Jp* ,17"^ II -M­ r£».£?«•*•> -.Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 74, No. 50 Please Recycle This Newspaper5— Austin," Texas, Monday, September 9, 1974 */'Ten Cents - Sixteen Pages 471-4591 Nixon r!S?.'(r ~ Rlchard Ni^nn nnS(.f^n?y 'g?H f Nixon unconditional pardon for any •Watergate offenses to "firmly, shut, and seal'this book*'for the nation and for Nix-on himself; Stunned congressmen express-fd both praise and outrage, and Nixon said• he was grateful. The White House said Ford sweated out his decision aloYie over' the. past week 'without.consulting Nixon, but the former President-issued a statement within minutes, sorrowing'over the "mistakes" he-had made but conceding no criminal wtiongdoing: •••••• • White House press secretary J,F. terHorst, Ford's first appointee, became the firsilhemberoflhe-Administration to-_ quit, citing his disagreement with Ford's 11 parrtrin ftir Nivnn' • ' HE SAID hecould riot "crediblydefend" the pardort-for Nixon ''in. the absence of pardons for those who evaded the war in Vietnam in good'conscience and former Nixon aides who have suffered under the • same Watergate" troubles'as Nixon. :•..."I deeply regret Jerry terHorsl's resignation. I understand his position. 1 appreciate the fact that good, people will . differ with me on this very difficult deci-' sign. However, it is my judgment that itis 1 in the best interest of our counlty. I think Jerij" did an outstanding job in a con­troversial period of transition, jl thank him ­for his services,V Ford said; . ' i TerHorst. 52; is -a longtime friend of Ford. ' . /FORD PUT forth his historic -rand im-mediately controversial ^ decision b'y summoning newsmen to his Oval Officeon Sunday morning and leading to ilium in solemn and somber tones from a long ! -prepared statement. It took him more than 300words to men­tion Nixon's name for the first time as he explained now ne bad agonised over what he was about to do. "I do belieye the buck stops »here." Ford said, and concluded with these wordsof official proclamation: ^Now,Jiie/_eij)re, ], GeraldFordr Presi­dent, of the United States, pursuant to the. pardon power conferred u^on.me,by. Arti­cle II. s€^tion.2, of tlie Constitution, have, granted and by these presents do grant a full,., free and absulut6 pardon unto Richard Nixon for all the offenses against Uie United-States whieh'he, Richard Nix­on, has committed or may-hadft corn-emitted or taken part -during the period ffftifi" Tifj lOfiq tfrnrilflh Anp Q| 107*-^­ FORD THEN rose from his desk and; left the room. In San Clemente, Calif., where Nixon­\has llved in seclusion'and pondered what -the-future-mightliold^since^he |eft_office Aug. 9, the former President immediately . issued his response. "One thing I canse# clearly how is that1 ;was wrong in, nol-racling more decisively University vice-president, said Friday, referring to the set percentageof the total ..University budget allowetl for salaries by the Coordinating Board. • -The University has^previously sub­mltted budget requests under some-restriction as to what it could ask for in • terms of formulas,' Hill said, adding he and Gavend# will discuss trends in faculty : salaries which they feel ;will support ii^>. creased; compensation ; for University , professors. The TACT representatives wili not ask : for specific percentage increases at the v "IWondaV, meeting,:hnwpypr: ,• • lit approving the University budget, the Legislature normally funds below the Coordinating Board formula, Spurr skid Friday. -"If they funded by the formuIa"we'd.toe doing very well," the president said. Because of the lowersfund amount allocated, Uie; University asks for money abdve this amount, "a pie in the sky" to assure funding, Spun <&pl?(ned. ^ morc fo«!hrightty in dealing with "M/lfitos full:Well that by doing this Watergate, particularly when it. reached. he's blown, his honeymoon up." the stage of judicial proceedings and grew -• -. -... , And .Sen,;.Lowell Weicker, K-Conn . in.. vfrora a political scandal into-a national : one of the harshest GOP reactions,-said tragedy," he said in part. ' " • "President Ford's pardon may be a per­ " "No words can describe-the depths of sonal, (jolitical or.emotional reaction, but my regret and pain'at the anguish ray mis­ it is heifhqr equal justice nor leadership in takes over y/atergate have caused the na­ a government of'laws;" tion and the Presidency." " ' i s • • .Sen.; George McGovem,.D-S.D.,-said he The surprise pardon reopened m3ny of. was •'surprised'and startled" atv Ford's lA' ttf/Minflc*' t-ltnt mktU Lili' I . . the wounds that-split ,Congress soiitterlj^. granting bfa pardon to Nixon and-charged before Nixon's resignation and. had only that the action would hinder the '2«!?ea'' " Watergate investigation, n u © Ford associate on Capitol • "1 think-the central-lesson of-Watergate Hill, who asked not to be identified, ^aid: ^was that, nobody stands above the law, no University Response . By JOHN MORRIS -. Texan Staff Writer " University reactions to President • Ford's "full .and absolute pardon" for former. President Nixon were as numerous Sunday as opinions on the en­tire Watergate affair, b.ut most followed. a singlfe. negative theme., / Sentiment-ranged;from passive to.out­ rage among University, professors, although all questioned saw the presiden­ tial pardon as alien to a strong:-judicial . process! : However, University La.w. Prof.' Charles-Alan Wright, who assisted in the. defense of the former chief executive. . declined comment on Ford's action Dr. Benjamin Wright, professor—of . government, felt the pardon was "premature • and coritrarv to usual procedure in a case involving possible criminal activity. "^Would-rftot-object-to^a-papdoaaX-a•P. normal course of proceedings had been - - followed," Wrightadded, explaining that . pardons arecorrectly;given only after in­-. dictment ami presentation Of evidence in -.court result in a conviction. r—-— GOVERNMENT INSTRUCTOR Neil Richardson shared Wright's view; "The coherence of the argument forpardoning Nixon was never offerfedi asthis has pre­emptedkthc public's right to know the v evidence." he said. /'This blunts revelations gained by' > (special Watergate prosecutor Leon) Jaworski's office, for this is not a par­don, but-a pardon before cohviction."— The.danger of: weakening the;. To Ask ... By SUSIE.STOLER Texan Staff Writer -, The -banner fry-, increased faculty 'salaries will be carried Monday to a ; Legislative Budget Board:(LBB) Hearing c in Galveston by -both University ad' [ministrators and .representatives of the [Austin Chapter of Texas Association of College Teachers tTACT). ' Recommendations from bo*tl\ the board [and the governor's badgeU-staff are |available to the Legislature whenWenriiafl appropriations are-made. University President Stephen Spirrr and Jafiies Cofvin, vice-president for business affairs, will present budget requests for faculty compensation increases of 518 percent in-1976 and 8 percent in 1977.. Similarly, Forest G. Hill, professor of ^economics, and David.Gavenda, president ' of-TACT and professor-of physics, will petition for salaries above the maximum „set o^qrmuJ^.ofJtheCOTriJlDatingBoard, • Texas College^afTtTGmvefsitJ System Pay budget office aod a member of the Coor­ dinating.Board. 