—Twii Hall by Mail Cdipi Spring Charmin' ^ ; — Student in quadrangle dorm courtyard wanders through flute tongs on a warm spring-like day for the »n|oym«nt of the trees and herself. " By HELEN VOLLMER *'Pay scales for anglos in comparable ^.^Recommendations sent to the Universi-job roles aresometimes much better than | if Council are the "yardstick used to for blacks," he said. -gauge how /esponsive the University is to The HEW investigators also met with Minority needsl" Edward-Nail, coor-seyeral politicians Thursday, gvfiveof.the lator .of Btfcic StUdefit ^r^iceSi' lirfd" "light frejtobers sf^lhe Legislative BladE tiuriSday. -* ?* ' Caucus! took time out from their duties at theConstitutional Convention tomeet with •>»Nall, meetifig" With representatives of the federal team. • 1 f ' 'r •ffte Department of Health, Education and State Reps. <3.K' Suttori, Craig Welfare (HEW), told the minority recruit- f Washington,-Senfraria^Thompson, Samsitt investigators these recommen-Hudson and Paul Ragsdale, were present. tions include suggested solutions to The Black Caucus, which originally ask­ . ffiinority needs in the way of academic ed HEW to send a task force to investigatej^ograms, financial assistanceand faculty University minority practices, met with ^rticipation. the HEW representatives to learn of their ^Discussion at the mdrnihg meeting "up-to-date efforts." „JJfentered primarily on minority residence-; Ragsdale mentioned there is an indica­problems and faculty and staff organiza­tion of problems with University officials tion. Specificconcerns of the black faculty and Sutton remarked, '-'The University is discussed were pay scales and workloads.: putting on pressure in Washington to getCNall, who previously met with the HEW them (HEW) out of here." . i|eam, said that _ , an ex-student of the Universi­^ojecis ;the same minority faculty ty, said thereis no doubtabout discrimina­-^embers are pulled in to work on them — tion on this campus.~M the cost of their regular jobs. "UT isn't serious about trying to ^.He added that while blacks with Univer-recruit minorities. We're talking about -gity positions are given quite a bit of students who aren't encouraged to come ^responsibility, "they are frequently .paid because of the school's racist image," he 4ess. added. : i ; . ; lury Selected To Hear Stans Case S4W.,_.. YORK (AP) — A jury of eight for the first of many nights of sequestra­ men and four women was chosen Thurs-tion. 3ay 'totry former Atty. Gen.John Mitchell The tri^l hs expected to last four to five g?id onetime Commerce Secretary weeks. . ' Maurice Stanson charges of criminal con-.­ The; defendants are the first former 8giracy> With six alternatives, the panel Cabinet members to be indicted on {immediately was sequestered. criminal charges since the Teapot Dome ^MitchellandStanswentto trial Feb.19, scandal of 1923. Accused of trying to impede a federal, Q: Gagliardi scheduled resumption of thewcwrities investigation of fugitive finan­trial for :Friday morning and said theaer Robert Vesco's operations, in return: government will launch its case with afir the latter's secret|200,000 contribution two-hour opening argument. • President Nixon's reelection cam­ r paign. -' /• • For the first time inthe trial, the publicClTie jurjr isi on the young side, with only; will be admitted Friday. ^|e of its members having reached retire-Among the witnesses scheduled to take ent age. Its foreman isSybil Kucharski, ; the stand during the historic trial is John teller from Westchester County. W. Dean III who was fired as President J.S. Dist. Judge Lee P. Gagliardi Nixon's White House counsel in the after­iered jurors taken to a Manhattan hotel math of the Watergate scandal. , -Mr 1st Arrest Mm University Police early Friday morning Warm arrested a male resi­ Friday's jforicaH dent ot Jester Center, calls for continued after the student warm temperatures -'-'sfreaked'i^inude and partly cloudy through the women's skies. The^high will,be section of the dorm.in the mld-80s, with "Mr — This latest incidert* the18w in the mid-60s. 'Bf,_ "streaking;^ oc­Winds will betrom the curred abo.utM:30 south-stiuthpsj^t 4 a.m. Identity of the to id student was not revealed. (Related story, ptiptos, Page 20). ^ ifill . WASHINGTON (AP) — Pr< SZZSl XI '«DTfV/r M because t am for more gas and olir, the United States Is not goin/ jierican people at prices they cart afford • «M»0 onjteaSw ed by Congress. *^r\« -> on btelieves a pricerollback wouldmakfc &"That biU will result thiongSfPSIrl also would (Career.1 , * • • ' , >1 S&&5P inevitably lead tocompulsory rationing in thiscountry, and , ThePresidem Mid Congress should act on proposals tN^' that we are not going to haVe," Nixon said ~ « * /'1v, ' ' Administration has had on CapitolHill "now for months,-ih H was the most unequivocal statement yet by the Presi f some cases for years, which would inqrease thesupply^,'iwmMKmrn dent that there won't be anyrationing At a news con-? energy in this country;" "wfM isM^wTfi^rtalMyliisappear andwecan movefor C>:i^ii,;r lid earlier he wanted to avoid rationing if possible. as a country with the energy that we need," Nixon saidU^|ASKED LATER at a n6ws briefing if the Presidents Nixon's commentson the energy bill came during a halflp; meant to say so flatly that there would be no rationing, £& hour speech at the opening of a Young Republican; White House Deputy Press secretary Gerald L. Warren r • Leadership Conference in Washington. said: "I will not qualify lus statement.1' < v'v Later, at a White House news briefing, Warren,said tWjjf Nixon's announcement that he will veto the energy bill energy bill had not been received at the White House apdy was no surprise because the White House had been saying ^ thus he could not say precisely when a vetomessage woutf,»;V in recent days the bill would be rejected if not changed. fv'. be sent back to Congress. : " The aspect of the bill most objected to by the White ; Nixon Also urged the Young Republicans to "get in there^ . House would roll crude oil prices back to $5.25 a barrel but ,1. XJind fight" for the Republican cause despite Watergate, ytewould permit increases back to $7.09, which is still lower -> -• "Don't assumethe timeto run foroffice isonly when it's* than some current prices. ,»H ' \ • ;v a sure thing," he told the cheering audience. "When th$V Nixon said he would veto the bill "ttot because Tam battle looks toughest, get in there and fight for the cause; * against lower prices, because I am for lower prices; not stsl believe in it because thenext time around, if you lose this ~ 7?-h£\* because I afti against more gas and oil available to the afe time, you will be there." !*>'r*S» Most Stations To Increase 2 Cents ' By MARY HENKEL days.Ruteeirs allocationfor March is17»-, because of his overdraft in February and next month will he better, thou^»,|^| • A 2-cent increase in gasoline^riceper 000 gallons, down from the 18,000 gallons March. The 2-cent increase will be in Morgan said. -.»rv gallon will await motorists at many ser­he received in February. To makethis last effect at hisstation Monday morning when Gov. Dolph Briscoe announced Thurs­v i c e s t a t i o n s F r i d a y . " " " 1 Russell will have to regulate pumping the first load of March gasoline arrives,. day the additional allocationof gasoline to The price rise is a iwnjp^uct ^cri^siE! hours. He will increase his prices at the HILL THINKS the increase will clear the Midland-Odessa and Rio Grande. ­ pump 2 cents Friday but will not pump his overhead. "I can give my remaining Valley areas. overhead, Clarence Vetter, staff analyst more than 800 gallons a day on a five-day employes a little, raise," he said.£lf The shortage of gasoline in the Midland* of the Internal Revenue Service, said week. Operating on a five-day week, Hill sells 'Odessa area caused oil field crews dif-Thursday. Wholesale gasoline prices have Russell's station was-open six days «-some gasoline every day. i ficulty in getting to drilling sites. In the not gone up, but wholesalers have until week in the past, but because of the gas­Robert Morgan at Morgan's Gulf, 2817 Valley, a heavy influx of tourists and Mex-. Wednesday to raise their prices. After oline shortage he has been forced to cut iGhiadalupe St., is not sure when his March leans seeking better quality gasoline and that they cannot raise retail prices until down to a five-day week, staying open allocation will arrive. His prices will not prices have^created an,emergency sitiia­the following month. from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. "When we have gas assume the 2-cent increase Friday., STATION OPERATORS may raise their we don't do anything but pump gas," Morgan is waiting until the wholesalers A TOTAti of 925,000 galldiiBliFgasoHne prices at the pump once a month on any Russell said. set their prices.' If they raise them, and has been sent to the Valley since the day of the month. Most service stations in CLYDE HILL, operatorof Hill's Arcoat Morgan expects a 6-cent heftrease, he will weekend. The Midland-Odessa area, whi Austin contacted Thursday will put this 1701 W. 3Sth St., answered his phone raise, his, adding the government-allocated an additional 869,000 gallons'^ month's increase into effect Friday. breathlessly and panted that he had no approved 2 cents per gallon. gasoline this week. Joe Ventura of the n m Regular gasoline was selling for an time to answerquestions: "I'm runningso IN FEBRUARY Morgan was allotted State Emergency Fuel Allocation Office) t.yA&iU average of 42 cents per gallon before the far behind it's pathetic." 21,000 gallons. He requested a 4,000-gall(m (SEFA) told the Austin Americahr price hike. Premium sold for 46 cents on-1 The operator of Hill's Exxon station at increase for March and has received an Statesman Thursday "There's no way we the average in February. 2803 San Jacinto St., Francis Hill, said his~ unofficial, but favorable, reply, he said. can know where the gasoline will be com­ Bobby Russell, operator of Bobby's Tex-' .March allocation has not arrived. Hill Thursday the station sold 1,500 gallons in ing from." or aCT aMBMRed River S|., had notreceived^ -opmteq 4Q,oqq |< ebrua< three hours — theSEFA contactsthe norra&lBuppUcfs "operatedon 4Q,OQQ gallons in Februaryand the normal amount sold on his March allocation,Thursday afternoon sam^ Jtorcb. JIJs an average day. "The situation is real when an area, suffers, a seyete shortage; will db the sarn^ in JtUbirdb. jH|s April * v?Hl cuirhi&r'.hoihowever_i- and-ihe supplierff set up but expects it will arrive within:2hr«te allocation cUT^bW^f tight; people are really hurting. I think 4 Operators wh& do ^oi i-this month^arewaiting forlhevroTd Public College Funding 1 .. i mil.,.: v..Ov;..' : . • f r ' m . . . " '-'j"!.1 l.:» from wholesalers — and thdt could mean Jin even greater price' increase latere. Compromise By BILL GARLAND them to do so in greater amounts. " assistance fund.Theamendment was tabl­ Texan Staff Writer ; BEFORE ADOPTION of the "com­ed 101-57 despite Washington's cry that it Public colleges returned from exile promise" assistance fund, Houston Rep. would "take from the rich and give to the Thursday and found a home in the propos­Craig Washington attempted to tap the poor. ••••• ... ' ed constitution after three half-day Available Fund for use by all colleges. The Available Fund is shared by the By Lawyers sessions of emotional pleas and flip-flop The fund consists of dividends from the University and Texas A&M at CollegeSta-' votes at the Constitutional Convention. invested $680 million of the Permanent tion. ;.ii-COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) —• Lawyers^r' - Delegates adopted a compromise ver­Fund. — " " Aftec approving the compromise fun-T"Lt. William L. Calley Jr. Thursday ja­ sion of the State Higher Education Washington wanted all Available Fund ding plan, delegates moved on to the final *quested clarification from the Army aslo Assistance Fund 107-55. 1 ? proceeds "in excessof $40 million"to spill section of the Educaion Article dealing just how much freedom Calley has since The section providing aid to colleges over into the assistance fund until it with the Coordinating Board, Texas he still is a military prisoner. outside the University and Texas A&M caught up to the $40 million figure. College and University System. \ Calley, 30, convicted nearly three yeaft University Systems was almost Thereafter, the Available Fund and the -An amendment hy Pads Rep. George ^agoin tiie hly Lai massacre, was freetCoh eliminated on a tie vote Wednesday assistance fund would "increase or Preston to do away with the section miss­personal recognizance in lieu of $1,0&0 because delegates said it lacked a "lid" decrease in parity," thus doing away with ed by two votes,83-81, even though a move bond Wednesday by U.S. Dist. Judge>9. and added to constitutional impurity. the need to spend general revenue for any to table the amendment failed *1-72. ti -Robert Elliott. ^' The assistance fund originally proposed higher education. THE CONVENTION will continue IT WAS CALLEY'S hew day in court^a by the Education Committee was to be an ^ When h|s original amendment was tabl­sideration of a proposal by Corpus Christ! civilian court this tittle instead'of annual appropriation from general ed 98-66, hecame back withone to"satisfy Rep. DeWitt Hate Friday to give.the Coor­military, and it gave hint new hopefor|6e revenues equal to the yearly value of the. the University of Texas' need for more dinate Board authority to screen ideas future. tZ- Available University Fund; Km id tetter **" a for starting new institutions. ' -y But with the freedom are : sCHl THE COMPROMISE puts a ceiling on IT WOULD "Uave ^fepf t^e* Avhilable Following the Thursday sessic^, con­restraints, someimposed by the Army and the assistance fund so that the appropria­Fund a little ahead of the value of the vention president Price Daniel Jr. saidii some self-imposed. < tion will always be equal only to the value We're off schedule, obviously, but not to "As an adjudicated military prison, of the Available Fund at the time of the the point that time can't be made up later he isstill subjectto Army regulations,"'an proposed constitution's adoption. «i." V . . Army spokesman who declined t^ be id«9-. Warnings that the Available Fund would Delegates have worked on the Educ^iftified, saidr . * "-"t rapidly escalate far beyond its current tion Article for nearly two week's meeting' "The Arriiy stilthas some res'pbt&ibiH^ value-of around $31million sharply divided in afternoon sessions and leaving mor-. to him and he still has some responsibiD$jr delegates on whether to approve nings open for committee, hearings. ' ?^to the Army. The crunch is — what original plan. The full session will begin at 9 a.m. Fri* iithey?" the spokesman added. -r ­ Many members, led by Alvin Rep. Neil iy, _ ^ "WE HAVE requested clarificatiM Caldwell banded together Wednesday to , Xj s „ -^rom Ae Pentagon as;to CaUey's status^ keep the current ad valorem property tax t J'^Cenneth M. Henson, the local civilian at- for funding the schools but were defeated '4\J^0afhey who pleaded for his bail, said.. ArtistDefaces 86-72. ! re.said, "I!m not telling." . The total bond amount could never sur^ damaged CaUey's chief military counsel^ -Jr pass SO percent of-the Permanent Gtotdoti; SaidCSff^hadmad^aT Univeristy Fund's value. Thus, the total Tony Shafrazi, 30, authorities said. ?4.l-job choice from thousands of offers soil bonded indebtedness < could not surpass .Asked why he dklit, Shafrazisaid, "I'mtif-wiH annbunce it "in due course." _ Jtt&p million the first year if th£ value of , an artist, and I want to tell the truth." ; I Without a ruling from the Andy ok filet ^the permanent Fund remained around $700 He declined-to say anything more about status, some question remains tudieti^r million. :himself CaUey can accept a civilian job. >r : Public college presidents supported the,v^ Museum visitors .who: witness th^ CALLEY AND his lawyers have agr^bd! ^assistance fund since the ad valorem desecration of tiie painting, which is he wiU abide by the restraining order that property tax brings in about 9 million less ;J massive, said an unidentified man tried to , he not discuss his case with Anyone bi^ than the current value of the Available stop the vandal but was shaken off. , I icounsel. He has refused to meet with tfe Fund.'1 ' ".I'm an artist," the vandal was quoted news media. .. -r ^ Also, the convention Finance Com­is saying to the man who interceded. "His sentence is under review by At&f ­mittee has proposed outlawing tuition: "Leave me alone,V . ^Secretary Howard Callaway," Henspv backed revenue bonds which support ;:': At that point, a guard grappled with the said. "Our judgment is that we do agt many construction programs around the% O^sndal, who shouted, "CaU the curator."-^want to doanything untitCBllawaylralWL^ state. \ " ~ ' "| The painting memorialisesan undefended Calley apparently isfree tocome andgo —Yuan SMf Hmi ky Devti . • The assistance fund would retain th^7 r ed Basque town that was destroyed in an as he pleases, even to leave town, acco?­schools' ability to issue bonds and allow^ Frlce Donitl <|rf pendii^-air raid ta April, 19$7; ding toHenmu^ , ••• -*^>5 M y'J^ m--m f JL Mkilm -mmm inks Public Hearings Kress Refutes Modesty, UT Studeiht Wf -•,»> Kress said there are 81 minority )A FANNIN ;>M the creeks." dinance, Southern Union must undercharge customers IS -Attorney Butter can meet By JGYLU# Texan Staff Writer and ^•members on the various Student Goyern­ "We feel this is an attempt compute gas price increases cents per 1,000. cubic feet, with three opponents of the >S& After . lengthy public to appease popular demand,!L„ passed ^on from Lo-Vaca resulting in a $2&0,000 deficit, -rate increase to work out ^„.... LARRY SMITH LgS#.-" v„.ment commitees. "Committee. hearings Thursday, CityCoon-Guthrie said, calling on the Gathering Co. at theend of the #51 Accusations by student James Meadows •' membership has by and large become cil postponed decisions on council to revise the or­ that the appointment of minorities by "44'jopen," Kresssaid. "Any minorityor other month. both the proposed creeks or-, dinance before accepting it. r * r" receive one,|*nny: represen­Student Government has been inadequate Student can join any time he or she iisi A request by Southern adjustment in price, Franks i­ dinance and changes in the "ANY ORDINANCE the ting the Austin Apartment were refuted Thursday by StudentGovern-city gas rate ordinance re­council passes is a step in the Union for the removal of this Denius,. an attorney for Association, Jim Boyle, presi­. .ment President Sandyt Kress, as i student government has beep 14--'*•" i Union feature allowing the company Southern Union told the coun­ I quested by Southern direction we're trying to go,'- dent of the Texas Consumers • "completely false." ' -, ,-„y gtruniental, Kress said, in helping to es­Ar.nk». ,r • Gas Co. \ 'i,; " • T' |v Mayor Roy Butler said in to charge customers es­cil. "It will all flow through to Association and Ffarik Ivy, 1,'• At a Wednesday minority rally Meadows tablish a University wide Minority Affairs • | M The answer to criticism. "It will timated price increases at the Coastal States Gas Producing -the l|niversity students' at­.1 labeled Kress a "paternalistic white per-Committee. The minority committee is I creeks! ordinance, h~— which i^ceived support from be an ongoing process to beginning of the month* was Co. and Lo-Vaca, , torney, who spoke out against >' son who ... says he's your friend ... but composed entirely, with the exception of i }F purify the ordinance and denied by City Council Jan.17. '."All we're asking is a the ordinanceduring the hear­5*when it comes down to the nitty gritty ... two faculty members, of minority a number of Austin S&r­ organizations during the hear­make, it fit the goals of the THE method of reducing the ing, -were included in the won't appoint minority students, to com­.-Students, faculty and staff. ifef NEW ORDINANCEIfS-ing, would require the community." presented by Southern Union burden of carrying $600,000 in negotiations by.a 5-2 vote with mittees." * »---Kress said part of the problem, with asm IS The decision on the gas rate half," Denius said.: ( ' Mayor Pro-Tern Dan Loveand ' Meadows also claimiExl that only one of -.V-K" SI 5(w«' Thursday, if approved, would m issuance of a permit for any .recruiting minority students for Student Wfc ordinance change also was Councilman Bud Dryden dis­Kress' 107 appointments had a Spanish substantial construction or authorize the, surcharge ALTHOUGH THE council Government has been the lack of blacks, delayed-so an alternative to senting. • surname. cutting of trees in creek Currently on gas bills, as well did not approve the proposed j,TXJT, or< the universit "dinance canlie formulated. ;other-business, City "Student Government has led the figHt all on increases in taxes and the. f^Councilmen postponed a The hearing was requested method to allow the gas com­Council awarded $1.8 million year to bring more minority students to "We have made strong efforts to make ftjJttV.-r. cost of unaccounted-for gas. pany to recoup its losses is decision one week so changes o by Southern Union officials in certificates of obligation to campus. We've appropriated money, meaningful participation a real possibility necessary. in the wording of the or-, after City Attorney Don In addition, the ordinance Austin National Bank, the low worked with Project Mo.,, helped form to minority students and indeed all dinance can be made. Butler warned the gas com­would allow the gas company The final decision on bidder. The bonds will be used new minority groups, and often fought the students," Kresssaid, referringtoStudent "WE NEED to have it in pany that a 5-cent-per-l,000 to recover losses suffered in Southern Union's predicament to finance the purchase of battle alone in the University Council and Government committees. "We have gone print sowe can seeif we miss­cubic feet surcharge added December, when estimates by was postponed until next buildings and land in down­in bringing HEW (Department of Health, beyond waiting for students to apply, we ed anything,". Councilman onto gas bills Feb, 5 is illegal Lo-Vaca led Southern Union to Thursday, so Denius and City' town Austin. Education and Welfare) to campus. have made a real affirmative»effort." Jeff Friedman said, after under the current ordinance. moving to table theordinance. THE OFFICIALS, however, The strongest criticism of claimed the surcharge was the proposal eamefrom Lloyd necessary to recover ap­Guthrie, spokesman for Save proximately $528,000 in Elaborating on his "no Effectiveness Training" and listening, the "language of He added that in most the child's personality; and bringing about a "win-lose" Austin's Valuable Environ­revenue uncollected because lose" technique of resolving president of the Califofnia-acknowledgement;'' Two-way cases, the parental attitude guilt-producing messages. confrontation, he indicated. ment (SAVE), who said the of a 30-day time-lag clause in parent-cluld conflicts, clinical based Effectiveness Training communication without was "Fix the child — he's the " 'You'll be the death of me And 99 percent of the parents ordinance offers "no real the gas ordinance. psychologist Dr. Thomas Gor­Associates (ETA),.Gordon power disputes is the aim of whole problem." ' yet' — how about that for he works with are accustomed assurance of protection for Under the current or-don Thursday-night emphasizr concluded a three-day visit to the techniques, he said. An important question producing guilt?" he to using win-lose methods, he ed the need for parents to tell, Austin with a speech in the Gordon said his program parents often raise, Gordon suggested. added. without threats, put-downs or Union Main Ballroom. :'•£ evolved from a self-conducted said, is that of getting "I" messages, as a "No relationship can be a guilt-producing messages, Citing skills taught in the study of his own methods of children to listen to them. preferred alternative, Gordon healthy one when one party -OP how a child's behavior is mak­eight-session program he counseling emotionally dis­In the early sessions, "I said, are a matter of "simply loses," he said. ing them feel. developed in 1962, Gordon in­turbed and damaged children, didn't know how to do that," telling the child how his /A mutual search for a solu­ Author of the book "Parent cluded silence and empathetic using tape recordings and he admitted. ' 'As a behavior is making you feel." tion acceptable to both parent identifying his most frequent­professional counselor, sitting In a moment when an "I" and child, he said, is.the fun­ *SALE* ly employed questions and in my office with a client 50 message doesn't work, a damental philosophy of the Shoe Shop responses. minutes a week, I didn't have "conflict of needs" arises, program."My job was like that of a to live with the child. My We make and SHEEPSKIN ACTION LINE mechanic, making repairs," relationship was quite if Citizen's Group Attacks repair boots he said. "I become quite dis­different from the one with enchanted with my effec­their parents; their behavior •hoes belts Many '5 .00 $750 tiveness I had to return the in my office was exemplary." . 