msmm • : i vr:-v;r^r-o ;^v. •:\v:. •..•sv^-.-.r?-^. •.« --.-• ' 'Z-i^g^V---•^'••••:'3,r';?Va"--'.?'•' »\ *V-* *-v ^7"" r ^ \ ^ i 'r, v , £„ v -x Mm'; , vi' ' . ^ : • / ' •• , . lUl •' ­By SCOTT TAGLIARINO tt-:f Lav School Place 1 results the validity f a runoff betweeh -statement of intent, , n Russell's filing, th6"Jf "I don't really care about--commissionat11a.m.Friday;^-1 "By the time we had Texan Staff Writer -1 showed Steve Russell^ as?rite-JJJasset and Russell. ' ii. Russell admitted Thursday Commission decided to give ^irty own candidacy, All I Commission chairman tabulated the election results Election returns for Fine in, with 120 votes, RoyatMl Under the'Chapter VII ofvthat he had not filed the Masset the choice of either 1^-'wanted was to have a fairand " Robert Lanius explained the Thursday morning, it was too JArts Place 1 and Law School Masset, 110, and other write-' the election code, a write-in statement; however, he havihg the election voided and equitable election with equal delay in releasing the results . late to use the machines a®. pPlace 1 were released ins, 101. Total votes cast candidate must follow the claimed that no campaigning holding a new election i^|r^resentation^'Jiu8sell8ai(|. had been caused by necessary to tally the largeiSi hursday by _ the. Election reached 529 with 198 no-votes. same -rules-as regular iook place hefore the whiclLRussell could not run oci^r--M— —-—^difficulties in^the tallying number of write-in VotesTT'llfe* ' £5&i ^Commission. However, a runoff was not candid^jtes, which means that commission wras notified. 2) holding the runoff and •• -Masset said he would sleep process. Lanius Said. jli Melinda Montemayor was-declared by the commission., he. must submit a written Because of .the discrepancy.^certify Russell, Walters saidtr on the issue and contact the m . fpleclared the write-in winner awaiting a decision Massetr ' ^ t n _ fp& -'i|in Fine Arts Place_1 over and the comnjission on the ^.^three candidates', possibility of voiding the other candidates :$liv no election entirely ^^•||prginally, candidate had !|^§fil«l for the place; however*1Drew « Walters, t a( pCIfMfina1 ^results gave commission member,­;|:,g^'Montemayor, 19; Gilbert. explained Thursday that a S^ff|Conwoop, 3, and Martha disagreement over Russell's Dwns, 2. No-votes totaled write-in candidacy had caused 137, with11one-vote write-ins: the commission to question Drug Specials March7, . W J & J Lemon Up - Shampoo siiit 10 ex. it. Powder $150 Value ? . 14«. , ^ $1.29 Vohw Clairol SB-Clearasil Herbal Ointment ,VV .45 OK. Shampoo 16 9I< Value -: j? oi*. Mt1to coilonnr Pernox Alka Seltzer limit 2 to customer *2.20 vahie 20's $1.09 Value M.35 52 Co-Op Supply Dept. ptfckato of S1 or aoro. -•-"• "-'ir"-'"1. Street Floor Scientists Believe iGroup Wants No-Smoking Rules Possible Outside garth Members of a newly formed smokers< to quit because we campus organization unveiled have found in the past this is plans Thursday night to go to noneffe,ctive," Ja n University officials in an Hilderbrand, co-organizer, effort to strengthen tjlie "We need to bafi enforcement of no-smokidg together to insurethe rightsof| rules. nonsmokers and raise their,, University-Texans United consciousness level," MiSs "for Rights of NonSmokers (U-Hildebrand Ttdded. " f' Transportation JSnterpjrises, given by th One hour free parking with: «f J2 or BankAm.ricord , ^ MatterChorgo welceme... -­ V ' *$*»& ^ r "l-T; 2 Friday,;March;8# 1974 THE DAILY TEX "If you have'to have^ -maintenance through damage By ZODIAC NEWS SERVICE^ policemen running around done by cigarettes, but Miss NASA scientists say they have discovered forms of life bptelling people to put out Richter asked "Why should earth that could survive on the outer planets of the solar, cigarettes, it's a grimr we have to pay for damages system. situation," another membe^Mhat smokers causeT'MS itThe new rod-shaped bacteria — as yet unnamed — are swim­ , pdded. • t-A : U-TURN maabOT ;t-A» for the.constitutional said they are focusing their rights of. the smoker Miss 'attention on enforcingcampus Richter said, "The right to thecals** discussed their dislike for rrighttosmoke.JThesmoker^& snicking at 2-J's and Dobieright to smoke stops at my Screen. "Why can't 2-J's putnose." all the smokers on the top v The group had no figuresoo level?"oneof theJ5member^ .the increased tost of '.attending the Meeting asked, ' IRS Reversal ITT Investigation By DAVID HENDRICKS Texbn Staff Writer ^ Investigation of possible White House influence in the ITT-Hartford Fire Insurance Co. merger will continue despite the reversal of 1969 IRS tax • decision, U.S. Rep. J.J; (Jake) Pickle of Austin said Thursday. The IRS Wednesday reversed its , earlier ruling that the merger was tax-free, in what he described as a rare decision which."has jarred itT to its boots." Pickle, a ranking member of the House Commerce Committee's special subcommittee on investigations which has been looking into the merger, said "the probe should not be dropped until all the questions are answered and the public knows the full facts.. ming, growing and reproducing in a highly alkaline solution in NASA laboratories. The solutions in which the organisms are SSI surviving and reproducing is believed, by most scientists, to be similar to the environmental conditions found on Jupiter, Saturn and Uramis. »-—ise open to Chairman Peter Rodino_„ JRS_.yesterday reversed—its­of the House Judiciary Committee-' decision/' he remark ..... . .... / "because he has expressed an interest in our work." The 1969 merger wps the largest in American history, involving the transferof m6fethanl.7miIlion shares of stock. The IRS first ruled that the transfer was unconditional and tax free. The reversal will cost stockholders between $35 and $100 million, according to a /New York Times estimate. Links to the White House include & then Atty. (Sen. Richard Kleindeist saying no further investigation was Student Ministry IS "JESUS IS: THE SAME YESTERDAY AND TODAY, YES, AND FOREVER." Htb. 13:1 Hyde.Park Baptist Church — 3901 SfMMlway Bible Study 9:30 Worship 8:30 & 11:30 Bus Schedule t Jester 9:10a.m. 5:10 p.m. Castilian it ?:15 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Kinsolving, S.R.D. 9:20 a.m. 5:20 p,m. .. Studtman's Photo Service 222 W. 19th & .5324 Cameron Rd. RESUME' & IDENTIFICATION TYPE­PICTURES ' :kt'i V*' 1-Day ;, Quick, Reliable Service 10 a.m. -5 p.m. Meet Max Factor Sandra In .Shop Free With Any $3 Purchase of Max Factor" Stuff: California Naturals fe ; Including: Avocado Lemon I Cleansing Facial^ Avocado Lemon i, —" T "" i v Moisturizer, ­ - /Frosty Lemon Cologne ~ •:i -&-V* 4-"­ > I Jr. ,/gkh ft] -_ I ' V FS&, 'ViSk *,-j •5 ^ t . i.*. o5 * x ^' On* hour fre. parking with purchaw of $2 or mora. BankAmericard A MatterCharge Welcome ' -f SlIBltji,i 'fiiTi'" flfhriT-' I'bjH' 'j'UVAf* Southern Union WHERC'S STIUAt WHAT WE CANNOT SEC w* cannot uires pa?' '1 -v ilgj r* the loot* t««th ol our lost . IjP*' ' ' ' '|P||£ SPt A By SUSIE STOLER company will be back af the Files to customers. %e so-1500,000 Vtien the current %% they hinge b«tw««n tight jow«.Texan Staff Writer next council meeting to called time lag resulted in losses as opposed to $713,000," ordinance expires May rl2, ver. Oetpair, City counolmen launched g request reconsideration of Southern Union's suffering ^ottnrf 'ATlM.Hm4 Southern Union will apply for he Window full and lookina ou fissile Thursday to Intercept Thursday's action^?^ 1422,000 in non-recoverable Speaking to Opposition to a rate adjustment. Until that to an *mpty mmf: ^ |Austin's skyrocketing natural costs. -Grenier s plans was Jim date, Grenier maintained, CouncSlmen BoS&inder, -J^gas bills as the council voted The February surcharge on Boyle, president of the Texas there is a terrible gap for the h* with of rocking chaira they neverWn. i,ter??|istHhiitni* Snnthnm (In /» «UU UuWclI LeDGuuolul WW6 , „.:n.jji.u 1.1^1 TlmwMitv ctiirinnta' 1 rSfj^iiistributor,, Southern Union refunded^ will add to the.total former University students' Forgett to in favor of the .approved! /; Gas Co., refund past I by the .attorney, \:fl overcharges to >any-'€firtW';t>ecember *n miyor Roy Butler, Mayor ftp It appearsSouthern Union is addition, the council undercharges and the time-On Tuesday, City Atty. Don Tem Dan Love and asking for equity, but its past : <^pvot^d 4-3 in turning down a Butler met with Grenier, Councilman Dr. Bud Dryden. lag losses; ; performance stains the M#equest by the distributor to Southern Union' recognizes Boyle, Ivy and Elmer to try to "clean hands'? condition ^ J^icollect $291,000 . in -"I fail tosee therationale to the "self-help" surcharge of settle the question of usually needed before equity •' undercharges for December penalize Southern Union for $216,000 was not in compliance overcharges by the company. given, Boyle argued. ^ whiske as bills. something Lo-Vaca Gathering with the present ordinance, The meeting was termed Starting April 1,5cents per Co. did," the mayor asserted. Grenier said. ^fruitful" by Butler although through -'Ipthousand cubicfeet of gas will Southern Union's problems However, the compaiiy took Southern PUn?on"f irooMal ^f^on wat not resolved ' 'filbe Austin's natural gas supplier, began to "crater in" and students' attorney,' and Rick^iS =, / ^ !o_ effect, _ the.council's-center around a discrepancy recovery of Southern Union's Elmer, Austin Apartment ->* Thre®,alternatives -were Ivljaction forces Southern Union between quoted gas rates-costs was crucial, he Association vice-president. presented to the council as a /Jgto recoup $700,000 in deficits, from Lo-Vaca and the rate explained. " « result of the Tuesdaymeeting. ji4|Arthur S. Grenier, vice4 hikes Southern coniag^kelo^ &e Whea Miked ,jrit«pks have: miscellaneous publications Few people realize that "a so few people engaged in the their hands and snort iLlike—approved -by-the -Man up person stralghtlftthe eye witfi^ director of a new colleglate beenimbiishgdr 1 but no publishing program. Press sneez* is rated on an Tomato Hubris for Wit and coke, deriving its sensual above. What words is one " a smile on your facfe, open' at Texas A&M. 11 now pub)i¥hw anil Wardlaw plans to build « empirical scale secondonly to W idsdom's s neeze-i n benefits. In some circles greeted „with ,wheo one your nostrils to their fullest,a A successor to Wardlaw will. distributes seven journals and program that Wi)l an orgasm in physical Thursday on the West Mali, perhaps this is done, but sneezes? * * capacity, and inhale quicldy^^ selected by an advisory approximately 45 books 9 "concentr^te on A&M's mo$t pleasure." where there were copious society is not far enough But this is not necessarily a You'll also exhale quickly^-committee appointed by Dr./hfyear, not counting old titles important strengths: This finding is attributed to supplier of pepper to liberate advanced to sanction such an •blessing. Dr*-McCormick but the result will be good fot-; Gardner Lindzey, vice-"reissued as a result of reader oceanography, forestry, wiW a noted nasal researcher, a noses. activity positively. ' contends that the'act should you as well as tot your noseT^;; Pres'dent and dean of demand. Sales volumn was life£management aftfa Dr. T.Willie McCormick, who . Misconceptions about what Thus, "sneeze-in" is an be "freed "from tiresome v graduate studies.— -— — $734,000 in l973. agricultural sciences;1' . had and who may still have a sneeze-in is centers around improper term, sinee ritual"-because "sneezing is a­ political aspirations* but who its hastily construed social sneezing has, through the liberating act." is nevertheless now writing definition. centuries, been an individual' The moral of this tale may'1 m for the Salamander Weekly, A "sneeze-in" is not where action, and an vinvoluntary." be clear: the next tirfie * 'from which this quote came. a group of people gather one at that. someone offers you a hit of : A TYPING SERVICE JESTERCENTER • At any rate, the public is together, pass pepper shakers But it is certainly not one to pepper, don't say, "No V ap^etnUringin unenlightened aboutrtMs^actr^TOltia7Spflnkreironi?almBi>f^be ashaiiied of. After all, it is thanks.""" Rather, look this m (kiwi tad An«rlaHMti and perhaps this is the reason. J Maw britft ESEEEE STORE Travel Essay ^ Prompt, Professional • Service. May Mean HAPPY f>URIM! "3 e J 453.7577 Your ON CAMPUS Student Store • Pick-up 8ervice Available ** x Trip PERFORM THi PURIM PRECEPT OF MISHLOACH MAN0T •eeeeeee*ee»ee«eee« Weekdays 8:00 'til 6:00 Mi -mm An essay on travel research •eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee BY GIVING A GIFT TO A FRIEND ON PURIM DAY • can earn a University student -;"J Saturdays 9:00 'til 1:00 « The Largest $300 and ah all-expense paid trip to Williamsburg, Va., ina MARCH 8, 1974 , • Va Selection of J :* _ a'u-.-T-r., contest heingsponsored by the e • Travel Research Association • BLUEBOOKS :RECORDERS: • COSMETICS of Salt Lake City, Utah. This year, the Jewish holiday of Purlm that commemorates the . in Texas e • SPIRALS • RECORDS Dr. Stanley A. Arbingast, liberation of the Jewish people from the evil hands of Haman, falls director of the University on Friday. March 8th. As in times of old, vve celebrate the great fr«n$2.25«P I • SNACKS * • MAGAZINE L- Bureau of Travel Research, salvation of Purim with: .. . .v. ,-.C I ; , S00 us for said purpose of the contest is 1. The giving of Mishloach Manot, gfft 'of ^tea#\ z^inai b^food to a Recorders St :iSt : •Ho aid professionals in the friend on Purim Day • March,8, 1974 before Shabbgs. Recorder Mus/c S (7:16 p.m.In Austin,Texa^) " 7\,' ^ j:;­ field of travel, research in 2. Tlw giving of charity to at least 2 poor people, or if you can not find a f Amster Mu»ic . -J promoting ail aspects of poor person put jtin a Pushka (eharit^ox) of your choice, also on Purim . tourism. CONVENIENT FOR SHUTTLE BUS RIDERS! I Day. •eeileeeeeeeeeee '.. Any interested University 3.' Listening to the reading of the Meglllah on Thursday night and Friday student should submit an : morning. _ essay of 500 to 1,000 words to Partaking in a fsstive meal on Purim Day. This year Purim occurring on a the Travel Research Friday, the Purim festive meal should take place before mid-day. Association, University of The reciting of "al hanissim" both In Shmoneh Esrey and Birchas Utah, Box 8066, Salt Lake City Hamazon (Grace after meals) found In the Daily Prayers. i_ " Utah, 84108, by May 15. 0 Young and old alike areurged to participate in thesePurim Mitzvoth. Let us express a bond of brotherhood between our fellow Jews this year, when it is needed more than ever before. ALTERATIONS JEANS, SHIRTS, DRESSES; Wishing you and festive Purim, LUBAVITCH. "f\'V We Are Now Doing Outside Alterations at Purim festivities and services for the reading of the Easy Prices qJ: ^ ^IVIegiliah will be held at Chabad House-Lubavitch, 311 E. 31st. No. 206, Thursday at 8:00 p.m. and Friday at 7:45 great feeling sho6BOB ELLIOTT'S ; a.m. The festive meal will follow at about 9:30 a.m.,and "for cut offs, baggies^ .c, ^2426 Guaiklup« On-rtw-Drag •«" Mishloach Manot can be obtained all day Friday. ^ dresses or even Open Thursday till1p.m. straig.ht-leggedjeans. ^Si^SgSSiS ..... .­ m SONY.TV VQ -i~, rgftsmdnship • Brown Camel In this age of mass pro­duction with its emphasjs • White ttia ^rT quantity rather than • BlueJeans quality, Sony retains an —intense^jrideotcraftsroaR« • Black ship. Examine any Sony t--f \)1 i * ft* 1 A product andyou'll seewhy t the close attention to even «**• the smallest detail has Making News: I earned for Sony an envj­abie worldwide reputation the Cardigan Press for fine craftsmanship in electronics.Here's another example of Sony, crafts­Waist-cinching manship. sleeveless dress with its own cardigan. In navy or red polyester trimmed with posey print Sizes 5-13. $32. % V >", ;V — V ' KV-1201 TRINITRON® vT \ r. -I, COLOR TV ^ •jl Jif • 12-inch'screen measured }s • diaoonally • rr-^rji • Trinitron one gun/onelens system for sharp, bright,-­true-to-life color. , fa-% €# • Pusti button automatic ; color and hue control • Solid slate reliability Instant picture and:sound „ • No set up adjustments .•illuminated tuning dials PA -m­ • Top mounted handle • Charcoal flray cabinet with chrometrim?;s Aakuqnm ON-THE-DRAG i'SflirM'SHi' ^ ^406 Guadalupe On-the-Drag ImUmM > »iilil(kni and aN over town <£J&* Frlday,JM*r«i «, 1^4 THE DAlLY TBytAN Paje 3 MUMiaaiiiMiiMii women M •m ^ fJP^ing ' and %W Solzhenitsyn affair having recently outraged most -literate people* this is a most appropriate time to , These need to be cleared up. Consider another political censorship closer to the "Free. :%foi FOREMOST APPEARS to be the Freudian notion ; World:" the case of The Three Marias^ innate feminine masochism — all women secretly desire MARIA VELHO da Costa, Maria Tetesa tloriS^aijd to be raped. According to a study by sociologist - ' Isabel Barreno published a book in 1972 called Menaehem Amir, 85.1 percent of rape cases involved: "New Portuguese Letters." The book, to be published in violence in the form of "roughness, beating or choking.' ' English translation this year, has been described by Such brutal behaviour can hardly be construed as Portuguese writer Antonio de Figueiredoas"^milestone sexually attractive to a normal woman|^|^ in women's liberation writing." It has deeply offended ^A second myth is that women invite or provoke rape, i the Portuguese government. prirnarily in the way specific women dress or walk. "New Portuguese Letters" contains protests against found that 75 percent of the rapes in his sample were sjythe second class citizenship of women jn Portugal, as premeditated. Supporting Amir's claim, the Federal ell as passages condemning the colonial wars currently Commission on Crimes of Violence reports "only 4, ing fought with American aid in Angola, Guinea-Bissau percent of reported rapes involve any precipitative Mozambique. The book has been banned in Portugal ^,and The Three Marias have been chargec drinking with the man, allowing him into her house, or/JJ 'obscenity." When leaders of feminist groups converged .indulging' Jn any sexual intimacy strengthens a^| j^on Lisbon Jan. 31for the trial of The Three Marias and defendant's, claim of provocation. A woman, cannot ^ th£irpublishers, Unhealing was jwstponed. As of last-remain blameless unless she lives as if every man she the triaUhW beeii postponed four times without meets \s aTH>terit\ai rapist. • * ' ; ­v^dVance notice. When ''New' Portuguese Letter*" A THIRD MYTH rationalize^ that rape is almost ^ reappears in translation, the Three Marias will possibly technically impossible. Amir's study concluded that in 87 ^yfjfaifce an additional two to eight years in prison fot percent of his cases, the assailant had a weapon efaming "the good name of the country.'ti this explains the lack of bruises and broken bones on a as a matter of ^Center, said. ^'We would be pleased to offer the services AMERICAN MILITARY aid to the Portuguese victim who only appears to the police to be "shakes up." policy does not provide adequate treatment for rape ; .of the 24-hour counseling referral service to put victims dictatorship is substantial. The quid pro quo may be our Legally defining and proving rape is a tricky problem. victims. According to Dr. Paul Trickett, director of the § in touch with specially trained counsellors who would be' ft' if base in . the Azores or Gulf Oil's investment in The new, improved Texas statutes, effective Jan. 1,1974,, Student Health Center, although no student would be-available soon after the traumatic event. We plan to 'Portuguese" Angola, but the fact remains that the still contain some inadequacies. Rape is defined as refused treatment, victimis are usually sent to t participate in these training sessions."