SAIGON (AP1) — U.S Defense S ecretary Melvin R. Laird, after intensive talks with U.S. officials here, m eets F riday with top the South V ietnam ese leaders to discuss next stage of A m erica’s disengagem ent from the w ar. Battlefield action T hursday m aintained the deep lull of the last five days while L aird conferted with A m bassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen. Creighton W. Abram s, com m ander of all U.S. forces in Vietnam. They discussed the new' schedule of U.S. troop cuts to be announced b y President R ichard M. Nixon on Nov. 15 and review'ed the general m ilitary situation in Indochina, Inform ants said. rem ains the best that These sources said informed speculation thousands of troops wall be sent home ahead of time, that by next July I for C hristm as, and only about 40.000 U.S. m ilitary men will be left in V ietnam —m ostly air and logistics support personnel and advisers. C urrent U.S. troop strength in Vietnam to is expected Is reported at 190,700. drop to 175,000 by Dec. I. It Laird announced on arriving Wednesday he would talk with President Nguyen Van Thieu, South V ietnam ’s defense m inister Laird Schedules Pullout Talks and its chiefs of staff, am ong others, during his three-day visit. reassure He said he w'ould the Viet­ nam ese of continuing economic support— which he said is just as im portant to the w ar as m ilitary support—despite the U.S. foreign aid bill S enate’s containing $549 million for South Vietnam. rejection of a " I will tell them that having been elected nine tim es to the Congress of the United States I believe I can m ake a fair appraisal the Congress will do,” Laird of w hat asserted, “ and I am confident the Congress will see the wisdom of carrying forw ard with the Vietnamization p ro g ram .” T hursday’s reports on Vietnam fighting recent the most that w ere characteristic of phase of the w ar: An attack by U.S. helicopter gunships on a North V ietnam ese truck depot in far the only northern South V ietnam was the U.S. reported by significant action Command. The helicopters fired rockets l l IO th a t destroyed enem y soldiers, the Command said. trucks and killed A South V ietnam ese regional com m ander disclosed plans for a dry season offensive in the Mekong Delta region. told AP Lt. Gen. Ngo Quang Truong Correspondent J.T . W olkerstorfer in Can Tho he w'ould com m it two divisions to the task of rooting rem aining enemy forces out of sanctuaries in the U Minh F orest and the southern tip of the Ca May Peninsula. Sm aller num bers of governm ent troops have been chipping at the sanctuaries for alm ost a year. ‘‘We have the m om entum and we w ant to m aintain it,” Truong declared. He gave no tim etable for the drive, but the D elta’s dry season begins in December. Also reflecting American disengagem ent w as the U.S. Com m and's report that for consecutive week Am erican a fourth com bat deaths num bered fewer than eight. In the its weekly casualty sum m ary, com m and said reports it received last week listed two A m ericans killed in action. This w as toll posted since M arch 1965. the lowest weekly The num ber of A m ericans wounded in to 63 from 84 action last week dropped reported the previous week. South Vietnam ese and enem y casualty figures for the u'eek also fell during the lull in ground fighting. The South V ietnam ese Command said 269 in action 394 —r. wore killed SEZSl Yj < • o u i ....... previous week s tiguic. xog P f ® am o J ° * ** The allied com m ands now have r e p u i^ these total casualties for the w ar: A m erican—15.586 killed in action. .302.167 wounded, 9,879 dead from non hostile causes. South Vietnamese—135,279 killed, 293,177 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong—780,632 Wounded. killed. Buses Readied by SMC Thirteen buses and “ up to IOO” cars are expected to carry several hundred Austin, Ft. Hood and F t. Sem Houston antiw ar supporters to Houston S aturday for a m arch and rally. “T here’s really no w ay of knowing how iv people will be go;ng from here.” I Richard Stuart. Student Mobilization nmiiteo spokesman. Inc bus will he occupied bv chicanos two with high >m L ast Austin, one to the school students, three with G I’s and rest with University students and antiwar supporters. Stuart added. the D rag The buses will depart from between 7:30 and 8 a.m . Saturday. Austin area m archers will join other participants from Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma at I p.m. at City Hall. The group through parade on Main Street, will downtown Houston and continue to H er­ mann P ark. A rally will be held in the park with John K erry, head of the National V eterans the War, Rep. Curtis G raves of Against Houston and Dehby Leonard. Houston Socialist m ayoral candidate, speaking. head the p ara d e.” Stuart said, “ but trade unions, gay blacks, women, p o p u la te and high school students will all be represented.” and G I’s will “ V eterans chicanos, the The m arch will be both and peaceful, Stuart added. “ We have a perm it and are expecting no confrontations.” legal The SMC will m eet F riday night in Union Building 334 to prepare banners and finalize plans for the trip- Bus tickets m ay be purchased any tim e the bus departure S aturday preceding morning. T h e Da il y Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas a t Austin Vol. 71, No. 86 Ten Cents A U S T IN , TEXAS, FR ID A Y, NOVEM BER 5, 1971 Sixteen Pages 471-4401 Rehnquist Tells Views To Senate Committee 33 ASHINGTON (A P)—William H. Rehnquist promised T hursday to be faithful to the Constitution if he is confirmed as Supreme Court justice and ‘‘let the chips fall where they m ay .” “ When you put on the robe,” he told the Senate Judiciary Committee, “you a re there not to impose your personal views but to construe as objectively as you possibly can the Con­ stitution and the sta tu te s.” Testifying a second day on his nomination, the assistant at­ torney general disputed a prominent law yer s description of him aa an “ extrem e conservative.” HE SAH) HE disapproves of ‘‘promiscuous w iretapping” and th a t it is unfair to think of him as backward on civil rights, although he considers long distance busing of school children Undesirable. Still waiting to be questioned by the com m ittee was President R ichard M. Nixon’s nominee for a second vacancy on the court, Lewis F. Powell J r., Richmond, Va., attorney. Powell was introduced to the com m ittee by V irginia's two senators, H arry F. Byrd J r . t Independent, and William R. Spong Jr., D em ocrat. Seven form er presidents of the A m erican B ar Association, the current president, Leon Jaw orski of Houston, were and on hand to back Powell, a one-time ABA president. While parrying various questions, Rehnquist disagreed with the assessm ent of John P. F ra n k < a Phoenix law yer, that he is an “ intellectual force for reaction” and a “supporter of police methods in the extrem e.” REHNQl IST, A LAWYER in the Arizona city before joining the Nixon A dministration, said “ thus is not a fair charac­ terization, even of my philosophical view s.” b r a n k s assessm ent, to a Phoenix new spaper, w as brought up by Sen. H iram L. Fong, R-Hawaii, who stressed his own opposition to wiretapping. letter in a Rehnquist said college students who have expressed “a very real fear in this a re a ” evidently did not have the facts about the scope of governm ent surveillance. However, he agreed with Fong that “ even an unfounded fear could have a chilling effect on private telephone communicatVm.” And he assumed the senator that he believed “ promiscuous w iretapping is a dangerous p ractice." Fong said he was satisfied that Rehnquist would judge cases at the court without reference to his personal opinions. Funds for Busing Barred House Action WASHINGTON (AP) — The House voted Thursday night to clam p harsh restrictions on the governm ent and the federal courts In an effort to prevent forced busing of school children to overcome segregation. called “ haste, Acting in what Rep. E m anuel Ceiler, D- and N.Y., hysteria,” the House adopted a series of potentially far-reaching am endm ents that c o u l d pace of desegregation. excitem ent sharply slow the ONE AMENDMENT would prevent ex­ penditure of any federal funds for busing. Another would prohibit the federal govern­ m ent from requiring a state to spend state or local funds busing. Still another would delay a court-ordered busing plan until all possible appeals have been exhausted, which could m ean two or three years. All to a the am endm ents were added m assive, $21.7 billion higher education bill and could be subject to later votes before final action on the bill. that W arnings the House w as acting irresponsibly and in violation of the Con­ stitution w ere brushed aside at the late- en­ night as m em bers session rushed thusiastically busing. to get on record against SOUTHERNERS clapped and cheered as N ortherners with a long history' of opposing antibusing the South w as affected by them trooped down the aisle to vote for the am endm ents. am endm ents when only The am endm ent barrin g the use of any federal funds for busing, offered by Rep. John M. Ashbrook, R-Ohio, w as adopted 233 to 124. The am endm ent delaying the effective date of court-ordered busing plans, by Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Mieh., w as ap­ proved 235 to 125. Rep. Edith Green, D-Ore., offered an am endm ent to prevent the federal govern- Burger Asked to Stop Alaskan Nuclear Blast WASHINGTON (A P)—An environm ental Justice W arren E. group asked Chief Burger Thursday to halt S aturday’s un­ derground nuclear explosion off the Alaskan full coast, awaiting a hearing by Suprem e Court. the A spokesman for the court said a decision probably would come F riday. The White House turned aside mounting protests against the explosion, which would be the largest one yet conducted the w estern world. is a t 4 p.m. CST on Amchitka Island to test the fiv e m egaton hydrogen bomb w arhead for the S partan antiballistic missile. for Saturday scheduled in It m ent from requiring the expenditure of sta te and local funds, which was adopted 231 to 126. SHE SAID it was designed to prevent w hat she described as back-door support for busing by the D epartm ent of Health, Educaion and Welfare. “ The Nixon A dministration says no federal funds for busing yet federal officials a re saying spend your local funds and we'll reim burse you,” said Mrs. Green. “ I call that tho height of hypocrisy.” tried to stem Some m em bers the flow of am endm ents by arguing that, cutting off federal funds for busing would throw the burden on local taxpayers. But the House w as in no mood to listen. as and Amendm ents m em bers rose them, shouts to speak on of Vote! V ote!" frequently drowned out tile speakers. coming kept THE RI SH to support thp am endm ents from Rep. brought Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y. a Negro. a biting comment VV here were you when the buses were and Mexican-American to e a r n in g children dilapidated schools?” she asked. black past your white schools She accused her colleagues of showing concern about busing only beacuse white students now a re affected. * “ We have nraeticed sham and hypocrisy a long tim e h ere.” she said, “ and it has finally caught up with us.” The am endm ent was only one of several dealing with busing the House was expected to consider as it worked into the night on a school desegregation bill also being offered as an am endm ent to the higher education bill. Just Plane Folks G o v Preston Sm ith points out an interesting item o f the U niversity H is to ry of A v ia ­ tion C o lle c tio n to w orld-fam ou s aviatrix M rs. Anesis Pinheiro M a c h a d o . M rs. M a c h a ­ do presented a d o n atio n to the collection Thursday on b eh a lf o f the Brazilian A ir M in is try . ll Si.Ut Photo by JOHN VAN BK KH I M. Brazilian Airplanes Donated Aviatrix Presents Models to UT Collection By RANDY HARVEY Staff Writer Several dignitaries, including Gov. Preston Smith, w ere on hand Thursday as the U niversity H istory of Aviation Collection received m em orabilia the of foremost pioneers of Brazilian aviation. of one Mrs. Anesia Pinheiro Machado of Brazil, called the “ dean of women flyers in the com ­ world m em orating Alberto Santos-Dumont, on behalf of the Brazilian Air Ministry. presentation, m ade the The m em orabilia, called the “ greatest contribution to our colic .ion” by curator Ja y Miller, includes three balsa and silk scale models of a irc ra ft designed by Dumont, plus slides, film and an official photographic portrait. Among the estim ated 75 in attendance w ere the publisher of Plight Magazine and on? of the founders of the collection. George Haddaway, the vice counsui of the Brazilian Consulate in Houston, Octavio J. Tavora Militant Nun Denounces Vietnam War By JO CLIFTON News Assistant “ We a re involved in the spiritual dism antling of an em pire, a process which will take 30 or 40 or 50 y ea rs,” Sister Elizabeth M cAlister, an antiw ar activist, said Thursday night. Sister McAlister, who was nam ed indictm ent along with radical priests Phillip and Daniel Berrigan to kidnap presidential adviser Henry for conspiracy K issinger, cautioned the audience of about 500 not to expect change to come soon or easily. in an Stopping the w ar and “dism antling the em pire,” cannot be seen as “ extracu rricu lar activities,” she said. “ We cannot keep everything we have—our reputations, our homes and jobs—and m ake minor adjustm ents. Any significant dissent will be met with the harshest of reprisals.” Sister McAlister played on the theme of m any antiw ar speakers that withdraw al does not m ean an end to the w ar in Vietnam. She cited mechanization of the battlefield, Vietnamization, pacification and the development of oil wells off the coast of Vietnam as assurances of a lengthy continuance of the w ar. Besides the ongoing w ar. Sister McAlister discussed the wage-price freeze and new nominees to the Supreme Court as areas of concern. “ The wage-pricp freeze and the China trip (President Nixon's planned trip) exist as a smoke-screen to put other things in the background,” she said. In the Supreme Court, she said, “ hum an rights, once established, are being turned around.” ‘ F alse arrest, intimidation of invasion of privacy, dissent, denial of due process, corrupt officials and the overuse of force as seen at Kent State and A ttica” were listed by the nun as problem s caused by Nixon’s com ­ m itm ent to law and order. However, ‘ the most this com­ mitment has been “ the way tho process breaks i n t o hum an, personal relationships,” Sister M cAlister said. insidious " results of R eferring not only to inform ers at public m eetings, but also to eavesdropping “ into the privacy of our own hom es,” she said, this kind of surveillance “retakes us all forget w hat it is like to be open and norm al.” Concluding on a hopeful note, the sister said, “ Our effort and our interest is by no m eans to overthrow the government of the United States. What we’re about is much deeper and m ore im portant—changing our att nudes and pi iorities so that ultim ately w hat happens in us might be reflected in those elected. It just depends on US.” van S i.in ' P h o to . C a llin g f o r Change • • * Sister Elizabeth M cAlister. Bank Panel Approves Pay Raises (AP) WASHINGTON - The House Banking Committee Thursday angered P resident Richard M. Nixon and delighted organized labor by approving retroactive paym ent of m ost previously negotiated wage increases stym ied by the wage freeze. The provision would require paym ent of all but “ grossly disproportionate” pay raises negotiated before Aug. 15. The com m ittee also added a num ber of other drastic revisions to the P resident's proposed P hase 2 economic legislation. ORGANIZED LABOR, which reportedly has been fighting uphill for refunds of frozen-out raises, saw the com m ittee action as a victory. “ It’s a whole new ball gam e.” an AFL-CIO spokesman said. the purposes N ixon' reacted sharply in a statem ent read to reporters at the White House. “ Th* inconsistent com m ittee’s action is clearly with economic stabilization program ,” he said. “ It would provide for a piecem eal approach to the developm ent of the program ,” he said, and “ lim it the flexibility” of the P ay Board and the P rice Commission. the of The AFL-CIO said of the White House reaction, “ It is obvious that Congress has m ore regard for the validity of contracts than does the White House.” THERE HAVE been reports that the five labor m em bers of the 15-man P ay Board a re ready to w alk out unless the board allows existing contracts to rem ain valid, and approves a refund of pay raises lost because of the freeze. Donald Rumsfeld, director of the Cost of Living Council and an ex officio m em ber of the P ay Board, commented at the W hre reports about House, “ There have been everything, m ost of which haven't com s tru e .” Rum sfeld said he thought the Banking Com m ittee action “ directly underm ines” the trip artite idea behind the P ay Board in which labor, m anagem ent and public renresentatives a re to decide pay policy. But he added at another point, “ I'm not a spokesman for the P ay Borad. They a rs doing their work in an orderly fashion . . . progress is being m ade.” and the founder of the Civil Air Patrol, Gen. D. Harold Byrd. Dumont (1873-1932) is credited with the first airplane flight to be officially witnessed Federation by Aeronatique. It was the first airplane flight in Europe. representatives the of from Brazil Mrs. Machado, who has been aw arded 25 decorations and other countries, has several firsts to her credit the first woman pilot to c a rry including, passengers the first Brazilian aviatrix to m ake stunt flights and the first Brazilian aviatrix to w rite for the press on m atters of aviation. She has m ade in Brazil, sim ila r presentations the Smithsonian In­ honoring Dumont stitution and the State of Missouri. to Miller explained Mi's. Machado decided to m ake this contribution to the U niversity because of her friendship with one of the collection’s founders, Viola G oltry. “ Mrs. Machado is very concerned about getting D um ont's reputation spread all over the w orld.” Miller said. “ She found out about our collection through Miss G entry.” Dr. Stanley Ross, provast for a rts and sciences, in accepting the m em orabilia, said the gift “ will certainly bring our two countries dosser together.” The U niversity collection, one of the largest for all universities, also includes pieces of cloth from the original 1903 W right airplane, the Atlantic and VV orld W ar I G erm an flying ace Von Richtofen's F okker tri-plane in which he was killed. the first airplane to cross THE WHITE HOUSE 806 LAVACA 478-0736 Student Library Committee Organizes to Push Reforms WATERBEDS ARE HERE TO STAY AND SO IS THE WHITE HOUSE WITH ITS $ 3 5 .5 0 PACKAGE DEAL WITH A FR EE W A TER CHAIR BED’ I l l • • • • • FRAME LINER . . . . . INSULATION . