mrnm •> *;• ««iS5w* I 'OTy By"KEN McHAM^T 53-i;:|hat conchisia/rwas disputed in the Monday hear-: . ' Well.-it's-Mill a free country, isn't it?''*'''' ;veach for-10-year periods . „ ^ Texan Staff Writer %L tag _ -;. Butler denied he bought the land anticipating an > Asked to explain why.-the La'Grang'e ?ite war crossfiro^nvolymg landowners attempting tostop «-• Ijand-speculation by Mayor Roy Butler msay •the planti^and-LCRA attempting to stop the lan­ Houston Attorney W J Merrill, counsel for the : increase jnjts.-value,saying he usesthe.teujl as an; i -selected despite. the ecortojriic superiority of-the -have influenced selection of a site near La Grange Fayette County Landowners Protective Associa-; "east -rartch" to match his "west ranch" in downersJrom interfering Wilbarger site,-LCRA ManageStjharles Herring 'Jar Austin's coal-fared power plant, charged tionv which seeks to stop the coal plant, said the* .. Leander."How can puttinga coal plantirr Fayette .said 'IWe hadn't proved it yet, but we'think the-^ -Landowners initiated court action June 4 to ^'counsellor Kayette County landowners at-a Mon-Rflrhtpl stnriy nptuallVshows theAVilbargef Crppk * iorce. LCRA and Austin to show why alternate -County raise the priceof my land in Bastrop Coun--majorjsource of fuel for the:plant.will be Eagle fday hearing in La Grange. ' 7 .-tfj&area as the. mosUfeasible site.' • lylid asked." .»— sites could not be used • .... Past! rrral -Thn pyfra transportation cost would be The -charges .were-, made in -support of the-. ; IX'RA, proiect manager for the proposed nlant. ....,.'j' ''The—report—establighes. fuel transportation. Batler would not reveal the purchase price of": offset by.the-greater efficiency ottthe coal. " • il.'Fayette County. Landowners Protective Associa-' i • was gran(ed-a: temporary restraining order July 2 .. •r„ costs as the overriding' consideration-for site ^ ... the il&97.29Tacres of landr bo»ght fromJames£.-However, the Bechtel report.lists theLa Grange j; tion action against the -Lower Colorado River enjoining landowners frofn interfering with1 selection," said Merrill,-''and shows the Nash July 5,-1972,."Tbe purchase price is ndt-any.: : rsite;flSTnore expensive-than-any-otheiLSile.ipr.use ^Authority and the City of Austin, which • 155th" LCRA's access to six Fayette County residents' • Wilbarger Creek site,to be. most economic when "• of your business or anyone els«'sv" Butler said. vir.bf Eagle; Pass coal alone or. a mixed usage. • .District Court Judge Paul Huser ruled moot in land for purposes oi core-testing. those costs are considered." -• Ky Butler .said, the report recommended the La In an introductory letter tp the" Bechtel site r- light of a.cross-action filed Monday by the lan­ Merrill said the alleged discrepancy between ;;-f;Grang.e site because "^lie'ther Bastrop lignttfe nor -Bechtel Power filed.a cross-action asking that- downers • . selection study project , engineer A.M. Jensen is Eagle Pass" coal is-going to be used.' •-landowners be charged $100,000 if Bechtel;!df­. ..the report's evidence and conclusion is evidence wrote "the magnitude of the differential costs •Butler owns nearly:1;600 acres of land on-and ficiats arfrcompelled to testify concerning the'srte of possible "capricious and asbitr^ry decisions?™; , . _„The La GrangeKite is ligted by the reports the that:vary, with fuel source and.their related • .arbund-\Vilbarger i.Creek between Bastrop arid by Austin and LCRA. . most economical site lf/fuel transportation costs selection procedure. • > • transportation far outweigh-all other "differential .V7Eigin,-according to deed records in the Bastrop: .ar^excWded. r _ « • -The -landowners' latest legal* maneuver is a' . Merrill,asked, the court, "Suppose-the mayor . sites -costs." -' -:js awi^Coui^ty. clerk's office..]:• . • , ' ' • . •a. Jensen's letter said the La Grange-site "allows cross-aetion tO'LCRA's suit for access to ianiTarid • • does ifct wdnt His land-condemned for the -coal " ; . Even a small differential m fuel traniportation'.'t 7^ The-Wilbarger Creek afea was among six final - " jrrattal^developmertt. of1"the area for two.,600 alleges LCRA and the^Gity oi Austin have entered -plant?.Suppose-the mayor seeks, to holt) the land cost-from one site'to another tends-to dominate ­ sites considered by Beclitel Power Corp; of San.s 'megawatt units, butretainsa potential forfurther into an agreement-which attempts the unlawful --until the-valuegoes up and. is thus biased toward •; other costs-,-since the plantwill use many millions* ;Erancisco andjtoustqn, contracted by Austin and":* the Fayette County site'?" "" •«-»-— ..'.developmentfcof the:site toxsome 3,000 MW. This delegation of authority by the City of Austin ' -IoLtons^f_coal during.its projected SO-yea^'Iife,. the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA} to « item-can result in a significantly.lower first cost The cross--avtion further alleges LCRA and Butler-saidof the charges "If we had gone down conduct a'site selection studyfor the joint-venture " • All site and fuel ti^spoHaCoiFcostsnncludedr-i^«atli_JiSi§ttendant reduction m.rteeded cashflow Austin do not have-.the authority to exercise the *lo Wilbarger you would havehollered-'You're buy­• the report lists Wilbarger Creek" as. the most during the early years'V «s­ ~ii\"coal plant. , power _ oileminent domain-Uncondemn land in ing the mayor'sland,' I can't pleaseyou any way I-economical sitefor tfse of either Bastropligniteor ^ -Jensen tould not be reached foneompient Mon-­ •fe&l":. Tlie Bechtel study recommended Cedar Creek * go" . Fayette CountyfariJIirthB-^Hernativertlie-ex^Ek mixed usage "of Wyoming coal, Eagle Pass-coal„ day. • '• ' - • '• » • fe>,:.-. near La Grange as the most favocabfe site, but .cise of such authorily^has-been lmproper and un-' Asked why--he bought tire land, Butler said, (near^exas-Mexico border) and Bastrop lignite/ .."MepTlirs charges were part of a complex legal lawful' • k •mm, ** v » . StudentdNjewspaper at The-University of Texas at Austin -?" / \ z—* Vol, 74, No. 20 Please Recycle. This Newspaper Austin, Texas, Tuesday/ July 9, 1974 ; . " . Ten Cents. • VweJve Pages ^ 471-4591 CourtConsiders .. I 'U.S. vs . WASHINGTON-CAP) -The Supreme will decide, the .case and its 't\v0 key Wltm . whether St. Clair would claim executiveCourt, cannot force President Nixon' to . ——r. ^.questions, whether Nixon must_oBe> a privilege protects ttiethe -records of a "\pi muege -protects disclose Watergateconversations .ions even if lowercourt.order to giye up tape reeor^^ ^.hypoth^ioaWriW Lal ^ V' " they demonstratecriminal acts -Q-' > I1®® and other records,of 64 presidential President and a judicial nominee" 7T"""" iawyer to(d the justices^Mond?y rq?y--conyersat-ionsr and -whe:tfier the \ ' " *^5? :i Presidential attorney J^mes D. St|| to '1 -would that could hot'be­ -Watergate grand jiiry had'the ri'ght think Clair argued that only the Congress;';-• name; Nixon as. an • unindicted co­released," St." Clair "said; adding that a^i I through impeachment, has the power to conspirator in the Watergate coverup. • :President coulcf be impeached for such ' bring criminal, charges against Nixon. •wrongdoing. ­ • IN.THE COURSEof the argument,St". . ~l'he juoicidi.y^il)ouWjjol be dl'ttWiHnto­~; ffial' prgcessrhe asset ted-.—•— ST., CLAIR, and special prosecutor Leon Jaworski fought ;the issues of ex­volved. -• .-^ " ­ecutive,privilege and presidential.power : THE COURTROOM'Sonly vacantseai--" Justice. Lewls F. Powell Jr., "one of before the-eight questioning'justices and was the high, black armch^ir-assigned to ' 'three Nixon appointees hearingthe casevsfa packed couftroom. ^ . ... noted that the purpose of privilege is to Justice William "H. Rehnquist. He sd II was the first-time, m a case titled guarantee the President candid advice removed himself from. the. case, ^_y"The._ United States of America vs. from.hisirqm.ms:associates.associates. The justicejusticg queried.queried, , P^urnably because he. held a . ' Richard M, Nixoh;"-that the Watergate "What public interest is there in preser-" ^'^.ViiakinB^^Justice. Department job . -scahdaj had reached the nation's highest ving the auringNixon sfjrstferm. -.­ ving:the secrecy about .a criminal con- ft. .court.-^ spiracy?". , • •; . In to St% rebuttal Clair's argument, g V In three hpurs of debate, Jaworskicast St-Clair replied, "A criminal con­ Jaworski's associate. Philip A. the argument m the "narrow, terms of-a spiracy js.criminal onlyafter it hasbeen Lacovara. uSserted, "A primkc .facie • -.prosecutor.seeking vital evidence for proven.,,We're riot at that point yet;.,. showing.can be made that .these conver­"trial, while .St. Clair put it in the-broad You should not destroy the; privilege in sations were not in the lawfulleonduct of'scope of,impeachment proceedings with anticipation of later criminality which public-business, but-in furtherance of apolitical overtones. • • may.not come to"'pass." . •.' : V: criminal conspiracy to defraud, theThe court gai?e no sign about when id Justice Th'urgood Marshall . asked ,.United States and obstruct justice.'1''' ­ Texas Student Publications . ;.By RICHARD FL Th^wprd^''.auxiliary enterprise," however, do not appear in ­ i, Texan Statt Writer -> , Oie trust agreement, jiist as the word "trust"does not abpear in ' yr Texas Student Publications (TSP) is an auxiliary.'enterprise of trie regents rules-.' •''r '; • ' iv'-.the University and*assuch ishot a'legalentity, aSystem attorney Whether TSRIs a bust or an auxiliary enterprise'now appears if^Mstated in an opinion received by TSP Monday,: op j" was.-'^-trust in'.tegaljtitns: 'Shttltz- I'®! Written by WO Shultz, the opinion further Stated the TSP said, I..m.not prepared to address those questions '' Board of Operating Trustees "has no authewity ta britig legal ac- Although thetrust rel^tiphshipbeteeen TSPand the University H tion in,its own name or to contract for legal services irvits own' would seem to. constitute a special legal relaUonship not held bv ­sjs.vbehalf." " ./ ' ---..4: • * *••• . * '*•'• " "" ... auxiW enterprises; Shu-hz would not define one. The-opinion was prompted by a TSP Board requestfor a budget TSPnSenepal,Manager Lojfd Edmonds said Monday it was his ^-.Change to transfer ?15,000fofi legal cQunsel. The boaixl planned to -. •. retained itssfetosas'a'legat entity Wheiithe o«ji V-hire an attorney tosjjtdylhe possibilitiesof a suit challeneineac--aeclaratio(i*of trust was approved.; •1 B •* « • • * ... •. . . * .•— ' ^ ® . . • / .InO A itc^f Sn [^•Mon-by.theSystem ward of Regents which moved TheDaily Tex-/ Joe Lattjng,^ 'an Austin attorney who represented TSP diirinc # •— •• • • • • : v_' -. •• —UP( Talapholos "--san tfcvoluntary fpnding, . . the trust' negdtiatipns, agreed-TSP.is a trust.. . ' " -' J-tft James at. Ctqtr (fop; and letfn^worski leaVe .Supreme Court hearing./ former _TSP president, -requested "Everyone would be surprised to-fitid out that a trust is not a Michacl.-Moore, Board : legal,entity,, he added. . • University President-Stephen Spurr take the necessary-steps to place the budget , change request as an emergency item on the (Related Editorial-, fage 4.j : *"T "' May^ 3 regents meeting,agendaJ' Some-questions have been raised since the issuance.of-the ' Spurr, however, declined, to take acfion on the matter until the opinion: . \ . ; . • . • Panel To Make Available ­ •ssufe\vas considered by the faW office. • Is-TSP a trust or not and what changes does a^decision one .-I»!regents andTSP currently operate ynder a declaration of Xf* way or. the .other portend for the declaration? trust, negotiated in the .summer and fall bf 1971 after TSR's -* Is TSP beingdeprived of due proceiss if it hasno access to the..cha'rter of incorporation expired-.*•• -. • ' ; . courts or right to legal counsel? •ar/son ' declaration are the terms of operation between • :/r-vyi"u ui= ickcius auuse uie aeciaration ' -•-Could the regents abuse the declaration and leave TSP with WASHINGTON i(UPI) ^-The House » iregents.:as.. 'tru^.tees!'...and. the TSP Board .as "operating no channels for relief? ° . ' ; nilftnnnlr fnH '* release of the commitjtee version will be a process in which he is permitfed .Judiciary Committee will make public rustees_—~~ — "~Regent -Jenkins-Garrett, who participated in the I the first official action to thallengerthe 1 .the trust participate. • : >Xuesday a-.comparison' between the accuracy or the In addUion all TSP assets, "of everyR1nd~amh?hara^terf^were-_ne^tj^tionsrsaid-*'anything-unde£;the umbrella o'f the tlnivpr, ~ I completeness-of staff rriemo which v>as1/Vhite' House transcripts of presidential transcriptSvPresident Nixon made public {^ leaked two weeks^igo, Nixon is shown in Watergate conversa'tionsapd transcripts declsratioB apparently indicates that TSP contemplating legal action ''smack's;of suing yourself." ^ April 30. " the same ^P615 made the committee.transcripts to play.-a wnich^ in its various fonns, constitutes a lieg^l " by the com^" The impeachment .inquiry-marked . .The whole basis of the declaration of trust "serves a University ^V twlttee Staff, a spokesman said Monday .mpreTattiverroleTuring-discussions of The law office opinion stated thtft both the declaration oi Ihist' •function,'' he said. •'. •• • ~ ~ .'-• time-"Monday because-the absence-of- Sljthe Watergate cdver-up. ' ; and the regents' rulesand regulations "make it clear that student »'Although some of the comparisons presidential attorney James D. Sf.JClairS Shultz, at thetime of the trustnegotfations, wasan assistantat­ •• t " "t;-— For example, the memo quotes Nixon the. University l)e • have been l^akfd to reporters, tlfe publications at of •Texa:s~-cit-Austin torney general and filed„a suit on.behalf of the state against TSP "• prevented it from qu^ioning witnesses,^sinstructing senior aides to avoid per-operated as-an auxiliary entejprise of that institutidn " ;, which the state.wo.n. Not long after, a settlement was reached.' — ~ ' -vJUry before a grand jury"by saying tliey •. .'could not recall certain events. ' -. fe-"Jiist.ho damned sure vou sav.-'I don't remember, I can't recall, I can't give" Easily; Love Letives Hospital any. honest .answer to that, that I can recalf,';" Nixon is. qlioted'as saying in TanakaPqrty Fails iW , -,the committee version. * Without Doctor's OK In—the—VWnte-Jfouse-edited version, ^ TORONTO (AP) — Prime Minister Pierre ElliottTrudeau'sLiberal Party won ;i;ri|Nixon appears ohly to be offering a By DAVID HENDRICKS J' • a resounding -victory.Monday night in an election rebuke to Conservative Robert learned Love had agreed to: stay at Uie­ "/suggestion, not to"be issuing an order p^f^f.ecasfcaHsi'lrdr^ -,i". C" Tixan Staff Writer j-center --1 Stanfield's proposed "wage antTprice" freeze to curb inflation, ' ' . ­ 1 'The Nixon quote begins: "gutyou can -Mayor Pro.TeihDan Love is.no longer "Love is acitizen,of Texas, and hecan' The Liberalsswept eastern Canada,"pickingup morethaniwo-dozeiTseatsIrfOiP sayTcan*t recall." ' -'tario, Quebec and the Atlantic maritime-provinces r. ' a patient atthe Starlite Viljage-Hospitaly do anything he damn well pleases unless j publication of theComparison-Tuesday-- -an alcoholic rehabilitation center »cai^neat courti.uui.1 icua him do something,"" vviuyi ,aa • tells to; 1 . By late eveujng they hadwon 124'seats,far-more tjian the?D9 seats they held go- mark the fitst release of materials - Kerrville, although hisdoctor did not ap-. .McBride said. «parti y, • -ing into % election. The,re are 264 seats In ths5House of Commons. liftwro hie. rlannrftiMi -r-«-•'> y . 1 _ v>"the Judiciary Committee examined in 18 "PSove his departure •> ' Love: eariierjjiad said he planned to-M ffcloutiy -^ough ^closecLsessions. oyer_a^six-week period '$• R " Tokyo fiTPli .7777* ^"R~^^ISTT7^^-*:^^-T5VRRR-?D®ED-^ESSLON& °Vera^six-week Stay at.the clinic through the week of ^ Dr. FiE. Seale.jf&Starlite physician, 0(.ratJ „Ty ,??i! Kaku^ Tanaka, whose governing Liberal / ^uri"8th<» first stageof its impeachment rWe'cln July 13 He reported.ly will attend the ^ -^sald Monday he-lastvsaw Love laSt week ' "1 ' l 5arty * > and does not know why heleft •• -J j, ^'~®!®c^°^s^ay>_ret»sed Tuesday^touadmlt defeat. -.• . The jest of the evidence also is to be' Love s ex-wife^ Peggy Love, said he ' 4­ , j --• scheduled for r |o)«. in ' Macv.McBride, business manage"for*'' hadj left the center"last wee); with the 4 , ff s-pokesmaii Starlite, said the center has no plans to ^ doctop^approval for an absence of a :^lna$ Wilf be.. Rodirio Jr.v D-- „ have'Love reforned A court hearing had couple ofndays, but Love, was not.at d n -bceh. scheduled last. month .in San An-Starlite late Monday. -' Witnesses Were scheduled' to be heard " . tonio;to determine whether Love should­ __Love .ancj Ihs-current-wife, Janice-'JSI for the rest of this week ^be committed."But the heanng-wasiOs^ -Were npt AvaUable^Moiiday. for com­+$* missed Armolir ment.' ' f -T* " ~—' SMJSi : i'49SMpt i"-, ,.v , £&&&& ! Wf« iV W T';: t ^Chicano Groups To Discuss SER •Mi ^n/ftec/XoirHrua^ Organization . By JOSE M. FLORES A me r ica n . Council f or: organization which ' ranked .Austin's Spanishjspeaking;.