, ? s*-* ~1 1 -'*• ^ J % <,* 5 "\ it ^ jy-"* Vr «.«• --'.a | l%W •' iSS v&TS?,1 r "fc. » •W jm Hi ^0,-mmm * t&R.»* VV "W . ' • * Mr-? ^>-f\ . TEXAN JTft r-, Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin A *<• ^ ^rrs. _r ^ K.M Vol, 74, No. 52 Please Recycle This Newspaper " "AGstin, Texas, Wednesday, Septefri'Ber 11," 1974 "" ten Cents Sixteen Pages ,.471-4591 && ,C£** * c-~--*'•'* rt.'Vv ^Vf^•^€"•.<'•"s;'•, ^v*0-r« • * J 'i >' L^<} .V!' ­ <"i *i«. , r: " 'i&Mlk^ix:"i*^ k! J May Pardon 48 ^ ^ + > ­ ' <-v ^ ^ WASHINGTON (AP) V President • • authorized statement on a nation already ^ Attorneys-for six Ford is:"studying the possibtlity-of par­divided over the merits of the Nixon par­ 'Watergate 'coyer-up-'trial--conferoed:.all|^J \i'it \}, doning all those convicted or accused of .;'•* don . . morning on a jojnt strategy. -v. 1> ? s., Watergate-related crimes, a.spokesmah "I think those factors have been taken . Hushen reported that the White Hoube said Tuesday." into aqcount," he said, adding that the had tabulated 16.obo;-telegrams on-the||§l| The 'surprise disclosure, heightening . launching of a study did not mean par­: Nixon pardon by late Tuesday'rnbnjlng^5®^. the confroversytouched of[-by. Eo'rd^s ,U dons actuallv would be granted. and found .tliem runmng_6-l in opposition " ,?*,»v * A pardon for Richard Nixon, was made by •REACTION'-from­ powerful-con -to Kord's-grant .of federal; imniunit\^to*; '•• .^U , '.,;. .; rA\& T ^ 'acting presssecretary John Hushen, who •' gressional Democrats was swift and the.resigned President."' . " * " • said he spoke with Ford's express <-.-'.•• critical.-Senate Democratic Whip Robert However. Hushen' said telephone reac-':• authorization..:.. C. Byrd of West. Virginia said-new par­tion .had "changed around rather .!?; '"The question of pardons is under' ' dons •'"would complete the cover-up of significantly'' and, through Monday, sup-•,% ;«study," he said, adding that the review -the cover-up.'' House; Speaker Carl- ported Ford's decision 5,700 to 3.900. • embraces all...48'. individuals who have Albert, D-Okla., said they "would be .; Buchen niade p.ublic a memo of the been accused of crimes associated..wi£h~" • (Related Story, Page 3.) Watergate, specjal prosecution .• force : the'Watergate label. Of the 48. 39 have which, listed 1.0 areas,;ip addltipn to the : pleaded guilty or: been convicted by -:. "Viewed as an abuse * of presidential • Watergate cover-up, that could personal- juries:: • ^ '' u»9i, power." ly involveNixon in potential prosecution.^ "I,CAN give you n^fuhl^Kjguttance ,'f-w i --Seru'Jmnes-L.,Buckley, RrN-Y.-,. said, :".Non,e of these mattersat the moment: Hushen'said. • • -• . "•.' however: "I cer-tainly. think. it's ap- Arises.to.the ievel Of o'ur abilityto'prov-e^ White House counsel' Philip-Buchen— -propriate-for-theseicases4oijer.eviewfidvi -pypn.a probable criminarviolatron;"-th& ­ -later told reporters he understood Ford But I haven't thought it through."• memo said.. ; . i ;?'*:Was . personally' conducting the .-pardon-Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-JV.C., Senate ' ASKED IF they had considered seek-;• study at this point but that he, Buchen, Watergate committee chairman, .said it lijg'a plea, from Nixon to at least one . expected to be involved later. would: be a mockery to pardon "these criminal charge-prior to a pardon, . Buchen said he believed Ford first dis­men who undertook.-.to steal from the Buchen .said the former President's at­ closed -his /interest in possible broad-American people'their right to a free torney. Herbert J. Miller.; "Seemed cer-. scale Watergate pardons at a morning . election..,." tain "there would never be a"plea." meeting with' Hushen and counselor AT special THE Watergate Buchen also was asked-if cir--: Robert T. Hartmann. . > prosecutor's office, spokesman James • cumstances might suggest there r.hadg —Texon Staff Photo-by Stanley Pernor ,, Hushen was asked bya newsman if he Doyle said,:"Jdon't think I'm surprised" " been a Fprd-Nixon pardon.deal. .. , ~r John Warner of the Bicentennial celebration addresses governors. ^understood the likely impact of his Ford-that'Ford would'consider the pardons. : "I can assure you he (Ford) did not make a deal," he said. ' || The spokesman said that while he% ;cpujdn't :injept himself into Ford's^ Governors Discuss "thinking processes,5'' he' felt that tKe' •' M9 -question of Nixon's mental,and physical •?. .By SUSAN LINDEE , , vatorles; within the region. Grants from ,%err predicted that in the 1980s there leaving their home community. . " : • promote the tounst concept across the hea1th was "getting'undue attention'* as';;^ -•--Tefcaa-Staff Writec. 5-. private funds will be given to students will be almost no university professors nation. ­ South Carolina Gov; John West stress­ , a possible motivation for the pardon. |1"-'•Higher education in the southern*' -and'faculty te allowthem-tostudy across _ . hired at allr and there may be a surplus ed the'need to respect the tourist, in- stales; thp inur.isi:hiimer)t..in"which heexpressed,remorse but ^ jbegins aeceBtmirstudcnts this monih. hardest hLts Kerrsaid^illtjelhe(jr^vate'^ Holshouser said the act provided fifods'/-v^ndUstry/' William Toobey of Discover want to celebrate it," Warner-said. • • admitted no guilt, was leit to meet this-jr^TKe-boarduilso-has begun a programof collcges. tfeacher collegesand the lesser ;t for such^systemi-which could,easeMr-ii~a^eHcaisaid,':agr$eing with West.. standard under the circumstances'. sharjng "uncommon" educational knownliberal-arts collegcs. bjin_rcrowding considera_bly^ Rural Oi]£_out of every 20 Americans is in­ "I am pleased'tOTfcport thatthere is a — He said Mjller was toJdfrom theoutset/­ facilities, such as electron microscopes,: "This period, untilaround 2000, may be .• residents could take advantage of-jjob op-volved in the .tourist fndustty, and it surging"and -widespread-interest across that a pardon woulcf not depend.on an ad-marine research units and 'ohser--unsur\'ivable for some;" Kerr said. portuniUes in urban centers without ranks second qnly to grocery store salds America in thfe concept of Bicentennial," mission of ginit by^thF"resigned~Presi^jn expenditures, Toohey reported. he added. . . dent. • yHe recommendetjthe establishmentof TYC Controversy 'ia National Travel Industry • Policy . ' Development Council to organize and Coastal States Asks -111 Ruling Expected on Delay Single Suit Decision ® By DICK JEFFERSON -behalf of the TYC last'week./The appeal care," Hill-said. Texan Staff Writer . would question Justice's authority to Meanwhile.' House-Human Resources Coastal States GasCo. wants the issue -. Lo-Vaca claimed that Srhali should be , U.S. Dist. Judge WilliamJustice is ex*­ force the TYC to adopt policies, even if Committee -Chairperson Carlos Truan, of its.liability in gas contracts-decided in^ ^disqualified from representing the LCRA' pected to rale shortly.on a state petition-' the council may agree with them. D-Corpus Chrjsti, asked the youth coun- one class action case, rather than going Wqrmer ... 'now since he was employed by -Coastal to delay jiis earlierrorder requiring the ,;To require that the hearings be heid' .cil to implement most of the court's through the several separate court ac? States 12 years ago. .Texas Youth Council toclose twocorrec­before the New Orleans court has a order while the appeal is being con­Wednesday's for-e.-'tions brought by itscustomers, aCoastal Lo-Vjca -is asking for -a- change oftional school?; a'Waitiqg an appeal, chance to rule on the appeal "is to put' sidered. . Stateslawyer said Tuesday: . .••venue in the LCRA suit, saying it can't cast calls for consid­ .The petition filed, Monday :by Atty. 'the legalcart before the horse," Hill said "Even though you have.,decided-to "We filed a motion in Houston to hold get a fair trial in Austin and TravisCotin­• vpen. John -jinu. .-said -"the delay was •>; in the petition. appeal, it is my hope that this will not be erable early morning, off other suits until the Pennzoil case in .tv because of unfavorable publicity. • ; ';ne<;essarv because -the state , intends to ,. ' "No emergency dictates that these allowed: to stand in the way of making cloudiness, otherwise Houston is decided," Tracy Dubosesaid. »¥; A total of 498 pages of stories from the t appeal J^stic^'s order to the Fifth U.S.;,^ i negotiating sessions precede final and changes tlie court found necessary,'' ; fcases against Coastal States' and its 'Austin American-Statesman 'as wpll as Truan said in a letter to the council. • • Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orlehns,aff| authoritative,determination of the defen­ partly cloudy with subsidiary. Lo-Vaca Gathering'Co., in­ articles from, the Austin Citizen and the •Hill specifically asked-Justice in .the" 7?"'dants' rights-, indeed, this case was,filed "For the sake of the troubled young warming temper-" clude suits by the Lower Colorado River : sTexas Observer were introduced-as:petition to stay that part of the order nearly four years ago, and the trial people i» Texasplease do not useit asan • Authority, Corpus Christi, San Antonio­ .evidence Tuesday. ' atures. Low .-Wed.nes­ which requires hearings to begin within;; thereof -was -completed almost exactly •excuse to delay making.available the and Pennzoil. • " • - :;s: Witnesses testifiedlhat local residents.30 days on a "detailed'plan for:ac-'i®""' one year ago/'Hill said; . kinds of assistance which those young day wilf be in the low Theattorney representingLCRAi'n the had already decided'both the gas slior­ ...complishing a. network of facilities for » Hill also stated-that in one year the people .so desperately need;-or to delay 70s with the high suit against Lo-Vaca, Clint-Small Jr. of •'.tage and higlibr-prices were Lo-Vaoa's .-.the'treatment.of delinquent youth." .,f.: TYC has elected-a-hew chairperson^ a eliminating our inhumane crime schools Austin, withdrew'frqm the-case Tuesday .fault. • •»!|3iThe order also directed ihe eventual':: ncw.executive director and has included .— the large, rural institutions — as climbing. to' near 90. . because • of questions about , his -former tii: The LCRA is suing LchVapa for allegedtlosing of the two largest. detention;^, two^new -members, Its new budget re­rapidly as alternative care and treat­Winds will be from the einplovment b>f Coastal States;.Sob Gib-.' breach .of gas contracts.;" centcrs m Gatesvijle. -7?'% quest "included very substantial atten­ment. can J>e made available^' Truan , bons; the atjtonrsy* who took over the ...._, Wilmer Hunt Retired State Dist". JudgeW <,-^Hill agreed to appeal the decision in"'*'-' tion for the. need of community-based said." i^'r, south, 8 to 1.5 rriph. , Hearing the changeTjf -sen ' case,-Said. / r< jjs venue case. m , Wallace Discounts '76 Plans By JANICE TOML1N v ''It's, not just the politician in him. He's honestly amice, . 1 •• • • Texan Staff Writer friendly, down-to-earth guy." • : LAKBWAY^KPourteen influential political leaders were -« Kaufmann reported the governor rolled:down his windowat a m scattered around the room at the Southern Governors stop lighton the way to the conference,to talk with thepeopl&in Conference, but camera crews and reporters singled out the the adjacent car. man whose political,future is one of the most controversial in •; : "HE GOES outof his way to shake hands.We walked through fhe business. - , tlie kitchen,and heshOok everyone's hand.from the cook's tothe m |j| ConfinedTto a wheelchair-following an assassination attempt; busboys.", ^ . _ . . ' • In 1972, Gov, George Wallace; D-Ala'., insisted Tuesday he Ijas ^Questioned about theover-sized cigar he holdsin a long silver no definite plans for the presidential race holder, Wallace admitted heidlft.not lmow.lthe brand. .''lDhat-ariybody^chance)>-are foriq7fi,"-hesaid .."I'll HnfTfTori lf i know what theyare. I don't inhale themso 'f?-*}n his tliickisouthern accent."I don't have any plans right now" it'doesn't matter," he said with.a.grin?" h other than-the-Alabama-gdvernoiis race. • that's, forsure,-~his~staff agreedi__ "I feel I will win that," he declared cohfidently." ^ ::vAs the lengthy morning sessiqn approached its end, Wiiiat^ "I do plan to try and"continue. rr^jT efforts to see that th"e began to glance at hi.s watch and indicated his back wasbother­ing him. A tlierapist travels with the governor wherever hem ' goes. * • . * . .s'.'Hc's got .a lot of pain all the time:from-.his injuries — Tvliplan foresee that th6 Oemocraric Party-paraplegic pairi.7> Kaulmann said. "He nnvei coinplalnc alaW Si moves back to the middle." anything.-though." v . Wallace: reported-;hesweighs.the same now Ss-he.didnthree years ago and is generally optimistic about his health. ~ Although security is tight, Wallace hafc been doing as he _ -^Democratic Party sort of-moyes back to the rtiiddle where it, .pleases. "He*s not "dependent on his bodyguawJs.v'iKaufmann ' 'canrepresentthe grealtnass of people;-instead of.the''new left' said. , --Cs"" *, , like it did hi 1972 " v " , ; "WE LBJFT the party"early last .nightbecause he (Wallace) aS THE creWd parted to letWallace through, the52-year,-old ^wanted to watch the football.game, We yelled-for tl>e southern' ^-governor was s&owerecf^wlth greetings and assurances he Was :, team. -l _ ^ ^"looking good." , ^ "One Uiing the:governor does'religiously is-read the.ney^s. TWlSuthern as the SK ^governor ^ , «gP' and I g« there pwtty " hellot swnefie . nice to meet you — making certain to : .\Vlien ,asked: to specjLilate on U.Si Sen. Lloyd -Bentfeen's ' 'hands with everyone within reajch.­ cnapces a^.ii "dark hefrse" presidential ^OmineeTTVall^ce"said ^•xarijS^l^j^io t>y"5tinUy'ftuiui WW •w ,5-^^3 • m* •Jf5 «* JCIA^S 1*»­ Austin Tomorrow Backed [Governors Gefl Council, Hears By CAROL BARNES fi^'the program were charged Weddeil; who wrote that city v Texan Staff Writer with collecting information officials are predicting •"the • City couBcilmen voiced full .from neighborhood meetings striferridden Austin Tom- and then 'presenting ;data to morrow is as good'as dfead," • • support.of the.Austin Tomorrow program at Us 'the council iri' the form of a and the master plan has little Goals Assembly meeting-•'goals document-" . • •' change for being accepted"by .....Tuesday. Love said. "This is.my first a council majority. • J -Mavor Pro-Tem Dan Love. visit to theassembly since the; • Leberittami said. "'This "? -and • Councilmen Jeff Fried-'• first meeting a year ago. • council .brought about the ex- mm iinri ,T O^VPTJ, lTJ^^nn,-."..'"i:,camfe-r off fcials---couflcii) decided, tostay away The Austin Tomorrow that-predic.t^.ypur'prcgfal1rl and keep.oilr hands^out of-the program vras-created .by City. is dead; are npriexistentv l •rplanhing-prtfcess., buS I \vant Council-nearly a year ago to donH know who;they are." •••/. you to know weare behind you develop,a new master plan for Love was referring to an aUthe way and thank you for Austin based on citizen input. •Aug." 31 column in the Austin : what vou are doing. -The -assembly members of Citizen bySeditor Wray '"\Ve~have ftayed out of the -FOR Come join us at our extraordinary giant paperback book sale; Outstanding current and.backlist™ titles from many leading publishers. This is a sale Booklovers can't;afford to miss. Sale prices .59 to $4.19 Browse our .25 table URlVERSIfY ccft8l»;* General Books; rim F"" * ~ .s-iV ' One hour frtli~parJdng -with-pu«ho»«-:of-.