«a«n«Q •xas of Austin '0'* «» pyl '»•»«*> ?W^ 1/73, N0. T«5 "* VJ ?' it wenty-Four Paget vitfrS'fc-rHB ,.i j'l1 .''Hi»" "'jncWwiar.r^T1^ TA J*]$&&• Overnight Bestseller Highly controversial Watergate-related tape transcript!of -prepare#iriultiple copies at left to help fulfill the demaro reside --. — . " " The lastftour copies attainable the first dayare carried at' President Nixon become available Wednesday for $12.24 for the 1,254-page book. Pressman U \ By RICHARD FLY V't Texan Staff Writer .... ­ Preliminary plans for remodeling the. *. Union Building and implications for the University System of an attorney |--'l-%e»erars stttdent services­ -r • I fAnn tiilll 1 fees wUl be considered by theUniversity-^ System Board of Regents in a 9 a.m.^ Friday meeting. -• ; Regents also will discuss a .. construction contract for a planned -Special Events Center and the future use •of" University-owned and leased airplanes. , EXTENSIVE remodeling and . renovation of the Union Building was Approved by the board Feb. 1 when regents appropriated $3 million for the project. Approximately $800,000 of the .funds will be spent for full-scale remodeling of dining facilities. A request for approval of the plans will be presented by the Office of Facilities Planning, Student Government President Frank Fleming, coordinatorof the project, said. ' „ Regent reaction should be "favorable, /if everything goes smoothly" and the project does not overreach its budget, '^Fleming added. , t « • IN ADDITION to renovation of the . ' dining areas, the Union Building's first floor will receive extensive remodeling ,;'and the outside a face-lift. ; ~ Regents also must face for the second •'time in as many meetings another bout vs with the compulsory student,services. fee. • ! At its March 15 meeting the board ; lowered the amount collected per . semester hour to fund mandatory :services from $3.50 to $2.50, a revaaue I AN ATTORNEY general's opinion :released last week might force the Governor's Race •»*> By SCOTT TAGLIARINO Texan Staff Writer Any contest for the 1974 Republican .beraatorial nomination ended in March erPformer State Sen. Henry "Hank" ;.wned by the University, while another is leased from Committee Reject , V ."APSfcE* ' -**4-"> y WASHINGTON (AP) ^ Sharply t, lawyer's argument presented before vfop .* session, the congressmen wertetold by?­splitting along paity lines, the House have heard any bf th$«vlttpiKW.'vi^ special impeachment counsel John Doar impeachment inquiry voted Wednesday' The committee approved a! Sinipie" >4hat the committee's staff has already oight to tell President Nixon he has 'letter proposed by Rep-Harold D. deciphered portions of the key March, "failed to comply" with itssubpoena for t ttonohue. D^MasS., «> tHepresidenttrtm ^|%73, White Rouse discussion bf hiish Watergate tapes. Rodino saying that as.of 1Q &M.\ fnoney for the Watergate burglars that m „ ,H the committee approved, 20-18, with? Tuesday, the subpoena's d&dlta*;"¥w .V^marked inaudibleJn the transcripts If only one Republician joining Democrats have failed W,! comply^#i?h.^ft®• i thitNlxon released to the public '^in voting to send Nixon lettersaying aiuiiiuvure^ luufiwita^ . 4 f , , J*1' pirn vyuug iw aciiu i^muii a icttcisayuig committee^ subpoenal* ?^Tuesday.,*iuesaay, v, that he has failed to comply by wiblicly Earlier,in the •ewnlhit, rR6diho lii|d ' i;|That tape, which was not Unladed 1ft ^ «tnrr ft,,.. MTyVffi rejected Nixon & proposalthaionly hp thecommitteeVsubpoena, ytesgivettto 3 'M,a Wwy' "*****•' _? nnH Hutrhinsnn verifv hie transcriots 1J ikb vianoi hu «h*.'Wh»A Umuo 1 and Hutchinson verify^the. transcripts the panel earlier by thfcWhfte released by the White' House.-. Rodino,; releasing edited transcripts rather than f # when Nixon agreed,to l«twth? committee turning TWO said he would not listen to the tapes the tapes that been1 SIM over SUuPOen&OQ UiDcS. •>—tt—•..•tt-is," haye all v.unav ii«uhad v Democrats joined Republicans in voting , without the committer s lawyer^., previously* turtyof oyer to the specialsubpoenaed tapes. Two v-:;S-:'l^esent,v• no. -, •::=^ .FlsewhereWedne/jday' REP, JEROME R. Waldie, EW^lif.I > . $% Doar alsd opposed Nlxon'soffer teletv,|, Required flight logs are maintained White House' version of partialfor the state-owned plane, but only transcripts of portions ?of presidentialreservations ate kepias records jdr the^ conversations/' Rodino said. "We did iaae| Waldie asked special impeachment counsel John Doar if the President's willful refusal to comply with t|he House subpoena is an impeachable offense, and Doar replied: "I believe it could be an impeachable offense under these circumstances." But Republicans contended that President Nixon has substantially complied with the subpoena by publicly releasing transcripts that they contended in some cases are better than the tapes themselves. "WE SHOULD accept the material in good faith and make further representations in the future if n&essary," said the committee's senior Republican Edward Hutchison of Michigan. The President has supplied the committee with a great deal of information, sahf Rep; Robert McClory, •»ff Republican of Illinois, "That is a substantial and adequate response toour subpoenas" . But Chairman Peter W. Rodino Jr., D* N.J., said "the President has not complied with our subpoefra, "WE DlD NOT subpoena an edited new tests, just looked at the secondary data." Other persons participating In the study are Dick LllUe, planning director; BUI Snyder, capital improvements coordinator; Curtis Johnson, director of the Water and Wastewater Department and Joe Ternus, transportation director. The report will be "an analysis of the impact of Wilding on other developments in that portionof the county," DeputyCity Manager Homer Reed said. to the area.. • |pp "It will be fairly straightforward," he After first ~votihfe down the proposition^ '^sald. "It will draw some conclusions, but the council reversed its vote by granting not try to make any recommendations." Southern Living a 30-day extension until Reed said hefeels 30days wassufficient the city could examine environmental time to study the problem, "in view of the impact statement prepared for the fact that that we had most of the company. information already. . A FINAL decision on Southern Living's "OUR ONLY problem is that we didn't request was postponed until May 9, when have time to go before the Citythe report and its evaluations are Environmental Board for Its . scheduled to be presented to the counciL conclusions," Reed said. The two main areas studied in the While the city is studying Wilding, report, Henry said, are the environmental Southern Living has not closal down to await the city's decision. of the development on water quallty-' "We are working with the city to give "I'd always liketohave moretime, but X them the information beneficial to them,' the University of Texas Foundation, Inc.|\tlunk .we've got enough information,^Hon Hammonds, vice-president, of v votes were finally tallied. v ? But the Republican hierarchy wouldn't; But with Grover s witndrawl go with Grover in 1974, choosing instead Granberry, who has been running for 10 former Lubbock Mayor James H. months, faces light competition from Granberry to carry the GOP banner. Odell McBrayer of Fort Worth. ? McBrayer, who says it was a message Interpretive JEromGod that prompted him to campaign for th«t -Republican gubernatorial *•They won't support me because they nomination, does not appear to Juwe a don't own me," Grover said when he prayer against Granberry. '5. withdrew from the race. "I've done all GS(ANBERRY, «orthodonlst, became that I can. It's going to take a grassroots> |buUM>ck's youngest mayor in 1970. He movement by the people to remove them feels his strongest asset is that he isn't a or abandon them." .-hard-core politician. IN MANY WAYS the decision to drop £ If Granberry isn't a politician, he has Grover juay" have been the result of a -become politically astute enough to nationwide effort to.give the Grand Old; .overlook McBrayer's candidacy and dig in Party ^ facelift the, ^jtte^f^^^or the lwng? the most Democratic nominee, Gov. Briscoe. His strongest criticism of Briscoe tints far has been againstthegovernor's refusal to take a stand on a rlght-to-work ' (Oeloted Uoty, provision in tlte proposed constitution. THE-RIGHT-TO-WORK proposal has been a strong issue for Texas Republicans — so much sothat they have includedit as a referendum In their Saturday primary. Another issue that. Granberry feds needs immediate attention is a special legislative .session on public school financing. "Last summer I advocated a special session, and 1 have repeated that ^---nly'Itodlnptiy-. attd Rep. Ed#a;rd£v»: Hbuse^ moved toward.anew with thespecial Watergate prosecutorby t Hutchinson of Michigan, th< asking a federal judge to throw out the' ^ortwiittee's senior Republican,goto prosecutor's subpoena asking for tapefr-^White House to compare ,ihe~ edited and reqords of presidential transcripts with the original tapes to be. conversations. ^ L--e'! ,fur*e ^ relevant material had been pu@ AT THE OUTSET^ of the rare evening ;^|nto tluf transcripts. • 7Men Arfestiid m fh It®SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -4 In a ALlOTO SAID He believed the groups massive operation, police Wednesday which used wings as its insignia, wa<.-* arrested seven young black men in San ^^responsible for 80 murders throughout', Francisco's "JZebra" slayingB. Mayor feSa^alifornia since 1970. Joseph Alioto said the suspects were ' Alioto said thebreak In the case,whlclt part of & statewide terror organization B^has terrorized San Francisco for five called the "Death Angels" dedicated to ^months, came during a weekend secret committing racial murders. *,V • meeting he held with an infoimant^: ^ More than 100 police officers gathered In the Zebra killings, young black men ' before dawn Wednesday for a series of ^..approach white men or women standing! raids-in which the seven, all San^or waUtiiig^'tte street.and shot thwnr . Francisco residents,were arrested. A1L^|without saying a word. EUghteen persons,], were charged with murder andjjl^were shot, and 12 of-them died. • conspiracy to commit murder. 4 ^ • ALIOTO: -SAID the "Death Angel*-' /At a news conference two houi& after^method of operation included not only the last arrest, Alioto said the suspects^ifthootings but also murders and assaults are members of a previously unknown by beavy-bladed weapons. He said there organization called the "Deatti Angels."^,.lJt may still be many victims not setjtet Members receive reputations and ' identified, possiblyincluding Wtchblkets promotions on the basis of the number^ and nature of murders they commit,'X Alioto said. Y * mm m A -rsr Southern Living, said. > Construction of roads and golf courses, ' which was already under way, is continuing, although it "has slowed down ; a little," Hammonds said, , ,^^ SOUTHERN LIVING officials also are ­planning to meet with the Environmental ^ Board, the Sierra Club and the Audubon Society, Hammonds said. S•? "We are trying to get people informed,"^' he said. "There arepeople walkingaround today who believe the moment the "Vr" development is built that the citizens of , Austin will start paying taxes for it. That. "there's not a Yot'o^opiwsiU'oadthorig f the people we've talked to," Hammonds ' said. "I hope the tide has turned and •. people have started thinking rationally,|; not emotionally." , Although Hammonds said he did not know if the council's feelings have changed, "We'retrying tohelp them make up their minds," he said. "The other guys are, too. "The controversy,is to get the city tobe aware of the controls and use them," he said. "We're painfully aware of the controls the City of Austin can apply."s V OS' * position this year. The governor should let school officials know whether they can count on some help for the next school year," he said. McBrayer, an attorney and lay reader, bases his campaign on a return to Christian principles. IFHE DOES win, McBrayersaid hewill depend on God to run the state through/ prayer and meditation. Like Granberry, he favors a right-to­work proposal in the new proposed constitution but admits he opposes revision oi the state constitution altogether. Other issues which McBrayer feels are important are televising executions and opposing legalised pari-mutuel betting. who have disappeared. Alioto said he thought the.teadetf'jaf tbe ^ r$ "Death Angels" resides outside of-California, fit;"'•> He said ti» ,?,3 . Student Senate approved Services, printing and postage Scheduled^ -reported that Place 4 House students#! SOB i.^Wednesday a motion backing and travel. -Funeral services for candidate Gerald Weiss," NEW HOUSING?" POLICY!! a the Student Government City > : The salary increase would University senior engineering speaking at a Tuesday Capitol' Council Lobby Committee's > raise the summer term ma jor J a mes Pa trick > news conference, expressed AufWAceident V . i m opposition to the Wilding salaries of next year'sStudent Vaneman will be held at 2 his support for pari-mutuel Delays Trialm rj DEXTER HOUSE"'^ project. Government president and p.m. Thursday at St. Paul's; Jiorse racing. ^ '4 Trial has been reset in JuneV Tite project, development of vice-president, Lutheran Church in Brenham.' Weiss actually stated that*: 1103 W. 24th ' a 3,500-acre tract on Lake administrative assistants and Burial will follow at Prairie . he "would abide by what the for Kay Taft, 22, who was tq.^"'" have been tried in Municipal ' " Austin, will be up forapproval the financial director. Lea Cemetery. people say" on. the May 4OCCUPANCY ONIY at the City Council meeting, / The Senate passed a motion Vaneman, 22, and Asst. Democratic ballot Court No. 1-at 1:30 p.m. ­ 'fev 7£—— May 9. endorsing a proposal by Save Atty. Gen. Robert Addison referendum on horse racing. Wednesday on charges ofcA' The Senate also approved a Austin's Valuable Bell, 34, were killed late The Texap regrets :ithe " prostitution, Ms. Taft, who was arrested <• C* >-"J ' fiscal year, beginning Sept. 1, Austin for fair electricity dars they were driving : i Weiss also recommended March 28 while employed at Luxurious Private Rooms noo '•"'•J " v.V'fc increases appropriations for rates and encouragement of collided head-on three miles the creation of an energy Edie's of Hollywoo^, was i-Private Rooms as Low as$60 per mo. revised budget for the 1974-75 -Environment to the City of Tuesday afternoon when the inaccuracy. ^ Taft. per mo. salaries, supplies and conservation of electricity. east of Manor on U.S. 29Q. commission with the power to involved in an auto accident in Funeral arrangements for regulate fuel companies. : t the 500 block of Baylor Street Bell are being handled in At the same presst^ at 1:14 a.m. Wednesday. '.' • Maid Service • Private Bus Austin by Hyltin-Manor conference, Weiss predicted a^ -Ms. Taft, 1107 Rose St., was v V v W t*> Funeral Home. Services will runoff between himself and released from Brackenridge ' be held in Houston Friday at his Democratic opponent Hospital r Wednesday -X Heated Swimming Pool • Refrigerators • Intercom St. Mark's Lutheran Church. Gonzalo Barrientos. afternoon. ! Laundry Facilities • Vending Machines i NELSON'S StudyAreas WAYNE BRAGG GIFTS siV 1 • 24 Hr. Desk Service • TV in Lobby Graduate Student in Latin American Studies "i. 4412 Sc C>«gn» , • Him: 444-1114 • Off Street Parking • Close to Campus f discussion and slides on i A < -; ZUNI AND NAVAHO Projecto Rondon, (Brazilian Equivalent of our Peace * , -Special Package Deals(Roomot Dexter -Board atMadison) - INDIANJBWELRY . "Corps) •' -: MEXICAN, I available as low as $145 : at ' ri IMPORTS, •^il OMN 10 a m t. 6 p m. •M Itfow accepting Fall '7A Contracts Soup and Sandwich Seminar "GIFTS THAT INCREASE Thursday 12 to 1 p.m. LUE" 1 J for U.T. Men and Women 1 jA-J University Christian Church 2007 University Ave. CLOSEP MONDAY fsM HOUSING OFHCE 709 West 22nd St. i L<* 478-9891 -478-8914 " I • I ANNOUNCING \ -*\ *• i DEXTER HOUSE . I ' •* I Come See -Come Live "THE FUTURE OF THE WORLD" >? I GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY $ $ A New Course for i'' s Fall 1974 International Studies (IS) 301' /.I TTh 10:30-12:00 (unique no. 25055) t Instructor: Neil Richardson, Dept. of Gov't. ' • 'I'm running because I'm it' € ** fulfills 3 hours of "Area D" requirement* ' " concerned about what's ** has no prerequisites ' happening to Travis County. •" . ' --j ."We've got to stop the 'The Future of the World" will examine social, economic/ end political prospects feeing rations—rk;h ­end poor—In a foreseeable world of increosing population, depleting neturpl resources, greater''runaway development thafs technologicel cepebilities, end continued blends of (ntemetionel cooperation, end conflict The readings and lectures (lectures include,guest experts from UT end erauqd:thp world) will cover epolluting our lakes, scarring wide venety of meteriels from futuristic visions to more conorete reelities of the present end'Weer future: 1 V our land, and contributing to , V problems ranging from traffic i' to health services to energy demands, f PREREGISTER TODAY! "We've got to provide more recreation facilities: parks, trails, bikeways, natural areas. 1. Because 75% of all courses are filled during preregisfra­ "And we've got to make sure tion. .• we have responsible law 2. Because most popular courses are filled during enforcement. preregistration. "Those are things a county 3. Because most prime time courses are filled during commissioner can DO \ preregistration. ' .•, , f something about. 4. Because you get 3 more days of holidays in AugCiit".:; "Thafs why I want to be your TURN IN MATERIALS BY 4 P.M. TOMORROW County Commissioner." Office of the Registrar &T^^ \ ^ I Dave Dorsett has spoken out on the rote WHY SHOULD of the County Commissioners in pro­ tecting our environment. He's worked to -4­ YOU VOT1 FOR stop destructive high-density develop­ments alongour lakes. He's exposed the ROBERT C. enormous paper profits being made by the men who want to build Wilding, a (LOU).» new 30,000-person city at Austin's west McCREARY? Mt •­ edge. -j ^ Jm ' INITIATIVE: i {. We need a strong, independent voice on lou McCreary was the first candidate to come out for ari elected the Commissioners Court. Student Regent. Lou McCreary is the only candidate in Pla&e 4 mm m St\vm * »s­ who has proposed positive legislation to prevent future energy We need Dave Dorsett. fraud 4* » * INDEPENDENCE; f ^ ^ • U.T. Young Democrats -^ \ "j "t low McCreary was not"picked"to runby localpoliticalhacks on Travis County Young Democrats '-v.'.f-a "slate."Uu McCreary Is theorycandidatein Place 4 who has 1 * coma out openly against bossism and,machine politics in Austin. • Travis County Democratic Women • The DAILY TEXAN •-*> teh&t. .(Afc. ST <4 ^ & "fi A. PtLPoi. Ad Patd by IndtpmndntStMwtofor Lou AfeCrwary.Jmmot tatntmbaekA Koav mmmmmmmrnmmt&iUlSmik Cmmm^cK Co-Chmirmm 1801 South lokoMhon. Austin Texm. Prinfrd by Th» DttU* Tmtm TSP BuiUHng, Austin. Tmxm*. ; fc p«i 1973-outcome 'of the Saturday govemop,said ina.Wednesday constitution, which Is now he predicted that many steps of Waco. This broughtsmall fortune" in a political '1 "But for the first nine years his rich friends, his special: May 4 referendum on' the press conference^.that while being prepared for the voters' Democrats would switch to home the awfutness of thefj/!.trust fund have been refuted he was in office, the people of interest friends, will -come issue! ., -• > ,v Oienpmain issu&of his primary;-approval. vote U the Republican' Situation," said McBrayer^by a spokesman in Pickle's, this' district had no way to through with whatever he Udoesn't make one bit opponent James Granberry \ McBrayef. 'a 43-year-old primary. who favors either public or?<> moffice. , know where the money came asks for," Bales said. of difference whether I concerns passaged right-to-Fort Worth attorney, does not In a pressconference, Bales from, why he collected it or m?$The spokesman in Pickle's support oy oppose the work laws, he is stressing an • favor the ptesage of a new stoned themvsaid the trust fund collected how he spent it," Bales said. office, Vrtro asked not to be referfenduittV' Wilfrelmina ^'opeK.ddoE polipy".between^constitution. . Testament on1 ^ m by Pickle during his 10 years Deled, candidate for Place the governor's office and the?-.tf; "I do NOT think this is the He noted that Pickle's identified, said only two trust McBrayer also added that direct commandmc mt in office may explain the yoting against thethreeissues funds have ever existed for. I,said. "Pari-mutuelhorse people of the state. time for it {a new he favors the death penalty/God," he continued.stands he took on campaign •, ** a limitation on political Pickled racing is a good issue to 1 . "An open door^pcjicy would . constitution),'' McBrayerleave up to the voters to serve ,a two-fold purpose," . said. "I'm urging people to, m The first was a fund-raising 1 Environmental Caucus resolve-'/ McBrayer said. "It would-"' vote against it. r* • effort in January, 1970. The John' W. Mugge, aiiother keep me informed and let.thfe "The clause mentlonlrti funds from that trust were Honts Proposes Endorses Bales, Sissy depleted by June, 1973, the candidate for Place 1, said,' people of the state talk to : equal education could mean • Ml spokesman said. 4.* • "As a candidate I don't their governor." _ ' ; anything from, A to Z. It coulci> The Texas Environmental. support to a single major ' On Jan. 14 this year, think it is proper for me to McBRAYER SAID such a bringaboi)t a state ' Caucus has endorsed Frances: environmental reform," th«|| ^ Mi New Personnel toy to influence the voters policy would consist of town "Sissy" for ^ proceeds from Pickle's Oct. educational system and bring Farenthold caucus said Wednesday. 10, 1973, birthday party were one way or the other." tu^krheetings in' the trade an" end to the local school governor and Larry Bales foe |Ms,' Farfenthold, Briscoe's*'' ^Bob Honts, candidate for , consider using helicopters in put'in a fund. That trust fund Mtigge added he is "very centers throughout the state,? concept."' 10th Congressional' District challenger, received a ratingf 1 county, commissioner, 'lawenforcement1,-Hontssaid. , totaled ^66,000. happy to know pari-ntytuel governor's suboffices in Mc&rayer said ecjual U.S. representative in of five out of five on ke$u Precinct' 2, Wednesday The sheriff's department THE SPOKESMAN said horse racing .& being existing stateoffices and ahot education should be based {Saturday's Democratic ^ environmental votes toproposed appointing a patrols remote parts of. the $50,000 of this trust Was offered as a referendum »{line to the" governor's office.' more on teaching guidelines primary on the basis of Utetep97l Legislature,professional court county and,a helicopter Could transferred to PickleVrer because "it is good the , "Mr. Granberry thinks that than on insuring that, environmental records '' Oq environmental votes inf I administrator to free judges help the officers cover the election committee. ; ,: people of Texas are being "the way to communicate is by-materialisUq values are the;/ Hoats alsopropos^i"that'ihe and attorneys are good in law, have to be approved by the t1L vif'-would have to be paid for out said he has "kept an open Tie it up Wm mind" toward the •of Pickle's pocket." T\ 'mmi CLASSIFIED AD He said there war only referendum because he in voids "first wants to see what about $10,000 left in the CALL 471-5244fllfiSt the voters think." present-trust fund.||| . WARNING Vj , If you aren't buying your MIDDLE EASTERN l v Motorcycle Insurance from-> • west 478-1577 Jones-Elliott Insurance Agency, v •/ 1 < You moy-fr TOO MUCH i ivjx. Vi •*% Bigs.$TUO!ES> ^ ; EXAMPLE . CouraM to bv offered Fall 1974 %• }> •?$. NO. 1 '74 Honda 125cc The softest, " Liability only -$38 IWqM Course A" 3 newest, greitest mm Dru^ Specials , Comprehensive Collision & Ne. Ma. DaccriptiMi ' • look around this \f 25440 MES 30IK Inttwkiction t• faih summer...airy Liability • $124 t ' ' A. 'ae kAaiam.a 1 1 A CuitHral, and Hhtorkal hw iviay. At.•* -j pastel prints, pn NO. 2 '74 Honda 250 cc datim rf tWMMdU last. MWF 2-3# BUR vollle. Sheer aind < . Liability,only -$56 116. B«tirsm.r'C 'a light and crisp. ^ -f. Comprehsneisve Collision & & ^ (S& Wella:''f'f Teamed up here 25445-WES 305 Peapla, Patnlwn md PWitics; Aa-latradw '*€-V. Clairol *%•>**• . Liability -$124 with _# ii'iue .4 tary Survay of th« Caataaiporary Middle it. corded NO. 3 '73 Model 850cc , Jljl2, m.Ml. Mnmpri. Conditioner- Liability onlv -$143 t( • }%l* ' i(4'S ^ 1* OX. midriff^ Comprehensive Collision & ; 2S450, MES 322 Arab CMfintfea. MWF 10-11, BUR 134. bL ^ 9 OS " " Shampo *.rM-*•" . blouse ih yelfow, WMiams. Liability -$284 r, -sfi. $12/ The pantsWe have local claim service 25455 MES 360 , Cenfereace Cewrse. Indepewdeet ^twdy. Coit-n hlue» $84. plus premium financing. seat of hstrntor must be obtained. Ea|Rih reg. 2.59 > . *1.59 Sites 5 to 13 ' :*t in charge. . -: xrii 1 25460 MES 361' Middle East CMI&ffions and Coitum; ^Cotton1l SPORTSWEAR;3607 Manor Roall ' PetttkaLami Social Consciousness fo jfco *^59 ?v •f ""j f.'fi^ 2ndFtOOR, ' , Contemporary Middle: East. .TTh 10^0-12, §fg926-6665,.if Balls IEB 362. lerve. JPOURS: MON.-FRI. 8-6 Footauard Not* MiddH Emsfrrn Studlas eoursmt HtlWf b» utitd toftiHlA Atitm '* A ' D. raquirmmantm for th• B.A. dagram. Plan I. They may-eteo h* taken In llau of the foreign language requirement by reg. 1.49 ' etutientM enrolled In the School of Communication. Ma '•X-Jones-Elliott Insurance Agency/^ '£k 4-% 59 93 .•V'liai'iS »i 0-Tips Medi-Quick CONGRESSMAN J.J. .-fc-* i -t' -^ * 170's Spray is reg. 1.09 reg. 1.49 bocli , 65 1 . Vv• ?•«-' " IF Mm y '• *' V ^ ft" The Co-Op Supplies Dept. i Street Hoor •i-f One Hoar free BankAmerkard t Parking WHh A MatterOiarge $2 Patthase Welceaio Or Mora. 2306 GUADALUPE/ ON-THE-DRAG^ y Jf* *• ­ when you onietrjmg better ,r '4 k : Jake Pickle believes that any real solution to§|p special interest to Jake Pickle is the Texas our energy problems lies in the development offfi TOKAMAK PROJECT at the University of Tex­ alternative energy, sources. Because of this he has as. This project, one of the largest of its kind, is worked hard in Congress for the funding of 4^ aimed at the development of clean fusion energy research and development of clean energy sonr-f^. and Pickle has been its chief proponent in i''feSi cest He introduced and guided through the House^f Washington. > this spring a Solar Energy Demonstration Blll.4|| While inkier Pickle believes that new energy This bill authorizes funds to develop practical^ sources must be found, he does not believe that CT-4141 solar heating and cooling units and install them in§|| the environment should be made the scapegoat of Mm i •€1 public and private buildings. Jake. Pickle is co-jpi our cnctgy difficulties as is evident by his vote on sponsor of a similar bill which would authorize^* the auto emission control provision of the 1973 funds for the research and^tievelopment, of-energy bill, a. vote for which he w^ oommended A!-££"­ geotkerntal energy. by Common Cnase. J CS-A700 ' RT-1020U ax-sw Easy Credit For Students And Non-Students -tte&r-J. THE CO-OP STEREO SHOP frSaniNG COMMITTBE -**Youi« Thw for mil" •C*nv McGirr •'Jani* 8muM * DiVMI TiiUm W*1U • Tom Krainplu • Bill On* Jtowr Prae Brnek * Janti UltW • Caih Ctinniimluin « Kay SutuOW •Jim Thornmmd • Bill Rudd • JrfT tJoununy • BobbyQlta> » Su* • Cnl| friiii'lihiinfttti^a 5 •J. •tohuntv# Jvnt And»t*on • Jid Knlthi * (Hoym • Uuidm Stamoni • fat K»)ly • Hark McM«bon * Bobby Paiuaralla • NUi Marking With W*l«y a jUttfa CroataHN f Chad C*M« • Mik* Hardao • Kioh»rd Fk»*«r» •' Mar .I£hityt|ia FACULTY BPONSOMt: •Daaa Pao* Kndth Mexican-Americans themselves, have'**' ' >^he people whd attend. No proxy votes are allowed. are reserved for the formation of caucuses. denounced MAYO. Congressman Henry B. This means that the people who are interested enough|jg! ANOTHER RULE guarantees that anyone who has -. Gonzales has accused MAYO of; preaching Wilson Foreman to attend the precinctconventions will essentiallycontrol ^ anything tosky can say it. Adjournment is not in order if ;f|| phrases which he 4ays and I quote "echo the sr«nHwsariTmpuct• the parties — both in the presidential candidates theyi^F any. person has a resolution to present. And resolutions M slogans of the Cuban revolution."End quote. And A TALK $0 FRANK, SO VITAL, SO 0ISTURBIH6, IT j select and in the process by which they are selected. are uniquely important: the resolutions.passed at tbe ^ Congressman Kika de la Garza of Laredohas (ILL DISMAY YOtj ADD MOVE YOU TO ACTION •it * THE NATIONAL AND STATE Democratic Party was n precinct and county conventions will form the county r4 also leveljed criticism. greatly changed by massive citizen participation in the^r Democratic and Republican Party platforms, which in jk. Now I show you my friends, a political WHILE THERE'S TIM^ | precinct conventions in 1970. George McGovern was' (t turn will form the state and national platforms. 'Mm I advertisement that appeared in The Daily Texan •MM­ DON'T MISS IT! nominated on the strength of that involvement, and the Those of you interested in any candidate, rules or party student newspaper at the University of TexasJ,r-party rules were changed. 'i. <. !V!x. procedures, orjocal.stateor national issues, would serve i; This ad is for my opponent Gonzalo BarrientosT KHFI-42 5:20 to 5:30 PM The unit rule — giving all* the votels of a delegaitioh to ; your cause wen by voting in Saturday's election and And at the bottom of the ad appear those words: A eable 4 the candidate towhom only a majority are committed — attending the t^ecinct convention — at 7:15 p.m. ,;t Quote: "Paid for by MAYO." End quote. KTBG-7 10:30 to 10:40 PM was abolished. Other rules required that women, blacks, v Saturday at the' place of the polls (2 p.m.. in rural , 'Surely it is clear that Mr. Barrientos and table 5 chicanos and young people be represented in proportion „ precincts). ' V > ' i MAYO are working hand in glove. Surely their KVUE-24 10:30 to 10:40 PM to their percentage in the society. Hie form and reform of the parties is at stake. ' % intent isclear. Where better than the Legislature v ... The resulting Democratic nationaf cbnvention in l972 j '• can militants pursue their devisive tactics, their ""•a was markedly different fromthe Daley-machinemonster -. '; disruptive influence, their rule-or-ruin activities. _ . fol. ad. fold lor.by Wten htwrn { of 1968." What was the difference? Norman Mailer; / Fint Hidalgo County. Next Del Rio. Now Another 1972 Foreman-Barrientos couldn't figure it out for a while <~r then it struck him. new towns -•< Travis County. And the Legislature itself. Pif| runoff "There was an insufficient quantity of evil'in the room,": On the evening television commercials Commissioners he wrote. Court candidate Bob Honts comes across with a highly vWe want to get it up before the council and get it down environmentalists lost. The primary reason for the loss AFTER McGOVERN'S defeat, the former powers in> polished ad, sketchy with details, but well spoken. "I've .before the opposition has any time to make a fuss about was HUD's solid support for the new town, outweighing the Democratic Party began making noises to convince • had eight years of experience in city government," says it." Though the San Antonio Express News editorialized the opposition of every City of San Antonio agency that people tiiat radicals had captured the party and that the Honts, and he wants to put that experience to work for ^against granting the request "without prior council insisted the project would pollute the Edwards Aijuifer.rules must be changed to prevent a single faction from Travis County. • notice," the City Council approved the MUD 7-L ,' Opposing Ranch Town were the San Antonio Sierra Club, gaining control. The minority representation rule, in* : The television audience does'ftbt know — arid Honts As our primary source we quote Ronnie Diigger's League of Women Voters, American Association of fact, was changed does not tell — however, about other dealings Honts has • • • • t f articles of May 25, June 29 and July 13,1973, in the Texas University Women, Citizens for a better Environment 2 "H' y-t** Those poises. are being heard more and more as the had with county and municipal governments. Observer. Honts himself describes Dugger's account of and the Bexar County and Edwards County.Undergroundprimaries; near. Gov. Dolph Briscoe has formed a "*• MR. HONTS is a public relations specialist,co-partner -the new town as "fair" and partaking of "both sides of water districts. Judge Adrian Spears ruled that HUD's in the well known firm "Christian, Miller and Honts." storv " Jc 7 ^ v t ^ --j* •' ^ n ^ ^ / Convention Committee to move to the precinct meetings uieawry.