•X" .A mi 4fT.O. Student Ne *&wrj SSWSfl'lBilf m£ SI* * .' __•• SSSjA ."".i-;.':;'-ii;;-:-'. :": ^.S?-";-•; •-. "'J-'' '•::'.w:,^;7,V..::"r^'-'. ;v,":il : Ten Cents PteflSe Recycle This Newspaper^ Fourteen.Page^I 471-45?}' lis-• • • i* 1«­ vania JT '&0A hb «5®W?wr By The Associate! Pret* review the plan and make known his decision Tuesday. ^rationing will go i Under the committee's plan, each cornrn^sn^ vdaU 'dj^M nto effect Wiainesclay In Pennsylvania, Gov. Milton J. Shapp whether to adopt it. *,<< ^announced Monday night. ;:; About 10 Florida counties already W will soon have gasollite £ Shapp's announcement, came as service stations in the, ^nation's capital and (our states started similar rationing plans In New York,.a spokesman for the Automobile Club said a J ^Monday. ,. .•-...-w ' J survey of 139 stations in the 14 southernmost counties showed I Pennsylvania will be the eighth state to institute a form of the state's rationing plan was "off to a shakystart." Nearlv 43 |jrationing, joining Oregon. Washington. Massachusetts. New. JVork, New Jersey, Maryland and Hawaii. plates, the spokesman said. 'i Shapp announcedihe program on a televised address. Hesaid A check of 65 stations across Massachusetts found the usual 4the program would be similar to thesystem institutedin all the long lines of gasoline-hungry motorists cut-about in half. pother states in which motorists with even-numbered license Supplies continued to be a problem. In Pittsfield, only one of •plates will be able to purchase gasoline on even-numbered days five stations surveyed was selling'gasoline. r * Shapp said he does not have the authority to make the ple with even-numbered plates. Some said they were selling $1 iand odd-numbered plates on odd-numbered days. . ' " Most Massachusettsstation operatorswere turhingaway peo­ >4progran». mandatory, so it will be voluntary. The rationing worth of gasoline to even-numbered cars if they were almost ^programs announced thus far are mandatory only in New empty. ^Jersey and Hawaii. "The lines ate very definitely cut down;" said Gerald t Motorists appeared to be adapting well to rationing plans McNamara, manager of a Mutual station. "It's an excellent ;launched in Washington, Massachusetts, New Jersey and the plan that should have been adopted a long time ago." District of Columbia on Monday. But New YorkState had afew In New Jersey, a slightly larger number of gasoline stations 'problems. appeared, to be open, and lines were significantly shorter. A • "Right now the lines are exactly the way they were, last Union County station that had a half-mile-long line last week week—about 65 cars long," said Mike Savage, an attendant at found only about a dozen cars waiting Monday morning,. -an Albany, N.Y., Mobil station. "I'm not going to stand out £• there and direct traffic. If he wants todo it, heshould make it a In the Trenton area, some stations said they were open and t |law," hesaid of Gov. Malcolm Wilson and the state'svoluntary had no lines. t In Washington, D.C., some motorists with even numbers on 5 t iling. K Maryland The odd-even will be plan the goes next into state, effect to implement thereTuesday. gasoline There, raition-as supposed their license to doplates so. lined up for gasoline although they were not .* r 5, Pony Express Revisited m ^elsewhere, motorists who have plates ending in lettersgeneral-In Seattle, a spot check showed that stations and motorists ; ly may buy gasoline on odd-numbered days and out-of-state were heeding the plan. ?UJ*WV N*^flroeery store as their owners do som*shopping inside. Motorists trying to so*# motorists may buy any time. -:_'~ • At one station, a line of 25 cars had formed 20 minutes before gasoline find their four-legged transportation cheaper to drive than a Maverick. , " Meanwhile, a committee created by Gov. Reubin Askew of opening time whileanotherstationhad no motorists waitingfor Florida approved a voluntary Oregon rationing plan. Homer his opening! "It's kind of a lonely feeling after two weeks of tHutchinson,' state fuel allocation officer, said Askew would. lines," the operator said. "There's nobody out there." • As a result of increases in gasoline ministrator William Simon in Washington UT ?olMiilk«a -allocations to Texas, Gov. Dolph Briscoe Friday to discussTexas' gasoline shortage kvl3. announced Monday he anticipates no com­and the truckers' situation. pulsory gasoline rationing in the state. To relieve the truckers' complaints, 45 Texas was among 12 states and the To IJPatrols; /­ Simon acted with a four-point plan in­flgiR . . . District of Columbia selected Saturday to itiating 16 percent surcharge cm fuel, a By RICHARD FLY < ; ^University police receive their gasoline receive additional gasoline. This temporary freeze on diesel fuel'prices, a Texan Staff Writer from the campus Physical.Plant at a.. redistribution is based on need within the toll-free hotline in the Federal EnergyOf­-University patrolmen arebeing asked to significantly lower price than is cjiarged state so that the areas involved will fice and a pass-through on futprg, in­limit their driving to 15 miles per work commercial service stations.~ ^ receive an amount closer to their original i Texas Alloting creases in fuel prices., shift as voluntary fuel conservation. * : allocations. The University buys gasoline primarily^ Police patroling the married students' „ "We're studying and reviewing With this pass-through, tjruckers will from Texaco for 31.2 cents per gallon and housing areas along Lake Ajustln forfuel and will , the police pay ttut rate, WlWam Wll«n®I UMdt. -.is ? PtiVatphT PIanf 'imU r-One -University 'patrolman who wii ttt-remain unidentified told The Tfextin. energy adviser, said. stations. ^ Rose said Simon believes that theseadd­however^ that the limit "restricts officers"Any plan that we wouldconsider would ed measures should ease the truckers' from being able to protect their area." Problems might be encountered if th#' be chosen aftera fullevaluation and would problems. "We've given them a desk in Fifteen thefts were committed in the cars run low at night, but one patrolman-be oneJthat would meet the broadest needs the'FEO," said Simon. L married students' housing area Saturday said car tanks are usutily at least h^lf;; in Texas based on local inputs from all In Washington, Rose was advised that night, the patrolman reported. full wheh the 12:30 a.m. shift begins.sources," he said. Texas' conservation plan will be cir-The patrolman on duty, he said, may Under Federal Energy Office guidelinesRose met with Federal Energy Ad-> culated as a model for other states. have parked his car to stay under his emergency services, such as police and Nh mileage limit when he normally would1, ambulances, are to receive 100 percent of v \ have patrolled the area. their current requirements. "I don't think that's thecase," Universi­But apparently, should the Physical * ty Chief of Police Donald Cannon said Plant run out oL gasoline police wouki be­: Monday. "It's just a situation where some forced to buy from commercialstatigpor people" have been able to evade officers. find another source. V;/; %' By CHERRY JONES The proposal, submitted by the ad hoc he doesn't have very much concern about times his academic or teaching salary. Most of the reported thefts occurred in "We're hopeful that we may rtofeive \ Texan Staff Writer • Committee on Minority Enrollment, this problem (minority enrollment)." Under present rules, the academic rate the north parking „lpt of the Deep Eddy more gas," Cannon said, but police may ; The Faculty Senate Monday approved a creates ascholarship fund to begenerated A recommendation urging the Universi­can be changed by the President's Budget Apartments. Several cars were broken have to go elsewhere to get it. J|" proposal to establish faculty-funded by annual contributions from individual ty administration to "continue with Conference Committee without consulting into and items stolen from them. Because of the federal guidelinesV the minority scholarships and joined the faculty members for Texas ethnic diligence"' its program to obtain minority the department whose budget accom­In addition to the University patrolman 15-mile limit "surprised a lot of officers University System Board of Regeg& in minorities. scholarship grants from private foun­modates the salary increase. assigned to the area, the apartments have around here," one patrolman said. "We taking action on minority enrollment. Although contributions of any amount dations also was approved by the Senate. This propose} "gets some dialogue. their own security service. — — thought we would at least get high would be accepted,. the proposal Opposition to the proposal centered on Between the administration and depart­"We don't have a fuel allocation as priority." recommends a minimum donathm of one the administration's past failure to obtain ment in changing academic rates for peo­such," Cannon said."We've cut down City policeare receivingall thefuel thiey quarter of 1percent of the individual's an­grants for this purpose from private foun­ple on administrative assignment," ourselves voluntarily." ask for, A1 Baker, city purchasing offideis nual University income. dations. , Forrest Hill,,a member of the Faculty If necessary, he said, p&trolmen may said. No limits have been placed on tHei? Money collected by the faculty would However, Miguel Gonzalez-Gerth, Compensation Committee, explained. drive beyond their limit. mileage. then be matched by the Uirtversity ad­chairman of the Minority Enrollment-ministration from "funds not presently Committee, said administration officials' dedicated or pledged for scholarship aid." had hot actively pursued a program to ob- Parker Fielder, law professor, called tain these grants. v.sv/ the recommendation "a chance to put our "Certain officials in the University ad- money where our mouth is,and call on the ministrationr have indeed sought money administratfon to match it." from foundations in the past. (But) all pther Senate members expressed doubt they did was write some letters and send Clear ... Van Goghthat the faculty funds would be matched them off to the foundations, and that's not Sciear to partly cloudy by the administration. " ^ the way to raise money from foun­ Texan Staff Writer In-: "I have ik) hope that this will be match­dations," he said. skies are expected vln Lippman diSv ed, but at least we will have done The committee's recommendations Tuesday/ with cusses the drawings of : something on our own," Ira Iscoe, direc­suggest an '.learnest, personal and follow-tor of the Counseling-Psychological Ser-through" program tocontact private foun­southerly winds 8 to15 Vincent van Goghthat < M mm vicut ss ns re nd TS'r I* 'JP* ' 1st, lie r8. f itr rss By ROBERT FULKERSON the Army didfittr dlu^ge anything *ior the areas' " Cooke noted. "Nothing that is extremely -r11 u Texan Staff Writer buildings, but UieschocAritlceiv'iiig themhadto pay dangerous, just things they wanted us to do which The University will tear <$bwn San Jacinto Dor-for'transportation and installation charges/' he ex­would cost money," Cooke added. mitory, 21stand San Jacintostreets,l>r. Ronald M. plained. i^'San Jacinto has not been in the black for two or Brown, vice president ^student affairs sal^d Mon-Cooke pointed out that barracks-type buildings, three years. It hasn't been living up to its financial likeSan Jacinto,once, linedSan JacintoStreet from expectations," he said. The former.Army barraekswitt beremoved atter—Simklns Hall on 25thStreet to Pieslteof the Alunini" :San Jacinto Dorm wasn't built to meet 1973-74 feis^semester, Brown reported. Univferslty Presi-Center, adjacent to the last remaining structure, safety codes," Dick Strait, director of Jester dent Stephen H. Spun* authorized the demolition, San Jacinto dorm. - Center and Mefi's Residence Halls, explained. Brown said. San Jacinto has a capacity of 62 students^ A dou­"Even playing catch-upball now and getting itin San Jacinto residents will receive personal letters ble room for a long session costs $174 and a single ^hape in terms of modernsafety standardscan't he Tuesday morning notifying them that no contracts costs $290 for the same period, making San Jacinto done, he said."It's a completely framed building .will heaccepted beyond May 18, the lastday of-the the cheapest on-campus residence hall. while ail the other residence haUs are concrete or semester Dr. Robert Cooke, director of housing at r;^'Our main concerns were the safety of the reinforced rteel," Strait noted. ihe University, said. residents and whether we could afford San Jacinto Heacknowledged San Jacintocould be brought ifjp San Jacinto Dorm wa$ it^^led in 1946, Dr, Dorm financially," Cooke said. to current standards but saidit would be extremely JRtebert Cooke pointed ^ • ^"libe University Safety Office>said to observe time-eonsuming and expensive. "Whenall the veterans retiirii^l imrWorld War conditions like 'all exposed piping1needs to belabel-Though San Jacinto residents may be hurt finals ed; the southeast stairway to be more cially by the decision to close the dorm, none v secure;, close off some/accesses to medutnlod reported having to drop out of school^ '•'£95. if !3f'It will be that much harder to live," Paul can't afford living on campus so I'll have to move Carlker a senior from San Diego Calif., said. "I've off campus." -* -* lived here for two years and I like the people that Tll have to find another place but I'llkeep going; live here.and the environment. ---' -toschool," Louis Maloney, junior fromSan Marcos,: :"The issue is the availability of low-cost housing said. "I couldn't live in Jester. That would beinw at theUniversity,"Ron Holub.^econd-year iawst^-possible," he added. •M dent from Dallas. said. "We've got 12 cocyerativfe "I'll be able'fo go to school, hut it will cost a Units for women at 2610 Whltis and no comparable more," Jim Yates of El Paso, said. "I'll probably' facilities for men will existafterSan Jacintois torn move into a co-op if I can find one at a reasonable; down," he added. He will have to move off campus^ price." ' ; but he will continue law schobl. n -_ ' y-vj . ^TU stay in school but it vill mean extra work.'t Holub, ^n 11-semester. tesident of San Jacinto',-David Goodnight of Houston said. "I'vegot a part- said, "In the fall, new fire extinguishers were in­time job now, and iVpays room and board at San! stalled 'and a fire prevention progtam was Jacinto. I'll haveto spmd 15 or' 16 hours morea .r presented by a member of the Fire Safety Division week working now to make ends meet," Jie added; v of the University. They say this place is a firetrap Students weraj'tconsulted in thedecision CQofee but they brought us a safety program/' reported. He called the decision "final." "I dm't think 1 can find anything fw a co# Brown wasn't sure what will become w SijMi parable,price," Gerald Stidham. asenipr fromTex­Jacinto's site. "It will projMbly be toa±Kapei|-bqit as C5ty aj9d San Jacinto Dorm president, said. "1 I m not-sure.^:^ y ^ M ?: m Wm. SSm MS & itizens w " *^.. . jBy JANICE TOMLBt he hadn't seen thefilm before Isoffensive." "You can recall things con* < |< Texan Staff Writer the courtroom showing. Hie revised 1974 penal "6dde " trary to the offense report, A two-hour, 20-minutefilm A four-man, two-woman. defines "obscene" material but you can't recall lar, declared "obswme" by Austin jury selected Friday is ex-as that whicti appeals to signs hi front of the lounge vice-squad officers was ad-pected to establish a baais fo* v prurient interests in sex,nudl-questioned Stover. mitted as state's evidence defining "contemporary com-ty and excretion, is patently "Your memory improveson Monday in the fifst Travis munity standards" in Austin offensive because it affronts things yob want to Cqiunty trial on obscenity in with their verdicts contemporary community ' reinember," Raines said. —thjjree years. —-Reminding the audience standards relating to the • "Things you need to pirious citizens lined that'"this isa criminal trial,.*! description or representation •; remember," he corrected algnost an hour before County Court at-Law No. z of 'set, nudity and excretion himself.. ^trial^began, in hopes of crow-Judge Mary Pearl Williams and is utterly without social i .Raines admitted attending' *JPfdi#g into the 30-seat cour-stressed several times she redeeming value?3?! "stag" films while off-duty, ':i||trix>m. County clerks have would "insist oil courtroom ' Defense atto&ejjff Riclt but said he did not enjoy them. "M-been beseiged with phone decorum." Any "overt reac­Stover and Terra!Smith, in an He testified that heattended a &$jy calls all week from persons. tion" to the film or testimony effort to.prove O'Neil was not party two years ago with at wanting to know when the will be regarded as a com­guilty of commercial exhibi­ fgtf " ment (m. the evidence, she film would begin and if the tion, presented photoglyphs of least 15 : off-duty officers -;§; public was invited to attend-noted;-" . the lounge marquee and signs , where/ a "stag?" "film was shown'. m The defendent, Terry Officer Gerald Raines view­posted inside-the establishe- -E oSN«eil, is charged with ed the .film at the Zippec ment, which proclaim ,4'no "Were there any arrests ting obscene mate Lounge 'Jan. 10 and returned cover .charge",.and "free' made then?" Stover asked. flowing a Jan. 10raid on the to police headquarters to ob­XXXX movies." ' ' ' -J' Ztoper Xounge, 1514 S.Lamar tain an affidavit and search Thestate must prove -SjTb&deiease ^equest^ci,^ w 0,"J tmavtaVduring kittBlvd., where "toe warrant, after deciding the gqilty of exhibiting obsefewwr; v • manager. film was "obscene.". for commercial gain to win a . of Police Sgt. John Boyd, as conviction. • the officer began Vice-squad officers seized Although Raines iuimitted : to inform — "The French Touch" during the film "sexually aroused" State prosecutors Phil the junr of a previous arrest c. the raid, but CNeil claimed him. he contended "obscenity Lerway and Jem Wisser called involving the defendent. four officers on the Austin The former arrest, Stover UiiiiimwHHi vice-squad ; detail.• to testify =• pointed out; isunrelated-tathe 'Monday;.Although the officers present case, and would soWE DON'T GIVE REBATES. recalled-!':' ';' denied, the prosecution was Raines indicated in his of­instructed to avoid this area ficial offense report that the of questioning before the juryHILLEL BOOKSALE bartender replaced empty was returned to the cour­ H Books and Records of all typos reels of film every time but troom. OH testified" that "once Mr. As the prosecution& : Monday thru Thursday O'Neil, the defendant, put the attempted to enter theiilm as • v new reel on." state's evidence, the defense February 11 thru 14 Contents of argued that the offense a proper reports are not always predicate had not been laid. . precise, Raines explained. Stover contended any vice­ 9 a.m. • 5 p.m. llllllimilWHIIIIIIIIimtllllllllllllHIIHIUIiMI 2105 Austin Eye Clinic Association ' SB > San Antonio etHwtk*w*y*lte* i ^ Mitchel Wong, M.D. announces the association of ~~ s ..Stephen IVI. Moehlman, M.D. Disaaus and Surgsry of the Eye Plastic 8t Raconstructive SurgarY of th.e Eye Memorex BY APPOINTMENT AUSTIN MEOICAL < OFFICE 464-4886 BUILDING. SUITE 200 8:30-6:00 MON.-FRI. 1009 EAST 40th STREET 90-Minute 8:30-12 RAT, . AUSTIN. TEXAS 78761 8-TrackJ Recording Reg. $3.19 •och NoW 2 ft Sale Ends Saturday, Feb. 16 MEMOREXRecotfnglape Heproductioosotrue it canshatter gtess. Co-Op Stereo Shop W 2MlMdb|M Keep your love growing mttimf with pardriM «f 12 ar Mn. tankAMrkari I Mattardiarg* w«i(MM. with Valentine cards, fresh flowers, candy 4ars. and lively terrariums from the General Store. GENERAL Monday-Friday =7STORE J ?:30.a.m»-8 p.m. , Saturday • 10 a.m.-2 p.m. . Miap1" ;First floor. Texas Union Personal Care Gifts for Valentine's Day Us means GreyhWurtci. and a lot of your fellow students MH ^ who are already on to a good thing. You leave^when you • lilce. Travel-uui.trfottablV.' A>)ifS^neffeshe^nid on time, a; ^You'll save money, too, over the increased standby air fares. Share the ride with us on weekends. Holidays. Anytime. Go Greyhound. GREYHOUND SERVICE * ONE-ROUND-YOU CAN YOU TO ~~ WAY TRIP LEAVE ARRIVE IM $9.10 S17J0 LSSJ5 $ 7.1S for firm curls in seconds! $4J5 S 9J5 flontje heat and nrioisti/rizing mlst to create flrm. y.45 $1429 seconds. "Ml«t Set" providei extra-curling acUon tor waves, curls, marcelling, tendrils, and stralghten­$1455 infl^(eVfen use orLwigal Spe^al mlirt wmolstuie fur eortnnuoua use. LJght^signals GREYHOUND AGENTr Vniversity Xo-Op 2246 Guadalupe 476-7211 SPSS mXi5?ifii!s%to?,™c"n'ir,ciu j,' election of The Da% Texan Feb. g, Rpbeit Lauius, Alpha'' !Q ^IrCCT WwOrKSilOpS editor and TSP Board Phi Omega (APO) Election Three of five workshops at the Economic Censuis Users members, according to con­Commission phairman, said Conference' tribution and expenditure Monday. ty and staff members. ireports released Monday. .;= ' Lanius said he didn't think Dr. William Fisher, director of the University Bureau of'candidates were spending as Economic Geology; Charles P. Zlatkovich, a University doc­much in this election as in , Wiley's $150 expenditure toral candidate in urban affairs and a research associatein the previous years. One Place 4 was , only half the. |300 limit Bureau of Business Research (BBR), and Dr. Stanley Ar- journalism candidate, John placed on editor and TSP at- bingast, BBR director, will chair the workshops. Bender,' listed no con-• large candidates. r First ina nationwideseriesof regional conferences sponsored tributions or expenditures. » by 'the U.S. Department of Commerce, for users of economic i census data,the conferencewill be thefirst tousedata from the Texan editor hopeful Chuck Deadline for filing for can­1972 economic census. Kaufman reported $144.57 in­didacy was Feb. 1. All 10 TSP. Fisher and Dr. JMilton Holloway, of Gov. Dolph Briscoe'sexpenditures, and editor can­candidates and four editor staff, will discuss the importance of a high capacity data­ didate Alison Smith listed candidates were certified by processing machine to the mineral industry. ' $124.06 in expenditures. the TSP Board of Operating Zlatkovich will chair a panel at the transportation workshop, Trustees Feb. 4. * ,and Arbingast will lead the manufacturing workshop. In the race for theo_tlyree open journalism TSP Following is a list of cam* University[ Facilities Free positions, John Morris spent paign contributions. and ex­ $24.72 of the$25 permitted and penditures as reported by the Mike Wilson spent $24.99. candidates to APO. For Sporting Handball and tennis arefree tramural staff "ought to look TSP Campaign (xprndHum to Texas state legislators if into whether state legislators Co«itr%otions IxpamdHurM • — anr« they use University facilities, should pay." HIIIW WW> Buck Hsryey......... . $10 $40.75 ^while students and faculty Until the 1973 school year, Gary EdwardJohnson ... 105.13 105.13 t pay a fee, Betty Thomp­faculty also had free use of Chuck Kaufman..... — 87.42 144.57 Alison Smith..'............ 0 124.06 son, director of intramural athletic services. They now sports, said Monday. must pay an annual optional At-targ* Hoc* 1 ' » fee of $12 to use the; facilities. John Carlson............. 