n 31 M yol. 73, No.118 Ten Cents Please Recycle This Newspaper •*yi*ur < '4-U 4 Ml iSsaSvsssVsezsi xi ' nlJ9Qpc^f^ xoff •*93ua0 ajmx%fj i^*?53 Resolved WASHINGTON (AF) - Senate, "Republican Leader Hugh Scott said Mon­By RICHARD FLY day the largest obstacle to an end of the Strip mining is%cheapest way to reacfc ^percent o| the energyit consumes? , .JiTexan Staff Writer' W Arab oil embargo has been removed with' co^dep^ts.' ,, ^; he is "optimistic that we be used either for developing alternative^Some environmental guidelines migfit :;Asked if the federal government has could become self-sufficient within a energy sources or as a rebate to oil com*, the signing of the Israeli-Egyptian dis? ! shovedaside for a short time sothe na-^ Considered reducing the limitq on, decade." igagement agreement, '' panies for exploration. may deal with the energy crisis, automobile emissionsand lead in gajwline, Asked if it might not be to After attending a 90*minute briefing by ^ Upon his return to Washington, Simon k federal Energy Chief William Simon said Secretary of StatesHenry A. Kissinger, Simon said, "We are discussing the enpkeiiminate only one-half of the •hm-tftill will meet with Secretary of State Hpnry along with other Republican and '"-onmental impact" of such measu^."1 between domestic siumly aM ctefwrnd, " Democratic congressional leaders, Scottfederal government is preparing replied, "'I would hopeihtt gW*&tiie iriscoes Energy Advisory Council laid theagreement wasa hopeful sign that an environmental impact statement" on portunity we wouldn't go just halfway The energy chief was in Houston earty esponded to their question in a Senate "constructive progress" has been made. oil exploration on the Continental Shetf,'||p:: Referring to the rising price of gas and onday to address the National Associa­ f ^phamber packed with legislators, press Simon said. . . is^eating oil Simon said, "We are not going tion of Homebuilders. While in Austin he HOWEVER, he would not predict when s.Ife'Jttidc-"spectators.r^:r r -.u Of immediate importance, he said, "is to allow the price to go to what I call an met with Briscoe and Texas railroad com* the Arabs might resume oil shipments to: f 1^1 Suggestions f„ ^„2fg %^ganization^in Washington, D.C., emoUonal level. missioness^jrtJ as the adviswy couih the United States. The exports were cut , ^£ris.is such as massive strip mining for which places the-suhiecL ofienerev under "It is maA mnn. «..if»hi® . — off to.protest U.S. policy, toward Israel. ~ ---%-t--^ £>f1coal, use of high-sulfur.eoa>, stepped «3ftOTB«2eo"r' *****W ^£™ker stiff opposition reduce energy demand, ' > Price regulations will Work to maintain didate, issued a press release Monday say­ ^premature."­ — " — . ' • -y. "M. "The facLthat we have 6 percent of the "this' reasonable level, he added. ing, "While calling on the consumers to IP"Lifting of all oil measuresisstill linked But Simon* indicated thiftaTtfibugb en-world's population using 35 percent of the ; Simon said an increase in year-end oil make sacrifices, Mr. Simon made no to Israeli withdrawal from occupied.Arat^fltfronmental concerns have their place, world's energy is awaste. We must havea company inventories "shows we succeed­recommendation whatever to curb ex« .^energy needs must take priority, « P f- territories and the restoration of the change in lifestyles and forge a new ed in decreasing demand through the cessive profits by the oil companies. , £\-l> He specified that limits on the us#1 til national rights of the Palestinian people," energy ethic," Simon said.-fourth quarter of last year." It is incumbent thatthe federalgovern* Kuwait Foreign Minister Sabah el-Ahmed S-Vhigh sulfur coahmust be set aside "in flie The nation needs to become self-Moreover, he said,"We're going tohave develop an independent fact-finding said in __an, interview in the Beirut^­sufficient in energy, the goal of a federal a comprehensive verifiable data system" agency to look into this problem (informa* newspaper A1 Rai alAam. ^=&>; Likewise,~rhe" hirited tliat coritiW dn" program called Project Independence, he to keep trafk of available supply and de­Uon on reserves) and not simply swallOvr ifeitrip mining might be loosened because of, Wid. mand. •• / what the oil companies tell us," Bales William Simon Scott of Pennsylvania and Majority g ^|heabundance of coal in the UnitedStates. TheUnited States currently produces85 Simon also indicated that mon^ raised said. energy chief. Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont,, told iH reporters after the Kissinger briefing that there were "no secret agreements" and ­that the United States acted in the.Middle* A« East solely as a go-between, Council KISSINGER briefed the President and m then 16 congressional leaders from both y jsw; sSL 71 w Minority Student Recruitment Amendment Rejected parties within hours after his predawtiThough University Young return from an 11-day, 15,600-mile * • Republicans (YRs) support Presi­By CHERRY JONES * THE COUNCIL rejected the original, more strongly u Affairs Committee report calling for establishment of diplomatic mission in.the Middle East. dent Nixon, an advertisement in Texan Staff Writer worded am«idment that would have allowed discrimina­new minority recruitment programs and expansion of ex­ Scott said that the disengagement '* their publication, The Banner, was tion ta isting ones, including Project Info. te University Council Monday approved a proposed favor of mlnorlty ^"P8 "wher^ Past ^crimina­ agreement ''has the virtue that neither I not quite in keeping with their tion mandates remedial measures under^tfte spirit or A special meeting to discuss financial aid and support amendment to the regental rule prohibiting discrimina­ side will be so strong or so placed as to be political beliefs. " letter of federal or state law." services for minority students 4s scheduled for 2 p.m. tion but rejected an amendment endorsing affirmative likely to resume a confrontation.^ Monday in the Joe Ci Thompson Conference Center. >. The advertisement from a local action in minority, recruitment. " Hie final, compromise version ol the pi-oposed amend­ stereo store published in the ment was adopted after much debate. Severaltcouncil University President Stephen Spurr opened the meeting^ Mansfield slaid congressional leaders ' January issue of The Banner, claim-CB^The prbposed amendment was part of a report from the members said they agreed with the intent of the rejected ' with comments on his recommendation to the chancellor would return to the White House Wednes­ ed that "If the Presidenthadfais^ 7 council's gd hoc Miiwrity Affairs Committee suggesting tape recorder serviced" at Circle " -metlmfe ul improving-minority .representation e meeting early for health reasons: legislative package Nixon plans to present IUniversity. • •••• -"'•••v Stereo, there would be no. gaps in to cope, with fuel and"gasoline shortage! SPURR said faculty pay raises had those tapes,^ L brought on by the oil embargo. -**-— f coMMrrrEE u, — priority in budget requests to th% Board of Regents this . ,-Thep p^bM^. statffi jhatjts JiilQio incjude minority, recruitment as well as informa-^i tw Board of Regents has Mpported tWs, WHEN, IO&Vfi^iritM,?ear^ advertisers may not tecessarily dispersaulso wa? approved,B&t letfefcon proposaft part ParkAr iPWbier tHeXegislature h^ not, sfeen fiJ. to support twexceptlor -agree witH its editorial policies; nid„nH aunrvirt ^^^ri^^p|g^laWi^dKpSoftheapproved^S-^e34P^^cwtB^boardincr^ alsoheen made in efforts to get Israel bincrease^itianciei aid an^^RWtJervicesfoiri ty students was postponed^; TomQwirk, president of Universi­ment.v % \'l Last week Spurr^recommended/that part of the Syria to agree to pull back their forces. ty Young Republicans, said in Under the .proved amendment, the present regents S?ble *"pn*,r",ted to /'The most important thing," Kissinger i LAfilERCOX,profeKorofbu8Uieislawai)dethM*Uoa, H** •»* inference to the advertisement', rule prohibiting discrimination "either in favor of or said of his marathon negotiating effort, sbid the^mendment has a "much better chance of getting ~ • ... ^ v ' r "It's just an ad and they (Circle against anyone'' would be changedto prohibit discrimina­through regoits with the lesscontroversial wottOng."^ *' The council also expressed its opposltltii to if prbposed Was "that it may have marked the v Stegeo) thought it would be/funny." tion ''against any person on account of his race, creed, tm. ^ j-1 .. . . . . '.amendment to the regents rules eliminating the faculty restoration of normal huma^ relatioijis ln -apprtvedvereion "clears the way for us to take tenure^ system^^thT»e^^Pi®«tor^^ — Qwirk alsosaid that theadvertise-' 1*area.,ry „ _ ^ positive actiwi, but does not require a hurdle over which,,cancer Center branches -. ment was printed because The The change wfrula allow thetliiiversifyfo takf positive _ ^.j-y^ y a _ the regents nrigt jump," said Wayne Danielson, dean of He said he was pleased "that the United action in recruiting minority students. The present,rule Banrtfer tries not ^ censor its. the School ofCiinimumcatlon. amendment vWiuld States Is the country that is Crusted by i8a^riai;'.^i?v j ; . classifies recruiting programs as discrimination in favor 'c ^ tenewable seven-year faculty appointmentsat the two in-bottl "W" . EHxy Lee Ray, the chairman of the Atomic tige not only is genuine, >mt the worst is vet to'come. structitm.-^ Commission, said preoccupation with immediate _ lems must not be allowed to in^iedequick initia "WE ARE going to have such acute shortages in the , IN ANOTHER development, of a Jtong-term energy research and dei^opm^tl&mxk few months in all products," he said. Minority Leader Hugh Monday the "s HUn-T ZD. Bonner, president of Gulf Oil Co.-U.S., said the blockade" to lifting the Arab 08 Rep. Lesi Aspin, D-Wis., said that havecome asnosttfprlse becausethe in-with the-signing of an IwaeB " Panies sufmorting a proposed $48 million U.S. loan to the^'lultry has been issuing warnings since 1960. _ ' pact. Russians for gas exploration are-intent on wa massif-. Sen; Henry Jackson opens energy crisis hearings. Homier denounced the "mistak^inotion" that thecrisis Scott commented after ai »s wT'tmm W-fXfr* w-r? .. m & ^V*r % -M1 fr"V^vlTr',j}t^|v'1' AV~ r>-rtns County Real Multi-member legislativ^^poiSed from Feb. 4 ts Feb.1? three-judge pkn^l plaimed to By HERB HOLLAND ^ 'districts In Travis and six1 Ito allow time to adopt a new implement a restricting Texas Staff.Wrlterjg? , other Texas counties are un-redistricting plan for the, plan by Feb. 18. , ~t, ­, While America is struggling America's humanresourceS, LeMaistre said teachers ? constitutional, a three-jwigfclljseven counties, which also i&ti The Mdy renaming muli to overcome the energy^crisis calling them "feeble, often, should not be forced to. iJederal^anel^as ruIed. -4v^lude ^ffersonr t and other shortages in unwise giveaway programs" "babysit" studentsr teaching- ' Atty. Gen.John Hill said McLennan, Nu«ra, El Paso Galveston and Hidalgo Coun> 3sM­ material resources* the cam-which were olten as them the social values they and Lubbock. , t»es, were not ruled Monday he had received word:try also has failed to develop demoralizing as.tbey were should be taught at home, of this ruling on a Richards ihaicat properly Its untapped human helpful. ' ^ "I believe we should free a :.jnent of the counties. resources, University System "As we redevelop our our teachers to teach and.de­ 14;/The counties will beChancellor Charles A. material potential, we should mand they teach effectively^'^ ommissioners * quired to redistrict to conr' also redevelop (jur human he said. . —r, • L^Iaistre said Mondayiright. — - form with the number of —LeMaistre was thefeatured resources," he Mid. "One chancellor pointed to legislators at-large elected speaker at the Austin way I'll stiggestis better per* economic barrier as the from each of them, Atty;. Approve Budget Chamber of Commerce's an-formance througheducation.*' —Tman Staff PkM by BwM Wn major cause of selective djfj;: ;g,pave Richards said. He nual dinner meeting at |he LeMaistre said although the A new county budget j -^ crimination in education. ^r| LeMaistre cites untapped resources. $rgued the case against Qie Villa Capri Motor Hotel. ^ American educational system 1974 totaling nearly115.4^ four-seat at-large districts in "We have long recognizai is the finest in.the world, 1t miltion was adopted by Travis rate wffl be W-W per $100 Travis County... our failuretofully developour *sn't perfect and could be im- County Commissioners Monfllassessed valuation. toprovide "What happens is that often untapped human resources," proved. "But we must first day afternoon. ~«mpre than $8 millionJn a dominant white majority is Energy Team Fold^ LeMaistre said. ... . . believe that education is es- More than *1 million in current revenue. Another $5.4 either hostile or doesn't M';At the last meeting of the would "start from scratch, revenue sharing funds to be million will come from fines,, matters. * care—the blade .community Mayor's Committee on' but suggested that members : The committee agreed to used for law enforcement,; delinquent taxes and other gets left out or ignored, and Energy Conservation Monday of the old committeebe called present its contingency report we hope to change this,"%; rural fire protection, social earned feeaofoffice. Inaddi­|M O^H^I night Barrie Kitto, associate upon to aid the new commis­for the winter of 1974-75 to the Services, parks, capital Richards said. professor of chemistry andco-sion. City Council Jan. 31. The ' provements and right of way year balance of $750,000, the A hearing for various BARGAINS ON UNKOUMEO KfRCHANDISt chairman of the committee,-Friedman said the new report electrical redistricting plans to be for roads is included in .^e^..county has more than *10 concerns I I expressed ''sorrow that no commission should be.able to productia^aJv*£onsumption if presented to the same three:budget for the first time, interest-bearine WE BUY ANB SOl members of this committee begin work "as soon as the energy arms worsens by judge panel, headed by U.S^f The new budget, over |3 W mterest-bearing I were appointed" to the new possible" after the council ap-,..