S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y of Te x a s a t A Vol. 73, No. 35 Ten Cents Austin, Texas T uesday, Septem ber 4, 197C -4401 Tropical Storm Delia Hee* For Galveston-Freeport Area M eanwhile with thousands of Texans SO F A R , M e C O M B S A ID , ti*- had i *-ri G A L V E S T O N (A IU Residents of this island city late Monday night braced for whatever Delia could deal but many of them belittled tho disorganized storm ’s significance Beaches that were crowded almost emp­ tied soon after the storm turned her course toward Galveston tint a few sur fers hung on Motels and hotels reported guests "Liking out for the mainland "S e e m s P E T E (.’O K IN S was tying up the a w ­ nings at the P ie r In ive In Restaurant and said Ilk*- everybody is laking precautions this time but I rn not going to start boarding up until I get some more definite information Six foot waves pounded the Galveston beaches, and Ja c k McComb collecting money to allow p eo p le on a fishing pier, said as usual that when a hurricane was coming the fisher men moved in in droves Large fish in such weather com*- clos*- and strike at anything one 96 pound tarpon hooked oil the pier 'W e re going to ' fay open all night McComb Hurricanes don t bother us just cools th*- place off said It Ja c k Bushong general manager of th*- Flagship Hotel said as usual when a mg blow started, his guest . started clearing out Even though th*' hot*!! plans to remain open he said "re a lly , it , a matter of fear and lack of education on just what a hurricane is accounting for th*- exodus * * B y The Associated P re ss * Th*- Texas Department of Public Safety in Austin said that Highway 37 between High Island and Port Arthur was closed b e c a u s e of high tides late Monday night M IA M I (A U ) Tropical Storm Delta picked up speed and changed direction slightly Monday afternoon heading for a Tuesday morning landfall along the Texas Gulf Coast the National Hurricane (.'enter said O K I. IA was p;c king highest sustained winds of Cl to 70 mile per hour At l l p m CO T the center of Delia was latitu d e 27 6 north and located near longitude 93 5 west or about 150 m iles southeast (ii Freeport moving west north west 15 to 18 mph Little change m forward speed and intensity was expected Monday night I F T M K F O K VV A R I ) peed i main the storm 's eye would pass over tamed Galvston's beaches about 7 u rn Tuesday D e lia ’s center was reported losing its organization hut was expected to dump four to six inches of rain Tuesday a it m oved inland in Delia Forecasters aid they expected little change intensity oi tor ward movement through the night Mon day Her winds were slightly less than the 74 in p ti needed to become a hurricane wind With Delia [losing no major threat to th*' Houston spar*' center officials decided Monday night not to dispatch a team of Skylab flight controllers to an alternate control center in Maryland The 26-man team flail been alerted for a possible flight to the Goddard Space Flight Center near Greenbelt, Md where there is a small control center that would be adequate to track the Skylab 2 flight "A fte r a weather review the flight control management said later we don't plan to deploy a task force to Goddard or to any other aeron rlary site I M F H O I S T O N space center is 30 miles is inland from the Texas Gulf ('oast sturdily built arid could only brr damaged fly a strong hut r inane It E a r lie r advisories from the M iam i hurricane center had predicted Delia s (-ours*- would (ak*- it into Louisiana D a v is Benton of G a lve sto n chief meteorologist for the upper Texas coastal area said the chang*- in course towards Galveston Freeport was caused in part by a cold front slowing down after reaching West Texas "T h is and a high pressure area to tii*- east created ideal pressure conditions bi turn the storm towards us Benton said T I D E S U P ’ from four to six feet w ere ex from Freeport to Port Arthur pee ted T u e sd a y w ith feet elsewhere in th** warning area Monday night and Tuesday tid es up to six Sm all < raft were warned to stay in safe harbor from Matagorda B a y to Pensacola Fla I A . M I S S I * n » C * • rip * M O O O t * — ? GuOpor t ! • hT* B f,OK i ’ P o r t A rt Ko 'J • / • M o rg a n C H V S - V I • r y s . t • W a t o T E X A S it v * M o r'* I ^ P o r ) A r C o r p u t r C r »t I • B k O W b S V t lll celebrating Labor Day, flash flood war rungs went up for a 24-county area of Southeast Texas and South < antral Texas H eavy rain to near five inches was ex peeled as Delia nears th*- Gulf shores Persons living in low lying areas were warned to move to higher ground im mediately R E S I D E N T S O I B o liv a r Galveston Island and the Surfside area of Brazoria County on 'he coast southwest of Houston received special warnings Residents of H arris Lib erty Fort Bend and Wharton counties were told to begin Jasper immediate storm preparations Newton Orange and J*-fferson counties w«-r* warned of tii*- threat S C A T I F R E I ) T H U N D E R S H O W E R S lined th*- Texa i ( ’oast from Brownsville to Beaumont and about inland shortly before dusk They w«-r*- expected to Increase and become heavier through the night IOO miles Thundershower a ctivity also grew along a cold front over the area west of the Pecos R iv e r and along the Red R iver Volley east of W ichita F a lls ii w i t ! m Ct * >**<•. , »< . i 1 i ' i - < * -1 n t y t 0 i t O Indictments Sought In Ellsherg Probe LO S A N G E L E S 'A f * i A county grand ju r y re co n ven e s T u e sd a y to de* id*- whether to return indi* trncnt tion w 11lr the break in at th* off)** of Daniel Fibber g [re,* In.dri t in conner S O I IIC .'ES ( I , U S I, t o Ma iris* .ligation itll* say those under *-on Ideration for po indictment ar*- form* r Whit*- Hon • aid* F g il Krogh arid David Young for rn* r presidential advisor John I) Ehrlichm an and convicted W atergate conspirator G Gordon biddy lo s t Atty It Munch who ordered the probe has aid fie expo* Is ii i dictrnents to b»* returned A spokesman said Monday ti* expect* th* grand jury to announce it.* action Tuesday or W<-*lri< . flay Jo sep h th* plumber? unit M F .M B F R S OI .o-cali**d W hite broke into the House B everly Hills office of Dr Lewis Fielding on Labor D ay weekend of IU71 to get Ellsherg s psychiatric files Ellsherg as a Hand fair;) researcher had copied th* s*-nsitiv«- Pentagon papers and turned them over to the press 1 borg*-1 ' J espionage conspiracy and theft against Ellsherg were dismiss*-*! by Judge Matt B y rn e in M ay alt*-i a four month trial when the burglary was dis* Ins cr] By i ne cited gross gov«-r rnnerit nu v on dsj* t arid od Ellsherg s right to a lair trial had berri prejudieed In taking testimony about the burglary, Mi*- grand jury heard from 29 witnesses in J un* and Ju ly The panel was recessed during August E H K L K U M A N , who testified in th*- se* ret hearings has publicly admitted he knew of Iii*- plumb*-rs investigative team and approved its formation hut said ii*- dido I know about th*- break in until after it o* c u m *■ and drops many students are having their ll) made Students arc given a form to fill out winch they must turn in to r* ( civ* then I I> Several categories of inform Ilion are included on th* .*• forms All info! mat ion gathered is lot I aiver a ly publication to be com piled in group figures not a individual' " W E D O V I KNOW your name and we don't care what it is Dr Margaret B e rry director of developmental program,' Office of the Vice-President for Student Affair explained [fie result lot Hr** total student body ar*' widely distributed We re trying to keep an ongoing profile of our total student body, sh** added 'I ti*' Department of Health, Education and Welfare (H E W » re quires information about parental income to determine the amount of federal aid the U niversity m ay receive It s too bad they ( H E W ) go at it that way We have so many indents veterans and mart ted students and we have to old* i give that information about flow much a father makes Ber i v said Dr Information about ethnic background:-, is also required by the gov*-!amental depaitmerit " A ’f O N E H M E, they dido I want it Now they do That s one way of knowing if then; is an increasing number of students Lorn other ethni* background1 ll it isn’t in - ieasing we must gel out and tferm i Dr B e rry explained A profile is made by ex and classification forms go dire* fly to a - (imputer arc put on tape and the data is retrieved separately from students names Duly items such a , address and distance Lorn campus are kept on record with a student s ideo Id eatio n lh* Some students don t Ilk*- to give tfir-1r addresses hut they're important for our information A lew years ago we got har k half of our graduation mal Louts because of address changes and [it cr egis! t ation I ii Ber r . aid "T h e information we have is not very valuable if students they dont know then tall addresses in the* prtng register then she added G R A D E S F E E A D J U S I M E N I S and d e p a r tm e n t a l notifications also depend on these lists Sin- *• most students [lick up ID' this time wa chosen for obtaining the information This v a l a ,felloe was added to the survey dealing with opinions on the mandator v fee winch include-- support of The Dai Iv 'I exan shuttle bus Student Government Senior Cabinet and the Student Health ( ’enter Student* may indicate whether these fees should be optional or mandatory There is also ah area conc * Hung current optional b es, such as the blanket tax Cultural Entertainm ent Committee and ( actus to how these ices where student - an indir de their prefer en* e ,i should tx- handled Dr Spun wanted the opinion information because there was o much contr over y last year over lees This way w* ll have a th*- student body also by sex and p ro file opinion of < las a 11< at ion I a Ber r v said Barron Out on Bond, Awaits Trial By C A R O L B A R N E S Texan Staff W riter W illiam R Barron, pubic relations director of tti*- Texas An Control B o a r d accused iii an alleged $125,(XX) extortion plot against stat** and federal air pollution officials, was released on $35,000 bond Sunday, Charles R ichard) Barro n ’s at Lim ey said Monday Barron was charged Thursday before C S Commissioner Philip Sanders with using the m ails in an attempt to extort $50,OIH) Lorn Arthur Busch regional ad mini sire tor of the Environm ental Brot*-* tion Agency, and $25,000 from ( ad K W illiam s, [ii evident ol 'I exas State Bank iii Austin, iii M atch 1972 In Herbert M cK ee of Houston chan man of Hi*- A h Control Board, also reportedly received $50,000 citer asking for Fletcher Barron of Houston said K l * hard! I he demand for the money was made in identically typewritten letters re* roved fly Bu f Ii and VI* K *r * hi Aug I Il e lino ha been suspended L o r n his $12,(MX) a e.n slate job awaiting outcom i of the extortion charge Hi- hards added The letter writer allegedly threatened to ruin reputations try detailing official mr. conduct bv the an hoard and regional E R A if the money was not paid an < buds Associated I Bess sh ay reported Busch and M cKee who denied cf).ages of misconduct turned th© letters over lo [lost,ii author dies A postal inspector said Barron was ,(nested III W est A ll tin where all Au ,LII franker acting as a middleman had been instructed to leave the $50,(XKI payoll Barron was released to the custody ol his mother and stepfather, Mi and M is A prelirmn.il \ hearing to determ ine whether lh* .-* i* enough *■ idenoe to p ro sent tin c,ise to - gr ind jur y will be held at 9 30 in tin Federal Court Building before Sanders ! i id,i > i to Condition, of th* bond stipulate that Matron consult wiih medical personnel to determine whethei he is leady for Court ippear.in*-* [ ‘ main in I i vc County until lh' ti tai tnd keep in touch with the court M th* request of Barron jiffs conli retie* w ill be beld said fa m ily, no Hichards UT To Offer 3 New Courses B> BILL GARLAND Texan S t a t f Wr i t er taught. Courses in voga. the philosophy and techniques of restoring buildings and physical education in elementary schools will be offered at the I'niversitv tor the first time this fall Yoga theory and practice will be taught in the School of General and Comparative Studies “ Kundalini Yoga—The Yoga of \wariness James Bien, is being sponsored by Dr professor of psychology and will be taught by Ojas Singh. The course is an upper division, undergraduate class for three semester hours credit on a pass-fail basis Awtar Singh, who will assist the teacher, said the class with be taught from 3 to 4 30 p m Tuesdays and Thursdays in Home Economics Building 113 Singh, a yoga student from New York, said yoga can teach self discipline, concentration self-relaxation and peace of mind Cultural and historical aspects of yoga will also be The class is a beginners’ course and will be l'mited to 30 students, Singh said Two textbooks are required and may be purchased through the instructor The only prerequisite for adding the yoga course is permis­ sion from the instructor or sponsor. Further information may be obtained from Bieri at 471-3393 or the Yoga Center, 3406 Guadalupe St., 452-0813. A three-hour seminar course on the philosophy and techniques of restoring buildings of the past will be called American Studies 372, ‘'Principles of Historical Restoration,’’ It will meet from 10:30 a rn to 12:30 p m. Wayne Bell, visiting associate professor of architecture and American Studies, will teach the course. The course will include field trips to potential sites ot historic restoration as well as completed sites. For more informaion on the course, students may get in touch with W illiam Stott, the undergraduate adviser in American Studies "Physical Education in Elementary Schools,” a new course designed primarily for elementary education majors, is being offered through the Extension Division evening cla sses program. The three-hour course w ill include a d iscu ssion of physiological and other scientific bases for physical fitness, motor .skills and physical performances as well as activities for developing physical adequacy in children. The course, Physical Education 350E, fulfills certain teacher certification requirements and will meet from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays and from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Registration for extension evening classes ends Wednesday in the Joe C. Thompson Conference Center with late registration continuing through Sept. ll. I l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l 1111 t i t 1111111 l l 11111111 II l l 11111 l l III 1111111111 III 1111 III I i i i i i 1 1 |||« 11 i m | m u 11 | | | i | | | | | « | ..............11111 l l 1111 III 111 i i i 111111111111111 l l 11111 l l 111111111 l l 111 l l 1111 t i l l 111 l l I t 1111111 l l 111111* 1111............1............. 111111111111111111 l l 1111111111111111111111111111 l l 111 l l l l 1111 l l 111 I > I IU II l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l « * l l l l l l i CLARK G A B L E - NAILED TO THE WALL W e took a s n a p sh o t of Clark a n d m a d e a 2 x 3' poster a n d nailed it to the wall. You (or a friend) can be nailed to a wall, too. Just bring a n y favorite picture to one of the locations below. O n l y $4 95 a n d extra fast service. GET THE PICTURE? • A n y of the Six Pants South Locations • The S h o p of John S i m m o n s in H i g h l a n d Ma ll . I L c im o n d BRIDAL S E T S S T Y L E D FOR cKow JOE KOEN & SON since 1888... Jewelers “ W h e r e A u s t i n i t e s S h o p w i t h C o n f i d e n c e ” 611 C ongress A ve. mutilation! enlarged to thou detail Gainesville 8 Acquitted 2 A ustin M e n A m o n g Trial Defendants G A IN E S V IL L E , Fla. (A P )- T h e federal conspiracy trial of eight antiwar activists, in­ cluding two men from Austin, came to an end Friday when a seven-woman, five-man jury acquitted the defendants. John Kniffin, of Austin, one of the defen­ dants, said after the trial that the group has incurred "a t least $40,000 in debts” for travel and legal expenses during the five- week trial. William J. Patterson, also of Austin, was another defendant in the trial. Seven of the eight defendants, all members of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) , were accused of plotting violence during last year’s Republican national con­ vention at Miami Beach The eighth defendant, Stanley J. Michelsen, was charged with not reporting the alleged plot. The defense claimed governm ent in­ formers who infiltrated the VVAW initiated talk of violence but attributed it to defendants in trial testimony. Seven federal and state informers were among the 27 prosecution witnesses. The informers testified that the defendants plotted to use guns, homemade bombs and slingshots to disrupt the convention. Government witnesses also testified that other defendants talked of using hand grenades and other explosives in the Greater Miami area during the convention Cult Author Dies at 81 L O N D O N ( A P ) —J R R Tolkien, a retiring scholar who became the unwilling ob­ ject of a literary cult because of his novel "Lord of the Rings,” died Sunday at the age of 81, his publisher an­ nounced. f r i e n d s T O L K I E N WAS s a i d to have fallen ill while stay­ in g w i t h at Bournemouth, a resort on the southern British coast. A spokesman for the publisher, Allen and Unwin, said he un­ derstood the author died from the effects of a perforated ul­ cer. Prof. John Ronald Reuel Tolkien was a severe and solitary scholar, an Oxford don not a little annoyed by the hysterical success of "Lord of the Rings,” a trilogy publish­ ed in 1954-55. To his colleagues at Oxford, ne was a genius, an authority on Norse legend and the author of works on E a rly English In his own words, he was a “ persnickety old academic." To his youthful readers he was a literary superstar HIS BEST loved creations were the Hobbits, a dumpy, dogged folk in the Rings novels given to overeating and understatement, fond of fami­ ly trees and flat of foot. T h e i r her oi c s t r ug g l e against Sauron, lord of the magic rings, was translated into 14 languages and the wide readership propelled Tolkien into the public arena. "H e was irritated by the e x ­ g r u e s o m e m o r e t r a v a g a n c e s , ” a f ri end related, "like when he was rung up in the middle of the night by an American who T E X A S A D D IN G M ACH IN E & TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE I 708 San Jacinto-454-3591 - 472-3233 TYPEWRITER, -manual- from ........................ Si 5.00 up -electric- from......................................... $30.00 up ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS......................... 25.00 up ELECTRONIC PRINTER ................................... 65.95 up RENTALS I B M. TYPEWRITERS.................................... 22.00 Mo. ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS-display ....... 18 OO Mo. ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS-printer........... 28.50 Mo. PORTABLE ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER..............17.00 Mo. Manual TYPEWRITERS................................. 10.00 Mo. ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR DISPLAY SPECIAL PRICES1 39.50 SO ROOT RECIPROCAL MEMORY PERCENT KEY SO X2 POWERS Only 2 blocks from Jester-Center Halls thought it was the middle of the day, who asked if there was a connection between his cult and the drug cult.” "IT HAS no allegorical in­ tentions,” Tolkien rasped to inquirers. "Hobbits are just what I should like to have been, but never was—an en­ tirely unmilitary people who always come up to scratch in a clinch.” But the cult went on, par­ ticularly on college campuses. Perhaps typical was the letter of a young American who con­ cluded "One day I shall cor­ ner you on a remote little star, and we shall talk.” To avoid the adulation, Tolkien fled Oxford. In 1959 he moved to a country hideout known only to his immediate fam ily and a few friends. There he began work on the "Silm arillion,” which he call­ ed a "prequel” to the Rings EARLY IN 1972, a few months after the death of his wife, Tolkien returned to Ox­ ford to take up honorary residence He never had time to finish the "Silm arillion.” Born Jan 3, 1892, Tolkien lived in South Africa until his fragile health forced the fami­ ly to return to Britain three years later, to the country town of Sarehol e in the Midlands. Orphaned at the age of 12, leave forced he was Sarehold for a succession of dreary suburban lodgings to " I t was the discovery of language,” he once said, "that warmed a solitary, scared adolescence.” C o-O p C a m e r a S h o p KODACOLOR SPECIAL Any Roll of Kodacolor Film (Up to 12 Exposures) Developed and Printed for $2.59 (with coupon) COUPON F O X P H O T O S I L K - F I N IS H K O D A C O L O R S P E C IA L ANY KODACOLOR ROLL UP TO 12 EXPOSURES D E V E L O P E D A N D COUPON M UST ACCOMPANY ORDER ( ---- E x c lu d in g I IO & fo r e ig n film Offer is G o o d Until Sept. 8 University C o -O p CAMERA SHOP Second Floor O n e hour free p a r k in g w ith p u rch ase of $2 or m ore B a n k A m e ric a rd & M a s t e r C h a r g e w e lco m e The real issue in this race is whether or not you, the voter, should sign a Hardin North contract. A s you might expect, we believe the answ er is clear. A nd in your heart, you know we're right. ,r. atter all the rhetoric and speeches are over, you ast examine your conscience and then decide Stand up and be counted at H ard in North. 801 W. 24th Street, in the middle of the student n e ig h b o r ly ould you rather spend the semester in a beautiful lartment close to campus or spend it running out of is or getting claustrophobia in a dorm room Would iu rather have the freedom of an apartment and the mvenience of a dorm or something less7 Pd for by W o m e n for Hardin, Betsy R oss, C h a m p e r s HARDIN* NORTH 47G-75-6 801 W e st 24th Street P a g e 2 Tu e sd a y, S e p t e m b e r 4, 1973 THU D A ILY T EX A N RUM OR 1 SM U Heads Issue O w n Paper Reaction of Daily Campus Staff Said 'G u a rd e d ' mation reports,” an SMU of­ ficial said Monday. T h e n e w s p a p e r , S M U Now, will begin publication Tuesday and will be dis­ t r i b u t e d on M o n d a y s thereafter, Joe Sherman, in­ formation services director and temporary editor of the newspaper, said. The student newspaper. The Daily Cam­ pus, is published Tuesday through Friday. Sherman said the four-page paper will print the texts of major speeches and reports “ that have no way of being printed in The Daily Cam­ pus.” “ WE FEEL this is The New York Tim es approach to reporting,” he said. H o w e v e r , he said the n e w s p a p e r w o u l d be somewhat limited because of C a m p u s N e w s in Brief STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE on INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS is taking applications for membership Applications and further information are available at the Texas Union information desk and the Bell mont Hall ticket office TEXAS FORENSIC UNION, an inter collegiate debate society open to all un dergraduat.es will hold an organizational meeting at 7 p rn Tuesday in Speech Building 301 the four pages of space available. “ Obviously, we’re going to have to pick and choose on what we report " The publication will be fund­ ed through his information department. Sherman said, and he estimated the cost per issue at about $500 “THE REACTION by the student newspaper has been somewhat mixed,” he said. They feel it may be a com­ petitor.” Mike Cranberry, editor of The Daily Campus, agreed that the staff s reaction was somewhat guarded “ T r a d i t i o n a l Iv, w e ’ ve offered this information.” he t h a t s a i d . “ I ’ m s u r e everything printed in SM U Now will be printed in The Daily Campus during the first week.” he said Even so, he emphasized that he didn’t want to start a dialogue with the other paper. “ We don’t want to get into a 'War with them.” G R A N B E R R Y said the reaction of the SM U student body was “ typically blase, although student body presi­ dent H W. Perry was pretty upset about the funding of the project.” The new paper was original­ ly the idea of SMU President Dr Paul Hardin. Cranberry said “ Hardin and The Dail y Campus were divided last year over the coverage of some events,” he added. He cited as an example, when The Daily Campus broke a story concerning reported discord on the SM U basketball team that “ Hardin declared a moratorium on sports repor­ ting and ordered members of the athletic department and administrators not to talk to reporters.” HE SAID the administra­ tion had also offered to buy a full-page advertisement in the student newspaper last year for administration news, but the newspaper turned them down “ I feel this is a sort of a comeback to that,” he said. TYPEWRITING BY ELECTRONICS EXTENSION TYPEWRITING COURSES N O W R E G I S T E R I N G S T U D E N T S F O R BEGINNING TYPEWRITING Fo r Beginners: OAX 201a (8 a.m. & 6 p m ) For Skill Development: OAX 201b (2 p.m. & 7 p.rn ) F I F T E E N C LA SS S E S S IO N S $17 C L A S S E S B E G IN S E P T E M B E R IO Not Necessary to Be a UT Student to Enroll FO R IN FO R M A T IO N C A L L 471-7335 Extension Teaching and Field Service Bureau 18th and Sabine Streets The University of Texas at Austin By JOHN GANDY Texan Staff Writer A new weekly newspaper published by the Southern M ethodist U n iv e rsity ad­ ministration will not compete with the student newspaper and will ‘‘primarily provide a medium for additional infor- N o Shortage O f G asoline O v e r H olid a y Although some Austin ser­ vice stations closed Monday for the holiday, all open stations apparently had plenty of gasoline to handle the traf­ fic. “ There is no gas shortage here,’’ said an attendant at Chevy Chase Gulf on north IR 35. Other station managers agreed and reported things “ going smoothly.” Herb Edmonson at Herb’s Shell on south IH 35 said he was having no problems this month, although “ last month I had to close one day a week ” A station manager at Town Lake Gulf said he has had no problem getting gasoline since May. “ Then we had to close at IO p.m. instead of staying open 24 hours as usual,” he said The As s o c i a t ed P r e s s reported healthy gasoline con­ ditions around the country for holiday travelers even though some r e t a i l er s in P e n n ­ sylvania closed to protest Phase 4 price ceilings which will take effect Friday. STUDENTS! 