* r ; ~—— fe-XJnited States is in a position to. bring political pressure to "sexual intercourse with a female not his wife without Brackenridge Emergency Center. The Student Health : THE MAIN HINDRANCE to improving rape laws and I free The Three Marias and other Portuguese writers, the female's consent."To get aconviction a womanmust Center is often unable to provide a gynecologist for her rape treatment is the lack of reported assaults. ^International Women's Day represents a propitious be able to prove 1) identityr2) penetration and 3) lack of examination, a court necessity if she decides to According to "Our Bodies, Our Selves" by the Boston ^ time to form a committee to start building that pressure. consent. Often the legal cross-examination, of the victim prosecute. Trickett has been criticized by some women Women's. Health Book Collective, an estimated four to is an additional form of harassment. The woman's past as being interested mainly in treating the football team. ten times more rapes are committed than reported. The sexual encounters are admissible as evidence, and a Brackenridge Hospital provides a resident social National Observer reports that in the last quarter of 1971 defense attorney will invariably pursue such questioning worker who acts as a professional "friend" during the : the number of reported rape cases in Indianapolis M to establish her nconsent." Paradoxically, any previous -examination^ While, no women gynecologists are on. doubled after an antirape campaign was organized. The • rape charges filed against the assailant are considered emergency call, conditions are reportedly of a higher number of rapes committed in the UT area is officially inadmissible evidence. quality than the cliched emergency room. Although the undetermined. According to Donald Cannon, chief of A VICIOUS ISE LEGAL RIGHTS of men must also be police meet the victim at the hospital, one emergency University police, only two assaults were reported during University women have long expressed concern for the considered, however While any npw statnfp nporiq tn -room social worker described them as ^abundance of darkxorners on campus and the inadequate offer more clout to rape victims, it should also retain exceptionally sensitive and almost apologetic" in their estimate of about one per month. The People's Free ' protection of rape laws. Despite much public outcry and protection for the alleged assailant. As with a woman, questioning. But some victims reported-experiencing Clinic gave the same estimate. ^private discussion, few people take rape as a serious any man involved in a rape trial is likely to suffer from it. crude and insensitive treatment. Rape victims are caught in a vicious circle. Fearing ^problem. Newsweek reports that "rape is the least often As an example, a law student recently on trial for rape, The creation of a special rape crisis center is due next reprisals from the assailant, cynicism from the 'punished of all violent crimes," is generally treated even though found innocent, is still considered guilty by month, according to Barbara Cohen, co-chairperson of authorities and humiliation in court they are pressured lightly by law enforcement officers and goesconsistently many feminists. Rape must be proved. More decent the Women's Affairs Committee. The center will be in into silence. Silence brings no legal reform, no treatment unreported by the victims. As feminist groups grow in methods are needed to obtain that proof. the West Mall Office Building and offer. 24-hour for the victim and no rehabilitation for the rapist . number and influence, reform seems imminent. A more immediate need is to provide rape counseling counseling services for women who have just been raped Without statistics, one can hardly prove that the rape A CURIOUS PARADOX is exposed, • however as one centers to help women through the trauma. Police have a — whether they decide to prosecute or not — for women problem exists. Courageous women have spoken out, and looks at societal attitudes towards rape reflected by the notorious reputation for callous questioning. ("Do you who have waited a couple of days to report a rape, and for with the establishment of rape crisis centers, more " statutes governing prosecution, the treatment of rape think you're pregnant, honey, or did his check bounce?") women in need of counseling. The program will train women will feel free to focus on the problem. We — victims by the police and the shame-induced silence of Women are often reluctalht to go to hospital emergency women who have been raped to recognize the physical, encourage Austin's doctors, attorneys and police people the victims themselves. wards where a» male gynocologist charges $30 for an psychological arid legal needs of victims. Dr. Ira Iscoe, to work for intelligent change in the treatment of rape. Certain myths confuse the issue of rape and self-examination. director of the Counseling-Psychological Services Women in Austin have suffered too long. — C.D. »e sar.-;** • <• -m i By LISA BAIRD "No matter what your fight, don't be atmosphere that permeated the . r. •" -J*.-J--v: ' 1 On March 8, 1908 working women ladylike," she demonstrated the need for mainstream social view during the '50s crowded the streets of the Lower East women to abandon their socialized view of had no relation to what was actually Side in New York City, demanding an end themselves, a view which by its very happening on thelabor market. Increasing to the insufferable conditions imposed nature stood in the way of self-assertion numbers of women joined the work force upon them by the garment industry. Given and change. So besidesfacing the hard line and have continued to do so into the '70s. • mm the fact that the manufacture of clothing antiunion industrialists, women in labor Now almost half the labor force of this has been traditionally considered women's truggles have had to contend with their country are women. work, it comes as no surprise that the usbands' viewsof what they "shouW be/" -Despite their numbers; however, majority of workers in this field have as well as their own deeply ingrained working Women's jobs are rarely stable. always been women. And yet, other more values. The kind of commitment which During the Depression, women were the subtle reasons are exposed in Rose emerges despite such obstacles is strong first to get laid off their jobs, and we can Schneiderman's speech, "Senators versus and still growing today among working speculate that the current recession will Working Women," presented to the Wage women. again result in the Joss of many women's Earners' Suffrage League of New York in If we consider the history of the last 30 jobs. Women, however, continue to 1912. She said: years of this country, we find that there struggle. The chicano workers, mostly "We have women working in foundries, has been little correlation between the women, who struck for 22 months against stripped to the waist, if you please, established image of women and the work the Farah Manufacturing Co. recently won because of the heat. Yet the senator says in which the majority of women have their fight for union recognition. nothing about the women losing their actually been engaged. During WW II, the In the spirit of their victory, Austin charm. They have got to retain their absence of men necessitated the Women Workers are calling on all women charm and delicacy, and work ift the overwhelming majority of women leaving -to celebrate March 8 as International foundries. Of course you know the reason their homes, Women had to be both the Women's Day. Although the holiday was they areemployed in foundriesis that they "men and women" of the family, meaning inspired by the women garment workers' are cheaper and work longer hours than that they were money-earners and child-strike of 1908, International Women's Day men. Women in the laundries, for raisers simultaneously. At the workplace, has been virtually unheard of in this instance, stand for 1} or 14 hours in the women took over heavy jobs traditionally country while widely celebrated in other Marcelina Mendez, United Farm Workers of America, 1973 terrible steamand heat with their hands in held by men. When the war was over and parts of the world. We in Austin Women hot starch. Surely these women won't lose the men came home, necessity no longer Workers recognize it as a a day for all any more of their beauty and charm by ruled and the types of jobs available to women workers, whether they are paid firing line putting a ballot in a ballot box once a year women were once a^ain limited to wockers. workers in the home or women than they are-likely to lose standing in "female tasks." on welfare, to commemorate their long foundries or laundries all year round. In terms of women's image, the '50s was and militant history. Theirs is no harder contest than the a period which intensified thl myth of the Lisa Baird is a member of Austin Please consider auscultation contest for bread, let me tell you that." homemaker. But the LadiesHome Journal Women Workers. That "contest for bread" to which To the editor: Chesterfield County School Board. These more reasonable to attetop^f^Dbtain a Schnefderman referred dissolved theAs heartwarming as it has been to have cases were decided on Jan. 21, 1974, the considered opinion. . myth of woman as "delicate, dependent witnessed the expansion of the journalist's court holding that mandatory termination Diane Van Helden creatures," at least as far as working consciousness regarding women's issues provisions of the respective school boards' PO Drawer 12966, Capitol Station Nmwipmpmr mt Ml* UmlnrtHy ml r«ni at Atfttfa women are concerned. The rest of societyfrom a state of no doubt unwitting neglect maternity rules violated the due process P.S. Comment on'the abuse of Schattman did hang on to the myth, however. Despite EDITOR— -.v.-y,Michael Eakin to that of cautious attention, I must clause of the 14th Amendment. The v. TEC would no doubt be superfluous. the fact that women constituted an MANAGING EDITOR John Yemma regretfully propose, after reading the chronology is condemning because, for all increasingly large sector of the work ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS.7.77; Betsy Hall. Mark Sims March 6 Daily Texan's reporting of the intents and purposes, the issue of force, a percentage which has been on the NEWS EDITOR .... Susan Wintetringerissuance of Opinion No. H-251 by Atty. termination because of pregnancy as well Money ventures upswing throughout this century, women ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR,. Ken McHam Gen. Hill, that women's issues be as that of permissible employment To the editor: have been consistently caricatured as AMUSEMENTS EDITOR David Daileyaccorded benign neglect in the future. This policies relating to maternity leave had It would be hard to deny that UT is one males' appendages and children's SPORTS EDITOR..............i7..7. ..... Danny Robbins admittedly unkind proposal is prompted been resolved once Title VII's coverage of the more prosperous universities in the servants. FEATURES EDITOR x... ...... Kristina Paledesby what I would suggest is gross distortion was extended to governmental agencies. United States. One has only to look at the Women's unity, whether in the arena of PHOTO EDITOR ,. Jay Miller of the significance of the Attorney That is, of course, assuming good faith new West Mall fountain, or our illustrious' labor struggles,^ dress reform or suffrage .iienerafs opipioaan termination of state—compliance with the law. ISSUE STAFF • ;."7 •. football stadium. Nevertheless, it seems threatened the image of the female, which employes because of pregnancy. To characterize Atty. Gen. Hill as Issue News Editor BJ Hefner strange that a school administration so in in turn threatened those glorified Suffice it to mention briefly what having "won the hearts of many women's General Reporter.. Linda Fannin, Bill Garland love with concrete and cement cannot institutions of our country: marriage and newsperson Oriswell has overlooked. The libbers" constitutes nothing less than News Assistants ....Pam Clark, David Hendricks, Dick Jefferson even maintain and repair the roads it has the family. When "Mother" Jones, the Equal Employment Opportunity reckless disregard for the hardships Contributor .r....... ..-.^7r.;r....,:..,,...........BarnetFishbein already built. - famous American labor organizer of the Commission's Guidelines on imposed upon those women who were Editorial Assistants:..-.nr.*..rr.rr..77.^Steve Russell, Charles. Dean^ Iate.i9th'early-20th Century, told women?' a ago,_ Speedway-was 1604, amended March 31,1972) reflect the issue until almost 10 months after it had ripped up in front of Taylor Hall, for the Assistant Sports Editors >..«.* Bill Trott, Herb Holland position of the EEOC.that exclusion from, „be«n requested. This representation of installation of sewers. Although Malce-Up Editor Sylvia Moreno? employment • because " of ; pregnancy Hill is as sophisticated in its presumption construction has been finished for'some Letten to the editor Wire Editor : James Dunlap; constitutes a prima facie violation of Title to speak for FEMINISTS(sic) as is the time, the school has shown no inclination Uno letter* should: ' Copy Editors..Army Armstrong, Robert Fulke'cson,-Paul Watleri -VII of-the Civil Rights Act of 1964. With clegal analysisfound in the reasoning of the to repair the road. This constitutes a r • -• .• David Rose Discrimination Because of Sex (29 C.F.R,-terminated because an opinion did not Almost year Assistant Features Editor .>...i.;...... .....Jim Fuquay Be typed triple-spaced. hazard ti bicyclists, as well ascreating an the amendment of the Civil Rights Act of Utah Supreme Court in a recent decision Photographers..Yrf.J.;.Trrr;r;r.Jrr7r;Try7.T7; David Newman, Andy Sieyerman Employment that certainly be visible Be 25 lines or less. The Texan 1964 b,y the Equal denying achallenge to that state's custody eyesore must Opinion* expressed In The Daily Texan are lho»» of ihe suml i lassillcd advertising ihjpild be made In'TSP Building r«MrvM Opportunity Act of 1972, the exemption of laws' presumption that the mother is best even from the top of Frank Ejrwin's ivory the right to edit I'dllnror the writer, ol the article and are not necexarllv -;l !tmi < 471-42441 and duplav adi'erljnnn In TSP BulldHHl state and local governments and suited to care for young children. The tower. . . ., • length. thow or the t'niversity administration or the Board o^ a nii '4*i-im»' , im w Keilcnts . . • -governmental agenciesfrom the coverage court observed that an equal protection wwifUpw ai Th» i. The niituinul advcrusmit representative' ol The; DailyLj It has be^n my experience that round • Include name, addres*, and Texan ^ ——Texun is .Nauonal Educational Advertising S»rvire^|nc^ of Title VII was removed as of March 24, argument against this legal presumption wheels-work best on flat roads, and ir "i fi'taii at Au>lin. la published by Texan Student • -^»H*>\iniitbn Ave,. York. N Y.. 10017. » number of contributor. 'W I'uWunlliins. l>r.xu» Austin, Tex.; or bring letters to the Tex­ certiorari in the cases of Cleveland Board consider auscultation before diagnosing l__ . . '. uf ihp rdituriiil ofti« (Texa» Student Publlcailoni 11«-\ iliiiK»iali«»niMi»rthenew»paperarnt34thli8eto»> Jim Daviaon an office*, basement, Texas Student lluitilinil hjiicintnt tUMinVir ut thr newi laboratory iGom-Strifls. Hlitt) ,\-Humei Ruad. Ijke Austln Boulevard *^ ncerning the question of Austin's elections would lessen the effect of the big to tte city planners^teut what type -representatives ot these same people—they vteujoolnt «SS?ElhS XEfEuS SS«few interests (that is, those wit* vested ¥*to the mandatesof the real MAT their rom mialitv nf lifo . ;j§g§^^¥' . ' From what I have obseryed'Wfarfn-jtny-" interests^­ on our quality of life. -&teSil tial neighborhoods by,spot soning-­participation, my fear that we will be a But this pressure will only be'suecessful if XThe consensus of the niiungs was (fill Phase II participants recommended that = ~t-TrMv rubber-stamp body has diminished. The we participate in large numbers in the rest of 1 changes which are destroying what we find immigration (which accounts for most of our people coming to the meetings are^s III Last Wednesday • _ the Phase meetings. SM.V, most beautiful and satisfying about Austin growth rate) be discouraged by eliminating r concerned, informed and determined to voicef ight only 20 people showed up for a Zone 7.fiVs are directly attributable to our rampant rate incentives for new industry to come to their opinions about the type of Austin they s eeting (which includes the University M of growth. The members of Phase It cited Austin. This would include solicitation by the would like to see. ^fea), r„ air, water, noise and visual pollution, along Austin Chamber of Commerce in The Wall That the city will ignore citizen input is a^Austinites must attend the Phase III with destruction of natural areas and historic _ „ _ •.J", Street Journal No longer would it be able to fear I do not dismiss as easily. However, I^meetings and issue a clear mandate to the and aesthetic buildings as, offshoots of a. advertise the enticing rewards of refund feel certain there is one way to prevent this ^^City Council concerning the type of city we,burgeoning population. yi£V"' „ -t>P-contracts and regressive utility rates from happening — large numbers of 'jJWant Austin to be. If we are successful in' The Phase II population meetings, j Rubber-stamp manipulation Austinites must participate in the Austin ^that, the council will not dare ignore our • < ; ; , advocated that mighterhood famify planidng -^Vlanypeople, myself included, are suspitfou!s Tomorrow program. What will happen if-, "v. desires. clinics be-established and that birth control -­ thpsein the city meetings for example, that they in Austin Tomorrow. more firing tine w< fcfisw.: f 5. SiOSTENS/AMERICAN Onus gooks YEARBOOK COMPANY will be interviewing for career tales representatives with