ux * i ^ I #$'It'sMore Than a Chuckle r~' • By SONDRA STALCUP lovaifle animals." Winn had to visit the in 1943, he worked weekends doingsports snoozle, kinky hair-and dark beard. •££ Texari Staff'Writer zoe many times to £§tudy and draw cartoons for the Los Angeles Times, A-s Walt Disney once said, -a$r?­ The world is a serious place. A light animal, faces and observe their moyei~ '.while in the^Navy. caricature is a portrait-with a sense of®) touch now and then provides relief from ment. tie.says he even .had_a desk•suf^-t' -Overseas, Winn drew -sketches cap-humor," Wjnn added. _ heavy subjectsand glVes peoplea chance rounded by mirrors, where • he made , tunng World-War II action as g combat The-jpowej of abimation -and-car-" -' to smile. • •:••-•. faces and captured his expressions on?^ artist. • • '•••* • . • -' ; tooning; really "came home" during:. fiW paper. " .... .• THE TIMES asked him to draw ,< WWII, says Winn. The armed forces ''Carfo'oiiS^e.popular because people WINN SAYS Disney loved ehrfdreft's caricatures, and Winn's firsfcassignment taught rather dull subjects and-therespond — especially Americans — with stories,aad did more than any human be--involved going-to. MGM and sketching _ publications,were-boring. They found. agreat senseoHiumor," cartoonist Win­ ing.ta bring about ariimateic^rtoops. this "goodlooking broad." • jazzing up" the literature and tranjinijr •Hrv|r-dj^ Winn says. "Americans laugh at any — VWalt-Disney was the only manl know^L •The;"broad-!-was Elizabeth Taylor. films produced more interest, thus using*' and everything " ]'s • ~* :of-who could "vfsualii^lax^entiwwxiotion--—Winn.5ays_he.had nojidea how to make cartoons as an educatronal^veftlctera— /— \ BUT, WINN, believes "cartooning in-" picturb in cartoons by juit reading asuch a beautiful woman look.funny. He trend continuing today. •r-i.i£3jives' mtielwmore than "just drawing book," says.Winn. . met many Hollywood stars, doing their • • Some artists "prefer to call cartoons * jig;-^Iffinily pictures." He says lt's-atbugh, "Disney was a great-idea-man and ex-caricatures at the studio commisary, in "humorous illustrations" because they -, compeuviVt! llBH)ve-would-be~t;catastroDhiq/' • 'j "Kissinger subsisted" oiTTive^of^six­ 13 Rockfilellef as-sayifig^iBy-ihat-timeW l. ANOTHEjR MEMBER-.or the. cdm-Tfiours slee^njgh^plusocc^snmal-cat-really-g6tten-pr^ty"_well 'on.topbf the mm —positive proof that SeccfitaCLflLState • . mittee, Rep .Ternme D. Waldip 'D-Tjilif.. naps:" thp Post's artiplp pnttilori "Tha ­ stuff myself. Heary A JCiS?inger, despite his denials, an advopate of Nixon's impeachment, " Rockefeller Years," 3Sid. '"liierj lf1ltlatp fl w. 1 wiretap program in told reporters. Kissmg'er-might-ibe -caused some, blbwrji^jwith veteran? yjdeeply' appreciative of the time he'd ;19?9.. • _ -7j vulnerable. , • -:.. .. •; ••• •—Ropknfollnr ^taff-ppApfe.whn spent.Iand 1 was very understanding • ; t,-4t-^a&-tfflLaIIggat'qn-which, caused "My -impression is that Dr-TTissinger", blocked Kissinger's access at times. about, his Teaming. And"-ot couf^e th&­a mws , is plagued with some ortheTSrobfems^he^—"KISSINSER'S HARUITAT. shi.itinn was the most frustrating things in the conference m Salzburg, Austria, T^ies-—whole Administration -has.been_nlaeiied " was to-march into Rockv-s office-and WnHH tn him ^ — -r®Vle^hiS r° e to 3WaHieSar--'resigtii' V -> ^o^usTTBafeTilmrAnd mahout Uie^atter . -, . -7" Many members shuddered, over the _ ^'The strious Ume-waS after a year two'months he came back.'" , Kep. Joshua Eilberg, D-Pa., s»aid the^v^thought of a Kissinger resignation. * " ; :-.r -— ir • .. evidence received by the »House im-"I would hate to see him resign over* peaohment inquiry wrat beyond mere. \.'this," said -Seft-J^ William:Fiilbright, D; • -allegatons about Kissinger's role/^,. Ark.,-chairman of thcrForeignRelations "There was positive proof," he told-Su b committee. .. --. ^ . group of. reporters. ...... "I want tosav to himas a friend:-staV HOWEVER.nnwRVRB-IMSO--IWREP. Don WAEdwards, "D---with'it cool It,r said Sen. Huber'fH. Calif.,. said it-was "inaccurate" to say. Humphrey, D-Minh. . -. Ehrtichman Trial .that the evidence -.proved Kissinger But Senate Democratic teaiier-Mike "ordered" 0>;;liniUated'|the17 wiretaps," Mansfield revealed that-ai-a breakfast -been, dropped against WASHINGTON (UPII ^-"CitingPresi-Charges lhaveof newsmen and government-employes.-­ meeting Saturday Kissinger-said he was dent Nixon% refusal-to sufxeri&r^sub^t" ;two"others ,initially;widicted ? Felipe de''He did not order, the taps," EWwardsw considering reigning "because {his poenaed evidence, a federal judge Tues-' Diego and Charles W. Colson. Colson,said. "It.was done.-by (Alexander M.) thing was: hangjng around Ml the time." ^ay..delay.ed ,John p. Ehrlioihman's con-^ formerly' Nixon's special counsel, plead- Haig,!' who then wa? kisisiiiger's deputy.-. "I urged-hTm not to r^ign," Minsfieid spiracy trial-indefSftely while the court'' ed guilty last week to a related.felony. .in the National Security Council (NSC).' " Said." *'I said the country neeided him." • . tries to force Nixon to-eomply. Ehrlichman,-o'nce Nixon's no-. 2 aideHowever, Kissinger .supplied the • The wijretaps were conducted U S. Dist. Judge Gerhard A. Gesell who also-• is •. under, indictment for the names of the NSC employes. whose beteween 4969 and4971 on the phones of said he would issue orders "very soon" • Watergate cover-up, wa.s elated byphones subsequently • were tapped, 17 government officials and' newsmen, — -probably Wednesday — to. enforce Gesell's action. He denied hfs demands Edwards said. The orders to wiretap ' ostensibly to learn the source of news -Ehrlichman's. -subpoenas .for. White for evidence were contrived to force^is— were not signed by Kissinger, he said. leaks about -sensitivenational security House documents-to defend himself in_ _missalj>f-hisrindictmenl;EILBERG-RjEP&ATEBrzjml. spatters. the-Ellsbergbreak-incase: : _ . .-If all" the,evidence can -be presented^strengthened, his charge~Tu"esday nl^it-"connrmationhearlriyi -lvait-—4le-prpniirrinhi'y-gf»iiH nivtpi-Nivon to l -on m» behalf, then I'll be exonerated,"In an interview .on public television. September.jiKlssinggr^id he h.ad only show, cause, why the suhpoenaed he said. • ————-———— From evidence 'presented the cbm-. . supplied names of.those^who had access materials should not.be produced for the Gesell has,already said he may jfave to mittee, he -saidi "It was quite clear that to information that had leaked to the .court's examination of why he should not » throw out-Enrlithman's indictmen&un­he'"*( Kissinger), had instituted these press. He insisted hfe had not-authorized b.e held in contempt — a last resort con-less the documents are produced and is" •-QPrinitiated—--— the .wiretaps;" . .. .... ... , jiucjcu uiuiivci/ ai uua — -— '^u-considering whether to begin sidered unlikely at this time. ^.aa.:cmainigrim{r wneuier. io oesin contempt " wuc.—-_— ;He said' the evidence: "was a direct: But the House impeachrneint inQuirv ; _ ^fhngp —prccurnai^ conflict" with what Kissinger told the; heard a tape.Thursday-of a conversation -.three remaining-co-defendants, would including the President who areSenate Foreign Relations Committee un-1 Nhmn.!,nH,ii>i,n w -n.» mv,n.. begin as^scheduled Monday, but he had withoiding them-. -/'between Nnton and John W. JDean III op '• '".I".'-. der oath at his confirmatidn hearing last: . £eb. 28, 1973. that tape,-Nixon choice,. 'other to The judge, .who last-week angrily u&-• -—OH latophmii On iio than postpone September. :.-' •. ­ Alexander Haig (I) and Henrys-Kissinger --v TeportecHy sSid Kissinger,, hail /'asked. Ehrlichman's case until the matter is braided White House lawyers-for refus-. JJep. Charles E. Wiggins, RCalif., in -'that it be done." ', , -: v ..settled. •_ • „ . 7 mg fihrlichman and his counsel access to : the s^me interview, disagreed."I-cannot; ;•{ •-if ••... . ! ;• Ehrlichman is accusecT'On conspiracy--st^bpoenaed files', rejected -a proposed'For share my colleague's certainty as to the . NEW"YQRK (UPii, — Secretary, of "and-perjury in connection with the S§pt.-'W|hite LHoySe compcomise that sjitt PSZZIZUimm & Widence,"hesaid. -State Henry A. Kissinger has used the 3,1971, ".plumbers" raid,on the office of would have forbidden Ehrlichman's -KISSINGER'S THREAT to resign sur-threat of resignation as a tactic in the Daniel Ellsberg's-psychiatrist's office • lawyer to see the documents. •' prised-Gongress7~The^SenateJ!orQiglti52past^Qcordingrto-thtilew_Yorir Post. _after EUsberg leaked': .the' Pentagon -Aijst. Special Prosecutor -William H. • RelationsXommittee votediinanimously THE POST, which ls~puBlishtng ~a UT Sells?Plane ess;7?-" Mprrfitl argued-in-vain-that Ehrlichman to aocogpTl^s written request to.reopen-^ copyrighted-, 12-part series on the The only defendants remaining are G airqady has all tfie evidence he "needs to"By RICHARB FLY-' ittvestiga senrctarv nf that­ nts^ttvestigataon-^f-4»is^rdle_iin:^he-state's-life, -rsaid Foundation Inc. for use qf 'a^ftfewer King ^ Gordon Liddy,.Bernard L. Baiter and—defend himself. He warned that post-Texan Staff Writer Air donated to the foundation/qy-tHe late wiretaps Kissinger had threatened "to";restgnv Eugenio R.-Martinez—-who-have -.'.ponSnehtcoutd^Blay.Ehrlichinian's trial . * .The University System now'is ouUof Eugene-McDermott of-l^llas> a major Democrats and'Republicans ahke urg-several times while workingon a project already been, qonvicted for the well into next year, thus-'violating"COTTJ the fljaqgjbuslnesg^. . University contributor. :" •-. etf Kissinger not to resign, ^ice^ in the 1950 for former New York Gov- Watergate hugging "*" ~ ."T.'stltutional guarantees to a speedy trial. Bids for the-pale o! tETTIniversity^ ^Lve"blds-were-submitted-for-tiie^ir­owned 1969 Beech King Air 100 were crarf, the lowest from Browning Serial opened .Tuesday afternoon'by E.D. -Service of Austin for $300,000 Wilding Development " : r jWalker, deputy chancellor for.-ad-.University officials w^re. hoping to JniniStratioiv, wlfh-Quintana Petroleum-market the airplane for approximately -Corp^of Houston the high bidderat $455,-$400,000. 7U'.. " 7— ~Sdffle_eriUqjsm was -recelved-Jiy the Annexation Camplextties Studied Walker an.d Regent Allan Shivers We're University in the spfing_for itsoperation named by the fioard of Regents May 4 to of the-two planes. . " ' By KEN McHAM -with '-suburban" subdtvision-standards, ation-for Wilding. . ^ ~ .-xk ment for"15,0uu units, were concerned­advertise-for and accept bids on the air-Required.logs-werSli^l on the school^ TexanStaff-Writer a category less rigorous than "urban" ' • "It imposescontrols and limitations on; . about green space and'open space and ® ' L planer , owned,, and-^therefore state-owned, "Annexation by^the city will not affect" standardsand^preSfently^allowed in areas land use in relation to a master plan, voluntarily; resubdivided into'll:500 un-"1-^hivers also-has been negotiating a were plane, but ,-ito; complete recortls our development orour relationship with more thanjwo" triiles outside city boun-; -.while not imposing ad-valorem taxes un--its," he said i-iniuswlease .agreement-r^ wUhi the 4Jniversi^ 17i» a wildiftg"official saidL TuesdayThe available records listed only who . _ ' >s-. REYNOLD^ SAID thecity already hasj, "City Manager 0an Davidson s V>1 maintainetf-on the leased aircraft, difg ' .'darie^. -. — til services afe provided," Lebermann • -• -vr. ' ^ 'said. had chartered the plane and itsexpected, -DOnaM D. "Reynolds,Vice5president > full subdivision control over the dpvnlrto^ i No three-year -utility-extension re-C £ -recommendedapproval, PlanningDirec-M though not actual,-destination^ ' -and project manager for ^ouflf^n Living ^^to suE^l ou^XI?^ tor-Dick Lillie recommended approval v-'% ­ :;^uirement exists under limited purposed of W,ldl • Regent Frank.a Erwin said diiring the .ng' -roads and sewer plans for approval. We . the only negative, argument-that ma'de ~ -.1 .annexation- May 4 regent meeting it was his opinion % spoke at length on'the complex have already met.the urtwin iiihrfivicirn^ limited purpose-sense was thatjhe area between Wilding r ^:r Lebermann said 4,aid the opinion thfc (University.at-_ relationship between the planned 30;^ standards of ^itv '' heLid ^ -vapd the city would grow," he.eontiriued ­ jiiiiannexation 'Us.complicated and open to Wctffnter.* tnrT^-nnd the statetoudiUr that flights" Pe«4n community, the City of AusCn „N(> ei§ wonld have m, lissome-questionTth .^terms of broad-based .WE'VE DRILLED for water in thatT^ C® Th"e_ 0'utloNok-fo^ ; chaired by the University neett not ' «nd^Travis-€oun^-4V^tet-Control and .powersover us-but if thev annex us-afev~^iPoa1»v a?sa and there^ none?«uLitJ&j«)ijigir>rx^si Wednesday tfalls fo£> ^^h^fno-iP of th 'l l'" ap . . . "lPr°Vernent °St5ict N°" 17' . -also w<)uld have to'extend utilffies and^=; 'He hopes^for some of these questions : the lake The area betweeh the citjTanS'*'Wl warmef _ e /t w?t?r ^istnct w^1! annex Wilding services to the-area," Reynolds said ho be resplved in the city's .annexation •Wilding will not be developed without sf,"—'£ .^1 University out;^ ',f it§ voters approve. . _ •, --_ "From what we understand, they're, f/sludi-^ v city water supplies.-. ^iemoeratiires, wlthreT r ---"^-Officials-oI_ Southern Living and not going to be able to supply these sfer-l 4 "To my mind/limited purpose aniftxa­ ^^SgS meet Frtdav Wlth . ,"If Wilding gets turned dowifyou're•••••%$& "nrh' s?veral' --vices wjthln the.required three yipars " tioncannot tie .used for an entire project Z^'igj^trfh^QW 90s anB -never gcdng-to bring m any business or.s,». f "^fi n"1Y ^ ^ counciiiiieii j»id Uie ifrdyorfThe^tyT—^g%iAend4sSUe-ifVPrv-Mlhshmtial. and?";--, hut r»nr aftnrnevs and the oitv's .afe a +ow Wednesday' Shivers said'last mnnih thaf hP ..— =-g Wilding. • the 'Capital .JmprovenSSts -Program^ working onifTrgeyifelds-saidT^ m = people into the_city becausell just won't-^L-_ be worth-the f^sx 10 "put Up"the fiunt " ^qJdM_in'the low 7Ps. they've used.H-^ (which"Hie city useTfirplan its bohd-, REYNOLDS"DEFENDED. THE; ^een n0^"in8 money. Ulthis.kind of thing 11s going to-^..4, mnniri nut-I'r.'.nni.iMi, iTiTir-V— V",' "T"— financed 'municipal.project! is fi^nneds^MQlogitSa^undnesspt Wildin^plahs^v rsBuf1reaffliTy7'iwlnds; n TI 'Would PAYHOR-;FTIAHITEBSILC^c^iotm.air. lt'D jU^t, UJVdei'-^DY ^IID^henr 'ffVeSFSTff'&'dvance.—Revnoldscontinued/-", "VIb've riot-recerved' anv criticism, of happen,' Reynolds said, I ' ' jjl ueLfiosts. . ^ <5-7 r~we've-asked-fora date tKesliiByrmiW:~Tri~Api>*AfcT"ERNATIVE-'f<»p^the- Sw^TS^sday-«n^lunavailable W,?1n, policy,-Councilman Lovell services within, three years. LebermanivJ./',Wnds of runoff affecting the fifch ' story that doesn't get told by themedia,'! SSmentr .^fe^b^Fmann> has»proppsflu-tioinR '-s^vfly; "• J IBS this originality planned • 'dpvpinn"-. :• RovnniHc tai/i •• • 1jj-- / I.f* ' A*? * •Sm Vs *" • ' -' ' _••' . • ^ |WiT.Vi 5" IMS r ~-< IT** TSP Boardi if 7 " --, V iri ­ *&£ County GOPTreasurer Trustees Appointed te!­ Claims Nixon Innocent Two faculty members and a •: w-Neal Graham, new at-lar]ge An Austin attorney told, Thumbing through the1,300-. investigating'the June, 1972, professional journalist were • member of the board, also members of the TravisCounty plus pages of Watergate-. jireak-in of Democratic named-to. the-Texas Student •took office June 1. Republican -PaTty Tuesday related material, Keahey ex­National .Committee head­Publications Board of-During -meeting Tuesday **• "* H night that reading Che plained that he had read the quarters in Washington." Operating Trustees Tuesday. night, board members elected presidential transcripts con­document-^s -an ^attorney. i-il^Anajysis of this is no easy __MiehaelTiQranof:i;assistant_ Lee Grace, presid⁢ Johrt yw f\;; vinced Kim PresidenfNixon is ' mightTead a depositionfronr -task," Keahey said^but as -pnofessor.of accounting; Mar­Morris, vice-president; and '•certainly not guilty of the ~a~eli6nt. Republicans we -owe it to tin L.Gibson4—assistant Graham, secretary. T " commission of any crime." "I feel the President made ourselvts to read" the s professor -of-^rarnalism; and; In other action, the board ~James Keahey, treasurer of errors a&an executivebut feel President's account of in-' Robert--Hollingsworth, "vice-'approved an amendment io­ the Travis County GOP-and a-~he-was-guilty-of:jio bad faith^ cidents relating'.to Watergate president of the DaHas Times -the TSP-budget -for KB -paptnor. in thp lao> firrri pf and certainly, not, of anv ^ ^P--iMVii, awl1 ...HctalJ,: ivere selected, by niaintenance-of-new-feomputer !