2 bvdr 2 bath with I (R E P L A C E Shag rarpvting built in bookcases huge walk in closets panelling deluxe kitchen On shuttle bus Close to Highland Mall IM 35 I-rom *239 A LL B IL E S PA ID 909 Kemli 454 9863 Spanish T J i l l a nortl By JANIE PALESCHIC Texan Staff Writer After his return to Austin from a summer stint with The Houston Post, someone asked former Texan editor David Powell about his plans for the future. P o w e ll said, “ T h e re ’s nothing left to do in Austin but play politics.” Austin is c e rta in ly the perfect playground for people whose lives are interwoven with politics, but politics by its very nature is hard to report accurately. POLITICAL INFORMA­ TION is hard for the reporter to come by because the source will not talk, talks off the record or talks out of the side Of his mouth “ R u m o r” w ill focus on speculation, innuendo and, of course, rumor, because this in fo rm atio n u n attrib u ted from reliable sources is as much a part of politics as the daily press conferences in the Speaker’s Committee Room. ★ ★ ★ Speculations run that City Councilman Dan Love will resign but has been urged to wait until a time when the election to name his successor can be held while the Univer­ sity population is out of town ★ ★ ★ j o u r n a l i s m s e a t vacated by Steve Underwood on th e T e x a s S t u d e n t Publications (TSP) Operating Board of Trustees should be up Underw ood’s vote swung many issues so interested fac­ tions are worrying about fin­ ding a candidate. g r a b s soon T h e fo r Although the T SP Board ap­ points the position, it will rely heavily on a preference poll jo u rn a lism taken among majors. One would expect the race to be hotly contested, but so far no one has stepped forward as a definite can­ didate. B ill B r ay , an ex-Texan s t a f f e r and unsuccessful editorial candidate, is said to be seriously thinking about the seat. S P E C U L A T IO N is that B ra y ’s vote would often align with Texan Editor Michael L a k i n , s o m e t h i n g t ha t Underwood s vote rarely did But then Bray is a politician in his own right and likely to do as he pleases. Student Government Vice- President Cappy M cCarr has just entered the Department of Journalism to get his se­ cond degree. M cCarr is un­ sure about reaction to his can­ didacy for TSP, and there is some question about his qualifications which must be certified by the chairman of the department. Other names being tossed around include Texan general reporter Alison Smith, ex- Texan staffer and former Stu- d e n t G o v e r n m e n t a d ­ m inistrative assistant B ill Mint/, and Powell Powell says that he definite­ ly w i l l not run, and he probably should be believed. Mintz also claims he will not run, but it is hard to imagine him staying away from it altogether. MINTZ RECENTLY resign­ ed his Student Government post, saying he needed to become a student again He has not completed a course since the fall semester, 1972 Larry Rubenstein, a third year law student, has replac­ like ed Mintz Mintz, was active in the University Reform Coalition, Ftubenstein, the group that worked to elect Sandy K r es s as Student Government president. ★ ★ ★ Dan Rather, C BS White House correspondent, called Regent Frank Erw in a couple of weeks ago to see if he knew anything about John Connally taking Spiro Agnew’s place if the Vice-President was forced to resign Erwin, a Connally crony from way back, had not heard anything and began calling all over town trying to find out something. ★ ★ ★ Apparently Gov. Dolph Briscoe’s introduction to the Chicken Ranch brothel at La Grange was brought about by the recent flap raised by a Houston reporter that ul­ timately closed the house. Atty. Gen John Hill was in Tyler about a week before the shutdown when he was called back to Austin by Briscoe. Brisco e asked H ill into the governor's office and said, “ What is this I hear about a brothel down at La Grange?” ★ ★ ★ State Rep Neil Caldwell, D- Angleton. may be announcing his candidacy for speaker within the next couple weeks. His legislative colleagues say he has done a respectable job as c h a i r m a n of the ap­ propriations committee and that the liberal representative will win if he runs. Despite stories to the con­ trary, State Rep Larry Bales of Austin is still considering the possibility of running against U.S. Rep. J . J . “ J ake” Pickle And then there are those who say that P ick le w ill resign and support Mayor Roy Butler in the race for Pickle’s House seat Architect Begins Duties Roy E . Graham, a member of the architecture and plan­ ning faculty at the University, will begin duties Tuesday as resident architect for the Colonial Williamsburg Foun­ dation He w i l l d i r e c t the departments of architecture and engineering, architec­ tural research and records and landscape architecture A native of Loui si ana. G r a h a m r e c e i v e d his b a c h e l o r ' s d eg r e e from Louisiana State University in 1960 and his master s degree the U n i v e r s i t y of f rom Virginia in 1968 He has com­ pleted his residence course work for a PhD at the Univer­ sity. In 1972 Graham conducted an architectural survey of the Mexican border town of identify struc­ Guerrero to interest tures of historical The s u r v e y wi l l aid in designating the former Texas frontier settlement as an historical site He is a member of the A m e r i c a n I n s t i t u t e of Architects, the Society of Architectural Historians, the for State and Association L o c a l H i s t o r v and the Association of Preservation Technology. D u r i n g l a s t t wo t h e summers, Graham was pro­ j e c t s u p e r v i s o r for the Historic American Buildings Survey project of the Depart­ ment of the Interior He has taught a variety of courses at the University since joining the faculty in 1968 mixed voices mixed repertoire Looking fo r one hour of c re d it to fill out yo u r schedule? Jo in UNIVERSITY CHORUS fo r p e o p le w h o lik e to sing straight hard work and fun rehearsals M & VV 6:30 8:00 p.m. U n i q u e no. 4 6 5 3 0 E NS . 2 0 9 A for m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n call 4 7 1 - 1 9 5 1 or 4 6 5 - 9 5 7 4 132 HOMEMAKER DECORATOR SET • 4 Complete Sets ie One IRONSTONE DINNERWARE Complete Service tor Eight Q U A N T I T I E S \ L I M I T E D ' lE Z E O E IX n i 50 PC STAINLESS TABLEWARE is Tusrootis Shoes for the hard- wo rk in' g ir l. Saddle- stitched, b ro w n cush 'n crepe thick soles. Lac e 'em up and get on the job! construction leath er uppers, 20.00 In ffliiL iir ■HBJUkAMK- mum rmmTiHi irm#’ deep Iptwted potter a w m h u m s • N a tio n a l S ilv e r Co Ironstone D in n erw are • N a tio n a l S ilv e r Co S ta in le ss T ab lew a re • H azel A tla s G lassw are and S tirr e rs • R eg al Co lo r C ra fte d T eflon Co o kw a re QUAI IT T' VAL I Bf AUTY ai) rn one sensational 32 PC GLASSWARE I STIRRERS ■ m rutn ? QI COVCRfD SAUCfPAN i a i covim psAuciPkn Canvassing Cam pus' While you're scoping out the c a m p u s , c a r r y all y o u r necessary paraphernalia in this ro o m y, go od -lo ok in g canvas bag with a zip top opening. Comes in black, red, navy or beige with a r a c i n g s t r i p e d s h o u l d e r strap. Accessories On-the-Drag 2406 Guadalupe F o r a c h a n g e of pace- side-buckle a pair of skid-proof, cush h ea vy soles in same saddle-stitch and construction brown. 'n crepe 20.00 THE RING LEADERS WE SELL RINGS A R O U N D EVERYONE' P U G E P ’S □ C o n g res s at 8th! H ig h la n d M a ll Q P O BOX I AA 7 AUSTIN, TEXAS 76767 PHONE 512-472-2485 On-the-Drag and all over town Tuesday, September 4, 1973 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 A guest c o m m e n t The second w a r R> S te v e R u ssell A j u r y in G a i n e s v i l l e . F l a h a s h a n d e d P r e s i d e n t W a t e r g a t e s p o l i t i c a l r e p r e s s i o n c o r p s a n o t h e r d e f e a t S e v e n m e m b e r s o f V i e t n a m V e t e r a n s A g a i n s t t h e W a r a n d o n e s u p p o r t e r w e r e acc u s e d of c o n s p i r i n g to a t t a c k th e R e p u b l i c a n n a t i o n a l c o n v e n t i o n w i t h cro ssb o w s, w r i s t r o c k e t s l i n g s h o t s a n d c o n v e n t i o n w i t h f r i e d m a r b l e s I r o n i c a l l y , t h e s e c h a r g e s c a m e f r o m t h e N ix o n a d m i n i s t r a t i o n a t a t i m e w h e n th* P r e s i d e n t s d i r t y t r i c k s s q u a d h a d in t a c t a t t a c k e d t h e D e m o c r a t i c i n ­ It m u s t h a v e t a k e n h y p o c r i s y s t a c k e d on c y n i c i s m f o r th e N i x o n i t e s f i l t r a t o r s to q u e s t i o n t h e p a t r i o t i s m of V i e t n a m v e t e r a n s a n d r i g t h e 1972 e l e c t i o n s a t t h e s a m e t i m e ' T w o of t h e v i c t i m s of th i s c y n i c a l m a n i p u l a t i o n a r e f r o m A u s t i n l e t t e r s , b u g g e d o f f i c e s a n d p a id f o r g e d Rill P a t t e r s o n w a s t r o u b l e d bv w h a t he c a l l e d o u r g e n o c i d a l p o lic y t o w a r d s V i e t n a m e s e c i v i l i a n s J o h n K n if f in o n c e to ld m e t h a t t h e l o n g e r he p a r t i c i p a t e d in t h e w a r t h e m o r e r e s p e c t h e a c q u i r e d fo r th*- o t h e r s id e , t h e N a t i o n a l L i b e r a t i o n F r o n t T h e r e t u r n e d v e t e r a n s fou n d the ir p r i v a t e w a r s j u s t b e g i n ­ n in g . w a r s a g a i n s t t h e i r o w n a c t i o n s a n d a n a ti o n g o n e in s a n e S p e a k i n g t h e c ons ci ence B e i n g a n \ i r F o r c e v e t e r a n . I n e v e r h a d to u n d e r s t a n d w h y B ill a n d J o h n b e c , o n e r e g u l a r f i x t u r e s a t all a n t i w a r a c t i o n s out in p u b l i c ,d e v e r y o p p o r t u n i t y d e d i c a t e d e v e r v s p a r e m o m e n t local a n d n a t i o n a l . I h e y s p o k e th e y w r o t e to t h e i r r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , t h e y to e n d i n g th e n i g h t m a r e t h a t t h o s e of u s w i t h o u t t h e s e n s e o r t h e c o u r a g e t o r e s i s t h a d c r e a t e d A PF. M E < W D H ) A T E w a s e l e c t e d in 19114. a n d a g a i n in 19BB. but st il l th e d e a t h m a c h i n e s s w a r m e d o v e r I n d o c h i n a , in c lu d in g ‘n e u t r a l L a o s a n d ( a m - In 1972 V \ AW p l a n n e d e a r l y to a t t e n d bo th p a r t y c o n v e n t i o n s - i n s i d e b o d i i to p l e a d o n c e m o r e f o r a n e n d to t h e l o n g e s t if p o s s i b l e , o u t s i d e if n e c e s s a r y w a r in A m e l ic a n b i s t e r y S u m m e r of 72 l e t t u c e b o y c o t t , so c o m m i t t e e m e e t i n g u n io n m e m b e r h u n s I, of c o u r s e w a n te r R I M O R S H A D IT lie c o m m u n i t y to h a r d to b e l i e v e a t th t a k e n s e r i o u s l y Hi v i o l e n t . s o a s not to t r o u b l e , it s h o u l d a a lie oing t< I h a d inst .s t a r te d law s c h o o l a n d w a s u p to m y e a r s in t h e w a s out of th e q u e s t i o n . B ut a f t e r b o y c o t t ,i six p a c k o v e r to J o h n s h o u s e . K niffin* a s u p p o r t e r of t h e E n d e d F a r m W o r k e r s a n d o M i a m i >uld ta k e a s t r o n g . I w df. is to h e a l all a b o u t V V A W ’s p l a n s fo r M i a m i h a t th*' (T A w a s r e c r u i t i n g g oo n s q u a d s in t h e C u b a n ex- s p o n t a n e o u s l y ’ a t t a c k a n t i w a r d e m o n s t r a t o r s . I fo u n d it ie t i m e , b u t J o h n w a s c o n v i n c e d t h a t s u c h s t o r i e s s h o u l d b e s c o n c e r n wats to k e e p t h e d e m o n s t r a t i o n s c l e a r l y n o n ­ r u n a f o ul of th e N ix o n p r o p a g a n d a m a c h i n e If t h e r e w a s o i n c f r o m t h e o t h e r s i d e . O n e h a r d d e c i s i o n c o n f r o n t i n g m u c h r e s p o n s i b i l i t y t h e v e t s s h o u l d t a k e f o r k e e p i n g o t h e r VV AW d e m o n s t r a t o r s n o n v i o l e n t . w a s h ow s t r a t In t h i s c o n t e x t t h e G a i n e s v i l l e i n d i c t m e n t s w e r e a K a f k a e s q u e n i g h t m a r e T h o s e w h o o p p o s e tin b o m b i n g , th*' g o v e r n m e n t s a i d , a r e b o m b e r s . T h e non f o r h o w c o u ld t h e s e d e c o r a t e d c o m b a t v i o l e n t v e t s w e r e h e ld u p t o b e k i l l e r s v e t e r a n s a r g u e t h a t t h e y h a d s c r u p l e s I t h e H a r r i s b u r g c a s e p r i e s t s , n u n s a n d K w a s t h e n a d i r fit r e p r e s s i v e a b s u r d i t y w e r e in f o r a n e w s e r i e s T h e m o s t f r i g h t e n i n g a s p e c t o f t h e H a r r i s b u r g a n d G a i n e s v i l l e c a s e s w a s t h i s : i b o u t k i l l i n g 1’ T h o s e of us w h o t h o u g h t s c h o l a r s p l o t t i n g to k i d n a p H e n r y t h e of s h o c k s . if it c o u ld h a p p e n to t h o s e p e o p l e , it c o u ld h a p p e n to a n y b o d y . M i s s i o n a c c o m p l i s h e d T H E G O V E R N M E N T w a s o u t to d e s t r o y th e e f f e c t i v e n e s s of a n y o n e w h o d a r e d o p p o s e it. f r o m G e o r g e M c G o v e r n to a n y o n e e l s e i n c a p a b l e o f s e e i n g t h e s l a u g h t e r in I n d o c h i n a a s a c r u s a d e f o r j u s t i c e . T h e s a d d e s t p a r t ot it w o r k e d . V V AW s p r i m a r y m i s s i o n b e c a m e d e f e n s e of th e G a i n e s v i l l e F i g h t B ill a n d J o h n b e c a m e p r o f e s s i o n a l d e f e n d a n t s , s p e a k i n g to s y m p a t h e t i c g r o u p s a n d t h i s g o v e r n m e n t a l l a w l e s s n e s s t h a t is t h e hat W A V Y c h a p t e r s a r o u n d p a s s i n g t h e i r m o r e th o s e w h o d i d n t w a n t to b e a s s o c i a t e d w ith v i o l e n t p l o t s . m o d e r a t e m e m b e r s An oi g a n i z a t i o n w e l l on it-, w a y to b e c o m i n g t h e v o i c e o f t h e n e w v e t e r a n w a s s u d d e n l y p a r i o f t h e l u n a t i c f r i n g e . th e c o u n t r y lo s t r e v e r s e d H A S W A T E R G A T E flu p r o c e s s ' ' o r g a n i z a t i o n f o r v e t s w h o c a n ’t s t o m a c h t h e po a n d A T W ? D o w e w a n t t h a n k s to t h o u s a n d d e d i c a t e d law v e r s m a d i l l o W o r l d Hen t i c s of t h e A m e r i c a n L e g io n T h e s e a r e q u e s t i o n s f o r t h e f u t u r e . R i g h t n o w , i r t e r s a r o u n d t h e c o u n t r y , t h a n k s to a g r o u p of o t h e A u s ti n F e d e r a t i o n of M u s i c i a n s a n d Ar- a n d m a n y o t h e r s w h o g a v e m o n e y a n d t a l e n t a n d to ? u p p t h a n k s I q u a r t e r s r e b u i l d a s a n C a n V V A W o t i m e , a n d t h a n k s t s p i r a c y w a s . B ill P a t t e r s o n a ni a n a n o n ’ m o u s F l o r i d a j u r y t h a t s a w w h e r e t h e r e a l c o n - John K n if f in a r e a g a i n c o m i n g h o m e f r o m t h e w a r T h is t i m e . m a v th e y find p e a c e S t e v e R u s s e l l is u s e c o n d y e a r law s t u d e n t Paying the price T h e U. p o l i t i c a l J u s t i c e l i s s e n t e r D e p a r t m e n t h a s a long h i s t o r y of i l l e g i t i m a t e p r o s e c u t i o n of s a n d a c t i v i s t s . A lth o u g h t h i s p o l i c y h a s s e l d o m r e s u l t e d in t h e co n i p o l i t i c a l a c t i o n of e n e r g y fr th e a c c u s e d , it d o e s a c h i e v e i t s i n t e n d e d e f f e c t — t o d i v e r t n m its p r i m a r y t a r g e t . w ^ , T H E T R t ’H N T Q l ® IS T O T H R E A T E N th e s u r v i v a l of p o li ti c a l m o v e m e n t f i g u r e s W h e n t h e s e m e n a r e a c c u s e d w i t h a c r i m e , t h r e a t e n e d w i t h i m p r i s o n ­ m e n t a n d t r a p p e d in th e w h e e l s of j u s t i c e , u n til p r o v e d i n n o c e n t , t h e i r p o l i t i c a l a c t i v i s m a n d th a t of t h e i r s u p p o r t e r s m u s t c h a n g e d i r e c t i o n s . T h e y m u s t c o n ­ c e n t r a t e on th e l e g a l .m d f i n a n c i a l m e a n s to p r o v e t h e i r i n n o c e n c e T H E E F F E C T S WILL R E M A I N w ith t h e m fo r a lo ng t i m e to c o m e . T h e t r i a l c o s t th e d e f e n d a n t s $150,000 J o h n K n iff in of A u s t i n , o n e of t h e e i g h t , s a i d , “ W e ’r e at le a s t $40,000 in d e b t . ” I T h e J u s t i c e D e p a r t m e n t will no t p a y th a t d e b t It m u s t b e p a id bv t h e e ig h t fix c o n t r i b u t o r s T h e t i m e a n d e n e r g y u s e d to t h e s e n e e d l e s s le g a l c o s t s c o u ld h a v e s i g n i f i c a n t l y r a i s e d p u b li c c o n - of th e c r i m i n a l i t v of A m e r i c a s m i l i t a r y a c t i o n s . T h a t is e x a c t l y a c c u s e d m e n , by V VA W or pay s c i o u s n e w h a t t h e led to siof) a n d it s p e n t a lot of m o n e y to d o so. *n m en t K M Oregon's w a r on waste By Robert Rodale (c ) 1973 The Chicago Tribune World R ights R eserv ed. It s been a lm o st a y e a r since O reg o n ’s bottle law —a pioneering e ff o rt a im e d a t reducing litte r and co nserv in g en erg y and r e s o u r c e s —w ent into effect. Most of the c o n ta in e r and b e v e ra g e in du strie s hav e spe nt their tim e hoping for a g ran d fiasco; m o s t en v ir o n m e n ta lists ha v e k ept th eir fin gers cro ssed hoping for success. l e g i s l a t i o n . NOW T H E res u lts a p p e a r to be in, with im plications for th e e n tire food industry and its “ th r o w a w a y ” philosophy. A ccor­ ding to Rich C h a m b e rs , a S alem , Ore., e n ­ v iro n m e n ta list who has been publicizing the law, they spell c l e a r victo ry for the O r e g o n e v e r y “ B y th a t of b e v e ra g e can c r i t e r i a —ex cept is a m a n u f a c t u r e r s — t h i s m e a s u r e s u c c e s s ,” says C h a m b e rs . “ Cans: down fro m 40 p e rc e n t of th e b e e r and soft drink m a r k e t to under 3 p e rc e n t B ottles. Ab­ solute d em ise of th r o w a w a y bottles. O v er­ in b e v e ra g e s : Up. L itte r: all business Down d ra m a ti c a ll y ” T H E LAW PR O H IB IT S snap-top ca n s and th ro w aw ay b o ttles and re q u ire s th a t 5- c e n t refunds be paid on all c a rb o n a te d b e v e ra g e c o n tain ers e x c e p t short-necked, 12-ounce be er bottles, which bring 2 cents. And although it took quite a bit of en ­ d u ra n c e on the p a r t of e n v ir o n m e n ta lis ts to bring the law into being, it se e m s to hav e been well w orth th e effo rt F ro m its beginning, the O regon legisla­ tion faced tough opposition fro m bottling and beve rag e in te rests. They w arn ed th a t p ric e s of be v e ra g e s would rise as a re s u lt of additional handling c o s t s - ignoring the fa c t th a t packaging co sts would drop to off-set increases. C o m p a riso n s have co n­ tinually shown th a t b e v e ra g e s cost less in r e tu rn a b le bottles. T H E Y T H R E A T E N E D th a t jobs in the b ev e ra g e and co n ta in e r industries would be jeopardized But th ey d id n ’t explain th a t the one-way bottling has allowed m o r e nationalization of m an u f a c tu r in g and has, itself, wiped out well over 11,000 jo b s in this a r e a W arehousing jobs and bottlehandling jobs would also tend to in­ c r e a s e with the n u m b e r of re tu rn ta b les. th e “ consistent with The b ottlers w ent to co urt, seeking to h a v e le g is la tio n o v e r t u r n e d B ut following two m o nths of testim o ny , Ju d g e Val D. Sloper found th a t the a c t w as in fact, the announced national policy of e n v iro n m e n ta l control and p ro te c tio n .” He concluded th at the judged by relev an t, legislation, “ when constitutional s ta n d a rd s , is valid in ev e ry r e s p e c t and should be, and hereby is, sustain ed by the co u rt ” T H E BOTTLERS also w arned th a t con­ th e s u m e r s s im p ly w ould n o t a c c e p t provisions of the law The s ta tistic s show otherw ise. th a t O reg on ian s have had th e ir consciousness raised to w ard o th e r fo r m s of litter Som e a r e a s have re p o rte d 75 p e rc e n t redu ctio ns since the e n a c t m e n t of the law In addition, it a p p e a rs But while O regonians h av e som ething to be proud of, w hat s happening in o th e r s t a te s ? Bills close to the Oregon legisla­ tion have been in troduced in close to ev e ry s t a te in the union. Most a r e stalled in c o m ­ m i tt e e s , som e hav e died YOU CAN H E L P . Find out w hat has been happening in your a r e a G et facts on r e tu rn a b le s v e rs u s nonretur- s ales of nables and p ric e c o m p a r is o n s F ind out w hat legislation has been introduced or is pending G a th e r in fo rm atio n on w hat the e f f e c t would be to if a O re g o n ’s w ere p assed in your a r e a F ind o th er individuals or groups who a r e w o rk ­ ing on this type of project and join th e m law s i m i l a r Without fail, w rite le t te r s and urge o th e r s to do the sa m e . The m o re your le gislators h e a r fro m th e i r c o n stitu en ts in favor of this ty pe of law, the m o re likely they will be to a c t to In tereste d And c e rtain ly use In 1969, a c c o r d i n g re tu rn a b le bottles t h e y o u r s e l f organization H o usew iv es rn P ollution Solutions, A m e ric a n c o n s u m e rs sp e n t $15 billion m o r e on th ro w aw ay co n ­ ta in e rs th an they would h ave had the s a m e product been p a ck ag ed in retu rn ab le s. And ta x p a y e rs spe nt a t le a s t a n o th e r $350 th e re sults D on’t to clea n up million be co m e a p a r t of th a t cy cle Jud ici al p ri vi l e g e El Flippo rides again By N icho las von H o f f m a n VS ASHINGTON .Jive J e r r y W arre n , the a ss ista n t p r e s s s e c r e ta r y , say s th a t P resi- E n t T r uthful won t apologize to the Ziggy Ron. be c a u se th e r e is nothing to apologize for But m illions of us saw E l F lippo on TV g ra b Ziegler by the a r m s , whirl him around, and with an expression on his face both frightening and frightful, shove him back down w h at a p p e a re d to be a r a m p in New O rleans. jokes. l e t s m a k e OKAY, T H E N , If Ziegler quits. Nixon won t have him to kick aro un d any m o re Or m ay b e Z ie g le r’s lob is to lend his p osterio r as a su b s titu te w h en eve r to bomb C am bodia the urge b eco m e s too painfully intense. it by But snide and snippy r e m a r k s aside, who c an fo rg e t the p ictu re of a P r e s id e n t so out of control of him self th a t he e x ­ p re s se s laying angry hands on a m e m b e r of his staff in public? P r e s id e n t T ru m a n w as given to occasio nal a c ts of