identified, were arrested in a swampy area at the airport and were being taken in for questioning. He said apparently they were hunters. They were carrying shot guns loaded with birdshot, not the kind of weapons that could have been used in an assassination at- tempt, Labeau said. Paign. V".?/Carter's J a now tc 1 1 " s ^ Si strikes (1^ ther e is an y it. Carter cinjiii ? Democratic J ' admire is | Strauss as | 'ocrats d ho'd themt^ the waveringiJ ection camp%| have been d himself to™ 'SO. rather ironically^ w >th Strauss isi arter b ■dy. gonist KeujciJ ws both the K the Democsj by the old a. Don’t get ml m— (0 5 The ★ Floral Fed\ Mart \ , 2 — m Center 13 > Texas Ave. TAMU The house specializing in Roses, Aggie Mums and special corsages. —VS. lexas Ave. TAMU (g> :7/„ JL J Center 2920 East 29th St. (Next to St. Joseph's Hospital) 823-5782 ie Wai/iingiK mpany Famed conductor Norman LubofF presents his choir Rudder Auditorium audience Monday night. LubofFs sentation was sponsored by the MSC Opera and Performing Arts Society. Battalion photo by Ken Herrera Mello to carefree tunes featured EASELS Luboff choir versatile,good PIZZA LASAGNE SPAGHETTI TUESDAY NIGHT BUFFET SPECIAL By JETTIE STEEN Battalion Reporter I he image wasn’t cpiite the way I remembered from my mother’s old bent up Norman Luboff album cover. Depicted there is a choir of 12 skinny men — not so the case when the present Luboff choir took the Rudder Auditorium stage Monday night. A parade of black tuxedos and hot pink gowns took on a spellbound middle-aged crowd as the choir, clad in formal attire, demonstrated complete dedication to its conduc tor, the ever-popular Norman Luboff. Luboff danced on the stage in his conduction as his choir’s voices were subjugated to his control. Sacred and secular tunes dominated the Review V of Oklahoma calls prof s bluff, builds a corral for horse parking United Press International ■NORMAN, Okla. — University of Oklahoma Professor Leo Whinery rides his horses to class, now that he has a place to park them. ■“It’s just a matter of doing my thing,” he said. ■Whinery said it started as a joke when he remarked in the faculty lounge last summer that the univer sity provided parking facilities for motorists and bicyclists and places for joggers to stow their gear, but made no provision for horsemen, i David Swank, associate dean of [the law school, overheard the re mark and persuaded Art Elbert, vice president of administrative af fairs, to approve a campus corral. ■ “They called my bluff,’ Whinery said. ■ Swank, Whinery and Jeff Pennell, assistant professor of law, built an -by-90 foot corral of timber and Irbed wire near the Law Center [j parking lot and rigged a metal gar- sk/ittit* bage can with a lock to hold the sad- QUlv dk. , . Three of Whinery’s eight horses J-;i take turns providing Whinery’s 6 aI1 jjjfitlbiansportation for the daily 30- vr0n ®\ l.aBinute ride from his home about 5 ire apt r ; and ga miles away in Noble. Whinery said he rides mostly for the exfercise, but added, “I can’t dis count the fact that I’ll save money on gas.’’ He estimated his gasoline savings at 500 gallons per year. first hour, which ended with five atypical pithy pieces. The second portion of the pro gram was more like a hoe-down than a formal concert as it was lead off with folk songs from the mountains, of Kentucky, y As I can best remember, LwlrofTs- style has not changed rriuch over'the “ years. As exhibited with “The Lord Loves a Laughing Man,” Luboff has kept with a bright, carefree, moral to the story (song) style. Luboff varied his selections from the oohs and ahs stimulated by “Mood Indigo to the jingle of tam- borines on “Old Time Religion. 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