«m Stoff-ftwt* by FMI he continued.——— Hart.-Keahey and'Hart, told crime, rA|iul 30pl$?3. v ....... -— -University President'Stephen. eauiDment and -waees for 'a party members that The partisan audience, • _ Reading the voluminous'-Spurr. ' • programer. LBJ .Portrait Unveiled rtranscripts^oMS-pFesidential—agreejL-With his statement publication -[eaves-*'narques^— Hollingsworth was editor, of -• -TSP stjon will ffeceive an op­ -Pretent at the unvsiling Tuesday of a portrait of Lyndon B; Johnson qt the LBJ Library meetings and conversations thatuhe chief executive hlis tftartlratthe President had no The Daily Texan from l948 to tical character recognition (l-r) were Harold Burso_n, Mrs. Johnson 'and Daniel The painting, donated 'by '&sm are ^'unique in American not received fair .treatment knowledge of the Watergate _ 1949 and is president-of the device which converts typed Borson, will hang aMhe sit* of the unveiling. Piel, the aWist, described the portrait "•^TlTsfairy; --niifl --^l-^itapnR^rnrn' -prpss^and m«|ia nor •-break-in. nor-of that at the of-Advisory Council for--the copy into computer data. The. as realistic-impressionistic. Mrs. Johnson expressed satisfaction with the painting. should-read the documents to ••from members of special fige-of-Dapipl F.llsSerE's-gsv-School of Communication data then is storSnnra mini­ arrr^pleasecHwith-ttryou-taught the.essence," she said> wjs6_. obtain an objective "view • *• Senate.and House comrtiittees* ^chiatrist.'1 Foundation. computer =where it may be caUed up on a video terminal; then sent to a typesetting 3$?; compiler. T 1Spurr Reports Progress RftRKING * One or" two jobs in the,rtew-PROBLEM? paper composing room will be University—President flowers, Spurr has1 requested scholarship fund should ~^eliminated--with-additiok_ol_l_Stepheai H, Spuir rontlnues to that all futures.gifts*be made -sent to the Development the new equipment^ TSP recuperate from" cormiafyv ascontributionsio toe Univer-—fiee,—LitUefield--Home. •• presents i General Manager_Loyd Ed-bypass surgery • performed • si.ty'-s Ethnic Minority, checks payable toThe Unjvi monds^ said. Edmonds also last Wednesday at,4he Texas Scholarstiip Fund.;*', ^s-sity-ofrTexas"at.-Austin;-ani Dr. Rose Marie Cutting, -told: board members that 10 Heart. Institute in Houston's special notation -^Ethntfc recycling l^xesfor HieTexan . • .^Contributions Minority Scholarships." Asstetant-ProTAof English-*-7^ SU Luke's Hospital. i; to \he T", "-wrtl-berplaced on campus in --&>urr said.Tuesdav he was.wWomen in Literature"3§£ July. "doing fine" but he was not; Ifc The board also approved a sure when he will return to­viO Ka-asarri„-i i-TL change in the Texan style Austin. Today "• ; Uniori 202 book which -deletes--titles •: !'Iam now backon a regular 12 Noon . referring to sex, sud)as Miss, CreeksOrdinance Sandwich Seminar diet and walking thehalls," he 'J;' *1 Mrs. attd Ms.n unless-saW-, flit . . A SOLUTION. necessary for clarification: Spurr was; moved las^ FrUvi-,-The City !%nniiig.Comini»-' 74,000-square-foot builditlg?;:; day into.a.private rotom from sion voted unanimously "l)ies-across Harper's Branch Creek?;; an intensive caj*-dhlt. day to grantan application by in South Austin , X}:_ -^ PARK AT OOBIE MALI'S GARAGE. * ' After being deluged, with Teague-Buda, Inc., to builcl a The decision marked thet'l1 ' 2HRS. FREE WITH ANY PURCHASE.'-first time the commission has1^ FOR NON-SHOPPERS. THE RATE IS ONLY 36' THE been asked to review a re-|fES DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS FIRST HOUR AND. 15* FOR EACH VS HOUR quest in compliance with th6 ® --— • THEB.EAFTER. ' . rOB-T--k— (PENGUIN JR'S.) provisions, of Austin's new f creeks ordinance which re-.;Z, TO REXlir-SAVErB0Y-A-t!ARKMG-f>EfiMIT—^^J: -—This summervoucan Hniovthe conveniance o^our targ&3 cubic foot oval Crest ^qujr^s'_that_'Hhe jitoposed 6-WEEKSMO.OO ^if!Vn!opmrnt-Lpwiprvp_ tWn refrigetalojt^yvhich normaHv rants for $2S/semesf«r,.f0r the low"price 12 WEEKS $55.00 of . na turat=HTrf-traditt ON SALE MON.-Fftl. DOBIE GARAGE 3-S P:M. iitg cholce of tKe ttivarside M apartments bacause wa elfaf character of the land and extra-spacious living and direct waterway .to the greatest-ex-Jj *9/6 weeks or *17/ 12 weeks. acces^tb the shu^tlo bus. tent feasible." These-low prices include free delivefy and pick-up. l.i $165 XIOBXK 2-1" 185 'UNCLASSIFIED'* CREATIVECONVENIENCES all Bills'paid CLASSIFIEDS -• >' 441-6706 Wlitij & 20th Strwl .V' . THE INSTlTUTfeOF LATIN •AMEftlCAN STUDIES — ---PRESENTS LATIN AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE in A SPECIALSERIE5OF FOUR LECTURES IfSS® -AMD PERSONAL-REMINISCENCES ,BY JHE DISTINGUISHED SCHOLAR • sy>j r STATESMAN AND DIPLOMAT DR. RAD0MIR0 TOMIC <• 1,3 A' Dr. Radomiro T'omlc is. a .former Chilean Ambassador to the United Stated (1965-: 1968) and served In his country asLfepth a member of the Hou^of papntian and Senate. ln addition, he is one of the founders of the Chilean ChristiarTOernocratic' -gattVL-flftdJwas .their standard bearer, in the 1970 Presidential election in: whic»i Salvador.-Allende emerged victorious. Besiaes nis politicalactivities; DrrToinic isalw / both a successful lawyer and university professor. He is currently on leave from botK the Catholic and National Universities in S/intiago, Cjiile. In addition to paving ' published articies and essays too numerous tomention. br.Tomicis gene^JlycOn& sidered to be one of Chile's finest public speakers. This past spring he taugfitlwo cours.es at the University of Texes — "Contemporary Interamerican Relations" and "Revolution, Reform, and-Democracy in Latin Apnerice." Dr. ToVhic's evening teW' /V .-/-isdli; wiH coyer a number of interesting topics ranging from his personal acquaintance with ' Chile's Nobel Prize winning poets Gabriela Mistral and Pablo Neruda to the profound ' ^4 socio-economic and political questions.facing, notjust Chile, but all of Latin America 4% today. Dr. Tomic will welcome questions following each evening's presentation;"' f %4r>* / ­ mi -St j Vi-'X ft • • 1 ,.,*SEaLj^ --. : 'Ipf •' ? " - -* "PLACEr BEB 161 ;TIMES:-7:00 P.M |jjg WEDNESDAY EVEKTINGS on JUNE T2, T9, 26 J9*" ' and s JULY 3, 197411 ' v. •*»-• v1 •­ NEW HOUSING POLICY!! DEXTER HOUSE 1 ^ \ ,:^np3 W. 24th J' >CCUPANCYONbY a j, — m&s t//% if — yr n ---»•»..« ft*.}. Semi-Private Rooms as Lowbs 60 p6r mo. ^ . s4*fS "pfeir 'fg fM. I You don't stick around for summer sch'dol-ipr | -Luxurious Private Roomvf 1.Q0 »eVrm |#|th6 fun of it You're here this summer becaus^vu.I •fe-MV»-• , • IW0U had-''®' Uttle too much fun last spring. Or ' 'i Vi-vv>c - J • Maid Service ' J-^oecause you want to get some uninspiring • C£» C' '.course outof the way before the fall. Or m.aybe. .you Just want to take it a little,easier next '- Heated Swimming Pooh* Refrigerators • Tntercom ^semester; Whatever your reason theobjective 4-fer ' Sf-ls still the same ...good grades, not cheap ,7^ hl^n^Y ?acllitles^ Vending JV\adrmes ' if " • <>-thrills. _ i • Study Areas. ^ ;r-^-.And where.and how you live can make a sEf* " • 24 Hr. Desk Service • TV in Lobbyi^ '^difference. " • " Gontdssa West Is an all girlenvironment two ' •3'fv. ^ Off Street_Parkirig • eios? to Campuii'!, Wa r-'fe/j-and ahalf blocks west of campus at 2707 Rio > frr.-Special Pdckflgs Deals (tJoam at<6tx\w -Board atMaditan) " :'£*•"'•' SglGrSnde, (512) 47&-W48. --_ . ^ 1-^­ * "-'vC available os low as $145 -We have.24-hour security, good home-cook­^;,ed meals, a swimrfiing po^Twjth carpeted sun­ ? ' Now accepting Fdll'74 Contracts ; ••r » t-r 'S?de6k, a piano in our living room, maid service, • WWW A+ laundry fa&tlities,'covered parking,' student tor U.T. Men and Women .v -fwafti«Antnr-pgQ^rft 7S>X_ *' -• ^ Come ISed Come l,iv(f~ _____ ' s . ;— I .v fiGST MOREFQR YOUR MONEY $ $ l*;„ ^^vyednes^ay^gne 12; IMAI ci&Sil > • r «*..* '^SLJX • ^vri »-t + T ^ProaaE mam Jff=£ZL„ Sirica RuJihq i*-s> LTT^—1 -gf: »"rf"V ^*^0 tj * \ ;^f"-,;^.-5r;,i''-,'> .i.^V^Vi-st- No rate ^Wvgc^On'et f- The University may. have to rS* evaluate its rental ;poiicy regarding ; " married student housing if the trend toward chjldless marriages bontinues,^ vn«-Braeutigam,-associate: director of hg VC Housing and-Food Services, said Tues- v. • day. ' • : ,• he'«- In keeping with the trend,150 of the 200. Gateway Apartments are singles' as" ...•>• designated for,childless couples.. •?A Thereseems to bea misunderstanding heC about childless couples at the Colorado sw| Apartiri^tSj ICyhthia Ott, a "resident­ e-'Z said. Some of her. neighbors believei', SlL AK»i3^«3k^uv^.-.v;«rsir.rs^r?4«-5 * s Canine Competition race along a tidt ^?!!*»Mn ¥'"^borhood in-St. Looi,, Thegirli tpontoredit for themselvefc vr-sw apartments are ^ir-conditioned. —= Pmrried toiistag sjiouW be restricted to -Apartments, which opened H19%, offer —•—^pies with^ildren. t r"_ ;r.. • ~a' combined• total of 400 .air-conditinngd .... --."I'hk FIHs'I 'l'ttiNG^ anvSne^saiiMo^—^one-and^jgftj^i^m'apaifaients. boOi me here was 'hj>w many children do you furnished and unfurnished. -v have,'" she said. OP SPECIAL;interest.Gateway Bas If the demand for larger apartments several units • yrhich will, accomodate for famtlies-decreases, Braeutigamsaid, 1,wheelchairs for Handicapped stt^ents. ' the University might change itspolicy of-'-"-?. The sizeof the unitsvaries, withlarger -reserving thp larger apartments for abartrtients reserved forlarger families; couples yath children.. . .... ] ~ Current Uuiveibllv tegulatiohs Tcouir& zjjfe^are^attemntlng to help all* that occupants "oTTi^beidrooin units . r-=r-;^--•-, —: -—uu.«. registered, fulltime Uifiversity students This means the'minimum course load ipu£f be 12 hours duringthelonjg session.. and. four hours during eacti summer ses­; Sion. . Brackenridge and the Deep Eddy Apartments, established in 1946, are'the oldest and cheapest iacilities. Alko available at the Brackenridge complex are; two4>^room duplaces. All are t|n--; furnished and. nonair-ctoditioned. • 1 Gateway, opened in 1973, andColorado ' $20 deposit.Is required. Upon application, " the studentsVhamfi will be addedJto the — waiting.UsLof .the selected complex. " > APPLICATIONS • for"the apartrrlents are accepted;b^inning 10months:prior to the seijiisster duringwhich the tenants will use them Braeutieam said -Thp sooner thS student applies, thehlghethls pnority on the waitinglist , This waitinglist varies according toIhe ;complex desired and the semester of in- * tended use. For example, Gatewiy'sfall waiting; list-'is-already-lengthy, Braeutigam said. This should not 'dis- stuaents. -Four-hundred of the.. Tenants must pav electricity cOiits In auuliuabunt ai -ladditionj Global Fleet kL' Seeks Data mm Sy^r On Weather GENEVA (UPI) — Men and machines • took up their.posts around a third of the wk y gtoheTuesday for a 1100 niininn lion that marks tne largest international ­Scientific effort in history and is aimed !at providing better, weather.iorecasts. ; U&;and Sowet scientists led the ?2«--s nation, 100-day" project involving 4,000 : jtien and women, 40 ships and more thaa te ja dozen aircraft , and space satellites:-^ • Startrng^Saturday; the" -international M­;teaiu will collect information about the ^'heat engine" or -weather factory" of • tropical ocean water that largely deter?v^ ^nines the World's weather. •... ' s^f • The inTprmationr to be~tabulated dur-— !ing the next three years, is expected to --Jtelp-^rovide two to three^week feather. -~l6riecaits::far rapre accurate than ^nyjhing known toaay, with aconsequent " saving of untold billions of dollars every ykat around the'world. s -. > -^r^i Tho gtobalJieat. engine's components Bre the tropical ocean •waters.'The'suH'ir; heat is storeii-in tlie upper layers of the bpeans,. transferred to the atmosphere^ -by evaporation, shifted higher in cloud 7 form by air: currents and dispersed arOond the globe. " V " • The project" is .belngTcalled GATE, „ "which is . an • acronym of "an: acronym. ­ m, GATE stands JotiGARP-(Global At­mospheric Research Program) Atlantic Tropical Experiment.'" /. ^GATE extends from theeastern Indiah* *nl:' Ocean, across tropical Africa and. the 'Atlantic^Ocean, over tropical South and^­ R:"' 1 Central'America and into the eastern­isi'Ljiinstfiacific Ocean. '" f : ^ •Th?v'World Meteoh>logic!at -urganiza-­ -jtion describes this one-lhiVd of the v jearth^s tropical beltas theworld's major heafTengine or' weather factory. The projectr based at Dakar, Senegal, • in West Africa, "is" directed by Dr. JoachTrn Kuettner of the United Stategir­-Dr. Yuri Tarbdevof Russia is hisdeputy^.t Zebra Murders Credited to 'Death Angels1 SAN FRANCISCO (tJPI) — Membersof a black militant groupi took pic­tures of each-other, murdering whites;to:-win promotions, according to grand, jury testimony-by an-informer-in-^-the-San Francisco "Zebra" killings case. v, • The informer, Anthony C, Harris, 287^w""fex-oonviuI, piuvidcd infoijixa­tion tjj,at led to=fhe group, cafledthe "Death Anjgels," which he said had morelHair2,'000 members nationwide.'—t-----_ Harris' testimony; which was released Monday, led to the indictment of four men, all Black Muslimsy on murder chdrges iij the-Zebra case, in which more than a dozen whites wergukilled, Apparently at random, by assailants described by witnesses as Slacks. '' New Trial Ordered for Knapp ^ _ AMAHILLO (AP) — Former .State Rep. Walter Knapp was freed from castoay7an-|5^00Q bond late Tuesda;y after a federafitldgP nF/Wwi iiim. released-from ririsnn awaitina a-now Mnl am n imo ™ index:. < Prices opened slighfly lower! Market ,...off 24 cents made a weak attempt to recover Index 48.56 off 0.43 Industrial 54.07 /off 0.47 in the early afternoon.then fell -Transportation : 34.97 off 0.54 ' "Broadly in theTiHarisaif-hourr "Utility —.4rr^304iUoffJ The Dow Jones average of 30: Finance; 54^32 offD.52 iridustrialsi which had risen more than 57 points in the first six trading days of June, pulled v * back 7.59 to 652.08. 4 " ^-WASHINGTON (UPI> -A federal" .'. as early as the openjngstatements m the judge Tuesday refused"to allow the six trial, scheduled for Sept. 9 Watergate cover-up defendants to be 'CAGHER1S.described Mifcchellas the tried separately despi^e argument^ihat^only defendant , who is "caaght .in a , grouping the men:, together tjefore the" crossfire between the special prosecu-• *'court ^ould lead, to .courtroom an-tion~~force and some of his co-" -tagqnism and hostility. -defendants/'^ ' U,S.DisLJudgeJohn J^Siricaabruptly « ^ In addition,:lawyers^ for John D. wiSJmil^ ^.r""'®e^ra°cer-^Mi^^':OT«L.H-llu-Halde^n.;s!9ld . -~r StS^f^lS^fW defendant ad pt,e§entedj6dividuaf. sroaraw?ttri!lilri(i"S aP-"*'* PWSS tw'»Xi J"31? *ult£a long possibly, up. to .three months — trial • would impose, on their clients. They also. argued,that'not all the men linked in.the s^me conspiracy kndw each other -and ­therefore; not all should be tried together..-"' -• • . __i. . IN DKNYING the severance motions,.: since-testimony from .the other co-, de^"fK»inWr;'tivc 8,1,1 Aww^no K Besides Mitchell, Ehrlichman and Haldeman, the defendante in the iii-. ",c "^'Ciiuauui ui me case in-. • elude.-Haldeman's assistant, Cordon Strachan; Robert Mardianf a staff aide for--the-CoiftrmtteeJFor the. Reflection • sof-the--President, and Kenneth Wells ad|nitted that the ordeal will be -o forced to. take the stand-Hiven lf hiS1 difficult' especially since the men in-will, but in an independeiit trial, that .Parkinson, a committee lawyer. ; In ? joint trial, aco-defendant cannot , overt acts in the. Watergate-cpver-up against their ' clients..will require testimony of "the other co-defendants." Stribkier said it is "conceivable that a­tremeadous"elashcould occur' -inefforts to clear one defendant if .that defense "requires the testiiiiony of another figureiij the case. ­,• ".Thelawyerssaidthatalthouihthereis jril.gS°f, ­testify wfthout coercion it it tfrhnlvfrru pwsi&l® loknow theeffecls whichp !wg : Sirica said he will unseal evidence . by special last presented Dy special., prosecutors last-, summer.against Stracnan to determine • whether the government can makef a; ' "legal presentation of evidence in the "* " WateTj^terover-ap-rtriM. Both Strachan and Mitchell have aslced , that chargesnsgaihst them be dropped on the-ba&s of their testimony during .,.. televised hearings, by the Senate ~ five co-defendants if his trial was not •tie (^uld advereely affect Hirlichmari 'argue that, the case "is based on-*­"Conducted separately .... , „ ' • -• -Strachan'sownadmission duringvarious lbed .*Il^51^ "and Frank Strickler, days of testimony on the WaterMte -. 