­ down of the game. Ea rly in the second quarter, Texas scored and converted the extra point to tie the game. Later in the same period the Steers would again score (on a pass to Moore in the end zone) and the contest was undeniably under Texas’ control. The second half belonged almost exclusively to the ’Horns, as time and again quarterback Eddie Phillips called the Wish­ bone triple option and scampered around the ends for long gains. He led the game's rushers with 142 yards. But despite Phillips’ success on the ground, his attempts as a passer were as dismal as his running was brilliant. In fact, UCLA’s most successful moments came when Phillips dropped back and put the ball in the air. Nine times he threw the football. Five times it dropped to the ground for an incompletion, once it was caught by Moore for a touch­ down, and three times it was intercepted by the Bruins’ Car­ ver. In the locker room after the game, Phillips joked about his passing, and smilingly insisted that he completed four passes ( “ One to us and three to them.’’) BU T T H E running game was something else indeed, the sandy haired quarterback said. “ We had some trouble at first with fumbles, particularly on the then everything kickoffs, but seemed to work itself out and we moved the ball pretty well w r x a c o H07VIJA. 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE A tt. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service SERV IC IN G V O L K SW A G EN VEHICLES IS O U R 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 CLOSED SATURDAY First Score of Season Texas’ Don Burrisk falls over goal line to tie UCLA, 7-7, in the second quarter of Satur­ day's game in the Los Angeles Coliseum. Hanging on to the Steer runner is UCLA's Bob Scribner. Texas won the game, 28-10. —U PI Telephoto. Pepper Convinced' B y 'Joe P h illip s Sports E d ito r LOS A N G ELES—Texas may bo ranked third nationally in most polls, but you’d have a hard time convincing UCLA Coach Pepper Rodgers tho ’Horns are not the best college team in the country. “ They’re a very, very strong the unusually somber team,’’ the Bruins* Rodgers said locker room af er UCLA’s 28-10 loss “ lf to Texas Saturday, they’re still ranked No. 3 next week, then they’re a very' strong No. 3.” in Rodgers, whose free-spirited coaching antics have given him the reputation of an eccentric-of* YOUR SENIOR RING sorts, said the key to the Texas tile player most attack and responsible for the Steer victory was quarterback Eddie Phillips. “ H E’S 'HIST super-great. For the type of offense he’s running he’s the best I ’ve ever seen. We had planned the fullback, quarterback and pitch man on every play, but Phillips kept getting away.” tackle to As for the rest of the Texas team, Rodgers said, “ They're better than I thought. I expected them to make a lot of mistakes they have so many because sophomores playing, but they did a good job of recovering front those fumbles and interceptions. (Texas lost one fumble and three interceptions.) ” Another Bruin who was sur­ prised by the ’Horns was quar­ terback Mike Flores. “ I don’t think there’s any doubt they’ll be in the Cotton Bowl again this year,” he said. “ I used to think that Michigan (ranked No. 4 in most polls and UCLA’s opponent next week) was better Texas Texas because than so many seemed to have sophomores. .But right now I don’t see how anyone could be much better.” FT .O RES SAID he was par­ the impressed with ticularly ’Horn defensive linemen. “ Their down linemen are as quick as anyone could want to be. They’re also strong and aggressive, and gave me much than Pittsburgh more (which beat the Bruins, 29-25, two weeks ago.)” trouble Flores said he watched Phillips closely throughout the game, and added that the Texas quarterback “ could be a very good passer trouble he had despite today.” threw nine passes, completed one and had three intercepted. the Phillios “ B L T , ” ADDED Flores, “ Texas doesn’t need to pass. I know everyone says you have to have a balanced offense, but I true with that’s don’t Texas. They could never throw the ball and still have a great offense.” think The player responsible for the three Bruin interceptions, safety Ron Carver, described the ’71 Steers as typical Texas team.” “ a “ They’re very enthusiastic and large sense of pride. have a They’re not used to losing, and w ill do anything to win.” “ And I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re the national champions at the end of the season,” he concluded. l& k . HOLIDAY GROUP FLIGHTS AUSTIN/NEW YORK (or W A SH IN G TO N . II C.) tit S I 0 0 4 1 R o u n d t r i p M / JE T A IR FA R E (plus tax) Departure* NO V. 20 and 24 DEC. 22 and 23 Return A N Y DAY! C a ll the T r a v e l E x p e rts . . . HARWOOD TRAVEL 3428 G u ad alu p e • 478-934$ THE BEST IN VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS 100% GUARANTEE — MODERN FACILITIES BRAKES TUNEUPS EXPERT ON VALVE & ENGINE REPAIRS CLUTCH — TRANSM ISSION — ELECTRICAL OPEN SATURDAY — BankAmericard Master Charge W E HAVE A C O M PLETE PARTS DEPT. GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 1621 EAST SIXTH 477-6797 Beat inflation! Beat Inflation! Buy an Advent Model 201 Most long-playing records used to list for almost fiv dollars, which was outrageous. Now they list at six dollars, which is post,...../ Clearly you can't continue to expand your record collection and at these prices remain solvent. There must be an alternative. T-»pe Deck. .ggling. There is: buy an Advent Model 201 cassette tape deck. A ninety minute cassette costs about three dollars: on if you can flawlessly duplicate at least two long-playing records. Each disc you record will cost you about $1.50 (and you won't have to get up and turn the record over between sides.) Tapes will outlast your friend's records. They won't warp or scratch or develop annoying pops and phnerts. You say Thats fine, but cassette decks always sound so god-awful." Such was the case, but the Advent 201 has changed all that. I r J * SOUinds wonc(erfu,• By able for recorde(^°musicien^ car' a We mean as good as the best LP records. The Advent 201 cassette deck takes cassettes kackground-music category and makes them possibly the most satisfying medium avail- • n.* I h* t.^ u del ? 01 '" corPor^ es the JpoiLy Noise Reduction System?) a patented electronic circuit that gets rid of the noise (hiss) that has plagued cassette recording. Advent then proceeded to include all of the things — steady-speed taDe U * Vll. sin?pl® ? nd precisely accurate recording controls, low-distortlon and low-noise electronics — that no one had thought to bother to bring to the design of a cassette tape machine before. V n9|f i. dioxide tape sold by Advent under the Advocate Crolyn® label. . In add'+l? n- +he Model 201 incorporates circuitry to take best* advantage of the new duPont-developed chromium aeveiopea crromium The Advent Model 201 costs $285 and is completely guaranteed, parts and labor, for one year. ♦No other tape system currently available does. "Crolyn" is a trademark of duPont. "Dolby System" is a trademark of Dolby laboratories. 1710 L A V A C A 476-5638 OPEN 9:00 - 6:00 M ON. - SAT. THURS. 9:00 to 9:00 P.M. Monday, September 20. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 If you'll take the tim e to find us, w e it ONCE UPON A TIME there was a nice little men’s store on an out-of-the-way street. They carried great-looking clothes for guys . . . brand names like Gant and .Hathaway and Corbin and Cole-Haan. But alas, no one would take the time to find the nice little store on the out-of-the-way street. Until one day, when the storekeeper asked his wife if she thought people would come in their store if they ran an ad saying that guys could now buy great clothes at great prices. TO MAKE A LONG STORY SHORT—She said yes and they did and you can. Across the street from the Trough in Hardin North Country Squire Created by John Roberts Largest Selection Best D ia m o n d Prices 2236 Guadalupe "E Pxt to H em p h illY ’ Our Used Cars Are Guaranteed 100% Not To Make You Nervous 1968 V W CAM PER Air, R a d io ........ 1969 V W 7 Pass. Sta. Wagon 1971 V W 7 Pass. Sta. Wag., 2000 miles 1968 V W SEDAN Std., Radio . . . . 1968 V W Fastback Std., Radio 27,000 miles . . . 1969 V W SEDAN Std., Radio . . . . 1969 V W SEDAN Std.. 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A N D E R SO N L A N E (Hwy. 18;t ,tt Cameron Rd I A U S T IN . TEXAS 78752 Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes a SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors ★ LEATHER SALE ★ Various Kinds, colors — 50c per loot Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin. Texa* 478-9309 four B y The Associated Press B U F F A L O , N .Y .—Calvin H ill scored touchdowns, his longest from three yards out, as the D allas Cowboys outfought the determined Buffalo Bills Sunday in their National Football League season opener, 49-37. The Cowboys, winner of all six of their preseason games, needed a 21-point second quarter to take the lead for keeps after twice trailing Buffalo, 14-7 and 24-21, before the halftime. D allas was in front at that point, 28-24. Veteran Craig Morton, who got the nod over scrambling Roger Staubach at quarterback, utilized his ground game on a rain-soaked field to wear down the Bills. H ill, who scored from two and three yards out and twice from the one-yard line, bulled his way repeatedly through the Buffalo line, grinding out 84 yards in 22 carries. ST. LO U IS—The Washington Redskins, capitalizing on four interceptions and three fumble recoveries, rallied from a 10-7 half-time deficit Sunday and upset the St. L/iuis Cardinals 24- in Tile National Football 17 j League. The Back '4 0 Weekday Special MON. THRU THURS. 16 sr- " T-BONE SERVED W IT H LARG E C O M BIN A TIO N SALAD BAKED POTATO HO T BREAD q 5 (Regular Menu Price $4.25) THE BACK '40 — 501 E. 5th Ifs the real thing. Coke. Real life calls for real taste. For the taste of your life—Coca-Cola. intermission and flashed the form which earned him All-America honors at Stanford in rallying the Patriots. G R E E N B A Y , W IS .-F ran T a r k e n t o n threw touchdown passes of six. 39 and 81 yards to Dick Houston and the New York Giants two fumbles in the Green Bay end zone for two other scores Sunday, then held off a furious Packer comeback for a 42-40 National Football League victory. recovered The Giants built up a 42-24 lead, only to see rookie quar­ terback, Scott Hunter direct the Packers to a 19-yard touchdown run by Donny Anderson and pass 18 yards to Carroll Dale for another touchdown in the fourth quarter. The Packers made it 42-40 when Doug H art tackled Giant punter Tom Blanchard in the end zone with 2:38 left. I No Match I I John New-com be and Tony I I Roche have been forced to I their benefit match | | cancel § scheduled for Thursday night I I in Gregory Gym because of J | injuries. The match was in I I connection with the 1971 I lf U n i t e d Cerebral Palsy I J campaign. in his N e w c o m b e strained a I | muscle right knee | | Wednesday in a doubles at I I the U.S. Open, and Roche is I | e x p e r i e n c i n g shoulder | I trouble. I Newcombe was told by § g doctors Thursday not to walk I I on the knee for four to six I I weeks while Roche is I I scheduled for surgery. | Impressionist David Fry is I | still on the program and will | | perform Thursday night. Persons who have already | J I purchased tho f§ tickets | Newcombe-Roche m a t c h ! I should send their tickets in J self-addressed J stamped, | a | envelope tile Cerebral I to I Palsy office for a refund. for Tile Packers took over on a punt following the safety and drove to the New York 36 with 1:14 left, but linebacker Jim Files the Giants’ victory by saved intercepting a Hunter pass. B A L T IM O R E — Baltim ore’s defending Super Bowl champs, in preseason play, lacklustre blanked the New York Jets 22-0 with a stifling defense Sunday as Norm Bulaich ran for 198 yards in the National Football League opener. CHICAGO—Tile Chicago Bears converted two fumbles by Warren Bankston into touchdowns during the rain with four minutes left in tho game and pulled out a 17-15 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday in a National Football league opener. Until the surprise ending, the ineptness of th<> Bears was in­ term ittently jeered by a crowd of 55,049. D E N Y E R —M iam i's Bob Griese hit Paul W arfield on a 31-vard touchdown pass with 2:30 left and the Dolphins salvaged a 10-10 tie with tho Denver Broncos in a National Football League opener before a record crowd of 51,200 Sunday. ATLANTA, GA.—Bob B erry rifled two touchdown passes to rookie Ken Burrow and Atlanta’s mighty defense shackled San Francisco with in­ terceptions and fumble recoveries as the Falcons ups^t in a National the 49ers 20-17 Football league opener Sunday. four pass three record C IN C IN N A TI—V irg il C a r t e r fired three touehdow-n passes, one a 90-yard bomb for a Cincinnati tile club B e n g a l s s l a m m e d t h e Philadelphia Eagles, 37-14, in a National Football League season opener. Sunday as SAN D IE G O —Running back Mike G arrett rambled 26 yards for a touchdown late in the fourth quarter Sunday to pace the San a 21-14 Diego Chargers National Football League season opening victory over his former teammates, the Kansas Q ty Chiefs. to Specializing in hair • hap! g and condifion’ng techniques that comp'ement the nature of each individual's hair. THE HAIRCUT STORE 2819 San Jacinto 477-0423 Free Consultation on what can be done to allow your hair to be itself and free you from worrying with it. Natural-looking hair designs for Fveryon M argaret Nunley, owner iiminieiiiimniinfiuniuiiuiUHiHinmiiiuiimiiHumiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiMiiiNiiiiHiiiiqiiimiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimniiiiiiiimiimjiiiiiinmiiiiumifnffnir Grid Scores By th e A ssociated P r e s t E a s t Bo sto n College 17, T e m p le 3 C o ast G u ard 28. R e n s s e la e r 27 C olgate 27, Bo sto n U n iv .21 C u r r y College 16, M a in e M a ritim e 7 D elaw are 39, G e tty sb u rg Col. 7 L a fa y e t t e 13, R u tg e rs I M a r y la n d State 20, H o w a rd U n iv . 7 M assach u se tts 13. M a in 0 M id d le b ury 33, B a te s College 7 N o rth e a ste rn 30, Rhode island 22 P e n n S la te 56, N a v y 3 S tan fo rd 38. A rm y 3 S y ra c u s e 20, W lseo n sin g V e rm o n t 20. C o nn ecticu t 20 South ssippi 6 B a r b a r a T ennessee 48. C a l I ' S A la b a m a 42. South M issi Auburn 60. C h attano o g a 7 D uke 28. South C a ro lin a 12 F lo rid a S tate 20. M ia m i, F la . G e o rg ia 17, T u la n e 7 G e o rg ia T e ch IO. M ich ig a n State n L o u is ia n a S tate 37. T e x a s A & M 0 M a ry la n d 35. No. C a ro lin a St. 7 M ississip p i 49. M e m p h is State 21 M ississip p i st. 13. F lo rid a IO S n n ifo rd U n iv. 7. C arson-N ew m an 0 T ennessee 48. C al. U . S. B a r b a r a 17 V ir g in ia M ilit a r y 27, D avidson Col. W a k e F o re s t 20, V irg in ia T e ch 9 W o ffo rd 23, L e n o ir R h y n e 9 Midwest B o w lin g G reen 20. Ohio 19 C in cin n ati 42, K e n t S tate 20 D e P a u w U n iv . 24. A lb ion € D ra k e U n iv . 34, A bilene 17 In d ia n a 26, K e n tu ck y 8 Io w a S ta te 24. Id ah o 7 K a n s a s 22. B a y lo r 0 K a n s a s St. U n iv 19, T u ls a 10 L a w re n c e U n iv . 31. K n o x C ollege 7 IO, D a k o ta S U > M a n k a to S ta te 0 M ic h ig a n 56, V irg in ia 0 M o n ta n a 27, N orth D ak o ta 14 N e b ra s k a 35, M in n eso ta 7 N o rth C a ro lin a 27, N otre D a m e 50, N o rth w e ste rn 7 O k lah o m a 30. South M eth od ist 0 Illin o is 0 s>oiil" western A rkan sas 31. O klah o m a S tate 10 N ew M ex ico 13. T e x a s T e c h IO So u th e rn C al. 24. R ic e 0 F a r W est A ir F o rc e 7. M issouri 6 A rizo n a 39. W ashington S tate 38 Arizona State is. Houston U n iv . 