32.45 She said no fee is attached 79.08 "The intramural staff felt Sarah AnnSchattman — to legislators' use of Universi­that facultymembers ought to AlJoig* Hoc* 2 ty athletic facilities, including pay approximately what astu­ Neal Graham. 20.32 tennis, handball, squash and Donald Wiley 150 dent pays to use the basketball courts, as well as facilities," she explained.jP lockers. JoumotiimHoa} V 24.72 Students pay a mandatory \orrli). JohnMorris Burke Armstrong 7.12 'It has been a long-standing $30 annual student services policy to extendfree useof {he fee, part qjt Which goes to the. JomwHim How 3 facilities to legislators. To my intramural department. DonaldMartin 18.93 , Michael Wilson .................. 24.99 knowledge it is .more a Free useof facilities applies courtesy than anything'else,*' only to legislators,,.^Miss JwmaUHn _ she said. • -Thompson said. ./• -• John Bender ;.... Tom Prentice She said she thought the in­However, she noted only a relatively small number of them use the free services. NOW OPEN IN AUSTIN! H Nobody -\INTERNATIONAL §stuffea' SKIN CARE ||sandwich •1;*! r® <'.y like mom CENTER r ..._. : •„v> . 3808 North Lamar 451-7811 Vl J-• r — -.•ft '* • '*• 1. JENEAL SKIN LAYERING: 2. JENEAL E-Z ZIPPING ­ A harmless and effective process for \ • .* HAIR REMOVAL removing enlarged pores, pits and acne-Free yourself of -unwanted hair the f the8»«iWItchahnpa;': type conditions, wrinkles, discoloration, painles^imd"8tfflple":&Z"way!~Nb more •* 5»rti*einto > -scar tissue,'stretch marks; . plucking, shaving or unpleasant smelling creams. 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Carvings •dgeofZHtHFr PafK , ^ Barton Sprii s PARKSI ' £• ftp Barton Hifls Navajo Pound Blanket/circa 1900 :441-1717 sssipft MiMi BPS mm PSttl :, t' W R^|lobs Available if!® Applications for resident HW CHMSTMAS WNNIi Ef3! (OJWOUStYUNTmpOj assistant positions in Well done? after leng (M \v;0omn, S~: f U.S. Rep. J.J. Pickle1 of Women's Residence Hallswill ; * swat • ... Austin said Monday the nation be accepted until ITeb. 25, in the early stages of a Mrs. Alys Bodoln, director, HAS BEEN 3% recession and that economic said Monday. iWebwIsedlstoffs controls set by the Ad-Interviews with applicants bout a core all gewimtt are only food fiend* who ... ministration have been in­have started, but late Of inspiration"? effective in Siting inflation^ applications can be taken to —Stephen Huntington ,l V, jrout*KlS*** '*"* . Pickle made the r^marks in her offices, in Ca rother8 bies . a speeqh delivered to Huston-Dorm. ?iiWax fheinnocirit ONE BEGETS ANOTHER . Tillotson College students and Qualifications for resident • > include craving baloney -TOW never KNEW WHO •< faculty aspart of the college's assistants (RAs) a observance,of Black History gradepotntaverageofstleast toot», you're moMy INa pkkle l7*r what pop* our *~ of the sun or sidewalk. 2.5. Mrs. JBodoin added that some dishbelched •> freshmen or sophomores are Girls; I'd like ydu to ^ , I was walking down the sireSr rarely employed. President's assessment that meat my husband (I'm stuffed^ when out of the blading Resident iuisfents receive (or sidewalk I'm not , we will not havea recession,'' naturallythe congressman said. "Say-roposed ordinance wou sure which) pops m i#km -,< '4ng so doesn't mean it won't*, marry the kitchen Unit Marcymbea from Boston. dorms,itsubtracted from the happen. ^ monthlycheck. Those living in ^Hey man wanna road my- Now the aftertaste's "Over the past three years poem ll air-conditioned dorms receive (simple heartburn) we have seen an alarming in-^ less cadi than RAs in other You read my poem. If you like artonyfnous drip creasy in the cost oJL living. my poem give me what its worth." dorms, Mrs. Bodoin said. still 1 The Administration's controls Potential RAs go through an leakt^ I read htrpminterviewing process that dutifully into cup of (offoe. should be lilted/ grades them on dependability, sacramentod rust •.He,wrote itio a f^bbug^The National Association responsibility, enthusiasm a cup of coffee. K ur steaming kettle, in the kitchen, for the Advancement of In the past, Austin's creeks Applications for construc­would be made by the director and a sense of humor, among r I drank 'my toffee Wrote this poem imed. well, MAR Colored People is sponsoring have been threatened by tion permits, under the new of the City Department of. other attributes. and; left* -1^ dust to dust— „ \ ' the following events the rest bulldozers, construction apd ordinance, would require sub­Engineering after a public "We want RAs who can V t.", * /<«• f-v ^Mf-4off Woodruff of the week: " , v5 ' „ concrete. . " mission of a detailed site plan, hearing before the Planning build an atmosphere' which Mother of God, you're a Christian mar* A symposium at 7 p.m. on including topographical infor­Commission.* makes students happy ami *yr -. WHY ARE YC LAUGHING -• •4 Helping America Passage of a proposed city mation, location of the 25-year enjoy living there," Mrs. Bo­you know, that's WHAT you ore Why are you laughing •. Understandthis, year's creek ordinance, currently un­flood plan of all waterways in A report on the ordinance, doin explQined.' She hopes to it's a sin Uttle blond boy with theme of Black History Week, der consideration, would seek the tract and information on from the city's Office of E»-have all RAs selected by you know Blue fire-ball eyes ... will be held Tuesday at the to prevent future destruction the treesand soil conditionsin vironmental Resource March 1. not protesting " And toy machine gun -%', by requiring a special, pernrit Oak Springs Public Library, the area. • • ~ Management will be Jester Center and Men's so eat it Rat-a-Tat-Tatting? before' nearly all construction V 3101 Oak Springs Road. In addition, applicants presented to the City Council Residence Halls no longer are —Anonymous OavW Kuhne Dr. John Warfield, could begin. would be required to file a at itsmeeting at1p.m.Thurs-accepting applicationsand ex­:'* associate professor and direc­statement outlining the effect daysin the Electric Building pect to have all R£sselected ( lir At present there is no or­ ' tor of Ethnic Studies at the of theconstruction on "theex­Auditorium. and notified by Feb. 22. . dinance regulating construc­ Information concerning con­ .University, will act as isting and. future drainage Miss Karalyn Heimlich, moderator-of the symposium: tion in advance on Austin's system of the area and on the ; "The ordinance doesn't pre­assistant director of student tributions to the weekly Ars Poetica Panelists include the Rev. creek , system, Jack Alex­natural and traditional' vent developments," Stuart life affairs for Jester, said column should be directed to Molly Hector Grant of Huston-ander, assistant director of character of the land and Henry, Austin's environmen­Monday approximately 175 Stafford, 471-4591. the City Planning Department Tillotson; Mrs. Wilhemina waterways." tal director, said Monday. persons have applied for the ^ ' Ik- Delco, member of the Austin;. said Monday. "But it does require a lot of 40 to 50 positions in Jester and '.i " & Decisions, on the permits Independent School District Work on the ordinance prior site planning.," Men's Residence Halls. Board of Education; Laredo began about one year ago, State^Repi. Anthony Hall; Ms. Alexander said six or seven Irelene Swain, University public hearings have been SHOPPING OIL: BLACK GOLD? music instructor; and Dr. held, with a final hearing Peter Dual of the University before the Planning Commis­FOR A Studtman's 1$ There Rtally An Cnmrgy Critit? •wjin- African and Afro-American sion scheduled for 7 p.m. HAIRCUT? "The Energy Crisis and the Middle Center. Tuesday in the City Electric Photo Service y~ -— , ill r,W*~ir~ , - The rest of the week's ac­Building Auditorium. • Quality "ifc' ^2 it -K S , ­ East tivities Include a slide show • Convenience , ' 222':W."|9th ;pV5324:,C^m u and dancers Wednesday at the Under the proposed addition • Service A Public Lecture byO.ak Springs Library, a to the city code, a permit • Reasonable Price festival of music arid poetry would have to be secured ,* Attention To Your Individual Needs Thursday , at the Huston-before any development of IDENTIFICATION TYPE MR. JACK BAUMEL -w*ll>fawirn piMlwm engineer— Tillotson Agard-Lovingood creek land is undertaken. 45 We challenge you to compare -will speak #n the rmallty of the energy ­Auditorium and an our considerations with ^PICTURES trish and It* relationship to Israel. The ordinance also would c appearance of the nationally any other'Men and Women's WEDNESDAY known soul group, the Chi-require a permit for the hafr styling salon in town. Lites, at' Gregory Gym Fri­obstruction of a watehvay or FEBRUARY 1J J ' 1-Day day. Ms. Deko will be honored the piping of a creek with a BHH) p.m. 2004 Guadalupe 2819 San Jacinto at a dlnher Saturday at the peak flow in excess of 300 .Quick, Reliable Servic* 1105 Sen Stephen F. Austin Hotel. cubic feet per second. 478-0022 477-0423 . free to Pub w •"•'S _ t V ^ The Long tq Speak of Love... and Short off It. The exceptional clarity and transparency of the model 1001 are a direct outgrowth of Infinity Systems' mew speaker technology, exemplified in the Seivo-Statik Iand the model 2000A. The -'t4#» model 1001 is the only low priced speaker which can re-create the full orchestral image and frequency spectrum with the lowest sonic coloration in the industry. -... Messages can be casu^il, sincere, humorous, dra­ » matic, light, flowery, shy, formal, traditional. •Whatever your style, we have Hallmark cards i <* r'i \-/*•«%1 that speakof Ipve the way you prefer, forThurso.. day, Feb. 14. INFINITY 5Y5TGMS.INC Thejprown Shops •• • 1 •' O1* 't*'s" 'Plaza Balcones 2900 Guddalupe Highland Mall INFINITY 1001 SPECIFICATIONS FREQUENCY KiSFONSE • 30 Hs to 21 KHs, plus/minus 4.S db CROSSOVER FREQUENCY • 1300 H* (acoustic) NOMINALIMPEDANCE d8 6 Ohms ^ m N MINIMUM AMH1FIER POWER . ELD OilUB 20 Villi per channel RMS' REAR RADIATION 50% above 1300 Hi M -f" ­ i Apply now to experience on* of the most exciting 'year abroad' programs available, centrally.located in Bregenz, Austria, near Euro^S'a finest winter sports freaa^ It's a shirt story...all about bright red poppfes ^• -A' and other gloriously colored posies sprinkled i-'•W Llv* with an Austrian ^amHy * No tangnage requirement for - i >• 's » « «. X 4" on bright white clingy acetate, (Machine admlMton • Learn Qerman by using It • Independent travsi y f -jj and organized excursions throughout Europe * Skiing and ski ft ^^ -* •" • --washable and dryable, of course^. So, piek Instruytkm1* F<"'y .Trannffr«hl« rrarilt* your posies in youfr favorite length; the snirt, $13, the shirtdress, $26. Both sizes 5-13. Curriculum includes Humanitfe* Social Sciences and Physl­oal Education. iscount . • Open lo sophofflores, Juniors and seniors from all accredited colleges..For detM$ mint WAONKIICOLUQI STUDY MOQRAM 477-0937^ WAGNBt COUEGE BREGENZ StMon IMand, N< bN-THE-DRAG,2406GUADALUFH|v|i « 13th YEAR ,'yj v Tuesday, February l^ 1974 THE DAILY TEX&N Pa^je 3 1 f As •S& 11 > flip. Quest viewpoint jSg-2 MM isjll MS, / * Si „ "'i1­ the rRANlAN STUDENTS year, the revolution had grown' strongORGANIZATION, enough to capture Taga, the eastern a*-'"-Demonstrationto*rote«the Tuesday, Feb. 12 iJFiew issues before the Constitutional Convention have be6n so 'sfbe ORGANIZATION OF ARAB capital, and by 1970, rebels had captured nationwide news black-out rhetorically obfuscated ds the fo-caUed "right-to-work" provision. STUDENTS-: the whole of Dhofar, excepting the II of the Iranian inyasion of Presently Texas is a rigbt-to-work state. That is, a worker cannot be ^ ^ ^ Saltan's seat in Salalah. Dhofar MIDDLE SOLIDARITY legally compelled to join a union as a condition of employment. Texas EAST As a result of political development and Forum on Dhofarwlth COMMITTEE —~—T?? gftwfh~ the DLF changed itsname to The v: JKiialdoi^B Al-Naqeeb, labor is urging the framersof the new charter to omit this stipulation so • v Dhofar is a large province 'of the Popular Front for the Liberation of the that Texas unions may negotiate union shop contracts. Unlike the in­Sultanate ofOman, with an area of around Occupied Arab Gulf, in September, 1968. Wednesday, Feb. 13 Lunch featuring middle-east famous closed shops of the19th Century trade unions, the union shop does 30,000 square miles — about the size trf Hieir guerrillas have already moved ysi''. Union patio, 11:^6-1:00 not. requirea worker to join before seeking a job, but rather that he pay Scotland. Bounded on the west by the beyqpd Dhofar to the mountains of north "'^/-^main ballroom Democratic Republic of Yemen (Sooth Oman and into neighboring^rain in the regular union dues after In is employed. Forty-four states now permit an case of ram Yemen), and on the east by the Kuria cities, the front has organized oil refinery such agreements.' —" -fT£Lm:pbofar and question Muria Bay, the capital of Dhofar is and port workers into unions, which have And,-7.p-nt*-** THE RHETORIC of unionism, individual rights and,collective bargain­Salalah. The population, estimated at j and answer period since carried out many strikes as ••'W­ ing spirals into a cloud of confusion. Speak with a nonunion member and between 100,000' and 250,000, live in the declarations of their discontent. In the Film-Dhofar and question he will -claim a "right-to-wprk" without having to participate in an coastalplainsandinthefertile mountains. liberated areas of Dhofar, the revolution F«Sb. li , Since 1881, Dhofar has been an annexed and answer period organization which pursues goals he believes detrimental to his personal has rebuilt a popular society.Each village ACAud.Tjp.m­ r'ZWyki£fcl part of the Sultanate of Oman, which is gives a six-month literacy course, has an interests. Unionists will prefer "right to shirk", poiptto wage increases separated from it by 500 miles of desert: armed militia to defend itself and has a respiting from union actions and call the nonunionist.a "freerider." The Dhofar has been ruled by imported Omawi women's committee to ensure the equal Dhofar from its main supporter. oar foreign friends in their own defense njnjmionist fetortsthat he is 3"captive passenger,"forced to contribute or*^ rights of women in the and progress means a more effective com­newsletters, meetings and the like. new society bung built. mon effort toward the goals we all leek." in aggressive operations in the area by And so they rave. ' Taimur, who resided in Salalah and im­After Augustof 1969, when British bases Speaking specifically about the Middle (docking the sea and harassing the civil posed a tyrannical rule upoHhe people: were destroyed, the British began air at­East, President Nixon went on to say: planes carrying supplies tq the civilians Amid the verbal barrage there lies an issue: to what extent is an in­ he had 5,000 personal black slaves, tacks, which everyday dropped thousands "This afea presents one of the sternest inside Dhofar. ( dividual obliged to financiallysupport collective actionon his behalf? The demanded of tons of bombs on villages and inhabited tests unrealisticallv high tar*>s, 1 lor/fieace1 throagJrpartnersMps in * Al-Houriyah alid fr^fcitfsV '"The unionists say completely. The nanunionists say not at all. Here is a mid­banned trousers, medicine, regions of Dhofar, in an attempt to break heljdng ail the people of the area marshal dle grcHind. "thdr resources to stare in progress." junction with the masses in the' liberated pie. Even with tiiis fierce oppression im­ A few news briefs will help show the PART OF the union membership fee goes for strike funds, legal zones, has-been able to defeat all the posed on the people of Dhofar, there were of thefrontand their popular,support, that significance of the "Nixpy Editors....,.,,......, Kathy Kelly, Keith HartneU, Eddie Fisher, write a short letter to their congressmen. possibly the Hlbkory Creek Savannah. • return to both floorsifor a final vote. -andthtfeissoiiidfclnKgwcba tiw . u •" . Anne Marie Kilday If Mr. Wiesner would kindly shed sofloe Unit. Secondly, alongVillage Creek is one It is taiotographers>....t ;;r,..rPauI Calapa,David Newman, David Woo light and inform the few of students , imperative that students strive farcin HOUSTON! "5"1 **»? "worm uie tew 01 us soioents oiuieeigntof the eight piantplantassociations not included harder than ever to save thecreek bvwav who areinterested exactly what ishappen-in the House bill; the Arid Sandvland Unit andomnhaiMthc tlpaioia M The DiUy Tata arc {bait o< tb* •Wd ctwUMrf KtvtTtUlM «bn^ frf BllitdBK tJitof or lite wrtt»r M tw. «»i >r, ,W| lni|||j ^-UKiwhetherttebilHs-orisiiotpassed; These~elght plant associations, or TirTlJfl^Sywtt.TheiTsKSZ toe tm ytm >i»a llwUMUiw-^oai lawtlw 3.m im-VMri and diiptay arimtUnt « TSRBMdiai «b* « «• Uiu<«miy adnanutmUaa.« ife> Botns <* *ao " " ~ maybe we can help more. ecosystems, are what define the Thicket G*wrt k la el awnat terry _ itennu. West Mall with a complete explanation MmuM Mi*.Wt aeM yoar ulmuKynhm.' IV luUonat adwtunnf wpmeouii** • rap pgrmib awm thrash May S««aa*cias poa«a(»paW a« and JMitfc N«*» farytre. TW Ttia n a nenhr oI the questions, aad here is hii reply); successional ^ba|««Ci alia life A#*m T«« • • i-fiMoated CMle«M» Prw., ike Soa ike Te*a» tx»rty Newft»p«r AnocUba* , Too many people have come to me with -lakes thatare separatedat different times «Wi. at Ike adnaral altw* flfawSla** PMrllrallf the same bewilderment as Mr. Tscheope. Creek as it changed itf Rery^Uan Mhtm far Ike aemeape&ra M Wk k StWa from-Village «•«%*. tNwwrtfloof 1«r x Ike >mtefronMary iCte-; N. Uatmt Mad. Lake Amtla Badevart A Everyone seems to think that the fight is BaiMit AMKt imaiWMtunrn^nKlathKrT, course. As a resultr they are in After all the fuss raised over awarding over. One couldn't be farther from the successional stages of evolution a gold ajumnus Brown, a distinguished alum^ Page 4 Tuesday February 12, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN m f MM MM MM#! more firing flggl Js§te|5SSs'-.• 'M mmtotr • • IstaftUtS if tfie law can be of itselFisa plaice that offers itstild^tivicious nortitwind, and scheduled stops by shuttle mtf-for some time, but ing that Austin's rumpled I; In. Wednesday's .paper defended in any way. There exploit consumers, and tok«te.^»e*ciUng programs which, of several blocks to go, I beheld buses. City , officials have after,seeing "L 'Amour" on streets would no longer haveDavid Moody asked wbereon have been cases where Texas force the antitrust laws. -^^^Bourse, are paid for through with delight the arrival of a argued -to as that if shuttle Saturday night it finally broke their same sinister effect on campus hecquld recycle his laws were so flagrantly un­Nor should Article 4411 be .board payments. Just see shuttle bus. I started toward buses could stop anywhere water. This university has our nether parts'. newspaper. The stations constitutional that no defense% regarded as some sort of un*v,.what happens when you try to it, but its driver shook his along their routes, students gone out of its way, and ours, suggested: .by.-The Texan are -could be made for them. For fortunate legal technicality,f^>lan and schedule one. The head and refused to open the . would use the buses to get to to provide the UT community Also, I see the "pissoiirs" I j| not easily , accessible to all instance, in 1971 the 'All attorneys general are-?, plans sit on the desk of the door and let me pn. . locations other than their with the biggest and . best of becoming tourist attractions, iij .students, and we'd like to take Legislature passed a bill re-' similarly restricted. To give.i.jbigher hierarchy for months, I suppose this traitor to the homes and the University everything that money can Photo areas could this opportunity to publicize quiring that all persons the attorney general th^Li J* the plans are OK'd (good "love Generation" acted in * campus. This' would, they buy and construction com­designated affording the best|;jgthe Jester Ecology Club's between the ages of 18 and 21 power to refuse to d^okany^uck), they run on a rushed this manner because the bus (reasoned, undercut the panies can .build. possible view of the "pissoir" V recycling stations. Right now vote at their parents' statute with which he dis|g^schedule because of the delay was not atan officialstop. But> ridership of the Austin Transit A major oversight cni be with the Tower rising behind ;, there are stations on each residence, The attorney agreed — or even felt to beunfK in this so-called red tape. the bus was almost empty, it System buses. ,, easily rectified by remodeling it — obviously the intentionof ­floor of Jester West and we general made no real effort to constitutional — would be tan* Than the original lower staff -was stopped at a red light Complaints should be tiie existing fountains into the the fountains' designers and ; hope to puttap another one in defend this statute because tamount to giving theattorney initiators Are blamed tor the anyway, the. weather was directed to Mayor Roy Butler, world's largest "pissoirs". jhe IMversity.plarmers. The . the Area of the auditorium by decisions of the Supreme rush and castrated for their bitterly cold,-and it would not' any memherdf the City Coun­This would mostly require the poijsibilities are limitless, but ' the endT of the week. These Court already on the books any state law. That power he ) efforts and threatened with have taken that sadist five cil, or trafficdirector JoeTer-erection of walls and decora­alals, time and funds are not. stations ftrenot only for made it clear that the law*^ " >es not possess. -:-t: dismissal. I promise,thisisno seconds to open his' door. I BUS. All cap be reached at477-tion of the interiors since Immediate consideration newspaper, but also lor cans could not be upheld. Is® The multi-member district exaggeration. , ,V hope TEI gives him a Good 6511.) pipes and drains already ex­should be given to once again ^ and bottles. Also, if;there is However, if there is a system is a bad system. It Which raises another ques­Conduct Medal: thanks to ist. The fountains—lodated in getting things moving in our , * anyone interested in helping* chance-that*statute mightbe may well be an jjn^ tion, how come the residents him, my cold got worse, Iwas C'est gauche iximitv tn ~ " late for work, and my mis­To the editor; , -stops — would allow many of Jim .BiiPi general to refuse to defend it remedy lies in the Legislature pointments? I do not refer to anthropy was increased This' Sea has been building us to ride a little easier know-1 Elimination Liberation v or Craig< at 471-2105. would be prejudicing the that passed the taw and the the resident assistants only because he chose to obey his li Tbe Jeater Ecology Club rights of the state. The Texan goyeroor thatsigned it. Tv (there is token resident par­stupid rule rather than show a editorial asserted that the C "Iris's Dan Boyd ticipation in this selection), little human decency. I CENTER FOR ASIAN STUDIES multimember district system 121! W. 13th St~j but the higher staff, those believe that this is a perfect Sc,;To the editop: is contrary to the 1964 "gods" that sit in their ivory example of "obeying the ? Pyblic Lecture (lllustrated)Thenwho towersand mend red tape, letter,of the law, but not the !felts r Jester Center may be spirit" even though this was will hold THE IMPACT OP ECONOMIC AND Let us fll be aware of the not what Baker v, Carr held. * almost filled because of its but a fleeting incident along blackson th^fair campusand That case invalidated giving ' their hands? convenience, but it sure has a the EC Route. , ^ T-rv, To the editor: pause to. Reflect upon the disproportionate numerical lot of unhappy, frustrated I highly resent being assess­ECOLOGICAL Are Jester Center residents years of racial injustice that representation based on pop­residents. ed on niy bill each semester charity cases??? We must be, '4'W * this race has"suffered. ulation density. For example, They say the residents are for a service which is denied DEVELOPMENTcONt THE PEOPLE^OF THE the way we are treated. In honor and celebration of Travis County has about 300,-. too apathetic to do anything. I to me when I most need it! I* I cannot understand why we Black History Week, those 000 people and four represen­do not think so. They.are just Lesley Doris Beresford ?