T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Nei University of Texas at Austin Vol. 72, No. 169 Ten Cents A U SU y Mitchell O Kd Bugging Post Reports A id e s W atergate Testimony '7 1973 0Ut W 5 ‘ * 0 . ,u » o l *°»/ -7o, h '0 m Sixteen Pages 471-4401 Grand Jury Hears Gronouski, M o ya .... \ . •nfVf"T7 \v \ r> i W A SHIN GTO N A P ) A onetime top-1 eve Nixon aide now :• s t1 • former Atty. (ion. John N. Mitchell and White House counsel III approved and helped John W. Donn plan the Watergate bugging inrident. the Wa el- - nor p. said Wednesda? night. The allegation was made by Job Stuart la -t prosecutors Magruder 'n •< o r ’ Saturday, the P< sr said Tile story was attributed to sources 'n the White House and the Committee for the Re-elect.on of the President. Magruder urns a White Hon o leputv o ( '’lief of Rte if Pe was deputy H.R. Haldenvin chairman of re-election c- >mmi?tee ti c President s rod M E W W H IL F , The quoted sources as sa Richard G. Kb nriie himself from the cam The Times si t ] the to have bee: tale bo in the position p r e s e n t colleagues who nu: The Times que and New York Times ig that Atty. Gen. t had disqualified have >rmer he in ! Mid t ion "u a s icp nod ' he w ) ii I d not r to prosecute” Administration . ted. id ! as ca ll, ng appropria ?» o atter nev ti of non 1)0 Kieindrmst and correl gene) d s p The Pest pc sr ufors a February Gen. M d’-!- prove the operation at provider n 1 accoil' of in then-\tr\ scvss and af eavesdroppm the W a tc T H O SE U D D led were Muchep, Dean. Magruder and G Gordon Kiddy, ne of those convicted in 'he Watergate trial the Post and a former Whitp House aide sa id. P also quoted one source as saying Ma grader's statements, expected to he repeated Thursday befo-e 'he fedora: grand jury probing the \ are exposed to result in the cr: rn ma! indictments of both Mitchell and Dean, The paper s i ai oik. reported also that Min a’ rang'ri to buy the - c o n v ic te d \\ Uterg itn en der,!died s ur. p and Dean later e of the seven *a oi S. weather There :s a .‘id pm ■ Thursday morning. Thursday and F? day . Thursday t ighf iii the rh ft to not hwestet . \ cha cee -,f ra u temperatures ll • - ,: ■ pe: Ti is and : v c , \v rn is w iii to 20 mph. Sources also s a i d t h e prosecutors have received statements from other per­ sons who can testify that Mitchell and Dean were involved in the arrangements to pay off the seven Watergate conspirators for their silence. Kiddy and dames W. McCord Jr., a for­ mer Nixon campaign security chief, were in planning the convicted for their part hugging. Five others, including four Miami men, end E . Howard Hunt, a former White Home consultant, pleaded guilty at the trial. 'Hie sources were quoted as saying Dean’s resignation is imminent. Magruder, Dean and Mitchell could not he reacherl f r comment I H E P A P E R a 1 < said that sources "in the executive branch” said Wednesday lhat Ha I dom an also mas- resign as a result of recent Watergate disclosures, though there Is no known evidence to ci iminal im. olvement. linking him Magnifier, now director of policy planning I" 1 the Commerce Depart men*, “ erose rn talk because he felt the walls were coming in on him, the Post quoted one source as saving. Magruder will rot be granted immunity from prosecution, but h**; es to receive some sort of favorable treatment, quoted the sources as saying. the paper I. B IE R B O W E R , lawyer, said identified as •IAMES M agruders that Magruder “ will testify before the grand .inn when called. I know he’s going in testify. There s no subpoena.” He would not confirm that Magruder had been interviewed by federal investigators It was Dean who was in Charge of the first investigation for Nixon. Asked about the Post story, Gerald K. Warren, deputy press scrrot|tJ*v. said: “ The White House is not prepared to react to a story based on sources. At a time when the rights of individuals would not he jeopardized bv a comment, ap appropriate comment will he made.” T H E ST O R Y was publishes! as ’'ne g and jury continued its probe amid unconfirmed reports that more indictments would be handed down soon, possibly for perjury' and financial irregularities. Gordon S. Strachan, a former aide to Haldeman, was seen for the second straight day in the office of federal prose- utor E a rl the Silbert. purpose of his visit. Some accounts have accused him of helping set up a political espionage ring for the Nixon campaign. Strachan wouldn't discuss Communists Ask Lon Removal Testifies Dean John A. Gronouski. Hanoi Unmoved by Cambodian Plans .SAIGON ( A P I —Despite planned reforms In the Cam­ bodian government, North Vietnam made clear in a Rad a Hanoi broadcast % ednosday that there can be no progress to peace until President Ken Nol steps down. official W mhington sources remained optimistic thiat the reorganization might encourage cease-fire talks, hut observers in Phi nom Penh tended to support the Hanoi position. C O M M EN T IN G ON b m Nol’s ai meed plans to form a new government that would include members of op­ position parties. Radio Hanoi said the reorganization “ is aimed at settling internal conflicts of the I .on No! puppet government which is deteriorating while confronted with gre be* .md greater m ilitary and political defeats.'’ " I rider American pressure,” Radio Hanoi continued, Kin No’ has been Hu fed to introduce a number of so- it into hts Cabinet so that i a’.'cr; oppo- ition elements ti av have ,t ‘broader political base.* “ However reformed it m ay be, the Lon Nol puppn govern rn en’ still remains an instrument of perialLsts, . J I ” The Radio Hanoi statements indicated tim Insurgents would continue a m ilitary drive forcing f>on Nol oil'. Camb «d in hope*; IH F ( \M BODI AV situating appeared to h of Vietnam. The Communists had iecusi R! v w the w continuing to W tn am ize five y ears Lie pen e talks remained stall ■>. refused to dei) wt’h the Saigon regina Nguyen Van Thieu. 1 ti Kike rho Tit .en government the I. n been enticized for being d is ta l from the > and oppressive. H R sources said the Fetted States n into agreeing to form a new government position elements. President Nixon Was re; sent word that this was his wish with spe G u i. Alexander M. Haig J r . Haig visited Phnom Penn last week and conferred with Lon Nol. Ism No) said in a radio address Tuesday night that he w ill choose a new prime minister and would appoint H permanent political figures from his party and two opposition parties to a new council of political advisers. IN F O R M E D sources said Wednesday that Lon Nol {Kvtponed formation of a now government hot auso he wan having trouble Hading qualifier! members of two opp si ti n parties. Republicans and Democrats, who are v dc rig lo accept j > '>!<; On the battlefields, Cambodian tro>ps drove back an attack on a garrison at Tram Khnar. 37 miles south of Phnom Pen, . the military command reported. Several other scattered attacks were reported. In the s ut em sector of Cambodia. In RnUth Vietnam, the Saigon command reported UA mere violations of the cease fire. bu? most appeared to be ing attacks and small-scale skirmishes. By M VR I II \ K I NA R D Texan Staff W ri f er h u e men voluntarily testified bef-'re the Travis County Grand Ju ry Wednesday concerning the possible inducement of two s' te's witnesses not to appear rn F-e f> toi'cr driving while intoxicated trial r' Dr. John A. Gronouski, dean of Ute L B J School of Public Affa ms, T e five inclw W I County C mmissionor IT ard Mf'v a ; Roy Q. Mint n and Charles K t 'n. who represented Gronouski ai ms tr • a t u t or B b Kuhn and Greenie ki. GR A L O I S K I SA ID he v mc,- j t0 f,v . hcr-'.ufe he had spent a good dc ii of time v th I I t ease and. a ’* bouch he w s co?-, snnal'y nor involver!, he felt the grand jurv fr« rn e eryone who could should hear ‘•tin -w arc.' light en trio c, -r “ Gron i'-kl was acc i 'ted o' chmues and cannot Ive tro,| again. the IVV I T. e two s ate s vvjmesses. Frank Machado Jr. and Joe Arreflcndo, who Ho; aor >ur at thp Gronouski trial, to I, >fore tile gr? rid jury Tile. da v. did led Arredondo answered aim si all que put lo him in a telephone interview ii es day' with “ I don’t really rare to anything right now ” st ions V eij. HE I I N V I X Y admitted tie saw Gron ! ISKI ‘‘I saw him the night he was arrested. driving erratically, bul I don’t know ab .ut the drunk part.” he said. Machado was unavailable for comment, Irs the October trad. John S’e w a r. th# said Arredondo and arresting officer, Machado stopped him the nigh* of the arrest and said Gronouski was driving e> ra'wady, Ibe trial w s held after a pnstp- nernent n in adempt m find the two in Hie prosecuting atfemev, . said were the et Iv people of 21 hour vt t o a r y ruth- 1 v IO -aw G Cai bribe louski’s * e; rat ic" driving in the Tuesday Austin Citizen. Fowler ss id Machado sa id and B u re n He said the out town ■ rn Minion his h o u s e , rn to the tri; af er a mem -ors war be dural red But Id p.TV i f eret test it NO TI " I ml e ervi ii: T ti r me to t■ i; I a bet• et- rase VV 11 pm h h • reported, an im- iv af er M dado er iud ice ei'K er i p o u r." Minton t i bey not en rue. to go* them to n the state had Hi “ After a bri« don af that meeting at cm home \ ;; lo said he wouldn’t go to 'na!. He sa e had bed to the police. With a little help from Moya, Machado finally talked. He laughed and admitted what he had done—that he had hoodwinked the nol ice officer." Minton said. Minton and Moya both accused Mrs. Fowler of attempting to do “ a political ha’che- bib" or them Mena said. think she Ukes R chard Moya and wants him out of office ’* Ho a dried that he thought 'hp whole s>ory “ I don’t “ stinks of politics ” before VT T D E P R E S S conference lifter his 1urv, appearance Gronouski said he felt it would be against all he stood for if he did not fell what he know about the ease. grand ’ he He said he had wanted the two men lo testify be mise he fed they would ted I i truth whet “ Many friends and enon ins will never know I was a courted of the DVY I charge,’’ he said. they got in pour Mrs. Fowler denied tho adogafions that politics were invoiced in her story’ and said if was and untrue that sh# ridiculous w a s on* to “ get” a uv of them. Minion acknowledged considering the Idea of a libel suit as a result of the story rn the Austin Citizen. Ineligible Player Lowers Boomer on Sooners ivv out of 3 ny- wrongdoing N O RM AN , Okla. (A P ) have lot "Of} the Univ ersity nine of 'he 12 fen thai] g, Sooners p layed Bowl victory ov lee: si i k nn Recruiting irregularities of ( Mahonia to form ? limes the No. 2 ranke I n— int 'uding the Sugar ie. W D OKI. MIMM \ OI I l( I M s , (\ \\0,u ,.s . lV that K erry Jackson, the No. I quarterback of the Sooners’ spring drills would be ineligible for next season and that offensive line coach Bill Michael had res gned The forfeiture and resignation came after Rig Eight conference officials verified that the t, ad­ scripts of Jackson and Mike Phillips, both from Ball High School in Galveston, Tex , had been t rn pc red with, Oklahoma Athletic Director Wad# T alker said Walker slid Michael had admitted having kn wedge of tho tampering of Jackson’s frau script He said Jackson stayed two nights In an O F athletic dormitory as a high school student—a violation of conference regulations. So at i cr Coach Ba rry Switzer said there was no that tile National Collegiate Athletic Indication Assoc'.,ition might enter the investigation. Dr. Pell! Sharp, university president, said n a prepared statement that “ lo the best of our knowledge, neithe" K erry Jackson nor Mikrt Phillips was aware that their transcripts had been tampered with, and therefore are presumed in* SH VRD SA ID he had also been Switzer thru no The-- member c the was the activity now Vos tig cion. involved in I SSI I re. i c,’ > vt hall st iff under i v Asked if former Head Coach Chuck r >w general manager and coach of rho New England Patriots, had any know! Fairbanks, >rofessiona I Hi go Of ti ? (R ein bul Story. Page fi.l ti iascript tampering, Walker said, • I that. I do not know ti I .or In Kansas City, a Rig E.ght a knowledged the investigation. “ T h e Is correct, and the Big Eight Confr* sp >kesm -’i informat n once office has no spokesman said. further comment at this time,” th# W ,!ke: said Oklahoma would forfeit e ve:v game vhicb Jackson played—eight of them victories ud one a loss to Colorado—meaning Oklahoma 'ill retain victories over only Kansas State. Iowa tate and Nebraska. I H E LOSS O f Jackson is a •vwete blow for ie S oners—Jackson rushed for 308 yards and rn pie* cd l l of 38 passes for 144 ya id v Switzer said he informed Jackson Monday that ' bing terrible had happened that would cause is ineligibility next reason. " Y -ii know what the kid did” ” asked Swayer. He just sat there and he didn’t say a thing. Then I told him coach Michael had resigned and h sa? there and cried.” Asked what effect the loss of Jackson v oui have On the team. Switzer said, AVe *■# competitor an ?! liners anc we ha* e to rise to th:c challenge H E SAID H E 'v uld encourage Jarks'*n Rn Phillips a linebacker and cen’cr on las? vear’ freshman team, to ‘stay’ and seek ar. educatio and later po: form as athletes. ' Oklahoma h i ] forfeiture mean Nebraska will be declared B t Fag Ii cam pion. Presumably the " If they say we sip now the champion, vee'’ Dirronir Be N eh musk a A f i de': ~ c ac, -pp; Devanev said in Lincoln. Public Nudity Stirs Parents XT-..* Voudouris igroed, . . . legislative rentedv is the onh an-'Wrt- Bv N \V( V ( MT. Bv N VST Y ( XEL anti KHIN HOI NMA, ( ■ne p i ned pat • act of fo-nieation Coman he Trail c univ officials to its i*f school bes riders who allegedly saw -n i car Last week on the easement rd on wp f - i°.'! Lake Austin met Wednesday night with S H E R IF F RAX M O M ) mg I rn versify System Chancellor and Mrs Charles LrM aistre and sp rn--snmn Mrs. Mrrletie Muxon, “ When I gel a law .-gams? public nudity I ll enforce it. But I can’t enfocv a law I don't have." the group, 1IU int F R A N K mid is hazy. Precinct 5 Justice of the Peace Jim Dear said current legal 'Cur indecent exposure statute rs ago, an?! tho only applicable law now •ofano and abusive conduct ’ if .'Though the city has authofit\ to pass e. It wo bu only tie p -^st'de to enforce ake its? a not in the surrounding area,” ’’ Ki d toe gtopp, “ You ve got to get vour > we can enforce.” Commissioner Johnny status of public nudit was ro}vc.ded four ye: Ls the -taiute against | Dear pointed out th an anti midi tv ordinals: (the ordinance) on the Constable Gene Colli legislators to pa s la a Bill Leake. Highland Lakes resident asked Frank win v ■ ■ e« i deputy sheriff patrol could not be formed in t e a ' e.a i have a deputy she'iff in the field I warn rn have W h e n percent control >f him ." said Frank. "W e don : v ant a g cups ' v igilan Frank p >mised mere patrol cars and patrolmer a-si gi od to the a rev short h . A S K E D BA’ \ R E S ID E N T f he vv .ald vote tor a se for skinny'-dipping ' Voudouris t (skinny -dip] evs * would guarantee si^er. fica lh set ast clad i" if tnev there.” Susan Hale. lake area ; e -v i < lent said son e ■ si ten is -n they* were not contacted about the meeting Mrs Mixt) s p ecen? vote confarted “ bv \> rd of mo?..* Asked if put', of i ie meeting v is given, she top:led that an annot peaced in local pttpei-s. anc added "bu* we dido ? want Mss M xon told the group a” Austin are . ems!.' Lew, received a u ep one , inforn tig ‘. re mat he is chairman of ti committee He is awaiting a lette? fro Spurn with details of the ©Bmmittee ai naming its four other member’s '.anham, assooa professor of management, has also bet informed that she ut a committee menthe* Elizabeth M s . Five f o r the M o n e y -Ins xv« «.v.'.-V' fe\ in Si. f I’tiolo by I ’lIIL HI HI Ii, As C o u n fy C o u rt- a t- U w Ju d g e M a ry Pearl W illiam s fires the starting pistol, five state senators are off to publicize the 8-hour Marathon Relay and Carnival to be held April 28 at M em orial Stadium . Senators (l-r) are Ja c k H iqh tow er of Vernon, Ron C lo w er of G arland , Peyton M c N ig h t of Tyler, Max Sherman of Amarillo and Jim Wallace of Houston. UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON ABROAD STRASBOURG, FRANCE SEPTEMBER '73' THROUGH JUNE '74 C O p en to undergraduates in ail majors T *o years college French or equivalent required Earn 36 hours U H credit $2300 for air faro, tuition, lodge g P X C l i S I C ’S G U A D A LA JA R A , MEXICO JU LY 12 - AUGUST 17: 5540 ans Drive nvolve Students ertis Ti: * s i lid *" ,t ?e;i,ne Wednesday »ht alew cee, :<'25 for an ad- camp litrri aimed af student v ock's im -i burg • : ip 11i *n V ■ e r g CO en;!! >e in ten sews. T 4- iii • Senate in next i n t u n ' ' . ' * w s h a v e b o o n for Tut ’S< I a y and i iv in fisc rnion Building. dub*! ■ • OILS - ..le d t o S J ie n ! i t h o > \ ■ »n ti*' a s p a ; x vr a d s . *m(o, s loc,, is, Senate loaders also student to in in an effort visit groups a.: un: s ’ s t H i e : : : s o n p a r t i c i p a t i o n id ( Tit ( e y e ' m r ' i t. O H I! R Vt I ION, the Senate e j to s|K>ns ir a rally Wed* y o \ el est lee t 'nisei s!*v ■ -tration's failure to conic a sa Lsfacto! v plan for a sexual discrimination on a n d Kay t h e o f i t i l e S e n a . e tile I 'niversitv lad twice failed to satisfy employment standards set by the Hep '•ament of Health, (H EW ) Education and Welfare ss i t l l sexual discrimination. regard to urge They said (lip rally was planned to t'n versify President Stephen II, Spurr to meet the May is deadline which H EW has set for submission of an ac­ ceptable plan. I' \ I CU .VMV, serial : from the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, moved that the Senate not only .sponsor the rally but refer the matter to the Women's Affairs Committee for possible further action. The motion was approved with only one dissenting vote. Senate memlier appointments to the standing committees and the people to chair those com­ mittees were named and ap­ proved at the meeting. long-range outreach .Several programs the presented executive repoi ts were approved and referred to committees. in T H E W O M E N S Affairs Committee will investigate and attempt to negotiate a “ more sensitive" Student Health Center abortions, Cappy policy on Student Government McCarr, vice president, said this project w as not “ a conservative issue or liberal issue, but an answer to human need.” Tile committee also will look into charges cf University sex discrimination. on The Minority Affairs Com­ mittee will be faced with solving the ‘‘fundamental problem of this racial discrimination campus,” said Sandy Kress Student Government president. Ii will improve r e l a t i o n s h i p s between th< ■ East Austin University residents and to establish com­ munity recruit projects minority students. seek also and to to T H E STUDENT Sere ice and Committee will set up tutorial s e r v i c e s internship p r o g r a m s . Offering at-cost charter flights to students and establishing a low-cost day care center will also be aims. A for primary goal tho Education Committee will be to place students on nominating committees for new department chairmen, It also will study the tenure system and investigate possibilities of student-initiated courses. By JOHN O’CONNELL and LYNN HOWDEN President Nixon has proved the cyclic nature of history, Frank M a n k J e w I c z , Sen. George McGovern’s campaign manager, said Wednesday mght. “ Nearly IOO years ago tho c o u n t r y ' s centennial was c e l e b r a t e d during President G r a n t ' s administration,” Mat k.rowioz n id a St. Edward’* University audience of about IOO “ NINON W IL L bring us into the bicentennial in 1976 with an equally corrupt administration.** The ma ior thrust of the speech by the former press secret a i. to the late Sen Robert F, Kennedy concerned the difference between “ old” and “ new” politics. “ Many columnists called the campaign mn by McGovern new poli ti'\s. ’ ’ Mankiev ioz said. “ However, the opposite is true. McGovern's campaign was the last one run along nM party lines and noli tics.’' lie sad little fare to fa ce “ Mix -a's campaign was an example of new politics, tie used vc ry cam­ like McGovern. He paigning r elied on d im ? mail to highly defined groups to carry his message ” the lawyer said.' “ T H ES E GROUPS were broken down into age, sex, occupation, Income and region. The race. c a m p a i g n the president sent between 70 and IOO million pie--es of direct mail to these groups, dealing with issues close to horn.'-.” he said. to re-elect “ This Ss the *new politics.’ ” Before television, he noted, a politician could say different things in different parts of the c o u n t r y . Television's instant rom tnt rn ira finn prevented that, he said. Mankiewlcz finished his speech by asking, “ If a cove mm en t bes for IO years, how many years must it tell the truth before the people I relieve it again?" CLIP and SAVE! NEED A BAND? PAY NO A HMN Y PKK! C A M . O R I V R TTF g I1' l‘.S Al JK I Y I 's i: Ta V V TAMA SVM T K IN S E Y , r rector 2h? Thomas JefO-son Drivt San Antonio, Texas ' rn2/V i 77T7 or 722 5175 C L IP and S A V E p f e _ ti t i l ; n n to ‘ 1 I van Staff Ph .,to b\ . I M M il,I,I.it . Campaigns Contrasted McGovern campaign manager Frank Mankiewicz told students ^ Ste Edward s University that George McGovern s presl- dontial campaign was traditional face-to-face and party structure oriented, while President Nixon hit each socio­ economic qrot.