478-4436 RUGS Electricity Rate System Beautiful Colors xbhild tq the very environment He found three major leather •LEATHER SALE* §|which produced the damage." classifications of parents' A citizen's group trying to calling for the establishment; jA Direct Line For goods Various kinds, colors -75*. por ft. message to children about un­change the city's electrical of either a uniform electrical" Voicing Ideas, Suggestions acceptable behavior, each of rate structure explained its rate or a progressive rate un­them a "You" message: "If ordinance proposals at its der which those using the& Complaints Capitol Saddlery CLASSIFIEDS you don't... I'llathreat of first meeting Thursday night. least electricity would pay the 3 -5 p.m. Weekdays 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 WORK exercising power; evaluations-Citizens for Fair Electrical lowest rate. that say something bad about. Rates is circulating a petition Hunter Ellinger, a spokesman for the group, said under present rates, a small residence using about 280 kilowatt hours per month pays 3.3 cents per kilowatt hour. . . __ But'a large commercal user, FREE PLANT IS JUDAISM VIABLE? Rabbi Shimon Lazaroff (one per customer, please) consuming more than 8,000 A Lubavitcher Hasid kilowatt hours, pay only .7 of a ° speaking on cent. The group's proposed or­dinance would allow the. City Council to establish a base 1511GUADALUPE rate charged "to all users ex-*"* Monday, March 4 cept public schools. The coun­Ph. HUHHV TropicM Plants 7 p.m. cil could adopt a progressive rate, charging more to large customers and less to small •* ON SALE® » « ffl«> 2301 Hancock (Down fronvthe Americana Theater) 2105 San Antonio businesses and residences. The organization plans to LEO KOTTKE vJftTeK 2. ® 260's Super 40's W VoIM $1.93 Value CADIAU "ANTIQUES" —-ODDS * IHDS A | 'C SELECTED PIECES TO CLEAR M.29 20% TO 50% OFF SS. A? Right Guard t-^iv'Av.y After 21 years, wt or* expanding and r«mod«ling and, iiKidentally, Powder R6 ccl«aningbous«l Th«r« art soma things thatmust pl«c« of iew«try,1oMi(is and ofids of gbsswar* and giftwara, groups of 16 oz. 5 ez. linoiis, docks, clogs, furnituro acconts, won somo Dansk sorving twinpok piecas. Thero's more, com* sool Entire stock not included. Parking? Alt Typis ^99® Value No hossio. Park in our lot on S«i Afrtwito behind the Cadeau. THE CHRISTIAN MYSTERIES. REPLETrirMYTR W •'m 0IVE US THE KEYS TO THE ANCIENT WISDOM INHERENT IN ALL Ate 55 T.29 "If THE GREAT BELrGIONS --i M,rch 9 * Swwtey. Miroh 10 'j? t ^ riL. RegistrtKton 9:00 •.m. Saturday, March 9 , Donation Owheer pwttae For pra-roglttretlon and information, call V, , t6OO D*r oaraon Co-Op Supply Dept. (•afrpmfeMtef |2«r 1Wlr«. Molly Flcfcan. 472-8221 or 837-1210^^^ P#f StrMt Boor 3316 Ow«dalwp« •9:00-5:30 • Kork in wf b) on San Antonto dlr*ctty b«hind th« Cod«au SOUTHWEST T0W|R.-7th & BRAZOS-FIFTH FLOOR Election day frustrations and hassle; have passed with the sunset. merged into history. Our horse had come Someone danced and the crowdJoined ( home a winner> and it was Party Time. "the dance died. " The happy victor hollered at us, "The In jammed corners, conversation began ;party's at the lake, but get there in time but was lost to the booming ceaseless see the sunset... the view is fantastic.'fp? vokie of the crowd.1 ^ 1 /7 iBut we missed the sunset. w ~ The milling herd shed stragglers who By the time we coaxed our borrowed ' * clumped in chairs and couches, watchingMlml *2 ®y KBNIC@ •-•••;••. . Socialist Alliance, Ruth Ann Mustang up the reconstituted goat trail; in mute silence. ; r r ^4: Student Government Shope said her platform was the sun had fled westward to Johnson City , In the crowd's bumping, shouting and tfli presidential and vice-abased on the YSA belief that andwe located the party site by following churning there seemed a desperate need presidential candidates ex^|f'oppressed groups must a trail of acrid smoke and rock music. to connect. But the. frantic pace alwaysplained platforms and organize and help themselves Out and beyond the house, the water still drove It past contact. answered questions before a rather than waiting for some shone with the gentle afterglow of the Yet occasionally, for brief moments it j : Student audience on the Texas other organization tohelp us." sun's passing, catching and holding some did connect. Union patio Thursday after*J' TO DEAL more effectively of the partygoers at the patio railing. . A small child held out his hands to the •-* \ J100"-'With the problem of minority But most of the celebrants had retreated dancers, they swept him up and the three V~l Eshel Bar-Adon, the first of recruitment, Norma Solis ad-inside where the makeshift bar furnished danced. For an instant, shouts softened to eight presidential-candidates'""vocated theappointment of a yet another kind of glow. _ ; ^vquiet smiles. _• < -»• r\n* to speak, advocated the con-black and a. chicane dean add The Big Hustle was under way, and the r/ A Dylan record cut through the sound, solidation of students' the hiring of four professional race to catch fun was on. -g-and the crowd paused^ listening. fcpagggttertm?' The music, unhard but felt, drove the Hot bowls of popcorn broke the crowds "Studies have "Shown that Ms. Solis also proposed that students spend more than $13 the Student 'Health Center v-lv Trapped in the corner, the guest--of ,, their mutual chomping.million in the Austin com­begin ^performing abortions 1 honor accepted shouted congratulations, ffliAt midnight the Mustang eased back munity, but students current­and-establish a irape treaty nodding his head toward figures muted iiown the goat trail, leaving a darkened ly receive nothing in the way ment center and ^indistinct in the unlighted room. . house which still pulsed with toft of services and privileges,'4 "One of the knottiest v His face smiled, but victory's pleasure a sunset already gone.CmS^wlJiBar-Adon said. problems that Student Government has to deal with Related story page 12 is how toget studentsinvolved Ray Bruyere called for Stu-in Student Government,'--^dent Government to return to Richard Frank White said. campus-oriented problems. To do this effectively, White A » C ''V 1 * * There isa ne^d for a published Said, "we have to address f teacher-course evaluation ourselves to problems that .'M'J'-'X f V >• ,-IfrjS'.vflrJrf! Backpacking for survey and "a good internship affect students everyday,\v :«V, program for all students at such as better lighting atshut-' this-University*' because of tie bus stops and "minority , *5.00 :l®8 the need of practical ex­recruitment." ' perience in various fields, LYNN CAULEY, the first (It's a shoulder bag, Bruyere said. vice-presidential candidate to A great looking canvas ONE OF THE MAJOR speak at the forum, voiced problems currently facing concern about "the poor per­tote that is a back-pack •M 1 Student Government is the in­formance of the Student... and with a quick snap of ? -^, ' effectiveness of the Student Senate." M the straps converts to a Senate, Frank Fleming said. To get students better ac­ shoulder bag. Water "During the last year the quainted with the workings of rnmwk proof lining...available Senate has been too involved Student Government, Cauley. With too manynationalissues, said, "Student Senate in assorted colors •H rather than issues that affect meetings should be held in $5.00 _ ^ a student's everyday life," he various living units suchas co- said. ops and dormitories." •; -Jean Marie -Kelly was not-Joan Lyda said the regents ­present at the forum. should "stop Manhattanizing it* P Problems with the Student this campus." Park It! Senate also were brought up Ms. Lyda also called for by Mark Miller, who said the more financial aid and the hir­With the arrival of warm weather, bicycles are becoming more and more practical, body should become project ing of more gynecologists for and the arches in Calhoun Hall provide ideal parking stalls for student bikers. oriented. the Student Health Center." TO PLACE A TEXAN With regard to minority Bill Parrish said he is bas­ ST. HILARION recruitment, Miller called for ing his campaign on his ex­ CLASSIFIED AD "the University to take grants perience as chairman of Save CENTER into. minority schools on the University* Neighborhoods as CALL 471 5244 -r • BOOKSELLERS IN same level as Harvard." a member of Student Govern­ MYSTICISM f t v; THE FIRST priority of ment City Council Lobby and RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHY \e *•*7 • presidential candidate Lee as an orientation adviser. ASTROLOGY, YOGA Rohn "is to put a student on Bill Ware also said his past This Coming Monday Is ESOTERIC SWDIES ~ the Board of Regents because experience would help in per­OPEN lO-6 Dally we need to be informed and forming duties of Student 1008 W*»t Avenua,able to give our point of Government vice-president. tfr% SOLIDARITY DAY Austin, Ty, vje "Some people may say that M' Srii, , also said that I'm not the most diplomatic 477-o;M*iltf X ^st y-$ r WITH ISRAELI P.O.W.'s ON-THE-DRAG, 2406 GUADALUPE •r-r students need to have input guy, but while working as an into theStudent Health Center etiquette enforcer at the Ar­ because she expressed reser­madillo World Headquarters, -JN SYRIA vations about some of its I have learned one thing and West Mall Rally! 12:00 p.m. policies. that is how to handle drunks,''v A member of the YQung Ware said. ... LAGUNA GLORIA OPENS The coolest thing for spring: Patent-ky '/cSs'i'H '-V""1 -r'' ^ leather strapped on m cork soles, single- in March 4 or tri-band style. Triband: 2 five-week pottery sessions offered. Yellow Morning, afternoon 8t night classes Red available. Traditional & experimental Blue methods taught. %r 19.00 . Instructor: Stan Irvin To register, call the Museum at 452-9447 COMES DOWN ON INFLATION * v z* > > Things must change with the dawn of new management, and we are no exception. In a uA. desperate search for more room, we found many cubic feet of repaired sets, unclaimed fpr more than three months. That means we can legally sell 'em. We will. A week-long sale, beginning Monday,Feb. 25, will hopefully give us a little breathing space. A few TV's, a few more home radios, and more car radios and tapes than the Sony warehouse! $ * v* ^ y Well, not quite, but we've got * bunch of ,them. Typicel bargains include: (1) S-TRACK CAR TAP!, 30 DAY GUARANTEE, $20 r (3) UNREAL l-TRACK, MOT WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN ANYTHING, $3 One-band: • Tj\1* TYPICAL BARGAINS Yellow ffl M.jl.4U CM TAPE. AHCItNT. NO WARR.^WORKS, $10 (4) SONY DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO, CLOCK OUT, |C Som* units wilt iheludt our standard \ wy1 How about AM/FM Sterao Radio £ ?' A > J , * -^1) Ketr 30 day s»rvic» warranty, and soma B-Track Sterao Cartridge tap* with a atarao caasatta tap* dack? wont Wa'llplay avaryonm bafora you player 12 watts, ton* control, In­Racord cassatta* from tha Radio tako ft though. »6 you'll know it dividual ohannel laval controls, while yoif listen, or use tha inchidad workad whan you loft ' ohannal indicator liahti.v , l V? microphona for dictation while you Wo also cjffmr standardpmckaga daats. drive. Has an instant pushbutton atop ;u: .V7«S,At^ mM 00. on auto sound systams complotaty in-if" * to eliminate commercials and pauses. Mtallad and gumrantaadS'Two ox-complat»ly install»d with «p*ak*r«. Convert* your two-channel stereo to . I amplas ftha chaapast and t^LmostM^ A*k for a Sanyo FT-818. 4 channel... sound automatically. 28 axpaoslva). mo tistod watra. volume, balance, tone. " VJAOW puts the Sanyo FT-433Min your car. EEDWAY RADIO &% 307 WEST 19th STftEET PHONE 478-6609 On-the-Drag % * S ^Frldey, March 1 »<• * m . sssrarf—r^ ^ >frx M mp~. UMi Wffl •;:• -IRMsM aeertain delegatesof the Constitutional Convention have lately made much of the ''funny money" a?0ects of th«p proposed State Higher Education Fund^itecent event$| show the claims might be more accurate closer to home|| starting with the University of Tex^s at Austin. J§ -ROBERT HURD of The Associated Press has revealed v that 14 key University administrators donated $50 apiece ' on the same day for Gov. DoJ^n Briscoe's 1972 campaign deficit. It turns out that noneof those whocould be reach­ed for comment could remember who suggested the $50 , figure. The revelations-raise serious questions of Univer-. sity System ethic^-questions that are compounded by the refusal of thd involved parties to comment. System lobbyist Dan Petty admitted to Hurd that hi solicited tjre contributions — but said he could not whether the money was in cash or check. "Won't remember," Petty said, "I've got my mind on s (constitutional) convention, and I really don't member." Other System, functionaries have equally poor memories. "I'm sorry, I don't remember that far back," said Dr. Ronald M. Brown,'University Vice-president. "No, I can't remember off the top of my head," said Deputy Chancellor William Lobb. "I have no recollection," said Dr. Robert Mettlen, assistant to the president. At the time of this writing Thursday The Texan had asked Dr. James Colvin and Dr. Stanley Rossi Both refus­ed to comment. , ? i '" ' ' :->Y--C-; The System-Briscoe Affair is a curious one. On Nov. 4. ; 1973, UT Vice-President Colvin and System Law Office : Director Richard Gibson donated $50 to pay ol$ debts of Briscoe's 1972 campaign. On Nov. 5, 14 other ad­ -ministrators made contributions; including, among others, Chancellor LeMaistre, President Spurr, Vice-Presidents Gardner Lindzey, Lorene Rogers and Stanley Ross, and Deputy Chancellor for Administration E.D. Walker. MEMBERS of the Board of Regents had alsoexpressed an interest in the Briscoe campaign. Regents John Peace, Dan Williams, Joe Kilgore, John Bauerle, Ed Clark, Lady Bird Johnson and Jenkins Garrett con­tributed amounts ranging from $50 to $2,000. first is simply one of propriety. Why in God's name are , the bulk of UT's administrators giving money to the governor? The conjectural answer — it can only be so because the administration will not talk to us — is that the money constitutes a political "favor" much as with the unseemly dairy contributions to President Nixon.y This in any case is difficult to prove. The acts, though, stand as mute testimony to the political nature of the University empire. IN ADDITION, there are legal questions to be iHUiiiiiiiiiiHinnmiimiiiiiiimirtiiiiim San Jac What was the basis for the University's decision to tear down the San Jacinto mgj's dorm? The Texan was told by Vice-President for Student Affairs Ron Brown on Feb. 13 that a memorandum to him from the Hous­ing and Food Service listedcost estimatesfor necessary improvements to the dorm. Brown initially said that a copy of the memorandum would be available to The Texan but said on Feb: 14 that the memo was internal, therefore not public information, and a summary would be provided. THAT SUMMARY did not provide specific information, so we re­quested the memo under the terms of the Texas Open Records Act. Until Thursday., we have received no answer from the University. Vice-President for Business Affairs James H. Colvin told The Texan Thursday that no such memo existed. Colvin did not know what memo Brown could have been talking about. Brown could not be reached for comment. "As far as I know there has never been such a Inemo that details specific cost estimates for San Jacinto improvements," said Colvin. "There has been a memo from the Safety Office listing improvements needed to bring the dorm up to federal safety standards, but no cost es­ timates have been made," he said. THURSDAY, THE TEXAN made an Open Records Act request for the improvements suggested by the Safety Office and all materials used to make any estimates of expenditures for improvements to theSan Jacinto dorm. --........ •>.. Colvin said he would seek legal advice on the request but would -probably refuse to release the documents. "I think I'd spend half my time furnishing inter-office memos — to you and every other one of the 40,000 students we have," he said, "but if the attorney general rules that I have to, then I will." — K.M. The University Co-Op management refused Wednesday to release to The Texan a copy of the contract between the Co-Op and the workers un­ ion. Chief operating officer Sterling Swift told TheTexan the contract was a legal document. He said to ask the workers union for a copy, but he did not think they would comply. THE TEXAN CONTACTED Rosemary Coffman of the workers union, who agreed to deliver a copy of the contract to The Texan offices Thurs­ day morning. Which she did. The union did not feel that any harm could result from the release of the legal document refused by the Co-Op's management. In an apparent change of policy, however, the Co-Op released another legal document solicited by The Texan on Thursday — the corporate charter of the University Co-operative Society. — K.M. Thursday's Firing Line featured a letter attributed to a 'Dr. Robert Bruce Banner' of CMA 7.154A. As followers of The Incredible Hulk know, Dr. Banner is not a member of the faculty of the School of Communica­tion, but rather the alter ago of the Hulk, editorial assistant Charles Watkins' favorite comiccharacter. The name was substituted, along with Watkins' office dumber at the true author's request. Watkins apologizes for his prankish deviation from Texan policy. . -C.W. Cloak and stagger By Zodiac News Service .> Victor Marchetti — the former Central Intelligence Agency official who lias written a bodkonthe CIA — says it is "very possible" that the CIA would have participated in 9 cover-up of a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy. — -•———— —-— •=——— Marchetti, who worked for the CIA for 14 years, stressed he does not believe that high CIA officials were ever involved in a secret plot to murder the late President. However, adds Marchetti, it is conceivable that lower-ranking CIA operatives, "equivalent in CIA status to, say, E. Howard Hunt," might have been involved in a conspiracy to. shoot Presi­ dent Kennedy. *. ; ,;.nr.. Said Marchetti: '"'If a contingent of that sort within the CIA was in­volved in the assassination, and if the agency later learned about such a plot — after it had been carried out — I believe that the Clywould try tp cover up the entire affair." \s~* • Marchetti, a former special deputy to CIA assistant;director, Gen. Rufus Taylor, is involved in a constitutional struggle to publish a book he has written about his years at theagency. The CIA has reviewed Marchet­ti?s manuscript and has obtained a court orderto censor out Z25 portions »l|Of the material on the grounds that Marchetti is revealing secret agency information. « .j,' Marchetti disclosed last $eek that two of Jim Garrison's assassination suspects, Clay Shaw and David Feirie, bad both worked for the CIA in the /1960Sv;.^r ^-—--^ ^ :fag*4 Friday* Marth 1, W4 THE DAILY TEXAN . v firing line all To the editor: Can anybody do something about Lee Hall? Letters of protest have been written to the administration for the last seven years I have been here. We have put up with fleas, roaches and of course the wonderful smell that goes along-with the little furry creatures they keep down in the basement. This time the smell is so delightful on thesecond floor, itis hard for one to be able to face a sandwich. It is 52 weeks a year of "morning sickness." As members of the third world in the University community, it is obvious that our appeals will not have first priority. But as a secretary, I feel I have the right to come to work without having to powder myself with DDT or wear a flea collar or • . more To the editor: I offer for your perusal the following dialogue between much-maligfted and now plagiarised (See Daily Texan, Feb. 27) pop poet rudd dudd and that illustrious editor of that great metropolitan daily, The Tex­an. radd: Just what do you mean stealing my name to write some inane editorial on streakin', Eakin? He who steals my purse, steals trash. He who steals my name is trash. M.E.: What's the point oi that, dudd?That youcarryapurse? dudd: That's you, all right, always looking -at the big picture. Well, I may have had to comp frack frnm (hp gravfr to rin but now I'm going to cut out your black bleeding heart. M.E.: I'm sick of all this auto-neurotic masochismo you're pushing in the name of art. I just can't seem to take absurdity seriously anymore rodd: (Sneering) When's the last timeyou -.1 -- — read one of yoar own editorials? They've really brought canned laughter back into the house. M.E. (Sobbing openly) Why couldn't you stay dead? Why are you always coming back to persecute me? dudd: Oh yes, that would have been so easy... sittingaround playing my harp, filing my annual statement of spiritual --worthr thinking up-new deadly sinsfor you to commit: "pride, Vanity, redun: dancjNsi;/' ">• M.E.: Well, in the immortal words of — Faustj, I'll be damned, rnti -finalljr beginning to understand'just what you're.. rodd: (Voice, fadingrapidly) Some men V* ' ' ' A W Wp§§ •wi WSmB iipjyi \ lis' h'* «t| i '•'vZiXk' ffiiss £5fcfr' '• THEHKBJTS ARE CELEBRATING ANOTHER WCTO WHY? THE%G HAVEN'T ERECTED ANY TM usnrss. MULTI ! NO, THEY'RE STILL GLOFFTINC (MR WE TWO THEY BUILT UBT wrac MILIM DOUM warns THIS WEEK Tell the Legislature we need a bigger cage for Frank. or to passage or defeat of any legislative measure." We answered. Under what circumstances did System lob­ have been unable to ascertain if this is the case because byist Petty recruit the money? Was it on University the information has not been made available. time? If so Petty would appear to violate an articleof the The Texan will continue its pursuit of the truth behind Appropriations Act of the 63rd Legislature which Petty's solicitation. In the meantime remarks about prohibits expenditure "for the influence of any election, tion. Elisabeth Herrington; * " " Senior Secretary Department of French and Italian Please press To the editor: Lacking the personal insight of those wiser and more knowing than I, it is dif­ficult to construct a letter which would adequately do justice to the position of all people connected with the College of Fine Arts. Others before me in recent days have professed through this newsprint their righteous and omnipotent concern for the plight of the college, and most in morning!' r see things as they are and ask "Why?1' I dream dreams that never were and ' ask "Why bother?" M.E;: Mistah dud, him dead. The resurrection of Brother Heumann will be held^Saturday, March 2, at 11:30 p.m. on radio station XEG (1050 on your AM dial) out of Monterrey, Mexico, and weekly thereafter. We invite all of you to listen in and send us all your money. If you don't, you will absolutely without doubt burn in everlasting torment. Corporal Sano —— — The Parthanogenetie Liberation Army on behalf of Brother Henmaiui mote: lor reasons outof our con­trol we were unable to continue the Texan series on environmental impact or­dinances today. We can recommend The Brother Heumann Hour for you listening pleasure, however — perhaps the finest takeoff on bigtime evangelizing^ou'll ever hear. Tune in Saturday at 11;00 a To the editor: I would like to tell the people of Austin what a fine town they live in. I have been in 15or more states, and from what1have seen, none of them have drivers to com­ pare with the ones in Austin. Their safe driving habits were probably developed ,from the well-planned streets and u ; freeways. . •' /' --. -I must also commend one of America's finest banks on Research Btnilevard and an exquisite hamburger joint on Burnet Road for the way they proudly display the Texas flag upside down. l ean hardly wa: M '.'funny money" and "fiscal irresponsibility" should be directed to the use of the Permanent University Fund as the private playpen for Frank Erwin and his powerful friends. — M.E at HJie zoo department who see that the foul wind is have to.invest in costly deodorant sticks.. particular, theirgenuineempathy with the changing, and progress in the evangelistic unvoiced needs of the students working in Therefore, I beg the administration to con- name of student inpuUs becoming a reali­ sider our problem and take immediateac-—toe Art Building, ' *I Jdo not question the integrity of the per­ty. •• ' We members of the Art Council were^ sons who offer their constructed vision that there is a driving need of the student contacted initially, or as soon as w' body of the art department to have voice and take part in the decisions that affect our college and department. I simply feel that perhaps their holy light is slightly out of focus. Having existed the past four years in that emporium of higher training for pushing paint, and having accepted the positionof art councilperson, persona-non­grata in the fall term, I feel that at the very least I can perhaps express the opinions of those at the heart of the art FECRl\M xNow you know what the peasants think of your daylight saving at this hour of . to leave and let everyone know how great Ralph White Austin is. D.R. Dobson Acting Chairmaii Mtmipmptr mi Tk* UmtonnHft f»««* #» . .EDITOR ^ ^;;v.;;;Michael Eakin MANAGING EDITOR ,.........John Vemma ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Betsy^^Hallv Mark Sims NEWS EDITOR ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR AMUSEMENTS EDITOR SPORTS-EDITOR FEATUREfS EDITOR.. PHOTO EDITOR City Editor............ Reporters ii............. News Assistants..... Contributors. Editorial Assistants. became a functioning reality,-toact asthe student representatives on an opinions, j basis in the search for a chairman can­didate. Since this initial contact we have been left somewhat in the dark as to how the chairman search committee is progressing (i.e., vague promises that "you'll know in 14 days," etc.) But non­etheless the initial move towards student input was made. We on the council now wonder, however, when this student-' faculty-administrative link will be re£ established. K The student representatives on the Art Council have been searched out by our vice-chairman of studio art to take part in prospective new faculty screenings, which; we have andstill aretakinggreat pleasure in. In addition the art councilpersons have been contacted to act as student represen­tatives in many other minor roles too numerous to mention which previously had never enjoyed student voice. It's a delicate situation in our department. We're working toset the precedentsof stu­dent input in our college. We're working harder than most schools on this campus. At times we're (art councilpersons) being manhandled and left out in the dark in our attempts to get things changed, but they are changing. So please press, Student Government fans„< faculty, ad­ministrators, et. *al, give us a little breathing room. s ' Sam Barzilla, Ken Crockett, Gil Scullion, Cole Welter — College of Fine Arts* Fine Arts Student Councilpiersbni New info To the editor: The published correspondence from Dr. Frank Kulasiewicz (Firing Line2/25) does not accurately support the concerns ex­pressed. Dr. Kulasiewicz must be aware-that the faculty of the Department of Art is on record in meeting, 5 April 1973, that "as a body, the art faculty voteconfidence in the art department Chairm&n Search Committee as constituted." This motion carried 36 yes, 2 no, 1 abstention. Assistant Amusements Editor............ ...v... Laura McDonough- Assistant Sports Editor .E^chard Justtee< Make-up Editor...... ...Sylvia Moreno' Wire Editor......r..^..... .... ......... T777 .iClaude Sinis Copy Editors..,,., Rotat Fulkerson, Pam Myers, Army Armstrong,; r......... Susan Winterringer Ken McHam David Dailey -...T:.:.:....Danny Robbihs Kristina Paledes Jay Miller ; ISSUE STAFF BJ Hefner' Linda Fannin, Richard Fly David Hendricks, Pam Clark, Dick Jefferson Nancy Mills, Rodolfo Resendez Jr. Steve Russell, Joy Howell N; _ ' Photographiers OpinmiiH pxpresMd in Tbe Dally Texan are ttiow of th» iililiinir Iht* writvr of the article and are [Hul neee»»arily \ v IliiMtr'iii the I'nivenntr admiiliMniUon or the Board of • • UiM'y WMwnr«ii4n i«(5i Tlw mllima) ail>frti»lnareDrfiantallv»x>tTheD«ilv teww IS NatimSl KdutatlonarAdverlUUiii Service. Inc . ;|«ru.XjnKie Texan l* a member of the; ^ A*«*.4ai«l.-»^>lk>inuu<-l!re)w.-tbe-8outh«Mt-Jownall*m, < and the Trw» IWh Newspaper A*»OCI»IIOB. Itvwlin# ntat urns(or thenewspaper are at t4thli Seton Shredsr HHKi N Hyrnel Head. I^ke Aintin Boulevtrd li -\ ­ 4 II, lll'l piip quest vleuupolnt ii protectyour neii p LUtlP,-.' ""AL >»-1 more firing line To the editor:. The recent Solzhemtsyn af­fair has occasioned much comment in the press about the repressive practicesof the Soviet Union, where, wei are told, the secret police keep secret files on practically everyone, especially on those, such as Solzhenitsyn, who are critical of the system. No doubt there is truth in muchof this. But such criticism of a foreign country will always , remain suspect so long as a­similar critical standard is not applied at home. . The University of Texas keeps secret files 'on every member of the faculty. They are called "personnel files." UT policy prevents the faculty member from seeing the con­tents of his or her file. In some cases the files are known to contain derogatory allegations of a personal, political and professional nature. The files are discuss­ed, as a rule, only in secret committee meetings at which the1 faculty member is evaluated. Even if the infor­ dot# DOONESBURY 7H&&S NO Neee TO BE ALARMS!), SIR. Th£S£ ARB I county offices and the Univer­ The immediate need for this sity ' organization is in a present problem — the extension of > 2) A sizeable portion of West Ninth St. from West CapitalCity history. Many old +• ^ dossier,the administrator responded with a flip remark which brought laughter from the Faculty Senate members (always appreciative, as they are, of administrative wit­ticisms). But the question was serious, and it remains un­answered; : -1!.,% . • 4v3f It is to be hoped that House. V£5... i£S.. X suppose vou'ee zi6Ht.. 6fve THEM H&&, PAT­LETS SEE WHAT pd. for YOU'VE 60T.. , byJoan lydq HEY, I UB knMjKN8W J TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS BY: UHB THIS YOU UXXJLP, 1 , ONE! MERIT TRAVEL /M THF PROGRAM INCLUDES: CONTACT: • Round Iriji Jeti Airfare San Antonio-Mtxico City • Sivm Nights Accommodationt : • Ttransfors to and tram Hotel SPACI IS LIMITED—PLEASE RESERVE EARLY Answer to Yesterday's Puule Crossword Puzzler rzi.ju 'ziwsiKra BBS HHSEE •nEi ACROSS . 4 Want v 5 Sewer . snrao 1 Stigmatize 6 Postscript ivrg BSrjfflO BQKHBBB 4t 6 Tartan pat­(abbr.) ' HEHQ QQUrSS K20 if tern 7 Note of scale SW3 HffinGR HDG3 ¥ 11 Click beetle 8 Priest's vest­ BH HBBaH aDHH V12 Seasoned ment # if • 14 Behold! 9 Newspaper rasBEQaa aoaat-t : 15 Afternoon paragraph ,.li; QBOS HQBU parties . .. 10 Hold back 17 Greek letter 11 Man's name raarn ugssbb urau 18 A state --13 Mends with ­ •ESQ uisnsa HBH (abbr.) cotton 20 Unit ol Iraqi 16 Projecting ><£ currency 49 Enfold. __ 23 Deface —-r -19 Food pro 36 f?®!? — 24 Mine < arams 37 Landsur-52 Spanish for [°H"^edby "river" entrance 21 Man's name ~A nrnn.c lnttnr 91? MArrvmflkina WfltBf 54 Gr06K lfltt8rJ..v 26 Designated 25 Quaver " 38 PeP"»8'Q" S7 Timetable ab­ -2BPrepositon­ 40 Makes "breviatlon" •-29 Prophets 27 Hinder amends 58 Compass­ .31 Rules 30 Scoff 41 More recent point -33 Containers 32 Having 44 Jumps ,60 Symbol for 35 Bristle branches 47 Falsifier thoron 36 Oeceive 34 Rescue 39 Sweetheart 0 42 Conjunction i 3 715 6 7 V 9 10 * f 43 Smooth 1 P ^ \ 45 Evaluate*^ rr &13 v ? ^46 — ° '"=" 48 Renovate 14 M iT"' fir Tr § «Si 51 Den m 19 w:20 fr sV' 23 T'53 Biblical 1 '/ . weed ,> 571 i6 fr 28" •1 ar • 55 Compass^ V'.j A­ ~ point 55^1 (T 30 31 32 r56 Gastropod tvl -mollusks w 55" St :vi5 idle chatter «Va r^6l Impelled on-36n37 38 57" 41 •*( m ward • -• • .« 1 Bridges 42 43" 44 45 . ; AV neighborhood. park ser­ving the all-city hike and bike trail as wellas theimmediate neighborhood. The new four-lane street' would virtually halve the park, destroy-its quiet, contemplative character and place voluminous traffic atop its most scenic ooint, .".Turtle Pond Bluff/fP ^ 4) A two-aciCtracf mnative Wilderness (part of the total' seven acres of parlnand) which the street would reduce; by one-half. This area present­ly provides habitat for small birds and important wildflowers and has been designated asa prime area for conservation by the Travis Audubon-Society, Street and the accompanying changes to this neighborhood a-nd parkland really necessary? What alternatives; are being explored? Can the expense of such construction be justified at a time when traffic projections are uncer­tain due to changing patterns sflf ejjergy Consumption? j, .^Tltese are questiofis neighbors have been asking. If you would like to know more about this proposed extension,^ and the possible effects oh the neighborhood, come and get together with your neighbors fet our organizational meeting,ll We are-hopeful that^ AddressH| cooperative efforts on the part of iftany will carry to the City ­ Phone Number Couhcii a stronger messages^ than voiced bv. in.« that by -dividual. aften buj Si Thank you. We hope you will^ ,®l %e able to attend this meeting., *. would be interested If you know of other areas oil; concern to the neighborhood' besides the Ninth Street ex-f tension, there will be time to r "express-these views also. please call Carolyn Bucknall at 478-5129 or Gen Farman at 477'9276 » •< * • , ' 6 t Carolyn Bucknall and Geri"\ "Farman are residents of the *4 Old Austin Neighborhood area. ^ i. ^ K ^' t A NCirAt'5 OFPlCE boons to -education? with teaching and learning in Government Education Com* mation is inaccurate, it usual­Bill 6 will entitle faculty ly goes unchallenged, since members fo access to the an open society? mittee has already achieved the faculty member it con­secret dossiers. At a recent William A. Berry implementation of programs cerns is unable to learn of the Faculty Senate meeting, Assistant Professor, in these areas. A "Cowse contents of the file. ; however, this suggestion was . . Department of 4rt; Description Handbook" ,con­ „put down hard. The effec­• " former member of taining;information 0n^, Last year a high administra­tiveness of House Bill 6 in this ~ ~ Army Counterintelligence reading lists* types ofp> tion official reported to the matter remains to be tested. assignments,' grading Homework * Faculty Senate on the secret J -* files. Far from perceiving the Meanwhile the campus To the editor: of-class time assignments, basic problem of secrecy, he police continue ^ ^to , With the campus election suggested prerequisites, etc., took bureaucratic pride in the photograph faculty and season upon us, the lack of Will be available in over 250 computer code used to store students who participate in credibility in campaign plat­locations on campus in time some of, the information. The political demonstrations, and forms becomes increasingly for preregistration. Over 2,500 code, he boasted, is almost the files, continue to,, grow important. The campaign courses will be included in. impossible to break. The larger. literature of Greg Powers,: this project co-sponsored by faculty is thereby candidate for Senate at-large the deanof students office. An One can speculate as to how 3, is a case in point. Edue ation C0mm ittee "protected," he said. Mr. Solzhenitsyn would react Powers advocates a "Super proposal approved this week It is not clear, however, to all of this. No doubt he Info Center" .which would by the Library staff will make what the faculty member is would object. He might even provide information on adds available to students the "protected" from. When ask­ask the question the faculty is and drops, coursedescriptions results oj teacher-course ed why a faculty member is reluctant to ask: namely, and teacher-course : evaluations. This information forbidden to see hisof her own what dosecret files have to do evaluations. The Student 'will be located oh the third the independent, non-coalition c andidate UT STUDENT GOV'T. TOURS PRESENT SPRING BREAK IN MARCH 31 -APRIL 7 $15500 STUDENT GOV'T:"TOURS ~T UN. 319 471-3721 MERIT TRAVEL (SECOND LEVEL) 478-3471 i hi y r ' * r**l\ VVtrf-?*— MIVCRSITY BAPTIST STUOCNT MINISTRY 46 37 iT' 49 SoT •>"*i 1 Light-haired H TT 52 W 3r l'"-'...' 7:00 PM MARCH 3, 1974 mood— H ST !r tii w *• . ar 3Unito1 . ii.A'S Siamese 'Pr 6r aF* currency -:-r— 1 mmm aid •fT" mf 'mmmm MM in signing a petition opposing the exten­ I'l AM I N floor of the Academic Center beginning April 1. The committee also worked last fall with registration supervision in publicizing the new drop policy. J Powers is not the only can­didate guilty of not doing % his/her"homework. Many proposals in oth^r candidates' platforms have already been dealt with or are in process. The credibility gap lies with some of the. candidates, not with Student Government. L I^-JPleaie fill out as ap*^ :propriate and mail to: , Old Austin Neighborhood, 808 .i&tWest Ave., Austin 78701 Cannotattend but would be willing to write councilper­sons or attend a public hearing «)ii this Issue. I iT. Would need a ride In order to attend any meetings or hearings. ' Other people you know who might be interested: J ' sion of Ninth Street*, fame Jm?* IN" would like to be in formed of future: meetings. Phone No. % gifil •rV if- HE SMO i aiOUlP WHAffPER At paWin© attention. F0R6ET IT.'THAT PAW1N6 ATTENTION GOULD KILL YOU,/ Alan Beychok Chairperson, Student Govern* CLASSIFIEDS WORK! ment Education Committee 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000009000 § REVISING THE TEXAS CONSTITUTION GENERATIONS f=il IMHAV AT TOO P.M. RICHARD GOODMAN, MODERATOR EMMETTE S. REOFORO ASHBEL SMITH PROFESSOR OF GOVERNMENT JANICE C. MAY ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF GOVERNMENT RICHARD L. DODGE , ' ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ARCHITECTURE NORMAN K. FARMER,, JR. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH -' EDMUND L. PINCOFFS : PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY SPECIAL GUEST' RALPH W YARBOROUGH j&'cm PHONE IN YOUR QUESTIONS & COMMENTS TO OUR PANEL AT THIS NUMBER' A-7I-A7TI KUTI DOO PUBUC RADIO «THI UNIVIMITV OF T1XA* AT AUBTII^ PRODUCED UNDER A GRANT FROM THE TEXAS COMMITTEE FOR THE HUMANITIES AND THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES. < >OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ JEANbMARIE KELLY r / *K. \ t jiF COLLIGf-HUMANITIES MAJOR -ENGLISH LIT. MINOR , COMMUNICATIONS " HOURS-96 GPA -3.5 r r Each year as election time rolls around, irucampus; elections just as in state politics, there's the recurring t problem of an elite few, armed with money and ^ driven by special interests,r^ho wage convincing |r; professional campaigns, obtain office, and then use^ that office to further their special interests and ^ • roaden their own power base. _ ;^ The past year at the University has seen Student % government fall into the hands of a small clique of|^| law students. These budding young politicos lobby|p more, for their own special interests and political!"# futures than fpf H^cefn the student^ body at m ... This year I urge you to let the.politics of experience||| run counterpoint to the efforts of our campus politicos. Let's take the responsibility for the'pursuit,^ & - of student interests out >f the grasping hands of thesis law school elite and place it with those who are.truly concerned with the humanities. Let's demonstrate ; there can be more to the Student Government than swigging scotch with Erwin & Co^ or furthering a boyfriend's statewide political career. Let's reestablish the shattered lines of communication that once con­ nected the Student Government with thsUaeeds of the student body. iriiam *i«y; Friday/ March 1, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Pane .f-, -.. ina / By. DANNY BOBBINS of course, win the title,and go' referees Texan Staff Writer -av,to # the tournament. whistles, blow and against WACO —The Texas basket-v -• If Texas wins and Tec^whom they blow. ball team will be watching loses, the Longhorns wou!d|k| Black means that SsMU some Saturday afternoon finish in first place by" must get Tech in early foul television this weekend, but^, themselves and represent the trouble and force the Raiders won't beTarzan Theater. conference at the NCAA tour-to play a cautious, less The Texas Tech-SMU game , n&ment. ' • -• — physical game. Chances are iii Lubbock will be on regional "We will be pulling for good SMU can do this. "It television, and the Texas SMU," said Texas guard seems like SMU has been do­players and coaches plan to Harry Larrabee, a senior who ing whatever it takes to win tune in at their motel. wiUbeptoyinghjs last regular lately," said Baylor's young 4^ And when the Longhorns The Texas-Baylor basket-coach, Carrol Dawson. finally take the court against DAWSON'S TEAM has been ball game will be broadcast Baylor at 7:30 p.m. Saturday from KLBJ-AM doing whatever it takes to ^ Com® In today and choose from a wide in the Heart O'Texas Waco over lose. The Bearsare5-8 inSWC*,$ (598) starting : at ?:». p.m. T«wn Staff HmM» by towl Coimpm variety of Magnavox Annual Sale values BUYNOW Coliseum, the outcome of the Saturday. V .' ; play, and Texas should beat^f —television, stereo consoles and stereo Conference race Southwest them, although the Longhorns -^ RoBinson Black AND components—price reduced to save season gameT"B5l" II 6M0 will be up to than. *' aredoing their best not to take any hopes the Bears had of rebounder is6-6 seniorCharlie you money...sobuy now and save on < does win then we #111 have to team in a lot of ways," Black The last weekend of the pfes a magnificent Magnavoxl SAVE win and the pressure willreal-things lightly. winning the SWC title have McKinney, who is averaging our said. "I. think inex­ KidsSiSsE SWc race boils down to this: "I'm not thinking about vanished. "They have good 18.5 points add 14:7 rebounds perience might have been an No matter how muc fe. win, a playoff between them Larry Robinson, who should don't know what happened to long range shooter," said perienced ball club would "pulling" the Texas people do would beheld in SMU's Moody be the conference's Most ajfv- in their motel rooms, SMU is them. They just fell apart Black. "He won't shoot from have' gotten down on P.>" Coliseum in Dallas to deter­going to have trouble playing Valuable Player this year. after we played them." deep in the corner. But he isa themselves. But they didn't fc I* ' AT BOTH mine the SWC representative Tech on the Raiders' home "I'm thinking about our BAYLOR IS on a three-fine shooter when he is fairly get down because they knewIf" to the NCAA preregionals in business. That'sall we need to game losing streak which close." court. they had so much future left. REED MUSIC CO. Denton March 9. do. When we played them began when senior co-captain RECENTLY, however, "I think Tech should have Other teams might have fold­ • If Tech' and Texas both before, they were a pretty Steve Dallas quit the team 10 McKinney has not btefan so LOCATIONS the advantage a home," said ed their tent and-said it was lose, there would be a three- well-rounded team." days ago. fine. 'CharUe is weary," Daw­ Texas Coach Leon Black. "I all over." way tie for the title among Texas defeated Baylor, 93-Dallas, a senior guard from son said. "I have never rested think the game will be close, Instead, Texas niay have Long Beach, Calif., is tak­ -'J>*3 Tech, Texas and SMU. The and the determining factor 79, on Feb. 5, and since then him."He plays 40 minutes of more than just one game left Mustangs would then go to the ing a 20-hour course load and every game because we don't to play., NCAA tournament because trying to get into lawschool at have anybody to replace both Tech and Texas have ' Taxa, the end of the semester. The him."" - Sfarting Lineups HIGH to. Hfi. am Golf Team been to the tournament more CharlieMcKinncy C 4*4 Sr.«-Rich Parion pressures of studies and Despite Baylor's tired performance recently than SMU. Gary McGuire v C 6-10 FrWh tarry Robinson basketball finally got to him, blood, Black thinks the Bears Lm Griffin • If Tech wins and Texas F M Sr. EdJohnson and he told Dawson that he will be out to play the role of vtynCorfey G 6-2 Jr. Harry Larrabee ' could no longer do his best on faffs Back « loses, the Red Raiders tfould, Mike Luce G 4-1 Sr. SWC spoiler. "If they beat us, Dan Krueger the court. it will make their season," he In Tourney "The way he put it to me," said. On the other hand, if Dawson recalled, "was that they get beat it will leave By BRIAN BLAKELEY he thought it was best for the something to be desired for Texan Staff Writerteam that he left." them • because they thought " LAREDO -The 'at­ Dallas was not a great they would win the conference mosphere was too good and championship."' scorer, but he was a good the field too big Thursday for playmaker and leader;-"It--After the Longhorns went 1­ "the opening round of the will really hurt them not to 11 in nonconference play, Border Olympics golf tournar have him in there," said nobody was picking Texas to ment. Although Texas finish­ Larrabee. "He was a real win it. But somehow they ed the first 36 holes with a 588 hustler and hardly ever took a managed to get things total, most teams did not com­STEREO FM/AM bad shot. He's the last guy together when the SWC season plete their play and will do so you'd think would quit." began. • • - ­ Friday. RADIO-PHONO SYSTEM jjf Baylor's leading scorer and ~ -"THEY ARE different a "It was pitch black on my Great sound,great performance— with last hole," &m Mason said. The Longhorrts teed off at 8 50-Watts IHFmusic power ata maximumof — a.m. and came off the course 0.5% distortion — model 1807 will satisfy at 8 p.m. even the mostdiscriminatingaudiopfrile.The Through 18 holes, Texas full-featured tuner/amplifier has astereo-Coach George Hannon was not unhappy with his team's two- cast indicator, tuningmeter, cut/boost bass, 1-5423 over-par 290. But he was not 5353 BURNET RD cut/boost treble plus a full jack panel. 465-86891 at all satisfied with the SPECIALSGOOD FRIDAY ANDSATURDAY There's evena built-inMatrix 4-Channel Sound .... OPEN 10 AM in 9 P.M. University of Houston's 11­Decoder. TheMicromatic Record Changer under-par 277. Or Oklahoma Is^StiIirlS.yCOCK TOl Pr. S(h 4 99 State's 283. Or North Texas and a powerful Air-Suspension Speaker / State's 288. r System completethis great Magnavox value. S2IPON S GIN 5:3.39 "I'm not unhappy with our RON RICO RUM score, but we are going to 110 Proof Puerto Rlcan Rum 5th 3.59 have to play a lot better to win," Hannon said. Texas laOWN RUSSE VODKA w- Slh golfers were not as satisfied' NOW with their performance , as §PJ®OT«JUILA SAVE 5th Hannon was.ONLY fyiJY SARK "Go to Boys Town. There's I UfrMf ScMth Whhky 21 5th more to cover there," said one pla;g£r. 74 5th "We were hitting it good,lABEl but our putting was just way 5th off," said Mason, who was V? 5:30 P.ally 2222 Guadalupe Next to Texas Theater HARVEYS Texas' low man with a 140. till 8 p.m. Thurs. I «6 Proof Scotch Whitley 5th Dave Narveson finishedPASSPORT _ with a 147, and Bob Harwell iM^oofStotthWhltky Q| fired a 150. Tony Pfaff came IGRAND MACNISH in with a 151. John Dill and iMProof Scotch Whlthy... . ..... 5th Bob Mase both shot 152s, butANCIENT AGE only a team's top four scores 116 Proof Straight Bourbon Whltfcey .... . ft GAL. are counted toward the total.GILBEYS GIN ."I don't know what it is," |90PraefGln .T... T GAL. Dill said. "We feel like we are -Pounder. PALO VIEJO RUM better than we are shooting."1 SOPrMfPuMt.lllcanRum FT GAL. Although complete results of the first 36 holes of play will ^ 3 39 not be tabulated until Friday afternoon, Houston's lead is tesasAassyjoir ^ 5th 5.14 expected to narrow con­MATTINGLY & MOORE siderably. ItOPrMf Straight Bourbon Whisky 5,h 2.99 3RANDE CANADIAN I®0 Proof Canadian WhMwy . . 5,h 3.19 reallytakesover. •: Model6506—Mediterranean styling ISTILLBROOK IMfroof Straight Bourbon WhMtoy 5,h 3.09 BREAKFRONT STEREO GEORGE DICKEL J16ProofT.nnMM.Whitley 5, 4.59 FM/AM RADIO-PHONOGRAPH CANADIAN MIST iMPMBfCanaJWHWhitiMy .....— — sth 3.59 .combines oid worldcharmand acoustical DOURO FATHERS ROSE engineering —to bring you greatbeauty Portujuoio Roto 5th and wonderfullistening from stereo FM/AM SHINER BEER Cans MCam radio or records.There are evenfour speakers CASE Wilderness/Whitewater and aMatrix 4-Channel Sound Decodercon­ Supply 24 HK BMtlw CASE 3 5440 Burnet Rood cealedbehind theexquisite exterior.In French Provincial andMediterranean styling— both distinctively Magnavox. . Fob. 26 • March 2 -Z .MA-Ma-* 5 Day Sale Only DUAL SONY Models: 74 Sale Price 701, Direct Drive P55520, Bate Bote, Cover, Stanton 681EE -Cover, Shure M91E U«t $471.95 _ 4l,,ia $349.26 Save $122.69 lilt $209.45 J.RREEDP­ 1229, Bote, Cover, Downtown Sale $146.17! Shure M91ED ' 805 Congrtu Iht $346.80 . eioI $221.13 North U.S.183 Save $63.28 124 Andtrton Lant Save $125.67 9:30-5:30 l2t8, Bom, Cover, „„ Shure M9IE U«t $266,80 < . $173.71 . THORENS Save $93.08 " " » •• i »N :r>^•: TD160C, Ba.e 1216, Base, Cover, Cover, J.R.REED MUSIC COMRANY 2818 GUADALUPE Shure M91E ru Shure M91RD ^ ©CjX.-, '-t HOME EOTEOTAMMENT CENTER 5353 N. INTERREGIONAL List $231.80 , $146.86 r Save $84.94 ­ -•iAi­ 303 E. OLTORF 1 U»t$269.95 .