.1-V * > r ; ' Student Newspaper at tye University of Texas at Austin 1 ;VoJ. 74, No. 51 . Please Recycle This,Newspaper --Austin, Texas', Tuesday, September IJO, 1974 Ten Cents - Sixteen Pag'es 471-4591 Nixon Plans To Quit Bar Criticize Pardon w SACKAM^NTQ, Calii. (UPU-nnri pnsiihln rtirh-irmnni, Ttir Pro«Hpnt L. Watergate should be shut." procee^fngsTTad been-eyptscted4o-begin­ .'" Former President• Nucon will*, resign Sett) M. .Hufstedieik said:--; --^'HJi.,ANNOlJ^^CEMENTca^M;"^tgw^:=• from theCalifornia State B&r; ending.his _ NIXONBEGAN his practice in 1939 in hours after Atty. Gen.SvelleJ. Younger " ASKED IF the-resignation, would halt .. 35-year carefer in the-state as a licensed . a small oE[itx\in';LSriiBrarreceivfng his • said Nixon still could face disbarment thej.-investigation and-disbar ment, attorney,, life personal lawyer disclosed first fee $5 —. for collecting a debt. for Watergate.related crimes in Califpr.- proceeding's,•'Hufstedler replied. • Monday. _ . Ap attorney must be a member "of the *• nia in spite pf his pardon from President "Resignation accomplishes , that: very A letter'"explaining NixOh's planned • bar to practice, in California.-..' Ford. :••• ... ' satisfactorily." ' . ' , resignation was.submitted. to the.bar.Isi At a ' -The resignation' ultimately be Mojiday-nrght-meeting, the • In LosAngelgs, Younger'sDemocratic • must presidtiftt by • Nixon* attomey Pean -Sr­ accepted by; the State Supreme'.Court —Califoxnja,barvoted approval; 347-169, of opponent,-Wiiliam Noras,'/safd in a news : i,1" (Related Slory, Page 3.) upon recommendation-by""Hie bar? a resolution saying Ford's•par^oomgof €OnferencEr he waseaUingiipon You6ger .. Hufstedler-sajd.-.•• . ; jf., Nixon "violates the principle that all to lmpanela special grand jury to in­ W/ Butler. It explain^ that. Nixon will.be '"engaged in. matters: other than the persons stand equal before the law." It vestigate, alleged-state crimes • com-' The message that Nixon planned to law" u also said the decision presented "a sub-mitted'.by_Nixon. Ndrris rfead off a string resign came to Butler through Nixon ——~~BuHer-said'a:simi!a^^esignation:woI!](^, , stantial threat that the confidenceof our * of offenses he-said could be.considered, _ aide Ron Ziegler. „ , be submitted to the New York bar, to r6itiZiens -in 'the -American system_ujf_ —lncludiagJ burglary,-conspiracy, extor-* -Meanwhile, Nixon, who conceded • ^which" Nixdn:;alsorbglongsr "u'~^" -• -• • mstlce -wlti he underrruned," tion, lllegalwire tapping'and-conspiracy "mistakes an$ misjudgements" regar­jto obstruct-justice.• „ The find the voTe came aTfer'Bfearfy. oile and a ding the-Watergate affair, relaxed Mon- Robert Strauss Lloyd Bentsen "investigation -into -possible• hfllf'hptfrs'Cf'ribwdietaie^dtfring-which^ -^The»baphas-beaajfl3iestigatin"e.ISTixoD's day in Pal'm Desert. Calif.. at the plush criminal acts by Nixon vvhich-migbt have opponent? argued that the decision had ^!eser!,~?§rd're,^of=>an--»Jd^fi6ad-._and participation in the Watergate scandal . led to. formal-disciplinary proceedings been made and that "the door of for more than a year, and disciplinary • political contributor. "V ­ . . •-..r.:r.V; ' •• " , • -. .. ..-Xv:''.'. -.i-i. .. . i ... .... f • " =Jr~­ By KEN McHAAl . .. attorney: abput it; But I see n6 problem-an induced;abortion.;"As best can be also that "more and more carefully ' Texan'Staff Writer',. unless the city attoroey-'h'as gpt'a legal ascertained,,,this is-the otily surgical -developed counseling .and support be A private physician's donation' of.a •«ne..on.accepting• the-gif t." prpcedureTn .the hospital similarly cur- V: provided by-the social' Work staff of vacuum aspirator to the City of Austin -Butler.'-saiiftHi — tailed," the report said. , • M>:i Brackenridge Hospital." 0. Monday may solve City Council's budget .any previous decisions of the city regar-• All.induced abortionsare required to Community Council Director Larry dispute Over; abortion equipment tor : staf£.recommended-• "In summary,'the restriction m-. ' "! -.' Texan Staff Writer , -. plete confidence in (special prosecutor-}-ed. : LAKEWAY — Southern'Democratic " Leon Jaworski.' ' ^ • County stated "Brackenridge" Hospital, ;the purchase. .j, dicated above do indeed complicate the ! It is not a popular decision," he saidleaders "expressed disappointment andand the city authorities have not formal-.. .• The city and hospital have refused tdsfc% procedure and put an undue burden on • Chairman of 1974'Democratic cam-grimly. • / * ' disapproval Monday of President Ford's ly accepted a donation. of. suitabl'e purchase thenecessary disposableequip-"'"7" jhose physicians who perform this ser­paigns. Carter said Nixon's resignation controversial decision:to pardon RicMrd ' "BY medical equipment how-being used-by ment (approximately $8 per termina-vice in the operating room. From the DISAGREEIiVG with the M." Nixon "would benefit Republican candiaces Uncbnditionally for any » President's position. Americans are be-, physicians there forclinic-ogrd patients tion) required by a physician to perform " patient's point of. view our-concern is politically, but he'felt; the pardon would for induced abortions.'" . • : Watergate involvement: • • :,r ing ifiade to,feel uiifair,-uncharitable'and . Comments-Sunday, were cautiously,^ have an adverse effect. "They cancel THE DOCTOR, who wished to remain j( uncompassionate. I dpn'.t think apyone • given , as gpvernprs 'one another" out;" he observed.-m unidentified, told The Texan the equip­ gt .the Southern i wanted-to-see a former Presicfent in jail, ment he wishesto donate now is in use at Govenors Conference adopted a "wait "I DO fi'OT support what the Presi­' but;this. (the pardon) leaves a lot of un­ UT Professors Ask and see" attitude before taking a stahd' answered,questions." " , .­p on the issue£ •. SJ:"'•? Brackenridge. "1 regard my rple not as dent did. I would, not haVe done., it owner, but as transient trustee toconvey myself-" ' '.t'j'j Few governors at the predominantlyr ? Noncommittal press-statements and.-' -' f 4'Jj&r this to the" City of Austin," he wrote Democratic conference feit the decision' 0 '.'no romments' ' were-replaced Monday . Although Gov. Dolph Briscoe, D-Tex , Davidson. . would affect future political campaigns.The doctor said he.bought the equip-^ with stinging:criticism for Ford from top Withheld comment Sunday, saying he did Democratic leadersseriously under con-; not understand the legal implications, of • "WATERGATE IS BE.HIND us," for Wages ment after receiving a^donation of $2,000 ; ; By RICHARD FLY ; -.low morale caused by grossly inadequate sideratioh 'for the 1976 presidential.; the move; Monday'he said the decision •-VVallace declared. "I think-the economy ; for that purpose froma citizen.who-wish- Texan Staff Writer "salaries," he-added: nomination. was made "in the best interest of the 'is of more_.c5ncgrn to the average : ed to. remain'anonyinous., He said he GALVESTON — Twoj University . . U.S. Sen. Llpyd Bentsen, D-Tex.', country." American citizen ;;, unemployment, the .jj received the donation after a request for . TO HELP PROVIDE more money ' purchase of a Vacuum aspirator by the. - professors, citing lowynorale and ..for faculty salaries, the University criticized Ford fpr interfering with ner-the "an .unusual : stahdard of living... if the President can ' Calling move among obstetrics-and gynecology section -of : -widespread discontent faculty! . presently has a policy of filling full mal judicial procedures, a^questioned : procedure ...-which raises many solve these problems he'll be.in good i "grossly inadequate 'salaries," , ' : Brackenridge.endorsed by the hospita1's over r professorial vacancies "with assistant . "how histpry will recerd tliis."" question^" Briscoe pointed out Ford' shape in 1976." • "• recommended to members of-"the-professors and promoting from within .,:..The American people will not get the Medical Executive Committee, was • Legislative Budget Board and the goveri-: made the decision'on the basis on inform •Bentsen-echoed the governpr's sen­ denied by Davidson because of a ?hor- ; the' University. Spurr told, the board this' full Watergate story because full available to general ecphdmy • nor's budget staff Monday that improve;-. mation not the timents,: saying preblems tage of budgeted funds. ; provides from lVfe to 2 percent increases development of factsthrough the judicial" public." -• affected "the-stpek: market, the super­ment. of faculty salaries, have-the top-, "Following your denial of purchase," each year "if meticulously followed." System is missing, Bentsen said. . and-eventually, political 'priority in the Legislature this spring; 1 GOV. -DALE BUMPERS, D-Ark., said market the he wrote Davidson, the "Medical" Ex­ . Hill presented s.tallstics which show "I'M PARTICULARLY concerned .market." •*. -: ••'r-. ecutive Committee re-endorsed the re­ . PRIOR TO-(he presentation by Dr; • * tlie actual purchasing power of Universi­-With the timing-in this type'of sjtua'tion-. the pardorb"will have a serious eroding • Forest Hill, professor of economics, and effect on'the-judicial system, not just the -. A disappointed Strauss ,said , he;., had : quest, adding that if a gift of suitable. ty faculty members has decreased 21.15 , Fprd appiears te .have prejudged, the: ... .ju -i, -j ,t • ,.. >Br.-I)avidGdVehda; professor o{-phvsics:>- evidence.and allegatipns.'-' people fnvolved in Watergate. Every pet­hoped the Ford era would be the "com- percent -since fiscal, year 1967-68,-. equipment ^uld be.obUined, the City of and education, University "officials although Average have :risen ^ Observing that "the;.honeymoon is • ty crook for years to-come will be ing into a: new dawn, but instead I find AustinAii^fin shouldshn„irf acceptarp#»nt fthishfc gift '...^sented thpir budget request^ for salaries . m DAVIDSON WAS unavailable Moriday • allilpst $5,600. • . : / ' shortened," Bentsen questioned how the affected." this White House returning back into the v , /lscdl.y?« "WE FEAR that tile ^nijlions of National Democratic Chairman RobertThe formal budget request was for -^dollar? pf tax; money used to establish Strauss of Dallas said the pardon was "a $500,000. • -­ •••^this strong academic institution will big dpwnslide^tSr'Ford. "I deplere it." "V^haye been for naught if it is npw allowed "I'F FUNDED, (the .scholarship "I wouldn't say he cut his throat, but • JV^to atrophy tlirough loss of-oustahdlng programl wpuld be-quickly swallowed up . he slashed a bit of his political wrist." ' ' v-vfaculty,'"' Gavehda told the state budget-on a need basis," Spurr said. / -­ . AlUipiigh Strauss said he had no basis-SAN "ANTONIO (UPI). -A prison Domirtguez.< —officials. * , "If we are to.bring in as many Ipwer victs' shield brought down to believe-a "deal*' 'between Ford and "So far we have lost only a-fewof our"* ' income students-nextyear as wedid this chaplain held hostage by rebel inmates-He was beneath me. 1 lay across,him. I ­ Nixon was prearrgnged. he quickly add- at the Texas penitentiary-says officers felt Dominguez'-arm TOoving' as-if to "top-educators.;" he added,"but tlie situa­ year < 188Vw.e will need$500,000,"Tie add­ ' ed the possibility should be questioned ed shot prisoners Fred GonieJ: Carrascoand mg his pistol muzzle against my body. ? tion hasjreached the critical, stage with and investigated The ynivers'Ay""System Boards of R-odolfo Docninguez at close range, 'I rolled away from him. I.saw. an of­ the rapidly rising qost of living.''­ Regents approprfat^d -$400,000 for , GOV. GEORGE WALLACE, D-Ala , • rather than frim 20 feet away as tie first^ ficer in body armor approaching anidi CAVENDA AND HILL, both represent icpeated his earlier-statement that "it is: tatives of the'Atistincfrapt^pQR^e^s'^-mtTO.rity^qtKilarships-.in.the spring,-with thought. v* : remember pointing'at Dominguer as he? Spurr adding another $100,000 from the prerogative of the President" to In a tirst-person account of the'Aug: 3' laywthfc ramprThe-officer-from-a-dis-^Association of College Teachers,.dids-not cite specificpercentages of the budget in University funds. --,, ;' --V-; / • grant such a pardon ~ -• shootout at'Hiintsville, printed in tho San lance of about si* feet-fired where I-asking for increased salaries. : Wallace reported testimony revealed Antonio Light. the-ReV; Joseph O'Brien; • pointed. -• , . s REQUESTED AMOUNT "fills Spurr acknowledged the' low faculty , THP that the Committee to Re-Elect* the a Roman Catholic priest, told-ho>v he" didn't see Dominguez hit; I'm sure?: out What the, total need isbeyond the pre­Cloudy ... .morale apd s^id,-"We're losing our best sent low income directed scholarships!." President sent $400^000 to Alabama tOc-v-^wa.%wounded in the exchange' of gunfire-the officer didn't miss. The officeryell- defeat him in 1970 ^ Two women hostagesv-'Julia Standley . ed, 'Carrasco?'.I pointed Where I thoughts^I (faculty) instead of our pqorest." •• : . Spurr added. • ^ Cloudy-^Kies with a ' "As a victim pf Water-gate, anything I ^ an?, E',7abelh Besf*?' were kllle^ ^ong Carrasco was: I heard-aftother shot.--Inf^l riorrtynn the budget request ^V iton .t-lihjnk_lhg nffin»r.• micggrf . hn» Is;;lai I slignt prospect of rain Cftriipete with..other top universities, in say could be regardedas preiudiced,"he-'*® ' Cairasco and Dominguez. A third was library funding. inmate, Ignacio-Cuevas, was not injured didn t see the slug strike. • I are forecast for Tues­the-nation,he pointed out, butnot eneugh University -salaries for-professional explained A in the. gu.nbattle as the tno of , inmates funds.rfnravailable for merit pay hikes. "AH this firing-was done at closerange^'il I day, Winds are ex­ research librarians currently is 25 per­' -Publicly, however, he questioned oniy< tried to move in a homemade "Trojan ' and not at 20 feet a°s I first thought " "IN MY 15 YJSARS at UT -Austin I cent below the national average and the tlie timeliness of the decision and said he Horse" to an armored vehicle parked in, ; pected from the south .have'never before seen such widespread .University has been having.a iiard time :did. not believeFordwould be affected " the prison-courtyard. '/An investigation to determine whether'-'^I discontent over salaries,"Gavenda said: competing for top personnel for some politically Carrasco and Dominguez were killed in I •'As -we all floundered in the'dark with fei* at 6 to 12 mph. Tues­. "I hear Serious talk of collective 'time. . i ;;iIONEYMOONS ALWAYS end the shootout or "executed", by law en--'^;I .bullets flying-apd-the choking-gunsmokeday's high will' be in bargamiHg;/rom people to whom such a , THE 'BOARD OF REGENTS Has .ap­ some last long than others^--, <* V -thick. 1 Vas hit. 'l believe Dominguez forcement officers is under way by'the1 yjI term was anathema before the mid-805 and a low propriated money from the Available Admitting hp was ' Surprised" at tlie-1 ^ shot nve after.he-shot Mrs. Standley.. It )Valker County grand jury in Huntsville : I "I think that undergraduate teaching, .Fund |o make up the difference between announcement. Gov JutimyCarter, D-• may^be,.that the bullet that hit me had " Gov-Dolph Briscoe and Atty.'Gen.,--51 Wednesday TinFofning which depends.so much on the the.Cooi>dinaUng Board formula amount da , recalled Ford "clearly said at hisc ­ sgttne--'through : someone else' first.•';• •• .John Hill have Ordered a state court of -,. I 'in the 60s., i enthusiasm of the teacher.;is -already" and the.mopey the Legislature.has .been confirmation hear1hg :• (|or.-viceI? rO'Brien said. inquiry to look mtaihe intident°after the.^ I Affering at UT Austin because-of the ^proprlating..^^ii*<,rg;;'rtj#/^'-}lw^'' presfdent)iro' would not Interfere with s Ai-'-TheJadder-tlirown-against, the. con­grandjury has issued its report. ' -1 t Jester^Residents Ask Open Hours Jester Center residents began collecting .u their rooms ^ petitions Monday for optional 24-hour guest Fein said residents bring beer kegs into . visiting privileges^Bandy Fe|n, president of Jester "«dl the time" for parties.:"But the' tester Student Assembly, said. t problem is you have to put "the keg in yoSf The plan was FonnuIateCland passed by the" • roomv andit's hartf to do that-and fit 30 or 40. • Jester assembly two years ago but was people in; too," he added. *. modified to an "extended guest hours" . The party room proposal is currently T>roposay>y theStudent Accommodations and -"under consideration, but I can't say exactly —Tltfr-wwgwfcviMUit^iom,xtDokx£fEei-ktStt-L_ September.: and allow; students; to entertain.. gliests in their tooms>until 11:30 P-mf, - weeknights ami1:3d a.m.on weekends. Cooke »? f1 -said. • , .•• . ,•••• . p. : . jti, Each floor votes whether-tQ accept-the ex^ -tended guest hours, but the 24=hour privileges -are "oot offered-in that choice now," 'Fem 'said : ment for improving the dorm's study­"their offers were refused ­ : lounges. -. • V because "people like that j "THE ADMINISTRATION said they would start fixing those lounges up over the (Related Story, Page 11,) "sUHiifter, and it hasn't happened yet,".Fein ­ don't usually do justice" to'"ati• said. -. •• . . event like this; This was an;''We.need to get furniture, carpeting and . X1-* '.paint for those lounges and .we ha.ve staff THE ASSEMBLY last year voted to-> working on that," Cooke said. provide a party room in which Jester "We can't use just residential grade fur-residents could consumealcoholic beverages niture because of the! extensive use it will uii- Currently residents can have alcohol only in -dergo," he added.' v/­ e i "•a-— • Jis. "'f&l ~'M,7%V V «*!. r« s >v BARKER OFFICE FURNITURE New oak ^ SWIVEL CHAIRS 39.50 :< ^ v-><; 4-drawer LEGALFILES1^^39.50 STUDY DESK 69.50 •9*1 ^ 5th andTCofigress Free Delivery You've probably been hearing a lot about Transcendental Meditation (TM) as a techniquefor ife'* reducing tension and boosting clarity of thought. Hundreds-of scientific studies at such research in­stitutions Harvard and Stanford, have provided striking information about TM. Below are some tfacts —What you've wanted to know about TM: 1^ 1ft' f URING TM >;,5sp ^^ m -I—F—ir-r— CREATIVE INTELLIGENCE ^. Meditators describe' TM as a systematic, process' of experiencing quieter, more refined levels of merrtal activity until the finest activity is 'transcended' and the mind experiences a restful r. inner .alertness. Brain wave patterns also indicate a state of restful alertness. Alpha'and Theta waves, are produced which are unique and associated.'­with a restful and creative state of the mind. '££G Tf»r»ee«dent*f, Meditwdoo'* i* tttctrot>e*9halogr*p*rt •' 4nd CWwc«4 N«wr?phT«oVBgv. Vol. 39 11073) PP 449-460) j® Levels Of Rest p**3) Change in Metabolic Rate p&i MTPNOStt . §1 •MX 3 I IRMSCtflOOOUtMtOHMWH p&gr * ­ Sf 1 & MUXATION 1 ^ raiuhnn' f> W>cnrt»Vco will ko mnVlo" Prtrtlfa e>ti>4 than tfi OOO nn panital improvements' iiy Z Z Top Whether the crowd at the Z Z Top concert knew it, the ' whole event was filmed for a -.possible television special to be aired ata laEerttate,accor-^ " ding-to Bill Ham, Z Z Top manager. Contacted by : telephone , .Monday night, Ham said he ^a4^een;,appt^cXe.d..]UL .. ARffsT*In ConcerT""" NBC's "Midnight Special" to; Tape the concert. Ham stated event, not a concert." • THE FI1A1-has pot been sold to any of the networks at present. "That's something we wiUAook into later," Ham said. • . "I definitely think the music field is movfiig into TexasJ' _ Reyna said. "We now have a Ham said. "We have a lot of and water at least 80,000 peo» . The program, which will be" tailor-made bilingualgood talent in. Texas. Why pie for-a day. Jt's 'different-implemented .in kindergarten -prograni foreach school in the•: .can't we dd What has been '• from feeding that many for and first grade classes this system."'3one 'on'tt'g^EaSt and West--two orV.three -hours at-aT foot­.fall,..mee.ts: the .requirements • \ The. seven-point planCoasts?" . '. 1 • ball game.'' ' of Texas Senate Bill 121 for a' stipulates the "program-!-will­bilingual-multicultural policy apply to schools already hav­to receive state funds. The bilingual program as^ .ing a bifing'ual •You say we ain't ill providerjlO-pei' stu-well as. those -funded by the drat enrolled in .the program, state program. The program .favorite chavyin' tebaccy? Mauro-L. Reyna, AlSD will expand1 one grade -.level u, ,ta m> • assistant:superintendent, said per year, until instruction is the program will' provide in-given through the'third grade. Don't get cranky' structitin if. at .least .20 Students ^may apply for the youngsters in the school, dfs-program after the third gradeThe University trict meet the requirement on a voluntary basis. &j:A. . v'CMfK'.'*-' •*• ,?v . -. ,'4.t? ,,...-..... IS CVy>^ ?^rTf --* -•* Tf^KV" J Vr^^r«6%&£l&'&/?-,»' Vvrl? MBI Ham and other promotersof "The breakdown came in promoters of the show. They the concert placed full-page crowd control/' Stan Leven­had nothing to do wilh it. The advertisements in the Austin son of Stan Levenson and Student Government wanted American-Statesman Suhday Associates said: Levenson's . to handle that • (concessions^ rand in The Daily Texan .Tues-.. agency handled, thei public^ and security)." . . With a clearer, more relaxed mind, all activity is easier and more enjoyable. Research has demonstrated that after TM, reaction time-is ; quicker and perception improves; the meditator is : .able to resporfcTTorcomplex.tasks anil copes better , with strdssftil stimuli. Continued practice of TM produces-an improvement In' job' satisfaction, academic performance and productivity, £i wellas intelligence and memory. >. 