T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper af the University of texas at Austin Vol. 72, No. 76 Please Recycle This Newspaper AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2>* \^2 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages 471-4401 Negotiations Portend Sc tot Or xx < « o n r» a OJO ty of Epoch Saigon Ready To Accept Cease-Fire Accord Candidates Tell Hopes O f War End HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (A P ) — President Nixon said Thursday night he is confident that differences blocking a final Vietnam peace .settlement “ can and will be worked Wit.” for the Speaking time publicly first about what he “ a significant termed breakthrough'’ in the Vietnam negotiation*, Nixon told an a rport rally that “ I arn confident we will sue oed in achieving our objective peace with honor and not peace with surrender in Vietnam.” NIXON’S CO .MM I NT c a few I »ur« after presidential c iv or Henry K:s'urger said “ peace ic af ■■ ! - Vietnam and said a greet i cr * r- dsrv I e long war could be reached w ' in a few we « Sen. Get r;;e McG>vn • greeted the reports by der N vat- say why It took “ another four yr = to put an end to this tragic war ” • Reacting to ? e new peace reports much » ab u* ti cm ear cr Ac ‘-e ba I to ’• ■ In the week Mc p est fleet tai nominee told cr c< ag tv nisand* on th* University of To-- a r r pus t; at he nope* “ peace will cor e at ! ng last '* »hc h< MCGOVERN S IID 'he pnp^ oudl- ed to 'hone ac. Thursday ace 'Men. sr: ar cepfed by the Veer -h Sn IT I arui «a d, *'T hope with all my heart that Mr. Nixon will not pen?,f* G«n TI raj to stand in the wav of a se* en en* to Oms war ' Noting *hat ’he Sou*1 Viemar cee ha' • »wid that the T> *ed r-' 'es wnr. * Hima*# peac* terms. McGover said the U.g an­ swer ought to ha “ s of > a S'* mg ■ < t 1 «. •• era to **gfv# me a chance” In the next four years to continue working toward building • general on cf p c cr lr* > Ary • n r m i d * to end the \ < An.er cs ft :hni < * I se B 11' ’ e <■ ding th# Vie?? “ will pc rn. te t e i great tmgedv ” r of, y * > find r"- v, .ft r .a nr# ret!rut.on is ce­ il! a way which it* peace ** r rest of Nixon sp* ke * his to Peking and 'loser . be'ween - e Ut • ! m urtr es re- essentia!, he s. t*e Or <> ■« 1 • the people ,> Chi? .« can be ft j ir e ? % this seor ,j different en .cd ’ ce ■> } C-ut r? ut ut S ,< J order .. .» • e jw p e of An rn a, d ’ e people of . , % di f ? J fi0t wmmlm. . • p I* if i • it a o* \ . f! weather The foret ami warn High Fridi Frid iv I . will tie in wcs’erh t> and been fi­ ll i.ens sui tunw SAIGON CAP i — The Saigon government Sruid Friday Smith Vietnam is ready to a-copt a cease-fire but will never accept a political settlement that goes against the will of its people. The comment government billow oil disclosures by North Vietnam and the United St,am that they have rome to within reach of an agicement to end the war in Vietnam. The proposed settlement a« broadcast by Hanoi, calls for a cease fire in Vietnam Within 21 Ik irs of t e signing of a peace agrecmen1 release (if all prisoner's of war and wit1 rn aw a! of all U S . and foreign ( Rp|i! d '-tors . Pate S.) IU kit is v it Ii in ho d v s . Negotiations would begin bet ween the Saigon government and the Vc? Cong to arrange elections for a c alition government. The Nor:; Vietnamese. In announcing ' ■ id ii g with Washington. their or Ie charged th ?t President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam constituted an obsiar Ie to pi j * 11: g tie final touches on the a? cord 1f ■ iso (if in ari-epnng soma of its provisions. They rharged Washington was using Thieu s balk ‘ to postpone the realization of those matters on which the U.S. had a ’ready given its promi.se ” Hie South Vietnamese Foreign Ministry Issued a cornu mique saying: V s is a perfidious aet of the Com- n unis' Norm Vietnamese i rd ender! to sow s i spin on among ti e Repubiic of Vietnam md ••-*'!' a• d to try to use i e pre ’sure of public opinion for an early c r ! • f • e hi mf -g and mining to their adv ai ’age J “ As Fret dent Th ieu already pointed out .a ’’dev sod talk on October 24. the is readv to accept tea e f ne, b u wail nev«r accept a lr Repub’ - of Vm’narn a political settlement which goos against the will and interests of IT million people of South Vietnam. All solutions o Dc* ap pl ira hie in Vietnam should re* pert the right of self-determination of tim S nth Viet­ namese people." The Saigon statement sa;., howe vee, whether the terms greed up- ■ by Washington and Hanoi constituted an acceptable political sell I em? ■ t 'lid not The South Vietnamese IT,re gn Min reaction followed an earlier statement on (Hp official Saigon radio that a • --epa• ate agreement between North Vie-nan ,e United States does not eoncern us in ai w ay.” i South Vietnam. South Vietnamese headquarters repented 113 enemy-initiated incidents, including 81 shelling attacks, in the la ? 24 horns. it w 's T ie Saigon command said th* largest number of attacks in any Ti our period since the Tot < ffensix <• of 1968 b it ITS. sources said they were of “ no military significance” since most consisted of only one or two rockei and mortar rounds The allied commands now hare reported the e casualties for the war American-45,884 killed in action. 303.475 wounded, 10,281 dead rf nonhnsfile causes an?!. I O'*') missing or captured. South Vietnamese—157.017 killed, 417.107 V uh Vietnamese and Abe’ G o n g — O'-' o«>7 North Vietnamese aid Vip? < wounded. shelling intensified troops ground attacks and terrorist • g small mu in incident killed. Kissinger Claims Peace Is at Hand' W ASHINGTON (A P ) - Presidential aide Henry A. Kissinger said Thursda; “ peat e is at hand” in Vietnam and. in his view. can b<» achiexed |n three nr four days of private diplomacy. Kissinger, President Nixon's n a h- traveled assistant for national security affau's, ga\e newsmen an hour long report on closed-door negotiaPor.s after Hanoi Radio shattered toe se^mecy lid h\ an nouncing the United States and North W*tnam were on the brink of signing a mne-point peace plan. The White House aide did not quarrel with Hanoi's recitati'»n of the tentative framework of an agreement Kissinger did quarrel, however, with a North Vietnamese claim that the United States had agreed to sign 3 peace pact next Tuesday but now wanted fin ’her negotiations on grounds that .South Viet­ namese President Nguyen Van Thieu was balking at the terms. First of a1!, said Kissinger. Hanoi had set the Tuesday goal. He said the United Staten wrhi!p accepting Dot ,31 as an ob­ jective, never gave a firm agreement to wrapping up a peace package on that day. Second, he said, “ It is inevitable that in a war cf such complexity there shou d (Text Kxeerpts, Page 3.) be occasional (idficulrie^ in reaching a final solution —and he cited what he termed the lustifiabie desire of the Saigon govern­ ment "to participate in the making of their own peace ' In Paris, where another round Of fort! a1 peace discussions were held Wednesda , the North Vietnamese chief d e I e g a ! e , Xuan Thuv, was asked if Hanoi would continue the talks, privately or o? lerwise, if the Oct. 31 deadline were not met “ Wait and you will see.” he replied. Kissinger, fielding a similar question, said he could not conceive that Hanoi word I seize upon such grounds to scuttle pea *e efforts that have come so close to f. . Mon. Kissinger several times empha-izeA— and the Oct. 31 target for agreement—were Hanoi's idea. Until Oct. 8 ami a major shift then in Hanoi’s bargaining position, he said, there had been no possibility of a set­ tlement. The net is require that North Vietnam w thdraw troops from the South. However, no rein replacements would be forcements or a c c o r d tentative does and pei 'ted prohibi'ed from Cambodia or Laos sn . seeking * nu id be n sanctuary The Fnite*, .S'ates would be hailed from to Sa.gor» extending nr * military aul government though, replace could, It wornuiit items °n a one for one nasi —th# same provision that would apt»y to Hanoi. A ne? : aul to? ei - R Ccmtmiinist negona?<»rs gave up ma or ground in dropping demands F at 7' leu he banished and tha? the existing Sa.g- r» government be scrapped. fr,’ t ' Hanoi had warned the settlement to be signed by representatives of North A et nam and * the United States. Washington holding out for a four-way signing that would a san involve the Sa y-m government and the National Liberation Front Forward or Back? W h ic h W a y Do es The Clock Turn? By JOHN FLITE DI KF Drive-in movie owners ham It, e~r!v risers to acknowledge im and nobody « really «u-e whether it - spring forward, fall bark or spring bat k and fall forward it, oldtim er rcfn.se resent Daylight Sa nigs Time ends Sunday t Saturday rn got v en morning you sc your< ock back0) tor is The tv I cr a sear r Ma! of nurring tb# clock forward or backward one hour may -e boggle the minds of rn : of the off ti is of ti e campus will nmpit.s” od or 7 in- day moming, Curt A’on Bieber stein, assistant director of Physical Plan’ s. I. The master clocks will be set ba k on# hour. (Write that down > So. just make sure ti,a* your own clock is one liour slower bx Mondov r? »m.ng so you won I tie out of step with the rest o? s of the worn! And ’ ere u extra hour of sleep to look forward to n Saturday night. (And who doesn't need it ?> i»e 'Peace W i t h Honor' C len ch 'd # hit fist to emphasize his ( ’cst com m ent abou t the latest V ietn am p eace moves President Nixon fells an airp o rt crow d in H untington, W . Va., I am co n fid en t ending the war wPl be on terms to pro d uce p e ace with honor. ' — UFI T«l«9l' Campus Reaction Myriad Ut RFTVV MATL SIMI G U L F I K U T A Texan S ta ff Writers Reaction from the University community to Hanoi's expression of i’s wilUngnes# t 1 sign a peace agre*‘nam’ Thursday, ranged fnxn sui prise to mild apathy to dislielief Many people hadn t heard enough about the proposal to formulate an opinion. " I haser,*t heard anything about it,” said Valet e v r.nwnght of the C >mmittee to Re elect the President late Thursday af* ternooii radio or “ We dont have a television at the campaign headquarters, %* I just don’t know. But I think I’ sounds great ” A so voicing surprise m er the Nor?h Abet nan es# pcnpoaal was Dor Waggoner, head of the Vietnam Veterans for the the Tres dent and also a member of Comr? ” ec to Reelect the President He Iu d he hadn't l?eard about the incident, exi-ept campaign hr* riqua rf Mrs for nome talk af “ I THINK it's a fine id< < f tliev can a tually hold free cie- tions,” Waggoner « v * {•ears* pi op-iv.)I I referring to the ene'ic-wi gov’emment *h Is part of the free cie tior.s w “ Bu’ free electians ai'en’t possible if C •mniuni-’*. have any control o%er the South Vietnamese po'iple,” he continued. “ The people of South Vietnam must have I t?e their own minds, Huh »u* pressure from the Communists.0 right to make up Several University faculty merntiet'S, It mg lie,in James Roach of the Division of c mtpenitivf and General Studies a*d Dr Walt Rostov, professor of econ r? *s and h -torv, said they had not had t ’ne to dexelop any opinion of the situation. I.RT School of Public Affairs Dean John Cl moussi s-.id he felt the informaMon is “ all garb ed. T haren’t read anything on It, and h ic only heard snatches of news reports •TM \ K R Y hopeful that we are close am *o an agreement ” Gronouskl said e o n r e r n e d , hoiAmer, about (Henry) Kissinger’* Staten ent tha* there a e vtijj mr* e things to br resoh e,i l>efone a set­ tlement ran be reached. “ When I was ambassador to Pe.1 a rd fin IV A : ?} ere were some things to he roc >]\ed be * ween the United States and Poland, and they still haven’t been resolved.” Wayne Beverly, a member of the Austin V ct nam Veterans Against tie M r < V- V NWI. expressed serious doubts ' it a peace vet't^ p n t ums near “ We’d beard there would be a ce r ■ r% Nov. I, but we are very' skeptical. If there U a settlement, of course I’m very happy; m happy for the Vietnamese people.” he is purely “ However, T think this said. political on Nixon’s part.” TMK v IS \ V \W member RH I definitely “ not a humane gesture He could have ended the war the day he got into office ” '* Beverly said he “ wouldn’t b« a bit sur­ prised” if a cease-fire were to go ii 'n effe t for a short time befoic t r r option, only to have Nixon decide after the election that a cease-fire was not working and F at the uar would have to continue. peak'rig f " Be e; - “ All of us- feel ♦ ' ere are sh ii a lo? of Viet na ms that could happen." d T e * cr ti .1 c st ll reeds to ’earn flint ■ Viet rani ••as no? a r? is? ake. hut a e n- ‘iou policy'' of the U.S. government. he s.'.d. “ There’s a prc.sihilu\ the VV AW w id e r - b * * e d m a y veter r s' organ;/ Mon if the war ends,” h e added. o p f? b o re r o f a •IIM ARNOLD u.d left Harmon, both fit Me I • iversiM McGovern Gimpaign also felt that the ter'at ne peace settlement is conin I e j hy politics. “ This is the kind U' rtun e thing we can’t control.” of Id v. h r e rig *he prcximify of the pe ce announcement to the election. Ha?’r ■ I .'reed, v- ■ g, “ Look u hat happene?! in l'thk The sip e type of rhetoric was tieing t‘ row! ar Hind then I don’t see any • •<> Ti e North Vietnamese merely u mt Nixon to dump Thieu.” e . r Sieve Bu w ki, a member of VV AW, Direct A1 a ion ar-d the National Lawyers Guild, ils» was dubious “ I think the war being over is a fine thing in that fewer Vietnamese will lie d ing. but the causes of war v ill go on until there is a fun- cl < en F foreign poll y,” he said, go Hi i Park, Museum Considered For Downtown Purpose of Area Undecided R\ < NMD ll K I l l I Talk of the development of a park in ■ s i st lith Street ,t ,. the downtown I front ? e ( • In a reeoiutton before adjoumiftff fkrt, e*{ ft»e State to go elsewhere with po rf, »e*J tor t i e i t e lf, the H use and * c* Highway Drp,*rtme» its 11-story h< Jq Rite and Ie e the b f; n f O'! ? - I , , f t I a M UH u '.It U a jM to l f e d H e m ole fica i?it.it ti ( Ht.er mc s t . ,i i * »*r * e « n t r we r , ,f * ie ti t% mmds D e «t»f>arently i n ** t,, leg ., ,. Anaeig lear? • j T Daily Tex rn possible use «' Ii i* [a , J |j. g ( • , iei»s| ate an exetxjfise office I-. Mc j m iaing Kfia. es and a ten l f » IS -’ive -taff, ,* a alate nitrneum t anet in , d e\ e h »t»r. e • :i* I i ft- • A m<»«1e; abe * , tx Mist ru< ted i j l i m t l ^ l , 'ie of one of tie prof* scil tourist Lr fort? at ion buihUng, Ti e ni? dei presently gs housed J«a* Wyatt of in i t. H tise Bloomington, * » *M resolution, along w, Rep Bn Bv Hum ut Amarillo, which den ,»? pie Mig ti . itep.tj'Uunii bewdt|u«utefi be bw-U * a y the oftuxt of Hep intr al *n*t • . , u , dew, pment J,,m i a <1 ncighlKinng e.sewhe;e sn it would not hkxk ti e view bet wen) Governor's the M c sum lf ut the Capitol, Wyatt emphasized the pixn* -c I alternative st rued ut c*, prevente DANCING CLASSES For Preiehoo! t Older Student! Registration Now In Progress TOE • TAP • BALLET BATON T W ILLIN G ACROBATICS - MODERN JA Z Z CLASSES TO TRAIN THOSE DESIRE TO BE DANCE INSTRUCTORS A !tin 'i most prominent danee-jchool for 41 year!. 472-9086 453-3706 345-3720 E N R O L L T O D A Y one n e a r yo u r ho m e. C hasse! in fille d . C a ll m o rn in g ! a n d e v e n in g s o n ly ! in o ne o f our 4 I'm ite d :a rg e & i p a c l o u i A u itin S c h o o l!, lir e . E a c h c i a ! ! clo sed when im Smith OKs UT, Tech Refund HOUSTON (Spl.) - Gov. Preston Smith signed a bill Thursday that will restore $5 million in the University of Texas Medical School construction fund and $7.5 million to the Texas Tech construction fund. The borrowed money had been used by the state in February, 1970, to avert a welfare cutback. Smith also signed a bill that will create a commission to plan a deepwater port off the Texas coast. Tlie governor told a Houston audience al the signing of the superport hill, “ We may look back on this event today and rank it...with the Supreme Court’s decision on the tidelands case nearly two decades ago.” The tidelands case involved the ownership of mineral rights on the Texas coast. The Supreme Court decision 'Smith referred to established Texas’ sovereign right to 12 miles of offshore land. legislation making In San Antonio following the Houston signings, the governor added his signature to the Texas Film Commission a permanent state agency. The commission, established on a temporary basis IR months ago, works to attract movie producers to Trxas for on-location filming. has been isolated too long and a vote for a third party candidate would only serve to continue to the set us apart total from American stream of life,” he said. C a m p a i g n i n g in Houston, R e p u b l i c a n Henry Grover promised to veto any state in­ come tax proposals if elected governor. SMC Rally Raps President Decision '7 2 Nixon Still Ahead Compiled From Texan News Services Poll The Gallup reported Thursday that Democrat Cicoree McGovern is continuing to pain but still remains 2.1 percentage points behind President Nixon rn their raw for the presidency. The over-all standings showed Nixon with 59 percent. to 36 p e r c e n t McGovern. for McGovern’s greatest gains were among manual workers, where Nixon leads only by 5 points—49 to 44 percent. In Texas, William P. Clements Jr., co-chairman of the Texas Com m ittee for the Reelection of the President, announced a “ get the vote” cff >rt. saying, nut “ Statistics show that without a s u c c e s s f u l turnout effort President Nixon can be defeated in Tex.-u^ taping a f\at McGovern s p e n t Thursday television morning program to simulate a dcfbate with Nixon by matching recent films of Nixon positions with live McGovern comments. attempts for Sen. -John Tower made ap­ pearances In Midland, where he “ deregulation” of called in we I ll lead gas prices and Lubbock, where he said the cotton loan level should be raised. Barefoot Sanders, Democratic the senatorial candidate, said Justice Department should in­ vestigate what he called Tower's franked mail “ use of his re-election privileges campaign,” in his Fjuir <’ruz, chairman of the H a r r i s County legislative delegation, urged minorities to vote for Democrat I>olph Briscoe. “ The Mexican-American in Texas With spokesmen vowing that the “ next months are going to the be antiwar in crucial m o v e m e n t , ’ ' the Student fSMC) Mobilization Committee held an antiwar march Thursday night, despite indications that an end to the war is near. “ The SMC is going to work until the U.S. is completely out of Indochina.” said Derek Jef­ fers, SMC amt Young Socialist Alliance member. Earlier, Ann MacDonald of the SMC had said she believed talk of peace was a “ rumor to defuse the antiwar movement.” About 50 people marched from the Union Patio to the ROTC B u i l d i n g . The march was preceded by a talk from Dr. Pat Knippa, assistant dean of social and behavioral sciences, a film on Vietnam atrocities and a performance by the Teatro Chicano. A noon rally which had been planned was canceled because of oQ Pick up a Rock-Ola Three-rak for $9.99. ( T h r e e 8 - t r a c k t a p e s fo r $ 9 .9 9 ) W ith valu es lik e t h e s e , no w o n d e r R o c k -O la is A u s t in ’s m o s t u n d e r s t o o d t a p e s t o r e . G e t any 3 s in g le t a p e s in e n t ir e s to c k fo r o n ly $ 9 .9 9 . lf o n e of y o u r t h r e e t a p e s is a d o u b le , a d d 4 9 c to th e p r ic e . S o try R o c k -O la , t h e u n - s o ft d rin k th a t's e a s y o n y o u r s t o m a c h a n d m u s ic to y o u r e a r s . Drink in the sounds of" « TRA .K TAPE ST ORE 913 W .4TH rain. lacking “ Peace comes at a timely moment for Mr. Nixon, but then no one has accused him of being in pure at heart or p o l i t i c a l motiviations.” Dr. Kruppa said. “ Kissinger is saying to North Vietnam, if you’re going to buy (the peace proposals) buy before Nov. 7 or the deal won’t l)e so good.” She emphasized that “ our responsibilities would not end with a negotiated peace. “ The problems of reintegrating soldiers into society, securing amnesty for deserters and draft dodgers and rebuilding the ecology of Vietnam will still be of concern to those who have fought against the w-ar, she said. It was announced after the film that the SMC plans a “ Trick or Treat for Peace” on Halloween. TSP Review Panel Upholds Decision Til? review committee of the Texas Student Publications Board upheld Thursday a decision to bar publication of photographs of male and fe m a le nudes in Pearl, The Daily Texan magazine supplement. Pearl editor Michael Patterson said he would appeal the ruling to the entire TSP Board, as provided in the Declaration of Trust governing TSP. Meeting with Patterson were Richard Elam, assistant dean of Pie School of Communication, and G a r y Baldridge, journalism student. The third member of the review committee. San Antonio Light Managing Editor William Bellamy, was not present. Patterson's plans to publish a portfolio of 12 biack-ftpd-whue photos by Marion Taylor were rejected Wednesday by Robert M i l b u r n , editorial manager. Texan FII a rn said tho review com­ mittee was not ruling on the artistic value of the photographs. “ The question is whether Pearl, as a supplement to The Texan, bv Texan should be ruled editorial policy, I think we all agree that you don't see much of In a newspaper.” he said. type of thing this In his appeal to the committee, Patterson emphasized the ‘T » ic philosophic difference” between a new sp aper and a m agazine. “ On the one hand,” he said, “ a newspaper I* concerned with the presen’a (ion of news as clearly and accurately as possible under the limitation of time and space. On the other hand, a magazine has the time and tie space to