7®-'' -.j, ' _ "The purpose of the hearing1is two­fold," Tom Keel, LBB director, said. "One, it allows the administrator to elaborate On his request and two, it allows budget officers achance togain further in­formation.'-' . Although Monday's hearing will affect only 'future, budgets, salaries for the current year could be affected by ariy. emergency measures ef the 64tii Legislature in January.. —r -Gov. Dolph Briscoe promised in August * such emergency steps would be "taken •after, he declined.to call avspecial session, of the Legislatures requested in July by Spurr to meet faculty financial needs; .; While terming _a special session "im­practical" and "unrealsticj' Briscoe said he would Ssk for a iO percent raise for all ­state, employes when the new Legislature w itowenes 1" • £ -?>­ : "We have no choice in the amount, re­ ;^ 5The refusal of past Legislatures to make quested for salaries," Robert Metllen, - ['adequate" increases in faculty salary budgets will result in the sharp decline of academic standingof the: University if the downward trend of faculty -purchasing power is not quickly reversed, Gavenda. told a TACT meeting Thursday. . £. ,The,purchasing power, determined from 'actual salary increases and increases in i the consumer price inflex, lias declined 21 ij! percent,;over the last seven years,.Hilf"" C said,drawing from a study of faeultycom-;. pensation trends. -• . '|f ;•£, Real income, derived, from dividing ac^ll . tual: income by tlie cost of living index, • ; averaged $ll;28P:in July, the lowest it has;S been since-1964-1965. Hill added. i « - Recent eiiortsto chaiige Briscoe's niind about celling a special session have produced no results. •Austin ftep.Ronnie EarlesajdThursday .that he and Austin'Sen. Lloyd -Doggett spoke to the governor, several weeks ago­concerningthesalarysituationandurged presidential orders — arc being sent to prison.• . ->-'v ^ • , Wright was;more concerned with makr ing public all that isknown of the entire Watergate scandal."We don'teven know why Nixon: Was-named as an uhindicted co-conspirator,he said, unless all ger­mane Evidence is examined in a c6urt proceeding. '• ­The upshot-of Ford's action. Schott said.-"may be -the end of. the -'honey-­ ,.-White House tapes and documents willre- moon', with the American people, itnain his personal property arid will be although the President has shown fairly ^destroyed upon Nixon's 'death or on SSpt-' good judgment "politically up to now SJ, 1979, whichever comes sooner. "WHILE DEEP down Ford may be Buchen said Nixon had/agreed,however,• trying to heal' the country. I think he to leave the . materials in a federal made a serious miscalculation' in gran-u vdepository in California for three years 4*ng th? paffan Srhntt caiH Jkiilwhere -they may be.subpoenaed for Jegal He foresees a congressional review of presidential pardon powers, and pointed, to revised budgetary-and war -making .powers as evidence-of this: Awt Onyprnment Prof. Joseph Oppenheimer echoed his colleague's feelings; "Mine is that it underlies the fact that Ford's-appointment was' predicated, upon a deal for immunity for • FURTHER-, • he sees the pardon" as "-payment of a" political debt."whichwili precede, the President's political coalP~ tion breaking-apart: ; . " Sunday's resignation'of presidential press secretary' >,F. terHorst, as a ••'matter, of-conscience over disagree­ment with-Ford's decision"," lends credibility to Oppenheimer.'s view. —"-iVtstiiitig—has-char ministraffon," he added, "liberals and • ;Amerfcan judicial system~:concerned te;.^Democrats will now turn their,support s^me observers. ~' -awav from•Ford."-•• . Richard L. Schott. an assistant v Richardson saw Ford's action"as less professor' oT goverrimeht, said,-J'The—damaging-to-Uie PresidenUin terms of man has been placed above the law." support from outside his own pafty, for" referring to Nixon being granted amnes­•Ford had hinted since taking-offifje that -; ty; while aides of his — who' followed^ he favored immunitv for Nixon. matter how .high powerful . McGovern said. Former Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson, who was fired by Nixon in a fight over the' surfender of White .House Watergate tapes, said that Ford "had had to weigh painfully difficult competing con­ • sid'erationsi" m granting-the pardon "I FULLY support the President's ac­tion,'' Richardson said: ",The-result is compassionate and right for the country, although I might-have preferred that it • had been reached by a somewhat different­route."^ , . pbv. Ronald Reagan of California said the. pardon Was"the right thing to do/5 He said. Nixon "has suffered.as much as any man should." —-Sen^John Tower. R-Tex.. .said .-Ford acted "in the nationa1 fnterest" b'ul'Sen —William Rrnflr R-Tfnn.. said: "I think' probably I might have waited.; Vice-President, nominee ..Nelson Rockefeller.aiso .congratuiated Ford for "an act of conscieftCe, compassion' and . courage."-but one Republican: Sen Edward Brooke of Massachusetts, said Ford had made "a serious mistake," • There were .no strings attached. to Ford's pardon, arid White House spokesman Philip Buchen said Ford had also decided, upon the recommendation of' .Atty. Gen. William Saxbe. that Nixon's . processes. Ford made clear he had acted both out of compassion for Nitfon and fear that the nation would be torn apart.by "ugly passions" if Nixon were brought to trial. • HETsAlu Nixon had-suffered "an American tragedy in which we.have all played a part. ' • "It can go on-and on, and someone must write'the end'to it! "I have concluded that only I can do that, and if I can, I must." ~ -Ford indicated Nixon's health was one factor, saying "seriousallegations and ac-, cusations hang likea sword... threatening, his healthas he tries to reshape his.life.." He alsosaid there seemed'noway Nixon could possibly get a 'fair trial in the : passionate setting of the final. Watergate ns. scheduled .tri begin this fall. and the aftermath-of the' resignation.'•; "But it is not the ultimate fate of Richard Nixon that most concerns me, though surely it deeply troubles ever}'de­ cent and e.verv compassionate person. . .'.'My concern is the immediaf' .. 