3 Ita"TimnmlMal by Jaet Fw«m. t.P. Duttan Mb.' • 111711 . •' J-• IMPROVED PERSONALITY Psychological,tests show that normal subjects practicing TM becorrje more creative, accepting, and. outgoing. Comperei) to non-meditators, meditators are more relaxed, experience joy more and sadness less, develop deeper ^relationships with others, and have-more personality resources. These behavioral changes are attributed tO a more balanced functioning of mind-and body. _ IS** "influence of TM on Self A«*weB**Oon-" J^urnei of CounteRns Ptveh Ve» If Wo^a 1f72f c -af *mi IMPROVED HEALTH A* the mind settles during TM, the body's / ^ Persons practicing TlM enjoy.better health, sl fflttaboJ'Ctt^toa state of rest about twiceMeditators ate ill less often, recover faster and % a* deep air jrfaep. .JM >eath rate slows, and show Improvement in a number of common.and workload -of tfw hoart toiteni There is a v chronic Illnesses Those benefits result from the slmuttafwous felaxatlon fit ail parts of the body.I, *_ rest added to the daily routine. Deep-rooted Subject* practice?TMnp4««> experience of m-*" strsjisef are spomaneouslyeliminatid through the Tni WWiqulHty^ BtooW tfl«t^gnd electrical recor-deep rCk(«lMlwi,0« liltand 'kUiBUIWo M«tn im AMA, Vol tlhpp. Mt-n*.ItW • |H w. • » JUL I OUSTOilC•bOOO : mumi Jho combined physiological, psychological and sociological changes produce an overall effect of fullness of life. The elimination of mental, physical and behavioral abnormalities through the.release of deep stress produces a sense of fulfillment and internal harmony. It is interesting to note that this development of life In increasing values of con­ -tentment and fulfillment has long Men understood -in termsof spiritual development With the tools of modern science, we can now systematically evaluate the objective causes and expressions etf this inner, personal development produced by .v.Transcendentai Meditation." v. . THf TECHNIQUE u The technique of Transcendental Meditation as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi is a]simple, natural technique of mind rest practiced twice a day for twenty minutes in a comfortablechair. TM involves no change in lifestyle o^ diet, no physical posturas or breathing exercises, no religious prac­tice or association, no hypnosis, concentration, feedback or conditioning procedures, no philosophy or beliefT no form of contemplation, in­tellectual analysis,positive thinkjng,afflrn\ation or .visualization, no. form of prayer or. worship, no mysticism, gadgetry, spiritualism ot mood-miking. . 7-. -TM is easy to learn: the first step Is to attend two^introductory lectures; rtext is to attehd a four­dsy < course of Instruction .invoNing 1V4 hours-on f.our.consecutive days. Free'introductory lectures are at the Austin SIMS Center each Wednesday night at 8;00 p.m. at 2801. French Place, mil S •in m in Mm 'I ^ t-i B educaMenff erQonltatiefl'iW^v -SPECIAt'FRIf $:fi J^TROftUCTORY tECTORIS P-m. Geol^^22?^^p 3:00 p.m'. tiEB 155 tSSSM 7;30 p.rn. Geology 100 I 'For mprelnfprmqtion call477-4736 Spanish-speaking students will be gi.ven a language ' dominance test on entering Specialty the school district. They will fashions for ' then be placed in the Aran and 'propriate bilingual class. women •' Parents of En^lish-spedking • children"may request p.lace-ment'-in the.prograih.Spac.ein the claSse^airriavailabie staff will determine the number of English-speaking; students placed in the. program. ;• The Cultural hei iuge uf tlitr people whose laft 233K. was faced with physical and ^ monetary difficulties; Leff ^ ; said / J--""*?p"Leff said -University Foot-• -Jg---ball CoachDarreU Royal-was '-Sj ­extremely pleased witfi • the' 5a#,-­concert and minimum amount ]jg of damage. ing taught" will be stressed in S, the program. " "• 538? The lack of black -instruc­ tors, in the district was stress-, ed by trustee Marvin Griffin as a .drawback for the fmt program. Reyna -pointed out that the program was flexible iijfths enough for lateradjustment in this araa, • :'" . SS5 •'SppBBI^BS': ' dm mwi $8W'l m Rezoning Delayed • The Historic " Landmark j Committee of the Landmark ; Commission Monday night postponed action on a rezon-j. • ing • recommendation f6r the . Oliphant Hcftise, 3900 Ave. C, ' until the committee could meet with. Powell White, ; owner, of the house. White was unable to attend -the hearing because-of a fanii­ly illness.' Jeff Jones, former University Student Govern-i ment president, toid the com­mittee the house was in-• teresting historically because it is an example: of 1890s prrh't'"'t"ro , vf the-middle. and not the upper, class of i Austin.' ] White, in a -letter to the ­committee, requested that the —house-not-be-his tofieally-zon-— ed, saying it will destroy the ' real value of the property which he bought for invest­ ment purposes. Informal Class istratiori Academic G&nter Foyer Sept. -3-11 , 8:30 a.m. -4:00 p.m. (Weekdays) (Registration Phone No. 471-4874) .10-' TO«f Si -• rou ARE MAKING THE -• J^e Student Government Committees give students.an opportunity to work in.the areas which affect them most-academics housing student services gnd political action.-The committees are agents-of the Sfudent Senate, but are free to.develop their owr» dwection and ewphojiST/is chaiipersofis are choien for their expertise in the .different areas and cho6se the other iommitlefe members for their interest and enthusjasm Intervievys are.held at the beginning of each semester with an emphasis on maximum participation trom ail areas of campus The committees include FINANCE- ' ff > -WKV<*AJ{: , I ;>• v* ' & * -.r'.' . . . "' . " -.Wfrte&i R„ POUTICATBESOUNICNS''2SJ EDUCATION" — - UNIVERSITY POLICY ** - yy& STATE LOTEY. CITY LOBBY s, " 3 • ; ELECTIONS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION WOME»)$ AFFAIRS I STUDENT SERVICES MINORITY AFFAIFTS COMMUNITY AFFAIRS ^ i CONSUMER AFFAIRS - MS® HOUSING UNIVERSITY EXPANSION AND UTIYZATION -COMMUNICATION ' INTERNATTONALSTUDENTAFFAIRS APPROPRIATIONS :XtI Si^i2cUjp for ^terview§ 5% *C f -; /WASHINGTON (UPI) -J.F. terHorst m'ember hirSd .by-the'new President:; Washington Bureau chief, v announcement, Kraslow wrote, terHorst i(iacknowledged, he, was lied to by White An official for the newspaper "said Aboard"the press charter flight accom­ phoned to say,"I'm very sorry, Dave. If ^.House;aides but-said Monday,he quit as .terHorst had been rehired in-the new panying; the President to Pittsburgh I had known on Friday what Iknow now I ' White" House press secretary solely position of '"national columnist" in ' -Monday, one White. House, staffer said would not have guided you away from because he; "disagreed with President-Washington and would write 'three, . terHorst felt his credibility had been that story." ' "• f-" Ford's unconditional'pardon of fornifer • columns a week for the paper. destroyed by Presidential advisers who TerHorst had won. the: admiration of vPresident Nixon. "He*went back on the payroll today," lied to him last week ..when he asked • Washington newsmen for restoring can- "i didn't quit because I was lied to,".;: ' srfidAl Blanc'hard, national editor of the whether Ford Were'considering a pardon/' dor and an atmosphere of goodwill to the ' he^Said, although sources said Monday News. for Nixon. .1.. -White House press relations effort. . one; reason for his-resignation was that '"-The-News has not, yet .named a new ^TerHorst was asking" 'on behalf of His last official act in office was to ­ p£White House-aides,lied to him when-he.' Washington-Bureau chief;.butBi'anchard . newsiifien. who had got wind'of thestoryr;-release -a memo-he had circulated ,to 1 .'^sought information for'reporters who ' said terHors.t would nptxeassume thatti--and.he passed on;.th6.'assurances of the White House officials-urging' them.,to • had learned last week that a pardon was tie. He said terHorst had asked .for-advisers that"*'there ,was nothing to it." •speak ''on.the record''wherever possible in tlie works. v '' i • several days in which to.tie-uph.is.White this source said. to newsmen. " v.'~ ; ' 7 Philip A. Lacovara, a Republican and : House duties .before returning, to the Sunday morning, he said,. terHorst • TerHorst notified Ford, an old-friend,the No. 3 man at the Watergate special • paper.: ' • . called the reporters andapologized. of his intention to.resign about an hour g^jMtt5St*utor'-1« photo it," terHorst said. -•'. of,Richard M Nixon hit the White House •_ the in-house activities that led to Ford's firmed that terHorst had rejoined its Hey, Beautiful White House aides and some of-Monday, .abruptly ending the political "dramatic' announcement'Sunday"had oc­ —AVashinghm-steff)—— _ i... . . ••••-.-. ite^s-media.: • tranquility that marked the President's cupied So much of the President's time Mits America of 197-5, 21•year-old Shirley-Cothrcm of Fort Worth, takes a •-»flPsUaiQnth..in^ffipo ' • TerHorst left the News, Where he was however/told a: different story^asecTon __thathehadt6gostpone-a*tiecisionon con­ -break from the pote of queenly regalnett and clowns for photographers Washington Bureau chief,'a month ago to The White House'isaid its switch^rd' their personal contacts -with the press • • • dilion'tl] 'afhfttsty^'for --VietTiarn'"-';-'cra ^ Monday during a jrightseetng t6ur ot New York City.; work—fnr—ftnrri_. HP wag the first, gfaff secretary and former Detroit News was swamped with telephone calls, dis-deserters and draft.resisters -aF ent had been.promised3-1 margin. Ford was greeted with for Tuesday, but deputy press secretary a spattering of protest signs and boos .John W. Hushen said it was "indefinitely enroute to a speech in Pittsburgh, and postponed because he (Ford) hasn't had here Democratic' senators took the . .time to come to'grips with it." Senate floor todenounce the pardondeci-^ Asked whether the Nixon pardon was :;r By DAVID HENDRICKS-. ^million barrels a day come in from noted.--, -sion __ ; r .coiisidered more important, Hushen .Arkansas Gov.,Dale :BumperS said he Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., b-N;C.. whose . Texan Staff Writer >#offshore. drilling while using only ,3 per­ replied: "That seems'to'be a conclusion The governors were presented at the had "reservations" about receiving such Senate delved A grim look at fuel supplies for the; cent of-leased land op the Continental Watergate..committee you could draw because, he* announced opening session with a bronze statue of a a gift. "The only thing that would have coming winter was given to southern •shelf. . •' deeply into the Watergate affair a year one before the other." Longhorn steer as a gift of host Gov: been more insulting, Gov. Briscoe; governors Monday morning by Com­' f "TtjiE SENATOR mentioned .that he ago, called the pardon "inexpedient, in­-In Pittsburgh, speaking to delegates ?t • Dolph Briscoe, each, made at & cost of would have.been to paint it burnt missioner'Don Smith'-of the Federal . thought that had there hot been restric­$1,000. : orange/' .' compatible with good government and a an international transportation con-' Energy Commission, asthe stateleaders tions on naturalgas prices in the past-it ference, Ford'made no reference to the bad precedent for the future.", discussed various solutions to the energy would have allowed morefuel companies Nixon pardon or-the controversy it problem.— -• to make gas discoveries, reducing the sparked. • , ; Smith , told the governors 'meeting at severity,of the current shortage: But Hushen. said ffie'President had: Lakeway Inn for the Southern Governors The governors' then began making heard the booing-.that greeted him out­Arch LCRA Lawyer Dismissal Asked Conference that from now through reports.' Gov. Moore. of West --• By WADE WILCOX chance of the casegoing to court because for delay. If there, is. any hint of im­side the conference hotel. March, 1975 natural gassupplies will fall ... Virginia sharply'criOcized the idea of Texan Staff Writer _ • The White House switchboard logged the company intended to honor the con­propriety or delay I am ready to step short oi demand up U> 9.6 percent.———--T-hmC»ng-aj_pip»|jno Vpnp7ii<»|p in Attorneys representing Lo-Vaca 3,000 calls through Sunday night ' tract.1 aside," Small said. ' . " He urged the governors to begin set-Texas. ''All we need is reliance on 7 Garnering" Western Union said 24,000 telegrams s made on Lo-.vaca s mo- ting curtailment-proeeedings in: ca.se-of another fnrpjgn gntirce." he remarked: right "of Clint Small Jr. to represent the and mailgranis were sent to the White States employment tion for a change of venue because Mon­ -more serious ents and to start Moore ""said' the logical^nswer To ~:I^"werColorado;Riyer.-Authorityin-a«4^ fcCRA:"-Smalhsaid House after the Fort announcement, a; day'^pnxKedij^s_.fiORused^on Small's — arrnntrinf meflns ft/ convcvance of coal energy dislocation ^ the United Statesis -milljojj_breach of contract suit filed by "Tthen wrote a letter to theToaM of— right to represent LGRA. times io those states now burning mostly the-LCRA. "the norrnal daily vplume: . .Directors • of r the LCRA and explained •Friday, Lo-Vaca claimed it could notnatural gas for home heating. — . lion." He_pointed out that a Federal Former Dist, Judge Wilmer Hunt, ap­that 1 was. continuing to receive a There were only about a dozen pickets " "It is not too soon to begin consulting Energy Commission reportshows 70per­pointed to the caise by 53rd Dist. Court among • converted to burning coal rather than Lo-Vaca attorneys to disqualify Small 1 : the transportation conference. . J '.'If the board had ;any.feeling conflict The'LCRA filed the suit because of *' HE ADDED that in thefuture theshor­gas oroil. Such conversionscould happen because Small represented Coastal . -existed t was not' interested iin. damages allegedly incurred because of~ —They-carried signs proclaiming "The tage may make it*feasible and advan­in 90 to 120 days he said, "yet relatively States Producing Co. when the firm • employment." Small said, .'{With that natealgas curtailments resultingin the Honeymoon is over," "OK. Jerry-, now tageous to build a pipeline from -little action has.bfeen taken in thte direc--sought to sell natural gas to the City of knowledge I was hired by the LCRA." 'use of increased amounts of more expen­pardon war resisters." "Justice died,Venezuela, a -major exporter lion." j. . Austin more than 12 years ago. Coastal Coastal States latvj-ers maintained sive fuel oil, increased electricity shor­and "Why not pardon all." petroleum to thellnited States, toTeXas/fey-Although coal is a "dirty" fuel, it-can States Producing Co. owns Lo-Vaca. that even the appearance of impropriety tages and price increases. As Ford left the hotel some young "but first" welnusi walt for the Alaskan Small denied any confidences; wqre be cleaned rup he explained, adding that •is sufficient to disqualify a-lawyer from •The hearing will, continue at 10 a.m. protesters,chanted Vno.more cover-up,-"^ pipeline.to be built." . ^ .2, divulged fo him by CoastalStates,.and he coal could easilyhelp' the country -a case against a forriier elient. _ -Tuesday, i ~and "prosecute Nixon.'1 ^ Smith and I'exas Seh. Lloyd BentsenMf claimed that he notified Coastal States through its near-term energy needs.' Furthermore, they said, representing were guest speakers before the power prior to going to work for the LCRA. one-client in-a suit against a former and energy seminar, officially beginning^ "We-, must /StrUura balance between When the LCRA sought.Small to repre­client is against the legal canons ofthe -iOlh annual-such conference, whichA'^ how we Exploit our own fuel resources sent it in a contract-dispute with Coastal Vv-ethics. . Cites . • .-held its lastTexas meeting in 1964 at San^V and fuel imports," Moore emphasized.-States in 1972, Smailasked CoastalSates"idon't want my presence to damage v< Antonio. mm High quality gas can be produced from officials if they foresaw any objections* "?'the case of the LCRA. I had nothing to do Benlsen told the governors the Unitedcoal also, Moore stressed, by the gas- t0Jl's r?Pres®nUng the,LCRA,• he: said. -with one word in this contract." Small Ih Bormann's Death States can and:should Strive to become^ ,< ificatlon of. deposits; More fuhds: for , They had none, Small said, on-the' •,>;proclaimed. ••••". Sis., "reasonably self-stifficfent.'1 • * research in thisfield are needed, he said.'-#witness stand, and they foresaw no "I think this is purely personal. Purely rA'i'VLONDON (UPI) In; a remarkable several years ago in establishing that a • Bentsen said.import oil costs could be. ,'.^. . The discussion .then turned to railway •case of scientific detective work, an' . burned body found in Berlin• by the" reduced.about a-barrel if two super-'-freight rates, which Mississippi Gov. American dentist reported Monday that-Russians was Adolf hitler, said thereport? were:built,along the Gulf coasts -William Wal|er calledI'discriminatory." Martin Bormann, Adolf Kitler> chief was no absolute proof that the badly Tomatoes Thrown allowing "refineries to" be built in this ­deputy, committed; suicide by biting a. ..burned remains .of a woman found near- HE TOLD the governors the northerncountry, jiot Saudi Arabia." poison capsule while Russian troops-,'by were actually those Of Eva Braun. .railftSttSMiave filed a request with the.. Eventually, the UnitedStates will have In Protest Against Busing were closing in on the last of the Nazi; : He said toe investigation began as anInterstate Commerce"Coigmlssioti ask­to replace fossil fuel with other sources' leaders inlJerlirr in l945. -attempt'toi evaluate the authenticity ofing for more revenues from southern such as'geothermal, solar and nuclear ,S BOSTON (UPI) — Antibusing Boston the answer." states. • :' , While Hitler.-and his bride of a -few an alleged Bormann skull unearthed fusion, he stated. . .. • school parents Monday hurled eggs and,, The demonstration began earlyin the. hours, Eva wereBraun, killing Dec. 8,1971, and the discovery of a den­ : Coal can also help.-he'sajd,' adding Although realizing the rail companies .tomatoes at U.S. Sen. Edward M'S; morning as persons from across the city tal bridge nearby three months later. themselves elsewherein-the beleaguered "Saudi Arabia lis tliie'j^ijjg. Kong of the are financially tight,."the position taken Kennedy,-D-Mass., and clashed briefly?; arrived at Boston Common. They eity^ Bormann, variously reported to,v Spgiinaes said he examined the remains •world when it comes to bfl, but the. by the Southern-GOvernors Conferenceis with security guards at the John Efp chanted, "Garrity must go ... there will have escaped from Berlin to have or using all available aids includingjelec-United States is the Saudi .Arabia Of the the sameas in >930 (when theconference' Kennedy Federal Building. : ":;:: be no busing in Boston,'.' and continued. been hit by a Russian shell, -was' tron. microscopes, which can expand­..world when it comes to coal." began) and-that is that 'the southern The confrontation, during which an 8-on to the government center: crunching the glass vial • of potassium minute objects a millionfold. • Bent$en argued, iri favor of more-states should be treated exactly asevery-by-10-foot glass window was shattered;;; . After two hours of antibusing speeches cyanide the Nazi Fuehrer had given"his Sognnaes said his examination ofioffslyjre drilling pointing out that 100 . othet "region of. the country." Waller occurred toward, the end Of a two-and-a-by local officialsand Avhite neighborhood aides for self-destruction. evidence in the U.S. National Archives, half-hoiir demonstration and march By leaders, the'demonstration elided shortly: This scenartaof the end of Bormann is| supplemented by his own examination of' an estimated 8,000^ to 10,000 white after noontime. * implicit in ai paper prepared for delivery! the'r^mains and circumstantial suppor­ parents who opposea U.S. District Court The demonstration was organized by a netus Tuesday to the Forensic Science Section! ting evidence, led him to concludes school'desegregation order whicli takes group called Restore Our Alienated • of the International .Dental Federation ''The forensic,identification of "Martin effect Thursday! Rights, an outgrowth of a group that by Dr. Reidar Sognhaes, professor of Bormann can be considered established. About 18.000 students wlll-bB-btispd un­organized a massive march on the state U.S. Capitol Gets $4 Millictn Security System oral biology and anatomy at the Univer-_ "Bormanni -in fact-did die without be-'' der the order issued June 21 by Judge W. house~last-«spring to oppose the-state's; sity of California at l,os Angeles. ]ng able.to flee Berlin when the Russian WASHINGTON tA?>)— Workmen are instating-a~$4-.million security Arthur Garrity. Forty-five -thousand of j .racial balance law.r' -,. - Sognnaes, who played a key role forces entered the city in 1945." the"city's 94,000 public school students system of television cameras, alarms and" X-ray machines in the Capitol will attend different schools because of > designed to prevent any more bombings. the order. Congress approved toe system two years agoafter a bomb obliterated a 3 Kennedy said he was not hit by any of Senate r^st room in the early hours of March 31, 1971, mangled a barber ^the eggs or tomatoes but was visibly shop and shattered windows through much of the Senate wing. v;i|shaken by the incident, which occurred '^shortly before noon after Kennedy was l !•'" I !-! •' refused the right to speak to the crowd. Berkeley Scientists-Discover New Element- As Kenneay walked away from theu ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) —• Two notechAmerican scientists Mon-;'speaker's platform, hewas followed by.a announced the positive discovery of a new man-made element of the "Jgroup of spectators. Just before he enterfefthe door to the Federal Building: tungsten family and cast;dotibt on similar Russian claims a month ago.' " several eggs and tornatoes were thrown, > It was reported to the'American-Chemical Society convening here, the 4nd the crowd-lunged-toward the door.' new element, No. 106 in the.periodic table, was identified by a team of When Kennedy walked through the by Drs-Glenn Seaborg and Albert Ghiorso of the'Lawrence door several demonstrators who tried to .^ecjopley Laboratoqr, Berkeley, Cajif._Itjsas_the fjrsi element discovered follow him were pushed back by security since the same Jab found Hahnium in 1970. ~ "" ^fflcers.ironutbeJ3sn§ral.SerVices:Ad^ . ministration,-Demonstrators poimded'Mi^ Ihe large glass windows and shattered)!; Stock Market Slides one-pane.' THere were n6 re|k)rts ,of m arrests or injuries. * "NEW--YORK1AP);.--TheT In an intprview, Kennedy said; "Thfcy;! stock market fell back into a 1 had.a right,to gather and express their steady slide Monday, and the<-; ~ K.t.S.E; -—BfttflMES AVERAGE _ylews. 1. had hoped they would give me - VtlMt Prolll* 30 lidestrliii the fiajne right." He said he doeVHot " selling spread to,one -of Wall regret appearing a,t the ralLy and added, ': Street's few bright spots of the? "I would do ft over again if I had the: 662.94 last couple of years — the gold ('chancp. " emi and silvertnining issues. '•"If thfeyTiad" allaswed me to'speak I, would have told them I share their cOh-* The Dow.Jones average of 30 cem," he said. "I know there are jtZ'i industrials closed off 14,94 -aU -parents "out thejre: wjio are ctyiemed 662.94,'yielding.almost exactly about the safety-of their children, ap.d thca" shouldn't tie considered bigQts,"feS half of the ground ithatf gained in a technical rallv last Thurc-Keqnedy urged the people of Boston tm> im "JlstsautoJhe. voice of,reason" and to day ftnd Friday, . ., . • :./iSj§!