-$2 or. -•<—J • : -more. BanlcAmcrtcard &-MasterCharge welcome. '< "« -• 0 •><.< . — ..^ a •• 9 We Believe A Stereo System Should Sound Better At Home. • f&fc Than It Does Oh Paper. r If you have $400-500 to put into a stereo system;-there are lots of really good receivers and record players to choose from, but very few speakers that hold up their all-jmportant-end of. the system. Which'is why some systems-•A'ind up sourrdirig less-impressive at -home than they duton-the advertisement. . -• . We sell The Smaller Advent Loudspeaker because it turns this Sit­uation upside dowtiv Not only do a pair of Smaller Advents sound as good as you (and we) had hoped, but well beyond unreasonable expectations. There^fs just nothing remotely like them. , &fesThe Smtdler •A.dvents were designed .to sotuid as good in every re-including frequencyTpandwidth, as any speakers of any price. Te.«t reports uf both High Fidelity and Stereo Review magazines agree that i tj^^r^|TOnse and overall perfonnancev would, be noteworthy in any speakerTregardles& of sizelor cost. j— -. . To understand just Ijow much of a-diflerence these speakers make in what you actually can hear for^your monfey^cotae-in and listen to the c .systems we've built around„aPatr of them. ^ ^ m %Ti4& ejcgs m m IE \ m irM4"­ IP planning but,will be baclt again when needed. And that; time will^be for the fight of French Cuisine) Rate,, Analysis pasSage^bf... the goals .. LAKEWAY Governors at the 40th Southern Governors By KEN MclIAM decreasing-amount per • document;'' Friedman .said. . ( . Conference were senved an 11-coursemeal at a state dinner.. Texan Staff Writer kilowatt. hour -as the SgCOflc!•'•Pgf>UtV^^ueafety -a£ter spending the day in business sessions. || City Council heard its first customer's consumption in' ^ t * With fiveviolinists leading the way. the 14governors paraded detailed'-analysis of ''flat" creases. ""is*:Quits Sheriff's rwjfinto the.banquet hall — an elaborately decorated indoor tennis electric rates in a special city • Friedman"and Binder have /•Sff n ' -' court — to the tune of "Hey Look Me' Over. " y ~:r budget work-session Tuesday; been' requesting information UTTIC6-. position Fathet Joseph O'Brien, prison chaplain at the Walls Unit at Two city .departmental heads... .on flat rates since October, delivered warned'against the flat rate-1973,-.during sessions in which ' ;' ' .the irivbcaUtfn to approximately 800 in attendance ' ^"'s^eTi^atfff'Cbdjficilmarf -m a month to resign from the pi i9mit.ui.il.fl' !• rljT1^=4axam^Jcnitu uncea•» 11 ' — Pansienne, Frosted Grapes. Filet Wellington with Sauce ; soon, release his~b«7 Travis County• Sheriff s Department" when -he..was Perigourdine, Artichoke Bottoms with Chamtrelles. Fiddle electric rate systems. YorfciCity ;tff study Austin's Heads au Beurre and Flaming Baked Alaska. . v . lITIpt" electric rates, electric rates. . . I taken off active duty, [and as'signed'a jtfbin-County Jail'. With many of the guests speaking no French, each-course 'favored by Councilman Jeff FRIEDMAN and Binder; .Cervantes began last April came as an urifSnillafc and often unpalatable-surprise. • -Friedman arid Binder and for» said they were surpri&d when • • One man. earned bis Waiter's disbelieving attention as he mally proposed by Friedman . as a deputy and after ohjy a- KBasirtT reportrcdsting $70,­ promptly drank his Marc'La Bufgonge Sorbet"rather than last week, charge one.price 000 and persenteS to council month on the 30b wasassessed a six-month probation in addi­ spooning it out.* -per kilowatt hour for all May 30,contained nis informa-• •i Apparently anything went; however, for Gov. Dolph-Briscoe,v customers regardless of quan-tion oh flat; rates. During that ;tion to the regular six-month D-T§x.\ showed up -for the occasion-in tuxedo and his cowboy.; . tity used, Austin's present meeting.' City Manager Dan period "They-said "my work wasn't up to par," he said. "boots:'- _ Vate system . charges a Davidson responded to -He was .offered the job in . Binder's prpfests b.Y ."3.ccfp­ the jail after he was told that • ting fuU.responsibility for any his work was>unsatisfactory. • misunderstandmg." Davidson UT Panel Aids Women •'•'I think I was put up thereso I »saW Eb^acb'-wpuld bring back would quit. That jail isa zoo;" flat rate;> information and * be said. other figures requested by flat SiCentei', Athletics.Supported Cervantes resigned after ratfe proponent Shudde Fath three days on jail duty. The tape crisis/center and existed," Cohen said.."'People n> Cohen. also said that per-' bv the entLftf -June " Tijesday. more • than three Frank deniect anything , womenX_juntefcoHegiate are-working diligently;: But I ' 'sonriel from the crisis center would really like to.see about _i^at^vea.jpproac.hes_jlis: ^ athletics are currfenfl^" -the will start visiting women's •month's: later. Binder noted. crimination"'in the Sheriff's biggest projects" of the 20"more committ,«ipeople-geti. dojrojtories^sororily -houses • Ebasco "never came back" Department I think we've Women's Affairs Committee involved." she said." ' V • and women's co-ops. ^•and asked. Davigdon—''Do vou ^ done weil in-. employ ing.. -of Student Government. Bar-know "what -happened to *m­ '. "The volunteers will be minorities, women , and the bara Cohen, committee co-'• The center is-sponsoring a them?" ; 5 trained in the lega'K physical handicapped^' he said> . • -chairperson,iaid Ttfesday. *. second training session,--to and psychologleal aspects of Davidson again-took ''full Cervantes said that of the The University Rape Crisis begin Sept. 1&;'"On the first ' responsibility if there was a rape.'.' Cohen SSid. All -train­ three black . and 1 three" Center., -operated in conjunc­evening, -we will split into ing-sessions be in the misunderitanding. It was my*>5~ will Mexican-American patrolmen tion. with the Psychological. groups, and-the leaders will impression they were not to* Union Building^'s""Sr.-t"-'' on duty when he was hired, Counseling and -Referral Ser­just present all the;informa-" ... come back unless we decided oiflv one'black officer remain­vice, "has received a lot of tion-to-the volunteers." Cohen The Wo'men's'AffaTrs Com­to change: our rates, and weV ed-• calls in the six months it has said. mittee was-also active with decided to have no more rate ^ women's intercollegiate increases," he said V. "Subsequent-meetings will be athletics last year. Co-; "I didn't know until this' ?»­psychological . training. chairperson Carol' Crabtree minute "'we were, not still * sessions — .''how to. tell what said. awaiting . their return," « HAMAGSHIMIM ST.UDENT ZIONIST MOVEMENT •' otherpeople want from you." ' Binder said. ,* i "It worked — their budget Most of this training, The flat rate analysis was.-, . . -come discuss what we'll be doing this year is 10 times bigger than it was, will-come' "only instead delivered by City At-"* hear about the reaction in , ^ however, • ' and we have "10 scholarships through direct contact, Cohen ty. Don -Butler and R L Han-* \ now. We've never . KIRYAT SHMONAH said. - before in seen •cock', head of the Electric'' "< scholarships our f • Utility Department .. v*-. to the terrorist attack •Hves.'-' Crabtree said. "WE HAVE argued . wev&i;? "THURS.7SEPT.1^77:30pmi.­ thnuM not have to buy any vent It and What To DoH You. s^toTlwiSE). an arm 2105 San Antonio of more fuel oil inorder to avoid ' ". i '-. /or moteinfo, call ^ ^ Cap t by Csid.a 'and Cstda__ tj,e Uee increasing the price, of elec— .-Kbfen.475-8892....' Jronk 478-6586 before, they begin working which administers,seminars, tricitv rfor our consumers.'?^: -writh-the tenter-' —— •wiH-spOTSw-an-informaUon—BuUeLjaitl ':An over-all in-'" seminar on...women's inter-crease in elcctric rates would* collegiate athletics at -7 30 destroy our arguments before^ _p.m. -Thursday in Bellmont the Railroad Commission.' Halt 328. Betty Thompson, . Butler also questioned -the J;? director of intramural sports, .legality ,of the flat; rate .jj . will be guest speakei •. -• system. "Utility rates -hiust ^; be. based on costs of service without' discrimination SPECIAL OFFER J between customers.'' he . "#7-' & -wrote in his report. "It is un-*3, $1.65 Per Month disputed. that the cdslsrtoqgy 1 'serve different classes of ' customers do vary,according to the Circumstances." ' The Houston Chronicle - Hancock told the council a' Now Delivered In Most Areas flat rate system would place Austin's electric rates for largfc-businesses in a poor "Call 477^4485^ -® position • competitive com-.^pared to other cities. ••'.' .>| 'iC'^'The setting of. rates is a •• •policy matter for" the; city' -• t Binder said. "In the past tiie ; policy, has been to attract in­ dustry. and now we need toset policy again to benefit all the ­citizens." ' Whatever\buNeed FOR THE UFE YOU LEAD.. You say we ain't got your favorite chawin'. tebaccy? Don't get cranky! The University' Co-Op^wants to know your Complaints and suggestions. The Co-Op a Consumer Action .Line 478-4436 Monday.thru:Friday, 8:30 to 5:30 When think bv Factorv Expert vith the brilliant, Chromega-Dichroic . enlarger system •i Thursday lliru Saturday. Sopi 12. !?.. 14 a- I Jrmoiis! !*.iI ifiis bciiiii ;il 10 .'ill ;md-run corninuniisK thi'inmhoui the (lav I :fkl 2nd floor ^wMBwawa im i* 3v. '5v5>^ y«? IM tstsii tvlA ;•n&s -jik-IK!Hi •i&mEm Stresses State Salaries wmmt mm By BARBARA .WILLIAMS Ui£'.tegigi^ui»^nme(i^tt)e-subcom* .: CftanffeOtould come at the fjrst of"Texan Staff Writer mitteevon salaries, and this committee's .February and be reflated in paychecks":Firsl on.the priority list of Rep. Sarah report goes to ' the 'Legisiature in at the end' of • February, with SjOrtie Weddington of Austin -for the upcoming • Januaryv" Weddington;said. chance of getting more/shepredicted.^'i legislative session" will be "a push for GOV. DOLPH BRISCOE has agreed think legislators are starting to realize state employeand staff salary increases that a 10 percent emergency salary in­j«n$ralIy^^sqine.8tiiteemployesran'tof atlea&tlO percent.^ ' *^7^ ," .. : , -,w.caoc u^ Mj January. Weddlhgtun. a-memter^f.ite..ppiise_ Weddington stroiigly• disagreed .that representative said. Appropriations Cornmittee,^ addressed^ chariccs of getling the 10 percent ln­ — — ; crease willw»n be necessaryncueas^iry -in live on what they are being paid;" the , The fact that there is extra money ut'r -, Taxas' College and University Systems •;-••.crease are minimal: Briscoe;is pushing the budget does ndt guarantee a salary'Emgloggs Association .Tuesday ,iii -the-"it.-and he is particularly interested in increase, she said, but itdoes make for a: ^TOSnws/$hftm1A8H$0irttira>w-~^^.^«v'-reofflw53te^ugiMvUhi%Us^p686aii^4tLiBg_ jtegis a bigger push for i "So far, .we have learned that nobody 'emergency salary increase,' she said. a salary iiiferease, antT money onTtfoe­ ftsefr-.—^I^iaJiciiavP go will get the 10™>rrr . board will help, she'notgd. Theclimate is .problems. The past-session oi; emergency, increase. she-saicr 11 changes poSsible. she said. '.'I BELIEVE the governordidn't call a special session on states employe salarie^-" because he-was-afraid tempers were i-lasss..' short after ^...Constitutional Conven-5pSf "tion..--iSp. • Also, he was afraid the Legislature in §S§| making .a special' appropriations bill 5 ; m For Mini- could not have limited the things that•. ­• --.could.bexonsider^vvHe couldn't keep" ™ s'omebp.dy from bringing up other—™ -® vestiga'tors to trace the movement of the measures;" Weddington added. eriforcement a^entsTai'rtnedBtit'in li ma-""pills from .the,.various factories into Weddington said stye'felt Briscoe, was jpr cities Tuesday night in an effort, to : almost£yery_Mexican state, theofficials smashan.international smuggling syn-.. sijid . " afraiji jhat all the money-on.the tajtjle would be sperit ,before the • November||§|| ^ Ti!E OFFICIALS believethe activein­ generaj'election, necessitating-a tax in-Spf?'-' t ^Ph—mr^^--~fi^iOTj:.u5UaaiyJiwhe.tamine ?ulphate, -rceasfi-.that he had pjrortiised against v"7tedl JmZT ^ : : ^bern tfivert6d *«*»-^ legitimate -tin..not. -saying"thfs hill"" will Stales and Mexico said the-raids climax--.dlHlg market-"wEurbpe and' smuggled . ,go . '\thrbugh-like-greased-:}ightning,-but 1i"to Mexico, Amphetemines are ifgal A ^ think it will pass with some work,"* she said. liHT^ennies'^^^W^aHn^led-Sm -^e,C'C0 ^ ***^ —There have h«pn rumors of a 17 per­ -•••• . Mexico and had a street' value of ~$1 6 .Amphetamines..could .b.e.'pu.r.chased in billion.'.; •''• • " cebt increase instead of 10,:;'buCwecP" .the'Unrted-Sta'tes^uhtttTecerifly:-During ­tfington _ The raiders were,armed with warrants said -she-.thinks .it. is more World War II' aiijnenS survival kits • probable that. Briscoe needs the ' for 125, persons in San Diego, Los were stocked 'with; them to enable a • emergency measure to pas's:in JanuaryAngeles;~San--Frarieiscor-Seattle-= New. ­rdowned*flie)-'to'.fight off exhaustion for to give.relief-. Employes will possibly get » -York -City; Milwaukee, 'Phoeni-;; ' days. ~ \ -•••••.­ • PortlandV Ore.; Tucson'," Boston, the 10 percent iftcrease in January, andj.1 Then truck'drivers.started iisihg them • Charleston, W. Va., and some, other in SeptemBer aiidther'7.percent increase to-keep awake. Physicians prescribed, cities. . ^ to keep-people the state is beginning to them for overweight patients. Musicians ­lose, she said-. * GRAND JURIES^ in the 10 cities used them for added pep. . . "I AGREE THAT .those that have DEMAND FOR the still-legal drugs r: worked longer should be making more, . returned indictments that remained sealed until the Drug Enforcement Ad- soared from 24.000 kilograms in 1966 to and we want to setaside some money for„ t-\'first ministration arrests in (DEA) each jurisdiction.. agfcnts made..the .32.000 in'1967 arid 34,500 each in1968 and. : merit raises," she said. . s Although DEA. agents are making 1969. when Congress began cracking The Legislature will discuss bills in • •arrests in the 11 major cities and others, down. Production dropped to 27,800 in their order on the agenda, but>theagenda m&m . 1970 and 15,229 in 1971. frilS * , grand jury indictments, were handed has not yet been made up. Weddington Congress first required druggists to «?Ai 1 T' /-down in only 10 cities. There were no in-plans to introduce a salary increase bill . keep-sales records", then classified the first: , . . ''-dictments handeddown in Portland,Ore. • drug in 1970 and in -1971 raised it to -Weddington said she. has approached " DEA Administrator John R. Bartels "Schedule II." along with cocaine and the governor's office to co-sponsor the-Jr. said the raids began simultaneously uc vruuiu uc^liupiui.ui KCIUUK -H morphine. bill,UUL, aaas he would be helpful in getting it• at midnight. Bartels said the teblets"are The demaiij tinuugh -}egt(Mistr4bution—-thcough..She_said she wouldn't wait 60 >l^ulat^alle4'-mini^ni^; _r prfescribed medical use-dropped to l,--days trying-to.get.the bill co-sponsored;>,;tney are small versions of benzaorine• • — " • — 580 kilograms a year in' 1974 and 1973~ . -but would acton her own. if necessary. tablets. -, r—"—: • •' ­' ROYAL CANADIAN' Mounted Police / in Vancouver took part in one phase of * w " A the investigation that involvkl two of the WT*%&,. principal Mexican ^sources of .the drug, —UPI Telephoto the DEA said.