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • WATER CHAIR • • • • R E G U L A R $18.50 17.00 4.00 C O C W e 15.00 $59.75 SALE 517.00 !12.50 s2.5 3 ‘3.50 U L r n I A I 35.50 YOU SAVE $ 2 4 .2 5 THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY! WATER COUCHES *14.50 ROUND WATER BEDS *19.95 By KAREN JUSTICE News Assistant Student Government T h e for Better Library Committee Services, formed at Tuedsay night's Student Senate meeting “ is going to be an action com­ mittee, not a study committee,” Cnairman Cathy Bonner said Thursday. “ Something has got to bp done now.” and crisis the University She quoted from a 1969 report of Standing Committee on the Library, which stated “ the library is in a state of deteriorating rapidly. . .Briefly, unless major changes are begun now, within five library—the the University’s principal instrument of teaching and research—will no longer be serviceable.” years “ This report came out two lf V M I. K T . n o w — T U I- ’ a n d 2 b e d ro o m ha n e c e s s itie s p in * a fe w P r ic e d JOI I fu rn is h e d a p t* . A ll lu x u r ie s . SIGA, a il b ill* p a id . *” *3202 I r a - in*: fro m G fillin s u id k r W e've Moved O U R N E W S T O R E 2411 East 19th Street Lone ± Star (O N E B L O C K W I S T O F CCtt ^ H O L Y C R O S S H O S P IT A L ) V t V • years ago,” Miss Bonner pointed out, "and nothing has been done yet.” She also read from a resolution passed Oct. 19 at a meeting of the history department, which explained the department “ hopes that the administration will act quickly to inform the regents and the t h e Legislature deteriorating condition of the Main Library, that it will en­ deavor to secure sufficient money to arrest the Main Library’s decline, and that it will proceed as rapidly as possible with the construction of a new Main Library and the proper funding of its holdings.” of About 90 percent of the reports Johnson Books On Sale $nnHav Autographed copies of “ The Vantage Point.” former President Lyndon B. Johnson's account of his White House years, will be on sale at the L B J Library Sunday. The signed books will be on sale—at $13 each—at the library's lobby and. main desk in possibly, at several tables around the building, said Harry Mid­ dleton, L B J librarian. the The former chief executive is expected to appear at the library Sunday afternoon. He will sign some books, but most of the copies that will go on sale Sunday have already been autographed. she has read that are concerned with the library have the same s e n t i m e n t s , Miss Bonner estimated. Many aspects of the library system need immediate attention, she said, while other areas require long-range planning. THE MAIN problem the budget, Miss Bonner remarked. “ The legislature appropriated $2 million for 1971-72. That i« no increase over the last year. is “ Something is terribly wrong when the University will spend for a Humanities $7 million Research Center or $600,000 for a wall, and then virtually ignore library inadequacies.” I . ” from Miss Bonner asserted that “ as much as some people would like to think so the University is not No. The Figures A m e r i c a n Research Library Association rank the University sixteenth in performance in a list of 17 schools, she said. Per­ formance encompasses volumes, staff, total expenditures and operating procedures. “ Tilis school is second only to funds. in endowment being library' Harvard Why is slighted?” she asked. the is facilities A major complaint with lack of existing s e c u r i t y in undergraduate libraries, Miss Bonner noted. “ Guards Education- Psychology Library would cwt more than replacement book^ for those that are stolen. However. it would be worth the extra money because it takes nine to the for THE WHITE HOUSE Your Dependable Waterbed Dealer •EACH BED CARRIES A 20-YEAR FACTORY-BACKED GUARANTEE j e w e l r y b y James Avery Crown Shop 2 9 th £t h e D r a g FOOTBALL SPECIAL W e 'll care for your child (2 to 12) while you attend games throughout the season. 2 hrs. Before Start of G am e Til I hr. A fte r G am e Fee: $5.00 per game CONGREGATIONAL NURSERY & CHILD CARE CENTER 428 VV. 23rd St. V j Block from C a-npu* C a ll 472-2370 fo r ^ f o r m a t ion. Revert At jour Necessary, TYPEWRITING BY ELECTRONICS IN ONLY 15 HOURS N ew classes in typewriting by electronics will begin Tuesday, N ov. 9. Classes will meet in B.E.B. 553 at 2:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. The cost is only $15. C all 471-3308 between 1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m., M onday thru Friday. ARTISTS • CRAFTSMEN SELL YOUR WORK D O B IE A R T S A N D C R A F T S FEST IV A L N O V E M B E R 19-20 D O B IE C E N T E R S H O P P IN G M A L L Last year th s festival was a great success Th 5 year will be even better. EN T R Y FEE $5 (no other charges) D E A D L IN E : N O V E M B E R 8 C A L L N O W : 477-6277 or come by Dobie Com m ercial O ffice SNYDERS- 2330 Guadalupe Na I ' E Y ” ■ 'X ‘: I' m n / % Elf* bocj,s broadtail trimmed with pretend seal in a smart double breasted coat, belted rn at the waist. It's a deep, deep b rown with platinum trim 6 to I 6 , 42.00 its the lace-up suede boot fa e.hiorv favorite, gently shaped. In a deep rich brown. 25.00 the pair Pag® 2 Friday, November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN/ t i - ♦ 12 months to locate and receive a re-ordered book. Also, many books are no longer available.” SHK students S U G G E S T E D the U n i v e r s i t y use work-study program instead of hiring guards. “ Since the federal government pays SO percent of the cost, it wouldn't be that much of a burden. You'd also be providing work for some needy students,” she said. in Another inadequacy the library system is lack of per­ sonnel Miss Bonner noted. “ Even in the Academic Center, there the are only two workers reserve bock section. Also, when new books are ordered, it takes six to nine months to get them catalogued and onto the shelf," in for She criticized the University for sponding large sums on special collections the Humanities Research Center. “ Pm sure tho value of a speci d collection is realized.” she said, “ but it seems unfair to have the No. I special collection and the No. 16 library.** ria] collections, “ a which in Won­ collection of IO different derland' books languages. Something like this shouldn't bp more important than library—which we a functional don't have,” she charged. cost $60,000, was ‘Alice in One of the President M ISS BO N N ER said the Senate with committee will moot University Stephen Spurr at 7 p m. Monday in Union Building 221 to discuss the library situation. Tile committee will also request Spurt place an Item on the agenda for the Board of Regents' IV c .3 meeting. faculty, students, In the meantime, she said, “ we em­ need ployes—a n y b o d y who's I n - forested—to help nut.” She en­ couraged those who couldn’t see the committee in person to send suggestions, advice and recom* to the S t u d e n t mendation*; In Union Government Office Building 321. Friday Pep Rally Planned for 7 p.m. A pep rally to raise spirit for Saturday's Baylor football game will be at 7 p.m. Friday in Gregory Gym. Head cheerleader Jose Pena Indicated attendance at the rally may not be as large as usual. Pena said lie expects Wurstfest to compete with the rally for s t u d e n t s ’ attendance Friday night. "But if everyone wants to come to the rally and warm up for the Wurstfest,” ho said, “ that would be fine.” Garcia Captures Place In Senate Runoff Race Thursday s story in The Daily Texan on Student Senate runoff election results incorrectly stated that Don Block won the Place 2 seat for the College of .Social and Behavioral Sciences. Actual winner of that race was IBI Homer Garcia, who polled votes to Block's 152. I-eft out of the story was the in announcement of a runoff Place the same college between Derek Jeffers and Glen Irwin Pinned. Neither polled a ma jority in the election. I of t Pregnancy Service Offered Student Health Center, Counseling Advisers Aid Coeds (Editor's Note: This is Part 4 of a seven- series dealing with birth control, part venereal disease, problem pregnancies, facing abortions and I Diversity coeds. The series aims at directing the reader to the proper local agencies which offer help.) related problems By KAREN JUSTICE News Assistant The problem of an unwanted pregnancy Is one which few coeds wish to face. Yet, than aOO women, 85 percent un­ m ore themselves m arried, that la st predicam ent y ear when school physicians at the Student Health Center diagnosed them as pregnant. found in Hie Student Health C enter> as well as a group of Austin clergym en banded together as Austin Clergy Consultation, are ready to help coeds caught in the situation. P*r . Fred DuPuy, center gynecologist, said any student m ay have for a $5 I pregnancy test perform ed health a laboratory fee. However, the student m ust first m ake an appointm ent with a health center doctor. This urine pregnancy test is 98 percent accurate when perform ed after the first month, he said. “IF A GIRL can have a morning urine specim en in by 9 a .m ..” DuPuy explained “ we can have the results for her by 11:30 a. I. that day.” Should the te*>t be negative, indicating a pregnancy does not exist, the student is given progesterone to induce a period he said. Pelvic exam inations are he in effective but diagnosing added, pregnancy, generally cannot be relied on until the second month. DuPuy also said the urine pregnancy test rarely yields false positives, bu: m ay give a false negative. ‘‘In other words, a girl m ay have the test m ade and it will be negative, meaning she isn't pregnant. Two weeks la ter is could be positive,” he noted. U niversity coeds who opt for abortions— Children of God Move, Building Ruled Unsafe DALLAS (A P)—The Dallas colony of the Children of God is being sharply reduced in size and its m em bers dispersed to other p arts of the country, a spokesm an for the controversial youth sect said Thursday. Ix)uis Ingersoll, who uses the Biblical nam e of Abel, said the p rim a ry reason for the colony moving out of its present h ead q u arters n e a r the F a ir P a rk of Texas is th at City ofticials have declared the building unsafe. The children w ere renting a fire-dam aged p rin t shop for $1 a month. But Ingersoll also said there are “ not so m any open doors” here as at other locations where the opportunities for obtaining facilities a re easier. 'Hie Dallas group has been reduced in the last few days from about 165 to 120, he said, and would be reduced further. Only 20 to 30 m em ­ bers of the sect will rem ain in Dallas, he said. T here a re sim ilar sm all groups operating in Houston, Austin, F ort Worth and E l Paso. SO percent do—are encouraged to have the procedure done during the first eight to IO weeks of pregnancy, DuPuy said. however, “ because the paren ts are often the m ore student thinks they will b e .” and helpful supportive than “ We ask girls who have had abortions to com e in within two weeks. And if they have fever or bleeding they should come in im m ediately,” he em phasized. He added that w hereas two y ears ago the health center saw one two post­ abortion complication cases monthly, th at figure has dropped to one case every three to six months. to “ THIS DOESN’T m ean few er girls are getting abortions. It simply m eans they are getting better abortions—b etter m edical care in states w here abortions are legal,” he explained. Coeds diagnosed as pregnant a re refered to the health cen ter's Problem Pregnancy C unseling Service. Mrs. M arilyn P rentice, director, said the organization “ deals with Die crisis of unwanted pregnancy. E ach situation is individual, M rs. P ren­ tice added, and “ we don't m ake decisions the the student. We help evaluate for situation and offer concrete advice.” 'Die service sees about one new case daily, she estim ated. “ We counsel as m any tim es as necessary prior to m aking the actual decision. Then we m ake referra ls to a social agency, adoption service or Planned Parenthood states w here abortion is legal and there a re no residency requirem ents.” These states are New York, New Mexico and California, she said. in “ I WANT TO em phasize that we are not an abortion referra l service,” Mrs. P rentice this service because said. “ We provide Planned Parenthood in Austin is not set to deal with U niversity students.” up Planned Parenthood in Austin, she ex­ plained, works m ainly with persons in lower socio-economic groups. Based on a spring estim ate, she noted, 85 percent of the coeds who com e in for counseling choose to have an abortion. The other 15 percent either m a rry or arran g e to have the child adopted: “ A few,” 6he sm iled, “ find the whole crisis w as a false a la rm .” P aren ts a re notified only if the student asks, M rs. P rentice said. Coeds a re en­ th eir parents, talk with couraged to M rs. P rentice also put in a good word for m en who com e in, eith er alone o r with their girlfriends, for counseling. “ They can rea lly ease a troubled situation,” M rs. P rentice said. Of the coeds who com e in, Mrs. P rentice estim ated 56 to 60 percent used no birth control. She said she feels this is due either to a lack of knowledge o r the feeling of a couple th a t “ it ca n ’t happen to us.” The ccuple with this attitude h as not faced the responsibility of birth control, M rs. P rentice asserted. Fifteen to 20 percent h ave been on the pill and quit either through a doctor's o r­ ders or on their own. F o r the rest, the fonn of birth control eith er failed or w as not properly used, she said. Another frequented organization by pregnant coeds is Austin Clergy' Con­ sultation. (ACC). “ We try to help the g'*l obtain w hatever service she w ants a fte r she's a through decision." the Rev. Bob B reihan, ACC co­ ordinator and Wesley Foundation director, said. and m ade thought When a coed comes in for counseling. Rev. Mr. Breihan said, “ we first inquire sh e 's about how certain pregnant. Then problem s, and anxieties a re discussed.” that feelings she is Services of ACC generally parallel those of the P roblem Pregnancy Counseling Service. Rev. Mr. B reihan said coeds who choose abortions—he estim ated 90 p ercent— are referred to Clergy Consultation in Los A n g e l e s , in Albuquerque or the Center for Reproductive and Sexual H ealth in New York City. P resbyterian Hospital F a ir and w arm er through S aturday. High F rid ay n ea r 80, with southerly winds 8 to 16 m .p.h. Low F riday night in the mid-50's. Outlook for S aturday is p artly cloudy w ith the high in the mid-80's. U.S. Challenges N. Viets on P O W Letters Tile United Stales PARIS to explain why only one of every seven A m erican prisoners of w ar has been allowed to w rite home during the last six m onths and why the total num ber of lette rs this y e a r has been cut by 85 percent. challenged North V ietnam T hursday The questions raised by U.S. negotiator William J. P o rte r at the 135th w eekly session of the Vietnam peace talks led to a long and acrim onious exchange with the second strin g officials leading tire Hanoi and Viet Cong delegations. Nixon, G an d hi Discuss India Pakistan Dispute President R ichard Af. Nixon met at WASHINGTON length with India’s P rim e M inister In d ira Gandhi Thursday and urged m oderation on both sides of the India-Pakistan border to reduce the risks of war. After a two-hour-and-five-minute m eeting at the White House, presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the detailed talks with Mrs. Gandhi and the contacts the United States m aintains with Pakistan P resident Yahya K han “ should in­ volved.” indicate that we are Panel Chops Defeated Foreign A id Bill The Senate Foreign Relations C om m ittee chopped WASHINGTON the defeated foreign aid bill into separate economic and m ilitary sections T hursday, while the House began work on a resolution th at would revive tem ­ porarily the current program . Consideration of the two m easures is expected to begin early next w eek. Asked if he thought either could win approval, chairm an J.W. Fulbrigt, D-Ark., told reporters “ I think it’s m arg in al.” Market Experiences Early U n sw in g NEW YORK The stock m ark e t m anaged to score a feeble gain T hursday a fter an early rally. It lost its footing and fell to profit taking. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed up 0.59 at 843.17. E a rly in the day, the blue chip indicator was up m ore than seven points. FBI Probes G onzales Assasination Threat SAN ANTONIO Tile F B I launched a probe T hursday into a reported assassination th re a t a g a in st Rep. Henry Gonzalez, officials said. J . M yers Cole, head of the FBI office here, said the .Justice D epart­ m en t req u ested the investigation. Cole said his office will co-operate with police, who received word of the alleged th re a t late last week. * c\ ° I FI BUTI wardrobe CAVITIES WITH A CII ECK-UP si THE MAYA 1616 LAVACA OPEN 10-6 -eft Friday. November 5. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg* 3 Editorial Need for change seen once again I he crass relationship between Texas politicians and higher education becam e apparent once again Wednesday when The Texan learned a regent of Stephen F. Austin State University offered to pay students on that cam pus to produce support for incumbent Gov. Smith. Regent Jam es I. Perkins even went so far as to acknowledge he had offered to pay Student P resident Greg Raney and his friends $2 an hour to drum up a few petitions urging the governor to seek re-election. Besides the obvious im propriety of the offer, one c a n n o t help but Tx? am used at the irony of the situation. A students’ movement for P reston Smith? The governor who wanted to increase tuition at State colleges and universitites an exorbitant 150 percent to help pay the cost of State governm ent but balked at taxing the corporate m asters of Texas? Really. (This is not to say anyone eLse down at the last session of the Legislature was much different. Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes, House Speaker Gus M utscher . . . all these leaders opted for the tuition hike but no corporate profits tax.) Nevertheless, Sm ith's popularity m ust have sunk pretty low if a Slate college regent has to purchase support for his patron on a campus he oversees. But then, so m any other things are bought and sold in Texas politics. The problem is, however, that students don’t really have a friend in the Statehouse to turn to. Smith? No. Barnes? No. Mutscher? He might not be back next session. Ralph Yarborough? He’ll probably run for the U.S. Senate against John Tower in 1972. Who do students have in office or on the horizon0 Hopefully, this situation might change. With ratification of the Twenty-sixth Amendment enfranchising 18 to 21-year-olds, a new turn in the political realm might have been passed. Around the country young voters have put into a few offices citizens who couldn’t even vote before the am endm ent was finally ratified. With this new political muscle, hopefully we can find politicians who will represent the needs and desires of young people, even in Texas State government. . . And yet . Texas is still Texas. The Twenty-sixth Amendment han’t changed much here yet. We still have a choice (if you'll excuse use of the word) between Dem ocrats Barnes and Dolph Briscoe for governor in next May’s prim ary. The only announced Republican for governor is State Sen. Henry Grover. Not much to choose from, is there? But we’re still hoping for a change. The prim aries aren't until May and that leaves time for someone to emerge that will look upon students as citizens with full rights and legitimate needs and desires that can and should be fulfilled. To prepare for the elections and possibly help such a candidate em erge, students m ust indicate their interest. Tile best way is to register to vote. Next week the Student Council for Voter Registration will conduct an intensive drive to register students on the University campus and we urge everyone to register to vote in Austin. Volunteers who want to aid the registration drive should go by the SCVR office in No. 8 Dobie Center or call 478-1383. If you’ve become disenchanted with this state's leadership, appalled by current of­ ficeholders, disgusted with the way officials have run die government, or just want to exercise your newly-won rights, register to vote. And maybe someday politicians won’t offer to buy support on a college campus. Maybe there will be someone who can get that support because he deserves it. Write your senator Dear Sen. I hope that you will stand against President R ichard M. Nixon’s nominees to the Supreme Court. Neither man. in my estimation, stands strongly for the civil rights of our citizens that badly need protection in these times. Rehnquist allegedly was involved in the unconstitutional m ass arrests in Washington at the May day antiwar demonstrations. Powell finds wire-tapping unobjectionable when applied to left-wing radicals to halt tho “ threat of internal subversion.’’ S in c e r e ly , Mail letters to Sens. John Tower and Lloyd Bentsen, Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20510. T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin E D I T O R ............................................................................................................... L o r i R o d r ig u e z M A N A G I N G E D I T O R N E W S E D I T O R ............................................................................................ J o h n R e e t z ...................................................................................................... C y n d i T a y lo r A S S I S T A N T M A N A G I N G E D I T O R A S S I S T A N T N E W S E D I T O R ..................................................... M ik e F r e s q u e s ..................................................................... D a v id P o w e l l A S S I S T A N T T O T H E E D I T O R ........................................................... L v k e T h o m p s o n S P O R T S E D I T O R .............................................................................................. . . J o e P h il li p s A M U S E M E N T S E D I T O R ..............................................................................T h e r e s a K a n e F E A T U R E S E D I T O R ..................................................................................... R o b in B r a c h e r Issu e N ew s E d itor G eneral R eporter N ew s A ssistan ts E ditorial A ssistant A ssociate A m usem ents Editor A ssistant Sports E ditor M ake-Up Editor Wire E ditor Copy E ditors Photographers ................................................................................................................ Jim Lewis .................................................. John Pope, Dotty Griffith, Jennifer E vans .................................................. Jo Clifton, Richard Finegan, Chuck Heller ....................................................................................................... Gaylon Finklea ................................................................................. Cicely Wynne ............................................................................................. Randy Harvey ..................................................................................................................... Debby Bay ............................................................................................................................. Bonnie Cox .......................................... Bob Plocheck, Harriet Hubbard, Joanne Ruhland .............................................................................. Phil Huber, John Van Beekum , . Opinion* express ■ <1 In The Daily Texan alc those of the edit'- or the writer of the aru* ie and are not nece? rn. y those of the r n iversify administration or the Board of Re- gents. ... . . 'n 1 V ,": f is riih- I T * * rf ] ex as St ti lien t Publications, Jjrkvv- York NY.. 10017. J. * ( bi I Hisn ay SUiti*>ji, i exas, 78712. Tucs- JU; N 'V '1'?: R IA,Pubi i sNd. day, VV Min sdav, sday arid b riday ex- ; ; Pt holiday and exam p, rfods August through ... Second-tlass postage Paid at Austin, Tex. .. opted by tele- • (471-4401). at the ed;toi ai office (Jour- News contributions will be r> Kl * Vi .tin, .1 ny ii, ct r nalism L. .ding 103) or at the news laboratory (Journalism Building 102). Inquiries eoncerninn delivery shm Id be made in Journalism Building 107 in Journalism Building 111 (471-3227). The rial nal advertising representative 0r The Da'!> Texftn IS Educational Ad! vertisirx? Service. Inc., 360 Lexington Ave.. New (471-5241) and advertising The Daily Texan subscribes rn mhe Assrw elated Press. The“ ew y S8 ? Time. News vice and United Press Internationa! Telenhntn ^ .N h e Texan is a member of the S S K elated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Jouma- lism Conference and the Texas Daily Nev s- paper Association. Page 4 Friday, November 5, 1971 THE D AILY TEXA!* By BOB BINDER President, Student Government to find out what At the August and Septem ber m eetings of the Ex-Students’ Association Executive the subject of vending m achine Council, profits cam e up. The Septem ber m eeting saw vigorous discussion with exes taking both sides of the controversy. N aturally, tb s subject has come up repeatedly in other m eetings with exes. TTie exes asked Jack M aguire and m e the regents did with the money and for m e to put the results in The Texan. All profits on U niversity vending machines are turned over to the regents directly for allocation which they do on recom m endation of the president; all those from athletic events go to the Athletic Council. Campus Services, Inc. is the corporation owned by the Ex- operates S t u d e n t s ’ Association and m anagerially for the operation. It keeps its expenses (530,000 last year) and nothing else. The following are the allocations for 1970-71 as taken from the records of the a c ­ for business vice-president counting files: Money turned over to the regents $140,000.00 Direct Allocation* affairs Housing and Food Service Texas Union Texas Union Dining Service Tavlor T Room $53,005 13,000 3.600 (Engineering Lounge) 4,000 TOTAL D irect Allocations Available for allocation P roject P resident’s Office KUT-FM program $73,605 Allocated $2,343.00 $66,395.00 Spent $2,345.00 publications 400.00 421.00 Student T ravel to Conferences on World and Public Affairs LOU.OO UT Showcase 4.597.00 Operation Brainpower 4.090.00 Support for Law Day 500.00 F >od for Bevo 500.00 P roject INFO 1.500.00 E m ergency Scholarships 8,000.00 Dean of Students-Student 400.00 E ntertainm ent Je s te r C enter Fund 1.500.00 APO guided tour m anual 250.00 Guide to Courses and ___ 350.00 Instructors AIESEC—Texas U ndergraduate R esearch P roject Student Governm ent 1.500.00 Chess T eam -toum am ent 1 .0 0 0 . 0 0 350.00 ROTC Rifle Team 1,500.00 C hallenge 135.00 V ice-President’s Office 3,000.00 Collegium Musicum College N ight 600.00 M arried Student Housing- activity fund 300.00 Student-Faculty Foreign E xchange P rogram W om en’s Residence Hall- 10,000.00 activity fund 600.00 Men’s R esidence Hall- 1,018.00 4.597.00 4,000.00 500.00 541.00 167.00 400.00 1.233.00 250.00 338.00 1.497.00 900.00 350.00 750.00 432.00 3,000.00 494.00 300.00 711.00 activity fluid 600.00 600.00 Gay/on Finklea Rallied out Com ments about W ednesday's peace rally all tend toward the sam e line: It w as a h e y d a y and photographers. for m inority groups As evidence of apathy or just boredom from students, only a high estim ate of 600 attended the noon rally on the Main Mall. turnout when insignificant It w as com pared to the thousands that m arched here in May, 1970. an But it didn’t in May, of course, look like the Congress m ight conceivably vote for a definite date of w ithdraw al of A m erican troops from Vietnam, President Richard M. Nixon hadn’t started or really suggested a winding-down of the w ar and m any m en w ere still uselessly being killed in a w ar that nobody quite understood. TODAY NOBODY understands the w ar, but a t least the outlook is brighter. The pessim ists are becom ing m ore optim istic as election year approaches and Nixon becomes ca reer conscious (a fact that m ay bring the boys home faster than anything) and daily the antiw ar congressmen win colleagues to their ranks. It m ust also be rem em bered that there haven’t been any publicized My Lai in­ cidents o r Pentagon papers lately to stir up the hearts of those students who are not as overt in their protest of the w ar as is the Student Mobilization Committee. So, the rally w as poorly attended and alm ost a disaster. ALTHOUGH EACH tied his speaker the war, com m ents ultim ately to ending each had his own pet took this opportunity publicly to voice opinions. Sign., and banners for each cause were also displayed. interest and State Sen. Joe Bernal of San Antonio. a chicano, is highly respected for his out­ spoken willingness take public stands to m ore frequently than other legislators in Texas. He is upset th a t by proportion m ore chicanos a re killed than anglos in the w ar and th at San Antonio, his district, has no rea l chicano leaders. He urged the Mexican- The gavel W here all the money goes Tutoring P rogram - Dean of Students School of A rchitecture- D evelopment Fund N ational D ebate Tournam ent Cam pus to Counselor 2.500.00 1.840.00 1.000.00 996.00 547.00 700.00 566,395.00 547.00 552.00 $60,300.00 it just dropped TOTALS DO NOT alw ays add up, as I did not round off, but the cents. D ie above analysis shows that all the money was allocated but not all w as spent. That which is not spent is returned to the G eneral Fund. For those accounts which overspend, I do not know w here the m oney com es from , but I suspect is sim ply an am ount to be subtracted from the next y e a r’s allocation. About $20,000 w as returned to the G eneral Fund from is the it subtracted out. It is a is so d esp erately needed by so m any good causes and purposes, th a t some money is left idle. I feel th .’t P roject Info should be ah Ie to m ake full use of their em ergency scholar­ ships. \\ e should know why em ergency scholarships w ere barely used as well es tile studer.t-facultv foreign exchange program . prior y e a r before overspending that is m y opinion th a t when money travesty' On to next y e a r's allocation. The money allocated has already been approved by the regents. 1971-72: Money projected to be turned over D irect Allocations $122 000.00 $ 82,000.00 Housing and Food Service T exas Union Texas Union Dining Service TOTAL D irect Allocations $.30,300 7.700 2,000 $40,000 Available for Allocation P roject KUT-FM program publications $ Allocation 300.00 Student Travel to Conferences on World and Public Affairs LOOO.OO Stu ient-Faculty Foreign Exchange P rogram 10,000.00 4,500.00 UT Showcase 4,000.00 Operation Brainpower 500.00 Support for Law Day 500.00 Food for Bevo P roject Info 1.500.00 E m ergency Scholarships 8.000.00 5.000.00 Taylor T Room* 35.000.00 U nallocated Project* TOTAL 570.300.00 Excess Income over Budgeted Expenses 511,700.00 •Acc tinting change from prior year THE FIGURES the amount represent to use. The available for those projects is 535.('OD under “ Unallocated P ro jects” usually discretionary with Dr. Spun* to allocate. The MI JOO under ‘'E xcess income to over budgeted expenses” would have to the regents for approval to go back be used. It th a t som e is m y contention of the above projects a re good and som e should not be allocated money until other endeavors of. D raft taken care consoling is dying. The F a ir Housing Commission is in desperate straits. a re It the th a t than needs b etter is m y position the Student Governm ent could do a better job of allocation among students and serve the students’ ad ­ m inistration allocating the money. These funds are State funds but not as restricted as legislative appropriations. I would like the $35,000 to be turned over to Student Governm ent to allocate. We are responsible to the studen’s of this U niversity, and I feel we can do a good job. We certainly won’t lot valuable program s die. Fur­ therm ore. we have been kept a t penny-ante the p ast th a t the operation so much in the Student G overnment has never had wherew ithal it should do for the m inim um d raft counseling and F a ir Housing Commission should be funded, and a sizeable am ount over to Student G overnment for turned (User the en ire am ount should be the fi T.ro, over to Student Governm ent for turned rn. I arn ro t suggesting that the alloc :: this funded progs; ms be cut off. With volume eoom w hether the A m erican people are p rep a re to accept a continued investm ent of live and treasure as long as our casualties a r reduced to m inim al figures ( “ only'' eigh d sad and “only” 72 wounded in a week or whether they have finally set their face against both Hie w aste and risk of furthe conflict. MR. NIXON IS STITX testing the wil ami resolution of tile peace forces, as hi tenacious resistance to the Mansfield end the-w ar amendment has shown, in a sens he is also testing our character. Do w cease to care when it can be shown tha most of the bodies slain or m utilated a r \ ietnam ese rath e r than A m ericans? Is a a ir w ar a rem ote matter—except for th im m ediate far lilies of the fliers si lot dowrn In J ae A s >n s latest euphoria, he report that Sen. J ubright and his colleagues a r Hanoi’s m ain hope” ; the enemy, it seem is once again on the run. What lingerin’: phantom hope persists am ong those wh a re challenging full-scale w ithdraw al? the A dministration is on Actually defensive as foothold new offensive by ra th e r than a cry of despair, Is now. th last-stan tim e for J the peace mcvemenl it clings in Saigon. And to a the ti mr" Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: • Be ty p e d trip le-sp aced . • Be less th a n 250 words. • Include n am e, address, and n u m b e r of con trib u to r. Mail letters t o The Firing Lin Daily Texan, D rawer D, UT Station, Tex.; or bring letters to th e Texan Journalism Building 103. Smooth Caller Man Convinces Women to By CLAIRE STORRS Tricks Coeds Entertain Mute Veteran injuries description of his w ar and began to moan and complain of an excruciating pain in his right leg. He told them th at in the p ast his pain had been alleviated by a hot bath. The three drove to the w om an’s apartm ent, the women helped him upstairs, and he disrobed in front of them . They drew him a bubble bath and afte r he was through with his bath, he asked for a m assage. The women complied with his request and m assaged the upper p art of his right thigh. The coed did not find out until two weeks la ter th a t the whole episode had been a hoax, when the victim ’s father inform ed her she had no such relative. T H E SA M E m an w as involved In a sim ilar episode about four years ago, said W illiams. He has been in the Austin State Hospital and served a term in prison for enticing a minor. W illiams “ The m an has not been violent, but he could get to be dangerous, you never know,” said Williams. said the suspect cannot be arrested on the evidence they have, he is going to talk with the district attorney to see “ w hat can be done.” although A persuasive telephone caller has tricked several University coeds and Austin women into giving him bubble baths and massaging has legs, Police Sgt. Fred W illiam s reported Thurs­ day. to W illiam s said the caller is a well-known the character police and has been involved in incidents of a sim ilar nature in the past. “ We know who he is, but he hasn't