T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin Forty -Two Pages Vol. 78, No 87 Copyright 1979, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (LISPS 146-440) Austin, Texas, Monday, January 29, 1979 Fifteen Cents News and Editorial: 471-4591 Display Advertising: 471-1865 Business Office and Classified: 471-5244 Board rejects renovation plans, approves tenure revisions By PHILIP BRASHER Daily Texan Staff The Coordinating Board, Texas College and Universi­ ty System, snubbed the University’s proposed $1.65 million renovation of the Custer House Friday sending I diversity administrators back to the drawing board The price of making a museum of the last of two buildings on the Little Campus “ appears excessive’’ and the University needs to re-examine its long-term priorities, the board announced at its quarterly meeting in Austin. The Coordinating Board must approve construction and renovation of all University buildings. In addition to the Little Campus decision, the board approved a non-binding policy on academic freedom, tenure and responsibility and gave preliminary approval to a plan for uniform grade point calculation “ IT ’S A BIG QUESTION mark,” said Robert Hardes­ ty. University System vice-chancellor for administra­ tion, of the Little Campus. We ll go back to the drawing board and then to the regents and see if we can find something that will satisfy the Coordinating Board ” Located north of the Special Events Center, the buster House, building “ C,” was the Reconstruction headquarters of Gen. George Custer The University began demolition in 1972 of the Little Campus to make room for parking around the SEIC In December, University regents approved a Dallas architectural firm s preliminary plans for restoring the building to its original 1859 design. Also included in the package is a proposal to “ mothball'’ the other remaining Little Campus struc­ ture, building “ H,” renovating it only enough to prevent further deterioration “ TH E R EG EN T S D EC ID ED the best use for it (Custer House) would be a museum,” Hardesty said. It s a luxury and anytime you’re dealing with luxuries you run into problems.’* The tenure recommendations revise a 1967 paper put out by the board, but not without protest. The board advises colleges and universities as to what their tenure policies should be; however, according to a recent attorney general's decision, they are not binding. Basically, the new paper states that professors must apply for tenure after a maximum seven-year ' ‘probationary’’ period. Upon receiving tenure, professors should be fired onlv for “ good causes.” The paper lists some but not all of the “ good causes ” Two organizations of college teachers went on record at the meeting opposing the paper’s adoption saying it overemphasized the fact that the recommendations were non-binding and because it left too broad the definition of “ good causes” for dismissal BET T Y JA E K ISSLER , vice-president of the Texas Association of College Teachers, and board member Paul Teague also criticized the paper’s suggestion that it is the professor’s rather than the institution’s respon­ sibility to apply for tenure when the probationary period ends. Neill Megaw, University English professor and past state president of the American Association of Universi­ ty Professors, said it was difficult to tell how much in­ fluence the recommendations would have on University tenure policy, but that they were sure to have some. “ It s hard to tell - that’s crystal ball stuff - but I ’m sure they exert some influence, otherwise why would there have been such a fight about it? ” Megaw said. A SELEC T CO M M ITTEE of the board worked four years on the policy revision before submitting it last year. “ I think it is influential,” he said. Only the final grade made in a repeated course will figure into the grade point average of a student seeking admission to graduate and professional schools, if the Coordinating Board gives final approval to its grade point calculation policy at its March meeting in E l Paso. That clause was added to the proposal originally sub­ mitted to the board at its October meeting. In other buisiness. the board approved the construc­ tion of additional parking at UT San Antonio and re­ quests for family practice residency training grants to aid programs at three Dallas hospitals affiliated with the University Health Science Center at Dallas. A heliport, swimming pool and hospital renovation were approved for the University System’s Galveston medical branch. New grade proposal to be decided Council to vote again on controversial issue By LAURA TUMA Oally Texan Staff After a lengthy journey which has taken it from the University Council to a committee to the (kwteral Faculty, a controversial grade change proposal will return home Monday. The proposal suggests expanding the current grading system to include pluses and minuses, with an A-plus equaling 4 3 on the grade point scale. The University Council approved the grade changes at its October meeting, but 51 (acuity protests necessitated a General Faculty meeting to consider the proposal. However, the General Faculty failed to reach a quorum last week and the council will decide the issue at its 2:15 p m meeting Monday in Main Building 212. Only 75 of the 268 faculty members needed for a quorom attended last week's meeting, so no official action could be taken. However, the faculty in attendance voted overwhelm ingly against the proposal Most of the faculty protests focused on raising a perfect CPA from 4.0 to 4.3. Most protesters contended that would increase rather than decrease grade in­ flation MANY FA C U LT Y members also were concerned with the larger number of borderlines created by more grades The U n iv e r s ity C o u n cil has traditionally abided by its original deci­ sion in the face of protests, and the con­ sensus is that the grade changes will again be approved “ I guess I better go on over there,” said Durwin Sharp, assistant professor of accounting, when told of the meeting. “ I am not on the University Council this y e a r,” said Glenn W elsch, professor of business administration, but I was on the committee that wrote the report (which did not include a 4.3 O PA L They changed it up in about 30 minutes of discussion after we had spent a long time discussing it.” However, several protesters said they intend to attend the meeting to reiterate their objections W ELSCH SAID he will attend the meeting to insure his work is not ig­ nored. Laurels Jody Conradt, Texas women’s basketball coach, accepts the Texas Classic trophy after the victory over Stephen F. Austin In the Special Events Center Saturday. Related story, photo, Page 8. Kathleen Cabbie, Daily Texan Staff Outgoing regent independent Bauerle proud of Union, campus construction Editors BOU: This it the first of a (bree part series o b the outgoing members of the Uaiversity Board of Regents By PHILIP BRASHER Dally Texan Staff Call him the independent of the University Board of Regents. He won t mind Dr James Bauerle, a San Antonio oral surgeon, was appointed in 1973 to the controlling board of one of the coun­ try's largest university systems and one of the world s wealthiest universities with two well-known and powerful statesmen So he was not surprised when Univer­ sity watchers asked, “ Bauerle who?” He's leaving the board this month still an unknown to many observers. The terms of Bauerle and former Gov Preston Smith s other two ap­ pointees. Chairman Allan Shivers and Edward Clark expired Jan. IO Bauerle, 55. looks the part of the television Texan. Listening to his syrupy drawl and looking at his jewelry — one ring that’s a diamond-studded saddle, another that's turquoise and a gold watch band complete with em­ bossed steer heads — you expect him to drive away in a burnt-orange Cadillac. M ED IC IN E IS Bauerle's specialty. After stints in Army medicine at Walter Reed Hospital and Ft. Bliss, Bauerle served on a host of state medical boards Bauerle, who as a hobby raises buf­ falo on a ranch near Johnson City, first met Smith when Bauerle was lobbying for a University dental school in San An­ tonio. And even on the board, the System s medical and dental schools oc­ cupied his interests. They were the most important issues, he said Bauerle began his term in the shadow of former Gov. Shivers and Clark, a former ambassador to Australia. Bauerle praises both of them. “ I learned by seeing great statesmen in action,” he said While a University regent, Bauerle concentrated on one thing — buildings — and wanted one committee chair: Building and Lands SOME OF THE SYST EM ’S most ex­ tensive construction took place during Bauerle’s term and he enjoys listing his committee s output: the Texas Union Building renovation and an addition to the University’s College of Pharmacy to name a few. The problems of the Humanities Research Center and divided library ad­ ministration are the largest issues fac­ ing the board and the University in the next few years, Bauerle said. “ I think we ll see a period of con­ solidation and refinement of certain areas,” Bauerle said. “ The first thing we need to talk about is libraries. It was a problem area when I came on the board.” Bauerle criticized the division of ad­ ministration of undergraduate and special collection libraries at the University which he said creates com­ petition “ I JU ST DON’T THINK that graduate libraries should compete with un­ dergraduate libraries or vice versa.” He said he is satisfied with his six years on the board, but meant it when he told former Gov. Dolph Briscoe he didn’t want any more. “ I was extremely sincere in saying I didn't want a second term,” he said. “ I ve had enough of those night calls,” he adds. (He said he gets enough as a dentist.) “ I ’m not a stranger to them, but one out of four were for the University of Texas Board of Regents.” “ At this point, looking at the year 1979 I will have 25 percent more time.” B A U E R L E WAS THE independent to the end He still expresses disappoint­ ment that he was not allowed to help elect the new University president. Bauerle was the lone dissenter in the board's vote Jan. 6 to delay selecting University President Lorene Rogers’ successor. Five present board members said they wanted to wait until they and the new regents could meet the can­ didates. Bauerle called the action a “ power play” and added that he, Shivers and Clark had been “ disenfranchised.” " I wasn’t fighting for the principle of who should be president at UT Austin,” Bauerle said. “ I just thought it was ridiculous that new regents should have the final authority, rather than the older ones who had been on there for six years. Flawn called careful administrator tion of being a thoughtful administrator and a good manager. He also gained experience in dealing with the Legislature, since he was frequently called upon Editor’s Note: This is the first la a three-part series profiling the three men being considered as successors to University President Lorene Rogers, who will step down from her post in August. By LAURA TUMA Dally Texan Staff Three weeks ago, he was considered a shoo-in to be named president of the University. Then the Board of Regents threw everyone a curve and decided to post­ pone its decision, so Peter Flawn was left up in the air. Not that he has anything to worry about. Currently president of the Geological Society of America, he is highly respected both as an administrator and a geologist. He also is known as a cautious, careful man. He declined to be interviewed about his background, saying he did not wish to appear to be “ cam­ paigning” for the president's job. Frequently honored in his field, Flawn has been awarded several research grants and was named to the National Academy of Engineerng in 1974. He has been on numerous committees and advisory boards and still sits on the National Academy’s space plan­ ning board, among others. FLAWN CAME TO THE University in 1949 as a research scientist and geologist for the Bureau of Economic Geology. In 1970, he was chosen as direc­ tor of the oureau, a position he retained for a decade. During his tenure as director, he gained the reputa­ to testify or give advice in land use matters. “ He is a fine and fair adminstrator,” said John Maxwell, a longtime friend and associate. “ I am a great fan of his. He is very thoughtful, very thorough. He digs very deeply, assembles information in a logical way and then makes up his mind.” Flawn also served as a professor of geology during his term as bureau director. He stayed with the bureau until 1970, when he became vice president for academic affairs. He was named executive vice president under Stephen Spurr in 1972. “ H E WAS TH E NO. 2 man in the governance of the University of Texas at Austin,’’ Spurr said. “ He was active in the whole range of University activities.” Spurr said he used his vice presidents as an “ ex­ ecutive officers group” and consulted them about most of the decisions he made As such, Flawn was privy to the most important internal operations of the president s office, Spurr said. That experience came in handy for Flawn when he was named president of the University of Texas at San Antonio in 1973. UTSA, then primarily a graduate school, was in the throes of adjusting to an expanding undergraduate student body. Some University watchers feel Flawn has lost his chance to be appointed, while others feel he still has the edge Whatever the case, the suspense should be over when the board meets Feb. IO to make its final decision. TU ESD AY: Wayne Holtxmaa. Peter Flawn In Rocky’s memory... Memorial services honoring former Vice-President Nelson Rockefeller will take place Monday. Stories, Pages 3. 4. High humidity... Austin skies will be cloudy Monday with a 60 percent chance of ram. Temperatures will range from the upper 30s to a high in the mid 40s. More weather, Page 13. Chinese celebrate new year HONG KONG (UPI) — Chinese welcomed the Year of the Goat Sunday with firecrackers, Coca-Cola and an ex­ hortation from Communist Party Chairman Hua Kuo-feng to work harder and speed China's modernization. Hua and two vice chairmen of the Communist Party’s Central Committee, Yeh Chien-ying and Li Hsien-nien, celebrated the new year — 4676 in China’s lunar calendar — with a massive party for 30,000 at Peking’s Great Hall of the People. Firecrackers crackled in all parts of the city to welcome the new year, regarded as a good one for matrimony and business, as key Chinese leaders mixed with rehabilitated purge victims and Peking residents at the hall, usually the site of formal dinners and speeches for visiting heads of state FBI foils hijack attempt NEW YORK (UPI) — A gaunt, 49-year-old unemployed writer who commandeered a United Airlines 747 jet with 131 people aboard by claiming she had nitroglycerin faces up to 20 years in prison, federal officials said Sun­ day. Radioactive waste released MONTEAGLE, Tenn. (UPI) — A tractor-trailer truck loaded with 46 barrels of radioactive waste overturned on Interstate 24 Sunday night, spilling the contents of some barrels onto the eastbound lane of the highway. v The 55-gallon insulated barrels containing five gallons each of two radioactive substances, Cobalt-60 and Cesium-137, were being taken to Columbia, Md., from Barnwell, S.C., by Hickman Nuclear Transport Carrier, Civil Defense officials said. “We’re treating it as a high-level risk,” said Danny New­ ton, assistant operations officer with the Civil Defense of­ fice in Nashville. Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, January 29, 1979 Now Accepting Appointments^ V - M I N E C ll af.MlOh J rn ^ > > \ * rn, ALL NEW AND ON TOP OF EVERYTHING ^478-4667 Tues -Sat. 504 W. 24th < Upstairs > F R E E P A R K IN GJ — Last Three Days Save $25 on the most sought after University of Texas Class Ring. Regularly $189.95 base price, now $164.95, plus you beat future base price increase. 2236 Guadalupe 9-5 • Allendale Village 9-5 • Westgate M all 10-9 Faculty-G raduate Lox and Bagel Brunch Tuesday, Jan. 30 — Noon Guest Speaker Dr. Isabel Pritchard, PHD., J.D. Speaking On The Equal Rights Amendment Hillel Campus Jewish Center 4 7 6-0 125 2 1 0 5 San Antonio LUNCH WITH THE COACH UT B a s k e t b a l l C o a c h A b e L e m o n s w i l l m e e t w i t h staff students, over lunch to discuss the team, upcoming ga m es, and more! faculty, and Today, 11:30 a.m. Texas Union Q uadrangle A buffet lunch will be available Sponsored by the Texas Union UT Interaction Committee Committee studies student fees Health Center, shuttle bus service represented By TERRY HAGERTY D aily Texan Staff Representatives from the Student Health Center and the shuttle bus service appeared before the Student Services Fee Committee F r i­ day to answer questions about their effectiveness in meeting student needs. Dr. Paul Trickett, health center director, and Ja m e s S. W ilson, U n iv e rsity liaison with Transportation Enterprises Inc. (which owns and operates the shuttle buses), appeared in connec­ tion with a U niversity proposal asking the Legislature to raise student service fees. The health center receives approximately 17 percent, or $5, of the $28.80 student services fee per semester. The shuttle bus service receives $14 from each student, accounting for almost half of the fee. Trickett said the health center will need from $2 to $3 more to meet salary and service increases The shuttle bus service will need an additional $5.57, Wilson said. T H E U N IV E R S IT Y P R E S E N T E D the fee in crease request to the Travis County legislative delegation without any student input. The delega­ tion decided to postpone sponsoring the proposals until it received some student input and a further study of the funding. Trickett said a special committee which recent­ ly finished studying the health center found two major complaints: students want more privacy in the interviewing area, and doctors would like relief from “ the pit,” the waiting area for un­ scheduled patients. The doctors do not consder “ the pit” a bad term, Trickett said, adding the term is an old holdover from medical school. He also said doc­ tors do not like to seesaw between seeing schedul­ ed patients and attending to walk-in cases, which are considered more urgent. When a doctor receives a patient's file marked urgent, he must respond almost immediately, Trickett said. This often results in the scheduled patient being delayed. STA RTIN G TH IS week, Trickett said doctors will be assigned to a full-day shift with walk-in patients, see only scheduled patients on other days. He said it is hoped the experimental procedure will speed up patient care. Trickett told the committee that a recent sur­ vey showed that 93 percent of University students would favor establishing dental care at the health center The University administration has been approached about the issue, he said, but has not responded so far. Dental school students from San Antonio have expressed interest in working at the health center, Trickett said Wilson also appeared before the committee to discuss the Llniversity’s contract with T E I. Wilson said the administration was responsive to students about shuttle bus matters, but he acknowledged that bus routes have not changed in the last five vears. T H E R E C E N T L Y signed contract with T E I calls for 60 new buses to be be delivered by mid- April. Wilson said Committee chairman David Haug asked Wilson about alternatives to the University's contract with T E I A voluntary fee which Texas AAM students pay for their bus system would be impractical. Wilson said, because of the unreliable nature of supply and demand Reporter's Notebook By MIKE STEPHENS Since Fo rd Motor Co. an­ the r e c a ll of a p ­ nounced proximately 1.5 million Pintos last summer it has been involved in a public embroilment that threatens life and its ve ry freedom It s life is threatened by civil lawsuits and the enormous amount of cash outlay required to fix the defective cars. And its freedom is threatened by criminal charges filed against the company by some fancy pan­ ts Yankee politician/lawyer. But there is good and bad in everything, and it seems to me the c ritic s hounding Ford s flanks search only for the bad. ig- n o r i n g e x t e n u a t i n g c i r - cumstances and overlooking the positive aspects of a very serious situation. It is Ford’s responsibility to fix the cars. With per unit cost of ap­ proximately $30. the company stands to lose $45 million in the deal. Not to mention the millions of dollars it will eventually pay in civil damages THAT IS NOT GOOD for Ford and what is bad for Ford is bad for the country. And consider the people who comprise the company. They are going through sheer agony. Stockholder friends of mine are scared to death of going to jail They don't know anything for sure, but Ford lawyers told them that, as stockholders in the com­ pany. they have as good a chance of going to jail as the factory workers who built the cars. The government even has the Pintos on the run, announcing last week it will soon decide whether to press additional crim inal charges against the offending cars. It is expected prosecutors will f o r fo r 10-20 y e a r s a s k stockholders and life of the car for the Pintos. AND P E O P L E F A IL to realize that after the company an­ nounced the recall, there was lit­ tle excuse for Pinto owners to drive around in dangerous cars * T h e y < P i n t o d r i v e r s I shouldn't have bought the piece of junk in the first place,” a highly placed Ford source told me He noted that even after the recall was announced very few Pinto owners in Austin bothered to bring their cars in for repair “ But there was a whole rash of Pintos lined up the morning after the crash in Austin.” he said And there is a bright side to the story The people who still drive Pintos are among the most careful drivers in the country. “ I looked out the rear view m irro r at least e v er y five seconds,“ my wife explained after confessing that she drove an unmodified Pinto in Utah a few weeks ago D E F E N S I V E D R IV IN G in structors say a safe d riv e r checks his rear view mirror at least every seven seconds Another Pinto driver exclaim­ I definitely keep out of tight ed spots ' This issue is sure to rage for years to come And some people who dr ive Pintos will die needlessly But I think it is time to crawl off Ford's back and credit the company for providing transportation to millions of Americans In the long run one might say Ford has made the streets of America safer for all citizens 200 j e a n s $ IO m e n , w o m e n Qu IT IT / i a m o i g n I rna nil 1 2 0 0 W 6 Th» b i l l ) I I t sr. a Mudra! M M H p H *1 Til# I nirrraila «*» T M M #1 Au*!in Ii pubitthvd bv T#*<» Mudra! I ’hN k atrous Draawr I* I .•T it T V M i h Tr*#« ti iwM « M M onte? Twas#* a i day ram p! holiday and o w pat tad* ria.** |» ratter paid al A M U * Tm SH IM # Am UM Tm Tburada* and F n V a t CM Utbut way* a tli V .*<<»p4ud tty trtrplaunr ♦ti asti a l M f M ilto n *! .avrm in g daily*** and rtoawtwd ad rad ial ag abn* Vt bv a m i* rn T S P (Boidmg J I V «TI U U and chapt** adw rtm ng rn T M - Bu>ut*ng I I M 4T I IM : T V na! tutu, advarhtmg raprnaaatotlw al T V ’.(ally T m m >» • .tm.- « u . ( t a w and Advarti*iM v r n r v . t«- Mudra ti b l * s 1’aiaaai C V ra fo HI N M I T V It , . I < tar. vubu. rihr* t (m in d h u t iMarnalttMal and ham Y u rt Ttm rt V a t S e n sp* T V Souther*! Jour na 11 *m < --tg** *» »* a m am V f V sn. Vaaonatod < ut logia I# Prana ( V t v fe ta * D ali? Nresgept* Aaam aUoa and I Copyright IW S To m * Mudra! BnMitauca** T M I D A ILY T IA 4% st Bf* R I P T I o s RATTA O S K V H I ! S T M t A U <«B S i t u NU I H S Ptrhad ag ait tamp**' bat«r stndant (#» Ptrftad up i t tampa* I ’m bod up nr t art .(tu* ga*** - a1 puMu by mail in Tat** By mail xuOid* T ri# * uithin I S A ! T (am li? a u d T m h s K M K S T K fls I Al I ANO S P M * . • M RM 9 i T (amity t u f t I ’m Ari! tip >4tng • I jut- .n Ti *** I to ISM tar* ami addr*-** rfeatigri ut TK X av STI I IKS T Bt B lit ATB ’SS P O Boa I et I rn T IC 1 4 t o i i to J * ii rn » to rn to Monday, January 29, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 30 protesters kitted on Tehran’s streets TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) - Army killer squads poured automatic rifle fire into thousands of massed anti­ in the government demonstrators in the streets of Tehran Sunday greatest mass carnage in months. Witnesses said at least 30 persons were shot dead and hundreds wound­ in the seesaw clash es which ed spread throughout Tehran — the se­ cond time in three days the capital ran with blood following a new government crackdown on public protest The renewed killings further im­ periled Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar's delicate peace mission to Paris for talks with exiled religious leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, whose return to Iran could bring civil war in NEW DIFFICULTIES arose Paris where Khomeini said he would refuse to receive Bakhtiar unless Bakhtiar first resigns from office. Rut officials in Iran said Bakhtiar would make the trip anyway. As darkness fell over Tehran, rifle fire crackled through the dimmed streets and the situation became totally chaotic. Thousands of automobiles began blaring their horns through the even­ ing in protest at the latest killings. A fter hours of sh ootin g, the capital's hospitals were crammed Sunday night with casualties and r e l a t i v e s and fr ie n d s by th e thousands began streaming into the center of Tehran with bandages and other medical supplies or merely seeking information. to p ro test THE MAIN BATTLE seesawed through a main square near Tehran university where Moslem clergymen the sta g ed a sit-in government’s continuing actions, in­ cluding the closing of all airports to block Khomeini’s return. Witnesses said small "killer squads" of troops moved through the reeling crowds "firing at everything and everyone in sight." Troops stopped women from lifting dead and wounded into the scores of ambulances which converged on the scene. A UPI reporter said the carnage appeared to be far worse than the ‘ Friday M assacre’’ of two days ago when at least 30 persons were shot dead and scores wounded by troops attempting to enforce the new ban on street protests. Student demonstrators may face deportation WASHINGTON (UPI) — Attorney General Griffin Bell, angered by Ira­ nian exchange student rampages, is directing a major overhaul of U S immigration control procedures Justice Department officials said Kell vowed to spend January super­ vising efforts that agency ami plug legal loopholes that make it hard to catch and deport il­ legal aliens to streamline He h o p es to su b m it refo rm proposals to Congress som etim e in this session, they said Impetus for the crackdown began building when Bell saw televised reports of iranian students battling police and setting a car afire outside the Beverly Hills, Calif . residence of the shah of Iran's sister He stated publicly he was fed up with the violent behavior of Iranian political demonstrators, supposedly admitted to this country to further their educations ADMINISTRATION officials said Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and national security adviser Zbigniew Brrezmski were angry , too — and suggested it was time Bell checked into the INS, part of his domain He did so and, according to the Justice Department sources, was stunned by what he learned The first thing, they said. was that nobody in the U S government knew how many Iranian students were in this country Estim ates ranged from 26.000 (the Health, Education and Welfare Department figure) to 36,000 (the Iranian em bassy) to 56.000 (other agencies) There was only one way to find out Ask the colleges and univer­ sities to count heads Survey results show there are 244,- 000 foreign students in the United States, including 50.000 Iranians EVEN MORE discouraging, the INS could not tell, within I million people, how many foreigners were in the country on any basis Another Bell discovery, the of­ ficials said was that the INS has "a management problem" which he blames on himself He neglected the service during his first two years in office, partly because he had to spend so much time restoring morale within the FBI and finding a new FBI director A ttem p ts to e x tr a d ite known violators are rare — except for Mex­ icans caught crossing the border il­ legally because the paper work and expense are intolerable Because the system is antiquated, officials are making plans for a modem computerized system which can handle the millions of visa forms efficiently I UAM J* 1 V% — -UPI Telephoto Soldiers aim their rifles at demonstrators during renewed fighting in Tehran. Pope gets mob reception in Mexico From Texan Wire Services Pope John Paul II encouraged Mexican clergy to care for the poor "without surrendering to socio­ political radicalisms, which in the end are shown to be inopportune and counterproductive " A sampling of American and Mexican priests in­ dicated they were in agreement. "We are in full agreement with his holiness’ recommendations." said the Rev. Manuel Sanchez Andrade. 