Weather: • Fair, M ild • High: Upper 60's • Low: M id 40's T h e Da ily T e x a n Lip Shrubbery O n UT Landscape Page 5 • Vol. 69 Price Ten Cents Student Newspaper at The University of Texas al Austin AUSTIN, TEXAS, W EDNESDAY, M A R C H 4, 1970 Ten Pan®' Today No. 126 Candidates In Presider ital 7 Race I » s ^ c , e Cai -J O '” ^ a ^Ss Bv C U FF AVERY Associate News Editor In the midst of late filing to beat the Tuesday deadline, seven candidates em er­ ged in a bid for the Students’ Association presidency, making the race one of the largest in recent campus history. in Filing for president the March 18 election were Skipper Dippel, Jeff Jones, Csaba Keszthelyi, D. “ Mickey Mouse” McQuarie, Joe Sharkey, Ken Sparks and Robert Turner. Tn other campus-wide races, Jim Arnold, Randall Hollis, Ken McHam and Richard Moore are seeking the vice-presidency, w'hile Ruth Doyle and Andy Yemma will run for editor of The Texan. for The ballot assemblyman-at-large Place I will include Gary Griffith, Don McCleary, and Paul Velez. David Mincberg and Chuck Roebuck will vie for Place 2. Thp candidates were validated shortly after the 5 p.m. deadline in the Students’ Association Office. Crow'ds of political hopefuls and aficionados had jammed the office to await the outcome of 21 races. Contacted by The Texan after filing, presidential candidates were asked to give brief outlines of their platforms. this an DIPPEL: “I sincerely hope that we can make issue-oriented campaign rn them than the pseudolabelism of candi­ dates that only serves to confuse a student unfamiliar with campus politics.” McQUARIE: “ I realize that I ’m not a new face in campus politics, but I am convinced that the climate of the students a t the University indicates this desire for the real Mickey Mouse to come forward and assume leadership.” SHARKEY: “Student government has failed to aid the dorms and co-ops this to obtain needed year as measures. It is time for student government to address itself to the needs of the largest group overlooked — the students.” tried they SPARKS: “ I am working with students in­ outside of campus politics who are terested in re-directing the goals of student government toward academic and environ­ ment approval.” TURNER: “ I solicit ideas and contribu­ tions from all who will address themselves to issues and problems within the fram e­ work of peace, sharing and unity — both on campus and off.” Jones and Keszthelyi could not be reached for comment Tuesday night. The candidates will m eet a t 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Business-Economics Building 155 to go over campaign procedure, ac­ cording to Bob Pennington, head of the Election Commission. Pennington said this year’s races will be conducted with slight changes in the election code. Inter-party communications will be counted as handouts and no stake signs wrill be permitted. Also, a candidate is eligible this year if he has 15 hours “ at the time of filing” as opposed to the old rule which required 30 hours “at the time of assuming office.” Pennington said that w'hile the commis­ it is not a sion will enforce the rules, policing agene}'. “ We’re here to help the candidates,” he said, “ and to answer their questions.” The commission, he pointed out also is em­ powered by an article in the code to deal with any questions not specifically men- tioned within it. According to election code Texan will serve as a voice for t Commission during the campa cising polling places, candidates necessary information. Other candidates are: ARTS AND SCIENCES PLACE I: Manuel I - O O % ^ Mirabal and Dirk Schenkkan. PLACE 2: John Mayo, Cappy McGarr, Craig Morton, and Rogelio Munoz. 3: PLACE Shawn Casey, Ricardo Hinojosa, Walter Matthews, Nelson Spinks and Dan Wallace. ARCHITECTURE: Jam es R. Seeman. BUSINESS PLACE I: Bobby Mann. PLACE 2: Frank Scofield. COMMUNICATION: Tim Donahue. EDUCATION PLACE I: Jim Lockett and nn Richardson. PLACE 2: Pam Hall, Kyle Hicks and Gigi Walton. ENGINEERING: Blanche Cohen. Jeff Holstein, Mark Lamaureaux, George Shannon, John R. Smith and Steve Walls. FINE ARTS: Amy Joan Brown. GRADUATE PLACE I: John Sauri and Charles Zlatkovich. PLACE 2: David Pratt, and Bill Strait. LAW: Noel Fichtenbaum. Vote M a y Change Student Assembly By CAROLYN’ HINCKLEY News Editor the A referendum spring ballot for providing for revision of student govern­ ment into a representative unicameral body was approved by the Student Assembly Tuesday night. Approval of the measure would lay the groundwork for abolishing the House of Delegates and Student Assembly in their present structure. In presenting the bill, assemblyman Bob Heath said the Students’ Association w'ould revise the constitution to implement the change if the referendum W’a s approved. Prior to passage of this referendum, the body rejected bills calling for re-appor­ tionment of the assembly and the abolish­ college ment of councils. representatives from A parking resolution passed providing that the University change the $25 ceiling to $100 for parking cases that go to the Justice of the Peace Court. Assemblyman Chuck Banks, in explaining the resolution, said a separate fund of student parking ticket revenue should be set up to finance student parking lots. “The University is losing revenue. This should be the Univer­ sity’s problem, not the City of Austin,” Banks said. The resolution also called for a change In the composition of the Parking and Traffic Committee to five students and five faculty-staff members. Banks also said the number of student parking permits issued should not exceed two permits for every space available. A sum of $1,500 was appropriated to the Housing Commission to hire an attorney three months until for the Students* Association lawyer assumes his position. He will work 40 hours a week In getting court action on student complaints of racial discrimination, rent fixing and other areas. The assembly tabled a constitutional amendment submitted by Birt Simpson calling for a separation of the blanket tax into an athletic package and another for student government, The Daily Texan and the Cultural Entertainment Committee. “This would do nothing but put The Texan in the red, and cause the demise of student government and CEC,” said assemblyman Bobby Mann in asking for its defeat. S i m p s o n ’ s constitutional amendment asking for election of members of the Texas Student Publications Board also was defeated. A bill clarifying the criteria for assembly recognition of college councils was passed. It Included provisions for voter approval of a council constitution, submission of processes of membership selection and approval by the Dean of the council’s school or college. The assembly approved a change of th® Exchange Board name to that of Interna­ and Studies Board. tional Programs Assembly legislation also stated that area chairman of the IPS Board must apply for participation in exchanges just like any other participant. In other action the body approved Bob Heath’s appointment to the Co-Op board, urged the University System to approve funding for a parking facility at the Texas Union East and created a housing com­ mittee to collect information tm housing costs. Physicians Encouraged By Johnson's Progress SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Army doctors said Tuesday they were “quite encouraged” with former President Lyndon B. Johnson’s progress despite irregular heartbeats and lingering chest pains. “ Our m ajor concern is to try to prevent a heart attack in the ordinary sense of the word,” a physician a t the Army’s Brooke General Hospital said. “ T hat’s the main thrust of the hospitalization.” Lt. Col. Robert North said Johnson's chest pains and irregular rhythm of his heartbeats “ could be premonitory warnings of a heart attack.” the North, chief of cardiology a t Brooke, said the former President is still experiencing some discomfort but nevertheless in “ excellent spirits.” is He predicted observation w’ould continue at least several days. North said there have been no serious problems since Johnson flew from the LBJ Ranch 70 miles nor­ thwest of here Monday and entered a special penthouse hospital suite. Doctors said the former President’s chest pains were caused by hardening of the arteries. “ Basically,” North told a news con­ ference, Is one of a diminished supply of blood to the heart in relation to the demand. “ the problem “ The ordinary heart attack is a conse­ quence of a complete stoppage, if you will, or a blockage of blood flow to a portion of the heart. The situation with President Johnson is not that severe,” he added. The former President, 61, felled by a heart attack in 1955 w'hen he was Senate Democratic leader, has had lesser recurring problems since then. North reported Johnson w'as treated over­ night for what he described as “extra or prem ature heartbeats.’’ He said they were not uncommon for people with heart ailments. But he noted such heart irregularities are “always a concern with people with this typo of heart disease” because it could lead to more serious rhythm Irregularities. “It’s only fair to say that we’re concerned . . . but this is not to say we have a bleak outlook,” he said. “We’re fairly optimistic at this point.” Tom Johnson, an aide to the former President, told a medical briefing Johnson “had some primarily arm pain at 2:00 this morning, and then again at 9:30 this morning he experienced some mild left chest discomfort w'hich radiated into his arm.” Delegates To M eet A bill to Include the president of the Students’ Association as a non­ voting m em ber of (rf Regents will be put to a vote a t a House of Delegates meeting a t 7:30 p.m. Wednesday the Academic Center Auditorium. the Board in Also on the agenda is a recom- m e n d a t i o n the to feasibility of establishing a syndicate to lease parking and facilities near campus. investigate construct in presiding over A bill will be presented that thanks Ernie Haywood for his neutrality and consistency t h e House. The bill also includes an ap­ propriation of funds by the Student Assembly to purchase a gavel and block as a memento for Haywood. Progress reports on the gasoline and food coop bills and the required physical education bill brought before the House at its last meeting will be considered. Politically Concerned Jam Association Office A n x io u s c a n d id a t e s a n d a r d e n t s u p p o rte rs w a it T u e s d a y t o h e a r the fin al list o f c a n d id a t e s fo r th e M a r c h 18 e le ctio n . T u e s d a y w as th e d e a d lin e fo r filin g fo r p la c e s on th e b a llo t. —Photo by Phil Huber Senate Secret Talks Urged On US Involvement in Laos WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. George S. McGovern, backed by chairman J. W. Fulbright of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, called Tuesday for a secret Senate session o* U. S. operations in Laos, But Sen. George D. Aiken of Vermont, the Senate's senior Republican, said he does not share the concern of many senators that Uios could turn into another Vietnam. “IF IT D ID /’ Aiken told reporters, “ it would create such an upheaval this country” th at any good resulting from a firm U. S. stand would be undermined. in Aiken said that, in some respects, the shift in the focus of the Southeast Asian w ar from Vietnam to Laos is “ a good sign.” He said it means “ North Vietnam Ls getting a little discouraged in the South and to Laos for bargaining purposes.” is devoting more attention On the Senate floor the tone continued to be critical of the Nixon Administration, senators — with McGovern, Fulbright and Stuart Symington of Missouri — on the attack. three Democratic “ IN SPITE of lessons of Vietnam,” McGovern asserted, “ we are the painful going down the sam e road in Laos, and we are doing it in secret.” contender I he South Dakotan, one of the earliest Senate critics of the Vietnam w ar and a likely for his party’s 1972 presidential nomination, said U. S B52 and tactical bombing raids over Laos “a re comparable to or greater than the raids over North Vietnam at their heaviest.” “ IT .ALSO seems clear,” he said, “that we invited the recent Communist offensive in the Plaine des Jam es by encouraging an American-trained, equipped and directed lao tian arm y to seize this area last Sep­ tember, thus upsetting a m ore or less stable m ilitary line that had existed for several years. “ There is growing evidence that the CIA and American m ilitary personnel — ap­ parently in civilian garb — are directing la o tia n military' operations,” he said. SECRETARY of Defense Melvin R. Laird, talking to reporters, said there has been no buildup of U. S. manpower — either civilian or m ilitary — in I^os. The secretary was about McGovern's statem ent that there “ has been more and m ore American airpower, Ameri­ asked can advisers and CIA operatives” in Laos. “ I can categorically state there has been no buildup of individuals whether civilians or m ilitary on the ground in Laos or within the country,” he said. LAIRD ALSO said U. S. policy toward m ilitary support of the Laotian government is under continuing review but “ whether there will be a change of policy, I would not make any prediction.” Fulbright, noting the Administration’s refusal to perm it publication of the tran­ in­ script of Senate hearings on U. S. volvement in Laos, said “unless it is m ade public I don't see any alternative” to the kind of secret session urged by McGovern. SYMINGTON, chairm an of the foreign relations subcommittee that conducted the closed hearings, has tried unsuccessfully to obtain State Departm ent clearance for publication of the transcript. Symington, renewing his demand for release of the transcript, noted that recent news stories base.] on government sources have information about Laos “ that we were not told.” And he said the State Department has done everything possible to keep the truth from being learned. A & S Council Deadlocked structed the representatives to discuss the split with their departments. sim ilar departm ent also was discussed. tile one to in the engineering “ All councilmen should confer with their department heads,” he said, “ to inform them of student opinion and learn about adm inistrative issues.” The council then voted to invite faculty members and interested students to the special meeting on March IO. Worehel said he expects a decision on the A&S issue at that meeting. In other action, the council voted to co­ sponsor with the pharmacy' department a drug sem inar during Round-Up. A plan to start a student lounge In a rts and sciences Councilman Payne that recommended to a A&S Dean John Silber be invited meeting their the group on decision-making powders on issues such as the A&S split. to advise Action on a Student Assembly motion to eliminate council representatives was ex­ pected, but an assembly meeting Tuesday postponed consideration. Before closing the meeting, Worehel expressed dissatisfaction at the low atten­ dance and participation in the A&S Council. “ We expect to report those not partici­ pating to their departm ents,” he said, “and replace them with interested people.” By RI STY TODD Staff Writer Conflict of opinion on how the College of Arts and Sciences should be split and a hassle over its own priorities left the A&S Council in a deadlock after a session Tuesday. Members voted to hold a special meeting March IO, to formulate a recommendation to be sent to the faculty committee ap­ pointed by University President Norman Hackerman last week. The debate over the A&S split began when Tommy Rice, Physics Department representative, attempted to explain several proposals being considered by the faculty committee. Several councilmen raised questions about the proposals that could not be answered by anyone present, and the meeting lapsed Into an argument about whether the council had enough information to make a recom­ mendation. the council send a After more than an hour's discussion, Doak Payne, philosophy councilman, moved that letter offering assistance in any needed form to the com­ mittee, but the motion died for lack of a second. Councilman Al Brown of the physical education departm ent moved that the choice of recommendations be narrowed to the Silber and W atts proposals, but that motion also died. A l t h o u g h Jason Worehel, council president, stressed the need for action, Payne questioned the ability of the group to affect A&S policy. have “ Our action m ay prove meaningless since we policy-making official capacity,” he said. “ What will it m atter if we do endorse a plan?” no Payne’s comment left the council dead­ locked cai the A&S issue, and Worehel in­ Unrest Powers Challenged Supreme Court to Rule on Ordinances' Validity \ ASHING I ON (AP) The local ordinances that were hurriedly enacted to give mayors em ergency powers during racial outbreaks of the last several years are approaching their ultimate legal tests. Tile Supreme Court was asked Monday to rule on the validity of ordinances winch give local authorities the right to prohibit assemblies because of suspected civil unrest. Such m easures w ere passed in numerous U. S. cities to cope with radical disturbances which erupted in th elate 1960’s, par­ ticularly those following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in April, 1968. I he ordinances allow m ayors or other authorities to take various emergency stops, but nearly all include the power to ban assem ­ blies or to declare outright curfews. The particular ordinance at issue was passed in Philadelphia, and although it is being attacked on rath er narrowly defined grounds the outcome is expected to have nationwide implications. The petition filed with the court appeals the convictions of three persons arrested during demonstrations that were held despite a proclamation imm ediately after King's death. The proclamation banned outdoor assemblies of 12 or more people ’ with few exceptions. The first arrests were made April 6, 1968; at a tree-planting issued in Philadelphia’s Roosevelt P ark protesting ceremony the recommissioning of the battleship New Jersey for service in the Vietnam war. The ceremony had been planned before the proclamation was Issued. Tile petition says that w'hile participants in the tree-planting ceremony were being arrested, “ more than 10,000 persons were Permitted to congregate in the Navy Yard, a few blocks away, J e r s e y ” ^31'* ^ ^ cerem on'es recommissioning the New More arrests were m ade the next day when a group appeared