17 B rin g h a m Y oung 54, Colo. S tate U n iv. 14 C a lifo rn ia 20, W e st V ir g in ia IO C olorado 56. W yo m in g 13 F re sn o S tate 14. San Jo s e S ta te T Oregon 36, U ta h 29 O regon S ta te 33. io w a 19 S a n F ra n c is c o S tate 35, San F r a n ­ c is c o L - T e x a s 28, U C L A IO U tah S tate 34. N e w M ex ico State 0 \\ ashlngton 38. P u rd u e 35 Sou thern C alif. 24, R ic e 0 Short Gains Votes For Dallas Switch BOSTON (A P )—The American been called in Boston, where League ow'nors are scheduled to meet in Boston Tuesday amid league President Joe Cronin ha* his office, to discuss the future indications they’ll give Bob Short of Short and the Senators. the necessary votes to move the W a s h i n g t o n Evening Star, which reported the scheduling of the meeting before an American league source confirmed it, said there is “ apparently little hope for the Senators to remain in Washington. . . ” The newspaper said Short has established credit with two Dallas banks and has never taken seriously any offei's to purchase the club, from Joseph Danzansky, president of the Washington Board of Trade, who reportedly offered about $9.5 m illion the amount Short paid for the club in 1968. including one Washington Senators to Dallas- Fo rt Worth—if he asks for them. Short would need nine of the 12 votes, including his own, and The Associated Press has learned he has them. Tile controversial owner in­ dicated Saturday, however, he might not make the request to switch locations, adding he might not be in the baseball business by the end of the meeting. “ I may be the owner when the meeting begins, but probably not when it ends,” Short said in a telephone rfis interview Minneapolis home. from to confirm published Asked reports lie would not ask for permission to move the team, Short said: ‘‘Anything us possible, but I don’t think I w ill ask.” Tile 10:30 a.m. meeting has H A V IN G A PARTY? NEED A BARTENDER? C A LL 478-7488 Bradley School Of Bartending - L O B B Y SU ITE— C O M M O D O RE PERRY BLDG. B ill Kilm er, subbing for injured Sonny Jurgensen. passed 31 yards to Je rry Smith and Chris Ham­ burger scored on a 16-yard fumble recovery return in the third quarter to spark the Red­ skin comeback. It marked a successful debut for Washington Coach George Allen, who was fired at the end of last season by the Los Angeles Rams. N E W O R LEA N S—Rookie quarterback Archie Manning sprinted around left end into the end zone on the last play of the game here Sunday to give the New Orleans Saints a 24-20 upset victor}- over the Los Angeles Ram s before 70.915 opening day fans. line Saints’ 33-yard Tile winning drive started at the as Manning completed three passes for 42 yards. A key play was an interference call on Rani cornerback Jim Nettles in tho end zone with 23 seconds to play, giving the Saints a first down at the Ram one. On the third down. Manning took the ball and sped for the Ram goal line, just squeezing the length of his body betwreen two the gun Ram defenders as sounded. FO XBO RO , M ASS.— Heisman Trophy winner Jim Plunkett made a spectacular National Football League debut with a pair of second half touchdown passes and the New England Patriots the Oakland Raiders 20-6 Sunday. upset Oakland managed to get a sputtering attack in gear against the Patriots’ tough defense late in the first half and took a 6-0 lead on Pete Banaszak’s four- yard touchdown run. Then Plunkett, who threw- only four two in’ the periods, took charge after the times first 816 W . 23rd IN H ARDIN NORTH I* SALE M ON.-TUES.-WED. SEPT. 20-21-22 I I STYLE" HAIR SPRAY REG. 99c 2 $1 VASELINE'S 6 oz. ‘INTENSIVE CARE’ LOTION GILLETTE STAINLESS b l a d e s REG. 89c B's 2 90 mm CANTER FOR ASIAN STUDIES PRESENTS: REG. 79c U M H PATHER PANCHAL A classic film of India by India's greatest director SATYAJIT RAY plus SATYAJIT RAY” 5 0 a film portrait W D G S I O ® 816 W . 23rd TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 7 and 9 p.m. BATTS AUDITORIUM J r a i r a i r e i P l r a l n a i r a i P i r a i r a E r a i m i m i P i r g •Coct Co)*- and Co**.' t r t regi»t*r*d ttadt-mttk l wh.ch Identity lh * t im . prix)ucl ol rh* Coca-Con Company. _ * ^ t,e? _ nnder an,hor,1>’ af Lfc* Cocoft-fola Company bys Austin Cepa-Cala Battling Company HURRY . . . HURRY . . . PICK UP YOUR I D T I U A U T H S YEARBOOK They Are Being Handed Out N O W In JOURNALISM BUILDING-Room 107 UT orange ID card for please bring your identi­ fication th e CACTUS y e a rb o o k FOUR FAMOUS N O O N E R SPECIALS! 950 This price good ONLY: M W F & T T S S try our famous On Wednesday . . . E n c h ila d a D in n e r fo r o nly 9001 Like Mama, like Son. . .True Mexican 5012 Burnet Road (Near W. 49th.) a I E a a a a I a I el I Page 8 Monday, September 20, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN A n o t h e r p u b lic a tio n o f H S J T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L IC A T IO N S . IN C . G lia] EJ E l EJ EJ GJE) E l EJ EJ tai EJ EJ FREE DANCE TONIGHT Benefit for GAY LIBERATION COURT CASE Monday 9:00 P.M. BEER 25c PEA R L STREET W A R E H O U S E 18th and Lavaca Donations Accepted ^■ ju tstam fin g new Penguins now at your campus bookstore THE NON-MEDICAL USE OF DRUGS: Interim Report of the Canadian Government Commission of Inquiry. A very human survey of today's drug scene in ail its aspects. C o n sid e rs a lc o h o l and to b a c c o as w e ll as m a rihuana , hashish, LSD, heroin, and ‘‘speed,” and concludes with some surprising recommendations. $1.65 THE SACRED PIPE: Black Elk’s Account of the Seven Rites of the Oglala Sioux. Recorded and edited by J o ­ seph Epes Brown. The ancient religion of the Sioux Indians as disclosed by the only qualified priest still alive when this material was gathered. Shows how the Sioux have come to terms with God, nature, and their fellow men. $1.45 BORN IN TIB E T . C hdgyam T rungpa as to ld to Esm e C ram er R oberts. With a fo rew ord by M arco P allis. The early life and escape from the Chinese communists of a young tulku of Tibet. His story reveals a deep Buddhist compassion and spirituality. $1.95 HAVANA JOURNAL. Andrew Salkey. A firsthand account — by a Jamaican novelist — of the effects of the revolu­ tio n in C uba on bureaucrats, m erchants, inte lle ctua ls housewives, and peasants. $1.65 AID AS IMPERIALISM. Teresa Hayter. A highly controver­ sial critique of the role of foreign aid in Latin America. $1.45 AGONY AT EASTER. Thomas M. Coffey. A m inute-by- report on the bizarre and tragicom ic events of the 1916 Irish uprising. $1.65 THE CHICANOS: Mexican American Voices. Edited by Edward W. Ludwig and James Santibanez. An anthology of writings by and about Mexican Americans. $1.95 PENGUIN BOOKS INC 7II0 Ambassador Rd.- Baltimore. Md 2I207 Western Clings to ’Old Style Peek and Decky, and their v a r i o u s confrontations with gunmen hired by Gregory. The narrative line is interesting enough, and the dialogue is not too bad, but the performances are under par. Some of the ac­ tors shout their lines and overdo their gestures, and Peck, though he has a few good moments, is is however, a erratic. There pleasant surprise in the pudgy, little form of Dawn Lyn as Decky. She is charming without being saccharin, and it is to the credit of director Hathaway that her relationship with Peck is developed with a minimum of sentimentality. The genre of the Western has been on the wane for a number of years. In efforts to keep it alive, film makers have made it more violent, changed the form I it. Some and tried to update excellent resulted films have ( “ The W ild Bunch,” “ McCabe and M rs. M iller” ) and some real b o m b s ("D o c” ). However, Hathaway has stuck to the style of storytelling that has kept him working since 1933. There is not much them atically at work here, a few ideas are introduced but then abandoned, but that is not this director’s concern. He is out to tell an interesting story in a straight-forward s t y l e , with plenty of a action background of beautiful scenery. Fo r the most part he has suc­ ceeded. The question the view er’s mind is if this is w h a t; you want to see. against in LAST 2 DAYS Ooen 5:45 • Feat. 6-8-9:50 PRODUCTIONS WALT DISNEY Scandalous ■JOHN i i (Sj«® TTOMCtXOr Pl *1971 Wa‘t Disney actions Starts WEDNESDAY! p a r a m o u n t PICTURES PRESENTS // friends' TECHNICOLOR’’ A PARAMOUNT PICTURE •SB* J I] By DAVID STEKOLL Amusements Associate What happened when one of the rock concerts ever worst-run p r o d u c e d , with the worst e q u i p m e n t imaginable, was viewed by a rude and hostile audience? It was a tremendous success! The Chuck Berry con­ cert at Municipal Auditorium Friday night, presented by the Cultural Entertainm ent Com­ mittee, somehow combined the i n c o n g r u o u s elements that pointed to a flop and ended with an aroused, clapping, dancing th' in a trained posit.on Be (.ire fu l h gh Id put you some xcrx ! n e I Y i ' iii 'i ■ ' ■ T A I K l 'n Y things ■ .1. . do* sn t get x hi In to nile e r e . y I at little I j our m outh C I M I N T r i l l y d ' o r y e m • ,■ ■ w e ll ad vised to think before acting Y ai xx m i l d b e is finite unstable C A M I It A ’ n turn- out *• U ii ’ ■ nim b y to hold •• xx.'ii e a u ii ! i/ a rd o rs great ” , b l i t - “ P i lo ml;' e x / . l o F v a i i r Jo.: ‘*t i \ es A r r y o u re a lly being as a ltru is tic as \ nu (Jib e r s m a y see through P i - x o V I R G O o f " t h e p. - a b i l i t y P a r t i c u l a r l y S l a y a l e r t f r f r o m t " l a y . ' O ' i d e e , I '' ii x - h a ' V e e l .pl. OI - r d . b u t y o u M l t ; < \ r a n 't find an oppressor. M a yb e you a n kidding :■ ourself lf St O R P IO things hax en t been w o rk in g too xx ell lately, m aybe you should some new directions, 'i bink t a ref ii nj-. try S X C I T T A R H s Y ou haxe enthusiasm far beyond a no rm al and energy M on day M ake good use of it. < \ P K K G K N Y o u are fu ll of sm iles today. Obserxe ( b ee ry words and the good it can return you. A Q I A R It s D on’t allow some p etty an n o yan ce to ruin y o u r day You a re should be thin kin g lo ftie r thoughts ab o ve and this P W » Y o u are m ore resolute and full of d irectio n than you haxe been in a Is the day to m ake progress long tim e T o d ay - N I I K I \ Vt R E N C K 10 p.m . A ll stations news 10:30 p rn. 4. 6, 42 To nig ht Show 5. 7 M e rv G riffin IO I/ ix e A m e rican S ty le (.'arian Show P la tin u m H ig h S ch o o l" 11:30 p oi. 24 Jim 12 Moxie IO Xxx night Zone M id n ig h t 7 N e w s 5 P a s to r's S tu d y THE HUNGRY HORSE 477-0432 1809 SAN JA C IN T O I-illest In Food A E n te rta in m e n t JO IN US FOR LUN C H TODAY FREL BEER, COKE, 7-UP, OR ICED TEA W ITH G IG A N T IC LU N C H W IT H THIS AD. TONNE MOON PIE FREE RFG OF BEFR TO BE GIVEN A W A Y B EG IN N IN G AT 8:30. HAPPY HOUR 3-6 $ 1.00 Pitcher .25 Glass “ Shoot-Out;” starring Gregory Peck; produced by H al B . W allis; by Henry Hathaway; at the State. directed By JA M E S S T A N LE Y Amusements Assistant Your reaction to “ Shoot-Out” w ill be determined, for the most part, by your feelings about Westerns in general. If you like them, as I do, you w ill probably enjoy this one; if you don’t, there is nothing here to change your mind. The plot incorporates two basic Acclaimed Ballet Film Scheduled for Tonight T h e highly-acclaimed film ballet of ‘“Romeo and Ju lie t” w ill be shown at 8 p.m. Monday only free to the public in Moody Hall at St. Edw ard’s University. Raul Czinner directed and produced the film as a tribute to the 1965 o f L o n d o n Shakespeare’s ‘ ‘ R o m e o and Ju lie t” ballet. p r e m i e r e story lines; the tale of revenge, and the badman forced to care for a child. Gregory Peck plays Clay Lomax, a bank robber finishing up a seven-year prison term. His partner in the robbery, played by Jam es Gregory, shot him in the back during the holdup and took the money, leaving him to face the law alone. Peck, of course, is out to even the score, but before he can go anywhere, he needs the money his cid girlfriend has been holding for him. She dies on the train from Kansas City, and he is left to take care of her 6-year- old daughter, Decky. The rest of the film focuses on their journey, shifting back and forth between the growing relationship between T R A N S 'ArT E X A S I 56/11 N l»marBlvrf • U U I1 0 OPEN 7:15 W ILLA RD 8:15 & 12:00 BARNES I R O K G N IRE B R U C E D A V ID SO N ELSA* LANCASTER DO NOT SEE A L O N E Box Offic e Open 7:15 B ru ce D avis on Sondr a Lock e " W I L L A R D ” M ichae l Caine Cliff R ob erts on “ TOO L A TE T H E H E R O ” G in g er Robert* R a y Millard “ QUICK L E T S GE T M A R R I E D " Pl us “ SHOTGUN' W E D D I N G ” Cameron lid. at 183 SH O W T O W N U.S.A. (GPI TWIN 4 5 4 -6 4 4 4 R o c k Hudson Angie Dickson “ PR E T T Y MAIDS ALL IN A ROW” B ru ce D avis on T H E ST R A W B E R R Y S T A T E M E N T " (RI I T i It I f f G in ger Roger* R a y Millard "QI U K L E T S G E T M A R R I E D " Plus “ SH O TG U N W E D D I N G ” (GPI LO N G H O RN Putman at 183 N. 454-3880 B ru ce D avis on Sondr a Locke “ W I L L A R D ” M icha el Caine Cliff R oh erts on “ TOO L ATE T H E HE R O " (GF) Where your nightmares end... H i l l i n g ® begins. 10:22 COLOR r n H ap p en ed ' To Aunt Alice?' Color C RC G E R A L D IN E P A G E DEPARTMENT of R-T-F 35 mm I I of Austin MOTHER EARTH CORNER 10th & N. LAMAR AN EXPERIENCE IN SIGHT & SOUND BEYOND THE WILDEST IMAGINATION! M ONDAY — W O M EN FREE! GUYS 50c TUESDAY — Drink and Drown — $3 Guys, $2 Girls Beer Free All Night. Mi xed Dri nks 55c — No C over W EDNESDAY — Anfi i THURSDAY -— Winn K ight $3 Guys $2 G rls ZCo•c CKT - Free W ir e All Niqht, M'xed Drinks 55c FRIDAY & SATURDAY -— $1.50 Cover SUNDAY — C o n c e r t N ght with 'ive groups — mixed drinks 70c (Get it on Good Time For All) OPEN FOR LUNCH MOTHER'S BEER GARDEN OPEN FROM 11:30 A.M. TILL - CINEMATEXASFALL 1971 presen Is Tuesday, September 21, 1971 "LE CORBEAU99 (1943) (TH E R A V E N ) in French with English sub-titles Directed by Henri-Georges Clouzot Plus short films bv Len Lye. Shows at 6A0 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. JESTER CEN TER A U D ITO RIU M Season Ticket $7.00 Admission $.75 COMING WEDNESDAY W R O N G es O X JES T E R A U D IT O R IU M / 6:30, 8:40, 10:50 A D M IS S IO N O N L Y 50c T H E S I D E S H O W TONIGHT! SHELTER RECORDS RECORDING ARTIST WILLIS ALAN RAMSEY COMING! THURS. - FRI. - SAT. RUSTY WEIR f j j The Saxon P u b j ^ T 38th & Interregional 454-8115 Our castle is your home! It will feel like home when you are royally treated to a special meal this week. Mon., Tues, and Wed. Just clip this ad and when you buy a m e a l. . . you get an equally priced meal 12 price! Welcome home. RESTAURANT a royal deal . . buy I meal — . get the next meal Vi price • 6801 BURNET ROAD • DIAL 454-2585 • Clip this ad QUEEN CAPRI THEATER 472-0442 OPEN 11:00 A.M. ’TIL? 521 E. 6th OPEN SUN. 1:00 P.M. ’TIL? UNDER N E W M A N A G EM EN T C ALL FOR M OVIE TITLE — W E C H A N G E MOVIES EVERY FRIDAY a BEST X-RATED MOVIES IN TOWN WITH THIS COUPON — 50c off Regular Admission 100% AIR CONDITIONED NO O NE UNDER 18 ADMITTED A - K A I t U A L I U L I M U V I c b RITZ ARTS C O NTINUO US SH O W IN G S 12 NOON TILL - 11:45 P.M. SHOWING NOT BES T, R I T ALSO THE f ONLY THE «. n B IG G E S T STAG • F IL M S A U ST IN IP M M IN- % ^af < z l l 'THE CO M IN G DOZEN" MIN. 35 MM ALSO THE GOOD, THE BAD, AN D THE UN-UGLY" "H A P P Y H O U R " DAILY 5 - 1 P.M. — S2.00 ADM. W IT H THIS C O U PO N — $50 OFF REGULAR A DM ISSION NOT G O O D D URING "H A PPY H O U R " NO O N E U N D E R 18 A D M IT T E D 320 E. SIXTH 478-0475 STUDIO IV 222 East 6th 472-0436 TWO SCREENS ALL MOVIES RATED X PUSHER'S REVENGE" AND HORN OF PLENTY 16 mm VIRGIN'S DELIGHT PLUS WEDNESDAY IS STUDENT DAY: ALL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT LD. Joseph £ Living present* a Mika Nichols Film slatting Jack Nicholson • Candies Bergen; I I “Carnal Knowledge' is brilliant A feast of a film!” — Judith Crist, N. Y. Magazine | Mike Nichols, Jack Nicholson, Candice Bergen, i ^ Arthur Garfunkel, Ann-Margret anni Feiffer. — Carnal Knowledge. Jules [r ] An Avco Embassy Picture Designer Richard Sylbert ■ Written by Jules Feeler • Executive Producer Joseph E. Levme JTRA N S-_ 9 A N S ★ T E X A S iw m u nrx 12200 Hancock Drive—453-6641 OPEN 1:45 • FEAT.: 2-4-6-8-10 PASS LIST SUSPENDED REDUCED PRICES TILL 6:15 7th GREAT W EEK T A H “ W T R A N S -A-T E X A S U R N E T V'lufe/n 6400 Burnet Road — 465-6933 OPEN AT 7:15 OUTSIDE PATIO AND PLAYGRO UND CO LO R T.V. ROOM Debbie REYNOLDS DENNIS WEAVER 8:15 & 11:00 PLUS "THUNDER ROAD", ROBERT •Y/ITTFR w helen" nj i or b. lint UU' United A rtists 1 1 L L L ! I 9:29 T H i t ; S E h : : tpa n s+ teXAs t e m l H l l v J l l ll l l M ITCHUM -------- DOUBLE FEATURE ENDS TODAY ■ 1423 W. Ben White Blvd 442 2333 O. cN 6 , 0 ‘. • $|,00 TIL 6:20 W EEK DAYS S H O W N AT 8 P.M. ONLY THAN5»Tm i ! S H O W N AT 6:20 AND 9:45 2224 Gmtem St—477 1SU OPEN 1:45 • $1.50 TIL 5 P.M. Feat.: 2-4-6-8-10 • LAST 2 DAYS Join the S. REC.?!