To the editor: would have gone had they not ^^psjwsition* available throughout the M.S. OA only both hisson's ears but his new college fad — streaking cruelty t Toad at the' unnecessary to the at Hall This letter is in response to voiced their intent so loudly. entire body, minus the scraps ®^UJIA«CH — to be much more little critters! ^ E corner of Trinity and Sixth 11 and 12 the March 7 Firing Line letter' -It's obvious that many with scattered by an RPG rocket than that Bonner Please sign up at the Room acceptable those written by Qyenton Elliot Jr. I Streets. Spaghetti dinner at < 134 for interviews on MARCH 11. the same inane aspirations which landed directly on his went before — breaking kf.SM Class of'SI 6:30 Greezy don't know if you've been to but some what less outspoken p.m., Wheels: Vietiuun, but I have. I am make There was chest). windows, rioting",* ransacking Benefit plays at 8:30, tickets only $3 at : and for interviews on MARCH 12, sign up at did it. My point is this: war is hell. administration offices, public To the editor: the Auto Co-op or, the door. very much aware of the another guy who never took But the most remote purpose LIBERAL ART* PLACEMENT CENTER drugs, et T Here is a slight correction ruthless killing by someof our use of cetera ad-• prisoners, even wounded ones. of" war is defeated when nauseum. In fact, if "this* 2608 Whitit' to the Kyle Benefit editorial most prestigious patridts. Tony Iarrobinov 1 He later shot himself in the women and children are so streaking is confined to yesterday.. The; workers Who) I was abducted into the arm the night before a ruthlessly killed. And brother, campus where people are offered themselves back Feb. armed forces I met two guys dangerous, patrol began. orders from the top have no who wfere more than anxious accustomed to the sight of. 11, and there is agreement UT STUDENT GOV'T. TOURS PRESENT There was another who would bearuig on the issue. girls wearing "short-shorts" the to volunteer for Vietnam duty run out into the field of bsittle #lii^SMSIil'''-:Auni Sallv with company on »SPRING BREAK IN and no brassieres, I am sure it noneconomic issues. But there so they could "slaughter the to cut the ears off the "fallen ^ will cause little""harm.. is still disagreement on murderous gooks" (sic). They enemy." He would then send Streak 'em Heavens, there Were oddballs economic issues, and no never made it. The Army them home to his father, who To die editors—1 '———• who wanted to take me to task" contract has been signed. preferred to send those who saved them. (Well, before I While I don't approve of back when I was UT goldfish-_ And a reminder — come to didn't want to go. But they left his father received not public immodesty, I find this eating champion; said jt was < the Kyle Benefit, this Sunday MARCH 30 -APRIL 5 Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle PI AN i I S ACROSS DOWN I VD05TUPIP EiBOH EHHH BBS DCpjESBURV 1 1 Chinese ; VSailor (col-&\2f2U BHEA6LE! VU4..'' 4-*489°° 0EJSE HSSj pagoda Toq:) @ga Qsnii n@n MERIT TRAVEL Jk 4 Cubic meter .2 Beverage 9 Music:aa 3 Affix nra HHEEI H@E3ii R£ALVf?mm THE PROGRAM INCLUDES: .conttACT* r" written 4 Withered hghh Brame sHra umoOiARAOBUlZB STUDENT GOV'T, TOURS 12 High moun­5 Make lace EHSiSH HQBIB OP3 Mm, Z0NK6K UT IT AS XASUAL"? Round trip J«t Airfare San Antonio -Atapulc* tain 6 For example SOQISDQ CDHHQfflB SUPAN INCMME AD­iOUKNOW, 7MATHAS UN. 319 471-3721 13 Ardent (abbr.) Six Nights Accomodations a@ni3 aaGras MISSION THIS AFTERNOON. mmmxATioNs! MERIT TRAVEL 14 Greek letter' 7 Illuminated fflGDn •••• HBQB HB LOLPMB SEX AT IT IS ., MAT tXACTW Vy-Joz-f/t Open Bar Beach Party 15 Rumor' again 17 Females 8 Periods of soma BEHfS Q0 WAU)£N WAS ^CASUAL"! DO Ml MEAN BY Passes to famous Acapulco Night Clubs > 2200 GUABAUttio 19 Before time \ "CASUAL'? Transfers to and from Hotel v.r > (SECOND IEVIL) 20 Part of step 9 Enthusiasm Has heeih 478-3471 21 Need 10 Definite arti­ crass 23 Obese --cle roraa DniiH W FAT.NO-600D, 24 Keen 11' Three-toed . 26 Wear away 40 Distant M 27 Ancient : sloths 28 Weight of In-42 Bird's home . 28 Drink slowly 16 Worthless—^ • : dla 43 War god 29 Showy leaving . . 29 High card 44 Sob flower 18 Thick • 31 More recent 45 Garden tool 30 Guido'slow 20 Knock 32 Electrified ** -A \* note1 •». 21 Injury particle 46 Be mistaken 31 Seine 22 Change 35 Rejects 47 Female ruff iwa n: jf 32 Frozen 23 Suitable 36 Vessel 48 Pose for water 25 Evergreen 37 Sings portrait 33 Note of , tree 39 Trials" 51 Cooled lava CLIOs...The Best scale r~ i 4 6 8 11 34 At no time 3 5 7 9 *0 36 American of the Boob Tube essayist 12 13 14 cm WU FLEA-BITTEN, 37 Uncouth INFORMAL. INFORMAL"? BLUE JOANS person Is 16 iy 18 ALLOWED. m/,?M The CLIO award winning ' -\ OODfOR-NOTO 38 Traced sexiousi commercials of 1973. 39 Measure of 20 i weight $$ CANINEi!!! The best in 30 and 60 21 22 24 26 40 Journey 23 25 Second quickies, S 41 Doctrine V 28 -29. 43 Swiss river 58 44 Tasks io -31 32 33 46 Mistakes SIS Fri. and Sat. 49 Fish eggs 34 35 36 37 running continuously 7-11 50 Look fixedly 52 Hawaiian 38 $$ 39 40 iHATS THE 1RK/0CE WITH 66IN6 Auditorium wreath ve? 5EN$lT(Ve.,EVeN TW6 5USHTE5T 53 Affirmative 41 42 43 Admission 50$ Q REMARK CAN Hl/RT ttJUR FEELIN65 54 Former Rus­IS sian rulers 44 45 46 47 48 55 Deposit 49 SO SI S2 WANT TO TALK S3 -S4 SS TO YOUR RADIO? DEATH AND DYING ® WE MEET OR SEMINAR HEAR FOR GENERATIONS TO COME THIS BEAT ANY STEREO CATHOLIC AND EASTERN SUNDAY NIGHT AT 6:00 RM.. PRICE -r PERSPECTIVES ON DEATH THE FIRST HOUR IS A PANEL DISCUSSION Arthur Kinsella ON REVISING THE TEXAS CONSTITUTION. and Raja Rao THE SECOND HOUR IS ALL YOURS. Sunday, March 10, 7:30 p.m. STEREO SYSTEMS" AT i Texas Union304 "AMONG THE SCHEDULED PANELISTS WILL BE: EFFECTIVE PARENTING SEMINAR SANSUI-BSR-AMPEX ISANSUI-DUAL-ECI Offered by W. PAGE KEETON MlVlr C/V BETTER COMPONENT SYSTEM UT Counseling Center DEAN, U.T. AUSTIN COMPONENT SYSTEM To Explore: • Effective Ways to raise children LAW SCHOOL . -; • Develop? rewarding irelationships • Applying behavior management skills JOHN HENRY FAULK Six weekly sessions on Mondays, HUMORIST & SOCIAL 7:30-9:30, beginning March 18 COMMENTATOR Register March 11.March IS at WMOB 303 or call 471-3515 : RALPH W. YARBOROUGH Opmn to Students, Faculty & Staff FORMER U.S. SENATOR THIS SYSTIM ceo pat tha axcitaawat al tha Afam •fflfcwJfira cancart right inta yoar Rving ream. Utilb­ iag tha SANSUI 3S0A starea re'«& j' 1 86318 ,:v> > Hfc' 1/1 (/Dallas 42 Days—$329* plus inter­>i% national departure tax v* ^ May 30—July 11 J Capital Airways DC-8 ^ li 1 > ' »f-''w"': ^ 183 seats ; 4 *Prices based on pro rati share of the total chartei cost. sgsj#>a SfjftS Icelandic GroupFlights Dallas LnxembMirg Dallas May 22—August 21, $382t May 25—July 12,$397+ • ~ ; • " June 4—July 2, $453+ June6—July 21, $468t +$3international departure tax : KLM Group Flights I Houston/Amsterdam/ lay 22—August 20, $462.60t| May 22—July 9, $462.60 June 5—July3, $541.60 tadd $3Departure Tax SPECIAL INCLUSIVETOUR CHARTER! i-V I.T.C. Charters OPENTOGENERALPUBLIC ^June 3—June18 16 days Choiceof 6 itineraries from $633 Umdmi/CostaOdSolj June 14—June28 $749 -w­ V"-I44k ' By DANNY BOBBINS traveled 65,000 miles to plajr says only five quality college Brookins' replacement is 7-0 . Texan Staff Writer basketball games. Last players have been graduated sophomore Mike Heck, a#^Bluejays prjably DENTON -When Eddie the" summer, the Bluejays made a from die state's high schools substitute who Sutton says Rouble _adjusting to. Sutton and: his Creighton y'ans* y 10-city tour of Brazil^ playing. in the last five years. One of * "has had his ups and downs ; .'n® , .• '. Bluejayswent toHonolulu two thoseis Gene Harmon; "tMs^yrar^MMtry apsr^^' Ust ^ear^HJie^Jays -wer^ weeks ago, they feasted, at a The referees in Brazil were currently Creighton's best The Bluejays do not have appropriately the last team to; luau with 100 Creighton poor, and instead of booing the flayer. one big rebounding star but Jls,t 11,6 onginal North Texa^.^z alumni. fans whistled at the top, of ^rHARMON, A 6-6 senior are tall enough as a team that State gjnm. which was simply,.^ When .Sutton and the their lungs, "This^ U one forward, has_hftf»n named the they areratad niHthnaWonallyj^^}^ the Pit, I^^ajed 4.5QS,.,, ^ans- •reason we plav so well on the most valuable player on the in rebounding. They are also Wlt'un touching ^ California one week before, road," Sutton said. "Our kids Creignton team for the last "fifth in team defense', Sutton's custanco. they weregreated by 500 other to adverse can.adjust two years, and he is the Jays' specialty. NO AMOUNT of traveling Creighton alumni, all doctors conditions. The officiating leading scorer this season^ THE BLUEJAYS have, experience could save,.•>and dentists. Sutton was mediocre at best in averaging 17.9 points per earned a reputation as a good Creighton in the Pit, and they"?' Sometimes, the Creighton"<"- game. lost a close game to North c show off his nationally-ranked Brazil. Ourkids learned poise, man-to-man defensive team, basketball players even go to team in front of the 65 CU and we believe we can play on :but Sutton is changing things.. Texas. school. Sutton does not intend-­ alumni clubs scattered across the road better -than most The Texas-Creighton first "We have started our last 111 h "That was one of the worst! to coach the Globetrotters the country. other teams." round NCAA basketball game or 12games in a zone because places in the world to play,"Jsomeday. He just likes to go places, meet He also wants"gckfif high" PERHAPS THIS is why will be televised hi Austin by it allows us to play our best Sutton said. "The crowd could; people i~ and school players to hear about Creighton was.able to upset the TVS Sports Network over ' players longer and cut down reach out and touch you, but? please alumni. his 2,500-student Omaha powerful Marquette a few KTVV (channel .36) at 8:10 on fouls,''; Sutton said. the toughest part was th< fej^sWus^man-tOK a^^TOsTTMrw^wn^eT could make many Creighton. graduates happy with a gimmick in a way,'' Sutton was only the second home mart, Texas' Larry Robinson During timeouts you could not1 game Marquette bad lost in said,. "Travel is an experience The Bluejays, who will start victory over Texas in the first will probably be assigned to communicate with your round of the NCAA Midwest in itself, and we sell a lot of 101 games, and the victory an experienced lineup of three CU forward Ted'Wuebben. players * ^ ^ ftegiondis at 8:10 p.iri^ ^jour athletes on this.Welell thrust the Bluejays into, the rseniors..and two juniors, have Sutton, however, says be. Tqp2^ . , FortunHeIy,"^e'''Nd^?|^j Saturday in the new-^uper Pi^pthem that they will play iA' a tremendous height plans to use a zone defense' games Saturday night will be ^ •T every city in the country, It is interesting that advantage over Texas at the at North Texas State. ?>•' • much of the Texas game. He' 'played in the modern 10;000­PART OF Sutton's11 "Join perhaps the world." Creighton should beat guard position. The Creighton also used a zone against South Marquette because the two seat Super Pit which wasL„ guards are 6-4 Charles Butler Creighton and See the World" ' He means it quite literally.-small Jesuit are Carolina, the team which beat ^opened in December, 1973. schools and 6-7 Ralph Bobik. philosophy stems from the •Sutton calculates that the six the Jay$ Monday night before ' similar. In fact, Sutton says The center is 6-8 Doug fact that the coach wants to ' seniors on his team have the largest Creighton For Sutton' and the they are '.'sister schools." Brookins, who scored 25 basketball crowd ever in .Bluejays. it would just be They are located in the same points against Marquette. Omaha. y< another trip. Starting Lineups province, and priests, Ux„ frequently ti^ivrf^back and ^ ' • I^m.' ' • Mpt>1 Oom '• Pm. •' • Clms forth between tnesqL 'Gene Harmon , : : F 6-4 $r. " Larry Robinson G 4-7 Sr. -• Ted Wuebben F 4-4 Sr. Ed Johnson :* f: 4-5 Fresh. And Marquette, TexasOoug Brookins C 4-8 Jr. Rich Parson ' ; . . C 4-8 Fresh. 1ike The track National Indoor Champion­Lightfoot will compete in the Ralph Bobik G 4-7 Sr. Dan Krueger . G 5-11 Soph. Creighton has an anibitious coming off a win at theBord.er ship meet. * 60-yard high hurdles. Charles Butler G 6-4 Jr. Harry Larrabee G 5-10 Sr. national recruiting program Olympics in Laredo will split Asst. Coach Bill Miller and :> • Don Sturgal will run the — which, of course, is into two factions this 32 others will go to Denton to 440-yard dash.FREE SPRINGfIKE CHECK strengthened by Sutton's love weekend. participate in a quadrangular • Rudolph Griffith' will for airports and motels. ; Head "Track Coach Cleburne meet with North Texas State, compete in the 880-yard run. Nebraska high school Price and 10 athletes will TCU and Baylor. •* • Reed Fischer will run the DAWES was"'13995 basketball is weak, and Sutton travel to Detroit for the NCAA « At Detroit. Randy mile. • Bishop Dolegiewicz and GALAXY now *119" Dana LaDuc will compete in S --4,-VIST* 10% OFF Uie shotput. ACCESSORIES A SERVICE FOR ALL BIKES " Dolegiewicz will compete " in the 35-pound weight throw. • Bill Golddapp. John •••AUSTIN CYCLE CENTER raig; Mark-Klonower and— Transportation by bus 4503 BURNET RD.H 9|| 451-8111 Paul Craig will comprise the •"TUES.-SAT. 9-6:30 mBm Condominiums with two-mile relay team. kitchens and fireplaces In Denton, the Horns sho&ld 5 days skiing and lodging expect tough competitionShoe Shop *SALE from Baylor, which finished Lift tickets second to Texas in Laredo. We makeand SHEEPSKIN U.T. SKI CLUB As a matter of fact, the repair boots Bears defeated Texas in most P.O. BOX 7338 RUGS UT STATION of the sprinting events and shoes belts '5,00 Many. :.k 125 AUSTIN, TEXAS 78712 have the makings of a -Beautiful Colors $750 452-5161 • Southwest Conference leather SPRING BREAK contender. . ~ •k LEATHER SALE* A $25.00 deposit holds your reservation! ® Voriooi kind*, colors -75' por 'lt, • It will be the-second time . Mail Today! Limited Space! this year that Texas has faced North Texas State. Baylor and Capitol Saddlery TCU in an outdoor meet. l>\ Intvrn.ii I uk . If the B.order Olympics 1614 Lavaca -Austin, Texas 478-9309 Dear Akadama Mama were any indication (the .Olympics were mainly SWC teamsK then the competition will' be tough indeed for the INOW OPEI Horns to defend their SWC TheKama Sutra title. I 7 DAYS To Place A Daily Texan I A WEEK Classified Ad of Wines. Call 471-5244 | Till Midnight Dear Aknrinnin Mania: IM.l'IVI Dl'CK I was at a party when-Hu>\ were 1 hut tie Akadama Plum We're Not REDNECK j sei'Vi ny Ak aiia ma I'l inn wit h Se ven-I <|iiart extra dry ehampa^nr Barbers ; I small hlock ofne Up. and I tell you it w-as Ian tasti<-. I MEDICAL ARTS • Sheet! oranue^and siraxvhernes WBiHler il-you knowdl anv nt her neat BARBERSHOPS Mix ill puneli howl, serves a|ipro\uiialelv ways to serve Akadania wines. • 2915 Red River 477-0691; 11>. metlmm si/e pmii h i iips A. Kan AKADAMA HHASII.IA GOLF Dear A. Fan: Ktpial pai l's Akadama h'ed and oi anm' niiit" . _ BOOTS First olT let ii'ir tlvank you lor-the- Sprit / of sij»la wonderful weekend I, had preparing to Bring this coupon Serve with iee. , . answer your letter. \Ye really had a hall to play at half. AKADAMA S'PHIT/KK experiment in}4 with Akadama l\ed. price. Pour t'hilletl Akatlama lu-il into tall tdass White and Plum And the'only reason 6700 Burnet Rd. with iti oila and si ir i;ent l\ I'm not still partying it up is that I had VODKADAMA to meet a deadline Inr this rolunin. b* I pari Votlk-a Dunham 1-acid tn taste' Raichle Kama Sutra of wines. I lei e are some of •|\vis! of lemon wilderness/whitewater supply my favorite reel pes. Bottoms up. 5440 bunwl road 1M I'M AN!) lUtANDV oi!Tim;<;Kiu'i'Nf7-ii She wants me, I pari Akailama I'ltiiU hollies Ak.ul.mi.i While yvnid I part Brantlv Tia'Ti I'i'iWrf ronrrirlITUrd +MHe;u,li' Kin'x e nr.'i lar'r<' wrntryhi -f ^ boots • t small liliu k ul •rranilx sny'ter _ -Ntix HKI> HAI.I KM'KFSS |iHir.i|i|ili-,mil Imir slurs Serves Discount I llilllel' • ill! a|ipro\miati-l\ III iin-ilnmi si/t-rups Aild Akadama h'ed lo lasl ft' •KF-on all SANCUIA AKADAMA ^INvisI of lemon ^ Iiolllrs Akailaoia Keif f Sensallonal! —u. I 1111.irl mI'i IiiIi snila Guitar ' •.• t an Irtv/en ronei'iitrated leninnai|r Mixwillt leition ami i>ran>;t; slnt-s 01 -•J l.isten lo Mama, and lar>:e pnelier -Serve oxer-iei'. pass tlie Akailama. tlie xvine that tastesa lot mtne than it costs. • Amster Music • • 1624 lavaca . J -••••••••••••«••••••-. TGJ L|QU0R Miss Black Velvet 3STORES n fA-!• is here and she's gonno getcha to try "Slack Velvet Canadian. Both these 2100 Riverside 441-0067 beauties (one alive & one billed) will be Store! No. 2 In person to see to you. March 8th at;19th Hole No. 2/2100 Riverside March 9th at 19th Hole No. 1,19th & Guadalupe SPECIALS MEN AND WOMEN SHOES FOR CUMBING — HIKING — BACKPACKING 5th 3.69 Oi;t Bfqck Velvet80 pr.... Vi gal. 8^99 Vrrr Old Taylor 86 pr.%SfS?!5th4.39 SHOE STORE a Bacardi Rum 80pr. ......5th3.99 »|Dwrn*i Ka. S$04,Burn«t Rd. 454-929Q p -4 W««kday* Old Mtl'^'ulcee 1.05 9 to 3:30 Thursday •P^>e 4 Friday, ^Varch-,8, 1974^T1IK DAILY TEXAN ' 1 r -' •>"' «c5,{ mm* \jp ByLAmYsMJ*fiP^s T'ed for Conference Lead writer ifc tor ^Rice football team, oi reliever is needed. Against'Ted Nowak, .385. and TheTe*** lefthander Holdei Houston, Gideon^ won two designated hitter PhilCosta, ^MUUSTON -The Texas ^will stMt^^game ,n ^ .375. None of their other baseball team will be taking ,>vTexas will use senior Rick "FLORES IS in a splint starters are batting over .300. TT.?f "^?ft-8>IC?^ful ?rofe?sional Wlfertocomeoutofthe^quicker to undergo change than at tte colle^atel^li:Itkt »Rice seriously when it travels Burley (4-0) on Friday and strictly for mobility SEVEN OF the Longhorn Univereity is not Ben Crenshaw or Tom Kite but a woman, in all sports, television has been the biggest growth factor. to Houston to play theOwls in ^homQresJimfiid^^^;^r|xises,r'l_Gu6tafaon--«kklv regul«Eft.^re ba^i^hi^teir I" ~W 1hasgiven womeft'S golf arid tennis MeepUnce, asiBgte gatoratstrttv.andtrt %nd Richard Wortham (S-O) on "Speaking optimistically, the than :";lhat mark. Keith ,j~* 18 ™ ® 0X1 theau-timeLadies ProfessionalGolf recognition and Over-all increased growth;" Ms/ Rawls" a doubleheader Saturday1^ behind Kathy WMtworth as^~'pomte^-<^'^More young girls now want to play sports fp.m. b^ginninglf^" "PetUt rfl'ay be the Most . Mi<*ey Wright. Ms. Rawls has won £3tournamentssince she because of TV, and the growth'will be continued because of A game with the Owls' be against Texas Tech hext baseman, still leads Texas experienced outstanding Saturday." Started playing on the tour in 1951. Included among her wins the new interest." with a .524 average followed football or basketball teamsis pitcher in the conference, are four tyS. Opens and two LPGA titles. ' 'J On the women's professional golf tour, prize money has considered by many Longhorn While Texas' pitching has by senior Rick Qradley who is playing Texas Coach Cliff Gustafson improved, its hitting has hitting .422. at the relatively late age of 17w.