Vol: 73, No. Please Recycle This Newspaper Ten Cehf® Sixteen Paget 471*4591 sst cere/ XX purr Recommendation ***** •oui '«*ua0 aTTJ0**1* •-PA-vsr< :ffi: By BOBBIE CMSWELl|JJ -men and women, The Daily Texan, .cultural entertain! the mandatory funding, rather than the $3.50 requin Texas Staff Writer tnent and Student Government, which includes theElects previously. , .1. An alternative compromise to the recently passed op-tion Commission, Senior Cibinet and student councils^ Spurr said he wanted to change the check-off system lional check-off system for student services will be These are the same service! that were placed on the • "so that wecould get the maximum possible incomefor recommended by University President Stephen Spurr to ^positive check-off system passed March 15. The Texan, Student Government and women's inter­m _|i special regents-administration committee. ' Spfirr said the same services placed under the manfc^, collegiate athletics," 3| Under Spurr's approach, students would be given the datory fee by the regents' decision, the Student Health ; ;j;When asked if outside pressure from legislators and 'option of either subscribing to the total package of ser­Center, shuttle bus service, intramural programs and religious leaders had anything to do with influencing his vices supported by voluntary student feesor, by check­the students' attorney, would remain under mandatory compromise, Spurr said, "We are always interested in ing individual items, decline to support any specific funding with his recommendation > ft what students and nonstudents are concerned about." • >'• item or items in the list of services. Students would be 'Mandatory funding isunder the regents' jurisdicti*on,'-. Texan Editor Michael Eakin said, *'Spurr's , ^tolled only for those sendees they do not delete. I can only recommend ways in which to collect the op^« / recommendation is essentially the same as theoptional Because details have yet to be worked out for the tional student services," he said ^ fee system passed by the regents. When used a few ' specific dollar amounts of each item, Spurr said Tues­' » the student; services fee reorganization plan passed years ago under the old blanket tax methoid, 70 percent day he did not know when he would recommend the the regents March 15 was the result of an interpreta­of the people never paid for TheTexan. What we need is system fo the committee, but he hoped-it would be bty tion by the University.System*law office of a Texas a true negative check-off system." »S:, ' |khe end of next week Education Code amendment designed to give financial In agreement with Eakin, Student Government Presi­iThe student services to be included 'in his negati# ^i^elief to part-time and graduate students. lent Sandy Kress said Spurr's recommendation showsf Icheck-off system would be intercollegiate athletics for Students will pay $2.50 per hour for theservices under n9 J^al improvement. .. initiate Negotiations ra,l®n rsttti . ANNE COLLINS i ^fchetion against the5 collection 6( Student proper notice ofthe propof retferital ac-^voteS to reject a proposal by University Texan.Staff Writer ^ services fees during the spring , tion to TSP. President Stephen Spurr to allow studentsThe Texas Student Publications Board, preregistration which starts April 29; • Violation of Department Health, of to decline to support individual funding in a marathon session Tuesday, voted un-Kress argued that if preregistratioH-Education and Welfare regulations. iterasatthe timeof registration.—4—­ animousty to aulho^zel^p^ud^ud^ ; f«e% -, ... ••ys THE-BOARE* VOTED to creatr flve 'legation of the Board fo Initiatea formal collected as now planned, TSP will lose an • Threats or coeeoion against a group task forces, three of them to investigate Negotiation process to encourage the opportunity for a reversal of the regental that brings charges against a governing ways of reducing costs and increasing in ^University System Board of Regents and action, since fundingwillteseta,nd^ come. • ethe administration to reconsider their harder' tooverturn^^^^f|Q|^||p^g%-• t The question of tiie legality of HB 83, --One will investigate increasiogther; 'March 15 funding decision. The TSP Board went imo cl&MSession which granted relief to part-timestudents, between advertising and news of The DSi-, If a satisfactory funding alternative is to discussa legal point, and the motion for since they get the same l>ene£ity. as ly Texan from 54 percent ads and 46 per^ not found through negotiations, the TSP negotiation was passed by the full board fulltime students. v',­ '' cent news to 75 percent ads and 25 percent ..Board said it will meet as soon ais possible immediately following the return to an In response to a hotly worded declara­hews. ' ?•! •" '• ,A ' to consider. alternative. . actions available. . open meeting; tion by board member Ronnie Franklin, Another will contact manufacturers whettsi THE MOTION came as the result of ||§KRESS PUT forth several points in dis-unanimous motion to re­ TSP passed a havedeveloped a process, leading to asav-r '­ prolonged discussion over the wordingand cussing grounds for possible jegal action quest tif Chancellor Charles LeMaistre an ing of several thousand dollars, 'j: -J|s scope of any TSP-initiated negotiations, against the Board of Regents including: explanation of his reasons for recommen­The third will investigate printing othe^ including strong urging from Student •2'#L Denial of First Amendment rights of ding against TSP-sponsored amendments than student publications to gain ad-J Government President Sandy Kress to in­free speech and press. to the Trust Agreement. ditional income;^|jf;;'.Ml^M vestigate the feasibility of seeking an in-• Denial of due process by giving no.! . .In another unanimous decision the board M n A fourth'ta^k force was formed to in­/*.?• vestigate the validity and enforceability of the Trust Agreement regarding adequacy Team Probes Recruitment ?W: of considerations tendered to TSP, Inc^ and other legal questions at the time the By Bllli DAWSON ^ Physical Education and Recreation Chairman Dr. Waneen '4greem^nt was signe^. A team of federal officials v^et Tuesday wifh'five departmenl Wyrick and Psychology Asst. Chairman Dr. ^oseph. H^rn^ ; chairpersons, one de*n, one associate dean and the University Dr Mary Teague, University equal employment:opportunity fiCtfi^Jel will ' PJJWIIU.J practices at the University. ~ j-fi Uf."" Climbing fhi Wall i, r Program is being implemented, and to se£ if there is any ^ •h • Sandra Williams, head of the Department of Health, Education ^ In other action, Sheldon Lippman was resistance to the program." the Mrrtester nearing its end, unread book*; overduepapm and finals p ^ and Welfare (HEW) investigative group, said of the talks, "We appointed editor of Pearl for 1974-75. The '•M The Affirmative Action Program, designed to end discrimina­ l^around the corner traditionally drivo procrastinating students up the wall in discussed both admissions and recruitment programs for only other candidate was Carrie minorities, if any, and asked for reasons and opinions for the tion by either race or sex in University hiring, was approved by their frantic rush to complete assignments. But spring break should relievo Schweitzer,, presently Pearl contributing number of minority students in each area. HEW last summer. '-s > ,'^rtn pressures exemplified by this 'modular man' painted on a window in the .editor. •h The federal officials, When the federal team finishes its investigation, it will submit met with Fine Arts Dean Peter Garvie, Pharmacy Associate its report on any "discrimination or underutilization of " r the board also voted to revive Dean Dr. William Sheffield, Spanish and Portuguese Acting minorities," it finds at the University, along with recommen­Peregrinus, law school yearbook, for the Chairman Dr. Carter Wheelock, English Chairman Dr. William dations for remedial measures to President Stephen Spurr and year 1975 and publish it as one of TSP's o% Keast, General Business Chairman Gaylord Jentz, Health, HEW officials, Ms. Williams said. ficial student publications.; Jm 4' Motion Directed vi' '.'s V'.; ' BpB To Urg Texan ^-JBy BILL GARLAND i determine the proposal's effect. itsiiii A noon Wednesday rally on the Main*.. Staff Writer > : Austin delegates Bales, Sen. Lloyd Mall will coordinate lobbying efforts to -Constitutional Convention delegates Doggett, Reps. Ronald Earle, Wilson persuade the University System Board of v adopted a proposal Tuesday, said "aimed ' Foreman and Sarah Weddingon vgted Regents to rescind its decision onoptionalV at The Daily Texan," to disallow public against the measure. student services fees, Student GSovern- funds "to influence the electionof a public ' Delegates continued debate on the' - . ment President Sandy Kres^ said Tues­official." Finance Article during the full session^ day. Introduced by Tahoka Rep. E.L. Short, Tuesday, eliminating all amendments ex-1;. ., ilWe're going to intensify and expand the Finance Articleamendment passed 86-cept those dealing with separate sulkt^ our efforts to seek a reversal in the 72 after Austin Rep. Larry Bales asked missions and substitutes for the entire i regents' May meeting," Kress said. whether it would affect editorial policies •• ticle. • _ • • -"--^1 Spreakers at the rally will include of The Texan. lllfiControversial convention issues will }>e • Austin Sen. Lloyd Doggett; Dr. David. "It may or may not,"said Finance Com­;placed separately on the ballot for voters Edwards, associate professor of, govern-" -mittee Chairman Neil Caldwell of to decide directly whether certain^-­ ment;>Dr. James Sledd, professor of--,' Angleton, who voiced opposition to the measures should be included in a new con* : English; Texan editor Michael Eakin, measure. stitution. Government "I read it (The Texan) every day and 1974-75 Student President-^- Earlier Tuesday, the convention Rules ^ 1 elect Frank Fleming, Vice-President^/ enjoy it. They send it to me free," Short Committee offered an alternative to th$Y elect Bill Parrish and Kress. said. proposed April 5 to May 6 "campaign ; Afterwards, Bales said Short ap- Kress said students during sprng breaHf recess" by suggesting a series of four-day^, I should inform people in their hometowns ** jproached him before the debate and asked weekends instead of a full recess. of the regents' March 15 decision so they $ whether the amendment would affect The Primary elections will be May 4. ' ' ^ can write the regentsabout it themselves. Texan. 4 "It was aimed at The Daily Texan/' "Students can put unbelievable pressure Bales said. "He (Short) asked me not to iComment­ on cities and towns across Texas" to send point that out." : letters and telegrams to Austin, Kress As for curbing current editorial policies, said. The next Board of Regents meeting is May 3. ''I'm not positive that will be the effect, Rally Today but it could be' construed to prohibit Participants in the rally also can signup On behalf of The Daily Texail political endorsements," Bales said.; for research to "draft legislation so this and Student Government noon "Lei meask you to consider if you really sort of thing won't happen again," he add£&­ .—UN Ttltphri* know what you're doing. I wish I knew on the Main MaU. ed. Randy tiurgess, coordinator of the rally, | One More Shot, John ' • Si myself," Caldwell cautioned delegates prior to the vote. expects a largeattendance. "Now that the Newsmen and photographers surround forme/ Atty. Gen. at the conclusion of Tuesday's session of his conspiracy word's out, we'll double last Wednesday's^.. Texan Managing Editor John Yemma John Mitcheir (raincoat, hat and pipe) as he enters his car trial in New York. (Related story, Page 16.) said the definition of "public funds"would turnout." „ Student Charged m. lii: With Forgery 5A, V Vote Joseph Phaneuf; University" Waftner TKO Absentee ballotingX-freshman'-and part-time employe in the Office of Student Financial Aids, was:"*, Wednesday's fore­Heavyweight cham­will continue through^.,. charged in Justice of the Peace Jim • pion George Fore­ Tuesday for the Aprife McMurtry'scourt Tuesday with forgeryof V$j cast calls for partly astate Treasury warrant for $745.43. * 5 Austin School Board;/ cloudy skjes and man retained his title Phaneuf, a 37-year-old special educatio%-i_ iiruesda y night by election.-Friday wilj&i major, was arrested by University Polic^*.p warmer . temper­ ,Sgt. William Best. ' • i-^1 be the last chance toV^ atures with a 20 per-, posting 8 technical Phaneuf's lawyer, Malcom Smlth, s&i£ fia cent chance of show* knockout in the se-vote absentee foijS^f the check in question was in the.form of a those students * leavfj grant to a University student. Th«?' xond round over Keners. The low will be student's name on. thp ^teck l^ul 1^ •U:i£ Norton. Page 6. ing Austin for springJ\ near 60 and the highIn •'MUr break. .5® Phaneuf was released f rom County Jail ­ the mid-70s. lil vft 2:30 p.m. after posting 11.000 bond. . lippfpi UTURN Proposal ' •-•>-;• r. -^^HSm' —-—-•'uC:'' ' •'"""" ^>.vvu •-'S 'hone Rates ^University Texans United & complaint if nonsmoking nalism major at fie Universi­Wm For Vendor 'ily Utility refund contractsand an amendmenfp|| s ©The hearing was set after City Atty. Don 'fdir Rights of Nonsmokers regulations are not being ty, asked 2-J's manager Bill UTURN1 wilt Sponsor to the city telephone rate ordinance will Butler warned Bell that the /city would file • A new trial date has (UTURN r will entourage non-observed 'in specifically Bialek to consideijdesignating booth'following spring break the subjectsof public hearings at Thursday'^fl^ suit if a rate increase was implemented not been set for Drag smokers to take the initiative, designated areas-of the the upstairs area qf the to emphasize the importance City Council meeting. ~ without council approval. veftdor" Rick Ream, to a bo1isIr -;smok1ng in University. restaurant for smokers, leav­on nonsmokers having a deci­ " The meeting will beginat l p m. in the City If the councilmen approve Bell's proposal, Asst. County Atty. Phil classrooms, teaching If the student's -attempts ing the downstairs area for sion in whether they must be Electric Building Auditorium. the mobile phone rates will be raised to Lerway said Tuesday. ^laboratories,-libraries; fail in getting aid from subjected to smoke, per month with an additional |6 network Ream's trial was elevators and other nonsmok­University officials who can Bialek said hejWOQld con­pamphlets will'be supplied to access chargeand a ^;l^^t?.j»er postponed in County ing areas defined, in ad­enforce nonsmoking; rules, sider the request!'but would inform students of health minute. ' „» Court at-Law No. 3 r ministrative regulations, a then thestudent is,encouraged make no definite commit-' hazards relating to smoking. will consider their proposal for an ordinanc^^l^The rate increase is scheduled to go into Monday When the group spokesman said Tues­to contact JgTUBN for abolishing the contracts. ^effect April 15. defense attorney asked day-assistance. " " " " Under the city refund policy, developerfll^ t t (Related Story, ft»g« lO.j Highway Considered for a continuance. Hie ^SjRobyn Richter, a first year -r||'In the short frionth the are repaid up to 90 percent of the cost o^fpMl and Amarillot request was not con­ graduate student and group gfbup has been organized, it Students may be able to sewer and water lines installed-in sub-£»% WS believe that the new price structure^ Public hearings are being tested, Lerway said, " co-organizer who believes has obtained the support of drive from Austin to Lubbock divisions. Will make the service more useful to alt;; ^ Ream was arrested in less than the current nine-held in various cities across nonsmoking signs fail to stop the Chuck Wagon and the |$|A second public hearing will consider a> customers," Bill Holman, Bell division'| on Jan. 17, 1973, on the individuals from smoking, Commons to set aside smok­hour travel time if a "Plains the state about the proposed, mobile phone rate increase requested by.1/ manager, said in a letter to the council. r ^ to Port'1 highway is built con­highway. "The Highway Drag after he had set said at the group's Tuesday: ing areas for customers. Jtouthwestern Bell Telephone. " "We do not believe that the new rates will" Jj necting Central Texas with Department wants to get the his wares on the night meeting that "opening a Although smoke does spread ^The^ original rate increase, which was' ^ produce more revenue than is required approval of as many local sidewalk in protest of a dialog up is more important into other areas, at least this the Panhandle. scheduled to go into effect March IS, wol<|^f cover increased costs experienced over the* ' city ordinance that went Jtfcan setting down a rule." is a start," Ms. Richter said. The Texas-Highway Depart­government groups as have raised monthly mobile phone ratesfromms years infurnishing thisservice and to providd ^ ment isconsidering a proposal possible," Reed said. into effect* December, sls^The group maintains the In addition, group member |60 to |71 and added a 30 cents per minute, a reasonable return on the investment," hi -V student himself must initiate, Trudy Thompson, junior jour to build a highway from Lub-The department will then 1972. ' u^'siee^fii^i':';':^ added. bock to the Houston-Galveston make a recommendation to is®® area. It would be entirely the Federal Department of federally funded. Transportation which will m Austin). Deputy City decide whether the highway Task Force&friction Centers J Manager Homer Reed said will be built. Then more Tuesday the highway would be public hearings will be held to an extension of IH 27 which determine the exact route of On Institutions fot Retarded now runs between Lubbock the highway. ' §• i By JEFF SOUTH ' ' "For a child, that jnaeans' with respect to profoundly for presentation before the He smiled, spoke hiirri($dly. small, home-like gfoup retarded persons, is more Legislature. ^ 4 ** itJWT & * Attending the; Ruth Snyder disagreed; centers or foster family*care, •effective — or as effective — "It will be many years< "The best environment for rather than large, impersonal hs the state school approach,'' before the communities inSummer Session? the care and treatment of the institutions for hundreds or.. she said. ,'V general can afford the man­mentally and emotionally dis­even thousands of residents,"; 3 , "Each special school for the power and the economics of •'Ijp-W- turbed," Rep. Carlos Truan, Truan said. 'mentally retarded represents caring for a large segment of D-Corpus Christi, told the MRS. SNYDER, parent of a a reservoir of professional the mentally retarded at the ®||£§SS®S|tSlWHY NOT Interagency Task Force on 22-year-old mentally retarded and technical, knowledge and local level," Mrs. Snyder, a Youth Care and Rehabilita­daughter, shook her head. skill, We cannot afford to member of the ExecutiveTRY THE BEST! tion Tuesday, "isa setting ap­. "There is not, as yet, any dilute the expertise by plan­Committee of the Parent4? proximating 'normal' con­valid proof that the home-in-, ning local faciUtic& & .every -Association at Austin State ditions.". the community approach, community," ,Mrs. Snyder School, told the task force; • 21 Great Meals per Week continued. • | . •' •• THE CORPUS CHRISTI ... 9i>.nAnn». t " .. r"' * L •?"&. >V _ '"--J, . . -KS1-* • < „•' > ~ ' W a recommendation to transit or publicschooleducation, Calhoun By MARIAN McDOWEU. sufficiency in energy be set, the' United States ;iin interr P-rn, Monday, Hal Womack, . ¥ Speakers from We Pefr prohibit large urban banks from instilling ,s said this would be impermissable becauseM Texan Staff WritelS.:•. or should the energy problem national affairs. *1 •• " -branch banks In Texas' rural townstowns. nt "f»ai in «• v«o thte group's treasurer, said1 le, Austin Women Worke Of the "fuel shortage." Yes, '' world food shortages aim} be approached from the * The People's Commission s;t«nd the Indochina PeaceCs Well-attired executives and lobbyists said: "fuel shortage,'^; future prospects for energy broader viewpoint of world, on Critical Choices, a counter rTHE COUNTERGROUP I t»ign will attempt to show thi filled a. crowded committee room in the YOU SEE, with fW^ilsupplies will be discussed by requirements? Should there organization „to the coalition , of 18 student and connections between the Capitol ,basement and, one by one, offered gasoline, the current 5 cents a gallon ratethe Commission on Critical be a serious effort to reduce Rockefeller Commission; will Austin £ .^community Rockefeller, commission and hours pf testimony for or against the will not provide enough revenue to main­Choices for Americans at a . the wasteinenergy use, which hold a demonstration against organization will hold a Imperial war, reduced wages provision. tain Texas' highway system, acknowledg­ Monday and Tuesday meeting at the present time is es­the commission's meeting forum at7:30 p.m. Wednesday . and police repression in this--IN THE HEART of one young witness' ed as the best in the country.in the Lyndon Baines Johnson timated to be around 50 starting at the East Mall at 6 in Will C. Hogg Buildihg 14. spiel, a stirred committee member in­"We're not going to see many newLibrary. percent? terrupted the apparently uninitiated highways. We're widening.