-• Mayor and wife vote in historic Washington, D.C. primary. t " The Mewcan government began coor­ dinated raids-on clandestine drug fac­lories in Mexico City, Guadalajara, and . Tijuana, it was anriouhceA MexitanJSfii IS?8$ , , ~ASHINGTON (AP,\ — The pardoning chances of being confirmed as viee; tories were believed tobe thesole source of. Watergate figures beyond "former president.'-• _ , • • • of the smuggled.'drugs." —President.-Hichard M, Nixon_could ^ "That is not relevant to any otherFour of' the factories were rai'ded this plunge President For3 into deeper trou­ issue," he said. . " —-» : week by Mexican authorities, and about ble with Congress, House Speaker Carl L "THE TIMING was very bad...." fsix remaining sites were the targets of Albert'said Tuesday. • . Albert said. '-'Itleavesa lot of peopledis­,_,.'. Kadditibnal -raids; Officials said the • "I:think it.would be viewed as an abuse turbed that the fullstory will never come '•earlier raids appeared to be routine t»| v-now.'i-.Hofheinz said.'-X-5 three challengers in Florida's -younger firemen. desegregation order, to bus 18,000 students when schools open Thursday. sickout over wages and a shorter workf ... It was the second sickout in less than . Councilman Frank Marin said the. Democratic primary. He will: face week which started Monday. 1 Hwo weeks by city employes; Garbage sickout is a scheme by Fire Fighters Jupiter Study Reveals Giant StormsRepublican Jerry Thomas, a 1 conser-Officials saidabout half of the city's1,-1 i vative former Democrat, in Mvember. Collectors held; a • one-day sickout -last Union Local. 341 to gain support for its . WASHINGTON (AP) — TJie first spacecraft sent to Jupiter has dis­ 800.firemen failed to show upfor work on . week in support of det®nds for im-. Other-incumbent'governors headed for collective bargaining with the cityT . covered that-the distant planet is a gianLbali of liquid hydrogen where the afternoon shift Tuesday, the same ' iiprpyediwyvuu .truckhul-k maintenance,!'-inainienance^ . Lester T^ra Jr., president of the local, victory included Democrats Marvin A n• ««14kA ? 11. it. . mammoth stornis more violent than hurricanes swiii for weeks rind absentee ratio since* the sickout s"tarted;;^~ ^s-w^s"4he erase with the garbageinen denied Mann's charge, adding that the Mandel of Maryland, Patrick J. Lucey of .years. . . said-;t)ie'~Areittiln"'. may Hav^ work stoppage would have been total if Wisconsin, Thomas P.. Salmon of Ver­Mayor Fred Hofheinz was out of town^'^legitimate grievances. the union were behind the sickout. .y./vTheSe findings emerged from "the voyagejof¥roTi6er 10, a small un­ mont and Wendell Anderson of ,.Q5 when the sickout began Monday but said v ^jBut Horie that justify an illegal Tyra also said the sickout was not the manned spacecraft,that passed within 81,000 miles of the planet last Dec. Minnesota, and Republicans Francis W. Tuesday possible penalties against tlje strike," he said. , * work of agitators within the department.­ Sargent of Massachusetts and Meldrifn 5. The results were summarized by project scientists at a news briefing firemen range from loss pf pay to dis.-State law prohibitsfiremen fromstrike v ~ ThomsonrofrNew-Hampshire The sickout firemen are demanding a Tuesday.-; .. * 20 percent pay hike. Theirminimum pay W th ' ! ''Houston h a r ^ e r T i a c r a -p a t t e n l of—V-Fir^ Chief-JohnJ4Ul^r^porUng t h a t . Aerosol Propellant Found in Atmosphere ­ is now $10.067 a year. Thev want a foiir­ wu v' 4eS • Rubllc service strikes in its history, and'.^Sojperations were' about normal, blamed hour reduction. in their 56-hour, work AT-bAWTlCLCITY.. N;J. ( AP) — The propellant used in aerosol sprav ,"^-S idmin!strati0n-dQes­ ble ^ea^ov-erhis'' c^nserva tiv"e 1^01' intend toivtithe sickoutoh whatbe described as !„weekv. cans is collecting in the earth's atmospFere,-scientistsAvarfted"Tues^ Challenger, J. Ross Pierpont. ,-tv m.1 They said it could reduce the protective ozone level and result in an in­ -Incumbent senators unopposed for crease in humafi skin cancer. • 7 : " Mnominatiotulncjuded JaVits, Democrat A recent samplfe of the air over the Arctic, in the vicinity of Gaylord. Nelson of Wisconsin and • • Ruling Spitsbergen, north of Norway, showed the presence of the chemicals, Republicans Barry Goldwalerof Arizona reported-sciehtists-from the Naval Research Laboratory. and; Peter Dominick of Colorado; . • A By The Associated Press • ^4i^fejhe party'for 10 a.ite Wednesday"on the v iT-WWte asked Hill if the secretary of ' i Itt all, 13 states and the District of Atty. Gen. John-Hiliihterpfete^ state£d?Gapitorsteps, Stocks Continuer Downward-Trend ' ' state coujd use "methods of statistical , Columbia-held .'primaries to.cfiooSe^cao-law Tuesday to mean that, in effect, the'-m'. 'The party's candidate for governor, " sampling to ascertain if those citizens'' „ ' NEW. YORK (AP) -The I t*Gs|.didates for*the Nov. 5 elections. Socialist Workers Party,candidates may,-?j!>*Sherry Smith, filed petitions with White signing the* petitions" are legally stock market showed si^ns of ;;.<-/ism. In Massachusetts, Sargent claimed not be placed on the N<5v. 5 election^" June 27 that she said contained '55,561, registered voters, and HiU said: • • ^4" quieting down Tuesday after Uvo&H. , MW JONES AVERAGE M.Y.S.t. victory over hisconservative-challenger,. '^'signatures to put Socialist candidates on VolusnProlilt 30 Inilostritls' ballot. . ; weeks of twists and turns, but ClKtl II Carroll'P. Sheehati. • \ The party has not been officially"^./, the ballot,, " "In some circumstances' the use of Sigf statistical samplingmay be permissible. prices remained on the defen-;^''f.) »• Former StateBep. MichaelS. Dukakfs ^-notified because Texas' chief elections/^' -But.White said last Friday that a ran-,......... .J 1 .. ,•.;r"_—-S-> 658.17 said, he ;had won -the, Massachusetts officer. Secretary of State Mark "White.^dom sample otthe petitions indicated an "Whether statistical sampling willi^iT sive, slippingmoderately in light&<;T^ "Inadequate' satisfy the requirement will depend upon;-.*,' .Democratic primary for goyernor over waswhs out of town. "•.'••"'''inartPftiiflfA''-number of signatures of 'trading. • -' U;r^ DOWN statevAtty.;Genl Robert H. Qujnn. 'r |-T; Bui the SWP apparently anticipated : Cuali|led voters. ., your satisfaction that anactual examlna-l The Dow Jones average of 30 4.77 IN MARYLAND, where Mandel's Hill's decision, announclng^beforeit was ' tion; of each'signature is Impossible industrial stocks was down 4.77, nargin oyer three Challengers was sub- b-made public thatthe party willsue White— have-approximately 34,000 qualified „ .»r-.-to fft lO of the party^ candidates-on the w-j' voters tbget on the^alfit.or'lpertent of ^antial but.less ton anticipated, a sur-* -..at 658.17 f&r its smallest net Jlft 10.HM pHsfe, appeared to be in the makingJn the,, .November ballot. . l;v thrvofeior governor irt the last general -change "since—two , week§-* ago' the status of all signers within a"close? « ,<^R'pteroftforial:r?c^^^i|.ja^.,^'f^^[^:nows..conferep(«.:wa5-.sch^uled£b^^s-electiori|''^|^^:gSs,t^'v-*'-«s-'''®'-i>> -;Monday, 1. 1 degree of.reliaWlity,''Hill>'it^^^js 4 JDAILY TEXAN; Page 3^ rfs® ­ guest viewpoint Professors, student's f sigtjg,. Page"4 Wednesday, September T hassled with books \m-: tSS'tr By DR, STANDISH MEACHAM tie, forced to do battle to purchase the' Aniunfortunate (Editor's note: Meacham is a very materials.which the Co-Qp, more professor of history at the University.} than any. other local store, is In busing As a result:of my own recent ex­to supply. perience and observations,-1 am writing . 1" have,discussed these problems with • to raise the question of what can be done the store's manager; Mr. Swift. He I ~ "A year ago to improve:the process by which tejft-assures me that he-is aware of them and L yery few publications Id-point out at the time that American taxpayers -, at theUmver-i tSnfiiv^afy :sympathetic to the plight of both facultysity o-op. . -,,-r equipped and paid.jffie assassins. Wow even the other Austin-daily has Last-April.I submittedlis'ts of books the store hire more clerks and salesper-.. ^ |>. ,,••• front-paged th^.'Story, now.that some of the guiltyparties-are owning up: tor my faU^c'flttrSeS.'T had used all-of • sons to handle textboolf^ft^grs-He in-' f'T-T*1® question is-now not so much what happened but-whetherwe will allow-thern in:thfe pas.t iind assumed that theyjpMormed me that over-90 men and women 1 it to happen again were still available. Four -months later^jfciffare now on the. payroll in that depart* i -\i. It's time the taxpayers demanded to know why the ClX can spend $11 and a month before the course was to%^|ment; My.response.isthat ifSOc^n't han­1 begin,: I received notice that-one of the^f-'dle the.problem.: more must be hired,'at million to'subvert a-govermgent with which we are not at war, Ahd even . books wasout of print. A week before the' .-.'least during peak seasons, If an increase I. ae^vUig^Sde* the-substantial issue-raised by the subversion, what is the course was to.hegin, I was told that a se-in tbe payroll means a slight drop in [ j jmle of American military aid in Latin" America? cond book was not available but that all ,dividends, I am;willing to make-that I Since no Latin American country did much in World War II, and it's -others^were in stock o'r, soon to arrtye^^'sacrifice; asI'm-sure others would-beas J highly unlikely any of them svo'uld"be much' help to usagainsi:China of the . Last-Fridayi two days alter the first lec-ss^Swell.1suggested-that-the store provide •' ture, I was-; informed that: two further • more space for the sale of books.-Mr. Soviet Union, precisely where, is the ''national security" justification for books were not-in stock at the Co-Dp and Swift stated that the Co-Op is discussing pumping ni.iiitary hardware into tlie aFea^Itseemsto us that.the^^apons^ -wereno longerin prinHYou can imagine : the possibility of establishing branch1 -• )iave two possible uses; the recipients could use them to keep their own* what this has meant in terms of confu-stores. A good idea, certainly.­' citizens down or several American-armed countries could have a war sion, both for ^myself and, worse. for I AM CONVINCED that some radical i j „?IT!on8 themselves. likeHonduras and El'Salvador, did a few yeajr^ back. •students;;I -hesitate to. castigafe, the Co-j|f®:solution-to-this-recurring prQhleiji_i}eelsi:. r Op staffs which seems to. be .conscien-SfsSliQ. be.; implemented;-and -very-soon,­ . The potentialuse of American arms to facilitatedictatorship'sunfor­ tious and hard-working. But unless mjff$S}| Unless both faculty"anil sludenttf make: tunately been realized in, Brazil (the-largest recipient of American •experience is unique —• and I do their feelings known, however, :those in L . ^aP°ns), and, a.year ago today, in Chile (the second largest)..Because -believe;it is — something will have to belsts charge probably won't mo've With the . —President Salvador Allende chose to keep his constitutional dis­done, to improve th? service they offer. -. • urgency they should. I hope your readers tance from the military;"American military aid continued while economic^" -w" MY DIFFICULTIES aV« nolhing com­williet both MoSwift and Prof. Kenneth <£>*«•»«« pared to those of students who wish to Olm, th^ chairman of the Coup's Board ... Jpd was shut off. That the result was predictable does not excuse it. purchase books, They are herded"' ^dfVDifectors.-'hear-from themright, P®^haps this day .should be set aside for national reflection on foreign "Maybe he's trying to let in some light.' through the store twjge a year like cat-|-away,-:' """"" SulS |-. / policy. We could call,it AntiAmericanism Day and spend the time ponder­ ft'ST ing -why the Vietnamese, e^v;.&^Afeiqln'aiid Chilean majorities «tVU firing line j Hon t like us. Or wie could do what the European Economic Community did when the colonels took over in Greece: back off and let the dictators ,.get theirs." . pM'­ the •Now that you h T as it resisted exempting Tex&s vets from the Imagine the anguish a guy. must feel with Mr. Wupperman's attitude it iust?fe(4^ ^ justification for'this? Un­that most vets don|t even know about §££ building use fee until the attorney general set it straight. confined for the rest of his life in a would have given me one more 'thing®#!???'btedly. :production costs have, risen, this money wh'ich is due them. . about,-which to be angry. ; couid not have risen, that much Finally, you should know"that if the University hasbeen wrongfully^^^^^^^^^ Therefore,1am happy to inform eligi-­ -tI—did—some—pondering—about the-*--'in the-course of a few months. ble vets that ail one need do to receive ­ youEligiblefor-th^-^^SghtSr^ This'isprecisely-the^kind-of-hehavior­ his pay-is Write "to his"former branch of: Statutorystatutory exemOtlOH.exemption, youVOU canra n get retroactiverpfrn^nfivp refunds-rrofim/fc-. v, :-r. •kinir .tw.,4 lat contributes, to tbe vicious circle of KJolsiean think about that. You're too .man, afltt I came.up with some very diS"--'-"-.:'--'u"tv"' ——service-s^ finance-center fi1i np a pinim iim fnr fh" R End of message to Texan veterans. Now to UreTunfversity ad-busy trying to score points with your r«»rnaMiv» n»v niw turbing figures-but I.feel that t& con^L for the 6 percent retroactive pay "raise -f sophistidited cynicism of the war or the cert had other purposes, too. one of theAf "-'9r some Ume, is bound to lead to .ministration: don't you think your policy of contrived ^silence is just a lit— for theJast-three rtionths of'1972i Includ-1 draft. Idoubt that fewif any havevisited most important being J.S. Bach's? f ,Price andwage controls. Sincetfiose dis­ '* tie dishonest9 kI. ed in Uieietiersfiould be tfielndividual's•'* s a VA hospital to get their opinion. You ."recreation of the mind." ( Now,. I don'tf'E® '>e^sin? tnachlncscannot operate on the name, current address, former mi'Hary Sit don't "give \a damn, about: these ' know about the "the Glory of God" can»pus withouta permission granted by rank. Social Security number, duty sta-J. Americans', only the ones, in Canada or seems to me that would make for very®|pj one V. another -UT authority, I am tion during those three months and dates Xoming On' for Doggett Sweden. . uninteresting lyrics, not to mention veryfesw wondering what, if any,-attempt has' ma of service. A copy of the individuals DD .President Ford is trying towork out a little mental recreation-, if'"any.) ..Yesjfesi*?een . to dissuade the operators ' -. ' frAw\ nilnH 9% PnAM nml.ti~C!«• a.