P s • •• :. 3 twSSi Student Newspapereit The University of Texas at Austin Austin, Texas Friday, March 15, 1974 Please Recycle Thus Newspaper "" .'"•i.'X—S"­ ~~5tzsr xx *wim. 9ZWl *°a 'O'd '*331193 crnjoMTW . By SUSIE STOLER and iHELEN _ mm H Ten Cents Twenty Pages ,\|S ;^71.45Vtv •"> ' C;l. r •; cards,''as soon as they are printed," and save$2 a month riding duringpeak;hours;,MQnday^ttro^i^:J^»%J|||iussg|^ Thursday. < ; * »'" SAVE's plan differed with the cmepre9^|ed:l^.^niu$^^ ^ofmasstransportationThursdayaa\reduced fare proposal. 1 • „ Austin moved into*; city councilmen approved a four-part package designed to Different fares throughout the day would be confusing, to convince motoristthat bus and taxi ridership have more citizens, Mike Smith, spokesman for SAVE, said. Instead, a flat ^rnta^toan driS -15-cent fee at all Umes should be charged, he urged. Increased Councilmen approved the transportation energy conservation ridership would pick up tfce added costs with lower fares. Smith. Ss^Mra^aitera^pro^ffS^ S^by Save Austin's In response, Ternus maintained SAVEtsplan,would £«st $»$, Valuable Environment (SAVE). city an additional 140,000 a month. h-f tf > / Councilman Berl Handcox voted in favor of the SAVE plan but Another major concern of the environmental poup. Smith later changed his vote to make the approval unanimous, -explained, is that Ternus plan would encourage bus ridership. Councilman Jeff Friedman and Mayor Pro Teto Dan Love were during peak hours when buses afe already • absent from the meeting. " ^ Ternus quickly took issue with Smith s remarks, maintaining The adopted*plan provides for a park and ride shuttle system, "the increased ridership from the program would not result lii^ reduced fares foroff-peak traffic hours,a "taxi pool" service and shortage of buses as >a resultof overcrowding. . --v.,• commuter basses * -; -In terms of energy conservation, the transportation plan wiji gJ| Starting March 25 motorists may drive to the Fox Theater on save more than 18,000 gallons of fuel a month, said Lyndon aS?iSrt^lS^aScatch a bus to downtown. Aenry, executive director of the Texas Association for Pub|ifc . The shuttle, leaving every 15 minutes between 7and 9 a.m. and 4 TransportatiOnK ^v , , Tl-rr_^-rrr:T7w_,I to6 p.m., will make additional stups near the University and the Although .Hfiffey predicted a 40-rninute daily loss in tra*el||W with the plan, bus riders will save $23,000 a month. State Capitol complex. Fares will be 30 cents one way. In other action, the council adopted a "no smoking" policy for Another incentive for riding buses will be the April 1 city buses. Councilman BobBinder was the lone dissenter,' KM implementation of a 15-cent bus fareduring the off-peak hours of asserting that the city shojuld npi use its ''lawmaking power to^ 9 a.m. to3p.m. and6 to10 p.m.The lowerfee ishalf normal fare. enforce" sucha policy. V-* ' ... Closely related to the park and ride service is a taxi service The council postponed fot-furth%f study action on Mayor Koy«,v? also beginning March 25. Instead of riding a bus from the fox Butler's proposal for adoption of a procedure in handling alleged^ Theater to work, participants will have theoption of paying $1 for police misconduct. The second reading of amendments to thegas'f­ a taxi ride to their office. A minimum of four passengers in a.taxi b ordinance was postponed one week for lack of sufficient? would be required. City Council reviews new' transportation energy conservation plan, Regular bus riders may purchase $10 monthly commuter members present. $2.50 per hour. Part-time and graduate• Student services to be guaranteed students would pay this fee, instead of the funding under a fee reorganization plan to be presented to the University System current $3.50 per hour. Under the -proposed fee structure, Board of Regents Friday are $110,000 from the University's operating"indispensable activities," University President Stephen Spurr said Thursday. The Student Health Center, students' attorney, shuttle bus service and intramural programs^are,.the four, items priority group of student services. Men's intercollegiate athletics, women's intercollegiate -athletics, The liar Daily Texan, cultural entertainment, Student Government; Cactus yearbook, parking and lockers -would be under an™ optional positive check-off basis. ^ The student services fee reorganization jflan is a result of an interpretation by the XJjiiversity System law office of a Texas, Education Code amendment giving financial relief to part-time and graduate itudents. U Under the plan, all students would pay By ANNE COLLINS and SCOTT TAGIIARINO ' : Texan Staff Writers When the University System Board of Regents considers a reorganization of the said present student services mandatory feethe history will mark yet another episode in here the fight for control of The Daily Texan ik'to—. and Student Government. kets From the 1920s until 1971, both The Daily Texan and the Students' Association iting (now Student Government) were funded rted by the optional blanket tax: The Students' irted Association set the amount and allocated the the revenue from the blanket tax for the in a -University Athletics Council, The Texan, enks and the Union Cultural ^ Entertainment 30s, Committee. . elch, i and A Taxan Interpretive A A 1970 ruling by the state auditor d by declared that all money collected by the U.S.; ­ state was state money, resulting in the ered regents.assuming control over the student ct 17 , ; services funding. >rder, ',• JMW .-Bryce Jordan, the 1971 University trike president ad interim, recommended to the regents that the Student Government > budget be cut from a proposed $1.84 to 56 cents per blanket tax. Jordan's proposal budget would be used to help pay for student identification cards and increased shuttle bus service costs. The recommendation will be presented Friday because of a need -'to-work-fast so the' materials for preregistration can be printed," Spurr said. -, • (Related-Story, 2.) " • . ... . In opposition U v* Student Government President Sandy Kress, who will present a two-part proposal offering an alternate method to Spurr's plan. Kress said he would first propose not to change the current fee .system at all, "because the system, already under a proportional fee, is legal. — In addition, Kress will propose a •, voluntary fee retrieval system. This would , call for an initial student fee from all students, but would allow part-time students, those taking under 12 hours, to be eligible to retrieve the fee if they felt they were not receiving any benefit from it. Preregistration for the fall semester begins April 29. An increase in University residence hall rates is among, proposals which the regents will consider. The proposed increase is 2 percent for residence halls and 3.8 percent for board rates. Residence hall and board rates for 1973­1974 were raised 8 percent over the previous year. ' passed, thus providing only enough funds for salaries, office supplies and the students' attorney's office. -\ In that same year theBauer Housestory , broke and The Texan found itself without blanket tax funding through failure of the .. regents to.recharter Texas Student -CloudyPublications, Inc.-^ r -S\ Friday's forecast Only when a "declaration of trust" was; i calls for consider^ drawn up giving the regents control over all TSP publications, includingTheTexan, -able cloudiness *J was a mandatory student services fee for and a 30 percent< the paper even considered by the regents. Yet TSP remained without any financial chance of precip­ -^ssistiince•unttTthrfatl of-l972-^heri"Oie itation/ Tempera-mandatory student services agreement tures will be mUd ' was apprnved hy Ihe -rttgentg, Until that itmu "ff1 w • •• ' —1 ••• . :m time, TSP continued publication,, using with the low in the reserve funds. m mid-50s and the w -The previous, year had seen the mandatory fee extended to cover funding high in the upper of Student Government. k-H 80s. _Winds will be ^Should-the-regent* pass this easterly fr tf\ /,( * T f, _ .t * * ' t > nation -t-UH Talaphote ts \a George Shultz • • — : .— . f . until it was felt the time was right/. • Aides said the secretary did not want to look as if he were deserting the President in a time of need. He made clear to newsmen Thursday he was resigning because he was tired-after ­five pressure-packed years. He said be was disturbed by the Watergate scandal but had words of praise for.the President. Shultz said Nixon "has always been jJII available for counsel and always < supported me, and. I.appreciate that very much." -'• One of the greatest achievements during his term assecretary, Shultz said, was the new system of floating world currency exchange rates, which he said has worked 4^ well. ~ " r On the minus side, he said, was the country's inflation rate which cause<| consumer prices to increase 8TB percent'!^ last year, the highest rate of inflation since 1947. . a [h • As for lessons learned, he'saitfr "the U.S. economy is part of the world economy — UiaVs Uie big lesson of 1973p* Shultz said he has not decided what he will do after he resigns but indicated he sM might return to the University of Chicago where he was dean of tiie Graduate School of Business before joining tiie Nixon administration.,. <$, % «( ^ <• i 1 * , , ^ ^ Before stepping "down"as secretary,;^ Shultz will travel to Santiago, Chile, for a /J meeting of the Inter-American.^' Development Bank, April 1 and 2 and to,^ Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, for a meeting ot^% the Asian Development Bank, April 24 to4j pit* Leaks Surgery to the'in* iured right knee of Texas' All-America -ftrtlback Rwrsevett Leaks was termed successful: Thursday/ but doctors doubt %*Leaks will be able to return to action next yeaTT Se« Page 6. „ >*x »; ents Changes By JEFF FRANKS should be made available to Legislature's House Bill 83? The University System students on an optional basis,' the Texas Education Code,Board of Regents will be Also, 3,507 or 8.6 percent, felt subsection B, section-54.503. going againstthe wishes of the The Texan-should not be This bill, Quinn said,majority of students if they supported by any kind of fee intended to give financial pass a proposal Friday collected by the University. relief to part-time students • making The Daily Texan fee No information was given . and graduate students. optional. Umvei 113 percent or Stephen Spurrand University those surveyed. LeMaistre had to decide what System Chancellor Charles Concerning Student student services had topjgpLeMaistre have requested the Government, 18,734 or 46.1 priority because "incoine |$gfunding change. percent, wanted mandatory derived from the student pj| A preferential poll on funding; 11,108, or 27.3 services fee will not support fclfstudent fees conducted by the . percent, said this should be an all of the current activities." JfiOffice of the Vice-President optional service and 6,283, or Four services were chosen fefor Student Affairs last 15.5 percent, felt the to remain under the ^semester showed students University should not collect mandatory student services 1? |fv?want The Daily Texan (55.9 . any fees for that body. fee allotment, Quinn,said. l^ppercent) and Student No information was given They are the shuttle bus Government (46.1 percent) On this question by 4,494, or service, the health center, the funded by mandatory fees. 11„1 percent, of those students' attorney and the $4 ^f 40,619 students surveyed surveyed. intramural sports program.Sl'pduring the registration Mike Quinn, assistant to the ' Quinn said the University ,^!i2process for last semester, chancellor, said Thursday the • will still have to pay$50,000 to ^.^52,719 said The Texan should proposal to make The Texan-" keep the shuttle buses |s$Mbe funded mandatorily. ' and Student Government running, despite t he-Another 9,818, or 24.2 optional services is being • mandatory fees paid by^Jpercent, thought The Texan made to comply wi|h the 63rd students. HBP! Headless Horse A hers* statu* in St. Mark's Basilica in Venice, Italy, it dismantled for examination pnd study. The 2,000-year-old statue is suffering from "bronze cancer.". To involve more independent students in the' University. Sweetheart contest, theentry fee hasbeen increased from $5 to $10 this year, Terrie Feher, chairman of the University Sweetheart Election Committee (USEC);; said Thursday. Because "about 75 percent of the applicants last year were from three or four sororities," theUSEC decided a feeincrease might limit the number of nominations a particular organization could financially support and leave the contest open to more coeds, Ms. Feher explained. The Sweetheart' "serves as fen official hostess at University functions and as a liaison between the students and alumni,"'she said. The race "is not simply a beauty contest," Ms. Feher emphasized. The winner has to have poise and personality, be a quick thinker and able to handle allsorts of situations." H§I The USEC will interview; and selectfive finalistsfrom a group of semifinalists? previously chosen from applications. The winner is determined by a campus election during Round-Up week and presented at the •Silver Spur Marathon Datice April 19. ~ — •••«­ ~ The contest was dropped in 1972 by the former sponsor, Student Government, because of "lack of relevance." After a year's lapse, however, the IFC decided to reinstate the Sweetheart contest in conjunction with the IFC-sponsored Round-Up week. -'-"-".v.'. -'"VV, Buddy Kirk Withdraws From Race Buddy Kirk of Houston withdrew from 'the Democratic primary ' state The .Sweetheart is mainly a comptroller's race Thursday • "public relations officer," bjit in favor of Bob Bullock. EXCELLENT Aid Bill Would should Texas win the Kirk said he .never A student financial aids bill, $1,500, passed Thursday receive aid. In the past, a was Southwest Conferencefootball, the job bjit entered the race which would raise the total : !>y the U^Sr House. —-student's financial status was championship again, she he did not want federal individual loan limit The new legislation does not examined to determine the would reign as Cotton Bowl outgoing Comptroller Robert frpm $15,000 to $20,000 while require students to have amount of money he or his Queen. ..Calvert to pick his successor." SPRINGBREAK allowing yearly loans up to financial means checked to parents could afford to contribute toward the Any organization or Calvert has endorsed his student's education. To obtain individual can nominate' former chief clerk, Hugh TRIP Transportation by bus " 5 days skiingvand lodging Student .Ministry aid, a certain amount of need candidates to the Inter-Edburg, in the Democratic Condominiums with « Lift tickets CLOSES must be shown. Fraternity Council (IFC) primary. kitchens and fireplaces ­ TODAY! Under this bill, the federal sponsored event., Applications Kirk, until recently a are available in Union government would underwrite district the amount of money which a Building 340 and must be supervisor in the . >. MAIL $25 DEPOSIT U T. SKI CLUB comptroller's office for eight IS returned there by noon, student's family cannot 'and one-half years, told an . AT ONCE TO: P.O. BOX 7338 "JESIIS IS: THE SAME YESTERDAY AND TODAY, YES, AND FOREVER." afford. March 22. ^<0: Austin news conference ' AUSTIN, TEXAS 78712 i3?i ft--'" ''The bill greatly widensand Applicants must be female Calyert hari fnrhidden him to ­ 454-9158 476-8073 simplifies loan qualification sophomores or juniors with a "pursue certain delinquentcriteria," U.S. Rep. J.J; grade pointaverageof at least tax accounts." He said the Hyde Park Baptist Church Name. "Jake" Pickle of Austin said 2.5 and plan to be a University accounts cost Texans "untold • ' 3901 Speedway Thursday. student next year. Bible Study 9:30 Worship 8:30 & 11:30 millions in uncollected tax-, Address. dollars." City_ -State. Bus Schedule Kirk said he talked t< Bullock Saturday "about Ph: Jester 9:10 a.m. 5:10 p.m. t inequities in the comptroller's .Castilian 9:15 a.m. 5:15 p.m. office, and his thinking is the same as mine — he would do Kinsolving, S.R.D. 9:20 a.m. 5:20 p.m. Post-St. iClip and Mailn away with inequities." • Vglies' Protest Advertising Gimmick (operable for ad to run 3/15/74): through use Beautiful Image J>f clever copyjtnd slick headline thisad will make a connection inthe By Zodiac Newsservice consumer's mind between traditional St. Patrick's Day "green''motif WW and corresponding greenery as it appears in nature, i.e. trees, shrubs, A group has been formed in AM&UOW, newts. Ad will urge consumer to go on a hike, bike trip, etc., as per Fort Worth to protest the l£A6t/Ecf "green theme, at the same time pointing out wonderful bargains in "Beautiful people" image in the Co-Op Bike & Outdoor Shop, {fitly "Post-St. Patrick's Day Sale" cigarette and deodorant ads. angle addi levity, arouses reader interest. The name of the new group is "Uglies Unlimited." To be Monday, March 18 -Sat., March 23 a member you must have (St. Patrick.'* Day, is Sunday, March 17) warts, pimples, freckles or some other visual oadity; and you must pay $2 dues. Organizer Danny McCoyClose-Out on Falcon says that membership in Uglies Unlimited is open to10-speed Bikes—Boxed just about anybody, as long as they have a face that would. Reynolds 531 tubing; Campagnolo derailleurs and hubs; center-pull stop a train. brakes: tew-up tires only; 21", 22", 23" frames.) A HAIR CUT *95 each. Net—No Dividend While They Last FROM THE HAIR CUT Plus Other Bargains STORE Co-Op Bike & Outdoor Shop ISA —JOY 403 W. 23rd TO THE wHli perdttM ef $2 «r . «ec«. IwbAMifkirf §OUl & Mailircbitfl* mm . Quality Rigorous quality control March 14, 15,16 — at procedures every stage of the manufacturing process — insures flawless performance from every Clairol Mitchum Sony product you buy.W' "Quality first'"tias earned Herbal for Sony wo/ldwide recog­ pts&Msep us A Aerosol nition as the unquestioned • 0 cogpflr om OF7m t/firjON% Deodorant 5 oz. leader in solid state elec­ Rinse LBAPIH& UMUEJ&TiaZ tronics. Here's another ex­ $3.50 value ample of Sony quality. ' TH£ Int prtft «Mi pwdm* <1 ii-" rwiiu) •) H it Mti. « •> mi. k r-s' -*rxTrl'w~ >age 2 Friday, March 15, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN, . -y •/^Ci t' ^ 1<<£&'' fi ft •• • v.-.-• •. ... ; • •'• • ors poetico Graduate b if that I how nothing M say nOUM(Y) By ROGER DOWNING/' ? problems encountered by frightened by the size of the when considering his resources, and intensive study * Andthat I am aware and afiakl MnNVmlVl IV 9 ffQfd tP Texan Staff Writer Kahn in minority recruitment campus andare worried about application, Dr. John King, in key academic areas. Of ifcnNf Have I com* to tho point figure H out. figure; "#%<$ Students failing to meet arefinding out whichstudents their scores on the Graduate chairman of the Nf» whoro tho sHUnest of my mind Addand subtract? graduate school entrance are from minorities and Record Exam, Hansen said. said.. So disturbs mo that I fool tha need divide? requirements still may be learning that some minority The department is trying to Three •£*• male* some Mayboiust _. . ^ able to enter through the applicants aren'tn marginaL overcome these problems by Office of GraduateStudies has use of graduate students amL i?r* 1 .Admission for but submarginal. I•^'setting up a summer started to help faculty. . ' Marginal Applicants (CAMA). I "Most applications"' vie orientation program to get the student are: Cooper said "CAMA \ Jl Cbnditional ip the minority °ne*« *• #n,v?'1 Wonder Program. receive > from minority minority student exposejcLjtq. • Materials concerning positions may increase in the ' fev niMw ww o'lW for pilll somotimot'' Dr. Catherine Cooper, .students are severely the campus," he saidty;k|$^| monies from private short run, but ultimately we * Holp. Whon in that shriokof blind And tho re«t assistant dean of the Officeof: ^deficient," Kahn said. \ "Minority students can not foundations have been won't need a CAMA system, I found my substane*, It w«t a / _ ^I just figure^ Graduate Studies, said the >. The department has a really be assessed in a fair distributed to graduate for everybody will be able to * Vantage-point, a^d <0 ^ " T«,ogram^ was"initiated itt ^ropMal calling for sufficient manner; by the Graduate advisers to recommend to get a quality (primary)-'spring,^ 1972, to allow -funds to travel around the Record "Examination", minority students. education. „ _ . i Alienation ^.11 departmental admissions state to interview and recruit Hansen said. • A Summer Graduate "Admission is-only the' KN a tablo 'ir personnel considerable Minority students. The HEAVY EMPHASIS-is Institute for CAMA • sstudnts beginning," Cooper said. ^ }, for tho objects latitude in admissions. proposal also would include placed on a minority student's which would include "What we need is follow*up ­ Yov}t» rocks v^ere! a piano of flat CAMA increasingly is being scholarship monies, Kahn success in his community orientation to University and placement programs." used as a means of admitting • Said, y-,C s OrJo mtndihi|i woul for whoovor putt tjtatm minority students, she: • He added that about $41,000 with' explained. 'Would be required to fund this I may put...my EVEN THOUGH CAMA is program for 15 minority gentle .^»oreW not used totally for students for a yfear. If such a minorities, the "departments program can be funded, it •intt are encouraged to recruit would free CAMA spots for minority students, and CAMA nonminority students, hesaid. thb is available for them to use," Dr. E. Wailand Bessent, not Dr. Cooper said. ; graduate adviser -for the m . She stressed that the Department of Education graduate school does not Administration, said that >y equate minority with "CAMA makes it possible for marginal, but the school does us to enroll minorities who recognize that the academic are attracted to the 3*&i *$L potential of some applicants department's programs." may not be reflected solely by DR. CARL Hansenv the standard admissions graduate adviser for the Health Center Workload criteria. Department of Special . 1 f »s ' f tn »?u ^s ,<*&. c -Some departments which—-Education said CAMA is not are actively using their CAMA totally the answer to the allotments for minority, minority problem. by Volunteers recruitment at the graduate Two of the main worries Volunteer runners are sophomore in secondary, helped them a lot." level are education, minority students have-about easing the workload of educaion, said. Lisa Emery, a The Panhellenic Council's administration, special coming to graduate school at professional personnel at the freshman in business, saidshe junior delegates are in chqrce education, foreign language Texas are that they are Student Health Center by served as runner when the of the project. Each sorority education,, community and Tho Austin chapter of taking medical ftles to recent flu epidemic was at its is responsible for providing regional plamdng and speech the Red Cross is soak­ doctors' offices. peak, "they really need more one runner an hour from 9 communication. ing volunteer driver* The volunteers have been help," Ms. Emery said. a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday Dr. Terry Kahn, graduate recruited by .the Panhellenic "People-were just packed in through Thursday. adviser for the Department of to transport disabled Council and the Health Center there." , Anyone interested in Community and Regional persons. Drivers may —Deidre. Lyons.ajunior working.,_as a runner may-Planning, said his department; use Rod Cross cars or biology major, said she felt contact-Mrs. Evelyn their private vehicles. Board memtye/ Janet Onion gets two'or three CAMA slots said in the pa'st duties of "that they really needed us. I Anderson, nuring supervisor but is hoping for 15 next year, Interested?/ Call 478­runners Were unsupervised enjoyed doing it and it really at the health center. '• Two of the-major 1601. and poorly orgnized. ' * HllllllllllllltlllHIHIUHIIIIIII Ms. Onion, a senior in health TAKE A BREAK education, said so far . the feedback from the volunteers has been "great," and the r March 30 -April 4 coeds "love to do it." She also TO THE LAND said a person leaning toward fly EASTERN to tteBAHAMAS -setting back to the und nursing or premed° would < •: enjoy it." Stay at the HOLIDAY INN (inipiiasit en Communal HomestMding) on Paradise Island Suit yourself One runner, Jane A discussion of practical aspects and areas MoGuffey, a junior in only *255.55* includes of potential conflict disappointments and in a sundress..; elementary education, said —Round Trip Eastern jetfare disasters. . -—— a fright little geometric print^sun she was "more impressed'' dress of soft easy care knit. Turn it San Antonio-Miami-Bahamas & with the health center after return • WORKSHOP SERIES $1.00 each into suit with its own short sleeved serving as a runner. She said Taught by Jesse Dragonwagon jacket. Wedtfewood blue tiny ribb nurses are appreciative of the —Five nights accommodations at <­ Monday, March 18th, 7:30 p.m. ed jacket and.. bodice, runners' efforts. the Holiday Inn blue/white/red print skirt.: and "I feel like I'm doing For Information Call JIM WORTHat453-0638 UNIVERSITY Y AUDITORIUM ON-THE-DRAG, trim. Sizes 5 to 13, $30. y fjf" or your local travel agent • ' ^ 472-9246 "' 2406 GUADALUPE -^ "" ^something worthwhile," r> v ti *« • Based on quad occupancy & group 10 air fare from San Antonio 2330 Guadalupe' l.ebecca Conway, . a tifSISiilf * -J/ w/medium Low wedge ii sling with . close-toe/ v > n? Espadrilie-style lk±8 ,t I rope sole, rope sole with gum base. platform heel, gum base.. 7t "•* «*»i r ft? UJ f a Yellow. . -V -..7/* V t" * '-r ' n ~ + * ^ <2t iC. Khaki 'f \ •> Jh 1 *• White 12.00 ^On-the-Drag -— JL. rpfWM3 X 58 ^8 Friday, March 15r 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 < 'V « ~ ^ " ». if I&hti iWlWitfS. • PV?WS-'. •WWP' Wf­ !