in­ te m p e ra n c e . but nothing like this. If E l Flippo had pulled th a t as a p riv a te citizen he d risk g etting a re ta lia to ry punch in the snoot. NON E O F THIS is said to c on de m n him. G iv in g Ron Z ie g l e r a good sh o v e is probably so m eth in g th a t tw o-thirds of the White House p re s s co rp s has been aching to do for y e a rs P e r h a p s P re s id e n t Flippo did it by way of patch in g up his d iffere n c es with the media. In any event, we should be un derstan d in g. Being P r e s id e n t is a hard jo b , b u t being P r e s i d e n t N ixon is a crucifixion. it w ouldn't scandalize As an isolated a c t of t e m p e r we could too m a n y hop*' school children, but com ing a s it does ju st a f t e r tha t strange-looking m a n m a d e th a t W ate rg ate speech and righ t before his s p o o k y th e s t a g e p e r f o r m a n c e V eteran s of F o reig n W ars, a lot of people a r e beginning to w onder w h a t’s going on. So m an y people a r e wondering th a t Jiv e J e r r y had to tell us the o th e r day th a t the P r e s i d e n t w a s n ’t u n d e r m e d i c a t i o n becau se he d o e s n ’t need to be. f o r T H E N WHAT G IV E S? With his San C lem e nte p re s s c o n fe re n c e, the i m p r e s ­ sion is gaining th a t Nixon is becom ing dysfunctional, and the f e a r is growing th a t he m a y do som eth ing we ll be so rry for It could be th a t such th o ug hts a r e the m alicious child ren of the disgust and d is­ respect h e ’s co v ered him self with, but e verythin g he does and all he d o e sn ’t do s e t off t r e m o r s ol anxiety. As the fear of som e kind of p re s id e n tia l coup d ’e t a t ab ate s, o th e r to rebodings ta k e its place. In til*' this strong a c tiv is t p res id e n c y we d is c o v e r th a t a weak, un­ is ce rta in , holding dow n the job reclusive m an fifth y e a r of inconsistent, He m a y not have a nervous d iso rd e r, but h e ’s going to give the co un try one, a l t e r ­ nating b etw ee n m orbid isolation in his various White Houses and th e s e odd leaps into the public eye m a d e yet m o r e dis­ c o n c e r t i n g by u n e x p la i n e d r e p o r t s of a ss a ssin a tio n plots. The p ec u liar com ings, going and hib ern atio n s of the P re s id e n t, however, a r e a s nothing c o m p a r e d to the Agnew situation. IS H I S c r i n k l y - t o e d i n d o r s e m e n t of h is V i c e - P r e s i d e n t an o th e r dang le, dangle slowly, slowly nu m b er'' As we a r e un ac cu sto m ed to s e e ­ in onesided ing our P r e s i d e n t s en gag e B /9 7 J/W M b / f r f l TW. i n w p r s t h e m V iew ed shoving m a t c h e s with th eir staffs, so we a r e not yet used to our V ic e-P residen ts a t ­ t a c k i n g o u r a t t o r n e y s g e n e r a l f o r th e f r o m “ s m e a r i n g ’’ public’s side of the television tube, it looks as if this A dm inistra tion w e re blowing itself up, which m ig h t be a good idea if we could be sure they w on ’t take A m e ric a with them We have Spiro T. E g g p la n t reading s t a te m e n ts to the television saying he is innocent and has nothing to hide, although he n e v e r gives us any fa c ts or p a rtic u la rs about w h a te v e r it is he is suspected of b e ­ ing guilty of We hav e a ch eerin g section saying how m u ch b e tte r, bolder and m o r e honest he is than Nixon because he says h e ’s innocent s o m e w h a t m o r e stride ntly than the P r e s id e n t say s h e ’s innocent. We have Melvin Laird calling up m e m b e r s of C ongress and cau tion in g th e m not to m a k e any public c o m m e n t on the c a s e ; th a t is, let ’im dangle. We have the atto rn e y g e n e ra l and his B a ltim o re subordinate, w ho’s supposed to be running the c ase, m ak in g elliptical r e m a r k s tell us nothing. th a t WHAT’S GOIN G ON h e re ? The a i r is full of c h a rg e s th a t our V ice-P residen t is in fa c t the c h e a p e s t kind of crook, and t h a t ’s all we get? M u m ’s the word, shush, nobody say anything, let the g ran d ju r y do its work in p e a c e and se c r e c y , as though Agnew w e re an a n o ny m o us junkie being indicted for snitching a stereo. This is beyond all believing W h a t’s go­ ing to happen nex t? Does E lliot R ic h a r d ­ son indict him and let him sta y in office th rough m o n th s of m e s s y tria l? O r does he not indict him and th en ju s t le t the m a t t e r drop ? Well, m u c h ado about nothing, fo rg et it, fo rg et W a te rg a te and get back to w ork, inflation fighters. “ F O R M E TO TALK about it would be to tally u n a p p ro p r ia te and I m a k e no c o m ­ m e n t ...” quoth P r e s id e n t Truthful in his shak en and shak y p re s s co nferen ce voice, when he should have said that, in d ictm en t o r not, all the ev iden c e on Agnew would be s e n t to the House J u d i c ia ry C o m m it te e It is th e re th a t im p e a c h m e n t proceedings m u s t orig inate, and an op erativ e, leading P r e s id e n t would tell us th a t while it is the c o u r t s ’ duty in­ nocence, it is the C o n g re s s ’ duty to d e t e r ­ m in e fitness to con tinu e in office. to d e te r m i n e guilt or So it s us who a r e left dangling with the m o s t th e i m p o r t a n t q u e s t io n s a b o u t g o v e r n m e n t’s integrity u n answ ered , but on the o th er hand, think of w hat E l Flippo m ig h t have said The firing lin e SUN 's issue quality 1960’s sto ries on d o rm ito ry p an ty -raid s'’ The p ap er v e rg e s on the edge of p u re irrele vancy. tried, tr y in g through to be “ p r o p e r T H E T E X A N h as its ed ito rial page, it se e m s , to be re le v a n t to the needs of the m a jo rity of people not only on the U n iv e rs ity c a m p u s , but in Austin as a whole. But the junk that oozes from the r e s t of the p ap er is absurd and a im e d at the m e n ta lity of those G reek la s t w eek ru n n in g boobs we all s a w T h e a r o u n d ed itorial page still lacks a lot, though It s e e m s f o u n d e d l i b e r a l k n e e - j e r k in idealism , which su re ain t the w ay the w orld is, nor does it s e e m to be the way to go about trying to c hange it. The Dan Loves a r e v irtually ir re le v a n t to any kind of change. He and the o th e rs around h ere like him , a r e little fish in the sea and d o n ’t have m uch co ntrol over w h at h app ens to this cou ntry , or even this a r e a Why d o e s n ’t T he T exan find out w hat the m u l ti­ national c o rp o r a tio n s like Westinghouse, John R o b e rts and G lastro n a re up to? T hey, and co rp o r a tio n s th em , a r e w h e re the fate of this town hinges T he Dan Loves of th e world a r e flunkies. And the panty raid m e n ta lity of the re s t of the p a p e r is an insult to anyone with any sort of intelligence, e x c e p t m a y b e to The T e x ­ an staff like H E R E ’S H O PIN G you people a t The Texan a r e able to ge t your ac t cleaned up a little before the b an is h m e n t to oblivion is c o m pleted . Houston F. Poston, Jr. To the editor: On T uesday night, the Planning C o m ­ mission will con sider a re q u e s t for a zon­ ing ch an g e con cern ing the building a t the c o rn e r of 19th and Rio G ra n d e S tre e ts. M e m b e r s S a v e U n i v e r s i t y Neighborhoods (SUN) believe this zoning change it gran ted, would c re a t e a s i tu a ­ tion in which this historic home could be dem olished and replaced bv a high-rise stru c tu re. o f F o rm e rly known as Laos House, and H om estead Co-op,” the existing building was con structe d in 1898 by the Wooten fam ily, th*' Austin H e rita g e Society lists it as one of the city's historic hom es The r e ­ cent destruction of the Houghton House has m a d e SUN m e m b e r s a w a re th a t if historic buildings a re to be preserved we must constantly a p p e a r before those city co m m issions whose decisions d e te rm in e the future of such land m a rks. The c u r r e n t B-2 zoning p e rm its m u l ti­ fam ily, a p a r t m e n t dwellings and r e s t r i c t s the building height to 60 feet. The o w n e r’s re q u e s t for change to a “ h ig h e r” zoning, would allow the building to be used for offices and for c o m m e ric a l v e n t u r e s . B u t m o r e i m p o r t a n t l y , a “ higher zoning would allow' the building to be used for o ffices and for c o m m e rc i a l in height, to, in o th e r words, destroy this historic hom e and c o n s tru c t a “ D o b ie’ style high-rise. T u e s d a y n i g h t ’s p u b l i c h e a r i n g provides the re s id e n ts of the U niversity co m m u n ity with an exce llent forum to e x ­ p re s s the ir view on the re le v a n t issues this situation ra ise s zoning, neighborhood in­ te g rity and the p re s e rv a tio n of h istoric h om es The hea rin g will begin at 7:30 p .rn in the council c h a m b e r s of the Municipal Building, 8th and Colorado Streets. Jeff Jo n e s SUN O b liv io n bound To the editor: T hroughout the s u m m e r the editorial pag e of The Daily Texan has la m e n te d tim e and tim e ag ain th e crisis of the Big Thicket. The T ex an ac c u se d T im e-L ife of being the biggest culp rit in the whole s c a n ­ dal about the Big T hick et Those a c ­ cusations s ta te d th a t the Big T hic ket w as being cut for p a p e r pulp a t the r a t e of 50 a c r e s of ti m b e r la n d a day, and The Texan insinuated th a t it w as Tim e-Life th a t w as doing m o s t of the cutting IT S E E M S c o n tra d ic to ry , then, if The Daily T exan was so concerned abo ut 'h e ra p e of the Big Thicket, that The T exan would be a lot m o r e econ om ical and less w asteful at ho m e How can The Texan ration alize tilling up so m any pages of its p a p e r with p u re g a rb a g e that ree k s with the sm ell of the yellow jo u rn alism of the T h e D a i l y T e x a n S t u d e n t N • w t p a p m r a t T h # U n l v n r t l t y o f T o i t o i a t A u s t i n E D IT O R .......................................................................................................M ichael Eakin M A NAGING ED ITO R .........................................................................S tev e R enfrow ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R S John B ender, Suzanne Schw artz NEW S E D IT O R ..........................................................................................Jean n e J a n es SPO RTS ED ITO R ..................................................................................... Buck H arvey .......................................................................... B etsy Hail AM U SEM E N TS EDITO R ASSISTANT TO TH E E D IT O R .....................................................K enneth M cH am F E A T U R E S E D IT O R .............................................................................. G ayle R ea v es PHOTO E D IT O R ............................................................................................Phil Huber ISSUE S T A F F .......................................................... City E ditor R e p o r t e r s .......................................................................... .......................................................... News A ssistan ts C ontributors E ditorial A ssistant Assistant Sports E ditor Make up Editor Wire E ditor Copy E ditors P ho to g ra p h er David Hendricks BJ Hefner Mike N o rm an . Mark D o rse tt C arol B a rn e s, John Gandy, Linda Fannin Laurel L au ren tz Don M artin Bill G arlan d , K aren A lexander Connie L an h am Danny Robbins Mark Y e m m a Nancy Cripps Vicky Bowles, N o rm a Gleason, Linda C annaday, B ruce G reg g, David Rose .................................... J a y Miller th e n ew s la b o r a t o r y ' J o u r n a l i s m B u ild in g 102) I n h u m e s c o m e m i n g d e l iv e r y s h o u ld b e m a d e in J o u r n a lis m B u ild in g a n d c l a s s i f i e d a d v e r t i s i n g 107 in J o u r n a l i s m 471 .1227' B u ild in g 107 (471 5244 > T h e n a tio n a l a d v e r t i s i n g r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o f T he D a ily T e x a n is N a t io n a l E d u c a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e r v i c e ami L e x in g t o n A v e N e w Y o r k N Y 10017 In c T h e D a il y T e x a n s u b s c r i b e s t o T h e A s s o c i a t e d P r e s s , T h e N e w Y o r k T i m e s N e w s S e r v i c e a n d U n i t e d P r e s s In te r n a t io n a l T e le p h o t o S e r v i c e T h e T e x a n is a m e m b e r o f th e A s s o c i a t e d C o ll e g i a t e P r e s s t h e S o u th w e s t J o u r n a l i s m C o n g r e s s a n d th e T e x a s D a il y N e w s p a p e r A s s o c i a t io n W e w e r e j u s t k i d d i n g , F r ed! T he re' s n o such t h i n g as a f r e e z e on s a l a ri e s for c o n g r e s s m e n . . / P a g e 4 T u e s d a y , S e p t e m b e r 4, 1973 TH E DAILY TEXA N Letters to th e edi tor Firing Line letters should: •Be typed triple-spaced •Be 25 lines or less. The Texan reserves the right to edit letters for length. •Include nam e , address, and phone n um ber of contributor. O p in io n * e x p r e s s e d in T h e D a ily T e x ,in . n e t h o s e o f th e e d ito r or t h e w r it e r o f (h e a r t i c l e a n d -ire not n e c e s s a r i l y th o s e o f th e I r u v e r s i t y a d m i n i s t r a t i o n o r th e B o a r d o f R e g e n t s .it A u s t i n T in I i.n lv T e x a n a s tu d e n t n e w s p a p e r .ii T h e I n i v e r s it v o f T e x a s is p u b l i s h e d b y T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s D r a w e r D U n iv e r s i t y S ta t io n A u s tin . T e x a s /8712 is p u b lis h e d M o n d a y , T u e s d a y , W e d n e sd a y T h u r s d a y a n d F r id a y e x c e p t h o lid a y a n d e x a m p e r io d s A u g u st th r o u g h M a y S e c o n d ( l a s s p o s t a g e p a id at A u stin T e x The D a i l y T e x a n N e w s c o n t r i b u t i o n s w ill ta- a c c e p t e d by t e l e p h o n e 1471 a t th e e d i t o r i a l o f f i c e J o u r n a lis m B u ild in g 1 0 3 1 o r at 1401 The real culprits in the meat price hike By Sharon Shelton In recent months, angry consumers have been fed many “ explanations" for high meat prices by the meat in­ dustry and its apologists, the press and the government. Excuses like bad weather and natural catastrophes (which took place long after prices started to rise) have failed to impress most of the groups active in protesting the price of meat But there is one ex­ cuse that some people have been duped into accepting. Exports to other countries are being cited as responsible for the soaring price of meat. To hear them tell it, increased meat exports have affected the hallowed principle of supply and demand F i r s t of all, the notion of supply and demand has only limited application in today's market Production and dis­ tribution are highly cen­ tralized and concentrated into the hands of a relatively few corporations that anticipate the market and decide in ad­ vance what the prices will be The top executives of the supermarket chains, the large ranchers and the meat pack­ ing firms manipulate both supply and demand. For example, during the meat boycott, according to of D e p a r t m e n t the A g ricultu re, many of the ranchers withheld cattle from the market and many super­ markets curtailed their meat orders rather than sell at lower prices That this is a regular practice on the part of the ranchers to manipulate the market can be seen in what is called culling Culling occurs when prices are low, and it means separating for sale only the oldest cattle that cannot possibly be withheld from the market. When prices are high, younger and larger quantities of cattle are put up for sale. During the April boycott, even though demand was at its lowest, prices were barely If supply and de­ affected mand were indeed a deter­ mining factor behind meat prices, as industry would have shoppers believe, meat prices should have been at an alltime low But, of course, prices remained high NO REAL SHORTAGE Actually, there is no shor­ tage in the supply of meat. for m e at The p o te n tia l production in the United States has barely been tapped. This country has the acreage, the feed and the technology to produce untold amounts of meat for consumption, and, in fact, meat production has in­ creased in the past few years. At the same time, especially since the boycott, there has been a drop in demand foi meat due to the high prices A report issued to the cattle in dustry by the Department of is revealing 5 Agriculture percent more cattle are now- being fed for slaughter than a year ago. The report goes on to say that “ consumers re­ increase main reluctant to th eir m eat purchases to former levels." C e r t a i n l y , is nothing in the law of supply and demand to account for the astonishing price increase of farm products (livestock and crops) over the last year It was reported on May 31 by the government that farm prices had increased 33 percent in the year ending Mav 15. a rise t h e r e “ almost without precedent.” Yet, even if supply and de­ mand were freely operating on meat costs, meat exports to other countries are such a small portion of the whole that they only minutely affect the domestic supply. Leaving aside the fact that meat im- So/es per Employe The Ten Highest S A C K S H A N K N a tio n a l Beef Pat kin# 472 $428,931 257 291 759 American B ee f P ack e rs 133 289.567 Associated M ilk Producers 438 284.719 Needham Pa< king 107 282.888 Amerada Mess IU 280 140 Iowa Beef Processors 323 272.856 Spencer Koods M isso u ri Beef Pa c k e rs 306 263 775 204 201,929 Archer Daniels Midland I lark O il & Refining 409 177,937 Tables from Fortune magazine s ranking of the top 500 I I S industrials Meat packing is the most automated ports have always greatly sur­ passed exports, beef and veal exports for 1972 were at about the same level as in 1965, making up a mere 0.3 percent of all meat produced! In light of this, it seems ridiculous to blame high prices on meat ex­ ports to other countries. FOOD MONOPOLIES F o o d p r o d u c t io n h as become big business. Small farms and ranches have been starved out by huge corporate enterprises that are concen­ trated into the hands of a few industrial giants who set food prices and are making record profits. Many people do not realize that meat production has become so concentrated that, according to The New York Daily News, 7 percent of all ranchers produce 80 per­ cent of all the cattle for market. What's more, the big supermarkets handle 85 per­ cent of all the retail meat sold in the United States. And p r o fits are up for these large concerns. Accor­ ding to the Wall Street Jo u r­ nal, Sw ift, Quaker Oats, General Mills, International H a rv e s te r, Consolidated Foods and Pillsbury all show­ ed tremendous gains last year And these are only a few Not only are large interests replacing the small farms. ranches and stores that once produced and distributed this nation s food. There is another development in the food in­ dustry that is guaranteeing even greater fortunes. A writer for Nation magazine describes it as “ vertical in­ tegration.” “ Vertical integration has wiped out the neat distinctions that used to exist between cat­ tle raiser, meat packer and re ta ile r by consolidating many operations under one company roof ’’ An e x a m p l e of this is Krogers, which in its 1971 an­ nual report boasted. “ W e re getting it all together." In this case, getting it all together means owning and operating 1,500 markets, 430 drugstores, 40 f a m ily c e n t e r s , 150 d e lic a te s s e n s , 15 m e a t­ packing plants, a dairy farm, five milk and ice cream plants, four b a k e rie s, a sausage plant, a truck fleet, several regional warehouses and an Arkansas chicken- breeding farm and feed mill. This system has enormous advantages which include driving out the sm all in­ terests, cutting operating costs and providing tremen deus tax benefits W e s t e r n b e e f is another exam p le. Head- q u a r t e r e d it Sales per Dollar of Stockholders' Equity in T e x as, The Ten Highest -Spent-cr Kuods Am erican Beef I ’akee is National B ee f Pac king Iowa Beef Processors Missouri B e e f Packers Associated M ilk Producers LT V Needham Packing Hath Packing W ard F nods S A L E S R A N K 32.8 257 472 i l l 306 133 21 438 411 297 $46 >6 35 74 85 50 26 26 22 96 21 20 18 71 18 57 17 56 lo 88 in and most concentrated of all I S dustries purchases cattle through a subsidiary and feeds them on its own feed lots, which have a capacity of 173,000 animals After feeding, it uses its own company trucks to ship the beef to its own packing plants, where the beef is processed and shipped to supermarkets. tax W e s te rn B e e f has also begun to m anage c a ttle partnerships which run cattle through loopholes, an enorm ously advantageous process which qualifies any p a rtic ip a n t “ fa rm e r status.” Farm er status allows cash-basis bookkeeping where all expenses count as business deductions w h ile p ro fits return as capital gains for WALL ST RE E T SP R E A D S With such incentives, the banks have been getting in on In 1966, for example the act two W all Street bankers took over the Arizona-Colorado Land & Cattle Co. and bought or leased IO ranches in four states with a total area about twice the size of Rhode Island Not only does this company run about 40,000 head of ( at­ tle, it also owns the biggest commercial feed lot in all of California or Arizona, a meat p ack in g plant, two land m a n a g e m e n t co n su ltin g firms, a 94 percent interest in the Alamosa National Bank, a and h o u s i n g p r o j e c t Farmhands. (a major Inc manufacturer of feed lot and other ranching machinery.) c o n t e n d e r s Other big operators in the beef industry include such un- l i k e l y as G reyhound; Ling-Temco- Vought ( an a ircraft and d efense-contracting c o r­ poration i ; Atlantic-Richfield Oil. General Host Corpora­ tion Dupont. Glore, Forgan, Inc and the St. Louis-San Francisco Railroad It is to these large con­ glomerates that the hard­ earned dollars of shoppers go They conspire to keep prices (and profits') high at the same time that labor produc­ in­ in agriculture tivity c r e a s i n g by l e a p s and bounds which means that food should be cheaper than ever, since it requires so labor to much produce. less human is Sharon Shelton is an ex- Daily Texan staffer who is now a reporter for Worker's World in New York City, from which this article is reprinted r r r crossword puzzle A n sw e r to P uzzle N o 1 0 3 A P l N A I I I n S I s i s / A O I P T I c U J t A R n a J H c u A B s J B m M I N \ 8 A n H " q M A A R Y ■ ( b o * rp! / E j V B h A N A P E X I T u m p ■ * A G B t n I i a s I T ° a WL t o opH| L Y UH 0 A A ! ( | I O 35 L iq u id m easure 3 6 N o t h in g 37 Servile fo llow er 39 Devil 4 0 Play 42 M o u t h in M a d rid 4 3 A ffirm a tiv e votes 4 4 M o u r n f u l 4 5 Self 4 6 G ir l's nam e 47 C o m b in in g fo rm three 48 W ith it (coll I 51 4 0 0 ( R o m a n i n ecessa rily s o " 7 P refix p e rta in in g to death 8 G ro u p o f three 9 W itch 10 S ic k 11 B o rn 16 H a n dle 18 O u t of practice 2 0 T in y - 21 S p r in k le 2 2 P ositive electrode 2 3 Legal matter 25 F a u lty a u to m o b ile (coll.) 2 6 D u e 2 8 Possesses 2 9 C a rp e n t e r's to o l 31 Frozen 32 Fe m ale deer CHEF’S SALAD # GARDEN FRESH TOMATOES # CRISP GREEN LETTUCE # HAM CUBES & TANGY CHEDDER CHEESE SERVED WITH CRISP CRACKERS AND SA U D DRESSING— YOUR CHOICE HOLIDAY HOUSE 2606 GUADALUPE NATURAL HAIR STYLING for both sexes at Rivas of Texas convenient p a rk in g — convenient prices 3 0 0 4 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 4 - 2 6 6 6 A p p o i n t m e n t * o n l y 4 7 4 - 2 6 6 6 A C R O S S I actor w h o o v e rp la ys <1 Pass out 9 N oise 12 A n ger 13 A q u a t ic anim al 14 S p a n ish cheer 15 A rtle ss 1 7 V i c i o u s 19 A n tiq u e 2 0 F ish 21 C a u t io u s 2 3 — G ra n d e 2 4 F ly a lone 2 7 S o m e 2 8 — and haw 2 9 Scatter 3 0 T o w a rd 31 V a p o r 32 Singe r D o r is 3 3 N o te o f the scale 3 4 R im s 3 6 A t this p o in t in tim e 37 M y (F r I 38 V e rita b le 39 E x p ire 4 0 S o u n d o f a ricochet 41 G r o u n d s fo r a suit 4 3 De sire 4 4 R a re ly 4 6 N ad ir s cou n te rp a rt 4 9 O f the past 5 0 K in d o f b utter 5 2 C in n a b a r 5 3 — Ju a n 5 4 B a c k b o n e o f S o u t h A m e ric a 5 5 Wee d rin k D O W N 1 P r o n o u n 2 O n a ssis 3 S o u v e n ir 4 G o b a n k ru p t 5 D e v o u re d 6 " ain t U)HAT A PITY TO KAYE TO (OAKE HIM ANO TELL HIM THAT SCHOOL £TA£T£ TOOM . Ain at a shame it is to d&W5 Sl/CH BLISSFUL S U M L E R . ' r n SCHOOL STARTS T O D A Y ii! 3- T I Mite D istr b y Puzzles, In c 1 0 4 C THE LAW EAST OF T H E PEDERNALES n 1973, the eastern edge of the Universi- of Texas was a lawless wasteland, tv governed only by the ruthless whims of terrorizing bands of outlaws, frequently intoxicated with " b e e r " and other stimulants, and as often as not watching " T V " in their spare time. Pitted against this uncaring horde were the law students of the University of Tex­ as, clean-living a lb eit rip-snorting watchdogs of decency. But this elite force of lawpersons could not hope to turn back the tide of wantonness without proper supplies. That's when the Co-Op was called in. Soon the Co-Op East lent its silhouette to the frontier landscape and, as the law students reinforced their arsenals with law books and supplies from the Co-Op's extensive stockpile, civilization as we know it began to come at last to the untamed east. CO-OP EAST 26th & Red River One hour free p a rkin g w ith purchase of $2 or more B a n k A m e r i c a r d & M asterC harge Welcome What good’s acheck lf you can’t cash it? Like at three Sa tur da y morning. Most checking at counts w o n ’t do you m u c h good then. W e ll, if you re hanking wirh Texas Bank, you can (ash a (.heck rwentv-four hours a day, six days a week And with real people, too Ar W I N D O W 62 i. W h a t ’s more, our " T E X A S L U E C K ” plan is designed just f o r you. Y o u see, we know that .is a student, yes ii 11 probably only h a v e t o w in e a few (hecks a month. you write. And that your average balance isn t, w ell, as large as ir w ill be someday So instead of having to m aintain .1 minim um balance that tics your money up or an average balance that s hard to figure, you're j u s t charged eight cents f40 passengers Ternus estimated traffic de­ mand in the immediate vicini­ ty of the stadium between 15,- 0 p o w * P h / A f £ h i c T O S f T ’j O B w f o u t n u e a v r * o A ti p a s t m e Ut ST L O O P A W L T O U.O VV S lQ M S T VILLAGE WEST-ZIV nu* 4n Legion Adjutant Supports Sanguine The Texas Department ad­ ju ta n t of the Am erican Legion, W H McGregor, said Monday he personally sup­ ports Project Sanguine and the newly formed “ We Want Sanguine in the Hill Country Committee.’’ Although the American Legion has not announced sup­ port of Sanguine, McGregor said a resolution will be sub­ mitted to the statewide national security committee when it meets Sept, 29 “ I ’m confident that we will support Sanguine,” McGregor said Although the American Legion would not actively par­ ticipate in the proSanguine campaign, McGregor said he was sure it would lend support Campus Leaflet To Be Published since “ we feel it’s a vital pro- j e c t for our n a t i o n a l security.” Sanguine, a proposed Navy project, is a $4CK) million low- frequency communications system proposed for the Llano Uplift area of the Hill Coun try. The system, designed to maintain nonjammabie radio contact with submarines in case of attack, is said by the Navy to be essential for national defense. Because of the n ec e s s i t y for low- conductive rock in the system site, only a few areas in the country are considered suitable The system was originally destined to be built in Wison sin, but public opinion forced the Navy to transfer the pro ject to Texas. The formation of the “ We Want Sanguine’’ committee, which was organized in op­ position to the* “ Texas State Committee to Stop Sanguine,” was announced by J . B Wright •Jr., a retired Air Force m a st e r from Kingsland. .sergeant The committee to stop Sanguine was formed shortly after an August meeting with Leader Orders Long H a i r Cut K O T A K I N A B A L U , Malaysia (Af*) The head of Malaysia’* Sabah State told police to take youths with long hair to the nearest police sta­ tion and have their locks cut “ short, neat and clean.’’ Mus tapha Ha run said: “ Because we live in the tropics, keeping long hair is most unsuitable Navy officials, where an es­ timated 1,400 Hill Country f i r e d a n g r y r e s i d e n t s questions at the officers Wright, chairman of the proSanguine committee, and five or six assistants, have asked Hill Country residents who favor Project Sanguine* to outline their reasons on a postcard and mail them to FO Box 274, Kingsland, Tex 78639. The committee plans to compile comments and send them to state legislators to balance the effects of the an tiSanguine committee Wright said he .started the proSanguine committee because, “ We feel there are more people here who want it (Project Sanguine) than don’t want it In a poll he took F ri­ day in Kingsland. Wright said he found only one out of I OO persons was opposed to Sanguine Although he is not getting paid for his work Wright said, “ I ’m doing it for patriotic reasons. like an ole firehorse When I hear the bell ringing. I want to go.” I m ( ding the importance of national defense as a major reason for his support of Pro­ ject Sanguine Wright said, “ Let s say Sanguine now or comrade later ’’ Seal Dies W ithout Care 401 W, J IMPORTED MANDI CHAT PRIMO FROM IMPI A , GRAUE MALAyLFGflA N I STAN, Morocco ,clothing, Jew elry, tapestries, g if t ?. r «■* ic w v v 4 sr■* ■» * “ Participation will be publish­ ed when “ there is a break or developments in issues Stu­ dent Government is involved in,” The next issue might come in early November, Kress in­ dicated “ There won t be a penna- nant staff for Participation,” Kress said, “ but an ad­ ministrative assistant or a S t u d e n t c o m ­ munications committeeman w ill probably direct its publication.” S e n a t e “ We hope the newsletter will act as a supplement to The Daily Texan and other media reporting for both students and persons involved with Student Government,” Kress said Student Government has published the first issue of a campus newsletter called Participation Student Government Presi­ dent Sandy Kress said Monday he hopes publication of the newsletter will become a “ fairly regular thing ’ Kress said 5,(XKJ copies of the newsletter have been published and will be dis­ tributed to campus dorms and leaflet spots on campus this week In noting that there will be no regular publication date for the newsletter, Kress said the New England Aquarium, said the aquarium had intend­ ed to send someone to Maine to pick it up, but then dis­ covered it didn’t have the staff to make the trip over the holiday weekend He said word was left at Morse’s home to take care of the animal until Monday, but the message never reached him TH E HARBOR seals killed in Maine this summer were probably shot by fishermen who complain the seals tear holes in their nets, (Garibaldi said “ I t s undeclared war between the fishermen and the seals.’’ he said C o r t e z & P o s a d o TWICE AS NICE! i a r y e o n e a n d T o u r c hoi ce of t wo l ovel y a p a r t rr an* community! (orated t ( o r t h e e i t t w o O f f i r ’, w i t h t w o p o o h T M O lo v e i n U f u l l y a p p o i n t e d boo H i h e I v e * , k i t c h e n , w a lk In c l o s e t ! a n d fo o d s e r v ic e O a rs t o s h o p p in g / T a lk c e n t e r P r i c e d f r o m » ) 2k c o u r t y a r d * , b u i l t I 105 Clayton Lane 453-7914 Sunrise Music Company GRAND OPENING Tues. Sept. 4 - Sat. Sept. I 6 The D a w n in g of a N e w D ay for Music in Austin Low Prices! High atm osphere! Stop by on the Drag 2522 G u a d a lu p e 478-0366 1 0 % D is c o u n t to A ll S t u d e n t s We Believe A Stereo System Should Sound Better At Home Than It Does On Paper. Ii you have $400-500 to [jut into a storoo system, thoro arc lots of really good receivers and record players to choose from, but very few speakers that hold up t lit ‘i i all-import ant end of the s\ stem. W hich is why sortie systems wind up sounding less impressive .’it home than they did in the ark ert i sen lent. We sell I he Sm aller Advent Louds[>eaker because it turn this situation upside down. Not only do a pair of .Smaller Advents sound as good as you (and we) had hoped, hut well beyond unreasonable expectations. There is just nothing remotely like them. I he Sm aller Advents were designed to sound as good in every respect, including frequency bandwidth, as any speaker of any pr ice. Test reports in both High Fid elity and Stereo Review magazine agree that their response and overall performance would be noteworthy in < in \ speaker, regardless of size or cost. lo understand just how much of a difference these speakers make in what you actually can hear for your m oney,come in and listen to the systems we’ve built around a pair of them. — T»*an Staff Photo by PHIL HUBER W h a t a S q u irr e lly Thing To Do One of the few campus inhabitants Monday, this squirrel sat out Labor Day in the grass and trees surrounding Benedict Hall on the South Mall. B O O T H B A Y H A R B O R , Maine (A P)- A wounded seal which lay unattended on a beach for 14 hours Sunday because of a jurisdictional dis­ pute between state and federal officials died early Monday Authorities said the animal, which had been shot in the s to m a c h , died a t the la b o ra to ry (if the state Department of S<-a and Shore Fisheries T H E SHAI. originally was thought to be a baby but later was identified as an adult mammal It went uncared for because state wardens said they couldn’t aid the animal because of a new federal law placing ju ris d ic tio n for marine mammals with the V S Marine Fisheries Ser­ vice The state wardens said when ttit' hie* ding animal wa- spotted on a resort beach Sun day morning they called Ken­ dall E Morse a federal fisheries official based in Portland Morse reportedly arrang ed with the New England Aquarium in Boston to come pick up the animal By 9 p rn however no one had arrived and Spencer Ap polonio, state commissioner of sea and shore fisheries finally put the seal in his ear and drove to the laboratory MORSE SAID the state of­ ficials could have picked up the animal earlier, because federal law allows them to come to the aid of a marine mammal for the good of the animal or the public Patricia Rodgers a guest at the Newagen Inn, a resort near where the seal was beac hed, said, It was really disgusting the way everyone kept saying federal government wouldn't let them touch the seal the SHE SAID she and other guests tried to get help, hut failed “ So several of the guests placed a towel under the seal and then covered it with another towel We kept placing water on the towel to keep the seal moist Morse said there have* been at least 20 dead seals killed with guns, washed up on the Main*- coast this summer He said killing a seal this way is a federal offense punishable by a fine of up to $10,000 Louis Garibaldi curator of / f' v ** < * ' ■ 'You botong jtof. **/'"... ’ ,*V * ™ .** •• 'C'*‘ V * >. Ihtfil ’ « \ V’r 6 n5li5JjAire Apartments ” #9 ”• *y8W '*‘ rnmit’Mt •*• WeVe got what you want in 444-1846 V'M *'” * sr* -* the apartment you call home . . . • Studio, i 2. & 3 bedfo^rns^ • Furbished or ghfurnlsHfed * l l Sounds* ; ‘ % Shuttle bus setvice; H;<-Tennis courti,W u-, G am erooms-' -tau cO’cUot a i m . i; and restaurant ,2t0l 8tjflbn»pr»ve, 441-335? U * IX • V*vw| J W e ’ve Moved To 2901 N. L a m a r NO BIKE SHORTAGE AT U N IV E R S IT Y CYCLERY (FORM ERLY UNIVERSITY BICYCLE) 2901 N O RTH LA M A R 474-6696 N EW HOURS: TUES & THURS TIL 9 W ED , FRI , AND SAT 9-6 CLOSED M O N. 2532 GUADALUPE H a n k ' * F am o u s Chicken Fried Steak 2 pc*. Moat, French Fries, Cole Slaw, Hot Rolls & Butter n only $1 20 Reg Move L a F o n tan a Convenient to shopping and campus • Reasonable rates • Large I and 2 bedrooms, furnished or unfurnished • 4 swimming pools • 3 blocks from shuttle bus 454-6738 1220 E. 38¥2th St. Austin A S ## JjB L K y jm rn. FRESH (JSDA INSPECTED FRYERS CUTUP WHOLE FRESH WATER CATFISH FILLETS 6 4 ' m 5 9 = I . I 9 LB J KEEP VOl/R BUDGET IN LINE SHOP THESE GREAT PRANO VALUES T O W IE STUFFED O LIV ES LVm. S N A P E TO M T O M A TO D R IN K ZV STAR-KIST C H U N K T U N A con” B A M A RED PLUM JA M C A M PB ELL'S PO RK AN D B E A N S ctr , , 0( 35 ' 6 FOR 53' JIF PEA N U T BUTTER ct"' V-8 CO C KTAIL D RIN K LZ HILLCREST BUTTERM ILK ZZ HILLCREST ICE C R EA M co,?*"’" FROZEN FOODS O R A N G E JU IC E TXt?'6 B R EA D D O U G H “".Zn, - 59' 19' 39 43' 49 29' D<3 O I oV t 33' HEALTH A BEAUTY AIDS $1.25 ED G E PRO TECTIVE S H A V E c,,,' 79' $1.59 RIGH T G U A R D B R O N Z E L” 99' THESE PRICES GO OD AT ALL STORES TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, AND THURSDAY r — .............. ■ ............ ' 'N GARDEN FRESH TOMATOES VINE PINK SLICERS 2 9 ' lb LONE STAR BEER 99 ' SIX PACK CANS 1221 VV 2401 Sun Gabriel Lynn 3101 G uadalupe 21K S. l i n i e r 3115 Northland Dr.______________ 478-7421 478-8880 19 Dobie M all v Park Free in Dobie G a r a g e I I A M . to 7 P.M. udio L_oncepts Tuesday, Sep tem ber 4, 1973 I H K D A I L Y T E X A N Page l l Mason Moves to Offense Texas Secondary Lacks Depth ( E d it o r 's N ote: The fo llo w ­ ing is the third of a five-part series dealing w ith c o m p e ti­ tion for startin g positions on the T ex a s Longhorn football team . I By H E R B H O LLA N D Texan S ta ff W r ite r Somebody must have been pretty sure about the depth of the Texas defensive backfield Sunday when they moved top substitute Sammie Mason to offensive halfback However, when Mason mov­ ed to the offense on Monday the defensive backfield was s l i g h t f a c e d w i t h problem depth As it now stands there are four capable defensive backs to fill three positions a Hut Defensive roach Mike Campbell says “ W e’ve done it before That is, the Texas defensive backfield has gotten by when there was a depth problem H e a d C o a c h D a r r e l “ Mason s got Royal said. good speed and quickness, and we want to take a good look at him as an offensive half­ back ’ Once I learn the offensive plays. I ll be able to get into playing half back. said Mason, who transferred to Texas from Kilgore Junior College “ I ’m real used to do­ ing the hitting, but I'm not too usi d to being hit I know what those runni ng backs go through .” The four men who will be called up to weather injury and opponents pass patterns are Tommy Keel, T e r r y Melancon. .Jay Arnold and K e i t h M o r e l a n d M i k e Featherston has also been given a chance to work his way into the* defensive lineup junior, played most of last year at safety but lost his job early in the spring when rover Bruce Cannon was tried at that posi­ Keel, 5-10 161. a tion “ I G L E S S I didn t have a good attitude in the spring," Keel said “ It just doesnt seem like football season in the spring Besides. I was carrying a big load in school Now I feel more relaxed and I believe I got my job back." That statement couldn’t be* too far from the truth when you consider that Can­ non has been moved back to rover M ELA N C O N , 5-11, 182. a junior, broke into the Horns’ secondary in the Oklahoma game and had an excellent season, including the Cotton Bowl game In that game, Melancon’s two interceptions helped clinch the Texas victory over Alabama. “ W e’ve got our own respon­ sibilities,” said Melancon, the left halfback “ Keel has a lot of experience, and Arnold is STYLECUTTING EXCELLENCE FOR MEN and WOMEN FOR YOUR FIRST HAIRCUT... CUTS >/3 OFF DURING SEPT. r e a l w e l l p r o g r e s s i n g Moreland is our fourth back, but he can play anywhere. Mostly, the secondary is the same." Arnold, 6-1, 195, a senior, played defensive end last year and started all season This year he will be the third man in the Texas d e f e n s i v e backfield at right halfback. Oddly enough, he is playing about io pounds heavier than he did last year on the line Fast and quick, Arnold’s main problem is that of adjusting to his new position he “ I ’ m h a v i n g a f e w p r o b l e m s , ’ ’ s a i d , “ technical problems, lining up problems. But I feel a lot first better than when I started learning more e v e r y d a y of p r a c t i c e . ’ ’ One pleasant .surprise this fall has been sophomore Moreland, 6-0, 185 Moreland mi ss ed spring t r a i n i n g because of baseball. I ’m M O R E LA N D ALSO played football last year and led the freshman team in intercep­ tions. “ I ve been real lucky this fall to get as far as I have,” he said Although he is not listed as a starter, Moreland is hap­ py just to be the No. I sub­ the def ensive stitute backfield. in “ You know how much enthusiasm there is in college football,” said Moreland. “ I just want to play football for Texas.” He should get that chance this year, considering that after him, the true talent stops. M IK E FEA THER STO N is the man who will have to come around if the secondary is to have any depth at all. A F e at he r s t o n sophomore, played on the freshman team last year “ We just don’t have any depth back t h e r e , ’ ’ said Campbell. “ If Featherston doesn t come along, that’s it. I hope no one gets hurt. “ You hear so much about Texas’ depth,” he continued “ I just wish somebody would show it to me ” Shoe Shop We m ake and repair boots shoes belts * S A L E * SHEEPSKIN RUGS leather goods :oo Many Beautiful Colors $7 50 ★ LEATHER SALE * Various kind*, color* - 75' per ft. Capitol Saddlery 1614 L a v a c a A u stin , Texas 478-9309 IM P O RTED A u stin’s most com plete Supplier of Im ported C ar P a rts OF AUSTIN A nother Exclusive Redken Shop 3 1 0 8 N. Lam ar No. 102 "K O K E Bldg." 4 5 2 - 3 6 3 6 By A p p o in tm e n t Only CAR PARTS buck Harvey sports editor HOUSTON—The Univer­ sity of Houston was called “ an from independent” 1960 to 1970 because of its football schedule. But Houston was independent in many more ways than that. To many of the school’s athletes, especially to the blacks, Houston was a refuge from the ruling force in the Southwest Conference, Texas. UH was the only place in Texas where good major college football was being played outside the conference. But now Houston’s in­ dependence is gone. The school was accepted into the SWC in 1971 and will begin competing in the con­ ference in 1976. But the SWC is not a favorite of the athletes at Houston now, nor was it to the ones who attended it in the 1960’s. That is why they went to Houston. f r o m “ I came to Houston to g e t a w a y the Southwest Conference,” Houston black running back M arsh all Johnson said “ We always heard blacks didn’t get a chance at other schools. I never considered Texas. We heard people talk that it was a prejudice school. Houston was a safer bet for me and it was recognized in our community. “ T h e S o u t h w e s t Conference is O K ,” said Houston defensive end Mack Mitchell, a 6-8, 230- pound black with All- America potential. "B u t I wouldn’t want to play in it. That is why I came here. I ’m graduating before we in the conference play it one year Playing might be all right, though in “ I think the Southwest Conference is overrated in this state. I ’ve been out on the West Coast, and some people have never heard of it. But here in Texas we are fed propaganda about their football, which really isn t that good. I think Houston was forced into the conference.” the S W C Mitchell doesn’t mean that f or ced Houston to join against its w ill. Instead, Houston nee ds the S W C . Not because the competition is so excellent. Nor because the SWC title means so much. But because joining the is the only way SW C Houston can gain the two things the school wants now: a schedule that would draw people and a large i n-sta te a m o u n t of publicity. Houston could have neither without the conference. It is fairly obvious why Houston’s schedule will not draw the large crowds. True, Houston did attract a lot of people against the Mississippis, the Michigan States and the Georgias. But those schools don’t play Houston anymore. Houston has become too good Why should those big schools risk playing a tough independent school, when winning doesn’t help their rating that much and losing destroys it? And it is also obvious why Houston has a publici­ ty p r o b l e m T e x a s newspapers shun Houston One Dallas writer said he would never vote for Houston in the Top IO, no matter what UH did. Out­ side of the city of Houston, the Cougars are rarely written about “ I remember in 1966,” said Houston Coach Bill Yeoman, just beaten Oklahoma State rather easily and we had “ we had moved to the ninth spot on the Top IO poll. The next week we played Mississip­ pi State, a very good foot­ ball team. We beat them 28-0 in a game that might have been our best of an 8-2 year. We fell in the polls from ninth to 13th. “ You try explaining that to a bunch of 20-year-olds who are trying their best for recognition. They were really disappointed and up­ set. The team couldn’t help h a v i n g a l e t d o w n . ” Houston did the next week, losing to Mississippi. T hose losses, ma n y times resulting from such letdowns, wer e ma j o r reasons for Houston’s lack of publicity. The Cougars had a bad habit of losing at least two games a year since 1966 T h e r e w e r e o t h e r reasons for the Texas newspapers’ slanted jour­ nalism: Houston’s proba­ tion in 1966-68 for illegal recruiting, the nontradition and newness of the school and, of course, Houston’s f o r l i b e r a l a t t i t u d e recruiting blacks. These things turned the press’ back on Houston And the newspapers are at it again this year. We are being told that Houston a wai t s anxiously S W C play. On the press tour, writers are asking Yeoman if being in the SWC was the r e a s o n f or his good recruiting year Players are asked if they wish they had a shot at the “ coveted” SWC title. The questions haven’t always been phrased the way Houston would like them And the answers haven’t been what the SWC would like to hear. But at least Houston is hearing the questions, and is thankful for that it BACK TO SCHOOL SALE IDEAS A, BEDSPREAD SPECIAL TWIN $ £ 9 9 F U L L $ 0 9 9 KING & QUEEN ONLY M2.99 Decorating is easy with these handsome spreads at Back to S ch o o l'' bargain prices1 S T R IC T L IM IT 2 B E D S P R E A D S g T O M E F T ^ ^ f ...............— VERSATILE AREA RUGS: \ J S iS e S Vihf >•*' ss y.' . a - y y t i - t -VV.