-,ple 'merely'.associated with Texan Staff Writer Economic Progress , to the high nationally for training community. We'v.e had . IfiexTiff-erent groups feel that More than 20-Mexican-Brown Berets and ' the GI. programs of its type'last year, meetings with .different way,V, said Dobbs American organisations plan Forum will gather to discuss-but may now be done away organizations; before, but '\¥J>at'is to'be done?i don't ' to meet at the Azteca possible, courses of action Kb with, Valle said. never with'this typeof consen­know. With'the variousgroups • Restaurant on East Seventh ,, save the embattled program. THE" CAPITAL Area'Co'n-. sus until it was realized SER an The Institute of Alcohol Studies is a program in the'extension ding the seminar. Thejtheme .of .the meeting, is "Relating to division df the University. •_ _ __ __ • othetsS,. to systems, to self, toward the prevention of Speakers from the University at.the seminar are Dr.Stanley alcoholism." • WHY NOT T. Donner, professorof radfo-televisiotr-film and education; Dr. Lectures,'laboratories and films will focus on specific areas Earl. A. Koile. professor of educational psychology, Dr. Arthur of alcoholism—Topics being-studied-include^alcoholismJn pop-• .1 Rrnwnpii of ,the Counseling and. Psychological Services TRY THE BEST! . ulation groups, prevention of alpohohsm through the broadcast Center; Dr. James Aiken, assistant professor of spSecIfcffltt media and new methods of treatmeht. muniration and Cieorge Thorman, assistant professor of social; -The purpose of the seminans to promote ftiore interaction work. ' .. •. • • .- ^ ..-j 21 Great Meals per Week between people in:different fields-dealing-with alcoholism,­Wayne L. Ewen, director of education, information and training •Maid Service at the Texa's Commission 'on Alcqholism. said. 1 STEPHEN M0EH1MAN, M.D. , . "'V •Close to Campus • •' • In regard to alcoholism-among college students, Ewen said _the problem needs: more -attention. "At least UT does have a ANNOUNCES THt HUOCATION-Of-HIS-OFflCIv.* Private Transportation' FOR THE PRACTICE OF , * •Private Pools CHICKEN-FRIED STEAK • DISEASES AND IHNERAt SURGERY Of THE EYE LARGE CHICKEN FRIED PLASTIC AND-RECOHSTRJiCTIVE •-STEAK, BUTTERY BAKED POTAYO OR FRENCH FRIES. ALL THIS AND -" SURGERY OF THE EYE . '-Z-L _ HOT TEXAS TOAST. AND ~ CRISP TOSSED SALAQ. EVERYONE GETS .1616 Royal Crest w iM " / « »fMIPn«BITi,V * nunw«i „ 444-6631 -MM. ran m ttuiii u c SUITE 512 / , Mfia BID <5M7Jt -eet- A PRIVATE ROOM ins. iW.TMU.Mt mCDICAtPAWr TOWER A -leading choice -of the-Riverside MI. MI i^iiiriisr IWlWESTMrti-StRKT Dr. apartments because wo-offer • EONSIiZ!! SIRLOINPIT extra-spacio'us living and direct access to the shuttle bus. MADISON HOUSE 1-1 $165 • .--" 2-1 185 ' EARN CASH WEEKLY 2815 GUADALUPE 709 W. 22nd St. 2-2 195 . , . all-bills paid Blood Plasma Donors Reeded 478-3560 478-9891 478-8914 Men-& Women: ? P° Madison -Bellaire Apts^ EARN $10 WEHCLY -«S also available for Summer " NO TIPPING '1^ CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION •^MEAS_you Atti& " HURRY! V Austin 4 yourself. Blood ComponentSj Inc. Jtientify a friend. The _ OPEN: MON.&THURS. 8 AM to 1P.M. Divine Dog Tag-is TUES. & FXI. 8 A.M> to 3 P.M. . contemporary answer to ClOSEiX WED. & SAT. . thej.d. bracelet of years, / k, : . # •. . .past. 409 W. 6th r&\'. 477-3735 ..UI GOLD OH STERLING SILVER .FftOM 25* SSSnT•, • Hungaroton ' OFFlCiXtLJfA^NOlINCING QuaIiton vthe; "ON THS OIAO"^ aiunoaU vtiuor* 9236 OUAOA1UPC ' 5726 RUKNCT 10. /* y Supraphon > '"AX Studffman's Two weeks only -•y. Photo Service' 222 W. 19th . . . & _ . 5324 Cameron Rd. t RESUME' & 'iJ-IDENTIFICATION TYPE iSAlLE' PICTURES ' •-™&alL whole earth g^oksi .* TENTHS tk FREEZE-DRIED FOODS 'P'i" tr _ J 1-Dgy '» PACK8 * CANONS -KAYAKa,: j^ajoeka^ ^ a foam paps ^ more . Quick, Reliable Service " -in. f ^fl/holeEairtK Provisiotv'CoS 2410 Sam Antonio 478-1577. Whatyou Si 4 want, is C GENERAL what we'll V ! f-%­ vj i « A,,*32> $0 ifest getJ l-Jm < Other Selections Available " ^3^/" > "hMi 01d Generals Never "Die; b4-v^:^; " — • X" They JusrT'aHe Away-. These sperfdpy impdrted labels specialize in record University -ihe Texas Union General Stare will fade aWayowifs of artists ,atid \Cotnpo6ers of Central Europe.•• in,early August (at iesfst temporarily) because of They are especially renotujxed for their definitive Go-Op t the Union s remodelling plans.' Toi cope with^ts untimely departure, the'store ^ recordings of Slavic composers.The sale runs Monday Consume will be selling many df its items 4-.cards, candy,?lthru Saturday, for two weeks. Shop ectrly for best needlework, mugs, flints, wood Items, candles, xveleclwn. .J?ils'.an• "Vv¥^ .*EW SiH y z - . . SAN ANTONIO (UPI) — In a surprise move,.prosecutorsi in. the murder trial of ?enl;y T ?er,.j —i11® Mqpday in~ troduced a signed confession m which Henley told of luring young boys into a. Si^rtUre r'n^ anc' (eX,7ndWiling five of• n .v mS='-i ,4v . , , On the openingday of the trial Dist. At-'• ty-Garol Varee Of Houston read the • statement to the jury while questioning ft r»a-?,? na .DetectiVeSgt. David • Mullican, who took the confession the night after Henley's Aug.8,1973, arrest, ?v!^eAt, He^ey S?id a,«ch?01 ' ?KWe1t I2° • 7"J ^ the alleged mastermind of the ring, .Dean Arnold Corll, 33, who said he would pay. the youth -$2&0 for every y,ouhg boy he could lure to CorH's WASHINGTON (AP) 'Former 'top presidential, lieutenant John..D.r John„iDb-. • •ho'f ! Via . At A -nnt nnthnt>i>»n 4Ua i Monday that he did riot', authorize the --'Eilsberg. break-in. _ Ehrlichman, who was Presi oifs' chief dqme$tic adviSSfT . r- r thatriru^statements^he gaye theFBI and. a grand jury were the result of oversight and not intentional. • . - ASKED specifically by.defense lawyer -H warnings' of his constitutional, rights a before leading them to the first of three burial sites in the Houston area. /. Mullican .was one of three policemen Ehrlichman-testified in his own defense' > ?ounts of tying' to the Watergate grand think the memo authorized -a break-in, from the Houston suburb•; of.Pasadena him choke some others^hen we would ^^hQ_intest!gated .tlie Corll shooting take them and bury them in different , . e—• -.. uic ijvuavuM dUUUlu Ul,X-dMUCHc which . exposed three-year kiHingplaces." ' i, ; ; spree. charged with one count 'of, giving false . Ehrlichman. had Said* eiarlier in con-" statements to the FBI and three perjury.'-•gressibnaT testimony that" he did not u,c imeeperjury. -]UrV«'. " 1 . . * but-the question came,Up'in court only j"!?' • • , . THE PERJURY counts accuse under cross-examination by associate . .. , „ jury Watergate -special prosecutor William three different times that he did not Merrill; know until after the .break^n that the Young had testified earlier in the trial" .-'J^owiKshirt;-^blue.tie,checked pants,^^two- plumbers" uhlt/was^gekinF infui matiom-t-tijat he.sent-the^papers^o Ehrlichman's ^ tone brownsTiops and yellowsocks, twice , for use in a, psychological profile -of , office in March, 1973, after Ehrlichman dyfing the moniing-sesstonrtumed atid - Eilsberg, ' • _ •' -' , called and asked for them. Young.said 'winked at his mother, grandmother and Ehrlichman testified that.he was tell--Ehrlichman told him he had removed three younger brotherssitting behind the _ Tng the truth at tne timeand was"as cer--some "sensitive", memos-frorir'the files • courtroom railing. : , tain asicould be of.something two years' but that Youlig had.made copies'which before." .' • ' Were 'turned over, to the . Watergate THE GRAND jury' testimony .was in special prosecutor.. May, 197J, and Ehrlichman said after Ehriramannestifietf^ahatnhe^filfeg reading a newspaper account, a"month stayed in.his office "a matter of a.day or later, he.searched in,his fttes stiji at the two" but .said fie never-examined them White House and found an^tug. ll, 1971? because he was too busy. • ' •«*, memo he had r.ecgived from Egil Krogh, UNDER questioning from thetbenchyij The7 memo mentipne(L ^'ls ^ P*"0^6 • pj-flfiJP and asked approval of a covert,, -,.>Usberg:Case fullyc _ v operation" in th'e Aug.; 11 memo. --from U.S. Dist. Judge Gerhard' Gesefer? ' gig: • Powers mm f'u; j THE TRANSITION schedule ten­?h?£,^aCj-movf^. ^t;tative,y approved-calls for the new con­stitution to go info effect Sept..1, 1975, if SiiHipfnTO iLKtinh* '^1^ ! -' *(} n -Judiciary .jr/fit is approved by voters. Committed Chairman Dewitt Hale of-Mf , ,c . , v ., : Corpus Christi assuredthe delegates that-?7. Jtl,re sut,-mis?.10n resolution suggested eeon)""ttee, the report wasidentical to What they had'-v y.,: .. the method of . •• .. .. --• J Ppublicizlhgu°ll"zinf the considered'on third reading, "with tne proposed constitution amendments' added to the arUcle, the'iTf^1,si°rihe fecretao-of state to insure, 1 1lhe cha^tfr convention voted: 9Hfe td postpone con-„.iiSpublicized in a timely, -„effectland sideration of the article until Tuesday. .,ff jmpa^al manner. The -THP bfportc nf r.J,e committee resolution includesan official ^StyleandDraf-^j.ewspaper -tabloid to be printed in. onnginTnn w To 6 > °" Kf'English and Spanish, which will be dis-' , convention,, bijt.the reports cannot bea!' ;tributed to everv residential postal timvSfw/thl ffna^fn' c°nv^1"1ijpatcon in.Texas asa means of publicizing" . tion gives the final approval to each aj^ti-, ;the suggested document. ­cle, the resolution of the Committee on *> Th„ JL. 4 „ , v provl Submission and transition must receive. -• • v . ,?S that toll-free ?ain­ a'tfelJiitds vote, 121 votes, before the • '^.be-proposed charter can be. submitted'to;v !!? "?„ ^ public "voters -the elecUon, the official LUbtl!r^"LaH®ilable'and the proposals The Committee on Submission and Transition sent a memorandum to all the' _ delegates Mondayr^-explaining the ten?-.THECOMMITTEE also.has.suggested tative proposals which have been a>" ihat public service announcements, out- proved. The "submission-package" in-i ^°°r advertising'and other public infor­cludes a transition schedule,.'a submis-, nationmaterlals used to publicize the sion resolution and an adoption ballot. ' document. -' S}>bp •' ^a?°Pti<2n ban whMh W|Mbe t°l;h mitt^d to voters at the. Nov. 5 general A on Uie entire constitution, the separate election, includes eight separate ^proposals and the transition schedule proposals. ' ^ be taken as early as Wednesday; 'isharpenough' tocut a "person's skin" . was found in the house,.along with mari­_. juana cigarettes, paper bags that smell­" ed dl acrylic rand numerous pieces of ' equipment allegedly used by CbH! in the . torture killings.' The prosecution presented a".221 caliber white -handled pistol --which ' Mullican said Henley used to killCorll in self-defense. Ntullican said, officers .(found (Jorll's n.ude bpdy lying against the wall in the hallway of his home, He'had been shot six times'. . The'testimony phase of Henley's trial : began:at l.:.3.0.p.m.\ a'shprt time afterJiis formal^arraignment on^ charges^"7of • murdering, six of the 27 slain yputhS. ' Vance, directing the pros.ecution, read each'indictment. . ' , . /'To this charge the-defendant pleads r-not guilty,'' 6hief defense'attorney Will Gray of 'Houston answered to each , *. charge. Henley stood silent by Gray's iside. , :: •» HENLEY and another-teenager, David Owen Brdqksy and Corll, an electricianr were the prihcipals iii the sex-torture • ring, police said. ' '•. The victims were tortured and billed, . usitalfy Ijy strapgulation ar shooting, police said.' No-trial datehas been set for • Brooks,., who was' expected to be a witness in the Henley trial. „ , . u, . 'Henley,, dressed . in.-blue• suit coat, ' ' " ---­ ' • • , v:i'.n•'• • iMVpnOTO . ~*wn JMI Henley's defenders:. Edwin Pegelow (I) ancf Gray Beef Imports ^ --' _.'r' .. Australians Show Concern Oyer Freirith BcfmS Toting . Economic Advisers. The session follow­ CANBERRA (UPI). — The prime ministers of Au§tralia and Ne>v-ed a .meeting of the officials and a -delegation of.seven Iowa cattle and hog Zealand said Mb.nday.that^Prancehad setoff another atmospheric nuclear producer spokesmen.* • : •• • , blast in-Uie Pacific and again registered protests. ; . .. -" -TheIowa;Republican saicfhe-andfnany^J In Paris, a French Foreign Ministry spokesman refused to comment," of his state's livestock leaders earlier * Cattlemen Split HINHTrtM /TTI>U • ^ . WASHINGTON (UPI-) Iowa Gov.. prepi'ate 'the plight Of Midwest stoclonen , Robert D. Ray.told a news conference who.haye beenlosing-nioney formonths,' Monday 'his7Sate'"s depressed cattle arid" hog producers ,are divided oV^r a . satisfied-^ith st^psthe Administration is proposal fof.; emergency v government. taking to holii^iown be.ef imports which credit guarantees for their industry "' cmripete" with • American cattle. He. Ray, who earlier, voiced fears that erfiphasizedV however, that he will favor. federal' officials might not fully .ap­ ..tougher action to hold down importsif :> -• ~th^ ^^.in^atioif^pMenPvofiifitaiy" 'moves sRoujd falter.. 7 ,r;• >••••• Ray's' cbrnments came at-a joint news conJtoencfe' with Agriculture Secretary, ' '.Earl j;;' Bute, and Gary L. Seevers,' a inertber of the President's Council-of .keeping to the fiovernmen't'.s^practice :pf not announcing specific, tests ;• had favored emei^ency credit'legisla­ operation to'obtain material:on ESllsberg Ehrlichman said then-FBI IMrector J. held by Fielding. .; .-7 . Edgar Hoover fiad failed to make a full beforehand and refusing to confirm afterward whether 'they iiave oc-, tion which has already.passed.theSenate and is now in the House; despite opposi­ _ EHRLICHMAN bad "initialed his ap-— ^forti^the case despite prodding from curred.-it—' . 7•••J/:• ^ • ••­tion from Butz. BuDnow, Ray said, some pixjval of the operairon. . —the Whitp Hnuse^ . Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam'Said in a statement, "The lowSns feel the bill might do more to otdiroaJte Australian governmenthas reasoi) to.Deiil^ttrafFrancehas^explotlethatr1 help-bankeh; than farmprs . . relationship between the President and atmospheric nuclear, device early today. : own lawyer did not-raise on direct ex the director was extremely tenuous due amination what Ehrlichman had meant ...to Mr... Hoover's failure to. cooperate,"when he .approved the ".covert jfEHrlichman said in respbnse toquestions "I wish to reiterate what1Said on:June,17 that thisfurther action by the French, is a-matter of deep concern to tlte Australian government," TWhitlam said. - Colson To Reveal More~Wqterg~ate' information- McLEAN,-Va. (UPI) 't— Charles,.W. Colson said Monday.he would offer 7 new information about Watergate to'the House Judiciary Committee but refused to say whether it would be helpful or harmful to his former boss, President Nixonu ...... 7 .Colson left his home in the Washington suburb of McLean and sur­rendered at a "classified" location in Baltimore to begin a one-to-three, year prison sentence at Fort Holabird, Md. He pleaded guilty .June 3 to" charge , of obstruction of justice in his attempts to leak information criticalof Danielj ElIsberg^dUring-his trial for giving newspapersthe Pen­tagon papers. : . . . 7-• • ,'-7._7 '/v-^ -v' '• -;.:i • v ; • He'told regorterS gathered in hisdriveway-that he.felt about prison like the W.C. Fields character who vy$s tarred ;'and feathered and run out of town: "If it wasn't for the honor.I'd just as soon avoid it " • Colspn, who onfee was quoted as saying he.would walk over his grand-­mother to get Nixon re-elected, has since said he found Christianity. Hie i: said the only reading, matter he would take to prison was "a couple of editions of the Bible," -, „ Market Hits Three-Year Low NEW YORK (A-P) -Interest ­: rate and loaii demand pressures ' swept the stock market into .a Dow Jones closing stock averages:steep.decline7Monday, carrying 30 Indus 770.57 -21.20 the major market indicators to .20 Trans : 152.15* -4.64 their lowest levels In more than 15 Utils 67.48 r" -1.67 three and.a half years. • ' t 65.Stock's .......... ....231.09'"?','i6.44 The Dow -Tnnpf! avpfap>f» nf —_. blue-chip industrials fell 21.20 ?;J| points to 770.57, its lowest close . "/i§ since Nov. 123, 1970. -8 Kissinger, Eyes Pfons For Curbing Inflatibh LONDON (l!PI):WSecretary_of-State Henr}LA.iiCissinger_and Britishjeaders— ISCUSSPd WAV.C^ on^ummnrt Ai>nk til 1 « '' ii'.:.; discussed ways Monday! bf encouraging Arab inyj^stmenl in the West to channel " back billions of oil dollars to-help figh^ inflation. American officials «aid­the^hief subjects in Kissinger's day of talks in London.included the world, oil crisis arid the economic-problems it-has caused tlie western world. • "THER^! WAScompleie agreement of vie month-old British Labor Party-governinent. ' He .Willstop over in MairidTuesday to pieet officialsof the Spanish.gbv4rnment' .and sign a cooperation agreement' before flying back-to Washington Tuesday -' - night. . -u • •• < • KISSINGER conferred .first .at, the.Foreign.Pffice with Foreign Secretary'-' ' James CallaglfanTXhancellor.,of the -Exchequer-Denis.,He'aley, Energy-Minister • Erip Varley and Gordon JRichardsori, governor of the Bank of England. ' ° ' They continue^ the talks over a "working lunch" at Admiralty House. Then Kissinger and Callaghan met alone for another 90 minutes before he had a Brie-" hour meeting with Prime Minister Harold Wilson at his Number 10 Downing Street office ^ : Final^:F^ssinge'rhad diorl talks witljXiberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpeand, fOrrner Pr.ime Mmister Edward Heath. nead of the Conservative Opposition Par-/ i w-A spokesman for Wilson said Kissinger reported tohim on Nikon's recent sum-, ;;i»iit talks rn.Moscow " _ -• . .