^ Form 114 should be included- The November 'election for the Travis County Senate Seat will not be a compromise acceptable to all partiesin­some genuinely like rock music • from such a sudden and hefty price in­. are the appropriate. ad­ Following •fcZ*cIose on®-Doggett isan incumbent Democrat. Clarke"Coming On'' volved; but some fools only have sym­millions of-young and not-so-young peo-t'^ crease. Edward Tlpborsky. dresses: . •-• , • ffig^Straughan is-a challenging Republican. That information is almost " pathy for well-educated ' expatriates. pie all over the world enjoy listening to it . GoverAmeht •ARMY: Commander," U.S.A-.­enough. -" '; These individuals never cease to preach • frequently. That it constitutes, Deleted info Finance Support Agency, ATTN: Dept.their righteousness and cruel (self--'"unmelodic.-inharmonious, insanely'-1 • To the editor: ' ; >>• But when you add that Doggett has Austin ties—ay a former University J 70, Indianapolis, IN 46249. imposed) exile. shallow, endlessly : repetitive and boring' • Re: my Aug. 29 Texan article1,"*1' • NAVY: Commanding Officer, U.S. body president -rr and when you add that Straughan is a onetime I realize most will Simply dismiss'this : •bedlam" is -only your inane opinion. ', be. perfectly tide.— and besides, Idid not 'University Veterans Association are • MARINES: U.S. Marine Corps ,|Doggett. At a fund raising luncheon,for Straughan>this week in Austin, ' sideration 'Paul,gave to others' opinions seeone litter basket. You can blame the aware of the information 'Which was Finance Center^ Examining Division;.>h.:.,.|Hpuston Sen.. Walter Mengden-labeled. Doggett a "dangerous,-knee-jerk But then Paul was one hell of a guy. ,~,;.v V-organizers not the concert goers, for the deleted, I'd like to take the opportunity Kansas City. MO 64197. fe|jliberal" who would "shut down the-doors of business" for ihe environ-H/'i ' . Wal Tobin .litter. It-should have been much Worse, •to present it-in this forum. Questions' regarding (his retroactive v§T?' |ment. Not to be outdbrie at his own luncheon, Straughan had brief words-^ 306 E. 30th St. No. Ill, ^ considering the conditions we were forc» Earlier this summer; a federal court -pay riase may be directed tothe ldcal-VA : ' -(Editor's note: -while .-we shave no ^js^ed to put upAvith throughout tbe long,hot ruled that militaryand U.S. Civil Service Commission, telephone 475-4185. 14-v-about Doggett: he's a "cross between Ralph Yarborough and Ralph current contacts in_ VA hospitals, thejit^afternoon while IErwin and Fleming: personnel who were in government Bill MoPhersohg|^ ilfNader;-.' staffer who wrote the pro-amnestywere in their airrconditioned press box. employ during October, November, and J'-P Journalism Senior^.. With these comments, we may be"discovering that tioggett is ijetter'i ... than we ever envisioned. feS \ . ^ -5 -— $ guestv1ewpo!nt5j ' -.a 4 -> ' M' M m J * fit m fa* THE DAILY TEXAN A year of repression in Chile 3hr<.o« JJflr.nltt •(T«« .» AwHa wm EDITOR. Buck Harvey -*r£Sg5CsJr By KATHEWNE WINKLER The program of the Popular Unity employment rate is at 20 percent. The totaled $1 billion. MANAGING EDITOR-..". '..-.l.fc. Sylvia Moreno : (Editor's note: "Winkler is a memberrfe.^government successfully aimed to ease government is . maintained largely Mr Thus, it would seem"'that"'the U.S ASSISTANT,MANAGING EDITORS.... Lynne Brock of the Latin American Policy . Alter-K-wssthe plight of the workers, toimplementa .through U.S. aid. >•: government: and the multinational cor­ -natives GrpujnT * ......... NEWS EDITOR Martha" JP McQuade To the list of conspirators: who1': the , leading productive resources from the United. States expend' millions oh ~ light lo -bring-down-the^AHende-govern-^ Larry Smith -pr»f>ram-nf_a(irarian rofnrm qfld Iff frf? ^_JVhv. we areultimately led toask, does porations cooperated with the Chilean overthrew the Aliunde government ex-, foreign (generally North American) MUNICIPAL EDITOR Ken McHam dollars in an.effort-to overthrow the con-merit, not only to protect their,jolntlyi'^l UNIVEESI-EY EDITOR . ichard Fl a'ctly a year .ago today, a new name can domination. In order to raise workers', stitutionailv-elected government of a held investments, but also to prevent the'.%'­now. be:addgi-It was recently revealed salaries; provide-them with adequate~ J smallLatin Ameriean country of only 12 experiment in socfalization from oc-F~: SPORTS EDITOR .* • ,. -Herb Holland • that the l^.-government .took-covert housing ?nd health care,-and give them^-million people? As it also did "with the curring jn other Third World countries;"5?;^ ­ EDITOR -i>. *•' JA . v„r. -.< T>„„,Paul Beutel long-sought AMUSEMENTS EDITOR. steps to undermine the AUenderegime in educational opportunities, govetnmerlts of other Latin. American where-U.S. investments there would be',' ' FEATURES EDITOR : .........Mark Yemma Chile..-.CIA Director William-Colby: the Popular Unity gOvernment'refUsed to" countries, namely the Dominican threatened. "PHOTO EDITOR acknowledged -in-secret: testimony that,^ ..'permit "valuable resources,-and the Marlon Taylor Republic, Guatemala and Brazili And • "* Such is the situation today: Chile's .. . .$11 million in clandestine , funds . were.^^prpfits to be gained from these,.to be in why does it now sustain what can ap­', three-year effort at national'and Tssuetsta-ff- authorized_to_:defeat.^AJipnde' jn the^V.the hands of foreign monopolies, propriately be called the. Fascist is.^economic self-determination wiped out.,^. Issue Editor*.;^:;:' JKathy Kafr; presidential elections of1964 and1370,asT^ IN "1971 the C-hilean Congress-uni_.. replacemenLof that gbvernment?_ ' the military junta .is but-, General Reporters,,^,,, '"^Pavid Hendricks, SusieiStoler,'Carol Barnes well as to "destabilize" bis government^?.; animously voted,.to nationalize the U.S?- _ jAs long as '" r IT IS SHORT-SIGHTED in this day of """'"tressed "wilhTJ'.S. aid, they'.are able to' ^ News Assistants — Steve Golub,.Patsy. Lochbaum, and bring about .its downfall after.1970.{p^iiownpd copper mines' After JaclTAndep • = , detente to pin the answer on an ^nti-:"3C0ntinue their reign of terrorBarbara Williams,-VickuVaughan, Christi Hoppe These "blatantly subversive activities; ;son made public the efforts oflTFtopre­ 1^% ~~Communist mentality in governing 'V ^ we, armed with the knowledge th$t Editorial Assistant.. , -.^.Mike Morrison -were rnerely a supplement-to themore^i-vent Allende from takingoffice, and then circles Since it was not theU.S. govern-^J?ur government contributed to the down-­ .Associaje,^musenients Editor .. William'A Stone Jr subtle form of warfare carried on duringsgto undertnine ~his government,, the ment alone whiclrundertooka campaign ' " fall of the Allende regime, should insistAssistant:Amusements Editor: ,-^EddyJIolmes _:_^eJtae^eat«of.Allende,si>0pulat Kni-<|fe£Popular .Unity:administrationnationaliz-:­ Of subversion — the large multinational ( ' that further aid be dehled the ChileanAssistant Sports Editor' > ~.,.j... Kelley.Anderson V government, TheTU;s.-initiSfed"cfedite^-ed-the ITT-owned~telephone_jcom{)any^ J ^corporations' with holdings in Chile junta Two bills have been introduced InMake-up-Editor Jeff Newman blockade tut Chile off from critical in-^.p Altogether 75 firms were put-mto the' followed suit — an answer can"betrer"be~'^7Congress-wh»ch-providts-for this and !•' * Wire Editor.., >... " ', ' • Ed Sargent . " ternational credit sources and made it®, C; public sector found in economic determinations should be actively supported. The Copy Editors .Cathy Brown, Debbie DeLaCruz, C. Russell Leigon, buy th£ intery ". While the fact of CIA involvement in difficult for her to on Clearly, the U.S. aid to the militaty; the 1 Kennedy bill in the Senate^ and the f*' Jay Jorden, .Curtis Lfistpr, Sally Carpenter national market, percipitating economleV^, the downfall of the Popular" tMty actions of ITT, which had investments of ^Harrington bill In the House call for {he Photographer'.,, '; > W > -Carol Jean Simmons chaos. At the Same time that U.S %' government is now publicised, U.S con-around $200 million ,m Chile, the .termination of all military aid to Chile Opinion* rxpreis«> in The Dally Tcxatj are Uxj*eoI-)te .economlc aid -dwindled, military aidirt, duct toward^ the new military govern-? n-iu^icatitiri l)uiidinK A#136>. ItKluirief ConcenilnKdfeHvTry- attempts by theAnaconda and Kennecott '^JTo protest the rolp of the lUhited States or Uw vrtter of lb« aMJcleand ue-Mt Wt-MurUy ^oubled. mt those at .UMi UniwrRlty.wbmnftiirjtiett'or-ifce Bo9rd-oT- rtent has recieved little coverage.Given copper companies to attach the New CL\duringthe Allende period and its current .iiyl display sdvertJiirtr in TSP It should not surprise many that our *' the policies of this military junta, U S Silf M7I .SSI ^ York funds of the nationalized Chilean.ylsupporFoT the junta, a demonstration is the Dally tloAenl ne^papw jl Tt»Un/vmJlr •j government collaborated with thej'^ actions should be more closely examln- held Wednesday aV the' 1 copper company^and to organizer an in-irifcbeing at noopo( Ttnd ilAmUlil pullWi«l by Ttejutt Studeni-#ff* fttwwat EdwSUoMI.Ailifeiiiiii*ServiceV te; i,military, largelandowners, corpora^in-si -ed. Since it took power a year ago,-fhe Cobllt»ljnitf.3DWW n3Ui|i»emts ^iau^n, Aimlt) Tex/ JSO LpjmKton Avt'. Nrw York, N.Y., 10017 ' , ternational boycott-of Chilean .copper; jaf-Federa! Building, 300 E, Eighth St We m The paly Teat publico! MonMy. Turaar,'' -Jfif/i®18 and sectof® of ^mlddleclass irt';;, military 'junta' has systematltally pur-and the CIA's subversive activitles are «^encourage people to attend. Also lor Viffamte.sr Thuiabr tni Fndajr~-j S^tembcf I im«II'row lnwrtwiwutiiodPjcifitNwService TW -- LhiJe lo bring,down a constitutionally^, , sued a policy'of Mark repression not unconnected. In faet, their policies-v/.those Interested m further information Sbrv"*11 Ahoiandeum pcnodi.Second-'wulhwMl Journalism COhtrOr ira Hie Tcul Dally THE_JUNTAS* POLldG'itafe;j8^ " " ' ^ rwere jointed glanndd.ed. UT officials.met %^n,Chile, pubhc showings of'the film Tex, ;jy?^spapfr-A»«oic^|ton.. \H<-cy<1tat i4aUp^. fpr the neWspairft lwlth-m'giftliert'M'aie-Ntiton'adminlstra-^gfe-Campftmento^'' with sneaker^win iw V rtfyw* by 'ijtiix­ swpathetifeto reform', was a rari^ S3KS5Sffi53u3i??®|ta&^^^S UUMWd-K9«nlJm.WHi Hpdtdway.'Jnwt* tion^and, th^CIA frpni tfl70 Hi mfd-t971.'vj,'held in Urtion Building 3^5 at 3 -p,ni. v 45*(tf 1Te*avSlbd«t Jlrt a/td Sfx^dwav TownM II#! UnWemivT&HSff U\b m -?Bollultlnational:rv ^'Wednesday 'arid at the wortien's Ctofth •­ & I corporations obviouslyhave thesamei»*i^3irSan Gabriel"St.. at 8Mi. Wednes-''' 98 "high.as JOO.percent; "ihei'iip-Crests aflieartrln Chll^ ^S. interestS^^day.'Or contactJL,APAG'. 243*4 Guadatup & '-i ^Democrats' sstill to choose Carolina , primary to new-certain,, awaiting • ther .ing Gov. Jimmy Carter, D, of is no way Wallace will 'be un-*. • (c) 1974, The Washington Post. "their gubernatorial-nominee..'comer :Charles D. "Pug" Democratic runoff. Georgia, and Gov. (soon to be challenged hi the South'; if he. • • '•Company. ".-• ri;i in a runoff on rSept. 17, the Ravenel; and now Maddox. But if . Republicans" arc .'Sen.V -Dale "Bumpers-, D, of runs for the Democratic' " TALLAHASSEE, Fla. ­ pattern of the southern The only incumbent gover­limited to their present state Arkansas — in the southern nominationa^ainin 1976. Step by-"-step,; and piece by primaries; this year has ; nors eligible to run for re-house control in such "Rim • presidential primaries. If any. other Dixie pojiticianpiece, -the .pattern is .being significantly,strengthened the election -who have..been'. ,South" states as: Virginia,-v .-Gov, Askew. D,"of can beatWallace in a southerns?^ asembled for opeJbeautiful moderate and progressive ­renominated in the South this North Carolina and Florida, is-extremely reticent .primary, that-person probablySifi^ political battle over the' forces in the Democratic Par-••••••' year are Wallace and Texas Tennessee, and non-about any-national ambitions, 'would cinch''at least second';"-).' custody of-the South in the ay — to the detriment bothjof • Cto Doiph Briscoe, p/.boMt.qf. segregationist, moderate and Since.hii opponentsare charg-place on tfie" national"^'­ 1970s. ./Vfeg .segregationist, old-guard whom overcame challengers progressive Democrats oc-ing. that he wants, another Democratic ticket — and At stake, is not only' the: Demo.crat? and. of from the Iit«r9l .wi/ig',of.(L»ir cupy virtually all"of the ' term o'nlya'sastepping-stone.'. maybemore.Andthenii will national-future of George Republicans. .. party..-.., remaining. southern gover-. . to higher office. be. interesting to see how theWallace and the prospects of THE VICTIMS of this trend !• The bright Republican" norshipsy then a-major-b'attle^^:.J?ut^Bumpers and Carter Ford-Rockefeller ticket goeshave been those who have hopes that blossomed with the can be foreseen in 1976. have no such inhibitions' Both in a South that seems to be1* strategy, But the Question making a number becoming bpt h ,.more whether this vast region, now have-been tarnished by-past -of 1972 are looking-decidedfy' probably pit Wallace againsf nutiqfSBT^->apoeai-«ik:Esr.-.^ rnorothe fastest growing, in the ha- scandals and contcovecsies — faded. Everywhere the r''one 'or "niore of: the • "New and Carter remarked in an'ih-: progressive, with each 1 ""' tion, claims a front-row seat • Gov, David Hail of Oklahoma, Democratic, gubernatorial "Sduthv"hopefuls. -like-retir­ here., 'succeeding election this year.-• in shaping the nationalfuture: who finished tfiird in his bid nonunation hastensetfled •: The latest partof.the~piizzle . for fenominatioriiexrfiov. Or-in i.exas, ArKan§03i..>&outn * i••• ' t* jw . * _ • . & fell into place Sept. 3 when val E. 'Faubus 'of Arkansas, Carolina,AJabama, Georgia i? '• State Rep.-George Busbee, D, beaten by David Pryor in his •— the Republican opponent is jeMvshroorn a moderate, teat Lt. Gov. bid for a comeback to the tioyi the underdog.­pSr5=~— Lester Maddoi, Dj "the old' governor's mansion; Lt. Gov. The Republicans seem like­-segregationist,.in UieGeorgia Barle Morris and^ veteran.ly to retain their control rof the lights came gubernatorial .runoff:.•• Rep, Willtanr Jennings Bryan Tennessee, where moderate Georgia rA5ylWith Oklahoma's Dorn," losers in the South Lamar Alexander, .R, was . 