• Daily Texan Government The University's administration and Board of Regents are once again nioving against longtime critics The Daily Texan and Student v Government. This time around, however, the punitive action could be, terminal. As usual, the administration's move has come with little warning and a. total lack of ^onsulta,tion. with the student institutions involved. V ' ^ |f THE PROPOSAL INVOLVES a reorganization of the student services fee changing The Daily Texan and Student Government td an optional checkoff basis. Student Government's loss of the $20,000 student fee allocation would almost surely mean the demise of organized student services and politics conducted by and for students. The Texan might fare slightly better: general manager of Texas Student Publications Loyd Edmonds says he "thinks" The Texan could survive for a year. After that time period no one knows. '/•' The move to voluntary funding comes from a System law office recommendation. President Stephen Spurr says his office had originally recommended retention of the present fee arrangement with the addition *of an optional $2 for women's athletics. Spurr says LeMaistre's office informed him of an obscure amendment of the Texas Education Code in House Bill 83, Subsection B, Section 54.503, designed to give "financial relief to part-time students and graduate students enrolled at institutions of higher education." Mike Quinn, assistant to. the chancellor, says LeMaistre requested an attorneygeneral'srutingi>nthea^endmenLeiL attorney general's office has not returned a judgment but the System law office went ahead and formulated one anyway: "in the interest of • formulating the student fee rates for preregistration." g; UNDER THE PRESENT METHOD of funding students pay $3.50 to a maximum of $30 for student services fees. Under this system students taking nine hours pay the maximum rate of $36. Under the new System ruling fulltime students register in at 12 hours — which thus requires an altered fee schedule. Taking 12 hours as a "full load" maximum, the System has divided 12 into the $30 fee and thusr arrived at a $2.50 figure — $1 less per hour in service fee payments for part-time and graduate stMentsTTB^ifferenceln UT revenue from part-time students will total $230,000. I--— THE TEXAN ASKED SPURR if the administration had considered the implications of his recommendation for the future of student life through operation of Student Government and The Texan. He says the administration considered "all the alternatives," but, required to make a choice—came up with funding for the students' attorney, bus service, Student Healthr*Center and the intramural program. We asked Spurr if $156,000 for The Texan and Student Government did not take precedence over $355,000 for intramurals: he said it did not. He Said, "As you well know I've alw^ySbeen a strong supporter of The Daily Texan," and added he felt certain The Texan would continue to serve as themajor newspaper on campus. Spurr did not comment on the future of Student Government. The recent mqvesjnuSfbe^uewed in the context of the administration's and regents' long history of hostility against The Daily Texan and Student Government. In 1971 the regentSrJ^d by Frank Erwin, instigated a year­long battle to "get" The Daily Texani which had uncovered the Bauer House scandal. In that year the regents also cut the budget of Student. Government and threatened to destroy the Office of Students' Attorney. In early January of this year The Texan learned of Regent Erven's vow to have The Texan placed on a voluntary funding basis as his last major act as a regent. We are now viewing the culmination of Erwin's tenure, one characterized by sporadic but effective attempts to destroy the campus' two elected student institutions. IN ADDITION TO the regents' antistudent history, the circumstances of this present move warrant serious questioning. They include questions on: _ _ : — • The intent and purpose of House Bill 83, subsection B, section 54.503. House legislators were out of town Thursday afternoon for the funeral of Hawkins Menefee. The Texan has thus been unable to learn anything about the amendment's intent or origin. There can be no question the System knew about passage of the provision; most probably the System iftstigated the amendment. • The System's use of its Own attorneys' ruling on the bill. The System has requested a ruling from the attorney general. Failing to obtain the ruling at this date, the System will operate under its own "interpretation." , • The secrecy with which the proposed change was formulated. By law .the regents are not required to release recent agendas until two days, before meetings. The Texan learned of the proposed changes only Wednesday evening at a System press briefing. Student Government, which would be devastated by the loss of funds, was not notified at all. It seems incredible, but true. With one and a half days notice the administration and Board of Regents ostensibly standipoised to cutoff the financial base of The Daily Texan and Student Government. In practical terms that financial base means the continued existence of those institutions. We invite students to view the fateful decision by attending the Friday meeting, located in the regents' meeting room directly across from the Main Library entrance. At that meeting Texas' heaviest Democratic politicos could vote to erode the only, elected voices for the student body. — M.E. THE DAILY TEXAN Stwtoftt Wiwmyif mt n»« Uafvvnffy •# Tint mt AvtMa EDITOR -— Michael Eakin MANAGING EDITOR -John Yemma ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Betsy Hall. Mark Sims NEWS EDITOR Susan Winterringer ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR . Ken McHam AMUSEMENTS EDITOR David Dailey SPORTS EDITOR , t Danny Robbins FEATURES EDITOR Kristina Paledes PHOTO EDITOR Jay Miller ISSUE STAFF Issue News Editor , . Carol Barnes General Reporter..................... ................Scott Tagliarino News Assistants Anne Collins, Bobbie Criswell Contributor ... Nancy Mills Editorial Assistants Dave Risher, Joy Howell. Steve Russell Assistant Amusements Editor .......Laura McDonough Associate Sports Editor , Herb Holland Make-Up Editor '***— ....... Sylvia Moreno Wire Editor ..T, James Duniap Copy Editors.... Robert Fulkerson,.Army Armstrong, Leslie Presser, David Rose, Eddie Fisher Photographers... David Newman, Andy Sieverman Opinions expressed m The Daily Texan are Ibue of the: delivery and clawfied advertuin* atiould be made in TSf iw tlx writer of the article kod are not oereuarily ItuitUinx 3 no >471-5244' and dapUy advertuinK in TSP tin**: tit the llmvyraitV administration or the Board ' ^ . Kvftntt* . • .. • -V •:' . ; . . ___ _ _ -Tbr imionarjKMerttJin* -repreieolaUve of The Daily TW lWll,» TWH, a Mudeql newipaper at" The University Tmiiin NaluMf Kducatkioar Advertising Service. Inc . ot Tews at Autrtm <« poblished by Teiaa Student i*U»'We . .New Ynrk. N.V : l»17 WO LeiunRtaa IWk-alKKB. Itfaww.b.JUiUvemtjf StWioe. Amtio. Tex. Thy Ihitfir T«nu>"u» pubhdwiM*«edsy.»-Vtie|day:--4Wlv *wHw«Uiy, TNradiir and Friday-crept holiday and esam. " Yi>«V Time* S«m Service. Uqited Presslnt^nMuoiul Aiw ljUrtMiKt) May Sri-aod-clara po»U«e paid at -and 'Adur New* Servwif Tbe Texkn u a member of (he A**tHt.,Twi : ' Amta-taUid (Ukuuie I'm*, the Southwest Journalism Nfrfs nathtatMwt wiUWictWrted.by tetepbeae (471-' Ciewrrw and Uw Texas Daily Ne»»paper AfflMi»tion mti in >y wiitafwiUow>.orat the new* Utwaiorr • SUrH-4. MM N. httmet Hand. I.afce AuMin Baalevard i It uKwtUBMntwa lUiiklms A4IJS> Inquirm ajacefatat lUii llul TriHtxnd IBO S tjk«thnre Blvd 0AI1V 'ffeXAN Im hermi' broken machinery By STEVE RUSSE! but it's forgotten now so it couldn't and ' ~been very important.ft* . DAVE RISHER • Jones' election naturally resulted in the regents cutting funds for Student Wednesday's election finally delivered Student Government from the depths of fGoverhment. Jones spent his term yaipping about this war and about minority depravity. The sordid story began in 1970, recruitment and about the farm workers,when a comsymp hippie named Jeff Jones whoever they aire, while his vice-presidentwrenched the throne from the rightful mumbled something about the economic heirs. This was the year that students first, acted on the idiotic notion that they should and political power of students and spent oppose the Board of Regents when the his time fooling with voter registration, regents ignore the best interests of the co-ops and other irrelevant stuff. / |In 1971, the law schoot joined the University. The 1970 election returns were an conspiracy with the election of, Bob -irrational result of the events of 1969. The Binder, and law students have been too electorate was unduly inflamed by a damn uppity since. .Wben Sandy ever picture in The Texan of Frank Erwin Kress came here from Berkeley, he found applauding the Waller Creek Massacree, well developed cadres already firmly and drew the asinine conclusion that then-implanted in the bureaucracy of Student • president Joe Krier was unresponsive just Government, because he didn't get arrested with other All told, the usurpers controlled Student students over a few old trees. Anyone Government for four years, and whathave could seeat the tiihe that theSierra Club's we got to show for it but one hassle after temporary restraining order was just a another? And what about all the energy thin why cheap publicity stunt. Had the Sierra Club student politicos have wasted on grown-up t and the handful of student malcontents politics? Oh, we've elected a sheriff here succeeded, today's studenttody would be and a councilman there, but mostly denied the breathtaking beauty of students get behind complete losers like Bellmont Hall. Farenthold and McGovern. What a waste! Another issue exploited in the Jones This year, the rightful'rulers finally used coup was the scrapping of the Program for their innate subtlety to regain their Educational Opportunity by the standing. University.PEO was a perfectly useless ; Watch out Harry — it will eat your plan that only helped a few minority innards out, it will defuse the very students; hardly^ valid' concern tor a. "firecrackers.of your a . valid for student govef«&ii^^" represents aff ' the sta-pressed searaHn'iwir pants •students. yes, Harry, BEWARE, for no longer can There was also something about a war, the pupils of highereducation exist intheir imperia strea nonmechanized saturation of natural good-things. Yes, Harry, it's coming to get us and it's bigger than everything we can muster. It's the KRESS-ROHN comes MACHINE, by God. By GARY H. NEWTON The natureof many older neighborhoods out as. a champion of the people by "Tell me, Ms. Kelly, to whom does The spirit was freedom and justice is being destroyed by poor quality, high supporting the results of the Austin 'swigging scotch with Erwin' refer?" Its keepers seemed generous and kind density apartments, which usually Tomorrow"Program. "No one. It's just an allusion." • > The future of the next 10 yearsof Austin eliminate any signs -An allusien te whom^——^ ­ lsbeing plannedat 1:39 p.m.Sunday in the grounds because of the need for parking follows: From 1:30 to 2 will be No one." Union Main Ballroom. Whether Austin area. The University neighborhoods are registration; at the same time a program "How about 'furthering a boyfriend's will sprawl out into plastic suburbia with the most densely populated in thecity, and on-the condition vf the University statewide political career?'" ticitacs like Dallas and Houston or many developers desire to make a lot neighborhoods, prepared by planning "That's an allusion, too." preserve its unique natural environment is more money by building more apartments students, will be presented. After "Oh." up to you. in these neighborhoods. Our chamber of registering you will pick one of the nine Vote for the candidate which furthers commerce is advertising for industry to interest areas — economy," population, his or hers or anyone's political Its leaders were suppose to serve the country come to Austin, which will bring more transportation, housing, core area, bedfellow's political ambition the pie, more congestion, more taxes. Our neighborhoods, environment, land use, or mostest. For then comes democracy, Now they don't pay it no mind city1"-government encourages new health and social services. The people running down the West Mail and into Cause the people got fat and grew lazy subdivisions by giving the. developers interested in these subjects will break up today's regents meeting. It could be "X- Now their vote is a meaningless joke rebate ion their investment in utilities. into groups with six to ten people in each. rated if the slanders were on film. The Austin Tomorrow Program i| tfi$e ine AUbijn tomorrow rtugrmn while we are experiencing an For the next hour the group will discuss Take a slap at the nearest female, but first time.toe city government of Austin energy crisis, they encourage electricity the problemsaffecting their topic. For the wait Harry, she's not a female. By God, has asked all of its citizens how they would usage by giving cheaper rates for larger next 45 minutes problems will be listed, she's a machine. A regular input-output like to see Austin in the future. So far in users. Do you want these practices to and the top six will bechosen. Then the top legal brief mechanization that spits out the University neighborhoods the response continue? six goals will be chosen. elitist candidates from the inner depths of has been far from encouraging. The first America where are you now The Austin Tomorrow can . success of the law library. She can't even, pour a meeting in this area had about 90 people Don't yoii care about your sons and guarantee that Austin will preserve its pitcher of beer correctly, attend it — in an area which is supposed to daughters •» • beautiful, unique environment. Theise Come the day, and the true rulers be politically, socially and Don't you know we need you now meetings could,,be the beginning of converge on the Main Mall, outnumbering environmentally aware and active! We can't fight alone against the monster returning the decisions of government the forces of evil at least five to one, Yes the monster's on the loose John Kay/Jerry Edmonton back to the people. It could be the shouting "Stop the„ machine! Stop the It's put our heads into the noose Many of you are probably wondering, beginning of neighborhood control over machine!" And stop it they did. This And just sits there watching "How do I know the City Council will do . itself. Only you can make it work. Come election is no fluke, it's a turning point. It The cities have turned into jungles what is suggested?" Thereis noguarantee meet your neighbors and discuss the portends a new constructive relationship And corruption is strangling the land that they will; however if 10,000 voting problems and their solutions, which will with the Board of Regents. Sweetmeats The input from these meetings will citizens participate as was originally affect you. If anyone is interested in will flow again, and no usurper will dare decide what goes into the master plan and planned, then their request will be hard to canvassing to get people to this meeting come forward when the power of the how or if we will deal with the problems refuse. It would be politicalsuicide for any come to 611 W. 22nd St. at 2 p.m. Saturday. bootlick dynasty to deliver the boodle is that face thiscommunity. Over 50 percent politician to ignore that large a group of You can make the difference. apparent to all. of the downtown and University land area his constituents. Most politicians are Gary H. v Newton is neighborhood Ah, the evil machinery is dead, is covered with automobile related likely to hop on the bandwagon and come coordinator for this meeting. drummed into the very souls of the facilities, and there are plans to widen liberation movements. Housemates no streets in these areas to bring more autos longer rule this cemented, demented land PAIN with more pollution and congestion into of scholarly churning. The monkey wrench People's Assembly to Impeach Nixon will rally on the Main Mall our neighborhood. SUN stopped the has found its mark, and the machine is Friday. State Rep. Ron Waters will speak, and eager impeachmovers University Street Plan until the master spurting, crackling and sputtering its way up for bus rides to Houston ($4 round-trip) for Nixon's March 19 speech plan goes into effect. This neighborhood to the pit. By God, Harry; Round-Up will splendid tiiUe is guaranteed for all must make its feelings known. return. flflnQ line Beware of regents bearing Greeks r»1_. • iniAlrn nM#i MMIMASm f ....!__1 1 _ _ 1_ _ p 1. .. 1 . t_ • . _ 1 _ i ..j i .1 « .I t To the editor: tricks and criminal cover-ups of criminal lack of adequate bicycle space. content of his track articles' leaves*much v In the bitterest election in the history of actiongi j^AINCFhePeoples Assembly to Wednesday, March 6, at 11:30 a.m. I to bedesired. An example of this occurred the University, Frank Fleming has Impeach Nixon) is having a rally at noon observed no less than.26bicycles parked in Monday in his article concerning the resorted to ^he safest forms of name-Friday on the Maiti Mall. Come and bring the controversial area known as the Rust-March 9 meet in Denton. He states that calling. He's gotten two losers to do it for your friends. The purpose of this rallyis to Ick Box, some quite precariously placed Tim Patton twice lapped Lamar Collie (ahim; If the student body considers this promo^ the Houston trip. on parking meters — and all you bicycle corrected spelling from the Texan article)second-hand invective as grounds on Nixon is coming to Jones Hall in riders know what happens to bicycles on the way to a glorious victory in the which to vote, allow us to provideour own Houston for a show of support at 7 p.m. when cars pull away from curbs — the old three-mile run.— •/­ in support of Lee Rohn. Tuesday. We intend to show him, and the fender-bender bicycle trick. The key issue seemed to start as a nation, through entirely peaceful means, This is an interesting statement as Tim division of the University along thelines of that he doesn't have that support. Charter Consequently, I would like in this letter ^Patton did not lap anyone twice not to "conservative vs. liberal." But supporters buses will leave Littlefield Fountain at -to proclaim a just cause — that being the "mention that Collie wasn't even in the. for Fleming have tried to shift the noon Tuesday and return at midnight. A placement of several bicycle racks in this race, having run the half-mile earlier. emphasis to the "dirty politics of the donation of $4 will be asked for the round-area' for the gas-saving population of Even if a Texas runner waslapped twice, Mayor Daley coalition" that backs Rohn. trip. Take your Junch, skip your class and bicycle riders. Molly Stafford does such a fact deserve news coverage?Initially, we tended to disapproveof this Show theWorld"What You Think of Nixon. coalition concept also. But we.have: been -'r -Alan K. Christensen ; Admittedly, last year's track reporter, enlightened recently a to the nature of the PAIN Buck Harvey, was negative, on the "big coalition behind Fleming. We spent la$t Holland daze Gross need business" aspect of college athletics, butWednesday night awaiting election Totthe editor: To the editor: at least he made an effort to become returns at The Daily Texan office with a I would like to proclaim a gross need in Though I have no desire to inpugn the knowledgeable about the sport and factual group including Fleming and a few of his ihe general area of the new professional integrity or intent of-Herb in his reporting. T crbnies. When Frank became aware of his Communication Complex — that being the Holland, I must say that the factual BUI Gamble runoff status, he and his army jubilantly ­started off to celebrate. On their way out, they stopped long enough to extend invitations to a vice-presidential candidate and his friends. A rough transcript of the invitation follows: "We're going over to split a keg with Enwin. Why don't you come and become : an administrative candidate too?" - It's time that Fleming stood up and let his coalition be counted too — Erwin's overwhelming support is not to be taken ' lightly. If Fleming wants to talk about coalitions, that's fine, but in reality^, the voters are choosing between a group of students and a coalition of administrators. Mariana Ratney . Matt Jones. (Editor's note: the letter printed above jwas submitted to The Texan Tuesday but ^ was not run. The Tefan has traditionally not Died partisan letters on election day to avoid ontrne or undocumented statements to .which a candidate may not respond.) your To. the editor: • We can't allow three more years of lies, % leadership. W$ can't ignore five years of enemy lists, secret bombings, campaign 'Har Majetty Is out of the country-^whielimofcei her imarter than „ «?. •% . .• r""'... aBstimaaLm . Quest viewpoint SBfiS" §1 mi r v: :. ';v:"v.'V ;-^-C;'|y-inaccessible to men. Men and women, therefore, learn io inflictpain, both psychological and physical, on women.Rape is v is the ultimate objectlfication of women: >" Altnough the editorial "Rape: A Vicious Circle," (Daily pursue mutually exclusive goals. A man who isfrustrated in his an expression of woman-hatred. .$6p Cultural role* -m: .(Texan, March 8) attempted to deal sympathetically with rape attempts to possess a woman and thereby validate his If one juxtaposes the common misconceptions about rape^ The cultural stereotype which designates wotnenas passive .. ..as a "woman's problem," it lacked an analysis of rape as a masculinity may eventually feel hostility for the source of his* (that women unconsciously want rape and that men rape beings isparticularly perniciousduring arape trial.The routine phenomenon inherent in a sexist society. Such an analysis is frustration, women. This hostility, coupled with the learned women to release pent-up sexual desire) with*the facts about investigation of a woman's sexual history, used to "prove" crucial to a clear understanding of the crime. masculitie aggressiveness, finds expression in rape. ft«„ rape (that it is primarily a violent and jsecondarily a sexual consent in a rape case, reveals the legal attitude towards „ The socialization of both male and female sex roles sets the Real Motivation crime) it becomes evident that thereexists in this culture an freedom of choice for women. A.woman who deviates from ­stage for rape to occur. It is fairly obvious that aggression, ' One popular misconception about rape is that It is primarily^ unbreakable link between what is considered "normal male prescribed norms by living with a^man or by havinga numberof7 r ^•especially with respect to sexual achievement, is the sine qua motivated by a need for sexual release. The rapist is frequently sexuality" and aggression against women. " sexual affairs can expect no justice if she is rapeg.. Having non of masculinity in our culture. For a woman to be worth viewed as a person virhosedesire forsex isso urgent as tocause 3This socially sanctioned bond between sex and violence leads' violated the social law which deems every woman some man'i 'having she must be obtained by the man throuj^i some effort. him to resort to force to obtain gratification. According to to the confusion on thepaHof lawyers, policemen and juries as property, she becomes, in the eyes of the law, any man's: Femininity, on the other hand, involves the suppression of a sociologist Menachem Amir, however, this emphasis on sex is to whether or not a rape victim's complaint can be believed. A property. What is really on trial in a rape case is a womanJfM.­ : woman's own sexuality and the acceptance of the role of sexual the wrong,one. He found that rapists differ from nonrapists not woman .may be bruised and disheveled when she goes to the right to control h6r own sexuality. , ^ object. Women learn to play hard to get in Order to gain status in the magnitude of their sexual appetite but rather in their police, but her credibility is still questioned. Because our > While rape crisis centers and self-defense classes are as desirable objects. If these conditions are extended to the proclivity for expressing violenceand rage. society tacitly accepts the idea that sex and aggression are necessary to help woman deal with the problem of rape, it must; extreme, the ultra-masculine itian would be one who.is In view of the high incidence of violence accompanying rape related, a jury will readily believe that a woman consented to" be remembered that they are still coping mechanisms. Rape is' unhindered by any obstacle in the quest for his woman, and the (not to mention the frequency with which rape is followed by or even provoked what turned out to be a brutal sexual a symptom of the disease of sexism in our society, ultra-feminine woman would be one who is completely murder) it is clear that rapists are motivated by a need to encounter. Rape is the logical extension of the male sex role; it Susan Raleigh is a student in psychology, J? ^ »s» more firingline $ * 1-V­ A machine is a To the editor: desire, the vain hope of status quo as it is determined j students^ the organization Union Junior Ballroom; , :%hjch will be meeting at the examine the makeup of the invited to attend. UIn the recent election there modifying "University by the one-and-only almighty invited my friend to payan $18 My friend remarked, "It's LBJ School April 1 and 2. commission. $ t Hal Womack., ' has been some bickering priorities" to include student "machine." membership fee that could be great to be honored, but why Commission members include All interested people are First year law student about the presence of priorities. * " . Ef fecti ve po1itica1 won back in a $3,000 do they have to come on like a Gerald FOrd, Henry "machines" on campus." organization is beyond fellowship or in a $100 prize to mail-order record club? I've K issi nger, T reasur y DOONESBURV Look elsewhere to find a possibility on this carrtpus, as each of four runner-ups. seen better offers on the back^ Secretary George Schultz and Not the usual machines, powerful organization, though far as coordination of the If $18 -seems a little steep, of a box of Kellogg's Rice CBS Chairman William Paley. SORRY, M IMS "60QP such as bulldozers, chain not exactly a politically lower ranks is concerned. One note "this includes your Krispies." , UT reception group,' ROLAND, WH£& RAVE 60/N6 TO FILE t STUFf"?f saws, cranes or cement The y 24 Singing voice discourse agency Unit.) half block from campus on 24th Street). 