36. of Mexico City. "We were told that politics have nothing to do with priesthood and we in­ tend to follow his pastoral line to the letter " The Rev Pete Jove of Immokalee, Fla., said, "His holiness reaffirmed what has been the tendency in the past few years — not to divorce the church from reality." The pope's appearances have set off wild mob scenes in Mexico City. POLICE ESTIMATED a million persons flocked to the Basilica of Guadalupe Saturday The Red Cross said 500 people were treated for heat exhaustion and injuries received in the crush A steady stream of stretcher bearers filed out of the church during the mass, carrying those who had fainted in the heat. Scuffles with the large guard force were frequent. A group of about 1,000 persons forced an iron gate, overran 20 guards and entered the basilica The hard- pressed guards in turn kept out others who had tickets Approximately 500.000 persons lined the pope’s 12- mile route through the city, cheering the pontiff’s every smile and jubilant wave. El Papa! El Papa! Rah! Rah' R ah'” These foot­ ball rally-style chants cam e from a sea of 20,OOO nuns waving yellow and white Vatican flags and yellow and white carnations as they waited for a visit from John Paul. A BAND PLAYING loudly in the background add­ ed to the excitement, and many of the nuns burst into song. Some of the songs were the marching hymns of the Cristero Wars in the 1920s, when Catholic guerrillas fought federal forces in a bitter religious war in which the government executed priests and burned churches John Paul took over an hour out of his busy schedule Saturday night to speak to the nuns at the Miguel Angel Institute parochial school on their role in the world. The crowd included more than IOO cloistered Carmelite nuns who had vowed lifelong seclusion to pray for the handicapped and mentally ill. They were given special dispensation to break their vows just this once to see the pontiff. The nuns' reverence for the pontiff was reinforced when he affirmed the worship of the Virgin Mary as a major tenet of Catholicism in his first speech in Mex­ ico. "He’s all for Mary!” they shouted. “ He’s all for Mary!" The multitudes of nuns welcomed the pope as he entered the courtyard of the school with cheers and screams reminiscent of the welcome teen-agers gave to the Beatles in 1964 John Paul caught a glimpse of another Mexico, when a short trip took him out of the nation’s capital and into the abodes of peasants, prisoners and the poor. TRAVELING DOWN A four-lane divided highway — closed to everyone but the pqpe and his party all day Sunday — John Paul headed the 80 m iles to Puebla, site of the CELAM conference of Latin American bishops. On the northeastern edge of Mexico City, his motorcade ran along one side of the vast slum of Nezahualcoyotl, where more than 2 million persons live in some of the worst poverty in Latin America. As the papal motorcade reached the edge of the ci­ ty, John Paul ordered a halt, turned in his vehicle and gave a papal blessing to a modernistic, glass-and- brick building, while hundreds of women waved energetically from the windows. They waved through the bars of their cells at the Santa Marta Acatitla women’s prison. The pope was responding to a letter from the city’s prison inmates, delivered the day before, requesting he visit them. Over the mountains and past the snow-capped volcanoes of Popocatepetl and Ixtaccihuatl swept the papal convoy. John Paul moved back to his open vehi­ cle, his wide-brimmed hat and cape of bright scarlet standing out against the dark green of the passing pine forests. About 75,000 persons had turned out in the little far­ ming town of San Miguel Xoxtla, about 5 miles off the superhighway. The people of San Miguel gave John Paul a bouquet of roses, and he unveiled a plaque that townspeople will be able to point to for years to come as marking the spot where the pope stood. Rockefeller cremated; memorial services today Memory of generosity, sense of humor related by acquaintance NEW YORK (UPI) - The body of fo r m e r V ic e P r e s id e n t N e lso n Rockefeller was cremated Sunday, the day b efo re a sch ed u led p r iv a te memorial serv ice on the powerful in family s Poe antico Hills esta te W e s t c h e s t e r G o u n ty . a f a m ily spokesman said Rockefeller, one of the nation's wealthiest men and a four-term gover­ nor of New York died of a heart attack Friday night at the age of 70 Aides originally said his body would be cremated Monday morning, followed by a private memorial service schedul­ ed for ll a rn at the family cem etery at the Rockefeller estate There was no explanation why the body was cremated a day earlier than planned th e c r e m a tio n George Taylor, a family spokesman, sa id took p la c e " so m e tim e Sunday m orning at a Westchester crematorium ’ He would not identify the crematorium or its ex­ act location and Mark, had gathered at Kykuit man­ sion on the 250-acre estate 20 miles north of Manhattan by late Saturday. About 70 relatives were expected for the service. It was orig in a lly reported that Rockefeller died at IO 15 p rn at his of­ fice on the 56th floor of Rockefeller Center, and was found slumped over his desk by a bodyguard F A M IL Y S P O K E S M A N H ugh Morrow said m alt of the Rockefeller fa m ily , in clu d in g N elso n s w ife , M argarita "Happy," and six children. Rodman. Ann. Steven. Mary, Nelson Jr However, it was later revealed that he died in a private office in a fashionable four-story brownstone owned by the Rockefeller family at 13 W. 54th St., just off Fifth Avenue A MEMORIAL TRIBUTE for family, associates, close personal friends and national and international public of­ ficials will be at ll a m. Friday, at Riverside Church with the Rev. William Sloane Coffin presiding. Rockefeller has been called an unsual man and anecdotes about him abound. One newspaper reporter says he saw Rockefeller give away his "last dime" to a diamond-bedecked dowager at a Texas dinner. John Knoble, a staff reporter at The New Haven Register, said the incident la te 1950s when occurred the in Rockefeller was at the Shamrock Hotel in Houston to build support for a presidential bid. Knoble said he was chatting with Rockefeller when an elderly woman w e a r in g “ th e h u g e s t p o s s i b l e diamonds...ambled up to Rockefeller and said: ‘Give me a dim e."’ R O C K E F E L L E R , E Y E IN G the glitter around her neck and on her fingers, asked why she would need a dime. The woman said she d been given a dime by R ockefeller’s grandfather when she was a child and " thought it if a n o th e r w ould be w o n d e r fu l Rockefeller gave me a dim e,’" Knoble recalled. He said Rockefeller fumbled in his pockets and turned up a nickel and a wallet with bills (the top one a 31,000 bill) — leaving the woman obviously dis­ appointed Then, "with an only slightly pained expression, he reached down to his trouser cuff, opened it, and there sewed in it was a dime," Knoble said. Rockefeller explained as he handed the coin to the woman that he kept a dime in his cuff " in case I’m mugged and need to telephone. My grandfather’s advice.’" news capsules By United Press international Court asked to suspend Judge Kirk AUSTIN — The T ex a s S u p rem e Court has been asked to suspend D istrict J u d ge Stanley C. Kirk awaiting the outcom e of removal proceedings a g a in st the W ichita F alls judge for allegedly falsifying court records to hide his c r itic ism of a jury. It is the fir st tim e the C om m ission on Judicial Conduct has sought a suspension on a sittin g ju rist during efforts to rem ove him from office for m iscon d u ct, M aurice S. Pipkin, execu tive director of the com m ission, confirm ed Friday. Authority for the judicial com m ission to publicly discipline judges was included in a constitutional am endm ent approved by voters in N ovem ber 1977. Carter expected to commute Hearst’s sentence WASHINGTON — The Ju stice D epartm ent has recom m ended that P resid en t C arter free P atricia H earst and the president is expected to act quickly, adm inistration sources said Sunday. A W hite H ouse so u rce said the recom m endation for com m utation of the 24-year-old n ew paper h e ir e s s ’ 7-year bank robbery sentence was delivered to p resid en tia l counsel Robert Lipschutz in the last few days and would be subm itted to Carter ‘‘very sh ortly.” Physicist arrested as spy in France PARIS — An E ast Germ an nuclear physicist and his w ife have been arrested and charged w ith spying while he w as working at the French N ational Scientific R esearch Center, French o fficia ls said Sunday. The p h y sic ist, Rolf Dobbertin, 45, described by French o fficials as a "high-level s c ie n tis t,” and his w ife w ere questioned Jan. 19 in Paris. The o ffic ia ls said Dobbertin, who posed as a West German and worked in the r esea rch ce n te r for 15 years, had confessed to being a spy and transm itting information to E ast Germ any concerning work at the laboratory on high-powered laser beams. The Dobbertins w ere caught when an E ast Germ an official defected Jan. 18 to West Germ any and gave Bonn authorities information on the Paris-based couple West Germ an security agents im m ediately tipped off their French colleagues, the officials said. Mysterious virus kills Italian infants NAPLES, Italy — A 7-month-pld girl died of m ysterious cau ses in Car- dasrelli hospital Sunday in the 42nd such death in the area over the past l l months, o fficials said The sym ptom s w ere alm ost identical to those of the other infants who died in the city, m ost of them at the Santobono hospital. Health investigators have said they believe the children have died from a m ysterious virus that cau ses high fever, breathing difficulties, com a and finally death. The m ysterious deaths began last February and have been increasing in frequency in recent weeks. Conflicting reports arrive from Vietnam BANGKOK, Thailand — Khmer Rouge guerrillas Sunday claim ed they have killed or wounded m ore than 500 V ietnam ese soldiers and recaptured the ancient tem ple ruins of Angkor Wat, sym bol of Cambodian nationhood But in som e of the sam e areas where the Khmer Rouge claim ed battlefield victories, the new Cambodian governm ent said local ad­ m inistrations w ere being set up to return the countryside to normal. Propaganda broadcasts by the Khmer Rouge radio, the "V oice of D em ocratic K am puchea,” claim ed Khmer Rouge troops killed or wound­ ed m ore than 500 V ietnam ese troops last Wednesday and Thursday, destroyed 14 tanks and captured six others in guerrilla-style attacks throughout the country. Vice Premier Tong arrives in Washington to meet with Carter From Texan News Services Teng Hsiao-ping arrived in the United States Sunday to usher in his dream of a new age in Sino-American relations. A crowd of several hundred American officials, Chinese diplomats and jour­ nalists met the vice premier at Andrews Air Force Base. Vice President Walter Mondale, the senior American official at the airport, led Teng through the crowd to a limousine that took the Chinese leader to Blair House, across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. China s military problems are likely to be an important issue in Teng's talks with President Carter and other U.S. of­ ficials during his visit. The Chinese will not be asking for material military aid in this instance but for diplomatic sup­ port. Peking is disturbed by what are described as “continuing and expanding provocations’’ by the Vietnamese along the frontier between the two countries. But although local forces there have been strengthened, it is unlikely that any effective military measures will be taken The reason for China's restraint lies across its northern frontier. The Russians have positioned about 650.000 men along the border running from the Pacific Ocean to Afghanistan. The Chinese have the manpower but not the weapons to match this force. Of­ ficials say they cannot be sure that if the Chinese army were to take "punitive" action against Vietnam, the Russians would not begin their own provocations along the section of the frontier that guards Manchuria, one of the most im ­ portant industrial regions of China. In this situation Teng is expected to ask Carter what the United States can do to dissuade the Soviet Union from providing military and econom ic aid to the Vietnamese under the treaty signed by the two countries last year. Former President Richard Nixon is expected to spend at least three days in Washington during the visit of Teng. The Chinese vice premier and other Chinese leaders expressed their desire to m eet with Nixon during their eight- day stay in the United States. Nixon will have a private visit with Teng on Wednesday. ( arter said that one of Nixon’s major achievem ents "w as to open up an avenue of comm unications and con­ sultations and negotiation with the Chinese which resulted ultim ately in normal relationships." Nixon has said he does not intend to make another bid for public o ffice,but he does intend to speak out on foriegn aftairs. . 4 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. January 29. 1979 Life too short for Rockefeller's dreams By Francis X. d in s * NEW YORK — Seventy years was not enough for Nelson Rockefeller, a man whose enthusiasm for life in all its public and private passions seemed to dwarf even the family fortune as the key fa c to r in h is d riv e to be remembered as a dominant figure in his part of history. He talked often of surpassing the 96 years of his grandfather. But he lived as if each new day was his limit, whether he was trying to force the legislature into some new pet master program or breathlessly merchan­ dising reproductions of his own art treasures. Either way, the master program or the reproduction business drew the same tireless superlatives from the man. He looked at life with a crinkle-eyed, lantern-jawed optimism. His basic political credo was to sell himself as the ultimate pragmatist who could hire the best minds to study the hardest problems as a prelude to his stepping in and making the decisions for solving them. In passing, he sprinkled “think tank" minds like Henry Kissinger’s on the political landscape, and he added a Medici precaution to modern politics by privately paying his favorite aides hundreds of thousands of dollars in ad­ dition to whatever public salary they got. His critics found the payments con­ sistent with the thread of brass that ran with the gold and the great human charm through the co m p lica ted Rockefeller personality. A characteristic Rockefeller mo­ ment in time was a night in 1973, when, flying in a family jet, he was sipping Dubonnet, eating peanuts, and talking of his latest enthusiasm, the National Commission on Critical Choices, which some said he had brought into being ap­ parently as a public vehicle in a final presidential bid. E v e n Rockefeller talked casually of "poll­ ing the world." He popped a peanut into his mouth and said, "I’d like to get Mao Tse-tung or one of his henchmen to prepare a paper on the nature of man." Right there, was the classic mixture of ego and hope that was his trademark. the m o s t e x p e r i e n c e d politicians never realized the power of state government until he took it over and reinvented parts of it. Such Rockefeller creations as the Urban Development Corporation and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority have been criticized lately in the frayed reality of time, but they bear the Rockefeller stamp as attempts to cut through the old political ways and turn social needs into votes. From a youthful studious scion in­ vited by President Franklin D. Roosevelt into a foreign-affairs pro­ ject, Nelson Rockefeller evolved into one of the toughest, the most cynical of stump fighters. His 15 years of can­ didacies for the governorship and the presidency took him all over the terrain of political philosophy and left him remembered as both hero and goat in the eyes of different political blocs. A liberal has to picture him standing tall and speaking through boos against the grain of the 1964 Republican con­ vention's right-wing militancy. But the same liberal also has a memory of the shock when Gov. Rockefeller had state troopers retake Attica prison in 1971 with a fusillade of heavy gunfire that took 39 lives of inmates and hostages. Just so, there are conservatives still angry at Rockefeller’s refusal to sup­ port Sen. Barry Coldwater as the Republican presidential candidate in 1964. But these same critics also had the satisfaction of seeing Rockefeller fly into Arizona nine years later and tell, in a recanting tone, of how he had been too soft on crim e and welfare issues. I'm not moving to the right,” he said back then to the inevitable ques­ tion of his trying to shed the eastern liberal image that was such a hin­ drance in his quest for the presidency. “ I'm just dealing with problems as they come up. " l i f e That latter statem ent comes close to the shifting truth of the type of classic A m e r i c a n p o l i t i c a l t h a t Rockefeller led. As governor, he arriv­ ed with a pay-as-you-go budget avowal, but left 15 years later having invented vast new means of floating state debt. In the same way, he first took on the narcotics problem as a treatm en t issue, preparing for costly institutions and jobs about the state. But then, as tolerance was withering, he public switched to the "crack down" stance and pushed through a heavy punish­ ment program for drug criminals. In all cases, his enthusiasm carried the votes and the days. Ultimately, he came to be seen as the consummate politician, vying to fly the topmost pennant in the shifting winds of the issues. But that judgment seems to o v e rlo o k k ey f a c e t s of t he Rockefeller zest for life. In 1962, for ex­ ample. his private and public passions clashed and he opted on the side of his private life, divorcing his wife and marrying M argaretta F itler Murphy. He was advised the transaction would hurt his political image, but he wanted this with his consistent enthusiasm. Through all the disappointment he might have presented to idealogues, Rockefeller never failed to stir the emotions of other politicians, whether to rub a mayor the wrong way or leave an entire legislature awe-struck with his ability to dream up fresh, costly, v o t e - s n a g g i n g j o b - p r o d u c i n g , programs. Their envy was bipartisan, particularly since he was not above helping to protect valuable Democrats when the reapportionment maps were it also was the sheer, drawn But begrudging respect of one politician watching a pure artist steal the show When he missed the presidency for the final time. Rockefeller was the first to show he knew it by withdrawing cleanly from politics, back to the art world where he was nurtured by his mother As he departed the political life, with his grin only slightly daunted. he offered a bit of epitaph "I did my dut y for 15 y e a r s and kept my enthusiasm .” c 1979 New York Times Rockefeller as vice president under Gerald Ford U P I TOlODOOti Rockefeller is shown with Richard Nixon during a 1968 luncheon at the Waldorf Hotel. -UPI Telephoto — UPI Telephoto This 1937 photo of the Rockefeller clan was taken In Tucson, Ariz. They are (l-r), John D. Rockefeller Jr. and his sons David, Nelson, Winthrop, Laurence and John D. 3rd. firing line Don’t pass D /F As one of the six student members of the University Council, last semester I observed what I consider an injustice in our educational system . Against overwhelming student opposition, the council voted to change the pass/fail syatem to pass/D /F. Many students and faculty have argued the problems inherent in this new coding: the mixture of graded and non-graded evaluation and more impor­ tantly the extreme detriment on the average student. Yet the basic problem appears not to be in the grading system itself, but rather in a basic attitude. School by definition exists because of and for the students. Yet our faculty and ad­ ministrators are attempting to legislate away a program which is beneficial to all students, replacing it with one which among other things will ‘‘help fight grade inflation.” If our main concern is legislating grading policy rather than advocating educational policy then I believe the University is soon to face a serious crisis. - Today we are all given a second chance to prove that our institution has the right attitude about education. We must at least maintain our present pass/fail system in order to provide the greatest opportunities for education — for students. Rick Archer Architecture Help our sanity Don’t ever tell us that our generation is apathetic, when you can’t even reach a quorum of 268 for an issue that affects the entire University. Don’t ever com­ plain that the faculty is given too little input into the system when you don’t use what little power you have. We thank the 75 men and women who did attend the faculty meeting and understand their shame in their colleagues. In defense of our GPA’s, we would like to comment on the proposed grading system . It would seem to negate the philosophy behind the system for a student to be penalized for making a low A, but not be rewarded for a high A. Granted, the 4 3 system is awkward, but to make it a 4.0 system by removing the possibility of achieving a high A is like cutting off the head of an elephant to make it fit the cage. Please, Dr. Rogers, help us retain our sanity by vetoing this screwy system. Cynthia Wood Plan II A salute I am sure I express the mood of many fellow students when I air my grief at the loss of a man who exemplified the virtue of capitalism, but yet remained above the corruption so many aspiring pigs fall prey to. Here I speak of my hero and former Vice President Nelson Rockefeller. I would propose that the University officials lower the campus flags to half-mast in honor of a great man. Phillip Vaughn Business Who decides? In response to the Jan. 25 editorial "Morals From the Past" and the letter "Pro-Lifers" by Robert Caldwell, I must speak. First, to the editor, you argue against the dean for banning X-rated movies, using the argument that; since the movies were shown last year, why can’t they be presented again? However, at the same time, you condemn the dean for using past standards. I suggest that you never speak again on double stan­ dards, if you use them too. In response to Caldwell’s letter, you defend the right to have abortion with the argument that many unwanted children will be born and suffer the con­ sequences of being unwanted. What would you do with all the unwanted children who are alive now? Kill them because they are unwanted and you don't want them to suffer? How about a new born baby, or a baby a minute before birth? Or a week, or three, six or nine months? Who made all the people in America think they are God and, therefore, decide when you are person? Now do we start deciding that people in comas, or the severly retarded, or criminals are not useful to society and should be eliminated? Shall we have popularity contests to decide who is wanted and who isn’t? Or why not place the respon­ sibility in the hands of someone who will call him self God and demand the worship of all the people.? Lawrence Richards Slavic Languages Confusing varmints After reading the column in last Mon­ day's Texan by H D. Woodard and D.J. Moore, I asked myself, "who the hell a re th e s e gu y s a n y w a y ? ” T h e ir ridiculous tirade against the UT English to departm ent was believe. Could two zoology TAS have w ritten such an illogical piece of “gark?" incredible too But my question was answered in Thursday s Texan. There was yet another ranting and raving bit of w isdom by th e a b o v e -m e n tio n e d authors. They listed their address as P a tte rso n L a b s.” T hat ex p lain s everything A couple of those ex­ perimental mice must have escaped and gotten hold of a typewriter Somebody better catch those varmints before they cause any more confusion. Jim Mclnerny Plan II Letting it out The very fact that the House would join with the representative from Dallas in a resolution against the students from Iran in this country is (to me) appalling. Was it not a m ere IO years ago that the Smotherses got fed up with the m a­ jority (the have’s) in America who thought nothing of lynching or running rough-shod over a man of darker hue; and in their fury, knew no other way to express this anger than to destroy. I, too. felt that such behavior was un­ justified at the time. In fact, I had so in­ su lated m y self ag a in st w hat was happening in this country that I was am azed when I went to teach in Newark. N J to find that great areas of the town had been, literally, burned down. As I drove down South Orange Avenue, I noticed that most of the buildings of the "inner city" were simp­ ly charred ruins. I had to be told by the superintendent of music education that this was the result of the riots of 1968. I taught in the Newark ghetto for nine months and lived in that city for as many months before I cam e to unders­ tand that this hideous outpouring of wrath had been necessary. People bur­ n in g dow n t h e i r own p la c e s of residence; how absurd. Only when I cam e to realize how calloused property owners can be when they are simply "letting out" cold water flats, did I know that these blacks had to, shout with the destruction of private property (the supreme goal for those Americans who pursue happiness) that they were tired of being ignored Now. we i who seem to be experts in corporate immorality) are offering asylum to those people who have killed and maimed many of the very loved- ones of Iranian students here in the United States, (sometimes I think some of the greedy bull would do for a quart of oil) and must subsequently, deport these caring kin' who would try to strike out al the m urderers of their I am a bit surprised that loved-ones they have done no more than break win­ dows and tear down gates Sometimes I think America has had it When we hold the destruction of private, sacred lives less dear than the destruction of private, sat red property, how far have we descended into the abyss of unholy unconcern The Iranian student'' have something to tell ui: Thou art weighed rn the balances and found wanting You love and value your cars your houser, your ivory palaces * and the wealthy of our country who have murdeied our kin more than the lives of those who would be free What has hapjiened to your m orality”*" Cornelius C lai rd 411 E. 30th St SALT serving a purpose __________ By Scott Williams While it is not my general inclination to respond to Texan editorials, the discourse on “ The Inherent Faults of SALT struck me as being particularly naive It s basic assertion us that the impending SALT II treaty is a “ useless diplomatic placebo because it does not "solve the problem of the nuclear arm s race" or address the issue of nuclear arm s proliferation A more responsible analyst would understand that the United States has long taken the lead in efforts to limit nuclear arm s proliferation and furtherm ore, that the upcoming SALT II tre a ­ ty. while not solving nor attempting to solve all the problems of the nuclear arm s race, could, nevertheless, serve as a valuable means for advancing our national interests. First, a brief review of efforts at nuclear arm s proliferation is helpful in dispelling the editorial's implied emphasis that we have not been diligent enough in that field The United States in itially proposed limiting nuclear arm s proliferation rn the early 1960s. although the Soviet Union, then still trying to keep China under its nuclear wing, was reluctant to enter such an agree­ ment at that point. Finally, in 1968, after successful French and Chinese nuclear tests, a nuclear proliferation pact was signed, though France and China remained, and still remain, key holdouts from that agreement. That these nations refused to sign, based on calculations of their national interests, should illustrate some of the difficulties involved in m ultilateral considerations of nuclear weapons issues. To a realistic observer they should also point out some of the untenable assumptions the editorial implies about the viability of a m ultilateral arm s limitation pact. For example, how would it serve the national interest of France, China, India, Britain or Israel to limit the relatively small nuclear weapons capabilities those countries now possess? Can one really imagine a serious French, British, In­ dian or Israeli politician, or even a Chinese leader for that m atter, proposing to limit or abandon what amounts to those countries' most salient m ilitary deterrent9 And even assuming that the leaders of these countries embraced the notion of m ul­ tilateral nuclear arm s limitation, I would hold little hope for a meaningful or workable agreement. We need only recall the experience of the m ultilateral naval limitation agreem ents of the 1920s and 1930s to recognize the un­ wieldy nature of such efforts and the spoiler role that a country like China could play as Japan and Germany did 40 years ago Perhaps we could attribute this to the ‘‘inherent faults" of in­ ternational relations. thai our paramount concern with SALT should be American security and maintaining the stability of our strategic nuclear deterrent I here fore SALT ‘ an not be viewed as an attem pt to solve the nuclear arm s race, but rather as a means to maintain some es­ sential equivalence between the United States and the Soviet I mon s strategic nuclear forces Because of this, we must and should expect that SALT I! will be accompanied by proposals tor im i eased outlays of new strategic nuclear weapons systems to maintain this essential equivalence that is the crux of our military deterrent This however, is far from making SALT II a useless diplomatic placebo." Sue h key points as limiting the number of warheads the Soviets can place on their MIRVed SS-18 and SS-19 missiles, which have throw weight capacities far in excess of any American K MMS, will be contained in the SALT II agreement as well as numerical limitations on strategic launchers that will force the Soviets to dismantle some of their older ICBMS This, of course, will have to be evaluated against the trade-offs in- volved in American concessions in technological innovation* contained in the protocal that will accompany the treaty and reported American concessions allowing for Soviet telem etry or coding of their missile test information, which defies American verification efforts ll this makes SALT a We must be frank in realizing that the American interest in the SALT process requires that we maintain this essential equivalence that can only be guaranteed by developing and deploying weapons system s that rep resent an effective 'useless diplomatic placebo" deter rent then we are deceiving ourselves as to what can realistically be accomplished the Soviet Union b u r emphasis should be to seek to manage this problem within reasonable bounds rather than dismiss a sound and well calculated effort because it does not solve the problem in its en­ tirety. in negotiations with Meanwhile, we would be best advised to withhold judgement on the SALT II treaty, the accompanying protocol, and the letter of understanding on future negotiations until all the negotiations on these m atters are completed Moreover we should leave the p o lem izin g in this field to those voices of righteous indignation such as Alva Myrdal. As Americans, we should evaluate the treaty on the basis of whether it serves the American interest instead of approaching it with the quixotic hope of solving all the problems of nuclear a rn is and nut'leau arr11® p roliferation W i l l i a m s is a g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t in A m erican and inter- Returning to what should be the real issue, we must recognize n a t i o n a l s t u d i e s b orders h » *a one'Pa r ty republic T W n l ! c MozamN u e , Zambia and frnm R * ce ^ won independence r TS? ®rita,n 15 years ago, the small B u t African state has been a persistent violator of the human rights of its citizens.. In 1964 Dr Hastings Kamuzu Banda, a veteran leader of opposition to British rule, assumed power in Malawi and in subsequent months survived two coup attempts by his erstwhile followers. Since then Dr. Banda has declared himself president for life, driven key op­ leaders into exile and in­ position troduced a number of laws designed to make his power absolute. Members of the Malawi Young Pioneers, Dr. Ban­ da s personal army, are at liberty to arrest and torture whomever they please. Other types of officially sanc­ tioned oppression include censorship, religious persecution (especially aimed at Jehovah's Witnesses), the use of the death penalty and even a strictly en­ forced national dress code. Political prisoners in Malawi repre­ sent all levels of society and at any one time may include government officials suspected of disloyalty to the president, relatives of exiled dissidents, citizens denounced by the government’s vast spy network, professional people and even common peasants who have no idea why they are being detained In 1971, for ex­ ample, an entire village was put under arrest for months without explanation. As a rule, though, the typical Malawian political prisoner comes from the northern part of the country and has had some exposure to western-style educa­ tion In Malawi as elsewhere suppression comes in waves, so that the number of political prisoners varies constantly Following one of the amnesties which THE ACADEMIA WALTZ HO W Y N O P ..IHC FUST tWIW, CFM CHICANO AMENTS J MIMICAL ft&AUOH UILI (Die PLLAX Sa. « Republic ignores civil rights By Kim T aylor the government grants periodically the number may be as low as 500, but at other into the thousands. No precise figures are currently available. tim es may range Prison conditions in Malawi leave much to be desired. Cells are over­ crowded, sanitation is poor, prisoners receive only small amounts of un­ appetizing food, medical attention is minimal and prisoners' clothing and blankets are often invested with lice and A m nesty International bedbugs. This is due in part to the general poverty of the country (which the government blames on exiled dis­ sidents) and in part to Dr. Banda's malicious