| -"turn your backson violence.. I've"seen u before, injmyjown-famity, andCit^snf A^igry white Edward Kennedy at Boston A m lY •-'•'I ^ -*<*-J c­ &W&& m^ TV r&tfjrrh -V "' "r *"<-%« , —"-'""t'i1^—rft-­ sp fswr EDITORIALS *JS.» :3>v Wis -;,-l.!v-i.';-.' Page 4 Tuesday, September 10, 1974 '1*1 —' • -•-•• -•• --••-•• •• • -• • -• sE-f if,; up sides with la causa Since Andy Yemma's editorship in 1970-71. The Texan, has \\'or£ed to -responded-, and finally in 1970, faced with a sharp decline m.salfes; 85'percent; publicize the plight of America's migrant'farm workers, many of whonvare of the nation's grape growers signed contracts with the United Farm Texans. In 1972. under David Powell, The, Texan first editorially endorsed Workers. ' -• -.. . the lettuce boycott organized by the United Farm Workers of America. AF'L-The contracts raised wages, banned.child labor, banned discrimination"oh CIO, as a nonviolent means for students tohelp better thp lives of those peo­account of race or sex, severely-limited use of dangerous pesticides, ple who labor to put food on our tables Today , the United Farm.Workersare guaranteed toilets and drinking water in the fields, and required the growers ^r^tir*1' '>!•• !T---n^Fss:5tat?^ h*Tl ?Huca.~mTaa-rnnt rihnt p to the Rpbert F. Kennedy Medical plan. Most important, the R, i.,1 ,T , (n i™»~v NRRHN 'iYitl"^ 'w" rfrrffirm ' onntrartsaKoMshed'~theliat^TaBSf^lfff^^ ' our support for their struggle ^ -K: * , .^cojrotes witK a unloifhrrfligTf&ll* ~~ if asked to name. themost difficult arid hazardous jobs we could think of, Soon after'signing the grape contracts, the UFW called for union rejprtsen­ most ofTis' wOTict-probably-mrt-menti-Qrv faim,w.or-k-However^'government tatlon elections for l&ttece pickcrs in the Salinas Valley, where workers had • studies haveconcluded that migrant farm labor is actually the nation's third ' 'been organizing for two years'.Tfief lettuce growerstgnoi>ed the-request.and­most dangerous occupation, with a job-related death rate for farm workers instead asked "the largest unionin the country, the Teamsters, to come in and 300 percent-higher than the national average, According to the jU:S . Public represent the farm workers—Days later. *170 lettuce growers signed Health Service, the life; expectancy,of a farm worker is a mere 49 years, "sweetheart" contracts (agreements reached without the consent of the while the average American lives to 72. . -workers) with the .Western Conference of Teamsters. ~K "day In the life'ofrnne-nirgrant-fanjilyi working in:lhe raisin;fields _of _tn_August,:197Ck when it was announced that the lettuce-growers had signed California/was descrifaffp ffle Los Angeles Times12/27/72). Their workday ,i ;• with "the TeaSitera.'ithe; UF'^'called Tdra"strike. Seven-thousand lettuce- began at 5:30 in the morning.and lasted until 6 at night; They filled-1.300 workers'walked out in what the Los Angeles Times (8/26/70) called the trays of raisins and were paid a total of $104. As there were nine of them"largest farnv strike in U.S. •hi?tory-.*l-.-Two .-years later the California working the, fields that day.'this meant a wage of lessthan $1 per"hourfor' ' Supreme Court; in a G-l'decision, r|uled that the Teamsters had acted in­each-member of the family. " ;.£gecret collusion with the lettuce groweVs. The decision stated'that"a ma­: This example is hardly unusual. According to a 1971 U.S. Department of" " jOrity.of field workers ctesired to be represented by the UFW and expressed •AlgrteiitturfrTepeFt-r-the-av^f-age-foEpL-^orket;makes. $1.1 ffay^ far about.: ; no desire .to have the Teamsters represent them 10 hours of work. Since farmwork is seasonal..most farm workers are urt­able to obtain-a tu year s empioynrentrTtroge-who-are-ablc to travclAfae with the UFW, or hold elec­CUapbisJbiy, J..fig£npp.i^_ hundreds of miles required to catch the various harvests still earn con­tions to determine the farm workers" preference, tnost growers simply siderably less than $4,000 a year. switched to the Teamsters. . . ; • May, 1971: White House aide Colson sent memos to the Labor and In practical terms, these wage rates mean that children enter the fields as When the farm workers struck to regain their contracts, a bloody summer Justice Departments urging them (o cooperate with the Teamsters in their soon as they can carrya basket and sta-y until idled, by qld age or sickners. lt ensued. In addition to the usual strikebreaking poUi^v. the Tealnsters hired dispute with the UFW. (Boston Real Paper 8/8/73). a crrartA IHwms ri-iir urt::i-.rrrtvif mpansmeans that thp^chilrirf»rithechildrenfifof farmfaj*m wnrlrpr^avprrjoinaworkers, averaging IlessPCC than a gradeschool" -thugs fr»rvfor $67.50«C7 a day to attack UFWTT^VlT picker lines and offices.' While UFW '•-June, 1971: Nixon met with.the Teamster Executive Board and pledged v education, will remain farm workers. In California, about one-fourth of the bullhorns warned', "You can hit them back if you .want to, but when you do that his "door is always open" to! them. (.NY' Times 6/22/71). . farm^abor force is made up of children under 16. Two-UT law students who you are no longera menibfer.of this union...,", the Teamster goons aided the • July, 1971: Secretary of Labor.Hodgson addressed the Teamstefs con­spent the summer of 1973 in the Rio Grande Valley assure us that child labor police in their bloody work. Two strikers were killed, hundreds beaten and vention and offered"an "open-doer" to the federal government: (LA Times is alive and well in Texas, too. ~\ 3,389 arrested before Chavez called off. the strike and sent 'those 6/1/73), .. . • f ; Tired of low wagesand hazardous working conditions, a grape picker nam­strikers who could make the sacrifice to the cities to organize the boycott. -» Fall of 1971:: Secretary 6f the Treasury John Connally, who was in­ed Cesar Chavez,after studying master organiser Saul Alinskv's techniques, It is to be expected that the growers and their Teamster allies would be strumental in breaking the Texas farm worker strike in 1966, approved a began to build the predominantly chicario' National Farm'Workers Associa-'"'' favored-by local officials in areas where agribusiness -dominates the moratorium onJ$l,3 milli9n .0w.ed to the government in back taxes by pasttion , 4t about .the same time/the AFL-CIO.was engaged in one of economy, b.ut the farm workers have also been a political out group on the Teamster President Dave Bec^. (LA Times 6/1/73).its periodic organizing attempts "in the grape fields by backing the national level since 1968. Chavez didn't help matters in' 1972. by endorsing • December, 1971: Nixon granted an executive pardon to formerAgricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOCh a mostly Filipino r'' George McGovern, but the senator was.a longtime supporter of" the grape Teamster President Jimmy Hoffa, who was serving a lJ-year sentence for organization. 1 and lettuce boycotts and ... well, look who th6 opposition was. • jury tampering and misuse of the Teamster Pension Fund.-(NY Times . California growers had stymied organizing attempts for generations bv . Richard' Nixon had long been an opponent of farm worker organizing ef-. • 12/24/71). • -V;, "V . playing ethnic groups against each other. Farm labor was done at various; forts."In I9bu71ie helped aul|ior"a~congressioiial study svhichTceBehided-that its investigation^^3ritor times by Chiriese; Japanese, Filipinos. Portuguese. Arabs and, of course,/ ; farm workers should bfi excluded from national labor legislation. (It is charges of fraud brought against Richard Fitzsimmons, sc>n of Frank Fitz-Mexicans and Mexican-Americans.: When one group went on strike, a slight-"^ becaiisfe farm wbrk"^7T^tinu¥'To"iack tins protec 1 saidfcf—^angfiei^gr-QB^wwM-be-enticedUo-crossihe-Dicketiines-But when AWOC ' lepaHvipiore thp UFW's requests for electrons.) Nixoii Dublicl^ouDosed the that the "love affair between Fitzsimmons and the White House" resulted in a'' strOck the grape growers in 1965. Chavez asked NFWA m.embers to honor first grape boycott, and his administration actively al-AWOC picket lines. The two groups merged to become the United Farm'-ticularly in 1969" when the Defense D^partmerif stepped up its annual Ladies and. g'entlemert, in this corner we have the federal bureaucracy,j Woricers Organizing Committee and were later granted a union charter by; purchase of"grapes by 64 percent, an increase of more than four million most Republicans, the growers, the largest union in the country, the police ^the AFL-CIO. pounds in a single year. (New York Times, 6/27/69). forces and.local governments in the areas being struck and the inertia of the ,» However, making an effective strike ^emaiped difficult, becalise of the Despite. Nixon's position on farm worker?, Teamster President Frank 'iatatusquo. ' . .feimpoverished work force and-a plentiful supply of illegal aliens imported agi Fitzsimmons found no problem,either ii\ assuming the post of vice-president . < .Challenging this array, we have Cesar Chavez, his salary weighing in at • strikebreakers. Fo,r two years the growers refused to recognize the oniony < ;of Democrats for Nixon in 1972 or in switching the Teamsters' $100,000 a room and board and |5 a week, leading a ragtag bunch of illiterate field "much less negotiate a cpntract, but during this-time the farm workers',. year legal business to a law firm headed by Charles Colson,. formerly one of workers and'kamakaze liberals. JOeroic hueTga caught the attention of the country.^Aid began to pour inland-SVT 1 * RTL RTR»RTNL H/LIRIPAMR* .. / MX7 « A NM % I ­ Nixon's'closest advisers. CNY Times 12/9/72). In the laid-back Seventies, polarizatibn is supposed to be a pig no-noi but1 ijjeople from civil rights organizations. to*-: These -actions" appear perfectly reasonable, however, in light of the­^OieTacTxemainsTfiarno one'who eats cain bemeutral. We hope you consider -In 1967, as public support for the farm workers continued.to build/ the favorable: treatment that the Teamster leadprshp received from the Nixon the working-conditions that produced the grapes, lettuce or Gallo wine you : UFW called for a nationwide boycott of nonunion grapes; Millions of peo'ple administration:^^ - r would Eke.-to.buy and1 ask yourself: Which side are you on? • sp ?.>*?• 'xm38$% ; ­ -••• • , ,-. guestvleuipofht Liberals unbowed By LARRY BALES ^ district. But where, was he when other into with the cities of AiBtiri, San An­(Editor's note: Bales is a Travis Coun­ ^.liberals like Lane-Denton stood up to the tonio and Corpus Christi. This travesty ty state-representative.) ^Mutscher machine? _ :i> . alone is sufficient justification forany , An open letter to Pam"Misoitr"^" consumer-oriented liberal from Austin , 'Gonzalo Barrientos needs no defense Paiicer engaged in the most vicious m vote Thein his fntelligentdecision to vote against^]Personal attacks on Frdd Head, the to against Parker. Texas P6 Observer has called Parker ^"a much Carl Parker and for Billy aayton fox;S!Kp1'>era' candidate .for speaker of the ORAnlrAK ±:_ _1 •;.! «i5-W«S-Wft1iei» oni4 klo 0llr\MAklAMn . .in compromisedliberal." speaker. However, your patronising at-aHouse, and his supporters,; ,,-titiidp toward Gonzalo Barrientos is not This is the people like GOrtzalo-In the closing days of'-th'e" man only a manifestation of your ignorance of Barrientos saved the people of Texas ^Constitutional Convention, "Parker the facts but also of the. thoughtless at­ from. The choice was obviously-a-dif­"cynically turned his back on labor can­ titude of so many uninformed liberals '' ficult one but I'.Ve' never been so proudv didacy with conservatives by voting for . •:Barrieotos was' joined in his decision ^/ight;to;worl^^^ df-Gonzalo. Your, condemnation Of his , by all'of the really tough-gutliberals in" ' decision-is indicative of-what's wrong i. the House; black, .brown,^" white and -s® In .the iast-.session of the Legislature with many, white liberals.-Without know­ women, in his vote against Carl-Packer 7 >Parker sponsored abill allowing theTex-ing all the facts behind his decisibn youPam Mason, whoever you are, your-;^1; ,as Railroad Commission, that great condemn him as a traitor to his own peo­liberalism can't hold.a candle to the-likes'i £ .' champion of. consumer' interests, r to -Ple. He knows his people better than you of-Reps. Craig Washington,/Ben Reyes, . nullify; contracts which Wyatt entered do. Chris Miller, Eddie Bernice Johnson, Senfronia Thompson, Ron Bird," Micky Leiand, G.J. Sutton or Lane Denton. Are all of these battle-scarred and proven rl WW THE DAILY TEXAN •fighters for liberalism wrong in their ffiwiptjw mt TW Vmtotiltf el Mat mt A««'J'^ vote for Clayton? - EDITOR.;:., J , ^Of my final trick,I gave the press Jerry Ford to kick around. They must be clim- . Buck Harvey Go to the library, Pam Mason, and MANAGING FIDITDR- bing the walls in frustration by now.'-haul down Harvey Katz's book "Shadow •'i" Sylvia Moreno on the Alamo," and turn with, me to ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS . . Lynne Brock Pages 202 and 203 and read about Carl Quest viewpoint Parker:; . NEWS EDITOR...,r;.v.:.,; Martha JP^McS The second,attempt atreform bythe MUNICIPAL EDITOR Ken McHam • Mfttscher.; forces came on March 25. • UNIVERSITY jgDITOR...; Richard-Fly The House Rules Committee, headed • can SPORTS EDITOR,... .'Herb Holland' •ess® by Jim Nugent,devoted a few minutes . By t)ALE NAPIER. ; of.thqt day to rejecting fhe resolutions AMUSEMENTS EDITOR , Pauj Beutel ^Streets 1 would,-.'-be; turned ^ifito-r-fliajori City Council elections, which -offer ex* y. (Editor's note: Napier is chairperson thoroughfares, thus destroying the west' sponsored by .Caldwell and Mrs. FEATURES EDITOR : » Mark Yemma cellent opportunities to mold-together a of the University. City Lobby.) Farenthold, and reporting favorably • PHOTO EDITOR IVIarlon Taylof .. . w^ampus community environmentally}: conscientious,' progressive council, open •, it to theHouse ana similarresolution by vNotquite twoyeareago toeUmversi ||1.aesthetically And economically /. • a vallcl, vl pu5SI„llulea ior bllluy alm a variety, of possibilities for study>.and Carl Parker. Parh$ was a so-called -" ISSUE STAFF . ^ • fy City I^bby, nee City Council Lobby Save University. Neighborhoods (SUNf^' analysis of the city's decision-makers. City Editor ^ Dfek Jefferson Committee. W3S-formedlormecl. ' flf.of nrannS-rArl (si fiahi thia --'t_ _ .• *• 'm • -\ « ; 'labor liber&l' who had -once been ; Coramittee, was the;^' waS organized to fightthjs.plan, original- out provided there is a sufficient.numbier of general Reporters David Hendricks, Janice-Tomlin, Susie^Stoler regarded as a true progressive. After realization that City Council decisions^kMy as a subcommittee of the city lobby;, the un-. News Assistants people interested. Becaus'e of • Susan Lindee, Williard.Hall, Sondra Slalcup. the first few votts of the B&ty-second, have only .slightly less impact on'^Jts independence became necessary as' usual amount of funds available to Stu­session, it'was apparent that Parker • •. ^ ' •; \ r.is.9,^,Waaf Wilcox, Rodolfo Resendez students' lives than regental decisions.?.-j.§»-the. issue steamroiled, demanding its ' dent Government! we will endorse^and Editorial Assistants .u,;i..<.-..V:?:.';...Steve Rusself, Robin Cravey bad become a staunch follower ofGua Frpm the time of its organization, before.'incomplete -attentiefn. In a public bearing support council candidate?^if feasible-rr-a Mutscher. nefolution was Associate Amusements Editor Vicky Bowles >4$M His a the Student Senate' CommitteeV/,fSUN managed to have held at Townes a new endeavor for US. > Assistant Amusements Editor.. .Bill Darwin .remarkably awkward attempt at face- Reorganization?ict, whfch formed about'-ggSHall, the City Cou'ncifBacked down on The Upshot of this self-serving diatrife Assistant Sports Editor..,.. " „Ed Dalheim • saving ~by the Mutschennen ... The a dozen major Student Senate com-^J&he street plan, in light of council -elec-fe'.-.starling tomorrow,-we are taking Makeup SIditOF . Capitol press corps exposed • the Phyllis Schwartz mittees, it immediately became and has ^fStions then less than a month awfty >' appjications'-to fill.positions-for both lob­WJre Editor w. Parker resolution as a sham, forcing '<>• ^ith Hartnell remained the roost active and dynamic ?? By Virtue of (his issue, we cansee that byists and pB'se^rchers. Even though,our . the MutscHer iearn to try again;... arm— of Student Government; now.we are requite literally, the fight is~ never ""=1.over. record ?pay seem impressive to Student -- .«=»« If this is' ncrt enough Pam Mason, letseeking new members through Student*. We are continuing this fight; jn the past Government leaders who prefer to-take jneLintroduce other facts to you about • Stanley Far-rar Government's annpai no positions and challenge no decisions, ann^iai committee^.we have dealt with among other issues" recruitment process. ' ^'"telephone rate hikes, e!ectric>ty rate itjs_-nevertheless tiny-compared to the 1 Carl Parker. ' -Oplnlom expressed-^ The,Dally T«UN ore tfnw of ihe ... municauon Uulidinx A4I36) Ipqutrlea concerntns delivery $ editor sr-Uw-wdter ot lhe«rlicleu«l are not mcenarily -Parker, in the 63rd session, bottled op,„u and danlllrd Bdvertljlng should be made In TSP Building' ,As the issue of the University-Area^-'strucUfres, utility rebates, the Austin- or. the Board of work which needs:to be done; we call on a ma tot :Of-legislation-he disagreed .with"ifff.-;:' UKne'nfjtlit iltilvenlly (UjminlurAllon •3 200 1471-52441 and display advertising In TSP Bulfdthit w Street Flan has demonstrated, lobbyingy-H-Tomorrow program, emergencymedical any students interested, in such work to • r—(leAMla t > -3.210 !^7i*)BG5iir -i-% the Calendars Committee which he, • activity"on city issues fs justified by the'fg^skryice,1 the Wilding project, the creek, apply /or an .interview at the'Student • The Da jf)f Texan;a iwwipaper alTlw Ujilvetoll?' Tlic nallpnjl adverilslnR fepmwtailve ol The Dallv 'few chaired This was directly contrary to * 01 Texas at Auitlrr, I, piibllitied iy Texai Sluderil -Twauls NJIIOMI Kduralnnal Ailsefllilni! iervlce MR, effect many issues have on students'|mordinanc!e. historical' zoning, nuclear Government office. .'Union Btiildfnt» 35>i ihiWIcaUmla^Oranrer D, llitlVertlly SUiHm. Aftun, Tex. JM UIIIWHI1 Ave Hew VurK. N. . 10017" <. -. .Iftfnc1 IkH .f.TMitiHwltla):.AWPI nfoi the Spirit of the ieform movement you • 7171}. The Dally Texan l« publtehed Monday, Tuesday.' " 'Kiwi-lbw.to ThS Asswlatrd Pntf ENGORGE, , ~ • Wednentay.iThiH*lay„»nd Friday September IhrmlBh; I'nlleil. Press IntenmiloiMl »nd I'jriric Mevrt Scrvlee, The' Mav and Tuesday. Wednesday,Thuraday. and Friday June-Tcwn u member ol the Assw laled Cbllenlale Press, the • During his service in the Legislature^ ih^t*uth AujtOtt, exect>t holiday ind aim perfodi Seraod-SnutlwiSa J(H/mal|im UJ.ngrou oifS (hf Tesas Daily , Carl J/aritefftas ijeen whlilever heiiadto • /• Newspaper AjSwl«ilort . • ­ city lobby cut its teeth on t}»is streetxrp!*special imprests and jjieir interrelation are urged toapply', too mahy issues Have ' _"llrt»ilinj! vlaQuns lur plan, by which West 241HT Street. West |.'ships With Austin politics and business. been'left unstudied'for^ack of sufficient -be in order to Obfain power: His liberal * Nrowcwitrlbuttom will be i«cpled,by telephoni »l I'd «p 'rtlh labor . mm y\ «•*« Jl'l A»4r President Ford has just verified what many.of us knew all truly played too many games without his-helmet? Did he ever 'too unsophisticated, to question,the mandate given them by thealong, namely that this nation's laws are not equally fair and , have a-heimet? Does he have a head? Is there anything in it' draft.-Because:of them there can be no unconditional amnesty.X'v just, that some citizens are more equal than others. As James .Who.cares?,..Who doesn't?-Does this act-raise the question Their sacrifice demands that tfioseiw-he,chose self-imposed ex­BaldWin has recently said,'.'If he lived on my street in Harlem, what is crime' Does it answer it? Does it raise the question ile submit and justify their aetwns. ­ •sSCg " -Nixon would "be in jail " -what is justice? Does it answer it?: • -. " • ' -• :•• £ • <4'*?•.*:'^ ~ Robert J. Macdonald. • • • I was not-after a pounifdrNixon's flesh nearest the heart. But -Is this yet another-example of. the Maxwell Smartism-We* .. n -- -Sid Jlichardson Hajl.3.322 ­I was after some application of a compassionate justice which "have to live, cheat, kill-and steal, we protect all that's good and -would leave • the-ideals this nation was conceived, under 'stLll .holv m the world.? • . . , , CJA in Chile healthy and intact Why do I ask so many questions? Befcause the answers ateso To the editor:.v .... :— " I-had Sloped' thatPresident :Ford would^mafce some effortto • boring? So obvious? . We read (strangely in the.Statesman and notlffTfie Texan1, right tlje-wrong that'had goW on for too long,"the.wrong"that ' Mark Simmons that-the CIA hasadmitted spending over ^lt niillion in covertsatd that money,or power, or influence, could buy one-'s way out Senior, Communication action funds against.the;popularly elected Allende governmentof any scrape with the law. We now see that hope was in vain. Pardon in. Chile which was viciously overthrown by the military last­ Now.I know the twisting bite of the old Chinese curse; "May my brother ;To the editor." Sept. 11: CIA Director Colby acknowledged-in secret testimony ByW^te38tBE«tmtnirnf^fmH«v4aith.that.this.Tiationj:anj jjiLdnrp. Find tJ5at [f can still attempt to be the dream that'oiir: •Founding-Fathers hopedliLwoul4.be^seemsto be.ebbing by the^j day.. Perhaps I have taken too seriously what has happened in . . ; • . --—,,.v­ fenotrglr" — 1ndeedr Sb'have-mvvfSmirv, — ----— • — -/This"revelation by Rep. Michael Harrington in a letteF fb Uus-conntoy.