« • U.S. Officials s'aid they discussed how.A-rab-investments in the West could been^T couraged tw-get a "flow back" of^oii dollars ~ --T • •, r . BrU^offlciaJs^aidJhey reviewetl^aysin which the United States and western < .Europe oo.uld work:together on this problem-withoritrjiowever, giving the impres-' --.' "5>on of ganging uj> on the Arabs ' 5­^ British officials said nominal decisions Were reached % rUH'TiltpholB Kissinger ^1) and British Prime Minister Wilson HEW Solicits : Public Debate NEW .YORK (UPD7-The U.S.. Department^of Health, WWVMWV"Education-andUUU • Welfare-said Monday it welcomes public comment on a proposed regulation that .would ban sex discrimination in all federally funded' educational in­stituliensr' : • 7 At a moniing -press briefing, Gwen­'dolen Gregory. an HEW spokeswoman, aid the regulations would bah sex dis­crimination in school admissions^ treat-merit of stiiiients after'admission and school employment. ' . 7 The. admissions rules apply only to vocational,' ^jrofdssional and graduate ' 'schools and to., public "undergraduate , colleges. Private undergraduatecolleges with a tradition of admitting only onesex are exempt, Gregory said. • The rules also would ban discrimina­tion in anv.form of campus employment, . .in line with theiederdl EqualOpportuhi­ty Employlrient. Act/ The rules would . cover everything from ."employment 'criteria to advertising' to pre­employment' inquiries.. _V, ill Arises Over SAN JOSE, GALIF.' CUPI)-t-One­ • hundred and seventy persOnS" sued-...the Stanford University Hospital and "California State Health Department , Monday, seeking! the right to be treat&l with the controversial drug Laetrile .in the event they contract cancer. '; ,; 72. Laetrile, also knownas vitamin B17ris: l . made from apricot and peach" pits." California banned its use in treating "cancer in1963,'although doctorsmaystill . use;it as-a dietary-supptement:———­ The suit filed: in Santa Clara County. Superior Court contends the ban is un­constitutional. . : ^ The petitioners said' that they have used ir;might use Laetrile and have or . would become patientsof Dr. StewartM> -1 "Jones, 55, a Palp Alto, Calif., physicialt> and leading advocate of the drug. -iPhey-pointed out--that' Staijifsi^; Hospital was the only-medical facility* where Jones had staff, privileges!^ " .Therefore, they said, they would have tciK be admitted to that hospital for Laefril^J ' treatment i »" The suit maintains that Laetrile is not-harmful and helps the functions of fKiSi heart, blood system,»lungs,:bowels amj: Other "parts of the body The suit declared that-the-plaintiff^ preferred treatment by' Laetrile over" ; -surgery-in^thc event-they-contrapted cancer. " The plaintiffs are seeking both a tem-;^ porary and permanentinjunctioBlagainst •> the -.state-imposed prohibition oil Laetrile. -' . >«.­ . -Jones facesproceedings broughtby th^' • .State Board of PAedical Examiners fqlS j prescribing"Laetrile to <$ncef patient and could-Jose his„ license, to practical medicine. —'— "SStsMB TuescVay, July 9,; 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Rage-J 1 Vfrs-V -rwg'~ eiiM mw. % ^ ttMil "1^34 *<*£ v* *fe« t -.Cii •» ,;r$f i-f-it -i -Cl Tuesday, July 9, ?*»•#* ;«< r« pftws^x usting the 4 • The Board of Regents-, and Texas Student "Publications Board of ° the situation that had produced 50 yearsof sup ririan -whojiad-iust made-such a legal"opinion: 21am not prepared,at thy." Operating Trustees (TSP).hgd a six-month fight three years ago over a The regents wanted the a'ssiets of TSP plus the power to approve and dis- v time to comment on the matter." • s;^new charter forTSP. At the end of the battle, The Texan reported that «JWj,.5 . jj:boti sides claimfed victory " , * '->r.v "' -Now it appears there iS'a victor. And it is the Board of Regents. At least that is the opinion of University System lawyer W.O Shultz, a , Nperson whose opinion is^highly quesUdnable. Shultz was ruling on a TSP ; ^request:that asked for a budget change so that TSPcould look intolawsuit 1-r,7^~ "proceedings And what he said is shocking," if nqt absurd: ,y\ r ...the regents' rules and.regulations make it clear that student publications at the.University of Texas at Austin shall be operatedas : : anMuxiliary enterprise of that institution. Being so'conptituiedand regulated, the Board of Operating Trusteesis nothing more' than an arm orageiicy of TheVnwersity^tTexas at-Austin-creatfd-by and. subject to the control of the Bpard^of. Regents ofthe University'of • Texas System. As stick, it;has riaexistence of legal entity separate and apart from-the University....' -. . v-'•'Nothing*more than an arm." "Subject to the Control of the Board of ° "No existence of legal entity." If this opinion holds up, TSP m & ••.and The Texan have-been — to'put it bluntly — screwed. • p-"What , this opinionrpeansistftat the widely publicized compromise •' -'agreement of Septembes, 1971, between TSP and the regents, never was. • Or if there was one, the University "is breaking it. 5 * : Before the 50-year TSP. charter expired three years ago, there was a ^definite trusLsituajimL_TSE_was_a^separate^corporation, free from thfe —University andclose to theJJmverSity. depending upOn the advantages1o£ both'. • ' But yhen -the charter expired in 1971, the University wanted to change approve allbudgetmatters. Said John Peace. a regent at the time, "We Shuitz'sargumenUiad been based on the regents' rules and regulations,ji~> don't"want control. We want supervision." • which-stated that-TSP was an auxiliary enterprise of the University. As The 1971 TSP Bo'ard disagreed with; the regents' plans, and voted not to" an auxiliary enterprise, TSP was "specifically required to conform to" the 'accept a-new charter. The state, led by an assistant attorney general .at • • rules ahd regulations", meaning matters of recording;-accounting, the time —-;W.rO: Shultz —'filed a suit against TSP, TSP filed a counter . & budgeting,and expenditure of all assets and funds. suit, and the earlier mentioned fight-was on. But, Shultz failed to ppint out, there is-no mention of TSP being an aux­ A.compromise was reached, but nbt before the regents got-what they . • iliary-enterprise in. the TSP'Declaration'of Trust. He told-us that three basically wanted: TSP's',assets:and control of its budget. But there was-years too late. -' . .. " strli a trust agreement between the regents and. TSP. Or so .people —,;XW.§-is a messy situation that brings up a lot of questions. How can you thought,^ tsF-Kjr-. ,\Ut' ''t': ' have 3trust^greemeht without both parties having equal rights to appeal "We set up a declaration oftrusi,"said^ustimattorney Joeletting, thet~i:. tp abuse of' that trust? Does, this mean..the regents can break the trust at _ lawyer who handled the.case for TSP at the time. "There was no question '• •' will? Does this mean "control of the Board o"f Regents" as Shultz statesin that the intent at the time was not to turn over The Texan tcrthe regents. r'-his memorandum? 1 ' -• • .. 1 We didn't end having a committee (TSP) directed by the regents." •.Kf-The Texan does not.wish to. overreact to this opinion. There is a good • Bob Bjnder, Austin city councilman and then student body president; . ­ chance that, this could pass ovei; without it ever affecting the operations said basically the same filing on Sept.8,1971, after the compromise. "Itis and financial situation of The Texan itself. ..a fair compromise,, wherein we.retained, freedom of the press and« the But remembering the regents' actions^ at the time the charter expired right.to go to court if" there is ever intended censorship .or abuse at-theM?? ; threeyfears ago, theelimination of the mandatory.fund last springand the agreement." recommendations by b.oth President Stephen Spurr and > So said Binder. But now—^ with TSP's concern of an abuse oftheagree-ti'mi i Chancellor GharlesTjeMaistre for an appointed editor, we must wonder. • mentor-can TSP go to court? Shultz'has said no. . If there is oneitMn^ we havlp'learned in'the past and we are learningnow, -Why did Shultz rule theway he did? It is quiteconfusing, at best. But the . .you can't leave a; lTOphole for Uie'regents.' ; V-• • . • h.whole situationseems to revolvearound the question: Is TSP a trust? If it pfesfe As Texan editor Lori Rodriguez said in 1971 after the trust agreement, "is.lheii it is aseparateentity.4f it isn't, thenitisan-liarm^of -the-UnLverri " " ~ -sitv. When asked iT TSP wasa trust, Shultz replied withall of the wisdom of a Texan. We wonder what \VH1 happen'next with this legal interpfetallon:* ! guestvleujpolnt Notes from Califorhia: striIce By CLYDE FARRELL ' Judge George-Ki'rk, Imperial-County •: ; ground iwi. Tho& Workers who Went tn < Jailed because they were frightening the;•_ • (Editor's note: Farrelti a UT law Superior CDurtf one hearsay declaration the fiel(&. often walked out when the • workers out of the fields. ^... student, is spending his 'summer made by a labor ointractor. The at-picket line and tbe flag appeaced. Of the: . The-growers and.contractors left most noriung for the United iFann Workers : .torney for "the UFW presented sworn esquirroles • (scabs-) who-regained;. -of their dirtyworkto»the 12 to15 sheriff's -of America-.in California's Imperial J declarations signed by-60" striking -matiy'Were ''students uninterested in:the deputies who accompanied the pickets ' • Valley,) -workers that no threats had been made -problems-of real farm workers.; Many everywhere/Under thfe terms of the in- On June 6, workers harvesting can­to anyoneand that they had walkedoutto others were the evertpresent illegals junqtions, pickets at,most fields had to taloupes and watermelons in the demand a union contract. Judge Kirk, smuggled from Mexico to- break the be 50 feet apart, within three feet of the . . . Imperial Valley wentout onstrike. Their granted the grower the injunction. His. strike. -• j pavement,, and with nb more than 25 demands were for more payand les? ex-. reasoning,'in the official transcript, was Judge Kirk's fear of the strike's bring-pickets to a field.;The immediate'effect -ptoltalioii'fiuiii Hie gio^veib auilTor -as-feBows: . —, •••••••-•••••. -ing-i!'disaster" to the growers was well was to turn a £fioutingcrbwd iftto25 quiet representation-hv thp./lTnitpri Farm A ir --•> •• '•—-"1 think iff they'rethey'redoing outthere they founded. In • the llMegree heat-of the~ individuals; It'also gave the:deputies an— W^-ker^f, Ainerlca;' The strike arose 3;ought to be requiredt to -gb out-thereto, Imperial Valley;" the-cantaloupes must excuse tu harassr^s when one man was spontaneously and unexpectedly. AfteK 'work_... I just canlt believe-that they be harvested on the very day they are threatened, with-arrest for walking bythe workers discussed their demands-in -doa-'t -ripe, or they will-'be ruined!. At-night, another to get a drink of water. There the fiefets, ^gyTf^d3beJJEWj;£fr-baek--—Unite^^tgai.-jVQi-kers are out there with a bfe62e,-I co,uld smell the rotting were16 arrests for"trespassing"intwo ,.. Ihem up. '.' "" .. "*",:.-:TJtcReting-.I'm getting tired of this • melon's from a car on the highway. . . incidents, although the fields ^involved Specifically, the cantaloupe workers .stuff.• As far as Tm concerned, this just The growers fought back with their " were not posted, and aCalifornia statute ; -demandjhatUiat tji^yt] be paid por.pie (by the isn't right, and I'm going to sipi_ the k usual bag of dirty tricks. D'Arrigoused a. probably exempts farm labor organizers" foot) rattvhertnahpor lacaja (by the box-order..." These people should he allowed sound truck, to.try to keep the~workers from trespassing laws, Union members s®«). The difference is crucial: the boxes to harvest these cantaloupes. It's just a from hearing the shouts of "Huelqal" were often given tickets for petty traffic •are the products of the'packing shed,' disaster, that's -what-it is, to these' ^The workers were given beer while'they violations^ many of which th'ey did notloaded and counted out of sight of the < farmers When they Iose. this much crop, •—wOrkkl^.to dull their understanding of £ven commit, while the growers gunned workers, and'the boxes include at best all th'ese cantaloupes ,1'm going to ; what they-were dojng; John JSCkson Jr.' their powerful care by the picket line st.only three-fourths of the melons picked, lunch." tolace -Brothers obtained the . and other growers personally supervised, (which Judge Kirk placed within threeafter unmarketable melons are discard-"". same injunction.' Most -othei; growers the sheriff's.deputies in their use of . the'-feet of the paverpenj), and ^through stop • ed The workers' demand is that they be ,: still had injunctions in effect from the injunctions to muffle the pickets' voices. signs. The deputies and growers made it ; paid $6 per foot of truck bed filled with .asparagus strike in January. T ­ Jackson also used'an airplane to cover • • a habit to park theircarson the.fieidside melons, measured from front to back, . .-In spile of the growers, the Contrac­the voices, and a water' truck to muddy of the road. The workers then-saw-a lot' This woujd yield^l20 for a 20-fo9t truck, tors, the Teamsters,L the police and the feet, of the picket line. In a D'Arrigo (if . police cars, a lot of policemen, and a • divided among'the 13 crew rfiembers . Judge Kirk,-the strike went fjprward; On . field, two foremen informed members of i few pickets—50 feet apart... : • •" with each receiving $9. The usual rate Thursdayr June 13, 100 workers walked the picket line, including an old man and-ii -The growers'" have -the money, the • noyr for a box is $54, and-a truck-load out of a Jackson field and signed a young woman, >that. th,ey would catch • racism, the police and 'the Teamsters."yields only slightly more than a box. . declarations calling for union represen-. them later in-Mexicali and beat them up. • j ^Small wonder that the Judge Kirks of the ,i.f >, Melon harvesting is widely considered tatioit„Later-that.day, 50 Walked oufoF rney worked tor tlie same contractor, : world cannot"believe the power of~the ••to be some of the most backbreaking *an Abatti field. Hundreds more walked .„Isuis Avila, who told Judge Kir'k.that-the 'UFW They forget one thing: the unionof "farm-labor. The workers fill huge sacks out in the succeeding days as the strike • pickets' rights to speak should be cur-;,--, Chavez has the people^ ^ i : ;on "ie'r witlf cantaloupes; walk up 18^3: ­ ll wish I,could do that/ plank-ontothe bed of the truck; dump -iijjtheir load; and walk back into the fiejd l¥mt. °r more. Only those with strong backs PTP firing line ^ AwviewMrom Texas M$-5"E*'and muscles candosuch work; and those WW .:whodo itoften receive back and shoulder By STEVE RUSSELL "It makes mesad that you'renot here, like animals in but treated Americainjuries' that trouble them the rest of • Clyde Farrell and I spenHaSt Summer "'"'as I feel you'd love it and-bereally help-ra -beautiful that The campesinos fight on- IWrb Fair electric rates: -their,lives. In the Imperial Valley, they on grants from the Human Rights ful. But on with the boycott. Over and > against near-impossible odds. . ••••i.-i V ,. r ; -have no union benefits to turn to when Research Council, working, for-the -over I hear people talking about the', •It $ a . sV-'fthese and other crises arise. Even those Unjted"Farm Workers in the Rio Grande strike say that it can't be j won in theIV'inZ fho Twfl^ ^e-1n?iCuetS' • who are forced' to pay dues to the Valley. • This-' ^fields alone.The peopleare jlist too poor,' 196?' h?V,e • Teamster "union" report that they -^summer..'I'm-taking-and the growers are itoo powerful. thW K^ntt nr rra ^ -e petition to vote1 Ta the editor: add to the already lengthy cfarsr ~Fee«iva.