reflect, to develop Ideas, to expound upon the news, to create and to experiment.” Patterson said he hopes !lo TSP Board 'rill den! with the issue before Wednesday, the d it# of the m agazines deadline for its Nov. 1.3 issue. Alka Seltzer drug department specials Oral B Toothbrushes sizes 40 and 60 ta b le ts Alberto Balsam Shampoo, 7 oz. 12 fo il-se a le d 39' 6 6 c sire Rapid Shave (lime only) 11 oz. 53' 98c v a lu e Foot Guard 6 oz. S2C$1.39 size Pepto-Bismol 8 oz. S7C 86c S2C $1,09 size $1.49 s ir* $1,04 University Co-Op Supply Department Specials good October 26, 27, and 28th o n * hour f r * * pa rkin g w ith pu reh a s* o f 12.00 or m o r* Bank A rn a rm a rd and M a » t» r C h a r g * w » ‘c o m * BUDGET TAPES AID RECORDS Brings You Low Everyday Prices PLUS SPECIALS EVERY WEEK FULL H O U SE J. Giles B a n d js r'l h a l l & j I C( J MPA R E * SPECIALS e v e r y W E E K j • George Carlin C LA S S CLOWN • <• steer * “ 1 * i In Rork ( — > Ii 4 : 7 7— ^ OPEN 10-9 472-4680 Ii FR EE P A R K IN G A T L A N T I C DANNY O KEEF BATDORF& RODNEY SALE PRICE 5.98 LIST BUDGET TAPES A N D RECORDS 3004 GUADALUPE SPECIAL O F WEEK G O O D THRU THURS. SPEC IA L OF WEEK G O O D THRU THURS P a g e 2 F r i d a y O c t o b e r 2 7 , 1372 THE DAILY TEXAN 4 * McGovern country rock fest ZUKER PARK 12-10 ADMISSION: $2.00 lots of beer and food available at the park Paid for by UMC — Lucy Hack, Treaiurar T h e Da il y T e x a n Sta ff editorials and opinions 1Peace at hand' Dr. Henry Kissinger’s admission Thursday that “ peace is at hand,” following a Lite night broadcast from Radio Hanoi revealing an im­ pending cease-fire in Indochina, has left most of us with the difficult task of grappling with the concept of peace in Southeast Asia. What was inconceivable little more than a week ago now seems an emerging reality. the Saigon regime. To The agreement is yet to be completed because the United States is having “ difficulties” with in speculation, those “difficulties would seem to be an allowance that 150,000 North Vietnamese troops now in the South may remain despite the withdraw al of American forces, and Gen. Thieu’s absolute rejection of any coalition government, which runs counter to the proposed election of a c o a l i t i o n government in South Vietnam under international auspices. indulge But beyond the context of the proposed agreement itself, there is a much more troubling question. And it cannot be answered here today, tomorrow or for quite some time. For years, this newspaper has supported unilateral withdrawal of all American forces and all American aid to the Saigon government that the United States not be a party to the death and destruction in Indochina. Furtherm ore, The Texan has believed the U.S. govern­ ment should take positive action to end hostilities between foreign parties to this conflict, the goal being peace, an end to the killing and accommodation of the competing political interests in South Vietnam. T o d a y there appears to be genuine light at the end of the proverbial tunnel. Now the inevitable question arises: Which Is more important in evaluating this development? That we are about to reach this goal of American withdrawal and cessation of hostilities? Or that for four >ears the U .S. has e x a c e r b a te d an unbearable conflict by invading Cambodia, bombing civilian areas of the North, laying waste to the South, mining Haiphong harbor and Increasing hostilities? By how much outrage should our joy be tempered? Undoubted!> this question would have arisen. That the nation is so close to a presidential election only brings the question more to the forefront. It would be easy to let cynicism run ram pant and ac­ credit the settlement purely to political motivations on President Nixons part, to eliminate that possibility. though Kissinger offered compelling arguments Still, there is an election Nov. 7 and when making a judgment in the race between Mr, Nixon and Sen. McGovern, each will have to decide for himself how this arm istice should he seen within the context of four years of war. Wrestling with lhat question may sear many consciences. Playing politics No sooner had Henry Kissinger announced the Imminence of an agt cement between Hanoi and Washington than Republicans began using the hope of peace to muffle George McGovern. U.S. Sen. Robert Dole, chairman of the Republican National Committee, Thursday sent a telegram to the Democratic presidential candidate asking him not to comment, further on the Vietnam war, as such remarks, he said, might jeopardize an impending peace. In other, words, McGovern could be committing acts against the state if he didn’t keep quiet Dole’s advice is the same sort of undemocratic rhetoric that we used to hear when Lyndon B. Johnson was president and criticizing the w ar unacceptable. Even in 1968 candidate Richard Nixon ad­ monished Huller! Humphrey for announcing a plan for peace in Viet­ nam during that campaign. Over the last four years military operations by this country have been stepped up, with destruction resulting that cannot be well estimated. A presidential election will take place in a little more than a week, and the last thing that should happen Is for the incumbent’s campaigners to try to silence the opposing candidate by Intimidation. McGovern by now may have little to say regarding Vietnam, since he has said that it would be worth risking his campaign if the end was peace. Nevertheless it is uncomforting to hear Dole ask for silence from McGovern, as if the Democratic nominee was willing to promote the w ar’s continuation for political gain. Dole’s “playing politics” we can do without. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Stud e n t New spaper at U T A u stin E D IT O R ............................................................................................ David Powell MANAGING E D IT O R .........................................................................Cliff Avery ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS .................Tom Kleinworth, John Tilly NEWS E D IT O R ............................................................................ Karen Justice ASSISTANT TO l l IE E D IT O R ..................................................Quin Mathews SPORTS EDITOR ............................................................................ Alan Truex AMUSEMENTS EDITOR .......................................................... Erie Leibrock FEATURES EDITOR .............................................................Suzanne Schwartz City Editor .................................... ................................................................... Debbie White ....................................................................................................... Bruce Goldfaden Reporter Jeanne Janes, Betsy Hall, Gayle Reaves News Assistants Editorial As. Lstant .................................................................................... Randy Fitzgerald Assistant Amusements Editor Ben King Jr. Assistant Sports Editor .................................................................................... Buck Harvey Kristina Paledes Make-up Editor Steve Ttenfrow Third Page Editor Desk Editors ........................................... Larry Fuller, David Carren, Harriet Hubbard, Leslie Lewin, Nancy Copps Photographers ...................................................................... Mike Robinson, Marlon Taylor O pinions rjxpre. ved those of to e In T he Da iy T ex an the th* r n . tor of i or a re a r tic le an d a re not n ecessarily the those of U n iv ersity ad m in istratio n or the Board of R e­ g en ts. T h e D ally T exan, a student n ew sp ap er a t T h e U n iv ersity of T ex as a t Austin, is pub­ lish ed by T e x a s S tudent P ublications, D raw ­ e r D, U n iv ersity Station. Austin T exas, 7X712. T he D aily T ex an is published Monday, T u es­ d ay W ednesday, T h u rsd ay and F rid ay ex­ ce p t h o lid ay a n d ex a m periods August through May. S eco n d -class p o sta g e paid a t Austin, Tex. N ew s co n trib u tio n s w ill lie accepted by tele­ phone (471-4401), fit th e ed ito rial office (Jo u r­ nalism Building 103) o r a t the new s lab o rato ry • Jo u rn al!• rn Building 102), In q u iries concerning d elivery should be m ad e In Jo u rn a lism Building 107 ( i i i 0244), d isp lay ad v ertisin g In Jo u rn alism Building 111 (471-3227). and classified ad v e r­ tising In Jo u rn a lism Building IOT (471-5214). T he n atio n al ad v ertisin g re p re se n ta tiv e of The Daily T ex an Is N ational E d u catio n al Ad­ v ertisin g S ervice, Inc., 360 L exington Ave., New York, N.Y., 10017. T he Dally T ex an su bscribes to T he Asso­ ciated P ress. T he New York T im es N ew s S er­ vice and U nited P re s s In tern atio n al T elephoto S ervice. T he T exan Is a m em b er of th e Asso­ the S outhw est J ' urna- ciated C ollegiate P ress, llsm C onference and the T ex as D aily N ew s­ p a p e r A ssociation. Page 4 Friday, October 27, 1972 T h e D axut T e x a n Illicit drugs By Jack Anderson (c) 1972 United Feature Syndicate Inc. Lust summer, we quoted an Internal White House memo which strongly refuted rumors that China was heavily Involved bi the International flow of illicit drugs. Recently, we obtained a secret intelligence report which backs up the White House memo. state: Tlie document’s authors “We beleve that opium production and con­ sumption is under effective control inside the People’s Republic of China and that any possible illicit export bs in minuscule amounts.” Tile intelligence report concludes: “There Is no reliable evidence that Communist China has either engaged in or sanctioned the Illicit export of opium or its derivatives to the Free World.” * * strict control over Tile Air Transport Association Our sources tell us that die Chinese haw* three-pronged antidrug program. First, a th# they exercise cultivation of opium. Second, they have instituted a vast program to educate the public on the evils of drugs. Finally, they have rehabilitated old opium addicts and A put them to work. * Ss proclaiming in newspaper ads around th* country that airlines have put an end to jet aircraft, but smoke emissions from environmentalists tell us that by getting rid of the smoke tile airlines have actually caused the amount of Invisible and highly toxic pollutants from to In­ crease. D evito ATA’s Latest ad campnlm, the Northern Resc rh O rporatir n predicts a 200 percent increase in invisible nitrogen oxide cr fissions from jet engines by the year 1980. lot enrines ★ if it The Island of Madagascar, which has served for years as a strategic diplomatic! base for the West in the Indian Ocean, may *-oon ojien its doors to the Russians and Chinese, according to an intelligence r e p o r t . Madagascar was solidly pro American until P re dent Nixon ap­ pointed Anthony Marshall, a political con­ tributor, to replace David King as am ­ bassador. King's friendly tie^ at all levels of the government were lost when Marshs TI Island’s new took command. Now, military theft* are rulers commitments to the W est the reassessing Letters to the editor Firing Line l e t t e r s should: • Be typed triple-spaced. • Be 25 line* or lest. • Include name, address, and phons number of contributor. M a il letters to The Firing Line, Th# Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, T M r (Amended) TPI-J hr Af Oyy- The firing line Pot prisoner asks v/hy To the editor: Many of us here in the Texas Department of Corrections are wondering lf and when the are changed, will it help those of us presently confined for possession of m arijuana? cwt cerning marijuana laws T am serving 11 years for possession of four and a half ounces and now have three years flat serve:!, and presently I’m un for parole. It has been a bitter experience for me as well as for the others who have lost a considerable amount of faith in the Justice of our judicial system. T feel no need rf rehabilitation because T feel I’ve committed no crime worthy of ll years. How is marijuana considered more dangerous than crimes of violence? This puzzles us because there are crimes committed by people such as robbery, m urder and rape til at have less time than we have. B I T T E R N E S S and confusion hold dominion over us. It’s hard to believe we have this law in Texas when 48 other states have changed their laws, some to nothing more than a fine. I am a college student and have a family of my own and this not only affects me but reflects deeply on my family. There is an urgent need to reconsider the severity of laws three years out of step with the rest of America. those BY CONFINING for mere possession of weed, they don’t solve the situation; more so they influence crime by putting us here. I never knew how to murder by contract., hot-wire cars or crack a safe until I came here. Is this the answer in solving the problem of marijuana offenders? Ifs time someone knew pot prisoners never have a nice day. Danny J. Woodall No. Z159S2 Coftield Unit Tower's gap To the editoi: Robert W. Grace, in his Firing Tine letter of Oct. 21, says that Barefoot Sarders has facts” about John been “ confusing Tower. Mr. Grace to set us straight. is going the However, what to “ confuse the facts” and further contribute to Tower’s credibility gap. lie does really is nE BEGINS by telling us that Tower is “ the ranking member of the Armed Services Committee” and consequently has been compelled to make numerous overseas tours. That Mr. Tower is the committee's ranking member will come as a surprise to that venerable Republican, Margaret Cl lase Smith. True, Mr. Tower has made a number of overseas military' junkets, paid for by the taxpayers and amply photographed, as we have campaign television spots. Such junkets are normally made when Congress is not in session and offer no justification for his excessive ab­ senteeism from the Senate. in Tower’s seen THEN THERES die pathetic claim that “ President Nixon ii as asked Tower to the White House more than 14 times for private conferences...” It sounds like e teenage girl confiding to her diary how many times the boy of her dreams has smiled at her. It is hardly an excuse for missing numerous Senate votes. Even the most that casual Washington observer knows Nixon normally schedules any meetings with congressional leaders early the morning, so as not to conflict with the congres-. onal schedule. in If Mr. Grace really wants to give us the fa d s, he might tell us who paid for the 44-pago “Directory of Government Services for Senior Citizens,” ma ed free by Tower under his franking privilege and featuring an introductory' letter from Tower boasting of his (recent) support for in- creased Social Security benefits. Or he might tell us how, the face of his demagogic use of the busing issue in the campaign, he can claim in his campaign brochure for blacks that he, “ advocates equal opportunity for quality education for all students” and “ that the schools of our nation must be color-blind when making plans and alig n in g stu d e n t.” in FT H. Pnrivis Cliches To the editor: Wliat point was Prof. Nakadate hying to make in his piece on Norman Mailer (Guest Viewpoint, Oct. 23)? After reading it three times I had the vague notion that he was putting Mailer down, but Nakadate’s prose was so backhanded and obscure that I couldn’t be sure. Perhaps the pier* was a satire on Mailer’s style. I don’t know', since I’ve found Mailer's writing too in­ voluted to read much of It. so, BIT I THOUGHT he was brilliant In person, and somebody else must have too, since several hundred thought pr'ople followed him to the Union Building after his him with lecture and plied questions for more than an hour. Many of those people were standing and could there was no since not hear well microphone, yet few drifted away before Mailer quit. Mailer said Rome thought­ provoking things. Too bad Nakadate bow fit to record only the cliches. Angly-James fire up campaigns Henry Staten TA, English Journalism Building (03. Tex.; or bring letters to the Texan offices. By Randy Fitzgerald Austin’s only Republican state legislator since Reconstruction Is attempting to fulfill a long ambition. He intends to help forge a two-party state In Texas by successfully challenging the state’s longest entrenched Democrat officeholder, State Treasurer Jesse James. Calling his campaign “ factually orien­ ted,” State Rep, Maurice Angly of Austin has launched a hard-hitting “ expose” of what he claims to be Jam es’ indirect in­ volvement the Sharpstown banking scandal. Jam es on the other hand, Is doing little active personal campaigning and uses one word to describe Angly’s accusations— ‘lies.** in A VC, LY STRESSES his revelations are b ase d on “ what Is public record,” and not on Jam es replies in kind he Is innocent cf wrongdoing and claims Angly is twisting the facts. unsubstantiated allegations. “ It La my belief that records both In the deed of trust records of Travis County the and the state auditor's report and testimony out at Abilene, when taken together, make a pretty clear picture of just how corruptly Jesse Jam es has run this off!re,” said Angly in an Interview, raising his eyebrows as he spoke. “ Jam es did not to my knowledge receive any shares of National Bankers Life stock, Jam es quite frankly took cash,” the 31- year-old Anglv charged. TRAVIS COUNTY DEED of trust records show Jam es and his wife, Zana, sold Lake Travis lodge holdings to a Johnny Attaway of Houston during the period of time stock manipulations were being made by Houston banker Frank Sharp. “ Attaway purchased that land tract a t Lake Travis lodges from Jam es financed by $400,000 loaned by the Sharpstown State Bank,” said Angly, quoting from memory deed of trust exerpts. it.” in apparent reference to “ No one has ever lost money on replied Jam es, the Land sales. “ He has even had to change his story,” said Jam es, who carefully avoids men­ tioning Angiy by name. “ It was $350,000 and not $400,000 which was loaned by the bank.” “ Lf you check the deed of records you will find there were seven different doxie —T ex an Staff Photo Maurice An gly executed, scattered out over a month and a half period of time dated on .separate dates, conveying Jam es’ interest in a land subdivision to the sam e Attaway. This time Jam es was acting as president of Lake Travis Enterprises and the financing At­ taway obtained was from National Bankers in notes of $200,000 and $300,000, Life making a total of $900,000 In loans made to Attaway. Jam es, of course, as the seller received the proceeds,” said Angly. Angly cued testimony from tile Abilene trial of former House Speaker Gus Mut- scher to bolster his theory of collusion between Jam es and financier Sharp. In particular, he used the testimony of Sharp’s former private secretary, Mrs. Sharon Gill eon, to show Jam es was “ on the phone back and forth continuously with Sharp” In the days preceding the loons Sharp made to finance land purchases from James. Sharp was tho only man who had authority to make Sharpstown Bank loans of such a large amount, Angly said of the land purchases. “ I never talked to Sharp at all about that loan. He’s lying.” an indignant Jam es the Angly ac­ told of responded when cusation. OVE REASON GIVEN for Sharp’s ap­ parent willingness to shell out his bank’s money to finance the purchase of Jam es real estate was the large amount of state money Angly into says was Sharpstown State Bank. funneled “ During the 12 months preceding the stock fraud scandal, the total litcren.se In total deposits at the Sharpstown State Bank was around $5 million. Of that amount, $4 million represented additional state funds given the bank by State Treasurer Jesse Jam es,” saki Angly, reciting state auditor reports. It was these state funds, Angly claims, which enabled Sharp to have the money on hand to make loans to those Involved In the stock fraud scandal. “You can ask any banker and they will tell you this is absurd. No other hank has received this kind of preferential treatment. These monies sat on deposit there with Sharp for a period of two and a half years until shortly before the bank closed. The lost over a million taxpayers of Texas dollars at that bank In earnings we should have earned but didn’t because at Sharp­ stown we didn’t even earn the prevailing interest rate. We earned only an average of 2.93 percent when the prevailing rate was 7 percent.” “This Is not true. Sharpstown State Bank was Hie .second largest state bank In Texas in capital and surplus. We put that money In one and a half years before I sold my property. We had money in all 500 banks In Texas,” Jam es replied. In response to charges he cost state taxpayers millions of dollars, Jam es said he has Instead saved state taxpayers $50 million in the last “ three or four years.” “ I saved the taxpayers $9 million just last April,” said James. ONE IRONIC NOTE Angly likes to add to his story linking Jam es with the principal character's in the scandal concerns the friendship James and Sharp purportedly enjoyed. It was Jam es who first introduced Sharp to then House Speaker Mutscher. It was Mutscher who commented after his stock that fraud conspiracy conviction “ there are bigger fish” not ye? brought to trial. says Angly said he fears the hanking Industry will pump unlimited money into the James this same money campaign. He enabled the Incumbent to critspend his opponents in tile May Democratic primary by 2 to 1. "Jam e s with his ability to collect IOU’* the bankers who received political favors from him In the form of State monies being left interest free over the years, Is certainly going to be able to outspend me.” Angly predicted from But Jam es didn’t agree. “ I’m running a positive campaign. All he ran do is make corruption accusations. Andy voted for both those Sharpstown bills. He's never been progressive," speaking of Angly’s unabashed conservatism. Jam es said “I never borrowed a nickel from Sharp­ stown State Bark. and I’m not guilty of anything corrupt,” Jam es repeated adding emphasis. LAWYER ANGLY is not concerned (bat is defying politic; I odds by running he statewide as a conservative Republican against a Democrat. “ I was elected to the House in 1908 with 5,3 percent of the vote when Nixon was getting 38 percent In Travis County. I know voters will spilt a ticket,” the House Dirty 30 member said. He feels sure students, “once they know of Jam es' role in the scandal,” will vote for him even though he admits he Is a conservative, “But I'm not of the ultra­ conservative stripe,” he Is quirk to qualify. (He calls himself conservative in spending m atters but en­ vironmental issues.) liberal” on “ fairly “ You know,” Angly said with a sigh and slight grin, “you would have to be 54 years of age or older to have ever voted for •any incumbent state treasurer than Jess* Jam es. I was 18 years old when I first heard of him. Why even his name, with the outlaw connotations, has a genuin* appeal. “ As state treasurer,” he continued, this time with a stern face, “ I Intend to put state monies parked at various favored banks in the state back to work for th* people.” James, also with a stern face, contended that money has been and will continue ta be “at work for the people.” 