-We're The commission, organized THE MEMBERSHIP of the speaker to ask if he had yet learned the Straightening. We're multi-laning, Any . :-by. former New York Gov. commission includes 43 "golden rule " , " " kind of road is a perishable commodity, "Nelson Rockefeller, was ln^; prominent Americans. Ex-Mixed Reactions Air4 Caught off guard, the witn^^lild'oMy Calhoun divulged.) ° -a, j i. ^ vited to meet at the library by officio members include Vice-reply he had heard of such a rule, tout, .no,, Someone apparently forgot to mention|Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson:.i|lt|i President tierald Ford, couldn't say exactly what it was. to Calhoun and the almighty Texas Good** "Gov. Rockefeller®^ Secretary of State Henry During Way o "The 'golden rule' is that the mifl vififk Roads Association that with fewer people . , '1assembled from both political Kissinger, • Treasury the gold rules," the delighted convention buying gasoline, fewer people pouring in|parties some of our finest Secretary George P. Shultz, Tuesday's-''day of dialogue*' in th^pfe delegate informed those in the bliss of ig­that-5 cents a gallon, fewer people will cussion in an introductory government class j ,"W0i ^minds and some of our most Senate Majority Leader Mike classroom on The Daily Texan and"Studenfp| conducted by Neil Richardson, instructor in norance to a round of gOod*natured also be using fine roadways. ^ ; jSm experienced citizens to give Mansfield, Senate Minority laughter. „ M Government funding controversy was a 4as§3# .government. THERE WILL BE no need toStraighten,' ^ thoughtful attention to the Leader Hugh Scott, House of mixed reactions forstudent organizersand' students ware relatively apaUieti^'-f WITH THE DELEGATE'S rule firmly to widen, to multi-lane, or otherwise en­ ,Y fijik critical choices which this Majority Leader Thomas P; faculty members. Richardson said. in mind, Friday's session at the case Texas. ;5'?vC country will facein the next 30 O'Neill Jr. and House Minori-. Constitutional Convention can pprliaps -Several members of Student Government^ 0."Students: collectivtl^ Where did those 80-plus votes come-Ol?;'years," Mrs. Johnson said ty Leader John J. Rhodes, plf •contacted various faculty members Mondavi >i$hould be done and came to the realization' placed in better perspective. ^' *7* from to defeat every amendment seeking v" ^Tuesday. Specialists in the fields %t-to encourage them to'discuss the fundin^| that the Board of;Regents seemed more A 1946 amendment pertaining ' to' a to find a place in a document purportedly , "THIS IS the kind of energy, food, health, popula­issue in their Tuesday classes. However;"?' responsible to the Legislature, than to the highway user fund in the currentConstitu-' expected to last another 109 years? r s mission, which government tion and economics will make some faculty members found student * tion was reinstated in full in the proposed "They were all committed/' said students," he said. ; cannot undertake alone, but presentations to the commis­response less than great. )f| He.concluded students are going to have document. Galveston Rep. Fred J. Harris looking , which should be done," she sion. Abilene Rep. Frank Calhoun guarded the heads of Dr. David Perry, assistant pr^esMr?of^;fs ^ ftrouble mobilizing support for teconsidera-over his fellow delegates * added. "The LBJ Library is }.Featured speakers include government, said he devoted part of his class . tiwi of the regente' decision. the fund from almost 20 amendments so from behind the rail circling the floor. ' glad to cooperate in this effort Lester Brown, senior fellow of to a free-wheeling discussion on the funding -. However,'Student Government President that gasoline taxes and motor vehicle "THIS STATE floats on oil. Oil means / which is aimed toward analyz­the Overseas Development issue.. Sandy Kress was more optimistic about registration fees, totaling more than one-mpre cars, more concrete, more bridges,ing where America is and -Council, who will focus on the He said, however, "the discussion did not, ^ Tuesday's "day of dialogue." half billion dollars annually, will continue more of everything that keeps the oil in­ where we're going. We look prospects for globalfood shor­generate the interest!' :/£''From toe feedback I have received, to go three-fourths to highways and one-dustry pumping, If anything, I'm^glad to forward to having their tage. "About 40 percent of the students voted to" '• Tuesday's classroom discussions .were fourth to education. see 50 members independent. Ten years > meeting in Austin and joining ,Dr. John Knowles, presi­discuss the funding issue, but the majority of successful and profitable, because it allowed SPEAKING WITH Calhoun after the ago, there wouldn't have been five,"in the input to. this valuable dent of the Rockefeller Foun­the students in the class did not get Involved students in an academic settingtodiscuss the turmoil of Friday had.folded behind the Harris, a 12-year house veteran added^;! • study which will benefit all dation, will speak on health in the discussion and 1 did not care about it/J^ff ramifications of the regents' decision," weekend, the Abilene representative ex­"I'm not saying all these fellows kW citizens," Mrs. Johnson said. problems. Dr. Bernard Perry said. sr „Kress said. \ pressed expected pleasure at the fund's prostitutes, but the victories wil) >».yronsuccess. ; The commission's agenda Berelson, president of the -,'Yi "Both sides aired their views and som#?^ . In an effort to promote more interestin the at the polling places," he said.5.fe#M| will include deliberations on Population Council, will ad-' good arguments were presented, but nothing Excluding mass transit from any fund In fact, another special a funding controversy, another rally will be - the interrelationships.of foodv dress the commission on pop­was resolved," Perry said. appropriations makes good sense, he said, monied interest, had only to flex a bicep to ..held at noon Wednesday on the Main Mall. 1 health, world populations, ulation growth and its because any such future transit will in­ ^ Low participation and lack of understan^gV^ Kress 9aid the rally will be an opportunity win inclusion in the proposed new constitu­ Quality of life, energy, demands on food and health. and information was the result of adis-Tor a fuller discussion of the issue, v J »%-V volve "utilization of existing highway tion, asconvention headline writers areso ' ecology, economics and world DR. RUSSELL Peterson, systems." ; fond of saying, "unscathed/' , stability. chairman of the President's •*: Rockefeller has stated that Council on Environmental mm —thebasic task ofthe commis* "-^uaHtyr-will -discuss-the HAMAGSHJMiMi sion is to idenUfy the eritieal Batios'aanvittHiment -obiee. StM£l«nt,ZiQni|t Movement, ;5pj}j; • SENIORS AND GRADUATESTUDENTS v , • . choices' which wilPconfront tives and their relationship to • V InMat6, Tajta Clofhing JEWISHNESS TODAY: Americans in the years ahead energy demands. If you are interested incomputer systcrhsand programMing... • -< and to determine the range of vDr. Walt W. 'Rostow, MUST WE FIT IN? 'v4 If you, are looking for a„ c^e|: mk, pleading software development desirable and realistic objec­'professor of economics and -r ~ Discussion on Assimilation and Future Co-Op tives this nation could achieve history at the University, will , EVERYONE INVITED! by 1485 and, to the extent speak on the economic role of If y°u like the creative challenge of participating with, and eventually WED., MARCH 27. 7:30 p.m. possible, by the year 2000. . 1801 RIO GRANDE Apt. No. 106 . leading, professional teams in the creation of advanced applications soft­ "s Among the critical * '' *• fdr mora info, call: "•M" ware . . . questions the commission will GAIL 478-5332 ELLIOTT 472-7493 20% be seeking to answer are: * • \:f' . Their opposition to mandatory funding does not extend itself to man­datory funding for intramurals, however, a "service" far less utilized that The Daily Texan. In opposing normal funding for The Daily Texan and Student Government YAF would seem to oppose student institutions simply because they-reflect progressive sentiments. How about it YAF? Does mandatory funding for intramurals strike you as tyranny, or is that category only reserved for student institutions? — M.E. roresight should be a prerequisite for any delegate to a constitutional convention. Unfortunately the current delegates seem to lack this basic quality. Not only did the Permanent University Fund remain intact but now the highway fund will still be around to haunt future generations. We may not have any automobiles, but we will have thousands of miles of ex­cellent highways. People will still be saying, "Texas has one of the best highway systems in the country,"or maybe theywill say wehave the only one. f More than $750 million is now firmly cemented into a fund to be used solely for maintenance and construction of highways. Since only about $200 million is spent for maintenance it is fairly clear where the rest will go. Several delegates voiced opposition to the proposal and more than 20 attempts were made to alter the fund, but the lobby efforts of the Texas Good Roads Association prevailed. Discounting the energy crisis, shor­tage of automobile fuel, the increasing implementation of mass transit Systems all over thecountry and the obviousneed for long-range planning, 4hedelegates committed future Texans tothe transit system of a genera­tion past. • i THE PURPOSE of revising a constitution is to make it morerelevant to the needs of the people it serves. Thekey to relevance and a good constitu­tion is flexibility and foresight. The constitution presently being drafted has neither. : M• • Sir J H'' I End realtor control ' In 1953 a realtor-controlled City Council adopted the utility rebate system to encourage growth. Now, more than 20 years later, citizens of Austin have a chance to see this system ended. A public hearing has been called for Thursday to discuss an ordinance proposed by Councilpersons Friedman and Binder, which would repeal this multi-million dollar developer subsidy program. Only two years ago a similar hearing was held on rebates. Fittingly, it was dominated by more than 50 developers and bankers, including eight bank presidents. No doubt the business interests will try the same trick Thursday, but this lime outcries against subsidization of growth leave hope for the public that the practice will be ended. It is not difficult to understand why more and more organizations throughout the city havecondemned utility rebates. Despite allegations to the contrary. Austin pays more than $1 million annually for essentially nothing. Business supporters claim rebates buy utility installations — even though the city already owns those installations; they claim that rebates help promote low-cost housing — even though only 0.8 percent of all single family dwellings built since January, 1972, are low-cost; and they claim that rebates cause a convenient standardization of utility in­ [-stallations — even though this can be done by law without rebates. Austin has never needed to pay for new developments. With a growth rate 130 percent above the nation'saverage, this is truer than ever before. We call for community support for the Friedman-Binder ordinance eliminating utility rebates, and urge citizeifi to voice their feelings at the public hearing at 1 p.m. Thursday, in the Electric Building, 30 West Ave. We must-show the City Council the time is here to end developer dominance of Austin politics once and for all. ' I 5 . . 1 -D.N. Who controls America? c By Zodiac News Service " • • A Senate committee has found that a handful of banks and large insurance com­panies control many of America's biggest corporations — but that this control is often concealed from the public and the government:" The Senate Government Operations Committee found that this concealment practice is carried out by bank trust companies and other institutions which manage huge investment portfolios. The study found that 28 institutions managed v a total of more than $300 billion in assets. :, According to the Senate committee, many&banks conceal their stock ownership , under pseudonyms ?-that is by using the names of dummycompanies that exist only on paper. As an example, says thecommittee, the Bankers Trust Company or New York is not listed among the 30 largest stockholders in the Burlington Northern Railroad ;in the official report filed with the Interstate Commerce Committee. But. the study found, six names on the list — controlling more than 750.000 shares of stock in the railroad — are "paper names" for accounts managed by thcBankers Trust 'Company. I The study alsti found that three New York banks had voting rights to nearly one-quarter of all the stock in both CBS nd NBC. -plus 'Significant holdings in 17 othe* .broadcasting groups.The Senatecommittee adds that less than.lO pcrcent of out­standing stock is usually enough to control corporate policy. ^ ;­ ; Tjhe Senate panel asked 324 of the largest U.S. corporations for a list ol their 30­biggest stockholders, but only 89 of the 324 responded in full:The bommittev coh­jtrhtdvd that the question of. who really controls America is still unknown today)': Page 4 Wednesday, March 27 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN An open letter Board of Regents Dear Regents: : IfjTTt has been a full decade since I was editor-in-chief of The Daily Texan| hik^nd I have avoided public comment on'the operations down there for th£' most part during that decade. Until recently, with a few exceptions, it„ t seemed that things were running relatively well-Most of the efforts of re* £ ,nalism school and with the Univiersity community as a wholev It is in effect a bulletin board for the University, a training ground for budding journalists and a channel for rather free expression of the viewpoints of vr v S VON HOFFMAN > f The Washington Post-King Features Syndicate WASHINGTON —. The staff of the Senate Commerce Committee has been getting worried letters and phone calls, these past weeks, from customers and partisans of something called Walnut Acres. Located in Penns Creek, Pa., about SO miles north of Harrisburg, Walnut Acres is one of the country's pioneer natural-food farms and processors; but under 'the terms of a proposed amendment to a new food-labeling law it could be wiped out, while Gerber Baby Foods, Hostess Cup Cakes and frozen chop suey sail on. As the law is presently drafted, food manufacturers would be required to dis­close the contents of most, but by no means all, foods. At the same time, all products would have to carry complete nutritional labeling — that is, how many and what kind of vitamins, calories and v proteins are in each serving. Sounds commendable, but Walnut Acres comprises two modest-sized iarms: one for raising chickens and beef, and one for growing grains and vegetables and can­ning. It runs off small batches of 60 to 100 cases of canned food at a time. The$200 to $400 it would cost to determine the exact nutritional contentof each batch would eat up any and all profit, which last year amounted to only $32,000 on a gross of $1.7 million. For the big manufacturers', com­pliance would represent a tiny fractions HrlnQ line To the editor: The outrage and sense of great loss I feel concerning the recent actions of the congregation of the Central Christian Church is, I am gratified to see, echoed by many Austinites. The insensitive destruc­tion of the Hunnicutt House'is, on all ac­counts, inexcusable. The house was a liv­ing tribute to an era of man; a monument that can never be regained. Would that worthy group of people responsible for this outrage tear up a Picasso masterpiece to use the Canvas as a dustcloth? 1 know that analogy is ex­treme, but for a very good reason. These people either did not realize or refused to acknowledge that they were destroying a work of art that could not be replaced. An example closer to home was the threaten­ed existence last year of the Wainwright Building in St. Louis. The building, by Louis Sullivan, was the first true skyscraper ever built; historically and ar­tistically irreplaceable. The Mickelson Realty Co., which owned the building, could no longer pay the maintenence costs and threatened to destroy it. Fortunately, the St. Louis organization was more patient that its Austin counterparts. By the time-consuming process of collecting donations the St. Louis chapter of the National Trust for Historic Preservation was able to raise the money needed to take over the upkeep of the building. The . Wainwright Building was. saved, but it-took time; longer than the Central Chris­tian CJiurch was willing to give Austin. - The citizens of St,.Louis can point with • pride -to a beautiful architectural tribute to the gehiusof man. Ail Austinites will be able to dois point to a flat black spaceand shrug their shoulders. Because I am an architecture student, I naturally feel the loss of the Hunnicutt House in that respect. But, I think a much more, instinctiveand gut-lev^l response is «the sense of loss I,and somany Austinites, ' flail! iliwaiwiiAiiiii In juSt about every confrontation between The Texan and the people who wanted it to shut up, retrospective looks at those situations h^ve in­evitably shown that The Texan-was correct and that those who wanted it- silenced were motivated by either personal or institutional selfishness, and occasionally by some degree of temerity. I find this situation no different. — . -— " ~ J T Frank Erwin is complaining that the Texan is taking stands fOr. spreading out the Permanent University Fund among other colleges in Texas at the same time that Erwin in trying to retain the fund for the University (and Texas A&M). While I don't necessarily, agree that 'the , fund should J)e spreadout, I can't see how having that argument presented ^by anyone — including the editors of The D^l^exan—-Weakens Erwiir[s ^argument if right is indeed on his side. tjrp 1 Democracy has always assumed that informed people have the capaci-. Jty to govern themselves. The key word there is "informed. This is why ; |%|we havp public schools and colleges, to provide our citizens with informa-, ration. It is why we have a student newspaper at the University. ^ From here, it looks as though Frank Erwin, and apparently many of the t. ,, "j rest of you, want to undercut that source of information. How you are go-• J ; students and others. It has been traditional for at least some students and others, myself included, to complain about the content or opinions in The .