'Most other damage was to trees and power lines though there was some damage to homes and-huildings. Electrici­ ty was knocked, out at times during the morning in the area around Lafayette, but by Sunday residerits were, beginning , to! . clean up after the. storm: Interstate"10 from Baton Rouge to Beaumont was open in both,directions. ' , "As far as what it looks like now, we've been relatively fortunate,"-said State Trooper Murphy Adams in Lafayette • where thf storm passed during the night. .. "I.didn't findit quiteas bad assome in the past. I had worked in other storms fhat' came through that caused a heck of a lot more damage." ­ At the height of Carmen's move inland, President Ford; calted»:GoV..'"EMwanls,'>^g pledging federal assistance if needed , The hurricane stormed ashoreSaturday .»! -night, pushed inland west of New Orleans#"'""' farmers could hn $100 millfon orrmorfr^spw.'m'phv and-gradually weakened as rtl As many as 100,000 persons-fled (fie moved farther from the Gulf of Mexico storm,—and another 60,000 found tem­A; N-WS spokesman said the porary.shelter, in Red Cross Centers in began-slowing as it moved north, preven-> -.J Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. The ting serious injury or major damage to Red Crossreported latein theday that 21,-buildings. *''» • Cloudy... Knievel... Mondayvs forecast,-Although ]dare,de.vi! — " • 1}on. Wallace arrivedSunday to Vi­ sing h'o)ered-by Stitcoe and Gov, Xf't nigtit. — •' cails for clear to part­iy 'y-Pc Iou d y ^kiqjs through • Tuesday,: with northerly winds. 10 to 20 mph. The high Monday is expected in" the mid-80s, with the-' low in* the mid:60s at Evel. Knievel faile.d to , leap Snake'River Gan-yon. in his Sky-Cycle Sunday, h& did walk l' away fromjhe multj­*r~fr—rtnlMon dollar stunt unhurt and $6 million • • richer. Page (Related, ttory, Page 3.) ^, £pf Spfw, Hispanic Week »"• l&SjlS Fesf Starts Tomorrow - By BARRY BOESCH Americans of 'Spanish origin;^ festival at Saragosa Park in and writes poetry aboul his . For Sale? Texan Staff Writer • A noon concert pn the Union*' East Austin starting Friday. experiences, and about, A* Semana de La Razav a Pa.tia Thursday and •a dance • The festival will feature chicano life. Velez Said. -•; Gty officials are consid­ week of-festivities honoring Saturday night Sponsored by r local Mexican-American A parade from -Martin ering selling Austin's the anniversary of Mexican the . Mexican-American talent and will have a bazaar-Junior High School to the publicly owned electric independence, will be Cultural Committee (MACCJ like atmosphere. festival site.ttiH.begin the ac­utility system. However, I-..celebrated by various Mex­will highlight thefestivities'on. The: festival, sponsored by. tivities Sunday.1 ivfuniz will under terms of the City ican r American groups in campus. Comite delas FiestasPatnas." also speak at the parade , Charter, Austin citizens Austin begvitung Tuesday. The Mexican American will also feature a ballet and Bellas Arte, the ballet coim must approve the sale President JFor.d has Youth Organization will spon-folklorioa group from Mexico pany. will appear at Austin before action is-taken. • • r fimclaimwRfip wpsVTv'attonal"1''; ror .a Me\icafrf8&~'lnnch"^^^'"fr~Cityr"'C&iyeg:::Betfas'--ATterPaul--iiigh.School jiiursday^ In ad-. • Hispanic Heritage Week, in the Union Patio concert Vele2.-local chairman ot La -UiUuii .Uie giuup. vvifcperfocnt . .recognition of contributions: The week's celebrations Raza Unida, said. at 4 p.m. Thursday and at by more than 10 million will climax with a three-dav , A formal message of "El* 11:30 a.m. Saturday, in--. Grito." the Mexican cry for Highland Mall. -independence, by. Ramsey --An art-exhibit featuring-Muniz. La Raza Unida can-, Mexican -American ^artists HPft Uxan"Staff Hwtoby David WooYou say we ain't got your goverijo'r. will didate-for will be held from 1 to 10 p;m: 4iflm • highlight the festival, Velez Sunday ,at 105 E. Third St. favorite. Ghawin7 tebaccy? said: Muniz is scheduled to Works by Mauro Pena, speak at It p.m. Sunday on the Carmen Lomas Garza and. Don't"get cranky J • festival grounds. : Carolina Flores willbe shown. Cover-Up • At that time, Muniz will, Also featured will be the dedicate the festival to Raul works of Steve. .Gamboa, a The University Salinas, a-poet and former and Binder Says Hospital Not Following Ruling Wk f photographer, Roland- Co-Op wants to resident of East Austin. Garces. Both are former ' By KEN McilAM had a-vacuum aspirator for ­Brackenridge performs 25 or anesthesiologist, then theknow your,,, Salinas spent.time in prison.:: •University students. ' Texan Staff Writer ever a year." Brown said the fewer abortions pier month. •• patient is moved. into a complaints"^' City Councilman Bob .aspirator; which can be used City Manager Dan Davidson : recovery ioom. These "ante and suggestions. Binder charged city officials for abortions during the first. declined; to comment on fairly expensive facilities." ^Austin NOW Increases Fnday with a "cover-up"' of-10 to 12 weeks of pregnancy, •Binder's statements until per­^In the first 10:'yreeksof Brackenridge Hospital's '.'is owned by a private physi* sonally; hearing:or receiving pregnancy an abortion.with a"-"'To. Over 6CLMemhers failure to" comply with a .cian and kept in Brackenridge them from Binder .but said, vacuum aspirator is -a' safe ''X •Supreme Cpurt-decision re-- """"•——— to ,deter --pr-ocedure-in-a physician's of-~ tobfi-maiiel iL " Mpmhership in Austin's chapter of NOW. National Organiza­quiring hospitals to treat by others.'.' ^boSTSfis'^t^rabR'e^ria^~,titn?>rprrpni-8!tf'Out-patient^7;. tion of Women, has.tripled in the last four months. Barbara abortions like any -other ''We shouldn't have to rely Hospital." ; . f hasi' Rrcihan-sa lri Duke, president of the local chapter, ^id Sunday. medical procedure. on a private doctor for equip­Problem pregnancy referral "Bt-ackenridge could do it on • The "Co-Op More, than 60 Austin women,, including many University Binder $nd Councilman Jeff ment. for the city-owned workers interviewed by The an out-patient basis.The ques­students. wiH be-attending the. group's meeting at the Austin Friedman are seeking;money hospital," Binder said. "I Texan agreed it was easy to tion W will they allocate the •Consumer Women's Center, 2316 San Gabriel St. The meetings are on the . for -abortion-related.-equip-• don't know of anything else get abortions performed in facilities for it. It's a rr^tter Action Line first and third Wednesday of each month at 7:45 p.m. ment and supplies for the city-they do that way. That's asub­' brackenridge for patients of priorities." ' • Activities include task forces on legislation, local lobbying to owned hospital in the 1974-75 terfuge — they're trying to whose incomes qualify them SOPHIE WEISS, whoims coordinate With national lobbies and reviewing textbooks for city budget. • walk the line. They tell for a cliniccard, which allowshandles problem pregnancy 478-4436 Monday thru Friday, 8:30 to 5:30 sex bias /ortheState Textbook Committee of the Texas Educa­The charges were made in proabortion people they have free medical care.;. referrals 'for People's.Clinic, tion Agency. .