* * SO C IE T Y F O R THE P A R E N T S OF “ T A K IN G O F F A MILOS FORMAN FILM A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • IN COLOR $1.00 'TIL 2:15 1:05 - 2:50 - 4:35 6:20 - 8:10 - 10:00 CHARLTON HESTON m O M C G h MNtflSlCN* TTCHNICOKT MAN TROM WARNER EROS. * KINNEY LEISURE SERVICE IM j $1.00 'TIL 2:15 1:40-3:20-5:00 6-40 - 8:20 - 10:00 BREQORY PECK .. HAL WALUS SH O O T P U T A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR* [GPlC5> J O H N P H ILIP L A W DO N STRO UD VARSITY I- rn • $1.00 'TIL 2:15 • 2:10-4:00-5:50 7:40-9:30 FROM THE N A T L BEST SELLER BY I t-t"1 A a a | n a i IC H CR ! In everyone’s life there’s a SUM M ER O F ’42 TJ Lir." j trcr> Warner Bros A K.nney Leisure Service $1.00 'TIL 6:15 PATTON 7:20 C ASSIDY 5:20 - 10:05 / - HELD OVER rn (iiioiuii: KAUL LL SP O T T / H ALTOM j i n r i w r o i v " H H H M E Bf a1 ACADEMY ■ B i AWABDSitemMi ■ M B H H B M M B I WCLUOHMS b e s t s o n g BUTCH CASSIDY ANO THE SUNDANCE KID I Monday, September 20, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* Ra/n ro//s /o Dampen Worshipers X * CSII o u i I I I 1‘ K K t Z . A d e v o te e in c f Kundalini Y o g a w hite) and a friend w atch the U n ite d S p irit D ay c e le b ra tio n at W o o ld r id g e Park Su n d a y (dressed a fte rn o o n . T h e festivitie s d re w m em bers from several religious group s to g e th e r te m p t to c re a te spiritual unity. in an a t ­ Park Celebration H eld Spirit R\ RANA S H IE L D S News Assistant United by a common bond, “ the sp rit of God.” a wide variety of religious groups gathered in Wooldridge Park Saturday to celebrate Unity of Spirit Day. Stating "a lot of painful things are happening in Austin,” a Hari Krishna devotee explained they could bo solved “ only if we who purport to love a common spirit come together.” in part taking Among the approximately 200 people the festivities and discussions were members of the liberal Roman Catholic Faith, Hari Krishna, N i c h r e u Shoshu Buddhism, Ananda Marga Yoga Society, Kundalini Yoga and the Hillel Foundation. In an attempt to “ create a sp.ritual atmosphere you can feel,” Hari Krishna began the festivities with a ceremony called the Aoritka. The white pavilion in the center of the park was converted into an altar with strips of read and gold cloth surrounding brightly odored portraits. A large pain­ ting was suspended the from beams by magenta ribbons. Chanting and dancing about the altar to the clapping of the crowd and beat of the bongo, the Hari Krishna’s offered food to “ the supreme lord.” The other groups then came forth to put across their message for The spiritual happiness. mediums were varied, some sang a n d others danced while preferred the verbal method of communication. A member of Ananda Marga A oga led the crowd in a spirited dance called Sufi. The crowd formed a joined hands and chanted while rhth- large circle, D IR E C T ACTION will meet at in the 7 :30 p.m. Monday in the Faculty Staff Lounge Union to discuss nonviolence and its relationship to education. Building O R B I T A L M E C H A N I C S S E M IN A R w ill meet at 3 p.m. in Engineering T^ab Tuesday Joerg B u i l d i n g 113. Dr. on Waldvogel w ill “ Known the Solutions Gravitational Problem of N- Bodies.” speak of U N D E R G R A D U A T E R E S E A R C H G R A N T S may be applied for from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. this week in Union Building 321. til* D r a g ’ lint l i m n Next to Co-Op jeu Lit!j- D esigners Opinions V ary I^ ^ rs unusual " H Others React to Attica positive reform be instituted.” Best did not agree with the “ I this Young Republicans’ stand. think Rockefeller handled situation very rashly,” he said. “ The prisoners had legitimate complaints, and unfortunately, they had to resort to violence to realize anyone something was wrong,” he said. get to Best had obtained about 2.000 signatures on his petition by Friday and said he planned to continue until Tuesday. signings the Copies of the petition will be sent to state and national figures, said Best. “ If this kind of petition response is picked up, something will definitely happen,” he added. C ___________ - I i . . W i . . - - C - . l ____ - - J C — I________ I F r a te r n ity a n d S o r o r ity M u g s — P o t t e r y — V a s e s —» — E m b o sse d H a n d c r a f t e d Iron — D e c o p a g u e W a l l P la q u e s — S c e n te d C a n d le s from all o v e r the w o rld — H a n g in g A s h tra y s — W i c k e r F u rn itu re — In ce n se — M o b ile s — W i n d C h im e s — M o u n te d C o lo r P h o to g r a p h s — P la s tic F lo w e rs — L a m p s — G i f t C a r d s — B a m b o o C u r t a in s — D e c a ls and P a tc h e s — B e a n b a g C h a ir s — C a r d b o a d F u rn itu re — W a t e r Beds and F ra m e s — J e w e lr y — L e a t h e r — S ilv e r . P n l l o P t . __ _ CCP U I SIT E D E C O R A T O R ITEMS FO R EVERY D E C O R I T E X A S E m m a I (I 'Arm 4(U NEW WORLD IMPORTS P h o n e 472-6440 1602 B a rto n S p rin g s S u n d a y 12-6 M c n .- F ri. IO a.rn.-9 p .m . Local s, YR'. Bv ANTHONY STA STN Y On the c a m p u s , Although the smoke has settled from tho riots at Attica State Prison, controversy has reached as far as the University. University Republicans have supported Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's stand _ while B ill Best, a 28-year-old graduate student, hr s protested by a “ rash” petition what he calls action by the New York governor. The University Republicans passed a resolut n in support of Rockefeller at a meeting Thur­ sday. "the T H E R ESO LU TIO N also ex­ tends condolences to the families of the slain hostages and con­ demns attempted mar- tyrization of the instigators of the riots by certain University of Texas groups.” it for a presidential com­ calls mission investigate prison conditions in the United States. In addition, to “ Anytime 40 or so people are killed, it is a sad occasion,” said Gary Metcalfe, president of the University Young Republicans. “ But it is hard to say that the outcome would not have been the same if Gov. Rockefeller had delayed action. R E S T ’S PR O T EST came in the form of a petition to Atty. Gen. that John Mitchell demanding “ an thorough immediate and investigation of the penal system, nationwide, bp conducted and JEAN BENARD RISHI University May Get Groups Library A proposal to start an organizational library in the first floor reading room of the Union Building was made Thursday by Gary Tolland, Texas Union Board president. The proposed library would allow all student organizations to have space for any materials they would like available for use by the student body. Boh Amsler, president of Ecology Action, first initiated the idea of such a library because he felt his organization needed a central place to display and disseminate their materials on ecology. After talking with Tolland, both agreed other student organizations would be equally well-served by the library. Holland has sent questionnaires to more than 300 student organizations to get their responses on starting the library. “ Of the responses to the questionnaires I ’ve received so far, there has heen a strong reaction in favor of starting the library,” Holland said. F olland said he plans to wait about IO davs to see if responses to the questionnaire make further action on the proposed library feasible. Holland explained many of the student organizations feel they do not have on0Ugh office space in the Union Building to meet their needs. 2 4 0 4 q u a .d a l:u .p & . E A R L Y F A L L SALE DRESSES SPORTSWEAR N O W D F F of God mically nodding their heads. In the meantime, a few couples in the center whirled their partners increasing around with momentum while staring into each other s eyes. The dance was completed when the couples were too dizzy to spin. an The activities concluded when, after all the groups had per­ formed cr spok n, a vegetarian feast. was served of Centre du European Y O G A returning to Austin fo r I week Y o g a Sem inar fo r info: 477-3206 SP K IA U 2 door File $ 1 0 9 5 B A R K E R OFFICE FURNITURE 408 C O N G R E S S P A R K A T R E A R W H IL E S H O P P IN G USE YOUR BA N KA M EH I CA r»0 OR MASTER CHARGE STUDENTS? H ere’s the EA SY W a y to Order Your Own . . . 1972 CACTUS Y E A R B O O K It s like special ordering" a whole year's supply of memories in advance! The Cactus, The University of Texas at Austin yearbook, will contain reflections and highlights of all the big activities of the coming academ ic year . . . athletic events, G reek activities, special features, pictures of all your friends . . . and more . . . much, much more! SIMPLY FILL OUT THE ORDER BLANK BELOW, PLUS A CHECK FOR $7.88 AND MAIL IT TODAY! ORDER ONE NOW! Texas Student Publications, Inc. P. O . Box D Austin, Texas 78712 Enclosed is my check for $7.88 (inclu. tax). Please enter my subscription for the $ CACTUS f0„ 1972 IN D IA A S S O C I A T I O N P R E S E N T S RUMA DEVI a well known Indian d a n c e r 8:00 P.M. • TUESDAY • SEPT. 21 UN IO N AUD. A D M ISSIO N $1.50 THE NET P R O C E E D S W I L L EE DO N A TE D FOP. TH E RELIEF OF R E F U G E E S F R O M BfcNGLA DESH ( E. B E N G A L ) . FOOTBALL WIDOWS: ARISE! r v_ a W E ’VE GOT S O M E ­ THING SPECIAL JUST FOR YOU EVERY M O N ­ DAY NIGHT AT EVERY I N T E R S T A T E ABC THEATRE! M O N D A Y NIGHTS WkW INTERSTATE .THE ATRES v fOOTBALL W ID O W U - Il o t U PA R A M O U N T — STATE VARSITY — AUSTIN E R R O R I T E " N Y L O N T Y P IN G R IB B O N - CO RR ECT IO N R IB BO N FOR A LL M A C H I N E S H A V I N G R E D / B L A C K R I B B O N S E L E C T I O N E R R O R IT E ™ Is a quality nylon typewriter ribbon featuring a built-in error corrector. E R R O R IT E ™ eliminates the need to purchase ribbon and correction aids separately. E R R O R IT E ™ is always in position to make quick, clean corrections... no more fussing with separate paper or fluid correctors. P urch ase E R R O R IT E ™ at your bo ok store. Sold Exclusively J I at College and University Book Stores Page IO Monday, September 20, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN FILMQN PRO CESS CORP., 653 659 Eleventh Avenue, Hew york, N.Y. 10036 Department Stores W I / Your m slip hr 2 Hay discount Men s & Boys’ Wear BOYS VAN CORT T-Shirts and Ladies’ Wear . , Fabrics—Accessories LADIES 100% NYLON FALL FASHION Tools-H ardw are BLACK & DECKER Paint Department GLIDDEN Corduroy Flinch Drill Redwood Stain S T E C , AL G R O U P Girls’ Wear GIRLS OR BOYS 100% NYLON / \ Y Hosiery—Accessories SEAMLESS STRETCH Jackets S o m p L in ed , S o r r n W i t h T u c L w a v H o o d - . 3 - 1 0 . OUR REG. 2.99 Nylons P e t i t e . A v e r a g e , T a l l . A s s o r t e d S h a d e s OUR REG. 67c 3 - r LIMIT 3 PAIRS Fam ily Footwear LADIES Tennis Shoes OUR REG. 1.48 75‘j^ • WHITE • BLACK • N A V Y Infants’ & Jr. Boys Receiving Blankets OO GUR REG. 1.37 LIMIT I PKG. Auto Specials STP Oil Treatment OUR REG. 89c 69 LIMIT 2 12" Portable 5997 ONLY 6 TO SELL • 2 Thursday • 2 Friday • 2 Saturday Floor Covering Sport G oods-C am era Shop REMINGTON LONG RIFLE 22 Rifle Shells OU REG. 84c Drug Department Miss Breck HAIR SPRAY Pictures & Mirrors FULL LENGTH Door Mirrors W ood Framed, Mounting Hardware 77 * Ru9s y LIMIT TWO OUR REGULAR 9.99 a # # LIM IT 5 BOXES PER C U ST O M ER BOX OF 50 SHELLS Electronic Shop Home Accessories Jewelry Department LIMIT TW O Toy Department PLASTIC MODEL Car Kits OUR REG. 1.97 All Brands Watches l « d < « t O ’ M » n t I n W h i t # O r Y e . l o w G o l d . A s s o r t e d S t y l e s Your Choice OUR REG. 2.97 2OO LIMIT O N E Smoke Shop REGULAR and KING SIZE Cigarettes OUR REG. 4.17 CTN. wlSD) m o d e l WM158SCG RED, GREEN, A M BER ONE LOW PRICE! BARON, TARANTULA, ETC. PIE W A G O N , BEER W A G O N , RED LIMIT 2 CARTONS The Awtr«l»^i«al Fo rcra« l (For Friday, October I) By SYDNEY OM ARR for a LEO w ants attention; this is especially true of students born under this zodiacal sign. A per­ ceptive teacher will give LEO just a little extra time, lf you be flatter a LEO, you m ay long the way paving friendship. LEO harmonizes with LIBRA. GEMINI. SAGIT­ TARIUS LEO does very few things th at are from cocking not com plicated to rom ance, it is all or noth­ ing. Some famous persons born under this zodiacal sign include Leo Durocher, Rudy Vallee and Mae West. and ARIES. ARIES (March 21-April 19): You m ay want socialize, to associate may want to be quiet, face somewhat secretive. You of a dilem m a. Key is to main lain sense of humor. Refuse to be frightened by what appears mysterious. Laughter can be vi­ tal tonic. one from hand TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You get chance to prove chili ties and cement friendship. Lunar position coincides with in helping authority. You don't know all answers. Rut some puzzle pie­ ces now are falling into place. (May 21-June 20): in­ •Join forces with TAURUS dividual Your ambitions can be t h i s ; be fulfilled. K n o w confident. profess onal Show superior you have stuff of suc­ proposal cess. Outline plan, You will get attention GEMINI CANCER (June 21-July 22): Good lunar aspect now coin­ cides with journey, added know­ ledge. gain through intellectual pursuits. Be gentle in dealing with fam ily m em ber Domes­ tic quandary will boomerang in your favor LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Per- (vive hidden meanings Realize; some persons cannot say what they think Read between lies Detect subtle nuances. Avoid finances self-deception where enter picture. Patience now is a requisite. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Seot. 22): Obtain hint from LEO m essage Avoid tendency to base actions on wishful thinking. Accent now is on m arriage, partnerships. legal activities. Be w ary in granting interviews Some want to misquote you. (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Spotlight on work, health, bas­ ic issues Key is to graphically illustrate best-selling points. rid of burden not rightly Get your own. Some are only too willing to take advantage of you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on change, travel, great Relations self expression. er inten­ with young persons a rc sified. Success shown through creative endeavors. Break out of emotional shell. Tell feelings to m em ber of opposite s o . LIBRA SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-I)ec. 21): Don’t neglect duties at home base. Going too far afield would be error. G rass is not greener elsewhere . Older tam ily m em ber plays prominent role. Use time constructively. Careful approach wins major point. I Dec. CAPRICORN ZI-Jan. 19): Obstruction to progress can be removed Key is to be ver sa tile. Be fam iliar with altern a­ tives. There is more than one if you know method. Act as it Neighbor, in confused m anner. relative ac's AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. IM: Money is spotlighted. What you felt was out-oi-reach becomes available. Steady approach is necessary. Maintain balance. Avoid extrem es. Protect your interests. No false modesty. Be specific, confident. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Lunar cycle high; you are pat to gel what you request. Be sure desires a re based on ac­ through; tual needs Follow take contacts prove fruit tut. Don't hide light. Be a seU-starter. initiative. New lead IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTH DAY you are considered dy­ nam ic, an original thinker. You do best when working for your­ self. You are not so good at following organized patterns, lf single, contact made earlier in' y ear could to m arriage. (To find out who's lucky for you in money and love, rder Sydney Omarr’s booklet, “Se­ cret Hints for Men and Wo­ men.” Send birthdate aud TS cents lo Omarr Astrology Se­ crets, The Lufkin News, Box 3240, Grand Central Station, New York, N. Y. 10017.) Copyright 1971, Gen. Pea. 1 Corp. IMMIGRATION IS CUT LONDON (AP) - Almost l l per cent fewer Commonwealth im m igrants were to settle in Britain during the Hist six m onths of this y ea r com­ pared with the sam e period las! year, the Home Office said. allowed ASK ANN LANDERS D ear Ann Landers: Your ridiculous answer to the mother whose 18-year-old son was getting “experience" from the 35- year-old lady next door leads me to believe that someone threw a cherry bomb in your crib on July 4, 1917 and caused perm anent brain dam age. You said to make sure the boy was “ plenty well informed." It seems to me that he is already TOO well informed. What he needs is a severe tongue lashing from his father — not more information. As for that wench next door, she should inch of her life. And YOU, be horse whipped within an Ann Landers, should be boiled in oil for your ho-hum attitude toward the boy's immoral behavior.—Mother Of Five In Covington, Ky. Dear Mother: Ho-hum, my Aunt Ethel. I’m realistic. And I hope you’ll join the real world soon, for the sake of your five kids. An 18-year-old boy who is romping around next door with the middle-aged wife of a tired business man is not about to g i\o it up and go bark to Scrabble just because his father gives him a scolding. I told th** mother to make sure the boy gets a tough lecture from his dad on the moral and social aspects of his he­ lms for and to make certain hp is well informed on the biologi­ cal a sp e c ts as well. That was good, practical advice and I stand behind it. No matter what yon think, Mother, you just can't keen ‘em down on the farm after they’ve seen Farce. * * * D ear Ann L anders. You've never had a problem like this one. I hope you’ll know what to do with It. I left the states two years ago to work overseas in con­ struction. I said goodbye to a great looking doll I had dated all through high school. We were not engaged because I didn’t think it would be fair to her, birt Sybil said she’d wait for m e. Not a week went by that I didn’t get at least three let­ ters from Svb, usually four. I kept asking for snapshots but she stopped sending them about 18 months ago. Now I know why. I got home yesterday and there she w as — all 170 pounds of her. My sis and mom had written that Syb was putting on a lot of weight but I thought they were exaggerating. I was so shocked when I saw her I couldn’t speak. Her first words were, “I’ll diet." We had a long talk and she told m e she had eaten herself into blimphood because she was lonesome. I feel awfully guilty, but I must admit this chick leaves me cold. I hate fat women. Would it be lousy of me if I told Syb to call m e when she drops the 50 pounds she put on in my absence?