£grown from $60,000 when Ms. Rawls first started to over fans to be the closest thing to said. "He's beat us. He's beat My dad was a good amateur player until he quit playing?1 $1,800,000 for this year. There also are twice as many an off day. ButRice's baseball declined. Before the Houston ' Gustafson considers> the team, which has won eight . »» raeft wnen hp started playing again, I started playing with tournaments and a chance to travel to other countries. everybody in the SWC.'| series, the Horns were batting Rice series to be the most ,373. Now the team average is is .r mo it . , The P^ses for women ire going up thanks to Sears,' games in a row, a important so far this year for ijThe Texas-Rice baseball cTe t0 *** Uiuversityin 1946> and «»1949 she Colgate, Sealy, Faberge and other sponsors that have Southwest Conference .349. However, Gustafson is ?Jfeis 17-0 team, games will be broadcast live started taking lessons from Harvey Penick at the Austin discovered the women's tour as a tax write-off. This new contender. not exactly worried over thosie ^"Rice is a real contender _ v D> j at 3 p.m. Friday and at1p.m i^aub. He k%|l]^er instructor ever "I L sponsor^ pnryo ,ovep>- lew lost points. and a fine ball club," he sale 'gwJi'ftst ».,jWe„ekiend','y&>£e»xjsftPKy--,-/,'Sa4-Brd&y-'CT"oii.'*^ ^ k ~~nsBSSg llounf «ri^Ta $3half-'afi grbwffi percentagewisethan the men'stour hasin the last> three games from SMU, 18-2, {imh-' hour lesson from him, and I've been going on that |3for 25 few years. 5-0and4-2. Meanwhile, Texas V}1 r that's to' be expected," he They've only lost one,starter , yw earned run in their last five "I think our pitching is " 2 dr.ltd.12,000 nriios , , Ms* 9awls feels that the new NCAA rule allowing women' Women Caddies games. In the first game of a finally starting to come VW SQUAREBACK fm to compete with men is not much of a step for women in Tuesday doubleheader against around for us," Gustafson Japan has instituted a new twist to golf that Ms. Rawls std» olr, radio, Factory warmly 'I don't think women can compete with men. I've MAZDA RX-2 would like to see spread'to the United States — women Texas Lutheran College, $aid. "We've had at least one* never known a woman that could play on a Texas team. Rice's Reneau, Tim good pitching performance in caddies. "Ninety percent of the caddiesin Japan are women. Larry Women simply don't have thestrength that the men do. It is Holder and Ralph Cooley They carry the bags on carts, but they do just as good,a job each of our last-five games." ltd. radiouke a five-foot basketball player playing against seven- as the men and sometimes better^" she, said. combined for a no-hitter. Since Martin Flores (3-0) footers," she said. "We are starting to have women caddiesin the U.S., and I Mike Pettit (2-0) and will not be able to,pitch before ,n^0Irett s'lould have their own teams," she continued. think we should have more. I'd ratherhave them thana lot of Reneau (2-1) will definitely next weekend because of a When I went to Texas, thereweren't enough women golfers start for this hyper-extended elbow, the ones we have," Ms. Rawls said. "They could be women the Owls weekend while either Bruce Gustafson said Bobby Cuellar they have a team but they should also be getting: When the tour halts during December and January, Ms. Hfi.nley (3-0), a defensive back (1-0) will probably be used if a scholarships. " = Rawls resides in Lakeway with friend and fellow,golfer• "Texas (the state) has a lot of fine women golfers.'and a Betsy Cullen. They have stayed there for~the last six years. lot of them would go to Texas if they gave scholarships.I am "We like Lakeway because people leave us alone and we can frequently asked by young players where they can go to play all the golf and get all the exercise that we want and school on a golf scholarship, but unfortunately there aren't still be close to Austin," she said. \ " " many schools that give them," she said. ; Ms. Rawls' last victory came in last year's Tucson Open B GAP 0 "I think the neglect of women's sportshas been ridiculous. and she is still playing well, but she doesn't plan to play Women have always loved sports, but society has frowned . .. _ r , ..A VEftY SOUND SYSTEM forever. "I plan to play for a few more years and gradually w?™en-A lot of women have been cut do«ji, as long as I can make a living and"stiff enjoygott POOL • F00SBALL cheated, and a lot of talented women have missed a lot of I'll pfay it. Eventually, I would like to gointo teaching it. I'd ,« »f . •'5TT * W.P..J I • " vw pw W WWVMMI0 IWt A U pleasure, sne added, u~*l ••quality SERVICE •i® hafe to quit now and miss the trips to Japan and Great FRI. CONQUEROO Women's athletics on the professional level has been Britain that the tour has been making." YOUR AUTHORIZED DOWNTOWN SAT. CONQUEROO VOLKSWAGEN DEALER 476-9181® Wfflfflm CORNLR 5IH & LAMAI«Hra^H 2610 GUADALUPE DEIORIS ARBY'S 3 for 2 SPECIAL Buy 2 Arty's Hot Roast Beef BACK Sandwiches and Get 1 Free From. Europe and New York $2.67 Value where she studied the latest for $1.78 SAVE 89< techniques in hair stylingfor OFFER GOOD THRU MARCH 10 men arid women. K v ^ • SnoppyS*rvic« 1705 Guadalu|>« . 472-1582 ' 2004 Guadalupe •„ Ptanant Atnwephefe 5400 Burnet Rd. 451-3760 from our collection to yours • O«on ood CMI 4411 W. Ban White 892-2058 478*0022 DO YOU OWN A VOLKSWAGEN -MGB Here's a sampling of collectables TOYOTA -DATSUN? designed to work for you in a "high efficiency" wardrobe that AMM -PORT CAR CLINIC encourages you to turn your8311 RESEARCH -836-8311 clothes closet into a fashion lab wi nji >• ti GILBERT'S AUTOMOTIVE INC. « 5'if 1209 RED RIVER 476-8990 where you can experiment with A Is the plan to have it 5501 AIRPORT BLVD. 452-7104 your own life-style look. Serviced or Repaired., WINE LOVERS, THIS IS THE PLACE! ,1621 *a*f 6*h CHECK THESE SALE PRICES! I Rag. Salt POUIUY-FUME WO by Gaudr* ... ... 3.49 2.79 POUIUY-FUSSM970 or 1971 .... ... 4.49 3.49 CHABLIS 1W0 taCroix ......... ... 3.49 2.49 CHABIIS 1st Cru M. d* Tomwre '70 ... 4.95 3.79 GAMAY 70 RoiiMMclw-Thorians . ... 2.95 1.99 COTES DE BEAUNE VILLAGES 1970 ... 5.79 4.69 M0NTHEIIE 1970 JACQUES Parmt . ... 5.49 3.99 478-5423 MERCURtY '69 or'70 E. VoaiHtk . ... 7.95 5,99 ft 1URNET RD. 465.8689 SPECIALS GOODFRIDAY AND SATURDAY WW L0CKEF0R0 CaUf. Zinfondal ...... ... 1.99 U9 1 OKN 10 A.M. 'Til 9 P.M. pM -. BERINGER BURGUNDY FULL GALLON. 3.99BACARDI RUM L0CKEF0RD BURGUNDY H GALLON . ... 2.99 2J3 •OPrafPuwtolHcanKvin .Sfh 3.79 SCUPPER0N0NG laird's 5th ....., BEAUiOLAIS 1972 Bkhot Sth CHATEAU to PRADttSI 70 R>4 Stfc ...7.1 3.19 SEHENtEFVODOr ATEAU OUVIRY 7J CoAitrw Slfc ^?TT^.99=T39i m-iYW ... 1.29 .99 GILBEYS VOtotfGifi GIN i 5»h 3.35 2.99 1;99 CHIVAS•6Proof Scohth Whbky CUTTY SARK MPKsfSulchWhMiy !*i§A£L,.,..: !4 GAL. .5th .Sfh 19.95 5.95 3.49 CHATEAU d« lo SENCHE MlMrvbis 5th CHATEAU BARON 70 R«d BonUaax 5th .... CHATEAU LATOUR da BONNET 70 5th ..... CHATEAU CARSIN '*9 CHm Bod. 5th ;:.w CHATEAU IYQUEM 70 Rtd. Bmn-g Win. 5th . CHATEAU CISSAC 'M Cm Bourgols Sth . .... CHATEAU GARRAUS 70 d« Paimr«l MAGNUM 1.99 1.29 ....„ 2.99 2.25 3.M 2.79 .... 3.95 2.95 4.49 3.49 .... 6.95 5.19 .... 9.95 150 FEATHER LEATHER WINDSHIRTS. Suede and leather is now a year 'round fashion^uch as these collectables to add4o your sportswear collection. Two styles $ aim HMSaldiWIMy VAT 69 GOLD MfreofScotch Whtoky................. 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STEINBERGER RIESLING 1972 LIEBFRAUMILCH or MOSEiBLUMCHEN '72 ..... ...... 3.95 4.49 ...... 2.69 BLACK VELVET CANADIAN WHISKEYMpr.p5th 2.99 3.49 1.BB 3.69 v n c l7r-w v*'' -A ' <,A\ m :;'JIM:SEA^u*liiMlS PASSPORT ^COTCHMK. ^ ^LIISrts 5.1f <• MATTINGLY & MOORE J WNrf l«ral*hi IwriMit Whhlcy J.W. DANT 10 yr•4PioofOM$ty(« WhHItty ... ' SMIRNOFF VODKA aopr.sth 3.69 SEAGRAMGIN90 pr. ..5th 3.59 •Ofr.Slh RELSKA VODKA KING GEORGE IVSCOTCHso m gauon 1.11 •V ...... wr. v .. 105$$ ^Biting Men-is v' . • J.W. DANTlOyr.MPC. KyWUskoy ...^v. HGALLON 8.88 OLD CROWliyr Str.tlwi.Whbtoy VIGAUON WALLBANGERilCHiiUR JACQUES CARDIN FRENCH BRAHDYM* QUART 4.45 TEQUILA SAUZA from Mtxicooopr. ...... QUART 5.49 BACARDI ALLIANCA CiNfif Oiohhif < FULL QUARTS SBbshbb SCHLITZ CANS BmBBH ^hsm B0|Hr;Rimi KUJE 5HI .« ..... I•>7 7 mst PABST BOCK BEER CHAMPAGNE v Mik tONE STAR : CASE . Apk.nr bH»JS:. .33 CRIBARI5H> ..... I.W REYNOLDS PABSTCant ..Acase: SPECIALS ARC CASH I CARRY -NO CREDIT CARDS Friday, March I, 1974 THE 0AILY TEXAN Page 7 ifpKIPPI f V1 T \ ritr-v>-Yy pyjragga. By RICHARD JUSTICE , Texan Staff Writer Fayetteville, Art. -At first day of competition in last year's Southwest Conference Swimming and Diving Championships, the SMU Mustangs felt they had* not been properly prepared for th£ meet. Last season Texas was trailing SMU jg by only a few points after the first day ^ andwarwitWn striMngdlstaneeef the sMustangs.„ ^ However,.nowever; • mis years ^vJcompetition SMU did'away-with in this year's SWC h any ^thoughts people might have had about ~ heir giving up their 17:yew ho}d WCchampionship. J-, SMU thoroughly dominateiktbe first . of competition and took a •"commanding 135-point lead over second , "place Texas A&M Thursday night, •r ' ^Texas, meanwhile, struggled to get $9 Aa lot out of them and gave our gays a lift at Uie same time." ; Texas Coach Pat Patterson disagreed. "I don't think that at any one point things turned around one way • or the other," he said. "Our whole goal was to come here and swim tired and. do the best we can. "You know what our goals are," he continued. "We're trying to do well iiatiofi&lly beeattte we know 'anything* we do here will still only get us second , place. , t If SMU did suffer a defeat, it came toMs? their attempt to letter the first womailliT Arkansas' Dick Perrif kept. Mustangs from total domination. "I was surprised at how well some of our people did,". SMU Diving Coach Bryan Robbins said. "We did sb well. We just missed a clean sweep by .85. And Christine, well shejust everybody's spirits up." »-V" The only event SMU did not win first place in was the 50-yard freestyle. Arkansas* fine spHnter~C6ug Wtom edged out Texas Tech's Bob Aberaon If the meet wasn't decided>in thefirst ;c;event of the night when SMU took first, |?3^Second and third in the 500-yard freestyle, the Mustangs completely trapped mattersup-whenQiey finished I -. first, second, fourth, fifth and sixth in ^,|iiedley|^^|ira>5^;-^ ;;;t "I thiift Texas is have in the preliminaries," Ms. Loock" said. "I didn't come here to letter.'' Ms. Loo£k~will have one more chance to.letter when three-meter diving", " I thinkW However, things will get better for Texas. Before competition ends Saturday night Texas will move into second place ahead of Arkansas and competition begins Saturday. do better in three meter anyway," she said. However, Ms. Loock's performance was overshadowed by the SMU diving team's domination. The Mustangs . finished one through five and came < close to sweeping the diving. Only and third. Patterson knows it, too. "I think we're a little down right now," he said. "We're going to finish second, but it's going to be,a little more difficult than we thought it would be. "I'm a little disappointed, but I know, things will get better." " AUDICO AlSV TOSHIBA SR40E Itari'i isuHiti teriarauata*, Tha HI mrti M ctoatt attra law tip mm* f* graatar laaar lnytmy TMfMM, aatkaaMylattfetortiaa, laagar alylat; Ma rafccad rartrtl waar. DyaaafcaMy mi taakaffy awtiltwl mttm •I MVMKM MTtffWM WCINt MSlpkf;wMi IS iMilt nw/rfc—il wpm p»wtr rtMKVMf m mmr mf*-• • tk uiUAB ' 1 iotimiSMIiwmrfVWVrMHVwVmi*"--' DrHt-frM Mhas fcHfriHH— "hwfc." PwMm for q—i sfapUr, s«lsrtl«i for MtMd sat al iytiWs, hHw—l fat* pralactlaa. moo r-. k twa-way systaai taalariag an I" waafar wM foaia Haiair taspaasiaa.mi a IW" Aract ratolug twaatae^;Tfcara's •syadaHy Atslaoad crassavar' i A lalaata (antral a^asta vow raa '382.70 Tfca watt-kaawa 12H wjriaat basa, MagaJ fcsttaaar and Sliara Mttf witrWis. AWa ta playaHbar ia aa aatawrlU stack ar la slafla plar Oaal prMlacla alaw far raMbla laaHt play wMWat sacrifldag«la|la play, aaflamiaata. Tlia Mf3t •Mrtdias ityiw umpSmtt wM tha 12H'i taa YOU SAVE $212.30 M LA CUCARACHA 1206 E. 11th ; (512) 477-0297 Presents FrL '& Sat. Blood Plasma Donors Needed Men & Women: # THE RIVER CITY ROCKETS -Oub Op«ns at 4 p.m. r Showtime at 9 p.m.Spraining in homegrown Tocos • WINE FOOD BHER: ---• Chtfc f» Quf1 ' ^ ' MASSAGES SWE0,8H STEAM ROOM MAGNETIC TOUCH WEIGHT LIFTING POWDER JEARN $10 WEEKLY WMENT f©R DONATION SAusfm • ^ . Blood Components, Inc. OPEN: MON.&TBURS. 8 AM to 7P.M. TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. CLOSED WED. & SAT. 409 W. 6th 477-3735 PIONEER SA5200 OF THE WEEK JENSEN MODEL I PIONEER PL12D ft w. BODY MASSAGE FOR GENTLEMEN Young LmfyMmtmutt in Complttt Privacy) 10A.M.to 12Midnight(7 Days) CAU-FOR APPOINTMENT (Satisfaction GuannrndU 1104KOENIQLANE AUSTIN,TEXAS S12/4S1.9180 ALL YOU CAN EAT! Filet of Flounder Golden Med Chicken Chicken fried Steak i v:v;-: ! * Salad Bar W«r ^ • Homema«Ie Bread ^ c*mrm Hri§ j Nobedy leaves r\ m. m Madkaa pawar,madioia prka -axtap­, Haaal raha aid vanatttty.This taM­(lata laiairatad aaipMiar tfhn *a 'vaty'latast la Haaaar*s arfvancad tir­talt tacfcaolny finui fcr stability mi varsatility. Tfca shgla aaftj. paslhpaa draritry affars Mthafflda^ cy aarf law dlstartiaa whila Mvarlag 13 watts ran/chaaaal, bath tbaaaals Jrivaa wHb lass than l.l^ IM aad banaaaic AstarMaal s342.00 ITEMS (NEW) PIONEER SXS2S RECEIVER 7» COLOR TV PANASONIC SA6500 RECEIVER PANASONIC SA5S00 RECEIVER PANASONIC TX3M0 TUNER JLL L-26 "PRIMA" SPEAKER DU/YI 1216 auto changcrWB12 walnut fam DC4hingad dustcavar SHURE M93Ecoilrhfat A lawprkaj twa alaawat. Ml naga systaM with an •"Mvar dalivaria( Tatal Eaargy Raspaasa aad masical balaaca tbraafhaiit yaw Bstaalag araa. flaxair saspamiaa pradacas (raatar darity, awra raaKstk Umi aad tha bast parianaaaca par Mar aa tha BMrhat taday. i.50 This waHwowa ilaala »lap tafafbU MAas qiMmty aad practkaBty sya­•aymoas. A syachraaaas matar balpt 2HlaH( 1SOO 1IdkMlwra ill REMEMBER: THE SOUN GALLERY WILL NEVER LOSE APSALE BECAUSE OF PRICE Suf •mm 442-9220 8 f^rTciay, March'$,1974^THE DAILY TEXAN ::Vv^%-•• : .'1 mt ; •• _ r ._ „ ** U.S. Sen.Lloyd Bentsen will not necessarily by the person Xj WW -J3? weak on "TbeChailenge of flying them Watergate" at2pan. Monday enter one kite per event and Acad«micC«nt*r Auditorium from7 •*$. . to 11 p.m. FrW»y Md Saturday., in the Unkm Junior Ballroom. may enter every event If they . AdmiMhMiIt JOcanti. Aspiring student essayists, poets and Thespeech is sponsored by enter a different kite in each. « CM» (MM will ba ctoMdPrW«r.::'S * The Bruce Triesche Memorial Poetry the Union Ideas and Issues baouw «• tha St»«a H^h Sch«rtr;?i: writers have until Monday to enter nine Award— ISO for the best poem or group** BaiKatiMll Twrnamant. *,-* writing contests being sponsored by the Committee and the UT Young poems by any student or ex-student. *nMNft-«re nmindid th*f English department. democrats. There Is no Service^ Se^thcwidlo lighting tin* to *;H Short story categories indude: Federal |dmission charge. . The department's Creative Writing •.The Hemphill Short Story Contest — Employment examinations BWiCAPIIQIOMUMV wiltfaeuion StaW ^ Committee will judge themanuscripts and a |50 first prize and $20 secobd prize for *lven at 1 p.m fMn-rim MiAtA Tri» willWUI beDe given 81 1 P m-9 * i® announce die results "as soon as possible ^ JiVMIXICO rnole J»P-Saturday in Geology Building " om5 u i*tM nS* after Monday," Dr. Ambrose Gordon, student. |^;c^iA«»togra^cb^|Mcki^ 100. Students interested tof ^".1!^*?^i11*"n*^ itteeeha>nnan,«iidWednesday. * The C the best shortstory bya graduatestudent. spring break still has Office, 2608 Whitis Ave., to •APHA4MSHNA TIMNi wtll h«v« • frai|£?]f how many because entrantscan submitas Other contests are: openings. register. faatt and Intlvat»t 3jMri; Stturdayf^i *1-* at 1003 E. 14th St. many manuscripts as they like or enter * The Co-Op Critical Essay Contest ~ The deadline for applying is tuisi , win dltcuu concahtration ai^jiSi more than one contest," he said. A |S0first placeand120second place prize Thursday. There are still 15';?'* Parents Course' tima u»a at'noon. Friday In JaiMi^' Prizes will be awarded for poetry* short for the best essay by an undergraduate 'i:~ Canter A332. Prt-enrollment It not< positions open, and the cost is ^.^00 seminar stories and critical essays, with a special or If* ^A Slk-WSWIUU WUIUHK on ,j, necMsary. v- student that analyses^ Interprets ONION IIOHATtOM COMMITTII WllM prise for the, best work in any genre. or of an {-Students interested in the parenthood will be offered by«?, &'-i:«pota»r a Lowar Guaa';'Rlvi^p evaluates one more author's tjie University's Counseling-f Poetry categories are: _ canoa trip Friday and Saturday): ' works. %e mam*«|lpt March 29 to April7 trip should Psychological ServicesCenter, s »m-Friday at »na east • The Academy of American P •il Contest — $100 for the best poemor brtnfl yw-.owo:loo0^®;^v#; ; Science Center at 472-4523 to The program will hold its by a University student.. award for the best ovecri first meeting at 7:30 p.m. in • Georgia B. Lucas Poetry Contest category; prize, $106, ^ /"i5 I? ?DNAS« III AUSTIN lOMORROtiplll "l->i m nb Union Building 334. -:NPKWMWOOO MCTINO Zona til |S0 first place, 930 second place, and All manuscripts must Jiave a:title and Suspension Possible Penalty " "f " A «3j[ Olympic motto sutes annual spring project." lire so retarded that it may | glory is not in winning but in Although the Cowboys will take them two minutes to i having competed. Thanks to conduct the Olympics,several complete 100 yards," he said&fj.the Texas Cowboys, 1,000 to local politicians, runniiig back "But when he finishes "thg'f1,500 retarded persons, most Fred Willis and wide receiver race, he is lmmediateljl'^ Pressured Students j of them youths, will have a Eddie Hinton of the Houston picked up and given a ribborf tchance to participate in an Oilers will join them for the and the kid beams. For many ^ t By BEN KING JR. one's own written work F" in the coursi tipped off if a student used Olympics of their own again opening ceremonies. of them it is often the firsC^ i It's 2 aim., the proverbial ^ But when the paj£er is offered for credit," Lawrence disciplinary pro :itfn,$-material the professor is this year. Willis and Hinton will help victory in their lives." , " |gg "10-page typed report" is due "returned instead of seeing the. Franks, associate dean of Franks said. familiar with," Franksadded. The Texas Cowboys Special ,(he participants and will • "Austin has of thc|ig onein the morning and with only "C" hoped for, there is a note students, said Thursday. Most plagiarists' downfall is After.