T rrZCL XI 'ictt'a 9€*!* *°B -0*4 •oul CM^U80 «ITJO*°W ecycie ewspaper M& sm, Ten Cents Twenty Pages N#* J WASHINGTON (UPIh-Cofigress ap­proved legislation Thursday boosting the nation's minimum wage in three steps to $2 30 per hour and extending it to aboul10 million more workers. President "Nixon said earlier Thursday that he would not veto the measure — he did last year because he thought it was in­flationary — so the minimumwage willin­crease from |1.60 to $2 on May 1, to $2.10 next Jan. 1, and to $2.30 on Jan.l 1976. The House voted 345-50 and the Senate, 7H9 to accept a conference committee bill that was a compromise between separate, slightly different versions. The law extends coverage for the first time to domestic employes, all govern­ment workers and retail chain*employes. In all, 54 million workers will be covered -by the minimum wage law, about 10 minion more than before.' "^his legislation is three years late," Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., one of its if sponsors, said. )pponents argued the measure-will hurt fie people it issupposed to help t-the poor because itrwill spur inflation and un­ employment. The measure applies to all workers regardlf^s of age.-"Congress rejected -strong suggestion by Nixon to make the X ' minimum 15 percent less for workers un­#*Sder 18. Passage means almost immediate pay hikes for four million workers now paid jg^By DAVID HENDRICKS Hector DeLeon, former mayoral aide, returned to Austin Wednesday night after testifying-t^fa Watergate grand jury in Washington about a "dignitary" he met while working for Mayor Roy Butler. DeLeon said he was questioned about Whether he took Uie dignitary to visit Austin attorney Jafe Jacobsen, who. was ifflicted. Feb; 21 by the Watergate grand juryfor allegedly giving false testimony to a. feStlF f .policy.-'. hours in 1977. dent Action Committee, the executive The audience, which began gathering in committee Farm workers also will be getting of the North,. Austin the City Electric Building Auditorium raises, but not as quickly as most others. around 11 a.m. for the 1p.m. hearing, was. (Mated • ­ The minimum wage for agricultural dominated by supporters of the city'semployes, now $1,30, goes to $1.60 May 1, "Association, West Austin Democrats and rebate policy. Scattered,among the crowd to $1.80 next Jan. 1, to $2on Jan. 1,1976, to the League of Women Voters. were a handful of construction workers, $2.20 on Jan. 1, 1977, and to $2.30 on.Jan.1,' Although opinion differed on the rebate 1978, clad in work clothes and caliche-covered v policy, both sides agreed that a rebate toboots. i The Senate version of the bill was more encourage low cost housing is important. One sunburned man, who said hevyorked ^liberal than the House version,.and most "One positive point that came out of the for Bill Milbura Co., said he was givenof the changes reflected the House bill. time off to come to*the hearing. In a report hearing," Mayor Roy Butler said, "is the The Senate backed away from a $2.20 agreement that the refund in some form , ., released Wednesday by Binder, Milburn hourly wage ne^t Jan. 1 and from over-was listed^as aholder of 11city rebate.con', for low income housing js desirable." timp for polifpmpn and firpmpn, aftpr 40 —AlUiottgh Friedmant attfra conclusionof""* hours. . iy^ the hearing, moved to abolish the refund When asked If he supported the rebate policy, the substitute motion asking for If signed into' law, as expected, the policy, the construction worker said he further study^of the policy was submittedreally did not know. "I haven't figured out,measure will represent the fruit of three by Councilman Lowell Lebermann. what's going on," he said,-shaking hisyears of division between the President In suggesting further study, Lebermannhead, . and Congress. . , ' , , said he would like to see the council ap­ A DETAILED presentation by point a study review committee, utilising, proponents of the rebate policy, complete with elaborate and was both academic and privateexpertise inmaps slides,' business. , .• moderated by Richard C. Baker, an Austin IN ADDITION, Lebermann' proposedattorney representing the Land Planning that funding for outside consultants be Council of .the Austin Association of Home ' made available and anexecutive memberBuilders, as well as various individuals. of the city management staff be assigned"The rebate plan has been a moving —Taxan Staff Ptato by David Woo to work exclusively with the committee; policy in making Austin the great city it is * Thecommittee, Lebermann said, will be Construction workers listen to council debate rebates. today," Baker said. "We think the system budsman, refused to identify the dignitary expected to make a recommendation to i has been fruitful through the:year|^und we he testified about but did say that he is "a the council on the future of the utility <5 national figure in national political ac­rebate policy within 90 days, as well as « tivity since 1968." He added theman was study the possibility of low cost housing 5 Recess a political figure in 1960, but did not through supportive xity policy. ' /, / become prominent until 1968 and that the A proposal by Binder to institute' a man visited Austin last October. finance Article Receives Tentative Approval , moratorium on rebate contracts until the One of DeLeon's duties While working recommendation is received from the for the mayor , was to#escort visiting 'wiwnittee wasWithdrawn afterCity Attys , By BILL GARLAND . the in \p|«|vflecsssary tea:la.two-thirds, moi^.yjan the fivfe articles have acquired dignitaries. A Texan Stall Writer , Dqn Btttler «dviae(^Binder that:the rebate ^ ' John Connally became Texas governor After tentatively adopting a contro-Convention deliberation could come to a Delegates voted 82-60 Thursday for the ordinance majority.^pa^ig 123-47. ' •\5on second reading thus for. :e would have tojftjjai in I960; He was in Austin lastOctober to be versy-laden Finance Article, halt prMr to April 5 if articles on local total Finance Article, considerably shy of ban the contracts. ^1 ^ ­master of ceremonies for a Texas Exes-Constitutional Convention 'delegates ~ ^ 4 J government and the Legislature are pass­,a two-thirds majority, beforemoying on to Students' Association gathering. „ Thursday voted 99*49 to recess the conven­ed on second reading.-the Local Government Article. "This man is not necessarily..involved. tion from April 5 to May 6. " ' Debate . same ratio to schools and highways. The contributions, which ranged from $50 to $500 were from Nash Phillips-Clyde-If it is adopted by the voters the increase Copus, David Barrow Sr., Waited will continue to goone-fourth to education, Carrington, Bill Mlburn, Charles Nash -:but the other um uie outer three-fourths will go to^d C,W. Heatherley eVe""0,6 proposed^ In Binder's report, Nash PhillipsClyde V Copus Jr.. are listed as hdlding more than For any changes to be made in any ar­$1,800,000 in rebate contracts or 13.1 per-> ticles on third reading, a two-thirds cent of the total value of all city refund : ' delegate vote will be required. contracts. Wmsm Barrow holds 7.7 percent of the conMf tracts, totaling more than $1 million;-.rj Carrington holds more than $600,000 as-$ does Milburn. Nash is a member of thei .^ board of directors of Austin Nationaf /f Bank, which holds more than $200,000 in; contracts. Heatherley holds more than}ii?$400,000 in contracts. v Fair ... Mayor Pro Tern Dan Love received $150 Friday's forecast from utility rebate contract holders. Con­tributing were Nelson Pruett, listed as calls for clear skies holding contracts of more than $500,000, ;and mild tempera­and Barrow.-' tures. Friday's arid Nash gave$78.22 to Councilman Dr. Bud Drydeh's-campaigniuhd Saturday's high will Contributions to CouncEiinan lVwweil be 80. The low Friday Lebermann totalled $49. Milburn andnight will be in low 4'^" Pringle Brothers were;the firms involved.. Pringle was listed as holding, more than Visual Che *§»--Texan Staff MmH» Paul Caiopo 50s, Winds wiH be $400,000 in rebate contracts. ••'J. • --V1 R-U-IW-JJ northerly 5 to " Pringle also gave $12.50 to the lre--„r The human shape stands incongruous against the Karsh regularity of the downtown AmericanBank BuiURng.;^Snrvp;h­ election fund of Mayor Roy Butler. • VotejAbsentee * RICHARD JUSTICE » Pltin at the University, sub-female athletes in all aspects /i'V* Texan Staff Writer K mitted one of three proposals of athletic life. The University Council on to University President • Funds from the same \ the Status of Women and Stephenapurr for considera­sources as the men's > Minorities Thursday re-tion. programs, as needed to sup­;• emphasized its belief that its The other two reports were port individual athletic ac­>, subcommittee's recommen-submitted by the University tivities; v ^ dation on a program for Athletics Council and by In­The Department of Health, ^women's athletics is still the tramural Director Betty Education and Welfare, Smost.viable received by the Thompson (HEW) is preparing |§||University, .V.. . * The subcommittee's report guidelines dealing with dis­Jvjl; ; t*We still feel our subcorri^ calls for: 41 crimination in all aspects of $£$inittee report-is the most , • The full integration of University business, but they workable,-' Rose Ann Shorey, women's intercollegiate have not been released. chairperson of the council, athletics programs existing The council proposal differs '4 said, although "that's not to with men's programs in the from the Athletics Council v-a say it will be accepted." ateas of staff, facilities, recommendation in several £5'.f The council, an instrument equipment and financing. ways. . ,jof the Affirmative Action • Equal treatment for The Athletics Council proposal recommends es­tablishment of a Department Six Prostitution Arrests Made of Intercollegiate Athletics At Austin Massage Parlors for Women separate from the men's department, j ^ Six Austin masseuses were Eight more warrants were The Athletics Coimcil also' arrested Thursday afternoon issued by Municipal Judge recommends establishment of , on charges of prostitution. John Brady but have not yet a separate five-member Warrants were served on been served. athletics council for womeni the women at six massage Sgt. Jerry Culp, Austin appointed by the president. parlors: Caesar's Retreat, Police Department vice squad , Casa del Rey, jEdie's of officer, said Thursday the J. Neils Thompson, Hollywood, Both Sexes, Magic women have been under in­chairperson of the Athletics -Touch of Venus and vestigation for several Council, and Athletic Director ' Cleopatra's Cove. months by Sgt. Jim Baker. Darrell Royal contend that a BETTY School Board Position 1 BETTY BELIEVES: • BiLingual, Tri-CulturalPrograms now axisting in the AustinSchools should becontinued and broadened. Communieatign betweenstudents, «>aeher»< admHmatratsn, Beardand the Cammunity must be emphasized and determinedly sought out. • Teachers deserve salaries that reflect their professional status andincrease relativeto theris­ing cost of jiving. . „ • AISD Board terms of six years are toolong. Shorter terms would create BoardMembers who are more responsive to the needs and interests of the community. The School Board election is April 6, during spring break. VOTE ABSENTEE TODAY at University State Bank; 19th & Guadalupe. 8:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. , Betty is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin.For more information or to volunteer support, call 345-1312. Pd Pol Adv.byStudents for «Progressive. Rssponsib/e School Board.DaveOtt/lick co-ordinmtor. 1808 Wmst Ave No. 21.Printed atThe Dei­fy Texan TSP Bkfg.. University of Texas, Austin Texas. Ml MUST SIGN UP FOR EUROPE FLIGHTS BY 1 We Will Be Open • TODAY UNTIL 7 P.M. • TOMORROW UNTIL 3 P.M. Call 478-3471 Group Flights Before you make plans togo to VIA AMERICAN AND ICELANDIC JETS Europe, don't forget ybur Travelers' May 19-August 19 (93days)^ Check. That isthe typeof Travelers' May 25-July 25 (62days). Check that Merit Travelcan provide „ May 2&-July11(45days). for you — a thorough checklistof May 31-August21(83days). everything you need toknow before Dallas toLuxem-a«j"iaembarking for Europe.Since our staff bourg to Dallas Yw /O.UU has been to Europealmost as many times asHenry Kissinger, they know VIA DELTA AND ICELANDIC JETS , j ­all the ins-and-outs of European May19-August19 (93days). I I travel and will help,you plan your May 25-July25 (62 days). ^ trip.So beforeyou travelto Europe May 29-August15(75days). this year, first check with MeritTravel. May 30-August20 (83days).Here's howto get there. Houston to Luxem-• • bourg toHouston YuOc.< / / Charter Flight We can also help you with VIA CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS Student Bail Passes -Eurailpa; . May 30-July11. Dallas to Brussels— Eurailguide -CompleteSelection jof Maps < 'Paris to Dallas Auto Rental and Purchases -VW Adventures Charter flight exclusively for Uni­Lists of Hostels • Foreign Study Programs versity of,Texas students, faculty, Travel Insurance and staff and theiririuAediatefami­Please inquire about our KLM i\7 Grouplies. Pricebased ona pro rata share Space. •, of the total charter cost (183seats). Merit Travel The flight isaboard Capital Inter­national Airways, an American 2200 GuadalupeCertified Supplemental AirCarrier P.O. Box7040 whose demonstrateddependability hasenabled itto . Austin,Texas78712 To get to Europe, simply crossthe be a U S Govern.$329.00 A 1 mentcontractor. -. > street All flights oHeredincon|iucUo^^thILT^tadentGovernment Tours. w " r'i / Page 2 Friday, March 29 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN •^7 Disrupt system of equal funding is not workable because adequate finances do not exists—1—^-- STEVEtfOttLDi and Brown Berets — brown pants, Miles. •••*•« and network access chargesHowever, the original CYNTHIA HORN * t jshirts and berets. Others were;1 i They would not comment on for customer-owned-equip­ Athletics Council subcom­the demonstration, saying While City Council debated members of the Concerned ment are reduced from $35 to mittee report provided for Citizens of East Austin. • only that they would speak utility rebate-policy Thursday $6 per. month.) women's athletics funds by night, 25 young chicanos and ONE MAN with a badly before City Council. IN THE request before the 'raising the student services Swollen eye and foot stood in The group was seated at the blacks marched in a circle council Bell asked for permis­ fee. the center of the., circle. meeting, during a recess, but outside the meeting chanting sion to raise the equipmentThe com­when started iV Spurr was not 'available for slogans and carrying signs demonstrators, they to talk, rate ?5 and charge all comment on the recommen­protesting police brutality. plaining of police harassment Mayor Butler told them, We customers the additional 16 dations... u . Several of the protesters and beatings, called for the cannot hear these comments, . • access fee. _*we're, operating under the Bell's original prdposal for Open Meetings Law." a rate increase, scheduled to UNDER THE law, thecoun­ go into effect March J5, was City To SueLo-Vaca cil cjrti only hear items that postponed gfter City Atty. have been posted on the agen­ Don Butler threatened to sue Austin To Ask Millioni in Damages da. the company unless the com­ The council voted to allow By LARRY SMITH City officials plan to con­line coming into the city, but pany received council ap­ the group tospeak at thef April Texan Staff Writer tinue legal actions against Lo-Austin is buying "spot" gas. proval before instituting the 4 meeting. Austin definitely plans to Vaca, whose parent organiza­Thirty-five percent of the rate hike. * Earlier iirthe afternoon, the proceed with a suit against tion is Coastal States Gas city's electrical power now is group picketed Austin Police The rate increase is subject Lo-Vaca Gathering Co., the Producing Co., despite war­generated from fuel oil, while Department headquarters, to review by city staff city's chief supplier of natural nings from Texas Railroad the other 65 percent comes carrying signs saying "Stop members and Southwesterngas, Mayor Roy Butler said Commission Chairman Jim from natural gag. The large Brutality Now," "We've Got Bell at theend of June. Thein­ Thursday night. Langdon that a suit might use of fuel oil was forced by The proposed suit stems bankrupt Lo-Vaca and jeopar­the Lo-Vaca curtailments. Miles to Go" and "The crease will go into effect April Beatings, the Harassment, from Lo-Vaca's failure to dize the city's natural gas Lo-Vaca was granted a rate 15. • the Killings Must Stop Now." • i il fulfill its contractual supply. • increase by the Railroad Corn-In other business,, coun-Consideration of agreements with the city. At Butler, however, disagreed emission, but Butter said since cilmen a amendments to the gas rate present, Austin is under a 50 with Langdon. "As We unders-the rate hike he has been un-promise agreed on com-ordinance, a fee to allow golf or­percent curtailment from the tand it, and as the city at-.able to detect significant im- Southwestern Bell to add a 15-dinance and Brackenridge company, but at times the torney (Don Butler) advises provement in the natural gas on clinic cent per minute charge on Hospital's policycurtailment has been 100 per­me, even if the company goes situation. mobile phone rates, while the cards were postponed. cent. bankrupt they, as a public "I don't know what the utility, have to continue doing amount of damage will be business," Butler said. determined as, but our suit "We don't really think Farenthold Suit will be in the multimillion bankruptcy is much of a­ tion." Needham said he was accepting campaign con­ dollar bracket," Butler said. possibility," the mayor con­idee Thi not contacted beforehand by* tributions in connection with a "We feel like and I per­tinued. "If the company did go postponed Thursday the April fund-raising dinner on Oct.30,sonally believe that it is our bankrupt, though, they would 8 trial date for Frances Jones and has received no before he had named a cam­duty to protect the people we be subject to appropriate Farenthold's lawsuit against notice of the postponement. Gov. Dolph Briscoe. Needham said he hopes a paign manager. Briscoe had serve," Butler said, giving his Regulatory authorities." reason for the suit. ' '' 'Lo-Vaca owns the only gas The Austin American-new trial date will be set soon named Hay as manager for- Statesman reported Jones has so the trial will be over before the event before Oct. 30, but sent letters to attorneys on the May 4 Democratic the Farenthold suit contends both sides explaining the case primary election. this was ,not equivalent toEASTER YOGA RET could not be tried that early Mrs. Farenthold alleges designating a campaign leauac oneof the-defendanta> -BriBGofe violated state law by manager -: ^ April9-Jess Hay, was not served Swami Satchidananda notice of the suit until Thurs­ Carrascolendas To Air day. Hay has until April 22 to will be there file an answer and appear in Ingram, near Kerrville court. Shows on National TV When contacted Thursday Toys, dolls and a shoemaker danced and swirled in the Applications at Union Information Desk night, Raymond Needham, an square of a Mexican village as the locally produced, attorney for Mrs. Farenthold, Call Ed: 477-7371 Mexican-American children's television program said he was "surprised and Carrascolendas hosted an on-set parfy for its National Ad­ 'disappointed at the judge's ac­ visory Board and 150 to 200 local guests, Thursday night. The party was the first activity in a two-day meeting. Fri­day, the board, which represents Latino communities all WHAT FAMOUS TRIO CUT over the country, will preview two stories which will be mcrown ujlt CUSSES WITH A SWORD, aired nationally over the Public Broadcasting System in ^Fa6ric, ytci SPOKE FLUENT FRENCH, rAlt Kcftu September. COULD CHARM A HAREM, SjxciaCizjHPj in-'j-tawcuuuv'FaSricg The two stories are part of a 30-segment series and Repre­ AND SOUNDS LIKE A sent a change in format for Carrascolendas. CANDY BAR? Make a Cowboy Shirt. (Or our seamstress Previously, the program was segmented and did not havea Will make it.) Best selection of cotton HINT: IT'S NOT SHA NA NA story line, but the new series resembles a musical comedy prints in town. $.99-$1.99/yd. All colors and will be "the only national children's series that will be & sizes. Pearl snaps. completely story-lined on PBS," Dr. Dave Berkman, qf the Owned & Run by UT Student „SV3313MSnW 33VHI 3H1„ JO NOISV3A Federal Office of Education which funds Carrascolendas," PI, MSN 3H1 S.ll -H3MSNV said. Z100 Guadcduoe Berkman also pointed out'that the new format aims at the TVetf io&igi \S ~$76-5$05 total Latino community which includes Puerto Ricans and Cubanos as well as chicanos. The Co-Op General Books 12 Week Tour of Department7 IV Proud To Present Soviet Union and Eastern Europe Includes Greece & Scandinavia Volkswagen Bus Camping Trip A SPECIAL GROUP June 10, 1974 to August 28, 1974 ' -Approximate Cost: $1,700 (indudes everything except transportation from Austin to Brussels) OF PAPERBACKS General Books Second Floor 3 hours of academic credit available. 25< For More Information, Contact Immediately: ^ J Gale Weber J 471-3607 or 477-1668 Largest Selection Of One Hour Free Parking Business and Technical )f Sponsored by the U.T. Slavic Dept. • With $2 Purchase Reference Books In Austin Or More. Drug Specials March 28, 29, 30 Suave NyQuil Shampoo 6 oz 16 oz. $1.69 Value 99' Value *1.02 JUST ARRIVED! 55* CO-OP PLANT SHOP • Brut Apartment Shop Tampax Second Floor Aerosol Besides houseplants, like ferns, Super 40's violets and begonias. Deodorant we carry soil, $1.98 Value 7 01. and plant food $1JO Value as well. *1.29 Bring This Ad in 93* And Receive Colgate Edge Off Toothpaste Any Purchase Shaving Of Plants with toothbrush Cream This Offer Good >1.18 Value 7 ox. " p-Through ~-VZK -F -— S—— $1.25 Value " April 13 75c One Hour Free m { Parking With $2 Purchase On* Hour M Supply Dept. Ina With PurchcwOf : Or More,; $3 Or Mm. Street Floor . , i* e H.: i >• ""-A k Kress,McGarr End Terms I M * 1M' \ " "v -5®! leaders ViewliYear in Retrospect (Editor's Note: The' departmental chairperson A room and facilities at The political duo both felt a ' third of a three-part seriei v '•One year is not' long committees, "the-;alth center," he said.he said.s||,.!--sag little nostalgia *t knowing University health '^©n student politics reveals * Enough to accomplish all you Day Care Center, Consumer Concerning projects thetwii Friday was their last day in /|the political but candid set out to do, and this hurts. Referral, Tenants Council, felt they had made the most office , ^sides of Sandy Kress, Stu­But in the time we had, Ithink Union Building tours and a headway in, McGarr said he Kress said, "I know I'll feel dent Government presi-we accomplished a great tutorial project in East-. felt most satisfaction with his at a loss for something to do."dent and Cappy McGarr, , deal," McGarr said. „ Austin. 1 --* work on the. Day Care Center "We'll probably start play-,vice-president, on their "There's so much left to do* In speaking on spring while Kress felt it was his ing shuffleboard at thelast day in office.) especially in the area of apriorities at which no major • work with minority recruit* Longhorn Tavern,'' McGarr , By BOBBIE CRISWELL academic; reform,''. Kress advances were made, the meat. ----joked. " ---­--Texan Staff Writer |added. -vice-president admitted his The University System Kress said he will be goingLooking back over an issue-, Although not all campaign inability in getting abortions Board of Regents' March 15 back to law school to finish upfilled year at the University, priorities werecompleted, the allowed in jthe Student Health decision to place Student his work there, while McGarr Student Government Presi­two felt satisfaction in the •.-Center."'' / V-^ ^ Government on an optional said he is waitingto hear from,dent Sandy Kress and Vice-projects they had helped to "Abortion was a priority I check-off basis greatly both the Lyndon Baines John­President Cappy McGarr said get started such as the ran my campaign on. Imagine bothered Kress and McGarr. son School of Public Affairs Thursday their only regret Foreign Studies, Referral me, little, short-haired, con­, "It's not going to hurt us so and the University law school was that they did not have Council, restructuring of Stu-servative McGarr. But much financially; I don't for acceptance. * <• -!