• response to hospital ad­equipment that can' be used However, they also agreed said "putting people through ministrator "William King , and tell people against abor­the process ot abortions at/ the' operating room is psy­ Brown's statement to: The tion they don't own any equip­Brackenridge is more.costly chologlcally punitive. There is. Texan that'-Brackenridge has ment. , • -and psychologically disruptive almost no precounseling, and UT . Brown declined to comment thftn it could be. ' the women haveio waittwo to; on Binder's charges until the^ The Rev. Bob Breihan of the three hours before^the opera-are channeled through thecity University Methodist Churcli. tion: v•'^ " • manager. who works with Problem ' "They have to watch people -"Maybe wearea littleslow, Pregnancy Counseling Agen-on stretcher's beingwheeled in but we are not holding up the cy, said "at Braekeriridge. ahd out," Weiss said, "and • process. I assure you;" Brown abortions areperformed in-an---have no psychological sup^fe saiot estiiuale-d «peFa44ng—r-oom—with—an^—pprt. #3£­ WR TELEPHONE COUNSELING 24 HOURS A DAY ^1 SI"?? ove has a 476-7073 ,h-J SHAPE,. own mm. Giving nature a hand with mmm. plants and things to grow v in your dorm your new : apartment or house But 9 mostly in your heart • Pi?' Because' love isso Individual,^ -Now two locationslor youf­ * -we think the cliamorid you. Hunting For That One Particular" *-Wk • ' growing needs - ' select should be in the shape David & Schraeaer international Garden Center s , ''that best expresses your love, lust ot! 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I '-Z.C2.* jt -: — From, Tel Aviv Carried 17 Americans ' -ATHENS (AP) -A TWA Boeing 707 jetliner .Qrasheci into the stormy Ionian ' Sea off Qreece ort Sunday, and Greek -aviation officials said-all 88 persons aboard were believed killed. Airline officials said 17 Americans in­cluding an infant, were aboard theplane. Italian police said two of the victims were Frederick Hare, anofficer of John­son & Johnson, and his wife Peggy of Raritan, N.J. A. Johnson & Johnson spokesman in: .New Jersey confirmed k that Hare is an exec^itive with the-com­ the Greek Civil Aviation Authority reported.its reseue pilots saw.''remnants of the wreckage and-bodies floating on , the surface" about 60' miles west of Kefallinia Island and ^5 tritfes west of Athens. -"Only when our ships can get nearer ­will we be able to finally confirm whether anyone has survived, but their chances are minute/''a spokesman for the authority said. • ­ The plane wentdown on the Athens-to-Rome legof Flight 841, originating inTel Aviv and continuing to New York and • Las Angeles, after an engine apparently failed. The Greek'Merchant Marine said the?, pilot of an Alitalia plane reported seeing' gin top"!v i rito the sea with one .epgihe on fire-at il:« a.m. local: time--4;42 a.m.;CDT—40.iflimites after?; the TWA jet left Athens. Trans Wofld Airlines officials-in Israels •'said--the Americans--were;-aaiortg 49a passengers boardingin TelAvivfor pome and the United States-Others aboard included 13 Japanese, four Italians, four French, three Indians, two Iranians, two Israelis, twoCeylonese, an " Australian and a Canadian. Tlie nationalities of 30 passengers who joined the fligh| in Athens and the nine crew members were not immediately • known. L , TWA headquarters in New Yqrk'ruled­rout sabotage,.despite; a claim from a . teleplione caller in Beirut that a Palesti-.man brganiaatioh Called the Nationalist; : "V'ii'N'HI I,.i Wl.'T'llVflM Uim-ut-•« which .speaks for .the -guerrilla .organizations; said the (fall waS a hoax, and emphatically denied that Arab' groups were involved in the disaster. » Rescue ships arid aircraft were dis-­patched by Greece, Italy and the U.S. Sixth Fleet, but a Greek;ciyil aviation'^; .spokesman said: "The stormy sea in thes&i areais making.1t difficult for ourships to approach." . The first ship to reach the crash site, the. Greek freighter Hellas, reported recovering seven bbdies from the sea. -, > Aviation officials ' said'-the ,-jeUinor— Wr^Vhrf^-appproHfjg'wTillp^TOingVn'Wl^t-o , sabotaged' the plane. J' "ieirut, the-. ;.;,an .emergency .landing ataUrigjr Palestinian news agency WAFA. military air base near Araxos, in reported that a spokesman for the ' -northwest Peloponnesus about ldb miles i'.;4 i; Palestine Liberation Organization, east of the crash site* •. Clash in Mozambique Acts -To Restore . By The Associated .Press small, desperate minority with no un­Portugal ordered its. forces Sunday to derstanding of .the evolutional history/ "restore pea^and-trahquiUty--w_tbe :-^nd,interested only In their personal "• Mozambiqu^ApitiSCof Lourenco Mar-,?*:•jgainVs — ". . " """ ; ques, where armed white rebels haver j taken over key points in a bid to stop the'ff t% Mobs of rebellious whiles and a few ..... ;jjro»wl^t-.b^^ef'-of-;1)dwer to a black,"' tsblacks were holding the radiostation, the ,, ffieffina^omltfaieff regime. . ~ -— ii^jrport.and-o{Jier.,Jte3tA.points _:ia.-the­| A communique fron^Pr-emler-Vasc© — Mozambique capital.' 1 dps Santos Goncalves resported that two " whites were killed and a black was wquhded ji^an incidentsomewhere in Mozambique." . • v-. Goncaives said a high-ranking army, officer flew to Lourenco Marques from.. army headquarters at Nampula, 1,000 : miles north of the capital, to negotiate with the rebellious white settlers. WASHJI^GTON.(UPI) Sen. William In an earlier communique,the premier Proxmire,' D-Wis., said Sunday. Pan said thearmed forces'have avoided using American Airways must either live or ..arms thus far because the rebels were die in the free market system. He urged., "using women, and children as the Civil Aeronautics Board to reject the • hostages'." .. • .r\? airlineV request. for a $10:2 million HE DESCRIBED tl^e rebels as "a monthly subsidy. ' news capsules Freed Hostage Praises Captors 7 GUADALAJARA, Mexico (UPI) — Jose Guadalupe Zuno Hernandez, •the 83-year-old father-in-law of Mexican President Luis Echevarria, criticized the government as"reactionary" Sunday and praised the leftist guerrillas who freed him a few hours earlierr ZUno also praised Cuban Premier Fidel Castroand the leftistTupamaro guerrillas of Uruguay while denouncing "Yankee imperialism" and the U.S. Central. Intelligence Agency"as:"capitalists who have no respect for anything'1 • Speaking at a news'conference at his home, Zuno said the government . of his son-in-law has,"let itself come under control of the reactionary forces of the world;" — ' Miss America Quotes Bible • ^ ATLANTIC. CITY, N.J.