iii '79, if my heart, s need to go [they solved! 6:30 ng rid of then they slt ( they hav it up. r (lid gel last;, ;eks of the sen :1 time to i)w what mahi e frequent I# irbett durinj ft the impress that they have and if they dr ling block, e that teamii ley’ve got the! b. I could he d, but who because Bnf a impulsivi have to wood nt) know other times! the way d I’ve go “If you don’t get here early,” Kyle ex plains, “then you won’t get a good spot.” An hour later, a van drives up and stops in front of the boy. Louis Walston gets out of the van and hands Kyle a large, covered bucket. Walston is a distinguished looking man in his late 30s. “Generally,” he says, closing the door of the van, “everybody knows what we have to do, and what it takes to stay even.” Walston’s son Andy, also 14, is standing farther east on University near the Ramada Inn parking lot. As each car drives by, he leans perilously out on the road waving a flower and hollering “MUM!” Hie cars drive by, obviously unimpressed. No, he’s not a displaced flower child. He’s not selling his mother, either. He sells football mums. That’s right, football mums. Mums are big white chrysanthemums draped with maroon and white ribbon and little metal lic or plastic footballs. They are usually adorned with pipe cleaners bent to spell ‘.‘ATM.” On-campus sales of mums are regu lated, but off-campus sales are another story. Out there, it s a free-for-all. Andy has been doing this for two years. He says he doesn’t like it, either. Why do it then? log lig Rider ami ones as don! me againsl Jist Univ bruised sh« in elbow Guy Sellen n while fensive end earn worked •sday inprej nier quarted irotectionbi ikerssaid. s thrown nes a probki ie Musts® hiding Effl [i the balls! s co-leadii jth Housta — Texas )ach F.A ■ Horned called no n for Satun against Bay ised with ■’re getting! rs hack and ole picture ite hack ie best I’ve: ey’ll he res Saturday upset T»! ir record Ii ? Wl rrnatimial -rE SCHD 1 , ANAGEf! ■mpos ^ 8530