— 1214, Bate, Cover, -•3 i^lAlSO SHOP BOTH STORES FOR 7950 BURNET ROAD * Shure M93E u« *iu.n S$120.47 •.Band Instruments iSove $83,01 ? • Guitars-Drums-Amps and get away to McDonald's • Sheet Music-Recor Despite the large delega­three-mile run. , Through the three previous three meets we've run this^ tion, the Horns still won't be «#|'But we're not going to be meets of the year, junior vear s> W fiitSllfl wmmm AERTEX2S|sif?L , „v.. . , eu. -un Tctaphc* * ->,r ir-A ^ * •* ^^Puck in the Ear Minnesota North Stars' goalie Cctare Maniago makes a Flyers' Garv Dornhoefer (12) skates into tfie play in the Th^ Knij^that air-conditions .save as he backhands the puck away from the net, first period in the gome at Philadelphia. the great outdoors ame and^Marquette—will meet the Pacific-Coast , were two of nine at-large ' .Athletic Association ' Cham­so it can be quickly evaporated for teams selected earlier in the-pion and the winners of the your own personal air-conditioning day to compete in the NCAA's Big Sky Conference and the •--system. Wedgwood blue, sky blue, national basketball cham-~ Western Athletic Conference ~ toasted orange, hunter green, maize, In Swim Meet pionships. will collide in the West - white, navy, sizes S, M, L, XL, 17.00 By LARRY SMITH * The others are No., 11-regional at Idaho State. -^ Texan Staff Writer ranked Pittsburgh, No. 12 Dayton has played in six -L-" i Suttln/f IHea lt our (nuIucu Q If this year's Texas A&M and TCU meets are any indication, Providence, No. 14 South previous tournaments and lost the Texas women's swimming team must be considered the Carolina, No. 16Creighton and to UCLA 79-64 in the cham­ favorite to win the state championship meet Sunday at Pan Syracuse, Dayton and Oral pionship game in 1967. American University in Edinburg. Roberts. 1 The same 10 squads that will be in Edinburg competed at the All of the first round games murols A&M and TCU meets. Both times the University won. At A&M are March 9. yi Basketball the women took first place in 7 of 12 events. Providence will battle the Qa« "A" Red Herrings 41, Semi Toughs 13 "If we don't win I'll be sadly disappointed," Coach Pat Ivy League champion at-St. BFP'S 59, Hoop 29 J!il Patterson said. fi John's in New York, Amalgamation 34, Watergate 10 25 PATTERSON expects the toughest competition for his team, Pittsburgh will meet the Mid­Incognita 38, Chl-Squares 14 Invarients won by default over UT which is 5-0 this year, to come from Texas Tech and A&M. At dle Atlantic Conference titlist Police the state meet last year, Texas finished third while .Tech won. at West Virginia and South Flounders won by default over shrinks Architecture Team 45, Smith's "We beat A&M and Tech by about80 points the times we com­Carolina will face the REYNOLDS Smashers 29 -­ peted against them this year. Ourscore compared to theirs was Southern Conference cham­UNIT 52, Ralun Caiuns 46 UNIVERSITY — Tanqueray 37, Roaches 37 about 384-300," Patterson said. . at Palestra in Sgr. Fury 35, Tumbleweed 28 pion the HIGHLAND MALL • CONGRESS AVENUE One question mark for Texas will be swimmer Kelly Philadelphia in East regional BFP'S 59, Hoop 29 v Red Herrings 41, Semi-Toughs 13 , Freeland, who has had the flu and been unable to practice for openers. * *" - OeM "B" . ' ife?; two days. ,,,r "r".^ Oral Roberts was paired Castillan 58, Snaka 47 -• ; \ / Haley's Comets 5Z Stars 35 r against Syracuse and ASA 41, Rosemary's Babies 36/ "I DON'T THINK it will affect her performance too much,". ' Patterson said. m "Every squad in the country has been hit by theflu,"Patter-^ son continued. "I don't knew of a major team that doesn't have some key people sick. It may cause a lot of changes to be TEKTRONIX® PRODUCT SHOW made." - This will be the women's last competition before nationals, a SALE NOW ON AT REUBEN'S NEW 14 r -V, meet for which Texas has already qualified seven swimmers and one diver. Patterson, however, said the emphasis for the SUPER BOTTLE SHOP at 8311 RESEARCH women has been placed on winning the state meet and not (Prices good also • . i s-'a tr~.« j-.-y,' -f * ^ ->' **1r 151 4-f'-it lre ass BEER Cs. of 24 BIG WINE The 4012 computer display terminal • Gtj Bv Longhorn Band Hall ^. PABST: Bockwcrrk-4.49 AtEt (Music Bldg. East. BOO E. 24th) •^•T^l TEXAS PRIDE cM . 3.59 To Sian-Up and Get Information Sheet; BIG SPECIALSBUCKHORN cmJ#: 3.59 '">skj [ST & MEASURE • Sign-Up Deadline 4:00 P.M.. Tuesday, Mardh 12 ON IMPORTER MILLER'S or bib 3.99 WINES -COM^ v • ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING. THURSDAY. Milwaukee Best ' INSTRUMENTS MARCH 14.. 7J30P.M„ BELMONT HALL ! BROWSil 328—ALL CANDIDATES SHOULD ATTEND ^4661 Dij l JPTW Plotter • Clinie For AH Candidates to Learn Texas Cheeri^^J Saturday • March 10 -Belmont Hall REUBENS V'AW Qu««tlon»?v ^31/10 Graphit ' v Calculator M-Lane Llttrell, 477-B2J 6311 RESEARCH 836-8311 •''St .!• ALL SPECIALS CASH OR CHECK (HO CREDIT CARDS) TM-800 series mmmrnrnmrnrnMimmim Friday, March 1, l|74 THE DAILY T$SXAN Paye 7 jm mmim Mm Hdrrtl.Opii\ With 'S:;: By RICHARD JUSTICE good." It's probably the By far the most effective "It's true£l; Clark said. • v • Texan Staff Writer ^flatter, as the Cougars' only Texas pitcher so far has been "I'm not trying to brag, but I hi "Ai the Texas LonghornsaifoL^worthy opponent hasbeen Pan sophomore lefthander feel that if I can hit onr the Houston Cougars open the,.,American University, which ^ Richard Wortham. Wortham, pitchers in practice then I SrWxL1974 Southwest Conference i^they went 1-3 against. should be able to hit whoevier '''Friday's starter, has pitched AW :'r baseball season at 3 p.m. Fri--"I don't rely much on that 16 innings and allowed only the other team pitches." CC 4-5 *I day at Clark Field, the IwoTtMgb ERA," Gustafson said. one earned run. Wortham has The Houston hitters have w€ teams find themselves faced'A lot of the pitchersthat con- done well also. But it is ob­ struck out 17 batters and with similar problems. : retributed to it will probably not walked only 6 this season. $0$ viously not from hitting their That is, almost similar.ll^itch much more this year. nirr a*w» W batting practice pitchers. ; Both Texas and Houston have>4$Statistics are not Sways'*<$»&.' T_v__f^wlr«2!! HOUSTON is led by left-questionable.: "We really fielder Tom Dtischihski's .478. hitting has been better: And' -"Houston pitching staff, the;. won't know Saturday's and rightfielder David Vin­ both Texas' and Houston's^"statistics probably are a t§S?f more incredibly, Lee's only Flores. "I think Flores has sportswriters' poll made Tex­ victory was a shutout over pitched well every time he has "Just because you hit well as the overwhelming favorite Pan Am. That's their ace. gone out," Gustafson said. your first 12 games doesn't . to win Coach Cliff Gustafson's GUSTAFSON says he knows "His statistics are,* mean you're going tocontinue Seventh SWC championship'in ft?-s£f nothing about the Cougar deceiving." ' to hit well. The ideal thing for as many years. pitching. He probably won't THE TEXAS hitting has not us is to have three or four BUT GUSTAFSON is not so need to. "About all we know been deceiving, though. The guys hot at a time." —Texan Sft > by Bml CoNn sure the Horns should be pick- Motion Play ed again. "A&M and TCU are about Houston is what we saw Horns, led by third baseman The Texas batters will strong, strong contenders," from them last year," he said. Keith Moreland's .628, have probably cool down somewhat Texan photographer Paul Calapo catches SMU forward Johnson in an unusual frame sequence in the Texas- Gustafson said. "TCU has got That's hard to do since the had notrouble hittingtheir op­during the Southwest Jimmy Murphy and Texasplayers Harry Larrabee andEd SMU game earlier this season. SMU won 74-72. " Cougars lost all their pitchers ponents' pitching. Conference season, and the a bigger percentage of frontline players back. On from last season!s team. ''The hitting is the best I've Horns' pitchers probably will :mm; paper, at least, there is no Texas, on the other hand, ever seen," second baseman become more consistent. One can't be too sure about its Bobby Clark said. The way we should be considered way or the other. t The Texas tennis team Texas State, 8-1, and defeated Bill Marsh, 6-4, 6-2. defeated the Horns' Gonzolo the favorite. pitching, either. The Texas pitching the Texas hitters Nonetheless, the Horns began its first day of action in Oklahoma, 7-2. In the next game the Horns Nunez, 6-7, 6-2, 7%, "I guess they are predicting pitchers can take only limited have hit against in batting should have little trouble with -the CorpusChristi Invitational In the match against West lost their only match against In doubles competition, by the amount of potential we credit for. the Horns' 12-0 practice has so far been their images, the Houston tournament bv defeating West Texas, the"Horns' Dan Nelson' West Texas when Dale Philips Nelson and Graham Whaling have, but that's about all they record. superior to the game pitching. Cougars. defeated West Texas' Marsh have to go on." '' and Dale Corbin, 6-2, 7-5. Against Houston, however, Sports Shorts Against Oklahoma, one of the Horns should be picked.the top teams in the nation, Houston brings a 5-5 non-the Horns lost the first two conference record into SWC UT's Keel Quits Team matches but won seven in a play, and the Cougars are hit­ row for the victory and the ting a respectable .337. Safety Tommy Keel told be held 12:30 p.m. Saturday in Odessa for a dual meet with right to meet the winnerof the But the Houston pitching coaches Wednesday that he Memorial Stadium. It will be Odessa Junior College, last SMU-Rice match Saturday. has been terrible thus far.The would no longer play football the first major contact year's national JC champs. ••••••••••••••••••* Cougar pitching staff has an for Texas. workout following a week of The women will be entering *­ incredible 7.48 ERA. -"It just quit being fun," organized drills. their last meet before the "THE TEAMS we have Keel said Thursday. "I wasn't Quarterback Mike Presley state tournament in San Mar­played either have good getting anything out of foot­will miss the scrimmage with cos. hitters," Houston Coach ball any more, so I decided to a sprained ankle received dur­Leading the men against e A TYPING SERVICE • Lovette Hill said, "or our quit." Keel,ja junior, started ing Wednesday's workout. Odessa JC, which beat Texas • specializing in * pitchers have made them look for the Longhorris last season. • • • last weekend, will be Pat • —theses and dissertations • "Sometimes kids just get Both Texas' women's and Thyssen, who will try to• —low briefs • tired of things," Defensive men's gymnastics teams will qualify for national men's 0 —term papers and reports e T We're Not REDNECK*! Coach Mike Campbell said. see action this weekend. competition.J Prompt. Professional « I Barbers { "That's his business." The women will compete in • • • e Service e ! MEDICAL ARTS 1 •• • the Texas Woman's Universi­CHICAGO (AP) -Salary I J 453-7577 « BARBERSHOP The first intrasquad scrim­ ty invitational meet in Denton increases and removal of • Pick-up Service Available • e -I 2915 Red River 477-06911 I mage of spring training will and* the men will travel to Commissioner Pete Rozelle • eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee* from arbitration are the priority goals as the National Football League PlayersHuun Association makes final HOBO JOE'S t preparations for its negotiations with the owners KUNG-FU ' •? B-B.Q ' in mid-March. CeoJ Mittis A Sfaw Pfves ^ P/.«fcrt'o •. -' INSTITUTE ^ CAN'T BEAT OUR BAR B-Q" Ed Garvey, executivedirec­CLASS LIMITED! REGISTER NOW! tor of the association, said SPECIAL ONMARCH 1 &2 ~ Thursday that Rozelle's new HEALTH*ART*SELF DpFENSE acarli is r the, PORK, SAUSAGE, CHICKEN PLATE 10-year pact with the owners $1.50 WITH THIS AD should, now more than ever, CHINESE INSTRUCTORS r.mr$ make him ineligible to serve 3401 Guadalupe 5811 MANOR ROAD 926-7152 as an impartial moderator in |j£ real 2-10 p.m. Weekdays • 451-9150 disagreements between on nv players and the owners. 1 DO YOU OWN A VOLKSWAGEN -MGB : oaOA : 20% e TOYOTA -DATSUN? e i '.Vl\ e Discount staUn e -on all Studtman's Photo Service AMM -PORT CAR CLINIC • e im 3 a:. . GILBERT'S AUTOMOTIVE INC. 222 W. 19th & Guitar 5324 Cameron Rd. Is the plate to have it ;::;i e e RESUME' & Serviced or Repaired. e Mm IDENTIFICATION TYPE 477-6797 1621 East 6th • Amster Music • e 1624 Lavaca * PICTURES Attention Organizations: 1-Day Quick, Reliable Service MONDAY, MARCH 4th is the LAST DAY to submit applications for THE STAR THDM ALL ^,v-/ OUTSTANDING STUDENTS wmI John J. MonfreyWine and Liquor Co. 207 E. 4th GOODFELLOWS 472-4961 Texas Union i for the Informal ClassProgram mid-semester classes: CB" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN American Car Repair Birdwatching IO79 VW SQUAREBACK Crochet I »' *td. air radio radial tins .. 3295 Applications and lists of qualifications for each award are available in 1073 VWSUPIRBUG Dyeing Workshop 2550 the TSP Business Office, TSP Building 3.200 between the hours of 1071 VWSUPERBUG Guitar: Advanced 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. IT/I std. air radio 2050 VWSIDAN Jazz Improvisation Knitting: Beginning695 KundaliniYoga 1 All applications must he returned to TSP 3.200 by -:;-t 1956 495 Mosaic / ­ 1079 VW THING 17/4 std.«dl#4,000miles Sailing: Basic & PINTO 4:30 P.M., MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1974 tdr fcf *fd.i«dre 3095 Advanced r ViGA Additional information available in TSP Building 4.112 or by ---7-1 1dr.std. i...................... Stitchery calling the CACTUS Yearbook Office, _ . ---MAVERICK Tatting 4 dr leaded dsluxt group ...... 471-5244 1070 WAZDA RX-2 and ­ I y*L 1drhtstd. airam/(m radio .... 1079 MAZDA RX-2 4 trip to Winedato •"* •*td. airam/fmradio ...... mxffe OATSUN • (UT reiteration of pioneer .JyOT-ldtJSlOstd. air — -buildings with-­»v i % £££-j « r SAVE §gjgp.; Few students realize the librarian, said. The collection /^Besides literary works, programs. ;,jk, • '^resources available to them blossomed through the efforts ' Fayne said, the library has Personal artifacts of Hs :sa -i^-for research or appreciation of-former Chancellor Harry many unusual collections. A^/Houdinir including a booklet •c'*^ in the collections of the Ransom in the late 1950s and 3/16th inch polyglot (several • entitled, "The Curious and§M Humanities Research Center 60s, he added. -language) Bible isone book in Amazing Exhibition of (HRC). . Scholars from all over the the' miniatures collection. Educated Fleas," share^ TOSHIBA SA 400 m RETAIL $500.00 Past the security guards world come to Austin to see Other collections include an, shelves of the library withmop|| (2) JENSEN MODE! the original manuscripts, cor­extensive autograph collec­tion picture stills, circus YOUR PRICI $350.00 and closed-circuit television respondence, first editions tion with a complete set of posters and 18th Century "PIONEER PL12D monitors, through the and memorabilia of William Presidents' signatures, and plays. A death mask of YOU SAVE | $150.00 elevator and up to the Faulkner, James Joyce, O.H. the world's largest collection Napoleon is there, along with SHURE M55E"special collections" floors, Lawrence, Eugene O'Neill, of 18th Century dime novels. collection of Norman Bel :| one can find anything from an George Bernard Shaw,-Dylan There also is a collection of Geddes, 2Oth Century^ 1853 Shakespeare folio to. Thomas, Tennessee Williams chess books and a '.Renaissance man, who Napoleon's 'deathmask, in ad­and may other contemporary library of volumes on gypsies.^ Resigned everything from dition to thousandsof rare and Jill III authors. and their culture. theater productions specialized books: to To do research on contem­Among the "unusual" are. ^ding machines. 8111 all The Itare Books Collection porary literature, Payne said, Writers' memorabilia and per Down on the sixth flooi <£ SgBSjpf the purchase of a manuscript Austin." And: many do. in 1894, has grown to the most Differences between original complete collection of 19th manuscripts and printed and 20th Century American editions can often show an and European literature in the author's thought processes, he 's Show Needs Funding VA Sesame Street-type Regional Laboratory in Los program has been piloted in Angeles to develop a televi­El Paso but needs, funding to sion series to teach be readied for network broad­preschoolers to read. casting, one of its originators-• Based on data ranking told a graduate seminar. words in order of learning dif­ Jerry Ackerman, doctoral ficulty compiled by Coleman student in radio-TV-film, and experimentation with a curriculum and instruction group of children, the pilot and educational psychology, was developed on much the showed the half-hour pilot in same premise as Sesame i-ji r-«au ill ftp! llfivitlflU UI5" cussed the data basis for the Ackerman said the show is show. -• based on the "dynamic dimen­ Ackerman, formerly employed by Universal Studios, worked with Dr. E.B. Coleman of UT El Paso through the Southwest sion'' of television^ dmove­ment, and employs media techniques tointerest children in the instructional program­ing. ' many phases, said Jane Combs, administrative assis­tant for the HRC. Founded in 1954, the collection covers every aspect of the theater,. ..By Zoliac~News Serviee -A solar research scientist is predicting, on the basis of sunspot activity, that a severe drought will hit the United States in 1974 or 1975. Dr. Walter Orr Roberts, president of the University Corporation of Atmospheric Foreign students at the University, a group which must adjust to a different: culture as well as University life, express varying opinions about the UnitedStates and its customs. Nelson Pereira, mechanical engineering sophomore from Venezuela, said that such reasons for studying abroad. Pereira found a lack of sen­sitivity the most unusual aspect of life in the United States. "THE PEOPLE are friend­ly, but they don't care about you until they get to know you," he said. I had read in books what it would be like," he said. Penumalli came to the United States on the advice of a friend, and received his master's degree at Oklahoma State University. He said that Indians would have "shown a lotof anger" in Research,.says that an up­coming period of little sunspot ' activity may signal an on­coming drought. Roberts says that droughts on the Great Plains have generally followed 20 to 22­year cycles, and that scien­tists wereexpecting a drought last year, rivaling the Dust events as Watergate would have been handled much differently in his country. "In rfty country, if Watergate had happened, Nix­on would not be there anymore," he said. Pereira said several factors caused him to seek a bachelor's degree in the United States. Problems at the university in Venezuela, reports from friends studying i0 the United States, and the "advanced American univer­sities" were his major Judo Program For Women Starts Monday "En Garde," a six-week self-defense program for women, begins Monday at the Hancock Recreation Center. 4 The classes, from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Mondays, will be taught by Shell Hillis. Special Pereira said he had difficul­a Watergate-type incident Bowl days of the Great ty adjusting to the American Depression. Instead, heavy lifestyle atfirst becauseof the "I think they would have rains hit the JMidwest in the language and customs. v been much more public about spring, accompanied by high Yi Ming Ku, graduate stu­it ... more bitter," he said. solar activity. ~ " dent in electrical engineering, found many differences between the United States and Taiwan. "People here have more freedom to talk about subjects more opportunities to ex­ press themselves," he said. "In Taiwan, they do not have so much right to criticize the government." _ _ _ ^ Ku believes that Watergate should not be important_to.... Americans now. "(People) should concen­trate on other problems," he said. AL THOUG H A ustin's climate is much like Taiwan's, Ku said the western dress and food seemed strange to him when he came speakers, such as emergency8 to the United States room nurses, a lawyer and a Ku, who came to Austin in social worker, have been 1972 after getting his scheduled. bachelor's degree in Taiwan, Hillis, a second degree said language was not a blackbelt, is a member of the barrier since he studied U.S. Judo Federation and the English for 10 years in Texas Judo Blackbelt Taiwan. * Association. He received his judo diploma from a Codokan Bhaska Reddy Penumalli, a in Tokyo, Japan doctoral candidate in elec­ The class will hold 20 peo­trical engineering from India, ple, Mrs. Eva James, coor­said he did not have problems dinator of the "En Garde" adapting, to American program, said. customs. ; Registration fee is $3.50. "Nothing seemed unusual L Declare your Texas lndeperid?i)ce at the General Store. Texas kisses records of Texas ballads handmade bird feeders • Texas MonthlyTexas Observer, Deaf Smithcookbook postcards of U.T., Texas newspapers Gernsheim Collection prints ^ Marshall First floor;Union 7:30 a.m. -a p.m. Mon. -Fri, 2 — 6 P.M. Sunday Edgar Lee Masters' sity*s world-renowned typewriter, a swatch of Ger-. Photography Collection. It trude Stein's wa1lpaper began in 1964 with the acquisi­(Which says "A rose is a rose tion of the Gernsheim Collec­is a rose is ..."), and a button tion, the world's largestfrom Norman Mailer's 1970 private collection of New York City mayoral cam­photographs, and now in­ paign ("The Other Guys are cludes more than 150,000 pic­the Joke"). tures, Joe Colthorp, HRC Of the entire Rare Books research associate, said. The Collection, Payne said, allbut first photograph ever taken,the original manuscripts and madeIn 1826 byJoseph Niepceholograph (handwritten) is on display along with many material is readily accessible other photographs of the to any student. Requests to 1800s, including some bystudy manuscripts are author Lewis Carroll. These,reviewed by a special com­like the other collections, can mittee. Payne -stressed the be seen by "anyone who com­availability of the materials. es up to see them," Colthorp"Any student can use the' -said. • -3 library's resources," he said. On the seventh floor is the Scientist Theatre Arts and Drama Collection, one of the oeun­try's. largest. It i& unique among theater libraries in its rs ,j Book Now! Space Limited on 1974 GROUP AUSTIN/LUXEMBOURG via Braniff/lcelandic Jets For U.T. Students/Faculty & Families Departures May li/Aug. 6 -92 Days May 20/Aug. 22 -94 Days May 23/Aug. 7 -78 Days ROUND TRIF MIS TAX May 26/July 26 -«1 Days May 26/J«ily 7 -42 Days New York/Luxembourg Portion Only$239 Austin/N.Y. $142.60 (plu$ tax) Rtturn Any Day J,Call the Europe experts 478-9343 > Serving UT Since 196 J at 2428 Guadalupe JOE KOEN & SON _ *•»* JOE KOEN& SON tit...Jewelers Where Auatirtitea Shop withConfidence' 611-Congress Ave. lUmlftHemi w*Utfd to ibow dtt—l srsiEM^Hte; No. H«. 2 " \3VV «»,»v tr ^ * x p ^ w r?JS NEER OX 949 RETAIL $1,595.00 (2) AUDICO A15V YOUR PRICE $1,061.00 PIONEER PL12D YOU SAVEf ? $ 534.00 AUDIO TECHNICA AT14S \ V mm i * SSFffiS ji-OUs­ • w.rt H rr. "vWSSS If®? ^\4 "i 2 f ~F~j, No. 3 PIONEER SX82* RECEIVER '•vSP'l ti-'Vi-' x.1" HJ-^ \ (2) JBL 1-100 "CENTURY" DUAL 1229 base & dusRover SHURE M91ED CARTRIDGE M RETAIL $1,393.00 YOUR PRICE $1,044.00 wm YOU SAVE $ 348.00 WM s ' ^^PECimM THEjyEEK mm WV ' ITEMS (NEW) PANASONIC SA6500 RECEIVER (2 only) PANASONIC ST360Q TUNER . ^ only) JBL 1-25 PRIMA SPEAKER -A­ (4 sets only) DUAL 1216 Changer DUAL WB12 Walnut base ^^ DUAL DC4 Hinged dust cover,. _ SHURE M93E Cartridge 001rtYOUR PRICE cawSAVE $430.00 -1•'V); • ;i-f)y$ • » s $330.00 $301.00 $221.00 30% 30% 3 mi $160.00 $122.00 (each) $225.00 , $125.00 (complete^ pacfcaje) ITEMS (USED With 90 Day Warranty) NEW PRICE PIONEER TX1000 TUNER r* ^ $300.00 vx SONY TC-250 OPEN REEL DECK $175.00 |1 AR TURNTABLE _ ,% ,! $155 00 1J SHURE M91ED CARTRIDGf .;jl $320.00 SS SONY TC-160 CASSETTE DECK $300.00 THE (Scujk^ &aUer IH 35 AT 4S4-0414 Also Open Sunday For Browsing^ REMEMBER: THE SOUND GALLERY WILL NEVER LOSEe A SALE BECAUSE OF PRICI "fr USED PRICE r ^175.00 ,^'t $ 75.00 t-r.