-in 4h£ last few years; at any rate, it has not taken brother soffense? Misuseof public funds' Perjury" No,nothing • • .Jlke .that. —... House Foreign Affairs Chairman Thomas'Morgan.only'gives place Without a gr'eat.amount yqf; personal pain finch •/"» fitting tllA Pkilnnnn. U«.._ :•_ __t •* ti'i . . \ ; Rattier,;than Vswye his^iin^;V^ -flesh,to what the Chileans have claimed all along—"that the ~ \ ' '*"* Charles Ramirez-Berg coup was largely "englnee'reti;by: the United "States'.'Besides the .he chose toexile himself. Ihaven!t seen him these five years...! "Graduate Student, RTF -CIA. activities, *U.S. cOuhterinsprgency" training of Chilean Perhaps President Ford will show some of ,his UnconditionalCowardly decision compassion,to families like oursacross'this greatnationI hope generals instrumental in the coup, direct unprecedented To the editor: . ' , • • , '- military aid and a U.S. manipulated credit blockade wereclear­ he will — so far I have. no reason to doubt his honesty:;.. President Ford has pardoned Richard M. Nixon Although ly a rgajor cause, lor.the riseto powerof the present murderous »' J ^ ' G.L. Barber this was~a veryTilfficoll Ueuisioii -to-tkr^'wlSi.-the--Presideht| dictatorship-. This didtatorship is already responsible for more -I400-Spicewoo.d JipringsJRoad would have us believe that 'll was a courageous-decision.;Presi-? -thM.3Q.0Q0_e*.e'eutiqns,jmass arrest and terrorist tactics, and dent Pordstated thaChis personal conscience"was his guide..At •1 Fair trials for exiles v rnn p Amnnn J jL. _ r_ _• 1-_ 111' unfortunate, we as a naUon can.only hope, that each case will „ Arel 23 • ,• in voui.dorm/,vour new : Fresh apartment or house But ; b heaths -Sv 24 is 26 2B . . •fhojfly.in Voo»-4te6«— "60 Report;-'is " « Colorado Corn 1 * .Now twoiocations tor voui .53 Tissue -growingneeds • 61 Pack away 79 30 31 ' r. -r 1^2£ars|l ^1 B5 Near w 3i Oavid & Schtaeder ­:.-.,66i VteftdMJL infernafional GardenCenter^ i'S$\ 59'Negligent'k 36 3T 38 39 40-4»T^ lust off Burnet Road and MWMWP MS*' ; Cft Recipient o North LoopDrive ctt f 'i 42 43 long JohnSilver's T M­ ;pi ^2"Xnlniai. if i . '*» ti OOWNl^ 46 AVi\ 48 ' 49 5Q ' / r DavicJ & Schroeder Inlenors locations: * 2825..Hancock Dtive.next tcf i Baylor 1:Breakfast fe 51 :V: <'r The CraftsmeninLqntem food ^ AN 55 Loop at Avenue Fp* ^7 "*s -J u LoneShopping Center^ if&l \ Parto 2 Parfof "fb, S6 si-.isbq\< -i? Rundberg 3-Seetati% agent ' i qU Road fS ' GARDENCENTER ^ J % .repression in Southeast Asid, in the Mideast,-1 in.Africa and in Latin America. • > . • As stories of atrocities iriount in Chile in the foreign , presses,-and as internationaf outcry;demands; a return ot democracy, let' us urge the United States not to be complicitin •: any more tyranny. Urge your congressman to investigate these ; secret activities of the CIA and tosupport legislation cuttingoff • military affl to military dictatorships.throughout the world. Let Chile be the'lesson :•' • . Alan Marks 133 W. 33rd St.. - Count the towels To the editor: . I agree witH the'statemenN. ''like a streekwalker-w'orking her way up to a brothel. the'Texas Republican Party continues its questfor the dubious.status of ^eriousalternative to the alleged • -wHTV'rtTR-v»'—i-jii. . iLrr-?yf foj—.1.win.'..'-—I ial. o^pl.-4>. , However, if-she makes it to the MhOuse better ke^p count of the tpwels' .. somebody had.. r Irish Matthews . Austin AFL-CIO: y*/Orlando SestSnel Last >t*«u over 200 University oi Texas otudvnts organized ­canoe trips, selected f'iJrm, mVmjged cuJtufdJ events, in­vited speakers, sp(msored seminars, distributed publici­tv, ai\jj vfa^vd Jr' exhibits to create the Texas Union program. * / • . this >ear you-can share Ihe tun of this learning ex­perience as a Texd«i Union committee member. To find out about committees and interview procedure, attend THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1974 'UNION 104 ^ <">u must attend nne of the two >.es^ions to he con ­sideret' tor .t i onimittrf. Interviews will 'oe September H>, 17, and IB. M A Natural For Fall S lii r t w i t lv .-a I'rcamv btMjfc Ui rl11' ti vv k (i f 10(1' r .arrvlio. Add llic flip-pli'alcd -Skirl or wide I(!rk­fti'tl flints anp •-witli 'iIh'.-yoked jark .i't, all t> f —. polyesTor-ravon lilcnd Iwccd; ITs a -naltiraL-Healhof (irron. Sizes.5 lo 13.' Jacket 29,001 Pants 17.00 '"TI Skirt 15.00 -iM Turtleneck 14.00 a'-" On-the'-Dr&g "^~24O6GUad0upe «. "i f •*> v fc. £ V J>,V \ / ,V«SISQ5*»-«—'S /V l'3f*(Editor's ting right ^halfback when the tained-such-.powerhouses "as defensive line.-snd tSameds TCU);was great." Smith said. the eighthbth ofuf rtgegpMtv §/yard range." a li8S!iP®I'p.:l''yard range 1 Mustangs ' open their season Santa Clara, Oregon State, igjvith Steve. Morton,: Mark: *'We didn't have our goals set V2X.FU •series of>1 stories,stories -feathered-gathered "We're not .going thrriuj ;--'v? pninp to throw^y '• jlEt Saturday against NTSU. Virginia Tech and Rice. MosU^Cqnes^Charles Adams and so high. We could have a • on thevanHoal Southwest the b«tll that much this year.itVj. " And of the starting fullback SWC teams treated SMU^Su-Ry^sell Johnson the group better team .this seasons if we Conference Press Tour-t but ^rhen it is thrown it-'s fors?ji "Davtd 'Bostick, -Smith -says.. _muchL more rulety. ~ ' should'give. NTSU a lot of • :don't get-anybody hurt:",;' . By RICHARD. J.USXICEsi-trf.-the: hig...one.'-. .SMU split end "He'san exceptional fullback, .'.'It'll be easier for us 4e-be problems, i vXj /'%\ '••• gij Despite Dave Smith, i', t^^ng-jft4»avp.IaL^satdweat>tainfelinebackec.Jj5d„ • ~«MMT^,TEHY.EARPROBAT»EH„ -perience and..unity working-•much improved-this season," members of the defensive ' .r,--.^'S«nio Qom . ' 7: • values such. ,as unity, paymg-.players cash bonuses^ ^amprQvlGg_.effoc!t,t'' • -.togetherness -and'faith: last season-.-The-probat.ion-in­'•J. The befeagured Srpith is-not • ehides a ban-6n. Mustang. Wesson .than we've had in the past." ed a lot of pomisV but we're-'•'Last '.year., the way we Ttiai TkK Rpan ..SUficeeding. television appearances and : -The SMU defense had niost.,,. _ggi.ng. tb be more consistent." _ finished the season (a tie with" T»«q«A*M "Our offense Is noT^^ •""'bowI gdmes^N^tHhat anvbnr-^capabilities, and ba^. .im­Deny andMikeSmith is more Of its big moments early last ? . fackle Louis Kelcher is the 'Arkansas"affil' Victories over: fcitintei to the long pass atall." SMl"s "rat SMU was.expected Either in pressed us with his improved^" than"adequ£tBvrTheir back-ups: -,^easQn.._Xhe_Mustangs con-mainstay of the-'Mustnng powerhouses Baylor and; excellent tight .end _Qscar (the next two seasons. ... throwing.". „ • -are not iriuch of anything. SMU-has Rqan sai PrbbWlple > — -" \«tOWoStot« 80 percent of his ability .''His some, on offense before -the­ but we think Riqky Wesson -AniUhe SMU offensive line., Or«g«n $*wf«... more outride running. In controlled scrimmages legs are improving each day, season is over. Clayborn had-:-.­ Finish: Seventh can do (he job for us." Smith of Henry Sheppard, Jim v a* TCU > ^'th-the -Joss..qffullback this fall, Wyatt hasconslstent-.and thejonly doubt is how long held a starting job until his said.-"He^bas the leadership . Duggan;.Guy Thomas, Horace '«*•; .' • r\r~ - TnciiTtch >-^ " Roosevelt Leaks.for at least ly produced long-runs and has it.viH take him to get back to switch to safety last week. ,,of T«ks« paTt of the season, the half-" become tbe No; 73; halfback his sophomqre ' form,""Akers-•• -• Another player, who. could TunUM^ Arby's at Aibnwi ' . t " -;•-••> backs will beasked todo more behind veterans Don Burrisk said, -'7 ' see action at. halfback is-the" J* v .1 §^j.than just fake and block. and-Joe Aboussie. When he is healthy, Bilrrisk, current' .'Noi-i fullback, Earl ­ <•> t«CT» sradj»m Fortunately, the Longhorhs "Gralyn has real natural 5-10, 195; can provide the • Campbell, With the return of . • ability as a -nmirer, with fine speed to complement the Leaks some time during thel"rn E-. quickness, good balance ar^d, powerruiimng^of Aboussie. season; the Longhorns will be ^good speed. The only thiirfg.-Akers describes Aboussie, in the enviable position of hav­ keeping him back Is his jnex-'; 5-8',' lSOlas "a good nofth-. ing two of'the best fullbacks in -­2 QUARTER LB. perience in blocking," Akers south runner and a tough : the countty. ;• said, • blocker." "We've talked about putting KUNG-FII HAMBURGERS WALKER.returns to action The Horns lost two part; him in the same backfield • gROM CHINESE INSTRUCTORS this year after sitting out last 'time starters from last year, with Leaks, but tifere is no FprSelf-Defenseand Sports -^nnrnn withVa frnoo injury in tpninrs Tommy Latidrv and positive.plans .becatiisei of the;' REG. $1.70 SAVE 51 Because o( • continuing Lonnie Bennett, but with the uncertainty ot Leaks' knee,11 " »_ib , Traditional Teaching problems with his 1fnee; newr players, Aboussie feels Akers said. tomato, mayonnaise and pickles -11— Mathod — -Walker-has only wnriroH fr^n that the halfback situation lias ' • The^Longhorns haveseveral OfFER GOOD THRU SEPT--13 REGISTER NOW :<4 MUST PRESENT AD WITH HINCHJtSf— T703 Ouudalupj 472-1382 daysthisfall. improvedT since^asfryearr—-interesting^ possibilities-at as • AT— —-Despite tils lack of olaving' • Good at Waco, Killccn & Austin Arby's' SftQO Burnet Rd. .451-3760 "We've got more depth and Jialfback that could provide 44,11 W. B«i» White 892-2058 PEISHAOLIN time; Walker is being counted with good young guys like ~the excitement (hat lias .been—-—­KUNG-FU on heavily for the 'Upcoming Wyatt ;and Walker we'll be • lacking since Jim Bfertelsen : •Arby's • Arby's • Arby's 'Arby's *. Arby's • Arby's season. '-'Jimmy's probably -able/ to .have a more diver-" graduated^"" INSTITUTE 3401 GUADALUPE Shoe Shop •SALE* 4-9 P.M. WEEKDAYS 451-9150 We make and SHEEPSKIN RENT ..... A . repair booH RUGS T.V. shoei telu Beautiful Colors Rentals -Saies ^ Service leather •LEATHER SALE * Varioui Itindvcolari -75V per ft. Pearl Magazine iMOvmttHI Austin T.V, ^ 22W O . , lrtr Capitol Saddlery Rentals DAN'S 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 453-8041 _ --0 • :.. J has a circulation of m '•Xv. "v . ' •; •-• . Typewriters at>' ': .12408 San Gabriel 37,500 in the UT (Next to Nau Pharmacy) gpsS ^ • ­ AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA 11 ^ markets *M Notice: Dan's-Typewriters has bought all ofHemphills'.office machines, including typewriters andadding machines ... pffering you agreater selection,to meet your every student need. SeeCoupon Offer Below. a-get ^ IJi m 5^ IR Rsf "is-tf i M •' Pearl Magazine offers adver­tisers a super incoad into theUT market, pearl "lias a highly , selective market and a guaranteed circulation of 37,500 -Peart, being a monthly, offers monthly event orientation aided by selectivity in aji placement, t ~A•*•-»'?s ' *-K your^r^nrnhlmrw With Vflll' Contact any of the PEARL ad Salesmen for details at 471-1865 4 Mr than happy to work out your--;,; ^ ^>r Advertising /ors*pt*m.ber is5^e ,— 2 -* -• ^ xii ^^*^6iV-2 M At Dan's we carry a good selection of quallty-ff typewriters to fit 4he needs*of any student,' ' new or advanced. Drop in and see what Dan means when*he' says, "WE WELCOME­sTUDEiJTS» CLIP THIS AD FOR A -DISCOUISPT ON ALL SALES AND REPAIR — GOOD •ki" ALL SEMESYE'r,. 'Cf 1 '' MS rRentals:-, Sales -.Service >V" rfr*. , DAN S" ^rmmrltlfsll 5408 SATN/GABRIElJ^'V mm h.rS. Si. BRINGI THS COUPON . -With this coupon, buy kM any giant, Itrga ty medium pizza at regular price and 'receive one pizza of -ithe nei(t:tmalier tlze wlttvaqualnumber of ingredient! FREEI One coupon per^isi't. please.. AWOWKU-MPf rJIrHH k ]2«00 GUADALUPE ' 3000 DUVAL #401 BURNET RD. 451-7571 220* RIVERSIDE 447-4411 7237 HWY. 290 (AST 92J.15M «7744»7„ 477-6751^»V477}f[l­MI9 RESEARCH nasi (Next to Nau Pharmacy) epcr/rs on all makes Monthly Magtnlito SufipbmuM to The Daiiy fexa AMERICA S r-AVORUB Pi/.IA w**} -* $Tuesday/ September 10, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN V-S » u*>3< l 33­ k %&? ,&• . • * <* t% * 5 , if? 1 - -UH Tdtptote --—Connors cashes in. King smashes a return';1'^:, . -i-'t -f w "~ U.S. Open tennis FX)RESTHILLS, N.Y, (AP:!: -bold as a bandit and atf ''ollCingTWba'in-reeent-months The„Amexican^ tities; have — "I was so high, I felt like I assassin with a steel racquet has'become mote deeply in­been Australian property':for was on cloud nine — I didn't in his hand — swept past the volved in pjjblishing and much of the last two decades. know " have won the "down;V said Jirrimy Connors'. Australia in 68 minutes of " . However, Goolajgong lapsed men's li{Ie""13" tTrii'es" since "I iiatd to. get' bahoova to devastating ^hot-making, 6-1, ; into too many, losses:.of corn-1956. Court had-won fiveof the gear I was afraid until the &G..M. J . centraUon and -allowed the last eight women's cham last point I might blow it,|^| The 30-year-old-King, highly comp^Utive Arnerican" pionships^.said Billie Jean King. . >v "'down a set at one Stage and to fighther wayout of trouble. Never since I started the So,, the moprhair^ courty trailing 3-0 in the final set, King previously won it in 1967, international tour 2?years ago killerfrpmKlleville.-lil.and gritted her-teeth and .1971 and 1972. has anyone beaten me • sothe gritty old lady from Hilton hammered out a 3-6, 6-3,-7-5 The new champions, each"of badly," Rosewail said. "HeHe a d, S re turned • triumph over the unpredic-. whom received $22,500 cash kept the pressure on me-allAmerican, tennis supremacy table Evonne Goolagong of prizes plus automobiles;new day. He hit the ball early and to home base-JHonday _with ' Australia. and other prizes, succeed, a on the rise and never gave me singles victories in the .U.S. ~ Goi>lagongv~daughter of. an.....pMc.Jit,Australians — a chance to get into. theOpen Tennis Championships. 'aboriginal sheepharder, had ; Margaret'Smith* Cdlfirt,-rioyr-­ match'. The 22-iyear-old Connors — upset tdp^seeded Chris Evert retired while expecting a se­in a stirring semifinalarid had. . cond child; and John New- Rangers Split ;• been favored by most combe, who had been' beaten observers to take the.measure by Rosewail i'n.thesemifinals. ' Astros Beaten they stand ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) ­ NATIONAL l£*GUE AMERICAN If AGUE Roy Howell's first major •,V« tatt • ' • - Ea«l league home-run triggered a ' w i • p«f. • v.l three-run Texas rally: in the Pittsburgh 76 64 .5*3 . New York;-^75. / 65 74 67. ,52S Boston :• T'l fourth Inning,and the Hangers Phliaphla iiii. —75 ~TT tot—iVj • Baltimore^ .rT4 -:ft6. went oh to beat the California New York..,. k. si . 73 .471 )0 Cleveiano Montreal . &1 77 .442 14 Milwaukee...*<; Angels 5-3 and gain a split of Cnic&90.... « 57. .413 18 Detroit £ their-twi-night d'oubleheader. _ _ _ . . . . W*»t' •V- Los Angeles...,. 88" '-Vti Oaklantf^^v. Monday. -wtv 65 Cincinnati 58 Texas ~ Chuck Dobsuil, inaking-'his—aii»«» " -7fl* 64 : ,-Kan City »: .v -Houston . 71 -69-.507 first major league start of the /Umnesoia~ • San Fran 65 76' ;"4a? Chicago. 70 72 year, stopped Texas on seven •San Diego.. 5V 9\ • 359 38-California,..—... 56 86 hits in pitching th^iigels tu a .< Monday'rOtom** Meniioy'i Camn Chicago?, Pittsburgh 4 Cleveland 1, Detroit 1. 4-1 victory in the opener. ; Los AngefcvB, Atlanta \ ' : New York 6t , Cincinnati 8^ San Dleyo 3 : . • Minnesota 3, Chicago11 — ' .. *** New Yofk 7; Montreal 1 California 4, 3, Texas 1/5 HOUSJTON fAP) — Gary Phlldelphla^ Stt Louis 0 Oakland 3, Kansas City P 'ulrst game'' (5^ Sa« P'a^c'sco fi./Hous*on $ BaUimore 6, Milwaukee 5, )) JnnJngs Matthews' two-run double and Dave Kingman's two-run tri­ ple highlighted a five-run out­ burst fri the eighth inningthat lifted the San "Francisco VANS Giants to an ft-6 victory over the Houston Astros*Monday IMPORTED night. v. AUTO PARTS NOW OPEN * Your Parts Problems VANish at VAN'S Parts for All Imports WKofe 3705 N. Interregional Provision wo ANUMo Next to the "Body. Shop" Ph.i472-6236 «tr ' * ^ r , When you eiiroll in Aif Force ROTC you can get more: an opportunity for 1a-scholarship, a chance, for flying lessons...and s iy-*£ 4 * ' t Interested? Cqfglll RAS IIS-471-1776 or 471-1777 W'AIR FQPCRRbtC A Story of Texas Footblll Denne Freeman W 4^ ' Hook Lni H74. The -book literally explodes in your hands, •recaljing-alhthe'exciteinent iand colcft-of the games, coaches . players and ,.pjays that have made Texas a natioriaj powerhouse^n the field. It^'a big. fascinating book, stuffed withthe^tuffdflegend. ---• ' , •' ~ • •-^ available livhije they last) at American Bank-When you opeji a new checking or savings account for -S50 or inore. or add $50 or mbre to an existing savings accqimt. the book's yours for five dollars (plus tax). Deposit $500 or more in one of American Bank s savings plans and ,.you take the book honve free. ­ zM ' available tindOr the same arrangeinents afe three7othbr^ books about University of I exas rivals:"The Razorbacks"(^rkansas). "The Spb.ners'-(Oklahoinar 'rheTwelfth Man" (Aci'M) bo get the inside stoty at American Bank. Get A MoveOn. With Us. I'd like toget theinsidestory onLonghorn Footbail. So here s$5 (plus 25c tAx) for the ! T5tTOl< and my deixisit of (§50 minimum) for inj't • New checkupaccount | D New bavings account D Existing savingsaccount nomlx^r -I Or. scmd me the book fr&e I menclosu\g$ -• ($5(X)minimnm)that 1 dlike to ; dc|x>sit in the following Ameiican Bank savings plan, d New savings account -^ . y • , j S ^lst,n^avirv^s dccoulV ^ •SiK er l^agleSavings'(5 l/2"o) I •iX dayCDO }/2%) •One \earCD ((K.) •2 1/2'yeai CD (6 1/2-i) " -1 '-v>-' -' X ^ <• • ! v Pleasesend the following book; ^ "YwC" Hwk LmHoMAs •IhcSoonsiis The F^azorback^ •TKo Twelfth Man ADDRESS CITY STATE Vie American National Bank of Austin IP.O.Box 2266 /Austin,Texas 78780 fAmerican Bank Plaza * r v-. . 'it24'77-A*iflt /A Jytif rated *CapitilICorporation Member!Member PniC. • J ^ v * Tuesday, September, 10, 1^74 T MLYTEXANPag^ 7;. $81 SMl/'s Smith Bitter M ."t$3 ' DALLAS — It i? difficult tcgBWMaaK~*y way " •• "i . "We had a rebirth this spring,'' Smith®tiifflv. "Our attitude i§, good, and we've been said. "I think; allthings work' together for-having some real good workouts," said •• the good: We|re going to be positive; and.:--lmebaeker Ted Thompson. ")Ve're op­we'te npt bitter-at-anyone-."' " ' ' ' timistic about the season. We can prove a " SMITHES LACK of bitterness surfaced-lot about our character;" quite clearly this summer when a reporter' "MOST STt'DENTJJ -are behind us," asked him about the hiring of a new assis­. said linebacker. Ernie Knox. "I haven't tant coach. . • Jjad any hassles, and 1 think we'll be a . "I don't know about this," Smith said at;v more urtificd campus this year " rit9raj*s,>«X5K3Bl3» -"The" nbv5ous^Srruth"af?not be6n «Sn­ •an^cotferagislierev-we almost-hay&toJbiUL fronted_wth his problems' often, space. Unless ii's-something Iifce a'i'resi-. « WJienasKecFaBduF Hfe "tmt'he-Titight. dent resi'gning or. a team problem the have lost, Smith, said,-"We've got papers here don't "want to print it.'' everything out in the Open "We have fK -Smith' was rpplaced_as affl&fc'tilrectnr. nothing to hide." . _ J by Dallas businessman Dick Davis.' And • And whefi, reminded he tiad saTiT the- Davis has the same flowery praise for. same thing one year ago; he turned and • Smith. ' . -~v— -walked away. IJaidMt piihiiip him SMn "We still have very, much' faith in •> knows it's got problems, and Smith knows • him," Davis said. "We're all behind hitni it.'The sooner he goes somewhere else for and we think this problem has caused our a fresh start the better. •*< Trevino Wins Series /^fr AKRON. Ohio ~(AP) — Lee " Club-course ji.... •this., elite event that brings Trevino finally conquered the It's a layout that Trevino together .only the winners of course he saidhe couldn'tpl^v 'had avoided as much as.possi­the world's major titles. • and won a two-day sudden-ble in .the past, saying it was s death playoff for the $50,000 too long for him. •' -• • ' •• ' • Player, who once led by six First prize in the World Series "My game has turned strokes in regulation play, and of'Golf. . around;" Trevino said Mon--Trevino, went back to the 14th . He beat South African Gary , day: ."I'm hittihg the long hole for the playoff that • Piaypr with a routine par on irons better, now. than I ever -produced five holes of high-the seventh extra hole — and have in my life. "drama — ­ -trariio Vi mntn X," V/ Ite., i the second of the day — Mon­It, was Trevino's first vie-before darkness settled in and day-on-thelong,-troublesomer tnry in fniir starts —' he had the.'playoff was extended to s&-/,i«u-yard Firestone "Country—rfimshed-.-last-isro-times . .in Monday. HOUSTON .(APJ, -Jo"hn -Houston Oilers to the Houston . porary-injunction after the 6­Matuszak 'lost the first round Texans Monday when State. 8,285-pound Matuszak jumped-' in his battle to jump from the Dist. Judge Arthur Lesher to" the Texans Aug.: 28. issued a temporary injunction Lesher's ruling-will keep prohibiting Matuszak from , Matuszak from playing for the NotreDame .playing for the World Football ' Texans until the case is •League Texans. resolved. * ­ Rip£ Techit'" • Whether it also-was the last "I expected this, but I am i ATLANTA (AP) — Notre -rtiund remained-to-be-deter­-disappointed, too.i".Matuszak „ Dame overcame an -early mined. Matuszak said he was said following Lesher's deci­"isomihdown by "the Georgia prepared to fight the' case sion. through the courts. Attorneys , /"All I really want to'do is te Tech Yellowjacketsand rolled for,, Matuszak and the Texans play football'. I f-eet strongly yito an impressive 31-7 victory said they were studying the that in a court of law with a.in a nationally-televised game -possibility of an appeal. • trial 'and jury, it will go-my - Monday night, at Grant Field in Atlanta. The Oilers "Sought the tem-way. I'm prepared to see it all • the way if it goes that far." The Irish amassed 450 yards Swim Tryoots total offense on25 first downs. There will be a meeting for Georgia Tech marched 68' all men and womerfinterested yards in its first offensive in trying out for tfietftriversi­ • possession, but the Notre forAQuofity ty swimming teams-at 4:30 Dame-defense stymied -the p.m. Tuesday: at the Gregory Yellowjackets the rest of the Gym Pool. game._ 1® IPP {"UNIV. FLYING"CLUB] J FLYWITH(JS J ! ... $ove. Meeting ' .Wed., Sept. U' J '7:30 p.m., BEB 166 j jComplete flight training i {fc-gjg ,|^. available . j ,«SM: im. ' If Ihe-jname is M Superior AHTOKtO -salsthe product vlpay <.^•1 STUDENTS lhPRICE SPECIAL OFFER ii *1.65 Per Month •• , 4 fThe Houston Chronicle "-"^1-Nqiv Delivered In Most Areas Call 477-4485&& -iS-"I mm W-c fcSS'im TEXAS STEREO OPENS NUMBER"TWd ^ •' •: ••• •• • ' 4°iP0° . W • ^QUADRAPHONIC, S & H , W • 8-TRACK WITH > GREEN STAMPS P f 4 SPEAKERS - 4*^ i Ul ^ e%$~ ' FROM NOWHERE TO NO. 1 IN AUSTIN IN A LITTLE rv OVER A YEAR. *3 THERE MUST BE A REASON!!!! V 1 |r I SAVE $T02.65 SAV& S118.7Q •-••wirWsaRsiTOsvwjas '•J-XZf i ' I miS. ft* tffrfac" KENWOOD EPI BSR 50 WATT PIONEER KLH GARRARD 60 WATT AM/FM STEREO MUSIf SYSTEM AM/FM STEREO MUSIC SYSTEM Kenwdod KR 1400 179vOS -44 Pioneer SX 434 239.95 EPI 60 72) 13? 