'Have you no sense of decency, sir? them namese would use for bargaining purposes. T hat from for the man whose Nguyen Van Th jeu, however the bargaining with Thieu turns out now, kept the prisoners in their cam ps for four more years. concern recently—the The great moment of the Armv- M cCarthy hearings cam e back to ! day when ! m e Josepn N, Welch, the Army counsel, responded to an act of m eanness by Sen. Joseph M c­ C arthy by asking him : “ Have you no sense of decency, Sir, at I long la st? ” The question really | tile judgm ent sought a Am erican people, as it would if It were put to the men who hold i power ut Washington today. from C ooked FRESH Continually! 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His wife, Louise, has waited for six and o n e - h a I f years now with •stonishing strength, wisdom and even humor. in the audience Louise Mulligan w as the •udience at the S latier Hotel here when P resident Nixon spoke to the fam ilies of prisoners and men missing in Southeast Asia. Most of rose and ap­ plauded when he finished, but she stayed seated and silent. She saw no reason, as she put it, to ap­ plaud a man who had continued this terrible w ar for four more years. After the P resid en t’s speech Mrs. Mulligan went out of the ballroom to telephone a friend. When she finished, she noticed a man watching her—the only other person in the hall. He was carry in g a waDda-talkls with • receiver button In his ear, like the Secret Service men who accom pany th e President. As she walked out, she heard him say into the sending unit, "She is now leaving th e hall . . .** and magazines produce evidence tying him to one alleged saboteur in particular. The public m ight Ik* full statem ent of facts—an inquire' or a detailed, categorical denial of th e charges. thought entitled to a MRS. MUI,LIO AN told some of the other wives about her ex­ perience. saying how ironic she th at we w ere thought for supposed dem ocracy in South Vietnam and then found things like this h ap ­ pening at home. fighting it w as to be is about p ar for What was done to Louise the Mulligan course in official Washington today—par for political d e c e n c y Visiting a n d for Washington a is d e p r e s s i n g business. Even d i s a g r e em e n t with Nixon's policies cannot prepare one for the atm osphere of this city: it is ugly. It is sham eless. these days candor. The P resid en t’s appointm ents secretary is accused of helping to arran g e a program of nasty s a b o t a n e the D em ocratic P arty. Newspapers directed at But no. evidence THE WHITE HOISE P ress S e c r e t a r y , Ronald Ziegler, refuses through a long briefing to com m ent on the substance of the charges. He says the White to House will pay no attention or “ h earsay ” from unidentified sources. Tn other words, it will not even look into charges against the man who guards the door of the president of the United States unless they are proved as they w’ould have to be in a court of law. If that applied, virtually no standard governm ent corrupt ion would ever be officially investigated. T here a re too m any sawdust In Washington now, men men with nothing inside—no lim its of ch a racter to w hat they will do for political ends. If it works, lf you can get away with It, do it: that is the only standard. the Of course It Is the president h i m s e l f who sets tone, of principle or m ere political ad­ vantage. The stan d ard s of this P r e s i d en t w ere revealingly displayed in that speech to the prisoners’ families. AT ONE POINT Nixon reached out to introduce the subject of am nesty for those who refused to fight in Vietnam. To gran t am nesty, he said, would be “ the most im m oral thing I could think of.” Tile sentim ent w as nicely judged for that audience—people whose husbands or sons fought the and suffered for a u d i e n c e mostly not rem em ber was Nixon’s statem ent ‘ last Jan u ary that after the w ar “ I for one would I k* very liberal with regard to am nesty.” it. What did Then a t the end cam e this j prom ise: "T here la nothing th at T want m ore than to bring your loved ones home and I will never let you down.” T hat from the m an who m ade the prisoners a political thereby assured the North Viet issue that and Revenge by the Candidates By Russell Bak e r (e) 1972 New York Time** News Service WASHINGTON—If President is r e j e c t e d he is going Nixon to get those bum s on w elfare If Sen. McGovern is elected he in ta going to get the Pentagon who are wasting billions of dollars. those bums is If Nixon If McGovern re-eiected he Is fom g to get those rich college-kid dem onstrators who burn the flag. is elected he is going .South rich Vietnamese generals who send their profits the heroin from trad e to numbered bank accounts In Zurich. to get those IF NIXON is re-e]e<"fpd he is those Judges who thereby going to get tolerate perm i ssn e n e s causing crim e in the street*. If McGovern La elected he is going to get those generals who t ol era te perm issi veness, th ereb v causing unauthorized bombings and dangerous breakdowns in civilian control of the m ilitary. Is ree lec ted he Is going to get Justice W'illlam O. Douglas. If Nixon If McGovern Is elected he Is going to get Spiro T. Agnew. If Nixon is re-elected he Is to get those hippies who the work going have no respect for ethic. IE McGo v e r n is e w te d he is g nng to get tho*** millionaires and fat cat corporations who got all the tax breaks. If Nixon is re-elected he is goring to let Spiro Agnew get .Sander Vanocur and The Washington Post. If McGovern is elected he is Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle going to let Sen. Fulbright get Henry Kissinger. is If Nixon re-elected he is going to get those kids who left the country instead of going lo Vietnam to fight. If McGovern is elected he Is going to get tiii.se peop.e who to left the White House the W atergate as accessories to burglary. to go If Nixon is re-elected he Is going to get those school buses IF McGo v e r n Is elected he those w'heat to get is going dealers. is If Nixon re-elected he is going to get Ramsey' H a rk , Jane Fonda and anybody else who goes to Hanoi If McGovern IR e]ec+*»d he is going to get William F. Buckley’ and J r ., Sammy Davis anybody by "ju n io r'’ who has 1/ecn osten­ the tatious Jr. else modified em bracing about Nixon ticket. If Nixon is re-elected he Is going to get Daniel Ellsberg. If McGovern Is elected he I* going to get F rank Sinatra. IF NIXON is re elected he is going to get those who have lost faith in America. If Nixon is re-elected he is going to get a lot of people and things you have wanted gotten for tim e, but which couldn’t be gotten during his first term because of delicate political reasons. long a If McGovern is elected he is going to get a lot of people and things you have wanted gotten fo- the last four years. F o r w earisom e N i von. revenge upon injustices, life's re-elect For vengeance upon life's tiring Inevitabilities, elect McGovern. And rem em ber, no m a tte r w hich m an wins, taxes m ust rise TUEYVE PANNED HEIEN 5liJ6£T5T0RY'5 BOOK FROM OUR SCHOOL LIBRARY, AND I CANT ttJHV a 3 ? Fundamental 3 3 Man’* nickname SS Housekeeper a a d . . i as Kane 40 Pteea in line 41 Man a name 4 2 Kind of T*r>' 44 Girt a . . nickname Int# e ft 46 Nov#ft^ 4 7 f ,i*t 4 9 french for "king" I'M 5 0 .MAP I FEEL LIKE 5UIN6 THE SCHOOL BCAR?! TUikiu T ii la x n T n n i f j BEFORE I TAKE AN1? 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Stub-toe con to u r is hand c ra fte d ha rn e ss T he clogs with p a z z a z z in an all-new m ode fo r Fall w ear. 20.00 TEAR DROPS T h e D a i l y T e x a h F r it t e d 27, w i & £ » 1 x The re)xan So o tbsaye IS T H E G A M E S S T E V E R E N F R O W A L A N T R U E X K IR K B O H L S A N T H O N Y S T A ST N Y B U C K H A R V E Y AL C A R T E R Terne at Rice Texan, 55-14 Texas, 24-10 Texas, 26-18 Texas, 28-10 Texas, 27-17 Texan, 31-14 Terne Tech at SMU SMU, 28-21 SMU, 21-20 Texas Torii, 11-27 SMU, 28-24 SMU, 24-21 Texas Tech, 35-31 North Texas S t at Arkansan Arkansas, 35-14 Arkansas, 42-7 Arkansan, 38-6 Arkansas, 56-3 Arkansas, 23-11 Arkansas, 24-7 Texae AAM al Baylor Texas AAM, 21-17 Texas AAM, 14-10 Baylor, 14-10 Texas AAM, 17-14 Texas AAM, 13-12 Texas AAM, 24-26 Houston at Mississippi St. Mississippi St., 22-21 Houston, 21-20 Houston, 21-13 Houston, 31-28 Tennessee, 3-2 Houston, 26-16 TOT at Notre Dame Notre Dame, 35-9 Notre Dame, 35-14 Notre Dame, 42-21 Notre Dame, 21-17 Notre Dame, 35-1 Notre Dame, 38-17 S. Mississippi at Alabama Alabama, 38-6 Alabama, 42-0 Alabama, 24-10 Alabama, 31-14 Alabama, 39-6 Alabama, 42-3 Air Force at Arizona S t Arizona S t , 24-21 Arizona St., 21-17 Arison* S t , 16-11 Arizona State, 23-20 Arizona State, 36-5 Arizona State, 36-21 Colorado at Missouri Colorado, 35-3 Colorado, 28-7 Colorado, 42-14 Colorado, 24-15 Colorado, 26-8 Colorado, 35-10 Minnesota at Michigan Michigan, 21-14 Michigan. 52-0 Michigan, 24-7 Michigan, 28-13 Michigan, 25-14 Michigan, 35-13 Oklahoma State at Nebraska Nebraska, 28-14 N ebraska, 38-7 Nebraska, 28-17 Nebraska, 31-20 Nebraska, 40-10 Nebraska, 36-6 Ohio State at Wisconsin Ohio State, 28-7 Ohio State, 38-6 Ohio State, 27-15 Ohio State, 28-7 Ohio State, 20-2 Ohio State, 28-17 Kansas State at Oklahoma Oklahoma, 27-7 Oklahoma, 41-7 Oklahoma, 45-12 Oklahoma, 45-13 Oklahoma, 56-0 Oklahoma, 45-7 Penn State at West Virginia Penn State, 17-0 Penn State, 21-17 West Virginia, 15-14 Penn State, 24-10 Penn State, 23-18 Penn State, 10-9 Southern CW at Oregon Southern: Cal, S5-7 Sot: thorn Cal, 42-7 Southern Cal, 32-13 Southern 0*1, 49 IO Southern Cal, 33-16 .Southern Cal, 24-26 Washington State at UCLA UCLA, 14-0 UCLA, 28-7 UCLA, 38-16 UCLA, 28-17 UCLA, 31-16 UCLA 28-6 Hawaii at Tennessee Mississippi St., 28-17 Tennessee, 66-0 Tennessee, 31-6 Tennessee, 20-10 Tennessee, 3-2 Tennessee, 24-8 Florida State at Auburn Auburn, 27-24 Auburn, 21-10 Anbnm. 24-21 Auburn, 23-22 Auburn, 15-13 Auburn, 23-21 Detroit at Dallas (pro) Dallas, 21-18 Dallas, 21-17 Dallas, 26-20 Dallas, 21-20 Dallas, 24-19 Detroit, 16-14 Houston at Cincinnati (pro) Cincinnati, 28-10 Cincinnati, 21-21 Cincinnati, 31-13 Cincinnati, 17-14 Cincinnati, 25-15 Cincinnati, 42-1 LAST WEEKI SEASON: 13-7, .650 103-25-2, .804 12-8, .600 102-26, .797 IM , .600 100-28-2, .761 10-10, .500 88-30-2, .763 124?, .600 98-30-2 .765 12-8, .600 95-33 2, .712 12 & Red River 476-8990 | 5501 Airport 452-7104 Canadian Whitley 86 pr..........................5th Canadian Whitley 86 pr. Puerto Rican Rum 80 p r.......................5th Puerto Rican Rum 80 pr BACARDI RUM CANADIAN CLUB CANADIAN I JOHNNIE WALKER JOHNNIE W GALLIANO Red Label Scotch 86 pr. Italian Liqueur 80 pr. .. 5th 5 t h GILBEY'S VODKA YO UR SUNNYBROOK C H O IC E 5 tn Straight Bourbon 80 pr. ® 3.69 5 19 5 .9 9 7.69 2.99 REBEL YELL EARLY TIMES KENTUCKY BEAU BOURBON SUPREME „ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . » 4.69 „ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.95 „ p. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . „> 3 39 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . « , 3.39 M SC0TCH L E G A C Y , B&L % 0 0 M T cog UM Puerto Rican ..5th e l# / 7 IN V E R H O U S E , H I G H L A N D M IS T 5th 80 pr. VAT 69 LANG'S M „. . P r . . . „> 4.79 ... Mb 3.99 M 3.39 SEAGRAM GIN » CHERRY HEERING » „ .m . 8.29 TV V O D K A P f ‘ 3.88 so '' • vw h U k e y W Pf. .. Bth WINDSOR American Wine Sale Extended Thru Sat. Oct. 28 BEER SCHUTZ Case 24 NR Bds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.99 BUDWEISER Case 24 C a n s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.39 BALLANTINES Case 24 C a n s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.56 GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE CONTINUES THE NEW ARMY STORE ON PANTS, SHIRTS, QUILTS, BLANKETS, JACKETS, SLEEPING BAGS, RAIN WEAR OF ALL KINDS, AND MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS TO O NUMEROUS TO MENTION. FIXTURES FOR SALE THE NEW ARMY STORE 517 Congress Next To The Austin National Bank Page 6 F rid a y , October 27, 1372 IH E DAILY TEZAK 1 e V U , r a m tai# e st**: S h a n k e i.iicht- wviehl e O i l - T n n n c d I p p e r Rom# Style* In Rife * *-16 A AA- K E E K NCAA Leaves Olympic Committee KANSAS CITY (A P )—The it* fall m eeting hi N a t i o n a l Collegiate Athletic Olympic Committee, charging the Knoxville, Term., Wednesday. Th# Association announced Thursday short-changed action is effective imm ediately. the U.S. Council at J?* withdraw al from has WATERBED FR A M E, PAD, L IN E R *40 20 Yr./Gfy. L S C C America. Barnes, S a m u e l Chuck Neinas, Big Fight NCAA Conference com rn i r o n e r and a the m em ber of the NCAA Olympic secretary -treasu rer, the Relations Committee, said It I* NCAA continuation the withdraw al will Games, but can no longer accept dramatize* tile ne*xl for Congress to establish some typ# at re m ­ m em bership in mission to look into it is extensively reorganized. USOC said support# the Olympic hoped T h e decision to withdraw was o f the operation its strongly of t'SOC until and the the m ade by the lR-memt*T NCAA organizatam al stric tu re . T H E W H IT E H O U SH I SOG LAVACA 478-0736 Use Texan Classified Ads RED W IN G SHOE STORE fcVM U n m e t Rd. M (v«tee- < h a r y« RanV- A m e r l r a r d THE BIKE RACK 4627 Red River 5 blocks North of Hancock Shopping Center — Take Shut­ tle But route C R to 45th and Red River then 2 block* north. SALES - SERVICE REPAIRS Tricycles Coaster Brake Bicycles 3-Speed Fold-A-Bikes IO Speed ( Tour i st a n d r a c i n g f r a m # i ) O U R $QQ95 0 / IO Speed Biko It made in Europe — ha* Simplex Derailleur — W einm enn Center Pull Brakes and other go o d features Parts and Accessories Financing and Lay-a-way Available New Supply of Bikes arrive weekly C O M E SEE A N D Y O U ’LL BUY 453-3078 New Hours Mon. - Sat. 9:30 till 6:00 VILLA CAPRI RESTAURANT Students Sunday Night Special Complete Dinner for $3.25 Choice of Fried Chicken or 7-Oz. Club Steak Just present your blanket tax or Auditor’s receipt to C«shior 2300 Interregional O N L Y 2 BLO C KS F R O M M E M O R IA L ST A D IU M H S PLUS DEPOSIT RETURNABLE BOTTLES F R U M •0 PR O O F R U M Old Captain Kidd 349 Y U l i q u o r s t o r e s HOLE Q fa yj BONDS) STOCK IOO0 B O T T LED IN B O N D 359 5TH MIRASSOU WINES S A M A Y BEAUJOLAIS, C H E N I N BLANC. S Y L V A N S RIESLING. MONTEREY RIESLING, Z IN FAN DEL $ J 9 5TH /t 29 CABERNET SA U V IG N O N 4 19th ST. AT GUADALUPE 3 1 8 S 0 U T H C O N G R E S S 3216 SOUTH CONGRESS CHARLIES SCOTCH 80 PROOF BLENDna5TH OLD CROW TRAVELER FIFTHS 86 PROOF STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 19 New Owls Facing Old Longhorns Rice Hoping SW C Balance For Real B y BU C K H A R V EY Texan Staff W riter This year is different, everyone from the usual keeps saying, Southwest Conference year. Customarily about this time of the season, Texas begins to play out the season against the also- rans. Boringly. Tediously. And winningly. BU T T H IS year, the babbling experts are saying, balance is in the SWC, and Texas back w ill be tested during the rest of the year, beginning with Rice University at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in Houston. KTBC-AM (590) 7:15 pm The Longhorns, people are repeating, had better be con­ centrating on the remainder of thedr schedule and, to use that classic line, “ play their games one at a tim e.” It Is doubted that Texas would want to play two or three teams at once, but in past years, the IvOnglHims could have just about done that. The 'Horns haven t hist a game to the rest of their schedule— Rice, SM U, Baylor, TCU and Texas A&M —in five years, when the Aggies upset Texas 10-7 in 1967. Those were the care-free Saturdays for Texas, when the games were used to build up s t a t i s t i c s and play that sophomore quarterback. TH O SE D AYS are no more. SM U, TCU and Texas Tech have lost only one, and Baylor has won. Two, in fact. A&M is not having the year everyone else is, but the Aggies always like to be different. But the team that has made the SWC as balanced as a jeep with training wheels is Rice. Four years ago the Owls didn t win a game. Then things got worse. They scheduled Houston University, USU, Tennessee and USU, teams not to be confuse'! with Baylor or TCU. And they paid for it. A 5-5 record in 1970 wras their best since 1963. But in 1970, Bill Peterson left Florida State and installed a new program before he went to the Houston Oilers in 1971. One that called for winning. SW C Roundup Tech, SMU in S howdown B y The Associated Press Southern Methodist hopes to defeat Texas Tech Saturday In Dallas to set up a showdown In Austin next week with Texas, which meets R ep Saturday in Houston. Texas leads the SWC race In the quest for its fifth consecutive crown with a 2 0 record followed hotly bv Southern Methodist at 1-0.' SMU Coach Ha%de Barnes does a good job of run­ ning at quarterback.” The Mustangs lead the defense In the nation against the rush, hold the No. I punt returner ti Kris SUverthom and have the top Junior running back scorer Alvin Maxton. In “ We know SM U is an out­ team ," says standing football Texas Tech Coach Jim Carien. fullback Doug Texas Tech McCutchen says to boating SM U Is controlling the football. thp key ‘‘SM U has been doing a good Job of this and controlling the ball has helped their defense—-It‘a taken the pressure off them,” McCutchen says. “ SM U has a tremendous front four and a real in good middle I .conn rd Carey. Texas A&M was as physical as any team we’ve played, and SM U strikes me as linebacker being the same kind of team ” Another SWC game Saturday finds Baylor frying to stay alive in the loop rare against Texas A&M. In other gam''**, North Texas is at Arkansas in Little Rock, Houston Is at Mississippi State, and Texas Christian Is at Notre Dame. On front, the Twneonference T C I’ has Notre Dame's respect Irish seout John Murphy Bays of tho Homed Frogs: ‘‘They’re very aggressive, and they have good ba I ar. np on both offense and defense.” Irish Coach Ara Parseghian adds, “ Mike Luttrell is an ex­ ceptional runner, and they also have .some fine defensive people like llnebaeker Dede Terveen.” 2200 Guadalupe O w l Power .. . Rice t ig h t end G a r y Butler (!) and linebacker L a R a y Bresher*. Al Conover, an old aide of Peterson's, replaced him, and Rice has enjoyed football since. This year Rice stands 2-2-1, but with different circumstances they could be 5-0. Or 1-4. If anything, Conovers football has been exciting. They beat rival Houston 14-13, beat Clemson 29-13, tied Georgia Tech 36-36, fell to strong USU 12-6 and last week lost to SM U 29-14. All of Rice s games were close, and according to D arrell Royal, they have always been that way, especially down there In Houston. “ W e’ve never gone to R ice Stadium and had anything but a rude bouncing around,” said Royal. “ I don't think we’ve had a game down there that wasn't decided until the fourth quarter.” If Rice has kept the game close a ll of these years with poor teams, Owl fans would like to see what their new boy's can do. Quarterback Bruce Gadd and tight end G ary Butler lead the SW C In passing and receiving, as the Owls asp a roll-out attack sim ilar to Utah State. Star receiver Bubba Berg is out for the year, but Edwin Collins has filled in well. R IC E D O ES run, but not often John and not well. Freshm an Coleman leading Owls is the rasher, but R ice leads the con­ ference in passing with 222 yards a game, and they probably w ill not play around on the ground. The Owl offensive line is capable, but limping. Limping is not the word for the Rice defense. Disembodied just might describe it. Star mouih and linebacker Rodrigo Barnes is out, along with defensive end I>arry Medford, as the whole unit Is hurting. Linebacker Un Ray Breshers Is hurt but playing, along with defensive tackle La rry Alford and linebacker Richard Hollas. Unlike Rice, Texas is un­ scathed, not to mention happy. Conover made a point that ‘‘Texas is looking good right now SUPER ARBY'S ROAST BEEF SANDWICH ONLY 74* Reg. 99c SAVE 25c SPECIAL SOOD THRU SUN., OCT. 19. 