^student ha» beoL conduct a football clinicabout ^largest number of retarded^­ five pages written, the Jo see the dean of students .. During the fall semester,-inconsistency of the style and reported by his profefteor, he noon. Mel Pennington, 'kids per capita in the nation,J "situation calls for drastic about the "F" in the course, Franks said, four students content of their papers. is always given a chance to sportscaster of KTTV-TV Hodges said. "Working withiy; measures. jreceived for plagiarism. %ere reported for plagiarism "The professor can usually High School. answer.if the facts are in sports, will be the announcer. them is something that can'^t The pressured student takes The dean of students defines and an average of 18 cases is tell when something has been The Special' Olympics has The Cowboys are asking for a a chanceand copies therest of plagiarism as "the handled each year. lifted, when he's reading a dispute." be put into Words. You jutt|&}: been held in the Austin area |1 donation to help defray have to be there to see hov^-£ the information out of a book appropriation, buyir.g, "There are those who paper with a number of 1 ^'Over-all, I think the for the last five years but was expenses. much these Olympics mean I just to get itover with— after receiving as a gift or believe any scholastic grammar and spelling number of cases of scholastic almost canceled this year • Hodges said there would be ' these kids." all, the last time,the book was obtaining by any other means violation should result in mistakes, and he suddenly dishonesty we handle are because of the difficulty in checked out was 1962, and another's work and the suspension, but this is too comes to three paragraphs small for an institution this finding local sponsors. there's no way the professor unacknowledged incor­harsh for a first offense, so where everything falls size, but I don't believe the % "In the past, we had could possibly recognize the poration of that work in the student isusually given an perfectly into place," Franks cases we handle are the only sponsored a single team at the BEGINNING MARCH 12 * 13 . said.-. instances of academic Special Olympics," Cowboy Professors can also be dishonesty on this campusJf. Chairman Kevin Hodges said The Fundamentals of Wheel Throwing School Facilities Impeded Thursday. "When it appeared --Taught by BOB & DEBBIE WRIGHT that there would be no event Results of a building quality said Wednesday. County Junior College, under survey of campus facilities Theone-year study has been the general direction of the .v CLA88E8 MEET TUE8. OR WED. EVENINGS will be submitted to the jointly conducted by Texas Coordinating Board and its CUISINELIBANAISE Having frowb/* ' ; ' AND SAT. AFTERNOONS FOR 8 WEEKS odjuttlng? ^ Coordinating Board, Texas Tech University and Tarrant -StaflL Sun.. College and Unii&r*ity $45 A MAIIRIAIS AND Call Arica System, at its^eeting^ridayf^t FWINO INCLUDED in San Antonio. -< e TREAK DOWN TO 476-2281 BARTON SPRINGS POTTERY 474-2200 Ml The survey was authorized! . ^"TACOJLATS RESTAURANT by the board to assess junior ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••»•••• and senior college campus^ 454-9242 WMAwMj; * 476-5455 9 •v K mm • m , • facilities and analyze repair *4 Regular Aififrtcan Dinner & VVIIne List '' ""S^^^SatsWiAMAR AND GET and rehabilitation costs. Available Orders To Go — Results of the study will ^ PLATE -«©. , Open 6 a.m. til 9 p.m. assist the Coordinating Board, Beani'Mmtn ^.bshsi s. 'RIVERSIDE the Legislative Budget£oard- SaladTaco and the governor's office In/ "' Wi Special •••••••••••••••••••# Printing and Copy Service evaluating and estimating Chorrizzo Con Huevo future repair and i-V rehabilitation needs of Texas —-jtr~~ 3± Burrittos .#• i, institutions, Dr. Norma • -r Foreman, director of publications for the board, : WINE COOLERS *&£ w-'j 5 Free Copi —>5^gMARCH 6­ Union Sets ^ rheBeit Pizza InTown (Honest] (p«r pwaon)w ^1 Super dear IBM Bond Copies Town Lake Maxa Shopping Confer • 1926 E. RIVERSIDE ^ " Monday through Friday^ Is 1920 East Riverside Dr., Suite A . !^r.- •M 8:00 a.m. -8:00 p.m. 4;---• Second Level s The Texas Union will Happy Hour HIBALLS 50 Phone: 442-2840 « Saturday 8:00'12:00 a.m. sponsor a bicycle ride to the Soooooooeoooooooooooooooooooooeooeooooeeoeooooeoeooeeooeoeooe" Capitol Saturday morning to Monday, thru Thursday 5-7 encourage legislators to give financial and legal support to j vV-s^i bicycling in the state. FEATURING: FRI. -SUNRISE -<•"4 ilte . I^ The ride will begin at 10 a.m. in front of Littlefield r. SAT. -NEIL DAVIES : Fountain. ­ | '*',<& , ¥ K J At the Capitol, U.S. rep.J.Jt [ Enjoy a change from the standard pizia 0, w (honesth possible bike lanes to run ^ Haircuts for people along side of highways. kteh^ho,lotythfe ­_ Bicycle associations, joining, Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m. -6 p.m. ttl fh J*? the ride include the Great 409 W. 14th 476-4890 !W5 pi s-\ t SPENDYOURMONEY ON m ifttt'ft It&iy-ftr d Southwestern Overland Melissfa, Mae, Alma Vr*' -Bicycle Association and the Capitol Bicycle Racing . Austin, Texas 78701 THE TOWN.NOT THE HOTEL. T%7rrAssociation. -At the Hotei Rimside we deat in basks. For a paltry $41 n«tit wel give you a room with bed ^iusin. Your bath bciaK inen footsteps " down the bal. Make it $8 and «el put you in a room with bath. With - N. IH3 477-16B7 '•W: Friday, March A.1974tTHE DAILY TEXANPaije '*5%kr: >',w'A>^ky^."-­ ml mmm sisiiift MmMmmfi llllllfl®!• ' • : mam m-v* $ Although olnly 20. persons showed up at a recent Austin Tomorrow zone meeting for the University -a-rea, spokesmen in the City •Planning Department' feel community input has-been -gutter adequate._' .^v, ,' Joe Ferguson, communications coordinator of the Austin Tomorrow program, said attendance at neighborhood assemblies depends mostly on citizen tonite iPii'; HH ?IS fH BlindSI mm • at the Dime Box 2714 L 1st 478-01S2 Dancing • No Cover Satvrda)^^ Vaby IWish P" TONIGHT SATURDAY * JIMMY ** SIMS, - C«ST«MS RESERVATIONS 459-8851 IPiiinS mm* ZoneMeeting Attendance Causes Concern 0 volunteers in specific zones who inform community member? of upcoming meetings. — — Speaking of.advanced publicity methods for these meetings, Ferguson said, "I don't think there is anything that hasn't been tried." Volunteers, in an effort to advertise zone meetings, have worked with the public schools, obtained names from precinct lists and even asked Boy Scout troops to distribute leaflets, he added. One method of assuring a good attendance at meetings is for citizen volunteers to "get in solid"with an existing neipboi^dod organization, TONIGHT BEVO MIXED Grande such as a church' group or concerned that citizens may Parent-Teachers Association, lose interest in the goalsFerguson explained. concept-once the neighborhood meetings are Out of 10 different zones in completed at theend of April. • the program, attendance for '* "People need to see the meetings is lightest in East!?? ffesults of their efforts," -Austifcrf MSMtiiii'' iroigipapPpI Ferguson said.-Another |Slf "People in this area have spokesman for the program government programs added, "Once we have people g before and are skeptical of involved we have to be sure§them. We have to fight this we don't drop them " skepticism," Ferguson said. For this reason. plahT'ire Coordinators of the Austin being made to recall theGoals Tomorrow program are Assembly in May, Tracy No Extension mm s There areno plans toextend the spring break an additional day to compensatefor Sunday closing of gasoline stations, Dr. Robert /O M®Mleli> : Uiriiy^;/exectrtiveassistant to the president, said Thursday. • V • -S Mettlen's remarks were in response to action taken by the Council of Deans at Texas Tech ' University, extending their spring break one day, to include Monday, April 1. . "The decision to include the Monday was made since students in the Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston areas would be unable to make the return trip on one full tank of gas, and Sunday traveling ••••*••••••••••••••••••••*•••••• { THURS. & SAT. NIGHTS ONLY J ' ' " I* * THE WADE MEN * * FROM SAN ANTONIO * * HALL AND SALOON r 6th & TRINITY DANCING & MIXED DRINKS Thursday^Friday, Saturday . NICK PHELP'S QUINTET /EvetyMghrs.!^ _ Restaurant •* %. &0or »•' ;•••««••• j. Second Level. Dobie Mall 21st G Guadalupe free porking in the Vear HlllllllllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllIIIllllillllliillllllllilllllttltlS CJTESODCJT DOOR -HSdm-t BAND AND DANCING SEVEN NIGHTS A WEEK AT THE SOUTH DOOR Tonight Featuring | ^ ^ Saturday Open 2 p.m. -2 a.m. 1 . live Band 4-6 | | e f Pay no cover -receive one free drink | 11523 Tinnin Ford Rd. -,s 444-07111 "rtiiiiMiiiiiMiniiniiiiiiimiMiiiiiiiiiinHiiaiHiiuiiiiiHimiituHiiffitiiHiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiuiiniiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijn • TRY OUR SPECIALS! First Time SERVED IN TOWN! ifie-Ohiginal CHINESE CUISINE • SPECIAL CHEF FROM NEW YORK • Mm.^tlrt W.11;3« AJL2J# ML, ^ WeS^tveTTVOU^ - Ofop So^ip-Fried flic#-2 Fried Woriton with— ' ® •.».<< $1.55 • Chicktn Almond............. $1,75 • Shrimp Chow Mcin ......... $1.65 • Shrimg Lobster Sauct.... $2.25 • Peppered $t«ak $1.75 • intt\ Sou? Shrimp ........ $2.2$ • sweet Sour Pork $1-75 # Beef with Tomatoes $2*25 WNHtt 5 PiL-H PiL Sat I Sot 12Nm-10 PJL -7 Dap A Week 9306 North Lamar at Rundberg Lane 837-2700 Arts and Crafts Classes Lathe operation, jewelry, basic film developing and printing, life drawing, limestone carving, leather sandals. r Register 12-9:30 Mon.-Fri." 9:30-5 Sot. r Union 333 Informal Classes Kundalini yoga, mosaic, American car repair: crochet, birdwatching, tatting, advanced guitar, knitting, sailing,, jazz improvisation, stitchery. PLUS: See frontier furniture, quilts, tools, buildings; and view demonstrations of pioneer, crafts (soapmaking, fireplace cooking. ,Te*­as. Register 9-5, Union 34' T._jg ^ j ^ ^ Rage W Friday, March 8, 1974 T^E DAILY TEXAN •••<* •• ' • • • "• v.'-.--. d •' r; ***** would be impossible," Bee Zeeck director of information . Services at Tech, said.-' "0ur situation is different though," Mettlen said. "Most University of 'Texas students. come from Dallas, Tarrant, Bexar and HarrisCounties, all less than one full tank away. I­don't see that a great number of students would be inconvenienced." If an extension weee-to be made, it would come through the University Calendar Committee, he added. ; f A member of the Calendar Committee, Dr. David E.. Hershey, director of admissions, said the calendar stands as is, and there had been no discussion of any change. "A chaqgeir-HQt out 4 D Watson, supervisor ' of advanced planning for the cityTexplained. -­ The Goals Assembly, established by the City Council, is a group of 25 individuals representing the 10 different zones of the city program. Watson said the group would act as individuals rather than as an assembly in refining the master plan for Austin's future' development. of the question, but I feel it is rather doubtful." V No change is being Considered at Texas A&M University,.either, J>r. JohnJ. Koldus III, A'&M vice- president forstudent services, said. The University's week-long spring break begins April 1. Classes resume Monday,April 8. rs Dr. Lorene Rogers, vice- president of the University, has been chosen to present a paper at the 29th national conference of the-American Associatioit"¥6r Uigher. Education (AAHE) in Chicago Monday. The theme of the conference Saturday, Sunday AUGIE MEYERS • ' and Western Head Music Company Paramount Recording Artists Cav«s Rd. 327-9016 Tu«».-Sat. March 5-March 9 SILVER CITY SADDLE TRAMPS -r Tues.-Sat. March l2-March 16 . ­ BRUSHY CREEK r Ikypy How 5-7 p.m. 441-3352 at the (fnqlishAire apartme 2101 BURT Si ° 8-30 Covxerh—^^-30 Tond 44alLc^o 4*L£ 6^ S4 -"boM^riOK'—*V3«eo at the 304: W. 15th Sat.. March 9 CommgFri. BASIUSK w STREAK M0Happy Ho Tonitel •v iaS , < The gasoline shortage damned near missed me. In December, my '63 Chevy fjgxpfred after 125^000 miles, so while the ^motoring public laid s6ige to local service Stations, I walked, stole bus transfers and bummed rides. But early thlsmonth, the old Chevy ­ made a miracle recovery and I was plunged into the Saturday opting gfs , lottery for procrastinators.' • After two hours, bumping arid' lurching in a line which wound toward infinity, salvation appeared in the form of an old Panhandle memory ^ the Oklahoma Credit Card. ^ ' The Oklahoma Credit Card, a short length of siphon hose, was first issued in distances. between dances and drive-ins strained the resources of Panhandle teenagers. r While the line inched forward, my mind drifted back to those Saturday night forays, and my first introduction to the .Oklahoma Credit Card. > We had-a rattling* but serviceable, '52 Ford, an empty gas tank, a dance50 miles away nand 1L35, cash money, betweentbe The car owner wanted to know, "How come you guys never have any money?"Because he kept us broke supplying him is -"Learning in an Open ySi AAHE is Society," and Dr. Rogers' organization m with beer and gasfor his car, we tol "Hey, why don't we fill upat Hank'&and fellTiim well settle up later." ^ Because we still owed Hank |5from the last time. One guy said he knew a, place we could "get ,Jdrip" gasoliiieiws*^^^ -rr-.~ "Hell no," said the car owner, "that m' stuff will ruin my car. Besides it stinks, and we couldn't get a girl to ride in a stinking car." We all nodded agreement to the logic, although his-mother and sister were the. only females who had ever ridden in the Cdr* • Still, being prepared was important. Finally, one guy who was interested in physics, told us about the siphon hose. "You mean gas.will hin uphill and into our tank?" we ask«& skeptically. When he started spouting phrases like "differences in pressure," wecut himoff. We still didn't believe, but time was running out. .A scream and a blasting horn dragged • me from the past. The line in front had opened up, but a station attendant came . We made the dance after siphoning a tankful from ,my father's car. But no one would dance with me. One gjjrl said I smelled like gasoline. "•.: gsiifiss 3,v . d a member Tesolving critical issues in of individual, postsecondary education. £ topic Will be "Taking Care of students, administrators, the Intermitten Graduate faculty and interested citizens Students." concerned with clarifying.and :L ': * SHAKEY'S presents at the Guadalupe Store | tonight and Saturday Only • at the Reagan Squcire Store TEXAS BLUEGRASS BOYS Jim Barr on Mandolin and Harold Fraab on Banie Tonight Only. Tomorrow Night Only at Reagan Square From Houston BLUEGRASS RAMBLERS ^st- CABARET • I NEW COUNTRY WESTERN DANCING -BEER < Fftl., March 8 8-12 , iBURT ? < RIVERA ft th« Night Ridsrs . SAT., MARCH 9 RONNIEMcNEiL & the Rough Riders 1 . 91900 US 183 (Now Coder Pttrk) Ph. 25S-9M3 •II ADMISSION $1.50 FEATURES 6:30-8:30-10:30 SAT. & SUNDAY MATINEES 2:30 & 4:30 AHlmlnrlniieniiUift '4 o wtttiflastiesliy: ^ PaulKrassner-RichardPryor-The AceTrucking Compahy-l^^ny Bruce • Joan Baez • Rhinoceros• Ron Carey-Tuli Kupferberg • Sha­'A,,en Ginsberg • Leonard Cohen • Malcolm X * Peter Max ^ PLUS BUCK ROGERS CHAPTER 4 AND Ur BETTY BOOP IN "NO, NO, A 1000 TIMES N® JpW^COMING ATTRACTIONS: WEDNESDAY, MARCH-13 to "HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR" and FRIDAY, MARCH 15 'WOMAN IN THE DUNES"? SATURDAY, MARCH 16 to "MY NIGHT AT MAUD'S" and TUESDAY, MARCH 19 "IA COLLECTIONEUSE' m, -m* * m*L Hp* - sj:­ w vSB-; -SH®> •4mdm I~iai>BIE SCUM N e Proposed By ROGER DOWNING ? -Constitution states that a candidate for Legislature. The 18-to 20-year-olds will """""ffilDAY""SATURDAY jSanging the proposed constitutionto. „ state representative must be 21 and 25 able to-produce new, innovative ONLY allow l8-to 20-year-olds to run for the ior a state senator. ORR wants to ^jjjldeas and concepts because young ovie/t Legislature was urged Thursday by the change section 3 to read any Texas Ifelpeople are able to believe that changes Funnierand Hprnier! Organization for the Right to Run iyoter who meets the staters residency can be made to better society." ^collectionofprtoe-winningaad (ORR). | Requirements San run for the Karen Cook, vice-president of ORR, tally selected films presented at the Second thru I — said tiie organlaitt&fr's tnaiftsttppdrt fri NPW YorlclroUc^igM^ Rmwaiers of ev. the Legislature has come from Houston was forced to cancel an ife!LSUqlW^ |r^shrnan Si^Houston's Rep. Ben Reyes. Fuqua, 18, appearance on the subject but issued a and president of ORR, said it is up to f|added that ORR also has the support of f written statement in support of the the vot«sto decide if an 18-to 20-year-?«2 other legislators including Sen, BESTOF ',ORR. ;; old candidate is competent to run for ^Uoyd Doggett of Austin. • •-/ v :In his statement Waters said 'lit isr"''-office. iSjLQRR .Js petitioning^to «et-50,000^— THE now time to adjust the agequalification " i In a written statement to the .^signatures supporting its cause. 4 v.'-: for those who make the law ... It is a delegates of the Constitutional #>4 Besides the state legislature, ORB; .HEIP flagrant violation of section 3 of the Convention, ORRstated, "By giving 18-i|$also has plans to introduce its proposal ; ^ Texas Bill of Rights that some adults to 20-year-olds the right to be elected to ®^to the AFL-CIO, University Young can make law, while others cannot. public office, you will pour some much-^Democrats, the Student'Senate and the BOBBY lifeandnewLMeas into-the Texas StudentLobby Association.­ AND' Groups J^oJSa/ufegWornen's Day » HELEN y a :T»a • A • women'sm *m-PfitiA iAYkfWkn tifi Saturday,'^V. /Wnnof^nina"tt/AmAn anil 1 mw 9. Two Austin tnm Patio to open its celebration, concerning "Women and our ANNUAL: organizations have planned said member —Paul D. Zimmerman, Newsweek^ are both Screen 1|"One of the most^ ^ ^ /'Makes MarlonBrando's MIDNIGHTiKM, appearing — Cue Magazine MUED ARTISTS I fascinating and funny butter scene in 'Last presents THREADGILL mm I films of recent months-Tango in Paris' seem like TAKINGOFF.. VELVET I a tour de force in its an act of spartan self- RECKLESSLY OPEN J explorations of lusts denial."-Rex Reed, f FUNNY!^ Syndicated Columnist .PtfmlftM fiitlitll! /Jmu Vntkftr tiAAnnrinm -1 *• vl|Hnh| <1«W rUlJIOf IfiClyOX/lfP. Iand greed unbridled jnafBANiyjN J|CHAFFNER film& S and sensualities " "An unusual and daring i "HILARIOUS! ^ I1 rampant." -Judith Crist, ^ UNCOMMONLY m film."-V///age Voice New York Magazine m ENTERTAINING!' m SOUTH SIDE 710 E Bon Whit — Hollis Alpen, Saipiday Review I ' 444-2296 •? |"A lib^ratingly funny pitch-black comedy. A chilling, TECHNieOLOR* —ALLIED ARTISTS BOX OFFICE OPEN 7$0 iHOW STARTS DUSK FRIDAY AT 6:45 cind 9:25 aoMM |hilarious dirty movie that^tickles us with memories Join the Saturday and Sunday Features A |of Fellini and Resnais andBunuel, of Antonioni and SJRF.C.?!1 at 1:30-4:05-6:45-9:25 ^ SOCIETY FOR THE MANN THEATRES |Bergman."