90 BSR 266AX 81.80 KLH 38 (2) 149.95 GARRARD 42 97.80 Total if Purchased Separately $401.65 Total if Purchased Separately $487.70 RECEIVERS CHANGERS TAPE EQUIP. SHERWOOD S72O0 BSR 310 AXE D0K0RDER 7140 ISO.. Wall SS14V 3 Way Speaker Automatic turntable, 4 Channel Reel to Reel .^M/FMStkrco , 'w7fl2" • woofer,' 10 KOSS HVIIC Magnetic cartridge . Record. Deck with Receiver Tope Monitor •. $000 Teal-Warranty. n /SA'A' Lightweight--— , List 91.80 Kilo Sound on Sound tis» 359.95 i/7 list $io9.9s fa. jlj yy headphones w/volume,-" ( Multi Sync. ' controls ittuM iisL429.95 list 54.95 ' . HARMON KARDON 330B GARRARD 62 <00 Wait JkM/fM 3 speed oulomotic OLYMPIC HP70 Stereo Receiver.' *^169 with toeicg and anti KLH. 23 D0K0RDER 7200 Stereo -headphone. lot 199.95. skate, Complete -with i2" Woofer air Reel to re/l.tope deck. Left/Right Volume" base and Share ellip­suspension spoken;,' Solenoid controls, tpntrols, tical cartridge. walnut cabinet . automat! list 29.95 .Ae9.i7i.8S list 149.95 Reverse v359 list 499.95 SUPEREX.PROB VI GARRARD ZERO 92 Professional. Stereo, KLH 54 Headphone ''' ti)| 3 speed Auto, BSR TD8S-^? . tOO rms wott 4-SSI 2V list S60 r HZ-tk iorrard'j finest, 8. track Vt'ereo: (hahael receiver with joicplete with wood :: 8" Coaxial speokej playback deck. Perfect AM/FM toner, tope with cone whiuer HEADPHONE EXT boseiSh'ure Hi-Track for the budget minded. monitor & joy stick tist 59.95 Cord, 25' long, coiled ' (IBptical Cartridge. Vaflf ufllilila list 53$ stereo Ust 4.9/ '299 SHERWOOD S7100A PANASONIC RS 26 3US BLANK TAPE 70 wott AM/FM Stereo •••••. DUAL 1228 KLH 31, . stereo solid: state record/playback AMPEX Automotic turntable. 2 way speakers, 8" receiver tape monitor Cassette deck with 84 Minute 8 track Walnut base,.Shwe Hi­_ woofer, high disper­ switch td|w . dubbing Dofcy.noise reduction blohk recording tapeii;|^ S110 frock Magnetic cor­ sion tweeter. Deluxe special FM hush filter. $ ]AA systpm. Cr02 switch Reg. $3.19 && | Iridge. Reg.239.95 1 7/ grill. automatic stop. : Jl/ list,15M5 Reg. 99.9jpair Reg. 199.95 HOW AMPEX 350-C60 i0 minute blank • CtOSE OUTS CARTRIDGES" cassette * recoiding ­ tape, limit size perBOZAk' 4000 >.1 customer v "• . WSff 69' Fiber-standing AMPEX 363-C60 speaker. 8 Tweeters, W Minute Chromium 2 Woofers. "*vS''0;0'fl dioxide cassette recor­list 419.95 (2) :*OJT ding tape. $|'9 Top quality KENWOOD KR2300 ARXB 9r EMPIRE 6000M 50 Watt AM/FM 2 Speed manual turn- MAXELL UDC 120 3 way floor , speaker stereo receiver. Cut . Jl'FA $1 SHURE M91ED Mile w/Shure M91ED w/imrble top. Minute.cassette tape.* iw.95(i) .. I3y $174.90 * list $149.95 *109 listi,55. V.4? $3" list 54,95 $22 MAXELL 64 MinuteFISHER 395 BSR 520AX low. noise blank -UO wott AM/FM Walnut base, dust HARMAN KARDON HK20 track tape. J00 If. iUri?;Tic«ive|:. cover and magnetic -2 way speaker with v-„ list 3.35 t w/remor# control;" m cartridge. §§§S$ • -V -woofer. ' ;riW SQA SHURE DYNETIC $'| 99 S tere'o., cartridge: w/elliptical stylus list399.95 " vZii *219 list lisjo' Reg. 55.00 J4 '• MAXELL , tht 44.95 40; Minute /low noise PIONEER PL10 _ SHERWOOp S7900A n KLH 17X cassette tap*. $149 1speed manual (urn-list 2.20 . loble w/Shure Av300E Stereo receiver.; 280 An industry standard STANTON 681EE^ watts. 10" woofer, 2'-';; Stereo elliptical cor-fei^ BASF 1800'. ? list 479.95 '339 -tweeter.' 1 .triv ;• v;;.s$oc Reel to reel tape, $499.gite •; *109 Reg. 89.95 Now $59 list 72.00 . _. . ' JJ list 7.03 1 GARRARD 74MS,. . ... BASF 90 Min., New auto record in-'h; PIONEER CS99A Truck tape^ BOZAK B301 $2« (Mil base and Shure "''V'"" S way speaker w/15" SHURE HI TRACK list 3.85 ­ 3 wny speaker w/12" M91£D magnetic car- woofer, 2" Md, 3" llllptical cartridge, woofer -$1111 list 167.50 117 *0 JMl tweeters. v~-{$•",$ ~~ w/dlamond stylus 6N cassette tape. |79Keg.15J.l5. fcg.fc9.V5 ^1*199 list 49,95 " -Ust 2.25' TEN OAT ,KJ^prtca!"X''*1, Any .fompone"* P ,lon» bsWedJ LL sr.,tf3iA-»r"d ISISTEREO Any a eqw> 1r 9r«aler] ?HOURS; .M. >RTH STORE TUES. -FRI.M 12.00 -9:00 SOUTHSTORE i# 104 E, Huntland Drive Saturday -i0:00.6;oo 1914,6.Riverside Drive Near Highland Mall CLOSED MONDAY fe fownlake Shopping Center VfitMnooM««# #t equoV or J1"!"'] ,454-8053 ' "ST "1.^!^447-8764? •Si-v. £&'• andkw*»!2L ;P?9e.'.f) J9W THE DAILY TEXAN J! « -wf irUv t "»T i&rrr **L T 'lP 4 < •k'x** *7JOf V « t ... ...—..j — .,... ;.. ^j.*­ I.' Pi StateTextbook By RODOLFO RESENDEZ, recommendation." He added to ;rriake a full study of theJ.,,for comment. .reduction Jan. l. the elimination of the rebate JR. ; report and declined to com-"' Another critic of the utility "Al-THpUGH tha. com­ Texan Staff-Writer'; ites. system would save money for ment. . . -: rebate system.-City Court-, mittee is persuaded that, the * l' J-'" Two vocal opponents of the city. « • » r City-Manager Dan Davidson cilman • Bob-Binder, , also trend in. city; government is • By NICK CUCCIA husband are far.more objeo-by ballot. A text must receive Austin's public utility rebate Friedman "oxp-Iained, •said, "It. appears the com­agreed with the', committee's 1 away .from participation in- Texan Staff Writer live-than fnosL people, 10 votes to be accepted, and system Monday supported the -however, the phase-out period mittee has done a fine job "in recommendation^ subdivision , development,".J^eiit(oners.-and-jHiblisher3~ ^J'W,f5 -DO NOT -revi-e-w----the-voting continues untilfive Special Task -Force Com­-.of-, ..months' as--c'6mingy-up the nine w.ith "We need to get'rid of it . the report stated., "a number7po!itlcallj', TWe're texts are chosen. will have their say Tuesday1 not cen- mittee OH Subdivision Polieies" reeonrrrrended--by -the-eom—-fecommendatiOHsIot the City ^rebate systemV," he said ' _of positive,'benefits' -to all' «••.'••• when-., textbook adoption soring. We're against cen-On Nov. 9, the-State Board recommendation to phase out mittee was too long and "Council." ' -Binder Talso" ; agreed 'WiTTi —citizens -would--^derived­ . hearings of the State Board'oT sorship. of Education meets to put the rebate system. preferred the phase-out period HE ADDEp the recommen­ from continuing the policy for , hurrying the rebate system's Education begin. . • "A chilcL has the' right to final approval on the text­ City Councilman.Jeff Fried­be "stepped up." " dation was a ' good solution." phase-out period, adding that a span of time on a reducing.-.r-The annual hearings give know the facts," she said, but books, chosen by the com­ man called the committee's • City Councilman Berl Hand-Other members., of City such-a move would be "even formula:" • ja citizens • the opportunity to the material should be geared mittee. decision "an excellent cox said he had not had time Council could -not be. peaGjjed better." -• . -" .The commi ttee's reportalso -present objections' to . text" "to~the:p®irr8»»tQ-^te''ffa^"' the-Stat&"B6arirBI'sTCiln<^Htrtir-i-erfiantzaU t 4^ - t-^-3QJ^—Je1enilone 471­. .71421 The students' at­ [ m.ister charge] torneys' will " handle i BankAmebicardI . landlord-tenant, 'cort­ they'regone,they're gone, turner -protection, welcome1 employes''rights, taxation • and insurance cases.;. Never again will you see Pentax at these prices Criminal cases, arid • domestic problems. & AN EXCEPTIONAL VALUE... AT AN EXCEPTIONAL PRICE! Super Muhi»€lbate3,'rakumar Lenses • ­ Color TV Rentals 28mm f3.S ......./. .V. .$152.50 $60 for3 months HONEYWELL PENTAX —35mTn-f3^-—TT— — $415.95 Monthly-Weekly rqfos . 135mm f3 5 ... / ". . . ,,$139.95 SPOTMATIC F Jc 200mm f4 :. . .77 "7$l'8§*"95~ FREE PICK-UP / w 50mm f4 macro ..'...*..5147.50 AND DELIVERY . w/f1.8:Super,Multi-Coated 100mm f4 macro-'...'.'.. ..'.. $199.95 Takumar lens FAIRVIEW T.V. SERVICE STROBONAR. $239.95 Mfg. List!,.. '441-5906 -441-4181 ;$379.00M 100 $15.95 Rental Purchaseavailable V:.".::.::.L'.M­ -'V ' 710 $93.50 ­810 Pro Pak „.$109.50 105.....$29.95 • Beaytif.yl,fitted soft case $19.9& Wavecrest Waterbeds HONEYWELL NIKOR . Complete HONEYWELL PENTAX ES II 35mm DOUBLE OUTFIT selection of water-1 The finest film developing beds & accessorise. is the one that delivers!­ equipment in the world. AUTO/STROBONAR i 6407Burnet •Lifetime warranty! 110..'...; $34.50 w/f 1.8 SMCT 454-7901 115 $43.75 $389:95 Mfg.'List" $16.95 360............ $67.95 S599.00 460 $88.50 470 A $99.95 Tank and 35mm reel . $6; Wi* INEXPStijSlVE-• w/f1.4 SMC i. ..-$429 95 780:--.,.$132.50 Tank-and 120mm reel ... ...$12.95 LUXURY APARTMENT Mfg. List $624.50 " 782 ...........$132.50 Tank for fouM35 reels . ...$11.50 Lorye ondcomfortable onebedroom • Tankvfor eight 135 reels ...SI9.50 apt,. from $U9, furnlshed- 890 Pro Pak II;$115.95 Custom fitted soft case« .$24.00, Convonlent location on shuttle bus, within biklmj distance ot campus. 892 Pro Pak H-.$115.95 Beside UT tennis courts^ Intramural Flash Head 804 $38.50 I laundry room: and .courteous fields. Two ppols. barboque pits, Prox-o-Life 7 ..$46.50 AUTOMATIC EXPOSURE-AIM & SHOOT AGFACHROME64' professl»f\al management. Custom AC Pak $38,50 ASPENWOOD' - ­ APARTMENTS Hi Per F. Pak. „ $62.00 ^ s PEOPLE COLOR 4539 Guadalupe .• Exacting,skirt tones plus clean whites, brisk 452-4447 YOU CAN PAY A LOT MORE FOR greens and blues. Honest warm colors. • Agfa ^processing assures beautifully-alive A LOT LESS CAMERA color; and it's,included When-you buy your -filrp :t''_ V . HONEYWELL PENTAX ! . • Doorstep'delivery—prompt and/convenient: • 20 or 36 exposures SP 1000 il • Distributed and processed-in the U.S. by Full-format through-the-lens. meter-«. < You'll-always find good prices \Honeywell ir\g for goodexposures fast and easy!* ' „on fine camera Accessories at Trim styling, ~' conveniently-located "(T35::20) Texas Camera. We carry a good to controls, and that naturally-good PRICE INCLUDES ; assortpr^ent of-fi}ter$r cable releases "feel" all make up. one. af the most PROCESSING ,7-„3 chords and brackets as well as exceptional " single-ten's-reflex Agfa and Jjodak papers, and v darkroom supplies,.. ' • | cameras moneyi can buy!' " $3.29 .im. $189.95 •Fully protective fitted hard case '^SattcntionI $19.95 4 Mfg. List $319.00 l Oeei;corned beet;cheeses .hafn,qliiche.ba(becueavocadosoup^pheesecako & va,.Bui not allatonce' 304West.13th472.L90Q, life'GREEKS!'.f" Proofs from parties photographed 'by,' Photdtech will be'.on display at Texas" 'Camera. Just take shuttle bufe route Nfl to & the cbrner of Riverside and Arena ("norit to ==the=Rivefslde=Twis)3= "i ' - imkm p RiVe^lVift Privp if!*3 ^owrLLake_£la2a%442-6700 TEXAS CAMERA " Riverside Twin Rivergjide Drive • Store Hours-Mon;-Sat; 10 a.m.-6 p.m. W.J. Mt k t ^ -m * ~ r^rA \*"t <-1 f V > J jjr ,y.v»-v; U CJ »>SJf SWP Fafe Hangs on Ruling. it- figs s v t K ft JT \ . . /$ /; Bv ROBERT, FULKERSON signatures of qualified voters. total: • "IP-.THE; attorney.general "If we don t Certify,"-he Texan Staff Writer -BV LAW, SWP needed 200,? "Based on-these results, we rules the random-sampling continued,'""I fully anticipate . Anopinion may be delivered 000 votes in the 1972 guber­found the SWP had serious method is. a legitimate test, a lawsuit by.the S,WP,_" ._ sluesday • on whether the natorial election for inclusion deficiencies in the area o> Ahe.secretary of state's office R PSuelalist1 Workers Party-will on this year's ballot,and itdid "valid signatures," another of-will not certify the Socialist SWP officials could not be : appear on the Nov, 5 general not reach that amount. ficialsaid Monday. :. Workers Party.";-reached for comment. election ballot^ a spokesper­Without the-200,000 -votes,:­son for the attorney general's SWP had to obtain signatures Faculty Senate office indicated Monday. •equal to at least 1 percent of • The opinions committee of the 1972 gubernatorial vote or. the attorney general's office 34,0S5.names. anofficial in the : • Ips'mynareaVTa draft which secretary of state's..office Salaries Discussed • now awaus tne ap • disapproval of Atty:Gen. John-. SWP officials said they sub-'? Texan Staff Writer . University budget. ---languages. y.UUO^Hdtuie^ Secretary of State Slark increases tsitec^ —^JhejieaLCommittee folfows. White asked the attorney • The«secretary of state's of­; communication between come, .out -with" Broad 5"nd" . anearlier comnuttee~oh facul­ faculty and various recommendations, :general's office Friday • to fice contends these signatures members, ty: compensation which not simply dealing, with .com­ decide-if random sample . belong to nonregist^redvoters, between the faculty and ad­ -provided extensive studies on ' ministration -was., noted pensation,'' Allaire said, checking ofSWF petitionswas • or voters who participated in faculty pay rates at the a iegitimate validity , test.' .other, primaries. The repeatedly at the first school referring to the concern rais­' University. • ed over faculty salaries dur­ . White refused to certify the' secretary of state's office year meeting of the Faculty •JjBF ' +. -TO# Senate Monday. ing the meeting. After several reports on theparty!because random 'sampt-; used a random sampling of . "Why should t.he faculty status of various recommen­ 'ing of SWP petitions indicated .the signaturesanddetermined. ' 'To remedy the .latter have to modhiigh^uring the Edwards, -an "inadequate" number of • the SWP. lacked the required. problem Cfia'trrnan Edwin dations, Dave daylight'hours'to get brownie associate professor of govern- philosophy, appointed a com--paints-for periods of leave?'! :ment, suggested keeping a log The Jewish Frankenstein mittee to examine the role of • A113ine.;;u.-p:cpf essory of asked Leslie Wiliso.n, of "all recommendattons and " referrals: to outside persons -* Returns To The Screen... and groups ^ • —Ttxtin Staff PhetobyDovidWoo "There is a definite; v Shades of Mathew Brady problem in trying to com­"mUftieata,witiuwF-calleagiie§, Senior photo-journalism, major Susan German require* a focusing doth reminiscent of fe Photo Service not Only in terms of telling the frtiatogrtTjihlc voriopiei o^sbe^{ocuses,her 4X5 view camera on them wha'f Bias'been do«C"but Gtegofy Gymndsiyrn. Atfhough the view eamera is simila'rlo j^ < 'The 222 W. 19th & 53^4 Cameron Rd. in keeping' them informed of • tjie'lSSOs/lt » wicTety used tvday. A. difficulty of photographing architecture if that Nikkormat FTN chrome ^Q Q53 what is pending," one lines of buitdings tend^ to eonverge in the picture. The view camera, parts of which with 50 mm f/2 lens . • member.said. can be. tiltfid, can correct this problem. Bell/Howell FD 35 f/1.8 compare'to Canon TIB with case M79'5 fV*5 HOLIDAY CLEANERS and 9:30 p.m; Wed., Sept. 11 Spotmqtic F 55 mm f/v.'8 SPECIALS Non-members SLACKS 74e DRESSES $1.74 Members SO.', Ji04S*h.«*"»e*HflS7REET' K»TOffiCl/*Ofc'» Mamtya/Sekor DXS 100D ft>usr;« Xt*AS?»>! $1 B ,..i.w... SHIRTS 36c ?r 50 mm f/1^8 ;..-.u . HrrMC.Vl£JMJ«8J25 Specials,Good at: * -U Faculty members -are no "Although many univer­loriger receiving an "instant" sities across the country still LIMITED SUPPLY! North iqmaroft 30th and Duval 1304 W. Lynn. rebate in the fpriiv; of a diS-.. offer faculty members a dis:*­ Koenig lane Wednesdays Only Thursdays Only count from the University ,Co-count percentage on: purchase Op but must;wajt for the ed items, the Co-Op has dis-"'Tuesdays '•patronage refund" to be continued this practice." ' returned by check, • Several years ago theCo-Op ' ' Unionweek "All members of the Co-Op, -eliminated an "on-the-spot"!­9 including faculty and discount, so the only discount ste students, are entitled to a service available Co faculty patronage refund," the Cc^ members was a special"Op.*s' vice-president of charge account,' which was finarices, Charles Walker, terminated last July. . 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. ACTIVITIES FAIR union Main " ' r'T^r" . said Monday. • The charge account system ^ Ballroom. UT Interaction Committee. —>• !• » '••A'-S®'. frrntrd n 2 prrrrnt dlfferpnre 12 noon to 1 p.m. "SANDWTCH 'SEMINAR: ' , %-^L". . because of theextra personnelCENSORSHIP I.N AUSTIN John Wisser. TravisCounty CHoos'c fHVOiA TWauve costs -involved..; Walker ex-' •' assistant 'District attorney, will discuss current por1—: tJlFPERENT ST^LCS plained. The faculty was ac=nographv cases in AyStm 'Union 202. Ideas and'Issues uallyjae&iying 2 percentlessCommittee. ' ;5 K&z CrAMnt$CH in. refunds . than students _.-iJ2_nqon.JHNE' ARTS FILM SERIES: POETRY - OUNHAHl because.;W...the bookkeepingA.LL EN . GINSBERG ~7TXI5—LTffWRE-N^CE­ 4C *chdrge."|§Si^ •:FERLINGHETTI. Documents the lifestyle and poetry 3VJ.V.V. • * V "A1* of two-tnen--" -copies ARTS AND CRAFTS-OF MEXICO" Describes the • * • • />' ".•"'"•Jfop&i;•.// •' ** •*-»v t4' /•' skills and traditions which are componentslot Mexican • . .: ie craftsmanship' in pottery'-weaving, basketn,'. stone;-, • c & oiFPGfitem, r^odrand meta]s.-LRree:'Unkm-Theatre, 3. to 5 p.nVJ-POIJTRV,READING.-Louisiana poet Ken onanrtm . Foiitenot wfll reacThis poems and lead a discussion of-ur^'vrt-­ 2405^A" Nueces trends in modern poetrv. Union 202. Fine-Arts Com­^mttee -r^_ ' " 7 p.m. to II p.m. GAMES .NIGHT. A-night of fun -Presents • ., and games tnclliding spades, whiz, blackjack. Foosball. V'CA .V John Garza and Blue Horixdn pmball. and" "blackout"! bowling. N'omihal fee for each SHHOBURNET H0K3 iSA-SW'/ —Happy Hour Daily -3-6 game, Games Area, basement Recreation Committee. m 8 p m FREE FILMS YO SOY CHICANO AND 2405-A Nueces -2-Blockt Weit-af Drag : REQUIEM 22. Two, documentaries about Chicano life. Chicano faculty members will lead a discussion follow­ ing the films. Union 104_ Mexican-American Culture Committee. . THE TEXAS UNION * 5-30 p.m. OUTDOOR FREE FILM ROCK AROUND COPY CENTER 314 TOE CfcOCKrA 1950 sclassie about rock-and roll! Union FAST FOOD, -Patio. Theatre Committee. 8a.m.-5p.m. Mbn.-Fri. m • TheTexas-Union-Dining-Serwice.seUs doughnuts, • sweet rolls, chips, sandwiches, ice cream, fresh' CURRENTCLASSES,i USE THIS CONVENIENT COUPON TO START YOUR CLASSIFIED AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN fruit, milk, soft drinks, coffee and tea. MOJC MJrtt b»­ -St', ruMliiMntttiiHitlfi * r The Patto.Snack Bar ^CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK 901We»f24­ I ­ £&n'ftx CUP AND MAIL TODAY! 6^ -WRITE YOUR AD HERE- Sj? ¥M GRAND OPENTNG "S Amount EndosecL y>J>2k ..Use this handy chart to quickly arrive Nxunber of Days i'"" " ' at cost. Sm (15 word minimum) i j Mail to: b •w* .DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS^5$ , ;,P.O. BOX D i UT STATION^ Cost per word-^{^AUSTIN/ TEXAS 78712 eing Spaghetfi,^p$!agnpi, Ravioli: ^ NW«t" . " 15% Off This Wjeek Only ADDRESS Wine 25' A Glass All Day? Happy Hour Beer Prices All Day Times­ .W j 77.2a 12^0 j ^25.20 —CUV -Michelob30<: aGIass .7,. ,„,_s^T436te$uber _ Shiner 20c a Glass .i7 PHONE gffl .. k«,in and M "®0-l Guadalupe Go OrdersIKvaltable 472,3034 f • V^' v.1' Austin Tomorrow ,ffsa& v «&*r) v.. — ' « "--Z've ^*• •c nmr Wf I ;$ Officials Dispute " I Wo Vacancy No estimate has been deter' Concerts West, agreed to be :lavatbrfes, Editor's By WILLIARD HALL .* G.H. .(Bones). Olden- loose clogged i,- mined yet on total,damages in responsible''for. damages-in­drains and two broken gates Texan Staff Writer burgh, director of the con­ Memorial Stad^m after the ' * " -71 '' By KEN McHAM "CP Gov.. Dolph Briscoe vention bureau at the side the area bounded by San . at the southwest corner,of the Which "top city officials' -members in-strict adherance • Sept. 1 Z Z Top concert. >;v Jacinto and Red RiverStreets stadium v • , * Texan Staff Writer :ip:'•might have made such/ to population profiles of race, acknowledged Monday A ustin *Cha mbcr" of. Ai Lun-stedt. business, antj ,iEast .23rd 'Stre5t and ' ~"\-"Report o£ the death of the .. statements to Weddell. .sex, age and occupa tion, he there will be difficulties in -Commerce-, said there are manager for intercollegiate Penick-Courts^ /•'"" ' Austin Tomorrow-program by meeting hotel-motel ac­more ; tlian" 3,000 hotel: i.-/. Lundstedt said he doubted if WEDDELL SAID Monday said. athletics, said-Uib main cost . William Wilcox director of the "University-i-would allow • : tBe editor of an Austin • he is "not surprised" by-these' !'THE$E WOULD haye to-commodations for the 11,-motel rooms in Austin. • repairs will be in "labor, the University Physical Plant, :newspaper has. drawn the ire •! 000 delegatesv to the 1974-. . A-ustin-coulii accom­:of another concert to be held in reactions. "My sources were be compelling reasons to not material.replacements.". satd damages include several • the: stadium • of' the program's leaders and good and.they'do say that," he approve the recomiflendatlons state Democratic convert-; modate. the guests,, but. Jim Wilson, assistant t'o'the" !„'iTTTT-frrnr-H fty-fi f f i p,iak tion in Austin Sept. 17.' Sanders, sSaid-^lUfosgnlLSBrBrise me program," Butler said, Clema office vite^president for business af­... ..In a-front-page column of that none of them will admitif '^^ufT^irf tlffnirttrefS's^onj^-At av press' conference / manager of the State fairs,.said no claim will befil- THe Times of London — thp Atlfl, 3^ frnctin PIHion for the record — but. thatjs obligation to.' We can't »iedauiitiiJ.'3.1! costs| have been editor Wray WMielf.wrote: " the outlook, 1-.assure voir tiiev-,± "delegate our rp«rpnnsihHjty nors ; Coriference. .at Committee, said. several i", "Talk -to-top: city officials were not figrnents of the im­_ out; but we will give"a lot of ' , Rris"nf''in-.other large meetingsare to ''completed, i Universityat-~Pfcrn7ji/r£f~Texosfd/#k ' 414tb aamoah both, in and outside the -City agination." "V ' ..-v-Weight to the report of the dicated this.year's conven­ on'brneaf—" ~™ ujj Te.fleia in Austmon prneaF liavi Council arfd you hear this Councilman Jeff Friedman assenjbly." tion would be the last for., the date of the convention. CimAc -T^ managing siirance .companies of. "intent . prediction: that the strife^ .