done anything Illeg al so we can’t arrest him,” he said. the W illiam s said the man’s pitch Is always the same. He calls his victim on telephone and starts conversation with the “ Guess who this Is,” His victim guesses, finally coming to a long­ lost relative, whom he convinces her he is. After cordial sm all talk, said William s, the “ relative” says he was enroute to pick up a friend who is a mute Vietnam veteran, but that he has car trouble and is unable to do so. He asks his to please pick up his victim friend and entertain him until he can get there. W illiam s said the caller always introduces his friend as “ Peter Thomas” and instructs the woman to dress up in a short dress and panty hose. A typical case related bv W illiam s involved a 22-year-old University coed and her 21-year- old girl friend. After the woman had been convinced the caller was a long-lost cousin, she agreed to entertain the friend. that The woman and her friend drove to a church that was the spot designated to pick up a “ Peter Thomas.” T H E COEDS told police that he gave them a vivid written Student Senator Quits explaining his resignation. But that was just one reason Student Sen. Charles Peissel resigned Thursday from Student Government but refused to cite any specific reasons for his surprise move. “ except “ There is no real reason,” he told Tile Texan, the Senate’s views on policies and my views on policies diverged too much. The so complex, but essentially it boils down dif­ ferences.” irreconcilable reasons are to P e i s s e l , who represented Graduate School, Place 2, sent letter to Student Government a President Bob Binder Thursday is One of the most discouraging the Student Senate, areas of Peissel said, its position of independent funding. Peissel said that when students returned to the University after the summer break and found the regents had taken little funds, their effort was made in discussing important Student funding of Government programs.” “ too “ Instead of asking where else can we get money, we should have insisted on getting some of it back (from the regents),” he added. Council Filing Opens For Nov. 17 Elections Filing for the six departmental positions on the Communication Council is underway and w ill continue through Wednesday. Two representatives from each in department the School of Communication w ill be chosen in the Nov. 17 election to serve on the council for the 1971-72 school year. for file Students may the positions in the Speech, Radio- Television-Film and Journalism Buildings and in the offices of the R-T-F t h e c h a ir m a n of department and the dean of the School of Communication. Candidates must have an over­ all G FA of 2.25 or above and not be on any form of scholastic probation. Also, students must run in which they are registered. the department from The Communication Council Is designed to act as a bridge between faculty and students, to work for the betterment of the school, to serve the Interests of the students and to achieve its goals through programs handled by .six student committees. P E A N U T S f NOW LISTEN CARE fJllV, MX) STUPID BEA6LE..THIS IS WHAT I WANT HOU TO PO FOR ME. J J IM GOINS TD TRV TO KICK TH15 BLANKET HABIT ONCE AND FOR ALL, BOT I NEED YOUR HELP I WANT NCO TO KEEP MV BLANKET FOR ME, ANO DONT &VE IT BACK NO MATTER HOW MUCH I PLEAD.. NO MATTER HOW MUCH I BE6.N0 MATTER HOW DESPERATE I BECOME. '-Ms ISLAND THIS ISN'T “ 'Ne 6 0 IN6 TO PE RN* FUN!, for resigning, he emphasized. “ I didn't resign for one or two reasons alone.” Asked if his resignation was prompted by any personality differences, Peissel said it was not, and added, “ I think Bob Binder is a good student body president with some really good ideas.” Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle ACROSS I Brick-carrying device 4 S ta tio n 8 Fuel 12 Collection of facts 13 Aroma 14 Constellation 15 Death 17 Dine 19 Hypothetic*, torc* 20 Lift with lever 21 Evil 22 Mature 23 Hunt for 25 Article of furniture 26 Cyprinoid fish 27 Sunburn 28 Equality 29 Cut of meat 32 Cofunction 33 Fruit (pl.) 35 Pronoun 36 Perplex 38 Small child 39 Tiny 40 Near 41 Recent 42 Flaccid 43 Insane 45 Seed container 46 Female (colloq.) 47 Printer's measure 48 Small rug 49 Informal party 52 Weary 54 Ireland 56 Period of time 57 Paradise 58 Inside information (slang) 59 Communist DOWN 1 Possessed 2 Number Wet down Nosegay Poem Conjunction Walk on Household pet 9 Conjunction 10 Keyed up with interest 11 Mine vein 16 Irritate 18 Paid notice 21 Chastised 22 Fruit drink 23 Pierce 24 Comfort 25 Prohibit 26 Possessive pronoun 28 Stroke 29 Posed for portrait 30 Interjection 31 Retain 33 34 37 39 41 42 43 44 W ager At present Mournful Craftier F an ed Resinous substance Apportion Among 45 Parent (colloq.) 46 Departed 48 Males 4 9 Drink slowly 50 Exist 51 Young boy 53 Note of scale 55 Artificial language I 2 3 4 T “ 6 7 n 8 9 IO l l r 20 L v v;:; y>> 23 24 X ' ii 13 VA 16 14 Tri 17 fa ‘ A V 19 22 25 iv.T i s N y i3 26 M - 29 WA i v ’ 34 r n I ® 30 31 35 37 40 i i i 43 44 r n 48 N t “/ / / 53 58 41 U Y 45 54 is yyrz y I ^8 V VY 42 46 56 59 \'v£ 49 50 SI D istr, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. at* 12 15 27 32 36 47 52 5> Love introduces the super lip shine L o v e ’s Glossy Lip Tints ere eight totally new high-gloss colors to drench your lips in shine. 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' < '*••»* -V>V ■- J- ' V *4-vt v '• < « • - V " # ,v., V - •;/< ’•V Y ■ V t, ■ v*\4 •i'-i < V '• >*>*•.'? -‘Sfe'V-rvtSS3Sr :■ M •*. a., tY..VA& J,-jiff J yr : J W ' VVSfe.' vie. . rn rn a ' S ■ a s s i r < * v - UST $ 5 .9 8 SALE $3.59 w a r n e r / reprise RECORDS FRIDAY ONLY RECORD TOWN DOBIE CENTER LIST $ 4 .9 8 SALE $2.99 478-6119 21st & GUADALUPE NOW OPEN 10:00 - MIDNIGHT 6 DAYS A WEEK Friday, November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Horns Inspire Bear Tackle By RANDY HARVEY Assistant Sports Editor “ It did something for our ego last year to watch them carry abont six of those Texas players off.” —Gary Sotton. March, 1971. If there's one problem Baylor defensive tackle Gary Sutton will ever face on the football field, it is not lack of ego. the the 6-1, 221- Off is as pounder friendly and talkative as you would expect a senior at a Baptist university to be. from Ozona field, But when he puts on that green and gold and becomes a huge part of that 'ol Baylor line,” he’s certainly no “ Sammy Sunshine.” "good “ I try to hurt people,” Sutton says looking ahead to Saturday’s Memorial Stadium encounter with the Longhorns. “ I want to knock someone out of the game. If he's helping the other team, I don't want him on the field.” the picture, Jerry G e t Sisemore? S i s e rn o re , Longhorn All- Southwest Conference offensive tackle, will line up in front of Sutton Saturday. And Sutton can't wait. “ They say Sisemore is well,” Sutton says of his foe who missed last week's SMU game with an injured foot. “ I hope so.” Sutton says he’s put on 15 last Texas the pounds since meeting, a 21-14 Longhorn vic­ tory, game. for “ Sisemore beat me several times just this last year, and I think it’s because he outweighed me so much. I don’t want that to happen again this year.” Sutton says Sisemore is the best offensive lineman he's ever met. “ I think he was the only Longhorn in shape against us last “ He kept year,” Sutton says. coming off the line stronger and stronger.” But that didn't help Texas much against the fired up Bears who remembered a 56-14 loss to the 'Horns in Austin in 1969. They still remember. “ I'll never forget a humiliation like that,” Sutton says. “ It was a It'll always hurt and it will always get us up for a game with Texas. It was a stomp. joke. We quit in that game. But now we’ve overcome the quitting we had two years ago. We may lose, but wfe won’t quit.” Another reason Sutton says the Bears get up for Texas is because “ they're so good. Texas is fun­ damentally the best football team in the country.” Sutton recalls before last year’s Texas game the Baylor trainer told the team not to bother him during the game because he would be too busy carrying “ dead Bears off the field.” “ After, it became a lot more important for us to hurt them than it was for them to hurt us,” Sutton says. A year later, that's still top priority on Sutton's list. Tohill Nam ed Coach at TCU Pittmans Chief Aide Anticipates No Changes Jerry Sisemore . . . Sutton's rival. HANK's g r il l 2532 G U A D A LU PE Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5*9 p.m. only 95 C Reg. $1.35 Happy Hour 2-5 p.m. Daily Light or Dark Lg. P itc h e r .............................................VOO Sm. 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Bour* ^.sth 1.69 A BIG W IN ES ON SALE IS N O W G O IN G O N I 1/2 G A L L O N J U G S GINO APPLE WINE . . . . 1.69 F O R T WORTH (A P )— Softspoken B illy Tohill moved in Thursday as the twenty-fourth head coach at Texas Christian, succeeding Jim Pittman with a vow to "do whatever it takes to make a winner.” the At 32 the youngest of the South­ west Conference coaches Tohill was unanimous swift, selection of the committee that from originally Tulane a year ago. lured Pittman PHOTOS So. COMFORT I OO pr............... 5th MATEUS Portuguese Rote 5th D0UR0 FATHERS W h i t e or Rose 5th COLD DUCK Jacques Bonet 5th MUSCAT Guild KEG BEER Shiner . . . . l/g bbl. . . . J / j Gal. ReuteFt’s ^ 12th A R ED R IV E R 476-8990 Adult Party Games PASSPORTS RESUMES S U P E R HOT S E R V IC E STUDTMAN PHOTO 19th a! Lavaca • Cameron Village ARE YOU INTO EARL SCRUGGS? IF YOU'RE NOT YOU'RE MISSING A LOT! 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STORE — O W N ED & OPERATED 1401 LA V A C A BY DELTA ELECTRONICS CO., INC. 476-5319 iscount records OPEN: r,r,s™ , 2 3 I 0 Guadalupe 478-1674 Peg© 6 Friday, November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Pittman collapsed with a heart into the seizure four minutes T C U - B a y l o r football game Saturday night and died in a Waco Hospital. TOHILL, Pittman's chief aide and his assistant during five years at Tulane, was named interim head coach last Sunday. At Thursday’s press conferer.ce the committee chairman in­ Pittman, troduced Tohill causing an awkward moment for the new coach and his attractive blonde wife, Bobbie Jean. as In something of a free wheeling news conference that followed, Athletic Director Abe Martin said, “ I had no other thought” in the selection of Tohill, but he refused to discuss the length of the new contract. “ It s good enough that Billy likes it all right,” he said. “ IT S NOT really outstanding,” Tohill **ld a moment later, “ but it does give a man security’.” Tohill, like Pittman a native Mississippi an t acknowledged that it would be difficult not to be Influenced by his years as Pitt­ man's assistant, but added: “ 1 11 be my ownself. I won’t pattern myself after any one perv>n . . . I think thats a good way f o r a man to lose a job.” He added, however, “ I don’t anticipate any changes in our football team or the program we have going.” th * r i v e r h id d e n In — S O T T H O F th e ie O A K K N O L L A P T '- t r e e * fe a t u r in g T e r r s p e c ia l I a n d I bed ro o m a p t* , a n d o th e r good etu ff, too. S o o th F i r s t , 444-1269 He said he would hire another assistant soon but was undecided at this point who would be ap­ pointed as his chief aide. Tohill said he also has had little hme to prepare f o r Saturday's homecoming game here with that Texas Tech. a contest suddenly has become .significant. The Frogs 3-3-1 for the season, remain one of four conference teams in the championship pic­ ture, all with a single loss. TCU and Southern Methodist are 2-1 while Texas and Arkansas are 3-1. Weekend Sports T EX A S’ FOOTBALL LONGHORNS host Baylor at 2 p.m. Saturday Memorial St ad. am. A crowd of from 55,000 to 60,000 Is expected. a weather forecast for game time calls for partly cloudy skies ith temperature near SO. The game will be broadcast by KTBC-AM, Che dial, beginning at 1 :43 p.m. ★ ★ ★ TH E LONGHORN REBOUND ERS, the University''a basketball booster club, will hold their first meeting at 6 p.m. Sunday at the Highland Mail Shopping Center 's Community Hall. The meeting will feature a buffet supper and entertainment. Coach Leon Black and several of the Longhorn basketball players will be present Tickets are $2 each, and the dress is informal. ★ ★ ★ TH E AUSTIN RU G BY CLUB hosts four teams in an annual round robin tournament this weekend as the rugby viewing season enter* into its prime. The tournament, which will be held all day Saturday and Sunday at the Martin Junior High School field, consists of the Austin Blacks and Golds, the Dallas Harlequins, the New Mexico Rugby Club, th* San Antonio Rugby Club and St. Edward’s in Austin. In last week’s games, the Austin Rugby Club swept two here as the Gold* romped over Sui Ross 60-1 and the Blacks edged St. Ed­ ward's 23-16. * ★ * TH E LONGHORN SOCCER CLUB, with a 9-0-1 season and un­ faces nonconference defeated University of Mexico at Tamaulipas at 9:30 a.m. Saturday in Zilker Park. in 50 consecutive league garner, The Longhorns, preparing for the Texas Collegiate League Cham­ lo s s pionship playoffs in Arlington, will be trying to avenge a 4-2 at the hands of Tamaulipas earlier this season, It is the first time an American university .soccer team has hosted a Mexican university soccer team. More than 2,000 fans were on hand when the Longhorns visited Mexico. W e ' v e M o v e d OUR N E W STORE SAVE ON AUTO PARTS DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS 2411 East 19th Street Lone Star (o n * b l o c k W M T o r H O LY C R O * * h o s p i t a l ) Meat Co. V w service VOLKSWAGEN & A M ERIC AN CAR PARTS OPEN SAT. & SUN. GILBERT’S AUTO PARTS U>21 E 6th 477 6798 Phillips Gets Starting Call coaches commented that Phillips had suffered considerable mental anguish over not playing. “If he doesn’t get in there this week,” Royal said, “he’s gonna explode somewhere else.” Royal would like to see the explosion come against Baylor, 1-5 on the season and a 27-point underdog to the ’Horns. However, Royal says he expects “a closer game than last year.” Last year the Bears lost only 21-14, slapping Texas with its most humiliating victory ever. The Longhorns are in their best several physical condition in tackles weeks, with offensive Je rry Sisemore Julius and Whittier and defensive tackle Ray Dowdy, who all missed action listed as completely recently, ready for Saturday’s 2 p.m. Memorial Stadium kickoff. Royal also said tight end Rick Davis’ bruised chest was better. “ He has trouble raising his arms, but he was making some good catches coach remarked. today,” the EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed MALE DONORS ONLY AGES 18-60 18-21 WITH PARENTAL CONSENT C A S H B O N U S P R O G R A M S FO R REPEAT D O N O R S Austin Blood Components, Inc. O P EN : 8-3 p.m. Tues., Thur., Fri. & Sat. 12:00 N O O N -7 p.m. W ed . 409 W. 6TH 477-3735 TAKE COMFORT IN DOUBLEKNITS Roy Mark B y e , B y e Bill B e a ll? Every coach realizes the possibility and the probable chance he will be fired sometime in his career for not winning. Ask Bill Beall, the Baylor coach who reportedly will be seeking new employment at the end of this season. “ I don’t think there are many coaches in the business that haven’t been through this sort of thing,” Beall said Thursday. The “soli of Ihing” Beall referred to was the recent report he is on the outs at Baylor although he is only in the third y ear of a five-year contract. Beall took over the Baylor coaching job from John Bridgers, who had mn upon hard times during the 1967 and 1968 seasons, posting 1-8-1 and 3-7 records, respectively. One of B eall’s first moves after coming to Baylor was to remodel the Baylor athletic facilities “ to do away with everything which could be associated with a losing at­ titude.” Not Enough Apparently the new quarters were not enough to bring Baylor back to the standards of their glory years with Don Trull and Larry Elkins. Beall-coached team s went 0-10 in 1969, 2-9 in 1970 and have posted a 1-5 m ark this season. Rumor had it before the season Beall had to produce this year or else. So when Baylor began to lose again the rum ors began to fly about Beall’s impending dismissal. Baylor President Abner McCall only added fuel to the fire when he announced he is appointing Athletic Director Jack Patterson to head a committee to examine the Baylor athletic program . Before Saturday’s homecoming game with TCU, McCall m et with Baylor trustees behind closed doors, and rumor once again had it the topic' of discussion was Bill Beall. ‘Tn the coaching profession you get all kind of rumors, I suppose they are only inevitable when you’re having a losing season,” Beall said. Losses Bring Rumors Another Baylor coach commented when any coach starts losing over a long period of time this type of rum or comes up. “ But every coach expects it to happen when he is losing,” the BU assistant said. Tin’ Baylor aide added the biggest problem with open speculation is the effect on the team. “They (the team) read the papers like anyone else, and It’s bound to have an effect on them. The players need to know the program they are playing under is sound,” he said. Often the players react by blaming the coaching staff for their failures on the field, but at least one player at Baylor is not blaming Beall. “ A lot of team s try to put the blame on the coaches and a lot of people are trying to put the blame on Coach Beall. But we (the players) don’t feel that way. I t’s our fault,” the plover said. No m atter where the guilt lies for Baylor’s dismal record the fact rem ains that alumni, trustees and fans don’t like losing records. And I hat could very well mean Bill Beall will have to find someone else’s locker room to remodel next season. W I L C O X X O Z T D A . 