•< have to Ifeg forguest hours. In students finding the greatest tatives. Denton County has too tired of begging^ '-. Spanish A fact, L find it impossible to number of blacks at UT — top about 75,000 people and one Name withheld by request (Editor's note: According to believe that 18-year-olds and wmm *, score is412T— will be awarded representative. If the. Je?ter,(peflter ResidentAssis-Mary Walsh, president of die 'older are regulated as to who John Milton *** ~ prizes racing from colored Legislature were to give Den-, shuttle bus drivers union, an-­ can visit in their own paid-for ^ashtrays spotted palms. h ton one but Travisonly two, or authorized stops are per­"President/ The "Thresholdj" Foundation for Conservation ­ rooms. Good grief, a lot of the Denton two and Travis;twen­mitted by city law but are for- Call Steven, Charlie,or residents may get married Shuttle trouble February 13, 1974; 3 P.M. Frank fof details. ty, that would violate Baker v„ To the editor: (bidden by -a work rule of Carr; one community or the • after they leave Jester — then ,This afternoon, Wednesday, Transportation EnterpHses, Pobl» Room, Acqdamic Center 406 iVr . Jim Crow who will hold their hands? f other would have more than as I was trudging down Red Inc. (TEI). It was gracious of the resi­ C Restricting its share of the represen­River Street toward theend of The rule is required by the dent hall to allow us to have -c To the fditor: tatives. However, Baker v. a hard day, with an incipient City of Austin to prevent un­ 'liquor in our room. Butr don't 'S j-f I wish to take issuewith The Carrdoe&jiot say that once drink it with your friendsf Texan's severe criticism of Denton is given its one and around, children, otherwise m j>: Atty. Gen. Hill for appealing Tray^ itsfouTvthat Texascan- NEAL you will be having a public t. the single-member district ' not have the four in Travisrun v case to. the Supreme Court. countywide rather than in party and this is a no-no. tl Oh yes. Jester likes to think While The Texan is one of. the separate^districts. Some peo­ I > I \M IS few major Texas dailies that ple feel-that the spirit of . * > fa favor single-member districts constitutional, but as yet they ™ forty Bm*f Armstrong „ and have worked to get them have not. It is not an""open- Response to the issues at hand. Keeping instituted in state and city shut" case, like the young elections for several wars. ^ voters' case. There is at least the Texas editor elected by the students. IT WILL 0E A Thfe'fattorney general is a fair chance that the Texas fL£A$aR6, MA'AM Working with the staffs of the Pearl, Cactus, bound to Represent the state. system would be upheld, given Article '4411 of the Texas the cutrent Supreme Court. and Texan to understand their needs in pro-; statutes'prohibits the attorney The statute restricting the viding good publications. Working with you ^ general' from prejudicing the attorney general cannot be •fcaeiJ ^the students^rv^ by'these publications to ^ rights ?f the statin any law­taken'? lightly. These sarpcr isee how you feel about what you are reading. suit. Itjis not within hisdiscre-statutes give the attorney tion to re/use to defend a state general the power to sue cor-Response, dedication, and execution, the same .skills used while doing in-depth re­ DOOT^SBURY search for the University Policy Cbmmtft'ee. THFS 1$ AW TERM PAPER ^ The same skills were used in researching fUSAYl suns, im OF WHICH I AM VBW PR0UP. the minority enrollment issue and testifying at UHOMUtD. HMM*, wonpum HMB6UESS& LOOKS our mczAH, the Constitutional Convention, while serving 1HB0&6Y UKBALL W660M on the Advisory Council on Student Affairs. n •mshbm muNoomi zxciTim austsmsmom?A HBAVteS somHm BBN?! J&UJKlmt-]/&&&:. ~ / !_ stmt PLEASE NOTE THE NEAT Alison Smith TAPING JOB (r.-if. Photo by Steve Joachim ...editor !f*T For a professional Texan wi,m Bene* Paid PoHtical Advertisement Humupr; OONT turn5 WGfMmAU&WYfflS ALMOST WORRY, I 10W0N.. SBNT BOB • 4 • •joeer Wvx * s Ki "" xf| H -vi •

v.; : Vi Dept. pf French'ltalian . 32 Evil 33 Parcel of Isnd ^44_Montter -•—_ eoopenwofk-' ^ 9 days in Western France The University of Texas 36 Roman gods 45 Ireland fabric « • 18 days in Central and . Austin, Texas 78712 x 7 Article 34 Cogtodlsva Southern France Lee Hall 309 ' ' 36 Present'time Daily lectures and guided Phone* u <511 % 37 Speck ^ visits to museums and f' -(512) 4715531 (office) tS 38 Be other pieces erf interest ' --327 2371 (home) >' W 39 Rel, % 40 EndxihterM • Opportunities to attend All travel arrangements by £41 8pihi*hfora cultural .and artistic. Longhom Travelen, fets T . "yfs' I ' events while traveling > Inct, Austin 42 Approach;'. in Franc® . .^... v.. . -.. , ; Sis mm 81 Hasten 82 indigent 83 DeclareTare CsMrati A'CMdlWIn Ev*ry NUmorial WMcat Clp tliiscouponfora 10%^| 3»."-SiiS' 54 Before SB See eagles mm­ dbcownt aMh»U|Mtair« | 88 87 Florid Rmtaurant, 2nd floor,D»xos| aaladt,andtMnptbgF*b.ll-15,1974. Union, during.A Chick*n In i ' • f6tp ­ t SWbhes Just dpth*coupon and |oin u« fora nosfalaktuneh EvtryfVtfMMnorialWMk J I'm* t Turkish rafli ' ™ pniSli -iiMSBrnf Fob.H-15,1974. • i-A It Vsetora, Srnma u Ins. immmm Tuesday, February 127H974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page S .c^, v-m - Horn , By DANNYROBBINS . • The. Frog^t scorer,Texan Staff .Writer^ .junior college transfer James X)RT WORTH — As Billy Hudson, dropped out of school Tohill knows coaches are not -a few weeks ago for what treated reverently at. Texas! were described as "'personalChristian University. reasons." Hudson now Is' W TCU Basketball Coach home in.Atlanta. Johnny Swain may belearning -The Progs' second best that, teo-Thetlir, injuries, bad scorer, forward Ted Jones, 0S-:Q? grades'bad vibes have turned •has the -flu, as do many of K^lv.a^tffiorned Frogteamihto .theTClI, basketball playersa"wbrse one. -<-\-and much of the TCU campus.*j» j_ When Texas and TCU meet Jones did not play against 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Texas A&M Saturday. and i Daniel-Meyer Coliseum; the Swaim says he will miss the jT V $ Horned Frog starters will Texas game too. b'i' -'have a combined scoring Bill Bozeat, who had been f , average of 24.4 points per seeing a lot ofjctionat center . v't^garaer . "" for TCU, was declared ; TCU, you might recall, scholastically ineligible at the J began its Southwest beginning of .the semester. .'Conference schedule' with a And Hetb Stephens, the guardin1 .,^104-53 loss ' to Texas who was supposed to pick up -Gregdry Gym. After that, the slack left by the'loss of --v things went downhill. H&dson, complained to Swaim ' • ' 'OP THE L4 players TCU" one morning that he didn't brought to Austin a month sleep the night before because , / ago, only nine will suit up his knee hurt. Stephens is now ' against the Longhorns Tues­out for the season kitli a knee day night. Three of the misp-injury, a 4 ing players were starters. < t, i,i£'There's not much luck in- Starting Unpups Toxcn' TCU •* Fm. H#t. Ow Ooss Larry Robinson F 6-7 Sr. Gary Landers F 6-6 Soph:EdJohnson ;F 6-5 Fr. Wayne Wayman F 6-8 Soph. sRichParson < C 6-6 Fr, LynnRoyal C 6-7 Soph. Oan Krueger G 5-U Soph. Jr. Eddy Fltihugh G 6-1 Harry Larrabee G, 5-10 Sr. Alonzo Harris G 6-1 Jr. 'S COFYING*-. -SERVICE 'Mi'-. i, BALI'! " XEPOX OR I3M COPIES on our two self-service machines *eb. 11 -veb. 1^ 2021 Guadalupe 1 ­U2 Dobie Mall W-P171 . COME TO SEBRING BY ROY . . ITS A NATURAL. Sr i YOU'RE YOUNG, YOU'RE TUNED OUT, AND TURNED OFF BY STUFF LIKE HAIR SPRAYS, TEASING, AND SITTING UNDER HAIRDRYERS. .SEBRING BY ROY IS JHE PLACE FOR YOU, WHERE WITH-IT HAIRCUTTERS DO YOUR KIND OF HAIR WITHOUT SPRAYS OR TEASING WITH JUST THE GREATEST MOST NATURAL LOOKS GOING. C'MON IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF. APPOINTMENT $NLY-472~7400 8? 7 W. 24th FOR THOSEOFYOUWHO MIS5EDTHEGREAT DEPRESSION,WEBRING YOUONEOFITS'NICEST FEATURES...THE CUPOF FROM7p.m.tilI0:30pm. WEWANT EVERYONE TOSEEOUR BEAUTI­FULLYREEECORA­ reoINTERIOR &• FASTERTHAN bier ONDELKIOOSPOODTT RESTAURANli H2809 SAN JACINTO HALPH MijRf ISMi) Rf M AUHA»j' p_ ... volved in basketball," Swaim 4Whole years" In QSWtowh. Ii^ififiid HPekiis Tera, assutttiini said, refusing; to make ex­,f/SWAIM HAS, winning SWC Tech beats Arkansas in Lub-> cuses, "We are just not play­championships in 1968 and bock Tuesday night • ing. We've. had this same .1971, and he thinks his job is basic group for two years, so safe. "I've been here a long "We can't afford tb think about Tech," Black said. we've got togoout and recruit time and made a reputation," some better players. Swaim said. "So they are go-"People have been talking to _ Tohill, _ the TCU football . fog to keep me for awhile." our players about that game. People have been talking tocoach who was fired before Tuesday night, he may wish about that game. Tech, the end of the season, also he were somewhere else, es­me lacked some competitors. But pecially if Texas plays like it Tech, Tech. That's all we hear. I think this could have then again, Tohill never did the first time the two had an adverse effect in the produced a winner in his "two teams met. SMU game." The memory of that 51-point MVV-' loss still galls Swaim. "Our Johnson's '• OSCAR ROAN might also M kids were embarrassed. I was have had an adverse effect. jembarrassed," he said. The football tight end played a Mother Af terUhe game,Swaim physical defensive game, a bit" FORT WORTH (Spl.) - chastised his players behind a of strategy devised to keep Mrs. F.E. Johnson, motherof locked dressing room door in Texas star Larry RobinsonTexas basketball player Ed Gregory Gym. he feels that away from the basket... . Johnson, died at 6 a.m. Mon­slaughter and the lecture day of an apparent heart at-which followed is still, very 'I sjpe dor>'JJiave an'Oscai* minds. Roa"n^""SWaJm said, ponder­ Mrs. iK&nson,1»,Tiac[ been a"*" "HfcxAs COACH Leon Black ing the fact that Robinson patient /at Fort Worth does also. "They really got should get more than his near­Osteopathic? Hospital with hurt down here," Black said ly 30 points per SWC gamebronchial pneumonia. She was Saturday night after Texas' average against the Frogs. readmitted Sunday afternoon 74-72 loss to SMU. "Their "I'm not sure what we'll dofollowing a coughing spell at pride was hurt. v, about him. Maybe we'll get the Johnson home. __ "If they can beat us, it will him before the game/' • Funeral arrangements are make their whole season. being handled by Williams They feel we ruined their That might'be the most sen-; Funeral Home in Fort Worth. season," sible way for the Frogs tobeat it is unknown whether John­Black and his players are Texas, but the TCU playerson will play iii Tuesday taking the situation seriously assigned to get Robinson night's game against TCU at because another loss wojpld would' probably trip or Fort Worth. put them two full games Something on his way to do it. LAUSANNE, Switzerland they compete as professions tmateiir status in a CAP) — Lord Killanin, presi­in one sport and as amateup* ilar sport. ' dent of the International in another. He. IOC executive has still Olympic Committee, said He was referring to the new not finishedgrafting its revis­Monday that American rule passed last month by the ed eligibility rule. Butcollege athletes may be in­National Collegiate Athletic Killanin told a news con­eligible for the Olympics if Association, allowing pros to ference: "Certainly the-Olym­pic rules on"professionalism of this kind are not likely to be Richard E. Nieman M.0. changed in the foreseeable future." announces the relocation of his office for the prattiee of Asked if American college athletes could disqualifyOPHTHALMOLOGY themselves from the Olym­pics by following the new ^Diseases andSurgery of the Eye) NCAA rules, Killanin replied: •at "That may well'be so. I don't EYE CENTER OF AUSTIN know how this -will affect the, Americans at Montreal in By Appointment 3913 Medical Parkway Telephone 1976, because I don't know Mon. -hi. 8:30 -5.00 Austin, Texas 78756 451-8484 how many have disqualified themselves yet." Discount on all FAME & GLORY Guitar .• This is your opportunity to express your ' • ideas. Submit a paper on* social, political, Amster Music 1624 Lavaca^ cultural, or economic relations between the U.S. and Latin America. RESEARCH Undergraduate Conference to be held to dis-. .Thousands of Topics'ci/ss student viewpoints with workshops and . $2.75 per page speakers April 12 and 13. Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage (delivery time is Submit papers between February 15 and lto 2 days). March 8 to Janis Greer, Institute of Latin RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE BLVD.,SUltE #2 American Studies, Sid Richardson Hail 1.30.1, LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025471-5551^ (213) 477-8474 or 477-5493 Our 'rtsearch material is sold for rewarch assistance only. whatcha gonna get at WlJdbrt's? rn Special .. .. "• ^ limit one coupon por customer please I-Berts L 99' MV*41' Each delicious Big-Bert tri-decker boasts 2 pttrp beef patties, slice Kraft American cheese, lettuce, and Hubert's Own specieI sauce. Redeem this,coupoh at your convenience. Good ell spring semester %4-K The Ugly Place with the Beautiful # 2300JVheless Lane O* north an I.H. 35. right MI 190, #1Mi aofcinan, Mt on Wtulm i tVR,| TW selW Wr ke* t " tkfafs-1 these} cfcarry teMetees.' IWy &3A ' 'Witha^yKT lett in Efst'Saturday's Texas--1 Teagtit: games' and junior higfr • game#/ SMU basketball game, Mustang forward Even when he did reach the SWC in 1968, Oscar Roan committed what appeared tor be only got to work one game;his first most people on the West side of Gregory • ' -year. v Gym to be a turnover. No call was made, Now that Cowan is in the SWC, he call by the officials, and Roan proceeded to • afford the luxury of wanting to officiate i-score.-; some games more than Others. >, It was not the only call that the fans'; "I like toreferee gameslike Texas-SMU where there's a lot riding on thepa," he What was a relatively well-officiated said."The fansand players care aboutthe pme. --gaffie. ^ Although the referees probably are right . like Rice and Arkansas is bad because more times than the people in the stands^ nobody really caries who wins. The fans they do make mistakes They can't helpit.' ' just come out to raise helL" „ , There are two officials to cover 10 fast-moving players; most of: whom block .out •CFL -~*sSi ^e arras from view.-•* t ' The Big Eight Conference found a way[ Hie SWC has considered foUowing ihe to improve officiating. It now uses three -Big Eight's lead. Some tournaments held referees in its games, something that SWC by conference teams have had: three of­ officials like. ' --ficials, but the thought of paying the "It gives you better floor coverage," salary for an extra referee has kept the Bailey Marshall, a former SWC official conference from using threeofficialsmall and nOW the athletic director of the games. •.; University Interscholastic League, said. It would cost an additional $U,200 in 'As fast as the games are today, it keeps salaries alone to have an extra referee at people in a better position to see theball." all. conference games. Chatting with Marshall after working .^--Ihe-question is whether it's ^orth it. It Saturday's game, t(ie two referees also could be argued that by reducing the favored the three-official idea. number of referees to one the conference "I've, worked a few of those threes-man could save several"thousand dollars. But, games, and I like it," umpire Billy Cowan of course, a game cannot be jfrop^Hy call­ said. * : ed with only one official. v' • But working three persons instead of Nor can a gaipe satisfactorily be called two is something the officials must adjust -by two officials. That is why the Bl£ Eight and many other groups, including some Big 10 schools, have switched Co thjree of­ Three Officials ficials. And where they have, Cowan says,' "In some tournaments where we were -,'!The..officials loved it and most cdaches using three officials there were com­have liked it." '• * ' plaints that, only two officials were doing The cost is substantial, but wheii it is any work," Marshall Said. He added, divided among the eight conference teams however, that the situation has improved it is. equal to less than one full athletic since the use of three persons now is being scholarship per school. ri taught during the training of officials;^ If the University's football team can "It's just a matter of learning to coor­spend $10,Q00 a year so it can spend the dinate with two other persons," referee night before each home game at ^e Villa Paul Galvan said. Capri Motor Hotel, then it's worih the ex­ One of the reasons Cowan is for going to tra money to improve conference of­ three refereesris that the new system ficiating. , -"• \ should increase the° number of years he There would be one disadvantage,' can officiate: however, if an extra referee was added "If they put three men on the court, then and an improvement in conference of­ they'll make men who can go until they ficiating resulted. Fans would not b6 able, are 40 go until they are 50 or 55." he said. as frequently to hear KLBJ radio an­ Cowan's desire to officiate longer is un­nouncer Bill Little, the "objective" .Voice derstandable. Like all officials; he makes of the Longhorn basketball team, scream $100~Ior each SWC game he works. Before things like "Bullock climbed all over he became a conference official, however, Robinson's back and the official didn'tcall he spent nine years refereeing church . a thing." Shoe Shop *SAiE * NBC Slates ' We make and SHEEPSKIN Hank for tV repair boots NEW YORK (AP) -Hank ; RUGS Aaron's first home game of' shoes belts Many the 1974 baseball season will 00 $?5C *5 Beautiful Colors be televised by the^National leather Broadcasting Compahy April *LEATHER SALE* goods 8 ait Atlanta' Stadium, NBC Various kinds, colors -• 75' jwr ft. said Monday. > IMKAMERICMB Carl Lindemann Jr., vice- CapitolSa|ldlery president of NBC Sports, said telecast of the game between 1614 Lavaca Austin/ Texas ^ 478-9309 the Braves and the Los Angeles Dodgers was schedul­ed to give viewers, a chance to see Aaron brea|c Babe Ruth's career., home run record. Teaching Workshop On the lint day of class do you see nothing but•sea of bewildered faces stretching all the way to the back of your classrooni? Do you sometime»feel like Alice-through-the-l^okippglass, running and run­ ning just to stay in .the same place? ^ " ' RUN NO MORE, FOR WE OSFER YOU RELIEF) The Center for Teaching Effectiveness wants to help you win your race against frustration. We are offering a workshop, on constructing educational objectives which will run two consecutive Saturday mor­ thaSanilVitohiho|M nings, 9-12, February l6 and 23. Arthough the workshop is open to • • ; . ' V.;;' :• any interested faculty members, the number of participants will be 2S21 Sin Jacinto « 2S04Giiadalupi • DatfcMM . : limited, so contact us early. For more information, please call us at %11-1488 or come up an OPlN: Tuej. & Thurs. Til 9i?f; 3 W4» M./nnd Sat/ 9^| • 1?^ 2" S lrr aTOO-AOUAOAUlM 1912 W. Anderson Lane S 451-A5A7 _ _474-Mai Page 6 fuesdai^February 12, 1^4.THE DAILY TEXAN « _ ZLs, f, , t-i ifwpjTp±\*;5'&*& "Our bowlers get ft a day X.n. , ---­" judge suggested Mon-By BILL TROTT for overnight tournaments/' more person^ costs when WlUiIMkQMVII lAp, {r, said Pat Hurley, manager of .they qualify for the .monthly »t Commissioner Mike Texan Staff Writer • " > 4 _ . Storen 0f the American Like many other minor the Games Area in the Union Ornaments. They i v Basketball Association may ' i >mr ' *' Building and the team's sponV^I1^ 30 cents a game and must ^baye violated a court order & IIT T*\ HhaI sor. uThe rest comes out of i^wl 15games to qualify, with ' ie/advised a coach to protest m. ^ Wl IV WUCI their own pockets." , ' gthe top five averages going to fames in which" star Geasgitmi&i. In addition to the$5 per pert^p® tournament. Gervin played for the San St. Ed's son, the University of Texas" Approximately 30 people tonio Spuris. gp Rv if Sports Association jar MtiRPirtP (UTSA)5,begin qualifying, said Hurley,U.S. Dist. Judge Adrian h Twan sSfstott -^Uocates MioHuriey for ac^utVtheJnd of themoSL Spears, Whose orderlast week 10 15 are Tte piyerSS^S^eam $5?"®? : allows G$rvin to play for San "The trend now is for more Antonio-for 10 -days, com?! opens its 1974 dual match meet its Texas Intercollegiate -mented on a copy of a news seasbh at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Conference rriBCV Hmoney for the women," said article filed in Ws courtin,the Penick Courts against crops-dues. aLtitoMO^ ^Hurley.. "Bowling doesn't Gervin case, XPACS % ~ ;^e artic^?, lire • Texas netters finished third purchase of bowling shirts "'there's no hope for the nearthe Spurs-Denver Rockets. In the conference and 11th (new shirts have been worked future." '' game won by the Spurs Sun­ 4inationally last year. into the team's budget only -The bowling te^aM hls •• day night, quotes Rockets 'Coach Ale* Hannum assaying "Making -the top 10 will twice in Hurley's 12 years trouble gaining recognition on definitely be a goal this year,'' with Union), UTSA funding campus. "One reason that he protested the game on Texas coach Dave Snyder.-jends. ... .. . v.bowling isn't developing is wp ^ Storen's recommendation. —"Storensuggested i,play the wm over SMUl«f" W^aATSSTi-taSbte"S­ year was a big step in the? game under protest a few right direction." jigs •' days ago because every game' '?SSS-'2SS« ''Geach Snyder, who hopes •r Gervin pfcfts for San Antonio proved by the UTSA. The 'W(i0^|&^b5^t'SLv the St. Edward's match will , r could be.forfeited," Hannum Can I Flip You for It? be a stepping stone to that ^ was quoted in the San Antonio Fred Center of the Philadelphia 76ert hat trouble main-Hawks' Jimmy Washington makes an all-or-nothing efl? goal, plans to use'several new more than $200. . -%recogni*ed as a major inters ;;Express-News.,.. taming his balance, and the ball, when the Atlanta fort for a steal. THa 76*rs won Tuesday's game, 116-95^ faces against St. Edward's. 1 "We're in about the same collegiate sport with Texas will start BillJFisher situation as most UTSA scholarships,"• said Hurleji^;$p? as first seed followed by Dan sports," said Hurley. "We "but that Isn't very likely." ' Byfield. Brad Nabers. Jim SWCiT& Sign {•V Bayless, Paul. Wiegand and^ |r" By Tfcf Associated Press Tom Roberts. • •••v odtalliuoodtollwoo? -H judgment. Th^t's still true to athletes, the recruiting chase Tyler' has as> Tech, several others. the Texqs, tpaw is ' I' A stable of'13 blue-chippers, John He said *vv.., «»««. a. !sfCi While some extent for major could last for months..