5 "'S enchilada, . said there is Haldeman s-lawyer,^said_the charges-of break-in.. . S3 * fit6 : ^ men charged in-the Watergate '^fendanbfwill f 0134 Cm ^:C?n)^':81,111 ~" " toi m1tc^»ll —Qrt t0 save ^ ^7 ' _ • -——-•far ;. He also noted .that' the. release of -volved:all have goqdxeputatfonsand are ^amel person could be subpoenaed and . , -,, •• : ,—.—— —~ ...—"oiogoKWatergate committeevuiuuuLLcc list»«i»i summer.suuuiier. In 1 J not .nardened criminals.'' ~ fm-mxi tA ttaifa tKo ii awaii i*><. rforced tortake the sUnd-^ even isJus. _ addition, Strachan lawyer John Bray has „ But" the-judge added, "These are the-.(appearance -would, consist solely af . raised the is^ue~o? conflict-tf eviffOT^ things we have toface. It'sasad thing. ,v claiming 'FifthAmendment rights ^obtained agau^t Strachanon the basisof against seu-incrimination: ( ... .n-v an^niiniuiiity'gr^t-wMch was given EHRJjtt&lMAN'S LAWYER,. Andrew • x-the special priosecutors-. • . • ^ ~ ;— ?• Hall, ppMlictod.. 'a r^l battle in this ; T Govenunient, i^torneys argjjed tHey ionrief attorney ^en^S5~wo^"be^e ^ C^^r^^i!°ln t^e i^I1®Si0f^^'?a^e have^nough evidence against StracliSn, -, subject of Obvioiis hostilities fr0m his -°btainedin wholly independent manners,. «»?«oes t-om ms p^ent. H^l contended ttot this bat-to presa,ttie case. But Bray continued to courage students",-howfevipr' Kofanse the"-:~±^r3nsc.rjpts-of President Nixon's hsOEclBatrarapiaiv. . --."~:3aterptezrel^ Datia Daigle, a Brackenridge resident;. * lagonism toward Mr. Miicheu as wen, oi.u. r__ <— and the courtroom battle could surface waited cmly two months, for. st-two-: —-• '.-Py MARIE.KILDAY" -—•?—-Jt^veren't for theRailroad (Commission's. . bedroom duplex^ Thedpartijient is "real Texan Staff Writer • . I ^allocation orders'," he; said. .clean," she said, adding that the Despite angry attacks pn the. Texas The atlieidttientv provides for three' ru^mterialsce also is satis&ctoiy. • tolroad Commissio/i, delegates to the " A commissionera.' elec.ted statewide for Wp Invp it^she sitid. "I don't think Constitutional Convesntion voted 103-59 Six-year,terms,;with elections staggered wew^juld'want to liveahywhere.else." Wlth chiWren •Tu€sday-torgive-,the-commiMion. con->fe or witEouV'Tr^^^tavr'ong^ia^lwse^^ ——iherp^ nW„ py j n stihitional status. .^plained. • ; bedroom units miist have two children Ihe.tali;,..but BraeuUgam urged-all a new en-~ Alsor-a le General ed .......... atteT-ftep—Rajr—r| 07 mdJwse m fou^bedfoom .units must studwits eligible to apply. He pmphasiz-WASHINGTON (UPAfter seven have three childrai, ' students may-withdraw th^ir_.jjiays of debate and wtes ah 36 proposed Hutchison Of Dallas moved to reconsider•-• V ~uth&Jection. : -/ y -^ • ­-Hutohiapn is ttiFautSoF^rthe^gon^" -' shaved ifchy hnly l/ioiji of 1-percent. 1 Wyatt of Bloomington. . troversial envinmmEnt"secUon Adopted The solitary • deletioffrof. funds • was sttedkuiginjavwofclheamend-:— laet.juaoir . -. •. ^simply a bookkeeping correction propos­njent, said it-"would protect the people-The" riew^.Jsection, sponsored by ed by Chairman John C; Stennis of the of the-state.byrequting fte regeiits, whp'': Hutci^n,-states;'flie quality at tiie en- Senate Armed Services Committee who • .control over $70^million" in' .— -v> vitonment is ,«to uc protected,"yi uievieu, and the Penna-M be ana had discovered, that ^!5 million-in parts ; Wfor^n-lKo—lltn T" ii I_ _ n _ ,nOTt. University Fundrto"3nswer to the^:JTautlioriZes tlie Legislature to enforce the . for,-the:.Trident Submarine had' already- P,Sl^raeR^dComa^^ >u=y.®e,»»se?u™,?™id«ptei,9o. been apjjroved in another bill,. , The weapons bill was jiaSsed on ak84-6 Sen. A.R. Babe Schwartz.of Galveston—-: -Rep. Ron Waters of Houston:speiaking vote with" all .the nay votes from I characterized.it as the "horror story of -in tavoroithe new section*,«said it was aDernocrat^r-James Abourezk, S.D.;; state agencies," as; he spoke,against the . comprdinise between environmentalists Dick:Clark7lowa-; J. William Fulbright; ai?e"oggett of Austin, Who billion. That difference will have to'be reading from oif" company magazines, opposed the- Hutchison section, ~ said,resolved in a conference committee. said, "I've been in the-LegisIature for 20 "This provision does no harm Or good.It , Every attempt to trim weapons or ex­ years, and.T hayenlt.seen>a -single thing is a meaningless provision in the' con­ penses was defeated. theTlailroad.Commission has done for stitution." ^ , E But opponents of Vietnam"military aid anybody in Texas''but"the-oil com .w Daggett debated for a more stringent came closest, losing by only, one vote panics.*4; _ . . . . , ; * environment section last weejt .and Tuesday when Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, ulol, Complalftiiig that hecould neverget an received support from the Sierra ChlS-D^Mass., proposed cuttingsuch aid from —-answer from tiieco " ' m, Schwartz f°fj?|s amendment.V: ^ -$900 million to $750 million. . ' -said, "They wori'lri •rsewfept "During debate, Doggett sad he Would 2;The one vote Xenneily could'normally with-a form, and they won't answer '.'rather see the constitution remain silent'have counted on for victory belonged to questions except with a lie. w on the environment. "In this' case, ­ -Hughes, a longtime dove. Hughes-argued 'J'You can't scrub,the scum off the . silence would be golden,''4ifr-said,­:that the Armed Services Committee On j.reputation» of the Railroad Commission" A direct-vote:on-airantibusing amend-iWhich'he'sits^had already, cut., the Ad- with lye and aiJI brush,'-Schwartz'said ^mwilon "to cKeerTalia app^listjt'rom the conven-;... jvold^tote-pi^iv'fljmlrin •• p2SS& «.«; ii«, j»jsa^!ssWi»s« it. The Vickamendment,"wldch recbgniz=~ yu« . defeat-included amendments aimed at-i.'ag^inst adding the new section, alleging ed "Theright ofschoolchildren toattend -/ the :B1 Bomber.^a new class of cruise the Railed;Commission is re^ionsible the.public school nearest their place of miSsile suhmarihe. ^ijore accurate for 9t!rt^l{hent.bf natural gas deliveries. residency;." was narrowly defeated ; warheads and tjwo separate proposals to -vto .Austin/; $an ."ABto^ and Corpiis; Saturday 61-60. ... _ -• . slash the number of; troops overseasr • • "^ristu,8|gjL.said .theT.^pmmiision b«^" Tuesday, Vick proposed to give tiie: " Stennis and;his committee-suffered a > been "uni^pdnsivertb -tiie. needs otl questlp,n_to_yoters on a separate suhmis- Attack ReneWGd on Economics Wn^I ' -­ ftkw!.-"- '-r ' SfS, IPl f'-A-.'f Crittcs Clrge New Wage/ Price Controls; .Tcuytuts ^ WASHINGTON (UPI) —ilie con J&m visory Council under the% Kennedy andL^ _Lof maintaining farm land against the^ -breaks such, as the oil depletion v;gressional Democratic leadership Tues­ ^ '• —^ juunwn aamimstraupns, tola House Johnson administrations, told "House potential >of making income'from the y allowance .available to the wealthy andf ^newec, itsatta<*on President Nljc-leaded;fuesday that-wage>price-con. land-at some future Xime. corporations T0mlC •poUcif-,and « /o^er ;_Jroisjn(i$t be renewed while taxes«nlqw , r|s ^ ­us® ec°nomis' ^^ urged a new .ineome^groups must be cutrand ta« Seh. Russell Long, D-^!;':reportediy -'"Heeler 'endorsed the Kennedy •v ^-0rrn wage an pr,ce cowro!s' -.loopholes" of the WMjthy.c.losed. ''Shas agreed to let tax reformersoffer proposals =and-criticized -Treasury r-^. . Speaker^arl Albert criticized the Ad-.C H-t--/ ^i.th®r rev?"«e package ,to a debt ceiling Secretary WiHidip Simon's earlier stand "*y* aW ,Megife Cortl-"~ ^extension bill the Senate Finance Cdm-mai ~ .minTsulitlaii^^uaicv'-oi-rift^ng^iSffimy-•• '1 w". uiu mic oenaie finance u>m-- ft -**Pf«Q 1 -f VMMMW~ 1 that tax. breaks for business, especially mi n ^ at all wfiile the economy sinks slowly lee meanwm^cenLluUed,UialK-i. .iiiUlU WUl !^Hl^«M4uol-Mumlav==^l^^'i&^e^uk^ into jdeep'Tecession" and said*Hous€' tax refoTOLbill, aBd plans were made for;^ • i ^P^velop new^nergy so^ Pfslble Jpssible Senate votf*. Mhnrfav RrfwArrf M . economists in comiHg weeks"on Bow to-jf^h^^^ue^orftyr^ureLli S^of colleagues.-has proposed raising the T 11 < -L J i-< Senat?^ vote^Mbnda^ otir^ Seh;E^ard s ?---s Heller, al§&_proposed a' "watchdog-^e ^* Nonibiil'infljtlun person ex^mpQon to$825, or! agency" to setguiqelines fotjyane-andr­ — -.'1,,'.." "W lluui>c aaiiel agreed tcntrtOvdy on—-tnkintfTjipinking thp opTinnnplinn^'fXt aTiatTttnn fav oiC »"«,iiuu^paMi!iagr»!ea tentatively on pri^'lftereases'with au'thoWtV-toadsDendSiThe first of those ecoAomipts, Walter, ^^enminatink somed^U&dns^^^ted;^o heip iow mcom ^^0^1^ increases to tight, 'LJewisetbacks onttife floorbut-thevVere generally on peripheral issues that have L'ortd'provldeTnorrfueKto industiy;— generated public-attfention but Which '' " But proponents of the amendmait in­don't go to the heart of defense"policy. cludiifg Rep. Carl Parker of Port Arthur ^Senators, for example,forbade the ser-_. and Rep. Don Adaftis of'Jasper,defended vices to use dogs to -test poisons, -the commission. N •' ; although other federal agencies will still — -Parker said the record of the Railroad tie allowed to use the animals. _ "Cotnmission_waS no 'worse than the he Senate alsocsttWuumberof-ser—record of^theSenatfi-^TherP haw h«.na vants that generars are allowed, forbade thousand more horror stories in the the.vAir Force to tesWife Minuteman Senate,""Parker said missiles ovar the Northwest, and Adams blamed the city governments ordered the Navy to stop using the Puer-v^ of Austin and San Antonio for the fuel to Rjcan island of Culebra as a bombing -shortages/ "The people of San 'Antonio - r—; ^ „ --citizeps'-' in allowing Lo-Vaca Gathering range>_afterl975r -and Austin \s311ld becookuig with woodif T-*—»­ -rX4) sion. Convention delegates, staying past-theiP^HSiral R p m • iw»o«»gs; Hipsgrf as Virk "read his proposal. A substitute amendment' offered by Dalla? Reps. Robert Maloney and^ Hutchison was adopted by the conven-­ tion. The Maloney substitute recognizes a '-student's rightto equal protection un­ der the taws.'-tracking the language of the i"4th-Amendment td the U:S. Constitution. . - The amendment, which many delegates admitted was "meaningless," was killed on a vote -to submit-it to the voters. 1, •;­ Economist Walter Heller calls for tax cut. '"Jl Wedne^ay,vJune7T2rT974^Fl^p^I^TE3^AN Page i' • -t mi si m^m-'m ~%s *~w< * •»' m y^ v* ^~*.~-v ^ r;~_ •nryv „ «4 * **. '"'^ " * '•"•*—r-«- &®5Z."L-•--' ,''_. -— Austin Tomorrow supplement Secretary off^State Henry Kissinger-'s tantrum in Austria has come ,-• — to-The Daily Texan, Febniary,}l974. -^ w at a mogt inappropriate time; just when, -it'the fragile stufl dl com- Legalized pollution To insure expanded citi?en participation in the Goals-A"ssenrbly, -tiie ^romigg^^gs~:tOMelherv:Keaiias " " *' ' " ' ' City Planning Department devised a percentage profile by race, sex and manifestly duThot earn w;tn ms nonresoiutron'oi tne Indoeluha-etJitfi occupation, for each of.10. zones the planners?divided Austinhnto, as well As hai been-customary with the Constitutional: Convention, any ele^'j: Moreover, hours before the presidential visit to the Middle East is a hell as for. the city as a whole; From the outset of th? program, theCity Goun-ment of rcontroversy.;. is either politicized to the. point." of baseless : J of a time for the real captain to stqrt rocking~The boat, . cil stfe^sed UiarCHe results would be credibleonly if participants ip iji the. -generalities or it i.s left up to the people of Texas t'o decide in separate __By all means, asJKissinger demanded, his criticsshould put up or shut:® neighborhood meetings.andtheromp&sition-of-tbeiSbalsAssembly close-proposals,. _ _ Lf ^ up, but the media reactions to ihis resignation thread suggest.lha.t lie is ly-matcfted the cjty's profiles;.at the very least; adjustments would be -h* a;. -The former iklherase with an ehvironmentaramendmentproposK by _ banking on the latterrThe-media chorus has not slfown^siich hariTjonrT 'jsffflartp to.allow for racial, sexual or occupational biases, indicated by the ' Delegate Ray Hutchison of Dallas. , since the Gulfr6f T.•_ submitted while only 9 names were suggested for 19 "Mexican-they preferred the convention to remain silent on the matter, rather than Just one more time t ;succumb to Hutchison's proposaU-i-i : American'' vacancies"1-~-- TJEhe greatwhitefathers in Washington still are passing their legislation' • Anbther packing device involves the number of replacements to be '• In the heat pf the fire, Hutchison offered an amendment which essen-to relocate native Americans.5 -' . ^ made; While program director Dick Lilhesays only17 replacements need,?® ; tially was the first half of Dogget't's", and -the convention adopted it. On Monday, the House Interior^Committee votes on legislation wjiiclp be mader-DaVidson recommends 52 to 70-replacements-Many council • It was after a Monday night meeting with the Sierra Club, the en-will determine the future of remaining members"of the-Havasupaf Indian'' meifibers-support DayklsoH's preference for obvious Reasons; the more ; : vironmentalistgroups^^eLeagueofWme^yotersVblisinesspersons^Tid-: *trtbepw,hiclr-nowj'jnhabit-&-small^seetion-of-theAvesteriiGrand_('anyon. J replacements made, the larger thenumber ^professionals'' that can b^^; other convention' delegates that he vowed to ask delegates;to vote on a , This legislation will determine whether these nativeAmericans maystay' :; ||-v added. new amendment; one wfechgjyeS citizensifte right to sue pollutersonly if on lands-ijvhich have been ucsurped over the past half-century by the­^'naT?yr-the_ City-CounciLis_using the Nixonesque tactic of delay*. Jhe Legislature says-they"can biy passing legislation. ' National Park Service. . llffl Despite Lillie's.insistence that the pro ^iSrfbetterSthan^ The^Texan.-urg^aIL^iiteigSted,to3vrite:Texas Rep. Alan SteeliTian;­1sothat it will not becomeinvolved in l975City Coiincilelectlions, the couti-^ nothing. But nothing might be better than this new constitution. In the^J Arizona Hep, Morns ts.. Ooaii aitd"6oni»iitlee Chan maiTJamcs A"'rralcy= cil has repeatedly put off making the new appointments,-which have been words of Delegate Hilary Doran, "Welost our virginity in the Educational -of Florida, House of Representatives Office,Building, V\'ashingtoii, D.C • • Jf -. _...-->«—— r~u. ^ I rz ^ By^TEVE RDSSEOu ~ -before a-CQBgressionalxommilBy in t37fc "current-legal'^status -of--womeB~rridoeSr­ "Do not put... unlimited powerinto that "(t)he typical woman worker is prevent-^aiem from naving to light a. t.h.e.-hands of the bands lucky if she earns 60 per cent of (what)' jungle war in Vietnam,-or frota being •Rememberail Afen.wo2iidbe.tvrant'a if.'.-. the typical man worker (esrns)-r-even POWs ." There is truth:in this When • ftfty viriifrf. If pfirtirulnr fa "though testi^fioi^fcat ner"lQ~3iIigeBce war'm-the-servieer-doing-njjLbit-toJcfjepL­not paid to the,Ladies-we are deter-and • dexieruy caiuiOl accuuut loi Urr d-safc-for. Glilf Oil and United mined-to foi"'Hf-a KohaWnn nnA will difference in pay and status " While it's" -Fruit Company, I had occasion to spend not hold oursilves bound try any J.n.mr true that the ERA will not-directly at-• »e»cn mutilhs-getting nty-faTaccepted,~^with bayonets and decent to train men to .i--»....'L 1 .• i'n-1'^i.i—-• fjn gamov -hnttT-nrp tir hn .avniriefl­ kept half of the pop-wi.JlJation-decidedly un-;;^ in the back of the bus. Very Seldom cana whenever possible. 0—-fequair-As America's-^'' ^ , cycle of infefiority be Droken from, the One law professor put it th.is way: "'Asj ' bicentennial ap-' ~ . inside,..and that's why the good citizens .: a proaches, it is just now becoming poss^ ; ' of Mississippi were always howling ''brtitafizi^'oiv' y<^VvWBWnvUilefefeilt@ Lis*^ " ble,_that this~oversiglit might be cor-® about "Outside agitatofs.'' v.^-% tie to choose." h.-.' - rected by : ratification:of the' Equals' Schlafly also points out that-the Schlafly's most-telling point, one -tha^( #3 'r i"£ Rights Amendment. . ^ potentially negates everything I'vosaid, •.It's a good thing that Texas-has" is that.the ERA .would remove laws tliat; < • already jquietly taken the probably Guest viewpoints protect women. It would benefit men •'v irrevocable step of ratifying the ERA, • not women,, and therefore any man.wh hppansp fiffpnsitinn to the amendment on ; . , .. v -supportsit-is acting-outofself-interesl. -~TK»-T«mm-w»lcnm«»-guail.