6421 Burnet Lane Phone 452-2876 COMPLETE HONDA SALES AND SERVICE liiiiiiSL’ESI By ALAN TRUEX Associate Sports Editor Darrell Royal left no “doubt­ fuls,” “probables,” “ ifs,” “ands” or “buts” about it. Eddie Phillips will quarterback the Longhorns against Baylor Saturday. “We got the doctor’s approval today to turn him loose,” Royal said after Thursday’s practice. “ He felt good and looked good, although he still hasn’t gone at full speed.” “His toe Is still not well, and he can’t cut and go as well as he once did, but the toe doesn’t concern me. It’s painful, but it can be deadened,” Royal said. the muscle “THE HAMSTRING is what really stops you,” he continued. seems “ But now completely healed. It's been 28 days since the Oklahoma game, and that’s about how long it’s supposed to take for a repulled hamstring.” Royal said Phillips Is in better physical condition than he was before the UCLA game. “ I’m concerned that he won’t be as the sharp as he used to be,” coach said. “You have to expect that after such a long layoff.” Phillips ran the second team In Thursday’s drills. “I couldn’t move Donnie to the second team until I knew definitely that Eddie could play,” Royal explained, “and we didn’t know that until after practice.” “ I wish there was some way I could keep this from being a demotion for Donnie Wigginton,” Royal said, “ I have a world of I admiration for him. I don’t know where this football team would be without him. And I don’t want this to sound like an epitaph for Donnie, because we can’t be IOO percent sure that Eddie’s leg will hold.” R o y a l a n d other Texas 'Horn Harriers Capture First Texas’ cross country team, paced by the steady running of newly elected captain Ricky Yarbrough, won a six-way meet at Morris Williams Golf Course Thursday. Yarbrough finished fourth with a 20:06 over the four-mile course as the Longhorns scored 33 points for their second meet title this season. Rice, which won the last meet at Morris Williams, was second with 51 points. Bill Fourdjour of Howard Payne was the individual winner with a new course record of the Yellow 19:51. He helped Jackets to third place with 76 points. Baylor had 84, Texas A&M had 110 and Trinity did not have a team score. — WALK TO C A M PU S, fro m a one the M ISS b ed room turn. apt. at pool, T E X A S A PT S. stu d y room s and m o r e for $160. a ll b ills paid . 1802 W est A v e. 476- 5556. 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AND FOOTWEAR TO COMPLIMENT THE DOUBLEKNIT LOOK ZJ-ranh (13rot!i ens “ The M ost D istin g u ish e d Shoes in A m erica ' ' 7” kidskin double strap boot available in black and brown. Combination cap toe, slip-on strap and buckle. In burgundy and black and brown and tan. $37.50 ■Reynolds ll penland CONGRESS AVENUE • HIGHLAND MALL UNIVERSITY STORE Friday, November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 STUDY NOTES LIT-SCIENCES- LAW-FICTION- NONFICTION Question of Life:Pone,'s,s 0,scuss Repeo/ Of Texas Abortion Laws BOOK STALL 6103 Burnet Rd. 454-3664 Open BOOK STALL ll 1512 Lavaca 477-1053 O p e n W p p Vc time. M A L E R O O M M A T E needed t» share; large two bedroom luxury aptrtment In Town l,ake area. Phone 444-MU any time, F E M A L E three bedroom home $42-month pl * share S T U D E N T S sitar. hills. Call 327-0983. F E M A L E N E E D S to move U or duplex by December house I 454-4170 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E share two bed-I three , room studio apartment vvth $67.50, others. london Square Apartments. 477-4043 liter six, Susan. hills paid. F E M A L E I E E D E D . j R O O M M A T E A vailable Thanksgiv ing Ow room In Iniis. Graduate $62 5o plus house student preferred. 472 1866. F E M A L E ROOM M A T E $6.50, Ml's paid. Pool, maid Two bedpom, bath. 803 West 28th t il 5414. 474 296 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E W A N T ED . Share o n e bedroom aparfnent with one girl. 5820 Berkm an, 219.153-5426. N E E D M A L E to take Conrad mid- two bedroom. Largo December. Fireplace. $62 50, trills paul. 44-7085. be unusual, L E O N E E D S M A L E roomuate Must responsible. Likes art, plants, people. C all 476-40,81 209 A East t8th. M A L E N E E D E D to share svo bedroom apartment with one wcking male. $65/month 454-4952. ROOM M IT E. N E E D M A L E Two bedroom, maid and J autor service. Shuttle to Campus. AC-CH. Cavalie. 307 East 31st. 472-76ll. Bus. walking Istance M A L E N E E D E D for largo wo bedroom apartment. Town Lake mea. Begin­ ning November or Ja n u ary 441-1543. W A N T E D . s h a r e tanimate to apapnont. Own bedroom On 40th and R e R iver. 453- 0038, 477-1898. F E M A L E studio S e r v i c e H A IR LT D . Call for normatlon on hair singeing for split nds and shag rills. 454-0984, Typing. M B . A M ultilithing. Binding The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to the need* of University tailored students. Special keyboard equipment for science, and engineer- ing language theses and dissertations P h o ie G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 Hem phill P a rk ROY W. HOLLEY 476-3013 T Y P E S E T T IN G . T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G . B IN D IN G T Y P IS T . B R T l h ♦ s o s t Selenide. reports briefs, profess aal rer rts. TrinC/ig. binding. Mrs. T Iii is. 4. id 5124. IB M B.C. I 5 1 ’IST A C C U R A T E DF P E N H A B L E J > i cuts ti pew Titter 4 . < et ' ■> ii u n ­ written. Overnight slightly higher. M rs. Hamilton. 411 S A V I, M O N E Y mg. printing, olndmg F u lly equipped; tyrv term PU), is. tin es. dissertations. City Wide Typing, any day. 4i'j-tl79, 6 a rn.-midnight All ^ " ^ N C E D dissertations, T Y P IS T . The sc.si i b m executive! etc ( harlene Stark. 453 5218. H A N D IC A P P E D lady ic 'ires typing cr light bookkeeping. twelve months secretary business co ursa. P A R T IA L L Y F executive 454-0707. years college, C L O S E IN . Beautiful, personal typing Colver St V Work MuUIUthlng, binding Lau ra Beflour, 47gl your '-I ' Just North of 27th & Guadalupe "\mxAa Jm * Typing. M ultlilthlng. Binding M B A V The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to the needs of University tailored students Special keyboard equipment o r language, science, and engineer­ ing dieses and disserts!! nj. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill B a r k Mastet charge honored SM A LLW O O D T Y P IN G - 892 0727. 5001 Sunset Frail. Bast minute and over­ term paper*, Theses, typing night d is s e rta tio n s newsletters, bulletins. I H E M E S , R E P O R T S , lecture note*, Reasonable. Mrs Fraser, 476 1317. * oui[)lete I N IV E R S IT Y L I T E R A R Y S E R V IC E S . service. Carbon- .ymbols. N e a r C a m ­ rlhoon selector, pus. 1212 Baylor. 477 9043. typing AC ( I It A T E T Y P IN G .. Reports, briefs theses, dissertations. Symbols. M n Anthony, 4a4- :i)79. T Y PINC TH E S E S . D IS S E R T A T IO N S * reports. Work guaranteed, 50 ling C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T E S E a c h Word (15 w ord m in im u m ) $ ............. .. .07 ...........$ .06 ........... $ . . . i 5 ......... $ ...0 5 Ka rh A dditional T im e S tu d en t rate on e tim e E a c h add itional w ord 20 C o n secu tiv e I s s u e s IO w ords 15 w ords 20 w ords inch 1 c o l. 2 c o l. inch 3 c o l. Inch 4 c o l. inch Classified Display I colu m n x one inch one tim e $ -.IO ........... $ 2.00 E a c h A dditional T im e SII .OO .......................... $15.00 $19.00 SSW.OO ..................................... fil l 22 ................................ $96-00 ......................................$120.00 ................... (N o co p y c h a n c e for c o n s e c u tiv e issu e r a te s.) • . L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S 15 words or less fo r 75c the first tim e, 5c each ad d ition al word. S tu ­ re ce ip t dent must show A u d ito r’s and pay Jo urnalism Bldg. 107 from 8 a m. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y through Frid ay. in ad van ce in D E A D L IN E SC H E D U L E M onday T ex a n F r id a y , 3:00 p .m . T u e sd a y T e x a n M o n d a y . 11:00 a.na. W ed n esd ay T exan T u e sd a y , 11:00 a .m . T h u r sd a y T ex a n W e d n e s d a y . 11:00 a.rn. F r id a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y . 11:00 a.m . "In th e e v e n t o f e rr o r s m a d e in a n a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m e d ia te n otire m u s t be g iv e n a s th e p u b lish e rs are in r o r r ee t resp o n sib le for on ly O N E Insertion. A ll c la im s for a d ju stm e n ts should be m a d e n ot la te r th an SO d a y s a tter p u b lic a tio n .” F e m S a l e T O P C A SH P R I C E S paid for diamonds, old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop. 603 Commodore P e rry . 476-0178 A N D P O R T R A I T P H O T O G R A P H Y . W ant W E D D IN G something different? C all Annette s Studio, 472- 4 4 8 4 . beautiful monochrome. E leg an t color. OLD BLUEJEANS FOR SALE: $3 Upstairs at FRESH PANTS 24th & San Antonio 472-1341 P O L A R O ID 360 with electronic flash P o rtra it and close-up attachments and carryin g case. C all 476-6333. F A R F IS A R O C K O R G A N VIP-225. U k e new. With Leslie speaker and combo pre-amp. $1800 value, w ill take $850 478-2079. S A N S E I S T E R E O R E C E I V E R , Dual Changer with Shure Cartridge, Altec- Lansing Speakers. An excellent buy. 476-6733, 454-6141. $1.00 OFF T rad e in any O N E pair of O LD P A N T S for $1 OO off any O N E pair of N E W P A N T S (except those already on sa!" for Sci at F R E S H P A N T S , upstairs A- downstairs, 24th & San Antonio. More info: 472-1311. BILL KASSO N Y A M A H A has a P L E T H O R A of brand-new Yama- has and a complete selection of groat used race bikes driven by grannies ON A N Y S U N D A Y . 1607 South L a m a r 444-7432 1969 F IA T 850 S P Y D E R convertible. 28,000 miles. F in e condition. 25mpg. 141-1833. ________ _ j P O L L U T I O N SOLT 'T I ON! Shaklee personal products. ‘ organic home E v e s best. 474 4 447. H O N D A CFD50, good < ondition. 4,700 Jim , miles $550 w ith h e lm e t C all 465-7942. D O CTO R L E A V I N G co u n try. Must sell I 1969 Volvo 14IS four door automatic. Bern offer o ve r 1500. C a ll 9264)646. 69 H O NDA CE350. O nly 4800 miles. Helmet Not a scratch. School teacher owned it. $550. 451-2847, 454-3611. R C A ’S console. Mediterranean. 8 ’ long. 3.50 lbs. one S T E R E O F IN E S T yea r old P erfect condition. $450. 451 2817, 454-3611. $900 K E N W O O D 4140 case. $210. Ja y , Receiver. 95W 452-4672 after 6 . with S e t a king s is w aterbed by V /ater & A r Elements, Inc. fo r only $16 50 at sold for only $1.99. U N C L A IM E D F R E IG H T . 6535 N. Lam ar, No Dealers. STEREO SALE Popular com ponent b rand t. See them at STEREO CENTER 203 E. 19th St., across from Je s te r C e n te r 476-6733. (3 of them) S T E R E O C O M P O N E N T S E T S $79.95 complete. in handsome grained walnut finish, contem porary de­ sign with world famous 4-speed auto­ m atic B S R turntable. 4 speaker audio system. F M stereo and A M -FM radios F u lly transistorized with five separate controls, ja^ks and many other features. Monthly payments are available. U nclaim ed F re ig h t 6535 N. La m a r. Open 9 a rn -9 p rn. Mon. thru F ri. Sat. till 6 p.m. external B R A N D N E W S E W IN G M A C H IN E S $35. N atio n ally advertised brand. We have 1971 zigzag sewing machines complete w ith factory guarantee, to be sold for $35 each cash or small month­ ly payments. These machines have built-In controls for making button­ holes, henting, decorative stitches, sew­ ing on buttons, darning, mending, over­ embroidering a n d m a n y casting, other features. They m ay be inspected and tested at U N C L A IM E D F R E IG H T , 6535 N. Lam ar, 9 a m. to 9 p.m. Mon. thru F ri. S a t till I p.m. four speed, '69 C O R V E T T E C O N V E R T IB L E . 435hp, removable hardtop, new tires, one owner. Well cared for. No racing, no wrecks. $3300. 441-2528. AM-FM, 3 BRAND N E W BEDROOM SETS Including double dresser, mirror, chest, and d ou b !e bed. To be so d fo r $89.95 per set. Payments are ava I la b e. W a al­ so have 3 living room groups. Unc aimed Freight, 6535 N. Lamar, O p e n 9 a.rn. to 9 p.m. Mon, thru Fri. S a t ’til 6 p.m. J U S T R E C E IV E D five 1971 deluxe solid in b e a k f u l handrubbed wa - consoles, nut finish, W o rld renowned B. S. R. turn- f a r e end 4 speaker audio system, $69 each. M ont - y t e rms ava ab e. They may be inspected at U N C L A IM E D F R E IG H T , 6535 N. Lamar, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon. thru Fri., Sat. ’til 6 p.m. L A T E ’69 X K E convertible. Yellow. Excellent condition. A M /EM stereo. $4000 or best offer. 327-1138 atter 6 p.m. 1967 C H E V Y 108 van. 2S3 engine. in­ Standard transmission. Panelled, throughout. sulated. Good $2000. After 5. Doug, 474-4454. condition H O U S E IN N O R T H A U ST IN , fenced yard, room, living 836-3848 evenings, weekends. 3-2, den, CH /CA. laundry Tarrytown. 3-2. Living, dining, study, Fenced. Deposit $250 monthly. No singles. 476- 8290. CH-CA. room. A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . DO IT! F IE S T A P L A C E , 4200 Avenue A. Shuttle Route. One bedroom, two efficiency. Unexpected b e d r o o m , vacancy. Sw im m in g pool, dishwasher. It ’s got everything 451-4535. Gandalf’s 472 1472 102 E. 31. N O L E A S E '69 D O D G E D A R T C U STO M . AT, m any extras. One owner. 20 percent off list. 478-5067 evenings. 1966 F A I R L A N E . P o w e r automatic, clean. C all after steering. five Thursday. Frid ay, 836-5561. 1969 T O R IN O 351. A ir. power steering, automatic. C all after 5 Thursday, Frid ay. 836-5561. M GA. 1957. $.500 or best offer, F a ir tires, condition, new clutch, new radio. 471-3794, 472-2914. Z E N IT H S T E R E O with A M -FM stereo. Brand new. W a rra n ty. M ust sell. 478- L arg e I and 2 bedroom , furnished or unfurnished. C a rp e t, air, G .E . dishwash- er, disposal, T ap p an range, balcony, pool. 2 blocks from Reagan H ig h . 453-7608. W O O D W A R D APTS. 1722 E . W oodward • Special student oriented clusters. • Swim m ing pools. • Moderate prices with all utilities 414-7555 paid — no hidden charges! • Only 5 m inutes to U.T. • Complete on-premises washaterla. • Free all-channel TV . • Ample parking for tenants & guests. T E N S P E E D C O L U M B IA B IC Y C L E . Excellent condition. $80. C all after FALL RATES $129.50 8154. 5, 472-1532. W A N T E D : IN F O R M A T IO N about haunted houses or cem etaries in the Austin area- Please call Glynda, 472- 5763. R N & N U R S E S E N I O R S — M A R R IE D O R S IN G L E W IT H D E P E N D E N T S . You m ay now make applications for the A ir Fo rce Nurse Corp. Take ad­ vantage of the world travel, good pay, flight nursing, advanced training, as­ signment choice and security F o r more information call M /Sgt. Noel J . Lovel- lette, 475-5691, evenings and week ends 441-3151. C O L L E G E S E N IO R S — M A L E S & F E M A L E S : Start at the top, as an officer in the Air Force. Applications are now being accepted and women officer programs. No experience required. Excellent pay while training Test given Monday and Thursday OS 45 a m. W ill test on S a t u r d a y s for Septem­ ber only at $8:15 a m. Cad 175-5691 for more info and appointments. for pilot, navigator, T IC K E T S . N E E D three good GA tic­ kets to B a ylo r game. Call John. 472- 2319, W A N T E D . U S E D sm all sailboat. 12 14 feet (sim ilar to Cape D o ry) or other suitable for children to learn to sail. Lynn Davis, 471-5388. Experienced drum m er for rock group. C all Rick, 478-4 r48. versatile W A N T E D TO B U Y books, Playboys. records, stereo tapes, guitars, record players, radios, stereos. 320 ( ingress. C H A R L IE ’S P L A Y H O U S E (almost downtown) famous eastside • two bedroom near down- c ■ fun place. L a r g e t a O ver 15 yrs. student dancing rendezvous own. Swimming pool, carpeted, No oven rowdlng-Sep. tables -350 seats to w n . Popular Je ts 5-piece combo-Latest h its’ a / o , w o o d p a n e l i n g . FRT A- SAT. at 8 p.m. til I urn 3 00 couple p ay at door or te! G R 7-0422 for reservations. Serene lounge atmosphere lit h St air cond. - Come! 442-3910 472-9147 Decorum 1206 E . i On left 4 blocks E . H w y. 35 H O U S E S . A P A R T M E N T S . ROOM S. Off Canadian Street, on Shuttle Bus Route 7. Lo w rent! C all 4 54-9131 after 6 p.m. L o s t & F o u n d LO ST W A T C H Seiko g irl’s the vicinity of 33rd Street. C all 441-1465 in after 6 . Reward. R E W A R D : LO S T four month old red , Irish setter (North Austin!. P L E A S E c all: 471-7211 (d ay), 926-8128 (night). LO S T B L A C K C A T with scar on leg. W e miss him. Call 442-3811 after 5. for return of $50 R E W A R D white Chested female month IR IS H S E T ­ T E R . tags. Lost 38th-Grooms. No SH O T S! Answers to Maggie. 453-8673, 476-0834. LO ST blonde hair, black F E M A L E A FG H A N . Reddish Lost October 3t Enfield vicinity. Rew ard : Lauren Lewis, 1109 West 10th. 472-5305. face-ears F O U N D IN T R A V IS H E IG H T S area. black and white female w ire haired terrier. C all P a m at 472-9135 or 471-1347. G R E Y W E I M A R AN E R , eight months old, strayed from home. Children’s pet 7013 Creighton. Reward. No questions asked. 476-2633, 926-8671. U niversity Hills area. H e l p W a n t e d S H O E S H IN E G IL L S Fun. exciting work in new business. Good com mis­ sion. tips. F u ll or part time. C all Leo, 141-0894 or Carolyn, 442-9054. P A R T T I M E food service help needed. Apply in person. 2821 San Jacinto. W I L L E X C H A N G E deluxe d ire ct color for distributing i $50 value) portrait tickets in w eir dorm 472-4219 handsom e? a ttra c tiv e ? 2 1 ? R E N T A G E N T want* ye jjjl M U S T S E L L ! 23” Schwinn V a rsity IO speed bike. P ra c tic a lly new. Chain lock Included. $85 . 477-3089. 1965 O L D S 442. Pow er, air, autom atic 63,000 new transmission. brakes. miles. $725. 478-2381. ANTIQUES R 'j n d oak tab 'e (cla w fo o t p e d e s ta l), oak b u ffe t with mirror (c la w foot pedes- (o a k ), brass beds ta , strip p e d ), desk (cla w fo o t), Q u een ^ nn Ib ra c / tab le b uffet with mirror and teard rop h a rd ­ ware, V icto rian m irrored hall stand, oak coat stand, large assortment of fram ed wa'erco a's. 1509 Exposition 477-8866 T u t o r i n g ST A T T U T O R IN G . A ll business math. G R R preparation. 451-4557. A U S T IN 'S sw’- q V ," escort service, nary 3 4 5 * 3329 commission U N IV E R S IT Y L I T E R A R Y S E R V IC E S : Personal instruction and assistance in writing. 