-o separately. ?ersmifflingfortfe Amen ca?i Jn dim "is enc af the jaijfieo (ii at the. kcondkyeC bi DoS'/eMall 1021 G uada lupe, f I P ® i S T j l l NY or Nassau — Luxembourg Leave Before June — Return Anytime Icelandic RT. Fare to Age 24 IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT EUROPE TALK TO SOMEONE W H O ’S BEEN THERE: O N THE D RAG (Next to 2J ‘s) 478-3471 mmmmmmmmmmmmmma INTERNATIONAL 2226 G U A D A LU PE 478 3471 WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY CC, S A N D W IC H and S O F T D R IN K ONLY REGULAR PRICE 65c fcnWkif fried MW G u a d a lu p e o n H ie B r a g OPEN MEETING OF THE UNIVERSITY CO OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS THURSDAY, APRIL 19 -1 P.M. Room 202 Union Building AGENDA ITEMS INCLUDE Introduction of New Board Members-Elect 2. Slide Presentation on the Co-Op — Shown at Expo '73 3. Sporting Goods Department Manager Report 4. Operations Manager Report 5. Presentation on Merchandising and Department Changes D R U G SPECIALS APRIL 19, 20, 21 Clairol Herbal Shampoo 12 oz. Reg. $2.09 $*j "| J & J Baby Oil Reg. $1.49 Clairol Herbal Rinse Reg. $ 1.2? 75 ° tiw rn ialsam Conditioner Reg. $1.49 Crest Toothpaste 5 oz. Reg. 89* 9 7 5 2 W E ’VE GOT HIH LADIES' SHAVER THAT CUTS HAIR .. . HOT SKIN Flicker ii 93 Flicker Razor R e g . $ 1 . 4 9 I® UNIVERSITY CO OP SUPPLY DEPT STREET FLOOR O n # h o u r f r e a p a r k in g of u o ° o f m o re . Slipcased G ift Edition of Jonathan Livingston Ceagu Reg. $7.50 Now ( D E « L i ' General Book DepK - - Second Floor Of* Fe p » rl - g - ’ ’’»• P r- cFas* c* $? 90 or n o 1'. UNIVERSITY C O O P *■«-! Amf'- A M aster Charq# Page I Thursday, April 19, 1973 TH E DAILY TEXAN U T 's H i s i o tic B r a c k e n r id g e T ra ct V ie w e d "The regent ma t use the property for the fy,” Et win said. He plated It'nefit of Hie Ln ive tile value f |lu> land at SH million. " L ie regents have been besieged by offers to use the property,” he continued. “ The land must be reclaimed so that the property will bo put to its best use.” ice leases on the baseball field, park and lake emollient we o terminated Nov. 7. Tin Municipal Golf Course lease will cud Aug. 7. *• * * Hie hist,.iy of die Brackenridge Tract !« *n In cresting tale in itself. It. is closely interwoven v iii die Unive:sit\’s develonment and the history cl rs nalitics connected with tile school, Col. George Washington Brackenridge, once called the “ Patron Saint of the University,” served on the Bund of Regents from 1880 to 1911 and 1917 to 1919. a total of 27 years. B m A - th” tract of lend along the Colorado River, his gifts to the University included funds for br Iding the first men’s dorm'tory at the school an I $25,000 for the establishment of a loan fund I r v rn in students law and me lh inc. in architecture, !'»” '( K E M D IK iE also donated land to the Cit> 0 A i A ib mo, notably that arca known as ' re p.»rk. ' ‘ I Tone IT- 1910. Brackenridge, then chairman of th-' R ■ nits’ Committee fcr University Lands, <1 meed the tract of land in Austin “ to the Slate of Texas, for the benefit of the University of T vcs...” The land, the deed savj, was to ne used ‘Tor the purpose of advancing and promoting 1 liver Lily < lucation.” Tho deed has been the subject of c. otro orsy ho bise -if a se*-con which specifies that ti < land i,; to I ie considered “ as part ut Hie permanent bind for said University until tim death of the Inst surviver’ < i six specified child!en, three ••••'•■- Were children of employes of the San Antonio Na- t:” nal Bonk an i three who were Brackenridge heirs. Brackenridge stated in deed that lie gave the land for * e University’s R-nofi!. “ as a part of (J ‘I . r‘s Note* Tins is the firs! of a thrcc-purt nin:,m I- • controversy *urroum1inK Tie IT, sci < nridgo I' net.) Bv " i i Kl-, NORM \\ i e\:m Staff W rifer A emoting to influence the actions nj the Boanl lo (i -ic’iit I .-’sh. bu approentb a group of Au a hi sj.orLsmcn and envir inmentalists have Iva he n found by '-onto people ;*• I : I just that purp se. ° ■' L"’ ( * (-’’P 1ms made itself Rn Avn as the “ Sib a Aw g ; " (Am m itirc." Tie task which they have sot thorns 'vcs vs the preservati n of Au- in's 1^- I ti Golf Course in th? wester!* pal t the city near Tem M iller Dam 'sib's mat led student hou ing. and the ffl T 1 'Lin * I nu u"h the circulation of petitions and active J t. the commit ce lisp s to save the course. lately 130 acres of densely wo ded x public recreational ai ca and green ' < n ap ■ •••'> 1 * ’ L I ft ’ft VLAIt'-f shuns bom de f >pt hat il-.e "'hi ii the o, us so is built is ic sod from is part of app o \ -rtolv 40S ors: y. '-.'I to the State of T nos ' 1910 for tim I Ii e Uni vc* shy, It «*” '• i ' t ‘ A os I) alit D o r go f cor, se i ta u e a smalle .po c b v l*;:v been per­ of the tract lying: il bi cby adjacent to * A Au tin cs a paik and ess easement to the lake. \ p non of the ic on Enfield R ad hr.v boon u-ed : ti a - a Little League baseball field. fro: Hie I aiver shy has never asked .for n ,r re eivv'l p i> payment from the city for the use of this Inn.I according to former Regents’ Chairman John I CC. VT \ P R E S S C O N TEREN C E last August, I ii versify Regent Frank ( ’. Erwin announced tho 'bor! of tho rn gent - to can co' C/> out'-tarid ng itt L the '■ en the land and recover ; srossinn of c !;: » tr.'u r. Bs MR H VET, F R E SQ l I S and V U SU X SMITH Ti van staff Writers Tn a rare flash of h< wy-hande* I gaveling, I" we Speaker Price I >nr*ie? lr. r o v e od t! o Louse bate Wednesday night as it moved to :*c-s an appropriations we’fa re rider to I : ■’ funds and food stamps to met hors of dependent children. The an'endmcnt would prohibit welfare fee mothers who do not try to w’ork or are m a voluntary strike. TI e rider, promised by Rep. Robert Davis o’ Dallas, cleared a motion to table by 7b 'n Ll before opponents tied up ll ohm f ■ fuele ilsan ic i horn's with |x>inls of said permanent fund with the request merely on my part thai it lie ne\ r disposed of but be held permanently Lu ach educational purpose*- THE D ECH STATES, “ (Itll rase sud State if Texas, or the riu’y constituted authorities of the University of Texas sell or convey said property from the purposes iforesaid at any time before the death of the last survivor of the alxive named persons.” title to the land would rover- to Jackson Ca linty, Texas, “ for the benefit of th*- public lice sr ho Is in and for that county...” Though an oxa- f survey of the grant is lacking. the tract Includes more than 400 acres On th** c ts! bank of tho Colorado River and around 95 acres on the west bank, both above and bel* w the present Tom Miller Dam. A letter from Brackenridge to S.E. Me/es, then president of the University, is recorded In the minutes of a regents’ meeting held Dec, ll, 1909. In the letter, Brackenridge announced his plan to donate the Land and the conditions on which he would give it.. The letter read*. “ Tn 'his connection, f tender to the University the land fronting on the Colorado River and embracing tile Austin dan*, amounting to somewhere In the neighborhood of 400 acres, providfd it could be occupied for University pur­ poses advantageously, rf you think well of the-, won t you kindly I .ave the boy's make a survey of it so that I may draw the deeds accurately by tjoundaries. and also that the board may sf'e something of the topography of the tract, to enable them to decide whether they desire it or not. f am perfectly* willing and ready to do this if it met-ts any of the wants of iii-'- University, but would be unwilling to give It to them to be sold or exchanged for other property.” was tim colove s dream that the University move from its original 40-acre site to the land he had dona bd along tho rivet side The regent-* minutes shortly after June 12. BHI, Brackenridge left his position on the board, -how th it th - move was considered at thai time. from inspected property you T H E HOARD sent a telegram to Brackenridge which read as follows: “ June ll. 1911. Col George VU. Brackenridge, San Antonio, Texas. Regents recently gave have University*, and suggestion Is entertained looking to ifs future use for sh*- of mam establishment'! We will be bere until Tuesday night, and would be glad to have your < mise! on this anc, other matters if you can come without serious discom­ fort.” The colonel’s reply was prophetic: “ June 12, 1911 Honorable Clarence Ousley, Cli airman Board r'' R ^ n t s . Austin, Texas, Thanks for- your very kind and highly appreciated incite dun to join y J in the (’onsideration of any subject pertaining to the fumm prosperity and welfare of the University of Texas. The land there will eventually be of great value, and I will as a citizej of the Suite o! Texas, take pleasure rn following as far as possible any suggestion or undertaking of your b; ard,” Although the move was apparently discussed at that time, no serious steps were taken to bring about the campus relocation. Tim proposal surfaced again, however, shortly after Brackenridge^ death in 1920. This time it had substantial backing, W HEN NEWS of the projxrsed move hit the newspapers debate flared among interested par­ ties. Tim be*' Dr. IRY. Benedict, former University dean, called the opposing factions the “ move to the darners” and the “ damn to the movers.” Many University students, ex-students. President R L . Vinson and ti ie Board of Regents favored influential Austin the move. a committee of citizens, mast of whom were members of the Chamber of Commerce, opposed the idea, as did the Texas Legist dure Influential in deciding the outcome of the con- txoversy was the will of Maj. George Washington Littlefield, another benefactor of the Universal v who had died in 1920. Littlefield was an ex-Conied orate officer who had donated even irene gifts to the University than long-standing had Brackenridge. There was a riv ’Ty between th*' two men, resulting not onlv from their opposing loyalties in the War Bel ween the States, brot also from business competition. B th were highly loyal to the I niversity. however THE L IT T L E F IE L D M IL L left $500,000 for the ( ci s ruction cf tbf. present Main Building and $300,000 for the construction of a women’s dor­ mitory. Bi,th gifts, said the will, would revert back to Hie estate ii lite University were moved to another location. The dispute was finally settled a few* months later when the Legislature appropriated funds to purchase land adjacent to the Forty Acres. it ruins s -tory will focus on legal development* relating to the tract.) G eorge W. Brackenridge . University 'patron saint/ Budget T r amendment was ar d to u ■ mote points of re Rafted rem- '4*.vd only order. The House recessed until 9 a.m. Thursday for .i final vote on til* - matte! Angry debate flared at times be:v<*en its the sensors of tile amendment and o f aments T ho amendment read: ‘’N',* person oft cr the ace th a n those disabled, R ose below of 1 8 and above a',. or I hero who ; to blind, is entiled to reecho any fards ap ­ w h o under this section h 'T ro-vj o p ro rn • i a ? ( Gels Stormy Debate is not engaged such funds or food stamps unless . , . sue h person has applied for employment , . . in a work sr -pp . e and or strike.” Mot her s in nil i areas u i bout • m* pioyrnent opportunities and those v irti • hildren under the ay” of ti would be et opt e* i. Austin Reps. Lari- Bales. S. ■rah VV* th tig­ lon and W ilson Foren . n voted a ga ins* Hie amendment. Rep. [y,:, \oto-| for if. Knish - chi,-ano and women House members the two-year “ no tvew taxes” appropriations bill was attacked “ racism and for sexism” Wednesdav, ft1* pated del ate, minority members tn snceessftHly proposed amendments to the $9.7 billion measure to end discrimination in state agency hiring. Suggested changes included rec.Tuif.ment Pr ■r ims and cutting salaries of high paid executives in “ racist agencies,’* liiese j-»er«p1o don’t want equal job op I! niston Rep. Senfron a po: unities 7 mmpson said, “ T ie ) cant to pay us slave salaries/* fey Minority member* have indicated they to cut University Chancellor 1 id Charles LeMaistre s salary because of “ racist hiring practices.” “ The U T System is one of the most, the state ’* d serf minatory agencies Houston Rep Mickey Leland said. in Before the ma ra ' hon appropriations <1 hate is through, a major effort will be made by Rep Paul Ragsdale of Dallas to require ell sto-e in an amendment agencies to “ assure affirmative artier” la achieving equal employment opportunity. ’ Ragsdale’s amendment has no teeth in it. oomph.toed Houston Rep Ben Reyes “ but that's probably the most we could get out of the House,” Two successful amendments added ex­ penditures to fthp two-year appropriations bill, but did not exceed the proposed $9.7 billion spending ceiling One by Austin Rep. Bales allocated $1 25 rn ill ion to centrally heat and air condition fbe \us in State School for the Mentally Retarded. Anoil.- ■ successful amendmesit ft- Alist n Rep, Cavness reinstated about $60,000 In fttnds for 'he Commissicm tar the Deaf. P r e s e n f Coupon for T E R R I F I C - -> .VO* f L t i t vl§ \ m J I f y i s ■I Robe 5 478 1 - organa I Bedr. SI 20 Menan M jnor San Gabriel 47P ' I Bedr. SI 20 Milano I rom S 12' Gal: Knoll I K ? Beth, t iurn Si. I Dedr. SIGO Gov ii ny 1 & 2 Bedr, From $ 1aa ^ l a Afert Lynn 4 i i it 7b : Imonf 442 i A 1-i’i Clayton 453-7914 0 South First •: '■ ' ' ICE Clayton 453-7511 El Mo rile rn. i ' I j io.’.n Laku Ciruo 1 Bedr. S I 39 * • • A Redwood Sqnait. U3 VV. 38th 4 a4 720 Efficiencies S I ‘ii) Harvard Place 020 Manor Bd, 926-6758 Sso Paulo i i r» ic tj uyini 478 207 1211V/. 8th 474-110 ' bl ti Royal Crest 444 5606 Roosevelt 454-9848 i5u"ii’.iA ■ ilJ NO rift 09 Reinli 454 08m • O E. 51st 453-3308 1 & 2 Bedr From $159 Tai Shan I & 2 Bedr I rom $125 El Posado I & 2 Fedr. From $120 Es Cortez I & 2 Bedr, horn $125 ■ )16 Bbllcreek 4b I I 26 13 Duinlanna f lf. & 1 Bedr. From $125 Le Font sub W. 2Bth 472 5480 2 Bedr S ! Pn (We place loommatec] Le Milage I & ? Be d r Fiom $129 '03 ‘-'armon 4 u3 V‘ ’C ct, ■. J. d I Bedr. S 120 Casa Felice • '02 Speed.vay 4t:5-8987 Efficiencies s: os Ca tile I a 2 P.- dr. i loin S I 34 El Ch apparel ii W. 38 th 454-72Q I Be dr, S i l 5 S i 20 I I I Bedr. I tom S i bo Innsbrook Elf. & 1 Bedr, rom $119 BARKY GIU.INGWATKR CO 476 - 2 633 toro vvrsr a ve, T ie newest Honda is here. We w'ant to show you the bigger, vronger, spunkier Honda Civic. Absolutely all new. The new Civic"' is sporting engi­ neering pizzazz like 4-wheel independent suspension, anti-sway bar and rack-and-pinion steering. And although it can get from 0 to 60 in 13.0 seconds, it still runs on pocket change. Gets up to 30 miles per gallon. Come in and test drive it yourself. We think you’ll be pleasantly surprised, and here. ittu m tta l 200 W . H U N T L A N D D R . OFF AIRPORT BLVD. ACROSS FROM SAGE C a rs 4 5 4 - 6 8 2 1 I H E D A U L T T E I A X T h u rs d a y , A r n i 19, 1971 F e * * I T h e D a i l y T e x a n S t a f f e d i t o r i a l s a nd opinions New Senate business A s the new Stu d e n t S e n a te b egins w ork, s e v e r a l m a t t e r s of im* po f i a n c e a r e f a cin g it. A m ong ite m s r e q u ir in g p r o m p t a n d f a v o ra b le is a p ro p o s e d C a m p a ig n R e fo r m A ct for s tu d e n t elections. a hon C o m m itte e a c tio n on the p ro p o sa l is to begin T h u r s d a y , D r a w n up to r e s e n d to s e v e ra l su b s ta n tiv e objection s to the c u r r e n t the p ro p o se d a c t a d v a n c e s s e v era l m a j o r r e f o rm s in e le c tio n C ode, tile m e th o d of c a m p u s < a n ip a ig n in g . As m o st people will reca ll, m a n y . re s trih liv e and a b s u r d re g u la tio n s w are brought to light in recent • •Ie- M ions A m ong the pro posed e h a n g e s In tile r o l e would be a provision that c a n d id a te s for the lop two S tudent Government, offices subm it petitions w ith at least 200 s ig n a tu r e s to get on the ballot. Also proposed is a r e m o v a l of re stric tio n s on the n u m b e r of h a n d o u ts c a n d i d a te s m a y m e M< t r o v e r , tile b in on adv t rfisinc in put-I c a t i o n s is also lifted so p r e v e n t a b u s e of ti lese liberalized policies and to p re c lu d e the d i s p a r ity in p a s t c a m p a i g n c xp« ndifures, u a sona b le sp e n d in g ceilings w ould be instituted for v a rio u s offices A n o th e r m a j o r c h a n g e p r a c t i c e s - -would be org a n iz a tio n s w h e n in the node—a n d a d e p a r t u r e fro m past re c o gnitio n of coa litio n s a n d o t h e r political two o r m ore c a n d id a te s . T im line u p behind provision, w hich a d ju s ts c a n d id a te s s p e n d in g ceilings d o w n w a rd if the> p a r tic ip a te in a coalition et fort, is f a ir and c e r t a in ly deserve* in an} inclusion r e fo rm m e a s u r e D e velopm ent of v a rio u s political o rg a n iz a tio n s on c a m p u s will only p ro m o te discussion of issues and r*-. -ourage robust and v ig orous c a m p a ig n s , e n d s to b e sought E a c h of t hese m a j o r p ro p o sa ls would s tr e n g th e n a n d s tim u la te the e le c to r a l p ro ce ss on c a m p u s F r o m a p ositive viewpoint, the a c t will also re m o v e m a n y in hibiting fa c to rs ink. re n t in the c u r r e n t code a n d p r o m o te g r e a t e r s p r e a d of in fo rm a tio n a n d cohesion of stu d e n ts, In !> entire!} Hie p ropo sed C a m p a ig n D eform Act c an h a v e m a n y beneficial effe< is for th e s tu d e n t c o m m u n it y and d e se rv e s prom pt e n a c t m e n t . A perfect C o ld W ar comedy W o nd e rs of w o n d e rs n e v e r fail to hr;op*ti in Dallas. Television sta tio n WEA \ r* 'r i v e d so m a n y o o m p h m s a1*nit tie-* show ing of a scheduled J a n e F o n d a m o v ie th a t lf c a n c e le d the film a n d r a n a n o th e r in stead . \ pla in in g his r e a c tio n to v ie w e r s s e n tim e n ts, sta tio n m a n a g e r W ard H u cv s a id th a t the show ing w a s postponed indefinitely. He a d d e d th a t th e decision not to a i r the film w a s not a b a n on o ther F o n d a m ovies. A I a1 ted D ress I n te r n a tio n a l s to ry ind ic a ted t h a t th e re a s o n v ie w e rs c o m p la in e d w a s b e c a u s e Al ;ss F o n d a publicly d eno unced re tu r n in g D.S, pris o n e rs of w ar. a c c u sin g so m e of them of e x a g g e r a tin g to rtu re th e y suffe re d w h ile In C o m m u n is t c aptiv ity. In sho rt, sh e h a d b ec o m e f or> trovers;rd H ie m o v ie t h e .station re fu se d to show, h ow ev er, w a s e a rls v in ta g e F o n d a , film ed long b efore she m a d e th e tra n sitio n fro m s e x i s t to c r u s a d e r . In f a c t, ‘T a l l Story.*’ m a d e in FDO, was the f a s t s ta r r in g In th e film she p la y s a n a ll-A m erican , m ale - role for Miss F o n d a hu n tin g c a m p u s * a f t e r b r a i n w h o h a p p e n s m a \ be tall In s e a r c h in g for a tall m a le , she lights ujxm \n th o n y P e r k in s , w ho p la y s the s t a r of the c ollege’s ba ske tba ll te a m and w ho also h a p p en s to be a c a b ct v c r a n d b rillia n t sc ie n c e stu d e n t. In th e c o u rse of tile m ovie, a R u s s ia n b a s k e tb a ll te a m c o m e s to town, a nd , of co urse, the R u s sia n s t r y to b r ib e P e r k in s . A perf**ct Cold W a r c o m e d y . B ut m a y b e th e D a lla s s ta tio n Is willing to belie ve that Miss F o n d a is a m i s f i t If its v ie w e r s believ e so, th e n sh e is p r o m p tly re m o v e d from the air lh r h a p s so m e will rejoice th a t at least if is the old Fonda* not the i ew Rights b ill advances D ie Ti \a> St n a b is mov m g r loser to p a s s a g e of legislation g r a n tin g 18-year-old T e x a n s full m a j o r i t y rig h ts. P re v io u s ly th e t a r g e t of a b a n Iful of d i s s i d e n t , i n t r a n s i g e n t se n a to r s , the bill by S ta te sen. Bob G a in m a g e of II ms ton h a s g r e a t import for the h u n d re d s et thou san ds of ' s v ca molds in this stab- The bill h a s a lr e a d y p a s s e d second r e a d in g and m u st now receiv e m a jo r ity a p p r o v a l only on< e m o re before be in g s e n t to the House. \ p re v io u s o b stru c tio n to th e bill on the S e n a te c a le n d a r w as rem o ved r e c e n tly , a n I th is put the m e a s u r e in even b e tte r position. T h e outlook - for S e n a te p a s s a g e soon. T h is is indeed an e n c o u ra g in g sign for y o u n g people, for it signifies t m o ve away f r o m the tra d itio n a l c o n s e r v a tiv e p o stu re of the s t a t e 's is most h i e r a r c h y justified a n d dex< i v< s e n a c tm e n t. th e m As s ta te d before, legislation to w ard this P a g e 4 J h u r sd a ;, April r , 1973 Tj j ft DAILY TKXAJf 'w-W5 B & Y . \ V t/M) IU m&ep ro IT I CA Dr BREATHE- \ CWT R E Z .. \ IN K m m & e . i a 1 c o h o l . \ e rn e CtCLUSlOfJ l^ \ . I me im 6VACT S M C A 1 T 5 R 6 Y . WHAT'S IT cento? ii) \ o p I O R ? o m s p e o p l e . i Administration air needs clearing By J a m e s Reston bd 19*3 New I ork Times News Service WASHINGTON—If you listen to all the arguments and throats between the White House and the Congress these days, you rn.