—Too Much To Love Dear TM .: lf son dump her *he might gain another SO. I rEp Syh In a doctor and get hack In shape, lf she sticks with her diet, fine, If *he can’t, with an incentive like this— well — she * a compulsive eater, destined to he broad where broad shouldn't bp broad. I would not tell a man who hates fat women to stick around to be a nice goy. It wouldn’t work. • • * Dear Ann Landers: I am ten years old and am trying to learn the facts of life as I go along. My mother still thinks I believe she bought me in the hospital. She refuses to an­ sw er questions. Please tell me if they kiss different in France. Is this w hat is meant by French kissing? Thank you — Self- L earner. Dear Learner: So far as I know, kissing In France Is the sam e as everywhere else. French kissing is soul kissing or kissing between people who have romantic feelings for each other — not relatives. • • • \\ hen rom antic glances it turn love or ch em istry ? Send for the booklet “Love Or Sex And How to Tell Tile D ifference.’’ by Ann Landers. Enclose a long, stam ped, self-addressed envelope and 35c in coin with your request. to warm embraces is (Copyright 1971 Field Enterprises, Inc.) Enrollment Ooen For Adult Workshop I,,' .M'ii'L'il B L U E C R Y S T A L — B l u e c r y s t a l Console B o i d and C a n d l e s t i c k w i t h g ol d e n c r u s t e d decoration the Vase a n d Scroll p a t t e r n . F os t or i a Glass C om p a n y , circa in Antique Class Show Set This W eekend dolphin .stemware collections of wil) be addition The earliest piece in this col- and labeled for study to antique its. m a n / In the private exhib- of local and out item s will be state dealers will display an- HOUSTON - Im portant pie­ ces from one of the most com- plete glass I shown for the first tim e at the tique glass to be sold. Houston Antique Glass Show and Sale Oct. I, 2 and 3. in Several dealers specialize discontinued patterns of crystal that was pro­ lection is a hand-made blown duced 25 to 50 y ears ago by; dolphin vase of Venetian origin, glass com panies such as Fos- the end of the six- toria. Cambridge, Westmore- dating teenth century. A m atching pair land and Im perial. A noted au- of canary-colored candlesticks thoritv on Fostoria Glassw are made by the Boston and Sand- will be available and collectors wich G lass Company circa 1840 are urged their pat- wili also be shown. These pieces terns for identification. are being shown courtesy of a Houston gist. The show opens F riday night geolo- October I, 7 p.m. at the White House Motor Hotel. 9300 South the Main Street, across carnival glass, cut glass and Astrodome. Mrs. John R Naill old p attern glass. Each piece is Show Secretary. Other exhibits include bottles to bring through from the to [ Y o u r H ealth crease in stom ach acidity with burning in the pit of the sto­ mach. It should definite'v not he used bv anyone wh > has an ulcer. of Dear Dr. L am b I would like to know if the habitual drinking of from one to three strength average cups coffee a day would affect the normal healthy function of the adrenal glands over the years. Please give me your true answer, the effect on the coffee busi­ ness. D ear R e a d e r irrespective of (than It stim ulates the heart and heavy coffee drinkers often have much higher heart rates they stop they do after drinking coffee, or switch to a decaffeinated product. Some I doubt the studies .suggest the drinking live s ’x cllPs of coffee a day is associated with an increased wish tow ard coffee business is going to shud der very much from mv an swer. The m ain problem posed !ale by plain coffee is its caffeine content. For to avoid this problem there are a num ber of decaffeinated pro the m arket. ducts on An average cup of those who coffee contains from 70 to 150 milli­ gram s of caffeine, which m om s that two cups can give you a pretty good jolt. How much de oends on how strong the coffee is and how strong the drinker is A dose of caffeine of 150 stim ulates to 250 m illigram s it the cortexa of if heart attacks. Medical reactions" texts describe "un-! (meaning bad) from 1,000 m illigram s of caffeine, or about six or seven cups of strong coffee. These include "untow ard reactions" flashing the in lights, ringing ears, nervousness (no wonder)! there trem ulousness. But and is no evidence that it will af­ fect the adrenal glands adverse­ ly the am ounts you nave asked about. in the brain i Coffee is not a natural beve­ rage for man It is an Arabic drink that spread to Europe in up typing fPt' ri orJ a ^ the 17th century. Like cig aret­ tes. in­ its consumption has creased markedly since the be century ginning of the 20th HOUSTON - Alley T heatre Curriculum will include the will begin the fall sem ester its popular adult workshop th e atre on Tuesday. Oct. 26. concentration. Stress will The classes will be held at the placed on use of new Alley T heatre, 615 Texas and observation. Avenue. of development of basic dram atic -sPeed of ideas in skills: diction, body control and and association tu rn s one on it other words However, d e b a te m uscular co ordination m av be ham pered b> this dose. And you can much caffein two cups of coffee, again depend­ ing upon the brew. Tuition for the five-week. 20- total of IO hour course Is $40, and enroll- . limited. For mforma- be imagination T here will be a . ment is . . . «. class m eetings over a five-week r , penod. with classes meeting Tuesday 7:30 to 9 30 p m . through Nov Adult Workshop 30 and Thursday .. from tion and registration contact the! reg istra r is The bad aspect of coffee at its effects on the digestion of 228-8421 ext. 65, Houston. m any people, causing an in* but the way it is brewed the "e M h at Pa r a ^ e * with "e in one or the increase in heart attacks, ulcers, lung can cers and other common ail­ m ents. The United States con sum es more than 70 per cent of the world's coffee crop. T ea also contains caffeine, BILL'S FACTORY OUTLET I & ll 1411 ATKINSON DRIVI — M A C S SHOPPING CENTER 112 E. LUFKIN AVE. — DOWNTOWN usual cup contains half as much as coffee. The best approach is for the coffee lover to switch to a decaffeinated product Thi helps prevent "coffee ne-ves.' (Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) SankAmericaad1 WORLD ALMANAC F A C T S N E W S H IP M E N T TODDLER SETS LADIES LONG BLOUSES sue, 3i-« *.«« LADIES SLACKS LADIES DRESSES BOYS JEANS BO Y S A N D MENS SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS GIRLS JEANS BLOUSES All Sixes IOO *3.00 *3.00 * *4.00 *2.00 *2.00 ’U t ’l i t .. 2 - IOO 50c This Week In Lufkin THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 7:00 p.m .—A m erican Legion Auxiliary m eets at TP&L Assem­ bly room. Hints For Home Owners 9:00 a.m .—F irs t Methodist Church Thursday Church School. 7:00 p.m.—Chancel choir Church parlor. rehearsal the F irst Christian re- _ m the old finish from a 7:00 p.m.—Lufkin TOPS D ub m eets in Angelina County Court- wooden tool shed at the rear ot our house. I intended to put a it. but: 7:00 p.m.—Lufkin Composite Squadron Civil Air P atrol m eets sp ar varnish finish on house Annex. moved AP Newsfeatures Q.—Some months ago I in „ By ANDY LANG instructions on the can’s label booklet, "P ain t Your House b l­ and you will discover that you side and Out." send 30 cents should have washed the surface and a long, stam ped, self-ad- with a specific product after dressed envelope to Know-How. the rem over had done its work. P.O. Box 477. Huntington, IVY. By neglecting this step, you left 11743.) a wax residue. On a waxed au- ------------------------ a t the N aval Reserve Bldg.. Hwy. 94 and I n d u s t r i a l ! " * ^ ! saw the b are Road. Visitors welcome. j c? t on 7:30 p .m .- S a m a n a Oddfellow Lodge No. 480 m eets at IOOF After appivinK the paint I not think it was verv attractive, so I painted the shed instead. ~ • 7:30 9:30 p.m .—F irst Christian Church youth building open for paint formed Hall on Loop 287 west. high school youth. 9:30 a.rn.-2:30 p.m .—Mothers day out Church nursery. FRIDAY, OCTOBER I in the F irst Christian 7:30 p.m .—Seven S tar Rebekah Lodge No. 194 m eets at Re- sm all bekah and IOOF Temple, Rt. I, Ewing Road. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2 W illiams, 1108 South First. PUNNY BUSINESS .£ 1*71 W HEA, I * U S P«t O f ACME HEAVY EQUIPMENT one^oes S C H O O L. q&>, we DO OPFER A EXpeWSivie c o o p e e ... By Boger Bollen „. HOWEVER... IT 'S s t Ric t u s C O R R E S PCW DEAKE ;^ " d Jirab le'3 preventing w ater H IE ALMANAC J Heed that, F in some places, the P a n t e d little s PreaclinK properly. itself into I from getting - - , I no- c u r s surface ‘ the , through to In this case, paint D A Y - B y l l A Y By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Today is Thursday, Sept 20, We want to put up wall- 'h e 273rd day of 1971. There are the it n om beads, much like those that a p pear on the hood of an automo-i Q- bile when it rains after the car paper in our living room, which five years has been waxed. Since I have was painted about to *----- — r — do a sim ilar job soon on a ago. The walls are plaster. Is it' all wooden building where I necessary to remove the paint "auonai m iiuary “ q., . , e jn tho . . veal- . . . t On this date in 1946, an inter iii Nuernberg, G erm any, found 22 leaders guilty Eleven were I i * _ top G erm a Nazi war c r jmes ribuital keep my lawn mower and other first'’ outdoor equipm ent, I want to xr * A. No. But what should b r> i , I i . sufficient, Ten vears ago: China can I prevent this beading of ing them depends on what kind Pre I the paint? of paint was used. If a latex aid his n a ­ 1 A. There are a num ber of paint was used, washing down m ier Chou En lai raid his na- tion wanted good relations with reasons why paint acts in this 'h e walls with a detergent wi the I way, one of the most common be being the application of a fin-1 som etim es recom m ended that a United States ishing m aterial over surface. In this case you took off the old finish and paint was applied, then the to wash thus might have existed. The likely with a special solution cause a off any wax residue left by the that sells wallpaper. -------- paint rem over. If you still have any of the rem over, read thei Five years ago Nazi war crim inals Baldur von Schirach it is and Albert Speer were released walls from West Berlin’s Spantlau which prison, leaving Rudolf Less a store the onlv prisoner in the prison. a glossy wire brush also be used if the however, wall is very smooth. If an oil phone service wa1' begun _______ to wash c>an be purchased at P icture-e!e- in removed any gloss (For Andy Lang’s helpful Pittsburgh One year ago is your failure that necessary countries, including although is all it 7:30 p.m .—Book Study Club m eets with Mr. and Mrs. E rnie avoid the sam e m istake. How done to the walls before p a p e r 51 - ‘ lh ★ FRESH BUFFALO F ISH * 49c PORK STEAK GRADE A FRYERS DRESSED FRESH * Specials for Thursday Afternoon, Friday and Saturday A STOP — LOOK — BUY! Then listen to the pleasant jingle of CA SH SAVINGS. We like to be graphic about It, but we’d need ten ods this site to list our SUPER VALUES. Come in today for your favorite top quality products at DISCOUNTS just as BIG AS THESE! TEXAS PRIDE BEEF STEAKS KORN KIST SLICED BACON FRESH LEAN GROUND BEEF PAN SAUSAGE Pkg. of IO S t e a k s *1.00 3 ^ J1 OO , 69c u . 49c ICABELL'S BILT-MORE BUTTERMILK LUNCHEON MEAT WHIPPING CREAM LAND OTINES H a l f - G a l l o n 12-Oz. C a n 39c 35c 29c '/2 -Pint C t n . Whitfield Whole Dill Pickles o . 49c i BUTTER KRUST QUAKER'S BREAD < I - < I - I < I Lai g e Loaf 25c 5-LB. FLOUR BAG 39 M ELLO RS BAKE RITE SHORTENING L I L L Y ’S Rose-Dale English PEAS 3-Lb. C a n 69c The G r e a t Train Rob­ bery, produced by the E di­ son Company in 1903, was the f i r s t m otion picture with a plot, The World Al­ film m anac recalls. The w as a Western starring George B a r n e s , Broncho Billy Anderson and Marie Murray. The m ovie was printed on tinted celluloid, giving scenes a yellow or bluish green hue. C o p y r i g h t © 1971, N*w fcpa.p'.r J i n Ic i pi tsi. ,V«sB, BEST BLEACH TS 29c 11! ir.T T iT fiy G R O C E R Y 302 CULVERHOUSE ELCOR TISSUE 4 “ 29c Do-It-Yourself Pipe Dryer Steam Out Of The House ! rally placed on 16-inch centers and plan accordingly. At most! j; ou need a four-inch hole so: you can avoid the studs with1 a little care. When going through a basement wall, carry] the duct high enough to clear! opening on the back of the dry-]vent into a chimney. The ductexpensive but easier to u s e . the foundation and go through; (old-fashioned er to an opening in the wall can be of the house. Almost univer-'stove pipe of aluminum) or sally, it’s against the law to flexible. The flexible is more By MR. FIX-IT rigid A vent for a clothes dryer is not normally included in the price of the dryer. You may find on inquiry that the cost of a clothes dryer vent is rather high. Most of that cost is labor for you will find that most hardward, department and dis­ count stores carry the materials you need at relatively small cost. The job is not difficult and is one well worth doing your­ self in terms of money saved. Do not attempt to use a dry­ er without venting it to the out­ side. Every bit of water in those wet clothiers is pouring into your house in the form if you do. of steam Turning your house into a steam bath is the least of the the drawbacks. in moisture will take its toll the form of peeled paint, mil­ dew. rust and rot. Eventually, Venting a dryer is a matter of connecting a duct from the h J ) t ST OVZPIPC- TYPE DUCT K FLEXIBLE DUCT CALK AROUND WALL HOOD USE SHORTEST ROUTE IF PIPE IS ANGLED, USE EXTRA-* SUPPORT FOR WINDOW HOOD USE PUTTY" You will not have to plan for The siding above, elbows and a series of con- Calk around the duct where of'it g °es through the wall on nections between sections the outside. The hood will be pipe. the *arge enough to cover the rough idryer first. It will handle either edges so far as appearance goes. is needed to a three- or four-inch pipe. the opening on but the calking Check out alr and When you measure what you ^ . ln need, allow for the route possible for maximum el- 4 wlnd7 H' putty 11 ln place 45 ficiencV Also eliminate manv bends and turns a* nos S - f w the same reasfn sidle tor tne same reason. ning on the back of ‘he dryer will have a metal Up Rigid pipg {itg snugly QVer shortest 11 y° u are “ s,n? 4 p 4te as you would glass. The If Ii y? U CU* a bo^e -*n you jn place with a clamp. this but make the connection wall there is a special hood secure with a few sheet metal I you can buy which will cover screws. Flexible duct is held ,this outside opening. | choose to through a basement pjpe that angles off from the ] window, remove the pane of dryer instead of going straight ; lass and replace it with a piece Up wm need some extra sup- iOf exterior grade plywood or j port. Use a loop of wire or aluminum. Dryer vent kits, rope fastened to ceiling joist. when intended for window use,.(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) will contain a special aluminum !plate with a precut hole and! a hood. In 1953, President Dwight D. appointed Gov. When going through a wall Earl Warren of California chiel Eisenhower remember that studs are gene justice of the United Skates. . THRIFT ^ CENTER END OF MONTH BARGAIN BONANZA! SPECIAL BARGAINS IN EVERY BIG DEPARTMENT • . . * MASTER CHARGE * * BANKAMERICARD * LAYAWAY CASH SPECIAL PURCHASE OF 35.00 SPORT COATS FOR MEN ★ Dacron Knits ★ Wool n’ Silk ★ Double Breasted ★ Single Breasted ★ 34 to 44 ★ Reg. and Long $1688 SPECIAL PURCHASE P e rfe ct To W e a r Now— JUNIOR STYLING ★ Orange ★ Navy ★ Blue ★ Green ★ Pink ★ White if Sizes 8 to 16 An 8.99 d Value MENS SHORT SLEEVE CLOSE-OUT VALUES TO 3.99 JUMBO On Our Very Best PAINT... 6 ONLY! 8’ x i r LADIES — GIRLS KNIT SHIRTS ★ Solids-Stripes ★ S-M-L 2 - J3; UNI-KOTE ROOM-SIZE SLEEPWEAR Interior Latex Wall Finish Reg. 5.99 Goi. $3. RUGS All Beige Tweed ★ Gowns ★ Pajamas I O . 2 - $5. THROW PILLOWS ★ I 8-lnch Square ★ Asst. Prints LEVIS FOR GALS WRANGLERS FOR GALS HUNDREDS OF PAIRS All Permanent Pressed Latest Styles J3. ■ $4: ■ $5. REPEAT OF A "SELLOUT" LADIES 2-PC. PANT SETS ★ 8 to 16 if S-M-L MENS LEATHER MENS BOYS LADIES GIRLS DRESS BOOTS ★ Black, Brown ★ Zipper or Strap ★ bVi ■ I I 10. SPORT SHOES bVi - 11 4/* n e • COTTON ANKLETS TENNIS TENNIS OXFORDS OXFORDS Black, Brown, Smooth or Roughout Sizes 6 to 9!