29 Possessive ' 25 Form 37 Beef animal 44 Opening pronoun 27 Metal strands 39 Withered • •47 Preposition When you arrive, hop an elevator to the 11th floor and take 30 Ignited 31 Nahoor 1 1 3 _ 4 ' 5 6 7 9 10 11 a look around. We think you'll like what you find, but if you don't COMEDOWN FROM THERE sheep you can always streak, hitch, bicycle, walk or mosey f^ack to A6HT NOW. ANP LET'S 32 Parent (col-12 13 .—, //// •h: J loq.)|R <«*-campus. ' ' • 33 Passengers 15 16 Tf 18 34 Cease M Think it over. Because when you compare our environment 35 Landedpro­19 20 with others, particularly in terms of cost, we think you'll stay perties 37 Coast 21 22 23 24 25 us. •' 38 Strikes 39 Heavenly 26 27 28 The Castilian . . . we dare you to compare. body 40 Cubic meter 29 30 31 ill 42 Abounding 45 Goal sr 34 32 MARGE, HAS ANKDNE EVER 46 Retail es­ "TOLD WD THAT WHEN WRE tablishment 33 36 37 MAP, W LOOK JU5T LIKg 48 Period of M time 49 Golf mound 50 Tall struc­ PILLIE JEAN KINS ? 38 39 40 41 42 44 ture 51 Weaken 4S 4«147 48 1 49 5T" 5 nilstr. 1t nlte Friday, March 15, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page I§g2fe, Future Uncertain i Leaks' Surgery Tech To Play Weekend m ^ m ' -1 ' e . v. ®S|' By BILL TROTT hitting. Latejy it's been especially frustrating and Wortham (#0) wilHfart thf Texan Staff Writer pathetic. " failed to get a,tuUn nine at.-, 3 p.m. Friday game with 91 ir^iln{u|yMLUBBOCK -Texas V,!"That may seem like bats. -• Burley (5-0) and Gideon (6-0)Baseball Coach Cliff stretching the point," said MORELAND is still Kitting scheduled to start Saturday's Surgery on Roosevelt Leaks' right knee was termed a Gustafson is finally getting Gustafson, whose team still is over .400 but like some of the ^pubteheader. Thursday, but it is still unlikely that Texas' All-America . what he expected out of his hitting an impressive .325, other Texashitters, has been k? Tech, 3-9 for the season and fullback will play next fall. -->'. K $$£ % pitching staff, but now the "but against Texqs Lutheran slumping badly. '1-2 after. facing TCU in There was speculation, however, that Leaks may be m slumping Longhornhittersare (a Tuesday doubleheader) Catcher Rick Bradley has conference play, will counter shirted and use up his final season of eligibility in 1975. ^ X his main concern.. • — their starters just handcuffed hit only-i087 for the last seven with John Davidson on 5££ -"It looks like that is pretty well itfor 1974," said Head Coach ;; A poeerful hitting attack us." A games and center-fielder , Friday, Steve Brock and all-Darrell Royal. "We have received no encouragement fromour-w carried the LOnghor.ns David Reeves' batting ;SWC pick Randy Prince, who surgeonJfor this .1411. We are hopeful he can rehabilitate and be The Texas-Texas Tech through the first three weeks average has Jbfeen dropping lost only to Texas last year. ready for 1975." . ' 'V,-" • :M , v| baseball games will be of the season while Gustafson off, too. "WE'RE A real young team Leaks suffered ligament fears during a Wednesiiay'aTref^n broadcast live at 3 p.m. , •. :. jra-isp. watched the Texas pitchers just oldtime and we've been doing a lot of 'spring training workout. Defensive back Sammy Mason hit him * •> k «/ Friday aqd at 1 p.m. Saturday "It's an struggle and fall short of their on KOKE-AM (1370). slump,'' Gustafson explained, moving around," said Tech low, and at the same time another player hit him high. Films S^&* "t? potential. "and everybody's in it Coach Cal Segrest, explaining show that Leaks' knee was in theair, not planted on the ground. BUT NOW, with its third ^ Things were worse in last together. •., " the Raiders' problems. TEAM PHYSICIAN Dr. Paul Trickett operated on the knee $$$ conference series of the weekend's series with Rice in "Hitters are usually hot for ."We've had inconsistent Thursday. "It was a good repair," Trickett said. "It was a season coming up this which Texas suffered its only a whilev and it's unusual for hitting and fielding and complete knee tear. The ligaments werecompletely separated weekend with Texas Tech, defeat of the season. The them to all get hot-at once," haven't had a realset ballclub and repaired with a transplant operation. ­Texas will rely on the much Longhorns, 21-1 for the year he said, "and it looks like and it's affected us but I think "We feel good about the repair and have high hopes he will improved pitching and' hope and 5-1' in conference everybody just Pooled off at we're picking up each week have a good knee," Trickett continued. "But it will take some ! that its hitters will, come collected only 15 hits in the opce.',' Meanwhile, Gustafson and lime forrehabintationaMwearenofggjpcting hinrtoplay this SfiC' •-­ around. three games against one of the * — --. —Taxan Staff Photo Gustafson hopes to get good the Longhorns are waiting out fall. > ^-;V "y.r.'ivf " i -. ­t£C'> "We're pretty pleased with better pitching staffs in the performances from pitchers the slump. Baseball Coach Cliff Gustafson Leaks, whobroke the* single-season and single-game -Ns*' the way our; pitchers have Southwest Conference. Richard Wortham, Rick SouthwestConference rushing recordsl^st fall, finished third in been, throwing in the last Third baseman Keith Burley and Jim Gideon in the 1973 Heisman Trophy balloting. seven or eight games," Moreland, who was hitting Lubbock this weekend -- "I really feel sorry for Roosevelt," Royal said. "If our team W: Gustafson said, "but werre over .600 a couple of weeks should the Texas hitters still could have done well, he would have had an excellent run at the STILLWATER, Gkla.-The * very concerned with the ago. found the trip to Houston be cold. '; *V The Cowboys beat Texas by 37 tournament we play good Heisman Trophy. He is a rare talent. There is not a team in (ft ' f i-rst annual Cowboy &&*":' strokes at the border, and that while we're qualifying and America which can afford to lose his ability." ; , i BP Invitational Golf Tournament was on a neutral course. (E^ then we blow it when we get LEAKS WILL be eligible for the pro football draft next yeSr, DO YOU OWN A BOOTS will open here Friday,withihe " North Texas State and there," Tim sophomore and he could conceivably pass up his final year of eligibility for Longhorns attempting to VOLKSWAGEN -MGB Southern Methodist Wilson said. the Longhorns and join the pros. " outplay three teams that beat University took the Longhorns &?-* TOYOTA -DATSUN? Warren Aune, Johnny Dill, If Leaks does not play next year, Texas' chancesof winning a them two weeks ago at the by 19 and 7 strokes, Scott Hanie, Jim Mason and seventh straightSWC title will be creatlvreduced. The5-11,220­ Boeder Olympics in Laredo, . —-„..3a game, anOne of those teams, and they also will be at 1 y AMM -PORTCAR CLINIC week. Pfaff is still having his faking ability is also invaluable. State, be by Oklahoma will Stillwater. back trouble and did not Leaks' replacement probably will be sophomore-to-be Pat GILBERT'S AUTOMOTIVE INC. playing oji its home course.. Dunham Texas had problems at the attempt to qualify. Kennedy, a5-11,190-pound fullback who playedsparingly for the ''u,--, Tl v It the place to have it Kastingor "Oklahoma State's got a border; The putting was off The Longhorns also will varsity as a freshman last year. _ ^ . pretty good team. They're Raictile and senior Tony Pfaff have to contend with the Leaks' absence also will put a great deal of'pressure oil Skrvimf or R(pa(r«l. enough competition by withdrew with back trouble in University of Oklahoma, incoming freshman-prospect Earl Campbell; a fullback- wilderness/whitewater supply themselves,'.' Golf Coach the last round. Unfortunately, Drake and five other schools halfback from Tyler who was the most sought-after recruit in 477-6797 1621 East 6th 5440 burnet road George Hannon said. Longhorns have Texas this year. the had in the tournament. HANNON HAS good reason problems at every, for thinking that Oklahoma tournament this year. State is enough competition. "IT SEEMS like every at JACKSONVILLE, Fla. ones in the 156-man field able_ British Open dhampion Tom Shoe Shop aSALE* (AP) -John Mahaffey, just to break 70 on the Deerwood Weiskopf matched par 72. back from an illhess-ehTorced country„ Club course^^^-LeeC par c Trevino went to 40 on We make and SHEEP SKIN absence, and big Labron lakespotted, par-72,7,08^jeard the'|front nine and struggled repair boots Harris matched wind-blown layout that played even logger home with a 75, threeover par RUGS 68s and tied for the first round because of the chiRy and seven strokes back. He •hoes belts Many lead Thursday in the $150,000 temperatures and a tricky," must improve Friday if he is Beautiful Colors to survive the cut for the final *500 $750 Greater Jacksonville Open gusty, swirling wind. leather Golf Tournament. Arnold Palmer headed a two rounds Saturday and ALLOY STEM & HANDLE BARS •IEATHER SALE * They shared a one-stroke group at 70, just two strokes Sunday. FULLY LUGGED FRAME FOB STRENGTH , goods Varioui kindv colon -75* per ft. a> & TOOLKIT advantage over longshol Steve off the pace. Also at that _.Mahaffey, a baby-faced 25­ t> >, WT: 27 IN UNKAMERICMQ Spray and big Leonard figure wer'e Masters year-old who won the Sahara a three Capitol Saddlery Thompson, winner champion Tommy Aaron, Invitational and more than weeks ago in Fort Lauderdale, Hubert Green, DeWitt $100,000 last season, has TUBULAR TIRES 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 Fla., each with 69. Weaver, South African Bobby missed the last two ALTENBURGER ALLOY BRAKES WITH QUICK RELEASE Cole and Nate Starks. tournaments because of a AIR PUMP 5 "Considering the mild case of the flu. conditions, it wasn't a bad Mahaffey used some D & M Volkswagen Repair round — but it could have been brilliant sand play to take his a lot better," the 44-year-old share of the top spot. He was Palmer said. in bunkers on fourholes — and Australian Bruce Crampton played those holes one ilrider was in a large group at 71 and par— SPECIALS ALIGNMENT MAJOR ENGINE TUNE " —^ BRAKES , Align Front End Replace Brake Shoes on All-Balance Front Tires *18.do ALLOY RIMS 4-Wheels. Turn Drums and Parts and Lab«r Repack Wheel Bearings '12.50 WARRANTY STEEL RAT TRAP Align Rear End lir 6 months • 6000 miles Parts WIDE-FLANGE ALLOY HUBS WITH >< ," QUICK RELEASE '29.95 and Labor SIMPLEX -PRESTIGE PEDALS WITH REFLECTORS Balance Rear Tires DERAILLEUR Disc Brakes EXTRA Type IV's and 1972 *12.50 Factory Trained Mechanics suggested list our regular price CLOSEOUT MASTERCHARGE BANKAMERICARDSALE PRICE 836-4480 OPEN MONDAY • SATURDAY 7 a.m.t0 6p.m. ' ... " 611-C West Powell Lane TRAK $139" *10900 Belgium Made in the John J. 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Scotch Jth W."T W ' BALLANTINES •6froof.Scotch Whhky t.. ,.,15,69 PASSPORT / BIKE MfrMfScMchWhbliy QUART 5.19 HARVEYS COME BY OUR NEWLY REMODELED 9jWi CMC (4 GAL. 8.99 S/E 1905 E. RIVERSIDE DR. SHOP • OILBEYS GIN -,, ...fi 90 |•orrarfoh,^.,..... Vl 6Al£<:«*4T rF' ; Sa&atisis!% gal 12.99 imasM^pAGNE -h159; PABST CANS *:0/T16l5 W. 29th • 3515 HYRIDGE * CK^4.}9 if :hutz CANS "5 ^...:;casT4.99 S8K :MWX y'xt :as '• " ' :#ALEIGH, N.C. (AP)~Bill Knight scored 34 points, 2% MK. .TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Campy ftussell, a brilliant them in the second half, leading Pittsburgh past TULSA (AP) — Big Eight champion Kansas, trailing Junior, poured in 36 points Thursday night, helping 12th- TUCSON, Arte. (APf-All-America Bill Walton's five Furman 81-78 Thursday night in an opening semifinal for much of the game, rallied |n thefinal four minutes to tanked Michigan up$et third-ranked Notre Dame 77-68 in points in the third overtime period keptalive the hopes of game of the NCAA Eastern Regional basketball edge upstart independent Creighton 55-54 in the first 1 ~ r f San Francisco! -" intermission, 38-34. ­only 20 seconds left, but lost possession when Ted John Shumate, staged 3 remarkable rally in the final six • „ . • „ v -- Down 17 points at one time, the Flyers frtiitt Daytiifi A four-point play broke a tie at 72-72 with 3:09 to play minutes of the first half that chopped Michigan's margin was caUcd for an offensive foul, ^rallied behind the sharpshooting«f Mike Sylvester andand gav Pitt the winning momentumt^Kv* 'y&> at intermission to 34-29.* Kansas held onto the ball for the remaining seconds, 1Don Smith ta pull even 80-30 at the end of the regulation —1 1 1 aSB Mfflg -M mm--MMm-m*. : I- •(!Z < tfx-f Inthe East w ••MB-In the Mideast f>, In the Midwest #!lli• •• In the West im- RALEIGH, ft.C. (AP) — North Carolina State All- America David Thompson scored 40 points to lead the »' TUSCALOOSA, Ala''.'?:\^AB^^N^MarqaetUi: downed f , TULSA (UPI) — Greg McDougald hit a layup with 28 time and the score was knotted 88-88 and„$}48at the ^nd®'5 / Vanderbilt 69-61 in the National Collegiate Athletic S seconds left Thursday night to clinch an upset victory by If of the first two overtime periods. nation's top-ranked basketball team to a 92-78 victory . Associatjon's Mideast Regional basketball tournament. .Oral Roberts over Missouri Valley Conferencechampion, V-The third extra five minutes eqUailla an ftCAiover fifth-rated Providence Thursday night and gain the ^Louisville 06-93, to set up a NCAA Midwest regional tittle> tournament record and by that time both UCLA foiwgfinals of the NCAA Eastern Regional tournament. . Marquette, ranked eighth, never trailed the sixth-1"game against Kansas: J . £ ^^. it . « n 1 a. North Carolina State, 27-1', has won 25 in a row since .vv-t.v,. . _ x. • "• v *+ Keith Wilkes and Dave Meyers had fouled out. franked Commodores, althoughthe Warriorsdid blow a 12losing to defending champion UCLA and has taken 27 straight on its home court in Raleigh. point lead, only to pull away for a comfortable victory in' _J>y U with five minutes remaining in the first half, but 6-3U ^sw^ns^utJihe.Bruins into the tad to s^y^with aahoolC£Xv _the final five minutes^ if ^ "•?, y ^ £ «•> & £ .guard Sam McCantsstole the ball six times in that stretch ­ Thompson, a 6-4 junior, saved Stateon a night when the ^ h shot as the third overtime opened. j ' { : jt » ""a it • and helped his club knot the score at the intermission,51-1 Wolfpack as a team hit only 38.6 percent of itsshots from Dayton, coming to McKale Center with 20-7 record^*" - Vanderbilt, which had thrived on comeback victories % 51. ..... • .. J the field. He scored 24 points in the first half to put his never gave up even though they were rated 20th against;11 all year, appeared to have another in the making when = s McCantS; began hitting tagain in the second half and ; team ahead of 44-39 at the intermission and added 16 in the Bruins who were ranked No. 2 in the Associated Pres^|£"i'4"» Joe Ford sank a 10-foot jumper in the lane to lift the : ., finished with 30 points while A1 Boswell contributed 23 • the last half! -> v\ = - - Commodores inttf a 51-51 tie. After an* exchange of ~and Anthony Roberts 14. poll. #4 Over-all, he hit 16 of 29 shots from the fidCeight of 10 Sylvester finished with 36 Is"the high point rrtari^while baskets, Marquette went in front to stay at 55-53 on a 25- mm free throws and grabbed 10 rebounds. Alan Murphy lecl aH Cardinal scorers with 26 points and •; Walton scored 27 and hauled down 19 rebounds. Meyers":%^'1 ? footer by reserve Ed Daniels with 4:57 left in the game. Westley Cox scored 22, 12 of them free throws. > . had 28 points when he fouled out. t Sports Shorts BOTTLE SHOPS & SPARTAN LIQUORS! Auttin't leading Win* A SpMf's APTeam HACKG&Tf »3S*itonaiuBr •12th & Red River 8311 Research 5501 Airport Blvd. %. NEW YORK (AP) -The at UCLA in the 1960s, was a the Texas team will b"6 82-70, in the Collegiateringleader of. the."Walton runaway choice for the third competing including national Commissioners basketball SFKIA1S(SCHWARTZ KATZ Gang" and his chief straight year by the nation's powerhouse Odessa Junior tournament Thursday night. \S W accomplice are among those Delightful QermanWNta Wine sports wri t er s a nd College. Williams scored 27 points as named to the 1974 Associated broadcasters. ' 1.99 college basketball player Barnes, the best major 1 Speciall since Lew Alcindor was king college rebounder in the f4<(4t£»t4. "Ht4V€AC nation with a 19 per game * The Basics,. ANDRE Rain Delays average, was an Hohorable CASTIL RUBUON s4**tA€* Chopped Sandwich .45 Mention in 1973. It's a first' T' JLOi Tennis Match time for Shumate, Notre mmmm mm 1J-1 ^0IW LAMBRUSCO ~ff Sandwich .59 lust ask at Riuben's • The Texas tennis team's Dame's superior center. LOOK WHAT TECATE for "REUBEN'S CASTLE" match " with SMU Thursday • • • •BlPVV Beef Sandwich .9? B # # 5th Pinot Noir, Pink from M«xico was postponed because of The University will host the Sausage Plate 1.45 Chablis, Soutern«, Chablis 6 cant inclement weather. The Texas Collegiate Gymnastics 5423 STRAWBERRY WINE CAMERON by LOPEZ match is rescheduled for 2 Championships Saturday in All You Should lot 2.99 5th 79' l:N 1.90 ROAD . p.m. Friday at Penick Courts. Gregory Gym annex with 5th SANGRIA Sol do MAJORCA In case of rain the match will preliminaries beginning at 11 453-7866 MiidbpiuiPfin RED MOUNTAIN Jug Winis 1.69 188! APPLE WINE Boono's Farm PABST BOCK be played in Bellmont Hall at a.m. finals at 8 p.m. FREE DRINK STUDENT ID Burgundy, Rose, diablis, PinkChablis ..1^ GAL. WILD MOUNTAIN Wim WILL BUY: 9:30 a.m. Seven other teams beside? 6fir's 1.33 * f -k-k ^CJfe can U Unmade Lone STflfl anc. ' VT5f<*" J£i— < —37,, ..y/a"..1: -•J ^ m *mm% That's why you can be certain that the beer you find behind a Lone Star label is as fine a beeras is # t tbrewed in the world. Because Lone Star has always paid the price for the best of everything it takes to make a truly great premium quality beer We're | fcloing it now. We always will.: -\K;i Jj bu see, you folks; of the^Big Country^are thel proudest people on earth. And Lone Star is " baer. You ju,st wouldn't haveit any Qth§^a -•1 = J/would we, S*. V jt. „ < , 1--. *.V 7S ^ "Amiri^'iFllest Beer 'I ' v Mm 'f ». p XftM Star Bur Co. of Austin -BgJ yrm-y&ir yffasaBBi EMTra Wji: * Jf •Friday, March 15, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 UT Women To By CHRIS BARBEE Texas Lutheran College of the winners bradcet uri playTena Staff Writer Seguin and Trinity University Baylor. The Teus wonen't of San Antonio will get the If the Horns lose to St. bukefbtll (Mm «9I toy to tournament under way at 9 Mary's, they will fall into the keep its season alive this aam. Fridays TLC enters the losers bracket and play at 6 weekend as it enters the tournament with a £-0 season p.m. Friday.District IV basketball record. Trinity, which has A consolation game will be tournament directed tgp tbe played 17 gamcs_ttUs_yeai^_ playedatl:3Qp.m. Saturday.Texas Association for enters the contest with a 7-10 The first and second placeIntercollegiate Athletics for record. teams will advance to the w Women (TAIAW). The Longhoros will match TAIAW State Basketball III „ All tournament games will their skills against St Mary's Tournament at Tarleton State be played on the main floor of at10:90 Friday. Texashas a®-University in Stephenville,Gregory Gym: The first .9 season record, and St. March S9 and 30. women's game played on the Mary's has a M record. Several teams participatingmain floor was Jan. 30, when Southwest Texas State will in the tournament have Texas played Southwest play the winner of the TLC-already played each other this Texas State University. Trinity game at 1:30 p.m. This weekend's tournament Friday. SWT has a 14-4 SWT defeated Texas three will be the first district record, while Baylor is 16-4. times, 56-36, 52-32 and 63-35 tournament for women ever The tournament champion and also has beaten Trinityplayed in Gregory. Another will be determined by double twice, 61-30 and 52-39. first for women's games at elimination. Trophies will be Baylor beat Trinity twice, services which will be places. . TLC defeated Trinity twice available during the SHOULD THE Longhoros this season, 50-28 and 66-21. tournament. Admission is win the opener with St. St Mary's has lost to TLC, M*ry>s> tbeywi11 *dv>nceto 44-37 and to Trinity, 41-35. RODNEY PAGE, coach of the Texas team, said Baylor ^I YOURCAS! and SWT are probably the two strongest teams in the tournament In its first game wilk of the season, Baylor defeated Texas A&M, 75-94. Last week Protertor" the Aggies downed Texas, 52­Ok. 39.St»p» illegal Page said his team will use tiptoning, (its any cor, and is ilwd* «f ••••••!•••••••••••• rust pint liwptud •, The largest ' • .. Selection of • fsJsr: To: !RECORDERS: NAME KiIINR (HipMi owl • la Taxes . • cKtck w UMiwy AMIM BmaUn I J frwn$2.25«P • R. F. loKnwn ADDRESS 1 1601 9*yol . OrMt No. 5 See US for I • Recordefs 4 OTY m\ Austin, T«m 71741 • Recorder Music • AmifarM^Se 1624 Lavaca "CB" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN STREAKERS Of America MEDAL m vtAmm sous am Mtomt OrfrRK Hw.sr1 BSONNCnil r«fl mo, M.MmAm VWSOAN Your Jeweler Can Engrave On stirMlrin Back Time. Piece end Distance. A Lasting Memento Of The Springot 1974 © QUALITY SERVICE ® UMKMAIt OaiVHtt YOUR AUTHORIZED DOWNTOWN M Ssdl Qwdi sr Mmwv Ot4*t Is gVQIKSVVAGEN DEALER 4^o-Q]>. ,11 HAMILTON •BHH CORNER 5TH & I AMAR H •m INI, Wiriass, OUs. 7NH Check ope Call 478-3471 Group Flights Before youmake plans togo to VIA AMERICAN AND ICELANDIC JETS Europe, don'tforget your Travelers' May 19-August 19 (93days). Oieck. That isthe typeof Travelers' May 2S-July 25 (62days). Q»ck that Merit Travel canprovide May 2B-July 11(45 days). for you—a thorough checklistof everything you needtoknow before May31-August21(83days). embarking for Europe. Sinceour staff Dallas to Luxem-flft has been toEurope almostasmany bourg to Dallas vO/O.UU $ timesas Henry Kissinger, theyknow VIA DELTA AND ICELANDIC JETS all the ins-and-outsof European May 19-August 19(93days). . travel and will helpyou plan your May 25-July25(62days). trip. Sobefore you travel toEurope this year, first check with Merit Travel. May 29-August 15 (75days)< May 30-August20(83days). Here's howto get there. Houston to Luxem-AMA -n bourg to Houston ygoZ,// Charter Flight We cen also help you with VIA CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS Student Rail Passes -EurailpassesMay SMkJuly 11. Dallas to Brussels— Eurailguide * Complete Selectionof MapsParis toDallas Auto Rental and Purchases • VW Adventures Charter Right exclusivelyfor Uni­Lists of Hostels-Foreign Study Programs versity of Texas students, faculty, Travel Insurance and staff and theirimmediate fami­Please inquire about our KLM 747 Group lies. Price basedon a proratashare Space. of the total chartercost (183seals). The flight isaboard Capital Inter­Merit Travel national Airways, an American 2200 Guadalupe Certified SupplementalAir Carrier P.O~Bo%7040 whoae demonstrateddependability ~ has enabledit to Austin, Texas78712 be aU.S. Govern­To getto Eurgpe, simply crossthe ment contractor. street AD Bights aHeredta with U.T.Student Government Tears. . Page 8 15, 1974.TOE DAILY TEXAN ' sSss£v ••• 'fv'•'u'i.' a sone press defense against Thorne St. Mary's and then drop into Ms. HiU leads Texas' a regular zone if necessary; scoring with 156 points this Page has not seen St. Mary's season, followed by Ms. Egger play this year, and he doesn't with 111. Ms. Turnbough leads know anything about them the team in rebounds with 90, other than that they have not while Ms. Thorne has 61 and played many games. _ _Ms. Trice, 70. STARTING FOR Texas Paula Muecke, a 5-9 Junior Friday will be 5-5 freshman forward who is not a starter, guard Cindy Hill, 5^7 has given the Horns a lot of sophomore guard Rita Egger, strength off the bench. 