^decision to bade the new town was "entitled to the all those persons who will support "programs and The firm, is Texas' foremost agent f&r feederally Honts> conduct with thie City of San Antonio also left presumption of regularity," and ruled against the cityplatforms consistent with the governor's," says Gordon financed "new towns:" first in Dallas with "Flower much.to be desired in the political and environmental and environmentalists. R. Wynne JrM chairperson of the Convention Committee. Mound," then with a "San Antonio Ranch New Town." • realms. Shortly after the developers (Christian and Honts' conduct in the San Antonio New Ranch affair T RESPONDING TO SUNDAY'S television commentsof" • Honts' work on behalf of new towns is relevant largely • Honts own undisclosed portions of the new towns as a raises basic questions about Honts' motives in running Democratic National Cpmmitteeperson Billie Carr, because county commissioners will one day make result of services rendered) announced plans for the hew for a political office in Austin. In Austin also the cityand Wynne issued a press release which said, in part: decisions on land use through approval or disapproval of town, environmentalists raised serious objections. The county have been asked to approve a tax-free utility "It's a shame they had to arm her with misleading and water supplydistricts. The most recentof those decisions reason was simple: the proposed city of 85,000 would be district. As in San Antonio, those bonding commitments false innuendoes because her usual whoops and yelps do concerns Wilding; a proposed 30,000-person development built directly on the Edwards Acquifer, an underground would one day be turned over to the city. more than ahytiiiiig I know to alert the Democratic fort northwest of City Park, fronting Lake Austin. * . • river tapped for San Antonio's water supply. Honts, Southern Living and Leisure, thedevelopersof Wilding,of the attackthat isgoing tocome from theradical left in ALONG WITH A GUARANTEED *18 million from the -.Christian and the other owners of Ranch Town had must have the votes at the county level to approve the the precinct conventions on May 4," . Department of Housing of Urban Development, Honts, obtained the financial support for Ranch Town through Fresh Water Supply District, and Bob Honts^ has been Wynne told The Texan Tuesday ttat-Carr had used the Christian and the other investors behind the new-town the Department of Housing and Urban-Development shown to be no enemy of MUDs and similar financing phrase "theactive progressive reformliberals of Texas" explored every avenue for cutting costs. They obtained (HUD).' After the environmentalist opposition surfaced, vehicles. In addition, Honts has received a |500to identifythe groupshe wasurging toattend theprecinct San Antonio City Council approval fora Municipal Utility Honts told San Antonio city officials"this is wired all the contribution from Allan Shivers and $25 from Alvin East,conventions. ^ , : District, a tax-free legal entity which enables 4he wa"y to the White House," implying that George two of Wilding's backers. THE GOVERNOR'S Convention Committee has' developer to transfer utility costs initially to residents of Christian, senior partner of the firm and former political HONTS INSISTS his campaign has nothing to do with received and expended over $60,000 since Feb. 6, the development, and, upon annexation, to the city. aide to Lyndon Johnson and John Connally, could pull Wilding, but indicates he "doesn't know if he would vote according to Wynne, and has' attempted to reach the According to Carol McSwain, former administrative HUD approval no matter what. According to Bob Sohn, a for approval of a water district for Wilding," saying "thegovernor'ssupporters with over100,000itemsof mail and assistant to San Antonio's City Manager Loyd Hunl, "It's n San Antonio attorney, Honts "bragged to me in terms city's decisiotii would weigh heavily with me." His a follow-up telephone campaign. Wynne says the true that it (the MUD) was absolutely covert until it was that I cannot remember that the people whose ,money candidacy for the Commissioner's Court may or may hot committee is financed through loans and donations. just on the verge of approval." Before on4 council was being used to finance Ranch Town had adequate have anything to do v^th Wilding. Honts' 4oes have aAll sidesin theDemocratic Party — the reformers, the meeting McSWain had explained, to City Councilperson contacts in Austin and in Washington toassure that those __ questionabjfe^gjrfd in his dealings ^with city Briscoe supporters and the Wallaceites — are realizing • Carol Haberman, Honts and others that the press did not who are espousing the environmental viewpoint could governments, though, and he should not be elected tothe importance of the precinct convention and are trying receive backup materials for items on the regular never Win." make vital land use decisions for Travis County. % to maximize the participation of their group. agenda. According to McSwain, Honts said, "That's fine. AS IT TURNED1 OUT HontS was right and the ' —M.E. mAr* iS I •fi­ (Editor's note: Tuesday's Amedcan-Sta'tesman "Letters to the Editor" led off with this comment from the wife of former Texas Gov. Dan Moody.) To the editor: To>the editor: parole in approximately two and one-half him (coincidentally, on the same day The Caucus. /I am replying toMiss AnnColvig's letter years. Texan co-endorsed him), is the best The Progressive Democratic Caucus is Hey! Wake up, you good conservatives, and vote in this coming in the Firing Line of April 30, 1974, In my opinion the facts of this case successor the County Courthouse crowd a loosely knit coalition of people who are election. It is a dangerous time for this town and this district — if we because I have an open mind; I have an justified the punishment assessed. Those could dig up to maintain the status quo. interested in going to their precinct let this wild-eyfed stupid "University Clique" take over the town and open door; and becauseisincerely want to using this one case against me have not I'm sure Mike would do a great job for convention to introduce specific district.. •. V be your district judge. been fair in that they have not revealed the County Courthouse in-crowd, but for resolutions. A The truefactsof the caseareas follows: the true facts of this case. me and for students interested in That is what they are trying t/do by electing Larry Bales to Other issues which were discussed at this case was tried before the change in i David-S.McAngus progressive county government that's our last meeting included: - CoogresS jBales owes hisvery existence to labor unions—and this is a the law by the Legislature when I, under oriented toward solving the county's • Opposing the Ninth Street Extension dangeroushtipie for the whole country; because the labor unions have n^y oath of office, was required to handle Fleming endorses judicial and prison problem, and wants to • Impeachment of Nixon: • set out to control Congress (and the country) with their illegal this indictment by the grand jury as a To the editor: stop reckless lake development, I think • Abortions at Brackenridge Hospital.contributions to every congressman they can control. felony case.The 29-year-old defendant had Because of the importance of legislative Hubert Gill would make a better county • The resignation of Police Chief Miles. been sent to the federal penitentiary for a I am appealing to some of my own good women friends — and my action to ourlivesasstudents, Ifeel thatit judge. Don NieUen • The Wilding project. previous sale of 400 pounds of marijuana. is imperative that students turn out • Nuclear power. good conservative women friends around the bridge tables who never Progressive caucus It was proven that the defendant provoked Saturday to nominate candidates who will • A police rape squad comprised of bother to vote; or the conservativeswho aresodisgusted with this year two 16-year-old girls into committing represent student interests. To the editor: women. of Watergate^— which has succeeded in exposing the crooked detailsof perjury at the trial. Among these candidates stands out one At the precinct conventions this" • Opposition to Frank Erwin's Saturday there will be three countywide all political parties — so that they just "are not going to vote"for any The true facts of the sentencing are as individual who has clearly and reappointment. , ^ P politician. — follows: the defendant through his consistently come out supportingstudents groups trying to organize caucuses. One • Growth. r attorney had theoption of asking for either in the issues that affect them. This man is political grouping, the Wallaceites, will • Neighborhood zoning power. The people are disgusted With Congress and feel,the stupid jury assess probably the Grass Roots the judge or the to Gonzalp.Barrientos, House candidate in label itself ' We will meet Thursday at. the Friends Democratic Congress has joined the Hate Nixon campaign of the vile Caucus. Another, the Briscoe wing of the punishment;"however, since the record of Place 4.1 therefore urge students to.vote Meeting House (3014 Washington Square) press of TV and eastern liberals, to get Nixon out! the defendant was in such bad shapeat the Saturday feak all over^^ ti»e:; signed my name to notes for SAC-YD. Wire Editor.... JohnByers -30­ that 1 will work to prohibit growth in close oar eyes to gnrirth and to build a cdunty, and I understand why jSam Wood It is easy topromise the moon, Michael. Copy Editors ...Cheryl Davis, Debbie jDeLaCruz,'IT-Travis sty. t have done so because wall around Austin is hot a responsible or in the American Statesman endorsed him' We have to look at what people have done Eddie Fisher, Patrick Dryden133, such a position would be both naive, possible answer. People will live yesterday; I don't understand why you in order to determine whether they will he Photographer -t-^ Chip Kaufman ^ unconstitutional and irresponsible. Under somewhere, and responsible citizens will , .• Optoiow aproned in Tht D*Uy Yum m(haw of u,. and rlanlfM did. able to carry out their pranises. wBtor «• (bewhltr «( Um »rUcW wadvc uMotMHflr ahouUlM nude toWBaUic irjjowr Constitution. Am&icans have .the lemnjodeaTwith ^ »® «««•«« i«aT«*toy •dwrtMw IbTSP Bmidta I am.of course, not surprised Urate you You have enndorsed a prosecutor whp Onm M (MUalvtraKy admiliMnUai orU»Bo!!rtir "• • 1.11# 1171-IHSi. ISri^ht to move wherever tlM^wiitir,Tliat is That, Michael, is why I said: "We need endorse Gill. When we talked Wednesday, advertises that he is not aligned with part Th».tWI)rTe*«,i. a itatant MMpqMr atnwUalvmH* Tte national advnttttaft rapmtMaUve of Tke Dally, vtqr you had-the ri^it to move hece from to control " the quality of the inevitable i. prid^to thequestioimaire, you had a rough of the politicalspectrum and a person who at T«ui at AtuUn. 1* piiMMM bjr T«xu StndaM Trun in NaUonal IStealioaal Adverti*** Sanrtcc. tae.. ^ Quaaah, Tex., and will have the right to ,,m Lnlntnon A«„ Mmt Yorti, N.Y.. growth until we get the underlying draft'Of a <*iH endorsement. ^ is willing to buy memberships in order to |remaiii here after you have graduated,as problems solved,". iV. Wglt 1*» Oatly T««j» to ptttumd Mowtey Tteaday. • ^^'Wlyt^MihafrtbeitoTliAiaoctaUd P«na.Tb* Differew*« aired manipulate political endorsements. Vmninmd PrKtay «n»piholM«y Mdniun New VofiTlmMNmScrTict. UnludPrtMlnUrDallaMl' ytm have stateifyou intend to do. There are .some differences between. i< I'm saddened by your endorsements, pefMi ttnach M«y. StcowMati ^Miaae paidjit W»d Zodtar Nt«r< smiM. TtH Tnante a memtor o(i,§14 You are m example of Austin4*growth. "Your tunnel .vision on the growth Hubert and me. The main difference is in' Michael, hut I'm not surprised. After all, C^UeitUte t>r«aa. Ut» So«tUnre(t JoaraaUam|;g Michael, since .:S0;v«cy much of it te question has led you astray, I'm afraid. our past record. 1 have practiced in the J.'ve been readin^your editorials a)l year. mm**tetepko* i«». md Uw T«ta» Uatly Nmpapir AaMirialM.' weMSWiaStan hnmi^ntion., And . than the iminigraata You have endorsed % person whose only probate court and have experience in the;0 Terry Weefcs ls a caadidate far canaty JJwta. imIt BMdwt h*Ml. Lak* AatUa BMlrrard * propagate. Orowth is faurfdy the resultof experience is wotting al eprosecutor for before Jadge^ IM Hud Trail aM un «. l^kMlnn aiw. i wmmm 9H «y BOB HONTS ,.. HbntS»W oto ping services an ndorseH the project. The rarol^^^^^ng--thei^^«ar^^tf>^^;®il^iiii!' & 4*> responsje/to, dealings,", pfwhich I am Opportunities, a variety of ueducational courses; the use supporting agencies include , those which • course. My platform for ,» systems, better care of our*­ certajh ^ilorial conunehts prop4, the Democratic housing types and prices, _an> solar energy in the home-all bodies with any ^tatutoryA^upported the public office points to thefts; .emotionally disturt PregaHirfc,my candidacy for Congress saw new towns as internal transportation''"will-be explored; a or constitutional control onnew Texas Water Quality problems and offers sound, children and .county coraraissiojter, the answer.torevitalization of system, a soUd framework of. comprehensive water quality the development. EPA, the ,.Board (TWQB) order which rational methods ! Precinct 2. ^ ourjiity cores and controlling iconomic x and . sociaL^Jknd quantity monitoring senior environmental agency>) has essentially Incorporated these areas . ) I am uncertamjas "to what urban sprawl. Following the institutions and a balanced' "system devised to protect the in the country, haB gone on 7 standards that were effort designed . was ^ meant about myEuropean example, new open space and recreational , Edwards AquiferJ,rom record stating "we would like , developed by SAR during the quality o^IAfSvior pur^newspaper have had the^l posse$s&g "extrefjnefy close towns were:: envisioned as system (some 24 percent of pollution^!"* -wiilAjJj" * 4 ' be to commend, your agency^NEPA process. Concern also opportunity to hear one sideln^ tiesMgh the supergrowth balanced and beautiful new the land Is dedicated to open: impkrrtentel. * (HUD) and the developer on''^diminished after the project I am the only candidate in thus far. I welcome thi?,^ : lobb$'*Inave not,-or tor that communities for people atall space). HUD and NGPA " the in-depth studies ... the was subjected to an in-depth the race to offer a defined opportunity to be heard. „ , matter, never have hadvany' income levels to live and SAR will be 'a proving The SAR project, as part of depth of the engineering ami review by Dist. Judge Adrian water quality program to halt Bob Honts is a candidate fdrr ^' business connections with^work..The San Antonio Banch ground for many innovative .the process to receive scientific analysis of the Spears. These conclusions pollution of our lakes. I have county cominiAiieii^jt^either Southern Living & (SAR) New To$a is^a techniques: sculptural site< Resignation asa Title VII new environmental impact of the were reached by Judge called for improved medical ^Preciirtt^iSi|44;S^I^ IW Leisure..Company or Allan masterplannedjffc new grading and road construction Community, underwent the project has surpassed that of Spears." Hopefully, the • •"1 • :f:MShivers — or the Wilding community undef federal will be utilized to minimize' most extensive reviews of any similar project of which project may serve as a model Crossword Puzzler development, I respect Gov. sponsorship conceived to pre-scarring Of the terrain; right-' both the Department of we are aware." . for future urban development ACROSS.... 3 Latincoo\ urjiinjir-) \Shivers but possess no service the needs of its future of-ways for bikes and nonauto Housing and Urban While the possibility of in the San Antonio area." junction raraooran ranBrawuii 'personal knowledge of any of inhabitants and to integrate traffic 1 M«ro«a»|t., „ 4 Marry ^ • will be designed as Development (HUD) and the substantial growth in the I have remained consistent 6 ImltatM Met 5 Spaniahfor nsi0H nanari am his business activities. the requirements of man with part of the internal .National Environmental Edwards Aquifer Recharge by advocated controlled 0'Cut "goodbye" •PGR! l-JHHQO r-lfiirj 12 Memorandum 6 Gun '' Further, I have support from those of the environment into transportation system; cable 'Protection Agency (NEPA) Zone created legitimate growth. Iam concerned about HU WDIIOH UNHD -13 Coin 7 Printer's individuals on both sides of a harmonious plan. As a new TV will be expanded to? process. Some 34 local, state concern on the part of some the type of development 14 Fruit drink ' , measure wmnaraara Hwraraw the Wilding issue. qontmunity, SAB will offer a provide protection to the1 .and federal agencies reviewed local groups at a time when occurring not only in Austin 15 Exclamation. 8 Aatate(abbr,) . 16 Platform 9 Title of •arar.10 •HQQHBrsi As for your prediction of sound economic , base with a home through sensors, offer SAR, and 30 approved or little or no controls or and Travis County, but ,,,1®" 18 Covar t gfei . ^ reaped,,-rjffini •nsiHB so \ ¥0M mmmM ^l^tandards existed in the area, throughout ourcountry.Ihave SO Near 10 Hypothetic#^ W«1H Elimraiil CSHH 22 Speck "" force Equal Time environmental groups seen these problems and hope ish Liismraa rasny 24 Novelties 11 Pronoun f-]fJirj[:!raf-J BrafLIRHH 27 Large birds 17 Part of "toNo such material will be 29 Rail bird , be" ,. ** r ym& Ourmagqxine assumes no returned unless submitted 31 Encountered 19,Conjunction 33 Harveat 53 Conlunctiori 32 Reddlah-21 Metal V,'. 35 Alma box 56 Shade tr§*« responsibil ity for urtso- with a self-addressed yellow color . cylinder v .38 Oiaturbance 68 Mournful ' licited mc envelopeand sufficientpostage. 34 Unit ol 11-: Italian cur* diacord hearlno 61.Symbol fof* "V#E? ' on <4 Maw • a »«ir ttr W ii> Wb.fe*'#.-' Mn ffhMnwnr tn fha ttrAi^rmM rency 25 Branch of ,:^"43 Chinese silver 1 s r rrdoutstanding iteriai-Y _, i( 23 Goddeaa of y|pOrgans of 60 Bom 5/^he ' Slacks program*.-v*' 'v and New York which-No stranger to the workings 36 Parent (coH oovemmen^v,; laborer ^ 62 A continent^. ORGANIZATION '$$8% Also co-founder of the auctioned off old inner-city of the legislative process, -vC loq.) Kir 26 flxesindsll^me Bodleaof labbr.i • , 37 Seesaw a, **%< £r."Wh,en -one speaks of-Austin Community College, homes, at low rates to anyone Delco serves as the co-' % • bly , water ' 64 Three-toed idj* ^ A IMS? 39 Shrill outcry 27 Oinera |r#B Become §1 aloth 'j Wilhelmina Delco, one speaks Ms. Delco displayed her belief willing to improve them and: chairman of the Austin 41 Man's •"2B Oeposlta aware of 66 Symbol for nickname 30 Pirtaof circfe.51 Exist '' • r of a woman who has been that educational programs do the zoning programings such Advisory Committee to the 42 Levantine " 8." concerned. and involved in, not stop with school children, as those initiated in Montreal Constitutional Revision ketch ' ^ g,, Travis County communities but should reach the entire which insist that any new Convention. Therefore, when WPWeABLH' 44 Steep de»;£ !$'d: PONT R6AU.V acent W i: S 4 J„ 6 7 1 9 ^ for 15 years.' a community as welL ^ , '} * development be in conjunction one speaks of Wilhelmina Wi MEAN IT! 45 Knock For the past* sik yei'r€, Ms. In the area of ^Consumer with the surroundings of the Delco, one speaks of not a 47 Body of 12 i1!) \4 Delco has served on the Board protection, Delco will support neighborhoods in whiph it is to woman who was in the right wWw f§-s u.s:mail 49 Academic^, 13 16 >7 18 19 ' of Trustees , of the Austin and workin the next be situated,^^^, place at the right time. One subjects ' wvi 26 y/r 1' Independent School District. legislative session for the Unanimously" indorsed by speaks of a woman whowas in' 50 Supercllidua if: V.' 3i i* wf: .person ­52 Pedal digits kI'. .the Six months board,' after the investigation she came to Commission creation of a Utilities with the Control staff, the Education Committee (COPE) of Political of the solutions the right and place in charge with viable of the- A? Mm 54 Pe Symbol for s> i? 46 181 ** began which finally resulted the money and the AFL-CIO and th6 Political situation. samarium,; 32; ^3 v.; St 55 Born * in the desegregation of Austin investigative powers to Action Committee for The Blacks Organization is M 57 Country of 37 54 i? 40 5»' schools in 1972. -, '« prevent the abuse of public Education (PACE) of the the BlackStudent Union at the* DOONESBURY (\Asia Y-AS A..MEMBER of the trust such as perpetrated by Austin Teachers Association, University and is chaired by c 59 Printer's ,; <1 ii-: 44" 44 measure > • board of directors of the Lo-Vaca Gathering Co. Ms. Delco recognizes and $8 Gre,<^ 61 Conjunction 45 iff 47 48 University "Y," she . Incentives toincrease urban supports the need of the Blackley. umr, F£UAHS, AS .1-' 63 Den 1 1 apftte--—'—^ 1 participated in plans to development should be "powerless to organize for h NUCHAS Z UKB HAVm Hs> 65 Skin ailment io Si ii 15'. ii ••If? 67 Aeriform s' implement the construction of' introduced into legislation to collective strength. Ms. DelcQ . Keep your POKBt, XHMEIDKHM (\*V •iC fluid S3 H if 38 1 sr a Vt.HOW YOU AU* the new building and to decrease urban sprawl. Ms. believes collective bargaining' :s: rj.i-i 68:Attitude WSX pi ' Ft&L ABOUT 7HI9 M% "^"'4 69 Tropical kif V initiate the Community Delco cites programs such as is a realistic and historically ~ COOL 61 64 e>i St (MP8ACHMBNT, y;( fruit United ;• Front breakfast those initiated in Delaware successful means of ^ .BUSINESS.. / •' • 67 #69 m ARICA m Kg 6* • improving the life of thosfif^ DOWN Lfi'% 1 Nahoor who would otherwise be'-> 476-2281 j'ty sheep . powerless. &J-£ Moslem I 94 Do you vofe at Maple WooiI School? •W-- Kf. r-.g*­ &'. w< t If so, join the Liberai Caucus at f« i# * • your precinct convention and elect Photo Service C "V, 1% „ k' M&smtmwH& ' -CHUCK DUNN 222 W. 19th '4 &*'4^ 5324. Cameron Rd.. YOU-fMASKMYOU gec/mitmrioBe im peopte PRECINCT CHAIRMAN \f&'Eiecrep. mm&m* 'p&oAmm RESUME' & stonmsucha*6issue HONBStY. S86 . ±­f " ififcv ,-rl Mm Am ^ RABBYALL pd. by Chuck Dunn IDENTIFICATION TYPE PAMNl HBS, I me. 1 mei ". & ' / * / .. PICTURES ' 9£, SUPPORT THE 1-Day Quick, Reliable Service PRESCHOOL •m;H LEARNING r? . . • PROGRAM (Formerly the Malcolm X People's free Youth Institute) a survival program of We the Mike Renfro has People proven his ^concern Organization for Travis County. • Hcnfro was the lawyer for the countyin the successful case against the Dahlstrom Corp., keeping a rock crushing plant out of South Austin. CONTACT LENS • Renfro is fighting for land-Use There is only one soft contact lense on the controls. Further growth & market. The Bausch & Lomb soft lens. There development should be publicly is. only one quality or grade of material so Justified. H don't let anyone tell you they usa a better Bo^&fliihas closely with grade material. ; County government on a daily basis. He ' "VV;' r; :v:\; deserves the respect he has earned as a Our fee is $175 a pair. Our contacts' lens tr^ly progressive attorney. has a lazer beam fenestration you have heard # 1* so'much about. k. • Renfro is supported by his fellow lawyers: Travis County Bar S If you want the old stand-by, hard contact Association^ Austin • Jri'lBar lens, they are $99 for 2 pair, the second pair Association. ' MM WMm can be fitted atno extra,charge to a friend or relative. *?' ,:1 ;i'M ' " ^ ;,l% Show Your Concern for 'Bi-focal contact lenses are also available. Travis County. Remember W 20 years experience guarantees you Renfro Saturday, May 4 V satisfaction. , x * Brinfl your oV^ physician's (M.D.) or op­ Tf- O miM tometrisfs prescription. Professional Offices Of: SEMI-SOFT CONTACT CO. WITH A RCCOR0 Cownly 4u49» m ^ 7305 Burnet Rd.r Suite 103 -US THAT SUmWTS m WILSON ^ , 491>3330 kitMnSiiN 1 ' r fn*xf re Giiwom-on Burnti Mi W KtrnM br H. K-tm. Mm HI » C%>.Hmmm. y Pd for by Stutbnts with Foreman Comm.. Dm Lang. Chmfrpanon. Austin, 7^ r-'| 1 r--| i it Thursday, May % 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Pagl Equal Time Si on KSi® and staff employes of the University. Wehave themoney—$300 By JACE MINOR Party has worked out suchapian thatisfair to all, butlam the power is often mentioned and must be Studied. . million — sitting there and a lot of peopte who need it to make 'Reared on a cotton farm (folksy, ain't it), I graduated from ionly one to endorse it. 1 » > We need a system of progressive taxation — the first tax ends m66t v y • •'CAhe University of Texas at Austin in 1987 and the University of ; There has been much talk about a student regent, and almost ; being a progressive corporate profits tax. An income tax is not I will work for elimination of-those laws thai penalize the" Texas School of Law in 1971. Working for the Court of Civil everybody supports one — me, too. But students don't stay • necessarily a progressive tax but should be so. I will work to • Appeals in Austin as its briefing attorney, I worked on cases ^involving Lo Vaca (Austin's gas company), the Railroad |#|Commission, countless insurance companies and many of >6S®Texas' laws — most of which are poorly written. 1 ... .. preserve any , . I am also nofSnddreeclby the Austin-American Statesman. Politically, I worked in 1968 for McCarthy in Prank Erwin's Fond reforms Educational finance must be givena high priority,and reform Something must be doneabout the spending of the Permanent Editor Sam Wood said that they would not Support me because precinct (we lost). In 19701 supported Yarborough for senator is obviously necessary* The state should assess, collect and University Fund for noneducational purposes. I want to have a distribute the property tax, since in many counties the of my views on the right-to-work (sic) law. My opponent hasand forked for the first liberal county convention; I was a precinct delegate and organizer in 1972 for McGovern. I have thorough investigation of such spending and will have such if Assessing is politically controlled. There are no state licensed Wood's endorsement. " , , , ' s®; .elected. A new Texan spirit ^ with money — what little I have -^Farenthold^jrs assessors.See further answersin The Rag, which happens to be, mM Student government and student publications are certainly There are a lot of things that need to be done in Texas, and I spWeddington and Doggett •: * taore worthwhile than the West Mall project, and ways must be ' Legislative mandates -don't pretend to be able to do them alone. I need your help to Platform -a beginning can createsome sense l#|atforiii will UkH kmg UiiTtoSeve, but I think they are fairly funded %mfor a called session to deal with adequate funding of Much in should begin determihedly. That is why I am running. same light, I want to see minority recruitment school problem, and raising the salaries of the state workers well-funded. Perhaps, minorities regard UT much as we might &!