^, more time to accomplish dent, Government com­nothing, could be done on the think anything will be cut, but The president felt assuredeverything they would have mittees, getting students on issue because of the lack of it's essential that Student that he would remain in someGovernment represent all aspect of politics in thefuture. students," Kress said. 1 . "It's a.kind of living play, "They can't put a price on and I've always loved it." Student Government decisions/' Will Student Although McGarr said he Government . only represent secretly wants to become a the number who check to pay famous country and Western fate Appeal for it? Who will then be allow­singer, he said he would also By SCOTT TAGLIARINO Daily gave 'unequivocal and uncon-ed to vote in Student Govern­ "definitely stay in politics. It Texan Staff Writer troverted testimony, but that Fleming ment elections?" McGarr is something new every dayThe Student, Court will decide Friday neither approved of nor ratified the questioned. and extremely exciting." whether to hear an appeal of the Election attempted improper influence. Commission's decision finding Student In their argument before the commission,Government President-elect Frank Fleming the"complainants claimed that Fleming wasnot guilty of administrative coercion in an ...guilty of coercion with Ms,. Mayne because he alleged, bribe of Cactus E^tor-fciz^a^^^:­ |*§l3f ' eftheFKnew about tMpurported bribe or fail­ Complainants Randy Burgess, Mary Bird­ ed to take affirmative action when he did song, Mary Walsh, Neile Wolf and' Leslie learn about it. Simpson filed their petition for appeal By BILL DAWSON later than 1875. Wednesday, and originally the court was to Speaitfog before Bruce Goranson, the in­Thirteen members of "Our group questions thedecide Thursday. vestigator, Ms. Mayne said she did not dis­, American Indians Now Tex-significance of the exhibit, as However, Chief Justice Lonnie Schooler agree with Ms. Daily's wording of their Feb. said Thurday that the other justices were not 3 telephoneconversation, but only the "inter­ans (AINT) met Thursday well as its research and pretation." with .Texas Memorial educational value," M& Echo- familiar enough with the case then to make a decision and that they would meet with the In her testimony March 21, Ms. Daily Museum Director Dr. William Hawk said. * Newcomb, but no agreement Newcomb said, "I am sym­petitioners Friday to hear their arguments. stated that Ms. Mayne called her and said, was reached on the Indian pathetic with American In­In a written decision released Wednesday, "Liz, I have a deal for you if you help Frank group's request that the grave dian problems, but* I don't Fleming got olfleted president,-! rap assure of a Southern Plains Indian be agree that the exhibit isoffefi­ was exerted on Ms. Daily by Kathleen or guarantee your admittance in the Lyndon removed from display in the sive. . Mayne, a Kinsolving head resident, 2) Ms. Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs." museum. ' "I find it no more offensive Optional Fee AINT member Holly Echo-than any other human skeletal Hawk said the group finds the material on display," he add­exhibit offensive, specifically" ed. ... because of the recency of the Newcomb admitted the ex­ ing remains. A museum publica­hibit is "not particularly a tion by Newcomb dates the good one," but said itsBy MARTY PRIMEAU explaining that the regents Santiesteban. skeleton on display ascertain­deficiency is not based uponResponding to the termina­handled the situation without • Harris County — Kay ly after 1858, and probably no its offensiveness. tion of guaranteed funding of consulting any of the student Bailey, Joe Allen, Ray Student Government, The agencies involved," Kress Barnhart, Jim Clark, Jack Daily Texan "and Senior said. ! Ogg. JOSEPH BLINDERMAN, M.D. Cabinet by the University "It will be a great help if we , • Lubbock County — R.B. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING System Board of Regents, Stu­can convince people that we McAlister. OF HIS OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE dent Government is asking need assistance and that we'd , • Midland County — Tom OF students to elicit support for like to see the decision about Craddick, Pete Snelson. mandatory funding in their fees given to the\students • Nueces County — Mike PSYCHIATRY hometowns during spring themselves." McKinnon, Dewitt Hale, Joe break. Kress suggested students Salem. . At a Wednesday rally on the unfamiliar with their Other key legislators in­GROUP & INDIVIDUAL TRANSACTIONAL Main Mall, more than 200 hometown legislators should clude: Price Daniel Jr. PSYCHOTHERAPY ANALYSIS students volunteered to con­call local newspapers for their (Liberty County), Dave Allred local (Wichjta County), Bill Mun- tact ex-students, names. BY APPOINTMENT 2200 guadalu*e. «uite 221 newspapers and legislators as Below is a list of key son (Grayson County) and 476-«ft7 weir as parents and friends, legislators in larger counties: Dan Kubiak (Milam County). Student Government Presi­• Bexar County — Glenn dent Sandy Kress said Thurs­Kothmann, Frank . Lombar­day. dino, Nelson Wolff. "We'd like students to tell • Dallas County — Bill as many' people as possible Braecklein, Ike Harris, Ray JESTER CENTER what is going on here by giv­Hutchison, Chris Semos. ing the history of the issue and • El Paso County — Tati '"STORE ..J WANT TO TALK Your ON CAMPUS Student Store TO YOUR RADIO? Weekdays 8:00'til 6:00 *' Saturdays 9:00 'til 1:00 DIAL 471-4711 HEAR FOfl GENERATIONS TO COME THIS • BLUEBOOKS • COSMETICS SUNDAY NIGHT AT 6:00 P.M. • SPIRALS • RECORDS THE FIRST HOUR IS A PANEL DISCUSSION ON REVISING THE TEXAS CONSTITUTION. • SNACKS • MAGAZINES THE SECOND HOUR IS ALL YOURS. CONVENIENT FOR SHUTTLE BUS RIDERS! OUR PANEL: W. PAGE KEETON JOHN HENRY FAULK JOE B. FRANTZ Backpacking (or ROBERT L. MARION >5.00 ~ RALPH W. YARBOROUGH (It's a shoulder bag, tool) • EMMETTE S. REDFORD A great looking canvas tote that is a back-pack LLOYD DOGGETT and with a quick snap of the straps converts to a MODERATOR shoulder bag. Water proof lining...available RICHARD GOODMAN in assorted colors $5.00 i SUNDAY 6:00 P.M K a*: ^ PUBLIC RADIO • THlE UNIVERSITY . OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN 4 * PRODUCED UNDER A GRANT FROM THE TEXAS COMMITTEE FORTHE HUMANITIES AND THE NATIONAU ENppVp*f MT FOR -mis UilM AMITIESTHE HUMANITIES. ri1' ^ ON-THE-DRAG, 2406 GUADALUPE' t Safrtf*rClatosClaUs extended the1 Christmas ''•^yttii method"1' Md (it at&tains, season, the "Age of Miracles" is with us ,several times a month) and headed north. Still and I ain't gonna' be poor no more ... :pwAt Dallas, the temperature dropped to maybe. 20 degrees, and the Ford'^heater went on ',From the Panhandle prairie came an ^lke- ^ answer to one of my 2,000 prettily printed jv-p'i wawas still thawing out when the inter resumes. • view started. The answer fell short of offering a job, "We were impresrsd by your resume,'^ but to a paranoid graduating senior, any the editor said, "especially the section on.*,; answer helps feed the hope we live on/ foreign reporting." '4f-t • Earlier, with reality fast closing, I had * I had trouble explaining that SeetioiipS joined other journalism seniors and flood­referred to a report I filed for my Boy; ed the' nation's publishers with enough Scout troop on Boys Town in NuevoW, self-serving propaganda to pink thecheeks Laredo. of a professional braggart. The editor also was pleased to see I had ill' For the most part, our efforts yielded won an "Outstanding Reporter" award. '%>. '•mk only extra income for printers, added "Which organisation gave .you thfsr ' igjwi •• burdens for postmen and boredom for award?" he asked. * Hp publishers. "The Avenue F Block Party,;/ But the book preaches,, "Thou shalt Association,' " I aswered. ar ? make out a resume." Gradually* my blown-up resume; .'' And so, in thousands of. newspaper of­decreased in size. , fices, mailrooms were glutted with a spr­"Exactly what is your experience, Mr,: ' ing blizzard of printed hope. Aulds?" asked the editor. „ w "I watch television and write columns-Most choked to death in ash cans. for The Daily Texan," I told him. ^ .§£»: ' But "! had a reply; someone out there "Great, you're hired," he responded^' wanted to talk. "At first we were afraid it would take too.. The third day of spring I leaped into out long to retrain you." TElgSayMfG&nISirfe By TOM HALLIBURTON installed in January." if--Local 1548 (the _TEI driyers' ScottflanPa^mioR£ v ^ V f *Jk£ l liit 'it 1*0 M and every situation." You can't makepeo­ '4>y CAM DUNCAN 1$. ' ple like going hungry, but you can try toNelson Rockefeller is coming to Austin keep them from doing anything about it. Monday and Tuesday; He will head the From 1970to 1972, the UnitedStates sold National Commission on Critical Choices. in three years over half as much arms to Thestated purpose of this commission is Latin America as in the previous 20years to "identify the critical choices ... which ($258 million in three years as opposed towill confront Americans ... and to deter­$447 million for the preceding 20 years). mine thp objectives this nation could And Texas has its infamous bomb school uook;*r achieve by 1985..." 4U.itttiC.WtL in Los Fresnos for Latin American police. wiMSWtMSg-. Rockefeller is an old hand at commis-. The countries most interested in having *»>/ sion work like this. For example, he policemen trained to make bombs are all produced the Rockefeller Report on the countries in which right-wing terrorism Americas for Nixon in 1969. After touting and para-police death squads have been a Standard Oil Company Latin America, Rockefeller and his ex­chronic problem, such as Guatemala, perts put their heads together.and Brazil and Uruguay. recommended: 1) the UnitedStatesshould HOW DID ROCKEFELLER justify his step up military and police aid to Latin-recommendation? He said: "One impor­ CE6# America, and 2) the United States should tant influence counteracting this overlook the undemocratic, repressive simplistic Marxist approach is the ex­nature of governments when it, .is posure to the fundamental achievements "pragmatic" to support them, and 3) the of the U.S. way of life that many of the United States should, of course, smooth military from the other American coun­the way for more U.S. private investment. tries have received through the military aUUED The commission even threw in some fine training programs which the United States r sounding proposals to improve the lot of conducts in Panama and the United Chemical the everyday working people. States." Is learning how to blow arms and legs off with your own. homemade bomb Bank THE COMMISSION KNEW about the one of the "fundamental achievements of reality of conditions in Latin America, as the U.S. way of life?" " they reported: "Increasing frustration is As part of his proposal for increased evidenced over political instability, military aid, one of Rockefeller's most THEEQUITABLE inttiv^oM limited educational and economic oppor­important recommendations was that thetunities, and the incapacity or slowness of^ "United States cannof renege on its com­existingrgove'rnmental structures to solve" mitment to a better life for all the people THE CHA8E MANHATTAN BANK the people's problems.'1 What to do about of the hemisphere because of moral dis­it? More,, guns for the generals. Why? agreement with regimes which the people "Subversive" forces throughout the themselves did not establish and do not Rockefeller's Critical Choices: who decides, who controls? hemisphere are quick to exploit ... each control." Translated into plain English, the United States shouldn't be squeamish^ about supporting repressive dictatorships when they back up U.S. interests. IT SHOULD BE pointed out that Rockefeller and his business associates s new By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN lineup, but then one of the characteristics Kissinger may find it pleasing to call can do more than make recommendations. 1974, The Washington Post-King both men share is an excessive love of anyone who doesn't believe in them They hold the positions of power that onn- Features Syndicate secrets. Though change has been masked "isolationjgtg," hut it ic th«y wrhn hnwo­trol a country's credit lines. For instance, WASHINGTON -The President lis -Dy much talk about o ur Li tile-lockedthemselves up intheKremlin, in­ look at George Woods: He served onamok among us, roving from city to city, grandchildren living in peace, the truth is creasingly cutting themselves off from Rockefeller's Report on the Americas,alternately playing with a yo-yo and that our pro-Russian policies as yet have our allies and trading partners. and is back again, this time in Austin,denouncing pur European friends and netted us zilch. For five years, we have treated them to helping Rockefeller make the "critical allies. Dr. Kissinger is alleged to be There is detente but there is no disarma­an unending number of snubs, public choices for America." He is also a former arranging forEgypt's best belly dancer tQ.-' ment. In addition, there have been a series ^dressings down and bolt-from-the-blue president of the World Bank and avisit us. And t'iwitchanah, the chap v^itfiT of not ungenerous military, technological declarations. The long-needed reconcilia­member of the Rockefeller-controlled the thuggish penS|nality who has taken and economic concessions by us which tion with China was'serious damaged by First Boston Corp. To keep him company,Chuck Colson's place as top White House have not been matched by the Russians. Kissinger's failure to consult Tokyo before Rockefeller has brought along thedirector brute, is arguing that our nontax paying, What's happened is that matters have he did it; our relations with everybody of The Chase Manhattan Bank, which thenoncrook shouldn't be canned because we been allowed to develop so that Nixon's were damaged by two dollar devaluations Rockefellers also largely own. need his foreign policy leadership. and Kissinger's domestic political interest without consultation with anybody; and Even the most fine sounding ofUnder Nixon and Kissinger, that policy in detente now far exceeds our national in­ is more than understood. Kissinger's oil-policy speech in London Rockefeller's proposals, such as those for oftefrprajsed terest. Those two are holding on with one reinforced the impression that our the improvement of agriculture, turn ugly "The fact is that today no one really last argument, namely that only they are secretary of state's strongest suit is the when their practice is exposed. The knows for sure what the foreign policy of clever, knowledgeable and adept enough weakest kind of press agentry. Rockefeller Foundation in a recent yearthis Administration actually is," writes to bring home world peace. This gives the granted $164,483 to Mexico, for an Inter­ the highly regarded, conservative, Colum­Russians an opportunity to extract real Right now Kissinger is at work paving national Maize and Wheat Improvementbia University Prof. Zbigniew Brzezinski concessions from us in return for the the way for another Nixon visit to Center. But the Mexican president of the in the spring number of Foreign Policy. seeming face of friendship. Moscow, one obviously timed to help him World Council ofrArid Zones complained However, you don't have to throw right-Concurrently, the falling apart of stave off impeachment. More than ever, recently in the Mexico City newspaper, handed to see — even with what the good relations with Europe and Japan has then, Nixon will be liable totrade realcon­Kissinger has done in the Middle East — progressed from vaguely disturbing to a cessions in return for the Communists' Excelsior, that "technocrats of transnational companies and that he and his boss peaked some time point of serious concern. Nixon and help in saving his job. organizations likethe Rockefeller Founda­ ago. That the secretary of state is still ti„on underhandedly manipulatedescribed as a genius in the public prints technicians of the secretary of agriculture can be traced to journalism's continuing Critical choices1? as a weapon against (Mexican) presiden­ reluctance to criticize those with whom it i You're not making them tial proposals ... and carry off the wheatbreaks bread. p The Texan invites people from the University community to stay behind and the Nobel Prize and leave us hungry." Yet while Kissinger stills criticism and Jjj for Monday, iand Tuesday of the spring break • in honor of Nelson He was referring to the fact that the first discourages analysis by answering his H Rockefeller's "critical choices" fest. Unfortunately, UT students have not improved wheat strains developed in Mex­RSVPs instead of the hard questions, it is I 'been officially invited this time around. ico were sold to Russia and other coun­ becoming clear that he and Nixon are Criiical events include the Attica film showings at Friday noon. Universi­ tries, while Mexico is forced operating on the proposition that ty "Y." 2 p,m. in Union Building 317, 4:30 p.m. at the Soul Factory. 1700 E. to import half a million tons of wheat. Washington and Moscow can, should and §§ 12th St.; and 8 p.m. at the Friends Meeting House, Washington Square and Facts like the Mexican case are notmust jointly rule the world. .'Ust Street. Rockefeller the Neither of them has come out in public mere coincidence. has J| The demonstration against the Rockefeller conference starts at 6 p.m., largest financial empire in the world toand admitted that they ..are attempting § Monday, Peace Fountain. See you there. worry about. The men he has selected tosuch a historic turn in the world power help him in Austin in making America's critical choices reflect this fact: Robert Anderson, chairman, Atlantic-Richfield (controlled by Rockefeller's Standard Oil); William O. Baker, president, Bell Telephone Labs, Inc. (Baker is'also a trustee of Rockefeller University); firing line On and The Texan William S. Paley, chairman, CBS, and director, First Boston Corp. (both con­To the editor: stitutions (such as the University com­mission has announced that it is inviting trolled by Rockefeller interests); andIn the Daily Texan and Student Govern­ munity) and that therefore individual "the broadest possible public par­ Woods, financial adviser ment funding controversy, the essential a Rockefeller liberty must be integrated with collective ticipation," although all of its events here and business associate. point seems to me to be that the entire responsibility. Otherwise "individual are closed to the public (except by TV). IN SPITE OF talk of a "better life for University community benefits from The liberty" becomes merely "individual The April Fools Day demonstration. all" the main concern of men in such rolesDaily Texan and the activities of Student greed." Remember the lonely children in Brazil,­is "a bigger profit for the Rockefellers." Government. It is impossible for any in­Dean Beebe Chile, Greece, Iran. Soruth Vietnam, South The Rockefellers have literally hundreds dividual at the University, regardless of Africa and other neighborhoods where an-of millions of dollars invested in Latin whether or not he or she reads The Texan Congrats tiRockefeller demonstrations have been America, in everything from poultryand votes in elections, to be so isolated To the editor: cancelled. Rockefeller is sc powerful that breeding to Standard Oil subsidiaries. from the life, activity and experience of The four people the Texan chose to en­he unites the Austin left — 18 Small wonder Rockefeller would recom­the University community as an in­dorse on March 26 for the Austin School organizations of students and workers; mend that U.S. taxpayers pay to preserve tegrated whole, as to be able to claim to Board have all worked many years in this black, white and tan. This is a beginning; the status quo there, keeping generals hap­receive no benefit from The Daily Texan's community for progressive education, and come and see it if you can. py and financially solvent at the cost ofand Student Government's participation in their records in that area cannot be Hal Womack democracy and basic human rights. that community. questioned. Even if one is interested only in the By writing the editorial in so flippant a prestige and marketability of a UT manner Steve Russell may have dis­ THE DAILY TEXAN degree, one is indebted to these in­couraged a large turnout in the University Stvrfanf M.vrspapar at Th« Unlnnlty mt T.a«s at AvtNn stitutions for their contributions to the community. If that vote is small, Steve conditions of intellectual life on which the will have elected the opposition including EDITOR Michael Eaikin MANAGING EDITOR John Yemma University's prestige and the marketabili­one right-wing Republican woman and the ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS ty of its degrees depends. It may be a joke registered, lobbyist for the antiabortion Betsy Hall. Mark Sims to speak of UT as a "University of the first Right to Life organization. NEWS EDITOR Susan Winterrineer class."' but without the vigilance channel­Congratulations, Steve. ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR Ken McHam ed through The Texan and Student Govern­Ed Wendler AlMS£MENTS EDITOR Dailey SPORTS EDITOR ment this joke would be turned into a 2605 Westover Road Danny Robbins mockery by the regents and administra­PHOTO EDITOR Jay Miller. tion who continually flirt* with AAlIp Attica ISSUE STAFF black-listing. To the editor: City Editors.. BJ Hefner, Pam ClarkAnd even if one is interested only in hav­WHAT IT IS,... Is a good movie. Free. General Reporters Richard Fly, Li/ida Fannin, Bill Garland,ings g£K>d timewhile purchasing a degree -Today. Last chance the schedule is in ' Scott Tagliarino, Cherry Joneswith Mom and Dad's money, the policy of the box. Eighty minutes in color on the At- News Assistants David Hendricks, Gary Edward Johnsonin loco parentis stands ready to return. lica prison rebellion and massacre of Sept. ,T • Rodolfo Resendez Jr., Cindy Horn The relaxation of administrative regula­9 to 13, 1971. Interviews with Rocky, with Editorial Assistants joy Howell, Cam Duncan, Steve Russelltion of student life is a product of effort police commanders, with prisoners — Assistant Amusements Editor w .. Laura McDonough that was publicized and organized for some of whom still live. Live footage of Associate Sports Editor Herb Hollandeffectiveness through The Texan and Stu-the slaughter. Rave reviews from the New Makeup Editor:...,,.., Sylvia Moreno .dent Government. Remember the struggle York State Supreme Court panel — "an Wire Editor James Dunlap for beer in the Union orgy of brutality!" The close-ups are Copy Editors Robert Fulkergon, Army Armstrong, Pat Dryden Because everyone benefits, it seems better in "The Exorcist,"otherwise this is John Byers reasonable that The Texan and Student where the pain really is. -— Pho.tograph'ers. .v.,v ; ;.7—7. ... Andy SieveritiSn. David Woo Government fees be mandatory. No doubt This Nelson Rockefeller, who sent in the some students would like to'avoid paying death squads, is ^he man who hired John delivery.a|»d should be made In TSf* Opinions expressed in Th* Daily Texan are those of Ihe wlitor or the writer of the article and are not necetsarily Min ding 3,200. <471-52441 and diiplay advertising in TSP lor these benefits, but this desire to get Foster Dulles and Dean Rusk as Uitwe' of the IJitiventiiy administration or the Board of- Building 3 210 U7I-1MSI , something for nothing is" no reason for presidents of the Rockefeller Foundation Heiwnls. 1 " Thi' lJaiTy Texan, a student newtpaper at The University , Tlic national advertising repreaenUUve of .The D*ily leaking the fees optional. . and Henry Kissinger as his salaried ad­of Te»a* at Austin, is published by Texas Student TVxan is National Kducattoflrf Advtrtisini; Service. Inc.. " Conservatives" continually argue in-viser on foreign policy. Presidents and I'liblirutions. Drawer I). tlniversity Slation, Austin. Tex 360 l^xington Ave,, New York. N.V., 10017. favor of "fairness" ahd "justice."If those ,pther politicians come and go, but the im­The Daily Texansubscribes tothe Associated Pre**. The 7*712 Th<-Umly Texan in published Monday. Tuesday Wednesday, Thursday and Fridayexcept holiday and exam* Tl,ne". .. N***Service; United Press International were in fact the criteria applied here tliep perial war policies continue. The center of poriuds Augus! through May. Second-clan-postaie paid si and AHliatt News Servlci', TherTexan I* a member of jl*. Ausltn. Tex, ­ the fees would remain mandatory. The the imperial web! is the Rockefeller famir Awwiatwl CrtllORlaje JJcetf,llh«. Southwest JourtMUlMn'.. Mrw rontnbutiora wiil be accepted bv telephone (47f. J 'WigrvxK aikl the Texas DaUv Newspaper Auoclatiun, criers of individual liberty" always seem 45W>. at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications to miss the point that they already par-llulkling, basement floori or at the news laboratory KiK'M'img stations foMhe newspaperaft!»t 24th ir Selim The piippet master is here is he really 'I omniunicatlon Huildine A4I.1A> InAMiri*. "WrciiK tun N. Uurnet Kaad. t*ke Austin Boulevard * ticipate in and benefit from collective in­alive? Come and"see. After all the com­ t.. " IrSl Quest viewpoint <• H£ ;«| ,w« ' .