-(AP) — The new Miss America is a Bible-quoting teetotaler from Texas who saj-s "I love apple pie." Shirley Cothran,^2L_a]sosaid Sundayshe wasfor abortion and the Equal Rights Amendment, against marijuana and. undecided on amnesty tor draft evaders. . --­ She, said she had never tried marijuana and never would because, "I'm a •Christian. !'-believe myJiQdy. is a temple of God, and anything that, destroys my body is not gopd for me." : i .'• . " ' • She doesn'tdrink liquor. "I don't.like even the smellofit," she laughed On abortion, she initially said she favored it in rape cases,-or when "the life of the baby or mother is in danger." But when pressed she added, "I think any womaij should have the right to do what she well pleases with her body," including not letting "unwanted babies" into the-world. D.C. To Vote for Mayor 't- WASHINGTON CAP) ^For the first time in 104 years residents of the nation's capital'will vote for their own mayor Tuesday in the District of Columbia primary. • ; " The Democratic-nomination is considered tantamount to election since there are no mayoral candidates'on the Republican and Statehood Party ballots. ' r#,. Martha lambdsts Nixon ^ ' HQT SPRINGS (AP) — Martha Mitchell said Sunday she-was vehement and extremely bitter about' President Ford's pardon of former President Richard M Nixon. "I knew. Nixon had something up his sleeve when he left the White House," Mrs. Mitchell declared. "Nixon's just as guilty and responsible as anybody else, and it's a horrible, horrible thing. I don't feel sorry for him or his family, either, because they're too stupid to know what they're doing." Rv RtrHARn PI V By RICHARD FLY Texan Staff Writer University and Southern-Methodist University are:represen tative of -private schools in Texas, paranoia has'tiot set in­-, At least onevnational study projects enrollment in private in­!stitutions of higher education will peak in 1878 or 1979, followed by a gradual decline. •,. ­% • On the-other hand, a study done-for University President • Stephen Spurr.ljy. Dr.C.L. Embrey, assistant director;©!theOfr;" .. . flee of Institutional Studies, predicts that enrollment in Texas public universities will peak in. 1981. .The decline th&t follows^ will be softietjmes mild and sometimes severe. ' ^ \ THE MOSTSEVERE predicted drop would be from 598,011in • •'"1985 to 552,776 in 1986, 0/ approximately 43,200 students. .'-r. The national study cited'above corroborates Embrey's pro-' . 'j-'jectlDns on a national level. $ ua_ not getiing any.better^and it's goingto^et a lot worse,'.' »B>spmhrey^aid-er year fpra student taking15 i. RMti raicorf lU tiiliUn «inn i. SMU raised It? tuition $i00 per semester with a total cdsUf r^_iust under $4,000 ' Unofficial reports from Lourenco •led by former army Gen: Bernardo Marques said the leaders of' some \ * Mesquiteia, whowasdismissed by Presi­minority African groups oppbsed to the dent Antonio deSpinola for his supportof Atrican /"guerrilla movementFrelimo the previous authoritarian regime in have declared their backingfor thewhite •Portugal. , . : rebels, who. broadcast repeated -pledges Portugal's chief of staff, Gen. Fran-to keep Mozambique from..the.-black!s' -cisco da Costa^Gomes, ^aid-Portuguese troops in Mozambique were ordered to THE REPORTS said the revolt was restore law and order so ^that the -aprppmpjits rpaohprf •ifi''T'.n<;a|ka pan ht» carried out in full." * ' ON SATURDAY, Portugal and Frelimi signed a pact in Lusaka, 2tom­bia, handing over Mozambique^ to a guerrilla-dominated"governmentalmost at once, callingfor a cease-fire to'end 10 years of colonial war, and stipulating"The strength of the free enterprise Portugal will formally recognize the system iscompetition, the right to a fair , territory's independence -on June 25, profit, and the threat of failures' Prox-• 1975, after nearly five centuries of Por-* mire said in a letter to CAB Chairman . ' tuguese rule. . Robert D. Timm. "A bailout for Pan Am would mean that the country is-operating on a two- tier economic system — free enterprise for small companies and individuals and . socialism, for the. large companies," Proxmire said. On - "Tn Pnn' A m n rnhcirty| ^i.rfp^y • of the; American taxpayer, is a clear dis­tortion of the free enterprise system." > By DAVID HENDRICKS he added.• Texan Staff Writer ..... LAKEWAY • —. To. open the • 1974• Proxmire said that if thfe CAB ap-} Southern Governors Conference, host "proveaUie iiubsidyrnt^Woald^gally-tfifld-^­ "Govs. Doiph'Brl^eoe of Tmas^nd-Mr-lvin the government to a subsidy payment, i Evans of the -Virgin Islands said energy and the entire case could end up in court .and economic problems, will attract the if Congress refused to provide-the •' :most attention during the three-day con-' : money. -• ,•• •-, ­ ference. • . . -.r; . "If Pan Am is,forced to depend upon""' Evans.discussed the inflation.problem commercial lines of credit, thp market ^ at a Sunday press conference. He said .place itfltl demand its Uwh performance Uie nationaf government might consider ...exact i^ own price, and that is how it .creating more federal jobs toivelp solve should be." Proxmire said. 'h •ithe current Unemployment situation. ; ; "If that price shouldAe bankruptcy. it'T. -should be accepted. Other airlines will , quickly,take over profitable routes,:; he •said ' J , WASHINGTON (AP) -Congress will • 'be back;in-full session this week, for the'; first time since Aug. 22. but with little apparent chance of finishing its work before the November election-" -• Some partisan skirmishing has begun " over, the prospect of & postelection "lame duck"-seSsion -Democrats are'" pressuring President Fo'rd to come up'.?.'-" with recommendations to fight the com-T-i bination of inflation and economic' sluggishness this year. Some ^'Repub.licantT'ilfcIuding House -Minority Leader Jofin j. Rhodes of Arizona,',say. a late session is un-=. -.. - necessary. They say Ford should con-"" ' sider the recommendations being gathered at a series of^meetings on the ' economy and present well-thought -out proposals to the new Congress,in January. . Both chambers, meanwhile, have^­scheduled legislation of less than top priority for this week. The -Senate, which ended -its recess ; Sept, 4^ is working on an extensive bill to "But-that runs counter to the promise' of less federal spending:7' Evans1 said: "that "is the dilemma. What is good for revamp the wou]d aggravate the drain of iunds from len­ding -institutions that finance home mortgages. " The House alsois to takeup legislation for extensive reorganization of the 5tudies Predict National College -> UP! felephoto.'