$ 7JKQO -$150.00 f iff Friday, March 1, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Paae 9 ! We Mee* Friday 10-9 Some Items Have Or Beat Any Stereo Price • So^ird%i%^ CLEARANCE SALE wtfc ip t &'$i IMI fer~j?f if" vfSii' •%$• ;0 m-­ • xz <2 "(I No reasonable offer refused. We must liquidate as much merchandise as possible. Mo dealers please. Some items have limited quantities, so be early for be^selection SANSUI-BSR-AMPEX MARANTZ-DUAL-ECI sOTSuisiii*ici V: COMPONENT SYSTEM U -U BEST COMPONENTS SYSTEM fRANKlY WE THINK all people deserve ...... •; Oata yea creased tetreebi|b fidelity, M. it heed lesetlie hr '• RL--a • -*•* ' —-00 ' --' --» MMAam BAI % iMHM'i­ * less*-OB oes wfea^aiojceee ce^Bpoe®ew sysje^B yeo t oe® ^ hi^fi RNNffldwM^s • ®qe®poi®el et o adgjrty attractivo prico; The SANSUI210 staraa ntrinrfhis yea 10 watts rMMe power per channel Yea cm beok ap 2 tepa Jacks aad 1 phena and yea "lat a wohetceta at' Sootart retail price ef S15f.fi To piey yaar retards with naally in this systeia. yea pet the KR2MXE­TURNTAIIL Caa^ilata with tea, tet caver, ead Shart tar-trM|a, yaa wfll letaseaadyee airttl Sstea la aaay aMealfbts • fraaa aew. ISR eHen this tarataMa at $79.95. Ta coaeMe a nWiiifintf syitiin-we attar yaalha ABPBt 711 Shna jUittfij a speaker thai gives yea a na^ltli want WHh aa r 9--• • --^ --• AiaMK*it ' nr^onfc . weeNr MM «• •opeoweefer, sue -M^pex •••ww-. lislaaiagler bears, hypaetbadla the mask, at a retell ai JW.fS each. TopartWn thissystaai wHInlaaraa*i»arHj (Mapaaaat Man Sata yaa •'• * •*'** * * o o • ooo •• *0,0 $' 49^ hydraulic cueing, List $140.80. Moonlight Madness Price if......$887year tytiam. Jwt plag lha OLYMPIC T03M lata yaar tystaa and play year fevarite S4mb lapat — bat naw yea tava $22.01 dariag •»™ra HimMi Ifa^on ' ^aiangm | ot> t> o lllit :" THOUGH WE HAVE mara axaaasiva svstams this, svttatn coa da many things that dov.«'| Yau save $16.55 •••••.sbsffl * H •LOW PRICES &&& QUALITY TAPTSf %r CASSETTEl!:^ CASSCTTE AMPEX 60 minute low UNIVERSAL noiso, high output. Use minatet low noise for any rocordor. Utt cassettot. Quality $1.19 ea. , racordiag. list 3 $2.M * — SAVE $1.00 ^^70< -« , $100 WITH APPROVED ^ 'Scetcli .207 Ugh output, low nolser> ' Scotch's,bast 1100 ft. list $7.99 oo. H\fr~ " CREDIT THIS FRIDAY • SAVE *3" *j£»# .-YOU PAY 10-9 —igtOHlTxr <&» v --*• e 10 FrIV-, «&l£ ^*~ ^K * *»tf * ^iaAii^r '' :»?«*• .rives** GSkftS ^ . ffe wm ii" -* Drink Life one drop at a-Airrie Flow with the Stream irPyour S8 Pour your Soul in the River of Life. Rush to the Ocean of God. ere is a song I sing in a dream. There is a flow I feel in a stream. Up to my neck in the flood from the snow Over my head is beyond what I know.. There is a Saint in every sna There is a lady in every lake There can be hell in a waterfal., __ Bujissjjb believe thei" is upheaved aftWall w^sliKj ding through the wester " " "~ ' ' " ' kle in the evening sun n headwaters west of Fredericksburg, through the raging rapids and cataracts the somber currents of Lake Travis, the Pedernales runs life's co t soul of the stream is spilled forward in the climactic cascade ccille 'he calms. The message revealed, however, is somewhat of a para •miiiMmiiiirj.)«wu.imiTJT.T< Th3B®gnPrable folk of the !Cirs, indifferent lo the few who happened across her path Her enchanted powershad boon protected since 1937 by 4. 860 acres of suiroundmq mnr.hland The Wheatley Circle Ba Ranch sheltered the fulls from thai early date until the acquisi lion of the land by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department ir Inarch 1970, for use as a state park HI ^ state park it is today one of the unique cind natural one found in Texas With the help and influence of the Sierra Club tins HillCountry oasis wcis designed to minimile distuibnnre t< the environment The major part ot the acreage is natinnl mwf ^w0SbulM rutcOQn the stirnng of a may The park boasts a large deer population and any number of unusual species of plants andanimals. An exceptional variety of birds including eaqles and ospreys are harbored tn the scinc­ ,ut"v m wmmmmmmmmmmm Some plants toWPfou T?*as barberry. the canyon mockorange and the spicebush 8H0n" peculiar characteristic of the Pedernales is the lining of •Broken cypress tree trunks along the banks of almost the entire river, ^•Legend has it that during agreat flood in the early 1950s, a WTill of water estimated at nnywheie from 60 to 100 feel h'gh was unleashed, ravaging everything in its pathand deposil>'»g a beach of sand beneath the falls which is still thereImf Pedernales Falls State Park is one of the first parks of Texas to be developed under new guidelines stressing extremeiv roi>. scientious preservation of the native environment and a minimum of development. There is only one to bel|lln¥d^ the immediate futur«v'*­_ Si§§§is ror most, the park and the falls will remain a timeless, ricf?le-­ w i*m, £;1 'I £3$8 vili 8®s •• • ':'%Ar. •yf­ C&i| Frida " s«u­ v,,y; <100.00 A MS|East Austin citizen's group Travis County Grand Jury to sitivity and harassment of' Despite claims by the *5 . '.VS. • . .. *.•'» • < ' Richard Frank White citizen's group that minority Vice-President i.ue „ I would be "for thesole ] which- _ rf-iTr """"set istin "citizgirs"group: 504.77 ' " -348.00 ( traffic tickets, Miles said Joan Lyda ..­ {, are charged with said. More than 10 percent of 307.95 statistics show that 76.7 per­ William Parish & wrongdoing," The Austin Responding to charges by Austin's police cadet training s cent of all tickets issued in William Ware...,.. 3.05 ^ f \ * t s# Police Department is > the East Austin community hours is spent on community >,r .1973 were to whites. At-Large city's moist thoroughly in-leaders that their relations and ethnic groups,s Place 1 »!% vestigated organization, he neighborhoods are "over-he said. ;, Miles said City Manager 68.70 " . 50.75 Linda Ann Crooker . ' ^ added. policed," Miles said "police The ^fil^partment's Dan Davidson would issue a 69.41 '•^ i ^ David Hall — % "Citizens now have the manpower is placed where the recruiting "board, comprised formal statement Friday mor­ 2.08 i Madeline Hartwell . ?»•<# chief of police, the city greatest demand for service of a chicano lieutenant and a ning regarding the civilian i&s Human black wm Placed manager, the . exists. If police are afraid to patrolman, actively review board. 64.70 Carol Crabtree Relations Commission, the enforce the law, citizens suf­Serenity at the Capitol:-<' s Richard Price .. . 1.75 3.00 Place 3 Althoughthedebate iniide might be (Mated, this couple Gregory Powers . 168.89 ' ARBY'S CHICKEN FRIED qM ha« escaped to the peaceful ground* for a stroll. , Cheryl Toubin ... 104.21 ' 50.00 meMm STEAK SPECIAL MING GARDEN Highland Mall Installs Computer Olga Zapata . . ..... 21.00 ^ , .16.00 2-CHICKEN FRIED STEAK SANDWICHESf ^ Place 4CHINESE RESTAURANT To $ave Energy Cohsurnption Robert Dees ....... 4.20 Deborah Stanton pgpW I •V 7 RIG. 1.51SAVE Authentic Chinese CMisin»i In an attempt to conserve energy, an IBM sensor-based Write-In INCLUDES LETTUCE & TOMATO Food to Go computer has been installed in Highland Mall. Katherine Edwards 123.60 HELP YOURSELF TO THE CONDIMENTS Phone1452-54861 The System-7 unveiled Thursday will regulate and control Sf Co-Op Board ; ^, OFFER GOOD THRU MARCH 1 Tue.-Fri. 11-2, 5-10 p.m. the air conditioning and lighting in the mall. Placet 1705 Guadalupe 472-1582 < Sat. A Sun. 11 a.m. -10 p.m. The computer sets targetfor amountsof energy used, John . 24.70 Neile Wolfe........... 5400 Bwmet Rd. 451-3760 ; Tiede, spokesman for IBM, explained. If energy consump­ Clowd Monday PlaceJL 4411 W. Ben Whit* 092-2058 tion-exceeds the target levelr^e computer will cut back. — 2210 Anderson Uu# Robert ClarkFor instance, in the morning the sun hit^the east side of Dean Oriiish 14.87 5 the mall, soair conditioning will be lowered on the west side and vicerversa in the afternoon. Information will be updated • as seasons and other conditions change, Tiede said. ? Mall officials hope to save10 percent onenergy consuption i with the computer. — *•••••••••••••••••• immiM*. • The Largest • By MARIAN McDOWELL sidered," Lippman said. Selection of liie deadline for entering Lippman said an unbiased Raise Pearl Magazine's first Bar committee from the Pearl Your Belles contest passed at 5 staff will screen applications 1RECORDERS! fw*i p.m. Thursday, but the stu­and select 10 finalists. -Texas jg* • 'Own! & »-dent monthly's art director Tentative plans are for thefrom$2.25up • SHARE-CROPPERS said nominations may still be five Bars to be chosen by a7 »* lgr See us for • J join at r accepted. small, randomly-selected "Although 70 applications group of University students, 'Recorders & • Community Gardens are out, only about 40 have "faculty and • staff, Lippman Recorder Music, J 9 minutes from UT been returned," Sheldon Lipp-said. The Bars' and finalists' OPENING SOON Amster Music #• man said.. "With a little photographs will appear in the For Information write to: 1624Ldvaca J P.O. Box 477, Austin 71767 friendly persuasion, we will March issue of Pearl. still accept latenominations." Applicants were asked on I The honor of being one of the entry form what it would the five Bar Belles will be mean to them to be a Bar bestowed on University men Belle. Pearl received many I p,.; -'---r: presents „ possessing the qualities of interestiiig answers, from sil­campus awareness, "ly to serious. For example: I To help insure all students, •SHAKEY'S I regardless 'of rank, sex or social .. 1 " ' at the Guadalupe Store appearance and personality.-"It would help me getdates*;" I "We have had two women "Itvjvould help me get into law security number, at Ieas| one RAT CREEK nominees. Although the honor school;" and '"Die honor I is for,the mostdeserving men, would mean eternal 'dis­ ^JoniohMhrjiSj^ all nominees will be con­grace." I pizza per month (a necessity in at the Reagan Square Store, I upholding the Great American i 7BRUSHY CREEK t • tonight and;Saturday only -RIC MASTiN I Way!), Luigi's has initiated this i Big Sur Poet Folksingar i student aid program. Cut out TONIGHT 8 P.M. i CEDAR FROST Unitarian Church FRI. 9-12 this ad, pin it on your wall and i 4700 Grover . SAT. 9r1 .. ..••i-i'is i CHINESE RESTAURANT Tickets $2.00 on the designated month; bring Only $1.00 Cover . Student«$1.50—: i World Known CANTONESE HAPPY HOUR 44 AVAItAilt FOR PARTUS I-in the coupon for one dollar off i Dishes I i any large pizza. You'll be a i Bar BQ-HECTOR'S 454-9252 I better person for it. —- i 5213 N. Lamar TACO FLATS 9 i Special Lunch WEEKEND SPECUISI FRI.-SAT. 6-8 ONLY -i Every Day s" CHALUPA SUPREME 49* I Enth.-Beans-Meat-Avacado-ialap«no-Onioii-Che«s* >x MARCH MAY I * -I a.m. -10 p.m. SUPER NACH0 25* i X*XvXv.'V>-;X#'_ I I I Chinese Art & Gift Shop CERVIZA: SUPERIOR 25* I I • I 3301 N. IH35 477-1687 i I BEGINNING MARCH 12 A 13 » -­ I '• The Fundamentals of Wheel Throwing Taught by BOB & DEBBIE WRIGHT i I It's all over — • Save some green~ I CLASSES MEET TUES. & WED. EVENINGS but the party's % on a large Luigi's I ^ AND SAT. AFTERNOONS FOR 8 WEEKS just beginning — pizza. 3S.--at Luigi's. I Musical Invents Committee $45 & CLAY -ALL OTHER MATERIALS AND GOOD THIS MONTH ONLY WITH COUPON GOOD THIS MONTH ONLY WITH COUPON St OFF ANY LAROK PIZZA. I FIRING INCLUDED St OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA. BARTON SPRINGS POTTERY 474-2200 Friday, March 1, 8:30 p.m. APRII * Try our Game Room Featuring Vulcan and Tornado football tables ASLEEP AT * View Our Boiler Room * Beer and Wine Fiiet^of Flounder .ftfil.tr THE WHEEL Golden Fried Chickee ' : Chicken Fried Steak -V plus: The Bronco Bros. • Salad Bar • French Fries p«r pcrsee "$2.00 UT Students • Homemade Bread Cwipea Per Give your bunny $2.50 General Public break—­ buy ber a- JOEY'S Nobody GOOD THIS NOtrtli ONLY WITH COUPON i; A "Welcome to Austin" Concert-Dance , SI OFF ANY LAKOK PIZZA Loaves & 21OO-A CUABAMIN 474.2321 I % RESTAURANT "ST ft' A J * ^ | l V mm Hungry iffigjigg 1-Jli Brn While UNION MAIN BALLROOM ---•* • 6 11 [im Do11v. Sort 7 a.m. • 10 PAge 12 Friday, March h 1974 TWE DAILY TEXAN nii£Ki&s*£tm Mil Retirement Provisions By SUZANNE PETERMAtf^TRS) and the Optional-program to join. References to the Teaches; Retirement Program (ORP). • An. increase ^;&tetirement Systemlathi ; sent' state constitution shouldavoid association benefits com­on accounts. |>eing too specific, members mittee, said TRS is available • Elimination of the annual joftheTexas College and to allstaff employes, students 15 membership fee. eJJnivarsity Staff Employes employed halftime and facul­ '• Extending the optibh of'.Association were told Thursp ty.ORP isavailable tofaculty joining ORP now available to jJay. i 'also, and to certain administr-; fac ujty and 3 State Sen. Lloyd Doggett of 'tors.. • : " -|§?f some ad­ ministrators to all employes. Austin emphasized the need Welton said thfe' major ~ forflexibility:in drafting pubic changes University staff Welton said 6 percent of w '•9ifl.pl oye retirement employes would like to see each employe's gross income vv*vv. > " y* ^--w. i is deducted frdm his response in Houston, and they an attempt to raise state sure didn't disappoint us," revenue during the Depres­,^1'J Second Level, Dobie Moll 21st & Guadc'upe ' % IS THE BEST Mathis said. Of the 61,000 total sion. Abuses and religious op­free perking In the rear v • signatures from Houston, position led to ita^ermination. about 17,000 were gathered Hester said. WAR last week at the Houston Hester cited principal sup­ c-xVcUet c1" TUES.-SAT. ALLEN DAMRONI1 rr SUN. ONLY MARCH 3 FRED CHATHAM & CO. Friday, Saturday, & Sunday Tues.-Sat. Feb. 26-Mar. 2 liiy ?»»— Pauline Kael, SILVER CITY SADDLE TRAMPSI flew Yorker BEVO IInl • . Happy Hour S-7 441-3352 WEST Louisiana's Most Outrageous Boogi* Band DRINKS THE AiisliMre Grand* Get Ready For Freddie (Fender)! 07 Be* Caves Rd. 327-9016 i&t > , ^1 jmil cttMf CH fiMnh BROS.t SMASH MM An IngoPremmger Production 'M IDONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITT OPEN TUES. -SAT. ICfrS«*t-tSail*-mnr ouvau•»votmuc-Kgaukmomm S PMuetdby DncMby ScrtcnpUybr TUES ... CHICKS FREE |ING0.PREM)NGER R06ERTALTMAN RtNGLAR0NER,Jr WED.. .DRINK SPECIALS framaMMlkfRlCHMOHOONIR^ Muncfry I0MMY KUNHL Icolor by DE LUXE® PANAVISION* THURS TEQUILA NIGHT SOMETHING NEW 5 ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK RECOROINQ ON COLUMBIA REOORD8 7:30 -9 TUES4HURS-NO COVIR-HAPPY HOUR 1 .< 75' Highballs 25* Boor 1 If Thurs.-Sun. jFriday, Saturday ^7:30 & 9:45 $1.00 gTOO SMOOTH ^March 1 & 2 • Burdine Aud.f Student Gov'ij •0-4 nN if" J* ? f 1 ^ nMkey Badnen /J WESTERN SALOON ^DANCEHALL 10% FRI AND SAT. 7-9-11 p.m. A.Cnaud.;$I Sponsored by U.T. A Capella Choir Saturilay night — Sort Rivera & Tito Nlgfct Riders Sunday -less Demaihe & The Country Music Revue • 57: coming March 8th -Red Stegall "S • «­Beer Wine -Set Op* • ./ >• ;• IIP * Federaljunds Jeopardized «P MHMR^ToSponsor Family Workshoj nmet fbr SS\3iigtie»t Might and longest llrrie in >MII not Be mailed «» announced Interchange1 ment Noripan flight." Also SSSaVfBi Spring prdfessor; £$|f#Br|ler. Keep your,copy of credit; 3fe>tontinuous sponsored FelonVote ,rom C '"4re two canoe trips on the *°°rielf .. .... . . .^Workshops sponsored by the Parmer, associate. Englisjt .TiiGuadalupe River. The "March 1S-1* j^LUPECANALES TACB EEC Members of the ''votingest' and tjiunm •_ fJP cif^ ^%f|Austin-Travis County Mental professor; Edmund Pincofff, •ife;:jrlp will b«'on tt>e Upper Guadalupe llfaMSttHWrittr and $2,156,000 in federal funds. So far tl»e|gaeillth.Mentai Rfe&rdation committee of the -Jp Rlver and the March 22-23 trip will professor of philosophy; and CCOtSTtATlON it in progress weekday* No federal funds are being withheld (roift I federal dur-" ^Jbe on the Lower Guadalupe River,e ^ Texas Air Cbntrof^oard TTACBf by the3" |>--R,ffhts the Ex­' ' Wednesday with a workshop professor of architecture. Rights and Suffrage Com- Jtension Teaching and Field.Service _ Environmental Protection Agency (EPA^ Barden said he did not know how much,, mittee, will be guests on Bureau, Extension BuildingSOI. Itis 3quota i fes Family Effectiveness. It . The radio programs will run is $7.50for eachtripantfeacltpersftt despite public reports about fund money would be involved if there is a cutoff.; "Capitol Gallery" at 7 p.m. not necessary to be a UT student to ill offer communication : weekly through April 7. They • •-enroll. For 'ipore information ctrfk* .should bring their own food, Jhe;' Arthur W.. Busch, EPA Region VI ad® Saturday On KLRN-TV, ikrlps wlll begin at 5 p.m. March 15 JI7178S, it* ministrator in Dallas, said Thursday aftetf' fedwalMlat^ranH^faH^sTo^^^w^r^W^118 for parents, husbands^;are sponsored by theUniversi* " Wh wand 22, meeting atMhe Hast Mall • ihi^ tn^"»^wives and other adults Uvin* channel 9. fountain. meeting with TACB officials in Gov. Dolp%* sibilitie^ and ty Communication Center and Guest R.C. is a ST. AUSTIN'S MUHSM SCHOOt. 1911 San Uf MIWIINO EfwM JMn.a family* thetha LeagueT aa(f»A ofnf WomenUfnman Voters.I/rttAvo Nichols :vt,,fonio St., has scheduled its annual INTCRCOUCOIATI TIAM -Briscoe's office. h."~ sff^tryouts begin Friday in the Union * leader in the fighi to have M&®ooK Fair from 3 to 5 p.m.Friday, 4 •jJiBullding Games Area for corrtpeti- HOWEVER, certain funds maybe withheld a.m. to 2. IIP --'• «—j •*+> «.*«.«-«« He added there was no discussion in ^ iPwfcHftinSaturday andI Benefit Dancers ^voting rights restored to |EppYnf. 'Sunday sdhool ikJtion a mee'^arch23 at theunion In Ote mm if some requirements under the Clean Air Act— governor!® meeting about a suit the TACBg$ffi * £ifSSJJlSf a proposal which has QYBowling Lanes. Persons can try out felons, ^Ssaudlforlum. The fair is sponsored ''at all hours the area is open. : . ,. are not met bvby TACB.TACB, BusrhBusch saidsaid. and the attorney feneral filed last October^^ S fe ^^ons at thJ Members of the Junior aroused much controversy. : V 'Annually by St. Austin's Library UNIVERSITY OMBUOSMAN,applications for ji-7;. One of the requirements involves con-V 5?ncenun« an EPA transportation order. m Mr^erson or SSO Helping Hand and the Junior -Board to raise funds to support the wv.&.1974.75 are being accepted in theOf­ svAcos1 f State Rep. Kay Bailey has -.^school's library. The public is in-1troling and reducing air pollution from: « ^THE ORDER requires the TACB tocontrol'*1 ®[S PCr P6'50" or Helping Hand Children's received publicity for her -" •'.iVited to attend,for more information v*'fice of the Vice-President for Stu­ •:'f>dent Affairs. Anyone with senior automotive traffic. ^ and reduce air pollution from vehicle traffic, "v . • as* ithor Home Association Board of proposal, to include property -call 477-3577 or 477-37S1."J:V*Y" XSM,,; hours and an interest in problem­ .workshops in * TO comply with this order the TACB would "We didn't discuss the litigation mainlyt"' Directors will sponsor two ownership a voting IfXAS COWBOYS will sponsor a trial"run V't-vjolving and-, administrative as Relating Person to Person, ' procedures may apply at Main infringe upon the authorityof several indirect because the attorney general wasn't presents A«ttmm Csvlf • f itst Lllnn benefits in March to raise niiatifiratinn Other com-of the Spiciaf Olympics meet with -v Building 121 or Call 47J-1J9. The sources, Charles R. Barden, TACB executive deadline IsMarch 8. V . TOSKSSHEffiia nese indireci MEETIN«;-^' Relationships MARK-AGE Will meet at 7:30 jp.m. Frlday ' P- traffic controls, water quality and highways, listening to various issues, he said. debutantes will be honored North Lamar in Business-EconomtestBulldlngiM, V^meet throughout March. All 'Capitol Gallery" will be Koenig Lane and Jie explained. Barden also said he would meet again soon guests at a tea dancefrom 4 to Boulevard. to discuss how toattune to theChrist : f Banden said EPA antipollution standards with Busch and other EPA and TACB of-' -workshops will meet at the .6 p.m. Sunday at Westwood reshown at 11 a.m. Sunday on -self via meditation and how space -jHuman Development Center-channel 9. UNION ARTS AND THEATER COMMITTK-Wili brothers and sisters ajd in tbev'can be met by curbing sueh pollutants as facfifi -ficials to iron out different areas of the state Country Club. Reservations, sponsor a "Midnight Special" film transmutation process. " "; •' South, 1430 Collier St., for the. ANNOUNCSMfNTS Friday In the Union Theatre. tories an^ other large industrial complexes. agency's responsibilities. are $12 for couples, $6 "for >first meeting. AlFtM Ml DOXA will sponsor a German "Spirits of the Dead" starring Jane MEXICAN-AMERICAN VOUTH singles and $3.50 for students acchitecture lectureat 4p.m: Friday Fonda, Alain Deldn and Terrfnce a For more information or ..ORGANIZATION will meeTit # p.ifl' " ¥•-- and Monday by Guillermo Torres, will post students, |inder-2f,v- "Stamp si for • Friday in the Catholic Student "registration call Interchange Department of Architecture attUT faculty and staff and $1.50 for Center basement for a party. Music , Arlington, in Business-Economics members. A second film, "State of at 447-4141.' . Fashions ; . -will be provided, and drinks wilt be TEXAS! A show featuring Building 151. * 'fSiege," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. $1.50.COUCATKMAI COUNOL nominations may ' and 9:45 p.m. Frldiay; 7, 9:10 andPanel Discussion f Scout Indian dancers, square be made from •» a.mrfo noon and 1 K " 11:20 p.m. Saturday; and 7 and 9:10 PHASE III AUSTIN TOMORROW dancers and Cedar Park p.m. to 5p.m. through FridayIn Sut-. " p.m. Sunday. A.Sunday;matinee film NEIGHBORHOOD MEETING for Zone,4 ton Hall. will be shown at 2 p.m. Sunday. ''Humanistic Implications stompers in a showing of spr­will be 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday at HINOOSPH SCHOURSHIK applications . Tickets will be 50 cents for children a movie of Constitutional • Reyision" ^ing fashions by local • are available In Sutton Halt 117. and 75 cents for adults; adults over Rosedaie Elementary, 2117 W. 49th St. will be the topic of a radio merchants will be at 8 p.m. Deadline for applying for the 1974-75 12 must be accompanied by a child! academic year Is Friday. PHASE III AUSTIN TOMORROW tm -w-t-' program from 7 to 9 p.m. Sun-: > Wednesday in Municipal ID CARD CCNTfl in Gregory Gym 20Q will UNION GAMES AREA is offering bowling NEIGHBORHOOD MEETING for Zone 10 day on KUT-FM 90.7. Auditorium. close Friday because of the State for 25 cents a game (normally 40 will be 2 to 5 p.m. Sundav at Mon-Panel members on the radio topolis Community. .Center, .1200 High School Basketball Tourna-cents) beginning Friday and con- Tickets for the fashionshow • ment. ' tinuing through May 15 during the Montopolis Roadprogram will be former U.S. and presentation of JEWISH. STUDENTS, Sabbath candle following hours: 8 to 9 a.m. Monday Sen. Ralph Yarborough, lighting time Friday is 7:11 p.m. through Thursday and 8 to 11:45 SOUP AND SANDWICH SEMINAR sponsored debutantes may be purchased suspense PLACEMENT TEST RESULTS and petitions for a.m. Friday. by the League of Women Voters of member of the Constitutional -AiOwrHWn«Wn.W«wVortiyoet from any member of the credit by examination will be . Austin willmeet atnoon Thursday at Revision Commission; Junior Helping Hand or by . avaHabiefrom IIa.m. to3 p,m.Fri­UNION MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT 2401 Pemberton Parkway to discuss day In the Academic Center lobby. COMMITTEE'wilt sponsor a dance Fri­ on ^-I ^ «£'? ii Emmett S. Redford, Universi-•? calling 454-5221. Admission is New freshman who entered in day from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday league positions issues. Nancy Holmes, legislative chairman ot the ty professor of government; , $1 prior to the show or $1.50 at January should pick up results of in the Union Building Main state board of League of Women •credit earned with CElEB Achieve­Ballroom. Admission will be $2 for« will speak. Voters Everyone-is Janice May, associate govern-the door. ment Tests. Results and petitions students and S2.SO for the general . welcome. Yves Montandin public. STUOENTS OLDER THAN AVERAGE Will spon­ UNION RECREATION COMMITTEE will spon­ sor a happy hour from 4' to 6 p.m. sor "Kite Flight & Possible Fife'" Friday in Armand|s Upitairs. ; " from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday in the playgrounds of Zilker Park (north TABIETOP GENERALS will meetat 1:05 p.m. side). There will be a SI admission Sunday in the Union Building Junior and beer will be served. Prizes will Ballroom to play diplomacy andwar -be awarded for-sharpest-kite^ •0THEBEARTH the exhibition regarded among critics, Jonnson Aumtoriunfo ••>•< sent^rsotoconcert^8r30-provideSHWopportunltiHoi* The 21-piece group is undei^ J?'jp.ro,Sunday.at Arr^dillp. Austin residents to enjoy bond Theater, Screenings direction of Dr. Glenn ^ entourage students' in-air^ ; Daum, assistant professor »» *^''"r AMerest in art. Two opening for "The WhiteSheik/' and ^f music. The concert will Aft receptions are planned to 8:20 p.m. for •'!ViteUoni." feature several works by ^PAINTINGS AND lPs>honor the students whose Ttiad Jones which, accoi*^.KDRAWINGS of more than ,;fM Wort will be on display ;r:;;v:^T ding to Daunt, mix W4i&»,^||)o Austin-students'-will tSlsThe wilWill have Its Austin students will be i^The Sunday opening ~V£US STOP" will »tw J®511 exhibition at the 19th an-^feature, elemehtary -)S galaf champagne opening at ventive harmonies. The ^t^uai Wellesley Junior Art ^students, and the second 8:30 p.m. Friday at Center works^qVs include central r o.._j... 11 mm m. _ ~ , m111lu"?