-publicly he, wants.to playJor Tommy Woods, Angleton looking for a stepping istone^ ^ jnumerous all-state and all-pro.spects but on marginal .. ... . . . ., 5 WE'RE IN THE TREES Texas. halfback; Arkansas, Houston, Brother A. Strohmenyer. St. •'• district,selections and an oc-players at least three of our r athletes want to wait Another blue-chip an-Te?.h-„ Edward's coach, is hoping to Large new 1, 2, and 3 bedroom flats and townhouses-­ -'casional out-of-state plum are cwche! must look »t (Urn on '"rhLdsby moreschoos, and nouncee for the SWC cham­Jim Wyman, Spring Branch be a stumbling block. ~ t"»~* zr i. % T-ifthe stakes Tuesday when the the olavpr ^ ' ' • $ others play spring sports, like i Southvpest Conference an­. T the No. 1 bluechip, receiver pion Longhorns is Kilgore end center; Texas Tech, Texas. ~ "Texas is undoubtedly one — _^ j't; \v JlM Lew Sibley, a6-2,220^x>under. nounces its signings of high He added, "You can'tafford John Washington of Dallas Rodney Allison, Odessa t of the best teams we will face • fireplaces . • private patios or decks • school football prospects.. to make a mistake. If a boy Roosevelt. The other leading prospects, quarterback; Texas, Texas this year. We will definitely • shag carpet -' • beautiful landscaping along with the schools with " Tech • 3 color schemes • • lots of trees .^8signs with you and then Washington 'was" the only be the underdog, but .we will • complete club room • in scenic Northwest Hills i uM > For the first time SWC which they are believed lean-, ' Ronald Burns, Arlington becomes unhappy and leaves, be ready to play, i hope Texas high schooler to get the to schools sire limited by the you can't replace him. ing are: .. . Houston defensive back; throw, them a few surprises," nod of all nineSWC coachesas NCAA to 30 football e Jim Yarbrough, Galveston Oklahoma, Houston, Baylor. he said. • 'V Recruiting is -milch tougher 8816 Tallwood Drive 345-1768 a blue-chipper,, but he is run­ : scholarships, and coaches say Ball, linebacker; Texas, Tex­Jimmy Green, Waco • and moreselective thw5ear?% 1. While St. Edward^s knows­ ning track and will not an­ ; they at^e having to be more as Tech, Houston, Notre Richfield guard; Oklahoma, \vhat it is like to be an under­ selective thanever in deciding? While Monday is theljfst of-v-nounce a school until May.J Dame. Baylor. dog, Texas may fiiid out what ficiai day SWCschools can an­The leading running back Joel Estes, Sherman k/rK'i-u*. • who should be offered free Mark Lewis, Spring Branch . it is like to be stumbling block educations via the football nounce their-scholarship prospect is Earl Campbell, a linebacker; Oklahoma, Texas. tackle; Arkansas, Tech. ,> when the Horns face national­ field. players, in some cases* es­215-pound speedster from Mike Mock, Longvi-ew Sammie Singleton, Baytown ly ranked Trinity University pecially with, blue-chip state Class4A champion Tyler linebacker-quarterback; Tex-Sterling halfback; unknown,' ''The guidelines on size, Saturday in Austin. .height and speed have been S- changed because of the 30 The Largest -* limit," said one SWC coach's • Selection of Sfee Our $2 DISCOUNT dN HAIRSTYLES aide. -S WITH THIS AO 1 t 1RECORDERS: "This is the smallest If master list of players to in Texas recruit? that we've had in Z from $1.95 up SONY years," said Willie Zapalac, RIVAS one of Texas' top recruiters.' 5 See us for Color TV's & Stereo Compacts ,W| "There^ wis a time when I • Recorders & Full Service Department' ^ could sign players on my own • Recorder Music Hoirstyling, Facials^ CM WE DISCOUNTSHOE • Amster Music • -• am Body Massages " ' F?. irKiystryNeeds • v-k 1624 Lavaca 38th & Speedway 2101 South IH 35 AC 512-441-4151 •eeeeeee:eeeeeee*e#e More Money IIIIIII LOUISVILLE (UPI) -In­ BE . --" — ' ' -" : MARY GRACE dividual investors must put DEBBIE G|i|>ture Th* Fot mo'»-•nioitr)(}ho(\ ! •v, •»< t;+ i1--' riWf Soryu Karate Institute HHh^34 Sou'h Bflphon,. '14t .3?)c9 __ i«f' ^Vr?Monday th.u T ho • h 00 'p O 00 j> n> L-3 "Mm ' M, mm: qisJrci tio.. i\ f I U 00 p»" |>fso" ... • ^ J -mi' MMk r-J. This '?,h.juld B«-n M.*«,t Inqui'i1 Todo. i & 19-8 p.m.* -Municipal Aud. ST. HILARI0N »® AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA .'BOOKSELLERS IN MYSTICISM ft kU RitlGIOUS PHILOSOPHY ASTROLOGY, YOGA §; . ^ESOTERIC STUDIES .OPEN 10-6 Daily "•trnkm - 4*-?*' Au*tlr^ T* 11 A.M. -2 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 477-0710-;-# "The most ' * WHAT'SYOUR FAVORITE? voice in the,world! VALENTINE BEEF? PEPPERONI? MUSHROOM? OR ANY OF THE »•§ i-i • : ; •» J * ^ T*\ CARNATIONS Ttr& DELICIOUS VARIETY SERVED ON THE BUFFET. -> fK; 3.5Q doz. t i J + £ < i J^Opera -Paris THE PIZZA BUFFET IS READY WHEN YOU ARE. Azaleas. Qardanlaa/ Hangijag Baakats ONE LOW PRICE FOR ALL THE SALAD AND PIZZA TOU CAN EAT. i?: Av m tsSirs7 V ili Vt*\ iff •*{' , * 0**13 601 Wi 1«th HI ,5 EAT. EAT uy 474-6641 7:30 /f* V*" -7 C^i m i ;Jr«^ ONLY H4<)' "l '<1 K . » : (VTIONS M tent ^>1 . mtj mm J i 8401 Burn«rRoa£i 451-7571 5 SponftnroH hy CPC ft ^«* with 1710 W. Ben White Blvd 444-6655 n Optional S«rv)c«8 Fee Drawing hy Euraka 3000 Duval . ^ 477-6751 Feb. 13*49/10 M.m.^6 p.m./Noflg $59i00 2800 Guadalupe 477-3697 WnlVilVH/ VfHIVVnilW .Hppif 5440 IwMt R*m I •L • c~t *"5* •' 2lrr Tuesday,. February-12, l»7» TOE DAILY TEXAN Paae 7 mm m S>f: -i.... ~ editor as an editorialassistant, weeklycolum­ ikiZT.r' nist, : sports editor, assistant sports editor and sports assistant. For professional experience, I have worked as a summer intern with The Dallas horning News and The Houston It* Chronicle; Eakin had basically good ideas for The Texan. It would be foolish to dis­card them. I plan to improveand add to Eakin'sintentions, and the mesh should provide for a journalistic,Jiard-hitting and relevant Texan. The" main ideas kre: ­1) Utilizing the community—I do not f believe that by myself I can produce a h tsp at- JOHN CARLSON '"The role of the Texas Student Publications Board is to oversee the various publications of the TSP—The Texan, Cactus, Pearl and the Student Director I believe I can add tothe board'seffectivenessand consider theseissues to be most in!­ ELECTED EDITOR: The Texan must continue to elect its editor. The Texan is a Student newspaper and its editor and policies should be decided by all the students. /. NEGATIVE CHECK-OFF FUNDING: the negative check-off is the only workable alternative that has been proposed, It continuesto provide a daily student newspaper U for only 2 cents a day to the vast majority who want it. It also allows others, not in $j£teement with Texan policies, to obtain refunds. 1 TSP BOARD REPRESENTATION: the TSP Board is currently composed of four Communication students, but Ohly two at-largemembers. As theTSP is supported by tj^e entire student body so should the board have balanced representation. INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING: responsible investigative reporting, as has been Shown with the Bauer House and the Available University Funds revelations, should and must be continued. • WEEKEND DISTRIBUTION: to many students The Daily Texan is a primary —-Tamil Staff Photo source of news. As hews doesnot wait for Monday'sedition, a SundayTexan would be of great value to the students. t t KXT'1 § . -fe­ lb a*« r lovrnaltsm § ih Mr is a revitalized recruitment program. ^ 6) Antisexist policy^-Eakln did much Qualified people exist on campus'J.% toabolish sexistmaterial. ButTheTex­everywhere, and they need to be |an style has not been officially chang--r-\ brought to The Texan through open in­^Ced. The choice of such words as chair­ 1# terviews. X'man and chairperson is now left up, to *<,*­ 2) Variety of ^opinion—The fall ' the writer and desk worker,ft® * editorial staff consisted of three peo­7) Texan funding—In somfe wayil if ple. I would like asmany as10 working? iSee nothing wrong with mandatory fun-as contributing editors. This allows .ding of The Texan. A remarkable more time for research and for a< r number of people read The Texan, and greater variety of opinion. I would keep' Jit basically isa service to^jynjyeysi­the present policy of presenting the 1M1• 1 iidii 11 i'ii ' —• *-**••• '• "'ni(r'rr mm But The Texiiri Is a difffei-entie^ce . ^than the shuttle bus or Union services. 1 'TMMNI;! maximum number of guest editorials. 3) Broadening the beat system—The Texan's new beat system has proved to be effective. Butit can be improved. To complement the wide area system, im­portant stories deserve a beat assign­ment for complete coverage. 4) Research teams—This innovation will definitely be continued. A paid Texan staff position should be created to head this group. 5) Syndicated column use—These columns have often been used to fill space. Closer attention should be given '.The Texan has its own opinions. If / someone does not wish to pay for these "opinions and does notwant this service, •then that person shouldn't have to pay. Under Die proposed negative check-~ .off system, these people v^ould pay at .registration for The Texan and then «.wpuld recover at a time later. Under "fUs fund system, The Texan wouldn't Jom a significant amount of money and l)*rdUld also end lawsuit discussions. y1 8) Election of editor—I support the present system of electing the Texan editor, and I would fight Dr. Stephen Spurr's recommendation for an ap­ pointed editor. 9) General operations—There are a •_ number of smallerjmprovements that could be made to The Texan: a. Begin selling The. Texan on Austin city streets. b. Place recycling boxes On cam­pus. v c. Establish'an error column for ; false printed material. d. Print more Texans (36,500 are printed now for a campus of 41,000, not including the faculty and staff). journalism place 1 —logon Staff Photo DON MARTIN The TSP Board js essentially a policy-making organization with the responsibility of keeping the student publications—Texan, Pearl and Cactus—running smoothlyand in the interests of the students. As a candidate for Place 3,1 support the following proposals: . Student election of The Texan editor: Increased staff salaries and better minority representation. ^ Negative check-off funding if the mandatory fee is abolished. "" A continued free and open editorial policy. More specifically I see TSP responsibility in these areas: THE TEXAN—The Texan basically serves two purposes. First, as a training ground for young journalists it offers the opportunity to gain «xperience,-develop leadership andprovide credentialsfor employment.Second, TheTexan provides both campus and national news for students, being the only daily paper for many. TheTSPJusa responsibility to see that The Texan is an unhindered and free press covering newsevents fairly and unbiasedly, yet maintaining a freeand open editorial page. . • • ; THE EDITOR — Texaneditors MUST be elected if it is to remain a free pressand a realistic workshop. A conscientious board will take the responsibility to see that editorial candiditesareqoalified. —7 — —r FUNDING — If mandatory funding isabolished I.would favor a negative check-off proposal where4hose who cannot support Thfe Texan can have their $l.65 returned. The board should movejbow to. make the Texan self-sufficient. TSP POLICY — To maintain professionalism staff salaries should beincreased, in­cluding increased funds for incentive pay for contributors. The board should en­courage strong, responsible investigative reporting. Students have a right to expect the students' newspaper to protect their interests. Editors should be allowed to en­dorse local, state and national candidates just as guestcommentators areallowed to do. The TSP Board should not serve in a censorship function; that is the j^h of the editor and his staff.The boardshouldsee that thecandidates itcertifiesare qualified apd responsible, ' !«•rbssrfc <• w 'SA" • Member of the Society. <>f GARY ED JOHNSON rofessional Journalists. A commitment to cover the news of • Lifelong resident of Austin. ^«ptheentire campus rather than jnst part pi• Neighborhood chairperson in the ^ ?|of it and a desire to set a newstandard 1 "Austin Tomorrow Program—in which 1.if Mof excellence for the editorial page and ~~K 'f^T-for the entire newspaper aretwo of the ^tilings Iwould like to bringtoThe Daily zsyrngrsimm* '* Contfufet weekly opinion polU, both •on campu^wide jssjjjes^ and citywide t ^issues. f • Hire more minorities to The Texan staff. Go out and recruit minorities in­stead of simply accepting those who come to the newspaper. • Bring back the Texas Ranger, the campus humor magazine until it was allowed to die a couple'of years ago. < • Print morecorrections and end the .current policy of only printing correc­tions when The Texanfears a libelsuit. • Periodically publish a tally of the, major votes of our elected repf*—*­'talives -' • Report more weekend news in the Monday edition since only one-third of the student body reads any other daily' .newspaper. • Print an explanation everydaytell­ing how you can get announcements in The Texan. 1 • Offer a car pool arranging service. • Sponsor a contest to redesign The Texan's dull masthead. • Stagger the times of distribution for The Texan so those who arrive on campus in the afternbon can find a paper too. EXPERIENCE „ : • Staff writer for The Daily Texan, as well as The Summer Texan. Member of thfe Student ment State Lobby. r . ^ • Member of the Student Govern-* thent Consumer and Environment' , Committee. • Member of the Student-Faculty Parking and Traffic Panel. WlWWIII Mi PVIWf • Member of the Student-Faculty Parking and Traffic Panel. ... • Member .of the.':Walter. Cronkite Fan Club. EDITORIAL PAGE POLICY Under my leadership, I would like to see the editorial page cover a wider range of subjects and be less redun­dant. .The current editor has been covering the same subjects over and over again. When the editorial page gets into a rut and devotes itsspace to subjects previously considered, then many important current events and SARAH SCHATTMAN A member of the Texas Student Publications Boardof Operating Trusteesis charg­ed with the creation of standards fpr publication and with the sound financial management of those publications. It is because of these duties that a TSP Board candidate's sole concern should be with business, not politics. In the past four years I have seen several persons resign their board positions to seek other campusoffices. These persons vacated their responsibility to TSP and the students who entrusted them with that responsibility. The board does not exist to be prostituted for an individual's political ambitions. A member of the board should serve, not be served. I will not resign my position on the board torun for editor; I will not resign my position on the board to run for student body president. I willcomplete my term, all the while striving for fiscal solvency, social and ecological responsibili­ ty. -1 It is critical that Texas Student Publications remain financially independent in order to preserve the elected editor of The Texan, and its integrity as the students' voice. Solvency is relative to the amount of advertising which in turn is contingent upon readership and the quality of the publication. The quality of the publication is dependent upon available talent, whichrin its turn, isdependent upon salaries. Many talented students are discouraged from working on The Texan because salaries are extremely low. When writing about TSP, Pearl and Cactus often fall into the*"also ran" category. Pearl is the only campuswide literary magazine and yet its salaries are in no way commensurate with the amount of time the student spends working for that periodical. Pearl desperately needs an increased budget if it is to stand on its own. At present, Cactus has some $64,000 in an account which isdrawing no interest. Ac­counts should be changed so this money can draw interest. In all salary issues it^is'obvious that the talents of minority students will continue to be wasted unless more funds are allocated for wages. AH departments of all TSP periodicals should have a more racially balanced staff. The TexanMinority Report is a small step in the' Cactus, when the board pou^ money into. Pearl. And while we're at it, wemight seal if we can get more of the phcpie number^* in the Student Directory corrupt." Still, promises will not change anything.. Let's get out a record vote antfthen joitf, me at the next TexasStudent Pui&icationir, Board meeting. Then times may be changing. • \ • TV ' MIKE WILSON • t v • Mike Wilson, a junior journalism major, with emphasis in advertising, fromi Houston, is a candidate for Place 3 on the TSP Board. " ^ One of the major issuesof this campaign is therelation between TheTexaff and th$ University administration. Dr. Spurr has suggested that The-Texan editor should bq! elected by the TSP-Board. I do not favor this and will work tirelessly to prevent any type of editor selection that takes thevoteout of the handsof the students. Isincerely believe that since you, the student, fund The Texan the selection; of editor should w yours. 4,.v;i.:-'/ Minority recruitment is oneof the hottest issues on campUs, yet therepresentation of minorities on"The Texan, Cactus and Pearlisfar lessthan that of thestudent bod# I pledge to workfor more minority representation on all Texas Student Publication# Another point to be raised during tills campaign is the salaries tof the studen); publication staff members. I believe that with strong budget management arid acy curatecontrol of available assets the TSPcan increase staff salaries; The publication' business, whether college or professional, relies^en the talents of individuals. general reporter on the Texan staff works an average of 30 hours p*r week'an}* . receives>fC&a>inonth. If elected1will work vigorously tocorrect thisgraveinjustice. lat there is an excess of Texansincertainlwxe^such asSlSSrtJybox/intiijr ateilK^rnoons w^e most inner-campuaboxed are empty by 10 a.m. I suggest that the TSP Board investigate such problems and offer some tyoe of solutions to best s e r v e the s t u d e n t population. i". v;r -The TSP Board i* a -i --• si. --—* uignnimtiuii. niiiuiig 1.111= uu^iq pj responsibilities are establishing and approving operating budgets and determining1 editorial and advertising policy. TheTSP actsas a. watchdog for Universitystudents, assuring quality journalism in all student publications I cannot think of obtaining anything short of this goal. l-he TSI^ Board is; not dhNC Journalism and adyerttiingsttklttits but id theintlreUniversity com-' tnutiity. ipieboartf is to.be a responsible business and if elected 1 will do my part in m # tli8t.business atmosphere to produce efficiency and productivity, t TUMday, February 12, )»74 THEJkHlY TEXAN 'k X­ $S£ editor X*r . »l )" '1 ' " 'I -'• • -• CHUCK KAUFMAti University problems as well. -1 * Service to the University community. '• -'''-V ' \ -:* •' "•>•• • ••'•" • '• % 'tjet's pursue how narcotic raids m If the regents want tog give students Dally Texan editorial page own University dormitories allow the Stu­'the option to' pay fdr their Uy serves asa major source of dent to develop individual character in newspaper, then why willthey not conflict Instead of reflecting the f so-called academic environment. grant students the option to pay the pt-oblemsof the community, I want to find out why teaching building use fee? Why not include an :.Editorials should fight problems assistants' salariesareembarrassingly optional fee forTexPIRG? effectively in words with the hope that _ t Where Was the student option when low. TA's should be able to share they will provoke not only written teaching responsibilities with other the West Mail was creamed with ce­responses but public actions. . faculty members'in conducting large .ment and nonfunctioning fountains? Ultimately, people cause chanfea; -required courses,instead of doingslave • Let's show in words and with actions editorials, alone, cannot. labor. that moneyshould bespent to construct . Hi* editorial pageshould be written; "1 learning institution and not an to'provide a market place for ALL ^architectural playground.idef& for all political philosophies. ,#r News-Wise we haven't taken advan- Whtt) taking a stand TO a particular , tage tit the many efcperts we have on ||||,issue, the editor should mfie it his . this campus in light of national events. responsibility to solicit all viewpoints The reader deserves more ^ togivethe editorial pages more iftfesourcefulness in both news and balance politically. Thus the reader is jf^ditorials.. '• -• " ^ given the Chance to formulate personal As editor, I would expand the i opinions. ^editorial staff so that team research ; Generally 1 want' -may provide the reader with factual, problems brought to the attention of :v',provocative and'c0mci3§.