«iflwpoinl«. but--aflrpp thaf lho F.RA would benefit menj Ufa* national'level is finallygetting orgamz-"" s.ed. At.lfeast one legislature has refused' each submitted piece mutt: -our sex role straightjacket isno lessco a$?to ratify on the-ground that Qod made -fining than that of women. Opinion :© sv^women to serve1 men. If Gw}, indeed a1wayi tinge'd with seVIiinJe'resj Be typed triple-spaced.S-;?t-^.employment discrimination isJalready2 • made. But the fight is worth'wat'clii^ • Be iimitdcFto1a maximum length-of"1Off-^^beeause,-*win~orJose, it will take i, R against the law and any~state lawswhich s|psdiscriminate^:against 'women are the lines. _ &:•*•%*• ijj several steps closer to this simple prid :,;f£^ifault of*the women who live in the offend, l ciple: "Equality of rights under th" \''^5ding state. • -Submit gueit viewpolnti to Drawer-D,— law. abridged by_.Jh "^T ", Employment discritpinatipny^ntrary'c i University Station^Austin, Teif.' 78712 or t6 United States or by any state.oh to popular belief is'still very much with the Texan office, in the basement level of count of .sex." After 200 years; isn't;^ realize^hat^heir business financial Samueisoh. establrshmentartan thb TSP Building'. -^ tirpe? j. political leaders would never stand in the way of responsible land 'use.-' -; y-4 economist par excellence, , testified ' ^ II •. 4 I S~ " r' ' I I I HI 11ii-.1i. I I«j I I... -III... .....I. ..I — I I. I — .11. I.. I) || & if&pTHE DAILY TEXAN . j s>'r.,„ Niwip«p«r «f ffci UnlnrtHjr *f T»i«i,af AviHn Agnew seeks a Iriencl EDITOFrr...^ "...v...Buck HarveyJ RTANAGIWGrEDITOR: By JACK ANDERSON Ij^JThe former yice-presidenC;still; had^ "coulds^ithan aoy fori rbrdBJ Hefner^ •N vice-presidenC^still; had. and repeated his hope that Kleepe "could^ithan aay form orpriyate or g^ernmeht' United-Features Syndicate " enough -political glaitjor to gainj "find some way" to provide the elec-^;|spending.wiAvthe,single excepuon of the ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR Lyrine Brock'l : * WASHINGTON;1— In his tall from audiences with the crown prince in Jor-J tronics firmwith minority-businesshelp.' 5space program. NEWS.EDITOR..tv, Pam CIark% power,-Spiro Agnew left behind"a-dan aod theTshah in Iran. But Agnew's Despite the federal regulations, v Translating these jJaUstiw.uito jobs, w. ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR..,,.., ~ Dave Rlsher? ;valuable contact who now,is helping him', main stop, in Saudi Arabia, had toJ>& Kleepe"caved in. He dispatched an aide_i .the researchersdiscovecetjUi^ftis aTiet: f SPORTS EDITOR... . l.ai'i'y SmiUi "^ind-business deals, -— --^canrcllcd lffftunr hii wifr' ttrrnnrf^ill to Oklahoma with;orders to make the'v^lloss in employment when moneyis.spent-1. r The fanner vice-preSfdent.during his: * On'the busIness'Side, according to our —"I. '-ri't >. — A— • j.:'.-,. • :• j •: AMUSEMENTS EDITOR. ....: Debra Triplett", glory days arranged a'job for one of his :sources.lDobbin helpejpave the way. PHOTOGRAPHERS...~ ...Stanley Farrar, Marlon Taylor supporters; Tilton H. Bobbin^ as assis-admitted to. us that he does. financial , local jgdver-nmehl -.tanjt cotnmerce s^retary in charge; of favors for his former mentor. Agnewhas Aero'tronics gotits'njinority-jsusiness apr, .The^verage^'entagon budget of $80 fsl W' domestic and viaternational business. called on himj Dobbin said.to'^eta run-. proval and land^.^ whQpping $4 miHion afrbillio^-the^study alleges, results In^the T-JtV.W rJtW« .This has pot Dobbin-iii touch with Some , down on.apersonLor.a company, or tbdo" worth of contracts "j lbss of atrleast 1,600,000.fobs each year; -ISSUE STAFF , r%>of the world's .most powerful a bank or credit check." '""" ^.\F€obiote:-AlUeSTtdflr-usKelud;'i^iedfr.t.'aci»»'f!ie'-.'nation. -** * City Editor Dl Jefferson businessmen: Inside.sources say -he has -•But Dobbin,denied ?that he-arraneedi UDOn an. aide who had. handled the: • 'The loeical conclusion, therefore.-is Generar Reporters ."...a.,.".;. Richard Piy,.David Hendricks. Arine.Marie-Kllday, • used his -position to opepL doors for the t X S " .-x Ken.MclI,mi deposed Agnew. _J News~Assislants..... 7'^ ™->. T"'V lrr?. -. < "Ttoger Downing A forJorn-figurerAgneW has lost his Contributors .... ~ , Gail Bflr'ntrSondra.Stalcup, Susdn Lm(Jei.r" politicgt'fareer. He;: has b.een dtebarred Cutting comers; Under pres'surefrom regulations. AnSBA; spokesman.Said that«1 •. "whether,the cut was-allin defense cort-Bryan Brumiey, Wijlard Hall, John Myn"K j -from pfectiding law. • The Internal " Rouse Speaker Carl Albert, 3mall' •;the c^mpamr became cjualified in .Ocik-: • tracts /going to -civilian-industry or :. Editorial Assistants .,,, ... Rancjy BurgessrSteve Russell, Dale Napici Revenue SeH0eensi$hueezing hlfa for Business Administrator Tb0i" Klegpen ^berjpX^i971 wWeh;a majoiity control;: ; military /personnel -going , to state and Make-up Editor^, , ---, — , «. -Eddie fabler backitaxes. -"The Justice-Departraenfris..* violated regulations to bail' ojit.an e|e&-; was'transferred to; an employ trust. >. localirgovernments,:the-trade-off woUldi Wire Editdf " , J .\.t* }:v...!'. , Janie Palescluc considering a suit: to recover the. bribe-:• tronics firm from^^ Albert'shomje state'Ofw! Military spending: The idea 'tl^t" still |nean a^het increase ofjobs for the" Copy EditorsRiTri Keith Hartnell. Nick Cuccia-. rWilhatirZels moneyallegedly paid him Whilehe wasa . Oklahoma. / '* j ' " hoostirig military spending creates jobs"' economy." N h — gov'emment»dfficialr &oitie firebrands at ,The struggling company, Oklahoma, ; and"is good tor Oieneconomy, according: Footnote A ^Pentagon economist ".IngTif^evelltfant-to-sge-to recoveruhis j^AeFetronicsT-jlidnlt=qu$Jil5L_forL.£l ^ to an iinreieas«i: report, is.a myth. ' acknowledged' that the "arithmetic" vice-presidential salary. "minomy-biisinesS govei uiueiili cunUacl."" -'""On ,th^^jrgry^ ;wr WpT^LrM: '^research eratfe-Was^Qod.but i^Jnionx.exgresMd fn.The DaMy Teian^ Qumw of the: w-jpunlcajlop Bultfling A4l3S7TInqutr/es conccrnfrt^ *J«lfvery "and dawiftedadyertlglng ghpuldbdjnatlC-ln • Agnew tried to raisemoneybywriting: The firm also had money problems, not? dollars-spent biTthe Pentagon, the nation argued tliat the statisticsJidn't su^pofl lhos« ^ thc Unlvenilty^ada\i#iiitraOoil or the Board of i-3:200 {471-5M4J an0 dtBpiayMady4iriiMnj[ a nbvel. But;a£ter-the reviews'apjiearedi ' the least.of which was a negative worth" actually loses 20,000 johsi l^is.is ttie fin-:the .conclusions. "Aboul the only thirig ; (Unenis ^ 3.410 I47MQ65) ' .** — I 'this v no;-.-longer:• seempd a'promising v. VJ ding of a,fouir-monthatudy' byihe Public' •f t.< ' Tbe-naudnal advertising: rvpfcst^ntutivr of'Tfit'-JMilv a' promising ^f 'fgoo^opo, .yojTcah concludefromtbeseJigures^he7" TbelJaHy •Texaru a*tuftnt novfspa^?f^IJeUnivfrsily of-,Teia5.t(Ad>0rt. it pabUthtf by Ttiss^Stpdenf •"T^xan 1* Ni»Uonal IWucal|ufUTl AdveftislnR ' -career-r-Almost in rf8gf»ratinn,.hp nirnwl -^'J-Tn-plaCi' TtpgoaiV-h GlTP'iP in^ichlgan. A"* said^^isthatemployesof stateandlocal, ..|iPuliliurti jr^r^er-.Dr^Mveraity,8UUpnrM«U^tex..^^eaLcxJng(fln.Avc..ttiMl^ I v Ammah;and' Beirut, and then hit the Nevertheless, Albert;calIeU.Kleppe up^ Jvfigures'i and-fouHd that the ^Pentagon\ " highly skilled Jefehse,workers Were let^ t43$lt.iM.{hetctfRtMj rffrce (fexa^ 8(ydenl'PubUcitiont^ *,Strcetn. 8UM-N.- ­ m arians react to Nixon $• "By DAVID S. BRODER only two years ago by He might have saved his everyone but the Presiderit Vperienced politician like.^Mr.. j^l *1974, The Washington Post overWhelming votfe pftte peor breath, for his worn __enqugh_ to, survive the in-• would npt let' hihl forgel." feel: for him,' the eastern see the damage they Were do--was Shown afraud. Why only evitable tips and downs " The Hungarians :are the Europeans are,..genuinely ing to their country and its with Mr. Nixon?." • / 'Personalities a'ddor subtract realists -of the Communist puzzled that a man with Mr. world role by their, hounding. ; >.-^e mortung! after, that ses--i 20 percent to theexeputidn of world', but wb^WWagy-jjs^ayi -Nivnn'n pntynf v.. v hpaH nf ^bf ihe Presidehfe sion in Budapest,.the govern-policies, but.i don't know ,of in'g — with its-implications of gfit-p -inrl h»afl nf ffnvemmetit. The vi.sit,or said" most.; ment newspaper—(to—the npw hpari of government accepting the possibility of"a a cofiMnander-in-chief wBose" irntiqi lliH i..ii.l uu in -ir-tnnirlin-ipnt nf •ho.|^|pPrir'an ch.ange in the ATheriean--f fWhet if the damn trouble-maker asks for asylum..:?' authority was legitimatized indeed' great; but that', nur-embassy) carried an editoria tured in the belief .that the ^ coluipn comparing. Mr. Nixpn . begfniTinig of wisdom m rule of law: applied to all men, to OnodaKth.e.Japanesesoldier easterh Europe. guest viewpoint. • even the.President, -they who fought in the.Philippines _UtCTailYicouid.not-turn back for 25 years, after everyone from holding the~Pr^ldent to else hadsurrendecpd..The bat-, Co-Qp Consumer account. tie is over, it implied, and ^ ISA expuIsions wrong Action Line By FARHOKH'M. MAHMOUDI ting students appealed to the Student Courtto review the case. ~^{Editor^Bote;~MahinoudiJs_ajmemberprthe Committeef — thrown at-a student-wlio-wasldefending'his-^lews against'tha -disrupting the meeting were groundless. The mitiority's First •11 mm -• • distortions and slanderslaunched by thesecretaries. This paved Amendment rights had been violated because bf their expulsion' 'Call 454r3781, ext. 354 the wa'y for thesubsequent expulsion of the dissenting students.: for stating their views. Free speechdoesnot turn on the will of lor informafiSrr THe expelled students have tried. and are continuing to fight, the majority; and the majority must tolerate words it-does not to reverse this expulsion .and take part in the ISA again..On like ,'to hear. Just an hour or so after th6 Above decision was Saturday April 20, the officers of.the ISA.prevent?|d.(by_use of reached, the ISA secretaries again prevented the dissenting , several heavy-set guards at thedoors) the particiaption of the studenls to attehd ah lSA meetihg^ZlT ' . ~ expelled students m an ISA-sponsored public meeting on cam-Having; exhausted this-channel, -too, the expelled students' " pus. ''As the students.-held^.picketline,opposinglhe iMi-.^have iniUated jhe formation of the Committee for FrteSpeech democratic policy ot their organization^ secretaries, the ISA on Campus to bring the case to tBrstudent body at large. Just , secretaries called.oncampns poUce tocle^ the picket. But the before the end df the.spring semestera meeting washeld by the ­pohce recognized the fight of the picket andfurthermore, called committee oh; campus. It was recognized that such a violation °.n the meeting to the dissenting of democratic rights (freedom of speeqh and ,expreSsion).is"of students. Tne me^ng^was^palled off and a^"private'.'-meeting absolute importancx to every student-and is not.limited to ex­'?•*"> was "e*" elsewliere..in the UmwjrBuJdinp. . pt>lW-3panjan-stiid<»nte alnnp ?ss £xhausting-all the.possibilities'^ in^the lSA-itself, the dissen-, .We.are.r~~"",!i~'" * " * ' PI AM I S . usin the fight for defense of democratic-rights. There will,be a work meeting to outline the course of action to be taken by the Andso.once again. An ordinary dog at that-. committee for this Summer .at 7 p.m; on Thursday in Union: Kitten Kctboodle had to Building 325. Endorsement6f the committee's aimsandsupport admit'she had been . Otftsmaa^ hy Have an open-air muslc lestlval at home H££!IZEMEM8SR. Qutck, Reliable Service ; lmt»tmevsanfO)srm: 3Si...ONBm,AFm.THBES NOUS OFS£Um,ffCAMB flfinioiveeit'.SE-4.4o •muKMrnvr amm inurn at and * course, but it mm'uxx^&mte,x ~~wa-5o~ftfftm8u! • >r 7Stereo^Headphones -(V&AmmnroF ss%!­ It s .completely different! The o'p>en-air design' of the new Pioneer Sg-L4p stereo headphones enhances .the intimacy of. personalized listening. Incomparable bass ^reproduction • is achieved by.-a i^rnbtnation ot technological advances -. ' and newly developed speakers Iri each earpiece. Exvremely . light weight, nearly one-third less than present headphones: [."The SE-L40Jssa..complete departure from conventlonallty-i­ n •md a nev< experienceIn sound. --s.is m- Crossword Puzzler Answer to Saturday's Puzfle SE-L40 ; ACROSS DOWN^, anuraH nianssia -it-;vet 1 Pasture 1 Prohibit ansnraa list $39.95 2 PeerGynTs­ ' -c sound A;!:'.;.".. £Praspia tiBBia i. — tnolher •;;«?< , , v—4 Month sanfa —3 Cokfie Intoiii wpp cjbhgb sale $23.50 . 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ELECTRIC .COMPACTS $15 ini;4^ It on your ears in soft, cushioned 48 Biotherol -^sale-priceJJtoo,*can't believe the 3 mo. for J3S_ ' . -i.'S . comfort..The lightweight SE-20^ l«^# v'-v] Jacob as kind to your budget as-It Is W'^4 -savings that is' in -store-for '^S Smallchild OFWCE ELECTRICS $22.50 *" --J t,\ l „ .1SO Long;-24 25 your ears; Completely-• packaged. ssM jComo by and-try. out . yttur new 34 17 28 ..0* 3 MONTHS T0R452;50 ® » •ijr t -slender Hah- with, eight, foot-connecting cable ^i|| ears ... they'll be -an improvement ~ " -tot.) , . • ; . 33 andpermanept storagecage11 to your persohalized_sound, M 4 " 1 B-t-SuBUMole : ADDERS — CALCULATORS *•• v .-. • "v.-•; *5**'• r-~ ­63 Females i a?? WEGlVEYQUFkEE90DAYOl>7iC 1 v ' , . " v f"1 T~> ^'•r| . 55 Most 42 43-; 44 45 -,r.sagaolous-:>_ lower ot "S: 36 UNf\ffiRSlT¥ 68'Prlson oflt-r-4fr-.48 4S> 50_, -•r- BERKvnnns While supply Tqsti: «eQ,opi :ti»-mttmn«o:mfcoir»ft; i*Jsaasss1 ;-64Mansnama 65 Affirmative1 40- ~ SfereoHShop «>*) . 66 Plieher» -M . ^ OUADAI.OPE • 4'76>3iUS I,t Onft-!6»e parkiH Rodent;--;, BURWETRQAB'^Mif7,t 23rdT &,i»uacialupie r WrUUfchdtO or rnnre Rnw&AmarSr>^[ s SX + *• ti 67, I tT •;rr.- '} & Wa5ter Charge Welcomed. 0' ­ Open Thurs. & firi. tili9:30 -y f 75^--V • * :iiWevdnesd^y,jJ -V-ft.^ ^ppir* tipsy /fiy* • • --~~ j ™­ . m, ' V^t*" ' *,•£*-' '"V • "'^ I *,* M >W»N ^ V -' <"> • -*. -' '_' -!h >'- * IWmmwi mm s ^ ^ « bS « u» :S!»5«\«iiuiu\i.|iiouj1v; First Baseman, Pitcher Ponders Future as College Sporfs Career Ends • w atr „ •' •••••' ^rK&S --. • .. , ,. ..... .........•*•-... . .. ...... . ^ BY LARRY SMITH • struck out 111 batters in 82 innings, which was the beat ratio-of captain of the LSU baseball team when he was in "college:; a Texan Staff Writer; - the club. His-tegh-was-14 in-a District VI playoff game against "'•'My father was-offefed a pro contract, but.he turned it - OMAHA-.— The major league baseball illalt tamlud. Uj.1 v. cell, • I nTiirmn-p fwh --. • ....... • , down." Burley said. "Since he.pla^d baseball; he was always m. and Texas,' Rick Burlev was not picked. Scouts felt he ran i . jjameatMiiisl Luuisjafln Tooh Bur-lev-plrkpfl tnrqe 'allle U)1HiIjj-uic.-JIc ocdmortto lm"'" "'yjhfll sir'he-Qlnu> tn ho a tirtl hag«mTnr.-nmt-hic-fa£t..hnll whs ton glmr-fnr-runners off base. "I havea.pretty good pickoff move,'' Burkey became-my tirsrcoach. ~ 1—' 1•—' T~r-: lit T ^nn'tUniiIrl n i nri-in'i iirVr"^'" It i •» *—-J---UnlU fmnt knrin'nn/l piUaUShw him to make it as a pitcher. .--_ '.' ; \' ' said. "But, Idon't ^HI|iirLouislana"Techis a'gbod example"Tlfty VT7 i. * So, fi&sgnior chemical Engineering'major may have to return don't run tte bases very well." j., • J_ has'caused him to be:las?effective on either position. Instead;, f; ^5 to-Texag next fall to get the fin"al l2 hours Fie ,needs for his EVEN IF BURLEY'S career ends with the College World he says pitching has helped-hjs hitting. I /-•degree instead of pursuing a professional baseball career...", •Series, he sfill-^ill liave had almost 15 years of-organized "Vyhen I pitchi 'I am m(?reiioosened up when Hirst come to -Co: "T thrn'ifo f hnH i rnorf pnnngh year to be considered fofthe baseball. He began playing on a team when he wasin thesecond bat: It's sort of like getting your.fir'st.ctfntcfet in iootball;,IFI've ; pfos," Bui;ley, 6-4, 210,isaid following a team workout sunaay.. gratle ill Fikiice. been pitbhing. itiielphs me to' g«5f the buttet'flies out " ; "But I guess they disagreed. I think I'd havea'better chanceas • .'I played .^jn ; the military base, where my father was THIS SEASON,burlgy posted a 12-U i'wim dab 4 while : a pitcher than as a first basemarr because l'in not 'a very-fast stationed," hesa.id:!'Basebail around the base was very big.'' batting .3lO.L He'tied catcher RickiSirad^y-for tke feajti lead in runner,Playing professional baseballwas oneof my big goals.'' After graduating -frpm Thomas Jefferson High School in home runs with l&Sn.d le "TheGiantsdidn't have-done better. r — -ZSttoOf • did about-as well as I expected to asia*pitcher, he said. "belJev^ t.should havehit ;400. Uvas.araiind !a.500average but by-college'standards: he.aiso has.a fairlygobSfastbaU. One •Jac and tne pitching is not^allttiat/iiujh' bettorit) thf» ;w: indicatibti of his pitching effectiveness isthat this last season he -come tn'.Texas was hiS father, who. Was the centerfielder.aBd* Iversity division." .. t. •' ',rr '. WEDNESDAY 1>iOON FORUM Title Match June-12 ¥4, UNITED FARM WORKERS MEDIA Tickets i Remember ; x /';:-show On Sale -iX*K5>i; Slide _shows,' including .'