477-9043. T IA N O L E S S O N S Beginners and ad­ vanced. Call 451-3549. M A TH T U T O R IN G that derstand. C all 476-0757. you can un- M ATH 603. Evenings. Dally, weekly, semester rates. Inexpensive. 808. 465-7689. B U S IN E S S . arts, M ATH. education m ajors our specialty. E x ­ perienced teacher. Very certified reasonable. Mathem atics, 452-1327. liberal IV! IS C E L L A N EQ U S Zuni N E L S O N ’S G IF T S ; complete selection Je w elry: African and M exican imports. 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. Indian R O D N EY EN T ERPRISE R o o m & B o a r d T H E L E M E CO-OP. One vacancy. Room and board. Also several vacancies board only. 1909 Nueces. S IN G L E RO O M S U niversity House men's dorm Room and board for F a ll semester Good reasonable from Campus, rates. Three blocks Shuttle Bus route. A C, maid service. 2710 Nueces, 477-8272. food and H O L L O W A Y H O U S E CO O P. Room and board. Vacancy-glrl’». Co-ed. 2510 Rio Grande. 474-2247. N E E D G IR L to assume Je ster contract by December 3. $72 monthly, room, hoard, maid, connecting bath. Jean, 471- 7666. P A R K IN G B Y M O NTH $12.50. 2418 San Antonio, one block from Campus. H e l p W a n t e d 476-3720. 1969 M O B IL E H O M E , 12X50. Good condition. N i c e park. Two bedroom. AC-CH. $600 equity or best offer. $68 monthly payment. Bela ire Park, 20; 385- 3138. L A R G E T W O B E D R O O M apartment near Campus, Dishwasher, disposal. AC-CK. On Shuttles I, 2, 3. Pets allowed. S u m m it Apartments, West 25- \2. 476-7812. 1971 H O N D A C l 450. Ex cellent con­ dition Low mileage. See to believe. $975. C all Richard. 476-0424. 472-5893. 1971 T R IU M P H Bonneville 650cc. E x ­ cellent condition. $1250. After 6 p.m., DISCOUNT STEREO 10-50% off Mott Quality Brands Available years in business. 453-13 ’70 H O N D A SL100. 5300 raced. Good condition. miles. N ever A lte r 5, 444- 2 312 453- 0112. 1963 OTO. AUTO . seats, vin yl top, a-c, ps, ph. bucket m any extras. Best offer. 453-1312. 1971-Ii H O N D A CB350. O nly ROO miles. W arran ty. P e rfe ct condition. Super buy, $650. 451-2847, 454-3611. R U S T O M A M P 200 watt, reverb, ex­ cellent condition, $330. A fter 5 week­ days. ail day Sunday. 600 South First, Apartment 218. N ea r Arm adillo. ’66 V W S E D A N . Good engine-tlres. Clean. C all 452-1888. Reasonable. C A N T A F F O R D A P U S H E R ? 1966 K a mn ann Ghia convertible. Porsche level suspension, front disc brakes, new Kent adjustable shocks, 1500cc normal engine, almost new nylon top. Excellent condition, 385-2254 or 478-7326. R E C Y C L E D M A IL truck. Carpet, cur­ tains, custom interior-paint Job. wired for tape deck. new exterior p a in t 1963 model. 245-4688 in San M arcos. 1966 M U S T A N G fastback V-8 . Fo ur 1 barrel, air conditioned, automatic, chrome wheels. V ery clean. $875. 478- 8869. D O L B Y N O IS E reduction system. Model 101. Elim in a tes tape hiss on any re­ corder. $90 Ja y , 452-4672 after 6 . C O M P L E T E S E T of L u d w ig drums Ja m e s Excellent condition. Contact Little. 472-2148 or 476-7951. G O L F C A RT, electric powered. N ew engine, paint, and seats. Motorcycle, 1969 Triumph Trophy 250cc. 454-2406. ude. IO Speed Schwinn V a rs ity bicycle. Good condition $75 or best offer. Stan, 478- 1973 after 5. S IA M E S E K IT T E N One male left. IO dollars. 452-5063 Please buy for afternoons, evenings. S L E E P S TWO. ’62 Econoline van. Wood paneled, curtained, carpeted, good tires. $875. 477-0780. G E R M A N S H E P A R D S 2621, ext. 200. 8:30 -3. Not A K C . 444- 1971 Y A M A H A 90 Enduro. F iv e speed. G reat dirt bike Excellent condition. W ith bumper racks. $300. 454-8123. G IV E S O M E O N E you love a portrait In exquisitely painted in oils. C all time for Christmas 474-4519. $100. D IA M O N D R IN G , solitaire. .52, perfect stone. Value at $450, sacrifice at $250 Shirley, 475-4326, 465-9970 after 5. ’71 S U Z U K I 500 Excellent condition, Bell Magnum. New rear 4” Dunlop. 5800 miles. $800. 926-0676 after 4. C L E A N 65 V W B U S. Ju st rebuilt engine. $1200. Call 452-7909. 1963 G alaxy 500 convertible. Good ^condition. Very dependable. $350. 441- F o r R e n t M O T O R C Y C L E T R A I L E R S for rent $4- nay. A ll factory built. Bumper hitches available. 442-1516, 465-0793. CA M IN O REAL - EL PATIO; 6 blocks to U.T. Large I b edroom & 2 bedroom— 2 beths. A ll b illj paid. laun dry room, 2 pools, dish­ C a b le , washer, disposal, security guard, covered parking e vad ab le. 2810 Sa ado 476 4095 W ILLO W CREEK HILLS APARTMENTS Live in the hills of South Austin. O ne and two b ed ro om apartment* (furnished or unfu rnished ). Overlooking Austin a nd the C o lo ra d o River. 1901 W illo w Creek Drive, off the 2300 block of East R /cr­ 512— 444-0010. Shuttle F IE S T A P L A C E Apartments. N ear B u s Route. Furnished ef- two furnished apartment. $180. ficioncy bedroom Now available. 4200 Avenue A, 451-4335. apartm ent, $126. Also W A N T S O M E O N E to take lease ending F e b r u a r y . Renewable. Deposit donated. Tw o bedroom, one bath. 345- 1451. SH O A L C R E E K V IL L A . Two bedroom duplex, furnished, AC, pool. $156 plus utilities. 4104-A Shoal Creek. 451-4023, 452-8094, P R I V A T E apartment. $145. 2504D I^>on. Shuttle Buses. Take F U R N IS H E D over lease for spring. 474-2752. Shuttle Bus. G R E A T LO C A T IO N , near Campus and luxury one bedroom, new carpet, disposal, covered parking, stindeck. ca tile TV', bills paid, only $150. 472-6197. 2812 Nueces. SUMMIT APARTMENTS Luxury 2 bedroom apartm ent. C A / C H . fully furnished, dishwasher/disposal, on i 003 UT Shu ttle B .s route. C om e by W . 2S'/2 or ca ll 478 5592 fate r 4:30 p.m. CA-CH, L U X U R Y O N E B E D R O O M apartment. carpeted, dish­ washer. disposal, large fenced patio. $135 plus electricity. 6508 Hickman, 102. Call 926-3666. furnished, bedroom O N E B L O C K L A W SCHOOL. Nice one im ­ mediately. $135, $122 plus electricity. Tow erview and Apartments, Oldham. 477-3584. apartm ent available 26th L O V E L Y E F F I C I E N C Y apartment now available. Completelly furnished, all bills paid. $130-month. F o r Information call 452-2384 or 453-3894. TW O B E D R O O M , two bath apartment. 4305 D uval. Quiet. Need to sell lease. H E L P ! M U S T S E L L spring lease, H a r­ din North. W illing to pay half first month's rent. 477-3809. N E E D P E R S O N to take over Hardin for contract. Call 477-1054 North more Information. service, O N E B E D R O O M near Campus. M aid Upperclassmen please One-two persons, $125-month. 453-3235. parking. W a l k i n g R A V IN E T E R R A C E . Available now. University. furnished. A c ­ Fireplace. Water-gas commodates 2-3. G R 8-5528. distance 21” R C A color TV . B ra n d new stereo with two large speaker cabinets. Must sacrifice. 441-7353 -04 T W O B E D R O O M apartment. Boca Chi- ca Apartments Quiet, access to Lake children, undergraduates. 0 0 F o r S a l e R o o m s WORLD OF STAINLESS 700 R IO G R A N D E W a W e rent color TV ll kind* of $25/—'n ib , A 1 o small refriqera' erecs, tap e decks, recorders, TV 5, ors rad $ 10 / m o rth . ca r stereos. LOW EST PRICES IN TO W N Black A il 'ghts, ce ostial lights, kinds cf gift items. Drop in a 'd check flicker lights, lamps, sir e o-r prices. P L E A S E T A K E room over. F iv e m in­ utes from Campus Neat. quiet. $50/ v bills paid. Graduate boy only. 471-1242. 476-22S9. F u jii RO O M J- O R RF.NT. Two Mocks from Campus. Paneled, furnished, shower, private entrance. $65/month. 478-2079. 454-3307. M A L E G R A D U A T E student. Single room, bath. N ear U .T. $45. 472-2696. N IC E B E D R O O M . P riv a te home. With kitchen privileges. Older L A R G E female student. 906 West 22nd. W ORLD OF STAINLESS 7C0 Rio G ra n d ® A ls o v V t o ur store in H ig h lan d M a l'. TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C A LL 471-5244 P a g e IO F r i d a y N o v e m b e r 5, 1971 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N EARN $'s W EEKLY Blood p'asme dono-s needed. C a 'h paid for services. Physician in attendance. O c e n 8 a.rn.-3 p.m. Tues., Th ar*,, Fri., & Sat. O p e n 12 noon-7 p.m. W e d . A U S T IN B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S , IN C ., 409 W e s t 6th. 477-3735. $50 R E W A R D F O R IN F O R M A T IO N leading to return of red 1969 Yam aha from U T Campus October 175. Lost 27th. HO 5-9506. F R E E K IT T E N S . Need good home. cute. V ery healthy, playful, and B la ck and white. Call 478-3579. Learn To Play Guitar. beginner & advanced DREW THOMASON 478 7331 478-2079 R E M O V E U N W A N T E D H A IR per­ manently with m edically approved electrolysis. U niversity Electrolysis, 477- 4070. $10 F O R T A K IN G C A R E of my dog 'til end of this semester. I pay for food. C all 926-3666. H E A D SH Q P. Posters, patches, papers, interesting books, pawn shop. Most store in Austin. 320 Congress. SWAP-O-RAMA S W A P MEET W H E R E Y O U CAN B U Y O R S E L L A N Y T H IN G (A L M O S T ) T H E L A R G E S T G A R A G E S A L E IN T H E A U S T IN A R E A . B A R G A IN S G A L O R E . E V E R Y S U N D A Y 4 p m. 8 a.m. S H O W T O W N USA D R IV E IN T H E A T R E C A M E R O N RD . & H W Y . 183 W A N T E D . S IN G E R , single or duo, to work evenings 8.30-12, six days w eek. F o r appointment call M r. M arcus or M r. Sarris. 478-1625. N E E D J R . O R S R . M E N 21 yenrs or cider for part time work. $2 per hour. Call John Laser, 473-7341. IDA PRESS 504 West 2-th Multicopy sefce. Specializing in hftdb'.ls. Call 477-833. W o m e n 'j L ’b Arise DIAL-A-BUNNY W A N T S Y O U ! ! ! A U S T I N ’S "swing es" escort W e "c h a m s ' ' for your dates! sa'ery 3 4 5 * 332? commission CLOTHING by P A T C H E D R E P A IR E D in, M on. thru Sr., to I I and 4 to 6, upstir* at I S E W I h G R O D N E Y E N T E R P R IS E F R E S H P A N I 465 1)335 ° U SPaCeCl p0Ke’ tal1 * Iter 5. six students U N IV E R S IT Y V IL L A G E . LT D . seeks time. Choose own hours. Commission earn­ ing'. Telephone J. B. Hightower, 476- 7636, for appointment. to work part FEMALE MODELS W ANTED Figure photography. Must be qood looking. $4.50-$7.50 per ho r , no ex perforce required but must be 21 or have parent O K . Some e/oninqs a va il­ able. also open. A p p ly Sales qirl position IO a.rn - 11 a.m. only. 1801 Nueces. interested M E N , I E S T U D E N T and m arried and in earning an extra $60 per week, apply today I p m . or 8.30 p m , 3108 North Lam ar, 203-A. L A C A SA C L E A N E R S needs part time junior or senior to work IO a.rn.-2 p.m. Monday-Friday. Call 444-7063 for appointment. F U L L , I ’A R T T IM E waitresses wanted. Apply In person, The Outhouse, 1510 E a s t 1st, after 5 p.m. PART TIME TO DO P H O N E W O R K ill work afternoon or eveninq hours. S alary open, no rar necessary. C ALL MR. FISHER, 477-3749 Frid a/ O n ly 24ih San A ntonio, 472 1341. FO U R -f’E N T Copying X E R O X ! * ; G inn y's Xerox 2200 San Antonio,second Boor Service. ( ’.mine conic 476-9171. A P E L IA N ! E R E N T A L S . I e f r i go raters, color T V ’s, beer errors, stereos. Alpine Rentals, 201 E a st {rd, 452-1926. IN S U R A N C E prog ra rn rn ii. service for the Young Professional The Equit­ the able Life Assurance Sflety of United States. 478-4090 N obligation. $4 A D A Y . 4 C E N T S A M IE . Longhorn 4x12 Car-TruGk Rentals, *1-1773, North Interregional. F O R M E H SEC T IE T A R Y w i t h R B A ~dZ lug typing. 45c/page. 451-2732 E X P E R T T Y P IN G . Law* etc. W est Austin, 474 briefs, theses. 760. 1:1 " E R T Y P IN G S E R V I C E . Graduate and Un- typing, printing, binding. V s K p (rn n v S< dergraduato 1515 Koenig Lane Telephone: 465 7205 T Y P IN G IN M Y H O M E . Fast, e ffic ie n t ° nt roasonable Prices. Call 454- 4370 Just North of 27th & Guadalupe BICYCLE REPAIRB Reasonable 478-1872 Greg or Brae V W rebuilt engines (short locks). Fully I for g uaranteed. Four months/,OGO miles All prices exchange, 36 h $225 40 h.p $335. HOO $275. 110(7,1600, fast backs, squarebacks - $295. ne . jes re mounting of cylinderhead fuds). Ex- chanqe must be in­ formation and appointm ent 451 7 12? rebuilds!^. For M B A Typing. M ultilithing, Binding Toe Complete Professional LL-TIME Typing Sorvica the, r!eert* of University students. Special keyboard equipment language, science, and engineer­ ■ ing theses and dissertations. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7G77 2707 Hemphill P a rk Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX DUPLICATORS 476-7581 118 Neches $300-$500 per mo. T y p i n g & FLEA MARKET NEED C O LLEG E GIRLS TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C A LL 471-5244 for resume Earn wh 'a in school. C am pus represen­ forwarding service. tative Flexib'e information For w rite N ational Resume Services, P.O . Box 1445, Peorie, III. 61601. hours. full C A R B O N - R IB B O N Seloctric In mid­ night: Out by 8 . 478-0753 /enLngs E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IS T . F le ctric IB M . Fast, accurate seEce" Low i rates. 327-1534. ’ M STRVTRr p D E L A F I E L D S t, R V I C E —Theses, dissertations T Y P IN G law rt‘Cnrts- Multilithing, mimeo- me South. Charge. 442- Bi-! va graphing. Save money - RankAm ericard, M aster (008. Baylor Game Tickets Available Approximately 16,000 student tickets for Satur­ A crowd of more than 60,000 is expected for d a y s Texas-Baylor football game were drawn by 4 p.m. Thursday. the game. Al Lundstedt, business m anager of intercollegiate athletics, said drawing of student tickets had been “slow unti] today.” He added that he expected 22,000 to 23,000 more tickets to be drawn by the 4 p.m. Friday deadline. Lundstedt explained that tickets for the general public would be on sale at Gate I at the stadium at 9 a.m . Saturday and would bp available at all gates by noon. Sales will continue until the 2 p.m. ldck-off. Lundstedt said 9,600 of the student tickets had the upper deck at Memorial been assigned to S ta d iu m . Knothole tickets for the north endzone will be available to public school students for $1 at the stadium on Saturday, Lundstedt said. t h e h a c i e n d a o f f l o w e r s . V . . Prices Are Back To The Good Old DaysI A ll Y o u C a n E at $ B u llet S ty le Select From Over 2 0 Different Varieties Green Chile Sauce C h ile s Jslapenos C h ile s Se rran os R e lish Tray Chiles Rellenoe S p a n ish R ice G u acam ole S alad C h ile C on Q u eso H a n d -M a d e T am ales Red Chile C on Carne Red T a co Sau c e Fried Beans S p a n ish S auce S o u r Cream E n c h ila d a * Green E n ch ilad as Red En ch ilad as Green Chile C on Carne C risp y Beef T a c o s Sop aip illas H oney yTT J T ostad o s LUNCHEON SPECIALS 9 9 c CHILD S PLATE-75* w 5800 BURNET ROAD Famous Throughout The Southwest LUIGIS R E S T A U R A N T A N D B O IL E R R O O M EXCELLENT F O O D Hot Sandwiches Spaghetti Pizza Salads TODAY H APPY H O U R 4 - 7 p.m. $1.00 PER PITCHER SUNDAY SPECIAL 4 - 1 2 p.m. PITCHERS $1.15 Short-Horn Sandwich & Glass of Beer 99' 2100 GUADALUPE Hizzoner-elecf af Age 19 Believed to be nation’s youngest mayor-eiect, Ron Hooker, 19, is congratulated by a police­ man of Newcomerstown, Ohio, where he was elected Wednesday. Mayor-elect Hooker plans to put into effect his campaign pledge to "stop hot rodding and speeding on village streets." Newcomerstown has a population of 4,500. VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner for $3.25 C ho ice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Just present your blanket tax or Auditor's receipt to Cashier 2300 Interregional O N L Y 2 B LO C K S F R O M M E M O R IA L S T A D IU M • B W * I I MARCH ON HOUSTON! Saturday - N O V . 6th BUS TICKETS A V A IL A B L E -C H E A P C A L L 478-0609 or come by: 2330 GU ADALU PE ABOVE SOMMERS DRUSS zio w !I STUDENT M O B ILIZA T IO N C O M M IT T E E ARBTS H A M And CHEESE SPECIAL! Full flavor hickory smoked ham — with a generous slice of ^K H A fT j o l d e n g l i s h C H E E S E Steamed Piping Hot GREAT!! OUR REGULAR PRICE - 91c EACH • Snappy Service ® Pleasant atmosphere ® Clean & colorful SPECIAL! N O W ___ (Today through Sunday, Nov. 7th) ^ «| 2 F O R ................................ I SAVE 72c • 1715 Guadalupe 472-1582 • 5400 Burnet Rd. 451-3761 Bring the entire family! SUPERPRICE! 98 ONLY (LIST 11.98) ALL TOP 15 BEST SELLING ALBUMS LIST 4.98 — O U R N E W R E G U LA R PRICE LIST 5.98 — O U R N E W R E G U L A R PRICE 2 . 