3&&V • '. »S®. ' V;. nominated to' succeed Gov. Winfield Dunn, R, and is favored over Wallaceite ex-. ..Rep. Ray Blanton, D. In more firing line • Oklahoma, the outcome is un-^ -Lifters toy fie editor of evils , Rrinq Line fetters should: • To-the editor: -> > !, • progressive,liberal reform credentials. Cheap personalattacks Be typed triple-spaced.... .. When Fred Head 'dropped out of thespeaker's race,his liberal such as those in the Gjiest Viewpoint against Gonzato Barrien­ • Be 25 lines or,less. ^ie Texan • supporter^ wereJaced wrth a value judgment between two less tos, tnan who has devoted his life to achieving equality and .reserves the right tpedil letters for... . Utah d.e,Sifabie"speaWfl:anaidatesrFOrwhatever reasons, they justice'for aU people. by.spmeone^who has contributed relative­'•.length." i ' 1' delermiiited-ithafeiClayfoii • would!be', a .'more -fair and honest ly nothing to these ends, arfe simply dipgusling. ""T"" ---T-r speaker than; would Parker. "Perhaps ffieir decision:Was in-• /We must respect thedecision of the liberals who are now sup-phone number , fluenced by Parker's betrayal of the Dirty 30 in Gus Mutscher's porting Clayton,,„We can only; hope,that they-made the: right" " . Mail letter*'to The Firing Line, ki days, or his support of the Railroad Commission and Coastal decision , -­ The Dai|yJTexanr Drawer D,UT Sta» • States Gas Co. against consumers, or his broken projniie in .A/'" -,';i~ OriAnn.Miller Austin, Tex.' 78712; -or bring­ • voting for the new constitution., . letters to the Texan offices* base­ i/;-Robert Howard : ment, Texas 'Student Publication* Members, Student Action CommUtee Building. It is true', as the*Gtfest Viewpoint-"Turningon Liberalism" by Pam Mason (pen name and/or. roommate of 'Alison Smith-, a • member of Carl Parker's staff) sayS,-.that-Billy Clayton, has a reactionary Voting record, but the liberals who threv?.their'sup-v • port from/Head to Clayton, have had experien.ee dealing with . both Clayton and Parker and obviously feel that Clayton will at ­ least give them a fair shake, « >j. -.'0:^^ ; - AVhile it is possible that these liberals may have made a mis'-' • take in judgment, it is entirely inappropriate to contend thai nrnufi Informal Class they have sold out their principles.. People Such as Craig ' 12 3 4 5*IT ~ -Washmgtony Ben ReyeSr Mickey Leland^Gonzaio Barrientos., III# It tZ. 13 IH i tiiun.iiw . • Senfrohia Thompson andlane Denton all.have unquestionable B lb IT II11»21 15 llH ft 11 2121 Registration nnxkminn as* "MillIIP® W8 Because of. a "mlsunderstan'ding with /fin?# the syndication company-, .The Texan* has . Academrc Qenter Foyer I r'-iiui!»»><-?!SiiJf.'j not"been receiving Doonesbury. The strip Sept. 3 -Hr 8:3-flLa.m. -4:00 p.m. S 4 7 will be back on this page as soort as. possi tttlWSfMTi. *.!-Uble. -VV (Weekdays) (Registration Phone No. 471-4874) ic^Bt iin m\u itaMn #tann*u milfs# •tM UTTtE 6&TER UAffN'T . TIFT5 IMITtVJiTIFIft FE£LIN6 UaL SO 5HE DIDtff , PARADIGM LECTURE NOTES ram THE REASON 2 1154 1 C4LHEKEJ5 60 TO 5CKOOLTOCW..A^ VOU -.. ^'>.«504W.-24tb' ' , 123 H IT I HAVE A 4" XNUU...VOlTBEtNS'THE"5CMOcX. # II1113 nr m i ^ 3H5P 7 • — ^ "JIBHif llIT IS SMItpi? if mz Is in ACC326 . Tomassini v /CH 301 Davis HE 407A-Hutchinson -25-21 nit w ACC 327 Wilson ;VVTCH301 Webber '-:'HE 32?. Hall 2SX2ntfjttM3l &3t ACC 329 Deakin OW 302 WyoH , MKT 337 'Anderson' wzmm " , ANT 302 Oliver CH 305K Morgan w'Pi'MKT 337 Fulcher mwm r ANT 304 Dav7»-* CS 301 buggan 'iii'l PSY 301 Parker ANT 322 ; Oliver 404G Pratt /#?PSY 301 Singh k --ifL ART 365 Grieder jJV«5DRM314 Wyman ki-PSY 342 Gummerman ARY 301 Davis : -10 32] . -Cranfill ,; PSY-3S3K Belknap AST 308 . Bath ' w'S?;EC0.302 , Knapp ;.. RTF 322IC Fryrtiah ANYfcJAV, TWAT5 THE M£S&AS£. AST 308 Robbins ' FIN354 Mettlen 5 ' SOC 302 Roth . . BIO 304 Gilbert IHOPEIHAVEN'T, BOTHERED GEO 304 Sprinkle . SOC.333K fully • THE MAGIC MUSHROOM VOU OR ANYTHING...I'LL ' BL 323 Jentz GEO 305 Wilson STA 310 Stutz PR06A6Ly SEE HDU "BMORROu)... CC 303 Armstrong GOV 310L Gutierrez ZOO 325 Wagner No. 20 Dobie, Lower Level CC 352 Armstrong. > GOV 3-JOt. . aehheimer ZOO 351 Myers 474-4317.Mon. -Sat. 10 -9 • ' CH 301 Boggs GOV 312L Galston MIC 319 Bose V-' GOV 3121 Richardvpn. **• -SUBSCRIBE EARLY ® \™ • -tk.­ gbntnmtui„ M . - -course?, with:' taMffictentAsales^wiH be discontinued after1 September. Notesservice is$10.50 persemester perset, Office hoursSire 10 a.m. to o p«m. Come by and pick up your free calendar. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS Of. 1 Enlre»!iess;.i 6 Halts --vv. 11 Pact 12 Author -V .14 Lease 15 Take -unlawfully•17 Chinese mile .18 frequently'(poet.) 19 Strip of • leather ;; 20 Sum up ­-21 Paroets-• lands whirl­• wind1­22 Eskimo 23 Plumlike . . fruil 24 Take lpr •.' •• • granted SSf 26 PrttontfataS& Doctrines^' Flesh 'v.: Mountaiosif -^SOattL. • America. / '31 Tillers of the : • soil 34 Vegetable. 35 Weird , 36-Latin con-• luncflon'tfvf; 37 Paddla a.2ff; 4 Near _T, 5 Prescribed*.";^ ways . ; 6vPersDiratlon 7.Sinare -..,a 8 Lubricate ^Liquid measure "" wtabbr.) 10.Rarely -11 Body of -. soldiers 13 Is borne . 16 Exact­19 Poverty-.stricken' on ' •''-'28 Member of 1° .2 religious ? order (pi) 23 Mortification g2 rff 25 Dow'nyduck 5l Fright -32.Remalnodat ease Answer, to.YeAerday:& Puzzle 26 European -finch Eiaesa raaraias ammamrn tuncaiaisa bq nraraiB raraaia HUES afaraae HEH nrjfiiB laaasa mia BHHiTiB laeaaoss StaBHQiitl fflssss ran auraran mwmm osra sanaa ©era Howra onan I3Q bosbeioraoranss HHtSSla HHQHSa 33 Sedate 7 35 Wipe out 38 Golf mounds 39Poker stake 41 Greek letter­42 Beverage 44.Cooledlava ' 46 Pronoun n • 1 3 4 . r™§6 13 7 4;' 9 10 w 13 14 li 16 — 17 IB, 20 21 ss^l Bibianas by-Famolare creates a look that,"does it", for Fall. Two popular stylesythe loafer and tie,-with wedge and crepe? loles -in softest leathery V" ••vSifi'.' Loafer: Green Camel rown avy Burgundy ' ikS 38 Instruct "-f!! 24 si 5S: 39-Man sname 40 Guldo s low note -5 :­41 Fruit (pi) $ 42 Ona op-xsi. posed -1 •: 43 Plagues : 45 Slanted; . 47 Lift —48-Splrlted^Ui horse s fed 27 30 34 37 i3» 40 i 41 Si 28 b31 35 •— rr-— — — i 42 39 si 33 36. DOWN rv; 43 44 45 48? \ki^ Pflvor' • Z2-PerlocLoI__ jJJ. j •A . Jaallng l. ^3 Dine-, 47 48 Navy' ~Red Brown 0fHCE SMCE AVAILABLtM 2200 GUADALUPE PLAZA Across ,the street from campus: Suite 211-200«q. ft. -T 5^ c&r. fflmst Wl -. £ Suite 214-515 tq. 8Suit*215 .242 ». ft.^ DOES WW0MSul,° 226690*q. -H.l'1'1 All over tow!* g&Bg&3fe jF|1?^ gj&s$p;g§ HP v^£? "Wr •yf"""-""--•-1 ' " '" " ' ' -'"I . Our Man in Bellmont •About a year-ago,.Student.A i-~Texan,Staff WHter The .bids, included -Jsucfi "We plairti havealuncheon ALSO CXJMPCTINGwtlitie "They are also getting" .Richard. Goodman/to succeed law student I ^ . The. final trials' Tor the items as percentage of profits for the gymnasts, take them «three other 1972 U:S. Otympic scholarships while we're not.-Gary-.-.Polland' as the' student represen­Men's U.S. World Games and paying* Rfr motels. ''I to the LBJ Library and.ranch, . team " members-; Douglas The Southwest Conference as . tative to the University.Athletics Council. hollQrid Gymnastics: Team, featuring think the primary reason Tes-: take.them horseback • riding, Fitzgerrell, the NCAA freeex-: -a whole, though, is behind the Because of Goodman's .professional the 14 loading gymriaSts in the "as won the bid is because ainij provide each of them with ercise champion, and Dusty rest of the nation because position and other unknown reasons, his •United States, will • be held -Gregorj' bolds 7,200" persons a cowboy hat.!' Hitter of UCLA, the Panfic gymnastics is not,recognized •confirmation was .delayed by the ad­«i!in the intercollegiate athletic policies dur­ Sept r^nd^--in Gtegory.;^hil^ the JLSU : facility only Among the competitors is Eight Conference champion. as a varsity.sport.-Therefore, ministration. ing their terms on the council.­^ —hold?-3!o0b.-" Stern said. ..•••••.. inW nmchv a praduate stu-Stern hopes the event will j THIS YEAR'S Student Government Goodman's fefm was different, though, the best gymnasts are goingincrease the r.r elsewhere,-: ---3^k"S^v^n-ma"n Hunt-f^w^tyern Connecticut" .... popularity-of •president;-Frank-Flemlng-,-has decidod-to; sjmucli different; During his year, thecoun­will-represent"the' tWetCTmsstwH^bidon thestfefrom-"Sta^XSO^fc"^8^W^mSBivgBte8m»Wlmsr^#Pe^« ffrmiiiilnii'fj ijiiiiffillm forego the lengthy appointment and con-cil made drastic moves toward'expahditig-.-­ssStafaia-jflt^ihfr Wnr'H Frank Cumiskgv. technical ' American male to win a gold a much better team which -take place on Sept. 27 and the iit Ghampi(jnships;' Oct;'15^: to-SS^TdrffeCtor TQ^—thg~tr.trr--^VtM—WHI'Mw-kfa^s^roftati. »lsasria*nht»r-duties, of. Athletics Council member despite lts resistanCC to do so optional ;rqutines nn Sept. 28u . . . ih Munich...Germany,...will be :nastics ^Federation He, in­turn-since"1932*.• Crosby was a schedule. If wecan developin-" Tiii^^RR-fetii aie$2.:K)"dIi!r~r"*^s ;• ?.• At the same time: Goodniah alie'nated selected from . their 'perfor­cidentally will be here for-the'.. member of the'1972 U S. terest m the -top men in the last-day tickets are , $3;50. 'I ran trattk here two.years (a 6-"7%-io6i" mances"w this meet". meet and was quitea gymnast Olympic, te'am. the--World country then maybe, 'people high jumper) and,! fcrtow the-set-up of thetually was-ignored by the-council Combined-tickets are $5v­ '•THIS IS^ the first-time a in his dav. beirig a'member of .University Games; .team and will come and see< us. Competition begins at 7:30 intercollegiate athletic program here ™-" FLEMING BELIEVES he can. mend IS. meet of this fcind Tias Been •three'Olympic teams/*; Stern. " haSv won >7 NCAA ,'cham-/'The „women's-team has -p-m.'botfrdaysT" *T pretty-vfrelV,-" Fleming-said --Other -stu.--'—Ithat..rafi.. ^.tweefl. jaculty and student -held m the state of: Texas," 'explained. ''-/c dent body presidents have done it in the members of the councilThTs yea'r.""!think* in­ •Bill Stern,:' director of the'. fil-.The amount of work Wi7fe' Record Falls it's vital in any group situation that ydji event and Texas gymnastics^ -volved is "unbelievable," he have the: trust-of 'the' group,"-Flemingcoach, said. "We're hoping it" Said. ' We've been preparing said "I think I could do a better job than; B Goodman in gaining, their confidence,'and r-^'TriE' Brock Steals No. 105 • -that way my suggestions won't go in oiie .. ST. LOUIS (AP) —St.Louis . record of 104 set by-the-Los-*a two-ran rally in the lltmn-;' —ear.and oqt the.otlier," : ; 0 -speedstef-Ldu Brock slole' se­Angeles Dodgers';Maury Wills ning,.givmg the-San Francisco gpt But what kindofsuggeslipns-Uoesnem­cond base in the seventh in--in 1962. Giants a 6-5 victory over the ^"ing plan. to submit to: the corporate giant .-«ing of the; Cardinals' game . Brock's first steal canie ni Houston A*stros . Tuesday « known as the Athletics Council? • against the* Philadelphia 'the opening-innfng followingd: night. 5?v' "I'd like to see something Imaginative < • Piiiliies Tviesday mght and set'' single toleft before a frenzied done with; football ticket-selections,'* hfe a major league record of 105 Buseh Stadium crowd of 27,-ventured. ~As you know, you can't draw GROUPDINNERRATE stolen bases tor one season. .. 185 stoadtags -rjj?, more thansix tickets together,andl'dJiJss*. * BEEf • SAUSAGE • UBS • Brock's.theft, his second of C-s to see. that number expanded. Brock led off -the seventh '• • fOTATO SAUO * SCANS . NATIONAL IEAOUE the night, came''during the ''A lot of fraternities would like that," with a single. Followillg the • •• Cat* •' ' • ServeJFamiJy Sfyte 4 W -t Ht:-he said. "And not just the frats, but Uie :eal,-Brock's;teammates and -546­ Of 134th, it eclipsed the previous ' '^""APOsrtlie housing units and professional photographers pouredonto the L«J0IS . w.. .» 74 "68 .521 3^ • -2330 S. Lamar * 444*846t -Custom Cooking •••**•*••••*••* field and Brock was presented pfttlaphla ».v.' 71 71 .500 6Va '" organizations. Sitting with k bvTnch of-NfiwVqfk..' "65 74 .461. n friends just, adds to^the enjoyment." iUNIV. FLYINC TLUBi with the historic base.that he AAontrett* !4 it • 77 * FIXING ttH*H > stole^'S^S-^^A^"®*?'' ' ' Chlc*90~.'.V " ^ 57 8? ,4)0 w \Vrra F.AR.EEACfflNG goals like that, W»il it's a small wonder. Fleming doesn't ex­ ^ Meeting, Sept. 11 J : ' Los Angeies. •?» 52 <631 ^^".pect the same trMtment.frprn the wuncil • Cincinnati .. U 56 .606 3'A * Wed., 7:30 p.m., * HOUSTON (API -"Tito ' . Atlanta ",78 64 .549 114 -given to Gobdnfnin. who was ignored, or we've irJ * BEB 166 * 71 70 .504-' 18 Polland;:who was given a pat on .the head Fuentes'RBI single triggered 'SanPran ..v ^46 76 .465 23:ft San Diego. . 5V 92 . -357 39 each month: ' Tw*«doy*s Oo«n«» "I know it will be tough," Fleming said. Pittsburgh Chicago 4 done something Los Angefes \, Atlanta 0 '.'ButGary (Polland) agreed'to work with CIncmnat} 5. San Oie$o 2 • Frank Fleming -me and give me~an-lndofctrinatioir Montreal 6, New York 4 VAN'S "Of course I'm not a personal friend of Philadelphia 8. $). Loots 2 about it! . Sap Francisco L Hoosfon 5, U innln^iv-.'r past -^ Bob Binder and Lloyd Doggett both" Goodman's (their friendship dates back to -did it t-and neither,suffered in'their effec­last spring's StudenV Government' elec­ -vrc,:V:; AMHUCAN LEAGUE : tOlt tiveness as president." : , " tions) but I may call him to find outabout i Pet. How effective Binder and Doggett were his approaches." , New YorkJ. ,76. • 65 .539 "A young woman who enrolisjn Air Force ROTCis ..Baltimore . 74 67 525 .. 7 • as Council is -Goodman said-he would wait for such a Athletics members not- eligible to compete for, an Air Force scholarship Boston .74 67. .5?fi 2 known, but ;no yjsible_cbanges were made ' call. AUTO PARIS Cleveland. 70 that includes free tuition, lab and incidental fees, '70 .500 5^: Milwaukee 68 J* .474 and reimbursement for textbooks for her last 2 Detroit 65 77. .458 t ( . JIV«M ps-of rnllpffp In arlriitinn, a tax-free monthly ' OaMend_,%^. . v 82 * SHINER BEER NITE • r^Sj-iSsv . allowance of S100 is .paid to both scholarship and ~ Texas. .. .4.., 76 : non-scholarship cadets alike. Km city Wften sne gets ner. degree, the tyteei aS-an-Atr -Your Parts Problems VANish at VAN'S NOW OPEN ^Mtnnmt» • , " 71 RENT Every Wednesday; § P m. --Midnight ' alllornla Force officer awaits her, malching her abilitiesto a .. Parts for AH Imports Cleveland 12, Detroit 6 ARitchfir— job with rewarding challeinges. With benefits like 30 ^~rfer6hs% NeW York Z Boston 12'Innings days' paid vacation, good pay. foreign travel, and a Minnesota B, Chicago 7, 15 innings 3705 N. Interregional s® I^2Jv!C' great place to build a future. "" -Milwaukee i, Baltimore 5, 10 innings: HECTOR'SNext -to the ^Body Shop" Ph. 472-6236 o Kansas City at CalHorrria« N • Only jjames scftedufed S••• 5213 Interested? Contact: Captain Jim Cargill Austin T.V. TACQ FLATS N. Lanwr at RAS 115, 471-1776 or 471-1777 Rentals• "454-9242 -j -— •..--H a,m. -Midnight Every Day 453-8041 A UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY PUT IT ALL TOGETHER v , IN AIR FORCE ROTC WITH THE PERSONAL PROflll CO. 0lM&/gOK -J5 TOYOTA DATSUN VOLVO We need exceptionalmale and femaleupperclassmen to pre­• : Quality Service -Reasonable Prices sent a new and VALUABLE service to /Seniors 8t-Graduate mmm CARBURETION LEWSLOWcure students, if you can effectively communicate with others, TUNING & EXHAUST ALWAYS FREE CLUTCH & BRAKE DIAGNOSIS 5 , ^ fc and have a desire to earn $400 per month with time left to VALVE £ RING ' ESTIMATES Low down enjoy it, then call Mr., MacLaskey today. ENGINE REBUILDING COMPRESSION TEST PLEASE TRY US! Levi's®Jeans. OVIRSEAS ENGINE 1003 Sagebrush 836-3171 Nof everybod^ll6oks"godd''" PHONE 476-6171, ext. 1004,8am-6pm Wed. thru Fri(fM&t. f£& w (or feels goo^) inhigh-waist Archer Center of 'pants. So it'snice to know Levi's still makes ' Central Texas goodrlooking, pasy­ PHIL-TEX ARCHERY CO. wearing, hip-riding iv jeans. In avariety ip^Most complete supply of 'W of fabrics and archery equipment . Over 300 bows '.i colors. m • Over 500 doz. arrows Try on a pair Owners have over 38 yrs: of of low-cut Levi's,: : bow hunting expeijence. ^12^-' Iffj bells. You'll feel • 11 indoor lanes • ** j J, • Instruction classes ARE MAKING THE DIFFERENCE ms • Open shooting • Rental equipment •™ t% i" » &*> • Family rates Co-a# < Havi Deer Leases Available The Student Government Commiflees give students an opportunity-to TAW tyr* AhtZ^io wamn-lhe xjreas which affect them most-academics, housing student ~860CTBIkT BurrielRd.T^ip;^ --454=5541 OH* -\VJ7 ,"r seivices ond political action The committees are agents ofthe Student s' Senate. bu^ ow.Jme to_develop their-own direction and emphasis The c2a"Persons are chosen for their, expertise*.jft ttie different areSs' and ;;. ^v99s® ,f)e other committee members tor their interest ond enthusiasm 3R interviews are held at the beginning of each semester with an emphqfsls fiF' _on roawmym participation from all areas of cdmpus The committees SKIPPER'S include ^ ^77 Xt FINANCE ^ m IMPORTED AUTO PARTS . FINANCE RESOLUTIONS ^ M 4... l EDUCATION fe-sjKi UNIVERSITYPOUOY mtj&m $1*-v 452-0244 STATE LOBBY ELECTIONS 4%' s * .