.'Frujts, Vegetables and rm? " yeo'ple.-^'GejiBrfll lnfnfmafinft gmi-Biip^gn^^^ •-nf'-••' ; Bring your own sandwich. 'tv available > at • the : Oiiivefsity JUhHVERSHVY-Y-—St^Qp for the Joe Frayer-u SHIRTS PANTS -Je'rry Quarry -fight to be ; M 2330 Guadalupe shown on closed circuit TV.at '-W fABove SommersVDrug) City Coliseum. "J ff'" Pi • • The match isscheduled for 9 , tn Shoe5hpp *$ALE * te p.m. Monday -wWe mokfeand •SHEEPSKIN : -Uj The -r-world light repair-bpo^s " RUGS" heavyweight title match, pjt4-*-' •shoes belts • Many ting Bob Foster against-Jorge ;oo >• Bealitiffll Colors ^Ahumadd, also will be shown. leather • ;The Erazier-Quarry:match is THURSDA^pUSHT •LEATHERSALE* . a heavyweight title elimina-_ goods VofioU kindi) colorO 75Vper ft, -tifin matclTand is scheduledv. tsii FUN CLUB IMAGES FOR MEN AND WOMEN ilitMS. for 12 rounds; Jusfforfun. And for friends. -The Thurs­:...on hisday. Capitol Saddlery day Night Unibn Bowling League. TWO 1614 Lavaca "Blor ticket information call Sunday,-Jiine 16 Austin, Texas 478-9309. guys and two aals on a team. We'll the University Co-Op. he)p you tina Teammates, ui you can . make your ow.n team. Crown SfaQDs *•J?iaza»balc<3Be"?7= SUMMER^ toniaht in UNION 300, at 7:30 p.m. Call ^jr-wiaas '-.2900sGuadalupe CA8TR1P6FCITY SAVE! SAVE! SALE AS1-S008 for additiofiai info. Highland Mall FOB NEW OR USED< CARS--tfY OfV lJP TO QAO/, £Ei--­W^ARfl¥^AM^M4^aAClC--«»> W »» JO% cyri:^ uncr rn" OR CASSETTE STEREO OM PAn c.Tco ' 0 ^-^CXCESS-AWST Cp_^ N C/^R svtjipjuut—enp im.m^c;h '?n , — ^ EOS, " -SYSTEMS-FOB. IN-DASH INSTALLATION. WITH US ^ASSCTFES. SPEAKERS/ WElNSTAtL YOU SAVE UPWARDS WHATEVER YOU NEED. ' v-WE^REPAI^ ; v _ OF_. --•--• $100.00 WE CARRY ACCESSORIES -V^*—w, LIMITED! HOT ONE 8-TRACK CAR STEREO INSTALLED WITH 2 SPEAKERS EXACTSA VACATION. TOTAL PACKAGE PRICE -ONLV*4646 Ygq'11 have to-agreerthat-^ummer-sctool-isnlt exactly,a vacation. But X^' SAVE $36,00: ifjrou are planning to pick-up a "few hours this summer, living 7 CASSETTE CAR STEREO FOR S20.00 MORE ri--tw ' 'Z ^ w'^ us only yacation you'll get-. . ._a~vacation frorir-gasolIfTe worries, .parking costs, high food-prices, jind s> MonUCa'Hdge City . f • • house cleaning hassles. • -1601 Son Jacinto Qkay. sunny Acapulco we're not. And even though we're . ?s T­twenty-two stories .high, we can't exactly fev fe-3t vap.N4-» j. . compete with t-he Eifel Tower.^ ft­ ¥'£,t'SnflrX$M. feiY^ ?v-j> 4,^1 , ; . should .think about. -. so you can park " _ your carJ^rtjro additiona1'charge r V:: ^ '" rTortRsTprr^ "^§S2e2­ Second, we_j5erve all the : good, , » ' * -k ** a'price you couId hever-affortf.on virinr own.^ ...in .Spearfish, South Dakota, 'on-S And:third,-^e offer a total istivitenmerit''^: the 22nd -of^January, 1943,-the complete with maid. service, an in-' ' temperature rose 49 degrees ffram door fivvimmingrfwol,-it-game-room s-' minus-4 to plus 45) in two featuring billiards. foosbalK l^ 'v ™ "rfiinutes? t ping pong,^pin_ball and7 * / - Jtiore. a mini-gym. a refer-llfV? _ ence library, a typing .room •w.|iiO. wit^ .IBM electritis, and , m ' ''l-, i\ '' 11" l'ie usuttfs.-, X^-<­ r-;ti SK1 dr\fsses and phone numbers, plus the schooler '» 1L lArf .'r -'i—« .A college and classification each' student, ^ , v';.' Directory will be inserted intoith* full circular v' Hon. of The-^Pajly Texan-1 ' ' "i~Vv ^ s . puElicatioiT tTX'*'"'''­ wmh for i4 later tbis month! . ^ mm .... . yjljSj another publication of TexasStuQent Publications::'^ J: •] •' ' ~ -j ' • ' w n • jVi ' T-H. •fSffprt'-, . J .^* I. , I. • .,-jj I,. s^JBaae i»3? ray PAH^T TExaw -. as . njfy > *\x\v ]'J* ^V* ^<&?sAr !isS££&feSESl£a£Sfl£da*gjgy}3CT"{g'jia&v .perfect biint single by second • hi l i . "v-wjn* . v*m*« w.ticir icimciuci,>it'lry­ and the; Sooriers then 'loaded -— --.^^nave j)e,en: aeiH buseinenrretiit•uruinr-iuliL: Pukji-irfj wny.^:-; -~ -7 --7— -Vw««.«« u»w;.hwuuci> -uitsiiMuauea : home by the Horns.;Irt 1972, '•"•>'11 n :;;.)irit;W r» Uy••^hnyUfnnrHfc lpnv-Of Inn-Ptfrhfti. Thgy Lhe bases.on two hits and a Texas-beat them 7-1, aMlast/. H?we«r..after,the:.5eMn^; off tl^r^Tk^=== ^—uiar^wno Dats lefAiianded. -jea-ir.'nHi8--«6oWSr^:3yM|: would haye;scored aeain but oklfhoma P>tchors Burlev was able ttiget out of : —.tt o—-v dpff^atoH 10-2 . . raown.^rtdfyvas abferto pitch a wrMiU Jidye.scoreq,again, out fj feK-1 had *eonri sturf''*-• * • the .inning when rightfielder -'— — complete game * a tremendous catch by third Meek'said "Texas iust cani'e " K en ny. King v; who wras ' v^jTHE TEXAS^\yih:^s'th6if:J':^*7;^'^?=S . tbpk a out swinging'?lnd thev h^d —­ ^i5t&mthern Ultabis^Jeftir ^'CT^eri^ ..:_LQngherfllsL]oneJoss w^s to^„ respecl ioi» (Stan I Meek, tl .He.is ill? first Texas hitter to not impressed with hls own -the UmversifV ^alrSnuthern Oklaboma -starting-pitcher. fecor^'iiiore ttan lOOhtte-in-a--7h'"s is despite the" California, which the Horns r—JUUMH4-2 Return AUQUST 23; 31 Aug. 23 FOR INFORMATION CALL 478-9343 HARWOOD TRAVEI 2428 GUADALUPE STREET EARN CASH WEEKLY­ -5;. . -• . . ^ Blood Plasma Donors Needed . ~ Men & Women: ;zzs EARN $10 WEEKtY ~" CASN PAYMENT FOR DONATION % ­ Austin ^OPJEN:MON.&THIERS.8 AH to7 P.M. TIMS. & FR1. 8 A.M. to 3 PJVf. k-~V .. . •_ CLOSED WED. & K-& Ci^isp _ 40^ W. 6th 477.3735 In the fourth mmng. Texas hits -all in the eight -and took the lead-by scoring two struck out 13 • runs on only one hit. Clj&rk-led . —I reSliy didn't have much off with a walk, and when of a fastball today,'' Burley rightfielder Tom Ba11. said. "I tried,.to.make-tjiem attemljed a ..sacrifice bunt, hit the curVe/V -Meek-tfied-to-get-flirt-it rn •"•'•;• ntmi pyc f,fnh|rrr, fn rnnn ntif (hratir fVi^ K<»11 i^»n -• .Cw cond but threw the .ball into ihe rnidcll(3 ilinings were thTeo crntprfield. .Catcher Doug ptrr>r^V'r^twiHpHtythf» T°f: . .v—w.^. nita.vniiiniiii.iin ,uv irie lex- -?*e;rl£rjftu*e^1' hi? ^ basemah Kelly ^Sn.dfer hit a solo home run to right field OKlahoma's leading RBI. man, hit a.-grounder. back.ito the' mound." -, "Iv CONSIDERED taking .Burley out several times' dur­ . ing the.ball game," Custafson said.. "But, he was continaall^ gelling tlie~ball overthe-plate'­ _so I_let him stay.inr' -EventBougtrlSixas w»[i bv a-.-­ FREE NITE VE NBW YORK ROCK y'DOORS OPEf|: 8 HAPPY HOUR!: 8-9 ' LAMAR 477-3783.iT RIVERS STARTING TOMORROW LIGHTNIM' HOPKINS Advanced Titk«h-Oijunl ft*cbrdr& tnatr SaiKtgm •.tk ArmadilloWorld Hdqtrs.. presents ~ ELECTROMAGNET: ''Q"^" ^0' ' tndoors 7-'""s C v,N6 COVER CHARGE 525h Barton : Springs Rd. tC 477-0357 LASSIFl I®V1eIR^F|TI"<^ORDII^IB'^&NK "™T THE DailW TEXANs ' — --V-. ' ' -fc CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! •WRITE YOUR AD HERE­ :-ZLL'W* 4 ^ g. 5 - SWnount Enclosed. ^M«e ^this handy chart ti» quickly arrive Number of Pays Mail to: Time^ ~2T ^UISIiN^I£XAS_ZfiZ12_ NAME 20.40. iMQPHOHL j at cost. 5­ (15'tvord t^inimum Times times Times Times 10' -Cost-perj^prd' 10 »W -35 60 .15­ 1.50 BMi: 2.88-1 -5,60 ua­ 3.06 "S.05 "10.56 IB 1.B0. ^.24 6.30 -10.80 „3.« •11.40 large, margin. much of tlwf game centered around the lefthander versus righthander strategy. * • : Since six of-Oklahoma's batters were lelthanders. (iiisfafsnn haH-pfanned-earhpr in: the week olr-in?H)g a .lefthander aeaii • against them if the strategy didiiotseerp toWk Seven;. of Oklahoma's. Seigh't hits were b^Jefthanders, "and riWrt ' wthnnHH was Meek." ';';l was luckv to get a couple 0f good, pitches,.'' Clark 'said.. o'i doubt if rm%tting.as high ; as .200 against lefties this ~ ^ ^rr— SHAKEV'S, 291.5 GUADAIUPR Presents [ • " KENNETH TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY Beer, iy/ne and Pizza TONIGHT-r- PAT GARVEY BEVOS WEST SIDE TAP MIXED DRINKS thrandfeo -ACE IN THE HOLE ?C FRJEE BEER 9-10 ' Zl OFF 2nd Steak Dinner x ~ With This Ad 452-2306 t.,f " -H * IH 35 & TONIGHT GREEZY WHEELT THURSDAY PLUM NELLY 707 Bee Caves *37 327=9016 -i—1— x. 3S6 1^­ i walk bike, or bus • an^Crher^niT CeiiJi a}-Austin— new modem» 4539 Guadalupe furnishings^ conventenKo ten^SracM^ .,ennjs-;__ .. University GRAND OPENING 5< H*1 i, Michelob Beer 20' ,YvP; s, munoioD Deer ^u -O mug $1.00 pitcher:with the purchase of'any. sandwichV pizza^ *&r--tneal ,.1, Live Folk Guitarist, Jorge Palomarez, I*" on Friday and Saturday nights Featuring.13 varieties of hot sandwiches, served on -12 inches of hot -French Bread Alcnl tht> krft.iri Pizza. Italian food= andShish Kahoh. .. Sun.-Thurv t1:00am to 1 pm _ Fri^jt Sat. IhQO afn to 2:00 ant ­ 2801 GUADALUPE " 472-3034 THE DAILY TEXAN > -• "•fcrs . •> PT^sP* ...something to reajly T your TEETH ^ when you :have .something to BUY • RENT >.kc SELL • Lease jor something to just "give away! i ™ ­ •T-««*> 'W, You'll « v ai MOUTHFUL ofResults! CALL ^ xf ^ -vt-* i>0CX-am.-_to5^00; ^%4SS£i V i I'' * f*~* -f f> ^ T1'V1 '.rj.'J1 iTfn'tft>nrt>| L..,%^t0-.00 a.m. • "JMnmtiy T^ksn Twvtdoy... 10:00 cum. •Central"'Air •-? ' WANT T05ELL Eureka efectricbroom, • _Thvrsd»>-T»«en-W»«hwrfey,-.10i00-ejSL. --24addeeback-chaits4.MeQnavox portibte"' Hdey TtuaTtivndey....^... 10:00 a.m. • >' * Carpeting stereo. Best .Offer. 474-5252. "—~ JL Large Poo) B/W -T.V i$7S), ches! of drawers (1^5), i —vacuum cleaner«30>. 472-4903. 3815 Guadalupe T2-FIBERGLASS 5AIC80AT/ trailer, ? Shuttle 4 Biks. • "tn th« twrt *f mod* In. «n two vesh, three cushions. Economical ­ erfvwtmnwnt, nvhct-imnl be 454-3953 ;" .-452-5093 sport. S300 c&sh» 441'627S.atter 6. . • yiv«fr«krtMpwb8»h*n mt*mpainiibleJar ' e«^ ONEliE»iwi htwtiwi.Mdtims far •dtyutMwirtf afould Ur*mod« not loliv. tfeoft,30 doy» whm fMibfcaUqp^ . . s108 plus E^; . . -DESK .FOR • • SALE: • Colprfu'l'Shag Carpet • -Gray metal with fop, twin LOW STUDENT RAISES pedestal typeTwrth letieT^jiie^fTr^" :;:C«n}ra|-_Air'_ Lslr­ 15 wota mintmum'each day ...4 *75 drawer. ,s150 inetrwes -nrofchmw' swivet -• Pool " , 7­ .. mpg., tune up, battery. })300.477-UW.""" KAYAKS . '63 VW. body.ruff,runs good.GoodJ^res~' / -S37J or best offer.X«H:44l-2534. Leave : ' message. •« v on display.at. Highland Mall at. Special price through. Saturday. *"• *^in "J­ t".,/'/?71 CUTLASS -gold'whiffe vinyl top, air 2 cond. S2,125. Call 478-6168. r The Sailboat-; .1966 BUiCK SKYLARK One owner, 81. ' Shop 5 j000 miles, AC. V-8, excellent condition, ^standard .fransmisslo.00 ' (Prepaid,-No Sjtfuods) Students must show Auditor's •jecelpti.arxl.pay in-advance in TSP «$g; 3.700 125th &; WhiHsJ from ! e.mold. 4t30 p.m. Monday through Yafertin^^omfrey,^Fo-fMieng, kGotu- Friday. . Kola'. Sa^sasparilla/ Mandrake; Ha.wthorne. BerrV, Hyssop,' Myrr^>om • and. Capsicum, are combined with ( natural-Vitamins and, Minerals In one caretuily batsnc' Juicy sweet watermelon,.-18-^2 lb. aug. 1968 -VOLKSWAGON, good condition? 99" ea. Home grown' tomatoes'25* Jo. » J900. 476-9101. Y ' .• ' -Fresh peaches 25!ib. AH Hems subject to , reasonable limits. ALL f»RpOF 10W50 lubricant protects gasoline Engines for 50,000 mile's­ -between oif chaogei: 441 5174i­ "V tljiAbb THREAPS' 1770VW. AM/FM, rad.Uils, cfearv^englne.. 10% OFF -petTRtr^^i7I^W¥ner^tt50.~i»t«>na ­ HM8t?, it ' • wltiORlfa3onanTi^oeentfTecyctedand*~- •new shirts .blouse*,-leans, ties, hats. •64 RAMBLER STANDARD, air. radio, iewelrV, a^»rAiBFnfatiovi. MWrty_ . ilhtalloiii T-sfth 40's summer-dre&sei. . ootterv. celiac- vM's summer dreun, pottery, collec­ Ptceilemj^idltlon, tires good, 20jmpg. table!, and mora. •+» "Ji-J1! -«»f(tiece» \M CORVETTE, AM/FM, ajl, 427; clean, 12975 or otder car In trade. Take up balance.^474-4444. 474-1041. VEGA'TI Hatchback standard, radio, . ,,r>ew4ttm. inspected. 46^000 miles, 25 AM/FM STEREO, BSNTNMRKI phono. Compfef* wlfh 4 speakers. Flrst-j-jials, uiiu mhI^jj«uidM>hsr-CA/CH^dlj=.&;?•' $m. 454-9ia. ^Partments, hwasher, disposal door to door garbaae •ril^lritn niul T^ ..1 tt f.__. . », • 444-1931 ••.•pickup, poot, \maid ;serv)ce If desired, •JMMEDIATE~SALE—KertWQOd_Jrtsreo, . Rod Singleton properties • . -v washateria incompiex.' See owners/ Apt, ; receiver,dual furhtable, baseand coverr? • ' •113 or call 451^4848.^ FrazFer speakers. Call. 476-6>5i;x: m : Virginia. ' • ^ ' • < W.ORKING JU-,S, EFFICIENCIES S100 OfJ BUSY m t 'J-1 BEPROOM S135.00 * • 2 BEPROOM SI75.00 --. FOR SALE! Pioneer SR-202 Apartments-shown till 9:30 p.m.. ­ Dishwasher, disposal, 6 blocks new list Is S140. .CSC Monitor Directly dn Shuttle..Seven minutes-from campus, p^tra nice luxury Reverberation amplifier, s«5, South -Cufe Ibedroom adarfrfients ' Bergsfrom ^ * s apartments: ' •< . J?f' speakers, 3 feet high, 2-12 inch ( ,J woofers,. 2 tweeters and a :/ 474-1712 . .. .. . 1 midrange,-tremendous powe"r ./' NO LEASE ( 2919West Ave. .. ' 5« 7Cnir^°781OU"d"$90 ^»yn^ESHia.w.lMn_clos..,V -fe 1/0-/IJ1 ext iVf.. . • Kitchen cabinets galore. All BlilsPBr" : OLD "MAIN" •'..444J93I • . * • ^ 444-2070' APARTMENTS '• Rod Sfnglefon Properffesr ,™ .t -Why waste time on axity bus? Walk to Musical -For Sale ' fi.f% class Unique &llfit Mlfiencyv. and one. 1—— -bedroom apartment* Furnished, AJi.< Pf LARGE ADVENT SPEAKERS'. Greet -Bills Paid -shape, S175. Ediphone guitar, six string;-• -$125.00 ^125 and up. |^y«r otd, S60. Craig, 3^35^,4^^ \ Bedroom Furnished .2503 Pearl 'WALK TQ CLASS Call 4773264 "# --Pets • For Sale LONG'HAVEN 'TI: ' THE ; SMOOTH FOX TERRIER puppies. Sire APTS. , •JV-' BLACKSTONE . 477-5662 *1, : S. Dam both AKC Champlons. 3>5-4t}9.. . M . Shuttle Bus Corner t , OLD ENGLISH SHEEPDOGS, AKC male, female >75. 44494(5. f( Homes -For Sole STUDENTS • NEEO'a nice fur/flshed • house with lots of trees, wfhdows, & a fireplace? 441-3591>-1 ' *fra< ... worksJ>op._ vestment. 474-5617. 1969 MOBILE HOME,"12*41-2bedroo-m;. •AC/CH/ washer, dryer/carpefed/S3,200.' University iotj'47*5224. ,v parage Sale -For,Sale '?A CALL 472-3930 FOR. Arf, BlCyCle,' iSsssss-^-.Blackboard, Books, Bookcases, Clothes, Si/MS iDljbas,-Electrical: Appliances, S»«lng ' Machines, Television, Mor». • Misc. -For Sale • yT&_raP CASfeFKtees paid for diamonds, ^d gol^gpgalDiamond Shop, 4018 N. : HP-35 CALCULATOR, SJ90* JJ68 Chevelfe, 1700.^Schwlnn yersltyl0-«>e«d A bike,iM..Bri*fcasev JS.Caa 477-8l67or 476^312. -0 SALE ANTIQUE Queen' Anne fab|e,T chairs,-masslve> mahogany1-.Iwokcase, -snffTffh*''', 'tynuiJgfeg WALX UNIVERSITY. 2 Large bedroom*, study* separate kitchen, fabulous bafh.. AC,.jjanefed,. carpeted/ drapes, frostiest refr.ig,new stove, park­ ing.Nochtidreri. tio pets. Nomore than7 occupants. Seniors^ graduates,,or facul­ ty. Water/gas furnished. Jl50/monthly. 478-9125; . _ • : highlandmAll ARE:A ON ~r1ri . . SHUTTLE ' H«?e, • a. 2 jftegrooms-furn. or gnfurn: with large walk-ins, beautiful landscap-^ i2fc F.C2f?,A,w ABP-Reteff. -4$£.$ 3262, 472-4162. Barry GiMThgwafer'Com-^ • pany. • • -. \. . »•-• • -.i $139. 1 Bedrooms • Shag-* Paneling Giant walk-ins Bate ins • Baiconfes Spanis^.furnishlngs' 2423 Town Lake Circle 444*8118 472-4162H. Barry Gillingwater Cooipany •*' .1 .•t,.l||l . I' CASTLE ARMS APTS " •.Shuttle Bus*3 Blks./.*• ' . . . A *• RETREAT APTS. 4400 AVE., A-' .459-0058 AAOVClN TODAY! We call Tt-our mini-dorm; you can call (t home. Great for budget-minded students who want prlvacy.-Your .choice of burnt' •oraijge, chocolate brown or. green sttag'. ­ with brigh wallcoverings. Patios. Pools, 'tabaharrOh-shuttle route;mlnutesfcom . the University and downtown. Efficien- T t bdr* al«ia av*nabte: • Symmer rates. ^ _• •_ AA/nnH^ C v 2220 WMIowcreekTTfTve " 444-6757 -T and "3 bedroom townhouse and flats bills paid. Summer from 1165. xOn shuttle bys route, dishwasher/ cen*ra^ air. pooL game room; ^afrWMii or corhe-by-T201 Tlrtnln Fofd Road,;Apt.W. Turn East off IH35 on E Riverside^Orive..; . • » WE RENT z?AUSTIN g: ---1 .-.. • Vfeur -fiine"is.'y!alu«ble,:"^''; •. Our service is free.. J .PARAGON — $6^.50/month siQO -:$iro L-' WEST OF CAMPUS ­ 5 BLOCKS RUMMER RATES New semi«efficiencles. Sha5>-carpel," .. cable, gasi water, furnished. RED OAK.:£&K-. • . 2104.San Gabriel. S121 Summer>Rafes-.• ^ * —W7-5514 .... . _??-^?l!4__OAe__bedr"oomv' large closets; '' , fully carpeTeci, c-abTeT^Sis^ „—;—_—. . piosal,water, gas, swimming ' . . pool, furnished. Walking dis­2109 SAN GABRIEL. Private andLarge . >arlce !° UT. -No^Children or . IBR Apt,. Full Kitchen. AC,* Furnishwi. pets. 610 West 30th, 477-8858. wsrer Hftrcyi-PsJdrSummefr-Rjie-L. SiiO ' 4>6-im Hs120 s­ }40S>toNGVtEWr«Tnd'J BR.