- n r<- rt- : E L.. vt n I I I ■. ' f e l l ? r n y ’M ; - Si'ti t ie r u Ic vt in un> Convenient pitier. \ Mi i I ii I • I <■ in .hug*. th ic k pile. in d o o r-o u td o o r . . . u huge . . . I . . . I ................. . . l l ..................... I . , pull cr n> - J - . . I i . ) - A $3.99 reg SIO J M P O R T E D IN D IA PR IN TS B e a u t i f u l H a n d B l o c k e d P rints in Hand printed a .ality 100 Washable Also serve matt ’ 1 r wa India top otton r n NUMDAH RUGS 1/2 PRICE 22% Wool & 78% Cotton Hand woven • Imported from India SIZ E 3 rou n d 4 round 5‘ round 6' round 8 round 3x4 oblong 4x6 o b lo n g 5x9 oblong REG $10. $16 $30 $60. $120 $12. $26 $80 SA LE 3 79 to.q 9 1199 H T ) 49 .99 4 .9 9 H 99 49-99 jpjPLitv-3 S3.99 $5.99 TWINS FULLS These rugs make handsome wall hangings or accent any room as a floor rug. SUPER PILLOW ti construction makes Super Pillow the best multi­ purpose pillow around. Special i Brighten up a room, create extra seating space or just lean back and relax Pillow Super . .. only $14.99 reg. $30. MUST BRING THIS AD - BACK TO SCHOOL HEADQUARTERS Mighlond M oll 2nd L«v«l n«*t to Jo * k * » 451-3733 M a s t e r C h a r g e B a n k A m e r ic a r d n e t t l e C R € € k Bedspread P arlo ur Page 12 Tuesday, Septem ber 4, 1 9 7 3 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N ( Disc Pads— Clutch Disc-Brake Shoes-Electrical & Exhaust System s-W ater & Fuel Pumps OPEN M O N . - SAT. 8 -6 International Car P a rts and Clinic PARTS — 2 9 th an d G u a d a lu p e SERVICE — 1621 East 6th 474-6451 477-6797 I M P O R T E D a n d D O M E S T I C P A R T S 'DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS” O n l y you Kl y o u r b u r b e r k n o w you h a d a U A IHI U'l M E D IC A L A R T S B A R B E R S H O P 2915 Ked R iv e r 477-0691 uwjysnsj t v 3 0 0 XSELLE;iS We're n e w in t o w n . We are the only fu ll-service q u a lity bookstore in A u s ti n open until m id n ig h t seven d a y s a week, We also c a r r y A u stin 's m o s t e x te n s iv e selection of European a n d A m e r ic a n m a g a zin e s. There are s e v e r a l o th e r u nusual things abou t U n iv e r s ity Booksellers, D r o p in and look around. We are loc ated on the s tr e e t level of the n e w U n i v e r s ity Y M C A bu ildin g—on the corner of 22nd an d Guadalupe* 2200 G U A D A LU P E 472-7866 Cards Gain Lead P IT T S B U R G H ( A P i - L o u Brock, Ted Sizemore and B e r­ nie Carbo drove in two runs apiece as the St Louis Car­ dinals routed the Pittsburgh Pirates, 8-3, Monday to earn a doubleheader split and retain their one-game hold on first p l a c e t he N a t i o n a l League’s East Division in The Pirates had taken the division lead by a few percen- NEW—This Fall . . . • TACOS-CHILI & CHALL) PAS at 2-J’s ACROSS FROM THE MALL tage points with their 5-4 vic­ tory in the first game on Richie Hebner’s mside-the- park home run in the 13th in­ ning Trailing 1-0, the Cardinals broke the second game open with six runs in the fourth off loser Luke Walker, 7-10. The outburst included five singles, a walk and a sacrifice bunt, but five of the runs were un­ earned after second baseman Rennie Stennett dropped a forceout throw at second Stennett, Manny Sanguillen and Bob Robertson hit solo homers off St Louis starter Rich Folkers, 4-4 S O N Y T V R eliability Sony’s m anufacturing philosophy dictates that products be built to last for many years of carefree enjoyment Everything that goes from overall circuit de­ into a Sony product sign to the smallest component—must meas­ ure up to exacting standards of reliability and perform ance Here's another example of Sony reliability. KV-1212 T R I N I T R O N * C O L O R TV • 12-inch screen measured diagonally • Trinitron one gun/one lens system for sharp, bright, life-like color • Push button automatic fine tuning, color and hue control • Solid state reliability • Instant picture and sound • No set up adjustments • Illuminated tuning dials • Top mounted handle • Walnut grain wood cabinet, trimmed in chrome SONY A sk anyone. u n i v e r s i t y 3)0 0 X321. LEKS THE DISCOUNT SHOP STEREO and TV I 38th & Speedway 477-0937 To the Varsity Johnson Moves Up Lionell Johnson, freshman linebacker from Winfield, La., was moved to the varsity Monday to play defensive end. Head Coach Darrell Royal said Johnson was promoted because of his ability and to add depth at the end position. “ I just came here to play ball Anywhere they put me is fine,” said Johnson He has never played defensive end before. He said he thought the switch would not cause him any problems. “ He’s big (6-2 , 205 pounds) and he's quick and they need the depth” said Freshman Coach Bill Ellington Johnson is the first out-of- state black ever to sign with Texas. “ The freshm en s c rim ­ maged with the varsity today, and they looked like they had a good time. They found out that those varsity boys are just a little bit more mature,” P m r a l e n if ! ★ a ★ The Horns scrim m aged Saturday, and quarterback M arty Akins hit six of IO passes for 130 yards. “ On several unspectacular plays. Akins showed more poise than ever The quarter­ back is responsible for moving the ball, and he's done that,’’ Royal said A ★ ★ Linebacker Glenn Gaspard, hobbling on the sidelines Mon­ day with a splint buckled around his right leg because of sprained in his ligaments knee, should be ready to work out in “ about IO days,” accor­ ding to the team doctor Gaspard injured the knee when he was hit in a scrim­ mage last week by running back Pat Padgett and his foot hung” in the AstroTurf He will undergo tests Tuesday, but the doctor said he is responding well to treatment T H E M A S S A G E P A L A C E O F C E N T R A L T E X A S E d ie ’s o f Hollywood STEAM CABINETS SAUNA ROOM MASSAGES (512) 478-0411 Palatable Pleasure — Tenon Staff Photo by STA N LEY FARRAR 1010 W . 19th St. Austin, Texas A football season s success is often m easured by the hard w ork during practice sessions. But during the sw elling tem peratures of fall two-a-day workouts, im m e d ia te re w ard s come in the form of such brief refreshm ents. It's not C o o t s , Bud or Schlitz...but it's w et. sp o rts shorts Exhausted Ms. King Defaults T O N IG H T ! World P rem ier “TECHNICAL FOUL” th e S p o r t s S h o w w i t h H ERB H O LLAN D 9:15 P.M . K U T - F M a n d s p o r t s n o w s 8 8 o n t h o d i a l e o m m o n t i q u o t a s (Spl.)—1The Arkansas Razor- backs, already expecting a subpar season because of rebuilding were set back further Saturday when their No. I quarterback, Scott Bull, was injured in a scrimmage. Choices o f RALEIGH SCHW INN PEUGEOT MERCIER DAWES VISTA T A. SIMPLEX PHILWOOD T.T.T. SUNTOUR C A M A G N O IO OTHER MAKES ON REQUEST COMPLETE SI Of K Oh R Af'ISO EQ! IPMENT PARTS It ACCESSORIES at WILCO HONDA 6509 N. LA M A R 452-2876 Bank A m ericard & M a ster C harg e W elcom ed 3 S P E E D TO IO S PE ED MULTI - S P E E D SPECIALISTS REPAIRS O N ALL M A K E S FACTORY TRAIN ED SERVICE M A N Y BIKES ON SALE! B IK E S NOT ON SALE YOU HAVE A CHOICE OF A GIFT ACCESSORY 442-1563 3 8 0 4 M a n c h a c a R d T u q -F ri I 2 * 6 S o t 9 - 5 CLOSED M O N D A Y ROOM 60C AND BOARD, A POUND. lf you’re a male student and weigh about 165 pounds, you can live at the Barrone for around 60C a pound per month. Ground beef can’t even stay at your friendly neighborhood super m arket for that. Actually, it com es to $99.50 a month. Not bad for a furnished room with 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 2700 Nueces 472-7850 F O R E S T H I L L S , N Y . ( A F i—-Defending champion and topseeded B illie Jean King walked off the court and defaulted to Julie Heldman while trailing 4-1 in the third set of their third-round match Monday in the U.S. Open Ten­ nis Championships. Ms. Held­ man won 3-6, 6-4, 4-1, default Mrs King gave no explana­ tion immediately for her ac­ tion, striding through the crowd into the w o m e n ’s locker room without saving a word She said later she had been suffering from the flu the last two days and ate no dinner .Sunday night “ I hoped to get through today’s match and then get a day s rest,” she said She looked gaunt, tired and apparently overcome by the intense heat Temperatures were in the mid-90s, humidity was oppressive and there wasn't a trace of wind ★ a A SAN D IE G O (A P I -H enry Aaron hit the 707th and 708th home runs of his major league baseball career Monday night in a game with the Padres and pulled within six of equalling the alltime mark of the legen­ dary Babe Ruth A A A HOUSTON (AP) - Rookie Ken Griffey delivered a two- run pinch single in the eighth inning Monday night, giving the Cincinnati iu ds a 4-3 vic­ tory over the Houston Astros a a a C H I C A G O ( A P ( - E d d i e Leon's leadoff double and an R B I - s i n g l e by C h u c k Brinkman triggered a three- run Chicago ra lly in the seventh inning that broke a 2-2 tie and lifted the White Sox to a 5-2 v i c t o r y and a doubleheader sweep over the Texas Rangers Monday The Sox won the first game, 8-7. in ll innings with Carlos May driving in five runs with four hits, including a three- NEW— This Fall . . . • TACOS-CHILI & CHALUPAS at 2-J's ACROSS FROM THE MAU run homer. A A A KANSAS C ITY ( A P ( - T h e Ka ns as C i t y R o y a l s a n ­ nounced Monday the appoint­ ment of Joseph R Burke as the club’s new vice-president in c h a r g e of b u s i n e s s operations. Burke resigned Sunday as vice-president and general m a n a g e r of the T e x a s Rangers A A A F A Y E T T E V I L L E , Ark A great night for Kentucky Fried Chicken Visit the Colonel 2120 GUADALUPE Interested in U.T. Athletics? Buy a Blanket Tax (★student Services Fee — ( O P T I O N A L ) THI S E N T I T L E S YOU TO M O R E THAN $250 IN F R E E A N D R E D U C E D A D M I S S I O N S TO A L L A T H L E T I C E V E N T S - P L U S - A L L C O N C E R T S AND S P O N S O R E D E V E N T S T H E CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE This Year’s Athletic Program Will Be Hard To Beat! BY 1973-74 H O M E BA SK ET BA LL SCHEDULE Dei I MUtUftlppi !)*•< I) Mi* and Val Belcher (6-5, 250). These two should move in before the y ea r is out At tight end, Houston is set with Marty Watts, a 6-3, 205 pound junior who last year a v e rag ed m o r e yards per catch than previous UH tight ends C a r l i e T h o m a s and R i l e y O d o m s , B r y a n W i l l i n g h a m and B a r n e y Williams a re the two capable flankers Though the Houston offense looks quite strong, no one is sure whether it, will come through that effectively But everybody is sure about the defense Ten of the ll starters return from last year's UH defense And all IO are good football players S T A R T WITH t h e linebackers. Yeoman calls them "as good a group as we've ever had " McGallion, Broussard and Harold F.vans (6-5, 207) are the three, and all have great talent and desire. Broussard calls his group "the wild men ” Go to the defensive line F i r s t , y o u h a v e M a c k Mitchell, a 6 8, 230-pound end who Yeoman calls the best pass rusher around. The other end is Bill Stohler, a depen­ dable football player. The tackles are excellent. Gerald Hill is small at 215, and Yeoman calls him "one of is quick our worries.” Hill enough, but Yeoman is con­ cerned about straight power overcoming him. When that situation o v e r c o m e s Hill, insert Yeoman can always Wilson Whitley, the 6-6, 275- pound freshman. The other s t a r t in g is S te v e t a c k le George, a 6-6, 245-pound talented senior T H E D E F E N S I V E backfield couldn’t be as strong as the front seven, right? Well, Yeoman calls comer back Robert Giblin "as good a player as w e’ve ever had at any position ” Giblin is 6-2, 202, and fast The other cor­ nerback, Boger Mayes, is the only new starter, and he is considered Yeoman’s other worry (Wednesday: Texas AAM Aggies.) Parker Leaks His Opinions HOLSTON (Spl i Fullback Leonard P arker, a round 5-11, 220-pound senior, was the most outspoken here "I think Roosevelt Leaks is a good fullback,” he said, “ but I don’t thik he is good as I am Overall he c a n ’t catch and do ECONOMY AC/DC PORTABLE CASSETTE CORDER /nth Built In Condenser Microphone and Automatic Shut Off SONY SUM RHOM H o m e E n t e r t a in m e n t C e n t e r , Inc. second floor 2406 G u ad al u p e / a r i n g ’ s TUESDAY F E E D A F R I E N D F R E E 2 f o r I S pa ghe tt i SI.19 all day Happy Hour 2-9 MllCATESSEN SB*' | ^ n t o / f i r r > o n p l Q c t TO ■ £ 1 4 Wr int to r e d u c e y our gas cost-per- m i l e ? T h e n y o u w a n t a M azda. Its r o t a r y e n g i n e h m m m s along on t he cheapest gas you can buy Yes, even on low-oct ane g a s , i t d e l i v e r s s t a n d o u t p e r f o r ­ m a n c e And M a z d a • Afatch f or Gr and Ope ni ng : 1914 Easf Ri ver s i de D r i v e 2 1 0 0 A GUAD ALU PE 4 / 4 - 2 3 2 1 MAZDA GOES HMMMM ON THE CHEAPEST GAS YOU CAN BUY! o w n er s r e po r t good mi leage, too 17 to 21 m p g . S o m e o w ne r s r e po r t even b e 11 e r m i l e a g e , a n d g e t s o m e less dependi ng on d r i v i n g conditions. So c o me in now and test our a ns wer to high gas prices W h a t a r s * YOU DOING ' t r w w w j W HOLCOMB-BEASLEY M A Z D A 6 9 1 8 B u r n e t R o a d 4 5 4 -6 8 4 8 STUDENT HEALTH CENTER ESTABLISHED & M A IN T A IN E D TO PROVIDE O P TIM U M HEALTH FOR ALL STUDENTS TO HELP CHANGE THE WORLD? CAM P I S C R US A D E BELIEVES IN A S O L U TI O N ^ JESUS C H R IST I Mi hi In 1 1 - t h a t i>ot e r t v , r a c i s m , a n d n o d a l i n j u s t i c e a r c s y m p t o m s af m a n ’s b a s i c c p u c e n t e r e d n e s s a n d r e b e l l i o n a g a i n s t t h e i n f i n i t e p e r s o n a l (iod, p r o b l e m H r b e t i d e t h a t if n< o r e to s o l v e t h e s e p r o b l e m s , m o n m u s t be ( h a n d e d f r o m w i t h i n . I H e bl i n r e t h a t t h e r e v o l u t i o n o c c u r r i n g t o d a y is n ot r e v o l u t i o n a r y e n o u g h . It s e e k s to tlu s y s t e m , tint d o e s n o t d e a l w i t h t h e s e l f c e n t e r e d a l t i t u d e o f m o n . ' h u n g ! I Vt i b e i n r e t h a t it is not < ruing h to m e r e l y et ui W a t e r g a t e ; w e a r e a l s o c o n c e r n e d a b o u t m o n s p r o b l c n r of pri ed; h a t e ; p r e j u d i c e ; a n g e r ; a n x i e t y ; b o r e d o m ; b i t t e r n e s s ; s e x u a l a n d o ei o l p r o b l e m s ; s o c i a l e x p l o i t a t i o n ; d i s h o n e s t y ; p u r p o s e l e s s n e s s ; i m p u r i t y ; b i g o t r y ; i n t e m p e r a n c e i n s o l e n c e a n d m a t e r i a l i s m ; p r i d e a n d e g o i s m . >. VV b e i l d e t h a t onI j e s u s ( h r isI h a s t he p o w e r to p e r m a n e n t l y c h a n g e m a n f r o m w i t h i n on y o u a v a i l y o u r s e l f o f a d e q u a t e h e a l t h i n s u r a n c e to c o v e r u n e x p e c t e d a n d u n p r e d i c t a b l e e m e r g e n c y s i t u a t i o n s Y o u r H e a l t h C e n t e r c a n p r o v i d e t h e g r e a t m a j o r i t y o f a n y r e q u i r e d m e d i c a l c a re H o w e v e r , it is s t r o n g l y u r g e d t h a t Page 14 Tuesday, September 4, 1973 I H F D A I L Y T E X A N Dis tin guis hed D ra m a tis ts Four n a t io n a lly - k n o w n professors e m e ritu s w h o h e l p e d d e v e l o p t h e U n iv e rs ity d r a m a d e p a rt­ m en t a r e s h o w n together at a re c e n t reu n io n . They ( l - r ) D r . L o r e n a r e W i n s h i p , a d r a m a e d u c a to r w h o retired in Ju n e ; M iss Lucy B a rto n , a c o s t u m e d e s i g n e r , B a I d e n S h a k e s p e a r e a n director w h o re tire d in M a y a n d w ill c e le b r a te his 92n d b irth d a y W e d n e s d a y a n d C o n k l e , a D r p la y w r ig h t w h o retired in J a n u a r y , 1 9 7 2 P a y n e , E P An exhibit ion of abstract ex­ pressionist painter Adolph Gottlieb’s work will be on view in the University Art M u s e u m s U p p er L e v e l Gallery through Sept 'IO T h e 3f> s ilk s c r e e n s lithographs and aquatints from the late 1960 s and early 1970 s represent the New York school of painting Gottlieb helped found in the 1950’s Bom in 1903 in New York City w h e re he s t ill re sid e s Gottlieb studied at the Art Students League with John Ile Sloan and Robert Henri tra v e le d and studied in Europe from 1921 to 1922 to becom e acquainted with European Abstraction and Cubism experiment' After the Depression and working as an Easel painter he spent 1937 in the Arizona desert H is works of this period a n ­ re rn im sce n t of an cien t hierog lyp hics and Indian decorative signs with stylized 'pictograph NOW OPEN taSTATION Food and Spirits Tornado Foosball OPEN M F 12-1 SAT 2-2, SUN 2-1 SPECIAL TODAY THRU THUR 6th BEER $1 00/Pitcher till 7 P M 1903 E Riverside Dr 444 -58 18 O N L Y symbolic motifs based on liv­ ing forms and In the 1940 s G o t t lie b borrowed from Surrealism hut rejected formal abstract a rf A rn cr n a n R e g io n a lism W ith M ark Rothko, Clifford Still and Jackson Pollack, he tried to express t h e general u n i v e r s a l and elemental During the 1950’s and 1%0's im I a n d S c a p e s o f G ottlieb moved from a g in a r y spheres, o vals and (.angulai shapes hovering over a heavily textured land to ins ret Bursts series of cosmic landscapes containing upper round elements and lower, broken exploding elements Later in the 1960 s, Gottlieb also ( leafed centralized, sym­ bolic shapes floating in fields of color of New York M arlborough G ra p h ic s , is cir* I n* dilating (tie exhibition The I niver ity Art Museum is at 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard The exhibit is open from 9 a rn to 6 p rn Monday through Saturday and I to 5 p rn Sunday LUNCHEON SPECIAL 1 1 : 0 0 - 2 : 0 0 M O N - F R I BIG CHICKEN STEAK with French Fries or Baked Potato, H o t Texas Toast and Tossed Salad FRIED I , * 1.29 BONSNZS SIRLOIN PIT 2815 GUADALUPE 478-3560 NO TIPPING COME AS YOU ARE’ C a p r i / he titre X — RATED ADULT MOVIES 521 E 6th 472 0442 CALL T H E A T R E FO R TITLES N ew Program Sat IA DIFS FREE ducount with Ad Q0 I O P E N T U E S S U M T U E $ . ” ” L lV E > l£ s m ig h t + W E B . - — S T E e L I V L S ★ T H U R S r T c Q U t U V N IG H T SUH. L F V D 1 E S F H E H C A L V ­ A O Cl. Z T - SV U Y .£ - Y A W X V V I I V V'he#hi Ie AWI A H I *% #iy im p ro vm in g t i ll lend •* fresh rifiie to t*v *ryth in g S p rrtjJg tJo n w ill lead you dow n t r itu r a tin g paths P I M F.s Tb«*f *• I.*. i rr.-»w k i uh U*im from m orn in g th roug h th#* nigh ! to e v en rout in#* •'vents lf w ill pet** lh** A s tro lo g e r* G u ild of Austin L IB R A R Y F IN E S Notice* from th# Univeriify Library or an y of tit branthwt ar# official Univer­ sity communication! requir­ ing immediate attention THE WRANGLER INN 8 5 6 5 B e p a r c h I 183 N j W e d J a m Se**io n N E W — T h i s F a ll . . . « TACOS CHILI & CHALUPAS a t 2 J ’s ACROSS FROM THE MALL the O ne K n i t e I l l V L A I V v H I N Hill A B e d M is e r prisonI* T U E S LEA ANN a n t i th# BIZARROS W E D OTIS LEWIS A N D HIS C O T T O N K IN O ! I I V I M U S IC N i m s • N I V I I A C O V I * • THE SAXON PUB / ‘Kl S I M S Rusty Weir A N D Jim Ritchey Tues Sot OPFN DAILY FOR LUNCH Af ll 30 2 FOR I HIGHBALLS 11:30 6:00 L U N C H 1 1 A M D IN N E R 5 30-1 I OO H A P P Y H O U R 4 :3 0 -6 :3 0 OPEN! PH IL A YLIFF IN THE B A R " A L I A S " — W e d . thru S a t. FREE PIZZA J f C O U P O N O F F E R B E L O W B R I N C T M H C O U P O N FREE B u / n n y % rf f *' H i J I O r o n e p i / z n n u m b e r r,f I P I Z Z ( if the agjrr flier vt fb i! ' OFF f R VAI ll) TMF IJ S E P T IS 1973 / V-7 So r A pO 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 II 8 O r", 8 IT z *5 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 38»h 8* IH 35 4 54 81 I 5 A S K ABO UT O U R P A R T Y FACH H IE S Dxi& xUliax ftgsxlla ( if, B r a w 4Vf ! 124 Tuesday, September 4, 1973 T H E D A ILY TE XA N Page 15 Antique Weight Exhibit Planned A display of almost 200 tiny gold weights w ill b«* on exhibit in th e U n i v e r s i t y A r t Mu s e u m s M a i n C a l l e r y through O rt 7 The weights, once used to m e a su re gold dust and nuggets on th*- Gold ("oast of A frica ar*- about two inches long and weigh 02 grams and upward On loan fro m the M r. and Mrs A lvin Romansky co lle c­ the bronze tion of Houston and b r a s s f i g u r e s a r e calk'd Ashanti weights after a loose A fric a n tribal federation of the late 17th Century form­ ed in the Ghana, Togo and Dahomey area. Lacking coma, , die Ashan­ ti kingdom need. d the weights for exact m easurem ent of gold dust and nuggets in trade, A single gold wr ight is an Abram m u and a set of 60 or more a M ram m uo Owning a c om plete ornate and a rtis tic s e t w a s a s i g n o f a trib e s m a n s w ealth. O ther in­ gold-weighing equipment cluded scales, a spoon, sm all brass boxes and tin y shovels fo r gold dust scooping S h a p e d v a r i o u s l y as humans animals, birds or in­ ani mat e objects, the gold w e i g h t s al so i l l u s t r a t e d proverbs familiar to Ashanti nationals The native kingdom was taken over by the B r itish in the 19th Century. Also in the show are two pieces of “ Rente Cloth, scarves chiefs wore fo r ceremonial purposes. The museum is on E ast 23rd S t r e e t and San J a c i n t o Boulevard and open from 9 a rn to 6 p rn weekdays and I to 5 p rn Sunday. There is no admission charge T R A N S 'k TEXAS QU ARIOS Theatres IV JUST O I F F AST RIVERSIDE DRIVE 444-3222 I 5 0 0 S P E A S A N T VALLEY RD R E D U C E D P R I C E S T i l . 6 I ' M M O N th ru S A I (N O S T O O * . S I - Til ( T M TI A TUSS S 2 25 f ROCK HUDSON DION MORTIN SHOWDOWN - ‘ I * P G , rHA.Nt < /K H I RLI J J Ho v i k > Lit; HELD OVER Fred Zinnsmar « film of THE DAY OF THE JACKAL A J O H N W O O IT P RO DUCTIO N PG rph E Irvine «rwi Brut ProdtKtkx A Touch O f Class PARKIN ■r* Til 6 P M FT A TU tfS I 45- 4 25 7 00- 9 35- SI SO T < 6 8 M FFA TURFS -I 30 3 30 5 30 7 30 9 JO + + + + * * * * * * * * * A * * * * * * * * * * * * * - * - * * * * * * * * * * * - - * * * * * * * * ♦ RIVERSIDE TWIN CINEMA 1 9 3 0 E a s t R i v e r s i d e D r . 4 4 1 - 5 6 8 9 I A K ? Wet O range" by Joan Mitchell is part of the "Fresh Air School/' 'Fresh Air' Interprets Display Nature In the 15-pamting exhibit the M ichener t h r e e e m i n e n t p re se n tly at G a l l e r y , Am erican a rtists sought to ex­ press their impressions of the magnificence of nature. th e ir own T heir large canvasses are examples of the “ direct pain­ tin g ” process which involves pouring or brushing paint over large areas to produce pain­ ting surfaces which already “ life ,” and have thus more closely p a ra lle l what the a rtists see in nature. “ All have drawn on nature for their source m ate rial, yet all have gone back to abstract color placement as a means of intensifying impressions the of nature.’ ’ D r Donald B Goodall, d ire cto r of a rt collec­ tions, explained The th re e p a in te rs , in ­ dividualists though they are, work in a style of painting which is an outgrowth of the abstract expressionism of the 1950’s. “ Fresh A ir School’ ’ w ill be on view at the gallery, on the flo o r of Hu ma n i t i e s f i r s t Research C enter, through Sept 30 G allery hours are 9 a m to 6 p m weekdays and I to 5 p.m. Sunday The collec­ tion is being circulated by the Carnegie Institute s Museum of A rt, w ith a grant from the Gulf O il Corp But nature lovers shouldn’t go looking for pastoral scenes, l a n d s c a p e s , b r e a t h t a k i n g paintings of animals or quiet woods They won t find them. .loan M itt hell, Sam Francis and Walasse 'l ing, the authors of the exhibit entitled “ Fresh A ir School,’’ are a ll e x ­ pressionists second genera­ tion . bstract expressionists is the correct term . 7 1 0 E BEN W HITE SOUTHSIDE O P E N 7:45 Show S h ir t * Dusk K l N O I I I N V I S I B L E F IS K in s ' O ' K l, O K M I K IK O N F I S I W a r re n O s ICS B ori Joh n son D l l . l . I N O K K B a r b a r a Hcrshi-v D a v id i a rra d in n KOX*AK BERTHA CAMERON RD. at 183 SHOWTOWN U.S.A. T o g eth er plu* M A R K O F I H F Of-.V I L K l N O K l I N V I S I B L E K I S T K in s ’ O I K L O F T M K IR O N (• I S T C * V # >♦ I wasted in a small part as a client of Segal s who wants to sue her philandering husband for divorce, but then decides to forgive him (an un- necessary parallel). U N F O R T U N A T E L Y , al almost two hours, the film is just too long The pace is too slow to sustain a low key com­ edy and Mazursky allows several scenes which seem needlessly redundant As I said before, this is a highly personal movie which may well be enjoyed by many, while others may find it I found myself torn tedious somewhere in between Still, Illume in Love” is one of the more thoughtful movies to appear this year, and as such and in spite of my personal misgivings I suggest you see it. NEW— This Fall. .. • TACOS-CHILI & CHALUPAS at 2-J's ACROSS FROM THE MALL THE Coasters had 11 gold records during the 50 s — CHARLEY BROWN — YAKITY YAK — SEARCHIN and others. they’re at CAESAR’S for two big weeks come out and relive a great era 442-9032 1907 E. RIVERSIDE I m M A V By P A L L B E U T E L Texan Staff Writer “ Blume in Love;” starring George Segal, Susan Anspaeh, Kris Kristofferson and Shelley Winters; written, produced and d i r e c t e d by P a u l Mazursky; at Capital Plaza Ctaema. “ Blume in Love’ is an off beat, excellently acted film P a u l from d i r e c t o r Bob & Mazursky (late of I Carol & Ted & Alter- ’ ) didn t particularly like the movie, though, but I suspect that a good many people will Ifs a personal movie and how- you react to it will depend a great deal on how well you are able to relate to its central characters George Segal plays Stephen Blume, a Southern California divorce lawyer, whose wife Nina (Susan Anspaeh > catr he- him “ working at home one afternoon with his secretary is apparently The affair meaningless < we are shown no -agon for it an irritating but p e r h a p s i n t e n t i o n a l omission), but Miss Anspaeh promptly obtains a divorce. The rest of the movie details Segal’s still desperate love for his wife, while she continues to reject all his attempts at reconciliation MISS ANSPACH soon takes up with a free lance bum nam­ ed Elmo (Kris Kristofferson), whom she meets at her job in (fie welfare office And Segal promptly begins an affair with Arlene Marsha Mason), an old friend whom he sees at the airport on his way back from the Nevada divorce Moth af fairs are based on nothing more than sex with Segal seeking physical comfort, and Miss Anspaeh apparently ac­ ting in a form of subconscious rebellion against Segal However, Segal persists in visiting fits ex wife frequent Iv and ironically enough, soon becomes friends with Kristofferson I really like ( him Segal tells her ) The situation finally becomes too ' B u c k e t ALL T H IS WEEK! LIVE M U S I C BY H A P P Y H O U R P R I C K S : M O N . -SAT. - I" P it c h e r fill- I I I O H B A I . I , 30' M C O 23rd & PEARL ACROSS FROM HARDIN NORTH 3 hrs. free parking in Hardin’* Garage v M E X I C A N B U F F E T S ^ A D I V I S I O N or C A M I X F O O D S I N I LUNCHEON SPECIAL YEAR RO UND •day thru S a tu rd a y Ai' 'l l i f J l 'U I: : ... " /Vc"f0* H. ""A' *'!'