-ght think I his town was hell-bent tor a constitutional crash, but that’s not exactly the way it Sa. Ai! kinds of people are saying ail kinds of silly and provocative things a trout tho the rights, duties and privileges of executive and legislative branches of the government, and howling for a "showdown” between the two, but the main thing is what happens here whenever the natural conflict, between the parties o- the Congress and til* Write House begins to get out of hand. Somebody always gets up to defend the banal interest rather than party interest, and if Pie issue is serious enougn, to defend the rights of the Congress against any excessive demands by the executive—and this is what is happening now, PRESIDENT NIXON has no more loyal supporter on defense policy or economic the policy than Sen. Barry Coldwater, former Republican presidential candidate to from Arizona, but when defending Nixon’s the W ifergate case, Coldwater rebels. st comes handling of It’s beginning to be like Teapot Dome," he told the Christian Science Monitor, "I mean, there’s a smell to it. Let's get rid of the smell.,.the President has to give assurances. I think Hie people will believe him. I el. n’t want to sec this man end ilia term with something hanging over him that will keep the Republicans from electing another president..." Other people, of course, take a different v iew. For example. Grid water's friend, Atty. Cen. Kleindienst told a Senate sub­ committee the other day that the Congress The firing line To ih** editor: article Regarding Mr. Restoris in Tuesday’s Texan pen ai ring to the widely heralded Watergate affair: certainly, the American public has become generally aware, or at least familiar enough with this scandal to realize the extort (or part the criminal governmental it) of of shenanigans that have oceui ■ evidenced by what has come ou: in the past weeks. Mr, Reston admits that "a crime has been committed" and wishes to know "who instigated and financed the ' rime” as this to could ti t compel any of the more than testify two million federal employes before the Congress on the Watergate or anything else, if Nixon didn't want them re < «; un * agree, he suggested, then us remedies wore to cut off Tile President’s rn rev, or impeach him. e Co; 1 - ■ This was the most provocative statement since Mayor Hague of Jersey City an­ nounced in 1937 that "I am the law,” and bd Muskie, when he heard it, almost blew* through die roof. Bul what was much more interesting is that prominent members of the attorney general** own Republican Party protested milch more effectively than Muskie. THE Cli AIKMAN OK the House Republican C .nferencr, Rep, john B. An­ derson of Illinois, announced publicly that Klcindienst s remarks were "unnecessarily p I a v o c a f i v e and cor mmptuous of Congress.” "More important," he added, "It con­ tained such an alarming and dangerous expansion of tire notion of executive privilege that I can see only one course of action: Congress must immediately pass legislation executive privilege lest Hie delicate balance of shared power between the two branches be rup- lured permanently.” lim! tog strictly Meanwhile, even Mrs. Anne Armstrong, a White House counselor, who Is Nixon's liaison between the White House and Hie Republican National Committee, said publicly that she agreed with Coldwater that the Watergate case was hurting the Republican Party but was convinced that the Administration was determined to clear it up to the satisfaction of the American people. Hopefully, Nixon wilt read the signals from his own party supporters, and get the Watergate suspicions out of the wav. He is in more trouble with his own party now than at any rime since his first Checkers speech of 1952, and now he needs a second. As Coldwater says, he needs to clear the air. Ho needs the cooperation of his own party and of Cie Democratic majority in Congress to pass his trade bill, to control the budget and inflation, to bring about the many useful reforms of his second term, and come down to the 200th an­ niversary of the Republic in 1976 with a reasonably united country. Bl T THERE IS still a crisis of con­ fidence, which Coldwater has defined better than the President can remove it. He has to speak out. else. Nobody but anybody Other Republican leaders besides Cold­ water are telling him the same thing, but apparently things have been done in the name of the Republican Party at tho Watergate, which he is not sure about or cannot admit if be does not know alinit them, so fie holds back. Meanwhile, Nixon Is confronted wit** Inflationary problems at borne, monetary problems abroad, military problems rn Cambodia, political problems on Capitol Hill—in all of which he needs tho cooperation of a Democratic majority which . f is congressional his refusal to tot his aides testify on Capitol Kin. impounding and affronted by hts appropriations, So long as this was merely a feud bet­ ween Hie White House on the one hand and the Democrats and the press on tile other. Nixon could prevail, but now even leaders of his own party are rebelling against his silence on the Watergate and his dictatorial attitude toward the Congress, Thev* are saying in effect that the political game has gone on too long, that the tim# has come for plain speaking and comr on decency, and that -lie national interest nm# requires a clear statement of "he whcl# Watergate conspiracy from the Prudent himself. service slowing down By Jack Anderson (cj United Feature Syndicate, Inc. In frontier days, Hie daring riders of the pony express raced a a os# the country tim horseback, delivering the mail at unheard-of spoils. Although the method of transportation has become mach more sophisticated today, with tho jet plane replacing the horse, the postal system has not. cut down the cross­ country delivery* time appreciably. IT ILAS NOW been two years since the post office was put on a business basis. Tile whole idea was to increase efficiency in­ and improve service. Congressional into vestigators have been citizens’ complaints about the sendee. Their preliminary’, unpublished findings are that long-distance mail delivery is slower today than it was two years ago. Cross-town checking deliver} within most cities is slower ti two \ ears ego, and overall service is c.Teasingly erratic. Our congressional sources lay much the blame on former Postman er Gene W i n t o n Blount Blount started reorganization of the Pos* Office and ti left in the middle of it. Hie new head rn, E.T. Klassen, was left to tie up the lo ends, of which there were many. the Besides reorganization shufl Klassen also has to fight the bugaboo many new administrators—the entrench bureaucracy*. that IDR EXAMPLE, KLessen re-on'ly w< on an inspection tour. Everything seem to be running smoothly What he did know was local postmasters h brought in extra help to make themsel\ look good. In at least one case, they < tually hid mail outside the post office conceal the evidence of their snail-Ii working pate. All of the problems have citizens howli and congressional investigators sou cry Ii But whether the flurry of activity spec tee mail eventually remains to Ive seen. One M arlington wit has suggested ti the answer may be to bring back the po express, perhaps replacing the ponies v motorcycles. to die regents, the administration, the City Council, et a1?) Tile numerous cow trails all over campus don’t really reflect this Quality of ours. The gross negligence or just plain thoughtlessness can’t possible justify continuing this practice. A few extra steps and a few more seoonrls might mean the difference between continuing to have the few green spots on campus or doing away with them all together. This is one time we can all do our part today and every day. Think about it. Michael Rogers Senior, Cox eminent The publics right lo know "concerns ti thing less than the integrity of the American political process." ^ What I question is the id -a of "senatorial discretion and constraint” that is projected by Reston and seems to lie defended over the greater prim ny ct clarifying the matter for the general public. How can such an indiscreet n e- . as the Watergate case he handled in a discreet and constrained manner if the government only wants to "get at the facts and restore confidence in the political process?" If government officials are sincere, it V””M appear that a hit of indiscretion risked would not be inappropriate for the to sired cause tot truth and renewed in­ tegrity of high government officials in the long run. Bravo! To the editor: I would like to comm end The Daily Texan niusements coverage rn s' iff la v e provided Hic brilliant ( eely Wynne and lite campus this semester They have been consistent throughout in supporting the arts by providing thoughtful and in depth a neles and reviews. All those involved with cultural entertainment in our community* are grateful for a job well done. Sandy Kress EEC Chairman '7VTI C o w trails I o th” editor Bm k.s rn ., findings Maybe Cle.ive I ‘Gran*- Mo;. Hive Feelings,” Huston, Wednesday's Texan. Fat STB .... v did, and then again maybe they’re not. The fact is that continuous walking on the same cow trail definitely does kill grass. Supposedly we students and faculty of the University are rational arn) feature adults. (^Haven't we espoused that often enough .................................. D av id Pow ell ................ T om Klein w orth M al c ia Aronson, Steve Renfrow ................................. K a r e n J u s tic e ................................ Q uin M ath ew s ...................................... K irk Bohls . . . . . . MANAGING E D IT O R ASSISTANT M ANAGING E D IT O R S N E W S E D IT O R ........................................’ ’ ASSISTANT TO T H E E D IT O R . . . . . . SPO R T S E D IT O R ...................... A M U SEM EN TS E D IT O R F E A T U R E S E D IT O R . . City Editor News Assistant* *** Contributor Editorial Assistant Assistant Sports Editor Make-up E ditor............................................ Wire Editor . . . . . . ........ ! y W-VTme J a n e Ghesnutt .............................> ? Ill * * VV. *" V ......................... Jennifer Evans ta BcLh Dotty Jacobus Chuck Kaufman **••••**•••••«... Suzanne Schwartz ° ' ComdI. »«*<• Norman S 5 w £ , ' .’ ' ' ^ S a V l ' a ' t u ' ™ , ' O ^ U d E Z S .........................................*!'.............. ;* ....... ^ 0 Huber, Jay Milter in TI’# D a ily Op'n ton? ex p ressed D *oi f h ' ‘‘'to m >'r - a d m ln t s t r a U o n or '’ re * I'.u .raam j r o t n e c e s s a rily > »> th e w r ite r of th e ct of the I uu’ f of tho iho i m - th.? B o s r d o f f i r ’ f . J L I g e n t The Dally Texan. a ' n ‘v '-r_Si,-v ob T e x a s t o t A ustin, stude nt now sp;.,per at P ® is pub- i f r ? f t , Tex,? s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s . D raw . ST H L diversity Station, Austin T exas 78T12 • he D ally T exan Is published M onday Tues- rn iu iT . . . and Frldtiy ex- cep) * *"' M n i h o lid a y a n d e x a m p e r io d s A uk u si th >uRh May M ay S e c o n d c la s s p o s t a g e p aid at A ustin T ex N e w * c o n tr ib u tio n s w ill n0 a c c e p te d by tele- n a iism R m im So'iM v fhe ?d,:orinl office h* Vsi.ni1 B . i i i n i n - V i t r4?,p --i, ^ ® d v e r tJ s ,n 1« • t o w n n llM n .-<00 c la s s if ie d a d v e r .V, 1 tL sin s I, J o .1 m a l l s rn B u U d in * W Thr D siiv T « , a d v e r b .cl, rep re’ ct rntlvc of c e r e s i n j « I*?™ , ls N « tlo n a i LOriucatJonal Ad- • 360 L #* ln * t° n A v e . N ew V irk l o o n v ! D®Hy T ? xan ■ u b s c n b t * to T he Asso- v c e n n d 'er n I t i 1 e nN e w y ° rk T im e s N e w s S er S e r v ic e T h e T M im ^ t.* . rnternftJ I « n a l T elep h o to S S P f - f l . S . ' T A * . * J S ' a s L f S o J s s “ * T*“ * d*‘» i C John E. Burns Sophomore, English EDIT( )R T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper a1 UT Aurtw Sam Wood: Read by the Decision-Makers of Texas I) TTH By TOM KLEINWORTH Texan Staff Writer Q: Ready when you are, Mr. Wood. A, Ready, huh? Well, I really to begin. don't know where Besides, so pure I understand why you want to interview me anyway. But I suppose there's no harm in it. still n o t I ’m I haven't been editor of the Austin American-Statesman all my life. I was born in 1907, and finished Waco High School in 192:). My father wanted me to go to business schoo] before I went to college, so that if we couldn't finish college we’d have something fall back on. Anyway. I entered Four C (that s Central City Community College) in Waco, the business school in 1920. finished and to THAT Y E A R , I began n y newspaper career with the Waco News Tribune. I worked there for two years, and then took a leave of absence and worked for the Memphis Commercial Appeal as a police reporter and for the New Orleans Picayune as a general assignment reporter. I eventually returned to the W a r n working newspaper, fulltime and attending Bavlor University when I could. For an 38-month period in 1931-32, I was sent to Harlingen to bo editor of the Valley Morning News. I was 24 then. That didn’t last real long, though, cause in 18 months I sold the Morning News (for the Marsh Fentress chain that owned it) and returned to Waco again. For most of the ‘30s, I worked as news H i tor, but near the end o' the decade I became managing editor, holding that lob until 1942 In fact, one year I was acting editor The ear tile Germans invaded Poland, Frank Baldwin went overseas on a speaking tour, and I took over for him. IN 197?, I applied for Army officer candidate school, but (lie A ir Force offered me a com­ mission so I accepted it. I began as a public relations officer in Childress, but after a while I was pent to the Pentagon, where T became the P R officer for den. Henry' H. Arnold, commanding genera] of the Army Air Force and a member of the Joint Chiefs af Staff. After some more Pentagon work, I went to Saipan at the request of Cen Rosey O’Donnell to be the public relations officer (or Die "3rd Bomber Wing. Boy, It's been so long ago I can hardly remember when it was. Let’s see. I June, 1944 Anyway, we had the first B29s (rom to operate against Japanese homeland My principal job w a s to fSO war correspondents the Manana It was Islands handle about think the Then, in May of 1943........I rn i i , ,, . not real sure about that date I was sent to Gen. Curtis LeM ay s headquarters on Guam. I was one of several public relations of­ ficers that handled communiques. And there were lots of them, since we carried out the five principal firebombing missions against Japan. M y tour of duty ended Jan. 2, 1946, and rather than accept an offer from the New York Herald Tribune, I went back to Waco. From 1948 to 1954 I was, in effect, the managing H ito r of the Waco newspapers Then I was sent here to Austin on a special assignment and wound up staying here and organizing the Capitol Bureau for Newspapers, Inc., the the Waco and Austin chain to. And belong newspapers finally, in 1967. I became editor of the American-Statesman As editor I ’m involved in all aspects of the newspaper, par­ ticularly the composing depart­ ment. But naturally one of my main duties is writing editorials. MOST OF THU editorials are written by me or Homer Olsen who’s been with the newspaper for some years now. But you know, if there’s one weakness on this newspaper (and it s the only one I know of), it s a weakness in the editorial page department. Raymond R.O. Brooks Dal linger were great writers, but they died, And dammit, we ne\er have been able to replace them. and But like I said, Horner and I write most of the editorials. And it s really hard to say w'here I get most of my ideas. I just sit here a1! day. reading mat! and clippings and answering phone calls, and some time during Dip da something rugs a bel! and I write about it. On some days I talk with our publisher, Richard Brown, and we re in and cwt of each other's offices all day discussing editorials. But on other days I may not even see him. the quality of the editorials—-well, u'e get a lot of c a l l s people...mostly journalism students ...who say we never write on anything con- from for As I __ J Ifs a great ! ■ day for I Kentucky J J Fried Chicken | , EAT J TO D AY AT- , 2 1 2 0 G U A D A L U P E | ^ft's fin g e r lickin' good * vet*ex*! Facie I Sr •ext "Unwanted Hair Problems Rflmovgd Permanently by Electrolysis J E A N 'S E L H I I R O L Y S I S S T U D I O Vt-* J Abd**#*, TWO LOCATIONS C A I I HHK CDM I ’ L I M IC S T A R Y CO N SI l.T C T IO N 7 2 0 1 O h n j t h t r r y 45J "WI56 J JOS u 46V635S Tf clinician* Mrs. Jean W harton Mrs Joanna A ntrim Mrs. W a n d * H a rm , a m m i : ! W W W K W ; nim WI Inn « through \ppointment H ay o r evening . 1r " a m .iMiiiiiijiinainiimi inti iiiiiiiinnitmiimmiiiimiiniiiniBmiHiinniiiiiminaiuimmimimiffnimny Im A c c r e d ite d by 1972 D ir e c to r y of Professional Klectrologtst M e m b e r of A m erican K lrrtrn ly « i« Assn snit l o t a s E 'le e ) m i n g 1s t A s s n . o f Isnt WHATS FLIGHT A B O U T troversaal. But we don’t hold our guns back when we need to fire. It ’s just that you can’t go around Its punching noses everyday. more effective to save your fire for when it’s needed. idea BUT L IK E I told you earlier, Tom. my job .overs more than just the editorial page. For in­ stance, that was my decision to run that “ Message from Mayor Roy Butler’’ on the top of Page I on election day. You see, I the mayor was had no having a press conference that day. I ’d been busy in my office all day and had received about 15 to 20 calls asking me to ex­ plain the proposed six-five city councilman amendment and a lot of other things about the election. the newsroom and saw La m BeSaw, one of our reporters, who said he had just attended a press conference by the mayor. I asked him if the mayor had jus? spoken or had he handed out a release. Larry said tho mayor had read a ielea.se, so I said ‘Give it to me, F II take care of it.’ And we ran it verbatim on Page I. I walked out into So We ran it verbatim because that s what the mayor said, and I thought it clarified the issues pretty well. W e’ve run press c o n f e r e n c e stories verbatim many, many times before. I have no apology for running the story. For me, it cleared up what a lot of people had been asking. But r guess you’re wondering if I would have nm a statement by any other mayoral candidates on the top of Page I. Well, r guess I WOu]d have combined them into one story, but ! can t imagine anything any of them could have said that would have been that important frankly Ail in all, the election turned Crossword Puzzle out as I expee < I. I thought all the incumbents v a lid get elected. You learn to judge elections ny tho mail you cot and the phone calls you receive. or the other. Tile vendor situation seemed pretty confused to me, however. I don’t think the council had the fortitude to make a decision one way They pussyfooted on it. Personally, I haven’t considered it that much, but I think it would be proper to build a market for the street vendors I ( W r think they have the righ*- to occupy the Drag or any other street, tor that matter. B y tho way, this is lite same situation I was referring to about two years ago, when I made allusions to tho Drag moving downtown. It ’s that the T'aiver’ shy community and its Influence is growing larger. N O U I have never opixjsH the 18-year-old vote. Never. A H there s nothing on tho record—no editorial, nothing—to show that I ever lur. e opp -sod it, i wrote ti. ugh. When If s not hard to set* where that idea started, I wrote that H i tonal two years ago, i pointed out that a stud vt glom* was encoring a bloc of about, five candidates. It was no cli Lei en! than two years before ‘bat. when the Great or Austin Association was supporting a bloc of candidates. U hon a group actively supports canduuios, i unk tho people ha\e a right to know. And since not too many people in the city I nu n- read tioned the endorsements in niv editorial. I he I tai y i’oxan, that t I did use some loose language, with my allod r - of move * ti o Drag downtown ! was referrin g : > tho sam e Thing that vendor came f r>m. , pr >p r in up ion, Bcse] But the ,!’p’ •’ ori«i] 1-ad any et -rn on • Spanish (abbr.) 7 Symbol tor tantalum 8 And sc forth (abbr) 8 War pod 10 Parent 11 Challenges 13 Approaches 16 Former Russian niter 19 Characteristic 21 Bound 22 Gastropod mollusk 25 Mistake 27 Country of Europe 30 Weird 32 Girl s name 34 Heavenly body 36 38 Piei aq Get 41 ti’.* Lr. 44 St.’ 47 R D I Odin A CRO SS t Swift 6 Vapor 11 Argu« 12 Soot, sot 14 Near 15 Direction 17 Whale IS Rodent 20 Remaps st ease 23 ~he trial 24 Ireland 26 Showers 28 Teutonic delly 29 Trap 31 Harvesters 33 Angers 35 Face of watch 38 Replies 39 Flowering Push 42 Conjunction 43 Lasso 45 Roman tyrant 46 Possess’vs pronoun 48 W oe out 60 Pinch 51 Arab salting vessel 53 FTyog creature 55 Saint (abb*-) 56 Calm 59 Impels 61 Evaluated 62 Worms DOWN 1 Keep 2 Hebrew month 3 Crony (colloq) 4 Roman road 5 Put off The Department of French-ltalian mo ms a SIX-WEEK STUDY TOUR OF FRANCE focusing on French culture and < va. Hon June 2 to July 15, 1973 ied by Edmond Bazerghi, Instructor in French 7 «r+ ieip*nH m a y r# g lO *r And r<*c«tv« err i * D r t .. C iv iliz a tio n ). or H ,* v m , y par+irjpat,, on a return in tim * f or ff,a second summer session at 1 MADIsOn Mouso Study tour includes: D EX T ER HOUOB MADIsOn-Be/MiKE Ap t s • 21 d ays in Paris & surrounding area • 7 d ays in W estern Franca • 14 days in C entra! & Southern Franco • D aily lectures & guided visits to museum^ an, places o f interest • H otels during entire six weeks 2 ) M € A U ( t h e * e s r IM T b w K j) • All transportation to and from Europe mr* h)4 \r> S Z W IC G * P w v A T t T fe A N S • Breakfast while in Paris; all meals while fr. . || , ;n H fc A T fe ^ P c o w S f o & H 6 p A c e ® All ap p licab le taxes and gratuities qf/ce : ~Joct \V. H o i for detailed information contact! Edmond Bazerghi D epartm ent of Frencfi-ltalian The University of Texai at Austin 73712 Lee H a ll 309 471-5531 (o ffice ) or 327-2371 (h ome) 4 woMtf4 478 / A P P L Y M e w f b f \ S U A V E R 4 F ^ Z - L Travel Austin. arrangements by Longhorn Travelers, Inc., Sam W o o d , editor of the other Austin daily, mulls over a piece of co py. H e writes about half the paper's editorials. the people around town. It sure affected the students, though. in I ll agree there is a sharp division between the voting at­ titudes of the students and the rest of the city. And you’ve got the a clear confrontation N iehols-Binker runoff. Bear in mind, though, I don't care. Anti don’t make this seem like I ’m herding when you write this story. Thero's* no hatred between we on this newspaper and the students. Me have great for students. respect AND DON'T think I ’m against . ne political philosophy or anoth­ er. either When it con es to work. I nevei ask a rertmter v hat his poetical philosophy is I hist mk ■ dm ’arue his stories ob to jct ‘ ively. And that s not easy, either, especially for young people. Because young people always get more involved with what they're writing and rite story they’re covering. Older reporters are more cynical, and that's always for the best. But like I said, I just ask reporters to write their stories objectively. Well, during this past City election, I received a letter ae- using me of slanting id* coverage for one candidate or time were another. N o t one Carolyn Bobo and Larry BeSaw, our reporters, ever told what to write and what not to write. My only criticism was once when I asked Can Iva \vh\ she referred '•'> B.ib Gray as a millionaire. She said she had “ heard it.