^pext winter. ' Dist. Judge William Wayn# million more thanlast year s, nQ^" ISNOOPERS FAWN SHOP I City Council Commission on points an executive bbard. > Kitto said the transporta­Justice, will be held at 9a.m. shows the greatest iaweasein Amendments m the budget Energy Conservation. .That actionmight be takenas tion subcommittee--was „still Monday in theAustin Federal general fund spending" for ^rnadeat Monday'smeeting u* I j 6V3 W. 29th 476-2207 City Councilman Jeff Fried­soon as Thursday, he said. working on its report. He said 'various county departments, ^eluded a, $1*235 salary fqr Courthouse. man, who' attended the Although the committee he hoped the final reportcould The judges ruled that the Included in the general fund another deputy consjtable in • CHECK CASHING SiRVICE j meeting, said he was sur­, went outof existence after the be presented to the council in deadline for filing for offices budget is a $40 per month Precinct 1, an additional $1,­ prised the new commission meeting, it took action on two "two to three weeks." in the House would be post salary increase for eachc6un-090 for five new washing lillllllff imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiuiiiiiiiHiiiiRiiir machines for the TravisCoun-/s a' • •tv.^ ty Jail and $240 for adult probation. A proposal by • \ TV-; <.-c til <-Travis County Commissioner 4 ARICA IP , * Johnny Voudouris that road •P *"&&&$& funds be divided equally The Arico Institute is offering the first Austin Extended Training. This is between the four precincts Co-Op Camera Shop also was approved, along with a "basic training" for life, to deal more efficiently and realistically a $41,000 decrease in the debt with problems. To increase the balance of the mind, body and k?SMm®# services fund. " emotions. To acquire greater energy, dearer thinking, calmer and more Itemized, the budget breaks controlled emotions. To achieve a greater auality cf'' down as: $9.2 million for ofhuman-ness", to ^Simmon .pmega. gain a deeper perception and a greater anility to cope with our com-ihiSftidiniflhilMKK general operations; $2.4 million for special roads and E lex and rapidly changing times and to jump to a permanently higher MllS»JjcMa. MMUii^llupt .DtbklUI bridges; $1.2 mi\lionfor farm- Pff " Color Printing sis »vel of daily consciousness. To supplement your understanding, to to-market roads; $409,000 for enrich youj life and to provide the tools for continuing self­ 'debt services; $20,000 for the development. i <• . ~ 20%? i 7 Demonstration 1 law library; $700,0i90 for right of way; $1 million for bonds •&$ The training.meet^Svery Tuesday and Thursday evenings, together MM' Discount ^ I and $1.1 million for revenue , -mt with one Saturday^and every Sunday a month starting January 26, on all XI Tuesday and Wednesday sharing. 1974 and ending May 4, 1974. In addition, there is an average of 1 Vi hours of daily work te be done at home. The fee for this course is $650. |ARICA is a nonprofit organization based in New York City and located Guitar | 10 a.m. -4:30 p.m. RESEARCH Sin 20 world cities. Arica is offering other programs in Austin ranging in Thousands of topics String! [ icost from none to nine dollars. (Damomtratioas IwM «v*ry 90 minwtn) " $2.75 per page1 For further information call ARICA IN AUSTIN 476-2281. JVmster Milsic * Sendfor your up>t(hdate, 160-page, tSuper Cfiromcga C Color TS24 Unraca • J maiLorder catalog. Enclow $1,00tutanrfir) ~ to cover postage (delivery time, is 1 to 2 days). * During this demonstration representatives from Simmon RESEARCH ASSISTANQE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE B1.V0., SUITE .Omega will mafce actual color prints vhile-tJ-watch, smashing 'LOS ANfiEttS/CftUF. 90025 in the process your long-held superstitions about the int-a (213) 477-8474 or 477-5493 Our research iMtorlil it told for' possibility of making your own color prints. Feel free to come| resuren twl«Uiic« only. V, ' in and ask -questions and shake hands with somebody named 1 "Bob Smith." 5 BEAT THE HIGH COST OF LIVING ! ^mi m.u" qu,i!i!v ns m rrM- Half Price During this demonstrotion oil Omega enlargers are on sdle i drnt <11 W .limit ( UM-k und< i 1 he I It \ at "attractive prices." Prices start at $134.00 for an Omega I lm (um-I'ki'.'MM).B 22 b/w enlarger. Any enlarger not in stock can be ordered i at the sale price with only a $10 deposit. 44 1-1437 Dnn'l \\.\il! t.ill lm We desperately need copies of SALAS: CALCULUS, since "l I. .300 additional students have enrolled in the course* -v One hour free parking (with Co-Op Camera Shop: purchase of $2 or .more. }»?. Second Boor' BankAmericard afy & 1 ' ( V'-'.? MostsrCharg* welcome^-— Atkins: Physics MIA: Modem Spanish— -*•— lllllimiHHHIimiHIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII! Bandy: Business law Morgan: Psychology Banfield: Unh«av*nly CHy Nelson: Design of Advertising Psychoiogy AppH*d to Teaching Nicklanovich: From Cell to Philosopher ' Borowitz: Contemporary Physics Petrucd: Gonoral Chemistry The perfect hl-fl Bums: Gov't By the People Bask Edition (It's Pevsner: Outline ef European Architecture Orango) Roberts: Intro, to Modem Exper. Organic Chemistry slapfep unit • Buss:rl^ychrfogy"-''^Sff^|#1fg?te?^ Solas: Calculus Chinn: Handbook Nursing Assessment of Chikj Scammpm The Real Majority V f" Dovito: Communication . j Shakospeare: Complete Works (ed. Craig) Durbin: Math " Shakefpeare: Complete Works (ed. Harbage) 41K • VA Eastman: Norton Antheiay of Pootry (Shorter Ed.) Shakespeare: Compieto Works (ed. Harrison) Ember: intra, to Cultural Anthropology ™PIOINJeeR" Project 60 ® F»IOI\ieeR SA-5200 Smart: Children Evans: Man and IDesigner Smith: Business law (3rd Ed.) Froedman: Issues of 70's SommerMd: Intro, to Taxation 2-way Speaker System ' : Integrated StereoAmplifierl Gear: Intro, to Computer Sd. Spencer: Rdgs. in Art History (Vol. I) \ -Ideal for any-moderate powered stereo system. this Another great value from Pioneer, the SArS200 uses the Qraebner: Htstory of Amotlcan Peopfe (Vol. tl) Sibf General Genetics .V most advanced clreuHryHncitrdlny direct-coup­ 2-way speaker system offers rich,gnlM n nr»'lf -Ff • Griffin: Advanced Accounting (Rovisod) Stamppi Era of Reconstruction ; — Mng for ouWandlng performance. Its 19.+13 watts RMS —_ rrildrange and sharp; crisp highs. The key is t^e per­ -(8 ohm8)-bottrchannel8 cJriven, at 1kHz, handles two pairs Orout: History of Western Musk (Revised Edition) ~ Taylor: The Short Story fectly matched combination of an 8-inch wooferV^h of fPWkej^yeteme with minimum distortion; There'e com- Guthrie: Intro, to Nutrition -Thacker: Intro, to Modem Acct. $ minimum distortion,and a SVa-inchaluminum die cast , plBte flexibility with connections for a phono and two aux-.­ Hamlin: Architecture through1the Ages ~ Titles: Purrtos de Vistas ^^J%p^eete^ih^up«0i!ide^cq^ Van den Berghe: Race and Racism &2Q wattfcpeafcfeMvi' ^ Janson: History off Art ,,, " --nrfgsl 'y£"H*? Joseph: Textile Science Weissman: Visual Arts as Human Experience Keltner: Interpersonal Speech Communication Wells: Mass Media and Society Texas—Rdgs. In Politics, Gevlt, A Public Pel. Welsch: Interfftediate Accounting Ktiiuse^ lirieaf Alj^bra Weston: Managerial Mac6ow«l: Behind the Screen •Wiemer: Real Estate ^Masters: National History of-the Vampire Williams: Ndtrition and Diet Therapy ^ * PoliHcs of"geffrv TEXTBOOKS phistlcation with advanced fea^ UNIVERSITY CO-O lures like: 4-poie, belt-driven synohronovs motor; ststlc-bal BASEMENT CO-OP STEREO anoea 8-shaped tonearm; ultra tight tracking; »n n.mp^ Bmt |ng;anttakstingcontrol;12*lnch r&ft* dynamically balanoed die cast tmke»4 platter; walnut base, hinged duet cover;33% — 45 rpfrr­ speeds. #99^5 n e lTuesday, January 22, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN %#}'?L j&L <& M 'ectrj i If \Politkal Roundup By BRYAN BRUMLEY MM -_ .itofurt of fli govertwrVraceaiKl Thr -Tomb State Writer .• MRsrTAli^raoLb^was u& Former state legislator,'fcad ,^ foflowinga iuncheonlli An ultimatum TWataesdty Id ask gubernatorial candidate Frances in Temple and a trip to WashingtwKf "almost put me in the governor's " for increased county powers. "Sissy" Farenthold confirmedMob- tot week. In Washington, she «4g& race," Mrs. Farenthold Mid. s$g ' % Barbara Loogeway, Calling for more county . Gill, a 1968 University law day that she is considering running - ijftr Poariypagaiinft,'I dressed groups on behalf of, equarafc—rasa.*-* government authority«aduatef has been in private ..JimWalldea -for governor or me of'the thite' rights amendments and, to troland regulate tend use, practice since 1970. Previous-7-«eats on the Texas Railroad Com­courage women to seek political of-^f an.resignedherpMtMonday Austin attorney Hubert GUI ly he worked with the Equal Sen. Jim Wallace,. Ek mission. fice. . ^ pnmary with Gw.Do||>h Briscoe in towork with the ^exasCenter filed Monday for the Opportunity Commission, ' Houston, announced Monday ~ , Though she has not yet made her he will seek re-election in­ She said in Austin that a principal# a^w*» for the Judiciary,State Barof Democratic ^nomination *c for decision, shesaid she will challenge reason for her trip was to consult governor, Texas. Travis County judg^fl^^fe Dorii Shropshire stead of ruhniing for state incumbent Jim Langdon, present with Washington oiland gasexperts^* • a sec?n^ two-year term He said hefelt tKT&>® ^jmptroller. commission chairman, if she rePr!sei,t?.tive ^m 9orPus •Thedeadline setby the Tex-' The Associated Press reporS iafe-®t!:t^e..needs the nower to set Po^sShropshire filed Mon-^Wallace'had been urged to pbooses the Railroad Commission iasStudehtPubUcati<^BiMtfd building standards and zoning Jay for re-election toa second ' seek the statewide office, be-race. < -Executive Committeefor per-restrictions so lone-ranseuse te*"ni as Twvls County cleric, tag vacated by the retirement ^Mrs. Farenthold said the Railraad sons to apply for Pearl feUttftr SdSXment oMMd em « the Democratic ticMt.^ oT 81-year-old Robert S. Commission, -the.-$tate energy- is 4:30 p.m., Ipriday. other labor leaders njrhile ia^yfliMrs. Farenthold denied an AP be'olanned^S^i^l/fe The filing deadline is 6 p.rn. .Calvert. regulatory agency since1917, should Washington. Barkin approved of hec^; report that she is conducting a poll Applications are available in Gill p'ntin ^®b'4 and no weelsehas %, .He decided against running aspirationsto the RailroadCommis-As in Texas on issues and her own mm on "open up the records topublic view. TSP Building 3.200.. the Committee ofl^ Local ** tor ^offlc€' > C ' iSi for comptroller because those ttee L0Cal .We don't even know what thev sion, but said. In her words. "Just viability asa candidate. Government of the Texas Elected in 1970, she said^4! encouraging him to enter the v "^Vtt^vi''dual applj^gidr sincerely enjoy the woi^ I'm • race were triable tp assure Constitutional .Convention doing and I hope to be re-^adequate financing. •< IfShusti-l' "v;'; Students Credit elected," j , HV .Also, Wallace said he wants ­ * Be a registe^ _stii8iit The first statewide primary to concentrate on the*^ LBJ: Thoughts cfiYear Later College Tuition will bp May 4, the runoff on Constitutional Convention. , > „ „ ' By GARY ED JOHNSON mourners paSsing through the fluence on the UnivetSity was as a congressman from 1937i,-|iuars. i-, ^s *%y. ZotHac NeWs Service^ • --LBJ Library while the Presi-that he left us with two in-— It only a, matter of Texan Staff Writer and as a senator from1949 un-if|§ • Be registered for or have was Lyndon Baines Johnson, the dent was lying in state there stitutions-—th$ LBJ School of ' til he became Vice-President' >'completed J375 and J336. time: Now students can pay SUMMER JOBS MSPSS 36th President of the United will be shown fro»S*wMP4.Publip^Affairs and Jtbe. I year agoTuesday at theageof Library, Harry Middleton, the library was built in was called Jan. 25, 1973, the , average of 2.25. . / __ l};: Florida State University has f e U 6 4 . M s -V # # library's director, said.'; .^; >; Austin---in8tead of San Mar-day Johnson was buried in a • Have appeared at least approved a plan that will Although the man from Also on Tuesday, a cos where LBJ attended family cemetery near Jolin^ jHfour times in the monthly , allow its students to pay for Stonewall received criticism raising drive will begin in college—was a proposal by son City, his boyhood; home. I^Pearl staff box. ^ --their.. entire tuition costs, Pink BSSftgi 1for his buildupof American in-Washington to collect $2 the Board of Regents to ^i A granite gravestone • Be serving onjtae Pearl merely by charging them ona v: volvement in Vietnam, he million to plant trees ina five-build a school of public af-'^ith the inscription "Lyndon staff at the-time of applica­Mastercharge. or J)ank* •H achieved progress indomestic acre LBJ Memorial Grove on fairs, Middleton explained. Baines Johnson, August 22/ tion. , , \ 1 ^aAmericard education, health and social thePotomacRiver, Ms. Tiller i.^%Johnson contributed |2* 1908—January 22, 1973, 36th , ^a'mp Olympia is looking AMatttltfav : I I • ' • • • 4*V./'>„C . A _ 4^ _l A. • i.4_ _ . UHMn! mm 4 ^1% a Y T «* •"/s> equality; said million to help construct the" President of the United ndtolluioodiolluiootf for summer counselors. II you "7 His widow, a University "He is still with us every LBJ Library at the Universi-,. States" was added to the si m- enjoy the outdoors and the • ; regent, plans to spend Tues-day," Walt W. Rostow, ty, the only presidential^ ^Thursday. WE'RE IN THi TRIES . day quietly with her daughter professor of economics and library on a college campus. ••••••••••••••••••• rewarding experience o£ working ' and son-in-law, Luci and Pat history and specialadviser for There are eight presidential .L^rge^w Us?, Bnd 3 bedroom flats jmflLtownhouses • , The Largest • with children, contact the 4; \ Nugent, Martha Tiller, national securityaffairs in the libraries./ • >* special assistant to Mrs.John­Johnson administration, said More than five million • Selection ©fr • , -^employment center for an interview son, said. Monday. -presidential papers have been -• fireplaces > ••'&<' -• private patloior decks • :Ji A 10-minute film of v"The President's major in-opened in the LBJ Library. •RECORDERS \ . • shag carpet* • beautiful landscaping • 3 color schemes • lots of trees %DNESDAY, JAN. 23rd m They deal with education, complete club' room »ln scenic Northwest Hills Tutoring Service Plans It civil rights, 'economics and 5 from $1.95 op S with an Olympia representative. the problems of the cities, in­-• ^ ' cluding transportation and the $ See us tor • 8816 Tallwood Drive Volunteer Work Groups a war on poverty, Middleton • Recorders A J '-The Student Tutorial Outreach Program (STOP) will hold said. * • Recorder Music J mmS .... .. orientation sessions for University students and faculty , Johnson began his political • Anrrster Music £ members interested in vol)Uite&r work at 7 p.m. Tuesdayand at career as an aide to a con-m ' • ,1624 Lavocq . • mpia -3y, 4 p.m. Wednesday in Union Building 300. » gressmari in 1931. He Served BACK-TO-SCHOOL STOP provides a tutorial program for Austin school children on the elementary, junior high and high school levels. 