472-1582 1705 GUADALUPE 451-3740 5400 BURNET RD. after Arkansas. They’re healthy and have momentum, plus they have and fullback. quarterback that QUARTERBACK Alan Lowry and fullback Rosey Leaks are Conover’s worries, as the two rushed more than 250 yards against Arkansas last Saturday. Add a new Donald E a le y and old Don Burrisk, and Rice should be in trouble. Deciding who w ill win is dif­ ficult, though. R ice has its home field, Its zany coach, a passing threat and new ideas. Texas has power, momentum, health and tradition. But consider this, if you can. R ice beat Houston. Miami beat Houston. Texas beat Miam i. What does that prove? W ell, besides the fact that Texas could beat the hell out of Houston, it proves little. This season Is different from other years, becaase of Rice, Gmover and balance. Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service Across from G u lf M a rt G L 2-0205 C L O S E D SA TURD AY The O nly Independent V W G a rag e in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Arldt's Automotive Service 7951 B U R N E T R O A D S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V E H IC L E S IS O U R S P E C IA L T Y Shoe Shop * S A L E * SHEEP SKIN We make and RUGS repair boots and shoes M any Beaufifu! Color* * * LEA T H ER SA L E V a r l o u * k i n d * , c o l o r * - 7 5 c p e r l k Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 ta special group was $ 19.95 now $14.95! Friday and Saturday The University Co-Op CP Apartment Shop second floor O n e h o u r f r e e p a r k i n * w i t h p u r c h a s e o f f " 'N' n r m n r » . B a n k A m e r i c a n ! a n d M a s t e r C h a r * * v t c l c o m a O n m -n O n % ' N , 3 <3 T S c s 3 N o Because ifs a station wagon, you can put a lot into it. Because ifs a Saab, you can get a lot out of it. E E O * IT ISS f PRETTY. IT S JUST PLAIN BEAUTI F L L S a a b 9 5 . s2 7 9 5 .' International Motors •frto UM iwtMtaf truer j»rpe>u>«*. lreae»oriM>«a, MMT e*4 Ural (net m4 of,mm f «, I weifth •< I lunar. Anatta, T aaa*. 477 WILCO O B C O » T X > J B l. 4509 N. 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P Comptef Se teflon ofWCnesjdvailaSleA {fourfavorite beverage txpeflygrtpmtibyourc^lffidmMocfisft B r it t o n s \j On The Drag at 2346 Guadalupe, 478-3411 7 * - ™ I MU M Aortae I , r, 9, i W M aa— I o T B S D U E T H O A R F r id a * . O c to b e r XT, v m £ a * e T .....Try. .... ja i :___ mimMI awa.** juafcfc THE PRESTIGE RETAIL & OFFICE LOCATION “ O N T U E U T D R A G '’ t a ~ - r CONTACT: K E N C A R R N E IM A N h a n k s & P U R Y E A R 476-7011 DAN’S 1600 L A V A C A 5353 BU R N ET RD. 478-5423 465-8689 srF\t i r d a t Or FN to A M 'TIL 9 PM . 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Yearlings Win, 45-14 R r CHT C K H ATTM AN Toxan Staff W riter in W alter Rowan replaced Larry the M iller at quarterback sc*'arui and fourth quarters to give the Yearling* enough of­ fensive thrust to defeat the R ic e Owlet*, 45-14 Thursday night rn Memorial Stadium. Team Statistics F1r«t Down* Rust n* Yard* Passing Yard* Pa cs*** P snt* Upturn Yarrtaf# KnmW#* I .nit P r n n l ” '*** T m * I* Jl« Ho * IS-2 6-36 ■' 129 1 *-52 Rife IO 45 in • ?7 A a 26 7 72 Rowan resmorl a sluggish first quarter offense, scoring on a sev'en-yard run and throwing a 28-yard scoring strike to end Paul Murphy, who reached over the outstretched arms of two Rice defenders to grab the pass. Halfback Bobby Rowan scored on runs of five and two yards in the fourth period and was the Yearlings’ leading rusher with 42 yards on 11 carries. In all, Rowan completed eight of l l posse* for 115 yards, with one interception. “ Rowan had the wind both of BUD SAYS: "PLUCK THE OWLS" his quarters which opened the passing game,” said a cheerful Coach B ill Ellington. The offense was able to hit on the the curl patterns when Owlets’ safety mover! up from the secondary to play the ran, Rowan said. However, this was not a game won by the offense alone. A strong rush on the Owlet punter gave the Yearlings exceptional field position on several offensive drives. Tho defense also took ad­ vantage of six Rice offensive mistakes, two fumble recoveries R I S H IN O : Texas Individual Statistics ( B i Rowan l l 42, (W I Rowan ll 38, Moreland 9-34. M il­ le r 7-25, K lin e 6-2f>, Roberson 8-J7, L i t ­ tlefield M I , C rouch 4-1.'>, R ie e B o y c e 12-31. Robinson 5-13. A lie n 6-14, Oor- I 2, A nderson chi H n 2 R, 4 no r a in c o a t P A S S IN O : Texas CW) Row an R ll, 115 yards, I I. M iller 0-2, 0 yards, I I. R i c e —Anderson 6-21, S3 .'arris, 3 I,. Corchuelo 2-6, 30 yards l l . R E C E I V I N G : T e x * * Thom pson 4-69. Murphy 1-2S, (R oborson k ick ) T ex as Roberson, 23 yard field coal (L a n d ru m R ic e Allen, 9-yard run ( B ) R o w an , R y a r d n m (Rob- ( R ) R o w an . 2 y a rd run (R o b ­ k ick I T e x a s e.'son k ick ) T e x a s erson k ick ) erson k ic k ) T exas -Roberson. 1-ynrd run (Rob- T exas -Earley, 3* y a rd pass ception return iR o b e rio n k ick ) in te r­ Atten dance 2,500. WANNA BUY A I PHOTO? four and Interceptions, one of which was returned 38 yards for a touchdown by linebacker Gen* Earley. Keith Moreland's fourth period Interception and runback of 43 yards gave the Yearlings the ball on the five-yard line where they scored two plays later widening the margin from three points to a 24-14 score. recovering Rice held the lead through the first quarter scoring five plays after a Yearling fumble on the first play of the game from scrimmage, on an eight-yard toss from quarterback Reggie Anderson to G ary Cox. “ Nothing takes the fire out of me faster than a fumble on the first play of the game,” Ellington said after the game, to which longhorn Coach D arrell Royal quipped “ How about the second.” Rice scored again in the third quarter. An interception of a La rry M iller pass and a 15-yard runback gave the Owlets the ball at the Texas 10-yard line. Four plays later Roy Allen scored around right end from nine yards out. Tommy Roberson added a 23- yard field goal as the first half ended and was successful on six extra points. Ttie victory over Rice gave the an undefeated 2-0 Yearlings record on the season, after defeating the Baylor Cub* 42-7 in and marked 15 consecutive wins for E l l i n g t o n coached Yearling football teams. initial outing; their ^ m e e t y o u r f r ie n d s .. d r T JU u SPECIAL SUNDAY ONLY! $ rjm \ FRIED CHICKEN I U M # FRIED CHICKEN YOU ALL THE DELICIOUS I M l a CAN EAT FOR ONLY $ | 0 9 CHARCOAL HAMBURGERS 111 Ir . 21 lh * OFFER INCLUDES FRENCH FRIES, COLE SLAW, AND HOT ROLL. OPEN IO A M. TIL MIDNIGHT • FOR I.D.’t * * • FOR PASSPORTS • F O R R E S U M E ’S SUPER FAST SERVICE! 12-10 ADMISSION: $2.00 lots of beer and food available at the park Paid for by U M C — Lucy Black, Tr***ur*r Page 8 friday, Otefber 27, 1272 T H E D A IL Y T O M M Running Rowan _ T i x u S u i t Rho Lo by M A H L O N I AV L O H , T,«a, Yearling quarterback Walter Rowan pets hi, team moving against the Rice Owlets in the second quarter Thursday night, leading the Texas freshmen to a 45-14 win. Rowan re- placed Larry Miller and Arew for l l 5 yardr to lead the Yellings to their second win o. the year. ______ ___________ UT Soccer Ready for Rice By ANTHONY STASTNY Texan Staff W riter Picking the Texas soccer team FOOTBALL & BEER COLOR T.V. SAT. & SUN. MON. HITE 2 ■ 6 7 - ll UP THE STAIRCASE 2405 Nueces $300 AYCD A LL Y O U C A N DRINK FREE M U N C H IE S They're Here! THE NEW 1973 PORSCHE, AUDI AND VOLKSW AGONS ARE NOW AT b o b " m X U e x . v o U c M v o ^ e n . h d u b l i n , , t e x c w 7 8 7 2 3 A u A l e m U. S. H IG H W A Y 2 9 0 A T N O R T H IH 33 FRATERNITY S O C IA L C H A IR M A N Call Us For L O W E S T PRIC ES IN T O W N CASH & CARRY w e R E S E R V E T H E H K . H T T O L I M I T R O S I T I S E L X NO < ll Kl K S o k < R I I M I < M I D - \< < I I I I O' A T T H E S E P R I C E S H E C A N N O T A I L O R D T O M A K E A M I S T A K E CENTENNIAL PAY-LESS • 2932 Guadalupe • 19th and Chiton • 6303 Cameron (Renton Sonar*) # 1110 E . S la t # 2125 Faut "th # 6.»St North L a m a r S T R A M .H T R O I K R O N W H I S K I E S JIM BEAM 86 Pr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 3.79 EZRA BROOKS 90 Pr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 4.10 DANT IO YR. OLD 86 Pr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 3.57 SEAGRAM'S 7 CROWN 86 Pr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 3.84 SEAGRAM'S V.O. 86.8 Pr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 5.16 I M T O U T E D S C O T C H W H I S K I E S SPECIAL PURCHASE A r * a R S O L D (ML I'r. Bo t t l e d Scotland In 3 I O R 814.58 MVb MACKINLAY^ LEGACY 80 Pr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 3.10 VAT 69 Black or Gold f S T J ' T ' U 0 Full Quart 5.41 CUTTY SARK 86 Pr e q u iva len t to ism sui Full Quart 7.05 J & B 86 Pr EQ CI V A L E N T TO S M 5th Half-Gallon 12.66 BACARDI 80 Pr. eq u iv a len t to s .w .mk Full Quart 4.45 V O D K A . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 2.69 KISMET 80 Pr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SEAGRAM'S 90 Pr T " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 3.35 SCHLITZ, Case of 24 Cans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.49 H E E R WITTE BUDWEISER, Case of 24 C a n s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.25 LIEBFRAUMILCH or M A Y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 99c FILLO D O U G H - GREEK OLIVES LEBANESE BREAD - FETA CHEESE VUNK L E A V E S - T W I N I N G T E A A V A I L A B L E O N L Y A T 2932 G U A D A L U P E to beat Rice arid Houston University this weekend should be quite easy. After all, the ’Horns have won 59 league games in a row and ripped one of the teams by 1 0 - 0 earlier this year. But that record is just what worries soccer coach Dumitru Teodorescu about the games. Texas plays R.ice at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Puce soccer field and Houston at 2 pm . Sunday at Hofheinz Pavilion. “ Everybody says 'V.e are the best team,’ and ‘We are very good.’ They think they will win because they ha\e won so much,'' he said. Ttiodorescil rates the Du Is 3 7 the “ best team in the league next to Texas, and Houston as one of the better ones. “ They (the Owl*) are very strong. They have planers that are very good.’’ he addr. Although Texas dominated th* last game between two, several of the player* that wen* in that game will be missing Saturday. the Don Nwokejl, who scored four DIAL-A-JOKE 476-5943 BUY T W O B L A C K LIG H T POSTERS GET A 4" B LA C K LIG H T FREE TH E W H IT E HOUSE 1806 L a va ca 478-0736 goals against the Owls, and Johnny Vallejo are ineligible for the out-of-town-game, and (■ ‘ii Marin, Muno Alva rez-Ca Moron and Jon Robinson arr* injured. “ Tactically, we n I to play a very strong gam'* nr I con­ centrate on the short pn r P B ill be a very ph; sic J en gement,” he says. if So, the Horns appear ready for they can another victory, survive a rash of inju: es and overconfidence. They only need one more thing, sa ye Teodoresru, “ M ort player*. Ka- h ga* p we have lost rune or two " But while the team ha* lost player*, they continue to win games, and be I'eve t ry w ill \* in. Rice may be converted Sa tv day. Austin Rugby Up for Sevens The Austin K by C ib, the . -cli defending champs r*. A t »r a four teams to * Sevens Tourname; t i } . ; vc-i -rct d. Ka Hi team will be seven men Instead of ti e usual 15 I r*-' ; ly on the same size field, but I t In o- y only flve-minute halves in IO minutes the ruggers get. a full gam e’s wort! of r r ng Em phasis is on speed Ti <• club ti * fast this year is sending a players who can be mustered. i-‘ three br omen In seven man rugby the team* fiold ' ar backs. Most of the play is n the open field. Tile lint*® (scrums) line up facing each other. Then the bai; is thrown be­ hind them to teammate*. Then everyone starts running 'po For tho Sevens Tournament the Blacks, Golds and Wild Bunch pool their talents and ava able manpower to make up the best four teams to repre^^nt the club. 2532 G U A D A L U P E HANK’s GRILL Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only $1.20 Reg. $1.45 Student Sp e cial TACOLADA DINNER Consists of: Meat Taco, Enchilada with Chill Con Carni, Spanish Rice, Fried Beans, Hot Sauce, Tostados, Soft Tortillas $1.25 With Student I.D. Card Beer and Sangria Available By G lass or Pitcher 1507 Lavaca Comer of 16th and Lavaca action line Thfl November ela tio n s ore approaching, and I’m eligible to vote. Hoyt do I got my absentee* ballot and must I do anything special when I vote? L.B. To vote absentee, it w ill be necessary for you to write a letter to your homo county rlnrk and request an absentee ballot application. You w ill then iv* s^nt an application, asking you your reasons for being absent, etc. F ill this application out and mail it back to your county clerk along with your voter registration card, lf you do not have your voter registration rani, there will he a section on the application that you must fill out stating that you have lost it. After you have srr.t y rur application in, your county clerk w ill then send you the b i Mot Do not fill out the ballot liefore you go befire a notary pill 'ic. This . in mrtnnt You must vote in front of a notary public or else y* ur vote will not be valid. After you have voted and the notary has signed it, then you must send the ballot back to your county clerk. To find a notary public, look in the Yellow Pages under “ notary.” i s TI lese a notary’ public in ti t h e r e service Absentee voting b is already started, and w ill continue through Nov. 3. The county clerk must have your ballot by 7 p.m. Nov. 7. If you are registered to vote in Travis County you may vote ab­ sentee on the fifth floor of the County Courthouse. You must present your registration certificate to vote. lf there any requirement that federal Jndge*. from district court* to the I S. Suprem e Coart, be members of tile bar, hold law degree* or be practicing attorneys? If not, h;<* there ever been a justice on th#* Suprem e Court who was not a lawyer, did not have a law degree or did not have pron- legal experience? D .P. AU federal jud 'es must be appointed to their office; however, a quick check with the Cor titmion shows that there is no requirement brr any type of I w < .-.cf • Prof, Charles Alan Wright of the School of Law says the e % lever been a judge that did not ha\e some type of legal background before he was appointed. W hat arc the Sevui Wonder* of the w orld? K .C , Tile SOV en V e:.T Wot !••• are the Pyram id! in Egypt- the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the s’atue of Zeus at Olympia, the Temple of b of Mausolus, the Lighthouse of Artemis at Alexandria and the c Missus of Rhodes. I ; *• - tho 'I' H ic Action Line will answer any questions concerning the University or any local or national K m i« s . Address inquiries to Action lane, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, I niversity Station, Austin, Texas, 7X71?, or bring them by Journalism Building 103. Only initials will be used. campus news in brief arent M IN O c o llo q ! it m ]S w Bfc Art L. Thnmiu. of M ter unlverejty. iii AUrvrftUon P r o v e n F a rt I 30 p rn. FrHay in Jo# C T *«n Conference < enter 3 A'-T B O 'II'I \ -.I MIN XU *p**k on Va at 4 p m Antimatter n t a I r.ivi r- •* I • si *- M a ,h-A«trr*r.on y B LIAU ,• IS 218. ARTS %Ni ii i it \» I > O M I k In­ formal < I.<**$«'• re (ti aire ti on will ba tn Onion Building 833 from neon to > nday 9 to p.m. 1 md t rl<‘ ty ’ mn CHI ORO X M C ( IT F,H IST R V r ■•••t at a to play •ar IN FA BKN' I •» Vt (THOI T FAJITN E M I a rn. w ill m eal from X p m . to warty ft? TL'ker Park TV a< •» < an .’ a I : I a** Ann* for f" at the P F M B < H B P * \ INT \ R F I B l fT F.RN Will meet fr- rn I to 3 pm. Friday In th* Method lit Student Center to dl**rt*)':ie ar»PiJea**<--R* M v c i o t n r . v IU I’ tH T 'H ST will meet at it) a rn Friday in Mer** H ill rtuiephaeh Room to hear r>r. ORIVE A UTTUE — SAVE A LOT I/a cl I t a . M d tact * ;4«| • * II M * *10* * IMM mo* IK N - CAPITOL D IA M O N D SHOv Austin : r n o m M<-h»*l Gazxanlge f lM K I VS JOHN QI VRTO w ut ut I ri -n '.J* f I'o ’p .rfl an*! Safur'!ay *C i "ff*#hou** TV B l ! TOP i.f NI K U N w ill rr**t a? •., r- m S nAny In O * Texas I ’n'nn r Ballroom to organ!*# a nvtfU- J ,r r aver ' Grenaller.” T I \ I i I M O N N P F C ! A L - P R O ?nr v l l D irty i . K V M * T O M W IT T K E in*** from v t o « p m . Sunday In Union R 'l’M'r.* SU and 806 to hold * J! • rhlldrrn of - • rr:*-d ut', den ta. faculty and em­ ploy***. T I V I S I MON’ ISM r * A V T ) IP F vs I It 'I VI I FT I I'. W I *rnn*nr G**>nt* I'n lo n M a in R isn H a ll room a? * v m Frida:- I V I T S B I A V < H I K I IT O F Ai s i r N' Will hear Tex*,* A FL-C IO Pre* dont Roy L v i M at IO a rn. Sunday I NU K, KNITT TF..VMS CU B win m c . at 9 a to Saturday at th* Intram ural Field th* T * x a « I I R s T In V IM \ ITO his IN VO CI A L C H A M I F will be in A' *tin thro'.ah Sunday in «*t up w rkahop* ?^r *x'-har ti* of Idea* The group i an be contacted e.i ( rum r.ity S** itehbcard. 478 5*157. Interested In the Study of Law? repreientativ* of I t h * A Washington University School of Law (St. Louis) will b* on campui W ednesday, N ovem ­ ber thjdenb talk planning to enter law ichool upon graduation, or thinking about it. Make appointment* with Liberal Art* Placement O ffice, 471-5661. to to HALLOWEEN MASKS Adult Sizes O nly • W ig s • Beards • Mustaches • Long Eyelashes • G oatees • Noses • Horrible Hands • Horrible Feet • Vampire Nails • r ake Blood, etc. G IA N T l/2 G A LL O N S A PPLE * $1 I Q 1.07 W I N E MADMAN RUBES’S FUN SHOP lo u te d Imida Poi cen s Bothie Shop at 12 A Rad River Chicanos! Blacks! W om en! Interested in coming to Law School? Al! law sch o o l require applicants to take tho Law School Admission Test. The UT L a * School minority Recruitment Com m ittee is offer­ ing the M IN O R IT Y PR EP S E S S IO N S for tho benefit c f minor­ ity students who pan to ta le the L j AT. The sessions are scheduled to allow those students who plan to take the Dec. 16th test to attend but any minority student planning to take the LS A T at any time is encouraged to attend. Sessions will be held at UT Law School in Room 123 at 7:30 with th© following schedule: N ov. N ov. 8 Cas«s and Principles Nov. IS Reading Comprehension Nov, 29 W ritin g A bility Dec. 6 Review I Charts and Graphs C all 471-5805 for information. F R E E By City Council Tennis Center OK'd In nor­ 75 foot swimming pool thwest Austin on the Doss Elem entary School playground and park area. The city w ill match the grant with monies from the Capital Improvements Program. A third grant for $50,000 would p r o v i d e a T.ihrary-I>eajming Resources Center near East 1st and W aller .streets in the Model Cities area. for A spokesman the city manager’s office, Randy Turner, said that since Austin began federal aggressively pursuing mane/ in March, 1971, the city has received $30 million in grants from th/* federal government. total was from He noted that $18 million of the En ­ that vironmental Protection Agency for the crosstown sewer tunnel, hut in sm aller grants for new project* and for improving and developing old ones. rest was the ” Previously we did get some federal money, like the HUD grant for Decker Lake,” he said, “ but we did not get very much.” In other action, the rouncil approved a request ’he Austin Peace Action Committee to put a banner across 19th Street west of Guadalupe Street. from The banner w ill be up Nov. 6 to 8 and w ill read, “ U.S. Out of Southeast Asia Now! March On Houston Nov. 18. Austin Peace Action Committee.” B y R O B E R T M. M r V E Y City Council with a bar* quorum of four members present, moved Thursday to provide the city with a new tennis center, a new swimming pool and a new library. The council authorized City Manager Dan Davidson to apply for $ 150 .OOO from the Department of H o u s i n g a rid U r b a n Development ripen Spare Fund to match with eity funds to build a new $300,000 tennis complex, It would have a minimum of 12 courts aa well as restrooms, lighting, fences, sidewalks and a pro shop. The Its next meeting, Nov. 2, aa tho da*° for a report from the city manager council set on possible tennis facility. locations for tbs During one of several breaks in the meeting that came when a councilman had to leave the room, M ayor Roy Butler noted “ this is the tightest we have been on a quorum in 18 months.’’ Ho added that Councilman Bori in California on Hand cox was that Councilman business and Lowell !>bermann was out of state getting a new seetrvg eye dog. last canine aide was old and died recently I>ebermann’s Councilman Je ff Friedm an was in court representing a client during the meeting. Davidson also was authorized to apply for a $55,000 grant from the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation Funds for construction of a 42-by- 2 5 Finalists Announced For Ten Most Beautiful Potograps of 28 University wom­ en s e le c te e ! as finalists in th e 1072 Ten Most Beautiful contest w i l l b e taken Saturday nvvming in K.»m woods Park, Suzanne the O 'M a l l e y , contes*, said Thursday. cochairm an of Finalists must sign up for a photo appointment on list outside Journalism Building 1ftn by Wednesday. the Studios, where Pictures w ill be sent to W arner Brothers a Hollywood celebrity w ill select the Ten Most Beautiful entrants. Nancy W alker, the context's other co-ch.":irman, said results would not t>e known for at least a week. Finalists am Sandy Arnold, Kathleen Rartnett, Cindy Bass, S c a rittte Boykin, Sh eryl B ra n ­ tley, K a rri e CapeUo, D a r l a Chapman. Suite Chum ey, VI? kl E s t r a d a , Deborah Gtnascol, Merdanne Griffin, P a tty Hayes, Sue Hines, Patsy Johnson, R ita Junker and Linda Lehmann. A!sn selected were M ollie I of I is, Deborah Lyons, Elaine Minor, Karen Moser, Carol Petty, Pooge, Debra Pam ela Roche. Linda Schraub, Marianne Sinclair, Liz Wicker- sham and Susan Wroe. Pinch, Jane I M i d d l e Earth I Aid for Bad Trips 9 p.m. - I n m. S c .rn Days a B e c k Also 8:30 - 4:30 University “ Y*» I A No names, no hassle M obile units available 472-9216 vmwuiw ui I a { J V J s h a p e ­ u p s (IMI* K W X . L'5-r. .