*’ And I told her she ought to check it out before she printed ii That's the only comment I ever made and the only dim tion they had as to what to write and not to write. In air my years, I was never told what to write and not to write, and Bm n t going to start doing it ti, my jxxrple Well, I guess that’s about it You know all about my life and w ut think of tho vendors and stijdon' vote s whaf ? No there's no need to bring up the press workers dispute, because I can’t tell you anything. That s being handled by the management, and I ’m not involved. All I know is they re still on strike, and we’re trying to negotiate. As for now, we’re running one big press in­ stead of two. And as I said, that's a1! I know. But. bef re you go, there is one thing I mutt ask you. The whole time I've been talking, you've • * • sh . . . well, is there any­ thing you'd Uke to ask me? O : Sir? , I- Pick your favor! in p a t e n t • y e O w • wnite • navy T h e d a i l y T e x a n Thursday, April 19, 1973 Page Women Must Pay To Play T e n n i s T e a m S e e k s 'Fair Share' of Athletic B u d g e t Bv C H IC K KAUFMAN i r k K A I I* Af A V T exan Staff W riter c o a c h ).” ’ * When fem inist G loria Stednem spoke of the ‘ g re a t jo ekocracy” a t the U niversity, no doubt her re m a rk s w ere pointed a t Tex is football and the m ale dom ination of sports. But am ong the women who have resume.-} a prom inent role in ath letics at the U niversity is Scotty G ovaars, sophom ore from P acific P alisad es, Calif., who is rated one of the top two tennis p lay ers or, th e University tennis team . a She finished tided in the district tou rn am en t with h er partn er. P au la Phillips, who with Ms. G o vaars volleys as th e No. I and 2 players. intram u ral-g u id ed The w om en's tennis team , like team s, all escap es th e professionalism of th e U niversity's “ m a in '’ sports. Although the sp irit of winning p revails, having fun is a prim e goal. “ Some people p lace m ore ip Coming em phasis on w inning, hut most people com e out to h av e fun,” said Ms. G ovaars, who was ranked No. Southern 20 C alifornia’s l^-and-under bracket. fr m California Ms G ovaars is not w hat might be called a recru it, “ I had no idea they had a team . I was playing tem ;s and saw a coup e of people (B ottvt tennis yang, one w as Ms. ti a g e r rn a n (w om en's “ T he com petition is so dog-eat- dog tin C alifornia) th a t I w anted to get away' from all th a t," she said. Ms. H agerm an points out the between m en 's discrim in atio n and w om en's ath letics at the U niversity is one which c an be figurer] in dollars and cents. not g irls on scholarships, th e y 're com ing out b ecau se to. T h ere's quite a b it of d iscrim ination with the b u d g e t,” Ms. H ag erm an said ab o u t the te a m ’s $500 allotm ent. they want “ The a re “ Tile g irls have oftentim es had th eir ex- their own for som e of rig h t out of to p a y perises p o ck et.” she said. “ The key' (to the p ro g ram ) is to have a big enough budget so we don't have to pay out of our own p c k e ts ,” she said. “ B 's really discouraging th at from such a big university th e re is such a sm all budget, then you go to a sm all school and thev get ev ery th in g ,’’ Ms. G ovaars said. Although winning ic im port tnt, It is not the key to this w om en's tennis ladies team . “ It s being on th e co u rt . . . from this you’ll get winning. Yes, I w ant them to win, but not at all co sts.” Ms. H ag erm an said. the w om en's Ms. H agerm an doesn’t exactly lib ideology c a rry \vhen she says, “ Men (in tennis! a re stro n g e r and can cover m ore i ground. W omen’s tennis even at the top. is not on the level as the m e n 's .” the “ Of course, th ere a re a few exceptions.” she added. M argaret top players Court, on® of in w om en's professional tennU. has accepted a challenge from the m en 's No 1 Bobby R iggs, player in the age 55-and-over for a $10,000 prize. Oddly enough, the m atch is to be played in California on May 13—M other's Day. W h e t h e r w o m e n o r the stro n g er doesn't a m en a re concern question left to anthropologists. thus w rite r—th a t s goes team N evertheless, th e w om en's tennis a through rigorous fitness tra in in g session during its p ra c tic e s a s do all organized ath letic team s, though the pro g ram d isciplinarian ath letic team s. is Hoi quite as with som e you “ She (Ms. H ag erm an ) a is not w h a t stric t disciplinarian. You eith er give y our all at p ra c tic e or you don t come, Ms. G o v aars said. cal! P ra c tic e s a re held each af­ is each p lay er but ternoon, to attend “ strongly su g g ested ” th a t by- th ree sessions. “ I find p racticing ev ery d ay , they end up playing tennis so m uch o f the tim e th a t th e y 're not hungry to play good." Ms. H ag erm an said. to Should women be allow ed N a tio n a l Student Ventures, Inc. invites you to Experience Europe Fly ch a rte r on Overseas N a tio n a l A irw a y s ' D C -8 's fro m Dallas to London June 6 R eturning Paris A u g u s t 27. S 2 5 5 round t r i p 477-7250 or Visit Dobie Mall, Suite Nine. F ig h t s c e e '' oc J t o U r ivers t y o f Texas students f a c u lty , a nd t h e ir im m e d ia t e f a m i l y T ex i S tu ff I ! to by J .W M IL K KH P l e n t y o f Poise S c o tty G c v a a rs p la c e d thire! in re c e n t d is tr ic t te n nis d o u bles c o m p e titio n v /ith her p a rtn e r, Paula Phillips. M s. G o v a a rs is one o f 40 parsons who p a rtic ip a te d on th e 1973 U n iv e rs ity w o m en s tennis te a m . IM Softball Begins Divisional Playoffs th vis; na! In tr.mini al softball is now into th e playoffs w ith leag u e cham pionships decided in a1! but two b rack ets. F lash E x p ress and Jum p .arr ranked into playoffs. "Die tr a m s rem ain in g team s moving in The fra te rn ity division w as left chih division are FEM , Akala In a to tem oil as a re su lt of aitio n Delta Sigm a Pi. d u r r s b rea k . D elta Tau A’n' a Tau the week before spring ikd ta blasted and ( 'n e -a, 21-2 and p e re n n ia ’Sv powerful Hall will clash to determ ine In Hie hon rn z d iv iso r R ot SOARD, C A POUND. if you're a male student and weigh about 165 pounds, you can live at the Barrone for around 60Q a pound per month. Ground beef can't even stay at your friendly neighborhood super market for that. Actually, it comes to $99.50 a month. NcU bad for a furnished room w ith carpeting and AC, maid service and three home-cooked meals a day. Chicken feed really. The New Barrone. Only two and a half blocks from campus BARRONE ’850 x a s T e CZJ Sponsored AMATEUR DUPLICATE BRIDGE TOURNAMENT T^ias Un ion Junior Ballroom Fest and Second Pkca Honer* 7;00 p.m. BAUSCH a LOMB SOFT CONTACT LENSES NOW AVAILABLE AT TSO IN AUSTIN CAPITAL PLAZA OFFICE BY A P P O IN T M E N T ONLY CALL: 452-5735 ( T e x a s S t a t e O p t i c a l A SSOC A TED D O C TO R S O F O P T O M E T R Y com pete with m m ’s xmnvU ‘If they re good enough to p lay on the m en 's team , they should plav. T hey have every right to com pete w ith th em ." Ms. G ovaars sai I. Tonight Int e r e rdU am ong worn r n ’; “ m ushroom ing'' nation, Althong! nor g :\e n a t the a re m any who: I a r g r> bung scholarships. P re se n tly , a aw aited on a :< to loosen restric sch o larsh ip s as not any “ abu;, scholarship. ruling is court o - ait in Florida ions on g ran tin g long as th ere is the ce u se ” of “ I think \vo just d eserv e our fa ir sh are, w h a'o v er we can justify a n eed ,” Ms. H agerm an added. jocko; Ta ay a t the T h e U n iversity is not an e x ­ clusive group. B 's not for m en only. thus When you buy from us, if you can find an identical item advertised locally at a low®- price than ours within 30 days, we will refund the difference. lf you are not satisfied with any put chase, lying it back within 7 days, and we will refund your money ALL PRICES AT PRE-DOLLAR DE VALUATION LEVELS BUYAIOW-PRICES WILL NEVER BE LOWER STERLING ELECTRONICS, T O T A L PRICE 389.80 STERLING'S PACKAGE PRICE 299.90 IHE TOP YJIUE STEREO SYSTEM rramwwr ii m r n u — rn I S T E R L I N G * MODEL 0045 VT A moderately powered system with many "big system" fea­ tures. The 40 watt (IH F at 4 ohms) AM/FM /Stereo receiver has F ET front end tuner, all silicon output transistors, headphone jack, "speaker matrix"sw itch for simulated 4-channel. The 31 OB speakers each have a 10" woof­ er, 6" mid range, and 3-1/2" tweeter for a 35-18,000Hz frequency response. The changer is a total turntable, engineered for precision operation, and includes mag­ netic cartridge, base, and dust cover. ADD ON AND S A V E! WHEN PURCHASED W ITH ABOVE SYSTEM MODE L ! 5 r 7 r - ~ ^ » MODEL 84-0810 M O D E L 16-5500 Finetuning control elirrv "cross-talk" inating makes this 8-track car­ tridge player a real buy. Reg. 39.95 Earcupshave 3-1/2" speak­ too. er, are comfortable, frequency re­ And is 18-22,000Hz. sponse the 2w 24.00/ p r Reg. 17.95 S T E R E O 8-TRACK D EC K PANASONIC This all solid state stereo 8-track cartr idge player/ recorder is perfect for putting yo u r favorite M ODEL RS-806US "1USIC on “ P6, [ R O T E L J ] BUDG ET PRICED R9° 4 9 -99 S T E R E O AMP J fc f t Advanced engineering, fu ll control capability, features r f 1 1 rival expensive models. You ■ ■ J I get a lot fo r a small price, w w ■ W I # g% h i f I 1% I M ODEL RA-110A STERLING, ELECTRONICS 9-6 Mon.-Sat. 9-9Thurs. 1712 Lavaca Street 4 77-5 8 66 T h e DAILY TEXAN Thursday, Apnl ID, ism Page % EARN C A S H WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed HOW ACCEPTING MALE * FEMALE DONORS C A S H BO N US P R O G R A M S FOR REPEAT D O NO RS application Begins Austin Blood Components, inc. For Union Openings OPEN; 8-3 pm, Tues., Thur., Fri. & Sat. 12.00 N O O N - 7 p.m. Wed. 409 W . 6TH 477-3735 & sessions for prospective member, of i .im -74 leva, I mon program committees will bp held at 4-30 and 7 p m. Thursday in the Union Star Room. ar f In',er^ t«t students are required to attend one of the sessions, where may ask questions and obtain information and application form, \pplications must be returned to the Union Program Office Union Building .142 by 5 p.m. Monday, Individual interviews will be Tuesday through Thursday. Specific interview' times and places will be announced later this week. Members of the committees will serve as volunteer workers. ■ lions are open on the following committees: Academic Affair1? ATo-American Culture, Arts and Theatre. Cultural Entertainment, Ideas and Issues, Mexican-American Culture, Musical Events, Recreation and Union Communications. * rep new committees, Building Use Advisory Committee Food Sen ne Advisory Council and the Interaction Committee, also have p scions available. Students To Eye Election Reform mr amp Health Profession Advising Scheduled A health professions sym­ posium for University premedical and predental students will be held at 1.00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Thursday on the University campus. f r o m Representah\ es six t edi -a1 and three dental schools Will be available for consultation a' the sessions. The symposium, in its second year, h a s helped University students get a clearer picture of what each si bool offers in various fields, said Dr, Donald A. Larson, director of education for health professions. to Ears >n said the symposium is designed inform University students about available ap­ plications for the medical and dental schools in ’he University Systr :n and cf p --sibIc almr- nativt s for .students not a crop to J, F o u r a f t e r n o t n l e c tu re s in th e Union .Junior Ballroom will d e a l t h e s e alternatives: ‘ ‘ R e s e a r c h as a Career,” ‘‘Delivery of Health Care in the ‘‘Foreign Medical Community,” S c h o o l s ’ ’ and "Physician's Assistant.” ' ho evening program will he in Rurdine Hall 106 with a panel of representatives from various s c o o l s answering students’ questions. The six medical schools to be the symposium I Galveston, UT Houston, School, Bavlor represented at are •Southwestern Medical Antonio, U T San (Houston) and Texas Tech, Tile three dental schools include I T Houston, I T San Antonio and Baylor (Dallas). the Only 479 of the 2,000 applicants for System University medical and dental schools were accepted last year and the cut-off point w'as a 3.42 GPA. “ They’re the most comfortable shoes I’ve ever worn. EA R T H SH O E ST O R E 24th & San A n to n io 36099 Moon / S W A c o I :.c f o p 0 y I 5 c e r tfo&ace £ iQCC $(2€S~Q C O C O A S n r t a i ST CfeA/—C.rtJ' : f,.ue .&.4T * m j p. f R ET jD ------ 0 ic aa ~ i A/4 Hi _ ! ppd — Z Poe T 9il£ Clk.) ^ChoiCjs ct Ce Uric L e w * * - , tm. L S l c j t u s e *" ~~ **- ------ ~ 1 r ' —• — — “ * ~ S ~ — — — ... “ T . - r . U w ro flc® ! , A g r e a t i night for I K en tu cky (Fried Chicken. ! Visit the Colonel 2120 GUADALUPE 6 Students interested in reform of campus election procedure will have a chance to present their ideas at a Student Senate com­ mittee hearing Thursday, Bill Mint?. administrative assistant said for Student Government, Wednesday. The Student Senate Election Committee will hold a public hearing on reform of the Election Code at 8:30 p.m. Building 334. to The seven-member committee was created at an April 4 Senate review proposed meeting revisions of the Flection ('ode. Committee members will present a hill to the Senate at a Wed­ nesday meeting. Persons who want to insure a chance to address the committee should Student Government office and sign up to speak. go by the TSP Board Publications To Fill Posts Appointment of The Summer Texan managing editor, Cactus editor and Pearl Magazine editor are on the agenda for the Texas Student I indications Board of Operating Trustees' Thursday meeting. Applying for managing editor are Texan staff members Wu I M atthews and Steve Renfrew. Walter Dean, Laura Gaudier and Bat bara Longewuv will vie for Pearl editor. Seeking the appointment for Cactus yearbook editor are John Adkins, Liz Daily and Sheldon Lippman. The posts will be filled by a vote of the T S I’ Board. Also to be taken up is a complaint against Th* Tm^n from mem­ bers of Community Switchboard over what they term lack of coverage of a political forum. Holy Cross Brothers SNOW SKI! AT SAN D YLAND 40 mi. on Hwy. 71 W SPECIAL! S 2 50 -A Hp. Equipment Included ( 9 1 5 ) 3 8 8 - 4 5 2 TO GET A C Q U A IN TED DOES YO U R LAST N AM E START WITH urn i i l f rf vt rf ti, L a L h " K V ' h S ' ^ T ( M r s ,. l - ' L - , t refiling SI .75. FOR ()\ro ARr. S„ r , ,-t this ,Uek for , , r •• ONE-HALF PRICE OPFER G O O D APRIL. 17 T H R O U G H APRIL MUST S H O W Y O U R STUDFNT OR ^Ta p p i d OFFER G O O D FOR IND IVI DU AL O N LY Mi Cato ttvSuCasa RESTAURANTS 504 E. 5th St. 2330 N O RTH LO O P W«feh Thi* Ad Each W»»i 476-4841 465-5449 For C h a n g * o f Initials “ We want to hear what people have to say on reform .” Carol Smith, committee m em ber and student senator, said Wednesday “ We want to hear new idea*.” Blood Collection Nets 1,000 Pints The annual campus blood drive ponied more than 1,000 pinto of blood Tuesday and Wednesday in the first of two efforts, recruiting v o l u n t e e r s from University students and personnel. Representative* from Carter Blood Bank of Fort Worth, Parkland Hospital of Dallas and the Travis County Medical Society Blood Bark set up more than 30 pallets in the Union Main Ballroom and drew a pint of blood from each qualified par­ ticipant, A coagulant railed factor 8, needed by hemophiliacs, is separated from the blood plasma, refrigerated to and va nous receivers throughout the s’ate. shipped Dr. Richard Balden, director of Carter, said, "The student con­ tribution is so magnificent and important to hemophiliacs and their families.” Volunteers help reduce the met of blood to families who could O' .revise not afford it, he added. The drive will resume Tuesday and Wednesday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. In the Main Ballroom. 9 Named To Work In PIRG Positions Tile local i s r d of the Texas Public Interest Research Group (TexPrRGj announced late Wed­ nesday n Tht appointment of nine persons to the board. Tie new board members were c osen from 21 who applied. They wi', I assume off leo immediately and serve through the 1974 spring Rem'rf cr. I hey a re Susan Browning, u n d e t e r m i n e d major; Ray Bruyere, government: Dave Hall, go'.emment; Charisse I/x-ke, government: Don MrCumin, graduate student; Mike Morrison, secondary Sharon Reid, geology; Elaine Sheldon, graduate psychology' studies; and J< ’■ Tire, Plan ll education; FACT FINDERS In form ation on D e m a n d 2500 SA N A N T O N IO S U IT E I 517 476 9292 A U S T IN , T FX A S HOURS M F 11-6 SAT. 12-3 W K V IL T , A N S W K R A N Y QI KST TOTT FOR A N Y O N E • “ -Y K l! 1 ! T \s TTH I FAT i . OR AR KA • THO rSA NTVS ON’ K I L E A T IS O • s t r i c t l y c o n f i d e n t i a l presents C A P IT A LIS M vs. SO CIALISM A D e b a te W ith C h o irP er50n of Harris C o u n ty Libertarian Party T O N IG H T ~ N a tio n a l Le a d e r of the Socialist W orkers P a rty SEB 166 8:00 P.M. LOCAL •• LONO DISTANCE MOVING ANYWHERE C e n t r a } V t FORWARDING INC. M U f Moving & Storage Service 1002 SPR IN G D A LE RD. AUSTIN, TEXAS 9 2 6 - 3 1 3 1 FREE ESTIMATES AG EN TS FOR 'trenton 'S/cut Jute*. She. L O N G D I S T A N C E M O V I N G Have you heard any good dorm jokes lately? A few years ago dorms were about as p o p u la r as c r e w cu ts, lf you happened to live in one you were more or less considered an outcast . . . you had to spend half your time explaining that it was your parents idea and that next semester things would be different. All too often you felt as if you had to sneak in and out. Maybe even learn the names of a few respected apart­ ment complexes just in case you ever had to impress someone. Well, not so today! Dorms are no longer considered the ultimate bum­ mer or bad trip. Granted, there aren't any long waiting lists just yet. But there will be soon. You see. with the cost of groceries increasing daily, inflated rents and time consuming travels back and forth to campus, more and more people are returning to dorms. of starvation just yet, but 1974 is right around the corner. As a matter of fact, in the not too distant future apartment dwellers may become the brunt of "did you here what ol so & so is paying" jokes. Hardly a laughing matter. Right about now you’re probably thinking "here comes the pitch . they re going to tell me that they'll feed me better, but look what Ive got to sacrifice . . . personal freedom, an impressive apartment, my kind of life­ style, blah, blah, blah". But we're not going to. W e ’ll let the cash re gisteratyourfriendly neighbor­ hood grocery store do it for us. At any rate we hope you’ll consider the alternatives. It’s not a matter Finally, if you're not a big eater or if you re constantly on a "new ” diet you might be a little skeptical. rood s a secondary item for you. And that s fine. But you might want to con­ sider this: we offer our residents the freedom of an apartment, the luxury of a hotel and the convenience of a dorm. What does your apartment offer? Contessa Castilian Two very serious considerations. Page S Thursday April ID, 1973 TH E DAILY TE2JU* news capsules Stock M arket Takes U p w a rd Turn N E W Y O R K ( A P ) —Stock m arket prims four turned upward Wednesday after downward drifting sessions. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed up 4.80 at 958.31. Most of the rise cam e in the last few minutes of trading since the Dow was off most of tho day. O il Imports M a y Increase W ASH IN G TO N (A P )— President Nixon took steps Wednesday to stimulate in­ creased imports of oil as well as greater domestic production, face of a potential energy crisis. in the greeter! with The President's energy message in Congress was “ disap­ pointment” by the Consumer Federation of the America, American Petroleum Institute, whose main complaint was that it did not adopt all the energy industry’s proposals. and with pin a.mr© by Herring Says ‘Charges Not True’ A U ST IN —Austin Sen. Charles Herring denied any wrongdoing Tuesday in response in a Houston to Chronicle news story. implications contained The story noted that an open records bill, stalled in a committee chaired by Herring, could adversely affect a business partially owned by tho senator. “ This is the first time my integrity has ever been questioned,” Herring said. “ The charges are simply not true. ” “ I ’m afraid the story has resulted from I ’ve had with the bad press relations reporter,” he added. The bill, in Herring’s committee since Feb. 14, is one of House Speaker Price Daniel It would require state agencies to make copies of public records available on demand for a fee of no more than actual costs. J r . ’s reform package. Herring s business, Capitol Commerce Reporter, Inc., has had free space in the secreta iy of state's office with access and use of the agency's information files. T h e Palmists a r e helping lo build Hie earth dow ntow n on the cam pus in the parish in the office building bridges working with tho young and old spreading the Christian spirit, praying celebrating counseling American priests on the move throughout North America. For more information write: Father Donald C. Campi)?