• -i 38 yf #iS IffiPiiiiS Raza ernative •HPBy ANGELICA MARTINEZ Russell condemned the county af­ tion. Had they offered to, it article; '-'La Raza Shuffle? Gutierrez would fear appor­Inowinfcly acceptW an tributiontor^uiuz^campaign the suspicion that his article is The Raza Unida Party in Russell need not fear what he tion in the hometown he has chairman for having refused fidavit that did not follow a$ from the Republican Party would neyje^Jhave. beep ...simply a rationalization for Texas remains a viable tool alleges, the resemblance of served diligently to reform, the opposition*!; application to prescribed. This is an offense was brought up in a meeting accepted. •• 5rejecting RUP. Our act has for effecting change political­RUP to that two-headed when even nationally he gar­be placed on the ballot. Arti­for which he could possibly be off the convention floor. A But Russell put these been a clean success. I hope ly and socially — change rele­" monster in Texas politics, the nered the chairmanship by cle 6.02, paragraph (C) in the fined ?1,000. Onecan Aardly promise was made to publicly charges aside and complained the audience is, too. We mustvant.to distinct communities Democratic Party and tie nearly a3-1 margin. As for the 1974-1975 Texas election laws criticize his decision. > \* r'H .condemn McGovern if such a about McGovern's defeat. He unite and commitourselves to and of great benefit to the ghost Republican Party; county chairman, he wasplac­the form specifically states donation were made.'' This implies that RUP figured in reforming Texas politics andgeneral populace. This is in It is near the ridiculous to ed in* a damned-if-you-do, that the loyalty affidavit must', ^ La Raza Libre is the current .Was reported to the. GOP by his failure. One comes to the social conditions. If not, well,response to Steve Russell's assume that Jose Angel damned-if-you-don't position. adhere to. He would have name under which "the dissi-, Mvarious observers." Know-* conclusion that RUP is finally now that Briscoe's campaign dent faction" is seeking to ing what has been disclosed being regarded as significant. manager is official, let him break up RUP. In the past about the sabotage of the And this is something that the chalk up Russell's article ''as more firing line four years that group has un­ other majar party- by most progressive a campaign contribution." dergone four name changes, Republicans, would con­Angelica is former Democrats most of it not progressives feel much Martinez co- seem strange if the flict about. What offended me ; ordinator of Students for Raza them, realizing finally that Republicans themselves most were not the charges Unida Party. . they needed to work internally Clarifying perpetrated these rumors. brought out. I am all too hap­(Editor's note: The to chip away atRUPstrength. Especially since this alleged py that an opportunity to dis-editorial on primary voting To the editor: La Raza Libre represents ministration of running the that Right On represents as: Bauer house, Lutcher promise was supposed-to have pel them has arisen. It is that did not mention RUP because some of the monied interests This letter is intended as a school board instead of the op­more of a cross-section of stu­Center, a paved West Mall, been made "off the conven­catchy, sarcastic headline-all Travis County candidates response to people who are dent opinion new carpet of that have never been satisfied posite. Shewill alsospeak and than does The $300,000 for a tion floor." Well, RUP does used in the article that makes In that party are unopposed, with RUP reforms. Among voting in the Austin School vote against the l'arge Texan? /> turf, $6 millionfor a new pool, not have to be paid to con­me flinch. and therefore they will haveBoard election and question bureaucracy that has grown Are not Messrs. Fraser and ad nauseum. Aren't these the some of the interests con­demn either party when they Even in the article, "At our no primary. As for the sadly nected with it is Del Monte. the reason for voting for June up in the school administra­Meadows actually incensed, issues to which we should ad­ act in complete disregard for own peril," Russell failed to predictable charge of racism, Since-RUP's conception 27 Karp in Place 4 because of" tion. Her background as a un­as Mr. Eakinpointed out in his dress ourselves? Are. you not the. grassroots' interests. count the Raza Unida Party in I stand on my record: Four employes have been fired for what they have read or heard. ionist, teacher and political editorial, by the liberalstands concerned about these, or am Malek himself responds, "Do with the other twin parties of years with the Student Non­ working with RUP. Now First, there is a need to activist gives her the taken by both groups,in direct I to equate your silence with Manuel Espinoza, a Del you think we should do this? I„ Texas that will be holding Violent Co-Ordinating Com­answer the charges leveled background knowledge to opposition to the right-wing tacit APPROVAL? am doubtful. How could .the primaries. Why did he choose mittee, co-founder of the Monte administrative trainee, fi *against her this past Monday know what the problems are YAF and Right On, instead of conclude with the GOP contribute to a rival can­to ignore us? After years of Committee to Oppose'Racism 4 has filed against Gutierrez in regards to her previous and the aggressiveness for the the forced taxation imposed following: In the past, in- didate? In addition, too cheap, being exposed to such abuse I and Apartheid, seven years in and remains on the payroll. political activities. solutions necessary. I urge on us, as they would have the tramurals, intercollegiate Raza unida's principals cannot help but detect an un­support groups for the United •She did support Ralph you to vote for June Karp. record read? I submit that athletics, the Union-and the But all this is something should be worth more than derlying racist slur. Russell Farm Workers, summer In­Yarborough and not Barefoot , David Butts their primary motive is very classrooms we meet in, RUP in Crystal City must con­that." Certainly they thought may even claim that some of tern with the Law Students Sanders in the Democratic political, and I think perhaps were supported by State of tend with. It is time to bare about it, wanted to, but they his best friends are Mexican-Civil Rights Research Coun­primary. this is nearer the truth. * Texas required student ser­the white liberal face of his did not make any contribu-Americans, but will not abate cil. -S.R.) • Ido not know whoshe sup­Contradictions Let the record be set vices fees, building use fefes, ' mask. The Raza Unida Party ported for governor in 1972, To the editor: straight.for if Messrs. Fraser etc. Do you not also voice dis­in Travis County is more but knowing her antipathy to Re: the Guest Viewpoint, and Meadows actually stand approval of these, or do they maligned by the chargesof its the Connally wing of the Tex­"A Regental Act of Equity," for political freedom, as they instead win your approval link to the Republican Party NEW HOUSING POLICY!! as Democratic Party, and her by YAFers James Meadows purport, then, do they also because of their very nature* and Watergate,than editorials opposition to Will Davis, I and Keith Fraser; also, the favor regental action cutting not being able todisagree with on "shenanigans" in Crystal doubt that she supported editorial "Come Off It, YAF," off mandatory funds to the your opinions? City. The white press will con­DEXTER HOUSE Barnes. The''statement that by Michael Eakin. health center, the shuttle Fred Goodwin tinue to attempt to discredit she supported Barnes cannot After reading the-Guest buses, etc. The Daily Texan Freshman, Natural Sciences RUP. Once and for all these 1103 W. 24th be proven and is based on Viewpoint-presented on 'Mon­and Student Government are charges must be denied to the hearsay. day last, and through speaking services, utilities, if you will, satisfaction of the public. The • The most damaging with Mr. Fraser myself, I equally available to all, and Greetings. memoranda,in question is not • -• OCCUPANCY ONLY • — 'i _• ——C'-y'' -y charge; and unfortunately the have concluded there is more should be f united as any uther proof that KUP was or can be truth, is. that she supported to his supportot the regents' service. Remember that arm-. .To the editor: abought off Russell omitted te—• Dick Nichols. Her support decision of last March 15 than ed services and police forces" Greetings and good vibes. point this out. Semi-Private-Rooms as Low as*60 per mo ' was based on a long standing merely to protect those are funded by required taxa­We are sending anopen invita­ personal friendship with students who are "forced to tion. I hardly think anyone -tion for all to participate in In a memo from Aiex Luxurious Private Rooms $100 Nichols and not on agreement finance the activities of £he would unequivocally support International Streakers Day Armendariz to Frediric Malek per m?LB oirmTWaKOW>4 BAHDS...TWEM ATTICA FILM NUGENT PK&n&A t^-V»OPPCr PEOPTE... FRIDAY t0CifEF€U.WKS ctilH OKOER TKE 12:00 Univ. Y or^ c«af=t3Rjvnc>N<>-THFrr NYVE-THEL 2KH) Urtion 317 f>OMeS...T«E1 iHSTftU. THE TJICTftJCiRS 8KK) FRIENDS SCHOOL BOARD PLACE 4 Ttdktoke 17^: MEETING Crossword Puzzle -T»E •Foat'FeuuEKs T'jaeftetM -DGI^" LrrrEK. HOUSE ACROSS DOWN |Dura QEnms ana Sponsored 1 Couch 1 Algonquian 0CD[»] OHH0E HHEJ TVTEM 'STiWDfiF® CJL SO rr\MflKES and 5 Hebrew Indian 2 Anglo-Sa*on ARASNMH HEEIEDE ft ppenr... 6MD tHrt" intbaJlES presented by ASSISTANT TO JUDGES OF U.S. DISTRICT COURT AND month 9 Period of money ••• Q0OBC3 LATIN AMERICAN POLICY time 3 Flourish of ' BDHI3 HHQ BllSfl "WP-fllR,SPlLUt4 t, f!j I h _ .• exhibition 40 41-43 vrw\ » 52 Belabors >:>> ~ 55 Everyone vrt ^ ' *• 44* 43 46 ^7 48 " 58 Sow * * £8 Mine -April 6th 49 50 51; 52 53 54 entrance 59 Golf mound S3 56 57 58 -' 60 Pitcher 1 L. • n V -Political advertising paitl for liy ShrfmHfwitnyNufflp},f*rhtml•••»<, r,in!' 61 Qreftk letter 1i66 y.-i ST" Chairperson, 823 E. St.,.• Austin. ;^ DEMONSTRATIONP iat Th« 00 -M --r V ^ r -" - f < f " * ^ f' i ^ I "* * ^ " * •w , ^ ^ f , ,|> ^ t r * * if " ' T r r • • • | '• "-• -. .. \ -, .K^4 , . -. J •. : 11, . . .. li --. K'-.t Mz .. _ , . -. . _ --. m ^ -, ' . . m. #*j~ Track Team Tennis Tepm «• Ul Picked For Dallas First bay ft mm By HERB HOLLAND By LARRY SMITH f|| University .of Oklahoma, 6-0, Methodist University for..t Quality Indeed. Saturday's the half-mile and Mark ; Texan Staff Writer 6-2, while Ms. Kurz downed ' Texan Staff Writer. > conference:titl#ir" meet will include holders of Kionower, who ran the three­ Conference's The Texas women's tennis Sylvia Thomas of Baylor, 6»2, , chances aren*t team will be an underdog for rm team got off to a fast, start 6-0. good to overtake Houston and| -DALLAS — The Texas track the Southwest mile, will return to the mile "Our rea best marks in 14 of 16 SWC run. -' Thursday in the first day of Nixon was the first time this season ;Patty the only SMU, but we just keep homing events. Texas athlete? hold "Kionower had a 4:08 mile* Saturday, as it competes in competition at the University University player to lose. She that Rice and Texas A&M cans six of thpse marks. at Rice," Price said. "Which women's intercollegiate ten the Dallas Invitational Track was defeated in thefirstround take some matches off them if?>£<7 • John Berry leads theSWC is a real good;time for that nis tpurnament. and Field Meet. " ' > by Leslie Salig of Newcomb they arenTt playing too weil,"j , in the long jump witha 25-0 4^-cinder track." "> The Horns are picked to Playing at the intramural College (New Orleans), 6-5,6-Texas Coach Dave Snydferf'/-^'/ f°ot jump, set last week Robert Primeaux, who won finish third behind Southern fields, only one.Texas player saw. against Kansas State. the NCAA 440-yard in­ California and NCAA-Indoor lost in the first two rounds of One of Texas' top players, Champion UT El Paso. • David Shepherd tops the termediate hurdles last year; the seven-round singles com­Debbie Brownstein, was un-, V Tech and Baylor areSWC field in the pole vault, will: make his first outdoor "I think that's a realistic petition. Doubles begin at 8 able to compete because of a perenially two of the weaker, vaulting 16 feet four times appearance of the season prediction,'' Track Cpach a.m. Friday. Play will start at pulled leg muscle. She, teams in the Southwest already this season. Saturday. ' ^ Cleburne Price said Th&rs- 8 a.m. on Saturday. however, will team with Ms. Conference. Tech has lost • Dana LeDuc's 62-10V4-foot The meet will be at Loos day. "But the top three teams Wilkins in doubles. several of it's top players1 shotput at Rice leads all SWC Stadium with the prelims Amy Kay Wilkins, the only should be so close that if Following the completion of from last year because of dis« shotputters. Texas player ranked among starting at 9 a.m. someone wins this tournament, the Texas sension on the team. aiiv event, the tournament's top 16, yield­ they're not supposed to, • Jim McGoldrick leads all; women will travel to Baton Leading the Tech team is it ed only lone game in winning could decide the meet." SWC discus throwers with his ' Entries Rouge formeets against New-Walter Hammerick, who has 440-yatd IMvy:;Overton Spence, Don two matches. She took her Also competing in the meet school record throw of 191-9 Sturgal, Kerry Smith, Nate Robinson comb College Monday and played'No. 1 for the last two first match from Becky Metho'dist (or) Marvin Nash. State University >'? are Southern also set last week. McDonald of the University of Louisiana years. He will be joined by Mil* Relay. Glenn Goss, Craig Brooks, Tuesday.University, Rice, Texas A&M • Paul Craig leads the SWC Ed Wright,' Billy Jackson (or) Don Oklahoma, 6-1, 6-0. She then Stanley Morris and Terry- and Oklahoma State. the mile and three-Sturgal.. Cindy Mahek of ••• Bennett in the top three. in both downed longJump: George Dennis, JohnBerry, "This week, we'll only be The Texas mens1 tennis Baylor is led by Stan Smith mile runs with a 4:04.9 set last Nate Robinson. Southwest Texas State able to enter three in each . Shot Put: Bishop Dolegiewicz, Dana team will spend the beginning at No. 1, who is not to be mis* week and a 13:48.5set at Rice. University, 6-0, 6-0. LeDuc. and the end of spring break on taken for the U.S. event," Price said. "But it's a , Bishop Dolegiewicz. Dana Ms. Wilkins' teammates • Discus: "Southern Cal's real the road. The Horns will professional, and senior' quality meet, and it will be a LeDuc. Jim McGoldrick also met little opposition. quality field all the wayt strong," Price said. "They Jovolin:,, Marty Petermann, Greg travel to Waco Saturday to George Moncoda. Baylor also Paula Phillips topped Ann Hackney have three 7-0 high jumpers, take Baylor then around." Polo Vault: David Shepherd, Greg Bowen of Baylor University on and to has one of the top high school three 25-foot long jumpers, Hackney Lubbock April 6 to play Texas ' players from Texas last year and downed Cheryl.Chevas of they've run 20.1, 20.2 and 20.8 High Jump: Silverio Bosch, Wyatt Tech. UT Bests Tompkins Midwestern University playing No. 2, Jerry Dobbs. 440 Relay: 41.In (Kerry Smith. Nate (in the 220-yard dash), they've 120 yd Higli Hurdlot:Randy Lighttoot, (Wichita Falls), 6-4, 6-3. , Texas is 9-5 in conference ^ The Longhorns will go with Robinson, Overton Spence, Oon Sturgal). run 47,1, 47.6 and 47.7 in the Nafe Robinson match play, and they definite­Dan Nelson, Stewart Keller, Meanwhile, Nancy Macken March 2. 440-yd. Dash: Don Sturgal, Glen Goss; 440 and their sprint relay ly need a strong showing to Gonzalo Nunez, Graham Mile Ron: Paul Craig 4:04.9n March Craig Brooks won her first round match by 23; Reed Fischer 4:05.4n March 23; Tim team has run 39.9 this year. . lOO-yd. Dash: Marvin Nash, Overten overtake the University .of Whaling and Jim Bayless, in default and defeated Marian Patton 4:07.1March. 16; Mark Kionower Spence, Kerry Smith They've also had a 1:48.4 half- Houston and Southern that order. 4:08. On.March 2; Bill Goidapp 4:09.0n-MO-yd. Run: Rudolph Griffith, John Rosen of the University of March 2; John Craig 4:11.3n March 16; mile." -Craig, Bill Goidapp Houston, 6-4, 6-0. Jesse Maldonado 4:17.8n'Marctf 2. _«40-Jni—Murdlou-Robert Primaaux,. 100 Oash: Spence 9.4w March "^3; Price said Paul Craig, who I David Colley, Billy Jackson Robinson 9.4nw March 23; Marvin Nash 220-yd. Dash: Marvin Nash, Overton Two Texas players, Jo Ann ran the mile .last week, will 9.4nw March 23; Sturgal 9.9n March 2; &pence,"Kerry Smith Kurz and Mary Tredennick,Smith 9.9n March 9; David McKee 9.9n return to the three-mile run, Milo Run: Reed Fischer, Mark received first-round byes. Ms. Cauvoea-Kay&fcvFoldingBoats March 9. Bill Goidapp, who also ran the Kionower —•Texan Staff Photo by David Ntwman Mldd-Cielt RKwr/CotvMCuldM 120 Hurdles: Robinson 13.7w March 3-Mile Run: Tim Patton,'Paul Craig, Tredennick won her second Sawyer Waterproof B*«a .23; Randy Lightfoot I4.0nw Marcti 23. mile last week will return to Jesse Maldonado David Shepherd dears 16 feet. match over Teri Gamel of the Brewkltat a HIPP Int. Accessories 880 Run: Goidapp 1:52.4 March 16; Pat­ton l:54.4n'March 2;'Reed Fischer -rr«Fn•'miirry-Ttf-pr.a.^K 'gfHgsr: ShoeShop t:55.3n March.23; Kionower 1:55.5n March 23; John Craig l:55.6n March 2 We n%ake and SHEEPSKIN and 23. HOUSTON UP) -Bob head of the NABC, formerly ice-job. Former Rice Foot­ 440 Hurdles: DavidColley 53.7riMarch repair boots 9; Bob Workman 54.8n March 14. Polk, incoming president of coached at Vanderbilt IS ball Cdach Jess Neely recent­RUGS Spence 21.2w March 23; 220 Dash: the National Association of_ Robinson 2t.3nw March 23; Smith 21.6n years and was head coach ly reti^bd as athletic director shoes belts $500 Many $y5c March 9 and 16; Sturgal 21.6nMarch 16. Basketball Coaches, got a se­Trinity University in San An-X^at Varfderbilt Beautiful Colors 440 Dash: Glenn Goss 47.8 March 16; cond new assignment Thurs­tonio five years. ^ leather Polk also said Rice-ex foot­ Sturgal "47.9 March 23; Craig Brooks 48.7n March 9 and 16. day when he was named head "Liking this area was a ball player Lou Hassell was •LEATHER SALE • goods Three-Mile: Paul Craig 13:48.5 March basketball coach at Rice main reason for returning," his commander in the Navy. Various kinds, colon -75" por ft. 16, Patton 13:52.4 March 9; Fischer University. Whole E&rtK Provision Co. said Polk, who led Trinity to a 14:02.8 March 2; Kionower 14:00.On "So you can see therearea lot March 16;Maldonado I4:05.0nMarch 16. Polk, head coach at St. 69-28 record and two trips to of personal ties that we'vehad Capitol Saddlery 504 west 24tK 478-1577 Mile Relay: 3:13.0n (Goss *8.2, Ed Louis University of the the NCAA playoffs. "Rice has with Rice a long time," Polk Wright 48.4, Rudolph Griffith 48.5, Sturgal 47.9) 3-2. Missouri Valley Conference always appealed to me. When said. 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 Shot Put: Dana LeDuc 62-10'i March for the last five years, I was at Vanderbilt I always16; Bishop Dolegiewicz 62-9'j March 23; Jim McGoldrick 54-2n March 23; Don replaces Don Knodel, who had admiration for Rice." . Ausmus 53-9' iMarch 9. resigned two weeks ago after Polk is the second former I Discus: 'McGoldrick 191-9 March 23; eight years at Rice where he Vanderbilt coach to take the Dolegiewicz 185—On March 23; LeDuc I79-I0n March 23. won a Southwest Conference basketball reins at Rice. Javelin: Greg Hackney 224—4nMarch title in 1970. Knodel was an assistant at 23; Walter Kniginyzky 202—4n March 2; Marty petermann 206—6 March 16. Polk, installed Sunday as Vandy before accepting the High Jump: Wyatt Tompkins 6-7'in March 23; Silverio Bosch 6-7'an March 23. Long Jump: John'Berry 25-0' 2 March 23, Robinson 23-9n March 23; Geo. Den­ I nis 23-0 March 23; John Stack 22-6^n March 23, Hackney 21-lOVjn March 9. Pole Vault: David Shepherd 16-0 four times; Hackney 15-0n March 23. •—indicates new school record. Or if you prefer, hitch, bicycle, walk or mosey to the Castilian n1-non-winning . "1600^WACA ; i.........478-5423 w—wind aided 5353 BURNET RD. . 459-8M9 this summer (we're just a half£>lock from campus on 24th Street);. SPECIALS GOOD PR1DAYAND SATURDAY When you arrive, hop an elevator to the 11th floor and take OPEN 10 A M Til 9 P.M. Tune Up; Any Car a look around. We think you'll like what you find, but if you don't KENTUCKY TAVERN o XO gjj2j*^ eo HINT: IT'S NOT HALDEMAN, 80 ProofItalian ..5th y«i#7 ERUCHMAN, AND ' rriiiwwj MITCHEU. SOMBRERO TEQUILA Sth 1AO # 80 Proof.From Mtxico ; •• • / and Labor . WMM DtuBroketEXTRA ' ' 1 • Type IV'e end 1972 " ^m.5o Type ll's extra '-v,*4 ^ MASTERCHARGE BANKAMERICARD 836-4480I t ,-til f % j The Castilian ..i,'.|pP8NMONDAY.SATURDAY 7 a.m.le6p.m J "'.S;, v-., < z.»23 Sun Aniunio 47H-WJI 611-C Weat Pewell lane ? » wr mI:r• TP* -<> SfW? iW" White Wins, 17-1 Nothing Exciting, Says Royal, By CHRIS BARBEE? Most of the third quarter was spent ex-Texan Staff Writer ^cnanging punts until Clayborn finally broke & The annual Orange-White spring football gj?|the monotony with his scoring punt return, game ended on an even note in almost every '.giving the Orange a 14-10 lead. respect Thursday night in>Memorial Stadium ^ V With the ensuing kickoff the Whites began as the White team beat the Orange, 17-16. •"/-yto play up to its potential. The White moved EUROPE . From the score, Texas fans might assume #;:®3 yards on IS plays, while using 7:52 of the next season's team will have equally balanc­|v-clock. Joe Aboussie scored from two yardsed offensive and defensive units, but >*vout for the.score. Longhorn Head Coach Darrell Royal said the o' The final score came with 35 seconds m Affinity charters and group flights ex- game was "nothing to get excited about." ' v v remaining in the game. Faced with a fourth dusively forf® fMfeM This statement, which is typical of Royal, ' 'down and 10 yards to go from his own.three­is unusually accurate. Both teams played a i-yard line, White punter Mike Dean stepped The University of Texas^ basic, evenly-paced game. The only real ex­' out of the end zone, giving the Orange a two­ : students, faculty,staff % citement came midway through the third point safety. ... mMKM Sfc quarter when halfback Raymond Clayborn Royal said he could not single out anyone andimmediate family, il found daylight and returned a punt for a 78--' for an outstanding performance. "I was lost yard Orange touchdown. in the maze. It's hard to keep track of 22 The first touchdown of the game was-; -people."scored with 6:58 left in the first quarter by Regarding All-America fullback Roosevelt Orange halfback Rucker Lewis from two , Leaks, who was sidelined following knee sur­ yards out.-The 40-yard touchdown drive, gery, Royal said, "I might as well go ahead which took eight.plays, came after a White •and. say it. We don't have the same typefumble by fullback Pat Kennedy. offense.without him." Dallas/BrusselsDallas ' 24 Days-$349* " I White quarterback Marty Akins tied the i yr After the game White quarterback Marty June 9—July 2 game, carrying the ball into the end zone Akins said, "I'm beat up — my knees hurt, from two yards out, capping a 67-yard drive my arm hurts.-1 haven't recovered from the Capital Airways DC-8 t on five plays. The final scoring in the first regular season.Tonight, I was runningfor my half came on a 37-yard field goal by Billy 252 seats life. -Tun Staff Mete by David Wn Schott. "I didn't think about (quarterback Mike) Presley being hurt during the spring," Akins Paul Jette prepares to tqckle Eddie Starke*. Ijgjl Statistics said. "But I tell you what, I think Larry Whit* Miller's going to give him a tough time for First Downs 12 10 Rushing Yards 49-175 55-17,1 • the second string spot." > USC Begins Upset Bid Passing Yards 16 74 In response to Royal's evaluation of the DallasBrussdsParisDallas Passes. ......4-10 3-9 Total Offense 5»-1»1 team's passings Akins'said, "Ifeel good pass­LONG BEACH, Calif (APj John Trembley 64-245 -The Trojans, bidding to halt of Punts, Average 6-35.7 7-44.6 ing when I have time. I just had to break and Return Yardage — John Naber of Southern Indiana's try for a seventh Tennessee, who set an NCAA 42 Days—$329* plus inter-1 106 11 run tonight. But I'm not criticizing the line. California stunned a fine field' straight championships, also Fumbles lost of total 3 Of 4 2 Of 4 record of 20.06 seconds in Yards Penalized 2 for 10 4 for 42 They did a good job," he said. in the 500-yard freestyle as scored with Steve Furniss v. national departure tax •USHMG: Orange-Bartek 17 for 68, Wilker 10 for 33, Clayborn Clayborn, who was moved fromsplit end to three-time defending cham­capturing the 200-yard in­qualifying for the 50-yard, 12-62, Miller 12-26, Lewis 4-10. freestyle, came back to cap­May 30—July 11 White-Aboussle 12-34, Aklns 22-58, Kennedy 11-46. running back this week, said, "I'm used tp it. pion John Kinsellaof Indiana dividual medley for the se-. ture the event at 20.23 ahead PASSMO; Orange-Miller 4-10. I'd rather play there, but I can play both." finished last in the NCAA cond year in a row. . Capital Airways DC-8 Whlte-Aklhs 3-9. of Joe Bottom of Southern Cal MCRVMOi Orange-Clayborn 2-12, Starks 1-4, Lewis.1-0. -Royal said tradition will be the Longhorns' swimming and diving cham­Naber, a backstroke at 20.29. 183 seats White—Padgett 3-74. strength in the fall. : pionships Thursday night. specialist who surprisinglyset Kinsella, seeking his fourth ...... _ ...... ^ ^ the pace in qualifying for the consecutive 500 title, took the 500 freestyle, won the event lead start and *Prices based on pro rata at the was with a time of 4126.85 with ahead after 100 yards, with an share of the totalipfaartt VEGETABLE GARDENERS! liflfei g.lt ilJj opening time of SO.WFW a Washington second at 4:27.15 slight edge over Naber, who A NEW STORE IS OPENING DURING and Rod Strachan of USC was second at 50.91. SPRING BREAK CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — After a frenzied day-long third at 4:29.75. But the determined Naber squabble over taxes and unpaid bills, the way was cleared late Kinsella was a well-beaten took the lead after 200 yardsThursday afternoon for heavyweight champion George sixth with a time of 4:33.69, and held it the rest of the way. THE KITCHEN GARDEN Foreman and defeated challenger Ken Norton to return to the more than three seconds Indiana received a setback United States. behind the fifth place finisher. earlier in the day during 913 N. Lamar (Across from Mother Earth) Norton was scheduled to leave Venezuela on a 7 p.m. flight, Furniss used his skill in the qualifying when its* 400-yardIcelandic Group Flights 478-4037 with Foreman staying over and departing at 8:30 a.m. Friday. butterfly and backstroke to individual medley relay team Both fighters were stopped at the airport when authorities edge out Stan Carper of was two Dallas/Luxembourg/Dallas Organic GardeningSupply disqualified when May 22—August 21, $382t claimed taxes and other bills were unpaid from Tuesday night's Washington by 9/100ths of a swimmers were called forVegetables & Herbs bout. second, winning at 1:51.52. leaving early. Let us help with your garden -seeds end plants, toots, A spokesman for Foreman said, "The king and his court are . Fred Tyler of Indiana, who • • organic fertiliser end organic pest control being held for ransom." had the best qualifying marks, No word has been receivedMay 25-July 12,$397+ In New York, a spokesman for Video Techniques, which was third with a clocking of on the University of TexasWE RENT TILLERS promoted the bout, said that arrangements had been made with 1 swim team. 1:52.06. f**+ June 4—July 2, $453t a Venezuelan bank to provide funds for Foreman and his en­ r-tourage to leave Caracas. Problem Pregnancy Counseling ServiceJune 6—July 21, $468+ Meanwhile, Art Rivkin, one of the group of San Diego Student Health Center t$3 internationaldeparture businessmen managing Norton, said the Norton camp had 105 W. 26th St. (4th Floor-South)borrowed $47,000 to pay taxes on the challenger's earnings and Confidential counseling with all alternatives discuss­tax USE YOUR BREAK had arranged a bond guaranteeing payment of up to $60,000 for ed and referrals made to appropriate resources. Call possible ancillary earnings. 