-r.y.-JvjiJ.T ... ... ... -..... ALFA-ROMEO >PORICHI •FORD (BrHltk) CITY LOBBY I' ENVIRONMENTALPROTECTION ;^ < -AUDI •HlLLMAN • RENAULT U 'AUSTIN •HONDA • RILEY WOMEN'S AFFAIRS STUQENT SERVICES I •ik% •AUSTIN-HEALEY JAR-— C *B.M.W. •L.U.V. ((fhivroht) , : 1 rl}5-^ •SAAB MINORITY AFFAIRS COMMUNITY AFFi *f#c f GAP1ll(toicoln/M»rcunf' •.)* MAZDA •SIMCA •^CITItOEN ' Vr""" • MIRCIDIS-BINZ •SUBARU CONSUMER AFFAIRS' HOUSING ^ COIT (Dodg») i • M.C. •SUNBIAM UNIVERSITY EXPANSION AND UTIUZATIONi COMMUNICATI.ON upty;*couww mv • MORRIS •TOYOTA fPlvmnti ' CRKWKT (Ptymuiiyi • NASH •TRIUMPH sm • DATSUN •OPH •VOLVO STUDENT AFFAIRS. APPROPRIATIONS *1£ -f t" ' •s' * •FIAT • PSVOIt 1 V* VOLKSWAOll fjPINTO (fo(d U.S.A.) ^v>. «Individual catalogs of pqrtt anicf accessories'available fhass ijxodelt, Sign*Up for&nttrvievi^&is^Week 0 fWednesday/^ursday/^Fndayr 4 r sottM " P;w>B 2426 GUADALUPE If Realpnsl LAMAR Urtion 321 Distributor , ,,-V .. -?a96.6 WednescJay, September*11, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN t * « ' ' t'Vlp' ^ tH-" StewS -»'fr , \ * 1 C-WtJ "TTS­ •rTX 8»: *NP* « • ' wwkSS? •Sflil •**$• fjft ! $ffc> ~f tSrd' On the Tour .:.. (Editor's Note: Tills is the ninth. and final iri' a series of stories gathered on the .'annual Southwest Conference Press Tour.) By HERB HOLLAND, ^ Texan Staff Writer Darrell K. Royal has spent one-ttinf of his Ufe ^ -coaching the Texas fodtbaU team and bfl'U-establish^d 4>all ..--six consecutive Southwest Conference titles. And Royal's boys will win it again this year unless "Dpddy' D", is right about his team. But he'never is. •: It's become customary for • Royal to preview -his team .^vith ^optimism of a sunfan oilsalesbian in a" rep^FcoTSRy" — people pnly expect it from himself as welT"aT~(Fi" mnr-^d-f^yaFgfatrT^ter^ Longhorns as two of the most anyone down; this yearv successful institutions in ma-bemoaning the shortcomings jor-eollege-footbaU.. of the 1974 preseason favorite: • Royal, 50, nowcoasts onone ~'Tkift)W the quality-of the-, of the most impressivestrings athletes and coachesand their Royal of conference championships ability J don!t see where mithe history of college foot-we're such a favorite. -coached by Royal. He set two Texas £— / Team JEvaluafiori Qffensi've Line A Receivers C Halfbacks = -B Quarterbacks1:-B Fullbacks -~~a-Defensive Line A Linebackers A Secondary^--.;. C 1 Depth ' A Probable Finish: -First "I see how thinjhe margin SWC rushing records — most between victoryand defeat is< yards,in a, eeason U,415) and and I don.'t*see where any most yards in a single game-team can be a big~favorite — J342jSgainstSMU ) •^'We're dependingon quite a • . Although 'Re originally few freshmen ... in'all the run wasn't expected to recover. and catching departments -' from-surgery m tim'e for this .This, year, though, Royal's season, Leaks ,is working out pessimisnf could be more "with ,the team • and may Tie justifiedjlhan it has over the teady to play as soon as the last seven yea'rsT But if -third-game^of the^sar, .Texas, probably isn't. Tech. "...7-7' Texas, lost: 32 lettermen Without Leaks, the from last year's 8^3 teani and" ; Longhom offense couldn't-be the:;majority of its;offense ' exfjecfed-to-ftmetionT-pePiod^­when All-America fullback Or so it was" thought:.:; Roosevet' Leaks suffered a . But: Willie Nelson probably severe knee injury in the spr­Sang the blues for his buddy ing . Darrell-when .the Horns lost , Leaks/finished third in Hie1 ^tandouts. like Bill; Attdssis, balloting for the 1973Beismdtir: ''Steve Worster.Jim Bertelsen, Trophy-and became the first black All-America ever > | ' '&L\ The University Flying Cl^b" .'.'Considers Environment& Economy Loam to fly for le$$ . Sept. 11, 7:30 p.m.;,BEB 166 •: • ' a# EXPERIENCE TRUE FLIGHT -..... ON Kondor's Rogalio Wing A High-Porformanqe Hang-Glider Sales -New & Used Repairs -Parts -Sails Free Instruction With Purchase^?* Regdy-to-Ffy or Kits " yL 4301 Guadalupe 453-6209 J ************-******************* UnionWeek wednesiay » . -• « 9 . Wednesday, September 11 5'p.mrlSALE OF ORIGINAL.feuROt'EAN • GRAPHICS.-Work by,well-known printmakers including '"Henoir, RouaUlt, "and Dali from Mtllitiud Galleries of" Houston." Union Gallery. Fine Arts Committee. . lH noon to1p jn.SANDWICH SEMINAR:THE WORKS­OF ALEXANDERSOLZHENITSYWrDrTSrdney Moilfes, -Professor (Of Stevlc Lagguages and History at UT, will discuss the llusslan aulhor's work/ Union 202. Ideas and Issues Committee, " 12 rioon. FINE ARTS FILM SERIES: THE ART OF - THE MOTION PICTURE. Defines ?nd givesexamples of the baslq elementsof filmmaking that lend themselves tov artistic control by (he' filmmaker. 1 ARTISTS: FRANK STELLA AND LARRY POONS­ • THE$EW ABSTRACTION. Twoartists paint and discuss their work in th.eir studios. Union.Theatre. Free. Fine Arts Committee. . , s. 12 noon/PAtlO CONCERT. Music; by UTJazz Ensem­, ble. Union Patio. Musical Events Committee. ; ~12:307p.m. to-2'p.m. SANDWICH-SEMINAR: ; INTOODUCTiONJTO BLACK' PQLmcs^N-'tfUSTlN, ---5:30 to 7:30 pan. EATIOiDINNER AND CONCERT, • Nlysic by .Cedar'Frost.JVJ^nu'and prices to be announced. Union'Patio. Musical Events Committed -j - rrStj-S ' 7, 9;30 p.m. WfiDNEgDAY FILM: DUCK,r YOU 5UCKER. Tfieatee Com^ilttee."' Admission foMtJT students,-facultyj arid staff; $LBO..members.' Batts Audi •• ! ^ t « Eddie Phillips, Jerry Sisemore, Travi^'Roach and Bill Wyman. college transfer: r Seniqr Wade Johnston will be that great linebacker who will coordinate and .add leadership to the lineb^cking cprps.along with senior Sher­man Lee. '• Royal's concernibefore fall workouts began was: the' "Rpr^hTlH'Tri* ^''Wo'ro not ' that olitstalijing7 athletically in the secondary ' W: -and'WgWTOt-that-phyS^r^ he.said. "That'sour concern'-" * Simmons *""j Hebert ' Melaneon At that time, sophomoreJoe Bob Bizzell (5-7, 138) ^was And year after year, ly plays... dead for the this year but two — All-listed as startingsafety an^'a someone rises to enlarge the Longhorns.) . • ' • America tackle BoJb Simmons tiny one.atthat. But Royal and alrea'dy huge footprintsnf'Hc^—TJiic ypar i«:''nn ovnoptj^n-/ his staff came up with" a _and All-SWC guard Bruce predecessor —it's:a sure bet If Leaks doesn't return this riiBert: ' . ' satisfactory solution by mov­ that the Horns will have at; season,-the backfield will sur­; That-meanrs Texas won't mg erstwhife lialfteek—Ray^­ least one great,rjmnlng back, vive without hirti on the legs of have to run. straight up the mond Clayborn to that spot offensive lineman,; defensive-' freshman stud Earl.Carripbell middle this year but also can 1974 Schedule S*pt. 14 el Beiton CetWg*. s*Pi.aj • Wypming S*p».28 • olT*koiT*ch ' ; yVpt^ngfen • ' Pet. 12 . OUohomo at Dollat" 19 Arhet^KH ^ --. &>:26.. . o» B»c«-. No*. 2 si«m Nov; 9;-' Borl»r ­ N»»Tl4 * niar" Nov. 39 lineman,'linebacker 'and pass defender — they aiways do. .* Whi'c> might hav-e something tB do with the con­tinued success -of...Royal!s.' program (not t6 mention the-: fact the rest of the SWC usual- M LEARN FROM CHINESE-INSTRUCTORS .For Self'Defense and Sports. Traditional Teaching Method : £_REGMERN0W AT PEISHAOLIN INSTITUTE 3401 GUADALUPE 4-9 P.M. WEEKDAY.* 451-9150 Vl ISign up for try-outs for tKe OT BoWlint,. • Team and the Region 12 Association! W Ijnipns Internatjonall tames Tourndmeni Will end SundayJ ISeptember 15. • Sign up in the Texas Union Games! • Area in the basement of the Union.l IContact Pat Hurley, 471-3616, for| further information. jtm Moondror>3jJ~ Qlorle • Catch a sparkle from th6 morning sun. • i.jj Hold the maofe--m o fa sudden breeze. fv";-' ki}XKeep those moments alive.' y^Jhey're yours for a lifetime I-Tji' with a diamond g,f a vi't engsgerpent ring tromPrf t ^ CranS° Blossom. »'*•/ Priced-from $300 ~~ wsm WmmSm IHI.PRA4 ALUNOAIE VlUAGE nn GUAOAIUK 573J BURNH RD. ­ mmmm. ,v * jHhKvV' Onl.v f>rattjM> BIiximim if -'• * 'Tfy ^ " 1,11 1 _ ; • v . ' ' Even though Clayborn from Tyler John Tyler. ' try-off-tackle or some outside hasn't played,-safety since : And , another stud; senior-running.' . • high School ,; he probably mil halfback-Don Burrisfc,' looks the defensive line also has rank among the top defendersalmost ' --'completely ' experienced leadership in its in the SWC this year;— it's in­ rehabilitated from the in-favor with tackle-s -Fred evitable — somebody from in. and All-SWC Doug Texas:tias to. ' • sopho mo re and j unior EngffsF cdin^Baefl|rf3 _ ­ RESeNT-AB-WITH-rURCHASE-— (rood at Waco, Killccn & Austin Arby's _• 5400 Burnet Rd. ' 451-3760 •Arby's • Arby's • Arby's * Arby?s • Arby*s • Arby's shouldn't matter much at ali because the Texas offense, most'probably will score 40 or more points, /against those-•­ teams anyway> . . " : Maybe Royal is right about -t.v his team tjiat it shouldn't be-h 7973 Results . " : TIIOI Tad* 19 t Waterfowl OkioKome 34 Atlremat 55 Ric* 13 4? SMU 14 . 41 tayiof '6 . a TCU •7 ' • 42 Texas A&M 13 3 N*bfatko " 191 such a big Favorite to take its seventh consecutive. SWC ti­ tle. Maybe the Horiishavethe potential to finish with a 6,-5 record. • • . ­ , But they won't — everybody knows that. _ Presenting: •The ^ New 1974% * fO 21" & 23" frames MkX 7 s129" l»"t.2V'. 23"425" from.* ^MWES^IU?" 21", 2S", & 25"-frames PARTS, REPAIRS & ACCESSORIES m One-Day Service > 7-t:3o tx~m A I #n •* ^1 hft' m fWm 'f.B :&mm* • M pt;. » The traditional; three-piece camel-toned flannel suit accented with tin K'^ 1 .^cOritinental flair of Aurtlmr Richards. Versatile with accessories, and tailored to perfection. Tie and sl^irt co-ordinated by'Bert Pulitzer: - ON THE DRAG -2350GUADALUPE THE QA1LY TEXAN Page 7 Presley Still Here, No. 2 v 'tJEditor's Note: This Is don't think there's quite as the seventh of an eight-part much personal; feeling -'series dealing with the 1974 between them now. They have Texas Longhorn football both matured. team.) ' "Presley's ready I • By RICHARD JUSTICE ^'--wouldn't hesitate a minute toTexan Staff Writer • JV'-use him" • ' It's not that Darrell Royal r And if he chooses not to? • wants lo pass up Mike "I've never regreted com­Presley; rts ing herer" Presley said. "This. Texas', bench-warming "^-quarter Mdity . .Ml do'anythingIhave to do to •Alans, would like to have the ' -."play." "" -r.opportunity to pass up some Presley is one of the few i _*' opposing defenses. : Who has not criticized Akms' ^ ^ Royal has promised Presley ': for his performances last he will get the opportunity to ,. sea son. L i k e a g a in s t . kssdp as much in the Longhoms -Nebraska and Oklahoma... opening game 8f •'Whatever he wants I want. do think those 11 starts gives Australian Challenger Beaten • .me an £dge. though " And the Texas starter* claims he will be a more Takes Cup Lead mature quarterback this:; season. /. NEWPORT,* R I. l I' out about committees and interview procedure, attend Service and Repair all Brandt U; I aj ,-—«UtWRt*Sf ' ^ ADJUSTi|&|ia j Bottom Brodirt ........>3.5tT WORN,' H«d Ut 3.00 -Brakes r •S.IJ0 front VAmI ...j .,«,.,?JQ. ^4 R»«r WIim! . ..*...3J0 '» DdrailleurC^l JSQ fix flats (wheel off bike) 1.50 Tru wheels ;(off bike) front, 1.50, rear, 2.00 ' I >-l I 901 PARTS AND ACCESSORIES J® I 4:30P.M.or 7 P.M.-. ,"D J Cyrfe Cuddy Car Bike Rock 12.95 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1974 S.I 27*1Vi Gum Wall Tirt 4... 3,29 i-> 1. UNION 104 "! 10 speed Kalkhoff Simplex-Derailleuf 89.95 We SPBCIAUZE IN BiqYCLB WHEELS — LOWEST • w/-' PRICES !iMon.-Sot. BIKE RACK 4427 R«d Jtivtr tO -6 Austin, Taxos 'I! D| "Vou must n- j«*i Highway 620 in-Round Rock iid«*ri-d for a committee. Interviews will b«-September got WE MANUFACTURE COMMERCIAL BIKE. RACKS 1»>, M, and 18.. ' i*\ I i=L Clip & Save -Repair Clip & Save »j OLE FASHION' PRICES "PLANTING FOR THE FUTURE" k 1 Are Here With A New if* H«!p O* Ptoni p ft+*. Will Yo" STUDENT ftUJHT DISCOUNT TOGETH 1 *** ^i|We Can Help Each Other For The Future Of Austin U V 5TUDBNT D'SCOVNT OFFER 5JVH *"'*1 '1'"-s»p> Iihm Dk^o, 1974 PALL student wscount p»ic«s LilSzi S*yt*rnb«r I,1974 rfvu 0«(««nb«r 20. 1974. 0 t o• IA4 :^^tpi«tHrr^.4aW?)l.winf otjwrifljwiij ttdj-----<;i. a pffnuil v Wt «c *wt« d jhi need fa tiflwft 'Out1 ysv iwilul55Mli*eWH#W«5ir -:»on sOrtwi faVAQ oet rrwlh " ­ tmAituim*•» KBWncwuuja'in^ ft* WCffHH (H AHff' ' * tr^#rtnnrcitiffinrfo> •; ivfti «i fciii ~.0Q* -MOfk-/, dvtmg (f^JxfjecK PK W«t, A W* :t»« 'BWrfi« Ajrtlw v. i / wtltof III A-- "•*& ^ mm £ISMMfj ^^11 :^TA'iBli'aTrv\" rjrrr^~­ 850 Sport and Dress Shirts, short and long s^evesr^«s^m5iraiaiun^ large ftrvfrextra. large and si?es 14y2 to 18* All of thes^ shirts have beer^ remarked for tonight at reductions of ?v00 to 3;00 each;The last hour we-­dfceidetf to give arr^extra bonus of 4,00 OPF on each bn^ .tfs. a,ctoyblei :|l sale, colors are the finest, brands are the best available.-We have also in-If eluded all our knits, short and long sleeves also. The same deal as the|M -sport and dress shirtis, we have alsoi decided on air the work shirts to puil^ them on sale: There are 22.60 jacket type shirts. ^r1ga~ctirigTtepi blore-ta^— jHlf sf"'n9 them at 22.50 -our price to you is only 14.00. Vies, it's true -good sizes 8t excellent colors. ................ s.. ^ ? \ Entire stock"of>ordiirey|Alt cuffed and flare jij LOOK -3Q0 Winter Coats jeans (the' ones you|dress slacks at 10% I? . (outerwear). Prices unheard of. ^ ^ OPF AII brand new !Savings of -15.00 to 20.00 on N . en: Yes — It's True A ~ '$ to ^T^Yotrwill love these coa»s.­-Wv.v.'.'.v.:v... ^ FLANNEL SHIRTS LEATHER COATS 480 are now being offered. 8.95 to 9.95, now .$135.00 ROW $110.00 6.99. Boautilul patterns. Sliss small, medium, •S:\l $95.00 now $75.00 large, and extro large; flANNU SHIRTSi 210 Sove 20.00 to 25.00 on each coat are now being offered for 9.99, Were 12,95. .One grocp 'of VVestern Shirts. F& Values to 14.95, now 9.99. Mot all Dexter shoes 22.95 to 23.95, now sizes but pretty good selection in 10.00 | patterns. All sizes on sale. 4.00 to 5,00 savings. They are all marked. » ; Dexter shoes 23.95 to 24.95, 16.99 . now Total of 275 pairs (not all sizes). ­ our showcase at g: good tor iji-different Work - ^ many styles) What a buy! 7:00 to 8.00 savings!