^^u ^Exhibition from Sunday opening on March 17 will^ Stage. Call 477-1012 for Park North, The Walt? |^through March 31 at the exhibit the wrok of senior . ticket• information and ^jtyou Swang for Me.-i Laguna Gloria Art high school students. reservations. 3 f^I'Don't Ever Leave Me'^s *.,ahd "Mornin' Reverend.':; ' Also on the program will; oa^'mj.&ua Memoriam," by David . 2Ut & Guadalupe Second level Dobie Moll 477-1324 |f|THE DEPARTMENT dF Nikolais Dance Theatre |^.:,,VMUS1C will present three PGCIflL DOUBLE FEATURE The internationally acclaimed Nikolais Dance Theater perform around the world. Nikolais' belief that color and " Student piaho recitals at •' will perform at 8p.m. Sunday and Monday in Munici sound, as well as sculpture, are essential to dance, has * . . noon Friday. Judith Pope t Auditorium. In addition to th# two performance*, the given birth to the multimedia or total theater concept in v*:--.^3ra! perRrm Soliata Opus |>»>Wi>i<»<>»»»MMllim theater will conduct a lecture-demonstration at 11 a.m. *u-r-V. u-V". ,109 by Beethoven. Lester the United States. Tickets for the. performances may be f Tuesday in the Union Main Ballroom..A matter daM will Senter will perform Sonata purchased in advance at the Hogg Auditorium Box oiFfice :be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Main Ballroom In D Minor by Chopin, for $3, $4 and $5. Optional fee holders may draw free also. Formed by Alwin Nikolais in 1948, the group t.. .Shirley Kirshbaum will, began in the famous Henry Street Playhouse on the tickets. Tickets will be availableat the door on the night perform Sonata in D Ma­ N lower East Side of New York Gty and has gone on to of the performance. i? V' jor, K. 283 by Mozart. THE NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE, a country television < rock group that has achiev- iff Jackson Browne, Linda 6i30 p.m. 9 p.m. rlOiipp.m.­ , ^ ed much acclaim for their 7 Jimmie Dean Show J >. 9 Tribute to Casals > J • ". 7 Movie: "Wild In the Streets"Rondstadt, James Brown, 9, 36 News _ .7 C C-24 Toma ^ -• ' -9 Masterpiece Theatre* • ^ ; '; work with Jerry Garcia Commander Cody and Peter. , 24 IDream of Jeannls . / 36 Dean Martin Comedy Hour-24"In Concert"—James Brown, v'Vand the Grateful Dead, will Yarrow will perform on "In 7 p.m. v. ,v ii~ -i'lO p.m. V.t.'iS'V' Commander Cody, Jackson Browne,: •perform at Armadillo % 24. 36 News Linda Rondstadt and Peter Yarrow Concert" at10:30 p.m. Friday ' 7 Dirty Sally -'"•» The French Chef 36 Tonight Show j^World Headquarters at 9 Washington Week in Review on ABC Wide World of Enter­24 Brady Bunch tainment. 36 Sanford and Son TRANS*TEXAS 7:30 p.m. BOX OFFICE OPEN 1:4S $1.00 til 6 FIRST I The 10:30 p.m. movie on 7 Good Times channel 7 will be "Wild in the Features 2-4-6-8-10 r 9 Wall Street Week \ W\ RtuMUM St —47719M Streets," starring Christopher ' 24 The Six Million Dollar Man ma 36 Bob Hope Special Jones, Shelley Winters,, and 9 p.m. •WSV '/.Jflls 'nr? Hal Holbrook. A 24-year-old a film about ? f J,-U— 7 Movie: "The Sweet Rfde" ~ man becomes President of the 9 Capitol Gallery MfRi United States and proceeds to 1:30 p.m. ' > r-t * 9 Lawn and Garden ~ : JIMIHENDRIX place all citizens over the age,.; --24 The Odd Couple ~ of 30 in concentration camps. 36 Brian Keith Show . CARRY KRAMER oti MARTIN ROSEN desert jr ALAN BATES & OLIVER REED| 'tMi ' GLENDA,JACKSON' JENNIE LINDEf '...THE BEST FILM • ' m KEN RUSSELL'S (tool 58 XBOUTPOP MUSIC ^ • KEN RUSSELLS Film ' ' ' I D.H.LAWRENCE'S • I'VE EVER SEEN." 1 -George Melly "THEMUSIC LOVERS" WOMEN IN LOVE' THEXONDON SUNDAY OBSERVER for-.' RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN 6LENDA-JACKSON TONITE 3:20, 7:50 fl:10t 5:40, 10:00 ..AS ENTERTAINING WILD, RACY, BOLD SATIRE with ByronBmrttna AND INTERESTING LEE Fsrnwriy with thr Hying Burritto Brat. f pulls out all the atopsl" A MOTION PICTURE HESSEL and ROGER BARLETT r Advinctd tickits Discount R*t, JIMI HENDRIX POSTER 50* TO ALL PATRONS! DON'T FORGET Featuring tlx pnvloutly uiMMfi partormancat from 1968 to 1970, M. Comedy From Including th» Montmny, /•/•of Wight, and Woodttock Ftotlnlt SmtXiSSS* touttmtCKmmjmMom the director A DOCUMENTARY TOOM WARNER BROS Q|A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY T.G.I.F. Iflff A JOE BOYD, JOHN HEAD, YES OARY WEiS PRODUCTION,, TECHNICOLOR* THIS AFTERNOON —tonight— , "SHEIK" 6:45*10:15 S $1.50 1 "VITEUONI" 8:20 WEEKEND MATINEES DOUBLE FEATURE "SHEIK" 3:15 STRAW BRIDGE "VITEUONI" 4:50 r ;s/±. yfnull HAPPY HOUR MON.-SAT. 3-7:30 TWO HAR& FiLMS-JSYJ $1.40 Pitcher 75* Highball ! 30e Mug / f • j-'r- OPENS THIS NT fit iil mtl|| \\\ WEEKEND' Hitliti \HM "COMES ON LIKE A FIRE SCREEN 2 ADULTS ONU "Before the appearance of VtTELLONi' I •' had tften been regarded as his (Felllni's) most ENGINE...ISHOOK WITH MIXED -succfsfuf film, andso it is."'-'^j-~ 2:00, 3:40, 5:2ft-S1.00 4fi.DRINKSil Peter Harcourt SHOCK AND LAUGHtER!" 7:00; *:40, 10;20 -$1.50 ,. Fi,m Quarterly —NEW YftRK TIUPS fa bIE^iI 4 HUGE m FLASH ft DANCE W. A, FtOOBtg FRIDAY 8prh. THE O'NEAL SATURDAV9piu & ASLEEP AT THE WHITE SHEIK' TheRollingStones " WHEEL m', "This livety socialeonmdy IsperhapS the freshest FANTASTIC SOUND SYSTEMI and the most tender and naturaitstic of his films. Kits Ktae Bang Bang "Hera is a Htm that reminds you of Chaplin and. Preston Sturges...clearly the work of a genius." RESERVATIONS New York Post "The Purpts Ooath" 459-8851 BUCK ROGERS POSTPONED fM THE DAn»Y TEXA^Pa &sZ • ' mm i.'ivi a *>*g$­ umorist • ^A#$V,>V r, ' SIP •"„ -•'.Tf-'V^m Lf&>^' 9 " By A. GLENN MYERS ; -Texan Staff Writer Although many an '"entertainer-folksinger" innocuously ­' performs a set of Kingston Trio and pop-pastoral tunes, Don 1 'Sanders writes and singsabout where he livesand has livedo-' the city, with its gutters, pick-ups, drugs, sexual crisis * ^educaton and humor. ^ r>' "Cruiser" is a tale of the stud, or his counterpart, in his HELD OVER 10th RECORD WEEK -ABC-TV IT IS THE SORTMMOVIE HOLLYWOOD SUPPOSEDLY DOESN'T MAKE ANY MORE PAPILLON' IS THE ESCAPIST MOVIE WE iif USED TO GO SEE ON SATURDAY NIGHT/' —Vincent Cenby, New.Yorktfa^ v t v, ti *-«s; : m. PASS ACADEMY) LIST AWARD USPEHDED kOMINS |, Vxw "The film packs excitement and tension. McQueen and Hoffman are both superb." Cue Magazine""Mtltn W!TIS!S*trJ#^' ILAST 1 '0 ncquraHDmam l/ATS! maFRWtiUJH1SCHAfFNtRIdni PflPLLOn v. , VICTOR JORY DON GORDON "ANTHONY ZERBEr TED RICHMOND —ROBERT DORFMANN. FRANKLIN J SCHAFFNER vn f^RAMOUWPICTl^CORPORAlXJN •rrffttJMVfcAVS. WC pmm J^CKLEMMCW , 'S/VETHETTGERT . wateringJACKGlLfORD «nd bwxiwintLMjnE HEMMw WHWn'bvSTEMESHAGAN tMruikar AndurarEDWW^ fOJDHW PnduMdbyST^ASHMW* nwrtadlvJOWC'WUSSOt r MAMNTtMUTMEt TONICMT "MOOT a* iM'tm. omt near «t ms milutum_ 4S4-J711 md ftSO pjm. Sparkle-chrome hyper-ventilated gas-eating phallic symbol on wheels stopping for hitch-hikers with the one-liner "You i .wanna go for a r^de?" "One Way Jesus" isa statement to the .}'Jesus Freaks and Hare Krishna's who have found the only 'true key to heaven. These, like many of Sanders' com­ positions, satirically focus on various aspects of being alive JwiayandpFovidfr^nalternative-viewpointiS— IF HE at times is uncomfortable or painful to listen to, perhaps it is because he often confronts the audience with the realities of their existence which they thought they had left or hidden at homte or in their minds. ®§ Sanders identifies himself as a poet. He agrees with Ezra Pound's statement, "1believe that the poet is the antenna of society." The poet receives the pulse and signals, ingests them; selects and transmits his understanding back on to the people. Because they aresensitive interpreters, poetsshould; ft-.-.-­ However; Sandersdoes not set himself apart;, "One of the things about me is how much alike I am with people in general. I've learned a skill that is no better or worse thai ^lewhoaremusicians.r ^ ,v --v.,: 1 1 - v* • • ; T.. -I1".*t *• "i./ ,^.iEc>«iwMso^HlKt«ELHEKeemsrEM -• MCH*a A mti• «h»MWKhn, UWHENC6 SOMAN-MMtvJULESL£VYw SUICtS-iigwi^fc* Pttfle 16|Fflday' JAarch 2* 1974 THE DAILY TO5CAN r n - hfTiJ} rV v>. —Texan by Andy SlivAMMn • Don Sanders relaxes with his guitar and dogf 'Polar Bear/ definite standards. Although the songs are very dense, and take several listenings to realize, the hope is that the perfor­ mance wll be understood first on an intuitive level." ,s Going to see Sanders is not like watching television. It is necessary to commit oneself. Whether, you like him or hate $1.00 HI 3 p.m VARSITY 1:40-3:20-5:00 .'•loO (U jADAL III1! ST («•! i 1 6:40-8:20-10:00 WOODY ALLEN TAKES A NOSTALGIC LOOK ^ AT THE FUTURE r = Wbody" Dian? cADeq,t ®Kieato V"§leepeir $1.00 til 7 p.m. FIRST AUSTIN FEATURES AUSTIN 1 r) SO ( ONf.RI AVI tM-7'SMM SHOWINGI AGLOWINGLYBEAUTIFUC FILM! Be sure—be absolutely •i—Qona Shalit, sure—to see it!" Ladlaa' HomeJournal AN INSPIRED MAGICAL £XPCRIENCC! It celebrates life and achieves rare stature for the screen!"—flex N.Y.Daily News Exclusive Engagement U MILKWOOD IS AN INSPIRED, MAGICAL r m—foUV;,• -mmm mmm EXPERIENCEfi t-REX REED,NIY.DallyN»wt W OYUNTHOIiAI'ilgSi^ UNDER MILKWOOD RICHARD BURTON *° ELIZABETH TAYLOR ME* O'TOOLE rS£Z3tZL^-ZTl_llii. I %x jSvs -^ •®^YV •> #' --" Wmm him, you will form your own opinion. And)like Sanders, it is i doubtful that you will leave with nothing to say or'think r about. -:.Sanders, urban wit, poet humorist, musician, actor and v person, is appearing at The Pub through [Saturday.. . , ii Joe Mike Taylor, playing six and 12-stfing guitar^nd twl kinds of harmonicas! and also singing his own materi^, can;; also be heard at Thie Pub through Saturday. " "" \ Arts and Theatre Committee ; SPECIAL SUNDAY CHILDREN'S MATINEE March 3 0 THE YEARLING" March 10 ' "KIDNAPPED" March 17 ICHABOD & WR, TOADi^ March 24 THE SHAGGY DOG" Admission: 50* for Children, 75* for Parents Parents over 12 must be accompanied by a child 2:00 P.M. UNION THEATRE TWIN(T.TTI SOUTH SIDE 710 E Bon Whit BQX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS DUSK To allow audiences to regain their composure from the emotional impact of "Sisters" after each showing, no one will be seated during a SPECIAL SHOCK RECOVERY PERIOD! tssmn Williams MAR60T KIDDER*JENNIFER SALUOICTCPC •yq rotor rrnowti«a AnAimMrjinlnlitfnatirwxIIMMw VIU I M10 'Pius CO-FEATURE THERE ARE SEVEN BASIC FEMALE RESPONSES! These girls experience themall t cotoi) . h FtLMKOPLK Prtuntatiot .tittaM : A TRANS AMENICAN SOUTHSIDE -SOUTH SCREEN m ntroduclng 8UE-8UE as SHANGHAI LIL THE MISTRESS OF TNE MARTIAL ART* *&> rfr PIUS CO-FEATURE € 1% . DAUGHTERS OF fe'V DARKNESS­ cr. ii' if i«fcp« I zx I 3" kM " * n: v . : 1ESIP •:jggs8 ' I'ifle ijfP.: an enigma in By MARK OSWALD Seven and a half of it's mine.* or Omaha; Nebraska") to write his doctoral thesis. He got*a Texan Staff Writer v Whitaker served in the military'us'a specific objectorduring teaching position at the University in the then-fledgling RTF ;S Dr. Rodney Whitaker came to theUniversity seven yearsago tiie Korean warw"in such wartorn places as River Street it|_department as so associate professor in the radio-television-film depart­ ;id^a of working in filiiiat Texas wasenormously attract­ ment. Before then, he'd been a playwright, done "slave labor" After the ^Sriie iecfded tb'gd !o tottegfe bn the Gi Bill. "tive because it wasn't already Mined. There was no film in traveling-carnivals and hustled his way around Japan with a applied to a number of major colleges, informing them what a erogram in place at that time," Whitaker related, '-There ~ '"~r uniquely brilliant, well-traveled young man I was, and that r wasn't muctvelse in place at the time, either -t we had a two- NowWhitaker is chairman of the country's largest RTF like to grace their campus with my presence/' Whitaker said,' car dirt-floor garage, one camera and titfee rewinds.department; he also teachesgraduate studentsfilm writing and half jokingly. 3$&M "It was fun. The students were bright, we made films and direction and writes novels and Hollywood screenplays, using i|%But no major university would buy his story, and Whitaker, learned abbut films, we laughed and joked and drank a lot of a*^nu®ri!!?m5,: .., ^ still minus a high school diploma, eventually ended up in a wine together, thought a lot together and made this one of the Whitaker, 43, said las^ ^eek that his background ''isn't any "notoriously dumb" junior college in Washington. k top three or four film departments in the nation." more interesting than that of most teachers on campus:" But K ^He blitzed his way through the JC curriculum ("like Bart Three years ago, WhitakeV became chairman of the depart­ his past sounds like an On the Road"-type novel. Siarr playing for Killeen High School -it wasn't too hard t<5 ment, "by forfeit —1 no one else wanted the job," he said. I d nevCT lived for two years anywhere before I got to Tex-score''), and got a scholarship.the Ujuy&stty ol Wftiiupgto: Whitaker, who authored a book on film criticism and as," said Whitaker, who speaks of his colorful, rambling past as "a sort of hired actor.: _ _ w UwM '^linguistics,-"The Language of Film" now used in classes at the with appropriate gusto. "Washington at that time was said^o have tine br'Bie 'besi ' University, has some definite ideas about cinema. He hatesHe was born in New York near the Canadian border and got drama departments in the nation," Whitaker said, "the+reasoi , Fellini ("A uniquely ed up and dull man whosehis firsttaste of education in a number of urban centers in that being that their "students" were all hired guns with a co: ^ roblems don't ihterest me"), spurns' the"Academy Awards^ state. "I went to thekinds of schools where if anyone caught you siderable amount of dramatic experience, and their plays look| ' ("They are to cinema what the Miss America pageant is tobrown-nosing the teacher, all the boys and most of the larger ed extraordinarily good." women's liberation — a great big television event which is «rirl« ware anina ~)Und the Crap OUt Of Vt>" " MM ill •wmk of a • 'What graduate who is perfectly able to get out and become a one-or two-man film company, do the whole gig," Whitaker said. "We're the best ifl the world at this because we are the wdy ^mes doing it."--­ > The availability of films to students is another area where Whitaker feels the University excells. "We've had visitorsfrom major campusesall over the country, amazed at thenumber of really good movies here during any given #eek.n. The department-ran CinemaTexas brings In most of the better movies, Whitaker said, "often at a loss, because not as many people wani tosee the best movies as want to see 'Gidget Gets Pregnant' or whatever." ' like to see such facilities expanded, envisioning & film flBrlry as the'nfext step. "The print era is dead," Whitaker claims, "what we need is a place;where a student'could see " film upon call, by himself, when he wants to... but in order get this kihd or rig into,p6sition, the vast majority of the coi unity of scholars-here are going to have to decide that soi money that always goes for buying, binding and housing pri .. , , early -I wag always^dontiitaing his studies there as ^graduate when hedecided togo"daydreaming, says Whitaker — and his overseers switched to Europe. He left school in mid-semester and spent si*months him tfc technical sehool, achange that appealed little to young motorcycling on the Continent. v v-'' f .^Mtaker. j After Europe, he returned to Washington and ran a theater .. _In a year and a half of technical school I think.J. made one ' there. "I found out that by doing this I'd reeked up enough ashtrfyout of copper," Whitaker said. ^ ^"k At 14 ne d had enough, dropped out, got icycle and started to "l?snj8''«roundV the continent,, getting work by following cropharvests from north to south. Winters were spentat any job that came along — washing dishesor travelingas a laborer in a car-­nival. "I mostlyspent my timein the carnival getting dirty and talk­ing to the old winos," Whitaker said, "listening to their vast lies and helping them.get their first bolts of cheap white wine down in the morning." Whitaker also made'his' living doing small acting parts he found as he traveled around. "Acting waskind of fun and a good way to pick up your money for a couple of hours work a night." He eventually made his way to Japan shortly after the end of World War II. "I lived with a White Russian whose family had been spooked out of Russia by the events of 1917," Whitaker related^ "He had market potential and I hack a PX card, and between us we were able to stay alive moving whatever came into hand. The carnival training came in handy them." "Hustling has always been secdnd nature to me," he added. "I figure if $15 in the room is divided amongst six people, then Village Twinsfcs 441 &6A9 1930 EAST RIVERSIDE URIVt $1.00 til 5MondojjMrfj^^ MALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS'? WILD NEW CARTOON FEATU 12:30-2:00-3:30-5:00­6:30-8:00-9:30 «S5Wi TECHNICOLOR" MNadtiSMUmlml Pmfato&lnce NO REDUCED PRICES • PASSES SUSPENDED TURES 12:30-2:15-4:00-5:45-7:30-9:15 rTEXAS OPEN 1:45 HELD FEATURES 2444-10OVER REpllCED PRICES TIL 6:15 12200 HMMdtDfiM—453-GM1 (MON -SAT ) BEST BEST ACTRESS SONG MARSHA MASON A STORY FOR EVERY ONE WHO THINKS^ THEY CAN NEVER FAIL IN LOVE AGAIN. MARSHA MASON and ELI WALL/CH In A MARK RYDEtl FILM ^CINDERELLA LIBERTY" -^ credit for,an MA; sol tookoff four weeks and wrote my thesis,f Whitaker said. MFour days after Ientered graduate school rd done all that was required formy MA. I just had-tohang around awhile to fill the residency requirements." What Whitaker calls hils "season of failures" followed his college career. Working out of Canada, he developed a TV series that never aired, wrote a musical comedy that flopped and directed a number of other unsuccessful dramas in New York. •• ''But the thing was, I was getting paid for all this," Whitaker explained, "I could see that if this kept up^ L wassoon going to become the richest invisible man in the Northeast'." Whitaker eventually gave up the ill-fated ventures, deciding to return to school for a Ph.D. He wrote to Northwestern University, offering to teach theater direction there in return for the doctoral education. Y "But when I got, there, I realized that they had mis­ understood; they thought I had meant film direction, not theater," Whitaker said; "So, recognizing that talent is free flowing and specific subjects don't matter much, and that anybody can learn what a cameraman knows in two days, 1 started teaching film." . Following two years at Northwestern, Whitaker holed up in Omaha ("I could never remember if it was Nebraska, Omaha ABARET Jf NEW COUNTRY WESTERN DANCING -BEER FRI., MARCH 1 SOUNDS OF COUNTRY MARCH 2 WAYNV ELLIS t Hw Wanted MM Naihvilk Recording Artist) 91900 US 183 (Near Cedar Park) , §«r Ph. 258-9663 i0HtMHtHniiiimiiiiiuiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiii(luiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiii cjrcsou&jrftoo* ~ ^ SiUm-., ,, BAND AND DANCING SEVEN NIGHTS A WEEK AT THE SOUTH DOOR _ Tonight Featuringr:^ I BOLA HOOKER S -Every Week at the South Door | Mon.-Wed. -NO COVER 1 Sun.-Thurs. -Unescourted ladies ; g f Pay no cover -recffiyftone free drink ^ vS 1523 Tinnin Ford Rd. 4­ 1S00 S. PLEASANT VAllEY ROAD JUST OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE AWARD NOMINEE MON-SAT AU SCATS FEATURES 2:30-6:15-10:00 *1.00 tin 6 NOMINATED FOR 2 ACADEMY AWARDS Tin Diwlin Cowpn (mwiua wummmAL A ^ The Dvecton Company presents Ryan ONeal m A Peter Bogdonovtch ProductionTWER MOON1 Co-stemns Madeline Kdhn •John Hlcrmen • And introduansItfum ONed as Addte Soeenplay byAlvin $a>9ent • Based on the novel,'Addteftay/ byJoe David Brown I POIJLWL^gy I Directed and ^oduced by Peter Boadanovich• AParamount Reieate j Soufidfrdck Album Avail'c: "'.inAMARmRANaOHOnFRBduOan • ifi "*' W ——————— • jSt .r. WMMnWSItVESHAGAN EMcudMFtaduMEDW^SEBJDMAN --'J PmduerfhvS^SHAGAN D*^byJOWa«Ai>SEN -MMOHiWIMMtHIMUSOiJkOQUm HKNTIWMOSWW* AWMMMUNrnCIUM jJLiii playing with a fairly light hand — I'm a little tired of films that .are 'sinificant' "), c? Whitaker commented on how he judges a movie: "I think the key time to analyze a movie is the 15 minutes that you're walk­ing away from the theater in the dark, hopefully in the rain with your head down, and you're still just thinking mostly of the movie... that gentle time in there makesit either a good film or : -a bad one." And all the restof the scholarship about movies hasto do with 'how the hell did they pull that off?' — that sensation ...,f Whitaker prefers to remain rather closed-mouthed about his own clandestine screenplays, as well as his novels. He releases his fiction using an alias • 'not because I'm ashamed of it, it just doesn't have anything todo with what Ido hereas a teacher.If I talk about it much, or even let it be talked about much, the whole grounds with which I relate to my graduate students would be grounds of my success in a different field. "I write under names other th£n my own just,so it won't get confused with what I do as a hired teacher.' He describes his stories as "thriller fiction of a'rather bright type. It's rather wryly written; other than that it'sgot the usual qualities of thriller fiction—it's slam-bang, punch and screw, that sort of thing.' "If I wrote what we call literature with a capital L, with sincerity and purpose, it would be proper to talk about ita great deal because studentswould want to hear aboutit; but notabout schlock fiction." The RTF chairmansays he enjoys a "peer relationship" with hisstudents, and is proud of the resultsof film education at the liiiiiiifliiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiitiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiii THE FOUR THEATRE SHOWCASE Rtdutid Prim Til 6 P.M. Men. thru-Sat. FEATURES 12:50-3:00-5:10-7:25-9:35 »7 -iif PLUS • I'll* BEST SONG :ffiEST-;ART BEST COSTUME DESIGN BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY ^ 7 " MON-UT «u sun "BEST ORIGINAL DRAMATICKORE t FEATURES 2.50-5:10-7:30-9:50, 7^" AllSEATS $1XO III"6" p.tn* 2%BadeatfJkterdJ\/omlBa&otK X)—' FEATURES 1^30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 MON-SAT ler business Ml MATS *1JB0 / was pleasure. Until her date with.. "Swf,.find out mMns! -• • . . ges. -, t ^ p. Whitaker's educational ideas have spread beyorid the Uiiive|> sity community; he recently took .a year's leave of abteiice & work in London on 4 Fulbright grant, helping to establish conf munication education in Great Britain But Whitakeris reafly get out of the academic world for a white. v ."This is my last year as chairman,u he said, '^-m'going retire. I have enough money in hand fbr my iamily and I to li for five years. Then I'll have to go back to work. yTd rather do it this way than retire when l'm 58, and end IjHng somewhere getting a wrinkled chest tan." SUNDA ROGER McGUINN & CEDAR FROST —"r Advance Ticket! $3 -­AvailableIt Oat Willies, Inner Sanctum, IArmadillo ..m., $3.50 at the Door . . THE Village VILLAGE Cinema i Four 17N W«t $1.00 til 5 MON-FRI No Reductd Pricn WALT DISNEY IAHB ON IM COMTIOVmiM •OMTMT SKtmitiB COMVfNTfOMl TwomBor WSTOIT MW ^ _ AMHoiost (6) JjJl;3p-!^p0-3;30­ $1.00 til 5 MON.-FRI ms PWAVBOr-aXflfiBVOQUXE sees 1:00-3:10-5:20 7:30-9:50 $1.00 til 5 MON.-FRI. GEORGE C.SC0TT JACK§|BALANCE ' ^ 12:45-2:55-5:05 7:15-9:25 $1.00 fil 5 p.m: M0N.-FRL Riverside Twin Cinema THIS IS THE LAST iimminiom' ^ WEiK TO SEE... rnwuwTKiHS MOR-THins. N* Radvcad PritM HWMil camaovBsui tOM TUT w •sTotr urn AKMM06T 12:30-2:00-3:30-5:00­6:30-8:00-9:30 12^2:154M-5^7dM:t5 CINEMA 1 CINEMA2 ivexy "Wftea ofcaLbafavr VIRYAFNCTING MOVII. Ika am,ktfmMMw n|K«Milamm ''"HlffHMOEXMaCKMKfaiV •"caaasaf WW mm •WHIM MMRHMHinatt ia>MtnMaBing«nssiwif .Jw'sX iwdand anhnalMil m OOUHI JULES FQFFBtr * DOMUlSUn«UW> NAKMNN MLUXB Prid»|,; March L 1974 THE DAI^ WW P'" y»••• 11-MIIIUlinn •N .||i;'II rj£*-x ''~llil8iil€ ^ ^^ & akv, mmme®m •••• ^^HBb «»^u HrffflmBb THE DAILYHETEXAIMIC EEE a mmm ' • PHONE A71-5saA88 IVIaI\I.••THR EH Ml 'J& 9£«S ,v« V! AifteiH.. fM fc*\ Ti ^CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS. SERVICES LOST & FOUND TYPING RATES.4i.«-—v- JS word minimirrirf "i -SSSS LARGE Shepherd-Collie mix. Very friendly. Each word one time.'...&S\ ?!&...£• 10 1979 BUICK LE SABRE. On* owner, ex­ NEW THIS WEEK! Ponce de Loon llb> LOST BLACK/Brown Just North of 27th & cellent condition. Attractive four-doer 22nd and San Gabriel, Extra largo two Each word J-4 times •.....% .09 hard top. Unusually good mileage on KENRAY Apartments and Townhousjs^^ THE BLACKSTONE Xerox or IBM Answers to Bruso. Please return. 454-Guadalupe mm Each word 5-9 times i07 bedroom, two batti apartments ABft 9020. Each v*ord 10 or more tlmiM.;.