• called the statement "totally Mayor FroiTem Dan Love Austin, unless housing ac-1|'3 Simply changing the.date to file claims. Officials of The Times'of director6f.The~Times-aiHi ~ . .ridden -'Atistin Tomorrow' misleading, inappropriate and oommodations are in-'f| London will meet with state; other newspaper officials will said, "I favor the! Austin • .would be illegal, Sanders A washdown of the'stadium manufacturing executives in • v program is as good asdeadrr-. . wrong. I've not heard of any 'Tomorrow program — with creased in the future. If field which includes driving a' meet with manufacturing ex­ said because by law "every _^ mortally wounded to, the Briscoe also said he un-T November to plan a' special ecutives in Houston Nov. 19 takeover," he said. "Some one qualification,1 that the political state party must tractor with a brush attach­ takeover, predicted this" a derstood'delegates-to the : Texas edition to The" Times and Dallas Nov. 20 to plan the in people"want"<6-talk -of profiles be maintained," Love.. . • cOnventionrvvhO.Jive.closest hold a convention on the ment oyer it'. is expected to next year,"Lt. Gov. Wjlliam P. edition, he said." . column months ago,-of rigid takeover because theprogram end ' ... said he is satisfied with city ird--—T-u«-sd-a-y--~ i jj_ Sunday. ' • no-growth advocates. • to Austin, are beingasked to Hobby announced Monday; . The edition is scheduled to is doing what it'ssupposed to. maintenance of the profiles. . September on. even . ,Ti;~t Iv e~co~ntr a-ctrr-t-h-e-—Hebbyifiaid -the edition will "Outlook now, these of-Just because it's notfollowing "In the event the-council • stay in their own homes. A . tie published Feb. -20, .1975, numbered years." promoters -> ficials say, is that thebulk of a. •-oldpatterns, they want to dis­dismisses, all the recommen^ worker in the Democratic of the event, be the largest ever puhiished said.. proposed master plan to come rupt it." dations of the program," Love Executive Committee of-, . When asked .why. the" ... ...out of .tlif program's-'Goals City Manager DanDavidson continued, "it. would 6e an ' fice, vrtio refused to be iden-delegates chose Austin toj ... Asse'mbly' has little or~ no • said Of'thertopL-iofficialsr "I -tified, said reservations for -. hold their 'convention,. exerosa. in_frustration.and a , •i^®a«ee"0^"jtnu9tering">acc€p-.v-~don%knowwhtethey=ace,,l ^ary^erious tnistake-Jtwould * delegates arebeing made as—; 01denbur^i-said.-l!because _ tance by a council ma|f '.never heard of anyone talking be sheer politics fiytWg'cBtSJf--far away as San Antonio.. this iswhere the action is."" . jority...." -iSs •of.a takeover." . " cil to reject the program's- THE AUSTIN TOMORROW MAYOR ROY BUTLER, report." program_was created by City likewise,,said he had. no idea COUNCILMAN Dr. Bud . Council last year to provide.: what , the report might be Dryden "I .hope ..the said, 3 citizeir-participation—io-4he­-reff rringTto._ Ldon'tJcnow program doesn't die. But the a new master Plant • fonriulation of who Wray's sources are," uhe-program is not m. fulTswing;?*""" plan for "city development. said.."He.talks, to me. and all lie added. "I.don't know that The master plan is required of us. ' " ' all they they accomplishedby state to be updated law ''My concern all along has had planned to do — I don't every 10 years. • been attendance," Butler think they have really gotten < NO COVER Joan Bartz, president of the said."Basically conser­from the \'r­ the comments all AUSTIN ROCK''N ROLL : Goals Assembly.. . said, "I vatives are not attending,and various segments of the city --don't consider ifof any impor­the.liberalsare. Thoseare too on the new master plan." • UNCLE JOHN TURNER tance because I have firsthand, strong terms ror that,-but "" But~Dryderr said; "I doft't -­kiiowledge the council doesn't that's the general feeling." -think that makes it fall by. the feel that .way — I think he Butler,said he is"concerned wayside: we arestill appoin-. AND DANCER 20% off on any plant (Weddell) is just frustrated." when any group takes control 1 ting new members, and if they. (NO COVER M6NDAY-THCJRSDAY) . • Reactions from, city couri-• through ihe ndndttentiance of continue to meet with Plan­ A DpORS OPEN: 8, HAPPY HOUR: 8-9I cilmen and administratars another group." The city is ning Director Dick Lillie, the were unanimous: no oneknew replacing nonattendin-g program will still be good." purchase with this coupon timtatcfsg--"-,: •! • ; • __ ' e 914 N. LAMAR 477.a7ftS Vendor Good thru Sept. 14 only \i Absencei iyersity Go-Op i -By MARY CLARK can "be attributed to' the cumstances, the vendors were Conf uslon • over permi11 >-inwifsg-ftf-tho-ci^iia^inn '. stopped. procedure and the absence of "The problenr developed Duncan said there is no eS­key administration figures, is when the Union food services tablished permit applicaUbn |-Apt_Sbop 2nd Floor ! _ delaying "effoJCts to work out a scaled down and the sandwich form. dispute betweh^eTJnfveFsF ; vendors moved into the inner The vendors will; have to BankAmericard and.MasterCharge welcome' ty andsidewalk sandwnch vehr campuiS area." Duncan said,. submit a written .request to DRINK; DROWN dors, Roland DeNoie of Salva­Since1 regents' rules the adihihistratioii asking per­-QneJiour tr^e parking with S2.00 purchase tion Sandwiches said Monday, specifically prohibit the sale mission to sell on:campus;and g "Nobody seems to know, of food on campus^xcept un­the administration will act on FREE BEER •'what the procedureis C for gel-der authorized cir- t-7\ -' it, he said. ' . : .. • ting permission)," DeNoiS ALL NIGHT said. "I. aip going to do — — $2 Girls $3 Guvs whatever it:takes to get a per­ mit, though," he added. SHAKEY'S Specials Prices On High Balls Since he was informed dar­LIVE ENTERTAINMENT ' 2915 Guadalupe x ing registration week that his A FEATURING . ^ pe&rhts ' . f vendors would no: longer be allowed on campus, DeNoie" BRUSHY CREEK LARRY RASPBERRY said he ha3 made the rounds : of administration offices And Die HIGH STEPPERS* TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY • : rii*: Design Your Own without results. University '. .-JS­ V .Serving your favorite Beer, Wine Coolers; . -Direct From "InConcert'' Just because it's yput love. >-i&k President Stephen Spurr and ; .Sangria, arid 21 varieties of ureaf pizza • and your day. James Colvin, vice-president HAPPY HOUR 4-7 EVERY DAY make it yourvery ownring. for business affairs, areout of 2915 Quadalupe • ;•)>' 476^4394 FEATURING ROCCO THE SINGING BARTENDER town. Tho only singing bartender that can't sing ' DeNoie labeled their in­-p«cce%ilbility as "stonewal-(^/'/a. y//wjf zo/m/' ' ling" tactics. THE BUCKET 23rd and PEARL , Dr. James Duncan, dean of "1 a ; Across from HardinNorth -3 Hrs. Free Parking •. -students and assistant Vice­ -president for student affairs, /! ;jSaid the confusion" and delay _ s LIBRARY FINES 'trst Select your ring width (MM -MrtUMETERS)""Notice> from th« University Sl'W library or xihy of ift branchet are official Uhtvor­tity communicatiom raquir- Ing immadiat*' attention. Authentic Italian, French drjfrit .and Austrian cuisine prepared . by Native European chefs. TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIALS ' Tlie finest in Viennese " (START AT 4:00 KM.) 2.SMM ,i; 3MM 3.5MM 4MM 5MM 6MM --8MM pastries. For souffle's call "T" i . MttLffflAm tOGS . : " in advance. ^2.i Featuring European Cold Select the texture of your ring JUNIVv FLYING CLUBS Buffet Lunches, Mon. thru Fri. WIDE RINGS ARE SHOWN BELOW TO lULUSTjRATE FINISHES THE SAME FINISH IS AVAILABLE ON ANY WIDTH ­ HYING high J Lunch 1 T:30 -2 Dinner 5:30 -11 -r.'u ^ Meeting, Sept, 11 ^ 476-1348 * Wed., 7:30 p.m., * H 801 Lavaca in the Cambridge Tower * BEB 166 •* SM a i ICUPTHIS LUCKY COUPONI EVEY TUESDAY TRY A 1AND TAME f/2 OFF YOUR| BRIGHT ' . SATIN" |OUISrSMEAL IFIT.IS ' ¥ • TEXTURE FLORENTINE 2 EQUAL ORU»THAN m "YOURS. FROM3PM-1IPM" • •ONLY. OFFIRSOOD UMTIll err Rib. Eye Dinner RovRog |. .. 0,a.6,1*74. in* "ib .ir Chops,e the setting design for your ring Buttory Baked '_ J'®!-, Jr $0 I wimu. k C/|' 1 Potato-or French ' &***:• ^ • JA I Tbxbi; §£ ^|«lT. ' L * Toast, and Crisp • 2." " ^ . I ' Tptud Salad W ^ fissysc Alto Chop Steak Dinner ' v' , j 3S WITH ALL THE TRIMMING S GABQENIA.' TIFFANY SCALLOR-.. ILLUSION _* FRENCH FRIES and BONSNZR SIRIOINnT II A LARGE SOFT DRINK i . ^ A r UKti • . •; ;> & TAKE THIS AD TO tfourtk 2815 Guadalupe mhr* ~ •<}j& fife ©fikH 478-3560 if "ON THE 0«A0" IW-rJi.-Jp & 2236 GUADALUPE -WrSwving IUip)«cMS'nSs BECR • r-OOSBALL • PONG s& . suQcutont tpaciils Open til! 4 a m JT. •• < AILANDAIE VILLAGE 5726 BURNET RD }E sv .. £"S'-fC ^ Tif>PiNQ ~2l7~r\ .rijif ^ *tK Corner "19th & Guoduiupc 477-6829 "Design YourOAn Rings"' are available in all price tanges.­ Tuesday, September 10, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11," m $m m^sSfp^s w$&rz*?± M£f­ T"z T'Zf, f -RV-Vr*^ M S' II «\ ~; 'Chosen Survivors' Definitely Preteen Fare &$$r MinneHi Biography Bats Become Bask mm-.v-r-:: _ __ Wr? "Chasen -Survivors;" . they've been "sedated to ease The-only detail the govern---.angle, camera shots ttf inten-Although mildly enter-• produced by Charles Fries; theshock'" —; which plummets ment *-didn:t anti< ipate was v jsify the action: plus, his usiof taining in spots, the movie- Views Life, Filrns. directed J»y. Sutton Rolcy; -' 1,758 feet into the earth They these darn vampire bats deep vertical lines in the long just didn't put me on the edge ~~ By BOB THOMAS two oMiis films lor MGM. know; • screenplay by H.B. Ross." ... are unloaded at one of several in the underground caves . narrow corridors of the sta­..of my seat with a chill up my -Associated Press Writer Also the problems of dealing In "I Remember It Well,'jand Joe'Reb Moffly, start-* "underground "Stations: • con­-which .k*eep.vtercomi'ng tion magnifies th?. sense"of &n--spine; The bat-sequences look LOS ANGELES (AP) -"! with the industry's censors. .Minnelli adds.-revealing, data ing Jackie Cooper., Richard .--.-structed by the U.S. govern­ humanity's survivors without: trapment felt by the sur---like the bird-sequences from Remember r' Weil'' is the ti­' The Production Code ad­to ever-growing Gartatlti lore,Jaeckcl and-Bradford:-anent to support the group provocation.-Now how can 11 .vivors." "The Birds/-'and otherscenes tle .of the'new autobiography ministrator 'objected to the :He w_rUes.;of ^thftir-firstXttllman; at the Aquarius.-;lifter global thermonuclear people liv^ normal lives when Noj tlieflaws hereare in the resemble !"'The Poseidon of Yincerite Minrtelli, -who has making of "Gigi" because • meeting at MGM when.hewas Mif{J# ' Showtown U.S.A., Soiithside-.-#Avar. The elitist bunch is (o they have to share their blood: • screenplay. Examples: how Adventure," If -you. have sometimes been remembered ''all of the characters were newty arrived from the. Newand State Theatres. • iSiS'stay in this hole five years with these nasty little tilings?. ;'the hats ent^r the station from observed the latter two,films., less; for his superbly styled unmarried and opposed -York stage and she was an es­ s^HifcSQBS^-UJER, zifithnf-g all** »"fif the earth is Every,time the lights go out the oaves is never satisfac-you have_ seen ther crux of ; movies than for beinghusband marriage as an institution," tablished, if personally in­Texan Staff Writer 'agam fit for habltatibn, \vh :CS. ' and father of-two superstars. and "the boy had immoral secure, star at MGM."""vig-troprs and tglevi tftey-canrretunr tor the surface --J^ianeiiuJKaslJtLej'ried to-, • ielations-wtth-many women-,— i xvar ATTRACTED to lid11 computer reports nt> openings i The acting"Tsoap.opefSisirir sion;watchers have wJ iUiS'yi'wi lillU .suul u ,. l^W­ -in fhr» Judy :Garland from 1945 to•^antlrtbtPprt'W^BCT^pi^nwteA»^n[>w..m;anngc.1uns-ftn|v a" the music (drowning some man threatened by frogs, Much or their information is* on7They__collabp.rated forlife as a-mistress," * man.who haslieen*reserved •grasshoppers, flowers,.•ibird&\ imparted to them through dai-. Homo sapiens Annoying". And . There is a scene wher6"a~ m^TODhones were available Qur iiinisan(foBeuHiiBliii4 iiij. ii/iminiKii^yii n.Hly p" t'ic lif** ^nn h° lonel>' wk-& rats, ants, bees and a host of ly recordings of a robot-like audio alarm systems, even corporate genius' f jL f.:iw hnwn relented,—Jand Minnelli;ii: filmedrh^..j Miniielli 77 Lira, born by'C^sariaTi"sec--" Mother Nature's other forces. -blonde who e-nun-ci-ates each baiting the bats with blood and < *><*>* Cooper) trips to take si^uIaTBetter tion on March 12, 1946. : • • • "Gigi:' in his usual good taste" 'Their romance began to -J None-of -these iilms. -have-svL-la-hlje JC3rejfui:iy_,T]ie electrocuting a couple hun-advantage of one of the ' ~ HAS MINELLI'S PRIDE in Liza when sg HE ALSO directed bloom she reluctantly these apects lsthe,vlvld" achieved. the suspense and tapes sound normal-some 'area, cant"Stop nhe-thirsty—female .doctors -after fran- such films as "Meet Me in St shines .through in his agreed to appear in-his.third fe cinematic quality "The menaces. .tically fighting"" "him"off. she "" phy^—. -autobiography^ fihrtr"Met'l My hi Strfcouis/' of times but have a.cunousecho " " Loais,"--1!Madarae -BovaFyr-— each room is a different hue Birds." But then\ not every at otheVs. More information suddenly shouts "All right!"" THE PICTURE'S finale has arid even tlie inhabitants begin "An American in, Paris" I've always been more a He was nine years older, but director is an Altre'd-comes from an Army major • one of the groupattempting"to and vields to-him. (Oscar for best picture, 1951), to look the shades of: their ^ part of the audience than her they had -arcommoa bond: Kitchcock. \ .(Richard JaeckelV. who is climb tosafety up the elevator THE COMPUTER has respective rooms. "Father of .the Bride," "The a» super fan, who both-had spent childhoods in — j'-t-ii*. father, Th6 latest "horror""flick is-assigned to ivatch over, the shaft-.(shades of the selected : the individuals Bad and the Beautiful;""Lust happens -to love her very theaters all over,the country.' . a banal bit of, both, with bats ..party.and. operate the "Poseidon 'Adventure"' I .with .-because, of the "knowledge "Oiosen Survivors" israted com­ for Life," "Gigi" (best pic­much," he remarks. -Minnelli learned that Judy : bejng the basic bother, called puter. . . they can convey to the .a harness and four-pronged. PG: "parental guidance ture, best' direction. 1957), Father and daughter had -sometimes, relied on'-.Chosen Survivors." . It seems they are. to endure hook. He should have used a future," as well as sex, age suggested; some material "Some Came Running" and hoped 'to make-a-film-, amphetamines to get-her • ; ATTHE OPENING, 10men the years recycled Batarang from the old ""Bat­and physical fitness; but it did not suitable others.' - "through a five on may be for together, but so far it hasn't shooting day. ,.£&4.jyf!iRen are^ sluggishly water, air and waste. This is man" show.-It could've really -not seek out; the mentally-preteenagers". this critic . With -collaborst&r Hector -materialized. Minnelli is con-4 THEY STARTED livingtossed into an elevator — not explained fur.ther,'ii;^„ • driven, the audience batty: • stable, for Cooper-is paranoic. believes preteenagers to be Arce. Minnelli deals.in frank sidering other projects, ad' together when "Meet Me In -. and. several otherSjjncluding Director Roley_ does abour the only ones who could ap-. andiinstructive detail with the mitting that he works to St. Louis", finished shooting. .% • the. best he can with the given the group psychiatrrst' t Bratl-" 'prefclSte thtsftlnr^-f'as-longas-­ ha2ards.ptj(lirsctix^for a ma-please himself ^"but I'm the Unable to rest after the pepifIIOKIB SCREEN 1& 2 1 material by using slow;-' fbrd DillmanX'.crack up dur-_ \ Uig^jrenvt too mature. jor studio it""tartest persoo-to-please that I he made"aH"Buf pills, Judy resorted to sleep-5 ^ motion,: close-ups and low-mg the ordeal. ' ?1it.&-Guod0)upe--S»cand~iifvp.i Dobie Ato[l;477-1324 • WTite.s Minnelli, 'Sand there rTHXAS SCREEN ,1 LAST DAY! NOW .0KN 5.-45 were long periods where, she MARCH CAMUS FEA. 6-8-10 6:30 pjn. .:u;r;^:f>.c&>vrT\; Larry Hagman, Martin Mltner,-• 10 p.m -took-no drugs.at all.. . ; : * : i}S0 til 6 jun. ~r­(Mon..Si]t.) % 3& New* . . . " / • . r 8 pm, -• . l.'.a9 insight In th$ Apple wKpCIM_ 7 Hee H«w -- v : 1*23 *e« Wutc 8ML—«2 2313 -Jessica Walter 7. 24, 36 News S "Then, life would get. too.{ "Prince much for her. and' I'd aime/ $1.25 each woiow.•uit:'9iOKWC-KMOMS 74 1 Dretm of Jeannio . . -7 Havjah.Fwe-O :v:^own" TWtTROUeilHFS W! : 7 p.m. -• ' 9 Jeanne..,Wolf. With.^'Pjiyliiii .home and find Jier speech and -: $2.00 for both. .. LAST DAY 9 Man. Bu«lds; Man Destroys' . Oilier" -* 'fTV' •"* ' "" » * 10i30 p m gestures doing double time." fmm rthe man Who • '/Through the MIM Once" r p.m. " ( V •>_'& 7 Movie "Family . Flight/' starr-'• il>r 2-6-10 He's' mil Id boiU « le^«nd 2-t,Happy.Oayi . , • . • .. ...9 Performance: "The^ Brahms lli' brought you .in lis own good time! 36 Movie; .'-'Born innocent," starr­; Horn trW'" • • • • " • 7 ^r^ng Rod Taylor, Dlna Merrill "FISTFUL Of DOLLARS ing Linda Bfa}r, Jo«nna MHes( ... •; r:.^ hp-k&V The Kllfers "Heart Diseasev . J/ CUtf STATES DRIVE-IN f Richard Jaeckei v'i< 7 Barnaby Jones 24 Wldd World Mystery; "Come 7/50 pJn ' * 9 Bach Sonatas SERGIO IEONE 7 MASH V^Out, Com? Out Wherever You Are," . ShowTOWNUSA 24 Marcus Welby. starring Lynda Day George •; ..presents 9 Eye to Eye: ."The Garden .of V. 36 Police Story • ^ "Francois Truffaut's Love" • • ' •••. -• « • ^ 9:30 p.m. 36 Tonight Show 24 Mov»e: .-Hurrtcane.'' starring • 1 * Byltne ras?s?ssrs5^ INTERSTATE THEATRES SouT^side 710 E. Ben Wh*t> •444r2a*/»' TE£>MCOtOR*-. PG BOX OmCC OPEN 7:45 $1.25 ftl 7 p.m. PARAMOUNT ;72 "SHOW STARTS OUSK 6:40^8:20-10!Off" 713 CONGRESS AVENUE • SCREEN 2 LAST DAY! ^ WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! I CLfiAVON LITTLE & GENE WILDIR Mike Nichols,Jack NkholsoaCandiceBetgen.^ TONIGHT i LIMITED Arthur GarfunkelAnn? COUNTRY |is' €amalKnowledge^ NUNOTES n Tlw Sn»atl Dolhepni CLIMl AISO ^ iasK WILDBILl 1 EASTWOOD^] JOEK1DD .BufffoloYankees, $1.25 HI 3 p.m. •; InThe Anne* . VARSITY ?v 3b, 2:15-4:10-6:05 HELD . f&JW $K50 at. the Door Tic^dtxon®^WiAVfSCN» B 2400 GUAOALUPE STREET ; >IUS CO-HfT U:00>Sb55—_Qy£Jj_ L_j1HURS^5EPT.12, aXM. I MICHAEL mm- ACOMEDY CLASSIC!H MURPHY GQC& EASTWOOD ADVANCE flCKETS W-.50 FRI. & SAT.'SEPT. 13 &~14, 1-^ animal cfiMTO" HIGHPLAINS I A OMVERSHOtt^R£tEAS£ w RUSTY WEIR mXFTER . jAOyAHCMICCTtlWJO ­ I TKKtT LOCATIONS: INNM. MNCTUM. I -OOOMOMtNTS (MOHUNOMAU1 &.THE COMP*M «COua 1 mwmKHiiAGo your heart. BEST DOCUMENTARYOVERWHELMING The Academy Award Winner EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCE" — % LUCY VILLAGE VOICE ROBERT BOLT-DAVIDLEANO [1PANAVISI8N-UETOOCOJOR.!! 9< TRANS-j MAMI ^STARTS^i tel TOMORROW 12200 HviuckDrire—45}SU1 TRANS1 EXCIUSIVC AUSTIN SHOWING! Open MS F«r. 2+4+10 12200HancackDmt—453-6641 Rtdwiii Pritis Til iM fUyt LAST DAY COWBOY In GEORGE SEGAL The exciting true story of a vanishing american •*J »1t in [Midnight Movies $1.25 T.1"} 00 and his special kind, of freedom..; THE mm ^{TERMINAL (LUCILLE BALL 1 STARRING LARRY MAHAN COtOR BY DtlUXE m MfA(\i I Buma /mm Pranvn* Tec.-—„ Ifrflre War.ro &r%Q(Hint!Cbruvnytcru 7 -12 Midnight-i Last night I nc^«iW0n^AMiM«i0NwwymmeOTBwiiKnl1 «CB»:POj|^igwril Someone VILLAGE x Village O fiNDIPSC)^ t AMI \ WEEKDAYS OPEN 6:45II mmw J I $1.50 til 7 p.rn. |J n Cinema ,' -IAR6AW MAT. TIU IJO IFsalur** at 7:00 and 9:15; - SMniASMTtAUIf»eAI«U^tn ; R8IS Plthir# B. I iBCKT«uaii^igc<aiEmb«««y Plcturi |"•Wo/nem's Wea^bailyA^ " WulWORisssev iMipMiSr • f quo rotff ytuouciioM »iOiQ*• aihth^ton ncru)njnuiAu -2; MMHV SAsr41 f.rfz: \ "1 ww* m v w» ^s*¥­ - Jones Returns to Screen Music Actress Ploys Cameo in ^Towering Inferno' •> -1 .-W&vt IfRRMANT CrATT Dk..i rw*.. ' •« w..u.a. ... .V . tfre# •Tf* >-•' ®y VERNON SCOTT Paul Getty Museum a few culture, is attuned Jo .John s Galley, who is head of HOIJjYWOOD (UPI)-— "'miles down the highway problems of th? day when she production at Warper Bros., Jennifer Jones Hves-amortl I Jones",coTnpUments-the • is.not globe-trotting with her talked me into it. He said my • -Department of Music faculty artists Delma Rogers, piano —Arturq Sergi, tenor. «;ill-be jdined by c »• treasures not even ^reamed stunning surroundings. She is husband in search of patrstings :appearatice: /n the . picture will offer"their talents free of charge in : A SOLO RECITAL by Danielle Mar­ Danielle .Martin oh piano, Feb. 15 to . by.. millionaires, queens or as beautiful in maturity as she; would be a calling card to let . the-1974^75-PacuIty Artist Series. ; *v or visiting museums: around tin. piano.. ,yrill_ be presented Nov. 8 perform a. recital of varied-vocal •ii"-,4 » Oriental potentates. •was-in 1343 when she won the the world. . people know I am working; The concerts will include vocal and Included on the.program will be" works'* works;.'-•• . -... . "... As the wife of Industrialist-Academy -Award, for "The She'is. working "in her first •Norton, had mixed emotions. instrumental presentations, solo and by Berg,;:Beethoven, -Schumann and A DUO RECITAL by pianist Allenphilanthropist I^orton Simon, -S&ng of Bemadette." • movie"in* five-yeara,-• '-The .But .Flels.. happy • acting : : duo-itecitals"anil chamber music Con-' .Ravel. and soprano Deatherage has beqn the brunette beauty is sur­Jones acted as guide for a Towerlfig Inferrto,-"wilh Paul -agate-. --certs.-.. Paul Ole/sky," cellist: and new ?Scheduled-:f6r:Feb.--2lr -.--^; rounded by a veritable gallery visitor at noon the other-day, Newman. Steve" McQueen, • i'l'D *.OVE to'play Marie-. OPENING. -THE SEASON;. Sept.' 17 ; .iriember'of the -faculty-thisfall; will-be. . A. piana recital hy.David-Smithyof fine arts. Simon brings proudly pointing out 'seven Wilfiam Holden and Fred Dressier roles now. An ac-will be Prank Speller, organist." joined by Perry and Posner for an *11-fac-uity-"member, will., be presentedhome literally scores of pain-Picassos. in .her dressing. Astaire. . tress is an actress all her life • Speller's recital will be entitled ''The- Kodaly program Nov. 10. .. . March 18:-The .program will include -tings--and sculpture; every room, along with a funky; "It's just a cameo role," if she wants, to be. Many ac-Golden: Age" and will feature-Iberian* New faculty artists Glenda^fam-ice. works by Beethoviafn, Chopin, Horowitz Jones .said, nibblingluuuiiu^ daintilyudiuuiy t-resses . had their best _ music from the period 1557-1799.' mezzo-soprano, and DaVid Resder'' and Scarlatti. -' ona lobster. snt'ifffo ilniip in-^rriatrcnii aftor fhe-ape of 50."• • . On Oct. 4, Martha Deatherage, piano, will present concertsNov. 23and the series April Closing fHwill—be home awaiting exhibition Gentry.! yerfecHoj^^-''——iUhics has n,as^ed tha t soprano;7a'nd.-'Wi>liam-Race; pi jinn-j11 ?A ""'[Actively. ,, •-.'y-.'