478-5711/ Ext. 26, for an appointment. Individual "Everything has been paid — all the bills that shouldjjave appointments Tuesday 1-5 p.m., Thursday 1-5 p.m.,been paid by the promoter haye been paid by us," he said. Friday 9-noon. FOR SISSY Before you leave, come by the lECTOR'S VOLKSCYCLE 454-9242 KLM Group Flights Farenthold for Governor state head­ MARK III TACO FLATS 5213 N. Lamar quarters at 404 West 15th Street IHoaston/Amsterdain/Hoi (476-2442) and visit with us about what you can do at home during the DAWES GALAXY HOBO PLATE 'Special 59' lay 22—August 20, $462.60+1 break. Put your holiday to work for WITH "531" STRAIGHT GAUGE fRAME Beom-Meat-Cheese-Salad-Taco, Etc. May 22-July 9, $462.60 Texas. PEARL 25' June 5-July 3, $541.60 AUSTIN CYCLE CENTER Pol. Adv. by Students for Ffirenthold. Steve Price, Chairman 4508 BURNET RD. Specials Good Fri. & Sat. 6-8 P.M. ONLY tadd $3 Departure Tax Published by the Daily Texan. TSP Bldg.. UT. Austin. Texas TUES.-SAT. 9-6:30 -Home of the Jalapeno Champions MASSAGES .HOT OIL SWEDISH STEAM ROOM • NOW MAGNETICJTOUCH WEIGHT LIFTING POWDER I r [SPECIALINCLUSIVE TOUR CHARTER! I 7 DAYS : £• IXC. Charters •» '# 727 West 23rd ' From IKU35, take Oltorf exit to . '• zW* p. Acroes from Hardin North % ' Algarlta, turn right one block -Brown Bag Supper on the comer of 23rd and Peart 1 s a development of Jagger Associates,;r J -rU -J J-Kir Page 8 Friday, March 29 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN V \ ' ^ f V"" TJ" * " ~ : "KJ '« ••••?:5"Jf-V. ' .T . • -V!''J'v 'Aim tSUeiukimm I' ltinansii £ J,— 9 »rt* '* r{T .«©JJ" 5\'r n'*1'' H5 -'^LT'jtW&dM 't*, *'. -!; V* *A/ "/A1,'W:'^:v < ' ..' I It^t! rV~;s' Si;'* A V.V^'v>rT.W * i& *•-,^ ­r$fliif1 « A'l fS'yrvx •ip^ kf-". »,: -i wy » ,", ' V . . '"ft^' ' 5 ,t liiiiii verse by janice tom/in photos by david newman mmmmm *sS2E8StV p* Wsj* £re»s c*W. a one-to-one relationship, friend to friend, gentle guidance to a misdirected child, struggle for independence and acceptance. "jesus, i never knew a retarded kid could do things like this." big buddies -founded of 1970. federal grant cut in summer of 1973. "we're working on a shoestring now." lasting friendships, trust and understanding, L«t * no experience necessary — 474-2481. small rewards make it all worthwhile .... if a smiling face, the touch of a hand flii m Wm and "hey, wait for me!" ; > * -s>£ % ">'S camp-outs, movies, ice creiam and ­ ftSi M love ... for-the very first time. J\t v -**•• f>»i ' uwe're not talking iabout emotional problems K\g * i/i we're talking about cfiildren.%^^^p|i,^.! -)V , . Friday, March 2 4 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9 V**?. m -tjy I -;• I,1 m mm TT raws? -r gp Ragsdale Racial Politics i! 9&3I& ;: a&m. •>• * By BILL TROTT said Ragsdale, Vwe could educate the black community IrfLOf Constitution Texan Staff Writei have, the first black county in campaign methods, voter fm4m By DAVID BROOKS i tion; Dr. Emmette Redfordil •-.•WiifaHi?i. While expressing pleasure commissioner in Texas, thank registration and other aspects p nn 195Q r --. ., The fair's activities designedforthe wholo family yiji -pliil^wphyi • • Rnhnnl Stnriont Sonata goat -ins and 2 ne-yoteB;— ilre^place at the Woddcreek resort two miles north of "Wbmen atfthe ljniversity Fri-Wimberley on Ranch Road 12. day through Sunday. Opening daily at 11 a.m. the fair will feature food and -Panel participants include beverage booths, a rodeo, a free child care activity center, Sarah T. Hughes, U.S. district free hay wagon rides, music provided by eight bands during judge for the Northern the afternoons and a Saturday nightdanGe and show-featur­District of Texas; Frances ARE FOOD PRICES ing the Geesinslaw Brothers. Farenthold, Democratic Tickets are $1 for adults, and children under 12 will be ad­gubernatorial candidate and mitted free. Tickets may be purchased at local banks, Sears chairwoman of the National in Hancock Center, Snyder-Chenard's in Highland Mall or Women's Political Caucus and from March of Dimes volunteers. Sarah Weddington, member of the Texas House. The discus­sion will begin at 8 p.m. Fri­day in Townes Hall's Charles Rose Marina's I. Francis Auditorium. Registration will continue through noon Saturday at the Shop Thompson center. Fees are $25 for attorneys and law at professors and $10 for students, legal workers or in- DOBIE MALL terested persons. The fee en­ fr No. 29 titles the registrant to con­ ference materials and dinner 2nd ANNIVERSARY ' Saturday in the Union Main Ballroom. SALE WHAT FAMOUS TRIO CUT FREE CLASSES WITH A SWORD, SPOKE FLUENT FRENCH, COULD CHARM A HAREM, MONOGRAM AND SOUNDS LIKE A CANDY BAR? for any purse SAVE MONEY! GROW YOUR OWN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ALL THE EXTRA -purchase over $10 HINT: IT'S NOT SHA NA NA VEGETABLES! v , y BENEFITS AT GOOD EARTH FARMS! Limited to one For only $150.00 a year you can lease a family-sized garden •Irrigation water will be available at each garden free of „SV33l3»SnW free monogram at Good Earth Farms, and enjoy all the goodness of fresh charge and free from chemical additives! 33HH1 3H1m JO NOISV3A farm vegetables for a fraction of what you usually pay. per person PL MSN 3H1 S.ll :X3MSNV •Gardening supplies at cost! Everything from fertilizer,It's easy! Even for the amateur. The rich bottomland soil to tools, to seeds at the Good Earth Farms Generalof Good Earth Farms is perfect for fast-growing crops. And Store now under construction. Plus a snack bar with you can work your garden with prdinary gardening tools. drinks and refreshments. AW.V -• L_ The primary cultivation is done for you! H On-the-spot planning and consulting services to help you get the maximum yield. Plus seminars conducted ®£.\ MAKE A PROFIT FROM SURPLUS by accredited horticulturists,a periodic newsletter 'full l:.f ' \ PRODUCE! . of gardening hints, and free advice on home canning and /"Y freezing. Just thinkrone garden at Good Earth Farms could yield •80 acres of unplowed recreation area! With unspoiled up to 400 lbs. of tomatoes.-150 lbs, of lettuce, 150 lbs. of nature trails, spring-fed streams, tree-shaded picnicsquash. 240 lbs. of cucumbers, and 300 lbs. of beans.* 1240 facilities, and a play area for children. lbs. of vegetables every time you plant! What your family •Fishing in a stocked pond and Onion Creek! doesn't use, you can give to friends, or sell at the Good •Controlled security entrance for members and guests Earth Farmers' Market. Or sell direct to customers during only. Plus roving security patrols to safeguard your crops! the Good Earth Farms "Pick-Your-Own Days". •Pathways to each garden maintained by Good Earth Farms. ENJOY THE SPECIAL PRIDE THAT B Annual Harvest Jubilee! With cash prizes for award COMES FROM WORKING THE LAND! winning produce. Imagine the feeling of sitting down to dinner and eating •Special Organic-Gardening Section^ • vegetables you grew yourself at your very own farm. Imagine DONT DELAY! ONLY A LIMITED the sense of pride, the sense of accomplishment. Imagine the comments from your neighbors when you tell them the NUMBER OF GARDENS ARE AVAILABLE salad they're eating came from your own farm! FOR SPRING CROPS. VISIT THE GOOD 'Source: John E. Larson. "Planning Your Vegetable Garden." Fact Sheet EARTH FARMS TODAY! Texas A & M University. and gundai ratMM. • • GCTJlontteCcft"-So& cfcirftS • £€0lO2nS fhe •Mc&en. It sher first album for MCA Records. Produced by Norberl Putnam at Nashville's Quadraphonic Studios GOOD EARTH FARMS £ tli YiffiS&SOTt-vS ?i Mlnorary Texan By KODOLFO RESENDEZ Dr. Radomiro Tomic, visiting professor at the Institute of Latin American Studies and the LBJ School of Public Affairsthisspring, was named-an honorary citizen of Texas at a presentation-re­ception Thursday afternoon. Lauro Cruz, Gov. Dolph Briscoe's special assistant dn community affairs, made the presentation. In conferring the award to Tomic, Cruz said in Spanish, that he *was honored as a Texan to present the award to another Texan. "If I were a wise man, I would stop here," Tomic said upon receiving the award. : "This isthe third time that I am honored as a.U.S. citizen/' Tomic said. Tomic said thefirst honorof being an American citizen came in 1940 when at the age of 25 he and his new bride were stranded in Finland dur­ ing World War II. Unknown and virtually without money, the Tomics had no way of returning to Chile. ;,^At the time, the U.S. government was sent to Finland to rescue American diplomats, Tomic said, "I took advantage and asked to be taken," Tomic said. Later, he.said, ship officials told him to keep it a secret because the Tomics would be listed as American citizens. Tomic said it -was the first time he had ever told thestory to anyone. On Wednesday, Tomic was named an honorary citizen of Austin by Mayor Roy Butler. ;v/: Approximately 40 persons including Tomic's students Salvador Allende's Christian passed over the objection's of • and the faculty and staff of the .Democratic Party opponent his party, Institute 6f Latin American during the 1970 Chilean Tomic was elected to the Studies and the LBJ School of presidential campaign which Chilean-Senate to fill, out the Public Affairs attended the saw the Marxist Allende-.. unexpired term of Pablo ceremonies. emerge as the victor. Nerada, Chile's Nobel Prize- Mrs. Lyndon Baines John­Tomic began his political -: winning poet. „. JW son also attended and extend--' •career while still quite youngs After a brief departure ^ ed her good wishes to Tomic. At the age of 26 he was the se£$! from public office, Tomic ?'a; Tomic is teaching courses cond youngest member returned to politics in 1958 on#' bn Contemporary Inter-elected to the Chilean House ^behalf of Eduardo Frei's first i American Relations and of Deputies. -; " presidential candidacy and Revolution; Reform and, In 1938, Tomic helped es­the Christian Democratic ! i Democracy in Contemporary tablish the Falange Nacional, Party. • /»' Latin Arrierica at the Univer­which later became the Chris­Tomic also served as am­yr sity's publicaffairs school. He tian Democratic Party. Ten bassador to the United States teaches graduate and un­years later, he gained fame from 1965 to 1968. dergraduate classes with the for defending democratic: The late Sen; Robert graduate classes conducted in liberty in Chile. Tomic plead*' Kennedy once referred to Spanish. ed against a bill designed to Tomic as "one of the most Commenting on the current outlaw certain political par­brilliant i^enj'ye ever Chilean situation, Tomic said ties during a Communist known/* ' Chile's economy-and politics "scare" similar to the Tomic also wttrked 16 years IpF4 Staff MmM' by DmW We* are bad. McCarthy era in the United as a newspaper editor in He is perhaps best known as States. However, the bill was Chile. -,j--v, Dr. Raddftiiro talk* to Mrs. Johnson and others. Pease Park Picnic To Commemorate Vietnam Veterans Day The University Veterans State Rep. Larry Bales, State with mentally retarded youth 78712. Students who plan to graduate tertfiffed ttudents and faculty at amine the programs of the Depart­Southwest Institute cf Fund Raising Caucus will present Isabel Welsh this semester should attach-a note to 10:10 a.m. April V In Sid Richardson Sunday through Wednesday atDobie Association will com-Sen. Lloyd Doggett and U.S. and emotionally disturbed ment of Speeial Education at Point Pritchard to speak on "The History that effect. Petitions will b« Hail 3.1it. Venture on the shoreof take Travis Center. Robert F. Duncan, Harvard v of the Political Taboos of knemorate Vietnam Veterans Rep J.J. "Jake" Pickle. offenders. -available at MEC, 2616 Wichita St., UNWN MCttATION COMMITTM will spon­Saturday. The group will examine Graduate School of Business Ad Mens'truatlon" at noon Friday inDay Friday with a picnic in The bring-your-own-food v ANNOUNCCMTNTS and at the General Information sor a trip to the Big Thicket Friday the department's curriculum and ministration, will open the Institute Union Buiidlng'334. Admission is SO MT MCUIYy FXHWTION opens Sunday Booth in the Main Building until S . $>nd Saturday. Transportation will consider alternative approaches to at 9 a.m. Monday with a discussion cents. Pease Park from 5 to 8 p.m. picnic is open to the public with a reception honoring the art p.m. Friday and.at the Information be by private cars. its training programs, particularly ot the history and principles of fund "Pease Park will berenam-with 25-cent beer provided by department (acuity and their wives booth from9 a.m.to 5p.m. onSatur­UNIVMtStTV tiCYCU CU» will meet at 8 at the undergraduate'and master's . raising. ­in the Archer M.Huntington Gallery day. a.m. Saturday In front of Jester degree levels. ed Vietnam Veterans Park" the veterans association. ot the University Art Museum, from "TECHNOLOGY ASSBSMINT. An Element Center to rideto BastropState ParK. NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FO« WOMIN AMlRtCAN awu SOOSTY Is sponsoring a for the occasion, City Coun­•' ~ 2 to5 p.m.The publicis invitedto at­. in the Social Control of Technology" UT SKI CUM will meet at LlttlefleldFoun­(NOW) will meet at-7:45 p.m. seminar on"Let theWord Speak" at cilman Bob Binder said Project Self-Help tend the showing of paintings,sculp­Is the topic Or. Raymond Bowers, tain at 3 p.m. Sunday instead of 1 Wednesday at 1208 Baylor St. the Shettles Memorial Methodist /vyiv\ professor of physics and director of p.m. to board the bus going toTaos, "Rape: A Crisis In Austin" will be :; Church, 4001 Speedway St., from ture, drawings, graphics, Tastij Clothinj Wednesday. "This is unusual Project Self-Help's first photographs, ceramics and crafts. ,th t-Program on Sclen.ce, N.M. for the spring break ski trip. the topic for the meeting. 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m, and 7 to » 4 because we never AMMICAN COUSCTION UBIAIY Technology and Society atiCornell MittTINOS . p.m. Friday. have IATIN "THIO«Y AND MACTKI O* FUND RAISMQ" open house will be held 1 to 3 f hours are being extended on Satur-1 University, will discuss with in-IDUCATCMS from the Austin area will ex­ iftKMMN'S AfMltfc £0MMTTH, Student focus renamed,a park before; usual­p.m. April 5 at the Austin-days. The new hours are10 a.m. to 5 will be of the first annual Government aftd the Women's Law ly we just rename.streets." p.m. effective Friday. Travis County Mental Health- MEASUREMENT AND (VALUATION CCNTR „ Other guests -will include Student Ministry Mental ftetardation Center. announces the deadline to have Project Self-Help, believed credit earned by exam Reported to ""{le Aujtin chapter o¥™ the registrar for this semester is S the Red Crass is seek­to be-the -first such project in p.m. April 8. Forms submittedafter Texas, employs the'abilities this will notbe processedtill the end ing volunteer drivers Of summer, 1974. MEC's mailing ad­ of ex-offenders in working dress is PO Box 7246, Austin, Tex., to transport disabled 18 persons. Drivers may "JESUS IS: THE SAME YESTERDAY AND TODAY, YES, AND FOREVER." use Red Cross cars w their private vehicle*.-Foni 316 West 6th Street for men tfmmrnnEtriTS^ and uiomi 1601. SHOPPE Hyde Parle Baptist Church A professional workshop for the training ot I rMiiiftiiinmiinjiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiii ' 3901 SpeMway actors. AND Bible Study 9:30 Worthip 8:30 & 11:30 Beginner and advanced classes for children, teenagers, adults; TONY FROM Bus Schedule Students to be selected and salaried for MR. LONNY'S FORMALS The GASLIGHT THEATRE REPERTORY Co. to HAIRSTYLIST 4013 Marathon Jester 9:10 a.m. 5:10p.m. open at a later date. (One block 5308 BURNET ROAD Castilian 9:15 a.m. 5:15 p.m. Telephone for registration and informa­ west of Lamar) + I tit LAVACA 176 <1171 OFFERS GUYS & DOLLS tion. 476-4536 weekdays 5-6 p.m. Kinsolving, S.R.D. 9:20 a.m. 5:20 p.m. A VIP HAIR TREATMENT (SHAMPOO.CONDITIONER. AND STYLE) for *6.50 FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 459-7904 Www Atmmt, L2A60E# 20% 0BCEM& . Discount on all Guitar Amster Music 1624 Lavaca 1 everybody's ^ talking... P(56>Ul$EP A ' ccep fir we oFmmnM's l£APtt(6 UMVE/&Tm$, /:... « >/442 PtW-ytoW iw>d$s> TO T ftp Tm CAMPUS OF MV66&& Afmvmrs, * mt£.tfstrm houxs, anp two smestm •riam ...Cause they gel* results! •• , ^ THE DAILY TEXAN w , CLASSIFIEDS TKUB tcenpry op • Call 471-5244 to place your classified ad! ^mir '' ' We will bo oponnoxt woek to toko your ads for Thf Dally Toxan on Monday. April S jl J#CA {Iir' ^ Kt tf*-* 4 , ^iday, March %% 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11 m *> . * . s 9 KM 'I i' mi it n b i H­ a i$ |! II «i f Iwsb Fuel Credit^ ft Still Accspte ;/'feddie Slack, from the Shell sta-' By SUZANNE PETERMAN 11 flee at all." A .V* -' ^ urting tion at 400S. Congress Ave., said the>With demand making business But Byron^ Kiefer, at 3828 N. \/ oil company "did instruct . .. -boom, some U.S. oil companies are Interregional, said his station no not us By MARK SIMMONS sent less of a problem than the front. If a Car is goingthrough-most-parts of Austin. Their about credit cards. When the.service The state's new "right turn partially handicapped jinder the intersection, then you ability to negotiate traffic is,, cutting down on the number of longer accepts American Express. charge went up, we decided, at our on red" law, which added the new statute. hear a constant increase in then usually complete. credit cards accepted by their 'The company terminated the option, not to accept Master own another: variable; to driver-••THERE ARE a lot fewer the tempo of the engine, and., dealers and issued to their' PARTIAL VISION gives an agreement with American Express Charge." Slack said that Shell is pedestrian traffic confron­blind people getting run over the car continues away from impression of control and customers. But local businesses in February. Service charges were still actively soliciting credit cardcontacted by The Texan Thursday tations, has not created by cars than thereare sighted you.*; . 1 competence which may going up, and it just wasn't feasible applications. significant problems for the people;" Nick Necaise, chief To perfect recognition of; deceive those who lack side indicate that;Austinites have littleto any more," he said. Kiefer also Mobil serviceman Algie Collins more than 140,000 Texans who of orientation and mobility at traffic and other crucial visibility and the results can fear. • , said, when asked about credit card said, "We're still accepting suffer from blindness or Austin's Chris Cole sounds, as well as to provide be deadly. , V "Shell, Citgo, Texaco and Arco applications, "they're selling all the BankAmericard like we always peripheral sight loss ("tunnei Rehabilitation Center, the general mobility training, the have all either stoppedor announced gas they want, and I don't think have." He guessed that the creditThe Texas Society for the vision"). state's leading center -for Cole center conducts four--plans to stop accepting bank-issued they're too anxious to issue new card cutback hasn't hit Mobi}Prevention of Blindness, For the blind, the new law training and education of the month training programs for credit cards like Master Charge orwhich places the number of cards." . customers yet — "I just got a card, means that they must contend blind, said. the blind in practical travel BankAmericard or travel and enter ­ licensed Texas drivers with Ruth Anders at Howard Johnson's and I didn't even apply for it." with traffic moving through "Engine sound is the key to through cities and towns. tainment cards like the American peripheral vision problems at ( said that Texacd discontinued its Stories do get around, though. Thepedestrian walkways. Fdr the how a blind person judges the The four-month course Express," according to a visually handicapped, the law safety of an intersection, and well over 100,000, maintains coritract with the motel Jan. 31, but owner of Morgan's Gulf reported begins with cane training copyrighted story from the Chris­ that no driver with impaired other oil companies have not. Susan that he had heard about the creditmeans that cautious compen­it is very distinct," Necaise within the familiar surroun­tian Science Monitor News Service. side vision should be allowed MacKay at Hertz Rent-A-Car card cutback and that Gulf was sation for "blind spots" caus­said. "If, for instance, a car is dings of the center and later recalling credit cards, but he'hasn'ted by tunnel vision is more turning right on red, it will moves outside to nearby to operate a vehicle. Texaco seems to be the only oil reportted the termination of their company changing policies in the Texaco contract about the same been told directly. critical than ever before. stop and start, being first sidewalks. The societyalso stresses the Austin market, and even all Texaco time. The consensus among dealersIronically, the state's more beside you, then slightly in THE FIRST contact with susceptibility of the elderly to dealers do not agree. Frank Holder All dealers contacted still accept seemed to be that if they have thethan' 35,000 legally blind pre-front of,you, then directly in traffic comes in quiet residen­diseases such as glaucoma, of Holder's Texaco, 1900 Guadalupe their own credit cards, and most gasoline, they will sell it. Exactly tial areas and later in the which deteriorates peripheral St., said that he had not "received take any bank-issued cards they which credit cards to accept is thebusier University district on vision, and conducts regular any instructions from the home of-have accepted in the past, least of their worries. streets like Guadalupe and glaucoma screening drives THE RAMBLIN' ROSE Speedway. throughout the state. The final sections -of the Texas Department of Public Hill Country's Largest Finest Ballroom training come in downtown Safety officials, although they Grounds Crews Like Their Work Sun. 5-10.-j- Austin, where students learn do not have definitive Sat. 9-1 direction and landmark iden: statistics on vision related ac­By CHRISTINE GILBERT mow, rake, clean up trash, maintenance crews, and ap­men on a crew, except for BILLY TEAGUE TONY DOUGLAS tification in all kinds of traffic cidents, are researching the Working in frqsh air and edge sidewalks, trim proximately nine of those are heavy lifting, Ms. Coles said. and the Country Corp. , and the Shrimpers and situations. plausibility and effectiveness open sky is preferable to shrubbery and other general women. Each crew consists of The crews work from 7 a.m. $4.00 per person (from Nashville. Tenn.) By the end of the training, . of bi-pptic telescopic visual sterile office environments, -gardening tasks. five to eight workers with a to 4 p.m. Monday through Fri­$2.00 per person students areable todetermine aids, multilensed glasses say students on University supervisor, Kirkpatrick said. day. Ms. Coles said she "can Approximately one-half the (Stay til 2 a.m. in the La Paloma Room) their location in any part of which improve peripheral vi­grounds maintenance crews. are University Ms. Coles said she likes her sometimes study when work employes the downtown area and in sion.' , The maintenance crews job because she can work at is slack, and "when the Hwy 29 West Llano, Texas Ph. A.C. 915-247-5102 students, said Janice Coles, her own pace and she enjoys weather is bad, we can go in­ grounds keeper and a gardening. "I worked indoors side and study, & long as oursophomore art major in night for five years as an executive superintendant knows whereschool. TROPICAL secretary, and I wasn't happy 5we are." . Ms; Coles and fellow crew Both and Attending the ARBORlliverHills playing the games of being a Kilpatrick Ms. * Luxury living at its best PLAN f member Paul Kirkpatrick, secretary. I am much happier Coles said a person becomes Rummer Session? also an art major, estimated now," she said. accustomed to the elements JLBMiJftO CA there are 60 to 65 employes on Women do the same jobs as working outdoors alfday. S A IE 4 can share for 'r^ii m"i r\ r"~rh furnished ALL BILLSPAID WHY NOT 4407 av H, on Crime Increase Reported in Texas • Fireplaces, Town Lake views ­ .« Pnnl with wiitar M..rt Texas crimp inrfrpagpri 3.10 percent that the largest increase was robbery which WaHei Cfeenr • 1 or 2 bedrooms, 1 or 2 baths: during 1973, the increased 17.1 percent over .the 1972 figures. • largedecks, outside storage announced Thursday. There were 492,654 ^fhe ~ Sst, Su , Mon, • 24 hour emergency maintenance service major crimes committed in Texas during crimes compiled by the DPS: i • 21 Great Meafs per Week •Onshuttlebus route 1973. Frequency 444-1806 "On the average, one crime is committed Increase Solved • Maid Service The Largest 1601 RoyalCrest Drive, Just off Riverside Dr. Murder 2.1% 88% r,1 everySx/i hours every minute in Texas," Bill Carter, A Development of Jagger Associates Rape 1.5% 61% 1 every23/* hours Selection; of spokesman for DPS, said Thursday. "While s_1 every xh hour Robbery 17.1% . 