► V t * CIocKe St Potholder Vest Twosome Hand-crocheted match­ ing shrink and fashion cloche in kaleidoscope colors for Fall. ft9 5 N E W A R R IV A L S — H IG H - R IS E B A G G IE S cuUed in brushed cotton or corduroy, (slightly irregular) compare at 12.00 99 6 ' T A IL O R E D M A N -SH IR T in crisp while dacron and cotton. ONLY 199 M A D C A P M C D H A T and M U F F L E R SETS #9 9 P R IC E S Y O U C A N A F F O R D !!!! i O P E N 10-7 MON .-SAT. * FACTORY Outlet Fashions 6411 Burnet line (Birne! Road) MASTER- C H A R G E C H E C K S L A Y - A W A Y BANK- A M E R IC A R D S P E C I A L ! SEE H O W E A S IL Y / ‘ ID r ' L ' ' M A K E " A R O O M W S H / A fo r tu n e s p e c 9' purer.as* br-os - j rr* hand-made area c.os, im r/---®d t'-ey re machin* washable and revers',- a ' • joertec^ for dorm, cen cr patio, she g-een, c'ack/white, b'ue/b'ack, g c!d/wh ta, ; s Peg. 20.00 - • r, re ? r J ASI HON B O I T IQI I c l o I B I -VACA ~ jals^dude;, short steeve shirts* !K7I off J I MALL H K J Flannel Sport Shirts XX' a r m l o o k i n g a n d w a r m f e e ! - inn; h c a v \ w e i g h t s p o r t s h i r t s . l u ll c u t f a s h i o n i n g m a k e s f o r f u l l - t i m e c o m f o r t . A n d t h e s e P e r m a - P r c s t s h i r t s a r e m a c h i n e ax i s !i a b l e . M a n y a s s o r t e d p a t t e r n ^ . H u r r y t o S c a r s . CI IAK GF, IT on Sears Revolving Charge Sears . . . W e ' v e G o t Ideas Hancock Center 4!st end Interregional Auitin, Tex** Dial 452-9211 tm D a ily T e x a n Friday, October 27, 1972 Fag* /r--' f *,‘y ! ' J, *''•*/'» '%&, % i ^ § ' ■try.- y^^m ' ' i P . -. > , - v . - J I ® ♦ -J k > a ' ;»• rf ' ’ ?. - H ? v , ' v '■' <•:,*?•* ••/. 'fr »..; ',/ *- u- - Q | J | G / ' y > ^ Mi- m m m m 'W v %/A r;• - 'v ■'y.vr: >y /w/A--,// . -■ /:■./■.y / ; * ' .*./ ' ' G a H Y >y 'VY G AV • .'••- V ”'■ (■ *, ■ *■ ■'■' *. ' ' -. G > y £ : . '■■ ■ ' ' '■ ':! C-’ 1 SM 4 7 1 # l 4 4 I V l f l N . T H R U F H I . 8 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 ;■ a -y .-v y -v A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . H A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . H A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . i i D u p l e x e s , F u r n . T H E D O L L H O U S E . 1-1 townhouses. Sw een ey I a t ip Tr«*- jnendous closets. B ra n d new, 454-4691. M a n o r R e ad a n cia l W O O D R O S E P R O D U C T IO N S need* fin ­ fur concert prom otion. < 'in tact C a r l S ch w a rtz at 1601 R o y a l C rest, 2140. Investor /partner r m C A M E R A R E N T S — e arn e r aes, p rojectors, Lghtlng, met- '.H'.rs. 476-35SL______________________ ! S T E R E O —L O W E S T a ll m a jo r brands of e v e ry type equip­ P R I C E S on m e n t C a ll J i m at 465-63. G, F R E E b la c k and w h ite fe m ale kittens. W 3 W est ?8th 472 M SO Phone 448-4097 M rs. Sm ith . F o r S a l e F o r S a l e 67 G M G V A N . re a lly nice, m a x c < >rpc. paneling, pin stripes, tape deck. W on t refu se reasonable offer. 441-2135 a vk for W a y n e . V W E N G IN E - N E W ', rebu ilt by V W m ech an ic. Reaso nable. C a ll 3S.V5817 o r 477 2863. ask for J R . 1971 T R I E M P H 500 m o to rcycle $850-be.st than 2.(KIO m iles, b lack o ffer Fess helm et, tool k it included 441 3541 and out. V W S Q I! A R E B A C K 1%7. < lean Inside E n g in e overhauled, nev. clutch, A M - F M radio, a ir conditioned. M o ve F o rc e s sale. $975. 315-1806. 67 C H E V Y steering, I I N O V A V8. a ir pou cr Interior, ex­ radio, v in y l ce lle n t condition, m a k e offer 471 7976 69 V W B E S . S U P E R B condition, good tires, blue book, $2050. m u st sell, $l,65u firm . 454 0585 1971 S U P E R B E E T L E V W A M - F M radio. AC’., m ust sell, best offer. 454- 1011. S T E R E O F O R S A L E : C lar!C W I 50 w a tt A M - F M R C V R w ith ch an g er, sm all sp eakers $85, m in t condition. 474-1258. 1965 V O L V O 544 In excellent condition. $725. 1106 W< st 22nd or 477-7084 1969 V W S e d a n ; tape deck, n e w tires, ex ce lle n t condition. radio, heater, $1095, 282-1258 for appointm ent. 69 VTV S F .D A N N E W orange p ain t Job, 41,500 m iles, good condition, $1050. Jo A nn 475-3544 before 5; 45? 1795 P IO N 111 R 727 S U P E R re ce ive r. Pe rfe c t . ..min it N e w $360, sell $265. 475-2711 extension 28. H O N E Y W E L L P E N T A X S p o tm atlc with F I 3 lens. $180. 472-6692. 1967 D O D G E D A R T 6 cylin d ers, A C, radio, au tom atic, $1000. co n vertib le, A fte r 5 30 p.m . C a ll 472-4978. -/KUT T R I U M P H D A Y T O N A ex­ cellent * edition, less than IOO m iles In use; for $900. ( all 478-*266. 1970 M A V E R IC K , e xcellent condition new lir e ', recen t tune-up. m u st sell ff r insurance reasons. $1495. C a ll 477- 8563. 1972 K A W A S A K I M A C H asking $700 T r y it, y o u ’ll I I I . 500 co, IL lik e 441-8464. 4.-4-7258. M i s c e l l a n e o u s Z u n i N E I- S O N S G I F T S ; co m p lete selection Je w e lr y ; A fric a n and M ex ican Im ports. 4612 So-ith Congress. 444-3814. _____ In d ia n P A R K I N G H Y M O N T H . $12.50. 2418 Nan Antonio, one block from C am pus. 476-3720. ____________ E A R N $*s W E E K L Y Blood plasma d on a'* needed. C««.h pa'd in attendance. for service*. Physician O ra n 8 a rn.-3 p.m. Tues., T h u rt, Fru, ?x S a t. O p e n 12 noon-7 p.m. W e d . M U S T S E L L G O O D T V , 19” B A W , $39. a u s t i n b l o o d c o m p o n e n t s , i n c ., 409 W e s t 6th. 477 3735. f$35 ) each. These | S E W I N G M A C H I N E S ($35.). W e have 4 j brand new 1972 a ll steel sewing m a - fam ous i chines at m ake full size sew in g m a c h in e ' feature single le x e r control for ease In stitch selection, b u ilt In controls for darning, zig-zag stitch, m akin g buttonhole mon ogram tng. e m b ro id e ry st it* bes. < ' com plete \xch full facto ry g ar c b , j U n cla im e d Fre ig h t, 6535 .’ .orth L a m a r i 9 9 w eekd ays, 9 6 Rat. S K Y D I V E ! Austin Parachute Center For ir form ation p’o oi* call 272 5711 enyf me F U su r» t o sf's ?i$ 478-2079. L E A R N ~ T O P L A Y g uitar, beginner, : ad van ced. D re w Thom ason, 478-7331, S T E R E O C E N T E R Before yos: b*ry *ny of b rand it following • M a r a n a • San sui • S o n y • C ra ig • San vo • A k a ! • T e e c • K E H • A D • Scott • D ual • G a r r a r d • " ’■ n Lan sin g ho r • • U t • U lra c o rd • P a n a s o n ic • P io n e e r 203 Fn*t 19th Street A K C A fghans C h am pio n p edigree show q u ality, below p et prices. Good homes only $125-$I.50 Gibson Co-Classic guitar. Not one sr-ratch, $125. 285-4503. Elg in . C A P I T O L C A M E R A R E N T S — ram er- lighting, m e t­ lensr . p rojecto rs, e r s i -i i< ulators. 476-3581, A I X E L ( ON FT- R E N D E on m etap hysics. tin. O ctob er 23 29, F r e e d etails; (454- ______________________________ N ic k L a w re n c e , Box* 9212, 78766. 1968). N E E D M A I . E T O assum e single room p aym en t $99 50-month til sem ester at I b'ock: E a it of G u a d a d * Phoenix. 476-9265. 9 .31) s.m - 6 p m . M on rja*. 7A A^3? 1971 R E N A U L T R-10, 6800 m iles, 4 speed tran sm ission , 478-1232 1962 V W B U G , rung great. C a ll 444-3410 a fte r 5 p m . $350. grey, bla<-k vin y ! 68 P L Y M O U T H 383, au tom atic. A C . interior, new b a tte ry, tires and M onroe shocks, excellent condition. $550 or best offer. M u st sell 454-0526. top, red 1971 H O N D A CB175. 1.600 m iles. B e s t o ffer gets this one reg ard less 465-8040 afte r 7 p m, O rig in a l upholstery, 1952 B U I C K S P E C I A L , a door 74,000. radio, heater, standard stra ig h t 8, v e r y good tires, excellent body-chrome 442-3596. P H O T O G R A P H E R S am a te u rs, A TTEN TIO N Announcing a brand new and rpsscn ah ly p riced m odeling se rvice a v a ila b le to serious se m ip ro fe ssio n a ls, and professionals W h y knock you rself out tryin g to find decent m odels when w e h a v e 25 m ale and fe m ale models (c a re fu lly selected fro m o v e r 150 ap p li­ c a n ts) ! M odels are a v a ila b le for, and exp erienced w ith , se v e ra l nude figure, p ortrait, life d raw in g, fash­ ion. T V ads etc. S o rry , we don t pro­ vide studio, ca m e ras, developm ent, free ad vice, etc. T h is Is not a schlock walk- in operation. A ll persons using our modf-lj are c a re fu lly screened I f lnter- ested, c a ll 451-3396 m ornings between lf) a rn. and noon. G ir ls — lf you w ould iiko to e a rn e x tra m oney, c a ll for an appointm ent. fo rm ats — j F O R S A L E E X E R - G E N I E used one month also used w ashing m achine. ; C a ll a fte r 5 :30 p rn. 288 2527. G A R A G E S A L E S a tu rd a y O ctob er 28, S u n d a y O ctob er 29. 1904GA U n iv e rs ity A venue. Clothes, k itch en w are, desk. W E R E N T A U S T I N Your time is valuable Our services free P A R A G O N P R O P E R T I E S 4 7 2 - 4 1 7 1 T H E C A S T I L E . W H E R E the unusual Is usual. F u ll kitchen, shag carpet, gas g rills in p icn ic area. p riv a te sauna, and g reat location. W e s t L y n n a t W e st 9th 477-7794. G r e a t L o c a ti o n THE CARRELS Large, c a rpeted, o 'e bedroom, *h tt’e to cam pui, covered parking, & c e le cable, dirposal, tjn d e ck, O d y I vacan cy 2812 N iece* 472 6497 ADVANTAGE POINT APARTMENT LOCATORS Top flight ap a rtm e n t locators se rvin g you. IS R IG H T — FR Eft T H E P R IC F A partm ent* ranging from $119.50 I I I W e s t Anderson Lane, Su it* 208 454-2556 O N L Y O N E L E F T , 2 bedroom , 2 bath lu x u ry ap artm e n t, located acro ss the street am enities, cam pus, nil m aid se rvice, nil b ills paid, fro m $200. 2910 R e d R tv e r. 476-5681. from TAI SHAN Excellent p r e * for luxury apartm ent*. W e ll $ l3 9 - $ !6 9 . ira* Ic 'a te d , fully carpeted kit, Dishwasher & D e p o ­ sal and more. C o m * out to 1400 Eatt 51 it. 453-3306 THE BLACKSTONE $64.50/ month Apatt^-ent vinq '/j b o c) from Cam pu* Individual applicant* m atched with com patible roommates 2910 Red River 476 5631 A Paragon Property R E A S O N A B LE RENT L A R G E STU D IO A PA RT M EN TS THE BRITTANY 300 Twine rest 465 0456 POSADA DEL NORTE 7200 Duval 454-I I 54 U t R G E e fficie n cy $115 plus e lectricity’ Pool, a ir conditioning, carpet, p an e l­ ing, no pets. Huntington V illa , 40th at A venu e A 454-8903. I * Font A partm ent* a** j st beautify for student* b a c a b a o f the excellent ihutfle b .» route j u t oft location. O n campu* and include many extra*. A L L B IL L S PA ID . L U X U R Y 2 B E D R O O M , 2 bath, a p a rt­ m ent, $170 m onthly, all bills paid. D uv; tai V t /ilia, 452-1459. ------ L U X U R Y O N E bedroom and e fflcle n - • oles, p riv a te balconies patios. P a r k P la c e A p a rtm en ts. H ig h w a y 290 E a s t B e rk m a n . 454-4691. S U C A S A : One bedroom lu x u ry a p a rt­ m ent on shuttle. A v a ila b le N o ve m b e r 1st. $159.50. 451-2268. T A K E O V E R L K A . S E : furnished efflrl- o ncy at R iv e r H ills, $135 m onthly, shuttle route. C all R e g in a 10-6 . 477-5196. R O O M A N D one bedroom ap artm en t a va ila b le . A p a rtm e n t w ith CA-CH, fol­ ly carpeted, built in kitchen pool. walk- to cam pus, all bills paid. 311 E a s t 31st. 478-677*;. L A R G E a bedroom,, w ith kitchen. 7 entrances, accom odates 4, $225 plus e le c tric ity . Another for 2 at $225 hills paid , Un usu al. 1902 N ueces. 476-3462, 476-8683. W A L K L A W school la rg e 2 bedroom, $220. B ills na id. R i v e r Oaks, 3001 R ed R iv e r. 472-3914. UNIVERSITY AREA SANTA RITA APARTMENTS 2819 Rio G ran d e I bad room apt* — $82.50 Double — $57.50 Every ti 5'g 1 .-m'ihed 472-7239 FREE RENT FOR OCTOBER T wo bedrooms, two bath*, ma d a d • a U tc r, ca b 's TV, near cam p * on *hut- • a bi.s. $64 50/mont'n a ' b *. LA FIESTA APARTMENTS 400 East 30th 4, 1800 W e now have I & 2 bedroom apar tment* for rent ESTRADA APARTMENTS 1801 S. Lakeshore Blvd. 442-6668 R EA G A N SQ U A RE T O W N H O U SES N o rth e a lf, 2— I'/ j T I I I G ran d C an yon Roo . p rivate back yard. Brick fireplaces. Utilities. 4 5 4 4691 B E A U T I F U L I B E D R O O M ap artm en ts Ju st 6 blocks from U T L a w School. F’ully carpeted, fu lly paneled, fu ll kit (•hen and m ore P lu s eie. B a c c a r a t 3703 H arm o n . 453-7190. M E N T . B E A U T I F U L E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T ­ Including location. M a u n a K a l Apts. 405 E . 31 472-2147. e x tra * M a n y able N ov S P A C IO U S I bedroom np artm en b a v a il­ lease till end of M a y. C A / C H , xhuttle. pool, $139.50 plus e lectric. 4412 A venu e A, C all 454 1360. dishwasher, I, Doe* your acartrre n t f r / s a g reat 'oca fa ir price*, patio* or ba conies bon. b uilt in beck A e 'v e i, breakfast rook*, p a n tie * , wet b a'*, 3 doc c 3 c 1 o room*, laundry and A IL B IL L S P A ID ? Broadmoor has it all. I2C0 P- ndmcor - 454-3335 or 434 7551 1972 I ROOce C O R O L L A station w a ; u A M - F M , still u n der w a rra n ty . 452- 8333, $1900. T u t o r i n g J U M B O B E A N B A G ch airs A n y o d o r o r com b ination of colors. Good p rice. S T A T T U T O R IN G . A ll business m ath. Q R E p rep aratio n. 451-4557. C al! 441-0401. O N E B E D R O O M N O V I. disposal, dish­ w asher. pool, cable, shuttle. of? E a s t R iv e rsid e . 2101 Elm o n t, 127. 447-1122. I block T A K E O V E R L E A S E N ov. 1 I ji r g e e fficie n c y '2 beds) all bills paid. $125 140b R io G rande. C a ll 474-1159 after 5 p.m . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . THE DISCOUNT SHO P Sle-eo i TV* offers; • low p rices on stereo com ponent *- * terns Inclu ding nam es such as A lk D U A L K E H , R E C T I L I N E A R , S A N S E I, S C N Y , K E N IA O O I >. M A R A N T Z . A K A I, T E AC • Sony T rin itro n color T V s • Bony stereo r-ompar-t system s • F u ll se rvice d ep artm en t 38'h Ar S p eedw ay 477 0937 IO a rn. • 6 p m . Mon. '"eh. G A R R A R D ATO 4 spend ch an g er w a ln u t S h o re M 5 5 E cartrid g e , $30. base, D inette w ith 6 ch airs, $20 472-9955. 4 M A G S. G re a t shape M a k e offer or exchange C a ll S a n d y 477-2282 or le a v e 1971 V W rarnpm oblle. with pop’np and radio, $2595 cash. 478-8460 M A T H . Busin ess, lib e ra l . ation m a jo rs o u r p erien ced ce rtifie d reasonable. M a th en em ies. 452-1327, arts, sp e cialty. te ach e r. edu- E x ­ V e ry a? 'I E X P E R T T U T O R I N G o rg anic intro du cto ry p o litical s. I en ce, hi tory, R u ssia n . G all 441-2170 a fte r 6:00 D rn. ch e m istry, In E N G L I S H T U T O R I N G that you can un­ derstand. 4 76-0757. TO PLA C E A TEXAN C LA SSIFIED AD C A L L 471-5244 S e r v i c e s PRINTING X E R O X IN G LECTURE NOTES 4c • 41 courses • tyo® letting quick copy • quality work • binding *;-q!e copy rate • quality class notes • reductions • these*, dissertations • same day service • For In forme lion call 477-3641 AH Available at I. D. A. Co. 901 V/est 24th 477-3641 M i s c e l l a n e o u s H A P P Y B I R T H D A Y S U S A N ATEILDUILY — A.B. ST. CHARLES and GEORGETOWN SQUARE APARTMENTS $ 1 2 2 . 0 0 Townhouses, I Sr 2 bedroom apartments. C-bse to schools and shopping centers Furnished or Unfurnished 4320 - 4330 Bull Creek Road 452-7797 453-4959 Small deposit. EL CORTEZ end EL PASADO 1122.00 I & 2 bedroom apartments Furnished and Unfurnished Close to Highland Mail and IH 35. Students welcome. r butt Ie Bus One B’ock HOI and 1105 Clayton Lane small deposit 453-7914 ALL N E W XXIV FLATS 1515 Palma Plaza - at V/ett Lynn - I blk. off Enr'-I ? BED RO O M $225.00 e'1 bi!!* paid •Shuttle bus — Cable I V — Full/equipped kitchen* Contemporary chrome & glass furnishings 476-9472 476-9712 LA FONTANA $119.00 One and two bedrooms. Furnished % Unfurnished Close to Hancock and Capital Plaza Shopping centers, Easy access to SH 35. Students and families welcome. 1220 and 1230 East 381/? Street small deposit 454-6733 C I . A S S I S T E D A D V E R T I S I N G K A T K S T a c h W o r d f ! 5 w o r d m i n i m u m ) r u t * o n e t i m e . . . . . . .h< .06 .Ta -05 $ K n - ' h A d d itio n a l T im * . . . . . . . S * S t u d e n t ............$ T a c h a d d i t i o n a l w o r d - n t o its e ra tlv e lasnee to w ort I a ...................................... I I I . T e x a n •Tuesday T e x a n M o n d a y , 1 1 : 0 0 a . m . W e d n e s d a y Texan T u e sd ay, 11 :00 a rn. T h u r s d a y T e x a n - f r i d a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y , 11 OO a m W e d n e s d a y . t t :0 0 a rn. ♦ r ‘ In th e e t en t o f e r r o r s m a d e In ■ a n n d tc rtis e m e n t, im m e d ia t e n o tice • n o s * h e t i t e n a s t h e p u b l i s h e r s a r e i n c o r r e c t r e s p o n s i b l e f o r o n l y O N E ( i n s e r t i o n . M I c la im s fo r a d ju s tm e n t* l i t ...old be m a d e n o t l a t e r th a n SO I d a s a f t e r p u b l i c a t i o n . ” s’ • . L O W S T U D EN T R A T E S IS word* or la** for 75c th* first • fir a, S c each additional word. Stu ­ dent* rnJ* t *how A u d ito r’s re ce ip t Journalism la 4 dq. 107 from 3 a m. to 4:30 p.m. (M o n d a y through Friday. in ad vene* i pay in G all a fte r 5. 476-0093. I ^ H Q E E E E B B B i i ? ; IL’ 1 l l ¥ f or; s I A y o u 'll lik e us. A u stin ’ s m ost i pl etc* used book stores, bookstall sd B u r n e t I C o a d, 454 • :004. B o o k sta ll p ltal P la z a . 454-1132. _ __ : H A S I .A R G E S T aeiectlon of low est e qu ipm ent * creo at id. E x c e lle n t condition. C all 461. 1*70 O P E L K A I -'KT. 23,500 miles, good Ion, gets good gas m ileage A M - F M and com ponent turntab le s' pa ra t* system s 478-0015. > R I K E , new, m an y extras, sported, $80. C a ll G re g or 4010 T A P E deck, one y e a r old, w $500, you rs for $325. 447 1908. M I J ,m ! i r S R T X F O R best offer. 1961 statio n w n g o n ; W u rlitz e r Up! si ' piano, brown couch. 926-6282, <1 A e c i a l s h i p m e n t ju st a rrive d , s V >nd n e w n a tio n a lly ad ve rtised stereo prop' ro-nt system s in m atching w aln u t s h in ' try. T h e se units featu re p ow erful RO w a tt R P . P . am p lifie rs. A M -FM - I P X tu n ' r, 4 speed G a rra r d changer, nd la r g e 3 w a y a ir suspension sp eaker gstem s O n ly ($199.95) each, cash c r U rn s U n c la im e d F re ig h t, 6535 North in m ar. 9-9 w e e k d ays, 9 6 Sat . 7,' Y A M A H A 650. s i* w e*ks old. In ar.ty $1200.00 o r trad e for car. ........... ........................................ 1-7031. ide 2 for H O I’S A N D S O F U S E D paperbacks I . T h e B o o k rack , 3709 T In te rre g io n a l. Mon-Sat. 9-6, Sun. J. 4 7 7 - 2 4 9 8 .____________________________ _ E n o n A M - F M sy ste m . S T F T R E O Compact changer. G a r r a r d 25 (sj 2502 S a n Antonio, 2. A fte r 6 a B Y O W N E R , 1971 V W B u s AC, radio, scar- p er package table, sin k). M a rb le K a lis. 693 -1933. red, m essage IA N OHTA, shape \ ( ny rf able. $900 451- good • f y p P a g e IO F rid ay, O ctober 27, 1072 Da il y Te x a s O N E B E D R O O M A P A R T M E N T , h e a vy wood paneling, fu lly carpeted, a ll built In kit- hen. CA-CH. pool, d o se to cam pus and shuttle bus. 4200 A venu e A. 454-6423. L O C A T E D J U S T O F F JH35 n e a r Capitol P la z a , H ig hlan d M a ll and N E shuttle route, U n iq ue v illa g e styled ap artm ents w ith m an y e x tra conveniences. The H am le t, HOO R c in ll. 452-3202. C L O S E IN . N ic e one bedroom duplex. shag carpet throughout, $125.00. w a te r rn.id. 1109B T r a v is Heights and gas B lvd . C a ll 454-6741. R o o m s S p a c e A v a i l a b l e Come by today TEXAN DORM 1905- 1907 N ueces F a ll, Spring S em ester*. $46 50 per nm. D a ily m aid se rvice, ce n tral air. com- p le te ly rem odeled. Also a v a ila b le — single room s, parking, re frig e ra to r, hot plates T w o blocks from cam pus Co-ed i I RESIDENT M A N A G E R S 478-5113 m m x E : S I N G L E A N D double rooms, kitchen. AC, m aid. 2411 R io G rande, 477-3671, 202 W e st 31st, 472-2368. 2021 Guadalupe R o o m m a t e s 4 7 2 - 8 4 1 1 A t V I L L A E S P A N O L A P A R T M E N T S * They don t g v * you a lot of b. M ane a?* * * r o rn $!25/mo. 615 A/, St. s A .*. 454 3194 O N E B E D R O O M g arag e a p a rtm e n t C arp o rt, N ic e yard . AG, $117.59 plus bills 458-6116 a fte r 6 (JO p.m . w e e kd ay*. A n y tim e weekend*. A P A R T M E N T S , U N F . O N E , T W O . B E D R O O M . T H R E E Spacious, p riva te, q uiet apartment--. L a r g a pool and grounds. $130-up. 452- 4011 T H R E E townhouse. B E D R O O M , l ’ a A v a ila b le No\ hath I. i m in .H ts UT. $200. Befo re 5. 472 8073. W a n t e d M A L E 2 bedroom ap artm ent. C a ll 4654)114. No R O O M M A T E share T O a n sw e r c a ll back. W A N T E D F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to sh are ap a rtm e n t w ith two others - ' p riv a te bedroom, bathroom , shuttle $90. 4 11-2470. 1 O L D E R F E M A T ,E R O O M M A T E w an­ ted. Ow n bedroom. City bus. No - shuttle, $65 plus bills. 465-0366, - - F E M A I, E R O O M M A T E N E E I ’E D N o v e m b e r to M a y, no deposit, $82 50- - - month. SR, shuttle. C a ll J u li e 44SNW76. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E N F E D E ! ) . Tw o bedroom a p artm e n t $1'>0 bills paid c a ll 444-0643. L A K E H O U S E O N w a te r share two bedroom, two bath with C H U A . boat and dock, fireplace, $150 plus hair bills. P re fe r g rad .student o r pro few s nal 327- 0400 a fte r 7 till I a in. ask for R o y . M A L E R O O M M A T E needed lo help with ru- take o v e r lense T w o bedroom furnished ap artm e n t. 47H4793 two N E E D F E M A L E ro o m m ate Be au tifu l pool, clubroom , d ishw asher, disposal, $56 25 month. 