.' Speller, French ' organ performing enormously "It wasn't voluntary~retire-/"milestone;;--~SEe diip gian? recital, featuring two• •, • • THERE ARE;,in fact, more -bright woman.' wno. aevotes-r-me ippf rirrl IM'___thnn n decade younger. She s°lo--and duo masterpieces in. their Malibu her . time, to working with always assumed I'd work cxedifsT.yeafs"o/ yoga~h>j~iieF rScbeluleitiaE­_ -chamber"music • conBeach dwelling than in the J. youthful victims:.of the drug again but not in.cameo.roles. youthful appearance. Oct. 11. vjill Ieature; Leonard' 1 hPPrt srhMliilrrt ftpptw • "The adulation! is gond. of violin apd Jcrfiii Perry, piawfr^"" ' .' Stfa"vtnsiyv -Poulenc.:.': Debussy. Noy; i7. Feb: 28 and April' 4. course,''Jones said, laughing. , A Tribute to Charles Ives"'will be LutOslawski and Weinberger. .-The-September chamber music,coti­ To. Honor —• . . Organist David Richardson, also '"BiirNprton; lov«s-to-ssa.rDe^. presented Oct. 19as_f_7:partof-the35rdan-. vj6anioi: xjaviu. itiuiidiusuii, iijsu a cert will be a benefit'and the only ad­. • F^lral;" sing and . dance' and -clown ?U ii ® . Sel^t«>,^.-new-faculty„inemb.qc, ..wyi perform a mission event on the series. around. He likes meto be gid-. from Ives solo vocal workswill beper-solo recital of German-"ofg^T works """ drifterinWfmation can be obtained .153 dy He -is^n. impressive, formed by Orville White, baritone, and Jah. 21. . by calling 471-1444. . . » audience .of one." • A party, honoring Austin available for transportationto then switch to the other bos singer-musician Kenneth the event. Round-trip tickets, for the: remainder of the trip. Threadgill on his65th birthday which include beer available" He also, will perform at the Union Interviews Set . * ' . 7 will be held beginning at 8' on the bus and "admission to Bentwood Tavern party. , A*. . vEach-year, Uhiversity •' All applicants .must attend p m. Thursday at theChetham the party, are priced at $4.. Th-Simday draft special' students are invited to inter­• one of two orientation session HANK'S •H&Z Street Warehouse,-. 119 .. The buses'will depart at 7:30 Tickets may be purchased view for ai position on one of for prospective members at $125 , Chetham St.; in San Marcos. p.m. from the At'T office,'602 .at: APT, Oat Willie's, Inner Pi»th«r 2532 GUADALUPE the 10 student committees -4:30.and 7 p.m. -Thursday in I The event is being sponsored • W. 16tb St.. " . . Sanctum and Joske's. Some which-plan and produce the Union' Building 174.. By" Austin Peopie Today " .thuffleboard "• f s tickets-for---XexatuiHiiign's program or . ; Committee-interviews will Hank's Famous " magazine. ~ . . * Threadgill will; ride on'one i • English dorlt eta^ ~be-fi«m4-.tDuS: pvm; j^onday;" pool ./ Chartered buses will be bus halfway to'San Marcos, $2.50. activities. and 6 to 10 p.m. Sept. 1-7 and18" S-A-TEXAS ^GhkfcarLJFrled Steak The committees are: Afro-in Union Building 342. REDUCED PRICES i-^merlcan^ultuis^^aitural ' 2 pcs:..Meat, Trenclr HE Tit 6 P.M. i Entertainment, Fine Arts, * Cole Slaw, Hot Rolls ft Butter 1500 S. PLEASANT VAU.EY RD , ... MON. THRU SAT. Ideas and Issues, Mexican- JUST orf EAST mvERsiDE bftivE 441-aZzZ J JZ-$2.ooj 35.10.'Guadalupe American Culture,;. Musical S1.50 HilmCa MmCKPHIMI unaMtDa Um -$1.50 • Events, Recreation, Theatre,' I til 6 p.m. niMtniitaacxta* Oantaa 9aM H10 HI 6 p.m.: . Union Communications and GEORGE C.5COTT "FEATURES' ; i:50 . University Interaction. •-2:15 •! 4:30 4:00 6:05 BANK5HOT 5:50 7:45 7 40 . 9:25 . hm,Crinfet Mnt/A tin•( 9:30 -Xestauront & Arcade; 2538 Guadalupe Gotsby Girls don't wait $1.50 fe'wasn '' HI 6 p.fn LUNCH SPECIAL DAllY -HI. 6 p.m. "Fftafures TONIGHT $1.49 by The phone ... Feotu/et They go for,dinner-good folk and the • a' LIVE Nt)COV£RMU$IC 7 NITES BUCKDANtER'S f 4 4:00. mellow music of Syl.Smith Mixed.Drjnks • Beef -• 6 A 7 ® . 'fchnicckf A fitnmauTi Pxturc Wine '• Food • Amusements •at J. Gotsby's Bor, and Restaurant. : 'L\ © jf CHOia 3tmdm.y 9inn*r'Sp«tid Something new-far Austin. • r. fr»m 6K)0 p^n. 9,5(1 .• * Tequila 50'}ihof Wed. A iot In the Village, 2700 Anderson Lone. • Ph 1279016 ACRES OF FREE LIGHTED PARKING Happy Hoar 4-6 707 BEE CATB8RD! 2 far1 Mixed Drinks v '.y 1 -Feqiwesi_Z:00-8:40-10:95 ?M£ LAST DAY! ! rTtiOO ti.ni.jH-2-mk)nlQht-^riclnv. ondJSaturdov ' JONLGHI • HI 1:00 o.m. Opensfor Sunday Drunqh at 12:00. • Entectolcsaent, Tuesday—Soturdov.8:30 todose. • Happy Hour 3:00 p.m.—7 p.m.—orfRRrtwrfor-^ " mort graphic; .....one every day exceptSaturday. •presents-!wmrtas^irs-xrf~tfie-si{ent-sere&n moipfMm 0xc(tfngi4lax,of/emm >.,*/»0. 7 . CAPITAL PLAZA • Jester Auditorium moon Pie oanceBand Good for ov^r SO more -films452-7646 • IH35NORTH JulieAndreius GhriarSharif ^ Wednesday September 11, 1974 .. ;s 4th Big Week! TheTamarind Seed GLENSHAW CORPORATION 8:00 PM • ^ . at •- Panavuioo® six) fa$tmar\ Color • an Avco Embasrjr c#icese. PRESENTS . Austin Municipal AuditoriumvS^" W:45-2t55-5:10-7:25-9:40 } "-V-Reserved Seat Tickets Available At: • HIGHLAND MALL Passes and Bargain ,fey., Raymond's # V &P2 451-7326 • 1H35 AT KOEN1GLN. Matinees Suspended . Auditorium Box Office ^ . 'DON'T MISS IT!" al —John Bustin 12KK)-2:75 The Austin Citizen 4:50-7:15 f:45 Hi@HL.AND MALL Exclusive Engagement!! 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENIG LN. "A MASTERPIECE CACTUS "•» jr fi NOTHING-SH'ORT OT= A MASTERPIECE! SLEEPER HIT OF THE YEAR1 IT HAS ® TEN TIMES THE ENERGY OF " MOST CONTEMPORARY FlCMS!" •x STAFF -flex Reed. NX Dailv News r "V -k­ "FUNf^rFANTASTICANtfOREN MOVING! FRANTIC PACE!" INTERVIEWS *».i •.;. r .-.. .-* . -. . A —Vincent Canbv. NewYork Times 'wi' • "11?Mandatory Orientation Sessions tM Voueari JOSE FEUCIANO 7WNCI SEPT. 10 , with special guest ^•• NT DAVK LOGGINS^ • : 11 a.m. -2 -7 p.m. .KRA ,Cpme jo Bos/brtj (You need attend only one session) ill V WCHEUNEIANCT6T • RAi-iOYOliAlO; JOS0X WtSEMAN d?; ONrtOwmtfri >Dtittvw^JACKWiUtOiWa^'Wir - SAT., SEPT. 28, 8 P.M. nxas Student Publicltionl Bid "f-l Ticketv $6, $5; $4 3k •#^^l^M|Room -4.112 fjsm OfEN-f2.l5 NOON-, R««ir Drf^iTnd­ Stt»»nlng» ol , 12-45-2i35-4i20 Jotke'i in Highland Malt,and Mail Order from Austin Ticket (corner of~25th Street and Whitis venue fc00.M0.944S-Service, $706 Rio Grande, Austin 78705 (Include money -handling). \ . V , J Jyesday> September 10? "1974 THEllDAILY TEXAN Page IZ \ > 4 V j\ Sisfej® iiiri'iiirtiiiiiiiniiiiM'WimdmiiHagl * * i ? ii3< " L *~Jr -V *• rfi<4$S&t W0i> a^WHS ^1*M,'/ ¥. ;'Jc''7-V3-"-i 4''^ '"• £!1 i» "i A .v ..,* -«.---,-".; -L*. l-'• 'sv;-^ •'-"'--i^' • •:•£ Hi'. ?WptT-w»s (> ^.s«S6psaMSgK|B|^ v J" 4 ••», •?" ISSdg *•* S i ^ i .* ^ "* ?L -L »' •?|v|T»Km MUM* M 1 >>. "r J"*|^" * f"T t*l r ,W*LjI!£5*» r-5-—«i*«ji» f. i*A*rf>MN,> »P fk, i nin 'k's CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. J[ FURN. APARTS ROOMMATES TYPING 15 wOfd isuuuisom Each-word one lime 2#er=Sote •^L"toERAW-rEMAt;S"rvfO": shaffl • exce RDACTT.OFOLLOW. Act IV,33ll E*y^5i!05e-3-a Bar Sole •ExceptfonaHloor-plans-for tlanat'nouse with graduate student. $ North -of 27th Each wrard'&rfime* oer mpnih. Half bills 385-8^69Eachword KJormore fimes .$. w, REVOX A77.tape recorder. JW or be$t • Cft4H.&8fcCE5 pa tor-diamonds VEmUSA 'cysfettfng;Fullkitchehiandon the shut-" Guadalupe. Student rate each time $ .80 oHer, 3S5^83d. • old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop,'4018 N H».Prism Tin pint D»A Larnar, 454-6877. • "* -HrWof 'smallrooms trB cteHrsp»^-—p7^g^j^ai»ri„ •• Ctassffietf Ofrplay • -....... ._ Tired of asphalt & noise?Tr*Plata yen-" •1 cot: x-llndijone, time!....:.$3-25' KEWVOO'O AMP, Aft himtaWe, Soa* , DECQRAT£»R«EWP|iEADS from in-lura. l S-7 Sdrm turn /unturn. Prom-r-t-T-I.IT^it-l_,t-. . .-rr . bedroom, two tatfrrogm. th'so' ^ y 1 COt, * Ilotfi 2-9 timev..-....$2-93 deck; Pioneer ^peakers .UOO: 444^8786 . JIM.S0 plus electricity' . . -• • .; • GET INTOTHE ACT.Act VMrEsiieclat-.;,.-;, dla. Use for cvrtalnv. wali,• ' 110 Burleson Rd. 'y designed.tor _ ,',L^. ,•- parel Upholstery. Mah^rani.' )$04>-Sah . ~ " v^B A ** .Mt.RACORD 4<^A automatic-turntable^ • Antoofo.476-229L -^ ~ Bartam Prop. :: ''Tt'r:^^K-*S^I2P^M?S!t&Sj*2f?*S?,^RSi ^RES'TAIJRANT-HOUSEAMT6S A*n«M Own Precise pushbutton cofi!rcHn, track ac­ • -92^-93651'•-All on the shuttle. FromSU4 -J149 .. . r .V • *, . ^OI*.I—_• room. sAO/month olus bttts J^tirih oti curately at one gram: $75. 454-1517 .. • OCAOUNf SOffOUU 90LEX H-I6 reflex ^wlttv thre* lenses: '• " -. "t -rg&Sf.ms&U&ig* nKm• ^ ^iii5«.?M}w Mh»1,#rth fiU The Co mpiete" Pr:ofesvonar~ wijte. angle I2rrim il.2. normal 2Smm;Monday TtftMV fndqy ..... 3 CO n.m. • 11,4, te1ephoto75mmt2.5.Rewind crank, ' night-kitchen personnel, even­MALE ROOMMATE. Ibedroom, s& 50 FULL-TIME Typing ?" Musical -For Sale fater set. case. 4784019. JJT STUDENTS / STUDENTSSEE WATERLOO FLATSl:: ing sea ter spart-time ABf», ft blocks to campus 2408 Leon 474­ TwMdey Tttoon Mtfftdsy .-* »tl 00 «.m. > 2 Bedrponv 1. bath furnished or unfur-v bartenders. and-part-Service Nesv } 8r. iust completed,great'jooklng. Foil -x .. .. • • _ -. i -•. -;nfshed; Shiig, cable, walk-lot, pool, com- finish with. cove. i350. A|y> Orande 110 Call 477-^032 after MALE ROOMMATE beginning October Vridnt^qy Ttxon Tw*4#f 11 00 o>n. GIBSON LgS PAUL Deluxe sunburst • .AUTHENTIC NAVAJO rugs: All sizes RESUMES 29 Un.t complex-... Great fyrrffttt.ng*. olete;kitchenvcto*e to shoppingL Town time servers. Apply in person Thvnday T«««n .W*dw«^oy U 00 o^m. •waft-guitar amp. pC0v4$1^095. .. Anyday.:. shuttle, pool, DW. dispoial, cable, t>39 : Lake.'From 1170 ALL BILLS PAID. 41 between 2-4 p.m: Monday -1st. bedroom ,, :wtth or without pictures;. and prices. seven. . • One Americana .WaMer Street,:47^4493/472^4162. farfoy Ttnn ttiwnrfey. .*. .11:00 «jn. plus E • Saturday. 109 West Anderson Apartments, No, 104. 3110 Red River. 7. Day Service •L^OWtG DRUM SET for sale w/seat -HEAVY WOODEN OESK, J25 Stereo hi *# M . ABP, pool, . shuttle.. S90/month.-CojTie 301 West 39th: 5 BLKS TO CAMPUS. 1 bedroom, tur-; Lane.. Equal Opportunity.Very good condition. Must «Uf '$250-nr fl« S50, Hairdryer,(S^Woodendouble*bed l4^8-2576 or 345-31.ntshed.; CA/CH, 'dishwasher, disposal;-• Employer. M-F bfter6p;mr——-r-.-'472-3210 and 472-7677, best o«er-4SM545. -. frame, S5.: Sfeam Roffers, % 10: Vi ; • • -W? H
phtU-PaPK«»,lbi Ih* *Hnt if «t««n mod« ilim uniform tops, etc. Susan. '453.-813Q.,Vi,^"nous sI<5 plus.BBackfclty •MALE ROOMMATE needed. 2 bedroom • ...,»,y4a^, Tll« ConqulsladotS­ S3.-8130 210V San GabrlftL,4^2.-7746 .for Informa**'­ a^wtMfMnl. imm»tfaH Mh(«mint be SELMER TENQR SAX. Excellent pf8tT5lWOW>erc-'Aprr^ -§^t™5^ISa."i.H.Kh]S2l.^s!J. aM «omen Bus driving-positions ,— receipts and pay >n advance in TSP­ irtaTn"cb^>T" 0377 after5:'30,1 a.m: to 4:^0 p.m. Mcftday through ' 5311 S.Congress > . ••• 09S3:-;:-* • v• >-•' "•• ' m. • to or ca)l 451-4848. : • \ •" ' ?"JS5^Al.P?,ttS.'>AtOrW-«eln 0penT^ev?ratpart*timerMay-«tar41r^in*r. 454-9863, 472-4162.. ftALE:VRDOMMATE-,--own-OettrKjm--—~CHR Hi" T ENSUN St Friday. •••••• • ». Reconditioned Uprigm* ing immediately and start working upon ^ ,* Expert Tuning & Repair -,. • GET YOUR DORM refrioerator #rom;. completion of training. Call Transporta­Tht.ee bedroom house.Shuttle, air,heat,1 * EL POSAOO from $130.: Fantasrlc , ASSOCIATES r~ *•.Piano Movmg-. . Appliance Distributors. 3&i4 Woodburv. ' furnished, garage. $700. Lee. 451-35S4. ; Call 441-3262 kitchens; On ci.ly -and shuttle bus. 928-1660 FEMALE ROOMMATE to share two A TYPING •• 444-4866.. •/•'. WE RENT apartments with rable, pool,-luU tion Enterprises. ClaytonLane. 453J9U; -472^4162.; FOR SALE ^3xiOAK DRAWING table, S35 Portable . Convenient to -showing. 1105 : AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY » V " bedroom apartment on 'Shuttle. Pets §u typewriter,, J25. Round plcknlck-taWe, AUSTIN EMPLOYER . allowW, $t05t month,rr ABP. 444-8727. . SERVICE Pets -tJEor Sale >.ivfivevbencbev $25. Pair hanging lamps,• ATTENTION: CLIFFDWELLERS. Unlr • Your'time is valuable que lA 2 bedrooms.: Skylights, sunken .. S25.. Five-speed Wkei, $30c Tnree motor* • FEMALE HOUSEMATE WANTED-Specializing in\V; . Auto -For Sale IRISH SETTERS: AKC Champion cycles. Cathy. Days only. 451-5137, 454-living aFeas.. bright color schemes $75/m^.Aptws .to.ufilWes. 2203 Nueces: 4754887.; SA Father .from Colorado, luxuriously • •' ; ••• Our service is free available.in convenient NE orvtheedge — Theses arid dissertations',? mt IWt SA>«B. SI900. Call 477-7154 after 5 coated, targe boned. Quality trophy win-of a cliff.From.$170 ALL BILLS PAID.• t — Law Brlels V; • p.m. • •.• . . •ning mother. Pups selectively bred tor 80WMA R . calculator,-MX-100.. 1 PARAGON 72U -Northeast.Drive, 926-9411 4724162 PART-TIME JOB FEMALE, TO SHARE nice Southside 1; •—Term papers and reports;' rich coats, calm temperament. Shots, Rechargeable;..memory, .twenty. func­bedroom apartment. $77.50-ABP.* Shut­ H course/ lake, from$125 ABP. 459-7960;. 3 afternoons per week. Light housework, tle: Cafi O.D, 4414690. Prompt,. Professional sj.s CUSTOMIZED FORDVAN, radialllrtZ wormed, reg. papers, pedtgree provid­tions, two months old., Must -sell." Bill, PROPERTIES • • • • --| ' ' I * > -'• Service dtsc wheelv V-8. AT, a[r.S2950:452-3606 ed. Reasonably priced. 327-IS75. 476-9079,. '•':;;V'r. •••; •' cooking, chitdcare.Cash or exchangefor. STUDIO AP.ARTMENTv Fireplactf. or 837-0750: furnished-lake apt. for 1 person. C^r. ;MALE-ROOMMATE share -2 bedroom skylight CA/CH, cable, convenient. $139 453-8101 AKC IRISH SETTER Puppiei-Large" USE0:"S«ITH-CORONA addInjf needed. Call 327-0490 after 7:00 p.m. apartment near campus. (125MBP own plus electricity. 900,E4st 51$t-451-3464, boned and beautiful. See both parents. ;:T' •' .. . I967PLYAAOUTH Baracuda 273. .AC ...... machine, portable, with case, good con-'--472-4171-472-5)39 . " i room. MbntH free rent; 4754258 after r PicK-up Service Available • # wcefcodys • 2043 0288 •p automatic V-4;good condition.STOO^Tr1*. Champion bloodlines. S80 terms. 454-dition. $35. 454-6705. ; * 4:00 p.m.; \ 3102 Glenyjew $129.50.. ONE BEDROOM Apartment; yery new. UTf AC shag carpet, pool* . -OLYMPIA-TYPEWRITER, ponaWe^ MALE -ROOMMATE'wanted-to share .. . -up, AKC.VRISH SETTER pups. Champion Excellent condition, $75. 4764104' after^' . 472-4175 large mobllfe home. $50 and share bills MRS. BODOUH'S TYPING SERVICE. water and gas paid. 2711, 3721 Hemphni.Park. 4764134, 472-4408, 327-1355, : camper. Front tires 10X14.5. rear tires. bloodlines. Must go. 9 weeks. $50, 476-*^"30:p-m,ahd weekendSiOffice,'472-J124>^; . . * weekends-• STATE _ . 345-5201^.. ; u v: Reports, theses, dissertations and books • 12X1&S. 1700 or Best offer; Atso'1 toct-' 9034, •-.•.• typed accurately, fast and reaspn^bly.1 utiUty trailer with electric brakes, S200. • . • ---• .•••• NlKON 75mm/f2.8« Bronrca*S2 camera EMPUOVMENT'T-f SHARE TWO BEDROOM house. Eiv Printing and'bindlng on request. Close ONLY" 3 BLOCKS from, campus." Ef­ 441-4204 CFA" REG. Persian Kittens." Smoke 120/220 backs.M»racprd SOH.Mark^ . HARTFORD fictency apartments.wlthlarge windows HALF-TIME 'J' field,.panefed,'carpetedr yard, laundry, In. 4784113. -i .T..­S137.50 blirs patd. $132.50 deposit. 478­ silver AOurtito Recessive) females 9 .• • .M changer. 4594303 evenings shuttle.-Female Grad' preferred.•• 72 BLUE HONOA 2 door coi/pe $t350C weeks old. 4^-1088, 4474640. PLACE •9594. :.' -KEYPUNCH -V $«2^/monttT;;475-'l97.t. . DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, and. Call after 6p.c$ 385^844. SILVER AND: TUROOUISE lewelry. law-briefs. Experienced typist,' QUIET, CLEAN EFFICIENCIES FOR SALE male chocolate oolnt Custom-work and.repair. 1972 Honda 1405 Hartford Rd. OPERATOR LIBERAL FEMALE share ideal hoifse.; •Tarrytowm 2507 Bridle Path. *Lorralne. Dishwasher, disposal, near shuttle bus 4 hrs. per day 5-9 p.m., 5 day-week. 1973 CAPRI, 4 speed. Decor group/ AC Siamese kiheo, caU 4754463. 3S0SL Completely overhauled. *459-7554. Large furnished efficiency apartment, .WCjhuttle,oWn room, $S7/mohtK, ABP. • Brady. 472-4715; exceptional condition. $2950..475-0843. ca/ch, shag carpet, full kltfhen, just off Francblse# 477-6202,1009 West 26th:' AKCDO&ERMANpuppi4s.7wee4(.S0M. Enfield Rd. Convenient to UT« caoitol. 'HOLLEY'STYPfNG SERVICE. AWafer, gaspafd. $t2S. See manager, 11(1 * Salary $234 • $267ii'per,monfh depending West 10m. 476-4413. 1971 YgTLOV^ I.URU Piiuu, exi.etleul • Hp and h#a»hy, $100. FURN. APARTS. shuttle bus. -on qualifications . . ./ LIBERAL FEMALE roommate wdnted Complete Service: typing, printing, bin­-. u condition, goodtires;sf250. CaU477-T268.: ;. .2S&-J978. ,327-2260 . Texas Rehabilitation Commission ; to sharetwajwdfoom apartment. $67.50 dlng^.Experienced in ail fields. Near . CLOSE;TO.CAMPU$; Room* $A5 ABP. e plus V* WM$a4764750 • or come by 2406-B ­ -900 West 2?th. CKkfency-tfom-«yf, P'»t !600,West.17? 3lfh, Jefferson; Sfdg. Rm 300 . Rio Grander t -» campus.. )40) Mohle Dri^e. 476-3018, :r.V: 1972 KREMLIN "X". 3-speed, AC exv ^BLOCKS-electric..-2907 -San GabtieL Barham _ _ AH 'Opporttr Ity Cmpluret—­ r~V tias.^ Cxeglteff?—condition—Be«> ?nv> : • Homes,for Sale -FRANrBS WfSrir>STVPiMr-«igPwl^g" Properties. .926-9365. WALK TO CAMPUS BICYCLE TO UTror ride shuttle bus. 2 AND~gEST ~ WE§tof to s^are 3 bedroom; 2 bath housvwlth • tations, Manuscripts.:4534090.""-"-' • mediate cash offer.->477-3388. WANTED: -FEMALE graduate student Experienced)-Law, Theses, Disser­ n Ftff"'*hed one bedroom..dis­ '64 MGB. Reluctantly for .sale. Runs, bedroom, old house being remodeled, female gcaduate student. Ownbedroom CAMPUS hwasher. $140 plus electricity. J405 J -bethi^4"^--• —^ ... looks good. $495. Call 474-1386, MJke, or $13,500. 3 bedroom home, $19,950. Call tNNlE HAMMETT. Typing F-see at 1606 Ethridge. p.*"" David or Rick, 452-5626, 459-9445. 454-THE BUS $175. 8364936 Duplicating ,$*rv 7644. V • ' Two'•• bedroom furnished• tatlonsi.-.papers'ot ait kinds, resunrtes. ! Hefms..472-7049. New laroe efficiencies, -living room,. one offset bedroom & kifchea cable, water-4 BLOCKS F,ROM CAMPUS, Furnished . AAATURE STUOENT wanted to share 1969-FIAT 450 5plder, "low' mileage, apartments. Pool, cable, laundry, qutef gas furnished. Summer $t2f 1 bedroom, no lease-required. $123 plus * OPENINGS. Free refreshments. 442-7008,'442-1616, * reasonable. 475-3761 weekdays. 512/S97-•LAKE TRAVIS PROPERTY, threelots, setting. $150 plus electricity at cbmmer- house. $80/month. AC, 452-S810 after 6 bills. 472-5515 after 5:30 pJn. J120 Full llme -S60 Part time. ^_5514, ... 476-7916 (Fredericksburg) ditioned. two-bedroom^l bath, plumbed 17th at Rio Grande , .. UNEXPECTED VACANCY. Large one SENIOR OR GRADUATE MALE to. pica/elite, 25 years experience/ books, 5602 nltes and weekends (ie)dstone home/ carpeted, air con­cfal rates. R|o House 472-1238. 606 W Red Oaks Apts. 21Q4fSaivt»abriel -Sales -.P,W." BOBBYS DELAF1ELO. IBM Selectrlc Advertising -Per­• for 2nd bath. Ownef.financed. Low in­sonnel..Flexible hours. dissertations,'.these*, reports, : bedroom, furnished,-near campus-t04 , bedroom apartment; $75, $hare two '67 JEEP WAGONEER, 4 wheel drive. terest. -Priced 20's. See to appreciate U.T. East 32nd..Manager apt. 103. 476-5940, 453-0175 . mitneographing. 442*7184. . • ­ v.i,-hubs^ four mudgrip tires, heavy duty 266-1480. ; ABP, ER. 477-4206 after 5 3454555. -^ • .• --—ckjfdi, power brakes, rack, runs weir. MOVE IN TODAY- VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER .Diversified UPPERCLASSAAEN THE OFFICE OF THE Secretary ol i ibdrs"gosaryim-«S4»<3»—-—- Service^. Graduate and uhdergraduafe ATTRACTIVE 1 Bedroom apartment. State needs night shift: computer Wh9» printing, binding.. 1515 Koenlg -19SSLS ANGABRIEL Dishwasher, disposal, cable, near cam-. operator, with the ioltowing W1..VW 5EDAN. Good working cdnd^; WHY PAY ~$T55 WENEE_O A HOUSEMATE for our fur-.Lane. ,459-720$--.; ' [SJiiWalk to campus. Nearl^new VBdrmWr~-w,^.»^»ihutu«_.iU»jplujjrtj&jc!tt ^ qualifications: (1): Currently Computer tion. $400. 472-1347. _ —RENT?" ——^ Bedroom-^— iStlicleney, tullstre kltchenandbath.maid, 1503 Sclen«-0r Two-Story.Two-sto Private ^STARK TYPING. Specialty} Techiileat. 1966 CHEVY Maiibu convertible -pm-klnsr-quletr-siW-oluvalec—Appolnti .... either ...in ,—^...graduate or Undergraduateundergraduate .dryer.-CA7CHr ^xpeciedtW Utfl^^UlsmilBttwmi'R^r' Good ' Alt Bills Paid ' ment -453-3235. • rnr-Wher---€harferie-4tarJt,,4S3s52J8«^- * see apartment. -. . in programming.-(4) Wishes to remain about 4 miles.from UT. Eaih under $25;- seriousJJT student. 477-2719. 1704 M»n. — • 70 GREMLIN, 6 cy), automatic; radio? 000.. Lee Phillips, Realtor. 472^438,'454> Buckingham Square Ln Austin area after graduation; Contact' ford. MINNIE ;Lv.HAMMETT; Typing 8. fit W. 31ni LARGE Tyvo STORY, 2 bedroom fur-/ J^Owen Coon at 47S-5845. 2054. Frank Steele. 345-237! -AC. $1195,^600 mi 477-4164 after 6p.m. • Oupljoatlng Service. Theses, disser­ nlshed 4-ple*.Has skylight, CA/CH, dis- HABITAT " IK Keep trying. ' .-T ; tatlorts, papers of-ail kinds, resumes, . 454-4489i'.»' hwasher, disposal! cable, shag carpet.Shuttle nearby; 447-8975, 476-4716. $200^ free refreshments, 442-7008, 441-6814;1973 ^VEGA HATCHBACK four speed,­ WANTED .Air. low mileage. $2400 4470963 or see Misc. > For Sale HUNTERS 2301 Mission Hill:. UNF. APARTS. . "TyPtNG. Carbon ribbon. IBM Seiec- Men and Women. Bus driving positions Terry, Burdine No. 470 , trie. 50 cents a page: Catt 454-0723." ^ARTMENT^ .ONE BEDROOM.-iull Itnath windows. open, several part-time.May start train­?fenced yard. Oulct neighborhood. H?-ROVING OVERSEAS, selling 1968 BEAUTIFUL $140 ^ ^oJ4r': • "FOR FALL? • • •' 41 jt/Ave.G. Come Dy 306 E. 41^t or 453-ingimmediately and jtart working upon MABYL" SMALLWOOD Typing. Last 5816. Volvo 144,20mpg.,-nidlor new tires. 451-i ;>i'GIVE US A CALL! completion Qf framing. Call Transporta­WOOPED minute, overnight available. Term V2268. 203'W.39ttC No. 10*. 9 MONTHS LEASED -. : • . ' „ tion Enterprises. papers, theses, dissertations, letters. " CREEK :T Bedroom Habflat Hunters Is FREE apartment v • 928-1460 . ' • Master. BankAmerlcard. 892­ CREEKSIQE Charge. locator service, located In the lower CLEAN. WELL LIGHTED , PLACE, 1972 SUPEft 'BEETLE 'v.One and two-bedroom apartments in 0727 or 442-8545. level of Dcft>lekfyiait. We speciallre m stu-Northeast, Huge yard, pets .welcome. AN EQUAL. OPPORTUNITY- lovely creekside ,setting. Huge grassy jft? ' H-12 pm, among the big trees on this select 41* ..'.dent complexes" • :A"'--" $100 all except electricity. 474*2582. EMPLpYER c lawn, lots of.trees. Convenient fo UT, •fe acre tract. Priced rlght.vSmall. down 708 W. 34th HABITAT HUNTERS -downtown., shopping, recreation. Fully Just North of 27th & FURNISHED 1 bedroom, Apt. No. 10.« AUD11972. 4 door, atr, 4-speed. 327-0569 payment. Balance fTnanced lO years. 454-8239 WANTBD APARTMENT MANAGER. carpeted, paneled, andyou won't believe Lower Level, Dobie'Mall,' 2505 Enfield: Shuttle. $145 bill$ paid, $50 Guadalupe 3w • , Suite 8A • 936-4555 after 5 p.m> -<—• 345-2257 deposit. 