$jit'">t the administration, regents and "-a fair editorial pijg^..vl -­legislators, not only in words, but also University studentsare an important­in actions. bloc of voters and will need to be well­^Xet's give these people a newspaper-informed on national, state and local (hey will want to read and show them issues. . /,•'r"-;' -,vy"| —Tmm Staff Hwti rationally, supported with facts, where Voting records of all candidates will the University has failed in not Moreover, an-.increase in providing the ''best possible might better reduce unreasonably voters may make rational decisions. education," and suggest and promote ; large classesand givestudents a better The editors will also have the powerpositive solutions. r opportunity to learn. to endorse candidates in all forthcom­ The Education tammittee of the* The departure of professors can be ing state and local elections, a respon­ [ Constitutional Convention showed par­prevented by alleviating course loads sibility which has been long overdue. * ticular interest in student grievances, and setting less restrictive publishing < But the importance of 'your vote by reacting critically to the .casual requirements; and by paying them begins tomorrow. A small voter tur­spending,of the Available Fund by the-. salaries competitive with other well-nout will only support Dr. Spurr's Board of Regents, and the lack of endowed universities. ~ suggestion that the editor should be ap­jttoiiies for an active minority recruit The mandatory fee must be retained pointed. ment program. so • that The Texan can survive -Please vote. This position must re­ Let's direct their attention to other; economically and remain as a public. mam a student-elected one. at-e place 2 NEALGRAHAM The TexasStudent Publications Board wasset up with thepurpose of enforcing and formulating policy and to approve budgetarymatters.This includeshot only The Dai­ly Texan but the Cactus and Pearl aswell. This is what you can expect to see me not only support but work for while serving on the board. I feel'The Dally Texaneditor should beelected by the students of this University. I would be opposed to anything other than this. We, as students, must retain the responsibility of selecting the editor of The Daily Texan for two reasons: 1) to give the studentsan active role in selectingan editor of their choice to reflect their views in a daily newspaper; and 2) to insure a system of checks and balances between the students, faculty and administration. Funding of The>Daily Texan should be through the mandatory fee. In the year1972­73, this fee alone brought in $136,950 a year. This same amount has again been ap­proved for the budget for 1973-74. If The Texan were to have substantialfunds taken away, theconsequences could include, but not be limited to: 1) salaries being cut back, 2) drops in circulation, 3) distribution problems and 4) lower advertisement rates resulting in another drop in revenues. The Pearl magazine has consistently lost money for TSP. Again in 1972-73, Pearl magazine lost a total of|8,145.00. Perhaps changes like increased,salaries and the addition of paid assistants to the editor wotild help. I would also like to work for a lab for magazine articles, such as The Daily Texan has fornews. This would increase theamount of copy toselect from and give more students the opportunity to write for something other than a' newspaper. \ ^ Presently, the only revenues received from Pearl are from advertising. Working for increased advertising salesand possibly putting Pearl ona subscription basis put-side of the University community could provide for new income. All of these things could improve the quality of Pearl, and eventually it could start paying for itself. \ Student response to the.performance of Pearl, the Cactus, and Texan is something that needs to be improved. What students want to read and what they read are sometimes two different things. Reader surveys todetermine the wants and needs of the University community would be a constructive Start. V J Working with the staffsof TSP and you, the studentsof this University, to produce ym a useful and informative newspaper, magazine, and annual, is my utmost concern. Another segment of the newspaper is a number of areas. also under fire from the administration. . ' The Texan now pays $32,000 over two Texas Student Publications is once President Spurr has said he favors an semesters infulltime staff salaries. If this again at a critical point. editor appointed by him, rather than by budget were increased by one-half — with Despite the continued successes of its popular vote of the students. $16,000 of TSP's $50,000 excess—additional irablications, The Daily Texan, Cactus This I wholeheartedly oppose. staff positions might be created with the yearbook and Pearl magazine, several If the editor — who is the designated monies.' problems remain unresolved. editorial representative of the student An increase in the salary budget would The Daily Texan, the students' body — is appointed by the president, he not only allow increased recruitment of newspaper and a working laboratory for would owe his allegiance to that ad­minority journalism students, but would young journalists, is the primarysource of ministrator and not to the students he also resulf in better neWs coverage on the news, comment and entertainment for represents. campus. ' ~ , many persons on this campus. Its ex­Minority recruitment, so long Overlook­Similar budget increases for the Cactus istence is threatened by a Board of ed by this University, is finally being im­and Pearl would likewise raise staff Regents which proposes to abolish the plemented, though not nearly as rapidlyas salaries from their present "monthly, mandatory fee which funds The"Texan. needed. stipend" status. Retention of this $1.65fee isbasic to The In the past, The Daily Texap has active­These, campus publications The Tex­Texan's financial survival. It is doubtful ly supported minority hiring, both an, Cactus and Pearl'— are among the whether this causes financial hardship to editorially and in practice. Not only must finest, most professional of their kind.For any student, and a "negative fee check­this practice be continued, it can be ex­them to continue to be, the TSP Board off' assome proposewould resultin niaiqr panded. K . must be composed t>f members,dedicated students taking advantageof a paper fund­TSP currently has $50,000 unanticipated to responsible journalism. ed by a few. annual profit, which it may apply toany of I pledge that dedication and support. , journalism place 4 JOHN BENDER Staff members of student publications at theUniversity have been unjustly under­ .paid for years. At present salary scales; r^iortersfor The Texan, sectioneditors for Cactus and copy editors for Pearl have to work for nearly three months just to pay their building use fee each semester. ; : For years the first priority was to obtain new facilities and equipment for TSP. Now that we have them, I say nomore moneyshouldbe spenton typewritersor corns puters until we have provideda decent salaryfor students who devote theirtime and tenergy to student publications. ; Journalism students who have to provide muchof their own financial support have had to find jobs outside their field of interest in order to make enough money to stay in school.. ; No affirmative action plan can effectively,recruit minority students for student publications unless we can offer them financial rewards as well as journalism ex­ perience. ; .'-.v; Right now TSP has|80,OOO in excessfunds fromlast ?ear.1strongly believe thatat least half of that money should be used to raiseridiculously lowstudent salaries. As ak| member of the board, I would immediately propose that a study committee be es-^ tablished to investigate salary scaleson student publications throughout the country and to work with editorsof HsP publications to propose reasonable pay scalesfor stu-M dent staff members. Pearl magazine, traditionally relegated to third place among student publications, is been ignored as a potential training ground for magazine journalis^Jhi: due mostly to the belief that Pearl must be financially self-supporting. , We have the opportunity tocreate a first-classmagazineat the University if we are Witling to put enoiitfi money into.it. No publication can be expected to generate m enough revenue to support itself during itsfirst years. But if we begin investing now f. to build a quality magazine on this campus, it could soon become not only self-j ttippbrting but eVen show a profit. At tin same time, we would be able to providea learning experience for magazine journallsts. I know the valueof the eq>erienced gainedby working onTheTexan. Ihave worked on The Texan for six semesters in the positlops of assistant managing edltor, news •dltor. city editor, copy editor, gweral"report^ And mws assistant. I 'have.alsoM ^wnwl-as aitenirai.reporter,for The OMrsicaha Daily Sun. • ; Iff 1 MM.- I have bein involved with newsipajpkia* fotf theIpast six years,and I have a thorough '? ,^A $ u yiat^ypgrfeye and--,,-. ----, • £23 AUSON SMITH viewpoint has too often influenced the news columns. Our objectivity has M n not so much with whatlfce justifiably been questioned. News and an has said, but how it has said it. editorial material must be striqtlyUndocumented, emotional and ohe-separated through professional repor­ sided editorial pages havedamaged our ting ; '• , .a:­credibility on thelocal and state levels. I Vrant The Texan to increase itsifelfe in state gOv«i^^itT^Mattors such ifc^ recruitment, campus construction and minority ra^tihent, faculty salaritt^fj nuclear energy, have been jeopardised. and regental appointments are 'AwM The Daily Texah is too important and decided at the state level. The Texar£l«| Job influential to he weakened by tte, must enhance thestudents^po^tions^ present brand of journalism. , strengthening cuf statewide influence.. ' ^ffi5§® AB editor, I want to steer The Texah Our coverage of state government""§|§|||M» *strong, respected position that limited in the past to covering opeq«|^^ionly high quality, Incisive journalism sessions of the Legislature, must be in<>|||§||l|jc^ provide. creased. As former Capitol bur£ai|-% -®^^-~Most;importantly,!am the only cm* chief, I have the knowledge and skill to ; p^^|dklate$vhO'iS^ experienced in hard news Utilize The Texan as a respected a^ii ^^|gand political coverage. If The Teftan is. vocate for student interests. i^^pto take aninformed, influentialstance, The Texan has been attacked trai^ the editor must know and understand year for its investigation of contrgyer>>^ sial issues. If we abandpn^^^^^n watchdog on the administration;* iSe^Capitol bureau chief, general will have buckled under to unstated v4 Tttan.-fM! Mwtf i This year's Texan has been criticized editor. must be legitimate, weii­for inadequate representation of the documented and scrupulously ^6* ;; f W student body. It is imperative that the curate. O^kwjise. o^r effQ|te|kre^pM;'« * next editor open the editorial pages to dpfpatinff i diverse viewpoints. If we are to de­News reporting Ts a prof^ssibn which/mand that every student pay a man­requires special knowledge and skill^.^ mm datory subscription fee, we must ^ fr The next editor must recognize" he^^<1 provide a forum for differing sides of strength and apply her knowledge. : current issues. Unless a controversy is experience in news writing, manage?' ^r I *publicly examined, a student has no ment and publishing will establish i reason to believe that our editorial high quality, professional ' viewpoint is an informed one. newspaper—but more importantly^ Additionally,, the Texan's editorial strong proponent of student interest.14 ^W0mk& DON WILEY The vital issue facing the TexasStudent Publications Board is the independence of The Texan editorship. Pressure seems tobe coming from differentareas of the carnal pus to change the present method of editor selection from an elective process in­volvlng all the students to an appointive one whichwould be undertaken by a board which has five voting members appointed by the president of the University. The , Texan must remain under student control by thenelectora) process. Otherwise, the editor becomes responsible only to a few studentsand five selected faculty members and professional newspapermen. Recent suggestions that the elective editorship -should be replaced by TSP Board appointment represent a serious threat to the democratic dontrbl of the newspaper. Keeping The Texan editor as an elected p<^i* tion is the single inost important factor in assuring The Texan its relative freedoth -from administrative pressures. If we allow The Texan editor to become an insthi1 ment of the administration, students will have lost all control over their oWn newspaper , ~ . —J— ^— % —^— *•>, ^ ji * " The meth&d of funding The Texan isvalso untlei* examination now, and1belfeVfetHat" the voluntary check-off system is a more equitable method of financing The Texgnj Those students who disagree withThe Texan'seditorial policy should not be required to provide itsfinancing. I strongly support the voluntary check-off system. This plan would give sufficient leniency to The Texan, yet would not cause any substantive change in the paper itself, except to. make it more responsive to student needs. | The Texan needs to become more of a newspaper. Editorial policy should not.be allowed to affect the objectivity of news reporting. Opinion and comment must be kept within the confines of the editorial page or within columns clearly labeled fdr this purpose. A balanced, open editorial page with well-researched opinions tiffil make The Texan a more responsive and a.more believable news source.,' '" r Stalif salaries are ridiculously low. ISP editorial positions are fulltime jobs ait|°i| they should be paid as such. At this time, many staff members are hoidingdown on£ and even two part-time jobs to*pay their way through school. Such low pay often makes it prohibitive for students working their way throujgh-school to work on TSP staffs. The editors should be paid a livable wage for their work. The Texas Student Publications need to take positive action toward significant minority involvement. Presently, the involvement of minorities in any of the Texas Student Publications is insignificant. Positive steps towards true minority involve­ment need to be taken and not simply editorialized about. Only through full involve­ment of all of the University community can the publications truly represent student ideas. . V,Vn,'^ .'v. -«• Polling plant for th« TSP Board ^ law School—Townes Halj on the and Toxan oditor aloction* Wodnos-broosowoy of the patio. day will btt ; : % ' l Natural Sciences—two booths on Archltocturo—W**t Mali in front of ^MoinMail. • tho ArchHocturo BuHding. -Nursing—rnow Nursing BuHding, ' Butinow—Sait side of Bwinw-iv 18th and Rod River Streets; Economics Building on Spoodway , Pharmacy—Pharmacy Building.Stroot. * Social and Behavioral Communication—Communkalion ­ Studies—two booths on Main Mali. Building Plaxa. , , The Colleges of Natural Science Education-7-Main Mall. ­ and Social airid Behavioral Studies Engineering—Comor of Tjjyior Had have two booths because of the at 24th and Spoodway Streets. number of students enrolled. The Fine Arts—Drama Building. \ students will be split alphabetically General and Comparativo.. from A through M an N through Z. Studies—Main Mall. K Graduate School—Main Mall, i'5 lThe polls will bo open from 8:45 Humanities—Main Mall/ a.m. to 4 n.m. . t •Jfesow >»-> > \ W'-S' • ¥ I* , i ' -|i f4 p. x\ t VT a tsr^ <• -«,& r Ji. t«74trte riii'iirviti'irr'in fSWB* o < ^ rt>v R S2f^ tlmw, ot presents Great Btuos McGHEE TICKETS UST DAY CMl MI TRINITY" I"Trtoltf" MT NAM" MT» « 1.00 HI « CAU t-ro STIU 735 ( STARTS TOMORROW flEOMMCOiUMr POO OF THE NORTH. JH TRANS»TEXA£ NOW! OPEN 2:15 FEA: 2:30-5:15-8:00 2200 Hancock Driw —4SH64I REDUCED PRICES TIL 5:30 mm IOOO-M® a] coioRwofiutfa® ( STARTS TOMORROW A STORY FOR EVER' ONE WHO THINKS THEY CAN NEVER FAIL IN IQVE AGAIN. JAMES CAAN MARSHA MASON and ELI WALLACF m A MARK RYDEIL FILM •CINDEREUALIBERrr Screenptayby produced and Directed by MARK RYDELL • DARftYi PONCSAN Bated on ihenovel by OARRYl PONCSAN • Music by JOHN W1UAMS • COtOO |Y 0€tUX£* PANAVSOK* LAST DAY "FANTASIA" OP»l 1:45 Si.00 til 6 p.m. features 2-4-6-8-TQ A rnwie& people who loe mcvies.. t STARTS TOMORROW 1 TRUFFAUT'Sl 2 W FOR f « C*tq*tW*w 8r«50»ifcMWrsr, • AWlmw CanrunBjtcns Company --Ja"Tl» Moraine Otnyfry Bti|okl star*In "Antig«f»" 7«71. 441-M8* by calling 454-3681. CINEMA 1 LAST DAY To Plaee A »d6.%50­ TUESDAY Daily Texan TOPLESS DAILY AT 4 P.M. SjIW^MO Classified Ad Happy Hour Prices All Nite Mondays Call 471-5244 NO COVER OPEN 7 DAYS • 2-12 P.M. 2120 E. Riverside (Behind Abbey Inn) IgnjtnNMM SHOWTOWN U.S.A. Com«fon Rd at 18 J ALLIED ARTISTS presents 3S84 m ® INTERSTATE THEATRES SOUTH SIDE 710 E Bon Whit( $1.00 til 3 pjn. 444-2296 in a FRANKLIN J.SCHAFFNER lilml Fwtures 1:00-3:15 PARAMOUNT. BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 pnpuon > SHOW STARTS DUSK *WMWOUWTHtUEA«C RANAVISI0N* TECHNjCQLOR* ;.OMO HE LAURENTM8 mpm 8th RECORD WEEK HMIumI MONDAY THRU FRIDAY of the AT 6:45-9:20 presents ALmciNa s g\. .•%SVXV.V>.V.V^*VNWR->.V.V,>$. SORRY NO PASSES "SERPIGO Color by.TECHNCOLOfir -T*chnieol^?< PLUS CO-HIT CINEMA 2 ONLY $1.00 til 3 PJIL iTH nCTIM WTITII -YARNING BELLI taturtt 1:404:20 KWh*n Mringe—doee yourayM T'. 540-fc40-«:20-1040 I BUCK GODFATHERSIS BACK1 2! ENDS ..and he's takin' over the town! TODAY! iaiL JHE CRIME WAR TO WttUAMSON COLOR m v S^|JNT>HAm EI\ID ALL CRIME WARS. SHOWTOWN U.S.A. Comeion Rd ot 183 836-8584 VARSITY NO $1.00 ffATfNEES"* FEATURES EAST. SCREM NO PASSES ACCEPTED EMEST BORGNINE 6:15-iB:20-10:25 SENE HACKMAN FEATURES 1^0-3^5-5:40-7:45-9^0 $1.50 . mmr cmkwk" |^| PG fit RAVE DAY! ; • ' PIUS '• te Gofer "THE HOT ROCK" ROBERT REDFORD "POSEIDON" "ROCK" at 1:10 LEONARD HARMS-CBS NEWS: . . . stunning animation a Jot tougher and not nearly as sweet as Disney's" JERRY OSTER .N.Y. DAILY NEWS: „ AS NEVIR BEFORE "Hetty Boop is an out and out delight!" TONY RUSSOMANNO -WXLO-FM: SEEN ON THE .CAPITAL PLAZA Ttenf Count Em Ten hilarious and trippy car• TODAY ATSCREEN ... toons. . . Devastatingly funny!" ™V^ I H ,lr> rJORTH A COLOSSUS GENE SHAUIT-NBC NEWS: ; AU SEATS $1.00 til IdO pjn. "If you want 'something different at the movies OF BALLET.. "TAKES OFF LIKE A BI4ZIN6FOREST this weekend, GO SEE BETTY BOOPUI DORIS DIETHER * THE VILLAGER: HRE, WITH A THRILL A MINUTE!" . . it's a fun show" •>. . —fl»x N.Y. Daily Hews VILLAGE VOICE; JOSEPH E-LEVINEprmna "Betty Boop, the animated liberated darling of the 30's GEORGE CSCOTTi, MIKE SMES-DAIf-YJMXANi ...., -"Outrageo3s'r • • MIKE NICHOLS4 JOHN BUSTIN -AMERICAN STATESMAN* Remarkable style and often bizzare im­THEDAmiXSPHIN agination" »d~afcr* iwmf AnAKoEmba^PictuK^lw JERRY MOCTE1UMA -THE RAG: IN BEAUTIFUL COLOR "I never saw a more happy bunch of people get ripped and eventually get into Max Fleuher's HIGHLAND MALL . 12:50 2:515:18 weird visions" $1.00 til 7 p.m. Of F IH 3Sat HIWAT 290 TODAY! I AUSTIN FEATURES MONEY TMCR 1 5r; so AVf 5:40-7:45-9:50 ?..all it tbkes is a little Confidence. '"BILLY JACK" "SSRaSF" PAUL /ROBERT EWMANlREDFORD ( STARTS TOMORROW"*^ ROBERT SHAW % :"The bast comedy off the year < -A GEORGE RQ^ HILL FltM i OF 1974 and thebest love story? "THE STING" . U "-•* 1 \ •' . . fnCHNOXOR* AUMVtRSAlPCTURt |g| nrmoor »BTTY MOOr ' HIGHLAND MALL — KOKO' JIMM TALKAKTOONS •ORIBN SONOB OH IH 15..IHIWAY V*•­ -hY^j Page 10 Tuesday/ February 12, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN ./ h'i s-tsf ' —. , ,-i ' " '< . « -—, , ' . f,« * ' j ' jifft V-i'VM " « '« ' J t y -y «•« ' . r~' . 7-— • '•>' J. "T* • * •• --• 'a.'-,••••••••!•. " —.M. , .., jj^L. _i__~ —--­ ««•«!• m-mx -i*. i», p,)p^«n«pppp9Maffini^inp«piffpp^n^i>< tch Art 6H v RopeLange starsin "I Love herself as an individual, You Goodbye," .a film which Karen leavesherfamily in premiersat 7:30 p.m.Tuesday search of a more challenging on channel 12. Miss Lange life. But she finds living away plays Karen Chandler, a Sfr from her husband was not year-old housewife who easy and findinga jobdifficult becomes dissatisfied with her for a woman who has spent role in society. She takes a most her life washing dishes course at a university, and and mak(ng beds. through conversations there Earl Holliman and Michael becomes aware of the fact Murphy co-star jn the made* that she has a mind and is for-TV drama. wasting it as a fttlltime *111. 7 He« Haw maid/housekeeper for her 4?.; 9 New* family. x ®'! 24 IDrmm of Jeannl#;1 •V"'? i 36 Eyewltn»»i N«W| Determined to establish i * Bill Moyar'i Journal cv •"WWffPlnssffip Ihtad by Panet ? 7 Hawaii * 24 Movlt: "IUov* You, CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) , * ° A survey of travel agents """v evanin^ p«p» has determined the "seven taaiiThatfe ^onderS%l 4^6^" U.S.A.", the Nevada Depart- f CeatlvKy and Modern Socti .ment of Economic Develop-}>m*. 24 Marcus Welby, M.O. -meritreported. <• 34 Police story „ » Byline* v The "wonders are Goldcin .i t •&V 10 p.m. „ - Gate Bridge. Hoover 7. 24. 36 Klewt * Country Mutlc Spectacular Mount Rushmore, Houston AJOimb. \ Astrodome, Statue of Liberty, * 7 Movie; "Harpy" , Disney World and the » The Advocate* • . 'i'sggi &S4l! 24 Wide World ol 6ntertalnment« Gateway Arch." 3t Tonight Show " * International Theater r"-290S SAN OAMIU COKNCR N. LAMAR 478-0102 Wle GOING i OUT $14 >* > * ilufr OF BUSINESS Vi EVERYTHING BOOKS NOVELTIES STAGE SHOWS I&2 /' 21st & Guadalup« S*cond Uval Dobie Mall 477-1324 IAS A GLIMPSE OF LAST DAY! n EFFBMWE. A |5:55-$f. 05-S1.SD /ANESSA REDGRAVE^OLIVER REED . IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM OF ^ THE DEVILS ^ w,3:SO, 6:00 -$1.2S 8:1Q* 16:20. St.SO STARTS TOMORROW JANEFORMDONALO SUTHERLAND Screen II PETER BOYLE sssssSS TOMOMOW AT MIPNIGHT DONALD SUTHfRUNO ALEX IN #ONDrRLAND BytRVtS UPPMAN „_ . Texan Staff Writer 5™» tke Kroller.M«Her National ?Jn^nm! Otterto," on exhibit at the Marion Koocter v *** bwtitiite. Saa Antonio, tfaroogk Marck 3. van Gogh's representationof pride and nielancho­^ s...JS*"P"*8i"•*•*"*«»on »ltw»t theMcN.y •j5" ™» 0®!l> <1853-1890) comprise only one-third of the total exhibition that includes the fine symbolist drawings of Redon and ntechanistic figures ofLeger. Bat it |S ™e van Gogh drawings, en masse or taken singly that leave one with lingering Hwughts. These drawings are a sjnall sample of the van Gogh treasure in theKroller-Muller National Museum Otterlo, Hie Netherlands. VAN GOGH'Ssentiment broaches nearmadness, but hisis an emotional Wqsraphy that is well-known. Dismissal from theological training and missionary wprk lead to a,vocation of pen and ink art work. . To his confidant and brother, Theo, theartist writes of his sense of debt and duty owed to the worldafter roaming it for 30 years. There was the need "to leave behind a sort df •not [e in drder to promote this or that trend, but on account of them h&ving in them something that expresses a sincere human sentiment. That is the goal of my wort...". _ Thedrawings, involved with crosshatching and unhesitaht swift brush strokes on browned paper are highlighted with white gouache or a touch of crayon. Defined by the media, the drawings ate monochromatic and direct. THERE IS NO pretense or perfume in revealing the human condition. The peasants that van Gogh knew well work and strain. The early carefullydraughted and the later fiery reed-pen drawings are created with an empathetic knowledge of the nature of the media and the nature of the subject matter. Van Gogh's socialrealism follow*the realisticand roman­ tic qualitiesof Jean-Francois Millet (1814-1875). The sowers, diggers and reapersof both artists area part of the earthand soil surviving by their own plebian strength. It is a struggle for freedom and dignity that is seen also in thedrawings of van Gogh's gnarled trees clinging convulsively to the earth yet being torn up by the storm. Van Gogh writes: '.'To paint peasant-lifeisa serious thing, and I should reproach myself if I did nottry to make pictures which raise serious thoughts in those who think seriously about art and about life.... One must paint the peasants as being one of them, as feeling, thinking like they do... " The viewer finds himself in a melodrama where the idealization of man is bound up in the misery of the human existence. Van Gogh's reality is reflective and lonely. U Realism, however, is.inherent in the Dutch art.tradition. (tdtfr'i tMw panted and Dawn S|>My. wha praporad M* cafemv' — 1|B­ onolyak and aMtals«y ckmM. AMS: The difference between quantity and quality are vast. Consider your values. Become awareof their truth. TAURUS: Rather than *tart something new, you are content to smooth out the wrinkles. ocMMh Your mind should be used to study and plan forthe future now. Be serious. CANCO: Today stresses the poetic Im­agination. impulses of passion may sway your perspective. TONIGHT BLIND '.GEORGE , • NO COVER • BEVO'S We«t Side Tap Mixed Drinks 24th and Rio Grand* CinemaTexas Feb. 13 aselectimofthree. ADe^Ufe ShauUerArais The Pilgrim TOMORROW NI6HTI ­ Mi. 13 / ••ester AeAtarien AAaliilee $1 7 mi • ml A Smrvie* of thm Dmpmrtmmnt of 1 R*Hort*h*it)on/Fllm ' . ;KOi Stimulated by your'various" relationships, you could reach a realization regarding your basic life purpose. VHOOi Inclined to pull afast one;It l>ad-a vised that you carefully consider your values. UMA: Caution where permanent ties, perhaps marriage, are concerned. Extremes are indicated involving iMxiiries. SOOHnOi You could feel isolated because of a fear of the world in general. S6SS '& ; Vfocant vanGogh's "ThefoddemoM, the JewishQuarter of The Hague endisplay at theMcNay ArtInstitute. Rembrandt's realistic theme follows a searching spiritualness. there is a delightful ease in the movement of this 17th .Century artist's line. The chiaroscuro has a silver lining even in the rugged expressionistic treatment of the bourgeois reality. With Rembrandt there is an illusory idealism. Van Gogh offers a caricatural distortion and sul­lenly expresses the "human, all WOufnan" side of things. !Van Gogh's subjeots appear to have grown weary of the search and remain forlorn, waiting for an outside force to clear up the heavy atmostphere.In "Wheat Fields" (1889), the sun is depicted radiating Hatchings of lines above a harvest of wheat while the turbulent clouds crowd the landscape. • Unlock the door. SAOITTAMUS: You get the most from the least because you know how to keep the morale high. CAHIOOIlN: Don't get. uptight about -details. See a project as a whole and .rise to the occa*lon. AQUAMUSi Your mind may be unable to rationalize today, leaving it allup to. your Intuition. matt You walk strange , path* today eiid may meet people who delve Into the unknown. ' Cuftdrd Entertainment Committee*• The Texas Union Monday, February 25, 1974 and Tuesday, February 26, 1974 : ' ' • ""T ,; V P'M-* Municipal Auditorium ^ Monday, Fabruary 26. Ojitional Fee Holdare $1. Hogs Box Offiea Fab. 19-26. Tuaaday, Fabruary 26, $6. $6, $4, Hogg Box Offica. TU*at« avallabla now. All aaata reaarvad/For in­formation 471-1444 TONIGHT! •«ip 4 a4 ­ ix '«L id TRIUMPH^O^THC WKp(H34) directed by Leni Rieferisiiahl * ^1:'i'lizt "TRIUMPH OF THE WILL aw* and remains a testimony to the noxious, animal magnetism of Hitler.,.The plastic brilliance fnd symmetry of*Miss RiefeHstahl's direction are undeniablm." —Peter Cowie, Seventy Years of Cinema 1md W5 Admiftkm $1 I & l^Ji. » I—taf Imlllnilaii • fWIwI ^IWWI.W.IVIVV "A Haritaga of FHm" aaaaon tiokata (^od Tuwday and Thuraday night) " ••• • ' ' Van Gogh, in being faithful to nature, philosophizes in­voluntarily. There may be no solace to receive on viewing a van Gogh, but nor is there total despair. Van Gogh offers a droll humor. The intimate drawings are more*a semblance of dusk than darkness! The McNay is the lastof lour museums to show thiscollec­tion of drawings before they go back to the Netherlands. The Museum of Modern Art, in New York, the Chicago Art Institute and the Canada National Gallery already have ex­hibited these works. The McNay is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 2 to 5 p.m. on Sunday. It is closed Monday. There is afl admission charge for thisex­hibit. "THE AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Friday, February 15, Municipal Auditorium 8:00 p.m. : REQUIEM by VERDI A limited number of tickets are available for SO* s /: w/f/i optiogal services fee —^. Student tickets $1 f Hogg Box Office — !0-6 daily ^ REDUCED PRICES TIL 6 P.M 1500 S. PLEASANT VAUEY RD ... 