4 ntact BwsinMf Placemsnf Centete STOP has been in operation since las^fallwith approximately A SPECIAL! THE B-HIVE m 35 tutors. However, "the program has drawn more inquiries this semester,mainly from University students, and we hope to Now leasing for the spring semester $2 DISCOUNT ON HAI expand its aid,'*, Robin Mueller,. Volunteer Services coor­WITH THIS AO • 20 brand new luxury efficiencies dinator, said. ' • Rustic de^or The short orientation sessions will'include-separate work groups for tho^e persons interested in tutorial assistance and • Enclosed courtyard with huge shade trees L — -nontutorial voluntarywork-—— ?— v^» •^ 19 IUIH|IU1 1IIIU" SUUIIIV IIUS • Only $137 par month, all bills paid' •:3mm­ An Environmental Family 4207 AVE. r mm451-7303 i.Comununity ;, s a­ td«*l for' UT»faculty—and staff. - Latge new 2 and 3 bedroom apart­ment homts located in acenie NorthMSt Auatin.Fsatur«s,includ« shag eaipet;r att riebMo. kitchen#,­private patios, clubhouse, gym. MARY GRACE 'n. DEBB,E and saunas. From $226 to S305 Informal Class Program COMPLITC UNISeX HAIR CARS r " 4 ; > ' R£GiSTRATtON CENTER January 14-25 mm-­ 7.2^4 Qri^e P^6»94^^ ?WALKING DISTANCE TOlCAMPUS6 Texas Union 104^* lismi 3004 GUADALUPE CAU FOR APPOINTMENT Studtman's Some classes which are still open: 474-2666 *vm, photographic expression>, Jewish cooking, : Photo Service ' . T> dating and relating, wine making, billiards, 222 W. 19th * & 5324 Cameron Rd. self-assertive drills, birdfvatching, chess, fh'iliffGii nrontw*t£i rlnrt ^ RESUME' mmm Wear me with your jeans" IDENTIFICATION TYPE s: 1^3; -V2fe MCTI 'RES «r -« H & 'Vm 5 ' v JjA" 1-Day The next UAT Is Fob. 91 ,Ti? Kfmm h : , , Oviek, Reliable Service V IIIWIll ^ . f _,TT» V.' J'-^ ' "YVT •'W^.TJ"TTPvt .v ..1. ijrt' A i m * The ISAT is a long exam and.a, ^ -­ * tough one. Itdetermine* whether yew get into law School. You should bo at well prepared a* eniMe in order to achieve your fuN potential. Our review coune give* yew every attvantage oimI C "tn,r Wk * oiimlnatMtha element* of Miprho TRANSCENDENTAL 55'STK MEDITATION 4*4 I cMffk Mge^nM^io ,i'b& fowl 4 The ISAT revleW cmme conttett ofMAHARISHI 20 how of dowo* taoght by a is.® qtraHfied inilryctor. You wSI loom kiw^JwMAHESH how to mSm^o yoiiir lime on the ssmm exam; the typo of queitiom to ex­ .•* v /MX, YOGI pe«t, the way to answer the * A.U. t $$jL (jueitions and valuable tips and r ' techniques to add these hord-to­ • A natural mental technique providing damp man­ «omo>by extra, points. The full tal and physical relaxation . , cownys costs only $9S...printed '• cfiaducat tdnsion and improves efficiency eetirse matwfol is provided...so act • • Praetieed* few minutes twiee daMy as a preparation for ; now end be proparod for the next mora aueeassful activity 1 PORTABLES St mo. MANUALS $9 me. LSATt • Is NOT a religion or philosophy and requires no concen­tration AM dassos at the;: OFFICE CLICTRICS $22.2^ me. the pantie foe. you, 1.25 a pair. Dobie Center Conference Room, ' Special Exhibition on • iturtwny.fr' ' ^ .2nd level, Dobie Center, 6:30 p.m,."N >,0:M Piflte- CE OF CREATIVE INTSUJGENCE tsx&lSt* 1S-.CALCULATORS Will Be Held on $15 MONTH .SEMESTER $45l£ Tue. '77»i -Jan. 22 VVe Giv« You From 90 Day Option Union Rm 31? lenik 4«-1111•« write* LSAT Bo««o» Cemam elTsi. BBwumans I?# 11-4 p.m. em, Imtv SSS^wnnr WTOU»»»', , tho ItirtO ltBPl ON-THE-DRAG Union Rm 334 11-4 p.m. 2234 QUADALUPE • 476*3528; M34 ffVRfiiT ftQAP • 454-fi7ai' Tuesdfl^. Janu«ry 22^ W74 THE DAILY TEXANJ?age • it# • . s# . • """" ' University of Texas System nor anyof its component institutions will dis­ ,fp­ fas*.-.-.-'' criminate either in favor of or against any person on account of hit or her mM race, creed, cotor or sex. •ism * . Regents rule, Part Two, Chapter I, Section 5 taut steps towards rectifying UT's history of de facto racism, approving several recommendationsof the Minority Advisory Committee(and alter­ing others. , On a positive note the council approved three programs of stfftstance They include recommendations that "a recruitment program be im­plemented that will bring large numbers of 'academically qualified' minority students to tbe University of Texas;" "that adequate academic supportive services and financial services and financial assistance be made available;-' and "that Project Info be expanded into a minority recruitment program ... tfftb increased staff and budgeting support necessary to handle the task of appraising minority students across the state; of the educational opportunities available t»,?them/\;fjt| • When it came to the regents rule on discrimination the coupon wasfess forthright. As proposed the council would have urged a reversal of the rule, which in effect limits the compensatory measures"the University may take. The committee proviso added to the regents rule, "except where past discrimination mandates remedial measures under the spirit or letter of federal or state law." *" This criticalchange wasnarrowly defeatedat ti^e meeting, primarilyat "tfte Ijebesgjirf taw 'veiA-tis supporters argued for an ambiguous reading which states, "neither the University nor its component institutions will discriminate against any person on ac­count of his or her race/creed, color or sex." Under specific questioning from Student Body President Sandy Kress, supporters of the altered mo­tion admitted, however, that their interpretation would definitely allow for greatly expanded programs of minority recruitment and assistance. THE COUNCIL'S PRESENT regents rule position is ambiguous, and must be strengthened. Here the words of the Advisory Committee need be heeded: "The history of social change in this country has amply demonstrated that 'neutrality* does not foster programs to effect social change. Tbe effect of the (regents) rale is to preclude any meaningful ef­forts to remedy present consequences of past discriminatory practices." The inference is clear. The University Council must present next Monday a strong, unmistakable call for meaningful affirmative action at the w J^versity. -7 "Mi "4tL. p! W' HV?-*.-,-. is. agWomen iif ^Abortion. The word used to summon an image of gory coat hangers and dark, rooms. It was used only as a last resort when the woman involved preferred the possibility of death to the certainty of motherhood. Thousands of women died each year and millionsmore unwanted children were born to parents who could not feed theones they had. Abortion wasa scandalous, dangerous undertaking that norespectable woman would con­template. 1 , CHANGE HAS OCCURRED, though slowly. In the recent past abortion has made gigantic leaps forward.The equipment used nbwis modem and relatively painless. In the early weeks of pregnancy an abortion can be performed with a vacuum aspirator which induces mild cramps only. At­titudes have also changed radically. What was once shameful is now con- decide. what is ri^ht for them individually. :ta keeping with these,values, the Supreme Court legalized abortion on Jan. 22, 1973. Abortion nowjs legally possible anywhere in the United States. Despite the ruling, some cities still refuse to provide the adequate ser­vices. Austin is one of those cities.In a city that boastsa large university and the state capital, neither city hospital nor the University health center will perform abortions. Women musteither go elsewhereor suffer. "WOMEN UNITED" will sponsor a rally at noon Tuesday on the Capitol grounds. The group will celebrate the first anniversary of the legalization of abortion and demonstrate to the members of the Texas Constitutional Convention that abortion and women's rights are indeed fundamental issues. We encourage people to attend. Abortion and Austin are not incompatible; they are indispensable. • -^ —J.H. The public^scrutiriy 'There is nothing so powerful as truth—and oftennothing so strange." Daniel Webster Students and faculty wearied oP the often abstruse and irrelevant research of their government and economics classes might consider working with The DailyTexan's investigative taskforce team thiscoming semester. :1 -I i m j^ OUR RESEARCH target for this semester is, you guessed it, UT's oft-maligned Board of Regents. The regents have for years operated in relative secrecy and anonymity, but times are changing. House Bill .6 and a public increasingly zealous of its prerogatives require that the state's moist powerful unelected board come under tile public scrutiny.­ OUR PRIMARY NEED isfor greater numbers of students to help with the research. The first meeting of the task force takes place at 5 p.m. Tuesday in the Texan office on the southeast corner of the new Com­munication Complex. The task force members feel it's high ..time the regents' million dollar financial dealings truly become part of the public trust. -M.E. ChPIYtD ' """W««TWMrtmiH) T««»,mi MmtHm ' EDITORS...... Betsy Hail, Mark Sims NEWS EDITOR -„ m.. . ASSE^AST Hmmqms SPORTS EDITOR........ v • •• •••• •• .Danny Robbins FEATURES EDITOR.. .. wv. * nr-ru.> •.ni.Kristlm Pitl^dcs PHOTO EDITOR Jay M,Uer ISSUE STAFF "-" City JEditor « *>• »* ••Afrfra I ;..M Mark Dorsett Reporters ...... Richard Fly, Cherry Jones. Bill Garland, ^ ~ ( : , IMnda FanninNews Assistants'.. "Gary Edward Johnson. Mary Barnes Contributors^.;.„; Gail Burris, Martha JP McQuade. Diane Dashiell, _1; . ' t Brian Brumlev &iitoriat Aaststaiat8 r. Charles Watkin, Joy.Howell Assistant Sports Editors -: Bill TTott, Joette Moffett Assistant Amusement Editor Wiemers Makeup Editor.....f.......... .^r.v»rvr......Nancy Call Wire Editor Mark Yemma "CDWf-—...Sarah Goodenough, Kathy Kelly. Keith Hartmdl. Anne Marie Kilday. Eddie Fisher I*hotographers-. v....py. .^vkiH .Paui Calj^a, David Woo tlnUny imU'Wul fin' Un» 'irf Ulr n . > «* mlml«MriilHw m Uf JlnoM al W «n«M4> iUM dMpkiir lilWabl . ^ >.310 , T>c lkutjr,fVu», aMm ^ Mr I TV HatMKit wlwrtMiit Hi Ttf Unify n( TW-'mc »< is HnW*«*rd TcnaH StMtwM ayiT*T7rn |Mr-"•.'yrn' Biiim lm imini »nww; »i»wi iii t»wrni>t)r »l'nM \*r..Hew Vurt. N V,. MMT JWI IV Itety tVtw.lA.iMWM ;Nn» Ynrt WrmiU^ " iaMUWur-Nrwi JSMVirp Tfet' -Tina* at a wwuiBli or $r ft'!"* -" HMIatirfNmm­ tarwiil lUtrttMr 11m. tkr iMMrd iliwrnaHmw 1**.: ' t'mivi* aot Uar Hfm IkmIy Hi iMiiiin i AamrtaUm. tvatriMMMMttH ir «wptnl kgr tihiilwtm*, *t>w aitfwnfyinriiiw Jtarart Hw). tj* mwt tAnrafctrjr M w Knl ttet Trail FM»K Ldfen lUvd Pajjr® 4 T|jesday, January TL 197*IpE DAILY I^XAN " . . By Women United the hospital. The situation on cattipus.ls even moreTuesday marks the first anniversary of serious. The Student Health Center the Supreme Courtis .ruling legalising refuses to performabortionsunder theex­abortion. This victory was of monumen­cuse that in their eyes an abortion is not tal importance in freeing women of -the emergency surgery, we question their dictates of theitbodies and ^^te^ A^ definition of surgery.Wheh performed in ' group of people opposing this freedom, the first trimester with an aspirator, affwho have chosen to call themselves abortion is a relatively simple procedure "Right toLife,"are planninga rallyat the which can be performed in a doctor's of- Capitol Tuesday in an attempt tothreaten the rights of women to obtain .legalized tlC6» Male viewpoint abortions.-In protection of our rights several women's groups haveorganized a; 1 It is very interesting to note that the noon rally Tuesday at theState Capitol.It "Right to Life" speakers and tbe city of­ ficials who most actively and vocally op­^ is urgent that all those who support the ! 'V;-.':-.'. tl " * . pose abortions aremale. Thisleads one to % ill §§§•••" • Supreme Court's ruling attend™... question their motivations. Because men Deplorable present situation in Austin is do not have toface pregnancy, wefeel this negates their rignt to dictate theextent to deplorable. Austin women wishing to ob­ tain an abortion are forced'to travel to which a woman can control her body, this either San Antonio, Dallas or Houston. is indicative of the suppression'of womeft Abortion on demand in Austin city in our total society.-In their misplaced _.-s, hne ^?ipid. The Texan to the daily newspaper news^per would follow. Legislature. volved to solve it themselves. for many of us. With these issues in mind, a group of Heobviously doesn't believe there is an The area west of campus has been the It is imperative therefore.that—Thfc­ energy crisiis. "subject of,some Controversy in recent Texan retain the. constitutionally That belief was evidenced by his actions' pages of The Texan. It was at this time a lieighborhdod association called SUN guaranteed freedom that has made this (Save University Neighborhoods). So Jar last Monday. Jan*. 14. on 1-10 between, last year, that a group of students who live country unique in • the world. Surely this iSUN has been able to prevent the im­Houston and Columbus. in the west campus area realized that es^ University cansurvive vigorous criticism. plementation of the University Area Although the car he drove was'a 1974 sentially no one Was really going to,care JUteannot.^ ay.»