$,.06 regular. Owner has 2 cars, needs only under newownershill 212? HancojA Dr. -$64.50/month one. Call 327-0355 oner 5. Theater. Walking,dt*-|^|­ ^^WSSSRS!S'%r-4C COPIES Student rate each time..75 ne*t toAmericana J100 REWARD escape a felony -no - Ciasvtied Oiiplay fanceof north Loop Shopping Center questions:. Camera, accessories, andl.cot. x one inch one lime .... £2:96 GARDEN ORGANICALLY. Build your and Luby's. Onehalf Mock from shuttle-,. . coat. Lost Saturday ntght Lew Schosl. lcol. x one inch 2-9 timei.......$2.66 Dome House with Solar Heating and tnd Austin transit. 2 bedroom^ga WALK TO CAMPUS; huge efficiencies Reduction-Capability to 24 x 36 1 _coi *, oist,_jnih 10 or _wind Generator. S.1 acres East. 474-townhouses. extra targe Two b*yoo»w|jfe-^-' $125 plus electric, ca/ch,adequate park.-parking fof. Cafl 447-1815; M B.A. •.. 2134; 473-6466. ' .. llatc am And. harO bftthi. CA/CH. RlV^f nictlr furnished. Barranca Squant , „ Pictures, Multiiith, Typing, Multilithing. Binding •more times /........$2.37 llats, one and two baths. : REWARD: Lost Blue Merle COLLIE. hwasher. disposal, door to door garbage^ West 26th.451-«S». CentralPropersti •ras 197B HO SPORTSTER XLCH. chopped, Paraaon Property .Printing^Btgdin^ Grey with black spots. "Matthew." VVa '.'4"he Complete Professional pickup, pool, maid service If desired, ties inc. iH "'ViSvr'1 v '* months. Lost-30th-Red River. 454-9344. lots of chrome.must sell makeoffer. 453- washaterla incomplex. Seeowners. Apt.i iSSS®1-'! OCADUNC SCHtOUft Mfe, sWf 5203. 113 or call 451-484*. JBSSS^tEiSEK xweBmstas service s,,-, ­ sgesgggflg LOST MALE SHORT-Halred St. Ber­ly TwoA TvHdajf 10:00 ®*w. orange and white. In new conditl BPAND NEW ©GINNY'S nards-Needs medication. Epileptic. Con­V"' "/RESUME^ * v~ J, ThurMltty T«i«n Wt^ntidoy. 10:00 a.m. 926-2061. Cash only please; , tact Linda, 451-3586 iF$ Fritfey toon.Thunday 10:00 a.m. WOODWARD APARTMENTS I've Got a Secret Apartments. with or without pictures/ COPYING OVATION steel string acoustic-guitar. • 1722 E. Woodward Office 107 Located in the heart of UT 2 Day Service Mr fefcs Must sell to repay loan. Penny. 442-0712.' 444-7555 area.Iblock toshuttle. SI49.S0 APARTMENT FINDERS service. 472t -Jr SERVICE Sfei !'lfi (Ht tvwf >ifwt modi in mn 1. 2. or 3 bedrooms ?, i -5169.50, ABP. 4162. 472-3210 and 472-7677 . odvtrtiMmtni, ImmidMHwHw mwat b* TC-5W SONY Reel to Reel Inperfect con--.unfurnished or furnished : v.';S'VJ 2707 .Hemphill Park Pfe-givtn«• lh»publfihiM anr*»p*niibl« far ditlon. S400. 442-4795. „ From $140 -$165 472-8253 472-2518. MONTAGE APARTMENT? have on* «v% . -TRAVEL &"-> " •nly ONE imtrrKf inMfiitn. All claim* for 2 swimming pools, playgrounds, v bedroom apartments' near campus on 42 Oobie Mall 476-9171 od|v»tm«nH ttoiftd b* mod* n*t lefw 1967 MUSTANG. Good body,, six washateria. Iighted grounds. 5 minutes shuttle with independent AC $136.50. thon 30 doyt aftor puMkotton." cylinder, automatic transmlss!on. S375. to UT. minutes to B.A.F.B.. steps from* 2*12 Rio Grande. W-JTO. _ Free Parking TYPING II Call 478-9747 after 6:30. D«v*. ^ IRS, on bus line, BILLS PAIO. Frea-.-??•­ -^hannel TV. : : TOWER INTERESTED IN A Responsive Typing Service REDWOOD EFFICIENpes. Near Slfe 20 MPG DATSUN Wagon. oufomalic. campus and shuttle. Shag, full kitchen, -Open 75 hours a week " 'NO-FRILLS LOW-COST • LOW STUDENT RATES air, excellent for travel, children, good small community living. S14S ABP. 403 JET TRAVEL Sfri" 15 words or lesS for 75'the condition, newly inspected. 471-6880. FACULTY MANOR West 38th.Barry GillingwaterCompany. COPY SHOP II 2200 Guadalup< to Europe, the Middle East, the Faf first time, 5' each ad­ 472-4162. 454-OSM. 12x60 FURNISHED WINSTON mobile RBC/Bond Paper Super East, Africa, or practically anywhere? ditional word. 1 col-x one AND STAFF CO-ED DORM 1 BEDROOM 8139. Near campus and EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can helpyou home. Excellent condition, new carpet, S*-i inch, each time $2.37. CA/CH, awning, and skirting. Don, 475-Large 3 bedroom duplex townhouse in shuttle, convenient to dowulown. New Copies find the least expensive way for getting "Unclassifieds"—1 line 3 4241 or 478-4223, after 5. convenient Northeast Austin. WD conn., • 1 Block Campus • Quiet furniture,' pool. 407 west. 38th. Barr Fast Thesis wheFe you want to go. Phone.us toll-free 474:i124 at (800) 223-5569. times Si.00 (Prepaid, No vaulted ceilings, orange shag, fenced • Free Parking • Maid Service Gillingwater Company. 472-4162. 454 Professional Resumes'58 LES PAUL JR. Excellent condition yard, largewalk-ins: 6413B Auburn. 926-8574..' : • Lauhdry Facillfies • All Bills Paid Refunds). Student must Grover tuning keys.S150.441-8565 after5 6614, 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater Com-2200 Guadalupe SEMI-STRAIGHT MALE,travel" HAS THE BEST Powerlter Typewriter, $95 or best offer. ' LVv% in Wooded Seclusion AVAILABLE NOW at summer rates -program. Located 2 blocks from UT campus. 510 West 26th. 472-9251. TYPING Reports, Resumes Call 459-8275. new.efficiencies. 301 West 38th. Sequoia r STEREO DEAL FOR Larger Apartments with shag carpets, TREES & VIEWS Apts. 442-2791. We have been in this business for 50 Theses; Letters ­ BOBBYE DELAFIELD, IBM Selectric, T> All University and LIVING ROOMFURNITURE, including modern furniture, accent wall and con­Nice 2 bedrooms furn. or unturn. only 3 years. pica/elite, 25 years experience, books, Ji>, YOU. sofa sleeper, recliner, and misc., gOod min. from downtown, 5 min. from UT. RENT THESE excellentdormitory-style dissertations, theses, reports, S % business work • ; Jfa Last Minute-Service fey condition, S8S; baby bed, high chair, venient central location. Large, walk;ins. extra storage, private rooms w»th all4itilities paid. Fumlshed. 'mimeographing: 442-7184. i203 East 19th 476-6733 stroller, rocking chair, tabled and chair balconies, lots of glass. From $179 plus $S5/month. Caipeted. air-conditioned, Yv"? -W open 9-9 Mon-Th & 9-5 r, S55; twin bedS25. (after 6p.m.) 441-1184. 1 Bedroom E. OAK KNOLL. 620 South 1st (use auto parking available. Contact FEAUTIFUL PERSONALTYPING.AU SERVICE Frl'Sat ' KS-» S145 unfurnished $160 furnished Timbercreek entrance). 444-1269; 472-ngna9er at33H> Red River or phone 476-PREGNANT your-University"WorKV Fast, SccurafeT" K jWE ARE THE GUITAR'S FRIEND, a SONY STR6046A, AR turntable, Shure 4162rBarry Gillingw«ter"C6mpany".' reasonable Printing-Binding. -Mrs. 472-8936 30A Dobie Center -tpz M91ED, KLH 17's. 6 mos. old. S425. Call 2 Bedroom , jnail order guide toacoustic instruments. Bodour. 478-8113 —— 474-1695r Howard: " FURNISHED EFFICIENCY for rent & accessories. We carry guitars as Mar- $178 unfurnished $198 furnished $155 ABP campus. Older but comfortable. Typing last tin. Guild, Gibson, Ovation, Yamaho; near MAB>V SMALLWOOD -A to.Z 1963 CHEVY II. Good motor, mileage. All Bills Paid 1 bedrooms Lots of windows. S12S. ABP. 472-9661. minute -overnight available. Term SECRETARIAL SERVICE .-Hahner harps, dulcimers, recorders, Needs repairs.$130.5300 Guadalupe. No. shag -paneling papers, theses, dissertations, -letters. banjos, books, and more -and discount 101. 3 to 7. 600 South First St. 444-0687 TARRYTOWN. ONE BEDROOM. unwed mothers in need MasterCharge. BankAmericard. 892-109 East 10thSt. . giant walk-ins -balconies 25%. Our catalogue will be sent out free Mature single, due to special cir­0727 or 442-8545. 472-0149 upon request. Guitar's Friend. 1240 HANDMADE PATCHWORK Quilts. Spanish furnishings cumstances. All bills paid. Only S125. of confidential medical, Theses, Dissertations, themes, $35/each. If interested, dial 453-1845. W\K ( Brogan, Stockbridge, Michigan. 49285. 2423 Town Lake Circle 459-7950. legal and social services FRANCES WOOD Typing Service. Ex-P.R.'s, BC Reports, resumes SOUTH perienced, law theses, dissertations, , Multilithing, Binding SOFA AND MATCHING Chair, also 444-8118 472-4162 ONE BEDROOM Apartment -8155.00. call manuscripts. 453-6090. bookcase headboard. Very good condi­Barry Gillingwater Company Luxury, extra nice, close to campnpus, Everything'From A to Z tion. After 5:30. 447-3981. SHORE shuttle bus. Warwick Apartments.. 2919 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Graduate> SAILBOATS West Avenue. 474-1712. . aridundergraduate work. Choice pt type rlheses, STARK TYPINGS: PORCH SALE -cheap bicycles, skis, APARTMENTS dissertations.-PR'»,: PrlnfSw and styles-and ^sizes. Barbara Tullos, 453-. CANOES stereo, typewriter, clothes, motorcycle, VILLA and two I THE EDAN ' .5124.::..: .-; -Binding,. ' NORTHEAST. Huge one tli-CHarlene ^SAILBOATS -over 50 models. stove,.refrigerator. 404 East-34th. Satur­bedroom. Complete kitchens, lots of Stark, 453-5218. day, Sunday. storage. From SliS plus electricity. 1402 GLADNEY HOME Daysailers, Catamarans, Cruisers, VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diversified East St.." " "" ~ ------ DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, and .Johns (by Reagan High School) pBoardboats. CANOES -Ouachita, Efficiency, 1, 2, and 3 ORLEANS Services. Graduate and undergraduate WANT TO SELLa new bike.10-speed. 14 472-4162. binding. 1515 briefs. typist, 'Pelican. Brownline,, Several models. 454-1583. Barry Gillingwater typing, printing. Koenig law Experienced ' Free lacket S. paddles. inch frame. 472-5220. bedroom apartments. 206 West 38th Company. Lane. 459-7205. Tarrytown. 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine Offer the solution I or 2 Bedroom Furnished, -Slightly 817-926-3306 Brady. 472-4715. to. MODERATELY PRICED RS TYPING, SERVICE. Professional THE FURN. APARTS. your housing. Convenient Reasonable to Shuttle UT. '-a block. funky laundry, 2-bedroom, shuttle, CA/CH. l"i & 2 bath Small -com­pool, dissertations, typing, near' campus. Reports, Copy theses, ~" EXCELLENT resumes. service SAILBOAT 459-9927 plex, pieasant semi-quiet neighbors, fair or write available. 453-7577. SECRETARY TYFlST 452-3314 453-4545 Shore's The South central location to mediocre management. From 8165 2308 Hemphill Street prodycing finest quality typing forSHOP provides easy access to U.T. plus elec. 2600 Enfield. 477-6845. TYPEWRITE SERVICE, efficient iyp-. students and faculty members in every * 1607 E. Riverside WE RENT Come by and see our new efficiency and PLEASE DESPARATELY Fort Worth, Texas Ing at reasonable rates. 926-3254. field for 15 years, will take meticulous 442-5900 NORTHWEST Close in, ideal location, l bedroom apartments on the banks of need someone to. take over spring con­shopping, ~ 76110 care to type law briefs, researchpapers, adjacent all conveniences, Town Lake. Complete with shag tract. Just a few steps from UT. 1 THESES, DISSERTATIONS, PRS B.C. reports, theses, and dissertations carpeting, accent wad. modern fur-, . bedroom and. kitchen, disposal, large and facilities. S129. Recorded descrip­typed. Experienced typists. Book yours accurately, observing proper forms. AUSTIN vUNITED FREIGHT, SALCS has just now! Call 476-9312 or 472-5928 after 5. Your time is valuable niture. plus an individualdeck overlook­refrigerator, dishwasher, heated bath, tion. 472-8682. Latest model IBMExecutive carbonrib­ -received a large shipment of brand new ing the water. cable, quiet neighbors, small grocery bon typewriter. All work proofread:'478­store just few steps away. 311 East 31st. r *1974 stereo consoles and components ATTRACTIVE 201* mobile home. M AND J. TYPING of theses, resumes, 0762. •Some have built-in4-track tape. am/fm Our service is free " AC/CH, residential lot, storage house, PRESS II dissertations, duplication, binding: open 476-1326. if no ans.. 478-9811. and ask for From $145", — all bills paid large patio. 8100. 327-2520 or 4724936. everyday. 442-7008. Not at old address. • radio, and turntable. Prices start at PARAGON James in 1602S. ^589,95 fo*1 consoles or components. Cash 300 East Riverside Drive 2200 NUECES. Furnished efficiency Please call before, coming. Just North of 27th & ]or termrs. UNITED FREIGHT SALES, PROPERTIES 444-3337 apartment. 8135 billspaid. Call453-6857. Guadalupe NEAT, ACCURATE and prompt typing. ,6535 North Lamar, 9 to 9 daily, 9 to 6 BEST DEAL IN 65 cents per paae. Theses 75 cents. Call __i&0Lt.U£da¥^_.: T4T-2737: " ~ 472-4171— TOWN TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds, weekdays TWO BLOCKS Available now. $105 per UNF. APARTS. RS TYPING SERVICE. Professional 'old gold, Capitbl Diamond Shop, 4018 N typing. Reports, theses, dissertations, montH; gas and water paid. We specialize in resumes, handbills, 'Lamar, 454-6877. resumes. Copy service available. letterheads and envelopes. 7577. 472-4175 TO CAMPUS Quiet, refined, upper class You. Belong At Check Our Low Rates -YAMAHA GUITAR SALE. Free case graduate married couple. 2200 Guadalupe -with every guitar, Amster Music 1624 weekends EnglishAire YES, we do type 1 & 2 Bedroom Efficiencies Nicely furnished, one Just Across The Street -Lavaca. Abacus Full kitchen bedroom with tiled tub, Efficiencies, studios, 1, 2, and Freshman themes. •GUITARS AND OTHER FRETTED in-CA/CH, carpeting shower, bath, large living 3 bedrooms, furnished or un­Business *struments repaired at reasonable ESTRADA Large walk-in closets room, all equipped kitchen, furnished, and all the extras not startout with ^prices. OUDS; LUTES, DULCIMERS, Services •etc. Custom built. 20% discount on ail Oriental furnishings— vented wait heater, 15,000 you expect — like laundries, Amster Music. strings.-Geoff Menke -APTS. Study room BTU air conditioner, utmost saunas, exerciserooms, game 1301 S. Interregional good grades! 4524 Lavaca. 478-7331. 444-0816 «" ; : Has vacancies, 1 and 2 Peaceful courtyard with pool privacy, no pets, undercover rooms, pools, putting green, iWE RENT CAMERAS, lenses, strobes, bedroom «? Only steps to"shopping parking for one car. Within 2 PLUS a great restaurant AND TYPING-COPYING 472-3210 and 472-7677 4r»pods, protectors. Polaroids, et cetera. 1801 South Lakeshore Blvd. 405 East 31st blocks of shuttle. Apt. E. 1301 the Cricket Club.Soon there'll PRINTING 2707 Hemphill Park«Rentai Department,Capitol Camera 476­ OS8I. Phone 442-6668 472-2147, 472-4162 Exposition^ Shown by apart­be a water polopool and hand­ SAIL Barry^Gillingwater Company ment owner. Call .owner, 478- ball courts, too. Come join us JGUiTAR REPAIR, new and L*sed 4356. now! ^acoustics, electrics, amps. Discounts on Why waste time on acity bus? From $145 LESSONS FOR SALE ^strings and accessories. THE STRING Walk class. Old* Main 444-1846 to .. BASIC (3/4/74) $16 -*SHOP, 1716 San Antonio, 476-8421. Tues.-$149.50 ALL BILLS PAID. 1 bedroom *Sat. 10-6. Apartments. Unique efficien­LE MARQUE furnished, CA.'CH, built-in kitchen,near 2101 Burton Dr. ADVANCED (3/5/74) S27 cies and one bedrooms. 25th Close to campus. Luxury efficiencies campus. 4307 Avenue A. 451-61533, 451-(off East Riverside) 20-PLUS MPG, '69 VW Fastback, and Pearl.Furnished. AllBills $115. one bedroom $130, two bedrooms 3840. Central Properties Inc. Call 442-5900 for into. .automatic, radio, 50,000 miles, S1300 Paid. $125 and up. 477-077& $170. PooL sundeck. fully carpeted, cen­ ^negotiable. 476-1432 after 6 p.m. tral air and heat. SIX BLOCKS from Law School; 2blocks $134 ONE BEDROOM. Enfield-Baylor. shuttle bus. One bedroom $135. AC hag. Mahogany paneled, balconies, shag, 302 W. 38th £56 CHEVY half-ton pickup. Rebuilt '59 carpet, dishwasher, disposal, walk-in poo;. Sao Paulo Apts. One block from RENTALS .283 engine. Good condition. S495. 451-6533 452-8006 closets. 32ndand Interregional.472-3995. shuttle. 15th. Pease Park, Tavern. 476­.Weekdays after 5, weekends. Call 441-Central Properties Inc. 4999. 476-5072. Boardboats, ^ Canoes, ^109. MINI APARTMENTS, also one and two V.I.P. bedrooms. Close to campus.-Fully Paddleboats^ Sloops, 250,under 600 •^1972 SUZUKI SAVAGE carpeted. CA/CH, rich wood paneling, ROOMS Catarfiarans. Beginning March 12 & 13th. Fundamentals df -jniles. excellent condition, best offer APARTMENTS WALK TO CAMPUS pool, all built-in kitchen. From $119.50. fiver S600. 441-8835 alter 5. 33rd & Speedway Reasonably priced. Large one bedroom 4200 Avenue A.451-6533,454-6423. Central wheel throwing. Taught by Bob and Debbie Walk UT or Shuttle at door. apartments-available. Properties Inc. CLEAN. COMFORTABLE SPECIAL ft/right. meet Tuesday room With 'PHOTO CLASSES for beginners at The Carpeted, weekly maid service, linens furnished,, Classes or Wednesday CA/CH, pool, sundeck, built-in kitchen. "Darkroom. 17 50 for 3-2 hour sessions Split level luxury living.Beautiful studio kitchen priveledges, $50 monthly. 1700 BEDROOM STUDIO, evenings and Saturday afternoons for 8 weeks. $45 'with lab time. 454-4036. units designed for 3-5 mature students. Salina (off I 19th).' Mrs. Rollins.-­ ONE fully [off East 19T " DISCOUNT 311 East 31st carpeted, built-in kitchen,balcony off of New contemporary .decor. Walk-Ins, 478-6776 451-6533 bedroom, pool, 1baths. Convenient to PASS BOOKS plus clay. All othfer materials and firing included. -RAR EAKITA PUPPIES. AKC pool, cable TV, shag carpet. Quiet campus and Highland Mall. Available PRIVATE ROOM for Men. Kitchen and 'registered nationaldog of Japan. Priced elegant atmosphere. Central Properties Inc. bath privileges. Close to campus. Call SAVE 25% unfurnished $150. furnished $155 bills ­ " SI50 to 1225. Call 282-2501. King size one bedrooms also available. paid. 701 North Loop. 454-3837. 451-6533. 452-2361 daytime. 472-2789 after7:30. Ask Leasing for Summer and Fall for Bobbie. Central Properties Inc. HAPPY HOUR 1964 VW BUS. Hi-performance engint, Drastically reduced Summer rates BARTON SPRINGS POTTERY 474-2200 SOMETHING DIFFERENT 'mags, radials, shag, custom interior. No calls after 7:00 p.m. Efficiencies With, eleyated separate STEPS TO UT. 1 & 2 bedroom efficient . FEMALE VACANCY in friendly co-op (2 for 1 Sailing) . Si,000. Make offer. 447-3379. 477-5560 or 477-7451 bedrooms plus enormous one and two-cies. Nice pool area, study room, orien­house. Double, room andboard. 25T0 Kio bedroom contemporary apts.with every tal furnishings.From $139ABP. 405East Grande. 474-2247. weekdays 2-4 p.m. APARTS. FURN. HARMON KARDON Citation II.60 rms convenience, furnished or unfurnished.. 31st. 472-2147, 472-4162. Barry Weekends 10-12 noon per channel. Dynaco preamp. 8120. 451- OAK is Gillingwater Company SANTA ELAINA HOUSE. 2411 Rio CREEK environmentally . 4636. Grande, kitchen, CA/CH, maid Service, oriented and offers a creek that winds WEST AUSTIN Brand New through the community convenient to QUIET ENFIELD AREA. Onebedroom co-ed. 870-875. 472-3684. Don. " GIBSON LES PAUL custom With cast, Efficiency. 5 minutes to down­campus 8. shopping and conveniently with built-ins, vaulted ceilings. Small brand new, must sell. Call 477-3828. town and shuttle bus to UT. priced from' $125. 1507 Houston Street. community living. $139.50 plus electrici­ HOURS DON'T SWEAT IT NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND pui Call today for your choice of 454-6394 Central Properties Inc. 451-6533 ty. 801 West Lynn. 477-8871, 472-4162. ROOMMATES weekdays 2-Dark, Barry Gillingwater Co. We Can Help You Find The %r males, 3 months, will bargain 2744. color schemes. —ROOMMATES ^WANTEO to' share-weekends 10-Dark 472-0558, 4728278, 4766707 -unit __ ELEVEN POOLS'" beautiful house Windsor Road area. 885,' Right Apartment. Where you want it/ 1964 CHRYSLER Newport. Dependable Highland Mall. & Capitol Plaza. Large1 own room. 476-1717, 475-6279 8. economical. S)90. Call 478-3910 ask for 7551 EFF„ 1 and 2 & 2 bedroom with all the. extras. From Martin, BEDROOMS $137.50 plus electricity. 1105 Clayton MALE ROOMMATE needed: Large fur­TOWN LAKE and at the right price! Our service ; Lane. 453-7914. 472-4162. Barry nished 2:2 apartment, dishwasher, FORETGN STUDENTS: FROM $132 ALL* BILLS Typewriter Gillingwater Company .. runs on various voltages and_ba«ery-..«. SI 29.50 . paid - CAJCH. carpeted,885, V» electricity:477-: SAILAWAY ^-is free/ we're waiting for yourealI;:r# 2316. Smith Corona Eiectra SS. Can be used EFFICIENCIES ON SHUTTLE. $129.50 anywhere. 441-0330. All Bills Paid A -new concept in apartment includes shag, complete kitchen, : 1800 S. Lakeshore FEMALE 25 roommate for 2 bedroom Near Shuttle Bus and Down­community living. Five- CA CH. Small community. 4204 house. 880. Kathy 472-7898 (work). (off E. Riverside) My r11e Wi 11 ia ms and Sr . IRISH SETTER, registered. $85 for architectural styles, choice of Speedway. 452-0986, 472-4162. Barry female, SiOO for male. Call 442-1090 after town Gillingwater Co. .' r.'< : £' furniture color coor­FEMALE TO SHARE bedroom In large five and weekends. styles, 472-0558 2/2 apartment. 865 ABP. Walk to cam­ r dinated throughout. CA/CH,' SEMESTER LEASE. Large ntfw 1 & 2 > 1W7~DATSUN~ 1600 Roadster, 30 mpg, 472-8278 pus. 478-8047. 478-8067. 442-9220 bedrooms with shag, tcemaker, aII built-ins, available unfur­ .... two lops, new carbs, brakes, electrical: 476-6707, unit 7551. slie 8. Vasque Hiker 4162. Bar-y Gillingwater Company. ~&r 451-6533, 447-3983 after 5. II Cost $40. sell S25. 447-3918 1118 • Gtllmpif — TWO THitir- SHARE HOUSE with four male One large bedroom every extra. Furnished or unfurnished students. Private bedroom, two miles VEGA GT 72. Air. standard, good gas from $139JO plus electricity. 807 West PERSONAL COUNSELOR, Jill UT MARRIED mileage, "very good condition. S2600 or apartments. CA/CH, Lynn. BarryGillingwater Company. 477-. from campus 855 per mo. plus utilities. problems. International: authority of Gary. 453-4501. best offer. Call 444-2761. carpeted, cable, dishwasher, HIGHLAND MALL 7794, 472-4162. ' .. farapsychology and ESP from Ildential appointment. -'67 DATSut* 1400 convertible.'2£Xmpg. AREA ON ~$115 SECLUDED one bedroom fur-. 258-5316. covered parking, laundry. wltzerland. Confldi STUDENT APARTMENTS ABP $142.50 New radiats. runs great. 345-3874 after 6 nished AC. close to campus and shuttle ROOM & BOARD AppiyjawJor^ummer '74 and^falK'74 — p.m. 477-814A 71IV1 Pin r.r«ivte SHUTTLE -busrsmall quietapartments. Waler,gas.Hug* 1 A 2 Bedrooms furn. or unturn. cable TV paid.609 East 45th. No.111. 452-ing, mending, alterations, etc. >474-2821 Eddy-Trailer NEW B5R McDonald 510X turntable: with large walk-ins, beautiful landscap­1435 or 451-6533. Central Properties inc. GERMAN HOUSE: Spaee fof female after 3 p.m. and weekends. : Gateway-Colorado-Brackenridge-Deep' Shur* cartridge. $60.Call442-1028 after 6 ing. Frpm $154 ABP. 1100 Reinli. 452-available for spring. $ll9monthly.472--Park p.m. . , GREAT PEOPLE! Brand new •005 or 477-M65. ECONOMICAL GARAGE: Best pric»s^_ POSADA DEL NORTE _ 32QjL 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater Com- two Save money. Ce weck«kinds.-474-5550 477-365f"' "«* . ** rates available. Call. Wr ips Ail binspaid. For mereinformation, call W Martin 441-6141. T 454-9475, t" 'A* Page J,8 Friday, March, h 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN h '•jt, ' 19 f ^ i V O'v 15s >1 *• u JtiK ril mm im mm HELP WANTED w> EACE .CORPSES Steps VISTA J hSE HI -Seek* malors In many different sklir areas to serve in all SO Mates and ln« developing countries, To see lioW and By USA E, SMITH M Glassblower's Work Seen on Campus himself with less and lessfree time. Hisspare timeoffered*, where your skills can be utilized contact former volunteers from 9-5 Wednesday i *; vitTexanStaff Writer • him the opportunity to make glass free-form objects. y§> . w through Friday in trent oi-BEB; th»-Witnout the waveof a magic wand, John SomerVille fcan His career/hobby entails more than just blowing gtass"v ' " Soufh Mall; and by the AAath-Phytict turn a piece of Pyrex into a rabbit. Or with the same flick Somerville has participated in numerous exhibits and * £« Bldg. .Applications for June-August •jifi^placement need to be submitted now. of the hands, he can produce a bird or flower before youjr^ craft shows. One weekend he spent at the Austin Chamber* y.' iHl >if$. eyes. • of Commerce Arts and Crafts Show making i£;t:gla$$: Somerville's magic is found in his glassblowing;*: tnenagerie of people's dogs. ' i SALES MANAGE/WENT OR The University glassblower has made of himself d-. /M had my ships, flowers, some cactus and otherwork on SALES Mutual 'of Mew York will conduct en--technologist*and artist display. But 1 didn't wind up selling any of it. Someone campus.Interviews for career positions THE 47-YEAR-OLDcraftsman has fused his talents with brought a dbg by atnd wante^rpe tyinaKewidentieal eppju > on Tuesday, March s. 1974. May or After graduating from high saps Summer grads. To learnabout this truly glass for nearly 30 years. j in glass to their approval. f '* outstanding opportunity with one of the school, "Iworked in the glass department of a rubber plant Si* "THEN I THINK everyone got the word and ali i did was \ oldest and largest companies in" S®! America, schedule an interviewthrough^ ill Canada for 10 or 11 years," Somerville said. work with dog models for |2 and $3 a Sitting all weekend, ^ the Business Administration Placement Service office, "it'sgood to haveMONY later leftCanada because I wanted a better job, higher.^0What a job that was!" Somerville said. 