35% •Close to Campus crime in the urban areasincreased by 4.9 per­Burglary 2.8% 18% r«very 3'/? min. Aggravated Assault T.1% RECORDERS cent, crime in the rural areas decreased 12.7 70% 1 every 15min. • Private Transportation Theft 2.9% 24% 1 everyV/a min. in Texas percent," he said. Carter also pointed out Auto Theft 2.4% 19% 1 every 12'/2 min. • Private Pools from$2.25 up TONITE— See us for Definitely the Best ALL THIS AND ^Recorders & montage EVERYONE GETS Recorder Music COUNTRY'IN TOWN IXMM1ITH A PftWATE ROOM Amster Music WALKIN' Friday Saturday 1624 Lavaca Plenty of Funk FRI 9-12 PLUM DRY BRONCO BROS. nehy RUN SAT 9-1 WEST SIDE TAP Dancing No Cover BEVO'S BASILISK MADISON HOUSE MIXED DRINKS 24th and Rio Grande HAPPY HOUR 4-6 709 W. 22nd St. It's Happy Time! DIME BOX AVAILABLE FOR PARTIES A TYPING SERVICE 2714 L 1st •478-0182 -specializing in It's Easter. It's Spring! What better time to have 478-9891 478-8914 —theses and dissertations a party. Make that happy time even more enjoy­ —low briefs —term papers and reports able with a Hallmark party set. From cute and FACT Madison -Bellaire Apts. SHAKEY'S Prompt. Professional colorful Easter rabbits and chicks to a more gen­FINDERS a/so available for Summer Service Information on Demand presents at the Guadalupe Store eral springtime decor, we have a convenient 1906 Pearl • Suite 201 453-7577 party set that's right for any party. 476-9292 ALVIN CROW AND THE NEON ANGELS HURRY! Pick-up Service Available Austin, Texas 78705 M-F 11-6 • Sat. 12-3 tonight thru Sat. WE WILL ANSWER ANY QUESTION FOR ANYONE presents at the Reagan Square Store ANY SUBJECT, LENGTH, LEVEL OR AREA * * LOU-RAY THOUSANDS ON FILE AT l.SO'-PER PAGE 3-DAY DELIVERY TQNIgHT 9NLY STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL , V>^WVAAAAAA/VW\A/\/WMA/V\AAA/VWWVWV RICK BERRISFORD& THE KITCHEN BAND I*TEN GALLONS!* * Saturday, only * * * * * r"4rm * WHAT FAMOUS TRIO * i* OF FUN... * * * HOODWINKBD THE COURTS, EMBARASSED CMPIRi, * * * & AN The Shrimp Harvest * A W*TY/ WHILE SWASHBUCKUNG THEIR * * WAY TO FAME AND FORTUNE? * is easy to enjoy every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, * * * NOT HALDEMAN, Thursday noon and night at inflation-stopper prices. HINT: IT'S * * ERUCHMAN, AND Generous servings of boiled Gulf shrimp on ice to peel * * MITCHEU. * The Crown Shops and eat. Cocktail sauce and hushpuppies, too. * * * BIG CATCH 3.50 HALF-CATCH 1.95 * -/SM3313)ISnW * Plaza Balcones * * 338H1 3H1«, JO NOISU3A * 2900 Guadalupe frZ, M3N 3H1 S,U :V3MSNV * * * Highland Mall * * * * ^Martin's * TORCHLIGHT * * * April 15th 4 * Oyster Bar and Seafood Restaurant * * * 5011 Burnett Road at Hancock 451-8174 * \ * All you * * Your favorite mixed drinks, wine, and beer can eat ROUND-UP CARNIVAL * * * rooms, tool! * April 17-18th * * * * * \ * * * 4* * * PINOCCHIO PIZZA* STREET DANCE * * * April 19th OPEN 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 a.m * * * 604 West 29th St. * * Austin, Tx. * * (16 Block West of * Guadalupe St.) 19-21st ROUND-UP PARADE o » shar; c.irr)»ts if condition Tcv^nds • .ec.p.ition lounge • crcrrtse mom • co-f-d iHOTi 1 suites with living rooms • rffrc-pr.itorsf'/collont food (all you cart rv.t) • mp^tin;* f.icilitios • are.i -• shopp"1,' rr-nt^r • activity program • color T • adiHcer* to Ciinmus DELIVERY 21st and Guadalupe 477-9921 _ WITH THIS AD _ _ ^ 'hone; (512) 472-8411 •Coming in I the Special Round-Up Edition of The save 30^soxa. 50* * Texan! Watch for it! ON YOUR NEXT 12" ON YOUR NEXT 16" * * * see OFFER O^QP UNTIL APRIL 25th, 1974 Page 12 Friday, March 29 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN • V # 1' ^2 ^ ' S Y i ft*. -V .-'v.. • -1 r•' * * \ "V *g*S«H3 mmm ?>iAritk Spoons Uli mwm astfood^Service Tempts Students ••m y v$sm ;J sp; |p wm By MARIAN MCDOWELL soda fountain was. declared _a lion with with the carry-out ''We^re.rapidly incoming a;v_students to eat-out, The iastfp :-p &&&:* . More and more students are1 loser. . food chains and has felt no taster, moving society. We food houses with their\n ////f • v> \ I.J 11 ^ x abandoning home cooking for A UNIVERSITY student pressurejronvi qom-have more leisure time, and streamlined service and i Si-3«;'";'-A • • dinner on the town; Students from the '50s explained there petition. are continually lookitiig foif limited menus are getting are tempted by such exotics . was nosuch thing asa walk-up: "Night provides the the easiest way. People want, .their business. Why are these. as' the McDonald's quarter* or fast-food service then as '-Customer with consistent and ,-.fo free their hands and time,..:;places sp,,pop,jul&r ;;il pounder, Taco Bell's bean and there is today, high quality food, today. Around cam- a varied^'^nd furthermore they arewilli^'students? the store's a •»t at burrito speciality, Jack-in-pus, drug soda menu and relaxed at->f4ng to*pay for it. 'I don't really like to ea' the-Box's onion rings and the fountain was a popular place , mosphere," Ms. Hinkle said. "AS FOR the campus areav ? ;fast-food restaurants, but it is Colonel's fried chicken. for lunch. 'WE ARE not a computer fancy restaurants do not quick and convenient. I don't burger. Our service is fast, flourish because of thestudent think it involves the money.There has been a steady in­5;s Things have really changed but our food is not budget and the time factor. If factor much, " Lorraine I cs« flux of "soybean speakeasies" since the '50s when seated ser­precooked." Rick Kilgore,. a student has money to dineat Gutierrez, a University stu­ //iv /I^,n\x /av and hamburger es­vice and formality were more manager of The Clinton, said. an expensive restaurant, he is dent, said. tablishments springing up in tune with the times. "People come her^ for our willing to go to the outlying NANCY BALSER likes to around the University area. Although there are a few per­ blue-plate special and our at-parts of the city to get it,'.' . eat at Holiday House because These fast-food chains-with sonal neighborhood mosphere. Our atmosphere is Erdmann said. ^ of its close location to campus ( * i, •/ .% their streamlined service and restaurants such as The Clin­ ! •* V* •> ••. Pttvg •mtgUPlMHsKal friendly and personable. It's The three primary concerns and because it is cleaner than «•'' ..i ; •. i limited menus are expanding ton, Hank's Grill, Les Amis like going home and eating of restaurant owners are most places. She said she dnd capitalizing on .the in­and the Night Hawk, the soda with friends." quality, service and pricey feels that the $1.35 combina­ creasing "eat-out" student fountains and greasy spoons Kilgore explained that he is Erdmann pointed out. He also tion plate is a good buy for the life-style. have replaced by fast-food trying to buy produce at added that 15 percent of the money. senrice. Has the neighborhood The popular greasy spoon better prices and is shopping menu brings in most of the 'I eat at fast-food places restaurant been affected by cafe of the 1950s with the blue- around more this year to fight money, while theother 80 to 85 when it is a matter of time, these fast-food houses? Most plate specials and seated ser­ high food prices. percent is strictly for but not when it is a matter of claim that they have not. vice is a thing of the past. Hie 5 V Walter Erdmann, customer convenience and good food," David Brooks, old-fashioned soda fountain -Betsy Hinkle, assistant spokesman for the Texas selection. also a University student, with the best grilled cheese manager of Night Hawk . Restaurant Association, gives While food prices in the • said. ' • sandwich in town was done Restaurant, explained Night his reason for the increase of supermarket have shot up by Most of the students inter­away with long ago when the Hawk is not in direct fcompeti-fast-food chains. 20 percent in the last year, viewed preferred fast-food as menu prices haVe risen by opposed to good food and only about half that figure, ac­seated service because of the cording to the Chicago-based time factor and the student Dorm Dining Areas To Remain Open National Restaurant Associa­budget. Good-bye biue^plate —Sketch by Morio Volloroy Two dormitory dining main open for residents of breakfast. tion. special... Hello, hamburgers rooms will be open next week Jester Center and the Men's The jester Center snack This has encouraged more and French fries. to accomodatedorm residents Residence Halls. All other bar, which closed at midnight 5® staying at the University1 dur­Jester Center dining facilities Thursday, will reopen at 8 Stftdent Veterans will once a year in April, also she added. ing spring break. Willie open for lunch April 8. p.m. The Jester Center receive certification cards in ' allow students to inform the The enrollment requests Andrews dining room will The Varsity Cafeteria will snack bar, which closed at April with their education VA of adds and drops in their (certification requests) for remain open for residents of close after lunch Friday and midnight Thursday, will allowance checks. -course schedules. summer school will be taken Andrews, Kinsolving, will reopen April 8 -for reopen at 3 p.m. April 7. Prompt completion and Cards should be retumed4o beginning Monday, she said. Littlefield, Blanton and return of the cards will allow their regional office by the Students attending the Carothers dormitories. student veterans to receive middle of April, Martha Win-University and wishing to final payments in May and dren, administrative clerk in enroll for the fall semester Kinsolving and Littlefield "automatically" enroll them chairge of veterans enrollment also may submit their re­dining rooms will close after in the Veterans Administra­for the University, said. quests beginning Monday, if dinner Friday and will reopen Tues. -Sat*, March 26-3Q tion program for the summer " If a student doesiiot receive they are'sure of their address for breakfast April 8. shauldnBttfy cfniT courses for the fall "Jester Center first floor diri- Tuet. April 6 , according to a VA bulletin. the Veterans Administrative semester. ing room lines A and Bwill re­ Sat., April 2 -/ TONIGHT -SATURDAY The cards, usually issued Office in Waco immediately, ' AUpN DAMRON **^Tue».-Sat. April 9-April,13 SONY presents ARICA OPEN PATH Askanyone. tUCKDANCER'S CHOICE WEEKEND WORKSHOP University Co-Op Hour 5-7 4414352 BOBBY BRIDGER and 476-2281 Stereo Shop '23rdIG u a d a l u p e ROGER BARTLETT ^ i Save Roger's Van Benefit Friday 3:00 till 5:00 50' Cover, $.1.00 Pitcher of Beer 3 1 W I 38»h and IH 35 452-2306 i© THE I at Friday & Saturday GREEZY WHEELS cm'­ Sunday - till 2 A.M. d Big Jam Session Wed., Thur., Fri. Sunday. WE WILL BE CLOSED; DURING J07 Bee Caves Rd. 327-9016/\ 1 SPRING BREAK TOO SMOOTH 1 OPENING ON FRIDAY. APRIL 5 Next Week- COME BY FOR Formerly THE DON 523 E. 6th Street BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS THE HUGE TONITEI UVEI No Cover Mon.-Thurs. BETWEEN THE JJJ TAVERN AND THE VAGABOND THEATRE * BRING THIS AD FOR HI-COTTON ;HAVE A HAPPY SPRING BREAK! £ 2 for 1 ADMISSIONS FRI. OR SAT. .FT.A tyC 0)Mn 8 a.m. .......10th and Lamar.... ... 477-3713 FINALLY OPEN Saturday WE MEET ® / and we got beer, wine, set-ups, pool, lotsa good people, ; OR BEAT and live music ANY STEREO PRICE Haircuts for people SANSUI-BSR-Ampex SANSUI-BSR-ECI lonrs: sun-fri 5-1; Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m. -6 p.m. 409 W. 14th 476-4890 Component System Best Component System Melissa, Mae, Alma 5-1 mSk THE DAILY TEXAN It pulls it's weight -and more. J JWWW ^ • 36,500 circulationto » students, faculty & staff We think dl people deserve components, and that is why we matched three top If yea hove $3ff.95 to spend for a stereo system then we have a system that wiK hMi momrfactvrer's at a law merchandise liquidation price. Utilizing tin Soasai ^ make yeahappy for many years.Utilizing the Saasai Ml receiver yea wilget to 210, the purchaser of this syittm g#t» 10 rtm • HMVWRMI/ tone centreL Fist 0 frock player Forward Ust $79.95 for car 2. Harmon KerdeO 75-pho 'ior 4 channel 2. KIH4I T#o#oy New From KiH Clear 2. ISR 5101 base, dast caver, ADC car­$39.95 Ust $59.95receiver 10 rms good list $499.95. Soand Ust $94.95 pr. M.rchandi.i U-tridge,' bydraaik cae list $104J0. 2. Pioneer KP333 $23.98 Morchendiie Uquidatioa Sale qaidotien Sole Price ..... $62,95 Morchendiie Ugaldetioa Sate Aale reverse cassette 2. Midland Price ......... $299.99 Price ................ $59.95 for car Ust $99.95 FM 0 Track $74.95 • for car 471-1865 X Pioneer KP300 Clean Seaad X Rsher 504 2 or 4 thaanol receiver 32 J. ICl 1253 Ihreeway Kl 12" woofer 3. ISR 4I0X wainet base, dast'caver, for an advertising Mte reverse cassette Ust $119.95 rms In gaad Ust $599.95. Merthondiso CieM Soand Ust $149.95 ea. Morchaa ADC cartridge Ust $140.00. Msnbandln representative to Ugaidotioa Sale Price ... $479.95 dbe maidotian Sale Price $59.95 UgaMaHw Sale Price .... $00.70 «rM FM Ust $154.95 $69.95 \ cwnplvt# $116.95 3. Motorria call on youl~~ K 4. fM 1229 wahwt base, dast cover, 4.25FtCoM TM1235 4/aMMi AttlOl OmpWior 11 rat per 4.. Moranu SG Two Wayr'' M t.WW-,i Sii £PfS!«5|*raS8fB!S5^5!!S^ mm wmmm mm SSM3I® §!« SSfSI Mkmlataaasafc a^3$' Pf \M HEW To S' •iSll Minority Policy. Investigafrion Not Completed SlStfl *#S By CHERRY JONES , March18 tocontinue its work" James Colvin, vice-prpsidenLv matters," Danielson said.The University officials on t Texan Staff-Writer 4~ _for business affairs..^ .^ : ;. -recruitment fV !, "WE WILL, have to retugi. investigators-asked about procedures * for After two weeks of in­later," Sandra Williams, head Schrank described the inter­"admissions requirements, both students and faculty, vestigating University minori­of the HEW team, said Thurs­view as ''pretty routine and faculty promotion and hiring criteria for hiring faculty ty policies, federal officials day. "We haven't looked very straightforward. They wanted -and how tfiese decisions are members and promotion and still have not completed their much at nonfaculty employ­to know our policies with made in our school," he add­tenure policies, Ms. Williams respect,to facultyrecruitment : probe and will have to return ment yet." ed. said'. She added that the team in April to finish the study,.-Thursday investigators talk­with reference to minorities The investigation centered was mainly interested in The five-member in­ed with A.M. Schank, acting in general" he explained. on minority student recruit­"what role they (University, vestigative team from the dean of the College of Natural Schrank said he told the in? ment and enrollment in officials) .have played in regional office of the Depart-* Sciences; Law Dean Page vestigators that one of the February, and this week the carrying out the University'sment of Health, Education Keeton; Wayne Danielson, major problems in hiring federal have been" officials Affirmative Action Plan."' and Welfare (HEW) is on dean of the School of Com­black faculty members is that looking into faculty employ­Friday, the HEW team will campus for the second time munication; Jack Otis, deaii "there just aren't that many ment. When they return, the talk to E.F. Gloyna, CollegeOr this semester. of the Graduate School of qualified people around." investigators will be concern­Engineering dean, and The team began the in­Social Work; Stephen THE HEW officials 'were ed primarily ^ with staff Jackson Reid, chairman of the vestigation in February after McDonald, Department of. interested mainly in faculty employes, Ms. Williams said. educational psychology three separate complaints of Economics chairman; and graduate student Investigators questioned the department. racial discrimination were fil--Charles Burnette, dean of the ed with HEW and returned School of Architecture and Agriculture Fund Probe Report Expected Soon B GAP 0 By DAVID HENDRICKS Thursday the report may take Chester cliams state -r^—Tman Staff Photo by Andy. Sfevwman Texair Staff Writer longer but that it will be made employes,.on state time, using Dr. Stephen Spurr explains student fee decisions. pool • beer • wine Next week is the earliest public when it is completed. state equipment, built a patio Donley Tonk that the attorney general's of­ The report will go to arid ranch house at a private fice will be able to release a Agriculture Commissioner home on private land. report on its investigation of John C. White, who requested Other allegations of misuse rr Fee Crisis, FRI. VIBROLAS alleged misuse of funds by the the investigation after Dallas of funds include the filming of Department of Agriculture. radio station WFAA charged a wedding, the printing of per­ SAT. PLUM NELLY John Odom, legal adviser misuse of statefunds, employ­sonal Christmas cardsand the *No 2610 GUADALUPE for Atty. Gen. John Hill, said ment and equipment for per­ planting of a private yard.sonal use. Chester also said the The Daily Texan should At that time he recommended Spurr has proposed a Odoiri said that when the department gave out state have no problems operating mandatory funding. positive and negative check­WHAT FAMOUS TRIO report is made,, the attorney jobs as favors to friends and next year on optional student "The Texan, was the last off system. The positive op­HOODWINKED THE COURTS, general's office will decide business associates who had funding, University President item placed on the mandatory tion includes a "package" 11 FRANCES (SISSY) FARENTHOID EMBARASSED AN EMPIRE, to continue the in­ whether 't .... t* contacts with the department. Stephen Spurr told a sandwich fee list, and it seems fitting with women's and men's in­ WHILE SWASHBUCKUNG THEIR vestigation or hind over the Commissioner White told seminar Thursday. athletics, ' 5 BENEFIT WAY TO fAME AND FORTUNE? that it should be the first to tercollegiate information to a grand jury. The Associated Press Thurs-"If one-half the students go," Spurr said. "Besides, cultural entertainment, Stu­SUNDAY NIGHT Odom said about 25 people day that the attorney pay the $l,65,optional fee,The. over-80percent of its revenues dent Government -and The NOTWALDEMAN, HINT: ITS have testified before the at­general's office will show the Texan will be able to operate Daily Texan. The negative Op­ BRUCHMAN, AND Comes from advertising," he MITCHELL. torney general's investiga­misuse of only $11 from the with a 10 percent increase in added. tion would provide students THE'PUB -Lots of Pickers tion, and all the allegations printing of Christmas cards its budget,"Spurr said, speak­with'a specific list of items Taking The Texan off the ./saaaiaMsnw mad.e by WFAA reporter" worth $8and the private use of ing at University Christian they wish to pay for. mandatory fee list was not an Pol Adv. PtL by Students for FarenthokL Steve Price, Chairperson. aaam am,, JO NOISIOA Dave Chester are beingcheck­a wheelbarrow which would Church. University System701 Harris Ave., Austin. TX. Puh at Tho Daily Taxan."TSPBkfa.. Vt, M3N 3H1 S.LL -V3MSNV ed. effort to censor-student The have cost $3. University of Texas. Austin. Texas. Until two years ago The editors, Spurr said. He still Board of Regents must lUiii Texarn operated solely onop-Teels mandatory funding is the ^inlfrze tfieir decision, If any. tional fees, Spurr emphasized, best method. changes are to be made, by Monday when printing of fee • TftY OUR SPECIALS! First Time SERVED IN TOWN! I receipts for the fall must TONIGHT & SAT. begin, Spurr said. ifieOhiqinal CHINESE CUISINE "But I can't predict what TOAD HALL SALOON * the Board of Regents will do E. 6th & Trinity 476-5365 any better than The Texan * can," he added. SPECIAL CHEF FROM NEW YORK * Spurr also answered CEDAR FROST * * questions about work being thru FrL 11:30 /UL2:30 PJL, If you heard them with Michael Murphey * done on-the West Mall, which * You'll Be There he said, "was planned before I • We Serve ... QUICK LUNCH J got here." He said he wanted Egg Orop Soup-Fried Rice -2 Fried Wonlon with— I 2 for 1 MIXED DRINKS 8:30-9:30* to get a Waller Creek bike Chicken Chow Mein $1.55 trail added to campus im­ •, Chicken Almond SI.75 Shrimp Chow Mein $1.65 • Shrimp Lobster Sauce .... $2.25 provement plans. Peppered Steak $1.75 • Sweet Sour.Shrimp $2.25 Sweet Sour Pork $1.75 • Beef with Tomatoes $2.25 WWER 5 PJL-10 PJL Sit I Sw. 12 WILLIE NELSON -10 PJL —7.Days A Week STEVE FROMHOLZ 9306 North Lamar at Rundberg Lane 837-2700 KENNETH THREADGILL TUFF SUN RUSTY WEIR REED ALVIN CROW & the Neon Angels Ihnatriy CmtIh*Nfll) Monday is men's \ The King Biscuit Flower Hour presents: GREEZY WHEELS lib night -no cover for stag men -plus ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL 75' highballs ©mfCHAIL ARTl Tib 7* D;RfX7!Q^ CO • the BLIND GEORGE SENATOR WINEGLOWE Unescorted ladies­ 2 free highballs, CHRIS GROOMS RAY WYLIE HUBBARD no cover charge. Mon.-Sat. at the PINEYWOODS COUNTRY rpAT w/L.Kt'5.' K3ANCTUK i ARfAADlLL-O, FESTIVAL 442-9032 n April 6 & 7 Nacogdoches,Tex. 1907 E. Riverside Dr. Tickets Available at: OAT WILLIES 1610 San Antonio Austin Premier * * * SUNSHINE RECORDS J "'PLAYTIME* * 2622 Guadalupe SONY,TV * A BUSH PRODUCTION "J**«• "•*-"rtd. Mnrw.lt/.» Um *, l)IR Craftsmanship mrouir vjirmc IV the Ursi thm ciptTWru-r the HrTrj«k~a«inr>. Mutton Vc V > ;IS JACQUES TATI'S * \n I mmv»htv rtprric«tcirr«orrded wniifiM: lb*\\ht» in j HMJ22. f>r cart-12 * * MOST BRILLIANT FILM. * In this age of mass pro­duction with its emphasis J A bracing reminder that films * on quantity rather than 103.7 FM quality, Sony retains an ON KRMH > * "4TakeThe Money J can occasionally achieve the status The Ears Of Texas Are Upon Usf * Jf intense prideof craftsman­% of art. A GLORIOUSLY FUNNY J ship. Examine any Sony And Run' product andyou'll see whyJ MOVIE. The density of the wit the J the close attention to even •the smallest detail has J gracefulness of the visual gags that J i isnuttiness earned for Sony an envi­J flow one into another, non-stop, in a * $ able worldwide reputation for fine craftsmanship in triumphant. J manner that only Tati now masters."* 8 electronics.Here's another example of Sony crafts­ Youmaybereminded — Vincent Canby, New York Times * 88­ * manship. * * oiChaplin..• * *. yonmaythinkof "JACQUES TATI'S * * W.C.Fields... .'PLAYTIME' IS TO BE * butaboveall youllsee CHERISHED, TATI IS *Z •ONE OF THE FUNNIEST J WoodyAllen,original." —100KMAGAZINE 'MEN IN THE WORLD." * -Penelope GHIiatt, New Yorker* yb << A * KV-1730R TRINITRONS * REMOTE CONTROL * COLOR TV * • 17-inch screen measured diagonally * * • Trinitron one gun/one lens + system for sharp, bright life-like color "COMPLETELY DELIGHTFUL.* y presented by • Sony Remote Control TATI IS A MASTER. J CommanderThe Cultural Entertainrr 'mittee of DAZZLING COMEDY." * • Swivel base for viewing . & from any angle ;1 v__i -1 the Texy^ —Judith Crist,New York Magazine • UHF pre-select detent * 8-channel tuning system Vi£-\ * • Automatic fine tuning, • Friday/ March 29/ w-oliseum/8:00 pm * color and hue inone push * button control • Solid state reliability$2 v Tial Services Fee • RecessesLside-mounjed ' handles Ticket drawing: -29/Hogg Box Office/10-6 daily • Rosewood grain wood • • cabinet Bus schedule; 254~Rourid trip/Jester, Kinsolvina, CO-OD A film by I* SONY V Ultt * 7:00-7:30 JacquesTati Askanyone. A JACK ROLLINS AM) CHARLES H. JOF7E Production * * § TMXR^JUX£N«7S£K£VROSE/CHMUSKWE/S»I^GU5BL/W5T«B3ER8 Univtrsity C»-0p; * No cameras or tape recorders allowed. SATURDAY 7:30 & 9:30 * HAWTHMWCH /WOSOTmn /caw / a^OWSTS^^SSSSN.^ StorM Shop| * March 29 -30 Jester Aud. * *23rd 1Guadalupe FRIDAY, SATURDAY 7:30-9:10-10:45 * 476-7211 %Cinema 40 $1.00 . * w March 29 -30 BurcTine Aud. $1 * Student Gov't. 0ffNTHUt.4MI.tia Page. 14 Friday, March 29 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN —I . ./ % \ 1 * .jj : t , V',,' %•' -ft" • j£xei_if /i bsS.-rtiJ 1 '' '' * ,1 l'&m£r . ._,m ' -1' ' " J ny, Nominees Announeed iSniaiiiniT'l * *" * fi y*'>:sK V/IDV /TTTV*t ^ , n" ' 2lit & Guodolup* S» , '«J thet^'OmdMer-Ralph Carter*^ 1:50-3:50-5:50-$! T«.y Awards ta™ b«n Z'*STlA^ke 'T*m""' •—* jounced by F^rJPalr­ mwicuiie ivanii, dwiii nuuni;,^ SUPPORTING ACTRESS,J A f™Sl:;: , "Boom BoomBoon Room" Room;" Rachel Roberts, foifepMUSICAL -Leigh Beeryfl !6 ,°f Seven David rriii' ^ ,Rabe, "The River work the her with new^'Cyrano;" Mareen Brennar^ critics and professionals . Niger" by Joseph A. Walker, 18 Phoenix Repertory Company. V'Candide," June Gableti MtMApiM .jf™*® ^Ulysses in Nighttown" by ACTOR, MUSICAL —.. ?'Candide;" Ernestine^ n" 1 SIlver Marjorie Barkentin, Alfred Drake, "Gigi;" Joe^;jackson, "Raisin;" medallions whose winners „ MUSICAL -"Over Here," Morton, "Raisin;"^ Sell,."Over Here. V.V ^ will be revealed April 21 in a ^Raisin," "Seesaw." ^ n i k$*U~ .Christopher Plummer, :DIRECTOR two-hour telecast on the . BOOK OF A MUSICAL — PLAY ­ ^Cyrano;" Lewis J. Stadlen, Burgess Meredith, "Ulysses American Broadcasting Co. «?Candide," "Raisin," CdndldGt. . Vv" vy-> ' --­ network beginning at 8 p.m. "Seesaw." •in Nighttown;" Mike Nichols, ACTRESS, MUSICAL ­ "Unele Vanya;" Stephen!°T-, ,H:• J MUSICAL SCORE -r— Virginia Capers, "Raisin;" Porter, "Chemin de Fer;" The winners will be deter-"Gigi," "The Good Doctor," Carol Channing, ,fLorelei;" Jose Qintero, "A Moon for the mined by , vote of ap-"Raisin," "Seesaw." Michele Lee, "Seesaw." Misbegotten;" Edwin Sherin,proximately 435 members of ACTOR, PLAY -Michael SUPPORTING ACTRESS, "Find Your Way Home." the theatrical profession. This Moriarty, "Find Your Way PLAY — Regina Baff, ;28th competition' involves Home;'' Zero Mostel, ; DIRECTOR, MUSICAL — "Veronica's Room;" Fion- Broadway products from"Ulysses in Nighttown;" Michael Bennett, "Seesaw;" nuala Flanagan, "Ulysses in March 12, 1973, to March 24, Jason Robards, "A Moon for Donald McKayle, "Raisin;" Nighttown;" Charlotte 1974. the Misbegotten;" George C. Tom Moore, "Over Here;" Moore, "Chemin de Fer;" The American Theater Scott, "Uncle Vanya;" Nicol Harold Prince, "Candide." Rixie Roker, "The RiverWing created the Tonys as a Williamson, "Uncle Vanya.'