*""•>> S°u' lot , "’Ini, 'let :>iron 1 ii I/, *"*'■«•o»,a '“Pa, , W - Susan Anspaeh, Kris Kristofferson and G eorg e Seg al meet in an am icable m om ent during Blum e in Love." much for Segal to handle Obsessed with desire, he rapes Miss Anspaeh one night when he finds her at home alone He then retreats to Venire no less where he grows a beard hangs around cates and ponders his fate Nine months later Miss Anspaeh shows up and of course, she s pregnant And ii you remember the Mob & Carol finale you can figure out the rest The perform ances an- generally excellent Segal *-x presses the hurt and longing of Stephen Blume effectively, and he utilizes enough restraint so that it doesn’t become overbearing Miss Anspaeh s Nina is as desirable a woman as we vc had on the screen in a long time Far horn being the plastic Barbie she projects a doll type warmth and inner fn-auty that mak e h e r c o rn p Ie t e I y ravishing Watch her in this movie and you realize what an iceberg someone Ilk** Candice Bergen really is But Sh** 11 ey Winters is FIGHT INFLATION ALL YO U C A N EAT-ONLY $ 2 .4 9 Fresh Fried Flounder from the Gulf Served with Louisiana (.limbo French I t i c s Texas Toast 49Pit P in io n With < iiupon N o b o d y L^ave* H u n g ry • JOEY'S FINE FOODS 1411 W . Ben White G n.m.-lO p.m. DsUy Sun. I s.m.-lO C o u p o n G o o d T u f t W e d T h u rt S e p t 4 .5 ,6 DOM! satan 2nd Level Dobie Malt 477-1324 21ft at Guadalupe Austin, Texas LAST DAY fa&rA k y a u O & L « W W T ^ U p - Pb ado V iC 4* PHO t>uc li on § - ( UNICOLOR “ F fort-. Warner Brr. j 2-4-6 $ 1 0 0 8-10 $1.25 M id n ig h t O n ly ! The M agic 'hristian Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr Midnight Only $1 .2 5 S t a r ts Tom orrow All You Cm % I149I PLU S Eat Buffet BUFFET SERVED ALL DAV VEAR ROUND AT SAME PRICE. I DRINK ■ A TAX I I ■ 7 5 'J SA C C O £ u V A N Z ET T “N T 5800 BURNET ROAD PHONE: 451 2296 Deliverance A J O H N B O O R M A N F IIM Surfing JON V' ilGHT BURT HI THOI D'i PANAVISION* ti CHNlCOt O H * lo c a t io n s in H o u sto n f>a ll a R ic fu u f iv jn f o r t W o rth A rlin g to n -an A n to n io A u s tin , t i P a s o C o rp u s C h r is ti, Bosn ia* C ity , B a t o n R o u g e K New Qr!ean'> I'm g w e w A lb u q u e rq u e Mime * O k lah o m a C ity ; f j ^ a j 6*t f 'O P g S ’fifA5s>*m'a W o e 2-4-6 8-10 Midnight Only Cultivate your eyes and ears. War t riday. September i 4 Novella Nelson Wednesday October I Helen Reddy Wednesday ( )f t .tier I / Beggars Opera r u(‘ st I .J y (Jct (> tx * r $0 c) ne! I bur sd ly N>./ember I American Ballet Repertory Company with John Prinz and Zhandra Rodriguez t ur-'.d iy Novenr ber b and T bur if!■ iy Nov'-mbi-r 8 Jacques Loussier Trio Tuesday December 4 Jazz Festival W ednesday t obruary 6 Two Gentlemen of Verona Mer if I iy f ‘ -bniir / <. Marcel Marceau Monday, f <-brit try 2S .ind Tuesday f ebruary 2b Nikolais Dance Theatre Munday Mar- Ii 4 You don’t need a green thumb to enjoy the C f C s bumper crop of c ulture this year Just purchase the optional student services fee at registration; then wait for the Daily texan to announce ticket harvesting times for each show lake the ticket and your I D to the concert and enjoy the bounty of fine entertainment Cultural Entertainment Committee Texas Union 1973-74 Series Tuesday, September 4, 1973 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 17 A I i F o p S a l e ^ A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n B a p a r t m e n t s , F urimH a p a r t m e i m t s , F uriuB H e l p W a n t e d I H e l p W a n t e d r n A S S iF t D A D V E R T i S J N G WATES IS w ord m tru rn j rn E a c h word on* tim * E a r h w ord 7 4 1Nm#* t a t w ord 5 9 t«rn#* F a' h w ord '0 Oif m o f * 11 r n * | S tud ent ra*r* aa cb tim * C>A$$Ti#< JM T /M I a it r A- t«nr>« HOO OO I ' I P A ’ f D £ 'n/'.np'/i a ■ '• p ’ m -J ' ’■■'•ii 444 M l'» 442 VO i i H o 'I D A X L / 0 f fjt renio^ab'e Ult- t " t - rt n 11 rj r> - 900 F / ? i- BO/ -PH ' i G m a * lr »tt Harvard t r a m * V , 'X J • ' • 6 t D O O M ',/■ r A 474 ',4'. / I XX, 8 8 4 / A f * y<>u ' tro u b le pf a p a r ing your c u m * fore for the next d a ^ ? D o you ir>#*d a Horn * that o ffe r* th * rf a t* m p * # r * and QI./ e* ' T hi* 624 $q ft horr-s* ofi t s aer**. >$ located af th * end of a dead and ffkfxt The^e a r * m a n y ffe e s and the p ok v e r y M0ud - U ' ' J f t i o n . r. a r r <*i■ $60 OO 928 069 af» * r fi ye old < A M T R A S 30 50 g off h i t Thrc> ugh Crirnrir a O b*c or a C a ll 4/8 5187, 6 prTi 9 pm w e e * d a /$ for p ric e * 972 I A T 74 Sptd rr 11 aa pf*f I a, t , ,,, ,f -t bit 16.000 r a 44 *706 OTI B P O C O V (J O N f N T S Sony f r 166 tap e d e ' k, HOO a b f u r n ta b lt’ 150 F , - a lle r,! cond * on ( a>- B i? 0760 N O M U N ' / 4 8 tr a o A t t • tape ster*,, I xr tllr- lt ditto A 474 SSS7 VTO V O i / s w a m '4 c o n v e rtib le , A C, and Non t 200 'vt > v r a d o <-»tt- * tie r h o u ri, 4/1 (476 or 926 04/6 68 D O D G E C H A B G I b jtcj A r o m a t i c , a C. v f,vI top, 'A 'Jio p ow e r H e a rin g , 4 V P G J 27$ v i-f 4', $711, f-xt 2 S o t 266 6 $ T I B 6 0 Cf1 P A 4 ’ IG 18 o r IV for a pa ' of I be P a f t Tree •■I rn z That £ O m * i# i- u t i ’J VZ a p a r 17 6 S at' A n to n io a K ' B I-G I ST I b i o p f* quo ty r- a a 4S4 1265 I r 11 r W olfhound, lr Q U E r S E C L U S I O N O v e r Sto n a H e d g e E n a t e ! W f H i a k # a r ea B n pea jt fui i b ed room , 2 b a th , 2 ' a r ga- age F o f f *1 i i /m g an d b lftlr g koqm>. ac r» A 1 v m o re detail- * , ty ro o /Ti 2 fg e B ad g e - a ’ 442 7881 oi t a t e ' a I a c r e f o r 444 4984 Ja c o b B a ,'trie an 't A s*."' R E F R I G E R A T O R R E N T A L No D e p o s it • A p a r t m e n t J 2 5 .0 0 / m o n t h ly or siz e S42 50 semester Free Delivery 926-7243 2000 B U F F A L O E S f or S a le wift. Soon* D a k o ta B a t IV', Vt per af re tor S45.f/X; d eed ed ’ a ' d m a t y ...... B e e 1/ 1*9 2 TS7 ' i i ' : ' h a t a ' S e ' , 286 2689 288 H o u s e s , F u r n . * I Bf LB',','/ *'f erst I WA / ' E / " /lr 7 B E D R O O M a p a r t m e n t rn old hoote ■•a ' / a m p u l HZO OO pet rribntt B ills p aid 4/4 S U S 7804 I R E N ' H P l AC * (A p p ro * I bloc kl '•ast of u r j S n a r e to rn i t t?d J bedroom 2 b a t ' boul'- w th y a r d i8S OO JVS OC W a n t e d H A P P E N S T A t ! ' 2906 San G a b r e Ne/, Store '/per lf,g S e p te m b e r <6 lo o * .rig lr,, 'i ,a c a ',d ie s , feather w o' r w v . 'l and m e ta l I- jlp t ijr e t a od ' a 477 5993 " ' 'r a t t e d /' . ' , to y , e t' - . " I >IJ| R *......" " / I " reader y J TO/ fh jjf^ / r fry f/OOh*,. t ,„ y f rt* B A R T f N O E R A VA I L A B L £ for ar. / and a f r a te r fiit/ p a rtie s R e a s o n a b le 444 59 54 I & 2 b e d r o o m a p t s / p a t j o g s Fu rn ish ed or unfurnished. ' TH, dishwasher and dis p u s s I r o o m , P o o l a n d p a r t sundry room, maintenance crew, red-,unable fall rates, c l o s e s h o p p i n g r a m p u s , center Near shuttle bul route G o o d e f t / i r o n m e n t , frp" rent given to some lucky F o r rn t e n a n t o n c e ■> m o n t h r a Ll 454 9475 o r f o r m a t i o n , c o m e b y 4305 D u /al s t u d e n t t o D U V A L VILLA SOUTH SHORE A P A R T M E N T S Efficiency, I, 2, and 3 bedroom ap artm en ts. O ffe r the solution to your fall housing lf p e t " g , And * t s h a g From$145 all bills paid 300 F ast R i/ frs id e Drive 444 333? I J N E / P f C T E D j(.( a N C V THE C A R R E L S M A N O R V I L L A I B R —SI20 2 B R —$148.50 C E N T R A L A IR C A R P E T IN G POO L 2401 Manor Rd. 474-4665 T H E V I N E Y A R D & S N O O T Y F O X Signing Fall Leases New Ultra Modern Apts Bright Colors Shag Carpet Dishwasher Pcx,) Efficie n cy 1 B R Furn 2 B R F urn $140 up $160 up $205 up A L L B IL L S P A ID 6309 B U R N S __________ l^ T 4561 t A N G L E W O O D W E sT a PT S I B R Furn $150 2 B R Furn - $180 Cfi S H W A S H P R S H A & T A P P E T P O O L C f N T b a i A I B C O N D IT IO N IN G 1403 N O R W A LK L A N E 472-9614 477 5134 S H U TT I I B U S C O R N f R B R A M B L E B U S H 1 B R Furn $135 2 B R Furn $160 * Shag Carpet * Central Air * Large Pool 2604 Manor Rd 477-1064 B R A N D N FC /, t we, b edroom C o m p e te ly f u r n iih e d . te lf c le a n in g ito ve . tro it f r e e !160 'm o n th , %75 d epuvit l a n e 38 5 2 8 5 5 A lto 2 b edroom unfur n utted d u p le x e r 385 7217 r e f r i g e r a t o r , d n h w a i h e r 1802 D alto n S p a cio u t, quiet, S E N I O R S g r a d u a te ! C a ia R o ta . 4312 t m a iie r co m D u r a l pie* b e a u tifu l one b edroom H40 00 p iu i e le c t r if ie r D iih w a t h e r , d<<,poiai. c a r p e t i n g r * b l e , C A C H , w a i t ,n f.im e tt w a t h a te r ia 345 1322,4514919 london Sgoare : B R . I B A 2 B R , 2 B A 3 B R . 3 BA $164.50 $235 L a rg e Pool —All Bills Paid $325 Move In Today! • Best Rate on the Lake Shuttle Bus-Front Door 2400 Town Lake Circle 442 8340 E L D O R A D O A P T S . I B R Furn. S140-S150 Sm all friendly complex nice pool H patio area 3501 Speedway 472-4893 S H U T T L E BU S C O R N E R B U C K IN G H A M S Q U A R E I B B F urn * tSS A L L B I L L S B A ID D l» h w a ih « r — Pool 711 W 32 Wa , to < am p in fully t arp*t*d 451 424$ 452-4142 S U N N Y V A L E A P T S . 2 B R Furn —SI74.25 P R I / A T E b a l c o n i e s d i s h w a s h e r P O O L CF N T P A L A I R 444 Vl't> 441 0606 S H U r r I E B U S C O R N E B T H E C O N T E M P O f ffir encies K 1-bedroom apartments — Furnished A ll bu ilt-ins, in c lu d in g trustless refrigerators - Laundry I block from Guadalupe H convenient to UT area From $130, all bills paid 454 6811 504 Swariee 453-0740 M A R K X X A P T S . I B R —$155 2BR —$184 C E N T R A L A IR C A R P E T IN G I A R G E PO O L 3815 G U A D A L U P E 454 3953 452-5093 M A R K IV A P T S I Br Fg fn 115$ S m a ll f r i/'fidly r.om ple* Bo o l F u lly 'a r p e t e d W a to ' K g a l p aid C e n tra l air conditioning I IOO S p e e d w a y 478 4096 S H U T TI. F B U S C O R N E R P A R K P L A C E A P T S 2 B R F U R N - $ 180 A L L B IL L S P A ID ) , ro n d itlo n ln g r - ' t ' i la rg e roorrit " , y 'a r p a t e d '" / a r e d p a rk in g 4 !'/6 A , i 452 i80i C O N G R E S S P A R K Apartments * 1 2 K } tind ro o m a p a rtm e n ts • f rorr $145, «|l b ills r,* id * Po ol • L a u n d r y 30 3 J oh*. N a ne 4 D a rn e r tut VSH T H E C O N S U L Fall is more fun on the lake ar ,< i .i» if j bedroom ‘o w n h o o t* and 2 •, » o ( ._ ,j,e a t te a t u r e i I r e ' ' , /1'- gr i. la rg e pool, ret r e a s o n ” , " r ' i * , d y ' a b l * T V , d l i w a i ' ■" J vp o i * I i n d i v i d u a l l y con tro lled ' A CM, th u tti* b ut Come by Apt. 113 1201 Tinnin Ford Road 444-3411 / / G O D W A R D A B A R TM F . IT S iii I W o o d w a rd o f f lr a |Q7 444 IVA 2, or 3 bed room * -n f t j r n i c h e d o r f u r n it h a d I rfjn $ 140 $250 / HW n*nr a * 44 " " ’ ’J b o o l I , p l a y g r o u n d * , ghtad ground*. 5 m ln u ta * ; p '- ' ' to B A F B , t-,,1 me B H I S B A ID , fro m I r f * T A N G L E W O O D N OR T H I B R F urn $140 up 2 B R F urn $180 up A r p * ,d ■jt t s t.ag < or f,e» arg#4 P o o l* i '-r ■ jf 11#* B u * r o r fier 1020 E 45th 452 0060 A N T I L L E S AP T S . 2 B R Furn. $180 A L L B IL L S P A ID 2 N IC E PO O LS D IS H W A S H E R F U L L Y C A R P E T E D 2204 I NF if I D R D 478 0609 S H U T T L E B U S C O R N E R W I L L O W C R E E K L u xu ry For Less 1 B R $165 up 2 B R $205 up A L L B I L L S P A I D Sh u ttle B u t Ro u te , D lt h w a ih e r t 2 larg e p o o li, ie c u r it y , C lu b ro o m , V o lle y B a il C o u rt Move in today 1901 W illow Creek 444-0010 H A L L M A R K A P T S I B R F u r n . -$145 • King size Bedrooms • Central Air 8, Heat • Dishwasher • F u lly Carpeted • Walk to Campus 708 W 34 452-1958 E L C I D AP T S . I B R — $150 2 B R $175 D I S H W A S H E R C E N T R A ! A C C A R P E T E D P A M I IN G 3704 speedway 453 4883 S H U T T ! F B U S F R D N T D 'X / R * 1 3 5 A L L B I L L S P A I D • Colorful Shag Carpet • Central Air • Pool • Shuttle Bus 3 Blks R E T R E A T APT S. 4400 A V E A 451-7092 M ove In Today E S T A B L I S H M E N T A P T S . ‘ 1 3 5 A L L B I L L S P A I D • Dishwasher • Colorful Shag Carpet • Central Air • Shuttle Bus 3 Blks 4400 Ave B 451 4584 M o ve I n Today T H E B L A C K S T O N E $64 50/month A p a r tm e n t liv in g /> block I rorr C a m p i t In d iv id u a l a p p l ! 'a n t i r r a b h e d w ith r'/ rn p a tib le r o o m m a te ! 2910 Hi-1 R i aer 4/6 5631 A Paragon Property W E R E N T A U S T I N Your time is valuable Our services free P A R A G O N P R O P E R T I E S N F W E F F I C I E N C I E S and one b e d rt rn p e a 'e t u i W A u s t in C o lo r f u l s h a g c a r p e t d is h w as h e r'., cozy co m m u n ity F r o m 112*50 Innsb roo k 1211 W Btl ( J u s t off B la n c o ), 474 1107 W I ST A U S T I N , n e a r shuttle One and tw o b ed room s w ith shag ' nr pet, patios, b a lc o n ie s , c o m p le te k itc h e n P n r e d fro m 1155 C as tile. 807 W est Ly n r 477 7794 C E N T R A ! , „ m L O C A T I O N triu n ity L a r g e one K two bedrs w ith c a rp e tin g , walk in closet, [tool, w alk to ' a m p u s or shuttle I rom H J S 904 W e st A /e n u r 476-9017 q u ie t N O i f A S E re q u ire d F u lly fu rn ish ed eft and one oedr clo s e to Shoal Creek H o s p ita l P r ic e d fro m *135 In Q u ln t a n a , 4 116 B u lle r eel, P d , 454 H76 E F F ic if NC. y o n shuttle bus route Include-, shag ca rp e t, full kitch e n , cen t r a l a ,r and heat s 129 50 C a s a I ell''- , 4204 'd/eedwa / 465 8987 N E A R C A M P U S l a r g e e ff ic ie n c ie s w ith shag ca rp e t, b uilt in k itch e n O nly S i4 5 A L L B I L ! f u r n is h e d R e d w o o d S q u a re , 403 W 38th, 452 1501 P A I D H U G E 2 B e d r 2 bath with F IR F P l a c f I , * u r y a p a r t m e n t w ith d e e p st ag ■ a r pet, p aneling, b uilt i- book, as'"., la r g e w alk in c lo s e t!, pool, arid deluxe k itch e n f ro m 1219 a i l B i n $ i v . i d S p a n is h V illa N o rth , 909 R e in ! 4',4 9863 tw o bede S U P E R L O C A T I O N b a r g a ir p r ic e tu rn ,sh e d apts L a r g e one, a ted |u l t off I m 35 b y H ancock Center c lose to IJT by bt R iv e r s id e and A irp o rt B u d m r iud es r a r ( ,P » d is h w a s h e rs , a ' Q uiet, ii4 0 % 160 1037 f 44tt 454 5526 S O M E T H IN G D I F F E R E N T K iln Jennies elevated with separate bedroom * plu* enormous one and two bedroom contemporary apt* with '-very con venx-n"- tarnished or unfurnished OAK ( ' R E E K is environmentally oriented .ind offers a r r<-clt that wind* through the eom- rriuntiy convenient to campus 4 shopping and "m ve n ie n tly priced from ll/ ', J5**7 Houston Street 454 6394 Or 478 4*ftfi $149 50 A L L B IL L S P A ID S p a c io u s on# bedroom ' c a r cam p u s ' a Ch, built-in kitch e n , ric h wood p aneling, b u ilt in stu d y desk, co m p le te , / carp e te d 4307 A v e n u e A 1*476 4655 O N E A c w e e k d a y s , 477 6581 B l G R O O M r e f r ig e r a t o r , 176 T a r r y to w n , beth, lo e B en s o n , E N F I E L D A R F A , s m a ll a p a r t m e n t r o m m u n ity F u rn lsh e d one bedroom , ah b u ilt m r tchens, C A /CH, vaulted ce i mg P r ic e s for tad 1139 50 plus e ll" tr ie it/ I a d r illo B la n c o , BOI We st L y r e 4/7 7794 N O TV I E A S I N G new e ffic ie n c y ap a rt rn e n t O ' , " s e m e s t e r or l o n g e r 1 135 OO " onth A il b ,i'. pa d 2700 //ane,' f*d , 477 4118 2805 72aco r Rd , 474 2201 i B a t h , C A C H , la rg e 2 Fit U R D o r/ pool, ■ , bloc ks f r o " law school, on lh u t tie bus route, a ll bd ls paid ' asa dei R io ll 12 R e d R iv e r 478 0672 L E M I R A G E NO L E A S E L A R G E I R E Q U I R E D ! 8. B E D R O O M S P O O L L A R G E C L O S E T S K C A B I N E T S P A C E 2 F R O M $144 T a k e N o rth I oop B lv d , b etw een B u rn e t R d if, L a m a r , u,<" r ig h t on R o o s e v e lt to 5606 R o o s e v e lt K I < M ir a g e 454 9848 $155 A L L B I L L S P A I D O ne b edroom I u rn ish e d R i ver*,ff)e A re a 2324 Tow rilak '■ C IN Ie E l M o n te r r e y 444 8118 W O O T EN P L A Z A A P A R T M E N T S L a r g e 2 B R , 2 b ath, ' a n tra l A lr/H '- at A ll B u ilt m s P o o l D is h w a s h e r F * tr a S to ra g e 1175 F urm sh e d 1710 W o o te n P a r k 4512498 L o s t s F o u n d I O S T - G o ld key f fig w ith I keys, gold disc e o g ra /cd /• N M C all M s P u tm a r 4711631 I O ', T FII 7-c X w alle t probate y tv. Vie Irnty foe Of IVN and Sari Ja r into R e w a r d ' a 7/od I na 471 5611 PF W A R D 'w o s m a ll b row n ish dogs lost v ic in ity D r a m a D ept c o lla rs , no ta g s ' a d 4',3 4623 D e s p e ra te R o o m m a t e s 72Al I 02/N m n " >wo bed room a p a rt m e ' ’ N o rth w e ft 180 B o b 45: 8976 atter U N F ' O R T W O m a le ro o m m a te s needed for two b e d r I u rn lfh e d apt tw o bath 444 0775 P O O / / / / / *M o u r m a r rie d I ow sh; d e n t w ill s h a re la r g e 2 b e d ro o m ,/ batt, a p a r tm erit Witt, s e rio u s student HOO FXI m o n th ly l r -lodes u tilitie s 44: :/39 I I '/ A L F R O O M // A TF O w n roo m r srr a house w ill, y a rd B r rig d is tan ce I o u f G r a d u a te stud ent or w ork ing per son p l u s (23 pi ,-.; p r e fe rre d 162 50. root,th, S u s i e 4/2 1 8 6 6 b i l l s R CX; / / 72 A IF w a rte d One m a le to sh are four b e d 'o orr a p a r tm e n t rn R ,er H lls 44, 6085 atte r 6 p c r o o m m a te F F 72 A I F a p a r tm e n t 1/0, no u tilitie s N e a r UT 4/6 846 b e to n /am one b e d ro o m a ll'- ' 5prr R O O M iM A T f w arded b ad roo rr apt AC , pool, 175 plus tie r t r i r i t y r an je u at 451 5867 or co m e by 411 2/>fi» .J9tt N o 101 J e r y n m one F I 72 a l f H A S la rg e tw o b edroom house ort S p e e d w a y N eed two roorr.rr.at'", lr, h e lp pac re n t R e a lly a b e au tifu l house S h u ttle s e rv ic e f .rru tr.eo e x ce p t one b e d ro o m ' a il 45', 6619 t h a t e 2 ll A N T F Q I I M A L I be d ro o m // bath w ith brie other w om an 444 6924 or 44/ 245 I to R O O M M A l l M i D E D a p t p r e fe r r e d 4/8 2/77 2048 I ast !7;th two bed room to G r a d u a t e S t u d e n t J u n i o r R O O M / / A T I W A N T E D A ! /e O r e m a "- to sr a r# [,!.;i one bedroorr ap t at E n g lis h A i r e , / I C I B u rto n D r iv e Apt IO O ? . 2 6 P rr /•I, C A ft ret H.V9S M A B UT ; bedroom . 7 b a n - ........ B t " ’ ; V; 478 st, 8 8 ,' so 22 A / a ra b it 'N ! B 17.000 B f j S t SSO uw m l t a g * 47/ i W S E W I N G M A C H I N E S a r ),, • t vi-o b f a - o i r > c m ar h in ts ort p ► w tt ' a ' A tt I g Af ad ' 478 4/66 -A I . a'' nr M A S S 71 S P A N S H Be d 'OO rf le t! poi® I ’/(J i No*". A? so $pe a Vt t \ 4// * 4V/ T U E F R E N C H P L A C E ?/04 J r* -3/ r. L ir v 4// 4 LM r f a p e f ✓ f % r < Pr*/,! ^ V ^ rjfy M A R K V A P T S . I B R Furn $150 I. i t w e lt er ^ Pf,,, r a n tr a l Air 6 H e e ’ X .rig s /'■ flerJ,M ,rr t S h u ttle H u t C urrier B f F B ' M B A 4/8 1844 ■/I f O R D S u b * ' »a 1 7 8 , nod fib* ' 2 « cr t. Ut, 12 ISS 'A d Hr-AH” a 4 64 /- /to a 7' U S E D n i WE: ti', , 14 4 64 699', $130.00 A N D U P Page 18 Tuesday, September 4, 1973 I H E D A IL Y T E X A N 4 7 2 - 4 1 7 1 R o o m s N I A R I A // ’, ' h'*7 'IU .f t to ttu d y 1149 50 f'/rr *.hw) B n ' '- ara’ . 370! I t a r m a n 453 7190 I a r g a ort* bedroom , c l e a n i a R o t r » !ld # n t.a l neighb or hood I t l l W r i t I Oft S tre e t No 'XI 29 n t t y .r, t i 20/month, : y , or »n- 472 R O O M A / A l l A B I [ C o rn e r suite C all 4/8 9611, P m le a v e m e s s a g e tor M r Gill!*, in G o b le for m a le i/8 or '. a n g a b r i e l , f u r n i i h e d 1906 ROO72 r e fr ig e r a t o r , e/ariOf.-ii ye rooter S85 m onth 4/2 4/lii tjr, pats, p r iv a te e n tra n c e , batt , I al K I T C H E N h e lp W a it r e s s e s / w a it e r s w arded P e c a n S tre e t C a fe 314 F 6th S tre e t IF Y O U A R F o v e r 21, lik e to sm ile , and h a v e lo key e x p e rie n c e , c a ll 4 78 6439 F 'art- h m e or full-tim e hou rs a v a ila b le Ar, e q u al o p p o rtu n ity e m p lo y e r P A R T T IM E IC E c r e a m trur k d r iv e r s needed W o rk afterno ons an d w eekend s A p p ly 5210 F ast R iv e r s id e D r L OC AL D E I I V E R 2 m ust h a v e car, gas allo w a n c e , p a r t t im e F o r In te r v ie w , r a il 472 1248 N E E D F D H A R D W O R K I N G in d iv id u a l tor p o r t e r '! p e titio n . M o rn in g hours A p p l y 2406 G u a d a lu p e In p e r s o n T a r i n g s C O N S T R U C T IO N labor w ard e d P le a s e co n ta c t G r a n g e r M a r D o n a ld at 453 8735 / Q U a r e a q u a lif ie d tr a n s la to r , ty p is t of an y r o n t a c t IF p ro o fre a d e r, ed itor, or l a n g u a g e , IN T C R C O N T I NF:. N T A I T R A N S L A T I O N S lf. 472 8977 To be p aid b y p ric e scale Ja r r ir o w s k i; in te rn a tio n a l I F / r F | | T N T W A G E o p p o r tu n itie s H o s t, h o i t a i I , m o d e l, p h o t o g r a p h y p ositio n s n ow a - ' eiited for d ep en d a b le a t tr a c t iv e a p p lica n ts 472 0447 t r e a t m e n t c e n te r need s R e s id e n t ia l m a r rie d co up le to work p a rt tim e w ith 8 ad o le s ce n t boys in ad d itio n to s a la r y , lob o ffe rs a good le a rn in g e x p e rie n c e for g r a d u a te or upper d iv is io n students in m e S o c ia l Scie n ce s C o n t e 't The S e ttle m e n t c lob H o m e 8)6 2150 f A S / 72 O N I / 2Ve buy high school ttu d e n t a d d r e s s d i r e ' t o r i e s , S I S / 1,OOO f am'-s D e ta ils N a tio n a l B re a d , Box 2001, A rd m o re , O K 7340) F A R N B IO b ucks S e ll flo w e r s on street co rn e rs T h u rsd ay S u n d a y 476 3060 u n d e rg ra d u a te C AV M ills 2/A N T F D type p e r t " ' R a d ic a l S c ie n tis t needs s e 'r e t a r y for s tra ig h t re s e a rc h p r o le - 1 A b ility to deal w ith c o n tra d ic tio n (lik e ♦he abo /e j pius c u r io s ity p lus c a p a - tty to lau g h In the ta- e of ch a o s plus ty p in g ( a la s i art. In d isp en sib le Som e f e m m e ' i / w ith F O R T R A N and/or soft sciences d e s ira b le 20 hours per w eek, fle x ib le sr Fledgling aro und c lasses, etc, 12 00 per h o u r C a l l 472-5267, be tw e e n v 12 a rn S e p t 72ay 31 D is p la y d e p a rtm e n f e x p e rie n c e re q 1 red F uh or pact tim e A p p ly in per soc. 7/c Sim on, 3rd floo r 506 C o ngress D ow ntow n YARINGS G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S ID A I c" lu re Notes Sec / ce is now h irin g a u d ito rs for the ta ll se m e s te r iou m ust ' a ye a B A nr Ti', with a m iaior or m in o r is 13 50 per in N a t u ra l S cie n ce s P a y 901 W e s t 74th s e m e s te r hou r S tre e t, 477 3641 ID A B A R ( F N D F R , w a l t r e s s / w a ’ e r to cc" II- A u s tin 's Finest r lle n te l P a r t tim e M u t t be a re lia b le at 4 p rn. B r in g r e 'e f t photo, a p p ly in person only Th e D ra u g h t Mouse, T il/ M e d ic a l P k „ t W O R K I R N I F DF O for odd mbs 72 USI h a v e T h e D r a u g h t House, 4112 7/eid' al P k w y t r a n s p o r t a t io n W A N T ! D C R F A T I VF lo v in g p erson to a fte r rn / one year old w h ile I work 72 y hom e or yours 472 1001 a fte r 5 p rn N E F (, I W 'l l f AC M f R '> for sr hoot age - n Id r e n te a c h e r arid d a n ce / a rts / f rafts te a c h e r C a ll for ap P O U ’ m erit H (6 1609 3 6 pm P I 2/ A tv I F O F U L L or p a rt tim e 'e r t lf ie d flig h t In s tr u c t o r ! ' u n fact R a y F Jard ln g B ir d 's N est A irp o rt 777 5337 W A N TF D C M U D D E /F I O P M l NT or 1‘ re n u rs ln g stud ent to ■ a r e for m y nine ye a ' old son, Tuesd ay, T h u rs d a y , 7 'IO 5 IO C a ll M r s / a u g ' a- 476 9785 P A R T T172 f J O B ', a v a ila b le for sk Hied in s tr u c to r ! m g y m n a s tir s and baton, a f t e r r bons, arid lad le s' e x e rc is e and p re SI hooters, m orriif gs C a ll A b ' la T/.er tell, 4/6 5667 7 / O T H E R '5 H I U R E R 1 ge t housew ork, m in im a l c a r a of S' bool age ' I dee- 7/ust ha ye ow n t r a n s p o r t W ag e s neg o tiab le 83/ 1617, afte r 6 • w e e k d a ys , 3 6 P A R T T 172 F E M P L O Y E E for rest work In q u ire rr drilght to 4 am , 6 d a y s / w e a k W a lt's ' offeepot 4811 8 ;r n e t R d 6 arr. 2 pre week da ys !I72F I • J I ' A '.H U R, p a r t tim e cook a-d wa tre s s w alter Young, attra- t u e , intel gent, h ard //orre-s A p p ly C h e r r y afreet inn 1601 G u a d a lu p e P A R T - T I M E A R T I S T Advertising Department Established Company e n th u s ia s t!', C r e a tiv e , a r c h it e c tu r a l, a d v e rtis in g , or a rt student to do paste up, design, posters, floor p lan s S a la r y open, hou rs flex ib le 7/ust be a b le to do c a m e r a - r e a d y a n for p r i n t i n g ' a l l S h e r r y /Aatthew s 452 7149 F A S T F 7/0d ' o rn p a n / needs a d r iv e r for i o r - " t s a r / H o urs 7 I M o n d a y th ro ugh F n d a y af d 3 hours on S a tu r d a y /A ult h a v e good d riv in g re c o rd A p p ly 19'I /* ride - sot I arie b etw ear 9 3 or ' a i l 454 55/7 and ask for L ydla HOL ID A Y H O U SE No I 1003 BA R T O N S P R IN G S P o s itio n s for c a s h ie r, fo u n ta in , K 'a r h o p are ,[,r-r fur noon runs 7/ust be a b l* to w ork M o n d a y 1 a d a y fur 2 1 h o u r i Her a u te of t i e s c h o la rs h ip p ro g ra m , ttu*. is an id eal lob tor to lla g e students Hour-, m a y br- adiu-.ted to rneet your s ch e d u le A p p ly 5 p m 7 pre, d a ily K A R A T E Wanted instructors, managers, representatives. No experience necessary. W e will train. Part-time or full time job. Please contact: Mr. Forte between 9 am - 7 pm at 444-9889. DOB I E C E N T E R is now ar i ('[/ting appllc A llo n s for sec u ri ty g u a rd It you a r e o v e r 21 an d fu lfill the ■ (■' a s s a r y q u a iifU aho'.