5-6 junior forward Treva Playing as a substitute^ Ms. Trice, 5-10 sophomore center Muecke has scored 81 polpts Debbie Turnbough and 5-10 and has gathered 56 rebounds sophomore forward Jody this season, ; Astros,Rangers Lose WINTER HAVEN, Fla. hit and walking two batters. (UPI) — Carlton Fisk clubbed • • • two home runs, one ai POMPANO BEACH (AP) towering blast which would Jim. Palmer hurled four scoreless innings and Don lightpole not gotten in the Baylor went three-for-three to way, and the Boston Red Sox pace an 18-hit' Baltimore ran their Grapefruit League attack as the Orioles whipped winning streak to four games the Texas Rangers, 12-3,by beating the Houston Astros Thursday afternoon;8-2 Thursday. Palmer allowed only three hits while walking two, Reggie Cleveland, picked up striking out three and hitting by Boston from the St. Louis one batter. Rookie Paul Mitchell blanked the Rangers Cardinals in the offseason, for two more innings before was sharp' in' a five inning Wayne Garland coughed up a run in the seventh and two in outing, yielding just an infield . the ninths --4--*=•-r •••••••••••'••••••a* A HAIR-GUT 4 FROM THE A TYPING SERVICE HAIRCUT specializing in STORE —id iHWllllNt Mow hfeh ISA —term papers and rapwts Prompt, Professional TO THE Service SOUL 453.7577 , Pick-up Service Available • •••••••••••••••••a* Photographic -Backpacking Trip Copper Canyon, March 28 -April 7 Fee: *99.00 Leader: Larry G. Humphreys AUSTIN NATURAL SCIENCE CENTER 472-4523 WANT TO TALK TO YOUR RADIO? DIAL 471-4711 HEAR FOR GENERATIONS TO COME THIS SUNDAY NIGHT AT 6:00 P.M. THE FIRST HOUR IS A PANEL DISCUSSION ON REVISING THE TEXAS CONSTITUTION. THE SECOND HOUR IS ALL YOURS. -OUR PANEL: JOHN HENRY FAULK ARMANDO GUTIERREZ W. PAGE KEETON JANICE C. MAY EMMETTE S. REDFORD ALAN SAGER MODERATOR RICHARD GOODMAN SUNDAY 6:00 P.M. Sri -* \ j W»ue RAUIU * TMB UIMIvensiTY ff OF flXAS AT AUSTIN -• •• PROOUCED UNDER A GRANT FROM THE TEXAS COMMITTEE MMIANITIE# AND THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES. _ ilKi olegiewicz To Get Mmm w sip§ SW' IS at Rice ,,, Mm? By HERB HOLLAND hasn't been working the sprinterson speed^F iV* Texan Staff Writer drills much this year. -— HOUSTON — Junior weightman Bishop —"I seldom take-a stopwatch out tofyrf Dolegiewicz will be in Montreal Friday practice with me," hesaid. "If you have af ;; night to do some '"PR" 'work before stopwatch in your hand, then the athletes^ joining the rest of the Texas track team will try to beat it every time. Some for aquadrangular meet at RiceSaturday, coaches can't go out there without one. sis "When we talk about 'PR,' that means "I don't believe you can develop speeds personal record," rDolegiewicz said by spading," Price said. "You develop"' Thursday. "And the most I can hope to do speed by strength." is set a new personal record." Besides Rice, the host school,Texas will;! Dolegiewicz will compete for his native face Houston and Lamar Saturday, a Canada in an indoor meet with France. welcome break from Baylor, which beat The man to beatas faras Dolegiewicz is the Horns last weekend in Denton. concerned is Frenchshotputter Yves "Baylor's ahead of us right now, but I-:: Brouzet, who tnrows ''somewhere don't know what kind of conditioning between 66 and 67 feet." they're doing," Pfice said. "They have; Dolegiewicz set a University record in some quality people who tend to run well. "Tim Son TiadTpheWranal tnple last," place third in the NCAA Indoor week," Price said of the Baylor sprinter. " Championship meet last weekend in "Baylor could possibly have the best Detroit. team in the.history of the school," Price . Dolegiewicz will compete Friday night said. • and immediately board a plane for But things should be much easier,for the Houston so he doesn't miss Saturday's Horns against Rice, UH and Lamar than meet against Baylor. Texas once again will be "I'il have to fly all night," he said. "I'll at full strength, personnel-wise, even tired after no be pretty a night with though sprinters Overton Spence, Marvin sleep." Nash and David McKee are recovering But Dolegiewicz won't be the only tired from injuries suffered last week. member of the Texas track team. Price also said that quartenniler Billy Jackson will be entered for the first time "We've had some real good working in the 440-yard intermediate hurdles. days this week," Te&as Track Coach "It should be a good track meet," Price Cleburne Price said Thursday. "But we'll said. "There will be some good individuals still be a little tired this weekend.­ in each event. "But this is the time of year to be "But when points are totaled, we'll tired," Price said. win," Price said. "I don't want to sound Prices, keeping with his philosophy of egotistical, but I don't want to sound taking the track season slow and steady, ridiculous either." ' ti IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Swimmers at Competing IriNaiionali Four members of the Texas • 2 bedroom, 1V4 bath • plenty of parking women's swim team will • large enough for a • city transit to campus compete Friday and Saturday study room • 2 swimming pools at Penn State University in • furnished • 24 hour maintenance'. • all bills paid the NCAA women's only FOR MORE INFORMATION swimming championships. CALL: The four attending the meet $175.00/mo. 444-7555 are Carolyn Jackson, Mary Thornhill, Nancy Robertson IdtttAVACA m-om and Beery Boggs. The women will enter four VW relay events and tour individual events which will all feature Ms. Boggs. The eight events are: the itt-lj'Attkesiorie/ 200-yard medley relay, the 400-yard medley relay, the '^ St»r< 200-yard free relay, the 400­yard free relay, the 100-yard individual medley, the 100­yard breast stroke, the 50­yard breast stroke and the 50­yard backstroke. T We're Not REDNECK"! J Barbers jJ MEDICAL ARTS j Studtman's BARBERSHOP J j 2915 Red River 477-0691 j Photo Service 222 W; 19th & 5324 Cameron Rd. RESUME' & IDENTIFICATION TYPE PICTURES 1-Day j i '• Quick, Reliable Service &z*l 3*6— ' £>UJ #*K £ 54*<4* ? £ 0*e*Pi, if tje If 6e W*'J uxmf fj ukt4if a+vJ tie&f /4> fa cjuircA. A ttecdspape/-^ i'f j u>€ •h -faff . //* yau, tru*i /H. -Hue f*r*r -flu* week, just put -pus ' ***&^ rfc* -traces * v*' • UNIVERSITY BAPTIST CHURCH .22nd k Guadalupt SUNDAY SCHEDULE 9:30 am. Bible Study . 11:00 am. Wor«hlp 6: OO pm. -Student Sjiippeo* ' 7:00 pm, Student Worship n. ww 4,­ - W:S «.Ki§ OF THE WEEK 30% PIONEER SX-727 1 AUDICO A12V TOSHIBA SR40E do ® •• §im w fe-x- M selectivity misensitivity and the wtk versatifity ef units casting muck mora Sherry Coombes (I), a art years with Hie SX-727. The 727 Sapeth detaeatiea at anv vehmw iNtifriftfl cwwii (irrnifi mnns graduate assistant at th« features greator than 40 Watts from Metitevanl hathtreeaa or Inat aftre-lew tip mass ler iraater taear RMS/channal at aay froqaaacy, IJw rew.led ZeppeHa. This M|h eaerty. freaueacy response, netkeakly less School of Com­ FM sensitivityaad M excellent cap­Mge etficleMy meaiter hem Adttce , distertien, loafer styWs We munication'* Disorder ture rorte el 2.8 A. This highly var-features M|h templiaiKe 12" woofer, redveed record wear; Dynamically and Cl'uiic, performs an eetlle receiver will fumHan es the mylar deae iridranie 4 tweeter sankaHy matched tenearm aNmtiiates audiomotric Krooning on beart ef this fina system. sfi sprmrf weR Aspersed temd. Ueeer resonance, rtwwkio and faadhack cans*| k.-.-fraquemy respense is aa eutstaaOm ad by cartrid|i and taaiarm mis- University student Cherry An array ,ef. easy te use features fias 32 la S2.00B Hz. Fuse pretettiea aad match. teMrlva allmhmtes nrndda. Greor. cMMiecHeas ler 3 ipeekers, tonh level caatrels are, of teurse, iatluM. Taaeann picks «p, returns and skats tekltt, tapedecki, mikes. Exthislve lifetime.Jefect warranty iasuras yew aff mater. Hlfk Wvel output eUmiaatos (all-safe pretettt year speakers. satisfaction a*4 peace ef mhd. -IWLMWF , SYSTEM RETAIL PACKAGEPRICE YOU SAVE L00 By BILL DAWSON Remember the hearing test given in elementary school test available anywhere, from hearing sensitivity, to finding!' when you sat with earphones firmly in place and listened the locus of a lesion in the auditory system," he continued.­ intently for the different tones? The clinic facilities include an array of sophisticated The; University Speech and Hearing Clinic offers free equipment. Double-walled, double rooms for the various -THE MIDDLE OF THE WEEK 33™ hearing tests to Students* but the tests given there go far tests have the clinician seated in one room and the patient in bilyond anything the school nurse ever administered. the other. Single testing rooms, also are used. < TOSHIBA SA400 PIONEER PROJECT 60 * mm The clinic, in (Communication Building A* 2.200, giVes DUAt 1216 |P1 Many patients are referred tothe clinic by their physicians ' hearing tests on a first-come, first-served basis, a$ part of for tests. "Hereyou get everything — the complete gamut of complete diagnostic and rehabilitation services in speech diagnostic tests, if you are recommended for them, because pathology and hearing impariment. the student clinicians are learningeverything," Martin said. !* | The tests are available to anyone in the community, but "The patients are thus betterserved because weoften find waiting-list priority is accorded University students and problems we're not originally looking for," he added, c faculty who call for appointments. The tests are given by Martin indicated some audiologists' contention that totid A high quality, budget-priced receiver -The comes with ef advanced integrated circuit design, woU-known 1214 upper-division graduate students in audiology, under close rock music causes hearing los| is not universally supported with IS watts, rms/channel direct-walnut base, hiogod dustcaver eadsupervision by faculty members. -in the profession's literature. "Some hearing losses are coupled power resulting in lower dis­Sound yeu wealda't tkink possible Share. WW! cartridge. Able to play "An audiologist," Dr. Frederick Martin, associate typical of noise ei|tosure and sdme are not," he said. tortion and a widar power bandwidth. from moderately priced speakers/This oither hi an automatic "Stack or |p ^*1 professor of speech communication, explained "is involved Martin said no shuttle bus drivers or riders have been to Drift-free FM has interstation 'iwsh." 2 way speaker features •" bass drivar single play Dual products allow ler Position for quad adapter, selection * relMrio multi-play wtthaat sacrificing with all aspects of diagnosis and rehabilitation of persons the clinic complaining of hearing problems from the bus and horn-typo tweeter. Traditional md • sis! with hearing impairment. for second set of speakers, internal Pioneer craftsmanship and durability single^lay performance. : The MHI engines' noise. fuse protection. are standard as is the suparfc sound matches stylus compliance with the "Our missions are teaching, research and clinical ^ Avoidance of noise is Martin's recommendatioiftopei'sons reproduction ef Project M. I2lt's tone arm campNanca. fwYey • services," Martin said. "The clinical services can't wishing to keep good hearing. "I would like to live tosee the Hjfn .separated, from, research, antUfor-students, they -day when hearing evaluation is a routine thing, like eye and learning function. ^ teeth checkups. People should take hearing problems to *63500 M A A50 9Q00 "We have a wide range of tests, offering any audiological "hearing specialists — audiologists.'' v f-'ia Libraries isW «T<» Professor Predicts Censorship A' By CHRISTINE GILBERT Ms. Bowden noted librarians' intellectual freedom. particular magazine. Many American public concern "that this will limit The committee sponsors She said, however, that libraries niay be facing new the type of material which banned-book displays magazines such as Playboy,problems of censorship, says they can, present for their illustrating books that have whiqji"' might bring Sam Whitten^ associate users." . banned in past complaints, not -,­ been years, are carried, professor of library scienceat The final decision such as "Alice in mainly because they are toothe University. concerning whether a book is Wonderland" and apt to get stolefr. Although censorship falls the local "Huckleberry Finn." obscene to Discussions in the "Insight" attempts have eased since the community, and Ms. Bowden "We try to get across the series are in support of theMcCarthy days, Whitman said censorship can ^e a ^idea that the book you burn U.S. Bicentennial Program explains that "we're perhaps problem in some conservative ^oday might be a classic of and are the Ub exploring entering a new era, ... communities. tomorrow," MS. Bowden said. American experience, past "fl Attempts at censorships ... -• Ms. Bowden also said,that and present. The main themeagainst public libraries are Ms. Bowden, who also is Austin libraries are of this week'sdiscussion is theincreasing." chairperson of the Texas particularly free of history of the American publicWHITTEN SPOKE recently Library Associaton's censorship because Austin isa library, its past, what it has on "Insight: Tomorrow's Intellectual Freedom highly educated community. achieved, and what is hoped Committee, said when University," a weekly radio She said the Austin library for in the future. '-e. series of the University. questioned about some of the system tries -to" respect all "Insight" will be' aired Censorship of public comments on the radio THE political views and will Saturday on KLBJ at 5:30 libraries was one of the topics program,^ that Texas consider any requests from a.m., KASE at 6:30 a.m., and covered in a discussion on the generally is free of the public for carrying a KVET at 5:15 a.m. history of the American public censorship. Her committee R0TEL RA-210 JENSEN MODEL 1 GARRARD42MS library. actively tries to educate the Participating in the public on the nefed for Book Now! discussion with Whitten were Space Limited on 1974 'Ann-Bowden, lecturer in 8 library science at the University and. deputy*, A HAIR CUT director of the Austin Public FROM THE Library, and Dr. Stanley R. HAIR CUT A solid state 30 watt ampttfior with Ross, vice-president and. Silicon output transistors. Features in­ provost-of the University. Dr' STORE clude rotary controls, magnetic and A lowprked two element full raaga A quality budget priced chongor with FC1 Rex Wier, associate professor itsft-ceramic phono inputs plus connections system with an I" driver delivering low tracking aHIHy and feather teucC ISA for tuner and tape. Harmonic distor­viscous damped cooing makiag the Mo communication, Total Energy Response and masicalof speech JOY tion: less then 0.5fi balance thrOagheat year listening axpoctancy of your records muck moderated the half-hour This economy amplifier compromises groatar. Tim eait iackides tho Shura area. Flexair suspension produces program. TO THE AUSTIN/LUXEMBOURG price, not performance, allowing addi­greater clarity, more realistic seaad M75 magnetic diamond attptkal car­REFERRING TO a recent SOUL tion of tuner and tope deck at o later and the best perforinaaco par doflar tridge for wido bandwidth respehso,via Braniff/Icelandic Jets date. —leng-Ufa and fooaMo- froo Kstaaiag.. Supreme Court ruling on ' : on the marfcat today. For U.T. Students/Faculty & Families obscenity and pornography, ........ ' . '• O SYSTEM RIOT T3ACKAGE PRICE YOUSAVE Departures 00iSSk^«*»-0060:mmm (40 May 16/Aug. i -92 Days May 20/ Aug. 22 -94 Days May 23/Aiig. 7 -78 Days • IOUNOTMF May 26/Juiy 26 41 Days • IVSTAX May 26/July 7 -42 Days i'»v ITEMS RETAIL YOUR PRICE -SAVE is celebrating its New York/Luxembourg Portion Only $239 II Austin/N.Y. $142.60 (plus tax) Return Any Day TOSHIBA SA-400-3 only $250.00 : $117,50 Call the Europe experts 478-9343 PIONEER SX828-3 only 500.00 $368.00 I V-sTTt----• V v.": SONY KVI722 COLOR TV-4 only 500.00 410.00 ,u PANASONIC SA6500 RECEIVER-2 only 430.00 301.00 10% off all merchandise including locally Serving UT Since 196? of 2428 Guadalupe PANASONIC SA5800 RECEIVER-2 only 330.00 221.00 handcrafted goods and imported items. ^, PANASONIC TX3600 TUNER-2 only 330.00 221.00 Come^by, browse, and have a free beer. -JBL L-26 "PRIMA" SPEAKER-3 only 112,00 {,< 1 Av«3 160,00 . DUAL 1216 auto changer-6 only 225.00 125.00 WB 12 walnut base ^complete DC4 hinged dustcover package) Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. -7 p.m. SHURE M93E cartridge and Speedway It's No Blarney, Lass ITEMS (USID with W Day Warranty) NEW PRICE USED PRICE PIONEER TX100 TUNER« $300.00 $175.00^,,; SONY SERVO TURNTABLE 500.00 250.00^ rjw DECCA ARM 4 . (Complete % fjm DECCA 4RC PRO-CARTRIDGE If-4.. ws . A'-. ^ Austin Natural Science Center f, v Spring Classes Begin *, s „* I!3S,Y |^^ ---April 7 — ' ?-THI Ht Beginning Photography m £>ound jailer Darkroom Techniques~~c -L W4 Silvercasting r , INI JS AT Hi Lapidary if 1W-Also Open Sunday For Browsing* Quilting > 'Tis an Irish look you'll be wantin' lass, if you're 01 Timey Cooking r hosting a party on St. PaddyVDay. And if it's £?$ Jewelry Construction ^ ^ r .convenience you're\wantin' too, 'we have all3L REG/STfft ~ youTTbe needingfor-party goods— by Hallmark; 472-4523 St. Patrick's Day, Sunday, March 17. REMEMBER: THE SOUND VfXSStf 'The Crown Shops GALLERY WILL NEVER LOSE Msfeil 1 Plaza Baicones ^ -2900 Guadalupp 'M A SALE BECAUSE OF PRICE Highland MaH ,, Friday, AAarch 15, 1974 THE DAILY trtTTv?.-.'.-'-• • ' F-~: 'ftr-' ---•• • -S..-I. —7 • -U. • . ,,L L. !?^£A, < » * A. ^ TER RIDAY--SATURDAY etsromI-rt HZI** Hlftt-H* A SATURDA Sj&^Aj Bfci1•?.*•. „4 S^trfC i ,?fei^cr ST?w* #&T Jlfi*''1fiff'-a •-"• >• •Mfi"I»* "'t L isft"* j&iV- RECORDER 1 Qwtll wpriJwlliii I • AC/DC • BatfMn ink •list $37.95 . SANSUI 6 MARANTZ S&-5 HEADPHONES -* ONf-i ,, OF THE . V ItST^ OmimmI Comfortable feeing •list $49.95 if '27" HARMON KARDON 50-Pius CAR -CASSETTE PLAYER MIKADO j : • Cemes with all patch cords • Qoctfcottoa • Fastforwwd a list $59.95' • |95 HARMON KARDON 75-Plus -W : SUPEREX HEADPHONES PRO•in»-V • OaaWy ttmd.T^y: • tattartfcaa' Kass, • PRO 4AA •Ust $59.95 -f HARMON KARDON 100-Plus S-TRACK HOME DECK • Staraa • Most economical an market •Ust $19.95 $4^5 AKAL910DB AM/FM S •Wmrnpo*rmmW< s 2 speakers a FM steroo a Ust $99.95 MARANTZ 2270 BUY!! AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK * AM/FM rwlo •Digital clock •Ust $34.50 ^WARANTZ 4220 • HI.StOrH;;.• W • t-trock car stereo '•S* • Cooms wHh heed •djastmeats • Ust $119.95 . HITACHI SR3200 v'' .t}oo6 toooo ftbno : -o o O.qoo s |>H95 • 50 watts stereo • (toad 12.5 watts par ckannil list $2^.95 ^ 195 DUAL 1214 TURNTABLE • 75 watts ttaraa • lay stick halenco ceotrel • Ust $399.95 DUAL 1229 195 • *9 *& Mwi• S7J tMlH *HirM mt" • U|k md few Mhr•lb»$5W.tS GARRARD 92C • 34 watts rms • loiit-in Dolby adapter•list $299.9$ 195 GARRARD 10QC •70 watts .per chanaal • HigMaw filter •list $599.95 BSR 260XE 195 • 20 watts rms .In stereo • Meia-roinata speakers •Ust $299.95­:oo BSR 310 AXE • *yr. warranty" ^ •50 watts v5 • Mrin-reawto Speakers •Ust $239.95 iS r-j $159M BSR5Y0X (A • .. •.?••• v $AQ95I'list$49.95 *f# MIKADO S-TRACK PLAYER FO ••Bose""^ • Shore M44E • Usl$179.95 A.'.-t. W> . •' Wehnrt hot* 5?" • ttngod Ant cover • Shore M91ED • Ust $379.95 rn&kmm r 31 J9S. complete • TanrtoMa tnty• Zara tracking • Naxt tii bast Ust $149.95 '96 COMMODORE 8-TRACK HOME SYSTEM -GOOD: SOUND AT LOW PRICE COMES WITH 2 SPEAKERS • Turntable only• Ike best •'Zere tracking •'Ust $209.95 r AKAI CS35P, •.Caaing, Base-. $409* j^tg4jo___ w if coMNnt t, AKAI CR81D -3? ••TRACK RICOftDER/ttAY(R 4,r> • Damp ceetag • BHpHcal tortildgo• Base, Dast cover • Ust $I4J0 $49!i 5. s, SUPER^OPE CD301 • ADC cartridge • Cueing • Base, Dust cover« • Ust $105.95 8-TRACK RECORDER -MC40_ ' Teoe gaoStycentral ' i. Sepoiou vilaau, nihil |« list $59.95 AMPEX 710 -ll,,HIVl -«•'VfMUMNl • WeMeosok hast Defty cassette Digital caoatar • list $349.95 *279" ECI 83 3 hoods, 3 antan Croat riipaoiaUst 5524.95 AMPEX 1210 195 • Tana central * 15 watts Ust $99.95 MARANTZ IMPERIAL 7 • CRO-2 Switchovar • Cassette recerder • Digital ceaater Ust $1(9.95 ECI 195 Best irequency respense in S-track Glass heads Ust $209.9S ECI 1253 » OrMt raptsM» CKMNI rxtr^w •Urtlllf.M FISHER ST500 mm}'W • 11mk mmht• rWm*m•UrtJIW.W -? " SHURE M91ED HITRACK AT LOW PRICE ^ • I >95| *\ V'A -*< 2-woy I • I" woefer • 3" tweeter • list $79.95 L^t,' «---TOTAL UST PRICE $296.75 SCOTCH 207 IMM tiii. •weo. $13" • Qoofity " *r 1 Aiapex I • 12" woofer • y •idiunga • 3" twaatar • Ust 5129.95 f|g§ li''v * 195 GRUNDIG-BSR STEREO SYSTEM o GRUNDIG RTU-25?* • M wattsA Maaaalii mi!• •^ >w|ifnrtvnfiO|v• list $13M9 GRUNDIG: • ' . • 2-woy speoker• 4" waalar • 2" twaatar I • Ust $39.95 BSR-260: ; • lat« • Dart cavar • CartrMfa , • list iHM $149« towyUte CASSETTE AMPEX C90 CRO-2 .• 12" waofar • 5" mi805.80 SCOTCH 90 HIGH* OUTPUT BLANK 8-TRACK TAPE I-track •..90 .»!»<*. Jil• vllynW-L AylwJ • :• ,iew naBo • list $349 •09 BSR-710X: • Dantpad cueing • Anti-skating • Duet cover, walnut baso • Shuro M91E • Ust $205.95 coniploto SCOTCH 45 DYNARANGE BLANK 8-TRACK TAPE 45 •Uw Mm brww#e •IhtSlSP ' m • 4-way • 12" weefer • 5" iwidraage • 3" tweeter ' • 2" sapertweeterUst $199.95 :oo • Soggested tracldng^ . M to 114 . -' • •list $54.95 " MARANTZ-DUAL-ECI STEREO SYSTEM MARANTZ 2230:|. «o U Ho GRANDEB-47-2 It7"""! rPage 10 Friday, March 15; 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN •S ..V.V. • r • ... -.. «.*«< .. tM i* }'* * :k r VW By MARK SKILES the table tennis team it was much more prudent to delay pie As be stood looking across thechannel toward Hong Kong, plan until a time of lesser responsibility to the government. Stji Cheuk Lam realized that the dreSm of freedom sown While in Hong Kong, Alex helda few odd jobs until a friend •fTiW lent him the money tobuy a failing table tennis club. With a J«ir years earller was about to bear fruit But a seven-mile vjSwim lay.between him and his goal./'. v " £-lot of hard work and boasting the only club in town with a ,% The journey had begun for Ctaeuk (Alex ishe is now former member of the Chinese team as resident pro, the • called) and his wife three days and four nigittsearlier. They club was a big success. He also was hired as coach at had left from a^small mountain village 60 miles north of Mansfield College in Hong Kong. Alex was happy, Hong Kong in the Chinese province of Kwang Tung. Hie prosperous and settled, thai he was invited to accompany a distance was covered on foot, across country, avoiding main friend on a trip to America. "I never intended to stay here roads and govertunent troops. The couple carried rice and (America)," Alex remembered, "only to visit and to return sugar cane to sustain them, their only personal belongings home!" being a compass and a flashlight. &• WHILE ALEX WAS in Austin, Dr. Joe Neal, director of ttt \t SWIMMING THE LAST part of the trip across this inlet of tifthe International Office, met him and convinced him to M the South Chirta Sea was theonly choice. Nationalist Chinese remain Austin troops were posted on all roads and docks to discourageone­ -way tourism. Binding his wife to his back with some rope and aided by an abandoned life preserver, they started the ^ .final stage of their escape. Once in Hong Kong, Alex.CQuld l4tor Alex to enter graduate school. He returned to Hong Kong _ S3 stay with relatives until he was able to find work.; £ to settlehis affairsand to bringhis wife andinfant son to live Leaving China was no snap decision of his. Fdiir y^re Austin. ' ^-passed before the plan was finally implemented. His Alex was-in-the country» iUniMthem atidaU<1 KLKMINAplacing second in_ the41 other_ 4.1 two. He currentlyAis Tl-s * , . „ ' —Tewm Staff Ptiete by Jay MHIm. * Alex recalled, "I was in India for a tournament when I ranked No. 2 in the nation, and his friend Richard is Class A ?Tav This form ranks Alex Lam nationally in table tennis. first thought of leaving China." However., as a member of National Champion Course Drops Riverside Fire Station PlannedIg^ End Today P&p|jfc Plans have been made to in North. Austin between the Riverside areat mostly,future enlargement. 1 .. ./*A>ylr?Y Personality Astonishes Crowd construct a new fire Station in' RtindbergLane'andlH 3fr,?tiH Apartment complexes,"Petty"^.'An ^ ^ ^ University students an area inhabited mainly by is being sought, Petty said. said, "the need for this .architect already W fife By CHRISTINE GILBERTS r hated with so much envy,"-he disfavor. He said Americans planning to call itquits ona University students, James "We are building these station will be even greater in «®si8ned_ this station, and bids,. image Texan Staff Writer said. -could improve their course must mind their Fs Petty, assistant administrator the near future." should be made within 30f Like a spider shedding its He his visit abroad "more ordinary stations because of residential ^ * r n.iiL described to if J. £• £ ^ and Qs and drop the.course for the ;Austin Fire growth and annexation," he The statin on East .days, Petty said. skin, Karl Hansen of Radio Russia, explaining that there . people, like you here, went by 5 p.m. Friday. Department, said Thursday. added. "Also, the State Fire Riverside Drive, which will,*abroad you Denmark astonished an he found the people to be to show what If students drop a class * The station will be at 5307-11 Insurance Commission Cover 4,000 square feet, hasf y "The city has until Octobe^j; E audience of students on the warm and friendly. The., Americans are really like." with an A. B or C average, E. Riverside Dr., near several requires fire stations within been in the city's Capital (end of the fiscal year) to. buy. Communication Plaza at a Russian bear seemed jflways Finally, someone asked they will be dropped with a apartment complexes which for land for the second site,"site, he; one and one-half miles, of all Improvements Program ,.land noon sandwich seminar to be smiling; -L>. -i J'ftansen if he had -been Q^wbic-h meang tha arfe, .predominately • student" -residential -areas. aeveral yeacs. -It-will <-. added. Tha city, operatai on _ ~ Tibiirsday stripping to hislrue IfiOallrt ana'' interviewed He went To by any radio student will receive no leased. more one-engine company to policy of buying land one yeafl "Considerably start identity. fell in love with a ballerina. ,stations in Austin. academic penalty for A site for a second station, development is planned for but plans have been made for and building the next. AfteiThe seminar began "We walked, and we talked, "As a matter of fact, this dropping the course. the land has been purchased seriously enough when and we got to know each other morning I was interviewed by Students dropping with a construction plans wltlHansen was introduced by Dr. very -well. By the time I was one of the most intelligent, D or an Fwill receivean F, finalized, Petty said. PAIN T^eature Waters Robert Schenkkan* professor to leave we knew that we charming men I have ever-which will go downon their * of radio-television-film, as the wanted to be with each other met, the noted radio academic records State Rep. Ron Waters of Houston will *SSaJ * 1 remarks. A brass band is slated for inclusion minister of communications foreyer, but when I went to personality of KLBJ, Cactus/ speak at an Impeach Nixon rally at noon in the rally's activities, but plans had not * ^StodiftttV 1; The drop procedure from Denmark, the author of the authorities for the papers, should be done in the Friday on the Main Mall. been solidified Thursday afternoon. iSl; AK«rn.y::";^ People's Assembly to Impeach Nixon several novels, and a "truly the Russian bear stopped At that moment the academic dean's office of (PAIN) member Richard Bodein announced Tickets will be sold at the rally and at Th« *tud*nt*' attomay*, hank great Dane." _ ' smiling and I was forced to distinguished. Dane took off Ivy and Ann Bower, art the student's school or Waters' address Thursday. PAIN tables on the West Mall for a charter Hansen, wearing a suit and leave the country without my his glasses, put 4hem in his college. available by appolnlmanl from The purpose of the rally is twofold: to bus trip to Houston for a demonstration tc| • a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday glasses, his gray hair neatly ballerina." breasts pocket and 'smiled No student will be cut and In broadly. demand the impeachment of President Nixon coincide with Nixon's appearance. ,• th'roaah Friday In Union 5 combed, began by response--to .questions 1JV HI allowed to drop after and to publicize Nixon's Tuesday appearance • Building 301. . Tolophem 471* complimenting the new from the audience, Hansen In a southern drawl with no Friday's deadline unless PAIN plans, the buses to depart from 7142. Th» itud*nH' attorn«y« before the National Association of Communication Complex. described radio and television trace of Danish accent, he the drop is approved by the Littlefield Fountain shortly after noon Friday will handi* landlord-Unant, Broadcasters' convention in Houston, Bodein coimwmor prot««tion, •mploy**' Then he described his in Denmark. He said news said, "In fact, I am Cactus for Jones Hall, downtown Houston site of impressions of America, editorials tend to look upon Pryor." student's dean for said. Nixon's speech. The return trip is anticipated right*, taxation and inturanco v nonacademic reasons.' "s ...... .... The rally will feature a performance by the around midnight. catot. Criminal. «a»o» and 'saying that Europeans have a President Nixon with And he was. * domottte problems by appoint- Bertold Brecht Guerrilla Theater Troupe, a false image of America as a' The round-trip excursion to Houston costs mont only. speech by a PAIN member and Waters' violent, unsafe land of corruption. TRY OUR SPECIALS! first Time SERVED IN TOWN! v-''There ft jiti country that is* kOrfgljflL —— To Place A fi Daily Texan mx ' Classified Ad ge Call 471-5244 SPECIAL CHEF FROM NEW YORK MMLthraFalkMMl^ML. * We Serve ... . QUICK LUNCH Egg Drop $gup:Frbd Rica 2 Fried Wonton with—, . MCCARTNEY ~ * VL:, cmtducied at -Kelly Sitiifh Cleaners. Stl" •• .