„LiULe. or no help -from. the -classes,^ but Clyde is However that may be, I have no doubt f'Sorganization is focused on .'.'The people of city reserye the •respondence "regarding, the eroded Tearnster? when they, need it. Instead, still working for the that la causa will win some day. "The^ngKatK 1 Uue\BuUthTN "a" liSX powei-o/ drrect tegislation....!' Te many n ^ey ask •cO-ir* grasslands of the University, 0ne that they apply to the Farm Workers' ServiceJ; • farm ..workers,, this people I'm working with have apatience:!:^^". ^"^^^®^-^®1"wl?e... A people, the idea of having power or con-' Center for help. -time : ifi ^California. already C0"J" could put an end to the_need for "A few and a love (orwhat they aredoingthat is'"S" ' ' .-. W fe' >• i tr°l/°f policies, whi'ch affect their, lives extra, steps, etc." . On Thursday, June 8, 130 melaneros Elsewhere ^i th'i^-unbelieveable. ' mitted to organizing a northward-^ • . -Mv.-i enraarl> ncr uraira nf cvIwIpao m il«t V seems quite foreign. Foryears theyhave page,--he discusses '/ ^spreading wave of.strikes in the grapes, Isitnpt abouttime that it was realized-walked out of a Havalan Farms field. " "Hasta la victoria-siemnre... t '• been faced by bureaucracies which have that pajhs are ntade for people and fre­The next'day, even before the .UFW.-his work situation in spread^his limited resources even more thinltr In1 PAOArmttinn' nf -. ? ( made decisJons forthem.with-or wkhout quently by people? Why should-people pickets arrived, 78 Colace Brothers • a Guest Viewpoint. • their consent. Recent events have Jeft necessarily adapt• to architects' worite'rs went out -on strike when their But in a personal letter to me, lie-dis-' few, if any, who believp thatgovernment cussed his reactions to it, and I think his sometimeg ^rittle views of reality' If demands were no,frmet.On Saturday,130 convey the flavor of being a part of thesE;* The key to their victory is not in the . j exists to serve the private citizen feelings are probably as informative as people have made a path — a path let it other Havalan workers walked farm workers', struggle. Lastsummer in"®*"-fields, but herein thecity, wherever peo-But we do have the potential to exer-be concrete it, and turn over the unus­out of jthe field, and half the I facts: the-Rio Grande Valley was horrible and pie consume:grapes, lettuce and Gallo • cise some control over our governmoit ed portions-of sidewalk to grass. This Colace workers refused even to board ' "Hello from the Imperial Valley! I've -beautiful: horrible that people are^gwine. As Clyde said: on with the boycott. ~ and events-that affect ourjdaily lives.' could .be achieved by working on the, the buses for the field. On Sunday, 78 . been here since June 12, doing sflpport Provisionsstill exist in constitutionsand problem areas quite pragmatically tow,-< work for the melon strike.-It's been an ' sColace workers walked out of the first - : charters which allow for true citizen in­hasten the ultimate goodbye to "a fewppf'^d picketed;Ata secondColace field,a i . 18-hour-a-day job, but it-has been worth put and power. AU.it takes is a commit-extra steps" and all attendant hassles \ < crew leader jumped down from a truck, / it allin excitement, experienceand good , J: ment to make,the^necessary .effort"and; vibes frortt" good people. |\ V THE DAILY TEXAN • ( Peter Falton^Mgrabbed -a flag from one of the pickets t ] th/4*nt Ntwijufptr Tfc« HJnhrtriltf ef Jtttmt et Awtfln . ii.f use channels available to us. • • vv • Foreign Language Education Center3-#?and led his 52 co-workers off the field. . .'There are twoother law studentsand MP , Today and tomorrow Student Govern* . f Later that day, 90 Saikbon workers , a lawyer in ourjegal department: Linton EDITOR .1 ......AV,s...Buck Harvey ( ment will have two tables set up (one'by Joaquuf from Berkeley, ICatie" Cooper MANAGING EDITOR BJ Hefner -Movie violence ,8t™* ' , • • • Robert Lee Moore Hall and one'by' x/. ,i.„ j,, . ' , On June 7, Havalan Farms filed for a from Davis and bamel Boone, our union ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR Lynne Brock # v Littlefield Fountain) where.you can ac*-To the editor: , u -, -. temporary restraining; order to Umit lawyer. We live and work ina small two-NEWS-EDITOR .-.' ...: Pam Clark ; quire information on fair electric rates;^ ,;-.s I just left the State-Theater after see­ picketing activities, allegih^ that all bedroom apartment, When we're not out * ASSISTANT tO THE EDITOR :. ..; .DdVe Risher .1 and/or sign an .initiative petition Jf ? ing "The Macon County Line.", It was: Chose workers had walked out because on the picket line.We work together very . truly the most violent movie Ihave ever SPORTS EDITOR .v.. .-..-..-.......Larry Smith ' euoughsignatures are collected on those ..they were intimidated by the 0FW • . well. We're all really into what we're do-, 'petitions, the city willhave to: "(a) pass «^\$een- AMUSEMENTS EDITOR Debra Triplett ^pickets. For preofi they.presented to ing, so'takingon allthework.we cando is the initiated ^nanc^without?'^,'!^ not ari advocate of censorshlp -natoral and expected. It'squite a change PHOTOGRAPHERS,Stanley Farrar, Marlon Tayloramendment.,, (b) submit said initiated from.1 law school, needless-to say;­ beyond personal choice, I Only wish I ­ISSUE STAFF *-~TX-~ " " • ordinance without amendment to a vote • '"'Our primary duty is support for • could iiow choose not have seen the pic-. k of the qualified voters of the city.. or We do have censorship,(though) ajnd-'' __ ' David Hendricks rng witness',statements, dealing'with ordinance without amendment, and an Firlng Lirfls latter* ihguld: News Assistants iVi. j-; Charles Dean, Steve GOlub, Jose M;:Flores, it is based. according to our Strpreme.g, police.; lnterviewingsfriking workersfor_ ; alternative ordinance-on.the same .sub-r?-t 6wen-Spain, Sally-Carpenter, Mary Murtaugh Court of the lahd(. on'bommunity stan-WV the press and fighting the injunctions.' 1^" |rHF| WMll llj 11II I ininrll "* (Clf'i dard^ Nn nnfe dvi* asked rhe about -': •' Bq typed trip!e*spac«d« <*W We've had about *25. arrests in the last , Assistant Sports Editor..,.. f.. Johnny Campos Charter Article IV, Section 5).'In any Make-up Editor Claude Simpson '.'Deep Throat," If they had I woul three weeks,so*a lot of ouf tlfnehas beerr event, you will have exerclsedyour right haye.objefctetl', but i-can see much- spent taKmg Witness' Statements and Wire Editor . Ann Wheelock witness /to have a voice in your-government. Copy Editors .....Jen Newman, snannon wyson. u. Uynri HuifbVd, . , . reason foe them to ask me about#?® ft 25 Hn«t"or t«irThs~Taxair ro^«)vet-^ getting people outof jail. We'realso'get- A minute of your time just-might save "-"Macqn -• V'VS?, >i "ir •he right to edit letters for length, vt4,V;.-, --.Debbie Turner,JgAnn Tower^ tin^jnto some litigation, which we'Jl be -v ^you^a little money and might doa lot for» -_ rA' 'f. ^ > i.,Doe5 our i worxing on more-when the harvest is • ,O^Inior» expressed in Tbtf Dally T^xtfn. «re IhOM of ihe:5"^ municatlon.Bollding A4196).-Inquiries concctningdelivery the City of Austin and the cause.of con-con"Punity .really prefer r .editor or.thd Writer ofthenrticloaod'aro not nec«s«irlly?v^ i * _ over, which should be in the next few -? end classic advertlsiiutatviiild.be madoin TSP Building serving energy, _plood-dreriched purposeless violence to-: 1 _; those of thtf rUniyenlty tfdaiinlytraUoq or the Board of \i 3.2b0.1471*5244}-^and display adverttnng. in'TSP Bottdfoff'~s v^' , • Inclthie name, adcfre», .and phone , days, fle^enty —— -w i .( -ir-; ibiiui.^.1. depiction of a natural'act? 'ft 3 MO l47W8fi»l . ' ~ ' 7* numbed of contributor. "" * • v;Yhe Daily Texan, a student newspaperat The UnlVersUy " ' "I'll probably move with the strike, r-The Wtlonai advcriisiDK:represefltdRve gf The Dally ."z i -c )7-^_VlceJ>resident* • Actually the answer that I mostVrefer of Texgt at AiMtin. Js publishcd t>y, fcttt Student--> " - vTexan t». National Educational Advertising Service; !m}., m although orders have not conie through Pub](c9lions. Drawer O, Xlolvfraity StationVAustjn Tex. ^ 4 -r?" V'>•**"-S(ndent05venimeiir—ior ^rbetprical questionis not and £bt n v ^ 11 -i.' i. r :_360 Lexlngtun-Ave., New York^N.Y;, 10017­ — *r | • censorship is not-warranted in any cade;-•yet. That would be fine,asstrike workis-. TWll.The D^ily,Texan.U'publlihed'^foo^iyv TQetd^y,^:; .;; i. The Daily :Tcxan.aut^ribet;(o:The-AsioclatfdJ>reM. Dut u ,s~an a gas; but there is*interesting work hpne, '/ United Press Internatioital and Kaeifie News Service.The' Moll letleri to The Firing Ufte/The Dally " Wednesday Thursday and Fridiy «ptem^r through ->\ More cbmmerit1 \ h we Texan, Dwiw*.p, gi station, Auirln, l«r • Mayi-anptuwday..Wednesday, Tbiripday. and t'Hday June".i-' -., Tc*nn isa member W the AssociatedCplie^ifte Pmi the* V make our preferences?, J Uw. Elth ed on radio, television and " newspaper advertisements .to . stress*energy conservation; J, •• ~ ENERGY conservation is not critical novT, Gallery add-Texas ranked second in the nation with 35 .traffic deaths over the 102-hour Fourth of July holiday period. This was seven short off. the, 42-deaths.predicted. by the. Texas Department of Public Safety-(DPS)r ' --.. The national total of 545 traffic, deaths also Was short of the National Safety Court-cil's predicted estimates, for the four-day weekend, which began at 6p.m. Wednesday an"d ran until rrridnigUt Sunday.. . A DPS spokesman" credited the reduced speed " limit; people traveling shorter dis­tances ;ahd gasoline-,costs' to-the lower number'of highway deaths. He noted that during a comparable Fourth of July "holiday period,in.1972, 80people were kilted on Tex-' as highways. Nine people drowned in the^taie? and one person was killed in a trailer house fire; Fireworks?caused two. injuries but no deaths m Austin, Fire Marshal L> "Priest said. The numberof grass fires in the city jumped from seven on the third of;July to-26onthe "Fourth, an inwease Priest said was probably-caused by fireworks* The breakdown of national fatalities was;­545 traffic "deaths, 187 -drownings, 8 deaths. from airplanes and *73 other deaths..to total; -•813 deaths:in-the-United States -over -the* Fourth of July/' fed, so the program will be a Common Cause Says"soft sell" effort.-to^ibuild-^JT^ • ~ . energy reserves for the.end of the summer. . Diclr Worrell, chairpersbn of the committee, said he ex­pects;eiettric consumption to ~set~a—record in Austin this summer. Moo"Weak' The next two "weeks are critical for meaningful cam­paign election reform, a representative for. Common Cause said Mpnday. Electrical costs are: rising David Dobbs, publicity and Austin's gas usage has/ coordinator for Austin-Travis riddled with loopholes," said David Bloch, coordinator for Austin-Travis County Com­mon.Cause. Common Cause is a> national ' organization; committed, to opening up government to public and private funds, none, of which are included in the •House biil, Bloch said. Further, the Hays bill before the House "includes .exemptions for fundsspent on -.-T.--.7..,--r-• _r w fund raising purposes, con­b^.en curtailed 25 percent, County Common Cause, warn-' people and encouraging tributions ..in the form of Worrell added. Therefore the ed that the U.S.-House;cam-citizen-participation.' v .; private property, such as" By CHARLES;DEAN -. Texan Staff Writer -r . Ifyou're looking for a job", the Career Choice Information Center may be able to,help. "^FThexenterwill teaehrf^sume-writingand explain different • styles and purposes of resumes at a workshop from'§ to"TP a.m. Wednesday in Jester U5A. • -' . •.'• v...,: AS PART OF the Counseling and Psychological Services. Center, the career center offers infornja'tioh din the entire ' job :hunting.process. ' ' . The' center has an extensive library on :career'planning ranging from job descriptions'and job opportunities to firian­• cial .aid arid grnrtimtp srhnnl jjrogr'ams;in.tpajor universities. "We are. constantly feceiving bulletins -ffefft profess'ionai sourcesliktfAlliedHealthProfessions and'ScienceResearch Association, .and our files are up-to-date!," counselor Bob Kelly said. • i " f .-ORIGINALLY the center focused on accumulating job. in-­forfHatidn but has offe'red^'ndividual and group counseling services for more than a year. "Our counselors are graduate students from"the psy­. ehology -&nd -educational psychology departments." said • Mike D.wffy, director of 'the. center. "Sihce. April, we've • probably talked with 4,000 students, and in the fall weplan Jo ? expand to seven or e?ght.counselors. ' . $ • "STUDENTS come to us with dififerent questions: What should I major in, how do I get a job, what jobs make the • money?''Duffy said..'.'$e're,_constantfy_^ " research to assess'ancl Improve our Services; ' ; ^ ­ energy cor^ervation program paign reform bill" is a IS y i!n^ t0 cut costs. drastically weakened version -'The Senate-: biir includes. .cars, telephone banks and TV ceiling on the atnouni thit in .' .stations,"-Bloch added. , DOONESBURY . C and build reserves, he said. of reform legislation^passed - individual cancontribute inan Dobbs urged all citizens to » The prograb is directed at by the Senate in April. election campaign, the total. write or.wire U S; .Rep..J.J. thrAn • typ»s -r.f energy coo ' "The-hill has been in com-amount spent by a candidate Pickle", House of Represen­siimers. Gallery $aid. forovera year and is and-prqvisions for matching tatives,~" Washington. D.C. "Commercial consumers-are~ urgedTtTset thermostats at 78 v degreSs? and. turn off "deCorativ.e" lights. Homeowners should observe ' media; energy tips and obtain "information ori saving. energy from the Austin Information Department (477-9911). TH^ SPECIALIZED con­sumers, apartment; residents Prisoners 'Arrest' Trash 20515,. and ask him to vote,for a" tough comprehensive reform billthatincludes areas such as matching funds, large, ; Travis.County.Jail prisoners are spending.days in the'sun -j . . -atHippieHollow;buttheyarenot;fun-filledday8.qti^elaker^cpnttl,utl?ns.ant'a"r7^t^!1?— Sheriff Raymond Frank.'s office has begun a (rash pickup : e'ect,on committee. . campaign at> Hippie Hollow with the aid-of prisoners. Capt. Hank-Oana and two.minimum security-prisoners,-'* jJoe Hinsley and Otto Hansonbilled 60 bags with trash,at the Cohianche Ti*ail-'ahd Hippie Hollow area Monday. -,aKal,„lucul3 Chief. Deptuy Sam Wikon saTd^ "We are tyring to en­iand"'HrartstsTieed to be aivare... PP°P'e to clean up the area thcmselv.es. . of energy; consumption even !We ^rp not harassing anyone. We just want to clean up though they don't pay forelec-. , * -. -tricity, Gallery said. Trash pickup will continue until the area is clean, Wilson .said. Ninety percent of the trash is beer cans; he added." ;•Hotels will have energy con­serving brochures in.ecialty [anions for men and women •50wif^#iek«nd temkad WHATCHA [ONftoJU.UNCM DUKE? NOmiN'SPBOAL—jJUSTS0M5 6VBBRUM RemrA&i-X E.:l, i jusriuyre urnmez POPS imhjYPiCL-pmepHeAD-isavme-DOMifwcr OF tT,j>icrmsoMe(FitmS£NP1He&SriN 8Y GABLE!' MY emu ARB 6REAT ABOUT rr-TWunt/NT/rAU! \ seea're.BEeNvp ? SIX STRAIGHT PAYS —QfiALi* sooscf eooaes. sorwrQijim&ewmr rr ts rMmrm-smsr. ;WVMCWB£SJR£jri;'om&eaw sArwcm 'V£AHrBUT. poesrr playMPEOm? "V wax/rise wrrmrsTHE WHOLE POINT! \ M •1 Plan Ah • . 11 Bury 24 Slave 13 Barracudas . water 44 Sand bar^ W 26 Bog-down .. 28 Symbol for 16 Wheel tracKs1Q Intttri/if -• 32 Bravery ,. 84 Trade for AT Cease 49 -Peel 52 Nahoorsheep 29 "54 Inlet 31 i 57: Cohjunction $8 Note;of;scale 33 60 Physician (abbr.) THAT'S-WHEN I CAME SACK HERE TO THE PtTCHER'g MOONP... Ct/C CZETcki jZrr+rtKi^-litinc r.r\oI'VE BEEN 5rrriN6-He(?rFOR TWO MM5...MAV6E I'LL SIT HKE" 3 .. .course FOR THE REST OF MV LIPE 42 AstStB­(abbr.) 43 EeltlshBr-. man . 45 Girl« name 46-Cyprlnoid--JlshjplJ 48-Slumbar^v. .50;Hurried SVEN J0B66T JOB NEVER' 51 Seines "j'a 53 Loved one. OP FROM AM0N6 THE A^HES HADTOWORRf ABOUT 601N6 .56 Rbati (abbr) 56 Unlt af : Swedish -• • EVENTUALW to simmercamp. . '.currency ' (01.) 59 Day of the­ . week issseSm 61 Extra, 62 Scorches „^ •''oOWM^i ;i.Paris Stock' Distr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. * V NEW HOUSING POLICY!! %2U% ~ DEXTER HOUSE ; 1103 W. 24th f BUY HIGHEST PRICE PAIR -~ 2nd PAIR ONLY ' Latest styles, : .] V quality brands, many colors - - OCCUPANCY ONIY ONECENT dollar-saving values! • .• . ~ 1'" Semi-Private Rooms as Low as Luxurious Private Rooms $100 per mo V per mo. •J.*.?1 f Sp • Maid Service ir4 • Heated Swimming Pool • Refrigerators • Intercom mm J^aunclry .F s aci]ities • Vending Machines • Study Areas • 24 Hr. D£slc S ervice • TV in Lobby W h• Off Street Parking * Close to Carmpus. ,.«• Speciol Package Deals (Room at D«xt»r-Board at Modlion)vfl;&-^l|s^} <.4 available as low as $145 - P H Novy accepting Fall '74 Contracts­ 'Tf ^for U.T. Men and Wortten .