—Foster Hirsch, in the New York Times , PARENTS OF FUGITIVE FOX TWIN CHILDREN 6757 AIRPORT ftVD. 4 AU.EN KLEiN 454-2711 THE GRANDE ENTER ONCE AGAIN (*•* I A WHOLE r' ' . -.trwCrvr MEW TAKING; fin*fOi WORLD OF a!g ® OFF" > MHOS FORMAN RLM ^ jft • • C0UIM8IA PICTURES PrtMRU A METROMEDIA MOOliCFRS CORPORATION MAGNIFICENT UNIVERSAL PICTURE • IN COLOR| PLUS CO-FEATURE MU8ICAL. l«MHk •""" Iff" MARCELLO II1ICHEL PHlUPfEU UCO . ENTERTAINMENT ASiSoiANNi y piccoLi NoiRrr i Toomi I'Extremely m 12:40-3:00-5; Vmcenl Canby. New1 Screen 2 —12r15$1.25 :ure AMffeAOJEOR tvm R1CHARO LIONEL MOtfEMUSICAL f [NG; SHOWTOWN WEST -SOUTHSID1 SOUTH gpp Thrill again FRIDAY OPEN 6:00 si? rear. lo all the Feature 6:15-9:00 p.m Great Hit Songs WHO Will SURVIVE--IN ONE OF THE,,• Including n tI . Saturday and Sunday CAMELOT" & GREATEST fSCAPE ADVENTURES EVER! 12:45-3:30- $1.25 for One rroll Flynn! "JP EVER IWOULO LEAVE YOUI BOTH for $2 6:15-9:00 p.m. FESTiyni] MANN THEATRES i rl&ni V FOX TWIN 6757 AIRPORT,IIVD. 454 2711 UMITEDTUOIWENGAQEMEIiT HtflHssed theboat MONDAY AND TUESDIL1 2 and 8 p.m emost commanding figureofhis time The most compelling dramaof ours! WNAVISIOH" -QXORW 0EU1XC 15s tfyouhadamother like this, PIUS CO-FEATURE whowould youbetoday? Hewa8agoodl PORTHESAKE but a1 OFVOURSAINTnC PRAY rrmmtm OAMMA RAYS OH MAIWH-THE-KOON XMn aLttfar-H* » MUWtscmmiti meooCKW. _I CaptainBlood| Rw Paul Ntemppan l»roductta««ot the19711 PulttnrPtte winning play —. I EEWdRD AM4A1T AIORT^BRAHAMS Lvexxtiiresofl ••'••A-y Pndnadtw OMeMbii lODBUMT i- ELY LAffyyU QQyQRBEN Prints by Dq Lgxe* TBCHteOQU** H 8j BLUE 2^6, 10 JMARIGOIDS 4 & IPOI-K"" L... - £$Liif . . m 1 Kendricks ^Does*Goed' /'Merchant of Four Seasons;" directed by Rainer Werner lovers which we gotin Godard's film, FassDinder shows hair By HERB HOLLAND )BICKS has b^en on . AFTER A warmup number Gonna Make You Love Me" Fassbinder; presented by Cinema 4fl; Friday and Saturday, real bodies. In fact, the ending of the film, while moving in its. Texan Staff Writer j own for more than three by the Young Senators, and "Get Ready/' in Jester Auditorium. own right, may be seen as a reductioad absurdum of Godard's' "Everybody's doing good,*'-years now, and his manager, Kendricks' backup band, HE He moved into a sweet love By VALENTIN ALMENDAREZ , . f^penchant for ending many of his films with the image of 3 Eddie Kendricks 'said of promised his new album, came out, welcomed by song, "I'm Still in Love: With J Merchantof Four Seasons" is a small but quite nnsettling±£personstaringoutintothecamera»exc< ' " himself and his former group, "Boogie Down," will be a screams and shrieks;' ,iYou." _ _ the Temptations., "Jhat's million-seller. The single ' * Air of a sudden, a single 'film. The plot is simple; detailing the life of a German laborer people staring ahead and not moving. SyOpening the show with woman approached the stage, arid how he simple decides that he does not wish to live any Fassbinder is not just playing off established conventions to what it'-s all about,doing version of "Boogie Down" already is. '""Change in Mind," Kendricks half-blind with tears. Ascorny longer. Since the plot is open to melodramatic excess, it might be thought' avant garde; By constantly unsettling our. good." jKasted-no-timo-winning-beexpected that theiilmJwo»ld^>e^sEaltow'_ condemnation^ of expectations of how to react to the information we are shown;—Kendricks did real good —At 34, Kendricks admits eager crowd over. He sang on his knees, held her hand modem sociely or whatever evils woold^driv«^aaaM^;to!sitti^wereMr=«ievei be sure-that-theinformation we see about Hans -Thursday night in Municipal Jbe'*fetting wearyof constant and sang the remainder of the death; Rainer Werner Fassbinder, the director, has not made has afiy direct connection with his actions. If this werea typical i' Auditorium. Hie lithe, ultra-one-nighters. "But everybody while moving from left to right and back %gain, song gazing i.nto Jter just another mindless variant on a banal story line but has, genre piece, the facts that his mother thinks that he is a tenor literally had his gets tired," he said. swooping over so the frantic -overflowing eyes. instead, made a film which consciously plays against the disgrace, his true love has rejected him because he is only a audience in tears, reminiscent "In the end, the people are the judge," Kendricks said. -females in the crowth could BUTTHAT'S ..^conventions of his mundane plot. fruit seller, and that his wife was planning to leavehim until he• s of earlier days, when he sang catch a glimjwe of his smilepr, style ... strictly for lovers. In ~<2* Fassbinder uses the story which sets out to-explain how an had his heart attack would be rationale enough for his decision i with the Temps. That goes for everybody. If I fact, he made love to the action evolved from the life of the character, but what he finds to quit living Yet by the style (which isan ellipticalchronology "But don't associate me get up there and sing * -sfiSSm wfh'lhe Tomps," Kaidricks' something the crowd doeSnl entire crowd Thursday night. is not the neat patterns which most films mining this plot find. fragmented by flashbacks) and tone of the film, these reasons '-^Another song, "Darling He reveals a mystery at the heart of Hans Epp's (Hans said before the show. "I particularly like, thenI'm just He sang "Keep on remain only facts. Come Back Home," and Hirskmuller) life. From the opening of the film, in which Hans The problem withFassbinder lies in thefact that he isstill notbelieve in myself and I'm on likeany otherscared singer." Truckin," one of his current my own, singing my music. But when he took the stage, Kendricks was in total hits and brought the crowd to is being berated by his mother for coming back alive from the sure where he wishes to go with his technique. He creates a, They're doing pretty Kendricks was fac from a command. He belonged in the life for the finale,' shaking hermetically sealed world which is concerned only with itself. with their own." scared singer. J* ,s driver's seat, for his hands as he passed across the an uneasiness is set up in the audience as weare not quite sure What is missing is a feeling of daring on his part. While this -stage again.-~ -^etoer-thisisTi/parodywstraightd^fflffr"1"*'"""^ '"r-;TdociliorfeWp"'WerclimtofFourl^soris**'' And when he came back for • Fassbinder Shares similarities vyth the French New Wave;: the most accomplished pieces of film making that I have seen "I'd now like to sing you a "Boogie Down," his encore, especially with Godard, in that they too played off of genre lately, it could become a problem for him in his later Work. few songs I had the pleasure Village of making famous with the the crowd became hysterical, conventions in their films. Even his influences are not sacred, However, right now "Merchant of Four Seasons" hopefully I 'Temptations,Kendricks dancing, singing and, asit had as in the scene where Hans and his wife'make love. It isalmost signals the end of the almost 40 years of stagnation which has'Cinema 10 said. More sfarid&, all night, screaming. as fragmented as the same type of scene in "The Married' blighted~tte German oaferoa and marks Fassbiaderas^oae of Even-though Kendricks -Women,"?hut instead of tlie«o6laesthet;working in played foi-just short af^an consisted ^ of "Just My hour, the people in the crowd Drama Department tofPresent 'Falstaff' Imagination," "The Way You knew they had been loved.% 4 ^ Wl • • '>' • Do the Things You Do," "The Corny but and English Wives of Windsor." (1.00 til5 M0N.-FRI. maybe,-A special English version of conduct an his second work in "opera " TIMiS 12J0-2:1S-4KI0-S.-45-j Giri|sAlr^tWiOi^'' "I'm undeniably Kendricks. Guiseppe Verdi's lyric version of the Italian "opera buffa." The central figure in Tickets are on sale at the 7M-h\i TRANS*TEXAS comedy, "Falstaff," will be buffa," which he translated the work wascreated by Verdi University Box Office in Hogg OPEN 1:45 performed at 8 p.m. Saturday, himself. "Falstaff" is a joint and librettist Arrigo Boito as Auditorium at $1.50 for $1.00 til 6 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday and March _ presentation of the an amalgram of Shake­students and $2.50 for HMCtud»tap»Sl-«7 mm FEAT. 2-4-6-8-10 16 by University students. department of Drama and speare's two Fallstaffs. The nonstudents. Seats may be iim Opera Theatre. noble aspects,of the old rogue, reserved between 10 a.m. anda film about Walter Ducloux, director of The opera was written by^ brought out in "Henry IV"are 6 p.m. Monday through rthe Opfera Theatre; will Stage^Verdi in his ^Oth year and is r•• set into the plot of the "Merry HENDRIX I ft', INTERSTATE THEATRES ..AS EKTHTIAJNING' $1.00 til 3:00 p.m: ' $1.00 til 3:00 p.i AND INTERESTING !• PARAMOUNT , FEATURE S TAT £ Feature*. A MOTION PICTURE •1 fnNGRF^S AV f N u r -^fflpi4S-5;05-7:2S^845 t • r j < 1 u f s a v f N l;f 2-4-6-8-10AS CAN ROSS18PT BE MADE.* .1 WALT DISNEYI ml. .PRODUCTIONS* WILD NEW CARTOON FEATURE! H Y DAILY NEW •THE BEST FILM ABOUT POP MUSIC am*: ONE OF THE YEAR S BEST Archer Winsten. N Y Posl —Bernard Drew. Gannell Syndicale Frances Taylor. Newhouse Newspapers —Bob Salmaggi. WINS —Jetfrey Lyons. WPIX TV —Leonard Harris. WCBS-TV Kathleen Carroll. N Y Daily News —Re* Reed. N. Y Daily News ohn Simon. Esquire Magazine—Stewart How '-^12:30-2:00-3:30-5:00-. ' 6:30-8:00-9:30 'AL PACING-Best actor of the year — National Board of Review |||||j^ HE'S A GOOD COP ON A BIG BIKE "BRILLIANT! A SMASH HIT! HITS THE" ON A BAD ROAD SCREEN LIKE A POWERFUL EXPLOSION! \\\ AL PACINO IS BRILLIANT! ONE OF TH MOST GRIPPING FILMS OF THE YEAR! McQ-he's a btisted cop,his gun i£unlicensed •f# ,4 , and his story isincredibl 1.-00-3:10-5:20-7JO-MO — Rex Reed, N.Y. Daily News • • .. ... *. IN BLUE' featuring six prevloutly unseen live pfformanca* from 1966 to 1970, ROBERT BLAKE * BIL1Y GREENBUSH including the Monterey,/*fe of Wight,and Woodatock Feativala ' Mnmmm HELD 12:45-2:45-4:45-6:454:45 eV.SM OVER ACADIMl mm AWARD 4th •Sgy.---[NOMINATIONS w WEEK I "Best actor |*Best screenplay A BADAC AND LEVY-GARDNER PRODUCTION SHOW , MWWIR-COllfEN DEWHURSTCOJ GULAGER ?• uwD HUXJLESluN • AL liTTIERlJsl^^TEc^tcacR*F»^«flsc^l••^^«bf ELMER BERNSTEIN »Pwli*N1CHAEL A WW-wiimand&fVaJuadtir LAWRENCE ROMAN'PiaiuBdbiJUtfS LEW SHS1 —-— MNO a* UUHtEHfTHe f-rf oven presents . Starring JAMESCOBURN AND SAT. At. PACINO KRISKRISTOFFERSON-BOBDYLAN 5th $1.00 til 7 p.m. AUSTIN V'.2b71« RACER • 6:00-9:30 ?I30 SO CONGRESS AVE MIDNITt MOVIE ^ m WEEK Directed^y SIDNEY LUMET Screenplayby lWLbbSALT WILLIE BOY • 7:50 onthe book by PETER MAA8 Music by MIKIS THEOOORAKIS " S1.25IVIRY FRIDAY-SATURDAY THE LOVED ONE" ' ' Colorby TECHNICOLOR' A Paramount s presems ,. . Release ' "NIGHT OF THE GEORGE HARRISON I.w JONATHAN WINTERS from iand friaodi 61 --• -LIVING DEAD" JAMES COBURN THE and had Nothing. wmsmmrm ROD STEIGER $1.00 til 3 p.m. CONCERT VARSITY w 1:40-3:20-5:00 ROBERT MORLEY rf f • ansa MOO GUADALUPE STREET 6:40-8:20-10:00 HORROR! l*«,0US i HELD OVER! 2nd JJl' 'nBEKl Tedwktloi®.-4 CLASSIC MASTERPIECE opptt/20th amtory-fex nWet* H I fciiiMl itm* Tmt fc !#• fcw•<••••• Un tlmsi W ^TOEAST-nvEnsiDtpnr.t TRANS•TEXAS AT TJHE Im OPEN 5:45 $1.00 til 5 Mon-Fri " HHlKlijiltl $1.00 til 6 p.m. FUTURE |1CJ » B*r. M.K BM 2333 fEATURES 6:00-7:50-9:40 PHOIHJCTIOXS* #-WILD NEW CARTOON FEATURE I Bobh I** I 1:30-5:00, Two of today's most exciting people 6:30-8:00-9:30 TB1I TJCrip •m. €L fWSodjT THaSe tAlleq>"v ^featon M: Sleeper" ?£& TECHNJCOLOft* . A JACK RpLLINS-CHABL^S PRODUCTION ^SALBMOTbnyiHOHMS ' \ Produced by JACK GROSSBERG • Executive Producer CHARLES H.JOFF1S hfOir ^ "NO REDUCED PRICES • PASSES SUSPENDED ijuwNcoeos Written bv WOOQY ALLEN and MARSHALL BRICKMAN • Directed ByWOOOY AUENj nusn '•}$£ aURES \1 30-2:15-4:00-5:45-7:30-9-.T5 ROBERT RtDFORD • fl&fifjft BLAKE IPG UwtwIArlaif ' -MsS eiMtwSiaiARSFIMCOFP "Tilt THM Wlttlt IQY IS Mtlir' V :Page W Friday} March 8, 1974 1|IE DAILY TEXiUN aIvI'14 §m-MS&k , --. " . . •>" tit Ilil'SI; 'c, ., „ , « The Texas Union provides varied Noon-l:S0 p.m. Sandwich Seminar'* TtanAtf-i * facilities and an extensive program for -Consumer Protection Series: "How p.m Film: "Harold & Maude:(Editor's Note: Dean "Iconsider this thebest group' Jerry " Garcia, lie began becoming boring, .since his ' UT students, faculty, staff and guests.'. to Keep a Good Credit Bating," MStarring Ruth Gordon and Bud Cott; Ornish spoke with of musicians I've ever played playing on. his own when, "I performances " are' so Monday -/ Boyce Harburg, president, Austin UT students, faculty, staff; 11.50 $#•'• contemporary singer with." One is worth the price just decided to give it a fling spontaneous. Bromberg 'will 9 a.m. to & p.m. Art Exhibit; Jueri Credit Bureau; Union Building 104. rg^nembers; Union Theatre; sponsored k&l and composer David Qf admission alone: the 'cause I waswriting songsand often launch into unrehearsed Svjaglntsev; University art student 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Dinner: Black soul Arts and Theatre Committee., Bromberg after Bj-om-^Walking trumpet," Bob I felt like singing them. I had material. His repertoire is features large, abstract paintings;^ food and Mexican food: an early sM&j p.m. West Side Second Story* , berg•s performance Gurland, who using only his been kind of intimidated about amazingly large and diverse, through Friday, Union Art Gallery;p evening dinner served in an informal ^entertainment to beannounced. Wednesday night at voice sounds better than most singing uhiil Biff Rose and' his sensitivity to the sponsored by Arts and Theatre' atmosphere with chicano and black Friday » Committee. r 1 music; 65 cents; Union Junior Castle Creek. * Herein, trumpeters play, one has to became popular, and he didn't audience allows eaqh choice 7, 8:45, 10:15 p.m. Weekend Film: Bromberg relates his 2 p.m. speaker:' U.S. Sen. 'Lloytf, Ballroom; sponsored by Afro-"42nd Street;" Busby Berkeley's see it to believe it. Billy have as muchsinging as Idid. to be appropriate to the -Young Democrat*;^ American and Mexican-AmerlCaR -BwtiM; -UT Mott-ftidactoits &nd~famous fjlflfff 11 Jmpressions of • his eew, ttoviclc Oft reed's, "Tony-" But he got away with it, and1 prevailing mood'/ 1. vr •. . * -*. * , Junior Ballroom. Cultures Committees. -UT students, faculty, staff; $1.50. f band and his unique Markeliss on bass, and fiddler enjoyed it, and I figured, well, , If is .difficult to generalize Wednesday 7 to 9:IS p.m. MGM Musical Film members; Union Theatre; sponsored 4^musical style. Brom-4^ Jay Ungar arealloutstanding. if hecan get away with it Ican about Bromberg's music. As Noon-1 p.m. SOTA-Sandwich Series: ''Easter Parade;'*, starring by Arts and Theatre Committee. mm It isa familiar phenomenon to he said, "I play what the rock-Seminar: "Married Student Judy , Garland and Fred Atitalre, Midnight: Midnight Film Special: ./.^•berg will perform at y get away with it. I'm gettingiff:30 p.m. Friday and-'.-, see other noted Austin better as a singer." n-rollers call 'a-cue-stick.' " Concerns," Lorena Guguet and Jerry music and lyrics by Irving Berlin; $1 "Planet of the Apes;" directed'byj; Saturday at Castle .f: musicians join in as the He feels he's not well-known Weiskoff; Union Building 213; UT students, faculty, staff; $1.50 Franklin Schaffner, starring evening progresses. *Jft%is longc experience with because, ."I'm too weird — .,v, sponsored by SOTA ^Students Older members; Union Theatre; sponsored Charlton Heston; #1 UT students, ill BROMBERG developed other musicians manifests I'm happy being weird. My ip'S' Tlian Average). mm by Arts and Theatre Committee. . faculty, staff; $1.50 members. mmsically in the' Village itself in an incredible stage records don't sound like ; By DEAN ORNISH during the early Sixties. His presence and communication anything on the top 40.-1 justi The people at Castle Creek incredible guitar ability made with the audience. Unlike have adifferent conceptof the ^r Ht-/TRANS*TEXAS OPEN 7:00 FEA. 8:00 HURRY $1.00 til 8:15 consider David Bromberg's him a much sought-after many others' performances, a whole',thing. ^ it'seccentric^# USE CLASSIFIEDS FINE FOODS & DRINKS band "the tightest band ever musician with the likes ,of Bromberg concert can 'be music^I'm happy the way ^ |M0B*nMIM~«S49» to play here." Bromberg said. Dylan, Jerry Jeff Walker and ' attended repeatedly without HARRY" AT 8:00 A 11:46 < F Longhorn Band Schedules Extravaganza^ $1.00 til 5 Mon-Fri The. Annual musical Joyce's 71st Regimental University Box Office in Hogg Drum Shop.vReitz Music Co., V: exlravagejaa. presented each Match,by Boyer and Lake, Auditorium fism $a.m. to 6 Richard's Music. Center and Riverside Tw|n luinemaL spring fey the University ^Highlight of. thejuassed pirn; FridafrTickete acre Strait Music CoTj EAST iUVKKSID^ ORIVE Avtiw.iwciw urn Longhorn Band has been lands performance will be,-available at • Amster Music^ scheduled for 3 p.m.Sunday jn presentation of Tchaikovsky's Center, Bledsoe Music, ':* The event is being held for Municipal Auditorium. 1812 Overture, complete with Company, High Fidelity Inc., the first time this year as a The Orange Concert Band, cannons and church bells. J.R. Reed Music Co., Milnor Longhorn Band scholarship 14MP ON TM benefit. White Concert Band, two Jaz% Tickets for the "Band-O-Music Studio, Piano and benefit and^admission CONTMVmiM •OT, Ensembles and the University Rama" are available in the Organ Mart, Reite Hora jmd^r person.^^^ I0M m« MtTTUiO Wind Ensemble will perform. (ONVfNTHWM IHKHMISM The groups are spring Ballet Theatre To Perform »BT0*Y AND divisions of the 300-member UKMM08Y (8 :mA, number of ballet director for ABT and a and "Flickers," a hilarious ~ 12;30-2:00-3:30-5:00­Longhorn" Marching Band, compositions ranging in University professor of dance. revue of nostalgia 6:30-8:00-^0 12J0-2:15-4:00-5:45-7:J0-*:15 plus the. 50-member .wind nature from the nostalgic to "Concerto" is choreographed ^^encompassing a decade of YOUR POCKET! group. ---*-=-••• the romantic will be in musical f orih to" r°America's popular music anil,..'J HE S THE WORLDS GR PA VEST "CANNON ' The Orange Band, performed by the Austin Tchaikovsky's "Pidno .dance forms. conducted by R. Vincent Ballet Theatre at 7:30 p.m. Concerto II." Tickets will be sold at the te ,J­ CINEMA 1 DiNino, direcor of the Sunday at Armadillo World Other ballets to be featured door for $2. Advance tickets THE FILM THAT JAMESC06URH-MCHAaSARRAZII# University bands, will play Headquarters. _ • ^ are "La Peri," a very old may be purchased for $1.50 at PICKS UP WHERE "Centennial Fanfare March" Opening the program will be romantic ba11et; ' Le .Hogg Auditorium, Sears, Oat EASY RIDER" LEFT CINEMA 2 nus M'« MKHAIL WINNOt Mm ­ by Nixon, "Rocky Point "Concerto," one of Stanley Combat," set to music from ^Willie's, Discount Records,.,, OFF AT 10:00 Holiday" by Ron Nelson and Hall's works. Hall is artistic Spartacus by Khatchaturian;>a nd Sanfords Shoes-QUITE THE RICHEST AND MOST ONLY THE MECHANIC PROVOCATIVE OF RECENT FILMS.' iHtllTilk a f)\/cp REDUCED PRICES TIL 6:15 SS WALKAflOOT. Illw.living lh» Mm 7200 Hsncocti Dm»—4SMM1 OVER (MON.