_u.»jr .W i»K HuiiiK uuauK .Street Plan but wtth Cadillac, which gets around 10 miles per about their neigUborhood unless they s7™T. closing of San finally true that .the motto chtoeled in .i™.. a i -^acuHo-Streetrit appears the issue mav gallon"at 55. thespeed limit he supposedly cared about itthemselves. At the timethe g—. tite tegialator,drove ^to, ^•area'was " lecommum­-a-masaive rerouting oftratfifcthrougfathe ; ty interests. And in the meantime we are west campus neighborhood.. '*:• :'p ^BejKfe Utli^iSTaS^KHSSTSll'd!" On the surface, the only issue appeared ; working on many other issues to.maintain. legislator, whose license plate bears the^hatever I can to see that ii fails. our, community. These projects grange state official designation, wascommitting-f-­ to. be ttie effects of widening a few streets Robert L. Rassell •from land use surveys aiid clean up an inexcusable. waste;of fuel.. ^ and making them one-way. The proposed Assistant PMfessor programs to participation,,* the Austin Maybe he can afford to pay the , . plan involved the destruction of several Tomorrow program. ^J money, but who gives him the right ttfj^ " ~ ^ llOlp! buildings in order ; i .ateui,; an interchange at waste unnecessarily our precious^ To the editor: 2.-r225!!l"5 Streets to 26th and ivefuel? —I -thcinteftectioir of looki«if( for the owner oi "-a^"rerf is facing, we wbuld awreciate^^y ^'Besides, what right does thisf^an hpveT^ Boulevard aver Pease Parte. • wM-h , ticipation at our meeting at 7:30 p.m. to endanger others' lives a black convertible top h.2j»Thc cffccts of a possible doiubling of „ , by driv ng 40v >hich hit my truck parked in the 400 block * Tue^ay at the KA ho^. ZSlS Leon St. m^e8f"tlour »ver tfafftc flow-in a residential neighborhood n„,^ , , ..the 'egal »Pfd Hmit?; of 32nd Street Sunday night after jumping I arc both obviofis and subtle, short-rang^ . Bill Parrtsh i;^hat nypwrisy' 7 Tody Jones «t'urband alinost hitUng tw^ : /JSand long-range. Most obvious are the enp| % /f* to-' U s;iron ^ cml und hissing a red plastic the barrier the traffic would*create. Less LGQIS|QTIV6^i —obvious is the cementingdver of .what lit^To thfrniitor­ us SludenlPublications Board appblnt the. this car please catt me nt 451-1042. ThunK .Ucjjreen space is'lefl ip order Ho create While reasonable doubt Still remains in editor for The Daily Texan, the Texan. -•vou* Nancy SchAiock to the full extent of America's . plays an extremely important role in the .412 W. Mnd St. % S SBIH' ome 9 Powerful* Horns erence 7f *4 * David Clyde of tbeVfi _ BERB HOLLAND Johnson, Larr^ Robinson^; The Owlsare led by Fishety *a good offensive team, too, Knodel forgtft about. Wlflle * /missloner Btowie Kufin will be"; Rangers'also will be hohocedJ ? Texas Staff Writer Harry Larrabee and Da^ 'who hasscored 14.5points per and said RHiie must keep the Rice doesn't have a ''super vamong the featured speakers,^ , . > * the Longhorns are lucJty/ KrUeger against the Owls, jf^amethis year.And if•« Artaraai jjearlydid, «a^ge' startereaverag* as he's averaged 14.0 per j them to considerably less " enough for third place Association of. Baskethall/competitioi! gamesofar. poiritathan what they'^ " l^aca-iwwafsr­ faulty transformer caused a 255L fceipt Ss tiif ^America Friday night.w. , began Monday., Competing And even though Rice (7-8) averaging," he said. "Ao4 wer failure in Rice's Autry•• -™8* ^ Plus, they have some V-Nolan Ryan, pitchetf"itf the teams can' check their Saturday,, The lights , That la, unless-junior owns a bettor season record We've-got to do a good job on California Angels, Catfish schedules on the bulletiiojv went out justas the twoteams forward TimMoriarty doesn't than Texas (3*11), Knodel ex-Larrabee and Robinson. turn," said Knodel, Hunter of the Oakland A's and boards outside Gregory Gynf; little power shor* from th?fljijattafc ^ts a "good, qqiqjfc tas^-They're just two of the out­ iJim Bibby, Jeff BurrouRhs 33. $ l ^Jjegan their warmups.sw ^ ' cut ourpractice schedule the standing players, in..ihft The game had In that event, Rice coacp Knbdel said the Horns league." down by one day. We haven't Mi RlPlNe AftJONP AU. .— J^'»®^Eball game.**, T^fjll FlWB„v ROBINSON AND Larrabee had as-much timeas we'd tike Phillip Davis ON THE WCKOP Davis, a 6-5 freshman from QrOSSWOfd KUZZier any mbeb rjwti take more than a power center Danny Carroll, 6-7 first 12 games paid off for Houston, will be making his HKSR HCinHH ansii to give Rice an advan* •forward John Kabbes and Texassinceit wonits first two first homecoming since ^ *6ross HsauamBR WQBBKS # as Texas, will be out guards Scott Fisher and conference games and is guiding Kasbmere High DOWN GOMtDB Biawta tt?RANM?iOAtSeeT fter its third consecutive Charles Daniels to join averaging over 90 points." , School to the playoffs teat, isarv 1 Inaect^i^ ciaasfflnsiHinasiR iwest Conference victory 2 annnsi iinora mu\ Moriarty or "Meyers. ALTHOUGH A week ago .-year. 3Saint (abttr ) . Jn as many game^P^ HOH rjr//nao wran, . BUT TEXAS Head Coach Texas was laughed at, people He scored 19 points against grafted **'•-4 Spread for dry* IS QrMt t ' ' mo an r-inan nranKH ba»J«ird , Leon Black said he felt Rice TCU and got 16 more against 14 Decay . $^ Globe RsannsnriH nwr^R i-k SMU in Dallas, coming off the 15 LMIfl conjunfe"^ « • rawn -il-'Si. s bench in both games. HOHfflB EIGESHRBW ie An»w w• •Piiss® lineup Tommy Weilert, Ed height „.v" Davis' main worth is in his 1S Anoer ' 8 QrMk fitter ••R [-jnnnnsj BOCI; TO Exclamation raran •. Knodel,r"and th^r've fast-breaking and-jumping ® WalK on : HnmMn nare'­ 92 Merry 10 Artiftoiai r rWfe;' hjyMf^a^'iailot of' players. ; abilities. He kept Texas in the 24 Organs of ttneuage ?ILM^,ar,in9 Lineups hearing 11 SwnboTforyt-28 T«r<^; mi--Mth'a nickhamii. DOONESBURY game against SMU with his tHum" :> 30 WalK 8T Haul " V83 Nota of scat* ~"V thing. Any success we've had fast breaking, and.outjumped 29 ExpIrM^' 17 Symbol for 33 One following •## Canln»i';w 31 Lair silver 3s Let It stand ^ f88 Mlra • . Urry Robinson F 6-7 Sr. Is$f 'TtimMornirty ", wil thisseason has been because men 6-8 and 6-9 to keep 19 Note of seat* f ,3? Native dF' >' ^, 00 Explosive * imtFwe '*< Ed Johnson , ; • P 6-5 ^reihft'Y John Kabbes ui •v.aiv \»q Disturbance me iNTMHem# s, *' Tommy Welltrt C 4-7Vi Fr«h?" r? Panny Carroll c mC j#ji&m of our young players coming several Texas scoring plays-, 5 largest oonth^iai Landed 40 Newspaper •(abbr.) mm im KMtXKY tmemexspme 5-11 Soph, fefe m sr. -!' alive. « nant '• --23 Antlered (Mi)mal paragraph -Si Man's nlcKnatfie „ it Dan Krueger © Scotl Fliher off the bench." 34 Satnes 86 Play 43 Thraefold B2 Note of scale --v ftmwim. Nm&mtK^ANUNUmt /SM/JM AC UiCiMMfU £tka*0i! i Jc ' «> Harry L«rrab«« , 0 5-10 Sr. Charles Daniels gO •2 ' . Soph. Knodel recognizes |e*as as Davis is.the ftRe.v^fele 38 8ymtx>l.for 26 Scofla ^ssci 4S Bodles of wst«r 64 Negative prefix I , mmm M/oontsm WWat yfOrMFfr cerium "* " " * 6omAB£ ANmw mei 8mwemess»£timCDMH0H _ ^(7 Person UK s^a-'angagajiadto ; r"T~ 5— 4 -i .i, % ~ rr T~ Ifl rr •MGATB6**VHH*W-VfO-U'SJJ 0«re foi i I \ oMyr mw $r """tsS Nans' Danie H&adiTUP •• -nM ohlldrantorohlldrai ii vV« li U ,N., b«ed periods m * By The Associated Press from-beWnd 71-70 victory although no new teams moved The Top ft), with flrtf-plact vottt In v* 39 Retreat -« parenthtset, season records throOgh ir 1 \\ w n?* ""Notre Dame's -----basketball Saturday, bumped the great, into the Tod 10. w&y.-ft 41 A continent garnes of lasf Saturday and total joints. (abbr.) W( /t&am joined Ara Parseghian's California team out of first North CaroUnaSw^neww ^Points tabulated on basls of 20-H-14-14-i ib 31 $SJ W 54 •* 26. 42 Way out. 0football .team Monday as place for the first time in No. 3, followed in order by • imwo 44 Man'a name 1 m- three years. 46 Extrasensory ;• W » ?» • Jl < ^^sovereign of all it could sur- North Carolina, -Maryland, 'W?z. ucla (is)..-. in M4 •reeptlon > /5vey—No. 1 in the Associated The Irish collected 38 of 51 Marauette. VandArhilt: N. Car. St......... 11-1 7B2 33 t 13 Si Si ^ Kf Press poll. i liit is 5^ 54 a 4<) i^t Notre Dame, .in ending f f. UCLA's 88-game winning jWKWjSi.-. 41 4l. 4^ •-Worth Carolina JUI?Pe<* streak with a dramatic come-points. UCLA received. 15 -Alabama.... VIM 334 54 Mountain first-place votes and 944 ahead of Maryland Mar-'10. L. Beach St. .i ..ti-1 MS (abbr.) -v 45 ^7 . 48 49 -mSNM> >S AJ/'» Set-Ups PEDAL OUT OUR WAY toiorfuf new s^ictency':and. r&m W®i ^two-bedFgrw 11V•,w._ US0A dwke leef .S-i;, im |m| J muscle toning machine; giving you a fresh, By Appointment' ,..... . .(v . :(C#HWT;,Clrtt#'Ui J arton Hills Only Iyouthful, look. — CHUCK ROAST mms 991 11 LAYER CAKE MIXES 35'< V " • -• ... •• . "tt—:—r Regular orS«|er Free PEPSI-COLA $1.09| MNUQMNAT HOME WHERE IT IS --j CirtilliIM ARE YOU UNHAPPY CHILI WITH BEANS \&2rA, Sci with your ITAMALES iitttota -*** -*• %&%•'*-< ft ** '' ' ^ iM i ^ —/ta "ivi f i REFRIED BEANS . ... Jsirek fty iyffreiKii Style Oree* VKIcVI OlAli9 Giwi}, Ne. 303Cae ... 2f0R }' IHI-C DRINKS ST".: * iff IDATIONS? hasui fee: KgSKMS^&SSJSfesssS^^SSicffiBissssssBasr. W FROZENFOODife & i -^.ASv I BAT Birr BMCMtwrnrTwIiey rerun 4*h* k,*; , As long as you POT rl» NUrtealoz. .....^. ...»». . 49* You can work at youn;$. f^ergy everything, m ^ ss-A own speed and get* U; MINI DONUTS ioe<.pVf. ; 1 Mv*"-> ^ J*\ fjl.':iwill be fine.j^'J'02'i We will have a few select vacanciesUniversity credit.^ ^mk^HBALTH k BEAUTY~Mi ^ for, men and women w jhe 2nd Semester 'pi W 'm ~a > d--C-r~4g* V&M-ItjfllSTIRINE 3ft- Jart. #74 ^ |$1.13 ClOSI-tlP !£ST~ _• 21 terrific meals a we .if '* r ^ S1.79ARRID Uwceeted, > Our Roomsm'* Private • 6 Day a Week Moid Service CORRESPONDENCi >me with: • Heated Swimming P^Jr mmt ^..PEARl. HAVEL STUDY •?un,'®c'|S "• * ORANGES . PEER U-TilnUSTIM gg&Mente, ta lbt er PtiwImw UgbT UAPPLYNOW, EXTE -5 t •m K -«. B: Rooni.2(il^A— .WADISON HOUSE >N MADISON-BELLAIRE APTS V."f tS t j • ' 1 341S Narthiand •Mi Tyesday ,1974 THE D^JPLY TE3 bS . PBioSwSssSSrjaiWii IBTtiBffifliii m ' _ y liatener^r ears) lome "hard drlving, hypnotic THE MESSAGE in this film h^Uy exists and symphonic (all;the tot-^ '%Ast in 0»e Stars;" »Urring Broek in the first half bat comes through vividly in struments together, with, Meters and Melba Moore; writte*by the second. Again, Peters has all the deptti the lead guitar clearly fin ad Hayes; produced by EUy low- and smo# to make the viewer understand, F' '>v'i j the lead) rock, as in ad; directed by Daniel Mam; at tbe Jeff to sym^thizeand to wact Anyone not mov­ ^t«IM "Desperadoes Waiting for . Tneiday only. 51 ed by the scenes in "Lost in the Stars"' hasa Train," which started ft *• By William A. Stoae Jr. #a*»t 1 surely missed o«t.pn $, taodiinf, piece of like a slow ballad with a .. "• Texan Still Writer . repetitiouschorusandend­^«Lost'ln the Stars" has to be jooe of the cinema. : By JIM FREDEEIC^J ° ed, well, llkeji train. most beautiful, heartrending movie-musicals :•*** Texan Staff Writer '*9®, she tries valiantly to hold her .own* She """Desperadoes" was. made. The American Film Theatre wjMPjje test ThFng altouTj ' ever doesn't quitesuccoed,thou^i.and Ithiid^all followed by something like (AFT) gefie* has finally broken out of its JerryJeff Walker's perfdr-she lacks is a little experience to help her "!Gotta Feelln," another 'limited structure(itsfirst three movieswere mance Monday xtigbt at the. blossom more fully. One things about Miss . "rocker" which got this substantially restrained in their settings, County Dinner Playhouse Moore which makesherdelightfully different politeaudience to the point having been shot primarily within asingleset was the playing of hit, is that she sincerely attempts to transcend that when the song and the rooms); and group; Not that be didn't, of given its audience a the facial and bodily limitations of her set ended there wasenougi refreshing break from the sledgehammer add a certain amount of musical soliloquies and get something across feet pounding to bring back fa>rcefulness of such previous-pictures Measy, low-voiced charm, to the audience. V";"^ Walker group for ' Or that he didn't sing moat and a "TheHomecoming.' ^ w THE REST OFthe castis fine?, thougha bit couple of "goodtime" It seemsthat the ultimate downfallof most > of his best known songs, stilted in their roles, and the cinematography songs. Within a minute ol piusicals is that the constant breaking-into­ Uke*"Mr. Bojangles." He here isstriking. The production'comesacross their walking offstage the song strikes the audience as hdrribly (and did. -as big and expansive and that's exactly the second time, the lights embarasslngly) artificial. "The actions and'. But his songs themselves ate effect,it needs to hit its audience full-face. wereon and half the people speeches of the characters become merely are generally a little too /There is one scene, however, which falls, were on the way to the intervalsfor the songs,and theaudience feels much third person to be arid director Daniel Mann is largely toblarney. impressive enough on their, narking lot. ;, :A-cheated. SC 'V* -f^li The scene involves Absalom (the fated son Ml'• * "LOST WTHE STARS" overcome^ this, own merits.." . and his emotional torment while In prison. iHl What Walker needs, and, Despite reports totheop­however. Thesongs are here, yes, but the ac­ PP PlfvT^T^lSI ' |if! • HP"•******* •» AnM Ufa* posite, the Country Dinner ting and direction overshadows them. His fellow inmates stand thickly on one side what he has, is a of the-courtyard while Absalom pjaces the , •r> professional-and acV Jerry Jeff Walker performs atCounfry Dinner Playhouse. Playhouse is an excellent Besides that, the lyrics improve rather /than -1 other—everyone's singing,of course—and the * complished group, in­place for aconcert; though detract from the story. -4§|| they were amazingly sub­Dylan's "One Too Many nights just for thehellof it, If you sit in the front rowof entire setup looks like a black remake 6f,7 cluding (at times) two lead The greatest asset to "Lost in the Stars,"m I tle, delicate and together, Mornings" •this theater in the square ,/Weat Side Story." guitars, pedal steel, piano, never missing a cue. But saying that Walker • >really ; you might haveahard time however; is Brock Peters. Here is a black -'^Excejrt for tftg unfortunate scene (and organ, sax, clarinet, Especially when Walker and his band could be sub-Ami irtrt: seeing over amps, organs man whose face—whose very, screen ea-$# director Mann's tedious fascination with trumpet and trombone, sence-r-is so powerfully expressive that tyM? overhead camera shots), "Lost-in the Stars" or pianos. with various members; audience falls victim to the emotion and In-strikes me as one of those rare pictures The only really Fa-trading lead for bass, bass-volvement he makes them feel. And theS-i which uses—but is not used by—its musicalquestionable aspect of such for piano, clarinet for sax.,? an evening was just theim­viewer is grateful to be included. "* pg content.1walked out of the theater feeling as . As one of the band saidj * • 'r ' |^® If' as they were warming up' ted them from "Up Against J tie and delicate and ^country honk but some,Of age of all those Well-Peter portrays a preacher living in South|||| though I had just seen something quite 1 i|#*»•»* i tandancy to bo Irritable'and crosi. •^y£| tached. Loosen up a little. Reagan Square ^ ) TAUtUti Yey tond toward extravagance KCHtflOt It would be wise' for you to TATION ..'