•? Texan, from its movie reviews to its sports coverage to its editorial page, ­ But those complaints, and differing viewpoints, have always had, in-; sofar as I know, ready expression on those very same pages. The Texan has been a great channel for communication of quite varied outlooks; that ; type of diversity, I believe, is one of the great strengths of America, and of Texas. ' > r,t ,/s'r" , ! • There are arguments that The Texan sometimes does not reflect the viewpoint of the University community or administration on its editorial pages. I am sure that is the case, if one believes that Frank Erwin has a corner on what the University of Texas thinks. But I don't believe most University students, or University graduates, buy that idea. The University exists primarily toserve its students, and through them, the people of Texas, now and in the future. I cannot understand how cut­ting off the primary mass communications tool at the University furthers that end. Liberals mean well but thousands of cases. ? , Don't blame the baddies Thus, should the law pass as now written, good-bye Walnut Acres, which uses no chemicalfertilizers or sprays, and which actually does grow and prepare food the way it is fraudulently suggested on television that certain "natural" products are handled. But if Walnut Acres is ul­timately done in by legislation, don't blame it on the corporate baddies. Thjs is no plot by the conservatives to expunge the last memory of healthy, undrugged, unadulterated pure food. Walnut Acres' cries of distress have been heard with sympathy by such senators as Eastland of Mississippi, Tower of Texas, McClure of Idaho and Baker of Tennessee, very far righties all. No, Walnut Acres would be a victim of good lfrteBtidns. e betting is that the amend­ment ,would be so harmful, not only 'Acres but to all small-food , will get knocked out. But it il­ how much easier it is to cry out, "There oughtta be a law," thanit is to cast a law in the right words. Law making works best when you can assume all people do and are the same. Thou Shalt Not Walk on the Red. As such, so much of economic legislation winds up favoring what is big and what is the same, with the result that they tell you on'teletfi­sion to shop for bread and toilet paper the same way. Don't squeeze the Charmin, squeeze the Wonder Bread. Hard to come by There ought to be a point where the liberals leave off and say it's up to the in­dividual to protect himself. But self- On Behalf of The Daily Texan And Student Government Noon on the Main Mall have felt. This more than anything else is a loss that cannot be measured. And the good people of the Central Christian. Church did not even have the courtesy to inform the public of their deci­sion to go through with this wanton and wasteful destruction. They deliberately denied us all one last chance to save Hun­nicutt House. Sharon Lyon Sophomore, Architecture Applause To the editor: I'd'like.to commend the regents on their action. Why should I be forced tosupport a student government and newspaper who express views different from mine? However, I suggest the regents go even further. Not only does The Texan mis­represent my opinions, but so do my professors; why should my tuition go toward their salaries? This semester one of my government texts expresses opinions contrary tomine; why should I be forced to buy such books? Furthermore, I'm a Christian Scientist and I hear that at the healthcenter (which I'm also forced to support) ... M. Logan Ware Alternative To the editor: Tuesday's Daily Texan editorial on the Austin School Board elections neglected to mention Betty Spence, a candidate for position 1 who deserves enthusiastic stu­dent support." Spence isa graduateof the Universityof Texas and fully realizes the importance.of emphasizing and determinedlyseeking out communication between governing boards and students and faculty. AISD terms of six years are too long, and Betty Spence would work for shorter terms which would create a board more responsive to the needs and interests of feel for the humanity of the building. More the community. than a lesson in structure, the Hunnicutt Spence would back proposals to continue House was one of the last trueinsights into and broadep the bilingual, tricultural the minds of the people of that age. It was programs now existing in the , Austin a visual and emotional experience that .schools. ' allowed people to comprehend the hopes, .She also believes that teachers deserve desires-and loves that the builders and salaries that reflect their professional subsequent owners of that house must status and increase relative to the rising Hp : ing to do it in the guise of being for the good of the peopleof Texas I don't l1 1 'know. , v< * * The editor of The Daily Texan is, as you know, elected. The argument that only one-fifth or one-fourth of the student body might vote in an elec­ • tion of the editor is specious. We pass constitutional amendments in this J state all the time withonly a handful of the registered voters voting — and the percentage of all those who would beeligible to vote if registered is, of course, still lower. But we abide by those decisions. At least the editor of The Daily Texan is elected; the regents are not. ; £ I hope that you will reconsider your decision to economically gut The Texan. I don't believe that the people of Texas will be well-served by ef­forts to cut off an organ of communication that seeks to tell the truth as its editors see it, and that allows presentation of other views as well. 4 Even though The Texan may be wrong from >time to time, or sophomoric, or irritating, I don't think the interestsof the people of Texas? will be better served with the bland type of substitute that apparently you envision as a replacement for The Texan. V " It is time for you to remember your duty to the people of Texas to insure ; that they have a university that encourages the free, open flow of ideas. Think about it. k : a cost of living. Her opponent is a busy minister and would be unable to devote all his energy to the school board. Betty Spence will fight for reform on a fulltime basis. Her opponent also lacks Bettv Spence's extensive experience in AISD affairs, ex­perience that will enable her to be an effective activist for progressive change. David Gullick grapes To the editor: Re: to Cathy Brannon's Guest View­point: Here is the truth. Let the truth set you ; Dave MeNeely, editor 1963-64 too protection is founded on knowledge, ahd knowledge of food nutrition is hard to come by. You might as well ask your stockbroker as your doctor about it.There is reason to believe that the food columns of the supermarket women's-type magazines are controlled by the same companies that are selling fancy-wrapped cancer of the spleenor cancer of the colon, in the package with the new, NEW, see- through window. In an odd way, requiring nutritional labeling may., reinforce technically. ac­curate but essentially misleading adver­tising claims about what's enriched, for­tified, strengthened, pure and natural. Even the government's recommended minimum daily allowances of various nutrients are only ball-park estimates of doubtful use. . Pending better research and better dis­semination of its results, we'll have to continue to muddle through to poor health and sickness, while the liberals try to write a law. But we can't force people to save themselves. That's virhat the Naderites did with seat belts! To insist that cars have seat belts for those who want to use them could be justified, but putting in the buzzer and preventing the car from starting until the harness is on has infuriated even those of us who want to wear it. You can make the people you want to help hate you. Look at Nader. Every time that damn buzzer goes off, he loses a vote. free (from a bad case of sour grapes).The students of the University of Texas have decided that they don't want the URC representing them. It is not a Communist plot or even worse, a right-wing plot. It is the students voicing their opinions which happen todisagree with your own. Bea big girl and face up to the facts. It's hard to take, we know. But life is full of traumas. It would have been much simplier if you had said, "You won't have the URC to kick around anymore." R. V. Breidenbach, Junior, Accounting; C.G. Giffin,Senior, Architecture; Karilyn E. Kober, Freshman, Premed; D.L. Allen, Junior, Accounting. ' \, Sfvrf«nf M*wr«p«p*r «f Tfc# UntwrtHy «f ?•«•• mt AvtHm EDITOR.. ..........Michael Eak'in MANAGING EDITOR John Yemma ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Betsy Hall. Mark Sims NEWS EDITOR ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR AMUSEMENTS EDITOR..; SPORTS EDITOR FEATURES EDITOR PHOTO EDITOR Issue News Editor General Reporter News Assistants Contributor ....; • Editorial Assistants Associate Amusements Editor Assistant Sports Editors Make-Up Editor. Wire Editor Copy Editors ....?..................... Photographer Opinions expressed in The Dally Texan are those of the »lit»r or the writer of, the article and are. not necessarily IImmc Inquiries concerning ;i............., Susan Winterringer ..:a Ken McHam ..David Dailey Danny Robbins Kristina Paledes-30­Jay Mill®1' ISSUE STAFF Carol Barnes Linda Fannin, Bill Garland, Scott Tagliarino : . Anne Collins, Bobbie Criswell Lisa E. Smith Joy Howell, Dale Napier Lynn Bailey Ed Dalheim, Larry Smith Vicky Bowles , Claude Simpson ..Phyllis Schwartz, Roe Traugott David Woo delivery upd claimed advertisl!)* should be made in TSf- MuiWiiig J,MO < 471-32441 and display adverliatnc In T8P HUIMmk H.J10 (471*1865). • •V'/TIms-national advcrtUtag r«j>ri>>entj|Uv« ri. H* Mil* Wxun Is National Kdupatlonat Advertising Service, lno . Ix'initRlan AVc,. Nev» York. N Y.. 10017! The l^itoexaniubscribes toThe Associated PresiThe Mow Y»rkMew*Serrlre;Veiled l^lnleriwittowil t ii Texas Itally JVew^wper AssorjaUon. lt«V *#VS.T­ ^f n»'.t.<.-A-,: ->,'-;, ;rzi _ r>»-£HS2 • By DAN BOYD will be at stake in the primary, as\ side Tra where Mom and ficult, but absentee voting by mail is,, -you becom^ involved in civil or KfeP *?w1it i$ still possible to register to well as one federal election, U.S^ Dad live are severe disadvan-.a very cumbersomev process. criminal litigation while you are in vote in Travis County for the Congress. The helecti6q is of infer^ tages. You-will probably have to Political scientists. have .long 'college, you will probably appear WtfsRiP5 primary elections to be held May 4.' mense importance. • W/{ vote absentee by mail, as will'also observed that only an infinitesimal "before a judge whose name will be ffij Hie30-day legal deadline will occur Students who are registered out-fei be the case in mostfuture elections, portion of voters who need to vote on the Travis County ballot on-May "34H 1during spring break, and voter ,; side Travis County should change' including the general election. To absentee by mail ever complete the 4, If you have any interest in being a guest • '"M"L M*" ' rummn turn registration deputies from the StiK their registration to this county. To vote absentee by mail you, must process. That is why the opponents juror;"you are much more likely to V V y 'k l¥^Y ^ dent,Council for Voter Registration " change counties, you neecHonly fin write the appropriate county of­of student voting power spent , he able to serveif you are called by will operate four registration tables out the application available at all ficials requesting an absentee ballot thousands of dollars unsuccessfully on carnpus until Friday, the lastday the tables; the process takes less , application. When you receive that* fighting the rights of students to from voter registration lists). One. Students w* $12I ^of classes before the legal deadline. than one minute. You do not neecl you must send it in with your voter jpte at4heir;-c^lleg^|^id|nc^g last consideration;-you probably your receipt from the old county. Ji? registration certificate and wait for have no idea about the merits of the; ^The tables will be operated at the To be eligible to register in Austin a.ballot. When you get the ballot, \ Only a few days remain io candidates seeking office "back following locations from 9 a.m. to 4 (Travis County), you need only a . you must not only fill it out, but you' ' register to vote in the primaries home." With the primary campaign p.m.: Jester, West Mall, Main Mall •US? place of abode. Dormitory "inust also have it notarized, and The stake you have in these elected two-thirds tlver, what do you know and 24th and Speedway Streets. The residences, apartments, duplexes, most notaries will charge a fee fof officials is clear. It is the Travis about the candidates seeking public! volunteers are official Travis Coun­ trailor houses, communes — any this service. Then you send the . County legislative delegation that is office ih your hometown? Time isty voter registration deputies. power place where you reside — is suf­ballot in, and the entire procedure most concerned with and takes most nearly out. If you are interested in The primary elections are the ficient. This is true-even if'you plan must be completed several days responsibility for the University of having an impact on everything most important elections in Texas. to move away for the summer or before the election or your vote will Texas System. It is the TravisCoun­from impeachment to the Board of; In the vast majority of elections, the forever. You are still eligible to vote not count. That is why SCVR une­ty senator who by the institution of Regents, stop by one of the four outcome is effectively made by the in Austin. Indeed, you hav£ a con* quivocally recommends that youex-senatorial courtesy can block the SCVR tables,' Shi't'M 9?*^ primary. Virtually all elected of­stitutional right to do so. • ercise your right to register here. nomination of a man from Travis i®rDan;;Bdy Mm fices from constable to governor For those who insist on-voting out-, > Absentee voting in person is not dif-County to the Board of Regents. If SCVR Steering Committee. more DR. M. THOMAS STARKES will speak on uest SlfHt : WORLD RELIGIONS, CULTS, | m sionism in Asia, they elicited side cafe after the rally and. /to be commercial aircraft?, -To the editor: students' concern be concen­only silence. There was a found ourselves deafened byv^his intense noise pollution is vRe: the guest viewpoint, "A trated on the odiousness of the I think is a good one becausejit Regental Act of Equity," by facilitates criterion 4 growing awareness on the the roar of low flying jets ap» an assault upon human ears THE OCCULT manner in which the Board of No. Young Americans for Regents (a body not responsi­;-.abby^p|||g||| v part of this,"radical caucus'' proximately every five or ten^sand we woiild be interested to tonight ' 8:00 p.m. that the Vietnam horrors minutes. Unfortunately, this, know if anyone else knows Freedom members James ble to those they serve) made . John Hollrah Union Jr. Ballroom "Meadows and Keith Frazer; their decision. I must agree '' Junior, Plan II were perpetrated with the as­is not a rare occurrence'^ -.anything about it. ; The tone of Mssrs. Meadows sent,acill) if UUfc the WV V»«J • wVWt' r 41J Yesterday morning, while' Paula Meyer is m with Erwin when he says that U not VU*; actualW *;V. , •* and Frazer led me to believe The Daily Texan should be "Asian tra assistance of a whole genera-/^peaking with a neighbor in *: Doug Barnett they allied themselves with responsive to those it serves. To the editor: tion of Asian specialists. the front yardt our words Indeed,, many America's completely obliterated the Board of Regents for the U"In the National Commission-of were most venerable Asian experts by the noise of jets thundering same reason on which the It ,seems there\ are four "bri Critical Choices, the UT latter based their recent may be held accountable for, .above our heads. Often at mm ^BETTY desirable qualities that should chapter of the Committee of night I've found myself the formulating of the decision: they don't like The be fulfilled in regard to The Concerned Asian Scholars ideological justification for wondering if perhaps an air £ Daily Texan nor the Student Texan: -recognizes those same U.S. intervention is Asia. attack was occurring due to Government (call them elements of the U.S. power "political hacks" if you 1) That the Editoris erected structure which have such a . The formation of CCAS in an abnormal amount of low SPENCE l^'fe by the student body. 1968 was intended as a direct flying air traffic. ;: must). 7'>.n stranglehold on their chosen kKw4 Meadows and Frazer say " 2) That the" newspaper be academic field. Essential to challenge^ to the •• Our question is this: has. chool Board organizational hegemony of w? that Eakin and Kress "believe allowed a free and uncensored the government because of its a anyone any information about -^sLS-f' i *. whole group of scholars who these jets who, from their people should be forced to editorial policy. intelligence-gathering and finance opinions they op­ have often rendered more appearance and their prOximi-Positioi 3) That those who do not evaluation capacities, the pose " fal»t beth t, BoUglU ' Wish to government and theEakin and Kress have in­ should not receive) the paper : and cheaply — after it had dicated their support for a Rockefellers than they have to • BiLingual, Trl-Cultural Program*now «xisting in the Auttin School* shouldbe continued and ered the are not coh^pelled to. been shattered under No doubt' broadened voluntary "fee retrieval 4) That the be brunt of McCarthyismcCarthyism and academic inquiry. WHAT fAMOUS THIO • Communication betweenstudents, teachers, administrators, Boardend the Community must paper the extension of this integra­ COUHTS, system whereby those con­congressional witchhunts. HOODWINKED THt bis emphasized and determinedly sought out. scientiously wanting their available at the lowest tion of the University with the CMBARASStD AN tMPIM, Since the 1950s, Asian studies • Teachersdeserve salaries that reflect their professional status andincrease relative to theiis­ economical still WHILE SWASHBUCKLING THEM money back can get it. With cost and in America has largely been government is on the agenda r con­the National Commission WAY lOfANit AND fORTUNE? ing cost of living. < . * >^'^§£4'' fulfill the above three of respect to theStudent Govern­defined — and confined — by • AI8D Board terms of six years are toolong. Shorter terms would create Board Members who ditions. . *." -'V on Critical Choices. ' I ment fee, I would point out the State Department and the HINT: IT'S NOT HAtDCMAN, are more responsive to the-needs and interests of the community. CCAS that it is not unusual for . With the inclusion of No. 3 Rockefeller, Ford and ERUCHMAN, AND UT Chapter MITCHeiL ' The School Board election is April 6, during spring break. VOTE ABSENTEE TODAY at governments to tax their con­(implementation of the fee Carnegie Foundations. 1 University State Bank, 19th & Guadalupe, 8:00 a.m. -6:00 p.m. . i. 1 stituents; this is the case at retrieval system), the Not surprisingly then, when Betty is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin. For more information or to vblunteer local, state and federal levels YAFers should besatisfied. In in the late 60s' young scholars ^Another assault „sj»3313>isnw 33BH1 3Hi„ dO NOISU3A support, call 346-1312. ( in the United States; hence, the long run, given the and graduate students urged To the editor: frl. M3N 3Hi S,ll 'H3MSNV W Poi Attv. byStwtomt* tor a PrpgrtmMivtk fit School $B»nt DmOullk*. co-onHnrntar. laoa^MAy. No. 21. (>rlnn 14 OldFrench , 6 Hypothetical KHBF3C] DBB! 4* iZk§ if -« coin : • force ISHESI3 raHH HEI 15 Writing im­7 Wager " plement 8 Silkworm BBHE HISnraB ' > « -.V'1 j '17 Interrelated 9 Beast of BBBnmtiEiBB number of burden DSEC1 E1I1HP3 '•& things 10 Promise to SraraH E3HBH HBH Place 3 M.K. HAGE Jr. • Mr. Hage is an incumbent and will 19 Foray v pay (colloq.) 21 Near 11 Owing 29 Make amends name "' probably be elected"president of the Board if a progressive majority 22 Kill 16 Sob 30 Dispatches 46 Insect eggs . 25 Sailor (col-18 Bog down 32 Hawaiian 48 Comfort • wins. He is a former teacher and principle and holds a .masters degree 49 Resort loq.) 20 Canine wreath 50 Dance step from UT in school administration. Hage advocated a restructuring of 27 Word of sor­22 Writing tablet 33 Offspring 51 Irritate row "" 35 Beef animal 52 Small child /i9 fr<2& and 23 Sweetheart school district taxation and adequate curricula materials. 31 Conducted 24 Paid notice 39 Court (abbr.) 54 Obscure r 32 Make into. 26 Having two 55 Period of time' wtf-ural as the. 40 Kind IflW .legislative 41 Teutonic 56 Parent (col­34 Part of "to branches deity !p4> be" she 28 Note of scale 44 Mohammedan 59 Behold! 35 Unit of tr f/ared Aid 5 10 Japanese- a sansuons m/a/f/Yf-Place 4 JUNE KARP • Mrs. Karp, a UT graduate is a business , currency,-i -36 Mountain u j 12 13 14 agent for the Austin Federation of Teachers and has 13 years teaching pass far/njr -Afarcgt " -37 preposition IS 16 IT7 experience. She has encouraged community participation in school ac­ //fa dif 4/1 '3& Strategist,-- tivities. Disturbedby falling achievement test scoresof Austin children, * 41 Goal' 19 21 , 42 Heraldry ^ <3/7at f* WSfefrt Mrs. Karp has sharply criticized controversial school Superintendent^ -~Qra«ed ^ 24 25 W 28 3?s Jack Davidson , 43 Shade tree ' 44 War god • 32 m ' 45 Printer's,-^! (1 fneaatwe^b 5T '47 Shlp'sboP®! "r «<"»» • 38 THESE PEOPLE CARE ABOUT THE FUTURE OF EDUCATION IN 1^49 Enthusiasm ' 40 AUSTIN. WE HOPE YOU 06 TOO. PLEASE VOTE. ' 53 Attacked iT 43 Equality ;se weiahtonn-45 46 47 48 ' Ml W. " E dia (pi.) , Pd. for by Student Action Com*: b Man's name 49 SO S3 56 PuWMiad by The Dotty T«wmi in Si?S?6l Inquire miHee a , -f$|e2 Start 57 ST Hit t No. 2W 6411 BurMt Robert Howard, Chairperson . the Texas Student Publication* Insane •wilding, Univ«mty el Tewi* Young Democrat* 61 Riv«rsi4« Oobie lam . Stacey Suits, President • Dlntr. by Unit** Int. *- dnesday,March27 - i&fe. M J# WMmm gifpr«Sf sras reman By HERB HOLLAND Auditorium was abuzz .with; foreign referee withouta vote but his punches' didn't even ,,September between Foremanv ,„ Texan Staff Writer ?„ ~ speculation ... Norton wasthe : 'and three Venezuelan judges.-faze tiie champ, letalone slow^fiand Ali, a bout whichcould br^ .:< World Heavyweight Boxing same size ad Foreman and . EVEN JOE LOUIS, ex-him. " filing both fighters as much a^S '^Champion George Foreman nearly the same weight ... heavyweight champion, said, Early in the second rounds *15 million apiece. 1 f . took his sweet time in dispose Foreman didn't havethecom­in a pre-fight interview that Norton landed a punch to' -The stunned Austin crowd . ing of No. 1 challenger Ken manding height and reach ad­Norton-would outlast Foreman's head that angered»:«;stuck around to watch the--y Norton Tuesday night'in vantages over Norton that he Foreman. w Jhim more than it hurt. a replay of the knockout, star-^ Caracas, Venezuela, winning did over Frazier and Roman. But when the two fighters^ Foreman replied with a left ; ing in disbelief at the sheer by technical knockout at 2:00 Besides, Foreman had been met In the center of the ring,v cross, a Tight hook, an upper brutality that had takenplace^ of the second round. in the hospital only 12 hours the 6*3 Foreman looked about cutand a left was Foreman's longest prior to the fight, receiving a foot taller, stronger and Norton into heavyweight title fight. He treatment for what was. 'meaner than the 6-3 Norton. Although N<£-ton defeated Joe Frazier early in ^ _ reported as a knee injury. The champion's grizzledstare the way down, referee Jimmy but a good fighterjwouldn't the second round to win the ti-?"^''^fMariy people thought would have pierced right Rondeau stepped in and gave "have gotten hit. ^"" tie Jan 27, 1973, and stopped Foreman's knee injury was ai through the challenger's head Norton a mandatory eight* _ "But if he gets me.theW I'm Joe "King" Roman in the fake, though, a move by. had Norton not avoided it. .count. agoing to get him," Foreman opening minute of his first ti-Manager Dick Sadler to in­As the first round got under||^ Scarcely after Rondeau said. '.'t '$$01' ...