-SAT.) ... -irni•ri rtAin . $: A n TjS at INCLUDING BEST ACTRESS EVER ER F till 4 a.m. TONIGHT-SAT. 2 lor 1 ADMISSIONS WITH THIS AD FRI. OR SAT. DAVID BROMBERG with Band SUNDAY-NAVASOTA Advanced Ticktts Discount Rwords & Inaar SmkIhih OPEN B p.m. lOth/lamar 477-3713 In'iiiiMmm'fa 20m Century-fox Presents WS, "" * s&Sf- BETWEEN THEM THEY WIN NOMINATIONS FOR WITH THE SOUNDS O DEtANEY APAnFMY * BOTH NOMINATED FOR BEST PICTURE A BONNIE ui & FRIENDS ^ • * BEST ACTOR • BEST ACTRESS ^ AWARDS! • BEST SUPPORTING •M\ JAWIS CAAN KIT ^ MARSHA MASON and ELI WAUACHACTOR AND ACTRESS rTEXAS ^THE FOUR THEATRE it 1500 S. PLEASANT VALLEY ROAD JUST OFTEAST RIVERSIDE OR OFF IH 35at HI WAY 290 1A™ FEATURES 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 4*m "«i "1L * i«J?t 1 A "W ItlWK t 'vt. Reduced Prices Til 6 P.M. MLJAM PEiK BlArm Weekf\'"l &£§£ ' Mon. thru Sat. FEATURES 12:50-3:00-5:10-7:25-9:35 A MQJUOWG {ACADEMY AWARD mm, NOMINATIONS NOMINATED FOR BEST ACTOR AWARD ck ELLEN BURSTYN BEST ACTRESS NOMINEE' including: UMTALR«^ BEST.SUPPORTING ACTRESS PICTURE < IN A Bit ',,/PHIU IPS PROIXC-TION O^-/ '"S JASON MlULERasfatofam 'BEST SUPPORTING ACM -AGEORGE ROY HILLFILM BEST SCREENPLi IHESIING ? Ws T6CHNICXXW A UMfVERSAL PICTURE IPQi «aSP V •=• TODAY'S SCREENINGS 12:00-2:20-4:40-7:00-9:20 A. '' BAROAM MJOMSE %. - EVnrOArTKIiMKM. & AUKATSSUtO •0N-5H PLUS -^ «u sun -4IMMMS mM BIST SONG ii>n. CIW«M>Ce>>l»OH*TIOI« BEST ART DIRECTION TUE Sereeninas Today at 12:30-2:47-5:04-7:21-9:40-1.1:50 , r.-^'.ry BEST COSTUME DESIGN ^ SEATS NOT RESERVED • TICKETS SOLD ON A SHOW TO SHOW BASIJ^ EXORCIST NO CHILDREN'S TICKETS SOLD -NO BARGAIN MATINEES -NO PASSES^ ^ BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY ^ BEST ORIGINAt PRAMATI(f^loRE ' Ajowph E.Le»tne»dBret Production*ric»i!«iKK»i BIG DOUBLE FEATURE GeorgeSegal GlendaJackson ...' *1,00 tii * P * mm • y: '' ' • ^AMdvin Fnnkfiim ' ! SHOWN AT 1:55-5:55-10:00 SHOWN AT 4:00-8:0 MON-SAT AU SCATS I.H.3S NORTH ATbuch Of Class ACADEMY AWMO WINNERI mJDNG-RUN (QMECK (AMimni .. . - , m* '• •UTSUPMRTIMQ ACtf»» OlEfOHEJCREENI: Paul Sorvino Hildegard Neil Mu» byGeorge BarricmlSunmy Cahn *nmnb»Mrfvin Fnnk andJack Rote A Pniducni anlOntndhMdvin Frank AnA*CO Embntytilde TwhMuIn* Rwnirf FRANKOVICH 2ACADEMYAWARDS |Orl0MSolii«JiT»cli»v»ihb|tanB»y«IUtarti) ^3?®e ""'T' PRODUCTION 1 r -•— ' — --** ~' A MMNNOMCNIWJUCTKJH FEATURES 2-4-6-8-10 BUTTERFUE8I GEORGE CSCOTTin I ARE FREE THEDAmDOLPHIN 1-, : Tfcchnicotor*Punxhiofi* ib&bb: Kelly Mfti* i tug- r v ^' " "G b,H63W BOX OFFICE 4 B M Scrtmlnii Tod»y OPENS DAILY 1 r>JVI> »iS0-3t30.5iJ0-7:30-9:30 i Albert i Barnes • —BARGAIN MATINEE— FromCaiMBIARCTURES m nOto-fntotlt**** *P*tmu*ten' ^ _ ALL SEATS $1.00 til 1:30 P.M. DAILY ••t•••»• »»<><•••••• Friday, March & 1974 THE DAILV TEXANjPage •!>;W ' : U • ••!• £ Aha *TRJ5r »xr * mmi AIL: PHOIME 413-5244 MOIM"THRU FHI 00-5:00 x • £ MS V.Y/CL k.-Oi." f. h .«' -CLASSIFI^J^G^ERTTSLNO * FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. SERVICES UNF. HOUSES TYP NG IS word minimum . i -•"i Each word one-time $ .10 AUTOMATIC'CAMERA: Minolta THE WILLOWlCK ,AWe-#%kt-^ NOB HILL APARTMENTS 1-2bedroom RETAIL ZONING, barge older home |.IctEach word 2-4 times \M Himatic 7s with Kauo electronic flasks jfurnished, pool, dishwasher, disposal, nearljnlverslty. Fresh paint, plenty of •< -4jUSt North of 27tbr&^ Each word S-9 timet $ .07 Asking $130, 471-13*1. >^ Live in Wooded Scctuiion BLACKSTONE Jlbllls paid, laundry, ^block toIC shuttle. ^PRESS 11 m 1 r Student rate each time s ,7S SURF BOARD .-ttS. Gibson classical ' Each word 10 or more times t .01 t"2520 Lonflvlew. 477-8741. fflO 4fe wi/m0n1h" OB"'Mc6r"w-459-> \ Guadalupe 'ILarger-Apartments-virith-sheg carpetv $64«50/month ClassitledDisplay 'v' guitar with good.case. 477-2*76 call {is-Apartment living block fromCampus 3 UNEXPECTED VACANCY. Furnished mrM modemfurnlture.accent wall and conSV? TARRYTOWN, Excellent location. Icol. * one inch one time .... *2.96 anytime. individual applicants matched with s one bedroom apartment on shuttle. split level, new utilities, privacy fence, 1 cot: x one inch 2-9 times .... UN .venient central location.r oMi compatible roommates • f§ ^Includes CA/CH, dishwasher, disposal, carpeted, S200. Couple or grad student lcol. x one inch 10 or moretimes FANTASTIC GARAGE SLAE. 1101 shag carpeting, cable. $135. 4105 preferred. 474-5534, 4784101. vista Lane, Saturday and Sunday ? Speedway, Apt. 202. 451-2(32, 345-45S5,' $2.37 1 Bedroom 2910 Red River . 476-5631 MBA Woman's clothing and accessories, ;^<^Typiny, Muttllithmg, binding, * *145 unfurnished $160 furnished A Paragon Property Zenith stereo^ Siriger sawing machine $144 ONE BEDROOM, Enfield-Baylor ^ithe' Complete Professional NADUNC SCH80UU kitchen Itemvflower pots, etc. > 2 Bedroom , ^ ~ "• Mahogany-paneled, balconies, shag/ We specialize In resumes, handbills,, V . T—I»W>I UOnc _ pool. Sao Paulo Apts,, one.block from jetitrh^ads and envelopes, FULL-TIME Typing , < lvvtmf TwMMMk^*;r^f4M» fejft; -'46CHEVROI.ET PICK-UP6cyt.ln«n^^^=a|!^^'»n,*Ndi~-=« ASK ;asEE -'•^shuttle, 15th, Peaise PirlC Tavern 476-Check Our Low Rates MATH TUTORING that you canWidnwdej Tmw T«II4.( .10:00 a.m. camper andlotsof g^r.uoo. " > • All Bills Paid 4999, 476-5072. r 2200 Guadalupe Service ;^ OUR 6R NO NEW 4understand; 476-0757. Tknriii Thm 10:00 a.m. JOst Across The Street* , \ M*«> l«w Wwindey 10:00 «.<•>. 600 South First St. 444-0687 ONE BEDROOM. 3 blocks North from . V . ' . ' • • • . •---,v RESU/VVES I've Got a Secret Apartments FRESHMAN CHEMISTRY and Biology 'M PLYMOUTH FURY, til V-«, UT. Gas, water, 1155. Aftelr 6:00. 478-ECONOMY MOVING: Conscientious tutoring. 472-4388 after 5 p.m. with or without pictures*.*, automatic, air. PS/PB. Runs well. 453- Lotated in the heart of UT 1194.. . ' Services the lowest rate. Call 8779 after 3 p.m. TANGLEWOOO area. 1 block toshuttle. $149.50 at 2 Day Service . V' * ­ anytime. 385-8509. at W'fl mmt» <•> .-an' EFFICIENCY, tlSl/month, lust NIKON F-bodypertfct.*171LunaPro' WEST -. $169.50, ABP. completed:-. 3rd balcony TYPING 472-3210 and 472-7677, : 'Meter,MlMikfcor Ilinmfjlens, vi47&82S3 • /s.. s^^472^5)i^| ' ooerlookli^ week and woofe.. Fiv> THE BUG ttttt Votkiwi j&OB mrHemphmpark; floor -sastosk 1 Br* Fvrn.*uL S4KSK' it5sw;Tih«^.rtaiiiWk«m • ^Kininutesi . 447-1716. t6c,Furn;sifO MABXL SMAtiWOOD Typing last minute -'overnight available. Terrti — -*'*-" ,rf study area. 3 br. sprinkler, a pictuiiff SOUTH Rooms Available. large living room, file tub-shower, bath. now! • typed. Experienced typists. Book yours Two large-closets, 15,000 BTU air From $145 DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, and book tome. Priced forties. nowl Call 476-9312 or 472-5928 after 5. -AUSTIN SHORE conditioner. Gas and water paid. Near 444-1846 law briefs. Experienced typist, shuttle bus. Nopets. AvailableMarch 18. Tarryfown. 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine. CAMPER MART PEMBERTON BRICK 2101 Burton Dr. M AND J. TYPING of theses, resumes, Apartment A. 1301'Expedition. Call Brady. 472-4715. acres .1908 University Ave. dissertations, duplication, binding: open See usat 6324N.Lamar for custombuilt, Luxurious 8 room, 2 studies, * APARTMENTS (off East Riverside) everyday owner, 478-4356. -- fell aluminum and wood-aluminum pick­478-2185 ' 442-7008. Not at old address. BOBBYE DELAFIELD, IBM Selectrlc, up camper tops. . . • Please call before coming. pica/elite, 25 years experience, books, • Ann Crockett Realtor ... , Start at *159.95 dissertations, theses, reports, We build a^dMign, any color. ^ 444-2702 NEAT, ACCURATE and prompt typing. mimeographing. 442-7184. Efficiency, 1, 2, and 3 VILLA HELP WANTED per ,>a9e- ' 447-2737 T1»»s 75 cents. Call TREES & VIEWS bedropm apartments. BEAUTIFUL PERSONAL TYPING. All • FURN. APARTS. Nice 2 bedrooms furn. or unfurn-. only 3 ORLEANS RS TYPING Professional your University work. Fast, accurate, SERVICE. Offer the solution to* min. from downtown, 5 min. from UT. reasonable. Printing-Binding. Mrs. 206 West38th typing. Reports, theses, dissertations, " Large walk-ins, extra storage, private Bodour. 478-8113 SECURITY OFFICERS TOP CASH PRICES paidfor diamonds, your housing. balconies, lots of glass. From J179" plus 1 or 2Bedroom Furnished. Convenientto resumes. Copy service available. 453­ old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop,4018 N. E„ OAK KNOLL, 62D South 1st-(use UT. Beautiful Pool and Patio. Night/weekend lobs, with very little/no WE RENT Lamar. 454-6877. The South Shore's central location Timbercreek entrance). 444-1269, 472-Reasonable. Shuttle RIBBON BEER S? CHEVY, l owner, runs well, good condition, Thurs. or Friday afternoon, COLORFUL MINI apartments on COWBOYS AND HANDS WANTED for weekends. 454-5410. TWa BLOCKS UT TWO BLOCKS shuttle. Two locations, two designs. 38th O GINNY'S New York camp. Wrangler-counselors and Speedway area. Convenient to apply now: High Chaparral Ranch, Rf. BANJO, $75. Small box amplifler„ $75. One large bedroom downtown and city bus. From SU9-S124 m •;Scopying 23C, East Jewett, N.Y. brings you to UT versus CREIGHTON game 447-2312. apartments. CA/CH, TO CAMPUS^ plus electricity. Barry Gillingwater ..Company, 454-8576, 472-4162. • "" EVENING BUS HELP -dishwashers THUNDI carpeted,.cable,._dishwasherr in SATURDAY night 8:00 RP'.RCt .1965 for-sale. 1970 needed. S2.25/hour. Apply person 1 & 2 Bedroom Efficiencies "mtne: Simpietepower; goodcondition. covered parking, laundry. APARTMENT FINDERS service. 472-Polonaise Restaurant, 1122 Colorado ­ Best offer over $300. 478-3196. ABP $142.50 Full kitchen 4162. 23rd floor. . CA/CH, carpeting Channel 36 477-8146 2101 Rio Grande APARTMENTS have one 42 Dobie Mall 476-9171 YARD AT 22 *3?£i? dr-3 spd-WWF« radio, Large walk-in closets MONTAGE WORK LAKEWAY. DON'T MISS THE GAME. Ph. 454-50S5 after 7 p.m. $2250. bedroom apartments near campus on 52.50/hour. Friday afternoons and Oriental furnishings shuttle with Independent AC.__H34.5P. Frge Parkirtg Weekends. Call 261-5544 or 453-70117 Cali 472.4961 for ­DUAL I2i» with base,Sust cover. Shure Study room iBirnio Grange. — V15 Tvne II with nm* $85.00 ABP. bicycle. Center, pull brakes, Brooks campus, shopping center, and. shuttle adjacent shopping, all conveniences, 31/1. Overseas Engine end Supply. Shuttle, own room. 444-3837 anytime; saddle,^ chrome forks. Excellent. S80. bus. All bHIs. paid. For more and facilities. »l29, Recorded Tftanks! • • WOODWARD APARTMENTS information, call 454-9475. description, 472-86C2, 1722 E Woodward ' Office 107~ ROOMIE, needed to share nice 2 • bedroom house. Enfield area. iTTFNTI0H MARR,ED STUOEHTSf • 444-7555 _ „ L^w THIS WEEK! Ponce de Leon (I), SoriFFICENCY APARTMENT ' After 4. .. David. 478-9130, 472-7316. Want economical housing? 10* b»sr new • •V 2. or.,3 bedrooms 22hd and San Gabriel. Extra large two Enfield-Baylor. Pool. Sao Paulo Apfs. T PROBLEM ., mnfitrnished or furnished bedroom, two bath apartments ABP. One_^biock from sfwftle, 15th; Pees* iKt «ni M '^ostcover, ShureM91ED cartrldoe<2»Nle homelocated inUT .Trailer MALE ROOMMATE to share furnished •Most outstanding apartments in tfie • Park; tavefh: 476-4W, 476-5072. shakers. List $149.95 each. Total Lisi Park. Evenings. 47*2391. 2 swimming pools, playgrounds • PREGNANCY home with two graduate students; $72.50 Price $891 65 " uniyars'frare,' Call Rod Wetsel at 472­ 'Austin Maternity Counseling "sirvlie ^ bills; no lease or deposit. 837-0304; GULF COAST 14-sailboat with trailer - •941 Of 472-82S),. .NEEp TO.SUBLEASE immediatelyone offers residential and nin-resldentlel excellent condition. (500. Or trade for bedr<»m apartment on West 32nd 8155 programs. Located 2 blocks from moLtorcysle, 44J-«J33, Evening*. . SI49 50 ALL BILLS PAID. 1 bedroom all bills paid. 476-0461. ' ^ campus. Slo west 26tt>. 472-»251, Mm fumfshed, CA/CH. built-inkitchen, near We have been in this business I J .HWX Leather top. S3.800 3840. Central Properties inc. furnished one bedroom. CA/Oi cable for 50 x»ars vr : 5EST;bu7> TOWN: 1973 Pontlac JflJJPW-4307 Avenue A. 451-6533. 451-4s MONTH RENT FREE. Large ROOMS • wsm. VI » •'* * HEMPHILL PARK area, ,bus. One bedroom $135.' AC, 2 BEDROOM STUDio «ru.r»^«wV problems. International authority of »emi-privat«_bath, kitchen'.prWileties, T SQHWINH VARSITY, P.OSNE9RCKKP5,|PVCTION PRtcE S395.00 .$75/month. 476-0548, after 6.p.m. KonmtiaXtd. Hke-new. -iJi»|Msal,r walk-in PIONEER KP-300 FM stereo cassettefor your car.List $149.95 I tor. wMck sale) MMWU os«U. 32ndand Interregional.472-3999. ' fEMACE THREE BEDROOMS L#rge J tjedroom duplex town MINI APARTMENTS, also one end two furnlihed. yard, own room, Rets a.v conventant Nor theastAustin.wJ ^NATURE SCHNAUlgR vaulted ceil bedrooms. Close to campus. Fully 4Y*ItABUE NOW,Largeon* bedroom, SOIL CONDITIONED and tilled for welcomed. Shuttle. 110.00 bills.452-li(r> <*>&3TOCK REDUCTION PRICE $114 ps. estimate Maodttn*. AKC regis!. , carpetedi CA/CH, rich wood paneling,-CA/CH, dishwasher, disposal; new spring-planting. 474-1081 for 1100 Clayton. yard, targe w«?k-(ns^jerASor'iT^ Maie/Femaie *tj«-444 9lot after 5 poofc ell bullf-inWtchen^trom$ll9.30: carpet. *140 plus electricity. The and appointment. , 4014. 472-41*2 Barry GHiliiQwater Com­«no AvenueA, 4SI-6533.4544423.Central Conquistador. 2lot * --. -— FEMALE HOUSEMATE -3 bedrooms mm* San Gabriel. 472-7746 TENNIS RACKET strln pany. Properties inc n for information. . Vantage furnished; own room, yard, shuttle; pets CENTER II,Nylon-$7.50, Gut ick up and welcomed. $8ft lido Cleyton, 4»4-l«o». 203 East 19th deliver. 454-7535 476-6733 Page.14 Friday, r^h 8, 1974 THE DAILY TE l-M iraa: I • s-sm fYmttUAMtUUS Jpf m m tlnParochu Th* Push To Save Energ For information Please cai^yv By DAVID HENDRICKS passengers. However,; ;lf t-5711 anytime Texan Staff Writer * >produced, it later can be m • With gasoline and other1: modified to carry more iff? lossil fuels becoming scarce, passengers, and even HATHA YOGA m pedal-powered cars may expensive models can be V$Mm 6 wk. $15.00 someday replace conventional designed for people wanting Nooni' Mon. or Thurl • automobiles, . ' status-symbols like Cadillacs, y?'v®rsltjr Y To determine thefeasibility Ivey said. At this time, a Guadalupe "1H r . •' 472-9246 lf|of pedal-car use, two students target price of $500 is being NELSON'S GIF , lewelfy." African BwHkHextcan Im^" 4412 South Congrest. 444-3814. cioMd • Mondays. • THE PRIMAL PROCESS: Contact: Th* fc Feeling Training Canter, P.O. Box 303, > Wlmberley, Texai 78676. $11447-2410 ­ SELF-ACTUALIZING process. Call Human Dynamics Instltute. 452-8705, ; WOULD SOMEONE connected with Or. . Thomas Gorden P.E.T. course please contact Mrs. Cox at 451-45J3., VOICE INSTRUCTIONS. John Welding.444-9935.' ' ' '• • LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beginner >• and advanced. Drew Thomason. 478­2079. LOST & FOUND V?SL I?V*S.GE ^LACK/BriWn' Shepherd-Collie mix. Very friendly Answers to Bru|o. REWARD . 454-9020, $10 REWARD -LENS. 50mm camera' lens lost Feb. 24 on Town LaKe. Please bring to 1201 Town Creek, No. 237 (Cloisters), or leave note. FOUND -SILVER bracelet at Eastwoods Park. Call Loretta: 478-1080. LOST NEAR 25th and RigGrgnde. Black and white female cat.'478-6050 if'found. REWARD: UNCLASSIFIED '71 Plntoi'AT, air, S1795. 477-3388. „ :<« Help elect Joan Lyda VP. 453-4290. '70 Toyota, $900,453-8211 after 7. " Waterbed wanted. Mu^t see. 836^5181.; Sublet large efficiency."459-8364. Free cats, kittens. Call 5 p.m. 477-2837. 1973 Honda CB450 . $1200 new.' House plants save mohey. 4M-1100 Garrard turntable 5100, $20." Hi-Fi Sale new Eq. 447-4076 mte! '72 Gremlin:' AT-6-alr. $2395. 477-3388. Fern. Roommate needed: $50. 472-9723. AKC Weimaraners reasonable 928-132]. For sale Sting Ray. $25. 453-9779. Find gold earrings? Please call 471-1108. Schwinn 10-Speed 476-4282. 7 p.m. Is there G.S.U. at UT? Call 471-1381 , RAVEL COUPLE NEEDS RIDE to Detroit/Ann Arbor area. Share gas, etc. 453-8153. apuenergy seminar taught considered if approved for by ,Fis^i assistant production. — professor of architecture, are Top speed forthe pedal ca& putting together what they will be close to 30 mph. Power hope will be an efficient drive will come from pedaling, system for a small pedal car. although a power assist from One of the students, Ford' a small electric engine could Ivey, a junior architecture be adopted, Ivey said.-W& ; • major, explained that the car By itself, the pedaf car being designed _ will-he, would be efficient ontyjwthin compact, light-weight, have a neighborhood1,/,Ivey some cargospace and provide remarked. But effective plansprotection from weather. to transport the light-weightThe pedal car. will be cars from neighborhood to designed for one or two neighborhood aW.from city to : UNF. DUPLEXES ivey said a pedii ]i»t could be driven to a "station," QUIET EXCELLENCE, West 46th, loaded into a car-transport modm-n, spacious, 2-2, CA/CH, walk-in Closets, washer, .dryer, dishwasher, system, then taken to the disposal, study, carport, storage, fenced "station" of another yard, offstreet parking spaces, four singles, family. 452-5401. neighborhood or city along with other pedal cars without the driver ever having to give up the privacy of his own car. WANTED, TR-6 or Porsche 914 unraced, Ivey pointed out that undamaged^ 512-672-3061: Write Box 103, Amtcak presently makes a Gonzales, Texas. good profit transporting cars BUY, SELL-a)l types glrieyJmagazlnesT­books, records, guitars, stereos, radios, from Washington, D.C., to iewelry, musical Instruments.-New buyer on duty. Aaron's, 320 Congress, Florida. downtown. The advantages of such a LIBERAi-CATHOLIC PRIEST Willing plan are not solely Energy- to perform : outdoor wedding or information concerning; 453-1398 or 451-saving, Ivey explained. 7941. Economically, no gasoline would have to be purchased,JOB WANTED and since accidents would be rare, insurance would not be MOVING? My pickup makes We going easier. One triickload: $12. Two'loads: needed. $20. 258-1891. Even if accidents occurred, 'the pedal cars would be so FOR RENT light that almost no casulties FOR' RENT. Ten acres pasture; ten would ever happen, Ivey miles :south. Some shelter horses only. projected. Call eyenlngs. 447-3459^ -• ' Also, pollution, both in the COMMERCIAL SPACE for immediate occupancy. 1000 sq. ft., 600 ft.' air and on«.4and, would downstairs, 400 oh the mezzanine. disappear, since there would $275/month (Includes utilities for firm with established credit), J.B. be no exhaust emissions and Hlghtower Tri-Towers North. 