-ft,si lSR FyRNISKED v , Apartments Furnished/ -AC. Covered-A -- ParKinj, Pool. 1 BR -II35 2 BR H60 r. krng SizeBedrooms 5 . ^. Pooi^plstljyastjer f. 4106 AVENUE AfAII BlfiYPald. I&2BTI" SHUTTLE BUS TB . Furolslwa, .AC,VXoy«f«a ParklnaK Larger T-nsn Most,. IBR -S160, 2 BR .J: SI6S:­ V -JLi, 452-1801 '* MARK V -If No Answer At'Above Call < -451*7901 39RAVE.P, 453-1084 EFFICIENCIES -t SlOOiOO . . HARTFORD PLACE , 1 BEDROOM-5130,00 : 1405 Hartford Road. 261-2390. Large fur­ • 2 BEDROOM -'$190.00-. -nished one bedroom-and efficiency ALL BICLS PAID aMrtments. CA/CH, sh»9 carpet, full - JiJvW 6 BLOCKS.CAMPUS , Kitchen, quiet atmosphere, lust oft En-' ' „j-f"001-SHUTTTLE BUS ROUTE field Rd. Convenient to UT,Capitol Shut- ROOMMATE . FURNISHED IF le-.bus. SUMMER RATES, FALL LcASiNG-NEEDED 2408 Leon HABITAT HUNTERS " NEW­ A FREE apartment iibttters service located in the iowerlefrel of Dobie Mall. EFFICIENCIES us Come by or phone now and take advah>. ~ """ -— —~=-* fage of the only no hassle method-of SHUTTLE BUS" apartment RUhting. Lower level Dobie' . Mall, Suite 8»A. Swimming pool, beautifully ' Phone 474*1532 v furnished double 'or stddio "bed, all have dishwasher; dis­posal, central air. and heat, 4oym shag,, carpet,•ii' room.--" - e.xtra. storage ... EA 305 West 35th 453^4364 1/ 2, and bedroom v apartments, a bLodcrtnTrtarsrSSroom1 apart- Sent, CA/CHr* carpeted, dishwasher/­ Offer, the solution to ble,' lauhdry,"covered parking. $128 your housing". -"I The South Shore's central location SHORT WALK TOWER. Old 2/3v provides easy access to U.T. bedroom apartment. Windows for^­ Come byano see our new efficiency and -Slant>,.»240. 476-3462. 4764683. 1902-1904:: 1 bedroom apartments on'the banks of ueces. -. • . . — .Town Lake. Complete With ^hagb . carpeting, accent wall, modern fur*, TARRYTOWN 1 Bedroom.-Mature. ­ niture, plus an individualded( 6verlook» ' singte.' Shuttle; pool, trees, lake, bills jng the water: gaW. 5135; Recorded description. 472-/* f/.« ? 15.* al| bllls paid SUMMER .RATES! New efficiencies. • 300, East Riverside Drive • 50"1"* l*d. *t>*s carpet, dlstiwafher, ­ ^-1. -444-3337;' -——'? 140 and up. Call 472-7611. i: --PRePCRTlCS -LThlllLWLIeS • ii.£« ltP57.^!F?TAu$TIN ^ • 5"9.50 All-Bills Paid, furrtflhed. 6911- -472-4171 .6|ri3 Great Norttrern. Cable TV. • • weekday.*, v -.-washer/dryer facilities, CA/CH, mature students,.no pets or children. Qylet for those who are seriousaitt want to study. 472-4175 ."X -Phone 477-620), John-'Ludlum before 5 ~ weekertds^ : ' " { weekdays. Resident manager 452-4944 after 5 and weekends. • ~ ^ •• i KENRA^ Bi " 3001 -3007-, -APARTMENTS' ~ DUVAL COLLEGE "j'V yi2122-Hahc9ckDr, . COURT; APARTMENTS 1 -r-• ' ' TT _,• - ---« Furnished Eiff.i5i.ency. Sumrper Rates -UTAH" SPEAKERS," like iww, 3*ay.-each_"nexfl«A^rlcaitafHiit?^ikm5'SR.~ $130^ASP AI? " ------Mr 0nd heat, syiten^ list-8140 aectv-a>klng.jU75 ior. ^Sf. each. Ait feiiTs -Pald. ^ tance f5~N6TO[-Lyop~5hopj3tng™^CgTTfer~~ washer/6ryer^ac(l[t[M *wi swlmmino poo!,. •• i j P8M or tot offer. ai-3Mt^fer.1. •, A^artrT^rttjihownfff/da/lcevK-yda'y.--"--3^ Luby'-s.One half blodt from shutlle cableTV no-Dets -pAm. . "XJ Luby:»^^lwlo^froftt&ttle._cable_fv.WAirRe'slSnt f^ >•; FLEUR DEH^Sr404-E,sMDtllrMltvrs— Mintmh lll»»IVBi»h«lnm..:w.lli.l. ; campus. Shuttle. Summer S2K. : . " - 1 -• •• • ' GREGORY.: APTS. -Large spacious o/.il apartments.,Walk focampus,swimming pool,-lots »torape, rkltcherc appliances, pne bedroom sf2& efficiency S)15. 702 . West4Sth. 478-230!;'451*10V • ­ • SUMMER KATES NOWK SJx .blocks ', from Law.School; Shuttle bur. One bedroom ,$130. Efficiency' $110.; AC, carpet,: dishwasher* disposal, walk-fn closets, 32nd and Interregional: 477*0010 or GL3-2228. . < 9 , . LARGE ONE BEDROOM, Walk to . -.scJwxM; Study area* carpeted, dliposai, cable-TV, 4un -deck,-CA/CH, laundry, f . shuttle, or . ,L Qreat location,-ABP, summer- rjt Nuecew477^4».__^ ' -Park Your Car and Walk To School! ~ SUMMER t-~i "•5 with us ineight * , >• gVeat University complSfes-^—. PONCE de LEON T-'MARK IV APTS aVsw • • ','> .1 1 THREE GREAT BUILDINGS . PEPPER TREE "*. FIVE GREAT BUILDINGS I ~ IOO^to1?^00 | Efffciencies> 1 Br> XLarge 2 Br ^ft ApartroenT liVlng-Vrblock-fromCamoui., Sm^tSSe rWrnt?^-mMched wi,h 'T^L'llt^OO San-GatjrieK^ 2910 R«d River „ 476-5631 >T I, 304 E. 34th .' , A PARAGON PROPERTY' ;,PT 11, 408 W. 37th" LARGE ONE BEDROOM, Carpeted^9* SalatfO e^rVd?y.^he°CodnqX'5o^^PT 502, W. 35th 21DJAS»n Gabriel. 472-7746. --pj V> m W 35^" kCall Our Office ... PdL f, 2207 Leon PdL J I, 2200 Leon ...j....... 472-8253 472-8941 .472-8941 472-8941 f.....:... 476-9279 • ' 454-0824 477-2752 472'8941 472-8253 •THE BEST VALUE IN TOWN » $. IBR. FURN. : . — DM. furnished cottaoe/ ,ROOMMATE -DEEDED, \ bedrobmv, . walking tfHtantfe^o UT cacnpui. 1105 apartment, 6 block* campus. All mile" month.476-0153al|erslx,' , . paid. S65 476^467. . 1 BR FURN-i-, 1 WALKING DISTANCE TO UT, Paved-. ROOMMATE NEEDED, 2 bedtti#ri7. ..s-rfront and back: Carport, prftlos, fenced apartment, 6 .blocks campus,,-att Ws Tangtewood/ > -•Tya/d.rPjus .bills. For appointment. 47?--paid, S50. 476*3467. • Antlex -478-4S74 Shuttle Bus Corner $100 •J BR FURN*" '• • "I Bedroom £1 Cid Apts.• -453-4883 , Shuttle Bus Comer­ . $100 1. B,R FURN Dorado-Apts. -472-4893 Shuttle Bus Corner . 1 Br. Furn. All,Bills Paid •La.Canada Apfs. 472-1598 » Shuttle Bus Corner. Tanglpwnnfl.NnrtJi. 1020 E. 45th­ •452M Shuttle Bus Corner $115 /j 1 Bedrooms • All Bills Paid Bucking^atn Square 7am^2nd 454-4917 $120 1 BR F'ura 3100Speedway • r " 477-1685 -.SHUTTLE BUS CORNER 34SS,-Qverby. »•'/....7 MALE ROOMMATE to ^hare griet : COLORFUL ) :0EDROOM. Shag, dls-apartment, cal^r^nv,6-lcrp-nrL ' "hwa^huwtuzy comrriunityrNearsnuttle.­ From $115 plus electricity. 12U West 8th 'SHARE THE'RENT on unique * (of/ Bfanco). 47 2 Bddroom furnishedand un* 5Wfr'472-8920. . . -furnUhed; Shag, wet bar,-private club rooms,' on shuttle. 4 bedroom>edr from H APPY.FEMALE ROOMMATE Wai -i_S149.50 ABP-..? bedroom ti&o sn ABP. to share beaifllful 2-1 •unit in^fourpli ^-€ompany. fireplace Own room reftt 1*0 Charisse 6-8 p.m. 472-930S EXCELLENT SUMMER-BATES .on • spacibus one and two -bedroom-FEMAtE ROOMMATE now --agiftnvsnts. Fall rates reasonable. Call •August. L#ra»1 bedroomapt: Onil, route, uo plus electricity. J*anne,^fjl­.-ENFIELD-AREA. Two bedroom with. ^fVetxJeKfa..F.uni!itisc«Mlbl» to shurtje buj. Call 453-^»/. tioo •: ABP, 908-G West 29th. Ba^ham Prtper­ rliei. 926*9365 ' v' '""V**OyM**TE-. Sharev>. duplB^.,CAiSfcs UNF. HOUSES GRADUATE STUD6ENT wanti mat^ft»/--j p^son.to :shar^ 2 bedroom apartmfift^? J89, an btlis paid. Call Bill. S^ p.rp. " ^FACULTY, • • • •' -T'­ ROOMMATE NfeEDEO,-prefer hMmfli'< "STAFF beli^. Share s bedroom, ivi bath wllfrjS . PLENTY. OF . ROOM for fartiily with • me. Enf/e(d-area on shuttle, Wteenagers.^nd/or horses and dogs For ;best-offw..26D0_.EnfieidjNo; 103. Ca»V tease -attractive unfurnished home out­Susan;/** -—­ side city and 20 minutes from Universe ,'ty. Vi acres with trees. wildfJowers, FEMALE ROOMMATE. 155, own roon^l mostly fenced. House'has central heat many windows, yard; Graduite •and| afr, three bedrooms, two baths. -^8*ir--* stone fireplace, modern MfthM./iariiK-. "•T ,".M 1™; ,y "V. <. room,-screened bacKM.rch.• Modern,-QUI£T -NEIGHBORHOOD. Fenced •NEIGHBORHOOD.. Fkncj#%ful|y*eauipped, two bedroom £ir con-Y°r£-Furnished. Dark>oomjpae»rNe>r' . cutionedmobtle home onback of lo^ You J4!"U,M'1,"> d'!P0Sl,'« may sublet mobile home if you wish . Available August V Appointment only: -• v ' % . •-• ' ' 1 ' HOUS.EMATE needtfdi ^wo.bedrooms. Aboye Pe«e Parke Quiet neighborhood;^ ShutHe. Dogs pK. ^75-478-6183. Sue nr -SUMMFR SUBLET. 2«Q4 French PI - bedrooms, 2 baths, unfurnished. Juno 10 -Sept. 1st.. Yard, quiet rftlghborhood 'H.I1TI -• . ' ^LARGE-HOUSE near. Lake Travis, on — Trtueialui. WHI comitate four aduffs.. Calf 444-9557. -'fs-f1'­ $140^ • l: •/-,-NEW LUXURY .rg,; DUPLEX -2-^ER-Eurn_ • : -2-Btfrmi'7rBathi-CA/C-Hi-lireplace. ALL BILLS PAID vau ted ceilings, sha®carpet, allelettrlc appl., shuttle bus service; Town Lake Antilles Apts. Area. (Furnished *30 extra),^ 2204 Enfield Rd -. S230.00 472-5320 -. , Water Pald­ 474-4322 477-1616 . " -1W SAN GABRIEL.-Furnished nwttfc. Shut/le Bus FrontDoor Private entrance," bath, rtfrlgeraji&i*-; waUr.cooWd, tap. j75 to tad: o^en. FURN. DUPLEXES NICE HOUSE/yery cloicnear HemRhlll.. Par(i, kitchen privileges, scml-prlvUit i bath.-m> Wo.t T1.. jTt im 3'" 'W567'­ FAR NORTH > bedroom. CA/CH. fenced ^y'lV'5 ^W"' $120_ —«fd. >135 billspaid: 452-4812... ,• -T.BR Furn_ "PRIVATE ROOM..2 blockscamp tml »li-m.lH service. I Chun Tanglewood West summer rates. 4/2-3694, <75-2551 ffi <» -­ t • 472-9614 HELP WANTED Shuttle Bus Corner 5^4*T s-ROpM-w(tb.k»chen priviiMM.'' All btlfs paid. AC; on bus line. 926.5071?: J=L6RAL:. DESIGNER-.L Experienced — need apply. Pay commensurate S l3°J'7iiVv^,-K TOWER-Large rot , 77-57 ... oldbulldlhg J95 up. Utilities, paid; ' yfltS abll(t,;4ji•5717 lor appointment. 3W62, 476^®3.19020904 NuecesT SELL FLOWERS. AAake130-160 working -­ : 4 peaceful 4ays a week; Thursday, Frl-WS-ROOM-AVAILABLE' ImmedlsteM -V afternoons. Saturday, Sunday all Private bath,, kitchen : privileges,51 " ??/. T2P commission. Paid dally. 474-Bl|(s Paid. 477-7524, 453-3537. . 3060,453-1509. 453-2761. . ""SYS-^Nice.roams 2 blocks frtm ca •BUILD YOUR.OWN .inddpeTOVnt ... ;s. 2109 Rio Grande.-Share kitchen,J ,-business.with the'second largMt natloiial .1*18 ,lSSm' washer and djyer. 477. .corporal.lon ln dlrecl sales. 441-5174. 453-5530. 5UMMER„EMPk.QYMEtiT. Bicycle _ SecurJty_Co.SMhirtgpe5pT«irtf8rastedin—HUNF. APARTS. W^Thursday 6/13/74 from 5i00*:00, WANTED..-SHOE SALESMAN to work -full-time at Hal's Bootery on the Drag. Apply In person. . CITY WIDE; COMMITTEE In need 0/ Mors^From 9-;i;a»Tr)., 4-6 p.m., 7-9 p.m.* -PART TIME EMPLOYEE for truck washina operation. Aftcriwmt <^>hir. washing operations Afternoons, Satur­ - "»y.•ttt->Hi -PREPARE HOJUSE for palnting.'-Apply ' W-3"h be,ore s %. FOll ^.nd oart time waitress/waiters;v\vf , Bus help. Kitchen help, bartenders, bar$110 help. AgplyJn personSat 6/8/74 10:30 tilt ; 5:00. Sun 6/9/74 12:00 til 5J00. S2.00 perhour. t t 1 Bedroom The Great Gatsby . 2700 West Anderson Lane inTt>e Village HALLMARK. Shopping Center •" n -APTS, --IFF® 708 YV. 34th ! 454-6294 -­ , . -PSR-NOUR-. ? .DlsJANce;iuT,fills paid,' AC, paneled, 444-7222 arpeted, pool, no pets.-2 oedroom, .<$190. 1 bedroom, ." "T;— —: — Sl45-il50. 3Q11 WhifiS, No. 105/-j YOUR AIR FORCE has openingsafter-5 Mon,-Friday. After >0— fv?ilabls_iiith^ QiHcexsrProgram. tly­ ,WS$ shad, cable S200rbills paid. Gr«at Oak . ;Great • 1^-1M#"ApartmentsApartments.• 477;J399 477;93tt. • •[ 1 JUNE FREE summer sublet. Large one bedroom apartment, shuttle,-CA/CHr •5i dishwasher, pool. 1150 ABFL-442-0915: evenings. ^ ti05 -»y5.1 Bedroom apartment, pool, very near UT,. carpeted, paneled. AC, a.m. weekends,' •.••••»-«»*««»••• ^ " LOCATION-LOCATION-LOCATION 'ool, •lundeck; .wafer & gat paid, SMat.J7ll Hemphill, xccBitirrffcir rtment x-or call 47M40t,;47»3IK£> ov-1355. 1 fe^-sV' vWim 2 BR FURN. LARGE 2 860ROOM, 2 tfath, ail bills P*ttt;.OhShuttle,, large pool, IVk'btocki; > School 3212 Red River. V'" Vf , v 4772104 J2u neo wver. ,)$y~'r-^ FREE JUNE RENT No deposit. In® ana non-flying If you are a coll«Sf senior orpreparlng to starfyour senior mry,;ehecV wlfh, your Air Force- representative/ SSGT. 'EdHudgini.^for 1 lJho u i'?i°n!3u ?n w, . .1 Sfi'fl'iwn. Just call 78757. ' ­ \.^ •" 3 • t.--... ..... MALC GRADUATr—Iiftflrtf mnmwift'. tor summer lo share twobedroom apart* ment near campus. J70 plus Va bills. 472­-VFGETAR)AN ihare-2 bedroom .-fun.-j; wished twust. U/.bu plUi W mt.'MfV 1220.-John. TEXAN DOItM—1M& . rwmKl.i >52.50/6 wks. session. Sihglei -svs.OO/i wks. session. Dally-maid-service, c«' tral aw,Refrloerators, hit pl«tes alloi Two. trit(ck£ from campus. Co-6i R eOTerimanogers7-U7.1760. —r -. EL-CAMPO, 19J2 Nuecci. Boys prlvl rooms MS. Double *27JO. KIteHi privileges. 459-7434, 477*9496. >2 STUDIO apartmenf for. lease.-1 UT. AAarried :couples only,-No r " mlMiniuiu. -i«5/month.-T eforeSpm weekdays.* LARGE 1 BEDROOM, walk 10 CamttOtS®.^ mailable,now, S125. All bills. c«llgftriF»--J 2932. Keep frying, ROOM & BOARD •BELt-SDN DORM for'Men. hqme-oooked meafc Air, S5ndltloi®®5«i. maid, swimming pool, will taks-cov) HL"!? f.u.Tm#r-26,0 Rio Grartde,i" 5680. Call 476-3340-betwefn9am-5: ROOM AND' BOA^D S137. 6 ^''""pefWly'neWM. Ramify Coo-Op-710 Wefil.Slst. 479*6596^'— -« BELLSON DORM Excellent hS^||| by week ormoftr " 2610 Rio Grande. Call 474>5680 br Jill- LOST & FOUND CASH REWARD: Male -Irish SeUjrS; South Austin, 4_7|.)933 Evenings-ifi-l,-; 1491 Amweri fp BirV.ln, LOST CAT Large male, mostly , «hJtL£a?J; "eck-33rd and Guadalube'. » 452-5803, S25.Reward. ^ _JT-' . LOST j Gold .wlrerim tinted preicripttoV; ' • eyaolaiaeJ:W[tweeft San Gabrie)>La^Mi anla»l-UOusmnulliei .~At)urv in-nwff 1901 WILLOW CREEK,DR. •=2400 TOWN LAKE CIRCLE .^'Speedway^-^i^::^..1.-^..,.,,,v.:'"V • * fr-^x--* "* JOO,Pl^V GWar:-B»g1ftftgJ>iH).. ^.SUMMER -FALL ced. Orew.Thomaty iitzmt.f < c* »fJ£SERVAT10Nff -..a.P^^r'.^fT9' Your-reply will be kept cori rfteVK-EJtECUTtv&OESKrWalnutJvlth arrrl' a cui'mm'nW 1 /* , — _ f 'baths':-df>d yOU Will be COnfactflTt f-Af a^cu^-mmxnsf eooldorVjmake an gipartmenlintervuiw. -Send .resume to PI BOX -' -y SEOROOM^'SUITe,—dooMr-totdr-ft &eA?'otde^r'cri-t "" seryfce~after^ou=ieas^iitodusr*­ .-Iteep frying. ' =5=!S#«= 21-Paae * WedneWiy, June 12,11974 Tftfe DAILY 55^6^ ' '"ISi jf"~gsg^gr^. •,~,;,r?^r?-.r:1.:..:r WF/ f SIU 4 1 1 1 t^4 * „"1 '"V"^ *& =£ V-"— -&-C &35 * "ff't ^ 4 ^ v* _ ^'•vj"v^) i'—n, «•» M ,. _.——kH*._." f • * * ~ *-b ,' ' " V-. ' '"••• ' '.i ^~r ^ --*• HI&S r V J w * •>> \ frtj* 7 < w1^ >. r * * •'J**-_ *• i, '* *• •»}" '* — \.i'3 ~<**-\i l"i-t "¥',' ' ' "" ' •A!»i.:-f»J ' >.'••— • v>.TlS.«>. . ?;w«5fc.-. ...-•• • _ •__ ,• iS«y»fl-i?-•• • . iris**iv • _ ••..-.. --• • L: t—-J • -L -__••• .. ••••-. MISCELLANEOUS Walsh M GETHIGH By MARK PEEL Texan Staff Writer / ON HOT*"*" —Ever wonder what happen^ edtoiheJames Gang and v^hy~AIR all of a^suddeo you cato buy' . ^ • • ai their, albums, in the bargain .Learn to, fly a balloon; In­ troductory lesson SS'Ground school classes now "forming. 472-8805. * . SONTT dlFTS':" --. -• Zuni : mo-tan jewelry, African-and Mtxlcen imports. — 4413 South Congran. 444*38)4. Ciowd • .Monday}. : • ^••.•i,­MOVING? MY PICKUP can make the aptno—itoteslotCMltr.*rom.'i' do~ -Rlli'Truck"--• Ing. MWl; TPfiwn AMvnMcor1 .•—r-, «!«,. oroUp.indiviiS'VB^«nin" >tu« Hijih i ntermfdt»,n ^.T'A -9 5 Frl.Sat , , 472-8936 30A Doble Center NEAT» ACCURATE and Prompt typing.; M cents per page. Theses 75 ctnt». Call Si." 447-7737; DlSSERTATlONS. thpses, reports, and law Brifrfs. Experienced typl»t> Tarrytowrt. 2S07 firldle Peth. Lorraine Brady. 472-4715 -I.VHIWQ; Experleneed theses, dissertations.. PR's,'• etc. .printing 'and .Binding, Specialty Technical; Charlene Stark. 453«57t8i , * *i •• HOULEY'S TYPINOlSERVICE. A com. Drive. «7f30l», • FRANCES.WOODS TYPINfe SERVICE-' Experienced, Low, Theses, Dlsser« Matfonl, Manuscripts. 453*6090. v ? , MABYL-4MALUWOOD TyplnB. Lest . minute, oi/ernlght avsUifaleC Term papers .theses*-dissertations, letters. MasterCharae. BanKAmerlcard. 892­ 0727 or_4«-e545 ....... L.^AMMET-T -T.yplno A MINNIE Dupllcatlnjj v Service;. Theses/ dlsser­ "upilcatl lioni,:. pwei. tatfonk,! papers ot.. all Klnds, resumes, Frfee refreshments. 442-7008,.442«?275 ' aOaBYE DELAFIEtDr4BnA>«lec1rtc, rr-; plce/ellt«,.SS ye«rs experience, booKi;. • r-wn. The J$nies Gang is still albums. une-aB—aeoustif aI thihg by himself and the se- TUTORING SPANISH TUTOR eny-Jevef;-Native .ipeakec.:Four.y«ir* experience aiiT;A* Reasonable rates. Call 477*1403, * ^ FURN. HOUSES • UNCLASSIFIED SU0L6T H0USE untJt Sept. 111. Fr« Klttern. 476-93U. ilM/ma^on.Shuttle route. 707 KjrwalK 'Lano^ 472-1963, 478-5463; -.Afghan pupSi AKOReg. 452-6308: qualified,:trostworthy. Information 327* . •; M 1228 r ; — '•*-64..Bug rtms good *390j 478-6910. • Capricorn labiel): f-Free cat fern', long hairiw^74-H48. The band records GINNY'S •SHISER BEKB-NTTK • SERVICE Every Wednesday 6 p.\n. -Midnight III 42 Dobie Mall 476-9171 - INC. 1CPer Bottle Frs° Parking 7 a.m. -iO p.m. M-F ME€TOfrS 9 a.m. • 5 [i.mi Set TACO FLATS .si yw-REPAm >ki PT'rM We ! " 454-9242 11 AJA. -MIDNIGHT EVERY DAY Show hfoun'd, but they^rc-stilt play florl^LaQuncT,' • • —»—— Thdre arf sevpn Tripmhers. timeris^aiyuhd 8:30 p:m. ' success since then.. ing repetitious bass-drums? -The second Walsh CCP7"TBe" of Lynyrd Skynyrd including Hopkins wh" 'I'Vfi H' Aililnl lirlii'i yi nn nn njpnr ^-leading rolte -guitar-roclwKid-rolfc SniokerYouDrink^ijjbPldyer 'thred .guitarists,_<^ary_ Houston, isjiationally known former,-' Hopkins is regarded will be Dorothy Lamour, Dest " »•«--•» «•-_ prominent blues figurje. ~ remembered as the girl in the Walsh, who-is appearing at You Get," was mortf ofiwhat Rossington and Ed King play a'sT'a "master of the 12-bar aS a Municipal Auditorium Mon-. people tho.ught Walsh should twin lead guitar, and. Allep, Bob Hope and Bing Crosby dayv nighf {with Lyoyrd be: hard rock and roll. The Collins fills out the guitar :"Road• To': pictures. Meet the Longhorn Bcihd Skwrd. Has put out twoi album has had one AM hit. lioliiUe. --• • • •..