­ Niger;" Frances Sternhagen, SCENIC DESIGNER — memorial to its first presi­ ACTRESS, PLAY -Jane The Good Doctor." dent, Antoinette Perry^ and John Conklin, "The Au Pair Hoyt Axtori Alexander, "Find Your Way SUPPORTING ACTOR, Man;" France and Eugene Hoyf Axton, singer and songwriter, whose work has Lee, "Candide;" Santo Lo- boon recorded by such artifts a« Throe Dog Might, quasto, "Boom Boom Room;" Jdjii Mitchell Concert Sold Out Stopponwolf, John Denver and Joan Baei, will Oliver Smith, "Gigi;" Ed Tickets are sold out for the Joni Mitchell Ms. Mitchell has requested that no appear at <6:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday at. Ar­ Wittstein, "Ulysses in Night­ concert at 8 p.m. Friday in City Coliseum. madillo World Headquarters. Tickets are $3 and may cameras, flash or otherwise, and no recor­town," Tickets which indicate festival seating' are be obtained at Oat Willie's, Inner Sanctum and the ding devices"of any kind be used at the con­ on the niain floor of the coliseum. Spectators COSTUME DESIGNER -Armadillo World Headquarters Box Office. cert. Use of these items could resultin anim­ are asked to bring a pillow and blanket for Theoni V. Aldredge, "The Au mediate halt of the performance. those seats. Those tickets which indicate Pair Man;" Finlay James, University IDs must be presented with the bleachers are reserved seats. "Brown Matrimonial;" tickets by spectators at the door. Franne Lee, "Candide;" The whole Good Times ( p.RI Oliver Messel, "Gigi;" Carrie 7 Entertainment Specials family passes some uneasy F. Robbins, "Over Here." Knievel" y Longhorn Singers To Perform moments when J.J. faces the 9 Capitol Gallery . . ,it30 p.m. The University Longhorn selections for the 40-member Leader Mike Mansfield and LIGHTING DESIGNER -possibility of being held back 9 Lawn and Gardenpresent commission, by Treasury Secretary Aronstein, from his senior year in high 24 The Odd Couple ; , Singers will choral chaired ' George Marin "Boom - entertainment for a meeting York Boom , Ken 3i6 The Brian Keith.Show former New Gov. Schultz. ... Room;" school. Good Times airs at • • of the Commission on Critical Nelson Rockefeller. ­The.Longhorn Singers have -Billington, "The Visit;" Ben 7:30 p.m. on channel 7. 7 "The Colleges" Choices for .Americans Mon­,~~Other prominent political 9 Austin Profile performed for numerous con-Edwards, "A Moon for the 6:30 p.m. day and Tuesday in the Lyn­personalities invited include 24 Toma fererices, conventions and Misbegotten;" Jules Fisher, 7 Jlnimle Dean Show 36 Dean Martin Comedy Hour don Baines Johnson Library. Secretary of State Henry • in 9, 36 News 9:30 p.m. civic organizations.-The group. "Ulysses Nighttown;" 7 p.m. The 80-voice chorus will Kissinger, Vice-President is under the direction of Dale Tharon Musser, "The Good 7 Dirty Sally 9 San Antonio Profile 10 p.m. present popular musical Gerald Ford, Senate Majority 9 Washington Week in Review Wolfer. Doctor." J, 24, 36.News 24 Braay Boireis" 9 French Chef36 Sanford and Son Jp.m. 7 Movie: "Artists & Models" TONIC Michael Bennett, "Seesaw;" 7 Good Times 9 Masterpiece Theater 9 Wall Str.eet Week Patricia.Birch, "Over Here;" 24 ABC Wide World of Entertain ROY ROBBINS 24 The Six Million Dollar Man •men! — "In Concert" AND THE LA^CUCARACHA Donald McKayle, "Raisin. 36 Lotsa Luck. 36 Tonight Show —TONITE AVAILABLES PRESENTS SATURDAY Sweetness & White sing SHOWTOWN U.S.A. HI III MY THRILL" Comoroii Rd at 183 AUBREY LAUDEN 83ft-8S8 The Godfathers Band' "NOSTALGIA AND THE tOTE THAT SOLE, from San Antonio MUSICAL TEXAS SWINGBOYS LIFT THAT HEEL" Showtime 9:00 p.m. OF THE YEAR. SOUTH SIDE LOVE S KNOT MARV MOVIE 710 E Bon White WINE, BEER;FOOD, SET-UPS WHAT YOU THINK" 444-2296 RESERVATIONS 1206 E. 11th |Y 477-0297 459-8851 BOX OFFICE OPEN 7s 15' SHOW STARTS DUSK ACR08S New Year's Eve Introduces Pitchers of Beer for $1.25 A SMOOTH WHITE All Week Long PRODUCTION DAILY $14.99 / EveryNight is..** MOW SHOWING AT THE •tarring JAMES IGLEHART «»(! iBHHDHK «IIIIIIIIIIII•YTTTTTV SHIRLEY WASHINGTON ,V Restouionr CHIOU1TO CX)LOR prinli by MovbUb V &0or...»* Second Level, Dobie Moll 21st G Guadalupe PLUS CO-HIT free,parking in the rear NEAR YOU "SIGN OF THE GLADIATOR* Village Riverside Cinema Twin # Jour Cinema BUTCH 4514353 1700 Wwt Im. 1930 EAST .RIVERSIDE DRIVE "There were, once upon a time, four Marx Brothers, four Beatles, and now there are the three Musketeers &THE IHAVEN'T HAD SUCH A GOOD TIME AT A NEW MOVIE IN YEARS." ARE BACK! Peter Bogdanovich,director of "Paper Moon" and "What's Up,Doc?" writing in New York Magazine . Just STARTS »for the / 9 Si, t: '¥ •jS&ffix- Is, J^LNEMMAN KATHARINEROSS ALEXANDER SALKIND 'BIITCH CASSIDY ANDTHE SUNDANCEKID OLIVER REED "SAQUEL WELCH "i PG "A George Roy Hill-Paul MonashProduction Co-S»rrino STRQTHER MARTIN 'JEFFCOREY«HENRY-JONES Executiva Producef PAUL MONASH -— |NOW SHOWING AT THE FOUOWINO THEATRES PRATURK TIAAIS' 12:30 rRICHARD CHAMOERLAIN -A^MICHAEL YORK«oAm^ 2:40 .2-4*6-8-10 PARAIV10UN T FRANK FINLAY -CHRISTOPHER LEE GERALDINE CHAPLIN II 4:50 Ml HUim tMIM (MM -Mi •if->4CO-KATU*e • . . UUVt INS ONLY «*. __ RICHARD LESTER nu* THE THREE MUSKETEERS m4hM M7:00 o . wHh SIMON WARDRD AndFAYE DUNAWAVDUNAWA WmoHy THE CULPEPPER ; • CHANJON HESTON«c«;», JATTLE COMPANY" ­ BOX OPP1CE ovm 7:00 SHOW STARTS ATDUSK 7:50-9:50-$!.50 w> \>s»a -Universal Pictures Ijurowiwnciun irN^inStigwood s A NORMAN JEWISON Rim, <rrrrrrirr ^ ^ -r^,;4 ­ iMi^l esentVaried Dramatic Works «Sa8 -/*< i* v' f Winedale stead of fashioned roast By LAURA McDONOUGH .. „. v^he Spring the weekend usually cornbread, Texan Staff Writer. . -|s| Festival, an annual event allotted. This weekend there green coffee beans and cook If the little German town of since 1967, is held in Round will be five performances and black-eyed peas over an open Round Top (population, 94) Top, a tiny community offer­•concerts, and one perfdr-pot. Samples of the J mance on each subsequent homemade cornbread and ItKSks about*a century behind ing the perfect-pastoral "set­ the times this weekend, then ting for the musical events. weekend during April. soap will be sold. the Winedale Spring Festival Through grants from the Tex­The Winedale Theater Bairn, Authentic! German dinners is projecting thfe desired im­as Commission on the Arts built in 1894 to store hay and will be available at Wagner's, feed, will house all perfor­a combination tin shop, ser­ age. The clock will be turned and Humanities and the back 100 years as musicians, National Endowment for the mances with the exception of vice station and cafe across singers, actors and craftsmen Arts, a federal agency, the the Sunday afternoon organ the street from the Theater combine their talents in the festival will be bigger, better concert, which will be held in Barn. Wagner's is the only recreation of the -Texas-and longer. the Bethlehem Lutheran other building besides the German festivals of the 19th The songfest's duration will Church in Round Top. Nestled Winedale complex in Round Century. •'< ." be extended to one month in-picturesquely between a •Top. restored farm homeand other At 3 p.m. Saturday, the INTERSTATE THEATRES farm buildings, the Theater Prairie View A&M Chamber Barn depicts rural life in Choir will perform in the $1.50 til 6 p.m. Fayette County in the 1850s. Theater Barn. Dr. Robert PARAMOUNT, (2.50 after 6 p.m. TRADITIONALLY, the Henry, head of Prairie View's 7 I 'A CONGRrSS AVFNl if 1 V : v Features 2-4-6-8-10 festival opens with a German music department, is the "BUTCH CASSIDYAND play, presented in German, collegiate artistic director for BUTCH since Winedale is in the heart the festival's student musical THESUNDANCE KID" ARE BACK! 'J of the German-speaking performances. Last year, Panavisionf •Color by D«Lu*e* region of the state.This year's Henry was guest conductor of Just forthe funofHI • • (pGlSSt ' . play is a 19th Century Bahama's National ILNEWMAN Viennese musical comedy, Independence Choir during ''Lumpazivagabundus,'' the celebration marking that directed by Dr. Wolfgang country's independence from Michael, University professor Britain. $1.00 til 3 p.m of Germanic languages, and A barbecue supper for the Features 1:45-3:45 7 19 CONGRESS AVf'NUF 5:45-7:45-9:45 produced by University performers and audience will students and the Department follow the Prairie View of Germanic Languages. Chamber Choir's concert. "Lumpazivagabundus"' is Friday's final event will be an A scene from the comedy, 'Lumpazivagabundus' named for a mischievous 8 p.m. piano concert by Max-spirit force appearing at the ine Sims Ennett, a New York will play on the hand-built "liederabend," and coffee and ed under the oak trees on the direction of Dr. James. B. beginning and ending of the artist. Ms. Ennettisoriginally organ in the church loft. cake will be servecLbefore the grounds of the museum at 6:30 Ayres, University associate play, but the story itself from Wharton. She received a The cedar-pipe organ, which concert. ^ p.m., arid' at 8 p.m: visitors professor of English. traces theadventures of three BA from Prairie View A&M, has been proclaimed by inter­No performances will be will be entertained by a study-Tickets for each perfor­ tramps, a shoemaker, a and an UN|MHAYWARD CARROLL BAKER JUOMJrwj**. MU fa c*t*|,lls !|«wtisw«iiBiiH smmmo WI** from the man who wrote Nfc**aoast|««SNS«MH0«MB OtftttiCnittSHVMI -BLYTHE DANNER smm n*s v (H THE "THE IAST PICTURE SHOW" MANN THEATRES WEEKDAYS AT TRCHNPCOUMT from the man who directed 4:45 and 8:25 p.m. ro«m»n» -figte; "SIRrtCO" LovlQ'Molfy FOX TWIN MATINEES SAT. «. SUN. »7S7 AIRPORT HVD . from the man who produced 454-271 :JS3Si "THE LAST PICTURE SHOW" .« ­ • Page 16 Friday, March 29 fc974 THE DAILY TEXAN .> it liSim \ Menace? *ANN GUNTHER fc.very day oil the Union Building second floor, the noon',., c nnr lQ Krw»nt hv 9n «i» mA».nUn ... hour is spent by 20 or more hamburger-munching, yogurt-% spooning soapaddicts, staring fascinated into the lives ofrai^V* endless parade of upper middle-class victims of chronic 1 1 traumatism. IN SOAP OPERAS, viewers are allowed to see mostly .. what advertisers consider good cultural-values. Theads, be-r ing inseparable from the drama in considering cultural v transmission, constantly reinforce the characters' values and vice versa. „ i FOR EXAMPLE, EVERYONE in the play is always clean: their hair, their fingernails, their clothes, doubtless \ their armpits. And their sponsors, are, apparently, their mentors incleanliness. Every 20 minutesof cleanliness rein-ii. forcement in the drama is accompanied by 10 minutes of propaganda from the peddlers of pristine purity. If the soap characters wereat times allowed toblow their noses, pick at a hangnail, scratch their heads, rub their eyes or picktheir teeth, perhaps their massive audience of viewers would get the impression after a while that the dirt and odors they ac­cumulate during a normal day are commonplace and un- ORSMiimtiP wormy ot ine aDuorr^nce exmouea Dy tue pertormers. worthy of the abhorrence exhibited by the ad performers. And perhaps this would have a liberating effect upon • , . ,< , . . viewers, for such a preoccupation as we Americans have with spots and smells is without doubt at least spiritually suffocating.;J ANOTHER VALUE promoted in the soafciS the use of caffeine. The players, whether they are the ever-available,? wisdom-laden matron, the feverishly unstable homewrecker, or the avaricious young career person, are perpetually portrayed holding a steaming mug of America's most ubiquitous diuretic. Perhaps if Americans weren't thus constantly reinforced in their propensity for stimulants, life in this frenetic country would slow, down to a more reasonable pace. " . * The idea of class distinction, long a turbiilent and fluc« tuating value in American society, is stronglyaugmented by the scripting and visuals in the soaps. Wealth and idleness are absoluteessentials inevery program. Ordinary" people are continually seen picking at their food in expensive restaurants, surrounded by plushly embroidered seats and murmuring leisurely platitudesaccompanied by the discreet clink of sterling and china. Soothing music emanates from sS® v J^the very walls*!, Pi^81|JAT HOME, the standard hallmarks of what, for most : ^middle-class Americans; must be a positively gleaming "JSJ jiopulence, are fireplaces, lush hovering ferns, mirrors and a Jl" '"'sterile orderliness that unquestionably bespeaks the off-\%f­-.camera presence of a fulltime maid. -In the three soaps I watched which made an effort topre-^ • •, • sent a less inflated imageof the typical American home, the "• effort was self-conscious, ill-informed and heavy-handed. In --­ • "One Life to Live," for example,.a lower class couple was shown "havin' fun" by cavorting aroundthe living room in a grotesquely comic way. " When the Edith Bunkeresque , ' - - woman turned off the music, the conversation turned to a 1 Cloying revelation that she was takifi'French'n' Charin, to •'improve" herself. Her cauliflower-eared lover protested, < until she "charmed" him by; saying "I love you" in eastern seaboard French. This vignette was followed by adissolve to the elegant home of a rich corporate executive, where a well-groomed, expensively dad couple was shown in a state­ly. forbidden embrace. The bathos-pathos juxtaposition of these couples effected a contrast which ridiculed the passion Of the former,depicting such as generation gaps. ­One of the better soaps is "General Hospital" In thisone, people areoccupied instead of preoccupied. Their lives seemg . ft/ • to have more purpose, and while thiscan be said to advanc^i the cause of the Protestant work ethic, at least it leaves^ room for the balancing properties of humor and gaiety to do4iSr their work. There is a genuine light-heartedness about this^.™j soap which reminds us not to take ourselves too seriously — a rejuvenatii\g American tradition. This characteristic alscjX^ll makes the camera work seem less voyeuristic than in other*. soaps, where the mercilessness of the camera's scrutiny/^10 leaves one with a flight feeling of pettiness.^-^ r'lMM ALMOST BY DEFAULT, the soaps convey §bm^positiv^i^f'M aspects of our culture, such asa willingness, however latent, to be good parents, a certain conscientiousness in regard to I-,v work, and a belief, however watery, in God. At times the1 /.? characters seem genuinely to care about one another, and -A * • sometimes the more poignant facets of human nature, such -• as shyness, self-consciousness in the young and generosity ^ "kga are exhibited without being exploited. * But beyond-that,-I can find nothing I would call positive1 •4 MntMiiainlAM BIIHKU /*\« a ^ -^ _ 'Al_ _ . • e ... ,'S TiV. transmission of culture. Over and over, the soaps reinforce Mlchfertef Galleries Evans Photos on An exhibition of Men' Project'' thedisplay will life of the poor in America, book. However, after the book photographs by one of present more than 90 Agee was assigned to prepare was completed in 1939, America's most distinguished photographs by Walker a written record of the daily Harpers rejected it. photographers will be on dis­Evans. living of a group of white te­The fruit of Evan's and play on the second floor of the The exhibit was opened Sun­nant farmers. Agee's laborsfinally appearedMichener Galleries in the day by Evans, who has been Evans at the time had been in 1941, under the title"Let Us Humanities Research Center visiting at the University for w6rking as a photographer in Now Praise Famous Men." through May 5. the last week. Evang, whose the rural South for the New Fewer than 500 copies of the appearance is sponsored by Deal's Resettlement Ad­'book were sold in its original Entitled "Walker Evans the Department of Art, the ministration. Evans joined printing, a time in which the -and Photographs From, the School of Communication, the Agee, and they spent" the original public outcry-over the 'Let Us Now Praise Famous American Studies Program greater part of a month in injustices of sharecropping and the Texas Union's Ideas Hale County* speaking to and had passed. and Issues Committee, has photographing a number of The book was reprinted in First Overdose taken the opportunity to speak sharecropper families. 1960 and was jumped upon by to a number of classes and The article arid photographs critics as a masterpiece. On West Coast students, most notably stu­that Agee and Evansfirst sub­Evans photographs have been dent photojournalism courses. mitted to Fortune were re­acclaimed by critics over the By Zodiac News Service The prints on display; which jected by the magazine .last decade as providing anThe Western Journal of were made in 193ft by Rwapg heransp thpy tnpk ar sym-endwringavisual image of pWtS What Is alleged to the from his original negatives pathetic attitude toward the America's cultural heritage. be first (now in the FarmSecurity Ad­ poor, rather than the patroniz­The gallery, located at the. documented case of an over­ ministration file of the ing one the magazine wold intersection of Guadalupe and dose of LSD. Library of Congress) are part have preferred. Evans and 21st Streets, is open'from 10 According to the Journal, of the Photography Collec­Agee then took their work to a m. to 5 p.in^ Monday four men four tions of the Humanities the Harper and Brothers through Saturday and from 1 and women Research Center. publishing firm in an attempt to 5 p.m. Sunday. The exhibit were admitted to a San Fran­ The photographs in the to expand the article into a is free to the'UW(Mli8 |RL !»""'»o|»——O BOGART ^CASABLANCA' BERGMAh "THE FOUR THEATRE jjSmnSEM 1500 S. PLEASANT VALLEY ROAD JUST OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE 444-3222 SHOWCASE" FEATURES 1:30-3^30-5:30-7:30-9:30 $1.00 til 6 p.m. --• I Reduced Price* Til 6 P.M. ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS! Men. thro-Sat. Including BEST PICTURE/ BEST ACTRESS/BEST SCREENPLAY I FEATURES 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 5 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS IF YOU'VE ONLY SEEN IT ONCE, YOU'LL WANT TO SEE IT ONCE AGAIN! Ajoveph E-Lcvinctnd Brut Production*Pramanon. m I Sumnc RGEOE •A A Mdvin Frank F>IM W i ATouchOf Class HITCH*TWMD AMMCKI SIMAND SHARIF ^WlllAimER RAY STARK "BUItH CASSIDVAND THE SUNDANCE MP" •funnyar J"™* ^S^iPin»y»lon»»«^)lor 6yO«Lin** uoKcaoR* ^WON* $ 5:15 it as juvenile and slightly vulgar. The emotions of the rich people seemed somehow mpre valid, more worthy of sym-; pathy from the viewer. IN THE SOAPS, children are used, solely to advance the story line, and are rarely seen as people with feelings, en­tities who count. One little girl's lines, for example, con­sisted of incessant yearnings to see her father, and served only one purpose: tp set up reaction shots of the martyred mother. This reinforces a tendency to separate children from adult milieux and contributes to forms of alienation (Editor's Net*—Oanton and Dawn VlROOi There Is a changed situation 5plv»y, who prepared thl» column, are . regarding your employment. This is local attrologon. tpodallilng In natal probably beneficial. chatU. poraonal lnt»rvltw», analytii and UBHA: A dreamy mood Influences today.astrology clatut.) "" "You are cautioned regarding lm: ARICS: There Is a demanding HnWuence-—Tpulsiv«-aetl«<»&,--. —j...: yjL lor direct action. Use diplomacy for SCDRMO: You deny yourself out of a best results. sense of duty and a greater regard tAURUS: Impatience could cause you to for future security. • embrace superficial values. Weigh SAOITTARlUSt You are Impulsed to make your decision. your influence felt, to obtain early GEMINit You may be Inclined to success. moodiness and procrastination. CAPRICORN: There Is Indecfslon in con­Don't be Drovoked. nection withwork. Youcouldbe rash and drive yourself to illness. CANCER: Though fearing to tread_on AOUARipSt Early success Is indicated. strange ground, you may be Don't let a lack of discipline lose Itmotivated to buck organizations. for you. «Or T-hink of the effect-on others—WSCKi Therearestorrtiy sessiomlnyourchanges you "make Will hsve. BB SB • -dumesllt llll!.'&«ty*>By»i to yWJIrexample. , pie.. • \ RIVERSIDE TWIN CINEMA 441-5689 1930 EAST RIVERSIDEDRIVE $1.00 til 5 MON.-FRI. the A SUPER-THRILLER! elax, clutch the seat and be sure to see it from the beginning!" TREVOR HOWARD LIV UlLMAN -Gene Shalit, NBC-TV MAX VON SYDOW 1:30-3:30-S:30-7:30-9:30 THE THREE OLIVER REED • RAQUEL WELCH • CHARLTON HESTON 12:30 2:40 4:50 7:00 *S NO PASSES 9:15 MIDNITE FUCK IVtRYMM. AND S1.25 SAT. ST BLUE MOVIE l-ABOUT THE WHITE HOUSE. |R[ t A MIKE NICHOLS FILM \\ // CATCH 22 DAYS & NIGHTS: 7:30 ONLY #«B0ND FREAKS: 9:30 ONLY a 521 East Sixth Str4»«M 472 7979 LAST DAY! TEXAS PREMIERE Satyajit Ray's "DAYS AND NIGHTS IN THE FOREST" "The very title rinjts with ent hanjtmenl, and l)tp old Rav ma/tie u $oan at work again. This time the xpell m a rugnpread out in the nun.a picnic by tneriver, a charmingly.«7/v parlour» game, Nothing much happens during thin key nequcnce, but the,netting holds the name pnmUeof peace and fulfillment Mw ^A. 2-4-6-S-IO , ^ THE LAST DETAIL ISBOTH "Superbly hnry." —VINCENT CANBY,-N;Y. Times "Veryfunny and well done." —LYNN MINTON, MoCall's '•••' i ^ 1 "A deeplytouching and (j funny movie." M —FRANCES TAYLOR. Newhouse Syndicate ACADEMY AWARD 4 NOMINATIONS "An unexpectedly * touching film." g--AARONSCHINDLER, Family Cirqle 1 i • "A genuinely funny film." „ —GEORGE ROBINSON. Columbia Dally Spectator Best Supporting Actor '4 c * Best Screenplay]! "Exuberant funny, sympathetic." ROBERT TOWNE —LEONARD HARRIS. WCBS-TV OPEN 7:15 FEA. 8:15 $1.00 TIL SHOWTIME FINE FOODS & DRINKS 465-6933 ALBERT RBROCCOLI«HARRY SA1JZMAN FLEMING'S LIVE AND, LETDIE YAPHEIKOTff\ uMWfY •JANESOMOUR AlBERf RB^OCGOl! ktikW.SAffiMAfj " -v * x' --si?iy.McCARMY.^ -­ (hNt^VtltlB ? AT 8:15 & 12:30 ill PLUS m ?, v 8:15 TUBIICiNimirAHD^^"WINNIR TAKI All"B COlOR»,Oelju*e" United AI-lislS1* AT 10:45 ONLY ••WLJO Frida Marc^i 2% 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 17 ^ • ' -"• - ' v; ' ' liiii A PHDWE 471-5S44 MOM. THRU FRI. 8:OQ-5:CQ I5« wmmm HsSlll ja£ AgVcRTISING? 1 FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. M FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS. •FURN. APARTS. • ROOMMATES c,-as^,ErDat vlfeiworti m»iucnM«M.'i % < •* 1, * ROOMMATE WANTED ta shafe 2 $ .to. CONVENIENCE, (tew efficiency across v^vKft/wortf.o^e'c 'BICYCLE, women'* 3-speed, hardly u*:: bedroom house, W2J0 plut bills, fenced'; t»H »w»*d ?-4 times* .\ <•.. SOT ed, MS. Call 454-17M after 3. LOOKING FOR AN APT ? from Law School." View, balcony yard, pets ok. 453-1489 after 6 p m :,£.|f:tV-y«t><<}>? tifnb^'C^wy: is .0? : fCENRAY Apartments and Townhouses A-overlooking EastwOods.Park. Available (Carol). —taHV vvoi d-Itfor more'>. ,w? "1971 CHEVELLE MALIBU, atTparts' "Under new ownership, 2122 Hancock Dr. TWO BLOCKS "NEWEST & Choose from over 10,000 units. Immediately. 474-4777. ;: >Ttltlont rate OiK-h timc y, ., '..:S .75 replaced plus newtires, excellent condi­next to Americana Theater, walkingdis­FEMALE OWNROOM$70. Available4-1 ; i^vvilijbU Display . v -. „ tion, good gas mileage, call 478-8635. tance o( North Loop Shopping Center FINEST Advantage Point Apt,,Locater BEAUTIFUL ONE BEDROOM, two, Irt NortheastAustin, home926-0318 Lindaand Luby's. One half block from shuttle TO CAMPUS *^1:i^?t^ ^:>^oc-tvKv»* 135, all bills carport. 4502 Ave. D.° 452-5448. Moa^yTmonlrMknf .... .,,. 2.00 pjn: 113 or cat! 451-4848. Oriental furnishings paid. Spacious efficiency, one and two FEMALE SHARE 2/1 house on IF shut- WAREHOUSE PRICES!Marantz.Sony, NEED TO FILL new efficiency Twftfday f*kon Mwiooy y.tiir 10:00 o.nv bedrooms. Closets galore. Party bars & tle, fencedyard, petsok. v*rent, Vibills. Wtdrmday 7txan Tottdoy '. 10:00 a.m. R.T.R., Dual Folkspeaker, factory seal­ Study room wet bars. Private patios 8, balconies. HARTFORD PLACE apartments; Walking distance UT. 1405 HartfordRd. 263-2390 Barbara 451-5916 or Dyanne 471-5107. Thurtday T«ian Wednesday 10:00 a.m. ed warranties. Phone 441-0338. Peaceful courtyard with pool Clubroom, game rooms, saunas, two Large furnished 1 bedroom and 8129.50. 451-7937. .Friday Tftien thunddf ....... 10:00 a.m. WOODWARD APARTMENTS Only steps to shopping pools. Individual heating and cooling.' efficiency apartments. CA/CH, shag QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD. Darkroom. YARD SALE.Barbeque pits. Children's •. Professional resident management. 1845 1722 E. Woodward Office 107 405 East 31st carpet, quiet atmosphere. Just oft Piano. Furnished. Fenced yard. t45, books, toys, and clothing. Movie Burton Drive at Woodland. Second red 444-7555 Enfield Road, convenient toUT, Capitol, ROOMS! utilities. No dopers, drunks. Michael camera. Rolling Stone Magazines, Les -472-2147, 472-4162 light east of IH 35, take Woodland exit.. I, 2, or 3 bedrooms shuttle bos. Some vacancies now, pre-Etchison, 453-9793. "In the event of erron made m an Paul Jr., Car tape deck. Turntable, •unfurnished or furnished Barry Gillingwater Company Phone 4424789 lease for fall and summer. records, books, clothing, small home odvertisemenf. immediate netke mutt be From $140 -S265 OWN ROOM in 3-2 house. North of appliances,' miscellaneous. Friday given as the.pubfaheti orereipontibte for Monday. 1410-B Eva St. (off T 2 swimming pools, playgrounds, TEXAN DORM Rundberg Lane.Call Steveor Dee at836­ eoly ONIincorrect insertion. Alt cloims for washateria, lighted grounds, 5 minutes 1855. Congress). 