. Lube Job Each morning, Chicagoan Albert Peters (I), who will be 103 on Oct; 17 leads'^; LS«'?.iL93"ye°7<,ld ^r0,her Paul -OO'-a .stroll. "If you put that iron on-the^ shelt, Albert said, "it gets rough, deteriorated: You have tg lubricate it." Talks To .Focus Inflation, Energy inflation may not begQod for t-he employ­ment situation." . Briscoe, fielding questions about the Aug. 3 Huntsville prison escape attempt invp^ti^atinn stressed that, "all the facts "will be. made known : He said it had been his.intention -all along to'conduct an investigation and the reason he waited more.than three weeks to approve a court, of inquiry into; the. matter was to make sure it did'not in­terfere ; with the -.Walker CoUnty grand jury deliberations. Briscoe added that he will .work with Atty. Gen. JoHn Hil! to name the district .judge who-willhold the court of inquiry. Of the upcoming state -Democratic ">s:i -t V- „ : railroadretirement system. ' "A major-task-for-both chambers ig ac­tion on the ^no'minatibn of' Nelson A: Rockefeller to be Vice-President. The. Senate Rules Committee h.as set a meeting Wednesday, to detennine' its. procedure.-, ; ..The House -Judiciary Committee.­ • which has jurisdiction over the nomina­tion for its chamber, may also discuss plans. A committee source said it has i been advised investigative reports on the! nominee's financial ^nd. other affairs, will hot be completed for, one month. ' Hearings, ordinarily, do not' begin'until su^h reports are in hand. House' Majority Leader Thomas P • O'Neill Jr.. D-Mass.. has said it will be impossible to complete, action on the Rockefeller nomination' this year.-; Without"a post election session -—.Democratic leaders plan to recess Congress aboift Oct. 15 to give members time to. campaign before the Nov. Selec­ day afternoon for the governors. Golfing tion and to reconvene after the election -facilities also are available. A state for a clean-up session. dinner'is scheduled Tuesday night ­ convention, Briscoe said tie expects a "fair,aud-open convention" with resolu­tion of irttraparty disagreements $pch as ' the, question of disputed delegatrons fieginning at 9 a.m. Monday, Briscoe • ^vtllTJreside-overdiscussions-ameng-16— otbef visiting governors on power-and energy policies. ' • i' : : Other governors expected to be active; in tlie discussion include-Govs. Edwin Edwards-of Louisiana, Arclt Moore, of ' West Virginia, Dale Bumpers of Arkan-; sas, .Timmv Carter of Georgia and . ,tymiam Waller of Mississippi. U.S. Sen. Lloyd Bej5tsen, .D-Tex., also . is expected td talk about energy glides Monday morning, Briscoe said. Bentsen is scheduled to hold a press conference at 1.1 a;m.-Monday, at Lakeway-Inn. site __of the governors conference.' Education, tonseryation and economy* will highlight discussions scheduled Tuesday morning. Gov. George Wallace _or Alabama', Who arrived. Sunday after-, nolMiTwilltallf Tuesday-ontheupeoming-— U.S.-.Bicentennial.' ; For-Wednesday, . law enforcentent, ­employment and rural area development policies .are scheduled-for .discussion. The conference will adjourn Wednesday afternoon. ' According to the fules of the Southern Governor's-Conference, its function "shall beto providea medium.for theex-\ change of views and experience on" sub­jects ofgeneralimportancetothepeopleof ; southern-states, to foster lnterstate cooperatioh-and regional development; to attain greater efficiency ..in state -ad­ministration; and tofacilitate and improve state./loc.al and state/federal relationships." " • Representing the White House-at the •• .conference wjl) be Kenneth-Cole.; a domestic adviser t6 President Ford. Democratic Party1 National Chairman Robert Strauss will speak with-the Democratic governors at1p.m. Monday. : Organized tennis matches-areset Mon­ ~ . — . ... •Baylo'fhaslnaTntaftied-afttrly stable rate of $2,500 per year. 1974, ^statistician Herijiian Holland said "we may not get that Edwin Hi Cooper, dean of admissions and records, attributed THP fYlST ftf nrivntp in Tavoe fhn nrlmiMiAno nf. j high." i '• ' • part of the rise to an increase in on-campus housing and the in-" Bill .Brown of ad-formal recruiting efforts of students. . transfer pool ever. . . Over-AFTER INCREASING by 15,000 students between 1964 and . 'gSmg-to-be-ufh" " 7" "-" -;•• •••. .1970. Texas has hovered around 40.000 to"41.000: j"" ••. of SMU said.' SMU has been fortunate not to have mushreiiming increases;7 *yr~-University-admissions.officials, are not expectihg the fall-'But-while many private schools across Ihe nation — par-­he added, so enrollment has stayed fairlystatile. enrollment to.differ.markedly from the previous year ---40.611 ticularly the smaller ones — are attracting fewer studentsas a -Brown echoed the other admissions officers when he said students. -• -•' .» • • result of exorUtant costs, the three Texas schools questioned there is concern at-his school about declining enrollment and rd' "In U\e recent past we have,bad k>rt of a gradual increase/' are maintaining a stable enrollment the economic climate. " L ' ^' Douglas McConkey. assistant director of admissions, saidBaylor enrolled 8.300 students in the. fall of 1973 and has "•I wouldn't say there's paranoia, but concern." The University has not decided to limit enrollment; all ^dropped the-projected 1974 figureslo 8,100. However, the ideal THE-PICTURE is not rosy for public universities,.either. ..^qualified students are being accepted. capacity of the university is 8,000 students .A few years ago Southern Illinois • University suffered a "It -wouldn't be much of a problem to maintain in the future , Ipcreases,lh incoming freshman and a gdod rate of student sudden drop in enrollment of 15 perfcent. or 3,00a-to 4 000 " 'an enrollment of'40 or 41.000." Embrej' said retention has.maintained Baylor's enrollment;said Larry West, students. One result:of. the reduction was the' termination of Texas Tech officials are predicting a 1974 enrollmenr of 21-.­ an admission official; "•' • " , almost .10Q faculty; members, And although it is unlikely other an inQreaseLof "only 240 students over last year 'Nationally, (declineI wpuld be the trend. We've beetMor^^ypublic institutionswill encounter such a p?ecipitousdecline the "We've been level here for,, ^bQut; four or five years." i L tunate to be one of the exceptions," he said. " possibility still hangs m the air. registrar D.N. Peterson said '•f'f?v'-' • •»• * 'Vi-W • J"A v TCU had anenrollmeht of 6,405 in fall, l973, but hasslipped toi^a The University and Texas Tech have'maintained a-•fairly iM . ''WE!VE BEEN • looking-at -the possibility '.of a decrease in —6,050 in 1974, a 4 percent decline. , . Instable enrollment fot the last few yeirs. The other state univer­ ^enrollment." he said, "but we have not encountered one vet iS*increase in tuitl0n- TexM/^M. has led t»th the stateand the nation in enroll- L-_ _ il , .. • Sa^M^udent popu^Uon ^se ^" • Llke;^e_Ilwv^ity; .Texas. %ech is becoming cramp^, enrollment to level off at the present flgur. ^ya'cfllti^^1--.fdc--M;(lob.