|le defense, Aug. 31, 1973. fluence the selection of a way, though, Norton must' finished the count, Foreman, When asked 'if he knew hoty,«» ^Unlike the Muhammad All-referee for the fight. Sadler have realized that Foreman's who had patiently walked bad he had hurt Norton,!^ Frazier fight in January, the had demanded a foreign stare Was much easier to through the entire fight, was Foreman said, "He didn't get' Austin crowd wasn't too sure referee and finally com­avoid than Foreman's quickly on top of-Norton again hurt, he got knocked out." which fighter wask.their promised with the Venezuelan.: punches. and landed three savage right Ali, who had made a specif favorite. Howevef^-\the Boxing Commission on a Norton threw and connected uppercuts to Norton's chin, tacle of himself through the '"""''the first punchof the fight, but smashing him into the ropes entire evening, appeared the first half of the opening... ;aiHf. * somewhat^ shaken tap by /4u4tt*4 round was mainly the Rondeau again had to step Foreman's easywin over Nor*j The Basics fighters trying to feel each !in. Norton wasn't down but ton, who had broken Ali's jawfl„, .Other out. was tangled in the ropes and Jn their first meeting. ; i diopirad Sandwichp?':4S In the third minute of the. RondeaugaveJiim a chancetnffi NEVERTHELESS, Ali's Ham Sandwich ~ first round, Foreman began recover. fabled mouth roared on. walking Norton into the ropes,-Norton wasn't solucky,after "I'll .retire GeorgekQUBS Beef Sandwich .99 maneuvering Norton into his that. Foreman instantly Foreman?" Ali said. "I'll stay:, —Wl TiliphiN. -m m favorite part of the ring. resumed his barrage of-out of his way for the firstfive > f Norton gets the count. 'snM Sausage Plata lllllftt 1.45 WHEN FOREMAN opened punches *and threw a left-, rounds and stick him. CAMEIW AN Ym SIimM Cat 2.99 up with his first flurry* of right, right-left combination' I "If he don't knock 'emout in PIT Mm ROAD m punches, Norton's defensive which smashed Norton to the the first two rounds, he gets 453-7866 UM(««kni2|'- Tennis Teamyp'V' M precautions couldn't prevent floor with a crash that was. .frustrated," Ali said. " FRBB DRINK WITH STUDENT ID the champ's blows from lan­heard even above the scream­ MR I But who really knows exact- ding. Norton tried to counter, ing fans in both Caracus and ly how frustrated Foreman . Austin. ••••• • ::i -would be after five rounds?• Hapless Frogs; i THE CHALLENGER', And what difference does it struggled to get up and even-' Hm ~ BI-UNGUAL & MULTI­ make? He's never lost a fight By ED DALHEIM -Horns moved their conference jvf> dO NOISH3A a development of Jagger Associates VI. M3N 3H1 S,il WMSNV 4 Call478-3471 Group Flights • • Before youmake planstogo to VIA AMERICAN AND ICELANDIC JETS Eur(^)e,don'tforget yourTravelers' May 19-August19(93days). WholeEartKPravlslonCo. Check.That isthe typeof Travelers' Qieck thatMerit Travelcan provide May25-July25(62days). 504 west 24th 478-1577 May 28-July11(45days). for you—a thoroughchecklist of everything youneed toknow before May 31-August21(83days). embarkingfor Europe.Sinceour staff Dallas toLuxem-AO"70 AA has been toEuropealmost asmany bourg toDallas vyltfiUv timesasHenry Kissinger,theyknow ' VIA DELTA AND ICELANDIC JETS all the ins-androuts of European May19-August19(93days). traveland willhelp you plan your May 2S-July 25(62days). Share the fun trip.So beforeyou travel to Europe May 29-August15(75days). this year, first check with MeritTravel May30-August20(83days). ^this summer Here's howto get there. Houston toLuxem-aOOO ITt bourgtoHouston vOO&a// Charter Flight We can alsohelp you with VIA CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS . Student RailPasses-Eurailpasses May 30-July11. DallastoBrussels— Eurailguide • CompleteSelection has played in 2,559 games — repair boot? RUGS tops for major league shortstops. He ranks 26th shoes belts '500' Many $750 Beautiful Colors leather SONY •LEATHER SALE* Askanyone. goods ',/;S Varioui kindi, color* -75' por ft; :<{^Uniwrsity Co-Op Capitol Saddlery iflfll Stereo Shop2Mt GoaMopt 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 v JESTER'CENTER N E?\'> STORE Your ON CAMPUS Student Store Weekdays 8:00 'til 6:00 Saturdays 9:00 'til 1:00 • BLUEBOOKS • COSMETICS • SPIRALS . • RECORDS • SNACKS • MAGAZINES " t j » CONVENIENT FOR SHUTTLE BUS RIDERS! NEW HOUSING POLICY! ,P I -v re- "V-::|^103 W|. OCCUPANCY ONLY Semi-Private Rooms as Low as$60 per mo i ^ Luxurious Private RoomsiS per mo ? ^* * 1 st£ Si ^ ^ l w '• !v* 5." • Maid Service • Private Bus & * tv "V *-< ' T1 i" 'fihfiSL* r t ^ ^ z \ I ^ ^ ^ f t ' > • Heated Swimming Pool • Refrigerator^* Intercom \ • Laundry Facilities • Vending Machi •-StudyAreas • 24 Hr^Desk Service • TV in Lobby O-tf street Parking • Close to Campu! 'Special' Meal Contractsfe Iti^fe^tlAyailable 'At Madison House Now drccepting fall '74 Contracts iM:] for U.T. Men and Women HOUSING OFFICE 709 West 22nd St. m 478-989H* 478-8914 DEXTERHOUSE Come See -Come Live GET MORE FOR YOURMONEY $ $ m • hill and ball Mickey Reichenbach backs him up. Sm j >.-v «4 »» W * ^ i.,A m • /It'sCarl Mayer's Anniversary SaL,,. Remember, you can save 25% on Carl Mayer's entirediamond collectiorf^^M • .^(Convenient terms available) /y 813 Congress 5517 Balcones ^ * *$ < Ative,happy and now recording for Capitbl Rei Hear their new album: m m m N Wednesday, March 27^1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page •/ •itr. M ** *' '• ' Tf ' s$s Essential ^•ld (Editor's Note: this is three-fourths of the election! the first In * three-part To beat the high cost of run­ series en student ning for public office, three polities and the power , groups of students formed «? » of the student vote,) parties or coalitions. Out of a EUROPE . £y SCOTT TAOUAIUNO maximum budget of $4,000,Texan Staff Writer however. University Reform Candidates seeking Coalition (URC) only spent1 positions in Student Govern­about $2,000. Students for a Affinity charters and flights ex­ment can be short .of many Liberated University (SLU) things — political astuteness, spent only $356.65, out of a clusively for: , M'e-' ­ time or even brains, but one maximum of $1,550,"and four The University of Texas thing they cannot be short of Representative Party can- is money. §SJr didates combined spent only students, faculty, staff The election code;5"'which' *|g3 governs student elections,-STUDENT GOVERNMENT and immediate familyt f sets financial expenditure candidates are not the only limits for all offices. These ones required to expend range from $150 to$790 for un­money to get student votes. §3f|i ^WTtir Mf affiliated candidates and $1% University students have long :.v;? ^r-r. to $650 for affiliated can~t.; been a force in state and local DallasBrussels didates. 1 : politics. Two prime examples of the power of student vote In the Student Government. v nt «te 24 Days—$349* weeks 'ago;^-occurred last summer -in election three ; Austin Sen. "' Doggett's more than $8,000 wasspent by n„A t„ •«.» ** June 9—July 2 HIIU KH« 74 candidates in (;l\gir cam-canjpaign ant' l®st in the Capital Airways DC-8 paiighs. j| f *• •£* as; nuclear energy bond election. Doggett's expenditures 252 seats THIS AMOUNT may not approximately $65,000,seem outlandish by moststan­were of which $10,000 to $12,000 was dards, but it must be noted spent on getting the studentthat almost 50 percent of that vote. sum was spent by 13 presiden­ by M tial and vice-presidential can­The usually anti "nuke" stu­4 learn From Life'-—-w mgtdidates. These candidates dent vote neared 10,000 on Dallaft/Brusscia/Parlp/Itolla* E°£um#t",a,X ph#*®9r°phor Walker Evans advises a James Aaee to , compose the Ihh4 "Lat Ui Nawlroiu 1 spent, on the average, $373 election day, proving almost l|n|Vei*itY photojournalism class Tuesday »o let "the Famous M«» wWe^epJt, the ^«?Afcib22 42 Days—$329* plus inter­each vying for Student, fatal-to the pro "nuke" forces street be your museum. Evnn» collaborated with writer sharecroppers in the early 1930s. Government's top two posts. ' which won by only 722 votes. nationaldeparture tax m The 10 senator at-large can­Thus, in both instances; the didates spept a combined $1,-student vote proved a viable Program Use Increasing May 30—July 111 " ? 335 in their campaigns, which, force in elections, and : Citizen participation in onru a/itinrt Qoaiofatif JtwA/i : .1 . ^ *•-­ Henry, acting assistant direc­Henry said he feels ridership monthly parking contractsex­ Capital Airways DC-8 combined with the presiden­although costly by some stan­Austin's park and ride tial and. vice-presidential dards, well worth the time, ef­program initiated Monday has tor for transportation ser­will increase as more people pire to use the buses, Henry vices, saidTuesday. become familiar with the said. total, shoWs that one-third of fort and money to any local been "a little bit less than Henry reported 52 persons system. The buses leave the Foxthe total candidates paid for politician or issue. what we expected," George used the buses to get to work Another reason for the low Theater in North A&stin every *Pricesbased on prb rat Tuesday morning, an increase ridership could be that per­15 minutes from 7 to 9 a.m. on share oOhe total over Monday's 3fr ridere. sons are waiting until* their weekdays, and stob at 23rd 'and San Jacinto Streets, the^-p^ ^ -{ ^ cost. V»* Capitol complex and down­ t ARBY'S ROAST BEEF * » " ^ town Austin. On the return SANDWICH SPECIAL trip to the theater, riders can catch buses at the same boar­ Hot Roast Beat, alicad welar-thln, stacked i ding locations between 4 and 6 high on a toastad sasama seed bun. Halp' yoursalf to all you want, of Barbtfque Sauca, p.m. Fares are 30 Cents one­ Hcirsaradith Sauca. Mustard and Katehup. way. •. r/i !/] 20€ OFF ALL ARBYS TONY FROM OFFER GOOD THRU MARCH 28 iVi Vtf* f MR. LOHNY'S *1 Snoppy SotvIm 1705 Guadalupe 472-1582 • MMMHII AtntMphmMay 22—August 21, $382+ • Chan and Cahrful ' 5400 Burnet Rd. , 451-3760 HAIRSTYLIST 4411 W. Ben White' 892-2058 5308 BURNET ROAD May 25—July 12, $397+ ' OFFERS GUYS & DOLLS A VIP HAIR TREATMENT June* 4—July 2, $453+ ea. (SHAMPOO. CONDITIONER. June 6—July 21, $468+ AND STYLE) Light up her eyes with the gleam of sterling silver rings +$3international departure FOR *6.50 made of spoon handles from Gorham, International and FOR APPOINTMENT CALLtax Towle's most heautifiil and popular patterns. They can be 459-7904 i;" Recreation Committee Sh ^ made to fit anjr size so she. can hav# one for each finger. ~ Silver, Austin Highland1Mall. /. • "r WHAT FAMOUS TRIO FROM GORHAM wki& & HOODWINKED THE COURTS, TRIP! EMBARASSED AN EMPIRE, WHILE SWASHBUCKLING THEIR WAY TO FAME AND FORTUNES A 60 mile trip down/the Rio Grande starting n IHoastoni tit St. Helena, Mexico. Leave: March 29, at HINT: IT'S NOT HALDEMAN, 4:30 p.m. Return: April 5. Price: $75 includes ERUCHMAN, AND :,/,;// . . MITCHELL. ^ , lay 22—August 20, $462.60f| gas, canoe or kayak, paddles, life jacket, guide, and all food and drink. . May 22—July 9, $462.60 >/SH3313)ISnW , Sign up and information: Union Rtn. 342 33MH1 3H1» dO NOISH3AJune 5—July 3, $541.60 March 26-28, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. *L,M3N 3H1S,ll :)I3MSNV La Scala Medici , tadd $3 Departure Tax J SPECIAL INCLUSIVE TOUR CHARTER! IXC. Charters c^antilly'Strasbourg Buttercup INTERNATIONAL ^sSc# OPEN TOGENERAL PUBLIC June 3—June 18 16 days Choice of 6 itineraries from $633 Old Colonialip Grand Duchess Dufiarry t/< •\ «s June 14—June 28 $749 ISSili -fll Mandarin Old Master ' -• Prelude BETTER THAN ' ' Iwm-*CASH..JOSKES ,rv* v ENJOYMENT CARD: ;y:^l {tv'-i1 Apply lor your Joske l* yj<';, 4 account today for easyshopping and extra i| .-'I benefits! l^f mf-n El Grandee C< s«. ** J. . Wm WV NUUTWHUBJHIB J. S * HV l.'ag.ifea 002 ^tiSoe^AusrtaleraTBTCH-5f2 4*7231 HONE 452-9393 ---< -1 k* **L -"-I Page 8 Marc^tl?74 THE DAILY TEXAN' v. ' '1' -• ,rr­ .1 ' Foreignm -*>• Groups To Meet !gse; % ¥ 1 5 v*^n. organizational meeting for the International Student Organization, va proposed campuswide organization, * -MM will be held at 4 p.m. Wednes­day in the-Academic Center Auditorium. The purpose of the meeting will be to ratify the constitu­tion of the organization* , Kyungsun Sub, a University student .from Korea and a member of the Committee to ; ^ the Constitution, said Tuesday. Membership is open :j to all foreign and American * University students. The organization will con­^ sist of a general assembly, where every member of the . organization will have a vote ran advisory board, where i each of the approximately 85 •; countries* including the United States, represented a||j the University will have a-" .? vote; and standing com­mittees for social, financial s and cultural functions. THE ORGANIZATION'S '• purpose is to help foreign students adjust to University : life and overcome the "cultural shock" experienced . when entering a new society; Suh said. Alam Miran, University stu-;: dent from Afganistan and a : member of the Committee to Draft the Constitution, said ; the organization-also will try f; to increase contacts and ^ cultural exchanges between foreign and American students. The organization "will be totally independent of the aistcatien/' Suh said. He added the organization will not be in­volved in politics. VEIKKO NUOTIO, a University Finnish student and constitution committee member,said foreign students need some sort of cam­puswide organization to repre­sent them. Hesaid the Univer­sity's International Office provides technical informa­tion about visas arid a foreign student's rights but does noty" handle follow-up social ad­vising. "" . " * % Ruben Worrell, a University student from Panama and a tnember of the constitutional committee, said foreign '.students can contribute in­dividually to the community by going to different groups and explaining the differences between societies; ns I H T6 CStbbat Foid By ROBERT FULKERSON? E #nd 10 yards wide. • Apartments and thegardening Texan Staff Writer Brackenrige FUW'( began. »Married students have Laboratory once used th<£ *"«««•»« VAfl,r« t begun gardening behind plots td grow flowers for the' veM9' , Colorado and Brackenridge University. When the, ' • abuses Mrs. Rodi said. "Well, a WtApartments, tilling U>e river laboratory discontinued itg Y bottom soil to, grovr flower growing, . vegetables, get someexercise ty allowed mar i^imd beat the grocery price to plant gardens. „ , ,. % :ifj *S'A v4­ * ' r%. Rosemary Bjorum works in her gfrden | If You Need Hfelp or * Just Someone Who Will Listens >":V 1 Telephone .476-7073 ' At Any Time : The Telephone Counielinfl and Referral Service PR, M. THOMAS STARKES will speak on WORLD RELIGIONS, CULTS, AND THE OCCULT tonight '"8:00 p.nft -t 7 -Union Jr. Ballroom 6,t.MORGAN TRAVELIS ZtlC.fl: i -vs ft when comes to In fact, you might call us r> "matchmakers"...because we've sent many beautiful people to so many beautiful places for many years now. We can offer you the most desirable honeymoon spots on the map...HAWAII, MEXICO, BERMUDA, MIAMI BEACH, EUROPE;..you name it, we'll arrange it. Plus the most outstanding hotels and accommodations. In fact, might call us the... . ESTABLISHED IFOR HONEYMOONERS! mm m MX"-* CRUISES AIRLINE Tlf1 TS mmm COMPLETE ^ TRAVEL Wil ARRANGEMENTS mm 45 1'6483 lomaln mi your honeymoon <*, < N<*w in our brand new location ivt f 'JEjL 8307 Shoal Creek 451-6483 , „future NOW 2 Arica & 476-2281 WE5T24 •176-7636 problem. . The University ptowed th^"" can do everything wrong and "You work hard all day at land behind Colorado still come^up with a good X school, and it's good to go t$ the garden for some hard! physical exercise," Sue Rodife| Colorado Apartments, re^if^ dent, said. Rising food prices influenc^ ed Rosemary Bjorum's decipp sion to learn vegetable gro™®8^ "MY HUSBAND and I thought it would be a good idea, so we learned how,'* Mrs. Bjorum said. "It's % , good way to get to know your; neighbors, over a few beers" down here gardening." * Residents of' Colorado Apartments have staked out P15&A3&&AM v/s/rm wm semester a" I " swwm West Barring major weather problems, the West i Mall renovation project should be completed within three to four weeks, Mike Quinn, assis­tant to the chancellor, said Tuesday. As specified in the contract between the University and Stokes Construction Co., the date of completion for the project should have been March 24. "The reason we haven't finished yet is because we'Ve had a shortage of materials and some bad weather.^' said Walter Fisher, approximately 28 plots and, instruction foreman for Stokes, are growing cucumbers, peas^.^^We've , had problems getting the stone spinach, radishes^ tomatoes^Tv^re laying along the walkways delivered to onions, beans, lettuce^: us," he explained. carrots, beets, cabbages^' , Construction on the controversial $279,000 rutabagas and squash. Their ""' project began in the summer and since then gardens extend 150 yards lonf Changes tattie original plansdelayed comple­ ! SANDWICHISEMIN ARs 1 y. * •"Should Professors Be |Required To Submit To Teaching Evaluations' 4' * * *>;;<*** wmon 334 «Wed., 12:00 noon 4 Sponsored by Natural Science Council * r ! I( tmot/'s •*impzu m {#m$ mm: m " enovation The original plans called for a 40-foot.<0*1 tain and elimination of space for flowed™ planters, Following student protest in July$>| the plans were modified. Those modifications, once they wen# ;; through all the red tape and were officially^ approved, cost us two months," Fisher said^fc Fisher seemed more optimistic, though, otY; crop" Joewm. stty business major and former 4-H, Club member, said. While (dots are not limited in size, It is difficult for one plot. Theysplit cost,1 harvest,,. silsw H s *^hen the project will be completed. "Unless University officials come up wit some new revisions, I'm hoping to have mjf crews off the mallby the end of the week," hef«~ All we're waiting on is one more delivery/!!,n"f thi, this stoneand for the nurserymen to plantv < their trees and flowers," he added. VEGETARIAl Ifttt COOKING' COURSE « • Meln Di»he» ® week» -tfleMonr^ - $20.00 -includes food (and feasts) Meet* Mon. and Wed. Evenings 7:30-9:30 Lutheran Student Center • 2100 San Antonlc offered by University Y 2330 Guadalupe (above Sommers Drug) -472-9246 Teuaht by Martha Shulmen • 441-2723; Call for Information CourM 8tarts March 26 • Come HungryI tfiW AMBRKMf l£A60£g cecetfcjr jUp # m Wednesday, March THE DAIL^ TEXA^Page % •5-!^ X ­ M&Ldbs?'. mm, Terms wmm pi' • • Hill nquiry §H Vehicles Nears ' Py BOB ETNYRE "If you lost your renewal form; ybu'll 1By BOBBIE CRISWEIA?$|t The allegations were that ' Texan Staff Writer ip three highinking officials m The attorney general'si of-the department were involved fice is conducting an in­with improper use of state vestigation into allegations; funds, employment and equip­ made by Dallas radio station ment over the last two years. WFAA concerning misuse of Chester claims state state funds by the State employes, on statetime, using Department of Agriculture. state equipment, built a patio WFAA reporter Dave and a ranch house ata private Chester ^brought the home and oil private land. allegations to the attention of "STATE MONEY, supplies Agriculture Commissioner and equipment were used to John White Friday. White film a wedding of a daughter then referred the matter to of a business associate, to Atty. Gen. John Hill, who print personal Christmas began a full-scale investigaion cards and to plant a private Monday morning. yard," Chester said. SPECIAL ASSISTANT to Chester said thedepartment the attorney general, Jim gave out state jobs,as favors Busalla, said Tuesday, three to friends and business state lawyers and two court associates who had contacts reporters are working at get­with the department. ting statements from state Employes also allegedly employes to aid in piecing disposed of state properties together times and dates to whileon a department expedi­obtain facts involved in the tion to Mexico City, Chester case. .