476-7636. fewer new roads would be needed. /BUSINESS OPP. "Look what the car has done in 70 years; the. whole 20 YEAR OLD retired student will show environment is full of the you how to earn up to $800 monthly while attending school. Send brief resume to image,of the car," Ivey said. P.O. Box 5159; Austin, TX 78763. Arts and Theatre Committee presents WINNER OF 3ACADEMY AWARDS! a ENTER ONCE AGAIN A WHOLE NEW WORLD OF MAGNIFICENT MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT . Thrill again to alt the Great Hlt Songs including "CAMELOT" & "IF EVER I WOULD LEAVE YOU!" raCHARO ' VANESSA ?' • <' FRANCO rv? :7tOAVld • UONEL'' "• "*' J 1 T v-j May be the most exquisite achievement in cinema tq reach AUSTIN PREMIER! —— these shores from Germany since the Golden Age of Mur- A Nostalgic Retrospective '-^r 0f ciassic^^Wil nauy Lang, Pabst, et a/..."Andrew Sarris in The Village Voice 1950 s TELEVISION A 3 HOUR ORGY ­ V wsfmm ff w-StV­ ' GROUCHO MARX IN AMOS 'N ANDY (1953) YOU BET YOUR UFE Wherein the Klngflsh end Andy throw • (1956) monkey wreneh Imo e UnHed ttetes bomb See Oroooho end Ms gu«sta who ere menulecturing plent This is a Isgsnrtery eretler then tie is. among them the ton •bow, end one of the meet biHWent Pranoisco too kospofwho slospe witli the enlmele^ eiid the Med Ouek who emergee Mi Is seMI . I#**?***"** SUPERMAN (1955) THE LONE RANOER (195),) •tors George Reeves In e/ere show mode The wy Finereplsede W I—in why t|«i for the U.t. Treasury' Pept Wi which : T«OM Rangw dons his metk and how LW » •-* ** • »» • » —^— Supermen tsMs us of the vhtuse of buying ^:-.-tneeta m mnii vnoun eompenion von*. govemmeof bonds I A howl from start to i iSjfJo. A i » if 4= ^ ' Zf v F/I ELVIS PRESLEY ON .­ ! SERGEANT BILKO (1958) ^;EP SULUVAN ^ ^ »l»B«wl»y «pw»r«no» m «Wt Mw Cml« turn. Thi* «»I»d<«. «M "THI WAR OAMM." flod« BHke ttwuMKd* ol hyMrtort ton* £<*£•« ••>-COHIMI HMI through Ntek'i IMMT on hit •prov*i M ho pooodod out "DONT M '.•• ID «n AWOL iimllKii CflUIL" and"LOVE M( TINOIR." Wowl ­ *«» ** jS&m&r RICHARD NIXON'S Qv \ ­ w^ A -.-v . M| Station a yWASHINGTONi^l>) ^I'edeKd wlergfs The API, an oil industry organization, gasoline in March, if Simon had not. at of their adjusted 1972 supplied chief William E.Simon tapped gasoline blamed the decreased refinery operations stepped in to order increases for many rare-untouched; they are Alaska,Kansas, ""Louisiana, Minnesota, North Carolina,' stock*Thursday toincreasedistribution in largely on "scheduled shutdowns for than. March and keep service station waiting New Hampshire, for example, would Texas and Wyoming. have received only 6i.7''perc6zit of its But Simon warned that he would atarilines from getting aslong as in February. 1% Simon announced increases to: March Both production and imports'ofeilm'oft"" March, 1972, supplies adjusted for new equalizing the distribution in April, slipped downward last week, the API vehicle registrations; Nebraska would allowing no state to receive more, flan 99 Averaging only about 2.9 million gallons per day an improvement of about 1 reported, although. imports of refined have received 65.9 percent and Wisconsin percent of its adjusted April 1972* base percent over February but the products increased substantially, by about 66.8 percent of their adjusted 1972 supply. . -:• 377,000 barrels a day. supplies. He said his goal was to bring all state increaseswereconcentrated most heavily with In the last week of February, Simon Simon's action,* instead; increased the supplies within 5 percent of the national ^4­ in states poor supplies, and improvements there should be more ordered emergency shipments of gasoline supplies of 30 states to at least85 perc^ntpfaverage. ,W from company inventories into 26 states of their adjusted 1972 levels. The national average for March would *-> -marked. and the District of Columbia to relieve : Simon emphasized that the increaseal^have been84.3 percent of the adjusted 1972 " ; ' the increases were distributed so that were coming from inventories, not from :A{>base, but the extra allocationsincreased it j „ no statewould receive lessthan 85percent local shortages and long gasoline station of its March, 1972, gasoline supply, lines. the supplies of other states. ^to 98.6 adjusted for growth : of motor vehicle Although that emergency injection was Even the six states with more than l0(f||f percent. registrations since then. , to total 7.8 million barrels of gasoline and mm' 'Pwssissstes 1 Meanwhile, the American Petroleum' it seemed to be flowing, thedrawdown did not shsaw up in theAPIstatistics, covering the week ended March 1. : Energy Chief William Simon talks with (W) Gov.. Tom McGall, Orogon; producOondecreasedabouUpercentjast V matching a decrease in refinery Instead, the API figures showed a 5.48­ Dolph Briscoo, Texas, and Edwin Edwards, Louisiana. week, -million-bartel increase in the gasoline inputo-5 ^'stocks, to a new total of 226.5 million -W With iem# .JiarreJs, about5 percent higher thana year WASHINGTON CAP) 31re~«hidfc~ ofCiunbodia;' By ordering special allocations to Ttie apprehensions of committee' increase tbe, March distribution/ Simon mmm said Thursday that President Nixon members and Doar about White Hons? appeared to bedipping intogasoline stocks­ appears to be trying to limit its intentions were based on a letter Doar ? for another 6.76 million barrels. impeachment inquiry to Watergate and to received from James St. Clair, Nixon's Testimony Given on Mitchell's SEC Role Simon told the National Governors restrict its access to White House special counsel, outlining Nixon's offer to ­Conference, where he announced the documents. "give the committee everything be has NEW YORK (AP) -A government • "Do you want to count it?' Richardson Sears said Casey told him: "Mr.Sears, I March allocations that further emergency But counsel John Doar advised the given to the Watergate grand jury.-, .witness testified Thursday that former asked, according to Sears. , can assure you of one thing. We don't alocations could be made if new problems committee to refrain from issuing a The letterstates thatNixon believes this .Atty. Gen. John Mitchell arranged a rubber stamp staff recommendations arise, but he did not think they would be He said Stans answered: subpoena for other information at this material is "morethan sufficient toafford' meeting between the head of the around here." V" necessary. ' " won't be necessary." time. The committee agreed, with a clear the Judiciary Committee with the entire Securities and Exchange Commission and Simon also told the governors he was lawyer for financier Robert Vesco Sears said that Cook noted that there considering the idea of lifting the. warning that it will exercise its subpoena Watergate sotry." It later adds: ' Searssaid Richardson thenstated: "Mr. power later if it feels neeessary "in the President's oplniofiT^thl jnigbt be a perjury charge against Vesco^ within hours after Vesco made a $200,000 voluntary ban dn Sunday gasoline sales, to Vesco wants-me to deliver you amessage.' information is being withheld. Watergate matter and widespread He said Cook stated: "If these facts are -cash contribution to President Nixon's re­ aid the recreation and vacation industry; election campaign. He'd like to get some help." • , • so, then.Vesco lied, and if he lied, then we Watergate is one of six areas of allegations of obstruction of justice in but his deputy, John C. Sawhill, later told have to consider the possibility of a presidential activity the committee is connection therewith are at the heart of newsmen that Simon meant Sunday sales He said Stans responded: "Tell him investigating. Others include allegations this matter. -Ve|c& aide Harry L. Sears, the'witness, that's not my department or bailiwick. criminal referral." ' might be resumed after the Arab oil of illegal campaign contributions; the "By making available to the committee testified at theconspiracy trial of Mitchell That's John Mitchell's department.'-' . embargo against the United States is • Sears said he asked Casey if there was actions of the White House special without limitation all of themat$rlaUand former Commerce Secretary Maurice any way to be assured that Vesco could lifted. investigative unit known as the plumbers; furnished to the grand jury ...he feels that/Stans that the meeting with then SEC Sears said he met alone later that day present his side of the case before any Figures released by Simon at the allegations of the use of government • he will have provided the committee with ;;chief William Casey was "very "productive." with Mitchell in his office after a charge was filed. He said Casey repeated conference showed that the States would agencies for political purposes; Nixon's the necessary materials to resolve anyprearranged appointment. He said he told that he "didn't rubber stamp anything." haye received widely varying amounts of personal finances and the secret bombing questions concerning him." him that the money had been delivered to: MITCHELL AND STANS were accused Stans and that Vesco was going to give a of trying to abort an SEC fraud probe of total of $250,000, raised from foreign Vesco's multibillion-dollar financial sources with only $50,000 on the record. news capsules empire in return for the $200,000 contribution. They were charged with . He said he told Mitchell that "I hope Conspiracy, perjury and obstruction of Maury knows what he's doing." Arabs Argue Embargo Talks Site * Lon Nol's representatives said it took seven months of negotiations to justice. CAIRO, Egypt (AP) — Egypt has asked a planned meeting of Arab oil bring the nationalist Khmer Rumdo troops over to the government side. "I'M SURE he knows his business," he producing countries to lift the five-month-old embargo against the United National Assemblyman Thach Chen, one. official working to bring in said Mitchell responded. Sears said he and Laurence Richardson, States, an Oil Ministry official said Thursday. But a dispute apparently ralliers, said ata ceremony 15miles west of Phnom Penh that10,000 more a business associate of Vesco, delivered Sears said he told Mitchell he was was developing over where and when the meeting will be held. rebel soldiers might come over in the next-few months. the cash in a briefcase to Stans, who was anxious to see Casey and that Mitchell . President Nixon's re-election finance Egypt said the meeting would be on Sunday in Cairo. But the Algerian picked up the phone and had his secretary chairman, at Stans' campaign office in Ministry of Industry and Energy said Egypt's request for a transfer had make an appointment for Sears with Stock Market Slides Down Again . ­ Washington. been denied #nd the meeting would be held as planned in Tripoli, Libya. Casey at 4 p.m. the same day. NEW YORK (AP) — Stock market prices retraced someof their recent Algeria added that the session may be delayed until Wednesday. gains Thursday asbrokers cited profit takingand increased doubt that the ^ He said the money was delivered on At the meeting with Casey at SEC I . Arab oil embargo would end as soon as had been expected. April 10,1972, three days after a new law headquarters, Sears said, Bradford Cook, requiring reporting of such contributions 742 Cambodian Rebels Defect Several individual issues like International Telephone and Telegraph, general counsel to the SEC was present. went into effect. KAMBOL, Cambodia (AP) — A group of 742 former insurgents Swore Avis,and General Motors were tossed lower on specific news events. Sears said he told Casey that Vesco had complained that the SEC staff was loyalty to President Lon Nol's government Thursday in the largest The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dropped 10.79 to 869.06, after SEARS SAID Richardson opened the harassing him and that he feared that the defection of antigovernment forces since the Cambodian war began in good gains Tuesday and Wednesday. Volume on the New York Stock case on Stans' desk and tipped it toward staff would seek an injunction against him April, 1920. Exchange was a moderate 14.50 million shares. : him so he could see the currency inside. without consulting the commission itself. 'Mr of CBS: %Walter Was Both an Actor and an Announcer'* (Editor's Note: CBS Newt anchorman Walter really worked at it, and he'd make good grades if he work that was better than most of the seniors. and rattle off the information, without script Or notes, ad Crooldte will speak at IS a.m. Saturday in the wanted to. But if he didn't like a class, he just didn't do . "I won't say he was the best we ever had, but he was. ' libbing all way. ? Lyndon B. Johnson Library Auditorium after Mrs. much at all." one hard worker. And he was reliable. Why, if I had a "Yep, that's Walter," reminisces Butler. "He was the : Lyndon B. Johnson presents him with the DeWitt C. It seems Cronkite preferred to spend his out-of-class really tough story that needed covering I'd be worried world's greateststory teller, let me tell you. That was his. Reddick Award as a part of Communication Week _ time at Hie Daily Texan, where he was a volunteer until I'd see old Walter stroll in, and then I knew strong point. He could ad lib anything.' • activities. There will be no admission charge, reporter. everthing would be all right because Walter could handle After the spring semester of 1935, Cronkite became persons will be seated on a first-come, first-serve dissatisfied with school, and with financial problems f> -: basis. .. compounding the situation, left to go to work in Kansas By JIM FUQUAY City, Mo. There, working for radio station KCMO, he Texan Staff Writer gained local notoriety for his "live" broadcasts of sports "Several thousand cheering Texan* bade the events, and it was here his story-telling skill was taxed to University of Texas football team bon voyage lost its fullest. f4 night. On the eve of their departure for South Bend, CRONKITE RECEIVED the play-by-play over the Indwhere they will meet the Notre Dame team !• • •! Western Union wire, and with the assistance of a sound- Saturday, the Orange and White squad witnessed a effects man providing the crowd noise, plus liberal doses manifestation of the spirit of their supporters." of Cronkite's own fertile imagination, he provided - By Walter Cronkite sparkling accounts of the games, even though he never l%eDoily Hexon left the local studio. Oct. 3, 1934 mi. -v­ a-Sti V Unfortunately, such a system does haye its Well, the Orange and White won, 7-6, scoring and being, scored against by way of fumbles, appropriately onmigh ill disadvantages. While doing one of his broadcasts, the wire broke down for 20 minutes, forcing him to make up But the subject of interest, though, is the writer of the alT the plays for that period. • story, pge Walter Cronkite, a !7-year old sophomore attending the University. & ' ' "I marchedthem up and down that field—withfrequent and . Cronkite, born on Nov. 4, 1916, in St Joseph, Mo., 17 wire finally came back on, I discovered that Notre Damebecame a transplanted Texan at the age of 10 and he attended the University during the 1933-34 and 1934-35 •«Esf had scored but I had them on their own20-yard line.I bad school years. to to get them all the way back downfield to score in a Failing to finish college and obtain a degree, he has hurry." since become one of UT's more illustrious drop-outs, Such tales may surprise most people, but those close to ranking just above or below Janis Joplin, depending on "/) him take it all in stride. I Where one places one's priorities and affections. "Well of course, Walter was a real ham at heart," Dr. But Cronkite's future seemed set early in life. Robert Morrison, 61, a fraterhity brother and now "WALTER NEVER wanted to be anything but a Eracticing physician in Austin, jokingly recalls. "No sir, journalist," recaUs William Butler, Cronkite's roommate e would never lose his spunk. He was always readyfor a in 1934-35 and Chi Phi fraternity brother, now an attorney good joke. And he wasn't afraid to pull a joke anytime on in Washington, D.C. anybody." "I personally maintain that Walter was both an actor AS AN EXAMPLE of this intrepid fearlessness, and an announcer. That's why he was so good. Why, he Morrison recollected an incident during the fraternity'scould read something a time of two, and he'd have it in ' initiation procedures. As any good fraternity man knows,his head," Butlersays. "Hecouki absorbit all andthen be during the initiation ordeal it's best to be on thegood side so articulate spewing;t back out in his ownwords that be of the active chapter members and certainly not do could ad.lib his broadcasts"^ anything that would antagonize anyone. Cronkite also displayed an early interest in the Such was not toe case with pledge Cronkite. journalism trade. He was editor of the Campus Cup, the As part of the Htual, the pledge was driven several . student newspaper at SanJacintoHigh School in Houston, miles.out of town and deposited in the middle of the and worked for the Houston Post during his junior and woods. Not only did the unfortunate fellowhave to findhissenior years in high3 school. •Mm:-way back into town, but he was required to bring in a person who expressed such Oddly enough for a an handful of what can modestly be described as the interest in a particular field, young Cronkite was not droppings in a horse corral. ­officially listed as a journalism major in his years at the "Oh* it was really horrible," Morrison remembered University. School records-show him enrolled in the rather unpleasantly. Anyway, he recalls, Cronkite School of Arts and Sciences, with no specific major. dutifully brought in his burden for proper certification of Apparently this lack of congniity between school work his task. . • -; : \V and personal, interests adversly affected Cronkite the •CRONKITE, HOWEVER, had additional plans. He student, '"7T?*** ' ////////t Surreptitiously stole away from the proceedings and"I ALWAYS WANTED to participate," Cronkite once —Prowing iwpHHluwd wvrtwy Mtrty* CampMt, The Quill. secretly stashed his hard-won treasqre in thg. pledge- told a reporter. "Covering the State Capitol was a lot "Why sure I remember old Walt," exclaims Miss Afton trainer's favdtlte tin of febacco, transforming the I was the While Cronkite wrote often for The Texan, he was alSo contentsIBBoToiHgtlilng mowniBltable for fertilizer than Besides,4 never went to classe?, so igot awful grades.' copy desk supervisor for The. Texan. Miss Wynn still working part-time for radio station KTUT, tjie iL smoking.' ;'vr..v • •/ ,v .3® Roommate Butler concurs with those self-expressed resides in Austin. predecessor of KTBC, where he did sports and news "^1"You should haVe seen old Babe's face when he opened sentiments. .. . "I reckon he'd come in every afternoon, always ready broadcasts. 7' Nhi tobacco," chuckled Butler, recapturing the scene. "It"Walter was, well, let'ssay he wasa variablektodent^!| Jo do something," she says, "He was just a youngster in When broadcasting sports at KTUT, Cronkite would-„ sure raised a few eyebrows, let me tell you. I'm prettyhe says,fondly. "If he was interested inasubject, why, he those days, a freshman and sophomore, but he was doing listen to all the latest scores and then rush to the studio Sa 8ure Walter paid rather dearly for that little stunt." , p«9e 14 Friday/Mfirctr X WnTREpmtTEXAN PI -ass 'MM 1M mi .... . . ---. v .issM-.