-stidient8; "Ms-sl^uld^'miQ'pi^tei^ „ . . .. . , by 4.309 sludent5, twice~as-large an increase as second place r:--We expect no further significant decline," Cumby said 7rt Southwest Texas State University L—­ _ —^.alleviatedAvithin 12 to 18 months;"because of construction oro­ ,Jects t We are cqmmitt^ tp hojdingtuition as tow aswe can for a^S (In 1973. the university enroUed 18.520 students The current P^erson said 0 q wee!tPftled * i,1 -v A&M officiallyopened its doors to women in1969 and. largelv pgt^bave waiting lists of students trving to get info dormitories aml^'contributing to the increased enrollmliit. a'ppf<5Slnmely^^OO^j^reclV'a-resuM-&f-(ht>-soarHi^PaiLntJi[Lo!.mp..c H.vi.||jnp of' i tlie university Is'lo *< ^ /,Z „** \ s ' f ^ -< ' tM . 'J©%lHi ~J-^C>f V *,q& UM v,«iie*-V«£s,e Stt® sSS? EDITORIALS a "j ••/. "~' Page-4 Monday, September 9, 1974 n. GOOD # ^i-ik ^fsSfc «r»sJSh The Snake River shuck; the San CIemente sting 'Evel Knlevel an^ichanrwixuii -csrtw-tiFTS!1 rWIW-fflPs£B3ti^-ableJjitfsefcMProsideniJEQixKs— sofFlandings Sunday, and the public got taken in career has been his devotion to the"RepublicanBut at least.Knievel's both cases. fans y/ere . Party. He has been strictly a team player, at- taken by their own choice. \\ ^fotaching his name to no outstanding.-legislation • r/j» . and finding his way into the^ news very/seldom.President Ford has; we believe. put the im? Thiswas fine when hewanted to be a wheel in the 4 k, terests of the Republican Party above those of­~ GOP, but it will not do in the White House. i > &/%* the copntry by pardoning Richard Nixon in ad­ vance,.before all the Watergate facts.can be air­ Ford's,action was;-he said/ based on-compass ed-by a publi? trial. We do not qpi>ose the pardon sion. But.he could've ended the uncertainty by itself. On the contrary, we are prepared to en­ simply assuring, Nixon privately that a pardon dorse a pardon for convicted criminal Richard j _ Would. follow if the former President should be Nixon that should be unthinkable for accused convicted. Gratitude seems a -more likelycitizenJRichard Nixon. r/-•?­ "•••;. motivation.: Ford wasable to even accounts with ",the"man who made him President and getIf Nixon has been unfairly treated, he could ^Watergate hushed a few decibels before_Uje_prove it in open, court ff. he is innocent, he November elections inrone fell swoop. In doing deserves to be vindicated by having the charges .. .so, he has squandered much of the goodwill of his . publicly proved false. It he is guilty, then we and MACHIA/E npffice and weakened his consensus. \­ IhB^ongressTieed-to-khow-exacHy-what-happen— mctrs 'mom SR^SOfc' (.ed so we can take steps to see it doesn't happen ' This country nee3T¥"Tuinaisclgsmfc of Ute^ HEALTH{ again. Moreover, if euf history books horiestly ' Watergate criihes and a solid campaign reform reflect a Warren G. Harding in the White House package from Congress. The Republican Party every few decades, then perhaps this ever- needs Watergate^relegated to the back pages and present possibility of corruption will remove the acpess large con­ continued to corporate divine aura of the presidency that makes bar­ tributions. We know what interests Ford has barisms'like the Christmas bombing A younger agecalied Aiiicriucj the N&w "running away an*iearning4hefe4s-R6-es that .the roots of Arln Ann hAliava/l »# Uioeikn knnA nfiltA 1-k * • ,:.i' • I • • World and believed it was the hope of the cape. Poets must eat;and farmers pay ^js . ecological problems world — a:fresh beginning where people taxes. But if we gain understanding of• -lie' in the failings of ; could build anoble society. On this conti-* 0 our system we can begin to convert it to''. • economic . systems. nent the equality of men was declared . what we Want. If-President Ford were Our economic^ self'evident,:and the standard of political serious aboutstrengthening Our economy S/iSystem directs .the equality for all was raised as a goal • he would see -that the task of retooling •-course of VfhicR,.. In historical-perspective.-has our industiy to eliminate waste would . £'»' technological ''>'• <,.• : been all but attained. But political provide jobs for the jobless. But morechange, and indeed, the shape of:-our 0 equality is not.equality. -_ . important, it would provide a legacy for|J£worM. % -This. vast continent seemed endless. our children. . i/OXi.ii\ In the Big—•() -Thicket, hundreds of acres Gargantuan, wa'ste. the —" MUIIWVVU ui. nuco aided .by ln­ trnagin6 if every house we built wereof beautiful hardwoods arefelled and left > dustrial Revolution^ became"fashk>nable strong-and spacious and comfortable, • . on theground to rotto make roomfor the —,„,„6 . •in... —the building of" empires. The governeuv«»­..and jf WeJiever destroyed one which was ;• :v;.-v • fesfePgrowing and more lucrative-pines. —Tnenteagerly rid itsetfi^blie-domaWr still iKpfni Snnn ? if we succeed in.C.> slj workmen, not craftsmen, build houses giving, for example; millions ofacres to stabilizing our population, we:could1 stop^ poor and unseasoned lumber to' railroad companies to encourage them to ' tjuilding houses, except to replace those ­•"Save time -and money, and to shelter carry .out their business function — to • which-finally wore out. That portion of' growing hordes. Old houses from astur——build railroads The Homestead Act, society's work would be done. We coulds.i-r dier more erarefiil -atrp arp torn -nacuvipassed riurimrduring the iLincoln-administra ';i{; dier. and graceful age are tnrn »Ka turn our minds to Other tasks and deeper ~ ;fdown to make way for inferior products tion, put land in the hands Qf; the people", questions. And down that path lies the '? ^ . Of a burgeoning construction industrjr: reviving Jefferson's dream of' an noble society that is the hope of America MsS 1^7 ^jWhich pays the workers,who buy thefood ; agrarian society.. But economic up­ and the world. — . 