*>"« W West mill Street. City of Austin. Travis You'll make a splash in -Couniv.Tcxas thinbe SAT. 10onvl0pm W . BMte.... , Page 'P * wr r m^rr-w;-v •JTS" " »iV j 73S p£rojSie|g_He/ps OomjoufG To Speak at St? Edward's . Tbe laFgest largest computer usfer number. - exner Knox told of one experiment Operation on campus, the "The Computation Center >f"V San Jose, Calif. He will speak > AUSTM TOMOMOW dealing with frogs to find out Daniel Ellsberg, whci Introduction to YMoteftig, Teacher Concern^ at the . PHASI III AUSTIN TOMOttOW Computation Center, often and Hybrid Computing more aboutthroat cancer. released the Pentagon papers particularly for persons who,, University Saturday. at 11 p.m. Wednesday in NBOHMRHOOD MMTINO Zone J; called "Big Brother," new. ' from 7 »o 5p.m. Sunday at Andrews < Laboratory areanalogous to a . "We had' ah experimenter to the press in1971, will speak plan to take one of the canoed:!Dr. Wilga M. Rivers of the Business-Economics Building *1. Elementary, 6801 Northeast Or. 1has a "Little Brother," in the Rolls-Royce and a 1952 Ford following a frog.around with a on the St. Edward's trips on the Lower and Upper * University of Illinois will 150. ' tUASM1 tOMOItOW fr ; form of the HybridComputing pickup," Knox said. "A Rolls-microphone record University campus at 8 p.m. Guadalupe River planned by MBOHROIMOOO MHTMO Zone 7, Laboratory. Royce (Computation Center) to its speak at 10 a.m. in W.C. Hogg Tuesday is Women's Day. ™ to S p.m. Sunday at Union Irom 7 croaks. The frog wasn't too Sunday in the Men's Gym. He the committee in March and Building University.Vice-President Dr. Main Ballroom. James Knox, supervisor of is a wonderful machine, but it happy about it, but it was a will discuss government April. Sign-up for the , The presentation" Is"free to Lorene Rogers, Rep. Sarah ambhcan MStmiTi or abunaudcsand the Hybrid Laboratory calls it doesn't haul lumber. The noble try. The experimenter th^publi Weddington Austin astmNautks Will meet at j p.m secrecy and military policy. remaining trips, which will be;. ilic. and "a significant enhancement" computers in theComputation was able to try becauseof the Admission March 22 and 23, April 12 and| businesswoman Margaretta f Friday,lit Engineering Lab Building the Computation Colter. Center are incredibly capabilities of Hybrid CBA Week: ;t Scarborough Wilson 102. "James Cookiey, chief of the gas 13, April 19and 20 and April 28«| CBA Week, sponsored by will dynamics lab . at LTV Aerospace Unlike the Computation powerful, but don't offer the Laboratory." Canoeing £ and 27, is in Union Building1! Business Ad­speak ata forum on the chang­• Corp., will speak. Films on the College of - engineering laboratory facilities, atDarryl Crocker will talk ministration Council, is Vought Aerodynamics will be located under ground real-time or hybrid capability The machines operate 24 342. Cost is ^7.50 per person. ing roleof women in business, east of the Tower, the Hybrid.. ,that the Hybrid does." hours a day, seven days a . Sandwiches, tea and chips CBA Council spokesman Don shown.. v is! l week, scheduled for Monday throughabout canoeing on area rivers Computing Laboratory >'%The Hybrid Laboratory but operators are UTIN AMlKICAN KXICY AlTttNATIVIS in a seminar, will be available. March 22. Paulissen said. ' - sandwich ^ OtOUf will hold an open discussion above ground in Engineering offers digital and analog present only from 10 a.m.. to6 by Union; : At at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the LAPG Science (ENS) Building 529. sponsored the ,v Dr."Karl Cohen will speak a dean's honor banquet capabilities which can be used p.m., Monday through Friday. Recreation Committee at . Rivers on "The Nuclear Alter­Wednesday/i awards will be office, 2434 Guadalupe St., In the the center's services are together. Knox said this Users may reserve time by Methodist Student Center. The R: available to any holder of noon Friday in Union Building A specialist in the teaching native." Cohen is chief scien­presented for teaching discussion is entitled: "Mexico: the a g rea tly adds to the signing the reservation log 202. excellence and to outstanding Frozen Revolution." The public is valid Computation Center of foreign languages will tist at the General Electric Invited. V:M laboratory's versatility. available in ENS 529. • The program will be an discuss "Student Interest and nuclear reactor division in students and alumni. tfADMd AND STUDY Statu lABOIATOtY will meet, at noon Friday in Jester A332 to discuss study reading: Pre­enroilment Is not necessary. STUOCNT-fACUlTT. COUOQUIUM iNSTITUTi OF UTW AMBHCAN STUOMB will meet ,;a-*1 <«. (Up.-Monday i« B4nintn-, A * ' 'EtOTitotirrtcV 161. Paul Rosenstein-Rodan will speak on -"Rehabilitating the Post-Ailende Economy of Chile." STUDCNTS OUMR THAN AVKRAOI Will meet •; from 4 toip.m. Friday In Armand's, : 411 W. 24th St. off Guadalupe Street . for a happy hour. TABUTOrOBffiUUS will meet at l:0Sp.m Sunday in the Union Junior Ballroom to play war games. mmm* =1 By HERB HOLLAND -Texan Staff Writer. "Coffin nails are free today, :f*E WOVINQ OUT OUft BEMAINIf Help yourself," was the cryrOCK Ttt REDUCE INVENTORY WIT* Thursday as the Organization 1ICES AT AN ALL-TIME LOW! NO RAIf for Committing Suicide in a Socially Acceptable Manner (OCSSAM) opened its .membership driya on the Union Patio. The "nicotine celebration" included free cigarettes and the sighing of a petition which read: "We, the undersigned, feel that it is every student's right' to smoke publicly on the IH/FM SIEIEt RECEIVER Regular campus of the . University of Texas at Austin except in crowded classroom 400.00 Pioneer's SX-727series of receivers are coming off the shelves conditions. Crowded here at prices far below normal. 195 wattsof music power at y< is defined as a densitygreater fingertips, with jacks for two tape decks, two record cl " than eight people per each one and three pair of speakers-and a microphone. hundred square feet of power bandwidth. Full controls and signal »classroom area," The finest high-fidelity music can be ^M |iJowip^be ^f^ <9® r% "PRETTY SOON, we hope to be an honest-to-God organization," 'Rick Martin, * one of OCSSAM's organizers said. Martin, a. senior education major, is a nonsmoker but said the reasons he began " ^ * Av • . ix 'i, •"' \ jn'Atifr' "A" ' j? •f+t-V-K w S1B1111I 47 Prtfit Sf By BOBBIE CRISWELfc directors Thursday. J^eirry wSbtit^d''®:gaii* ftion Building pj&gram remodeling and building I-«--J-V*' C Texan Staff Writer The gain was announced by the "tough decisions and Advisor y Com mi ttee, new Union East begins. •fet- . • • Although a netprofit of $7.47 Ron Mancuso, manager of changes made in the dining reported progress made by !|n • ??? Board members Saftcly^ ChariejrSection's late-nightshift had the criticism. "If you have three or four units ::'lor a dining service for a six-; Texas Union Dining Services, services in December." • the committee, which is iipl Kress and Cappy "McGafr,", watch, and o]fi jokes plus familar insults answering one call, it can look like ybu're month period may not sound who reported that last year's Profits for the games area attempting to collect student Student" Government^, ! ' jumped around the room, pagjmr the too impressive, it brought 'operations showed a loss of and the Copy Center also were • opinion concerning changes i liMBBS-harassing the people." president and vice-president,,! coming-to*work ten^btts. "; . So the word hasgone out, if two carsare • sincere applause from the $29,194.80. reported rising. the Union Building will led discussion.on " i.llpllff Every organization chops the World into at scene, continue your rounds. • ••• Texas Union Board of < Union Director Shirtey Bird Frank Remlng, mem^ undergo when a long listance phone service sections for convenience and The night slows down and for long •.-ill ^students, which would .bC administrative efficency. Austin police stretches the radio is silent. But still we •-Professors To Speak on Constitution provided by the Student divide the city into five areas ... East*.^ roll, moving past necm-Ughted bars which •. • . ,, Government and housed in the.* Austin is "Charley Section." ® Five University professors „ t spill laughing, shouting crowds out on the University professors will be^is to "give people a chance to will bey beneficial to Texanft^ Union Building. .SH:sidtwaiksV''fill"; compose the' panel in the above political commentator and say their bit." She added that even if the voters reject it.TV * „ sergeant's voice rose th«r.^ . fourth of eight weekly KUT-author John Henry Faulk. broadcasts "give citizens -The proposal, td b6 backgroiuid reading the crime report. fi^Crowds don't bother me," says the FM Sunday .broadcasts Earh twA-hmir .W^another forum" in which Jto, ^ Dr-Sager said future by the American International'Ballpoint pens scribbled rapidly, trying young officer, but still his eyes sweep sponsored by the Texas divftwi voice thelr opWons? £^^^mphcation of the new Phone Co., would allow to record and remember stolen care, intently over the milling groups. •• -League of Women Voters ;; vviiaumiiyji yc otuuaiw iu use urc^MViuw iw­ '' f _ „ • 1• constitution wouldwuuiu be wto students to the phones for? armed robberies and the descriptions of We answer a call to transfer a prisoner concerning the new Texas -Dr. Maysaid future effect "bring Texas into the 20th five-minute tong distance^? long8 distant fugitives. ; :::;^^|gpp|! i constitution. to 7 p.m., the panel discusses w^the proposed-* constitution -• •• calls for only 25 cents. ,Y^# from Brackenridge Hospital to the jail. Century." v /'Full.moon tonight," said one. ' " The prisoner is drunk and missing one ThisSunday's panelconsists the historical, future and J"Yeah and it's payday weekend and we shoe. While being transferred he asks of W. Page Keeton, dean of humanistic implicationsof the got a warm night," responded another. continually about the shoe. At the jail he the School of Law; Dr. Janice proposed constitution. The "Be some cuttings and Shootings, glares at me, "You don't give a damn if I May, assistant professor of second hour, 7 to 8 p.m., is a ISouthwestern PremierJ1 - mm oe*r not. pwnawot; Dr.Enunette£. question .answer gession^.^ T In wWcYi listeners phone Redford, Ashbel Smith, No one grinned at the "full moon" Other family disturbance calls come professor of government and their questions and comments,l FrOIVI the DirOCtOr Of Tw -, w theory; violent nights in the past hfid • to the panel. "s • ! through. The wife is kicking the husband public affairs; Dr. Alan settled the issue for the police. out or the wife is leaving, the police Sager, assistant professor of • MS. ™,us Naims, head «£v| LAST TANGO IN PARIS . Eleven p.m. the shift changes and 20 mediate and then leave. government; and Armando public relations for the Texasw­ blue-and-white prowl cars hit East Austin A car races, 'wobbling through a stop Gutierrez, instructor in' Bernardo Bertolucci streets. League of Women Voters,said||li|| . _^1_. ....... light, then crosses to the wrong side of the government. Joining these purpose of the radio programs^,|S | Radio traffic slices through street. At the end of the chase, a girl gets , urn •ft -**! conversation, "Family disturbance, East out, clasping her arms to ward off the ^5 Seventh, see the woman." chill. She wears glasses without lenses. Dostoevski^ THE ­ • Units nearest the scene respond to the ; call, one taking the call and the other "I'm on probation for not wearing my IBacting as backiip. ; glasses," she tells the officer "but see, I • With one-man units, the backup help is have them on." --' --v. v mmm critical, so the officers go all out to make But she does not have a license and is & the COYOTfiS ' the call. ^ booked for DWI still wearing the glasses.' Sunday andMonday Only ''You never know when something can The arrest took 15 minutes, but the. go down," says the young officer, "and if paper work consumed an hour. rch 17 -March 18 you don't get there, you may have a dead At dawn, the full moon's power had friend." failed to materialize. No cuttings! liappy Hour S-7 441-3352 Yet the deoartment is acutelv aware of shootings, not even any police brutality. sm ms e Machine Charges Nickel By Zodiac News Service charge." .• ... a - Visitors to the new $700 Dallas Mayor Wes Wise, million Dallas-Fort Worth when he heard of the nickel airport in Texas are likely to rake-off, said he was get short-changed. "appalled." Wise predicted Wheel Saturday All of the automatic dollar that the income from the bill changing machines in the nickel charge will be WINCHESTER r^V.f air terminal give you only 95 infinitesimal compared to the SAT. 9-1 Doug Sahm & Augie Meyers Sunday cents in change. The missing ill-will it will breed among BRONCO IStarring nickel is for what the machine travelers from around the BROS. Big Jam Session 5 PIEQRE CLKMENTI :• explains is a "service world.' X :• HAPPY HOUR 44 • STEFANIA SANORlELLl 07 Be« Coves Rcl. ^ 327-9016^ AVAILABLE FOR PARTIES •"It's tN Mme oM story ot a man who meets his double: IThey 4ream togelher."-Bernerdo Bertolucci FRIDAY, SATURD^? _ The Back Forty Steak House . March 15-16 Adm.$1.50 5 5th & Neches |..a beautiful and tunny movie... .The total effect la that 47:30-935-11:1S ft® I of youthful explosion ol movie talent." ,, . I Now Featuring ARE YOU ON*SCO-PRO?ii -Vincent Cenby FRIDAY in Jester Aud.M| • -TW NEW YORK rims SATURDAY in A.C. AuC| !; FAMILY STYLE BAR-B-QUE H1 ? IF YOU BRING AN OFFICIAL NOTICE THAT YOU ARB ON SCHOLASTIC ! Cinemti 40 PROBATION, YOU WILL RECEIVE A DISCOUNT ON BEER AT THE. Fij f- ALL ONE CAN EAT *3.45 per p«r»on ; ?! Minimum 4 Pertons ­ SCO-PRO. LOUNGE Tues. thru Sat. 5:30-9:30 609 W. 29th off the Drag ' 477-0548 POOL • PINBALL • FOOSBALL • PONG JAPANESE STYLE KARATE FREE STEREO MUSIC Taught by Brian Pickett 2nd degree Black Belt ALL GIRL FOOSBALL TOURNAMENT -Tues., Mar. 19, 6-12 HAPPY HOUR 3-6 DAILY First Lesson Free COME SEE THE SHOW AT THE SCO-PRO Cost per month -1 lesson/week $12.50 2 lessons/week $15.00" 3 lessons/week $18.00 Begin anytime; glasses are continuous • • • TIMES: Tues. 6:30-9:30 p.m. AUSTIN PREMIERE • Thurs. 8-9:00 p.m. • • Sun. 7:30-9;00 p.m. • Harriet Anderson • Sponsored by University Y, 472-9246 • • j Bibi Anderson t 2330 Guadalupe • (Above Sommers Drug) t Gunnell Lindblom Classes held in the Y Auditorium , . i . t are ' I • I k-SALE • •• •• SUNDAY, MARCH17, 11 A.M. to 7P.M, • CONVENTION CENTER EAST ROOM " HOWARD JOHNSON'S AUSTIN • 'CORNER IH35 and US 183 " ORIGINAL PRINTS AND POSTERS PICASSO DALI CLAVE GOYA MIRO DAUMIER ROUAULT FRIEDLAENDER and more than 300 internationally kno^vn artists pw 10% -40% Discount on many items *' ^ ""• f? $ MasterCharcie , BankAmericard Arts and Theatre Committee & Friday ; 42nd STREET with Dick Powell, Rudy Keeler -MILUOUD INTERNATIONAL GALLERY ; 7, 8:45, 10:15 p.m. Saturday: FOOTLIGHT PARADE with JamesCagney, Dick Powell;joqn * T?*s Blondell 7, 9:10, 11:20 p.m. %OU^AN EATH v^" ~pfosn short: Movies Are Adventure: Busby Berkeley Dance Scenes ? Filet of Flounder Sunday: ROMAN SCANDALS with Eddie Cantor '0=15 > /--i i; Golden Fried Chicken V^v 'Vt -I ^ Chicken Fried Steak Produced by,Busby Berkeley*., $1.00 UT-Students.-.Faculty,--Staff50-Member*. 4 A New Film by Mai Zetterling lor ;. B 20TH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS • rranch rries m Friday Ijmt persen . ^ • ' novnvmuuv divqq. ^ Ceepan Per Party J 'ecteC tQ Open Women'sJ=ilm • Special DUHET IIamaiiimiIA RrMfl"'''' $!.M UI: r f-estival oftta W&'r-Sii S1.M MiMnrs JOEY'S • Sin New York ESt®" Nobody Uovts RESTAURAN Ul t--S ZH* nvHtira• FRIDAY, SATURDAY BURDINE AUD. $1.50 T MIL B .mi Whit 0 nm Dnilu ^iin MARCH 15-16 7:30-9:20-11:05 Student Gov't. Y Walt Disney's ICHABOD AND MRe TOA 2 p.m. Children 50c Adults 75 JU Friday, March 15, 1974 THJE DAILY TEXAN Page, 'Wg, . • . n m. 9s& 1x5 ,t ••• ^ fyMIKE POWERS A University chemistry professorThursday^ trongly criticized "irrational" use orSf ectrical power. ' r Using excessive lighting in; hallways as ^example, Dr. Barrie Kitto elaborated adTi: energy consumption to 30 guests at the1' •University Chr^tj^Q)^ noon sandwich seminar. ]P'\-y -v?v x" -sStsI Encouraging the establishment of more; specific lighting standards in large publicand Commercial buildings, he added, ''Lighting1 Comprises about one-quarter of the energy s ftemand for these buildings. |T "Some candlepower standards seem to be iwritten so that one can read a fifth carbon j Icopy in a hallway, which Mi ridiculous," Kitto taaid. "pv« ' " -*-<¥ it really rational, aid if not what can wedcr to prevent it? Such exponential growth cannot be sustained indefinitely with finite resources." , The biochemist elaborated on three principal difficulties in correcting current trends.-//_ -• ,, He sail electrical end usage lacks definitive analysis and promotional rate structures encourage rather, than discourage Because of Jgr^f aftioiS& !ifk)§taxabfeP properties in Austin, such as University and state grounds, the city depends more heavily on revenues from utility taxation rather than property taxes, causing hesitancy officially, to discourage consumption, Kitto added. For Expansion '' * • • ***& — ss3?y Qf Cit/ Porks An' ambitious, 940 million-said. But some of the land will parks and recreation program ; be left in its natural state, he to fit the needs of Austin for '• added. 1980 was discussed by City -The Department of Parks Parks and Recreation and Recreation will bring its Director Jack Robinson massive. proposal to Thursday. ^ ; • Council within a few Speaking to an' Austin, but Robinson doubted it would Rotary Club ltfncheonv ever be approved in full.' Robinson said the department Robinson sees the use of will use innovative measures, .outdoor recreation^a means to meet the growing public's of aiding the energy problem. recreational needs, which he "If we get people outdoors projects will be greater in the and involved in physical S-Ttaiii Staff NiM» by Jay MNNor future since people will not activities, the lights and ?.4i|have the gasoline to go much thermostats in their homes Tassel Hassles WS * Kitto's uwotoemttvt with Zfcro IHjipttW v Kitto suggested reducing demand lay Graduation tlm»n»qt, and Undo l\>ttrt; fl*tfln^ fitted for 1i«rtap aiid gowri, torn*: Growth and land usage and planning groups' eliminating long term waste rather han plrtw om of the steps that lead down the long rood towards graduation. stimulated his interest in Austin's energy; useful services. flfc problems. He considered the greatest waste to be in Convention Recesses for Funeral |He described local efforts to cope with air-conditioning because of inadequate "*• The Constitutional Convention Hall, delegates * Wednesday morning on his apid growth as typical of many democratic building codes' which "contain nothing about Convention recessed for two flew to Dallas for memorial way to a hospital, after his car stitutions — crisis response. insulation or orientation and little on days Thursday in memory of services on a special charter bounced off a truck threeQuoting figures which encouraged public materials.'' _ . " State Rep. Hawkins Menefee flight arranged by convention times as he attempted to passAcceptance of the South Texas Nuclear. Kitto, a New Zealander, came to the United of Houston, who died in a car-president Price Daniel Jr. a bus on U.S. Highway 290.Project in Austin's $161 million bond issue State*in 1962 and has been on the University truck collision Wednesday. Mehefee died early last November, Kitto asked, "Do we really, faculty since 1966, involved principally in r -...^t, Following a brief eulogy inwant a continuation of that demand curve? Is biochemical research. 2. WW WW Wfl F/l WW FW WW WW WW WW WW WW WW WW WW WW WW WW HELD OVER! . • ^Houston's aiiisi Presents SHAKEY'S presents at the Guadalupe Store FRI. & SAT. DOGTOOTH VIOLET c>,. r KENNETH THREADGILL Back from LIBERTY HALL tonight thru Saturday . Ctub Opens at 4 p.m. 1 TOAD HALL SALOON , e _ }' . ' • •= (> Showtime at 9 p.m, ^°*TRINITY ; --at the Reagan Square Store ' Specializing in Flour locos ^ If you heard 'am at Liberty you'll bo therm/ Check It Out! DANCING AND MIXED DRINKS LOU -RAY Wine -Beet -Food -Pool * ­ rutr* toitrwwwww wwiU'U W\a u\4 * tonight only Happy How 4:30 to 8:00 Sat. Only at Reagan Square DOAKSNEAD BAND ARN\ADII PIZZA FOR HONKY TONK HEROES OPEN 11:00 a.m. to 2K)0 a.m & STRAWBERRY JAM 604 West 29th St. FRl. DOAK SNEAD ' Austin, Tx. (% Block West of SAT. PLUM NELLY -Otiadalup* St.) 2610 GUADALUPE ^HOT­ STREAK ON OVER TO OgUVEHY 3-7:30 Happy Hour ^ ' WITH THIS AD Live Music Tonite! save 30c ~sem 50e • ON YOUR NEXT 16"ON YOUR NEXT 12" OFFER GOOD UNTIL APRIL 25»h, 1974 MARCH 18, 19, 20 D.H. LAWRENCE'S at HIGHLAND MALL PREMIERE TRANSCONTINENTAL TOUR \\WOMEN IN LOVEft i •'Sri&e A RETURN TO THE RICH TRADITION OF THE CIRCUS AS IT ONCE WAS IN AMERICA ANIMALS OF PERFORMING ELEPHANTS CHIMPS WILD ANIBUH ACTSQ 125 PERFORMERS . 3 DAYS - 5 PERFORMANCES, SFC I FRIDAY ONlrY-March 15 7:45, 9:50, & 12:00 k -kit A Page 14 Friday, Marchu" » ^ Jf «* • -^1^1, 4, 2^ **** A.C. Audlfdriumi ,iv wr Tues., Mar. 19, 4:30 & 8 p.m. ^ C3 vmk Uvlii ifdir* ITj "f»ww Ql O p»iii( vy«d.# Mar. 20, 4 & 7 p.m. M AOVANC! TICKHS ON SALE NOW (II I'metT lUs Jotkc'i MghlwHl MsH . ^n.H" 9am to 9pm tovwi day* a wMk To' fil1 these needs'y> said. Robinson said the department The public is again ready > will begin "an agressive land for outdoor programs,'{acquisition program, which Robinson said, such as thosie will develop half-mile that used to be presorted at neighborhood playgrounds, the Hillside Theater at Zilker and . municipal parks which Park. Both Northside and may acquire land from Wooldridge Parks mayneighboring counties." eventually begin similar The department will programs, he said. develop much of this land with The director emphasized facilities such as the heed for recreational swimming pools and handball facilities to attract the whole. and ~ tennis courts, Kobinson family. -v ' ' 1 „ ' ^ i on Student Death-Awaiting Lab Reports Lander Suzanne Philips, a 19-year-old business administration major, died early Wednesday moring in her 5M apartment of apparent asphyxiation. "It appears she regurgitated and inhaled causing her to ciiUKe, 5nive siic \vds> uuiiic alunc ctliucpuluii I gel AIIY ucipi 1jV« . Colon Jordan of the Austin Police Department's Homicide Division said Thursday. Jordan said there were no signs of foul play in Miss Philips' apartment at 801 W. 24th. St. ;;2j.i'ITz" : Miss Philips was not breathing and had no pulse when she was discovered lying across herhed by her roommate Sara Wilkes, police reported-_ ., An inquest ruling on thie c^use of death will be made after lab ­tests are completed, Jordan said., Miss Philips is survived,by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.L. Philips of Houston. MASSAGES HOT OIL SWEDISH STEAM ROOM MAGNETIC TOUCH WEIGHT LIFTING ' POWDER lagtc BODY MASSAGE FOR GENTLEMEN Young Lady Masseuses in Complete Privacy! 10 A.M. to12 Midnight 1104 KOENIG LANE(7 Days) , AUSTIN, TEXAS CALL FOR • • . APPOINTMENT : 512/451-9190 (Satisfabtio'n Guaranteed) presents RAY WYUE HUBBARD (R^d Neck Mother) — JIMMY JOHNSON SUNDAY JAM SESSION PICKERS WELCOME NO COVER 38th and IH 35 452-2306, Tues.-Sat. March 12-March 16E£rE!:3 BRUSHY CREEK Tues.-Sat. March 19-March 23 : ' m EWING ST. TJMKlw .Happy. Hour' 5-7 pjR.. liui «8:«*4W I lie C ulturdl 1 nicrt^linmcnt ( DID m itlcc of ] lie Texas Union Present 'MBjip™ Life . rrm\d Thi'nos the Many Faces tV<-| of NovellJ Nelson| l i id.iv. M.irch i I o(;i( AndiIoi i imiflj 7:UI X I (): () I) 111 n ^ j A.' ir.^kUgA.'! m* mmmmmm CV1-V.i y&Lte* .. 2tt» A Ouodalup* S«<.• e'Attei^*r disappointing first act with % ,disillusioning f;g The overbearing efficiency expert set on mechanizing the performance by Mercedes McCambridge, the cast of "Hie ^ffice*Richard Sumner (George Phelps), just doesn't '"lave DCCf) I ROM TH€ flU*MKER fJS11 ,WHOQWC-'VpU Desk Set'; came to life and ironed out many of Tuesday's|;if ^ his deadpan, t monotonal recitations ruin any. >RA& opening night traumas. * . , r^^pontilneity that othercharacters might havegiven the plaV; Miss McCambridge's performance at first lacked the ?