«« *«»«» Lamour's most recent film, c^mij with his • new band, Barnstorm. . ThVfirst Walsh album, also entitled ''Barnstorm," got: good responses-from' .tHe' KM market, but most people who had pememtered Walsh's powerful. guitSr: from the James Gang days just weren't ready for this quiet, laid-back "Rnfikv Mmintain Way" and Van Zant does thevocals, Bil-; The 150-piece -Longhorn Heniy ^lllmore,. Th^^Magic has Yecieved fantastic " lv "PoVvell is th'c keyboard lf"1-rT!e,r Band will present a Flute^Oyerture by Mpzart, nsp on FM stations man. Leon Wilkinson plays' W? ^and1' prvBiam at "Pr.cludc . and Rnnrip by , -response Burnet Tutillt "Sea Songs -" " . bassan4 Bob Bums takes care , 8 P;^Wednesday on the Nur-Tutill, Along with '.'Rocky Mountain v Way," the songs,;"Meadows," of the percussion and drums- sw6:Building Patio, 1700 Red March" by Ralph Vaughn River St. Williarrisv. ''SlayonLc Rhap» •'breams" and "Happy. chores;-To say the least, the — . • - sody'-byCarlFridemanh and " Ways" arerthe-niost popular J band's sound is hard, driving". • '.The program.-includes' "Russian, Sailor»sJJance'' by cats from the album on rock. • ... -Girl's 10 speed blkerssOL^S^ «^and i TRAVEL . tr Sailboat & trailer. |<600; 472-467^ Hdrumssnd fluteTRo,cke.Grace belo'w the Mason-Dixon line^ < DRIVING THROUGH PHOENIX to L.A-Sherwood 8900A Ret. 447-4076 Nti • handling the keyboards and and. also-takes a couple of . .yyish someone' to shace driving and -back-up vocals"and Kenny stabs at Neil Young for his •,Nted cJouWe sfie waferbed. 441-1 . Passarelli playing' bass and songs "Southern Man" and •AS Rambler-6 AC^MJ>jeat:4S4-247S1 alsa lending a hand* with the "Alabaik". from the Harvest . Need female rmmate. Cheap. 476<7S3t. vocaB." • • • ."album.- _ MMUU ' PienoVteM tuning? 441^4492; . » Lynyrd Skynyrd isa product ^Marshall Tucker _ Band is of-pr<5ducer and super.-' touring with Vfalsh and . ABORTION ALTERNflTiyg! Pregnant" Manua} elite 4ypeWfjt^r^472j«7t1, f.,^and alitrejwd? Help Is a» neat4» your.——.. -v., .zsessionman A1 Kooper's Lynyrd Skynyrd but will not ^.^telephone. Pro-Clfe'Advocates.^SlO'Wesl BUi m vet Dresser MltCi 608?r^ attempt-Grcpli;in on-the -•appear-with themin Austin or_ 26>>)^4198 -' " •' -Femaia houiemate. 28-t>0 Screen ProducadbyMAimn 1U8MMIOrcMtyWOMKVjUIMET^r v> •ndNOMMMVRXLBI BaandontMB tjbohbyPCTCn NUUUI acagssar-.! IS 2:30-5:00 -$1.25 7:30-10:00 ,501 • MIDNIGHT MOVIES-$1.251 I? , Screen 12:00 l "BATMAN ADAM WEST . ^ BURT WARD Screen 2 12:15 SEE THEM DOIT IN..; I • tavE US AN 2l3(ft " 4:55 -F:2'5 J1.50 til 6^p,m. FEATbflES 1:20'" 3:30 s&Q It^pjHYTOnOMSnEFFbRipGES/ELLEN BURSTYN/BEN JOH^ON/CLORISLEACHMAlfV ^u(utuS.cya •p^ffiBOGOAhtOVl&H/Sfiffl^DRTRy^ PETERBOGDANOyiCHiAtSf»«ORW—^ I'wuaaava; FRlEDMAla HATURB -!£0-3:3$ FEATURES .1:30-345; ftAIORES.3:10 4*K7:4M:50 S:4Q.7^5:f^0 S;20-7:S5-^SVILLA61 VARSITY =AQUARtUS^ NeMAriV THEATRESIV was"Donovan's.. • Reef' with -Joiin Wayne. -. ­- m '• f *> , Lamour ' -The play will run Tuesday through Sunday with th^doors. • •openingit e p.m. for the evenf^­ing performances. Curtain ^s at 8:30yp.m. with buffet supper beingserved from 6r30 until"7:30 p.m. "Matmecs are.. held at 2_pIfeT'Sundays. LOUllliy Dnwer Playhe offers aspecial student rateof $5 with UT 'ID on '. Sunday afternoons/Reservations must be made in advancer-Call 83fr:5921-for reservations; ,and. other information. ;HURRY, SEE IT TODAY! -THE MOST SUCCESSFUL ESCAPE ADVENTURE bf ALl TIME. ay­ & RONALD NEAME filnr PANAVlSION' I COLORSOEUiXE* ffATURE TIMES ..-X . AQUARIUS 4 SflOWTOWN DI SOUTHSIDE DI BOX OFHCE OPEN 8:00 SHOW! STARTS AT DUSK*" l&f I 21i» & Guadalupe Second level Dotiie Mall 477-1324 I Screen ) UOUBU; hfcAlUkfc I ONE FILM FbR $1.25 •T.' r*X t -Ai, I BOTH FOR $2.00 I -rr. 1 ?«•»"; (Editor's note; It would beitfesponsible of The Texan if; -:.:w'^ve chose to ignore the most cohtroversial film placing in •town without the Courtesy of a review. So here'it is — not en­ § te? ; tirely serioUs;but nevertheless an honest attempt to search —— «""i cnrial romment and. redeeming value of "Deep, ttlA Throat."] / 1®;.r ':;"Deep Throat;' written, directed and edited by 'Jferry Gerard; jt&rring Linda Lovelace and a cast of thousands previously unknown to local audiences,-MytpsMy Club onSouth tamar Boulevard; cost of admission at $5 isa*bit steep, but the mandatory soft drink at $1.55 takes the,cake. -v ;By^DEBK.v was right Upghw^a.• -f1;rs^--5;o,?cern is reviewing this film was whether, itwould-it tli^iExti-emely,short on dialogue,. the-film pushes a good , -...... 'Itiwids ment and not have theopinion of-onejud|eand'6ne courtforced.^beUe«eots , bored and e.xhdusled.-m^ltiwids *' " -: ~ ~ TEXAS; rea. 1 3:00-4:45 6:30-8:15 7274 -puartslupfeSt—.477196' FILMED IN AOSTIN ~S£Xm AUffiegCTlBLMSPItODUCTiON LOCAL CAST!! TRAN^TgWS_ -OPEN 7:45*-Huwru. 6400 Burnet Road -465-6933 %\s> TilSHOWTIME If yOU'VE SEEN IT ONCE YOU/U WANT TO SEE IT ONCE AGAIN!< AT 8:45 & 12:30|, • PIUS AT 11:00 ONLY * SKYAT MORNING ^ INTERSTATE THEATRES SlJ5.liL3.jtm.PflRAmOuNT )r40.3;20 SiOO-iiHO g.; • *zM ijyou dare, soenda night with VINCENT PRICE w TF^M piantng v* i Colo* prtnuby MovWa fINCENT PRICE-PETER CUSHING ll0'ltTOO'-*-1 ?^5^SSSS!L'?J "otattiKUi ^p«Wibr WttS^qui* -MKtmt*H*4mfcdi*6? DOUOAS tttWT^Kgrtl I" Tt*ur«»a».»mem .vfc ANdnCMriTTOBtATIGNtt »*&&! $1.25 lil 3 p-.m. ,STAT E ;««« FEATURES 719 A'/r.N'Jt: 1:40^3:20-5:00-i:40-8:20* IPS 10:00 U2JUD PG I DRIVEN BY LOVE.„ANt^BANK ROBBING KNOWN TO HAVE, MANY FRIENDS AMONG INDIANS, MEXICANS, POOR WHITES, ANDOTHER COLORED PEOPLE. " ra?-. |fe., VaR-SITV . -;-fEATWtES. , ­;>.ioo -A(.)A: ! -pf > [,. j-30-S:36.i:40.iU45.V SlT ^ -wnnerV2 —s_v­'ACAOEMY AWARDS j i hi « ii! i WW ' ^^pgTRR RnBDANaviUH have.any. kind of socially redeemingvalue. Or;as Justice Potter One scenesunra^LEOJie fabric of western civilization with bafldana-handkefeinpT>~jt/st^s'''sfiFwiSKe5*!7Ut,loiJd tor."iVhijg-. Stewart put it. whether 'we'4jrecognize; it when wfe saw it:" <~sudublatanlirreverence towafd established social mores and strong:man.?'.Accoited •. by • the • burglar, slurqaickly asserts After viewing tilts spectacle, if James Joyce could climax his literary Career with Leopold and. Stephen backyard.-Jerry Gerard could epitomize ••'Uicutcr, — • *• •. • • •­ tireworks' missiles from Cape.Kennedyt>n^v«w>ttF-KqurKUr Hofn'r^Ti^0^tagorust ls^omit. .she finds her salya-.. true: J'rom the beginning, .a.woman-finds, a:maoJo fee; qiilt_&< tl°n '"•l,er ient.vvit^Aheirdirechonin life, but sheisn't. Likvf Jasonseeking ... . gjittfalty below-her.*.Tfie doctor-, sore and in thehospital recover­-the golden floocg. I'lvssfS pursuing his Tionle ami the Pilgrim .'"'-"v* '* '' ing, cannot rocover in peacewithout Li'traa taking^more than-lhe;­searching for Progress. Linda begins her pergonal-qiiest tor -ionic v. aula sny Oocp Throat—is a rt^rnripnt film-a.wnrlt recohimended dose:* ' , • • J ' , 1 ^ ' pafidermg to the-lowest7 instincts of the species. They would p-rnatured-do<;tof-who..likeJ?rmceuCharming, awakens our Sleep-on theni. .vu. and I hardly emerged from the club'as sex flends at ;l jm:1-­ the opposite'was-possibly true. --v> -ing Beauty to the joys of-sensuaL'pleasure. y --­ . Certainly, tins film seems tooffer little more thanmost other Maybe my.attitude was .'. In actuality, the real -plot was probably writlen-in the follow­ hardcorerpomographic filmsr .lt -is.-however, a rather clear '' ing;manner. By::taking, a number of "sexual encounters and stringing thero tbpether with quite triyial situations that only a: .defiant would believe true, the writers came up with the script -Learnrng to'live -witii-her disability, she makes a living ajt_ a job that is satisfying for her. ;-4 an odd sort of physical therapy where obiectification. would be more of-them (her patients) Tier: w Village A/ILLftGE ' * Bft Cmcma Foitr Anderson LQne4Sl-8352 Held 12th Week Held Over 3rd Week Whereujereuouin'62? ^ *• ­ JI.50-4^00 6:00 SiOO-tCk'OO '.BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR -BHST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Ru»«:8€n Johnsonr ----; Qofi» ieachman, ^ : . d* • m 'wmmmwm 1:30-3:35-5:40^7:45-9:50. PLUS D. H. L&WREHCE'S, Tiwchi WOMEN IN LOVE" UnitedAriiins :: k OfClass :;l2i55=ZI00-^—PG — 1:00-5:10-9:30 PG Reduced Prfce« til 5 Mon.-FH. idfcHS ' *-& JV.sArvJ.-iW- AT 12.-30 ONLY cti>«<»Y>An>-'«n'~r •'• . "j -.•'-•-u , appeqled to me i^.toQ much of a-good thtfig; I suppose; Over-all. statement on mans tendency to be led along purely by sex..^ viewing this film convirtc^tfieW if people"cantinut to con. •-•-uj. , ...-•• ; • -•••••• £ '^ ""demn this type of Thing^nd tfy.to^ahish it'from-theirsieht itc • pecent satire buildsaround a reversalsf traditional sex roles going .to flourish. People should look: -at these films and ^ ano cravmgi>. in.'tligtirial'episoderLindartyhiles away'the-evefl-^ Inrr kntiKo n» a" fciruwi.ni. ... i • *"* t._ i MI. Maria Muldatir, whose fit-st, solo album is oneof thejop 10 in riational sales, makes*hejr first Austin anpearanceSatur-da\' at th6 TexasOprv Hniisp-Tickets ace fS.in advance and $6 at the door. Muldaur first ca'nie to national attention "when she Vill.^4^ idSiverside • v,-^­ Cinema '--Ms. -i&i Four " respected jug bands.-One of -'way-to Los AngelesA^-. its Singer .and guitarists was ' • ' Geoffrey "Muldkur, who also ' • together they .recorded recorded-several' solo albums ' leve5 -albums for Warner diiring llwgnyears 'WKpntho ^one °[ Kweskln band bripke "up, ^>r drew-much- Kweskin himself joined the• .h®r,^1°, .alty"n, es followers of Mpl Lyman, a .' c!l ,nc^ Midnight at shadowy figure whdf at one. H?e, „ 's ti Don't 'Xa. g®n joined theJim Kw^kinJ-ugr -time published the Avatar , „ eal!!? °n day on jchannel 9. Six men and UAHWW MAIINtE AND P Undtr-1Zyrs.not admitti MMPETER BtATTyS Directed bvWItllAM FRIEDKIN TODAY at oFrom Warner Bros 12:30-2:45-5:00-7:25-9 40 HIG"tAND MALL delightfully unique mntiini pirti|fp 12:30-2t15 °f love and 3 55-S:35 _ suspense that could T.15-9i00 easily become \ 8 classfc BARUM WTK£ $125­Kl.SUTS BARGAINMATS.EVERY DAYTIL1:3QP.M.-11.IS B \t X"?*CAP!TAL PLAZA HELD OVER! 9 A57-7646 £ — —fOSfTSaYQKTKHSl. miR PRRfiOttt THc GR6RT GRT/8V l2:45-3:30,6>15-9:00 IIOIHB mum ridieutous^-absolutely-r-idKHitem^ mm--' House •ammo'us praise from crttics^ throughout. the^countryJ in­ cluding many who -never noticed her earlier work..She has limited her. personal "!TppeafSiioi).s. but. Uiwse—s)*e­has done havevcarned.ci'itit'al praise , TicKets^ are-sell in a' m < Band in thermiddle:1960s as 'newspaper in' Boston aad f ^ 18 Powhere^:moderately well and-may be e Maria D'Amato.-Tlie Kweskin made Rolling Stone as an e3t-• r--,?sold by the pefformance JMa b9nd;, Boston-base^ was '6ne ample of charismatic cultists. * Her album, besides selling -supporting act-has beeri an-arid Geoff and Maria' made their vfell, has drawn nearly un-nounced." television— ^J^ater presents. a boy afe herded together in a "Triple Feature" shows TV ''I"oide]lt at , supposedly unoccupied series', pilots at 8 pin. on Vwaiy directed by • Stacy French town.• Although all • channel 36. The three cam-MATURES 7:00-3:30-10:00 ;.;Wednes-• appear tn"be Jewish, one is edies are "Lily" with Brenda AUSTIN PREMIER Vaccaro,^i>naKespeare LoVfes "Renibi aiidt1' with Bett Cenyy * and. Ja Ann Phlug.and "Rat­ • sv" wlfh Pat Cooper; ' WhoTaheThe^ Silent Film (;lassies features ''Mysterious Lady.',' ­with Greta .Garbo-as a Kus­ -siaiLSByjaLlO p.m. ori-channel 9. . 7 Mavtle / r 9iN*w4 -• < Z/~ rs'f: .vj: 24 \ Oream pf Jeannt'e * 36 Eyewitness News 5&S--7. Bobby Gentry'! Happiness Houf ­ 9-The Building of Gund Hall .• 24 The.Cowboys^­ ' 36'Chase • ^ V ~. v 7i30-p.m. , * •>"' 9 Hollywobd Theatre < 24 AAovIe: "Pioneer .Woman7' : 4 p.m. s!r~;,'» " ' •-7 Cannon.'. '• -J\\ t%r tA AA.nu,#-pgatUfP. rr;V • • 9 p.m. . wr-.. . •­ « 7 Kolak ^ '' l-l i •V-', .-9> Pace iivTerrts fn . 'r' -y • -r y'.. . 24 ABC Newft:;£lqielV£ PLUS CO-HIT _ _ 477-1324 W The relationship between four sensual people islimited They must finda new way. GLORIA 6RAHAME COLOft i-fisr • WINNER IP NEW ADMISSION PRICE* ADULTS ... S2.25­ PANAVlSIOfi*^ 4-^ .. ?HILD (4-11) ... SJ.00 ­"•--CHILD (under 6) -Freo W/P AT 8:lt)5 ONLY , CQLO^BY OfcLUXE» Glenda Jackso WAmHHUTfltS GULF «»JWW 454*2711 C4fl>^0fl -836.8584 TONIGHT AT ^'.6:15-8:00-9:41 •B& s-** '-BOX OFFICE OPEN} BK10 iHoyrs|ARis. DUSK ^:,HEUAWSraE DOWN "it I' "i y • THE 'j rWmwMMime . AjoMpkE.iorinsjoiBri wmvEXW' • , SS-®­C^j^daJ^l^on jpTORBMB^fflA^-ROStN in».i Bujsiflairri . -Frankfilm WW3K&U&-.-UUVECTEirs FftNfASttt" AlbuchOt'ciass ® 70TOF * --''4'WTRusstti^n. n \?z SjV*. -Admission"f ricesJ" -f|1|—Riwiifsria—-qati liQO-silQ.t^O WnmAn 2:55-7:10 ^ D.H.LAWRENCE'S FrpfnW»fmf*fo^ im ***** PwM^nieMton*Com»wty ' PiAle-t^'li^-feWMflaVJWoww 3i45-8i0ff CH|10 (4.I1J /j100 YHlin (tndnr.d..tJTlt VI w *...197A THBLIVAIT.V TRYtIN? m " "• rT,'jvT 3>sf£ * t i IF vr*£J^r~' —-fv Poet ^anjfs Local Works LorVaca P/qn Ranks Utility Sixth By JANE ANDERSON _-J% transport, extfhangeand bank-, mahd. TTie ;proposed curtail-Dr.'StellaWoodall "of San-,-faculty and "staff will.' be Texan Staff Writer fng imbalances, Fawcettsaid, ment plan will not curtail the Antonio, poet laureate inter-offered.. Private transporta-Largp industne^'.would have, He also testified that some' of repayment of these debts, national, is conducting a tion willJ'be necessary.-For a harder timeconverting their s the debts arp being paid back Cross-examination of search for 100 short poems, more information go by Union machinery, for use with an over a period of tfme wherea^ 'Fa wcett' will continue-about Texas or Texans., . . Building 342 or contact the alternative fuel than utility others are payable pa de-Wednesday. -. Woodall will edit a Texas Union Program Office at 471­ vnpmlpq Dintnn edition of -Poet, a magazine' 4721! i cg-nres»dent-oi4heJU>^c for the World Poetry Society. ANNOUNCEMENTS . „.TEX AS UNK^N wiltsponsor the film Gathering (^o, said -'taeSday TCtsrmf The. «*»Wfft Fawcett testified at a Texas _____ -^-Wednes-. ^Railroad Commission hearing tonib, T^xas 78211.. day. Aomisyorv is /; facvHy and staff; "s T.50 for\ on a proposed curtailment Inaddition^.a'seminaf'ari'd '! members. • workshop will be held. Oct. 4 "OfflON ARTS ANO OtAFTS-cenlcr wHi.spon plan presented by Lo-V^ca:" By ROGER DOWNING fence proposal, said Tuesday f The question arose' wfien md 5 in Satr Antonio..Further : '.*, sor -&•ctemonstrati.ofi'-of • r©o-rt- Texan Staff Writer the "facts did not justify the *• • voursg»-f«irtmgiK^rirfflT^'" •wnw rnllffd eni... . »• f Under the .proposed" plan Peace Justice.Jim McMur-~Butler>s stdleaient-by-saying —Wednesday ,is the deadline : SEMINARS utilities, including Austin,.S£n tiy ruled the death accidental, the cost of a fence would be TEXAS-UNION ~wi1| sponsor a sandwich > r~Tnon Sfoff Photo.by Poi/f Ccrfopo for signing tip .fpjr the June 22 • seminar at noon WedneSday U"* -—Antonio—and—Corpus Chritfh 7 . Austin is.Onejf the few.ma-little compared to the' cost of UT Day at Sijc Flags. Special' .Union Buildjr^ OT7. DF« Ros£'Marie,Bill Rowan experiments with the Texas fusion reactor. electrical •entities and the jor cities in Texa^th¥tliash6 the swimfning pool., --group rates for UT'students. .Coifing-of the English department^ ; / ">vHJ-drsct/sj ''Women Jn Literature'^ Low.er Colorado ^jv^: ordinance .requiring. fences Joe Hajjar, owner of the A-. , Authority would be classified^ arpuhd swimming pbfils., Tex Pools and Pool Tables, asJjoiler.ii^us£r|j|n(^i^M^^^ man. Jeff said even though he installs be sixth on a list of priorities, FrMman. sponsored a fen(^-TOiy -above.gr.ound. poois Tokamak Reactor Tests Listed above utility coni-ordinance last sum^er; butit which require a ladder to Kick^ -P8WW *re by_a ^ote of 4-3, ..enter; he recbmmend«i ,that Although •: to quit smoking .' Morris b lie'ves people mercial7indust! pld turkey." may be' too.dif-'.leani to"smi .e through1 con-FusiOti^Epllgv (users oit '^asfor,its chemical something th&t is"extremely , __xt . — By SALLY CARPENTER • -large energy release.,Thenext required Tjixan Staff Writer . step will be to.tesi reaclor • -energy^ Ten gallons of water feasiBiIi.ly">.by replacing the ?. providing tfne gram of hydrogen gtoms wRh.more ex­ . * deuterium may produce'the pensive deuterium!