*•1 • • HAS presents at this time. Be »ure you don't over-watqh your pocketbook now. Don't BI«, 12 FLAVORS OF WINK COOUftS, DtUCIOUS extend your resource*. make rash promises.--. -r.. OWMMP Thing* tend to be "haavy" for SAWTTAMUSi Youore probablyIna fairly you now. Pertwpt you may learn i open state of mind and your money TEXAS BLUiGRASS BOYS SANDWICHES, 4 TOMADO FOOSBML TABltS,yOOL,>* - HNBAIL,PONQ,BtMCTHONK HOKiSHOESJkND A KOfTIC ^ BLUEGRASS MUSIC! ; how to lift your own spirit*. , ' -situations are fluid. WCSTCRN ATMOSPHiM YOU'Mi SUM TO UKi. CANORi Discipline It Implied when try­CAMKORNi It may be that you are TONIGHT ONLY ; .'m-'M IO*Mm.stse-siso ing to accomplish anythingof merit. \ stimulated to bring more inner or V­Don't make things too easy on outtr. wealthInto your sphere of In­--Smrving your favorite B—r A Wirw Cootea, Sangria, yourself. """ ' fluente. ' -• * s.2& * 1 and 21 votmMm of Pinoi In Mvar HMs ~ A;/;;. • UQ^ Don't letdoubts or the temptationto • AayAtiUSi Don't, allow yourself to j»vTK|#r^ \ i U " ,','pot something over" on the world procrastinate as there is a tendency -Influence you now. toward moodiness. Keep smiling. * 454-4116 4)21 Cimtm RHJ, RNfM Sfm VMQOi You are not willing to make mcBi Pay attention to your intuitions, m iii v . . emotional adlustments at this time, . hunches, and inner guidance. A "-7Kr Roldlng out for love on your own realization could move you to trans­ '5a5^-v-f /}SW'¥vr>'. ••• &4&JT terms. cend. ..—0„Jp»v»r ShoeShop •SALE* £t^ -& P'We make and SHEEPSKIN Conserve Gas & Save Money 4>1 repair boots RUOS Migrate noar campus. Excef/ent location, ^ ~;,T' £ shorn belts ToesDAY near shopping center and shuttle bus. Two *500Be.a£|lo^75fl leather -75" per ft. r "3 " V",%'*'¥• 'IK ,.t OTfOO* Various kitids, colors at reasonable rates. Call 454-9475" or come on wheels. by 4305 Duval.J.1^,. ^ . ~ ..-v.-. ^Capltdl^Saddlery COME SEI THI. "" Wm-Z­ 1614 Lavacsrife Austin, Texas &.* 47^9309 th^puval yiila Apartments MEW IQOK IN LUXURY CARS. MAZD §t ATTENTION: RX-4 SUPPER RESTAUR DRIVERS --%& A Special Every Weekday We now have d large selection of new ROAST BEEF SANDWiCHE and used Jeeps -see them now at ? ^ HAMBURGERS FISH PLATE french fries, green ^ ROGER BEASLEY JEEP OOSBALL -PONG; salad, fexas Toast and 6918 Burnet Rd. -. 454-6848 Sound System by Circle Stereoj iced or coffee.i 25 Open Everyday 1 1 d irt tea 1974 ,W-' H / , \* y MAZDA RX-4 19th & San Antonio 478-391 Corn&hmof 19th and Guadalupe SEE IT NOW AT . < is®, ™ 477-6829 ROGER BEASLEY MAZDA 6918 BURNET RD. 454-6848 COLOR TV the newMr^SS -S25 Mo TMONTHS $75 APPROVE D Z 5T *#.'**• I STfig^yu S«n»f*,#r *"* *'3 Afo EN-SPEED APE RECORDERS $12 MONTH SYSTEMS I7WRK I—. KAHSfW WK ;M0.1#s BUCTRtC PORT. TYfCWMTtt 96 4 $1214 ^^^^ :i0stariih^clats^§ OR WITH CARRiAOC IKTURN omen'rSelf^Defenseisi^ ADOtNO MACHiNCS «nd WITH CRB*T MUNCK Self-DefenseSi MANUAL TVPfWRITKRS ' ^ S5 $• .'k -—.-ft f* •* -•-' . .'Si-,': Further Information Coniatt UCTRO»nC CAICUIATORfe 1* •: After 5:00 p.m. j£JM~ TYMMfltttiRS -»10 %7i% UNIVERSITY CYCLERY SPECIALS RATES s TiMf.TrTliiirf. Tl f OvI^mi % Afvorodo ' 194 Kntray Hwy. 12S4S.Um«r . ^ffc. SIS4SM Ph. 441421* for men and women CIhw Woiiwy , ^ Classes hold Mon .Thur< 6-7.30 S> 1:30-9 m TShon^47«-17M GUADALUPE * 476-3929 2901 N. Itnwir 5134 BURNET ROAD • 454-6731 ry Course $12.00 607 W#28th If12 W. AnderMit Une Tuesday, January^ 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN ;\Vfour Urals in Sequence. Of these wasforeseen, fieTstated. performance " warned students to b$ -the most striking is the -Before his presentation, at Gregory Gym of the occult practices sion, Kole discussed the other' description historical Kol^' commented i$iat\r--Vf jr % reason—it Death," which he designed to and necromancy. In response side m ,y IMMEDIATELY reassured, Kole makes no claims to -the volunteer put his head on supernatural power. "Any &­ television j.Jhe, block, the blade was, year-old wjpj the knowledge I The time of series pilots has f p.m. * 9 Bill MoyarV Journal Wm-z 1 . .. -'....Mil L.'.—T> I.. come again. It's that time o£ -2* Happy Days . year when the networks are^S % Adam-« 0PEN7M RA.7M testing the popularity of their "f<» mi ONE COMPUTE SHOWING ONLY 7 Hawaii FIveK) possible new series by offer-^ UST MY 24; Movie: "Get Christie LOveHgff ing them to the home TVr£ 36 Banacek . — 465-6933 audience in the form of full, pm 9 Evening At Pops length TV movies. 7-H'awKiHi; 7:30-p,m. -'» 9 Consultation k 11 * a shapely police detective who.S v10tM is out to uncover a huge dru^ ,f jmov... »»»..••n.-SW W empijre. Teresa Graves stars* f as the female sleuth in this ¥34 A Beautiful Killing pilot based op ."Law and "36 The Toftlgm Show !S' J.'rt-!-.j, .+ j. -f .j. + h .* 7 Hee Mawv JNobody --iS ** *>. > 9,24 36I DreamNews of jeannle • -1 iSr;r?r-y*¥«V ;>] stuffSa Arts and Theatre Committee C > "*} 'tTONIGHT,! sandwich ^ i v ^^^onight 8 : BUND 1:1 like mom it except GEORGE THE JACKIE Starring Jackie Robinson • ;• NO COVER • •'Si Ruby D«« it',1! *mm-­ JLli ' . '?>'>• isl BEVOS -A-^ ry?.T', —WESTSIDETAP ,iha8»nim MIXED DRINKS' ' >: • 0T^!udents,faculty, C «:iI2iS*n Jacinto 24th and RIO GRANDE Members -75* 2C04 Ouadalnpe t. (In hMtarof " ­ t.So «dte kb ISOUTHSIDEL^n , John Wayne *f 1 < Anne'Margret js • SUnlerBAer!..-.-;- 112 £'.y.'.-. Alex Cord Screw IL "TK UST 8KNk>r (N) list & Guadalupe S«cond Uvcl Dpbi* Mall 477*1324 . Ton SleRu JmmY Slate. U -TODAY ONLY :n«ii«H8»r ;p:; r-rrff-l.-00-3:15.5j0-51 760-l0H)S-$lJO ;r;" "Piarinia^lpppcr, Jo<{y McCrta 12:«-2J0-S:fl0-$1 7:40-10^1^0^ ^ IK MORT siMfrlu* u 7 Koifrm* WiDiaro Xpiijr Youn 1 WiUiaro Smith, Tonljr jfounc f "CMKMK AIM N^OAliar (IV) iiaeroB Rd. ai 1B| ^ $$&.*<• ;!fP SHOWTOWK y ' Stern. Jeremy Sl«t'e'r§'^ U/l • ,imis mas Dennii Mopper. Jody McCn* B| __ "TBI MORT STOMraB"4;i.; ; WiIJi»ni Smith, Tony Younjt 1 tmOW AMD MOT UATKOr Ml U ALLIED ARTISTS presents ,^oes1!Mi Theyhada messagefortheArmy: _ JM - #| ma FRANKLIN J. SCHAFfNERlHni KENRUSSELLSFifiW Clint Eastwood.Te1lvSavalas.DonRickles. Carroll O'Connor and Donald Sutherland PANAVISION* TECHNICQLO|,a. ' 9th WMk RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN GLENDAJACKSCjN. in"KELLYS HEROES" m Monday thru Friday1* •af '7:00> 9:35 p. TARTSTOMORROW­ ..FANAVBWH®:TECttOCQLQR®vftom *ttn*ftsi-O Jr S1.M til 3 Mk VARSITY8 ¥ 4 ;-4 -i.ihl hmm MMM . STREC1 IM BiWI IBM yr'"-'' $1.00 HI 7.-00 PJ*. 5J0-7^0-»-J0 moot MOORE AS JAMES I0l» .ffc-flS mmmwm . , N0WI OKN 1*5, « HMcS5tftto Wfcwdl PHcm "A SOLID A BANG UP REWARDINC :OP CAPER. Gene Sh.ilit, NB DETECTIVf V To STORY 11 d i 11! AN .NGROSSINI REALISTIC VND ADJU VIOLENCE! ;rime VIVIDLY AND :aper HONESTLY A H. Wciler J. V limes PORTRAYED! — Bru< o Ciuik N.HKin.il Ohserver The Laughing Policeman COLOR nv flf: I liyp* MATINtt MON. Mm 1500 3.PLEASANT VALLEY AAA OOOO unitojy mr FEATURES 2-4^-8-10 • $1.50 til 6 p.m. " From the producer of "Bullitt" and "The French Connection! THE SEVEN-UPS BPB COLOR BY TVCIAB •PRINTS BY DELUXE* ftairtWllnrtclwldtr » T«ny U >hi»«» HELD OVER AREDFORD ;]S1.00 TIL 4 MI­ FEATURE TIMES 12i0-3M.5:10-7JS-9J5 BUTftJUNIISTII EHECtiTIHE MnenmK $1JO HI * |MN. , KATURE^NMEi? YUt IRYNNER RICHARD lENJAMINw PANAVISION* JAMES BROUN MrmocouM MOM* TRANS^TT^CAS NS»1 LAST DAY "JHtfMY" UST OAT -I OFIN -$1.00 til *:1S» ikfIATURES *!l54^0-*^' 1423 W, SIR WM) Mud.—442-23)3 RATEO P6 "'C^ Mtgg ( BTARTS TOMORROW ^ frooghostljrhirk mounUin thiseerie storyof witches^. voodoo...devll&...inoi»lerB WM momtainfirfk swear lt\true 1AST DAY "J0P' P«*vl:4S $1.00 till * ml EXA5 KATURES 2-44 (SmmIi at •), • -ws PREVII TONIGHT t STARTS TOMORROW ^ P»Mi_ —Owi* C^MB NOW VoA MtntWi' BSJgSiS- Vi ' M|W' wsms^S s saw ii^ itasfestMSaSM 64ft«i^f3cRPJM^5®r»i^Si" ®TO hi I nil "••rM»i,iiVri>«»S .75 Hon, champion lineage, shots, wormed!,, Available with TV cable, swlmmTrtg Efficiencies • 1and 2 bedrooms,";-: 1575; 47l'3712. 5; SAVE >56 on semester contract in Pf' ABP $142.50. 477-0144, 2101 Ifio Grande^ iM? Beautiful Castillan dorm. AAust soil Classified Otsplay •> -< needs fenced yard: 150. 47M932. pool, and patioareas.'Large closets, ful­Tappan Appliances " ifWil M #*/ mediately. Phono 444-4541, 474-4209. AustinParachute Canter 1 col. xone inchonetime,..,...*2.94 ly draped. . Washerdryerfecllltie*. Dishwasher, Olsposal, Gas SMvO- MINI APARTMENT. Open betm eella{ - Tsor. * ttrta Intli 8-9 time* «.«\*« 1972 FORD VAN. Long wheel bast. air. Located biockfrom shuttlebus. Sewat vtpdlvlduatly controlled CA/CH,pook * 1 tTiT &¥ ­body, tires. • Recent paint, shoclit. ' IDEAL ADULT / NO LFI3S6 '• 1 Iversity areal Call Rod Wotsel at' 47^>st4— blocks from campus; Car storage only:, •foM ENVIRONMENT pno ifef Furrflihedsnd UnlurnljhedApartments S10 monthly. GL3-2364. TV RENTAL black and whlte *5.00 battery.385-49U after 5. --8841 or 472-0253. «<> . * / one and two bedrooms week, *13,00 month. Free delivery.-452--J ^'v • LOW STUDENT RATES ^ FACULTY, GRADUATE , Tappan Appliences ARISTOCRAT You Belon NICE ROOM In house.Mj4-VVe>t 22nd. APARTMENTS.; On« *73 CORVETTE convertible, fully load­ .tws.-| 15 words or less for 75* the ed lowunitaage^ 472-Rtl W4JI-2I4S. , r^&T4JDENTS AiN&'YOUWSl s ^MWRNHTE*4>*otn»l gat stov*-bedroom~i12S plus gfMf -first time, 5* each ad-MARRIEDS. A, individually controlled M4 ^UL.slMjhrPM&Hitr pa^ji^^ WORTH BLUFF ESTAIE SOFT DRlNks'4S* slf pack, local Beer * , mOPEL GX Great as mileage, good, ^ CA/CH, pool, TV ctto" sliiappliances. On bus line. Twoblocks Efficiencies, studios> 1, 2, ancan be neighbors end Lamar, 454-8541. carpets, draperies, dishwesher, dis­enloy the following: "Unclassifleds"T-l line 3 posal, frostless refrigerator, total elec­Professional management, BOZAK URBAN Speakers. 3 wey furnished, and all the extras un­ S149.50 ALL BILLS PAID, J bedroom times $1.00 (Prepaid, No. system. Walnut cabinets. i3*S the pair.; tric much more.Located near Highland MMFM '-98^8^ •you expect ^ like laundries, • derground city:utilities, natural ait,• LEAD SHEETS Melody, chords; lyrics ; . furnished, CA/CH* built-inkitchen, near" for copywriting ^s.j^ldvaeajate. | i»Jaguar Sedaiv wire wheels, sunroof, Mall, lust IVi blacks west of Reagan D&MMI saunas> exerclserooms,9ame paved streets* 2 cai» off-streel parkins, il •Refunds). Student must S450. Dodge^ck-up$350.sqi«ashblos)om NO; tease:^« -campus: 4307 Avenue A. 451-7I7I, 474:. patios; storage area, a club house with Inexpensive. Call Jan.442-0258.282-2031. : Phone 477-Mjjlh, between IH35 and Hwy. 2W and j*nd Unfurnished '4455. 'rooms,' pools, putting green, Bs5??S?.$m «how Auditor's receipt ana necklace, S300 ne 451-4432 or v ^ :;':.>Furnishe<| and Unfurnlthecf : . lounae, kitchen and billiard room, laun­ pay in TSP 862V. •'•''''•'"One Bedroom Apartments n-SfromUwSchool; iblockt AND dry facilities, picnic areas yrith outdoor. 2 -BOB DYLAN ticket* wanted. Good Bldg. 3.200 (25th & Whitis) f j Tappan Appliances _ AC,. the Cricket Club. Soon there'll grills; 2 well-equipped playgrounds and advance 4fl vi RATES FROM $152 SIX BLOCKS from Price. 477-2355. shuttle bus. One bedroom $13S. PIONEER PL-51 direct drive turntable it* ALL BILLS PAID V Vis Dishwasher, disposal, gas stowsJ# an invitingpool. Quiet Countryliving.|u$f . . from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. with base, dust cover, Shure .V-lS type 7707 GRAND CANYONDRIVE Individually controlled CA/CH;TV cable closets. 32nd andlnterreglonal.47^-3995, • be a Water polo pool and hand^ 10 minutes south of Oowndowri Austinon carpet, dishwasher, disposal, walk-in Monday through Friday. HI. 441-0032. LA QUINTANA ball courts, too. Come join us IH 35, Bluff Springs exit. Monthly rent JOB WANTED VOLVO 1225 1M7 2 dr, AM/FML needs 4545515 452-6047 4314 Bull Creek Road 4541274 MINI:APARTMENTS, also one and two nowl» ;^ From $145 ^ m starts at lust *50. Adlacent to the T ^ Jlmmey Clay golf course. some engine and body work. S400. Cell - bedrooms. Close to campus. Fully :4444846^8'vfc!;4iP 4600 ELM CREEK DR. Mike *2S;1M5. . carpeted, CA/CH, rich wood panellni FOR SALE WE-RENX.M .pool, all built-in kitchen. From-»1l9.5 2101 Burton Dr.. 441-1627 CREATIVE CHILD CARE M^CME*OIM CAMERAS 3b%^50% OFK CaWFfb" 4200 Avenue A. 4544423, 4764655. , '' ~>(off East Riverside) In your residence for children who want ^ Ft.2,-list 1534.00 only S2K,00."Camera extra stimulation and activity-.-! Obscura 47I-S187 evenings. fc^USTIN-;*. ONE BEDROOM STUQJjQ, fully LOST & FOUND Professional experience with children.; BankAmericard, MasterCharge. ' $115 -$130 plus utiimes^ carpeted,'bullt-ln kltchen, balcony off of NORTHEAST. Huge land 2 bedroornT Infants, the gifted. Also, training with' Complete kitchens, lotsof storage. From *125 plus electricity. 1402 EastSt. Johns, feu iVourtime is valuable Large, 1 & 2 bedroom, turn., bedroom, pool, 1<^ baths. Convenient to learning problems. Judlty Michaels. > STEREO 1972 FEST iVAC 14*x70' double- campus and Highland Mali. Available'' *100 REWARD for male west Highland ' 441-0424 centraf CA/CH, shuttle bus (b^Reagan High School) 454-1583. 476-White terrier. Lookslikea white Scottie. ~> '•£ lnSulated. 3-2, CA/CH, W/D carpeted, "Our service is free ML. unfurnished S150, furnished SIM. bill* Lost December 17; If: found please call *3.50 per hour !50,00 per weekehd ­ VM furnished unfurnished, bay window and city bus, walk to shoi paid. 701 North Loop. 4S4-3837, < 4594802 " • skirted. 