attitude toward political prisoners “ They will rot. ” he has said. The worst of the Malawian prisons is Mikuyu Detention Center, which is located on a sweltering, m alaria- infested plain In line with his belief that prison should be a deterrent to potential dis­ sidents as well as punishment for proven ones. Dr Banda has actively en­ couraged brutality in Malawian jails. Torture, in the form of beating, burning, sexual abuse, prolonged submersion in water, and forced confinement with lun atics is common. R ecalcitran t prisoners may be forced to drink from cups which have been used by persons with leprosy or tuberculosis, or may be subjected to shock treatments (in the ’’electric hat’’ torture). Amnesty Inter­ national knows of several cases of per­ sons who have died or become per­ manently crippled under torture in Malawi. Political prisoners rarely come to trial in Malawi, because under the law they can be held indefinitely without charge. When they do, however, they can expect no mercy from the courts. for both crim inal and Sentences political crimes are severe, even by A frican stan d ard s, and the death sen ten ce is im posed fre e ly . Ap­ proximately 50 prisoners, including politicals, are hanged yearly. This happens despite the fact that the Malawiann constitution specifically states ‘The Government and the People of Malawi shall continue to recognize the sanctitiy of the personal liberties enshrined in the United Nations Univer­ sal Declaration of Human Rights...” To date. Amnesty International has investigated and adopted the cases of a number of prisoners of conscience in Malawi In addition. AI lent its support to a worldwide protest againt a par­ t ic u la r ly bloody su p p r e sso n of Jehovah's Witnesses which took place there in the winter of 1975-76. For the most part, however, correspondence with M alawian o ffic ia ls goes un­ answered. and a direct appeal from the secretary general of AI to Dr. Banda has been publicly rejected Taylor is a member of A ustin's A m nesty International Group. BY BERKE BREATHED aw ak CCW CCW V 1 07,MMB 'M toM rn fem mmm,? wmnMm cm nmcxtiL cfm Mimr fin m ue rn MB r ve n ia l IDE flNWfl? IT 'mm mw. I TOM S1FI5... %,u I 7MTCMS /m AM tW OM Ra/owm/Mi Merom c, * TOU Asses \jWv fat* & T . . T ll ' 7 T E ^ ---------- \ 7 r J >r ~i p f editorials THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 5 Mor ja y , Jan uary 2 9 1979 No sympathy for industry For the good of the whole, it is oftentimes necessary to require mandatory government regulations on certain industries and businesses. These regulations span various areas, including an employee s working conditions and environmental concerns. Sometimes implementing these regulations can be a tedious and costly job, but we should not allow these reasons to be used by an offending industry, business or city as an excuse to ignore beneficial guidelines. The Environmental Protection Agency, unfor­ tunately, has entertained these arguments, and has decided to relax its standard for urban smog. Such narrow-mindedness on the part of EPA will be ecologically devastating and leave vulnerable to change remaining environmental checks on in­ dustry. In response to pressure from the nation’s largest oil, chem ical and auto companies, EPA Ad­ ministrator Douglas Costle is expected to raise the acceptable level of smog by 50 percent, from .08 to .12 m icrogram s per cubic meter of air. (A microgram is a millionth of a gram.) The major objection to the current standards is cost. Industry officials estimate between $15 and $30 billion a year would be needed to enforce EPA regulations. An article in the Louisville Courier-Joumal cited only two of the nation’s 105 urban areas as meeting the health standard for smog set in 1971. Twenty ad- ditonal cities would be in compliance if the stan­ dards were relaxed. Industry spokesmen voice the expected doomsday effect of preserving the current standards: the cost will be passed on to the consumers, the regulations benefit few persons and worker layoffs and widespread inflation will result. For the sake of saving money and avoiding the attendent inconvenience of cleaning up their respec­ tive industries, lobbyists and even President Carter’s inflation fighters have pressured Costle into compromising himself and raising the smog standards. Health concerns should be the only criteria for such decisions; the dollar value should not be enter­ tained. We are amazed at the arrogance of industry. First these companies want to be free from government regulation to pump into the at­ mosphere all forms of filth and chemicals their lit­ tle smokestacks can produce. Then, when those practices prove harmful to life forms, these same companies complain about the cost of cleaning up after themselves. We have no sympathy for industry. They created these aerial cesspools and they should be responsi­ ble for cleaning them up. Raising smog standards to save businesses money is a patently political move, a move that will prove ecologically naive in the not too distant future. Notoriety stacks the deck The American judicial system proposes fair and equal treatment regardless of race, color or creed. Perhaps the Constitution should be amended to in­ clude other variables such as prominence, wealth and political position. Patty Hearst and Richard Nixon illustrate the polar extremes of how the legal cards can be dealt to persons of notoriety. Five years ago a young 19-year-old girl was ab­ ducted from her apartment and subsequently spent six weeks subjected to horrifying conditions. Adap­ ting to live rather than suffer the indignities in­ flicted upon her, Patricia Hearst had no choice but to join the ranks of the Symbionese Liberation Ar­ my. For her crime, helping to rob a bank and associa­ tion with a guerrilla terrorist group, a confused daughter of a wealthy publishing magnate was sentenced to seven years in prison. There can be little doubt that Patty’s background was a detrimental factor when it came time for sentencing It must have been hard to muster sym­ pathy for a glamorous, wealthy and attractive heiress. But the fact is, had she been a normal girl from an average family the judge and jury may have realiz­ ed that Patty’s only crime was the will to live and that she will always carry a life sentence of having to bear the scars of emotional and psychological damage. Patty’s time was served the day she was abducted. After she has served 22 months of the seven-year sentence and exhausted all means of appeal, Presi­ dent Carter can justify the injustices that Patty has suffered by commuting her sentence. The Justice Department has passed on that recommendation to Carter, and by acting quickly he can relieve a night­ mare and return a victim of prominence to a nor­ mal life. While Patty was a victim of the system, the system was victim of Nixon. Why couldn’t the sentiment that was afforded Nixon, specifically the attitude that the em­ barrassing resignation and subsequent emotional and psychological damage was penalty enough, be afforded to Patty. Now, Patty sits in a cell praying for leniency while an ex-president who humiliated his country and skirted judicial retribution is profiting to the tune of more than $1 million from memoirs, government pensions and non-taxable expenses. And most embarrassing of all because ‘‘it seemed like the decent and proper thing to do” Carter has invited this unscrupulous political snake to the White House for the state dinner honoring China’s Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping. Granted, Nixon made a major contribution toward normalization with Peking, but to start heralding this man’s achievements by escorting him back to the White House is an insult upon the public, akin to inviting Benedict Arnold for Thanksgiving dinner. Obviously, the law will never be impartial, but certain amends can be forwarded. Carter would do well to send Patty home and Nixon back to the beach with his metal detector. Library founders deserve credit Refugee problem: a source of anxiety By J i m M R n t o n WASHINGTON — The refu g ee problem is a source of increasing anxie­ ty to the Carter administration It is tom between its desire to relieve the poverty and suffering of people fleeing from economic m isery or political tyranny abroad, and its fear of taking on more refugees than it can absorb. There is general agreement here. both within the executive branch and the Congress, that present laws are inade­ quate to deal either with the people the administration would like to bring in or the people it would prefer to keep out And also that responsibility for ad­ m inistering present program s is scattered and incoherent. Accordingly the administration is now preparing new legislation that it hopes will be more relevant to the rapidly changing refugee problem in the world, and it has asked Dick Clark, former Democratic senator from Iowa, to join the administration as a special am ­ bassador for refugees One of the major problems for U S, of- f l o a t s under p re se n t la w s and regulations is to define what is a “ refugee ” In the past generation, the U S government has been concerned to for people seeking provide refuge freedom primarily from the U S S R., Hungary. Cuba or other Communist countries But the new refugees from Indochina do not fit neatly into the old laws and regulations and overwhelm the barriers erected by the Congress There are now about 200,000 refugees from Indochina, two-thirds of them in Thailand and one-third in Malaysia, try­ ing to get into the United States in addi­ tion to the 180,000 already admitted China has taken an estimated 170,000 from Vietnam. France is taking 12,000 a year and Australia 10,500, but Japan, alreadly overpopulated, and vast coun­ tries like under populated Brazil, have shown little interest in easing the pressure What the administration wants is con­ gressional approval to give the attorney general parole authority’’ to admit 50,- 000 refugees a year under a broad defini­ tion that a refugee ii. anyone outside his own country unable or unwilling to return because of persecution or well­ founded fear thereof, because of his race, religion, nationality or political opinions It also wants special emergen­ cy authority for at least another 50,000 a year Even though it is the Carter ad­ ministration that has made the defense of ‘ human rights'' the major theme of its foreign policy, and is doing more than any other country today as in its long history, to receive the latest army of homeless people, including the shah of Iran, there are clearly political and economic limits on what it can do. Dick Clark has no illusions that Washington can solve the problem, but his assignment will be to make it more relevant and more coherent. «1979 New York Times By Jo h n R oth gob Since joining the faculty of UT some 20 years ago, I have refrained from writing letters to the Texan. Having read the rash of articles and editorial comments on the mismanagement of the University Art Museum and the Harry Ransom Center I feel obliged to speak out in the hope that som e historical perspective will temper the harsh judgment of the University com­ munity concerning Dr. Roberts and Dr. Goodail. It is hard to believe that in 1958 the rare book collections of the University were housed in four rooms on the fourth floor of the Main Building guarded by Miss Fanny Rachford, who regularly stopped all scholarly work at 3:00 for a half hour of "tea time.” In the years that followed, the Univer­ sity has acquired one of the most prestigious research libraries in the world, two art galleries exhibiting out­ standing works of art on a continuing basis, and a collection of painting and sculpture (modern and Latin American) (rf national if not international fame. This could not have been accomplished without Ransom and the men of vision whom he gathered around him — in­ cluding Roberts and Goodail. The driving idea behind these men was to gather at all cost a significant collection of arts and letters to enrich the humanistic life of this university. Looking back, one must admit that their work was done autocratically, but that it was done at all defies reason. In 1958 it would have surprised no one that U T could build great stadiums or a campus far exceeding in size the original 40 acres, but the bold design of libraries and museums would have seemed in­ credible. The uncatalogued materials in the HRC seem somehow an embarrassment to the present administration, but in the exciting days of the 1960s when great collections were arriving monthly, Dr. Ransom made it clear that he preferred to acquire significant materials when they became available and worry about cataloging them later. In the bold plan of creating li­ braries and museums at Texas, securi­ ty became a necessary evil which should not impede the scholar, or inhibit the undergraduate from partaking of the riches gathered with such loving care. No one would suggest doing away with security but in the balance sheet of the loss of books should be included the value gained in making these collections available to the University community as a working part of their everyday life. Let us hope that the administration will not overreact and seal these priceless documents of man s humanity in a dehumanized vault. I feel obligated (a s should the University) to express my thanks to these men for what they have created while admitting that today perhaps their time is past. That there is no place for them now in the University is not to discredit them but to admit the pass we have come to. In my heart I yearn for the excitement, the intellectual stimuUh Hon and humanistic adventure which surrounded these men. Rothgeb is a drama professor. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Editor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editors Assistant to the Editor News Editor Associate News Editor Sports Editor Arts and Entertainment Editor Features Editor .......................... Photo Editor Assistant Photo Editor Im ages Editor Campus Activities E d ito r.......... General Reporters .................................... Gary Fendler Mike Stephens Thomas Kessler. Melissa Segrest Mark McKinnon Mark Dooley ................................ Beth Frerking David Chapin ’ ................. Anne Telford ............................ Scott Ticer ............................. Mike Laur .................................... Carlos Osorio Marion La Nasa Suzy Lamport D a rn e d Bcnmngfield, Philip Brasher, Prentiss Findlay, Jim I^fko, Martha McClure, David Heal, Ernestm a Koinero. Jann Snell, C arla Thornton, Laura Tuma. John Valdez Theresa Sheppard Issue Editor Dianna Hunt, Robert Hinds. Mark Schulter News A ssista n ts A Scott Sudduth Editorial A ssista n t Sports A ssistants Je ff Latcham , Michael Hurd Make-up E d ito r ................................................................... Ken Mathews Wire E d ito r ...........................................................................Susie Grubbs Copy Editors Melinda Magee. Martha Sheridan, Diane Morrison Xavier G arza, Jan Sonnenmair, Nuri Vallbona Photographers opinion* express**! in uh- nail) Texan are those at me eaiuit or me wr ier of the article and are mil necessarily those* ol the I mversity or administration the Board al Hegents, or the Tex as Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees this publication is On letters On columns Firing line letters should • be typed and triple spaced • be 30 lines or less, HO characters per line • address issues not personalities • include name address, and phone number of contributors Mail letters to The Firing Line. The Daily Texan. Drawer 1). UT Station. Austin Tex 78712. or bring letters to the Texan office in basement of the TSP building The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit letters to the editor for proper length and clarity Editorial columns should • bt' typed and triple space • bt* 80 lines or less. 60 characters per line • include name, address anti phone number of contributor. Mail columns lo Editorial Department. The Daily Texan. Drawer I) UT Station Austin. Tx 78712. or bring columns to the Texan office in the basement ol the TSP building The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit .ill columns for proper length and clarity Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, January 29, 1979 I M O N E S S CLOSING OUT SALE ' ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED 20*70% ENTIRE ANTIQUE COLLECTION 3 0 % OFF 1201 West 6th 10:30-6:30 478-3468 garret! optical C E R T IF IE D O PTIC IA N David Garrett, F.N.A.O. Prescriptions filled Quality optics from our own lab Wide selection of frames Frames repaired, fitted and adjusted Hours: Mon.-- Fri. 8:30- 5:30 1600 W. 35th 452-3225 'quality eyewear for the eyes of Texas' Paradigm Books & Lecture Notes Paradigm Lecture Notes Service is offering Notes in more than 70 courses this semester. Seminary lecture series to begin Monday night Austin Theological Sem inary’s four-day mid-winter lecture series, expected to attract more than 200 people from throughout the Southwest, begins at 8 p.m. Monday with a lecture by Dr. Sidney E . Ahlstrom. Professor of Am erican history and modern religion at Y ale University, Ahlstrom w ill speak on "Ideo log y and Religion: The Churches and the Shaping of Am erican Values.” The mid-winter series continues Tuesday with two lectures in the morning. Professor Freda A. Gardner, director of Christian e d u ca tio n a t P rin c e to n T h e o lo g ic a l Sem inary, w ill speak on ‘‘Disciples as a Body.” Following Gardner’s lecture, Dr. David B a ily Harned, chairman of the department of relig iou s studies at the U n iv e rs ity of Virginia, w ill deliver a lecture titled “ I Believe In .” The morning lectures w ill be in the chapel at the Austin Sem inary campus, IOO E . 27th St. and the evening speeches w ill be at the University Presbyterian Church, 2203 San Antonio Street. Dr. Ahlstrom w ill speak Tuesday night on the political implications of the Biblical tradition from Puritanism to the present. On Wednesday night his lecture w ill be entitled 'Gentiles in God s New Israel: Southern and Northern Dissent” and Thursday he will con­ clude the series with a lecture on “ The Rude Awakening - since 1960: The Present Crisis of a Distended Society.” Professor Gardner leads a workshop on Christian education Wednesday afternoon, following her lecture on “ Maintaining the Body on the W ay.” Her final lecture, Thurs­ day morning, is entitled “ Faithfulness in the Future.” D r. H arned, who w ill le ctu re a fte r Professor Gardner each day at l l a m., w ill speak on “ God the Father Alm ighty” and "M aker of Heaven and Ea rth ,” the final two days of the series. The three lecturers were selected because of books they had published recently, Peggy Cock rum. Seminary spokesman, said. Fitness class to begini Program to stress endurance Classes begin Monday for adults taking the U niversity cardiovascular fitness program. More than 500 Austin residents have completed this course since its first session in the fall of 1977. Focusing on the strengthening of the cardiovascular system through a fitness program stressing endurance, the 12-week program is directed by Terry L. Baylor, ex ercise physiologist and physical therapist. M ed ical d irecto r for the program is Dr. Timothy Stevens, director of in te rn a l m e d ic in e tra in in g at Brackenridge Hospital. Serving as exer­ cise specialist is Graham Hutchison, member of the American College of Sports Medicine and form er member of the Cana­ dian National Track and Field team. The classes w ill continue through April 20. with sessions scheduled in the early morning or at night for the convenience of those who work In d iv id u a l p ro g ra m s a re p r e ­ scribed for each p articip an t based upon his performance in an “ exercise stress test." said Stevens. The exercise stress test involves use of a treadmill with the exerciser s oxygen in­ take and use monitored electrically. This allows doctors to rate the subject’s car­ diovascular endurance, to see where to in­ sert the participant in the program, to es­ timate how much he can improve and compare his performance to others in his sex and age group. Stevens said. Participants must have clearance from a physician to enroll The $185 cost of the program includes use of University gym­ nasium and locker room facilities, plus the instruction, stress test and d ie ta ry analysis, he said The summer session of the program w ill be from April 23 to Ju ly 13 Additional in­ formation is available from Dr Baylor. Bellmont Hall 222 . 471-4822 SY MUOI S O F LOVE Y o u r K e e p s a k e d iam o n d is g u a r a n te e d in w r itin g fo r p e rfe c t c la r ity , p re cis e c u t an d fin e w h ite re g is te re d c o lo r p e r m a n e n t ly an d p ro te cted a g a in s t loss Keepsake’ MacDonald will speak at petroleum seminar Dr Robert MacDonald, a U niversity assistant professor of petroleum engineering, will speak on “ The Sensitivity of Oil Recovery to Producing R ate.” during a session of the P e tro le u m E n g in e e rin g Seminar Series Monday. The lecture w ill summarize two recent studies on the use of computer models of oil fields in Canada and Nigeria, MacDonald said, but the talk will be "not so much a sum­ mary of the results but more of a description of the use of these techniques." The meeting begins at 3 p rn in Petroleum Engineer­ ing Building 311 and the seminar series is open to the public with no adm ission charge The studies focus on the use of r e s e r v o i r s i mu l a t i on m o d e l s the relationship of oil recovery from reservoirs to the produc­ tion rate. MacDonald said to s t u d y The lecture would be of in- t e r e s t to s t u d e n t s of petroleum engineering and anyone with ties to the in­ dustry. he said Bovine life span surpassed, vets call 39 years unusual A u s t i n v e t e r i n a r i a n s accepted the news of the death of Star, the oldest cow in Am erica, nonchalantly The Wisconsin cow, which died at age 39 (equal to 239 human years), was “ pretty old for a cow.” said Dr. R J K elly of the Animal Clinic of Northwest Hills “ They probably get rid of most cows at 13 to IS years ’ K elly said “ It was an excep­ tional individual " Dr T G Bradfield of the Westlake Animal Hospital said a cow s normal life span is probably 20 years Animal ages are computed in human years by the ratio of the average life of the animal to the average human life. said Dr Carl Hubbs, Universi­ ty professor of zoology S t a r s o w n e r E m m a Itahlstrom said the cow died six m onths short of tying the Guinness Book record of bovine longevity NO SOMOS UNA FRATERNIDAM CHICANA! (We're not a Chicano Fraternity) But we are unique. How about you V l v I a IL i i o u t a l Les Amis • O D Y C O N T O W IN G R*«hop* your boll tam bust. Ton* up your thin, gat rid af (•B olita 4 7 6 - 7 5 0 3 . Mr. S tn u m Th*ropy K rtp u ik r I h r r t it no I in tr diam ond t i n / University Keepsake Jewelry Center Dobie Mall 477-9943 Layaways Visa M asterCharge 407 W. 24th St. ( Vk block bom Guadalupe) 472-7986 Mon.-Fri. 9 am -8 pm Sat. 10am-6 pm Valentine's t Day CP February 14th CP SALE' N 10-70% off EVERYTHING l f ! 14 M I I I pper Le iii/D o b ie Mall Tuesday, Jan. 30 7 p.m. Board of Directors Room Texas Union 4 .1 1 8 Phi Kappa Theta The Other Fraternity E.F.T.H.O.I. COME CHECK US OUT! A RUSH SMOKER FURNITURE n A IA / P ; in the KAW Hundreds of Items To Choose From WOOD FURNITURE DAILY 9 -6 :0 0 TUES 9 -8 :0 0 Closed Sunday 451-0213 en 0 r ; a 1 o o • CHECK OUR PRICE • CHECK OUR QUALITY • CHECK OUR SERVICE • CHECK OUR STOCK o T I c TO z RUSH SEAT BAR STOOLS c 30“ R E G $21.50 SALE $1 7.55 m 24“ R E G $20.50 SALE $ I 7.00 RUSH SEAT ROCKER R E G $57.00 SALE $35.00 4 DRAWER CHEST r e g $56.50 SALE $44.88 M A N Y O T H E R S IZ E S R E D U C E D TO C L E A R Back Pack Book Three sturdy designs to choose from $8.95-$15.95 UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED! s o V J * U N I V ^ c o - o p 8 5o o o "TI c TO z c TO rn 7713 BURNET RD. AT ANDERSON LANE NORTH VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER O = ia n iiN u n d q o o m o lio s • aaniiN nnd q o o m q u os • VISA A Mott*fCharg* W *ic*m * 505 W. 23rd Street Resignation requested Director denies accusations Bv JANN SN ELL D(CT;/ Texa n Staff Three board m em bers of the Tex­ as Commission for the Blind have called for the resignation of ex­ ecutive directo r Burt Risley, charg­ ing him with m anipulation and m is­ m anagem ent of state and federal monies. Risley has served as executive director for approxim ately 14 years. He m anages the com m ission and presents budget and policy m atters to the six-m em ber board for final action. Board m em ber W alter Muster of San Antonio said Sunday he felt Risley presented budget recom m en­ dations to the board without enough inform ation for m em bers to m ake intelligent decisions “ The board acts as a ru b b erstam p ,” he added Sam Millsap of San Antonio and John T urner of Dallas a re the other two m em bers calling for R isley’s r e s ig n a tio n T h e th r e e b o a rd m e m b e rs , who a r e b lin d , a lso criticized Chairm an Charles Sapp for calling off a board m eeting scheduled last Friday. TURNER SAID HE believes Sapp called off the m eeting because the briard was planning to select a new chairm an and discuss com plaints against Risley. I c a n 't m ake heads or tails out of the audits (taken in 1974-75 and 1975- 76)," T urner said. “ M anipulations have been going on all these years and I ’m tired of trying to figure it o u t " The Travis County d istric t a t­ torney’s office is auditing the com ­ mission. M uster and T urner both said they have m et with the d istrict attorney about the investigation. I c a n 't mention any specifics, but th ere a re m any things th at will come out and be the open,” Muster said in " I'v e had m any experts look a t the (sta te ) audits, and no one has been ab le to fig u re out w h a t's happening to the money. ... The d is­ trict a tto rn e y ’s office c a n 't even figure out what is going o n ," T urner said. RISLEY SAID ANY p ro b lem s with th e c o m m issio n ’s a c co u n ts fro m re s u lte d m anual to electronic accounting in 1975 fro m a c h a n g e ‘ There s nothing unusual going on; the com m ission is one of the the nation," Risley said. best in There s been such rapid growth and then the change over in data processing... but there never has been anything fraudulent going on." Risley also said he had been un­ aw are of the board m em b ers' com ­ plaints against him. They never once said one word to m e....I don’t know w hat their allegations a r e .” T urner said Risley was aw are of the com plaints. “ I’ve served on the com m ission for IO years, and I have a lw a y s c o m p la in e d a b o u t th e m anagem ent. But I have been ig­ nored because a m ajo rity did not see things the way I did,” he said. FURTHERMORE, Turner said Risley m et with the three board m e m b e r s b e f o r e th e c a ll fo r resignation was m ade public F ri­ day. “ We had the courtesy to le t him know w hat we w ere doing th at m or­ ning," he said. T urner said the com m ission’s ac­ count books w ere three o r four y ears behind and that various types of m anipulation have occured. “ And t h a t c a n ’t be b la m e d on an y changeover to co m p u ters,” he said. "T h e re lack of good m an ag em en t.” ju s t a is T urner said a m ajority of the six board m em bers m ust support the executive director, who is reap ­ pointed annually. “ Now th ere are three of us (opposing R isley), and he will not be able to continue serving without a m ajority supporting him ” in ­ vestigating M illsap’s right to serve on tile board. Turner said Millsap has been on the board for two years, and D urner said he believes the in­ vestigation is unw arranted. T he a tto r n e y g e n e ra l is Tax cut financing decreases State financing of the “ tax relief" am endm ent and property tax cuts on agricultural and tim ber lands will cost about 15 p e r­ cent less than anticipated in last su m m er's special legislative session Ixx’al school d istric ts loss in revenue from the tax cuts will total about 1375 m illion, according to Raymond Bynum, a school finance expert with the Texas Education Agency. In recent testim ony before the House Appropriations Com­ m ittee, Bynum said public schools will require about |75 million less than the $450 million in special funds created by the le g isla tu re last sum m er to reim burse local d istricts for lost revenue resulting from changes in tax assessm ent rate s The constitutional tax relief” am endm ent, approved at the polls Nov 7, exem pts $5,000 of the m arket value of every hom estead from school taxes and authorizes the L egislature to grant an additional $10,000 exemption on the homes of elderly property owners. T h e p r o p e r ty o w n e r ’s th e $5,000 hom estead exemption would averag e $41, Bynum told ap­ propriations com m ittee m em bers ta x s a v in g s on Bynum estim ated the loss in sta te tax revenues from im ­ plem enting the $5,000 hom estead exem ption a t $100 million per year He estim ated a revenue loss of $23 million per year from granting the elderly an additonal $10,000 hom estead exem ption. About $240 million to $250 million will take care of the two hom estead clauses' for the 1980-61 biennium, Bynum told the com m ittee m em bers Thursday. Because of the adoption of the tax relief am endm ent, som e appropriations com m ittee m em bers said the loss in school revenues should be m ade up through taxes on intangibles — stocks, bonds and bank account balances. "How a re we going to give this meaningful relief unless we tax intangibles’’” Rep Dan Kubiak, D-Rockdale, asked THE DIFFERENT COLLEGE RINGS Now you have a choice Men’s contemporary rings r 2 Classic B lazo n Monday, January 29, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 All W O O L S P a n t s © © s i l t © 50% o f f I B A IL LH A n W (5 Student groups influence politics By CHRIS M CLELLAND The responsibility for voicing opinions of students is invested in several groups on cam pus. The City-County Lobby C om m ittee and the Student S tate Lob­ by Com m ittee handle issues upon which a student consensus can be reached. On issues which m ay divide students, the U niversity Young Republicans, U niversity Young D em ocrats and the Young A m ericans for Freedom take on the roles of shaping the opinions of students and m aking th eir voices heard. The UT Young D em ocrats and the Young Republicans each have a p p ro x im a te ly 200 m e m b e rs and plan in itia te m em bership drives this se m e ste r The Young A m ericans for Freedom num ber about 80. to THE ORGANIZATION The p rim ary functions of the Young D em ocrats a re aiding the cam paigns of D em ocratic candidates and inform ing students. is also concerned with getting students active in politics, Bruce E lfant, president of the University Young D em ocrats, said. He noted th at apathy among students is incredible. The organization supports issues backed by the national D em ocratic P arty . For exam ple, the group opposes Proposition 13 m ania, which E lfant said "m a y not be helping the poor peo­ ple the m o st.” In the past, the U niversity D em ocrats did m ost of th eir lob­ bying through the Students’ Association. At present, they m ain­ ta in an e f fe c tiv e th e predom inance of D em ocrats in the sta te and local governm ent, E lfant said. lo b b y in g c a p a b ility b e c a u se of E lfant is the sta te lobbyist for T exas Young D em ocrats. The functions of the U niversity Republicans a re essentially the sam e as those of the U niversity D em ocrats, T erry G laser, past president of the organization, said. HE SAID THAT SINCE both p a rtie s a re outnum bered by the independent voters, the effectiveness of both organizations depends upon their ability to appeal to those independents, Many of the independents a re taking a conservative stand sim ilar to the R epublicans’, G laser said. The U niversity Republicans m aintain contacts with the Capitol through volunteer sta ffe rs they provide for Republican legislators, he said. At present, U niversity R epublicans do not have a form al lob­ by apparatus, but the initiation of one is being considered, G laser said. Since Republicans a re a som ew hat scarce com m odity in Tex­ as. their lobbying power is ham pered. Consequently, Jim Stokes, cu rren t president of the University Republicans, said they will approach the legislators “ not only as Republicans, but as youth.” The Young Am ericans for Freedom a re not aligned with any party. They a re instead a national group which m aintains a very conservative policy on issues, Steve M unisteri, sta te c h a ir­ man of the organization, said. Their main concern is fiscal m atters, he added. B E A U T Y B E C O M E S Y O U with individualized skin rare bx Erno Laszlo No. 5 Jefferson Square call 462-8846 A t e 2 Arb$ WITH CHEESE B uy up I* IO in m u ltip lo* a l 2 a l th** prtco w ith lh it cou p on (■ p ico t Morel* I, 1 ( 7 ( O O OO AT A U ARAY S IN AUSTIN 2 Mgs' 5400 Burnet Rd. 1715 Guadalupe 4411 S.Lamar COUPON SPECIAL i : I- I I M n fr $125 i 2 M ijS r $229 i : ROAST BEEF PLATTER (w ith Critpy P o ta to C a h o t A C r ea m y Cato S la w ) SUPER ROAST B U F WITH C H E E S E R B uy u p to A a t th** price w ith th it co u p o n Expire* M arch I , l f 7 * Buy u p to TO in m u ltip le ! a t th** price w ith th** cotip a n G O OD AT A U ARBY'S IN AUSTIN Expire* M arch I , 1 9 7 9“fir 2 M$r *l75i 2 Mfr $214 G OOD AT A U A M Y 'S IN AUSTIN. ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES B uy u p ta IO in m u ltiple * a f 2 a l the* p n c e w ith th** c o u p o n E*p*re* M arch I 1 9 7 9 G O OO AT A U ABBY S IN AUSTIN Buy u p to IO in m u ltip le* a f 2 a t fht* price w ith the* cou p on ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES E xpire* M orch I , 1 9 7 9 . & *x7512 M$; *214 ll M$r $125 SUPER ROAST B E E F ^ ■ S A N D W jC H E ^ ^ I f t ! Ii B uy u p to IO In m u ltip le * o f 2 art I hi* p n c e w ith th** c o u p o n Eapiroa M arch I , 1 9 7 9 . G O O D AT A U A M Y 'S IN AUSTIN. G O O D AT A U A M Y 'S IN AUSTIN T ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES B uy up ta IO h i m ultiplo* a f 2 a l th** p r i c e w ith the* co u p o n ( ■ p i l e * M arch I , 1 9 7 9 . SUPER ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES B uy u p ta IO in m u ltip le * o f 2 a l th it prica w ith th it cou p on Expire* M arch I , 1 9 7 9 G O CO AT A U ABBY S IN AUSTIN G O OO AT A U ARBY'S IN AUSTIN ROAST B U F BLATTER (w ith Critpy R otate C a h o t A C ream y Cola S la w ) B uy u p ta A a t th it prica w ith th it co u p o n . Expert* M arch I , 1 9 7 9 . Sr G O OO AT A U ARBY'S IN AUSTIN S e a h a w k Wr: Colorado Sculpture Contemporary Fashions in Eyewear fjA Reflections Jasmine Mini Circle! Unique *"*■ Sonnet Treasure Sunflower Women’s fashion collection Petite y Intrigue Intaglio 15% Rebate on Purchases This Week No Deposit Required /ircmvED V COLLEGE RINGS COLLEGE RINGS Offer Good 1/29-2/3 ONLY Street level VISA & MasterCharge Fro* I hr. Parking w/$2.00 Purchase 1/2 PRICE SAU Ona Weak Only I k i i u u n I), r msk-n | GVENCHY POLO AA P J P ie r r e C a r d m A PLAYBOY optyi W n g U t t < 'dine Ii.in #8 Jefferson Square, 38th and Jefferson • Austin, Texas • 451 -1213 that’s possible. Texas, now 20- 2. was hanging on to the ball and a 70-69 lead w ith 33 seconds left in the game and 30 seconds on the shot clock a f t e r the la s t of R o s ie W alker's Texas Classic record 32 points. The Horns ran the clock down to :09 before calling time out. Ew ella Munn in­ bounded the ball to K im Basinger, who passed to Linda Waggoner, who found Jackie Swaim open near the free- throw line. Swaim took the pass and hit a layup with but a second left on the shot clock. SWAIM’S SHOT was not ex­ a c t l y w hat Coach J o d y Conradt had told her players to do during the time out. Instead, she told them to run off as much time as they could, even if it meant using up the shot clock. “ I wanted to get down to three seconds and let em take it downcourt,” she explained. “ I was willing to run the clock out without a shot.” “ All I know is, the minute it went in, I heard the buzzer go o ff,’’ Swaim said sho rtly afterward. By the time SFA could inbound the ball, time had run out anyway. In the end, their inability to foul when they had to hurt them most. “ In the last IO seconds, I couldn’t convince our young ladies to foul when we wanted em to.” Gunter said. “ Nor­ m ally. they do a good job of fouling when we don't want em to. ” IT WAS A s o m e w h a t questionable foul on Texas that had allowed SFA to get close after the Horns had threatened to run away with a 61-53 lead. With 5:56 to play, Swaim received her fourth foul when she was called for going over W alker’s back as she shot. The basket counted and her free throw made it 61- 56. After a follow by Barbara Brown brought the Ladyjacks w i t h i n o n e , B a s i n g e r countered with a jumper that rattled around and in, giving Texas a 63-60 lead with 4:23 left. With the Horns down 67- 66. Basinger again gave them the lead by hitting a 20-footer with 2:01 left. S F A turned the ball over on their next possession and Tex­ as ran the shot-clock down to less than five seconds. The (See CLASSIC, Page IO.) Horns chop No. 3 Lady jacks to win ‘Classic’ power struggle By TOM KLECKNER belly Texan Staff What the third annual Texas Classic eventually came down to was a matchup between No. 2Texas and the No. 3 Stephen F. Austin Ladyjaoks, much to the surprise of no one. It was as if the other games, most of them one-sided, were played to set up that one game. And both teams did their best to save what had previously been a rather ordinary classic. Texas’ 72-69 victory Satur­ day afternoon in the Super Drum left many of those 4,800 in attendence limp with ex­ citement as both teams traded the lead in the last three minutes. It was in direct con­ trast with last year’s finals, when Texas beat SFA rather handily. 75-54. Public address announcer W ally P ryo r called the game one of the greatest women’s games ever played in Texas. SFA coach Sue Gunter, whose team fell to 19-3 for the year, was a little bit more realistic. “ MOST PEOPLE who saw it can pretty well be con­ v i n c e d it w a s an e v e n matchup,” she said. “ No one dominated, it went in spurts. Both teams played well and you almost have to consider this a one-point loss.” Gunter may have been right as the game was closer than the final score indicated, if Texas’ Jackie S.waim s h o o ts o ve r S F A ’s (11) Barbara Brown an,d R o s ie W a lk e r (40) in Texas Classic sports THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 Monday, January 29, 1979 Dave Shepard (44) drives around a pick 9et by teammate Keith Stephens. Kathleen Cabble. Daily Tanan Staff Longhorns roundup Mustangs Texas rolling into Monday night rematch with Houston By MICHAEL HURD Daily Texan Staff Texas’ 98-62 thumping of the Southern Methodist U niversi­ ty Mustangs Saturday night in the S u p e r D ru m was a suspense-filled game N e v e r m ind t h a t the Longhorns won by 36 points in a game rn which a Texas fan yelled a suggestion to Abe Lemons that his team should play in street clothes to make the game even The game was that easy. B u t th e s u s p e n s e f u l elements were still there Such as • W o u ld J i m K n v a c s becom e T e x a s ’ a ll- tim e leading scorer’’ (He didnt, falling three points shy » • W ould Ovie Dotson get his customary crowd-pleasing dunk9 (H e didn t, but the crowd stood in anticipation each time he got the ball.) • Would the Horns break IOO points9 (They didn t, despite the urging and coaching from Ron Baxter and Co. on the bench i • WO U L D L E M O N S CLEAR his bench for the first time this season9 < He did. and was probably tempted to play redshirt Ken Montgomery who was seated on the end of the bench and W AS in street clothes I • Would Sonny A l l e n ’s Mustangs choose to take on the 1939 Longhorn team which was in attendance at the game9 tile didnt, but he should have The 1939 players were the only team in the building which shot worse, a1! but one missed his introduc­ tory shot than SM U Saturday night • T h e M u s t a n g s shot a pathetic 31 percent for the game (only 25 percent in the first half* None of their starters shot over 500 All five at Texas’ starters scored in double figures, led by Knvacs with 24, as l l of 14 Texas players scored “ T H E Y ( T E X ASI SHO T great so we have to give them credit They had four guys in double figures at the half lamented Allen W'e had good shots early, but didn t make many of them Many of the missed shots were from inside the key as Texas often limited SM U to only one shot per possession as f illip Stroud and Baxter (See LONGHORNS. Page It.) We're re a dy f o r Spring Break! UNIVERSITY SKI CLUB p reviou sly mv ne (I m erchandise THE I SECOND I OWNER 10% DISCOUNT I with tnts coupon and put€ha$a of $10 or mar rn Stereos TVs T o p e s Rings G u i t a r s Re cords Cameras Typewriters Knives Speakers and mach much more Good through fob 29 MEETING Tues. Jan. 3 0 ELM 4 .1 0 2 7:3 0 PM Fun, film *, and info on Spring Brook trip to Cro*tod Buffo ONLY $ 1 3 0 .0 0 2100 G U ADA L UP E POSITIONS IN NUCLEAR POWER TRAINING NOW OPEN Jan Sonnenmair, TSP Staff Ara You Afraid To Shed Your Winter Coot? Face it — you can't hide that extra weight under bulky winter clothes much longer. It you've been talking about losing those pounds but not doing much about it, read on. At .weightfl&loss medical centers we are so confident that our weight loss p rogram will work for you - we'll a ctu ally R E B A T E you $50.00 toward your weight loss program . is m edically supervised. A new Fast, safe and effective. The prog ram revolutionary reduction plan: N u tri/s y s te m 2000, a scientific breakthrough that utilizes prepacked, premeasured foods that a re specially form ulated to take the calories out and leave taste in. learn to Keep w eight off. Once you reach your goal, you'll m aintain your new weight through our Behavior M odification P rog ram . Here's your chance to lose up to a pound a day, even if you've never been successful before! Call N ow for Free, No Obligation Consultation SPECIAL OFFER Present this c e rtific a te at the w eight®"loss medical centers. a t the tim e of your consultation, and you will receive a R E B A T E of $50.00 tow ard your weight loss prog ram . w O ght^loM medical centers - expires Feb. 23,1979 North 4 5 1 -8 2 5 8 South 4 4 1 -6 8 8 6 For those who qualify a $650.00/mo. stipend is also available for your entire Senior year of college or any portion thereof. Nuclear Power Officers starts at $12,500/yr and go to $22,500/yr by the end of the 4th year. $3,000 cash bonus after completing I year Nuclear Power training. Receive $20,000 cash bonus for extending beyond original contract expiration date, plus many other benefits. lf you a re an above averag e student with I yr of college level calculus and physics and w ell on your w ay to graduation, you m ay apply for one of the positions now open. For m ore in fo rm atio n on how you m ay reserve your position until a fte r graduation, contact L T Fred Crecelius, N avy N uclear P rog ram s R epresentative, a t 102 W. Rector, San Antonio, T X , or call collect 512-341-0224. The N uclear Power R epresentative m ay also be contacted through the B EB Placem ent o f fice fro m 29 JA N I F E B U Monday, January 29, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 Gators swim faster than Longhorns By DEBORAH K. MANN Daily Texan Staff The score, 72-57, was a little sur­ prising to Coach Paul Bergen and the University’s women’s swim team In fact, the whole meet was a bit of a surprise. “ Florida did better than we thought they would swim,” Bergen said of Texas’ dual meet with the Gators in Gainesville Saturday. We underestimated one small, very important fact — everybody is ready to swim Texas. I don’t know why. but when you get off that bus, they'll be shooting for you That got driven in home.’’ Bergen said Texas had trouble swimming together as a team “ The meet helped point out a number of areas that need work The first — being more together as a team. How to win and how to lose as a team is important We didn’t lose very well.” H O W EVER, T H E R E were some bright spots in the meet, particular­ ly the performance of Texas’ breaststroker dana Hooker, who stole the 100-yard breaststroke from defending AIAW champion and record-holder Rim Dunson. Everything and everybody was set for Dunson to win, especially the Florida crowd. “ I could tell by the attitude of the crowd they thought she would win it — they were cocky about it and it made me mad,” Hooker said. It was a close race, with Hooker winning 1:05.75 to Dunson’s 1:05.80, I really wanted it, but it was hard,” the freshman Longhorn said. ‘‘She out-split me in the 50 and IOO, so I had to try and run her down and for­ tunately I did it in the end.” Bergen said Hooker was the out­ standing swimmer for Texas. “ She contributed the most spirit-wise. She really cares about the Universi­ ty of Texas and I think that’s amaz- mg for a freshman. She just swims for the team.” AND B E R G E N agreed that Hooker s swim was a nice surprise. It was really evident that she shouldn't have beaten Rim. She just tried to get us back in the ball game.” Texas lost the “ball game” in the freestyle events, garnering (wily five points to Florida’s 22. “ We were pretty dominated. In freestyle, we were obliterated. That will be the big drive for next year — freestyle^.” Bergen said. Joan Pennington, coming in at 52.76, was edged in the 100-yard freestyle by Florida’s Virginia Allen in a time of 52:57. Pennington also lost the 200-yard butterfly, but came back to win the IOO. In fact, Bergen said the whole team im proved as the m eet progressed. “ As the meet wore on, we got better as a group,” Bergen said. FO R T H E D IV E R S , Denise Christensen helped out the team with wins in both the one- and three- meter events, while Erin Belter took second in the one-meter and third on the high board. “ They did very w ell,” diving coach Mike Brown said. “ They didn't have ideal diving conditions — the temperature was in the 40s and 50s.” Despite the loss, Bergen said the team had gained a lot from the meet. “ It s better to be surprised in January than in March (nationals). We might have thought everything was going fine and we didn’t need to work on anything. When you get beat, it s a very humbling ex­ perience.” Texas-Floridti results 400-yard medley reluy I Florida, 3 51 Mi 2 Terns. 3 55 OI 400-yard IM I .farm (iirurd, UT, 4 32 40 J Jenni fer Sye. Fla.,4 34 77 200-yard freestyle I Brenda Borgh, Flu I 51 OO 2 Fury Janet. Fin . 1:53 15 100-yurd backstroke I. Chris Breedy, Flu . 57 ho J Meg McCnlly. Fla., 59 22 100-yard breaststroke I.Jana Hooker, UT. I os 75 2 Kim Dunean, Fin , I 02 HO 200-yard butterfly I Betsy Rapp, Flu . 2 OI 05 2 .loan Bennington, UT, 2 02 24 100-yard freestyle I Virginia Allen, Flu 52 57 2 Bennington, 52 76 200-yard backstroke I Breedy. 2 04 H5 2 M d ully. 2 07 H3 200-yard IM I Renee Laramie, Fla., 2 Oft 2 Sye. J 10 30 500-yard freestyle I Jones, 4 52 72 2 Borgh 4 53 OO 100-yard butterfly I Bennington, 55 04 2 Rupp. 57 62 200-yard breaststroke I Hooker, 2 23 20 2 Jeanne Childs, UT 2 23 39 HOO-yard freestyle relay I Florida. 7 41 60 (exhibition) 2 Texas. HOPIS. Irish, 4 Top 10 teams upset By United Pre** In ter­ I I t A Z3 rn a rn national “ The football ratings mean a lot, but the basketball ratings don’t mean a thing," said North Carolina Coach Dean Smith Saturday night after the second-ranked Tar Heels were upset bv Clemson. 66-61 “ I hope our guys know that ” Some other coaches may not agree but at least five of the top IO teams are thinking about it after being upset by unranked opponents over the weekend shooter who endured two tense time outs strategically called bv Notre Dame Coach Digger Phelps before shooting the crucial basket. “ I wanted it to be like one of the 50 I shoot every day in practice.” Down by two with five seconds left to play, the Terrapins got the ball and worked to tie the score with the final shot Greg Manning drove the left baseline and paned off underneath to Gib­ son. who scored as he was fouled by Irish center Bruce Flowers Notre Dam es two-week reign atop the ratings was dealt a severe blow when M aryland’s Larry Gibson sank what he called “ just another foul shot" with one second remaining to complete a three-point play and give the Terrapins a stunning 67-66 up­ set over the Fighting Irish THE R EST of the casualty list fourth-rated Michigan S t a t e was stunned by Northwestern 83-65. No, 8 Illinois fell to Michigan 56-54, IO I .louisiana State and No was surprised bv (Georgia 93- 88 I wanted to shoot it as nor­ mal as possible.” said Gibson, an 80 percent free throw "The play worked perfectly, getting the ball to Manning and then to (kbson, that close to the basket," said Maryland Coach Lefty Driesell, “ But a three-point play’ I couldn't plan something like that.” THE IR ISH , whose only other loss this season was to Kentucky on Dec 31. rallied from a 12-point deficit in the second half to take their only lead of the game with 2 08 left on a basket by Kelly Tripucka Two free throws by Stan Wilcox gave the Irish a four- point lead 30 seconds later. E rnest Graham paced Maryland. 12-5, with 28 points and Gibson added ll. Bobby Conrad and David d a n c e c l a s s e s UNLIMITED O ffe rin g C ia stat In BALUT • JAZZ MODERN • TAP H U Y • DISCO DANCERCISE • EXERCISE PRE-SCHOOL - ADULT ; RIVERT0WNE MAU 7113 I, fever tide Or. 44? 5711 441-AAU H A ANN DIXON O W N !! soups salads Poole hit two free throws each in the final seconds as Clem­ son upset North Carolina in an Atlantic Coast Conference match Larry Nance scored 21 points, including 13 in the first half as the Tigers, 12-5. took a 30-29 lead into intermission. Al Wood paced the Tar Heels, who never trailed by more than four points until the final second, with 28 points “ W E ’V E B E E N playing about 32 minutes of good basketball and tonight we played about 38-39 really good minutes of basketball,” said Clemson Coach Bill Foster " It was a heckuva win for us " off IO straight points at the start of the second half to up set Michigan St. for its first Big Ten victory in eight games. Spartan Earvin John­ son had 26 points but Greg Keiser was held to four points, 13 below his season average. and F O R W A R D S D A V I D Greenwood K i k i Vandeweghe combined for 45 points to lead UCLA over Washington. Greenwood scored 24 points to become the Bruins’ fifth-highest career scorer with 1,439 points, pass­ ing Sidney Wicks on the all- time points list. Vandeweghe equalled his career high with 21 Marty Bodnar sank a layup at the buzzer to lift unranked Michigan over Illinois for another Big Ten upset. With the game tied at 54 and 1:37 remaining, Michigan’s Phil Hubbard missed a free throw and the Blini took possession. But. a midcourt steal from Rob Judson set up Bodnar’s winning basket, which gave Illinois its third straight loss. Carter Scott scored ll of his 19 points in the last seven minutes, including seven in overtime, to rally Ohio State from a 55-46 deficit to its eighth straight Big Ten vic­ tory. In other games involving the Top IO ranked teams. No 3 Indiana S ta t e whipped Creighton 77-69 to remain un­ beaten in 18 games, No 7 UCLA defeated Washington 86-61 and No. 9 Ohio State edg­ ed Indiana 66-63 in overtime Larry Bird, the nation's leading scorer, was held to a season-low 17 points but In­ diana State beat Creighton for the .second time in a week Carl Nicks scored 16 for the Sycamores while Creighton's John Johnson tallied 20 I-cd by Rod Roberson's 20 points. Northwestern reeled PLEASE HELP ME W ere you downtown in D a lla s on C om m e rce Street near the Adolphus Hotel on O U -U T night at ap proxim ate ly I a m ? D id you see an altercation between a young m an (brow n hair, 5'10", w earing jeans and a plaid shirt and a belt with B a r r y on it) 'and a p olice m an ? lf you did and will truthfully state the facts, I please contact M elvyn Br u der, Attorney 214-742-3224 collect or evenings and weekends Lamar Smith 214-561-6186 collect The policem an has ch arged this young m an with a ggrav a te d a ssa u lt (IO year prison sentence). sandwiches Please call. G od bless you. PVH NM NM IH f IA I IA I im IA I IH I I VISA & MatterChargo Welcome L r * Vnu«* elk C afe J li l t A > i n V n t o n m 20% OFF WARM-UPS CHECK II/ OUT... c o m p o n y Dytvwm we* nw w gect Tem** « ompxny .me* e t ted rn em ployees i i per to m not number* Successful food refuter rrw vA K Curer *le rn c o r o a r o p p o r t u n i t y / O Store Operation* Managem ent • Warehousing Transportation • Bakery Dairy Production Managem ent M anagem ent • Data Processing System s a n / o t lo n c o m p a n / o Cr b e n e f it / location/ flam ing progfama ottered rn G ood slatting salary and rapid advanc em ent Benefit* include paid relocation Me and m edical insurance credit union tree use of com pany lodge, paid vacation* tuition assistance • Austin • C orpus C hron • San Antonio Training and rn na! assignments typically available in the same city All com pany locations rn Tcaas p r o f e / z lo n o ll/ m Dynamic. innovative mteHtgeni and progressive individual* with a strong desire to contrlbute to die otganiianon and tee* a sense oI achievem ent d e v e l o p m e n t p r o g r a m / Structured total developm ent programs are designed to m ove you rapidly into responsible positions Included are m anagem ent seminars O I T and continuing education See what you can do tot you check with you! placem ent center or contact us Corporate Starting a M E. Butt Grocery Com pany P O Boa 9216 a Corpus Christi. Texas 7 HA OH ( S i l l S B I 1482 An equal opportunity em ptoyei M f Rooster’s is having a warm-up sale on every warm-up in stock. You can choose from White Stag, Winning Ways, Adidas, Speedo, Speedline, Jelenk, Spalding, Broderick, and Bassett- Walker. We have lots of colors and styles to choose from in children’s women’s, and men’s sizes. Come to Rooster’s where the selection Is great, and choose your new warm-up at 20% off. Rooster Andrews has the sporting goods. ANDREWS 3901 Guadalupe 3200 Anderson Ln. 454-9631 458-2103 Mon. - Sat. 8 til 9 Page 10 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Monday, January 29. 1979 sports shorts c ------------------------------------------------------ Denton loses In singles championship HOUSTON — With teammate Kreg Yingst failing to qualify and doubles partner Kevin Curren out with the flu, Steve Denton played the part of the Lone Ranger in the second annual Prince Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches National Indoor Singles Cham­ pionship in Houston over the weekend. But even the Lone Ranger occasionally fires a few blanks with his silver bullets and such was the case for Denton Friday afternoon as he fell 7-5, 6-4 to Michigan’s Jeff Etterbeek. Denton entered the second round match as the tournament’s seventh seed and was favored over Etterbeek, who was ranked in the second eight, but in a tournament of All-Americans, seeds mean little. “These guys are all All-Americans. Anyone can beat anyone else on a given day. They’ve got to be good or they wouldn’t be here,” Denton said. “I guess today just wasn’t my day.’’ Etterbeek broke Denton’s serve twice in the first set and four points in four key games made the margin of difference. “I just lost the wrong points,’’ Denton commented. Trinity’s Erie Iskersky, who was the No. I seed, won the tour­ nament defeating Northwestern Louisiana’s Ricardo Acuna 7-6, 6-7, 6-2, 7-5 Sunday. Acuna was a dark horse entry filling in for Curren, who was the tournament’s second seed until he dropped out. Southern California’s Robert Van’t Hof took Tennessee’s Andy Kohlberg 7-6, 6-7, 6-2 for third place. Consolation went to SMU’s Mark Turpin who beat TCU’s Rick Meyers 6-1, 6-3. IOC may ban Radio Free Europe LAUSANNE, Switzerland (UPI) — The International Olym­ pic Committee is considering banning Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty from the 1980 Moscow Olympics. The controversial issue over the two U.S.-funded radio stations which broadcast to eastern Europe from West Ger­ many will be high on the agenda when the IOC’s nine-man ex­ ecutive board meets Monday and Tuesday at its headquarters beside Lake Geneva. But Lord Killanin, the IOC president, made it clear both RFE and Radio Liberty were unlikely to be allowed any accredited journalists at the next Summer Games when he gave a news conference last week in Moscow. “BASICALLY, representation is decided on a participation basis and on the basis of how much correspondents report back to their own countries,’’ Killanin said. “I think it is important to stress that these stations are not broadcasting to countries to which they belong, or which they have been accredited for. They are broadcasting to countries which already have accredited representatives,” Killanin said. Although RFE and Radio Liberty were represented at the 1976 Montreal Games, their journalists had their accreditation revoked at the Innsbruck Winter Games earlier that year on a technicality following a Soviet protest. The Soviet Union has made clear it will not accept R FE or Radio Liberty journalists in Moscow because it does not regard them as true sports reporters. Young’s career in jeopardy after loss SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (UPI) — It took l l stiches to patch up a forehead gash Puerto Rican Ossi “ Jaw s” Ocasio dished out to Philadelphia’s Jim m y Young, but the damage to the 30-year- old's boxing career looks beyond repair after losing the bout by unanimous decision. Saturday night’s 10-round contest in San Ju an ’s Roberto Clemente Coliseum proved Ocasio’s first victory over Young June 9 in Las Vegas wasn’t “ a fluke.” In a split decision last summer, the then unranked Puerto Rican pushed Young out of the World Boxing Council’s ranking as the No. I heavyweight contender. Young said he wasn’t in shape for the Vegas fight and planned to put Ocasio away Saturday to get a crack at heavywight champion Larry Holmes. Holmes, who watched the fight ringside Saturday is recogniz­ ed king of the heavyweights by the World Boxing Council, while the rival World Boxing Association still gives the title to Muhammad Ali. Connors wins Indoor Tennis PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — A steady Jim m y Connors jumped on slow-starting Arthur Ashe from the outset Sunday and defeated his 35-year-old opponent, 6-3, 6-4, 6-1, for his third U.S. Pro Indoor Tennis Championships Title in the past four years. In winning the $40,000 first prize of the $250,000 tournament in a one hour. 56-minute match, the top seeded Connors kept Ashe, seeded No. IO, from coming to the net with a variety of baseline shots and aggressive rushes to the net. Lam voted Longhorn football MVP Junior flanker Johnny “ Lam ” Jones was voted Most Valuable Player for the 1978-79 football season Sunday by his Longhorn team m ates at the annual football awards banquet. Dwight Jefferson, defensive end, received three awards: the D. Harold Byrd Leadership Award, the D X. Bible Team Spirit Award and the $250 Ed Olle Memorial Scholarship for outstan­ ding ability on the field and in the classroom. Other award winners announced at the event, sponsored by the University and the Ex-Students’ Association, were: defen­ sive back Glenn Blackwood (the Travis County Texas-Exes Scholarship Award, Jim Yarbrough, offensive lineman, (the Clyde Littlefield Scholarship Award, a $500 graduate fellowship) and Longhorn quarterback Randy McEachem received the Longhorn Club Sportsmanship Award. SAVE $15 ON ANY Classic... (Continued from Page 8.) shot was m issed, but the Horns rebounded and took a 70-67 lead when Munn hit a short ju m p er with 1:06 to play. thought if we could stay close inside and not give too much away, our outside game could tip the scales. We thought if they (W alker and Swaim) could balance out each other, we could have it our way.” OUTSIDE SHOTS lik e Munn’s helped turn the game around. Swaim had 25 inside, but Waggoner had 14, Hattie Browning 9, Basinger 8 and Munn 6. B esides th e 6-1 Walker, the Ladyjacks got 18 points from 6-0 post Brown, but only ll from their guards. Texas started out by having Retha Swindell front Walker with Swaim helping out. However. Walker beat them both with backdoor plays to give SFA a quick 4-0 lead and conspiciously point out what the Ladyjacks would attem pt to do. “ We knew they were strong inside,” Conradt said. “ We “She (Swindell) was trying to deny the pass, but if s hard Longhorns... to play denial on R osie,” C o n ra d t said . “ H er size makes it hard to get around her. We were just trying to help out on her.” “ ROSIE, SHE goes to the boards well,” Swaim pointed out. “ That's what you call a physical post player.” Texas could afford to have Walker score 32, as they shut down Brown and 6-3 Vanessa Anderson (two points) effec­ tively and out-rebounded the Ladyjacks, 38-37. “ I thought the key to the ball game was Kim ’s play on Brown,” Conradt said. “ She did a good job on her and chipped in with that basket at th e e n d . E v e r y g a m e , someone comes in and does a super job at a critical point. Hattie hit a couple of baskets when we were bogged down there and Ewella ran the offense well.” in The Horns get very little time to rest, as they take on Houston, now 11-6, in a 5:15 p m game Monday the Special Events Center. As it is their sixth game in eight days, Conradt has given them Sun­ day off, as well as Tuesday a n d W e d n e s d a y b e f o r e T h u r d s d a y 's g a m e w ith Southwest Texas State. played hard but we got a few breaks.” T H O S E “ B R E A K S ” included controlling the open­ ing tip. sco rin g the first in basket and never being jeopardy. At one point the Horns led by 47 points. M oore had been chided earlier in the season by fans for not taking shots. Some fans doubted he was a good shooter. “ I know I can shoot.” he added the “ But runni ng offense and helping out on defense takes away some con­ c e nt r at i on which is what s h o o t i n g i s a l l a b o u t . Sometimes 1 11 go up thinking of passing and that throws my shot off ” Some of the passes he dis­ played Saturday night had the 15.381 f a n s a p p l a u d i n g deliriously Moore made one pass which may have defied the laws of gravity. Bob Cousy and Nate Archibald L E A D I N G A F A S T break, Moore, in a series of contortions in mid-air, avoid­ ed charging into SMU s Mark Davis and while not looking in Krivacs’ direction, gave him a perfect over-the-shoul-der-be- hind-the-head p ass which resulted in a Krivacs layup As broadcasters are wont to say: “ Tile crowd went wild.” The customary call for San Antonio senior Ovie Dotson s power dunk came earlier than usual Saturday night — 4:46 of the first half, when the Horns only led by 21 points. 