0000 MON thru SAT JUST OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE IW-illl 340 5:10 7:25 ' C0LUM8U PICTURES RASTAR PiOOUCIOKSfmM fJS tRW STARK-SYDNEY POIUO! PnHxtw WOW IN IT'S I4rtnjf||k ENPSTOPAY $1.00 ?0!h Cenluty foi pffsfnts Htisni. DonaldSuth«Hand ^.iiliotGould Sally KslUrman "7 THE CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE OF THE TEXAS UNION JOYFULLY PRESENTS •oum «. uviHt S1.N III * M>­ FUTURES 1:45 345 S.-45 7*5 MS NO SPEOAl REDUCED PRICES All PASSES ARE SUSPENDED ADULT $2.50 CHILD UNDER 12 $1.00 U tt HELD ovn ...... TOM LAUGHUN 2444-I0 DELORES TAYLOR -» It •* fGMNDNEkV ? BEST MUSICAL" /HUSK3IL TONTAWARD WDHa! -; -_,i; ' PRODUCED BY JOSEPH MONDAY/FEB. 18/MUNIOIPAL AUDITORIUM/8KIOPM FREE TO OPTIONAL,FEE HOLDERS *i'gx f I' -aw LKAjsJ* GENERAL ADMISSION 7' > BOX OFFICE 10-6 DAILY FEBRUARY Tuesday, February T2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page fl r ^ r f . . > . ***« l<* "wS ^ / f V •'Si CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE 15 word minimum • FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. HELP WANTED SERVICES TYPING Each Word one time.i.f,SS&V:v'.':$yi0 PEACEFUL WEST AUSTIN. Colorful V RATES -V' -. \ SANSUI ». receiver WTO.rms. Vei Each word 2-4 limei.,.J.;i/i2....$ .09 powerful! AI$O too watt speak tmm "SS efficiency. Shag, complete kitchen,near OVERSEAS JOBS * Just North of 27th Takes All. 476-7902. Each word 5-9 times .//".'.r.i .S .07 RENT LE MARQUE .Enfiild shuttle. $139 ABP. 1211 West 8th Australia, .Europe, Each word 10 or more times -*.$ ,06 Close to campus. Luxury efficiencies' (off Blanco) 474-1107, 476-2633 Barry America, Africa. Students all ->i Guadalupe Student rate each time .".J.75 1970 CUTLASS tudor, ht, ac, pa, good - Gilllngwater.Company. PRESS il $115, one bedroom 8130, two bedrooms Classified Display tires, clean buy.Call Jo*La Fico.Day*, professions and occupations $170. Pool, surtdeck, fully carpeted^ cen­ Icol. x one inch one time.;... .J2.96 '444-6171 (Please leave message.). AUSTIN ' FLEUR DE LIS. 404 East 30th. /Mature $700 to, $3000 monthly. Ex­ tral air and heat. ' Evenings after Icol, * one inch 2-9 times. J2 66 442-1017. Your time is valuable student. Lovely one bedroom. Walk to penses . 1 cot.. • * one inch 10 or 302 W. 38th campus. Shuttle. Summer rates. 477-paid, overtime, •more times ..." ,..$2.37 ROYAL portable, typewriter. S50. Call 451-6533 . 452-8006 5282. sightseeing. Free information. -s.'iM.B.A. . ^452^_aftw;f,pjn. Our service ls free_ ^TWANSAWORtO-RESEARCM-typlBg, Mulnmhing; BfiSflng — Central-Properties tnc: -~ $144 ONE BEDROOM. Enfield-Baylor, CO. Dept. A*. P.O. Box 603/ TENNIS LESSONS specializing The Complete Professional OCAMINI SCHCOUU , beginners and intermediates. $4.00 in . PARAGON Corte Madera, CA. 94925 . Tnm hMgy ]:00 p.m. per FULL-TIME Typing ' / |-'V Timdoy loan Manday I0>00 a.m. lesson. 452-7551 after 6. PROPERTIES WALK tO CAMPUS We specialize In resumes, handbills, WMMmi T«nn tvnday 10:00 t.m. 4470. letterheads and envelopes. Service KLH MODEL 23 speakers. Kenwood 40 ' Reasonably priced. Laroe one bedroom • ^ACCOUNTANT Check Our Low Rates ThurW^r fwon Wwbmday 10.00 a.m. apartments RESUMES watt receiver, AR turntable, Sluira -,472-4171 a. available. Carpeted, 2200 Guaidalupe '•'••V Tawm Thvndey ' 10:00 a.m. AVAILABLE NOW. One bedroom/ Graduate student With ac­ .M55E cartridge. In warranty. $450. 474- CA/CH, pool, sundeck, built-in kitchen. -Just Across The Street '•fe!:; 4310 after 6 p.m. • weekdays _ 311 East 31st " ' ,>........., ; OUring nOrmow :'iVt™~3-eQU(PMENT.New AOCXLM * working hours. Earnings com­ :?4r $42. Used AR manual and B&D SP-12. 472-4175 Central Properties Inc. ,472-3210 and 472-7677 t'mm«diata Miinmull b* a> tha puMMwra an rauwmiMi fw 454-3074. weekends LARGE EFFICIENCY. CA/CH, close to mensorate with experience. PRESSm 2707 Hemphill Park shuttle. $120-8130.1111 West 10th, No.106 wl*ONIinctmdiiiiwiiM. Alt tloirm far Call Oale Moody for appoint­ or call 472-0829 after 6 p.m. adpMnwtH alMuW to mad* na( latw 1967 MUSTANG. $700, ac Slots 20 mpg. THE TEXAS UNION­ SOMETHING DIFFERENT ment. 459-7687 then 30 rfay* «ft«f pwMketian." 1949 Chevy. 1300.1971450CL Honda$450. :Efficiencies with elevated" separate ONE BEDROOM studio apartment,' COPY CENTER 7% 442-9318. KENRAY Apartments and Townhouses bedrooms plus enormous one and two completely furnished. No deposit re*~ TYPING II : under new ownership, 2122 UancocH Dr. bedroom contemporaryapts, with every. quired. Sublease. 442-4902. A Responsive TypingiServiQe 1972 HONDA 90TrallbiKe,74 license/Ex­ • LOW STUDENT RATES next to Americana Theater, walking dis­convenience, furnished or unfurnished. cellent condition. S300, accessories. 477- RECEPTIONIST tance of North Loop Shopping Center OAK CREEK, is environmentally WALK TO CAMPUS; huge efficiencies -and Luby's. One half block from shuttle-" oriented and offers a creek that winds—*«5-ptus electrfc ca/Ui,adequate park- 15 words or less for 75* the 54S1 after 5 M-F. - first time, 5* eacfr ad­transit. 2 rte ' "IT*' but°wM|flconsicfer part time end A.ustin • bedroom through the. community convenient to ing, nicely furnished. Barranca Square, ' 2200 6u«dalup«! '69 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT. 4 wheel ditional word. 1 coll x one townhouses, extra large. Two bedroom campus 8> shopping 'and conveniently 910 West 26th. 451-6533. Central Proper­Transparencies drive. 4 cylinders, 3-speed transmission. flats, one and two baths. CA/CH, dis­ priced from $125. 1507 Houston • Street. ties Inc. inch: each time S2.37. Make offer or will trade. Days 454-4731, hwasher, disposal, door to door garbage 454-6394 Central Properties lnct 451-6533 • -. .. -478*2458 Master-Maker ext. 322., Carley. 451-3698 evenings. •1W "Unclassifieds"—1 line 3 pickup, pool, maid service if desired, «. •*-. i. . -v COLORFUL MINI apartments on shut-Cisneros Sign Co. 474-H24 times $1.00 {Prepaid, No JEEP 19734 wd low mileage, clean,roll-washateria Incomplex. See owners. Apt. tie. Two locations, two designs."38th and 606 East 7fh Room 314 Fast Thesis 113 or call 451-484* ELEVEN POOLS Professional Refunds). Student must bar, top, gauges, carpeted, big six, sure-Speedway area. Convenientto downtown •••... Resumes show^Auditor'sreceiptano ?rip,t-sp4_cuslomsh«els,.r&r*__4i2-. -v EFF., 1 and 2 ' ^ -and city bus. From $119-8124 plus elect-. The Texas Union No Hassles Scientific _. tricity. Barry Gilllngwater Company, 370 after 3:30 p.m. "Management s Next to Gourmet On the Drag ; pay in, advance in TSP -bedrooms • ---t 454-8576, 472-4162/ 476-2633. Monday-Friday'8am-5pm Bidg. 3.200 (25th 8, Whitis) ROYAL typewriter, 1200 WOODWARD APARTMENTS Opportunites 4' copies ELECTRIC FROM $132 ALL BILLS new. Take $149. TWO BEDROOM townhouse, In qulef Hardly used (never from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 1722 E. Woodward Office 107 PAID fourplex near Hancock Center, shuttle. . Burger King Restaurant, liberalstarting excellent Monday through Friday. could type worth beans). 453-2104. 444-7555 -Red River bus. CA/CH. Mediterranean salaries, thorough on-the-job training, SECRETARY TYPIST I, 2, or 3 bedrooms A new concept in apartment furniture. Children, pets accepted. No full hospitilazatlon and life insurance producing finest quality typing for NiKKOR 24mm f.2 coatedlens.One year •unfurnished or furnished living. Five- plan, paid vacation, unlimited growth Xerox or IBM rrom siau -IMS community lease. $175. 4708 Depew (block east of ?IKl ,acu"y members in every old. Cost* S412. Must sell for $250. 471-From $140 • $265 ii Red River at 47th). 476-8575. potential. Apply In person 9 to 5. Bu 7801. 2 vimmina pools, playgrounds, architectural styles, choice of X Surger field for 15 years, will take meticulous swimming ' King? FOR SALE washateria, furniture styles, color coor­ L»,^ia'lia"ted_ grounds. 5 minutes EFFICIENCY. Sublease ~on SB router" '60 VWi New paint, brakes and Inspec­ toUTv dinated CA/CH, fSWKasBS'' T, mtnules fo 6.A.F.B., Steps from throughout. S125/mo. Bills paid. 408 West 37th, 453­ tion.Great economy.Must sell.1950.444- IRS. on bus line. BILLS PAIC THE FLOWER PEOPLE need Mlp to 8897. channel TV. Free all built-ins, available unfur­3574, 454-0047. Reduction Capabilityto 24 x 36 sg^asfflyiBMss: sell flowers. Thursday through Sunday. nished for $120 all bills paid. ton typewriter. All work proofread. 478­ Highest paid commission, lowest prices, STEREO 1501 Kinney Ave. No. Ill $115. ONE BCDROOM apartment. 2721 7156 or come by 4301 Guadal Pictures, AAultilith, SANSUI 2000X, *200. Pioneer PL-50, £alill453-7156 lupe. S100. Pioneer CS-77, $240 pr. Call 472-Hemphill. Near UT. Carpet, paneled, Printing, Binding 9889, 478-9811 leave message, Jim. FACULTY 451-6533, 447-3983 pool. Water and gas paid. 472-8999, 327-DANCERS -We have a couple of1355. SYSTEMS Central Properties Inc. openings for the energetic among you. TYPING Reports, Resumes 8-TRACK PANASONIC tape deck for AND STAFF Theses, Letters Good pay and excellent tips. Contact Sour car. Excellent condition. Call 476- Large 3 bedroom duplex iownhouse In SAAALL EFFICIENCY, Enfield Road, Dan or Tom at the Second Story, 444-I All University and * furnished, AC, all bills paid, $95. 477­ SALE 112 before 6:00 or after 10:30 convenient Northeast Austin, WO conn, 5206, 477-2543 before noon. 9018, located where Manchaca meets S. so GINNY'S business work vaulted ceilings, orange shag, fenced MlGHLAfo© MALL . Lamar. Last Minute Service PACIFIC CATAAAARAN with trailer, » yard, large walk-Ins. 6413B Auburn. 9»­ very fast, carries 10, AREApON UNEXPECTED VACANCY! One iS COPYING Y Open 9-9 Mon-Th & 9-5 Kenwood stabile, 4: 5724, 385-0855 1775 , 6614, 476-2633. Barry Gilllngwater Com­ bedroom luxury apartment on shuttle. NEED MASSEUSE tomassage bodiesof 01 SERVICE Fri-Sat pany both sexes. Call 441-4151. Make money Q Includes ca/ch, dishwasher,-disposal, SERVICE now. „ JVC • Sansui 1970 VOLKSWAGEN: Looks rough, runs Hwaj 1 & 2 Bedroorrit'f'urn. or unfurn. shag carpet, cable. Apartment 101, 4105 472-8936 30A Dobie CenterMarantz good. $99 or best offer.441-6250 after 9:30 wlfWjrfle walk-in{febeautlfui landscap­Speedway. 451-2832, 345-4555. PART TIME help 2-5 Monday, Wednes­ p.m. ^ No Lease ing. Fram.8154 ASP. 1100 Reinll. 452-day, Thursday. Every dther Saturday 8­ Pioneer Furnished and Unfurnished Apartments 3202, 476-2633. Barry Gilllngwater Com­SUBLEASE 2-1 immediately through. 5. Astro Cleaners. Call 442-4354 for ap­42 Dobie Mall 476-9171 A to.Z May 31. Ma' New phase River Hills. Call 453­ 1963 FORD PICKUP. Runs, but needs One and two bedrooms pointment. pany. 1062 or 1-1623. SECRETARIAL SERVICE some work. $125 or call 451-5558 or 478-Tappan Appliances Free Parking Sherwood 2918 Dishwasher, disposal, gas stove, 109 East 10thSt. AUSTIN PEOPLE individually controlled FURNISHED EFFICIENCY for rent TODAY magazine Open 75 hours a week 4724149 Harman Kardon Jiearcampus. Lotsof windows$125ABP;-needs part Uijisl subscription salesper­ HALF SCOTTIE-half Poodle mix pup-CA/CH, pool. TV cable sons. Earning potential Is.great. Name Theses, Dissertations, themes, $120 472-9661. Both two and, four channel receivers. pies. Shots and wormed. $10. Call 476-SEVEN TOWEffS your own hours. Call Betty Moore. 451-. P.R.'s; BC Reports, resumes 1306 McKie NTAIN TERR COPY SHOP 11 Check this one out. 9096 after 5. 453-7608 FOUNTAIN TERRACE 6424. Evenings 478-6345. APARTMENTS APARTMENT FINDERS service. 472-Muitlllthlng, Binding QUICK-SET TRIPOD; Vlvitar f4.5-T4 One bedroom apt., large closets, fully 4162. RBC/Bond Paper Super Everything From A to Z *76.20 PART TIME,20 hours/week. App­mount zoom lens. Both excellent condi­carpeted, cable, disposal, water, gas, ly 7524 North Lamar No. 207. 1, 4, or 7 Copies swimming pool, furnished. Stereo Center tion, rarely used. For information 472-j furnlt... p.m.-sharp. Monday, Tuesday, or - No Lease ilking distance to UT 7977. ,, Walking UNF. APARTS. Wednesday. 203 East 19th Furnished and Unfurnished No children or pets. 476-6733 12x60 FURNISHED Winston mobile One Bedroom Apartments 610 West 30th 477-8858 " STUDENTrTNTE^ESTElTTrrTS 2200 (Guadalupe Johnson & Five blocks east of Guadalupe on 19th home. Excellent condition. New carpet, . Tappan Appliances You Belong At Constitutional RevisionProcess. San An­ CA/CH, awning, and skirting. Don 475-. Dishwasher, disposal, gas stove tonio representative needs volunteer Near the Spoke Individually controlledCA/CH, TV cable 4241 or 478-4223. EnglishAire " help with his committee work. 47S-5809. szy Associates LA QUINTANA 454-1376 474-1124 NEyv DAYTONTIRES. Size J78-15, 1500 4316 Bull Creek Road „SOUTH Efficiencies, studios, 1, 2, and COUNTER HELP wanted at Taco Flats, Pictures • Kalograph FREEWHEELING miles. $100 plus old tires. 476-7044, 8:30- ,5213 N. Lamar. Start S1.75 hour plus 2200 Guadalupe, Suite 3 bedrooms, furnished or un­ Binding Printing 5:00. 441-2538 after 5:00 weekends. BICYCLE SHOP SHORE meals. Save Time - furnished, and all the extras Save Money 220 Now opentill9 MAQNAVOX 500 AM/FM tuner amp, THE BLACKSTONE you expect — like laundries, ACCOUNTING GRAD student needed: Next to Gourmet on the Drag Word Processing -Student Complete lines by: Italvega. $100. Gibson duo-nedalist guitar amp. $64.50/month -APARTMENTS saunas, exercise rooms, game . Part time employment in construction -and Business Typing, Tax Motobecane, Raleigh, and Mercler. reverb tremelo, one 12" speaker, $125. oriented work. 385-0855. Open 11 to 9 Mondav-Fridav. 10 to 5 892-1463. Apartment living'/jblock from Campus rooms, pools, putting green, and Notary Services. Saturday. European bicycles slides Individual applicants matched with PLUS a great restaurant AND MAKE NOVELTY TWEEZERS, full VALENTINES the Cricket Club. Soon there'll . Wednesday,13th 7:00. compatible roommates Efficiency, 1, 2, and 3 time, light factoty work. Start THE COMPLETE 2404 San Gabriel 477-6846 S1.75/hour. Call 474-6226. DAY BUSINESS 2910 Red River 476-5631 bedroom apartments. be a water polo pool,and hand­ FURN. APARTS SERVICE COMPANY. A Paragon Property Offer to. ball courts, too. Come join us _ 2 PART TIME ditch dlggecs"needed? Send Your Sweetheart a beautiful Heart- CAR TAPE DECK the solution now! Fr^m sl45: ' Yoor hours. W/hoUt. Heavy Jabor. 454-Shaped Cake on Feb. 14. Call 472-8417 Today ! NOW LEASING new efficiency apart­your housing. 9265 after 5:30 p.m. To order Phone 476-3987INSTALLATION ment. One semester or longer. 4440846 -V-—--4 or Anytlme -Delivered STARK TYPING. Experienced theses, • Maintenance S135/month. All bills paid. 2700 Manor ASK TO SEE The South Shore's central location dissertations, PR's, etc. Printing and 2101 Burton Dr. • Quality Work Rd.; 477-4118. 2504 Manor Rd.; 474-2201. OUR BRAND NEW ROOMMATES Binding, Specialty Technical. Charlene provides easy access to U.T. • FAST (off East Riverside)' DAN'S TYPEWRITERS and Stark, 453-5218. -DONE ANYTIME • "Guaranteed TWO BLOCKS UT, one large bedVoom I've Got a Secret Apartments. Cfome by and see our new efficiency and re apart­Calculators. Sales, service, rentals. All ,• Cheapest In Austin apartments. CA/CH, carpeted, cable, 1 bedroom apartments on the banks of NORTHEAST. Huge one and two ment with three male students. *55.00, makes. 2408 San Gabriel; 474-6396. DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, and dishwasher, covered parking, laundry. Located in the heart of UT "own LaKe. Complete with shag bedroom. Complete kitchens, lots of frills paid. Close to campus. 472-1720. law briefs. Experienced typist, Call 476-5996 ' ABP $142.50. 477-8146, 2101 Rio Grande. area. 1 block to°shuttle. $149 50 .'carpeting, accent wall, modern-'"fur­storage. From S125 plus electricity; 1402 THE BUG-INN Volkswagen Shop has Tarrytown. 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine for appointment -5169.50, ABP. niture. plus an individual deck overlook* East St. Johns, (by Reagan High School) FEMALE GRAD needs roommate to moved. New location/1024 Airport Blvd. Brady. 472-4715.. MINI APARTMENT. Open beam ceil­ing the water. 454-1583, 476-2633. Barry Gillingwater share 2-bedroom near shuttle.Call Janet Guaranteed repairs. 385-9102, 472-8253 472-2518. ing, shag carpet throughout, all built-in Company 451-7664 after 6:00. BOBBYE DELAFIELD, IBM Selectric, . kitchen, color coordinated. CA/CH, pool, WHETHER YOU NEED a house In the pica/elite, 25 years experience, books, PERSIAN near campus. 4000 Avenue A. $134.50 From $145 — all bills paid NEAR UT. 3301 Liberty, downstairs.Un-FEMALE NEEDED immediately share" country or an apartment near campus, dissertations, theses, reports, bills paid. 452-5533, 451-6533. Central 300 East Riverside Drive (urnished, with two bedrooms. one bedroom apartment. South River­we can find'it. 476-4833. mimeographing. 442-7184.TURQUOISE TOWER Properties Inc. 444-3337. Reasonable cost: Call 472-2765 after 9 side, Cloisters. NR,$77.50, ABP.442-8185 p.m. or weekends. (Collect 817-799^4611) Nancy. SKI REPAIR at reasonable rates. Wax BEAUTIFUL PERSONAL TYPING. AllOzs. rough and uncut, EFFICIENCIES. $115 plus electricity. . Available March 1st. edge, fix holes, for fast spring skiing. your University work. Fast, accurate, SUMMER RATES IN JANUARY-: cabochens medium to large Pool, AC, carpet, paneling,no pets. Hun­MANOR Reliable. Bill Gundry. 327-2242. reasonable. Printing-Binding. Mrs. Cutest one bedroom apartment in South ROOMMATE WANTED to share apart- BARTON HILLS. Quiet adult at- matrix. tington Ville. 46th and Ave. A. 454-8903. Austin. Directly oh Shuttle. Built-inbook ment with three.male students. $55.00, Bodour. 478-8113 mosphere. studio, shelves, walk-in closets, cabinet space bills paid. Near campus. 472-1720. 478-7183, 3-7 p.m. Two bedroom SPACIOUS 2 BEOROOM furnished CO-ED DORM galore. Enjoy the friendliness and con­ fireplace, plus carpet, ail kitchen built-MABYL SMALLWOOD Typing last - M-F apartments. Good location, near cam-venience of a small complex. in, private patio-yard, washer-dryer, all MALiE ROOMMATE, share large 2/2 MISCELLANEOUS minute -overnight available. Term pus, shopping center, and shuttle bus.-. bills paid. >225. 327-1333. mobile home, CA/CH, pool, full kitchen." papers, theses, dissertations, letters. 'UNITED FREIGHT SALES has lust Allbills paid.For more information,call • 1 Block Campus • Quiet 2222 Apartments .385-5102 or 447-4376. MasterCharge. BankAmerlcard. 892­454-9475. • Free Parking • Maid Service HUGE 1 or 2 bedroom. S14S-S155. North, 0727 or.442-8545. received a large shipment of brand new Call 476-6191, 444-2070 after 4:30 and • Laundry Facilities •.All Bills Paid all luxuries, patio, washer connections, SUNNY. BEDROOM needs new female 1974.stereo consoles and components. NEW-THIS WEEK! Ponce de Leon III, weekends. water-gas paid. GL2-9551, 444-8465. SKYDIVE! occupant. Located in house oh creek FRANCES WOOD Typing Service. Ex- Some have built-in 8 track tape AJWJFM 22nd and San Gabriel. Extra large two Rod Singleton Properties perienced, law theses, dissertations, overlooking active, lovely Eastwoodsradio, and turntable. Prices start at bedroom, two bath apartments ABP Park. $58.50 plus bills. 476-2301. manuscripts. 453-6090. $19.95 for consoles or components. Cash Mpst outstanding apartments In the un­WEST AUSTIN Brand New FURN. HOUSES Austin ParachuteCenter or terms. UNITED FREIGHT SALES, iversity area! Call Rod Wetsel at 472-NEED 1or 2 female roommates to share "EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Graduate 8941 or 472-8253. Four people suites; 2 bdrms, 2 Efficiency. 5 minutes to down­2 bedroom/2 batlf apartment. Shuttle, and undergraduate work. Choice of type 6535 North Lamar. 9 to 9 dally, 9 to 6 For information please call baths, living room, dining town and shuttle bus to UT. LAKE AUSTIN, quiet country living, $110, 447-4625, styles and sizes. Barbara Tullos, 453­ Saturday.­ . 5t*4) $149JO ALL BILLS PAID. 1 bedroom winter minutes to cam­ 5>?4. Call today for your choice of rates, 15 272-5711 anytime J; furnished, CA/CH, built-in kitchen, near area, kitchenette. Private pus/downtown. New 1, 2, and 3 bedroom MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED. Huge 2 color schemes. campus. 