4.54-2593. bedroom, bath, two F E M A LFT R O O M M A T E needed im ­ m ediately. One room. $5,5 plus bills. Close to cam pus. A p t In house. 474 1778. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed b y Nov. I to sh are nice two b ed r" -rn ap a rt­ ment, $77 .50 bills paid 478-7879. M A L E R O O M M A T E own too rn, G R shuttle route, $48 plus th u d bills. 465 T y p i n g S E R V I C E . G rad u ate V I R G I N I A S C H N E I D E R T Y P I N G I n- typing, printing, b jnding, derg radu nte 1515 Koenig L a n e . Telephone: 4h,>-i20.i. and Jus! North of 27th & Guadalupe M B A . Typing , M ultlllthtng, B in d in g The Complefe, Professional FULL-TIME Typing Service to the reeds of U n iv e rs ity Sp e cial keyboard equipm ent language, science, and engineer* ta il'T cd students for mg therms and dissertations. Phono G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em p hill P a r k B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D , I B M S e le c tric — p ic a /elite. 25 y e a rs experience. 443- ____ E X P E R I E N C E D s e rre ta n r w ould like typing. 45c p er page. 926- fo rm e r 7184. 5136 ROY W . HOLLEY: PRINTER 476-3018 Typesetting, T yping , P rin tin g , B in d in g H I G H E S T Q U A L I T Y T Y P I N G SUSAN'S TYPING SERVICE Ra'io o a pro f* n o r * 1 L r -THa i * v~-Di*s*ct#tion* IBM Se ettr - I (Pica and El *•) C e r t 'n P - n Syn-bc * Proc*'re«d "q PLEASE C A LL 452-4290 B E A U T I F I L T Y P I N G , th*****, dlsser- r (sc, f m e r legal s e c re ta ry . tat M rs. Anthony. 454-3079 I Xt J-. L L E N T T Y P I S T - fo rm e r se e r* . all U T papers. .Vie/page M A to ry W A N T E D F O R S p rin g se m ester: house less for U n iv e rs ity couple, $120 o r 8854. Gall 478 3721. W A N T T O B U Y ’ good In stj Ie young m en & young ladles clothes, lingerie, larg e p urses m e n ’s shoes, bedspreads, sheets towel*. 78 S a n M a rco s Street. 477-2165. _______ W A N T E D T O B U Y Books, Playb oys. R e co rd s, guitars. Penthouses, eb- record p layer*, radios, stereos 320 Con-? gross. O N E O R T W O fe m a le room m ates, 328G $60-$90. C all 442-680* afte r 4 0 N E E D O N E O R T W O fem ale room ­ m ates by N ot em ber I G a ll 447 2368 afte r .> 00. weekends, an ytim e L A U R A ’S P E R S O N A L P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P IN G - re p o rts, these*, dissertation*, ltilithing binding. M b o o k s . etc R easonable. Close in. 478-8113. H e l p W a n t e d Ju'Y f H " H of 27-K & Guads' ■P« F o r R e n t C A P I T O L C A M E R A R E N T S — c a m e r­ lighting m e t­ lenses, projectors, ers, calcu lato rs. 476 3581, as, N E A R 88th, a va ila b le N ov. I. new 2 bedroom m obile home - m a rrie d couple only. No pets 453-4612. S P E E D W A Y , L o s t a F o u n d $1,000 REWARD G r a y fe m ale Chlchuahua. W e ig h s about 2’ a lbs w a * w e a rin g a s m a ll yellow co lla r w ith bells. H e r nam e is “ P r is s y ” She needs special attention, food and m edicate n W ill be 6 y e a rs old Cost $35.00 as a pup but she is as a baby in l.o st betw een V illa C ap ri and us now L B . J . L ib r a r y . (713) 465-1225. No questions. (713 ) 468-2236 or R E W A R D for re tu rn of ca lico black, w h ite ) fe m ale eat (tan. lost trnm Saxo n y A p artm en ts, R o y a l C re st D riv e 111 6814 afte r 5 30 i> rn. L O S T R IN G W E D N E S D A Y In men s restroom In basem ent of P a rlln . C a ll 926 .">628 afte r seven R e w a rd L O S T M A T T : B A S S E T T puppy Brow n, l./ ra. 38th black, w hite. A nsw ers to - H a r r is P a r k . R e w a rd . 441-0634 S e r v i c e s XEROX COPIES 4c EACH lin q !* co p y rat* reduction* fee each Q . a ' T y cop (“ * on plain bend papar. G IN N Y ’S C O P Y IN G SERVICE 31 A D O B IE M A L L 2nd L E V E ’ , D O B 'E C E N T E R 476-917! cr 452-8428 Now open M en Th-jr*. n gilt* F ri.-Sat. ’til 5. lub. T Y P E W R I T E R R E P A I R S . C L E A N T N G - se rvice m an. Re aso n a b le rates. F’r r * pick up. A n y time 345-1297. Ex p e rie n c e d P IA N O L E S S O N S . C h ildren and a d u lt' and popular. C onvenient Gins deal N o rth /C e n tra l. 454*2968 a fte r 2. A R E Y O U B O R E D w ith life ? C a ll 452- T Y P I N G In m y home. T r r m papers, them es, dissertations. M rs. Peterso n, L A Y E R C U T S , S IN G IN G , fu nky lashes, a stro lo g ical ch arts, B lu b 454-3531, 345- 6939. 886-4818 3000. VV,’ FInglne p arts and se rvice . FTnglne w o rk of a ll kinds a t reaso n able prices. O u r aim Is to do b etter w o rk for less money. And w e sell o rig in a l equipm ent engine p arts a t discount p ric e s : cranks. bearings, v a lv e s piston and cy lin d e r sets, rings, m u fflers, extracto rs, and clutches. A C o m m u n ity A uto m o tive co o perative Su p p lier. O ve rse a s E n g in e s 836 3171 NFTW W O R L D C le an in g S e rv ic e , y a rd work. hom e cleaning, m aid se rv ile , tree trim m in g . 476*4578, c h a ra 'd e r g u a r­ anteed A R M A D I L I X ) W o rld H ead q u arters. c re a tiv e dancing, co m b in ation : ballet- ; m o d em Ja/z-exerdse. M o n day ternoons 5-6. S a n d y K e m p 454 8246. a f­ G O O D C O O K W ith car, re fe re n ce s seeks ho lid ay and foot ha] I p a rty planning. Booking now thru N e w Y e a rs . 926-3161. T H E L I T T L E nu rse ry, n a tu ra l licensed fonds, m usic, art. lots of love. 5507 D u v a l S tree t. 454-7343. A ges 2-5. P la c e , FU D Unusual opportunity for m atu re , flex! tile, m art n-d couple, desirous of a learnin g experience w o rkin g p a rt rim e Aith 8 adolescents In a residen tial sot lin g Ro om an d h o a rd p ro v id e d v nile on d u ty In addition to s a la ry Require^ on-* d a y a w eek and 2 w eekends per month. (5 >ntact The Settlement Club Home between 9 - 5 p m . 875 2150 W A I T R E S S . and hostess needed. F’or interview 8611 Balcones, B U S B O Y S , near 183, nfm r 4 p m G IR D m ornings, F R I D A Y no P A R T typing, errands, casu a l rtrrs«. tra c tiv e w ith p erson ality C o . 606 E a s t 7th. 47? Ro bert. tim e w ork recep tio n ist mod pay, at- C lin eros Sign for 2458 ask F U L L T I M E W O R K In d riv e In. o ve r 6106 IR, W h a ta b u rg e r D riv e In . C am ero n R ^ad. We*! groom ed pe-jo -*1.'* y e . " ) r-a- wanted to t * H » doo'm an re c e p to r duTe* at Ijx jr y f ah ris# 7 a - - I p.nr 21 28 year* r d. E»ce ■ • a . -j con dition* for young student Q u a : sd ap- p !ica nt# p e a l* ' a ’ 4 8 7218. D E L I V E R Y P E R S O N N E E D E D P a r t I m e 3 4 hours d a ily . < a r needed 478- • 2526. E X P E R I E N C E D S A L E S ( . l l " , for ladies sp o rtsw e ar shop. P a r t tin * In person. T h * C ric k e t Shop, Apply Highland M a ll W A N T E D R E S T O N S l B I .FT F E M A L E student to i are for 8 rn >r,th old child In m y home Afternoons and occasional .Saturdays, T ran sp o rtatio n requ ired, 9^8- 0212. R a w student w ith accounting degree and at least two y e a rs a v a ila b ility fur p art tim e e m plo ym en t w .ih a s m a ll co rp o ra ­ tion. P re d e ce sso r w ill provid e break in tra in in g p rio r to com plete take o v e r ny lax* ap plican t. P u b lic acco un tant and atto rn e y w ill be a v a ila b le fo r consulta (Ion and guidance A p p ro x im a te ly 20 hours/w eek requ ired $2 00/h 1 r and an exp erien ce m oney C an 't buy, G all for appointm ent. G eorge Sm ith . 465-7687. P A R T T I M E S A L E S cle rk and p icture fra m e r Ex p e rie n c e helpful. C a ll M r, ’til 8 W rig h t, 451-1 111. P H O N E S O L IC IT O R S , no experience ne cessary, we tra in , $2 06-hour. G al! 478 1525 F’rld a y or M on day T H E F 'L O W E R people need people to sell carn atio n * P a y Is 25-30 percent Of > ■ air sales ( ’all 453 917k 282-0319, 451-1516 or clim e by 4301 G uad dupe. Sen . i< es H o u s e s , U n f . YES, we do type Freshman themes. W h y not start out wYh good grades! Ph-.f-.e G R 2-32 Sd a rd G R 2-7671 2707 H em p hill P a r k D lsseruttl na. t i c k e r and reports 2.V*T Id idle l ith. L o rra in e B ra d y . 472-471&. EDC P E R T T Y P I S T . T k c ' f i , m pc Mrs. Tullos, 4’>3-3124. I r e : - i t bi ,efs. I B M S e le c t e e . re p .,ru , P rin tin g , binding. B C. 't e c r e U r t il S e rv ic e s The** , D issertation s - T e rm r a p e r * I ist, professional, a c c u ra te and guap. anteed s e rv ic e on ad y u r U n lv e rs iq r l PRTN 3 IN G M I I .T I K I T H I N G B I N D I N G • S p e cia l K e y b o a rd s # Spanish Po rtu g e se • I cg rn erin a • ( til o r • R;ing ta g e l • Kng! sh # H i* to ry • E t ce te ra # R' n/ P R 's I B M ' . ie. i- -* and E x e c u tiv e s / P ic a and B lite type* R esum e* « r d a m atte ty p e w rite rs for I crc ne zed e tters of application. F O R IN F O R M A T IO N A N D P R I C E S --- C A L L A I, T. I F. D 444 6 M | W O O D S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E , IO yearg I giw, thesis, dissertations, expel ,. ■ < etc. Prin tin g , bindings. 453-6090 I B M themes, theses dis.se ria tkms M A R J O R I E A N N E D E L A F I E L D ^ ty p e w r ite rs ; experienced typ ­ re­ Is B i n k A m ar I c a rd / M a ste r ist. sumes o u r k . h I Chart-* honored 442-7-plng S e r v ic e la--t m inute and ovr-mlgnt a va ila b le . 892-0727 - 50(11 Sunset T r a il c r 442-8545 - 2005 A rth u r Ban e T e rm papers, theses, le tters. M a ste r Ghargg d iS'Prtntlon s, honored. TO PL A C E A TEXA N C LA SSIFIED AD C A L L 471-2544 T y p i n g S T A R K T Y P I N G : Ex p e rie n c ed theses, dissertations, P R ’s etc. P rim in g and Binding. S p e c ia lty : tech nical. C h arlen e Stark. 45,3 5218. Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX D U PLIC A T O R S T h CROCKETT Ca. Fast, aff''ant, a-.curate. typ'nq of these* plus; them#*, dissertate rn, FAST X F R O X 4000 M U LT I! ITH, B IN D IN G 453-7987 5S30 Barnet Road JusT North of 27*H St Guadalupe TTxa/iJtA /nnjov&tjs M B A T yp in g , M uiUUthlng, Bind in g The Complete Professional FULL-TIME Typing S*rvic» R ESU M ES with or without picture*. Ph o n e G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H e m p h ill F a r k TO PLACE A TEXAN C LA SSIFIED AD C A L L 471-5244 476-7581 118 Neches Radio To Air Switchboard Marathon By JOHN BENDER Texan Staff Writer Community Switchboard will hold a 24-hour radio marathon beginning at 6 p m. Saturday at Dobie M all. City Council has agreed to block off Whit is Street from 20th to 21st streets where rook bands w ill perform from 6 p.m. Saturday to I a.m. Sunday and again from noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. The marathon w ill move inside Dobie M all to room IO from I a m. to noon Sunday. Folk singers w ill perform. Radio Station KEATH w ill broadcast the marathon live for the entire 21 hours. John Lane, executive director of Switchboard, said he hopes to raise at least $4,000 through telephone pledges and donations to be collected while the bands are playing. Tile number for telephone pledges will be 476-4665. Proceeds, I .a ne said, w ill go toward expanding Switchboard's programs by providing a counselor for runaways, an for persons travel hind emergency stranded in Austin and expansion at the free clothing program. S w i t c h b o a r d presently provide* telephone referral, emergency housing and storage and Job Information. counseling and “ Tile rationale behind what we're doing is that the Free Clinic marathon last venr set them up for a vear-long budget," Lane 590Id. City Council recently gave Switchboard SAHOO but “ ifs not clear whether we'll ever get that again.” Tnne said. Ten rock bands and eight folk singers will perform during the marathon. Tn case of rain. the rock groups will per­ form in the Dc hie M alt T n groups in order of appearance w ill lie: Basilisk, Lincoln. Evergreen, Cedar­ wood Workers, Vita, Vance Hobbs, Turtle Creek, Dick Roberts. Crawford Blade, T>arry Ruberstein, Kurt Van Sickle, Carl Smith, Ijost Austin Band, Rockola, Blackbird, Molts, Storm and Drew Thomason. Project Info Busy Informing Texas High Schools Show Increased Interest By D ANNY IMH (.LA S Project Info, an organization designed to inform Texas high s c h o o l the antlion University, has had requests for speakers Jump from 56 last year to 170 this year. about “ Up to this point, we have been abl* to handle the Increase in the schools," Invitations from Trudie 130 IOO F re d phi, said M rs. student development specialist. faculty “ We now have m e m b e r s and trained students on the staff," she said. the M n Precdph* attributed i n c r e a s e to invitations In distributing literature to schools around the state. This year th* program w ill Date Tickets Drawn For S M U Grid Game particularly benefit economically disadvantaged students, Mrs. Preciphs said. Integration has led Increased distribution of to an underprivileged students within schools. “ Our delgates are bringing back good report* from almost this year,” Mrs. all schools Preciphs said. “In fact, several schools we've visited have asked us to come back this spring and •peak to their junior*. “ Past experience Las helped Project Info. Maybe In previous y ea n th# time wasn't right for us to emphasize the fin a nH a1 ald amdents," Mrs, to minority “ Also, our P r e c i p h s said. program has been given a big boost from the administration.” Project Info is expanding Its services this year to community Preciphs organizations. Mrs. empha.sized that this will give de’ogation* * chance to talk to parents of the students. Mrs. Preciphs said a number of students have shown Interest Ln becoming delegates. Interviews for students who want to be a part of the program w ill be held this spring, she said. Each student must complete a t r 0 I n In g before becoming a delegate. program I Revenue Sharing County To Get Sum By ESTHER SILBER Travis County will receive $860,000 by January as its portion revenue sharing plan of passed by Congress earlier this month. the Precinct I Commissioner David Samuels-n said the funds “ seem to be liberally given with few restrictions.'’ for However, Washington officials fire and stressed priority in­ police protection, welfare, facilities and the creased updating of buildings. Com­ missioners were encouraged to work im­ provement:*." “ permanent jail for Samuelson, Precinct 3 Com­ mis, oner Richard Moya and County Auditor B ill Rust w'ere briefed officials federal by Tuesday In Fort Worth. Th* five-year, $30 2 billion program was signed by President Is to Nixon Friday. The aim pump more than $5 billion a year into states and local communities for services and improvements. the said R u s t federal suggestions were only “ oral statements ' and the county had f l e x i b i l i t y In deciding on programs. Moya and Samuel son im­ both expressed proving fire protection for rural areas. Moya also considered in­ creased police protection and health facilities In rural areas as V>p priorities. Interest In “ Right now we have only one patrol car in some areas and we need more than that,” Moya said. Rural health care is also of poor quality, he added. The 1973 county budget Is now and Mova under preparation to meet with other expects c o r r isEioners “ within a week or two" to discuss new programs. Th* first check for $430 OOO is MIDDLE EAST CUISINE SATURDAY, OCT. 28 SUNDAY, OOT. 29 SERVING 5 P.M.-9 P.M. SERVING ll A.M.-9 P.M. ALAMO RESTAURANT 604 Guadalupe 476-5455 Regular American Dinner St Wine List Available O RD ERS TO G O due the first week in December with a second on* scheduled for th* beginning of January. Fund distribution the program is based on numerous factors including the 1970 census and the county tax ba.se. for by Th* two-day conference was sponsored the Na dona'; Association of Counties and in e l u d e d from throughout Texas and surroun­ ding states. representatives ii PANTY HOSE SPECIAL! one size, super stretch Suzy Perette panty hose These $ !.9 5 value pan ty hose m ade by one o f America s leading m anu­ facturers, ar# famous for long '►ear and co m fo rtab le fit. N o bag gin g or wrin­ kles. too. Snag-resistant, C h o o se from five fashion colors when you g e t our q u ality Sanitone dryclean­ ing. H u rry, supply Is limi­ ted. ‘ 'PANCAKES 2 , SA U S A G ES ; ‘ Coffee, tea, ' -or hot chocolate LM&mimsL \.? *" * LARGE ORANGE ' X ■ rn JUICE I «* V a P A N C A K E S with coffee ’A it, c f tea or ,. S B F hot chocolate 5 ♦ I U H S A lb * blanket following tax Bombers have twin drawn from application* for the Texaa-SMU football game Pick up tim* la from 9 a rn. Monday to mvm Tuesday, at th* date ticker window In Gregory Gym. Ticker* not claimed by th* deadline will Ii* returned to th* regular student lottery, Person* w’hose number wa* not drawn may gtill participate In the regular drawing or may purchase t date ticket in the section beside th* student area and draw an adjacent blanket tax ticket. Date ticket* cost $6. who nom m u ore* or**# OOM* or anc FILM 'N PHOTOS Halloween Special KODA C O LO R DEVELOP and PRINT 12 EXP. $1.97 20 EXP. $2.97 500 W II N WHITf 8*00 BURNET BO, K l WEST HTH presents CHARLES JOHN QUARTO Le Potpourri Coffee House Thurs. & Fri., Oct. 26 & 27 8:00 to 11:30 p.m. N O W SERVING SA N D W IC H ES & DRINKS THE PENTAGON PAPERS and AMERICAN DEMOCRACY A Documentary Film with Daniel Elisberg TOP SECRET 55* Burdine Aud. Direct Action Fri., O ct. 27 7, 8:10, 9:20, 10:30 p.m. EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed NOW ACCEPTING MALE & FEMALE DONORS CASH BONUS PROGRAMS FOR REPEAT DONORS Austin Blood Components, Inc OPEN: 8-3 p.m. Tu*t., Thur., Fri. & Sat. 12:00 NO O N-7 p.m. Wed. 409 W . 6TH 477-3735 The Texas Union Musical Events Committee INSIDE THE LOCATED FLA G O N & TRENCHER )”on Can Hat e Your Pie and Vat It I no! O PEN 5 P.M. - 12:30 A .M . Sunday - Thursday 5 P.M . - 2:30 A.M . _________ F rid a y & S a tu rd a y Who will you vote for Nov. 7 ? BIG DADDY DELIVERS PIZZA 2513 SAN ANTON IO STREET Call 476-6795 □ □ Undecided — then com# to the rally and hear Me- G overn't policiei divcusied by a Senator who headed the Muski# Campaign. M cGovern — then come to the rally and hear Hugh**, have a good time, *upport th# candidate. O R S O N WELLES' CITIZEN KANE WILL BE SHOWN MONDAY, OCTOBER 30 7:00 & 9:30 BATTS AUDITORIUM TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 7:00 A 9:30 JESTER C EN TER AUDITORIUM Presented by UNIVERSITY FILM PROGRAM COMMITTEE and CINEMA TEXAS Sen. Harold Hughes at a McGovern Rail* FAMILY STYLE With Sheriffs Candidate Raymond Frank on Gregory Gym 12 Noon "Law and Order and Nixon" Father Arthur Mouser SERVING THE FINEST CATFISH YOU CAN BUY tctilted *eav Au^ >lh Noritv df 4 ^Omts> bn - I » AI/S77V SERVING BEER BY PITCHER ^ R E F IL L S I J J ? & 2 0 * NEW HOURS M-F 7 A .M .-2 A .M . Sat.-Sun. 9 a.m. - 2 a.m, Free Lunch paid for by UMC — Jim Arnold, Chairman. T h e D AIL? THAM Friday, October 27, 1372 Page ll » : V I »« -( ■ A rn* CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE THE TEXAS UNION WITH SOL HURC K p r e s e n t s HARKNESS BALLET SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29 MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM 8:00 P.M. TICKET D R A W IN G CONTINUES TODAY H O G G BOX OFFICE IO A .M .-6 P.M. FREE TO BLANKET TAX HOLDERS. S I C H A R G E F O R F A IL U R E T O P R E SE N T B L A N K E T T A X BUS SCHEDULE JESTER, K IN SO L V IN G , C O O P , 6:30, 6:45, 7:00, 7:15, 25c EXACT C H A N G E REQUIRED D R A W IN G BEGINS M O N D A Y FOR AUSTIN SY M PH O N Y O R C H E S T R A PE R FO R M A N C E O N N O V . 