-., a p p ly at G o b le ' u r n r r .c " ial O ff ic e , S u it * 6 f.e n te r 5 prr, M o n d a y th ro u g h f " d a y F rom In te r v ie w s to be a rr a n g e d F *O S IT IO N for student to - are for I c hild Room , b oard, s a la r y p rovid ed Ta 397 593? d ays, 477 1584 nights K w eekends V I R G I N I A S C H N F ID I R T y p in g Ste i ■ r or, piete di versified s e r v ic e s 459 7205 m m N E E D 5 p ersons p a r tt im e , e vening s, and S a tu rd a y s 12 50/hour C a r arid neat a p p e a r a n c e A p p ly 3004 G u a d a lu p e , re a r, suite 108 4pm 2 S T U D E N T S needed fro m 2 6pm d a lly . lir e n s e M o n d a y F r i d a y C o m m e r r i * i re q u ire d D r iv e bus to and fro m schools A ssist In b o w lin g p ro g ram s A p p ly in p erson A u s tin B o w l O R a m a 517 S L a m a r B A P H E L P no co stu m e s M u st be neat and a ’ t r a c tlv e P a r t tim e evening s A p p ly 5213 N o rth I a m a r tim e In s tru c to rs H A N C O C K R E C R E A T I O N Center needs p art In tap, b allet, b a to n , a c r o b a t i c s , au to ris e r h a n k s , w eight liftin g , yoga, ch ild re n s g ard en Ing, d ra w in g , b rid ge, painting, g u ita r IO hours per and flow er a r r a n g in g 7 week f a l l 453 0622 l l 90 to 17 40 per hour S H O R T O R D E R cooks and kitchen help needed for n e w r e s ta u ra n t A p p ly in per son 2nd floor, D ob ie C enter 3 5pm C O U N T E R H E L P P r e f e r u p p e r c la s s m e n D r y c leerilng p lant 79 a m , or 4 7,pm, and S a tu rd a y s C all 444 7063 for a p p o in tm e n t P A R T T I M E s e c r e ta r y H ours flex ib le for 2 a tto rn e y s Confact Scott W ork S te w in g 477 381 1 P I C K U P C H I L D and b a b ys it 7 30 4 30pm d a lly L ig h t b o u le w o rk 454-8819 afte r 4 N E E D E D I M M E D I A T E L Y one ' a s h l e r for p a rt tim e noon and two g rill persons fo r p a r t t i m e n ig h t s W e o f t e r a \r h o la rs h lp p lan, p rofit sh *' ,g and half p rice on food A p p ly In person Two J 's H a m b u rg e rs 3918 7j L a m a r f o r I n t e r v i e w i n g T H E M O V I E S T A R is c o c k t a i l w a itre s s e s / w a ite rs to work fro m 4 OO 12 OO F a rn 1150 OO per week A lso heed d a ru e rs 16 OO per hour Barter,dc- to work F r i d a y an d S a tu r d a y n ig h ts C le an u p p erson to work fro m I OO til 4 (JO A p p ly in parson I 3 OO d a ily, 1602 San Ja c in to P A R T T I M E W O R K 3 evenings and Saturday minimum. $300 per month Call 452-2758. Learn to Identify E D I B L E P L A N T S W e w ill pay U T u n ­ dergraduates $5 to par­ t i c i p a t e in an e x ­ p erim ental Computer- A s s i s t e d I n s t r u c t i o n program Call 471-1044 G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T Witt, arc.', ;rit!ng d e g re e to work 20 hu , r t w<-ekiy S u m * kn ow le d g e of co m p u te rs ar,d/or prugr arnm lrtg helpful but r-> re q u ire d M u l l be a v a ila b le for u-A-.t •/ ye ars 12 per hour 465 HAI f all Georgi- '.ct tt H o u s e s , U n f . C O U N T R Y H O M E 4 B ed ro o m . 2 B a th , well, and e / t r a s 125,000 11,850 00 w tie up lu ll a n e deep I 897 2357 Security Realty 788 7689 /Du J Z J J I B F C R O O M I /, bath n e w ly d e r r,r a t e r ] c e n tra l a ir and heat, d ish w ash e r d s p o t a I, r e f r . a e r a t o r 1750/month, HOO deposit Top s r „ (,e 442 4919 5307 South C " e g r e s s O p e 8 5 s t o v e a n d N F A T 2 1, W eb e r V ille Rd Air stove, r e f , w a s t e r , a r g * ya rd 1175.00 b ills paid 447 2696 ' a r pe ’ H o u s e s , F u r n . I A K I T R A V I S w a te rfro n t hom e Tr , a e r* , b a b o / u , patio, re g u latio n level, I 2. r e s p o n s i b l e p o o l students or ( a m i l , R e fer es re n o ir i d M r s K ie fe r 454 7741 w e ek d ays ill OTI I nights c o l o r t a b le CIN LA k I T R A V I S O ne bedroom , ne w|y re m o d e le d , b e a u tifu l view, s w im " ng and br,ating Si/5 07; 767 1050 M o rn in g s 8 IO OO a fte r 5 OO F o p R e n t T y p i n g J u s t North of 27th & Guadalupe f i lm M B A. Typing, M u lti 11 th I ny. B in d in g The Complete Professional F U L L - T IM E Typing Service R E S U M E S with or without pictures. 2 [/ay S e rv ic e 477 3210 and 477 7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k S T A R K T Y P I N G E x p e r ia n c e d theses, P r in t in g and d is s e rta tio n s P R 's etc B in d in g S p e c ia lty te ch n ic al, C h a rle n e S ta rk , 453 5718 M A B CL S M A I I W O O D T y p in g S e r v ic e 'a s t m in u t e - o v e r n ig h t a v a ila b le 897 0777 5001 Sunset Trail 447 8545 7005 A rth u r l.an e T e rm p apers, theses, dis s e d a tio n s , le tte rs M a s te r C b arg e . B an k A m e n e a rd w e lcom ed J u s t North of 27th & Guadalupe n n ^ i / v h j Y ES/ we do type Freshman themes. W h y not start out with good grades! 477 3210 and 472 1677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k T IPI N G G u a ra n te e d S e le c t o r 35' page Quir k w-.rk 476 8218 r e s u lt s I B M A to Z S E C R E T A R IA L S E R V IC E 109 E ast 10th St 472 0149 Theses, D llie r t a tio n s , th e m es, P R s. B f Rep orts, re s u m e s M u itih th in g , B in d in g I ver ythm g r rom A to I M u 11 i I i t h i n g, T y p in g , Xeroxing A U S - T E X D U P L I C A T O R S 476-7581 118 Neches D I;,S F R T A T I G N ’,, theses re p o rts , and t a w b r i e f s t y p i s t , T 'a frytb w ', 2507 B n d a P a t t L o r r a in e B r a d y 472 4715 ( / p e r i e r , r e d J u s t North of 27th 8. Guadalupe Ity M lh a J I n n y L v b j 1 pi "J 721 B r,di The Complete Professional F U L L - T I M E T y p i n g Service to th# taiic.'^ d f,eeds of U m v e r t i t ) s ’ .dents spec a 1 k e y b o a rd e q u ip m e n i tor lang uage science ar,-) e n g in e e rin g ft eses and d isse rtatio n s 4/7 3210 and 472 I til 2707 H e m p h ill P e r ► M A R JO W IF A D E L A F I E L D T yp .ngq F d i s s e r t a t i o n s , t il e s e s , r e s u m e s d u p lic a tin g , bind ing open e y e r /d a y 442 7008, 442 1070 T r a v e l G R I / IN G SO M I //HF R F V S a v e on gas, fa tig ;<• end " a / b e 'flak e a f r ie n d ' a l l A u s tin R id e c e n te r 453 6700 9 UNCLASSIFIED tm f D F E M A L E ro o m m a te C h r 9.355 R o o m & B o a r d B f I S G N D O R / / P,t mer. e x c e lle n t b b " <• "y o k e d m e als A ' m a id , s w m cr ug p " , 76IO R ', G r a r de fo r U N I 7 f R M T / CO D P H '. u s in g W om en 2610 W h ltis tit r e m o n th ! room and b oard 1/79 00 and 18:9 00 f a l l 471 ',136 Use Texan NIT F H O U S F n e ar B u d a HOO rent //ill tr a d * for nix e house in A ustin R e p ly Fib/ 8779 U n iv e r s it y S tatio n Classifieds A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . N E V E R L I V E D I N - N E W " W A T E R L O O F L A T S " 41 W alle r 476-9491 2-bedroom I bath F u r n i s h e d $210.00 Unfurnished $179.50 All Bills Paid "One Block North Side Town L a k e " A I D E A P A R T M E N T L O C A T I N G S E R V I C E L E T US A I D E YOU IN L O C A T I N G Y O U R A P A R T M E N T OR H O M E F A S T C O U R T E O U S S E R V I C E S A V E S T I M E A N D T E M P E R T H I S S E R V I C E IS F R E E P H O N E 836-9323 7800 C A M E R O N R O A D S e r v i c e s S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T on g u a ra n te e d re p a ir * . * a le v and r e n ta li M a n u a l, por IO ke y ta b le ty p e w r it e r u*ed, *25 up e le c tr ic adder, *25 up A B C T y p e w r i t e r 605 N e ch e * 474 4239 M e c h a n ic * sp e cia lisin g In V W , Vo lve , Toyota, D atsun, B riti* h , Opel and 240/Z Q u a l i t y w o r k / r e a s o n a b l e r a t e s 4 month/4000 m ile g u a ran te e on a ll *er v ic e an d p a rts A ugust S p e cia l M a io r tu n e u p *12 50 plus parts I V W 110 50 plus p a r ts ) F r e e e s tim a te s / F r e e com p ressio n ch e ck s O v e rs e a s E n g in e 4 Su p p ly 8363171 R o o m & B o a r d » h l J » t le b u s , f e m a l e u p p e r t 'assm a n K itc h e n p riv ile g e s , m a id 9 e rv irc a v a ila b le 478 2808 b etw een 9 4 T H E P H O E N I X 1930 San A n to n io S ingles *99 50 D oubles *94 SO F R E E R I B B O N W ith a n y ty p e w rite r or ad d in g m a ch in e re p air R e a so n a b le rate-, Sales, se rvice , re n tals A B C T Y P E W R I T E R CO N e w ly re d eco rate d , d a lly m aid , new lounge Color T v , w a » h e r d ry e r Hot plate, and r e fr ig e r a to r a llo w ed f ree p ark in g one block fro m C am p u s 476 9265 47 7 5777 605 N e ch e * 474 4239 L A R G E R O O M Students 708 TV lOtf 477 7',24 for s e r io u s f e m a le f F T E L I S T I N G C om puter M a tc h in g S e rv ic e , f u n C O M P U T E R S , 600 w n No IOT, 477 4492 n i c e *50 / m o n th p riv ile g e s f u r n i s h e d roo m tor student fu r k it c h e r n o e x t r a j I ob 1 a ta y e tte E X P E R I E N C E D ch ild ca re , m o d ern hom e, hot m e a l, happy day, ag es 18 m o nths 5 N e a r In te rre g io n a l O lto rf 442 2696 Vt R 7 N it I PO O // SIDO OO UT a re a m a le student, lib e ra l, lau n d ry, 'le a n in g s e rv ic e a v a ila b le tre e 45 s ii/ / / D A N 'S T Y P E W R I T E R S & C A L C U L A T O R S 2408 San G a b rie l (N e x t to N a y P h a r m a c y ) Sales, service, rentals (a ll m akes) 474-6396 Xerox or IB M 4c C O P I E S Reduction C ap a b ility to 24 x 36 P ictu res, AAultiIith. 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S E R V I C E 1 A R G E S IN D I t, roo m o ne block c a m ­ pus Studious a tm o sp h e re , ca n tre f air, m a id j e r v k e The M u s t in g 205 W est 201- 472 941 or 478 709/ On,, bedroom eft ic ter,, y also a c a lla b le T E X A N D O R M 190S IVO/ R u e r es F a n , Sp ring sem ester *4*.50/month D a ily m a id '.cr vie c. r e ritral i t r , ro m p le te ly rem od eled A lso a v a ila b le single rooms, p ark in g , r e fr ig e r a to r Hot P la te s allow ed Two b lo ck * (ro m r a n pus Cr, rn) R E S I D E N T M A N A G E R S 4 l l ,760 M i s c e l l a n e o u s N f I S O N S G I F T S I n d i a n le w e lr y , A fr ic a n and M e x ic a n im ports 4612 South r on g ress 444 1814 < losad M o n d a ys Z u n i A l I A U S T I N C o o p e r a t iv e N u r s e r y in te r r a c ia l, p are n ts Sr hoot, c r e a tiv e , p a rtic ip a te w ith c e r tifie d te ac h ers 1 3 2 m o rn in g * 4 y e a r olds year olds morning*. 4f>4 5315 4 2 D o b ie M a ll 476 9171 F re e Pa rk in g O pen 75 hours a week P A R K I N G 2418 San A ntonio S t r ic t *60 00 tor tau se m e s te r < a I 472 0081, if no an sw e r 452 5 >44 W H I D O Cleaning A p a rtm e n ts dorrr •, and houses C a ll ,u*.an 454 MHI S H E F 1 ROC k IN G and re p a irs , a rp e r try , fr e e e s tim a te s A fte r 4 pm 4/7 147^ A P A R T M E N T M A N A G I N G ou p ie G r a d u a te s , n o r h ild r e n U n iv e r s ity a re a One a v a ila b le fu ll tim e 'n r , do rn,nor r e p a ir * 472 208! F R E E IO X E R O X C O P I E S I offer lit' ted ten r opie* per person. e x p ire s Or to per 1973, fro m A X V D A C l A I S K Y D I V E ! Austin P a ra c h u te Center F or inform ation please ra il 272 5711 an ytim e S r M O O I F U N C o n g r e g a t io n a l tx *• v e 'o p m e n t Center 7 10 5 30 408 W 23rd 0 „ a i ,f i * d Tea, hers Ages 3 6 (o r y o u r C h ild r e n ( .t o ld S P I r 1AI AAU S IC C lasses for four -arid fixe m ar old* On S a tu rd a y * N a p i/ . r r. I tr.r, A t E a s t A u 'h n MUSIC A r a d err,, ; 7 Cl Sar, Ber, ard 474 2688 £ u i U i l \ U C U . 308 W est 16th Street 476 4666 476 4665 B e t w e e n G u a d a lu p e a n d L a v a c a Z F K O X A N D O f I SE I P R I N T I N G f t e e air y Up F re e reduction* O P E N fro m 8 a rf, to 9 p rn w e e k d a y s » a rn to 2 p rn S a tu rd a y s B a n k A m e r - 'a r d end M aster C h a rg e W e ir erne denver 1 D u p l e x e s , F u r n . n o r t h ? a s t d e a n , 2 beetrooty d r y co nnections. *165 926 *44 1 e ne g h b o r t ood, a Ch, 1 arp o rt, lauri sps, buses, scho ol* Learn to cJentify E D I B L E PLANTS W e w ill pay U T u n ­ dergraduates $5 to par- t i c i p a t e i n an e x ­ perim ental Computer- I n s t r u c t i o n A s s is t e d program Call 471-1044 Barton Springs EARN %'s WEEKLY New one bedroom Vaulted w ith Ceiling, M e d ite rra n e a n Decor, CA C H, D ish w ash er, Shag Carpet $149.50 M i s c e l l a n e o u s P A R K I N G C L O S E TO C A M P U S one blur k *60 sem ester *20 " . tw o b lo rk * *35 '.err,ester, *10 me 477-5793. B lo od p i* * rn * done,'* fu n d e d ( a i r pa o fpr l e i v ic e ’, P h y s ,, a ' id atfk n d ar,' i- O p?" M o n , f h u r * 8 a r n I p m T o e * , l f ' h a rn A U S T i i i B l O O O C O M P O N E N I V INT 409 Wr -.f 6tf 4/7 t i IS J P rn r (Died Sat Wed M A D A M E C H I N A , p a lm reader and ad vt stir tells you w h ateve r you wish to know about love, m a rria g e , fa m ily a ffa irs Open seven days a week from 7 am ti pm 6531 N i a m a r or c all 454 3449 C A S U A L L Y Y O U C re ativ e Outdoor P o rtra its Save I now V isit our Studio R o y c e P o r t r a i t s 2420 G u adalu pe 472 4219 I I A P H T G P l A 7 G U I r A U B e g in n e r •rid • d v a ru e d D ra w 478 2079 __________________________ th o r n ily ,' CLASSIFIEDS W O R K ! ! ! •staM iffffj. M 0THEREABT1I unescorted women P R J G J E _ BLITZ N A N N IG A N FORMERLY M A M A S COOKIN' plus 25c BEER O P E N 8 P M . 1 0 t h & L A M A R / 4 7 7 - 3 7 8 3 Tuesday - Saturday K E N THREADGILL Lunches Served Daily 11-2 H appp y Hour 5 7p m 4413352 S e r v in g Stack* Seafood Sandwiches Mixed Drink* (fnqlishAire apartments ^ 2101 BURTON ORIVE Service Forum Begins L t G o v . B i l l H o b b y and b a n d C o m m i s s i o n e r B o b A r m s tr o n g w ill be a m o n g the s p e a k e rs a t a fa ll c o n fe r e n c e t h e R e g io n V N a t io n a l o f C o u n c i l o f U n i v e r s i t y R e s e a r c h A d m i n i s t r a t o r s ( N O H R A ) , E n t i t l e d “ S t a t e G o v e rn m e n t I ’n iv e r s it y P a r t n e r s h i p i n P u b l i c P r o b le m S o lv in g ,” the c o n ­ fe re n c e w h ic h begins T h u rs s ta te g o v e rn m e n t in its ro le of th a t s e rv in g th e p e o p le of s ta te , sa id G e o rg e R B lit c h , d i r e c t o r o f t h e O f f i c e o f R e s e a r c h M a n a g e m e n t a t th e U n iv e r s it y C o h o ste d by the U n iv e r s it y and T e x a s A & M , the tw o-day t o d r a w e v e n t e x p e c t s N C U R A m e m b e r s fro m N e w M e x i c o , A r k a n s a s a n d L o u is ia n a to 33 in a d d itio n m e m b e r s o f R e g io n V fro m d a y w ill focus on the c o m O k la h o m a and T e x a s m o n gro u nd w h e re in the un “ A n e x a m p l e o f p u b lic i v e r s it y , in its ro le a s an in ­ s titu tio n o f te a c h in g r e s e a rc h and p u b lic s e r v ic e c a n a id the p ro b le m s o lv in g w ou ld be the c u r r e n t e n e r g y c r is is , ’’ B li t c h ll w h a t e v e r re s o u rc e s said the U n iv e r s it y h a s s u rh as e n g in e e rin g and e c o n o m ic s , C o u ld m e e t o n c o m m o n ground w ith the s t a te g o v e rn ­ m e n t it w o u ld h e lp s o lv e the p ro b le m B li t c h alo n g w ith D r M a r ­ a s s is t a n t K d rn is o ri I v in vic e - p re s id e n t to r a c a d e m ic a f f a i r s a t O k la h o m a S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y , a n d D r J M L e w a lle n , a s s o c ia t e d ir e c to r o f T e x a s A & M R e s e a r c h c h o se th e topic Fo u n d a tio n b eca u se of “ an in c r e a s in g r o le in the p u b lic p ro b le m - s o lv in g a re a , B li t c h sa id whofccho gonna get ot L im it a r i a c o u p o n p e r c u s t o m e r p le a s e E a c h rJe ltc io u s B ig C h e f b o a s ts tw o p u r e b e e t p a ttie s s lic e K r a it le ttu c e s p e c ia l s a u c e , o n A in c h th re e d e c k e r A m e r ic a n c h e e s e to a s te d b u n B r in g th is c o u p o n , it a g o o d to d a y th ru S a t u r d a y B A S C O E N T I R P R I S E S IN C A 1 I A S T F O O D S IN C B U R G E R C H I T S S U R G E R C H E F S 3303 N. LAMAR 2700 S. LAMAR BURGER CHEF,*, ■ UNCLASSIFIEDS'' ORDER BLANK THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! _ (WRITE YOUR ONE-LINE AD HERE) _1____ TTI i_L I... Unclassifieds" are O N E - L I N E Classified ads that run for s i I consecutive issues for SI.OO, prepaid. Lim it of one-line w ith | | | no copy change or refunds. I I I I I I I I _ _1. . . . I I J NAM E ............................... PHONE I I I ADDRESS....................................... I I CITY I I I M AIL TO: I I I I ................... Z IP ....................... □ $1.00 ENCLOSED The Daily Texan “ Lnelassiiieds” P.O. Box I) - University Station 1 r i ... * — u — Austin, Texas 78712 ~~~ - . ___ —_ .. — r I TONIGHT \N C O N C E R T jm y m TexPIRG Pla ns Fall Internships B y C A R O L B A R N E S T e x a n S t a f f W r it e r T h e U n iv e r s it y T e x a s P u b lic In te re s t R e s e a r c h G ro u p (T e x P I R C ) and T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s ( T S P ) B o a r d of O p e ra tin g T ru s te e s a n n o u n c ed M o n d a y the c r e a tio n of four new in te rn s h ip positio ns fo r jo u r n a lis m , tw o for ra d io - te le vis io n ( R T F ’ ) and th re e fo r a d v e r tis in g stu d e n ts fo r the fall (lim s e m e s te r M ik e M o rris o n , c h a ir m a n cif the lo c a l T e x P I R G h o ard, ex p la in e d th a t stu d e n ts w h o m e e t the r e q u ire m e n ts fo r these p o sitio n s c a n r e c e iv e th re e ho urs c re d it to r th e ir w o rk w ith Tex P I R C a c o n su m e r- o rie n te d o rg a n iz a tio n m /at ions T h e jo u rn a lis m in te r n s h ip re q u ire s a student m a jo rin g in n e w s re p o rtin g to w o rk on T e x P I R G r e s e a r c h and report w r it in g at le a st IO h o u rs a w e e k T h e student w ill a ls o sign up for th re e hours c r e d it u n d e r e ith e r Jo u r n a lis m 321 or 329, both ind epend ent stu d y c o u rs e s In ter n ship p o sitio n s in the P T F fie ld a r e d esig n ed to a llo w the student to m a k e f ilm p ro d u c tio n s of T e x P R I G re la te d wor k and p ro je c ts A pplican ts must h ave com pleted at least two K T F courses and w ill sign up for R T F ' 336, a special studies course Term Expires For Chairman Of Committee R ic h a r d D o d g e , w hose t e r m a s c h a ir m a n of the U n i v e r s i t y P a r k i n g and T r a f f i c C o m m it te e e x p ire d S a t u r d a y , said M o n d a y he w a s r e lie v e d it w a s o v e r “ L ik e a ll c o m m itt e e s , it w a s s o m e t i m e s v e r y “ W e fr u s t r a tin g ,' he sa id t h e a d ­ k e p t n e e d l i n g m in is t r a t io n and noth in g h ap p ened T h e c o m m itt e e o n ly a c ts a s a n a d v is o r y b o d y to U n iv e r s it y P r e s id e n t D r S te p h e n S p u rr, D o d g e sa id , its a n d h as no p o w e r o f o w n T h e c o m m i t t e e ’s n e w c h a ir m a n w ill be a p ­ p o in t e d b y S p u r r , a n d D o d g e said he u n d e rsto o d D r W i l l i a m R o b e r t s o n , A dvertisin g students selected w ill w ork eight hours a week p h y s i c s p r o f e s s o r a n d and re c e iv e $50 a w eek in addition to cred it for 379.1 The advertising in tern sh ip program consists of w riting house ad vertisem en t prom otions tor student publications, understudy mg The D a ily Texan ad vertisin g salesm en, .selling space for P e a rl M agazine and w orkin g on problem accounts A dvertisin g internship applications are being accepted in Jo u rn a lis m and R T K applications are .Journalism Building 111 a v a ila b le in the T e x P IR G offices at HIO VV 23rd St m e m b e r of the c o m m itt e e , w a s being c o n s id e re d R o b e rs o n sa id he had not h e a rd he w a s b ein g c o n ­ s id e re d and tho u g h t it. w a s too e a r ly to c o m m e n t. S p u r r cou ld n o t be r e a c h ­ ed fo r c o m m e n t M o n d a y W o o d fin Prize A w a rd e d W i ll i a m A B r o c k J r of w a s e s ta b lis h e d by G e n e M D a lla s , a se n io r m a n a g e m e n t .student h as been a w a r d e d the $500 G e n e and J u d y W o o d fin P r i z e t h e C o l l e g e o f B u s in e s s A d m in is t r a tio n in i n v e s t m e n t W o o d fin , p a r tn e r in the N e w Y o r k f i r m o f .