4307 Avenue A. 451-6533, 451- Rooms Available. mobile homes. S75-S160. Rustic lake story house. Own bedroom. Excellent VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diversified 3840. Central Properties Ing. 472-0558, 4728278, 4766707 -unit cabin, $70. Mack's Marina. 327-1891,327-location. $70 plus. Call 478-3967. NELSON'S GIFTS: Zunl Indian Services. Graduate and undergraduate 1151. iewelry; African and Mexican Imports. typing, printing, binding. 1515 Koenig Hanging Baskets and Potted 7551 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. Closed Lane. 459-7205. 7 Plants SIX BLOCKS from Law School; 2 blocks ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 1-1 Mondays. shuttle bus. One bedroom $135. AC, 1908 University Ave. COMFORTABLE 2 bedroom house. apartment on Town Lake. $87.50 ABP.Nice Valentine Gifts! carpet, dishwasher, disposal, walk-in CA/CH, furnished, utilities, shuttle, NR Shuttle. Call Bob 447-2401, 6-10 p.m. RS TYPING SERVICE. Professional 478-2185 Reasonably Priced. closets. 32nd and Interregional. 472-3995, $129.50 S160/month plus bills. 1100 Clayton. 452-LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beginner typing, near campus. Reports, theses, 1688. " and advanced. Drew Thomason. 478-dissertations, Copy service GRAD ROOMMATE needed. 3 bdrm, 2 resumes."The Backyard Greenery" MINI APARTMENTS, also one and two bath, modern. Call Aimer or David. 454-2079. * available. 453-7577. 4004 Avenue H bedrooms. Close to campus. Fuliy All Bills Paid -471-14>2t -carpeted. CA/CH, rich wood paneling, . TREES & VIEWS Near Shuttle Bus and Down­THE PRIMAL PROCESS. Contact: "Just North of 27th & pool, all built-in kitchen. From $119 50. UNF. HOUSES Feeling Training Center/P.O. Box 303, to share rent. 4200 Avenue A. 451-6533,454-6423. Central Nice 2 bedrooms furn. or"unfurn. only 3 town WE NEEt> SOMEONE Wlmberley, Texas 78676. 512-847-2410 Guadalupe ­ $55, '/S, bills, your own,room, in Properties Inc. min from downtown, 5 min. from UT 472-0558 orLARGE SIX seven bedroom older Tarrytown. 476.2903. — TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds! Lar.oe walk-ini, antra storage, private -472-8278 Home. Convenlem UT,"downtown. Fenc- ANY ART SUPPLIES you no longer old gold. Capitol Diamond, Shop, 4018 N. balconies, lots of glass. From $179 DIUS Lamar, 454-6877. ONE BEDROOM STUDIO, fully E KNOLL. South 1st (use 476-6707, unit 7551. ed backyard; double garage. No NEEDONE OR TWO Liberal females to. wanfi Iwould use them. Drew 4;78-2079. carpeted, built-in kitchen,balcony off of OAK 620 appliances. S285/month plus bills. 327­ hty/alu share apartment. On shuttle, total costTirnbercreek entrance). 444-1269, 476­ bedropm, pool, m baths. Convenient to 0425. $174.25 plus electricity. 451*558. 2633 Barry Gillingwater Company With every guitar, Amster Music 1624 unfurnished $150, furnished $155 bills THE CONSUL BEAUTIFUL NEW TOWNHOUSE for TUTORING YAMAHA GUITAR SALE. Free case campus and Highland Mall. Available . MALE WANTED to share 2 bedroom r Lavaca. paid. 701 North Loop. 454-3837, 451-6533. $155 ABP lease. Two story, three bedroom, 116 apt. NR Shuttleroute.'$6P. Callafter 6:00' YES,wed Central Prbperties Inc. ON TOWN LAKE bath; located at5811 Coventry Lane.S225 p.m. 441-7761. . . MATH TUTORING thatyoucan unders­ GUITARS AND OTHER FRETTED in­ 1 bedrooms unfurnished, $275 furnished. Call 454-tand. Semester rates available. 476-0757; Freshman struments repaired at reasonable STEPS TO UT. 1 & 2 bedroom efficien­shag -paneling NEW-MANAGER 5869 or evenings 478-4722 or 442-8438. MALE ROOMMATE needed to share prices. OUDS, LUTES, DULCIMERS, cies. Nice pool area, study room, orien­ASTRONOMY, PHYSICS, MATH tutor- giant walk-ins -balconies NEW ROOF -large 2-2 apartment furnished, disposal, etc. Custom built. 20% discount pn all tal furnishings. From$139 ABP. 405East Ing. Experiencedtutor.Master's degree. Why not startou "tT" strings -Geoff"Mehke -Amster Music. 31st. 472-2147, 476-2633. Barry Spanish furnishinbs Large }, ,2, and 3 bedroom carpeted, 2222-B Mission Hill. 447-2316. Semester rates available. Call Martin. ith 1524 Lavaca. 478-7331. , 441-ol4i. Gilllngwater Company 2423 Town Lake Circle Townhouses and 1 and 2 ROOMS good grades!444-8118 476-2633 bedroom flats with great WE RENT CAMERAS, lenses, strobes, QUIET ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom tripods, projectors. Polaroids, et cetera with built-ins. vaulted ceilings. Small* Barry Gillingwater Company features like these — gafgrill, 472-3210 and 472-7677 Cental Department, Capitol Camera476^ community living. $139.50 plus electrici­large pool, study room, cable TEXAN DORM ROOM & BOARD® BUSINESS 0PP. ty. Ml West Lynn. 477-8871, 476-2633. 1905-1907 Nueces 2707 Hemphill Park Barry Gillingwater Co. THE SAXONY TV, dishwasher, disposal, in­— Fall, Spring semester $46.50/month; Excellent; IRISH SETTER pups international Come by and see our large, comfortable, dividually controlled CA/CH, Daily maid service, central air, com-BELLSON DORM for men. YOU CAN BE part of the most unusual .hftm?. .coQkrt mealj,-AC-mald>swtr*-^ i • -c5*l2»!l!n™W«»dline-.AKC,-Shot*, -worm NORTHEAST NEAR SHWtt ...totally. electric—apartments.—Spaciout-snuttlebus. Turn-Eastoff1H3^"—p»etely—remodete*—Also-avaHabit-- business opportunity ever offered. Per­ _ m , dMntA fAMtift ming pool. MlS Ria Grande. 474-5680. P«»ales $100, Males $125. 451-1556, ---...— grounds with lots of arass and parking on __ East _ Drive. ** single rooms, parking,narlrlrafrlnarBtA*refrigerator. U.Hot sonal appointment. 459-5060. . Highland Mall. & Capitol Plaza. Large 1 Riversrde M-F after 6:00 & 2 Bedroom with all the extras. From ®yr pool i*.,surrounded by a beautifui Plates allowed. Two blocks from cam­MARCH 1. FEMALE vacancies Ark'Co­ $137.50 plus electricity. 1105 Clayton courtyard with an aloining club room Come by apartment 113. pus. Co-ed.' ­ Op. $135 single, $95 double.Pool, library, CAMERAS 30%-50% OFF. Canon Ftb Lane. 453;79I4. 476-2633. Barry We are locatedat 1616 Royal Crest Only 1201 Tinnin Ford Road RESIDENT MANAGERS 477-1760 good food, friendly. 5blocks cmpus. 2000 FOR RENT WANTED ili'j!V,,534-on,y Camera Obscura, Gillingwater Company a one block south of the Town Lake Shoo-444-3411 Pearl. 478-5117 evenings. BankAmericard, o>nq Center on East Riverside Drive. CLEAN,.COMFORTABLE room* with Mastercharge. SOUTH -MODERN 2-1, stove and dis­ FRIENDLY PEOPLE. Large 2-2 In weekly maid service, linens furnished, I Bedroom S155-S175 hwasher. North -clean 3-1. 476-4833. small community. Just a walk to UT kitchen prlveledges, $50 monthly. 1700 Saline (off East 19th). Rollins. 1970 MOBILE HOME 12 x 60. 2-1, ca/ch, withbeautiful courtyard and pool. From 1bedroom I bath $190-S2I0 No Lease ART CLASSES . Mrs. Roll no equity -take over payments. Call »92-$200 ABP. 803 West 28th. 472-6480, 476-2 Bedroom 2 Bath S210-S245 Furnished and unfurnished apartments Beginning Feb. 23rd on Sat.In my home. ­Efficiencies -1 and 2 bedrooms Tenative Schedule: Reasonable Tuition 0233 4-5 or 992-0237 after 6 p.m. 2633. Barry Gillingwater Co. Furnished or unfurnished LOST & FOUND All Bills Paid Tappan Appliances 3-5 yr. olds -10:30-12:00 AKC NEWFOUNDLAND puppies; shots EFFICIENCIES ON SHUTTLE. $129.50 On shuttle bus Dishwasher, disposal, gas stove UNF. DUPLEXES f: USE 1:00-2:30 -SV:- 6-8 yr. olds - ami wormed, $175. Bastrop. Texas, 321- includes sh4g, complete kitchen, 444-6631 Individually controlled CA/CH, pool, TV 2125 after 6 p.nt. and weekends. CA'CH. Small community. 4204 cable 9-12 yr. olds -3:08-5:00 THREE wBwnwvm, iwo Dam tuilv Speedway. 452-0986, 476-2633. Barry CASTLE ARMS carpeted, ca/ch, fireplace, $200. 2313-2 IWILL PAY atSubstantial REWARDfor DAILY TEXAN Small classes for the Individual child. UNDERWOOO 300 adding tpachine.Ex- Gillingwater Co. 3121 Speedway 477-3210 the return or Information leading to the For more information Call Debl -452­ Weit' 451-4W' cetient condition. Attractivedesk model. No Lease 2M-1M8" 474-4717, 3271 return of mybloodhound Charlie. Color- • $50. For more information, call 451-7780. SEMESTER LEASE: Large nevy 112 Furn.shed and Unfurnished Apartments red; 100-120 Efficiencies • I and 2 bedrooms bedrooms -with shag, icemaker, lbs. 5 years old. Needs |CLASSIFIEDS TWO BLOCKS UT medication. Call W. E. Matthews. 452­ GUITAR clubroom, TREES, Secluded location in Tdpp*n Appliances Buy, sell -all types glrley magazines- business. 330 -Southiii ciieie. pwelry-muslcal Instruments. cable buyer on duty. Aaron's. 320 Congress.. Northeast off Manor Road. From $159 •x^Tfr^ssasx-. s,ov« One large bedroom TRAVEL •384 • home. 475-6346 -_THEY WORK! ft.-ft^kw'cpriii-gultars-stereosTadlos-New 1 carpeted, cable, dishwasher) Downtown. l30«^nL,NDAAPAR™E^.,-J,r. INTERESTED IN •NO RENT till February1. 6 blocks cartt- covered parking, laundry. I9J4-CADILLAC Fleetwood. Body in pus. All bills paid. One bedroom, $150. ABP $142.50 ~ • -NO-FRILLS LOW-COST ' ­: REWARl?. MALE IRISH Setter lost Ih .good condition, in good mechanical 476-3467. 2408 Leon. THE WILLOWlCK 477-8146 *2101 Rio Grande1 --JET TRAVEL Red River area:, Informatlon or return. shape. 258-5713 after 5:30 Live in Wooded Seclusion to Europe, the Middle East, the Far Call 451-4239. ' ENFiELb A«EA. One bedroom with . EasV Africa, or practically anywhere? FURN. APARTS. NORWEGIAN Elkhoond puppies. AKC. every extra. Furnished or unfurnished Larger Apartments with shag carpets, ' . £OUCATIONAkPLIGHTS cahhelBypu $50 REWARD for information leading to males, shots, champion breed 258-2744. »rom $139.50 plus electricity. 807 We*t 'ind the least expenslye'way for gettirfg" recovery of red Sutuki 125 stolen Feb. 2. Ljmn. Barr^Glmngwater Company.477- modern furniture, accent Wail and con. e POSADA DEL NORTE where you want to go. Phone us tbll;free No questions asked. 451-5908Save money. Come live with us. For the at (800) 223.556*. : ™ 1972 TRIUMPH Spitfire. $2200,~2l veniem central location —nent three weeks only get-your SI00 giH~ miles'gatton average. 442 7750. '— STOLEN NIKON P camera with 55mm bedroom Young manager and tenents. Club room, . $115 SECLUDED one fur­• IBedroom COMMUTING from San Antonio. Leave f1.4 lens. Reward. 459-9315. ORNATE BRASS BEOS. Pplished. with nished. AC, close to campus and shuttle. volley ball court, private parties, shag cl»»»«. Cail Reed, I-615 NELRAY side rallingst Just arrived. Doubles and bui.'smallquiejapartments. Wateir,gat! $1« unfurnished $l60 furnished carpet, one and twobedrooms, flats and 655-0971 efter 6:30 p.m. REWARD, Lost Blue Merle COLLIE. singles. Sandy's. 506 Walsh. cable TV paid.609 East45th,' No.UT.452-townhouses. Shuttle bus Grey with bleck spots. 9 months old. —i­ .2 Bedroom 1435 or 451-6533, Central Properties Inc. n 451-8155 469-9463 "Matthew." Lost 30th, Red River. 454­SOLEX OYSTER perpetual date,. two $178 untarnished $198 furnished JOB WANTED 9344, 477-3l2» 477-0146, Jan, •STOVE «NEAR SHUTTLE $tei.nl?u. new. $180. 477-^02. GREAT PEOPLE) Brand new bedroom apartments, COmpiitely fur* All Bills Paid from-UT Law School, on shuttle bus REWARD, male whiM toy POODLE lost •REFRIG *"*, •SHAG CARPET ' aVc~TRICOLOR Beagle nistied. Frost-free refrigerator, self-.route. Large.pool, ca/ch, abp, Casa del near 41st. Flea ootlar, no taflS^Call 45tI; Mm south.yrstst. •DISHWASHE#fefc­ weeks. Shots. wormed. tend hw*mfr,. turn. 444t0U7 —»'«•'Call --CREATIVE CHILOXARE " , °*°'' •SW1AAMINGT>0QTT prMMmt: 47t"3mV «*777l,I moiStltly, ITSaeposit. ConveniftH-afer-*:00 4784672. Bergsfrom and Highway 1(3. Students' PICIENCY: SI05, ell In your residence for Children who want GRAfY STRIPED three month kitten •DISPOSAL •LAUNDRYextra stimulation and activity PROFESSIONAL SHORT-WAVE and families welcome.Manager 385-2043 wa^jcampus/ shuttle bus. ^9LEASE one and two bedrooms. Fur-found near LBJ Library, See Qan, Latin receiver. Nuth $150. after4:00, ' • • Professional experience with children, SB-310. E.W. ' ' -n'shed and unfurnished. 8T89. and up. -inianiSy-the gifted. Also, training'¥HB~ ^3CM65rSS5.SittUU,10,^AWR-­NEAR HIGHLAND MALL. Oneand two learning problems. Judlty Michaels PHONE 459-5647, 837-2030 feppgcoi; .4 speed.Itrack am/fm, . bedrooms,' CA/CH, appliances, laundry, ^?VEN,6NTLY LOCATED on. 44I-Q624 STOLBtl: NIKON "F" Camera with $135 ABPtl.$M mflM.S9 pool. From $119.50. 453-7034, 454-5238. • • 5!?row. 1*001, shuttle, city buses. $130. -$3.50 per hour $50.00 per weekend 50mm f 1.4 lens with small Kratch on smo. 471-S7U attar 6. 47^4550 . 476-8835 West 4th st front of lens. REWARD. 478-4724 . { J.8. Goodwin Co 12, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN fiiSmi ri mmmmm ­t fciVifi""!' m .>-.w Foreign Languod»t lice ^Actions ourses xln Poor By HEW . By MARY BARNES Spanish class, for example, includes a first would have tocontact the chairman < Te*aa Staff Writer study of Spanish -film* newspapers and of their major department. The chair­ » mzmm S4S® Special sections of foreign lawe»«g£m advertising. Investigation of a complaint Statements (of policCjta the future. The Office of Civil; '•fvv man would then have to supply the dean ^courses designed for students in the of police brutality against two brutality)/' Police Chief RX0-.,\ unfortunate incident Rights of the U.S. Professors from the School of Com­of the College of Humanities with a list llischbol of Communication are being . Austin police officershascon-;-fBob" Miles said Monday, probably could have been Department of Health, munication, including representatives of 20 students Willing to take the course. -Hioffered by the University Spanish, ^ from the news, film and advertising Dr. Sherzersuggested that students in­eluded the officers "com-' They stopped the car solely avoided" had the officers ig­Education and Welfare » French and German departments. areas, help the classanalyze the media. terested in a French course draw up a mitted no offense that would to give a warning ticket." He nored the verba) abuse.) will undertake an iri-The special sections of Spanish and "The idea was to readand listeo in the petition or contact Jean-Pierre Couvin, warrant severe disciplinary termed the offleers' action ai memorandum vestigation of Univeruty action," City Ifonager Dan "perfectly legal, although in> French S12L were initiated last year cultural context," noted ElaineGraybill, coordinator of the department's lower ^The officers minority programs, Stu­along with a special German 312L sec-.. assistant professor of Spanish and Por­Davidson said in a memoran­poor judgment." excellent policemen with no dent Qoveram«it Presi­ division studies. ^ tion at the request of the faculty of thfe tuguese who teaches the class:"We also dum issued to City Council One of the officers involved-prior record lof clttzeibcorhtir dent Sandy Kress said German studentsprobably will beable , ^embers Friday. has beenverbally reprimand­ School of Communication. relate the language to other fields of plaints about theiractions. Nd Monday,' *• -= , At that time, when a foreign language to take a media-oriented course despite ed by Miles and cautioned to further disciplinary action. i& study such as education and history." ^a?The complaint was brought -The Investigation, . requirement substitute was first offered their major next fall, .;Mid _Hviber.t. -use more self-restraintin-planned,'^ the memoranduni Or. Graybill and Pina Sherzer, assist before the ,c6uncH~Jan: 24 by- which is to begin Feb. 25 —iiy the school, the faculty proposed that Heinen, associate professorof Germanic' .< Jthe face of such verbal abuse concluded. ^ "lant professor of French who leads that Fabian Villanueva, his wife': and continue until Marchthe foreign language courses be made language's counterpart to the Spanish ^languages. -and 16-year-old son. They 1, wasrequested by Kress more relevant, Wayne Danielson, dean class, noted that other sections of the "f^Heinen taught the original experimen­reported they were stopped by and has the support of the J.bf the Schoolof Communication, explain-courses might be added if students in tal class last year. The course next fall the officers for driving Shyient ? "* -ed Monday. . other majors expressed an interest. sj$lMte_open to noncommunication ma-without tail lights and were •IBSB3. . ^ ^sections pon-A rTr^pntntiv^ nMhf Spmrinh tnrfr TT not an-then allegedly mistreated.~;v" tftesr "study ot the language Portuguese department explained that ticipate enough media students tofill otit «v y as recruitment, financial r -:The memorandum said ai^ aid, graduate programs, To arouwi thejnciedia th? country. The students wanting to start such a class the class, he explained. scuffle occurred followingfiSU^ athletics and housing, he }" "verbal abuse"' 'to "theofficers; Student Voluntary Services she said.-I, ^11 after stopped the: (SVS) and the Student ' A training session »' , ,If itSSterminiiW « J , Villanueva car,. Mrs.' ^Tutorial Outreach Program held University is n^t up­ 3SB8S seeking volunteers to „ „ Slated 4 J" p.m. Monday 4U holding present federal were 'subdued, and hand? Radios assist in the television lear- T^'vi^nn^nJ R..^na tk* civil rights laws, it could HP stesg ning center for sixth graders il mean acutback in f^eral oasefnent discuss mlnorliy predental students. , to at Austin's Webb School, 601 ^lriin^ hl.t 1® aJl The Union Ideas and Issues Mortar Board UTTOMMV SMNT STMW^ ASSOCIATION c v. recruitment and campus solidarity. "Hie investigaticm I made .v.-ft st John's Avo> . . students but would be eij-, funds, said Kress.wmi Committee will hold a two- will operate an information booth NOItH UNIVIHITV NIIOHBORHOOD did not bear out -the]; day, free seminar on the Outstanding University outside of Burdine Hall fromnoon to ASSOOATtpN will meet at 7:30 p.m > Robin Mueller,* SVS coolf^ially *> «»wa-"We're not trying to women with a 3.0 grade point 5 p.m. Tuesday. . • Tuesday atthe EpiscopalSdminkry, dinator, said the program is in tion majors, Ms. Mueller said. Constitutional Convention deprive the University of STUDY SKKIS IAKMATOIT r' 606 Rathervue Place, Room 259, to beginning at noon Wednesday and 90 hours.at the end of this (lASSl)wlll hold two discussion discuss the City Council's proposal Cowboys Plan conjunction with community "Volunteers are asked to" any money, he said. "We semester are eligible to join sessions Tuesday in Jester Center r to widen Red River Street north of station want to in Union Building 104, AJ32. A study skills session wilt be 26th Street. Charity Consort . television KLRN give only two hours a week of just follow the Mortar Board for the fall Speakers Will be School of held at noon/and discussion of wumi coMMitm will conduct a which airs educational their time," she sai<^; law." * , Law Dean W. Page Keeton; semester. graduate entrance exams will be j.~. regular meeting from 3 to 5 p.m.r The Texas Cowboys will children's programs daily. . Mortar Board, a national. held at.4 p.m. . .. _l Wednesday in Unlon Building 389. -present the Doobie Brothers, Regent Frank C. Erwin; Pr. . The television programs The mMting is open te all facalty George Beto, former director senior women's honcHr society, AMBhCAN AtSOOATlOW O*A»CmTtCTU«Al • • members and students. in a charity concert at 8 p.m. deal with "little thingssuch as will have 35 spaces for new . aiMiaiu will meet at 1p.m. Tues-UT SAMNO CUfl will offer a novice in-March 25 in Gregory Gym. water and plants that the child •of the Texas Department of members for the next long ' day in Engineering Lab Building to : struction class at 7 )>.m. Tuesday In' Corrections, and Dr. Janice hear two representatives from the .; Robert Lee Moore Hall 5.104. John ' might not pick up in school." . Tickets for the concert will May, assistant professor of session. Linbeck Construction Co. speak on McClanhan will lecture on 'bailing Ms. Mueller said. Prospective members can innovative constructioii.techniques < .'. as Self-Confidence." go on sale Feb. 20 andmlay be government. and younjianglneerslinconstruction. WOftKN UNITB will meet at 7:30 p.m. The voluntary" tfeacher'I ' 1411 LAVACA 472-7315 purchased at Raymond'sDrug PC Keeton will speak on the pick up information sheets AMCHCAN MST1TUTI OF MITAUMOICA1' Tuesday in Union Building 325. aides would be present during No. 1, 2706 Rio Grande St., between 1 and 5 pi.m. through and rmouuM mwinu win con-' ffWNftH ' MmSm legislative, judicial and ex-/ ' duct a monthly business meeting at ASTIONOMY DCfAITMMT will hoid an Raymond's Drug No. 2, 2807 the television sessions and ecutive articles of the propos­ Friday in Speech Building 105. 7:30 p.m. .Tuesday In Petroleum I-. astronomy colloquium at. 4 p.m. answer any questions children TONIGHT AND WED. ONLY . Engineering Building 311. Guest: Tuesday in Robert Lee AAoore Hall San Jacinto St. and at Cowboy ed constitution at noon. Erwin might have, Ms. Mueller said; Mysticism Talk speaker will be John Copplnger, 15.212 featuring <}r. J. Craig booths to besetupon campus,v. will speak on theeducation ar­ divisional engineer for Halliburtonm Wheeler from ttie Harvard College "The volunteers actually ticle at 2 p.m., followed by Zalman Services, who will explain the ; Observatory who will speak on Proceeds from the concert will be left alone' with theSchachter, operations of a service company. "Supernova Explosions in Binary Beto, who will speak on the professor and chairman of the AUSTIN AMATHM tAMO CUM will meet at' . Systems." Ah atomic and Molecular will go to the Austin Associa-, children and will function THURS. FRI. SAT. suffrage article. Dr. May will Near" Eastern ai)d Judaic 7:30 p.m. Tuesday In'the Red Cross Seminar will also be held at 4:30 tion for Retarded Children. r more or leas like teachers," • Building. 1225 Red River St., to ^ p.m.r Irt Robert Lee Moore, Hall discuss rights, suffrage and Studies at the University of r?s?" hear a lecture on solid state voltage% 10.212. R.B. Bernstein, University ^11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111(11111111^ finanees^noonThursday; in Canada, will --regulators. All students interestedIn chemistry and physics professor, Manitoba -ham radio are invited. will speak on "HeH-: Quasibound AND A question and answer speak at 4:30 p.m. in the qHCANOOCADUATI STUD04TASSOCIATION State Spectrum, Experimentally period will follow each ^illl hold a regular Meeting at noon O'erlved Spectroscopic Constants Academic Center Auditorium Tuesday in Union Building 334. and Propensity for Rotaflonal Ex­ speaker, and . there will be FROMHOL on mysticism. OUHJCAT1 WODOI will meet at 7 p.m. citation via Collision." Advane* tkkct* at Inner.Sanctum A Discount Rccords sandwiches and chips at the Schachter, an ordained rab­Tuesday In ttie Union Building fNYSKS DffAlirMmT will conduct tWo Junior Ballroom to play bridge. seminars noon speeches. -. -4 • Tuesday. A statistical bi with a master's degree ip oaotooKAi somas immiitimnt win .. mechanics seminar at 3 p.rri. In the psychology of religion, meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday in Geology ; ' Robert Lee Hall 7.306 will feature Post Office -Building 100 for a guest lecture by -Kenneth Hawker', research scientist will discuss "Mysticism, * : Mark E. Hennes, senior geologist, assistant for the Center for The second public auctionof From Kabbalah to the Core Laboratories,. Inc., on. Statistical Mechanics and Ther­ "Deposltional Anticlines of Deep modynamics, speaking on postal vehicles will be held at Aquarian Age." ';;, -Environments — Past Success and "Correspondence Rules, Phase «UNE ADMI FREE TORI 10 a.m. Saturday at City Future Exploration." Space Distribution Functions and Quoin MAYO AWIMAT1VI ACTION COMMITTB Quantum Kinetic Theory." A Coliseum. will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the relativity seminar will be held at 3 Forty-three vehicles — all Any female student whtf has : Mayo Room In the Union Building p.m. inRobert Lew MooreHall 9.222. " painted white — including 25 attended the University since 1967 Dodge vans: 17 1966 January, 1973, and Who is BUBBLE PUPPY International one-half ton enrolled as a fulltime student HILLTOP -INN vans, one 1965 left-hand-drive may enter tyie contest for the COVER • ' Dodge and % one-ton van will 1974 Texas Relays Queen.