/2 ★ Navy Deeptone Colors ★ 4'/i - IO 4 Pair 88‘ I. ★ B'/z -3 ★ Colors I. Scouts Attend Piper Jubilee By MR. & MRS. JAMES was had by all. F . MARSH Route 3, Box 369-M In keeping with the Cadette Troop 457, which is a Piper Troop, attended the an­ nual Piper Jubilee at Miller Outdoor Theater at Herman Park in Houston on Saturday. ’70-’71 program of the year of Folk Art emphasis, the entertainment included round and square dane ing by a group of teen age dan­ cers called ‘‘The Twirlers” . They also viewed an old fash­ ioned melodrama, complete with a villain and a hero and cue cards for the audience to cheer and applaud or to hiss and boo at the proper time. There was a barber shop quartet (all la­ dies) to sing some old time songs. After the program, the troop had lunch in the park and visited the zoo, and a good time Girls who took the trip with their leaders, Mrs. Ray Rob­ ins and Mrs. Tommy Strick­ lin, were Cindy Thornton, Sherry Bridges, Elizabeth Bullock, Su­ san Schakel, Jean Owen, Kath­ ryn Payne, Ceclia Shepherd, Marilyn Rye, Robin Ewell, Jerri Squyres, Amy Atkinson, Paula Milligan, Regena Picou, Tami Tallent, Karen Miller and Stacy Robins. Other adults who went, and helped with transportation were Ray Schakel, Mrs. Thomas Squyres and Mrs. Mitchell. The troop is looking forward to being a Piper Troop again this year of ’71-72 so they will be eligible to go to the Jubilee again next year, and hope to have the company or other Pine Shadow troops while there. The Land O’Pines troops were led by the Council Piper, Mrs. Downing in their District Cheer which is: “ 3, 5, 7, 9. Who do we think is fine? Land O’Pines, Land O’Pines, Land O’Pines.” La/id O’Pines troops were re­ cognized as coming from the farthest distance and the dist­ rict was represented by troops from Lufkin. Nacogdoches, and Corrigan. Leaders, and new adults, you plan to attend the outdoor ! training program Oct. 5, please ;call Mrs. Raymond Skinner or Miss Candy Moss. As we are going to have fun doing some cooking, you will need to bring 50c to help with the food. So please call so we will know how many to plan for. SPEEDWRITING SHORTHAND Now available in the night program at MASSEY BUSINESS COLLEGE. Registrations being accepted for new classes beginning Oct. 4. Classes are offered Monday and Thursday night of each week for young adults who are eager to enhance their earning paw* er, as well as for mature women who would like to spend a few months in training to qualify for an added income ta the fam ily budget. C o ntact the M A S S E Y B U S IN E S S C O L L E G E offices immediately and experienced personnel will be glad to help you arrange a suitable program for your needs in qualifying for office em* ployment. * D o n ’t d e lay — call to da y! MASSEY BUSINESS COLLEGE 119 S. First Street 632-5561 Lufkin, Texas X LUFKIN FEDERAL NEW HIGHEST RATES PAID ON SAVINGS 2 YEAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES *5,000*9 MINIMUM r n I YEAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES *5,000** MINIMUM I YEAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES *3,000** MINIMUM 90 TO 179 DAY CERTIFICATES *1,000** MINIMUM REGULAR PASS BOOK ACCOUNTS • Compounded Daily . . . Paid Quarterly • Assets Now O ver $30,000,000.00 • Now In Our 37th Year DEPOSITS MADE BY THE 8th O F OCTOBER EARN FROM THE 1st LUFKIN FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LUAN ASSOCIATION s n S O U T H T H IR D , L U F K IN , T I X A I Farm News O f Texas Plant Food Can Boost Winter Pastureland! IFS PENNEY DAYS! EVERY AISLE IS ALIVE WITH FABULOUS BUYS! C O L L E G E ST A T IO N - F o r o p tim u m g ro w th of h ig h -q u a l­ ity w in te r p a s tu r e s , use a d e ­ q u a te a m o u n ts of p la n t food. s a y s D r. N e al P r a t t , a g ro n o ­ m is t w ith the T e x a s A g ric u l­ tu r a l E x te n sio n S e rv ic e . C O N T E S T - K a rn e s C ounty will h o st a n in v ita tio n a l S ta te 4-H H o rs e J u d g in g C o n te s t O ct. 9, a n n o u n c e s W. P . M c- N a llly , c o u n ty a g r ic u ltu r a l a g e n t. C ounty. T h ird rn th e ru n n in g w a s S h e rry S te ele of M o n t­ g o m e ry C ounty w hile K a r r e n B u rre s s of Collin C ounty c a p ­ tu r e d fo u rth p lac e. w id e c o n fe re n c e fo r r a n c h e r s , in te r ­ te c h n ic ia n s a n d o th e rs ra n c h e s te d m a n a g e m e n t w ill be held in L u b b o ck O ct. 8. r a n c h a n d T h e in H o rs e Show in th e W ill R o g ­ in F o r t W o rth e r s C o liseu m S e p t. 23-25, p ro v id e d th e ty p e of c o m p e titio n th a t h a s m a d e 4-H th e fa m o u s. W hen all d u st h a d c le a r e d a n d the fin al w h istle h a d so u n d e d on th e la s t d a y of c o m p e titio n , fo u r the 4-H ’e r s w e re h ig h -p o in t a w a rd , in d iv id u a l th e m o s t p riz e d a w a rd of the sh o w . tie d fo r V a rio u s ru le s a n d re g u la ­ tio n s w e re a p p lie d to d e te r ­ m in e th e c h a m p io n h o rse m a n to be a n d K a r e n J o h n s o n of M idland C o u n ty . T he re s e r v e c h a m ­ pion h o rs e m a n a w a rd w ent tu rn e d out th a t row in a A c co rd in g to B. F. Y e a te s . (h o rs e s ) a n im a l h u s b a n d m a n w ith the T e x a s A g ric u ltu ra l E x te n sio n S e rv ic e , th is is th e th a t se c o n d y e a r th e tie h a s o c c u r re d a top h o rse m a n a w a rd . L a s t tw o -w a y y e a r th e h is to ry tie . in th e c o m p e ­ of the show . So, g e ttin g is tition k e e n e r. th e r e w a s a d e fin ite ly firs t the fo r a t R a n c h M a n a g e m e n t C o n fe re n c e is s la te d to begin th e F a r m e r s a t 8 a m . Coop. C o m p re s s , a n n o u n c e s D r. B ob R a g s d a le E s te n s io n a t T e x a s s p e c ia lis t r a n g e A&M U n iv e rsity . se ss io n w ill D isc u ss io n s d u rin g th e d a y ­ lo n g c e n te r a ro u n d g r a s s p ro d u c tio n , g r a ­ h o rse s, zin g m a n a g e m e n t, m e s q u ite , n u tritio n a n d p r e ­ c o n d itio n in g . T h e c o n te s t will be held a t in K en ed y th e R o d e o A re n a a n d w ill b e g in a t 9 a .m . C o u n tie s th ro u g h o u t fro m th e s t a te a r e in v ite d to e n te r a s m a n y te a m s a s ju d g in g th e y d e s ire . T e a m m e m b e rs m u s t be e n ro lle d in 4-H a n d m u s t be e n g a g e d in a h o rs e p ro je c t. T h o se 9-13 y e a r s of a g e w ill c o m p e te in th e j u n ­ th o se 14-19 io r d iv isio n w hile y e a r s old w ill be in th e s e n ­ io r d iv isio n . to S te v e T ip p s of T a r r a n t C O N FA B S L A T E D - RANCH M A N A G E M E N T A s ta te - S T A T E H O R S E JU D G IN G d a y s G ra s s b e c o m e g ra z in g fo r w in te r should I e g ro w n d u rin g fa ll m o n th s As w in te r a p p r o a c h ­ s h o r te r , e s , clo u d a n d t e m p e r a t u r e s d e c lin e . All of fa c to r s m a k e g ro w in g th e s e c o n d itio n s fo ra g e l es s fa v o ra b le . for w in te r in c r e a s e s c o v e r * fo o d s u n n y T o m a k e m o s t e ffe c tiv e u se fa ll d a y s , of w a rm , a d e q u a te p lan t sh o u ld be a v a ila b le to h e lp s tim u la te s y s te m , e n ­ a h e a lth y c o u ra g e d ro u g h t r e s is ta n c e a n d , m ost of a ll, h e lp p r o ­ v id e e a rly g ra z in g liv e ­ s to c k . root fo r A so d te s t is th e b e st w ay to d e te rm in e a m o u n ts of f e r ­ tiliz e rs n e ed e d , p o in ts out P r a t t. A good p o rtio n of p lan t n u trie n ts should b e a p p lie d In b e fo re se ed a r e p la n te d . m o s t a r e a s of th e s ta te , th is m e a n s a bout 60 p o u n d s of n itro g e n plus p h o sp h o ru s , p o t­ a s h , lim e and o th e r n u trie n ts. In th e e a s te r n a n d G u lf C o ast IOO p o u n d s of a r e a s , 80 e ffe c tiv e ly n itro g e n u se d fall growth. to stim u la te e a r ly c m b e to A N N U A L CHU RCH CDI is , . f o v e ra F E R E N C E A N N O U N C E D th e in "The C han g in g F a c e s in m e l ne u m n g in g r a c e s e w s. t lem e of th e 26th a n n u a l T ow n a n d C o u n try C hurch C o n fe re n c e O ct. 14-15 a t T e x a s A&M U n i­ v e rs ity . P u b lic ity C h a irm a n K e n ­ W e e k e n d G a r d e n i n g Small Bulbs M ake Vivid Spring Show By D W IG H T S. H A LL A rea L a n d s c a p e H o r tic u ltu ris t se ld o m T e x a s A g ric u ltu ra l E x te n sio n p la n tin g T h e re a r e w h ic h d r a in s w e ll; y e t, is in clu d e d a m o n g s p rin g ty p e - of a n e m o n e s fo r o u r a re a --tl.e tw o it S e rv ic e O v e rto n , T e x a s 75684 j St. B rig id , w h ic h h a s se m i- W hen s e le c tin g sp rin g b u l b s ,; d o u b le b lo o m s a n d th e De C a e n do not o v e rlo o k the little s p rin g ty p e , w hich p ro d u c e s a sin g le , b u lb s o r ty p e s b u lb s. T h ey , too, m a k e a q u ic k sh o u ld be in c lu d e d in th e s p r i n g id ea l g a rd e n to p ro v id e a n a b u n d a n c e ancj y j y j j sh o w a n d a r e flo w e rin g p oppy-like b lo o m . B oth s m a ll th e fo r b o r d e r p la n tin g s , ro c k e ts in of ric h , c o lo rfu l b lo o m s. A sin- le f t 0Ve r gle bulb will p ro d u c e a s m a n y ro c k g ard en s> o r la te ja r g e r b u lb p la n tin g s a s f® flo w e rs, s ta r tin g in in m a n d a r e good b a c k g ro u n d p la n ts f e b r u a r y th ro u g h A pril. fo r th e m o re n oble fo d ils, a n d D u tc h b u lb s, p la n tin g all th o u g h is a too. a r e a tt r a c t iv e to tw o th e g ra p e hva* Move A n em o n es d e m a n d a in a h a lf th e ir ow n w h en fro m fo u r to six tu lip s, daf- r a th e r iris . S m a ll sh a llo w p la n tin g of one a n d one- in c h e s d e e p a n d in ch e s a p a r t . jn m a s s a n d q u a n tity P la n t A n e m o n es in O c to b e r a n d th o u g h in a w ell p r e p a r e d , ty p e th e th e b u lb dow n. tis s u e s law n. T he blue of the St. B rig id ty p e a n d p la n t tin y bell th e ste m s c a r s fa c in g u p w a rd , in c o m p a c t B oth ty p e s of tu b e r s sh o u ld be g ra p e h v a - N o v e m b e r sp rin g b u lb m o is t soil. T he De C aen it m a k e s a sh o u ld be p la n te d w ith sp rin g bor- p o in te d e n d o f th e s m a ll fa m ily, th e in th e old s te m in Look fo r th e v iv id show n e th 5th W olf, a g rib u s in e s s econo- p ja n te d E v e n list at A&M I D iv ersity , sa id m is t at AMM i D iv ersity , d isc u ssio n s will c e n te r th a t p o s itiv e p ro g ra m s w o rk in g in r u r a l a r e a s . sa id E v e n on c in th a r e t^ e A c tiv itie s s t a r t w ith re g is - der< g r OUn d c o v e r b e d . o r th e M e- d r jf^s on is D r, R. L. th e A&M So- ^ e a d s o r Sp j^ e s jn e a r jy s p r i n g .; so a k e d tra d e in a t 8 a m . a t m o ria ! S tu d e n t C o n e r. K ey- o r Wh ite flo w e rs a re s p e a k e r n o te S k r a b a n e k of ciologx a n d D e p a r tm e n t w ho w ill ta lk on j ^ v e T e x a s a n y ' R e c e n t C h a n g e s Im p li- , g r 0Wlng c o n d itio n s, d oing e q u a l- son. P o p u la tio n a n d T h e ii ly w el] m su n or sh a d e c a tio n s .” g ro w s to to le r a te s ing A n th ro p o lo g y j ^ e Sp r jn g a p p e a rin g j^g j, a n d jn c d es in in co ld w a te r fo r tw o! to p la n t- in sp ro u tin g . K eep god a n d d iffic u lt b e d s m o ist d u rin g g ro w in g sea- th re e h o u rs p r io r to a id . T h e c o lo rfu l A n e m o n e sh o u ld p j a n t g ra p e h y a c in th s in O c - be p la n te d W olf la y sa id m in is te r s . l e a d e r s a n d o th e r a u th o r i s e s w ill p a r ti c i p a te in d is c u s s io n s cheg d c o v e r in g the s e v e r a l fa c e ts of t h e th e m e . A bout 150 m in i s t e r s a te e x p e c te d to a t- |y e a r te n d th e c o n fe re n c e . tok e r in c h e s a p a r t r u r a l . s js te n t bud3S a b o u t ye a r th r e e tw o o r th re e fQ fo u r i ng a n 0 f in- a r e m o st e ffe c tiv e in a b u n d a n c e a n d in a p la n t- its ow n a n d now t0 a llo u , th e p e r - | m ix e d w ith o th e r b u lb s, u n le s s m u ltip ly fro m it is its c o u sin a n d c o m p a n io n th e m in p la n t, the R a n u n c u lu s . T h e Ane- th e g a r- m o n e , w h ic h m a k e s e x c e lle n t p l a c e in a pC rm a n e n t sp o t g n d th e y do b e s t w hen not c u t flo w e rs fo r th e h o m e , d o e s S T A T E 4-H H O R S E SHOW d| s t u rb e d o r d u g fro m y e a r to not r e tu r n fro m th e s a m e b u lb y e a r a f te r y e a r an(| m u s t be - T h e 9th A n n u a l S ta te 4-H y e a r den a s • l - m THI ATVI OPEN 7:00— -STARTS 7:45 **! * -T »-C OW***,' C- A BA Y S T A R K -H ERBER T R O S S p-m /v , Barbra Streisand George Segal The Owl and tile Pussycat CO-HIT "THE BUTTERCUP CH AIN" O PEN 6:30 STARTS 7:00 M illa , o r T r ite le r ia . is a n o th e r re p la n te d e a c h fall, soil inch little r a t h e r is a lso o r c o m p a n is s m a ll, r e w a r d in g in e x p e n siv e T h e R a n u n c u lu s, d e s ira b le a n d b u lb w h ic h sh o w s off its s m a ll. 10n p lan t of A n e m o n e, s ta r - s h a p e d , f r a g r a n t flo w e rs of in M a rc h . M illa la v e n d e r b lu e p r e fe r s a in su n o r f ilte re d s h a d e . B e c a u s e th e y a r e so a n d m u ltip ly so ra p id ly , th e y sh o u ld be u s e d in g e n e ro u s a m o u n ts a s d r if ts b e tw e e n s h ru b s o r on th e ro c k law n a n d g a r d e n s , o r a s b o rd e r p la n tin g s. P la n t M illa in ­ tw o c h es d e e p in O c to b e r a n d No v e m b e r. tu b e r o r c la w -lik e ro o t. B e­ a too, ii d e ­ c a u s e it, m a n d s a sh a llo w p la n tin g as d o e s the A n em o n e. R a n u n c u lu s a ls o h a s a of r ic h c o lo rs a n d is a p e o n y -tv p e or c a m e llia -lik e b lo o m on a IO to 14-inch s te m . T h e fre e flo w e r­ ing b e a u ty p ro d u c e s a s m a n y a s tw o dozen b lo o m s p e r p la n t. M an y m o re n o r th e r n g a r d e n ­ ing books re c o m m e n d p la n tin g R a n u n c u lu s A n em o n e in p o c k e ts ra in b o w th re e a n d to in A n e m o n e s a r e sp rin g a m o n g flo w e rs , be- th ro u g h o u t th e g a y e s t of in g ric h ly d iv e rs ifie d in c o ! o r J s W y e t th e w in te r a n d in to th e in o u r a r e a , T h is e a s y s m a ll tu b e r-lik e b u lb in g a rd e n o g ro w soil ,lw p o ssib ility of i s ' f 1? a r ,? v,a l of s u m m e r a n d s p r in g h e a t h in d e rs th e b lo o m in g a b d . th u s, a n O c to ­ jity of b o th . . b e r an d N o v e m b e r p la n tin g is re c o m m e n d e d . la te I tim e ; h o w e v e r, T h e s p rin g se a s o n is p rim e the b lo o m in g w ise g a r d e n e r m u st p lan w ell in a d v a n c e of th e se a so n . Be p re p a re d to p la n t s p rin g b u lb s in O c to b e r a n d N o v e m b e r a n d . in clu d e s o m e of by all m e a n s , th e s m a lle r bu lb s. T h ey , too, m a k e an a b u n d a n t sp rin g show . CINEMA I Fea.: 7:00-9:05 CINEMA ll FEA.: 7:10-9:05 Y U I BRYNNER in A m o s . S a b o t a An A LBEr TO G rG /'.-L i : h p c a COLOR United Artists I I Jane Fonda • donald /utheriond That book is now The film! Time To Store Caladium Bulbs (EDITOR’S NOTE: The following gardening ad­ is given by the Flower Garden vice on caladiums Club:) Caladiums have begun to droop and lose their color. It is now time to lift the bulbs, remove as much soil as possible, and place in a warm, dry. well-ventilated spot to cure. After the tubers are dry, remove dead leaves and inspect tubers to be sure they are good healthy bulbs. They are now ready to be stored for the winter. Put each color, if you want to keep colors separated, in an old nylon stocking. These can then be hung in a storage closet. I t is a good idea to dust them with dusting sulphur, Malathion or Chlora- dane before storing. Store in a warm, dry place where the temperature will stay as near 60 degrees as possible. Carefully winterized caladiums will last from year to year and if you save even the stock will be smallest bulbs your original doubled. Renew Landscape With Fresh Plants is a fall look a t y o u r C O L L E G E ST A T IO N — L a te y e a r . M any of s u m m e r a n d tim e to la n d s c a p e w ith a c ritic a l eye e a s ily h a n d le d o r to a d d a n d d e c id e w h e th e r o r re p la c e so m e of th e p la n ts m g a ro u n d d e c id io u s good p la n ts , th e ir h o m e le a v e s e a c h fa ll, c a n be m o re t r a n s p la n te d ro o t c o n d itio n d u r- j <• ' \ GREAT SAVINGS Carpet Remnants 250 2 7 x 4 8 . Size W i d e a s s o r t m e n t o f c o l­ ors, t e x tu re s in fin e c a r ­ p e t in g . A ll e d g e s a re b o u n d . F o r e v e ry ro o m . End-of-month clearance. SHOE CLEARANCE! LADIES. CHILDRENS FABRIC SHOES ORIG. 2.99, 3.99 N O W 144 I MENS, BOYS FABRIC SHOES ORIG. 3.99, 4.99 144 A 4 4 A BOYS DRESS SPORT SHIRTS SHORT SLEEVE Orig. 2.98 New 199 I LONG SLEEVE Orig. 3.SO New A4 4 £ CLOSEOUT! MENS SANDALS ORIG. 4.99 NOW 2.50 WOMENS — 1.00 Boys Dress Pants ORIG. 4.98 ^ SO NO W A LADIES COATS REDUCED ONLY 4 Orig. $24 New A 0 0 O Iv Orig. SI 8 1 A 0 0 N O W LADIES SLACKS REPRICED 8 PAIR Orig. $9 NOW $4 21 PAIR Orig. $11 NOW $7 4 PAIR Orig. $13 NOW $7 SLEEPWEAR CLEARANCE SHIFT GOW NS LONG GOW NS Now 188 I WIGS REDUCED ORIG. 25.00 N O W I OOO IA ORIG. 12.88 NO W *8 JCPenney The values are here every day. Weeders Guide By EARL ARONSON AP Newsfeatures How do plants reduce noise levels? Connecticut Agricul­ in­ tural Experiment Station vestigators report that vegeta­ tion was more effective in re­ ducing the (higher, more pierc ing and annoying frequencies than the lower or deeper ones. Another study found that all plants reduced all frequencies .bout the same. frequency j but Leaves absord little sound at consid­ low erable amounts at higher fre quencies. Used were vastly dif­ ferent foliage vegetation, stem diameters and densities and ground conditions. sound When little foliage is present as in pine, hemlock and bare brush, is reduced by stem s or by ground. Stems w ere ineffective at low frequen­ cy and only m oderately effec­ tive at high frequency. T H U R S D A Y E V E N I N G 4:30—0 O Bewitched CD High C haparral (D Leave It To Beaver 5:00—© Steve E dw ards Show O News O O That Good Ole Nashville Music 5:30—0 O O © © News © Dick Van Dyke 6:00—0 © © © O O News 6:30—0 Truth or Conse­ quences O Fun-A-Fishing’ © This Is Your Life O News © Dick Van Dyke 7:00—0 © B earcats © Alias Smith and Jones O O O Flip Wilson Show 8:00—ffl © Movie: “ How to Save A M arriage and Ruin Your Life” O © Longstreet O O Nichols 9:00—0 O Dean Martin Show Soft ground absorbs consid­ erable am ounts of moderately low frequency sound but is in-!