| Oneeasy thing,single-member districtingis a must1am the *'only candidate who favors, and has said so, the drawing of regard Texas A&M, but we must make the effort to let them Equal time SiSf know they-are wanted and will be treated, well. The other district lines to provide for onedistrict comprised of at least 30 students of UT gain by their being here. And, of course, •rcent students at the University of Texas. I don't think students should be gerrymandered to provide anybody witti, reliable votes for re-election. The Travis County Democratic < rac^t^ Energy position ^ ^ ^ JM w- Because of our energy panic caused by the criminal fraud of cure for inflation 'is belt Lo Vaca and Coastal .States, we find ourselves faced with E.H. Meadows, a rancher, distributed. Meadows, a rnemBer bf the tightening from federal to theOur last "Thursday Nite" this semester building a coal plant that nobody wants and now possibly two businessman and professional Since Meadows is a small Farm Bureau, feels that personal level." * 5nuclear plants, which at best, don't work. We have nuclear government teacher holding a businessman himself, he finds farmers and ranchers must be Don't Miss iU On the subject^of the fuel power because we had to find an excuse for the atomic bomb, master's degree in a lack of governmental allowed to make a profit arid crisis, Meadows says we are not because anybody sat down and figured out that nuclear constitutional law, has'been understanding in this segment be shown knowledgeable far from a fission was the best way of creating energy. It is not. Solar actively campaigning on a of the economy. "Small understanding from federal solution, but he feels the free enterprise wvt person-to-person basis in businessmen are literally and state levels. THURSDAY P.M Y-m every county in the 10th buried in paperwork, He is of the opinion that the system will be responsible for new research, development of Congressional District since governmental controls have worldwide food shortages he filed for office in seriously damaged some make the production of farm new oil fields and refineries SPECIALS November. businesses and restrictions products a No. 1 priority. At and practical production4 of 5:30 to 8p.m ;;• -of®! .. Meadows is greatly and impositions have taken the present time, the world the new sources of energy. - concerned about the U.S. tax much of the enjoyment out-of has a 21-to 24-day food "The oil companies have lost 0O . A Full Line system which he feels is ownership. Our sma11 reserve. Meadows says, their 22-percent depletion w New Reductions!1< Of SONY -, ^ verging on being business and free enterprise "Worldwide agricultural allowances, and if the excess unconstitutionally con­production has been good this profits can be guaranteed for- system is the backbone of .the su Products With fiscatory. Since the middle United States must year. This ease the ii^vestment in research, I feel and will Easy Credit Plans income taxpayers are paying receive we11-informed demand for U.S. commodities this is a wise investment in about 90 percent of all taxes, consideration as they employ abroad. Possibly, wie may see the future of our nation: For Students and Find your Lucky Siza he feels that the tax load 60 percent of our working a trend toward lower food Established companies are in thase odd lot Non-Students O should be more equally population." prices in the near future." experienced, equipped and Inflation threat organized to carry on these Meadows sees-inflation as 8 crucial projects. It's cheaperk UNIVERSITY CO-OP ~ serious threat to economic for the United States tolet the JEANS MIRAr* ANDA STUDIO v\ _ f Stereo Shop " Zf stability. He says, "The oil companies use the excess 1 primary cause of inflation is profits in this manner than to yi 23rd & Guadalup* . W excessive deficit federal en danger com mercial BASSPORTSHH A 476-7211 wet 48 where spending. Congress is production ;• and ^ (Open: 9:30-9:30, Thur»?.f " MMisj°' responsible. Massive federal transportation." good friends ft FH., 476-7210 after5:30) R ME PORTRAIT spending and inflation leads to -According to Meadows, meet each increased centralized improved police government and limitations administration should be other daTservICEHfHl on free enterprise. It curbs emphasized to get control of 2323 OiMdohip* [CORNER OF ' our individual freedoms. Our crime. ''Our present crime 5AN ANTONIO 476-0040 10.8 percent inflation rate is rate is a national disgrace AND 24TH expected to continue. The real that cannot be endured." Pessimism of voters • Meadows is concerned IB about the pessimism of the voters toward all levels of government. He blames corruption in politics, magnitude of massive federal u r bureaucracy, Watergate, governmental interference and demands on < private •s enterprise and private citizens, huge political p;qjgp g.u contributions and spending, and the lack of representation m | * of vocations and professions other than that of lawyers in our state and federal government. tv (How's this for an unoriginal headline) The above isa press release by Meadow's Enterprises, Elgin, Texas. Meadows'I opponents for the U.S. House are Jake Pickle and Larry r Bales. I I •Op Buy-Back Policy Exposed! "SHI DISC0NTIMIKD I I The Co-Op buyback policy is not, as a popular myth would have it. a_ TEXTS HERE TOOO" Watch I Representatives of. the I piece of dadaist theatre, an absurdist tragedy on an extended run. It I leading wholesale book I may seem that way, though, when you have to wait inline a while only company will be hare to I I to discover that you're going to have to keep Toward A Theory of buy all books that have I I Titular Obfuscation and The Collected Poems of Liwrence Welk for the not bam reported forIre-A plant andcut flowerI use at U.T. {...in plain I rest of your life. But there's method in this madness, and a little shop in Highland Mall. I I language, this means you knowledge of what's going on might just save you a lot of trouble. from the samt ptopU who . °brought you the Crown Shop* I keep only those texts I "-"'l^hft:;Co-Op only buys back those books whictrprofessors have in­ I whose sentimental value I prevents your parting dicated they're going to use in either the summer or the fall. We give I I with them.) you half of the list price for these books, whether you bought them new I I or used. These books then get put on the shelf and sold for 75% of the list price. The enrollment of the course determines how many books we can buy back, and since we get overstocked fast it's a good idea to br­ THIS SEMESTER ing your books down as soon as you can. A lot of books that have been discontinued at our own beloved uhiversity have a market value THE CO-OP IS somewhere else, and we can give you a wholesale price for those (about 20-25% of the list price). We can't buy back lab notebooks, work BUYING BACK ALL INSTITUTE. IfoC: papers, study guides or spiral notebooks of your doodles. But we still BOOKS THAT WILL buy discontinued paperbacks at 30* each. If you can't stand the thought of remaining associated with the BE USED IN books that we can't buy back you can give them to the City-Wide Com­ mittee for Human Rights. If all this doesn't make as much sense to you SUMMER OR FALL as you think it should, give us a call and ask for Sheryl Starry or Chris SEMESTER. THIS IS Suit. Ned Newt, for security reasons, must remain incommunicado. A complete co-ordinated You understand. , r • training in: raising your levol of con­ sciousness ; p' CO-OP ATHLern t'-> problem solving ' "If vou 'ro on an » have to sell positive emotions SCHOLARSHIP LONQHORN letting tensions go Wi% votir books •< a.m. objective analysis OINIMO HALL <»» >' 10. 13. 14. 15. N° calmness and security REQUIRED ITHAT A to 1 relaxation;. T'-v :/:I|l : \%fu ~: mm \T THE STORE-physical movement unleashing your vital 1:96 1 fif* jf ! Y-S4 energy §Mk J* ^ Intensive June 3 -July 12 sjfejfs-; .w.. Extended June 1 IBUY-BACK DIVISION August M 2 i i-1 ARICA 476-2281 TEXTBOOKS-BASEMENT S"'." ip Page 6 T m;0­ dailxtoxan •Mm-i * Time Is Running J vstW «®V,a Willie Grflan oik Dancers njoy Rituals If knowing how to "pop" during the long songs.» your fingers Armenian style "We're here to have fun," and remembering your sweat he smiles, as he leads the towel is your idea of string of approximately 50 happiness, joining the dancers highkicking o&t the International Folk Dancers door, into the hallway amid every Thursday night might dazzled• onlookers an WHEN HE RETURNED from the war, "I didn't knowpg Gasoline shortage, hey?' he laughed, pointing to a anything todo but startriding thetrainsagain," he recalled,|f switch engine-"I watch him go back and forth all „v Green, a swarthy, jovial man, wouldn't even guess how -k many times those trains have taken him back and forth^ across America. . . nHis eyes and his voice teU of those travels. "I've workedfit ... WVt'V sw :: Mayer reports heavy beef-only 190 poundsof this iseaten eating is not only 'expensive, by the average American in. but it is a highly inefficient cereal form. method of obtaining food pro­every kind of job, all common labor, I didn't get past the|||j fourth grade," he said apologetically. Heading north in the summer, south in the winter, Willie^ remembered "making good money as a dishwasher: in^fg Oklahoma City. And (ricking those tig apples up in Oregon, r that's the life, hey?" he laughed heartily. HE TICKED off the thousands of miles he has ridden the^f' rails, living in the "jungles" of the big yards — Los Angeles,. Albuquerque, Fort Worth, Chicago, Baltimore. His eyes®® flashed when he spoke of another hobo he said had set fireto^ the pile of old railroad ties which serves as Austin's hoboifi " " " Jak d-s '-s 5* . junglei; iwC. But don't generalize about hobos just because some aref "But dot animals," Green said Americans Consuming ftlltlill 'For Too Much' Beef ' By Zodiac News Service , 200 pounds of cereal grains —' Harvard nutritionist Drik or nearly six times as much \ Jean Mayer says Americans eat far too much beef. . Mayer tein, simply because,so much each-dance, everybody is others. The Thursday class, ' cereal Is required to feed the smiling, most particularly the which starts at 8 p.m. in.the bV°TEH cattle consumed. one who started it all, Jimmy Junior Ballroom, is a In a developing country Drury. beginning class and such as China, Mayer says, a SATURDAYA University student instruction is part of each well-fed person consumes majoring-in accounting, evening. The club asks for about 400 pounds of cereal Drury began the organization small donations and in turn grains per year. In com­ in 1971.Described byia former brings in folk dancers for parison, Mayer reports, student' who is one of the seminars, in addition to Americans consume about 2;» current instructors as a making semiimrs out of state. "benevolent dictator," Drury The University chapter also Hair is constantly on his feet and has members attending the Let youralways smiling, as he heads more advanced Austin Facial TENSIONS GO the long lines of dancers, Interntional Folk Dancers, For changes his vast collection of which meets, at 8 p.m. every ARICA native dance records and Saturday, at the Hancock Both Sexes 476-2281 keeps everybody kicking Recreation Center. 2M1S.Cmiiws 441-4151 t "M* s&­ Glen Murchison believes that growth in Travis County must protect trees and other living things. As a County Commissioner Glen Murchison will use his in­fluence to protect the environment from rapid unplanned growth. COUNTY COMMISSIONER, PRECINCT 2 . .yr(.....v -, ,.. + ^ Sk',.v*;• ais'lfe Th» Man for limit County, Horwiflyj SilKbnt* tor MtircN$&iDmM H.f*** CMrptrm 201 W.St M*oXd,dutifa. r«»M.Prinfd i Th0 O*ty T+xmx TSP BuiWng, Unhmwtof of ftxw mt Austin. At , 5* 98 t s V-Mpr -oar *1 "1 vL iJ f * v % t, ft •&r 1 r w ^ & \ ,sskM2sif4-4 of W""*" m CHISON mm Hobbsbeoftrne m^w 1,000 miles ina carwith asteel bed,, igoing 100mph, thattrain just beating you to death, and it's freezing," he said. STRETCHING-OUT in the warm Texas sun, Grteri admitted "I'm getting old, and don't have niu^t time left, I "This here Austin is beautiful, isn't it.this bid C6l6radb and those pretty hills?" he askwi. ; ^Reaching among his tattered blankets and rags,, he produced a wrinkled brown bag, with a twinkle In his eye. Uncovering not a bottle buta Bible, ragged and heldtogether by yellowed strips of tape, he asked "Do you read in here?, «"If people would justsit downand read hereand live likeit "If*" long. ^ . He returned the wave of an engineer on a San Antonio­^und freight, adding that railroad people — engineers, brakemen and switchmen -are friendly to hobos. "They'lltell you when the next train heading your way is pulling out REFRIGERATORS mmm mmm wnmraii mm tax PMlM forHm wMt FREE DELIVERY .89$. • h colors, 2 models to choose from • Free delivery to your room (not your perk­ing lot) • Free end immediete meintenence service Supply is Limited! Call Today! ^ ' UNIVERSITY REFRIGERATORS -47S-3471 ^ mmtwm Hu»' ' GREEN HAS NEVER been hurt while ridingthe trainsfoL, 38 years. "I never hop a train at night and never when it'll .moving, you can lose an arm grabbing hold," he said. % I^The boxcar philosopher has seen the hard side of life, and|f speaks often of "the animals, and that's all they are, who'lpM walk up and blow your head off for nothing." -Jp IpHe especially remembered Bonnie and Clyde, whom hag:, law in San Augustine asa youngster."They weremean, bull';; Ihey got 'em, when that farmer turned tl?em in," M|If he could turn back the hands of time, what would hive been if not a hobo? "1d wanted to been a singer, or a •• • news reporter on the radio, or some^e wth a lot o? jn<)fj|y so that I could help other people.?-. tlwmw ": TME MENTION of singerJimmieHoagerearousedGrw^ who recalled hearing "an old fella here yrho could sing aod^ yodel just like him yeh, Threadgill." v* 7-.J|>: "Hanging round the watertank, just waiting for a train, * J» imitated. ^ But the sun was, going dowh, and the hungry hobo said he© ' had to finer'something to cook thesebeanswith," eyeing the-scraps and trash down the tracks. M ^Willie Green extended a calloused hand, and said "I don't , know where I'm going, but I'll be tack, come on down and. talk, okav?" Mothers l Something Special Each of us hasa special feeling about his Mother.;.^ Each describes that feeling in his own way oni||% Sunday, May 12. We have a Hallmark card that lets you say Happy Mother's Day, your^ way. You select the card, you select the mes-|k sage. Then put them together. It's called Per­sonal Expression. ' ... /tfe The Crown if iUS' Pfdza iw.VVJ' , 2900 Guadalupe Highland Mall ' J < i 15 A l * tr V * t & -f ^ "H » ^4^ FOR STATE sjREPRESEIJTATiyE NOW .WEST l Ct 4M fC"» ^ 1|fi $&>r. THE iONLY candidate: •m wk i *}M "M r 's^ M XS5 h. *v^, a "~v-ihl4 s ,-r 'f —.Ji "> % fX 3^011 '>1 i > . .. . . ZQR A STJJDENT MEMBER HOUSE K ! »u *" Hi­ 1, 1" % •, f tfc --V'/i v-* Aw > 5.^-V^ A « ^ <" mm fdiilte. Jr\ X?' SlED-THA\|XS COUNTY YOUNG DEMOCRATS m ma •-* . .. ... .... -.. OT.J1103 Cotormdo Apftmmt**. Austin uiktfng.Univnity ofTtxmn. ^ Thursday, May 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page-J n , ° . iM f Texas jWfc? /.!^^"®fe'&3.-v,;«':->i.i'X!;.':?-!®^ES' "' "'. -'/i-j/ ";'' • , ' \ •'.' '. .| •'•:'••' •"•*•,. .;: :V : 'O''' .v'.V'-'i •••.-; • ; •• .. '••'••;• ;"Y ' -'"•J •' ISN'T If AMAZING HOW TIME SEEMS TO FLY WHEN YOU'RE HAVING FUN? OUR COMPETITORS DON'T THINK SO, BUT ON OUR FIRST ANNIVERSARY WE ARE PRETTY PROUD TO HAVE BECOME AUSTIN'S MOST TALKED ABOUT STEREO STORE. WE'RE ALSO THE BIGGEST AND THE BEST, TOO. AND THAT'S HAPPENED ONLY BECAUSE OF OUR PRICES, OUR ASSORTMENTS, OUR LOW-KEY SALESMEN/ AND OUR CREDIBILITY. COME IN AND SAVE EVEN MORE MONEY DURING OUR FIRST ANNIVERSARY SALE, BUT HURRY — SOME QUANTITIES ARE IIP THE WORD IS GETTING AROUND! t !'.u' -; IS. i 1AKERJ ' '<* HARMAN KARDON 330B KIH 23 BSR 310X j AM/FRMRt Writ SaBd • At iadastry stoalaid If"waafar TW tail waJda 3-' > •••', f • FAl Tfcat*taMMdda)-*|N*4aatoh& Stott Racabar . , '1SI rtWMtor.lb9.ISf.9smw watic ckaagar wM Shara RWS iwm.ts I wr W | (artrUf* bast t, Ant t»»ar. •-VJPj •— ** •" 'aifs Ra«. »1.N ' Tkbisai«i|Mrb«yat FISHER 295 DYNACO A-25 GARRARD MODEL 74MS || N Walt AM/M Stora* Racairar lbi|i^iryw'w Msa mkI Aatwaatk TwalaUaiiKMat I at • fiactiaa *f Hi vaiaa. My wt.1lMAKM0IHCRH.I*tS las* aatf Sbara BH^ticol fefe&lsl faotarad tor Md Ihlitlag t, 1 •w . 1 « * 3 A« I CartrMfa MtllD,, pfeasw*. R*a. nt.ts • r® ^ 5 J r Ust151.IS ^ , v ,FISHER XP55S DUAL 1214 • 2-way ijiiitif systaai I" , 3-if*ajavtoantk ky a \ FISHER 180 * o^ar, 2"* hw^hfi 5*]fMr liajar. liKkdat baia a M-NMt wanraaly. Ust SMS , . . Hdwwiat attptlcal cartiAM/M Store* Iminr Rtf.1U.IS 'V:: UrtJW.fS KLH31 DUAL m» J WBJf J" ;;-®h 3-spaa4 aotaawtk nod ifcaa|ir SHERWOOD S7100A Ugh twnhf. Mm wjliaxa a*d HckariafK­ 70 Writ AM/HI * • k'A gAfcg.tSpair ,,. .J Tndi aMptitai tartrMga. Stan* tMiinr . v # 1 DD Ra9.7St.tS M5» IM23MS , I77 HARMAN KARDON HK20 DUAL 1229 2waysp**barwilbt" pr*ft»i*aat Wda.ln.ai> .Wii aatMwtic ra 1 CO 2" twaatar. dwagar with bast and SS walfe list m.«s "U7 : UstlM.K , nduriaa VISE. Java •7JS SHERWOOD S7900A AUDIO ANALYST GARRARD MODEL 62 IhnaOad. AM/FM « 4*. ' Spaakwi.lawy. IR" aatwwrtk twatakb with m Watt Racaivar 9?Jkfl W*afcr. Daaw's aaly trn* I nckariag K-Track Ust479.9S wU# UstW.RS CartiMg* list 12A.IS ^ DCB2000 GARRARD42 MS KENWOOD KR4200 ji Rl Wan AM/FM ir laqirttti toaa ana, vixaas Storaa Racaivar • S yaar an daa^td ratiag, t^tkal car- lid2R*.9S •21» RMW.9S 2 far tridga, basa. R*g. ft.IS - 'APE GEAR! fMISCELLANEOUSl •PANASONIC RS263 US : I STANTON 6S1EE 18-TRACK IfttfcyCassatHBack *s .A 1 1 Staraa Carlridg* 1 Slarat lapti • Aato—lit Stop> Nasa # 1 JLO 1 1 —• •* » I |SB arighid artists • SwRcbUstllf.K : |v7 I iagiilaiad Maabar ' 1 Rag. MR »29,|1 Urt72.tR '35 IFISHER TX420 I PICKERING V15E I -» a OLYMPIC HP70 I Qaad AavRfiitr «Rh laRMa t> 'DIB 1 Mpwnc 1 Staraa HMdphaaas witb I Trad Playar list 299.K 77 1 Rati bag I IR ft. axtaasiaa soitlI aftadaaaatUsttt.fS $12 I cMd.Ust2t.W IjISRTDSS IADC 10E MK IV 1KOSS PR04AA •'t-Tiackstor** . *aa ; : 1 MapMlk csrtHrfft 1 playback da* 9*7W Btammi 1flMal I list 60JO $39| I 'KsKMS. X7 ISlylas.UstSRJR $19 IELECTROPHONIC CASSEnE IPICKERING XV15-750E IMILOVAC AC/DC •ftaefc. Aatowalk racasdtog m I Topafliaa • AM/FM ptilablt rassattaI lad, paat* i*t*id #AD |T j • MSpVm ca«ins§e I "playir i. rtcardar •fatilf.M ^tT • Ustt&RR $37 I list 1t».«S $39| WOLLENSAK 6154 I GARRARD S195B DmhI KMI to |n1 OUR GUARANTEE 3 sptad aata dwagar •Ta*a Back VBMatars UstlVf.K\ Z/basa I M91I nM-BAWmt list $2*7.1$ I aaly 1 MAXELL M Mm. Uw IMm Aay tfiptaaat aicaft «1« 1 |CmdtiTMi ' MrtiU|*t May b* ritaiaad • aa ptiHaai askad -W • 1 AMfiX 42 Mtet* UwA cadi rafaad wilbia 10 days af panban. |1-track tap* l»« 1 IAKAI GX280DSS Raai t* rad gaad TAPE IOUIPMENT EXCLUD1D tapadidu t aoiy 1 MAXBtMtra-DyMwcW 1: UatTW.fS |MiMrt* rasMtta taf« *2** I 30-DAY EXCHANGE Aay tta>nut auayt 1 MAXEU UMS-7 1«N Fa«t • I caitiMgw May b* exdwweed far aa*tb*r at tfMl ar 1 Raaltag* «4« J graatar voiaa wilbia N days a af pardMM. Sio^ly pay raMl 1 AMPEX 60 Mimite Lew Noiso 1 WOLLENSAK fe-;,' dHhrmca. AC/X partaMa cassattt |Coss*tt«Tap« 49* 1 tapa racaidar1 FULL YEAR UstH.9S 1 AMKlS451MI(Mt SPEAKER EXCHANGE 1 mllerMllapt VMrite *m yaor af pvnhnt *3W I «ny ipaabar way b* axebaat­ 1 AMMV dM ad far aw af Mpoi *r graatar wfca. SiMpfy fwy Aa ratdl »r. ID0K0RDER 7200 1 dHfaraaca, |ikts aa aHavraact R*dtaradlopa AAXOlMaiwtt far cabiaat daMaga, if aay. dadi, 3 tutors -«pc" -g is ^ S 1 *1** . s359 j' TRY US, WE MEAN IT ^mrtw Us* ttf.tS LONG-TERM hhh8 •m FINANCING M Om Block North of Highland MoH ot 104 HvntlaiHl Drivo ALSO mmm WttS8klm& March, Texas Parade / Ity IJNDA BENSON * iple If'Hoiistbh thight not^ outside the1 statt^ but the buy a Dallas magazine." magazine still maintains, a went On the newsstand for the . National magazines Look Besides being the center of high. percentage -of out-of-first timte, with.distribution in and Life may have had their downfall, but the magazine the state, Levy added, state readers — 18,000 ot^he , Austin, San ^ntonio^H^ston and Dallas.1 "We are looking industry in Texas seegis to "Austin is a great place to 50,000 circulation. !< 1 r to forward to a 75,000 to.J09,000 have a bright futureir^ ^.live. *'v: "We are trying be a' Mike Levy, publisher of'< Austili alio IS fhe general interest . magazine -statewide ^u^oj, Texas Monthly, said in the headquarters of another state directed, toward professional Texas Monthly already has first' issue of the magazine magazine, Texas, Parade, people^? Benham.said. ''We just over a year ago that the which . has-been published say our' Audience is. basically approximately 15,000 afreet trend in magazine journalism sales monthly. Its articles WSi* have rgng&l from the "Body is away from the big, mass ?We ore trying to be a general l circulation, general interest' Business at Tokyo House," publications and toward the interest magazine directed about a chain of massage "special market" magazines parlors, and "Living Off the such as Psychology Today and-,Joward professional people/ jltym Fat of the Land,'' describing mmm Sports Illustrated. mm Texas health spas to features on John Connally and what it's LEVY MUST have since 1936. Randall Benham, men to a much larger extent predicted correctly; Texas associate editor of Texas than we would like." Benham like to be a patrolman in San Monthly has had an Parade, says Texas is.the kind described the audience as , Antonio. White, promotion impressive first year^ of state where two state mainly men over 40 and in ^Tracey \ tecently winning the1 magazines ban survive. "If executive positions. "director of Texas Monthly, Columbia U niversity's there is any state in the union When asked about the said the magazine is not National Magazine Award in interested enough in itself, it's competition of Texas slanted toward any one group, the "specialized journalism" Texas," Benham said. Monthly, Benham said, "We but a recent demographic category as well as the Gold UNTIL 1955 Texas Parade are reaching a different study revealed more than 50 Medal in the 10th Annual was a publication of the Texas audience than Monthly" and percent of its audience have American Advertising Good Roads Association and ''We will be treating stories an income over $20,000, are Federations ''Addy'' Award contained mainly chamber of differently. We won't -be college graduates or have for the March, 1973, cover, commerce type material with treating the sensational side attended college and are 25 to plus a 60,000 statewide no advertising. of it," Benham added. 49 years old. circulation. After it was sold the BUT THIS does not mean Both magazines are Levy, who worked for magazine continued "telling Parade's stories are not predicting #n increase in Philadelphia Magazine and people out of state about sometimes controversial. One circulation and Texas Parade United Press International Texas" until 1970 when some Baptist group called a boycott will soon be starting a before coming to Austin to "new blood came in," against Texas International circulation campaign-drive. receive a Law degree from Benham said-He was Airlines because of a story But as Benham pointed out, the University in 1972, said he speaking of Ken Lively, who favoring pari-mutuel betting since Texans have an picked Austin for several then became editor-of toe in The Texas Flyer magazine, awareness about themselves* reasons. "I was worried magazine. "We are now which also is published by all indications point to success people in Dallas would not buy trying to direct toward a Texas Parade and includes for the^specialized magazine a Houston magazine and the Texas audience instead of many of the same stories. marketin Texas. ,w Mexico Pushes Herifqy ; .. t \ Austin Selected for Book Store By BOBBIE CRISWELL ^ University faculty about the cultural identity. > Cultura has been printing Texan Staff Writer project. Shveid will make a The government, working primarily coilege-level books The Mexican government . quick tour of all 12 citiesto get with toe government-owned at inexpensive prices, but has selected Austin as one of reactions and opinions on toe book company, Fondo Ve Shveid said the book' stores 12 American eities where it book store project, which will Cultura Economica, felt the will try to provide a variety of will open a book store, Which • specialize in books printed in book stores would be a way to books, including the classics,it hopes will serve as "a Spanish. get in contact with American history and children's books. window into Latin America Shveid said toe nonprofit citizens, especially those with and Mexican culture." idea started after toe Mexican a Latin heritage, Shveid dald. Nettie Benson, head of toe Felix i^CHiveid, , -a government received many Although most books will be' Latin American Collection, representative of the Fondo comments from Mexican-written in Spanish, some will spoke with the representative Ve Cultura Economica Americans as to their"second be printed in English about about toe project. publishing company, was in class stature in the United Latin America. "fwould very much like to Austin Tuesday to speak with r States and their lack of Up to this time, Fondo Ve see it happen and wish it all the success in toe world. We very badly need some kind of distribution of books in Spanish — all kinds,". Ms. Benson said. She noted there was only one place in the state, a store in San Antonio, selling,books WHY? 1. Because 75% of all courses are filled during preregistra­ printed in Spanish. • 'tion. . "V'" m^ * -y ' ' ' "Considering the number of 2. Because most popular couVses are filled during Mekican-Americans in the area, I-know therels a-gt^^ preregistration. demand for something like1; 3. Because most prime time courses are filled during this," Ms. Benson said. ' pteregistratiori. The stores, which Shveid said he hopes will 1^ open 4. Because you get 3 more days of holidays in August. '" within a year, also will be established in San Antonio, ' TURN IN MATERIALS BY 4 P.M. TOMORROW Houston, Dallas, San* Francisco, Los Angeles, San f Office of the Registrar Diego, Phoenix, Washington, Chicago and New York.. c "Eve Street Y FRIDAY, MAY 3 ....celebrate the ertd of classes and get ready to vote Saturday.* -i ON WHITIS STREET W&mmm L*. garage • Free Beer 7-12p. 4PV . VV'V'K;74, . •-v.-'rv'.' •• SM: cA.-w*rj,.v»»«?-».• •' invited to attend •s&wssk i SATURDAY, MAY tf— 4 OfW TUES. THRU FRI. NOON TO NINE, SAT. 104 AVAILABLE Sponsored by Dobte Center & Students For Voter Participation t }"* iJsi i->\ ft PHONI 4544053 •'ml • > ' " ' jr •, • ••• ^ - • !•" " • • Page 8 Thursday, May t 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN mm By ANNE COLUNS Walker, just getting on the everyone submits the 60-hour all," said Mrs. Alice Davis, the System office encouraged the school, she added; /;/»'&ij Texan Staff Writer .^waiting list can be a di{ficuL| 5,transcript on.ftejsatae date^ another waiting student-"But and assisted the student-Mrs. Walker has no Peal; The waiting list for$||experience. t&Mhe dates, of the 30-hour when you don't know how long Initiated committee which statistics on the number of * /'admission to Universityfff ^prospectivei'' nt»imlr.sing, tr the wait will be, it's very conducted the survey. persons who change their, *, System nursing schoolskf%st udent may make ,a priorities. discouraging. Mrs. Davis said "THE RESULTS of thepoll ' majors while waiting to enter' t subject of a recent survey by^^preliminary application for TO BE notifiedthat one is she was told it would be "a will beshared with the faculty nursing school, but she does* ?jVnursing students, reflects irif* ^nursing school at the on the waiting list is not semester to a year" before research committee that is not believe the number Jtei i, Av . part the lack-of suitabl4vjcompletion of 30 semester necessarily to know one'? she could enter nursingsCboQl; investigating criteria for significant. | facilities for training, Mn& |hours, submitting status, however. >"< f;& in Austin. ! ? ^ admission," she said. "Any , "Most are not actually! Aloma Walker, nursing school^^transcript; the completion of One student who will enter "YOU CANT be. static, changes will be considered by discouraged and are willing to? ^student adviser, said. , ^each additional semester ^nursing school in the fall after Mrs. Davis said,"My husband the faculty on the basis of wait," she said, "particularly; Wt "We utilize all the hospital'~'~retyiires another transcript.?^a one-year wait, the second and I had to make plans. 1 recommendations from the _ when they see how crowded; and clinical facilities we; The date of the transcript semester of which was her went to work lor a y?ar, and faculty research committee^'; other professional fields and';By WaitingVst t^4^possibly can," ^Irs. Walker submitted after the own choice, believes the he went to drafting school. I Dr. Willman added. other nursing schools are." ­'said. "In Austin we were able completion of 60 semester handling of the list to be was..notified of admission for Mrs. Billye Brown, dean of An opening on other( ||@f o place students at hours is the criterion which "arbitrary,-" spring semesterbut had to put the University^ nursing school campuses within the System?, rgstrom Air Force Base loir determines the student's "I had trouble finding our: it off until September." at Austin,, said she is not in rarely occurs, but when one' Still Afflicted e|S|p& tgr U' 'w the first time ,in the fall place on the waiting list. Itall my status on the list," she Dr. Marilyn D. Willman, disagreement with anything does it is made available to a* fsemester of 1973," she added. depends on the date; the president of the University, said in the survey report. It student who has made It Ja e sllssllllyilllii AS EXPLAINED by Mrs. earliest one counts. If "It's upsetting to Walt ar^ System nursing "school,*«aid was done with the blessing of second choice. *.» o Snuff Out Complete Research Service lySSws ;F4 . 4 4*T m&Bt. 'By ROBERT GOET2 > ^fpreparation of tobacco used later 16th Qentury and spread undoubtedly hookworm mi^it have had your hopes example, comes on with a Collopiat* Research System* h®«•completa Whenever there is an Ji»y inhalation or by "dipping;'' to Ireland and Scotland in the -riiOPBQAV " shattered, but youcan stilluse nice cool rush that opens tip Educational fiataarch Sarvica, Including ^alleged "rage" sweeping i.e., rubbing on the teeth and ....17th, and tobacco was also THE TWO men set the it for pleasure. your Mfaagjss andclearstyow^, Tarm Paper Raaaarch, Thaala Reeearch and ;college campuses acrog& the gums." 10}taken in this form by the record straight, though at the ACCORDING to Dean Swift PrpjfeasiQnal Typing In all areas. nation, it can often be ITS MANUFACTURET natives of Africa." expense ol dispelling a Litd., "the nasal membranes If you were UHcen in, as T attributed to a dollar-involves 18 to 20 months of THE USE OFsnuff has even harmless myth. "Farther, actually absorb snuff with a was, this is what you do: send ' conscious free-enterprise grinding tobacco and been popular in this country, among the illiterate classes pleasant effect, as anyone a selif-addressed, stamped i#s;;80,000 operation that has the devious "subjecting it to repeated as a U.S. Public Health there is a geographically who has ever "snorted" any envelope to* Dean Swift Ltd., Cfijfck Dallvary a Collegiate .Research Slwriifl purpose of exploiting it to the .:. fermentations." It is scented Report da^ed Feb-28, i913,,A,widiefSprtad folk belief that stimulant• understands. Snuff Box 2009, San Francisco, Cal., Mon, thru Fri. '04 lost £th Stree» No. 518 hilt. -" with such exoticfragrancesas verifies.' t-. ,v. i . \ r^flnnttsnuff dippingirtiftniner and tobacco is a direct hit without any 94126. You'll get free samples Hre: 1Q;00 to 6:00 Uttlefield Building :: t Qr, as in the case of attar of roses, lavender, In ttfe paper titled "Snuff chewing are preventives.... harmful side-effects. plus literature of the history, 10:00 to 4:00 8at. Austin,Texas787d1 streaking, the same general cloves, jasmine, cinnamon and Tobacco: Their Use by "With the passing away of Eucalyptus snuff, for use and etiquette of snuff. type of operation will and musk. ^ School Boys and Girls in the ignorant physician, as his capitalize on it after its , Although it may or may not County Z," two place is rapidly being taken by inception. A pertinent, though be sweeping U.S. campuses, representatives of the U.S. the modemly trained man, the ecame popular on the preventive against growing popular belief." 'te&f••• paraphernalia, has this to continent of Europe in the pale (namely, in this instance You anemics out there say: "Called 'snorting' by the young, a rage of fancy snuff <•«< sniffing is sweeping college ISPECIAL \\ SUMMER COURSES campuses all over the U.S. %•< The snorting population ON INDIA BESTiREPRESENTYOU? seems now to be about evenly divided between men and Sponsored by THE CENTER FOR ASIAN women." But incase itdoes comeinto STUDIES • ^ vogue, here is a primer on the The SAC-YD's slate is the end-product of com- subject of snuff that has to be 2nd Summer Session — Clatses Begin July 15 read. promises between various factions in Austin. The slate Snuff is "a powdered AMg S381 1148901 Th. Rol. of Ih. PrlvM. SmIm »' , A v,;' MKT S372 (21010) in Indian Economic Development. stresses balance more than support for the candidate To be taught by a distinguished visiting professor from India, 8hrt,USE B.R. Deolallkar, recently a visiting Fellow at Harvard University,I .who is the most student-oriented. Barrientos has much MTWThF 11:30-1 BUR.1224DAILY TEXAN ANS S360 (14870) Educational Development In India support among the Chicano faction. Also hef EDC 8371 (22840) and Pakistan. To be taught by a visiting professor from Neto^ CLASSIFIEDS favorably disposed toward most student issue* except ^ Zealand, Donald Smith, who hat served with the British Council! THEY WORK! in both India and,Pakistan. abortion. He represents a better compromise candidate MTWThF 10-11:30 BUR 212. ANS 8360 (14880) Geography of Asia -emphasis. to the different political factions than Wilson Foreman.^Sri GRG 8331 (11440) South Asia. Course draws on the rich field experience in India off X' Vs.i3 Experience ARIGA professor Robert Mayfield, visitingprofessor from Boston Univer-o > 1 ^ T* L \ f# s, v-'1-' sity. -4 . > "r* .1 .. . <:;S _ _ • . V 4 v [Tonight7-l Op.m.| However^ heno can't" ^approach Wilson Foreman's MTWThF 8:30-10 BUR 134. --. -f -V-\ (All courses open to studentswho have not specialized in AsianStudies) UT Main Ballroom record ofpro-student achievement. During the last ses­sion^Foreman compiled both a 100% student lobby and >-i ^ l, 7 iV *> " 100% Common Cause voting record. This remarkable ^ X. record is based partly upon Foreman's support and vote for the following legislation: r ^ W h »* fellSiS • Marijuana Reform • 18 Yr. Old Rights • Student Reasons Regent's Bill • Ethics Legislation • Environmental Bills • Financial Disclosure • Abortion * Minority Recruit-i I * :d to LIVE at ment • Bi-Lingual Education . t ^ ^ „ \ During the entire campaign^ Foreman has not been XLOIIVE challenged on a single vote he cast last session on Dobie's right next to campus. Just across the either sutdent or reform issues. SAC-YD can't find fault street from the main academic complex ... with Foreman's Pro-Student record, yet has chosen to and a fast dash to the Tower. m endorse another candidate in order to draw support for { ^ •* + f jj" rV•• f- r-c ••Mi the rest of the slate. Dobie has space. More room per room than ,4 you'll find in all but the most expensive apartments. Extras ... like a bath with each J*­ bedroom. Space to study, to relax, to LIVE. v"< V 7r:,s;V; ^ Dobie serves 19 delicious nfeals a week (or take only 10 and save) . ..in a spacious, well-lighted cafeteria . ..real food like eggs cooked to order .;not overcooked dorm . v ' SAC-YD•W HAVETO SUPPORT A .,fare and plenty of choice. sIlH v'Il.il"-w.