at the home of a congressman to petition for passage of the 1968 Civil Rights Act. Others followed at an outdoor meeting on the University of Pennsylvania campus called for discussion of the proclamation. Appellants and m ore than IOO other persons whose cases await tile outcome of tins appeal have been convicted of crim es for their quiet participation in open political assemblies of a wholly peaceful character,” the Supreme Court was told. To ban such assemblies and make arrests under "a broad proclamation prohibiting peaceful as well as violent or potentially violent gatherings, the appellants argued, violates F irst Amend­ ment guarantees of free speech and assembly. News Capsules .By The Associated Press. uth Viets Report M ekong Delta Offensive SAIGON 'auth Vietnamese headquarters reported Tuesday 323 >my soldiers were killed during a three-week sweep by irly a division of government troops in the Mekong Del- fen battalions of helicopter-borne 9th Infantry Divis- troops took part in the offensive through heavily popu- ?d Vinh Binh Province. Casualty figures showed the gov- iment forces also sustained losses, 31 killed and 401 unded. The operation ended Sunday, dany of the casualties were attributed to booby traps, indicator of deep inroads the Viet Cong had made in province during tile previous several months. Jntil the middle of 1969, enemy forces had been reluc- t to show themselves because of the presence of the !. and South Vietnamese 9th divisions. ipeased Pompidou Returns to France NEW YORK lis anger over pro-Israel demonstrations appeased by apologies of President Richard M. Nixon, French Presi- t Georges Pompidou flew home Tuesday with a smiling i revoir” for the American people, lis French Air Force plane underwent a thorough search a use of a phony telephoned bomb threat. Then it took from Kennedy airport shortly after noon, ending a con- /ersial and sometimes stormy eight-day visit here of npidou and his wife. behind him Pompidou left a group of 15 leaders of Jew- organizations, who said they were “dismayed” over French president’s abrupt cancellation of a scheduled idav meeting with them. They were among protesters inst France’s sale of HO Mirage jet fighters to Arab ya. Security wished to reduce the number of movements I Ie,” Pompidou told a farewell news conference, in refer- ? to the canceled meeting. "But perhaps the real reason nore fundamental. There comes a time when such 'tings are unnecessary and even detrimental.” □rdsmen on Call for Possible Cam pus Action CHAMPAIGN, IU. ov. Richard B. Ogilvie ordered 750 Illinois National rdsmen on standby duty Tuesday after trustees of the /ersity of Illinois banned a speech by William M. Kiuist- a lawyer for the Chicago Seven, spokesman for the Concerned Lawyers and Law Stu- :s, sponsors of the speech, said that Kunstler’s appear- i has been postponed until next week, teven Danz, the spokesman, said the group decided to off the controversial lawyer’s appearance because of tension caused by the trustees’ action in ruling Kunst- 20iild not speak on campus. anz said he talked by telephone with Kunstler Tuesday the lawyer said he wouldn’t appear at an off-campus anz also said the group would go ahead with plans to U.S. Dist. Court for a temporary restraining order nst the trustees’ action. 5A Plans Spacecraft Orbit of M ars WASHINGTON ie National Aeronautics and Space Administration said day it wall try for the first time next year to place spacecraft in orbit around the planet Mars. ie mission goals require that the Mariner spacecraft inue to send back data for about three months, while ling the planet. tis period wall allow enough time for the 2,200-pound ?craft, equipped wa th television cameras md other ex- nents, to study about 70 percent of the planet’s sur- from an altitude of about 1,000 miles, and also to ob- ? selected areas as they appear to change with the .ian seasons. ter the three-month operational period, however, bot Ii Kraft are to continue to orbit Mars for at least 17 entually the gravitational attraction of Mars will draw' down to crash into the planet. k Market Continues Upw ard Surge NEW YORK e stock market show’ed renewed upward momentum lay after riding out profit taking early in the session, e profit taking had started on Monday and followed rice gains last Wednesday and Friday. e broadly based advance Tuesday was the result, ac- ng to analysts, of investor confidence that large banks would reduce their prime rate of interest to 8 percent Sy2 percent. 2 analysts said, however, there was no tangible evi- that the big-money markets w'ould make such a ? Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed with I >f 7.19 to 787.42. An hour before the close, the average ieen up 2.70. The Associated Press 60-stock average 2.5 to 279.7, with industrials up 4.1, rails 70.6, and ss 70 2.5. ! New York Stock Exchange index of 1,200 common ! i advanced 0.29 to 50.48. en Accepts Demo Committee Draft WASHINGTON /rence F. O’Brien accepted the Democratic summons cond time around and agreed Tuesday to take over as chairman of the debt-and division-plagued party. Democrats’ ranking professional politician at 52, *n reversed his earlier refusal and accepted the draft, unanimously by the party executive committee, turnabout came after two days of stalemate in the for a second-choice candidate to take over when 'red R . Harris of Oklahoma steps down Thursday, the Democratic National Committee ratifies the rec- idation of its executive committee to draft me as ian, I must accept that decision and I wall serve my ’ O’Brien said. certainly expect it to be ratified,” said Jacob M. of Chicago, the Democratic elder who served as re­ in between Room 902 of the Watergate Hotel, w'here ecutive committee met, and O’Brien’s public rela- •ffice in New York. Wednesday, March 4i .1970 THE DAILY TEXAN House Approves Railroad Union Walk-Out Scheduled ComPromise Congress Asked to Block Strik HEW Funds Cut Meets N ixon’s O K (AP) WASHINGTON - The House, obviously tired of its long fight with President Richard M. Nixon over education spending, voted Monday to accept a com­ promise $19.4 billion HEW appro­ priations bill passed by the Senate. It contains provisions perm it­ ting cuts to about $19 billion. The White House, equally will­ ing to end die battle, let it be known Nixon will sign the bill in that form although tile total still is about $680 million over his budget. He vetoed an earlier one that was $1.2 billion over the budget. 1116 House vote, 228 to 152, was in the form of an instruction to its conferees to accept the Senate version. Although it is now just a formality, a conference will the to be held between have House the and agreem ent reached there put to still one more vote late this week. Boti! the Democratic and R e­ publican the House supported the motion to instruct the conferees despite misgivings about the Senate bill. and Senate leaders in Tile key to Republican support w as the inclusion of a provision perm itting Nixon to withhold 2 percent of the funds in the bill education for effect, This, program s. am ounts to a cut of nearly $400 million from the bill passed ear­ lier by the House. variety in of a WASHINGTON (AP) - P resi­ dent Richard M. Nixon asked Congress Tuesday to block a nation-wide rail strike by order­ tentative ing acceptance of a wage and jurisdiction set­ job tlem ent for 45,000 workers. “ A nation-wide stoppage of rail service would cause hardship to human beings and harm to our economy, and m ust not be per­ m itted to take place,” Nixon said in a message to Congress just two hours after four AFL-CIO shopcraft unions called a strike for one minute after midnight Wednesday. "Speed is essential,” said Sec­ retary of Labor George P. Shultz in a White House briefing ex­ plaining Nixon’s unprecendented proposal for a mandatory set­ tlement. "We hope Congress will act quickly,” Shultz said. "W e'd like to see them act tomorrow.” Nixon’s bill would impose as final a settlem ent worked out by negotiators for the four union’s but rejected by a m ajority of the m em bers of one union. The settlem ent would include a 68- President Requests Reform O f Federal School Spending $3.60 an hour for the workers who repair and maintain railroad equipment. industry insisted upon It also would include the con­ to permit troversial provision workers of all four unions to cross each others’ traditional job jurisdiction lines to do a limited amount of work, which the rail­ road to increase efficiency. M embers of the Machinists, Electricians and Boilermakers unions had voted approval but rejection by than 3,000 less sheetm etal workers has pre­ vented a voluntary settlement. a nation-wide "WE MUST NOT submit to the rail chaos of stoppage because a minority of the affected workers rejected a contract agreed to by their lead­ ership,” Nixon said. "The public interest comes first.” Nixon exhausted had existing delaying measures. all "With regret, we are forced to announce that under authoriza­ tion voted by shopmen we are calling a strike against all 128 o* the nation's railroads begin­ ning at 12:01 a.m. EST Thur­ sday,” said chief union negotiator William W. Winpisinger. three Congress year quickly enacted a special stop a sim ilar strike th; down the nation’s rail sys two days. RAIL SHOP w orkers, im a t the 14-month delay in the dispute over wages '< jurisdiction, reportedly w ready walking off the jo wildcat strike a t Penn Cl yards in Cleveland. Winpisinger, vice-presic the International Assoria Machinists and chief ne) for four AFL-CIO rail shop in the dispute, said a court ruling left the wort choice but to stage a n a tl strike or face further long in court. Judge U. S. Dist. I Corcoran Monday enjoin! from picking oi unions railroad for a selective, saw ” strike on grounds th agreed on national bar) with the railroads and mus it. He did not foi with nation-wide strike, althou said tile railroads were entitled to shut down all ra in a retaliatory lockout unions struck just one. ing form er Secretary of Defense Neil H. McElroy as chairman. the 1955 McElroy who headed White House Conference on Education, has been chairman of the Procter & Gamble Co., Cin­ cinnati, Ohio, since 1959. The President singled out the problems of parochial schools as a particular assignm ent for the c o m m i s s i o n , saying: "This government cannot be indifferent to the potential collapse of such schools. WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi­ dent Richard M. Nixon charted a course of reform rath er than expansion of federal education aid Tuesday and stepped tenta­ toward possible govern­ tively m ent assistance financially to strapped parochial schools. to The President's m essage Congress on education, as expect­ ed, called for: a new research - oriented National Institute of Education; a presidential com­ mission on the financial burdens of elementary and secondary schools, public and private; a $200-million pro­ gram ; a three-year extension of the federally-chartered Corpora­ tion for Public Broadcasting, and new attention to pre-school learn­ ing experiments. right-to-read Nixon placed heavy a n d re­ peated emphasis on what he de­ scribed as the failure of current federal aid program s to improve the academ ic perform ance of poor children. "There is growing evidence that most of them are not yet m easurably improving the suc­ cess of poor children in school,” he said. "We must recognize that our present knowledge about how to overcome poor-backgrounds is so limited that m ajor expansion of such programs could not be confidently b a s e d on t h e i r results.” The signed an order creating the school fi­ nances commission and designat­ exectuive chief O MOTOROLA car stereos SPEEDWAY RADIO 307 W e st 19th 478-6609 This “patch” Foreigners1 Training C u t Back by Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) — Prod­ ded by Congress, the Pentagon its often- is sharply curtailing training criticized program for foreign m ilitary men the in United States. The cutback could prove trou­ blesome as the Nixon Adminis­ tration seeks to reduce American p r e s e n c e o v e r s e a s by strengthening allies by training and equipping them through the m ilitary assistance program. A LITTLE-NOTICED amend­ m ent attached to the foreign aid bill last year now requires the United States to educate Ful- bright scholars and train m ilitary men in equal numbers. of Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., sponsor amendment, tile argued the United States ought to concentrate as much on the civilian who m ay serve in a for­ the uni­ eign government as formed m an who m ay take it over. Defense say Ful- officials bright’s am endment is forcing the Pentagon to drop 714 m en from this 5,634 m ilitary trainees and 1,778 from next year’s scheduled 5,778. scheduled y ea r’s The Nixon Administration’s Vietnamization program is not expected to suffer, however. The training of South Vietnamese to take over the w ar — as well as m ilitary men from some other Southeast Asia countries — is covered by another program . THE TRAINING program dates back to the imm ediate post-World War II days when the United States sought to bolster allies to | m eet the threat of the Soviet bloc and Red China. Since then more than 2027)00 foreign m ilitary personnel have been drilled in the arts of w ar, in the United States along with 95,000 more at U. S. bases overseas. Newsletter Says Spiro Has 135 IO WASHINGTON (AP) - V ice- President Spiro T. Agnew has a high IQ of 135, says the Republi­ can Congressional Committee's Newsletter. Its statem ent came in response to a question reader which said that some Democrats had said Agnew has a low IQ. from a "The last time the V ice-Presi-1 dent had his IQ tested, he scored 135. In psychology, according to the World Book Encyclopedia, a genius is a person with an IQ of 140 or over,” the newsletter said. DRIVE A LITTLE — SA V E A LOT 1/4 ct. let. • m. # # rn 1/2 ct. 3/4 ct. 1/3 et. 31.50 41.00 125.00 225.00 275X10 CAPITOL DIAMOND SHOP 603 Commodore Perry Hotel A U S T I N 4 7 6 - 0 1 7 8 48 HOUR KODACOLOR PRINTS Bring U* Your Exposed Film by 4 : P M Print* Reedy 48 H r*. Later at 4: P M j S T U D T M A N P H O T O 19th at Lavaca . Cameron Village Marketing Majors: Federated Department Stores, Inc. has a notion M d hardware, and fashion and an opening. Plus stores in great cities all over the country. 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LOUIS THE LAOS HOUSE SOUTHWEST CENTER FOR HUMAN POTENTIAL PRESENTS A PUBLIC LECTURE BY ALAN WATTS O N ECOLOGY AND RELIGION S U N D A Y - M A R C H 8 8:00 P.M. H A N C O C K CEN TER T O W N H A L L (below Sears) ADMISSION GENERAL $3 STUDENT $2 I Im a r*\ A V/ f \ R Cl I n A A I A M t i * A L A N W ATTS, author of The W a y of Zen; Nature, Man, and Woman; Psychotherapy East and West* Beyond Theology; The Wisdom of Insecurity; and many other writings, has worked to unify science Dhitas- A n h v / A n e t ophy, and religion into a totally modern view. He has been an editor, an Episcopal minister, a university professor, and a research fellow at Harvard University. The Sunday evening lecture will focus on one of the crucial issues of today, the critical relationship between man and nature. r A l i M i / M i i n X a » I _. _ ~ _ \ A / ■ • . 7 I* • I i a X J I i * r* . > * I l l . . I . 1 ^ C I I * a e The Laos House 700 West 19th Austin, Texas 477-4471 Eclipse Predicted Saturday Trip to Mexico T • A l l up that astronomers had spent watching eclipses since instru­ ments were invented, it would only amount to a few hours, he said. The time of the total eclipse in any one place is less than five minutes, he explained. Students will be able to view the eclipse on a small projection screen attached to the Univer­ sity’s telescope the Physics Building observatory. According to Edmund Hedemann, teaching associate astronomy, who plans to operate the telescope, in in the projection screen is necessary because looking straight at the eclipsed extremely dangerous. sun is HEDEMANN SAID that “any­ one tempted to look a t the eclipse should first hold a magnifying glass over a white sheet of paper and see what happens. That will happen to the retina.” A person might not immediately feel the visual impairment, but a blind spot in the retina could be the result, he explained. He does not to Hedemann recommend either sunglasses or smoked glass. According the “striking thing about the eclipse is that it won’t be striking.” He said that the 73.5 percent eclipse will leave enough sunlight so that only especially looking for the eclipse will be aware that it is happening. those people Hedemann also said there will not be another total eclipse near here until 1979, when an eclipse is across to Canada. scheduled cut Candidate Stresses Vocational Needs Though narmallv nokrnrr amu Though normally poking around and exploring in caves, the Uni­ versity Speleological Society’s involve next expedition will traveling hundreds of miles to Oaxaca, Mexico, to view a solar eclipse. The expedition will leave at IO a.m. Thursday and travel by bus to the site where Saturday’s total eclipse will be visible for a longer time than in Austin. the society, said Terry Raines, expedition chair­ man of the group bought a bus for the trip, but it will also be used for their other trips. Raines said a few astronomers in the group plan to set up teles­ copes for viewing and to take photographs. The total viewing time for the eclipse will be about seven minutes. • Four Radicals Debate W orld By RON MARTIN Members of several radical groups voiced disagreement over priorities in answering the ques­ tion “how to change the world” in a Young Socialist Alliance- sponsored debate Tuesday night representing Melissa Singler and Mike Maggi, both the YSA, answered the question by saying an organized revolutionary political movement was needed. Jeff Jones, a member of The Rag staff, and Judy Smith of the Women's Liberation Front each spoke in favor of more basic reforms involving individuals. Speaking first, Miss Singler said that YSA has been active in bringing working classes into the antiwar movement. “By mounting larger and larg- T V rn » r n ' ' i ; er demonstrations, we will attract new people to our struggle in­ cluding those from the working classes,” she said. Maggi said, “Revolutionaries must be organized into a third political party to produce change. The problem is to change our system from one constructed for profit to one oriented towards human needs.” Jones, a