3. H O G G BOX O FFIC E IO A .M . - 6 P.M . By BRUCE GOLDFADEN Texan Staff Writer (Second of Two Part*) S tu d e n ts Fee in th e U niversity Co-Op a bookstore, d e p a rtm e n t sto re , a b a c k d ro p fo r b a rte rin g w ith D ra g v e n d o rs th e ir fo r fu lfillm en t of a n w a re s a n d a infinite co n su m er needs. fully com ­ B u t preh en d a of co o p erativ e .society o r th e rig h ts, p riv ileg es and p erso n a l benefits w hich can be obtainer! fro m it. the m e a n in g few stu d e n ts v a rie ty of To th ese u n d e rsta n d rig h ts fully, it is n e c e ssa ry to know the philosophy and p rin c ip les upon w hich a coop erativ e so ciety is founded. a re developed th e best h u m a n T he co-op philosophy springs from R o b ert O wen’s uto p ian idea c h a ra c ­ th a t te ristic s by cooperation, not com petition. In rn ay groups th e e a rly 18f)0s, trie d to w ork, and m ost failed, but th e R ochdale Society of E q u ita b le P io n e ers succeeded and b e c a m e a m odel for m odern c o o p erativ es. to put his b lea Tile U n iv ersity founded upon th e C o - O p w as R ochdale P rin cip les. n u m b e r, O riginally In p rin cip les w ere l l th e re w ritte n In 1966 a t th e C ongress of the In te rn a tio n a l C ooperative A lliance. T he principles a r e : • M e m b e r s h i p a of co o p erativ e should be so ciety vo lu n tary an d a v a ila b le w ithout a rtific ia l re stric tio n o r a n y social, ra c ia l, religious d iscrim in atio n , to all persons who c an m ak e use of its se rv ic e s and a re w illing the to re sp o n sib ilities of m em b ersh ip . p olitical ac c e p t o r societies • C ooperative a re d e m o c ra tic o rganizations. T h eir a ffa irs should be a d m in iste re d by p erso n s ele c te d o r appointed in a m a n n e r ag re e d by th e m e m ­ b e rs and a c c o u n ta b le th em . to societies M em bers of p rim a ry should enjoy rig h ts of voting (one m e m b e r, one vote) and p a r ­ ticipation in decisions affectin g th e ir societies. • S h a re ca p ita l should only receiv e a stric tly lim ited ra te of in te re st, if any. • S urplus o r savings, if any, a risin g out of the o p eratio n s of a society belong to the m e m b e rs rn rn rn rn rn rn rn • » Clint Eastwood Elizabeth Hartman IN 4 5 4 - 8 1 1 5 S S * # I H 3 5 The EJeouiled • rn rn rn • rn # rn » p i l 'd S A M STBAKS-LOBSTER-11:30-6 MIXED DRINKS 2 FOR I Directed by Don Siegel Frl. and Sat. Oct. 27 & 28 7:30 & 9:35 Jester Aud. Adm. .75 Student G ov’t. IN G M A R B E R G M A N S CLASSIC ©nth Seal Co-Op's Philosophy Analyzed Modem System Violates Original Cooperative Principles S tudent G overnm ent, believes the be .student m e m b e rs e l e c t e d student population. should from the to ca m p a ig n ,” “ All stu d en t nom inees the b o a rd a r e out of touch w ith the m a s s e s b ecau se th ey do not have to explained. “ C am paigning for m y office w as an educational ex p erien ce, and I le a rn e d of the problem s stu d en ts e n c o u n te r.” he “ AN ELECTION would also a r ­ tic u la te the issues and hopefully d e c re a s e stu d en t a lie n a tio n ,” he ad d ed . D r. K enneth Olm. c h a irm an of th e board and a ss o c ia te professor of m an a g e m e n t, said th e re is no re a so n a change could not. be in stitu ted . H e added an election se e m s to be less effective w hen th e re la rg e and div erse is a m em b ersh ip . p re se n t Dick election B ecause of Shocket, p o l i c i e s , educational psychology g rad u a te alm ost stu d e n t, Im possible sw eeping ch a n g e s in the Co-Op. to m a k e believes i t ’s “ Since the p resid en t of the U n iv ersity n om inates one half of th e board m em b ers, an y a tte m p ts by stu d en t re p re se n ta tiv e s a re th ­ w a rte d ,” said Shocket, one of the in m o re vocal bo ard m e m b e rs re c e n t years. IN REGARD to su rp lu s savings, stu d e n ts have only one dividend option. They m a y tu rn In p u r­ c h a se re ce ip ts for tile school y e a r a t the end of the .spring s e m e s te r to collect ra sh dividends. F a c u lty and sta ff m e m b ers a r e allow ed tw o dividend options: an 8 p e r­ a m onthly c e n t discount on c h a rg e account, or cash dividends on p u rc h a se receip ts. U ntil June, 1971. staff u ’ore allow ed a th ird option w hereby they could take an im m ed iate 10 p e rc e n t discount from the re g u la r selling price and pay the balan ce in cash. facu lty and Six oth er groups, four of these not m e m b e rs of th e society, a re also entitle,! to c h a rg e accounts a t the Co-Op. T hese include: 1) F u lltim e em ployes of the sto re wiio re c eiv e a 15 p e rc e n t discount, and p art tim e em ployes who p ercen t a discount. receiv e 12 2) E x-faculty and staff m e m ­ b e rs with estab lish e d cred it and le a st f h e y e a rs who served at re tire m e n t T hey before them re c e iv e an 8 p erc e n t discount. 3) E stab lish ed resid en t adult* outside the U niversity com m unity who have go^d cred it ratin g s. schools, d e p a rtm e n ts 4) L ib raries, s ta te , fe d e ra l and m unicipal a g en cies the a n d of U n iv ersity who re ce iv e a n 8 p e rc e n t discount. 5) L ocal firm s. 6) stu d en t organizations w hich receive an 8 p e rc e n t discount. R e c o g n i z e d A stu d en t m a y open a Co-Op tim e account wdth a ptircha.se of 850 o r m ore. The b ala n c e m ust six m onthly 1n- be p aid st a Aments. In said , ASKED I F it is th e intent of the Co-Op to follow all th e R ochdale P rinciples, O lm “ T h a w w ere designed for a n o th er tim e tightly and place, for a sm all, knit the group. The operation and n u m b e r of people involved look c au se s you re ality In the face and a d a p t fhe situation the tim e .” the needs of size of to to to an operation B ut the ex istence of th e Corv- Burner Co-Op of B erkeley pro v es these p rin cip les can suc­ th a t cessfully he applied In m odern tim es th e Bize of the U n iv ersity ’s. “ T he B erkeley organization b eg an as neighborhood buying H ubs in 1937, ” said E rn ie Eden, executive s e c re ta ry of th e Inter O ' O perative Council of A ustin. T ile groups opened a gr ocery sto re and a gasoline station, th e ir e ffo rts rig h t shopping ce n te rs owned by 58,000 m e m b e r fam ilies. developing Into TODAY THESE center* m n « W of su p e rm a rk e ts, h a n lw a re -v a rie ­ ty store's, p h arm a cie s, gasoline sta tio n s re p a ir an g a ra g e . auto and Quoting from the Jo u rn a l of the New H arbinger, a publication of N o r t h S tudent A m erican C o o p e r a t i v e O rgantrarton (NASCO), E den said , "The key to successful cooperation Is In the w ords ‘ac c e ss to ch an g e ’ If your cooperative has b uilt into It th# m ech a n ism s change with for w hich lndiridual m em ber feels he can do «*>mething about p rogress, i f s alive and w^ell. If the Rochdale you sim ply sta te P rin rip le s Individual m em ber feels the p rinciples have no relation to him or her, then you don't h ave a cr>-op. von have a com m ercial e n terp rise ** th e the so TURTLE CREEK N O COVER TONIGHT NO COVER 472-5392 ■ th e H E R PLACE th a t society a n d should be of In such m a n n e r ae d istrib u te d would avoid one m e m b e r gaining a t th e expense of others. This m a y be done b y distribution am ong m e m b e rs in prcnnrtiou to the tra n sa c tio n s w ith th e ir society. • All cooperative societies the for should m a k e provision th e ir m em b e rs, of education officers and em ployes and of the g en e ra l public in th e principles and techniques of cooperation, both econom ic and dem ocratic. com m unities, to se rv e h est c o o p e r a t i v e • A l l organizations, the in te re sts of th e ir m e m b e rs and th e ir a c ­ tiv e ly co operate in every p ra c ­ tical w ay w ith o th e r cooperatives at local, n ational and International levels. should of not A lthough s tric t com pliance with each rrf the R o chdale P rin cip les c h a ra c te ris tic Is ell th e U n iv ersity Co-Op societies, a d h e re s in m odified—o p e n m em bership, control by elected d ire c to rs and n e t surplus sa rin g s re tu rn e d a s a p atro n a g e re b a te . to a version which re tire d Is open M e m b e r s h i p to U n iv ersity stu d en ts, faculty and facu lty and staff staff, who .served five y e a rs o r m ore, and th e B oard of R egents. This com plies w ith th e R ochdale P rin c ip les in th a t the society is av a ila b le to all w ho can m ake use of its serv ices. by th a t TD F SOCIETY’S provision for control d ire c to rs elec ted conflicts w ith the second principle is not in a organization. d e m o c r a t i c S tudents, sta ff and facu lty a re denied the rig h t to d e te rm in e how policy- m a k e rs a r e sele c te d . th e Co-Op of T he tw o-thirds is d ire cto rs hoard com posed of four stu d en t and four faculty m em ber's. Students a r e nom inated by th e p resid en t of S tudent G ov ern m en t and a p ­ bv proved the Student .Senate. F a c u lty board m em b ers a r e nom inated by the chief a d m in is tra tiv e officer of the fu rth e r a p ­ U n iv ersity w ithout proval from any a d m in istra tiv e body. Both fa c u lty and student nom inees a re then voted upon by the existing board. of T il ESE EIGHT persona then eleci a ninth m e m b e r to serv e as c h a irm a n of the b oard. He is the chief and pre sid e s a t m onthly m eetings. p resid en t D ick B enson, executive officer of Fair Housing Commission Students with problem s con­ housing—contract*, cerning repairs, eviction, deposits, etc,—should call the Students’ i Association F a i r Rousing § Commission Office: Union f. to S p.m. . Building SH (I Friday). | through Monday Telephone 471-7796 (8 a.m . to i p.m . Monday through Fri­ d ay). LAM S YUM YUM Chinese Restaurant IS I he Pl ace f or A u s t i n s Finest A u t h e n t i c C h i n e s e Foods NOW SERVING EXCELLENT LUNCHES 3301 N. INTERREGIONAL 1 1 - 2 477-1687 rn rn rn rn • A Night of Heavy Comedy (tarring GEORGE (ARLIN C re ator of Hippie D ip p y W eatherm en 6 W onderful W ino NOVEMBER 9th 8 p.m . Municipal Auditorium Also Appearing! KENNY RANKIN A d ven e# Tickets $3.50 — $ 4 .5 0 — $5.50 Available At: 19th H ole Liquor Store | Both Locations) M a g ic Mushroom (D o b ie Center) Chess King (H ig h la n d M a ll) Evolution Records (San M arcos) J RUSTY, LAYTON, and JOHN / V — with R i l e y Osborne Austrian Chef, Erich Kreii, c re a te s the menus of his homeland exclusively a t Old Vienna. Old World elegance a t 8th and Rio Grande. Week end reservations 476-6019 Open 6:00 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Itll and Ria Grande u MEN UT: WM. P. ENGLISH MERCANTILE CO. C R E O L E G U M B O ....................................$1.23 C A J U N SU EL L O N S H R IM P 2.30 B R O IL E D W H O L E F L O U N D E R . . 2.30 F R IE D JU M B O S H R IM P ( 7 ) ____3 30 C R E O LE P O R K C H O P S ................. 3 95 C U T L E T IN W IN E SA U C E . . . . 2.30 C LU B ST EA K (1 6 o z.) ...................... 3 95 T B O N E ST E A K (IO o z .) ............. 2.50 T B O N E STEAK (18 ox.) ............. 3.50 # S IR L O IN STRIP STEAK (1 6 o z.) 3.95 N O W S E R V IN G D IN N E R 7 N IG H T S 3010 GUADALUPE P H . 477-0498 ANNOUNCING! • NEW PLAIN PAPER COPIER • YOU DO IT OR W E IL DO IT -SA M E PRICE! • BRING IN THIS AD FOR A FREE SUPER COPY AND A LEMON DROP THE COPY SHOP 3209 RED RIVER PARK AT THE DOOR Roy Roger*- R E S T A U R A N T ROAST BEEF SANDWICH SPECIAL 2 FOR *1.08 REG. $1.58 SAV E 50‘ OFFER G O O D N O W THRO UGH SUN DAY, OCTOBER 29th B E E R • F O O S B A L L O P E N T IL L 4 A M . CORNER 19th & GUADALUPE 477-6829 ' T H E S E V E N T H SEAL' knight, returning home rat ager medieval F.urope. An exceptionally p o u t rf ul film , is Bergman’s stu n n in g allegory o f m a n s search for m eaning in life. A the Crusades, p l a y s a gam e o f chess a i t h D eath while The Plague is a work o f awesome scope and fro m it remarkable visual pleasures. C A N N E S FILM FESTIVAL — In tern a tio n a l Ju ry Prize W in n e r — Twice — with: MAX VON SYDOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7:00-8:45- 10:30 A.C. 21 (Academic Center Aud.) BIBI ANDERSON OCTOBER 27 & 28 $1 ZEUS comes down to Earth for tfcej^ekend. ZEUS will perform this Fri. & Sat, /VOWER B W 1 0 th at L a m a r/4 77-3783 # Page 12 Friday, O cto b er 27, 1372 T H E DAILY TEXAN Note Service Disappointed ID A Proposal To Split Revenue Rejected me,” he said. “Our whole intention,” Holman said of the proposed purchase by the Senate, “ was to set up a system of communication, of feedback from the students and faculty.” IDA proposed last spring that the Senate purchase the service under a no-risk plan with an the profits equal sharing of between IDA and the Senate. taken at The Senate rejection came largely in response to a faculty the poll the end of the s u m m e r which showed majority of faculty members do not approve of a note-taking service. The results of the poll showed faculty members who 229 disapprove of a notes service as opposed to 159 who approve. To the question, “Do you ap­ prove of the program being administered by a student-faculty board under the auspices of the S t u d e n t Government,” 203 professors voted no and 169 voted yes. from student The question of whether the p r o f e s s o r s would allow a their graduate department to audit classes and provide note* for the service, which the present system is employed by IDA, was voted down, 192-187. Holman called terribly damaging.” the poll “not “The poll was slanted a little against us, but it was also pretty ! the middle, well split down especially on the issue of letting Use Texan Classified Ads note-takers Into class,” Holman said. H o l m a n mentioned the possibility of a review board, a system used at other universities, as a means to review the notes for quality and the service on better ways of working with im­ provements are needed, he said, to increase subscriptions and thus reduce rates. faculty. Such to advise the “Our relationship with the faculty has been pretty good,” Holman said. “We always ask permission to take notes In a class, and lf a professor says he doesn't want us In there, we respect his wishes.” MOLTA Lunches Served Daily 11:30 - 3 Dinner 5 - 1 0 p.m. Daily Serving • Steaks • Sandwiches 'J • Seafood • M ixed Drinks y f l f e ; at the FnalishAire apartments V I E r f ’f 2101 BURTON DRIVE ^ THE A F R O - A M E R IC A N P LA Y E R S Open "The Ghetto: Don't Cry, Scream!" For a Final Run Sunday, Oct. 29 thru Tues., Oct. 31 8 p.m. Matinee Sunday 2:30 p.m. A.C. Auditorium Don’t Miss it ’cause it’s Super-Bad $2.00 478-221! Cash Helps Beat DW I Convictions By TOM WELLS Texan Stall Writer The Austin Police Department reported last week that arrest* for driving while intoxicated (DWI) have almost doubled over the last year, but indications are that persons willing to spend enough money often can beat the charge. Jon Wisser, an assistant Travis County attorney, Indicated that person* who refuse to take a breathalyser test and who have enough money to pay attorney fees are extremely difficult to convict. Police Capt. W.R. Swinney recently said DWI arrests Increased 15.1 percent last year. He attributed the rise to a $1,500 breathalyzer obtained by Austin police in October, 1971. , WISSER AGREED that the breathalyzer was helpful, and he said •‘probably 97 percent of those arrested plead guilty,” because they take th* breathalyzer test. “Then there are those who spend many thousands of dollars and get off,” Wisser said. Wisser admitted those who can afford to hire good attorneys are favored because the attorneys can obtain repeated delays. If the defendant has not taken a breathalyzer test, tile longer the time before the trial, the less the of firer can remember, Wisser said. While the law provides that any person who refuses to submit to a breathalyzer test can have his driver’s license suspended; an acquittal or dismissal of the charges negates all action against the persons’ driving privilege. PATROLMAN Frank Fischer of the Department at Public Safety «rplained that when an officer stops a person suspected of DW!, he requests tile subject to submit to a breathalyzer test, to be ad­ ministered by a nurse or a doctor of hi#; choice within two hours. If the person refuses, the officer arrests the subject for DW! and files an affadavit with the DPS saying the subject refused the test. An administrative hearing then would be called and the defender^ amnmoned to appear before n judge in the em* rn tv In which he was arrested. Fischer said the hearing Is almost always within two to four months following the arrest. Wisser conceded it Is definitely to the defendant's advantage not to take a breathalyzer W . Assuming attorneys are knowledgahle concerning defendants* rights, W isser said he had seen only one a t­ torney take the breathalyzer after he was arrested for DW!. “That was because he was so drunk he didn't know what he was *Xng,” Wisser added. Penalties for first conviction DW! range from a minimum od a CV) fine and three days In jail to $500 ind two years In jail. A DEFENDANTS driver s license Is not suspended unless a Jail term Is »ervod. and Wisser said most sentences are probated. Travis County Adult Probati-m Officer Jim Rust said persons on probation for DW! are required to check in with their probation officer at least once a week for the first 12 weeks and once a month after at In addition, they must attend two sessions a we*»k for th* first 13 weeks at the Austin Rehabilitation Clinic, 410 W. 8th St. The clinic provides employment counselors, psychologists and an alcohol treatment program f«r th-e-o with more serious pmblems. Other provisions included in most DW I probations prohibit persons from drinking any liquor or even going into bar, Rust said. By AL CARTER Texan Stall Writer Pat Holman, owner of the IDA Lecture Notes Service, said Thursday his firm was “disap­ pointed” over the Student Senate vote Wednesday not to purchase the service. He said other means would be improvement and for sought reduced costs. “Wre’re going to go ahead and find other avenues to work with students and faculty,” Holman said. He added that one possible method will be to approach faculty members concerning the formation of a notes service review board. Holman said his only complaint of the Senate proceedings is that he was not informed that the matter would be brought up at the Wednesday session. “Common courtesy would at least call *°r them to Inform U.N.'s George Bush To Speak in Ballroom United Nation* Ambassador George Bush will speak at 3 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Main Ballroom. B u s h , former Texas congressman, was appointed by President Nixon aa permanent repreeentativ* of the United State* to to* United Nation* in 1970. a Admission will be to students, faculty and staff with current identification and $1 for other*. free The pubHe lecture Is sponsored by the Texas Union Ideas and Issue* Committee. FRID A Y & SA T U R D A Y PHOENIX D R IN K S D A N C IN G N O W SE R V IN G D E L IC IO U S S A N D W IC H E S FOR L U N C H EVERY D A Y 1 2 - 6 SOtJCJT M O R - i i S a l t s * - A t i l l Tleniw Ford Rd. off E. Riverside Friday — — Saturday — GREASY WHEELS LE ANN BIZZAROS and the AT J ' e v o J W E ST SID E TAP R O O M 24th and Rio G rand* M IX E D D R IN K S Texas Union Special Programs Committee Invites the children of students, faculty, staff and University employees to a S U N D A Y 4 - 6 Union 304 - 305 •FO RTUN ETELLER • REFRESHMENTS • S P O O K H O U SE • M O V IES B l 1411 L A V A C A 472-7315 TONIGH T & SAT. PRM and THET FURE ADVANCE TICKETS FROM DISCOUNT RECORDS FRI. A F T E R N O O N — J A M & BEER BU ST SKIFFLE B A N D ★ ★ ★ ★ C H U G C O N T E ST S W H O O P IN ' & HOLLERIN' H A P P Y HR. 3-6 M O N .-FRI. EMILE de ANTONIO'S 1809 San Jacinto 477-0432 - FRI. & SAT. - the inimitable By offerin g significant film! from la t'n America. Africa, and Asia THE THIRD W O R L D P H M SERIES seeks to expoie Austin A udiences to a wide­ ly-acclaim ed sector of contemporary film which hat had little exposure in this part of the country. SCHEDULE October 30 YAMA It MALLKU The fir BLOOD OF TILE CONDOR th ree w tS ely-ocrk itm ed film * by the you n g Bolivian director. Re San J ir e s, o ffer s a pow erful d ram atization of tile cultural pap be- n the m o u n tain Indians a n d the w hites of L a P az S ardines' film w as na! y banned In B olivia, then Inter V iew ed by half a m illion of Ma n ir y m e n a fter m ilita n t str e e t d em on strators succeeded In ge’tfng th e i r elea se d T he M im a* o f Od a provocative film I* rf acned w her m em - •r of th e ind ian c o m m u n ity , rn respon se to the forced ste rilisa tio n of ir w o m e n by P e a c e C orps v olu n teers, tak e their revenge. HW* b/w N ov em b er 6 VIDAS SECAS BARREN IJY E S tho fir st m a M en del e s of B ra z il’s w orld renow ned C inem a N ovo, I v - ' ira d os S a n to s’ n ow c la s s ic film portrays the life of draught- m : ,-r-int w o r k e rs In t i e rn .rth -e a stem »ert»u» reft mn T he people M-rt.io. b e c a u s e of the rich n ess of th eir folklore and the in ten sity o p p ression , h a v e c h a lle n g e d and Inspired the c r e a tiv e e n e rg ies of re first w a v e o f C in em a N ovo din-' tors. i P e r e ir a dos Santos b /w IM S of th the en I Nove mber IS B I R N ! IYT* t*6* ted by Italian fllm n .-tk er Gtilo P o n teco rv o fw ho w ar Internation al In tbs n for " B a ttle of A lgiers > and starrin g Marion Brand a- >f a I ’.rit ah C olonial ag en t. B U R N ’ portrays 'b e t w --phase lib eration if b la ck p lan tation w ork ers of the fictitiou s Port-:? <■ Island (. e m a d a T he fir st p h a se of the str u g g le — th row in g off P ortu gu ese ''la n d safe for li> — is ah Im p eria lism , In the secon d p h a se B ran d o and the new B ritish i— a nee red by B ran do In order to m a k e the '• lev -• are th e m se lv e s fa c e d w ith a revolutJ >n. o P o n te co r v o co lo r Novem ber 20 THE I XFR AL EL CHAGAL M iguel M ttin ’s sen sa tio n a l p ortrait t * a c r im 'r.a1 bred In the poverty and it th e story of FT’ ChncaLe <1 pp rn v-i UCB of the feu d al latifim dio. Through* n cr; ti n, crim e . Im p r iso n m e n t and death sen te n c e Littln n ever -se* s ■ ' t of th e social fo rces w h ich m u st be held acom gatab < H is I rn Is h th a p o w e rfu l a n a ly s is of th e condition of th e p e a s a n t a n d a n a tta c k on a rent n o n a ry Judicial sy ste m ml L ittln C hile b /w CHILE P FT S ON T/1NG PANTS rn lr-e-» I In a whlck v- th th e s u c c e s s e s and th e p r o b le m s of the P op u lar ' nlty e a t offlc als, stu d en ts, v orkers an b u sin e ss sp o k e sm en , the B e v ie s and th eir ere" doc jm en t the A fascinating and comprehensive look at Salvador Allen de s r , • m enu An \ AI & H annah L ev in ie sT'oetrunt of sp irit and opinion found In A llen de s In terview s w ith govern co lo r bile. U f r \ Novem ber 27 P l IELA-NDABA E N D OF DI XI-OOIT, M ghom o and a c rew of fiv e P an A fr ic a n ists e n tered Soutt A frica th eir fo o ta g e out o f the en ntry In s fitments, v and sm u g g le d (’teal film o ffer s a sta g g e r in g view of the p h y sic a l and p-o ter the ins ' lei- d o m in a te th e d a lly U se s of b la ck South Aft ‘ lty N a n a ( f ap arth eid . Ma ho m o b /w co lo r 197® WEST M RICX, ANOTHER VIETNAM? \ B ritish f rn c r e w r e c o r d s the r a m p life and c o m b a t e x p e lle r -es of c e e p era la un it figh ting In P o r tu g u e se C, In n and I n t e r s p e r s e * font a c * ts )m in d ep en d en ce an Intern ew w ith A m llc a r C abral, m o v e m e n t im G rea t B ritain founder cd th e I'AIG- b/w D ecem ber 4 RAMPARTS OF C E W R EMP VRTS D ’ ARGIEE A ben * ’ully film ed p o r tr a it of life In an A lg eria n v illag e (actu ally fi rued a) by a F re n c h d ire c to r who uses th e v illa g e rs th e m s e lv e s e s hit to > r V . A sit down strik e by th e m en of the villag e, wh- m ak e th e ir living rig ro c k s a lt nr.d er th e d e s e rt s--n. and the g rad rn aw aken in g of one e y ir.’v p rofessional a c tr e s s ti e f m > a tte s t to th# ch an g in g c o n s c io u sn e s s of the se e m in g ly ch an g a- urn :ng w om en of th e v illag e (ployed by the la B er tu ce lll color in r Jean- D ecem ber l l R E D DETACHMENT OF WOMEN An epic dance d ra m a by the China Ballet Troupe which d epicts th** true sto ry of a young w om an who escap es e n s la v e m e n t by a feudal lan d lo rd md r> cs P e o p le ’s R ep u b lic o f C hina ,*f to Join a group of revolutionaries. co lo r Sponsored by D EP A R T M E N T OF S P A N IS H S P O R T U G U E S! D EPA R T M E N T O F O R IE N T A L & A F R IC A N L A N G U A G E S C O O R D IN A T E D BY LA P A G (L A T IN A M E R IC A N P O LIC Y ALTERNATIVES G R O U P ! JESTER A U D IT O R IU M EVERY M O D A Y NIGHT Admission 75c 7:30 & 10:00 P.M . T h e D a i l y T e x a s friday. Odour ct, urn Fag* «i 4»- Wine- Coolers Soft Drinks FROM 2- 6 Happy Hour Today 2 * 6 p.m. VINCENT CANBY, N. Y . T I M E S : “.. .superior fiction, as implacable as ‘An American Tragedy,’ as mysterious as ‘You Can t Go Home Again,’ as funny as 'Why Are We in Viet Nam ?' and as banal as 'Main Street.’” J. Friday, Saturday Sunday 7, 9:30 and 12 midnight ARTS & THEATER C O M M IT T E E PLUS - E L E C T R O N IC L A B Y R IN T H Students 75c Members $1.25 2405-A NUECES * I T H E G E M J Hi jim A O * E. 6th • ." 