--W­ ... . Dobie has a friendly, personal atmosphere. ^ ^ A fine group of residents conscientious COMPROMISE CANDIDATE BUT YOU DON'T. fro security .,.and a staff that CARES about YOU. PLEASE CONSIDERJVILSON FOREMAN. HE HAS Dobie has th6 Mali. A delightful selection of WORKED TO EARN YOUR SUPPORT. shops, entertainment, essential services, even & JPl a double-screen movie theater . . ^conveniently located right downstairs* * ^ fiJ-% M4 Dobie prices are competitive. Thanks to expert profession^ management, it doesn't & WILSON V .. WSk with a record cost any more to go First Class,, thcrt aupporta CHANGE '•M * Jrc «£ f A ,if.^LongS«*«k>n^'ir "Swmm«r S««ton (6 wk»J n 0REMA1I • f'ML" Dou*1485 . $200 Suit* SSlfr*liPS $1600 ' $200 ^ -*PlanA 19 m»t»p«wttk "lSrowhpwwttk live Smart™.at1MUBKB, M * Dobie Tower • 21st at Guadalupe • 472-8411 pd-by Students with Foreman. Dm* Lang, Chpsn.. 2235 Lakmshora * "••••..•'•i.'Si-Vl"».---c ..•*' — /%;<• -• V.— A,.-.1-.A....-..-.. . , . i« . ———— i .i li . Thursday, May % 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page Y e for the people Si st® * lew1' is? ~ cfP ' . * -.1BBEB the privileged few. SAC-YD Endofe&ifcs. hriieaa? ••SW GOVERNOR S— FRANCES FARENTHOLD. A former House member and leader of the Dirty Thirty, Mi.Farenthold isin are-match with DolphBriscoe. In 1972 she was .the first woman to have her name placed innomination for vice-president and placed second In the voting.She-has recently served as chairperson of the NationalWomen's Political Caucus and as anassistant professor of taw. Farentholdis stressing Briscoe's inactioninprotecting the environment and upgrading public education. §U T<§&| U.S. CONGRESS — LARRY BALES. State Rep. larry Bales offers new strong leadership in his attempt to unseat long-term incumbent Jake Pickle. Bales favors immediate impeachment proceedings, an excess profits tax on oil companies, and Common Cause's iposals for federal government reform. As an attorney and a former aide to Sen. Ralph arborough, he has the experience necessary to act as U.S. Congressman. ; " it m i' -'4 (COMPTROLLER —• BOB BULLOCKi Bob Bullock repeatedly showed his cencerii for students during his term as Secretary of State. He was instrumental in securing the ap­" V pointment of the first student to a Board of Regents of a State college in Texas, and fought for • *•«?•«•* • kf students' right to vote in their college towns. He has also served as State Representoitive and *1 as Chief of the Anti-Trust and Consumer Protection Division of the Attorney General's Office. |r. 1 i-'mi ' WE REAFFIRM OUR SUPPORT FOR STATE SENATOR UOYD DOGGETT AND STATE %r, REPRESENTATIVES SARAH WEDDINGTON AND RONNIE ^v 'rA*" ? f EARLE WHO ARE UNOPPOSED FOR RE-ELECTION ON MAY 4. STATE REP., Mace 1 — WILHELMINA DELCO. cu™,«y.n»mb.r of th. : / Austin School Board, Wilhelmina Detco has served as co-chairperson of the Austin Advisory > Committee of the Constitutional Revision Commission, and as President of the Travis County . PTA Council. She will be a strong advocate for equal educational opportunity for all Texas children. She favors a student on the Board of Regents and a corporate profits tax. STATE REP., Place 4 — GONZALO BARRIENTOS Bmri.m.,u.fa™., j refaarch assistant in the EdPsych Dept. at UT, Programs officer for VISTA, and consultant on migrant worker programs and police training. Wilson Foreman narrowly defeated him in a vicious 1972 run-off campaign. Gonzalo will work for a citizen's standing to sue polluters, a solid student legislative district, and a utilities regulation commission. COUNTY JUDGE — HUBERT GILL and TERRY WEEKS. Both Hubert Gill and Terry Weeks bring years of legal experience and political concern to the race for County Judge. Both were key people in the election of State Senator Uoyd Doggett, and councilman Jeff Friedman. Weeks is a co-operating attorney with the American Civil liberties Union. Gillhas worked as^an investigator with the U.S. rl Equal Employment Opportunity Conrtmission. , DISTRICT JUDGE — JERRY DELLANA. N.W serving as Judge in Travis Gounty Court at Law No. 1, Jerry Dellana has had sixteen years of experience as a public of­ficial. Having served as Justice of the Peace, Assistant County Attorney and Assistant District Attorney, Judge Dellana has earned the respect of Austin lawyers for his fairness and legal knowledge. Ws-COUNTY COURT AT LAW No. 1 — BROCK JONES, A. staff Atiom.y to the Travis County Juvenile Court, Brock Jones was responsible for the handling of allcounty juvenile delinquency cases, and for providing protection for neglected or abused children. He acted as Assistant Attorney General of Texas in 1967 -68. His experience handling both civil and criminal law makes him a qualified candidate for judge. COUNTY COURT AT LAW No. 3 — JIM DEAR. D«.rhc..b«n a JP for the P°** three years and is a former assistant city attorney. By working long and irregular hours and by showing a sense of fairness, Jim Dear has earned the support of young progressive ''2^3 lawyers who have appeared in his court. COUNTY COMMISSIONER PCT. 4 — RICHARD MOYA. A .tnng advocate of student interests for the last four years on thf Commissioners Court, Maya has worked for an improved jail, legal action to protect the environment, and polling places near it" campus. He is former chief investigator for the Travis County Legal Aid & Defender Society. iVSI!.CL9LT"A^5E' PCT-1 — RICHARD SCOTT. A prating attorney ami graduate of the UT law School, Richard Scott has the working knowledge of the law needed for a JP. He is amember of the American Civil LibertiesUnion and theNAACP and was a delegate to the 1972 National Democratic Convention. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, PCT. 2 — CHARLES WEBB. An Au»ttn iawy«, Webb received a BA m Sociology and a law degree from UT. Webb believes in deciding each case on its individual merits, particularly those involving"victimless crimes" and intends to ;educate Travis County citizens in the use. off the small aaims court without an attorney^ mk JWSna QF.THE PEACE; PCT. 3'^^SSfif^lf A 5"*" ° and a degree in law, John Wisser has worked actively in th*Student Attom^soffiM.Hewas instrumental in the writing of the new landlord-tenant law, and worked with the UT Ugd Research Gfoup. He recently has served as assistant Travis County Y.rUl •• ,v"c . • •• i B cM VOTE THIS SATURDAY/ MAY 4 -:• mkm •'i'm p* Pol.At*.** I §h£ STUDINT ACTION COMMITTEE d U.t. YOUNG DEMOCRATS jL -rtotrnmum.auarasoN , STACY SSITS, PKMSiMt _ ^ mr MM0 •* Ml W.M* mm ^Professor To 18th Century Politics 509 W. 26thSt., forajjwclM mwting Prof. James T. Boulton of which could'^-influence and prayer. D«rr«lt UoflW* Will b# the University of Nottingham educational priorities in gu«t speaker. . aUKiWMMTOO* will m«*?frort9to will present a lectureon "18th Austin. For more information 10 p.m. Thursday In Union BulMIng Century Political Satire: The call Wendy Biro at 317 to_ study the Bible In a, Men in theShadows" at4 p.m. Community CQuncil, 47&7521, nondenominatlonal atmosphere. -.£fcfXICAN.AMiaiCAN YOVTH Thursday in the Humanities OROAMOATION «• meet et 7t» pjn.Research Center Library- b^wrt^heWeJectiewferWIelfifm*. School Auditorium (4.252).^ ; RMTM OUMDMMmt HKMKT Of the; : • Austin StateSchool will howItssixth •ASU wilt sponsor a short class in Boulton is best known for annual Recognition and Awards concentration and time use at nooi Program at 7p.m. Friday In the Thursday and a class in breakim his work with 18th Century , school gymnasium. 3203 W. 3$th St. i study tensions at 3 p.m. Thursday iEnglish literary figures, v The program Is open to the public. ' jester Center A332. Pre^nrollmentg. ^,, although he has recentlymade UMONA«n ANPIMATR OOMMimi will not not necessary. For mor#] : sponsor a tilm, "Spider Stratagem." information call 471-3614. significant contributions „ . ... ... to. based on a story by Borges and ifCUSMA. University 5tair Assoclation>~^ "'4*. D.H. Lawrence studies, Hisirf directed by Bertoluccl, at 7 and• 45 j will meet at noon Thursday In Union;., • Building 334 to review retirement;-, editions of Burke, Dryden and .Th1ur*?"?,1? ,he.uJ2i°7T?M,rf • \» ' AdmUslon Is si for faculty^$; programs for University employer ,DeFoe have been and staff and II.50 for others. with guest speaker Conrad Fath England and'America w ONION MUMCAl IVtNn COMMmil will SIMMAM Wlk-' sponsor a concert by Don Sanders ^?*OiOOY PWAtTMINT wlit sponsor av from ( to 11:30 p.m. Thursday5-'*'^' seminar at 1 p.m. Thursday In...Stolen Fossil through Saturday in the Union West Geology Building 100 with O.M.v.: Side Second Story. Admission is SI Fritz speaking on "Ophlolite Belt A 165-million-year-old fossil^; Thursday and H.SO Friday and west of Paskenta, Northern SMurdaiy. California Range" and cycad leaf stolen from an!l$ : V ^ Coast Thomas W. Broadhead discussingexhibit at UniversityA^)^MAMiiNwCr^r«m>ao'toia << "Biostratigraphy and Paleoecology Showcase two weeks ago has ^ p.m. Thursday in Union Main ot the Floyd Shjale,: Upper Ballroom for physical, emotional ; 1 Mississippi aha Northweslvnot been returned, and there r7 and spiritual exercises in self-S Georgia." are no clues to its'3 evolvement. Or. Robert Jolly will« VNIVWSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH Will i--speak on the work of Arica < sponsor a soup>and iandwlch whereabouts, Botany Prof, Participants areasked towear loose seminar at noonThursday in NordanTed Delevoryas, said; ^ clothing. Admission is free.: ' Lounge, 2007 University Ave.Wayne f|M AtfHACWHSI1AN rniOWJH* wllLmeet Bragg wilt speak, at "Projefo, Wednesday. at 7:30 p.m. Thursday'at The Well,: Rondon, Brazil's Peace Corps" The fossil was part of a graduate student's research. Housingit^M^; Cycads wereagroupiofseed S.. :i',' " s8aS®!Sfca& mm plants abundant'in the^ll Mesozoic era — when dinosaurs roamed the earth. Whoever has the fossil is asked to return; it to the botany, department office, Hear ComplainIf Biological Laboratory 311, or to Union Building 320. No '' Construction problems Gateway resident/ said- questions will be asked, which have plagued Gateway Wednesday. , Delevoryas'said; ; . Apartment residents for more Lack of landscaping at the than a year may soon be apartments has prompted EducationNeeds alleviated after University most of the complaints. With r There will be a -public administrators visit the site no ground cover, the rocky,, hearing to discuss the, Thursday. . hilly land has become a safety educational needs of Austin's Residents of the married hazard for children, Brock citizens at7:30 p.m. May13 in student housing complex have said. Metz Elementary School, 2101 made their complaints known "Some of the first floor Willow St. The forum, to Student Government and to apartments flood during sponsored by Community University administrators but heavy rains causing minor Council's Education Advisory so far no action has been damage to the apartments,'? Committee, is to allow Austin taken. •*: he said. citizens to express their However, Regient Frank C. Another problem is the lack viewpoints concerning what Erwin and Dr. Ronald M. of a safe route from Gateway educational needs are being Brown, vice-president for to a nearby shopping center neglected or underfunded. student affairs, will tour tile and elementary school. >r . The needs expressed by complex Thursday and make Building and landscaping at: those present at the forum recommendations for Gateway were halted more will be used to compile a improvements', 'Bill Brock, than a year ago when the report to Austin governmental Student Government construction company and educational institutions administrative assistant and contracted to build the complex filed for bankruptsy. Since then, no major construction has been done at Attending the the site, and residents are threatening to move out Summer Session? unless somethingisdone soon. WHY NOT VA Checks TRY THE BEST! Modified il : A-;r-it%: ;.:K ;-y '•''-1 .• ''-P~ •21 Great Meals per Weel* In Summerf • Maid Service The Veterans Administration announced a • Close to Campus change Wednesday in procedures for distribution of • Private Transportation v benefit checks for thf University summer session.? • Private Pools The first benefit check for veterans registered forALL THIS AND courses during the summer session will be mailed to theEVERYONE GETS University for distribution rather than to the enrolled A PRIVATE ROOM student. Veterans who plan to register for summer session courses and who wish to receive their first benefit check immediately after \ -, registration should complete709 W. St £» i w the necessary forms at the veterans desk in Main MADISON HOUSE 478-9891 478-8914 Building 1-G. f Madison -Bellaire Apts. I VOTE a/so avaifabfe for Summer ; HURRY! SATURDAY -> >1 „ *'v * i , V" < $ |2 I s ' j-.jy ^ •I COI % TERRY WEEKS ON THE STUDENT • R&isSV.we • By •3 to 2 vot# th® Travis County Commissioners rocently rofusod to tot up absontoo voting substations which would have made iteasier for you to vote. Terry Weeks will vote for these substations because he has always worked to make it easier to vote rather than harder. § <• 'J V During th® special Senate election run-off last summer, the Republicans mounted a challengeagainst student voters who had mov­ed out of their precincts. Terry Weeks researched and wrote a legal opi- I "ion which the Secretary of State signed. The opinion was circulated to the electionjudges anduphold theright to vote. Weeks andseven other lawyers then went from poll to poll giving advice to election judges when stud«nt voters were bping challenged. Thousands of students were challenged that day, but all save a handful were allowed.to vote. I-Terry Weeks will continue to be effective representing you as Travisj County Judflej^;;y^--i-; ^ V •' •Oesl swdlorwanif bf SMm Actisn CMnmHtM on4 ^ fage iO Xhursday, May 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN S-'aC'* • ^ m IS' m ITT. Florida Development 4 ®1874 New York Times News Service ifep PALM COAST, Fla,.-— In the early morning stillness, as pjcoBtnd ofit •Mm iierons stalk mullet ami other fishin the swirlingshallowsof ITT officials, on tfe 6tfi& land. soaiid like the Matanzas River, the engines of earth-moving machines on the subject of environmental protection, and they•*#$8S,. can beheardcoming from behind the pine forests of Flagler ^JnsS that the corporation is, talring steps to avoid the mistakes made by dthef large lam developers in the past It is a sound that brings smiles or shudders Iran the "WE HAVE agreed to do anything Mr. Kuperberg has s presidents of tiny Flagler County (pop. 4,450) on the Atlantic asked us to do," asserted Or. Norman Young, president of .iCoast about 20 milessouth of St. Augustine, theoldest cityin MPT Development. "Certain trees and animals have had to ^ North America. For here, behind the screening trees, the continent's ;r;,-fhewest city is being, carved out of the wilderness by a However, he added, low-density cities such as PSlm Coast Subsidiary of the giant International, Telephone and that eliminate "the psycho-social pollution" found hi £ »Telegraph Company. ,Vr<. g$t £>f crowded cities supercede in importance the wishes of 'eg: BY THE TURN of thfe centfcrt^, according to present plans environmentalists "who couldn't agree with each other over £of the ITT Development Corporation, a city with a , , what would be acceptable in the first place."^population equaling Cleveland's will be located on the banks Controversy has marked the projectsince theland figured •sof the Matanzas. An international salesforce of 600, working indirectly in the antitrust settlement arranged by the Nixon Imainly in the northeastern United States, sold $& million administration intheITT-Hartford FirelnsuranceCpmpany;r Iworth of home sites in the company's Palm Coast f||l.merger. ? v' ^ «' ' -3j0f v^ •> .Development in1973, shooting for a$1billion investmentand ||g-MOREOVER, when environmentalists in Florida discuss ~ -'600,000 residents by the year 2,000. §§fcthe powerandihfluenceof an international corporationsuch Y Qui the ITT project i»as run into stiff-backed opposition y^as ITT on government policy makers, they, point out the "ffom state planners who have called it an environmental ^^coincidence that President Nixon dropped recommended disaster that would devastate the state's longest remaining ^new controls on the development of wetlands from his stretch of undeveloped coastline on the Atlantic. ^.environmental message to Congress at about the time ITT ,. v TWO YEARS ago we told them they were building a began selling Palm Coast to the public. ^ dinosaur— an anachronism — that was years out of date as im The PalmCoast developers have leveledhundredsof acres, far as enlightened development goes," claimed Joel of land, cutting calans and pumping up landfill to provide:Kuperberg, director of the Internal improvement Fund, the sawtooth building' sites, reducing forests into moonscapes'! state agency responsible for development along waterways. ^with two or three trees per acre. ''Here we have the world'smistiest corporation walk into &;/'• "Flagler County nevergrew,in the past because thepeople •^Florida with a plan that is 10 years out of date," Kuperberg !who controlled this county didn't want it to grow;," said-^' < said, explaining why 72,000 acres of Palm Coast's 92,000 V..£ Carter Rawlings,1 irin moved how 10 yea^s ago from acres have not yet been certified by Florida for out-of-state "S^A Georgia. ''The local power people don't want out operating junior ROTC May 5th, 1974 ' programs — known as (Sunday) "JROTCs"-on at least1,100 U.S. high school campuses. An estimated 152,000 high school Auditorium students are enrolled as JROTC cadets. . S0i 7:30 p.m>%$ Now, a new ROTC plan, also aimed at high school students, is being launched. This $1.50 at Hogg Auditorium program will allow high school seniors to drop out of* Ticket Office school to serve in the National Guard instead. 1? mopetoi 9 orug sure Relax, listen or reconl with Broadmoor's Cassette Recorder with AM/FM Radio. .v'.v;-.;-., ••'.<>••• REG. $49.99 Completely solid state with built-in antenna and telescoping antenna. Batteries, blank tape, earphone and microphone included. AC/DC. W IfM •^4, v/ ""a-The Commodore 6 2 9 8.3 I 4 u \ A Minuteman 6 Calculator— just in time for finals! fjT ONLY MO* ? 3 r'V1 ? " ft* 1 * y. -1-T H*i iih "?»wi Six-digit capac'^y; adds, subtracts, multipli'«, divides. Fixed 2-placHf decirtnal. Breeze , througn your checkbook and 0^ Sfhop smartlybecause thislittle ?t , 4 o*. calculator goes everywhere!Runs on standard 9 volt battery. \ " s QUANTITY N6HTS KSSIVa. PWCCS BOO01 I MAT 4,1174. Wm&. Traffic ffj?; " nm* Grant -iltvC.. ....... . By JEFF FRANKS , V Research Council. . .f • Inexpensive methods to The council, made Hip of efee trafficcongestion will be representatives from various s^died with a *50,000 government agencies, decides rch contract awarded to on areas of research a University professor by the concentration aftd sends federal governments requests to people in the National Research Council. different fields for bi$is and Sandra Rosenbloom, proposals for research assistant professor of projects. , ; cbmmunity and regional Ms, Rosenbloom laid planning in the School of reason she and her ccdleaguc^ij Architecture, said the were awarded the «jontracC|| 'research will focus on was because of their concern^ * 'anything that does not with the possible socinisf • involve capital expenditure. impacts ofany programs thej^|< We'll look into such things as* tttay recommend. /, ~ W$ staggering work hours and ] Work on the project begaii(;v! special lanes for buses as April 1 and will continue until , possible alternatives to the next April 1. Ms. Rosenbloom ,r building of big/ expensive said the research will be done ;­mass transit systems,'*;she nationwide and will include said. taking trafficsurveys, looking , k.13 1 -y ' -Si'f-UH < Ms. Rosenbloom, who Is at various traffic control A Joint Booster -1 sharing the project wjth projects which teave been This 80-f©et4ong obje«t is the first stag* booster of Roberta Remick of Santa tried in the nalJdn's cities and. > the Saturn IB whkh will power an American Barbara, Calif., got the making reconimendations for spacecraft in the {obit U.S.-Russian space venture in contract after responding to a programs to be used in , 1975, The 86,000-pound booster Is at Cape request for proposals on this different; fcitifes for the easin|Canaveral, Ro. topic from the National of traffic congestion. 20,000 WOMEN ! S Wilsdtf Foreman: ^ Gonzalo G^rievllbs: , is on reeordas voting to preserve a women's liahltaidfiotise ^ l£s> than • week left before the elatftibn, has hot made to hove an abortion. During the last session he voted down public his stand on ebortion. WMIt this is e matter of per* line whh Ms. Weddlngton ag^nst all attempts to ropoal ^sonal conviction, all the voters have a right to know how e ^00 righttJnX^tas, . ,, candidsts would vots on«bortion h»^wiUf^mhh%Omm.. Dmn Lmng. Ctwlrponon, 2238 S. Lakosluiri''PrUt94?»t THm Diillyfoxmi^kf Building. Th* Un/wrtity of Toxm* at Austin. v, mnnnthon l ' . IRUru Urall tT;< ',v adnnsmm % { f 5-) Sesipim XYS m firP -V? LOMGHORN SPECIALS i'fir |! 2it-.M>MnGe slices w ?y-*'V RE6. 69c i REG. $1.69 BUNTE ' JOHNSON & JOHNSON 0RAN6E SLICES BABY OIL Delicious, r •v Great for dry refreshing candy.b skin, 16 os. Giant 2 lb. bag. ^ ' I p ' , " '1 ' 'wsT>. .v REfi. $2.09 SEA A SKI •' WOOOR-OUTOOOR msmmm TANNING LOTION Normal or For a great tan O y formulas, inside or out! 4 Os «; Limit 1 sus&L m. : M -MM KE8. $21.88 REWN6T0N 850 HAH DRYER ^ln Toasted 850 Walts of drying ""Tan or power, 2 speeds, Tropic Beige. brush and 2 comb attachments. c 1 -1 'V-,"•,. , -"j,', ^--tii(,.i&: -\V:•&&* K %? Leo SaycrSilverbird N Imludcv: Tomorrow Slow Motion jB lnr>o. mmyM«5r v.' i&i&xMitmmm S8rrthr» &8mmJ Sffrrtjlm amj ofit/m mm MP LIS Unborn Child IndudBKUIndfluwcn SsSSii A LL TVCKERBA ND & MKMHoiMvHrfVHciiwhlfcWUOaau/N»Hi' IWbritDo i§ MYSTEflY TOME MAC rvl iiilPIIVA-XvffivSsm* &KWWS?xSSWsSBS: WAV/, wmmmvi „ BlackSabtatb SaM^BfeodySataaft mmi SK-kskm WMmn?i •KkMkiiueHigigrtMiyW»JlRVb«r/lM/$iNne«ubR $Kv&5*k: Wmmm -Xv>: •XW «1 wmmmm® mmmsmik fcfi-ArSSS? *C,V1 --*m jm fc¥:*:xsW:*; W$0% List Price SALE PRICE List Price SALE PRICE 1 -^a» > r ^ «i£i S8r*+&*r* Deep Purote H T0-->} & CENTER OPEN 202I1GUADALUPE FREE PARKIN Till MIDNKS IN THE COVERED" MON. Thru SAT 78-6119 DOBIE„GARAGE Page 12 Thursday, May 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN _j ,f_ ~ •. mmmmmm' M'/rWB -I '' v.: -as By ItELLEY ANDERSON Gregory Gym handball* ^"Facilities areopen 6a.m. to participation in the program. ' ^ On the ninth floor ofc J,>& Texan Staff Writer ?'* racquetbali and squash p.m. Monday through "We're inour third printing of" "Bellmont Hall there are I 4/tM­ -a 4tWhen University faculty courts. On Tuesdays and ' Friday 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. IDs. Participation is up way squash and eight handball and staff pay a $12 fee to the Thursdays at this time, the Saturday and 1 to 6 p.m. past all our (intramural courts, while there are 19 intramural department,1 they restriction is placed on the -Sunday. "So if a faculty-staff department's) hopes and handball (including a four* receive the benefits of an Gregory Gym . annex, where member doesn't have a expectations," he said.. "We wall glass-enclosed one) and activity program which is one basketballv'-'-Volleyball, schedule flexible enough that have 1,600 faculty-staff men two squash courts in Gregory of the best in the nation. badminton-and thdoor jogging hecan befree to participate in and women registered in the Gym. In the event there is jSJ c canvan beuc done.uvuc. « w^i . utgaiuAcu pivgiaiuuig b wugimu uiio jcaiy extensive squash court The fee purchases an ogr organized programing program this year.' use, activity ID card/which allows §#HE HEAVIEST faculty^ fwm 12-1, he will be able to ALTHOUGH Smith is seven antiquated onesirt the > &^. ilp-­ the faculty-staff bearer to use Staff use of the recreational come in at his own leisure, .eased with participation, he rear, of Gregory Gym can be Xif all intramural facilities; facilities comes during these Smith said. still would like to see a higher utilized. %:*^Therk is a special faculty* hours. Bob Smith, .associate ^Special conditioning classes percentage of the University "THE FACILITIES are so -;:r. Staff recreation period from director of intramiirals, said itso are offered at 7 a.m., faculty-staff community convenient," Glbsot# *2s#S| noon to 1 p.m. Monday that right after 5 p.m. there noon and 5 p.m. and include participating. continued. "They're worthp-£ through Friday, during which also is heavy facility use mostly calisthetics with sorterm "We mail out brochures to • money to me. I'd rather have|only faculty and staff can use because many instructors get aerobics and jogging. try and encourage as many the use of these facilities than? ;§£>*:{#-the Bellmont-Hall and off work at that time. . .. Smith is pleased, with .the people as we can, into joining., f 1500 raise f jifll our program and present what^fe; On the third floor ;V we have to offer. feellmont Hall, there are two;j of Horses Limited One person who feels the locker rooms exclusively for*! faculty program has much to faculty-staff r-one for men offer is Dr. Martin "Red" and one for women ~ which ' ' •4J. the Gibson explained that ai "This committee isn't used' k m •'mM » . Chicago Cougars defenseman-coach Pat Stapleton aims a lew choice words at the. _ llth-hour by as WOfCf-CII ftA& * An move appeared moot at this point, ..The $4,000 entry fee for some universities and only a sounding board,"' .^ referee after he was assessed a ten-minute mln misconduct penalty ina5-3lott to Toronto; Churchill Downs to ease the the Kentucky State Racing what will be the richest of all colleges there are maybe only Smith said. "It has come outf " traffic jam by doubling the Commission adopted a new derbies is due Thursday three or four squash courts with good ideas if USE ? purse for an alternate race racing rule Wednesday that no morning, when post positions and a person has to wait in procedures that wecould do Prop unwanted than 24 horses can beSaturday apparently removed more will be drawn bylot for the 1V< line for a long While to get a-The faculty-staff program DAILY TEXAN JVOTE f ^^iang-ups only one prospect from the entered in the Derby so that it jnile-Run for the Roses. court. "There not is thW has become as active a Held, Mrs. Herman Udouj's can never be split into •(>4To start at 4:30 p.m. CDT problem here. Squash is not program as anything we've, .* ..CLASSIFIEDS; Silver Hope. divisions. Saturday costs another $3,500. lRic#s crowded at all," he said. h?Sal department> gSe" ^THEY WORK 476-2281 ' Accountants : : ^ Texas Commerce Bancshereshas several entry level accounting positions immediately available. Prere­ quisites require that you have an accounting degree [U}^-F&bla.tvoAbsque-GaJlbteH with above average gradesr HAVEN HEARD? Texas Commerce Bancsharos Is vigorously expanding operations. This unique opportunity offers exposure to the varied accounting functions of a targe bank's ac­Mi' counting division. You will be exposed to a variety of accounting problems consulting with other banks' ac­ft =3 counting divisions. •; , ! . „ r,. •90S IMS. I Exceptional salary, working environment, and growth potential; please send resume to: HCEfiMP Employment Office « I ^ Highest Quality Boots Texas is now buying LARGE QUANTITIES Fit By Experienced People1 Commerce Bancshares, M mm m , * * ^ ^ \% ft Inc. |WKole EaurtK Ph]v1«to\Co^ of used books V • -.i 717 Travis 504 west 24th 478-1577 Houston, Texas 77001 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F (whether used on this campus or not)f •> J V ± „ t \ 5 *" h * \i''*• f ^ I ks % i *' :%:*X >; ••^•4,•$ - f? V3 < rs'if5f >4 Mr>i t/j V !f^l r ^ • r? IH ** W*1 A Farmer's Market i. \ "fi. •»-^ %• v i J-ff a mm • . ... • ^ .) vegetables... s Direct contact with the farmers MSMl % e * Tif * , ­ •*jL ^ sf f ' ©mphill sr,yr HSi grow your • mm '>> US , „ 4-vT iAmSt w Shop and|Compare and MM y| MtSM,m You'll Sell Them Here! ^ 1 & < * 'ms -> 4» ^ ^ ' r v V#" ' ^ ).'«} ' *, \i r:(V: iJ . >•* fc,W»V I ^^ uj > ^ ri i JGLEUURCHISDN O "&7S? li: Immlm-u, s«ssm i Yowr Friendly Book Stores fa OUNTY^OMMISSIC^NER,.PRECINCT 2| Yt 2244 Guadalupe (On the Drag) PA Pol. Adit Ptud lor by Studttts for Murchiaott. Dunil H-MHh, Chmirpmnott, 201 W. St ElmoM, Au»tin.T»Mn.i'rfal9dl Th» Dally T»xan TSP Building. Unlvnity of Tmxma at Austin. ^ Thursday, May 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page <*. siM-•M (y, T-?| Decides WFL Cannot Cowboys testimony' from Cowboys become a matter of barter." on them. Their value to our district judge, saying he was player&, coaches and officials -*VI am delighted/1 said .club has been damaged."