1905-1907 Nueces rdjwstmentt sKewld be mode not later to UT, minutes to B.A.F.B., steps from Fall, Spring semester -S46.50/month. than *30 day* offer pubtk-ation " QESK. BOOKSHELVES. Special prices on THREE ELMS POSADA DEL NORTE maid central IRS, bus line. BILLS PAID, Free NEED TWO LIBERAL roommatesnow Oaily service, air, Channel TV. 400 West 35th. Furnished • Unfurnished. Save money. Come live with us. For the completely remodeled. Also available -share 3 bedroom house. CR shuttle. S45 Ave. B. Summer rates* Start $135 • $185. Also ALL BILLS PAID next three we?ks only get your $100 gift. single rooms, parking,refrigerator. Hot plus bills. Carol 472-9728. to students or will -make to order. 4300 leasing for fall. 2 bedroom 2 bath, 1 • Colorful Shag Carpet Young manager and tenants. Clubroom, LOW STUDENT RATES plates allowed. Two blocks from bedroom 1 bath.Close tocampus, shuttle • Central Air « Pool volley ball court, private parties, shag XL Practically IS word minimum cach day . S 75 HONDA 250. new. THE BLACKSTONE bus, extra large, shag carpet, disv . ^ • Shuttle Bus 3 Blocks carpet, one and two bedrooms, flats ana campus. Co-ed. NEED TWO FEMALES NOWI Own c.v 1» ntiG'ttfO^l Word cachday $ .05 Perfect street-trail combination; S950 or RESIDENT MANAGERS 477-1760 room, Estrada Apartments; Riverside.. I -oi x tmo «nih cach day .... $2.37 best offer. 444-6689, 282-1377, 442-9611. S64.S0/month hwasher, range, disposal, refrigerator, -townhouses. Shuttle bus. Beckie 478-3448before five,447-4864 after 'U<»» fov»ilicds'r i line 3 days Si.00 large closets, private, pantry, storage, " RETREAT APTS. 451-8155 452-5326 five. '^repdid. NO Refunds) HELPS YOUR FUTURE. 5.125 acres Apartment living V3 block fromCampus cabinets, cable, iaundry room, pool. 451-4400 Ave. A 459-0058 ROOM: Fully carpeted. Spacious walk- individual applicants matched with 3941 In closet. Four blocks from campus. MOVE iN TODAY Students muv* vhow Auditor's east near Colbrado. Live On it or use as compatible roommates Pick uplast twomonthsof lease expiring.»'«J pay in advance in T£P investment. 459-9574, 452-4205. June 1st. Call 478-6776 or 478-6889. UNF. HOUSES Li; 6kt»j. *200 <25tK-& vvhitis) from 8 VILLA 2910 Red River 476-5631 •»«i». t«v J 30 p.m. iMonday through 1971 MALIBU CHEVROLET, $2000. SANTA ELAINA HOUSE. 2411 Rio 1 BEDROOM, AC, carport, rear fenced ' * nif<»>. ' ' equipment. Call 477­ Great shape, new A Paraaon Property WHY MANOR ORLEANS Grande. CA7CH, maid service, kitchen. yard, large front yard, tall oak trees. 4562 or 926-7741. , S75. 472-3614, 258-1902. 2507 S. 4th. $135. After 6 p.m. 442-8344. VI 206 West38th TROPICAL PLANT SALE On Waller Creek. Beautiful indoor plants, ASK TO SEE • 1 or 2Bedroom Furnished.Convenient to TRAVIS HEIGHTS. 4-2, AC, range, pan-„ B«awtrhri—•PtJOi" -amd' Patio. el heat."Next to park. Nice 4407 Ave. H.Saturday, Sunday,Monday— Reasonable. Shuttle ''2 block. FOR SALE bromeliads. Cheap prices, inback yard. „ _OUR BRAND NEW -SEARCH —~Summ«r--Rates Now FURN. HOUSES neighborhood, big trees. 1406 Alameda. 2 BR Furn. $125-5135 452-3314 459-9927 453-4545 $245. 478-2911. I've Got a Secret Apartments. LAKE AUSTIN -15 minutes cam­ GARAGE SALE on Corner of 29th and 1 BR Furn. $115 pus/downtown. 1, 2, 3 and bedroom Salado, Saturday and Sunday. Central Air-Conditioning mobile homes. S85 to S140. Mack's Located in the heart of UT area.-1 block to shuttle. S149.50 COMPONENTS - Carpeted -Large Pool Marina. 327-1891, 327-1151. UNF. DUPLEXES S169.50, ABP. PALO BLANCO SIDE BIKE TO UT FOR SUMMER SESSION 2-1 house in 1974 Component sets (only 3) complete 472-8253 472-2518. SPRING BREAK MOVE? Clean 2401 MANOR RD. APARTMENTS Tarrytown. All bills paid. Washer and with speakers and dust covers. To be FURN. APARTS. • Transportation 474-4665 northeast, 2/1, AC, range, refrigerator, dryer. No pets. Call 477-5570. jpJd; for $88.00 each, Cash or terms. • Professional Service Furnished one bedroomapart-fenced, some furniture available. $140. 444-9379. UNITED FRE'iGHT SALES, 6535 N. • 24 Hour Phone Service -SUNNYVALE GARAGE APARTMENT. Near UT, will . ment. 3 vacancies. TOWER Lamar Monday-Friday 9 to 9. Saturday trade for 2or 3bedroom houseor duplex. WE RENT- LET US HELP YOU FIND APTS. 911 Blanco Linda 477-0985, 476-2661, No. 223. Donna9 to* v YOUR 2 Br. Furn. > $170 472-1030 475?2561j 474-4293, - MANOR AUSTIN 1 Br. Furn. -$150 FOR RENT NORTH3 BEURUUM,21 ^APARTMENT* Private , age, air conditioned. $229. AX-7000-GARRARTj~ " valuable CO-EDDORAA DUPLEX / Balconies -Dishwasher TARRYTOWN 4012. STUDY IN PEACE 8, Quiet-have your Garrard's famousprofessional turntable Pool -Central Air own 2 bedroom, nicely furnished mobile home in country. 8 minutes from UT. is. the heart , of the AX-7000-Garrard Our service is free or HOME 441-0584 Near Lake. 2000Vj Raleigh. Attractive, • Quiet SHUTTLE BUS CORNER stereo system 250 watt amplifier and 1 Slock Campus spacious, one bedroom completely fur­ROOM & BOARD ,$120. 926-6546. Free Parking • Maid Service precision AM/FMmultiplex stereo tuner PARAGON MYRTLE WILLIAMS & nished garage apartment. Carpet, Laundry Facilities • All Bills Paid BOAT DOCK, covered. East side Lake with FET circuitry. AIR SUSPENSION drapes, CA/CH, beautiful yard, patio. FEMALE VACANCY. $107/month. Co­ MARK XX APTS. Austin. $15 monthly. Swimming and 3 way 10 speaker system. Features PROPERTIES ASSOC. Convenient to citybus, shuttle.Only non-ed. New Guild Co-Op. 510 West 23rd St. ramp available for sunbathing. 472-3858. horn tweeter, and 31» duocone tweeter 472-7201 324 So. Congress 1 BR -$115 2 BR -$184 476-0849. heavy duty 8" woofer,5'*" midra.nge, 4" smokers! Available April 1st. $140. Call 472-0352. in each speaker enclosure. 1 year 472-4171 CENTRAL AIR guarantee on parts and labor. Lists at S529 but will sell at S?99. Cash or Terms. weekdays Four people suites; 2 bdrms, 2 CARPETING SERVICES UNITED FREIGHT SALES, 6535 N. baths, living room, dining 2506 Manor Road LARGE POOL Lamar. Monday-Friday 9-9, Saturday 9-6 5 BLOCKS area, kitchenette. Private Students Welcome 3815 GUADALUPE" 472-4175 Rooms Available. Walk or bicycle to class 454-3953 452-5093 WEST OF CAMPUS weekends Efficiencies only New semi-efficiencies $50 deposit Shag carpet, cable, gas, water, fur­ STEREO BONUS TANGLEWOOD SARA nished- NOW LEASING "new efficiency apart­ Lowest Rates in town FREE RECORD CHANGER 1908 University Ave. Red Oak 2104 San Gabriel ment. One semester or longer. Going fast! at the 477-5514, 476-7916 Rd.; 477-4118. 2504 Manor Rd.; 474-2201. with purchase of stereo $135'month. All bills paid. 2700 Manor 478-2185 $124 bills paid EAST system 474-5550 477-3651 Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom with DOWNTOWNER BEAUTY from Stereo Center MINI APARTMENT. Open beam ceil­every extra. Furnished or unfurnished 203 East 19th ing, shag carpet throughout, all built-in TREES & VIEWS HIGHLAND MALL from $139.50 plus electricity. 807 West Phone now: 476-6733 Lynn. Barry Gillingwater Company. 477­ kitchen, color coordinated.CA/CH, pool, SALON near campus. 4000 Avenue A-. $134.50 Nice 2 bedrooms furn. or unfurn. only 3 AREA ON 7794, 472-4162. 476-0198 bills paid. 452-5533, 451-6533. Central rmn. from downtown, 5 min. from UT. Summer Rates Start Now! Properties Inc. Large walk-ins, extra storage, private GREAT Brand two 304 E. 11th 477-7769 SHUTTLE 2 BR Furn PEOPLE! new FOURSQUARE balconies, lots of glass. From $-179 plus Huge 1 S. 2 Bedrooms furn. or unfurn. bedroom apartments, completely fur­ FURNITURE EFFICIENCIES. $115 plus electricity. E. OAK KNOLL. 620 South 1st (use 1 BR Furn. S120-S12S offers the PERSONALIZED hair cut with large walk-ins, beautiful landscap­ nished. Frost-free refrigerator, self- Custom made furniture. Price for un­Pool, AC, carpet, paneling,no pets.Hun­Timbercreek entrance). 444-1269, 472* Nice shag carpet -centralair ­ ing. From $154 ABP. 1100 Reinli. 452- cleaning oven, dishwasher, $149.50 finished begins at. Chair-s25, Coucb-S35, tington Ville. 46th and Ave. A'. 454-8903. 4162. Barry Gillingwater Company. Large pool monthly; $75 deposit. Convenient for $3.00. 3202, 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater Com­ Desk $40 Coffee Table-$20. Dining Befgstrom and Highway 183. Students pany. i Ride Bike to UT Please call for appointment. Tab!e-$20. Trundle Bed-595. We also SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM furnished $155 ABP and families welcome.Manager 385-2043 sfrjQ frame canvases Between 6th and apartments. Good location, near cam­after 4:00.7th on Red River. Monday. Wednesday. pus, shopping center, and shuttle bus. 1 bedrooms Saturday, 10.00 to 5:00. All billspaid. For more information,call shag -paneling PEACEFUL WEST AUSTIN. Colorful 478-3252 454-9475. giant walk-ins -balconies WALK TO CAMPUS 2604 Manor Road 477-1064 •-efficiency. Shag, complete kitchen, near Reasonably priced. Large one bedroom Enfield shuttle. $139 ABP. 1211 West 8th NEW THIS WEEK! Ponce de Leon in, Spanish furnishings apartments available. Carpeted, (off Blanco) 474-1107, 472-4162 Barry . 22nd and San Gabriel. Extra large two 2423 Town Lake Circle CA/CH, pool, sundeck, built-in kitchen. ESTABLISHMENT APTS. Gillingwater Company. UNF. APARTS. SINGER bedroom, two bath apartments ABP. 472-4162Most outstanding apartments in the 444-8118 311 East 31st $135 FLEUR DE LIS. 404 East 30tll. Mature Z IG ZAGS S56 University area' Call Rod Wetsel at 472-478-6776 451-6533 ALL BILLS PAID student. Lovely one bedroom. Walk to Barry Gillingwater Company 8941 or 472-8253. Just received in original factory cartons Central Properties Inc. • Dishwasher campus. Shuttle. Summer rates. 477­3 Z iy Z ag Singers that makebuttonholes, • Colorful Shag Carpet 5282. SUMMER RATES S149.50 ALL BILLS PAID. 1 bedroom • Central Air sew on Buttons, do decorativ.e'stitches & furnished, CA/CH, built-in kitchen, near Looking for a Quiet Place sonograms — much morf Inspect to­ • Shuttle Bus 3 Blocks COLORFUL MINI apartments on shut­ day UNITEO FREIGHT SALES. 6535 campus. 4307 Avenue A. 451-6533, 451-for Study? SOMETHING DIFFERENT 4400 Ave. B 451-4584 tle. Two locations, two designs. 38th and AT CIRCLE VILLA N Lamar, Mon-Fri 9-9, Sat, 9-6 3840. Central Properties Inc. UPPERCLASSMEN Efficiencies with elevated separate MOVE IN TODAY , Speedway area. Convenient todowntown 2323 Townlake Circle jedrooms plus enormous one and two and city bus. From $1194124 plus elec­ SUMMER RATES NOW! Six blocks bedroom contemporary apts. withevery tricity, Barry Gillingwater Company. to share 2 bedroom efficiency, walk to campus. Private entrance, parking, from Law School; 2 blocks shuttle bus. 2 month electricity. convenience, furnished or unfurnished. 454-8576, 472-4162. SIGN A 9 MONTH LEASE AND GET 1 bedroom/2 bath; one bedroom $135. AC, maid. $75 plus OAK CREEK Is environmentally ANTILLES APTS. Available now. 1 BR.FURN. $165 TOP cash PRICES paid for diamonds, carpet, dishwasher, disposal, walk-in oriented and offers a creek that winds APARTMENT FINDERS service. 472-MONTH DURING THE SUMMER FREEold gold Capitol Diamond Shoo, 4018 N. closets. 32nd and Interregional. 477-0010 through the community convenient to 4162. Summer-Fall 453-3235 2 BR. FURN. $180 Lamar. 454-6877 or GL3-2228 campus & shopping and conveniently ALL BILLS PAID 1 Bedroom -unfurnished -$130 plus electricity priced from $125. 1507 .Houston Street. 2 NICE POOLS REDWOOD EFFICIENCIES. Near YAMAHA GUITAR SALE. Free case MINI APARTMENTS, also one and two 454-6394 Central Properties Incj 451-6533 Dishwasher campus and shuttle. Shag, full kitchen, 2 Bedroom -2 Bath -unfurnished r $170 plus electricitywith every guitar, Amster Music, 1624 bedrooms. CUxse to campus. Fully small community living. $145 ABP, 403 Shuttle bus, muzik, pool, shag carpet, small complex, Fully Carpeted Hancock Apts. Lavaca. carpeted, CA/CH, rich wood paneling, 2204 Enfield Rd. 478-0609 West 38th. BarryGillingwater Company. pool, all built-in kitchen. From $119.50. Free April Rent On Shuttle Bus Route. 472-4162, 454-8576. very clean. ELEVEN POOLS SHUTTLE BUS CORNER GUITARS'AND OTHER FRETTED in--4200 Avenue A. 451-6533,454-6423.Central Efficiencies. Sparkling new Luxury. 921 struments repaired at reasonable Properties Inc. East 46th. No Lease. All Built-lns. Near , EFF., 1 and 2 1 BEDROOM $139. Near campus and Call 441-0014 or 441-3020 prices OUDS. LUTES. DULCIMERS, Hancock Shopping Center. Close to BEDROOMS PARK PLACE shuttle, convenient to downtown. New etc. Custom .built. 20% discount on all STEPS toUT. I & 2 bedroom efficien­ furniture, pool. 407-West 38th. BarryUniversity. On Shuttle Bus Route. FROM $132 ALL BILLS irrirtgs. Geoff Menke -Amster Music. cies. Nice pool area, study room, orien­APTS. Gillingwater Company. 472-4162, 454­ 1524 Lavaca 478-7331, tal furnishings. From$l39ABP.405 East 454-3854 451-6654 472-8226 PAID 8576. 2 Br. Furn. $180 31st. 472-2147, 472-4162. Barry GUITAR REPAIR, new and used Gillingwater Company A new concept in apartment ALL BILLS PAID ONE BEDROOM Apartment -$155.00. acoustics," electrics, amps. Discounts on community living. Five-Central Air Condition -Large extra nice, to campus, HELP WANTED Luxury, close strings and accessories. THE STRING OUIET ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom PLAYBOYS architectural styles, choice of Rooms -Fully Carpeted shuttle bus. Warwick Apartments. 2919SHOP. 1716 San Antonio, 476-8421. Tues.-with built-ins. vaulted ceilings. Small West Avenue. 474-171?. Sat 10-6 community living. S139.50 plus electrici­Ultra-modern duplex apt., includes furniture styles, color coor­Covered Parking Area ty. 801 West Lynn. 477-8871, 472-4162. hanging fireplace, panelled walls, dinated throughout. CA/CH, 4305 Ave. A 452-1801 NORTHEAST., Huge one and two ORNATE"brasTbEDS Polished, with Barry Gillingwater Co. We are now taking applications for slanted beamed ceilings, Terrazzo all built-ins, available unfur­ bedroom. Complete kitchens, lots of side railings. Just arrived. Doubles and storage. From $125 plus electricity. 1402 singles. Sandy s. 506 Walsh. NORTHEAST NEAR SHUTTLE, EL CID APTS. East St. Johns (by Reagan High School) floors, fully draped, modern furniture nished for $120 all bills paid. day cashier and grill help. Highland Mill.& Capitol Plaza. Large 1 and all tile bath, 2 bedrooms, air con­1501 Kinney Ave. No. Ill 454-1583. 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater CamER'a5~S%-50% Off. Canon Ftb 12 bedroom with ail the extras. From ditioning, central heat, kitchen, private 451-6533, 447-3983 1 BR $150 Company. bl 2, list $534, pnly S282. Camera S137.50 plus electricity. 1105 Clayton yard/patio. Lease required -rent Obscura. 478-5187 evenings. Lane. 453-7914, 472-4162. Barry Central Properties Inc. Dishwasher -Paneling We offer: BankAmericard, Mastercnarge. Gillingwater Company SI55/month. No utilities. Tenants will LARGE ONE and two bedrooms. show. 3408-8 West Avenue. To lease call Central AC -Carpeted CA/CH, disposal, dishwasher, pool,shut­ $1.70 starting pay tle. $150 up, ABP. Now leasing. Ver­ or write Apartment Rentals, 1009 Main 3704 Speedway 453-4883OVATION steel string acoustic guitar. {EFFICIENCIES ON SHUTTLE. $129.50 sailles Apartments, 4411 Airport. 452­ Plaza Bldg., San Antonio, Texas. AC 512­ Almost new Must'self Penny. 442-0782. includes shag, complete kitchen, SHUTTLE BUS FRONT V2 price on food 8385. CA/CH Small community 4204 227-2231. v.i.P. DOOR FOR RENT -Cameras. Lens, Projec­Speedway 452-0986, 472-4162. Barry LAW SCHOOL -one block. Large one tors, Accessories The Rental Depart­Gillingwater Co. APARTMENTS Flexible hours and two bedrooms. CA/CH, disposal, ment at Capitol Camera. 476-3581, Dobte VERY SECLUDED You Belong At 33rd 8, Speedway pool. $150 up, ABP. River Oaks,3001 Red Mall.. ' new Profit Sharing Plan SEMESTER LEASE. Large 1 (L~2 Walk UT or Shuttle at door. $130 ALL BILLS PAID River. 472-3914. bedrooms with shag, icemaker, EnglishAire LARGE INNEft TUBES for swimming clubroom. TREES. Secluded location in split levelluxury living.Beautiful studio Efficiencies, I and 2 bedroom Scholarship Plan or tubing. All siies to choose from. S3.00 Northeast off Manor Road. From S159 Efficiencies, studios, 1, 2, and units designed for 3-5 mature students. apartments, perched on a cliff overlook­LARGE ONE BEDROOM. Walk to school, shag carpet, disposal, cable TV,up 2201 Airport Blvd. ABP 2602 Wheless Lane. 926-4202, 472-3 bedrooms, furnished or New contemporary decor. Walk-Ins, deck, room, Apply 2-J's Hamburgers 3918 North Lamar ing a creek in one of Austin's prettiest un­ sun central air, laundry parks. Fully shag carpeted, CA/CH, A K A11730DSS 4-channelreel toreel tape furnished, and all the extras elegant atmosphere. pool, built-in kitchen, beautiful fur­shuttle, all bills paid. Great location. 4162..Barry Gillingwater Company. pool, cable TV, shag carpet. Quiet 2812 Nueces. 472-6497. deck Best offer. 288-2681 after 5 p.m. you expect — like laundries, King size one bedrooms also available. niture. 513 Pecan Grove. 442-8094, 451­Leasing for Summer and Fall 6533. SAVE $40 to $50 per month on summer MYSTlc~ARTS. 504 West 24th. 10* saunas, exercise rooms, game Drastically reduced Summer rates Central Properties, Inc. rates. Save $180 to $240 on year, leases. Tuesday-Saturday. Handmade clothes, LE MARQUEE rooms, pools, putting green, No calls after 7:00 p.m. Also taking Fall leases. Swimming pool, rose pottery. True soaps. Close fo campus Luxury efficiencies 477-5560 or 477-7451 PLUS a great restaurant AND study room, security, no pets, walking sU5 one bedroom si30, two bedrooms the Cricket Club. Soon there'll ESTRADA distance to UT and Capitol. 1802 West HOLIDAY HOUSE HI Fi SALE. Kenwood amp, KLH tuner. S * 70 Pool surcdech. fuMy carpeted, cen-Avenue. Phone 476-5556. Tanaberg tape deck. Reasonable, all or trdi air and be a water polopool and hand- separate. 442-7515. 302 W. 38th oall courts, too. Come join us APTS. THE PAD. Largeefficiencies, fully shag carpeted. CA/CH, pool, all built-in inratar. No. 1 ADOED 12050 IMPROVEMENTS '70 451-2461 451-6533 nQwJ From $145 2 Shuttle Town-Country I2-A4, SSE Austin, elec­Central Properties Inc. Has vacancies, ,1 and kitchen. Trees, right on Bus 444-1846 route. $130 all bills paid. 4504 Speedway, tric S6000. 442-0971, Phil Ward, 441-1776. bedroom-" Part-time noon help. No. 212. 451-4252, 451-6533. Central 2101 Burton Dr. 1801 South Lakeshore Blvd. Properties. HANDCRAFTED silver and ceramic SOMETHING DIFFERENT (off East Riverside) We are looking for good part-time help to Phone 442-6668 S$na« iewtiry, -contemporary paintings. Eitrcenc^v with elevated separate GREAT OAK APARTMENTS. Two Serigraphs. William Hoey & Co., 1612 enormous one arifc two work noons. Excellent scholarship Bedro«ms plus blocks from Law School, Quiet. Luxury, Lavaca 477-3007 beorocm contemporary acts with every two bedroom, two bath, shag carpet,convenience, furnished or unfurnished. I BR, I BA 2 BR, 2 BA 3 BR, 3 BA sundeck, pool. Now renting for summer program offered to college students. Ex­ 4 5 CU FT Refrigerator -s85. Yamaha THE WJLLOWICK Cak CREEK »s environmentally and thereafter. 477-3388. FC-230 12-string and case -S90. 477-3317 SOUTH $164.50 $235 $325 perience not necessary. Good pay and ex­ er.e^ted sod otters a creek that winds Live in Wooded Seclusion after io o.m Large Pool—-All Bills Paid Ibi-ouyri the community convenient to Larger Apartments with shag carpets, HALF MONTH RENT FREE. Large 1972 GMC VAN, side & shopping SHORE furrtished one cellent working conditions. Apply at 1003 lamous and conveniently bedroom, CA/CH, cable. sliding door, 6 Move In Today! p^ced from 4129 1507 Houston Street modern furniture, accent wall and con­452-3076, 258-1832. cylinder engine. 5TD trans., good solid 454-6394 Cenfrai Properties Inc. 451-6533 APARTMENTS • Best Rate on the Lake Barton Springs Rd. between 5-7 p.m. daily. condition Call 477-3828 after 6 venient central location. fewly Shuttle Bus—Front Door rooms $75., all bills paid. (908 West 29th, 1969 FORD XL 351-V8, very clean, spor 1 Bedroom 2400 Town Lake Circle in the rear). Efficiency apartment fy economical Call 474-4(50 after 6 30 p m ONE BEDROOM Efficiency, 1, 2, and 3 442-8340 S145 unfurnished $160 furnished $99.50, all bills paid. 2907 San Gabriel Apt. C. CentralProperties Incorporated. ATTENTION GERRARD LAB -80 Turntable E«-S150 ALL BILLS PAID bedroom apartments. 2 Bedroom 451-6533. A d.fterem one 0«dro6r:1'fiAA^v»uaaaiupe :^ •• experience, 25 years old. XWCA, 311 Xm mOf Chinese Finances •% 'wsfys .^McCullough. San Antonio, Texas, 7(21V -!»• $12-227-1441. 4c COPIES A University professor has vice Center in Hong Kong for v^tyVumerous University faculty members®; visory council of the Ame 5 'EXPERIENCED .Walttr/WaltresV. received agrant that will take further research. He will have received recognition this semestei||p 5F Pediatrics. Speak fluent English. Part-time. -Cafe ReductionCapability to24 x 36 Jif ,. ^^^^•5703... . ^v-y,-,'him to Japan and Hong Kong-return to the University in the for expertise and achievements in their"'* Typing, Multilithmg. binding -1 Dr. John D. King, associai Pictures, Multilith, ,s The Complete Professional .Pooling, Binding ^'f^riyTELEPHONE TYPE WORK, pleasant to study the politics of China's fall of 1975. particular fields. \ special / education and educational ad­ •> j.-'.--' -«olce, no experience necessary. Atterv finance trade Ifel• v*^FULL-TIME Typing noon and evening hours availably. and system The grant, awarded by the ^Sinclair Black, associate professor of^i§ ministration, was chosen president of The . *1.75/per hour plus bonus. For Inter-?..,,Since 1959. Joint Committee on Contemn architecture, was appointed Bicentennial/I Foundation for Exceptional Children. -•vsY1 Service > .View, Call 451-8131; * RESUMES i'-Rj Dr. Gordon A; Bennett, porary China of the Social consultant by the Austin City Council. 4$, -Dr. Robert Little, professor of, physics » GINNV'S EXCELLENT TYPIST, Must type 70 •sfvSy V .withor withoutpictures. wpm. Flexible hours. Apply 1-5, "30-A* assistant professor of govern­Science Research Council and |aDr. John E. Breen and J. Neils Thorny and education, received national recogni­ 2 Day Service 'ot* ^COPYING Dobie Mall. 472-8936. ment, will begin 15 months of the American Council of 'sen, professors of civil engineering, weres tion by the American Association of •!m-' *:• '472-3210 and 472-7677 service NEED COMPETENT loving babysitter study June 1 at the University Learned Societies^ will allow elected fellows of the American Concrete . Physics Teachers • innov^tp^ tor fun baby,tjirl.ilper hour. -441-8524;®*; 2707 Hemphill Park of California at Berkeley and Bennett to acquire data to use Institute. ** f," v : teaching method^^fiS^^felSi^^a'; f WANTED: Willing, modern thinking, at Stanford University for the for a case study of financial, Dr. Ma¥y Ellen tfarrd£' or of|Dr. Wallace Mentfet^^rofessor of ikf 42 Dobie Mall 476-9171 neat part-time help. Time to study. Pick . TYPING II your own hours.Must be ableto manage first six or seven months of and commercial issues. home economics, was elected treasurer 0tif -government, was appointed a consultant Free Parking —~-and operate without direct supervision— his research. 1 A Responsive Typing Service 452~26ii. In turn, the case study is to the National Cofuncil of Administrators ot;$ to the National Endowment lor the -"•-V Open 75 hours a week •• He will then spend about a re-evaluate interpretations of Home Economics. ^ Humanities. MIDNIGHT -8 A.M. house parent. Mar- bridge House of Austin.; 2505 San month at Tokyo's Institute of the nature of the Chinese Dr. Virgil Flathouse, assistant professor • Dr. John E. Roueche, professor of '2200 Guadalupx COPY SHOP II Gabriel. , Developing Economies before political system in the 1960s of special education, was appointed educational administration, waselected to RBC/Bond Paper Super NEED PERSON for receptionist job." going to the Universities Ser-and the 1970s. superintendent of the Texas School for the • a three-year term on -the board of direc­ Full time, working with photographic Copies Fast 474,114 Thesis equipment. ApplyMl-cwe$t 24thStreet. Bennett, who speaks, writes Deaf in Austin, effective June 1. • : |®| tors of the Council of Colleges and Univer­ Professional Resumes and reads Chinese, has had .Dr. Benjamin Fruchter, professor of •' sities. No Hassles Scientific 2200 MISCELLANEOUS For information on Austin two Fulbright grants for study educational psychology, was appointed Phyllis Young, associate professor of GuadalupeOn the Drag • Next to Gourmet Tomorrow Neighbor­at the National Taiwan editor of Multivariate Behavioral, music, was conferred an American String : hood Meetings, call 474-University and the Hong Kong Research, the journal of the Society of Teachers Association citation "in recogni­EXCELLENT 474-1124 SKYDIVE! 4877. Neighborhood research center. Before join­Multivariate Experimental Psychology. tion of distinguished leadership'*and ser­ Pictures SECRETARY TYPIST Kalograph typing 'rinting Dr. Ernest A. Gotts, assistant professor ... producing finest, quality for Binding Printing meetings will last until ing the University faculty in vice" in "training string teachers and Save Time -Save Money students and faculty members in every Next to Gourmet on the Drag AustinParachute Center April 30. 1971; he was a researcher at of special education, was named to an ad-. develppihg young talent." field for 15 years, will take meticulous care totype law briefs, research papers, the Center for Chinese Studies B.C. reports, theses, and dissertations For information Please call at Berkeley. \a accurately, observing proper forms. PROBLEM Latest model IBM Executive carbon 272-5711 anytime ribbon typewriter. All work proofread. PREGNANCY UNCLASSIFIED 478-0762. Austin Maternity Counseling Service, offers residential and non-residential $25 reward • house wanted. 478-2965 : UT Showcase To Display Exhibits programs. Located 2 blocks from UT campus. 510 West 26th. 472-9251, 2 bd.-2 b, apts for summer 477-3388. We have been in this business A 30-foot popsicle stick "Fantasy, Facts, Future," display. two computer terminals%';jM for 50 years Piano need tuning? 