9264661 ' SYSTEMS ° PARAGON 1206 & 52nd, Mgr. Apt PEACEFUL WEST AUSTIN: Colorful LOST AT TENNIS Courts on 45th. , '(3 CHEVY expired inspection: sticker efficiencies and 1bedrooms. Shag, com­ TRAVEL SAL. PROPERTIES plete kitchen, near FURN. HOUSES Prescription glasses, wire fram*s> Call $150 cash: Come by 1914 Patton Lane. Enfleid snuttle. 444-4221 for Wayne.:,.REWARD ' 10 SPEED MENS Raleigh bicycle. One From S139 ABP. 1211 West.8th (off Blaiv ' -' -! -' *M-K : year otd. lmmaculate. SlOOor best offer. WALK TO CAMPUS CO) 474-1197, 476-2633. .LAKE AUSTIN, quiet country living, Kenwood / LOST ON MONDAY 14th -gold ringkey 55 MPH TOO SLOW Reasonable winter minutes eam- Call 451-4131. Seasonable priced. Large «one^ bedroom rafes, . 15 to chain with oval pendant.: irreplaceable : weekdays apartments available; Carpeted;: STEPS TO UT. 1 8. 2 bedroom efflclen-pus/downtown, New 1, 2, and 3 bedroom keys. REWARD: 'l^.^lMl. 44I-0m,' Sansui v V REALISTIC TR-SOO »-track recorder. CA/CH, pool, sundeck, built-in kitchen.' cles; NIC# pool area, study room, orien­mobile homes-*75-*160..Houseboat *120. Ann;.;--:. : : for where you ne#d to go? ^ -* " jvc : Fast-forward, pause;, timer, large view 311 East 31st -tal furnishings. From*139ABP. 405 East -Mack's AAarlna. 327-1891, 327"U51, Fi_Y CESSNA!r^-rl meters; repeat, continuous, and auto-31st. '472-2147, 476-2433. FOUND CALCULATOR during lastPioneer stop functions. SIM. Free cartridges in­478-6776 476-4655 2 BEDROOM /MOBILE HOME. Near week of finals. Call 474-4470 and give Energy-efficient transportation" cluded. Robert 444-S177. weekends Central -Properties Inc. QUIETENFIELD AREA. One bedroom Lake Travis,RR 2222. *130 -lots *40.244-• : details. i\ with bulit-ins, vaulted sellings. Small.: ,1794 or 477-9771, , -BIRD'S NEST AIRPOR1 Sherwood. 1.;. GOOD GA&. MILEAGE; +947-Ford community llylna. $139.50 plus electrlck AAALE IRISH AETTER lost weering two Custom 4 dr,power, air, excellentcondi-THE WILLOWICK . , Jy. 801 West Lynn. 477-8871, 474-2633. c" 272-5337 - ,Harmon Kardon tion, very clean. 327-0988, 475^4421. collars January 8. Answers tO'Argos. Live in Wooded Seclusion UNF. HOUSES REWARD. 442-5271. please.; NORTHEAST NEAR SHUTTLE, NEEDED CAR POOL MEMBERS from' SU CASA Both two end tour-channel receivers. QUEEN SIZE BED with legs, good con-Larger Apartments with shag carpets, Highland Mall,& Capitol Plaza. Large 1 San Marcos to UT dally. Call 392-7475 In Check this one out. TWO BEDROOM. Near UT, five blocks HOBBITT OFFERS *5.00 for return of San Marcos. f - small grey cat with lightmarkings. Last: dition $40. '46 VW seats Mack, good SIO. modern furniture, accent wall and con-: 203 West*39th & 2 bedroom with ail the extras. From east of IH35. *125/monfh plus bills. 327- , 472*0670. ' S137 SO -plus electricity. '1105 Clayton 0425. . seen running across GuadalupeTn front. Lane. 453-7914, 476-2433. yenient central location. 451-2268 till 6 -\« of Varsity Theater towards University:'73 YAMAHA 250MX. full race, modified Stereo Center FIVE BEDROOM older home; Near Methodist Churchi Cat is wearing white ports, KonS's, etc. Must sell; call 474-1 Bedroom FRIENDLY PEOPLE. Large 2-2 In • Now leasing for Spring " '' "small community.' Just aVwalk to UT downtown, 3 blocKs east of IH35. collar.Please call AmandaSanders. 454­203 East 19th 4209.-S145 unfurnished J140 fumlstied* •Apartments justredecorated with beautifulcourtyard and pool. From *385/month plus bill*. 327-0425. 8452. She wants hef Kitty-cot, 476-6733 1963 OLDS SUPER M. four door, ac. ps, 2.Bedroom • Quiet atmosphere S200 ABP. 803 West 28th. 472-4480, 474­ "Five blocks east of Guadalupe on 19th SS0.476-5744 after 4:00 , 2433. v. " VINTAGE GRETSCH GUITAR. New • Pool, party room & Bar-Br ,ACT I, II, 8< III-Colorful new mini­ -S178 unfurnished ^198 furnished Shuttle on corner All Bills Paid < Yorker/4Call 475-4780 between t«3r -Que apartments near shuttle. 3 locations, 3 Recorded blastIOlal 477-3749. Classifieds the Moriday-FHday: , 444-0487 • Water and Cable Paid J. \ -floor redwooddesigns,exteriors. 3 bright$145 color, ABP. schemes, 38th and Mentalpatiientsliberatlon 474-4172. 400 South First St. THE HONDA 90. Low mileage, candy redr' Half Month Free Rent > • Our Spring Sates are "J " '4 2i„ way area. ^478-1841, 928-2952, 476­ -silver. lOO mpg Helmet included. S3S0. Moving? Help: *10 a truckload. 268-1891 discount 441-0446 (evenings) 1 BR, 1 BA. -$160 PHOENIX to campus, "Shop ^ SCHWINN VARSITY 10 speed, 22" -includes .shag, corrtplete kitchen, double rooms, lounge with color TV and Fff S105 • 2 BR, 2 BA.:$275 walk„ one DIOCK r... ARC Dalmation pups. *40. 474-1134. EFFICIENCIES ON SHUTTLE. *129.50 bingie and- T Bedroom -$150 . hotel -beds, frame, new tires, tubes, front wheel 585; CA/CH. Smalt community. 4204 refrigerator. Extra large Female roommate. Good deal. 474-9892. shag carpet's, daily maid -STEREO & TV'! 43*4849 after 4 p-m. All Bills Paid,Maid Service, 6; Speedway. 452-0W6; 476-2633. . r service.'Hot: plates allowed.— No extra charges. 10 speed Huffy *24.478^1466 Advertise SEMESTER LEASE. Large new 1 8. 2 r^criver-ampfifier. Excellent condition. • r-• mates furnished. J-We have any type of bedroo'ms wlth shag, Icemakelr'S* 476-9265 i » m-STTt New Shlclc flexamaffib *18. 478-1466. rr®i4!l};S¥ 3 Reasons To Shop At $#LEl -EtCO 100 watt FM stereo blocks from campus. Room*. STUDENTS afe-Singles *89.50; Doubles *49.50 THE DISCOUNT Call 345-2339. clubroom, TREES. Secluded locatiort In 476-3467 ^ » X apartment you want at Northeast off Manor Road. From *159 57 int. Harvester van.*595 477-7614 SHOP GIBSON GUITARS ES335TDC electric PASO HOUSE For -hard shell cast -J-45. Staft ^633., Cameras 30%-50% off (neW) 478-5187 "I. Personal Service case, both excellent,' 441-7941; Efficiencies with elevated separate.-: tion away. (MEN). 2. Quality Stereo Components bedrooms plus enormous one and. two SAN JACINTO ARMS, 1709 San Jacinto. 'AM/FM stereo receiver, Tel. 454-88«;" Call 892-2215 bedroom contemporary apts. withevery Walking distanceUniversity, Capitof.1-2 3. Low overhead. Low prices convenience,-furnished or unfurnished. bedroom, 2 batn. CA/CH, carpeted, Spring semester, largo rooms, CA/CH, *: Male Castillan contract. 472-8782. ~" FURN. APARTS. refrigerators. Maid service, hot plates Housing 10 to 6 OAK CREEK isrenvironmentally ••*200. water-gas-cable paid. No pets. S13S-* allowed, parking space. Siogle *90, Dou­ 38th & Speedway 477-0937 oriented and offers » creek that winds THREE ELMS 474-0920, 472-4838. ble J50. All Bills Paid. House plants, reasonable. 474-1100. . HI6HLAND AAALL through the community/convenient to 400 West 35th ' 1808,west Ave; iPh. 478-3917 campus & shopping and' conveniently ' : Furnished -Unfurnished 1 Bedrooms TUSCANY APARTMENTS. Excellent Sony cassette 134SD. Call 441-7582.AREA ON priced from *125. 1507 Houston Strief. Start *13S . for student With family. Close in, con- u SHUTTLE ^ 454-6394 476-4655 EXtraJargeJg for ap­ Ptaza). Open to public 9 to 9 daily; 9 to 6 1, 2, dr 3 bedrooms pointment. On shuttle bus ' "* „ ;•' APTS unfurnished or furnished . - FEMALE GRAD needs 1 or 2 room­837-2030 ; £**• • ' From *140 -*245 44^6*31 NO LEASE. One and two bedrooms. mates to share 2 bedroom apartment on'i 2 BR Furn. — S180 2 swimming pools, playgrounds, Furnished andunfurnished. *129 and up. ' shuttle. 472^7386." STEREO CONSOLES Dishwasher (4) NEW Large — Fully Carpeted -washateria, lighted grounds; 5 minutes 5404 Roosevelt. 454-9848. J.B. Goodwin Co. eqjiipped -with AM-FM Radio, 4-speed WATER & GAS PAID WANTED MALE OR FEMALE room- to UT, minutes to B.A.F.B., steps from auto recordchanger, functipnal controls SHUTTLE BUS CORNER mate to share apartments: for spring IRS, on bus line. BILLS PAID, Free HARTFORD PLACE NO RENT till February 1.4blocks cam-­ for balance, bass, treble and AFC for 4003 RED RIVER channel TV. ,1405 Hartford Road 263-2390 : pus. Alt bills paid.. One bedroom, *150. semester. 444-3411. z* : ---n drift-free FMreception, built-in antenna plus many other features. These sets are 451-4373 452-9027 New furnished efficiencies. Large, .474-3467. 2408 Leon. YOUNG CHRISTIAN ,WOMAN wanted $ CA/CH,'sliag carpet, quiet atmosphere. finished in hand-rubbed walnut (*99.95) r 2 BEDROOM STUDIO apartment. *175 to "share apartment, only steps from 1 Just off Enfield Road; convenient tTOTr cash or terms.United Freightsales, 4535, plus electricity. Shuttle. 4708 Depew, Town Lake.*91JO ABP, Debbie 444-8992. ^ SOUTH Capitol and shuttle busN. Lamar or our new location at 1004 S. of Red River). Lamar (Lamar Plaza Shopping Center). Apt. D (I block east ROOMAAATE WANTED, one bedroom 9-9 Daily, 9-4 Saf. TOWER .SHOREi§§:: ALU BILLSPAID Available immediately. STUDENTS: apt. near campus, *70 plus Vi elec, Call ONE BEDROOM FURNISHED, near ' John at 476^2548. TOP CASH PR ICES paid for diamonds, MANOR APARTMENTS WALK OR SHUTTLE , FLY FREE UT, Hancock Center-^ Carpeted, electric old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop, 4018 N. kitchen, CA/CH, cable, laundry-MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share . Lamar, 454-4877. to U.T. . .j--facilities. *140 plus electricity: 258-1832. new apartment. *78 ABP.-Shuttle, pool, , ^ or • *­ CO-ED DORM dubroom, dishwasher.442-5234 anytime. YAMAHA GUITAR-SALE. Free case -; RENT FREE .. With every goitar, Amster Music, 1424 Efficiency, T, 2, and 3 $125.00 SUB LEASE thru May. Deposit ifree. 1 bedroom, *160 all bills paid at River ROOMMATE WANTED to share apt. Lavaca. • 1 Block Campus 'Quiet • Free Parking bedroom apartments. Luxury Furnished Hills. 441-2053. CA/CH, pool, sauna, your share ex-(If you rent this y/eekl) 'Maid Service. AAanager Apt. 103 penses-*51. Gait Luis 477-1227. ' GUITARS AND OTHER FRETTED in-•LaundryFacilities > Aii Bills-Paid the NORTHEAST SHUTTLE and city bus ­ . struments repaired at reasonable •Offer solution. to 4105 Speedway . -451-2832 MALE ROOMMATE needed to Share route. Colorful one bedroom wifn dis­ prices. OUDS. LUTES. DULCIMERS, your housing. • " -/ 104 E. 32 476-5940 hwesher, pool, unusual furniture. *139 luxury 2 bedroom, 2 bath duplex. SR DURWOOD VI*LLA(»p etc. Custom built. 20% discount on all plus electricity. 1400 East 51st, 453-3304, shuttle. *85.00 447-i^U: strings. Geoff Menke -Amster MLSIC. The South Shore's central location, 474-2433> ~ •>. • v-T^vTv-: 1524 Lavaca. 478-7331: I -T A V T-t V Four people suites; 2 bdrms, 2 provides easy access to U.T. TWO BLOCKS UT. " AAALE ROOMMATE to share large 2 •ONE BEDROOM EFFldlENCIES " One' large bedroom .ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom with bdrm. Own room *85 itio. NR shuttle,. WHY NOT BUY condimiifium and build oaths,-living room, dining Come by and see our new efficiency and., 447-1450. •: ;up an equity while you are inschool? No . 1 bedroom apartments:on Jhe banKs oL: apartments. CAACH, •very extra. Furnished or unfurnished Mod^furriiture, *hag, pool,-laundry, park, walk to large' area, Jtitchenette. P^ivate- from *13».50 pfus elejrtrlclty. 807 West -yardcare,-nice pool.-private lake; cotin-"Town Lake. Complete with shag $hopping center, ABF Lynn. 477-7»4 476-2( NEED FEAAALE ROOAAMATE to share "3P, 2512 Durwood, off Oltorf. : try air. *21,440, 5% down. Oak Hill area. Rooms Available. carpeting, accent wait, modern fur­carpeted, cable, dishwasher,1 new eff. FA/rw, r, 2 ba, ' '\ heated, dishwasher, disposal, shag apartment. River Hills, *61.25/month, T' between 6th and 7tt> on Red River:), PAID N Carpel, laundry. Near Highland AAall. furnished, all Mils paid. S.R. Call 444-/ ^ I'*' BLOCKS FROM LAW SCHOOL. .453-3704. WE'RENT CAMERAS-" LE AAARQUE A new concept in aparfment Near EaitwoQds Park. Take overjease 2865. -.STteaA1 tripeds. prolectorv PolarMs.eteetetv; CJjje lo campus. Luxury efficiencies community living. Five HOW LEASING new efficiency apart-' ROOAAAAATE NEEDED. UT area, 2; Rental Department, ~ cable. *135 plus eiectrlcHy, 4^24565. ,Capitol Camera 476--*15* one bedroom *t30, two bedrooms architectural styles, choice of ment. One. semester'or longer. bedroom, 2 bath, CA/CH, laundr 3581: fool, sundeck. tmircarpeted. cen-furniture styles,»color coor­tiaS/month. At|.bllls paid. 2700 Manor 1 B8PRQOM APARTMSNT. Large facilities, pool,-utilities. Seasonable WINFLO ffal air and heat. Rd-J. 477-4118. 2504 Manor RO,, 474-2201, 1965 PLYMOUTH FURY automatic air, dinated throughout. CA/CH, «»l, shuttle. *155 ABP. 3212 Red RjyH 2608. * R&H, new paint, good i 302 W, 38th HUWflN6? We have N0. 207 bm-3pm^; " URY EFFICIENC4ES condition. *350, APARTMENT all built-ins, available unfur- NEEDONE-FEMAtEToomrnate share Call 459-6854'after 4pm 42&46S5 F J­ nished for $1^ allbills pald^@ 5ne^> two. ffiree, .and four bedroom -^tVE BLOdKt WEST of amniir timtr -CCTtnil ^opertjes, Inc. apartments and duplexes in„seveeaL ^semt^WO#iW«^t?«a"carpet;"'cable, Spanish furniture, shag, shuttle, park, ABPfr —— 1501-Kihney Ave; No:189K' locations From *75. Call ws today, Can-"hl* ^Mod or coat rack (with umB'reila ring), wal«r furnished, *129.Red Oak.2104 San : 476-4655 trai Properties, 474-7940. Gabriel. 476-7916, 477-5514. . TWO SINGLE FEAAALE working room convenient to downtown, 808 Wfnflo In West Austin." Bentwood chairs. Sanity's, 504 Walsh. mates. House, *75/month; Call Valerie. SHUTTLE BUS. Beautiful apartment*. 928-2121. *100 REWARD for faking over spring -WATERSEO, King-site oompiete with , $155 ABP One. bedroom from *119. Two bedroom rS.139.50^j^g#li:­ contract.-Suite contains 3 bedrooms, 2 . frame, sheets, blanket* and-spreed. *40. Iroim UW. Central Properties, 476-7960, CaU ROberf t* p.m. 474-I741. 1 bedrooms DOWN BY THE:^ . bethykltchen,(4 girlsVaH mealsinclud----FEAAALE ROOAAMATE needed toshare shag -paneling 13 ^ML.J707 Rio Orande,-aona Auttlh, 476-i^sbs;o?a.*Aow'Wh ,,jsRfvi ' TOWNLA*e.Beautifuloneoedroonron RIVERSIDE WTJGlTJKSuiuRrnriarMrcyHndars, four giant walK-ins -balconies ;i shuttle. Prom S139 aH bills paid. Celt u$ pipe*, backrest, good condition, runs Spanish turriishinas , ~ Large new 2 bedrowhs furn. or unfurn. today. Central Properties, 474-7940. NEED ROOAAAAATE *75 plus Slec. -j, II Own perfectly. *625,45H4KI anytime. , 2423 Town Lake Circle * ?!£&* • "S?