candidate for Students’ Association president, cited what he believed to be the four main problems facing the United States today. They were imperialism, racism, male chauvinism and ecology. that He said to change the world, we must first change our­ selves as individuals. He added, “Approximately 40 percent of this state is either black or chicano. It seems that about this same percentage of the student body of the state’s largest university should be from those two minor­ ity groups, and it isn’t.” Miss Smith stressed ecology ag the vital issue. She said that since change is inevitable, we should ask how we can cope with that change, rather than how we might initiate additional ones. She said two problems inherent in the capitalist system are that the people are programmed to consume and man believes his role is to exploit and conquer nature. Sie said, “The only way to survive is through a more equit­ able distribution of what is avail­ able and to cut down on con­ sumption.” mom mm bi mm $ Most of Sun The astronomy department plans no rituals to ward off evil in advance of an expected 73.5 percent solar eclipse in Austin between 10:36 a.m. and 1:13 p.m. Saturday. Tile eclipse will reach its maximum at 11:54 a.m. they had been Hi and Ho, Chinese royal as­ tronomers, were beheaded by their emperor after the earliest recorded eclipse in 2137 B. C. Because in a drunken state, they neglected to shoot arrows and bang drums In the ritual that delivered the sun from tile dragon devouring it, and were blamed for throwing the days into confusion. WHETHER THE University Is in for days of confusion remains to be seen. The 85-mile-wide path of the total eclipse will pass through lower Mexico, the Gulf of Mexico and northern Florida, then swing the eastern coastline and up finally move over the ocean to ' Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Atronomy Prof. William P. Bi­ dolman said the corona of the sun, the pearly white halo, cannot be soon except where the eclipse is total. A total eclipse will occur in the same place about every 360 years, he added. “ IT IS INTERESTING to wa­ tch the ground under a tree dur­ ing an eclipse,” Bidelman said. “Tile light reflected tlirough the leaves will crescent be shapes.” in Tile astronomy department is not planning any special research during tho eclipse, he said. “Fifty years ago astrophysicists chased eclipses all over the world.” Now generally only men who special­ ize in solar eclipses travel to ideal viewing areas, he continued. “The study of solar eclipses has become a highly specialized field and requires special equipment.” Bidelman said. ‘‘Tile University does no possess a telescope de­ signed for solar study.” IF ALL THE TIME were added Sorority Curfew To Be Extended Sorority house curfews are to be eased next fall, but they will not be eliminated. Mrs. Evelyne Bennett, Panhol- lenic Council director, said cur­ few' would be extended from mid­ night to I a.m. Sunday tlirough Thursday. Sorority members hav­ ing parental permi>sion will be allowed to have no hours on Fri­ day and Saturday nights. The present 2 arn. curfew for Friday and Saturday still will be In ef­ fect for those not having parental permission. The Alumni Advisory Council, which consists of one delegate from each sorority maintaining a house, decided on the change both after sorority members their parents. “ After considering all sides they think they’ve come up with a compromise,” Mrs. workable Bennett said. polling and The council considered several alternatives. One was to leave the system unchanged. A second was to do away with all hours for those with parental permis­ sion. A third choice was to have no hours for juniors and seniors having parental approval. Ano­ ther alternative was to extend curfew' to I a.m. on weeknights and 3 a.m. on Fridays and Satur­ days. ‘‘One of tile main problems was security,” Mrs. Bennett said. I Other factors are the expense of changing to a new system and the methods to be used in imple­ menting the change, is the left “The business of implementing ; individual to this sororities,” Mrs. Bennett said. She added that most sororities already hire guards until closing hours. Mrs. Bennett listed three ways the new system may be set up. One method w'ould be to issue keys to members. Another which is more expensive is the use of the ad­ a card system, with vantage that the cards cannot be duplicated. Tile third alternative is the use of guards. | “ even smaller number graduate, Hodges said. If elected, Hodges says he will two vocational high propose schools for the school district and urge vocational programs in each existing high school. “These schools,” Hodges said, the “ should w'ork closely with businesses and trade unions in curriculum and instruction. By doing so, the schools will prepare students for jobs they can begin high upon school.” graduation from On special education, Hodges said he would encourage the con­ cept of educating handicapped children in the same classrooms as children without disabilities. “ Integration of the handicapped with the more fortunate students would have a double purpose. The handicapped children would learn to cope with their handicap in a predominantly unhandicapped world and the integration would serve to educate the public of their neigh­ the handicaps of bors,” Hodges said. Other candidates who have fil­ ed for Place 4 are Mrs. Virgie M. Badger, an Austin housewife; professor of Stan Burnham, health and physical education at the University, and Will Davis, the incumbent. Deadline for applications for the school board race is 5 p.m. Wednesday. Applications may be mailed but must reach the school board office no later than the 5 p.m. deadline. ACAPULCO SP R IN G BREAK A M E R IC A N AIRLINES DIRECT SAN A N T O N IO OR FROM M E X IC A N AIRLINES FRO M THE BORDER. HOTELS, MEALS, Y A CH T CRUISE, ETC. Cheap & Not-so-cheap SANBORN’S 716 BRAZOS 476-7548 C. B. Hodges, co-ordinator of special education for Del Valle Independent School District, filed Tuesday for Place 5 in the April 4 Austin school board election. Hodges, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, has held his present job with the Del Valle school district since his Air Force retirement in 1964. He said he believes there is a need in the school district for additional attention in special e d u c a t i o n and vocational programs. About 90 percent of the students in each graduating class from the high schools are prepared for col­ lege freshman programs but half of these students do not go to college. Of those who do enroll in colleges and universities an Briton Talks On US. Media By BETTY FINDER and national papers. Because of the size of the country, there is no time problem betw'een printing and delivering. Lehmann teaches an upper- division course on the Eater Romantic Period and a graduate course, British Writers 1930’s- 1950’s. Lehmann said he is accus­ tomed to lecturing, but enjoys teaching and knowing his stu­ dents personally. Lehmann’s book, “In My Own Time: Memoirs of a Literary Life,” has been called the “most important account of British literary life from the Thirties to the Fifties which has yet ap­ peared.” The autobiography was originally issued in three parts. In addition “New Writing to “In My Own , Time,” Lehmann’s books include: ; “A Garden Revisited,” “Evil Was Abroad,” in E u r o p e , ’ ’ “Ancestors and Friends,” “Collected Poems" and “A Nest of Tigers.” He also has edited many anthologies and symposia. Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge, he worked with Virginia and Leonard Woolf at the Hogarth Press. He plans to give a lecture, “Working with Virginia Woolf,” before Easter. John Lehmann, British author and editor, is at the University as a visiting professor of English for the spring semester. Described in The New York Times Book Review as “a man born with a silver pencil between his fingers,” I-ehmann believes the role of media is to present all sides of a story. All media has a tendency to lean to one side or another, he said, but, “after all, it’s more interesting to write about a battle than a peaceful village.” Discussing trial news coverage, Lehmann said that in England only facts are given before and during a trial. Afterwards com­ ments and opinions are published. He thought this was good because it protects the accused. Concerning Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew’s attack on the media, Lehmann said an English newspaper, The Sunday Tele­ graph, had said the U. S. televi­ sion networks may be “inventing events” or enlarging on them. If this is true, Lehmann said, it is something w hich would amaze an Englishman. Both the BBC and the commercial medias, in Leh­ mann’s opinion, report very factually. He some Englishmen, think the BBC is slanted to the left, but if this is true, it’s not very pronounced and by no means covers the entire field. said | I t m a n n said editorials are exactly what they say they are, editorials. The now's part of a paper should be factual and fair, but the editorial page is the place for opinions and comments. English universities and col­ leges do not have daily papers, I t m a n n said. People read local> Cricketeer sport­ coats make you a little brighter Cover your active campus routine with a sportcoat that will take you through a full season of classes, social events and sporting activities with plenty of style. Pick a bold all wool tweed coat in a variety of aggressive patterns.. Bright idea. CRICKETEER’ Sport Coats $50, $55 & $60 Dress Slacks $18.95 to $19.95 i fin limn •On the lir a s ” N ex t to Co-Op G e m o lo g is ts — J e w e le rs — D e s ig n e r s E.E.SENIORS • LOOK Milo the engineering opportunities open hi rural elec­ trification and telephony • A S K your Placement Office for pamphlets telling w hat the Rural Electrification Administration offers for a challenging career with all advantages of Federal Civil Service • S IG N UP for a personal interview with the Recruiting Representative w ho will be at your Placement Office M A R C H 6, 1970 NO D IS C R IM IN A T IO N iii— - ... -I .| W f : ’ . You will be surprised and pleased at the sight and sound of this compact Magnavox Solid-State Stereo. 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Distinctive Store For Men/GR 8-6636 Magnavox Home Entertainment Center -- 805 Congress V M M * * * March 4, IWO THI DALY TEXAN Pag* ) in the T he Carnegie Commission on H igh er Education has called upon the I'nited States to eliminate in ­ equalities of educational o p p o rtu ­ nity bv 1976. report were Included propositions th a t "all economic barriers to educational op po rtu ni­ ty be eliminated, the curriculum and environment of the college campus not remain a source of in­ educational disadvantage or equity, and substantial progress be made toward universal access to higher education." As the leader in Texas higher education, the University of T ex­ as System should take particular heed of the panel’s recommenda­ tions. This is especially im port­ ant in that, tragically, only about I percent of the Austin campus the percentage of is black and is similarly Mexican - Americans minuscule. its Obviously recognized the University has not responsibili­ ties. Last summer the Board of Re­ gents killed the Program for Edu­ cational Opportunity, a s m a l l - scale (about 25 students each year) effort to increase minority group enrollment. One of the key factors prevent­ ing many Negroes, Mexican - A* mericans and other m i n o r i t y group members from attending this institution is that there are so few minority students here. As related by several persons who have w o r k e d with PEO, it is frightening for black students to cross a campus that is so racially stacked against them. PEO was at least breaking the ice for minority students; The Carnegie report suggested Several means of achieving equal opportunity, many of which, if im ­ plemented, could have a profound influence on the state’s increasing social problems. M ost of the recommendations i n c I u d e d a role for institutions of higher learning. For instance, it was suggested that in com muni­ ties w here effective desegregation of local school systms has not been achived, colleges and universities should offer their resources for research and consultation to local school administrators and com mu­ nity leaders. Several other recommendations: 0 Institutions of higher educa­ tion should establish educational opportunity centers to serve areas with major concentrations of low- incomc population. 0 Recruiting a n d counseling pools should be established among neighboring colleges and univer­ sities to co-ordinate resources and staff efforts for admitting educa­ tionally disadvantaged citizens. • Graduate a n d professional departments should co-ordinate re­ cruitment of disadvantaged stu­ dents. 0 Institutions of higher educa­ tion should devote a portion of their summer schedules and facili­ ties to a campus for disadvantaged children. In short, there are many ways in which the University, w ithout prohibitive costs in money or m an­ power, could lend a hand in alle­ viating the injustices that have been built into the social system. The tired excuse that it’s not the I Diversity's responsibility to p ro ­ vide impetus for equality in edu­ cation should be replaced with progressive words and actions. 6.Don t M ention A n y th in g A bout L a o s We H a v e n ’t T o ld H im M uch A b o u t That*’ Editorial Responsibility neglected Russell Baker Politics made clear for everyone, (r) 1970 New York Times New* Service WASHINGTON - "Tho White House has a r­ ranged this brief iii g in response to many com­ plaints from people who say they cannot under­ stand the A dm inistrations policy on school desegrega­ tion. I will be delighted to clarify tile policy for anyone who has a question.’* f * -Ti “ I have a question." “ Please state your name " “ I am President Nixon. My q u e s t i o n is perfectly clear. What is the Adminis­ tration’s policy on school de­ segregation?” { “Well, you don’t pull jo u r punches, do you, Mr. President? And in answering, the Adminis­ tration isn’t going to pull any punches either. I want to make that point perfectly clear. Are there any other questions?” “ I am Robert Finch, the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, and I ’d like to know. “ WHAT I’D like to know, Finch, is who let you in here? Don’t you know you’re under in­ structions not to know anything except the names of people we want you to fire for trying to desegregate southern schools?” “ I am Sen. John Stennis, sir, of Mississippi.” “ God bless you, senator, as well as the great state you represent, which, we most fervently hope, will never again cast its seven electoral votes for George Wallace.” “ I heard what you just told Mr. Wilkins pri­ vately about supporting the brotherhood of man. How fast do you intend bringing about this so­ called brotherhood?” "Wonderful though the brotherhood of man is, senator, we fully realize that it cannot lie brought about in your time. Or in our time. Or. for that m atter, in the time of anybody who might some day become a white voter in tho State of Mis* issippi. That is private, of course. Any other questions?” “ SEN. RIBIC'OFF of Connecticut. T feel terribly guilty about being from the North because — and it takes great courage to say this — it still has a great deal of school segregation.” "Yes, we know about segregation in the North, senator. What is your question?” "I have no question. I just wanted to take the world how guilty tell this opportunity to I feel.” “Anyone else?” I rn Atty. Gen, Mitchell and T'd like to repeat the President’s question. What is our policy on school desegregation?” “ WELL, you have to realize that we wouldn’t have to have a policy if it hadn't been for the Supreme Court. So naturally, we are do;ng cur best to eliminate that particular body. With all deliberate speed. I ought to add. for "the benefit of any folks here with northern-liberal-black- legalistic leanings, judiciarywise. Anyone e l s e have a question?” “ Yes, .sir. I'd like to know. . .” "Ju st a minute, kid. Don’t you know that chil­ dren are supposed to be seen and not heard ?' ’ “But as a schoolchild directly affected. . .” “ Directly affected? You? What office are you running for?” The firing line: festivities show prejudice “ Our campaign had jectives: three ob­ free passage (1) To destroy enemy forces threatening our country. (2) To liberate those parts of our homeland still under enemy occupation. (3) To secure through Aqaba and Suez.” 1964— \ igal A lion, com m ander- in-chief in 1948, in answer to Ben- Gurion’s statem ent: “ Had Ben- Gurion not ordered a cease-fire (in 1918 ‘The war of liberation'), then our troops would have oc­ cupied the Litani River (still in Lebanon) and the Sinai desert in the south (formally E gyp ta in be­ fore 1967) and also liberated the whole of our homeland.” 1967—Abba Eben: “ Even if the U. N. votes by 121 votes to one, we will not withdraw from the territory we have occupied.” 1969—Golda Meir in a national­ ly syndicated press release: “ The to presumably Golan Heights are non-negotiable the Gaza strip is non-negotiable.’ o! No mention was made Jerusalem ; ii it negotiable. What is there to dis­ cuss? The quotations could be ex­ tended indefinitely but no avail. The world has recently the beginning of a move­ seen ment away from the primitive ethnic tribalism that has maimed recent recorded history. That Zionism adam antly and consist­ ently w ishes to revert to purity of blood stream s labels it, to use “ an Arnold Toynbee's epithet anachronism .” That a Jewish movement is all the more depressing. If after 2,000 years cf suffering they chose to em­ brace the very ideals they suf­ fered under, what hope can we hold for the history of the next 2,000? is it Barbara Sadow Andrews Dorm To the editor: Kappa Sigma fraternity’s acti­ vity on Texas Independence Day is an integral part of the wonder­ ful and inspiring speeches near the Main Building by adminis­ trators, old grads and others. In the very middle of our campus we talk of freedom and independ­ ence and other good stuff, while up the street we pretend we are Frito-banditos, spics from south of the border down Mexico way — to put it bluntly, h u m i l i a t i n g our Mexican- American brothers. greasers, Ail of us should be horribly asham ed of our inhumanity and blindness, which goes free in the guise of patriotism, ashamed not only as Texans and Americans but (so that we don’t forget) as human beings as well. There is no need to condemn the celebra­ tions as infantile as we have in the past. After all, one is a fool to grow up and become an adult anyway. W ho knows but you might become an adm inistrator or a regent overdosed with the dream of authority and never see LM- moral corruption s u c h as we’ve seen on this day. How can a nj one seriously pretend to get an education here or pretend to respect University officials who consider racial prejudice as part of our proud Texan tradition. I sincerely believe that Pres­ ident Norman Hackerman should deliver a message of apology to from Mexican-Americans for in­ dignity they have suffered on this occasion. this entire University the David McMurrey 803 IV. 28th St. No. 202 SWT purge To the editor: Please note errata and some underestimation of the faculty- purge problem in your front page item March 3. “ What Happened to McCrocklin” is a bit off in PEA N U TS THE um c? \ IS FILLED WITH ; J vTRC. I DEMAND TO SEE THE HEAD BEAGLE/ Paa® 4 Wednesday, March 4, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN the m atter of “ what happened to ’his detractors.’ ” The McCrocklin regime has re­ mained basically (virtually com­ pletely; intact since his depar­ ture. And it has purged Southwest Texas State University of even more of the “ detractors” than the story indicates. in regime involvement For example, there are now at least three other faculty m em ­ bers who have “gone” and who are presently studying a t the Uni­ versity. One was fired via ter­ minal contract given because of his the Mc- Crocklin affair, by admission of to The Associated the Press tendered timely resignations. These exes of the SWT faculty, now students include Don at Graham and Steve Marshall, both at the dissertation stage in Eng­ lish respec­ tively, and Mel Jordan, working library in science. areas bearing on and government, last May. Two the University And there are others. The ven­ geance of McCrocklin’s cleansing agents has been rem arkable for its degree of paranoia, backward­ ness in academic values and dis­ ruptive effects on learning environment of SWT. the Steve Marshall No deception To the editor: Bill S trait’s letter in Tuesday’s Firing Line is a ludicrous attem pt to deceive the student body. Any­ one who has had any dealings with student government knows that Skipper Dippel, a very like­ able guy and a good friend of mine, is a conseiwative in his political viewpoints. Indeed, it is not stretching tile truth for Tile Texan to label Skipper as “ the ram rod of the conservative fac­ tion of the Student Assembly.” I find it appalling that Mr. Strait would deny Skipped hic pol­ itical integrity. I am sure Skipper is proud of his conservative be­ liefs and stands. Gene Dolfi President, Young Democrats Negotiable? To the editor: In the face of continued de­ for direct negotiations, mands why are intran­ sigent? Perhaps these quotations m ay refresh the memory of the world Silent Majority: the Arabs so 1918—Ben Zvi, second president of Israel and Ben-Gurion. first prime minister of Israel, writing in a review (Palestine) appearing in London, set the boundaries for the Jewish state: (1) “ North-Mount Lebanon (2) East-Syrian Desert (3) South-Sinai Peninsula” 1919—Brandeis, L o r d Balfour and Lord Percy issued a declara­ tion, saying: in (1) “ Palestine must be wholly Jewish. (Arab Jew s formed less than 5 percent of the population at this time in Palestine) (2) Palestine must control the w ater sources the North” (i.e., parts of Lebanon and Syria) 1950—Menachim Begin, present m inister without portfolio, in a speech April 7 after Israeli troops and settlers began to cultivate and occupy demilitarized zones: “There will be no peace for Israel or the Arabs, even if they sign a peace treaty, until we free the whole of our homeland.” 1951—Yehuda Mennon, speaking to Karen K a’yemet Aug. 8: “The boundaries of the Jewish state extend from the Euphrates to the Nile.” 1956—Ben-Gurion, in a speech to the Knesset after the Anglo- French Israeli attack on Egypt: T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper at U T Austin Opinions exp ressefijn The Dally Texan arc those of the editor or of the w riter of the a r tie r end are not necessarily those of the Univer­ sity administration or of the Board of Regents. Urn® througn May. Second class postage paid at Austin. M 1s Monday Published by Texas Student Publications, Inc., Saturday and holiday periods September ln J B- ’m m a s : • * vertising Service. 360 Lexington Ave.. New York. N.Y.. 10017. ad^ j;uf ln*. represen I a live Is National Educational Ad­ Th -H Is a member of and th o ^ flv a ? Collegiate Press. The Southwest Journalism Congress, and the Texas Daily Newspaper Association. ?rHUr-S(i?lb?s « t0 "The Associated Press and Postmaster: Send form 3579 to Texas Student Publications. Inc., P. O. Box D. Austin. Texas 78712. PERMANENT STAFF EDITOR .................................................... M ark Morrison MANAGING E D IT O R ..............................John W atkins ACTING ASS T MG. E D IT O R Lyke Thompson NEWS E D IT O R .................................... Carolyn Hinckley ASSISTANT TO THE E D IT O R ............... Lynne Flocke SPORTS E D IT O R .............................. Vaughn Aldredge AMUSEMENTS EDITOR .................Middy Randerson ........................Rob Inderm an PANORAMA EDITOR ISSUE STAFF Associate News E d ito r.................................................Patsy Guenzel News Assistants Cliff Aver}', Katie Fegan, Melanie Middlebrook* Editorial Page Assistant ..........................................Quin Mathews Assistant Amusements Editor ............................Pennie Freeland Assistant Sports Editor ...................................................Craig Bird Robin Bracher, Jennifer Evans, Katy Roper Copy E d ito r s Wire Editor .............. phiujpS Guest viewpoint Jewish state essentia! now By N A B IL D ALLAL Tile article “Mideast: ‘peace with justice' ” by John Jacobs is typical mediocre propaganda distributed by Arab govern­ ments and the Fedayeen. Unfortunately, Mr. Jacobs, tike some other strangers to the situation, has wholeheartedly adopted tho slogans disseminated by Fatah and the government c o o t trolled press of the Arab governments. A humane and more objective way to look at the si *ua ti on in the Middle E ast is to think of Israel as not a land occupied by foreigners but of Jews returning to their country after cen­ turies of exile, persecution, and having to live in lands where they were doomed to be a minority. The historical situation is very complex and neither Arab nor Jew- can claim that the land belongs to him alone. A very pragm atic and realistic way to lock at tho whole situation, therefore, is in term s of the original U. N. partition resolution. Some means must he brought about to allow the Jew to come back to his country' and to live alongside the Arabs. AS A RESULT of the war of independence and the 1967 war, all wars fought to guarantee Israel's basic right to exist and to thwart “ Arab a ‘tempts at genocide," there are today one and a half million refugees. The refugees increased to the present level as a result of Arab irresponsibility and a call for “holy w ar.” Had the Arabs learned that it is wrong to call for m urder in the name of (ani in 1948, there would have been only 600,000 refugees and the problem could have l>een solved, instead of aggravated. No doubt, the rebirth of the state o f Israel the displacement of some to refugees but the s tuation would no* have reached its a w e condition of today had it not been for tile dogged persistence of the Arab governments to annihilate Israel. inevitably contributed Who Is responsible? The answer cannot be given in black or white terms. Sox-hundred-thousand Jew’s were persecuted and forced to leave the Arab countries entirely dispossessed and, having had all their properties confiscated, now live in Israel. Another 600,000 also were dispossessed and have been forced to settle in foreign countries. ISRAEL HAS done its share to alleviate the condition by call­ ing for a negotiated peace with the Arab governments so that it can settle the refugee problem once and few all. But toe Arab governments continue to deny Israel the right to exist and the Fatah commandos tell the outside world that they want to liberate the land for the Jews, Christians and Moslems and tell their people their aim is nothing short of demolishing Israel. A question that has always obsessed Jewish refugees from Arab countries and Otho* people in the world is why tile Arab governments had to be so cruel to the Palestinian refugee and not integrate him. While Israel has absorbed Jewish refugees from Arab countries and tried to bring many of them from the dark ages to a modern technological civilization, Egypt and other Arab countries have exploited the refugees for a political purpose to got an excase to question Israel’s right to exist. They have very immorally put them in the squalor and m isery of refugee camps and refused to let them enter their countries and integrate themselves, Countries like Syria and Iraq, for example, are outrageously enough among the most underpopulated countries of the earth and have unjusti­ fiably refused to do so. All in all. one Palestine with Jew* and Arabs is all fine but not if the Arabs want to destroy Israel or have the Jewish people become a minority and be persecuted again as has been done for centuries. So until the Arabs change their attitude and approximate it with one of universal brotherhood, a Jewish state is strictly necessary. —P h oto by S teve H ultm an Almost... — Photo by Steve H ultm an Longer... Moustache Wearers Defend Their Cause in unexpected said. side benefits, he try to equate the length of some­ one’s hair with his politics.” By JOHN POPE News Assistant Call them what you will — moustachios, soup-strainers, K aiser Wilhelms or handlebars — moustaches have become highly popular among University males, The fad, which had long been considered dead along with cellu­ loid cuffs and high-button shoes, r e v i v e d when the Beatles sprouted them in 1967. THE QUARTET’S influence spread across the Atlantic to New York, where m any perform ers grew moustaches. However, they were rare in the modem South­ west until the last two years. Now moustaches have become enough a part of tile American scene that tile arm ed forces, in­ cluding die University ROIC units, have perm itted servicemen to wear them if they are neatly trimmed. ‘‘I never intended this, but it does make you look older and, to some extent, m ore sophis­ ticated,” Udell said. “ I would fee] naked without one. I t’s part of me.” AS “EASY RIDER” fans know, some people tend to equate long hair, moustaches and beards with antiAmerican ism. ‘‘I find this whole concept of rednecks’ being against longhairs over-exaggerated in Austin, but there are places I know that I shouldn’t go to because of the unfavorable reaction to my h air,” Udell said. HE ADDED, “I ’m not In any I think a kind of revolution. person who has justify his to growing a moustache is trying to get something out of it. I just like it.” The University m ales who grow them generally agree there is no special reason except that they like the way they look. Paul I-echo, sophomore political science and psychology m ajor, said he grew his simply because he “ felt like it.” S O M E T I M E S , t h o u g h , moustaches come about almost by accident. Ernie Eden, junior government major, said, “ A couple of years ago I was in West Virginia, and the people there didn’t shave too often. After a few days, I found I had a moustache. I liked it.” The feminine Eden's handlebar been agreeable. reactions to have mostly “Some girls go wild over it, and some want to play with it. A girl in an encounter group had a always moustache, so she felt mine,” Eden said. wanted feel to HOWEVER, SOME WOMEN are not so enthusiastic. Maureen McGavern, senior fashion design m ajor, said, “ I I like to look don’t like them. a t some of a re they nicely kept, but usually they look too nice and artificial or too long and bushy.” them if P h oto by S teve H ultm an Long... STEVE UDELL, sophomore radio-television-film major, said, “I really dig it.” Having a moustache does result On the subject of long hair and patriotism, Leehe said, “I know long-haired Young too m any Republicans it’s anti- to American. I find it childish to think MISS MCGAVERN said when she was kissed by a boy with a moustache, she “ broke up and couldn’t He stop laughing. laughed, too.” — Photo by Rick W illiam s Longest Poor to Conduct Protest Congress By ANN BRADLEY The poor {leople of Texas will be conducting their own congress a t the State Capitol Saturday to protest current administration of welfare. The Poor People's Congress, hosted by Austin Welfare Rights Organization, expects to draw representatives from Houston, Waco, Dallas, San Antonio and is scheduled Corpus Oiristi. It to begin a t IO a.m . “ S I N C E GOV. PRESTON to call a Smith didn’t see fit legislative session, die special their poor people a re calling own,” said Allen Danziger, Uni­ versity graduate student who helped organize the AWRO. He was referring to the request for a special session made when wel­ last fare cuts were month. threatened Mr*. Velma Roberts, chairm an of the Austin group, said the pur­ pose of the congress is to draw up a platform and a list of de­ mands which will include a guar­ anteed Income for all Americans, welfare payments equalling need and an end to the welfare ceiling by January', 1970. ACCORDING to Mrs. Rolierts, the the idea for a protest at Capitol was formulated in early February. At that time a group of welfare rights mothers from Houston came to Austin to dis­ the welfare cuss cuts. They decided to hold local demonstra­ tions state-wide on Feb. 19 and to conduct a protest Saturday at the Capitol. to In addition is going scheduled speakers. AWRO to request tile presence of President Richard M. Nixon, Gov. Smith, Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes, Commis­ and sioner Burton Hackney others “ to congress. testify” before the The proposed requests read in part: “ for failure to attend . . you may be considered guilty of contempt for tile poor and morally liable for violation of the inalienable right of life.” . MRS. ROBERTS spoke with Gov. Smith Tuesday. She stated, “ He assured me there will be no further welfare cuts. He said New Group Backs All-Volunteer Army Recommendation by a national commission to the Nixon Admin­ istration to replace tile draft with an all-volunteer arm ed force has brought together a coneen od group of students as a new Uni­ versity organization. Students for a Voluntary Mili­ for tary’ has been established educating the University com­ munity of the advantages th at the voluntary enlistm ent system has over conscription. Students will become involved in legal political action ta make elected officials realize that the American people desire replacing the the peace-time draft with volunteer system within the next two year*, said Mike Shearn, a m ember of the Select ive Service Youth Advisory Board. “Tile question of replacing the loss philoso­ said. is more or Sheam draft phical,” Shearn said he has been in complete support of the idea for a long time and therefore joined the Youth Ad\is«ry Board and helped form the student campus organization. The first meeting will bp at in Jester 7 :30 p.m. Thursday Center 315. National WRO has promised to send either Bruce Thomas or Jacky Pope. the and individuals AWRO has made attem pts to aid of University enlist groups for financial assistance and aften- dence at the congress Saturday. Leaflets and posters are to be distributed and bumper stickers sold in the University area. Danziger said the organization sent letters to the fraternities and sororities asking for their sup­ port, but has received no answer. Contacting various other campus organizations proved equally as fruitless. He explained that part of the problem stemmed from tile fact that the Poor People's Congress is concerned prim arily with the needs of the poor people and does not wish to be associated with any other cause. he would shift the money from contracts m ore buildings and until the Legislature meets next January without making a political thing out of it.” She said tile governor had explained, “We just aren’t going to starve these people. There aren’t going to be any starving people in Texas.” He dees not plan to attend the congress Satur­ previous of day because engagement. a POTENTIAL SPEAKERS have been contacted by the group and, according to Mrs. Roberts, U. S. Sen. Ralph Yarborough either will attend or send a representa­ tive. State Rep. Curtis Graves of Houston will be present and of L arrv Community United Fund, also Will .speak. Mrs. Roberts said tile chairm an Jackson, r ........... Shouldn't you join the Fly­ ing Klub? Go to the flight desk at Ragsdale Aviation, 1801 E. 51 St. Identity in East German Split W idens has E a s t Germany not developed a strong nationalism, but it is evolving a separate Ger­ man identity, Prof. Peter Chris­ tian Ludz of the Free University of Berlin said Tuesday. in Ludz spoke on “Recent Socio- Political Developments the German Democratic Republic” to about 40 persons in the Union Building. The speech was spon­ and sored by Eastern European Studies Pro­ gram. the Western Ludz is a consultant for the Ministry of Inter-German Rela­ tions and the West German Chan­ cellery. “There are now two German societies two German states,” Ludz said. There is “no and Students Tutor In West Austin Twelve students who are vol­ unteers in the University “Y” tutoring program are working with children at the West Austin Neighborhood Center, 1300 West Lynn St. Rick Appleton, graduate stu­ dent and teaching associate in the education curriculum and in­ struction department, aware- of the West Austin center, organized a tutoring program to serve the children who use the facility. Tutors meet with groups of two or three children on Tuesday and Thursday for about an hour be­ tween 4 and 9 p.m. The children range from 9 to 14. The groups generally concen­ trate on reading or math, Apple­ ton said. Most of the children come from the Mathew's Elemen­ tary School district. About 30 stu­ dents are using the program. Appleton is pleased so far with the project, in operation only three weeks, and with “the close­ ness of tutor and c h i l d that develops as they relate to each other. I t s more than just an academic thing.” Students included in the pro­ gram are Peter Lohmann, Susie Loshak, Laurie Reedman, Sandra Schoichet, Gaye Rothman and Debbie Lapidus. Others are Michelle Franklin. Randy Byron, Stephanie Shapiro, Lang Reid, Lee Pickett and Dan Weathers. Appleton said there are about 30 more children who need tutors. really outspoken new nation- alism ” but there is an increasing self-consciousness and pride in E ast Germany, he related. Much of this attitude comes the younger generation from which is very critical of the West G erman style of life but which is also very critical of E ast German mistakes, Ludz asserted, said Ludz “ generation this gap” is pragm atic and confined to disagreement over methods for modernization. no “ articulated counter-culture or underground m o v e m e n t ’ ’ as young people in E ast Germany “ try to be a p art of the establish­ m ent.” There is flexibility of There is social stability but not political stability in E ast Ger­ many. The the younger generation of political in leaders a “ rejuvenation” profes­ sionalization on secondary lev els of government but not on the top policy levels, Ludz said. resulted a n d has “ There are better relationships between the party and the groups of society.” This has resulted in a lessening of coercion as both party and people are aiming at Great Combination SPECIAL G ood thru Fri., March 6 D a i l y - all d a y Con,y ^5^Taco, Enchilada, Tamale, Chili, Chili con queso, Rice, Beans, Tostados, Hot ^ uce fit-C h ic o g 5012 BURNET R O a O an increase in the standard of living, Ludz added. Two-thirds of all E ast German students study mathematics, engineering, educational sciences and natural sciences because the individual party exercises control in these areas and there is a greater chance of advancing within the party, Ludz said. less Ludz said that E ast German student l e a d e r s encourage rebellions in West Germany but a re “ very’ much afraid” that they might spill over into East Ger­ many. Join The Wine Revolution! Open A Can Of Wine Tonight! That's right. Wine in cans is here. Rose, Burgundy and t C h a b lis in Party T y m e 's unique flavor-gard* alumi­ num cans. Each can holds 8 ozs.