*&£ ..o„ H f ^ 'I fSfc -.v -^ HOUSING OFFICE 709 West 22rid St. •*> #Sit 47S­ f'ffS" •-V ."•M_ -HOUSE^ fW * r ---Come-See -Come Live , PET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY $-$ ? M - Wi 5^^-^ -j sa All over town vs. *3* f ^;i-i, aJTSS /T^d^ July^9, 1974'THE DAILY TEXANfee 5 1 filyVLr A \ ,S^kk; r"-i :P0?5 ffjA*­ sport, which had -no formal ; They, are put in -flight and' growing sports, oecause more are extra; and Castaiio also ... By MARILYN MARSHALL name then, was called -cross each other..' people can now afford iti" provides, guns.. Double-barrel : ^ Texan Staff Writer '""shooting around the clock." There are eight stations on' said .Stanley Castano, owner.Ishotguiis, automatics and ' V * HO Thanks to skeet shooting,_ r r-W>J : - Rade Foster-later became a'ssis-' the field. A round of skeet con-of the Austin Skeet Range fiv^ • pump gujns. Double-barrel huntsmen may improve their v tant' editor Of National :sists of.25 shots, and.the per-miles northwest "of Austin,": shotguns, semiautomatics and y accuracy .without '•bloodshed ... _ ........ ^ horn poste 'Sportsman magazine. The ' son with the'greatest number Farm Hoad 2222, it is the<^nly .pump guns are> the best for , r. ^ ^ A ' during the offseason,-Skeet shooting is a year-round sport _ _ _ ownersfoundeU>Huntingand of dead targets at the end-of skeet range m the area skeet-. "A skeet gun shoUid bel v * *. \j4 j seasc the 1 •,.-~vtffthT3ToVldes^ _ to 1he rounds' wins, . A round "of.25. targets costs able to tire two shots 'tbose-whii can afford it,; garner !~' irr*sk'eet •" "Skeet is one'STE the fastest-$1.95. Clay pigeons and shells .succession St. L interest ' „ Skeet, . which is Scandina-. -shooting around the country, —year vian for "shoot," {iot its start In 1926, Foster offered $100 to follow Injury Forces LeMaistre acid Ra in the early-1900s in Aridovfer; anyone finding a suitable -V^ Alass-j when C.E, Davis, name. for "shooting around,.;, pitchalong Witli hisson knd William the,clock.'1 Gertrude Hurlbutt ^ and • hosier, snoriarciay: targets—&f—MQntan.a—suggested'. ToQuit Swimmiiig Tedrri McGfor practiced /'skeet." Gr C »v They' developed a. method-^."A skeet field-is in the shape . Fred LeMaistre, -a sprint and-.relay -• try to achieve any kind of excellence after ­hits thaf allowed-several persons a semicircle. Targets are swimmer, has been forced to quit the Texas |f§miwnfi that much:time^^p.:r;:. v- Mc 'to. shoot .the-same number of thrown from two houses, a swimming team because of.inflamed,tendons ,B§|-sHrfyaSPII ' sliots for competition. Th^ high house .and low-house. During the last year, LeMaistrejyyasone or ^. Pit in his shdulderi it was announced Monday. top sprinters, 50 and 100 yards,-on the sere » ;;.the LeMaistre, the sffn of University Texas team. He finished seventh in the 50­ Chancellor Charles LeMaistre and a premed yard tree style in the §outhwtesi Conference '• biology major, still had two yearsof eligibili­ -meet and.swam :on the 400-medley, 800-free'. -by leftwhen;he was sidelined-. •­ styleand 400-freestylerelay teams. Allthree mm "I had four inches of bfcepital tendon • ;finished second., Prior.to' the conference -removed °froni my'Vight shoulder my inc.* meetr-he had several, firsts, andjeconds in freshman year," LeMaistre said. "But.ithen • dual competition. •,.•••' • the middle -ofJune .this year hoth my • shoulders flared up, and the doctor saidl had "LeMaistre is definitely a national caliber the same plrbblem in my other-shoulder. He ^••swimmer. He was a state high school cham­tolfl me the right shoulder woulcTt'et better, ;'S:^pion," TexasSwTm Coach Pat Patterson said. _ .but-rd-probably have to fiaye air operation on fT'His loss throws us into a real weakness.in the left OnetHfs Christmair " • y. _ V Ihft-spnnts He'sJiound to be a rrtighty guity • "I knewif I had the operation I would.miss : kid. If you carTimagine swimiainirwitfra teiF­my junior year and would have only mv don that looks-like a shredded pair of blue,, senior year l^ft. And.it would be pointless to -jejins, you know whatkind of pain|ewas in." -OHTflipfibfo Dodge Ball Fred Patekoftlie Kansas City-Royols leapt high ashe^fires the ball toward first base' while.Bostons'^Dwight Evans slidesunder him during thefifthinning; Evans was out V*I«T on the double play, and Boston later lost; 5-0. ..u_._ i' SPECIALS $ Otf Waist Band Short Sleeve t •» Questions about your benefits? JEWELRY Austinife SHIRTS KNITS • Want to work for increased benefits? • Like to meet other college* vets? > Second . AT THE.5TH SmEET STUDIO • Uke social-activities & sports? ' • i>ljM-.to help other vets, while • 16th, t Aforning and JSvetiing-Classes -M Dirt th^y are.helping you? ~ t- -yjALLAS-(AP^^Elmrieen^.: year-Told-! kim.-Bauer of iron • Like to belong to a non-political, FOR FURTHERINFORMATION Conroe, last year's runner-up * •'I iilpf all-types-of-p6ople organization, '474-1348 119$. 3tfC and" the youngest girl in the -a ni * Open Division, shot a 72'Mon- PRICE Great Colons athl , day to take medalist honors,in the ' the 10th annual Texas State hen > Junior vGirls Golf Chatri-; yeai Fun Of It? IMAGES FOR MEN AND WOMEN Jhen the Ufl?versi^Veterciiii>-Associqtlon -pionanr>-. t—thCT TITe tournament i£ Sftott-• ' -T-r—N fay invites you to its next meeting-, on July 9, sored by the Dallas Times « gre. • Herald. . " - tag< ot ^30 P'rn. in Union 334; andeyery se­ Kim's 72 was three over par • pos! at Xlie Lake course at Forest cond Tuesdoy tlier^after, same time, .el§v Informal Classes Oaks and was just one shot H t same place; better than the 73 recorded by . neg ON THE-DRAG 2426 GUADALUPE^m, Midsummer Registration Sherry Wqod qt Austin.. ^ ' rea! - TEN-HUT! LEF HACEh Fouf -other contestants n #+* Wed.JulylOto Unionl 04-broke 80 in theOperv Division--;» ' it," Robin Sue Hall of Laverma,1? bee Fri. July 12 , 8:30 a.m. -4 p>m. 77; Debbie Skelly of, San ..An-" ! befi tonio,77;j trsa Perkinsqn of . floo Openings in 13 classes^ • Houston, 79; and^ Saruira'/ . moi _Yount of Piano. 79.^4 O ,1' ATTENTION Announcing Orientation Students •is? Ji-siS*. Another word.for your UT vocabulary: Hietfi ~ M PRINT NAME -S0C-SEC NO , -Last Nune -First Diddle MISCELLANEOUS OPTIONAL FEES bt. VtISM TO-BE BILLEDf FOR ThE ITEMS CHECKED" BELOW »—-Check what you" DO want—r-z':,l'K u FOl iyjrrt-THE CACTUS . ' -. -• --. • '-il $ 8,40 F03 I—I LOCKER * SHOWER:(ONE SEMESTER) .75' F06 Q» "C!' PARK1NG PERMIT ;F0R AUTOMOfeILE 10.00­ mm F08 m "M" PARKING PERMIT FOR' MOTORCYCLE -6.00~ trt-ethnicbank. * ) THIS CARD MUST ACCOHPANY YOUR REGISTRATION MATERIALS What is a Tri-Ethnic Bank? V^"w SIGNAdiRE-ii-^—JZL • ' ; THE UNIVERSITY. OF TEXAS AT-AUSTIN, 1974 J*1 S*1 f n,~ ,1.­ A tri-ethnic bank is a bankfounded — on the — principle of equ.al minority represen­ 4^1 tation from three ethnic groups. Union Bank is the;only tykethnic bank in America OPTIONAL FEE CARD (op'shen'ul fe kard), n.; (1)-today. -^ Viy"}1-, rectangular slip of heavy paper issued to each student J f at registration on-which he can reserve a copy of The^ -­ Who Owns and Directs Union National'Bank? 1975 CACTUS Yearbook. . , . Oui^shaTeholders and Board of Directors are leading'Blax;k'Ameri(iah5 Me)f >ifn* -fe?? ican-American and Anglo-American citizens of Austin. Men and women of your mr community working together to. provide the people of Austin a bank attuned to *v . & ij. their individual needs. <-'r -*' • •; ,*;v r --^^ What Doe^ This Mean for Austin?' ' ' ^ MAKE • A bank is only as successful as the people it serves. At Union National, we're *T~ S'!» i -dedicated to'serving all 4,he people of Austin. Housewives and working women.' YOUR MARK! -Small-busiriessmen-and large corporations. College students;and iiolle'ge profes^' ~ pib, L -id?. sits~X sors:Black*Americans. Mexican-Americans. And Anglo-Americans 4?/ -JK 'ffH'. ifTogether We Stand. Jtose>ve Yout Copy of th'o mm Ameri^^s only tri-ethmc bank. It s a bold adventure. But we'ye working 5*^ a iw ^ '' *• J:ogetherjto make it work. * . 1075 CACTUS J oin us tSr retEeshments and .a look at our ne^ building 1 **£* I ivjjpf ^ week during our Grand Opening. And make our bank YEARBOOK , wfc •your bank. by Marking Your OPTIONAL FEE CARD. ­ F IHION £4$. When Ydli gl^You wifl be billed with your fees for the falH l H. *\ -V X-: s8.40 %Pape, 6.7jues'day,.Ju!y 9^W74^E DAILY TEXAN -A-** riryr-" w STs? 'Sp* ' ">f< • -'^3 ' • 1 ,Vi# . • ~ '* -": •• ^" *, . •---,,.r • •-*--v-. :«•> • • ­"* a —' * * — ^ Jv *^" ' . $ ^ m Sports Shorts College All-Stars HOUSTON (AP) -Doug Chambliss ripped a three-run • defeated veteran Ken * "Rader smashed .a two-run double/ Bobby Murcer arove straight-sets Rosewa'Il. in . jhomer;: and Tom Griffin in three runs with si homer-• Saturday to win .-the men's EVANSTON.' 111. (API •made by Dave Casper, Notre:posted his 10th victory of the and an infield out and Dick Wimbledon -singes cham­ The College All-Stars voted Dame star, who said "we are season Monday night, leading Woodson-pitched strong relief; pionship arid $24,000. Connors, s-• Monday to honor.the National issuing one statement — wethe Houston' Astros past the after: a shaky start, helping' 21, needed only 90 minutes 'to Sfc Football League Players'­ the_A]tStarSi m lightipra dif-~„St. Louis Cardinals 4-1.V the New York i Yankees'rout -defeat. the 39-year-old m: Association picket_ line-and Tinult situation.-will honor the • Vgj?-Rader's ninth homer of the the Texas itertfeers-12-5 Mon-Rosewall, 6-1; 6-1, 6-4: no­ —stated ^"No" negotiations, • picket lines:'-'' "~year"camernr-the-frfth-i'nning^~(iay-night : ­ Chris-Evert-,-19j-made-it-an. practice:. no contract, no. Iffs The executive director of- following a single by MiltMay The Yankees pounded 19 American sweep by winning .game ' s-i f: Chicago Tribune ;Chanties * ^nd was the key blow in a bits off four TexaVpitchers, the women's title over Olga It could mark, the first time v;k,A •vowed Monday night to cancel • pitching duel between Griffin including four . doubles by* Morozova, the first Russian & since -1934 that the charity All-the strike-plaguedCollege All- f and the , Cards . Ly.hn ;Jighthittipg >Iim 'Mason, two~ woman to reach a Wimbledon ;Star. Game. scheduled July 26. Star. contest-"unless an , — .McGlothen. : • • doubles and two, singles by . Final, 6^0.-6-4 — ; -••-! J in Soldier Field against the .'arrangement is worked oyt" Kiv Griffin, 10-3, scattered nipe Ron Blombefg and three ' * Miami. Dolphins, will not bV •within.48 hours to allow the — hits for. the .victory. _ _singles and a double by Roy . .'•••••••...* * ~ .played. ' ' 'game, to be played without in-•— I,McGlothen, now 12-4, gave ~White. -7 -. -. --Sua Pontes defeated Owen -The announcement was1 terference." •. up just four,hits over the first . .; + *• Averrue Gang l4-7 Wednesday yvrn inninpir hut firnH in tlio N^W YORK fURU -^.ABC claim the GrOUp "'A in- fw,eighth,eighth, when the AstrosaddedAstros-added ,s, televisiotr'jBinounced. Mondav Uamural. sjii t.liall chain televisiorrahnounced. Monday . •~>a pair of insurance.runs." that Fred "The Hammer" piohship. ABMAHP'Sj •I; ' it •' • Williamson, formed all-proj * • • MUNICH, (UPI) -West defensive back, will replace? • SAN JUAN, P.R. VAl»t~-> J CHARCOAL BROILED 1 .'-.Germany.-defeated :The Bon Meredith in broadcasting . Tom Boswell 'solved a ^Netherlands.2-1 in a come-, NFL Monday night football'. defense.m troublesome' zone HAMBURGERI froth-behind victory Sunday to He wilLjoin Frank Gifford and and'led the second half the . ..with lettuce,^ f^mato, mayonnaise g • win the, World Cup soccer Howard.Cosell. United States to a 115-95 vic­ \tournament. • • • • •'* -' tory over Canada in'the World Reg.ivcy. ot89e meach J; . '.• • • • WIMBLEDON/ England, Basketball .Championships * ARLINGTON (AP) -Chris (AP) — Jimmy Connors Monday night. ­ 2 1. 09 Mm FOR . I Texas Athletest*Change SAVE 69 department people in a community., bath ing to get them to feel like You're looking INCLUDING PINTOS AND VEGAS -J!,;;requested the change a'month situation but have access to a -part of Jester for a couple of ^ 3 . ago. \Vhile some details are connecting bath area," Strait years-now. gince they eat at for a new still -unsettled, -Texas Siiid. f •' •' the' training table; they didn't ^ apartment... .. Freshman-Football Coach:Bill . While .there has been'«ffort used -to get an ID card. Last Ellington and—Asst. Jester by the Jester staff to make-th¥ year, we gave them ID cards -• -Dj,rector Ridhard TStrajt have atnietes nfore~a^part-of-'the— for Jester-activities TUESDAY ironed out most"matters; ^ '/Every year we.go through FEED A FRIEND FREr ; a new negotiation (with the athletic department) because 2 FOR 1 SPAGHETTI i the number of athletes living HANK'SGRILI If OUR SPECIALTY k here• varies-'from year.-to consider tho'.go/et privacy year," Straitsaid. "This year 'j/l 2532 GUADALUPE , i$l.39 V.W. TOYOTA DATSUN spreadirify dak ~j :—they-reque3t.cd tho change^ under th$ -trees of-our nnf) horfrrf}rn ALL DAY -Neithef-v-perso»HsawL-4jiy~l.l r^r—Famous _ili VOLVO FIAT MGB [—-aPsHrnettts—for^~SUiS—AII-­ «. i great advantage or disadvan1. Bills Paid, ' ' ~ , tage in the move except for* Chicken Fried Steak t/ possible improvement of the ,v. -2 pes.; Meat, Frencli Friet, f y. elevator situation. .[ Cole Slaw, Hq» Rolls &« Butter irrjt-X INfERNATlORAt However, the two * 5-9 p.m.only .,^$1.45 Reg. $1.85 Palo Blanco negotiators gave different' 2100-A GUADALUPE 911 Blanco 472-1036 wfe OAR PARTS • / reasons for the move. ... i, ,474-2321 2828 GUADALUPE 474-64^1 .'.'Most of theplayers,wanted " "it," Ellington said ."We.had-Shoe Shop *SALE* been on "the second'tloor-' , before. We tried it {the 10th We make and SHEEPSKIN •! f floof) "and didn't like it; so we • repair boots'?;? 1 RUGS moved-back-"' : L On the other FSf~''v PRICED"MERCHANDISE *aTipie I Buy one I** ^fS­ * Large pizza ritsr" ' ^vs BELL BOTTOMS P * DENIM JACKETS! H'S m' Vp3t BRING THIS COUPON WESTERN SHIRTS m A-3; BOOTCUT JEANS SPORT SHfRtS-: ^Hsr is: TANK TOPS j $0 UNDERWEAR. A- With thJ» coupon,buy it* 1 >»1,1 li.H f J« , h BELTS _ any giant, large or ^ ® rta i f * i> •iHfON** in ! ef-fe ^5* Ww. • medium pizxaat ' 0 •iir V.xi* SHRINK TO FIT regular price*nd.__ Mw0ktMfK -. J ll' J 4 II & .> • KNIT SHIRTS " • ' "r­ receive one pizza of * 2r~ \ * : .the next smaller. - ClMMi* lltse Jj. • PRESHRUNK se?-sJp'y isize with equal number iis Atxherj •/••• of ingredients FREE! 'iChMH.St««4 One,coupon per visit.-' please. . Oi>»n W. • >i|tpU9ft» y*m*. VAUD THRO JULY lS,-f»74 '.•-•rt-f.-jXiZjpig. (MkAMMltof w <* ta Mom CMfH Nllt I «/-M»/'y,, 451-7571 53000 OUVAt / ,;,.47?.675li£U 2209RIVERSIDE^ 447-6411., .8319 RESEARCH" 837-0771--^ 7237 HWY. 290 EAST -928-1504. ^ ieOOGUAMLUPt 477-M»7; 5 " rffi&.iS". -.gg>-rg-y jy* •: tit 0' Children are.in for a real French child develops an at­elude "White Mane," .the treat on Thursday mornings tachment (o a merry-go-round story: of a wild, stalljon living There is much concentration on" processed "99 and 44/100 Percent Dead;" directed ' thismonth. Laguna Gloria Art horse which-is to = be ' in freedom, the menqfho wish. "and machinery, from the endless car chases by John Frankenhejraer; screenplay bjMuseum will continue • its: -destroyed; hut it contains^ to capture and break His spirit Robert Dillon; starring'Richard Harris: at thestart to the final shootoutin a carnmer­ children'.? film-program-strangely-happy ending' and. • the .little . boy. who -Ul­•?,cial, laundry.-But who cares?­ : at the Village Cinema Four. through July. Admission'-for ' .."Clown" also will be shown timatelytames rhim -through'• _ By MICHAEL ETCHISON rls.is a gunman -r-the best, of course,the'films is free. love; '.'A VisK From.Space";:' and deals with a boy and his-' Texan StafrWriter — -jiariieof Harry Crown. He's called into action :.Laguna has selected films: the advehtures of a little girl dog,-expressing values of •' 1 The qameia slowly wanders underwater In bv Edmond O'Brien because O'Brien's^­ which they' feel w.iil allow whouaeets an inhabitant of a courage and ingenuity in the < Los Angeles Harbor:.We have just seen a man • rackets . are being .cut into : by Bradford— lagunaOffers children -to acquire "good distant planet; "Pigs," an un-. endings Another film, tossed into -the water, hisieet in a concrete Dillman. . taste iii fklm''-through,presen­narrated-study of pigs with "Daisy," depicts'the daisy as block. Now we seejhat many have preceded It's too bad O'Brien never seems to have ting-classic,examples of film.; special photographic; effects; a -symbol of beauty, yielding him'. They wavergently. Fish promenade. Dillman. A brief exposure to Dillmart's making aswell as imaginative and the. Charlie Chaplin only to those love it.and enjoy Richard Harris talks about-what we see.