9 9 3 e 6 9 i uvn, Friday. November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11 Mexican-American Scholars Examine Chicano Education By JILL INGRAM Tile scholars presented the works to their peers at the conference To provide the “ missing link” in the education of Mexican- for critical analysis and suggestions. Am ericans is the goal of Manuel Reyes Mazon, director of the Teacher The final document, edited by Mazon, w ill be titled “ Toward a 1/2 PRICE SPECIAL FRIDAY ONLY — R E S . O R D E R O F EIT H ER T A C O S O R E N C H IL A D O S (T H R E E T O A N O R D E R ) REG. $1.25 NOW ’/a PRICE W e also have delicious Mex. Plate, N a ­ ches, Chalupas, Guacam ole salad, Beef Burritos, and Bean Burritos. Once you ve tried our authentic Mexican cui­ sine, you will never be satisfied elsewhere. W e also have orders to go. EL VASQUEZ 2909 G U A D A L U P E 474-2763 Corps Assistance Program , and more than 80 Mexican-American scholars who Frid ay will end a three-day meeting on campus. The educators were invited to Austin for a critiquing session, the product of which w ill be a collective work identifying the problems of education for chicanos. Mazon is under contract from the National Teacher Corps to develop a comprehensive training sequence for Teacher Corps interns that w ill provide a “ sound educational philosophy reinforced with com­ munity-based cultural awareness,” THE PURPOSE OF the conference Is to develop the first phase of the sequence, the development of a basic philsophy of education of culturally and linguistically different children. Mazon termed the development of an educational philosophy the “ missing link” which w ill “ bridge the gap” for teachers dealing with these students. “ Up until now, there has been no realistic foundation on which educators could plan a program of education that is responsive to the needs of the community and its children." To accomplish this goal, a planning committee was appointed to consider what should comprise a philosophy of education for chicanos. NINE ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES were defined and prominent Mexican-American scholars were asked to prepare papers on each of the topics. — S T . C H A L E H P L A C E . G o o d d e a ls on fu r n is h e d a n d u n fu r n is h e d a n ts . I a n d 2 P i t 's , o il b u ilt- in k itc h e n s F r o m 43‘IO M i l l c r e e k R d . , 453-4959 GiHraolar Philosophy of Education for the Mexican-American.” Development of the training sequence, known as Cultual-Home* Community-Awareness (C H C A LT), was authorized in 1970 by the National Teacher Corps in Washington. The idea was based on the premise that a principal area of neglect in the schools has been oral language assessment prior to instruction. MAZON SAID WITH a sound educational philosophy reinforced by cultural awareness, “ the teacher w ill be able to deal with the language of the child with understanding. The teacher ran assess the child’s language capabilities (whether English or Spanish) and not classify him as deficient, but use the language that the child knows to help him learn another language.M The entire project is due sometime in 1972. It w ill include a pool­ ing of educational ideas from Teacher Corps projects throughout tile Southwest City Council OK's Late Alcohol Sale Despite opposition from several Austin citizens the City Council passed four to three on second reading Thursday a proposed change in City ordinances allowing the sale of liquor until 2 a.m. Royal M asset, a divinity student at the Episcopal Theological Sem inary of the Southwest and Vicky Lowe, a University junior who works at Middle Earth, rc-fering to the council's seven-point plan to rid Austin of drug pushers, pointed out that the counciil, in passing the proposed change would contradict itself. “ You have begun a crusade against the use of drugs while endorsing the consumption of alcohol past midnight,” Mussel said. W o m e n s Ri ght s ? Women's Liberation has made further headway as far as restroom designations are concerned on the fourth floor of Benedict Hall. Its a matter of first come, first served, with a toilet that calls itself just that. However, one instructor whose office is next door to the "toilet," says he has never seen a woman entering there, although several secretaries work on that floor. ALSO DYLAN, COLTRANE, ET AL I his wee it'll be v DONAVAN (SKIPPER) YOUNG & JIM MINGS And for Austin, that's veery, veery nice So come by for a fine dinner and Minqs THE PLACE RESTAURANT in Dobie Center IF Y O U EA T PIZZA , T H EN Y O U K N O W BIG DADDY (... PIZZA) The best pizza in Town! 2513 San Antonio — Beliing Jack-in-the-Box FO R r i \ t C DELIVERY IN THE C A M P U S A R EA 476-6795 Present this picture of Al and get 25c off any large PIZZA on delivery. Bring this picture in to BIG DADDY PIZZ A and get $.50 off any large pizza. One coupon per pizza, please. Offer Good Thru TUESDAY, N O V EM BER 9, 1971. KTSA PRESENTS TEN YEARS AFTER SUN., N O V. 7 - 8 P.M. HEMISPHERE ARENA • A n to n io RESERVED SEA T IN G 3.50, 4.50, 5.50 REC O RD H O L E No. I • B E L O W TH E BELT REC O RD REN D EZV O U S • S U N S H IN E C O IJS • D ISC R E C O R D S in Austin ALSO COMING DO N O VAN FRIDAY, NO V. 26 • 8 P.M. Municipal Auditorium • Antonio RESERVED S E A T IN G 4.00, 5.00 6.00 A V A ILA B LE AT S A M E L O C A T IO N S A G O L D E N STAR P R O D U C T IO N Cultural Entertainment Committee The Texas Union TONIGHT AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA M aurice Peress, Music D irector presents Homage to Stravinsky 8:00 P.M., Municipal Auditorium Bus Schedule — 25c Round Trip — Exact Change Required 6:30 - 6:45 - 7:00 Beginning with University Co-Op, Carothers Dorm, Kinsolving, Scottish Rite, Simkins Hall, Moore-Hiil Hall All C E C tickets have been drawn, but tickets will be available to students at the door for $1.00 Drawing Continues Today, Monday & Tuesday ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATRE Tuesday, November 9, Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 P.M. Free to Blanket Tax holders. Residency schedule: Monday, November 8, 4:00 PM — Texas Union, Main Ballroom, Master Class Tuesday, November 9, 8:00 PM — Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 PM — Performance Wednesday, November IO, 11:00 A M — Texas Union, Main Ballroom, Master Class 2:00 PM — Texas Union, Main Ballroom, Lecture-Demonstration 3:00 PM — Texas Union, Main Ballroom, Master Class This project is jointly supported by a grant from the Texas Commission on Arts and Humani­ ties and the National Endowment for the Arts in Washington, D.C., a federal agency created by an A ct of Congress in 1965. DRAWING BEGINS MONDAY THE JAMES GANG Saturday, Nov. 13, Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 P.M. $1.00 to Blanket Tax Holders DRAWING BEGINS MONDAY Tuesday, Nov. 16, Municipal Auditorium Free to Blanket Tax Holders H ogg Auditorium Bo* O ffice Hours — 10:00 A M to 6:00 PM — Monday thru Friday Park Beerfest Set By Young Demos The first annual Democratic Beeriest to “ dishonor” the election of President Richard M. Nixon throe years ago, w ill be at fi p m. Friday in Eastwood Park. “ Tile beerfest will be informal and conversational,” said Dan Boyd, presient of the Young Democrats, which Is sponsoring the event. Among several public officials expected to attend are State I And Commissioner Bob Armstrong and Austin City Councilmen Jeff Lebermann Lowell Friedm an, and D irk Nichols. Former Justice Lectures Today Form er Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark and U.S. Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., will visit the University as part of the Tom C l a r k Distinguished I>ecture Serif"? sponsored by Phi Alpha Delta law fraternity. Clark w ill speak at 4 p.m. Friday in the Tom Clark Lounge in Townies Hall. Tower w ill speak at 4 p.m. Nov. 19 at the same place. The lecture series was .started this year to expose students to influential speakers and their issues, said ideas on current Harold Vanburg, president of Phi Alpha Delta. Tile speakers w ill present a short informal talk after which there w ill be questions and discussion. Tho series is open to tile public. Clark who was an associated justice during tho “ activism era” of tile Supreme Court, w ill probably discuss tho trend that President Richard M. Nixon’s four appointees w ill create, said Vanburg. I lie lecture series Was named after Clark because “ lie was an influential member of our chapter and a Supreme Court Justice,” said Vanburg. Chark is the only graduate of the University to become a Supreme Court justice I S. U.S. Sen. Lloyd Benison, D- Tex., and Sen. George ten­ McGovern, D-S.D., tatively scheduled to speak In the serif's next semester. are L A I O N I A N \ h u n of | .:(8 i ii l i l t a p l * , . N w i m i ’iiiiK p,,,,!*, 454 lin n tow ii, a n d I C* „ « n s h u t ,"‘s' I f o u r <4> ;{n, , o» |,; * Oliiguidfer FIFTH AVENUE BOOK STORE • BEST SELLERS • P A P E R B A C K S • N E W S P A P E R S • M A G A Z IN E S • S P E C IA L O R D ER S • lf th e re j a m a g a i i n e w e d o n ’t h a ve , we ll q e t it fo r y ou ! ! H IG H L A N D M A L L 452-6995 7 D AYS A W E E K Page 12 Friday, November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEX, m u s l i m s t u d e n t s ASSOCIATION will celebrate a in Ram adan” with “Night dinner( at 5:30 p.m. Saturday in the Alumni Center. PHYSICS DEPARTMENT will present W. Hodge and J. Gibbs, g i v i n g research progress reports at 4 p.m. Friday in Building Engineering-Science 145, PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT will present Dr. Lee Sechrest of Northwestern University at J pm . Friday in Business- Kconomics Building 151. r e a d in g a n d s t u d y s k il l s d a b hold (RASSL) will enrollment from 9 a.m. to noon anti I to 4 p.m. Friday in Jester Center A332. S T U D E N T COUNCIL FOR VOTER REGISTRATION will register voters from IO a.m. to 2 p.m. on the West Mall and at the University "Y ” week­ days. S T I I) E N T MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE will sell bas tickets to Houston for the an­ tiwar march Saturday. To get a ticket, come by office at the University ”Y” or call 478-0609. TEXAS STUDENT EDUCATION a ASSOCIATION will hold membership drive day Friday in a West Mall booth. I MON ART (»ALLERY exhibit of paintings from the L and L Gallery will continue 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Friday. all I MON CEC presents the Austin S y m p h o n y Orchestra with Maurice Poress conducting, at 8 p.m. Friday Auditorium. in Municipal U N I O N ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE will sponsor an after-game dance from 8:30 p.m. Saturday to 12:30 a.m. in the Union Main Ballroom. Big W i l l i e will en­ tertainment. provide U N I O N WEEKEND ULM . in “Joe,” will be presented B a t t s Auditorium Friday, Saturday and Sunday, with features at 6, 8 and IO p.m. UNIVERSITY SPORTS CAR CLUB will meet at l l a.m. Sunday in the parking lot at 26th and Speedway streets to conduct a time-speed-distance rally. VARSITY RIFLE TEAM female m embers is seeking to form a women’s intercollegiate team. If interested, call Charles Porter at 471-5919. LBJ Library Gets Architecture Honer The American Institute of Architects has named the Lyndon B. Johnson Library and Sid W. Richardson Hall among the l l top in competition award winners sponsored by the Prestressed Concrete Institute of Chicago, 111. in The prime consideration judging was excellence in design using and prestressed concrete to achieve aesthetic expression, function and economy. concrete precast A__ afP , ii;. ' I "S’ ' 4 J $$$■>$& ASTRONOMY hold DEPARTMENT on a. will "Electronic T e c h n i q u e s in Astronomy” at 4 p.m. Friday in Physics Building 203. seminar A U S T I N SWITCHBOARD is collecting goods for a second­ hand sale to begin Tuesday. Call 476-8800. B ’ N A I HILLEL BRITH F O U N D A T I O N will hold Services Shabbat Hassidid followed traditional by Shabbat meal at 5:30 p.m. Friday a t 2105 San Antonio St. a COMMUNITY IM OLVEMENT COMMITTEE will hold in­ terviews from I to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday in Union Building 300 and 221 respec­ tively. DIRECT ACTION will meet at 7 p.m. Friday in Union Building 202 to discuss formation of a food conspiracy. F I R S T STREET NEIGH­ BORHOOD CENTER needs clothes and shoes to give awny. FOOD CO-OP will m e 1)' at 7 p.in’ Friday in Union Build in/: 20 ’ Con Sun I meet Rf om )obio p m . at at 7 G O E wil ference day. D E B R E U open he Saturday I N S T IT HOI SE will hold an use party at 8 p.m. at 1605 West Ave. V I E OF LATIN AN S T U D I E ASSOCIATION wi 30 p.m. Friday i of Si L Hinge A M E It I ( S T I DENT meet at 4 St u d e n t Richardton II til. I N S T I T U T E OF LATIN AMERICAN STI DIES will meet at 8 p.m. Friday at 2203 S. L: lash >re Blvd.. Apt. 112. INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 8 p.m. in Business- Economics Building 133. Friday J E S T E R CENTER COF­ FEEHOUSE will have live entertainm ent from 9 p.m. t<> I a.m. Friday and Saturday. Enter at west entrance on Speedway. & SATURDAY TEXAS a lia s 3 FACES WEST Sirloin Hamburgers D raft — light & dark W ine Coolers Steaks, Seafood, Sandwiches ,-j J T I * Saxon E t ( V , “ ' n v . - 1 ( ■’M a 38th & Interregional 454-81 15 w J U o t l c r r d MOTHER EARTH CORNER loth & LAMAR LIVE S U N D A Y - - BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND TRAPEZE One of Their Last Performances before Returning to England D E M I N I Houston’* Newest R e c o r d i n g Group M O T H E R EARTH CORNER 10th & LAM AR 4 77-3783 C^iuL C^-ctravcin R o o ti of Villa C a p r i C o r p o r a t i o n OPEN TO THE PUBLIC DINING, DANCING, ENTERTAIN­ MENT, MIXED BEVERAGES NO COVER NO MINIMUM MONDAY Thru SATURDAY 2300 N. Interregional In the Villa Capri Hotel GR 7-0338 The Lavender Hill Express IS BACK When: Fri., Nov. 5,1971 8 - 12 p.m. Where: Women's Federation Bldg. 2400 SAN GABRIEL Also: Phoenix, Genesse, Rusty Wier FINE ARTS STUDENT C O U N C IL PRESENTS CHARULATA (The Lonely Wife) Directed by SATYAJIT RAY • winner Berlin film festival • th e b ast o f Ray’* rec e n t works SUNDAY, NOV. A JESTER AUDITORIUM and IO P.M. 6 8 Oc proceeds go to scholarship fund D O W N H O M E 3409 Guadalupe TONIGHT The Bob Gawd Boogie Band IO* BEER 50c PITCHER 8« $1.00 COVER COMING NOV. 18-19-20 NATIONALLY FA M O U S SPENCER DAVIS GROUP Fellowship to Include Women submitted to the Principal, Lady Women are Included this year in the Rhodes Studies Program for the first time. cessfully graduate studies in a field offered by the University of Oxford. common room will be available to her. information should All be Candidates m ay be m arried or single, although m arried fellows m ay be obliged to m ake their own arrangem ents for housing at Oxford. To be elegible, a candidate must be a U.S. citizen who has resided in the states for at least five years, be under 30 at the tim e of application deadline Dec. 31, and just have pursued suc­ of three copies Applications m u s t Include transcripts covering both un- d e r g r a d u a t e and graduate studies, a statement of major intellectual interests and study proposed while In Oxford, and the names of five persons from whom can be obtained information c o n c e r n i n g the candidate's qualifications. lines of M argaret Hall, Oxford, England. Complete official Information on Rhodes Fellowships for Women may be obtained by writing to Dr. William J. Barber, American tile Secretary Rhodes Scholarships, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. 06457. of SAVE THIS COUPON FOR SATURDAY! m s / j The Rhodes Fellowship for Women is an extension of the educational program s supported by the Rhodes Trust. Unlike the Rhodes Scholarships for men, the fellowships are senior awards and the only ones a t the women’s the University of branches of research Oxford scholars from abroad. reserved for fellowship t - be W H E N THE program Is in full operation, a Rhodes in Fellow will residence for two years in each of the five Oxford colleges for women, Lady M argaret Hall, Somerville, St. Hugh’s, St. Hilda’s and St. Anne’s. The 1971-72 Is limited to one fellowship at Lady M argaret Hall beginning October, 1972, and is open only to can­ didates from the United States. competition Selection of the Rhodes Fellow i will be made by the governing bodies of the respective women’s ; colleges in Oxford. THE RECIPIENT will receive I a cash stipend of 1,500 pounds j ($3,747), plus free residential and ; dining facilities in the college. I Also, the amenities of the senior ^ Fri. & Sat. W ATERLOO Social Club & Theater 7th & Red River presents MELODRAMA "DIRTY WORK AT THE CROSSROADS" 472-7136 or 472-8284 for reservations HUNGRY HORSE 1809 SA N JA C IN T O 4 7 7 -0432 — FRIDAY— GREASY WHEELS A V N IQ I E B L E N D O F C H A R LIE B A R D , HANK SNOW . A T H E S K O K IE IN D IA N D R I AI & 111 GLE CORI'SS — s a t u r d a y — MULLET!! C H U C K • JULIE • J O H N REED O N LEAD GUITA R • BILL CAMPBELL • GUEST STARS N O T T O O L O U D — JUST PLAIN GOOD NOV. 5, FRI. NOV. 6, SAT. Armadillo World Headquarters Presents The Earl Scruggs Revue fr o m N a s h v ille with Rat Creek G O O D SATURDAY ONLY AT EITHER SHOP: No. I — 2821 San Jacinto No. 2 — 2604-A Guadalupe TH I | . w o k # PRESENTS FRIDAY NIGHT . . . MOTHER DUCK COVER $1.00 SATURDAY NIGHT BACCUS DON'T FORGET FRIDAY AFTERNOONS T. G. I. F. BEER & B.S. Tickets $3.00 at: O at Willies, Discount Records, Disc Records in Highland Mall 8:30 478-4651 23rd and Pearl Streets In N ew H ard in G arage Com plex 477*6135 THE HBI? 0RISAH3 C L U B presents FRIDAY NITE I SATURDAY NITE SWEET SMOKE LAUGHING KIND from Ft. Worth . . . Texas top rock band from San Antonio plus guest bands • Hurricane Wine Coolers (includes souvenir glass) • Wine Coolers (includes souvenir glass) $1.50 .75 LOWEST EVERYDAY PRICES! Every Day Prices Reg. 6.98 * Reg. 5.98 ■ Reg. 6.98 - Reg. 6.98 - TAPES COMPARE THESE PRICES AND FIND THEM THE LOWEST IN OPEN TILL 12 WEDNESDAYS AUSTIN I Week Special New RICHIE HAVENS "Great Blind Degree' ii FREE PARKING $5.98 LIST n o w $ ^ 5 9 GOOD THRU THURSDAY A * * Lomise VfeSTSATO Norman Eaton's CHAMPAGNIE BUFFET Saturday NOVEMBER 6th 6:00 • Roast Tenderloin • Roast Sirloin • Stuffed Chicken Breast With Wine Sauce $ £ 5 0 per person f t b m n g f i n j P o l o n a i s e I i \ | —> Westgate c e stA u S A n t 478-4628 23rd Floor, Westgate BUDGET TAPES AND RECORDS 3004 GUADALUPE Friday, November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 13 MORE INFO : CALL 441-1863 12th & Red River N a IN T E R S T A T E P A R A M O U N T W $ ! .CO 'TIL 2:15 FEAT.: 2 : 1 5 - 4 : 1 0 6:05 • 8:00 - 9:55 Bergmans 'Passion Superb “ The Passion of Anna:" directed by Ingmar Bergman, at Hie Texas I Ilio n Theatre. By STEPHEN JAMAIL Amusements Staff the University This weekend, community has the opportunity to view a work of genius, Ingmar Bergman’s of Anna." It is a masterpiece of the cinema. “ The Passion title exploitative The American distributors of this film chose to release if with the “ Tile Passion cf Anna.” Translated from the Swedish however, the title the is “A Passion” and multi-leveled implications of this e m o t i o n a l . work—religious, physical—are m irrored the film. In its ex tern a l d r a m a t i c con­ struction. th e film Is concerned in TRA IN S'*- I C A A S 1ooOi ft. Lamar Blvd.