^ A, picture h»»p on the wall of The Daily Texas sports athletics * virtually forcing*^ ScTiir proposal 4br m sorry tb*t "physical preceded Long's ruling, and Cowboys president'1 and Schramm's reference to the office. It's a picture of a co.uely young lass In a Texas senate' aU,Me *;1»artoent? ig,. attributes had finally become before he madeit hetook time general manager Tex players and their promotional cheerleader's outfit) separate men's and women's athletic department only a matter of barter,•*" ;out to deliver what he himself Schramm, who was among valueprompted WFL attorney Beneath it is a caption: ''Texan Writer Undergoes Sex rv.Wednesday ruled the World termed a sermon. those who testified. "That's^ . David Beck to saj^^Q^^ja.f Change." The copy under the headline tells the tale of makes thecouncil happy i&w&gr Folotball League cannot "Asa courtof equity we are what we had asked for. % closing arguments: Herbette Holland, the former Texan sportswriter who went anything. tv" iL concerned about the mores "People are emotionally • 'These people are hot The women, meanwhile, must rely on members, of the Daltai to Copenhagen for asex changeand returned to Austin with what has taken place in involved with the players,'* products. They are human their funding. And from what I've seen by hanging around Cowboys to future contracts,. the expressed desireof organizing a women's rugbyteam at Judge Charles Long thus mmerce, business and Schramm continued. "When,' beings and as human beings the preregistration tables in theSchool of Communication, it >4 the University. / pahicularly in the field of the fans know that some of-they have the right to take. doesn't look like the women are going to get too much ikv granted the temporary It's reallya funny picture. Butlooking back, my year-longinjunction the Cowboys had athletic endeavor,*' the judge; these players are going to advantage of an opportunity venture into women's intercollegiate-athletics has been .. vnAnAV ­ sought against the World said. , i leave, it has to have an effect" when it is presented." ^ The women's athletic campaign all seems to be a bigger anything but laughs. "It is to be regretted that: waste when you consider the outcome. The council s only Football League.. WFL mmm It's beena true learning experience... both for me and for attorneys said they1 would physical ability and a proper, motive for even actingon the issuewas to forestallany legal M those noble people who thought they could make the appeal duringthe20-day limit' application of -wonderful Rain Threatens University Athletics action by irate Studentsand not because it actually felt there Almost two full days of physical attributes has finally should be a program of intercollegiate athletics for women important pocketbook^: m MKSffXl Nelson Tourne atBut S?StVremains unchanged. The Athletics Council' * C] M. H •mmmWasted effortWmSTS ( DALLAS (UPI) -The golf, and Jack Nicklaus, opens has lost its ability to act in the best mterests of the r%v* ] University because of its misplaced and perverted priorities. tour opens a three-week stand' Thursday over whatlikely will In that aspect, the women's athletics campaign has been jSsifr' in Texas Thursday,and that is be a soggy Preston Trail Golf an unnecessary expenditure of time, anxiety and concern. Council members can't be blamed for those priorities. Trips from Club layout. The council, for the most part, never did give a damn about Thev've built a well-respected program over 50 years usually good news for the Colorado,-Now Matdeo and othar irwi farmers. No matter how dry Heavy rains fell early in the expanding into women's intercollegiate athletics and never because of them. However, the things that were important A Unique Backpacking Experience week, and scattered showers will. There's simply no money in it. back then aren't importantnow, and the councilcan t adjust. the weather has been before t,i-;• . • • .. • /. ' •: ^ 38£-;. the golfers hit the state, hit the course again It took m*about 10months to realize that. It took a trip to ' '' things usually become quite Wednesday although the pro-the Southwest Conference's winter meeting in Dallas during Maladjusted wet when they arrive. amateur event was run off on December and a self-financed trip to the NCAA National And, worse, the Athletics Council refuses to adjust. That •3g Cflwl gOmO This year is no exception.::'; schedule. There was a chance Convention in San Francisco to see how unresponsive the .'dwete:*oeetiiiS "P. 0.Box 6431 just suggests that the council is an irresponsible and The $150,000 Byron Nelsofi ' of more rain. corporategiantsof intercollegiate athleticsare tosomething 512-4764908 Austin. Tews ^512-478*6853 Sw Golf Classic, minus leading As to the favorites to that might cost them. . insensitive group. Trying to work within the system is great if results are money winner Johnny Miller capture the Nelson ^ there It took ineabout15newspaper storiestoseehow two-faced are none. if.- affected. However, a year's worth of student and faculty these administrators can be. Or maybe a better term for pressure and concern has resulted in a tragic display of aYoung^Texans Ben them is naive. reactionary group's willful resistance to change. Crenshaw and Tom Kide are The Athletics Council is naive if it thinks a $2 million being listed among the football budget constitutes a first-class athletic program, ~~ No matter what anyone outside of the law does, the possibles along with Dave especially «&en there are many schools with better (and Athletics Council's money-hungry^position will remain the Stockton and defending cheaper) football teams. ' _ same.! . •. */ champion Lanny Wadkins. The Athletics Council is naive if it thinks it can 'set up a Since the council can't act in the best interest of the And there always is Lee committee jto study Expansion into women'g'intercollegiate University, those persons who maintain the present attitude Trevino, who has beenplaying " athletics iuid then discard that committee's proposal in should be removed and the council restaffed with peoplewho less than sensational lately favor of a proposal which defeats every directive of the would better serve the University. and finished dead last in l^st committee and violates Department of Health, Education J. Niels Thompson, the council's chairman, and his yes­week's Tournament of and Welfare guidelines. -V ! men should resign. After all, it was Thompson who Champions. * And the Athletics Council is supremely naive if it thinks repeatedly told reporters that women's intercollegiate "I'm not used to. finishing it's been able to fool anybody about it. athletics and the HEW guidelines "will kill intercollegiate last,"Trevinosaid on arriving On the other hand, maybe we're naive for thinking we can athletics as we know them in five years." in his old hometown. even begin to alter the Athletics Council's unquestionable Intercollegiate athletics,as Thompson knows them,should "I'm playinggood enou^ito power. have died years ago. No matter how much power Thompson win. I was playing well before After all, the University System Board of Regents has at the University, he won't beable to getaround HEW or last week, and I might do it instituted a separateblanket tax forwomen's intercollegiate the inevitable rise of women's intercollegjate athletics. again here." Jump your level ARICA to Blood Plasma Donors Needed I 476-2281 ' ox MILWAUKEE (UPI) -The lefthander who had a 13-7 a great idea iirsandwiches. Men & Women -, f record atSpokane last season. HAMBIRGERS Texas Rangers optioned out their second pitcher in three Sunday,: Martin EARN $10 WEEKLY Oh sent days Tuesday to theirSpokane Pete Broberg to the PCL|PASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION farm club. Indians and replaced him on Steve Dunning cleared the roster with Jackie Brown.Austin waivers and was sent to the Shellenback and BrownLEAD GUITAR Pacific Coast League club. have been pitching batting Blood Components, Inc. Manager Billy Martin practice for the Rangers and OPENiMON.&THURS.8 AM to7P.M. < replaced Dunning with Jim were with the club on its J Shellenback, current road swing. JTUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. a 30-year-old • CLOSED WED. A SAT. If You Need Hfelp . Si*' 409 W. 6th 477-3735 or -"71/ _ V'" MUSICIANS Just Someone Who Will Listen ^ Telephone 476-7073 " t At Any Time The Telephone Countellng and Referrol Servke Play for Fall '74 Course Credit SPENDYOURMONEYON with THETOWN.NOTTHEHOTEL. tUk' Jtt the Hold Riverside m deal ia basics. For a paby $4 a night wtl givepmarooa«Mibed and basin. Tow bath ben«Mrefootsteps BREAKFAST Varsity & Southern d«n Ihe kaL Make i $8 and «el put you in a noaiittM. WMh or viiKNrt, you're in a bwkfing «iih a Luby's Cafeteria ami foc> Singers Loco -one of the River's fivefier nightspots. M rigM m the heart of Sm AhIom's beaoGiul Paseo del Bo. Hake ytm tesenalioos for a •eehnd. Or a week. JU the hotel that Call: Stewarf Clark or Al Clark ; yw get More for your awney ; Now 471-1951 471-1951 442-5730 447-9818 Aoo(X)miaw' x . "v Cstreer UNIVERSITY CO-OP Floor m On. Hou, F,M taking f n-f-'j, 4r' ^ r_--v— \ 'TheiiwnwiwHnminonvyduu; • 1 oz. Montezumo TequilasJ '80--*« : »5 02. CONCENTRATED ORANCiE lllflnTBZlllVIH -BREAKFAST DRINK. Overice. ' itt'3sensational, and that's no bull. TEQUILjAi|-A 4 ,t juri*.80 Prool Invito Awion Oirtitl*. IrmgiCo. Nw Vbrt< Wfk. f }j Pa9« U Thursday, AAay 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN " 7 ^ [ r~~ / ^ 'f tm P1W n k$S '111: m iwip llf» • W&/T* htm Host Track Mee By HERB HOLLAND DON STURGAL teas thef Jffi® fi|/.LeDuc is wird at ifWtfT and , Admission the meet' msqffi-imw * r r-^ <• Texas Staff Writer best time for the 440-yard?' Dolegiewicz is fourth at 185-0. free with a I •iWsfo^ CAPT — fifth inning. "Texas Track Coach dash this season, a 46.7, and isA , CAPTAIN . , 'WYATT without/ ' > , -js fm?Houston's Lee May hit a pair o*trton spene*. ?.>•:..*night. and Pedro Garcia added two-again," Price said at Drake. In the 100-yard dash, three John Berry,"' who set a Mil* Run (Waterfall Start) -Rm4 ' May, who hit a pair of run shots, propelling the "Now it's time to start Texas sprinters have wind", tmrcrLital ia.» >-„» ' Wscher, Jick Cokwln, Tim personal record ,last week at mnumimomm, mvk Kionowtr homers against Chicago Milwaukee Brewers to an li-s Slinking about the conference aided 9.4s to their credit. Drake, has the only long jump m-yo «'?»> Hurdi« ­ Monday night, singled off victory, over the Texas meet, who can double and Freshman Overton Spence, -ov«r % foot in tho SWT thic Primwu*. Greg Hackney, RoMiuon over l^.we PWC UU3 440-yd dath — id Wright, Don sturga^* shortstop Dave Rosello's Rangers Wednesday night. what three athletes we're Robinson and Canadian year.. '-'T ' • Jackson, ©latin G«a Brian LyarltfJ:'­glove to score two runs in the Briggs'fourth homer of the going to enter in each event." Marvin Nash are currently In the' pole" itoult, T«xas c«>9 »«•«**. o«vw mckm -^ 100-yd Dash -Spence, Nesh: third inning and tie the score season came off loser Steve .Price will get his chance tied for fourth in the one-two: Sophomore ,flB-dD"h ~ ranks MO-yd Run (hall-tt«ggar) -Rudolp#?:.at 3-3. , Hargan in the third inning and Thursday in Memorial conference. SMU's Pouncy David Shepherd is the easy Grltfith, Paul Subrt, Lamar llollla, BIII5. Cesar Cedeno's infield put the Brewers on top to stay Stadium when Texas hosts twins, Gene and Joe, lead in favorite to win Thursday. His Goldtpo, John Craig. 440-yd Intermediate HurdlH — David,single put Houston ahead 4-3 4-3. Winner Jim Slaton gave tCU, Rice and Texas A&M in that event with 9.2s, tied with 16-8 vault at the Baylor Coiley, Prlmeaux, 'Bob WdrJimatv;in the fifth inning, and May up 11 Texas hits. V; a quadrangular track and field TCU's Bill Collins. Invitational set a school Randy Randolph, 2JO-yd Dfesh — Nash, $ponea, RoWnnsohr drove in two more runs with a May's three-run shotthe meet. Field events start at 6 David Colley's 52.6 It^fifth record. Hackney's 15-6 vault Three-mile Run — Paul Craig. Tlftv * 1 ­ single off third haseman Bill fourth, his second homer of p.m., with the running events best among SWC 440-yard at Drake is second. .Harrington Ooss, Wright, Jackson,"-" Madlock's glove. the year, followed a single by scheduled to start at 7 p.m. John Berry, hurdlers this seasons® • -* • Griffith TCU's 440-yard relay team Mile Relay — Sturgal > long jumper. .880-yard run. •, Sacrifice flies by Milt May Garcia and an error by a For the Longhorns, the four-Defending NCAA champioriH' ran a 40.4 last week at Drake Dlicui — Jim McOoldrick, Bishop Doleglowict, Dana LeDuc, Ted Watson , and Doug Rader gave Houston second baseman Dave Nelson, way meet will be welcome!^® Texas athletes also Robert Primeaux is expected should be amp1e all collegiate relay teams this and Javelin -Marty Petarmann, Wattar^ > two more runs in a five-run giving the Brewers a 7-2 lead. relief form the last three dominate the three-mile run. to return to his event this season. competition for the Horns. Kniglnytky' , ­weeks of relays competition. Paul Craig again leads SWC, >week in.. a. comeback role^' Texas will dominate the TCU's Collins should be more : High Jump — Wyatt Tompklnt,1 SUvarl$£ * £ $ c< r4vr- aosch. Hacknay -^ *11 4-11 CK UK Sfmdings IMS Once again, Texas athletes .opponents with a 13:48.5?, Spence's 20.9-second '?/• field events Thursday. In fact, than enough for the fexas David Shepherd, Hacknajr^ Pole Vault -UMHUCAN ISAOOt 4^ : NATIONAL &IAOUI :•! will have the chance to Patton is third-best this yard dash is Second only tor,';.the only field event the Horns sprinters, owning a 20.9, 220* Shot Put — LeDuc, Oolagiawlctj McOoldrick, Don Ausmut compete in individual .events season with a 13:52.4. defending SWC champion Joe J don't lead is the javelin.... yard dash as well as his SWC — long jump John Barry, John SN sTa * l ' M. «• ifv "V'v w i oa in preparation for Ithe SWC Klonower is sixth at 14:00.0. leading mark in the 100. T 'Robinson R»:' New York .: U 10 .» -St. Louii. 13 10 565 -meet May 18 at Rice. ? Sl| Longhorn halfmilers also this:season.;' • second, thought'$i% Milwaukee: ... 10 I 555 1 Montreal :r 8 .529 .1 .... 'i, M. Pouncy, who ran a jW.fc tvsfcft „ Greg Hackney's throwof 2244.. Baltimore . . . 11 9 -550 1 Philadelphia...; 10 12 Texas athletes top flfe SWC lead the SWC Otis season, IN THE RELAYS, 'Teia'^^| Dana LeDuc's schciu nsSira '. ShoeShop *SALE* || .455 3 in 10'events, and more Defending champion Rudolph Detroit to 10 -500 2 New York....j.. • 13 .381 4 recurrent baton-passingr$shotput of 64-8V* is tops: Cleveland..... . 10 11 476 IVt Chicago 7 12 .368 4 Longhorns are in the SWC's >-Griffith's 1:50.6, 880, leads problems haven't kept then£>Teammate Bishop ' , Wo mak« «i 13 JIHICP SKIN Boston 10 13 435 3>t> Pittsburgh,., 61 v315. 5 m WM Top 10 than athletes from any while John Craig (1.52.0) and from posting the SWC'SMDolegiewlcz, wholhrew63-6% ci/Ny.y3-\ W«rt ^ J " " r ' repair boot* msm other school. Goldapp (1:52.2) are second second best , times this year; " at the Kansas Relays, has the * h RUOS Texas.......'.r. 13 9 .591 Los Angeles../:'. A* » 17 A 739 • Calltornla..-, 12 11 .522 1W Houston , 15 10 600 3 TEXAS IS strongest in the^and fourto, respecUvely. f The 440-yard relay team of j only other heave of more than thoot bells ^ Many Oakland ... 10 11 -474 2'/a * Cincinnati 11 9 .550 * To Mice reci pesthatwillP.O. Box 2629 benice to you. / Palos Vcrdcs Peni Peninsula, Ca. 90274 1181 %> Akadama Mama, please lay a copy of AKADAMA your very together friond's blueprints Blue Jeans . & 7UP' • |K' inst.riirMnn« nn mi». ^ 'S '< '«%/. I & instructions on mo. m Mix 2 to 3 parts |Name NotliKluded m * Akadama Plum e Address with 1part 7UP. /.City .. . ZiP Codc— SHOP FOR MEN AND WOMEN I personally like / JStat0— \ Mtirriu" it in a wine ^ •r»n checking this box because | "H ifi.1 t * Akadama is picking up tKc postage and| giaSS Wil.njce» l^.r • :» it i ^ • " ; • ' "v-i |they would like it if ^also asked you to I ADALUPE 'SANGRIA AKADAMA^^m-S ^ ... . mm l»y JSunl«>r>s Iym*rauM«rtta). L... A bottle of Akadama Red. a pint of onN niURS. TIUL 8.-00 ""'LiS­ -Wfc- Thursday, May 2/1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Paye It V'niiKi m m mm Said High (Editor'* Note: This is Ike first ia t two-part •cries N rape ia Anstia.) " By LINDA FANNIN For many University women who find themselves walking dark streets, living alone and going to casual acquaintances' apartments, the possibility of rape is very : real. ' ;• -• .H*m Unfortunately,^ the fj|) problems that a victim ipl encounters after an attack also are vary real. %£$ The number of rapes occurring on campus and reported to the University police is low. In the last seven years. University Police Capt. Jimmy Reed of the criminal investigation division claimed, only two rapes and one case of assault with intent ^rape have been reported. ^'About as many go unreported as are reported he added. v~. Barbara Cohen, co-chairperson of the Student Government Women's Affairs Committee, estimates. however, thai' there are approximately 10 times more unreported attacks than repeated rapes each year. "MOST ATTACKS aredooe by friends or friends of friends, and they are kept quiet," she said. "These are exceedingly difficult, to prosecute." Some of the rapes, Ms. J Cohen said, are not reported > because the victims are embarrassed. "There is a lot of guilt," she said. "They ask themselves 'What did Ido?' " According to Austin Police Department statistics, 70 rapes were reported in the , city last year, with 15of those charges proving unfounded after further investigation. Capt. Hariand Moore of the community relations division said be could not estimate the number of unreported rapes. Some rapes are not reported, he said, because ''some people just don't want toacknowledge that they were attacked and raped. Of the 56 actual offenses reported, Moore said the offender was arrested in 50 of the cases. • • •• • • ALTHOUGH the rate of arrest is high in Austin's rape cases, therateof conviction is "There aren't II rape cases tried," Larry Laden;-^assistant district attorney, said. Only one case came to trial last year, resulting In the acquittal of the defendant. Although most offenders entered pleas of guilty, Laden said in some of t^e cases the complaining witness J J the charges. girl realizes what she has to go through," he said. "Beforeit isallover everyone aids up trying her." we have now In adequate, but most of the that you must sho^ the damages. Juries are almost viewing rape cases in that manner," he said. "If she doesn't break down on the stand, the jury thinks it doesn't matter." In many cases, Laden said. thedefeqse questions the victim about her private life and relationships. "They can bringininnuendosjytotare% devastating." flit ||§OTHER CASjESarearoppM because of harassment by the family or friends of the accused, he said. Karen Duggan, a University student who has been researching the problem' of rape in Austinfor more than a year, agrees the primary problem in getting a conviction in rape cas^sis the,;, said. "It shouldn't matter attitude of the jury, whether the woman is a­— jJ£j prostitute or a nun. pThey kind of view rape sp a damage suit," she said. "They keep trying' to look for damage done." Another factor in the outcome of the tfcial, Ms. Duggan said; is how the case is presented ^by the prosecution. "If they try to present the victim to look like Snow White, the older generation has a preconceived' notion about the younger generation and it just doesn't wash," she ml Wi-ll%l fe U-SMStSI "T s, - pf'4fWk f* A ^ ^ l issue of consent, she said. "I would like to see a definition of cdnsent written into the J*l_ ..J **!«* j»,X. <-3 .j^fieJJTiw •• v fit i. *£ TFT >4:rr law." TO HELP the ratfc ofc conviction in rape cases, Mk. Duggan suggested that all victims .tak§v lie ...detector Primary T Mr To Resolve Issues T&<*'• Three issues lengthen the <$ list of choices to be set before voters in Saturday'^ f 1 * ' , a ^ Republican primary. As resolved by the State _ gt ft ,VfW Republican Executive Committee at its March 11 meeting in Arlington, the party's referenda concern the constitutional right-to-work provision, state income tax / ', and pari-mutuel wagering and local-option horse racing. The first referendum asks -**1\ X., whether the new constitution NEVER BEFORE should guarantee job-holding rights to nonunion workers. Reminding party members that Republicann legislators have favored a right-to-work III THIS LOW PRICE provision, the Texas Republican Citizen magazine added in an April article that . "Labor leaders particularly AFL-CIO president Harry Hubbard, have opposed w/ra sian kcuiei MODEL SX-424 including it.... Governor Briscoe has persistently sidestepped the issue." \ 7 Requiring majority approval in a statewide referendum before any typeof state income tax (personal or At this price they just don't come any better! The SX-424 AM/FM/FM stereo re­ceiver putsout a hefty 50watts ofmusic power(IHF at 4 ohms) with a power band­width of 2O-45,000Hz. Features bright tuning meter for the highly sensitive FM corporate) is enacted is in ° question on the second item. section, jacks for all music sources and speakers. The beautifully crafted wood cabinet matches any set of components and enhances every decoration scheme. Shop the Electronics Supermarket for Pioneer's SX-424—never before at such a fantastic price! Pioneer—when you want something betterl The single most effective REG. iction taken to conserve energy at the University has been the shuttingoff of heat or $199.95 air conditioning at timeswhen ­ 60PIONEER' building use is at a minimum, William Wilcox, director of the Physical Plant, said Tuesday. &D PIONEER MODEL A report recently Mfr. Sog. 0Si#r£t-46-1300A distributed by the Physical MODEL SX-626 U«t Plant comparing electrical SYSTEM rm energy usage for the 1973-74$64.95 • 2-way, 2-speaker system . -''I*?' academic year with the two previous academic years • 8-inch cone-type woofer shows that since September, AM/FM 1973, the University has • 3-inch cone-type tweeter averaged about 1.5 million% .• Beautiful wood cabinet kilowatt-hours a month less MODEL CS-E350 than was using during the cmruiE iwnuu This beautiful record changer from Sterling comparable period in 1972-73. comes with base, dust cover and magnetic cart­ A bargain comparable only with our price on the SX-424! The month with the greatest ridge. It also includes jinchangeable spindles for The SX-628 delivers 110 watts of music power (IHF) at 4 STERLING. decrease in energy usage has automatic or manuM'operation, low-mass coun­ ohms) and hat an astounding frequency response of >5-been March, 1974, down 2.5 terweighted tqnq arml cue and pause control; 80,000Hz. Jacks for all music sources, headphones and million kilowatt-hours from anti-skate control-(ind'4-pole induction pole.. It thrte sets of speakers. Brighten your world with Pioneer March, 1973. will give you all the professional features you equipment, and shop the Electronics Supermarket where "Our new policy differs SYSTEM desire in hi-fi components, but just look at the prices aretailored to fit your budget) MODEL from our past policy of price! 82-0210B] making buildings comfortable 8-inch high-compli­ day and night, year-round. If a ance woofer Rag. professor went to his officeat. I 3!6-inch tweeter; any time, say on Sunday Wide frequency re­ $339.95 afternoon, he would find it­ sponse $59.95 habitable. Now, he may have to open a wind'dw, Wilcox said. The former practice was "nice, but not economically feasible," he said. SALE REG. (2) JBL Aquarius 100.00 ea. 189.95 ea. TEAC. (4) JBL Prima 100.00 ea. 159.95 ea. yon The leader. Ahtrayi-ha* been. Assorted Burgess Batteries 20% off MODEL 355 (4) Trusonic Spk. 95.00 159:95 ea. ATURD (1) Rotel 40 RMS Per/channel Amp 279.95 300.00 (1) Pioneer SX-6^-255.00 349.00 (FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALE) (1) AKAI 1721W 225.00 m The Way 299.95 TI-SR-10 Calculator B9.95 of the WARRIOR CUfflK lift BnB TI-SR>11 Calculator 109.95 ARICA WB 3476-2281 * Teac's 355 isa studio quality deck that features" the unique Dolby Noise ReductionSystem to re­ duce tape noise. A unique peak recording level indiqrtor shows maximum signal level for high­ AUSTIN WOMAN'S est quality recordings. High density permaflux heads in this unit are designed tor minimum ' 4 Mr * w }i r > > ^ ^ wgMMM THEATRE STERLIIMQ ^" * f' M presents ^ tape dragand maximum fmciiierKy raapCMflfei MEDE May 51i t:39 p.m. '• 'f *2 • Amm: 19th I 1712 mm (77'SIH ;Tm"'i,.GV«1 ut. M ikjS San Jacinto - Danatiaas *** $1.25 Thursd^y, AAay 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN j\md-,Al s liiMi m NEditorVftote: this It the but, in a three-partseries examiningthe Texas Dining Services*) iy SCOTT BOBB Texan Staff Writer A group of students went into the Texas Union Chuck IIt;II Wagon to,.get a bite to eat one evening around 7 p.m. The dining unit was practically .. deserted sp they had very little difficulty getting their food. Other than a wait of a few iqinutes for their cheeseburgers they were not delayedl But when they came through the cashier's line, fr they couldn't find a cleanB^SMtllCy CJJU ...table. Dirty plates, cups and ^"^tSnapkins^covered every table. : V .The onlyclean spot toeat was V ' -'in a closed section. The area looked as if it had Just fed the participating teams in the Texas Relays; Garbage cans were t; overflowing, and trays were > stacked high on the racks, p: Five tJnion employes sat at :a table near the cashier, talking. Most, of them we*e 1 either supervisors or personnel with responsibility, ' as attested by the keys that j. jangled on their belts. Two |workers in white-shirts sat •k with them and the cashier |'joined in when she didn't have . customers. The sight of the « crew sitting down while the eating, place Jooked so disastrous amazed the customers; Apparently the crew was waiting for the v Chuck Wagomto close before actually beginning work, the • students, unable to find an empty table, took their food out to the patio to eat. The situation, which occurs frequently, pointed to several 4 problems. That most workers will try to do as little work as possible is a fact of life that every manager faces. When tjie supervisors take little interest in the state of the facility; the mnwngyr has a personnel problem Personnel troubles arise for many different reasons. By the time troubles reach the problem stage; however,, related issue* have intertwined with all the little daily problems to tie the proverbial gordian knot. The main cause of the problem at the Texas Union is the lame-duck mood that has permeated the establishment this academic year. The -Union Board announcement, last fall, that the Dinftie Services might have to closfe down initiated the downward spiral of moral. In September, 1973, Shirley Bird Perry, Union director, sent a letter to all personnel informing them that the Dining Services might have to close as early as December. Though the situation looked better by Feb. 1, 1974, when the University System Board of Regents voted the funds foT remodeling, the decision to close was merely postponed. The Union would have to close in the spring for extensive The subsequent loss of, morale is understandable, r-Though few students had been ' with theDining Services more than afew semesters, someof the fulltime employes had , been there for more than five years.'The prospect of being may jobless in a time when jobs are difficult to find would discourage any breadwinner. And the'process of looking for a new job would tend to turn much of the work force's energies away from the job at Ms. Perry'sapproach to the problem is straightforward: "We may have a morale problem, but I would rather have a morale problem than to suddenly terminate everybody in May. This way evei^one luiows about it. I've 'encouraged the employes to look for other jobs, and said I would help them with recommendations." The Union administration has found jobs at the University for most of the Dining Services employes. •••• The closing "will give managemennt a chance. to make a clean sweep of personnel and to start over with a new work force when the Dining Services reopens. Though the prospect;pf training an entire work force , .... „ r does not delight: manyrefurbwhin8-managers, the closing of the Ms. Perry seint'' inbwer Dining Seervices may be a letter informing the employes blessing in disguise. ^ that all personnel might have ^|'It's very hard to. remove to leave by May, and that the management would give job recommendations to anyone looking for a new job. "We can only keep a few employes on payroll after May 18," she said. an employe once he or1she is here," Ms. Periy explains. The University's desire to provide security for its employes, a sort of "tenure for the masses," has created a lengthy procedure for terminating an employe whose work is unsatisfactory. As Perry says, "The, University's disciplinary-, termination procedure is a good thing, but because of it we sometimes have staff members who are not performing up to our standards." The point is well-taken, as anyone whohas seen a Union employe loitering in the hall, reading in the rest , rooms, or watching TV in the lounge will attest. Though the DiningServices' morale problem has affected all of the workers, the students employed at food operations havelabored under some special problems. The first of these is that they are, for the most part, lumped together with the professional employes. Consequently their particular problems often go unnoticed. For example, student employes have to schedule their' hours around their course ^schedules. If their schedule changes during the semester or during exams, they may have to forfeit their hours and a sizable portion of their pay for'that week. Because they are part-time, the students have no benefits. -May 4Sot. May Premiermt new ABC Dunhill Album!8^" * "Stone, Slow, Rugged" 5-7 p.m. 4414352 Consequently, it a student is sick for a couple of days, because of l}is smaller workweek, he may miss, an. entire paycheck. •' Thirdly, part-time personnel are for the most part out of the mainstream of operations. Because they work 10 to 15 hours a week, and many of these in the evenings, students miss a great deal of communication from the mannagement. This communication — necessary to introduce new policies, explain managerial purpose and,.in reverse, take suggestions'and complaints— misses most of the student . workforce at the Dining Services. The effort to communicate with part-time, employes must be more intense to keep this important segment of the workforce informed.^; Finally;'-"communication between the part-time employes is important to a smooth operation. This inter­communication is just as difficult to maintain as management-student com­munication, and it's difficult for the same reasons. A student may know half a dozen people with whom he works and bea stranger to the rest of the force. Since the Dining Services distributesno personnel roster, a student may have a hard time finding -someone to work for him if he ^cannot work his hours, As a result of all these ,t,.y a'''! present* LAME BUNNY problems, student, employes feel alienated from the operation. One worker said, "The management doesn't make a point to tell everybody about ,changes. You usually find out via the grapevine. And when you talk to the manager about a problem, nothing happens. As a result, students and management don't get along " One possible solution to the ' student-management problem is the establishment of separate student channels of communication.. In other words, a group of students (i.e. part-time) managers answering to the manager of tiie Dining Services would be in charge of scheduling, hiring, disciplining and even training the student workers. Being both part-time workers and students, these managers would have more insight into the students' problems ahd could carry them directly to the, tojr 'inahageinenl. Conversely, the student managers could convey management directives to the student workets. The Dining Services does employ a few student supervisors, but they don't have the all-encompassing responsibility that a student manager would have. The system of dividing the workforce into part-time and full-time segments has been tried in other unions, and hra succeeded. 'Ap / In summary, the Dining -Services at the Union has the opportunity to reorganize its personnel structure. With the upcoming closings the • operation has the chance for a new start with new employes, A qharice Of this nature doesn't tome often. The burden of whether-the Dining ^Services succeeds in it* ''remodeling'1 lies on th? shoulders of the Union Board which is now deciding on the operation's future. Perhaps they will remember that ^ remodeling must include more, than a new building. If they don't, the Dining Services will be back to its present ponditlmji^a ft# Jit: (Editori Notfe: The autMf worked in a university student union for four years and was a student manager for two of those. He has worked* in addition, as a manager for a national restaurant company.) into these.. t% "Sunshine exerciser# i"1 * # t4" ' •* h P®al w«y 10 brinK ? ¥> '3 v.' sunshine Into youft^ tk: day whether thefl «un is Bhintnfcflf ^Sw. 1 or not. Im,t*A 1am! -• ¥1 Spaghetti Dinner 5-8p.m. ,707 Bm Caves Rd. t 327-9016 -4/U. COVER 2610 GUADALUPE TONIGHT C0MQUER00 BEVO MIXED it tIt UNLIKE THE INCUMBENT. LARRY BALES IS NOT Ati TME LIBERAL. This Friday Ancf Saturday (May 3 &?4) ' TheCo-Op ^3? Ar_ .r'r-; For example,Democrat Larry Bales hasprovedhis commitment to the women'smovement by supporting these issues as amember of the Texas Legislature.It's a matter of record, and all weresupported by the Texas Women's Political Caucus. * •A ban on sex discrimination in granting credit and loans. •State funding for family planning services. ^ •State support for day care centers for children of working mothers. ,•Homestead protection anda $3,000 homesteadtax exemption for unmarried adults. ' -" -t . M­•Equal retirementbenefits for women under the TexasMunicipal Retirement System. • •Maternity benefits for teachers without any penalty..