472-0390 NOW OPEN! VIK CO N D ITIO N ED A D M .1 M OV! E S THE NEWEST NNN H A TED T H E A T R E , IN TOW N. ^ F E VTI K IN O : O F F ADM. E R IC E W IT H CO Ul’O S, "HIDDEN LUST’ a o "LOVE FOR SALE" # # # # # # # #* M iD N .e J s:-.ow S A T . I 1:3Q P .M . The S H O C K of it will make you -WEttCM. (NTONWlOfW..^ **»•• na VINCENT PRICE CHRISTOPHER LEE PETER CUSHING C O L O R B Y MOV S U ! g I I i i P L U S "THE GRIMSON CUTl l with B O R IS K A R L O F F AL L SE A T S $1.00 PARAMOUNT.**" 713 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E 1*3 IN T E R STA TE T H E A T R E S I n t e r s t a t e s PARAMOUNT 7 IS C O N G R E S S AV EMUS $1.00 TIL 2:30 1:40 - 3:20 ■ 5:00 6:40 - 8:20 - 10:00 Decade Relived in Buildings Sidewalks of New York Visited in Slide Tour of T h e the beginning skyscraper era in New York City was relived in a lecture Thursday night by W illiam H. Jordy of Brown University. The talk and slide presentation, sponsored by the School of Architecture, was entitled “ New York in the 1920s: Fact and Fancy.” that of in “ The image of New York has the always been skyscraper, especially the Twenties,” Jordy said. Four sub- finds i m a g e s especially in evidence In the ’20s formed the “ fact” portion of his lecture. Jordy that ragged The first of these is New York's skyline. characteristic “ No city has a more decisive edge than New Y o rk ," Jordy said, referring not w ily to the silhouette formed by the tops of buildings, but also the crowding of dense, Irregular towers against the the water surrounding Manhattan Island. stillness of The second sub-image contrasts “ radiant drastically with city” view of New York. This Is the “ internal, convoluted and this dark” aspect of the city’s canyon- like streets. “ Tile view from die penthouse suite” is Jo rd y’s third sub-image of the skyscraper age. In this connection he noted im­ portance of a 1916 “ setback” law the Union Coffehouse To Present Quarto Charles John Quarto, poet and musician, w ill appear at 8 p.m. Friday at Le Potpourri Cof­ feehouse in the Union Building. Among Quarto’s credits are album cover poems for Stephen Stills, Je rry Je ff Walker, R ita Coolidge and Michael Murphy. With Murphy, he la co-writer of “ Geronimo's Cadillac” and “ Tile Rainbow M an.” Frost Show, Quarto has performed on the David the Hollywood Bowl with Joan Baez and the throughout most of country in concerts and cof­ feehouses. at L a Potpourri Coffeehouse, sponsored by the Union Musical Events Committee, open Thursday and Frid ay nights with different each week. entertainment is which required all skyscrapers to be terraced to allow “ a minimum of light and a ir” to filter down to the street. Tile results of this law were grandiose plans for penthouse garden terraces, on one hand, and an opposite result, buildings that look like “ a stairway for the Jo lly Green Giant.” is “ Manhattan as Jo rd y’s fourth New York sub­ image the electric city,” referring to New Y o r k ’ s dazzling night-time display, somewhat less spec­ tacular now than it was during the 20s since “ of course other cities have electricity by now.” The “ fancy” portion of Jo rd y’s l e c t u r e several concerned visionary plans for the city (a ll brought t h e beginning of the Depression. to an end b y Although never realized, some features of these plans are still relevant to modem projects for the city, especially in the effort to link different building com­ plexes and In the separation of vehicular and pedestrian traffic. HSTRANS + TEXAS Mit/flftsn 6400 Burnet Road — 46b 6933 FREE V IEW OPEN 7 P.M. — START 7:30 PIZZA 1.50 LARGE C O LO R TV ROOM FEATURE TONIGHT HERE COME THE P G BURT REYN O LD S • Y U L BRYN N ER A T-.-Snlcolor (PG ) r ' i i r ' United Artists . I H lf you want to know how this man made a movie out of this book PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS D IC K VAN DYKE , ~ O T v Wont kAMERICAN INTERNATIONAL mciu r P m H R fw | t i .. _ Vincent PRICE- Christopher LEE * 1969 A m erican Internationa* Pictu re s T R A N 3 » T EA M S 5601 IL Lamar Bind.— 451-1710 OPEN 7:00 — TART 7:30 SAVE BONUS C H ECKS FREE V IEW TONIGHT 4th WEEK you’ll have to see the movie! WOODY ALLEN'S ■EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX* *BLTTWERE AFRAIDTO ASK" NODDY ALLEN • JW N CARRADINE • LOU JACOBI LOUISE LASSER ANTHONY 0UAYU TONY RANDALL • LYNN REDGRAVE • BURT REYNOLDS • GE NL WILDE » -Trfhr-f tt CHARLES H. JOY FE Itta * * * H»dor«r JACK BROOTKY Anaeaft An***-*, J ACK GROSS8f8f ant Oath** WOODY AUEN Sara* sew* * * &6ok t* DR DA • SO REUBEN tone C4»npc«id ani ComtacM if MUNDELL I OW! United Artists — — "--- ICit rf i n t e r s t a t e T A T E 719 CONGRfSS AVENUI $1.00 'TIL 2:30 2 4 6 - 8 - IO Why Wasn't -‘S S jflL •A© saw + s ! * * * a VO*'1'* ^ r\ * « * , CKboated ACADEMY AW ARD? W h y W a s n 't O N E T IN SO LD IER A t L a c st N o m in a te d for Best S o n g ’ T IN S O L D IE R s t a y e d a t t h e Top o l t h e ra tin g ! f o r W e e k i ! D o y o u e v e n K N O Af one cl t h e A c a d e m y n o m i n e e ! * C a n y o u h u m it'’' I t « juit n o t fa ir ! f e l l H o l l y w o o d S i g n L o b b y P e t i t i o n m I RETURN TRIBUTE' M f T h e B e s t M o tio n P ictu re of 1 9 7 1 1 BILLY JACK _ IOMI LUCHI IN Oft ORTS MOR SBI Seen fcjr m o rt people Ikon fiddler, Lott Pretor* Skew Niche Jo* Clockwork or f tenth Connection! CHEER FOR BILLY AT LEAST ONE M O RE TIME? A U S T I N 4.2 5719 2 1 3 0 S O C O N G R E S S A V E WALT DISNEY’S DOORS OPEN 1:00 $1.00 TIL 2:30 DALMATIANS I 10-4:45-8:20 ROBINSON 2:35-6:10-9:45 ALSO— WALT DISNEY'S "101 DAIMATIONS” T g r i i i i i i i i f i i i i m l ag® 14 Friday* October 27, 1572 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N CLINT EASTWOOD JOE KIDD TEC* if.iCOlOR* ■ PANAVISON* [ P G ] r * T H E . D E A D U E S T M A N A L IV E . ..T A K E S O N A W H O L E A R M Y I . T W O M ULES FO B S IS T E R SA R A A A U N IV E R S A L P IC T U R E m m m m m m m m m m a m m m ti PLUS -- PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS — PLUS (5 H p LOVECRAF7 S CLASSIC TALE CI TERROR ■ unwicH Horror SANORA DEE DEAN STOCKWELL ED BEGLEY LLOYD BOCHNER 'mnnSnmm SAM JAFFE 9 | AMFOiCAN ..aal IKTfRNATIOWI C O LO R rn MOVtUA! jW -V'. I *1970 American International Picture!. In*. R O C K IN G C H A IR SEATS SM O KIN G PERMITTED ACRES FREE PARKIN G O P E N — 5:45 • F E A T U R E S 6 - 8 - 1 0 NOW, From the novel by KURT VONNEGUT, JR. CHRISTOPHER LEE • MARIA SCHELL IEO BENN I.' BIGHT or THE blooo M hONY SCOTT HITCH PL I LR WAB! OOO WORSTER' M Tm Rr m ■ i*15:*- ~ v MJ 7 JESS fWWCO, ■ '•'ASS ‘S y-sM-.'Ait,..,.; FAST SCREEN BOX-OFFICE OPEN 7 GO S H O W STARTS DUSK T H E H O TTEST TH IN G ON W H E E L S RAQUEL WELCHS KANSAS CITY SOMBER ?|»Q VffP' -i TU PLUS — CO-FF ATURE M GM pfeswh J O E C O C K E R VI-IM IHUTtl NORTH SCREEN BOX-OFFICE OPEN 7:00 S H O W STARTS DUSK H If you’rt lo o k in g jm g* fo r tro u b le -.* he’s JOE K ID D . The Secret Fire-Bombing Of Dresden. ‘One of the most datin g, original, and totally fascinatin g m pictures ever made. v p..3,n r Qt rN,w< ___________ _ A GEORGE ROY HILL PAUL M0NASH PRODUCTION S L A U G H T E R H O U S E TECHNICOLOR' [RS® J p I ' X / ' E .MICHAEL SACKS • RON LUBMAN • VALERIE PERRINI H C H M T ■ A STW O O D JOE KIDD * IWtrMlA'a: ase Company p.o' iron • iicmn" jOLOS* - Pana/; Ob* |»i* P L U S — C O F L A IL * R f A m PRODUCTION ^NDROhEOa STRAIN I i MICHAEL CRICHTON j J S A UNIVERSAL PICTURE - TECHNICOLOR* PANAVIStON T e x a n S t a ff Photo by NANCY GOLDFARB A ll Around the Town W illiam H . Jo rd y, professor at Brown University, plays host for a slide tour of 1920s N ew York Thursday night in the A rt Building Auditorium. "The radiant c ity'1 by day and ‘ the electric c ity '1 by night was explored in an analysis sponsored by the School of Architecture. daily horoscope inK feel A R I E 5?- Y ou Witt bo te< TAI R I s Ti ie for today, so don’t lightheaded <4i! its a b o "t being irresponsible rumination Is o ver. No h a rm In w ish fu l thinking, th o u g h . A K w ill re tu rn tivltles. harper ag fp-m y e sterd ay to haunt to d a y '! a< O C X M K R : Pa- vf> r» tiin< o p e rative fo rm ula today. W atch out fo r the a ll im po rtan t m c ." I; P ro b le m PP re g n a n c y Counseling S e rv ic e Stud int 11• aith Centi IO', VV. 2i'.th St. (4th Flo o r South * C o nfid en tial < un hog ' th a ll a lte rn a tive s discussed .md re fe r­ ra ls rn.id* to a p p ro p ria te re'-<» re ­ ne f s < nil M i t K S c r n m r 4TS-'>711 F x t. 2<> Yen t k I,K O S ta y out of larg e cro w d !. Y o u r too m uch > sui ii * n om pi t,!* p u b lic exposure M i t t . t i An outgoing stale is essential. to everyone you meet, but S p e a k t r y not to babble. L I B R A ii ip< -hie t Y e - r nt r f re- .r'-es are G o o d d ay for a >-( O R IMO ft. t p t-,r t e big event Satu rd ay Go to bed e a r ly tonight. > Vt . l l I VK l I - a r e doomed p o n e m e n t Mould be wise. K ffo rt to in th e a t t* fail' re. A post­ f \ I* It I I <• ll N S' p < <•: .plaining. T o m o rro w w ill be worse than today, s o b e p r e p a r e d . Ie ' p n fi r s< A I U X R U S » fresh Hi!- A d ifferen t environm ent ' in he*i> you see th'• cs In a n e w ligh t P l ' i I S w ill crease « o- aeratlon. I »* r« >n o f th o se .von •• t-»day w ill A kind word k in* From the besi'Sener P a ’en v en • geoerition A PARA MC-JMT PICTURE '* PW 3f •.’ $ ' - :■ A ' O ' V * i A A P m P f« R C r n MI A S E IW W E P E A C E to tt e re r-W*now»iv t " n « ) •* FRED SEGAL JOHN KNOWLES ROBERTA GOLDSTON Oar '**• rte LARRY PEE ROE v <»^ a *a*> ps pox »• y> or a paramoijnt pvv^§ e-or)r*3o. FOR EVERYONE W H O HAS EVER WANTED TO SAY, M1 CARE" lf i -* Only See One M o tif This Yen Set T hu One. a$ i -TIL 1:30 2-7646 * CAPITAL P L A Z A > * S 7 N O .tN T tR M O IO N A t MWV M O - 7 O f 5 20 - 7:30 9 : 4 5 BOX-OFFICE OPEN 7:00 SH O W STARTS DUSK HER W ARPED SEN SE OF FUN MADE HER DO THINGS THAT MOST M EN WOULDN'T DARE TO AND M O ST W OM EN WON'T EVEN IM A G IN E - D ISCU SS! iUNITED PRODUCE 9J Pr«*#nt DIRTIEST I GIRL I EVER I MET I ...SH E ’LL BLOW YOUR MIND 1 COLOR ; R Due to the true but censorable nature#!of the actual happenings in this story, as well as the age of the girl and the fable pf the.people involved. United Producers has agreed to the following conditions. F ic ttc to u t n a m * * <4 H > * 1 u«*d Mi pt*<-« ot toJ« l « n" tin *!- P a tro n ! will be edehed o l tb t ebockinfl n«ture ol th# nim and will be urged to ^ g u id e them eelve* e c co rd - PLUS C O -F E A T U R E In gty. i It’s a business doing pleasure with... J A G U A R S H o t m f® ( J ) C O L O R by Movi**ab n m AMtamu finis ukicorx iN iu ru s u n e w t UT Orchestra To Present Free '20s Concert Sunday Lawrence Smith w ill conduct the University Symphony Or­ chestra in concert at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hogg Auditorium. Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra is enlivened by con­ trasting ensemble sections with c e l l o monologues. Last on the program w ill be Shostakovich’s Symphony No. I, Op. IO. Composed in 1925 when the composer was 15 years old, the piece shows the brilliant Russian orchestral tradition as well as biting wit and demonic fever. The concert is admission-free and open to the public. Tile new music director of the Austin Symphony Orchestra, Smith is a visiting professor in of Music, the Department teaching courses in advanced a c c o m p a n y i n g and vocal repertoire as well as conducting the symphony. Celebrating Fine Arts the F<”stival theme of the Twenties, the Sunday concert w ill offer a program the musical trends of serious com­ posers during that decade. illustrates that A N T O V W E B E R N ’S Rym- phonie, Op, 21. the composer’s conscious attempt to revive classical form and com­ positional techniques. reveals Reflecting the late bloom of 19th Century romantic traditions Elg ar's in England, Edw ard tv tonight 7 p. ITI 4,4J, Sanfo rd and Son r>,7, IO Sonny and Char Show 0 Washington W rfk in Review 12.24 Brady Bun<~h 7;3fl p rn. ii Big Valley 9 .lust < .fin latino I-’ 24 Partrid g e Fam ily 4.12 Little People 8 pm 1 2 .2 1 R o o m 222 7 M o vie •MO M o v ie : Break" 42 Movie 2 ' ad ital E y e 4 ( J ho st Stery Pe te Kelly')* B lu e s " “ T h e M c K e n z ie ' The Killer*" 11 3d p m M i d n i g h t 8 30 p rn. I! Petticoat Junction 9 Speaking yreply 12.24 Odd Couple 9 p rn ll Movie: “ Eye of th- Cat" 1 2 .2 4 1/ n - e A m e r i c a n S t i l e 4 Banyan f TO p rn 9 W all Street W eek 1 0 p rn 10:30 p rn. 9 Wisconsin Outdoors A ll O th er S tatio n s N e ’a s 1.42 Tonight Show 9 Advocate* 12.24 D ick Cav eft 5,7,10 M o v ie . " L a n d R aid e rs'* 11 Movie- "M illio n Dollar Legs'* I* F u n In the Hills » M o v ie : “ A G a th e rin g of E a g le s " 21 M o v ie : “ D esp erate Hot rs 42 M o v ie 12 M o vie Pegg>'' 9 Midnight Sm acks: ' King of the Forest Ranger!, “ M id nig ht L a c e ' ' A p a rtm en t for 12 30 a rn 7 New * 5 D aughw r " M o v i e s "Fran ken stein '* GREEK FE S T IV A L FRIDAY, 6-12 p.m. SATURDAY, 6-12 p.m. SUNDAY 1-8 p.m. VILLITA ASSEMBLY HALL SAN ANTONIO BOUZOUKI M U SIC • GREEK FOOD IMPORTS BAZAAR • GREEK DANCERS C n THEATRE FEATURING: 521 EAST 6+h 472-0442 UNDER N EW M A N A G EM EN T SHOW C HA N G ES E V E R Y F R ID A Y T H E REST IN XRT E N T E R T A IN M EN T F IR S T AUSTIN SBOXX ING - TWO SI P E R SHOXXS 14 HOW TO DO IT i i i i A N D i i BO TH IN C O LO R A N D SO U N D — RATED XXX BO X O F F IC E O P EN S DAILY: 12:00 TO 10:00 LOO O N S U N D A Y BRING THIS AD FOR Vi OFF ADMISSION PRICE 2224 Guadaluo* St — 477 1964 O P E N 1:45 * $1.50 'TIL 6 P.M. Feature* 2-4-6 8 IO * A LIVING CORPSE 'Chained forever to a slavery A more vile than any before endured! , >\ c H I P I *■ kY-. "ft! TW/A A V _ mk. \ “ BLACULA' IS THE M O S T H O R R IF Y IN G FILM OF THE DECADE." - C o u n t Dracula Society Deadlier than Dracula! An AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL Picture W I W ILLIAM M A R S H A L L -D E N IS E N IC H O L A S -V 0 N E T 7 A M CGEE G O R D O N P IN S E T w T H A L M U S R ASULA.LA color r™ As You Like It W? P U S s n DENT LD. Escorted Ladies Free With Membership Vr» One Ender 18 Admitted VOW M R C O N D ITIO N ED TEXAS-RICE PARTY f e a t u r i n g CIRCUS Friday, October 27 9:00- 1:00 Tides ll Motel 6700 South Main HOUSTON BYO B $10 Per Couple C oat and Tie Set-Up I Provided OBEN 5 OO FEATURES: 5:15 - B OO RZQUCED PRICES 'TIL 5:30 » r e « h e l Ucfc V ( ° P l e In i ^ c Barbra’ Academy Award W inner- Best Actress! mo* --ft - f r t v BARBRA STREISAND OMAR S H A R IF ; * GIRL I Dr sr** -‘ rn ^ - . i m • o Jx L U - 'N t t r >.x> v- JIL u !i ■«- nu* i IWW a _____________ *-..»• fLlWCIil ll'1 £ • Sr* I Pmm ■Rte VER-1 ET) | irti\ .. -tv I*,.'w r », " te THE ULTIM ATE EXPERIENCE FOR EVERYONE! "DISNEY'S GREAT PIONEERING VENTURE IS THE SEASON'S HIT REVIVAL!" Newtok “ A N I N C R E D I B L Y R E V O L U T I O N A R Y F I LM . . . T H E MI ND CAN RUN RIOT!” The NYU Ticker "FAR AHEAD OF ITS TIME . .BEST AUDIO-VISUAL EXPERIENCE IN TOWN!” William W o lf,Cue “ B E S T F A M I L Y F I L M ! ” Joseph Gelmla, N»w*d»y “ A TOTAL EXPERIENCE IN SIGHT, SOUND AND COLOR . . . MAKE FANTASIA A MUST!” B° b Saimaggi' Group W Net^ °rfc STARTS TODAY OPEN 1:45 P.M. FEATURE 1:55 3 55 - 6 00 roo - lo p.m. Fri. and Sat. Oct. 27 & 28 7:30, 9:15, I 1:10 Tickets on sale at 6:30 J. Adm . .75 Cinem a 40 Batts Aud. Play it again, Dobie The minister’s daughter. Her father taught lier about God. The g>psv taught her about Heaven. °D .°H . “ L a w r e n c e 's From the depths of the ocean to the heights of the Andes, Charles Darwin searched for the Origin of Man— and found a truth that still shakes the World! Palomar Pictures International, Inc. Presents T H E DARW IN A D V EN TU R E Starring NICHOLAS CLAY • SUSAN MACREADY and IAN RICHARDSON • Screenplay by WILLIAM FAIRCHILD Story by JA C K COUFFER and M AX B E LL A • Music by M ARC W ILKINSON • Executive Producer EDGAR J. SCHERICH Produced by JO S EPH STRICK • Directed by JA C K COUF FE R • Released by 20th Century-Fox Color bv De Luxe UNUM AUMOKIS Starts Today V A R S I T Y 474-4351 2 4 0 0 G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T $1.00 ’TIL 2:30 Feat. 1:20 -3:05-4:50 6:35 - 8:20 - 10:05 A Dimitri De Grunwaid presentation JOANNA SHIMKUS . FRANCO NERO____________ in D, H LAWRENCE'S T H E VIRGIN .AND THE GYPSY” HONOR BUCKMAN • MARK BURN'S FAY CO M PTO N -M A U R IC E D EN H A M Efim toSSST1 i £ * W S m Color Prints Bv Movifbb [R I ~ - r r : — ■ A C H G 'v 'R O N Future Rrlray a division of Cinrcom Corporation * omriAL I WTT ATKIN IL SHOW! NI, CAWffs nu ii. FESTIVAL. N O W S H O W IN G 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 1 0 FRIDAY & SATURDAY M ID NIGH T S H O W ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE AFTER 2.00 P M. $1 2nd Level Dobie Mall 477-1324 21st at Guadalupe Austin, Texas T h e D a i l y T e x a n F r id a y , octo b er 27,1372 P a g . is AHD SAVE MONEY! DELUXE BOSTON ROCKER The nation s honest rocker. New styling, beautiful m aple finish. Height 27”. seat 12" height seat x 14", 11". C om e s fully a s­ in colorful sem bled carry-out box. PLAYSKOOL TOY REG. 2.87 PARKER BROS. SQUARE OFF GAME REG. 4.77 0 2 7 * 1 0 7 PARKER BROS. NERF BALL REG. 97* SALE PRICES G O O D THRU SAT., OCT. 28 2101 W. BEN WHITE BLVD. 7301 BURNET RD. 444-5566 454-7751 M ILTO N BRADLEY O PERATIO N #4545 # 3 0 \ SHOP GIBSON'S TOYLAND AND SAVE #ia A v < S , / />• r n M B B O X OF 50 GRT RECORDING CASSETTE FEDERAL PO W ER-FLITE „G.t, .22 L O N G R I F L E H igh velocity. C O c 4 0 grain lubricated, unplated bullet. O 40 MIN. REG. 1.37 77 CHILDREN'S COSTUMES 12 CHARACTERS TO CHOOSE REG. I 24 S,M,L TINY TOT COSTUMES REG. I 87 m 4 4 3-5 YRS. I * I IOO MMI* CH EC KS ASSORTED C O ST U M ES REG. I 57 6 C H A R A C T E R S T O C H O O S E ■ I 24 / PC-450 RELIABLE ELECTRIC C O R N POPPER WITH SEE-THRU COVER REG 10.47 7 9 7 ♦TGR/24 PICK-UP TRUCK GUN RACK •7GR/24 u / c REG. 1.57 RICHMOND CEDAR WORKS ICE CREAM FREEZERS • CEDAR BUCKET • OLD FASHIONED HAND CRANK 4 QT. or 5 QT. REG. 12.47 EA. YOUR CHOICE CAR STEREO SPEAKERS REG. 7.97 EA. ftCAOsrwcK SMITH-VICTOR SLIDE FILE REG. 2.47 77 BETTER GROUPING OF INDIVIDUAL SLIDES PHOTO SPECIAL VALUE K S T W 4-5 # 7 0 7 0 2 PROCTOR SILEX ELECTRIC GLASS PERO 9 CUP • AVOCADO • HARVEST GOLD REG 11.27 678 ALLEGRETTI VACUUM CLEANER REG. 54.77 \ 97 GIBSON S NAME BRAND VALUES IONA ELEC. C A N OPENER & KNIFE SHARPENER • AVO CADO • WHITE BOTH STORES OPEN 9 TIL 9 CANDIES BIG TREATS FOR LITTLE TR ICK ER S BEICH B A N A N A CARAMELS, 150 CT. ASSORTED BUBBLE GUM, IOO CT. 77 N A M E B R A N D S INDIVIDUALLY W RAPPED JU JUS, 20 CT. M A M , PEANUT OR REGULAR, 12 o«. MILKY WAY, 16 ex. MUNCH, 16 or. 3 MUSKETEERS, 16 oz. SNICKERS, 16 or BABY RUTH, JR. 30 CT. BUTTER FINGERS, JR. 30 CT. LADIES' FUN FUR COATS IN A VARIETY OF COLORS & STYLES SIZES 7/8 to 15/16 Coleman FUEL I G A L L O N REG. 1.09 Coleman SLEEPING BAG 6 LB. REG. 34 97 97 * 8 1 9 8 A - 9 7 I Daisy BB's REG. 67* REG. 2 9 . 4 7 8 8 9T-5000 I f e n REG. 2 4 .9 9 99 V t " DRILL SET Complete with attachments a nd carrying case 77501-2 FOR SHOP OR LAWN CARE Sorry, No RAIN CHECK on this seasonal item G IB SO N 'S SEASONALS PRICED IN CARTON PORTABLE KITCHEN BARBEQUE GRILL CAST ALUMINUM REG 29 88 97 P P K 3 1 5 CLEANWELD PRODUCTS SOLI DOX KIT SOUD OXYGEN WELDING TORCH E V E R Y T H IN G TOR A P R O F E S S IO N A L JO B ■ - A S S ? * * *, ■ rrjrrro-j_m±. p * i u fe. a : soup SKILSHOP JIG SAW BY SKH REG. 14.99 SEVERAL COLOR CHOICES 97 # 1 7 1 4 rn cr NL Page 16 Friday, October 27, 1372 THE DAILY TEXAN MIRRO ALUMINUM F A S H IO N C O O K W A R E SET 7 PC. TEFLON ll • AVOCADO • POPPY COLORFUL PORCELAIN EXTERIOR U - T I REG 9.77 g 47 , , 67 MIRRO ALUMINUM PRESSURE COOKERS 4 QT. REG. 11.97 • AVOCADO • HARVEST GOLD • POPPY 6 GT. REG. 15.47 #0 4 0 4 . 3 5 -3 7 -3 4 # 04 3 6 - 35- 37-39 M E N S HANDKERCHIEFS 8 to a PACK REG. 97* STITCHED HEMS - FULL SIZE » I LADIES' PANTY HOSE ONE SIZE FITS ALL M E N S DOUBLE KNIT FLARE SLACKS REG. 9.97 A Q g • SOLIDS • FANCIES • NO IRON • MACHINE WASH , J • SIZES 28-36 • DESERt SAND • INTRIGUE • TROPICANA • N A V Y • NEW BEIGE S t e 0