\ v-vx: Robes, Pajomas, One group,of blue Bandanas (red • chambray work Urtibrsllasi and blue). NOW shirts. Some per- Regular 8,95, now 6.95 -ftcgular" 6.95, n^w 4>95 ~—r , 'v m""pnt prass. A ~ i-real buy. Now 6.95 Folding Umbrellas 1 One groupH'trf dress shotr^ 9.95, now 6.95 " Regular 21.95 to 22.95 A copy style of Cla rk S> of jj: Handkerchitis X)ne Now 10.00 group of shoes are odds and England Shoes. ,i; Regular 75-'iatfc, ends. Good shoes at (Not Clarks) ON 5: now4 forSr50 5 -SALE AT 14.99. SRejufar-;50-«ach; ' .W.VWW • ~Vi price 1 You better?: ww »r«r $2.00:.. . EnTire stock-• of 140 Sleevelets • believe it! ;. -.sweaters oil on sale. Hew tnerchan- Sweaters -.-beautiful patterns. All on- • 53 good looking Sports Coats (a" complete close out). They have been marked' down to 39.95, dise. Sizes small, .medium, large and extra -large. sale. Now save at feast $3.00. on each,.. sweater. Popular prices. '42.50, and 47.50. Regular 69.95 One group of good looking cuff­ I to 89.95. Goad styles, colors ed slacks at V? price. One group land sizes. of flares at V2 price also. Fair sizes and good patterns. ' 230 pairs of Blue Jeans - Lees and Landlubbers. Regular price 87 pairs of straight leg slacks. Some 13.00. TONIGHT 7.99 flares. 2.00 a pair. Last call tonight.' • Sizes 28 to 34. Values to 13.00. All new ties -JusT Think! Burlington socks, (entire stock) regular 1.75, now 1.00. 22 10% OFF Colors. . Entire stock of belts are I On*^ group of 20 good looking Sport Coats at now 10% off. Brand new ;! 25.00. Regular 69.95 to 89.95. You will be V merchandise. s lucky if you find your size. 0l!e Closing out on all tank tops'atI S™"'1 suits at W '-,S ,roe-A 2.99. Regular 5.95. All sizes. | t0?P^e 275 Turtleiieck Sweaters and also combed cotton turtlenecks at'great savings. You will be interested in them. , f! ALL SALES FINAL — NO REFUNDS Butifye.will gladly exchange or.give you a credit-slip. Plenty of space in the rear of our shop for parking your car, ALTERATIONS are charged at —wholesale cost to us. • Remember the time'and place. It's Michael's Menswear, 2424 Guadalupe, .Austin,Texas. The time is tonight, Wednesday.Sept. 11, 8 P.M. to Midnight. Th«nU Michael's, Inc. •„ -a* ^ Thanks, " J5w ^ -*y mM Remember -We carrythe Clarks of^England line-of-Waiiabees, Trek«,ar|d others. Also remember -We carry John A. Fry^ Boots -a big selectionlrT We accept-the-following credit a.. BankAmericard> l_b. MasterCharjge * Diners Club ' f' r-rtJ>s>j*{i American Expres — »MES>I WEAR Carte Blanche m^sm ifsst _as,jg i»^ISS8«ggg?jiSpf^Sf^i :P:>> • ^ia F" . I • " --.-TTT ~~ -r^~ 6' t--' .'• "V. "SLv ^ Uniori-Erlti Schedules Coin Boxes Net $6 Daily \ Deadline Announced Interviews® t S^lnCe the faU sem'estef j.'ti The Texas Union "will tibld' began, the coin boxesat 8of 60 tsprierilation sessions -at -4:30 --and 7 pm. Thursday in Union Daily Texan distribution Sunday,;is:the; fall; Semester The federal'government in­The federally insured' loan is : points havenetted a total of $6 deadlin'e for University Building 104 for students in­sures;the loan at a 7 .percent madp by (jommercial. banks,-• terested • in interviewing for to $8 a day for Texasj Student stude'nts seeking financial aid ratei Repayment of the loans, credit unions ana savings and Publications, Loyd Edmonds, . Union committees/ to apply for Hinson-begins nine months after the loan .associations at a-7 per ­ ..rgen^ral manager of TSP, said Hazelwood and Guaranteed Purpose of.the seSsfonsTs/Kr -:: student leaves scljbo! either cent-rate. ^acquaint,.-applicants with the Tuesday,„" -" * •* -'W$ JB*. Student-Loans. • 1' by graduating orquitting,.said-In contrast to the HinsoTi-. • As--an experiment. im­DROf? Applications-may ob-1 Hjzlewood. program -coounitte'e sy,stern, the com-.- be Shirley Binder,' director of a plemented by the TSP Board tained at'the.Office of Student financial aids. rn-i-tttrc-S" and interview • Guaranteed Student . Loan : to aid voluntary funding, coin Financial Aids. ?608 Whitis ^procedure.. All t.a&plicanls A Hinson-Haziewood .loan .recipient dt(fes npt have lo|i}^ must attend-.one of the two „ contained. were placed, at Ave, The office is opeh from" will: pay-an eligible fulltime.J a family financial statefnent­ specific Daily Texan boxes1xj­ mhir-h tfipy wjf] _ 8:30 a.m. io 4:30 p.m , student up to $750 asemester. if the amotinfof the loan-is' Hn­signup ,for an interview'.wIUT weekdays. . . . . •' '• "v tAid,forsummer'.scHoolis$5£lO' der $2,500 and his family in­ scription to purchasea copy or in^semester finan-Binder that • But said come less. than ?15.000. A :the-pat^f^ ,—:— •nrtttee or committees in W. . These eight boxesdistributewhich they'are interested; "j •" a total of about6,000of.the 36,-• • -A Hinsoh-Hazlewood appli­f;. Interviews,lot the 10 Union .000 cqgies of -the--newspaper " committees-will be Sept.-IS/' cant must be a Texas resident . circulated daily. Althoughthis*'" and :17r-and-'I®,-.-TOo..'committees^ i(g\ file;'a ..farnily.-financial 1 are; Afro-American Culture, mrnt J statement throaglr the -•• newspapers in circulation last American--College Testing . Cultural Entertainment, Fine AMERICAN INDIANS NOW TEXANS . April, "we'll probably have to* : .go up to 37,000 or more to Arts. Ideas, and Issues, • •i1rogram.--ln .'adtftiioh;'jai: • Mexican-American • Culture, IF YOU , Hinson-Haziewood form must Musical 'Events. Recreation. satisfy the demand;" Ed- be completed for-the State v (AINT) • T heatrc. Union Com"-'" —moi>ds_said. .. College Co6rdinating. Board. munications, and Utuversity . When . the rcgents~halted ARE-NOlS Extra financial aid .money : OPEN MEETING Interaction „ " mandatory Texan funding last- . this itear "has eirableTl '• - MS spring, the TSP Board sought .. applicants to file for financial. iTHURSrSEPT: 12 . S; : " tlzrh -alternatives A?"' PAID & aid later". If approved for the Burgess Sets At its nextmeelingatend of . Hinson-Haziewood or the ; HANSEL & GRETEL ' ' 'P this month, the TSP jBoard ESP Display •. Guaranteed '"Student Loan 409 W. 30th 7:30 , ^ )Jw ' will discussstrictly controlled- ;pfograms students will ! 478-9297 subscrfption circulation, "all.; receive their money, in abouta. When, parapsychologist increase the to. month. " -R«s&-iU!fg^rJmakfi5^.the_ • in ad tate -1 h»--Jbalanfie«-subs<;5igtions._or a —newsr_hc*does-it in an i^n-.. "fequest~to~Hie—regcnts-.to­ conventional way. He predicts reinstate mandatory funding. newspaper headlines • before . This year, the .board ap­they are. printed. propriated $68,000 of previous Burgess, a former U.S. Justice Department employe, Texan earnings to maintain Broad Selection on Display • „ —Tnan Staff Hwta by Corel Jaon-SmMom the yearjs budget.. •will; demonstrate his psychic • powers at7:30 p.m.Sep't.22 in• Dimes don't cut cost of production.'^ : irs Cabinets -Tables • the ballroom -cf-Marian Hall at San Antonio's Incarnate' Word. College. .• UBRARV fines METAL DESKS • CHROME LEGS • FORMICA Naticei from >h« Unlvanitf v. -Burgess' presentation : will iibrdry .:•? any of it* be sponsored by the Student TOPS branch»$ ore officialtlnlver­ • Government Association of >ity communijationt-requir* DOORBUSTER SPECIAL 18 x36 with Box Drawer & File Drawer ... $54.50 Incarnate Word College. ing immediate attention. SONY TC 131-SD -.'•T.8 X42. ; with Box Drawer & File Drawer $59.50 • Castette deck with Dolby ­^ Good buy st $239.95 ,' 26 X42 with Box Drawer & File Drawer . .... $69.50 • Clear reproduction • Sony.qualify at low prite 30 X45 With Box Drawer & .File Drawer ,. . $72.50 Guitar String • list $239.95 CHOOSE THERIGHT SIZE FOR APARTMENT STUDY DESK *209.95 Sale |I 617 W. 29th at Rip Grancie 472-5471 w5& CHAIRS K*$touranf A Artadc Upholstered seat/back, ' -_ _ D, 2-Drawer, letter size 2538 Guadalupe . Save i0%~0n 95 adjustable height ........ -—29— s24 LUNCH SPECIAL' DAILY $1.49 Upholstered seat, back . ' _ 4-Drawer, letter size ­ UVE MUSIC 7 NITES All Guitar Strings ( side chair.........,........ JL I 95 . ?4195 NO COVER Mixed Drinks >-Beer .""" ' • -... I-. g.< Wine •. Food .• Amutemonts1 SniMliiy Dln«i«r Spttlal . .6tOO p.m. v;. :;.'y^ AMSTER MUSIC —4624-LAVA • Davi0 & Stjhraeaet Inferiors 2825 Hancock Drive next to; The Crgltjimefmtlantetri f loneShoppingCenieP-" , f % V-i STEREO & TV 38TH CSPEEDWAY 477^ GAflOENCENTER Ite t » !> t i \ c* ^ a ^ i -1-<^v*"~s » j v ** , •* *»< ,•) . V , , •?, a , <* <-H. * * _ i ./ ? r5\ _ *V-, ,i « iwty­ .i? y «N-< j|miimnitimmiiimmiiii!iiuii!iiiiiiiiiii!tiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiimitiiiiiimitmiiiii;iiufiiiiiit)mi}imiuiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii£y Frank's Letter To Blast Jail ( Free C/inic Cuts Houirs j •;;5®£p8p« B> -SUSIE STQLER plaints from other sheriffs lie provemCnts should be he* wbuld withhold comment tie. biUy room and had Texan Staff Writer talked-with last week' at the solicited before com­on Frank's forthcoming better collected 'over the years, -wvv I But Adds Pediatrician I Sheriff Raymond Frank vail Attorney General's La\V En-missioners can act respon­until he received a copy because -nd one hid time to , send a letter within a, week . forcement Gonference. --, sibly to'improve the jail. Specifics mentioned in the keep track of the belongings." By SYLVIA TEAGUE tlie staff is on a volunteer-professionals and 'non­ „ putlining inadequacies in the -"The county commissioners "We're aware of the legal letter will include Prank -added The People's Clinic basis although sofne receive re­Free professionals. Among .those Travis County Jail t?r'county -are responsible lor.keeping a requirements which must be quirements cited in recent Another prime problem has reduced its hours and ex­pay, . needed 'are artists and .commissioners^ an action in sate jail, not the sheriff This" ~ metrbufwe don't know how-to--court, rulings such as one-man cited was visitation panded its operations to in­-Jarry said the clinic is tren­carpenters. Anyone interestedsuring his going on record Xtx leltef is not a-trick I'm the allevLite the problem. Like cells, exercise areas and 24-"Visitation is really-un­clude the services of'a ding toward paramedic and in volunteering: l^ay .contact cite jail problems -he, said sheriff, and I'm supposed to any area 'where we're not "huur surveillance of mentally satisfactory Families conie pediatrician.once a.month7~7 participation--to offsetnurse the .clini£.:J«i more informa­ • Tuesday. make some noise toget things knowledgeahie _ we need Jo l iji and suicidal inmates.all of in to siee'their loved ones/and' • The clinic; in the basetnent the high: expense of doctors.-. tion. •*T really Wouldn't have to done." Frank said in defen-hire professionalhelp tocome * which .: are 'unavailable--in they can^hear or sometimes-;, of. the congregational Church -She emphasized th6 need for:' :Since-January-,_ -1974, -ri-—. the,-.;?sFwrMfe=8s38*tCT? ry-ftpt solHtinns.' . County: Jail. see them due to. p.oor'' ,408:%;^3fd .St.t is now open .voli.inteers; aiid -donations a.t'^".clinic has encouraged Unlver~f!'sC 1(rings ha.ve heen-m commissioners' hands by Precinct "i • Co'm'mTS§TqTrgr"-'^cn5gfw^jp{?^^rotgeTnmt!fesjkeititles.'•' • he-eeBM»e»adT.. iEom^iyife je . clinic. Donations come • sity students to.seek heljj atmeticulously" discusseff" Friday.,. ' . > aid Jul, ST in an Overcrowding -he '.explain*. throuBil l^rsdaW tTnttlTaav before.'-' the sheriff said, ad­However. at least oneof the"~7 Responsibility for getting. advisory.gpimo«;by-U;S. Uist-.. ed^^ eaUSSfl Bi>uam lu.bo-1. it Juttuilll! 1 lll(....i."i:ir)imutltt.V. .. v tUun nf fl)P rlinirding he took .the-advice of four commissioners feels outside lielp-lies with the Judge Jack Roberts-issued mr "assigned cdis-indisbnriunjite-. .basis com-The clinic isable to function although students'dependents writing down specific professional advice"on tail im sheriff."Sarnuetson said--responsel0_aJ,972 suitfiled by ly of what offense they have Each evening is devoted-Ms ­in a professional manneronly /ire* wglcprnq. Jjtttry,saidjhe "Unless this.is done; which " 12 inmatPS-^then in County r co™mitted. • --—--—treatment-inparticalaraTeas "bec'auSethe staff doesn't work two "seem to duplicate* "ser-"by law is the sheriff's' Jail "\Ve have,27.6 prisoners now .with service on a first-come, for .comp'etitive^-ffaiaries, vices, and a student tpkes the ' business, our hands :arevUed,i;iJ" "Judge Roberts will with a capacity of 286. When first-served basis. • _ place of someone else who Jarry said _ The sheriff is m-control of the probably have to come out' we reach 250, we-have tocom- j The : clinic requires 50 might have no otheY place to' 'Alicia Jarry.' clinic staffTait.^-the commissioner-^ddi with $omethin{; Stronger than . pletely disregard assigning volunteers a week, including, receive help. coordinator, said a budget cut e& -an (pinion;"" FranR" saidnfr -them—eeMs-accord'ing .to-' -forced:the reduction in.hours ThecOTtimissionersare-do^^—.c«mmettting^jort-iany_Jnvj ^eawnsthey arehere,'1 Frank jfter-effiripnr.v mg '/everything we can" to .provements for the jail soon,-: said."' ——:.-However, iJ remedy the: situation, com*.-; •Commissioners have dis­. Many, of the inadequacies studies, the clinic devised'a " plan which allows treatment "Sign UpNow' mented -Precinct 2 Com­cussed,allocation of $2,000 for stem from a. past failure to missioner N.b. Gault, adding the sheriff's use; but Frank comply: with statutes concer­of approximately the same,,> number of patients in ao; feels'these measures are. not ning county jail management, shorter time. enough? the sheriff said. . . City Offers Competition An enlarged administrative "I don't know why the law Monday is reserved for -: Wavecrest area for the-jail in both space . has not been followed. When I general medicine, Tuesday Flag.-football,, basketball and volleyball will be among theWaterbeds and personnel, is .needed,> he ; became.--sheriff,~r found they -for obstetrics.and gynecology, athletic activities 'sponsored by the Austin Parks and Reerea­ 2532 GUADALUPE 1 rJ,—l 1. . I., -iuatjiadn't complied." he and Wednesday and Thursday" tion Dejjdttmdht.jWs -fartl . I this Complete • "'When inherited said, ^lalinmg^flie-ndiir "Competition will begin the week of Sept. 23 in-mcn's/Uigfool­ Hank's Famous problem in January, we iouna compliant d^li w'liiV Itirth rrmtrnl rpfiiu arc -bail. men's basketball and men's and women's volleyball. ' selection of water sack after sack of inmates' jeets to be mentioned iri his .ed daily from 7 to 9 p.m. ' There is a $3.50 entrance fee tor participation irTlJilTleagues-­beds &accessories. othes which were put ina lit-letter to the commissioners. In addition, the clinic will If an entire team wishes to enter, tlie fee is $^0 for football and Chicken Fried Steak basketball and $35 for volleyball •provide, the services of a. 6407Burnet 2 pes. Meat, French Fries pediatrician one Tuesday of. Instruction in volleyball, badminton, tennis and judo is also' Cole Slaw, Hot Rolls &:.Butter 454-7901 .every month, -' ^offered; The. cost for volleyball and badminton instruction Is; v 'i 5-9 p.m". only. ,'; . $1.65 $3.50. tennis lessons.cosl $10 and judo lessons $12. -• i*«g i . The clinic employs two Classes will begin the week of Sept. 16 ~tl fulltime'' doctors:) one in Registration for activUies wiU be through Kriday at theParks iX2405-A Nueces general medicine and one in and Recreation Department. ' ~rfanfiiy,planning.' The rest of Presents on the Patio ' STORM Mecovm >RDERS HAPPY HOUR DAILY 3-b 50-6#f Pircher of Beet Toni»« AND rClMS Now Fgoluring Turtltt Kitchen 2405-A Nu«ei-2 Blocks Off Drag RECORDER MUSIC,, SUGAR IzWers Mondoyii presents lib night -no tover LARGEST SELECTION' for %\ag men * ptut REUNION 75s bor highboiit -IN TEXAS Unescourtod ladies 2_ft** hlflhbq no cover and • Uneue>rt«J lodie* w/cfreese S AYE 49 Amster Music nocoverchurga Yfree• highba!U 7C ­ MUST BRING COUPON Mon.