— just right for two glasses. Now you can enjoy premium C alifornia wine at every meal and not worry about “leftover spoilage.” Sip and see if our Rose isn’t rosier, c*ir Burgundy lustier, our Chablis paler. NOW AT YOUR LOCAL SUPERMARKET, PACKAGE OR WINE STORE. m n TYH! W00UCTS, N.Y, N Y . 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Inc , l i t I 892 H O W TO P LA N YOUR E N G A G E M E N T A N D W E D D I N G | Please le n d new 20 c a g e b ookle t, " P l a n n i - g Y o u r E ng a g e m en t a n d W a d d i n g " I a nd full color folder, both for o n iy 25c. A llo , tall me how to o b ta in the bea utiful I $• 70 | 44 p a g e B rid e 's K eepsake Book at Half price. M—« . I _...........................J L ^ | E ^ ^ ^ 0 | A M O N ^ ^ N G _ S . _ J O X SO . S Y R A C U S E . N . Y . » H 0 l j Wednesday, March 4, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Page S Though the Texas m entor wra: pleased with this game, he wa! disappointed with the overal season. Texas, picked in the tot prediction! 20 finished with sensor record and a 6-8 conference record. pre-season a 11-13 in After the gam e in the bus} dressing room, Black said, “I am hoping this is an indication od the team maturing, but there’s no way to tell, though.” Mustangs. them through Doyal and Then the ’Horns fell into one of thmr lapses, tile typo that has plagued the season, and failed to score a field goal for more than four and a half minutes. The Ponies, taking advantage of the lull, knotted the score for the first tim e at 36-36 with four minutes left in the half. the ’Horns came back strong in the second half but so did SMU behind the hot hands of forward Donnie Berg and guard Bobby Harrison. Tile gam e remained close throughout the first half of the final stanza lead changing hands with three times. Phillips, who had not scored for the first 12 minutes of the second half, then connected on a follow up as Texas began to pull away. the With tile shooting of Doyal and the hustle of Billy Black, the Longhorns began tile surge which produced a 13-point lead with a little more than a minute left. to the With 53 seconds to go in die game, Texas Coach Leon Black retired Doval l>eneh. Doyal, who at the introduction the game a t the beginning of received! a good applause, now listened to a standing ovation from the 4,000-plus fans — P h o t o s b y I k e B aru c h. A t Se a s o n 's End . . . m aybe’ maturity. Orange Skinclads Seek S M U Antidote in things Several this world always rem ain constant. The sun rises in the east, w ater always flow's downhill and in Southwest Conference circles, Southern Methodist always comes out the winner, and Texas alw'ays comes out second. swimming And unless tile Texas paddlers can come un with a cure-all for the “SMU Blues,” it’s going to happen again. This m ay be the year, though, for the Longhorns to upset the Ponies, if workout indications are a sign of things to come. ‘ Bruce Robinson has looked real good in workout,” said his coach. Hank Chapman. “ He will really be tested in the individual medley and the backstroke.’’ other Chapman's freshman standout, Frank Salzliandler, will be in a fine position to do well in the breast-stroke. He was one of the nation s IO fastest breast­ stroker* last year, and qualified with Robinson to compete in the NCAA championships. Besides Robinson and Salz- handler, Chapman will enter a1 of his starters, with the exceptioi of Steve DuRapau and Bruet co-captains ’Horn Anderson, DuRapau has complained of i strained shoulder recently, am Anderson shows symptoms of th* flu. Two of the four Texas divers will compete on both boards V ednesday, and Drew Ligon will be sprinting for the first tim i this year. “ Butterfly could be a good contest,” said Chapman, “depending on who they enter.” Texas butterfly is in the hands of Tom Turner and Bill Mao- Na ugh ton. But for all the ’Holms' ability, experience and wins, they still have to contend with SMU’* 13L year the sw im m ily the Southwest Coo- piw er of tow ference. The Ponies have returning All-Americas. reign as SMU definitely has the upper hand, but Steer freshmen a r t among the best in the country. Returning Texas veterans ha vs the experience and depth to males the meet a very interesting and close match. FRATERNITY ALUMNI RELATIONS FIRM SEEKS M AN WHO NEEDS AT LEAST $25,000 ADDITIONAL INCOME National organization working exclusively with the frater­ nity world seeks man to operate local office here. Must enjoy working with people and be willing to accept com­ prehensive training. This is a franchise program and can be handled on a part-time basis evenings from your home until full potential is reached. A minimum of $5,000 cash 'n re- quired with financing available. If you want a secure in­ come, call or write me for complete details. Harry 0. Richard*, President, Fraternity Alumni Service DIVISION OF THE CARSON COMPANY 61T South Boulevard • Evanston, III. 60202 • Tri. 312/869 8330 Senior Captain Tallies 35 Ponies Doyaled' to Death Tech Dumped In 69 Finale Ll BB(X1K (AP) —» Baylor built a 36-poinit load and then had to hang on to take an 80-72 vie* hwy m e r Texas Tech Tuesday night in a Southwest Conference game before 8JOO fans. The Bears’ victory lifted them Info a tie with Tech and TO I for third place in the final SWC standings. Gene Knolle scored 26 points for Tech to lead a1] scorers and joined the 500 point d u b a t Texas Tech. Baylor’s balanced scoring, with five players in double figures, was led by Tommy Bowman's 20 points. Tech and Baylor are both 8-6 In RWC play. The Bears a re 15-9 overall and Tech is 14-10. AGS TH IP CHAMPS COLLEGE STATION (AP) - Texas A&M survived a withering r a l l y bv Southwest Conference b a s k e t b a l l champion Rice Tuesday night to put the Aggies all alone in second place in the final a 91-86 victory over the Owls. standings with Tile Aggies also were 14-10 for the year and 9 5 in the SWC. Gary' Roist was high for Rice With 24 points while Tom Mver added 21. Christians Fry Hogs FORT WORTH (AP) - Texas the Christian University ended Southwest Conference season with a 97-05 victory' over Arkansas to piope! die Horned Frogs into a three-way tie for third place in the final standings. T ie Frogs, who put six players in double figures, trailed 47-43 at halftime. They never led until ll :31 left in tile game. TCG finished the season with an 8-6 record. Arkansas is in the cellar with a 3-11 mark. By SYLVAN RODRIGUEZ Assistant Sports Editor Texas senior captain Wayne Doyal scored a career high 35 points in his last game in an orange the Longhorns to a season-ending 85- SMU over 74 M u sin g s Tuesday night in G re­ gory Gym. leading victory jersey the in Doyal, a 6-6 starting forward for three years, provided the kind of court leadership that has been somewhat lacking in Steer court efforts this year. Doyal is now the second all- time leading Texas scorer behind Raymond Downs’ 1.513 points. The 35-point output is also the best game for a Longhorn since Billy Arnold pushed through 36 on Jan. 16, 1968, against the Aggies and is the ninth best point perform ance by a Texas player. Loyal finished his career with 1,066 points. saw The game, W'hich the ’Horns perform in spurts, began as a duel between Doyal and SMU’s Gene Phillips, the South­ west Conference’s loading point producer. At the half, Phillips, the whole SMU who is often Box Score iK-tna Pf t p 3 35 2 16 I 13 36-25 6-11 5-11 3- 7 2- 9 2- 5 0- 0 0- I 0- I r e b f t - f l a 3-3 8 ■1-4 15 6 3-4 5 3-6 4-5 14 OO 0-0 (MI OO IM ’ 11t RS t p Pf r e b 6 4 I T E X A S D o va I G r o s c u r th L e n o x Black H o w d o n R. I^anedon J . I ^ m g d o n H y d e B r a d le y T e a m Tola!* S U I P h ill ip s B o r s H a r r i s o n D a lz e ll P u t n a m T a l i a f e r r o R o llin s M iller H a w k in s M e a d o w s M o r r is T e a rn T o t a l * SI 81 12-1(5 20 74 team, was ahead of Loyal by one point with 19. However, in the second half Doyal maintained his scoring pace w'hile a tight defense contained Phillips, who ended the night with 23 points. The Mustang junior’s output was sufficient to give him a season point total of 684 for the SWC single season scoring record. Tile contest began with SMU scoring the first point from the free throw line but cold shooting from both sides in the first two minutes produced only a 2-1 advantage for Texas. Then Doyal began to get the ball and Texas began to get on the score board. He scored three jumpers and a foul shot for a quick nine-point lead. Using the accurate shooting of Doyal and the long outside shots of Scooter Lenox, the Steers maintained a comfortable lead with Phillips the the only effective scorer for C o a c h Leon Black . . . sees hopeful signs. Nesters H o s t Okie Squad T h e University tennis team, after a .seventh place finish last weekend a t Corpus Christi, hosts Southeast Ok- 1 ahoma Wednesday on their home courts. Action will get underway at 2 p.m. at Pcniek Courts at the south end of Memorial football Stadium. I S * M U S T A N G . V-8. P S -A T . a ir . t i r e s ...... - .............. . d H io m S 2 (4 raP9 & 5 5 Ue- eX d ir p c L s e ll in g a n d n e e d t o e a r n 82.00 p e r h o u r , d ia l 465-0935 S i i S 8" 1' N o in i tia ! ln v e s t m e n t R o o m & B o a r d I MONTH'S RENT FREE A u stin $ N e w e s t a u d M o s t L uxurious! p,' i n ^ T fjA C T E N u a t m o s p h e r e , L e a s e , n ° T ° T r c p s ' f ir e p la c e . a / - to s e ll b e e r, fo o d P a r k 40 Z o n e d i i i ’ e a v y , r a f f i c - G L 3 ‘5314- C L 2- THE C O N T E S S A 2 7 0 6 N u e c e s 477 -9 7 6 6 I n s p e c t io n I n v ite d f o r S u m m e r & F a l l S e m e s t e r s A N EXCELLEN T O P P O R T U N IT Y T h e U n ite d F i d e l i t y L i f e . tw o s a le s Sj t w ? s a le s I n s u r a n c e If _ — “ I f t r a in e e s t r a in e e s . ink dlr^uTnSanvoT1ia fv11e T n ^ r inc_ d i r e r , i o n s , y o u m a y e x p e c t a sub-' in c o m e o n a p a r t - tim e b a s is . !cU P h o n e M r. C o v e r t a t 476-6341 E le g a n t living f o r y o u n g w om e n y u u in g n u i i i e i i ° * 20 me«!r Week S t u d y h a ll • P o ll v f • T V • S u n d e c k • M a i d service • F r e e p a r k i n g 7?{a/cCrtA A w JiY & y, M B . A. T y p i n g . M u lti lit h in g . B in d i n g The C o m p l e t e Professional F U L L - T I M E T y p i n g Service t o t h e n e e d s o f U n iv e r s it y t a ilo r e d s tu d e n t s . S p e c ia l k e y b o a r d e q u i p m e n t fo r a n d e n g i n e e r ­ s c ie n c e , i n g l a n g u a g e , t h e s e s a n d d i s s e r ta tio n s . P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h i ll P a r k B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G S E R ­ r e p o r t s __________ M im e o g r a p h in g . R e a s o n a b le H I 2-7184’ V IC E . T h e s e s , d i s s e r t a t io n s E X P E R I E N C E D a c c u r a t e I v p is t L o w l a s t s e rv ic e . M rs. T u l lo s G E r a m s . Just North of 27th & Guadalupe J By CONNIE SMITH P O S A D A DEL N O RTE L e a sin g now ! O n e a n d Tw o B ed ro o m A p a r tm e n ts , s i us Luxury Tw o Bedroom Studios. 7 2 0 0 D ev a I C a '! J . A . K ru g er, ■452-23 ?4 Austin’s Greatest Apartment Values ! THE BRITTANY 454-1355 300 Carm en C rt. 452-2384 C L A S SIF IE D ADVER TISIN G BA TE S Each W o r d (15 word m in im u m ) * .05 ....................... S 1.50 M in im u m f h a rirc • S tu d e n t r a t e <15-w ord m a x im u m ) .75 .50 •E a c h a d d i tio n a l 20 C o n s e c u tiv e Issu e* in w o rd * 15 w o r d s 20 w o r d s C la s s ifie d D is p la y I c o lu m n x o n e in c h o n e tim e $ 1.50 E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e ......................... ............... s i o.oo ......................................... $13.00 $15.00 ................................ o n e tim e $ $ ............$ 1.40 tim e (S n c o p y c h a n c e fo r c o n s e c u t i v e I ssu e r a t e s . V • L O W STU DE NT RATES t h e less f or 7 5 c sh ow A u d i t o r s fir st 15 w o r d s or tim e, 5 0 c e a c h a d d i t i o n a l ti m e . S t u ­ r e c e i p t d e n t m u s t a n d p a y Bldg. 107 M o n d a y 3:00 p. m . F rid ay . in a d v a n c e in J o u r n a l i s m fro m 8 a.m. t o t h r o u g h 11:00 a .m . T h u r s d a y . U ntil D E A D LIN E SCHEDULE T u e s d a y T e x a n M o n d a y . 11:00 a .m . W e d n e s d a y T e x a n T u e s d a y . 11:00 a m . T h u r s d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y . 11:00 a m . F r i d a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y . 11:00 a .m . . . F r i d a y 3:00 p .m . S u n d a y T e x a n F o r S a l e i Largest U s e d B o o k S t o r e in Austin S a v e S a v e — C o m e T o THE BOOK STALL 6 1 0 3 B u r n e t R o a d 454-3664 1965 R I A T 15 )0 R p y d o r a C,',XfT J Ie m 4611 M a n c h a c a R d . e d i t i o n . §850 c o n v e rt I h ie 444-2877' c o u p e . F o u r 1969 C O R V E T T E . 11.000 m i le s ' Y e llo w Sol! r e a s o n s $4490. W i s e 477-6511' m e d ic a l E x t e n s io n 302. R e s id e n c e . 444-0610. s p e e d . 350 a i r A ir 66 F H E V IK;LL1: M a lih u t u d o r h a r d t o p . i n t e r i o r ’ a u t o m a t i c . 327. v in y l 442-9628. 444-3012. ti r e s . $1,300 n e w I GI IP A R , a m p - p h o n o u n i t : e a s e m ik e fo o t- * tr e m u lo , 1 2 " : s w i tc h e s : $ 1 2 0 ; 477-4902 s p e a k e r * re v e r b , r4 hnl r a ? l K IS H « P “ " .b o a t. d a c r o n s a il. l a m e ta b le . $25. D e a n P o u n d . 476- $60 A ls o : N e w h a r d w a r e . d r a f t i n g p E S p E R A T E . M u s t s e ll 1968 K a r n n n D a n , 561,7 C o rd e l! n f te r 5 p m - n l > d a y S a tu r d a y . S u n d a y . lrflS- I H O U N D S , s h o w q u a l i t y b lo n d e s a n d b r in d l e s . R e s e r v e y o u r s s m *io e ' T e r m s a v a ila b l e . ' 452^4 9 7 5 tU(* 68 R E N A U L T s e d a n . R a d io , h e a t e r d is c b r a k e s . 15,000 m ile s E x c e ll e n t c o n d itio n 3 0 M .P .G . $1195 O L 3-2138 1 w a lls W a r r a n t y : yC C K -S W A G E N ’. A /C , r a d i o , w h i t e 13 m o n th s /ll.O O o 8.76- $1795. c o n d i tio n . 001 253B ’ V E C T O R SYSTEM S Is f e a t u r i n g a S P R I N G S P E C IA L B u ®b m a s tc ' r D u n e b u g g v B o d y K its . in $26n. T h e u n iq u e G u ll W in g g " T K i t F o r m . $175. R o o m m a t e s F E M A L E S H A R E lu x u r i o u s tw o b e d - I LTem 4 D - S e n t ’ 4,-105 D u v a1 ' C a ,‘ « f t e r 5506 G rover GL 2-0507 FR E N C H CO/ O N Y 1 BR . 8 5 0 s q . f t . f r o m f u g L U J J J U .- S P A C E f o r m a le o r f e m a le . L a r g e tw o Tb a ; J a p a r t m e n t , $6 1 . li u ttl e - A p a r t- A P a n ; V E C T O R /E l S H M A S T E R O ld U .S H ig h w a y 183 454-4983. 2 BR -------------------------- — -----------1--------------------- f t . a t o m $ 1 7 0 F E M A L E u p p p erclassm a.n W alk U T S J I b ill* . p a id . O n e b e d ro o m , a/c", I IOO s q . - no le a s e . L i n d a . 477-1610 e v e n in g s COM P A C T H O N E Y W E L L R o ll e l' ,35mm c a m e r a . $150. 327-0211. N o rth C e n tr a ! e ffic ie n c e s . N ew , c a r- p e t e d , d r a p e d , c o n p 'e t e k itc h e n ; r a n g e , W A N T E D : f e m a l e r o o m m a te tw o b e d ­ r o o m a p a r t m e n t . A ll b ills p a id $52 50 I o o l. te n n i s c o u r t s C a ll 444-0819. ...... I b a .h , am p le ^9 pv-^In Y V A 350 S c r a w b lcr, 1300 m ile *, p a y m e n t m a nager: 454-681 47I 2214 co,,d,ll,' n - N e e d m oney. ‘ 4 5 4 -8 9 0 3 . retri- ■ator. FA! t t o r a c e and p a rk in g . A - F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d t o s h a r e n e w o n e b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t o n 38 S t r e e t . $67.50. 454-3918. TW O M A L E s t u d e n t s s h a r e f u r n is h e d $75 R e ­ t h r e e b e d ro o m , tw o b a t h f e r e n c e s d e s ir e d . 345-0795 U S E D S A IL B O A T . F i b e r g l a s s , D o lp h in r . t t i s B 465-9215. ___ • c o n d i tio n $195. T R A V IS H O U S E A P A R T M E N T S n o w o p e n f o r le a s in g t o s t u d e n t s S to p b y (o f f 1600 R o y a l C r e s t D r iv e r a i l o r R iv e r s i d e ) . 