•A requirement that lawenforcement agencies pay all costs of medical i examinations for rape victims. ^ JDon't let a $100,000 media campaign fool you. ^ Vote Larry Bales, Democrat for U.S. Congress. Camera Shop Is Having-An INVENTORY ''•:-¥SALE a i * I *> m ill#! , Every year on June 30th, the University Co-Op endures the annual experience of taking inventory. Rather than count that merchandise, we would like to sell as much as possible before the end of June. We usually splurge and havea few good sales in the week or two prior to the inventory, but most of the students hav#^ already disappeared for the summer by then. The University Co-Op Camera Department has already begun digging into the depths of their stockroom in order to put forth some really good buys that you students can take advantage of before leaving for the summer. On Friday and Saturday, May 3 & 4, we plan to move as im I'54* • fir much merchandise as possible. During those two days many items on our shelves^ will be discounted. Even if you leave some film for processing on those two days, we will discount it 20%. We are not putting out just a bunch of two legged tripods and some outdated film, we are discounting many items from our stock* Discounts will range anywhere from 10% to 50% Many prices are so low that we ^ rjf 'J < ? i* cannot advertise them, so just come by the photo department and we will give you a list of exactly what the discounts will be on various items. You may also arrange for credit in advance. Sale prices are obviously limited just to merchan dise in stock, n V -h, st -t Jk \4 n « h f Jf k* JsiUlSIlizJiLixi­ •.J-!? t SafuOn Thau Two Days WHI Be Net -No Dividend, V •• afA-is?'•flint* %o Merciiandf»e1wilf fie Held. 1st Come» 1st Serve Bdii»t^s§pt*­ a Ml*,J- Endorsed by the TravisCounty DemocraticWomen's Committee . ffl • K& Hour ft— Parking With $2 Purchase -The Co-Op mm amera "Ml . '•' --— pr—ident;RobertHow ard, Cftf rper»on.*04 BankAmeHcard A 1 %1r*? J*1 i i MasterCharge Welcome iTii'ihiffirilfrri j T JL' • hi.; in i .iii i ] turn in ii u it 'i. ji Wmrr ..Jhursday, May 2, 1974 ?BE DAILY^TEXAI||age ityiS * V r X-f ^ /t -t pre not sq prominent. the best lyricsever written ^frustrations ogn -the J loud,, Ample, uncluttered female chorui pushing s Hoopte;"byMott Ail" "*iJS •bout why people listen to ~ pulace as the banqreally; v ^ |Mott into the background^ ^fc;ColBmbU«871. roll. ^ inta nn fnr nnfH&V. • ijhe 1 '; auspicious this stuff: "Don't wanna 1 cranks up for once. ...v By MARK OSWALD ;11 Well, there's a lot of that fcV'Roll Away the Stone," a, Side two starts "WiUt' ' $ptan Staff Write* M>n "Mott'^s logically ffjj&ushy love songi is set to a ^fimnouncement, "ladiesand smash, just want smash •*! «ensation/don't wannar4^spurred by the leaving of sha-la-la-la-ing from the -launches into the tune of "MARIONETTE, -• fiiiwhich adheres closest tit premier rock bating ^" lead guitarist Mick Ralphs, chorus and capped off with . ^the same name. It's your ^continuation of "Mott's IJiihe style of thg, group'? Gaining popularity under the tutelage of David Hunter has taken the group: a hackneyed guitar line s^iatest' .'50s style (yawn| evocation of the rock star's-^earlier efforts' Simple, in, some new that returns three or four ^Mocker, folks, but this one ^ unhappy plight that has its oud and excellent. A Bowie with"All the Young directions -;.j.:,. ^S>5P!K»LYJ"ti'4'I" Dudes" they followed with that don't always work. times indeed done in fine style, /^moments, but side one's eenagey ballad, "Trudi's That said, "The HoopIe^^Soine basic piano and a ifeprize is "Crash Street ig" ("ooo-ooo, I got my • "Mott," one of the few FOR INSTANCE, "The great albums of last year. Hoople'Vends with two contains some first class horde of saxes churn out tf|kidds," a really pounding baby"), works well, in the >>Jhe rhythm as Hunter, ¥M|»iece of rock theater that tradition of "Hymn for the • Relying onsome crunching very unrdckpnd rollish mucic. Hunter offers some rhythm guitar and the cuts. "Through the more great R&R jive ^recently described by |%fcould have been the Dudes" and "Ballad of. f'f can fewsoundtrack for "Clockwork . sardonic voice and wit of Looking Glass" is an lyrics, and the band KaKaren Carpenter as "that Mott," before the rest of Althing behind the sun- ^Orange." -"The Kidds" the .side trund^s leader Ian Hunter at their overproduced ballad, a still produce its flash, through sadly the guitars |f_'Rlasse&" shouts some of unleash their adolescent mediocrity»t||?^^^MM best, they play violently swelling "orchestra and Thursday, Friday, Safurd : *HE 'Beaux «SWS'-A 41-year-old tradition will University, and since then the faculty review of student a carrot, another aira bag ofi£ ^presents be revived by University tradition has languished. work and a visit by the Dean's architecture Students this This year, however, a group Council, a group of UT poK*^V,.| weekend, as they hold thefirst of senior architecture architecture alunmi, from required this year, somep Beaux Arts Ball in four years. students have organized the students have discussed The last planned ball was event and planned it to The original Beaux"Arts appearing as Colonel Sanders, ? jfVwyMghrhL canceled in 1970 after the coincide with end-of-semester Ball in 1928 was then called a classical pediment (part ofS KSWJ ' shootings at Kent State activities, which include . the Wind-Up Ball — in honor the front of abuilding) and the? of the wind-up of the spring American National Bank.Open Doily for lunch 11:30 semester — and was held, asgilding-~ , 38th and1H 35 452-23i has become custom, in the Tom Moriarity, spokesman , Driskill Hotel. Level. Dobie Moll 21st G Guadalupe for the student committee / II SQUEEZE INNwmfe Festivities, included free parking m the rears a which has organized the • Mm banquet before the dance and, presents 1 «$£%] • affair, claims that the balls l later in the night, the will provide social interaction/­ crowning of the sweetheart of among students, faculty andthe School of Architecture HAPPY®HOUR Students claimed the event^f*8**"1* a*uJn,uI Every Day 4:00 til 7:00 was blessed Ptah, : f This year's Beaux Arts Ball oiessea by the!mmim Egyptian god of architecture, will be at 8:30 p.m. Friday inAll Pitchers 99* and thus they came to the ball the Crystal Ballroom of the dressed in extraordinary Driskill Hotel. Music will be costumes. Once a faculty provided by Texas Blend, an Bottle Buds .00 member disguised himself as. Austin rock band. All Draughts 25* I# • 1809 Guad&lup'e' (ietidea?Vr In a last-minute change of: ' 24 The Streets of Saiv Francisco 200 Academy /fmm plans, Dick Cavett will devote: 36 Music.Country, U.S.A. ASLEEP AT THE the entire 90 minutes of his 9:90 p.m. . 9 uehox Quartet j,' t show Thursday night in Sam Peckinpah's 10 p.m. •' %•. ' '' ( * , 1MHMR Benefits! WHEEL tribute to Grouchy Marx. The 7, 24, 36 News ' program will consist of clips 9 Washington Connection Happy Hour Prices 7-9 ,10:30 p.m. > .*• Mon., May T ?8:00 p.m. from Grbucho's previous talk! 7 "The Law and Jake' Movie: NO ADV. TICKETS show appearances. Wade," starring Robert Taylor, Richard Wldmark and Robert Cavett personally called fy . Mlddletop. i with v ~ The Daily Texan Monday ?: 9 Nova . . " 24 ABC Wide World of afternoon to promote this Willie Nelson Entertainment:. "The Dick Cavett special presentation, which he Show," featuring a salute to Groucho Marx. Michael Murphy ¥4 was inspired to put together 36 Tonight Show ifcagj^V} after Groucho's appearanceBW Stevenson -as the recipient of a special Oscar on this year's Academy Rusty Weir Awardb presentation. ((dUar> N«l*: Dant«n aild Dawn 6:90 p.m. • • Sphny, who jx«parwl ihh column/ aiti: Advance Tickets on Sale At: 7 Hazel local cntrolagim spackilfxing in natol 9 News 24 I Dream of Jeannie Texas Hatters; Discoynt Records; Inner Sanctum, Joskes charts, personal iMtorvtows, analysis and astroiogy dassos.), 36 Eyewitness News ARIES: You are able to distinguish 1p.m. fa -v-w between desire and actual 7 The Waltons • • . ' requirements.. 9 The Advocates TAURUS: There is an expansion of 24 Chopper One interests, an ever-growing circle of PRICES 36 Ironside , Betf ofe^i^yJ)eAdlie^dffrmk4mi^/f^F^ehou^' , \ work nowfame an ?:•• METROCOLOR • PANAVISION* : -MGM ^ . 9 War and.Peace .v , attracts; students,''followers, 24 Kuna Fu Friday and Saturday . Sunday admirers. Success is Indicated. LEO: You will gain through 7, 9, 11 p.m. 7 and 9 p.m. resourcefulness, perhaps t.he rtsand Theatre Committee Ur)ion Theatre HAPPINESS competent handling of money. VIRQO: Success where partnerships and MT* 2.^22 Guadalupe SWEETBRIAR is mergers are concerned.. Reaffirm — — — — — — — — iTT. $1.00 UT Students,^ your noble motives. ; LIMA: You are willing tooffer the benefit Faculty, Staff ARICA I the doubt, to be, forgiving and _ B.W. StevenSon-CaldbaSaS of $1.50 Members:;\ i 476-2281 ; generous. SCORMO: There'tsan ability to speculatenfiuj POichael Murphy and show a profit. Check all factors. SAOTTAIUOS: You enjoy-the feeling of or KatKi fOcdonald -insane expansiveness at home and don't want that closed-in feeling. CAMKORN: There Isan intensedesire for 3.33 £ii&± JcrriilcffWalte higher education, academic in life per se. Z^ppa-OuerhitfKi' Schsation AQUARIUS: You willdevise a way today to Country & Western Street Dancev do the most with the least. PISCES: You have an expansive personality now and tend toward extravagance. •-...••« Featuring t^ On neu Q^obie Bfos.^d-floiffi •«* RiulSimoh-Livd RK^min Middle Earth | •s EVERYONE ADMI FFBETO 3lc WILLIE Drug Crisis Center I or Carlv^ S»motn—HofcaiCcS 8 p.m. — 4 a.m. I and I AND and the JoHiv Oenver-£r«at Hitj • ' FREDA FIREDOGS 9 a.m. — 4 p.m. I Seven Days a Week I Mobil* Units Available J At Any Tim* ; v I ALS0«sp mah^ BUBBLE PUPPY BEER FOOD • o"tKer 472-9246 | 2336 Guadalup* ' I la/bumS ai 4htsc. lou> Priced N* Nam**. 1 •JSSLfiJSBL'Sfc jSfJHSSSS. / /m/'/rs/f ////////////////////////#/////#/// Happy Hour Every Nite FUN DANCING 8-9 p.m. mmm Donation Recycle your irroQucnon 00 at Gate REASONING Pitcher Bc«r $1 Mixed Drinks 60*-$l Anorene. Texas, 1951 Opwitp* lOth/lMMr 47747U n For Benefit of ARICA . Nolhiog much has changed*. 476-2281 m Austin 16th & Trinity Symphony On Waller Creek Orchestra THE AUSTIN COUNTRY*FESTIVA -^ ON THE BANKS OF BULL CREEKi1 ' .^;J starring — • ° A "CINCO Se MAYO" CELEBRATION ^ _ i wtfV/'-5 TIMOTHY BOTTOMS /JEFF BRIDGES f. -' MAY 2 A 3 -nm ELLEN BURSTYN/BEN JOHNSON " CONCERT: ~M CL0RI8 LEACHMAN /CYBILL SHEPHERD v* i b'M PLASH 4n<*4fc* ktAfWidt.tcntifpfor *>r l«»yMtHwKy sodMw SegdwewA. i;;r And th# ContiiMntai Kids FREDDIE FENDER • ti |X94uc.d br SMVMifriMUion. UrlSehwdw ' i . w»**wn4m tmmctM atArmn . ^ »% U\ : "W ts «w mom lnnmMworfcfcir s yowwg tumhcmdU*cSor [ Mmikm Tkkmt§ on Soh at: tRAY WYUEHUBBARD • DOGTOOTH VIOLET • GREEZY WHEELS mmm, , Paul 0 ^.mermanNEWSWEEK ' sinceCmtXMKJmr .o T«xa» Hatfm; Dhcwmt Imrdi; Rhrer Qty Inn; & ACADEMY >f#ARDS Irnur Sanctum; Tows Op*y Hew* &MM MILTON CARROLL BAND • ALVIN CROW May 2 p—famionf $2JO;May % pm/hntmntm $330 !,/ ' Best Supporting Actor — Bm Johnson • LOST GONZO BAND ST1^Z°B^D Best Supporting Act/ess -CkMte Leachmatt ' Tkk.„r ; ViMi •i?I . ^SATURDAY, MAY 4 toad Hall & Saloon W »ixed Drinks ifp* FHiey, Seturdey -7JO I. M5 Doug Scihm • Alvin Oo W; SUNDAY%ry Inner Sanctum " and Fr«da and th« Rrtdogt g Oat Willies Beejr H' >i' tJS May M . A.C AW. (1JS . sis • « f .DiKoveryRecori S3 Political ResourcesA4vuory £ouncil \ {San Marto«) (0atetop8n9:00 A.M,^ ior-lQui -RELY*--: Freda and th« Rredogs' rr {- 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN fiuass' ; m 4 rr Kelpe R89 4 T> ^ 1 1 ' * & By IRVm LIPPMAN representational. The subject perfect and to colorthe spaces , art history in 195? from the® Continues to paint. ThoughW§. Texan Staff Writer matter was the viewer's to be soothing. Kelpe does University of.Chicago., lie Always,, experimenting, he "'Paul Kelpe, in a quiet" ability to associate emotions speak of an affinity between taught art history at UTfrwn ''reflects primarily the artistic movement of his own with the abstractions. his artistic Intentions and . 1948 to 1954 after receiving his paintings and drawings of the in Austin, is stillexploring the Plato's discourse on absolute MA from Chicago. From 1957 ~ ,late Thirties. Kelpe'sfrequent Coming to the United States Constractivist tenet of the beauty; both being the pure to 1960 he taught at Howard analogy is to think of Ms art in in 1925 and settling in Rocky 1920s. Kelpe, who remains form or idea, totally devoid of. University, Washington, D.C., terms of music; instead of Hill near. Princeton, Kelpe unknown to most Texans, will empirical content. Kelpe's art and from 1960 to 1969 at East arranging, tones in £* continued his constructions of have a one-man show at New adheres with Platonic zest to texas State Teachers College rhythmical manner, he canvas and .jniscellaneous York's Zabriske's Gallery in the contemplation of the thing in Commerce. In 1969, Kelp$. arranges paints. ,, , <%.. hardware. Bits of wood and October. on a level outside mere Returned to Austin.' !--' ."ty Kelpe has shown in no metal, screws and doorlocks, Born imMinden, Germany," appearance. < : ZABRISKE'S has "galleries in Texas. Although mousetraps and ironmongery < in 1902, Kelpe was part of the Selling Kelpe's early works one of his paintings annually formed stable squares,circles In 1930 Kelpennoved tb wave ofartistsin the mid-'20s for the last two years. In the finds its way into the Texaiitti and rectangles. He aflso Chicago. He had his first one* in Germany that followed the October exhibit, the New Fine Arts Association show,:' worked on two-dimensional man exhibition at Chicago's Constructivist experiment York gallery will show, he has neversold a painting pointings in the Twenties, .Little Gallery in 198. A few led by Kaftdinsky, Malevich, Kelpe's paintings from the Texas. His one-man show ii|j§§ transforming simple years later the paintings took Gabo and Pevsner. In 1924 Twenties, .thirties . rand Hew York may not give him a The Kelpe had a show in Hannover geometric shapes into tight, on new dimension. Forties. f " Texas audience, but thtfk-| flat, architectonic packages. shapes were no longer rigidly y with Kurt Schwitters and %j At present the fertilt Misfortune isn't Kelpe's. placed; they began to float Buchmeister, being' part of KELPE OFFERS' no Mm while being pulled into the the "gegenstandschlose*' philosophic manifestable or gravitational point always in The ShrimpHarvest (nonobjective) movement. purpose for his art as did his my tufty HMy MvMhy, v the center of the canvas. In Like Schwitters, • whose art cohorts. Malevich and Gabo. r KImii pricM. OmtoW* •««<•«•• •> ImIM OwW Shrimp wi to H «mI His paintings, there is always €•*»•« mix* «INI hmh|M»|^>l, came under the strong Kelpe's goal is simply to CATCH 3.50 HAIT CATCH \M a setting stable juxtaposition influence of Kandinsky, Kelpe make forms balanced and of shapes in a void. constructed picture planes beautiful, to arrange things in that were devoid of the such a manner to be made Kelpe received" his PhD in Am* is®; giU.^arsaVJ Radio Show To Feature Student Tmmi Staff by CMp Kwifmcut • A Texan staff writer will for several years and was on and< the excitement on the i Poul Kelpe and an early untitled painting. Oyster Bar andSeafood Restaurant recount his experiences in the scene during much of the , movie set. 5011 Burnet Road at Hancock 451-8174 witnessing the filming of "The filming of the movie. A sequel to the mwje is due *All-you-can-eat-room» *Regular-^eriu-rboftvThree Musketeers" on The to be released soot^lt M Cafctus Pryor Show at 8:15 sThfe1"Austin^ Amiertfcifc-' Art Classes To Start Ml •jm ip-a.m: Thursday on radio Statesman recently publishediLaguna Gloria Art Museum THE MORNING classes afternoon and evening station KLBJ. Saez' account of his meeting has opened registration for its will include Watercolor, classes also. •. Daniel Saez lived in Spain with-, actor Charlton Heston summer semester of art centering on the artistic Classes will be offered for IN THE MIDST OF classes, which will begin June concepts and fundamentals of children and adults with 3 and last five weeks. design in pictoral morning, afternoon and composition using watercolor. evening sessions. The first Use Classified Ads There are no entrance i Teen Pa inting_ wi il five-week session begins June requirements. Glasses are emphasize, the fundamentals 3; the second, July 15,open to. children and adults FINALS of color theory and mixing, Information concerning and to beginning and design composition and scheduling,. facultyadvanced students. layering. qualifications and supplies W-AJACK LEMMON, BIST ACTO* ;>'The museum (3809 W. 35th THESE ARE just a few of can be obtained by calling 452­ vv St.) will present the largest the courses offered: Other 9447. AH classes are open to number and variety of art1 courses will be available at the community at large. JACKCEM sc^isMng-pOflrsytJofth# AmtfcantHiilitfcKfntfi. -,v classes everoffered during its summer session,::^.;^ i :i\;pj!< nSane/a^ YOU ONLY HAVE NEVER A COVER YOUR BODY 2021 East Riverside 441-4677 ARICA ; r ,476-2281 ­ t --fcf lis 2915 Guadalupe •Please' DO NOT Patronize These UNFAIR! presents •: V' I Theatres, Which Pay Sub-Standard Wages. 1 KENNETH :fl 1 •ViHage Cinema Four Showtown Twin Drive-In| ! THREADGIU IRiYerside Twin Cinema * ^ r South Side Twin Drive-in v^pobie Screens,l& 2, Ml* - Tonight Only.*, Beer, Win*, Iff" TO IPlease DO Patronize These Theatres Which Pay fair Wages andPhza • ; }| ^ ; -a,ld Employ Professional Pro{eg^ist| eym SATURDAY NIGHT, MAY 4, ONLY! 4 ^ Capitol Plaza CfikdB&^^ IAmericana * :LAGUNII' |Jester Auditorium 8:00 and 10:00p.m * IAquarius, Four Fiesta Drive-In State• WEST SIDE SECOND STORY J"IAustin k :Rated R T ^.Admission: $.1.25 + _ Fox Twin Texas§•' GLORIA „ COFFEEHOUSE; 11IP a> I •uurnet linve-In |jHighland Mall Cinema, v, . -Varsity[ 1""™ Musical Events Committee ART MUSEUM $1.00 UT I % Paramoiintl«^:ri^ 1 aw^Iart . T* ; A Tickets on sale Saturday night * •POM* /or end sponsored by Local 205. International Alliance Theatrical Students at 7:15 for both shows §Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators. AFL-CIO. L SUMMER CLASSES $1.50 '• Presented by Life> J^Sening Austin*s Entertainment'Industry Since 1911. | BEGIN JUNE 3 Oamral Public - Drawing-' -• K Sculpture' Painting 1 Jewelry Video Tape Watercolor -xecaOsdieStendhaHanworldof Pottery Rtf«MlBti0ll.*A• k film.' : • Basic Design Life Drawing V s­ Clgldren's Art s«^a 20th Century Art Register Now i Call 452-9447 r •>! ^ . 0 J35S 1 ypZ*?STUDENTS! %•« -> WILL GET YOU m 1 ww - TIMERUNmM)' -£ THEp PAILlhi 1TEXAN t 4> uUNCLASSIFIiDS" • ps, Come by " THE SPIDERSSTRATAGEM" TSP Btdgi directedby BernardoBertoluoci. 3-200, Based ona storyby JorgeLuisBorges Incolor. and plan\ 3.50 ' your | ' Uncionlftorf ADVAMCE Ad TONIGHT! feirtt mndTfaVnCqmmiUee TICKETS AT: WEEKS MDQGRANPCl lN^R SAWCTU iM in si Tel. /VI Tfl BY Vr,'«. C.X.A tW®PlO . 1 ki. ^ C U, . ^ \ misfit iMeflle* ItKltV ujcavci MoV Mn«c«s t cw. Ar>ca.w, 0« No refwnet :M $140 wMi-f aeti­ v ^ |il*t *Otxadolup* Stond Uvil Dob* Moll 477-1,1)4 SCREEN I m»w •> clPiM ¥M pf%i Ti» •? SCREEN II "ABRILUANT FILM-^ STUNNING!" -Judith Crist, New York Megukf Feature Tint** 3:15-6:10 9:15 namtarnwww AUBtaWHOP mwtnmw THE icPwf* -$W " *T SI" 1M >#' MvH 414*M • DP ft».L mmT4^ ­ m§ir • -X&S' • '' «?/'?« U< i-; RUUNG CLASS MIDNITE MOVIES HEAR-JIVE TALK Teenage slang ­jazz, drag racing, and left-over ? G.I. expressions!% «•> A California town j turned into a teenage jungle) IOO DRAQ RACES I IN Screen I 12:00 Wed. thru > Sot. Screen I 12:00 Nashville thru Sun. Sound SCREEN II 40^ ^ 12:15 WOODY May 1-7 Weo.Tues, ALLBI TAKES A NOSTALGIC LOOK AT THE Rmw £sl in • s , , ."s * DRAMA p.m. and Conference AA f Scott Theatre's summer ''THE ^ SPIDER'S! schools at 7:30 p.m. • •; ^melodrama production will " Stratagem," Bernardo THE UT DRAMA de-Friday; and Conference , ,',be held at 3 p.m. Sunday VBertolucci's 1970 film , j, partment will host the A AA schools at 4 p.m. and Ifpand'at7:30',tun. Monday at 'which both Time magazine ' V48th annual State One-Act Conference AAAA schools •the theater. Entitled "The \ -and the Village Voice have . • Play Contest of the at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. ^Rebel's Revenge:or ..'termed his best movie, will •'-University Interscholastic — Tickets will be available 'Chicanery on the ^ Ibe screened' at 7 and 8:45 . League Thursday, Friday to the public only at the ChattahooChe," the play f -p.m. Thursday in the Union and Saturday in Hogg will be directed by one of ^Theatre. -in? ^ door at the time of . 'its conauthors, Moe 1 ' Auditorium. Conference B -performance. Admission is Samuelson. (S.J. Aronson "schools will perform at $1 for students and $2 for is the other author.) ^MUSIC <7:30 p.m. -Thursday; adults. •-Conference A schools at 4 AUDITIONS FOR *Z|chary A GRADUATE degree recital FILM will be presented at 8 -p.m. Thursday by Shea'ron LOVI HAPPY: 6J5-W5 "THE BEST YEARS of Our Smith, in . partial' CASABLANCA: 8:10^ Lives," William Wyler's fulfillment ' of ,1946 film which won the requirements for the * Academy Award for Best master of music degree in THE MARX BROS. Picture, will be presented piano. The program will be by CinemaTexas at7 and10 held in the Music Building . p.m. Thursday in Jester Recital Hall and is open to' Center Auditorium. ; the public free of charge. "A NIGHT IN CASABLANCA'!. DBTYHUIff GUZYL •*-—Plus— COLOR BY DE LUXE# "LOVE HAPPY" NOW SHOWING AT THf FOLLOWING Thefilm thatintroduced Marilyn THIAIRIS Monroe to the screen,> K»1MI STARTS MONDAY: AI TAT EE Andy Warhol's (X) ".TRASH" AND. SOUTH SIDE 1Sivcrsi3? SEETHE WORLD'S LARGEST 710 E Bon Wh»t BOX OFFICE OPtN 7:30 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK 444-2Z96PAINTING OF "THE Twin * THREE MUSKETEERS" 111 IB Village VILLAGE 12:30 SHOW ONLY $1.00 $1.50 $2.50 Cinema i Four 27M Wilt M, ,~rrw J Roar once again the origina)movie cast,.. mn ^1" -4 MIDNITE MOVIE mur wmn OmH bw IM U| J SJSm' mil KMOIIM MNttun MASH M • M» («*»>*>«MOT! • tetefaPwingef Prwtetottf! , • -•: S-jk; ­ •T"*yW C^byOEtUXE'PANAVIStON* •"* -HB ALICE'S RESTAURAN '4>t & .H J o#1 &0M£4miw »«W By LYNN BAILEY are often taken for granted philosophy Supply nil the University:^ pointed the photographs for Texan Staff Writer or totally overlooked. photography^ News and Information a retrospective exhibit of Qut of the oorner of his rtJl»e instant.'^ " Service public relation; work by^hjs late wife, eye, (and With his camera) "THE PICTURES are ^Even the portrait^•-$ photographs for th Jeanne^ftC.. (SoberFrank Armstrong, not of unusual things, hut contained in the coHecUon' , University, he supplies all Armstrong, which was ' University News and of things that are slightly are candid, ^rmstrong^ • realists for pictures o^v shown in the University-Information 'Service inconsistent with the emphasized w$'z 'the^f University-connected newi^ Art Museum in September,photographer, has environment," he said. spontaneity of each shot^lp items. (He produced an"' 1972. An exhibit of hisearly * * V i / captured fleeting glimpses the unplanned •< .estimated 10,000 prints last,., work has hung in the-Union of the world that most ^pOnfe'example shown is a images. year.} His photograph^ Gallery in 1967. . people 4'tune out." photograph of a black bird, $ "THE PRINTS are have appeared in all majof# Armstrong's collection •" ft. collection of 48 of wings flapping but not yet Straightforward, no| ^&jfcx«s newspapers. ^ \ , #A %H1 be on exhibit In the Armstrong's prints, in flight, parched on top of jpanipulated images," h# ?:f| HIS PORTRAIT-of Aperture Gallery at 5959: entitled "Photographs Out a white-roofed car. The said. "No darkroom tricks University Law Profg\, Westheimer Ave, In of the Corner of My Eye,", contrast of black on white. v„jrere used." Charles Alan Wrlgh|Vv Houston. The pictures are will be exhibited Sunday|i;| the motion of the m"~u~w, a result of two^ appeared in Tinned "mere observations1' of through June 7 in^r'i suggest str what Armstrong magazine, and one of his the world — "small things raw.' S°,llst0^'4#pe^ture Armstrong said. called ''serious searching photographs of author-.*;; that happen every day,"{ieGallery. ,,r tj&st? for myself and expression! University Asst. English said. "Most people tune Armstrong started the; ARMSTRONG used—~ of how lfeel about things,'': Prof. Michael Mewshaw' ' themout. I tuned them in.">!V,.-.i%. collection in September,'^ Olympus 35 BC camera for|^4 deals with truth and was published in , Before beginnirf| his 1972. ("That's when l'£ most of the pictures in ther honesty "things people Newsweek magazine. He work for the news service, * —Tnon Staff HNtoay.itT MMar bought my camera," exhibit and a Nikon are doing that aren't in has won numerous awards -, Armstrong was chief 1 Nil University photographer Frank Armstrong said.) The pictura^f • some. . context with. v t,hei| in regional and. natloha|i§ photographer of Texas document certain aspecls^ All the photographs int^ environment,"; J*' Competitions. v ., Student Publications, Inc., of the world around us that the show emphasise his' "i* Armgtrongjedited^ from 1965 to 1969. • SSilltl ma.­ '"^'^UNCLASSIFIED'' % tf-jf Battles Ovlr PaysTel«^sioh Cfi^irfal tA® »i®(freSfe, rH Village CLASSIFIEDS Riverside By JAY SHARBUTT 'TV Stationsstations and ihe Siphoning charge hoewash.hogwash. It allows once-a-month showines assurance that nothinnothing which the three siohonine alloWsonce-a-month showings Twin AP Television Writer -networks, describes siphoning says it only wants federal of movies 10 years old or is now presented on NEW YORK (AP) -The as "the removal of popular rules eased enough to let pay older. conventional television could Four Cinema sound of clashing claims is roo OUT ANDCM0N LANI Ml W • .p»y hfvsi 30 At 12730 TV UFPC THE J , , TEQUILA NITC . } wk$ OUR 20th ANNIVERSARY: * HISTORIC OF THE THREE sV< * (1954 -1974) * * jX CODS? MUSKETEERS Presents ,TOAD HALL AND SALOON} * ^ ' TRINITY AT L 4th 4 * >t.-H'tfh!'* * 11 .if HOUSTON'S •>*< ^* NINOCHKA SM® * 1500S. PUEASANT VAUEY RD ....a.. * VIOLET| Directed by Ernst Lubitsch - v MON, THRU SAT. JUST Off EAST mViHSIDE DRIVE **4 'ilLl.* (Tiw bn» in PROGRESSIVE COUNTRY ROCK) * A BLythe Satire about Ck>mmttnl8iii Meeting * If ybu heard 'em at Liberty Hall, you'll be there! J Capitalism in Paris in the Sha of Greta $1.00 5 ACADURY AWARD NOMINATIONS 7 ACADEMY AWARDS $1.90 Hi 6 p.m^ » * Gartio and Melvin Douglas. In tl Garbo mULNOVMAN ttf 6 p.m. Natwret Laughs! 1:30 4 HATURIS 2:30 3>30 J »** 4:S5 Tonight! 5:30 V Mi 7:30 9iS0 9:30 TGCHMCOUJM AUMVW3M.H0TURE THE BEST YEARS University Thursday TECHNICOLOR 10:30 Film Program 7 & 9 P.M. $?JO OF OUR LIVES i.^ -* • CbmmiHet ^ Bafts Hall Audi. til A p.m. R«VCH»1MIMiMiMCKI $1.50 Features til 6 p.m Spring 1974/ *t.00 A - ­ . . A UNIVERSALPICTURE .Wmm -directed by WilliamWyler J -TECHNICOLOR* 'PANAV)SiON< THi m 6 -ffl^:4S •URT cp^ i2-^ $uSnH tanmWwf •CMarbii 0«Un** ' 'v, < •-i , 6:30 ic ttYNOUWl^l OAKK 1:20 10 lOtO COU3R BYDE UJXE ACRES OF FREE LIGHTED PARKING **it*(Highest Ratfng)M . -HUt.DltrHtwt 4*k I An Immenselyromantic movie wtthstyieandinMHgencer -Ctnbr.N.Y.TInm 1:00-3:10-5:20-7:30-9:40 l\ tarring ["Lawrence's viroln. Afast waiting to be -RollingStone'* Frederic March ^fH.Myrna. Loy slick awakened Into ••nooalWe." of -OMM,TDt thmviirlm 6II1IBIX8IIIIII6III! 7 and 10 p.m. Jester Agirfalonging —Newsweek Admission $1 Auditorium lor morefreedom, eexuaiand chaiged from otherwlaa." A Senttern of the Department of Redio/Televiston/^ifm \ -Wca,C*Utg*tint lW 10MM. Bam -WashingtonPost H5w afv Mi .'»Wt THE1 Th» makingof•woman: •^ >t ADMMnOOnMUpHMUWi wtoiuaM«N-M«K(UB84wcaMriDri­ SHEWS R^KDtBD.OHiMwnt"nCVKMANDnCCmr MMWCEDENHAM wabit. SSwfap^-i—* Austin>11 FRIDAY ONLY Burdine Aud. May 3 7:30-9:20-11:00 Student Gov't. $1.00 , , Anew film by Kurt Vonntg'ol ' Mf.Vcioneci'i s night- THE* CAUfft HIM terrrvi ^ ronfornirv CONRACK, HtS STOtY IS Ih?miliiory mind t«h- "WALKINGTALL" noltxjicol de^pc'ism TWC. M WAS «$T A TIACHIR AND THIN t>sr n'^'cncied i> , i ^, JOEDONB*K«•EUZABETH HARTMAN•ROSEMARY MURPHY ridieriKMdv N.Y — :re •HKNMOM. fc~* Iv-J rt«v"" ol -r--few HURRY! b\i 12'2-444-H ifipy '«v i >1 vi i bod ENDS S1.M tfl HIGHLAND MALL btf 451-7326 1W0 TODAY! Feotyrjng Bob and Roy Bill Hictey and Kevin OFFIH35atHIWAY?90 McCorthy. Directed by •. Fred Burzyk. Written s- by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. tn color from »W«r|SflQe€Rr qnd mlfl p fi fj /iSrf FflBROUJ PASSU I CAPITAL PLAZA •AMAIN C04TMftlM MATINB I H V)NORTH 12:4£*304:15.9*0 . •••i" »>» » , 2 ACADEMY WAUER GKEHWN -DOLORES MQRAN JONV i2t*i big mm C£ FANTj 1M0-W7-S*4-7:Z1-M0 AWIIOS ^ MNAWSMN* PASSiS I IAN6AIN HAT, HOACV CMM.H HAWKS, COtOBBlfOiVUXE* SOSPBWCD ^ Iuw» im*T twl Wi>H» F«*» SATURDAY ONLY ^«d-. BNMR lim.HOT ADMITIEQ Mdv 4 ^"" ^ 7:30-9:20-11:C HIGHLAND MALL FRIDAY SATURDAY W. h» J#»»M Aud Y Student Gov't $1.00 Cinema 40 $1.00 -7:30-9:20-11:OS| Mm.. Srhursday/ May 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 21 •f# ^§S br Delux bus, . K°*nl HE OAlLVtoTEXAN Ml ' -i ;<*•$ i " im'i H . i.. i ••Mini 'I ' in i , Tnriiji T«Mn Mmday.....NiN•* We*w4ey Tim Tnifcy..lMOmi. Oey i«M WMhwaday .lOiOO aj*. iMwar. Musical -For Salo rTnan Tlwnday......1P>00«J». YAMAHA GUITAR: SALE. Free o»M , ^iwiMiwirTr'Mu*ped. ^j^oiutety mint condition. 1»7I PLYMOUTH FURY III. Fullyloaded, good body, PS. PB, AC new paint. *1100.451*4402. 'M VW runs 47S-4M3after 1964 CHEVY IMPALA SS. PS, automatic trans., AM/FM radio. Must sell immediately. *3S0._Call 447-1001. 1971 FIAT0S0 SportSpider. 35 mpg. New top, new valves, and more. Only 29,000 miles. *1400. 472-7397. 'MMGB. Goodrunning condition,MUST sell best offer. 44i-00n. '49 VW BUG. Good condition, 25 mpg, radio. Call 451-^ni/ 19S9 VW. Rebuilt motor, new brakes, new state Inspection,1575.19S9 VW, new rings, good tires, *295. 477-4666. HR70xl4 radial*. New 4/S114. VW tires 4/S63. Misc. VW part*. 477-444*. 1947 FORD VAN. 6 cylinder, standard, good mechanical condition, new paintand interior, *995. 471-7201. '65 PLYMOUTH. 50,000 miles, goodengine, needs body work, etc. *150: 472­ '40 VOLKSWAGEN, automatitlt. goodcondition. *000. Call 441-611 11-6115: 1964 CHRYSLER, good condition. New muffler, 'new battery. *250. Call evenings. C.T. MaxwsJi. Motorcycles -For Salo Pots -For Solo >* FREE LARGE 4 montt* old pup. Needs large fenced yard andchildren. 452-5444 after 5 p.m. GERMAN SHEPHERD mix puppies for sale: Call 452-0(21 after 4 p.m. • For Solo ATTRACTIVE, old large brick family MI-SMBM»%|pgiSa walk to 'UT. S20.SM­evenings for appt. 14x00 MOBILE HOME. CA/CH, 2 bedroom, IVi bath. Washer/Dryer. Best offer. Evenings; 200-1474. 12x60 BROADMORE traHer. 2 bedroomT 1>* bath, dishwasher, carpeted. Excellent condition.DM35* after 5p.m. Garag* Sale -For Sale MOVING SALE. Panasonic stereo,AM/FM, turntable, speakers. Dynaco FM tuner, Scott amp. Daybed. Miscellaneous Item*. 472-1794, 470-4959. BACKYARD PLANT SALE. 4407 Avenue H. Across from Ellzabet Ney Museum on Waller Creek. MOVING SALE. Chests, dresser, tabhb refrigerator. 477-6605. RUMMAGE SALE. Saint George'sEpiscopal Church. 