% The party guests, too numerous to name, tend to become luster, the exuberance expected. She dully recited her lines, ^ . tiring; their efforts to portray "typical drunk" secretaries uppax?nt int?,rest or P1810-v.and executives are laughable — not in the sense of laughingWhile , her three office assistants, Peg (Jann Jackson), v"with" them, however. Quite the contrary. Sadel (Janelle Glickman) and Ruthite (Tero Gaus) are :>,< In an inevitable pseudo-sex role, Abe Cutler (Charlie frantically fighting to keep their jobs, she remains calm. " Collins), who plays opposite Miss McCambridge as her Joni Mitchell Performance^of Sadel and Ruthie areparticularl#.comic.While Sadel fatalistically, sarcastically accepts"* machine takeover, Ruthie wails and mourns her fate; Minor characters deserve credit for much of the play's ^•success. Imogene Imboden (Corrine Davis) graces the stage " only a few times but nevertheless steals the show. As a "disappointed operastar whohas been with useversince She flunked her screen test/' she entertains with bumps and Miss Ferris (Carol Blodgett) delivers an hilarious |*performance as a stereotyped reporter assigned to take ^picturesof the new computers. The gum-chomping, clumsy, incompetent woman gives the profession a reputation that > other reporters certainly would, not agree With but still is ' fumbling, reluctant lover, comes across not as a desirable husband-to-be, but -a questionable cross between Dolph Briscoe and Jonathan Winters. His efforts to be suave and debonair quickly become ludicrous especially his J,tender" dialogues delivered in a distinct southern accent— MISS McCAMBRlDGE developes a. certain tongue-in-­cheek humor, a condescending approach to theEntire affair, that boosts her performance and reconciles her early lack of ifcr-Sumner, to make him appear the utter fool; alone make the play worthwhile. In one moment of sarcastic eloquence that totally destroys Sumner's composure she says, "Yes people are iust a bit outmoded. Maybe they'll stop making them." MATINEE ONlY^f ^ CAPT.BLOOD-12,4 x>9Gi«H€.UEMirie pReserm CWUD€ ElOUGW ^ "HAWl mmm® Slated Giimihin 31—477 w OPEN;1»45J® $1.50 HI 6 p.rtw^ f FEA. 2-4-6-$.loipit ROBIN NOOO -2, 6 11.00FOR ONE $1.50 FOR BOTH ("MBOMIE /weeo 8-10-$1.50 • Female vocalist Joni .Auditorium Box Office'. Mitchell will appear at 8 p.m March 29 at City Coliseum. Tickets for Miss Mitchell's concert, a Cultural Entertainment Committee special event, will go on sale March 25. Prices are 82 for optional fee holders and, may be ^obtained at the Hogg Miss Mitchell's perfor­mance, part of a 1974 concert tour, coincides with the release of her album, "Court and Spark,"which is regarded as being one of her most personal musical statements and one of the most full realized arrangements in the singer-songwriter's career. (MHor't N»Ik Da«t.n andOnm Spiny, VMOO: A restlessness regarding your -wfco pt#pB»a (KBchoft/orakaJiiiiiiltiiii. n wwkii compounded byadMirata ip«iiutiitiiy In diorti. par—nal lnt»r¥l«»n. t "get away from It all." amrfyMi and attisUgy donM.) • •». ~UBtA: Use flood ludgment today regarding your recreational ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION MCLU0IN6 "BEST PICTURE ^EST AGTOR^JACK NIGHOLS0 COl UMBIA PlCTl liU S present JACKj ICHOLSO THE LAST mm Haircuts for people -Mon^Fri, lOa.m. -fipgau.409 W. 14th 476-4890 Meli&sav Mae. Alma Austin, Texas 78701 'A H3 MK Anopportunity toexpress yourself activities assome stresscouldarise. through writing or speaking comes SCOKftO: There Isneed fora combination nriuch to your benefit. TAURUS: Your career seems on an upward trend. Much attention should be paid to extravagant moods. of reason and expansive communication into the home. SAGITTARIUS: It's a good day for any kind of formal learning experience, as attention is sharp. VillageCinema GCMMI: The inspiration to communicate your philosophy to others brings expansive, beneficial relationships. CANCHti .If attention is paid to your CAPRICORN: Let your talents of reason and clear sensory perception bring you long awaited rewards. AQUARIUS: There should be a lot of Four 17N Wnl minilm 4SI4JR inward drive to "do sorrie attention paid to your personality, traveling," a lesson is learned. 110: An unusual: achievement Is temperament and disposition now. HSCfS: Expect the unexpected today. indicatedhavingtodo withthe useof intellectual faculties. Develop your skills and techniques in preparation for future. I"A TERRIFICALLY ^MOVING EXPERIENCE. Full of paradoxes, Ills at once heart­ breaking and comic, fangeringand reassuring. 1|?-GHARLES CHAMPLIN *c' Los Angeles Times JTONIGHT ONLY! FEATURES 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20 FREDA Academy Award Nomination* AND THE FIREDOGS ;w i SATURDAY Mr ' JERRY JEFF FEATURES 12:45-2:45-4>45 WALKER 6:45-8:45 FROM'THE AUTHOR '>••10 , - Celebrating his 32nd birthday^ OF "iERPICO" -... TWO SHOWS 7:30 & 10:30 AdvwKf Tkkttsat Nxw|k«di( lirner Sonctvm. «.<•, OTIS YOUNG /RANDY QUAID /CLIFTQN JAMES CAROLKANE/stm^nSROBERTTOWNE-JS5S5 DARRYL PONICSAN **k> JOHNNYMANDEL • n^nnGERALD AYRES • ommuHAL ASHBY M ACHUI rn*.««iUMUUT TURN FROM COLUMBIA PICTURES A DIVISIONOF COLUMBIAPICTURES INDUSTRIES, INCRl"^5j PETER MAAS COMESThe Vklachi "THE FOUR v«. iTHEATREV $1.00 til 5 MON.-FRI. _ —.... ^ 1500 S. PLEASANT VA1UY ROAD JUST OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE 444-3222 SHOWCASE" j-.AFEATURES 12:45-3:00-5:15-7:30-9:45 ^ FEATURES 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 NOMINATIONS! •nc.ud.ng BIST PICTURE/ BEST ACTRESS/BEST SCREENPLAY Reduced Prices Til 6 P.M. foon. thru-Sat. Aguninhis sock, atireironinhisbeltandnobadora TTib story of Eddia c i Thebest ex : EATURE TIMES Z-4-6-8-10 $1.00 til 6 p.m. By the winner of the 1970 Nobel Prize for Literature "0»IETWV IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DEMISOVU .. ^ $1.00 til 5 MON.-FRI. BADGE 373 YT 5 « mnnsnTNEKXPumarnnOHM. TONIGHT THRU SAT. AM^WDiR soizmmtsyVs ;^r' ROBERT -oyyALi -s f.' • •> VERNA BLOOM t C---. ! B . r;' ; ,FEATURES • WHO HAS NOW BEEN EXILED FROM RUSSIA NOW * ® KNOWS AND SEC THE REASON WHY—HE WANTS 1:00-3:10-5:20-7;30-9:40 Sex.Songs and Satirel 5 * ALL THE WORLD TO KNOW AND UNDERSTAND... 4MSI MIDNIGHT MOVIE ^ Can Heironvmus Merkin $1.25 EVERY FRIDAY-SATURDAY ever forget fey Humppe SCREEN 1^4 A MdvinFrank Film AlbuchOf Class HELD OVER • FEATURES 12)50-3:00-5:10-7:25-9:35 6 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCUiDINO BEST ACTRESS OXKIUY ix thku^;(»•• n.vx DKXiwnKn m FEATURES 1:45-3:45-5:45-7:45-9:45 < 'An exquisite andbeautiful film!" ?-Ju(lith Crist, Niw York Magazine ' % if \\ * mRAwmoGS" PUSTIN HOFFMAN SUSAN GEORGE WINNER 1972 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL JURY PRIZE AWARD Qnly Amtrkw ram and find true happiness? MIDNITE $1.29| (X) to bt so Howowd $1.00 til 6 p.m wntise/rr *N*veo Z4ssafT>ayan EXCLUSIVE ENQAOIMENT ••»»»•» »»» ••••» iHtUst%Htti riwi MktiHmsOfliBj—•>— SLAtJGHTERHOUS -p:,VE MCHA^I SACKS 'mnuwmui MtnwHinw !>««<« » TECHNICOlOft*vf SCREEN II *IIDNITE£I v^rlday, March 15, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 15 at; J# .-•« •-»<. it-'" IMtHIP ,. K'*5fc{S -s W'' •'•» thCUftlon 'Girls m Fen\inist The Tgxas Union, the tommyoity center Curtis—-recorder; free to optional fee • 1970 film opened the ."detachment" as well as her The ^emphasis on asks the audience if we \ for the University, provides varied; holders; $2 general admission; Hoggp "the Girls"; starring The change the, world, yie must ' for Box Office.Office, 10 a.m.^6 p.m. daily, 471 * Andersson, Harriet first Best of York honesty in "Lysistrata" as thematic v . facilities and an extensive program a.m.« D.m. dailv. 471®? Bibi New portraying the frailties of both sexes. basis arid structural remember that the/film was ' Students, faculty, staff and guests. ' ' 1444; Hogg Auditorii>m. Andersson and Gunnel Festival of Women's Films: |itobHDAy:,v® WEDNESDAY \, , Lindblom; directed by Mai but, to my knowledge, has not The story unfolds with springboard grow* made in 1969 and that alot of Noon-l::30 p.m. SandWkh Seminars-t-umbersome. 2etterling tilings have been said since. *C! " 9 a.m.'S p.m. Art Exhibit: "Canadian Zetteriing; to be presented been shown commercially in substantial . r-r~r;-•• . Graphics;" prize-winning raveling Consumer Protection Serie.s: Friday and Satnrdliy by this country. In fact;,the only Zetteriing, who wrote tbeseems to want to make Far more importantly, we exhibit of graphic art by Canadian . /'Marriage and Divorce ik Texas," Dr. script with David Hughes^,,certain we understand the must realize that Zetterling'is' Student. Government iii Zetteriing to reach Austin has, uses ftiia artists; an honor brought with the help' Guy Shuttlesworth, profenor of social Bordine Auditorium. probably been her Aristophaness^piay's relevancy. And,indeed, a/mature and honest artist of the Canadian Consulate; through -work; sandwiches, chlptjj and tea By CICELY WYNNE Weightlifter's sequence in "Lysistrata" to arouse thie 1 she usually makes such points who presents both sides, from -April 5; Union Art Gallery; sponsored available; Union Building 104. independence in three with subtlety simply by the characters* viewpoints as ••'v\ by Art$ and Theater Committee* THURSDAY . \ Texan Staff Writer ,J'Visions of Eight." fjjUISOAT . . 0ur fvitasies ofteijj; It hardly stretchesany point actresses who are touring to performing the play and well as > her own. Jt ;ii< | 7 p.m. Film: "Sorrow and thevlty,''1 % • Noon-1 p.m. Sandwich Seminar: "The miDAY -\ fovemhelm everyday ;reality to note that the Swedish the play. Aristophanes') letting Aristophanes' ideas do intentionally, the chatacter$'..-j Brown Berets;" a chicanoorganization Time and location to be announced; /director is both a woman and: comedy concerns a group of their own leaping, acrpss self-consciousness and Bias, : "witti their shocking andfrom East Austin gives a presentation ; Chess Tournament; through Saturday;: humorous revelations. Seldom . an excepi film maker. In women who tell theiifr millenniums. s t not the director's. ^ j of its phTlbsophy and activities^,, further information will be available in§ husbands: no sex until you.. FORTUNATELY, The At the sairi'e time, ; Mil can submission to that reality1? |these da>», violent,-male- sandwiches; chips and tea available; ^ the 'Progfarrt Office, director breaks great i t'l Union' Building'; produce so much pleasure as dominate movies, it's stop the war. soon away Zetteriing displays fe Union Building T04. ' lilt 342; registration required; sponsored We see scenes of the from the dependence to talent for surrealism. The /A4 in Mai Zetteriing'.s ''The., refreshing see a beautiful 8 p.m. Performing Arts Series:'^ranr^ 9 by Recreatidps Committee .and UT; 1 about omen from a comedy, which is the first juxtapose playfully little fantasy passages express the Brueggen — harpsichord, "and Alan Chess Club. >uii ,„ doubts mm female artisW viewpoint. antiwar; feminist work, then episodes of realistic men-women's and IN HK0H HYTWt DAHHB> » 4MUV", THE DIMENSIONS of three .in mid-line, we are suddenly women (and vice-versa> frustrations quitegraphically* TEXAS WORLD PREMIERE TODAY AT 1:30 P.M. STEVI FtHMAN -fftOOUCIt actresses' awakening to their transported into one of the relations with the womensand but they are subdued by the equality is visualized through women's fantasies. her own dreamlike visions. amused detachment, ot a realistic and surrealistic Zetteriing's ease in handling Some of the lines maysound deeply committed and images made all the more the shifts heightens the sense dated or self-conscious, as intelligent film maker; f| txmitpeUingfay; of discovery, bothmensayworoena** LarryMcMurtryknows humorous and ironic characters' and ours. „ silly, or when Bibi Andersson viewpoint, sans fantasies, and the north country of it is definitely feminist. IJ is ENTER Texas like thepalm the viewpoint of an extremely s sensitive and intelligent I of his Writing hand. human being who hapened to \ "DRAGON*' % '• '• 1 His stories of thatwild * go through life as a woman § arwstt mww IV 4 and sweet prairie -1 and became proud of her: nUliiT womanhood. And it is the spring from the earth uncanny brilliance of an artist HE CUOBBERS THE MOB AS itself, and from the who can still laugh and sigh — . especially at the end of the roots of the people who film — thinking it a bit absurd live, andloye..and dieon it. that men and women can't. treat each other as equals. From these stories THE DIRECTOR could A STEPHEN FRIEDMAN Production have come two notable hardly have found two better motion pictures.One was actresses in Harriet and Bibi -ANTHONY PERKINS Andersson.. Ingmar TiUD. Another was BEAU BRIDGES Bergman's discoveries prove) THE LAST PICTURESHOW. once again that it only takes aBLYTHE BANNER thousand nuances, to be truly Now, StephenFriedman, the great actresses. .Gunnel producer of THELAST ^ Lindblom, as the other. woman, is almost as . PICTURE SHOWandSidney' impressive. Lumet, thedirector of SERPIGO, hgveturned "7 7:30, 9:20' and 11:05 p.m. another remarkable.stotyby -Friday and Saturday in Burdine Auditorium. Larry McMurtry.LOVIN'MOLLY Hi : ;J - C . is perhapsthemost unusual Also Starung EDA/^RD BINNS story of themall. *, ' AWEINTRAUB HELLER Production "BLACK BELT JONES" slatnng JIM KELLY; GLORIA HENDRY Scieenptay by OSCAR WILLIAMS • Produced bv ARICA LARRYMcMURTRY and Pto&iced b* STEPHEN FRIEDMAN SIDNEY LUMET FRED WEINTRAUB and PAUL HELLER Directed by ROBERT CLOUSE Wk&ik fn>m w»n»«»Bn>».QAw«m«fCommunte«iion^cBn»»ny It's more _ From COLUMBIA PlCTURf S/* DIVISION OF COLUMBIAPICTURES INOUSIRIES INC jjg " muTcm CT A DTC $1.00 til 3:00 p.m. than your mind. . 91AK19 , ' -FSfifVjlllll FEATURES 476-2281 TODAY!! ^ l:4O-3:20-5:OO OPEN 1:30 FILMED IN BASTROP WITH MANY LOCAL 6:40-8:20-10:00 z'* J STARTS Features ACTORS INCLUDING JOHN HENRY r' ftMERICANA 2-4-6-8-10 TODAY Reduced Price* til 6:15 FAULK. LAST DAY! #VAGABOND WOMAN: 8:20 '» ;M F .»Si»i" st: HIROSHIMA: 6:40, 10:30 INTERSTATE THEATRES «»«<»« AUSTIN,,^ Jl I T •/. .;: -"'v: -• •*',.• • •••.•.• • "so fine that it should prove irresistible, adelightful new surprisefrom r WOODY ^ achieves with elegance and eloquence thedirector of "My Night atMaud's" ALLEN i -anhonest the goals it has set for Itself, 'my night at and"Claire's Knee'' maud's' was forme the finest film in the TAKES A T A festival (new york 1969)." wt —¥ine«nt canby, n«w yoifc lima* NOSTALGIC LOOK ATTHE 5 AL PACING FUTURE. "SERPIGO' ly •r?-" 'It- StLsTflr my Ut: vFINAL 7 DAYS! % 7 p.m. wai^iAUSTIN ¥: BOOT HIU • 7:50 •' r--:j *< f rafilm by Eric Rohmer r-: ,3'J so cor^^f. BIG JAKE • 6:00 9:2* Avr >. Waning Haydee Politoff and Patrick Bauchau STARRING JEAN-Ido.® TRINTIGNANT AND FRANCOISE FABIAN tn CMkntneoior IWRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY ERIC ROHMER PATHE CONTEMPORARY FILK pr—Conttmtxwi , ThoseTRINITYi Boys Are Batld MIDHITE MOVIES DOUBLE TIATURI ^ „ SAT.iSUN. MATINEE MOVIES DOUBLE FEATURE $1.00 ONLY I ante ft-tf­ }SW. %abn in ft „ . " DUCK *19 MONKIY IShtfF**i SOUP BUSINESS kJ£-l 12:10 1*^0 THE WOLFMAN m 7^­ITWOTHOOS««9ffiHLE8KJ0FFE,Pft0OUCTK>t GP t!£3i> 2:00, 5i00 r..' 1 -> Ptatexdh/ JACK^ROSS8a^ E*«cue»«ProAKwC>WHL£SH,JC3FFe ' I m . OLIVER HEED IN ?; ON THE SAME.PROGRAM * -'''IWfc.ta, 'ALLEN'ind MARSHALL'BfllCKMAN • CVccfM Oy WOOOYAUEnJ Kh:,. hs 1 IJohn Wayn* ^ ^ Rlfl I A If C' THE CURSE Of UnrtidHilall < 'a *5 hi" V"/"vi THE WEREWOLF TRY AM ^ i ^ T ^ VAt *1 ^ W8&M8St Page 16 ^riday^'March' 15, 1974 fllE DAlfcY tEXAN I -'•*. .v. -f, f--V* ( • . •st&MiZ . ? _ *34' 2 tscv"-> lj ... By CiLENN MYERS public appearance' at the impressive range and how, we have to play crowd at Castle Cree* 15. Texan Staff Writer if'New Folk" concert portion command of his voice, has pleasers and standards and 23 and will appear opening ' ^ ------Sere's a little town of the Kerrville Folk Festival, been primarily a rock and stuff. We enjoy doing those, night May 23 at Rod Look-out Mountain that's She is a strong and natural blues vocalist until Plum too, but we'd like to go more Kennedy'f Kerrville Folk ',j3j •V-; plum outa Tennessee and vocalist, wiUi leanings toward Nelly. Formerly with the for originals. It's a way of Festival. *}>. 1 ,nelly outaGeawgia, and that's "Texas music" (not the kind Sweetarts and Molta, he has getting my songs to the Thurman feels that the I why they call it Plum Nelly," that inundates, yjau, jfUtta,-. be«n batting aroMnd, the people. We get asked to play group is a part of something'flaid Billy Stoner, member of Austtrt music scene foir 10 Jerry Jeff and Murphy and new and evolving. "I thinkAustin's Plum Nelly. Stoner, 'rhythm acoustic years and has done some work Ramsey and those guys. By rock is spent, and country's Once they plug in their guitar, vocals, primary writer with Rod Stewart.^ the time we get to doin' them, comin' on. We're in on die ? strewn equipment^around an of the group and former truck we'll be doing our own stuff," ground floor of something big.available stage-and spill inte driver, first came to Austin in Put them all together and Stoner said. ; > v Jim Hendrix was progressive* their opening number, -the the days of the Vulcan Gasf what have you got? A group In their path through the Rock's peaked out. Rock'satmosphere is honky tonk Company, about five years that combines two-three-and Austin music club hierarchy, into the future. Country'sexcitement and movement, ago. His tunes, rhymes and four-part harmony with lead they play at the Dime Box Inn goin' through the same oldbrought to you by the four thoughts are as solid country vocals by any of the four, lead Friday, Buffalo Gap bones. I know Austin's in on a distinct personalities of Jerrie as they are Stoner. ^% fiddle runs laid over a rhythm Saturday, Bevo's Monday, boom cause people ii|c&Jo Jones, Stoner, Benny Thurman, fiddle, violin a^d guitar and bass foundation, Soap Creek Saloon Thursday,' Conqueroo> .comin' back."!0f^' Thurman and Ernie bluegrass country vocalist, treating traditional, standard Gammage, who have blended University music major drop­and original tun^s, such as their music in the old sense of out, bass player for the Stonfer's "River Gang*' ("Onethe word "group," where the psychedelic 13th Floor of my closest friends was a Riverside '& Twin $1.00 til 5 p.m. iff' • y The Man,' fas; yior10 years"!and his mixture V." Jerrie Jo Jones was first played with Leon Russell, of fact and "fantasy in "The Cinema MON.-FRI. 1 111 ' heard by Stoner about a year Jerry Garcia, Moon Pie and Devil and the Deep BlueSea," 44144M IMpWTHIVtMIPIblUWt ' l*'* ago atShakey's Pizzain North . Bob Brown. His fiddle is with the rhythms and musical Joseph E. levine presentsa Miha Ntchols'film starringJack NichoKon • Austin, where she used to beat clear, test, with excellent construction of rock, country, ' her brains out trying to sound timing, and a combination of spiritual and bluegrass, *** Cdinal Knowledge'it or»of th«bMtmoviM«var." like a red and" white stripe? country licks with formal • —Lit Smith. CotmopolHtn Migttln* player piano and banjo, music training. ;v"We'd tofiiirn more ahlr ' *.««» #' —Twwi Staff Hm» by OwM Nowmon Forsaking that life, she and Gammage, bass guitar* -more toward originals. But Mike IVichol^JMNicholsoii.Candice Beigea ^ Plum Nelly performing at Soap Creek Saloon Stoner joined up, making their strong vacalist with an the way the clubs are right ArttwCarfunl^/VnnMaigreiandJulesFeiffer. | (^malKnnM^ri^.KV^Ii^Carnal Knowledge. > I 2 12:50 television EXCLUSIVE *«8EmMuy PWuir* America's first woman in 24 I Dream of Jeannie ?< The-Six Million Dollar M4n 2:40 •7 p.m. a ' * "?> space runs' into trouble when MOpm. 36 . The Girl With • Something ' Extra vv-*i 4:30 SOUTHWESTERN Executive Producer JoseplrE Levine • Produced and Oirvcied by 7 Dirty Sally •---.. an explosion rips a hole in the 9 Washington Week , 9 Lawn and Garden "Camel K/wwiedoe"­ capsule and wounds her fellow 24 "The Big Cats" — National : 34 The Brian Keith Show % 6:20 PREMIERE Geographic.Society Special p.m. -••••.,. , •... 8:10 4^ T i ^ / wz'.jti1;. astronaut in The Six Million 34 Sanford and Son ,, 9 Austin Profile , h'M $ms Dollar Man at 8 p.m. On 24; *7:30 p.m. •/ 'T 4 iiifti toyou6ywzfinepows-thefieofi/e viT'5 ^ -n't­ grw&you "7/?e tfezz S/h?er WALKIN' ;| "Hwrty of funk" .. From Wtrrw Brot A Wariwr Communfcatlonft Company MBmNASTY 'ARTBD fTALLl BEVO'S BARGAIN WEST SIDE TAP . • MIXED DRINKS P' MATINEE 24th and Rio Grande $1.00 AU SEATS TIL I.H.35 NORTH 1:30 p.m. MATINEES thru SUNDAY ? "Oqd" at 1:00-4:354:10 p.m. 6757 AIRPMT "Son" at 2:45-6:20-9:55 p.m. 1454-2711 f-K THE TWO TOP MOVIES OF THE YEAR! -WI^ BOX OFFICE OI»EN 7:0& BETWEEN THEM THEY WIN NOMINATIONS FOR ; SHOW STARTS DUSK •»'. •; 'A<0^5; 20 ACADEMY AWARDS!! —r«''*£•&• ^ . INCLUDINO BEST PICTURE • BEST ACTOR • BEST ACTRESS1" " BEST SUPP0RTIN6 ACTOR • BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS •--PLUS :M LIMITED ENGAGEMENT-MATINEES thru SUNDAYl PETER BOYLE John WAYNi • Anh-MARGRIT -.HIGHLAND MALL„ „ VatiUUiiia ^ I &|| PLUS Oijyjrr TRAIN ROBBERS 'pg OFFIH35at HI WAY 290 ; -v*. = ­ TRANS•TEXAS ROCKING CHAIR SEATS PATGARRETT PLUS SMOKING PERMITTED ABB JL ACRES FREE PARKING 1423 W 8m White BM.-4422333 BILLY THE KID giWILLIAM PETER BIATTVS--^ Starts Today! Open 5:45 Features,6-8-10 11THE SKirGAME' |r] METBQCOLOR : C 1.: Jaims GARNER -Lou GOSSETT fHB SHOWTOWtNJ U.S.A. y*-* ifc, r 1' imon R ij , hmn Hmt Todby ^ *' BEST • VTnrin Raton" at'lrf04404t25 pM. 'WIST 5Cm«N BEST ACTOR NOMINEE ACTRESS SUR 6«IRM" it 3:154^-1045 CUNT mVLMM/MJUH . MANN TMEATMS ittTWrnHTHM SI iinm MHtrn TECHNICOLOR* W&F Hfl URUM MAts AVNIVERSALPICTURE viiHomu RkT MWTTtl 12i00.2t2(Mt40.Ti00.St» wtmuwtmc&mmHoo SATURDAY -SATURDA^F ncNN«ew»> HHtvmoH* sunMT i r-y. • -8 £ > • r^r C71 A »* ^ v * ~ l irtjuw y (jLASSIFI^D-^g^ERTlSING FOR SAL FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS. •FURN. APARTS. HELP WANTED ROOMMATES 15 word minimum 3S8 MINI APARTMENT. Op*n beam ^r"4^ • Each word one time ^,«..... $ 10 canoe North 27ijh & NEARLY NEW Inflatable with celling, shagcarpet throughout,ailbuilt- of Each word 2-4 times .09 f00f£ump,1if4|bck*ts, and paddles. Mis­LOOKING POR AN APT.? H; NEED IMMEDIATELY^, 4ust : In kitchen, color coordinated. CA/CH, V *' : Each word 5-9 hmes .... $ 07 call 474-1074-afternoon*. . LE MARQUE " Guadalupe Avenue ' ^li(> Student rate each time S .75 1972 HONDA SOQcc.. 4 cyl., 8500 miles, $115, one bedroom $130, two bedrooms $134.50 bills paid. 452-5533, 451-6533. PART- crash bars. S950,, best otter. Contact $170. Pool/ sundeck,•fully carpeted, cen­Central Properties Inc. on Town Lake. Free ywmand Each word 10 or more times S 06 Close to campus. Luxury efficiencies Choose from over 10,000 units," pool, near campus. 4000 A. Person to share plush duplex Classified Display . Advantage Point Apt. Locator §K$^ " I coi. x one inch one time ...; $2.96 : G # r y , -4 7 1 -l W 5 . : • ^ 5 tral air and heat. -. X •*$ board in exchange for light Kf rV I LOI. x one inch 2-9 times .... $2.66 302 W. 38th Free s NEW THIS WEEK! Ponce de Leon III, housekeeping duties. J .iof. Y one inch l& or more times MARANTZ 2270;Receiver with case • ;• 451-6533 452-6066 • -22nd and San Gabriel. Extra large two ^FULL-TIME ;, perfect condition, under warranty. M50. • Call Mr. Huffman , ^ i $2,37 bedroom, two bath apartments ABP. : ^Typing, Mulftlithtng, binding -­ Call 441-8180. Before noon, after seven.; Central Properties Inc. outstanding in ' ; WORK • Most apartments the' university area! Call Rod Wetsel at 472-, The Complete Professional 451-8242 -No fee. ^ 261-6200 1970 SAAB. 1300 miles. Runs perfectly. ? 8941 or 472-8253. If youcan answeryes tothreeof thenextD6AOUNC SCHRHJ1I Good condition. 27 mpg. S1500. 454-2327. four questions: UT AREA, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, CA/CH, FULL-TIME Typing ,TtKonMdov ...... 3.00 p.m; WALK TO CAMPUS $149.50 ALL BILLS RAID. 1 bedroom 1. Ilike to meet people?—, walk-in closets, laundry, pool, utilities, ' TwctAiy Twan Monday ... , 10:00 a.m. -y reasonable. 477-2608. Service WadnnAw Tcion Tucmy . .10:00 a.m. 2. Ilike a challenged MARTIN GUITAR Model D-21, very Reasonably priced. Large one bedroom' / furnished, CA/CH, built-inkitchen, near ' hard to find.Excellent sound, condition. " Spartments available. Carpeted; TWO BLOCKS campus. 4307 Avenue A. 451-6533, 451- •RE.SUMES fh dmtfJfmMhHtoi MV 3. lam willing to work smt. FEMALE: MARCH FREE. 2 bedroom ""HWJstiett-case. *450. 477-2508 after 5. CA/CH, pool, sundeck, built-in kitchen. 3840. Central Properties Inc. Friday .Taxan Tttwtdoy , ; 10:00 a.m. 4. My frlitnds think I'mITwinner? apartment. Town 'Lake, SS5.00 ABP. • V. r with or without pictures. '70 PODGE PICKUP. Bucket seats, 311 East 31st TO CAMPUS SUMMER RATES NOW! Si* blocks Please Call tor Job Interview Shuttle, own room. 444-3*37 anytime. 2 Day Service -• automatic, auxilary tanks, camper, 478-6776 451-6533 from Law School; 2blocks shuttle bus. 2 472-3192 , 9t 472-7206 goodCondition. $1300. 454-9387 after 6. > bedroom/2 bath; one bedroom $135. AC, STRAIGHT MALE ROOMMATE: 2 ? 472-3210 and 472-7671 "In tht mnt ... Central Properties Inc. 1 & 2 Bedroom Efficiencies bedroom, SS0. ABP, IC shuttle, pool. carpet, dishwasher, disposal, walk-in i,• 2707 Hemphill Park adoiriUaiwwi, immtdialtMtkamvil b* NORWEGIAN ELK HOUND, male, \ Full kitchen Park. 4>7-5092, f closets. 32nd and interregional. 477-0010 #ivan otth«publbhart at*vatsanwU* far make —* or GL3-2228 three months, champion ,bred, CA/CH, carpeting only ONCImwiyl lwwfla>.Mdofch* far , SOMETHING DIFFERENT' ROOMMATE to share large 2 bedroom offer. 258-2744. > rdiiHlmaaH tfooutd ba mod* hat latar Efficiencies With elevated separate Large walk'in closets NEED IMMEDIATELY. v apartment -March free. S70 ABP. Fred, MINI APARTMENTS, also dne and two TYPING II than 30 day* after puWkoHon." 