• He siiid atomic flssion and: -to an alternative fuel, healso Friedman said he -wouldjipt' Jolla. Pools. of-Austin, is %Theprogram'Wtal«Mvei'''^^9^^^n^ future : recipe ; for th'6 The Texas'-Tokamak is one coal:fired plants are thejeast said U?31 Lo-Vaca had made reintroduce the ordinance un-— against a,fence law because ' * ' " with a-$4 refund to those one-hour sessions spanning attending all the session^. equivaAen't of 2,400 gallons of of five q^iitt in .the United desirable because of potential ' "o actual study as to the til he could get the fourth vote he said it would ,hinder the gasoline. "^ States.1 After the initial $4 to tiahgers tp the.environm^T""" FJ1?,enPSi)f converting eiUier needed for a majority! Coun-shimming-pool owner, that Unlv^bit^ stud^ts!^" ^ . CAUCO PRODUCTIONS By vc.ombining these $5 millioir!ibuilding cost, the ' "The. potential tost per industrral qr:utility company cilmeri BobBinder and Lowell there was noreason to require Chip-Morris of the Texas" A'H0 KOKB PRESENTS elements in a machine called Tokamak requires a budget of kilowatt for these sources of , machinery. V wbermann Supported Frie^-a perspn-to have a fenf a nuclear acr . going to work,';' Lohr said. • ~ftiitottio.-^-'njese--debts.,-ttaye sun," explained'Dr.* John" tiideht,* Since atomic fusion " been accumulated . through TEmN . Lohr, of the UniversityGenter combines rather than splits' for Plasma Physics"and Ther-. = atoms, -explosions • would-be monuclear Research. , • impossible. . • ; A DIFFERENT pohr satrf"1-percent of the .—Lnhr said , researchers seek Tairirt^TiuTO---H>r-^-he^^-.,-primarily to-find solutions..-tc ©RUMMER- THE BEST WAY WE KNOW TO hydrtifjen, in the!oceah(cquld the problems-raisea iniatomic r^PASS THE BUCK prpdlice.limitless amounts of fusion in their research, to be 24th &-Nueces completed in' two years. TONIGHT pracess worK,"we can i.uii the examDle. a. .for billions of. years, " temperature of 10Q million Pius Special Goest Lohr said. -^iegrees.'Centlgradep-five tOST HIWAY BAND I Students-only HOT~5AU€E The Tokamak, a Russian ia-times that of the sun's center. Wednesday Nights- Beer $1,25 • pre-paid Sat.r June 22nd Tvenlionr^s~focated-rin-the—{nustbereached for efficient zmRobert Lee Mcore Hall base-fusing of the nuclei, rne gasT •'25th & Whitis Texas Opry ment; . .• .,-i must also be contained long' AVthough University enough for the reactions tooc-' Village Ps* researchers are working with clir. I wo Periomoirevs the same type ;of .energy as 7-J0 & 1(h30 PJM. University scientists have Cinema' Twiii Tickets S430 in advatue for eodi KMS Fusion ^Corporation in . had. success-,in the last' few snow Detroit, the methods used months, measuring 'plasm'a of $5,00 ot tbe dpot-'>­differ:-• 2700 WEST. ANDERSON • LANE 4S1-SSS2 iwo EAST wvnuroETOuytxajiswi: .20 million degrees in the pome, by TSP Building, Room 3.200 'and place AMIable eK Pauls Sooth (Down­ University scientists yourunclassified ad town i Riyersid®),' Inner Sanc­ u;-Tokamak. Although the high­ produce-fusion in a .magnetic ivm. Budget Topes, S'Tevn Opry rfieia7«Sd^rMichigan-based-temperatures are --sunstill not Ihaver# hod company uses laser,"beams to " retained Jong ^emraghr ^he success shows that turbulent achieve the same result. 12TH -heating does work. -"We think their claims are' WEEK! overly optimistic ... but their P^Opgdofxjyich,; Temperatures .five to ten NiSwYorkMogozine As a Summer Student at UT -information. _is '.classified titn.es_ greater-than those because of the (military, rso reached must be obtained for you don't know if they're theiroonuclear.energy. Qverexag'gerated or noj.,'4. You Lohr-said, * »$.'j ^ Lohr said theoretically The University machine, -splar -energfy is the", most 12:30-$1.00 now in an experimentalstage,! desirable, but that it is now $1.5° jw combines-,thejiiiclfiLiof only10 percent efficient^ "hydrogen atoms to-produeera --Large amounts Dtjand~are— Student Nbwspaper at The University of Texas _ot Austin And you may^pick up^yourjtexanf DAILY TEXAN at any of the conveniently located oYange pick-up stands on campus.. V-^ IF YOU ARE NOT A STUDENT, HERE ARE THE SUBSCRIPTION RATES FOR. Jfy"> 1-" , THE DAILY TEXAN ... A Really to so -- i« a >- MAIL PICKUP STANDS • ••• 1 j • \ -r: "y-sfidZ ' . Students-N$n-Student­ •,<$y A. 'V. -Faculty-Facufty-^r y Staff Staff ­ y Summer Only $4.00 :$ .60 $^fcO0— when-you xrffle » s * * Have 7 X Fall or Spring $ 8.00 $1.65 $ ^.00 something / J" k '4' , Fall and Spring $15.00 $3.30 J $11.00 ^ i •> }>- „ ^ <•?> tw i TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS P.O. BOX ft, AUSTIN, TX. 78712 £• Please enter my subscription to THE'DAILY TEXAN f or Enclosed is my check for $_ , /' StK\f a? * tSWrv* A NAME _ trui t&y ADDRESS ive.qway , O s. , ­ pTi. STATE till^uf tliw tftupoii ati^uii nni4 m'rtit with your remitfancVhirttwp ^^o^l^e^UR^xantlassified Ad Sli abovejciddrcrss, or youTtiay come by the TSP Buildin^r 25th and wumis, Mondiv throudh Fridav. 8:00 a.m. »o 4:30 D.m. andstart v; ^i^r|ob>Iriptton. •v? % ^We^yay/^une-^,rlW^HE^^irrTEX^^agi^ • •-V.ft'AK&iV .*5* i£fe-£V "AifcVf -i 1..'.^ jS^S? yfc^s vsg'-^ Vy. -j.­ /T>» r^w ., , *SL, Council, Citizens' Boards To Review S&1* I M » r^f. I.I • By KFN-Mrff/ifit. >'Texku Staff Witter •. The Ninth and 10th Streets Ternus and neighborhood op-• improvements projectjyijlje_; portents at a June4 meeting of considered by "City Council \' the Citizens Board ot Natural . and two citizens boards in-a' Resources.arid Environmental tentaUve schedule set by City Quality, The.-Rials' were •rfiffirffii f&.lhp bosrd's .Rn«-.r • r^ferred~to the, board's En- Council meeting. Sinclair Blacky University In ttifcintern, the proposal associate professor of ., will be-aired at aopagJT^ai^jfi^reiarid',chairman of' -meeti-ng of the. Parks^and. the cbmmitteeTsaicithe com-Kecreation Board, and at a "attomnfintf tn mi. -July^-meetmg1of"the_atTzfnsjtsideas,orgar^^/and will l'f\ Board of Natural. Resources -present a final draft analysis an^Environn)ental<3uality.; of fhe'project to the citize'ns . The project would ex»end board on July 2. West Ninth Street across a jn the coihmi11ee's park.J«tw^en...W.est.-Aventie preliminary report at theJune and North ^mar Boulevard ,4 board. meeting, Black said ami widenWest Ninihand 10th the traffic need was"based on- Streets between North Lamar '• a set of assu'mntim>s nnt ~=agFtiruaaulutJu bt^ggC-—"—-n—"— .,-• Opposition-to .the^iroject-! n io .uie^roject r ''The_rnain concern of lie • the south, 18th Street.on tfie north, Ried RiverSfreet on the the eastr wUl replace. ureeoi^GyiriY:_ ^ _ ^"'ine tipecial Events center will be a miniature .of the dbmed stadiumTriTJouston; said • J'tit:\ Ha-w thorne-, supecintendeiit. foi H.A-" Lutt Construction' Co. of Houston, builder of the project. Tie domed roof will equal a 10­ s'tory/building in height. -is Jiigher .thAn tlje ya.1 V mitlinn hirt rppiil company last month. University System Regent Frank; C. Erwin said last moiith that niuch of. the After, the'trees are bul^doz­ . . ... : , .. •— diffjerence on price from the ed,-there wilLbe-littlareplan---,originat...estimate. was at-L ting. "T^e stadium will be of MrlbutabJe to rising steel Such.design that there,will be • prices and increased eoists for little room lefVto recfeive any heating, plumbing sad "elec­treesnir shrubs,'.*; Hawthorne—tricity • "said? . ..... , —ffhedeadlin&forcompletionWith'a seating capacity of is March 13,1977. .i6.dob-.-car*-daiijv" Ternus movements. West.Ktb Street., various activities to illustrate-­ilil "Tnaffir nri finnflalnng also is-inadgoaate because :: their reas^fof^pimih&-the ^ " ' aim11 Ih&n ctutfnh uioct fTii' "Til!'! 11 n irTTTrnT^T^TTil mil" rttrm^n i.* ...V ••it ... will then switch west to wesiooun fti III'I" mini "liinnii un irnlintii n'-tiinr Lamar." ed to .turn left onto North' thfcir.-neighborhood "to let tne Ternus'^aidrieiUierFirst^Lara^rrTtrnBssanT public~se»thebeautifi)lhomes; _ Street nor 15th Street could _. . and-the beautiful park." He handle the westward mov$­Tea Siff -of the. Old .Austin . said the tour would take place mant konaiica. hri/loac onwicc merit because bridges' across Neighborhood' Association" sometiihe before the July 18 inDisfrictCourt . .**' ^• . -*>• —•*-­ By WILLABD HALL dating baOk, to tlje 1950sJLMiL_iiestified,' Bank's -returned t6 Texan Staff'Writer 1973. he said..he believed he the stand to' resume .his Testimony continued Tues­•had been working, for the ."testimony day in 53rd District Courtson­ corning-the busffless-dealings-of . retired Austin Diocese . Bi^op ixjuis J'v Reicher,' -Jhecourt is trying to deter- - from-neighborhood borhood residents (jommitteelsTwt the tr^ffie.„^'!1'on imst.fund established prompted citj . ea. ueuo, th6 city s Urban, figures," he continued. "Our Sy the bishop. belon^ttPthe ' TransportationIron Department *--rriain-niaiii concern ..isa lor me Catholic Churchy'... JU1 the v , all fnr a rouictnn V\f i ' ... " Tbo Mnlff Rov M ^^UTDXto icaU fora reyision of npighhorhonH The MoSt Rev. Vincent M. : ®os,®y9ons,U'lti^ng' 'Ternus!saKTEeTTOSrtBd¥=^03S3Si^^S2K£iS?E'®^:''le Engineers.,destg^ studyof the loth Streets .improvements diocese, is plaifitiffTiitte suit" 30-nursi»g tomes.,-.. , . Catholic.churcJi.last year rui-­ — , x. • f " w ~year, rut- project ffe'nooj.j. v..oroueht. aeainst-the Churcnes/arp evpmntMfrnm — nri iui 11 brought,agamst*.the trustees Churches,are ex^mptUrom-ed that the ^fe* needed;. to handle .pro-" s The revision includedslight­ rtl fnc ftm/1 --. -to VAC K«r fnrlnHnV )n<« . ,, , , • . -' .* . •. r . . ,. of the fund. . -• • ..taxes by federal law; lynarrower street widthsthan traffic flow when the Mo-Pac Robert L. Banks, anaccdun-Dist. Judge"Herman Jones Testimo'ny. is expected) to' jected increases in "east-west•' trust belongs to "the church; v , . " • * v.ofcAitiwiij .;io CAPCVICU' IOoriginally proposed ' and "a expressway is cdrnpleted. tant.-with Price, Waterhouse is hearing the case withdut a '.Jas.t.the restofthis week with lengthy justification of traffic and Co., has testifieki audits r "A large amount of traffic JU^ ^ . the hearing resuming Wednes­ need for the project.-on Lamar will shift oyer, to . showrSl,million from the sale' . After Kultgen and Deers. -day rnormng \ w -• The traffic justification was Mo-Pac — cow... estimated atabout Ca.mobilehomesfactorywasdeposited in the accounts of the diocese... ' . r, ' Trees Removed Law : Flour checks of $250^000 each were dirawn from thearlourits and; depdsited "into • the.trust eening , . • . • • • tund cnrqugh.jfour hanks, .Construction of a^ new is^ooo permanent seatsTplus • . Banks said. ' "• The unsavory roles olaved Special Events Cent^-for the 2,200 pdrtabre seats, the In a deal involving purchase by. trfany lavwers involved in University btgan iThursday-center will-be .the site of QL^ nursin£ .homes, Banks the Watereate scandal has r tt!?..bulldo^g of an .fis-. basketball games, University testified, the check from the .fdcused public attention fair­Umate4 150 to;209.trees. • Interscholastic-League ac'-''sale.ofoneRhode Island.home^lv or nof Tile Iiemeif, U> U: UilL.ui an LiuUifs. in.iiHn I^nnie. mninhnr m 19Sfi was 'matie oilt tn entire leearDrofeisiSn area boundedby_16thStreet on and cultural entertainment' Reicher "in his ^capacity as , Lpng before Watergate; events; lit will* also . available for city'use; ---' --The-constructioniost set j •"" PL -nflVP <28.809,316-by Lott Construe^ —the-"trust-Q daysWaco businessman J.H. befote school opais-and en-; Kultgen testified -Tuesday he ding^O days after the first had helped Reicher in, a day of classes. Delay must be" .number of business dealings exDlainprf hv a valirt pvmieo • HAVE WE GOT ft MEAL FOR YOU! at Dobie Center select from a -full line salad bar. Three different .s ^' -entrees." Condiment bar ; unlimited seconds^wide? J selection of beverages, ­ [ind a plan that-best'-w­ smfp * fits your .needs. W Z*£M WW sat.' j'? ftipi v* "YOU CAN LIVE WIW US TOO" ; ' 1^1...pn sale at the front desk !'42 PUNCH CARD'c Monthly Plan" #5QP -- $32^5-0._ wfe'*vr,USe the punches like cash. "" ' ' $77.00 vt-4iY 1 3 for dinner, 2 >91; lunch,* j'/i/ttCMeats all Month. Non­\ 1 for; breakfast,4 for specials, * Transferable. Five Days'a Wefek. \ • Good through May* 14,' 1.975 -.Transfer?trte. , v breakfast, -Lunch and Dinner ts^s i,P5l5iS' -v r ,* iMBawgnasr •j.^.mu u"e-suiuiion mignc -wait ,nntH'the --liclise. nln'fpc burg;^1d mudi'asHfrc residen^o^ and not-less than 90 daysin-ad-Janning said. "They don't add-yance. ihe • deadline, will remain'.v&id just take away.'.' only, fqr the upcoming July . Ravenburg explained that and October examinations. under the Tetas Abandoned?: PafiSe "stresses the State Motor VehiclerAct; the police' Bar's willingness to providp mtist trace., the current -information on these c-hanges;-ownership -of the:vehicle, by-offenngaloli-freeTiurnber,' attempt to notify its owner; • l-800-292-54ffi9. Students: may advertise ^thgir. intention to obtain the new" declaration remove theyehiclgand finally," forms from the law school or if no one claims il,-arrange to from the State Bar: have the cal"-de^troyed -17^-oar-showroom. Our demOnstrati^n^pilffTp^"' rs(»',r*p "il • a'*ow V°u tofairly compareeither of th.e Advent s ^ speakers, with each other and with speakers v_ = V Jrom other-manu{aGtur^rs,-If-you-Dreffir we will "notiaS^lhespeakersduring theromgafisori i t .We won'E.r^Sh you, ^ou-can coipe in"a^often^^^S i?' , you wan-t,-listen as long-as you like, and"use as ®? wide a variety of program material as is helpful ' to you^ " . r ' Nothing'aboutieitherspeaker^ac'pVdenteV--^ They arethe-resulto! eighteen years' previous W$ ji 4--V C experiente in^aking.fii^-^fqniiance acous-^ ^ ' Still* tic-suspengion. speakers. and their low cost is ^-.the result of what the people at Advent have . learned about; talcing the most §hnple, direct| • Before you buy your first of youVne'xt paj'r of route to highest performance. : -. .. ' loudspeakers, we repommend that youhdar'the Both Advents jiave idemtically wide fr6-^ -Advents, quency bandwidth, with' bass response ap­ ' Both the , original'.Advent Loiidspeaicer , proached by few speakers Of any pride or size,-• -and The Smaller Advent'Loudspeaker make: . and ..wjith high-frequency response and disper-mk the top level "of loudspeaker performance avail­ 310^-of the Highest order*. Both have the same lg E^th ^'ff?f thai-ir^i.Prev^0"^S°ing eost darity and accuracy, aiid^n octave-to-o^avp take he?d;^ea^ Ho^w-fh te V musical balance chosen to soundconvincingnot If you know someone .who owns a-pair of'%-'"-*' (si9V n*. «,iA j • .... • .. • • •ntq or ^millor^Aiiiunti. •> Advents or Smaller Advents, you-can -easily move to check outthose claims -listening both to. the speakers and,to^yvhat their ownerh$s to say, about them.. Many Advent; owners bbught their speakers only afterextensive comparisons, „ . 're-comparisons, and early disbelief fliat tHeyfe were hearingwhat th.ey;were hearing.The same""" ' owners have become by far fh'e most effective , advertisers for Advent speakers;.helping to 'make the original Advent a best-seller before :., ifc was advertised-nationally. nts bmdlier you• can-easilv Tf vn.1 u„.;„ „ J , ' I -a rk free lo Poti^GdTi'ag»~3t the- before, tral location to sit out the* before they can Be dealUw'ith. Street Vendors' — -esSzir ^endo»^f^the^rd^ttepJ__iyan»prf in-uhat's hp^l f «r Marketplace have requested-everyone." _ Yn^r-o—-^onm ( Randy-„ _ Turner, manager act-The proposal Avill. be baStST ••mnuaiu on .'interviews with area Tuesday profterty owners, tne vendor's­ , and policemen who patrol the. : /('he additional spate would • areaT-and-the-ejctensive-study­ be on the north side; of 23rd " the city, manager's — Street froiti Guadalup'e Street made last fall., ••It' • .. to the^mid-fetreet aljey behind Several -Drag vendors said Hal's IJootery.) Th^s vendors , more .space is • needed on want the-space for Saturday jSaturday^ and othec^jeak"sell-; "use only; ' ' inglirriesrHowever, ttje need for additional space will in' ^ . Turner s^id he hoped to „ crease ih the-fall When the _ have a propesal ready forCity, marketplace gets'back into • • CoimciLnext-ffie^kJe_gaidJie full swing, vendors said -~ S| vents. v * t *C" LI v •** ?.r'$11® depending on cabinet finish)^^will • w Pl*" ' ' /, ' nln\? •jlirrht),,V yvi' i " "?• ' ' a?-s«ght;Jy louder in bigger rooms than The Smaller. ,($76). Either is an.outstandin'g value­ .by any standard, and The Smaller may be the Thost spectacular bargairi~available • in stereo' ^ Components. " ' We have qnydisplay complete music sys­tems which"feature The"Advent Loudspeaker "ft? ?nd The Smaller Advent Loudspeaker. These systems were pre-selected by us, after careful evalulation, to offer.the best possible reliability, ~r­compatibility, and level of Equalityqualitv ' Jl ana a ot sound whirh .Vnu Will find ae t.n-t-iofi.inn i Ci ; 1 J "v ->\ K-' Vs^ , vr &.Z-V sMm, J *~.y* $