-,large. closets, complete 7127. Ask for Susan, Near shuttle. 451-0. <5ir"*-i NO. TRANSPORTATION? kitchen with food service bar, pool, S CASITAS APARTMENTST North ""— >*fter*w 11 —444-IU8 476-2633 _ jrj^Rtemwr64 50/month Sl'ar N6:Leasers . fpur:b|>t frorrt campmi locafed 900 Wesl .AAanager 305-2043 mlnutestroil um^us,-own bloslis Ojpm glamentary. *19.<00. MiM Mibtock fromcampus fiumisneo and unturmsMd aparfment* 22. AAgr. No. 212 or No. 214. Call 4744346. after 4:00. no bill*,,near 1 woods -Efficiencies -land 2 bedrdoms Tappan Appttaiic** • : w¥w~P6>PERTRrEte (V and V. SOUTM AUSTIN, close to shuttte bus FEAAALE ROOMMATEIsr needed to 1 Outstanding apartments • Iultra- CONSILIUM RENTALS ' 'desirable locations, oulttanding layout, 1910 Red River -<74-5431 ^SSffSh^SCAWpiw/^V WdfjZalTt^'johrrHolmU0or'^teve Jj^He^'fiSa, Biology Lab* totally.different color scheme, close to & APARTAAENJ LOCATPJL SERVICE-- LriLe„. Harrlton.PeafHg.AuOc ­ A.PJiMaoo.Property— tA —­ 477-3210 »1».S# (ABPi'i^BHI1 892-2215 476-6707 Unlf 7551 . «H9W^PSg8» i--­ piiwi TYPING gfit*«NHsr v-:-:SPipai North Communi Guadalupe plfep riOW&T* ..fftfltgn Apartment ftf) Wme. but Win consider <»ert* Hm bofferinga series of 10 con­ .... iii. euiidl«ig 300 for a|i newtnemt. CawaTmss, tn pay Care Center.'Natural' Program in Public -, , ...Ralph., -MMnvitTlWMNAllwill be presented typing. 40 tw^.-lmmWlate opening. ** tinuing education coursesfor Food. Coding, Flower • ministration, Drawt. v 1*1^!:**••*«<>«>•™Te*« -wh Tuesday W <55** t " ' ot-Ust Jk £• Arranging and FCC J)n}y^$.& Alabama 35486., -constitution. Ml *222. Al Jack ton, *Uolvi ing, MultiMtitn$ Binding Ciwwroi -StgnCo. fSm ,|be spring semester. ACACWMC MWUM eoWiHrtlM wit}.-y graduate student, «»in disci -f: ^Classes scheduled Include sponsor a forum on "Whit To t>o It _gj _ Complete Professional K4" E«t*SfTth License Training, * ' i5 vj -51 " * " • .. .. .. . . .. URPE Matting .v| SSS&rtt'iff FULL-TfM€ Typing PART TIME TYPIST, Afternoons, at- Pbofcograptiy lor Fan, 6 to ® ;,jjr>wFori^uZ^Ur*uuuiiiuiuuiiwircgisus-wnrK iviwmiu c^JWSWySES JlMk mimtti11 ^Service 'M:#w letterhead* and envelopes. ~ ffPtfj,„to tt.m; TTrorsdays, beginninr1^ »8*a&» ot*ApartknUir ^*£^Vtti2t nadiraiW^^"^­ •SES'_ "RESUMES _ S£^»JiA,,c 7i Rome Landscaping eourae, call the awunttttlty-^Lfff^^ ^ , SOLO DINNER MUSICIAN 5r?:M Jtut Across Thasit and Gardening, 6:30 to 9:30 college at 4764831, Ext. 51. , ^ iwuai _ _j»s ieef-SP5 ^Ithoc without pictures. frldeys and Saturdays. Must have Mn Will hold an organisational^ 2Day Service J IW transporfatlqti. Call452-»6»forauditlen •?" p.m. Tuesdays «hd Thursdays n>e«tU« and brown hag lunch . ./inatihit* for spm* Studtas Jn-NeW^ ^^lsSHMlth/--Prol*sston»^ Offlai '.'#,tM|'i'i0s , 30 and 472-76$^ Communicators atinoon Wednesday in Union llrhjr'" > , -#$, • Park THE FLOWER PEOPLE ne*l people# PRESS ON *• &iLgy of the Hffl^Countty, Hie Black Student Cwn> ^N«8.Themwtin«wlU ^ramaiwlw£2ntVSUI^M^S^jell flowers.• Thursday through Sunday. THE TEXAS UNKXi offered in April. municators, wtaobandle com­include discussion Of national Will me*t at noon Tuetday in union will rr^et at 1p.m. Tum<%. ivwa#vf nMittct# t.*" TYPING II % Call 453-715* or come by 4301 Guadalupe. And 9rojeWS* wiMdl^o3M< yd 4 p.m. Wednesday Id UAfon, Ta« Clinics, Gourmet Cook-|N"W»MOHIM TIMI UV uildlng 900 for students IntemtM Responsive Typing Service BREARINTfl THE exciting 8.-lucrative. the media, seek to enlarge, * cv,:*r-™ ?'blo-tirne flower telling. Commit­ *S%. ston 8. weekly bonm. Thursday, Friday Xero? Multilith Quadalu|%r ^gSTESLSSKV ^"KUy ^* SERVICES "Call1501. It not toooar).7k Transparencies'«t. Theses & Dissertations: Communication .mon,};-r"r»^a5S5SS3 COCKTAIL HELP, dancers fS«of)l at *»"m Thes| Ell t Club. Good tips, wages, com- Copied University blacks can receive i? Business-Economics Building JSC ,/ 'r<#«lonal Resumes minions^ FlexiWr schedule. Apply In 100% cotton bond " u,. Or. Rodolto Jacobton will speak on ,, OTE SAXON PUB " 1 Lamar. — The Texasi3nloh tne™j;, "Bmnguaiism «nd sicuiiuraiitm inf>ri ^^No Hassles Scienrifit parson, on1North1 1 6* per page ntora. information about ->Jj On the Drag -Naxt to Gourmet „ Grad. School Guarante#;>4,< group at ? p.ttl. Tuesday. in||>2. Soelollngulstle Framework." " • 1 Vv !StS^SS\W" Monday-Friday tem^ (24 Dr. Service) ' Ilninn^RuMrfinff ttQ nr ku miitmooox christian kuqwd# Presents. . ... . rooni board, frlnae beiirtTu; CaT|JMr'. 4* copies Union DUUuing Oisor py ^#K?:30 p.m, Tuesday in the Renart* E0*!?™' Th* Governors Retirement 1^1 canterbury AssoclStlon, 209 W. 27th rR#lWwic*- TTmsi Lai , All University and mmmmamkm Sl^ to discuss the Orthodox view* «t: *<« gws'fiess Typing, THE PRIMAL PROCESS.' Contact: . each.' •. ^,V1* • 472-014* " Speedway , . and Notary Services. --Feeling Training CMitar, P.O. Bo* 303, Wlmberley. Texas. 71674, St2->47-2410.: i For applications Vrite Theses, Dissertations, themes, MALE OR FEAAALE COOK. Efficiency THE COMPLETE IAST DAY1 1 P.R.'s, SC Reports, resuihhs more Important than experience. Hours ~ BUSINESS OAN'f TYPEWRITERS and Coleman Hansone, t,r m • Multlllthlng, Binding 9;00 a.m. •1:00p.m.Must have transppr* -Celcptators. Sales, service,.rentals. All W.C. FIELDS f. \ (Everything From A to Z tatlon. 836-1609, ask for Jane. SERVICE COMPANY. makes. 240B san Gabriel. 47443M. educational /director, in H ; Call 472-8417 Today! ''STARK TYPING. Experienced theses, \FT LEGS" dissertations, PR's, etc. Printing atid TUTORING a "BINDING,. Specialty Technical. < Charitna. SMrk, 4S3-H1I. r COPY SHOP 11 . PHYSICS TUTORING by experienced * ^VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Typing Ser-4red. student. Reasonable rates. . RBC/Bond Paper Super ifflHi Problem solving a specialty. 45943W,- €|C &DEPX-Of MIPC ;>vlce. Complete diversified services. 4S9-4Sl-2013,beforenoonorafter_*i0;30 p.m. Copies-" ~ -&i, 7205. -•-• •• i^s,-rf-: iSSfiP MATH TUTORING that youcaii unders-ml *»:PfGsen# ahowith DISSERTATIONS, theuK, reports, and tand. Semestor rates available. 476-Q7S7. flaw briefs. Experienced typist. 2200 Guadalupe liiarlle, 'Rvggles^' Ck«rle< ^TarrytOWn. 2S07 Bridle Path. Lorraine TUESDAY Brady. 47i-471S. §3WANTED r.-w I , AAARJORIE DELAFIELD Typing Sar-• /474-11?4 FEED A Bory Ceoper, Geerge Rsft glwfeiiaa Y . , • ' vice. Reports, resumes, theses, disser­Buy, sell -all types giriey magazines-Picturesa-v-' Kalograph, tations; plca/eiite. Duplicating, bln& : books-records-gultars'stereos-radios-Binding • Printing FRIEND 5i4S«30 . ding; AfwnEveryday.442-700*. teweiry-music^l Instruments. New Save Time -Save Money Vll'arD <>B*RtE1 CDCC buyer on duty. Aaron's. 320 Congress, Next to Gourmet on-ttie Drag STARTS WEDNESDAY 1 BOBBVk DELAFIELD, IBM Selectric, Downtown. : ' ;plca/elite, 23 years experience, books,' i B 2 for 1 Spaghetti SIX GREAT SHORTS ^dissertations/: theses, Mlp^fsi < ************-*—————"^^.--rrrVYYyvvwYA^Vw^imtW) . lmimeographing, 442-7IMI . ... f » . « * Y 7TI] -... — $1.25 VI LAUREL ft HARDY Jan. 2Ji, 23, 25, 29 -^ 8 p.m. Jan. 27 — 4 p.m. FRANCES WOOD Typing Service. Ex­International Theatre all day W,C. FIELDS AND perienced, law theses, dissertations, manuscripts. 453-6090. i 2908 Son Gabriel Jjj Auditorium^' CHARLES CHAPLIN •w*' ­ BEAUTIFUL PERSONAL TYPING. All BEAUTIFUL GIRLS ON STAGE your University work. Fast, accurate, reasonable. PrintlngrBindlng. Mrs, us five Bodour. 47M1I3. * FEATURING BARBARA * ilU: -ConcertMm . OI1WI ™ EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Oi'aduate -Direct (ranNew Orbms • andtundergraduate'work. Choice pf type $** BUCK ROGERS 'styleles and .sizes. Barbara Tuflos, 453-i^is -r *anrf* 5124. 3ii 3100-A OUADAtUPS X MOVIESKsSSe: JHE UTTLE RASCALS 474-MM • THESES, DISSERTATIONS TYPED. Experienced typists. Book yours now. X NUDE STA6E SHOWS STARTS JAN. Call 476-9312, or 472-S928. X BOOKS & NOVELTIES - TYPING WANTED. 50>/page. 472-4212, Call before.Sam and after 3:30 p.m, " Midnife Special whatcha gonna get ai Hill-tort'*? Just Nbrth of 27th till 2 a.m.MenoThurs. 00 'At Guadalupe (ONE DRINK MINIMUM) J OKH 12 NOON TilL,n 1 2 AM M0N-SAT Special ** '' "'." "' "'** T Vii'ini'ii I nr. m '€Mi' YES, wedo type,, mm v ' Ehtire per customer |Freshman themes;1 , Beethoven MdiK „ S!S§f"; Why not start out with'' ,v ;xy fife' 4{ m sr good grades! Drawing t& Ticket Sales wOptional Services* Fee' 472-3210 and 472-7677,) Jan. 16-29 ^ Tickets Sold Out UyllMR RAMB 2BIG CHEFSi99 Each delicious Big Chef boasts two pujrk baaf patti*g. *fic* Kraft Amarfcan chaaaa,^ ' 2707 Hemphill Park EVERYONE ADMI FREE TON 10 a.m. -6 p.m. -}••:,•"% Public tickets - spatial lettuca, spaciai sauca. on a 4-inch thraa dackar saaama bun. Bring thl$ coupon it's g • Hogg Auditorium y'/M 12 jper concert good all spring samtsttr, the' Tb. Ugly Plto witK ilie BeouHhil Real, a HELP WANTED 3303 N. Lamar Qualify^ Service, anil Value ThingI M Dallas Mack rn' Roll PR AND & IBUSTiRliliil1 ^^presenu :i^0 •$$mm AD MAJORS OPEN 8 PJ 10th/Lpmo4 I" 477-3783 FEED YOUR FAMILY fe Tonixht! We have part-time openings for PR and * \' li<3 "v . Ad rrtaiors desiring 5 above average part-.'ABLE DAVID time eifhings while directed by Henry Kingyp.;^,.,-,.^ gaining training in their respective starring Richard Barthelemess| fields. You will be *:M calling on Company ' customers/ by ap­ mb pointment. Ear­rfings are related; STARTS TOMORROW directly to effort __ and time available*. and you must have a fx5i> car. For further in- Advanced tickets at Discount ^1 formation call: 451­ Records & Ihner Sanctum ,7511/ ext. 49;tf between 9-9, AA-F.5^ I ~*jy * v;:————^ t*W*& ip-i PUBLISHER'S •f ..CONVSNieNTi.YCt.OSr 35 REPRESENTATIVE V°or neiotiborhocHj^P'Jtia Ihn has the most deiiciouj pizza, Mked tp lasly perlectKM' EVEhYTIME',Pizza inn uses the rtpest tomatoes in our specially seasoned sauce, dough >^' to call on our accounts, AAust made-lresh darfy-and ttie-fmest mozzareHa cheese Top ttiu rare treat with your choice ~\:f be quite personable, and have ol Americas Favorite Pizza Topping^ sausage pepperoru beet-or any of otir delicious j saltation of 19 varieties Meal lime, snack tirrie,anytime-ITS PIZ2A INN TIME* P' "-; had some experience In sales, "tr Write or call Kate-Moore, _ BEULEROPHON BOOKS, 153 IJUW US" OFFER Steuart St., San Francisco, ^ AftFT TO ^ e,ui«Q« tor Ca. 94105, (415) 391-0911. .; :"!PS **-!saw^s- UVEl AU. wan ••.\ .„d0^e* ­ -saSfe 11.: ;? 'Vj ;r? t%J 'Is Attention tol'qble David wn$ by far the be# of King* Amcruxmvf ; . 'in ILT— —alimw.y am am mm wmMiNQTHtSmjmi»_«aacou*0*«i»-^ mmam am 'm'' ?21 STUDENTS .films, and quite certainly his tnasterpiece, Earn while you learn^Local "f^Joe Franklin, Clmiwof the Silent.Screen" rental firm needing part time — ond „.. IBuy any six.# plzza at ­ help-Call Max at 892-2215 for -alppolntnrientr"-_ ^;— -•nweehwoqe^ia^ uf -^ i ' I ( the next smaller six* ^ROMI^ , , (/*>10 JJO 4N ,v, Jwlsd bi D.W. G ? to jto a3o TALK YOUR WAY • with equal number . CANAQlAM•MUMOf «AC4 , ^JltA 710 JanTO «n4 SO J m » of ingredients FREE! HO* JMAffNO ' TOP* PAY fjt.i * Owe couponper vlsHpleaf. JS IS| p»*«... 110 m >» Anyone can talk but can yoo talkt good IWZ2A INN-EAST TO GET TO y#?15Sf! -• «0 tts .enough to make-S400/montl»-in. bonuses - -—^ % sccracm f»12 it? Plus salary? W*will makeIt easy for you- Jastar AwRtoriim --" -I SKSiSS.. H< 'IS IS. ISs <» -f > with asiwlpful bonus, dswtparklng areai- i»»J» *t-** friendly atmosphere, ano new office. ® Heritoga af Fikn Saosan Tkltets |J 171# W. *» WMa IM.444-MS5 l«tt« teffinsn Wti A«ad Ta"18 }S *3 *iS f _ X»a 451-2357.betwMn.?#m and l.or CMhs Wts^^jj between5pm and V. ' " . ORLEANS • V-r-^ (Good only on . tM —* Wkl—Jk v ^ T tnasdoys md Thwrsdays) $8.00 IBn^ W4WI I HAPPT HOW MOM. •SAT. 3-7:30 l ^ 748Y-'«5''5 lv*w? PHOTOGRAPHIC MODELS WANTED. Temarraw niflth "Tlis fitms of diaries S'M Female, minimum age II, For further' rnloritiifMift WflM! rc«pi»i camera a B>-J mnnm , ,, , orcallH»rryAdalr,45M152afttrChA, P.O. Sox 663,.Justin. TdMS,S71767p,m. We appreciate your enthusiastic ' response last ytler and we apologize for •• 23rd & ~MIS NEW JOB ^ not being* able to use everyone. A NIGHT OUT ',v 4''V loSS FROM HARDIN "UriVerrewdvJ»a,m,'SWfTH' 'kouisWA.'ri^ii#pW.wMiu Must have THE CHAMPION­ -TTn. hei free parking in Hardin's Garage AMI RICA S fAVORITF Pi/SA MV^l V» * 4kJJ&Sr%-$ W^2 G -: ^WASHINGTON '.work violate the 14th Amendment'* guarantee of due process of law. .; At the same time, the court r laying therewen noreqoetts forhelp and Amori-.., judgment on whether' it would permit no reconnalwwnpe nights were provided. ^ the school boards to establish a firm date THK SAIRAN TMIRMT »i«n UM AN' planes flew reconnaissance missions over THE SAIGON sources also said an during "the last few weeksof pregnancy'*^ the islands Monday at the request of the American civilian is missing on one of the on which ail teachers would have to take South Vietnamese government. islands ,that were overrun by Chinese maternity leave. " ' -,v According %r the South Vietnamese forces Sunday. r4 : i In other action the courtk, .sources, JJ.S.. authorities twice turned. The American was;not immediately v * Held unanimouBly that the San Fran*. 'llf-mwfiiiipiiw down requests for the U.S. Seventh Fleet identified but was saidtobe a formerU.S. Cisco unified school district .denied equal to furnish,rescuevessels or helicopters in ' What Gasoline Shortage? !k:i Marine officer who handled liaison educational opportunity to Chinese-^ a search for a South Vietnamese patrol­ ~ between the U.S. consulate in Da Nang . speaking children by failing to help them'" Thumbing their noses at all Sunday-doted gasoline their operators lor a sHent and gatless Sunday spin. The and the South Vietnamese navy. boat escort that apparently wis sunk with : overcome the barrier of English language station*, those electric cars in Olmsted Falls, Ohio, take aulas range in distance capacity from 40 to 200 miles. U.S. Embassy officials were not im-82 crewmen aboard. . instruction. The requests were reportedly made at .mediately available for comment. <-'£> Agreed to decide whether prison meetings between ,U.S. Ambassador. 