-t. simpering leer would reduce anyone to jelly Film Series and ' challenging award-:classic;."Easy Street;" which it It's clever idea, pretty. Well done -Anyone but-Harris, Harris is sterner He winning films. • " ihvolves'Chaplin as„_a-reform­i go into some: detail about the opening of . can even withstand.'exposure to his opposite *"The program forJuly 18Will -Several ftlpis will be-: ed, hobo-who' -becomes a '*99 and 44/^00 Percent-Dead" so you can number, Chuck Connors playing a manpresented this Thursdayin--include "Flight af-Dovesr-' a-policeman and tames the save your.money. In fact,reven if someone : without a left hand... ; . .j-eluding "JT," which d^ls feature-length film.^starring ~ roughest street in town.-^—— ypffers to pay yoar way, try to get a transfer.*. "Along the way. there's a Hijack .on a lift- with a'small bteck boy living Jack Wiel and Ron-Moody as -Each film program is ap­ -hvo orphans pursued by a • ''The: Manchui-ian Candidate'' is, X gather,??-?; bridge, jtjvalk through the sewers (with; of 'lYt in Harlem and-his. personal, 'pi wni^tcly. 00 mimitps in ! J? FrnnlrrnTinil^rtr'f 'hact -film I didn't much " course, crocodiles — Frankenheimer doesn't ^'1* villanous. uncle who also is a « struggle for . life and. love length. Children of all ages • master of disguises. • .; like it, but it's an instructive contrast to this miss a thing). I hooker with a heart of ctc -­withm his environmeht. are welcome. Films.will^be •one. A'Ganditlate"'was strained, tense,"slick an earnest young sidekick:—-and a lifetimeAlso scheduled-for-screen­The final films wili be <• shown af 10 a.m. ip the' Mea*** "and (it seemed at the time) ,absurd — who supply.#!excruciating dialogue^ . ing is "Merry-Go-.Rou.nd presented July 25.-The last zanine Gallery of the wants a movie about assassins? But it work­Is it possible-.this'is supposed to be aspoof? Horse" in which a kittle program m the'series will 4n-• museum,.v • t*V> A,, ; ed,*al least fitfully s ' • Howcum I didn't laiiglr?. Howcuin :"99".is also strained, tense and so forth. . Frankenheimer didn't laugh? Village Riverside America To Appear in Concert CiStenvar^ iffatar&Xg I Alt CINEMAS EVERYDAYS1.25'TIL l:301 , America will appear in concert a£8 p.m. Fridajrin Municipal The opening-act. will be Brewer and" Shipley,, who'recorded Auditorium. The group burst upon the musicscene three years "Qne Tpke Over the Line."-Tickets are available.for-|4,'?5and 'FoutlS?il Cinema ago with the hit single,."A Horse With No Name." Since then $6 at Magic Mushroom, Home Entertainment, Inc.-, in Highland im wcVJMtnsM u»i ' "Everybody who -.' 4514JSJ . tte^t^^^r^ twoselfrgxiMe^Ps. " MalVanid^iverside.Records'and Tapes; --. : • v •• Iiilii. i has ever been 1 " YfeANS-fcTEXAS ' OPEN aiOpT' ' loved by a dog •A MOST IMPORTANT FEATURES • ~wIllaif6rB~ AND.EXCiTJNG FILM... 2:30-5?00-7.30-?ir4f ~ Benji." REDUCED PRICES TIL S:15 iDLSNRS!tS-HUQEf- Twin |2200H»ncotJiDiW|—*53f6U-' EEEECTIVE. ASMASH" j Four Cinema " 'CHINATOWN' IS EXTRAORDINARY! Vfno&nl Canb^N.Y.Times I-* . J7WWRI AUDCKON UK l fwMm IT IS .BOTH OffPlT ROMANnC. fUN. MYSTERIOUS,! .1^30 E. Rhrtfiid* Or. -4SI4SS} CYNKAlr AHD BRIUIANTI" ., ' , R fomlfyWm byJo«tAfoft L _44U54W. 477-W4 .; In 1969.-shs watched -Bridget Byrne,,Los Angefci Hera/d-£xamin»f white ha killed, a lot of ­ |* people \ *'<4 MONSIRKTS HIGHLANDMALL 451-7326 • JH35 AT KOENIG LN. 12:45'-2:30-4:15>6i00-7;45-9:30 ttniMStorMial -mM*: 1-00-2:45-4:35 WALTONS"'JOHN-BOY becomes a man HMCOllir MMVaON* «:20-8:10-10:00 Take a touch af VAmertcan Graf­ fiti," a sprinkle of '^Summer of ,42'/...»tir in a portion of "The STATES DRIVE-IN '. m Last ^eture Sh&w/'.and you have . BOX -' OFFICE OPEN 8:00 HtLD RiyersideTwiftCinema OVEfk i j •5 of theyean JS SHOW STARTS DUSK VII-5.661 1V30 .East Rivemde Dnv ^710 E-^8«W-Wi)le»4*4-gSB, "* FIIM * H0f_TI£AlJKISSfD-BY-ANYONE .SPBWSrtl CROSS IT — and you just SIRIOUSlY fONCtRNHl^lTH IHE FUTURf Of TflE CINEMA" -V. V«l« y-.\ ~ might get crossed off! |doesn't iustexplode j , A MOSTIMPOI^ANT^ND^" I i>««c iHCFKginTfOM^K"-r' ^SXGlTING-FitM-~BAOLANOS:4S-~. IU6 »T«aaoicMARy.LAVNE« CSSY • HUGELY EFFECTIVE: A SMASH | -iteruptswith ; ViMuwii Ciin^y. W.y.-hmes HIGHLAND MALL NOW' 451-73-26 • »H 35 AT KOENIG IN. S volcanicforce: ! 1:00-2:45-4.30 6:15-8:00 Samuel Z. Arkoff presents 3 Max Baer.prgiluction an ^grican'• -Jon Landau, Rolling Stoned I l=00-W5^J5-4-5M:10-l(fcoio^ MaCfln County tine color.by.cn.-• Intefnational release B^jAnojhefPlace^notbedlrn£^omDosedandsui^ I .—PLUS CO-reATURE^*™" ~ I ^ - . SAMUEL Z. ytRKOFF presents, 1:90.3:00 llC: DILLINGER 1 IGo to Church starring WARREN 0ATES-8EN iOHNSOH-MICHEUE PHIUIPS AND 5KI0-7.-00 MO on Sunday : Individual C10RIS. UACHMAN os lady in Red FnmWifwr.lm 4 A W«m«r CeriwNinkatten*Compmy| Ads for Go to Hell Fsatvre.;,, |on Monday. caas OPEN 1.-45 FEATURES Times|v,. % THE.-. ihflO-til 2-4^6-8-10 Village -'•VILLAGE *TSt­ .m—__ -im ^ t, Winner -ENDS •Cinema Golden Globe Award1974: TODAY Four . JWI Wm Minw Im Maximilian ScheU's ­ • 'TIIE• •" • • :r*—MOT Italian Fgod PEDESTRIAN »powwful m«L.andMsM«nt ^ INTERSTATE THEATRES at its Best ir r lastday; MlOOA L* » a , ,O0(JRST)PEN 7:15 LUNCH^ DINNER SPECIAL PARAMOUNT . 2 .1 '*" ' 1 71? avF.N r FEAtqRES»7:«S-»J0 OPEN FOR LUNCH 11:30-2:30 rSTARTft^ORROwS FOR DINNER 4:30 -12:00 " It was1948 and all CUNT EASTWOOD !vXv ALL THE » the boys at school knew BiHie... "THUNDERBOLT and SPAGHETTI FOR $050 LIGHTFOOT" YOU CAN EAT 0NIY Serving Austin's finest Selection of. Pizta< Sicilian Pie Sandwiches,, Antipasto^JLSalacjs, Spaghetti A >1.2S til 8:15 p.m. Beverages. ".••••' • Feoh/r«j«J^0-y.-50 ' -------­ No Reduced Prices 1:30:3JO-5JO-7JO-9JO Nofestet. Complf.merilary Glass of HOT LEAD Win*. With Each Purchase HOT CARS HOT DAMN! FEATURES:*" ; but Buster. iniftitttt G21 Enst S.»ih 47i» 7979 6:45-8:25-10.-00 loved her 23rd & PEARL ST/ TWUtOURS FRIE PARKING :and no one i understood. IT'S BACK! ISAACHAYESa This is t/ie same version thpt was eonfistieated I Village VILLAGE USTERand BILL1E THE. .he's a skip tracer and abounty hunter. !***'•"' M. 'Cinema im* im. OF COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES INr. IF YOU JUMP BAIL. ..YOU'RE HIS MEAT! MARILYN MONROE • CANDY BARR Four >-AND A HOST OF OTHERS IN : ' . • tW fW#»t Aafcmn Um• v -4SIII! W AM* IMKUAfMOUCIlO* BWTTY "THE EROTIC FILM EPARAUAXV1EW CIRCUS" (X) BADUUmSl WM_ S# «"W«iwmcttoi'e -V 1lOO-2:45^J5 "idO-lilO-tlhOO 0»,fe Clwrth en SwhIcv 0a to H«n m Waeday., 1111 '"Hs< (ImtaSmhhimh _6W08umet Rotf A,S®SSK0VICH| OPEN. -«rf)0 flUDWEIiniwnPWHEUin trakdn SH0W« AT 9M* 12:30 ISAAC HflYESa PLUS— WWIWM® "HANNIECAULDER YAPHETKOTOj MtniASAMTIAUtT IOAP444-SOI SlIOWN AT 11:15 ONLY > rr, AMEfll WWTERNATIONAt} •color byM&wclab:~ ; >2:35-4d04K)S 1'TRANS4-TEXAS —T&JKiS- OPEN 12:45 Al «ATURES KlO-fdO • Hao OVER'" S1-50 Hi; 1^)0-2:45-4^ iiui;ivm"n » i.—1—1... i .1.... 1 11 *:I5 p.m.1 •iui» mMM-«;mi •:k:lS-«.-00-»:55l' $1.2$ Til.3K» p.m.. VARSITY 1^0-3:20.5®)" AW » vs» * ^11d fa 11S ' • za®1 i^«:20'10K)0 ' 7*—1 ' > ' ^ *i* * —1 r .IwatfiAce • fjm ?-30O STPcTTT '•"" '"""JfaTy KMssma '•Unlike ihe Vest of the Nev York'Erotlc"film Festival'the mat: 'Snow J t0 Z °f Pi'fw*' fraup ««• both cn>ti$-*nd amwung ... " , 'Whe one to wait for, icilhout a doubt, ii-^Apple Knackers*ni • • •uwFnmrjCT'*.?; •. WJ Coke's a *hjirrnaq film made around t.9$0 with o very young, very abjea-loolftn/ttM'iriljn Monroe She walks infj&nrof thecamera, stls dotcn bentath'a faketreeandcpmmenstsjtjtau)striptease, later roll- Queen' Starr I MMVnAttMfMCt WQ0«1W*V ,tn/t an afipli up anajlawt* thefamous torso and sipping a edke."A ­ '^sl. IPG . . .... P""* Mills, WfaBimlon^uf New» Af 1:15 Only , u « 1 ^ « *• • v « ' ^ * i-m sj-S-I IS -(J'­ ^r>"^7 - Wmm^ V- w® '4^, f.«K T&t&r­ • _ » -minireviews-am? Play Depicts^Social Realism -.<•By PAUL BBUTEL>^ _ .:*-. Texan Staff Wrlter&ffi , *Wiid Strawberries' > - Tfiis filrff 'concerns a 76-year-oldSwedish doctor; who,dur-Tng ;• the course of a day's drive, recounts the more meaningful moments of his life. Likemost Bergmanfilms, it contains many poetically beautiful scenes, but the final prsSuct is rather unfulfilling. ~ ­ To quote Stanley Kaufmannr"-'Wild Strawberries' deals superbly with some familiar contrasts: of past and present, of the differing blindnessesand egotismsof youth and age•..!• but finally, one feels-.lhat the apparatus of potentially profound drama has been confined to a plateau of pathos;" •^At 7; and 8:45 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Theatre^;;; 'Angels With Dirty Faces' ™ ..In..1937, William Wyler's "Dead End"introduced a group of,.six slum kids, basicaljy.good but' led astray by criminal adults. The "Dead-End Kids!' reappeared the following year in Michael Qjrtiz' "Angels. With Dirty Faces,'' which stars Jaines Cagney, Pat O'Bijqn, Humphrey Bogart and Ann Sheridan. In this one, a"gangster (Cagney) works with.a'pftetor (O'Brien — who else?) to try to rehabilitate the kid?.-It's a typical '30s social melodrama, with an outstanding cast. At 7 and 9 p.m. Thursday.in the Union Theatre.' television -f Youth in.Trouble • . 36 Eyewitness New.s,^;f. . "1 pw • "9 fAan Builds, Man Die*trt>y» / 24 Happia Days * 36 Adanvl2 7,38 p.m. jk' $ — -—JLWawaJLPJv^Q > 9 The Niturallsti. -r M-Movle4-^Ihe-me^atoiL!lstarrlng • . James Farentino, Myrna Loy and Roddy McDowell.-. v 36 Faraday and.Compttpy."'.~»:-? p.m. 9What's the Big Jdea? * . 8t90 p.m. . „ .r 7 Shaft r '»""•? , . .^•,9-p.rn. .- ~ • 4 *9 You Owe iVTo Yourself -•. . .24 Marcus Welby 36 Police 5tory . • *^:30 p.m. 9 Bylines 10 pm " ' 7, 24. 36 New W*V, .vv "9 Insight. • ­ 10:30 p.m.. . •? Movie: ("Adam's Woman/' starr­ ^ -tag John Milts and Qe«u.Bridges, • GULF STATES DRIVE-IN V A1LIED ARTISTS presenls ins FRANKLIN J.SCHAFfNER lilni pnraxon PANAVISION* TECHNICQIOR* |pGl IM.M5 Brooks if.'.'Tfio""The" Girl Oil the on Via "Flaminia;" -directed by Henry' Oliver; starring Stefanie. Powers; at the Mary Moody Northen Theatre on the St. •• Edward's University cam­pus through-Friday. -By DEBRA TRIPLElTVr­ . Texan Staff Writer y/~ Realism as a theatrical genre depictsreality, whether in the past or present, To try •to solve current problems within a play written during the 1940s would be not only pretentious, but downright ig­norant.; :;.K/ Rather; stage realism should portray, accurately a time in a certain place. If itis in the past, it;should give the viewers air idea of how things looked, how people looked and the emotions they experiend- However, /blocking Is his portrayal of Antpnio; an awkward"with characters angry young-man furious over standing too much in front of his Country's defeat and each other and impeding the decadence. Jantzen almost audience vifw of them. With •pushes his anger over the the arenrf stage, thisis acom­bounds of believeability, over­mon problem, but most of the powering the import of his :blocking prphlems^cnuldJaye^-jrerds with a too loud voice been corrected-by a slight tone. " " shift of the actors' positions. . Excellent' leads are-played"Unfortunately, the blocking by Stefanie Powers and Dex­problems oecur in someof the ter. Bullard. . Powers main­ more ' intense emotional tains an unpredictable elec­scenes which iose some'-of tricity . throughput the playtheir impact when the emo= which makes the. audiencetion reflected in the actors' wonderabput her.next;inbvi faces cannot, be observed.­Several performers work, Bullard ^portrays:, well an overtime in putting oH'a good American GI who is concern­ed about the. Italians,in his. show. Carol Blodgett as Adele own 'rtisinterested :wav. fujchij portrays the synr pathetic, warm Italian boar The play deals with some djnghouse keeper with.smooth heavy dramatic thenjes —"the emotional transitions and real emotion's of the. Italians in ed. The current' St/ -Ed's.:professional ability. .1944 after 'their country's . productionof 'TheGirlon the Via Flaminia" 'does these things .with individualistic style. 7 Hee H*w v ~ws y .v -,24 wideworld of Myi.ery: *'And the' .Over-allperformwces for . -9 News . • • ".!.v t^&^Bones tame Tbgether":v^>^ -^'vthe play are excellent with The Tonight show..; complete ~aji8 solid fl • TONIGHT OfllY: BENEFIT APPEARANCE : DOUG SAHM --ANQ BAND » wt/s BUCKbAHCER'S CHOICE : .707 Bee CavesHdr 327-9016 f • •-•• ^ • 1/W I 21st A GytsJatupe Second Level Dobie MaH 477-1.^24 SIsowtovvnUSA AMijUPtCininlnllMiiy BO* - piwet OKlil MO" EscapeIs frerything! • l \ CINEMA 5 FESTIVAL J Jr .. u LAST DAY! * & r— paioce; • from Cinema5 J $1.25 forone film I f£>>& $2.00 for both Crtaser't: IJS-S.-OS-JJS ^ Traih 3 15-4 4S-10JD .... IAST DAYI " "1, IMSfSTARTS TOMORROW I eter And.Ros«lie. A beautiful film. Ifs £Mn Madigan "May well 'to'lift mosii |whsl love is all aboutr—NBCTV "Intelligent, ieaulilul film ever raade-Newsweek jwjtr and inform^by energeL» direction and quisite an eiceptianaljJm Its color a at>sa-| Ivifarsni performances. Most, enfoyable.'..ut«V g0irge0i».The useof inuslc«a3^eqaalt/I Jj-Esquire ' eloquentTof silances and sounds is beyond! ICes. & Rosalie (PG) Verbatdescnption. _n Y.Times "' |1V3Q.5.-Q-• ELVIRA: 3^0-7:00-10:30 j'""TEreenTr"*' ® • Todoy Thru Tiies. m '| .doesn'tjust I explode-it| MANN TNEAIRC6 pK erupts with| FOX TWINifr> "-*7SMimW7UV9. ••~1454»W11SmmJ volcanic .| force." ii| UNEQUALLED ADVENTURE :r-Jon Landau, ^ilm lu-^ RollinaStone •" r-1 FROM WALT DISNEY! GreatFrontier Adventure!s bdtS—n 8:15 10:20 1 HB, ' jFrom W4rner Broi A Warner Communlcatloni Company A Lenny Bruce Short '>ThqnkYou,MaskMan/ m(i MIDNITE TODAY tiiraTueC $1.25 fmbt Screen 1 • 12:15 I RESTAI Vr^CHMlCOLOR1 nrtrttMd i*DUENA VISTA D«TFr&nI ONC. i.;.f' ~andJet your eyesdedde! 6*1 'J-Vfi "• " ~ J TECHN (COLORij i"C Tf •is' M \ » W'J1 - ' ~ ­ M OR PURE ™"ur* OlK IAMM-7.-00.t0M Qturv-Fox COfVJEBY! " "henwy -W, * f v FOX MSh. _>a-v iWAI* Tuesday, J.uly^9, 1974 THE BAlfcV TEXAN Paa^ Q ..tfj ,iy?,;S" "•' i.' t&M I/# 31 JP-9­ 4 !-SfWW ,-.2-r-i-br\:''• .:•--A--1 ',•.:. "?•'.' -•'*'•• .>••?:;;1.--^ vy-^*, K *.•» ,-K V. CLASSIP1E& ADVERTISING RAI£S_, FURN. APARTS FURN. APARTS. 15 .word minimum FURN. APARTS. SERVICES TYPING eVCTnronhe EichwOrd 2-4: times,a Each.word 5*9'timei ROOMMATE -NEEDED, 1 bedroom - SPFIGieNClES -S100.00 apartment, 6 blocks campus AH bills .. Each word 10 or motelimes AlsC 'LABRADOR Retriever^ Puppies $100 paldV $65. 476*3467 Just North of 27th St.odehrrate.each tj/rw.-.-75 -•' • ..jj IDCDROOM to GINNY^§ Guadalupe Excellent; championship blood1 line.*:'* Classified Display • _• Papers, shots, wormed. Blacks, $8S. 444-^.ii AUSTIN . v2BEDROOMv-$1W,00 1-B-R-EiXRN fiOMMATE NEEDED, ? bedroom l-Stu: fc'.Wnch.pne timeji.:;G.:i..S2.?6 836| . •.' i...yAi A niiu h iCOPYING t col;.* 1 inch 2-9 times.:.;.-..-.:$2.66 : ) ALL BILLS PAID • TangleWood «paid, $». 476r3467. t . 1 tbV.-xV»nchJen or-more times S2-37 6 BLOCKS CAMPUS g-IBLUy AKC COCKER SPANIEL: Black female,1 ,'Your time i$.valuable'"""' r.«£9P1*' SHUTTLE'BUS ROUTE ^ 10 weeks. Also stud service-reasonable. Our service yenfngs, weekends. "^'NEEDED • bedroom near Northwest Park. 855'plus • OCAOUNE SCHtDUU -476-3467 .* . 240BLeonn> 476-0948 jA.bllls.'gay,477*9089 TypIhg.'MUItHifhjhg, BJrt^ing CHOCOLATE, LAB PUPPIESV'AKC, PARAGON ShutMe Bus Corner Tv«*day fuen Mondoy.......IJ.-OO om. $300. Negotiable. Charm 442*938?, Tom NEED ROOMMATE JULY VouR.share ; ,42 Dobll W«dn#»4oy T*xon Tu»sdey.. 11:00 o.m. 452.3501.. .;_ % t* " PROPERTIES . HABITAT HUNTERS " » $47. Catl 447-50$2 or* come 704 So First-• Mall 476-9171 ^,2hePn°MRT^I TfT«-— Mary and Glad.' < Thursday Toxen W»d»t«doy. 11:00 e-m. FIVE PEDIGREE male Irish Terrier:^ A £REE apartment locaters serw'ce - Frte Parkinq -. jjups. Eight weeks. 150. Can brmg to located in. the lower level of DobteMall . -2 Furn • HOUSEMATE. WANTED-Share two lO^.m.tMPi FnAoy T*x«n Thunder .......11:00 o.m-campus. 453*0945 < ,472-4171 * Habitat Htmt«rs has listings on over 15,-" ALL BILLS-PAID -bedroom large house,503Texas Couples . -5 p.m, Sat) Resumes .v.5-e-v.'^»v -• ... weekdays .'•-*• • • • WO. rented vnlfs,-for summer and fall-• vCopruf.by or phone now and take advan-considered. Celling fans, fireplace 472- wiih or vvithoiut pictures. II Homes -For Sole -f'-472-4175 .. apartmenttage of tMhunting.only rtoLowerhassle levelmethodDobieof -Antilles Apts. .0986. '• . • 2 Day Service -1 .. -!>?* " 2204 Enfield Rd. "In iht .Mtni «l um modi 307i. TYPING Reportsr-Resifmei nings. CdnsQlidated. Realty Association. ^ COPY CENTER -Tbesfes, Letters. . 1 BR Furn ' * shag, cable, $200,-blUs paid. Great Oak HOUSEMATE WANTED: Shar>. two / All University and — - '^^;^^y^pa>tments.477-3388;iX'rArwirtm#nH ATTZnaa 1 bedroom targehouse, 503.TexasrCouRles r -business work _ LOW STUOENT RATES ' J"angJewood West considered.. Ceiling tans, fireplace. 472­ IS yord minimum each day ..:s 75 NASHUA furn mobile home^ SO'xlO^T"7- $95 V Bedroom' apartment, pool, , very Ditto ,0:"^ -Last Minute Service: Each additional ftord each days -05— -Goodrondltion CaH436-55l7 for appoint-472-9614 ", ww UTrcarpeteti^ipaneled, ACrwater 5" Optn feS-Mort'Th 8,-- ShyCorner APARTAAENTS — ~ .^ol^ x i^nch each day.