442-1112. •' • ' . Prefer married. Send resumes to Box -the storage spacet From $134 ^0 Call MOVE IN TODAY 1668, Austin, Texas. 1971 FORD LTD wsgon, 9 passenger. . 474-1532 — -1 • * ONLY $125 plus electricity. Like new ef­v ~ Air-conditioned, excellent condition.441- ficiency. No pets. 3805 Ave.'B. 4594564.' FLOWER PEOPLE need several per­ CANOES ALL-BILLS PAID 1 BR -$155 manent people to sell flowersfor. thenew S v SAILBOATS " ' DOWNTOWNER WALK TO 'UT. Nice efficiencies. 2502 i; '74-'7S:sea$on. For interview, Aliine or 2 BEDROOM • 70 OOOGEVAN. AM/FMfadlo. Carpet Ashley. 282-0001; • .mm Nueces. CA/CH,"carpeted, ABP $90,4Z6-. 4 and. paneled, new paint flood tires; . ...CLEARANCE 5ALE . §1P:-T . APTS; ;-|||Kgir. 9098, 452-0404, 837-2524. • 2 SATH wrr . . SU50 4/3-1497. Savings to S900 MARK XX . FLORAL .DESIGNER. Experienced S!l®150r? H6iLaf_Jr^fa0,5.Bf,Square has ' CO/ W6 OO TVp6^ l Bedroom $150 month. Furnished, air­ luxury apartments Ideal lor-sharlnol 454-3953 452-5093 APARTMENTS AVAILABLE In Small * only need apply. Pay"JC0mmensurat»­ SAILBOAT SHOB_ bills paid. CAfCH, walking distanceUT, •with.ability^ 4/7*5717 for appointment Quiet garden settlno,-pools and" Freshman themes! - Motorcycles » For Sale 1607 E.Riverside *' * 3815 Guadalupe « covered parking; laundry room. ^ -complex near.UT Law Sctiool end shut- clubhouse for private parlies,5205 50 un' " die; Wafer, gas, apd cable-paid. $110 and furnished. J230 furnished Easy drive to'-" SAVE MON£Yl .Call us before buying "505 East Ilth • ... -Paradigm .Lecture Services. 504 west UT, downtown. Call >36-7719 or 451-1159; : Why not start out withshi ­ • 442-5900. GRADUATE-NOTETAKERS $t2S..One adult, no pets.. 478-4118, 477­ •••6048. • r- motorcycle Insurance. Lambert In-• 24th. 472-7986. 10 a.m -6 p.m'. surance .Associates, Inc. 4200 Medical 472-0515 good grades! WILLOW CANOE SALE ^ FREE-APARTMENT for. Girl-Friday* Parkway. 4S7-HM PART TIME WORK STc m • Ultra-busy taw. student needs someone $300 pqf month. $159.50 ' AND RENTALS £7.- • Call.452-2758.No experiencenecestae/. tor housekeeping, cooking. Shopping, tk&£ • HONDA CUI75. Late 1973. 1000 miles, DOWN RIVER SPORTS offers you tM^T# •EFFICIENCIES .. 472-3210 and 472-7677 CREEK ALL BILLS PA IP" tight secretariat work. On-tne levQlt 442-. -'rtflnt . miwlitlnn with. •vfr»( «77( n, 'rrflnt condition with-extras. $775 or great sport of canoeing at inexpensive""*^, .LONGHQRN.AGENCY In Phase 111 of assume. Wayne. 474455> or .9264521. > rentai 4 sales rates. Canoe Sale now In NOW LEASING FOR SEPT^ Only S125 plus E • development will now accept 3 new -Large patios* balconies, and.beautiful'; 270* Hemphill Park > • 88 •progress.' .• Lovely shag, full kitchen. CA/CH. DpO-EFFICIENCY associates for .management training.-courtyard areas at Chateau Trianon:: APARTMENT. $m?h .1^71 YAMAHA 175 gnduro. Rebpred, .Take.off after class w/a canoe ,s bie bed. Somewhat secluded. No-pets. . . Carpeted, Mr. Chinee. 472*194 Townhouse andgarden aparimentt,only 1 BDRM 2BDRM furnrshed,.modern kitchen. lust tuned up;-«Many other features. • A accessories for only S5. 3805 Avenue B. • • • minutes from shopping, parks, golf. One ROOM & BOARD Aldose to shuttle. $125 plus bills, 5210-C Dependable franiportatton. $325. Larry, $175 $220 i-459-8564,„ iv^^oe Saye^s 474-2W2. Sieve. •PART TIME or fuli time help. Nights : bedrooms frorriai59; allbills paid-Also 2 4514231. evenings^,nights. * • 5213 Ave. G 45V8349 some day$. Start $l.90/hour: •bedrooms. Call 926-1247 -Furnished' or 451-1159. or..unfurnished and CALL TODAY! • Scholarship, benefits Apply -Sandy's-APARTMENTS.-Air conditfoning, J'-i 1972. INDIAN Super Enduro, 70cc. like ALL BILLS PAIO blocks from campus. 477-7558.v, Hamburgers. 403 Barton Springs Road WHY NOT . n€* condition. Includes car rack $295. '2 BDR/1 BATH Insniau, quiet complex : Dishwashers -2Large Pools . 452*5022 after 5:30 p.m. weekdays. ARENA MODELS WANTED; Male and female. on Lake Aultln inlet. $170 plus elec 327-A GO-OP? •Security 0479 after 5. Experience preferred, not necessary. SOFA/CHAIR fe UNF. HOUSES -21st St^CollegeHbuse is a large co-edco-' :7f7l YAMAHA 350-R5; Excellent condir. Select various s^as 8r chalrrVn Clubroom, Volleyball Court All types needed. Magatine,'illustration, ^.APARTMENTS op-w 1h many soclaland educational ac-sets MOVE IN TODAY . -V 'he, membets, New tlon,-backratti, etc. Call Parh, 454-2979, 1-5 f6r appoint­NYlties run-by fhe, membets,: • tires. John, 4S94370 evenings. $550, -. .LlFETfME guarantee construction,t&tfiit ,jV1414 Arena Drive -•iiii.vaicaroer.' drapes.-living room, fining ment. Douglas Photngraohv.-1104. WetL. -FURN. HOUSES buildings, lots ot treej. Double occupen-^? Usted retail $2*9.95 ... HURRY! While -: .1901 Willow Creek ' 2 Bedroom-From $210 f*K# room, kitchen wlfh gas stove, garage, 34th cy $110/mo. Apply et 2000 Pearl, «atter.^r' 'V yard » 10:00 p.m. *74 KAWASAkt motorcycle 100. New, they last ~ $159 Furn " All Bills -Bus fenced $275/mo 4764042 or 8;30 weekdayf"' noons only 290 miles; Street legal Stilt under . 444-0010 'between 7am -7pm LAUNDRY COUNTER help Saturday, LAKE AUSTIN; Quiet country living, 15 evenings. . • *—; . * warranty.'$490, 282-0635. • UNITED Mgr. 442j4124 Hours 3:00 p.m/to Sunday, Thursday minutes campus/downtown. One, two; * Vi? f0R RENT -partially furnishedhouse 2 10 00 p m Phone Paul, 442-0895 after. and three bedroom mobile homes. $70 .1971 TRIUMPH DAYTONA 500, helmet. FREIGHT. -VILLA t ^r,# Travis Hts. Near shuttle $155 3 00 p m S140. Mack's Marina. 327-1891. 327-1151--; • shop manual.Just tuned, excellent con­ mDeposit. 471-1254, 447-3236. dition, must see. Danny, 478-4766 • SALES ^ $159.50 ;?> TWO NICE CHILDREN need babysitter 1 BDRMHOUSE for rent on We$t sideof MEET NEW PEOPLE! 6535 NorthLamar every day. after school. 2;15 • 6:00 p.m. campus w/in walkingdistance. $115.453? i ALL BILLS PAID Male and Female openings In off-,­1970 TRIUMPH Trophy S00ccto Tuned.-ln-•^Monday-Fnday 9-9 ORLEANS ROOMS : Sue Doherty; 476-7085; 478-1556 after 6 «72 or come by 1106 West 22nd & ask for' spected. New chain, tires. Loo^s and" Sat 94 • Lovely, spacious, 1 and 2 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED p.m. • • : *•.•. !• •• Manager. • •campus co-ops. Coed, att-male, all­ ;,:fon* good; $750. Fedeffco, 477-4626. ' •••. . female, or vegetarian housfc*. Member Bedrooms, Furnished,or Un-• Shag, paneling,giant walk-ins, balconies — . . • :»1££&H °ORM.-1905 Nueces: Doubles 3 EVENINGS and Saturday. $75. Need 2'BEDROOM/ 2 BATH -mobile home on . . owned and operated. Inexpensive/com­ furnished, '/a blqck UT Shuttle. 'r FI MONfTPPPPV'-« :}& s*m" sln»lM »3«5'Semester wheels. 7S24 North Lamar, No.211.1:00, Lake Travis. Quiet place to study*. For-fortable. Inter-Co-Op Council, 510 W­ • Rent with four months option 453-4545 ^ .'* \V-'Iv I Cl\rvCl T^f-..,Dally mald service; central air " • 4:00, or-7:00 p.m; sharp. AAonday showing; call 266-1906. • 23rd St, 476 1957AUSTIN -" 59-9927 452-3314 2423 Town LakeCirde.-wRefrtjeraiorj,.hot plates-allowed. Two -or / . to buy: Tue " 2 Bedroom h'V ' hours: 7 a.m;v*. 10 a.m. Master Valet AKuiKh m*>>ir>it»UI _ _-"-'.I'. SOUNDS Close to downtown^ furnished-0/..unfOr^' -iMALE. GRAD.UATE -STUDWtT— > op with manysocial and educationalac<451-2340 . ; 3004 Guadalupe 476-2267 ' ' $210 .nljhed/ V or t feedroonv large waik-Jns/-': Bedroom, • prjvata entrance, :prlval«. TTCtiraners. 2710 Manor Rd. LOST ENGLISH SETTER puppy. White fWlHes tun by the-members. Newf' with brown spots, one brown ear.-Ten ;w-—Glfls-Candies-Rosters^Glflssware-• -•'1304.Summit'. ' < • 44m>584~' extra storage^-private balconie$< iotf o^ bath, quiet nelshborhood. 4S9-S322. . buildings, lots ot trees. Doubleoccupan­ weeks old. :Answeri to Mlke.-477-30fl» Blacklights-incense Wall Plaques ' grass. Perfect for.the working student. 50ClAL#.ACTIVlTfES: coordinator for-yf cy $no/mq. Aoply at 2000 Pearl, after-' Stereo -For'Sole £&p&rAu$tift's High ClassTtead Shop •'-.v. •" ~ r-Shuttie at fcont door ;From $U5;plus E^-620 South Ut. (U*e MEET NEW . the elderty. Experience preferred but: Reward .noons or. 6:30*10:00 . PEOPLEI Male and weoKday -not necessary.Call474-1411 for informa­ ' Open Noon til Midnight tftmber Cfeek entrance.) 444>1269,'4?2-, FemdTf .opening! In off-campus co-ops evenings tion & ep^plnfmen^ LOST: WABASH COLLEGE class ring 4)t;. , ' ' . Coed, afl-male, all-female,or vegetarian • (l973)r-Wa$ loif-in-Athletic Fieldbehind ­ s-i hwe«. Memberowned andoperated, in- -BBLLSOtt. DOB)v\ for.Men. Excellent^ ; CO,D. DELIVERY. Must be neat/,fast, ,—,CAMI NO REAL ; expensive comfprtabfe. loter-Co-op Jester Center,.>R*warar47£2674. v home cooked meals. Alr-condllloned,-:-: AX 7000 BRAND NEW EFFICIENCIES Council, 510 W 23rd S1„ 47^-1957 . > alert/ have goodrunning car;Makeup to' maid, swimming pool, 2610 Rio Grande,i Jfl APTS. :;.435.va day.JVPart and futl-tlme . LOST*, silver; bracelet epsf side of cam* -sill Call 476-4^52. H54-SM7 GARRARD CASUALLY YOU Nueces Si? C9tiDLTl0.^.D double app!j£at(on$tioV« beingtaken.Apply 3108 pus. Please cali Diane. 477-0031 »ln«'» «• N Lamar, Suite 102 454-«761. -s.Creative OutdoorPortraits -T.°S Alio 1 bedroom -1 bath S169 All with bio baiconies:for vour plants; NOWHlRINGwaitresses/bosbd«all &£i W> watt Ampllflerj. AMiFM^.ter'eo 2 bedroom -2 bath $S2^^'^----i: toomi:J Vi .blocks from campus. CURING ID ProcessfFriday, -PROW.'S NgSTi 8710 NUeces. Room and rf * Knar,Q*tru4 professional setTes turn-'-/' Save 'a Now CtoSe to campus. Beautifully'furnished; apartments 477-7558 -, -white LOST gold ladles'-Bulova watoh. Black •• ,ln8/" »l«,5«/(itonth, doubles j i ,--f a t * -Air Suspetalon.10 speaker system band. Teardrop.shape. REWARD. 452­ -SOomsJ -singles; onlv.ai " w-^aavy doty 10 woofer, fvt -t4 * VJslt our Studio , S150 Summer plus_electricity and -LOWER FLOOR corner^ suite room shifts. Apply In person.1V.00,• 6i00T-4323 ^ J«5/monlh, alr conditioning. .?5-fl242, 472-2816 ' •- IH-35 Swlh at E St Elmo Rd 2697, m'itfi'artoe, and 3Vj". tweeter. SuogMte^ Mana9er: Aft ^ tl»r»5»;,. foor (4Mos»Hot3m,cajjior : Royce Portraits ^L-^ 478-9058 201 if., contract price. Josh 477-3W2; ' • AfS.N'?,.<:0i!TRACJ. Dot|la 22nd floor . 2420Guadalupe •^. ildfl suile Fantaitk view campus, air..-'' VX frm* . 472-4219'"** 1 /v port David; 475-J002 .^UNITED FREIGHT $130 up HELP WANTED HELP WANTED SALES 1 BR Furn. JUmtel * •.>:L&xi?£3. -j*. gBgNew and Usedi WAITRESS,'BARTENDER fleedad WOULD YOU BE INTERESTED IN part-time to serve Austin'* Finest WANTED SahirdayW l-lang-Gliders , Tanglewood.%^ Tavern clientele. Must be available THIS GREAT-^SCHOLARSH through Ball. S»Mrs.* Overtonbetween­ -Annex • 4-30 .t 30-The DraughLHOUSE, 4112;, ^PROGRAM?' VP*# P.1ANIST /KND GUITARIST wanted fg"pj,, — ? ,sVi,"-r purchase '. 1315 NORWAUTLANE Madlcal Parkway, s • showarOup. Must haveeciulp*'^ 'V . alltemal*showhMR SUSPENSIONS " 453-6209-^ 476-0948 * 1. Scholarship pays up to J200 per semester." mentandba^filling }o trayelWeakandlEt/ 1 BR, ^ BA After 6 p.m>, ^ 2 BR, 2 I SHUTTLE BUS CORNER , PERSON TO DRIVE school type bus/J m , 451 8574 • SPEAKERS V-rX--Guadalupe-, 0 m, --A. $100 when registered. 6" p m, Monday Friday. •S?P " »t,. Apply jn B. S100 mid-semester WANTED Chauffnu't llcenie reijulralf,." H j)!8S:K Available {if d^" LARGE POOL • ALL BILLS PAI0T ftKI woInclude wide tonal CaWrreraU "ly*K' "Shajtastlc"Recently clex oy *00 SQUARE FEETjfl fn these 1 pafson.iit7SouthT.amar/. .2. Must be, eligible to work noons; weekdays, ' WWP and 8-12 00 tlail TTH W4-J600 9­moth, too, Furnished or unfurnished, mttinwn dislortlon, electronic nfcel!9rTt't>uy.-S60anedi327'-cedrooms .and.the 2 badroorttsare rnafn-. . 3, Most 'work 20 hrs, a wdek. • v JO a.m. M?F.'. ;• ' J tmf guarantee on parti & H75, ' /WOVE IN TODAY rafrjaerafors (Trosf-HOLIDAY HOUSE NO J needs part -4, Will'receive pay & scholarship,!^^!, -pS time help.to worKlor^ nights a weakt. songs], BesiJ^ote on the Lake: • fre*), DW, cable, walMns i-bullf-lns. Half.'prlea > tood,-^scholarship:program, 5. Godd at ar|y University or College In Ai n-a From 1165 ALU BlU^-rAJij. im Shuttle Bus P ront Door WhelessLanr pi|dyHcatlon.Apply?6(SiSGuadalupe.">. -6. starting pay.i2.0^/tir plus food discount, dlneUei, f0wn Lake-Circle. mJm47Muii paid vacation. & un­ - Jipr'nis furnished. ~ rSJ? , (t*mvy — EfGHT mmmmt Nl5PN MIKORMAT with50mmIW lens «*wday-Frfday5!-9 -anjf-case. Uke paw Rogers drums, 1200 SQUARE FEET DyMwvnd: snara. 'Zlfdikn cymbals North Austm, 'pool eond(tlon,;«7-*7« «J 1959 Sat. 9-6 Between uesda wmber DAILY mm s t. .-v'% . „ - , j <*-#W m campus briefs ^ \j7,. .* ^ if. i ;) 4,, i, Us .It ' " V\ * 1J. * « * 1^ i h..!! " .„ %. .%H• i v '*." 5 -University ' who students faculty members interested in both the University .bowling ..'.hold its firstmeeting of the semester wish 'to volunteer a fevv-houts •4easnii>gu-principles. • of com­team and for.jntereollegiate J06* 'P:m-Tuesrfl,y In Burdtne H»l|each week" tutoring.elemen­puter operation may register cpmpetffioriln -otter garftes"" HUMANITIES-COUNCIL will meet*a1 7:39" • tary and junior high school' for the fall series^of tutorial such as pocket billiards, and Tuesday .In' Business-1 students have a-variety of opr sessions-offered By the Com­table tennis. . -Economics Building-16i.' ** SOCIAL ANO BEHAVIORIAL SCIENCES portuhi.lies for-service. putation Center beginning Signnip is being held in the COuNOt wHl meet af«:15 jJ.m. Tuev Tutors in reading, m&th "and Thursday. ' • Union-gamesarea in the-base-/t ^day-Told-Jou?rtaiiimift Geography.Boitdfng),lo-dJ*cuss.Building 402 (the English skills are. n'eeded The session will require, no ment of the Union--Building • " .interview* and ib.forrpuiate goals. after school hours at theSouth fees unless a student wantsan Sign-up ends Sunday. •" SCMINAKS Austin Neighborhood Genter, optional user account, costing . DEPARTMEWT OF ASTRONOMY .Will sponsor I ANNOUNCEMENTS a seminar appearance by Dr. G de 2414 Oak' Crest. No previous $3. ^-USTENING: AND-.NOTjETAKINQ 4^111 be diS•' : Vaucouleurs of the astronomy dept.* cussed by/»he .sia(( of the Reading experience-is necessary. For . • at 4 p;m. 'Tuesday in 'Robert Lee . T'>* and Study Skills Laboratory' . Moore Hall 15.216, • more information, contact . {RASSLJal 4 p.m. Tuesday.in Jester-­ DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS wilt sppnsor an M Sailing Lessons * Center A33?. .. Deb Morrison.at 444-352?. . atomic.and molecular seminafHd 4 ' -MEETINQS p.m. Tuesday in ftpbert LeeMxjre ' t ^ After-school tutors also are A course of ^aslc sailmg-; --AME8ICAM SOCIETY OF CIVILENGINEERS WWI. MaJl .10.218; . -. -t • -. m Nmnlibmhood.Ccntor, tfi-19 E, •r^nih^at 6 rn" m Tiipsriair' at J?irfct St.Persons interested,in -helping shouldcall 476-CnB41 for Lakesh'ore Blvd. und.er the WHIttt"P£RS0N IS­...jnore.inforiijation; -auspices of the Austin Parks vv •} Marketing Club" ^ and Recreation Depaetroent,— SUPERIOR"? The Universityvchiipter of ^^^ucter Claude Hargrave—T»an Staff Hwte by Stanley Farrar the American Marketing ^ hoped to be able to ... the. rational thinker? the religious .-.' \ • Git Along, Little Dogies Association will hold itsinitial ' Ji??'-?ss to 35 students- believer? the artistic dreamer? the political meeting-at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday • Ptf|er courses are scheduled U.S. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Tex., addresses the Southern longhom..steer were presented to-each governor, The .24 and Oct. 8. organizer? FREE 19? page book. .WRITE: at Scholz' Garten. The „• Governors Conference hpreMonday at whicfr castings of a castings are reportedly worth $1,000 each. chapter is open tq all business *c s all ex^ Quest for the Superior, Box 4913, Austin/ and advertising, students. • * .-r,~ Texas 78765. mor®'nf^atlDn caU At the Tuesday meeting, the ,,^n "922° or 442_590°­ agenda will be discussed, and questions will be answered for iWWr Union To Hold Event prospective, members. and. .Union.Tryoutsi guests.. '•';* •Today^^fWtie^ Include Filmy^Games Computer Tutorials The; Texas Union games University students and - af^^pjr;^;;Thei^srodcanteJJJjlm:^ daybecon-j.7x!^Tiki •*fcWUC,lid: a*',u area is sponsoring try-outs for "orDMt?R^y»^PO?tfy?;and,-;;flogrflpby' cases -.«*'«»»puusoring-iry-ouisior pottery will h^ghllghT" sandwich"seminar in: Union, classic...."Hock Around the • certs by "progi'Sssive•country * Tuesday s acUvities during Building 202. • Clock" will be shown byf the" artist"-wrillis"Alan Ramsey in "> -, • ­Texas Union Week. . . • > For poetry enthusiasts two ; Theatre Committee at 8:30 .—the Union Theatre, sponsored X- John wisser., Travis County events are planned.* At noon. p.m. on the Union Patio. by the Musical Events Corn-* * assistant district attorney, ...the Union Theatre will show a Other ifiajor eventsschedul-mittee. Admission is $1 for * * will ^ discuss censorship in \ film: depicting the .life "style .ed during the week wilhbe an staff, faculty-and .students, 3f * > * Austin and current city por-and poetry of Allen Ginsberg original European graphics $1.50 for others. , : * * AustinHunsRugby Club — " arid ^wrence Ferlinghetti. sale of prints by Renoir, * * IN THE BEER GARDEN JOB WANTED From 3 to 5 p.m., Uie Fin^ r Rouaul.t and.Dali from 9 a.m. > Announces g^rf" * * Arts Committee will sponsor to 5 p'm, .Wednesday': and * Fall Practice -6:30p.m., Toes. & Thurs. A FROM THE KITQHEN •RUMMER BACK from NYC.-Wants • a. poetry : reading in Union /Thursday, in the Union ' S'fl-*'lh playing band. Can beiln af * Intramural Held -Everyone" Welcome * ^COLDSAtADJPLATE once. 447-UM. Building 202, featuring Gallery, The sale is sponsored * TS * * Louisiana poet Ken Fontenot. by the Fine Arts Committee.- 478-/4J1 ,^6-2012 or ,4.72-8763 for information-* CHICKEN, POTATOES, JEll-O, VEGETABLE 331 * He also will discuss trends in -Thursday. Friday andSatur­ ^ SALAD . . BEMB3B modern poetry. Throughout the day the iliitlr inf. Union Gallery will display: 476-9093 Mexican craftsmanship in typing r pottery, weaving, • basketry', Woodward ApGrtments Why Hassle >W4>..... stone, wood and metals. 1722 £ast Woodward. printing Tuesday; nighty the Recrea­» Security lights A Dealer . • binding; tion Committee -: will. hold a 1 • ?'5wimm{ng F(K>fs ,One Bedroom . . .from $140 426-w^rW«rsW&-dr-J\ iames night" between 7 » ffoy Groands ' . For VW Repairs? » Wofhatefiio .p.m.and midnight inthe base ­TwoBedroom.^Jroni$165 • llghtiJ Croundt ANNEX KITCHENS GAY RAF ment gamesarea. Uameswill sm Three" Bedroom'...from $220 5 Mwotes JoJ inplnrto cpadfs, /VHizl hlack­ . •. . • • Minutes: to BAf 200 ACADEMY DR. GRX5UP }ack, foosball.'-pinball and; JHM-S • s . discussing gay life : • All-^ntTPaid FreeTtttXhmelTV—-^rtiepsJromJB imnan— THE BUG "blackout" bowiing! • Pets WekoRlteTrucking, iyik-f. v-• • ,, Blood Components, Incl "Yo Soy Chicano REDWOOO FLOWER BOXES. Great for. apartment gardens, flowerbeds for the 1975 OPEN: MONJ&THURS. 8 AM to 7 PM. ' t (Film by Jesus Trevino)V ­ Sites T '6* long. *3.50/foot. 477*2104-• TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. . -8UY-SELL PLAYBOY, Penthouse, etci : roooks, records, gulfaruiewefry, radios. ' CLOSED WED. & SATf^l Aeron's,'320 Congress Down-PEREGRINUS Tonight Union 104 ': •.4°?W.6th'« * ''ABSTRACT ART is a producf of the uh* 477-3735 8 p.m. ,Oallery, DobieM^ll, --— Yearbook Aj; EXPAND YOUR' CONSCIOUSNESS'! J®f M $P",B| 'ff 01 centers (or [HIKINGBOOTg ' ' K fl,u2 ^evc.'?''m?n £*pel-len«> the I -Blue Ridge Mountains, Washington, ;**• • "irfrimmiw • HAMAGSH1MIM P C • N»w YorK (special-event a Madison. Squaro Garden).* and oar. F:Llglit*JWe200 453 7Mf American, Soviet. & Syrian Jewry; p si ^ planu ehe«|jt;4)»m^7444i»ii- TOWNES HALL AUDITORIUM I , v Jewish Activities"oh Campus "^1 J. oorrn rm *lie rafrlg i50 47«m6 jiitoll More!! -5s,-Apti moving «. hauling MIKe 441>005« -Don't forget to Order Your Copy of ^^FlyJDgCl^SepI 11 7 30 BEB 1M > ISt?" upr'Oht piano lor salt *nfni Corrie to Hjllel . . 2105 Sao'Antonio j-r sa .-:'Monlal gallant Lib, sharl, 47]-5l?9. ?The 1975 THURSDAY, SEPT. 12 at 7:30 p.m.,, t Highest Qu&lliy fiodia ^ 1 473*3344. •••*• [Fit By CxpertoncedPeople sfsfl business meeting, refreshments, and ^Refrlji e*ci),cofm fli4h-W47r •"J ~ stories from KIRYAT SHMONAH li:. ­ -il's-j,*"""!» ru°Irpm Parli tX5 474.W5-' EREGRJNUS «/of mor® info> )te EwtK Pk^vSonTc^ T» Volvo, geod ihapa'JMO 454-MJ0 When you hav& your picture taken! Nt*#:flO(id;*lclm:b*elnn»r45WaW Karen, 475-8892 yr^j Frank', 476-65 fc 504 west2%k 473-152 ,.., " oh/yS6.30 yac* 5:*?Tuesday^—^ptembeF 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 15 , Av1 *ir> UTS ,V"v.-m m c\ * W< ••-.«'*ssitfs-'-. -5;x?jtt•: -v>.v--(UP ,'^ ' -V \-ZWO «*--**> J. 5-W r'>o^W—«3r*V £S?Crr &5-;>S'. v-i5-v^{rir. •£3&L^\'*iy'Jtr- •£.;_!.i.] • -.sjS^Kfe 4St:~."-';^-^V.W-ja^K^ . ^Y*$b£ 'SS^ * ""'" '~'i$'® " '"^ --«^a,; w5i"iui*?.V.*»..
  • .'f'."Vi Pi ~ ^(,£-4 -i,^ . • > >£§« t-:-:' , 'r,A' tf ^ ' *,<^*' ' -'1 ' . <•>• * "U -3T--"tw rf *" J*?cir4'~ i^^nctose^-rf?^­^ ',S, fiv(4 ­ &**•>*£ 1 ^f-2 'j a-A. •••;-c.C ^ ^»-n-i^ 1 iJsaS^"' .• »*» # VWif fe'.fe,"' '­ ': <1 *> V»„3»«i'.-:. •'••-/ ' / , ' * , v-"-* ^AS-^ '**£ ' ' :&ik • bringingitthe1-largest single one ->•— ^ 'A • -Tl T-*i mus event ever •J-1", c * f/W; Memorial Stadium on September 1, "I C\^7 A f<8i ' tftft -~ -' '* ' WS5"" IW 7 Z-L -cV$-,S&. *t sr ^ <1^-1* ^ • .•'t: ' 4. *« "••' i *MPS^i': ^ We are proud to have earned f%?2-r gp-^' >a W»-« M • • F?A -^ $25^000 for#youEA student govern­ 4 is. i&rssa6 :i: ment fund, more thanrfaAyf singll ^„'V " '"yj •* V Sif%Ba7 ^b> ^ }• • **tlX amount ever contributed. Also, a SS5f5Ki Mi-^ 4/. -sfVa •4H special thanks |oes to the entire .'Ml •.V j&O University adminiftration and the U 0v4 ']•,­ *,|SP-V .V/C —'£ r» m ,' « -_ ^ . . pfs !^.fiiv V2: Ss-^ »*••<» j-V W* •S ^ 6%T Athletic Departmei||. HopkS'em •«~&z J^i; >| mMA ,., J V •.e.-i'i tP 1Ms fn rnim ' • §r> :'"" • -:.V,r. r^TTH tSTr»-t ^ ijfjr 9*^®}-^ 0' W . fca....£3^ . ... .,,.......... ...... .. .... . ... m. rM -Mi--w?^ •• ,; ' •' • gitAffsK r}| "aB :i;R VVWP h&.v IWk r,.., t x^f­ .^C,IT v ' •"6J'Y<'T', ' * "V andBill.Ham T3^ IJ •&•^ r't,4' ':-^V«^-s \ i«r«L j > <• '-"'V-". L^-;r i. >, \ ^ ?5® g&?*fr ''T',-^ <-.•*-" ,l* a •«£ -rS?" * ^ *&& - Alex Cooley 'Mi fey 5^Bill Graham Terry BasietJI ! .. . , tSfiS ^ .. ; •:•••: :;.--WM :",^:<'V:..:^,: WM W •tfo.exas Student Government -tv t \&fii \ a * ^ "• * . * i , f t •-.-"-4.-4 h *% i a»t*siwfi5Jfa5&yAi/v-I r/|l>age 16 Tuesday, September 10 T974 THE BA1LY V' -" ; k'" '"••'& MSS' |^?3V# • -" f '^V'V -y ^ *-4 •* J t« -, • ^ ^ J * /«'•«* H 1 Sfc^ JjJ~"'' 1"'""'" -.•o'jiRiS-n;. ~T