41-20 "O-VIE, O-VIE.. . . “ was the chant. “ I'll tell you,” lem ons said, “ the crowd was getting vicious. They get go­ ing on Ovie to dunk it. Some night he's gonna get killed He's gonna go up there and leave an arm or something on the backboard “ SMU should have been so exciting The Mustangs were led by junior ce n te r Brad Branson, who scored 19 points and had ll rebounds Reggie Franklin and Phil Hale, with 15 and IO points respectively, also scored in double figures. The Mustangs are now 2-5 in conference play Allen put the game in its proper perspec­ tive “ It wasn t as close as the score indicated “ No. coach, but it sure was suspenseful the TEXAS TAKES ON U n i v e r s i t y of H o u s t o n Cougars at 7:30 p.m. Monday in t h e t h e D r u m . As Longhorns begin the second hal f of t hei r c o n f e r e n c e schedule, they are 7-1. UH is 3-5 in conference play. i s T e x a s p l a y i n g a w e s o m e . ’’ Cougar head coach Guy Lewis said “ I heard about the SMU game and I saw them play USO so I know they’re playing great "They all shoot well, so how to defense are you going them'*” he said. T e x a s won f i r s t meeting, in Houston on Jan 8, 75-57. t h e SWC ’im '••ma am Argonia* Bettor '•MW IOCA Houlton R ice SMU TOU AAM Tom AfXenM* 7#*** 10CA fteytty H o u lto n SMU R ice TOU Ret 675 750 625 626 500 375 375 2*6 OOO Pf RA aes 6*i se* sn 512 752 see sos 5*2 564 6*4 5*0 607 636 571 4*7 se* 423 MAION I 17 14 13 if ll ll t 6 S 610 77* 766 sir 611 660 411 333 294 IM O 1461 U T I 1207 129* 10*6 I M I 1223 '4 0 * I J J 1 >702 >5*6 130* <33* •2*3 <40* 11*4 11*6 (Continued from Page 8.) d o m in a te d th e d e fe n s iv e boards. They finished with 13 and 9 rebounds, respectively. But the star of the show was undoubtedly John Moore, Tex­ a s ’ s e n io r g u a rd . M oore finished the night with 18 points, six rebounds and 13 assists. “ E v ery th in g w ent rig h t to n ig h t,” he said, “ SMU ■MU (St) stats POPO* PT PT A t 0 2 4 2 4 1 0 27 77 45 1» SS 41 73 16 21 46 IS 96 >.361 Tonight Never A Cover long**! H appy Hour in Town Doubt# thats — J f#» I _ 11 a m - I p.m . LOOKING FOR A HAIRCUT AT A FAIR PRICE? LOOK TO MEDICAL ARTS BARBER SHOP. 26th at Rod River 4 7 7 -0 6 9 1 She# Shine* I RECOMMEND “ A Greet K e e te u r e n t ( hoi*#*” T he J ? e am R eel T om at o Q tiehtv lf Allen I chm! I t h 7 2 0 2 I W M ( i i M ( l r l w ) i r Shoe Shop G E N U I N E IIA T M IR V IS T S L U T H tR (O A T S S H K PSK IN RU G S $49.S0 $99.SO $10.00 ★ S A D D L E S * IN G L ISH W i S T f R N good* Capitol Saddlery A u stin T e io * 1614 Lavaca 4 7 8 9 3 0 0 I T A L I A N s u i t s p a n t s s h i r t s L 3 ag od S afl ® ii 2 ® nu M a xn m i li o n I 2 OO w e s t 6 E N JO Y T H E _ fc t L l W IL D L IF E A T ■ V A L E N T IN E ’S H appy Hour starts at noon and lasts til 9 OO pm. You get two dnnk-s for the price of one or a double— whichever you prefer Re member ladies still get bar hi-baiU for 40c 9 OO pm 2 OO am Monday thru Thursday Take in the wildlife a n d spend your evenings at Valen tine b . 2518 San An­ tonio, 477 8506. I HK H A A S TAVERN Tonight in the Tavern PRO-BOWL GAM ! on Big Screen 8:00 p.m. Tavern Drink Special ^ Daiquiris & Pina C oladas $1 THIS WEEK ONLY Jan. 29 thru Feb. 3, 1979 20% OFF LIGHTWEIGHT PORTABLE import TYPEWRITER Net Time payment plans available Goes anywhere — Has many features found only in bigger models. PLUS! Check out our complete line of machines from S M I T H C O R O N A S C U C O R P O R A T I O N Purchase one for cash & get a SUPPLIES Street Level 10% d isco u n t net VISA & MasterCharge T s tr tiv e M itu Free I hr. Parking (2 o - 0 k F w $2.00 Purchase Why you should buy your ring now! 1. You deserve it. You’ve accomplished a lot. 2. Save $15 on any 10K gold or Siladium ring instead of the 5 % or $10 you might get from any other company. 3. Different Rings! The largest selection to choose from. Over 20 different ring designs! See traditional and con­ temporary men s designs and beautiful fashion rings for women. C L A S S IC BLAZO N C O L O R A D O SO N N E T SU N F LO W E R /IRORVED ------------------------ REBATE CERTIFICATE.......................... GET A $15 REBATE ON ANY ARTCARVED CO LLEGE RING WITH THIS CERTIFICATE. Valid on any ring in the ArtCarved Collection (even gold). Choose from a wide variety of traditional, contemporary, or fashion rings, custom made to your individual taste. ^ C O L L E G E RINGS How to got your $15 robot* by moil after purchase 1. This coupon must De presented with your order. 2. Limit: one refund per purchase Purchaser pays any sales taxes 3. Offer valid only on rings ordered during this sale 4. Rebates can be issued only after final payment on your ring has been made 5. At that time of order, your ArtCarved Representative will give you a Rebate Request Certificate. This certificate must be mailed, along with proof of full payment, to ArtCarved within three months after you order your ring Rebate void after this period. Allow four weeks for rebate processing OFFER GOOD I /29 through 2/3 ONLY NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED MMfe. CLASS RINGS Street level VISA A Ma s u r c h a r g e Free I hr. Parking w /$ 2 .0 0 Purchase Spurs lose 2nd straight as Pacers roll r r Monday, January 29, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 11 IV IU M U ay> J a n u a r y •'♦.OO CASH *9.00 DOLLARS CASHI INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - The Indiana Pacers, showing their best offensive punch of the season, had four players scoring 20 points or more, topped by Johnny Davis' 27, in a 123-110 victory over the San Antonio Spurs Sunday. It marked the first time this season that the Pacers have won three straight. San An­ tonio, playing its third game in 2 1/2 days, had the top scorer in George Gervin with 31 points. The Pacers broke an 80-80 tie with eight straight points in the third period to take the final lead Mike Bantom had a season high of 26 points and 16 rebounds. Kicky Sobers tossed in 22 points and Billy Knight added 20 — his best effort sin ce the P acers recently joining San Antonio led early by nine points and controlled most of the first half before the Pacers rallied to beat the Spurs at home for the first time in two years Larry Kenon has 21 points for the Spurs, who dropped their fourth straight game on the road Bullets 122. Knicks 10S LANDOVER. Md (UPI) - Bob D andridge scored 24 points Sunday to lead the Washington Bullets to a 122- 105 victory over the New York Knicks Klvin H ayes and Kevin Grevey each added 20 points for the A tlantic D ivision leaders, who bounced back from Friday s loss to Kansas City Bob McAdoo* 34 points Uxl the Knicks, who lost their fifth game in a row and their seven th c o n se c u tiv e road game King* 137, Caviller* 109 (U P I) KANSAS CITY - Otis Birdsong scored 30 points Sunday to reach the 1,000- career points mark in only I Hi seasons and also lift the Kan­ sas City Kings to a 137-109 vic­ tory o v e r the C lev ela n d Cavaliers Birdsong scored 13 points in the first quarter as the Kings raced off to a 33-19 lead He added nine in the third quarter and six more in the final period to up his career total to I 020 points He also had IO assists period down by one, 74-73. period. Pistons 128, Clippers 118 PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI) - Kevin Porter and M.L. Carr combined for 50 points and the Detroit Pistons set an NBA re cord for field goal percen­ tage Sunday to beat the San Diego Clippers, 128-118. D etroit, which won its fourth straight, hit 56 of 81 shots from the field for a mark of .691, breaking the previous record of .685 set by the Los Angeles Lakers last Tuesday. The Pistons hit their first seven field goal attempts of the game and also connected on their first eight tries in the final period in halting the Clippers’ four-game winning streak. Porter, who dished out 18 assists, had 22 of his 24 points in the second half, including 12 in the third quarter when the Pistons built up a 14-point lead San Diego, playing its third game in less than 48 hours, scored the last eight points of third quarter to cut the Detroit s lead to 96-90 The Clippers sliced the lead to four early in the final period, but Detroit goi two quick baskets from rookie guard John Long to kill the final San Diego threat Philadelphia, led by Er- ving's 29 points, never got closer than IO points in the final 12 minutes. Nets 117, Suns 114 PHOENIX (UPI) - John Williamson scored 25 of his 37 points in the second half to lead the New Jersey Nets from a 22-point deficit to a 117-114 v ic to r y o v e r the Phoenix Suns Sunday. The Nets made their move after trailing 61-39 one minute into the second half. They closed the gap to 89-79 at the end of three quarters and scored the first IO points of the fourth quarter to move within 91-90. Phoenix moved ahead again by IO but New Jersey tied the score at 111 with 1:24 remain­ ing on a three-point play by Bernard King. The score was tied again at 1:13 before Williamson put New Jersey ahead on a short jump shot with five seconds left Truck R obinson had a chance to tie the score with two free throws with three seconds remaining, but made only one. W illiamson con­ verted a pair of free throws with one second left for the NBA A m I I n f t o i t B m m I n t T n m t i n n i i Bg u n n to r r m imvfnfiHHtw (Night O h m not Included) final margin. W ait D a v is and A lvan Adams sored 25 each to lead Phoenix. King had 20 and Ed Jordan 18 for New Jersey. Lakers 111, Bucks 109 INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI) — H areem A bdul-Jabbar scored a season-high 40 points Sunday night, including eight in the final two minutes when the Los Angeles Lakers turned back a Milwaukee rally for a 111-109 v ic to r y o v e r th e Bucks. The win moved the Lakers in the into second p la ce Pacific Division, reserve Don Ford added five rebounds and two s te a ls the fourth in quarter. Marques Johnson led the Bucks with 23 points and Junior Bridgeman added 19, including eight in the fourth period. Tun con my* a lift by bo It only takes I in« a blood plasma donor. l ' i hours, I and you tan donate every | 72 hours. your I You will receive SI.OO for first donation and I $10.00 for a second dona- 5 tion in the same week. you, you will receive a « I® lf you bring this ad in with — I $1.00 bonus after your f I first donation. I AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, IN C I Phone 477-3735 I I S IO We** 29th j^ H e u rs r Men. i Titers. I a.m.-4:J0 p.m., Tees., Wed. I Fri. I ' «.m.-2:W p.m. J ENGINEERING MAJORS H E R C U L E S IN C . of Salt L a k e City, Utah, is interested in your future if you are an engineering student. W e w ill be on c a m p u s interview ing for the follow in g positions: MECHANICAL ENGINEERS O pportunities in rocket m otor design, a n a ly s is and testing; facilitie s and m a n u fa c tu rin g engineering; and qu ality a ssu ra n c e engineering. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS (electronic elective), and Rocket m otor and com ponent testing facilitie s and m a n u fa c tu rin g e ngineerin g (electronic or power elec­ tive). CHEMICAL ENGINEERS Rocket m otor design a n a ly s is and testing; process engineering; qu ality a ssu ra n ce and p ro gra m s. O ur representatives w ill be on c a m p u s M on d ay, F e b ru a ry 12th, to d is­ cuss your career interests. Contact the career placem ent office to schedule your interview. lf unable to interview, please send resume to: PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT P.O. Box 98 M a gn a , Utah 84044 — UPI Telephoto Golden State’s Clifford Ray (44) puts up a shot that Boston's Dave Cow ens blocks. Nuggets 98. Bulls 87 DENVER (UPI) - David Thompson s 27 points powered the Denver Nuggets to an easy 98-87 triumph over Chicago Sunday d e s p ite an NBA season high 29 rebounds by the Bulls Mark Landsberger The Nuggets led throughout including three the contest, 23 point margins The Bulls threatened only once, cutting Denver's lead to 73-64 with I 22 left in the third quarter Celtic* 103, Warriors 102 BOSTON (U P I) - Chris Ford scored a career-high 34 points Sunday and player- coach Dave Cowens scored 12 of his 22 points in the fourth period, helping the Boston Celtics snap a four-game los­ ing streak with a 103-102 vic­ tory over the (kdden State Warriors The W arriors have lost IO of their last 12 games Boston had the lead until 4 18 left in the game when center Robert Parrish scored on a slam (lunk to give the Warriors a 96-94 advantage But the Celtics later ran off seven straight points, giving them a 103-98 lead with 2 20 left on the clock Two Warrior b a sk e ts tw o minutes were not enough. la s t th e in The Celtics, playing with only nine men. trailed 13-12 with 6 53 left in the first period But behind Chris Ford s IO and Dave Cowen s eight points, they closed the first quarter with a 17-3 spurt to take a 29-16 lead Golden State closed the gap to 56-45 at the half, behind Nate Williams’ eight points and Phil Smith s seven The Warriors continued to nibble at Boston's lead in the third quarter W ith 48 seconds left in the period, guard John Lucas converted a three-point play to give Golden State the lead 73 72 They ended the Carr finished with 26 points for the Pistons. Lloyd Free, the NBA s second-leading scorer, topped San Diego with 23 points while Randy Smith had 21 and Nick Weatherspoon added 18 for the Clippers. Blazers 116, 76ers 94 PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) - Lionel Hollins scored 33 points and handed off 12 assists Sun­ day to lead the Portland Trail Blazers to a 116-94 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers. Julius Erving scored eight of P h ila d elp h ia ’s first IO points to put the 76ers up 10-6, but Hollins then scored nine points during a 17-4 spree which gave Portland a 23-14 lead after one quarter. Hollins added eight points in the second period as Portland went ahead 49-36 at halftime, but Erving, with IO points in ♦he third period, helped rally Philadelphia to within five. 59- 54. before Ron Brewer led a surge that put the Blazers ahead, 80-70, entering the final Washington Philadelphia Nev* Jersey Ne** York Boston Sen Antonio Houston Atlanta Cleveland Detroit New Orleans W L 33 15 28 18 23 21 22 29 17 31 oMlf whJ fUulalan Cr W ITT lit U lT M I O f t 30 20 27 20 27 24 20 29 18 31 17 35 Kansas City Denver Milwaukee indiana Chicago Seattle Phoenix toe Angeles Sen Diego Portland Golden State I W 30 19 28 24 22 28 19 30 18 31 31 16 30 20 30 20 24 27 22 24 23 28 Pct. 888 636 523 431 354 600 574 529 406 367 327 Pct. 612 536 440 388 367 660 600 600 471 467 451 as 3 8 1 2 W 16 ivy 3v* 9v» 11W 14 as 3vy 8v» ll 12 2» 2* 9 8v, 10 Boston 103. Goidan Stats 102 Washington 122. New York 105 Detroit 128. San Diego 118 Denver 98 Chicago 87 indiana 123. San Antonio 110 New Jersay 117. Phoenix 114 hants* Qty 137, Cleveland 109 Portland 116. Philadelphia 94 Milwaukee at Loa Angeles H E R C U L E S U.S. C itiie n a h ip R e q u ire d E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r M / F CUSTOm hi-fi TWO DAYS ONLY MON. & TUES, l l AM TO 7 PM CUSTOM STRIKES AGAIN & WEEKDAY SALE IO TO 50% OFF ON ALL STEREO EQUP. OPEN MONDAY & TUESDAY 11 AM UNTIL 7 PM QUANTITIES LIMITED! ^ S A N V O S T E R E O S Y S T E M O T* Buy a SH U RE ME G get a - — — - - - - SO U NDCU ARD record preservation kit FREE! v v 915 Dstereo cartridge at HALF PR IC E and** \ STEREO SYSTEM JCX 2 TOOK RECEIVER • AM PM Stereo Receiver • 13 Watts Per Channel R M S w / 5% THD** B SR 2260 a Magnetic Record Changer a Complete rn/ base A d u s t Cover ‘4 ' ' i Ii f* • t NO NAME 42 • 2 Way Speaker • 8 Woofer $299 STEREO - ACCESSORIES - STEREO B L A N K TAPE ST Y L U S C A R E n i a x B l l Low noise 90 minute 0-track tape MAXELL UG STR 90 NAV S6 19 STEREO HEADPHONES SUPEREX NAV $65 _ v; SU P E R E X P R O 6 VI Stereo headphones SOUNO GUAPO STYLUS C A W AFT Sound Guard kit contain* brush cleans* appkcato* rn blow** 3« and 10k magmftars ann >n«,tiu* huns N A V 1 * 8 4 4 90 M INUTE C A S SE T T E TAPE BASF B A S F ST U D IO 9 0 9 0 minute studio serie s blank casse tte tape NAV $5 49 97 - V I FREE N A V $ 6 0 4 95 NAV $74.95 C'fi ti rrtrir?r(rtro-trntrtrtrXrtfrrtr&T}'&EtrE-&Br. A ft P O C K E T RADIO 95 j miMo S O N Y Includes Solid-State Circuitry & 2’/*" D ynam ic S p e a k e r Comes w/Earphone 19" Diagonal Trinitron Color TV w/Pushbutton Tun- « g Wide Angle 114 Degree Picture ‘479 KV 1922 TAPE DECKS $ ‘ • e r r The Teec A -10 5 is a ca sse tte recorder with f e r r it e he ads, p a u se control and twin VU m eters A so u n d investm ent' 2 HOUR BETA FORMAT RECORDING TAPE 99 L 500 SA N YO FT 479 A M /FM ST E R E O C A S S E T T E IN D A SH f S A N Y a T E C H N IC S S A 300 AM FM S T E R E O R E C E IV E R Technics T E A C SANSUI SR 232 # Belt Drive Turntable a Auto Return SANSUI G 2000 a AM/FM Stereo Receiver • 16 Watts Per Channel*« ECI PROFILE 640 • 3 Way Speaker a 12" Woofer s549 DEALS FOR YOUR WHEELS IN DASH AM/FM CASSETTE CAR STEREO WITH 6” SPEAKERS Pioneer KP4000 AM/FM cassette car stereo O0n»ONeeji Pioneer Pl 6L door mount speakers *179 NAV W E S S22‘> 90 J E N S E N C A R S P E A K E R S JENSON C 9851 a Two 4 coaxial speakers $ PR A f t D UNDER DASH 8 TRACK WITH 6”x9n SPEAKERS Pioneer TP 252 dash 8 track tape player. Pioneer TS 690 6”x9” dual cone speakers NAV $95.85 (if)p m iv rp n 35 WATTS PER CHANNEL W/ NO M ORE THAN 0.04% THD* T E A C A 303 FRO NT LOAD D O LBY C A S S E T T E D E C K NAV *400 20 oz. ceramic magnets. Sep­ arate 3" twe­ eters JENSEN! C9740 NAV $69.95 195 I PRI 3204 Guadalupe 617 W. 29th 104 E. Huntland 454-2622 472-5471 454-5474 CUSTOM HI H Discount Centers Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. January 29. 1979 C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G RATES IS word m inim um Each word one tim e $ .14 ...... J 32 Each word 3 times Each word 5 t im e s ..................... $ 39 Each word IO tim e s ..................$ 64 Student rate each tim e $ 90 I col x I inch one t im e ............. $4.39 I col x I inch 2-9 tim e s ............. $3.96 I col x I inch IO or more times $3.75 DEADLINE SCHEDULE M ond ay To on F rid a y ..................2 :0 0 p.m . Tuesday Texan M o n d a y 1 1 :0 0 a .rn W ednesday Texan Tuesday. . 1 1 :0 0 a.m . Thursday te x a n W e d n e sd a y .. 11:OO a .m . 1 1 :0 0 a.m . Friday Texan Thursday " In the event of errors m ade in an advertisem ent, im m ediate n o tk e must be given as th e publishers are responsible for only O N E incorrect insertion. All claims far a djustm ents should be m ade net later th a n 3 0 days a fte r publication." S T U D E N T , F A C U L T Y /S T A F F RATES 15 word m inim um , each day ...J .90 Each additional word each day$ 06 I col x I inch each day $3 15 "U nclassified*" I line 3 days $1.00 (P rep aid, No Refunds) Students, faculty and staff must pre­ sent a current I D. and pay in ad­ vance in TSP Bldg 3 200 (25th & to 4 30 p.rn W hitis) from 8 a rn Monday through Frid ay AUTOS FOR SALE CASH FO R your junk car. Free pick-up. junk Local recycling company using cars. 456-4014, 451-4240 1964 VW BUS, sunroof, portholes, ex­ cellent condition a ll around, $950 Call Steve 8-5, 478-8593 1971 F O R D E100 van, new engine, with in­ 17,000 m i. Stereo, custom carpet terior, $1850 LOU, 474-7468, 474-8661, leave message 77 VW “ RA BB IT , AC, A /W F m T I ow m ileage, $3,000 Leave message for Rostami at 443-7527 or 471-5704 1977 T R IU M P H S P IT F IR E , 19,000 miles, A M -F M , excellen t condition, see to believe, $3800 474-9152. 1972 IM P A L A 4 door sedan. AT, A C 7 p s ! PB, 54,500 original miles Very clean Excellent condition. $1250 258-3449 1974 L U C A M A RO. A cT a M F M new brakes Good, clean condition $2200 Call after 3:00 pm 458-8433 '72 T O Y O T A C E L I Ca ] A6^F~V^~ex- '73 Toyota PU, cellent condition, $1250 runs great, $900 452-8352, 454-2387 1971 C H E V Y must sell. $850 477-8751 a fter 5:30. IM P A L A ,- 'great" shaped FOR SA LE: 1970 Ford Torino converti­ ble. in excellent condition Call 444-8773. 228 C AM A R O 1979 Call a fter 6. 345-0326 1969 P L Y M O U T H station wagon transm ission, sacrifice, needs negotiable, 444-7075. Must $300, GOOD CAR for school, work, $700. Call 477-6935 a fter 6 weekdays $977 T R IU M P H TR7, excellent condi­ tion, A M -F M , CB. Must sell, m ake offer, 471-7800 FOR SALE Motorcychf-For Sole HONDA 500 CC m otorcycle for sale. $500 Call a tte r 8 pm, 837-1160._________ 1976 K AW ASAKI 400, very good condi­ just tuned, helmets, tion. 7,400 miles, faring, windscreen, backrest, bookrack, $650 442-2094 evenings 1974 Y A M A H A 250 E n d u ro lio o ~ ~ w ili talk__836^°02 ______ Stereo-For Sole ______ N E E D TO sell receiver, turntable, and speakers, come check it out $500 or best offer_ 442-6402, Edwardo C R A IG A M -F M 8-track, in-dash stereo. Four speakers included, excellent condi­ tion All for $160 Call 442-8309 J Musical-For Sale _ A LP H A M U SIC Center No. 2 is now open at 29th and Guadalupe (close to Conans P izza). Sheet music, strings, guitars, songbooks, 477-5009 G E M E IN H A R D T E B O N Y and silver f tccolo, excellent condition, call 477- 172. Y A M A H A P R O FE S S IO N A L alto sax~ ophone, perfect condition. Ask for M arc, 2A 454-4956. A fter 6:00, 446-3634. Photogrophy-For Sole G A F SS505 XL sound movie cam era Like new 345-6410 Mitcellaneous-For Sola N ELSON'S G IF T S Established 1945 indian Largast selection jewelry 4502 South Congress 444-3814 Closed Mondays. R O YA L E L E C T R IC typewriter, needs repair, $45 Selmer flute, $100 476-4725. reservation BOSTON T IC K E T S , 21st row, call 453- TOM, Byron MUST S ELL 7972 17 ft Glastron Bl74. Excellent condition, 140 H P Mercruiver inboard-outboard, power tilt and trim Custom tilt tra ile r included 345-6410. COLD? IN S U L A T E with yards of foam barely used backed red shag carpet Need money Call 452-8550 K IN G SIZE waterbed with Chemlex heater and fr a me 258-3579. Q U E E N S IZ E w a te rb e d , bookcase! headboard, fram e, all accessories, $350 474-6305. BOSTON T IX front row and front sec­ tion, floor seats, 442-2328 Z E N IT H p o r t a b l e TV, excellent con- dition, 12" x 14" screen, B&W with por­ table table on rollers $75. Call Selma Smith, 453-4387. after 6 pm I R K E D One car using two spaces can irk anyone JOIN ‘STO Pl TS’ Society To Overcome Parking In Two Spaces a a * for membership (incls Send $5 memb card, bumper sticker, semi­ annual news-letter & 25 NOTICES to place on windshield of violators). M AIL TO: ‘S T O P I T S' Box 26026, Ft. Worth, Texaa 76116 j e w e l r y , e s t a t e W e b u y j e w e l r y , d i a m o n d s , a n d old g old. H i g h e s t ca s h p ric e s p aid . C A P I T O L D I A M O N D SHOP 4018 N . L a m a r MISCELLANEOUS P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e 993j?n* nCy te* tif>9 and rH e rra l$ 474- M O V E M E N IS W ORKSHOP sacred dance as given by E J Gold Saturday, Fab. 3, Grey Forest Hall, San Antonio, ca U j;3 2 4 785l_____ • A B V S IT T E R A V A (L A B L E, T u n lor elam anfary education m ajor, mature, lo ve kids A fternoons, res p o n s ib le , evenings, Mon F r i Kris, 476-1942 SUE A T SNOWMASS on Jan 5th your instructor, Paul, would like to hear from ybu Paul, Box 169, Cary Quad West, Lafayette, indiana, 47906 U N F I!R N . APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS R O O M M A TES SERVICES SERVICES HELP W A N TE D TYPING to share N O N - S M O K IN G F E M A L E g r a d large student/ professional quiet house with fireplace, North Austin $150 plus VY bills, 837-0451 U R G E N T ! N E E D non-smoker by Feb 1st to share large 2bd-2ba apt. All bills j paid Pool, cable. CR shuttle, pay rent $152.25 Call Rickey after 4 at 451- 7745 _ F E M A L E STU D IOU S non-smoker share 2-2 apartm ent, shuttle. $105 plus half bills. Anytim e after I 447-1585 R ESPO N S IB LE F E M A L E S needed to s h a re nice 3 b d rm hom e F re s h ly painted C A/CH , upper division and grad students preferred No children or d South Congress at Oitorf, $125 and $115 P ^ J ^ b i h s $90 deposit, 443-9201 N E E D F E M A L E for 2br apt walk UT $90/mo 1/2 Elec cheap bills 472-3358 H O U S EM A TE NE E DE D io share welh furnished home near campus, $125 mo 1st and last mo rent plus $85 deposit Non-smoker 451-4188 LO O K IN G FOR two UT students to live in 3BR duplex 444-0466, ask for Jerry. R OOMA T E W A NTECX 2406 Rio Or ande N o _ 3._______ W OMAN SHARE large house furnished 2BR - access UT. park $160 plus 2 bills 477-8528 H Y D E PA R K , need liberal, responsible f e m a le h o u s e m a te , no c ig a r e t t e smokers, private entrance; hardwood floors, w d, shuttle; $160-8170 ABP 452 7972 after 4 00 R O O M M A TE TO share 2BR apt Semi- furnished. pool, CA CH Prefer responsi­ ble g ra d jtu d e n t $128, deposit 452-5870 F E M A L E R O O M M A TE needed 2BR apt. 31st and Speedway $105 olus ' j E (aboutJIO ) Fred 477-9245 F E M A L E R O O M M A TE needed. Close to campus $150 a piece plus Vj E 476 8258 after 6 OO pm N E E D E D BY February 1st, fem ale to share 2 bedroom apartm ent $86 OO plus ejectricity Backy, 441 3506 U R G E N T 1 N E E D room m ate by Feb. I IF Large bedroom route JI 150. call Charlie, 459 6797 furnished duplex N E E D R ESPO N SIB LE fem ale around 30 to share mostly furnished 2br T uba north duplex Bills aver $150 mo Linda 836 7408 ___ N E E D M A L E to sublease at Castilian, sauna, food, maid, extras can 443-7715. ask for Dan R ES P O N SIB LE EASY GO IN G grad or SOTA, M or F needed to share nice 3b- drm house, $83 mo 471 5646 days. 478 2243 evenings SHARE M Y 2bdrm furnished apt near campus 606 W 17th, apt 405 $95 mo , 1 a elect Bin. 472-018! N OI N - S M O K I N G P E M A L E g r a d student, professional to share large quiet house with fireplace. North Austin $150 plus Jja^bMIs. 837-0451 N E E D F E M A L E room m ate for new NW ' i bills, no pets Hills house. $125 mo 345 3967 I H E Y ! 2BDRM apt needs 3rd tenant mi from IF 1410 W North Loop No 101 S100/mo., VS bills Own room 453-7724 453-3045. ask for Peter (John m ay not be home ) r o o m m a te R E L IA B L E F E M A L E I to share a large three wanted Feb bedroom house near Pease Park. $150 pius VS bills Come by and meet us, Diorste.^JRcxtoin^ 1408 W 29th F E B R U A R Y , SHARE house w ith 2 students $85, Y» bills. 476-1336 F E M A L E ROO M M A TE needed, lb r apt $100 A BP Campus area, WC route, 472 5118 a fter 5 LOST & FO U N D LOST M E N 'S glasses Littlefield Foun­ tain, plaase call 472 7399 LOST S H A R P E ls im a te calculator Ottering five dollar rew ard Call 454- S446 Ken UNCLASSIFIED 68Chevy com rebuilt $400 472 9959 BostonTixFtRowSections442 2328 G reat Boston tickets 926 7830 Double bed fram e & headboard 444-6055 Need ride - Da I la $ F eb2or 3 $ 451 8833 4 Boston tks sec93 $16 471 3347 Don't tie R I O T E R R A C E A P T S . 4821 E Riverside Dr Now leasing I 8, 2 br apts Some with fireplaces, quiet living, rac­ quetball court, swimming pool, laundry facilities, students welcome 385-4500 T R A V I S HOUSE APT. 1600 R O Y A L CREST I & 2 br. Choose from 4 floor plans, Dishwasher, garbage disposal, c a r­ peted. CA CH, pool, party room 1st stop on RC shuttle route Priced from $195 and up 442-9720 Q U IE T S C E N IC seclusion on Lake Austin 12 minutes from UT Large I and 2 br apts $225, $285 plus electricity. No children, no pets 1801 Westlake. 327- 0479___ IST, unfurnished one bedroom F E B apartm ent with appliances, $135 plus bills, near Barton Springs, 443-4764 f b a, 1704 M c C a ll, A eTpT T F 50~ 7 b “ Tarry to w n area, Louis-Hines Prop Manager, 477-2062 FURNISHED APARTMENTS Free Sarvic* Parking Transportation HABITAT HUNTERS A lo c a to r service specialising in com plexes arith accass to shuttle fre e a p t hr a tao sing For Summer A FoH Dot),rn Mali Su„. aa 474-1532 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a ENGLISH AIRE APTS. Renting for Spring Semester Efficiencies I, 2, and studio ap ts, fu r­ nished and u n furnished fro m $170 W ater, trash sewer, cable T V provided, on shuttle, 2 swimming pools, 2 hand- ball/racquetball courts, 2 central laun­ dries, lighted tennis courts, near R iver­ side and Oitorf office hours 9-6 Mon-Sat, 12-6 Sunday 1919 B u rto n D r . 444-1846 V illage Glen I & 2 bedrooms. Available now. Shuttle, tennis courts, exercise room & more. 2101 Burton Dr. 4 47-413 0 or 476-2633 F u m . 6 U n f u r n . E F F - $195 A ll B ills P a i d Large apt., pool, fully shag carpeted CA CH, all built-in kitchen, convenient to campus 4000 and 4200 AVe. A, 451- 1422, 451-6966, 451-6533. Central Properties ipc. Do All These Ads D rive You b a n a n a s ? W e R e n t Apartments. Duplexes, Homes 24 hours/7 days All over Austin Real World Properties Campus 443-2212 North 345-6350 Free Locating Service ABP I br apts. turn $225 spring for leasing Now campus, shuttle 5 blocks to C H A P A R R A L APTS. 2408 Leon 476-3467 M A N O R C IR C L E * 2br - extra large " near airport * furnished - unfurnished * freshly painted, built-lns * convenient UT ’ $195-225 plus E A G 928-9631 o r 928-0526 N E A R UT, IB R , furnished, shag carpet, CH-CA, T V cable, im m aculate $215 plus E. Three Friends Apts, 1010 W 23rd, 472- 2273__ LA R G E L U X U R Y IB R apt, university area, shag carpet, dishwasher, disposal, CH-CA, cathedral ceiling s, TV cable, furnished unfurnished S300/mo plus E $375/mo plus E Three Friends Apts, 1010 W 23rd, 472-2273. SPACIOUS ON E bedroom on shuttle Riverside area $190 plus e 443-8814 or 447-1122 E F F IC IE N C Y APT, furnished, near UT, shuttle bus $150 plus utilities Call 444- 5766 after 5pm WALK UT. I br furnished, $165 plus elec­ tricity 474-2269 after 2 pm. M A U N A K A I, 405 East 31 st, walk to campus, shuttle bus, 2br. 2ba efficiency, $250 V illa Esparanda. 4310 Ave B, ef­ ficiency $159 50 472-2147, 459-8018 UN E X P E C T E D V A CA N CY: sm all I br, $215/mo plus electricity No pets, 4205 Speedwiy, on shuttle, Skansen Apts 451- 6672___ L A R G E , SU N N Y , extra nice lb r, large windows, good view, shag carpet, dis­ hwasher, cable Good storage, cabinet counter space, $210 plus E 404 E 30th, 471-4358, 478-2381 BLACKSTO NE APTS. ‘'a block from law large desks and school, 2/2, C A/CH , bookshelves, $300 mo ABP, 2910 Red River 476-5631 VACANCY, T I M B E R WOODS Apts I OOO W 26th, efficiency, $180 plus electricity. EFFICIENCY~~$T25~~ABP~ » 6 E. 30th, 472^5134_____________________ MUST S U B L E T spacious, furnished 2br- 2ba apt near campus, *270 plus E 474- 7680, keep trying 5 L « D ^-N T E F F IC IE N C Y . $137 50/mo ABP, C A/CH , 2502 Nueces (2 blocks from campus) Call 477-1379 after 5 pm. Grad students preferred FURNISHED HOUSES N E E D I M A L E , I fem ale to share nice house, $IOO /m o, on shuttle, 474-4213 R O O M A N D BOARD R O O M A N D BOARD The Castilian is the place to live • Color TV lounges • Weakly maid service • Social activities • Saunas, pool, recreation room • Fully furnished with paid utilities. l/i block from campus l f or 15 moat pioan • Coverod parking The Castilian 2323 San Antonio St. 478-9811 • Racquetball Courts • Shuttle Bus • Free Cabio TV • Endless Social Activities • I & 2 Bedrooms Available 2 0 0 5 W illo w Creek 4 4 1 -5 4 6 5 Hurry! Leasing spacious economy priced apartments now! in Moral: Early bird gats th# worm. Pleasant Valley Estates 1300 S. Pleasant Valley Rd. 443-534 V Unfurnished IBR starts at I 70 00 Unfurnished 2BR, I bath starts at 2 2 5 00 Unfurnished 2BR, 2 bath starts at 2 4 0 00 Shuttle bus a t your front door I block from beautiful Town Lake an ORPINES S ID — BLUB NO INITIATIVB ANXIOUS - TKNSC FEARFUL FOR NO APPARENT REASON CAN'T SLEEP You can benefit from new i n m e d i c a l a d v a n c e s i f you re s e a rc h . To see q ualify for free and con­ fid e n tia l medical treatm ent, call 477-20H7 — any time. INSTANT PASSPORT RESUME APPLICATION PHOTOS While You W ait R o y c p S tu d io s 2 4 2 0 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 2 4 2 1 9 PASSPORT PHOTO? RESUME PHOTOS APPLICATION PHOTOS — Just Walk In — — Ready in 2 minutes THE THIRD EYE 2530 Guadalupe 477-5555 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L I N G , R E F E R R A L S a. p r e p r e g n a n c y t e s t i n g Texas Problem Pregnancy, 600 W 28fh Suite 101 M F, 8 30-5 OO T K 474-9930 R O O M S W A LK IN G D IS TA N C E UT. shag carpet $105 mo CA CH, kitchen privileges wfWyef^ity House 2710 Nueces, 477 9388 \ J U D E N T s th e ,, r E v e m B E R Austin's quaint downtown A la m o 1 hotel. Daily, weekly, monthly rates Reasonable 476-4381 F E M A L E VACANCY in Co-op Fem inist atmosphere Good food $165 mo a b p phone 474-4652. 