■:!, Room 101. Paulist Fathers. 415 West 59th Street New York , N.Y, 10019 margin,’’ he said, according lo wire reports. Reading attributed to 8 o a l e ’ s his organization, Tbe\ face a May 15 runoff. strength P r o b le m P r e g n a n c y C o u n se lin g Sot vie o Student Uo.nlth ( enter 105 \\ Ciith sit. (4th Floor-South I Confidential counseling with all alternatives discussed and re der­ mis made to appropriate resourc­ es Call Mrs Young or Elaine Srrivnrr 47**5711 Ext KOSE MARINA'S SHOP DOBIE MALL NO. 29 472-5540 H e r b a l S h a m p o o ' s a m u s k . Unintentional Fall — U P I T e le p h o to , A man id e n tif:rd as A ^ r o Ferre o, 27, plum- n sid a y. Police and priests had convinced Fer­ r e t s from a Brooklyn fire escape from which taro not to jump when he slipped and fell h* had| P ° ' ic< ' flld f "r' - ''r,rd f ° lr * P W three stories. C a u g h t in a net, he was unhurt. Radicals W in at Polls Berkehv Council Moves Further Left By D M I!) ! ?q Texan Staff Writer Radii ais > Iii • t have built on their sum the polls nvo years mo up another seat on t -» E : City Council within one vote pi a majority. bs re Mea nu bilo :• • <•* Black Panther Rot} S* second in his i c for hut garnered p n i;Ti v for op a eumbenf. Both clee; ion.* Tuesday runoff IV THC RF,RU) radical Ying Ll* April Coalitior ) open council sp i for The D aily Wednesday The of were won by liter a liberal-moderate Radicals now vi rune council *e;cs ( i Hold anomer incumbent black swings be k md liberal and rad: a1 ©ut the n?w c r. . The April (’os! i success fc ' n pi lln . ago, T other rn ! i a is ta hie council. The Iii ion is made up of students c the elements I mversitx < f California con: c a r r y and blacks and browns large minority in comm mi tv. a jtopulation of 117.000. the city's Berkeley has of V O T E R S B E & K K L K Y also c vc a Bi •..nip na bority to a initiative, seeking to I .arijuann enforcement of marijuana t 'io u pr; >rity” item for I; ■; .I It; I. incumbent Mayor ■i r ; fell 8 1 votes short r ! to r err ary majority in his ,;:,v........... - cb hon. Seale, who a ire ut and donned coat ’ n for the campaign, ran arn: ■ ■ tin iii! a1 returns gave ’n; 10.02 percent of the IO.WHI votes cast. Seale, chair- ■ of the P.! a ck Panther Party, IO pet 'em of ‘he vote .-in uphill fight r> eice?I ’ I f tee i <• her candidates split the ll \I> no immediate vi \• .R ■ rn f ’ bur R f iding admitted • u ■ - surprised he hadn’t fared " r rn ilk iv. I felt that I'd make in tho ptimnrv. bv a narrow S u i n g I n f o Cc Spy in g I h e I l l , f to nj foci ids ( f)iflnn s . 'fi o Cs f to? IL'. 20 Peace Corps-Visfa Recruiters ON CAMPUS West Mall — EEB A n n i 17-20 t o r y o u r I re e C n p v n ” ’f o '5 - •" r / c o n t r o v e r s i a l e d u c a t i o n a l m o n o g a o b I c t s S a k e A Look \i The R E A L S k i n n e r w r i l e : inn i ssr rn i e r o p EPU 11 MIC err PUS I O ( . 'n I I ll tv a CANON TLb 3 5 i P . f r : S L R CAMERA MONOGRAMING, NEEDLEPOINT, GIFTS 9 ll HAI ll 7 HF Iv JU EST PRK I \ UCD THE BEST OVALITY. B o d y B iz a rre 24th”San .Antonio. G A R R A R D SONY SHURE DYNACO PANASO NIC C U S T O M J " D IS C O U N T LETS M A Ha rn WE MEET OR BEAT ANY STEREO PRICE A DEAL!! • • CUSTOM HI FI WANTS TO MAKE A DEAL WITH YOU THROUGH SATURDAY W F Wa v f clvcdai ©.ive T ■ * jFTHBRE IS AN ITEM THAT YOU WANT AND IS NOT LISTED COME IN AND CHECK OUR PRICES.'DEALERS'AREr^ UE, y ° UL ° p NLY SEE AT 0 U R STORES. - ^ SANSUI 2000X SANSIH STEREO SOUND BSR 51 OX TWO EGI 853 V T IV' r r e r e u i V ii T r f an p ", cane' included. ” 't ” * re n e w e r* W ith SO u , t t . R V I ? p , r c h a n n e l on. pf the he*t ,r* l h , . sp e a k e rs, h»v In * a „ d high filter", and m ans bUV at $379-w- Walnut ,h“‘ "nU * thf REGULAR $685.80. NOW AT CUSTOM HI FI FOR A SUPER $ 4 6 5 .8 0 BLANK CASSETTE TAPE 60 MINUTE BLANK 8 TRACK TAPE 80 MINUTE BLANK REEL. TO REEL 1,800 Ft. I MIL Polyester STEREO RECEIVER TWO W A Y SPEAKER Lo- compieIe i ha l ig e r >* >■ ha v e rhmr n the Pm ti fe a­ .MOX W ith tures lite adjtl-t ale,, sn|, sUatlng. r ic ut a I c, '> s t f u ll- s ir e d p l ti tor, " .. a re tnrliidlng h u e . d u s t cover and i Ishare .-ar- t ridg e. B e a u ) a r r e t a il of 1105.95, F u r a <*nreplete s o u n d n e l l ' . ' r a k e r s s te m W it h a n R in c h v e n t e r 5 m r < • • et*' .MUI m u s t M ea* t h e m to b e l i e v e ’ t h e i r B e t ii la r p r ic e of *99.95 e a c h K i t h a v a r i a n t s ana par* lia > e rh'> sen th e THRU SATURDAY 3/$I.OO t h r u SATURDAY 88c STEREO HEADPHONES 25 Ft Coiled Extension Cord THRU SAT. 88c KOSS HEADPHONES THRU SATURD AY $45.00 THRU SAT, $7,95 EACH APOLLO 8 8-TRACK PLAYER Mew there s a camera with both simplicity of operation and the quality features usu­ al!/ found only in mora ex­ pensive models. Highlighting the I Lb is the unique center- weighted metering system that operates with the FO lens e ther wide open or stopped down. Lither method can give perfect exposures, every time. Shutter speeds range from 1 to 1 /SGO second, with elec­ tronic Lash sync at 1/60 There are many other fine fea­ tures, too. It’s the perfect camera for the beginner— yet advanced enough for the avid Model 34CA N O W AVAILABLE wuh FO 50-nm f/1,8 lens and case. C a n o n C l B E L L & H n m e i i CAPITOL CAMERA THRU SA T U RDAY $2.88 THRU SATURDAY $1.98 STEREO CAR SPEAKERS y ife THRU SA 1U RD AY $9.99 AC-DC CASSETTE RECORDER ’ • e / c h -nq. $49.95 Thru Saturday $24.95 THRU SAT. ONLY $3.88 PR. MON. - WEDS. - FRI. 12:00 - 6:00 TUES. - THURS. I 1:00 - 6:00 SATURDAY 10:00 - 6:00 DUAL GIBBS FISHER THRU SATURDAY $29.95 REG $49.95 THRU SAT $28 50 THRU SATURDAY $2 Ll M A N S cy I .net s, clean .<575. 476-8649 a fte r 5 p.m ., 471- t do s ' 1574 Weekends SU M M ER RATES N O W 21’ 2 . 474-2081. • F t . rr - • y furn •- J apt*. O N E - T W O B e d ro o m s, M o d e m 2 406 R io * fat.-!:- M a n a g e r a p t B . A lso 702 W e s t , J " ID I S. Q I I E T . 14 u n it L i (in c b e d ro o m R o sa . 4312 D u v a l, $117.50). tw o h c riro .„, ti' .ii S M , 50), tsvo bedroo m A ll b ills paid $145.00 p lu s e le c tr ic ity . 345-1322, 451 i Si im m et iS u m m e r C a sa - ■ • • T a * p i -1 • ‘ - » c t ® * s soil ! iv s 3* 5 I NKI rn rn .no M .- : a-k m g S - e x t. 2885; nig hts 1971 K A W A S A K I 175c< ti nils. < vt rn helmet ■?. o r best offer R ich ard 471 5835. loss -I. m ile a g e , enable $350; O N E B E D R O O M $110.00 $ I 15.00 T W O B E D R O O M $140.00 A p a r t m e w t s , P u r i m . ^ ■ _ A p a b t m e i \i t 5 , F u r n . ^ ■ 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 \ s m f i i n \ t t y i k i t m n a R .\ T K > L . u h W o r d ( I S w o rd m ln im u tti' $ h V d d Jlie B n l T im e ............ SS J $ I > intent I ii ii a d d itio n ii w o rd i it#1 one tim e .07 .06 .75 .05 1 i « n « e r u tlv e . it. in c h if w o rd s |*i m in is ........................................ J I I .OO t i w o rd s ........................ ............... JI").IMI J I >1.00 .................. .. ........ ................... St ' OII $77.IMI im h ............................ sin i (Mi tm h ............................ S IS 7 «0 I 1 itll. I fir Ii .......... .. ,i t id. I r n !, < Iitsxifted D is p la y I I n Si i .d a m n v oni' in ch n n r tim e ? SO . I i SO ’ A d d a inn,vt T u lip S o ro p e r h a n ii* to r r o n s c i n i n e Issu e ra te s I I>f \ i i i , i \ > ■»< Mi h i i i 'Pontius T exan T il's d .! ' T e x a n M o n d a y , W e d n e s d a y T e x a n t r a i n ' 3 (VI p m . l l OO a rn. T u e s d a y . I ! OO a .m . T h ti m d ijr T e x a n F r i d a y T r i m T h u r s d a y , 11 OO n m W e d n e s d a y 11 OO a rn . ■'In the exes I of e rro rs m a d e In a ll n it ••! I is r iir n t, Im m e d ia te n n tire p ast In* u n en as the p u b lis h e rs a re llrro rre e t re s p o n s ib le fn- o n ly O S T rtioTi U l r l a in » for a d ju stm e n ts in should be la te r than 30 d a i s u tte r publication.** i i Ic iii w it rn id e md fo r an in ade N il tie a m o u n t of less Mi in $' tilt • L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S lh# I S w ord * o f ess for 75c first fir a 5c aa-h •o’d ’lio n a l w ord. Shi* ro c* p l d r a t m ss? show and p a r J e u n i u n B •••■j M c -:: ay thro., ah F rid a y I C 7 fro m 8 a rn. to 4 30 p m in a d ven e # A .d ‘*or’« in S h u te *• i s bi Wade ti I Chf r to: 19: i m i f i R ( I L L T l T a b e V. A r r . a v H A T . I. K S •nor. I si lite r s pm I K R 31* •od. F R ASK. *971 S ’ Z I S../5 «■> r ne V «i ,. * n b tviKKHK* ra t K, C a ll 4 -I F O R M C O R T IN A f!9 fordoor, t id • x* 471 .*r.l a M e r ti r rn fin tbs U E G L S T F . R K I eld. tbs ■ id. b a rdt pion sh! H is sh it S.: ii lit »i * IU JR -V I. ; ne! i ii furn >■ nu w , Walsh Inspected a n d H O N ;'N C l..TV! 1 '35s a ' i i t -i p m 5 V “ i m ile s $475 : b ra ry b a lr*. V A N t * I R V A T R body. 1965 25.3 5, a .tom n'ic transm ission ut miri-eng ne sec ip $500 473-7590 S T E R E O E Q CT P M E N T Fish e r 7o0T r e c e iv e r , v t R T S P - c h a n n e l ens! $495 ! > . ■ 12'v ss uh Slut re V i a casse tt ; -I ■ I by $55. i n i idee J).?0. A bai O X Rn . -e I T A . Gifi 3171. ') I $225 I I '*•- $: in AN fill > * a 11 l\ i ■ t itn m a ti n d ltio ■**:■ T R U -M U H < perfect a i- , ha> '• H or call Id! 826 F o re s t green. S e e at 4501 AYI 147-3019 . t .si!, rd • i hr t . ll,? I R T V . J : ' Slim T W .. L , ’ P s y c h e d e li; ‘ vs 11Ii tw o la rg e nu n - K a rd,ai e n r in s ..chaunt - $100 451 tfi3C r ■ m ode! s m < abid ers M- .ti.rob J ti ! 3 c h a r m * ; i o lo r o rg a n l i a r ighr hi xes 175 ' ! e t co a m p . 60 non l l I 1 n w s 135mm F 2 s N tk k o r, 30mm 13 5 v . \ H e r fo r N ik e ® , 500mm F O . J i '* ! r w-*. ik< i: a d a p te r. Ut st offer ’ Sc i lit, 327 P >43. ’*. 6 8379 C t X ' K K R S P A N T E L n ip p le s , full blood, no j . .p. y < , , I'N T Q t K S H IR T S . ■ 'turn made. Y o u r mat* ria \\i stern sh rls m y specialty. G cis. $fi-$l". g JO ' .$ 1 4 477.3743. 1965 B U I C K S K Y L A R K Good in-town c a r for st* Ii nt Ne ss- brakes, .shin ks. J >00 or best Mer C all 441-<778 t n e-up r 441 sit29 C M c lo S P E E D , e k e and a c c e s s o rie s —. '2 st r ng g i it a r i 5 A - •<’ Y a m a h a 263 2939 a fte r 5 30 p rn IO S I T E D B I C Y C L E . * " t c , rp u ll, S im p li x 23 . „ ' V h C t M t,v Ti SA Mi 991; -IM :)7W iv M L M • ' 11 d, a t. I non n iiin . l.i.ooo m ile s, 1964 K C O N O I.l i ii;t inn, i. pa int w h iti xfifi i N E V A N . V e r y g-od 'ylini-r, 3 s i ■i; i I. New D I R K i T h 'A i 'T O L Y O u tle t. 1973 An do rsi rn L a m ', 13.37 C a m e ro n Road P o ly e s t e r d re ss sh irts 1 1 OO K ni* slac ks $7 50. S id i v a il. sa S a tu r d a y , A p r il l l V A R A N ’ K R I R S. A K •- i ■I Mat ; hu nting * : -ii pets I ' M silver 11 i r en t. - $!9o - bedroom - 2 bath. „ shuttle bus. e x tra r iose 1w c a m P0S. large, shag carpet, dishwasher, ra n e e . a is posn I, r e f r ig e r a to r , la rg e clo sets, p ri v a le p a tio , cable. laundry room, pool storage cabinets, 451-3941 ' cs. m a id TKKD B E T 'R O O M fu rn ish e d W ash fact I i- s n v ic e s fro nt do or s w im m in g pool, sh u ttle at KK .ilk in u d ista n c e F a re '■ML-' S u m m e r R a le s C a v a lie r A p a r t ­ m e n ts. 307 E a s t 3 ;st. 472 7 6 H to U n iversjtx Ja n ito r and '-r r' • •*- 2 b d re am *. v res. Like t eta — m s u - Ms. t i t s w ith o-m * -■ q.» ' " n e a t - room , ' C d , room, c a b '# I. M sr /rasher ed C A / C H , c a d . r . d -. a Come bv Apt. I I 3 1201 Tinnin Ford Road 444-341 I W E RENT AUSTIN 'i pur time is valuable Our services free PARAGON PROPERTIES 4 7 2 - 4 1 7 1 PO O L FIREPLACE F t - f e y A p ts I THE F R E N C H P L A C E E n jo y y e a r a ro u n d lu x tiry In y o u r new 2722 fnr P U q 4 7? 8 '7 0 . S p a n is h d e c o ra te d desig ned a p a rtm e n t tile the fu rn ish ed , M e x ic a n t a b l e O n floors and shu ttle bus ro u te . R e a d y to m o v e in % 150 OO, HO L a st 37th S t C a ll 478-1382 fre e T V , after 5 a n d w eekends 1305 L^rg a -ne be : I y i .ry a r ••'merit r" V c -t p n cd or U i" .'!■ • ed 5 C ' ra t. Pool, L a jn d ',', $ 140 bi s paid. EL PA T IO APTS. 28 10 Rio Grande AP F urnished Apartments Efficiency — $ I 35 1 bedroom I bath— $ I 50 t.p 2 bedroom, 2 bath— $190 up Laundry, pool, cable TV A- Bills Paid M anager’s Apt. 102 476-4095 P T . A Y B O Y S a p t.. duplex ( eilin g s. T e i t MZO In clu d e s U ltra - m o d e tti p m oiled w a lls, she.) h a ng ing fin plai ' 4 lien rn ed flo o r5, fully d ra p i ii m orler n fu rn itu re a n d a ll tile bath, 2 tied ii mm-:, a i r t o ndition ln g. kitehen, p r iv a te y a: ii / c e n tr a l heat, pat • ren t $15 / ' e q u ired L e a s e uionth N o ut iii? ii * T e n a n ts w ill shoe T o It ase c u ll o r vvrile .MOK \\ i- a Av* A p a rtm e n t R e n t a ls 1009 F ro s t N a tl B a n k B ld g . S a n A nto n,o, T ex * 7.vju5 A C 512 - 227-2231 c e ilin g , B i' At PI F U ! . M I N I A P T S Open b e am ed in k itc h e n s , shag c a rp e tin g , C A C H pool Close to c a m p u s and shu ttle. A ll bills paid. 400(1 A v e A 453-5526 476-4655 c o lo r co o rd in a ted , h u n t w a t c h f o r o u r S U M M E R R A T E C O U P O N IN T H E D A ILY T EX A N Tbs ry G C a 47D-2633 q u iet E F l ' T i *] . N C Y — re s id e n tia l n;»:ghttrhood n e a r U T and M a t e of­ ail built ins U A / sto re roi ms. la ;ndrv. S m m er rates l l IO.). TK C; hie p aid. Lim .-Med at fic es 5 o: * a rp i • t lf, $123.50 dune t W a te .. t , 1406 A v o e ( r n ’v irtu a l 151-3201 C C C L, POOL S C H O O L low S h u ttle I s • t 'ru n t d o e r. w ith in c r e d i­ bly ('lim e see es a tte r a|i 'T ‘y .*■ tn rd a y and Su n d a y. 'y 11 \ eept \Vt rinesd ay iu m m e i i: ra te s p o S H A D C M O A K S 2401 L o n jv 'ie w 476 0411, 345 3833 (STRADA APTS. doe" hc'e SU M M ER RATES 180! South Lakeshore 4 4 2 - 6 6 6 i 4 4 2 - 6 7 5 2 a b#d- .- d p ' o . T L sw 37 S T I ' D 1 a m p is. elud ed 1 ' N i F L 1804 L av hi •2-3223- 7( I F S !| data I N e x t ln- s B F S T I JOI A T H N iii K' c e s s ib le * shuttle. Lu x u ry pa id nu le a s t ' 4 0 4*51-6696. b e d ; ne Av e: ISI ■! N -’-th. o ffices. U T . J I*-'1 NI b e t I U 2825. A, V. A £ ' V I C K A : - R ' 1 C L JTS 27 : 5 K l • ■ '*r ca I . . . e.-e-*rre- . e-d *** i 7 " * ' 'r a L ^ C A / C H , 474-iT i 2 * L E A S IN G A N D PRE L E A S IN G A am - x ' a h ep«rfrrftnt<, ri.ee h c - j : a l on sbuftfe h -■ ro... 7 d F T ip B r f l k e n r i c lg e & A 1 1 o c i a f # 5 454 5816 F F A ' F U S L U X U R Y bv me s h I, t t. I e sh pp • - reasonable fail rate?. 454-9475 a n d > . r ce n te rs, I ' F P I F X r urrnshert ’ bedr ■ r > im i ic!* s vv nil to w y' , cry 11 ■ rn a ir cor.di • neni tto md j !>• ds. i b v crc ri c; ' blO' k o ff Gun I St Bi m e r e q un g is- and su it! r r r ' • u 223 hr I nivt •> •>*. tpeting, dr an* Ten Ira I heat, Al'n-, 2 IU n d .'I > e bath, Bs W est 31 Hr • $115 /month, joes. I *?,. loos F ro s t « •: t • a ; , t E N L R A I, P R O P E R T I E S IN C . of ie rs Su m m er rates a v ailab le n o w through A ng us! 'I : -5th • ’ ' M a l -I et 302 W« tri m $115mm» c a rp e te d a p ts w ith poof, a d eq u a te p a rk in g , v ery n a r c a n ,p u s 454-9751 I ,t- 2 b edroo m luxury • -I. int ie. I , 30fi W e . i 36th $99 ,n p riv a te , fo r the budget m in d e d stu d en t. 454 9751, fu rn ish e d e ffic ie n c ie s • hi \ iy ■ g, re 311 L ; , st " j . • fr int $71 -TI bills p . cl. f ic irn c ic s . I b u ilt rn kit< hen. pool. 478-6776 ef it.- 2 bedroom, carpeted ro of top sun decks, r e m s : rn it. 1005 W , t $ ’ 75 A B P . L a r g e 2 be d ro o m , new sh ,ic poi I I ontplcx- 478-5592 rim. t» ■ patio'-, s m a ll q d e l • S Sq UP 919 VV est 2fi!h • IT C I ut' 1109 w a lk c e n tr a l a ir 477-2043 A ige to ca m p u s , n ic e ly off c ie n c y a p a rtm e n ts , fu rn ish ed , S U M M ER RATES at LA CASITA (3 B ks. to La v S e t c o ] • 4 0 ’ P O O L ' / A S H E R S • D i S h • S H A G CARPETS • COVERED PA RKIN G • BULLS PAID 476-4038 327-1466 2700 C G ( I Bk SH w a B .s) O N E A N D 'I W O bedruo m a p a r tm e n ts e m a il q u ie t co m p lex C A /C H , cable, In t r a m u r a l c o n v e n ie n t lo shu ttle and fie !'!* $130 a n d $1.50 p lus e le c t r ic it y 4409 A v e n u e A 452-9948 U N IV ER S IT Y A R E A S A N T A RITA A P A R T M E N T S 2-19 R n G la n d # I b-’d rc o m apt-, $82.SO Ex Double — *-r 7 ' C - 472-7239 ; rn -sn sd 121 I EAST 52nd STREET A q u a in t, c o u n try , seclu d ed se ttin g d is­ a p a rtm e n ts tin g u ish e s A rc h e d d o o rw a y s and ru s tic in te rio rs fire p la c e . One b e d ro o m AC. sta n d in g $143. O n a b edroo m w ith hidd en e le v a te d sleep in g loft, $155. 8 m in u te s fro m cam - th e se u n iq u e 47 7-3601 W IL L O W ( R E E K H I L L S A l! B ills P a id 1 B R F u rn . — S t 6: up 2 B R F u r n — $205 a S h u ttle B u s R o u te F- -bv. ashet s — 2 Larp i Pools T r a v i s S e c u r it y G u a rd s N ig h tie Clubroom In Today Move 1901 W illow C reek 114-0010 A T T R A C T IV K and lo cal 'n. L a p g i a p a rtm e n ts P l a c e for re la x a tio n and stu d y, D u v a l V i l la 4 VV 9175. S U M M K R rates O N I B F D R O O M a p a rtm e n t B ills p a id . $140, 2700 F r e n r h P la c e . studio 472-8790 W A U x — L A W S C H O O L, large 1 Sr 2 bed ro o m s, CA-CJt, pool, sta rt $150 bdls p a id , R iv e r O a ks KOOI R ed R iv e ; 4 72-39! A . I « - Q a .- _ r • sh a n can a I e :re,, i ■ ■ L „ n J , u !° J ‘ ■’ ? * * L '- u I N K W i-iectt i- bi F F R ’I KNR LES. kit! hen, carpet, la u n d rv , shuttle, disposal, cable $135, bills paid. 477. i W alnut M a n o r, 27U0 M a n rn R e a d I 41 LF t A c ll shag FL C A PT A N APARTMENTS 5 0 0 P 0 -5 □ 9 n H ens r 1 • $ I 3 4 i d 4- 6 5 - 8 6 < 8 I S O M M E R R A T E S - G re a t for stu d c’its O n e bedroo m , c a rp e te d At , c o v e re d p a rk in g , stu d y desk-, sun deck, ! 1 able 1! sji, sal A*sn «p»'- ai 12 nmn'h lo c a tio n leases 2812 Nueces, 472-6497 E F F I C 1 L N C P et,p i r T r i c a ll ng <1 lee# *. Keep f“ ; M O N T A G E A P A R T M Ii N T S, now ret) 1 ne f >r S u m m e r and one bedroom, on shuttle and r e a r campus, $116 50 to $ I tit 50 plus electricity 2812 R io G ran d e 477 2977. I- ail. O N E B I A u g u st I Mi;,., x 'R O O M t 15. Cast! t r-i 2515 * ll et H Aune T thru "•es. S m a ll A IP . C O N D I T I O N E D r rn, m e r 4 bim ks fro m c a m p u s nt -nth C a ll R U k at t 'x - u i . fo r sum- f.TV * 5 BLO C KS FRO M THF CA M PU S. I 2 3 Bedrooms) Furnished or Unfurnished. A t o Private Bedroom and Bath for Singles. A p h P a r- ed S h a q C - p e l nq -- G c 'd C H o r e d D ra p e * to Sw-rnirrq Pool — " L a u n d r y R e -" *— -Study Room. — A • 5t' " . ‘ ePV c f Pa A - o f Space _ Call or come see us O N LY if you want the BFST at R EA SO N A BLE PRICES. 1802 W est Avenue — Phone: 476-5556 or 476-7473. X Be au tif.. y L a r d '.c a o e d . • S U M M E R RATES • for students Eh© Cloisters Apartments HOI Town Creek 442-6333 LA ST O P P O R T U N IT Y F O R w a i t r e s s e s H O S T E S S E S in elegant Northwest Austin restaurant Please call 266-1355 for interview 8 K M O L u n k l to s h a re 3 h .nth, sh ut■ . n ! . I,-,.. en cod ed in Ju n e ip a rtm e n t <'0 I n ' u i m , v . • LUXURY 7 BEDROOM . 2 PATH SUPER LA R G E FURNISHED ALL BILLS PAID O N LY $214 M Kr I ' R f . ( ) ' . ’ NI O w n b edroo m » th t Ad it fam t $70 w npr 1 per ~ i Tull D e an ic q Ti-, ni-r-dt'd - ir d . lc a s r m on th. N ■ N e llis a t 476-9293 • Ecol with ss de St tWaterfa'I • H u b f o c m w it h r « r • G u t r i e re “ rn - F - o- r ill I C»R 2 I -August 3! f -r I tv fe m a le holist n a te s . !X w e e k s ' of I 2 n d s im m e r sch oo l 471 1371 o 476-3095 k e rn tr y in g ; p o t a ft e r pi nu r n • D o " ' I c d o o r g a r b a g e p I ,p l a w s t u > ; m ■ r", n ia l# • • S u r - i e d c i i Underground pari* n a I • oui romp mer! of app! y • BeduLifu / f u " shed . G F " ' , . p 1 B " v 443;>-B, V a n d e rb ilt, N s h v ilie T e n n 37235. i -O', J. * - es R O C )MM \ n ct ••'ba re ten* F e m a >ei O vn r c m <<3/ SP HJ ive lf rn in t11 177-8170 a fte r t 30 FO U R B L O C K S TO T H E D R A G On Shuttle Bus Route 2810 Salado 472-38I6 LA FONTANA $ 1 2 4 . 0 0 One and two bedrooms. Furnished & Unfurnished Close to Hancock ^and Capitol Plaza. Shopping centers, Easy access to lh 35. fl"o familie' v/e-:rome, Etude- 1220 and 1230 East 38'/2 S ^ e e 7 sma'l deposit 454 6/ 3d H I L L T O P a p a r t m e n t s $129.00 u p E F F IC IE N C IE S O N E A N D TV/O B E D R O O M APTS. F U R N IS H E D A N D U N F U R N IS H E D Beaut ful decor, large po' A A o-' Sou'h Austin party ,,, off Dr,ve- Shuttle bus route 442 9612 1900 Bu- 'on Drive two BEA ! TI F U L NORTHW EST HILLS. three bedroom ana Spai ions apartm ents, a va ila b le ) (unfurnished pool lau n d ry carpeted, C A /C H . kitchen built in. iro n s $159 in Im p erial N o rth ­ west A partm ents. 345 2056. 