474-5153 (early). $1,000 bridge will be erected in the the theme.of the annual event, The Center for Middle allowing viewers to havev""'.'/j| Don't read anything by Veilkovsky. Union Main Ballroom by the will be carried out by exhibits Eastern Studies .will have five direct access to the com-' Justin boots, new, 7^Jf§ Portable Stereo J20. 444-3855. University Showcase, April 9 the nuclear Three of -answer , ON for any pertinent in­, Studies, reactor: models nuclear TYPING Reports, Resumes Hey FiDbo. Uy.XAE.., Tabs, microbiology labs and power plants that will be con­At the event 15 distinguish*! ' -^ --E -• Theses, Letters-. THE TEXAS UNION formation leading to R~t, " All University and COPY CENTER Kenwooid amp tuner 476-5065 Cheap the Department of Petroleum structed in Texas and a model ed" alumni will be honored business work R Last Minute Service the arrest and con­ TO PLACE A Engineering. _' of a working nuclear reactor" Selected by the College 0f|>%| Open 9-9 Mon-Th 8. 9-5 Y 8 a.m. -5 p.m. M-F viction of any per­ Mrs. Brucie Taylor, who also will be displayed. Engineering, they will open^ ^ Fri-Sat SERVICE Union 314 t son or persons WANTED U TEXAN has coordinated Showcase for The Department of Com­Showcase '74 with a ribbon^:" "t 472-8936 30A Dobie Center 471-3616 V UY, SELL: ail types girley magazines, CLASSIFIED AD the last 17 years, said Wednes­puter Sciences and the Com­cutting ceremony at 11 a.m; \;^^ ", . ' 5' copies .4 responsible for the ooks, records, guitars, stereos, radios, varied Center up April 9. .i» 'til midnight every day . -JeWfctry. musical instruments. New CALL 47] -5244 day visitors will see a putation will set " fire at Eli's Club on ,. . ,_ , .r. 8sbuyer on duty. Aaron's, Q20 Congress, Information Center ABACUS *Xerox, Transparencies, ,March 13, BUSINESS SERVICES Multilith Ithe owner, 476-8174 "!ne£ditick_ets toj^niMitcheii. wiii '•SSrlr 1301 S. Interregional p.'y) p»rh, 'fjlia»li477.BOW. 444 0816 — ~affer~5 J5^TTT7 PTre •MK& NEED 2 Joni Mitchell tickets for Friday Typing (50" page),Printing andBinding. Marshall's office night. Cail«72-4680 or 441-6065. S One block south of Riverside. At the VW PARTS AND SERVICE Sunnyvale shuttle stop. BloodPlasma Donors Needed v Quality work at reasonable prices.Tune­ up $10.50 plus parts. Free diagnosis. Photo Service ./ Spring Vacation Estimates and compression checks. TUTORING Men & Women: Please try us! (We have moved to 1003 Canoe Trips 222 W. 19th A V 5324 Cameron Rd. AAultilithing, Typing, Sage Brush). For information call 836­ MATH TUTORING that you can unders­ 3171. Overseas Engine and Supply. EARN $10 WEEKLY tand. 476-0757. Xeroxing We plan float trips on the Thanks! AUS-TEX Upper Guadalupe up to four CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION RESUME' & days. Call The Guadalupe LOST & FOUND DUPLICATORS Canoe Livery. 885-4671. HELP WANTED Austin IDENTIFICATION TYPE 476-7581 LOST AFGHANhound, brdwn/grey.454­NELSON'S GIFTS: Zuni Indian 8278, 471-5266. REWARD , 118 Neches jewelry; African and Mexican Imports. Blood Components, Inc. PICTURES FOUND LAST SUNDAY -Irish Setter. STARK TYPING. Experienced theses, Mondays. Call 5-10 p.m., 472-9420 to identify and OPEN: MON.& THURS. 8 AMto 7 P.M. 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. Closed claim. Binding, Specialty Technical. Charlene LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beginner TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. $dissertations, PR's, etc. Printing and SPRING Stark, 453-5218. and advanced. Drew Thomason. 478-LOST BROWNISH-BLACK Dachsund I mutt with limp around 19th and Rio DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, and 2079. CLOSED WED. & SAT. 1-Day ;;fi Grande. Call 478-3471. a'j? law briefs. Experienced typist, GIVE ME your old artsupplies, 478-2079. INTO Quick, Reliable Service Tarrytown. 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine LOST IN HYDE PARK area: gray 409 W. 6th ' 477-3735 ­ Brady. 472-4715. 2nd ANNUAL 8-HOUR Marathon and striped neutered male cat with whiteun­ WS Art Show. Stadium. April 7. 12 noon • derbelly. Reward. 476-5419, 451-3325. BOBBYE DELAFlELD, IBM Selectric, 6:00. S10 Exhibitor fee. Louis Henna, Jr. pica/elite, 25 years experience, books, 454-2501, 837-0395. FOUND: Ladles watch and three rings­dissertations, theses, reports, Put your career into high near Burdine. Call 444-8687. mimeographing. 442-7184. .HI! THROWING A PARTY? Let a bell j.i ACTION! •elly gear! Call or come by and FOUND BERMUDA KEY Chain and \\ dance troupe entertain you! Sidney, 447­ BEAUTIFUL PERSONAL TYPING. All visit with us. We want to ex-,, 2083; John, 447-4777 keys. Near Parlin. 453-7719. // your University work. Fast, accurate, plore job opportunities with reasonable. Printing-Binding. Mrs. PAWN LOANS made on mdst anything KEYS, found Monday 3/25/74 at Hippie Bodpur. 478-8113 o'fvalue. 613 West 29th. 476-2207. you! We're on the shuttle bus Hollow. Call Gary at 471-2310 to Identify. route. wiferlmmed minute -overnight available. Term MABYL SMALLWOOD Typing -last LOST ROUND GOLD s 90 Minute Color Film glasses on campus Wednesday. Please papers, theses, dissertations, letters. CORPORATE call Jill, 454-0228. * MasterCharge. BankAmericard. 892-TRAVEL The most recent documentary on the largest 0727 or 442-8545. GIRLS REWARD. .Black Lab mix. Damaged left eye. Basil. Call 478-1224 or 474-2682. massacre this century. "Attica is every LAM'S YUM YUM iV EUROPE-ISRAEL-AFRICA. Traveldis­ perienced, 'law theses, dissertations, FRANCES WOOD Typing Service. Ex-AMERICANA BLDG. counts year-round. Studeiit Air Travel LOST: GREEN PACK In Chem building prison, every prison is Attica" manuscripts. 453-6090. SUITE 303 Agency, Inc. 201 Allen Road, Suitte 410. restroom, 2nd floor. Please return at 1301 IH 35 SOUTH Atlanta, 6a. 30328. (404) 256-4258. least notebook to C103W for reward. CHINESE RESTAURANT NEED BADLY. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Graduate 444-4861 and undergraduate work. Choice of type styles and sizes. Barbara Tullos, 453­ 3301 N. IH 35 ^ 477-1687 Friday, March 29 5124. TIME MEANS . VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diversified lantern Light Dining Services. Gr&duate and undergraduate typing, printing, binding. 1515 Koenig MONEY ALL YOU CAN EAT! Showings: Lane. 459-7205. . World Known Cantonese Dishes Ambitious couple who needs more in­ MINNIE L. HAMMETT, formerly come. Unusual opportunity for good ear­1 St associated with Marforie Delafieid Typ­nings for both. Work together.Part-time Filet of Flounder 12 Noon ing Service. Typing of theses, resumes, or full-time. Singles also considered. dissertations, duplication, binding.Open Phone 345-2807 for interview between 7-9 Golden Fried Chicken Special Lunch Daily n y* everyday. Notat oldaddress. PleasecaM p.m. before coming. Free refreshments. 442­ University Y, 2330 Guadalupe 7008. Chicken Fried Steak NEAT, ACCURATE and prompt typing. 65 cents per page. Theses 75 cents: Call "THE MOV IE 2:00 Union 317 447-2737. trff.r STAR" Salad Bar 99 4:30 Soul Factory 1813 E. 12th St. RS TYPING SERVICE. Professional typing. Reports, theses, dissertations, is interviewing for clean-up person, resumes. Copy service available. 453- per and French Fries Ipar parson waiter/waitresses S150 week 8:00 Friend's Meeting House, 7577. dancers $6 per hour. Apply in preson 1-3, 1602 San Jacinto. Homemade Bread Coupon Par PartyHOLLEY'S TYPING SERVICE. A com­ 3014 Washington St. " plete service from typing through bin­ ding. Available until 10 p.m. Experienc­ ed inall fields. Near campus. 1401Mdhlfe tRAVIS STATE Drive. 476-3018. SCHOOL TYPING WANTED. Neat and fast. 50 ATTENDANT 1 -$397 cents/page. 472-4212. Call before noon and after 5. per month leaves CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK THEMES, REPORTS, law notes, Taking applications for full time work, reasonable. Mrs. Fraser, 476-1317.1204B mainly 1:45 p.m. to 10 p.m. shift. Duties Marshall Lane. include the care, training andtreatment Hungry "ofmentally retarded residents. Applyat "Just North of 27th & the Personnel Office, Travis State Guadalupe SchQpl, 2 miles east of Austin on FM969 (East 19th).'8 to 11 a.m. or 1 to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Share the fun • OVERSEAS JOBS YES, wedo type -this summen Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa. Freshman themes. Students all professions and occupations S700 to S3000 monthly. Expenses paid, overtime, sightseeing, Free informa­ Why not start out with tion. TRANS WORLD RESEARCH CO. godtd gcades! Dept. A-5. P.O. Box 603, Corte Madera, CA. 94925 . 472-3210 and 472-7677 2707 Hemphill Park SERVICES CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! HOLIDAY HOUSE THE BUG INN Volkswagen Shop. Free Timing, Carborator adjustment with No. 1 . this ad. 1024 Airport. 385-9102. -WRITE YOUR AD HERE- Part-time noon help. ' ^ PRO-LIFE ALTERNATIVES. Call 472-We are looking for good part­" 4198 for help In pregnancy decisions. time help to work noons. Ex­ GOING AWAY for spring break? I'll cellent scholarship program 147-4327'forf further to college students. tend yourplants. Call 447-4: offered Info. Experience not necessary. Pre-lease now for as little Good pay and excellent work­ ing conditions. Apply at 1003 as $59.50 per month,furnished, PREGNANT Barton SpringsRd. Between5­ ALL BILLS PAID! 7 p.m. daily. Save money andput more funin your summer by sharing oneof these luxurious2 bedroom,2 Amount fnc/osedL Use this handy chart to quickly arrive unwed mothers in need bath apartments withthree other students! Number of Days or confidential medical, "THE FLOWER PEOPLE need people to This low priceincludes furnishings... and all ' at cost. sell. Highest paid commission, lowest Mail to: *v „jr; legal and social services prices, paid daily. Cal) 453-7156 or come the summeriun features thatmaiw River Hills i -(15 word minimum call by 4301 Guadalupe. famous! DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS FLOWER SELLERS needed Thursday; No. Times Times Times Times Times Friday afternoons, all day Saturday, Huge swimming * Free Icemakers Sunday. Freshest flowers, hlatiest com­pools with water • Plentyof parking and Words 1 2 5 10 20 IfliSiiP0. BOX D -UT STATION THE EDNA mission. 476-3060, 453-1508, 4»-2761. . : volleyball courts® ample laundry facilities fi^BAUSTIN, TEXAS 78712 GLADNEY HOME dance Teacher for children, 3-5 Costper word 10 18 35 have oneof those conversations tlieit never new strategic arms limitation (SALT) In London, where Kissinger stopped oft f| took place." talks and cast doubt on President Nixon's for seven hours enrpute home to confer Hearst Moves To Pacify SLA chances of breaking the deadlock when he "I looked into my coffee cup and with Prime Minister Harold Wilson and visits Moscow in June. hesitated." Cook said. "He said 'Well other rnembets of the new British Labor| SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Two dition that Patty must he released hefnre Tha Itonrata «» y»^ . * The tffitt-wora statement made no men­ Brad, that's the way it happened..There's Party tol<$— suspected members of the Symbionese payment of the additional money, Hearst this Week. There the father conferred with tion of progress on any of the? issues government, Kissinger no sense of getting everybody em­ reporters: V,J Liberation Army sent their "warmest said: the board of the Hearst Corp. of which he dividing the two nations, including the barrassed. We did no wrong. The donation "It is difficult to define a breakthrough. -4 regards and. love" to kidnaped Patricia "I have no control over that. I'd have to, is chairman. Middle East and bilateral trade. Hearst Thursday and agreed with her go back to the company and say please do When Hearst, who is president and was legal. The suit was filed.' " (In Washington, U.S. Defense Secretary At the same time, it is too early to say' * After his first two appearances before whether one was achieved. The degree of father that she will be released unharmed it the other way, and I can tell you now the editor of the San Francisco Examiner, James A. Schlesinger said Thursday the the grand jury, Cook said, Stans called progress will be determined by the follow-'; by her SLA captors. answer would be 'no.' " was asked Thursday if he were convinced failure of Kissinger and Brezhnev to break him on May 7, 1973, and said they should up." Kissinger added,"Even if perfect un­ Editor Randolph A. Hearst told a news Wearing a blue "sports coat and grey he would see his daughter again, he said: their SALT deadlock just about dooms any meet again on the Vesco situation. derstanding were achieved, it would still conference outside his suburban slacks, Hearst seemed less tense than he possibility for a breakthrough during "Yes, I am. I think that after these "I said I didn't want to discuss it any take some time to mature. Our relations Hillsborough home he believes his was during his last appearance before President Nixon's summit trip to Moscow demands have been met and the SLA further — I was on my way to New York to with Russia are a combination of coopera-^ daughter is safe and will be released when reporters and television cameras. in June. He said that unless a basic agree­ realizes that what we've done is testify before the grand jury (for the third tion and competition, and ambiguities are • the SLA is convinced another $4 million is ment on srategic arms limitations comes everything within our power to do, I think time)," Cook testified. likely to arise at any point. The arsenals of available for continuing the free food He also appeared to be more confident in advance, "such agreement cannot take that they will honestly begin what they "He said 'Nothing has changed,' but I mass destruction must seriously affect v program they have demanded. of Patty's safety than was his wife, place" during the summit.) consider negotiations to get her back." said it had. He said 'That could mean trou­ coexistence." In nearby Berkejey, radio station KPFA Catherine, who said in a New York inter­ The joint U.S. — Soviet communique ble. What do you mean?' U.S. OFFICIALS in his party said r received a letter from Russell Little and view earlier this week that she was "very was released simultaneously-here and in Kissinger did not consider that he -hadJoseph Remiro expressing their con­discouraged about the whole thing. As Hearst was speaking, a radio station "I said I was going to tell it as it was." Washington about 'nine hours after managed to the stalemate fidence the girl will be released and sen­"I can't think of any way out of it for broadcast a letter received from the two Cook also admitted he lied to two con­Kissinger's plane departed for London. break over •, nuclear weapons limitations. , ,4 ding her their "warmest regards and Patty," Mrs. Hearst said then. She did not jailed SLA members, who have been seek­gressional committees investigating THE STATEMENT said both sides are They said the Russians had made a love." meet with reporters in Hillsborough ing a nationwide television broadcast to Vesco, who is now a fugitive from justice determined to find solutions to the im­proposal on nuclear limitations Which Little and Remiro, identified by law en­Thursday. comment on the Hearst case. in the Bahamas. passe in SALT talks in Geneva. But it did Kissinger considered unacceptable as itforcement officials as SLA members, are stands, but which he will discuss with U.S. jiin jail on charges of assassinating Oakland diplomatic and military officials when he 1 -newscapsules School Supt. Marcus Foster last Nov. 6. gets to Washington. The two said the kidnaped girl would The joint U.§. — Soviet communique remerge from her experience a better per­ said the talks were held in a "constructive son. Dancer Tries To See Kissinger Steak Streaker Stoned and businesslike atmosphere."The phraseShe will look back on her abduction, they MOSCOW (UPI) — Ballet dancer Valery Panov secretly came to SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Diners at the Steak 'n Ale restaurant weren't in Communist usage often denotes hard said, "as one of the most meaningful ex­ periences of her life and may be able to Moscow to personally plead his case to U.S. Secretary of State Henry A. amused Wednesday night when a nude man dashed from a restroom bargaining. The statement said" both sides agreed lead a useful life because of it." Kissinger or his aides but was thwarted by secret police and Kissinger's through the rows of dining tables. the talks were "an important stage" in Hearst told the Hillsborough news con­staff, friends said. Police said irate customers began hurling bottles and silverware at the to preparing for Nixon's scheduled visitference he does not believe Patricia is Panov, 35, a Jew and former leading male dancer, with Leningrad's nude streaker, some bashing him with chairs as he darted among them. Moscow this summer. dead. Hearst said he thought the kidnapers Kirov Ballet, declared his intention in April, 1972, to emigrate to Israel. Officers said the streaker picked up a chair and hurled it across the "Considerable attention was given to were waiting for completion of the He was given an exit visa in December but said he would not leave unless' room in retaliation,breaking a light and several drinking glasses. the problem of the further limitation of strategic arms," thestatement said, "the s original.^ million People in Need food he can take his non-Jewish wife Galina with him. The man, later identified as a Grand Rapids, Mich, resident, was cap­ sides agreed that, despite the complexityprogram that ended this week and also for tured in the restatirant parking lot. of this problem, there are possibilities forsome assurance that another $4 million reaching mutually acceptable solutions. offered by the Hearst Corp. for the girl's Market Drops 16.82 Points Doctor Details7 Hospital Malnutrition "THEY ARE determined to continue|p release would not be "snatched back" the NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market, chilled by the specter of a con­ moment she is freed. HOUSTON (UPI) — A Harvard Medical School surgeon Thursday said make energetic efforts to find such tinued rise in short-term interest rates, turned in one of its worst days of solutions." To convince.the terroristSLA that the $4 the highest rate of starvation in the United States occurs in hospitals the year Thursday. There was no hint of Soviet irritation million provided by the corporation would because post-surgical diets lack body-building proteins. with Kissinger's personal diplomacy in the ^be available after Patricia's release, The market opened with a sharp downward burst, leveled off briefly, Dr. G.L. Blackburn said protein calorie malnutrition occurs because Middle East. . Hearst said he was putting the money in then fell into a steady slide in the afternoon. standard diets of persons undergoing surgery or who are critically ill is The statement said that "taking intoac- escrow in a bank where it would be ad­ The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed off 16.82 at 854.35. . their special role at the Geneva • ministered by three trustees, still to be sugar and water. count peace conference on the Middle East, thenamed. sides would make efforts to promote the He said heexpected it would take two or Vets Protest on Washington Monument Baptist Blasts Betting on Horses solution of the key questions of the Middlethree days to make the money availableas WASHINGTON (UPI) — Seven Vietnam veterans, including four in HOUSTON (UPI) — A Baptist lawyer says Texas should not legalize East settlement."' demanded by the SLA. wheelchairs with American flags in their laps, staged a brief protest atop horse-race betting because it would be "ripping off its citizens." On trade, the statement said the sides "If I didn't hear from them at this point, or if somebody didn't hear from them, or the Washington Monument Thursday over conditions in VA hospitals. The Attorney Phil Strickland said the losers outnumber the winners at the agreed to develop further mutually beneficial ties and businesslike coopera­ have some kind of negotiation taking demonstration ended in a scrap with police. pari-mutuel window. tion on a long-term basis. There was no" place, I would then be very fearful that Police, who said a "slight scuffle" occurred, denied the claims of a "Gambling is primarily the exploitation of the people who have the reference to attempts in the U.S. CongressPatty is dead," he said. veteran who said he was punched and that another was pulled from his least, and it is a regressive tax. It doesn't create new money," he said. "It to block trade benefits for the Soviet ^ Asked what would happen should the wheelchair. simply redistributes the money of the many to the benefit of a few." Union unless it allows free emigration ot SLA refuse the Hearst Corporation's con-its-citizens'. End of By RICHARD FLY line one year earlier than planned. One of the major issues arising from the proposals is^ Lax Texas Staff Writer In addition, the developers must pay the city to build whether the city should approve them and possibly en- East Ranch, northwest of Austin off Highway 620, is the approximately two-mile "Wilding connection." courage growth in the Lake Aiptin area. -, *J§typical Texas hill country. Steep slopes and numerous The city must foot some of the bill, however, to make In a City Council memorandum, City Manager Dan " ravines, covered with mesquite and cedars, the line of sufficient size to serve the Bull Creek Davidson said Wilding would be able to obtain state ap­ characterize the land. drainage basin. proval for operation of sewage treatments plants if the Turning south off 620 onto Marshall Ford Road, then Wilding must pay the difference,between the cost of city does not approve the proposals and assume utilityeast onto a well-laid gravel road you come upon a large the pipe planned for the original two-mileextension and regulation. construction site, where road building equipment is cut­the cost of the larger one necessary for handling the in­ ting wide swaths through the cedars. creased sewage flow. The plants would pose a threat to the water quality of •' The construction is for a golf course, part of a new This would result in a $285,000 expense for Wilding. Lake Austin, the city's primary water supply, he said. residential community for up to 30*000 persons being The Wilding connection would cost Austin $77,500 and Reed hinted that extension of the sewer liine to Wilding planned for the 3,500-acre area. Wilding $1,134,500. might encourage further development. ' Named Wilding, the acreage has two miles of scenic The project, however, may actually result in savings "It certainly will make sewer service available, and frontage on the north bank of Lake Austin. for the city. Asst. City Manager Homer Reed said developers will certainly tell you it encourages them,"|| Thursday. he said. ' 1 ® The land was purchased in 1970 by a groupof investors i Thje city would eventually have to serve the drainage The sewer mightencourage development northwest of ­ including University Regent and former Gov. Allan area covered by the Wilding connection anyway, Reed . Austin a little farther out than the city had hoped. Reed IIT Shivers and a number of legislators and lobbyists. tA'v' said: at a possible cost of $500,000. Thus the city may added. ' j But to get the multimillion dollar development project save more than $400,000, he added. •off the ground, the developers. Austin-based Southern Austin has provided sewer service to Anderson Mill -" I. Living and Leisure. Inc.. must receive City Council ap­Reed denied that extension of the supersewer was and Lost Creek developments whereby the cost was paid : I planned with knowledge of Wilding. I proval of two items. by the developer and federal grants, with a minimal OM.MI "The line was part of the 1972 Capital Improvement O « Wilding needs city consent to a contract for sewer line amount furnished by the city. Program," he said. "Wilding came around about a year construction to Wilding and approval for the creation of The funds have dried up, however, and Wilding was later." a fresh water supply district (FWSD). saved by the city's own plans.' / ' Under present financialagreements* Wilding provides In addition, county commissioners must assent to the Annexation of Wilding by Austin is "entirely possible'1'J creation of a FWSD. < that any bonds sold for construction of the sewer lines within the next 10 years, fteed said. 1 would be paid off within five years after construction is „ Council will consider the requestsat a public hearing Should this happen. Austin would assume the remain begun,1 in three or four years. a scheduled for April 4. ing debts incurred-by Wilding for" water, sewage and Should the city decideto,annex Wilding before the five A two-mile extension along West Bull Creek of the drainage facilities — an estimated; $14.8 (pillion in . years is up, it would not have toassume thedebts for the bonds. • I-" . <-L!y's crosstgwn. 'snpersewer has been formally­ • sewer connection——-— '• / «— planned since 1972. The sewer line presently ends at the Developers do not see inclusion of the ai'ea in thec'fty Until the connection is finished, the development will «Sk«tck by Mary Yimmv junction of FM 2222 and Loop 360. limits in less than 10 years. operate a temporary treatment plant. The treated The proposed, agreement with Southern Living' and The first stage of Wilding's residential development Sit* of future home for 30.000. sewage will be sprayed on Wilding's three golf-courses • •••••" Leisure calls for the city to begin construction of the consists of 1.181 acres and a projected population of 17,* g through an irrigation system. . 800 person^. , • • & : Paye 2<) Friday, March 29 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN 9 9-11 « .. % "t 1 V5 £W SKiittKMii