1964 VW. Good condition. Newly bedrooms plus enormous one and two Oriental furnishings. 477-4222. bedrooms. campus. jfc> 'inspected. Call after 5:30 p.m. 454-7519. bedroom contemporary apts. withevery , Study room Close to Fully A Responsive Typing Service carpeted; CA/CH, rich wood paneling, Person to share plush duplex $•, convenience, furnished or unfurnished! ROOMMATE TO SHARE two bedroom HEWLETT (PACKARD 80. Perfect OAK CREEK Is' environmentally, Peaiceful courtyard with pool pool, air built-in kitchen. From $1)9.50. on Town Lake. Freeroom and LOW STUDENT RATES 4200 Avenue A.451-6533,4544423. Central house. S75 a month. Call Mary between 15 word minimum each day . S .75 condition. S350. Call 477-8994. L-201, oriented and offers a creek that winds Only steps to' shopping Properties Inc. board in exchange for light .10 a.m. and noon. 442-6537: • cach additional wordeach day S 05 Colorado Apartments. After 6. through Ihe community convenient-tq 405 East 31st housekeeping duties. '2200 Guadalupe .campus & shopping and conveniently OWN ROOM spacious luxurious house I col. x one inch each day .... $2.37 472-2147, 472-4162 STEPS TO UT. 1 & 2 bedroom Call Mr. Huffman near Balconies and 2222. S90 plus bills. "llnclassifieds" 1 line 3 days SI.00 GIANT GARAGE SALE. Sponsored by .priced from $125. 1507 Houston Street. efficiencies. Nice pool area, study room, © (Prepaid, No Refunds) ' U.T. Acappella Choir. Saturday 9am -454-6394 Central Properties Inc. 451-6533 Barry Gillingwater Company oriental furnishings.From$139 ABP.405 261-6200 451-6137. Yvonne. Students must show Auditor's 6pm Sunday 1pm -7pm. 1502 South 472-2147, 472-4162. Barry Fast 474.i124 East 31st. Thesis Bldy 3 200 (25th & WhitiS) from 8 Auditorium. ELEVEN POOLS i.>.AK r J-IML SUMMER INSTRUCTORS apt. Private room, bath, pool, sauna, Professional Resumes .£{Ul£.T ENFIELDAREA.One bedroom reccipt and pay in advance in TSP First, 10 blocks south of Municipal Gillingwater Company MALE ROOMMATE: share 3 bedroom a>m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through EFF„ 1 and 2 HIGHLAND MALL ' C" NEEDED Bteightxoffin. Cail .928-2820. --No Hassles Scientific ®^"w?Th.. bullt-ins, vaulted ceilings, Eridivy. ---..LARGE *1NNER -TUBES far -swimming Small June • July Next to Gourmet" or tubing. All sizes to choose from. S3.00 BEDROOMS AREA ON community living. $139.50 plus Field classes in science-oriented and FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEQED Oh the Drag -// up. 2201 Airport Blvd. " electricity. 801 West Lynn. 477-8871, 472-pioneer neriiage program^ i.e. go Own.room. South Austin^ heritage program, I.e. geology, NOW!FROM $132 ALL BILLS SHUTTLE paleontology, andJ an plant animal townhouse. Call 444-0292. FOR SALE. Ironsted bed painted gold, PAID unfurn. , organic , 4162. Barry Gillingwater Co. Huge V 8. 2 Bedrooms turn, or EXCELLENT communities, botany, mapping,,ot $35, Call after 5. 441-5707. witli large walk-ins, beautiful landscape gardening, heritage, pi ROOMMATE needed. >75 SECRETARY TYPIST A new concept in apartment NORTHEAST NEAR SHUTTLE, Austin pioneer MALE ... per FOR SALE ino. From $154 ABP. 1100 Relnli. 452--skills. (Pre-school -Adult), knowledge month, billspaid. Until end of May,.Call '61 FORD 350. One ton truck. Old 3202, 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater Com­From of local'area will be helpful. $2.50 per 454-0161 after 6:00. students and faculty members in every community living. Five-Highland Mall, & Capitol Plaza. Large V- producing finest quality typing for & 2 bedroom with ail the extras. ~ hydramatic 4 speed. 750x17 tires. 12 foot architectural styles, choice of pany.. ' ' S137.50 plus electricity. 1)05 Clayton hour for 15-30 hour week. Contact field for 15 years, will take meticulouslumbpr rack. After 5 on weekdays. 1307 furniture styles, color coor­Lane. 453-7914, 472-4162 Barry NATURAL CENTER* 401 care to typelaw briefs,research papers, SCIENCE AUSTIN dinated throughout. CA/CH, Gillingwater Company B.C. reports-, theses, and dissertations Cullen Avenue. Deep Eddy, 472-4523. Mon.-Frl. 9-5:00. accurately, observing; proper forms. CAMPER AAART n,— '69 VW FASTBACK. Automatic, radio-all built-ins, available unfur­ UNF. HOUSES EFFICIENCIES ON SHUTTLE. *129.50 Latest* model IBM Executive carbon' VILLA 50,000 miles. $1100 cast* Must sell. 476­ See us at6324 N.Lamar forcustombuilt, nished for S120 all bills paid/ Includes shag, 'complete kitchen, ribbon typewriter. All Work proofread. 1432 alter 6 p.m. 20-plus mpg. /• all aluminum andwood-aluminum pick­ CA/CH. community. 4204-478-0762. RETAIL ZONING. Larg« older 1S01 Kinney Ave. No. Ill Small TOPLESS home up camper tops. Spefedway. 452-09i)6, .472-4162. Barry near University. Fresh paint, plenty of • 16mtfi KEYSTONE MOVIE Camera. 2 451-6533, 447-3983 ORLEANS Pi Start at $159.95 ' Gillingwater Co. oarkina. J275/morfth.Dall McGrew.459­ We wilt build any design, any color. lens, turret. Slow-mo, singleframe. Old, Central Properties Inc. 206 West 38th "8763, 45*7442; -~ . — ^ — -Bi -•clean,^reliable $85. 477-6W4. = r - 452-3800 lor 2 Bedroom Furnished.Convenient to SEMESTER LEASE. Large new 1 8, 2 antf bedroomsugui uuiiii *riim shag, Ivonlanvi, eXpCriehCe UT.. Beautiful Pool Patio. with auay, jcemaker, NO ABCWIT6CTUaALL¥-UNIQU«'^WU»e­ -64 VW SQUAREBACK with newer BsasonabJo-Siiuttle. 4t-bleefc.—-dut>room;-TREES. Secluded location iir " ^arn $60Ur$80r in countryside. 15 miles from^tampus ' GARAGE SALE. Saturday-Sunday. 474-17421,..-452-3314 459-9927 ~ #^453.4545 Northeast off Manor Road. From $159 working in one • FLEUR DE LIS, 404 East 30th. Mature 507 E. Bee Cave Rd. FURN. HOUSES —term papers and reports WE RENT -with every guitar, Amster Music 1624 Fully Carpeted student. Lovely one bedroom. Walk to (2 mi/past Zllker Park) Prompt, Professional AUSTIN Lavaca. campus. Shuttle. Summer rates. 477­ 2204 Enfield Rd. 478-0609 5282. Your time is valuable ASK TO SEE SHUTTLE BUS CORNER LAKE AUSTIN -15 minutes Service GUITARS AND OTHER FRETTED instruments repaired at reasonable QUR BRAND NEW COLORFUL MINI apartments on BOTH SEXES campus/downtown. 1, 2, and 3 bedroom 453-7577 -* Bi mobile $85 S140. prices. OUDS, LUTES, DULCIMERS, Our service is free shuttle. Two locations, two designs. 38th homes. to Mack's Tl etc. Custom built. 20% discount on all I've Got a Secret Apartments. HARTFORD PLACE and Speedway area. Convenient to MASSAGE .Marina. 327-1891, 327-1151. Pick-up Service Available bl bi strings. Geoff Menke -Amster Music. PARAGON Located in the heart oKUT 1405 HartfordRd. 263-2390 downtown and city bus. From S119-S124 Ncw'oxpansion details the hiring of 10 FOR SUMMER SESSION 2-1 house In 1524 Lavaca. 478-7331. area. 1 block to shuttle. $149.50 Large furnished 1 bedroom and plus electricity. Barry Gillingwater massayers to bo trained and go to work Li Tarrytown. All bills paid. Washer and CA/CH, . PROPERTIES -S169.50, ABP. efficiency apartments. shag Comp.ahy. 454-8576, 472-4162. „ April 15. dryer. No pets. Call 477-5570. If GUITAR REPAIR, new and used carpet, quiet atmosphere. Just off m acoustics, electrics, amps. Discounts-oh 472-8253 * 472-2518 Enfield Road, convenient to UT, Capitol, APARTMENT FINDERS service. 472-N.0 EXPERIENCE TYPING Reports, Resumes bistrings and accessories. THE STRING 472-4171 shuttle bus. Some vacancies now, ^re­4162. Kim « Theses, Letters . NECESSARY SHOP, 1716 San Antonio, 476-8421. Tuei.-lease for fall and summer. n" S, y All University and Sat. 10-6. weekdays EFFICIENCIES. Call Mr. Forter 441-4151 .SV, business work REDWOOD Near TYPING campus and shuttle. Shag, full kitchen, R j.-;.' >'r Last Minute Service OVATION steel string acoustic guitar. TOWER small community living. S145 ABP, 403 I yZ-..fV Open 9-9 Mon-Th fi< 9-5 Must sell to repay loan. Penny, 442-0782. ESTABLISHMENT APTS. West 38th. Barry GillingwaterCompany. 472-4175 Fr'-Sat $135 472-4162, 454-8576. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for young ERVICE . ORNATE BRASS BEDS. Polished, with weekends MANOR persons who would like to work in a new Multilrthing, Typing, side railings. Just arrived. Doubles and ALL BILLS PAID 1 BEDROOM $139. Near campus and massage parlor in North Austin. Ask for 472-8936 30A Dobie Center; • Dishwasher singles. Sandy's, 506 Walsh., shuttle, convenient to downtown. New CO-ED DORM • Coforful Shag Carpetxfc Slgne between' 10.a.m. to 12 midnight. Xeroxing furniture, pool. 407 West 38th. Barry CAVLERAS 30%-50% Off. Canon Ftb ESTRADA Gillingwater Company. 472-4162, 454-AUS-TEX • Central Air Friday and Saturday till 1:00 a.m. 451­bl.2, list $534, only. $282. Camera 1 1 Block Campus • 4400 Ave. • Shuttle B Bus 3 Blocks 451-4584 8576. ' 9190, or come by at 1104 Koenlg Lane, ABACUS • Quiet Obscura, 478-5187 evenings. 1 • Maid Service between Lamar Blvd. and Burnet Road. DUPLICATORS' BUSINESS-SERVICES Free Parking • MOVE IN TODAY APTS. BankAmericard, Mastercharge. 1 • All Bills Paid TARRYTOWN. ONE BEDROOM. Relaxing atmosphere. Laundry Facilities due special Has vacancies, 1 and 2 Mature single, to 476-7581 1301 S. Interregional 1970 CAMARO, 3-speed. Excellent circumstances. All bills paid. Only $125. condition, good.gas'mileage. Call 476-bedroom 459-7950. 11? Neches 444-0816 2443. 1601 South Lakeshore Blvd. $135 Phone 442-6668 ONE BEDROOM Apartment -S155.00. LOCK, STOCK & Typing (507page), Printing ATTENTION MARRIED STUDENTS! ALL BILLS PAID Luxury, extra nice, close to campus, BOBBYE DELAFIELD, IBM Selectric, and Binding Want economicalhousing? 10'by 52' new Four people suites; 2 bdrms, 2 •Colorful ShagCarpet shuttle bus. Warwick Apartment's. 2919 BARREL RESTAURANT pica(elite, 25 years experience, books, Moon mobilehome locatedin UT Trailer baths, living room, dining • Central Air • Pool' West Avenue. 474-1712. Has openings for Lunch Waitresses, dissertations, theses, reports, mimeographing. 442-7184. Park. Evenings, 474-2591-. V.I.P area, kitchenette. Private Shuttle Bus 3 Blocks Cocktail Waitresses,Hostesses, Walters, » NORTHEAST. Huge one and two Busboys, Kitchen helpers, Cooks, and A to Z Rooms Available. RETFfEAT APTS. BEAUTIFUL PERSONAL TYPING.All AKC IRISH1 SETTER puppies. Healthy, APARTMENTS 4400 Ave. A 459-0058 bedroom. Complete kitchens, lots of Bartenders. Full or part-time. Phone _ SECRETARIALSERVICE . friendly, 2 months old. Shots, wormed. storage, from S125 plus electricity. 1402 daytime 454-6307 for interview. your-University work. Fast, accurate, $100. 476-5439 after 5, weekends. 33rd & Speedway Move In Today East St. Johns (by Reagan Hjgh School) reasonable. Printing-Binding. Mrs. 109 East 10th St. . . Walk UT or Shjiltle at door. Bodour. 478-8113 454-1583. 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater 472-0149 SONY TC Dual Capstan Drive Auto Split level luxury living. Beautifulstudio 1908 University Ave. Company. Theses, Dissertations, themes, reverse cassette tape deck. $150. Eddie. units designed for 3-5 mature students. ' 478-2185 MARK XX APTS. PART TIME WORK..$300/per month. SMALLWOOD last resumes MABYL Typing -P.R.'s, BC Reports,minute ; overnight Term 454-9089 after 6 p.m. New contemporaVy decor. Walk-ins, 1 BR-S1552 BR-S184 'i MONTH RENT FREE. Large Call 452-2758. available. Multilithlng, Binding .papers, theses, dissertations, letters. LIKE NEW BSR 810 turntable with elegant atmosphere. CENTRAL AIR 452-3076, 258-1832. COWBOYS AND HANDS WANTEt) for MasterCharge. BankAmericard. 892-Everything From A to Z pool, cable TV, shag-carpet. Quiet furnished one bedroom. CA/CH, cable. 0727 or 442-8545. •Shure M91E. Usedonly six months. $125. King size one bedrooms also available. CARPETING New York camp. Wrangler-counselors "" TREES & VIEWS 441-7572. Leasing for Summer and Fall NOB HILL APARTMENTS 1-2 bedroom apply now: High Chaparral Ranch, Rt. STARK TYPING. Experienced theses, Drastically reduced Summer rates Nice 2 bedrooms furn. or unfurn. only LARGE POOL furnished, pool, dishwasher, disposal, 23C, East Jewett, N.Y. FRANCES WOOD Typing Service. . dissertations, PR's, etc. Printing and. SUNN CONCERT BASS Amp X2-15" No calls after 7:00 p.m. mm. from downtown, 5 rhlh. from 3815 GUADALUPE bills paid, laundry, '-"i block toIC shuttle. Experienced, law theses, dissertations, Binding, Specialty Technical. Charlehe Altec speakers), Giannini Craviola {12-477-5560 or 477-7451 Large walk-ins. extra storage, private 2520 Longvlew. 477-8741. NEED LABORERSand helperson large manuscripts. 453-6090. Stark,fe453-5218. string Italian guitar) 3 microphones and 454-3953 452-5093 apartment proiect. Call Bob Kendrlck balconies, lots of glass. Prom $179 plus other miscellaneous sound equipment. EFFICIENCY -S105 all bills paid. Maid after 6 p.m. 441-0663. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Graduate DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, and 472-3802. Timbercreek entrance). 444-1269, 472-service, 6 blocks campus, shuttle bus. and undergraduate work.Choice of type law briefs. Experienced typist, E. OAK KNOLL 620 South 1st (use "WEST AUSTIN Brand New 4162. Barry Gillingwater Company. 2408 Leon. 476-3467. WAIT-PERSONS WANTED. The Back styles ana sizes. Barbara Tullos, 453-Tarrytown. 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine 1973 C'*PRI 2600, 13,000 miles. Efficiency. 5 minutes to down­Forty's Steak House. Apply in person. 5124. Brady.. 472-4715r FM/cassette*fctei°eo, AC, vinyl top. 441-town and shuttle bus to UT. 1 BR-S150 EFFICIENCY 2700 Swisher, 1block Law 501 East 5th. 1865, 258-5J21 eif 371. $155 ABP Dishwasher -Paneling School. ABP S120/month. 478-6550. VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diverslfled-x^j r- EL CID APTS. Call today for. your choice of 1 bedrooms BARTENDER WANTED -part time. Services. Graduate and undergraduate JUST North of 27th &Central AC -Carpeted MOTOROLA TV, terrific buy for $25.22" color schemes. NEAR CAMPUS. Furnished efficiency The Draught House, 4112 typing, printing, binding. 1515 Koenlg Medical paneling screen. 476-9078. 472-0558, 4728278, 4766707 -\jnit shag -3704 Speedway 453-4883 with CA/CH, dishwasher, disposal, etc. Parkway. Lane. 459-7205. Guadalupe giant walk-ins -balconies S120. 104 East 32nd. Manager apartment 1948 CADILLAC HEARSE, largest car 7551 SHUTTLE BUS FRONT no. 103. 476-5940, 451-2832. ACTORS NEEDED for film. M AND J. TYPING of theses, resumes, Spanish furnishings-'' student ever made. Show Exxon you can still DOOR Call Joe 477-4386 or 474-4488 after 5 p.m. dissertations, duplication, binding: open afford gas. Completely restorable. Have ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment. everyday. 442-7008. Not at old address. 2423 Town Lake Circle most new parts. $695. 476-9078. 444-8118 >72-4162 Shag, dishwasher, cable, pool, shuttle. BASEBALL MANAGERS and coaches Please call befdl-e coming. $129.50 Barry Gillingwater Company ' $135. All Bills Paid. Call 474-2605. urgently needed for North Austin Lions OVATION steel string acoustic guitar. . 1-: PARK PLACE Club. Babe Ruth League. Mr. Jarman 9-NEAT, ACCURATE and prompt typing. Almost new. Must sell. Penny, 442-0782. All Bills Paid STUDIO APARTMENT -male grad 5, 454-4881, After 5, 452-3303. 65 cents per page. Theses 75 cents. Call. APTS. YES, we do type 447-2737. student. Large living area, kitchenette, 42~INCH ELECTRIC RANGE. Double, town 2 Br. Furn.-$180 walk-in closet, hanging closet, .tail WAITRESS/WAITER wanted 2-3 nights Near Shuttle Bus and Down­ ^ SOUTH Freshman themes. self-cleaning, automatic ovens. White. ALL BILLS PAID shower, private entrance, shuttle. J100 per week 4-12 p.m. The Stage Coach *S TYPING SERVICE.,Professional $300. 453-6544 after 5:30pd. 472-0558 ABP. 478-6380. Lounge. Please call Charles Jacobs. 451-typing. Reports, theses, dissertations, Central Air Condition-LargeRooms KAWASAKI TRAIL, 10 472-8278 / < SHORE Fully Carpeted -Covered Parking Area NEW furnished 5291, after 6 p.m. 345-9046. resumes. Copy service available. 453-Why not start out with lOOcc. speed ONE BEDROOM 7^77. 4306 Ave. A 452 52-1801 transmission. 1973, $450, trade on MG 476-6707, unit 7551. apartment with CA/CH, dishwasher, WANTED PHOTOGRAPHERS good grades! APARTMENTS for Midget or Sprite. 454-3825. disposal, laundry, and pool '/2 block MODELS special assignment. HOLLEY'S^ TYPING SERVICE. A shuttle. Near 34th ana Speedway at 3405 Excellent pay, send vital statistics and complete service from typing through 62 l.-H. METRO VAN with Hydraulic lift, TWO BLOCKS UT SUNNYVALE Helms. 472-7885. photos to LouButler, Gen. Del.,UT Sta., binding. Available until 10 p.m. 472-3210 and 472-7677 5425. '72 ton Ford Van. 452-0004 ; 442-large Experienced in all fields. Near campus, 0610, One bedroom Efficiency, 1, 2, and 3 Austin, 78712. 1401 Mohle Drive. *76-3018. bedroom 2 Br. Furn. -S170 EXPERIENCED SALESPERSON for apartment's. CA/CH, APTS. . .. .. 2707 Hemphill Park 750 NORTON 1972 $1,000. New Sting Ray carpeted, cable, dishwasher, apartments. VILLA ladles' sportswear shop. Part-time. The bike, 5-speed, $25. Both great condition. 1 Br. Fgrn. -$150 /covered/parking, laundry. Crickett Shop. Highland Mall. 477-1614. Offer the solution to. Private HELP WANTED ABP S142.50 Balconies -Dishwasher - your housing. DETTE EXCELLENT TYPISTS. Must type 70 SONY 250 reel to reel tapedeck. $90. 476-477-8146. 2101 Rio Grande Pool -Central Air Central,air,'spacious, paneling, 1 8. 2 , wpm. Flexible hours. Apply 1-5. 30-A 441-05846721 ext 72 or 451-4080. / The South Shore's centrat location bedrooms, pool, attractive furniture, Doble Mall. 472-8936. SHUTTLE BUSCORNER free cable TV, gas and water, carpet, U.T CHANNEL, home JVC 4 8-track . provides easy access to laundry. Hear Medical Park Tower and PERSON NEEDED for demanding We are now taking applications player-recorder. Like new. $110. 477-POSADA DEL NORTE Come by and see our new efficiency and UT. Select tenants Apartment 104 position that requires all -secretarial 4222. 1 bedroom apartment* on the banks of skills plus the ability to write and for new cashier and grill help. Save.rponey Come Hve with us. For the Manager. 4318 Bull Creek Town Lake Compfete with shag MINOLTA SUPER 8 camera. Autopak accent modern fur­ next tbree weeks only get your U00 gift carpeting, waM, NEWEST & 452-5431 . 459-5373 anticipafe assignments. S575/month. Youngf manager and tenants. Club room, Reply In person 2813 Rio Grande, No. We offer: D-6, 6-1 Zoom, with intervolameter. voHey}ba1i court, private parties, shag niture, plus an individual deck overtook-FINEST 101. _ Perfect condition. $140 cash. 477-3032. carped one and twobedrooms, fwjand my-jiie -water ,-.­ UNF. APARTS. $1.70 starting pay townheuses. Shuttle bus ADMINISTRATOR'S SECRETARY. . 1969 VW CAMPER,Van. Excellent VANTAGE POINT 451-8V55 Hours: 2 to 10 p.m.Monday-Thursday, 8 condition $1900. Call 471-7201. 452-5326 - .. From SI45 — alt bills paid Vi price on food to 5 p.m. Friday; at Austin Community 300 East Riverside Drive You Belong At College Campus. Must type 60 wpm, Flexible hours RESERVE YOUR APT. POR SUMMER'72 CZ250. Excellent condition. $485. 441­ 444-3337" good grammatical skills, and public 7988. & FALL. Shuttle bus service at your doorstep. Rentals begin at $135, all bills EnglishAire • .relations. Prefer some college, three Profit sharing KENRAV Apartments and Townhouse* years secretarial-experience. Call 476­ 1973 PINTO, extra clean. 12,500 miles. under new ownership. 2122 Hancock Or paid. Spacious efficiency, one and two Efficiencies, studios, 1, 2, and ext. 70. r 6381, •....­ Automatic, AC, super buy. $2,649. Call next to Americana Theater, walking dis-FACULTY bedrooms. Closets galore. Party bars & 3 bedrooms, furnished or un­Scholarship plan soon. 474-6636. wet bars. Private patios & balconies. 'ance o' North Loop Shopping Center TOPLESS DANCERSneeded. Hours3 to Clubroom, game rooms, saunas, two furnished, and all the extras and Lub?'s One halt blocMrom shuttle AND STAFF 8, Monday through Saturday. Agply in pools. Individual heating and cooling. WILL SELL 4 month Karate cnd Austin transit, 2 bedroom you expect — like laundries, person. Sit'NBull, 3500 Guadalupe. Apply 2-J's Hamburgers Large 3 bedroom duplex Townhouse in Professional resident management. 1845membership for discount o< $75. Contact townhouses. extra large Two bedroom Mary DeBarbrie 447-4894. tiats. one ano two Oaths CA CH, dis­ convenient Northeast Austin, WD conn., Burton Drive at Woodland. Second red saunas, exercise rooms, game EXPERIENCED MANAGED.needed In hwasher. disposal, do6r to door garbage vaulted ceilings, orange shag, fenced light east of IH 35, take Woodland exit. rooms, pools, putting green, University area. Small complex, . 3918 North Lamar MARTIN 12-string guitar, D-12-20 with pickup, pool, maid servicyj it desired, PLUS a great restaurant AND reduced rent. Call 472-2518. yard, large walk-ins. mi38 Auburn. 926-Phone 442-6789 case. Excellent condition Best offer 6614, 472-4162. Barry Gifiingvyater Com­ washater.a edrooms modern furniture, accent waif and con> s NATUR'TRIM. No hunger '74PORSCHE 911T Targa: AC AM/FA* t. 2. (off East Riverside) stereo cassette, much more. Warranty. ^•Uflvturnished or furnished venienf central location. pangs, no exercises, no drugs. AKAI AA.8030 Receiver, 25 rms watts per channel. List $299.95. 26 mpg. 441-8964. ' ,K • -:i. From SU0 • $265 A unique natural/food formula 2 swimming pools, pfaygrounds, SANSULturntable, new model SR-212. List $149 95 SCI-1253 3­ 1 Bedroom soft and TEAC 450 Cassettedeck'. Only fiveti,_ _ •wasnaterta, iigf>ted>'£rovn]!HirTTt]l4JJ1 j-'^t^201.80,^SCl-1253 speakers. List $149.95 each. "Total List nMAyERICtTitandard 30,000"n *v B00 and AvAve. A." 454 .472-9414..' " and families weltome, AAanager 3*5-2043 SANTA JUAINA HOUSE. 24Tf1 Klo. clean 14J5 Call 471-5827 _A/CH. nta.'d Mrw" smalt v-4 automatic good gas m 8903, after4.0Q... >••• . • •: , ' FOR RENT Grande. Kltchen, CA/CH. maid servlcat. STOCK REDUCTION PRICE SI143 co-ed, S76-S75. 472-3«4. Don. "SPACIOUS 1 BEDROOM furnished NOW C new efficiency PEACEFUL WEST AUSTIN. Colorful . ........ FOR RENT -CAMERAS, L»ns. •partro#nt» Good location, near apartmei 'PORT ARANSAS -Spring BreaX^ imesfer Protectors, Accessories. Tti« Rental campus. *tv8ep*r>g center, "»od stHittte TOS/rnoo' or longer. .anytirrrt -large housV for rent. $30daily 'paid 7700 Manor ,tc*p"w Camera Wirfilt; -bus For more filancol 474.1107: 472-4U2 Barry .'i.rneais weekly, J140 weekly, sleeps 20. Ca All bills paid Rd, 477 (eft Blanco) >74-1107, :all 1-512-; ino* Rd ,474-2201. comfortable conditions. Bargain. QavlcL information, call 4S4-M75: ' . Gillingwater Company evenings 478-7040, 452-1275. 203 East 19th 476^733 m Page 18 Friday, March 15, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN i; 5S r '* ' r " "1.>Vi®§S®l 11 "TO.-"!.?*-'• W• iy«mi wpipj^^ppp / •' SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS vC. " LEARN TO SAIL ^ Eluncl -? ti PREGNANT THIS SPRING VACATION intensive course, April 1-5. Sailing :, everyday on 44 ffi -sloop, oVernlgKt graduation cruise. ONLY S75/PERSON. •{Jruxkload^M Pot Unclaimed VlKtNG, Box 421; Port Aransa*. Texas ?®v* ^ * W ' frfr I | (jnwfid mothefifrf need .78373. SS fft-74»-S9» By LUPE CANALES Later investigators found a weighing scald|; of confidential medical, y Texan Staff Writer a a - in nearby abandoned shed and frest||g| legal and social services .• No suspects have yet been apprehended in ^pampfirte close by. „ . .I®?­-* connection with anestimated 12,000 pounds of ;.fyDPS narcotic officers are following^, NiffefRcal1m Ms&ypjyEi marijuana found in an overturned semitruck different leads in the investigation of the ^ SLffL *'*Jw •-' near Bastrop Wednesday. Two men seen In, ownership of the land where the truck wasC • THE EDNA^ Ausfln'PalrachuteCenter jv". the vicinity are being sought by police. found, papers found in the truck, the license'v GLADNE\%HOMe For information Please caH "This is ~no amateur operation," Jim plates, and the weighing scale found in tW^j *rt 272-5711 anytime.. s* Robinson, Department of Public Safety gearby shed, Robinson said 817-926-3306 (DPS) information officer, said Thursday. "We doknow forsure that themarijuana NELSON'S GIFTS: Zunl Indian "This is a highly sopjiistlcated operation.*' from Mexico, but we have no information aS.-.': iewelryrAfrlcan and Mexican Import*. 4412 Sooth Congress. 444-3814. Closed The truck, bearing New York and Indiana ^to where it was crossed," he said. . or write Mondays. • ' license plates, was found about five miles x The confiscated material is being held in'"HtM 2308 Hemphill Street- SELF-ACTUALIZING, process. Call!' Fort Worth, Texas, Human Dynamics Institute. 452-8705. north of Bastrop in a ditch. DPS headquarters in the city, Bill Carterf *^ J 76110 > 1 The seuture surpasses the old state record : DPS information officer, said. |ls % LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beginner and advanced. DrewThomasorv 478- by about 8,000 pounds, Robinson said. 2079. •••••.• Carter emphasized that the case is being"' The marijuana, valued at $1 million, was Xerox or IBM TRAVEL found processed and in balea ready for. distribution, DPS officers said. --T«win Staff Ftoto by DavM Newman FOR 1»M vyy_ CampmobWe. 4c COPIES SALE The truck's bill of lading, which shows the* Officert unload 6,000 pounds of mqrijuana. . 4 merchandise information, was fictitious, Investigation, the marijuana will be brought^-Vawg Reduction Capability to24 x 36 Sheriff Jimmy Nutt of Bastrop said, in as evidence, Robinson said. Pictures, Multiiith, v "That was what aroused our suspicion," vl "After that, it will be burned in a special Printing, Binding t Nutt said. container by court order," he said. .VfcSi .1'' 20 YEAR OLDrettred student will show ; Shuttle Changes|Proposed ~ you how toearn upto $800monthly while ,' Nutt said his men'and other investigating s; The overturned truck also contained attending school. Send brief resume -to Jm P O, Box 5I», Austin, TX 78743 .. University students will be of services,K,t"t^^^':?"' unserved areas because of officers were at the scene when a wrecker several hundred boxes of pineapple and xvGINNY'S given an opportunity to offer • Cameron' tloa-% ' --I *» ' ; gave "vague" descriptions of the people who .here," Nutt said. . 