-V On Old Hwy. 1$3N. » Off Boliones Dr. I MONDAV THRU THURSDAY be sold. Deadline for submitting Wostorn Saloon -Dance Hall applications is5 p.m., Feb. 26. 1OPEN 8 p.m. lOth/tamar 477-3783 I WEEK! Application forms are Twos. & Wod., Feb. 12, 13 ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiii^ UNCLASSIFIED .available at Bellmont Hall 220-P and in Union Building Moving? Help: $10 a truckload. 258-1891 W. ALVIN CROW Cameras 30%-50% 6ff (new) 478-5187. mtiiitrrr and the Neon Angels AOVANCID 16MM FIUM MOOUCTIOI4 Bagels delivered 442-9569, 476-1900 -STUOMTS will hold auditions for spr-( Fri., fmb. 15 y CJtf SOUCJF DOOR 1 ing film productions from 7 to9 p.m. Salin- Mental patients liberation 474-4172: Tuesday and Wednesday on the FREDA & THE FIREDOGS fourth floor of Communication Weimaraner, 2 AKC pups 477-4781. * Coming Sat., fmb. 14 Building A. Anyone interested in ac­ What would U do W/J100? 459-5060 ting in the films is Invitedto attend. HIAtTH nomtlONS OffKX AND HAMNO 345-M49 AUBREY LOWDEN 1 442-0113 SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY Refrigerator for sale. 454-2327. ~~~~ . AMD STUOY SKIUUAKMATOKY Will sponsor a disciisilon at B p.m. for sale S15. 45^-2327. Wednesday in Burdine Auditorium UNESCOURTED IAUES- Royal elec. twrtr.j_ike new. 453-2104 on "how to prepare for th'e ^ ONE FREE DRINK -^ MCAT/OAT for all premedlcal arid Afmospliert '67 1600 2 tops S895 453-2104 MON.-TUES.WED. 1959 Stratocastor 451-7680. Tonight thru Saturday NO COVER Pitchar Sony TC336 tape record. S180 454-151(8 mdl. 539 < hk 10-U ' -. . ' this mtK-"CARRIAGE HILL delivered 442-9569, 47«-1900 HAPPY HOUR 6-7 • -\,iw \ 2 for 1 4x5 & I snses asking S600. Mike 83MW0 COUNTRY COMFORT ; Birdr Hbday to Most: |H 1523 TINNIN FORD ^ 444-0711 Twi.-S«t. M. 19-23' •a Le Sabre custom 4 dr $595 474-1900 . S495. 476-1900 pm SHINER STEVE FROMHOLZ I 8S£S i stereo amp $74.50 476-016? . T»«i.-S*t. Feb. 24-Mar. 2 J" '66 Rambler tlSO. Some work 477-3J31 ALLEN DAMRON— CLASSIFIED AQVIRTISING 0RBER BLAMK ~ m i > *-i * - 441*3352 at the tfnc\li5h Aire APARTMENTS SHAKEY'S 2101 BUR present! \ at |Im~Guadalupe Store • Kmmnmdy Whrmammta " Bill and Bonnie Hearne l«wl|M thm Sit, M, It IN AUSTIN IN CONCERT ! dt the Reogan Sq^ofiff*^Sfora TEXAS BLUEGRASS BOYS ^ Tonight Only i' < r < r r < » i j AND MAIL 4* ^ CHINESE COOKINGLESSONS WRITE YOUR AD HERE ^11 wan '' Vincent Chan;is offering twe^^ AMERICA IHEAR YOU SINGING » ' > » ) ) > - Number of Days Wmm* m-v. •*" • 1 . " •• -• * I 2 IBS (15 word minimum] * PM WED. FEB. 13 No. TilMS |iiiMS Times Times Times ] DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS An Environmental Family AUSTIN'S'MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM P.O. BOX D -UT STATION -v Community Words 1 5 10 " 20 Idool for UT faculty and staff. All siiats reserved $6.50 $S.S0 $4.S0 Cost »«r word 10 It 35 40 1.20 AUSTIN, TEXAS 707)2 Mrgo now 2and 3bodroom apart­ : "fipmotf Ibcatid .jn aconFc' lis 1.50 2JO 5.25 9.00 ROO NAME SCARBROUQH'8 DOV £N & HIGHLAND MALL Northaast AMitin. F«a turaaincluda -SEARS IN HANCOCK C k » UNIVERSITY CO-OP •i* . 5M 9.40 19.20 ahag carpat. all alactric kltohana, APDK ' patioa, ctubhouaa. gym, TICKET OFFICE 1JO ( -15.95 10.20 20.40 and aaunaa. From $229 to 830B I ABp. 6615 N. LAMAR ;i». 1.90 3.24 6.30 10.10 21.40 I • 1.90 11,40 22.90 PHONE: Ml m4543681 FOR TICKET INFORMATION Ii 7224 NortlHtdst Drivs f24-t4! j? Tuesday, Jebroaryfl2, TpUE DAILY TEXAN Page 13 •r ~4'i$ m: Am mmm wmmmmtmR swum WislMM; ixon "|:WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nixon Monday Southeast Asia has been concluded by the United States and oil-producing nations. ;<3hight urged the leaders of IS oil-consuming nations to and moves have been made toward,permanent peace in^y,. Those attending the sessions include foreign ,; 4void what he called "isolation in the energy field" by the Middle East. ministers, finance chiefs and energy experts from the Jf^Wdng business deals that are not to the interest of all o He said"the world now faces an unprecedented'*^ United States, Japan, Canada and Norway am} nine m |i%|nations. • -'-'v?-challenge but that buildingand keeping peacewill not be;.-',<. • members of the European Common Market: France, |M-1n a White House toast to more than 100 delegates to ^easy. West Germany, the Netherlands, Great Britain, Italy, f'ifthe Washington ^ergy cdnference. he said the United ** <^He said that because this is an era of negotiation and^§| Denmark, Ireland, Luxembourg'and Belgium. s ^r&tates will reject the idea of such isolationism because not confrontation it isnecessary to realize itis essential Walter Scheel, West Germany's foreign minister and ^^it might be good politics over the "short term to make to "maintain the strength and security that brought us !> president of the Council of European Communities, urg­ > £he test deal you cap, but over the long term it is bat' where we are.' * V a>K *** 'thr* ed a conference of all interested nations — major con­ t|$tatesmanship.'w:':^,.^ Nixon said the Unltetf' States not ofily rejects sumers, producers, and underdeveloped countries t-by His remains appeared directed mainly at France isolationism in security, but rejects it in trade relations^ and in monetary affairs:Besaid thiscountry would play '; The conference participants have repeatedly ;V-jk?»il producting nations to protect its source of supply. a responsible role in world security, in world trade and emphasized that they had no intention of making this •V\l In exchange, France hasoffered arms, nuclear power , monetary matters and in the energy field. meeting into a conspiracy against the Arab oil- plants and other economic development projects to" Ea|Jier7 opening r the two-day c'onference, U.S. g '..5^ran, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and other Arab nations. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger emphasized the cutting off deliveries to some countrieslast Octoberand - ----. • J.*" need igr ;_. S iaopeaising their prices. ^.....^aSsaes^ —^wouW'dnye oil prices Arab oil shipments have since been resumed to most .jup, drive the economiesof the world down and drive all He said that bilateral agi^ments by individual Im ­European countries -but are still cut off to the United iof us apart." itations could not solve the problems and might well: States. —-• -• ­ •• r Nixon said the Unitml States does not intend to throw make them far worse. Kissinger said the United States would seek no help at |its weight around but said t)ie country's objective is to "We believe that it is essential that these this conference in responding to the Arab embargo. ^build an era of permanent peace. He said that hedid not arrangements follow agreed rules of conduct," -Europe relies on importsfor 60 percent of its energy. ;wisb to follow a generation plagued with wars with a Kissinger said..The conference is seeking some way to-... -Kissinger warned that failure to resolvethe energy *new generation plagued by economic warfare. agree on the rules of conduct for buying foreign oil problem by international cooperation ''would threaten * •' Meanwhile, the Libyan government retaliated to the without appearing to threaten oil-exporting countries.|the world with a vicious cycleof competition, autarchy, JWaSfiihgton meeting by nationalizing, the Libyan The first day of the energy conference ended without rivalry and depression such as led to the collapse of Mitchell Sharp of Canada (r) and Kiyohiki Tsurumi of operations of three American oil companies. ~ any fundamental decision on whether there will besome world order in the Thirties. ongoing action after this conference ends Tuesday or -"The most immediate and critical problem concerns Japan talk at the energy conference in Washington. t Col. Moammar. Khadafy's Revolutionary Command whether it will be something that folded up its tent. % price," Kissinger also said. Council called' the Washington conference "a. Kissinger took the position there should be an energy "Current price levels are simply not sustainable. At -provocative attempt aimed against oil-producing coun­ action group with continuing responsibilities after the these levels, the industrial countries alone will incur atries." He nationalized the Libyanoperationsof Texaco, meeting ends. current account deficit of $36-40 trillion in 1974 ... " California Asiatic Oil Co. and the Libyan-American Oil "Co. But French Foreign Minister Michel Jobert strongly. Against, that background Kissinger urged that the •> Wt.f, -uV.-v.Cr-,,­ opposed any conference aftermath krguing that to es­arrangements made by individual nations to secure oil ' Nixon singled outGermany's Foreign Minister Walter supplies "follow agreed rules of conduct." tablish task forces or committees would be contrary to $ Soheel, who is president of the council of ministers of an agreement the European Economic Community • ,A member of the U.S. delegation, William H. Donald­t Nthe European communities, to receive a toast from the made to avoid binding commitments at the energy con­son, under secretary of state for. security assistance,distinguished guests in the White House State Dining elaborated in a news briefing. He said rules of conduct ' ' 1 • 'v • * :. ference. * „ Bonn. He said all of the guestsat the head table were might be "a basic setof rules, oracodfe, under whichoil LONDON (AP) — Britain's 30,000 situation continues," Len Clarke, the foreign ministers but there was only one who also is a ' In his talk, Kissinger said no conceivable increase in purchase arrangements would be made." locomotive engineers will call oft their regional union leader in Nottingham, said. ^president. bilateral trade can cover the massive payments deficits He said such a code might cover "the>. .After 11 violence-scarred days that left to continue the protest The settlement arrived at last week two drivers dead, scores injured and 100,-now or in-the -Paul, Minn., and voted to continue the Prime Minister Edward Heath last week partners. TheCommission must approve 000 workers temporarily without a job, future, despite an agreement reached last calls for a 6 percentfreight ratesurcharge strike, asdid groups Claiming to represent and went.ahead with a national strike that such aphen, ancTfijitish sourcessaid it has Thursday with officials in Washington. to make up for higher dieselfuel costsand more than 1,000 truckers in the Detroit, is now in its second day. • truck traffic was reported at near-normal shown sympathy to the request. levels inmost statesand vitalproduce was Highway gunfire was reported early guarantees of ample supplies of fuel, in­Mich./ area. Officials in both states Miners formed picket lines in driving Executives of the state-owned British railing once more to market. Monday in at least four states and van­cluding Sunday sales. Some drivers' reported increases in truck' traffic rain and wind Monday outside Britain's Steel Coip. have estimated steel produc­ dalism — mostly shattered windshields — groups voted in truck stop balloting tocon­however. coal mines. tion would cease by early spring if the coalOfficials of the New England Produce in several others. None of the injuries was tinue the shutdown, then changed their Indiana Gov. Otis R. Bowen called Joe Whelan, a miners' union official in strike lasts. ­ Center and at several Midwest livestock serious.- minds after learning more details of the National Guard troops and extra state the Nottingham area, said he had been markets reported. receipts close to or The walkout against Prime Minister W.J. Usery Jr., the Nixon ad­agreement. police patrols off the roads bit said they threatened with death after safety Edward Heath's anti-inflation ceiling on above prestrike levels. Truck stops in a ministration's chief labor negotiator, told Truck traffic was up in Florida as in would remain on alert if neeaed. In Ken­workers, charged with keeping the mines' wage raises started at midnight Saturday*number of states began pumping diesel newspersons that a surveysby the Depart-" other states, but a spokesman for the tucky, National Guardsmen remained on in operablecondition, crossed picketlines: but the 280,000 miners had not been workr -fad for the first time in a week. ment of Transportation showed truck traf-owner-drivers there maintained the strike duty to provide escort service ,to any "There will be bitterness, even between ing overtime and Sundays for thre?Full-scale slaughtering operations ' fic had increased for the second straight would resurface. trucker who asked for it. father and son, for years to come if this months. . news Author Solzhenitsyn Rejects Summons into the Pacific Ocean Friday after 84 days in space, 1,816 employ MOSCOW (AP) — Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the target of bitter official at­Kennedy Space Center saw their jobs come to an end. tacks for publication of his book on Stalinistlabor camps, rejected Monday a They joined more than 13,000 aerospace workers at the center who have summons to the Soviet prosecutor's office. He said he would not appear for lost their jqbs since 1968, when 26,000 persons were employed during the The best way to fight high electricity $228 million." . • interrogation. ; * .. height of America's space program. prices in Austin would be to jam the McCreary said "100 percent of Lo-switchboards of the Texas Railroad Com­Vaca's long-term debt isOwned to Coastal. . The prosecutor's officeliad delivered a second summons to the apartment By June 30, the work force at Kennedy will be about 9,450 said a mission, Lou McCreary, an Austin at­ States.Gas Producing Co," ' . " ^ of the author's wife, and Solzhenitsynsaid he refused to acknowledge legali­spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. torney, said Monday. The Jan. 1, issue of-Forbes magazine ty of the summons. Stock Market Suffers Another Drop "The (Texas) Railroad Commission in said Coastal States was the No. 1 money­' Following a furious campaign of official press denunciations of Solzhenit­Austin has saddled the Austin housewife making gas company in the nation in 1973. syn and his book, "Gulag Archipelago," the prosecutor's action could be the NEW YORK (AP) — The stock with an unlimited cost-plus price in-Austin, which has experienced ten)* market took ra slow but steady -crease," added McCreary, who is running porary curtailments of'up to 100 percent stort of an attempt to silence the author by arrest and initiating charges pounding Monday, with brokers for staterepresentative froipTravis Coun­over the past year, is oneof several Texas against him. blaming most of the damage on ty, Place 4. cities and industrial concerns whose con­ A summons was delivered Friday, but Solzhenitsyn's wife refused to In*a letter to the Railroad Commission, tracts Coastal States has not be able to continuing worries about the accept it. A new document was taken to her apartment Monday, and„ 30 Indus 803.90 -16.50 McCreary'requested it reexamine the meet. »i* world's energy troubles. Solzhenitsyn then issued a defiant statement to the prosecutor. 20 Trans 180.01-2.67 court judgment which set up a The Austin City Council is expected to The Dow Jones average of 30 in­ receivership for Lo-Vaca Gathering Co. filing ; "In a situation of general Illegality which for many years has existed in 15 Utils.......... ...83.37 -0.12 consider a damage suit against dustrial stocks dropped 16.50 points^ The receivership, (established by 200th Coastal States and Lo-Vaca at Thursday's our country — and the personal eight-year campaign of slander and harass­ to 803.90, its lowest close since i£ 65 Stocks........ ..:;;.^59.m -4.i3i ^District Court last July), was designed to council meeting. ;?.> ^ i ment of me — I refuseto acknowledge the legality of your summons and will safeguard money for the public interest, Austin also may enter into a suit with finished at 800.43 last Dec. 13. The not come for an interrogation to any state organ," the statement said. McCreary said. But, McCreary added, Pennzoil of Houston which' has a contract widely watched average is now "all money generated by Lo-Vaca during with Lo-Vaca. Pennzoii, whichalready has 1,816 Canaveral Employes Lose Jobs within 20 points of the three-year ex­ the receivership, after operating filed the suit, is requesting nullification of CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — When the Skylab astronauts' dropped ^ low of 788.31it touched last Dec. 5. penses, was to be used to pay off Lo-certain short-term contracts made by Lo­Vaca's long-term debts, which totalled Vaca. " Convention Committees By SYLVIA MORENO— If"because of the equal eliminate segregation," Rep. Thompson proval of the Rights and Suffrage com­tides' presentation, delegatesmay submit Monday after a Weekend recesis. educational opportunity-and half because said. mittee and will be considered by the full minority reports, signed by at least six A tie vot^? temporarily defeated if BILL GARLAND of the University funds." Daniel said the section would probably "convention Thursday. ° dissenting members. proposal to strike-, any reference of a;Texan Staff Writers The equal educational opportunity *1 be worked in dicing the styling and draf-. This week!s committee meetings are-_ Because regular hearing sessions have salary commission in Article X, general ', Motivated by planned floor sessions clause is in the first section of the educa­ ting stage if the attorneygeneral rules the scheduled as work sessions with debate, ended, the only testimony to be heard in provisions. Delegate A.J. KoKoth in~ _ later this week. Constitutional Convention tion article, and several delegates voiced section is properly worded to reflect the straw vptes and tentative approval votes the final committee hearings is that from troduced the proposal, whose approv^C committees are plowing through section opposition to the section's wording. intent of the proposal. i>n the specific wording of each com­expert witnesses. John Gronouski, dean of would have enabled committees such asi.by-section approval of their articles in Houston Rep. Senfronia Thompson sub­ The convention is scheduled to consider mittee's report. Each report represents the. LBJ School of. Public Affairs, Lynn the executive, judiciary or legislative to/ preparation for their presentation to a full mitted a new section entitled "Prohibition the education article Friday. an amended version of the proposed con­Anderson, also of the LBJ School, and consider-and include salary provisions. > convention.. " of Discrimination," whichdelegates voted The committee will spend the rest of the stitution as submitted by the CRC. : University Law Prof. Mark Yudof are The Committee on Local Government:The waning stages of the individual to submit to Atty. Gen. John Hill for an week assigning membeirs.to defend the ar­ -Constitution articles, 11 in all, with sec-scheduled to testify before the Finance passed, for convention approval, a provi*" _ - • committees will give way to daily floor opinion oh whether it conflicts with' the • ticle sections on the convention floor. tions from 2 to 25. must be adgpM hy q Cnmmittpp Friday sion idrich would' take tiie county home-* meetings beginning Thursday. Bill of Rights. Article One. "Hie article on voting rights, including" • vote of the fullconvention with a Debate on section wording of each arti-rule section out of their specific article, to , Tbe Education Cmiunitlee voted 13-7 "The only thing I'm trying to do is be proposed to the convention separately!. -those of the ex-convict, has passed ap­quorum present. At the time of the ar-cle occupied the substantive committees-Monday night to pass an education article Delegate Lyndon Olson's proposal,..-, recommending several major changes T1 stipulator eounty home rule in the sam^y Itvtn the document -proposed -by the language as the city home rule amendf . Constitutional Revision Commission ment (1945). except for,jnino?¥|)rord^ . . (CRC). ' /•' changes. The provisions dealing with the Perma­ nent and Available University Funds Houston Rep. Joe Pentony continued his advocacy old special "interest provisions we cagie here to ..,.The-Executive . Committee approved-*­ ^ remained almost identical.to theCRC ver-^fondajrof changing administration ofthe Perma­abolish," he said. tain guidelines. three sections under its jurisdiction, ini ­ - '•skm, but ihe committee changed the fun-nent University Fund in a new. constitution, calling The Available University Fund, consisting mostly Other schools outside the University and A&M cludinu^moval of the governor from oft"^" 4ing base for schoolsoutside theUnftersi-plans-to leave the fund unaltered "simpiie fraud. • i Systems currently receive money from a 10 cent per -fice b^raseof temporarydisablement exf\J. tended through'one year. •:ty and Texas A&M University Systems. "It is fraud on the students and faculty of UT and Fund, provides approximatelyfSLmiliion-per year to, $100 valuation property tax which yields' about $22 ^;A ,provisk»i f8r exemption from a^million annually. fV\ Other schools outside the two systems A4M, because the fund they are told will be used ex­ valorem taxation of personal automobiles^' Wili receive a yearly appropriation from clusively to achieve and maintain "academic ex­Statio^ , The $9 million difference between the $31 million not used for production of personal inf'-l H'; the Legislatureequal to the amount of the and $22 million figures might have to be raised by a cellence" will be used instead to support the ad­ The University receives two-thirds of the fuiid and come, was drafted by the Finance Com^.* ministration's "lucrative playhouse," Pentony said t • tax increase, Pentony spid. A&M at Collew Station receives one-third. -*-.C : The ' mittoe. _ \ il adopted at a morning press conference. Houston representative said he will submit The Committees Mi Legislature mid th^ ^ ^-Convention president Price Daniel Jr. The Education Committee has re^mmehd^tlkr r:,j proposals to try^ to rectify the funds situation when* ^The worst fraud of all isagainst those of til who other schools receive an amount each year equal to Judiciary workedjpefly on making planC WM, following 4he vote, "Half of them the education article is qpnsiderejl by the full want a modern Texas constitution free of the same the Available University Fund, with the amount for final voting alrarticles during the res)|'