476-4655. share N E E D E D : Lib e ral m ale • •Animate to in luxury Barton H ills. Call 447 Tx.Tt after 5 p m and ask fo r Bobby a artm ent large I* I . M A I.I. R f IQM Kl A I I, needed p. share one bedroom apartm ent. Shuttle $80 A p ril free, i -i 9381 m a l e I7 AOM,m a t e needed m ediately N u n - s m o k e r p l e a se If conservative freaks. terested P r e f e r i alt 451-4453 im ­ No in­ L I B E R A L M IN D ! D student needed share nice large rf bedroom house, Carpeted. C A -cil. So uh A u s tin - $ (iv mon th 447-34 4 after .5 nm rn-te E A S Y G O I N G I ! ! . ! RAT, ri" urn; ’e 111 rill d b l Ii,. s<4 South Austin, own bcNhr,-m, 447 TURI. fem ale Use Texen Classifieds Advertise To For Housing U . cm St A), go X.■ s-'n? N r* h n v\v i Tv in J - VI \\ !.\iiin s hat die b; .NI K W in! i s’ J-, iud w ?! ANI N I \ R IN G ii r t • 'J-- * a- is, I , ‘tom s. C a ll 111 333 c 1971 C \ M E R I 'N Mi T it IT- Hi >WE. n bedrooms, ce n tral heating, a ir itlo n ’ng, g as w a te r h e a te r < ad S SY 12 30 ' 30 p rn TO T i 'V* >TA •ai ■ I I xx .Vt 4 \\ a -I ,< I B E A G L E S , Ti. Colored no dew i law s, I .‘Id t h a n ip on AKC Registeted lines. 926 1597. S te r e o co m p o n e n ts a t new a t s t. t . o C en ti r 47fi *■ 33, n e a r low p ric e * I T, 303 East loth 1972 K AN' C H E V R O L E T . V R. g - -I i md t: i . s ta n d a rd C a n be seen a t I IOT A v en . . ' I i t >3 1 I N T E R N A T I O N A L pickup, cylinder, $ Speed, tool box, good I ihb. •' I u g gi d $ <00 17! 3! 29 FT ' ' 36 633" '.VI Sr to r $700. 452-8875 or T H E H is t C t N T S I R I P S te t el. and T V S o n y T r in lt r o n C o lo r TA • S< r • S te re o * 'im p a c ts (J I ti.*y Ct nt per em s Full Service D e p a rtm e e ? O u r p ric e s a re c o m p e titiv e w ith S T ! R R * E Q U I ? M I N I T h e Sh o p has the lo w e st p ric e s T i v .« 4 ’ , * >93' Kit ’A S T r r c o c t I -rirr * 8 ani J H M N ! i A fer I N K ! R ■ ! ITV . K is t sri I - )0X3 A * I ■■ I i inst I- S< hi fu rn ish ed . \ r.. M i TM lit av a ii a ti Ie I T m 4 ' 1937 !< .1:: ca,. I A K’ E M C a ll D a v id s r.ole cut $> .u W ill n : iv 477 1318 ’N C A P R I C E M i r e i run s 478-40-86 n r 47 A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . V.I.P. APARTM ENTS i 3r t & r et d y a y LL i - C T I r strut L e 0 t rj -IO'. le v e l ii x u ry liv in g . 3 b e d ro o m , 2 S p ic p Oh i i i ) ’t i f ii I st id i > u n it* dt * cm d f. r 3 5 m a t tu‘e vt alan ts. N e w c o n te m p o ra ry d e c o r KK a lk ins. p o # , c a b le TK', shag c a rp e t Q u iet ele g a n t a tm o s p h e re K it g c .'i one b e d ro o m s a lso a v a ila b le 4 7 7 - ; I B E D R O O M r -; F ! C i E N G I E S c 'I whee! dri low INCH I it IO, KNR 72 F I A ' 453 4 ,*< 850 Sp •* n $ !v»i v«- in ease i ex* e! . C I -3 rn-: c r \< . I m * ll e . V S ... Ii v N T Re, S 1/ kl r n ! vc* VNV roi • s ■ I R E R \ an, rebi $700 00 or best • eng ne fe r. 472-9 ">d y Kenwood 2 1 30 R e ce ive r, 2 'lenson ’ * 3 I J k o N e w . T irrita b le 453 4»24 a fte r 6 .Tri s p e a k e rs . lr! G a r r a r d W R F N ! N G S h ' pher RC T P I E S rn *ther - tai G e rm an ' S T \N it I I ' •til 171 1 '*22 8-5 ash for ti, * lea n Hite; g d ir fi 65 O L I *S X*-- * r V d I t- I n? H I re K ti C A N O E S EASTER GIFTS H o *-.e p N n i < a H a n q l r q B a s k e t ? 4 ,)( 4 A. -/er u e — A R T H S H O E S A N a S S 3 *7 ci 9 a tor ’ 1 rn rn p r » i o s T c o ,v f c r t a b l e E A R T H -OE S T O R E San A mon lo pc *I r e ■ i G R E A T O A K a r A R T M E N ' T S #4 rv-usl ® a ' P 0 ' • ->< TV cable $64.50 penon BIL PaH S U M M E R RATES $45.00 per,od B lls Paid Lower rales for 4 peep-a A p a r t m e m t s , F u p i v i . EY 8TH S H O E “ L O G S -Z ce G Q r r5! c- d o w n t o 6 cl r f h . ( 5 4 - 1 7 5 3 OM r, y : - -. - r y o n r _ THF LANTANA APARTMENTS 72-512° N O W READ Y FOR I EA SIN G FOR SUM M ER & FALL P A ‘ E A R T H S H O E S T O R E 4 rh Sr Son Antonio r a c -I t_j q (J c r I<08 W e s t A v e n u e L r- ■:> a 'ocr>, $■*’ a c ' r q p * q! I A i l BILLS P A D ‘ - e B ... - U - - - - 24 .KU ’ c.vr La>e Crc.# ■ 4 4 2 8 3 4 0 FIR E P LA C E - SK Y L IG H T ona betirscoi .jtu d d ,..C A / G H , cafelt ; 13 4 r us e je c t "ic ily -1 ----- , a# A S a ~-er li ; st S p rin g v a c a n c ie s - L a r g e double * ru. -* M I N o r rn'Cd room . c o lo r lounge, ing. V e ry clo se lo I n v e r s it y refriui. rn to rs se rv i f, I V rn ted 1 ro o m s. A /-. H in eat Ii fret p a r k ­ $ )/m o nth — < a ll vt * 3917 G' IM F T I I U G I F I ii - N T E f f ii .'n- 11 s ... jih rdevatt ct si pa rn 'n bi d roo.ms plus em n ic- * o ne and tw o bcd room o 1,ti nip, ra 1 y apt I", cry i i in va n 'nee. o, m ished < .'I f u n ished O A K CPV ii ■ i litan y nri en ted and that w in d s th ro u g h to c a m p u s Sr rn ani ntjy J , .f f< • >m rn un in ani en t shopping i ' R F I the ti r, I I 63 -t S tre e t 176 46 I E P lea s! N e w a d d iti in tu N '- ver been bv cd <’ 3.5 w I Ii w ith le a s e and twi i at pet, - $!*• w a lk s Si hoe: T w ,i i . ks V In t, rre g io n a l )"• -tfiu.i Af ’. in clo set - va ui A p a rtm e n ts line hem,i- rn !so e f fic ie n c y $122 tw o bath bedroo m I!:* [a >sal. sh w a s i c r I .aw fro m sh ittle 32nd front bl in K O C R B r , O C H S C - $115: tw o bedr I " . ; , nims r. nj,.'deled. h a ssle s 7.tv,; • • * .t dent rn gi d 153 222< ■fieiencies $155 MI At T no 5238. 478- THE BLACKSTONE $6 A 50 month A p a rtm e n t I-. - u V : H o c k from C a m p . s I rt q 3 . - v.: p c a r t s ) a • ■ • - a . * ft 1 :P " c o r ■ ales 29IO R e d R iv e r 476-5631 A r' - i 7. q Pre y e r i y FFF- STO R A G !1 TI : F A LL i ffic ie n c G8 ?rom $95 2 Bedrooms — - $48 3 p c r C n ,» p - p q .- R H ' << n ,, ^ ' a no p U 5 . 3 ; ~ n f 0 6 0 0 0 fji 4 / 6 - 3 4 6 7 H : ’.L A " ’ A o w - -ik.nq "••» n-d r * I • - • b s a scc ■ * ?.h flrj c. !*i r pe4. p o c Sumrr s r re-es. N O W ' •' a ; A C , O ' ? ■ ' ■ Q. '-'3 b i d r e e rn y ,- i n Pear?* ' rn is F .d - ‘ t a bus. f -rn- - a F . /<: 4 \ JI S A L K IM IS N S A il sizes, t>rtm u llad s fert ’ - - , - s c h e ffie ra , cts, - ephnnt ears, 'M d u • rees, pl rn*' .1 u ie ; p mt M ex*: ut 11 cs : • ic, . ' p n ! 20 2 > i 'fib A R 8 a A I O JO-.speed A N iv; ft k - i rn - , lex ha adp in p, '*• p rn. RY SALE t urn your Mother on to a pot rrom B O B WRIGHT STUDIO Saturday & Sunday until dark Barton Springs Pottery 1900 Barton Springs Road „ IO Thursday Aoril 19. 1973 T H E DAILY TEXAN ' K ' F S f r r » i M r spusit on. Sh I KI .Vt H N T I- t e d ; I av f ii • ep< in t m ale*! 4.2 out ; •>. $ 25. s ’ ii! k ttens ex. ellen ! s e rv ic e N W U N I S I 7.17 ii ca d b o a rd nev ■ r '•rn »!( - >ld $.'./) t -Ii -1x32 A ANTI- D T i C h ia , v e ry 5711 e v e n in g s E t O N O M IC . A lrc n n . A M p,>wo r sto< rir -TM U C I 5 A M Kl 2 1 ’ fn nt w ■ r 47fi UT' is ) B i 5 68 71 K VK B g or v md i - • I finn, no a ir 453 7 ! Do*! EC Sw - gr r t id' o', f E M , s ta n d a rd tra ilis. gold, K PXI •ellen! o,in d ie on, 477- IA 17f. c c or tra \ heel J 475. C a !! Don 471-3616 SU e ft T A B L R L A ' la m < OO. Oath si S w a g ti ii v c H i ’ p $7 ■id ’a ’e r k . $10 OO c r he St o ffe r. i ha i s, m u d clo th e '; d ry e r. B Iv: C T L F sum - ?, u* w A M '''N' t in s. new t i t M53 a fte r 5 1 • ;; - A ST’ r ’ 11 ne V l e i ’ ! F e m 327-0731 G ood E a s t er gift. (; .- »1 VV itll fN < 1969 !• ia t x v i S p o rt I <. :pe, som e rust I-*"1, (..all 411 2311 b e fo re i Od p m . S M IT H C O R O N A E le e tra s s portable tv I' -v inter L ik e new sell fo r STR'* R u n s en 220-110 v l t s o r v hie '• " t i tv • Le.minty good till i - st Si sn w 97. t n'. i-. • r. ! g 4 > 6723 Help Wanted. SALESMAN - RETAIL clothing weft, IonK ,,nlr- :t'2 r m' c r & K T P A R T T IM E A N D S U M M E R W O R K 4 to 8 hour shifts Even in us and Nights Paid Vacations Uniforms Furnished Croup Insurance YO’ must ne cl years of age, mature of good moral character and no crim­ inal record Apply in Person STANLEY SMITH SECURITY 3007 North Lamar, Display Assistant YAR1NGS DOWNTOWN t d ay p,perienc# Must have prev Part t ma cr f I f Some heavy lift- I Inq Involved. Acpiy in p°-ron Yarinqs 1 Downtown, 5."o C • ires?, 3rd floor, Mr. J YARING'S U N IC O R N PRO D UCTIO NS C A ST IN G FEATURE FILM n lo r n , 4 S evere parts or.-- - fe atu re L im to be ih c * m A types, ma e and feme a, reeded. Fxpe-Arce helpful but not necessary E a c h --a C d .a corsiderad on merits. -od pa/, Non-S.A.G. Must be 13 or ©vsr; Casting: We A ti r 'r d 7 ,rs. : 9 1 8 a n ii 4 I 4 AUSTIN S O L D cr,T AND FINEST SERVICE DEPARTMENT Home and < ar Stereo Homo and Cap Radios Tape Recorders Re. : rd Plaj cr s Iter ■ is ors I cievlsions Wollansak '■< Sp* cia Quasar, Sony We repair ail brands S P E E D W A Y R A D IO SCI W. T-'I. ,78-fiM. H e l p W a n t e d MECHANICAL ENGINEER No experience necessary, jilt a d»s:re to be a product'on engineer and malts a career in th# Boat I- : ?! . M t - a qrad,ate in mac mica eon'-sering. Send resume to: GLASTRON BOAT CO, P.O Box 9447 (Personnel Dept.) Austin, Trias 787c>A H O LID A Y H O U SE I 1003 Barto n S p rin g * R o a d P a rt tim e c»- or a d ca- I to work neon runs, start ng f ay $ .6 / hour. r v a- Apply to Holiday House I, 1003 Barton Spr’ngs Road COCKTAIL WAITRESSES, high pay and good tips. Apply in person. The Bucket, 725 West 23rd. E X P E R I E N C E D I O U N G K w aitress. Good salary and tips. Applv In person Towne Pump Lounge, 1500! > Barton Springs Rd. P E R S O N A Ti I T Y PLT\S' Hostels needed Driskill Rar and Grill. Gall Mr De Pay, 476-541 I for appointment. NOW HIRING topless dancers $150 00 to $175 00 per week For Information and an In te rvie w ca ll 454-8843, 453-9029. IN AUSTIN couple with 1 transportation as night staff WANTED for working retarded young men. Good starting pay and fringe benefits 477- .8934. for I EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY I experienced structural steel craft­ sman. Salary open. Soup insurance, paid vacation, pleasant surroundings I are just a few of the manv benefits ! cl!, red. Sen.! res.ane t i I. «, Iii Vs, rn I or ca ll 385-6727. NEW BUSINESS needs people to help steady customers i Cedarbird Press, 477-1504 weekdays IO find. develop a rn -6 p rn. NEEDED: PART TIME re.shiers. Noon and nights. Starting pay $1.75. Apply 21 I, 3'iis North Lamar. ST. AUSTIN'S ELEMENTARY SCHOOL has openings for tho 1973-74 school y e a r in the following areas. Primary teacher and aide Secondary—must.-, a r t science, En glish Applicants experlent e Come by the school t19H Sun Antonio) for an application an d/o r In te rvie w some need H E L P ' S T O ’K C O N T R O L C L E R K . F 8 tim e. •‘I u s t have K'l'n! bundu i ;tu.g m ath em atical ability, serious w o tkm . Apply in person. Mr. Yo tig, Yan: k s Downtown, 3rd floor. STORE DETECTIVE Man or lady. Pre-. s se- r */ expe-’ •ne# of po ■* -• rl r • ’•"•d. r»-t t —» cr full bm *. A o r / .i person, 506 Con l r rd F - - - M - Y - • g. greis, Y A R U S S days; N E E D B A B Y S I T T E R , dr, p m . week- I 5 p rn. S a tu rd a y Too kid;, 7 & 9. Also clean kitchen $1 fkVhruir' 476 78 A 477-56 - ■ THE GAT E E R Y - ' needs ladle s. 21 an • over w 'h sis ■ nn.| personality P a rt : •> moo Ump. full ! me. We tra n < ’ M r Law . cst & Found S M A L L G R E Y D O G — shaggy^ lost at Barton Springs. M a rch 30. Reward. Please call Marilyn. 472-0352. FOUND Senior ring. For return Iden­ tify and pay for this ad. Call Mike 4" 7-8272. LOST BLEE jewelry box in v i c i n i t y of Kinsolving Dormitory. Contact George (:. Melngvalo at (214 ) 270 4401, Collect. ’ LARGE REWARD! For 12 VeeF lrish Setter puppy lost around 35th A Speedway. Please call 478-8133. black harness. Dallas LOST MALE. 60 pounds with studded tags 4919. Answers rn zack Please restrain with caution and call 472-2736 Immediately. LOST TUESDAY night Black German Shepherd puppy in area between Law School and 32nd. Reward Phone 478- 8820 or come by 812 East 31st. R U S S i A - S C A N D I N A V I A B weeks, $387 inclusive. London departures. Small, international or- jo camp’ng travel (ages 18- 30). Also Europe, Africa, India: 3- I I wee*". W rite: W ho's Earth Travel, Ltd., Box 1497, K.C., Mo. 64141. FEMALE HOUSEMATE. Spacious three b e d r o o m s , completely furnished, utilities, yard, studious atmosphere. $60 month, bills. 327-2192. FURNISHED HOESE available May 1st through August Three bedrooms, $250. No deposit. 915 E, 38Mi. 454-1384 dom s Board TOWER MANOR Ac-,'-wierd dormitory for Men and Women I Bio in i room P 0>~-*rr f* d r (r om campus bedrooms, 2 baths, *■ - Hen, maid service, ' ‘“ eel paring. 1908 University Ave nu a 4 78 2185 STAT TUTORING. All business math. ORE preparation. 451-4557. CHEMISTRY: Intro or Organic. Call 411-2170 after 6 p m. GERMAN. Native speaker will assist (Also Latin ) M.A. University of Munich. 451-2351. you effectively. T y p i n g Ju s t N orth of 27th & GuadaUoe B u d g e t , The City Council will consider approving a now MG. : Cl s Program budget and will n mm discusKion of the .stroo vendor Issue Thursday. Hoi'in I DoT Joie, st root vendor spokesman and unsueaeyRfu! City Council candiuate, will (Ii l , results of the tho April 7 elect . n, in which none of the lliree street vending proposals received a nm ;ovi:v v He will suggest act son lo res,. Ive the controversy. As a result of the election the pie8 Tt city ordinance limiting v.--; Dr i trio 2.3rd Street nmrketplaco Is Min in effect. to C uncil also will consider a new JiT’> lei Cli ii’n I id get with revised pi a or ii ies. o n A g e n d a The Model Gitics P ro g ra m must oprr.ite for the next 14 I-ast months en $2.7 million. year's budget was $8.1 million. the budget, According to the final version juvenile of defender and tran­ sportation projects will be con­ tinued. the special T7ie emergency fund proiex ?, with a $31 .OOO budget which provides small grants to the poor on an emergency basis, will be snapped in favor of ti c family planning project with a $33,000 budget. In addition, budgeted amounts Hr the relocation project and continuing educate n were an by INLOW. Tile money slashed from the two projects was applied to the sk. '.Is pro lect, corr. immicatLn making a $170,000 budget for the improve rea ling program levels of four elementary sc5 iced s. cdiildren in to T h e alcoholism treatment t reject, with an $83 OOO bud git, and the repaving of two streets in the Prospect neighborhood, with a $102,000 budget, were not Included in the revised budget, Mrs. William D. Arnold and members of the Save Muny Committee will appear before council to discuss the group’s the Austin rave to efforts Municipal Golf Course. ( ouncil also will consider autnonzing submission of a grant application to tile Texas Criminal Justice Council to continue th© A u s t i n Metropolitan Area C r i rn i n a I Justice Planning program. Employes Elected To Co-Op Board Two University Co-C^) employes were electf-l to the Co Hp Board, it was announced Wednesday. John Micliael Medary, who represents hourly workers, is e m p l o y e d in the textbook d e p a r t m e n t . Feta Reed, representing salaried workers, is in the check cashing department. ti " ten cadet *0 c Met Robert r M i r i i A H i UT President's ileview Set for ROTC Units University ROTC uni Is w iii join to },<-r»r Un : Stephen H. Spurr and to recognize oui : of ©ach unit In the anni: J Univ> y . ' Thursday in Memorial Stadium, The Mayor of Austin Award, pre .ti b v the Eii stan d in g sen io r m ilita ry s< ic ce o f given to Cadet Maj. Lane Jamis(>i c l l ,: The Navy Award, presented by General Dyr city president id midshipmen view at noon or to the out- unif, will be O i l .s. as Corpor; ti -TI •- nlistod Scien­ to Individuals within the Naval Rf TC an I t'.e '. tific Education Program who have academic averages at the end of their senior year, will be presented m., ivath major this year to Midshipman First ( and officer candidate Dennis W. Moore, electrical engineering major. I u : The John Edwin Simpson Award, which rem.- m; in the Air Force ROTC pi grrun. w. : ; > ; ■ T. Watkins, an engineering s< wrico h e l l '. e e e e o , w 'N Ji Hi ) -'..JO' a rr. l l EiT THS I ruAQt ac H t: AME : KUO ii nousVV- I , =1 ", ' 3 I d ! ; ‘Y O U R O U N S T U P IP , BABY BROTHER/J fem ? A S H A M E '> i c u n I '<■ FEMALE VACANCY. Holloway House Co-op. 2510 Rio Grande, 474-2247. _ A to Z SEC RET A RIA L SERVICE S S S S H E E rn MBA. Typing, Multtllthlng, Binding The C o m p lete, Professional FULL-TIME Typing Serv ic© tallore 1 to the needs of University students. Special keyboard equipment for language, science, and engineer­ ing theses and dissertations Phone GR 2-3210 and GR 2-7677 2707 Hemphill Park ACCURATE, TEN YEAP-S expfrler.ee, references. Papers, the^s. Sadler 444-2101: Hamilton, 44-1-28.31, No calls after IO p.m. V i * / * ^ ST I b i d , I n c . 476-9093 typing • punting binding 420 w. riverside drive STARK TYPING Experienced theses, dissertations, P.RL* etc. Printing and Binding. Specialty: technical. Charlene Stark. 453-5218 Dissertations, theses, and reports. 2507 B rid le P a th , L o rra in e B ra d y , 472-4715. 109 Fast iota St, 472-0149 These*, D '‘seriation*, flam e*, P.R .’s, B C Reports, reiurrst M t tih tl ng, Bind l"q Everythieg From A to Z V I R G I N I A S C H N E I D E R T Y R IN G S E R V I C E . G rad uate and U n ­ typing, printing, binding. d ergraduate 1515 Koenig L an e . Telephone 4* .>7205. M A R Y E S M A L L W O O D T yp in g S e rvic e lax: m inute and overnight availab le. 892-0727 - 5fX>1 Sunset T ra il or 442-55-45 ■ 2005 A rth u r Lan e. T e rm papers, theses, dissertations, letters. M a ste r Charge honored. B E A U T I F U L T Y P I N G , theses, disser­ tations, misc, E ■ rn er legal secretary. M rs. Anthony, 454-3079. you r Cr ive rsify work B E A T T I F U L P E R S O N A L typing — a1! Prin tin g - - binding Close to U T . L a u r a Bodour, 178-8113 M A R J O R I E D E L A F I E L D . G rad uate and undergraduate typing ; resumes. 50c/page: m ulUiithing Bn n kA m e ricard and M a ste r Gharge, 442-7008. J u s ! N o H H o f ' St G a * I s ’ jo e t a v w . RESUMES V. f ’n O'* V, t h o u ! p ic t u r e s 2 D A Y S E R V C E Phone r’.R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em p hill E irk M i s c e l l a EA R N $*s W E E K L Y Blood © atma dc "O'* r coded. C e sh paid » •or service*. Physician O p - 1 8 « -.-3 a rn T °s . I • pr; & Sat. Open 12 roo-.-7 r rn. vVed. " t O' > - I -- ssro r- ■' i 4 ■ ■ . , . : - - i, 1 — in attend- t / 9* SKY-DIVE! Austin Parachute Censor For nformafton r eat# call 272-5 - I I a ny ti rn% N E I j S O N ’S G IF T S Zuni Ind ian jewel- in ; ins I ry . A frican a: I M i Scan 411-38.14 t. . 4612 S< nth Mondays. KW A i ’ YO''!-} ( Houston for sum m er Y - r .->> i it nn n ; !ey N ■ if v n. cg- I ■ * Vnl- I . E A R N T O P L A Y Fo lk advanced. G O r D rew beginning and Thomason, 178-20 79. E A R N M O N E Y Lr i tent Hex I AKU Y Send R o v f a j : Brochure < '■ y b ro ! eiegant ti rr pi rments. F o r the nicest tm -t some pets you have e ve r known, call 327-1875. B in k Am ericnrd, M is*, r G harge we ecu ,e. \Kt ‘ ’5>r rh ii <>.ats and c r rn R e aso n a b ly priced Iii > s. N E E D I 'R E A M Jr.tcrpretntlons” Meditation te c h n iq u e desire '!? Co y l e OO philosophy explained P rn , 1115 Vt ext T2t; 441-2222. Tuesda s, fir ! V I S IT I N G P R O F E S S O R vv p! i-behaved - house (two furnished bedrooms, C h arles Moskos. 906 Mi higan, si..ti, (312) sci visit Austin first week in M ay. fam ily seek 4 in Ju n e 1974 Cor fact ! -an­ WMH ll inols Tv!. p referab ly children) Ja n , H O U S E S I T T E R A V A I L A B L E Adair rn ale, as> 43, wishes ie pursue post-doc tora*# studies in Austin W ill exchange ho .se sitting, r ar e of grounds and pets for low or no rent. A n ytim e late M a y 1973 and August between 1974. W rite M H G r.o 3, 2111 K Street. N W W ashington D C 20037 or call (w o rk hours) 202-343 1317. B I C Y C L E R E P A I R : A ssem bly and a d j u s t m e n t s . Q u ality w ork at reasonable prices. 477-4943. FREE, H U M A N & 21 Ex cellen t part tim e opportunity to ne p u re business s k iis in a re al w orld I Justness rn a jot -. grad stu ­ situation. dents, even profs ar,, invited to con­ tact us to find but how to use yo u r evenings to earn $3bO-$3(>0 w eekly "Ca!! M r. K in g Rt 454 4 s 43 28 U N IT A P A R T M E N T complex near 133 Pool, washers dryers, CA-CH Individual lock storage, all bills paid! W anted g lad to m anage unit in exchange for larg e 2 bedroom apartm ent. L ab 472-8311 student and w ife D u p l e x e s , P u r im . Fo r R e n t E L E C T R O N IC typewriters. Weekly-m onthly C A L C U L A T O R S mid rates, Rental-purchase availab le. D a y s 454- 1971; nights 345-1297. JOB OPP.' NG FOR A STYLIST M :st have • xcellent artistic ahint} with emphasis on transp- rtntmn design Th* Individ a1 must be able to work from a conceptual design or sketch up through a prototype. Interested persons should send rem mes t G AST P O M E D * " C O . P O. B x 'J 147 11 ti.innei I '.ept ) A d u Ti x ' s 78 "66 MS or MR rx >N T I >R( >P i JI T LI T ES HEI P YOU S I AY ■ ■ St HCX >1. We will arrange o r ■ had ie to f t yours f i ,r pay is tops and promotions are; fast Our port time workers average $2 I un after six months Pitts fringe Ui-nefits. Learn while : • learn The f a food a d sen- md tstries ar* the 'est trowing .segments of our eron- t >m>\ You might just deride tx sta> v th us aft- r gr > tuation We h*v# «. me ti-.g ide ts. If sou like to mix with ; •- .pie, find s."M<’ p bor in doing a good jot* and d a t mind worklr g until 2 •» ct F rilly and S a tu rd a y rig hts, we have a CALL BILL ’-'ETES JPC, 7635 9 to 2 M nday thru Friday for Infor­ mation and an app intment for an In­ terview. for you. Be st Pi/.’ a 'n T wm (H onest) ip m t. ?- n a e■ 50 S a m ever - s. M u tt have good, e -ar, I » / vc ce end t • ; ‘5" lo-a Sty re©-- red. Es­ es ant O' * ""te n d hour’ / ifarting waqe lo t full 40 o 5 d ay weak. C all 454 p m fcet-A sen I Ca,rn.-5 p.m. 4 542 H r fcxpe-' anes not : o r'g o ng I V V L f II A T E O P E N IN G . Need hard w orkin g j* tier. P a r t tim e, m orning in person. T arin g 's, 2406 horns Appl} i luadalupe, modeling assignm ent needed A 'IT R A ! T i l E F E M A L E for free lance Some expel once helpful b t m-t necessary. 447-2041 a fte r 6 p m , for conform ation and appointment. R E A D E R S U R G E N T L Y needed fr,r blind law stc 'ent * ' i! Don Sm p’man, 454 : 230 B A R T E N D E R P Veteran in G rad uate Sc.coot who bo Here a year • r more. Best iob ; ' supplemental income. A p ­ I :e ( s p a s / in r er on w rn re cent . i .' t.'-v-j ■ -ii : - oto. L n A -* ply Ck-a ugh: after 3:3;- pm . l : . M E N T A L H E A L T H W O R K E R S i penltigs The B r -. n S< i f< r men us mc: t;d health w orkers t - work '-int with retarded (ra in profoundly boys " ’ ii men. Applicants must have knowledge of behavior modification teehriqu' T h is s not easy work but s w ll offer a challenge and valuable learning experience for an individual planning a c a re e r in 'he men' ii health ' cir!. ", '-Ling hours are flex Me Start me <-i'a:-• $•• bO/ho-ir F o r fu rther in ­ form ation cnlt 478-6662 FULL & PART T IM E N o ex ce; enca boce viry — we will train, M .it be very n it. C ould develop irdo I it , u permanent j b f >" wing your college career Pf ne for epf 837-0824 $6 PER H O U R D ancing at T H E M O V IE STAR •I 311 - 6 : .a Mon - I ri. W A N T E D ; Y O U N G a ttrac tiv e women to tra in as mn souses Good p ay while training, t 'a ll: E d leks of Hollywood. 478- 0111 to contam Austin m edical H A V E O P E N I N G for aggressive man and profi ssi mal people. Must be sharp dresser and good conversationalist. 20 • mr plus 8 cents-mile hours-week ca se. 44 1 2133. ST A R A ' public, I M M E D IA T E L Y ', work with id key add, light type, per evenings shifts interv ev. 478 6439. E q u a l Bonailie M'eekeiids Opportunity E n ip to j or. Fle x ib le A so ne<-d w a ires.-cs l l a.m . 2 p.m. and clean-up m an 9 <81 a rn. - 3 OO P rn Apply in person 9 OO a rn. -3 no p.m. 1602 Ran Ja cin to . N E A R UT. L ik e house, carpeted two Fenced C entral a ir ii eat. bedroom >r d . Carpent c o o 3 ('Lim '; TEXAN DORM 1V ; , - ; fie? Nueces $52,50/6 week session. S u m m e r Ft des cen tral air, com- D a ily mo d si md P etc y ri rn (deled, Also ax ai la ole • - '■I., a r ■ rn s. park r.«, i * ft get a' -r Hot I ’iati ' a'!-»wed Tw o bio- ks from cam- ii NT vt • VG? RS 475 ‘ I U F 'S ' 'W Q O I K P \ R K G irls and-or boys ; paid Also garage $60 rn each, nil bi l l >' ;• ii if g w i r e a " ’ GR-. 1700 THE PHOENIX 1930 San Antonio Sing es $99.50 Doubles Ai A 50 . . . r« if ■ j 1 p d • y tv. v i J, V, x ss-nr-dr u-. " -o, cr a- -' .- j, »" ■ • - - • fid. j - s t • : v * — r C e ~ T .:*. • ■ -os 'a f A 76-9265 477-5777 SHO'* . V. A L I In old houve H 2# fell’s paid to '' w e r Huge rn. rn jgoa N cees 4"6 3462, 176 8683 P R I V A T E R O O M S for men. Clove rn q u irt neighborhood, ce n tral ’am p hi .it a r. P riv a te w tr trice, kitchen, bn'h prtveii-ti'-s. C all 452 2361 daytim e ask H r L o b b y ; Coil 472-2789 after 7 30. 7184. 1906 S A N G A B R I E L Fu rnish ed room, bath. no pets, entrance, p riva te R e frig e ra to r, water-cooled Mn, spring $8>month, bills paid. 472-4781, R O O M F U R N I S H E D cam pus V e s t. P n v a t e entrance and bath, a ir carpeted u-ndiUoner refrigerate r, NL. e $75 pl is utilities 477- 565-1 X n .te d heat, n e a r N O W O F F E R I N G re ser­ v a l -IU, stngie and double rooms $40 and $30-mon th. Maid. C A , w a lk to cam pus. U n ive rsity House, Co-Ed 477- S u m m e r l i m Xerox or IBM 4c C O P IE S Reduction Capability to 24 * 36 Pictures, Multilith, P n n b n g , B in d in g $> GINNY'S COPYING .!?J SERVICE 42 Dobie Mall 476-917 Free Parking Open 75 hours a week S E W I N G M E N ’S and w om en’s clothes like you w ant. C a ll K a re n e x a ctly W y iy , 472-4304. Sales, T Y P E W R I T E R R E P A I R and cleaning. rentals. Ex perienced service, No rip-off p rices. 454-1971; nights 345- 1297. $10 pius p arts V a lve V O L K S W A( I i IN N E E D fixing 7 Tune ups job $6.5 plus too. parts M a n Crichton. 327-1282 C A C M em ber, ($42 m ax ). B ra k e rep airs V W E N G IN E , S P E - ! \ L l S T S i ‘heck our i vpei w,iced. fas’, reliable, labor. discount prices an parts and jobs - engine o v e r­ V a lv e .'"bs . ring hauls stud resenting. E U E E d : a gno­ sis, estimates, compression tests. A pril S p e c ia l: Bosch Tune up Kits i includes points, eondei sor), $1.99. l»osch Pi A C om m unity A utom otive Cooperative Sup plier O. E . & S. 836-3171 P R O F E S S IO N A L T E N N IS S T R IN G IN G - R E G R IP IN G Ask for your discount! T Y PIN G R L . R Y SER V IC E L " , e • s e h v i c e ' Bt I FXE ; * ‘ A 5 C/ for • REP ET ' VE I 42 DOBIE CENTER 472 8936 B O B B Y E D E I. A FT E L D , I B M S e le c ts . p’ca/ehte. 25 y e a rs experience. *42- RO Y W . H O LLEY: PRINTER 476-3018 Typesetting. Typing, P rinting. Binding E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G , d isser­ tations, themes, research papers, M is , Peterson, 836-1818, E X C E L L E N T T Y P I S T — fo rm er secre­ t a r y — all E T papers. 60c/page. 836- 2288. - CROCKETT TVs V I X V X X / I X L I I Fast, efficient, accurate, typing "4 theme*, diwserhat'oo*, these* p Co. FAST XEROX 4C00 MULTILITH, BINDING 453-7987 5530 Burnet Read V IV IA N B R O W N Professional Typist. ■VII fields. N orth east area, near 11135. 928-0991 afte r 2 p m PRO FESSIO N A L TYPIN G IBM SELECTRICS law , them*, dissertation*, P.R.T G .arant»ed to meat 1 ■ I * r « t beat on* Frances Woods Barbdra T ios 453 6090 453-5124 E X C E L L E N T S E C R E T A R Y T Y P I S T producing finest quality typing for stu­ dents and in e ve ry faculty m em bers (u id for 15 y ears, w ill take m eticulous c a re to type Ja w briefs, re se arch pap­ ers, B . C. reports, theses, and disserta- r i rf--;-' composition and spelling. L a te st model I B M E x e c u tiv e carbon ribbon ty p e w rit­ 478 0762 er. A ll w o rk proofread. E X P E R T T Y P I N G . N eat, accu rate 70 < ents-page double s p a e d 478-4259. T Y P I N G : S O M E p ic k u p and d elivery. te rm papers, Dissertations, theses, legal, 327 2041. Just North cf 27th & Guadalupe I I Jim Jo tth y Y ES , we do type Freshman themes. TO PLAC E A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD C A LL 471-5244 Box H a l’s Professional Stringing 85/ Del Vc a Texas 78617 926-7138 — 926-7595 24 1 r serv a - C rsp!efa P a Shop Free Pickup - Delivery Why not start out with good grades! Phone G R 2 3210 end G R 2 7671 2707 H em p hill P a r k F R E E T w o lovable 8 w eek old tiger kittens. C a ll Pa u lin e afte r 5 LD Cm .• J Al V ' <*’ 452 9601. B u s i n e s s O p p . o % . f " ' A l S r i * V T \ t i i i fe 4 ’ a i , u ; S A *S n Art Dull din q Aud. 23rd 5 San Jacinto A rn# I ADMISSION — SI Pre-lease ncv/ at low sum ler rates for as little as $58.75 a month ■.rrj L - ; y • r kl X JI! I * > A L L £ I R L h s # a » " ** iih lM C , " * X # V % L - t . Four students can share tee rent on: 2 BR, 2 bath flat at $58.75 each de □ 4 BR, 2 bath fiat at $/ 3,75 ei ch - □ Ai! furnished, I AH bills paid. O On the shutiiebus • Swimming poofs with courts • Clubhouse with we - lcemakers • Laundry foe . s v of vc - The acacias ^44-4485 1221 ^ fgarita From IM 31 take- Citer! exit to AigarsSa, turn right 1 block. KS3S3S3EJ5f»Sa ’SasHSK S3 P r e - l e a s e n o w f o r s u m m e r (At low summer rates) Share the way we live: for as little as $58.75 a month! Four students can share the rent on: □ 2 BD, 2 bath flat at $58.75each/mo □ Ad bills paid. I J A l l f u r n i s h e d . n O n the shuttlebus Yet all four have full access to the swim ­ ming pool with water volleyball court, and landscaped grounds. " A R B O R ” I.>00 Royal ( rest Drive ver Hills 4 4 4 - 1 8 0 6 A ii. u io p m c n t o f p g g e r A sso ciate s -argr--. J W & lt K i v j g g V3k.".:*Si: S636SI$I the professional camera for ever\/one! -l ' * lim £ * £ ■ » J C a n o n f e a t u r in g E- SIN G LE-LEN S R E F L E X CAM ERA • Throughdhe-Lens Spot Meter W ith 50m m • Wide-Open or Stopped-Down Metering f/t.4 Lens • Fast QLFilm Loading System • Breech-Lock Lens Mounting • Fast Microprism Focusing • 1 to 1/1000 Second Shutter • And Lots More! Drop in for a demonstration of this fine camera. NOW AVAILABLE Canon d B e u e H o u je il Authorized Dealer / Sales and Service © CAPITOL CAMERA Lov »r Level Dobie Mail I H E D A IL Y I E X A N Thursday A p ril 1373 I Private Funds Sought for Program Foundations Slow To Support UT M inority Recruitment NELSON'S G IFT S 461? So. C O N G R E S S riio n *: 444-38 4 ® ZUNI AND NAVAHO INDIAN JEW ELR Y • MEXICAN IMPORTS OPEN IO a.m, to 6 p.m. " G I F T S T H A T I N C R E A S E IN V A L I K” CLOSED MONDAY R\ ROBERT FAT EK Texan Stuff W rilor University officials art* con­ tinuing their search for private fund a foundation money massive pro arain designed to i n c r e a s e minority student representation on the Austin campus to Th Ronald M. Brown, vice- pK'sidenr for student affairs, said Wednesday the plan 6»ok root last June Alen University repents authorized administration of­ ficials to seek funds for such a program ENTITLED "A Program to Serve Cultural Diversity at IT Austin.” the proposal is an at* "greater temp’ to bring a number of students who have been under-represented in the past and to assist them in various ways fn achieve sue'"ss.” University Prr-si ion? Stephen lf. Spurr has contorted major foundations in sevtrrh of funding th*' plan was first an- since i minced last Dr* ember at a major civil rights symposium In honor of late President Lyndon Raines Johnson. thp "So far the negotiations have not yielded,” Brown said, “ hut there is still reason for hope.” Spurr had earlier said, “We’re not going to let the program drop for lack of external funds.” B r o w n noted Wednesday state ap- federal and ’hat proprint ions contribute heavily to the financial aid portion of the proposal which will require S2.2 minion for the 180 freshman and transfer students desired for fall enrollment-. “ WE WERE afraid th,A we would have no federal money,” B r,avn continued noting Congress now has compromise measures to restore partial college financial aid funding. In addition, l>oth Spurr and Brown have Raen optimistic concerning a University budget request before state legislators that will provide $60,000 to fund undergraduate scholarships for the economically disadvantaged. liaise committee approval has already l>eon given that measure. to establish a $500,000 scholarship fund for the state's brightest black and chicano students, is yet to be acted upon by slate lawmakers. B r o w n A second bill, emphasized intended the L e g i s l a t o r T o S p e a k A i Abortion Meeting Austin State Rep. Sarah Weddington and City Councilman Bud Dryden will speak at an abortion symposium at 8 pm. Thursday the Kinsolving Dormitory dining room. in Sponsored by the Simkins Hall Dormitory Council, the sym­ posium also will feature Gerard Nugent, Austin attorney, and J uly Smith, University student and member of City Women’s Caucus and the Austin Problem Pregnancy Council. Als. Weddington will discuss the recent abortion decision of the u S. Supreme Court and Dryden. i medical doctor, will speak on the importance of the abortion question to Austin. Each presentation will he fellowed by a ques'ion and an- swer period. proposal's fate wiL not be clear until tho University budget “ will be put to bed” later, He added, however, "General funding will provide more permanent funds than outside private grants." T H E D E C E M B E R proposal Includes expansion of present counseling, tutorial and orien­ Info, tal ion programs. Project designed to give informational lectures throughout the state, also will be beefed up. our minority “ We won't know until the second week of September how well student situation stands,” Brown said. Those figures will be available after a survey completed by is students during regis ration tabulated. “ Right now, we are trying where we can to move ahead,” he added. TOPITE A T B o t wmFIRST CROSSING h e r IOC BEER til 9 00 — 25c BEER til 12:00 UNESCORTED L A D IE S FREE 477-3783 OPEN 7:30 ^ From the lur am ia r im at you can sec forever, and while you're so engrossed with the view — wash down a juicy char-broiled bratwurst with a properly chilled beer — at very reasonable prices (no charge for the view). On Ranch Road 620 jus! 2 miles north of State Highway 71. Open from noon on Sat. & Sun. Other times too. Phone: 261-5539 /i^ncc upon a time, not so very ^ i o n g ag o , in the slee p y hamlet of Hardin, there lived a Sweet Young Innocent who was both beautiful and witty. But alas, ’twas for naught, for she was forced to do Menial Labor by her Jealous Elder Sisters, H e rs w e re the v ile s t o f household chores. All day long she would scour the pots and scrub the floors. And, of late, her sisters had volunteered her to tend the King's kumquats. Keeper of the Kumquats. Oh, Horror of Horrors! Oh, Insult of Insults! In the seclusion of her own home our Fa ir Lady had escaped Public Rid icu le. But now the V illag e Children would dance about her, singing Nasty Little Verses as she made her way to the Royal Kumquat Orchard. “ K u m q uat, kum quat, the more she ate the fatter she got!” the children taunted. Oh woe was she. Fo r, In Truth, in the several months she had tended the Royal Kumquats, our Sweet Young Innocent had developed a Passion for the Fruit, whereupon she had grown from a petite Size V to a gargantuan Size X V I I I . And she might still be there today, had not Fate in­ tervened in a most Peculiar M an­ ner on the day before the Royal Ball. J see, a traveling fa iry g o d fath e r and p a rttim e starving artist named Schlemiel (Schlem, for short) happened upon our Damsel in Distress in the or­ chard, lust as she was finishing her Dismal Duties. “ Forsooth, Sweet Young In ­ nocent, Methinks thou couldst benefit from some R and R ,” spake Schlemiel. “ Rest and Relaxation, Your Fairyship?” she queried. “ A u contraire, M ’Lady,” he corrected, “ Rock and Roll! A bit of the old Boogie Woogie! But surely you are attending the B all?” The Ball, indeed. Tearfully she explained that she had neither the W ill nor the Wherewithal to at­ tend the Ball, what with her Tat­ tered Frock and Dishpan Hands. And, she added modestly, she was a tad Overweight. “ Fret not, Fatso,” Schlemiel sympathized, “ for I shall at once Awe and Amaze you with a Mere Sampling of Schlemiefs Patented Schleight of Hand!” And with that he waved the antenna from a ’39 Desoto and L o and Behold our Unfortunate was once again her Former Skinny Self, and her Sad Rags once again Glad Rags. “ Outasight, F.G .!” she mar­ veled. “ But I am still in need of some Wheels,” In an instant Schlemiel had transform ed an unsuspecting kumquat into a Yellow Cab, which was all anyone could expect on, such Short Notice. And, as the Hour was fast approaching IO p.m., Schlemiel reminded her that he went Off Duty at the Stroke of M idnight, the Consequences of which were Obvious. f l f i l j e l l , if you can guess the V M W rest you’ve been reading too many Fairy Tales lately. Our Sweet Young Innocent made it to the Ball without Incident, and after not a few glasses of the Royal \V ine, told the W hole Story of her Renaissance to an attentive Duke Buck (remember LTuke Buck?). And Duke Buck, bless his E n ­ terprising Heart, took Full A d ­ vantage o f the S itu a tio n . I f Schlemiefs ingenius Taxi Service could escort one Beautiful Girl to the palace Safely and Soundly, the Duke deduced, then it would seem Logical that this same Taxi Service might escort tens, indeed hundreds of young lovelies Safely and Soun­ dly! And what Unattached Noble would hesitate to Foot the Bill for so Selfless a Gesture, he mused. An Official Proclamation ap­ peared Shortly Thereafter, stating that Free Taxi Service to and from Designated Locations was now available between the Hours of IO p.m. and Midnight for all Hardin residents. 0rnd as for our Sweet Young *vlInnocent, well her love of the Good Life was something less than her lo ve o f the K in g 's kumquats, and soon she had eaten her way back into the hearts and songs of the Village Children. TLT oral: A Taxi A D ay Keeps , J * l T h e M uggers A w a y . Or, Take A Cab, We’ll Pick Up The Tab. The above manuscript was delivered to a ir offices in a plain brown wrapper postmarked Argentina. BV neither take credit nor assume responsibility for its contents. — Ed. Now, Free Taxi Service to Cam­ pus, IO p.m. — Midnight P | HARDIN NORTH Btf KS SOI West 24th Street (512) 476-7636 JU /£ 12 Thursday, *U a lh, 1973 THE DAILY 1EXAN Inventive Thieves Learn the Ropes Two would-be thieves who took elaborate safety precautions were surprised in the act of removing a fraternity'* color television set at 2:45 a.m. Wednesday. SO S E R P R IS E D , in fact, that they loft behind what probably was their getaway car. The two men had tied together several room doors in the dorm section of the Alpha Epsilon P i house, 900 W. 26th St., with a long rope. crisscrossing the hallway from doorknob to doorknob to prevent residents from intruding. The two thieves had removed the set from the lounge and were moving it toward the east door of the dorm when Joel Fallas, a fraternity member, surprised them by walking into the lounge from one of the untied sections of the house. THE THIEVES then fieri on foot, leaving behind the 24-inch color console set and a white station wagon with a warm engine. The fraternity member chased after th -rn, but both men disappeared down the street. Tile fraternity president, Joe Hertz, who did not witness the incident himself, was convinced the atterr;; cd theft was merely a Drank initiated by a rival fr tternity. Judging by the descriptions of the two m en. he said, “ They Were typical fraternity guys—young, whim and .short-haired.” campus news in brief rn \< X III MIC X I I VI U> t | M U I I K vi ill sponsor a debate a t s p m . T hu rsd ay Busin i ss- Economies B uildin g 166 M ike Holm es of the L ib e rta ria n P a r t y w ill debate Syd Stapleton of tho Socialist W orkers P a r t y The topic is "C ap ita lism vs. -Socialism.” XN i k o m im x -I M IN XII M ut meet at t P rn. in Physics-Mftlh-Astn.nnmv Building 15.21*: Dr. L a r r y T m finn. associate, win special speak on ‘ Atm osphere of 'I ta n .” research the <" ii I i i k i > r i t \ J K I.I.o w M il I’ w ill m eet at 7 .30 x i r ti x i p rn Thursday at "T h e W elt,” 509 XX . 20th St , for election of officers ( H IM * IM A KI.OI* 'I K W ( X K I I K S in fourth H om e floor, o u t . W I/ . XTIO.N w .ll me. t at . e rn Econom ics T h u rsd a y L ib ra ry , to hear Dr P h y llis Pochards speak fin job op­ portunities I IM I MION < OI si ll. V. ll n i t t 6 30 p rn. T hu rsd ay In Sutton H all 210 fix- a general business meet im: ( MI \< ll s r i I I I A T w ill m eet a t 7 30 p .rn T h u rs d a y til Sid Richardson H all 3.109 to elect o ffic e rs C K X III X T L K A P P X D H L T X P I, nations honorary TONIGHT BLAKE SOUTH DOOR Under N e w Management TRY IT A G A IN , Y O U 'L L LIKE IT 1523 Tinnin Ford Rd. 444-0711 i-rm I sponsor I* ct are on the I >i link ti d’s fratern ity, v t I Livid T u rn e y ’s education D r ’ Ending a educe i ion 7 p in. Thursd > Thompson ( 'onference Cen ' ( ; Ill r XII IAI I N I ti vn u nf attem pts in the M I *•!