1 SOUTH VIETNAM conceded military authorities must guarantee inmates legal .. Graham A. Martin and South Vietnamese ^ victory this weekend to China in the dis­ Representation in disciplinary hearings •<$1||« Foreign Minister Vuong Van Bacon Satur­ ;Hp pute over theislands andis now seekingan kf • Agreed ta xevi£^ a l^r;c«irt deci-. day and Sunday during t|ie height of the emergency meeting of the United Nations yN*e/ Witt • sion (Mi state powers which 12T 'Wti Security Council to present its case on A diplomatic level. UP TO 150Soutfi ^ethamese troops are Officials SSy Oaths to At the United Nations in New York, 'reported missing after a Red Chinese^ ^|The pregnancy case stemmed from WASHINGTON (AP) -r Herbert L. year to conspiracy to obstruct loyalty io this man, Richard Nixon, goes President Gonzalo Faclo of the Security amphibious force of up to 500 men backed . regulations in Chesterfield County, Va., 'ru—1 Council said he has received a request by MIG bombers overran three of the Porter, the former Nixon re-election com­They have not been— sentenced longer than any person that you will where teachers arerequired to leave their from South Vietnam for a meeting ot.the, islands in the archipelago. mittee official who admitted lying under As Porter stood before U.S. Dist. Judge*' see silting at this table throughout any of fobs during thefourth month of pregnancy council on Chinese "acts of war/' , ^ China said in abroadcast it hadcaptured oath to remain "a team player," was John J. Sirica to waive his right to'an in­these hearings." and in Cleveland where they are required charged Monday with making false dictment, a grand jury was taking Facio, Costa Rica's foreign minister," personnel from the South Vietnamese sidel< mtq leave during the fourth month. Porter said Monday that he "was not said "he expected to call a meeting for and that they "will be repatriated at an statements to the FBI. testimony in the case of the flawed and „, i Similar regulations exist in thousands of disloyal to Nixon'-' now, but, "I'm a little Tuesdayor Wednesday. ButChina opposed appropriate time," It did not say bow. ,v„,4 The charge carries a maximum penalty nonexistent White House Watergatetapes, school districts throughout the nation;. disappointed in the advice he is.taking. I .^_meetingand;dQuht.was.expressedin™Hiany-were"Capturednor-did-H-fnakeatqrr— .^of Jive years in prison and a 910,000 fine. jxf Porter said Magruder-told him at the think a lot has been mishiaiidled. They go diplomatic circles that South Vietnam mention of the American. x "NEITHER THE necessity forcontinul-Porter, 35, had been prepared to 'end of June, 1972—11 or 12 days after the$ ty«oS-instruction nor the state interest .in guilty, his lawyer said, but the judge break-in at Democratic Party head­*up and down—one thing one day and one could line up the necessary nine votes The location of the U S. Seventh Fleetat .thing another." needed to put the issue on the agenda of the time was not disclosed. keeping; physically unfit teachers out of assigned to the case was ill and the case quarters—that "dirty tricks" would sound the classroom can justify the sweeping was put off, perhaps for a week. bad to investigataw^'Porterssidlaagfeed mandatory leave regulations that the The slender, boyish-looking Porter, told to say he gavelliiy$160,000 for hiring 10 ' Cleveland and Chesterfield County school college students for lO-months at $1,000 a ~ boards have adopted,"-wrote Justice that he lied to the FBI, to the grand jury month. ..Fotter Stewart for the majority. That was the story he then told to the Chief Justice Warren E. Ijfurger and gave to G. Gordon Liddy, the alleged FBI, grand jury and at Lid# and James Justice William H. Rehnquist dissented. {mastermind of the Watergate break-in. . W. McCord's trial in January.& i The pollution case came as a challenge V; fie said he agreed to the lie "becauseof Porter said he told the true story to the; to a ruling.by the Colorado state court of the fear of group pressure that would en­U.S. attorney's office in mid-April. appeals involving air pollution tests made sue, of not being a team player." . . „ Porter told reporters he now works in a at plants of the Western Alfalfa Corp. by Porter, who hadcharge of scheduling, is Small construction businessrowned by his. :s.siege of Wounded Knee, ment of Indians charged in charge of the bureau police,? seek the post. Mmoves to the polls Tuesday widespread corruption in the said tribal police have beehr Others whofiled for thepost |: amid predictions of possible Bureau of Indian Affairs and alerted to the possibility of ' include former presidents i *1 in Wilson's office and urged a "I an-^ Poor Johnson [violence. disturbances. am Enos Bear, i.*!­ Twelve-candidates were return ~to~lK'*ffibal"form of ficipating some problems,., *HoIy 1Rock, and Gerald One vihe primary election ballot for government on the reserva-from militants," he said.. Feather. By BILL GAHLAND It substantially reduced the verbiage of two weeks. = ' » . v lpresjdeat^ofthe<)glala-Sioux -tioni.^- A'spokesmalf ui the tribal No one has .won successive Texan Staff Writer r s the 1878Constitution, the document now in .. 'After the convention passes each of thetribe, including incumbent Wilson denied the superintendent-s office said terms as presidentsince bien­Bombast rebounds from hallowed walls, effect, in a draft that consists of 11 ar-~ eightiarticles, it will vote on the constitu­ • Richard Wilson and American allegations, inferred to tiiejacr-the Election .has spawned, nial elections began in 1935. newspapers fill column after column with ticles. 'r':»•r •;' tion as a whole. It must pass by a two-. • ^Indian Movement (AIM) cupation force strong sentiments the as on detailed summaries and reports, people Eight of the articles in the CRCconstitu­thirds majority before it can be submitted In.addition, nine personsare leader Russell Means. "renegades" and declared reservation, home of about.: gape at the magnificence of staging the tion parallel; to subject the to the voters. ' Means, 33, Porcupine, S.D., repeatedly he wished the 11,000 Ogiala Sioux. , on the ballot for vice-first Constitutional Convention in 100' The convention is scheduled to end was a leader of the takeover. government forces surroun­"At least a couple of the president, and 80 persons are years, and most onlookers wonder just The convention consists of 181: March 29, and voters will go to the pollsto ? He and others are on trial in ding Wounded Knee would seeking 20 tribalcouncilseats. what the toll's delegates—the representatives elected Candidates have-announced ... going on. vote on the convention's prodtftit probably ^ * St. Paul, Minn., for their role leave so he aitd his men could to break the polarity betweeh ~ Thtetribal prairiwthassnfe Should you find yourself amongst these and senators of the 63rd Legislature. during the November elections, but the '; i in the siege. Wilson, S3, a drive the invaders from' the Wilson and Means," said the authority of most patronage awe-filled viewers, you might peruse the These eight committees, with 20 * vote could occur during the primajry elec­ : ' t,. plumber before winning the 'spokesman, who declined-to distribution of federal and following, which, using the term loosely, members apiece, are combing through tions. head office on thereservation, Tribal" police said Monday grants on the federal reserva­ ' each "of the eight articles, preparing each be identified by name. is an explanation. If the voters say yea,we've a newlaw ofis an avowed opponent of the election eould again bring . The two top vote-getters, tion. , At the request of the 1971Legislature, a article to read as a majority of the com­the land (atleast a new wording of the law 37-member group of influential and, sup­mittee,members want it. of the land); If they say no, our old 1876 posedly, 'knowledgeable citizens, The committees are hearing public Constitution, referred to by one CRC hereafter known as the Constitutional testimony on the CRC document and will member as a "patchwork quilt," still Revision Commission (CRC), prepared a continue to do so through Feb. 1. Con­stands and theCRC, the conventionand all whole new proposed constitution for Tex­sideration of some committee reports by the work entailed therein rides off into ther —news capsules as. •> the full convention should begin in about sunset. Floating Franc Falls; Qold Gains to'the discovery of 27 bodies reportedly lulled during •m&i sigpiiga three-year period. LONDON (UPI) — France's newly plunged 4.8 percent against the U S. dollar Monday, The two survivors-of the torture-homosexual ring and the price of gold hit an adltime hi^i of $162.31 an are Rhonda Williams, 15, and Timothy Kerley, 20, IWMFESS- ounce in Paris. -A• ,;-who reportedly escaped death, when Henley shot „ The dollar readied a record high against the Corll. British pound before steadying. Gold's price hit. ^—Defense attorney Will Gray had announced eariy. record levels everywhere, but nqbody emulated the Monday that he would call Miss Williams to the By JAMES DUNLAP ^ As an example of areas that have a chairmen of state agencies dealing witil French. : -J— stand, but later, after a 2&-oiinute conference in the and r; "broad impact" on education,lie cited the education. * v Paris buyers stampeded in^o gold as the franc fell,, -a BARBARA MINNICK power granted to the goveraqr to appoint Yarborough told the committee not judge's chambers, said that1; "we are Having a little mm pushing gold up $5.73 an ounce to $162.31 by the ^MThe Texas Constitutional Convention del^ate legislative pewer io the ex* trouble getting Miss Williams.-'... -market's close. „ " received a $1.8 million 90-day budget Mon­, ecutive, a themeiie has been carrying to day recommendedbyconven|iQnpresi' ,, ^ther convention committees. dent Price Daniel Jr. ; -l. /v . t'; > Following Yarborough's appearance;Commission Ordered To Hear Di$put.e A public hearing on the Items' in tiie fee Education Committee heard further Stock Market Averts Sharp Decrease AUSTIN (AP) — State Dist. Judge Herman Jones proposed budget will be held at 1 p.m. testimony on the wording of section 1 of NEW YORK (AP) —• An 11th lK|urfliiiTy of bargain^^ Thursday,.and thefull conventicm willvote* ruled Monday that the^ Texas Railroad Commission constitution 'Article VII which charges the state with hunting ^irased most oflhestock market's sharpear­ on its passage Friday. cannot "cop out" but most hear a dispute between providing "equal educational opportunity : Pay and'expenses for'the delegates to , .for feach person." ly losses Monday, and prices closed only slightly North Texas and South Texas natural gas users. ~ tiie convention total $1.1 million, the Convention Nolan Estes, superintendent of the tower. greatest,single item in the budget. _ IP ^J)allasSchool System, ,said-tbe-word l'e^ -San Antxmio, Austin «nd the Lower Colorado River If the conventioncan finish itswork in 90 The Dow Jones,average d{ 30 industrials, down Authority—which generate elebtricity for 30 Central days, it will not be necessary to ap­^Schedule quarl" might be taken to mean that an : All eighit substantive committees equal number of dollars had to be spentfor nearly 16 points earlier in the session, closed down and Souih Texas crnnmunities—asked the commis­propriate more money from the state's will continue hearing public eachchild.' only .84 at 854.63. , „ sion last year toapportion Lo-Vifta fatheringCo. gas genwal revenue fund, according to a < testimony Tuesday. Meetings areas "There is liothing fete ui^uai ibm resolution included in a memo sent tojalL follows; ----spending and providing equal care anyone betwlen thenvai>d suppliers-for some N^th Texas 'fti? deTegat^f ~ Education-Hnoor of Convention cities. - :•rr. Hall, 10 a.m. Survivors Still Silent 5en. Lloyd DoggettofAustinintroduced Local Oovernmen t—Ap­ approximately four 'million per­ Defense attorneys tried uiw .in the Constitutional Convention a propriationi Committee Room 300| f. The jalcoholiQ beverages section of the sons iii the Dallas-Fort Worth area say they con­proposal to give each. Texas citizen the Constitutional Commission (CRC) docfr 10 a.m. ...... -'s massmurder-tracted for the Lo-Vaca gas in1969. They contended right to a clean environment andthesound Legiilatare—Speakers , Com ment fras -discussed Monday by the ^rtiure ring and continued to hamm^f-away at the the courts have held the commission has no power to development of the; state's-natural mittee Room, 18 a.m. General Provisions Committee, % resources. ' Finaace^-Senate ctuunl 9:30 . The cornmittecTheah! testim^iy from construe cmitracts. •^question-of civil rights of the defendant, Elmer The proposal, Doggett explained, will a.m / one witness, R.H. Cory< representing the, li^yne'Heiiter, 17. ^ provide Texas with a definite policy on en­Executive—Senate Finance Conn T'~Texas Brewere InstlUite The South Texas users said they have earlier c»n-vironmental issues for the future. "I hope mltteeRoom301,16 a.m itwill encourage us tb hemore farsighted Judiciary—Old Saprieine,Court proposed tonstitution which would ensure R. Cobble, faces'five commission power to apportion gas among cities. in the use of air and water than we have Room, 10a.m. »».•, local option elections t.o determine changes. "been with oil apd gas/' he.said.s RighU and Suffrage^Ueutewuit __ Whether a locality would permit or ' prohibit the iale of aiconouc oeverages. Tlfefciwriirtssloii said it lacked jBrlsdirtion lirtte In other convention activity, formar These local elections should be "ex* Monday'scourtactivity waspart of a pretrial hear­case because the abdication brings into issue con- UJS. Sen. Ralph Yarborough testified to • Trovitiont—Committee v ^jressively recognised" in. the new con­ ing for Henley, whose statements to police, along r^tractual transactions and the circumstancessurroun­the Education Committeeaboutarticles in . stitution, Cory said. Previous con* Room—C-13, l» a.m. Tentative :With those of another Houston teenager, led officers ding the intent, purpoaq and execution thereof.'^: the new constitution that affect education topic for testim«iy; .the eaviron-. havft hsd no-specific language -besfdes Article vn which specifically- '' permitting these local option elections, he -deals with education >«ge 10Tu^ay.January2^,lig4THEDAILY TEXAN '""j­' i JP sa,d-^ ML AOSMl