'y^f in YOUR future." •; pay and with some future. I had reached the.top bf1 my pay More than one weekend wasspent on hi&miniatureglass V scale when offered a,better positiqn m Houstpn,Jt lopkpd,, * ' ferris wheel. Four weekends with at least 80 hours involved j TR AIN NOW for your? SUMMER JOB. Young men* like a new enabled him to construct the 24-inch diameter wheel. C, * women who are willing to Prom Houston Sornerville'came' to ttie Equipped with tiny neon lights, glasspeople and amotor, learn and workduring vc "star! §tffsyears ago. r,v ^ The glassblower doesn't have to worry about losingit toa of something good. Excellent: training and top money could r"" "THERE WAS Ashortage of glassblower's then and more sale, "They get discouraged when I tell them in time ahd lead you to the kind of full-so now." labor alone it's worth about $400." * time ipb during the summer Hiscareer asdirector of the shophas taken shape repair­IN A MATTER of minutes Somervillecan pacify a buyer -a where youcould affoFd to stay ing and designing scientific equipment for the chemisftrjr, with a small swan or road runner ata pricehe:can afford. in Austin and still save next- pharmacy, botany and other science 'departments. yp Somerville admits it is "sometimeshard to sit in frontol year's. tuition. Desire will overcome all obstacles.So call "Repairing bins, tubing, condensers and beakers takes a those fires." After a 40-work week ahd countless hours in -454-4841 for an appointment hack seat," he said, ' ' his shop at home, he shuts off the propane flame; with Mr. Patton. The service is beneficial to the University. The school HE RETURNS HIS carbon rods, carbon paddles; PART TIME WORK. S300/per month, saves considerable cost and time by not frequently seeking call 452-2758. assorted brass tools and didymium-coated glasses git, commercial services. . -— 1 — glare from the flames) back to his work bench. % -" ' PHOTOGRAPHIC MODELS wanted. . Apply 9-2-. 'STUDENTS AND even professors began looking ovef' between Douglass Photography. 1104 West 34th. 454-2979. J!my shoulder with interest.So in my spare time,1taught for j, When he and his wife aren't visiting their grandchildren, NEW CLUB Waitresses, bartenders, -12 nights, two hours each night, right from the standstill," he pfefers to recline in the warmth of the sun with a cashiers; and bar boys. Call for an ap-fe?ljlie"said. "They surprisingly came up from condensers,; -'fiberglass rod in hand. * 11 ppintrnent. 459-8851 or 836-3453. •' m—*— 'iia;ti i ^ ^ 9fWT ivy' ^ learned coordination and even figurines." SlgfesAnd With a somewhat, different skill, Somerville PART TIME TRUCK stop attendant 'needed ipm-6am Friday and Saturday' John Somerville creates Figurine in hit shop ot home. Somerville discontinued the ^classes when he found jsfjgi. produces a few fishv-'';-^-''iJ,a!#"1 >****-*• •••• night, iam-ipm Saturday-Sunday. Ken Welch. 452-6496. , Female graduate studetns interested in applying for the To Place A WANTEt) SERVICE Attendant for local­ ; $1,500 American University Women Fellowship may pick up Daily Texan rent-a-car business, full-time hours. Must be 21 of over. Start immediately. forms in the Student Financial Aids'Office. F6rms must te Classified Ad Ex-Prisoner Salary S1.75. Nights -Monday, Tuesday. Days vyTF. 478-6439, - Call 471-5244 Graduate Women returned no later than April 1. < Jose Antu, counselor in the aids office, said eligibility re­ DAY BUSMAN/BUSWOMAN. 11-4 part- time and full-time. Night Hawk Steak quirements for the fellowship include: enrollment in the House. 452-0296. ; Names 1 Graduate School (or acceptanceto GraduateSchool for 1974­ CHUCK CARPENTER Associates Is now taking applications for part time -75), high scholastic ayerage, proof of Graduate Record Ex-;-f: The Texas Board of Pardons."f;. Project STAR, which stands and foil time employers. Salaries range 'tor Social Transition and May Pick Up ' amination scores and two letters of recommmendtion from :and Paroles has released the from S400-$800/month. 476-7757. University professors. names of the 44 jparijutina Rehabilitation, provides DESK CLERK. 3-11 p.m.,,Experience ^ U u( (1 , J J ! V ^4— ^ preferred. Ramada Gondolier. See Mr. 1 " ~Financal need will be considered, Antu said, but it will not * prisoners whose sentences shelter and jobs for men Boiles. ' ••''II '1 • mm 1 c be a primary consideration. recently were commuted by released from the Texas HOUSEKEEPING, CHILDCARE. Fellowship Forms The recipient will beselected by acommittee composed of Gov Dolph Briscoe. _ gf Corrections Department Three , nice children. Monday-Friday, Call representatives of the American Association of University ^ -The names were released as who were sentenced for : 8:45-5145. J250Vmonth: Ann Barnstone, work 476-7085; home 477-Women (AAUW) and the University. The fellowship, award­a.result of a formal request by possession of up to four 6698. ed in May every other year, is sponsored by the Austin The Austin American-ounces of marijuana prior to BARTENDER/WAITRESS to work in branch of the AAUW, Antu said. Statesman under the state's the lessening of the penalty. Austin's finest. Must be available after­ noons andevenings. TheDraught House, new Open Records Act. Before the new Texas penal 202/SR 4112 Medical Parkway. When asked-why the board code took effect last August, AUSTIN PEOPLE TODAY Magazine refused to divulge the names possession of any amount of needs part-time siubscrlption sales, per­ Salute Quieter Unicorn's sons. Earning potential is great. Name when the prisoners were marijuana was a felony, your own hours. No hardsell: Call Betty released, a spokesman for the punishable by up to life im­ Moore. 474-6021. day is the day.the U.S. Postal '• • March • 2 is probably the football coach, in Amarillo; board said, "It was decided prisonment. Possession of up March 2 will beimportant to PAINTERS or experienced helpers) call anytime. Leave name and number or many Texans: ; Service increases its rates, it longest day of the year for Dr. Ronald Brown, vice-not to issue a press release at to jour ounces of marijuana is. Electronic after 6 p.m. 477-4104, also is Texas Independence Texans, or at least for Texas-president for student affairs, that time," but refused .to now a misdemeanor Besides the fact that Satur- PART TIME COOK for day care center. Slide Rule UT area. Day. '. Exes. in Baton Rouge; Jay Arnold, • comment further. punishable by up to one year's 453-1657, 478-1959. S1.80 per a?; hour. ^1. ^ The University's celebra­Texas-Ex clubs throughout Longhorn football defensive Austin Rep. Ronald Earle's -imprisonment. Fully-featured MISCELLANEOUS tion of Independence Day the nation hold conventions back, in Cuero; Dr. Stephen office is coordinating the u According to the American*# HOUSE PAINTER,experienced. Hourly capability for ^ rate adjustable. Whole or part large should be a quiet one this from late February through Spurr, University president, program, called Project Statesman's list, more than house. Call 472-4823 before 10 p.m. WANTED FUN LOVING young man eager for year. That wasn't the case a late March to celebrateTexas in Dallas; Dean Page Keeton STAR. "Earle was responsi­half of the released prisoners under $200 friendship with coed with similar in­ It's a powerful scientific terests. Write to B.I., P.O. Box 571, San few years back, however. independence. of the University law school, ble for getting the prisoners, were from the. Dallas and. BUY, SELL all types glrley magazlnes-Marcos, Texas 78666. instrument: ' v w" * books-records-guitars-stereos-radios-Traditionally a cannon was Roy Vaughan, associate in Wichita Falls; Regent released," an official said. Houston areas. A kVvd."\^ « lewelry-musiceM jnstrument|. New THE PRIMAL PROCESS: Contact: The fired from the State Capitol on director of the Texas Ex-Frank Erwin, in Temple; and •Trig function »>• f \ buyer on duty. Aaron's. 320 Congress. Feeling Training Center, P.O. Box 303, •Lo^ functions Downtown. Wimberley, Texas 78676.. 5)2-847-2410 March 2, and the Kappa Students' Association, said Roosevelt Leaks, Longhorn MASSAGES O Roots and powers' PHIL FROM RICE, who came by house Sigma fraternity answered that the Texas-Ex clubs are All-American football HOT OIL 'SWEDISH STEAM ROOM •Degree/Radian selector" on Jarratt. Please call Dorthy Steven. with a barrage of its own. the ''extension of the Ex-fullback, in Victoria. MAGNETIC TOUCH WEIGHT LIFTING MISCELLANEOUS 476-1717, 475-6279. • Separate addressable The tradition started March Students' Association all over POWDER memory ­ LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beginner and advanced. Drew Thomason. 478-2, 1897, when University the world." Ex-students want •Leatherette bell-holster .2079. President George T. Winston, to find out about today's use ; work for us next year—a few hear yours. Our office is on the fourth ^7-':>h WAV TO SAT^SFV\OUR dedicated people who arft vyiUing to floor of the TSP Building, room 4.102, , . ^ork. toM^:inidoai itt'Epar what vou w^lThe work will be hard, frustrating can do, ao^ come by. CRI5PV FRENCH FRIES # _T7?at times; the pay will be lowj very Thafway when you're faced with ANP THE HAMBURGERS tow;" and the hours will be long—you • mm'-the question of experience;^-you'll " p ; ^> may even have to miss your usual bed-come up*with a good answer. ton*."; _ * 1. _iL ­ tainHiBK Z THAT.,:SCOOTS-HONOR. HOURS:lpA.M." I2MIDH0E 9TH ST BEFROfAPr.' TOBRrTr ^^ont^^ogori^Su^p?#m»iirto f hrtfott/ "ON THE DRAG, AT 2003 & 2606 GUADALUPE" '1; —-dfnefh«r ISP publication— Friday,March b 1974 TOE DAILY TEXANjPage 1? - —--—* iSL ^p^ts ^ri*$£ fr/^* vV.» r^l KV$^WW>£ $D ® -• -/^ .:--\! tt»i-yp&X*i>\ >.'.. t -v 1. is1.., ki J j*J£«A»(ii rocery Bill Soar U.S»f EcjfMRenew To Jt *'sX- ArabMinisters To Meet on Oil Embargo This Month J; «4fi':. C-f * *, "Sa . . (AP) — Proclaiming "a new era,".f:V "The oil ministers will be meeting in March, and they In the Sinai peninsula. The Egyptian and Israelitroopj By The Associated Press > ill President Anwar Sadat announced Thursday he is resum-will make thedecision,JMsnot mydecision. ltis thedeci-, completed the first phase of their pullout last month, One year after rumblings of consumer discontent which prompted boycotts and J ing full diplomatic relations with the United States and in-sion of all the Arabs." ' ' ., ' • % ---. -—.—. ^ demonstrations over rising food xrats, the family grocery billis higher than ever. viting President Nixon to visit Egypt. TftelsfaeliCabinef met In Jerusalem to refinefurther The main leaderof tfie~Arab oil boycott isSaudi Arabia, An Associated Press marketbasket survey shows the tab is16 percent above last He added that Arab oil ministers will meet this month" the Golan Heights proposals, readying themfor Kissinger a strongly Moslem country-whose' King Faisal has in­ "" Wi:? • March's levefc* wu'1" T„ ' r*V A V v v.fcys.1-ifoS to pick up Friday on his way to the Syrian capital for the^ raarcas _, ' , Vi,'. ?3ife 2?spf®f tv to decide whether to lift the oil,embargo against the sisted that Arabs must regain the Golan Heightsand East "Shopping is a Ffejkl problem," complained a Miami, FfL^otiran. "tdon't buy United States. -.'Jerusalem before Uniting the oil spigots back on. talks with Assad. u | i brand names any more and onlyshop on saledays. I'm managing because I buy in, With Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger at his side, Kissinger met with Sadat for three And a half hours%t Turning to U.S. relations, Sadat made the announce­quantity and use fpod helpers to extend the food." !V*vV -^ Sadat declared to newsmen: "As long as Dr.Kissinger is Sadat's rest home near the Pyramids at Giza just outside ment that full diplomatic relations with Washington were On the other sid4of the counter,a Dallas supermarket'mf^g^^igTteijTQlesa# handling the whole thing, everything is okay." Cairo. They looked over maps of Syria's occupied Golan resuming. His disclosure came soon after a similar ant prices of just about everything were rising* "Consequently," he said,"thewhale The American secretary was in Cairo to confer tfith ^Heights, on the northeastern Israeli border. nouqeement from the White Hou&e. J grocery business ik scrambling to keep up with price changes."' Sadat on, among other Middle East topics, efforts to* ~ Asked; afterward, what advice he would give President - „ , , Sadat also said Washington has agreed to aid Egypt w. THE AP CHECKED the prices of 15 food and nonfood iteriii MsVoh arrange negotiations between Israel and Syria on dis­ Hafez Assad of Syria, Sadat said: "Togive Dr. Kissinger §',!5ivith technical assistance in certain stages of clearing SfiMarch 1, 1973, anil has rechecked at the beginning of each'succeeding month. engagement of their Golan Heights forces. the opportunity to work out and achieve what he has " the Suez Canal." A U.S. Army and Navy demolition team 333I The AP found that the marketbasket total was higher this March than last Asked whether recent progress in getting the Syrians achieved on the Egyptian front." already is in.Egypt checking ways of defusing mines and W;^Marchin every city checked; rising an averageof 16 percent. Seventy-six percent and Israelis together enabled him to give Kissinger cause •v That was a reference to the troop disengagement pact unexploded ordnance in the canal, which has been closed;of the total number of items on the check list were up over the 12-month period. for optimism on an end to theoil embargo,Sadat replied ^engineered by Kissinger for Egyptian and Israeli forces since 1967. .? -'siKSifc.-jivswva Hielatest round of increases wasled by a jumpin sugar jfifces -a boost that will be reflected later ih everything from bakery products tosoft drinks to processed meats. FTC Study asm fai 14 percent. Over the year, sugar went up an average of 36 percent,~and in some MufsaaiiA^ mmmm cities, the same fivepoind sack of ^anulated,suga$,t|»t^^ last, March W&s selling for $1 or more this year. ^ ifes Eggs -which soared to record levels, last year, then seesawed for a while — declined in every city j but the decreases did not offset the higher sugar prices. WASHINGTON (AP) ~"A Federal ways to provide more information to The AP marketbasket total wait up during February in nine of 13 cities check* Trade Commission study released Thurs­funeral shoppers and make the industryed, rising an averag^ of 3 percent. It was down in four cities — decreasing a little day depicts grieving funeral buyers as more competitive. -r > less than 2 percent. captive consumers who spend hundreds of -v The study estimated thecost of a typical! In addition, 33.8 percent of the total number of items checked went up in price dollars more than necessary. funeral and burial at $1,886 complete.during the one-month period. Nineteen percent went down in price, 39.5 percent The staff study said people don't shop The commission asked the area's were unchanged and 7.7 percent were unavailable on one of the check dates. funeral homes because they are usually funeral homes for the prices of their three AT HOME, beef prices continued to rise in many areas, although special sales grief stricken and because funeral homes cheapest funerals and iound that the cost brought the price down in some cities. The price of chopped chuck, however, was uotlar rarely advertise prices. of the very cheapest ranged from $210, to higher this,March thfan last in 11 cities; all-beef franks were moreexpensive in10 warn The study said customers often aren't $900. The average price of funerals sold cities. -• > • • >-* 'f told cheaper funerals are available orcer­during 1973 ranged from $500 to $1,830. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has predicted that food prices ove&all may tain services can be waived. None of the prices included burial costs,rise as much as 16 percent this year. Last year the government said, food*prices MORTICIANS SOMETIMES misinform which added on $488 in the typical funeral. generally rose about 20 percent. k customers that such things as embalming THE STAFFSTUDY said the quality ofThe cities in the APsurvey are: Albuquerque, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, are legally requiredj iflafd. And the mor­ goods and services varies from one morti­ Detroit* Los Angeles, Miami, New. York, Philadelphia, Providence, R.I., Salt ticians charge up to $200 just for crema­ cian to another, but added a qualifier:Lake City and Seattle. ; ^ ' tion, even though the crematory charge is someone who buys an expensive funeralItems covered in the survey are: chopped chuck, center cut pork chops, frozen not more than $75, it said. also pays more for identical servicesorange juice, coffee, paper towels,eggs, butter, detergent,fabricsoftener, peanut ''The funeral industry is characterized provided for cheaper funerals^ ^}i}tbutter, tomato sauce,chocolate chipcookies, milk, all-beef franks and granulated by a lack of price competition, a lack of William F. Magruder, the funeral direc? sugar, ife consumer information and ultimately — tor with the most expensive low-pricedon the bottom line — a° lack of consumer funeral in the survey, said, "With thecost choice," said J. Thomas Rosch, head of 4N --* r. of funeral equipment I,would rather give athe commission's Bureau of Consumer Ethiopid better grade of casket or better quality of Protection. ce than to give people a cheap pine atauid:.a funeral1 homes in the Washington area, New Prime Minister "the results are in general accord with a He said it's true'thaf in hiost cases'peo­number of other cost studies and es­ple don't shop for funerals, but that's J* Thomas Roach, director of Bureau of Consumer ttS:M timates from around the country," the because "they go back to the establish­ Named Protection of the FTC, discusses funeral costs. study said. .-' ment which served their relatives — like Rosch said the commission is studying the family doctor." ^"DDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) Observers said the emperor's measures ^Ethiopia's rebellious soldiers forced appeared to stand a good chanceof ending 4 Emperor Haile Selassie to name a new the country's gravest civil crisis since an prime minister Thursday and grant pay attempted coup in 1960. UNCOVERING the barb FACTS OF STREAKING ^raises demanded during threedays of non-The rebels, reflecting widespread feel-By LISA E. SMITH posure rate at college campuses across , .Violent mutiny. -ing among civilians as well, had privately Texan Staff Writer ; the country. But not all streakers want .'I; THE EMPEROR went on nationwide accused former Prime Minister Aklilu Streaking — running in public between anything to do with monetary values. ^adio to announce he had asked Eln-Haptewold of inefficiency and failing to two points in the nude — has become big- Recently a Southern Methodist Univer­ "aalkachew Makonnen, a 47-year-old meet problems of inflation and famine in business. sity streaker was asked for identification diplomat who had been telecom-drought-hit Ethiopia. The University College of Business Ad­when,charged by SMU security police with^.munications minister, to form a new ministration Council endorsed Thursday SALASSIE MADE his broadcast hours disorderly conduct. He had a difficult time ^government. Selassie called for calm and night a proposal by council members, Dal after dissident troops in battle dress explaining the lack of a wallet. promised no reprisals .against the at Addis Ababa airport and Martinez and Mark McMahon, to promote appeared SMU security is unwilling to discuss the .^mutineers. a "Queen Streaker''contest against Texas banks, main roads and other key points in craze, but one SMU streaker was quite There was no immediate reaction from Tech University. the capital. willing to talk about his experiences. the noncommissioned officers' committee MARTINEZ AND McMAHON are try­Wishing to maintain His anonymity dur­ It seemed to be a show of strength in . that led the revolt involving nearly all ing to file a female streaker organization ing daylight hours, the streaker said he .'Ethiopia's 40,000 soldiers, sailors and air­support of some hard bargaining at the cm campus to promote the event and prefers answering to "Cannonball." X men. paiace between the emperor's military collect funds for a $600endowment fund toaide, Lt. Gen. Assefe Demisse, and a award the winning streaker. Female "It's good for SMU," the runner said. mutineers' delegation, rather than an streakers who crossed campus late Thurs­"Everyone Comes out to watch at night. attempt to seize the city. day afternoon did so before guidelines They hear of a streak alertand come pour­ But the soldiers declared an 8,'p.m. were established, so this feat goes un­ing out of the dorms. It's become a big curfew for Addis Ababa. counted. deal — drinking, dates and all." Later troops set up a roadblock on the "We want to issue an open challenge to "You'd be surprised how organized it is mx only route to the airport and began check-. Tech in which we'll mutullly set up rules — there's always someone to protect you. ing drivers' identities.Long linesof traffic and guidelines for the race," Martinez When a streaker takes Off, atleast 15 or20 backed up.' . said. guys run interference on eitherside of him A time period will be set in which both like blockers to stop anyone from getting OBSERVERS SPECULATED that the campuses will be allotted the opportunity him," he continued. soldiers were looking for former cabinet IB to have a female streaker run across their Several disappointedspectators confess­ ministers who might be tying to escape. respective campuses first to collect the ed that "it happens so fast you often mis- The U.S. Information Service library' prize money. In case of a simultaneous s'em." closed but most civilian activities went on time, "the winner will be determined by YET STREAKING HAS continued to at­ normally during the day. the longest distance," McMahon said. tract large crowds at SMU _ The emperor disclosed that he had the — including The two streaking promoters expect to resignations of former Prime Minister SMU security and Mustang Band contact the Tech student government Fri­members. The band provided "The Haptewold and 18 other ministers..' day to get the "show on the road." In the Stripper" for the mood on one occasion. The emperor said pay and benefits would be raised for all ranks, with a meantime they are going to begin Similar crowds, officials, bands, streak­ soliciting donations for the $600 among private's base pay going to $56 a month ing queens and even athletes may become University students. v1-' from $50. The rebels had demanded base a part of the University's streaking THE STREAKING FAD has a high e* events. • 1 Emperor Haile Selassie pay of $75 which would have doubled the ' rate of two months ago. rneuis Britain's Labor Party Takes Early Lead Streakers come in different shapes . LONDON (AP) — Harold Wilson's Labor Party forged into its usual in­ >»' A itial lead in Britain's national election Thursday with increased margins "V1 ^ in some electoral districts imperiling Prime Minister Edward Heath's grip on power. An upsurge in support for the middle-road Liberals appeared, on the basis of first results, to behurting the ruling Conservatives more than the Laborites. Both developments in the nation's emergency baUot, seen together, led the British Press Association, British Broadcasting Corp. commentators and other experts to forecast a major, upset in the final result. Results from 103 of the'635 election districts showed Labor had won 63 seats for a gain of five and the Conservatives 38 seats, a loss of four. At that point the Liberals had won one seat and lost one. One seat had been taken by_ a fringe party. ————___• —^ Stocks Close With Small Decline NEW YORK (AP) r— Stock market prices registered some small it declines Thursday asprofit taking at least temporarily halted a two-week rally. K'fi The Dow Jones average of 30 in­JS* dustrials was down 2.89 atJ60.53, New York Stock Exchange closing in­ and losers outdistanced gainers 746 dex: ­Market off 6 cents to 658 in light trading on tlie New Index...... 51.56 off 0.06 York Stock Exchange. -• ~ Industrial..... i . -55.83 off 0.09 The Dow Jones industrial Transportation. 38.57 up 0.06 average finished February with anUtility..„r 35.72 off 0.10 advance of about five points for the Finance..!,^.;.. .v.......64.53 off 0.06 J 1 4 * month, almost exactly duplicating _ —it? small net gain for January1; : Thursday's slide reached its deepest point, as measured by the Dow, at about midday. The market turned slightly upward in the afternoon, ap­ parently responding modestly to reports that Egyptian President Anwar Sadat had said Arab oil ministers might meet within the next month to 4 —f«*an SfttH reconsider the embargo on oil shipments to the United States. ^ \ different sixes MU7k .. ana even erent sexes. >age 20 ^riday, A^arch 1, 1974 THE#DAILY TEXAN ifmiiiffitf'iir.tfih