442-9720. H e l p W a n t e d M E N 'S SUITS Below Wholesale G u a r a n te e d f a c t o r y rn ;s h . N o t s e c o n d s o r s a m p le s . O v e r 250 o n h a n d . W id e r a n g e o f size s. A ll p a t t e r n s : S tr ip e s , u j r t f v p la id s , s o lid s . $47.50 to $56.00. I Y f h c 453-4055 — 472-3697 1377 tx x V n rJ./-.* . V II3SU A 5100 c o n d i tio n . W is e m a n . 472- U S E D BWV T V 's. G o o d - b e t t e r - v e r y 4-8 T R A C K T e n n a C r a m m e d r - . r t r m ™ „ - * ’ 4 .7 S O X iw xw s-* ' • ■ ' W* ' * v s g o o d , $25 50 u p . A u s tin T V S e rv ic e . g o o d , $25 50 u p . A u s tin T V S e rv ic e . 430:5 M a n c n a c a R o a d . H I 4 - 1 3 4 5 . s te r e o s te r e o . A C /D C IO A.M /F M c a r t r i d g e radio G R <7:3625 s n e a k e d i n - _ E fT L, * m ',,. I O l i n a a C / n r T O P C A S H P R I C E S p a i d m o o d s o ld g o ld . C a p ito l D ia m o n d S h o p . 603 C o m m o d o re Perry. 476-0178 f o r d i s - 1965 IM P A L A S S p o w e r , a i r , n e w .lob. o n e o w n e r 454-8243 c o n v Q rtih le i-rr to p r e c e n t b r a k e b r a k e G H & |Q N $ 1 » b a n j o . $75: Garrard stereo. $75: $50. S ''h w in n . $85- t e n n is r a c k e ts . $20; t v p e - w r i t e r . $20. 454-2383. I - ten speed M ust scil. a c c o rd la n. 1964 H E A L Y 3.0«« $1650 * p m E v e r y t h i n g new ’ I , r , i 5 ■ 4 7 c r « u ' J,- 944 a f t e r 5 Q U A R T E R D E C K A p a r tm e n ts 23 S E n - _ _ _ _ M O BILE H O M E LOTS O W N E R FIN A N C E D DESSAU N O R T H I H 3 5 M i s c e l l a n e o u s l o t — p a v e d S I 995 OO f n r €0' x 150’ s t n - e ts — c i ty w a t e r — e le c tr ic ity n a t u r a l g a s — 2 m i le s t o s c h o o l —' b u s service — 5 minutes t o IB M Indian ti t es to TI • 19 m in tile s to down town —jewelry. Mexican I m p o r t s — 4612 S Close to stores and h .•ishaterms- - good congress. Open IO to 6 restrictions - D r e w T h m S n C4 7 8 ^ i alSO r e p a , r e d ' - , _ T -------- — --------------- IO min- KELSON'S GIFTS—h a n d m a d e c a ll 836-1709 836-1294 444-38D- ---- L E A R N T O P L A Y G U IT A R , b e g i n n e r D R E V E S R E C O R D E X C H A N G E U se d 1624 L a v a c a . t r a d e d , s o ld . L F r 478-2079 1967 C A D IL L A C . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $2995 476-7460. A N I I H IN G L E A T H E R c u s to m m a d e N u e c e s ' ° U L E A T H E « B E N C H . 2405 C H E S S B E G I N N E R S : S e n d 10c, c o s t i le s s o n . i H h J . M ic k e l. B o x 9245. A u s tin ; rJ ° ( lv e W a lk in g £ 0 0 MHS ! r e e c h e s s G R 8-5528 Registered Nurses a t p e r n g s t v s . S a 'a r y B ra c k e n rid g e a v a i a c e H o s p d a l fo r R e g is te r e d N u rse s in m o s t a re a s on s tr a i g h t 3-11 o r 11-7 a n d a l­ t e r n a t,n g c o m m e n s o r a te w ith s a tis f a c to r y a p p l ic a b l e e x p e rie n c e a n d r o u ts w o rk e d . C u m u la tiv e v a c a tio n , sick e a v e , r e t ir e m e n t p ro g ra m a n d g e n - e ro s h o s p ita liz e ! on a n d D e in s u ra n c e p r o g r a m . C o n t a c t th e P erso n n el O ff ic e . ~ 'a c k e n r i d g e H o s p i ta ', A u stin , Texai . - . . di.sh ; A n e q u a l o p p o r tu n ity e m p o y e r. BARRANCA SQUARE APTS. B r a n d n ew W i th in v. a i k in g d is ta n c e U .T E f f i c ie n c y a n d o n e b e d r o o m a p a r t ­ m e n ts . c o m p le t e ly f u r n is h e d . $115 u p F o r I n f o r m a t io n c a ll 454-0239. 910 W'. 2 6 th fie ld 2 b e d r o o m . 2 b a th , w o o d p a n ­ e le d . f ir e p la c e , s h u t t l e b u s r o u t e F r o m $190 — a l l b ills . 476-1292 W A L K T O C A M P U S w a s h e r , d is p o s a l: w a lk -in "closet "and p a n t r y : s h u t t l e b u s r o u t e I C ont. u is t a d o r A p a r t m e n t s 2101 S a n G a b rie l G R 6-9363 a f t e r 5. R A V IN E T E R R A C E . A v a ila b le n o w . d is ta n c e U .T . F ir e p la c e . c lo s e t, d e s k , s t o r a g e s p a c e . — ----------------------------- O N E B E D R O O M . A ll u e l e c t r i c i t y 4316' B u ll C eek. e x c e p t 454-8018. • L a u n d r y r o o m w o o d s t y p i n g S E R 'v i c e '" T h e m e s th e s e s , d b e r i a tl o n * . M u l t i l l t h Q u a l ------------------------------------I ra te s* M rs r e a s o n a b l e U ty w o r k ut W o o d s . 472-1825. BARRONE 2 7 0 0 N “ 'e s in v ite d I n s p e c t io n f o r S u m m e r & F a ll S e m e s t e r s T V lounge 20 meals a week M a id • Pool • Parking Experienced managem ent 478-8345 or 477-9766 The Contessa West 27 0 7 R o G r a n d e I n s p e c t io n ' I n v ite d 4648 4 7 i f o r l i r a . I s RO Y W. HOLLEY 476-3018 T Y P IN G . P R I N T I N G . B IN D IN G N O R T H W E S T , n e a r A lle n d a le Y e a rs 465- ty p i n g e x p e r i e n c e to h e l p y o u 5813. B E A U T I F U L klndsT T Y P I N G ’ .■special tv p e f o r e n g i n e e r in g s c ie n c e la n g u a g e , N o r t h U n iv e r s it y M rs A n ­ th o n y , G L 4-3079 A ll “ *«.*** El 20 meals ./w eek S u m m e r & F a l l S e m is e g a n t living fo r you nq w o m e n SATISFACTION g u a r a n t e e d ------------- --------r e p o r t s L e g a l . s p e c i a li s t . t y p i s t w i t h B B A . IB M E x e c u ti v e e l e c tr i c 453-8650. ; - D i s s e r t a t i o n s , th e s e s , r e p o E x p e r ie n c e d , Kitchen & dining a r e a in e a c h suite Free p a rk ing M a i d service Laundry • S t u d y ha! • Pool • TV lounge facilities • Sun d e ck M A Y FA IR H O U SE D o r m ito r y For M e n & W o m e n Room & Meals $ 12 5 ,/m o n th fro m C a m p o s s e rv ic e — La M a y fa ir b u s th© h o u r —- M a d to e n d C r ' h e a t e d po o l v- o io r p a rk in g a r e a — D aily p s e rv ic e — cilitie s ic e m a c h - e y \ i ' * — n r r i v e t e u p c le a n in g L a u n d ry f a ­ 2000 P e a rl ll a b o u t 0,1 - 472 -5 4 3 7 M a y fa ir A p h . ! J u s t N o r t h o f 27th & G u a d a l u p e w&rt&SL / r n jujl * T y p i n g . M u lti lit h in g , B in d i n g M B A 0 The C o m p i e t e Professional FULL-TIME Typin g Service tr> ta ilo r e d t h e n e e d s o f U n iv e r s it y s tu d e n t s . S p e c ia l k e y b o a rd e q u i p m e n t ^o r e n g in e e r - s c ie n c e , in g la n g u a g e , th e s e s a n d d i s s e r t a t i o n s . a n d P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h i ll P a r k o p u r A N N E ’S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . W a n t c o r r e c t l y ? O n d o n e t i m e ? A t a p r ic e y o u c a n a f f o r d ? 442- 7008. t y p i n g .. in E n g l a n d . IN EUROPE S U M M E R J O B S P la c e m e n t a n d G e r m a n y g u a r a n t e e d f o r e a r l y s o - i n li e a n t s . V a r io u s jo b d e s c r i p tio n s d e - I p e n d i n g u p o n y o u r J iu c a u o n s . f i r s t c o m e , - J o b s a f i r s t s e r v e d b a s is . A p p ly a s s ig n e d o n S w i tz e r la n d , a r e , _ I V IC E . G r a d u a t e a n d U n d e r g r a d u a t e , w ° m . , r B o a r d — 20 M e a ls a W e e k H 'P in g . p r i n t i n g , b in d in g . 1515 K o e n ig s a il b o a t — a i r c o n d itio n e d — l a r g e E a n e . T e l e p h o n e : 465-7205 V IR G IN IA S C H N E I D E R T Y P I N G S E R - ~ m a id s th o s e f o r I N E E D M E N . I f y o u h a v e a c a r a n d c a n u s e $2.56 a n d u p p e r h o u r. a p p ly 612 L a v a c a . <:30 p m . . M o n d a y . T u e s ­ d a y . o r W e d n e s d a y Classified A d T y p i n g P r i n t i n g M u lti lit h in g G r a p h ic A r ts R e s u m e * T h e s is L a w B rie f* L e c t u r e N o te s T u t o r i n g C lo s e to C a m p u s A-PLUS UNIVERSITY SERVICES 504 W e s t 2 4 th S t r e e t 477-5651 M A R G A R E T RITCHIE P r o f e s s i o n a l. O b s e r v a n t T y p i n g S in c e 1951 D IS S ER T A T IO N S , THESES. RE PO RTS C o r r e c t ly t y p e d o n IB M w ith s y m b o ls . ! N e a t ly m u l t i l i t h e d o n A-M 125(1 p re s s . I ; A ttr a c ti v e ly b o u n d u p o n r e q u e s t 1404 K e n t L a n e ( o f f K n fie ld R o a d ) G R 6-7079 J u s t N o r t h o f 2 7 t h X G n /x r U ln r ,* . ‘N o r m OT 2 / T f l & G u a d a l u p e A m y M B A • M .B .A . T y p i n g . M u l ti lit h in g . B in d i n g / The C o m p l e t e Professional FULL-TIME T yping Service t o t a ilo r e d t h e n e e d s o f U n iv e r s it y s tu d e n t s . S p e c ia l k e y b o a rd e q u i p m e n t f o r e n g i n e e r s c ie n c e , m g la n g u a g e , a n d th e s e s a n d d is s e r ta tio n s . P h o n e G R 2-3210 a n d G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h i ll P a r k 210 F a s t 2 n d . 478-6382. Au l " 1 N o r t h A p a r t m e n t s . $16.25 C o u p le in - l d iv i d u a l, tw o m a le s n e e d e d A p a r im r nt 246. 454-1361. T f ' A p a r lm L n t H e n c e n e c e s s a r y A sk K rm V •<«-•*> n o u r s l n r e c e iv in g ro o m . N o e x p e - f o r M r. C o llin s o r M r. F u c e l lo . L e o n s , H a n c o c k C e n te r8 E s s T y p i i v g R o o m s _________________— - — _________________________ W A L K T O C a m p ■ eled. carpeted. “ '/c0" i h $ & s a T T ir a ' 6-9363 a f t e r 5 , T e le p h o n e 472-4823. s ! ir r “ rnc i c r n u . (L o ir i .Vt ■R e r / ' r " *» S A IL B O A T s p e c ia l I S p o r ty 15' h . A a f L ' t P h a ” ,T h e b i^ ' f a s t b o a rd f ib e r - R ? a ^ e avaardt m x ? v / 'V i!u a r n ! G R K B '23 b a t h ' S ^ n G a b r k a f t p r 11 p ni “ i S i n ^ m c c S 5 S - c o n . CALL GR I -5244 T O PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD O N E B E D R O O M . 1714 S u m m it V SUO p lu s u ti lit ie s A IC. S h u t t l e r o u te . E n f ie ld A r e a ) . 1838. 472-0256 O N E B E D R O O M CALL GR 1-5244 TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C L O S E TO U.T. • P e r s o n a l t y p i n g o f a l l y o u r U n iv e r s it y w o rk d i s s e r t a t i o n s , T h e s e s o u s ly h a n d l e d Y e a r s o f r e a s o n a b l e . f a s t. c o u r t e o u s , r e p o r t s m e tic u l­ e x p e rie n c e V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N T Y P IN G SERVICE P r o f e s s i o n a l T y p i n g A ll F ie l d s M u l t i l i t h i n g a n d B in d in g o n T h e s e s a n d D is s e r ta t io n s 1301 E d g e w o o d 478-2636 Page 6 Wednesday, March 4, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN Texas Firepower Destroys Bulldogs Twice By VAI CHN ALDREDGE Sports Editor Two nearly identical home runs and a streak of wildness on the part of Texas Lutheran College pitching sparked Texas to an 11-4 win in a doubleheader nightcap Tuesday after an early outburst of batting prowess decided the first game in tile ’Horns’ favor, 8 - 1. giving up one hit. inning of The Bulldogs took a command­ ing 4-0 lead in the top of the the second second contest after Steer starter Donnie Horne was forced to retire with an elbow injury. Horne threw on­ ly 12 pitche6 in his brief stint, He was relieved after getting one out by Mike Beard, who cleaned up . the little realizing what TLO had in store for the second. first, BEARD LED off the next in­ ning with a free pass to Bulldog catcher Terry Kyle, who was later picked off second with an excellent play between Beard and Pat Amos. Second sacker Pat Bailey followed with a single to right, after which shortstop Doug Berrera reached first on a thiev­ ing error by ’Horn third baseman David Hall. T IX centerfielder Alan Wells, whose bat bedeviled the Steers all dav( drove in Bailey with a single, followed by a base clear­ ing two bagger off the stick of left fielder David Mueller. Right fielder Pat Smith finished the Bulldog batting exhibition with a double, scoring the fourth run, and bringing Texas reliever Natl Salazar to the aid of Beard. SALAZAR retired Lutheran i h F ir s t G am s ab T exas 4 Mi l l e r c f ......... Caswell ss ................4 Chalk lf .................. 4 Harmon c ................. 3 H all 3b ............ . . . . I Langerhans lb . . . . . 3 Peschel rf ............... 3 ................ ..3 A mo s 2b Hooton p ................. 3 O O O D u f f e y p .............. 0 n Totals ......................... 28 I i I 2 0 2 2 0 0 o 2 2 0 0 2 0 2 8 9 o bt 0 1 0 0 3 0 3 7 0 ab h 0 . 3 3 r 0 1 1 T exas Lutheran W ells cf ........ M u e lle r lf ......... Sm ith r f ........... . . . . . 3 Stanoek lb . . . . . . . . . 2 ........... 3 B io d ig e r 3b K y le c ...................... 3 Ba iley 2b ................. 2 B a r r e r a ss ............... 2 K Reichenbach p .. 2 K ee l p .................... 0 T o t a l s .................... - 23 IOO 0— I Texas Lutheran ...........OOO ................................. SOO 030 x — 8 T e x a s E — S ta n c e k 2 . B le d ig e r . x D P — T e x a s I L O R — T IX ! 4. Texas 5 2 B —Miller. L a n ie r ha na. H R — Mueller. S — H ar­ mer!. first baseman Roy Reichenbach, who took the first loss of the day in his dual role as a hurler, and followed with eight more consecutive outs, giving up only three more safeties to win his first game of tile season. But the Bulldog bliss lasted only moments, as the TLC moundsmen began to find the pill difficult to control in the bottom of the second. After first sacker John Langerhans grounded out to first, right fielder Randy Peschel singled to right. ’HORN SECOND baseman Amos hit into a fielder’s choice forcing Peschel, and with two first, down and a man on redemption seemed as far away as the center field flag pole. But Lutheran pitcher Don Reichen­ bach (yes, a brother) suddenly lost sdght of the magic strike zone hovering above the plate. fielder Salazar, center Jack Miller and shortstop Lou Bagwell were offered free trips to first, after which left fielder David Chalk issued a sharp single to ice. TLC break mentor sent Reichenbach packing and sum­ moned help from righthander Mike Nest. the scoring Buzzy Keller But Neet issued another four- ball pass to catcher Tommy Har­ mon. Third baseman David Hall then slapped a long ball to right center for a single but rounded first thinking the throw would go to the plate. The Bulldog cutoff man instead elected to put Hall out in a rundown between first and second, and did so. But not before all Steer base runners had scored bringing the count to 6-4. HALL REACHED on a single to start the bottom of the fifth and Langerhans proceeded to pole a looping 350-foot shot over the right-center field fence. Amos then singled after Peschel flew out and stole second as Salazar struck out. Miller also safetied to right, putting two men on, when Bag- well, a smallish transplanted sec­ ond sacker who bats right, drove a hard shot over almost the same right field fence that saw Langer- han's round tripper moments be­ fore. The first game of the twin bill was almost out of doubt from the first TLC pitch, which cen­ ter fielder Jack Miller laced over tile left fielder's head for a dou­ ble. Bagwell followed with a sin­ gle. which Chalk followed with another single, before Harmon grounded out third to first. HALL THEN walked to load the bases, the Langerhans lined I a hard shot to the scoreboard. ■ Unfortunately, exactlyi that’s h 1 2 3 0 3 I I 1 0 0 0 12 h 3 2 I I 0 0 I Second Gam e ab * T ex a s M ille r r f ................... 2 B a g w e ll ss ............... 3 C h a lk l f ........ . .............. 4 H a r m o n c .....................3 .........................4 H a ll 3b L a n gerh an s lb .........3 ........... 4 Peschel r f Am os 2 b ..........................4 H o m e p .........................o B e a r d p ..................... , o .................. 2 Sa laza r D T otals ........................... 29 I 2 I I I I O 2 0 O I l l ab L u th e ra n W e l l s c f ......................... 4 Mueller lf ................. 4 P a t Sm ith rf ...........3 Roy Reichenbach lb 3 Greg Biedlger 3b .. 2 T e rry K yle c ......... 2 2 P a t B a i l e y 2b I T o m S c o t t 2b ......... 3 D o u r B a r r e r a ss . . . I D o n R e ic h e n b a c h p I M ik e N e e t p ............ .. 0 E . B io m a u is t p . . . .. I J e r r y S t a n c e k p h - .................... T o ta ls ..27 040 OOO ~0— .4 Texnx L u t h e r a n ................................... OOO 050 x — l l ! T e x a s J ^ r m o n . C h a lk . H a ll . D P — T e x a s I r .L O R — T IX .' 5. T e x a s 6 2 B - ' 2 T I X ! 