^q.qo q effective at very low or at very' high frequencies. O ffi Owen M arshall Counselor At Law O O O © © News j 10:30—0 © The Virginian and stem s Leaves reduce t.-ansmitted sound mainly by soft ground scattering, while im ­ absorbs pervious absorb! much less. sound. 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Ill S. FIRST ELLIS A RAeUET RH. 434-4454 FN. AM-7743 People Iii The Xcws NEW YORK (AP) — Cant, wife, now m arried to Beatle from ,E rnest L - Medina | tnU hnnth«! p*nanate!work *or attorney F. Lee Bail-' D istrict Judge P eter S. Solito share his for at his My daughter with Miss Ono lawyer wh° successfully directed is going to John Lennon. that Cox the low fre eY’ defended the captain r e .e a r r te r s The best way to reduce | th? J E T , ‘ starting up hitrhwav nnciHprahiP pnprrrv at considerable e quencies, said th is ' annoyance band of soft ground very near together Wednesday night the source, because once low frequencies have travelled ^elev.sm n beyond v is a narrow: Medina and Bailey appeared to the Oct. 4 David I' lost the point where th e'tep e tnnwoi j * ^ ic interview program . - the Bailey said he has hired Me- ^ g f D p n p f j k f ) a n r p L /Q I I L C D C I I C I _ I (- l O f 5 9 1 1 1 1 ^ 9 7 . ________________ “ “ weekend visitations. ground is effective, they travel ^ ^ great distances suffering only m eagre reduction per doubling of distance. “ On the other hand, high speed traffic generates higher frequencies thet are better re ­ duced by dense foliage.” The sam e results hold for the i... sam e sounds traveling between Tx xnnnsctoH nearby houses. In congested ry custody are as where space is a prob­ Kyoko, 8, lem. plants do offer m ore than yokiT ono just tage gained by screening view v f the source of noise. the psychological advan- the R in Menomiee, ° T WnctlJ L The Knights of Columbus will dma, who is leaving the Army. to work at the R. J. Enstrom Corp., a small helicopter manu- sponsor a benefit dance Satur- day i rom 8 P m - to 1 a m - at facturer St. Patrick’s new parish hall Bailey recently acquired con I at 2118 Lowry. trolling the com ! Grand Knight Bob Wallace ipany. said proceeds will go to St Patrick’s School. interest in i c h M . HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - J "as Deen awarded tempora Music will be provided by b a r d e d tempora- Aubrey Elliott and the Toners pu;nc onri j-.-* «nj Chips and dips and Mexican A 1 2 * mnth fr te[c delicacies will be served. whose mother is door prlzf, wM ^ given \ M a ~ $2 . The ruling cam e Wednesday Tickets m ay be purchased from after two days of hearings with any Knight of Columbus or at law yers for Cox and his form er the door. P rice of adm ission is Wootco KPARTMEMT STOKKA ntt. Wfl i h i > ‘i . • m Im k 6 L L j Features! Friday end Setordey: Country Steak Dinner W hipped potatoes end gravy. vegetable, roll and buttar.......... 17 I Hamburger Platter Q J C French Fries, Lettuce & Tomato % 0 rn Fresh Strawberry Pie 50c — next month, we'll have our tenth birthday! To celebrate we thought we should do something for our community — So, on Monday, October ll, at 7 O ’clock in the evening Canon and Parker will present a Style Show & Buffet Dinner for the benefit of THE ELLEN TROUT Z O O in the new G R A N D BALLROOM of the ANG ELIN A HOTEL Adm ission: $3.00 per person Entire amount of admission will be donated to the Ellen Trout Zoo, and is tax deductible. Please make your check payable to, The Ellen Trout Zoo. tickets to you. You mey cell us at 634-3339, and wa'l! hold your tickets for you . . . or yon may send your check made payable to the Ellen Trout Zoo, end wo'll mail your It you want to make up a party and all sit together, just request this and we'll have your places reserved by place-cards on the tables. Tickets on Sale at Canon and Parker! IO DOOR PRIZES W ORTH $450.00 TO BE GIVEN A W A Y! Neither Rain, Detours, Nor Boy Hits Cirl Keep School Bus Drivers From Their Rounds (Second of Two Related Stories) By TOM TIEDE DERBY, Conn. — (NEA) — It was almost 4. And Shirley Hotchkiss, 37-year-old a school bus driver, was tired. Her arm s ached from w res­ tling the three foot-wide steer­ ing wheel. Her eyes burned from peering around the 35- long vehicle. And she foot thought that if one more boy the back hit one more in girl the back, her head would split wide open right the there road. the middle of in in To m ake m atters worse. here was another detour. B ar­ ditches ricades over sewer a to and a sign pointing minscule sideroad that looked every bit like a footpath. “ We won’t make it,” one of the kids said. “ Everybody pray to make it,” another suggested. “ Please get stuck,” a boy chortled, “ please get stuck.” turned Shirley Hotchkiss chil­ sharply. “ Quiet down, dren,” she said. And some­ she how guided the detour with nary a bump fresh, through suddenly the bus in T h at’s her job. of course. the No bumps. As one of 275,000 people the nation who regularly chauffeur about 20 million school children, she is not allowed to bump. She is charged with an awesome responsibility, her cargo is pure gold with runny noses- and one m istake could turn into a tragedy for the entire community. Red-haired and hefty, Shir­ ley Hotchkiss does not look on her employment quite so she dram atically. Nor can ARE YOU FULLYINSURED? Fire! Fire! I n s u r e t h e f u l l v a l u e o f y o u r h o m e f r o m l o s s b y f i r e . L o w r a t e s . See Us Soon GIBBS INSURANCE AGENCY SI 7 S. F irst JAM ES GIBBS put her duties into any im ­ mortal words ( “ I just do the best I can” ). But she knows the pressure is there and she reacts “ Never accordingly. relax.” she says. “ Keep one eye on the road, one eye on the the traffic, one eye on children—and never relax.” The philosophy seem s to work. In six and one-half years of the wo­ school bus driving, man has never had an acci­ dent and never had a child injured aboard her bus. in And fact neither Shir ley’s philosophy or record a re rare among school bus pilots. As a lot, they seem to do an inportant task well and correctly. today’s less Not all of them, of course. There are some school bus in every school dis­ drivers trict who are capable than others. In New York City some drivers have been knowrn to take parental bribes to m ake detours for off-the route children. In California a few drivers have been found drunk on duty. In some south­ ern spot checks of drivers have turned up men with crim inal records. states and they’d in oil.” “ Don’t mention my school,” says a principal in Pennsyl­ vania, “ but last year we hired a drug addict. I don’t know hew, but we hired him. We got rid of him as soon as we found out, but if the moth­ ers ever heard still boil us all Yet on the whole, most states school districts hire only the acceptable. They do so by following semirigid P ros­ employment criteria. in A rkansas pective drivers must spend 10-12 hours in they are class study before even ready to take their road test. New Jersey dem ands an annual physical examination and routinely fingerprints all drivers. Connecticut officials regularly birddog ihe s ta te ’s drivers, in private cars, the employes on procedure effi­ ciency. following unseen to grade Here in Derby, sm all as it rules Is (Pop: 12,000), thfe in some are big city. And ways, they are even better than big city. The school sys­ tem contracts the necessary buses from a private owner, George Blake, who boasts that in 20 years in the busi­ ness he’s not had one bus fatality, not one child taken to the hospital: “ We’re very careful with whom we hire. We check them out good. We won’t al­ low any type of crim inal re c ­ ord or bad driving record. And we keep checking up on them once they’re hired, so they don’t slack off. But the s i t / ow— eat well an d lose "My tat NOW...REMOVE POUNDS AND INCHES FROM THIGHS, NECK, LEGS, WAIST - ALL OVER - WITHOUT EVER GOING HUNGRY! Ubf'nlory h*< •d I tiny tablet With a PHB t h a t is g o o d b t E a t ) SAT ISFACT IO N g u a r a n t e e d o r m o n e y b a c k with the X -ll Reducing Plan Today, an amazing easy reducing Plan with X - l l Tablats new offers you a way at last, to get rid of 5, IO, 70 or mote pounds of caressive tat while you eat 3 sensibly square meals a day. You eat and slim down’ This unique preparation- now in easy to usa tablet form - with the exciting new X - l l Reducing Plan, Its unusual combination ct ingredients helps give you the tooling of a fuller, contented stomach, appeases desire for tween-meal snacks, and provides a whole spectrum of vitam ins and minerals essential to help prevent nu­ tritional deficiencies. Puts enjoyment in»« «*.m g while you lose unsightly, superfluous fat. G et th is extraord inary X -ll R e d iic in K P la n a n d start y o u r figure slim m in g today. Y o u ’m u st be IO O"!, delighted with resu lts fro m y o u r first p a c ka ge , or m o n e y refunded im m e d ia t e ly -n o q u e stio n s asked. Jkflenfr best thing we do. I think, is to hire only local people. P a r­ ents don’t like strangers bus­ ing the kids. I thing it’s com ­ forting for a m other to see a fam iliar driver year after y ea r.” To be sure, it’s comforting for many m others to see dri For ver Shirley Hotchkiss. one looks the woman as if she can handle herself thing, ( 'I've always wanted to be a drill press operator” ). For another, she obviously is a subscriber to the no-nonsense theory of pupil transportation. She’s polite with her passen­ gers. but never closes her third eye. “ I like Shirley ex­ cept when she yells,” one yells youngster says. “ She like my mommy yells. Only som etim es Shirley yells loud- er. things But normally, job. “ You have to put your then,” foot down now and says Shirley. If not, there can be trouble. Last year, here in peaceful little old Der­ by, one kid was knifed dur­ ing a bus fight. In som e big­ ger cities, like nearby New Haven, there have been rape attem pts, extortions, shake­ downs and shootings on buses. are less hectic. Like the other af­ ternoon, as Shirley Hotchkiss wearily m anipulated her bus through successive detours. One kid said he was stung by a wasp. Another quietly wet his pants. A third got a finger in his eye. And a fourth, a fat girl, took a prat fall deboarding. Other than that, as they have for six and one half years, every­ body on Shirley’s school bus got home safe. several Yelling, a synonym for dis­ cipline. is of course a m ajor part of any school bus driver’s (Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) Nacogdoches Painter Honored With Party is A combined Mrs. Muller and her husband. Stephen F. Austin. She farewell party i painters and a form er resident and art exhibit will honor Vir of Nacogdoches. Mrs. Nabinger ginia Muller, well-known Na- now resides in Fredericksburg, cogdoches painter and teacher,! Mrs. M uller’s early art trarn- will be held Saturday at Gal- mg was with her m other but IO p.m. she also studied at Kilgore Col- lery 107 from 7:30 to lege and with Ja n et Turner at invited. The public later building contractor Belton Mul- studied portraiture with Ray ler, will move shortly to Frede- Kroman in Longview and Mexi- ricksburg, where they will ope-co. She attended a concentrated rate an art gallery and where series of instruction by a panel Mrs. Muller will conduct class- consisting of Wheeler Williams, es. The Mullers plan to restore Dean Cornwell and Henry Gas a stone house is almost ser, all National A cadam ecians. IOO years old. F redericksburg and also F rank Reilly, instruc- town west of tor at the Art Students League, is Austin that was founded by ear- and P ortraitist R ichard Seyf-| ly-day G erm an im m igrants the historic that The m other of Mrs. Muller classes wih Jam es Valone of POETS CORNER j DISCOVERED GOD is D. S. Nabinger, long one of T exas’ best-known landscape Kurth P-TA In Membership Drive Cert. Other studies consist of ^ a young man I wandered through valleys deep, the A rkansas Art Center and ^ n d mountains so ridged, watercolor workshops with Mil-; ford Zornes of Utah, Jo Taylor \ d id ’ it of Pittsburg, Reese Kennedy of in pride. Nacogdoches, and George C ar-!gut jt seem ed someone was by penter of Ogunquit, Maine. in sorrow, I did so steep, m v side. so it She is a m em ber of Artists and Craftsm en, Inc., The Hill 11 alwavs looked to find who As a new school year g e k f e ™ 1? . underway, Kurth P-TA is u r g - f rt „ Gulld- (^ a“ gd^ hes, A * Because It seem ed wanted to share. ing each parent to participate * £ t t . M M I WJ- l? undf onh’ Lla"° was th*.r e - to me he It was funny though for I knew not what he had, ut w bad. sne h ^ l depre0sTdent0 M r s " " Richardson said i l l s Lecture-dem onstra.ions .he, ' Nacogdoches Art League; Llano But what ever he had it wasn I Art Guild, Llano,; Guild. Longview; Arts. D allas; and Some of the projects which are the P-TA has supported head-sets. which are used with the cassette recorder-player, to s indi-j better meet the needs of vidual instruction. It is h o p f u l widely that through a variety of f u n d p a rtin g s are shown at raising P - T A Carpet Gallery of Victoria,; might be able to purchase more ^ Art Gallery. Houston, audio visual eq u ip m en t th a t will Securities, K errville.; and other n Muller has throughout Texas. H e r Gregg Art of Fiesta art other , c u s - activities the ps , A r t I began to see more of this One, m ing sometime to ught. Weathermen " ‘8 the welcome roll out to u , ' rn ..........................]£ feet slate thus far. 73 meir miudi luiucsi wi In their initial contest Di- then toppled Center 20-7, ASSOCIATED P R E S S „ , , . . K mat. but I m sorry it had to be called the chance of rain by shutout the Livingston Lions, another Class AAA squad 14-0. n . L i r , ™ nats)—OI- §ame time 50"50- 337. Murcer N.Y., The New York our ball club,” said Howard. Ya kees Washington, now abandoned Last weeks game against » a ....................... Class A Corrigan has been -331. the Jacks' toughest battle of the season. RU N S ebrew, Minn., BA T T ED Diboll’s offense is a blend Bait., 99. dampened what might have by American League teams Kin been the farewell game for the twice in l l years, is trying to) nigh, attract the San Diego Padres Felipe Alou stroked a bases- from tbe National League <1 lead a four-run replacement next season, bul the move st iii is viewed as un SAN A U G U STIN E - Riding quickness on the outside rush- Minn., 177. of hard-hitting inside running p o w e r , c o u p l e d with speed and Alomar, Calif., 177; Carew, V ankee rally in the fifth League H ITS—Tovar, Minn., 202; loaded single to The American a1- likely. SA Wolves Ride 17-Game Streak S ' O I r o n e r S c h e d u l e The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from Mrs. Richard Alden Knight's Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will tx1 fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find (he f>est sport that each day has to ofter. The Major Periods are shown in boldface type. These be­ gin at the tir.es shown and la>t for an hour and a half or •wo hours thereafter. Tile Minor Periods, shown in regular tvp*- are of somewhat shorter duration. Date Day M*nor Major Minor Major AM PM D O U B LE S—R .Smith, Bosh, ready has approved the Sena- Players said they would like Carew Minn 3 3 - Schal, K.C., 31 T R IP L E S - P a te k . K C., to Dallas-Fort to see the fans get a new flan ll ; Worth next season, although chise. How.-d said. “ People in town deserve a major HOM E RUNS-Cash. Pet., two best-known players, How- league club They have had 3 2 ; M e l t o n , Chic., 32; ard and former 31-game winner nothing but losers in my life there is a strong possibility the this tors’ move IO. R.Jackson, Oak., 32. Denny McLain, may not be time." Sept. 30 Thursday Oct. I Friday 2 Saturday .3 Sunday 1:35 8:15 2:05 8:10 2:25 3:15 4:00 9:05 9:50 10:35 2:55 .3:45 4:30 9:30 10:15 11:00 The 1971 NEA All-Major League Team IO. Arlington .............................. 