— 4 il-l/1 0 3 ■ MOVIES - 3 OPEN 6:00 P.M. P R E E T R A I N R ID E S C O L O R T .V . R O O M w ith four m iddle-aged people— A n d re as. Anna, E v a and E lis— w ho a r e neighbors on a s ta rk , d eso la te island In live th ey Though close p h y s i c a l p ro x im ity acting- in te ra c tin g a n i being acte d upon th e s a m e e x te rn a l b y m a n y of forces, they n e v e r re a lly “ to u c h .” T h e ir s is the u ltim a te Isolation of th e individual—d e stru c tiv e to th e m se lv e s a s w ell a s to o th ers. le a d s a A n d reas is the m ost obviously Isolated of the four. L iving alone in a house w hich re fle c ts his own isolation, he life w hich se e m s designed to in su la te him is a the w orld aro u n d . It from w orld he has ch o sen to abondon. A nna e n te rs his life w ith h e r own isolation. She h a s chosen to live in a w orld of fa lse m e m o ry — a w orld w hich allow s h e r to go on living in sp ite of its illu sio n a ry foundation. A nna an d A n d reas b eco m e lo v ers and, in doing so. only su cceed in a d d in g to th e ir m u tu a l bur s e p a r a te isolation. E v a and E lis a r e a m a rrie d couple who serve as the b rid g e w hich b rin g s A nna a n d A ndreas to g eth er. Eva is p lagued w ith doubts of h e r ow n w'orth and to doubt ad e q u ac y . E lis se e m s the w o rth a n d a d e q u a c y of life and th e m en who go through Us m otions. T h ese d o u b ts s e rv e to th e ir ow n p a rtic u la r give b ra n d of isolation own th a t ex ten d s m a r r i a g e . seem re p r e s e n ta tiv e of an e ra in which m a r r ia g e e x is ts a s an institution w ithout its c a ta ly s t, ch ild re n , and its own in w hich iso latio n —an to life h a s th e m T hey th e ir lost catalyst—God. The acting Is of the highest caliber. Max von Sydow as An­ dreas, Liv Ullmann as Anna, Bibl A nderson as Eva and Erland Josephson as Elis function per­ fectly in their roles. Sven Nvkvist’s photography deserves a separate discussion of its own—his eye the greatest beauty in the most o r ­ d i n a r y object or situation. reveals And then is Bergman. there “ Tile Passion of Anna” is a work of genius. He is the genius. What more can one say? British Pianist Ogdon To Perform Sunday B ritish p ia n ist Jo h n O gdon will tw o of the b y p la y w orks R o m a n tic best-know n p e rio d ’s c o m p o se rs, S c h u b e rt a n d L iszt, a t 4 in Hogg A uditorium . p .m . S unday The Skof Room I Lind er N ew M a n a g e m e n t) FRIDAY — 9 to 12 SATURDAY — 9 to I BOBBY BRIDGER English IWordins: Artist — Ventured in the motion pit (lira WHr.r.LS soon to norld premier in Austin — plus DREW THOMASON 3709 Lake Austin Blvd. 472-0414 Fantastic Country Folk Snniidi COVER S1.00 OPEN 1:45 • $1.50 T IL 6 P.M. FEATURES 2-4-6-8-10 LAST 5 D A YS Appearing on the Solo Artist Series, he will play Schubert's “ Wanderer Fantasy” and Four Impromptus, Op. % as well as Liszt's (Gray “ Nuageg Gris” Clouds), “ Le Legubre Condole. No. I ” (The Gloomy Gondola) and the B-Minor Sonata. The 34-year-old pianist form er co-winner of Tchaikovsky Competition Moscow Is a the 1962 i n So un ds o f S i l e n c e Carlene Watkins and W yn W arren r e h e a r s e a scene from The Three Sisters," drama department production opening Monday in H o g g Auditorium. Viewing Tonight Special notice, perhans, should be taken of a made-for-TV movie on channels 5, 7 and IO at 8:”0 p.m. Friday. Ray Milland, Gloria in Grahame and Yvette Mimieux sta r this Western m ystery about a minister and his wife who are discovered dealing ic witchcraft. I B I D Y I S S C H I D E I PI QUEEN CAPRI THEATER . . . . . 472 -0 4 42 OPEN I LOO A .M . T IL ? 5 2! E. 6th OPEN SUN. LOO P.M. 'TIL? EVER Y D A Y IS S TU D E N T D a y W IT H A STU D E N T $1.00 O F F W IT H S TU D E N T LD. C A L L F O R M O V IE TITLE — W E C H A N G E M O V IE S EVERY F R ID A Y M ID N IG H T S H O W FRI. & SAT. 1 1 :0 0 -2 :0 0 I D § m S K H M M K r n H S3 James Garner ^ > __ S k i x i © a m a Lou GossettSusan Clark • —v Brenda Sykes Edward Asner-Andr^ Duggan r ****** crafter* Mew* Fteenberg • Pierre Warier • Rrhard Alan Smmors H vr, Kale, ■ from W irno Bros, A K ire y U m pany * 'Jwa# Nan* “ ‘ T H E T O U C H ’ is a work every bit as mature and mysterious as anything Ingmar Bergman has done in the last few years!” —Richard Schickal, Life Magazine ulngmar Bergman’s ‘The Touch’ is the best film about love he has avar mads. ** t a w lo p i O M ,a tt, T h e N e w Y o r k e r "Bergman's 'Tbs Touch' is ss brilliant as the beat of hie recant films. Consummate artistry!" —Rlayfcoy Magalia* “ ‘The Touch’, a fascinating picture to place In Bergman’s gallery of haunting experiences and yours.” —Archai Wlnttan, N. V Foal In g m a r B e r g m a n ’* / i n t E n g lis h la n g u a g e m o tio n p ictu re s ta rrin g E llio tt Q o u ld , B ib i A n d e r s o n , M a x von Svdotv " T h e T o u c h - Presented by ABC Pictures C orp a s B A iubi'd>ory of if* Arrie, con » i Q i»r,toted h, fx V Bfoodcosbng Compar, ev mc I ~OIOf I O eram a Ro e^vnn U n d e r 18 Mint be with paren t OPEN 5:45 Feature 6:00 8 :00- 10:00 YOU BLED MY MOMMA YOU BLED MY POPPA BUT YOU WONT BLEED ME MELVIN VAN PUBt.ES ira JERflr GROSS preset SWEET SWEE TBAC* S BAAOASSSSS SONG I CINERATION INDUSTRIES Release - COLOR X I ^*.A * » T t ju . y j $1.00 T IL 6:30 FEATURES 6:00 - 8:32 An epic drama ot adventure and exploration! l i e J ' '4 H h "■y?! % ' 3 ;~ ..W '- v a * HELD OVER 2nd WEEK (I 30 p m pi i m e n M a r s h a l l Pl I I AI.' 4 I Pi I V .in I >yk* -» N« .■ . 7 l l e i ' U niv I J. I:.’ St m d I p a n d C lit t 6 B la d y B unch .'I Ll Capitol Eye 17. Ti ( ’la. a., m T e d d y B e a r s •I. n. 17 The N A. B.,n<-h iii 7 p rn 7 7 I I) : IO O' H a r a U . S . ‘I i i . .. 17. 74 The DarUrdee Family 9 h i c e I m F a c e I 'I. 17 M .ivit Ii"'.. . i & In y i n .'d e I ll T V 11147' IU th e V o . "Is 8 I. HI 17, 24 RtK.ui 272 S .'In p rn 17. 74 Odd < n ip le 5 . 7, 10 M u m '. a p m k N rn ' 17 24 '..n e Ame: < rn Sr * LI S ii 8 3(1 I rn I N F L (• r m e ..f t h e W e e k ii I h id C m p ie 47 N . ii’ S h o w w ith t at B r a n d o n 17 AU a ie R id e to H a n u m a n ’* 10 M o m .' Ll P h i l.idelph. i " M a n - L a t e r o f H y d r a ' 1 In Or* he n a It W a s h ! ! -a •! VV. c k In H ey l e w 43 M o v ie a c e : " S t e e l J u n k ie '* ii riel o f t h e B a s k e r - T re e n s a l R ftl l l 30 p 'n M id i : v l l l e s . a . a % .. OHE KNUE J R ill A R e d I d l e r • CODY HUBACH J CODY HUBACH ® BILL NEELY 6 A Vernel! Pratt Soyer Blues ^ A ” J H A P P Y H O U R S D A I L Y 4-8 p.m. BEER $1.00 Pitcher | J ® • I • N E V E R A C O V E R • € HOW SHOWING! OPEN 11:45 COLUMBIA PICTURES Preset tv Sean Connery The _ Anderson Tkpes A P'v.'BLPT M WEITMAN PRODUCTION M - . n . iP i ! n " i m n c i d id r l ( " n o t f o r C h i l d r e n S H O W S AT: 12:10 - 2:05 - 4 :00 - 5:55 7:50 9 45 B A R G A I N M A T IN E E T O D A Y SI M UNTIL 1:30 P.M. T R A N S ★ T E X A S I B I 6403 Burnet Road - 465 6933 r n OPEN A T 6:PM • C O LO R TV R O O M « AIR C O N D IT IO N E D S N A C K BAR • OUTSIDE SEATING BONUS C HECKS W IT H E A C H ADU LT A D M . " M a k e s H u gh H e fn e r’s P la y b o y P en th o u se look like a n u rse ry sch ool I ** •A B C TV 6:30 and I 1:50 RADLEY METZGER p r e se n ts _ “T H E J l B E R T I N E | a u m Catherine Spank ane Jean-Louis Trintignant 17*71 K o N A U D U B O N F I L M S , Relaaaad through E A S T M A N C O L O R 8:30 O N LY pretty much tho whole Kama S u tra... and the total effect, beyond question, healthily erotic." — Life M agazine • H A D L E Y M E T Z G E R EHODUCTION D a n i e l s G a u b e r t • N m o C a s l s l n u e v o I and DLrartad by RADLKY MCTZGKI1 r/Z.T *•«*•«*! through J AUDUBON FII.MS r*NAvilion * rRCMNICOLOR* Page 14 Friday, November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN 2 0 0 1 : a space odyssey btarrinoKEIR DULLEA-GARY LOCKWOOD s c r e e n p la y b y STANLEY KUBRICK AND ARTHUR C. CLARKE PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY STANLEY KUBRICK. SUPER PANAVISION andMETROCOLOR i m n m n M i k g # mgm Concert Set By Symphony T he A ustin Sym phony O rc h e stra will p resen t a to trib u te late sp ecial I g o r a S trav in sk y p ro g ra m en titled H om m age a S trav in sk y at 8 p.m . F rid a y in M unicipal A uditorium . th e in W illiam D oppm ann will a p p e a r a s soloist perform ing S trav in sk y s C a p r i e e i o for piano. Dopp­ C oncerto m ann h a s been soloist with leading A m erican v ario u s o rc h e s tra s , the including D e tro it, C hicago and Cin­ cinnati Sym phonies. Also a p p e a rin g will be the U n iv ersity C horal Union. The C horal Union will be the direction of Dr. u n d er M orris J. B eachev, who has various U niversity taken choral groups n a t i o n a l l y tel nationally the faculty in 1957. to u r in­ on and joining since Conducting the A ustin Symphony will be M aurice P eress, who is in his second the y e a r as conductor of sym phony. T h e Austin m a e stro nationw ide recently won acclaim as the conductor of Leonard B ern stein ’s M ass before a national audience a t the opening of the John F. the Kennedy C enter P erform ing A rts. for S A V E T H IS C O U P O N FOP. S A T U R D A Y ! ■W PgBrw i . . . . w a o T f l I |j,|[t ho Sa rn Wi t c Ii shojT] G O O D SATURDAY ONLY AT EITHER SHOP: Ho. I — 2821 San Jacinto No. 2 — 2604-A Guadalupe FRIDAY and SATURDAY V * « 12:00 MIDNIGHT Putney Swope plus The Rarely Seen T.A.M.I. Show VARSITY featuring: Th# Rolling Stone*, J i m e * Brown, H a n n ib a l & th# H e a d h u n t e r * a n d other for gotten IO or 12 legend*. STUDIO IV TWO SCREENS 222 East 6th 472-0436 ALL MOVIES RATED X The Picture You H ave Been W a itin g For Is Here! "O R A L GENERATION" "J O Y S OF GEORGETTE I I 35 mm IS mm "KEY HOLE POKER" "C O N N IE A N D FLOYD" Be Sure and Visit O ur Bool and Novelty Store Upstairs WEDNESDAY IS STUDENT DAY: ALL TICKETS HALF-PRICE WITH STUDENT LD. Doc Severinsen To Play Friday Doc Severinsen and the Now Generation Brass will appear in concert at 8 p.m. Friday in the Coliseum. The show he will present Is basically the sam e sort of performance that Severinsen has become famous Tickets can be purchased for $3.50, $4.50 and $5.50 at R a y m o n d ’ s Drugs and Montgomery Ward. Fancy Dan , • . Doc Soverinsen. Daily Horoscope to a c - A R I KS : Y o u < M p l i s h t o d a y . T h e n a n y t h i n g y o u d o w il l b e a p l u s . J u s t r e s t . s h o u l d s e t o u t n o t h i n g e x a c t l y L I B R A : P u t a s i d e n a g g i n g d o u b t s a n d g e t b u s y . Y o u h a v e to s e t u p a s e l f - p e r p e t u a t i n g w i n d f a l l f o r y o u r s e l f if y o u a c t n o w . t h e c h a n c e T A I U I S : K e e p y o u r h i g h p l a n e . Y o u t o h e l p s o m e i n d i v i d u a l . G E M I N I : P r e p a r e s o m e g r o u p s h o u l d h e t h o u g h t s on a t r y i n g t h a n r a t h e r s e r i o u s c h a l l e n g e is a m< d i a t e p a t h a n d y o u w i l l n e e d d e a l w i t h c e f u l l y . C A N C E R : i m m e d i a t e l y a n d f o r b a t t l e . T h e r e i m - in y o u r to f o r ­ f o r r e l a x a t i o n . Y o u h a v e h a d a p r e t t y r o u g h w e e k a n d y o u n e e d t h e t i m e to r e p a i r d a m a g e s . P l a n d a y t h i s i t L E O : L o o k t h r o u g h F r i d a y a n d I n t o t o f i n i s h tin- w e e k e n d . D o n ’t h u r r y l a s t m i n u t e d e t a i l s . T h e y c a n w a i t . A I I P . O : S h o r t l y y o u w il l b e g i v e n t h e o p p o r t u n i t y to m a k e a p o s i t i v e c o n t r i b u t i o n to y o u r o w n p r o g r e s s . D o n ' t p a s s it up. t o v e n t G i v e S C O R P I O : to f o r c e o t h e r s y o u r e m o t i o n a l f e e l i n g s t o d a y . J u s t d o i n g t h a t is w r o n g . T t y t o b e h a v e r a t i o n a l l y , b u t i n t u i t i v e l y . S A G I T T A R I U S : A p r o f i t a b l e d a y f o r y o u t o d a y w o u l d c o n s i s t o f s i m p l y d o i n g n o t h i n g T h i s s o u n d s s i l l y , b u t y o u c a n u s e t h e b r e a k . C A P R I C O R N : T r y to p u t o f w h i c h t o g e t h e r a a r e y o u t h o u g h t s f e w c e r t a i n . T h i s a t t e m p t a t o r g a n i z a t i o n ) w i l l b e n e f i t y o u a t t h i s t i m e . s m a l l c r i s i s in y o u r I A O I A R I L S : A li fe w i l l l o v e g r o u n d a n d d o n ’t p r o b l e m h e a d on a r i s e t r y t o d a y . G i v e t o m e e t t h e ; P I S C E S : Y o u r a d v i c e Is u n w e l c o m e t o d a y . I f y o u w a n t t o s e e h o w u n ­ w e l c o m e . t r y g i v i n g y o u r s e l f a d v i c e , a n d s e e h o w i t is r e c e i v e d . — N I C K L A W R E N C E Potpourri Singer Proves Exciting By BOB DOERSCH IIC its that a business, own Now folk m usic has become it has stylistic developed cliches. Mike Meade, professional folk singer, has been around, and he showed his audience at the Potpourri Thursday night that he knows these trappings well. his B e f o r e appearance, however, a wistful little man named John Delaney sat on the stage, played a series of mean­ dering tunes and sang in a quiet mumble that sounded as if it had to be persuaded into song. Bet­ ween songs, he would grin shyly, mutter “Shore are nice people to play for,” stroke his chin absently and drift into another amorphous ballad. What a difference when Meade came on! Battering his guitar with piledriver deftness, Meade generated hand-clapping rhythms with ease, and hLs ringing voice shimmered. He sang songs everybody knew, to Graham from McCartney Nash, all smiling broadly or dropping his head in thoughtful introspection, as the situation demanded. the while Without a doubt, Meade can generate excitement. His com­ mand of the guitar Ls impressive, his personality formidable. But, if you are looking for something beyond the hootenanny level of showmanship, Meade may turn out to be a disappointment. I S H O W I N G N O T O N L Y T H E B E S T . B l T A L S O T H E B I G G E S T S T A G F I L M S A U S T I N I N X-R A T F.D A D U L T M O V I E S R I T Z A R T S "SUCCESSFUL ORGY" ALSO 1 6 m m f e a t u r e # A s h o r t# 3 5 m m & f e a t u r e t t e s "JOHN'S 8 GIRLS" F O U R H O U R S H O W I ! ! Escorted Ladies Fre# with Membership rn 9 as c w f t * VJ. e I - f t B G X O F F I C E O P E N 6 : 3 0 — S H O W S T A R T S " ;00 A female half breed who is too white to be black • • • too black to be white! S h e didn’t c ro ss the color line she walked right down the middle! T h e S i d e S h o w 7 P R E S E N T S (h ld s h in , A g id d y old tramp, a sort o f modern Elijah, emerges from Lake M ichigan, clad only in dirty long underwear. The film recounts his surreal adventures and the many odd characters he meets— am ong them two abortionists discussing the merits o f Leonardo da Vinci in the middle o f an operation. Outstanding underground com­ edy! Winner of the Prix de la Nouvelle Critique a t the 1964 Cannes Film Festival. Fine performances by Lou G ilb e rt as lead ("Juliet o f the Spirits," "The G r e a t W h ite H o p e "), Ben Carruthers ("Sh adow s"), Anthony Holland, and others. Directed by Philip Kaufman, Benjamin Manaster. Edited by A d o lfa s Mekas. M u sic by M e yer Kupferman. Photography by Jean-Phillipe Carson. 1964 Plus Bert Lahr in “Gold Bricks" and a Roadrunner Cartoon. S U N D A Y , J E S T E R A UD . 6,8:05,10:10 ONLY 50c Austin Premier Fri., Sat., Sun. Nov. 5, 6, 7 Union Theatre 7 :3 0 & 9 :4 5 Each N ight TR ANS TEXAS h w m M 2200HinMCkDny^5HMl * OPEN 1:45 FEAT.: 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 R E D U C E D P R IC E S TILL 6:15 M O N . - F R I. TRANS ★TEXAS nnnvi.i.i.i 1423 W. Ben White Blvd. - 442 233J R O C K IN G C H A IR SEATS S M O K IN G PERM ITTED A C R E S FREE P A R K IN G ALL SEATS $1.00 ’TIL 6 P.M. WEEK DAYS F E A T U R E T IM E S 6 — 8 — IO PLUS CO-HIT S H O W IN G BOTH THEATRES OTTO P R E M IN G E R /Vtt U v X t M IC H A EL C A IN E -JA N E FO NDA JOHN PHILLIP LAW D IA H A N N CARROLL ROBERT HOOKS • FAYE DUNAW AY B U R G E SS MEREDITH HURRY SUNDOWN PANA VISION*- TI CHWCOLOfT A PARAMOUNT RELEASE [sucks iD FOP VOT** A lP acS ] EAST SCREEN N O R T H SCREEN E A C H FEATURE S H O W S O N E TIME O N LY I i r a m s e m i s Print b y TECHNICOLOR* R e l e a s e d t h r u ARTISTS IS r um UNITED ■ n o s hTRMBCOLOS NOW! 2 MORE SHOTS IT CUNT EASTWOOD! ; TECHiSCOPf TECHNICOLOR COLOR by ceint He released thru Uflltod Artists I I i B o r t ? V f . IN TMF ATRC SHOWTOWN US. Cameron Rd a t 183 ^ — W EST SCREEN — BOX-OFFICE OPEN 6:30 S H O W STARTS 7:00 " IAM ES TAYLOR ISTHE DRIVER WARREN OATES 1SGTO LAURE BIRD IS TH EpW t DENNIS W ILSON ISTHE MECHANIC TWO-LANE BLACKTOP ISTHE PICTURE v v G IW O- LANF > BLACK­ TOP -i. r'-'tL: JA-. ’ • 'J JA M ES TAYLOR - WARREN OATES- LAURIE BIRD • DENNISW ILSOM PLUS — CO-FEATURE CHARLTON HASTON "H € Q M € G fc MAN $1.00 awaiter seltzer product!!* co-stunk ANTHONY ZER B E’ROSALIND CASH BORIS SAGAL JOHN WILLIAM and JOYCE H. CORRINGTON mwmb tv WALTER SELTZER PANAVISION* TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS. A KINNEY LEISURE SERVICE m S t a r t s W E D N E S D A Y ! "Theyl Call Me Trinity" THE PASSION OF ANNA Ingmar Bergman by (A Color Film) p r e s e n t e d bu U i n e m a 40 T H E Y C A L L M E T R I N I T Y I* a fu n n v s c r e a m i n g l y “ G ” r a t e d w e s t e r n m o v ie in t r a d i t i o n o f C A T B A L I . O U . s a m e t h e ANAVCO EMBASSY, h e l e a s e H I"Mis ‘B alm , housewife, dict/noTdo nu chow iodcuj. diary off a mad housewife a frank perry film a u n n e r s a l p i c t u r e t e c h n i c o l o r * Jig Friday. November 5. 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IS OPEN: 11:00 A.M. - 12:00 MIDNIGHT THIS WEEKEND ALL ALBUM S ARE ON SALE THIS INCLUDES SUCH ARTISTS A S JOHN LENNON ALLMAN BROS. CAT STEVENS CAROLE KING THE BAND ISAAC HAYES CH IC A G O STEPHEN STILLS ROLLING STONES ROD STEWART SANTANA JIM! HENDRIX PINK FLOYD DAVE MASON THE W H O G R AH AM NASH BEATLES C, S, N, & Y JEFF BECK HERBIE M ANN BARBARA STREISAND TRAFFIC GRATEFUL DEAD JEFFERSON AIRPLANE NEIL YOUNG JAMES TAYLOR PAUL MCCARTNEY ...AND MANY OTHERS RECORDS Reg. 4.98 Reg. 5.98 Reg. 6.98 Reg. 9.98 NO W NOW NOW NOW TAPES 8-TR. A N D CASSETTE-REG. 6 s NO W 4 29 SPECIAL MUNTZ 860 8 - TRACK TAPE PLAYER Reg. 39.95 NO W 2995 WATERBEDS KING-SIZE CHOICE GET WATER CHAIR OF COLORS1795 FREE 48" BLACKLIGHTS WITH FIXTURES 17” GET ONE BLACKLIGHT POSTER FREE L U N C H E O N SPECIAL POORBOY HAMBURGER - 29 H AM & CHEESE O N RYE WITH 16 oz. BEER 8 9 C FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIAL FREE COKE AND FRENCH FRIES WITH A NY HAMBURGER OR CHEESEBURGER SUNDAY SPECIAL PIZZAS, PIZZAS, PIZZAS ALL YOU C A N EAT $1.29 PER PERSON OPEN AT 2:00 P.M. SUNDAY BRING YOUR FRIENDS It O I. COLD STEIN OF BEER - 40c ABOVE SPECIALS GOOD FRI. & SAT. ONLY ige 16 Friday, November 5, 1971 THE DAILY TEXAN FREEBEES 2800 GUADALUPE 478-3549 J