477 0225 WALK UT. room for gentleman, CA-CH, carpeted Silo John Howell, owner broker 458 1201 TWO LA R G E rooms, one share beth with man, one share bath with girl $95 ABP 306 E 30th 472 5134 MUSICAL IN STR U CTIO N in s tru c tio n c l a s s i c a l g u i t a r b e g in n e r s a n d a d v a n c e d O r e w Thomason 478-0650 team c l a s s i c a l g u i t a r classical. Spanish flamenco and pop­ ular music Call Ty Bowman. 472 2864 and leave message lessons P IA N O LESSONS with experienced perform er Good with kids teacher Im provisation M att Read or by ear Harris 454 9201 p r i v a t e VO ICE, piano, and music instruction Study classical or theory popular musjc Sharon Bunnell 327 5377 P IA N O LESSONS opening* m private je ffe rs o n Square E« studio near per tented qualified teacher Phone 451 3549 VOICE LESSONS from UT Or student to advanced, in m usic, beginning reasonable rates information 451 -4788 te a c h e r E X P E R IE N C E D P IA N O Beginners advanced Guitar also Folk- classical UT music degree 459 4087 476 4407 Now hiring waitper- sons & cashiers for s out h n o r t h & locations. Apply dur­ ing business hours or call 837-5950 for in­ formation. GRADUATES lobs Get the most out of your advancement satisfaction, salary progression Free details W rite I n n o v a t e Systems, 2301 JOBS Rockwell Rd Wilm ington DF 19810 Female |ro6va!e student* needed ax ex pert men I v , 1 I ipe* terne in we. k i n e with yew n e chi Mdten 1* nee extent $4 SO hew p t u * $ 1 0 O O b e n u x Fe* d e t a d x tm* A U r rn*, mn. Bh xHtlele 471 USO 9 S •* EJ* 9934 In the evening O U T S T A N D I N G O P P O R T U N I T Y T O E A R N F A N T A S T I C S E T T I N G F O R P E R S O N A L G R O W T H to invest your non productive tim e only build an >ncome producing business which w ill provide present income a* wen as enhance your future lifestyle and profession R espo nse# od v>duets or couples call 444 1751 Leave your nam# and phone number A secretary w ill ton tact you for an interview appointment 27ih S n i f f "i r ~ TYPING, PRINTING BINDING Tha Complete Professional FULLTIME TY P IN G SERVICE 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H EM P HILL PK P le n ty o t F o r k in g • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a * a • c c o n u i V u e Econo type Econocopy I • C W I l U C U U V a T ypin g, Copying, Bin ding J P rinting IBM Correcting Selectee Rental A Supplies NORTH Mon -Fri 8 30-5 30 Sot. 9-5 • S M & Guadalupe 4S3 5452* SOUTH J M on -Fri, 8 3 0 -5 :3 0 Fri. 8 :3 0 -5 :3 0 Sot. 9 -5 a f l River vde 4 Lakeshore • • • J * *43 -4 4 91 J I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • WORK AT M O T H E R E A R T H C u s to d ia l E n g i n e e r tor students part Perfect work Apply 7-4 pm a' «07 East Rivers ide ' m# ga person Mon Fr ipay lr or T Y P I N G E R R Y S E R V I C E 9 6 M o n F n T yptng T r a n s c r i b i n g T y p e s e t t i n g C o p y in g B in d in g 472 8936 D o b i e M a l l Com m unity Electronics ixp ert stereo A TV repair All work guaranteed 20 years experience SOA VV 2 4 4 7 2 -9 4 5 9 lo u d ■ In .o r Sanctum it UCO. dx P H Y 403K L A B NO TE S L a b o r a t o r y notes (not le c tu r e f o r P H Y n o t e s ) as n e e d e d 403K L a b Sections, A c o m p l e t e set p r i c e d 3 0 % less th a n c e r ­ l o c a l s to r e s D e l i v e r y t a i n a v a i l a b l e C a l l J i m , 452-6237 S 2 5 0 Phoenix Services 1200 Richcreek 452-6237 U N FUR NISHED DUPLEXES 2-1 . Q u a i l C REEK Rutland area spacious c o u n try kitchen, u tilitie s room, paho garage 1795 B IG Proper ties 459-0156. 345 1660 -14* N EA R L AW SC HOO L pets ok, t i t A t e , 258 460? 4)4 5000 ae efficiency. GAY F E M A L E couple preferred Walk IBA quiet mg distance campus 7BR and private Can 477 4!80 atter 5 OO R O O M A N D BOARD W O MEN LARGE rooms goodm ea'x I block from campus I aural House Co op 26)7 Guadalupe 476 5154 or 4784)470 ROYAL C O O P fem ale vacancies, good liberal a* meals, quiet neighborhood mospherf 478 0*80 |I5 0 F E M A L E ANO m ale vacancies IH C mo 7 blocks oft campus New Guild Co-Op SIOW 73rd Ph 472 0357 O P E N IN G AT Mromen s co op 11 l l room and board Susan 47: 4 * 4 9 UNFUR NISHED HOUSES « M IL E S SOUTH of UT on quiet street convenient to everything 3 7 1 C H C * carpet fence patio rang# a i sh washer disposal, W D connections $325 pius deposit Call 442 7945 M uS T SUBLEASE available Feb 1st h o u se near Mo pac and E n f ie ld Can 4 ? i 9324 k e e p f r y in g J B D R V 2B A CA CH n o r t h Uti lities . 451 7098 s h u t t l e n e a r 'en ed yard $ 3 7 5 mo p l u s R E P A I R S ! ! digital clocks c a r clocks h a i r d r y e r s C A S S E T T E P L A Y E R S , L A M P S , A P P L I A N C E S , W E L D I N G T I N K E R ' S DA M W A N TE D CLASS r i n g s , gold ie w e ry old pocket stamps wanted watches currency High prices pa902 5 Congress. 442-6767 A N N O U N C IN G O P E N IN G of im m tgra Hon consulting service at 3410 E 1st on Jan 30 Retired im m igration officer will consult on im m igration and naturaliza­ tion matters Call Leonard R Wagner, 385-7145, for appt T U T O R IN G - M A T H , science, English, foreign language statistics and GR E ition 47} 2737 a l l Y O U f o l k s th a t need e x tra money can sen flower * with Th# Original Flower People Paid daily ISS l i e f Jobs' Cruise ships M E N 1 W O M EN see freig h te rs^ xpeience high pay Europe. H aw aii Australia, So America Sum m er' C arter Send S3 85 for infor m elton to SeaW ond AB Bo* 61035 Sect C* 9586C P H Y S IC A L LY H A N D IC A P P E D young is seeking p a rttim e afternoon adult assistance with care Can 476 5156 P A R T T IM E W A R E H O U S E M A N driver M F mornings NW Austin 454 5719 ASSISTANT M A N A G E R I or small com pie* M ature couple to assist manager in duties Oays 452 0138 evenings 454-7500 MOR N I NG WA I T PE R SON wanted for 6 tips am 7 pm shift experience helpful excellent, close to University Apply in person at R am ad* Inn Capitol 300 East lit h C H I N E S E R E S T A U R A N T nee d s w a ite rs or w aitresses E x p e rie n c e preferred but not necessary Call 453 !809 ISI i Guadalupe accepting P IZ ZA h u t applications tor day waitpersons Any shift from 9-5 Apply in person from 2-5 pm at this location N E E D S IT T E R (or children ages 5, 7, 9 From 3 30 5 Tues F ri Need car Price negotiable Call 47e 8534 in UT N E W R E S TA U R A N T opening area has opening for bartender cocktail person waitpersons evening shifts full and parttim e Ask for Steve between IO 2 tor appointment 477 1800 SERVICES SERVICES I e a r I T ex t r a" c a s h 1 I j As A Plasma Donor I ! At Austin Plasma Center I I 2800 Guadalupe I I *8.00 ... 1st Donation I I *10.00 ... 2nd Donation I I *10.00 Bonus on 10th Donation I I I I 4 7 4 - 7 9 4 1 I $1 .OO B onus on I st d o n a tio n w it h this a d ! . J IB M 4 sa tfk x f t n n ' ^ L , v & i y RESUMES w it h ar w n ik a u t p i c t u r e * 7 D ay Sarvica 2707 Hemphill Fork J u s t N e r t h e t 2 7 t h a f G u o d a I u p a [471-3210 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 GOODC h d s s a r ta profess*©* ’ v p i n g < thesis sc tent Ute S47C T V P I N C accepted dos omen t C E O'si V I L L A G E C I N E M A IV Part tim e con. ess>on hr p needed wee* day afternoon* t JPS W p m 17 90 hr e»p» 1 >ene sh o w in g * of W onder-Wonder love and ' Superskiers" beg rn .,g ,y ’ p r , Monday Ihrough Fn. day rn the Texas Union Bu m ing T I X A S U N I O N I N T C R A C T I O N C O M M ITTE E wit! sponsor a question and answer session with Dr Robert Cooke director of housing and food ad­ minstration from 3 to 4 30 p rn Monday in Union Building 2 102 T E X A S U N IO N M U S IC A L E V E N T S C O M M IT T E E wilt feature Reggae Night from 6 30 to 11 30 p rn Monday in the Texas Tavern M E E T IN G S A D M I S S I O N S I N F O R M A T I O N DELEG ATES will hold an organizational meeting to prepare for the tour group of h gh school students from the Valley and San Antonio at 3 p m Tuesday in the I astwoods Room in the Texas Union Building UT EM PLO YEES U N IO N meet at ooh Tuesday in Jester Center A3 17a to d>s issues rn the current cuss UT stab legislative session Sen Lloyd Doggett wm speak on the subfect A U S T IN C O N C E R N E D C Y C L IS T S wit meet at 4 45 p rn Monday at <805 Pear St a commuter bicycle ride tor fun and consciousness rasing will be discussed LE CTU RES DEPA RTM EN T OF C L A S S IC S a pons ■ t ang Pa il Shorty a lecture by Mabei I professor of Greek at Bryn Mawr College on Reverberation and Mythology lr the Wed at 3 p rn Tuesday m Wagqeoer Halt ne S E M IN A R S SC H O O L OF C O M M U N IC A T IO N JOB P LA C E M E N T O FFIC E a sponsor a question and answer session to expian placem ent office services, resume preparation end job-hunting tips from noon to I p m and 3 to 4 p m Tuesday rn Com m uneatiin Building 4 126 Ceral yn A Blanda career placement director w speak on Career® in Communications " GREAT MUSICIANS Sponsored by I he C u ltu ra l E ntertainm ent C o m m ittee of the I exes U n io n in co op eratio n Leith the D e p a rtm e n t of M usic C ollege of Fine A r t s Justino Diaz Ban, vocalist T hursday, February I H o g g A u d itoriu m , 8 : 0 0 p .m . I he program will include works by H andel, Brahms. I aine, Verdi and Montsalvatge I kket Sa ie* tor CEC holders begin T hurwiay Unitary 25 $1 OO withe EC lDs 4 * 1 1 4 4 4 * B o x O f f ic e ^ y H K U H O H t fp y K T i n n p n T y p q “O C T O / ^ q , ri-ninc 2 ? ^ p q ^ y - C e ^ O i l H q K i B e . ie H H I P 6 H O J !O r * ifH © C K H X I DONT KNOW... IT JUST HAS ALL THE APPEARANCES OF BEINS A GOOP ^EAR DOONESBURY MR. SECRETARY, THE PEOPLERS REPUBLIC OF CHI­ NA VEHEMENTLY PROTESTS J VIETNAM'S BRUTAL AR­ MORED ASSAULT INTV THE SOVEREIGN STATS OF KAMPUCHEA! by Garry Trudeau HANOI'S VILE AND SAVAGE BLITZKRIEG IS AN AFFRONT TO ALL PEACE-LCM NG PEO­ PLES OF THE IAORID, AND SHOULD BE CONDEMNED BY THIS COUNCIL AS THE D E' SP/CABLE, CRIMINAL ACT TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE A C R O S S I O ver 5 — metabo­ lism 10 Bond 14 God of love 15 Loosen 16 — breve Mus I? Bare 18 Sorted again 20 Relative In­ formal 22 Nullify 23 Active one 24 Direction 25 Plum 28 Changeable 32 N Amer in­ dian 33 Earn 35 Angers 36 Nobleman 38 Potions 40 Holy season 41 Walking — — Elated 43 Soft cap 45 Season: Fr 46 Liberates 48 Frankness 50 Danish I 2 3 A measures 51 French river 52 Enclose in Vat 55 Force 59 Barbecued 2 words 61 Snare 62 Noun ending 63 Feat 64 Disabled 65 Expensive 66 Join 67 Otherwise DOWN 1 Twinge 2 Russian river 3 Beverage 4 Courses 5 Oppressed 6 "Lend — 7 Afr village 8 Ventilate 9 My Fair Lady” lyri­ cist 10 Woodbine or Belmont ani­ mal: Slang UNITED Feature Syndicate Friday's Puzzle Solved S 2 2 2 2 a u a a a o a a u n n a n a a g a a a a a □ a a a a a a a a o a o * ojclea l a oTeJB n a i Iv[t I S ia S S S g a - 9 e M t l Lf J "it Ic t u'o FHfv e 'n I Ie tnt a|r i | f r e ! A I C IC I E N T ■ ■ P jA T TS I q R T o T r k ■ ■ bT i Tn' s ■ i n | r to I (J l f L l (J 10(311 a □t i Ll rna u a a □a □ □ □ □ 11 Kelp 12 Ait Sp 13 Bail 19 Norse god 21 Fate 24 Irrigate 25 Sorrow 26 Expiate 27 Virtuous 28 Clamps 29 Extort 30 Slow: Mus 31 Oleate 34 Vestments 37 Template former 39 Hider 42 Erect 44 Makes leather 47 Hammer 49 Cuddle 51 Speechify 52 Chilled 53 Not any 54 Andes shrub 55 Bore 56 Russian river 57 NFL team 58 Sword 60 Males U 17 20 I i 32 36 41 46 59 62 65 26 27 HSM50 54 5J 52 21 r ■r_j 34 ^ ■ 3 8 42 5 6 7 8 IS I T * Br ll I r 19 i 8 ■ r I _■ I ■ L 39 ■. 0 ■ !■48 \ I■I 30 56 43 29 47 51 3! V J 55 II 63 I■16 i i 64 I ■67 by johnny hart J OH,SHUT UP/ J r s t ,■— TtrP f VI'1 - r h P ' ' , "I ii,, f a r by Brant parker and Johnny bart P 9 C K O H C e D B 9 'IP !' C T 9 H U M # !, H p O B O p a jT H O PTO PW e u4HMeTpV4q©CKOt< K H to p U q U H F T H * W IZ AHD O r ID I HAVE A I&Tt &'R fzX* THE W \Z A F & W , o ' n ' . / t ' i - If you can easily read the above lines, you may fiave th« kind of language talent that the National Security Agency not,His. Opportunities now exist for candidates skilled iii the languages shown, plus certain other unusual foreign languages as well. Those selected will be able to make valuable contributions in the production of national defense intelligence. The National Security Agency offers a variety of challenging assignments for language majora . . . translation, transcription, area research projects, to name a few. Newly hired linguists receive advanced training in their primary languages and can plan on many years of continued professional growth. Intellectual challenge is part of NSA s language, tex)... plus attractive surroundings in our suburban Maryland headquarters. Salaries start at the GS-7 level for BA degree graduates, plus all the usual benefits of Federal employment. U. S, citizenship is required. Schedule an NSA interview through your Placement Office. N A H O N AL SECURITY AGENCY Attn: M321 Fort George G. Meade, Maryland 20755 An Equal Opportunity Employer m /f •A N PAANCMCQ 130 24 S . . \ a : U P I WEATHER POTOCAST G> Snow is expected In tho northern parts of the nation, in* eluding tho North Atlantic Coast •ta ts *, Uppar Graal Latta* region. Control Plains rogion and tho Central Inter mountain region. Fair weather ie expected elsewhere. Austin will ba cloudy with a 80 percent chance of rain. The low temperature Monday will ba in the high 30a, with the high reaching into the mid 40a. There ie a chance for clearing skies Tuesday. The Mm wW eat at 8:08 p.rn. Monday and rise Tuesday ai 7:23 a.m. Navrozov: covert dissident Secret book completed, smuggled out \ By WALTER BORGES Daily Texan Staff No one in Russia suspected Lev Navrozov of being a dissident. After all, Navrozov was one of the Soviet Union’s top translators when he applied for an emigration visa in 1972. His translations of Russian works into English and his good political standing had brought him to the upper echelons of Soviet society. His status was evident. His villa was larger than that of Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. He chose w h a te v er to translate. to p ics he w ished Despite his exemplary standing as a Soviet citizen, Navrozov was working secretly on a m anuscript presenting an insider’s view of the Soviet Union. “ There are two kinds of dissidents in Russia,” he said in an interview last week. “ There are the overt and the covert dissenters. To be an overt dissenter is suicidal.” NAVROZOV CHOSE SURVIVAL over suicide. His decision allowed him to come to the United States, where he became a best-selling a u th o r an d a n o ted c r i t i c of U.S./U.S.S.R. policy. Navrozov has criticized the CIA and other U.S. intelligence agencies for being arrogant and inept. He a t­ tacked the agencies for doing a poor job of evaluating Soviet capabilities and intentions in a speech at the LBJ School of P u b lic A ffairs la st Wednesday. His book, “ The Education Of Lev Navrozov,” made the New York Times best-seller list. It is the first of a seven-book series Navrozov plans to write from manuscripts completed in the Soviet Union. While in Russia, Navrozov wrote the m anuscripts under tight securi­ ty. He destroyed rough drafts to m in im iz e c h a n c e s of an in ­ crim inating search and trusted few friends with the nature of the pro­ ject. “ MOST FRIENDS thought I was writing a novel,” he said. “ In the family, the thing was referred to as the composition.” In 1972, Navrozov obtained visas for himself and his family, because he and his wife are half-Jewish. The m anuscript had to be smuggled out of the country. Navrozov’s book gave him an in­ fluential voice among dissidents. He said dissenters like Nobel Prize winners Alexander Solzhenitsyn and Andrei Sakharov — whose views are w id e ly p u b lic iz e d — do n o t necessarily represent all sides of the dissident movement. “ The dissident movement in the Soviet Union encompasses a full spectrum of opinion,” he said, ad­ ding that Solzhenitsyn’s view of the western world losing its courage is “errant nonsense.” In a 1978 commencement address at Harvard, Solzhenitsyn attacked w estern m aterialism for under­ mining the spiritual foundation of western society. NAVROZOV CALLED Solzhenit­ syn “ a Communist utopian” and said his criticism s reflect the sam e arrogance and ignorance evident in U.S. intelligence analysts’ views of the Soviet Union. N avrozov said R u ssians a re motivated by the sam e m aterialism as Americans, but the motivation is channelled differently. Americans pursue happiness, he said, while Russians channel their m aterialism into aggression. “ D e m o c rac ie s a re p a c if is t,” Navrozov said. “ Most people find happiness lies in other things than being killed or m aimed or paying high taxes.” He said although Soviet society “ is a caste society infinitely more stratified than American society,” the Soviet people share a common interest in world invasion. Navrozov attributes this to “ Rus­ takes an sian chauvinism” aggressive form. Many Soviets, p ar­ ticularly ethnic Russians, “ feel that they are a m aster race,” he said. that Cook terms lignite-coal plant as costly as nuclear project By DAVID REAL Daily Texan Staff Austin City Council m em ber Lee Cooke said Friday a lignite- coal power plant would cost more than Austin’s full share of the South Texas Nuclear Project and would be just as controver­ sial. Cooke said STNP could save the city more than $100 million over the cost of Fayette 3, the proposed lignite-coal project. He estim ated STNP would cost taxpayers $366 million as opposed to $475 million for Fayette 3. “ It s not only an issue of pro- and anti-nuclear, it s also an is the most issue of econom ics,” Cooke said. “ STNP economical long-term plan for citizens.” According to the Fayette Power Project economic reports, the plant will cost aproximately $375 million, and the lignite mine will cost about $100 million, Cooke said. If the city sold STNP for $160 million, he said the city would need $315 million in additional bonding authority. COOKE ESTIMATED STNP would cost the city an additional $205 million after the initial investment of $161 million. Using a task force report researched by an outside consultant, Cooke in­ cluded $160 million for the current cost overruns, an additional $20 million for potential overruns and $25 million for the pro­ je c t’s uranium fuel load. The $100 million for the lignite mine covers fuel costs if the city developed Fayette 3, H L. Peterson, assistant director of the electric departm ent, said. We would need that much front-end money to start the plant and develop the mine,” Peterson said. “ The two must go in combination.” The $25 million for STNP’s fuel would last 15 years Both the coal and nuclear power plants have 30-year life spans COOKE SAID HE had not received any input from other coun­ cil m em bers or city staff yet. “ I don’t know how that (his calculation of $205 million necessary to fund STNP) legally or technically can be put on the ballot,” Cooke said The city legal staff worked over the weekend to determine referendum and bond election options available to the council. Cooke said coal has as many potential hazards as nuclear energy does and would be as controversial. “ I think the thing not being discussed is, once the STNP is no longer an issue, whether voted up or down, you can bet your bot­ tom dollar the environmentalists will go after coal.” Cooke said. “ That’s the central issue as I see it. “ Hit nuclear as hard as you can now. Then we’re going after coal.” “ IT’S A NO-WIN proposition. There are side effects to all (energy sources),” Cooke said. Mayor Carole McClellan said Friday she is considering full funding of Austin’s 16 percent share of the STNP as an option. McClellan has consistently opposed funding STNP overruns, while still endorsing the nuclear project itself. She said the council should discuss holding a bond election in March to fund the STNP overruns “ as requested by a number of citizens.” Council member John Trevino said the new STNP funding proposals are “ contingency plans made to salvage the nuke” after last week’s defeat of Proposition 14. “ THE WAY I INTERPRET the election, the majority of the people who voted against Proposition 14 were anti-nuke,” Trevino said. The council views the STNP issue with apprehen­ sion, he added. “ We want to make the best decision for the people we possibly can. Ten years or 20 years from now, people will look back and say. Yes, it was a wise decision because they had m ajor problems with it,’ or No, it turned out to be economical and safe.’ We'll either be praised or dam ned.” Cooke said interpreting the vote was difficult because the wording of the proposition was not clear. “ My feelings are if s about a 50-50 issue.” Cooke said ATO members’ hearing to begin A pretrial hearing for Alpha Tau Omega fraternity mem bers Ron Alan Wilson. Robert Taylor Herrin and Jam es P Hinson is scheduled Monday in 136th District Court. They were charged with aggravated assault after an incident involving a University freshman last sem ester Austin attorney Roy Q Minton, who is handling the three charges together, said the case probably will be postponed Minton said the district attorney’s office (prosecuting the case) agreed on the continuance He said he did not know how long it would take to prepare for the case. How Ic (nos from the compotes between your ears. ReclTbm ato “ that nice little Ita lia n restau ran t I fcO I I l l N I l l D I N N ! H SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS m eetin g a n n o u n cem en t INTERVIEWING TECHNIQUES TUESDAY JANUARY 30, 1979 — 7 p.m. — RLM 8.136 REPORTS-DISSERTATIONS THESES-RESUMES • CONSULTATION — (CITINO SY WtOFfSSlONALS • TYW NO CREATIVE SERVICES 7200 GUADALUPE 4 7 1 .1 4 )) O n Ain Am * ~ <*•** F y j Ais a student, probably your biggest single task is information pro­ cessing. You spend more time absorbing, analyzing, and memorizing facts than anything else. And most of that informa­ tion is in the form of printed words. Think what you could accomplish if you had your own personal computer that could digest all your reading almost as fast as you can turn pages. The time and efficiency you’d gain could make a big change for the better in your life right now. Of course, you already have such a device — it’s called a brain. But you’re probably not using even a tenth of its capacity. Because just as a computer is only as good as its programs, your brain is only as powerful as the way you use it. And when it comes to reading, most of us are still stuck with the painfully slow methods we learned in grade school. Methods that are so inefficient that your brain actually gets bored and distracted between words (which is why you prob­ ably find it hard to concentrate when you’re studying). Evelyn Wood would like you to spend an hour with us to discover some of the miraculous things your brain can do with the proper training In a single, free, I hour demonstration, you’ll find out why most people are such poor readers, and how our new RD2 course can increase your reading speed at least 300%, with better concentration and retention. As part of the bargain, we’ll show you some new reading techniques designed to in­ crease your speed immediately, with good comprehension — after ju st this one free demonstration. Evelyn Wood RD2 can open the door to big things for you. better grades, more leisure time, and a whole new pos­ itive outlook on studying. And it will only cost you an hour of "computer time" to find out how. Ew IvnW bod will open your eyes. Attend a free 1-hour RD2 demonstration this week: Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Cambridge Tower 1801 Lavaca January 29 Monday 12:30 / 4:00 January 30 Tuesday 3:30 / 5:30 / 7:30 a EVELYN W OOG RE A O NG D YN AM ICS -A O IS COMPANY © 19^8 f AWX) n g D y n a m o s lf* Beautiful Dress ... Beautiful You ... GRAVES Highland Mall The Student Center. G o i n g to M c D o n a l d ' s K is alm ost as m u c h a part of school as going to class. You've m a d e us the _ place to m e e t, to,talk, to have a good tim e, to ce le b ra te y o u r victories a n d help forget defeats. You've m a d e M c D o n a l d ' s m o r e th a n just a n o t h e r place to eat. A n d t h a t ’s why, at M c D o n a l d ’s, we do it all tor you. C M c D o n a ld 's System. Inc., 1977 TRAPPED IN A WORLD HE NEVER MADE/ Howard the Duck January 29 * The Daily Texan Weekly Arts (£0- Entertainment Magazine ‘From the time of his hatching he was different,’ Pages 14-15. Inside , Page 2 Treasure off Padre Lewitzky in residence , Page ll. King of the blues, Page 12. ‘Treasure, People, Ships and Dreams’ A Spanish legacy r e c o v e r e d off P adre Island By M A R I O N L a N A S A The date: April 9, 1554. Four Spanish merchant vessels raised anchor in the harbor of San Juan de Ulua, the port of Vera Cruz, Mex­ ico. Their destination: Havana, and ultimately Spain. The ships left port carrying 410 passengers and crew, silks from Oaxaca, the medicinal resin liquid amber, wool, the red dye cochineal and in excess of JIO million in silver and gold. Before the journey’s end, three ships and more than 300 persons would be lost off the coast of Padre Island. Most of the treasure would never be seen again — until now. in an exhibit of artifacts salvaged from the wrecks entitled ‘Treasure, People, Ships and D ream s,” on dis­ play at the Texas Memorial Museum. The voyage of the Santa M aria de Yciar, the San E steban, the E s p ir itu Santo, and the San A n d r e s seemed ill-fated from the start. AFTER COMPLETING the Atlantic crossing, the ships arrived in Vera Cruz loaded with trade goods from Spain. They found a city almost totally devastated by a hurricane three months earlier. Unloading the trade goods and reloading the raw m aterials of the New World became an arduous process. Then, too, the more heavily armed ships which were ex­ pected to escort the small fleet safely to Spain had not arrived by the time loading was completed. Captain- general Antonio Corzo and the m asters of the other vessels decided to sail on alone. It was a decision only some would live to regret. French and English raiders after the rich cargo were not the only thing Spanish merchant vessels had to fear in the w a te rs surround ing the New World. D eadly hurricanes and spring equinoctals — sudden, violent gulf storm s — reaped a heavy toll of small ships. Corzo s logic seemed valid. His ships were seaworthy, the weather calm and the danger from privateers greatest in the waters beyond Havana — where he could doubtless find an escort. THE SKIES WERE clear as the 20-day voyage to Cuba began. But the spring is an erratic and unpredictable time of year. Even the most seaworthy ship would be hard- pressed to ride out the sudden storm s that develop during these months, and the only alternative is to run before the storm and hope it blows out before open water runs out. Corzo s fleet was over halfway to Havana when the first gale struck, blowing the ships alm ost due west. Somewhere rn the confusion. Corzo and the now-crippled San A n d r e s slipped the storm The other three managed to stay before the storm — until they saw the churning surf off Padre Island. Unable to run farther, the ships dropped anchor and turned their bows into the gale But the cables soon parted, and the three ships were battered to pieces or swamped in the white sand shallows. Although many passengers and crew were lost in the dangerous surf, some managed to make it to shore safely Through the years, two different accounts of the sur­ vivors have come down. On#1 version recounts a death march southward on which the survivors, ill-equipped from the wrecks, were killed, one by one, by hostile Indians Only one man. a priest, survived the carnage, according to this version. The other account has Francisco del Huerto, m aster of the San E S t e ban, piloting a small boat back to Vera Cruz. The others, knowing help to be on the way, crossed over to the mainland in search of better campsites. In­ dians cut them off from the wrecks and killed a number of the Spaniards before help could arrive WHICHEVER VERSION is true, salvage operations were undertaken almost immediately from Vera Cruz. Divers worked for six weeks over the three wrecks, in 15 to 18 feet of water, recovering 35,804 pounds of silver and gold This left 51,330 pounds of treasure strewn across the gulf floor. Other salvage operations were planned, but none undertaken. None, that is, until more than 400 years later in 1967. That year a treasure hunting enterprise from Indiana. Platoro Inc., began to work the wrecks, whose locations were still known. The salvaged items, however, were taken from the tideland — public property — and citizen outcry soon prompted a court suit to determine ownership. By 1969, as a result of the public interest shown and the subsequent court ruling in favor of the state, most of the known collection of artifacts had been returned to Texas and an Antiquities Code was enacted by the Legislature. Nun Vai'Don* To a great extent, this one case spurred Texas to preserve the artifacts of its past. BY 1972, EXTENSIVE field survey and artifact recovery operations were initiated by the antiquities comm ittee and the state m arine archeologist. Employing rigorous scientific methods, scientists located, excavated and preserved remains from the wrecks. It is these items that are on display in the Texas Memorial Museum. Life on these small ships was a microcosm of the world during the mid-16th century. The Atlantic crossing often took five months or more, and everything needed to sus­ tain life had to be carried along. The artifacts salvaged include everything from rem ­ nants of hammers and pickaxes to lead sheets used for item s were also patching recovered. Brass pins took the place of buttons and zippers, while pewter plates of English manufacture were probably destined for use by a rich Spanish m erchant. the hull. Many personal Shards and fragm ents were salvaged from barrels used to carry food and water. Nut shells, olive pits and grain were found, as well as a section of a pig’s foot, indicating livestock was carried aboard. Even the remains of cockroaches were discovered, showing that tim es were not that different from today. Shipboard fittings displayed the simplicity and skill with which these vessels were constructed, only 60 years after Columbus first reached the New World. Weapons carried ranged from the eight-foot breech-loading bom­ bard and the sm aller verso — an anti-personnel rail gun — to the powerful but slow crossbow. ONE OF THE most impressive finds from the wreck site is a cast brass astrolabe dated 1545. The astrolabe is a navigational instrument used to determ ine latitude, often to within 50 miles of north-south position. The year stamped on this Portuguese-made instrum ent makes it the oldest dated astrolabe yet discovered. Two crucifixes were also found, exhibiting the Spaniards’ religious zeal and delicate artistry. One, a 16- carat gold cross, shows a finely featured Jesus figure. The other is broken but consists of a gold binding surroun­ ding a wooden core. Most of the silver bullion found at the site was in the form of rough disks, formed by pouring silver over sand or rough rock. The largest disk recovered weighs IO pounds. Gold fingers weigh six ounces each. A m ajority of the coins recovered were 4-real pieces minted in Mexico City. The exhibition also includes ‘‘concretions,” the mass of marine growth that forms around objects left for long in the salty gulf waters. Only the care and expertise of the Texas Archeological Research Laboratory at Austin’s Balcones Research Center have left the artifacts so well preserved. The exhibit at the Texas Memorial Museum is more than a display of silver and gold; it gives special insight into the lives and dream s of those who lived in the mid- 16,til penury, Foe this, the artifacts shine the greater. * * * * * * * * " ‘ • • m rn -rn a * rn, * a ta. Nuri Vallbona r i g h t , U p p e r th world’s oldest date astrolabe, m ade i P o r t u g a l in 154£ Right, viewers eye c o lle c t io n of silve coins and gold bar resting on a 10-poun silver disk. dance DANCE LECTURE: Bella le w ttk y dance company will conduct two lecture-demonstraftons from 9 to 10 30 p m Thursday The intermediate advanced class will be in Drama Building t 172 and toe advanced level win be in Anna Hiss Gym, Studio 134 BELLA LEWITZKY: The Bella Lewttzky Dance Company will per­ form two different programs at 8 p rn Friday and Saturday at toe Paramount Theatre Tickets are avaiabie at Inner Sanctum. Disc Records and toe Paramount. CEC tickets are available at Hogg Auditorium Box Office music YOUNO-UCK KIM: Young-Uck Kim, noted Korean violinist, and Dcfcran Atamian, pianist, will present a studio concert at 8 p m. Monday in KLRN Studio 6-A, Communication Center, 25to and Guadalupe streets Admission is free PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE: Conducted by George Frock, the Percussion Ensemble will play at 8 p m Monday in toe Music Building Recital Hail T U B A / E U P H O N I U M E N S E M B L E : The U n i v e r s i t y Tuba/Euphonium Ensemble, directed by Steven Bryant, will present a concert at 8 p rn Tuesday in Music Building Recital Hail he program will be "Five Moods” by Gunther Schulter U TA GUERRA, PIANO: Lita Guerra wiN present a recta1 in celebrated of Schuberts birthday at 8 p m. Wednesday in Music Building Recital Hall The all- Schubert program will feature Sechs Moment Mustcaux” and “ Sonata in C." JUSTINGO DIAZ, BASS: Justino D>az OLYMPIA, .en, Rietenstan, $ documentary Mtool me 1936 Olympics * an inherently controversial eon, it s 1951 version of Tenness*e Williams play, and Vivien Leigh and Kart Maiden co starred, but * rn Marion Brando s brilliant and overwhelmingly powerful performance mal manes the movie A story of romance end marriage in a decadent and OY • g irk: iety th* I m is eloquent and the acting exquisite an the way around T H I BIRTH OE A NATION, 7 and IO p rn Tuesday. JESTER AUDITORIUM This >s it, D A Griffiths seminar 1915 ’lim that, at ieast critically if not actually established •eafure fammakmg This fictwnhzed account of me birth of me Ku Klux Klan raises many aes belie and moral questions as we become so involved Mi the story mat we fir-d ourselves swept away ana along by repugnant political attitudes A turn mat would still be watched even it if weren't historically important. "Birm" is Griffith's finest won, BAST OF COEN, 3 and 9 p m Tuesday. JNION THEATER EHA Kazan at his peak directing James Dean. Julie Hams, Raymond Massey and Jo Van Fleet rn memorable performances Dean plays a troubled youth dominated by his lather Masse,) in this film class* adaptation of the John Steinbeck novel THE GENERAL LINE, l p m Tuesday UNION THEATER Sergei E isenstem made mis as an instructional film lo encourage agricultural mechanization ifs a strange and fascinating blend of humor and propaganda, with one of the great bovine sex scenes of ail time. JESSE JAMES. 