• added. £ NEEDED i kg Uncle Sam look-alike and 25 extras, all; ^ages for television PSA's. Tryouts March ­ 'i 28, 7:30 CMA 4th floor * 474.113A * DINE WITH US thick; juicy STEAKS from $1.95 to $6.95 Delicious Sourdough Homemade Bread, Tasty Salad Bar Sizzler 5 oz. Top Sirloin with large baked potato & trimmings JOEY'S *2.50 1411 W. Ben White NOW LEASING m. m PLEASANT VALLEY im P ESTATES . .WAV 1300 SPRING VALLEY ROAD\ _ f RIGHT NEXT TO AQUARIUS THEATER) i i FROM *165 FURNISHED & ALL BILLS PAID ii 442-3667 Wole Sovinka's TRIALS OF BROTHER JERO CHILDE INTERNATIONALE Nightly at 8:00 p.m. Two one act plays presented by the IT Kltmic Studies Center with the Airo American f METHODIST STUDENT CENTER P 2434 Guadalupe _____ Tickets Student *1 tien Adin iil.tble .it the ('o-Op. Kavmund's l>ru^|8| CHESTER SAID he has If you haven't yet registered your multi-have to bring the. certificate of title and been "compiling this informa­dented 1958 Chevy pickup, ectomorphic last year's license receipt, we'll furnish tion for a long time. Some of Cadillac, souped-up 750 Honda or paint-you with a copy for a 25-cent fee." twice; first by the people whothe allegations occured a few peeled boat trailer, take a pair of comfor-Callaway added. City Councilman Jeff Fried­buy the homesand then by the ­ man §poke Tuesday against months ago, some happened table tennis shoes and a Frito-laden sack County Tax Assessor-Collector Fritz.. city. The citizens are paying as far back as a couple of Austin's public utility rebate lunch to the County Tax Office or substa­Robinson said almost any bank, savings for the service three times;years ago." tion when applying for 1974 license plates. and loan, Handy Andy, Sears or system which he terms out­when they buy their homes, moded for the city's present Montgomery Ward store will register "We did not release the when they pay their monthly "Unfortunately, many owners choose to automobiles and pickup trucks. growth rate. names when we broke the bills and when their taxes are wait until the last minute to buy their At a sandwich seminar in "But motorcycles and trailers can only story on.WFAA to avoid possi­license plates when the lines are longer," the Union Building, Friedman raised for city services," the be registered at the Bank of Austin, Sears, ble libel," Chester said. councilman said. R.W. Townsley, director with Motor Vehi­ said, "the city initiated the any Lamar Savings Association branch of­ "But Atty. Gen. Hill has in­cle Division of the Texas Highway Depart" rebate system after World Although most developers fice and of course, the tax office in the sured us that his office will already add on an additional conduct a ment, lamented Tuesday. County Courthouse," Robinson said. War II to encourage growth, cost for serious investiga­Townsley noted that owners of autos, but with today's growth rate utilities to the con­ The fees vary according to the weight of tion, turning all information trucks, motorcycles and trailers must dis­ 130 percent above the nation's sumer, most developersclaim the vehicle.. over to the proper play 1974 license tags by 12:01 a.m. Tues­reminded that no longer need that if the city did not refund authorities," he said. day to avoid paying a penalty. Townsley motorists average,' we them they would have to beginning in 1975, Texas will change over such an incentive." ii Vernon Callaway, administrative assis­ charge the consumer an ad­ Chester said the to a five-year license plate system. For IN EXPLAINING how the tant to the director of motor vehicles, said ditional $500 to pay for the agricultural department is each of the following four years, Texas rebate works, he said the the registration procedure is the same as pipes, Friedman explained. "coverinig up as much as drivers will purchase an adhesive sticker developers put in sewer and last year. BUT THE COUNCILMAN possible because the people to place in one of the four corners of the water pipes and then go to the said the additional $500 would guilty of the allegations know "Bring the renewal form we sent you in license plate, Townsley said. city and are asked to be repaid be a minimal amount when who they are." the mail and your payment to the County The program is expected to save tax­with interest. spread over an average 30­ Tax Office or anyone of the 40substations payers an estimated $10.5 million over a "Under this system the Bob Williams, assistant to ^a.round Austin," Callaway explained. four-year period, he added. -developers are getting paid year mortgage. Commissioner. White, said "The developers also claim White has "denied the the $500'charge would hurt the allegations because they are low-income group who could so vague and broad." not meet the monthly Bluebonnet Celebration Blooms payments, but in the last two Williams said, as of Tues­A crafts fair, boat races secutiye weekends, Saturday west,of Austin. Bagley, chairwoman for the years only 8-10ths of 1 percent day, three people have been and a flea market will be in­and Sunday and April 6 and 7. "Bluebonnets may be found events. of the housing built in Austin called in to testify before the cluded in the 12th annual The bluebonnet trail will in profusion at many locations "Also to give the visitor (attorney general's investiga­Highland Lakes Bluebonnet give photographersand flower off the main roads, so wehave something to see and do along has been low-cost housing, so tion. Trail to be held on two con-lovers a chance td see arranged to have each the way, we will have a they are claiming it would stretches of bluebonnets in the chamber of commerce open Bluebonnet Art Festival in hurt a faction of people who Highland Lakes Hill Country during the two weekends to each community plus some aren't being provided for in * SHINER BEER NITE • make available local area special events such as a drag the first place," he said. Every Wednesday 6 p.m. -Midnight maps showing the best places boat races at Kingsland April Friedman and Councilman mvvvvwvvwvwwvwvwwwvwvvwwwvVv to see and photograph the 6 and 7," added Mrs. Bagley. Bob Binder have proposedFACT state flower," said BeBe In addition to the boat elimination of the rebate FINDERS races, there will be a' system which will be decided15*Per Bottle Information on Demand Springfest and Flea market at at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at an 1906 Pearl • Suite 201 Buchanan Dam Saturday ^nd .open City Council hearing in 476-9292 HECTOR'S Austin, Texas 78705 Sunday. This will be a the Electric Building M-F' 11-6 • Sat. 12-3 German-style festival in­Auditorium, 301 West Ave. WE WILL ANSWER ANY ' 5213 cluding food, music and AT A PREVIOUS hearingat QUESTION FOR ANYONE N. LAMAR • AN* SUBJECT. LENGTH, «Vit crafty. — • -• which th^ refund contracts OR AREA 454^842 ^ A.M. -MIDNIGHT EVERY DAY AT There also will be a bus tour were passed, Friedman said SEED • THOUSANDS ON 'FILE 2.50 PER PAGE of the LBJ Lake area April 6, 90 percent of the citizens in • 3-DAY DELIVERY • STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL leaving Austin at noon. attendence represented 441M15T For a map and brochure banks,. developers and men listing all events and points of with real estate interests. SHAKEY'S interest along the route, write "But the builders and2915 Guadalupe Bluebonnet, PO Box 1967, bankers can't oppose the presents New Year's Eve Introduces Austin, Texas, 78767. citizens any more," he said! Pitchers of Beer for $1.25 ALVIN CROW | ... TONIGHT AND THE NEON ANGELS All Week Long WHAT FAMOUS TRIO CUT CLASSES WITH A SWORD, . TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY^ * Every Nighr is...*• JOE SPOKE FLUENT FRENCH,Serving your favorite Beer and Wine Coolers, COULD CHARM A HAREM, Sangria, and 21 varieties of Pizzas AND SOUNDS LIKE A CANDY BAR? ! MAMA V Resioutonr _«* 476-4394 2915 Guadalupe N, 6Dor .• . formerly Soul Unlimited •••••• HINT: IT'S NOT SHA NA NA Second Level, Dobie Mall 21sr G Guadalupe free parking in the rear • BEVO'S „SV3313)ISnW i West Side Tap 33VH1 3H1„ JO NOISH3A i Mixed Drinks PL. M3N 3H1 S.ll H3MSNV i 24th and Rio Grande Tues.-Sat. March 26-March 30 * GREEZY WHEELS CLAUDE & the COYOTES UFFAI Tues.-Sat. April 2-April 6 TEQUILA N(GHT...Stil1 40' a shot ALLEN DAMRON K?L J~4S\ B GAP 0 Also Appearing Friday & Saturday Happy Hour 5-7 p.m. 441-3352 flr SL pool • BEER • WINE 707 Bee Caves Rd. 327-9016 HonkyTonk APARTMENTS WED. VIBROLAS THURS. JABBERNOW *7 r ; -­ k v * / « , ^ '* ' ^ , *7 • ' ^ pgiilsli:' „ I'M poUtlcol roundup m Deadline §et • v.! j.-v .v: '• •r: Deadline for reporting Program especially aimed at P^jtlon andto elect a student reprtsen-Wednesday In Robert Lee Moore AFPC/O Endorses I ^y'tatlve from each country^ For Hall 15.216B. He will speak on ^credit earned by examination and chicano premed ! ' "Fabry — Imafic-Tube black 'further information call 454-4060. . Perot'%'t$to theregistrar is5 p.m. April students. RASSl will present a discussion of study imerferometry of Galaxies: First wm 8. Petitions submitted to the * ; »reading at noon Wednesdayin Jester ' .4,', Results from McDonald Ob»er-TheAuStli '!liapte^W legiJyiPle peoplfcy.':il; in the number of candidates conributions, specifically A332. not . vatory." „ five '* Measurement and Evaluation Pre-enrollment is re-•. AFL-CIO has endorsed Citing a variety of scandals; "S^AINT-Plans -*•* quired; RASSL willpresent adlscus-PIOPUS' COMMISSION ON CRITICALCHOtCtS "Miose only qualification is recommending that: Center (MEG) after , the ' slqn oiftSrm papers at 3 p.m. will sponsor a panel discussion 7:30 candidates seeking countyand involving both >state and unlimited financial resources 1) All major campaign ex­ American Indians Now Tex-' Wednesday In Jester A332. Pre-1 deadline will be processed enhjllmeht is not required. BuT,d,Tutydilcu»n.c -, am against the single special limited to 20 percent of the PO Box 7246, Austin Texas, "The River" and "TheWar Game," colloquium at 4 p.m. Wednesday in interest that gives large sums total campaign expenditure 78712. staff and faculty members, • t; i at 7 and B:30p.m. Wednesday in the Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. Dr. Texas House, Place 4; high tag with an obligation attached." "The price on ceiling. Plans to meet with officials Union Theater. Lowell M. Bollinger, Argonne Wilhelmina Delco for the plain UNION MUSICAL EVENTS COMMITTER will speak on office," Barrientos av 3) A-spending limit of $20,­ Students who to of the Texas Memorial will «:\5 National Laboratory, House, Place 1; Sarah Wed-elected Barrientos presented graduate this semester should sponsor a patio dinner from 5 to*7 "Technology of a Super-Conducting three-part plan for limiting 000 be placed on all coun­ continued, "has all too often Museum and leaders of p.m. Wednesday onthe Union Patio. Llnac for Heavy Ion Acceleration." dington for the House, Place2, attach a note to that effect to UNIVERSITY Of TEXAS MEDICAL BRANCH -a*. SANDWICH SEMINAR will be held at noon made a person's ability to campaign expenditures and :tywide;races^^®p^^|l^ their petitions. MEC will businesses dealing with fadian .. San Antonio will present Dr> Arthur Wednesday In the Art Building and Hubert-Gill for .county raise'large sums of money, notify their degree checkers crafts also will be discussed. E. Grant, chairman of the physical v:t Museum garden patio. The subiect judge. AUSTIN TOMOMOW " medicine and rehabilitation depart-will be "Methods and Means of Stu-rather than his willingness to who need the information fH»S» III NMOHIOMOOO MHTMO for ment, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the ,. dent Participation in Faculty Selec-serve, the decisive factor in : third floor conference room of the ' tlon." before theofficial MEC report Zbne 10 will meet from 7 to TO Barrieni;or determining whether or not he p.m. Wednesday at Popham Student Health Center. He will dls-UNION ACADEMIC AFFAIRS COMMITTH will is released. Elementary, Oel Valle. ' cuss electromyography in a public tiold a sandwich seminar at noon . will seek office." 20 ANNOUNCfMINTS lecture. " Wednesday In Union Building 104. Gonzalo Barrientos, can­ MSHOP PATRICK HONSof San Antonio will MHTINOS Brent Austln wlli speak onWomen's Affairs say a mass at 12:45 p.m. Wednesday MENTAL PATIENTS MIRATION PROJKT will "Investing in Stocks and Bonds." didate for state represen­Barrientos stated two wMmS** The Women's Affairs Com­at the Catholic Student Center, 2010 meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday In Lunch will be available at nominal tative, Place 4, said in a press reasons for the skyrocketing Arts and Theatre Committee University Ave. . Union Building 22) for a general cost, Tuesday if conference that mittee and the Women's Law CtUSTt MtCUUAN, hornlst, will perform meeting.. cost of campaigns. First, Caucus will present Isabel her master's thesis recital at 8 p.m. PHANTOM WRITERS will meet at noon Watergate Two elected, he is prepared to in­"candidates have spent .Thursday in the Old Music Building Wednesday In Parlin Hall S to read Welsh Pritchard at a multi­Recital She perform and discuss original works. troduce strong bills to limit money needlessly in an effort Hall. wl,ll The Eugene Boiza's "En Foret," Carl meeting is sponsored byHumanities campaign contributions and to insure that their opponents media show and discussion at Look in *Deep' THE WAR GAME Nielson's "Canto Ser.loso" and Council and Union Ideas and Issues spending, "so that the monied do not outspend them." And noon Friday in Union Building Brahams; "Trio in E-Flat, Op. 40, Committee. . By Zodiac News Service 334. for Violin, Horn and Piano." UNIVERSITY SPEAKEASY CUIB will meet at 7 Post interests -tan no longer second, there has been a rise Washington award- DEAN'S HNI ARTS COUNCIL is accepting p.m. Wednesday at the Piua tan, Ms. Pritchard, a law stu­self-nominations for membership 3000 Duval St.The meetingis opento winning reporters Bob dent at the University of through Friday at the dean's office the public. Woodward and Carl Bernstein In Battle Hall. Five -students from UNIVERSITY "Y" STUDENT LIADERSHIP ' TILLIE'S each of the music, drama and art California at Berkeley, will BOARD will meet at noon Wednesday relied on a super-secret White "It may be the most important film ever made. in the University "Y," 2330 discuss "This History of the departments will be elected after House source who literally We are always being told that a work of art spring break. discuss Political Taboos of - Guadalupe St., to .feared for his life when many • PUNCTURED 47TH ANNUAL TEXAS RELAYS will sponsor a "Institutional Racism." Rudy Gar­cannot change the course of history. I think Menstruation." special 440-yard relay for any za, from ethnic services In the dean •of the news leaks in. the' Admission will be 50 cents University students who-wish to of students office, will speak. Watergate case were publish­ROMANCE (1914) this one might, Xt should be screened ent^r. There will be separate SEMINARS ed. "... -. divisions for men and women. AFRO-AMERICAN CULTURE COMMITTEE Will everywhere on earth." •/ ' Premed Program Competition will be between in­hold a* sandwich seminar at noon According to their new directed by Mack Sennett -Kenneth Tynan, London Observerdependent group and campus Wednesday in the Union Building "All The President'sThe University of Texas organization teai^s. The relays will Star Room. Mrs. Exatton A. Delco, book, The first feature4ength comedy Medical Branch at Galveston be run April 13 and preliminaries candidate for state office, will be the Men," scheduled for release ° will be held April 10 In Memorial guest speaker. in which Charlie Chaplin appeared. will present Raymond Stadium. Applications are available BAPTIST STUDENT UNION will hold an Infor­in May, only Woodward knew Academy Award For Best Documentary, In Bellmont Hall 220P. Application mal seminar at noon Wednesday at who the secret contact was i- Fuentes at 8p.m. Thursday in deadline is Friday. 2204 Dr. Tommy Live organ music by Dick Price 1960 San Antonio St. and the contact always used a Union Building 325. He will INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ORGANIZATION Starkes will speak on "The Occult." offer information on the 1974 will hold a general assembly at 4 EXTRAGAtACTIC ASTRONOMY SEMINAR will code-name. The code-name of Directed by Peter Watkins Summer BKuchment p.m. Wednesday In Academic present er. G. De VaOcouleurs, the high-placed spy? "Deep Center 21 to establish the organlza-professor of astronomy, at 2.p.m. throat." A BBC Production Jester Tonight! Auditorium. .. 7 and 9 p,m, Admission: $1 THE FUB presents Tonight 7, 8:30 p.m•ft A Service cf the Department of Radlo/Televi»ion/FHm BOBBY BRIDGER ROGER BARTLETT Save Roger's Van Friday Afternoon I TONIGHT -SATURDAY 38th and IH 35 452-2306 -M 4 ...Choose aSpecial iHOPNO.1 SHOP NQ. 2 SHOP NO. 3 Our very first This outlet opened The largest Sam-7 This store still retains just three months after Witch shop! Designed WEEK its original charm— our first shop. A little and built to serve you a snug shop just large larger-—but still main­quickly in a pleasant enough to seat 20 tains the small friendly atmosphere-—a unique COTTON friendly people, which atmosphere. Located indoor sidewalk cafe probably explains the on the drag—it& inside Dobie Mall. EVJUKXUNE ADMI EDFREE TONITE HAPPY cozy atmosphere. convenient to the Convenient to the east Communication School Pitcher Highbol! side of campus. Complex and the SPECIAL ROCK 'N ROLL BY j north part of campus. • • " -• • Ruben or Pastrami APPLE JACK Soup or Potato Salad NO COVER MON.-THURS. Fountain Drink or Beer OPEN 8 p.m. lOth/Lamar 477-3783 MULTI-MEDIA TURKEY ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••* * * SANDWICH * SUBMARINE Austin Premier * * SPECIAL $1.50 |"'PLAYTIME' * SPECIAL }IS JACQUES TATI'S * WILLIE NELSON * * }MOST BRILLIANT FILM. * Multi-Media Submarine This special is Turkey Sandwich * STEVE FROMHOLZ * A bracing reminder that films * Potato Salad Potato Salad offered to solve the * Fountain Drink afternoon and evening KENNETH THREADGILL * can occasionally achieve the status * Fountain Drink RUSTY WEIR * meal search. Offer > of art. A GLORIOUSLY FUNNY * ALVIN CROW & The Neon Angels * good at shop No. 3 in GREEZY WHEELS J MOVIE, The density of the wit the J Dobie only from 4 pm ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL J gracefulness of the visual gags that J till 9 pm. Your choice 99c 99c J BLIND GEORGE J flow one into another, non-stop, in a J of a hot Ruben or CHRIS GROOMS Pastrami sandwich! J manner that only Tati now masters."J SENATOR WINEGLOWE Our popular com­Servedwith your choice —Vincent Canby,New York Times + RAY WYLIE HUBBARD * * bination sandvvich, Our most popular of soup or potato salad * • crammed full of three sandwich! We cut the and a drink of your * } "JACQUES TATI'S } meats and two turkey very thin and choice, including beer! * * 'PLAYTIME' IS TO BE * cheeses, plus a serving pile it high. Served with A regular $1.95 value *1 CHERISHED. TATI IS * of our own homemade our own homemade only $1.50. Offer good * * .ONE OF THE FUNNIEST * potato salad, plus any potato salad and any through April26,1974.H * 'MEN IN THE WORLD." * fountain drink of your fountain drink of your * -Penelope Gilliatt, New Yorker^ r" *1 choice. Regular $1.35 choice. A regular $1.40 HAPPY-TIME :'M i * * * value—only 99$. No ^value—only 99$. No * * coupon needed—just coupon needed—just BEER 25c * * * * ask for the Submarine ask for the Turkey Happy-Time prices * * * * Special. Offer good Special. Offer good —only 25$ a glass * through April 26,1974, through April 26, 1974, from 3 pm till 6 pm -COMPLETELY DELIGHTFUL * J TATI IS A MASTER. * at shop No. 1 only. at shop No. 2 only., daily. . m * DAZZLING COMEDY." * —Judith Crist, New York Magazine J * * * > Shop No. 1-2821 San Jacinto * 4 * } * April 6 & 7 Nacogdoches, Tex. Shop No. 2— 2604 Guadalupe s * * Tickets Available At: f * } * OAT WILLIES , , |. Shop No. .3-7:,Dobie Mall * A film by * 1610 San Antonio IM * JacquesTali I * * SUNSHINE RECORDS FRIDAY, SATURDAY 7:30 & 9:30 * •Hi. Pis#2622 Guadalupe ^ March 29 -30 ^ .Jester Aud. * theSanWltclishops A BUSH PRODUCtio.Nl^Spilit'4' > i w $1.00 * Cinema 40 * '0i* * 11^ mmmm Wednesday, March 27, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page u /•V r- t *•« 4-r • m. ®p sPS> Austin To Host Ballet CasliConcerf Scheduled The annual spring perfor­dix. choreographed for Austin Johnny Cash, along with June Carter Cash,'" The next yearhe produced the song that li)mance of the Austin Civic Making his first dance Civic Ballet last year by Ballet'has been set for April 5 appearance since hisrecovery Slavin, will appear on the ill appeal1 in concert-forone-perfoimance a^--years later became the turning point in his. p.m. Sunday at Municipal Auditorium. , jife, "Folsom Prison Blues." -fand 6 in Municipal from broken ribs, Eugene program. Largely a lively .Known as "America's Singing Story In 1956 the song that is still < his biggest Auditorium. Austin Civic Slavin is a former principal story of fun and flirtation, this: Ballet co-directors Eugene dancer of the Royal Winnipeg Teller," Cash has entertained millions ever ",s "seller and theme song, "I Walk the Line" hit ballet is'as favorite of the the last 17 years with his down-to-earth the top of the country and pop music charts. .Slavin and Alexandra Nadal Ballet of Canada and the dancers. Slavin have planned another Ballet Russe de Monte Carto. -A n'ew ballet set to ballads. He has performed in various prisons >The album of the same name is one of the six varied program for the grow­Ms. Slavin, whose polished Arensky's "Variations on a throughout the" United States, brightening the 'jgold albums he possesses. §M ing number of dancedevotees. technique as a ballerina is Theme by Tchaikowsky" will lives of inmates with lyrics such as "A,Boy June Carter Cash, originally gaining fame As their classical offering; now known locally through complete the program. Music Named Sue." ' as part of the singing Carter Family, went onm the Slavins have recreated the her previous appearances Although he was an adult when he started to become both a soloist and comedienne, for the performances will be Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo with Austin Civic Ballet, was conducted by Stuart Sankey of to play guitar, Cash has been singing and spending some years in New York before versibn of "Raymonda" — formerly the principal dancer the Austin Symphony writing poetry since he was 5 years old. One _ marrying Johnny Cash in 1968. , (Divertissements)., Lavishly of the Royal Winnipeg pallet Orchestra. * of seven children born to Ray and Carrie She has since become the undisputed Firstcostumed, this ballet includes of Canada and also danced Cash in Kingsland, Ark. he gretyup around A special matinee is set for r Lady of the countrymusic industry. ' ­ the Hungarian-style Czairdas with the Ballet Russe and 4 p.m. April 5 with admission the piano.: Onty Tommy, the youngest in the and a pas de dix for five American Ballet Theatre. 