^... --S2-3; ... . • • —•—'•-v.' -gffs pa1d..See at 27.11 Hemphill, .apart-NEEDED: one or two male roommates Xerox Multilith SERVICE 9»S-FrI-Sat ~ "Uhclassif«eds"'MinftSJdarys..SI.00 • -+ne»t;J^or..catL.472=44Q8, 478 3885, 327-Two bedrom^ two bath epartmerif. .(Prepaid; No.Refunds} -• . :.t2"749' .MOBILE-HOME. CA/CHt. Z* Shuitlebu^>447-61 ..FEAAALE ;ROOMMATE now.through • PAniri'll^ " B^dg. 3.200 T251trs-Whltis> from 8 Bqdroom apartments. hwasher. cozy community. Near snuttle-Aug. 31r. Possible h^ve.own room. West ' : v 9. BY QWNER-2826-Saiado. iDUd, 3 a.m. .to. 4.;30, p.m:• Mbhdax.ttp-oygh bedrooiti4 Offer From $1IS pluselectricity. 1211 West 8th * . Au?tin. cheap. Cindy, 476-7831 $*' -FrTdAv-^.---.'-', • . fireplace, fenced/ garage^T" $115 the solution, to ^Otf Btanc*>7-474*W07r--472-4i62. Barry Tf)6 Texas UniOH CHRISjTENSON & workshop. Excellent cbndltlo^i. Apppmt-,'.. your,housing. GUllngwater Oompany. ; -owieywBSHaoRHoaQjauitt house Monday-Friday ' ment. 474-5617 1 Bedroom' Own /00m. Fenced, yard. Near shultls -»3;00-p.m^ Tt>e South Shore's central location LARGE l.&2Bedroom"fumlshedandun»-. S5S, deposit, otllltles. Michael'. 453W3. L ASSOCIATES "--­ 1 . All Bills Paid provides easy, access to U.T. furnished. Shag, wet bar; private club FOR SALE -Misc. -For Sale • .Walk to Campus Come by ami see our new efficiency and rooms, ort, shuffle. J bedroom, from^ ,-^A TYPING SERVICE lbedroom apartments on the banks t»f $149.50 ABP.v^ 'bedroom $169;5Q ABP. TOP Cash PRICES paid for diamonds, -"Buckingham Square Town Lake. -Complete:' with shag 1200 ' Broadmoor. 454*3885, 47^2633, ROOMS t—-Specializing in AutoFor Sale old goldrcapltdl Diamond . • Shop, 4018 N carpeting,-accent wall, rriodern fur« / Bar^ Gllllngwater.Company.,' . VW REPAIR —Theses and disserfations'ii Lamar, 454-68?>, niture, plus an individual deck overlook* Quality work at reasonable prices, we TEXAN-.DORM. 1905' Nuecesl Doubles-can give youbtetter service from our new •71 'VOLKSWJlceiN iuper' #lth ' LARGE I.NM6RTUBES for swimming 71J W.32nd" v ? ing the water. • . :*/ • EXCELLENT SUMMER -ftATES on ,152.50/fi wfcs-session, Singles, -•195.00/4 shop at 10O3 Sage Brush. Freediagnosis, —Law briefs , ~ Excellent coftdltlonr*J iutomattc sflck. ' or fublng; All slzes to choose from. 43.00 • . " c. . 454^917'. " • spacjous^one and two ,bedroom •wks: session. Dally maid seryrce. cen­compression checks and,, estimates. —Term papers and reports ' « • Call after 6 p.m» 44M3|? or 478-9102. , up. 2201 Airport Blvd. From $145 V all bills paid apartments. Fall rates reafsonabte. Call tral air. Refrigerators, hotplates.allow Tune-up-on standard VW.-410.50 pius ed; Two' blocks from .campus.--Co-Ed parts. 836-3171. Please Try Us. • ^^®^-^LLA• offer. 243-7232, Ml75-:vv~br best NI20 S4W, SUPER 8 MbVlb Camera/ , 300 East Riverside Drive Resident Managers: 447-1760. ': ^•Overseas Engine a. Supply Prompt, Professional ~ # .Kodak fnstamatic M95 Pro]ectorJ Sears -444-3337 . ' -ENPIEUD^AREA. Two.bedroom With A . . . .. Service . I Movie.Editor viewer, Jike new-S500.472* every exIra. Furnis hed.' or urni ** PRIVATE ROOMS «0/month-All bills' 1770 FIAT 1J4 Sport raupTTOJ0r1>tsc---42,v brakes, 476r4S2&. :J757 .from;$152-plus electricity. 807.-West. paid. 6 blki from campus. Fraternity' abortion ALT6RNATI.V.P! Pregnant 453-8101 5-speed: 47^450.. $120: • ^n«* //t4.•4/4-4J62, -. Companyi-477-;-. House..;4&61""NaSh; . Keyboard. $200. Midpje olfra-mlnlature : 477-71685 . SHUTTLE BUS tisposal, CA/CH, patio, available Aug 15 459*5^7k VOLKSWAGEN REPAIR. Experienced ' laundry, pool. " ' BUSINESS. SERVICES 2520 Umgview. 477-8741. Metropolitan. Greai condition. 'Needs camera and acrces$o^esr$100^Mi2349.:. ' SHUTTLE BUSCORNER student, ;maior and minor1 .work, Sife'; SQod home In AuiIIjL a uaiysln tur IJUU^- 1 ROOM HEMPHILLPARK area.Share reatonable^ prices,;personable service: j^sRoom MO, 1301 South IH 35 SjpCallGlcnna^ 892-0334 «fter 5 p.m. ,• "•PfcAV-WfiWI PralH -Swimmirtg pooli beautifully NEwt,Y REDECORATeD eniciencies kitchen and bathroom" facilities. by appoint-444-0816 wooded;9.9 acres ,while its "value1-.furnished. double $65/month ABP 478-3671. Keep trying. » Typing, Printing, Binding -^964 CHRY&LER Newport .at PB, PS, • creases. 452-3082;^^453*3192" -bedr-aiUautejliihwasher, dis-­ AC, rear nice. Only 12S0. Call. 476-343Si NEA« CAMP)js;= room, AC..iprivate, .Must sfill! " MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE; ,• $110 posal, central-air w$l iheatr Experienced r $1,000. 454-1547!! iHALLAAARK^ Manager Apt. 104 "*'••• -.»• • » Mondays:-' * "'* . • ' • * ' ^ ' iTUltll MUSTr:SEtt:7I VV*$u0ef, E«tellent-0'i»5-,reB...gn ... LARGE 1 BEDROOM. CA/CH,. pool, : ROOM, BOARD for long session 1974-75 • .» . J.V' l«llbCU $126 plus electricity. 5001 Bull Creek moving? mv PICKUP can make the Bridle. Path..Lorraine • condition • call after 6:00*p m,441*1359 -rAmr R^pR'GERATOR^lop condition, / 451-4364- In exchange for helping'disabled: stu­going a lot easier. Tom's Do RiteTruck-• Brady. 472-4715.', -. _pr. iTit.-y)02. . • . . $45 or near. 472-9130: 11-2 p.m; ••'•i Road. 454-0935. dent Call Mr John Flowers, 476-7374. ' •fng^asS-WL';; v ' ',ey.Bw -j»,:— " ' . . '7' APTS111 jr ^ STARK-TYPING, Experienced fheses< =~=~ -£)OLPHW^SAiLBQAI_ Ifl._oaod shape THE ' COMPLETE:LUXURY...Two bedroom -^dissertations, PR's, etc. Printing and .19/3 PLYMOUTH SEBRING -PLUS, -— 'VACANCIES. Summer/Frft. red/white. ,FM stereo tape^ my price with csr topraCk.-^ $285.-CalT?^92^,7-r and. efficiencies. Summer Rates 24 HP'Beginneradvanced.;Drew Thomsson. <78-2079.and ­ . Fiats Apartments. lSir palma Plaid Male/Female. Also Vegetarian. Qieap! Binding/ Specialty Technical. Chartene $2995. Cell Dahny, 472-7666^' ^ •/^ ' ' • BLACKSTONE 474-4322. Shuttle bus corner. 1957 fnter-Cooperatlve Couocll, ABP; only,$io0.474-25^2. -.^1' -tie. 4S1-3842. • . ding. Available until 10 p.m. Enperlehcr matched,-with compatible room* homemnin tuilmmlnncooked^ meals.kui tt\n^TroOse.."etc/^r.,®,M*» Manuscript!. 45*4090. : While at factory. Electric,windows and" . Creative Outdoor Portraits. after 5 Mon.-Friday. After 10 Books, record^ guitars, jmplry.-rftdloj.^./; 1:!!.... " •»'• seat, power door locks. AM/FM stereo Save* '/j-Now-a:m. weekend's, -• $150 £). EFFICIENCIES . $95 stereos. Aarort's. 320 Congress! DowS Vmabyl SMALLWOOD--Typing. Last tape. Rally vtfweis, steel* belt radial . i: • pool, ac*bo carpet, paneling,plusnoelectricity,.pets. Hun-15 minutes cam-• . . . ' minute, ovdrnlght .available....... Term, Visit our Studio. . IBr. Furn.' . c LAKE AUSTIN town. ' —>-•-* -: pus/downfown. 1, a, and 3 bedroom • tires. Only 26,000 miles,4 owner ouT"0T~~*r tmgton .Villa, 46tf)!h and .Ave: A. 454-8903 Kob?,e papers, theses^ dissertations, tetters,^ covntTY. Buellel; Inc. El Campo, Texas ^HRoyce Portraits' Ail Bills Paid Marina. 327-IJ91,SJf.ti 1,5327-MJt;--,0 »140. -Mack's MasferCharge. Bank»merJcard. 892rl$ 77437- 0727 or*442-8M5. I7-i-713-5f•543*2729.. ' La Canada Apts. v CLEAN 2 bedroom, CA/CH, shuttle bos ^ 2420 Guadalupe , 472-4219 front yard, ^alk to UT. $149 plus elec* TARRYTOWN -^shuttle, small one TUTORING '108 plus E 472-1598 . frlclty., 208 East 31st,.N0 -5. 454-4658. bedroom mobile home. .Mature single.' MINNIE L. HAMMETT Typing 4 Duplicating service. Theses, disser­ i -. Shuttle Bus-Corner r«i adlacent pool, bills paid, J115. 459-7950." .MUST .SUBLET beautiful one bedroom tations, popers of all kinds, resumes^! -Top Dollar Paid Por-~lr~eo)dr?t4-Shag ^Carpet . 5??<3TH47TMW07RING ! FURN. MPARTS. .apartment In desirable location'near SUBLET small furnished house-second Free refreshments. 4427008. 442-1616. ^ Nice Used Cars ?l|i • Cental Air, 4 "\-i Campus. All-Bills Paid. Mike, 472*8458 summer session Quiet, fenced yard, " —piano.-1150-entlrv-penoa. «78-9iZO._. "IOBP^E D?Js L^F,ELD' ,B^ Selectric? ASK FOR JACK'POTTER-• Pool • '-i SAN JAC1NTO ARMS, 1709 San Jacinto, HELP WANTED • Y**rs experience, books, . I—• dMse.c.thlJons,_theses,reporU, "X:^-BiLLMUNDAY WALK TO GLASS •Shuttle Bus'3 Blks. thib, Walkln^distance University *Capltoi 1* SHARE • 2 bedroom, ,t-2 bath. CA/CH, carpeted; •pal/7u, meditation gardenV waVherl mimeegraphlng. 442-?iB4;~^ - $105 ' -jOLD MAiN APARTMENTS ' - -water, gas, cable paid.No pets. $115 ud.-?ELL S-9^ERS'Make 530-160 working ' ^ , PONTIAG — s , v 1 Bedfoom fas 476-0706, 472-4838-' ;. CaiUSl 5559?' TV' f peaceful.days a week;'Thursday, Frl-yjRG |NIA--SCHNEt D6R Diversified ^ ipjion^uamar __47S-7?|2Si : New one"Betf7Wm and effMency aptsj v day afternoons, Saturday, Sunday ell. Services. Graduate* and undergraduate"" Now leasing i^r .summer:..and.:fall semester. .Price range -from $120 • RETREAT Kl TangleVvood North UT PRESHLY PAmTED 2 bedroom, 2 FEMALE: 2 bedroom, house .for lease. typing, printing, binding. 1515 Koenlg * Sec at 2503 Peart, Apt. 4 ^ *&&&%&&: bath, CA/CH, laundry,pool, cabte^ quiet, -Haif^fuwlshedu Sunken vf --,.^7i-HONDA550.CL. Excellent condition. paid. 452-1427. • • downstairs, 3-lW,CA/Crt,stove,refrlg., 'Concession stand for-remainder of Dissertations,. -Professional Reports, ­ KIE i.Lr:^ . _ 01 >S&h P'P^s. 'or dlrt orT5>r%ef,'Call-44fi- waterUf»tfbr :n»Idpaid. $150 NE. East St. ; «ifmm» iae rr*i "••••"•'JWBI-law, reports. Self-correcting IBM. Bar-' Johns.' summer.. 385*3720 for appointment. 890«. Only $550 "5 B-LQCKS WEST OP • Meodor. 926-3445 or: 477-8559 -bare Tulips'. 453-5124. »,*"•­ 2' bedroom studio apt.. Available now-: . 'CAMPUS SECRETARY/ needed, full almost new, ~POSADA=n-£^--Tleiv Ijfrtje-^o^ncles, Irymg j-oom, 5 s,7°mon,h-05,1 ^ time position v, HONDA .CB70 Step-Thrur < .w'thmaurcabJc;$195 for fall. See managerABP„ $1502413forLeon,summer,No.' -~ ^TOWNHOUSE two bedroom. Jfrepiace, Y£Pf; EXPERIENCED, -• warranty, • electric starter, automatic •" HfZ or phone 478-6880. -f K"chpn-cable r-[n\->5\u-,V, i?0,1"1 own IraiiPOtWfcnV PS?i'icKn"1 worA ST self-correcting Xlutch, $330. 4S4-0992, 452-2889--Leave DEL NORTE !'" Gas-furnished. Summer -S1210Q ' wa'er-: Call:.327r2733before noon. ' BM. Theses, dissertations, maf­ ;-hum6er.. .. • Now leasing fpr fall. $125 r $180. Garden, 477-55)4 474-7916 To llemfjerlal..Linda, f4UM. • CONVENIENT"7 • T;0 pool, AC, cable; laundry, paneling Bu's • ., • R£0 OAK APTS •. '•'•• ' • P;fJt'VER V • BOY, compact -.1971HONDACB4SO. Excellent condrHon; connections .to Downtown & UT • 2104 SAN GABRIEL f'kk refrigerators, with prck-up truck fUSTIN SECRETARIAL SERVICE, r. anytime$800. call Allan,. 471.-3114, -474-2861, •SHOPPING and downtown. 308 Eas'st John --, U UNF. HOUSES prefects).47^3,71. , C s,rce'' Typing, dictation " Bills paid.,Water, gas. & cabl,e '<1~, "f .i ,452-2744 bytshorlhand-or yoor machine, themes, 4U.J T.V.Dishwasher, garbage dis-: TWO BEDROOM^-stbve, refrigerator, PART TIME EMPLOYEE for truck pSSr«7.®-,<,rch""'ur"' ""'"T . one AC. .South. StudentSvonlyv. '251!! ?, °P*ratlon afternoons-end- Stereo -For Sole : posal, laundry, large closets, HIGHLAND MALL3 Sl00/monfh. 441-4630. „ „ C?mmerc,a-1 Iken^JjMMsV "aVe 'Just 27th "SOM$OHEitj~STERSO SYSTEMrCon-«T covered parking -(acros's AREA ON North of cord-receiver, 'Garrard turntable;. V from the Orange GobSe KENRAY SHUTTLE • / Panasonic cassette recorder wim tapes School). 1 bedroom $135. 2 :NR/ "Huge 1 8. 2 bedrooms furn. or unfurn. Guadalupe stand speakers. 1150, 454-4394. . ; wdh'Jerrge walk-ins, beautiful landscape Place ^KEYPUNCH : bedroom; 2 bath $175.441-8197. APART^EfiTS .Ing. From $154 ABP. llOO Relnll-452- LOST & FOUND .3202, 472*4162.-BQrry. GlllinswalaK.Com-' TURNTABLE ,with . new-Shure. v 2122 Hancock-Dr. pany.-;,. ' * . OPERATOR -v SW900E-cartridge? Works llnfc .looks - experience. working tya/fitA AM good. 150.442-«979. -deck, 19"B&W TV. CallChuck. 476-3997:« EFFICIENCIES $100 • Barry GUIIngwafer Company Frame|^.MS493,-HandlebarS}amp^o CATCH THE EYE l,; 7567L Bob, .453-7895. Pleasd-Ye>urn Be happy doing the thing you like best --•ft -'-"'-I® .1 BEDROOM $135.00 library book . f>EIJR pe LIS. 404 East 30lh: Mature -• 4^2-3210 and 472-7677 ' Mr, 4l40t » 2^EDROOAA J175.00 -005 iw'rQOrnsi-Wa'k fo reward return Of black maie hai'f S^XVa^^k?^^" ?, "THE SPOILER'/ 0 „ . -v, Dishwasher, disposal, 6BIoci t Monday, July sbcond, . San 2707 Hemphlll-park ­ S-' • 'Come hious8-plants chevpr 1p m 4740 iooTT •JHE BEST:VALUE,IN TOWN -,iAR man. turntable S6S 444-S615—trf-PAIR of larger Advent PART-TIME WORK , G-°'c3 Omega calendar; newf 926-69)4' • • speakers, like new, «t- beautiful walnut cabinet. ,V. fine component stereo-926-6914 ' S100 each. .Call 441-2209 FURN Classified Ideal for Students -5»le '7| Toyota 451-7117 ' y' .after 6 pm. r * Fjr HEY, 'M VW, new'englne 453 2504, •mmkh fi-jf Pertl"> kittens S5 837 1592 ALL BILLS PD. Help clean commercial bulldinos^ Call 441-5610,^ Musicol -For Sole f 1 Mornings 4:30 -8.:30 a.m. ' ,Ouiiar inslruc)lon Call 4^1-5610 " jigr^'AWOS, AVAILABLE for student ren-^ Above average paylJ-„*•%r Pauur Ffnaer cAb 441 5610 Lavaca AmsterMusic: 1624 2'Bfi FURN deaf .Working' conditions "hoe SI60 136-6171 ; t"v KUJTOM 200 tpp two 15*< JBL'S $300 or best ojfer, Must sell 472 8739 Long-term Employment p1-calc,Men-Speed 474-2144 GUITAR STRINGS Save 20% on ah guIfar^ jTraptfolfn/ and ban|o -s4rlngs. fl^w Amiter Mutfc, 16?4 Lavaca. t-WJ, ^-4*",' ^ " •e"5a0c<,le"' r|ng 14 qarat451-35(4 't £ -J, O'BSOWll'j'^trlfig,Hke'new, $l7Q or best iVK" 444^0010 442-8340 0"er.;•44i8537.^• --r.• , •..-•.>: • •• -us U MUST •mm WANTED '-WE R6PAIR all =$tr£ng Instruments, wXi5?f®r cuijsrs, violins, S banlos, etc B'E DEPENDABLE >f i;par«ment,r. ,naDBV.U"''or[,l,h,d Dulcimers made -}o order."S3?~and UI1 • Gedf, Menke, 1624 Lavaca, 47$ 7331 WJLLOWXREEK COMdon-SQO^R^=^ 1'. -V'BE A HUSTI FP'„,! . WO.90 474 ?55r,aM,?,5frOO I&Mr.MARTIN 0{ir Excellent can 1901 WlLLOVy.CREEjC^Rf tJ0~TOWN~LArKt-C4-RCLE­ «nt»o two or test o!/er 176-3201, fit 6119-* t . OVATION-ACOUST/C f E/eofrlc ( • wW» case Fender super revert - J* • ptnftW mil|i ||I II Mlel7TTii1-i wyff"/?" ^Shag carpeting anda swirnming pool don't-make an apartmani'! f*-si (BOdeCi^ orbestroffer Ca)l 441-1312, -1 ^ — m •tii J — ^ if-.ru* I® -• Si '1% -". T'< PP • A u <\l4s? v;3f&«# ftfPi iSjfk My-O/7-Alv Manager \ * -„ * ?l|| ~ -~'p' " .»$5d6F--~^­ du»s„'in Tomorrow Faces Reorganization, Replacements KCilV IVlCHAM • ideas and goate expressed in»» ^ -j/ ... By KEN McHAM r/taac-.inH. a/talc-.ovnroeta^ l«>n tive or relocated -assembly Testing Smut Law selected. -- "COUNCIUVJAN. BINDER — Texan Staff Writer -the-neighborhood meetings----members-maybe -namedi-by -. '-'Theje-was not anyattempt--has.requested more names,-isi® ' By MARY CLARK nature of the films shown there. Other theaters "The Austin Tomorrow Goals The;assembly will alsoelect City. Council Thursday, said to fashion the list tofill any or " compiling " some with other•feJosephLloydSrnith,managerx)£theJVly-Oh'' ajevnot showing films as graphic as "Deep" Assembly will meet July 23 to • presiding; t)fficers' and an ex­Lillie. That action has been all of Jthe categories .—.it-was members of the:-council and •­ •My Club and the Zipper. Lounge, is a' Throat"and--"Tfie Devil and Miss"Jones;•"••he: review the.compiled results of ecutive committee consisting delayed since early May.. merely a list from which the has asked that the.88 names be businessman trying to .run a-businesi^ not a said., ' • ,. — . all Austin Tomorrow representatives from "ORKSlNALLV council -Df two " LIliL'IE could-select.. There broken dowRintQ categories," great First Amendment Tighter, his attorney .-if Smith continues shoiying such filmsv the -neighborhood -meetings and each zone. Previous assembly--recommended the council ap/-was no other intent," , said Davidson said. « 1 " ­said Monday. Austin Police Department will' continue to adopt new organizational meetings have beenconducted -point a representative group Davidson.-... > . -r " -E Terra) Smith, the manager's attorney, said make arrests. VAs long as he violates the law, rules-for the assembly. • solely by Planning Depart-• I7 members, to speed the Councilman Bob Bindersaid Lillie-said he is "'hopeful" . of his client is .testing the obscenity law because we'll arrest him.V Miles said. The meeting will be held at ment staff. The decision toes­ the revised nominee list will appointment; process while the list of nominees was,; tablish self-governing the. • to estab .it does not clearly define'which questionable, .'Smith's attorney agreed that filrijS shown at :.7:30 p.m. in .the Joe^-.-Thomp­a keeping • intact '-'totally unsatisfactory" conform the established -movies may not be-shown Because of the his client's club are probably, more graphic son Conference-Center," 26th organization was' made ,at a membership profiles for race. because it did not conform to: " Pftrf'tes °f ,th^ program vagueness of the latest Supreme Court ruling than others showing; in town.'The police have .and Red River Streets. •meeting May 7. . Sex, occupation; -age and population profiles by.which • T.-he . Austin. Tomorrow on obscenity, no on? knows for* sure what can' not engaged in selective enforcement, he said.