7 and 9 p rn Wednesday. JESTER AUDITORIUM This 1939 Western, worked on by many of th* people responsible for ‘The Grapes Of Wrath, deals with the story of outlaw as political and social allegory The color work in the film is absolutely gorgeous X was directed by Henry King and stars Tyrone Power as Jesse James Henry Fonda as Frank James With Randolph Scott and Jane Darwet) THE LOWER DEPTHS, 3 and 7 p rn Wednesday, UNION THEATER Jean Renoir s version of the play by Maxim Gorky deals with a ruined baron, an out of-work actor, petty thieves and an assortment of other slum dwellers Renow spices the tragedy with fins csul whimsical, iro n * humor Stars Louis Jovet and Jean Gabm THE TWELVE CHAIRS. 8 30 and 10 p m Wednesday, UNION THEATER This vastly underrated Mel Brooks film a more man worthwhile tor more than just Mel Brooks tans largely because of exceptional comic performances by Frank Langell. Dom DeLuise and Roo Moody, not to mention a short appearance by M B himself I AM A FUGITIVE FROM A CHAIN GANG, 7 and9 p m Thursday, JESTER AUDITORIUM One of the finest of me social-commentary films put out by Warner Brothers in the Thirties This a a powerful and frustrating narrative It concerns a man wrongly accused and sentenced to a chain gang, who escapes, becomes prosperous in a new life and then has his past discovered It is an involving story With Paul Mum turning in a excellent performance in the main role THE PRODUCERS, 3. 7, 8 45, and 10 30 pm . Thursday, UNION THEATER Mel Br oohs first feature film, starring Zero Mostel as a libidinous and unsuccessful Broadway producer, reduces Nazism to a tasteless but gloriously liberating bad joke Includes the mind-boggling Springtime For Hitter" musical number With Gene Wilder and the utterly maniacal Dick Shawn EVERYTHING YOU ALW AY* WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX (BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK), 7. 8 45. 10 30 p rn Friday. UNION THEATER Woody Allen s rather free adaptation of Dr David Ruben's chatty sex therapy manual is fitfully tun­ ny. but a scream when it does connect Featuring Woody. Burt Reynolds. Tony Randall Lynn Redgrave. Gene Wilder, Louise Lasser and Lou Jacobi THE THING. Midnighter. Friday and Saturday. UNION THEATER Concerns an in­ tellectual carrot from outer space (played by James Amess) with a predilection for human blood The eloquent prototype of the '50s paranoid sci-fi movie, ghost- directed by Howard Hawks SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT, 2, 3 45, 7, 8 30 and 10 p m Saturday. UNION THEATER Some people laugh when told mat mis film is me scond biggest box of­ fice draw for 1977 and mat it is a beautifully crafted movie as well But bom are true statements. In his first directorial effort, Hat Needham (assistant director of the "The Longest Yard ) does an admirable job white Burt Reynolds as Bandit proves that he is i HE comic actor of the Seventies Starring Sally Field, Jackie Gleason and Jerry Reed TOPPER, H a m Saturday. UNION THEATER This 1937 film has lost none of its sparkle since initial release Constance Bennett, Cary Grant and Roland Young star as a pair of playful ghosts and the mortal whose life they disrupt. This film veision of Thorne Smiths comic novel spawned two sequels and a popular TV series Don't miss this opportunity to see me original. OLIVER, 2 and 8 p.m Sunday. UNION THEATER The Dickens musical extravanganza that won the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1968 OFF CAMPUS ANIMAL HOUSE, VILLAGE John Belushi screams a lot and is screamingly funny. This co m * look at a 50s fraternity is the filmmaking debut for me National Lampoon loonies, and it s as anarchic, or more so, than the mag Food fights, toga parties and the like abound BERMUDA TRIANGLE, LAKEHILLS, VILLAGE Based on Charles Berhtz's book about the supposedly ysterious area near Bermuda where planes, ships, etc disappear BREAD AND CHOCOLATE, VILLAGE Wonderfully funny and heartbreaking new film by Italian director Franco Bruseti Features Nino Manfredi and Anna Karma as .rn migrants trying to make a living in Switzerland against many and varied odds Con- fronts prejudice and assimilation against a beautiful Swiss-landscape background CALIFORNIA SUITE, CAPITAL PLAZA Herbert Ross directs Nett Simon s play (as in ' The Sunshine Boys" and "The Goodbye Girl"). Alan Alda, Michael Came Bill Cosby Jane Fonda, Walther Matthau. Elaine May, Richard Pryor and Maggie Smith are all guests at a southern California hotel Many sub-plcts all more or less come together THE CLASS OF MISS MCMICHAEL, HIGHLAND MALL, SOUTHWOOD. Oddly enough Oliver Reed and Glenda Jackson star in this film about high school frolics trials and tribulations EVERY WHICH WAV BUT LOOSE, AQUARIUS, HIGHLAND MALL. Whether you like t him, Clint Eastwood ha? tyeen in some excellent films oyer the last decade, and mis ■ » .. „ » * » * * » » * ■ ■ » * * * * a * * * t « ZI ran** witfi the best He plays an easy-gcxng truck driver'' who spends his spare time neoned * barroom brawls it co-stars Sondra Locka Geoffrey Lewis and ar amazingly expressive chimpanzee FO R B ID D EN DR EA M S , RIVERSIDE B ted as me new Roman Polensk. movie it is ac toaiy the one he made rn the early Seventies between ‘Macbeth and 'Chinatown which was formerly fitted W hat" it « the Alice in Wonderland story mutated and transposed nto a bizarre e rat*, often tunny and occasionally cruel existential fan­ tasy A wry-.ar in her ear*> twenties wande-s through a house and encounters odd adventure* FORCE t« FROM NA VARO NE, NORTHCROSS Robed Shaw Harrison Ford, Bar bara 8a<. - Edward Fox and Franco fifeto stw rn this adaptation of a recent Attaste Mc I ear* novel it <% NOT a seoue1 lo The Guns of fifavarone G REASE. AQUARIUS John a volta anc Olivia Newton -John star n tn<*stay vrwim a rtist M ichael Uck m Four Mr rec ct;.-n t i Tim b> it * (),. u n t B Tw o Trmsgtstnnt Strut to t Af., in and A t t tcso W e tco tn r Piet t M i B u n d no H r* Mal* 8 ss rn F me adm«svotso V ... c Bv. Halt 8 p m > >.•• adm ission W E D N E S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 31 L IT A G U E R R A , i nu bx tty ,u . - • , S chubert p ro g ..im Sechs M o m ents M u s h .tu t < 94 .md Sonata in c. Opus P osthum ous M usic Bu ii R ec*tai H a ll, 8 p rn I rec adm ission F R I D A Y . F E B R U A R Y 2 SU SA N C O L L IN S D M A .e t.!,. - ■ o>a mg. Program* W orks by M o n te ve rd i. S c h u l/, Mi B rahms, Halsey Stevens, and ? a l t i n K o d c y M Building R ecital H a ll, 8 p m Free adm ission RESOLVE TO START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT! Take off all your unwanted hair permanently w ith medically approved methods. Bette Pritchett, Owner For Complimentary Consultation Day or Evening Call 4 7 7 -4 0 7 0 j VISA O UNIVERSITY ELECTROLYSIS 1201 W. 24th, Suite 105 Q 11 SACRED HEART 8 11 PTL PROGRAM 6 NEWSWATCH PRESENTS o e LIGHT o f t h e w o r l d IO CD CAPITOL EYE 5:45 6 00 6'30 700 2 © VALLEY OF DINOSAURS 3 © THIS IS THE LIFE O 12 VEGETABLE SOUP 4 CD CARTOON CORNER O 6 PTL PROGRAM IO CB HOUR OF POWER 7 30 2 CB WHEELIE 3 © 700 CLUB O 12 CARRASCOLENDAS 5 O ROBERT SCHULLER a oo 2 OCH) 11 CBS NEWS o OS DAY OF DISCOVERY PRINCESS KNIGHT 10 CB REX HUMBARD JAMES ROBISON PRESENTS MISTER ROGERS RELIGIOUS TOWN HALL O 6 8 O 9 CD 8 30 3 © JAMES ROBISON PRESENTS O 12 MIGHTY MOUSE AND FRIENDS 4 CD IT IS WRITTEN O 6 REX HUMBARD 8 O ELECTRIC COMPANY 9 CD DAY OF DISCOVERY 900 PEOPLE VUE MOVIE -{DRAMA) " V * CD CAPITAL EYE § (10 CB ORAL ROBERTS Studio See DIVINE PLAN 1 $ © PTL PROGRAM 9:30 (2 5 O C H ) DAY OF DISCOVERY 3 © KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO 4 CD WORLD TOMORROW © 1 1 CAPTAIN GUS © 6 JERRY FALWELL 8 © ZOOM (9 CD LET THE BIBLE SPEAK 10 CB CASTLE HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 10.00 2 CE) JIMMY SWAGGART 4 CD CHRIST FOR THE WORLD © 1 1 ) NEWS (5 © AUSTIN PRESENTA (8 © REBOP ( 9 'CD IT IS WRITTEN (13 © REVISTA INCRIEBLA 10:30 “ Rollino Man” 1972 2 CE) FEATURETTE 3 © ANIMALS, ANIMALS, ANIMALS; SCHOOL. ROCK (4 -J CD JIMMY SWAGGART © 11) FACE THE NATION © 6) HOUR OF POWER CB) © TURNABOUT Encores’ (9 CD HERALD OF TRUTH (10 CB CHRISTOPHERS 11:00 HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH ALLANDALE BAPTIST CHURCH CONVERSATION HYDE PARK BAPTIST CHURCH NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Time Of M an’ (60 © n eon; mins.) (5 O FACE THE NATION © MASTERPIECE THEATRE Episode Fifteen. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH OF FORT CD CD WORTH CB FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 11.30 o DIALOGUE SO (JED (ID MEET THE PRESS (T D © FU TBO LSOCCER 11:45 12:00 CD CD © CD CHALLENGE OF THE SEXES Men and women com peting in various sports. John Eaves vs Genia Fuller (skiing), Greg Louganis vs Melissa Briley (platform diving) and Keith Erickson vs Ann M eyers (basketball.) ® © INTER-VUE © ® © CD (ID © THIS OTHER EDEN A study of E n g la n d ^ history from Stonehenge to the present day, with particular em phasis on the role religion has played in shaping the nation and its people. (60 m ins.) SURVIVAL WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW POINT OF VIEW NEWSMAKERS 12:30 S QD CB 3 ) ISSUES AND ANSWERS KIPLINGER REPORT 8 © WALL STREET WEEK Tobacco Puffed Profits Host Louis Rukeyser, Guest: S js a n Black. Vice-President-Research. Burnham Lambert. Inc 9 (D FUN OF FISHING of Drexel 5 O 24 HOURS OF DAYTONA 12:40 12:45 2 CB HARLEY BERG SHOW © 5 O 11 NBA BASKETBALL ALL-STAR GAME 1:00 2 3 CB 3 ) THE SUPERSTARS Today s show will feature Lynn Swan. Jack Ham and Tony Dorsett com peting in a 14-man field in the fourth prelim inary round (75 mins ) 0 4 © 6 12 © COLLEGE BASKETBALL 79 Kansas vs Michigan State 8 © GREAT PERFORMANCES Vanessa This 1978 Spoleto Festival perform ance of Am erican com poser Samuel Barber s Pulitzer Prize w inning opera features the libretto by Gian Carlo M enotti which tells the story of an aging beauty who panics as her youth fades Johanna Meter sings the title role. (2 hrs.) 9 CD WALLACE WILDLIFE 10 CB INSIGHT 9 CD JUKE BOX 10 CB MOVIE ‘ The Story of -(DRAMA) " V i Seabiscuit 1949 Shirley Temple. Barry Fitzgerald. An Irish horse trainer comes to Am erica with his that becom es a niece, champion racer. (2 hrs.) to develop a yearling, CD MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) 9 “ Pippi Longstocking” 1973 leger Nilsson. In a small town in Sweden lives a freckled girl with pigtails who gets into constant exciting and unbelievable adventures. (2 hrs.) 13 © KNOCKOUT * 3 CD 3 ) 2 INTERNATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING The World M iddlew eight Cham pionship will be on the line when Hugo Corro faces the challenge of Vito Antofuerm o. (75 mins.) 13 © EN EL MUNDO © 4 © 6 MLZ © SPORTSWORLD 8 © BEETHOVEN FESTIVAL Fourth S ym phony’ C onductor Dorati and host E G, Marshall take a leisurely carriage ride through G reenfield Village, Detroit, as they discuss the light-hearted mood of B eethoven’s Fourth Symphony. It is perform ed by the Detroit Symphony at Ford A uditorium . (60 mins.) 13 © MEXICO, MAGIA Y ENCUtNTRO 1 30 2:00 2:15 3:00 3:15 3:30 (5 © 24 HOU RS OF DAYTONA Skating National-Figure (3 CB 10 CB 3 ) W,DE WORLD OF SPORTS 1) 2 U.S. Cham pionship, featuring the mens and dance com petition. 2) World W rist W restling Championship. 3) A report on the Grand Prix of Brazil. (90 mins.) © 5) © 11) BING CROSBY PRO-AM GOLF TOURNAMENT Final-round play in this pro-amateur tournam ent, with Vin Scully, Pat Summerall, and Ken Venturi providing from Pebble Beach, Calif. (2 hrs.) the com m entary 4:00 CID © FIRING LINE ‘ Recognition of China’ Host: W illiam F. Buckley, Jr. Guests: Ray Cline and Jerom e A. Cohen. Associate Dean of Harvard Law School. (60 mins.) 1 9 © LOST IN SPACE 5:00 (23 (33 CD no CB 3 ) ABC n e w s ©O D NEWS ® © WINTER RIDE O ® NEWSWATCH PRESENTS a© A SPECIAL PLACE © TARZAN m CD SIEMPRE EN DOMINGO 5:30 I CB 11 CBS NEWS I POP GOES THE COUNTRY l© d J (ID € D NBO NEWS S NEWS WORLD WAR ll: G.l. DIARY 6:00 CD (3) CD a® CB 3 ) ABC SUNDAY MOVIE SPECIAL ‘The Bad News Bears’ 1976 Stars: W alter Matthau, Tatam O ’Neal. A form er baseball professional transform s the meanest pint-sized team in baseball history from cellar-dw ellers to pennant contenders, breaking a few rules along the way. (2 hrs.) O ® © OD © © THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF DISNEY ‘Shadow Of Fear’ A bizarre tale of an in­ troverted teenage boy’s supernatural encounters through out-of-body experiences and his ability to see things from the perspective of anim als. (Con­ clusion; 60 mins.) © GD O SI) 60 MINUTES ® © PRISONER “ The Day of the ® © MOVIE -(SUSPENSE) • • • Jackal” 1973 Edward Fox, Alan Badel. Plans are made to stop an assassination attem pt on President De Gaulle. (3 hrs.) Sunday. F e b ru a ry 4. 1979 7:00 © 4 © 6 12 © THE BIG EVENT ‘Centennial: The Scream Of Eagles' Stars: David Janssen, Robert Vaughn. Paul Garrett, a direct descendant of Pasqumel and current owner of the Venneford Ranch, befriends Lewis Vernor, an historian, and relates C entennial’s entire history. (Conclusion; 3 hrs.) © 5 © 11 SPECIAL MOVIE PRESENTATION Rocky 1976 Stars: Sylvester Stallone. Talia Shire. The Academy-Award winning movie tells the uplifting story of a small-time boxer and street punk in Philadelphia, Rocky Balboa, who battles against overwhelm ing odds to make som ething of him self. (2 hrs.. 30 mins.) TO MRS. BROWN: A DAUGHTER This 8 © program docum ents the birth of Louise Brown, first test tube baby born in England this year. Included are interviews with Louise’s parents and other couples who have considered the use of the technique of im plantation. (60 mins.) 8:00 2 3 © 10 © © SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE The Way We W ere’ 1973 Stars: Robert Redford, Barbra Streisand. Set against the uneasy tim es of the 1950s, when political suspicions and accusations turned friends into betrayers, The Way We W ere’ is a bit­ tersw eet story of two people who d rift into marriage and out of love without ever really understanding why. (2 hrs., 30 mins.) 8 © MASTERPIECE THEATRE Episode One. ‘C ountry Matters: Crippled B loom ’ This story deals with a love triangle filled with intense jealousy. The program into the appalling energy and malice released when people are trapped by circum stance. (60 mins.) is a stunning insight 9:00 .8 © NOVA ‘Cashing in on the Ocean' This program examines the worldwide contest to tap the treasures of the sea and studies the black rocks, rich in copper, nickel and cobalt which are at the center of the struggle. (60 mins.) 9 © OUTER LIMITS 9:30 © ( I O (DD CO-ED FEVER The m ixups are many when a dignified w om en’s college turns co­ educational and men arrive on cam pus for the first time. Stars: David Keith, Alexa Kenin. © 4 © 5 © 6 © 11 12 © NEWS 8 © SOUNDSTAGE ‘ Bruce Roberts with Alice Cooper and Bernie Taupin’ Bruce Roberts presents an evening of light-hearted banter and m usic with his guests. Numbers include ‘I’m Com ing H om e,’ ‘ Lips Hips and F ingertips’ and This B oy.’ (60 m ins.) ( 9 ) © COMBAT 53 0 CBS NEWS 13 © CURRO JIMENEZ Cfi Cl CD lo CBS) n e w s © 1 2 AM ERICA‘ Home Away From Hom e’ 4 © NBC LATE NIGHT MOVIE ‘Stranger In The House’ 1978 Stars: Keir Dullea, Olivia Hussey. A psychopathic college student terrorizes a sorority house with threatening phone calls. (2 hrs.) © 11 MOVIE -(DRAMA) " V i “ Little Fauss and Big H alsey” 1970 Robert Redford, Lauren Hutton. A shy, awkward mechanic joins up with a handsome con artist, suspended on a drinking violation, to learn what he can about m otorcycle racing. (2 hrs.) ( 5 3 0 ABE LEMONS SHOW © G D DOLLY PARTON SHOW (JHS) ABC NEWS 10:45 11.00 " V i “ The Out of -(COMEDY) Jack Lemmon, Sandy Dennis. 2) CD TESTIMONY OF TWO MEN PT. III. (33 3 ) m o v ie Tow ners” 1970 ( 5 3 © MOVIE -(D R AM A ) Old A quaintance” 1943 Bette Davis, Miriam Hopkins. Two girlhood pals find each other increasingly nasty as the years go by. (2 hrs.) © ® EMERGENCY ONE ® © NEWS © CB MOVIE -(DRAMA) Hum phrey Bogart, Edward G. Robinson. A tough gangster holds people captive in a Key W est hotel during a rough storm. (2 hrs.) 1 1 : 1 0 “ Key Largo” 1948 ® © REX HUMBARD 11:30 © 12 MOVIE -(DRAMA) *Vi “ The Sw eet R ide” 1968 Tony Franciosa, Jacqueline Bissett. The story of relationships between a tennis bum, a surfer and a beautiful girl. (2 hrs.) 10:00 10:15 10:20 10:30 © ® PTL PROGRAM ( 3 3 © NEWS © © PTL PROGRAM ( 3 ) © PTL PROGRAM © ® INVOLVEMENT 12:00 1 2 : 1 0 12:30 12:55 1:0 0 24 Saturday, February 3, 1979 053 A BETTER WAY © 0 ® 5 3 GO 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 8*30 9:00 10:00 10:30 11:00 8 3 J BAY CITY ROLLERS O C D O BAGGY PANTS AND NITWITS G D O ® 5 3 POPEYE; IN THE NEWS ® © SCOOBY’S ALL-STARS; SCHOOL. 31 ROCK O CD O 3 ) 5 3 © YOGI'S SPACE RACE _ O ( D O G E ) 5 3 © f a n t a s t ic f o u r _ _ 8:00 ^nSe^hShPn^s81*58 BUNNY AN0 ROAD GODZILLA SUPER-NINETY; 7:30 ( D O MISTER ROGERS ® ^ C H A L L E N G E OF THE SUPERFRIENDS; ® O ONCE UPON A CLASSIC Episode Seven. ( D © NEWS IN REVIEW ( D O CINEMATIC EYE M ’ (?) OU EXTENSION 79 9:30 CD © ® O © 5 5 t a r z a n a n d t h e s u p e r SEVEN; IN THE NEWS € g L® O ® 5 3 © DAFFY DUCK; METRIC MAR- ® O MOVIE -{SUSPENSE) ‘M ” 1931 Peter Lorre, Ellen Widmann. The Berlin police and the underworld search for a psychotic child-murderer. (2 hrs.) ® 0 HOBAB GD 3® © © FANGFACE; SCHOOL. ROCK O OD © ® 53 © f r e d a n d b a r n e y ® © CHAMPIONSHIP FISHING PINK PANTHER; SCHOOL. ROCK >ON, METRIC MARVELS I, JETSONS; METRIC MARVELS $ Invasion o f the B o lty Snatchers [^ S T E R E O ! » 13-JR-345-5J9-7.4R.1R4R I2J9-J49-S:IR-7J9-RJ9 HUD OVIRI I a m I I U a . H W U - 12J5449 K t J H P l T T ^ l H i l l l u a u I JR-J JR A Iwntyir*. Lim? Story MAGIC 5J9-7JR-t-JR I S\UESTEK STALLONE 'ALLEY PG SJ9-7J9-R49 HELO OVER! a M K H 549-7J9-RJ9 I. ■OMAN POLANSKI S / M i d d e n , ^ a m a r n a 548-7JR-RJ8 mtmmrnm R I V E R S I D E IV30 RIVERSIDE • 441.SMT mumm. . -------- — .... - - REDUCED PRICES UNTIL 6:00 MON THRU FRI. 5 * t o n i g h t o n l y * e n e m a I ^ e y r m Uni R ie fa m ta h l's O L Y M P I A (1936) ★ ★ A ^ J mM tAAA iH YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^ A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A JTA# A A A Starring Jette Owens and Adolph Hitler A f att til Work Of Art Part I — 7:00, Part ll — 9:00 presents T O N IG H T O N L Y Alfred Hitchcock's B L A C K M A I L (1929) T R A N S TEXAS THEATRES $2.00 Til OHM PM O P E N 1:43 l.PPMIVI EfATURI I FEA 2 -4 -1 0 " H o u s e •LmWm M s ” WALTER MATTHAU inr , ; OHNO A JACKSON SOUTHW OOD 1«? M I nil mu a *• w a n $2 OO T il 6 : I 5 H A 4 -« r < * £ * . FEATURES 5:40 7 SO 1 0 0 0 FEATURES 6:15 I OO 9 45 \ j r j - f J M o M NST M OO Til 4 TODAY ] S o A n I y » m a q l w lo m th* mitv' C H E K H A t H O N G % U P IN S M O K E A^mviywsTCs b i m i-if t N IL E roo-- PO FEATURES 2 10 4 4 0 7 IO 9 4 0 35 j - ,o I JJ oo k »t JI 22 Thursday. February I, 1979 N B C N e v f OVER EASY Host: Hugh Downs. BEWITCHED NEWLYWED GAME LA SENORA DE CARDENAS NEWS 6:00 6:30 NAMETHATTUNE ODD COUPLE © © MATCH GAME ® © NEWS $25,000 PYRAMID MARY TYLER MOORE HOGAN'S HEROES MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT I DREAM OF JEANNIE DANCE FEVER 7:00 ® © CD O OD © MR. HORN A revealing story of the enigmatic frontier figure Tom Horn, whose colorful Wild West career encompassed the capture of the legendary Apache warrior Geronimo and a rough-and-ready, life as a Wyoming bounty hunter. Stars: David Carradine, Karen Black. (Pt. I. of a two-part series; 2 hrs ® db I B © MORK AND MINDY Mork borrows Exidor’s mountain cabin for a restful weekend with Mindy. O ® O CE) © © CIRCUS SUPER HEROES Olympic champion Bruce Jenner hosts this special the century turn of Ice Cream m ade d aily w ith o n ly fresh in-season fru its and o th e r real flavors. S w ee te n e d o n ly w ith h o n e y or fru cto se. H o u r s . \ o o n - l 1 : 3 0 p m. - E v e r y D a y ( 2 B lo c k s \ o r t h o f th e F o o tb a l l S t a d i u m ) 2821 San Jacinto • 477-9965 f m i S * 1 Get $100 Off On a n y of our M exican dinners a n y M o n ., W ed , or Thurs only. O n e p er custom er, p lease. Coupon expires february I. *•« Prwe Deluxe D in n e r.........................$3.85 I n t h , h u h S o o n o n d U n w it h o u i C h ih co n Q u o ta T o n , T o m a h C h ih G u o t o m o h Sa lo d T oo o r C o tto n 4 O o u o r t Number I Dinner................... $3.55 t n t t y l o d o B o o n s a n d t i n T o m a h a t C h ih ton Q u o ta G u o c o m o J o S o ta d T o to T oo o r C o f t o t a n d D u t t o n Regular D in n er....................... $ 3 .20 T o ro V h t h ilo d o K n , C h ih t o n O u o to o r T o m a to . B o o n s C M # T oo Or C o tto n a n d Pom rf Combination Dinner ............. $2.85 f n c t w t a d o . C h ih , B o o n s a n d K i n , T o m a h o r C h ih t o n O w oso /assart Coupon good at 23rd stroot location only 725 WEST 23rd Lunch, Dinner, and Drink* 7 Day»-A-Wook thursday television listings featuring four of the world’s greatest circus stars and their death-defying specialties. (60 mins.) (J D O PRISONER ® © GUNSMOKE ^ CD VIVIANA 7:30 GD db CB @8 MAKIN’ IT Billy Manucci has Saturday night problems~a college paper that’s overdue, a girl that won’t wait, friends whom he’d like to join at the local disco, and a father who thinks he should decide whether ‘makin’ it’ in school or on the dance floor is more important to him. Stars: David Haughton, Lou Antonio. (Premiere) (HOD LUCHA LIBRE 8:00 GD OB) © @9 BARNEY MILLER Realizing that he has passed the useful prime of his life, Barney finds his graceful transition into middle age hampered by the outspoken concern of his men. O ® © ® ® © QUINCY When the son of a long­ time friend dies of a drug overdose, Quincy teams up with a pre-med student to find the source of the illicit narcotics and stop the trafficking on campus. Guest star: Michael Constantine. (2 hrs.) (J) Q PALESTINE Part III. ‘Abdication’ This final episode in the documentary, which recounts the history of the era that led to the birth of the State of Israel, describes the political maneuvering and guerilla fighting that led to Israel’s declaration of independence in 1948, as Britain, finding Jewish and its irreconcilable, Arab responsibility and referred the territory to the U N. (90 mins.) ® © MARY TYLER MOORE 8:30 ® db © © SOAP Corinne gives birth to a healthy baby boy after only six weeks of pregnancy and Chester suddenly remembers who he is. abdicated demands S© BOB NEWHART SHOW © PASION ES ENCENDIDAS 9:00 ® ® © db © © FAMILY Kate has trouble keeping an open mind when her friend Joan accepts an invitation to visit, and casually moves into the guest house with Willie. (60 mins.) © ® O (0) BARNABY JONES After a daring attack on a wealthy businessman, Barnaby is asked to provide protection and gets an impressive look at the sophisticated devices of an ultra-modern security firm. (60 mins.) ® © MOVIE -(DRAMA-COMEDY) **V*t “ Change of Habit” 1969 Elvis Presley, Mary Tyler Moore. Three novitiates undertake to learn about the world by doing volunteer work at a ghetto clinic. (2 hrs., 30 mins.) ( I D © ELCHAVO 9:30 ® © SNEAK PREVIEWS This program reviews ’Movie Movie,’ ‘Ice Castles’ and ‘Same Time Next Year.’ ( I D © ROSALIA 10:00 ® ® © ® © ® © ® © © d b ( S ) f f i d 2 > © © NEWS DICK CAVETT SHOW VARIEDADES DE MEDIA NOCHE 8 10:30 ® ® © © STARSKY AND HUTCH-MANNIX Starsky And Hutch~‘l Love You, Rosey Malone’ involved with an Starsky becomes romantically underworld gangster’s daughter. (R.) Mannix- ‘Playground’ An egocentric movie star refuses to believe Mannix’s contention that someone is out to kill him. (R; 2 hrs., 15 mins.) © CD © ® © © THE TONIGHT SHOW Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Pete Fountain, Jimmy Grippo. (90 mins.) © ® © ( H ) CBS LATE MOVIE M A.S H.’ When the 4077th learns that General MacArthur himself is due to visit the camp, dreams of fame and fortune dance in everyone’s head. (R) ‘COLUMBO: Last Salute To The Commodore’ Stars: Peter Falk, Robert Vaughn. (R) ® © ABC CAPTIONED NEWS d b © ADAM 12 S© UNITED STATES PUBLIC POLICY © STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO (ID © 24 HORAS 11:00 11:30 ® © MAVERICK 12:00 © ® © .6} d$ © TOMORROW Host: Tom Snyder. Guest: William Spaulding, aerospace scientist. (60 mins.) (1 b © IRONSIDE dD PTLPROGRAM NIGHT GALLERY J ® I © PTL PROGRAM 9 © NEWS 12:30 12:45 1:00 © KMOL (N B C i San Antonio. Cable Channel 12 © K E N S fCBS) San Antonio. Cable Channel 11 © K L E N ( N B O , Tem ple, Cable Channe 6 © KTBC (CBS i Austin. Cable Channel 2 2 © R L R N (Public) Austin-S A , Cable Channel 8 CE) KWTX (CBS i Waco. Cable Channel 5 CD KTVT ( Ind I F o rt Worth. Cable Channel 9 © KSAT i ABC i San Antonio. Cable Channel 10 © Kl YE (ABC* Austin. Cable Channel 3 © R T W (NBC) Austin, Cable Channel 4 © KWEX (Spanish) San Antonio. Cable Channel 13 ACTV (Com C a b l e 1 Austin. Cable Channel 10 i m V K K M I ' V i lli 11:00 a.m. THE M IDDAY PROGRAM R STRAUSS "Le Bojrgeois Gentilhomme": Incidental Music 2; — S u i t e ; H E R B E R T : C e l l o C o n c e r t o No HERBERT/HAYMAN "Victor Herbert Favorites"; “A Set of Brass" Part 3 — Music of G Gabrieli; BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No 19 in g 1:00 p.m. THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM "Hussite Overture, HAYDN "The Queen of DVORAK France" Symphony No 85 in B Flat, MENDELSSOHN Voitn Concerto in d; SCHUBERT "The Great" Symphony No 9 rn C. TARTlNi Violin Concerto m E. Violin Concerto in F; CHOPIN The Mazurkas Pan 4 YSAYE Reve d’Enfant" VIEUXTEMPS "Ballade et Polonaise", "The Legacy of the Mannhe n School" Pan 1 — Symphony Concertante for T* 0 Violins and Orchestra by K Stamitz 5:00 p.m. DIVERTISSEM ENT 7:00 p.m. THE NEW RECORDS 8:00 p.m. AT YOUR REQUEST Listeners requests m il be ta*en at 472-1257 begnm ng at 6 p rn 11:00 p m THE M U SIC YOU WANT K I T * ! rn 6:00 a.m. EKLEKTIKOS with John Atelic in F, "American" Quartet IVES/SCHUMAN DVORAK "Meditation on Vanat'Ons on America; HOVHANESS Orpheus", GERSHWIN Concerto in F. RODGER "Lagoon" COWELL "Twilight"; CRESTON Midnight". GRIFFES The White Peacock," "The Pleasure Dome of Kubla Khan" BARBER “Vanessa" "Intermezzo" 9:00 a.m. A U STIN CITY C O UN CIL with Mike Wo-verton 12:00 p.m. OPTIO NS "I Have Loved England " The propaganda that brought America to England's aid in WWii is recalled 1:00 p.m. HO RIZONTES with Ana Otero 2:00 p.m. AUSTIN CITY C O U N C IL * th M *e Wo .ertor 5:00 p.m. ALL THING S CO NSIDER ED with Stabberg & Edwards 6:30 p.m. THE SPIDER'S WEB Choices Portraits of Ann Putnam Mary Easty a ' d Anne Royal) * Pan I 7:00 p.m. SECRETS OF SCOTLAND YARD 7:30 p.m. IN BLACK AM ERICA 7:56 p.m. STAR DATE “Groundhog Day " 8:0G p.m. JAZZ IN AUSTIN with (red Bourque 11:00 p.m. SOUL ON FM with Karol Nicks Bella Lewitzky is a strange and wonderful phenomenon, a rugged individualist in and American modem dance, a marvelously inventive choreographer, a stylist a dancer of remarkable discipline and authority. -— Los Angeles Times TFC TEXAS UNION CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE A m T M PARAMOUNT THEATRE PRESENT FIRST TIME OFFERED! lf you lilta poop!* and want a butin*ss af your awn, Fashion Two Twanty Cosmetics may ba th* answar. Thor* ara na Fro rn his* Foot, no territorial limits, and 1 0 0 % buy-bath guarantaad if you are not completely satisfied Company training and othor growth incentives included. Income should astond $15,000 first year. For appointment call (512) 444-1670. Ba n h /w ie r ic a r d 7 DUVAL CLEANERS 4220 Duval St. SHIRTS A JEANS LAUNDERED ALTERATIONS L B Texas Union Events January 29-February 4 A U WEEK VIDEOTAPES — "S u p e rsk ie rs" and "Stevie W onder/Wonderlove" in the 40 Acres Room from 2-7 p.m. daily and 4-8 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday in the Cactus Cafe. FEATURE OF THI MONTH in the Recreation Center is IO hours of bowling free with purchase of a Columbia White Dot bowling ball. MATCH PLAY PINBALL TOURNAMENT registration in the Recreation Center. Tour­ nament to be held on Saturday, February 3. For more information, call 471- 1944 STARTING FEBRUARY I CHALLENGE LADDERS for video football and pinball start today in the Recreation Center. Information and challenge rules available at the center desk. M O NDAY, JANUARY 29 DR. ROBERT COOKE, Director of Housing and Food, will answer questions as part of U T. Interaction Committee's Feedback Series. 