25 cents for children and 50 family, also is an entertainer. Along with John Carter Cash, the first son couples. The Slavins will be The demicharacter ballet. cents for adults. In 1955, Cash cut his first record for Sun born to the Cashes in March of 1970, June is featured dancers in the pas de ''Shostakovich Suite" Austin Parks and Recrea­Records in Memphis — a two-sided hit called always at her husbands side on the road, in "Cry, Cry, Cry" and "Hey, Porter." recording studios, on film and on the stage. tion Department will handle THEATRES l?V Kobe] the sales of these tickets. tickets for the reserved *, PARAMOUNT 1 -i C ONGRF^ A v smm ; $1.50 til ,6 p.m. After 6 $2.50 child $1.00 Features 2-4-6-8-10 BUTCH AND THE KID ARE BACK —JUST FOR FUN— "BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" ; PAUL . ROBERT NEWMAN *>REDFO'RD STAT E 1 9 C ON C, R S S A'. $1.00 til 3:00 ft.m. 1:40-3:20-5:00 6:40-8:20-10:00 United ArtistsSTARRING... ELLIOTT GOULD •ROBERT BLAKE VARSITY ."'JOG GUADALLPL STRF.t'T FANTASTIC WEEK! IF-$1.00 til 3 p.m. 1:40-3:20-5:00 6:40-8:20-10:00 1X1 Hi AUSTIN 2 130 SO CONGRESS AVE HOWARD MWW $1.00 til7:00 pan. CONQUEROR • *40-10:00 PILOT * MO . , SUPER WAYNIB KOW»»DHUOMI5 seat performance at 8 p.m. April 6 will cost $2, $3 and $4.50. Tickets will be available at all Kara-Vel stores, the Lorelei and Shop in Denmark through April 3. Tickets will be available at Hogg Auditorium April 1 through 3 and at Highland Mall on April.4. All remaining tickets will be on sale at Municipal Auditorium April 4 through 6. iSmr Carolyn Hubner in^Shostakovich Suite' reduced PRICES TIL 6 P.M MON thru SAT1500 S. PLEASANT VALLEY RD ....... JUST OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE 4«UEVE^ANTHONY PERKINS BEAUBRIDGES -BLYTHE DANNER BUTCH &IH AREBmCK! lust forthe Ipom the people who gave you "The Jazz Singer" NOW IN ITS 10th WEEKI NOMINATED FOR.. IY AWARD! INCLUDING BEST PICTURE -BEST ACTOR -wPAUL / ROBEKT .LEWMAN/REDFORD] ROBERT SHAW A GEORGE ROY HILLFILM "THE STING" M 12:00-2:20-4:40-7:00-9:20 "• $1.00 til 1:30 EXCEPT "Exorcist" HIGHLAND MALL Lovtq'Jiolly rrsMxun. fun of HI OFf IH 35atHIWAY 2^ t ? NOMINATED FOR 10 ACADEMY AWARDS THE EDWARD BJNNS• JSSZZZLARRYMcMURTRY-""STEPHEN FRIEDMAN .S8>€YtlMI ^ 'Rj—_rrr~—c TRANS*TEXAS J 2224 Guadalupe SL—477-1964 BEST ACTOR CCXUU8IA PICTURES JACK NICHOLSON OPEN 1:45 $1.50 til 6 p.m. Fea. 2-4-6-8-10 NOMINATED FOR 3ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING INCLUDING BEST PICTURE BEST ACTRESS BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR NO CHILDREN UNDER 12 ADMITTED SEATS NOT RESERVED NO PASSES NO BARGAIN MATINEEj 12:30 2:47 5:04 7:21 9:40 VILLAGE CINEMA FOUR THE LAST DKTA1L m ncaowi FIK .im ta*i«n rtitxt f=i 1423 w Ben Mute BM).-U2 Z333 • ICAM9 iwmi BEST ACTOR LAST DAY "ALL THE WAY BOYS" OPEN 5:45 $1.00 til 6 p.m: Feature* 6-8-10 RATED G 451-8352 2700 WEST ANDERSON LANE CheLegend of BoggyCreeh >EE IT AQAIN AND AGAIN THE MOST TALKED *»QUT PICTURE Of OUR TIME VHMJOlSHErS Orfcryou see BILLY JACK iypuII not forget them. TECHNICOLOR® From Warner Bros. A Kinney Leisure Servi Probably the most entertaining Western ever mack! FG ruBffuotmuta suggct^4 *«"ilWK »nMlK wnaWt" l«c »(t mMHH JULIE ANDREWS DICK VAN DYKE 1:00-3:30-6:00-8:30 cThinkofthe perfect-crime... Uiengo one stepfurther. TRANS*TEXAS WMLWTUTE/N OPB4 7:15 FEA. 8:15 $1.00 til SHOWTIME 16*00 BurMt Road -4SS-033 UVE AT 8:15 & 12:30 GHARRY SAUB&i, ROGER„JAMES MOORE BOnD 7^ IAN FLEMING'S''' i UVEAND LETDIE 1 IN RAUL NEWMAN • ROBER] KATHARINE RO "BIJKH CASSIDY AMD THE SUNDANCE KID' Color by DeLuxe* .... [ Hear BURT BACHARACH'S "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head" as sung bv B. J. Thomas -A George.hoy Hill-Raul Monash Production .» ; Co-Starring STROTHER MARTIN • JEFF COREY • HENRY JONES • Executive Producer PAUL MONASH NOW SHOWING AT THE FOLLOWING THEATRES , • FEATURE TIMES '' wmrl 1:30-4:00-6:30 9:00 Jaramount Pictures presents"the refurr Df the greatest lovestory of ailtime.. •Franco Zeffirelu 1:15-3: 6:15-8:45 ;>t E .«si si * t»i Film Program 7ft® P.M: CommiftM. Batls Hall Aud. Spring 1974 . $1.00 TEXAS PREMIERE Satya/it Ray's OCCULT SEMINAR •3;-c WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 8:00 P.M. UNION JUNIOR BALLROOM IN THE FOREST" 5 Introducing to University of Texas ­ "The verytitle rings withenchantment,and the old Ray magicis soon at work again. This lime the spell isa rug spread out in the sun, a pic­ nic by the river, a charmingly silly parlour-game. Nothing much happens during this key sequence, but the setting holds the same promise of peace and fulfillment as the garden with the sun rippling over thegirl on the swing inCHARULATA, the music room emerging from its chrysalis of disuse in JALSAGHAR, or the snowy, peak appearing from behind the mists in KANCltENJUNGA. Elsewhere the problems of the world may hang. heavy, but not in these oases where Ray's characters, their dreams and their surroundings mergein a harmony that momentarily suspends time." -SIGHT AND SOUND 3 DAYS ONLY! Salvador Dali • Luis Bunuel's p TOD BROWNING'S L ANDALUSIAN II "FREAKS" S DOG (Un Chiwi Andalou) SEPARATE ADMISSION 9:40 ONLY Dr. M. THOMAS STARKES Author. Lecturer. Teacher WILL BE SPEAKING ON: WITCHCRAFT DEMONOLOGY SATANISM "'TakeThe Money And Run' presented by Baptist Student Union, free admission Isnuttiness triumphant. Toning oiChaplin... yon may think of W.C.Fields... batabove all youll see Woodyillleiifori^iial." —LOOK MAGAZINE s ^ •• s i wmmmsmm ;fill mmmm j, presented by 1 Thie CuHtir$iI Entertainir A \\ mittee of PALOMAR PlCTURt S INTLRNATIONAL PRtbtNTS V." Friday, March 29/ \ oliseupi/8:00 pm WOOOY ALLEN'S i $2 v '^^^TialServices Fee INTAKETHE MONEY AND RUN" Ticket drawing*. ^£*0 j-2$f Hogg Box Office/10-6 daily WOODY ALLEN PjANET MAR60 Bus schedule: 25< Round trip/Jester, Kinsolving, Co-Op A JACK ROLUNS ANO CHARLES H. JOTO Production warn *u£««ri2ttr rose /cha«.1sh! wffi /sjoneT(Kzo /Mwoi^ERfi MMnfMHUUSCH/WOOOTLLLEN/COLOR / ooSSm.mc. w Mo cameras or tape recorders allowe FRIDAY, SATURDAY 7:30-9:10-10:45 Burdine Aud. $1 March 29 -30 Priccf synchronize* music to film. (Editor's Note? Canton ana ^ Dawn Spiyey, whoprepared this column, are local astrologers specializing Innatal charts,per­sonal Interviews, 'analysis and astrology classes.) AMES: You become sensitive to yoiir Im­age as personal public relations de­mand It. TAURUS: Success Is indicated regarding your relationships with women Your moods will be fast-paced to­ day. GCMINI: Bright, shiny objects attract your attention. Don't settle tor se­cond lt Disney Production! CO-HIT Walt Disney Productions Wnkdays Open 4:30 "Supwdad" at 4:354:10 H«bl»r" at 4:20-9:55 MANN THEATRES FOX TWIN 67S7 AIRPORT IIV0 454-27 THE GREAT STORY OFTEXAS PROUCHY RETURNS 10 THE SCREEN t. PKXXOON ffilH ELIZABETH TAVLDB ROCK HUDSON JAMES DEAN CHILL WILLS r ­ MKRCKMS McCAMBRIDOt JANE WITHERS -CARROLL BAKIR JTARTS TONIOHT Mi at 4:45 and 8:35 p.m. MANN THCATnCS IfO: The roles you assume may" make you appear ridiculous. Your ego could shun communication. VIROO: You probably relate welj with children just now and discover new things. UMA: Job chances or indecision in con­nection with work is setting your moods. SCOmO: You're probably tempted to lie back and relax and let others deal with events. SAOITTAMUS: You may be moved tosave for the future or accumulate material and Experience. CAPRICORN: Come down to earth and ac­tually communicate Instead of merely relating ideas and ex­periences abstractly. AQUARIUS: You arein touch withthe peo­ple. Useit as areflectionof your own . identifications. fISCSS:.Loyalty Is a quality you seek to­day — learn how to express It to at- By WILLIAM A. STONE JR. Texan Staff Writer >%r^ t?4 |jpS Moviegoers who have ever ISat through a silent film urn . supplemented by. subsequent­ - ly-added music will heartily appreciate a man like Dick Price, j ^ -"Die reason? Simply this: Pric^has generously offered to assemble and perform a musioal score for the silent films distributed on campus by CinemaTexas. PP ACTUALLY, Pricehas been 'doing just that for about a ^-Why -woyjd a film maker VillageCinema Twin Four 4514m tnt war >mwsow uhi 44l$669 1^50'EASTRlVF.ftSJDE DRIVK Ihaverfr hodsuch agoodtime of onew movieinyears." Perer Dogdonovich New Ycxk Mogozine STARTS FRIDAY NO PASSES NO REDUCED PRICES 21st & Guadalupe Second Level Dobie Mall 477-1324 Screen I 1:50-3:50-5:50-$! 7:50-9:50-$l .50 And now the movie..."S ...perhaps diemost remarkable film to emerge since CecilB.DeMiile founded Hollywood." -VERNON SCOTT, UPI A NORMAN JEW SON Film JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR Screen II SPECIAL DOUBLE FEATURE /Gp\ (®P) One Film for $1.25 Both tor $2 ' San -4, 8 Bang The Drum -2-6-10 itsstm mm Nothing is inort' important the same lan frit'iuishiy Not fame,a fight for not moiK'y.love and not ck'cit h. Mmtm , PtflWMnl pTMffHS , mkl year now, but those who have, never had the opportunity to enjoy his talents will be able to do so at 7 and 9 p.m. Wednesday in Jester-Auditorium. Price will be there, with the organ provided him by the Department of Music, and he will furnish background music for "Tillie's Punctured Romance," (1914), a film which helped to establish Charles Chaplin as one of lerfca's leading comedians." rice, a teaching assistant in the English department working,oh his Ph D disserta­tion, became involved in this unique musical avocation last year when he sat through a silent flick. Says Price: "The more I thought about it, the angrier I got. Even the early movies of 1898 had suggestions of a musical-score." SOME silent movies, such as D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation," (1914), had musical scoring written for them fct the time of their produc­tion—scores, of course, which were unusable before the ad­vent of sound in films. f|Mfpff| _J,;P SSwsSsS^ftffia ***$% . MOIM. THRU FRI. 8:00-5:00 ^ :i:-;i::: ; \ife| WM& ,*'< |fi| ' ;vv'//r/'' "s £/ *', ,, '; IPS IP , IP# m CLASSIFI^Ag^ERTISING FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. m FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS. • FURN. HOUSES TYPING &N&&V­ 15 word minimum Each word one time ...„t.m,.. l.10 CAMERAS/TELELENSES: 100 per0 HALF MONTH,RENT. FREE. Large Each word 2-4 times ...^^,. $ .09 cent brand new Pentax super-multl-- THE WILLOWICK ^ bedroom, CA/CH, cable. LAKE AUSTIN -15 minutes cam-Just North of 27th & furnished one Each word 5-9 times . S';0* coated telelenses from overseas. 200mm THREE ELMS pus/downtown. 1, 2, and 3 bedroom Live in Wooded Seclusion 452-3076, 25B-1832. Student rate each time '.S .75. camera, 40mmf2.8, $40. Almost new Summer rates. Start $135 -$185. Also .Larger Apartments with shag carpets, WALK TO CAMPUS; Newly remodeled Marina. 327-1891, 327-1151. Classified Display • ' -Canon QL25 camera, 45mm f2.S, $50. All leasing for fall. 2 bedroom 2 bath, i' 'Each word )0 or more Hmes S .06 M.O, $125, 135mm f3.5, S90, Ricoh SOOG 400 West 35th. Furnished • Unfurnished; WE RENT mobll* homes: $85 to $140. Mack's Guadalupe AUSTIN rooms S75., all billspaid. (908 West 29th, I col. x one inch one time .... $2.96 with cajes. Annie, 441-4117. bedroom 1 bath.Close tocampus, shuttle modern furniture, accent wall and con­ FOR SUMMER" SESSION 2,1 house in I.col. x one inch 2-9 times .... S2.66 bus, extra large, shag carpet, dis­Your time is valuable in the rear). Efficiency apartment Tarrytown. All bills paid. Washer and venient central location. S99.50, all bills paid. 2907 San Gabriel I col: x one inch 10 or more times 1945 yw SQUAREBACK. Not beautiful,, hwasher, range, disposal, refrigerator,' dryer. No pets. Call 477-5570. Apt. C. Central Properties Incorporated. *2:37 but runs nice; new license plates, $400. large closets, private, pantry, storage, AA.B.A. " 1 Bedroom After six, 441-1225. cabinets, cable, laundry room, pool. 451-Our service is free 451-6533. GARAGE APARTMENT. Near UT, will Typing, Multiiithing, binding3941 5145 unfurnished . 5140 furnished . trade for 2 or 3bedroom houseor duplex. LA CASA 1947 VOLVO Stationwagon. 4 door, good PARAGON -S125 up. All furn,, very nice Linda 477-0985, 476,2461, Wo. 223. Donna The Complete Professional MAD1INC SCHfOUU transportation. 74 plates. $395. After 4, 2 Bedroom and clean, quiet atmosphere. All con­47J-J!541, 474-4293. ; : ­ Monday Taxon Frktoy 2.00 p.m: veniences, 5 minutes to town, off South FULL-TIME Typing 477-1338. Tuttdoy T«*on Monday ..... 10:00 o.m. PROPERTIES S178 unfurnished $198 furnished Lamar. 2024 Goodridge. Call 454-1170 or WwioMday Tiian Tvtmy . 10:00 a.m. 441-3139. Service ~ MAPLE DINING SET, sofa, rug, size 7 All Bills Paid Thursday Tiian WwlnwAiy 10:00 a.m. wool coat for sale. 451-2427 or lot East RESUMES FrWoy Tixan Thvrtday ....... 10:00 o.m. WHY 472-4171 UNF. HOUSES 47th. 400 South First St. 444-0687 -weekdays with or without pictures. FOR SALE. UsedSmith Corona Electric POSADA DEL NORTE 2 Oay Service SEARCH 1 BEDROOM, AC, carport, rear fenced Typewriter, $95, and used Bottecchla 10- Save money. Come live with us. For the "In.tho ovonfof orror* mode b% pn 472-4175 HARTFORD PLACE yard, large front yard, tall oak trees. 472-3210 and 472-7677 speed. Call Jay at 478-9440. next three weeks only get your $100 gift. odvortfeomont, s° Open 9-9 Mon-Th 8. 9-5 Convict Hill Trajler Park. Very Reasonable. 474-1308. ONE BEDROOM ing the water. vaulted ceilings, orange shag, fenced RETREAT APTS. Fri Sat 4400 Ave. A 459-0058 styles and sizes. Barbara Tullos, 453--SERVICE Austin. Offers 100% yardi-large walk-ins,4413B Auburn. 924-5124. In South West a '45 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass. One owner, $150 ALL BILLS PAID MOVE IN TODAY stone home with corner fireplace* trees, radio, heater, AC, $400. 474-4528. A different one bedroom floor plan. — all bills paid 6414, 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater Com­ 472-8936 30A Dobie Center and 7% loan with low assumption. Carpeted, CA/CH, built-in appliances, From S145 pany. VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diversified MARTIN 0018c classical guitar with lots of glass, pool, huge closets, right on 300 East Riverside Drive Services. Graduate and undergraduate Security CaM* atlef „Sbutll« Bus Routs., -444-3337 MANOR-Ulithina. Typing. B6"72*t - w^koa"ays. 6 °P. • 4209 Speedway Lane. 459-7205. 453-4921 451-4533 !49-F4AT12«-5pyd«r; tow mileage; mint CENTRAL PROPERTIES MINNIE L. HAMMETT, formerly -„ XeroxTnl condition. 454-2979 8:30 to4:00.1104 West associated with Marforie.Delafield Typ­ Looking for a Quiet Place , VILLA AUS-TEX 34th. ' ing Service, Taping of theses, resumes, , for Study? Summer Rates Now .dissertations, duplication,binding. Open TENNIS ANYONE? STEREO BONUS REFRIGERATOR $25, TV $30, bedroom UPPERCLASSMEN APTS 2 BR Furn. $125-5135 everyday. Notat oldaddress. Pleasecall DUPLICATORS furniture, children furniture, rugs. Call Located by ,UT courts giving you 40 ten­to share 2 bedroom efficiency, walk to before coming. Free refreshments. 442­ Has vacancies, 1 and 2 476-758J* FREE RECORD CHANGER 454-7W7, after 6 p.m., or call Y.P. 471-nis courts In your backyard. Of course, campus. Private entrance, parking, 1 BR Furn. $115 7008. „with purchase of stereo 5454 daytime. t|iere are 2 swimming pools, barbeque maid. S75 month plus electricity. bedroom Central Air-Conditioning system pits, and allof the other things you want. Available now. 1801 South Lakeshore Blvd. Carpeted -Large Pool NEAT, ACCURATE and prompt typing. : 118 Neclfes AND ALL AT REASONABLE RATES. Summer-Fall 453-3235 Phone-442-6668 65 cents per page. Theses 75 cents. Call Aj—<—:—-— from Stereo Center FURN. APARTS. RIDE BIKE TO UT A to.Z ^ 447-2737. ASPEN WOOD 203 East 19th 2401 MANOR RD. 474-4665 4553 Guadalupe Phone 452-4447 Phone now: 476-6733 SUBLEASE EFFICIENCY through May NEW THIS WEEK! Ponce de Leon HI, RS TYPING SERVICE. Professional SECRETARIAL SERVICE 31st on IF shuttle, $130 ASP. 4504 22nd and San Gabriel. Extra large two typing. Reports, theses, dissertations,-••' 476-0198 Speedway, No. 106. Mike, 451-5916. Hancock Apts. bedroom, two bath apartments ABP. SUNNYVALE resumes. Copy service available. 453-109 East 10thSt. 7577. 472-0149 Free April Rent On Shuttle Bus Route. Most outstanding apartments in theFOURSQUARE LARGE EFFICIENCY, $134.50 ABP. 5 BLOCKS WEST OF Efficiencies. Sfferkling new Luxury. 921 University area! Call Rod Wetsel at 472-APTS. Theses, Dissertations, themes, FURNITURE Witt pay $50 to take over lease through 8941 or 472-8253. 2 Br. Furn. -$170 HOLLEY'S TYPING SERVICE. A com-P.R.'s, BC Reports, resumes Custom made furniture. Price for on-May. Afternoons 454-6423, 452-7049. CAMPUS East 44th. No Lease. All Bullt-lns. Near plete service from typing through bin­Multllithlng, Bindingfinished begins at: Chair«s25, Cooch-S35, Completely furnished efficiencies, AC, Hancock Shopping Center. Close to $149.50 ALL BILLS PAID. 1 bedroom 1 Br. Furn. -$150 ding. Available until 10 p.m. Experienc­Everything From A to ZDesk-S40. Coffee Table-$20< Dining gas and water furnished. J109. University. On Shuttle Bus Route. furnished, CA/CH, built-in Kitchen, near Private ed ihall fields. Near campus. 1401 Mohle Table-$2Q, Trundle Bed-S95. We also 454-3854 451-4454 472-8224 campus. 4307 Avenue A. 451-6533, 451-Balconies • Dishwasher Drive. 476-3018. m strip frame canvases. Betyveen 6th and KENRAY Apartments and Townhouses LA VILLITA 3840. Central Properties Inc. Pool -Central Air EXCELLENT7th on Red River. Monday, Wednesday, under new ownership, 2122 Hancock Dr. 903 W. 22'/a 441-0584 TYPING WANTED. Neat and fast. 50 SECRETAR Y TYPIST Saturday, 10:00 to 5:00. next to Americana Theater, walkingdis­Call 477-5514 or 474-7914 .. •SyMMJpR "RATES NQW! Six blocks-SHUTTLE BUS CORNER certts/page."472-4212. Call before noon'— for478-3252 tance "Of North Loop Shopping Center PLAYBOYS^ from Law Sctiool; 2 blocks shuttle bus. 2 and after 5. producing finest quality typing students and faculty members in every and Luby's. One half block from shuttle bedroom/2 batH; one bedroom $135. AC, end Austin transit. 2 biedroom carpet, dishwasher, disposal, walk-in MARK XX /\PTS. THEMES, REPORTS, law notes, field for 15 years, will take meticulous Ultra-modern duplex apt., includes care to typelaw briefs, research papers, TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds, townhouses. extra large. Two bedroom closets. 32nd and Interregional. 477-0010 reasonable. Mrs. Fraser, 476-1317. 1204B old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop, 4018 N. flats, one and two baths. CA/CH, dis­LE MARQUEE hanging fireplace, panelled walls, or GL3-2228 1 BR -$115 2 BR -$184 Marshall La^e. B.C. reports, theses, and dissertations Lamar. 454-4877. hwasher, disposal, door to door garbage Close to campus. Luxury efficiencies slanted beamed ceilings, Terrazzo CENTRAL AIR accurately, observing proper forms. pickup, pool, mai'd service if desired, Si 15, one bedroom S130, two bedrooms floors, fully draped, modern furniture MINI APARTMENTS, also one and two CARPETING Latest model IBM Executive carbon SI70. Pool, sundeck, fully carpeted, cen­ribbon typewriter. All work proofread. YAMAHA GUITAR SALE. Free case washateria incomplex. See owners, Apt. tral air and heat. and all tile bath, -2 bedrooms, air con­bedrooms. Close to campus. Fully LARGE POOL with every guitar, Amster Music, 1424 U3 or call 451-4848. ditioning, central heat, kitchen, private carpeted, CA/CH, rich wood paneling, • 478-0762. RESEARCH Lavaca. " pool, all built-in kitchen. From $119.50. 3815 GUADALUPE * 302 W. 38th yard/patio. Lease required -rent STARK-TYPING. Experienced theses, GUITARS AND OTHER FRETTED In­451-2461 451-6533 Sl$5/month. No utilities. Tenants will Properties Inc. 454-3953 452-5093 SERVICES dissertations, PR's, etc. Printing and struments repaired at reasonable Central Properties Inc. show. 3408-B West Avenue. To lease call Binding, Specialty Technical. Charlene prices. OUOS, LUTES, DULCIMERS, WOODWARD APARTMENTS or write Apartment Rentals, 1009 Main STEPS TO UT. 1 & 2 bedroom efficien­Stark, 453-5218. etc. Custom built. 20% discount on ail 1722 E. Woodward Office 107 Plaza Bldg., San Antonio, Texas. AC 512-cies. Nice pool area, study room, orien­TANGLEWOOD A TYPING SERVICE strings. Geoff Menke • Amster Music. SOMETHING DIFFERENT 227-2231. tal furnishings.From $139ABP. 405 East 4200 Avenue A.451-6533, 454-6423. Central 444-7555 DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, and 3 bedrooms 31st. specializing in law briefs. Experienced typist, 1524 Lavaca. 478-7331. I. 2. or Efficiencies with elevated separate 472-2147, 472-4162. Barry EAST Tarrytown. 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine unfurnished or furnished bedrooms plus enormous one and two Gillingwater Company —theses and dissertations Brady. 472-4715. GUITAR REPAIR, new and used From S140 -S265 bedroomcontemporary apts. with every acoustics, electrics, amps. Discounts on 2.swimming pools, piaygroun-ds, convenience, furnished or unfurnished. QUIET ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! —law briefs strings and accessories. THE STRING washateria, lighted grounds, 5 minutes WALK TO CAMPUS with built-ins, vaulted ceilings. Small OAK CREEK environmentally to UT, minutes to B.A.F.B., steps from is Reasonably priced. Large one bedroom —term papers and reports SHOP, 1716 San Antonio, 476-1421. Tues.