-, " CITY DIRECTOR ot Plan­ptocedure for the -other. Rules of neighborhood. all Austin.Tomorrow program was implemenied by be shown, the attorney; explained. '"• *,•~v The'"attonfey"Avas disappoirited--wJien 167tH ning Richard Lillie announced • assenitly.. will be" discussed -'-After/ the council postponed' members had been selected. City -Council last, fall to"THERE-IS NOTHINGthe. (Smith) would Dist. Judge Tom Blackwell granted a' tem-Friday the Planning Depart-Lillie will, present a. draft action twice in .executive ses­ In particular, Binder noted provide citizen-input for like ^battel Ulan not bniiy nrrnrtnH,".. Iho :nt forar-y .irient staff had''compiled and-prepared; ; from the the :at-injunction hannine further screenngs of sion,.City.; Manag.ef. Dan high in the"Jist. was white,-AustiO.s . master plan,, re­ torney sais.....".The.'.'.The whole issue will be decided "Deep Throat" and thougnt oy his decision -scored the team and in-. jfofotiirg-Q. riilag adnptpH •Davidson on May 16 presented' male, '• busin¥ss"T: and' qufred by law to be updatedby juries who will try to determine what Blackwell had ruled the"movie obscene.;, dividual results of ad Austin for. the.Constitutional Conven­to the council a list ot BH per­ protessioiial oaiegories.-every lO years.; Austin's communitystandards are," he added. BLACKWELL, however, said that since h^ Tomorrow gfiais meeting's,'.' tion: . sons. recommended for ap­ Smith was arrested Friday for the second was ruling on a civil matter and the upcoming and scheduled the. July 23 • "We.took.the jules, studied pointment to the assembly. time in two months. He was charged, with a .case.is a criminal one; his decisioti should, not meeting to release the,, data. them and pulled what we Davidson said the names misdemeanor for exhibition of obscene affect the criminal triaj ou.lOTfne, thought tie most.'appropriate The assembly wiii then dis­ were compiled "from the lists material. . >• •• " I He based his ruling-on what he saw,inthe cus's' the 'preparation of — so the.assembly could have already in the hands of the ,3 Austin Police Chief R.A. "Bob" Miles said movie; the judge said; Anyone with in-. recommendations. to City • "something to hwk at instead of. council and some "from city: the vice squad may raid Smith's club more telligence could s£e that the Supreme. Court „Council7.for a -new Austin nothing at all," Eillie said. boards and '-comiriissions, frequently than others because 'of the graphic guidelines w^pe being violated,," he added. : .' master plan based oncitizens' Replacements for 52 inac­:from which--54 were" to "be INCONCERT •INCONCERT • INCONCEftT NCERT • INCONCEBTaINCONCERT«INC Center Shifts ^ N CONC^f^ n^^jcERT rzf. »Vi?& •*45^.-— 4. ^TONlGHf -SAT. Summer Hours The Women's Referal For more information on CEi NELSON Center has changed its hours the kinds of classes to be • ,~for the summer. Barbara offered, call.; 471-4874 • during T JJauy specials • Cohen, chairperson of Student registration airier47F4721 prior •.•Sfctf. "v„ -^Government Women's Affairs -to registration. MOTHER EARTH /Committee-.'" said the new . ANNOUNCEMENTS ' :!0i!: , 'vv ALSO APPEARING • *«IS AND. GRAFTS CENTER of the Texas hours are from noon to 5 p.m. tm . Union willsponsor a free demonstra­ • .Mondays. tion ot mticrameat noon Tuesday In : UnionBuftdfng 333. BILLY C. ^ • . AUSTIN, --fARENT«CHliD'. ASSOCIATION' Wilt conduct. an.Introductory class .In ADVANCED TICKETS AT DISCOUNT RECORDS i: •jThe center; which pV&vides. naTr^inoc'i women information regarding" natural, prepared childbirth at 7:30 •ff Jfcv .' • FREE T AMALES " AND INNER SANCTUM ' day care, abortion, legal . p;m, Tuesday at All Saints Episcopal Church, 209 W. 3>th St-. .needs and job referral, -is in TEQUILA SOf A SHOT per person; 1 .7 Union Building 319. Admission is si with ever^ooe invited.; TEXAS; UNION will Sponsor a tree film, • LIVE ENTERTAINMENT' "The hunchback of NotreDame,"' l_*Cqhehj5aidrejular Jiours_ oi&uadown taroun(iAp.nrL)-.Tue»clay._ will resume inThe fall. tS -on the Union RjitlOi'. Brewer & Shipley Featuring -IP ! HAVE A POINT. TEXAS'UNtON will sponsor a spade; tour-• namerit at-7,*30 p.m. Tuesday In July 12 \\ If THEN THE PENTAGON * Informal Classes . Union Build'ng 104/Cost Is 25 cents per persdn. :'V.'. MUST HAVE ONE TOO' Would you like to learh how TEXASunion;will sponsor an exhibit of AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM to do macrame while skydiv-;. / the charcoal drawings and enamel. FROM CHICAGO paintings bf Rlchard Rlgh from 10 iR^-Qr_.how. to find*antti ^ Tickets $6, $5, $4 1ST APPEARANCE IN AUSTIN . . a m: to S p.m.through FridayIn the-• prepare edible weeds? Un^'Galiery vWe.will trade you a mug of beer for yoiif old Fraternity br MEETtNOS-Magic Mushroortt -;Pobie, R»verside Records These are only some of the PUfUCA^BBRIDGE ClUb willineel f p.»»> -•r-Sorority .composites^ paddles. . Tuesday. ln the. Union Junior and Tupes, and -Home-Er»tertainrnent_-, skilly being taughtJn informal Ballrcorr) to plhy brfdge. Highland Mall. . I THE BUCKET ^T~13rranfcPEARL-Tonight classes , during July and NEWMAN ClUB will'fhtfet at ^ p.m ^ August by the Texas Union. j 3 HRS. FREE PARKING Wednesday m«the.Catholic Student ACROSS fROM HARDIN NORTH - Center-to discuss future activities. Registration will be con­ ducted 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Friday in Unlof BulIding'IM7~^— • Classes are open^ to the tf®5" public and costarouncT$10pef Student. Alt classes will have ''The Point" & "Selling begun by next-week, aiid most will meet in the Unfon Building. v--•••.: >8' of the Pentagon" " bM )S& tP> ^ 50® -• '; 7-10 pm A. C. AUDITORIUM ., Spotttortd by Manogimi'nt Dtpf, * . •> *• *ib r^g, • IkklMmMHiililM KOM NOW -. -SmmI on July f3»rvi|^ « SatH he tw shows, 7 A 10 p.m -• ' Tkk»*» $5 ' lnn«r Sancfum, OfKouiit I«c*nh, Ttxos Hattvrt, opd Th. Op«­ • HOUM IS THE TIME TO COME TO THE .Anmm At#* Kafvty'. $1ot ih« • Son-.. mm 'AID OF YOUR" 'w ^ ENVIRONMENT! line. •'• v_ -• . • .-• • v. v.. . The Daily Texan and Student Government have joined days together in an environmental project of recycling old •i'V: I • newspapers. We are saving our excess Texans and « w other newspapers and taking them to the waste paper dbllarl #3^* ^ant each^week for fecyeling!.-Won*t YOU join us in '30D0DUVAL.-477-6751­ |^i ""fclS tlHS effort?'' yqgy • .Je-' 0, We are providing, for* your convenience, GREEN' ^STEe ~ "" -US U RECYCLING B6XES at various-locations on campus Luhchtime, Dinnertime, or Anytime... our smiling service and fi feinlly^|.tme^tfere->s4he— for depositing discarded newspapers. These GREEN perfect complement to*America's Favorite -^hare a Pfzza today .at Rizza Inn. Daily I RECYCLING BOXES -will be located at the following Texan^I - spots beginning Friday, July 12. • r:s ShareaMi-Ul today... Hi ilfewfrM , — .'Si • •PMA BUILDING-^.hWspe^ VtOWNESHAtL | Fn^lassifieds I • • LfTTLEFIElD FOUNTAIN. UNIVERSITY CO-OP iiiii^llwc,x,19n 'h"* *ny tvgt brmedium pizutttr*^uUr ifsaComfi.by 5 pnot and fttefv* orwpiuaofthe' n«xlwv«flet sir*wth«qiuf nurnbar PP Bldg, f;5:| • 24TH AND SPEEDWAY^^ 24TH AND WHltll: •ol mgrMei^sFREEI On* potion, R6om3.200 'oom 3.200 J « o*f .and place -5" r VaW Thru JU1y ^74 your JESTER WOMEN'S'DORAA 'V i -> "26TH AND WHITIS .|MI (MM lufi Unclasiiliad M Qrtm QnmOIII • 21ST AND, SPEEDWAY • ACADEMijp Center -,J ' 'C'"' 0>­•-WOS-J-J •sat:-.'* 'students.only * I fe'.. -• > J B JSt>ONSOttED_BY ^prtt-pajd -i-^| "4inelreN*w: . refunds TEXAltsTUBJENT PUBLICATIONS mj\ ft— Una. Iwt 26th & Wffitis hi, . " S,-'4 UIPit** "n %\ ­ 111* <- : STUDENT GOVERNMENT ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION COMM.;"5 ••••••••••••••••••••A* S Si^ ./ VI H1\* rt-rrl» * ,i.. . * 1 ~ y 1' —L-—T.ji.-rJ > &£& ­ s-s^igsa ' W*St' *f[ J$j&f SWSK >-* f$g$wsim > "v *5lr ^ "• '"Whatta weeKerid.VveKad H showers today, and I'fiin^^f6ranoiiier''Psf We," so goes backstage'chatter in the so-called "Lodges" restroom. #i|s« People backstage were lucky enough to have ae'cess to showers, but the otherWM »«5»=60,000 festival goers sat in the hot Texas sun, drinking and generally raising hell.aag&s t-VriiW '".•^-After-the second day, nobody seemed to notice the heat. .Thousands of people,-a grass fire,.loudspeaker messages about medicine, good antfpad dope plus some damn good, good music descended upon the Texas World »s&#em Sfories and Pho So/edway for the. Fourthjif.July.weekenddespite local 'citizens' .''protests.'';. . V THEY ^SAID Paul.McCartney, was holed up in a-Winnebago somewhere. They •: ^i»v\ said Eric Qlapton even came along with McCartney.We saw McCartney. But who by IF _ _ cares? They didn't favor the cfowd-with theironstage presence.•• . • • * • • £§IN WsmM f«!Wl{ <#:&Va . Some of.the Thursdaytioketholders didn't.get tosee the people they came to see •• >-,a' when the concert was shut down early that night; Michael Murphey'and B-W. ••-•­ T-" Stevenson, scheduledlo appnnr ThiircrHv, Hirtn'l piny — nnt pnnngH timp hpforp • ... ...icurfew,-Jejrry Jeff didn't even'get to finish his set. A bit'of. time organization ' ;?;^would have helped immensely to tighten thingsoip. • . : • • ' •: ; ; . Mark -PeeP® ' But the important .things to the' picnic occurred in front of the.stage, not .,. backstage. Everyone seemed to have a good time in spite of promotional hassles; -rude television crews who felt the concerts were m'ore for them.than the paying -' . .^patrons, performers not appearing and the sheriff standing in the wings w-itha w • -"fcourt summons in hand. . . : and " JH>"t\ jh>.W> '* Three,cheers and a double pat on the back go to the Middle Earth people (theys ; deserve a MeSal of. Honor.} wfio walked through the bodies ahU "Blanketsunder ^ i.ifyjroakeshift tents in the Texas heat to-deliver salt tablets and medical assistance-'">•-a gDebm Triplett ^They"were*the only folks, who seemed to-know«xactly-jrtiat4hey weredoing JM V'-irV, ^96 s';;® LUCKILY, the touted 80,000 people never materialized. Instead a comfortable isss-s (shall we say bearable?) crowd of 60,000was the three-da£total. That averagesj: .20,000 a day'—.so enough, breathing room was given to -those,who Wfere there.,-&S1 -. y .Willie Nelsori_provid^d us*'with some nice surprises like impromptu perfor­:38"Sv6b>(f ,*iji»3mances with Leon Russell, Doug Kershaw, Steve:Fromholz, Michael Murphey and p*; Willie appearing.® stage'unscheduledVsinging, boogying and drinkin' beer with _1 r;v«;a the .rest of us:-~ Mary Egan of Greezy Wheels _ jpsafe* X. A fire dampened Uje spirits of some people.when '16 cars"were~destroyed • Not1 much of a recommendation for next.year. -•••;•• But the.three-day participants,all lived it up in grand Texas style and wenthome •^.exhausted with just memories of a good time in College Station. Too bad the local r^linhabitants didn't appreciate us like we.appreciated their Piggly Wiggly's. Gib-T' ^ son's, local motels and hotelSi «i-. • • "• " •™t=' r\\a «&'*• JN*. -J vLJv 2 £ !<4" ^Excuse me, I can't see over your' hat.' v Por the writers and'photographers who had come to /'ll p.m. Thequestion in most people'smihd was how are do their job, Willie Nelson's Fourth of July Picnic was, ' they going to get all those people'to leave the area-each anything but a picnic. Wednesday afternoon and Thurs-night? --day morning at the press credentials trailer was pure That tyrned out not to^be a problem *-r the festival chaos goers cleared"out each nigfif within "one hour.after the: .'People who had made advance arrangements to gefv>: music had stopped. The problem was many top narhe credentials for the picnic were having trouble getting passes, and those who-hadn't, even if they had been j Walter Cronkite or Roger Mudd, were out of luck.* >~ r -The people who were at the head of organization for' the pifcnic, Tim O'Connor, Larry Moeller and O'Con­nor's wife, Mary, could not have done their job any better.'However, the people in-control ' ol stage and Backstage security couldnU-have been any worse. For the most part, those underlings were bouncers from different bars and cluhs, some from Austin. -Performers were not allowed on stage jjnles^it was . jtime for them to perform.One guitarist,who wasforced -to leave 'his• expensive instrument/onstage rafter: his... group had played, was not even allowed ta go back up and get it or evdfl"eheck-to-see if it was still there. The Texas Mass Gathering-Act, which applies to any sor£ of gathering of .more than 5,000-persons, • was­enatted by-the Texas Legislature after the Dallas Pop ' Festival which was held the summer of 1969'. That festival drew several thousand pot-smoking, skinny-: -dipping and booze-guzzling, youngsters to the now-defunct-Dallas International Motor Speedway, north' of. ' Dallas in the tiny town of Lewisville. • After cries of "God help us" from-the people of -'Lewisville and "neveragainl' fropi thesolons, the Mass, -Gathering Act came into being; To-thfs-day no. music promoter of any type has been able to comply,with the strict act which states certain health and security •".regulations' must"be-met:for--crowdsoverr5,000.ona::. curfew'will be enforced. Thp picnic did not complywith .' fhat act" and without having the stafe^s. blessing of this -permit, the show had to shutdown each dayprecisely at-were scheduled to go on near the end.of the day's 'perftmnances but didn't get to play. ' ' Thursday night, Michael Murphey was the last per­foqjm scheduled; but Jerry Jeff Walker was the last mig tcrplay before the show.was shutdown at11. Waylon 'Jennings was the first to go on at noon-Friday and and also did a set at 6 p.m., and MuipheJ played' later Fri­day night. Friday -night, instead of cutting people 'from the-program, Nelson, Leon Russell and Dpug Kershaw, who were to have had their own separate sets; played together until*12:30 a.m., bepause there wereno lawen--' forcement Officials;on >hand to see that the 11'-p:m.­.curfew was obeyed':. -.. * • .: NBC television's late-night rock show,-The Midnight1 -Special, was-there to film each night's performances, along with good ol' WolfmAn Jack. The MidnightSpecial crew gave special orders that no "other photographers were.to be allowed on eitherof the two stageswhile they were taping. Ahd ,those orders were'carried put; r At first, writers and photographers Were issued a you weren't-performingaftfiat time or a stagehand. • In-a'way, all-of this tight security was good. At last ; year's picnic at Dripping Springs; securitywas so non-" existent that people who did not belong on the stage "made it impossible for the:performers to geton and off , -; when they were to play^ ' • -However, this i'good security" was; abused..Staged ' crews and film crews were able to take friends, w^ves, children and animals on stage while legitimate photographers' had to settle for shots of-.perfohners— backstage or fight the crowd and an eight-footstage out>;' front -Saturday, the last day, some amends were made, and''f 'O'Connor, promised to work with the press as best he ; could. A gpeciaLarea was set up on the'far eqd of the stage-away from the performers -There was one small problem, however. Between the area .for the photographers and the performing stagiTwere the televi­' sion and'sound control boards_as well ascables hanging from the roof Of. the stage like giant pythons. Those who finally did get up there-to shoot pictures' ' .had to-fight for a spacein ttie small area> shoot around, or thFough the cables andsound people and alsocontend With , bright television-'lights. Saturday, things obviously were waybehind schedule)' and the general consensus among^the performers was: this is the last day so they can't doanything to us now. "backstage" pass printedin blueand a^blue plasticam-We're gonna pick-allnight long,f; a HoustonDJ serving > band, the type hospitals use to.identify, patients. Green as emceesaid. Bnt~Qie BrazosCounty sheriff'sdeputies armbands and passes were issued to stag? crews, per-had other ideas. •' -v .-,­former? and one photographer who was the "Official r "'Late in the evening, with five bands left to play, the .Willie-Nelson's Fourtlrof-July Picnic Photographer,-'—'..sheriff appealed on the scene and informed.O'Connor Other photographers had to get their-shots' tbe best way and Others,"Y'alf ain't gonna pull: that-s tonight they could,"butithey weren't getting on stage -^JLate^Eriday^tlli^zdiaHBed.''A--'greeii armband and pass were;no longer any'good, 'a"speciar^fMidnight Special-sticker was:required to get within 50feet of the stage area and an•; like you did last night!anil go past 11:" Someone in formed the good sheriff that his watch'had stopped, and ^t wasindeed already 12^15 a;m7 "Well,4)K then;:y!all-i: got untilJUa.m. and then my men have ordfiESJfl-cutoft " " whole damned speedway. " i/* Lu The Dirt; Band aets down to Nitty Grlny i .'Iter-^ ' & ja'rr'f-XKj]>»,; i-si M ~ '" ,uk -st­ "5 jwa-i. hp !0P