'r ^ " -• ­ ™ SERVICE BUY, SELL all types girley magazines, ooofcfs, records, guitars, stereos, radios, proposed changes for next loops in intermediate areas -If committee members ' hired-Mm, Nutt said. The driver was paid in "The food was perishable and thfefe was no jewelry, musical Instruments. New year's bus routes. during peak periods. approve the changes, the qash. point in keeping it," he said. buyer on duty. Aaron's, 320 Congress, 42 Dobie Mall 476-9171 Downtown. . i *The committeeand students modifications must be ' • The East Campus route Free Parking will' meet at 2 p.m approved by the City Council, LOST & FOUND ^~will have better access to the Wednesday in Union Building the. Urban Transportation Open 75 hours a week 202. parking lots east of Red River Department and the Use Texan Classified Ads LOST: BLACK -WHITE female Street. COPY SHOP II Siberian Husky, no collar or tags, has "The proposals were University police, parking and slight limp, answers to Lokl; If found, RBC/Bond Paper. Super please call 476-0403. REWARD. designed from suggestions No services were added to traffic departments, t * * Copies throughout the year from the LOST BLACK CAT, female, flea collar. Willow Creek-Burton •Drive area. bus company, students and • CHAMBER MUSIC CELEBRATION • ' Reward, please call 444-2749. citizens," John Wilson, CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE & DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC EARN 2200 Guadalupe SWTSU CLASS RING, 1971. Ring of keys shuttle bus administrator, near 24th/Lamar, Reward. 474-9420. Jim.: said Thursday. MARCH 19 AT 8 PM IN HOGG .AUDITORIUM, " Blood Plasma Donors Needed -­ • 474-1124 REWARD FOR INFORMATION The" proposed chi'nges in a Pictures. Kalograph concerning metallic blue Ford1943 Van, summary prepared by Wilson Binding v Printing Lie. No. BN-7065, stolen from Jester ^ Men & Women: Save Time -Save Money parklng iot No. 47"C" sometime inthe are: .. . Next to Gourmel gn fhg Drag . .­ • Biv«r-sid'e-bu«e8 will. -^ ' EARN $1Q WEEKLY travel eastbound og 21st~ REWARD. Lost blackfemale puppy last ««J -.!» IL _T -'*• CASH PAYMENT FOR DONAfTON PROBLEM Thurs., March 7, around 23rd and San "Street and exit the campus On Gabriel. Small scar on side ,of face. Snn Taninfn Qtraat tn nul,inil aan i PREGNANCY PLEASE can 441-3167.441-5525. Jacinio aireei lo reduce ,. . _' Austin t; Austin Maternity Counseling Service , _—: , ———— noise and problems on 21st . n. .. , programs. Located 2 blocks from UT Windson. BLIND female part German street, lne KlVerSlde routes offers residential and non-residential LOST: Fromc vicinity Harris Blvd.- CT Blood Components, Inc. campus. 510 .West 24th. 472-9251. shepherd. Blonde, bjack ears-nose, no aiso will be rearranged to ­ „We have been in this business Collar. Answers to Regan. Please call OPEN: AfON.& THURS. 8 AM to 7P.M. ' A. for 50 years 472-4443. REWARD. form three routes..-"to jerve LOST MICKEY MOUSE atLake Travis, the area, more efficiently." TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. Please return. Call David, 472-4281. -/ • W.est Campus and ECONOMICAL GARAGfe CLOSED WED. & SAT. Best prices, experienced mechanics. REWARD, LOST brown Dachsund. RED Intercampus routes will be rffa* vwh,a. Trust us not to rip you off. Tune-ups, collar, answers to Cindy. Special dipt -­ brakes, overhauls. House or 1-9329. combined, to stop duplication 409 W. 6th calls required. Call 454-0425, 454-9.'" 477-3735 breakdowns $5.00 additional. AIR CONDITIONER SPECIAL Leak test, checkline pressure, add freon If needed, clean inside filter, check all. mounting bolts & brackets, adjust drive for Your listening Pleasure bell. Parts & labor. ONLY S7."50. We Have Some Fine Tunes CEC OPTIONAL SERVICES FEE DRAWING MARCH 13-19 Call Mike or Bob 444-2403. AT HOGG AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE, 10 AM-6 PM, MONDAY-FRIDAY x y>® LA. Freeway . «0\Vo PRESS II Si,,in» PUBLIC TICKETS $2 w«' bo1" ' CP •;* -;«.. ' Charlie Qunn ^ ArmadilloWorld Hdqtrs And Many More Fine Country Songs Authentic American Indian Presents We specialize . in resumes, handbills, For Your Eating Enjoyment letterheads and envelopes. " Check Our Low Rates 2200 Guadalupe- $ Chalupas ­ Just Across The Street Meat Burrittos Chile Con Queso Schlitz GENESIS SHOWING O DAYS ECONOMY MOVING. Conscientious Services at the lowest rate. Call | AND SALE O ONLY anytime. 385-8509. Fri.-Sat. 6-8 Only, Open till 1 on Sot. Advance Tickets $3 THE BUG INN Volkswagen^Shop. Free FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY Timing, Carborator adjustment -with MARCH 15-MARCH 16-MARCH 17 this ad. 1024 Airport. 385-9102. A Paraddx to Luxury (Ydu'll love It) Available at Oat Willie's, Inner Sanctum, & Armadillo GROW YOUR OWfyi.Food. We turn 11:00 A.M. -9:00 P.M. lawns into gardens with Troybullt iHector's TACO FLATS 5213 N.iar RototilJer. Reasonable, guaranteed. 454- ' $4 at the Door 8211 after 6:00. RAMADA INN GONDOLIER .. '• "* SEAMSTRESS. Good sewing done very 1001 InterregionalHwy. cheap at my house. Call Susan, 459-9471 after S.p.m. Austin, Texas *' I1­ SQUASH BLOSSOM, EARRINGS CARPET .CLEANING, maid "service, party cleanup, you name it -we do it. ^BRACELETS, RINGS, FETISHES Quality work, home or business, at < lowest prices. The Services Co. 453-0457. LAM'S YUM YUM 5 BOLOS, CONCHO BELTS. THEMES, REPORTS, law notes, BUCKLES AND OLD reasonable.—Mrs. Frasier, 474-1317. 1204B 'Marshall Lane. CHINESE RESTAURANT • , PIECES World Known CANTONESE S VW PARTS AND SERVICE Quality work at reasonable prices.Tune­up „SI0.50 plus parts. Free diagnosis. Estimates and compression checks. AU-mi Dishes , * DEALERS SECURITY Please try us! (We have moved to 1003 WANTED ON DUTY Saye Brush). For information caU"83^­3171. Overseas Engine, and Supply. v Thanks! • Bar BQ ' * New in Town: • TUTORING • V" •>•••-;• \ v " " Weekly Special j MATH TUTORING that you can understand. 474-0757. ASTRONOMY, PHYSICS, MATH tutoring.. Experienced tutor with, Special Lunch* master's degree in astrophysics. Call record c* Martin anytime. 441-4141. •. Daily • • NOSTALGIA WEEKEND ^ • JOB WANTED 3301 N. IH3S -477-1687 S • • DO YOU REMEMBER? • •v L.u MCSVING? My pickup makes the going ^7 ir­ easier. One-truckload: $12. Two loads: »20. 258-1891. SBOBBY SOCKS, PONYTAII5, BUTCH WAX, DUCKTAIIS, SADDLES COMPETENT MATURE former UT J OXFORDS, 57 CHEVIES, LETTER SWEATERS . -J Administrative Secretary available 11-3 or what have you? Please call 472-2294. • MUSIC OF 50's & 60 s • UNCLASSIFIED! TNITOWN*NOT THEHOTEL. At the Hotel Riverside we deal in basics. For a paltry $4 a night weU J PROVIDED BY J PAZ# give you a roorii with bed and basin. Your bath being mere footsteps 28mm Canon f3.5. ti10," 477.4222. ^i.rj iH down the haH. Make it $8 and weH put you in a room with bath. With Wrecked '44 Mustang. $200. 477-4222. or withoid, ymi're in a buiMing with a Luby's Cafeteria and El Poco Lost keys -prize. 454-4479 or 472-0837. Loco -one of the River's livelier nightspots. M right in the ht^rt of iDADDY DOOWAH & THE: % tiii4m calendar watch. 924-4914. San Antonio's beautiful Paseo del Rio. New Schwlnn Varsity lOsp. 924-4914. Make your resenatiofls for a weekend. Or a week. At the hotel that eatin' place in town, and we're figures you get morejor your money For sale Conn. French hrn. 471-7823. looking for people who would like when you're awake. THan when 15 cubic ft. fridfte. 478-4992. t30. . you're asleep.; to stack up some dough. v '48 Ford Torino. S309. 474-1942 ^ A BRING YOUR SWEETHEART OUT TO EAT. THEN REMEMBER WITH US THE So if you need a job—and English 3-speed. Men's 477-2)59 Z MUSIC OF THE PAST. some bread, get both by serving w ' v ^ L j' ^ Happy Birthday Leslee, Love. Jimmy. up some terrific flapjacks with a Walerbed t fr«me wanted..834-5181. -j big syrupy smile to some reat -yf~ n; — —, *58 VW Bus. 477-2022. " = "honeys. HI BALLS V^1'''« *£3x( r?T" AR3A'S PR. S285. 454-3074 The job requires a TheRiver's (MyBudfet Hotel COVE%;' $2.SO/PERSON Sleeper sofa offer? 4 p.m. 441-4739. JNIkon Ffh tV.4 exc. Cond 471-2275." ' * Comer oi "> Jrwt 8:00 FRI. SHOWS: AHC W»lmaran»r» rtasanable. 92l-13ijl If this souhds^goods? ~'t:9i00 SAT: on the San Laminated diplomas. 454-7084 ./ 'on out and see if you can hustl€j , / ivf ? 'kft Antonio River Hp?i sale 20-40% 447-4074 nites 'virK&iour ghjb. -' • mi,WWi .. You can find us at 1617 S. '72 Gremlln. AT^alr. 1^95.477-33*8. , r Martnti,ftohner sale) 25%off.441-41l0. ik'< viiamar. on weekdays, between *. /^nine and five. On Saturdays and *"** pIofSerrSXw£l348. HtmI*4l^1r|0( At K Sundays we're here between w"l"wv"superbietle, 81700. 4761(01. eleven and five. Come by in ^*$3 Second level Dobie Mpll 23 st 6 Guodolupe Ph»j«Nne*A»li00/l375rTodd.476-8422. v free parking m the tear „ s ~ , -person for an Interview, please, Phillips 212,' ^SOSPIZ, .Todd, 47(4622. mi JPsS" Z8m& a i£ ft* Friday, March 15, }97A THE DAILY TEXAN Pagfe 19 '/ uiMaWiKiitiiiieiMi isc Innocent SfS^# Ph,­ P b, ir' .WASHINGTON (UPI> -G. Gordon *^4 Liddy, mastermind of the 1972 Watergate break-in, emotionally embraced three co-defendants in a courtroomThursday, then all four pleaded innocent to conspiracy Charges in the 1971 Ellsberg burglary. .<• The others: Bernard L. Barker, 56, former CIA operative and foreman of the Watergate team; Eugenio Martinez, 45; and Felipe De Diego, 45, the only one of the four not charged in the Watergate ( burglary. All are from Miami SiR, Former White House aides John i« -.^-as *v; rt$$$£« {«&. »t> «' y < .* to.* fi ^<•» *rft JC '[1 BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AF^) 0$^ American oilman Victor Samuelson Samuelson calmly prayed as he was taken $;?&**$ "\i'-VJr*^' remained in the hands of his Marxist from his cell and told he would be i; ^ ; W« vf* —UH Telephel* Prohqska and Ackerman perform in film scene before plane 5rath. . Air Crash Kills TV Crew " • , -1 • "TalkingBear'ActorAmong 36 Dead BISHOP, Calif. (AP) — Investigators area since Monday, headed Azzarella, a film director and writer Oew te'helicQpter Thurssiay to a roc^jfew-JBurbank, a iese^redits-inehidetheNationai" ridge wherea chartered planecrashed and exploded, killing 31 members of a television movie crew and-five airline employes. Eyewitnesses said the Sierra Pacific plane blew up like a fireball after .slamming into the ridge about five minutes after takeoff from Bishop Aiiport Wednesday night. The twin-engine propeller plane disintegrated on impact. Only the tail section remained intact. -A helicopter pilot at the site said, "They were all dead. All that we saw was a lot Of burning:" Wolper Productions, which chartered the Convair 440 for the crew filming the-documentary series "The Primal Man," said one of the dead was actor Janos Prohaska, 54. He played the talking bear on the Andy Williams Televisionshow. His son Robert, 34, also was identified as a victim.. The crew, which had been working in the news miles sou® of here, -Geographic special,"The Violent Earth,"* Federal Aviation Authority Officials, and a» television biography of football star Inyo County coroner's workers anifen EBIjj.'* Joe Namath. team were at the scene. The FBLni&ft were assisting in identification of the bodies, many of which were badly burned, Cause of the crash was-not immediately known. A team of National Transportation Safety Board investigators was on its way to the barren hillside, at,about the 6,500­foot level of the White Mountain range. Prohaska, a Hungarian-bora acrobat and actor, played animal parts in more than 300 television shows and 37-movies. He and his son created the costumes for apes, bears and chimpanzees they portrayed in television specials. They played ^prehistoric men in the four-part ABC documentary about man's struggle for survival. Wolper Productions spokesman Michael Manheim said another victim was Dennis Amorous Adventure Nets Pension ATHENS (UPI) — Greece has ruled that the widow of a Greek seaman is entitled to a full pension even though her husband died while committing adultery in the Philippines. The Council of State said the death of Nicos Alexious, 47, who died in August, 197L, in the port of Legasti in the Philippines, was an accident suffered while performing his duties; The council said an accident "causing injury or death and entitling the victim or his family to a pension is anything occurring during, prior to or after his working hours. Such an accideht can also happen during a seaman's recreation, which is necessary because of his long stretches away from home." Opposition Unites Against Wilson LONDON (UPI) — The Conservative and Liberal Parties, in a move that could topple Prime Minister Harold Wilson's minority Labor government after only two weeks in office, decided Thursday to join forces in a parliamentary showdown early next week. But political informants said Wilson may decide to cling to power even if he is defeated and stake his government's fate on a confidence vote later next week. Soviet Capsule Lands on Mars MOSCOW (UPI) — A Soviet space capsule has soft-landed on Mars and found there is "several times"more watervapor in the atmosphere of the mysterious red ^ISnet^than was -previously believed, the Tass news agency said Thursday; The agency said, however, that the probe's radio transmitter went dead before it touched down on the surface. The water vapor discovery was made before landing. Western space experts said the finding could be of great significance in helping determine if there is life on Mars. Market Uninspired by Embargo fend ­ NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market was able to muster only a faint [welcome Thursday for the apparent end of the Arab oil embargo. 1 Prices made two attempts at rallies during the session but fell back each time, finishing mixed. » The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials wound up 1.88 points on the minus side at 889.78, but advancing issuesoutdistanced declines by a 7-to-6 margin on the New York Stock Exchange. TOO Percent Oil Production AtlowecT AMARILLO (AP) — The Texas Railroad Commission set the state's April oil production allowable at 100 percent for the 25th consecutive month Thursday Crude oil purchase nominations for April totaled 3.94 million barrels daily, up 106,409 barrefclfrotn March, which far exceeds actual producing •capacity./!. • . • The all-out production figur? was ordered for the first time ata similar executive hearing in March. 1972, at El Paso. * ; ; In Los-Angeles, Sierra Pacific spokesman Dean Sparkman said the pilot had been in contact with thecontrol tower at Bishop Airport until just before the crash and had reported no difficulties. . Sierra-Pacific is a subsidiary of Mammoth Mountain Corp., which operates ski lifts near Mammoth Lakes, about 50 miles north of here. It purchased four 44-passenger Convairs last year. The Convair was a major short-haul aircraft used widely by major commercial airlines in the early 1950s. By NANCY MILLS A student day care center will begin services at University Presbyterian Church, 2203 San Antonio St., the first day of the fall . semester; ,Cappy RJcGarr Student Government ^Vice-President, announced Thursday. Co-chairpersons of the board of directors, Randy Roberts and Patti Hill, explained that the project, proposed last summer by Student Government, exists to serve the student parent. "We want to provide high quality, low cost day care service to meet the needs of the student at the University," said Roberts. I' . , , • A survey last fall showed there isa ratio of 6,800 children to 7,900 married students and although there is available day care service in the University area, infant care is limited, he saidv For this reason only children up to 3 years old will be admitted. The center will remain open from8 a.m to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, but since the program caters to the needs of the student parent and not the-working parent, no child will be ^allowed to stay longer than five hours, Roberts said. "Fifty cents per hour will be the normal cost; however, the proce^p of DALLAS (AP) — Two locomotives hauled 11 gleaming cars into the Dallas Transportation Center -the old Union Terminal -at 7:45 a.m. Thursday to restore rail -passenger; service which . disappeared in 1969. ' One witness said in wonderment: "It's almost coming when they said it would." The train was scheduled to arrive at 7:30 Ehrlichman. and Charles W. Colson defense lawyers to reply within 10 daysi pieaded innocent Friday to charges in the whether EhrTiehihan's trial on the other Ellsberg break-inas,w?U as the Watergatecounts should be separated fwm the trla^,. , ** Id '* W*1 • All six men were indicted March 7 on Gesell also gave the lawyers TO days to |$v­one count of conspiring to violate the civil say when they wantthe trial held andwhy.-|M liberties of Pentagon papers defendant Liddy remains in custody, but Geself Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist; whose released the<>ther three onpersonal bond/; office was burglarized. Ehrlichman also ' Liddy, 43, Poughkeepsie,'N.Y., finance fel was charged with four counts of lying to Icounsel for the Committee To Re-Elect » investigators. ?l$the Presidentat thetimeof the break-inat. At the 45-minutearraignment Thursday^ *the Democratic Offices in the' Watetigatte & U.S. Dist. Judge Gerhard A. Gesell asked complex, has steadfastly refused totestify & hiMU&£$ 1 ?jabout either burglary. ' newsmen they impressed captors Thursday despite payment of a executed-" V 1 r record $14.2 million ransom. ' T.,f , , , , Esso Argentina officialswere optimistic *5? "fT1° fronl th<\ date the 36-year-old refinery manager would be S1"1".8, .4 °| Sarnuelsoh s released shortly even though reluctant .m the restaurant of the refinery he managed in Campana, 60 editors prevented full complaince with the "Ti^n^K is —guerillas' demandTfor publicity, miles north of Buenos Aires: r Uddy has been held in Terminal Island" federal Prison in California recently, |!§| ex|pected to be called for trial on state charges in the Ellsberg case. He was M'" transferred from the District of Columbia jjail where he is serving a contempt IP sentence that will not expire until the }••£ original Watergate-grand jury is| dismissed: /./ He was sentenced to a maximum of 20, f years in prison for conspiracy, burglary ^and interceptio>n of a wiretap in th^ls? Watergate case. He will not begin that| sentence uiitil he finishes the contemptrj: term. Barker, who told reporters he has beer! selling condominiums in Miami for a#> The ERP demanded llOmiiiion worth-small flraj In whldi he hi» a flnanciall SAMUELSON WAS kidnaped Dec. 6 and • • . .. . interest, free bond awaiting nna».uu.|™«v. » «iu Of food plothihir moHir>al sunniioc mieresi; is ireeon personal uonu awaiung held in a small "people's jail" during the 'long negotiationsis between Esso and the People's Revolutionary Army' (ERP) an outlawed terrorist group. -The ransom was finally paid Monday, 142,000 $10Q bills carried toa rendezvous in -the trunk of a car, informed sources said. The ERP set a further condition that ' Esso place advertisements in a dozen Buenos Aires/newspapers saying the ransom was-Ajpart of "superearnings ' obtained In Argentina through exploitation of workers." Only two morning papers carried the ad Thursday. An afternoon daily, El Mundo, ran the text in a news story Wednesday afternoon. The government banned El Mundo from publishing Thursday, saying it had broken the law preventing the spread of guerrilla propaganda. V The agreement came after bargaining broke down and the ERP sent Esso a letter saying they would shoot Samuelson and return his body in an American flag, qualified sources said. According to an account in the Buenos Aires Herald, guerrillas told some local implementing a sliding scale like that of Ohio State's is being investigated. There, parents who use the center more often pay at a lower rate and students who use the center less often pay at a higher rate," Roberts explained. Since the center will be completely self-sufficient, tuition will pay for staff employment, supplies, Utilities and food, Roberts said. The building use donated by University Presbyterian Church, a $400 loan and a $400, grant from Student Government proceeds from various fund-raising projects will begin financing of the center, Roberts added. Donations will be welcomed if they meet county welfare standards. The center is expected to handle 35^ children per hour or 200 children per day and one staff member to every four children, he said. Staff members will be selected by a director and an assistant director who in turn wjllVbe selected by the board of directors, Ms. Hill explained. The , positions will not be limited to the University, and applicants for "both positions jmust have a high school diploma and three references. builS STt^dhSilt -appeal from his Watergate conviction, rro(i,nJna.c ^.fllStriBUten to Argentina's needy; -• Esso argued it could not meetwith the complicated distribution plan and could only pay cash. Officialssaid they could not pay more, than $7 million; and they said if the offer wasn't accepted, they would release all information they had on the ERP to the police. The ERP countered their demand for $10 million, agreeing to accept cash,, and they added that Esso must spend $4.2 million for flood relief in northern Argentina. • Esso, apparently after high-level consultations with E^xon in New York late in February, agreed . to pay $14.2 million in cash. Samuelson's wife and three children were evacuated from Argentina in mid-January when "officials said the negotiations for his release were at a stalemate. Samuelson is a .native of Cleveland, Ohio, and had lived in several Latin-American countries working for Esso before coming here three years ago. in Applications will be mailed to anyone who calls 471-3721 and leaves their name * and address with the Student Government office, she said. Parents, students in child qare classes and members of service'organizations will form a volunteer staff,to,aid jthe center, Ms. Hill added The board of directors will consist of graduate .as well as undergraduate students tp achieve a balance of experience a nd personalities, she said.-In two weeks, two members of University Presbyterian Church also will join the board. An advisory board also will be established to maintain contact between each of the different departments, Ms. Hill said. Applications for preregistration enrollment"will be available in the Student Government office "April 22, 23 and 24, McGarr said. There will be a $10 registration fee; a registration fee will be required every, semester. Students must indicate the number of hours for which they want to enrojl their children; therefore, they must know what classes they will be taking next fall so they can rearrange their schedules-around the day care center, he added. Martinez was paroled last week. .*>' Henry B. Rothblatt, attorney for Dftj; Diego, told reporters before the hearing^ that "if necessary, we're going t'qhv subpoena the President." '* V After the arraignment, however^ Rothblatt said only, "We expect to call all. Relevant witnesses." Group5*3­ -•V 4r Asks Return Of Funds SAN ANTONIO (UPI) -The board of directors of Associated Milk Producers; Inc., (AMPI) Thursday announced it has formed a special committee to pursue : , possibilities of recovering "property or funds" improperly used during the last five years. The nation's largest dairy cooperative-already was attempting to get back from u the Committee toRe-elect the President a $100,000 donation AMPI admitted was made from AMPI corporate funds to the Nixon campaign in 1969 in violation of the law. . Formation of the committee came at the end of a two-day closed door special called meeting of the AMPI board to •review an independent investigation it ordered into AMPI activities. < John Butterbrodt, of Bternett, Wis., president of the 40,000-maMber co-op, announced Wednesday the study by a Little Rock, Ark., law firm was beingsent -to the Senate Watergate committee, the Watergate special prosecutor, the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. District Court at Kansas City, Mo. The Kansas City court has jurisdiction over an antitrust suit against the San Antonio-based cooperative pressed by the government and 20 private firms. "The special board committee is studying the report. If wrong-doinjf is established, the board willtake timelyand proper action Awhile at the san^e time protecting the constitutional rights of any., citizen ororganization," Butterbrodt said; At least one former AMPI official has been granted immunity-in the Watergate investigation and several past and present officials of the co-op have testified before the Watergate %rand jury and Senate select committee. Dallas Gets Passenger Service ' k?­ a.m. but was expected to be delayed a couple of hours by celebrations. But the welcomes along this line were not that long. 1 About 150 passengers were on the train, met by Mayor Wes Wise, about 300 spectators and the North Dallas High School Band. , Amtrak spokesman Jem Bryant said crowds of up to 300 turned out at each stop between St. Louis and Dallas. More than 200 were on hand at Longview although it was only 5 a.m. The train is called the Inter-American nd will run three times a week to Laredo where passengers can change for Mexico City. But there was -a rasping sound from Missouri Pacific Railroad. lt tried to Stop passenger service between Texarkana and Dallas, demanding a different liability coverage: The case will be heard in a Washington court Friday. - £The in ..Dallas on Mondays, Wednesdays and: Saturdays and returns north from Laredo on Sundays, Tuesdays and Friday. The 13 stops in between include Poplar Bluff, Mo., Texarkana, Ark., Mafrshall^ Longview, Dallas, Fort Worth, Cleburne,1 - A band greets Amtrak pulling into Dallas' Union Station. . * w He McGregor, Temple, Austin, San Marcos and San Antonio. ­ i&M |Page 20 Friday; arch 15/ 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN T-" •ir SlTO — mmm