0 M u e ile r . S m ith . B a g w e ll. H R — L a n g e r - 1 i hans. B a g w e ll. S B — A m o s. W e lls . where it went — under the score­ board for a ground rule double, scoring only the second and third runs of the inning. After Peschel whiffed, though, Amos drove in the final two tallies of the frame with a single to right. Texas picked up another three runs in the sixth, but it seemed like grossly unneeded insurance against the sterling mound work of 'Horn sophomore All-America Burt Hooton, who recorded his second win of the young season. ROCK n ROLL REVIVAL FEATURING CHUCK BERRY AND THE DRIFTERS THURSDAY, M A R C H 5 8:00 p.m. CITY OF AUSTIN COLISEUM TICKETS $3.00 and $4.00 50c higer at the door Ticket* may ba purchased at: RA Y M O N D S D R U G S • TH E RECO RD SH O P • A LF IE 'S FISH & C H IP S M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D S • G IB S O N S (Ben W hite Blvd. Only) Get Your Tux For the Formal Season Name Brand Tuxedoes | 0 0 Sale Runs Wed. thru Sat. HORACES FORMAL WEAR 3004 Guadalupe Plenty of Free Parking T h e D a i l y T e x a n S i Your Best Bet to e e VM W Ftw« rn snme I P I I TMS'/ ..’b Mal VT PM S I E ■ Mm rn ADVERTISE YOUR STUDENT HOUSING FOR THIS TW' IU I — . I | , c+z % -'Oh: : it rn Down and O uf Texas third baseman D avid H all puts the tag on Texas Lutheran left fielder David M ueller as M ueller unsuccessfully attem pts a steal in Friday's doubleheader. IHorn Cage Story: Swandive Former Player Blames Dissension, Poor Coaching Associated Press Writer By ROBERT HEARD Conch I .eon Black says his Longhorn basketball team, which was favored to win the Southwest Conference, h a s been “ out- toughed” this year. A former p l a y e r blames Steer swandive on dissension and poor coaching. the Texas, 11-13 for the season and 6-8 in conference play after a 85-74 win over SMU Monday night, the Mustangs from grabbing a share of sixth place in the final con­ ference standings. successfully kept “ We’ve simply been outtoughed all year,” Black said. “ I'm not pointing to any individuals. We’\ e simply been out-toughed as a team.” Black said his players lacked on the same freshman team on w h i c h Aaker played, was averaging five points a game this year. Aaker’s teammate, Larry Mc­ Coy, also quit the Texas fresh­ men last spring and they are roommates at Colorado this year. They led Wheatridge, Col., to an undefeated season and the state schoolboy championship in 1968. T VV O O T II E R Wheatridge athletes who came to Texas and made major contributions to the national championship football team are Freddie Steinmark. the Longhorn defensive back who lost a the Arkansas game, and starting offensive guard Bobby Mitchell. to cancer after leg Black is in his third season at Texas. He has recruited ex­ tensively out of state in an effort to make the Longhorns a national basketball power. This year’s freshman team In­ cludes four players besides Wil­ son who will push for front-line positions next year, Black says. B. G. Brosternous, Ralph Elliott, Mike Dukes and Jack Louis should battle for starting berths. “ W E SIM PLY o v e r s t a t e d things,” Blade said of the current group of sophomores. “ We felt like they had to be good, and they were better by comparison to what we’d had before. But they were not the kind that should be playing much as sophomores.” In a preseason poll, the South­ west Conference coaches picked Texas to win this year. Black said he would be quieter about recruiting in the future. THE TEAM LOSES only senior M ayne Doyal who had a career high of 35 points against SMU. It gets back the sophomores, who were 9-3 as freshmen, plus this year’s freshmen, who also posted a 9-3 record. “ One thing I ’ve concluded, too, is that I'd rather have that kid who has less publicity and who is coachable, one who’s a com­ petitor even if he has a little less ability,” Black said. freshmen aggressiveness. The had more injuries than the var­ sity. he said. “W E ’VE HAD TO sew more freshmen up in 12 games than we’ve had for the varsity the whole season,” he said. John Mark Wilson, hottest scorer in Texas freshman history', has had three sets of stiches, he said. He could not recall a single varsity wound that needed stit­ ches. But Steve Aaker, who was named the outstanding high school player in Colorado in 1968, and who quit the Yearling squad last spring after his freshman season, says there are other reasons. “ There’s a lot of dissension on the team,” Aaker told The As­ sociated Press Tuesday by tele­ phone from Boulder, Colo., where he is sitting out a year at the University of Colorado to regain eligibility. “ People hated other people and stuff. Not so much on the fresh­ man team but on the varsity," Aaker said, “ I PERSONALLY didnt get along with Coach Black,” he said. When asked in what respect he said he would rather not say. Aaker said the situation in general at Texas was bad. He said he was moved from the post position to forward and needed but did not get help on dribbling and shooting. “ Right at the end when they heard rumors I was quitting, they began to pay attention to me. I guess they hoped I'd stay. They began complimenting me a lot." he said. ASKED coa ches IF TH E brought out the potential in other players, Aaker said, “ They took it away. They took the will to play away. When I left there I didn't care whether I ever saw a basketball again.” Aaker said he was not sur­ prised that Scooter Lenox, who averaged 21.4 points learn to Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guada'ajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Ari­ zona program, will offer. June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geogra­ phy, history, political science, lang­ uage and courses. Tui­ tion, $160; board and room, $155. W rite Dr. Juan B. Rael, Office of Summer Session, University of Ari­ zona, Tucson, Arizona 85721. literature Haggar Mustangs j make it happen. I The slim -cut s la ck with the distinctive M ustang buckle. Forever P r e s t - no ironing ever. Popular with teens and twenties alike. 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W e d n e s d a y , M a r c h 4 , 1 9 7 0 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P e g # 7 Roberto Rossellini By CICELY WYNNE Amusements Associate HOUSTON — W ith IO film stu­ dents, R ice University would be lucky to get the president of KPRC -TV for a Monday night lec­ ture. Bu t film director Roberto Rossellini is spending the last of his four weeks as guest of tho Institute of the A rts, commonly known as the new media center. The famous director happens to be one of those artists who, in latter part of his career, the to tim e some devotes com­ municating with students and other artists about ideas, not just film s. Inform al talks, discussions with students, faculty and com­ munity people — he wants to keep it relaxed and open. affair with Miss Bergm an stifled both their careers. Rossellini then made some minor film s, before his moderately successful black comedy, “ General della R overe" M any people m ay remember Rossellini as the notorious Italian who had the affair with Ingrid Bergm an in 1951, long before M ia Farrow and Andre Previn. “ P a isan " AT TMK LEAST, he should be remembered as something of a Columbus in the Italian film in­ dustry. His “ Open C ity " (1945) and (1947) not only revived Italian film s, after World W ar II, they inspired the neo- realist movement. That is, his film s were the first successful, com pletely neo-realistic works, they were successful because good foreign and m arkets received them w arm ly. because era; replacing Gone was the white telephone m o v i e the theatrics was a new realism in film s characterized by the use locations of non-professionals, and .stories of common people. Rossellini was eventuUly over­ shadowed by such directors as Antonioni, de Sica. Fellin i and Visconti, who continue to make fictional films. However, during late 40’s and early 50’s. the Rossellini was the w orld’s most famous director. His perhaps (1959), notable for Vittorio de Sica's performance. DI RING THE 60’S, we begin to see the director as he is today. long historical-educa- Making STARTS TONITE AT 2AT Z DRIVE-IN THEATRES 15 V V O C K B O N I S C II H H S I O F I \ (ii- , I H S . A L A N L A D D . IN C O L O B ! P L I S ! A L E X C O R I), I N T O I O K ’ ‘ " A M INUTE TO PRAY,' A SECOND TO DIE" ae U A M c>> 3 H A N fc — EAST SCREEN — BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:15 SHO W S START 6:45 now you can SEE anything you w an t ma a t .,, A lic ia » starting ARU) GUTHRIE COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists ’ - E _____________________ - CI I S — ( () - F E A I i i ii ; — - ROD STEIGER — SIDNEY POITIER IN THE HEAT C F THE NIGHT SH O W TO W N _ WEST SCREEN tional film s for Italian television. Rossellini spares little tim e for “ friv o lity ." But Rossellini The sm ell of fresh paint and sawdust pervades the atmosphere at R ic e ’s unfinished media cen­ ter. somehow relaxes in the hard m etal chairs. He leans forward, as if to im ply that he is the listener, and we talk about the state of today's film s. Although he believes strongly in his own work, Rossellini doubts the value of most current movies. “ Movies are dying every day for the lack of ideas. They continue to repeat the same old themes until they have no more meaning. We have had so many antiw ar film s, so many film s on vio­ lence." A DIRECTOR has to go deeper, learn to he feels. After film s convey the reasons for people’s behavior, they must construct solutions for problems. “ Before, Rossellini says, the film was at the stage of deciding what kind of sickness we had, and we cried, and cried, and cried, and after that, it was very boring.” Film s became so boring for the director that he stopped going to movies l l years ago. “ M y in­ terests were driven in other directions. You can go to the movies, and see a better or a worse film , but the themes they treat are alw ays the same. So, I'v e no more interest in those things,” he says. THE DRAMATIC or fiction film impresses him as useless in a society so in need of important ideas. As one might expect, Ros­ little patience with sellini has film s’ new freedom. Sex, violence and coarse language, rather than fill movie houses, drive people aw ay. He says “ It's just a way to grab people. “ It makes me laugh a little to see people at film s labeled ‘for sex education’. You don't need that, really, you get your own practice. It's so natural," he says, grinning. Rossellini sees a world-wide decline in the popularity of not only pornographic movies, but m usicals and comedies as well. The British audience has dropped to one-fifth of its size of several years ago, he notes. To Rossel­ lin i, that can only mean that people want something else, that they need something else. “ SURELY the m ain ingredient in this change is the tremendous development of science. And the world is such a vast world. So, I think that is the reason why we are not happy, or why every­ one tries to express his unhappi­ ness in this world, stems from the fact that we don't know what INTERSTATE D O O R S O P E N i) I JO A U S T I N 11? fl fo . CON GUESS THEATRE FEA T I KES 5:58 - 8:00 - 10:02 Not that rt matters, but most of it is true. 20th CENTURY FOX PRESENTS TOOL NEWMAN ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE ROSS. BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID PASSION* COLOR BY DELUXE » W ta BD Ml M M M * I 3rd BIG WEEK! NOMINATED FOR 7 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING THE FOLLO W ING: ★ itat S B £ r i BEST MOTION PICTURE OF THE YEAR! ★ Ac& ★ A“ " S „ , Ar '"B E S T SONG OF THE YEAR! r dBEST DIRECTION OF THE YEAR! S F R E E T A R K IN G v A T A L L T IM E S ^ ^ ^ J N T E R S T A n 75C 'TIL 2:15 THEATRE • FL A T I ' BLS I : S t - 3 :30 - 5:40 f: 50 - 10: OO HELD OVER! 2ND GREAT WEEK 9 A ca d e m y A w a r d Nominations IN C L U D IN G ACTRESS Ja n e Fonda DIRECTOR S yd n e y Fillable • SUPPORTING ACTOR & ACTRESS G ilt Young Susannah York BEST BEST BEST l / ’ i f c j / " - A n n « e.M O N u rn I X I I ’M N J A D J A C E N T T O T H I A T A I Making is going on in our live s,” he says. Rossellini cannot content him­ self with making educational film s; he feeLs an obligation to their others communicate to He says, " I have no use for those things, but that is my per­ sonal opinion. Each man must do what he feels urgent to do, what makes him happy. The whole thing should bt rooted in deep honesty. If you do a film because you are sure that with a certain number of ingredients you create a success, perhaps that is not such an honest posi­ tion, but perhaps we need that also. I am open to everything, I am against nothing." Fo r the l a s t several years, Rossellini has produced semi­ documentaries for Italian televi­ sion. A ll of the film s involved extensive research and recon­ struction. A ll deal with important historical turning points: “ The A ct of the Apostles," “ Su rviva l," "So cra te s," recently completed, and “ The Industrial Revolution,’* now in the organizational stages. Rossellini feels that television allows him freedom from com­ m ercial pressures as w ell as the freedom to create longer film s ( “ S u rv iv a l" is 12 hours) with an educational approach. “ Even Truffaut. THERE AREN’T many film di­ rectors who care for Rossellini's educational approach. Rossellini sees him self as the lone rebel. “ I can see no others, really. In Am erica, I know very little. But even in Europe, perhaps Godard is starting to be aware of th is." Ju st a few months ago, he said ‘I have cer­ tain things to say that are urgent for me to say. I don’t care about . . . ’ I think now he has a certain doubt . . , I can say this because we are von,' close friends. Ju st lately he has said I have to move in that direction’,’'' Rossellini says. ‘Perhaps, “ But I have not seen a com­ plete film in l l years. I do watch parts of them sometimes on flights from Europe to Am erica. B u t I sleep very well on the planes, I mast sa y ," Rossellini adds. BECOMING again, Rossellini talks about the future to create and film s’ chance serious knowledge. B y urging the people of research to express them­ selves, he hopes that everyone can have a "general orientation." He says “ Today, our knowledge is only a little, but it is immense compared to what we knew two centuries ago; and we must be oriented in that new light. “ I think that we must act to involve human beings completely in that or we w ill have human beings a victim of that,” he says. N A T U R A L L Y , man cannot sur­ vive without the knowledge to cope with new technology; nor can idea film s hope to be effec­ tive without this diffusion of knowledge. Rossellini says, “ If a film expresses an idea, and we have not the knowledge, then that film is like throwing a stone into the sea — it is completely lost." B y "general orientation” Ros- seliini means an awareness of the "M o v ie s are dying every day m r the lack o f ideas. W e have had so m a n y an tiw a r films, so m any films on violence." important turning points in man’s struggle to survive — such as the Industrial Revolution and the Greek society, but not just speci­ fic influences. He feels that an artist must provide links between the ideas to build a new civilization. the In searching for the most effec­ tive film style to create a general orientation. Rossellini sim ply re^ turned to his roots in documerf- taries. He now feels that docu­ m entaries alone provide the necessary orientation. However, his personal disregard for other reveal kinds of intolerance. films doesn't general orientation. "U n til now, film s have played only a m inim al role. But I strongly believe in the possibilities because film s were never used properly. When people thought of movies, they thought of making a great suc­ c e s s . But this is changing now because our needs have become clear. W e must take the action to satisfy those needs." He cannot help but feel that his idealism is appreciated. E u ­ ropean audiences have reacted ‘‘very deeply" to his work, he says. “ This is a very good sign, but we are just at the beginning of that action." Movies Again for TV A good movie is on Hie tube W e d n e s d a y night—one that “ Gentle­ everyone should see. men's Agreem ent" is about a w riter who poses as a Jew to obtain to w rite a m a g a z i n e article on anti- Semitism. Problems d e v e l o p when his son gets beat up and his girlfriend gets apprehensive. information Gregory Peck is the w riter and Dorothy M cGuire and John G ar­ field also star. Tune in at 10:30 p.m. on channel 12. Another movie about a reporter is on channel 9 at 9:30 p.m. Richard Boone stars “ The M ark W aters S to ry." A reporter writes his own obituary' while he is dying of lung cancer. in STARTS T h u rs. Theatre ”6757 AIRPORT BLVD. 454-2711 TODAY — DOORS OPEN 6:00 Feature 6:15-8:15-10:10 Plus DISNEY'S "PECOS BILL" W a l t D IS N E Y presents OUTDOOR ADVENTURE FILMED IN THE WILDS OF CANADA M O R A IN E LAKE, LOCATED BELO W LAKE LOUISE, BANFF N A T IO N A L PARK. THE S C EN IC SPLENDOR OF Y O H O N A T IO N A L PARK, THE K A N A N A SK IS RIVER AND FOREST, THE B O W RIVER RAPIDS AND THE STONEY IN D IA N RESERVATION, BETWEEN BANFF AND C A LG A R Y . 300 ponds IO ft. Tall and a Screenplay by JACK SPEIRS Based or betook “Hie Biography of a Gnzziy-by ERNEST THOMPSON SETON ProfecaJiiy WiSTON HIBLER • Directed by RON KELLY THIS SATURDAY JEFFERSON AIRPLAN SAN ANTONIO ONLY SATURDAY - MARCH 7th SAN ANTONIO MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM ONLY Complete Sound System — Glen M ackay Light Show Tickets: $6 — $5 — $4 — $3 Reserved _______ Tickets Available: Raymond’s Drugs, 2706 Rio Grande, thru Friday LISTEN TO RTSA RADIO — 550 lee A JAM PRODUCTION Page 8 Wedoeedey, March 4, 1070 THE DAILY TEXAN Additional Viewing: 6:30— 12 Nanny 4, 42 Virginian 5, 7, IO Hee-Haw 9 News 7:00— 12 Eddie's Father 9 K'ukla. Fran and Ollie 7:30—12 Room 222 5. 7. IO Hillbillies 9 Book Boat 8:00—12 Johnny Cash 4. 42 Music H all 5. IO M edical Conter 7 M o v ie —- "T ho A m e r ic a n o " 9 New* in Perspective 9:00—12 Engelbert Humperdinck 4, 42 Bronson 5. IO Hawaii Five-0 9 30—9 Drama Special— "Th# Mark Waters Story 10.00-4 5. 7. lo. 12. 42 News. w e * thor. sports 3 W h y You Smoke . 10:30— 4, 42 Johnny Carson 5. 7. lo Merv Griffin 9 Advocates 12 Movie— "Gentlemen's A r greement" STUDIO IV 222 E a s t 6th 472-043* RATED ”X " — NO ONE UNDER IS IME Kitty DALL IN COLOR „£ ,LT S IN COLOB “ BLO W THE MAN DOWN" • E S C O R T E D L A D IE S F R E E S I P E K SN E A K 8 P .M . W E D . HURRY! H LAST DAY! CACTUS FLOWER” 7,7. - S H O W IN G AT - 1:15-3:40-5:50-8:00 ■ OKNKRAL /IRIkMA CORPORATION University Art Gallery of Variables By PENNIE FREELAND Amusements Associate The variable paintings in the Oyvind Fahlstrom exliibit in Gal­ lery 17 of tile University Art Mu­ seum would be fun to play with. A set of blocks which can ba put together to form a number of patterns from the paintings on the wall sit sedately on the floor. On the wall, magnetized “Dom­ inoes” cling to their places in a random arrangement — not that there’s anything objection­ able about the arrangement, just Classics to Present Three Greek Plays that there are so many other pos­ sibilities. Other paintings are variable in how the person looking at them decides to read them. The action is random cartoons that can be made to follow a story line ac­ the viewer cording decides this line should be drawn. to where The detail in the drawings is intriguing — one could sit and just read them for a long time. On one wall stretches an Ink painting like an endless Rorsch­ ach test. TTie blots tell a story, too — one follows them from the door and can watch the action build to a climax as he reaches the comer of the room. Also on display through March 22 are pencil and ink drawings by John Marin and pencil sket­ ches of the female nude by Fritz Bultman. These, with paintings by Sonia Delaunay, are in the Museum’s Main Gallery. "SUNDANCE" formerly "GEORGE" every WEDNESDAY NIGHT at the NEW ORLEANS CLUB SOUNDVILLE RECORDING ARTISTS SUNDANCE Every Wednesday Night SPECIAL: BEER $1.00 PER PITCHER T B S B S I O S U M I 12th I RED RIVER 478-0292 ■ } ae s “Measure for Measure’ is to the Nixon-Agnew government what ‘Macbeth’ was to the John­ son government,” commented Erwin. “It will probably be per­ formed extensively in the next couple of years.” Erwin said he hoped a touring company might be formed from v o l u n t e e r s . “With efficient mobilization of existing talent, we can come up with some excellent theater,” he added. Students interested in the pro­ the De­ ductions may contact partment of Classics. NOMINATED FOR FOR THE FIRST TIME IN ACADEMY AW ARD HISTORY ONE MOTION PICTURE HAS BEEN NOMINATED FOR BEST PICTURE and BEST FOREIGN FILM Acapulco, cha, cha. ch al “The last w ord in thrillers. Terrific.” •“Gene Shalit, Look Magazine "Enough intrigue and excitement to eclipse Jam es Bond.” “ Playboy; •I I TPIZ ’ damn near knocks you out of your seat.” —Paulino Kaol, Tho New Yorker, “A n ‘A ’ for ‘Z ’. Stan d s without peer a s a docum ent and thriller.” —judith c a s t, n b c - t v VV! S M ONTANI) IRENE P A P A S J! AL LOI HS tfflNTJCNANJ ^ j W * ' J W F The Department of Classics has tenatively scheduled three plays, including an all-black production of Aeschylus’ “The Seven Against Thebes,” during the latter part of the semester. Undo* the direction of Donald Erwin, the department hopes to produce Shakespeare's “Measure for Measure,” and Euripides’ “The Bacchae” in addition to the Aeschylus drama. “The Seven Against Thebes” is a newly-edited translation by pro­ fessor of classics William Arrow­ smith and will be performed with an all-black cast. “The Bacchae” will be per­ formed in masks with an all-male cast in the tradition Greek style. Der Wienerschnitzel 411 W . 