( o reform last 2" >ears, at (J. doe in th in « horal ensembli s lo tsc Dr, Ela in e Brown, w id ely l oo v a for her t ho wm k S h e u iii spring ch rat symposium lend sessile • o t hor nu rature ; nd • horal cond’.''ting from » to 6 p m. in M u sic Bail ding E a s t Thu rsd ay for lot N \ I k i n \L> f ;n Me xii nil t - it Wo I Dill, lux I inters iewed . Vt ne/; ■ la aud Peru w ilt be ior ctor a u d work possibilities v. Ah P f. M ( *i eft 1\ | ii /I a * Cl ti \ C I J ill ll U. t t sn- i on t e n lew $ w a I be M ay *1 or IO To sign ra il Mrs. M tj o H arris, Institute of Latin Am. im rn St iii. s I “ho mmeat ( i! rice, I, M oi.day or Tuesday. ; p, i . i to on K i t \ I I t l l S SI A l | \ VK ii in e rt a l in Pli> sit - Math- 3 p rn. T hu rsd ay Ast i iiiioni;. Building 9 22 : ie a r L a n e ii glutton of Ox? rd U n ive rs ity st eak ' T w is te r on Space tin • I jet da s x xi pf I s l i ti o x L A T I N ' s o s l o i o f . v ll I I t l l x x L I L E K X I I R E w ill meet at 2 r rn. Thu rsd ay in the Dobie Pc ‘ fh* A u-‘ me- I enter • > dim •ss ’ ’ >de* o ' t , p ... L< K eaH l% \ VI I ' l u r ” T KA I M O N PR O * • I! VV • O I s TIL w ii * 30 ar rn* rn et 7 p m. T hursday in the Texas I in! -n S ta r r I e n t u s P. ..rn for p relim in ary prospective and orientation m em bers of th® p rog ram cora- mine* s. Attend,'ill- e fit OI o of th* se meetings Is m andatory. for T I ) ; ! . A A I I N U L K S I T V Z E N K A R A T E * f ill m eet at f. ,30 p . m . T hursday in Moore-Hitl F o r u m Room to praeth «*. I M H RIX A I K H 7 3U P i n . : nion Buildin g SM-* KOKI KTX w ill m eet at I bm 'd a y in to see the movie. '"rh o Sit el Roofs. COMMITTEE MEMBER INTERVIEWS Mandatory Informa+ion/Orientafion Sessions Thursday, A pril 19 Texas Union S ta r Room 4:30 or 7:00 p m. Interviews A p r i l 23-25 for The following com m ittees A cadem ie Affair* A ro-Amerlcan Culture Arts X Theatre B aiding Ut* Advisory C EC Food Se rvice Advisory Idea* & Issue* Metiean.American Culture Musical Even** Recreation U n io n C o m m u n 1 catio n* UT Interaction 1 E S A S X m x m Recreation Committee SAILING COURSE Dry-land and on-water instruction Monday evening* First session— April 23 & 30 Second session— May 7 & 14 F E E —- S IS D E A U N E — FRIDAY IN FO R M A T IO N AND SIG N U PS U N IO N 342 „ „ ■ WANT TO SEE STUDENT GOVERNMENT DO SOMETHING FOR A CHANGE? It Will . . . W ith Your Help Join ct S tu d en t G o ve rn m en t C om m ittee Interviews Tuesday Wednesday Noon lo 3 p.m., 7 to 9 p.m. IO a.m. io Noon, I to 4 p.m. Union 321 Communications — Finance — Housing — Education — Student Services — C om ­ munity Affairs — Minority Affairs — W om en's Affairs — State Lobby — Political Resolutions — Consumer and Environmental Protection — University Policy __ Elections — Building Use and Construction Burton, Stitt Among Guests T i I “7 T Jm Im I hST i I , % A I B u i l V l i n r n s i f i km "ha I I i rn T l f e k i : Jazz Fest Planned The third annual Southwestern College Jazz Festival again promises a lineup of jazz greats. Set for two concerts in Gregory Gym April 28, the festival w ill feature Gary Burton, Arnett Cobb, Richard Davis, Max Kaminsky, Barry Miles, Jim m y Owens, Sonny Stitt and Teddy Wilson as well as eight college bands, four college combos and three college jazz vocalists. Stitt v lll ap)»ear at the 2 p.m. concert, and veteran jazz pianist Wilson, a native of Austin, w ill appear at tile evening concert. His set ".ill feature Cie comet of Kaminsky, who is playing in Texas for the first time since he appeared here In 1937, with the Tommy Dorsey B a ri. AT TH E OTHER end of the spectrum are per­ formers like electric pianist-composer Barry Miles, Grammy Aw'ard-winning vibist Gary Burton and former Herbie Mann fluegelhom player Jim m y Owens along with award-winning bassist Richard Davis. Ex-Lionel Hampton tenor Arnett Cobb w ill be sitting in with the big band from Texas Southern University, The TSU band is the 1972 College Jazz Festival warming barid. Vocalist Anita Moore has been on the road with Duke Ellington since singing at last year's festival. Tho 1972 award-winning combo, "Jo in t Effort,'* from S uthern Methodist Univer­ sity, w ill also play. CO LLEG E BI(» hand entries include those from the University, SMU, Sam Houston State, the University of Houlton and T arlton State University, The 2 p.m. concert Is throo hour's and the 8 p.m. concert w ill be four h ms ending with a jam session featuring all of the guest performers and winning student instrumentalists. Tickets, ST 50 for students and Si.50 for others, are on sale at Hogg Auditorium, the University Co-Op. Sears in Hancock Conter and at the festival ticket office, 6615 N. Lam ar Blvd. Sir Lawrence O livier gives one of his best performances in an excellent adaptation of "Richard III. " The film , also starring Sir John Gielgud and Sir Ralph Richardson, w ill be shown at 7 p.m. Thursday on channel 9. Walton fans get a double treat as the fam ily faces a crisis when Olivia Is struck with polio. The show w ill be shown at 7 p.m. on channels 5, 7 and IO. 7 p m. 12.24 Mod Squad !> M o vie : R ic h a rd T W ’ 4.6.30 F lip W ilson $ UNIVERSITY OMBUDSMAN Students with University ad­ ministrative or other Univer- *;?y related problems should contact Hector De Leon, Om­ budsman, Union Building 344, 171-3S25, 1-3 pm. tv tonight 9 Fir..in Ulna 5,7,10 Movie: "The Extraordinary Seaman” 4,6,88 Tonight Show 5.7.10 The Walton* Ll It Takes a Thief 7.30 p m 8 p.m. • p.m. IO :Iii r> rn 12.24 Dick C ave tt 12.24 Streets of San F ra n cisco 4.6.36 Bo b Hope Sp ecial ll 30 p rn. 4.6.36 D ean M a rtin Ii Movie ■'Tv.,iichr * .«• ii - C»‘4* 5.7.10 " U p with Pe o p le " Midnight IL M o viet "W iU l H e rita g e " 8 Bill Moyers Journal IU M ovie: "S p irit of W est Point** 9 Midnight Sm acks: "Z o rro 's B la c k W h ip " | MIDDLE EAST CUISINE j 9 SA T U R D A Y , A PR 2! — S E R V IN G 5 P.M. - 9 P.M. # m S U N D A Y , APR. 22 — S E R V IN G l l A . M . -9 P.M . • • rn a rn ALAMO RESTAURANT 604 Guadalupe 476-5455 • Regular American Dirtn & bVjrte List Available ^ ORDERS TO G O OPEN 6 A.M . ‘TIL 9 P.M. © rn H" w 1 w wW vir w ^ i £ w e S p r i n g 1 9 7 3 U FPC Ip Xjt W? Wp I ' I rn t rn • rn rn rn • rn rn rn rn rn rn ' J rn rn £ E o u E o ti)o bm Urn rn IU CD D "SUNDAYS AND CYBELLE” (France, "62) directed by Serge Bourgurgnon with Hardy Kruger and Patricia Gozzi film ii on# of th# bait ***n In sam# tim*, boasting in Bo.rguJgnan a director of Superior achievement and lupariative pnomii#, end in Petriela Gonl en adolescent actress whose performances will stand ai a touchstone The beauty and ingeniousness of Bour- gutgnon I cinemetography cannot be ignored.' John Simon, TO N IG H T CM LY 7:00 and 9:30 BATTS AUDITORIUM ADMISSION 75' re, f A P M l$ SlM ?S p m -SALE TOAPttltX^-. T ~ ~ f** .'Aifor matioN CALL C5tV2Z5~9539 * 623Vf/$* APRIL 22,1975 PAYTOMID-NIIE ■—f ~ — 4-—y- ii g. rn rn rn rn © rn rn • rn rn & • f t • rn e # % e rn rn rn 2 0 2 1 5 . i d . a r r ui IN G M A R A G B M R E N T H E P A S S IO N O I \ . i . A l » , F H I . & M A T , 7 : l t O . & I I F V I H I S V U ' MKUOWNMKItftl vuwm lAjjeifc* ^c' nraiMWMIM^^ ANDY WARHOLS THE CHELSEA GIRLS with Nico - Erie Emerson - Brigid Polk • Ingrid • Pope O ndine • Ed H o o d • M ario M o n te ! S a tu rd a y Only April 21, 1973 Batts Aud. 8:00 P.M. $1.00 Presented by Cinema 40 Tickets on w la af 7:00 Grammy Winner Vibist Gary Burton wit! join other outstanding jazzmen for the Southwestern College Jazz Festival April 2 8 . as you like it FILM S “ Satanic' Night and Smilax Morning," one ut the best films to come ig Albert Finney, will be shown out of Britain in the at 7 and 9 p rn Thui ■ “ Sundays and Cjbelc,’ at 7 and 9:30 p rn. T Thomas Hardaways v Thu- J iv in Hie Mum Pamela Maim, pi mb 1 Thursday in Hie M i:i Mil--, Man Ham- 1 w ill pei'form tit 8 p tho Union Building ‘‘Dracula” w .Ll be pc: f at Center Stage *• i he Taming ct tin* 8 g r% tv, Wednesday th Reginald Marsh's nevi Reseal^ ii Center. Friday Grossman's l l G allery. Jester Cor tor Auditorium. ti by Serge Bourguignon, w ill tie shown n Halts lh :1 Auditorium. M I JC > a junior organ recital at 4:15 p.m. ■I Mal give a masi til egis recital at 5 pm tiding Hi ■’ *' a] i Iall. ii; r on the N ational Coffee House Circuit, Piu;sday and Friday at La Potpourri in HR VM \ J at 8 p.m. Friday and 8:30 p.m. Saturday ’* s ■ ut in aes at Zachary Scott Ti teat re at i Saturday* tin ii! it has Just opened at the Humanities n ca a are on exhibit at die TexPIRG , 0 U M S M il La v a c a 0 TON GMT • SAT U RD A t 172-7315 S T E V E FROMM OLTZ K EIT H SYKE a d v a n c e tic k et s at D IS C O U N T records TU ESD A Y - S A T U R D A Y FREDA - * FIREDOGS Lunches Served Daily I 1:30-3 Dinner 5-10 p.m. Daily H ippy Hoar P i» 111 335? ® Steaks ® Sandwiches • Seafood • Mixed Drinks HAPPY Hi UR PRICES ALL DAY! A LL Girls Adm itted Free! S W Z " ! I £ > 1 1 3 H RS. FREE PARKING IN H A R D IN G A R A G E HAPPY HOUR PRICES: (3-121 $1.25 Pitcher 30c Glass 23rd A Pearl (3-12) 55c Mixed Drinks ACROSS FROM HARDIN NORTH FEATURING BY POPULAR DEMANP FffoM THE F IR S T et - . . ^ . lim t w f n w * f r i,e yr* * I H O M E R - J lW f t d lV E 5 E A 8 R L E ^ t - M L A IX ) W - ST U D ER BA V 0 R - HftWK- FXCAUBER-CHAN6ES-VOCIFEROUS* 7 * . STAM Does* WARLOCK • FAMILY OF MAN' FREE ANO EASY • See-the* a LL I A T /l& B £ F ® Jules Feiffer's LITTLE MURDERS Eliot G ould Donald Sutherland Alan Arkin Fri,, Sat, April 20, 21 7:00, 9:00, 11:00 Burdine Aud. $1.00 t h e D a ily T e x a s rbursd& v, A m u 13. im pas® u Student Gov’t• Tv( ' r ' i s about tho life of a bou.se, “ ' c area in South Austin become a major Urban r '• Renewal area.” ’ °' ’o ’von Mr rapid eonstruction ’ ■'rn( 'bs is that people need a plaep lelcss. architect Coleman cm t apartment building should have fveked bv now. Not * >, sa I Chuck Martin of the Austin A p a r t m e n t \ssociation. a voluntary i 7. a t i o n of apartment owners, 1 r anagers and .suppliers. g pate a softer market In the ' *‘uf we really don't know what to plan Ct o. gurney.” Martin said. “ There ” a p; edict ,ons of RO to 85 percent an d we do feel that all building ■ 1 \vni probably begin to drop off.” * ip n> v ' n ; *d, however, that the building perm * department of the city saws con­ er apartments will continue at the s one pace. lime w e started to get strict “ It over developm ent.’’ lac Au? ims a ii tment aunt of l i e a ss I unit? I in Apartment Association, which membership of owners and of hi percent of the 42,000 units in Austin, has conducted or rate survey* rn determine the occupancy in Austin apartments. ” rn found that of a total of ' survey eel all over the city in 05.8 percent were occupied. • on ive occupancy figure was I ho South Austin figure was H to \\ e.:t Austin’s IOO percent 1 1 owie.'lged 'ha*, though things ling smoothly for the apartment it present, “ Maybe there is a r • on ti o’ [n Ti years ’hive a re a l ro il’d become I j •' f, ar- hitect. “ inst can’t 1 i•' fbi -■ ■ ip't i>g h< r " 1 zard >•. flint tine to gro.v. And ’ ■ it'ton r • <•> ai < a P m i-inps the aesthetics of the ve rtr^a most graphic- Bun ■* ? tho condition of < it in Austin. ( ! ve’oprr pryf !s inherent • ■■ ii I and whaust. Thp onisi' vos, nm of non als. And since O’, ervtInns rn in st. -nos wash tho tin* lntos oil parking lots 'n a storm sewer. That, t o ’I t streams and into psi hot irs of the Burton graphically illustrate the prr, en * in T.’sbn. ' t“ • lights or s .ipwalks re This led Coleman to e a pigment system I eve! ■ v '-.ere. a fair';, wid< street, hut cr rn st r net ion. \partments ' ;.’Os of comp st or fr om o framing, to trim. '.'UTO] tip and down the dirt for landfill Comber Kpiled belli no large wire •nsebes, as Coleman ’n do with ar­ is and eel ta ink not s of a refute- 'are. ’ : lid ff r tr. ct apart- small houser being cig} t vears ego u hr n VIV) es built the first : e v. >!j!: * a st quadrant Trace. ’ t that t ’ c t a b a si c master plan . Meritopolis area. mr or five planning *d at the southeast Wcndl cr said. “ That a pg f r many years ■■ ace for high Hi frorrI Parker I vine We saw the high TH bi < oniing ft nm orth at•o md U.S. 183 Pf sr VI divert future fhe so’i'h to balant e ady bought 60 acres in the and sold al! hut tile on whwh Willow (“'reek las since sol I his interest. ■ hut still owns adjoining bink of his handiwork0 fo p: poet it varies, One • PX can look real good and •same amount of land can i m not real happy with th at area or protect* in were planned.” the planning ’’looks like n out railroad boxcars.” sled th; t builder s go to ; .‘■TUctures in the same preserve the open space, cl have o • ie dorp through the zoning commission, department and the Olty C Wirt!, 'I' e plan has its drawbacks, though F< and five story buildings can block the v of the neighbor And no one s quite s if people would like the idea of living the large buildings. Coleman agree i with the idea of build rubier verticil t v than horizontally, admitted, however, that there w ould more cost in vertical cor st ruction. I ie be To the problem of view. Co’em an adv ‘'Woo determines We views0 When the'. tearing down th- destroying a view. The whole problem one of sim planning '’ To accomplish t i m e trees, this the “ s od, ■'re It I is Coleman said be pl,- • • to > m. city the establishment of an A Design Agend T o agency would consider rn “ The agency would as a whole and review ■:•■ cu’Ting in the city. It would nj for development, Coleman sa d. lie cr design oriented professional? planners, architects, and si aper If s time we start**! to get development.'’ The ,-;ty currently ha? department which does ad current planning for major a c tv llmvwpr, it has no real < controls Bryan Schuller of ti - Cit Department said a1 tho preset! D nothing his department < prover,! the builder from sera trees and tine land. Me doe? provide a landscape plan th* amenities.” Hie sam beast quadrant of I ii msit v I r me | (urn a I ’oca ti >d usage bocaurn according to St see pip need for an arr-a for and we can better control Iv n environmental and develop planntnfr? I'.'T IO tho ."'in I ' Imn gh borh rn *pm en ‘ or- TO’ • pl ms trolled by si; ch ; s and so on. strict over pf ant»ing I p,] ci rdP Plann fjlflfl A et e lug off ti c ’J npAfj to ^ ci t v v niter *''v e ^ pa rf moti t s • rn min st ar !- “ Twenty years is about the life of a house, and in that time that area in South Austin could possibly heeorrr* a major Urban Renew al a re a .” p >int in a large area rather than bavin® different areas o' tho pin- rezoned e\erv Cm-* a new se* of apartments arc to be built.” called this “ planm d unit Schuller d ‘velopmen'.” Though Schuller said the developer may put amenities In at his own discretion and ‘‘they are net required,'’ I t was quick to add that most developers in Austin a e aware of the “ unique characteristics of tho land.” “ The builders \ egetation.” he y ■ d. try to trees are worth monev. Most ti e n ti: ii retain The planning departrp'wf can tell th# developer to limit development to ” X units per a ere.” Schuller said. “ And it can tell the developer to provide a certain numb r i n g a> the ’ uni}pr» It can a T o d e ride wha■ f> [ Ti (% o' bedrooms ’ the mn j- •- roads will jJO and rvan tell builder to dedicate a Ct•main number feet fv’ recre. tional pui’pO SOS, [larking sp. ices a ecol .f “ But you en said. ' 5 on can on Iv requirements to be met. ” legislate q u a lit y Schul I or create minimiim Schuller said whip* hiKudin? codes ? : f* strong enough that apa rf merits should I; s t for some time, “ they won t last forever. “ looks fit,vnvc other ••r hr added w, ; rd na B irt n vnrds and small ° building l)f>' m f n high phi fs- ' rep i ak sr h,v n of the original o has sn1 O' sold aid, 1 I ’m sick ’n I he ti ces off the i eve opei s har ° • nine years ago •' whet was then Dri ’vc a roo. scrub it I Drivel had r now* that ti cts and ilia' area ah n ° ' re ? v ah (j uad ra; soot km alm i t density ‘ The e •-f f ( tr i ffie dew ‘lop and wi ti- Mw out the I h e apartm ents themselves “ have nothing to do with ar­ chitecture. '1 bui'H tho complexes they ? *o fear dow n trees, rip out S1- e ivironmentcilly th ey’re *.q the microbial action of hnv q 'Ti- ic 'iii the Page 16 Ti-c • April 15, 1973 THE DAILY TEXAN Story by John Yemma Photos by Mark Yemma J T < ;?v x-ears is about the life of a house, t i ; ie that area in South Austin ? a id “ y become a major Urban I P Renewal am a.” T c o is reason for rapid construction ’ ’n <■’ its is that people neoi a piano n. ■' artheirs*, architect Coleman ’ ’bought apartment building should f’ *0 t have peaked by now. ’ Not so, said Chuck Martin of tho Austin A p a r t rn e n t Association, a voluntary O r g a n i z a t i o n of apartment owners, managers and suppliers. • -.icipnte a softer market in the f ■■ but ve really don’t know what to plan f " oci upancy," Martin said. “ There ' n predictions of 80 to 85 percent cc up :acy and we do fad that all building Will probably begin to drop off.” “ Martin added, however, that the building perm r department of the city says con- apariments will continue at the same pace. “ I f s t i me w e started to g e t strict o v e r d e v e l o p m e n t . ” " ;e. ; of 65 percent of T m A it tin Apartment Association, which a membership of owners and c ma the 42,000 ;ii : T r a it im s in Austin, has conducted ■ n absorpt iii rate survey to determine the amount of occupancy in Austin apartment?. lion found that of a total of ' surveyed all over the city rn I '1. 05.8 percent were occupied, n Sou* . \ ; tin the occupancy figure was I >■ : }-o' "ut. The South Austin figure was second only to West Austin's IOO percent mark. : Ak: 'in acknowledged that, though things 1 e ruining smoothly for the apartment is a (I for some kind of control. In 20 years " -.-0 could become 1(5tty at present, “ Ma"be there ' ; ’ i ' n lh ive an urb m b lig h t” • '' n a rob beet, “ ins* ain 't ■ in this leapfrog, haphazard And ><■■«? e»>nun ie t< grow. And F e Burton Drive area n]*;tri m oms arn springing 1 ;> .ic-'p pasture land os sowing legendary serpent’s A I >r. JI• il>er! Coleman, the T?nK ersifv’s jfpi t ire, belime? mut'h et n ♦ pol bn ion f hat down the sir in turn, wash Town fg.Re ” f rye th Drive area ti cond I : •" of d There ate T •'il-nrs the aesthetics of the F’-jrlc • i vo a re a rnost g r a p h ic- c ' '-'a*'? hie condition of c! 'vp'opm rt in Austin. I S © X © S po ' • in *? not problem »> the parking lots inherent complexes. ' off <» I and exhaust. Tile then mh.es, are of non dei als. And. since everything ta in storms wash the ''ped, ionic hates or. parking lots •et to a storm sewer. That, es Into the streams and into e aesthetic^ of the Burton -1 graphically illustrate the l l e\-c ptnent in Austin, no st rent lights or sidewalks Thrive a l Coleman *o tfic whole apartment system \ ng evprywhete. a f u r’v w ide street, hut e with r >nstruction. Apartments us stages of completion, from ’ k, rn ft in mg, to tr im. cs barrel up and down the e-j O' c r- for landfill. Lumber cd n e e w ire if - ••tmnrt clusters ■ on ta i with proper planner for San \n- 1 A r ' n’s T wn I im sod in rv'f tis ng land n f>0 pere ont of the c im; loxes goes ha' n rn gt ISS— k: lo dead, in wa vs othnp ■51r t O' o r , he added. land along Burton Ana,|s and small tho building boom flip Hi rtk F)1 ;g (fXg p f of t I sn f ik- ho n of the original who has s nee sold 'it -k to Slid. n cutting the trees off the st other developer? have saving lr o s “ eight or nine years aero much of what was then n Burh in ! V ive a • ca. were scrub trees and said. ’‘Rut. that area amp h Burton Drive) had non noticed now that they’re ie felt bad ah' ut the loss nan of feral a solution cont rn is for density and plans have all ti o trees ii der must then be willing for every tree he cuts ■' •! • un rn Si •«!<) ^ trec ' 1 o but d the com plexes, they I ave nr tor many rears 11 seemed the logical place for high it ' r densiti dc\elopment. Lu lo WnS m w land, from P ark er Ivine dcveopmeig, We 5aw the high c s t ti a flu density on ftom development to th.* north around U.S. 183 and we thought we could divert future traffic to come from the south to balanic out the flow ” IL.Ta conting a p a r t m e n t s t h e m s e l v e s T h e “ h a v e n o s h i n g to d o w i t h a r ­ c h i t e c t s o.” W ordier orb South Austin eight to IO ic v bought fit) acre> in the and sold a1! bu! the on u ach \\ illow' ( ’reek I his interest Jvn!ow Cleek bu- still owns adjoinin' w is builf- } l“ Jn land. ink of his handiwork0 ;VH ’ "F r o m pc .-jeer to pi -je -i it vat os> hf‘ 11111on < i pa-x can 1xc ars.” bendlet suggested that builders go to 'out or five-story structures in the same i ca to preserve the open space This; change would have to be done through the zoning the planning commission, ' ' 1 department and the Ch- Council. Tile plan has its drawbacks, though. Four and five-story buildings can block the view of the neighbors. And no one j pose to the city the establishment of an A u ;‘in Urban Design Agency. The agency would consider neighborboods as a whole and review development oc­ ean ing in the city. It would approve plans for development, Coleman said. ‘‘Tile agency would be controlled bv professional? design-or! en ted planners, architects, landscapers and so on. I f s time we .started to get strict over development.” The city currently has a p a n n in g department which dees and current planning for major areas of t 1 city. However, it has no real architectural controls. advance Bryan Schuller of the City Planning Department said af the present time there Is nothing his department “ to prevent the builder from scraping off the trees and the land. He doesn’t need to provide a landscape plan or any specific amenities." ran do Tim southeast quadrant of the city was allocated for medium density apartment usage because, according to S c h u lle r , “ we see the need for an area for apartments and we ran hefter control building from n environmental and development stun I* “ T w e n t y y e a r s is a b o u t the fife in t h a t t i m e o f a h ou se , a n d t h a t a r e a in S ou t h A u s t i n c o u l d p o s s i b l y b e c o m e a m a j o r U rb a n R e n e w a l a r e a . ” ■*■■■■■■ WM* til *" MU . uumM*anrv''Mi point in a large aren rather than having different areas of (hr cite rezoned every time a new set of apartments arc to be built.” Schuller development.” called this “ planned unit Though Schuller said the developer may put amenities in at his own discretion and “ they are not required,” he was quick to add that most developers in Austin arg aware of the “ unique characteristics of the land.” “ The to builders vegetation.” he said. trees are worth money, Most natural retain the try The planning department can tell the developer to limit development to “ X units per acre,” Schuller said. “ And if can tell the developer to provide a certain numb r ef parking spai-es according to the numb - of bedrooms.” It can also decide where the major roads will go and can tell tim builder to dedicate a certain number of feet for recreational purposes. “ But you can’t legislate quality,” Schuller “ You can only create minimum said. requirements to be met.” Schuller said while building codes are strong enough that apartments should last for srnie time, “ they won t last forever. rnik . . I: - - A 4 V ' A H fV ' - - •* 5 ,/ y * i ^ i s ( w c sr , **-1^ I - ^ j < > (J j ■■ SM 0m *9r . .. ; I * * = k ‘ m w I lr . V I i ' Psf. f * Tare -• Thuif y Arm 19, 1373 THE DAILY TEXAN ***** .vJte--. > Story by John Yemma Photos by Mark Yemma