3-4:30 p.m. in Texas Union 2.102. STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE will be shown at 3, 7, and 9:15 in the Union Theater. HISTORY OF BLACK HISTORY WEEK will be presented from 6:30-8:30 p.m. in Texas Union 3.116 to kick off Black History Month. Afro-Am erican Culture Com ­ mittee. PRO BOWL GAME on the Big Screen at 8 AFTER LEAGUE SPECIAL with 25* bowling from 10-midnight in the Recreation Ctr. TUESDAY, JANUARY 30 AFRICAN ASTRONOMY will be discussed by M r. Charles Wallace, Technical Staff Assistant in the Dept, of Physics from 3-5 p.m. in Texas Union 3.128. EAST OF IDEN in the Texas Union theater at 3 and 9 p.m. S1.25-UT. THE GENERAL UN I will be shown as part of the Soviet Film Series at 7 p.m. in the THE AFRICAN BEGINNING will be presented by Leland Jackson in Texas Union Union Theater. $1.25-UT. 3.116 at 7 p.m. DUPUCATI BRIDGE will be sponsored by the Recreation Center at Varsity Cafeteria, across from Jester Center. The sanctioned sessions begin at 7:30 p m. and cost 75* per person. CHICANO DISCO from 8 30-11:30 p.m. in the Texas Tavern. Dance to Polkas, Cumbias, R a n c h e rs, and Boleros. AFTER LEAGUE SPECIAL in the Recreation Center features 25‘ bowling from 10- midnight. o t h e r s . UT midnight WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31 THI LOWER DEPTHS will be shown at 3 and 7 p m in the Union Theater as part of the French Film Series S I 25-UT BLACK FILMS PRESENTATION in Texas Union 3.128 from 3-5 p.m. S i.25-UT, S m o ­ HISTORY OF BLACKS IN THE U S, MIUTARY will be discussed by Dr. Johnny Butler, Assistant Professor of Sociology at 7 p m in Texas Union 3.116. DISCO from 8 30-11 30 p rn. in the Texas Tavern with DJ Hunt Armistead. THI TWELVE CHAIRS will be shown at 8 30 and IO p m. in the Union Theater. $1 25- AFTER LEAGUE SPEGAL in the Recreation Center is 25* per gam e bowling from 10- THURSDAY, FEBRUARY I THI PRODUCERS will be shown at 3, 7, 8:45 and 10:30 p.m. in the Union AFTER LEAGUE SPECIAL in the Recreation Center is 25‘ per gam e bowling Theater. S I.25-UT. from 10-midnight. HISTORY OF BLACKS AT U.T. will be presented by Velm a G aines and M r s. A lm etris Duren, Special A ssista n t to the Dean of Students at 7 p.m. in Texas Union 3.116. M rs. D uren has written a book on the history of B la ck s at U T. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2 EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX will be shown at 7, 8:45, and 10:30 p m. in the Union Theater. S1.50-UT. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3 BOWL 3 gam es for $1 from ll a.rn.-6 p.m. in the Recreation Center. MATCH PLAY PINBALL TOURNAMENT begins at noon in the Recreation Center. SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT will be shown at 2, 3:45, 7, 8:30, and IO p.m. in the Union Theater. S1.50-UT. BOWLING FOR BUCKS begins at 8 p.m. in the Recreation Center. E n try fee of S2.50 covers lineage and prizes. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4 BOWL 3 gam es for SI from ll a.rn.-6 p.m. in the Recreation Center. OUVERI will be shown at 2 and 8 p.m. j ^ t h e Union Theater. S1.50-UT. P C K ET S: 56 75. 5.75. 475. 3.75 Paramount Box Office Mon-Fri. 12-6, 472-5340 Beginning Jan 22 Inner Sanctum Records, Disc Records (Highland Mall) CRL Hogg wiB be charged general admission P C K ET S: 54 75. 3.75 with CEC LD No checks accepted. Box Office, Mon-Fri, 10-6. 471 -1444 Those who fail to present C E C I D. For residency information, call 471-5319 ______ _____ 472-5411 713 Congress P Q * * * * through ttw oI the N n o n a i Endow m ent ta, th< A m jn d the Te«*» C o m m * * o n o r the Aru and Hum anities S1.50-UT. GRADUATING MECHANICAL ENGINEERS ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS AND PHYSICISTS A Career With Vector Cable Is For You Consider the advantages we have to offer you excellent salary, generous benefits, career advancement, stabili­ ty exciting challenges, corporate growth, and the ex­ citing dynamic lifestyle of Houston We can offer these advantages for a few simple reasons. The Vector Cable Company is an international leader in the manufacture of high quality cables and underwater It is also a subsidiary of Sehlumberger, one connectors of the largest international companies in the world Vec­ tor Cable plays an integral part of Sehlum berger operations through the supply of customized electro­ mechanical cables This all adds up to the sue to insure stability, the activity to insure growth, the specialized requirements to insure challenge, and the opportunity to insure advanceent selection of e n te rta in m e n t a n d O u t S u g a r La n d taxation it o n Tho frin g e of H o u s t o n , tho n a tio n t fa tte tt g r o w in g c o sm o p o lita n city. It effort yo u a va st recrea tiona l e x ­ p eriences u n e q u a lle d in the state. Disco d a n c in g until d a w n , C o tto n l y e Joe at G ille y s, a n d a n e v e n in g ©f o p e ra a re o n ly a fe w of tho choices o p e n to you. DON T LET THIS OPPORTUNITY PASS YOU BYI ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS] Thurt., Fab. I & Fri., Fab. 2 Cockrell Hall VECTOR Sehlumberger Vector/Sehlumberger 555 Industrial Rd. Sugar Land, TX 77478 MT* A s * An I aval O p p * * 'u n ify im p i* y * 8 - N * c ' * TOMORROW NIGHT * ELVIN BISHOP!! and Austin’s own WOMMACK BROTHERS * FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 2nd * BUGS HENDERSON GROUP ★ SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3rd * An Evening With JERRY JEFF WALKER ★ SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4th ★ Jazz With CARLA BLEY BAND S25V2 BAR TON S P R IN G S R D . 4 7 7 - 9 7 6 * SteamLoat Springs presents mon CLOSED tu es-w ed-th u rs I BUCKBOARD I BOOGIE BOYS fri-sat TRAVELER EVERY M ON. NIGHT IN FEB. WE WILL FEATURE TNK AUSTIN ALL-STARS. EVERY TUES. NIGHT WE WILL FEATURE THI LOTIONS. tues*wed-thurs nights 95' BAR DRINKS = = I = | I | I | 7115 Burnet Rd. La Promenade 459-4318 MONDAY LADIES' NIGHT Free Cocktail for all unescorted ladies. 8 p . rn.-I 2 a n d no cover. 6 5 2 8 N. L A M A R 453-9205 tdovish iii Median is message ‘Lou Grant’ Okay, that's a p r in t.” — Cecil B DeMille NEW YORK (API) — Informed sources say that Rockefeller. 70, had been spending his last few years working on his fabulous art collection - enough for IO museums, the loot of the world Cost: No man can say Then, last week, as it must to all men. death came to Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller. C am era pulls to night shot o f R o ck efeller Plaza; film , sound w ind down as c a m e r a dollies 180 degrees; cuts to screening room interior and slow roll to MCU on m an, center. MAN: It s a good short. Thompson All it needs is an angle. All we saw on that screen was Charles Foster Kane is dead I know that. I read the papers.” Lap dissolve. The film is “Citizen Kane RKO, 1941. The man is Mr Rawlings, a maker of newsreels, and Thompson is his star reporter. The character of Kane is either a letter- bomb to the Hearst legacy or a suicide note from Welles And not many people remember it, but Nelson Rockefeller was both the progenitor and private assassin of the project. It was Rockefeller the puppeteer who balanced his friend George J Schaefer at the top of a dy­ ing RKO. peering into the abyss of blood-red ledger sheets. And it was Rocky who spotted Welles far ago on the stage, who saw the sheer corpulence of the boy’s genius, and urged his friend to stock up on salvation Later, when the Hearst empire was threatening the swift and wicked wrath of retribution, Rockefeller cancelled the film’s New York debut at Radio City Music Hall and urged Schaefer to sell it to Louis B. Mayer, MGM head, who headed a group putting up $850,000 to destroy all prints and negatives. The film managed to wade into existence, but Schaefer was squeezed lifeless in a power press, the war with the world saw Welles drawn dry, and Rockefeller moved on to the less demanding business of buying South America. THE POINT of this drama is its geometry. By darken­ ing the lines of force, watching as the parallels and arrows and angles come to converge, a pattern is reveal­ ed. There is a sculpture in the scenario; a message sketched in vectors. Citizen Kane was full-blown studio cinema, a persecution by the New Order of an aging and toothless medium — printing plates worn smooth from decades of invective. But it was a film which framed big chunks of best-sellers - a biography titled Im p e r ia l H earst that got them sued, and Dos Passos’ U S A., a film done ex­ clusively by radio actors, and a director with a theater background. This was a film which, despite all its pretense of truth and gilt-edged integrity, was founded in the blackest depths of yellow journalism. It was to be a hatchet job on one of the keepers of the national consciousness, a land­ mine centered squarely in screaming bold headlines and four-star smear tactics; a film which d e m a n d e d con­ troversy. But then, Citizen Kane’’ had very little to do ultimate­ ly with the newspaper. It is a film about film. And from those opening segments which contrast traditions of mon­ tage Expressionism and documentary Realism, to the closing reflection that “I don’t think any word can explain a man s life,’ Kane is a concentric study in psychology a bundle of contradictions that finally hones in on a core of compressed truth so vapid and cloud-like by profession, that its only learned reflex is to dissipate, and leave the il- usion and residue that film is trained to provide. This is the fire “Lou Grant” was conceived in — the V- 2s spraying London, with “Tender Is the Night” still play­ ing somewhere on a confused Wurlitzer. The newspaper industry has grown withered and grey on a generation of ronkite smiles and “People” magazine, on minicams and Telstar. EVERYTHING ABOUT “Lou Grant” is stained with newsprint. The cast are all by-lines stylized from The Washington Post. Joe Rossi has dyed his hair a basic Bernstein black; he is the brash fast-talker, a Hilty charm fused through trial by Watergate. Billie Newman is a perky young Sally Quinn, and Charlie Hume is the fair and partly cloudy M.E. with Ben Bradlee’s reflection and a Jason Robards spirit - and the artful Donovan comes off a three-piece progeny of Hedley Donovan, the editor of Time. And the elegant asserted graced of'the publisher 'Notes on the Wasteland' By P A U L C U L L U M Mrs Pynchon are gently drawn from the social animal Katherine Graham. The plot lines are jumped straight from the front page banners, picked up in a matter of weeks like stories con­ tinued from Page I. They played tile Silk wood case la Kerr-McGee employee allegedly killed rn conjunction with industry abuses she planned to leak) after N ew T im e s broke it, but before it got big press play. One show which has Rossi going to jail to protect his source in a prescription-racket story breeds the Peter Bourne Quaaludes-in-the-Cabinet scandal with the Myron Farber N e w Y o rk T im e s martyrdom Another, where a Nicaraguan official comes military shopping and generates both pro- and anti-protest, mixes the Somoza travesty with the shah’s last arrival at the White House THERE IS A BASIC prejudice against electronic news that comes from 20 years of typing life on an old Crown manual. Maybe the mechanics are coded genetically in flakes of iron that travel up through the fingertips and outstretched arms to lodge in the brain. But television absorbs its share of cheap abuse A press conference by a distraught widow is imploded as the TV sound van drives up late. The mike-man apologizes, Sorry — we had to go back for a piece of equipment,” and someone asks “ A hairdryer?” He is finally called on by the widow and poses, “ Are you suffering a nervous breakdown0’ Everything is cosmetics and shock reduc­ tionism. Citizen Kane’ The show s intentions are obvious. It deals categorical­ ly with problems of or about the news industry. By ad­ dressing these appealingly, it would like to parachute into television disgust and regain its rightful throne. These are tactics; TV taking a reading on the Newspaper, only as a conspiracy to focus the rage back on itself. The difference is that newspapers are millions of individual characters, strung in lines and columns to tell a story. Television is one single band of radio waves circling the earth. The attitude that would fall for a trick like that comes strictly out of print. Such days have been put to bed You don’t get fooled again. STORIES CENTER on the primacy of deadlines and off-the-record,” but there is the same old bias against anything but hard news. Corporate ownership of the press is called on ethics, without acknowledging the ruling of the industry by the dozen major chains. Feature spreads are given to the plight of the veteran or life in the ghetto, without ever admitting that such treatments ease nothing except the conscience of America. In a piece on the American Nazi Party, Lou gets to hold the First Amendment near and dear to his heart, but the speech he gives is so gripping and dripping with pathos that it reveals itself for blatant tear-jerk melodrama. When a “routine murder” is dropped from the budget, up­ roar sees it finally returned to the pages, not once realiz­ ing it as the exclusive terrain of front-page layout. The point is hammered home in a fascinating episode on a plane whose landing gear fails. Almost all action takes place at the airport. Rossi calls the story back to the newsroom as it breaks, while they hold the front page. But when the plane finally approaches the runway, the setting shifts back to the newsroom, and we see it reported as an actual newspaper story. The plane lands safely, and the story is killed. THE POINT EMPHASIZED is the goodness of the press — the relief of tragedy being averted. Lying just beneath that is an admission that the newspaper actually thrives on death and grief; if these people’s human souls teach them a repulsion to such a tenet, their professional ones tell them to pursue it, and with ghoulish blood-lust relish'.’ ‘ *“ '• * * >•- * * ■ w ednesday television listings 21 6 OO 6 £ b? n I w< O © i i \% © N EW S 2 3 4 © 8 O FO O TSTEPS Two to Get Ready An expectant father has problem s d e a lin g with his teenage closed-m feelings about his wife s pregnancy, until he is made to realize how much she needs him to share her feelings 9 CD B E W IT C H E D 10 © N E W LY W E D G A M E 13 GD LA S E N O R A DE C A R D E N A S 6 30 I CE) 11 PRICE IS R IG H T i O D D C O U P LE 12 11 96 B E A U T Y C O N T E S T N EW S M A R Y TYLE R M O ORE O 6 H O G A N 'S H ER O E S 8 O M A C N E IL LE H R E R R EP O R T 9 QD I D R E A M OF JE A N N IE 10 © W ILD K IN G D O M 7 0 0 3 CE) IO CB © E IG H T IS E N O U G H W h e n 2 lig h tn in g fla s h e s , th u n d e r c la p s a n d th e p o w e r fa ils , th e B ra d fo rd c h ild re n u s e th e ir v iv id im a g in a tio n s to tra n s fo rm th e o ld h o m e s te a d in to a h a u n te d h o u s e (60 m in s .) O 4 p 6 1 2 © R IN G L IN G B R O S A N D B A R N U M A N D B A IL E Y C IR C U S D an ny K a y e is th e h o s t o f th is te le v is io n e d itio n o f The G re a te s t S h o w On E arth, in c lu d in g a n im a l fe a tu rin g a c ts fro m 20 c o u n tr ie s , tr a in e r G u n th e r G e b e l-W illia m s , R u d i L e n z w ith h is c h im p s , and tra m p o lin e a rtis t C a n e s tre lli. (60 m in s .) © 5 O 11 THE IN C R E D IB LE H U L K B a n n e r g e ts c a u g h t in th e c ro s s fire w h e n a d o p e p u s h e r trie s to s ile n c e a re fo rm in g p re a c h e r. (60 m in s .) 8 O G R E A T P E R F O R M A N C E S V a n e s s a ’ T h is 1978 S p o le to F e s tiv a l p e rfo rm a n c e o f A m e ric a n c o m p o s e r S a m u e l B a rb e r s P u litz e r P riz e -w in n in g o p e ra fe a tu re s th e lib re tto by G ia n C a rlo M e n o tti w h ic h te lls th e s to ry o f an a g in g b e a u ty w h o p a n ic s as h e r y o u th fa d e s . J o h a n n a M e ie r s in g s th e title ro le . (2 h rs .) 9 CD G U N S M O K E 13 GD V IV IA N A 13 CD L A C A R A B IN A DE A M B R O S IO 7:30 8:00 2 3 CE) 10 C B © C H A R L IE ’ S A N G E L S T h e A n g e ls g e t jo b s in a s e a s id e d is c o w h e re s e v e ra l d is a d ­ v a n ta g e d m en w e re s e e n b e fo re b e in g m u rd e re d . (60 m in s .) 0 4 1 2 © W E D N E S D A Y N IG H T A T TH E M O VIES Viva K m e v e l S ta rs : E vel K n ie v e l, L a u re n H u tto n . Sm ugglers plan to s a b o ta g e E ve l K n ie v e l's m o to r­ cycle jump in Mexico in o rd e r to s m u g g le c o c a in e into the U n ite d S ta te s by s ta s h in g it in th e d a re d e v il's c o ffin (2 h rs .) 0 5 0 11 O N E DAY AT A T IM E J u lie m is ta k e s a te a c h e r 's h e a vy c ritic is m to be th e s u m m a tio n o f he r w o rth 9 CD M A R Y TYLER M O O R E 13 CD N O C H E S T A P A T IA S 8 30 0 5 0 11 THE JE F F E R S O N S W h e n G e o rg e and L o u is e m e e t F lo re n c e ’ s in te n d e d , th e y w o rry th a t he m ay b e to o g o o d to be tru e . 9 CD B O B N E W H A R T S H O W 13 CD P A S IO N E S E N C E N D ID A S fu n d s fro m h is c o n s titu e n ts , a nd 9:00 2 3 CE) 10 CB © V E G A J Dan g o e s a fte r th e k ille rs o f h is b e s t frie n d , w h o w a s a c h ie f o f a lo c a l In d ia n tr ib e , u n a w a re th e v ic tim ’ s g ra n d s o n a rra n g e d th e s la y in g . (60 m in s .) O 5 O 11 K A Z A p o w e rfu l c o u n c ilm a n w h o o n c e h e lp e d Kaz w h e n he w as in le g a l tr o u b le , is c h a rg e d w ith b ilk in g th e la w y e r is p u t in th e a w k w a rd p o s itio n o f in v e s tig a tin g th e o ffic ia l. (60 m in s .) 8 O N A T IO N A L G E O G R A P H IC H o n g K o n g : A F a m ily P o rtr a it’ T he C h in e s e life s ty le is in tim a te ly e x p e rie n c e d th ro u g h th e e y e s o f th e L e o n g fa m ily . T h e p ro g ra m c o n c e n tra te s o n th e v a lu e s th a t are im p o rta n t th e C h in e s e c u ltu r e s u c h as w o rk , fa m ily , lu c k . w o rs h ip a nd fo o d . (60 m in s .) 9 CD MO VIE -(A D V E N T U R E ) ~ " F ly in g M is fits " 1976 R o b e rt C o n ra d . S im o n O a k la n d S to ry o f W o rld W ar ll fig h te r p ilo t, P a p p y B o y in g to n a n d h o w he tu rn e d a b u n c h o f w ild , g irl-c h a s in g tro u b le m a k e rs in to w a r a c e s k n o w n as th e ‘ B la c k S h e e p S q u a d ro n .’ (2 h rs ., 30 m in s .) 13 CD MI S E C R E T A R Y to 13; CD R O S A LIA N E W S ® -4 ° 8 Q DICK C A V E TT SHO W 13 CD V A R IE D A D E S DE M E D IA N O C H E 5 2) (3 CE) © PO LIC E W O M A N -M A N N IX P o lic e W o m a n - P a ra d is e M a ll’ B ru c e B o x ie itn e r g u e s t s ta rs as a p rim e s u s p e c t in a s e rie s o f m u r d e rs o f y o u n g In b lo n d e w o m e n . (R) M a n n ix - ‘ T h e O th e r G a m e 9 30 10.00 10:30 © KMOL (NBG) San Antonio. Cable Channel 1 2 © K E N S (('BS> San Antonio, Cable Channel 11 © K O E N (NBC ), Tem ple, Cable Channe 6 O KTBC (CBS ) Austin, Cable Channel 2 2 © KLRN (Public) Austin-S A . Cable Channel 8 © KW TX (CBS) Waco, Cable Channel 5 © KTVT (Ind ) Fort Worth, Cable Channel 9 © KSAT (ABC) San Antonio, Cable Channel 10 © KUVE (ABC) Austin, Cable Channel (3 © KTVV (NBC) Austin. Cable Channel 4 CB KWEX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel T3 ACTV (Com Cablet Austin, Cable Channel 10 7-10 d rn M F a id io KM EV fin 11:00 a.m. THE MIDDAY PROGRAM SCHUBERT: Overture in D, Symphony No. 1 in D, "Quartet Movement" String Quartet No. 12 in c, Piano Sonata in C, D. 840; "A Set of Brass": Part 2 — Music of A. Gabriel!; CIMAROSA: Symphonic Concertante in G for Two Flutes and Orchestra; DEBUSSY: "Sacred and Profane Dances" for Harp and String Orchestra 1:00 p.m. THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM in d; BEETHOVEN: MENDELSSOHN: "Ruy Blas": Overture; SCHUMANN: Violin "W ellington’s Victory” ; Concerto SCHUBERT: "Unfinished" Symphony No. 8 in b; NIELSEN: Symphony No 1 in g; "Italian Baroque Violin Sonatas": Part 2 — Music of Tartini and B. Marcello; SCHUBERT: Piano Sonata in c, D 958. Piano Trio No. 2 in E Flat. Encores 5:00 p.m. DIVERTISSEMENT 7:00 p.m. GREAT PERFORMANCES Live broadcast. Simulcast with KLRN-TV, Channel 9 BARBER "Vanessa" (English libretto by Gian Carlo Menotti). Opera won Pulitzer Prize 10:00 p.m. AT YOUR REQUEST Listeners’ requests will be taken at 472-1257 beginning at 6 p.m. 11:00 p.m. THIS IS MODERN MUSIC HAUBENSTOCK-RAMATI: "Mobile” String Quartet No. 1; URBANNER: Third String Quartet; LIGETI: String Quartet NO 2; BROWN: String Quartet. Kl n*fm 6:00 a.m. EKLEKTIKOS with John Aielli MENDELSSOHN: Symphony No. 1 in c, Op. 11; DOHNANYI: Variations on a Nursery Tune, Op. 25, Concerto No. 2 in b, Op 42, Serenade in C, Op. 10; MOZART: Concerto No. 23 in A, K 488; JANACEK: "Taras Bulba"; HAYDN: "The Bear” Symphony No. 82 in C. 11:00 a.m. READING ALOUD with Bill Cavness Martin Chuzzlewit" by Charles Dickens, episode 54 11:30 a.m. PERFORMING ARTS PROFILE 12:00 p.m. OPTIONS IN EDUCATION with John Morrow ' Profile of a Junior High School Principal.” “ Profile of a High School Principal." 1:00 p.m. HORIZONTES 3:00 p.m . A ESTA HORA CONVERSAMOS con Alicia Santelices y Beatriz Beltran Entrevistas en espanol. 3:35 p.m. TEXAS WEEKLY with Bill Anderson 4:00 p.m. FROM THEs MIDWAY Cur/ent Political Situation in Italy ” "Eurocommunism in Soain.’1 ' * * ' 5:00 p.m. ALL THINQS CONSIDERED with Stamberg & Edwards 6:30 p.m. THE SPIDER’S WEB “ Brother Blue. Pygmalion." 7:00 p.m. DETECTIVE SERIES: JOHNNY DOLLAR The old-time mystery series is rebroadcast. Tonight, get steamed over “ The Evaporated Clue Matter.” 7:30 p.m. LATIN AMERICAN REVIEW 7:58 p.m. STAR DATE “A Moon With an Atmosphere ” 8:00 p.m. ACCESS with John Hanson "Shoplifting." 9:05 p.m. JAZZ ALIVE!! "Bill Evans & Trio." Pianist Evans, bassist Mark Johnson and drummer Philly Joe Jones were recorded at Grand Parade du Jazz in Nice, France, in July 1977. Saxophonists Lee Konitz and Stan Getz and trombonist Curtis Fuller also play 11:00 p.m. SOUL ON FM: EXPANSIONS with Craig Jackson & Rudy Green Wednesday, January 31, 1979 in T o w n R ic h L ittle g u e s t s ta rs as a L a s V e g a s c o m ic in v o lv e d th e m y s te rio u s d is a p p e a ra n c e o f a g a m b le r (R; 2 h rs ., 15 m in s .) 12 © TH E T O N IG H T S H O W H o s t; O 4 O 6 J o h n n y C a rs o n . G u e s ts : R o d n e y D a n g e rfie ld , S te ve L a w re n c e (90 m in s .) G 5 O 11 C B S LA TE M O VIE T H E R O C K FO R D FILE S R e s u rre c tio n In B la ck A n d W h ite A w rite r h ire s R o c k fo rd to h e lp h e r fre e a m an s h e s c o n ­ (R) v in c e d K O J A K : T he G o d s o n ' S ta rs : T e lly S a va la s, K e v in D o b s o n . (R) 8 O A B C C A P T IO N E D N EW S 10 © A D A M 12 in n o c e n t o f k illin g h is g ir lfr ie n d . is 10 © S TR E E T S OF S A N F R A N C IS C O 13 © 24 H O R A S (9 © M A V E R IC K 12:00 O GD O C l) © © T O M O R R O W H o s t: T om S n y d e r. G u e s ts : J o h n S a lo r and G a rth A n c ie r, tw o p o p u la r c o lle g e ta lk s h o w h o s ts . (60 m in s .) I G © IR O N S ID E © J I ) PTL P R O G R A M (9 ; © N IG H T G A L L E R Y ( 3 ) © P TL P R O G R A M ( 9 ) © N EW S 11:00 11:30 12:30 12:45 1:00 TV C O M P U lO C SERV ICES IMC E m m y a n d P e a b o d y a w a rd s w in n e r D a n n y K a y e , w h o has been d e s c rib e d as " a n o u ts ta n d in g a r t is t in th e w o r ld , " w ith th e g r e a te s t y o u th fo llo w in g jo in s c ir c u s s ta r s fr o m m o r e th a n 20 c o u n tr ie s as h o st o f th e a ll-n e w " H i g h li g h t s o f R in g lin g B ro s , an d B a r n u m a n d B a ile y C ir c u s " W e d n e s d a y on N B C -T V . G O U L E T 0?Y\fcLFTTt5 ******* pc K IP P S * fo o ts • V r t p w t o a s t * OPEN 7: OO A M -9 :0 0 P M **04 MKS. AU9TIW IWP! A* J - , Mi 20 Tuesday. January 30, 1079 6:00 ( 3 3 © © ( 3 ) © © n e w s OVER EASY Host: Hugh Downs. Guest: Allan Jones BEWITCHED NEWLYWED GAME LA SENORA CARDENAS 6'30 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES ODD COUPLE GONG SHOW NEWS NAME THAT TUNE MARY TYLER MOORE HOGAN’S HEROES GDO MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT ( S O ) I DREAM OF JEANNIE ( B I O SHA NA NA 7:00 GD (33 © © O © HAPPY DAYS Fonzie delivers a lesson in handling affairs of the heart when Richie lies to Lorie Beth about dating a pretty baton tw irler. v*s> Sp WINTER BOOT & SHOE SALE 15°/ > fir * * C ontek : s50 14 j cm •rn.'. k x » ^AAC L cU / S o tiv u /o y • y * NEW YORK 5 HYLE w ith AVOUCH OF MEWYORK STYLE WITH A TOUCH OF L A D IE S i I CONTEST n e m u tao CMM T V TMI W M M tft GAME ROOM - Pool, pinball & electric Kames 14 Howard’s creator ducks out; feathers may fly 15 and Howard temporarily ukes on human form He reverts to his normal body, and gets rid of Dr Bong for a while Then there follows a quick succession of brisk, action issues “II You Knew Soofis,” where Howard saves the country from a rampaging pack of Anita Bryant clones who are out to cleanse our minds, not only of smut, bul Of all emotions whatsoever. “Sudd,” the story of a huge, poisonous scrubbing bubble which sets out to clean up the streets of crime, evil and filth, forcing Howard to judge the limits of legitimate censorship, and probably best of all. “Star Waaughs,” an absolutely brilliant satire on the sci fi film. wherein Howard is reunited with Man-Thing and Dakimh. and they set off to attack the Impenum Em­ porium. or the Death Store, a hotbed of crass commer­ cialism spreading its tentacles throughout the cosmos Right after Star Waaughs.” Howard goes into a deep depression, a let-down period after all the action of the last few issues, an extension of the emotional vacuum that produced the non-issue,” No 16. and was sup­ pressed during the action issues This is true not only for Howard who had no time to worry, but also for Gerber, who had no space to work out emotional issues It must have been somewhere in here that the decision was made that Steve Gerber and Howard the Duck would be parting ways Howard's depression lasts through issue 26 at which point the magazine goes from monthly to bi­ monthly publication, and Marvel assigns Jim Shooter as consulting editor (the first time since HTD No. 8 that anyone but Gerber had recieved editing credit). Marvel seems to be trying very hard to construct a positive image for the magazine's future, but public relations is no substitute for writing skill Moreover, the company's reluctance to support Steve Gerber's in­ novative moves indicates that they are moving toward a more conservative format. I don t think Howard is going to like that very much. It won t ever make it into the S e w York Retnew of Books, but it must rank as one of the major upheavals in the American literary scene during the past year Officially, as of the latest issue (No 30), Steve Gerber is no longer writing or editing ‘ Howard the Duck ” Marvel Comics will survive, even HTD will continue. with new writers But it won t be the same, and the un­ iverse will be a lesser place hereafter Under Steve Gerber's editorship. “ Howard the Duck ’ had developed into a truly unique comic book, built around three central elements an improbable hero, the surreal social satire of Gerber's scripts and a willingness to experiment with the medium — to vary the format to fit the structure of the material HOWARD HIMSELF IS a cynical, preposterous duck whose main pleasure in life lies in smoking cheap cigars — an existential loner whose strong sense of personal morality is balanced by an even stronger sense of self- preservation; he is usually more concerned with survival and staying out of trouble, than with righting cosmic wrongs. But by far his strongest point is the way he accepts — nay, embraces — the absurd, dressing it in a healthy amount of despair and overwhelming self-doubt The same qualities seem to apply to Steve Gerber s writing. Gerber is a man who has long since dispensed with all distinctions between art and artist For all his complaints about alienation in this world of strange hairless apes, Howard is perhaps the most human character ever to appear in a comic book The relationship between Howard and his creator is so close that we can trace the connection between Howard s adventures within the comic, and the development of the magazine's style and format. HIS DEBUT CAME IN 1173 in “ Man-Thing,” No I., and he followed that up in several other Gerber mags Then, after a couple of months spent falling through a dimen­ sional void, he landed in, of all places — “Cleveland! How could a place possess so eerie ami evil a name, and not be possessed by demons?” There he battles Garko, the Man- Frog, and Hellcow, a bovine vampire. A month later, in January 197b, he appeared for the first time in his own magazine This is something of a turning point for Steve and Howard. HTD No. I opens with Howard’s first soliloquy, a sign that Gerber is already developing a way to voice the issues which he would develop throughout the run of the comic book. Another key development is the first use of social sym­ bolism to define the villains. Howard finds Bev, who will turn out to be the main love interest in the series, in a tower built of credit cards, and must battle Pro-Rata, who wants to become Chief Accountant of the universe, using his dread weapon the Cosmic Calculator. Howard’s earlier antagonists were more or less conventional (other than being comical), with no direct social or political significance. IN THE EARLY ISSUES, we meet several characters who will reappear later, and at least two failed artists, who seem more than a little similar to Gerber. “Four Feathers of Death” is a fine parody of the popular TV series “Kung-Fu,” with Howard as “Pondhopper.” Paul Same, an artist specializing in unfinished works, represses his frustrations and finds an outlet in the in­ credible somnambulant violence which he unleashes against his apartment building. Most of Gerber’s creative energy over much of the next year went toward organizing Howard’s presidential cam­ paign. Unfortunately, those less scrupulous than himself involved themselves in last-minute skullduggery and, some say, fowl play, which ultimately cost him an elec­ tion he had all but won. WHICH BRINGS US TO what is probably the pivotal issue in the series; No. 16, “Zen and the Art of Comic Book Writing.” There has probably never been an issue like that before, nor will there ever be again. It is an es­ say — Gerber’s description of the angst which has kept him from preparing this month’s issue — presented as a dialogue between Steve and Howard, as they drive across the country together on their way to Las Vegas. Hie characterizations are sharp and convincing, even with very little accompanying artwork (mostly abstract backgrounds). Gerber’s prose is direct, effective, and yet entertaining, combining humor with a refreshing feeling of openness and honest reflection. But most impressive is the sheer audacity of the concept itself, the defiance of the standard conventions of comic book format. IF THIS ISSUE represents a formal peak for HTD, it probably also marks the beginning of the end for Gerber at Marvel. Still, the next few issues are among his finest. There is a two-issue story wherein Bev marries Dr. Bong, 07148602415607 Above, Howard is in the spotlight again with friends and enemies on the same bill. Right, in No. 29, the duck suc­ cumbs to a mallardy. Far right, in No. 24, the feathered philosopher faces mean streets and meaner people. ii, S h *■ f> ■ # ' » .» k ’ * ' » » » - « * * >■ a % * * < » K « ' • % *