3-0 C LA SS AAA I. M cKinney 2. Ennis (3) 3. Silsbee 4. lowo P a rk 5 Brenham 6. Gregory-Portland 7. Brownwood 8. Monahans 9. Lam esa IO. West Orange t8) ................. ..................... ( I ) .......... ................ ( I) (2i ....... .............. ................. ...........................2-0 .3-0 .. 3-0 ...2-0 ...3-0 ...2-0 ...0-2 ...3-0 ...3-0 ...........................3-0 C LA SS AA Cornell Leading Nation Statistics NEW Y O RK AP) ion the nation's ............................ 3-0 (9) Along Sixkiller at the throttle, follows 2. Refugio <5> .................... 1-1 .........................m *“ “ " s -....... — - — ------- - in three 4 Denver c'itv"’.‘.‘.’.'.’.'.'.’.'.’.'..’.’.'..2-i . I. Eastland 3 Dibotl 3. Diboll economic with a 307 average with freeze, brakes have been ap- games. plied to the runaway scoring Penn State leads scoring with 7. j OCksboro t-end in college football. a 50-point average, followed by ;• J ™ * 1' .................... 2-1 | J i g , Latest statistics by tho Na- Washington. 49, and Oklahoma. 10. unden-Kiidare ... 3-0 the NCAA arm which 42.5. ices, keeps up with such things, re- Dartmouth leads in tital de- I veals games were tng in three the lowest in scor- up Western Michigan following 5. with 145. Texas Christian is No. 7'. Poth fense. with only 116 yards given 4'. Albany Saturday’s that last Sonora There were were shutouts I seasons. 16 (7) ................................3-0 .21 *.*.II*.*‘ 3-0 nl;".".y.'.‘.” ‘.'.'.'.3-o 2-1 .......... in rushing defense, holding ^ Forney nj .................................3-0 .3-0 t i) 24.5 IO. Farm ersville Forney to an average of among the major teams, the foes most since Nov. 17. 1965. The points, and Richmond in pass parlv season scoring averages defense, yielding an average of 44.5. Penn’s 49 yards tops the are well below last year. In 66 games last week the punters and Yale, with no major qolleges produced an av points scored against it. leads erage of 37.6 points a game, the in scoring defense, smallest since Sept. 28. 1968. The season’s average compared with 42.6 last season _ • ,nen and the record 43.2 in 1969. t o t a l o f f e n s e ......... 96 38.6 is , The onlv explanation by ob- 3. Bowling Green ..175 . , is that coaches have 6 arkansas Princeton ‘ u 4. l i i servers turned greater attention to the defense. 8 Dartmouth I Cornell 611 2. Penn state — 159 1096 1010 497 ...253 1426 s. washington ... w uv p a s s i n g o f f e n s e A n T w T r a m i e U C d g U t A H “s c h o o l S C UUU*, C o '"- 0 v u . iowa State 1() Colorodo , I f j * < ne^l. with an outstanding back in Ed Marinaro. is leading the country in both total offense I Princeton with 611 yards and rushing of 2 washington 11* Stanford fense with 431 yards tor tne 4 virginia Tech s. it' has played single game Penn State follows in both cate- 7. gories with a 548 average over- « ^ ° hvard all and 384 yards rushing in two 10 Davidson gravies. Bowling Green is averaging 505 cards in total of­ fense. third. . 39 citadel I vy 1 cornell The top passing team is an- 2 Penn^state 3. Oklahoma . . . . 72 ....124 ...120 m e m b e r . 4 Bowling Green ..131 other Princeton.' with 328 yards in the > T « » do -■•••>» gip for the onlv game it has played—a to Rut- losing one gej^s Washington, with Sonny 431 769 760 682 667 996 .. 59 330 658 » 956 941 Alabama ... 187 7 Dartmouth » i0 League J-—— r u s h i n g o f f e n s e a 17-game winning streak in regular season play, the Wol­ A,L YBr*n ^ IV TDs5 ves of San Augustine High S 1 4 School take on foe No. 4 in 5 the 1971 season when th 2y in- i ’ 7 vade Woodville for the F ri­ day night game with the Eag- 10 les. .. . 84 611 548 sos 497 475.3 475.7 463.5 452 440 434.7 452 ...73 ....173 880 ...2 1 1 1304 8 l l Av ....-64 2? is ios si Not since Garrison’s Bull- dogs turned the trick back in Att com Yds Gain 1969 have Coach Warren Nor- 24 ....im 52 j * ... so 38 .....m « 923 30% veil’s Wolves tasted defeat. 8oo 266.7 m 745 658 219 3 su» 609 203 602 200.7 396 198 198 198 579 193 During the regular 1970 sea- son the Wolves walked over 10 straight foes undefeated rolling up 371 points while a1- lowing the opposition only 47 points. In Bi-District action last season the Wolves lost a ah Yards Avg tds heartbreaker to Barbers Hill, 24-18. before packing away their gear for another year. Coach Norvell’s 1971 edition of the San Augustine Wolves opened against Groveton with the Indians falling 54-12. Sec­ ond foe was at Garrison with the Wolves winning this one 36-0. Latest foe in the 17-game winning streak was Timpson with the Bears falling 27-6. 431 384 380 341 333.5 332 330 329 318.7 3137 7 9 It Players Association Blasts Artificial Turf. Telecasts ing attack and a capable aer- ial threat guaranteed to keep their opponents’ defense hon- est Hemphill relies almost en- tirely on their ground attack as witnessed by their victory over Academy when thev failed to gain a yard passing. Northwest STO LEN B A S E S —Otis. KC ., 5 2 ; Patek. K.C.. 49. PITC H IN G (15 Decisions)- This is to Hemphill’s credit McNally, Bait.. 21-5, 908, 2.80; .750 1.62: c.Dobson. Oak., 15-5 .750 3.71. ----- NATIONAL L E A G U E when they run up against the B juei Qak., 24-8. tough Jack secondary which has picked off six passes in three games, only one shy of the number of completions they have allowed. (425 at bats)- Torre. St.L., .363; Clsmente, .342; So this week’s Diboll grid pjtt 3 4 2; Garr. Atl., BATTIN G looks to be a rough Beckert. Chic.. .342 action and tumble encounter, accord- ing to Wyatt. “ Why we may be lucky to even score a first down," he g. . said. “ Hemphill would rather beat us than win district." R U N S—Brock St.L 126: Bonds S.F., 110. RU N S BA T TED IN —Torre, 13?; Star„ ell. Pitt., 125 HITS — Torre, St. L., 230; Garr. Atl.. 219. D O U B L E S —Cedeno, Heust., P H IL A D E L P H IA (A P ) - Vil- 39; Brock. St.L., 36. lanQva faces Massachusetts thfi feature first.r0und game of l l ; Morgan Houst. the Quaker city Holiday Bas- H OM E RU N S—Stargell Pitt ketball Tourney on Dec. 27. it 48; H.Aaron Atl.. 47 It in T R IP L E S - Metzger. Houst.. S T O L E N B A S E S —Brock today. ll. is TTinie Stargell—lf Pittsburgh Tony Oliva—rf Minnesota “ We’re not playing on past was announced games-won or lost,” Coach Manhattan vs Tennessee, Fair St.L., 64; Morgan. Houst., 38. jield vs. south Carolina and La “ W e’re Norvel said. our foes one at a time and « ii .iw u.m i. MV,., u.. .... ---- mnpr iirsi-rounu uuncavc. other first-round contests. he added. (15 Decisions)- _ Roston College in the McGraw. N Y., 11-4. .733, 1.78; •*« ™ » * Gullett, ( in. 16-6 .727, 2.73 PITC H IN G taking ‘ W ASHINGTON . ---- (A P ) - .te a m cities where season tick- Woodville is next on the list.” SaUe . ... , i i a ii ,■ I Clbsed-circuit telecasts Uncial turf are under attack bv He said the association was told by Commissioner (Pete) the National Football League 1 Tex) R o z e l l e and Mr. Plovers Association. and ar- efs have been sold out. i nf « * - <;hf a^ked owners negotiating team, that * r nth work When the Wolves leave the field house Friday at 5 p.m. they will be wearing WToif Crimson Jackets for the first time. The new colorful jack contrajr*® ets were made by Mrs. Car- fields which extend[ through the 1973 r(jU Vaughn to closed-‘ircuit -sea^on P ohibit c losed ^circuit, Thg football cable or pal television. Ue assum(*d . slogan “ Seventeen for yj0if fans Down -Seven „ And one at at tima! E d Garvey, executive d the N F L P A . tor of Wednesday for a halt in further current in L lla tio n of artificial a i l an c d telecasts of home pro L in e s ^ Rod Laver Back On Tennis Circuit their rep- ( AP; — to go throe hotly contested sets re«entations were made in good revelations were made in good " other Wol'f games to be E ^ ‘t” o7 tennis’ IO leading mon- to defeat Brian Fairley of New fcarvey said his oigmiza mr faj ^ therefore, dropped our re is relvinc on public opin^n c niiPQt for tk roononin^ of tht f o r c e the N F L to take action on 1 bith subjects before ii ^ them ” is to The \ F I PA executive direc- here: 0ct v~ Dibo11' ah ,ui at ey winners, headed by favored Zealand Wednesday, 6-3, 6-7. 6- After losing the tiebreaker. ^ a ’iza.ion “ Oct » a, Palestine West- firstP prize in the RedwoodI B a n k the; lwre; ne pursuit today of the SIC.OOH Okker dropped his service Lindale, Rod Laver of Australia, contin- I bv Dr wood; Nov. 5 Rusk nere and a reopening of the Pla^’ed sponsoring a study B E R K E L E Y . CAlif. Hemphill; Oct. 15, include: Oct. 3 international anything rn C lo Open in „ ^ • 1 ^ . Tennis but hen ran off blasting an ace «h> ^ - games. for match iVellington Mara, owner oi j ames Garrick, of of lamas fiarriric nf b attle Seattle. the season closes Nov. 12 at Championships. th£ New York Giants and chair- wash . to determine if artificial Shelbyville man of the Player Relations turf -1S cau.Smg an “ alarming Association said a t ;rib u ted to the executive direc- s^ d be bad written all tol of the N F L P A are com- ^-pu general managers and fact trainers asking them to cooper- pletely without basis arid he was so informed in the study, entirely fi- ■ “ Statementsinumber 0{ football injuries." ate in Sports Briefs Laver, back from a month’s point. the from layoff tournament Two of the three Americans; tour won a second round match among the top eight seeds- Wednesdav from Alex Olmedo, Marty Riessen of Evanston, 111., No.7, and Cliff Richey of 6_4 6.j Olmedo. a Beverly Hills. Ca San Angelo, Tex., No.8—also lif hotel pro. returned to the were pushed to three sets to get circuit this year after a six- past the second round, from vear layoff. Riessen won Joachim v In today’s round of 16. Laver Loyo-Mayo, Mexican * We will request a meeting nanced by the association. th ‘Every N F L club that has re- bimittee to directi' and pre .sponded to our request has in the players’ executive ;.i iit e lv express our deep con , Arn with these misstatements a form letter that the matter is Eyreton and A.«ault «v»mbuwd EmMson who sc of. f a c t m a d e bv their represen being referred to the National for a record iS iv e ” Mara said. -301*6® Super-layed 6-3. 4 Fooball League Player Rela- fects payoff for $2 at Roosevelt goon Rahim, a UCLA stude („rm*d us in v h a T r ^ W i a n y Miss Cadueus. Grateful Add opposes fellow Australian Roy W E S T B U R Y , N Y. i AP» — ft he Denver Broncos pounced they would beam Oft. 3 game with Kansas Association—the an- tions their muter established for collective winning combination was 5+6 City bargaining and labor problems _____ . com Raceway Wednesday night. The from Pakistan. nto ^ a, Ha. r 0 er Tavlor of England. 6-7 b^ ctndpnt fi 4 0 3 .■ . f. . ^ Kodes n, u70rhoslovakia beat Roy Barth match- of San Diego. 7-5, 6-1, and, Wednesday—Andrew Patti- meets Bob Lutz of Los Angeles.1 wmVeycoSntjnue! N E W YO RK . AP, - F o r son _ of Rhodesia again, sndh^ elimmated T ^ r y Add-on h,ch seats w Washington Redskins plan • - to throughout this season, even if dham and Utah win open the arened Arthur^Ashe j l _ G u n of A u r t r ^ M . 6 2. final their how four ’amcs on closed-circuit fly Washington Coliseum G arvey said thy I Hon er and W ashington I ; , ’I n r « ; . = home , s TY at ( ' 'trvpv said One aim of the Madison Square Garden Dec.'Cliff Drysdale of South Africa No 4 seed. coasted past ar. - - ss. 7 J S Z S - z t J r A 3 a s x a s s x a; Basketball Festival in Spring, Va. and second-seed^ Ken F ^ e w a ll o Austramn ,iaThird seeded Tom Okker o l m a t c h e d today with Spain's An- move by t y p e ol turf causes the least in other .L!!- . c o , , Dib.ev „ f aus,™. — ion ar undoubted!\ be — in other Hinued. iraiiar announcemei Joe Torre—3b St. Lo u if Lee May—lb Cincinnati Manny Sanguillen—c Pittsburgh Los Angeles-San Francisco Race Goes Down To The Wire By B E R T RO SEN THAL ssjR,,ated Press Sports Writer After 161 games of the regu- tar season, the hectic National Leagues West Division pennant race boils down to one game • - ,01 y tw? , , me 162-gamei schedule reach- s c im ax onight, with the e-. san Francisco Giants holding a precarious one-game lead over the Los Angeles Dodgers l i m i t m n A San Francisco victory over the Padres at San Diego or a Dodger loss at home against t h o the Houston Astros would make the Giants chamDions and send *u0 VT ,u„m rr them the NL playoffs against Pittsburgh, beginning Saturday on the West Coast. jnfn into ......... . , 1 , However, a Giants’ setback and a Dodger victory would put the teams in a tie for the lead and force a one-game playoff Friday at San Francisco. the The Giants, who have led since April 12th. muffed an op- portunity title to clinch to Wednesday night, bowing San Diego 4-1 on Nate Colbert's three-run homer in the 10th in- ning. However, they were as- stired of no worse than a tie for the Dodgers fist place when were trounced by Houston 11-0. Montreal defeated Chicago 6* the only other National in 5 League game. The Giants will use their ace Juan M arshal, right-hander, 17' U ’ against San Dieg0’s Dave Roberts, a left-hander tough with a 14-16 record in an at- tempt to win their first title since 1962. However, Marichai has been seeing a doctor about a sore hip and the injury could curtail his effectiveness. Man- chal is 3-0 against the Padres s ., this season, while Roberts is 0-3 aeainsf thp CianK * c San Diego Manager Preston Gomez is certain there will be a play- n Despite t figures. *t the n u n o L . i off. “ The last game is going to be in San Francisco Friday,” he said. “ Roberts is going to win for us and tile Dodgers are going to win.” Told of Gomez’ prediction, Giants’ Manager Charlie Fox said: “ He's entitled to his opin- ion.” Los Angeles’ imperturbable manager, Walt Alston, took the Dodgers’ defeat as calmly as could be expected. “ They just beat the hell out of us,” he said. “ But it’s no worse than It also was nice to losing 1-0. the Giants lose, but we’re have disgusted with our own still score.” Alston will send right-hander Don Sutton’ 16*12’ agamst for* mer Dodger Jack Dillingham, 10-15, in tonights windup. Colbert, San Diego’s big slug- said he hit an inside, belt- fastball off Giants’ relief ger, high ace, Je rry Johnson, 12-9, over the left field waU in the loth inning for his 27th homer of the season, breaking a 1-1 dead- lock a a u I I I <*T r n i i t A t I felt like I was due for a base hit,” said the Padres’ first baseman. “ I was starting to get a little upset because I ’ve been failing in clutch situations.” Tommy Dean the Padres’ winning rally with a leadoff single off Johnson, who started had relieved starter John Cum berland with two out in the fifth inning. Don Mason forced Dean, but John Jeter reached first and Mason was safe at second when Tito Fuentes dropped s h o r t s t o p Chris Speier’s throw on an attempted force play on Jeter’s grounder. “ I don't think it would have been a double play ball,” said Fox. “ If it had been a double play it would have been a great one. Jeter runs too fast.” Xhei1t Colbert ended it. Clay Kirby went the distance for San Diego and held the Gi- 15th S€Ven hits for his anfs victory-most by a Padre pitch- er in the club's three-year his- ,ory He stru,.k out 1L _____.. T . . . b u t Walking OUt t o yous"before a game “ he said ® l(. .. t h e mOUnfl the affain.t fue rian t? I fait against toe uidtus, 1 zen uhs pressure. Even though it didnt 1 to ne t fpit tikp ™ were in the pennant race “ --..thin F tough Kirby was the clutch, stranding ll n nar- bever! thev had been suied on try to do.” even with its 38-14 victory over ticularlv wary when they lee it Irom trees, parked cars ana nth Back in the days when Allen Now that Allen is with Wash was with the Los Angeles Karns, ington there already has been talk be pumped rookie Steve Goepol of Colgate, who went through camp with the Cowboys before he was cut. “ No.” he said. Landry was asked if the Cow- Landry announced Wednesday int iys had former interviewed tip "wit Ii a George Allen coached er advantageous positions dur boys had Richter that Craig Morton will start at Redskin tight end Pat inc practice. quarterback for the Cowboys over Roger Staubach. who was knocked silly in the first quar­ ter of the Philadelphia game las: Sunday. Morton came in and led Dailas to a 42-7 victory. “ We will not change our two- (A P ) - Texas quarterback system," said Lan- ' ; er s; ^ ogei Wait And See With Phillips AUSTIN, Tex ~~ Houston County Squirrel Season Opcis Oct. 15 S q u ir re l season is due to open in H ouston C o u n ty Oct. 15, though it w a s listed in yes­ te rd a y ’s paper am ong the counties opening tom orrow . A re a counties w h ich a re open to sq u irre l hunting to m o rro w include A n g e lin a , N a c o g ­ d o c h e s , Cherokee, S a n A u g u stin e and Sh elb y. A r c a counties w h ich re m ain closed to s q u ir­ include H ouston, Ja s p e r, N e w to n and rel hu nters u n til O ct. 15 T r in it y , Polk, T v le r , Sabine. F o r opening dates and reg u latio n s on all T exas counties and gam e species see the 1971- 72 Texas H u n tin g G uid e, a v a ila b le a t 'Texas P a rk s and W ild life o ffices and fro m all deal­ ers who sell h u n tin g licenses. Landry was asked about that Wednesday and he answered. “ All information is helpful. Anv information you might get could confirm what vnu believe is go­ ing to happen.” Not that Landrv is accusing coach Darrell Royal will wait dr-v - H s ao fau*’ °* until Saturday to decide whether v' e arG * first-string quarterback Eddie a* anv Phillips will play Saturday for the Recalcitrant third-ranked I e funning back Longhorns Duan? Thomas Is now working with the team but probably will for several of Redskins nefarious against Oregon, the schemes. But he did sav when asked whether the Cowbovs decide Saturday how much of a were being particular!” careful gamble it would be to use him during practice this week: “ We and if ifs worth the gamble.’’ in the lineup at some point might look around." to wait and not he activated weeks. said Royal. “ It's still doubtful Landry said. “ W e’ll just have “ WTe will eventually work him The unbeaten Redskins and if he can run.” the nndefea'ed Cowboys tangle Sundae in the Cotton Bowl. Phillips to drills returned Wednesday but, Royal said. “ He --------------- r u n f n t i n f r»RY ..jA n irp p w Landry said Allen knows the didn't go full speed...vet at times M IL W A U K E E , Wis. Coivhovs well. he felt his hamstring muscle ^ ne way ,0 *nsure a longer lite “ We’ve played against 'em a tightening.” ^or y ° ur outboard engine is to times,” Landry said lot of “ They got to stop us even if with a hamstring pull and a use, advises strained toe they know it’s coming.” Phillips has been bothered run the engine dry the N EW S Service. lfter each Evinrude Landry said one advantage to lf Phillips doesn’t start To use up the fuel merely dis- nicking up a former player is against the Ducks, Donnie Wig- connect the fuel line where [“ you can learn audibles, sets ginton will get the call. connects to the engme. Manning To Lead Saints In Houston HOUSTON, Tex. (A P ) — Dan kett, were generally regarded mg quarterback, leading them,Charley Johnson in the second Pastorini and Archie Manning, as the big three quarterbacks in to victory in his first profession- half last week against Kansas City and perked up a stale two of the top rookie quarter- the 1971 pro football dratt. backs in the National Football Manning is the Saints' start league, may duel in the Astro­ dome Sunday as starting quar- veteran Houston offense. Pastorini a1 start. replaced Braves Re-Hire Luman Harris But Oiler head coach Ed ATLANTA (A P ) - “ I really age the Atlanta Braves. Hughes hasn t decided if he ll b eliev e open against the New Orleans Saints with Pastorini. who com- pleted IO of 21 passes including sible trades and changes, is the made the announcement at ering the way the young play- Braves was uncertain until ors came along and with pos- President the club Bartholomav _____ the personnel, consid future with Harris’ Bill at one for a touchdown in an out- best Xve ever taken to spring ^standing performance last week. training/’ Luman Harris waid news conference at Pastorini and Manning, along Wednesday afer signing his only 30 minutes after advising it*s hard Hughes also said he expected a tough time from the Saints’ “ With Manning prizo rookie. Wednesday, ^ r a m b lin g around back there. ' our timing to get a with New England’s Jim Plun fifth one-year contract to man Harris of the decision. down,” Hughes said. “ I thought Dan did an excep­ tional job against Kansas City,” Hughes said. “ He was under tremendous pressure. He came in when we were behind and they knew we'd have to throw.” ALL TROPHY OPEN HORSE SHOW SATURDAY OCTOBER 2, 1971 (RAIN DATE OCTOBER 9) TREATMENT CENTER RODEO ARENA LUFKIN. TEXAS — CLASSES AND SPONSORS AS LISTED: HALTER CLASSES ll) A M. - ENTRIES CLOSE BEFORE CLASS BEGINS S3.OO Entry fee for each animal in each class (except where specified) 1. 1971 Fillies — John Duke Ins. Agency, 114 Fronk 2. 1970 Fillies — B. F. Goodrich Stores, 320 S. Chestnut 3. 1969 Mores — Jim W aters Ins. Agency, 400 S. First 10. Grand and Reserve Stallions — Mrs. Roy Saunders 11. 1969 and After Geldings — Billy Lee Thompson, Attorney 12. 1968 and Before Geldings — Davis Ins. Agency, 4. 196S & Before Mares — Cannon & Parker, 112 S. First 404 N. Second 5. Grand & Reserve Mares — Mrs. John Wood 6. 1971 Stallion Fools — Gibbs Ins. Agency, 517 S. First 7. 1970 Stallions —- Matthew Miller Dept. Store, 113 N. First 8. 1969 Stallions — First Bank & Trust, 415 S. First 9. 1968 & Before Stallions — Sea Food Inn, 1S07 S. Timberland 13. Grand and Reserve Gelding, Renfro Packing Co., Wholesale and Retail Meats 14. Junior Open Cutting — Barnett Feed and Supply, 15. Open Caning — Selmont Paint & Body Shop, 1311 Huntington Paul Ave. PERFORMANCE CLASSES START 3:00 P.M. Entry fee S2.00 (for each event) Trophies through 6th Place except where s p a c e d 20. Reining — 13 thru 17 — Piney Wood Mobile Homes, Inc., Co. — 523 S. First Buck Crawford 214 S. Timberland 16. Western Pleasure — 12 and under — City Motor Co., 1301 N. Timberland 17. Western Pleasure — 13 thru 17 — Gilbert Burraus Butane and Furniture, 1402 N. Baguet IB . Western Pleasura — 18 and over —■ Beesch’s Born Western W ear and Garden Supplies 19. Raining — 12 and under — Two Point Shell Service — 21. Reining 18 and Over — Southland Feeds Supply 22. Keyhole — 12 and under — Peuland's Riteway Shoat A Metal, GE Air Conditioning A Heating 23. Keyhole — 13 thru 17 — Wayne Jones A J. B. Jordan Ins. Agency 24. Keyhole — 18 and over — KAW Trucking — Jasper, Texas 25. Paia Bending — 12 and under — Mom’s Washhouse. Washateria A Dry Cleaning 26. Pole Bending — 13 thru 17 — Lufkin Farm Supply — 219 N. Second 27. Pale Bending — 18 and aver — Million and Loving Gra. A Market — Hwy. 69 Seuth 21. Flag Race -— 12 and under — Hopson Electric Service — 1613 N. Baguet 2? 30. J I Flag Race — 13 thru I 7 — Cherry's Handy Dandy Gra. A Market — Kurth D r i v e Flag Race — IS and over — Woody's Toys — “ W e don't Work W e Display'' Straight Away Barrels T. Jackson 12 and under — Or. Wtlliom 32. Straight Away Barrels — 13 thru 17 Angelina Motor 33. Straight Away Barrels — 18 and over — W aller Sheet Metal and Roofing — 121 W . Burke 34. Claver Leaf Barrel — 12 and under — Land O' Pines Dairy Products Co. — 500 Abney Ave. 35. Clever Leaf Barrel — 13 thru 17 — Caver Electric — 36. Clever Leaf Barrel — 18 and over — Portor's Mobile 37. Open Rescue Race — Ivy's Shopping Center — Lone Star 38. Ribbon Roping — Automatic Transmission Service — 1711 1022 E. Denman Jones-U-Name-lt Gro. Feeds A FertiliieK N. Raguet Timberland Drive 39. Tie Dawn Calf Roping — Tipton Billingsley Ford — HIGH POINT TROPHY EACH AGE GROUP Horses must show at halter High Point Trophy— 12 and under — Elbe Cleaners— Judson Shopping Center High Point Trophy— 13 thru 17 — Dunn's Gro. A Market — Loop 287 High Point Trophy— 18 and over — Raymond H ava'd Paint A Body Shop JOHNSON & PINNER USED CARS Lufkin Ave. TEXAS STATE OPTICAL 109 E. Lufkin Ave. Additional Overall Sponsors WILL HAVE DRAW ING FOR REGISTERED QUARTER HORSE AT 8:00 P.M. GUS BOESCH A N N O U N C ER SPONSORED BY - i - CULLEN ROBINSON JU D G E ANGELINA COUNTY MOUNTED PATROL BILL GOOLSBEE PRESIDENT ARCHIE PINNER VICE PRESIDENT E. E. WILLIFORD SEC.-TREASURER Inside Angelina College Community Chorus To Begin Messiah' Rehearsals By JOAN POPE Lufkin News Writer Community Chorus rehearsals physical education major of Clark, and Cynthia Thomas w ill I chairman; and Clay Cox. par- Alpha Tau is an organization originated last spring as the Lufkin. represent the organization in liamentarian. for male students only, which school’s initial fraternity. Sophomore students also pick the student government meet-________________________________________________ ________________________ G S v >v:< M ELEGANTLY' STYX. F P — A new formal roof line on the 1972 Dodge Charger Special Edition (S.E .) gives this popular hardtop a dressed-tip, sophisticated a p p e a r a n c e . Hidden headlamps are standard on this model. Other C hargers offered include a 2-door Coupe and a 2-door hardtop. FAIR C h a rg e Plate m sm BankAmericard tim e mm Repeat of a Sellout New Shipment Safari Bush Jackets ea. SAVE 4.01 M ach ine W ashable Polyester and Cotton The S a f a r i J a c k e t — th a t goes e v e r y w h e r e , all y e a r ro u n d! In w a s h a b le , no-iron 6 5 i% p o l y e s t e r and 35 % c o tto n . S t y l e d wit h c o n ­ v e n i e n t p o c k e ts , long s le eve s and a c c e n t e d w it h w h it e to p s t itch in g . In b u rg un dy , b ro w n , n a v y and pu rp le . Sizes 8 to 18. ii « Ti £ Psi • . ii H I I lr Th* Fair I ne. P O Pox 404 7 Bea umont, Tex. 77 704 E n c l o s e d Is my C h e c k or M o n e y O r d e r for bush J a c k e t s at 5.99 e a ch , plus .75, for tax a n d m a ili n g. ( T o t a l 6.74 e a c h ) . J a c k e t s Sizes Sizes First C o l o r C h o i c e Seco n d Choice N am e A d d r e s s C ity & S t a t e Zip Designed re fit a wide range of figures. Non-Cling Nylon Tricot Slips /> % ^ \ tv ' * r ( ( ,•* * >, i j / \ I' ; ( y*( \ \ J\ / \ \ v \ i n . / from R o s e m a r y ( r i g h t ) : D a i n t y and fe m in in e in a s i m p li c i t y of s c a l ­ lops and la c e . A c c e n t e d w it h ti n y ro sebu d s. S t y l e 4 0 4 4 . 1 W i l d Ir is " ( l e f t ) : W i t h a sh irr­ im ­ ed b o d i c e e n h a n c e d w it h la c e . A lso w it h p o r t e d nylon la c e at the hem line. S t y le 4271. IOO poo Both in sizes: Short: 32-36 A v e ra g e : 32-40 for the annual fall production ed three representatives to sit ings. the council. They are Marshall Young was selected of “ The Messiah” will begin with Get. l l at 7 p.m. After its ini- Lynne Bivin. fine arts major; to be the program chairman, tial meeting, the group is sche- Dianne Warren, arts and Lois Williams will report duled to rehearse weekly until major: and Carol Whitten. All the events. Sergeant-at-arms for the production on Dec. IO. this term is John Pierce. three are Lufkinites. liberal Now ----- Soloists for the concert are its third year, the land Young, and the vice prcsi- They are Bubba Mrs. Gloria Lewis will advise soprano Carol Cramer. Wash- Angelina's united Brotherhood the group, assisted by Susan ington, D. C ; contralto Mrs. Society, designed to promote Bates, piano instructor. Betty Bedsole. Lufkin; tenor peace and equality, has elected Joe Carrell. Tyler; and b a s s - or reinstated a number of offi Jim Norwood, West jeers for the term. baritone Monroe. La Beginning its second year o( activities, the Alpha Tau has This year's president is Cleve- elected officers for the term. Zeleskey, in eommunitv chorus is directed c-en^ l s Coletha Stevens. Patri- president; Bubba Holland, vice bv Angelina College’s Charles|cia Adams was picked as sec- president; Art Bullock, secre- treasurer; Hogan'and accompanied by Su- rotary assisted by Earliest Per- tary; Steve Hicks, (Dennis Dickerson, sergeant-at- can Bates. Last vear, it tro lle d 75 members but the Fine Arts, U BS treasurer is now Shelia;arms; David Metteur, social Division is anticipating a total of about IOO for the new term “ The Messiah.” in its presen­ tation last fall, drew7 a cana- cifv crowd that provoked the department to make it an an­ nual production. Next year’s .soloists have already been de­ termined. Lawn Problem Solution Cited County Agent Says “ Thi<; concert." s a 's Hogan “ tells the stop of man’s re demotion, and it's divided in''' ‘hroo mrfc. The first seN forth 'ho ore en o f t h e r p r lo p f n p d . t h o h i p '" ' o. Christ, of His mission hen' < ’.m d r n m f n r t . It.' By CHARLES ARNOLD trate should be used at a rate County Agricultural Agnel not to exceed .3 pounds per 1,000 small Sick lawns often show false square symptoms of the real ailment, amound of fertilizer, it is im- Lawn problems that range from portent that the fertilizer dis feet. With this nation, recurrnchnn. econd portion deaL wit*. genera]jy poor growth and ap- tributor bt* accurately set. pearance to thinned-out or dead lf the soil is highly and. it cion. and “ th** establishment (,r areas have plagued nomeown- may be necessary to add lime the k'ngdom of God upon th° ers ^ is summer. If the home- Liming will assist in the .mr owner is to accurately deter- mal uptake of nutrients by the parfh T hird s -t v Mpcsmh tvp- mjne t v rea] cause of his prob- plant. “ the Christian belief in lem he must check -everal pos- Tnspect the af{ected area care- 'H o r . o c n . . p r . t i o n o f t h e h o r ! ” - 'n a cprk with tho trjiirr>r*h ct th* "pdepm^d anH tho glory of boa. yon ’’ cnvs Hooqn. Tho nroiin will sin" on1' nor. •inns of naeh Dart and will not cin" “ Tho Messiah” in its on tirofv. it laid thpt ic Hnoan a]cn ■>tir*in5it“ d that fhn haM**-5»nd.n half nrndnetinn will hn tn^p-1 arid mccihlv iicorj he lnonl onri irpa radio stations during thc Chr’stmas sp a con. lawn sibilities. True fypy for injurious insects, par- lawn grass diseases ticularly chinch bugs. To the generally are associated with untrained eye, chinch bug dam an unfavorable growlh environ- age is often confused with dis ment. Frequently, the home- ease. If untreated, this insect owner reacts to grass damage alone could destroy problems by applying addition- large areas of lawn and weaken it a1 reeling the condition, over-ferti- more susceptible to disease pro- lization may aggravate the situ- ducing organisms ation. particularly if insecis of Regardless of any cnemica diseases are involved. Before treatment applied to gra.s for attempting to correct th'1 situ disease control, the above con ation. several possibilities should ditions. if present, must be cor­ be checked. cor- remaining grass making reded before any satisfactory Instead of fertilizer. After three days of voting The soil in the affected areas long-term control can bo ob should be checked for ccmpac- tamed. Newlv elected treasurer AC students finall” chose mem Hers for their campus govern- lion or an extremely thin layer of topsoil. Either condition will ment. ic prevent adequate moisture stor- . B W Thompson, a psychology age. Slower water application major Lufkin. Dnn^a over a Rice. Lufkin business major should be started so i.s secretary. is to m- penetration. Freshman class council rep- ' without run-off ’, to a depth longer period of rime ‘ adequate from sure resentatives for this vear are ° f I- inches. physical education major Philip Over - fertilization, ecpeaiallv h„th npw * Vc,shy. from Katy; Billy Lung-with nitrogen, can cause grass ham. a business major from to become susceptible to seve- ni- Crockett: and Vicki Marshall, ral diseases. Ammonium p ajnNn the exterior of a can be both expensive nd time consuming A new fact sheet from the T '\as Ag Service. ricultural Extension “ Painting the Exterior Wood of Your Home” , .suggests proper methods of applying paint to ‘n lV r won' “ T I P a,nte^ wood slflln2 inn ... ,,rn should add color and beauty to the exterior of fhe home charm, while preserving the ap cleanliness and pleasing pearance. No one paint satis­ under fies all requirements missiles. He has completed a varying conditions. The most tour of duty in Viet- important point to remember is to follow the manufacturer’s Col- 12-month Mr. nam. and The sergeant is a 1%7 grad- recommendations. Men In Service Army Private Evel EVEL J. COLWELL J well. 19. whose parents, and Mrs. Evel Colwe'l. wife, Linda. live on route valla. Tex., recently pitted eight weeks of ad1, ance of Mr. and Mrs. individual training at Army Armor Center H . Knox. Kv ‘he ‘J . S. of 805 Picardy, Lufkin. NORMAN J. ROSS I, ume ui nuuauu mgn oniw i. Linseed oil-based com- His wife, Laura, is the daughter probably the most .units are rrequently Joe LucKoy a$ed but latex-type paints are gaining popularity. Each type 0j- pajnt js adaptod lo different situations and should not be During the training, students Army Specialist Four Norman used in the same manner, in field radio learn the duties of a tank crew- J. Ross. 21. son of Mr. and The preparation of ‘he wood important, man. including the firing of the Mrs. Norman W. Ross, Route surface tanks armanent and small wea- 5, Lufkin, is serving with the Paint on new wood can prof ice Dons. Thev also receive instruc- 77th Maintenance Company in up to IO years of service be- tion fore repainting is necessary if operation. Germany. map reading and tank ma'nte Spec. Ross nance and repair. is used. the company. He entered the army A copy of the new fact sheet, Colwell entered army in February of I b’s year in “ Painting the Exterior and completed basic training at basic training at Ft. Ord, Calif. Wood of Your Home. ' is now lives on available from the County Ex- Ft. Knox. is an engine and the wood is properly prepared power train repairman with the and June 1970 and completed L-984, His wife, Belinda, if quality paint PV T very is He is a 1970 graduate of Za- Route 5, Lufkin. Pension Office, valla High School. ROBERT E. COX Robert E Cox of Rt. ti, Luf­ kin. Tex., has been pron K ite d to staff sergeant in the U. S. 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