-oriented and offers a creek that winds community living. $139.50 plus electrici­ "Just North of 27th & Sat. 10*. IRS, on bussline. BILLS PAID, Free apartments available. Carpeted, through the community ty. 472-4162. channel TV. convenient to CA/CH, pool, sundeck, built-in kitchen. 801 West Lynn. 477-8871, Prompt, Professional Guadalupe campus & shopping and conveniently Barry Gillingwater Co. Summer Rates Start Now! ORNATE BRASS BEDS. Polished, with priced from $121 1507 Houston Street. 311 East 31st ' Service , side railings. Just arrived. Doubles and 454-63$4_Central Properties Inc. 451*6533 NORTHEAST NEAR SHUTTLE, 2 BR Furn singles. Sandy's, 504 Walsh. Highland Mall, & Capitol Plaza. Large 1 478-6776 451-6533' 453-7577 1 BR FUrn. $120-$125 15Central Properties Inc. 8. 2 bedroom with all the extras. From Pick-up Service Available tyoAlliA Nice shag carpet -central air ­ CAMERAS 30%-50% Off. Canon Ftb $137.50 plus electricity. 1105 Clayton bl.2. list S534, only S282. Camera TWO BLOCKS Lane. 453.:79I4, 472-4162. Barry Large pool Obscura, 478-5187 evenings. Gillingwater Company ­ Ride Bike to UTSOMETHING DIFFERENT BankAmericard. Mastercharge. iondon TO CAMPUS Efficiencies with elevated separate . YES, we do type EFFICIENCIES ON SHUTTLE. $129.50 jedrooms plus enormous one and two OVATION steel string acoustic guitar. includes shag, complete kitchen, Almost new. Must sell. Penny, 442-0782. 1 & 2 Bedroom Efficiencies bedroom contemporary apts. withevery CA/CH. Small community. 4204 ABACUS Freshman themes. 2604 Manor Road 477-1064 convenience, furnished or unfurnished. Speedway. 452-0986, 472-4162. Barry Full kitchen Square OAK CREEK is environmentally BUSINESS SERVICES FOR RENT -Cameras, Lens, Projec­ Gillingwater Co. tors, Accessories. The Rental Depart­CA/CH, carpeting oriented and offers a creek that winds 1301 S. Interregional Why not starf out with ment at Capitol Camera.474-3581, Dobie Large walk-in closets through the community convenient to SEMESTER LEASE. Large new 1 8< 2 ESTABLISHMENT APTS. 444-0816 good grades! campus & shopping and conveniently Mall. Oriental furnishings 1 BR, 1 BA 2 BR. 2 BA 3 BR, 3 BA priced from S125. 1507 Houston Street. bedrooms with shag, icemaker, $135 Typing (50< page), Printing and Binding. Study room S164.50 $325 clubroom,'TREES. Secluded location in One block Riverside. At south of theS235 454-4394 Central Properties Inc. 451-4533 LARGE INNER TUBES for swimming Northeast.off Manor Road. From $159 ALL BILLS PAID Sunnyvale shuttle stop. 472-3210 and 472-7677 or tubing. All sizes to choose from.S3.00 Peaceful courtyard with pool Large Pool—All Bills Paid ; ABP. 2602 Wheless Lane. 926-4202, 472-• Dishwasher up. 2201 ^Airport Blvd. Only steps to shopping 4162. Barry Gillingwater Company. • Colorful Shag Carpet 2707 Hemphill Park ELEVEN POOLS • Central Air IMPROVBVOURSELF! Be a person of EFF„ 1 and 2 ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom with • Shuttle Bus 3 Blocks 405 East 31st Move In Today! • Best Rate on the Lake Property) 4.9 acres East will make you 472-2147, 472-4162 every extra. Furnished or unfurnished 4400 Ave. B 451-4584 BEDROOMS such a person. 459-9574, 474-2134. Shuttle Bus—Front Door from $139.50 plus electricity. 807 West MOVE IN TODAY Barry Gillingwater Company 2400 Town Lake Circle FROM Sli)2 ALL BILLS Lynn. Barry GillingwaterCompany. 477- UNF. APARTS 1949 FORD PICK-UP. red. Chevy V-8,' 3-7794, 472-4162. speed, radio, radial tires. Asking S800. ANTILLES APTS. » 442-8340 L PAID Call 477-3734. A new concept in apartment GREAT PEOPLEI Brand new two 1 BR. FURN. $165 community living. Five-bedroom apartments, completely fur­„ 2 BR FURN. SI80 AKAI1730DSS 4-channelreel toreel tape THE BLACKSTONE nished. FrosMree refrigerator, self­ 1 deck. Best offer. 288-2681 after 5 p.m. V.I.P. architectural styles, choice of cleaning even, dishwasher, $149.50 ALL BILLS PAID SUMMER RATES $64.50/month furniture styles, color coor­ monthly, $75 deposit. Convenient 2 NICE POOLS MUST SELL SOLIGOR lens 300mm Apartment livingVs.block fromCampus APARTMENTS dinated throughout. CA/CH, Bergstrom and Highway 183. Students Dishwasher Bayonett mount. $95. Call Zag, 452-1551. Individual applicants matched with 33rd 8. Speedway and families welcome. Manager 385-2043 Fully Carpeted AT CIRCLE VILLA compatible roommates Walk UT or all buitt-ins, available unfur­after 4:00. 2204 Er/field Rd. 478-0609 Shuttle at door. < 2323 Townlake Circle AKC REGISTER Russian Wolf Hound, 4 nished for S120 all bills paid. SHUTTLE BUS CORNER ^plit levelluxury living. Beautifulstudio months old, male. 478-5012. Home 251-2910 Red River 476-5631 PEACEFUL WEST AUSTIN. Colorful 4837. units designed for 3-5 mature students. 1501 Kinney Ave. No. Ill SIGN A 9 MONTH LEASE AND GET 1 efficiency. Shag, complete kitchen, near A Paraxon Property New contemporary decor. Walk-ins, 451-6533, 447-3983 PARK PLACE Enfield shuttle. $139 ABP. 1211 West 8thTV, carpet. Quiet 1971 FIAT 124 Sport Coupe. Good condi­ pool, cable shag Central Properties Inc. (off Blanco) 474-1107, 472-4162 Barry, MONTH DURING THE SUMMER FREE elegant atmosphere. tion $2195. Call John 454-1211 before Gillingwater Company. APTS. 5^00 After six and weekends call 243-King size one bedrooms also available. 1 Bedroom -unfurnished -$130 plus electricity 2 Br. Furn. $180 2297. ASK TO SEE Leasing for Summer and Fall FLEUR DE LIS. 404 East 30th. Mature Drastically reduced Summer rates ' ALL BILLS PAID 2 Bedroom -2 Bath -unfurnished -$170 plus electricity OUR BRAND NEW student. Lovely one bedroom. Walk to MYSTIC ART-S, 504 West 24Hv 10-6 No calls after 7:00 p.m. campus. Shuttle. Summer rates. 477-Central Air Condition -Large Shuttle bus, muzik, pool, shag carpet, small complex, 477-5540 or 477-7451 Tuesday-Saturday. Handmade clothes, I've Got a Secret Apartments. VILLA -Fully 5282. Rooms Carpeted ­ rose pottery. True soaps. * very clean. Located in the heart of UT Covered Parking Area COLORFUL MINI apartments on shut­ area. 1 block to shuttle.S149 50 ORLEANS Call 441-0014 or 441-3020 MARANTZ 2270 receiver, perfect condi­ 2506 Manor Road tle. Two locations, two designs. 38th and 4305 Ave. A 452-1801 tion, with case, under warranty, S450 or -S169.50, ABP. 206 West 38th Speedway area.'Convenient todowntown Students Welcome best offer Call 441-8180. 472-8253 472-2518. and city bus. FromcS119-$124 plus elec­ Walk or bicycle to class 1 or 2 BedroomFurnished. Convenient to tricity. Barry Gillingwater Company. EL CID APTS. HI Fi SALE Kenwood amp, KLHtuner, Efficiencies only UT. Beautiful Pool and Patio. 454-8576. 472-4142. Tandberg tape deck. Reasonable, all or S50 deposit 1 BR $150 Reasonable. Shuttle "t block. separate. 442-7515 452-3314 459-9927 453-4545 HELP WANTED Lowest Rates in town APARTMENT FINDERS service. 472­ TOWER Dishwasher, -Paneling 4162. 1957 FORD PICK-UP, J,ton hew motor, Going fast! Central AC -Carpeted shocks, brakes. S520. Call Rod, 472-1772. MANOR S124 bills paid BRIGHT AND REDWOOD EFFICIENCIES. Near 3704 Speedway 453-4883 ADDED S2050 '70 474-5550 477-3651 campus and shuttle. Shag, full kitchen, BUS We are now taking applications for IMPROVEMENTS CHEERFUL. small community living. $145 ABP, 403 SHUTTLE FRONT Town-Country 12-64. SSE Austin, elec­ MINI ONE BEDROOMS West 38th.Barry GillingwaterCompany. DOOR day cashier and grill help. tric. J4000. 442-0971, Phil Ward, 441-1774 CO-ED DORM You Belong At 472-4142, 454-8574. Deluxe with all extras. Close to shuttle and VERY SECLUDED HANDCRAFTED silver and ceramic bus, new shopping center, 290 1 BEDROOM $139. Near campus and jewelry, contemporary paintings, 1 i Block Campus • Quiet Koenig Lane. Call today. shuttle, convenient to downtown. New $130 ALL BILLSPAID We offer: EnglishAire Serigraphs. William Hoey & Co, 1412 Pree Parking • Maid Service 472-8278, 9-4 and West Barry ° Efficiencies, studios, 1, 2, and fOrnlture, pool. 407 38th. bedroom Lavaca. 477-3007 1 Laundry Facilities * All Bills Paid 892-2Jl5, 4-9 Gillingwater Company. 472-4142, 454-Efficiencies, 1 and 2 3 bedrooms, furnished or un­ apartments, perched on a cliff overlook­$1.70 starting pay 8574. " ing a creek in one of Austin's prettiest FG-230 12-string and case -J90. 477-3317 ONE BEDROOM Apartment -V2 CU. FT/Refrigerator -S85. Yamaha furnished, and all the extras parks. Fully shag carpeted, CA/CH, $155.00. after 10 p.m. you expect •*-like laundries, pool, built-in kitchen, beautiful fur­price on food Luxury, extra nice, close to campus, saunas, exerciserooms, game SUMMER ON THE LAKE niture. 513 Pecan Grove. 442-8094, 451­ AKC IRISH SETTER pups. $75male, $45 Four people suites; 2 bdrms, 2 shuttle bus. Warwick Apartments. 2919 Flexible hours 6533. rooms, pools, putting green, STUDENT DISCOUNT West Avenue. 474-1712. female. Call Dick Briggs at 477-5577. Central Properties, Inc. baths, living room, dining PLUS a great restaurant AND For the three summer months only. Profit Sharing Plan kitchenette. Town Apartments NORTHEAST. Huge one two SONY 'TC228 8-track recorder and area, Private the Cricket Club. Soon there'll Lake will give a and bedroom. Complete kitchens, lots of playback unit. S90. 474-4429. Rooms Available. substantial rent discount toUT students be a water polo pool andhand­storage. From $125 plus electricity. 1402 Scholarship Plan On Town Lake, cable, all bills paid, ball courts, too. Come join us disposal, telephone jacks, laundry East St. Johns (by Reagan High School) ROOMS 1972 GMC VAN, sliding side door, cylinder engine, STD trans., good solid 6 now! efficiency. 2 3 ROOM: Fully carpeted. Spacious walk-Apply 2-J's Hamburgers 3918 North Lamar facilities, club room, pool,pets, spacious 454-1583. 472-4142. Barry Gillingwater condition. Call 477-3828 after 4. From S145 I bedroom, bedroom. Company. 1908 University Ave. In closet. Four blocks from campus. 444-1846 bedroom apartments. Shuttle, bus .LARGE ONE and tWo.bedrooms. Pick Up last two monthsof lease expiring 478-2185 8-TRACK, AM/FM Stereo system,2-way K'Ssino.wi.,maKe ,hil 8 9re»t summer] 2101 Burton Dr. CA/CH, disposal, dishwasher, pool, shut­June 1st. Call 478-6776 or 478-6889. speakers, good condition.'Sounds great, 1500 East Riverside, 444-1458, 444-3750 (off East Riverside) tle. $150 up, ABP. Now leasing. Ver­ $110. 453-5132 evenings. 4411 Airport. 452-ATTENTION sailles Apartments,83&5. BOOKS. RECORDS, posters. 474-0345. TREES & VIEWS Monday, Wednesday 4-4:30; Tuesday. TEXAN DORM Thursday 3-4:30 or 474-4074. Nice 2 bedrooms turn or unfurn. only 3 HIGHLAND MALL LAW SCHOOL--'one block. Large one MBAs, ACCOUNTANTS Leave 1905-1907 Nueces message. mm. from downtown, 5 min. from UT. 1 and two bedrooms. CA/CH, disposal, -S46.50/month. Fall, Spring semester -Larye walMns. e*tra storage, private AREA ON pool. $150 up, ABP. River Oaks. 3001 Red Dally maid service, central air. 1949 FORD XL 3S1-V8, vengctMnTspoo bajco^es, lots Qf glass. From *179 plu* SHUTTLE , NEWEST River. 472-3914. fy, economical. Call 474-4150 after 4:30 entrance). 444-;26*, Huge 112 Be^fooftlt furn. or unfurn,"' ONE to KNOLL, 620 South i$t (use & Tfmbercreek 472* LARGE BEDROOM! Walk p.m. FINEST plates allowed, iwo blocks from portunities? Certainly, the Fortune 500 comoanles voij hZ 4162. Barry GiHiingwater Company. with large walk-ins, beautiful landscap­ school, shag carpet, dispdtsr^cable TV, campus. Co-ed. been intpruiou/inn nn ramn,., _ "•11,ca .yuu nave ing. From $154 ABP. 1100 Reinli. 4J2-sun deck, central air, laundry room, jeen interviewing on campus offer good s7laries an/beneflts* GERRARO LAB -10 Turntable. En- VANTAGE POINT RESIDENT MANAGERS 47?-1760 ceilent condition New M-93 cartridge. $155 ABP 3202, 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater Com­shuttle, all bills paid. Great location. but there are MANY^majlto medium-sized companies without 2812 Nueces, 472-6497, pany. facilities for onrcampus recruit!, Call 474-4150 after 4 30. i 1 bedrooms 18 which offer unusual oppor- RESERVE YOUR APT."FOR'5UMMER SAVE $40 to $50 per month on summer funities. These are some of the cVi MOTORCYCLE 1972 Hodaka lOOcc'S. shag -paneling & FALL. Shuttle bus service at your rates. Save $180 io 5240 on year leases. ROOM & BOARD desperately want your talents. Wefnpanles we represent, which Excellent condition, U00 Ouostall far­giant walk-ins -balconies TANGL^WOOD doorstep. Rentals begin at >135, all bills Also taking Fall leaiet. Swimming pool, are particularly looking for ing UO. Call alter 5:00. Kip, 447^347 , , Spanish furnishings ' paid. Spacious efficiency, one and two study room, security, no pets, walking FEMALE VACANCY. 5107/month. Co­MBAs In Accounting and Fjnancfe, B£As in Accounting and allWEST bedrooms. Closets galore. Parfy bars & distance to UT and Capitol. 1802 west ed.'New Guild Co-Op. 510 Wast 23rd St. Engineering disciplines. We hav£ lulll)lt.s Doin nom«»«ir mnKAWA~SAKTs00 H-1 15,000 mlletr 2423 Town Lake Circle wet bars. Private patios & balconies. Avenue. Phone 474-5554. opportunities both domestic Bood condition, $700. Calf Jim. <51-lm 444-8178 472-4162 -' I Br. Fgrn. 1145 Cfubroom, game rooms, saunas, two 472-0352. arid overseas. Why don't you mail us your resume Sr bett^r vet BarrryGillingwater Company -2 Br. Furn. S190 -' , pools, Individual heating and cooling. The PAD. Largeefficiencies, fully thag come by during your Spring Break and look Into sLoni thlVa iwo VOLKSWAOEN. AM/FM, sunroof, Dishwasher -Shag Carpet Professional resident management. 1845 carpeted. CA/CH, pool, all buM-In »ew paint %nt ut-ui*. 'vTNrAPARTMENT. Open beam c«il-Central Air & Heat . Burton Drive at Woodland. Second red -kitchen. .Trees, right on Shuttle 00$ TUTORINGEl er^ptoyerFee Pakl by the miLihag carpet throughout, all built-in 1403 Norwalk • light.east of IH 35, take Woodland exit. route. $130 all bills paid. 4504 Speedway,mi sr*ATQ;-«TER^i^«f«iouitar .• kitchen, color coordinated.CA/CH, pool, SHUTTLE BUS CORNER Phone 442-6789 * No. 212. 451-4252. 451w«;33/cen«r,i 'wtttt case.flCS cash.Flute $30. 447-4*49 near 472-9414 TUTOR ING tHat you can unders­ campus. 4000 Avenue A. »134.S0 • Properties. tand 476-0757. WALKER RECRUITMENT bills -paltf, 452*5533. 451-4533. Central '«• VW STAtIONwAOOM. tires, Properties tnc . NOW*LEASING hew efficiency apart- SPACIOBS 2 BEQROOM furniihed GREAT~OA* A^TTMENTS~TWo ,u Personnel Consultants 1 VtatgasmilMoe Good condition, «H0. blocks from t4w Schobl, Quiet Luxury, »w? ^^3S*pomHB,TJ,monum ment: One semester or longer. apartments. Good lojftloii, near cam-two bedroom, fwo bath. shag, carpet, CLASSIFIEDS 4635 Southwest Frwy, ^80x^27569, Houston, Tx. 77021 -EFFICIENCIES SI15 plus electricity. $13S month. Alt bills paid, 2700 Manor W»:'.»h0ppi't0.center, and shuttle bus Pool, AC, carpet,paneling, nopetsi Hun-Rd . 477^41It. 2504 Manor R0.; 4742201. Air bills paW-rbt more information, call tundecK, pool. Now renting for summer ttngton. Vlll< 44th and Ave. A.454-1903 4i4'947$.c . • • and thereafter. 477-3388. Dave Dickson -AAe.Hin «i«,. WORK! Financial/Accounting „ EnglneerTng Page 14 Wednesday, March 27 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Lk: m jJ.S--^V ii;^:-^-;'v?'v!vi 7=^;; ^^5^'*s''S^> 'A^':* ^!?>:P'r-'V^^';?^,=-'-;: B v m.^ + v> v ,-sryH^ HELP WANTED SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS FREE RIBBON ! mm mmm ,,14/LHE MOVIE — i?With *ny typewriter or PiS§' adding machine repair. lllr By STEVE GOLfJB eS-|coming intp'graduate school, dergraduate major, but their are realizihg that it may no those who drop out appear to Reasonable rates, 'TlsCeA* •x Sales. Service, Rentals. $1,000 WM^ Students thinking of enteif 'with nq clearly defined goal, hearts weren't in it," Belt longer be wise to go into a" have" th'fe , potential Tfor ' : Is.;interviewing for clean-up person, •< MasterCharge ....... . BankAmericard waiterfwaltresses si50 per week and > rk Call 474-2566 :%g graduate school may want having a goal but not liking it, said. field where job opportunities , graduate studies/' Belt said. dancers Uper hour. Apply in prison1-3, : ?*, ABC TYPEWRITER CO. REWARD to consider the reasons realizing that their goal 'Others who dropped out are few and far. between," ' Seventy percent have 1602 San Jacinto.: ?>y,S(\.:j«Free pick-up and delivery;' .{graduate students give for doesn't require a graduate were not dissatisfied1 with Belt said. Graduate Record Exam • dropping out. degree,,l Belt said. their career choice but with Besides trying to help scores of 1,000or better.and 35 HOLIDAY HOUSE No. 3 for any pertinent iri-^is wiiuam TV Beit, assistant "Those who came to their specific discipline." An graduate students dropping percent have 1,300 or better. now taking applications part time •• ; Xerox or IBM -dean of graduate studies, has graduate school with no clear­example would be students out or thinking of-dropping The graduate school usually formation leading^to: employment to start after springbreak S Profit sharing, scholarships, >/t price' interviewed more than . 700 ly., defined goal said they who love teaching but don't out. Belt hopes the informa­requires a score of about 1,000 food, flexible hours, paid vacation, start 4c COPIES the arrest and con­graduate school dropouts in entered for reasons like not like, the subject they're in," tion obtained from these inter­to get in. ST.70. Must beneat andenergetic Apolv 2606 Guadalupe 9:00 to 11:00 andI00 to viction of any per­'the last five years. On the knowing what else to do, being Belt said. views will help him counsel "The findings of these inter­ 5:00, Tuesdays and Wednesdays Reduction Capability to24 x 3$ • • ' son or basis of these ''exit inter* urged by parents or In the last few years more students thinking about apply­views are corroborated ,. Pictures, Multilith, persons Printing, Binding responsible for the views," he said "some professors to continue their students are giving financial ing to graduate school. studies done around the coun-v^%| definite facts became education or that it seemed problems and the lack of job "Most of the students who try," Belt said. "Egra..''' TRAVIS STATE fire at Eli's Club on evident." like the thing to do," Belt opportunities in the particular drop out didn't stay long," Belt encourages'Istudentsf * SCHOOL iHH' March 13, 1974. Call "Two-thirds of students said. field as reasons for leaving* Belt said. "Seventy percent of considering graduate school?^ ATTENDANT 1 -$397 fsgsiS per month ^GINNY'S the owner, 476-8174 leaving graduate school in the ' "Many of those who had a their graduate program, Belt those who leave do so in the-to seek counseling withiv • 5»P .COPYING after 5 p.m.; Fire middle of a semester give one goail • but didn't like it con­said. first year. graduate advisers in the Of-, Taking applications for full time work, jii mainly 1:45 p.m. to 10 p.m.shift. Duties of thrfee interrelated reasons: tinued with their un­"Many graduate students "The great majority of fice of Graduate Studies., Marshall's office include the care, trainingand treatment '^h^SERVICE of mentally retarded residents. Apply at • the Personnel Office, Travis State 42 Dobie Mall 476-9171 NELSON'S GIFTS-! Zunl Indian Travis State School School, 2 miles east of Austin on FM 969 jewelry; African and Mexican Imports. OCWYM (East 19th). 8 to 11 a.m. or 1 to 4 p.m., Free Parking 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. Closed s £> > Is-.1 Monday through Friday. Mondays. An Equal Opportunity Employer Open 75 hours a week LEARN-TO PLAY GUITAR. Beginner and advanced. Drew Thomason. 478­ COPY SHOP II 2079. Turn Into Earnings CHEMIST Excellent opportunity for a RBC/Bond Paper Super GIVE MEyour oldart supplies.478-2079. Copies By MIKE CROPPER trainees can 'work and earn picnic packets consisting of watered, and kept: in the garden. Glass explained that'" recent graduate with a B.S. ANNUAL 8-HOUR Marathon and 2nd greenhouse. ­ degree in Chemistry. The job Art Show. Stadium. April -7. 12 noon -Mentally retarded students spending money, too, Gordon plastic fbrks and spoons with his 20 trainees recently, 6:00. S10 Exhibitor fee. Louis Henna, Jr. Bragg, director of the Evalua­disposable pepper and salt Glass said trees such as packaged and sold 20,00c|. will entail performing at the Travis State School 454-2501, 837-0395. chemical analysis, test, in­2200 Guadalupe produce and sell a variety of tion and Training Center at shakers, and basic parts for liveoaks, cottonwoods, earthworms to an Austin ' vestigations in connection HI! THROWING A PARTY? Let a belly booklets dealer. dance troupe entertain you! Sidney, 447-goods ranging from vegetable the school, said. In fact, the computers and • sycamores and Chinese determination with the of 2083; John, 447-4777 workshop employs many punched and stapled together. tallows also, are grown and Bragg said the work day for.