24th Just O ff "The D rag'1 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT O PEN IO - M ID N IT E FRI.-SAT. TIL 2 A.M . Biggest Name in Hot Dogs ONLY 18* INTERSTATE Random Comic Strip 'WW The design on this Oyvind Fahlstrom painting appear* again on the set of build­ ing blocks also on display at the University Art M u ­ seum Gallery 17. Schisgal Dramas Open At Methodist Center and “ T h e Tiger” “The Typists,” a pair of one-act plays by Murray Schisgal, will open at the Methodist Student Center auditorium at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and March 13 and 14. Both plays revolve around the relationship of two people who are balanced on the complicated edge of today’s world where nobody listens, nobody cares. _ The cast for both plays is Pam Gorham and George Pearson. “Die Tiger” Is concerned with the extreme, sometimes comical actions of one man in his search for expression, love and compan­ ionship. is “The Typists” unique, because the span of a lifetime is compressed into one day in the lives (rf two office workers. The special staging, using the the whole auditorium, depicts amusing and pathetic aspects of man’s isolation. The production is sponsored by the Ichthus Coffee House. Ad­ mission is $1.50 general and $1.25 for students. Reservations may be made by calling the Methodist Student Center. CINEM A 40 PRESENTS Louis Bunuelo Simon of the Desert and Nazarin (7:00 & 9:45) (8:00 p m j non-members 75c Friday, Mar. 6 Jester Auditorium ■ T R A N S * T E X A S ■PHilVl'M'l ■ 1423 W. Bm Whit! B W .— 442 2333 RO C KIN G C H A IR SEATS SM O K IN G PERMITTED ACRES FREE PARKING COLOR br DeLuxe h tA lU R E TIMEo / . J O a.,., 9 :3 0 United Artists ^ I N T E R S T A T E S T A U T S t o d a y : O P E N 1 1 : 4 5 S T A T E D O W N T O W N T I* CON G K tSS THEATRE F E A T U R E S 1 2 : O O - 2 : 0 0 - 4 : 1 ) 0 t i : OO - P : OO Dice was his vice - Men hers. One of the year’s IO best pictures!” — Roger Greenspun, New York Times — Rex Reed, Holiday Magazine • Joyce Haber, Los Angeles Times Syndicate — New York Post —Cue Magazine 4 l l . . greeted ay Costa-Gavras screenplay ay Jorge Sempmn Music by Mikis Theodorakis RATED GP T R A N S + T E X A S 51.00 TIL 5 P.M. I 2224 Guadalupe S t-4 7 7 -1 9 6 4 STARTS TODAY! I TRANS+TEXAS t i t . I r a i l . i n /\ MER 2200 Hancock Drive— 453-6641 TODAY • 2 -4 -6 -8 -1 0 STARTS O PEN 1:45 FEATURES • BARGAIN MATINEE • ALL SEATS $1.00 UNTIL 5 P.M. • SEATS NOT RESERVED Deaf Group Presents Plays National Theater On Fifth U.S. Tour The National Theater of the Deaf, on its fifth nationwide tour, will be in Austin on March 18 for one performance. presentation, sponsored jointly by the Austin Club of the Deaf and the Speech and Hearing is Clinic of scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Muni­ cipal Auditorium. the University, i'lie Tickets may be purchased by writing to Miss Grace Hanson, Speech and Hearing Clinic, the University of Texas, Austin, Tex­ as 78712. Prices are $10, $5 and $4. Tickets also will be available at the door on the night of the performance. In their Austin appearance, members of the company will perform two plays — “Songs from Milk Wood,” an adaptation of “Under Milk Wood” by Dylan Thomas, and “Sganareile,” a one-act Moliere farce. The highly acclaimed National Theater of the Deaf was founded in the summer of 1967 by Eugene O’Neill Memorial Theater Foun­ dation of Waterford, Conn. The company was organized on the premise that deaf people have a natural ability to communicate visually and have a natural act­ ing talent. Although organized only a little more than two years, the com­ pany has to its credit a two-week s t a n d tw o European tours, three films and numerous television appearances. on Broadway, Cash and Wife Have First Son NASHVILLE, Term. (AP) _ Singer Johnny Cash became the father Tuesday of a boy — and he didn’t name him “Sue.” John Carter Cash was bom to Cash and singer June Carter at 12:43 p.m. in Madison Hospital — a week earlier than the mother had predicted. But Mrs. Cash said all along it would be a boy. _ The Cash’s son weighed in at 7 pounds, IO ounces. the Cash’s “ Boy Named Sue” u’as named top Country and Western song of 1969 at the an­ nual Country Music Association awards banquet in Nashville. The song has been nominated for the top popular recon!ing of the year. Film Shows Birth Of Jewish Nation IsOt My People Go,” a dra­ matic film account of the rebirth of the Jewish nation, will be shown in the Texas Union Audi­ torium at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. 'rho Hamagshimim Youth Com­ mission for Peace and Demo­ cracy in tire Middle East is spon­ soring the film. Admission Is free. • • • • • • • • • • • • * J O H N N - : rn 3 16 Congress WI NT E R IS D O IN G A BENEFIT TO KEEP FR E A K D O M & IN SA N IT Y ALIVE A T THE V U L C A N G A S C O . M A R C H IO & ll A D V A N C E TICKETS OAT WILLIES 1801 N U ECES PHIL'S RECORDS 204 W. 24th H A Y A 1616 L A V A C A OUR ENTERPRISE W EST of L A M A R & 34th ‘150 M IN . • D O N A T IO N m • J By t h e way — I Q » HUB-CITY MOVERS # J TONITE $1.00 • JOmCfWllllY FOX PH SIMS in a GEORGE STEVENS-FRED KOHLMAR production Tit® Oilily G am e In lb) w it’ PM M bl THO KOHM tweeted 6y KOKOT SW K S Screen^ try FRANK 0 GARDY based on h* L~[ I M * ConwwJ and ConducWbr W I W ! JARR! COlORDyDC llfflf ' The S the S lisiihiiii ffit ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE ROSS ROBERT BLAKE SUSAN CLARK "T E L L TH EM WILLIE BOY IS H E R E ” BARRY SULLIVAN. T E C H N IC O LO R C ostarring ■ A LL A G II ADMITTY!) ■ I P a n n M Guidance Su g g n ted . ^ WO J T O NM » C A R L REINffi>^|^OUEL^MLW>RINE■ IN COLOR Wednesday, March 4, I97.Q THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9! Foreign UT Exes to M eet A conference designed to estab­ lish a continuing liaison between international ex-students and the University will be held May 14 to 17. Sponsored by the Ex-Students’ Association, the International Ex- Students’ Conference is expected to attract several hundred foreign nationals who w'ore educated at Texas. Student involvement will be limited, depending on space left in meeting rooms after the May 13 registration. The theme will be "The Uni­ versity of Texas and Education for Mankind's Future.” All major speeches will "focus on world problem s.” ^ McGeorge Bundy, president of Ford Foundation, is one of the principal speakers, He previously Campus News in Brief discussion of "Women in Lead­ ership Roles.” STUDENTS FOR A VOLUNTE­ ER MILITARY will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Jester Center 315. UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHU- RCH will hold a soup and sand­ wich sem inar a t noon Thursday in Nordan Lounge with Dr. Arnold Lopez-Cepero speaking. * I D IVERSITY I XDERWATER SOCIETY will meet a t 7:30 p.m. Thursday in I ’nion Build­ ing 300 to hear Jim Keith speak on commercial diving and to see slides of Cozumel, Mexico, by Louis Schaefer. Y O U N G AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM will meet at 7:30 p m. Thursday in Business- Eoonomics Building 57 to or­ ganize current projects. AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY will m eet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Engineering Lab 102. ARMY ROTO is accepting appli­ cation; through March IO from students of sophomore level and above the tw o- year program in ROTC building 110. interested in ASSOCIATION OF STUDENTS OF LIBRARY SCIENCE will in meet at 8 p.m. Thursday Building Business-Economics lot to hear Pauline Atherson speak on library automation. BAPTIST STI DENT I MON will hear Brother Elso Garcia of El Salvador Church speak at ves­ pers a t 6:30 p.m. Thursday. INTER - VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP meets a t 8 p m. Thursday in Calhoun Hall IOO to hear John Walvoord of Dal­ las Theological Seminary speak on and ‘‘Drugs, Delusion Christianity'.” OMICRON NC will meet in Home Economies Building 105 at 7:30 p.m. Thursday to hear a panel served as a special assistant on national security to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Astronaut Alan L. Bean, a Uni­ versity graduate and one of tile Apollo 12 moon walkers, is the final speaker of the conference and will talk on the role of educa­ tion the space age. Other speakers have not been con­ firmed. in “The Austin community has a chance to participate by offering accommodations to tho interna­ tionals who arc participating,” said Mollieo Walters, conference co-ordinator. "Those who have replied to our letter of invitation to the conference have also Indi­ cated that they want to m eet with specific professors that thev had at the University.” Panels and meeting rooms will be set up for this purpose. The steering committee for tire conference is headed by Edward Clark of Austin, former U. S. am ­ bassador to Australia. Other alumni members of the steering committee include CBS news broadcaster Waiter Cron- kite; C. W. Cook, General Foods Corp. board chairm an; W. W. Heath, former lh S. am bassador to Sweden * and Harding Louv­ r e n o o , Braniff International president. Also. Mrs. Lyndon B. J o h n s o n , Mauricio Madero, grandson of a former Mexican president and Dr. Norman Hack- erman, University president. Two students on the com mitt ce arc Joe Krier. prcsm Ari f r A 4 I-, Students Association and Rostam Kavoussi, an Iranian national wrho is immediate past president of the student body. Chairman Clark set $150,000 aa the maximum budget for the con­ ference and 68 individuals and various foundations have already contributed $30,000. ‘W e hope that tliis is only the first step in encouraging the Uni­ versity foreign alumni to estab­ lish a more active relationship their alma m ater,” said with Mrs. Walter's. Newman Club Plans Carnival 3 he Catholic Student Center will sponsor a carnival Sunday. The event, offering entertain­ ment ranging from a pie throw to body painting and cake walks, will begin at noon and end late in the afternoon. Proceeds will go toward fur­ nishings for tile new Catholic stu­ dent center at Prairie View A&M, said John Howard, president of the .Newman Club, which is spon­ soring the carnival. If Yod Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service T o da y' s Events Noon - Ix)yd Edmonds, chair­ man of the Austin Association of Sfu lent Work Committee, speaks a t the Baptist Student Union, 2204 San Antonio. I p.m. — Spooks m e e t at the Delta Delta Delta house. 6:30 p.m. — Brother Elso Garcia from the El Salvador Church speaks at vespers at the Baptist Student Union, 2204 San An­ tonito. 6:45 p.m. — Students for Moya meet at the Littlefield Fountain to post signs. 7:15 p.m. —■ Gamma Delta Epsil­ on executive council meets in Union Building 354. LSO p.m. — Committee for Envi­ ronmental Teach-In meets in Union Building 325. 7:30 p.m. — CoWed Wives Club meets at the home of Mr. Ken­ neth Zimmerman, 3411 Casca­ d e s , to hear Dr. Erwin Spear discuss "Biological Problems Threatening the Future of Man­ kind. ” 7:30 p.m. — Ilamagshimim meets in the Texas Union Auditorium to see ‘‘Let My People Go.” a film on the rebirth of the state of Israel. 7:3ft p.m. —• Women’s Liberation meets in Union Building 300. 8 p.m. —- University Surfing As­ in Business- to sociation meets Eeonomics Building 166 w’atch films. 9 p.m. — Campus Crusade for Christ holds a College Life meeting at JVlta Gamma Soro­ rity house. 2410 Rio Grande to hear David Holmberg speak on “ Is That All There Is?” 9 p.m. — Newman Club meets at the Catholic Student Center to finalize plans for charity carnival Sunday. Ad Apprentice Plan Continued An apprentice program in advertising which pays at least $325 a month is to be offered I again this summer for qualified s t u d e n t s from southwestern colleges and universities. apprentice by Application forms for the fifth program sum m er sponsored the Southwest Council of the American Associa­ tion of Advertising Agencies are available now from department heads. Apprenticeship positions „ v are available to any student who has completed las junior year in a course related to advertising and public relations, including courses in comprehensive art, marketing, m arket tele­ vision, public relations and other journalism courses. research, radio, fetes cWt\jch One is the cF&ulist? I f s easy to tell a Paulist. Just talk with him. T he first thing you notice is th at h e ’s contemporary. H e to es today, but plans tom orrow w ith the experience and know l­ edge o f yesterday. T h at’s a r a u t o t characteristic: the abil­ ity to m ove with the times and to m eet the challenges of each era. A I aulist is a,so the mediator of his age: he tries to bring to­ gether the. extremes in today’s world and the Church, the Jib- eraiS and the m oderates, th e eternal an d the tem poral. N ext, he is very m uch an indi­ vidual It sets him apart im m e­ diately. H e has his own p artic­ u la r talents and abilities an d he is given freedom to use them . if you are interested in finding out m ore about the Paulist dif­ ference in the priesthood, ask for our brochure and a copy o f our recent Renewal C hapter Guidelines. W rite to: Vocation D irector ^Paulist. ^Fathers Room 300 415 W est 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 Page IO Wednesday, March 4, 1970 THE DAILY TEXAN A l t e r e d Landscape . —Photo by Steve Hultman \ A/L W here m a s t i c )rees once sh aded tranquil Waller Creek the new ad d itio n to M e m o ria l Stadium arises am id much noise and tumult. U n iversity officials h op e it will be c o r s le t - ed by Sep te m b e r. Council to Consider Speed Limit Changes I im if /nl — a __ a.!_ Speed limit changes on Austin streets, eminent domain proceed­ ings and zoning changes comprise the bulk of a business-laden Aus­ tin City Council agenda Thurs­ day, The council will consider in maximum including changes limits, Lam ar Boulevard, Congress Avenue., city’s m ajor arteries. portions l l speed of and South the two of Recommended by the D epart­ ment of Traffic and Transporta­ tion are increases in the limits on South Congress from Barton Springs Road to Oltorf Street from 30 to 35 m.p.h., from Oltorf to E ast St. Elmo Road from 40 a iv a to 45 m.p.h,, and from E ast St. Three eminent domain proce­ dures xviii be acted on, including a residence a t 710 Theresa, which hampers right-of-way for the Mo-, Pac Boulevard, under- construction. now Five cases involving rezoning will be heard without conditions, I five more with conditions and I seven cases postponed from the meeting of Feb. 5, 1970, win be \ examined in an afternoon session. I Citizens to be heard by the cou­ ncil include a group from the Austin and Travis County' Com­ the Model munity Council on Cities Program and a spokesman I from "Operation Sunshine,” an activity sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Department for the mentally retarded. ★ L E A T H E R S A L E Various kinds, colors — 50c per foot S A D D L E S ENGLISH-WESTERN M A K E & R E P A IR Boots Sh o e s Leather G o o d s SALE* SHEEP SKIN RUGS M a n y Beautiful C o lo rs BahkAmebicabd temme 'fat Capitol Saddlery 1614 La vaca 478-9309 TEXAS INTERCOLLEGIATE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION invites its members and immediate families to join: LA f A J V IA A M E R IC A N A IR L IN E S ACAPULCO spring break 70 Front M a rch 20-26 IN C L U D E S S IX N IG H T S IN H O T E L Round I rip from A u stin /S a n A ntonio or Dallas NO BO O K IN G FEES! CHARTER JET FLIGHTS VIA SATURN AIRLINES Date Depart To I- June 2 Houston 2. June 3 Dallas Brussels Brussels ROUND TRIP FROM TEXAS $50 D O LLA R DEPOSIT D a te Depart Aug. 18 London July.23 Brussels To Houston Dallas A IR F A R E G U A R A H IT E E D /P L A W E S U N D E R C O N T R A C T / S P A C E L IM IT E D TKA’s Authorized Travel Agent BEVERLEY BRALEY 40 Acres Club 2500 Guadalupe/Austin 512-478-8888 TOURS . . . TRAVEL Box 7999 Austin/78712 512-478-5601 Box 431 Bryan/77801 713-823-0961 ( 2 ) Bell System RECRUITING TEAM O N C A M P U S M A R C H 11,12,13 REPRESENTING__ American Telephone & Telegraph Long Lines Dept. B a c h e lo r's and M a ste r’s candidates — Electrical, M echanical, Civil, Industrial Engineering, M athem atics, and P h ysics can did ates with broad interests in econom ic and m anagem ent problem s. L o catio ns: M id -W e st state s initially. Southwestern Bell T echnical students, particularly those se e k­ ing m anagem ent and adm inistrative a s s ig n ­ m ents - E.E.; M.E.; I.E.; C.E.; M ath-Ph ysics. Locatio n s: Texas and the M id -W e st Western Electric All E n gin e e rin g d iscip lin e s needed to fill T echnical E n gin e e rin g position s in design, product, system s, military, research and m anagem ent training. Lo catio ns: S o u th w e st — M id -W e st — Eastern and Northern States. Bell Laboratories Research and Developm ent — B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. Candidates. E m p h a sizin g E.E.; M.E.; Ph ysics; E n gin e e rin g M e c h a n ic s and M athem atical Sciences. Locations: N ew Jersey, Illin ois, North Carolina Sandia Corporation M aste r’s Degree in M athem atics, Electrical and M e ch a n ica l Engineering, B ach e lo r’s candidates of outstand in g sch o la rsh ip in Engine ering considered for technical developm ent program. Location: A lbu q ue rqu e, N ew M ex ico SIGN INTERVIEW SCHEDULE IN PLACEMENT OFFICE An Equal Opportunity Employer