//eh, R h o a d e s and Co , and his w if e F x S ta b lis h e d b rig h t to h u m a n e r e c o g n iz e stu d e n ts w h o “ sh o w g re a t p r o m is e of fu tu re le a d e r s h ip ,” th e a w a r d a B r o c k , 2 2 y e a r - o l d m a r r ie d student is 1973-74 p re s id e n t of the C o lle g e of Business A d m in is t r a tio n Stu d e n t C o u n c il, c h a ir m a n of S e n io r C a b in e t and r e p r e s e n ­ th e U n i v e r s i t y t a t i v e f o r C o u n c il, the le g is la t iv e body fo r the G e n e r a l F a c u lt y H e a ls o se rv e d a s c h a ir m a n of the U n iv e r s it y S h u ttle B u s la s t sp rin g and C o m m it te e f o r m e r l y e d i t e d d e rg ra d u a te n e w s p a p e r t h e un fo r th e C o lle g e of B u s in e s s Ad m in is t r a t io n River Hills is getting better all the time Announcing cr hujs V I & 2 bedroom s from $ 125 a month • efficiencies • pool urid clubhouse■ • fireplaces and de< V , • walk if! ( losets .ii d out ,ido • all bills paid • furnished or unlur nished i or 2 brith tor mm ar c m I 700 Burton Dr i vf 442-1449 tak e R /cr side or Woof Hand exit cast a developm ent of Ja g g e r A ssociates am ora for a few good college men] HIT SINGLE HOCUS POW S a itis bfsM M il qu4>aI ati% act/M H CRYSTAL HORSE S SHAY $10(1 for each month of the school year. Its like a $900 annual sc holarship lf you qualify, you c an earn it as a member of the Marine C ’orps’ Platoon I waders Class You’ll also be earning a Marine officers com mission through PLC summer training at I > Quantic o,Virginia ( a r n p u s Talk to the Marine offic er who visits your p iern The Marines are looking for a few good men. U T S T U D E N T S Meet Captain Doyle at the BUSINKSS EDUCATION BUILDIN G, SEPT. 5 KROM 9 A M. to 4 I ’ M or TEACHER PLA C EM EN T O FFICE, SEPT. ti FROM 9 A M to 4 P.M. I___________________ GET INTO FOCUS SEPTEMBER 4-8 OO PM AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM ADVANCE TICKETS t 5 OO . $4 SO, $ 5 SO AVAILABLE AT MAGIC MUSHROOM - DOBIE MALL DISC RECORDS HIGHLAND MALL GENERAL PANTS BURNET RD EVOLUTION REC SAN MARCOS PANTS SOUTH - RIVERSIDE ? SOLAR$Attractions u n n n n r T u t N ^ Tuesday, September 4, 1973 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 19 Congress To Convene Prospects Slim for Key Trade Bill WASHINGTON (A P )—Congress returns to work Wednesday after a month’s vaca­ tion, and prospects appear slim for passage this year of key measures sought by President Nixon Congressional leaders say the White House is giving top priority to a trade bill which would give the President substan­ tial new authority in this field. Negotiations with Am erica’s principal trading partners are to start in Tokyo later this month But the Nixon bill has not yet cleared the House Ways and Means Committee and. even if it can pass the House in October, as some leaders estimate, it still faces highly uncertain Senate prospects. Other major presidential initiatives for revenue-sharing plans in the fields of education and housing seem to have little chance of enactment in 1973. Some congressional leaders say the ses­ sion can be completed in October if the legislators w ill concentrate on ap­ propriations bills and shelve most of Nix­ on’s programs until next year. But others predict the session will run at least into November Since 1965, Congress Grocery Prices Fall From A u g u st Peaks has not quit before December in any non­ election year. Both branches have full calendars as they resume sessions Wednesday. The House plans to act this week on a bill authorizing $682 million for the State Department, a housing loan insurance measure, legislation to revise the national flood insurance program, and a bill to provide more subsidy money for Amtrak which operates the nation’s passenger trains. The Senate takes up first a $4.8-billion Treasury-Post Office departments ap­ propriations bill, legislation to authorize funds for Radio Liberty and Radio Free Europe then Next week it will begin consideration of important legislation to try to guarantee that 30 million Americans covered by private pension plans actually receive benefits when they retire. Kress, M c G a rr List Priorities Bv LIN D A CANN AD AY Texan Staff Writer next week " The main priority of Student Govern­ ment committees is to keep active and strong in all areas of decision making affecting students, Student Government President Sandy Kress said Monday ‘ This is why we established the com­ mittee system to facilitate the involve­ ment and partieipation of as many people as possible in as many different areas as possible, ' he added Gappy McGarr Student Government vice-president, said he would devote a lot of time at the first of the semester to organizing com m ittee* so they can operate efficiently Under specific priorities, Kress said academie reform would be an important goal for Student Government. This area is one which has been too long ignored. Kress said Plans include coordinating the Senior Cabinet and Stu­ dent Government and investigating items in te rd iscip lin a ry academ ic such as programs A second priority, Kress said, is trying to establish more student services, such as a day care center, charter flights and published course-teacher evaluations for students M cG a rr commented, “ I have been working with the day care center and feel it is one of the most important projects of the semester " Coordinated placement offices was another student service mentioned by M cGarr "V e ry few schools at the University have placement offices, he said "Over 55 percent of the students are being neglected in the area of placement I have discussed the matter with Dean Duncan and I'm meeting with President Spurr Kress also stressed the importance of working with minority and women’s af­ fairs groups The Women s Affairs Committee is forming a task force with some students from the law school and will be conducting some surveys through the year," he said. important priority," Kress said. will be examining decisions made at administrative and regental levels, such as the* way buildings are constructed, ways monies are spent, etc. "Another In other words, we ll be working toward having a kind of student stamp on decisions," he added Lobbying, since the Legislature is not in session, will be mainly at the City Council level, Kress explained "W e want to get students involved in city affairs, working on referenda and working with legal ac­ tivities which involve students as citizens. However, there will be some groups lobbying for Big Thicket and the Cambo­ dian problem," Kress added "One of the major projects involving city affairs is a petition drive for the ex­ tension of drinking hours from midnight to 2 a rn M cGarr said The proposal was defeated M cCarr explained, when coun­ cilman Dan Love changed his vote and voted against his own proposal on third reading Mf C arr said they hope to get from 18.000 to 20,000 signatures. We are also going to get deputies to go around and help students to register to vote.' M cGarr said These are only a few priorities," Kress said "There are many more areas that seem more important to others. This is the good thing about the committee system. Different groups can work with the causes they consider most important " It is a flexible system," he stressed. new s cap su le s J ✓ Sandy Kress ...p re sid e n t By The Associated Press Grocery prices have fallen a bit from their mid-August peaks, but are still about 7 percent higher than they were six months ago, an Associated Press market- basket survey shows. The A P surveyed the prices of 15 food and nonfood items in 12 cities March I and has rechecked them at the beginning of each succeeding month An additional check was made Aug. 13—the day after the Phase 4 economic program began. During the six-month period, price ceilings were first imposed and then lifted on virtually all foods. The only food still under a ceiling is beef which will remain limited in price until Sep 12 The Sept I check showed pork chops and eggs, which rose sharply during late July and early August, have declined in most cities. In every city, however, egg prices—which topped a dollar a dozen in some areas Aug 13—were higher Sept I than they were March I. Pork chops were up in seven cities, down in three and un- —Texan Stoff Photos. Cappy McGarr ...v ice -p re sid e n t C a m b o d ia n R e lie f Sen t PHNOM P E N H (A P i—A 14-boat Cam bodian Navy convoy reached the besieged provincial capital cf Kompong Cham Monday with troop reinforceme nts and badly needed U.S. a r m s and am m unition the Cambodian c o m m an d said including 105mm how itzers, It com pleted the voyage from P h nom Penh up little in 25 h o u rs w ith the Mekong R iv e r resistance. So viets D en o u n ce S a k h a ro v MOSCOW ( A P ) —The Soviet U n io n s m ost joined m in e rs and m etal fam o us co m p osers w orkers Monday the officially prompted chorus dc riouneing physicist Andre! IT Sakharov for his a tta c k s on the ruling h ierarchy. in One letter published in P ra v d a was signed by D m itri Shostakovich, A ram K ha c ha turia n and IO o th e r com posers. It said Sakharov’s a ctions w ere "in c o m p atib le with the lofty n a m e of a Soviet citizen and a Soviet scientist." P a r lia m e n t passed legislation on Satu rday ord erin g the w o rk ers back to their jobs. All the unions complied ex c e p t for the brotherhood, which said it wanted m o re tim e to study the new law. Strikers R etu rn To W o rk TORONTO (A P ) —The lone holdout union in C a n a d a ’s national rail strike announced Monday night it had o rd e re d its m e m b e rs back to their posts in c o n fo rm a n c e with a governm ent back-to- work directive. T h e C a n a d i a n B r o t h e r h o o d of R a i l w a y , T r a n s p o r t a n d G e n e r a l W o r k e r s , w h i c h the 56,000 nonoperating r e p re s e n ts 18,000 of e m p l o y e s , o r i g i n a l l y h a d b a l k e d a t t h e governm ent-im posed se ttle m e n t which ordered .strikers to end th e ir nationwide walkout on Sun­ day against C a n a d a 's ll railroads. Prison G u a rd s R e le a se d MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. ( A P ) - T h r e e officers held hostage by dissident inm ates a t the Indiana State Prison w ere released u nh a rm e d Monday night, and o rd e r w as re sto re d in the prison, of­ ficials said. R o b e rt L. D ebard, ex ecutive a s s is ta n t to Gov. Otis R. Bowen, said the th ree hostages were released a fte r dissident in m ates w ere prom ised com p le te am n e sty from any c h a rg es growing out of the tak eo ver of th re e of the priso n ’s cellblocks changed in two in the six-month period. Looking at the over-all picture, there were these developments: • The marketbasket total was up in every city from March I to Sept. I with in­ creases averaging 7 percent and ranging from I percent in Seattle to 15 percent in Philadelphia. • In the period from Aug. 13 to Sept. I, the last part of the six-month period, the marketbasket total was down in nine of the 12 cities checked and up in three. • Of the total number of items check­ ed, 50 percent went up in price between March I and Sept. I. Twelve percent were down in price, 26 percent were unchang­ ed; and 12 percent were unavailable on one of the two survey dates. The increases and decreases over the six-month period reflect the law of supply and demand and the economic controls imposed by the Nixon administration in an effort to halt inflation. Coffee prices rose sharply in July, for example, after disease and bad weather destroyed crops in Brazil Pork chops, eggs and dairy items went up after Presi­ dent Nixon announced on Ju ly 18 that boosts in agricultural costs could be pass­ ed on to the consumer. Shortages of several items developed before the freeze was lifted as farmers complained it cost them more to produce the goods than they could charge. Farm costs rose because of soaring grain price* resulting from increased worldwide de­ mand and crops that didn’t come up to ex­ pectations. Beef is still in short supply in a few areas because cattlemen are holding back their livestock until the freeze ends The A P survey covered Albuquerque, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Lo s A n g e le s, M i a m i , N e w Y o r k , Philadelphia, Salt Lake City and Seattle. The check list included: pork chops, eggs, butter, cookies, chopped chuck, frozen orange juice, coffee, paper towels, peanut butter, detergent, fabric softener, tomato sauce, milk, all-beef frankfurters and sugar. Consumer G a s Costs M a y G o Up WASHINGTON ( A P ) —Petroleum in­ dustry figures indicate removal of federal regulation from natural gas prices would increase the average household gas bill anywhere from 16 to 32 percent by 1980 The 16 percent increase, however, may occur even if prices remain regulated, since the Federal Power Commission ( FPO) has been preparing to raise the ceilings. The industry has said higher prices and removal of price regulation are needed to stimulate exploration for new gas fields and relieve the growing gas shortage The American Petroleum Institute Mon­ day released a 150-page study prepared for it by Foster Associates, a Washington con­ sulting firm, analyzing the possible im­ pact of price deregulation Most of the detailed figures were not spelled out by the report but could be calculated from the tables provided The figures indicated that increasing the field price from 20.5 cents to an average of 45 cents would increase the average household yearly gas bill about $25 27 by 1980, an increase of 16.3 percent, disregar­ ding inflation or increases in gas consump­ tion The report said it made no attempt to estimate how high consumer costs might rise under continuing regulation by the FPC . But the commission has been con­ sidering increasing the regulated ceiling price to something like this 45-cent level. At a free market price of 55 cents per million BTU in the gas field, the figures in­ dicate the average household bill would in­ crease about $33, or 21 percent, by 1980 T o n ig h t: C a r y G r a n t a n d In g r id B e r g m a n NOTORIOUS in 11946) d ir e c te d by A l f r e d Hitchcock 7:00 & 0:00 ’1.00 J enter Auditorium Starting tonight! Presents: 55 FILMS FOR FALL Four G r e a t Film Series! E v e ry W e e k , M o n d a y thru T h u r s d a y ! iy% 13 WHd We st e rn * bittern i f e t a * p r e s e n t * I of t he m aut n o t e u o r t h \ ae Hie. i *m e a t * in the g e n r e , f r o m n om e of • - ort* of th* m oa t v e n e r a t e d a u t h e n t i c A m e r i c a n a r t fa r m * , S o u . st t t o m >f t ht r u n t st, fr o m f i l m * of a c t i o n arui h i gh a d v e n t u r e t o t hou? p a r xg th* '‘(it * 'a i < an Vt. *./ in if * s o m e t i m e s t r a g i c d e c l i n e I \ nu re •/ - fi ne *! l i t . t or* J o h n h ar d. R a o u l I l ut he r' * (l at e n of fi l m * by \ \>il*h, H e n r y K i n g , A n t h o n y A r t h u r I* r n , N a m P et fan [rah fi l m * m a n y E u r o p e a n t r i f l e * c o n s i d e r a m o n g n a ' * f i n e s t c u l t u r a l a c h i e v e m e n t •/ - U T T l l B IG M A N 1 9 7 0 D ire c te d b y A r t h u r P e n n W i t h D u ft m H o f f m a n F o y e D u rra w a y a n d C h ie f D a n G e o r g e N o t e s p e c ia l tim e * 7 OO a n d 9 30 T u e s d a y * 15 C in e m a C la ss ic s ! ( memo I e.xus continue* it* Tuesday night tradition of nun eying the history of the film medium u itll ti brief ai emeu . featuring 15 program* that represent th* broadest ranges of < in, matte i xprehsion. See cam* !y from the golden pantomime td Chaplin (intl Keaton tint,ugh th Kl ’n sophistication t/f Preston Sturges to flu contemporary humanism of Milos barman' See the stylish* experiments af a Wegener and a Welles, the personalized poetry of Sternberg, Renoir, Vigo. Chabrol; the powerful and relevant studies of life and death in Kurosawa s IK IR I and Kubrick*s IH I• K IU ISC ; the darh. blink tisinns of Hitchcock in SOT OR HH CS or Huston in I HI A SPH A LI JI SU L U And a whole lot S T A G E C O A C H 193 9 D ire c te d b y J o h n Ford W>th J o h n W a y n e a n d C la ir e T re v o r 9 4 N O T O R I O U S ( 1 9 4 6 D ire c te d b y A lf r e d H itc h c o c k W i t h C a r y G r a n t a n d In g r id B e r g m a n W e d n e s d a y s 14 S u rp ris e S le e p e r s ! T h u r s d a y s 13 F u n F ilm *! Here is a sp* * tally se!* cled group of European films from the lid's that tries to go beyond th* standard fare usually stu n on campus. Many of them are Austin premier* s Then* comedies, spy film*, aril eat tire films and thrillers are moil, by some of cinema ’n fines! ar fists, sin h noted din * tors as ('laud* I * bm* Ii (maker of A M AS A S I) A WOMAN), Robert Tutu*, honan for his A \ Of ('FR EN I I A l OWL ('REEK K RU K,Ii, Jacques Deny (of HOKSAI ISO fame,, Pietro (DIVORCE, II APIAN S I V I.Ii (.emu. and Mono Moniedh helio did HIC DEA / OS MADONNA S I RI E l , Plus a bevy of continental stars' Several entries bel*,ie ilik* THE D EV I/ A l MV H EILS. OH J EJ 11 VE. JIO M IU ION and MA I A H A R I) are features from the nouvelle vague whose importance is only now being recognized A l l should be j u s ! right for those favoring the off beat in I hi’ U trh '» almon! HI t i by I harmin', night a h\ not marl your un bend tarty arui un K in d al oaf af ( i m ma lim n ’ Thurrdny night fun fitmrt lur Se/,(ember a n d October thei r all lr,im th, (ahull,un JIA'* the Holden a.;, of Hollywood a hen moiler a cre mon, ' liked K H U U M ADN ESSf fry lh, tun "Marijuana ' mimical number rn 5/ f KUI K A l Itll \ A U I lh.S. Compare Carbon Mala Hart lo Dietrich', and lo the ■I, ann, Moreau r, main both .Sown that tame week by CinemaTextuJ Watch Fred and (.niger together lur the I,rut time ,n U U U , DOWS TO KIO. See broadway 'n hit re, mal from lur! .caum I III W OM EN in ii. original Herei n form. Ptu. two great W e.ternm, the funnier! Hurter Kenton ever, Otto Preminger', pre Watorgati matlerpiece and Al,im Ke.nuir ' haunting firrt film! 9 6 • M U R D E R A I T M I V A N I T I E S 1 9 3 4 D ir e c t e d b y M it c h e ll I e , eon W i t h C a r l B n ,s o n a n d K it t y S T A G E C O A C H 196 6 D u e t t e d b y G o r d o n D o u g la s W i t h B in g C ro s b y a n d A n n M a r g i t f 9 U Flf>t T O T H E M O O N . T H E M A D M U S I C I A N T H E T E R R IB L E T U R K IS H Trench and Italian ( incma ' T M F * D U O W D H TH E I!? B O O T S O N 194 3 D ire c te d b y R o o u l W a ls h W i t h E rro l F ly n n a n d O liv ia d e H a v i l a n d N o r * s p i n a l tim e * 7 OO a n d 9 30 FO R T A P A C H E 9 4 8 D ir e c te d b y J o h n Fo rd W it h J o h n W a y n e a n d H e n r y F o n d a N o te sp m e* 7 OO a n d 9 I S ) T H E G U N F I G H T E R 1 9 5 0 : D ire c te d b y H e n r y K . n g W th G r e g o r y Peck a n d M illa r d M ite h ell T h o rn e* In c# C IT IZ E N K A N E 1 9 4 ! D ir e c te d b y O r io n W e lle * W it h O lt o n W e lle * a n d J o * e p h C o t t e r N o te s p e c ia l tim e * 7 OO a n d 9 30- B u ste r K e a t o n M A N O F THE W E S T 195 8 D ire c te d b y A n t h o n y M o r n W ith G a r y C o o p e r a n d E X E C U T I O N E R T H E M A G IC W E L L a n d T H E W I Z A R D A l C O F R I S B A S I 1903 1 9 0 4 , b y G e o r g e * 9 5 T H E G E N T L E A R T O F M U R D E R ' I E C R IM E N E P A IE P A S , 1 9 6 ? D ir e c te d b y G e r a r d O u r y W it h C a rlis le M e l,# * T H E G R E A T T R A IN R O B B E R Y ( 1 9 0 3 ; b y E d w in S P o rte r T H E C R I S I S ( 1 9 1 2 ) b y D a n ie lle D o r r ie u * A n n ie G ir a r d o t a n d R ic h a rd T od d 9 I B IN T O L E R A N C E 191 6 D ire c te d b y D W G r if f it h W i t h L illia n G»»h, M a e M a r s h R o b e rt A m id o u a n d J e a n P ie r re K a lfo n H o rro r' a n d I n c h V o n S tr o h e im N o t e s p e c ia l t im e * 7 OO a n d 9 4 5 , 9 19 FA N T O M A S ' 1 9 6 4 , D ire c te d b y A n d r e H u n e b e lle W it h J e a n M urals a n d Louis de F u n e s 9 35 S c '* * n C o m e d y a n d it* G o ld e n A g e T H E K N O C K O U T I 1 9 1 4 ) w it h C h a r lie C h a p lin a n d F a t t y 9 2 6 T H E D E V IL AT M Y H E E L S 'U H E B A L L E A U C O U E R , ( 1 9 6 5 ; D ire c te d b y J e a n D a n ie l P a lle t 9 2 0 T H E T H IN M A N 1 1934 D ir e c te d b y VY S V a n D y k e W ith W i l l i a m P o w # ll o n d M y r n a to y 9 2 / H O R S E F E A T H E R S ( 1 9 3 2 , D ir e c te d b y N o r m a n I M c L e o d W i t h Tire M a r x B ro th e r* A r b u c k le B E H I N D T H I S C R E E N ’/ 1 9 1 6 ) w it h C h a r lie C h a p lin T H E P L A Y H O U S E f 1 9 1 2 w ith W it h Sam i Fre y a n d F ro n c o ise H a r d y 10 4 H Y I N G D O W N T O R IO ( 1 9 3 3 ) O t r e c t .d b y T h o rto n F r e e la n d W . t h F r e d A , t a n . o n d G in g e r 9 12 TO B E A C R O O K U N E FILLE ET D E S F U S IL S . ( 1 9 6 4 , D ire c te d b y C la u d e le lo u c h W it h L a u g h t o n N o t# s p e c ia l lim e s 7 OO a n d 9 15, 9 13 M U T I N Y O N T H E B O U N T Y I 1 9 3 5 ; D u e t t e d b y F la n k Llo y d VY,th C l a r t G a b ) , a n d C h a r i . , J u lie L o n d o n M ila n T M I LEFT H A N D E D G U N 1958 D ire c te d b y A r t h u r P e n n W it h P a u l N e w m a n a n d lit e E is e n s te in o n d G n g o n A le x a n d r o v 10 9 THE G O L E M D ER G O L E M 1 9 3 0 , D ir e c te d b y P a u l W e g e n e r a n d C a r l B o e * # W i t h P a u l W e g e n e r P lu * sh o rt T H E FALL O F T H E H O U S E O F U S H E R (1 9 3 8 b y J a m e s W a t s o n a n d 10 10 I H E W IS E G U Y S IL E S G R A N D E S G U E U L E S ( 1 9 6 6 ) D ire c te d b y R o b e rt E n ric o W r it t e n b y E n ric o a n d Jo s e d e G io v a n n i W i t h Lino V e n t u r a B o u r v il a n d M a n e D u b o is IO 18 M A T A H A R I 1 9 3 2 ) D ir e c te d b y G e o r g e F it im a u r t c e W i t h G r e l o G a r b o o n d R a m o n 10 3 T EN D A Y S T H A T S H O O K THE W O R L D 'O C T O B E R 1 9 3 8 , W r it t e n a n d d ir e c t e d b y S e rg e . d o e r ffe r a n d Jo r g e S e m p ru r t W i t h B r u n o C r e m e r a n d M a n s a M e ll IO l l W H IT E Z O M B IE ( 1 9 3 2 , D ir e c te d b y V ic to r H u l p r n n W i t h B e la lu g o t r 10 3 O B J E C T I V E 5 0 0 M IL L IO N 196 6 D ir e c te d b y P ie r re S c h o e n d o e r ffe r W r it t e n b y S c h o e n THE M A N W H O S H O T L IB E R T Y V A L A N C E 1 9 6 ? D u e t t e d b y Jo h n Ford W i t h J a m e i M e lv ille W e b b e r S 'e w a r t a n d J o h n W a y n e N o t e s p e c ia l tim e * 7 OO a n d 9 15 IO 16 D IS H O N O R E D 1 9 3 ! D ire c te d b y Jo s e f V o n S t e r n b e r g W it h M a r le n e D ie tric h a n d V ic to r 1963 Du te d b y D a v td M ille ' W ith Kirk D o u g la s a n d G e n a M r L a g le n P lu s sho rt T H E T O W N ( 1 9 4 3 , b y J o s e ! V o n S t e r n b e r g L O N E L Y A R E T H E B R A V E R ow land* ' 0 33 C IT I Z E N K A N I 194 1 D ire c te d b y O re o n W e lle s W i t h O rs o n W e lle s a n d D o ro th y I I 36 HELL S H I N G E S 1 9 1 6 D ir e c te d by T h o rn ® * H In c# W ith W i llia m S H o rt C o m in g o r e N o te s p e c ia l tim e s 7 OO a n d 9 30 IO I / M A T A H A R I I 1965/ D ire c te d b y J e a n L ouis R ic h a r d W r it t e n b y R ic h a rd a n d F ra n c o is T ru f­ 10 25 T H E W O M E N I 1 9 3 9 , D ir e c te d b y G e o r g e C a iro , W i t h N o r m a S h e a r . , a n d J o a n C r a w f o r d N o t e s p e c ia l h m m 7 OO a n d 9 3 0 ) f a u t W i t h J e a n n e M o r e a u a n d J e a n Louis T n n t ig n a n t I I I T H E F A R C O U N T R Y I 1 9 5 5 , D ir e c te d b y A n t h o n y M o n n W i t h J a m e s S t e w a r t a n d R u th IO 24 T H E S W I M M I N G P O O L (L A P IS C I N E ( 1 9 6 8 , D ir e c te d b y Ja c q u e s D e r a y W i t h A lo in D elo n M a u r ic e R o n e t a n d R o m y S c h n e id e r 10 31 THE P A S S I O N A T E T H IE F R IS A T E D I G I O I A I9 6 0 , D ire c te d b y M o n o M o n ic o !!, W i t h A n n a I I 8 THE G E N E R A L ( 1 9 2 6 , D ir e c te d b y B u s ie r K e a t o n W it h B u s t e i K e a t o n a n d M a r io n M a c k M a g n u m , B e n G u n a r a a n d Toto 11 15 A D V I S E A N D C O N S E N T ( 1 9 6 2 , 0 ,c o d e d b y O t t o F l e m i n g . , W i t h H e n r y F o n d a a n d 13 3 O N C E U P O N A T IM E IN T H E W IS T 1 9 6 9 D ire c te d b y S e rg io L eo n e W it h H e n r y F o n d a ’ 0 30 T he C lo in e F re n c h C in e m a Z E R O F O R C O N D U C T ( Z E R O DE C O N D I T E 1 9 3 3 ) b y J e a n C la u d io C a r d in a l# a n d J a * o n R o b a r d s N o t e ip e c io l tim e * 7 OO a n d IO OO V ig o A D A Y IN T H I C O U N T R Y 193 6 b y J e a n R e n o ir 11 7 THE LITTLE N U N S I E M O N A C H I N E ) ( 1 9 6 3 ; D ire c te d b y L u c ia n o S a k e W i t h C a th e r in e C h a r le s L a u g h t o n ( N o t e s p e c ia l lim e s / OO a n d 9 30, S p o o k a n d S y lv a K o s c in o I I VV W i l l P E N N Y i I 9 6 8 , D ir e c t e d b y T om G e e s W it h C h a r lt o n H e s t o n a n d D o n a ld P le a s a n c e T H I B A L L A D O F C A B L E H O G U E 1 9 7 0 D ire c te d b y S a m P e c k in p a h W i t h S t e lla S t e v e n * I 6 T H I L A O Y E V I 194 1 D ire c te d b y P r e s to n S t u rg e s W i t h H e n r y F o n d a a n d B a r b a r a a n d D a v id W a r n e r N o t# s p e c ia l tim e * 7 OO a n d 9 TS S t a n w y c k P lu s sho rt A T R IP D O W N M E M O R Y L A N I b y A r t h u r Lip sett I I 14 THE C L IM A X I I M M O R A L ! , f 1961 D ir e c te d b y P ie tro G e r m i W i t h U g o T o g n a z / i a n d G ig i 12 6 H I R O S H IM A M O N A M O U R I 9 S 9 , D ir e c te d b y A lu m R e , n a , , W r it t e n b y M a i g u . r i t . O u lu . B a llis t a W i t h E m m u n u e lle R iv a an d Ei|i Q k a d a R oger! N a v a r r o R o m a n i 13 IK iR U 1 9 5 2 , D ire c te d b y A k ir a K u r o s a w a W i t h T u k a t h i S h im u r a 'N o t e s p e c ia l tim e s 7 OO a n d 9 30 I I 70 T H E A S P H A L T J U N G L E 1950 D ire c te d b y J o h n H u t t o W i t h S t e rlin g H a y d e n a n d M a r ily n M o n ro e P lu s sho rt T H IR D A V E N U E EL b y C a r t o n D a v id s o n I 1 2 ) T H I K IL L IN G 1 9 5 6 , D ire c te d b y S t a n le y K u b r ic k W i t h S t e r lin g H a y d e n a r id C o le e n G r a y P lu s sh o rt N O W T H A T THE B U F F A L O S G O N I b y B u to n G e r s h f.e ld I ? 4 LES B O N N E S F E M M E S I9 6 0 D ire c te d b y C la u d e C h a b r o l W i t h B e r n a d e t t e L a fo n t a n d S » e p h o n e A v d r o n Plu s short A 1 9 6 4 ) b y J a n L em c o I ? M T A K I N G O F F 1971 D ire c te d b y M ilo s F o r m a n W it h B u c k H e n r y a n d Lyn n , C a r lin I I 21 G O L IA T H A N D THE D R A G O N V E N D E T T A DI E R C O L E , (1 9 6 0 D ir e c te d b y V it t o r io C o t t a f a v i W it h M a r k F o res t a n d B r o d e ric k C r a w f o r d 11 28 B L A C K S U N D A Y LA M A S C H E R A D E I D E M O N I O ' 1 9 6 0 , D ire c te d b y M o n o B a y a B a s e d on a s to ry b y N ik o la i G o g o l W it h B a r b a r a S t e e le a n d Jo h n R ic h a rd s o n 12 5 T H E D E F E C T O R I E S P IO N , ' 1 9 6 6 , D ir e c te d b y R a o u l L e v y W i t h M o n t g o m e r y C lift H a r d y K r u g e r a n d M a c h o M e n ! Our season ticket is cheaper than e v e r!!! $10.00 for 5.5 films! This fall, all season memberships will be only $10.00. All screenings in .Jester Auditorium 7:00 and 9:00 P.M . (except as noted) Single admissions—$1.00 A S E R V IC E O F T H E D E P A R T M E N T O F R A D IO / T E L E V IS IO N / F IL M : U N IV E R S IT Y O F T E X A S AT A U ST IN That’s less than 19c a film a savings of over 80%! P a g e 2 0 T u e s d a y , S e p t e m b e r 4, 1 9 7 3 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N