'Now, if you gentlemen will please look the other way, I'm going to strip!' i |Mthat is fouled by the canners who cheat. heavals in the latter part of the 19th Cen­ \ gj.'the fanner who lived on the land that • tury began to concentrate land £/||taxes took. " ownership. And during the Great Depres­ . lino Wffiii; The word is waste. Not only,.arer; sion of the1930s farmers wereforced'off m JBfe ^Jgidwindling -resources being wasted:\ "lheir farms by taxes, only to see large' m ^pHuman effort is being wasted, and the corporations pick up landxheaplyat auc­ igppleasure in life. We must live jn these tion, If our present economic troubles FlyJarvae floating in tKe,coffee shoddy new houses7 and work' in' or at dump us into-$rdepression, the-goliath |^-£jJeast endure the sight of office toWers corporations:will again be.strengthened To the editor: ( ... . . .: ..pg|pffenngs and not from Salvation. of a rock concert: peace, love, dope and ^erected at the..command of-men whose at the expense, of their smaller com­Regarding the article "Vending Per-sf^sandwiches -t.'i checking out pvery.article submitted by , all that crap — but nothingZ ZTop could rhain qualification for making the deci­petitors. mits Needed'' in the-Thursday! Sept. 5 ''c!v; our Rublic, l.n:thjscase, we have po morcf '• ,Jjaari Bixby Dunham do was worth/that kind of money. sion is a strong drive for.money-and' Texan • James Colvin says that vending reason to believe Goodman than we dtf'^ ' Even "today -the great bulk of Susie Y. Thorn power..And we mustspendour timeslap-pe,rmits will now be'enfbrced because Eveiyone that wasn't dying of hunger you. It Is one of the hazards of printing America's resources are in the hands of • Wallace T. Fowler­..or dehydrating-might well have enjoyed 8 ping togetherapartments which weknow large corporations. These corporations profits go-to thf Ex-Students' Associav fj-^'Giiest Viewpoints." • I;'," Jane Marie Sheppard the concert's atmcsghere-of brotherhood S "twill begin to fall down in a few years,or spread around the. globe like cancers^ in-tion v and '.'because we gre concerned Winifred Conlon • 1-tl; As far as the article goes, we found it \ • » "^ about students' health." • and ^ and games. It was fun city. . to be an interesting look at anint^stln^ ' eveiyone Everyorie was professor. We did not view the reference If Colvin were really concerned about ZZ Top again stoned, was ­ care-free and everyone got ripped-off — health, he would not force people to sub­to Frank Erwin's son to be critical. It THE DAILY JTEXAN To the editor: no matter how good the music,:1t's time sidize ptomaine ' Niwipc^vr a*Jilt Uelvnitj V«juit «f A»«H* tfioge-over-priced; r 7 might be a depressing fact of life to youf iii;.. i -iI can'tean 1 helpneip butDm feelieei that theuiat ine lZ ZA Toplor people started,demanding their money's but famous sons and daughters do make " whl nff/ 'n?chm®s-As-a persoIl.'1;r',concert was an Over-rated bull fight EDITOR.! -i.'i.......Ai.i.V.;. worth. Not even popular musicians are newsworthy items. If -this wasn't the MANAGING EDITOR ......."../....Buck Harvey tranerifrtaf n t„ li » 3 0^-'-:First they herded us into Memorial above our capitalistic enterprise of tak­'case, would we have ever heard of David dece"t .v...-.J..:,, Sylvia Moreno InHk^ThJ1 ,.,eaTgt,P ? Stadium like cattle at|fi a head We, the ing more than their share. , Elsenhower?) <:r-„ -• ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS.13 l|' Lynne Brock . . Alex L Durand ills j j' Larry Smith R 243 Roberts Skunk yammering Mai,..controlled No nutador (mtes he,s a grotonrf KEWS EDITOR ; vomlmgf.- ... Martha JP McQuade •-.To the editor: , J-- SfUNICIPAL EDITOR. ...............Ken McHam -Iam also "health" conscious,and that^.;g&0,^bi Frank the Third , / J The letter from Jore Luis Cerveraf," UNIVERSHXEDITOR Richard Fly Flring Line, 9-4*74, portrays just the sort To the editor: 'lalUr^icM^^ IS SPORTS EDITOR -Of, emp.tyjheaded,-.idealistic-yammering f .....Herb Holland In response to the "Guest Viewpoint"" AMUSEMENTS EDITOR':.„I ;-v has never used the machines or hewouldClSnce t the h, l? w„ which so often plagues legitimate con;« .......Paul Beutel in your paper on-Friday.by Mr. Good-­ FEATURES EDITOR: * I such an servatlon efforts. This approach ttsiv ^ " Scott Taglianno "Erwin^s^scm^Sffii^lils'^TjreferenceKOf' General Reporters... J)f thing. David Hendricks, Susie Stpler professors in a given subject-It was his News Assistants .1.,^..-.v.....Patti Kilday. Barbara" Williams, Julie'Ann Booty. . • T ' >11-" r ly with the closing of the Union and the ' son's decision to change to Dr. Grtibbs' Joret your soft-shelled, softer-headed' , , ; Barry Boesch, Steve Olafson. .on stage, he performed his best number .stampede,ofStudents toall food sources. economies class, not his father's. If yoy '.defense of wild skunks running loose in _ .... --Rosalind Young. Susan Lindee, Mike Ullman of the day:-he walked off. care to check, Frank III was*signed up " your neighborhood overlooks the'VitalRebecca Haire Editorial Assistants..,.. ... _I)anny.J^obbins, Steve Russell *•'-J" --v -The bull was getting anxious. Some of 5 ' : " 151i W. Koenig Lane _ for Pr. Knapp's Eco.302class on MWF,1 issue of rabies. The TexasPublic HealtjjAssociate Amusement5 EditorC.A.Richardson the people had taken LSD, some were think you would be also surprised to'find . Department's Rabies Surveillance 5Kra-?d,toc""^ v-^r..-.LaurelLaurentz Shocked, disturbed drunks a great number wererstoned on that Cliffton Grubbs and Frank Erwin Report for 1973 confirmed 271 cases of r«nt J...:.;..., Nick A. Cuccia pot and virtually everyone was starving Jr. are not mortal enemies. " .rabies. Of those, 140 cases occurred inX.*-i Copy Editors.^,>.«„I.„u.n,.iJlTO--.ia.-?f^pavid Rose, Laura Miller. Mark Meyer, To the.editor.: to death. This •; w "' . , . .. t , •• .^v... w oeatn, inis made for one massed up Unfortunately, I find TheTefcrt) prints Vskunks. That constitutes 51.7 percent?""' Photographers5,.,v;TJi/a.'U. aa William*F Zeis, Lissa Bengtson -^r.rcretSh°cMan?d,Isut.urbeJd read^ bull, already walking dizzily as Jiis in this article.not only half-truths but in= V,.Jore. And .the unfortunate way mostof ­ • Andy Sieverman, David Woo that theSalvation sandwich vendorsmay-' •?'< stomach began to eat itself correct facts as well. If I read thisstory ,;;these cases-were discovered, you^mlle* f '^e;(fwye^ °5.nra,pu^ '"Vendors_Eer-Before .darkness had fallen, Carlos and know that things are wrong, what •; i and ask? People were bitten. Children*:'Ilm' 831,131,3 ?2ositive, W0H llHe to ^ see"^-^ head hling low awaitiqg t^ie kill by Z Z wish to support'it, but when you drag a—prdof-that Jiey ai;e taking fundst!'"1 Top. A short wait was not enough. The r Pflfilotip #MatniAM fa to* student even though he is Frank'Erwin^s «;^th Pa%uf ireatmentrPaln!' Shofa'Tn.TtelMty T«un,a limjenl MvrsjwperAt The IJnlmilty trom theEx-Students' .Assqciatlon;?gjrcrowd waited well over an hour, and at: !f .?"• " h pcibUilieol by Texak S(oi(em son ipto such bull -weli I'll have to tWlaltoa Drawtf 1>,; i>ni»fjtiy.$tjiioii. AtBuk Tci New,Vorir. ^Y„10bl7; ' .• • f^noPiKr?fIan,'K V rl c. , 'fc|last. beffire thebulldropped pf exposure.­ ; OT», Tb» D»l|y Ttan a PoWiihed HWnday. Tiiadar •_ ... * 1tr"e that those buying{font Salva-jfe f z Z Top began to romp and stomp. After f"r,ia', September Urnm# rfetsSwrifcf.Tbe May. 1 TMsdajf. WedMxliy. nuntoj. .WWW* ]kMDVr AVMTWtainiMJiAvsf OFFICE SMCMttt J rWUfKH |M|:{\|MCUWttlOlV CMtMMlC &OHP. 5u»5