« properties of materials; the 474-H24 plants to stools of cedar. Pictures research and development of Kalograph FREE BOOKLET -"Life After Death." • At the crafts and artr more trainees than the The trainees work side by sold. the resident-trainees* is only/ Binding Printing Write Gen.P.O. Box60, N.Y., N.Y. lObOl new or improved materials, Save Time -Save Money workshop, trainees (those> nursery and arts and crafts side and can choose the job He said many of the plants four hours long1 because* products and chemical Next to Gourmet on the Drag residents learning a trade) section, they want to do. Girls have came from clippings donated crowded conditions allow only salary. Ex­ processes. Good TO PLACE A Bragg said the programs come to the school only since by city garden clubs, and a a certain number of the'* .mold and transform boards 836-0836, extension 270 for ap­4" copies* TEXAN and stalks of cedar into cut-were formed not only to allow September. number of copper plants were. trainees to work at one time. ' pointment. boards for housewives to use residents of the school to earn * The nursery is new to the donated by the University, He added, "we alsodon't want PRESS ON 9108 Reid Drive CLASSIFIED AD in their kitchens, spending money, but also-to school but is a much enjoyed Probably the oddest but one to overwork anyone." Coffee and cobbler's provide something for them to addition, Fielding Glass, of the most lucrative "crops" He said the profits from the cellent fringe 'benefits. Call CALL OVERSEAS JOBS THE TEXAS UNION f1" benches are also put together do besides "sitting around all supervisor of the nursery, gar-farmed by the trainees in the projects go in the paychecks Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa. Students all professions and occupations... COPY CENTER "and sealed with a type of var­day." He said the state dens and the arts and crafts gardening project is the worm-of the Workers. S700 to S3000 monthly. Expenses paid, food, and shop, said. He explained that nish that brings out the rich provides clothing overtime, sightseeing. Free informa­ tion. TRANS WORLCTRESEARCH CO. 8 a.m. -5 p.m. M-F brown and mellow beige tints shelter for the people but not for the first year, residents Bottles, Cans Not Recycled Union 314 f­471-3616 |By Zodiac News Service Dept. A-5. P.O. Box 603, Corte Madera, of cedar wood. spending money, so that is who helped begin the nursery CA. 94925 : 5' copies ANOTHER SECTION of the what the programs are for. worked for no pay. American bcittle can steel cans and 960 million and glass bottles last year, 'til midnight every day school works with trainees on THE MAIN training project TOMATO, jalepeno pepper, manufacturers .have been Those figures sound im- Information Center planting. In their nursery, of the school employes about bell pepper, onion and cab­ } 'Xerox, Transparencl advertising that they are mak-'pressive until you realize that es, residents of the Travis County 200 persons-and ,pt|ts together bage plants are. grown in the ~L--Muitilith ing big strMes recycling -iir -Sehool fearn to plant ahd eare garden, while various flower­in they represent only one their Bottles and cans. " every six aluminum cans, OTie for trees and plants grown and blankets, which are used by ing plants including a variety The industry boasts that it of every 22 steel cans and just t> TIME PROBLEM - sold at the school. shipping companies to protect of geraniums, coleus and are reclaimed billion one every glass school has goods; napkin packets, small terrariums planted, 1.6 out of 33 PREGNANCY The also a bottles made last year. aluminum cans, three million Austin Maternity Counseling Service. workshop where interested WORK . offers residential and non-residential programs. Located 2 blocks from UT campus. 510 West 26th. 472-9251. Tune Up: Any Cor Public Lecture and Discussion We have been in this business for 50 years Ideal for Students 12 Week Tour of Help Clean Commercial i$12 piwsports Soviet Union and Eastern Europe Buildings THE BUG INN Volkswagen Shop. Free Shifts available: Call Mike Includes Greece & Scandinavia Timing, Carborator adiustment with THE PHILOSOPHICAL 4:30 to 8:30 a.m. (Mornings) this ad. 1024 Airport. 385-9102. 444-2403 Volkswagen Bus Camping Trip 6:00 to 9:30 p.m. (Evenings) PRO-LIFE ALTERNATIVES. Call 472- Member 10:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m of Co-Op 4198 for help in pregnancy decisions. (Nights) June 10, 1974 to August 28, 1974 IMPLICATIONS OF v Ideal working conditions Approximate Co$t: $1,700 Above Average Pay ' n • (indudef everything except transportation horn Advance to Job Supervisor WHAT FAMOUS TRIO CUT Austin to Brussels) For Interview, write, giving GRADUATE STUDENT needs male all details about yourself roommate: share two bedroom apart­CLASSES WITH A SWORD, ment, CA/CH, dishwasher, pfiol, $85, SPOKE FRENCH, •>-to P.O. Box 3021, half electricity. Call Robert Stark 441- FLUENT 3 hours of academic credit available. Laurence BonJour Austin, Texas 78764 3377 or 447-1001. Sunday, COULD CHARM A HAREM, AND SOUNDS LIKE A Asst. Prof, of Philosophy HELPI NEEDED! One female room­ For More Information. Contact Immediately: ^ mate to share two bedroom furnished CANDY BAR? April 14. apt. with new-to-Austln female.'451-2654. Help! HINT: IT'S NOT SHA NA NA Gale Weber ^ A.C Auditorium ' HOLIDAY HOUSE FEMALE ROOMMATE: Large four The Crown Shops 471-3607 or 477-1668 * No. 1 bedroom furnished house. Own room, „SV3313)ISnW Wed., March 27 call Diane. 447-1466. Sponsored by the U.T. Slavic Dept. wPlaza Balcones Part-time noon help. PERSON (OR COUPLE): share two 33HH1 3Hl,i iO NOISV3A .2900 Guadalupe 7:30 p.m. We are looking for good part-bedroom house. S62/mo. plus bills. Pets P£, M3N 3H1 Sdl -V3MSNV O.K. 454-3834 after 6:00 and weekends. -Highland Mall time help to work noons. Ex­ Dan. cellent scholarship program ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 offered to college students. bedroom house, S62.50 plus bills, fenced Experience not necessary. yard, pets ok. 453-1489 after 6 p.m. Good pay and excellent work­(Carol). ing conditions. Apply^at 1003 Complete Research Service EARN CASH WEEKLY FEMALE OWN ROOMS70, Available 4-1 * Studtman's Barton Springs Rd. Between 5-in Northeast Austin, home926-0318Linda 7 p.m. daily. NEED after 5:00 FEMALE ROOMMATE NOW. Collegiate Educational Research Research Systems Service, has a including complete g Blood Plasma Donors Needed . -V. * ' , Photo Service •f Share beautifultwo bedroom apartment. Men & Women; t&y Shuttle. Afternoons, evenings after 5:30. Term Paper Research, Thesis Research and 222 W. 19th ' & 5324 Cameron Rd. THE FLOWER PEOPLE need people to 442-1842. sell. Highest paid commission, lowest Professional Typing in all areas. EARN $10 WEEKLY prices, paid daily. Call 453-7156 or come FEMALE SHARE 2/1 house on IF shut­ by 4301 Guadalupe. tle, fenced yard, pets ok.Vi rent, Vi bills. RESUME' & Phone: 474-1235 CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Barbara 451-5916 or Dyanne 471-5107. WANTED WAITRESSES/WAITERS, 50,000 Research Papers on file kitchen help, managers forFlaplack Ca­ROOMMATE IMMEDIATELY. Nice 2 m nyon. Exciting new pancake house. 1817 bedroom north, S60. Vi bills. Sarah, 454-Quick Delivery Collegiate Research Systems IDENTIFICATION TYPE Austin S. Lamar (formerly Arkies Grill). Good 3503 extension 47. Home 836-5824. Mon. thru Fri. 104 East 6th Street No. 518 pay, flexible hours, fun surroundings. QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD. Darkroom. Call 441-3701 for interviews. Hrs: 10:00 to 5:00 Littlefield.Building PICTURES Blood Components, Inc. Piano. Furnished. Fenced yard. *65, COMPANION for my sonof four to work utilities. No dopers, drunks. Michael 10:00 to 4:00 Sat. Austin, Texas 78701 OPEN: MON.&THURS. 8 AM to7 P.M. in my home part-time May, full-time' Etchison, 453-9793. .summer. Must have car. 327-2064. TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. OWN ROOM in 3-2 house. North of EXPERIENCED NURSE AIDS. Part Rundberg Lane. Cqll Steveor Deeat 836-MASSAGES 1-Day -P; CLOSED WED. & SAT. time. Apply in person, 6906 BurnetLane. 1855. HOT OIL SWEDISH STEAM ROOM Quick, Reliable Service "MAGIC TOUCH of Venus Body MAGNETIC TOUCH WEIGHT LIFTING 409 W. 6th 477-3735 Massage for Gentlemen" needs persons LOST & FOUND POWDER who massage for immediate employ­ ment. Relaxing atmosphere and ex­ LOST AFGHAN hound, brown/grey.454­cellent money. Full time or part time. 8278, 471-5266. REWARD Call 451-9190 or 1104 Koenig Lane, ©mtclf of Austin. Ask for manager. FOUND: Small white female Samoyed-w looking dog, near ENS-Taylor Hali. 1­ VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: gymnastics, BODY MASSAGE FOR GENTLEMEN 295-5841 (Buda). tutoring, soccer, photography, any type I of special programming.Call Boy's Club Young Lady Masseuses in Complete PrivacyI POUND LAST SUNDAY • Irish Setter. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK of Austin, 444-6369. Cftll 5-'10 p.m., 472-9420 to identify and O A.M. to 12 Midnight 1104 KOENIG LANE I claim. -~— FLOWER SELLERS needed Thursday, <7 D»y$) AUSTIN!TEXAS Friday afternoons, all day Saturday, LADIES WATCH LOST. Monday CALL FOR I Sunday. Freshest flowers, highest com­ Littlefield Foundation. Stainless stretch mission. 476-3060, 453-15p8, 453-2761. APPOINTMENT band. Sentimental value. 454-1475 or br­512/461-9190 ing to Salvation Sandwich Stand. I FULL TIME POSITIONS now being Littlefield Fountain. Reward. ISatisfaction Guaranteed) taken at Hang-lt-On in land Mall. Apply Monday-Saturday froi 10 a.m.-9 LOST BROWNISH-BLACK Dachsund I p.m. -­ mutt with lp around 19th and Rio Grande Call 478-3471. DANCE TEACHER for children, 3,5 I p.m., 2 or 3 days week. 836-1609. I MASSEUSES, MASSEURS for the -STREAKER CREATIVE LIVING CENTER. Ex­ perience or interest In meditation and > I sensitivity techniques desirable. UNCLASSIFIED T-SHIRT Professional training. 478-4209. I TWO WEEK JOB. Professor and wife BSR 810 turntable SI10 441-7572 need "mother's helper" for two small boys when baby arrives (late April). I '64 Olds F85. Wrecked. $100. 451-1585. ~ room and board. 454-1848. Pay S100, i Roberts 8tr rec/play $65 476-9832 I PART TIME WORK 3 evenings and Saturday. 1300/per month. Call 452-2758. Fnshed. apt. $90 mo. abp 454-5445 SALESPERSON. Part time, flexible S25 reward -house wanted. 478-2965 . I CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! hours. Clothing shop. Experience ($3.cIO+60t/*4?) I necessary. On the drag. 476-4339, 476­ 6 volt Delco battery new 453-2104 5477. 7S Exp. streakers call Mike 454-7471 ­ SAN ANTONIO YWCA Resident Girls fe;SlR£AK ~~I ——WRITE YOUR AD HERE— " Camp Summer Director. B.A., Camping . 2 bd.-2 b. apts for summer 477-3388. experience, 25 years old. YWCA, 318 I McCullough, San Antonio, Texas 78215. Piano need tuning? 474-5153 (early). 512-227-1441. UtvoituAfa I Don't read anything by Velikovsky. , WAlTER/WAITRE4S.„Speak fluent EXPERIENCED " i__ C lfcl«tC|^. -VHqjiAAit* -tiwobJO Justin boots, new, 7VaD, $35.-472-0178. I English. Part-time. Cair452-5703. Ski boots'and bindings. 451-6814.' TELEPHONE TYPE WORK, pleasant I voice, no experience necessary. After­ Yamaha FG180 guitar w/case. $65. 454' noon and evening hours available. 0175. * ' SOS/per hour plus bonus. For inter­I view, Call 451-8131. Caovoes•KayeiKs-rbklit^Bodts Amount Enclosed. STEAK 8. ALE needs day bus help, MISCELLANEOUS I to RMW/CSM*GUUM Use this handy chart to quickly arrive Number of Pays waiter/waitress. Apply only if planning Possible advancement MkM-CnUt I to.work through summer.Call Lee2 to4. at cost. BrmMhs Mail to: 453-1688. (15 word minimum) SKYDIVE! I EXCELLENT TYPIST, Must type 70 wpm Flexible houri" Apply E 3? A DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS Dobl® Mail. 472-8936. I: N«.. Times Times Times Times Times Austin Parachute Center P.O. BOX D -UT STATION I Words ' f 2 5 10 20 SERVICES For information Please call AUSTIN/ TEXAS 78712 272-5711 anytime Cost per word 10 18 35 60 1.20 I 2.70 5.25 9.00 18,00 NAME 15 1.50 I VW PARTS AND SERVICE : Quohty work at reasonableprices. Tune-Spring Vacation 16 1.60 2.88 5.60 9.60 19.20 •ADDRESS uo & 10.so plus -parts. Free diagnosis. I s< Estimates and compression checks. Canoe Trips : .r 17 1.70 3.06 5.95 10.20 20.40 j "T .y<, Please try us! (We have moved to 1003 > Brush). For Information call 836-Whole EairtK Provision Co* I jlciTY 3171 overseas We plan float trips on theapa 18 3.24 6.30 10.80 Engine.-and Supply. 1.80 21#60 478-IS77 Upper Guadalupe up to four 504 W«st 24iK I .TlmnK*! day&. Call The Guadalupe?® ,._ 11.^10 22.80 :#PHONL 19 1.90 . Canoe Livery. 885-4671, i I 11 11 3.42 . 6.65 1 1 11 111 wmmm iS!88SiSiwectn«sclay, March 27 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page V --' * M ir: mm VI f5>«r? 'c J."* . I Arab'IsraeliPeace eveals AMPI ContributiS H I Main FocakPoint Over $126,000 Donated to ~ " L promising to raise $2 miltioMd? din&to two.officials quoted in the report. In August, 1969, WASHINGTON (AP) -r An internal audit shpws thai paign, they also were giving support out of corporate ' the co-op shipped $100,000 in cadi to Nixon's lawyer-fund , Associated Milk ProducersInc. (AMPI) paid atleast $91,­ R: funds for Humphrey's Minnesota senatorial campaign, InV.5.-Soviet Talks . .681in, corporate money to support Hubert H. Humphrey's raiser Herbert L. Kalmbach. £ .. the Wright report showed., MOSCOW (AP) 7-Prospects for pSu$:: The milk producers recently said the $100,000 was an il­ 1968 presidential ^campaign and $34,500 to his 1970 between Israel and the Arabs was the legal cbrporate donation. The cooperative asked Nixon : It quoted former co-op lobbyist Bm A. fcilly'as saying- senatorial, campaign. focal point of two rounds of talks Tuesday The audit and"a lawyer's report/obtained from court campaign officials for return <>f the moneybut haveasyet he was reimbursed from company funds for two con-" between Secretary of State Henry A;% records, show that the giant dairy co-operative retained received no reply. tributions to Humphrey totaling $22,500. Lilly also said £Kissinger and Soviet leader Leonid its ties to Democrats as it switched its main support to TO COVER the $100,000donation andsome otherexpen­that a $12,000 advertising payment to the New York firm pf '<•' ditures, the milk producers used a system of bank loans, Inc. actually ^Brezhnev.' • ..^President Nixon after his 1968 victory. of Lennen & Newell was payment forf^ s§?? Shelved temporarily was the chief item St THE 1968 Humphrey money went to pay the $15,000 transfers, payments and reimbursements that involved a Humphrey's printing costs. The invoice for that payment^ fjvion their agenda — search a. number of Democrats, according to the Wright report. tffe for nine-month salary of a campaign worker, to reimburse listed it as "consulting fee for ^^'conMptnai bnakthrough"^ to produce a him for$11,641 in campaign travelexpenses, toreimburse Generally, the milk producers made payments for ad­Humphrey's former campaign manager,'Jack' Chest­ mittedly phony lawyer's fees or public relations fees to ^>new treaty to limit nuclear weapons that at least $54,000 in campaign donations by a number of in­nut. was quoted as acknowledging receipt of around $22,-. President Nixon could sign at a summit persons who later passed on part of the money to repay dividuals and to pay miscellaneous expenses of a cam­300 from Lilly, but the report said Chestnut couldn't be; y ^ bank loans covering the$100,000 donation.The money that here this summer. paign rally, a dinner and a parade, the audit shows. reached a'Second time for comment on the Lennen & There were indications, not con­ wasn't passed on was supposed to be used to pay federal ; Federal law prohibits corporate contributions to Newell payment. Documents show Lilly received the :••••. —UM firmed by the American side, that < political campaigns. Two former officials of the milk income taxes on the "fees." advertising bill from Chestnut and gaveChestnut two cor­Kissinger may extend his stay to tackle Henry Kissinger producers pleaded guilty last January to conspiring to Among those listed as participating in this payback poration checks to pay it, the report said. • the nuclear arms subject again more reference was made to the negotiations on donate $22,000 to the Humphrey campaign and former arrangement were former Democratic Party Treasurer thoroughly. His talks with Bt-e^hnev open­ Richard Maguire, former Humphrey aides Ted Van Dyk general manager Harold S. Nelson was indicted earlier LILLY ALSO was identified as the main conduit for strategic arms. and Kirby Jones, former Lyndon B. Johnson White House ed Monday. Kissinger is due to receive Israeli this month for perjury because he denied knowledge of Humphrey s 1968 money. Lilly worked nine monthson the Kissinger also is seeking active Soviet Defense Minister Moshe Dayan on Friday that donation. The $22,000 is included in the total $91,691. aide W. DeVier Pierson, Rep. James R. Jones, D-Okla., campaign in six states, while being paid by the milk cooperation in arranging a troop separa- and the late Clifton C. Carter, who had been executive in Washington for the first round of dis­;L Through a spokesman, Humphrey said, "I have no producers. He was Humphrey's coordinator in Alaskaand tion between Israel and Syria in the Golan engagement diplomacy. A separateSyrian knowledge of these transactions ... an organization as director of the Democratic National Committee. West Virginia, the report said. His corporation salary was " Heights. The Soviets thus far have been team will follow on April 10. Working as large as AMPI should have had the kind of legal counsel The report said Maguire didn't respond to requests for listed at $20,000 per year, which figures to $15,000 for the dragging their feet in this matter and even comment, and that Pierson declined to comment per­ intermediary, Kissinger hopes to that would have prevented these types of transactions." nine months. Humphrey Sent Lillya letterof appreciation :counseled the Syrians to stiffen their duplicate his success in pulling apart THE AUDITING firm, Haskins & Sells of San Antonio, sonally. Van Dyk was quoted as sayinghe wasn'tawareof after the campaign, saying "I deeply appreciate your demands. : Egyptian and Israeli troops near theSuez. said its accounting may not be complete because some the true purpose of the payback money, which went dedicated service ..." sources at canceled checks from 1967 and 1968 cannot be found. through his employe, Kirby Jones. A communique issued by the U.S.Em-However, Soviet hinted a In addition, Haskins & Sells said Lilly received $11,641 The audit is attached to a report for the cooperative's REP. JONES was quoted as saying he gave $10,000 to bassy here said Brezhnev and Kissinger reception Tuesday night that Kissinger in travel expenses. It also listed 29 ccHOp employes or paid "special attention" to the Mideast, will be late for his date with Dayan. He board of directors by attorney Edward L. Wright, a the milk producers as a voluntary, unreimbursed dona­associated business firms that received payments total­ former president of the American Bar Association. The tion which he thought was going to be relayed to , the European security conference and the now is scheduled to leave Moscow Thurs­board commissioned Wright to investigate illegal Democrats. The report said Jones received a total of ing $54,000 — listed (Officially as salary bonuses, adver­ troop reductions day, stopping in London for five hours to East-West talks on in political contributions and other payments by past of­$155,050 in fees for legal and editorial work for the milk tising fees, or the like — who also gave identical amounts were Central Europe. confer with James Callaghan, the new producers in the four years before he was elected to to the Humphrey campaign. Several individuals Bilateral relations, "in particular in the British foreign secretary, on U.S.­ficials of the dairy group. quoted as confirming that they were asked to pass the After Humphrey's defeat, general manager Nelson Congress in 1972. K economic and trade field," also were dis­European relations. But the sources said corporate money along to the campaign. cussed, the communique said. No he may now stay in Moscow another day. decided to "make peace" with the Republicans, accor-; 4 In 1970, about the time that milk Supreme Court Rules &a•.«''m Failure To Pay Filing Fee May Not Bar WASHINGTON (AP) — States may WbaFothemirequalified ''ability to-pay a fixed fee without providingany alternative n^eans candidates from the ballot because they cannot afford to pay a fil­is not reasonably necessary-to accomplishment ftf the state's ing fee, the Supreme Court held Tuesday. legitimate election interests." In two other election law cases, the justices served ndtice that At the time the case began its journey through the courts, state legislatures will have to justify limitations on the right tq California required a fee of $192 to run for the state assembly, !v-A run for office under the Supreme Court's strictest scrutiny. $701.60 to run for the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, THE COURT said states must show compelling need before and $982 for governor. placing burdens on the access of candidates to the ballot. The In the second case, the court approved Texas' complex system compelling-need requirement is the strictest standard used by of regulating independent and minor party candidacies. : the court in establishing restrictions on government action. Under the system, parties receiving less that 2 percent of the . ' In anotherdecision, thecourt relaxed restrictionson the search vote In the preceding gubernatorial election must nominate their and seizure of property of suspects after their arrest. candidates at conventions instead of the primaries reserved for In a 5-4 ruling, the court said that a search and seizure related major parties. to aa arrest may be conducted without a warrant several hours ADDITIONALLY, they must come up with notarized iv after the arrest. signatures of voters equaling 1 percent of the vote «ter Fleming (r),grills John Dean. J named as a Co-conspiratorbaUyrt indicted sheer sandbagging by Vesco," .Pean dented it. -1n » v.J ^ v fit , J. -t ^ -y V—'IF* rtwili I JPage 16 vyednesday, March 27 1974,THE DAILY TEXAN ' ***> U .'i'w »Tr