4301 North interregional. Friday 9-5p.m., Saturday 9-4 pjn. BIG YARD SALE, Saturday, MayT0:30-5:30. First English Lutheran DayCare Center, UT area, one block east of Guadalupe at 30th and Whitis. HUGE GARAGE SALE! Many families contributing clothing, furniture, etc. May 9, la ft 11.9 a.m. -*_p.m.Old white hoiise on grounds of St. GeorgeEpiscopal Church. Airportft Interregional. MULTI-FAMILY Garage Sale. Sponsored by Air Austin Cooperative J Very eling, carpe CA/C fl-5244 MOINlPTHRU FRI 00-5:00. 5533. JBSKr*?! ?«w. ji FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. B FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. IS * mm TANGLEWOOD WE RENT AAARK IV APTS. Buckingham TWO BLOCKS EAST , SUMMER RATES NOW w Square#* im AUSTIN m,. . 1 BR Furn., S130 1 BR Furn -$145 Small friendly complex. Pool. Fully- TO CAMPUS ^urry! Hurry! Hurry $ -; ^our time Is valuably |carpeted. Water a Gas Paid. Central air ALL BILLS PAID®*?; JJJ. 2 Bedroom Efficiencies Summer Rates Full kitchen "start Now! ^ CA/CH, carpeting -y • ,, „ __ _ ^.<4 Large walk-In closeti,« ,, ,]&,•&>, 2 BR Furn.Jrt40 (t s . •* Oriental furnishings""1 - 1 BR Fum. S120-S125 ; Study room ^-Nice shag carpet -central air« -Peaceful courtyard with poolt^-v^ . P?«l -••••>• -—Blki Only steps to shopping " ii,-i')Rlde Bike to UT 405 East 31st w -f ir 472-4162 i\ 1 -Bitrry Gilllngwater Company 2604 Road ' 477-1064 *120 -*135 : SUMMER RATES •' HALLMARK FOUNTAIN TERRACE APTS. APTS.,., Large apt., one bedroom, large closet*, Summer Leasing Now fully carpeted, cable, disposal, water, gas, swimming pool, furnished.Walklnd 1 BR Furn., S125 distance to UT. No children or pets. 610 • King site bedrooms West 30th. 477-0050. : • Central Air «> Heat • Dishwasher:^ conditioning. Walk to campus -Fully Carpeted 477-1605 Dishwasher • Pool. Our service Is free \p3Wi^LE BUSCorner 711 W. 32ndi 454-4917 , PARAGON 4­ .PROPERTIES^ ?108 plus E EL DORADO Who knows more about a 1 BR, V BA; 2 BR, 2 BA; 3 BR;3 BA . • Fully Carpeted LA CANADA APTS. • Walk to Campus ' student's apartment needs „ S155, L $210, ; S290 Apts. ­ 708 W. 34th < 454-6294 than another student? Large Pobl -All Bills Paid -Stoning Summer Leases 1 BR, *150 2 BR, *100 SUMMER Ot FALL LEASING Call the HABITAT HUNTERS Move In Today! " ALL BILLS PAID iBR, Furn. $135 plus Elec. 47*4532 Pretty shag carpet, dishwasher, pool BRIGHT SHAG CARIkRPET -• Best Rate on the Lake -^Shuttle Bus Front Door 1300 W. 24th 472-1S90 _ Suite8A^DobJe.Mall Shuttle Bus Corner Walk to Canuius DISHWASHER, POOL Fr*ee service, 7 days a week i 1302 W. 24th : 477-1202 FROM *119 plus E. , ' 2400 Town Lake Circle SHUTTLE BUS CORNER 442*340 --­ 1 BEDROOMS i FROM *130plusE. _ *> I FURNISHED ON SHUTTLE VILLA ^ Longview Apts. , 30TH ft SPEEDWAY 4534)540 472-4162 SPANISH TANGLEWOOD Special Student Rate **. BARRY GILLINGWATER CO. ORLEANS T BR, $135 .2 BR, $160 NORTH ; .. . 206 West 38th Centrel air, fully carpeted, nice pool, 1 or 2 Bedroom furnished. Convenient to V end 2 Bedroom apartment*. Dazzling patio area. : EL CID APTS. UT. Beautiful Pool and Patio. Managed decor. All the extra*. Assigned parking, Summer Rates Start Today Shuttle Bus Front Door by owner-Shuttle Vi blodt. shuttle but. From *140 -*100. Alto 2400 Longview 472-5316 1 BR $140-$155 1 BR. $130 452-3314 459-9927 45M545 summer rates. 4520 Bennett; 451-3470 451-4119 2 BR $165 -$175 Summer Rates Start Today. Dishwasher -Paneling • A/C Paid THE TIMBERS $110 Central AC -Carpeted • Bright Shag Carpet / APTS.. " 3704 Speedway 453-4883 • 2 Large Pools SHUTTLE BUSFRONT DOOR . 1 Bedroom Ml AMIGO Summer Leasing Now i• : Efficiencies, 1 and t bedrooms, and • Shuttle Bus Corner 1 BR, $110 -$120 . apartments studios. Pool, sauna, exercise room, Small, friendly complex, pool, new shag Shuttle, club and game room. *140 • 0295 MARK XX APTS. bills paid. Also summer rates. 1020 E. 45th 452-0060 carpett water & gas paid by owner. 1 BR -$130 2 BR -$150 Furnished.., 1307 Norwalk Ln., 472-2627 45th and Duval SHUTTLE BUS CORWFR Summer Rates Start Today 451-4119 452-3076 S" Central Air -Carpeting Large Pool . EFFICIENCIES 3815 Guadalupe 1907 San Gabriel MANOR VILLA Northwest Austin. *119.50 All Bills Paid,: 2506 Manor Road furnished,. 60U-6813 Great Northern. 454-3953 452-5093 Summer-Fall reservations. -Students Welcome HURRY! HURRY! Cable TV, washer-dryer facilities, Upper classmen. Near Walk or bicycle to class CA/CH, mature students, no: pets or campus.-New 1 bdrnrv efts., Efficiencies only HURRY! children. Quiel for those who are serious and want to study. Phone 472-6201, John Summer Rates Start Now 5 BLOCKS big kitchen, full bath, air-S50. deposit Ludlum before 5 weekdays. Resident WEST OF CAMPUS conditioned,. maid, parking. Lowest Rates in town 2 BR Furn. $125 -$135 manager 452-4944 after 5 and weekends. S130/mo. plus elect. Summer Going fasti 1 BR. Furn. $115 New semi-efficiencies Shag carpet, cable, gas. rates. 453-3235. $124 bills paid Central Air Conditioning, Carpeting, water furnished 474-5550 477-3651 JERRICK RED OAK. 2104 San Gabriel Large Pool *121 Summer Rates 477-5514, 476-7916 Upper Classpersons « Ride Bike to UT APTS. 2802 Whitis ^ SUMMER ON THE LAKE A.C., parking, maid. Summer-Fall STUDENT DISCOUNT Save Fuel. Walk to campus. 2 bdrnveff. 2401 Manor Road Luxury 1 bedroom Leases. Summer Rates-Fall 2 person* 474-4665 apartments, with central air, For the three summer months only. SUMMER RATES START TODAY Town Lake Apartment* will give a > MARK V *160/mo^ 3 persons *10$, plus elect. carpeted. Dishwasher, laun­ Appointment. 453-3235. . 1 Br. *130 substantial rent discount to UT students. dry facilities, TV cable. Luxury one bedroom apartment, fully., On Town Lake, cable, all bills paid,. Walking Distance to UT disposal, telephone lacks, laundry carpeted, dishwasher, pool./ WHY '/3 Block to Shuttle Bus facilities,dub room,pool, pets, spacious SHUTTLE BUSCORNER efficiency:. 1 bedroom, 2 bedroom, 3 3914 Avenue D ' X -Fantastic Reduction 472-4171 s weekdays 472-4175 > weekends iondon Sonare summer Rafts Start Today APTS.^^| ?f ? ColorfulpJMiagCarpet • 'v * Special Student Rates ! 1 BR *115 -*125 ---, lisig ; • Small friendly complex Central Air ' • Pool and patio area /• . . • Shuttle bus corner Pool ^p4 3501 Speedwey 472-4093 Shuttle Bus 3 Blk^| Tanglewood a, p Summer Rates ., . W. Annex Start Today STUDENT SPECIAL ? 1 BR Furn. *120 • S133 _ RETREAT APTS. Shag Carpet, Central Air, Pool, Shuttle Bus Corner 4400 AVE. A 459-0058 1315 Norwalk Ln. MOVE IN TODAY! 470-1074 Chez Jacques bedroom apartments. Shuttle, bus. V.I.P. SEARCH ; 453-1004 -•%/;- Lease now; make this a great summer. ,50°EM*—R,V#",D«>, 444-1450, .<444-3750. APARTAAENTS SUNNYVALE 33rd 0i FREE 1972 JAWA CALIFORNIAN 350CC, 4300 evenings. Pool -Central Air. 44HM4 DUPLEX ' Drastically reduced Summer rates miles. Perfect runningcondition, *550 or „ SHUTTLE BUS CORNER 311.East 31st No calls after 7:00 p.m. or HOME best offer. 451-4643, 471-7411 477-5560 or 477-7451 478-6776 451-6533 Misc. -For Sale MYRTLE WILLIAMS & Central Properties Ine. TOP CASH PRICES paid tar diamonds, Chimney Sweep ASSOC. old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop, 4010 N. 472-7201 • " ^ 324 South Congress -WATCH FOR ELEVEN POOLS Lamar, 454-6077. Apartments * OPENING 105 W. 30V4 454-0403 : EFF., 1 and 2 ^ , FOR RENT -Cameras, Lens, Now Leeslng for Summer POSADA THE VINEYARD ii AAAY 6, 1974 Projector*, Accessories. Tlte Rental Pool-Trees-Gas Grills BEDROOMS Department at CapitolCamera. 47*4501, Covered Parking-Quiet FROM $132 ALL BILLS K ADVENTURE & SNOOTY FOX "STREET 'N TRAIL DoMe Mall. Close to Campus-Shag Carpet PAID . . Lease NowTorTalFfo geTa * Cycle parts and Acc. lBedroom *155 plus elec. : New Ultra Modern Apts. ' 1101 W. Anderson Ln. ORNATE BRASS BEDS. Polished, side w/Fireplace A new concept in apartment tiff, of one month rent, Bright Colors, Shag Carpet ' 451-4165 railings, curved foot boards. Doubles Efficiency — *125 plus elec. Community living. Five' tudents and singles will love Dishwasher Pool and singles. Sandy's. 506 Walsh. architectural styles, choice of our garden, pool and CAMERAS 30%-50%OFF. OlympusOM-LEASING FOR SUMMER, furniture jtyles, color coor­clubroom. Your own private Fabulous Summer Stereo -For Sale 1, fl.2.-Lilt SS79, only *200. Camera LEASING FOR FALL! dinated throughout. CA/CH, bus, group trips, and many : Rates 5 ' Obscura, 471-5117 evenings. OPEN HOUSE! all buiit-ins, available unfur­other adventures for fall. ' TAPE PLAYER V.M. 7" reel-reel.Hum. BankAmericard, MasterCharge. , Efficiency $120 up * *350; take *200. 920-20M after 5:30. You're invited tosee the bestlooking one nished for $120 all bills paid. • Flats and Studios from $125 : • * INTERNATIONAL 420 Class Sailboat. bedroom and mini apartments in ithe 1501 Kinney Ave. NO. ill 308 East St. John S1 BR $140 up 'AR-LST's new, one pair. SN0. Circle 14' racing sloop, trapeze, compass, University Area! Pepper Tree IV end V 452-2744 451-81^5 'Stereo inc. 476-0947. spinnaker, trailer plus complete now open. Nothing compares with them1 451-6533, 447*3983 2 BR $175 up solitaire rig. *1450. Call 452-0024. 502 West 35th, 404 West 35th. Call 473-; Central Properties Inc. THREfe ELMS ALL BILLS PAID * PIONEER CS00 speaker* *290. 477-97VL 0253, 454-3259, 472-0941 ' ext. 254, or t3*-*4tS HONEY FOR SALE. Buy in quantity, 400 West 35th. Furnished -Unfurnished. WALK TO HIGHLAND MALL gallon, 55 gallon, special prlc Summer rates. Start *135 • *105. Also AND DPS Furnished 2 bedroom leasing for fall. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 1 tired of looking, hate sales talk, and $155 bedroom, 1 bath. Close to campus, shut­6^09 BURNS ...451-4561 STEREO BUYING SERVICE. If you're honey if bought now. Callf TAN6LEW6£>B " want the best for least. Call 453-1071, 15-CHEVY 2» Inboard ski boat and WEST tle bus, extra large, shag carpet, dis­ ^ Clay. trailer. *1200. Skis and accessories. 441-Located between Lamar & Leasing for Summer & Fall hwasher, range, disposal, refrigerator, 2340,441-0609 evenings. Guad. 1 Br. Furn. *135 large closet*, private patios, storage, Stafford House AR 2X ipaakers. Sony TC-054 plus more. cabinets, cable, laundry room, pool. 451­ 606 Franklin Blvd. , 2 Br. Fum. *160 ' 441-1550, WARD'S 12" Mack and white portable, Dishwasher -Shag Carpef 3941. Apts. • •fc; - excellent picture. 441-5005 after six. Dishwasher & disposal. Close Central Air & Heat ' StLVERTONE portable stereo. to intramural Field. 1403 Norwalk 1 BR Furn -$112.25 -Excellent condition, hardly used, two-NIKON SUPER 0. Zoom movie camera. SHUTTLE BUS CORNER 453-2835, 451-4352. FACULTY 2 BR Furn. -$128.00 |«nr£ speakers detach toten feet.*60.477-Perfect condition. Leather case. *100 or 472-9614 Small Friendly Complex offer. 452-1400. Fully Carpeted " MARANTZ 1060 amplifier *160. 2 KLH TWO WHITE VINYL headboards with 108 PLACE THE BLACKSTONE Large 3 bedroom duplex townhouse .in 2500 E. 22nd *476-5421 AND STAFF Model 6 loudspeaker*. *170.2 Wollensak lamps for twin beds. *35; like convenient Northeast Austin, WD conn:, reeding lam : speaker*. *30. 474-4629. -new jctrlc belt vibrator tor figure NEW EFFICIENCY S64.50/month .vaulted ceilings; orenge shag, fenced CONTINENTAL eiectrk Control. *50. 447-2112. yard, large walk-ins. 6413B Auburn. 926­ SONY TC-30 auto cassette, best Seny APARTMENTS Apartment living '/> block from Campus 6614, 472-4162. Barry Gilllngwater Com-* : makes. Automatic reverse, best offer SIX SIAMESE kittens for sole. Call 477-• dishwasher & disposal ' Individual applicants matched with APTS pany. over *100. 453-107*. Jim. 5173. competlble roommates • svMnmlng pool LEASING FOR SUMMER• patio ft barbeque MUST SELL outstanding system. JBL INTERIOR-EXTERIOR Latex paint; 2910 Red River 476-5431 • nj Mock to' Shuttle Bus LOOKING FOR AN APT.? 2 BR. Furn., $150 speakers, Garrard turntable. Pioneer available now at wholesale prices. 441-• individual storage A Paraoon Property Golf course across street, pool, central amj>IHlfler. Very reasonable. Call 474- 1540. Oecor Paints. •bookshelves air cond., dishwasher. Choose from over 10,000 units. •" twin studio or double beds 910 E. 40th 451-4373 15Vk ELGIN 40 HP Evinrude. remote •laundry faculties SHUTTLE BUS CORNER steering end controls. *450. PH; 451-0540 Advantage Point Apt. Locater SUMMER RATES after five. •LS^G^SUMMER AND/OR STEREO FALL From $115 . Free -' TWO SETS of Drape* withhardware, *10 -Summer Rete 910 West 26th.Large efficienciesand one DIPLOMAT APTS. and SS; queen sizequilted bodspreod,*0-*125 Per Month bedroom apartment* evallable for SIGNING SUMMER LEASES : A PRICES 452*0470. All Bills Paid summer. CA/CH, all built-in kitchans, 451-8242 -No fee. 100 W. 45th completely furnished. Walk or ride 1 BR Furn., $125 f You Won't Believe 10-SPEED SKY BLUE JeuM), 23W~ 452*1419 or 453-2771 shuttle to University. Peneiing. Smell, friendly complex. Central air, frame, excettent condition. 470-1235. 476-7609 or 451<4S» . Nice shag carpet. •.••••8P0:at NEW — Central Properties, Inc. SOUTH 1911 SanGabrier . 474-2703 14-SAILBOAT wltti trailer, excellent condition. *500. 441-0133 after six. SHUTTLE BUS CORNER Stereo EFFICIENCIES THE BLACKSTONE SHORE CAMERA: Rolleiplex SL3S, body Mack, w/Zeiss 05mm flj lens. Good one. 1300. CLOSE TO CAMPUS- Center s"m"iKoo/MoirthR "'" APARTMENTS Barry, 470-9029. SHUTTLE BUS Apartment living Vj Mock from Campus ANTILLES fO« SALE.G.6. washer, Kenmore gas Swimming pool, -piicants wlm Indtvidual epplicants matched witt NOW dryer. Cell 345-1174. beautifully furnished KMe roommates companw Efficiency, 1, 2, and 3 SIGNING SUMMER LEASES • Kenwood Receivers SAILBOAT Coronado 15 fiberglass double or studio bed, all 2910 Red River 4764611 • Sony Receivers stocgbgOacran talis, wtth trailer. MO. have dishwasher, disposal, bedroom apartments. •! . 2 BR FURN $170-$180 • Altec Speakers1 A Paragon Property •V ALL BILLS PAID central air and heat, shag Offer the solution to • Dual Changers 2NICE POOLS carpet, extra storage • AKAl Tape Oecks ' your housing. DISHWASHER BULLY 1 room. • JVC Tape Decks CARPETED The; South Shore's central' location) < • Pioneer Turntables 2204 ENFIELD RD " 47*0609 THIS IS IT! 305 West 35th I . >110 plus E , provides easy access lo U.T, • Marantt Receivers SHUTTLE BUS CORNER Giant 2 store warehouse clearance (6Mocks fromcampus) Summer Leasing Now Come by and see our new efficiency and ^ • Shure Cartridge* Ibedroom epertments on the banks of • Headphones Manager Apt* 106 Town Lak*. Complete with thag ESTABLISHMENT carpeting, accent wail, modern fur­ 203 East ml) LE MARQUEE niture, plus anindividuel deck overlook­ Aero**Street from endlutt Southof UT. , APTS. •; ing, the water. Close to campus. LuxuriTetflciertcies 476-011* 47*4733 WHurd Jar and Pant Tree must *115, one bedroom $130,: two bedrooms e Olshwasher * CA/CH Mate their entire stock by 11:0 $170. Pool, sundock, fully carpeted, cen­ ; From $145 — all bills paid , Stmday. TM* Is THE BIG THE WILUOWICIf • Bright Shag Carpet • Pool.r tral air and host. OHEI Starto 10:00 a.m. Frl. at 5;^300 East..Riverside:Orive%#' ; Live in wooded Seclusion . Shuttle But Two Blocks g 302 W. 38thmlnlwarehgme No. 100 and 115. neaf to ttw Faittt Untied. Chwrch at 7701 S. Larger ApertmentS with shag carpets, 4400 Ave. B . . . 451-4514 451-2441 451-6533 Central Properties Inc. modern furniture, accent Wall and con­ (MM system •VTwWivr n me neart ot AX-WHtirraM venient central location. RHMI veavsccLuoeo SOMETHING DIFFERENT FRT ctrcvi AIR susmutsioN I Bedroom $130 ALL BILLSPAID Efficiencies with elevated separate THREE ELMS Feature*--^.' GOOD FOOD bedroom* plus enormous one and two " "'oioimlurnMwrt ' H60ftirnUM 400 West 35th Kfflciencioi, i and 1 bedroom STORE Cfiwotthka»ri^>edon»cliwoverieefc-.Jadrsem contemporary apts. with every a ereek to on* of AwtHn'o grelflMt anventonce, fyrnlthed or unfurnithod. iWv.SM*Ave, IC*W? Dark*. Fullv shea earnetM. n/ru 'OAK CR'EKK -It environmentally oriented and offers a creek that wind* e?.?e»mti large •rsr; 451-3*41 ut nY,,A-A * > ' at Propei Hoi, ine ; Page 22 Thursday, May % 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN I Nursery School. Baked goods, toys, . Walk UT or lUttte at door. Transportation appliances, furniture, XHothes, craft*. 9 APTS. ajtV. -5 pjn. May 4^. 406 East 32nd. Split level luxury living.Beautiful studio Professional Service 2 Br.Furn.-SI50 units designed" for >5 matur*'students. Cashonty. 24 Hour Phone Service New contemporary decor. Walk-ins,' MOVING' SALE. Orange plastic 1 Br. Furn. -S130 pool, cable TV, shag carpet. Quiet WALK TO CAMPUS LET US HELP YOU FIND Summer Rates Start Today modular bookcase, rectangular table, elegant atmosphere. • Reasonably priced. Large one YOUR Private King size one bedrooms also available. ._ Carpeted,' stool, trashcan. Also mirror. 472-6776 apartments available. APARTMENT, Balconies -Dishwasher Leasing for Summer and Pall CA/CH, pool, sundeck, built-in kitchen. On Summer Lease NOW $105 to $119 Water & Gas Paid , Manager Apt. 103 104 E. 32nd 476-5940. If no answer, call 345-4555 4105 Speedway 451-2832.-If no answer, call 345-4555 ; FALL LEASE NOW TREES & VIEWS Nice 2 bedrooms furn. or unfurn. only $ mm. from downtown, 5 min. from UT.. . pr Large walk-ins, extra storage, private,balconies, lots of glass. From <179 plus • E—OAK KNOLL, 620 South 1st (use(Tlmbercreek entrance). 444-1269, 472­ 4162. Barry Gilllngwater Company. $155 ABP 1 bedrooms shag -paneling giant walk-ins -balconies Spanish furnishings 2423 Town Lake Circle . 444-8118 472-4162" Barry Gilllngwater Company : WILLOW ;i:SS mm HurryI Hurry1 Hurryl Summer Rates Start Today •'M 1 BR $155 2 BR $190 ALL BILLS PAID Shuttle Bus Route Dishwashers -2 Large Pools SecurityClubroom, Volleyball Cpyrf,,Move In Today -i-* v, 1901 Willow Creek ­I 444-0010 Whi EASY WALK uni( (3BLKS TO LAW SCHOOL) • apa S12S Bills Paid • . 40' Pool Covered Parking Summer Rates LA OASITA KE und 2900.Cole * 327-2239 ne> APTS. tan c.n to* CONSUL anc Hal ON TOWN LAKE hw picNew Roof -New Management wa 2 and 3 bedroom townhouse and falti 113 frdm S1B0 all bills paid. Summer from $145. On shuttle bus route, dishwasher, , disposal, central air, pool, Call 444-3411, or come by 1201jrinnin Ford Road, Apt, 113. Turn East off IH35 nn E. Riverside Drive. SUMMER RATES •2 wa ^10 West 26th"Large eSJciOTCtesand one • to bedroom apartments available for IR summer. CA/CH, all built-in Kitchens, ch completely furnished. Walk or rid* shut­ •ietoUniv^Paneiin^ S" .. Central Properties, Inc. et Ei SU ROCA or Q APTS. Gi w c< SUMMER & FALL LEASING . , el . 1 BR> 5135 • , 41Dishwasher • Nice Pool Covered Parking.•? PaneKng_ -v N 2400 Longview 470-5203 H SHUTTLE BUS CORNER & $1 HIGHLAND MALL , L G AREA ON SHUTTLE S b Huge 1 v ALL BILLS PAlti-,^w't,'r5': . sow wanted. Part or full time. 4pm-' Indtog >s • Very largeefflclency with beautifulpaife, NEW EFFICIENCY APARTMENT^'. RESUMES HONEST >1pm. si7 SouthLamar. Apply after J-M Paris was one thing. To lose; each other Sin > i,, , eling. Open beam ceiling, thick shag Summer rates. Near UT. Double in CasaWance was another.] But to lose Save Ttm*. (Save Money FEMALE ROOMMATE, Apartmen |.ii) 4carpetirtg-all built .In kitchen, pod, dishwasher, disposal, lull size stove :{wV/ith or without pictures. P-m. < «Kh other In Texas would be-ridiculous. to Gourmet -ton the Drag pvailabie June 1. One block from Uti (EASY) 4} iCA/CH, close toCampus andshuttle bus. shag carpet. 400 West 34th. 451-7*37 Alcoa has Especially when I'm a lousy SIS aw,ay, , -140/month plus electrlclty. 477-1459, 2 Day Service SUMMER WORK. City Of 4000 Avenue A or 4200 Avenue A. «SF » openings for summer work. For details with Texas international's fitting afidV^Sf 5533, 454-4423, 451-4533 ,Al| BEDROOM, furnished, quiet, small 472-3210 and 472-7677 call MAIN NUMBER In Dallas. 241-weekend flights to Dallas LowField. Ya .\i? 3471; Houston. 524-3020; Austin, 452-27M -. -#1$125 for summer. 459-4445. mm ^ or 452-449U San .AMonio, 142-455;... Fort_ worry about. •electricity, cell 477-4411 after J. §f# LoneStar Carpets wflf pay Worth, 4404M4. (CUp out and take •rr<5ARDENER$n Ijjff WARWICK y UNIQUE EFFICIENCY, $150 bills Midi home.) . 1 MALE, private bath, AC, on the drag!!>: 1„ Huge two bedroom,. $240 plus bills. S TYPING it good hourly wage plus Lawn & Garden ServiCt^ Take oyer lease..Mil! May lWh, SM.l%;;^PARTMENTS ?~room.*?«.-b-l,l4,7PJ^No '«»• Snerous commissions for TOPLESS DANCERS needSd.Hours)to Complete Summer , *w/rr>onm-473-1 Nueces. 474-3442 A ftesporojvw Typing Service m • Monday through Saturday. Apply In I®U f Bedroom -si50 ephone solicitors. Hours Guadalupe. SKVDIVE! Maintenance Available _ <,.i 1,1. ,1 person. Sit N' Bull, n ,5i' JlP .3* Efficiency -$122 -TIRED OF THE STERILECOMPLEX? \ Vi':;-v'•>&?%$ 4:00 -9:00, Monday - OT&76-8938 COOL FEMALE roroommate to share 2 m studioI apartment,apt $75 month, ••'bedroom SALESPERSON NEEDED, Contract - _ 5 Uwxury -&Ktra, Nice Apts. ^")|>|^^rtn™Hat*1007 West24thart at°17H aoo Guadalupt''' Thursday, j?;00 1:00, Austin Parachute tonter -.ABP, nodeposlt.I, Enfieldare* on Shuttle; j• sales. Experlen i necessary, evening -ODIOCKS campus iSwmm" WI*im Ar mui 4.^. «im />.•< Saturdayt;(Can hours. 4:904:30. m route. Cindy, 451-4M9. l:» View. AC pool, trees, $100. Call be No traveling. Call 474­ 2919 West Ave. ^fe?5ps«manager, 472-0690.' 474-1712 adjustable). I2U. FEi ROOMMATE , • v^or lnformation Please call or subletted;:: PROBLEM ^ t LE EFFICIENCY, lust off campus.39th and : Fatf^'SIi: Thesis Call 444-1930 MATURE COUPLE to manage North 272-5711 anytirtie is!s heedi I for summer. Quiet 2 bedroom ex near CR shuttle. 474-1972. ^^1 BEDROOM -$130 ..^.Guadalupe. Queen size bed, 4 burner apartment complex. Prefer one home PREGNANCY1 foulrplex ^ , Professional Resumes refrigerator; sofa, lots of room • during day. Nopetsor children. 4543003. ^INEFFICIENCY -$100 AC/CH. S125 ABP. 400 W. |j|olHassles Swa Scientific; •i* Austin Meternity Counseling Servlcei NEED TWO IMATURE male students tflL\ i ? hartrnni K&gWh,. No. 4. Call478-5131 preferably ;^|>n the Drag -Next to Gourmet \ * ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN.Part offers residential and non-resldentlet Share large J-bedroom apartment Iri >, 2 BEDROOM • $190 '.vV.before noon. programs. Located > blocks from UT *iver»lde"area next lall. 'Prefer time. Experienced, senior architecture LES AMISS .' ^l•-f®SS P... STUDY MEDICINAL |mok»ri. 471-220*. r |.-'f , ALL BILLS PAID student desired. 451-2414. SlOWest 24th, 472-9251. have beenIn this business jeji r-a AAD11C ;LARGEEFFICIENCY, lotsof windows, Sidewalk Cafe <4i. tor SO years ROOMMATE sumi FW-S«-LOCK5 CAMFF.US. r !•; ?ld«r' *'» ABP.400West29th No. 3.472- WANTED SERVICE representative to ' " IN.-MEXICO < -FEMALE tor ' : ' » xr? work for local rent-a-car business. Full B«st program for EnglUM ipMkers.K ^ "'MShare one bedroom apartment. mM «Sft .2408 tEONSSStSI""-:: : -• TrHNC v » s . 'ABP. NR shuttla.'444-i5o4. and part time eveitoble. Must be 21 or Write: Univertldad tnttriimMlc*na J \<< . over. Starting salary sl.to. 47M439. Aptoo. Postal 25V Salfl»oJ Coahollaw ' X^i %;;i;Save gas, walking distance University-business work FOREIGN CAR ii"«OOMMATE NEEDED IN DALLAS. I Mexico ' '"2 bedroom, H2 bath, CA/CH, Last Minute Service afternoons 4 p.m. -6 p.m. RESEARCHERS 4 WRITERS wanted MeXiCO f '.ryW*'- r:am moving permanently to Oallai end REPAIR Open 94 AAon-Th l. 9-5 for all areas: Govt., Business. Eng., Aheed a roommate fo share 2 bedrooW i OLD MAIN Toyota," ---• -­ APARTMENTS ^ Fri-Set 47M41*. .* .Wyice and repair on 240-C * Call John at "447-im lP$j£'0ENERAL DfTsun, Volvo, Opels, and VW. Maior. , MALE * ROOMMATE needed, "* No-801 47frWM'472-4*38 sinirics Phil., Education, etc. Call Mr. Meyers. 240C Toyoi -•.'Zfiv*. tune-up $14.SO plus parts. Free, Why y^^tlnw.011bus? Walkl^las^%bedroon? apiirtmeni*7ifrn'l'shed' 472-8936 30A Dobie Center -,OFFICE: W WANTED COUNTERPERSON. Must LEARN TO SAIU , , diagnosis, estimates, compression.) s^'cttWroom,r,^,Htype and drive. Apply Inperson. Dollar-Start your'summer vacation) by joining checks. Please try us. For information,; l * ­ ,TbK2! ^«dM,d^l; EXCELLENT nt-A-C day si25 and up. viniff . ^ Nice office, type as. depe^dabrif A-Day RentJk-Car. 3105 Manor Rd. our second 5 intensive sailing '.""STUDENT WANTED' to sh'ar* SECRETARY TYPIST Interectlng work. All instruction whl le sailing course. -friendship and furnished two bedroom - WEHi aboard our 44' sloop in trie Gulf of 1111 PART TIME HELP wanted, needs car, BEDROOM, air-conditioned, private' producing finest quality typing: for Associated^^^ Personnel •••' fi-'ni.-riri if>r irVuMti. -• Lj house for summer, Near park and free; g»[$e«ln^|Court Reporters Associated. Mexico, iwey 18-22, indude|t overnite, entrance, water, furnished. Couple, no students and faculty members in every >7-, 'pool. Bike focampus.Ien|oy goodmusic ; iraduation crufte. Wrlte^rc»M VIHInfliv $95/month. 472-1091. field for is years, will take meticulous 314 HighlandMallBlvd. ••»••••• • pnd quiet times. Dick. 454-29*0/ care to typelaw briefs,researchpapers, ; .451-HOI ..liSailing, P.O. Box 4311, AranMl», v ASTROLOGY GRADUATE STUDENT with Texas 78373. 749-3940. • . BX. reports, theses, and dissertations NEAR UNIVERSITY. Two bedroom Accounting degree for temporary work Readings and Classes^ accurately, observing proper forms. apartments. 2404 Rio Grande. 702 W. auisting.fi^audlt of small corporation. Latest model RECEPTIONIST KENRAY Apartments and Townhouses 24Vi. AC. GR8-4938. IBM Executive carbon Must be available at least JO hours for information^ l ribbon typewriter. All work proofread 4 MOUNTAIN .'.RECREATION;L >y Hill Circle. $45 per month. 441-, under oew ownership, 2122 Hancock Dr. 478-0742 < -SECRETARY weekly, $2.25/hour. Please phone Mr. Call on. next to Americana Theater, walking dis­LARGE ONE BEDROOM, small quiet Dale J^oody for appointment. 459-7487. and Science -Colorado State, Ro" tance of North Loop Shopping Center complex, trees, shuttle. $130 plus LJjjht typing, stable, great people, small University summer program -§37-2765 ESPONSIBLE female roommate for '^ and Luby'S. One half block from shuttle electricity. 4007 Avenue C, Apt. 201. 459-PART AND FULL TIME land sales 4445 or 4S4-0759. designed primarily f<»r non-\ " Share two bedroom apartment. 3001 end Austin bedroom, Associated Personnel positions available-Men and women; transit. 2 1 A to h r? -A0 2 ..River. Shuttle. $84 ABP. Bridget. townhouses, extra large. Two bedroom t Services Carrnecessary. CM! 444-3140.' science students coinbinesri 1-4808. •yfi flats, one and two baths. CA/CH, dis­ UT AREA renting for summer. 2 large SECRETARIAL SERVICE; non-technical science courses "314 Highland Mall BlvdS^, hwasher, disposal, door to door garbage bedrooms, baths, CA/CH, laundry, ' 2 109 East 10th St __ "** with long weekends of rJver" _A MALB ROOMMATE;**!», -pirkup maid service It desired, 4720149 ^ 451-8201 oSf " ^Xerox or IBM ptiol. pool. 474-9813, 477-2408. -w- ster,summer school; Move lnMay waihateria Incomplex. See owners, Apt. Theses, Dissertations, Themes, ROOMS trips, backpacking, camping* ' 454-5093 after 5. 113 or call 451,-4848i.«jp^.v^>.»f^.;:r.!.-: SUBLET MAY-AUGUST. 2 bedroom * PR's, 8C Reports, Resumes * summit ascents I n the, : { spacious, old home Enfield area. $22S Multillthing, Binding > COPIES roommate to. share > : monthly. 474-5597 efter 4 p.m. Rockies. JUrie 10 -July [12. For-1 iCOOL FEMALE fWtthlnflJr«mAteX . PETITE FIRST CLASS f s>?a^»rhrjent, Kathy after 4 p.m. 385-8708,. brocmlre, write: AARS, i3ox 15, Also; Thesis-Dissertation Reproductlon;'cW!IU|.z3M. ; COLONIAL MANOR. 1212 West 13th. SUMMER"-'^ ROOM, BATH, Physics Dept., CSU, Fort Binding; Prlntlng/Multlllth, Reductions «T , , WOODWARD APARTMENTS Near shuttle, summer rental. One, two ruRVfffjVTT;;; 1722 E. Woodward Office 107 bedroom, carpeted, AC,carport, nopets, STARK TYPING. Experienced theseis^ -BREAKFAST NOOK Collins, Colorado. 80521, ;? j® 'H OUSEMATE NEEDED tor summer. ~ v 444-7555 water-gas paid. $94-up. 472-4838. dissertations, PR's, etc. Printing and WORK. rge house and yard. Own.room, $47.50. lus bills, Brenda. 453-977*. ,1, 2, or 3 bedrooms : :-:K- Binding, Specialty^ Technlcal. Charlene , /\ adding machine repair Highland Mall, & Capitol Plaza. Large 1 Must have car and be able to deal with * y1930 San Antonio Reasonable Retes To EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Graduate " ­ and undergraduate work. Choice of ty public. :$2.50 hour up. Apply .3004 > Sales, Service, Rentals Ww-:'8. 2 bedroom with all the extras.. From styles w-BertkArrtericard Lane. 453-7914, 472-4142. Barry $137.-50 plus electricity. 1105 Clayton FURN. HOUSES yles and sizes. Barbara Tullofc Guadalupe, Rear suite 108,4 p.m. dally. 4/ 'Singles $67.50 Don't tie MasterCharge 5124. Call 474-4921 or 474-4239 Gillingwater Company Doubles $42.50 ABC TYPEWRITER CO. Advertise LAKE AUSTIN -15 minutes VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diversified SEMESTER LEASE. Large new 18, 2 campus/downtown. 1, 2, and 3 bedroom Services-Graduate and undergraduate Newly redecorated, daily 407 San Jacinto Blvd. up your! mobile homes. $8S to $140. Mack's typing, printing, binding. 1515 Koenlg bedrooms with shag, icemeker, STUDENTS , maid, new lounge, color TV, Marina. 327-1891, 327-1151. Lane. 459-7205. clubroom, TREES. Secluded location in washer-dryer. Hot plate and Northeast off Manor Road. From $159 NEAT, ACCURATE and prompt typing. allowed.: Free ABP. 2402 Wheless Lane. 926-4202, 472-SUMMER LEASE. Unusupl 2-1 home. refrigerator 4162. Barry Gillingwater Company. Above Barton's. All conveniences. 40 cents per page. Thetes 75 cents. Call parking one block from Cam­in COMBS & SHEARS Responsible couple. 1000 Lund.$200.447-447-2737. SUMMER FULL 1177, 459-5334. pus. Presents Vera & Judy ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom with ;Two well-trained stylists specializing InHOLLEY'S TYPING SERVICE. Aevery extra. Furnished or unfurnished TIME JOBS unused layeredALLANOALE PARK. 4 from $139.50 plus electricity. 807 West bedrooms, 2 complete service from typing through men S> women, wash t wear "'HHousin baths, appliances, central air; binding. Available until 10 p.m. 476-9265 477-5777 cuts. We are interested in maintaining Lynn. Barry Gjlllngwater Company. 477­ 7794, 472-4162. con venlent:" $23S/month for good Experienced in ell fields. Near campus. $40t/month, no experience required, the Pr housekeepers. May to August. 454-2800. 1401 Mohle Drive. 474-3018. . paid training, travel expenses, for products interview time, TEXAN DORM. 1905 Nueced: Doubles - Space 7 -Doble /Ma|l«. GREAT PEOPLE! Brand'new twq, $52.50/summer session; Singles -477-0433 THREE BEDROOM house for rent June TYPING WANTED. Neat and fast. 50 bedroom apartments, completely $95.00/summer sessloffT Dally maid 1 through August 20.454-4553. PAX 1721-cents/page. 472-4212. -fumlshedi Frast-free refrigerator, self^. Call 454-1234 cleaning ttven, dishwasner,..$149.50 plates allow* Two blocks from MOBILE HOME for rent over summer. CROCKETT COMPANY -typing of ail "Monday-Friday around the monthly, $75 deposit. Convenient campus. Co-Ed. Resident. Managers, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. $110 plus bills. 385-sorts! Themes, theses, dissertations, Bergstrom and Highway 183. Students 5201. • xerox : 5-9 p.m. " 447-1740. walk, bike, or bus /^;^ . resumes, and other pepers, and families welcome. Manager 385-2043 anywhere in Central, 1 ^ , copies, binding. 5530 Burnet Road. 453­ after 4:00. BEST ACCOMODATION, single room, house.* SMALL 2-BEDROOM HOUSE.: Ei 7987. AC Iblock campus. Summer rates, Austin-fully furnished, eir conditioned. ^ w PEACEFUL WEST AUSTIN. Colorful Mustang, 205:We*• vest 20th. 472-1941. 45> Summer sublet. Couple preferred. 924-THEMES, REPORTS, law nOTeS. 452-4447 efficiency. Shag, complete kitchen, near 4372, 5pm-7pm. Reasonable. Mrs. Fraser. 474-1317. Enfield shuttle. $110 plus Elect. 1211 Sell thenn uacMuupe West 8th (off Blanco) 476-3895, 472-4142 SUMMER ROOMS. Doubles: SSO/montti. new modem 2 BEDROOM mobile hornet furnished. TERM PAPERS, themes, theses, law UNIVERSITY CO­ Barry Gillingwater Company. Singles $45/month,air conditioned, close 500 Bastrop Hwy. $90 plus bills. 475-4434, memos, etc.-etc. Fast, accurate, furnishings to campus, deposit required. 477-5307 or 472-4224. reasonable, rushes-welcome. IBM OP »fs now accepting FLEUR DE LIS. 404 East 30th. Mature 477-2S54. 2414 Rio Grande. Selectrlc. 243-2893. ,. to students. Lovely 1, 2 bedrooms. Welk to 10 ml.nutes/campus. 4 Applications Fall SUMMER for andscaped tennis campus. Shuttle. Summer rates. 477- tSANTA ELAINA HOUSE, 2411 Rio downtown bedrooms, 2 baths, AC, appliances, GOOD TYPING. Error free, 50 ^^^^rtyards courts 5282. cents/page, 451-3541, 474-2212. Rush Grande. CA/CH, kitchen, maid service, University washer, dryer, semi-furnished. empIoyment. $75. 472-3484. Don. $250/month. 928-2390. APARTMENT FINDERS service. 472- Some of the positions The 4162. Just North of 27th pwN ROOM, furnished house, female, GRADUATE COUPLE, faculty. Rent will be starting as early yard. Shuttle.MO/month. Plusbills. 452­ our house for summer. CA/CH, 3-1,' Guadalupe, , ONE BEDROOM Apartment -$155.00. many-extras. About $140. Call 452-8230. as JUly 29, J974. 1488.1100 Clayton. , Daily ^Luxury, extra nice, close to campus, shuttle bus. Warwick Apartments. 2919 Applications may ATTENTION MEN! Furnished room SUMMER LEASE. Beautiful 3-2-2 home be West Avenue. 474-1712. ABP, attractive; close to campus- in Enfield area. CA/AII appliances. Call _t — anytime, 477-8023. picked in the Kitchen and bath privileges. Call 452­ • up Texan! NORTHEAST. Huge one and two 2341 days. After 7:30 p.m., 472-2789. Ask bedroom. Complete kitchens, lots of Personnel Office. for Bobbye.. . . storage. From (125 plus electricity. 1402 East St. Johns (by Reagan High School) YES/ we datype Equal OpportunityEmployer ; SOUTHEXST^oom for summer and place 453-4308. 472-4142. Barry Gillingwater UNCLASSIFIED year. Private entrance, beth, refrig. 2 Company. Freshman themes. blocks-campus. Available after May 12. 472-9448T" \ 2bd-2ba apt. one vacancy 477-3388. LARGE/ONE and two bedrooms. CA/CH, disposal, dishwasher, pool, Want to buy electric fan. 478-3944. Why not start out with COUNSELOR ad, shuttle. $150 up, ABP. Now leasing. WANTED Versailles Apartments, 4411 Airport.452- good grades!' $10,000 -415,000 8385. Free kittens. Call 453-9798. Need MA Psychology, some trelning call provided, salary up w(th experience. An LAW SCHOOL -one block, Large one '45 Mustan^,_$750. 459-8084. 4100 Ave. G. 472-3210 and 472-7677 equal opportunity employer. PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH and two bedrooms. CA/CH, disposal, Associated Personnel Fender-Dual show spk bx. 451-8519. and wife seek apartment or pool. $150 up, ABP. River Oaks, 3001Red 2707 Hemphill Park f -V Services house in Austin to rent for 4-6 471-5244. River. 472-3914. Gibson Les Paul Jr. $235, 451-8519. 314 Highland Mall -weeks in May and June. (.Ap­ SAVE $40 to $50 per month on summer 175 Yamaha. Call evenings. 444-8497. ffl-W proximately 12/May ­ rates. Save $180 to $240 on year leases. LOST & FOUND Also taking Fail leases. Swimming pool, BOOKKEEPER 20/June). Please contact Male roommate wan 451-5592 9-10pm. study room/ security, no pets, walking Charles Ross; 617-B Madison distance to UT and Capitol. 1802 West LOST: SMALL FEMALE Black Cat was TRAINEE Ave., Charlottsville, Virginia. Avenue. Phone 474-5554. . Conn Altos 22 453-2104 weerlng yellow collar. Vicinity of 30th, $375 Plus RIO LADO APARTMENTS and Hemphill Park. Reward. Call 474- 22903 WALK TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled Seari washei\& dryer $250. 453-2104. 4730 after 5:30. Good advancemem, free perking, good office experience, some typing, training rooms $75., all bills paid. (908 West 29th, provided, want:dbl,mattress, braidrugs834-5181. $99.50, all bills paid. 2907 San Gabriel white diamondon chest iniured claw on Associated Personnel Services Designed'with the student in mind. 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom, furnished & un­ in the rear). Efficiency apartment LOST "RUSTY", 9 months Irish Setter Apt. c.Central Properties Incorporated. Free tiger kittens. 478-4392. . . •. front foot.East Riverside-Area. Reward.> I 314 Highland Mall ' GARAGE TO RENT 451-4533. 444-3837. 451-8201 * in UnFversity Area furnished. Individual Heating Sc AC, 3 exciting colorsPool with diving Refrigerator for sele. $8 477-4485. MINI APARTMENT. Open beam ...***. » .. r-' FOUND 4/24 Long haired white cat. E. For storage of car. board, Tennis, Laundry, Front & Rear entrances, Parking at your door. Lost: Spitz pup., 459-8084. 4100 Ave. G-Riverside area. 441-US5. ceiling, shag carpet throughout,allbuilt- MOVIE Call 472-2746 in kitchen, color coordinated. CA/CH, Found: blue parakeet 471-7450. r Ask for Newman . 1 Dishwasher, Disposal, Color TV, Recreation Roomhi^ pool, near campus. 4000 Avenue A. $123 LARGE REWARD for return of Irish bills paid.' 452-5533, 451-4533. Central Setter. 4 months old, male, large,-: Properties Inc. Country home for summer $100 243-1133. answers to "Eric;" Lost: South 1st ! * 1 Bill* Paid ;;J. -t West Gibson area. No collar..,244-1745 or , < v -NE£DS• -­ woliensek tepe recorder. 441-8333. NOB HILL APTS., 2520 Longvlew. Now 244-1922, 453-9417. BARTENDER PRESTIGE HOME. Three bedroom leasing summer and fall-Large 1, 2 ' NEAT APPEARANCE -APPLY IN with large living area for summer. 459-Preleasing for Fall term ^Special Summer Rates| Metal wardrobe,4x3x2V4 $20 471-2548. bedroom. Dishwasher, disposal, shag PERSON 1 PM.• 3 P.M. 9025. ' . carpet, pool, laundry. 1 block tennis TUT0RINCS 1408 Sal) Jacinto courts. Va block IC shuttle. Summer Wedding dress sz 12, veil $50 472-H33. COLOR SLIDES of campus at night, T 2989 E. 51st (off Manor Road) 926-8760 especially orange tower. Day 478-4454, rates, 477-8741. Wooden display cases, aft. 452-7002. that you can: r night 47%9042. MATH TUTORING tittiniathi Sanctioned Straakina PART NOW LEASING for summer. One understand. 474-0757. Thanks "12" for the year. Love, Jpen. large rugs, couch, easy chairs. Good bedroom apartment and 2 bedrooms. WANTED: firm double mattress, desk, One and two bath apartments. Large :'45 Opel $300 best Offer 459-9539. if VIOLIN, VIOLA, FIDDLElessons. Near TIME pool, CA/CH, V/i from UT Law School. city transit, shuttle. Call Carol, 454-2885 condition. Please. 834-5181, 837-1252. ^ Shuttle bus route, ABP. Cesa Del Rio after six, evenings. " Apartments., 3212 Red River, 478-0472. THE ODD COUPLE who would en|oy ASTRONOMY, PHYSICS, MATH: WORK " sharing comfortable oldfashioned house EFFICIENCY, carpeted, oneblock Law tutoring. Experienced tutor with with a grandfather physically able but. master's degree in Astrophysics. Call School, $95/month. 2700 Swisher. UNF. APARTS. (Days) fired of living alone. Low rent,-­ Manager apartment no. 203. 478-4550. Martin anytime. 441-4141. unfortunately no petsor children. Box D-.*w Yard & Landscape work. 2, Austin, Texas 78712. MAY FREE. Sublet until August-One., Above average pay > $124 -$159. GAS, WATER, and TV cable READING TUTOR. Diagnosis and bedroom; unfurnished, shuttle, paid. Oneand 2 bedroom, pool, paneling, dishwasher, pool, CA/CH, cable. $135 remediation. Evenings and weekends. Start at once and dishwasher. Two blocks to shuttle. ABP. 442-0815! " 837-2152. Can develop into full time West 39th and Avenue B. 454-0340, 452- ROOM & BOARD summer job. You must have 4342. . -v : ,g your own transportation. For •fi? NO RENT UNTIL THE FIRST BELLSON DORM for Men. ExcellentGREAT OAK APARTMENTS. One'" 1 BDRM .lBath, $127.50 plus Elect. •jhomd-cooked meals. block to Law School, quiet. Luxury, two FURN. DUPLEXES Interview, write P.O. Box. Air conditioned, 2 BDRM • 1< > Bath, $149.00 plus Elect. 3021, Austin, 78764. bedroom, two bath, shag carpet, On Shuttle Bus Route, Convenient to maid, swimming pool. Now taking sundeck, pool. Now renting for summer - ..reservations for summer and fall. 2410 Capital Plaza. Gas, Heat & Cooking, JUNE THROUGH AUGUST, Sublease ' Rio Grande, 474-5480. and thereafter. 477-3388. : CA/CH, Free Ceble Television, Pool, two bedroom $155;23rd andSan Gabriel;:Laundry. Room, Shag Carpet, Pets For Information: 471-7(71, 478-5013: SUMMER ROOM, BOARD Vacancies, NOW LEASING Super summer rates. I .. allowed. SE­TELEPHONE end 2 bedroom, pool, grills, tennis coutis its! '$120-8150 semester contracts. Over-21 close by. $125 -$145.1200 West 40th, No#; -KAILUA VILLAGE APTS. near UT, two bedroom, one bath,' OPERATOR women or Gradual* men, AC, 5211 Cameron Rd. carpeted, ~H carport,small private comfortable Seneca House Co-Op (old 135. 451-3333. yard. $225. 34M083. Most ONg BLOCK from Law School..-.' experience necessary, will train. Hoyr» Towervlew Apartments. Large, nlceW, /;-1 fo suit your schedule, $a.80/hour plus, , 451-3044, 834-4947 back < speak and dress neatly. No-Varsity House). 477-0225. bonus. Apply. In person only, »em-9pm. decorated. Gas. water, TV Cable pald.^; 300E.llth,Ro $110. No pets;.472-0191. jfts&t"l.SIJ/ 4 Room 134." FOR RENT *tr SUMMER RATES CONVENIENTLY LOCATED. Ontri ' busesi.­ bedroom, pool, ceble, shuttle,city bi 'THE FLOWER PEOPLE need people10 '4 (plus electricity. 1510 West 41h. 474^: sell. Highest paid commission, lowest GIANT DOUBLEGARAGE/STORAGE. : AT CIRCLE VILLA 'ZiSW-5® Yob lock, tin roof. Rear 3202 Nudces. ' X-.V2S 2323 TownlaKe Circle o;,:4 prices, paid dally. Call 4S)-?tM or come $25/month. 447-1177, 459-5334. by;430t Gvadakipe. MUST SUBLEASE one bedroom NEW 14x40 house trailer,3 Mdroom.Tw ,: apartment In ?i»ir;H Pf'c* SIGN A 9 MONTH LEASE AND GET 1 FULL OR PART TIME-work, $300450^ betlv^carpetod. draped, CA/C^t,$150 mo. u negotiable. Call447-5110 for information. gutter month. Cell for apiwlntment . MONTH DURING THE SUMMER FREE r ' , r i t MONTAGE APARTMENTS are renting' for summer. One b^droofn^ CA«. *hao, 1 Bedroom -unfurnished .r. S130 plus electricity . ASSISTANT BROADCAST . heer campus. $U4,?0, ,*T3».50 «nd PRODUCER. Work for one of Austin'* electricity. 2812 Rio Orande. 4H-2977. 2 Bedroom • 2 Bath -unfurnished -$170 plus electricity leading advertising and production Shuttle bus, muzlk, pool, shag carpet, small complex, flrms. Medla Communications. SUMMER STUDEfWsr The Cloisters Challenging position with excellent UNF. HOUSES apartments on ToWn A.eke offering our i • very clean. -' • workfng-environment. Appilcants myst ..exceptional ,rates. Shuttle bus at front ,,imil rial SKIIIS, ana seme euaw have secretarial sklllt, and some audlo door" fhree pools. Our prw^ttnents V.8II 441-0014 • ' "or '^441-3020 and film edltlnSiting experience. Semi 34-1 NORTHWEST. Air.conditioned. recommehd us. 1201 Tpwn Creek Drive. resumefor appoiiMAent. no Mutual $210. 452-4012. 442-4313, Savin ,Austin, T*. 78701. TmHTpTlVri *2$ * Thursday, May % 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 23 iif^'­ d#" m ll*5^2®' Nixon's Lawyers fi/e Petition .'.j mm Washington (Apr^^resid^nr® •-sous^t _ Nixon's lawyers moved to quash a prosecutor Archibald Cox. Siitica was prosecution subpoepa Wednesday and upheld by the U.S. Courtof Appeals for the hinted strongly they are moving toward a District of Columbia. ; i Supreme Court showdown over whether • Cox lost his job over the incident, but the WhiteHouse must give any more tapes Nixon ultimately turned over the, tapes in and documentsWatergate Question rather than take an appegal to the •j investigators. ' upreme Court. 1 lit, a motion filed in U.S. District Court, * < At his news conference Wednesday : the(.President's attorneys asked Judge -morning St. Clair had asserted; earlier John.J;Sirica to quash a subpoena seeking indications from the White Hoijise that tapes and records of 64 Wiute House Nixon would seek to calla halt todemands cwiversations for use by the Watergate special prosecutor in the cover-up trial of seven defendants. A SPOKESMAN for the officeof special prosecutor Leon Jaworski said the White House motion would be resisted. A hearing was set forThursday morning in Sirica's . courtroom, -v "<¥<& -we will resist," the prosecutor's office said. "This is material we need. We will do everything we'can to secure it." -While White House chief Watergate lawyer James St. Clair at a news conference earlier in the day had avoided gg?,a direct anwer to questions about a -^Supreme Court fight, the motion filed ?|f^ater, indicated he was preparing to take jp.the battle to the high court. >,i. In the motion, St. Clair raised some ^points of law which he said he was not piressing at this point but was mentioning th£m "in order that they may be preserved should it be necessary for this case to reach a court in which Nixon vs. Sirica is not a controlling precedent." pi;'THE ONLY COURT through which this " case could normally pass ir. which the Nixon vs. Sirica case of last fall is not ' controlling would be the Supreme Court: In the earlier case Sirica rejected similar White House arguments last . October and ordered Nixon to turn over By SUSIE STOLER Texan Staff Writer When the 18-to 20-year-olds were granted the right to vote on July 7, 1971, the possible impact of a "student bloc" was hotly contested locally. Yet after three years of various state and local elections, it is difficult to trace a pattern of student influence at the ballot box. --The fears of conservative interests that students would wrest control of local government from the hands of established political figures havelessened from their initial high pitch. At one point, in July, 1972,. concerned local businessmen met in Austin to discuss challenging the legality of "transient" voter registration in Travis County. A FEDERAL judge in Tyler decided the issue of student registration in October,1972, by handing down a -decision which voided Article 5.08 of the Texas Election , Code. The article had required students to give intentions of indefinite residence in the county of v registration after graduation. In retrospect, the impact of a student voting bloc < which caused initial anxiety has not been consistent. fi w\ A computerized analysis of the 1972 November gs. ?£> f. general election conducted by The Texan indicated the # j; pewly enfranchised voters canceled each other out in the final result. % However, in thespecial election runoff held in August, r 1973, to fill-the State Senate seat vacated by Charles Herring's resignation, students turned out in large numbers to aid in Lloyd Doggett's'Victory over Maurice Angiy. * Newcomers Run for Governor w ¥: Two State GOP Races Contested (Editor's Note: This is the eighth in a I' series on the contested races in die Saturday primary and the involved.) §? By DICK JEFFERSON i '"•••• . Texan Staff Writer ~ |: Republican voters will decide only two" 1' races in Saturday's * primary election, since the remainder of the ballot is j|'composed erf noncontested races: Governor t*. ­ rW'/'-'­ : .^A pair of political newcomers'are • running in the governor's race. This is the first year Texas voters will choose the !•- governor for a four-year term instead of the former two-year term. §i' ft' Granberry Sk Jim Granberry, former Lubbock mayor, K. has largely ignored his Republican p counterpart, focusing his attack on I-Democratic Gov. Dolph Briscoe, whom Granberry feels "failed the Texas people s with his lack of leadership." -jfV- Jim Granberry for tapes and documents after h^> turned over 1,200 pages of transcripts to the House Judiciary Committee Tuesday. St. Clair said the materials turned over to the committee, which is s tudying impeachment, contained all tlhat the committee and the prosecutor need. In the petition asking that Jaiworski's subpoena be quashed, St.Clair ma intained that the material sought covered "confidential communications' of the President" and that it should be up to the President "rather than for a court, to decide when the public interest requires that he exercise his consti tutional privilege to refuse to produce information." FACED WITH a Thursday deadline for responding to Jaworski's subpoena, St. Clair also discussed in tb e news conference Nixon's reasons for making public more than 1,200 pages of edited transcripts of Watergate tapes. He also disclosed that the House Judiciary Committee seeks more than140 additional tapes for its impeachmentinquiry. Discussing the Jaworski subjpoena, St. Clair argued that the massive public release of transcripts by Nixon Tuesday strengthens his effort to have the subpoena quashed. He said he will move Student Bloc DOGGETT 1XH)K all 13 University area precincts, carrying as much as 90 percent of the vote in some boxes. Although Doj;gett credited students with helping his victory, he refused to say a "student bloc" had won him the race, which drew only 28 percent of registered voters to the piolls. "Generally s.peaking, there's not a great deal of difference in thie turnout of students than that of other interest groups in the county," Ken Wendler, chairperson of the Travis County Democratic Executive Committee, said. "THE IDEA of a large student turnout in terms of registered voter percentages is a smokescreen," he added. Many political observers agree that students tend to vote for the same candidates in certain races, but the actual impact of that mass voting is debatable. "Students dom't reallyblocvote,although theyoisually vote similarly,'.' Robert Howard, chairman of Student Action Committee, said. Wendler and other political Sources disagreed. "Obviously, situdents vote in large blocs, but I never have felt it right to address the student voteas a big bad wolf; neither ar«> students just a bunch of sheep to be led around," Wendler said. STUDENT influence at the polls is felt most strongly in local special Jnterest races, such as nuclear power and City Council elections,Sandy Kress, formerStudent Government president, said. "In the first three years after students could vote, they held power as a bloc by themselves, but now the different associations and ties between the University and other community interests have broadened that influence," Kress explained. Similar attitude:;on the spreadingof student influence in local issues were expressed by Steve Guton, Attacking what he Calls Briscoe's lack" McBrayer of initiative, Granberry has said, "Most Texans want leadership from their Odell McBrayer is running a different governor. They don't want more of the type of gubernatorial campaign from his present attitude of letting things drift along until a>crisis develops." Granberry, in advocating a quick solution to the public school funding problem, said, "The governor misled public school officials when he assured them of a special session, but never carried through." The GOP hopeful also is a strong advocate Of the inclusion of a right-to­work article in the proposed constitution, including a ban on the agency shop. He said Ik would like to see "annual sessions of the Legislature, with restrictions to improve governmentalefficiency." He added, "Better management of the governor's office is necessary to eliminate the patchwork programs that have been carried'on." • • Odell McBrayer Page 24 Thursday, May 2, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN V...-. opponents, or any other candidate. "I want folks to pray for me and my political race," is McBrayer's philosophy. McBrayer, a Fort Worth Lawyer, has pledged an administration based on "the Christian principle." The major issue in his campaign has been "to return these principles to government and to bring governmentcloser to the people." To accomplish this task he is planning to establish town hall meetings and suboffices inlocal communities,as well as a hotline to the governor's office. Like his campaign opponent, McBrayer also favors the inclusion of a right-to-work provision in the proposed state constitution. To his opponent'slabeling him afanatic, McBrayer replied, "And, you know, I guess I am. If a fanatic is one who loves his country and his God, I figure I am a fanatic...." McBrayer feels he can garner the minority vote because, "people just want someone to be aware of their needs. Lieutenant Governor The GOP LieutenantGovernor race also has two candidates for the new four-year term. Among other things the lieutenant governor presides over the State Senate and Is acting governor when the governor is out of state. Marshall Ga$(bfd Marshall, a Dallas broker, is running on a platform that the present lieutenant governor lacks the leadership needed for the position. He criticizes Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby for his lack of leadership, "especially during the . ethics reform debate I donot feel Texans want four more years of .la^fc of leadership." ' gr V 4 £ 38®-­ ;wo grounds: t ,• "Especially now,'clearly the prosecution must have enough evidence to proceed to try these cases. And knowing Mr. Jaworski, I am confident that he wouldn't have indicted these people if he didn't think he had enough evidence to convict them." • Acknowledging {hat the White House has a duty to make available materials that would be helpful to the defendants, he said, "everything we know of is in that book (transcripts)i What's exculpatory is there." St. Clair contended there was a significant difference between the Jaworski' subpoena and one issued last year in the name of former special prosecutor Archibald Cox. He said the Cox subpoena, which led directly to the explosive firing of Cox, was on behalf of a federal grand jury and that two court decisions that went against Nixon in that case were "based on the proposition that the grand jury has sort of unique requirements." The Jaworski subpoena, he noted, is aimed at providing materials for use in court trials rather than in. grand jury deliberations. Asked whether Nixon woultl abide by an adverse Supreme Court decision should the Jaworski subpoena lead to a court fight, St. Clair said: "I wouldn't want tb comment one way or the other because I have not discussed it with the President, and I would not want to presume on his decision." . IN ANY CASE, he said, "I don't believe that we'll come to that." St. Clair also was asked to outline the strategic advantages NiXon hoped to reap by making public the massive array of edited transcripts. He cited the following •SmSs"1' 'the basic consideration: "People-were getting more and more, imbued with the idea that the President had something to hide, to theextent that it .^endangered the presidency, sb to speak.... tfe"The facts ought to be known and then r let's argue about thfem-And I predict there's going to be a lot of argument over the next weeks, months and even years." St. Clair volunteered that the staff of the Judiciary Committee is seeking tapes of 141 or 142 additional presidential conversations. He said he hoped the committee would take a second look at the request in light of Tuesday's disclosures and decide not to press it.fl; $-v Move $ r , .. Tm Plans Made By Lawyer HOUSTON (AP) — A lawyer for Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, a defendant in the Houston mass murders case, said Wednesday he plans to file papers Friday before the Texas. Supreme Court asking that a San Antonio judge move Henley's trial out of that city. Lawyers for Henley said Monday they would ask the Texas Supreme Court on Wednesday for permission to file the writ of mandamus. . Ed Pegelow, one of the attorneys, said Wednesday night another trial had forced postponement of his trip to Austin. Henley's lawyers say they will ask the high court to order Dist. Judge Preston Dial to act on their motion for a changeof vienue'. campaign manager for Larry Bale$' bid for election to Congress. ; ^ : "Students have established a f>isis in about 13 precincts for action and are moving out to exert a larger influence throughout Travis County," he said, CAMPAIGN managers^for Other candidates in Saturday's primary agreed that younger voters tend to bloc'vote. "With their similar interests, it's not surprising that many students would vote for the same candidates in elections," said Phillip Patman, with the Tjgvis.County Briscoe re-election campaign. Students are likeany other votinggroup present atthe polls, said Tony Proffitt, campaign director for U.S. Rep. J.J. "Jake" Pickle's re-election bid. "Generally,. students are interested in the same things as other people are. It's just a question of their priorities," he* said. ... ... . ' A prime question in assessing the impact of student votes is whether the newness of voting rights will fade and be replaced by apathy. "THERE'S SOME apathy in student voting. They're more interested in getting a degree and getting out than they used to be. In that sense they've conservatized," said Bilj Anderson of the Frances Farenthold for Governor campaign. Another observer, Stacy Suits, president of University Young Democrats, finds students not "asfired up as the last" elections in 1972. I guess McGovern's defeat and Watergate have something to do with people beingdisillusioned with politics." In the final tabulation, the mere presence of students at the polls Saturday will not be the deciding factor in any race. More important Will be whether the generally liberal student voters turn out in larger percentages than voters, in other more conservative county areas. Marshall also supports the strengthening of state and local government "to battle thegrowing federal bureaucracy." Skates While both candidates have run a low-key election, Troy Skates, the other candidate for the GOP Lieutenant governor's race, filed "to prove people can run for office without spending huge sums of money and win." Skates, sin Austin businessman who ran two years ago as a Democrat, also is running on the lack of leadership issue. Among the issues Skates iscampaigning on, public school financing tops his : priorities. ^ He favors an equal distribution system. Under this system all school revenue would come in to thestate and be issued on a per-student amount. He also is a strong advocate of the creation of a state agency tocontrol utilityrates.iq, Troy Skates ** i if I'M & -Taxan Sketch by John By«r* •R * •Wif iM on By United Pre*g International A Dallas man held prisoner in his farm outhouse by a marauding boar hog ahd Texa^Supreme^ rt n*ma^was.yarded14,146for hisinjuries Wednesday by the i ™fJwh court overturned a lower court decision and said Paul Marshall whs entitled to collect the damages from John C. Ranne, the owner of the hog. Pflas had denied Marshall any damages on grounds that he contributed to his injury by negligently failing to shoot the hog before it had a oi attack him as he walked from his farmhouse to a pickup truck on Jan. Records in the case show the boar had escaped from Ranne's hog farm and had roamed Marshall s farm for several weeks, charging Marshall 10 to 12 times and tend1""8 10 an outhouse several times before charging him and biting his Oil Jan. 21,1970, Marshall had fed his own hogs and saw the boar about100 yards went uito the house to change clothes for the return trip to Dallas, and said he looked for the boar before he left the house because, accordingto thecourt record, he always had to look before he made a move." ;^started toward his pickup, and when he was about 30 feet from it;near the outhouse, he heard a noise behind him;" court records say, "turnedaround and saw the boar charging toward him. He put out his hand defensively," but the boar grabbed it and bit it severely." Before he was injured by the hog, Marshall had left a note in Ranne's mailbox saying John, your boar has gone bad, He is trying_to chase me off the farm. He stalks us just like a cat stalks a mouse every time he catches us out pf the house We are going to have to get him out before he hurts someone." W The SupremeCourtsaid Marshall's actionscould not be considered contributory negligence in the mishap, because the hog did not leave him a free choice of alternatives -he could only remain a prisoner inside his own farmhouse, or go out and take the risk of being attacked* _ Both Ranne and Marshall lived in Dallas, but owned adjoining hog farms in Van lanat county. news Sadat Supports Peace Efforts ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (AP) — President Anwar Sadat of Egypt said Wednesday night he is fully confident Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger will work out a Syrian-Isifaeli disengagement pact on the Golan Heights. ^ ' Sadat also Said he may take up with Kissinger the possibility of U.S. arms supplies for Egypt but that the subject had not been discussed yet. Two weeks ago^ Sadat announced ffiat E^rwas ending its 18-year reliance on Russia for weapons. He charged the Soviets with making long delays in proibised arms shipments and with trying to.use arms as a club to oojrit'rol Egypt's foreign policy. > Sa^lat stressed that Syrian President Hafez Assad "has the final word" with Kissinger about a Syrian-Israeli troop separation on the Golan, but added: "We are discussing all the possibilities." However, American sources cautioned there was no deal in the offing and predicted negotiations would be protracted. Stock Market Rallies NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market f pulled off what brokers termed an unimportant rally Wednesday: points were big, but volume was low. The background for it was set by several factors, brokers said: a sharp decline in the Market up 65 cents market last week, the failure of a long-Index 48,92 up 0.99 awaited and much-touted price bulge to Industrial .........54.06 up 1.14 appear after controls were lifted Tuesday, Transportation...35.44 up 0.92 Utility..............3t.^3 up 0.53 and the general reluctance of corporations Finance 56.93 up 0.76 to issue bonds because interest rates they would have to pay investors would be too h!8h- """ The closing Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was up 17.13 at 853.88. Senate Passes No-Fault Insurance WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Wednesday passed a far-reaching bill requiring the states to adopt no-fault automobile insurance. On a 53-42 vote, senators gave final approval to the measure demanding that automobile insurance in each state guarantee compensation to accident victims regardless of who caused the accident. The bill, opposed by the Nixon administration, now goes to the House Sponsors, led by Sen. Frank Moss, D-Utah, say no-fault will cut premiums and assure quick payment of medical, rehabilitation and loss­of-wage benefits arising from traffic accidents. The bill, attacked as unconstitutional, also would bar a victim or his survivors from suing the other driver's insurance company for "pain and suffering" unless he died, was seriously and permanently injured or was totally disabled for more than 90 days, Opponents contended that each state should beallowed to adopt the type of auto insurance best suited to its needs. They predicted the Supreme Court would strike down the bill on grounds Congress has no authority to require the states to administer federal program. Both of Texas' U.S. senators voted against the no-fault bill. ' On the losing side were Sens. Lloyd Bentsen, a Democrat, and John Tower, a Republican. Siricli Rejects Disqualification Request WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. Dist. Judge John J. Siricahas turned down a request that he disqualify himself from presiding at the Watersrate cover-up trial. Sirica, who was the judge in the original Watergate break-in trial rejected Tuesday the disqualification motions filed April lO^by four defendants indicted in the"cover-Up. They a^e scheduled to go on trial Sept. 10. | ® The moUons had been filed for former Atty/Qeri. John N. Mitchell art^ former White Ifouse aides John D. Ehrlichman, Charles W. Colson and Gordon Strachanr € ,:MV : -1 -, ^ -„ --• , Thefour defendants claimed $M?a had "generally displayed what can only be called a prosecutorial interest." _ ... ; . • — . . ~ Vj