-Sat. 4323 IH-35 SOUTH IW4IAVACA 47S-?i31 Mon>Thurs, s..v r-: Bearssen Hoppy Hi - • I (Af-i^..SL.EImo Road) Mon,*Fri -Aim*** Hoppy. Hr. Mon.-Fn. tacos & homemade onion 447-5511 2lot I ^eO=6rQO­ 2 for 1 rings. AH at popular prices. ­ BIKe/Book GOOD AUMUSEMESTER NOW APPEARING . 442-9032 442-9934 c OPEN DAILY 1907 E. Riverside Or 3303 N. Lamar ~ 629 W.Ben WKite 10:30.-10 P.M. MONDAY through SATURDAY 8 fpiir-Midnight laf-Sgef-dcM*)-boit/. iv. WORLD TONIGHT & ^ 3& ELECTRO . v MAGNETS I AND ­,1'c. ,« % Musical Events Committee presents TOO SMOOTH f.Vtl Cinconcerf^S?. vC $1.50 COVER­ mk .^ USZ.. WILLIS ALAN RAMSEY ^.11 4 FROM THE KITCHEN i Thursday-Saturday, September 12-14 MEATLOAF WITH MUSHROOM GRAVY Texas Union Theatre -c '•4w -Tickets: ......^Available.at Union Theatre $1,00 UT Students, ?ox • Office Thursday and Whole Earth. ,0 S p'm-ond "s-k Fait/lty and Staff •" . Provlaiorv Co. $1.50 General Public 2410 San Antonio 478-1577 • '5p& Authentic Italian, French ^— wp mi Zh.i -and Austrian cuisine prepared '••.llsls • toy Native Etiiropean chefs. The finest,in Viennese pastries. fFpr souffl«'& calf omj " "T advance. -Featuring European Coljdi Buffet Lunches, Mon. thru Fri. Lunch '11:30-2 Dinner 5:30 11 S»'': 476-1348 ­ no ij, 1801 Lavaca in fhe Cambridge Tower FRIP/W* 8PM ^ rfi mi EVERY MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY TRY A sepreMBERZoj au<4r+oriurv) RoxRoge/y » » » RESTAURANT • The Jum,bo Jack.. A 100% pure bepf hgrriliurger^pati y "that measures'five 01 inches'wide'.., y ROAST BEEF S#v: Sesame seed-faun. Sii,ced tomatoes. SHced pickles. Shred" 1^"v SANDWICH |43 ded lettuce. Rings of fresh onion.' Special saudfe? " FRENCH FRIES AND A ' SOFT DRINK $L09 out-OooriOoe-ivcfej pewJtiMb^cpwc^ TtW-oTSaMCoUifee BE£R«F005B ALL® PONG Guadalupe & 2Qth Open ?i!l 4 a.m. Burnet Rd.&N.f Corner 1 9fh and Guadaiupe 477-Afj /9 Mft r.\!\ . * f •» /«_ ^ -J.t « -4^^^^!?^-,. • 52%£. Pardon Justified?IEducation Report Governors, Ford Aide Disagree I Probe Withheld School Books By DAVID HENDRICKS " 'Ford's'reprosentative at the during the congressionalThree dissenting members b . Texan Staff Writer governors conference. heartngs to confirm'him as By NANCY CALL Texas.,Society' of the cipals'reviewed the books m will go on . record for the 15­!•• of-Austin's Special' Utility.;,/ . Two -governors attending -'It would", not be a good' vice-prfesident. had said he _ Texan Staff-Writer Daughters of.-the ' American . question, she said -member textbook committee' Rebate Task Force decided' •'" the Southern Governors thrng to see'a former Presi-would not pat-don a president •Two petitioners calmly Revplution. ^ Most representatives from which .will meet here Oct. 1 Tuesday not to release a gave their.criticisms, and apt Replies! from, publishing the publishing companies for another hearing and Oct. 2 Conference and a lop White "dent convicted and sentenced before;,a'n .indictment.'minority report,which would House official voiced.differing.••• to jail," Cole said."So it's . Carter also pointed out th^t ^proximately 34 publishing companies were made from., declined comment of any kind for decision-making. "3 disagree•: with committee ' opinions Tuesday on justifica­better he was pardoned now representatives responded" 4 30 toS^O p.m. These replies' pertaining,to the'objections. . ; by Fdrd's reasoning, a line of The panel's recommenda-• recommendations to: phase ' tion for President'Ford's par­Tuesday on the first day of the Were aiso presentedin written All stood 'oh .the written spare the country theagony i< THAN ' ' > . * MORE 1,200 • THE TEXTBOOK hearings. ;, is Dr. M.L.; Brockette, Texas -had jCsmSoniUgd himself to the , • • ed. '' .. " Gqv.ernj.rs-would be Following a four-hour ' te'acjjerSi parents and • priri-to continue through Thursday. ' commissioner, of education. ' report by comp'romTsiqg7ahd'~; valuable, to such a meeting. recess^ Mrs. R.C.-Bearden of Cole^decliried to comment signing his nSme -to -itj * on"reports that Ford-is cori-Carter ,explained, because of Sari Angelo presented a one- although this was done with > sidertng pardoning a11 "their high executive ability " hour petition on behalf of the -§ • "some reluctance." Watergate defendants. Kidd plans to send a letter Garter called: Nixon's par­ tq City Council stating his : don, a "serious, and un­ position on the matter, in SHAKEY'S warranted tn'trusion into the • place of a minority administration of ! criminal •; ":~^~:'-Mosrcal Events Gomcnittee presents ... .2915'Guadalupe report....Booth-,,.'.was..' un-justice;."' one that ''would • r' presents' : destroy confidence in the This summer.ffiegroupwasi PATIO DINNER and CEDAR FROST ?ap$fi^wfr5rthe•Taw"*--'-— y/r7 m favor-of -a-propbsal which _ BRUSHY CRElK The; governor explained he would immediately cui the would hot nave pardoneatffe" TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY 1 -UnionPotio | 50 and rebates to percent, former President s.o soon, Serving your favorite Beat, Wine Coolers, casf oi /a'n Poi'o llinnerwitllie^rrJr'rBaHffftfm­ phase out the rebates over a 5 : calling the action a '-.reopen­Sangria, and 21 varieties of. great pizza -­ // . to 10-year pertod-—Texan Staff Photo ing pf Watergate wounds." V •••' City. Council will -.consider " 2915 Guadalupe • 476-4394 Gov: Garter He,-also, rioted that Ford, the report Thursday. The Rusty Nail A unique eating & drink­ ing establishment is oDen at 12th & TONIGHT & THURSDAY ^ , Rio Grande T PLUM NELLY •MM iiumiiiumuiumuumHiHitoi COMING FRIDAY V-;; iiiiuinuuiiiiiiiiiiiuumiS •The Auspicious Return of ' •ctlPTHIS LUtKY COUPONI IAND TAME 1/2 OFTYOURI SHIVA'SHEADBAND • GUEST'S MEAL IFIT IS | a EQUAL OR ICSS THAN S 707 Bee Caves Rd. 327-9.016 • YOURS.FROM 3PM-11PM" •; -f . . ^ -y* .4/^ • ONLY. OFFER COODUNTILI RE-OPENING PARTY, . I OCT. 6,1974. | TONIGHT ^4-Gatsby Giris don!t wait THE LOST GONZO BAND -by the phone ..; (JJ. WALKER'S BACK UP BANDh They,go for dinner, good folk ond the MILTON CARROLL / melJow m'uslt of Syl Smlfh fSlitY C. m rtbl_Gofsbv'5 Dor. ortdResfouronf-^ .. •feQ / Something new for Austin. In fhe Village, 2700 "AndersonLone. COUNTRY SUNSHINE AND OTHER QUESTS [CLAMAfitf NO COVER AUSTIN /ROCK TV ROLL $2 COVER FRIDAY and SATURDAY LIGHTNIN' HOPKINS UNCLE JOHN TURNER 11.-00 a.m.—12 midnight Friday; ond Sotordoy' fi!.l:00 a.m. Opensjor Sunday Drunch at 72-00. W AND DANCER l tmtuAt (NO COVER MONDAY-THURSDAY) Entertoinmenr. Tuesday—Saturday.&30 todose. • -Serving iiapjscks arid |\ DOORS. .QPEN: 8 HAPPY HOUR: 8-9 ' Happy Hour 3:00 p.m.—7 p.m.—drinks two for one every doy except Saturday. ' succulent specials taiiatftrtftft imu HM201 9»4 N. LAMAR 477-37fi3 IGLENSHAW ; corporation! .. PRESENTS I ATTENTION LAW STUDENTS: V MARDIGRAS PITCHER HURRICANE 200ACAMM FREE CHAMPAGNE PUNCH TONIGHT •" Wild Bill LADIES FREE , and th« HAVE YOUR Buffalo Yonkeei LIVE ENTERTAINMENT -in the Small Ballroom —afto— . FEATURING CLASS in tho Annex THU.RS,, SEF>tri2, 8 P.M. vJ » Mithaal Murphy LARRY RASPBERRY PICTURE Advance Tickets $4,50 AND THE HIGH-STEPPERS . Fti. 4 Sal.r Sept. 1.3, 14 with special guest STAX RECORDING.ARTIST " TAKEN ^ 8 p.m. Rusty Weir -fa DAVEIOGGINS HAPPY HOUR 4-7 EVERY DAY Advance Tickels $3.50 'Please Come to Boston' FEATURING RQCCO THE SINGING BARTENDER Ikkit UcolMnti lnn*^ Sanctum. Odd The wor/d's only tinging bartender lhal can't sing. ^ 7 Motranft (Hitfhlond MdH), T»KOI Opry Reserved seats avalfable at Raymond's Drugs 1 and 2, § Houm ftoi Joske's in Highland Mall andMail Order from Austin Ticket |£ Of Ik* FREE Service, 2706 Rio Grande, 'Austin 78705 (include money • & 23rd and PEARL W1 Show Informaf lon-442-2743 °^er' *tc*nip®4*«W-addressed envelope and 25* handling). THE BUCKET m Across from Hardin North -3 Hrs Free Parking s-sx for the 1975 HAMBURGKRS . . isSKf : PEREGRINUSl^ ^£> :>p>V(V-" ­ ","f Law School ' 'i'jff • m : GOURMET Yearbook iANNOUNeES-T&k-. Tft •­INFLATION FIGHTER SPECIAL •' SEPTEMBER 10 -13 L1tk WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER fl Studio Hours: 8:30 5 12:30 i ' 4­fepfeSf'' No^ 4 HAMBURGER , M 1:30^ 4:30 . m^de with VMb-puro beef pattiechaii>roileS, lattuce, " tomatoes, friustard, salad sauce arid pickles. TOWNES HALL AUDITORIUM r/.r Don't Forget toOrderYour opy W~i -J FRENCH FRIE •St <&r .Old/ Fashioned Thick 'Gut-; ' ; • t" -The'H 975 LARGE ICED TEA • pEREGRINUS p-iSlnG' m Fresh Brewed -.Plus Refills When you have your picture taken! „ , * plus tax .. 3&R&, fi r i is 311' S. Ldmar '-477-3477 2200 Guadalupe "On the Drag" -474-108^! ' iniys6.30 ry. 11; 1974THE1 ^ f.«aa€ -J tj 'zmiwi J ¥w\-> -TW #% _' ••••••••••• • -•-••••:•••-v.-•• ••••• - **• £§Jr^ -^3^-^!$-'^,. ",j -*< "y^r1 tl •• -$&hv .j^i SSgjVj&ff­ v Raspberry Jams at Bucket 'M 1 Chritfth's Sci-fi ^fep^' ^/^5 By DANIEL D. SAEZ ... ^Vsetting blues foundation, r; #%%#I a• ^?r«settin§ the blues foundation., the Highsteppers-slid into "Trou- I 1 • I /'*' Texan Staff Writer ^ '"•; ble in Mind." Lead guitarist Raspberry, a former member Qf Not AnsWers .-^.the Gentrvs in tho 'fills • ©hnrArt * thA vnr*!ils: u/ith: Pnml £110 Attendance at local nightspots is minimal the first days of a ". the Genirys ih the"80s. shared" the vocals with Carol Sue t^new week, and Monday night at the Bucket was no. exception.;, Ferrante, a former Miss Tennessee who holds nothing back in :V'TKe [Terminal Man;" Vi " were shot under a bell-jar.<«« Richard A. Dysart, implant a.-or the researchers, or some The regulars had elected to remain home out of the rain, and . the Way of vocalizations, : :," "produced, directed .andi^ -< THE STO.RY concerns a computer-linked monitor into combination ofvthe two? Thev. had anyone used both hands ar^J feet to count the people there. Alternating between the saucy and £he sultry, "Missy Carol" written by Mijte Hodges, .scomputer scientist named Benson's brain, to curtail his-film is full of gratuitous cofti?? .he would have had several fingers and.toes left oyer after the did an intense and gutsy rendition of "Got To Find Me a Part-. .from.the-hoyel by Michael if} •Harry Benson-(George attacks. Predictably enough plications. .The monitor fails Crichtwu starring .George . '"J?'}®11* , , r.^vtimeLover,"'receivin^a glossy ba.ci?upfrom saxophone player -;:Segal), i.who, hasdiscov«r«d the-monitor-faUsr-JI^-worse^jKrt onty becaupent is-tiigd in • i Under these less-than-satisfactory conditions a lesser band ; • Jerry McKSnney. Segal,**Joan"ITacKeTt "and that computers are taking " -u.ii than Jails' —" il"actually with computers-but also i smigh't have}usjgone through themotions of a performance^but A band of considerable depth and ability, they were able to Richard A. Dysart;'at over the :world. About the enhances cBensonJs because "Benson's brain :Xarry Raispberry and the Highsteppers, a Memphis-based rock switch from blues Jo rock Without skipping a beat. "Dixie Riverside and the Village. --time he makes thediscovery a vicipusness. messes it around. There's a _ car •and^ roll^bliies group, showed the fortunate few what kind of Diner,-' an upbeat jazz-country piece, exhibited the individual ;;c.-:By;GREG;SMiTR^^S wreck turns ljim into a -HE BUSTS loose from the helicopter that keeps appear­Anettle they're made of. nf! thA orflinv ac & xohnla . • "* . • ~ v Texan Staff Writer < ^ periodic psychopath. After he iei.uejuey,iy.luaue m. talentsOf the group as a Whole." • iilrrKiTfriiAnt-^^c hospibl, named Babel, and ing — the symbol of a policeHANOiCA^Pfc;l>"fty-^it^n^rtjgg"ffi^ustiit-k«w>Pal)a»^^^rtlm^,.,anlH.^flu^ihArTjninypr :j«. \|iiihorm temporarily the way he-commits*^ noneUiagSs.transcended U.e bad acoustics iU^UI vuur ' ^el-the first being "The ^eafs^Kfi?we . ... ;iity Bucket and plowed full speed ahead. turned-aV'"' hy w acts .ai.,muraer.ana -CompleXfjuetUonsforcom}several actsof..murder..and ' With bass player. Rocky Beretta ami drummer Bill Marshall some scheming,docbre7^r~— ytantrtlinn.* Undismayed by the small turnout andfiuoyed by.the promise — -• • chton s liking for 'rrtfrfi H fr |IM •technical verisimilitude. of better acoustics that asound check and a capacity audience Segal is curiously_big.guns exploits the fluid properties of" satisfying nuVnber of murders Will provide; Raspberry and the Highsteppers were eagerly There's' a glittering brain for such a role. But Benson.is blood the sameway ''Fsycho" . here —; and in other:• ways FtATURES 7H»-8^0-10HM> operation'ln" this one. that supposed to be highly in­ awaiting their midweek performances. ; • " • s did. His end, when itcomes^ is' Hodges seems to be playing'" mAmoNt> takes a disproportionate hunk ONE WEEK ONLY telligent, and Segal is good 'at pathetic; like Frankenstein's. down his own melodrama. The S3t £jit'S,»in Slr««l *72 "WE CAN understand toni^t; with die-weather-suidall," said of the film's running time. • SvappearingThtelligenL' ' Unlike "Frankenstein,'-the camera technique is sterilethe grinning, lanky Raspberry during a break, "but we'll realiy But whereas' "Andromeda The scheming doctors, film fails to say who the and barren;.Jt's a curious sort-.­ • get rriad if everyone doesn't jump uparid danceby Thursdayarid Strain" had a proper swagger headed by . Joan Hacke'tt and villain is. Is.it the computers,. of Frankenstein film \-JiY Friday."' . •" ,v.'*;r-:V;S and preposterousness, "Teiv Satanically li'V If Raspberi^ and ttie Highsteppers continue to play their kind |BS T !, minal .Man" isi gloomy low-•'*. , ' ' ' ' ; ' -'' • • ' •' -•V-Jii'T.VO .. -: of raw, zestful music like.they did-Monday night, they heedn't im- key, and ends on a sour flote. :­ \\/f ~°ay Cocks. worry about a lack ot dancers on the floor». . '• • All its scenes look like they ^ _ ' funny. Women's Art on Display ""e Magazine nn k1. t . r> • 5s; Women . have, in some Thursday, with a talk by Hen­documented by Hendricks in < respects, heen more, impor-dricks on the exhibit and on her master's thesis in art v , , j, than men in fostering thg_ the achievements of womeri In, history. television w1 y pjen. ' - Atv--V. i productionofart. Now^smen Texas art. 8 p.m... .• 9 3P p -> -.ae^icks'„ta|k vgUUiggiO-jiL-., -7Sens and Daughters* • - ^artiS^fr'ta^T^16"W#e': various^'rexas ^ 9 Zoom > ••. ? Canrion 9 video Visionaries.: ' r "Th'errole^of ^ 7.-30 p.m. and will include ' "" 2* ^that-s My Mama 36 Lucas Tanner-• 10 p.m. • . • ••.•:/ • ».• . thfe exhibition space . women in supporting and --•n time . discussion 36 Ufctte Hous* on the Prairla 1:30 p.m. • . -7,24,34 Ngvys ;te&traditioha!ly occupied , by producing art has been for and 7:30 pjn. . ^, . • . .• v... . 9 Th?.Boarding House • 9 Man Builds. Man Destroys' Vdmen. questions: 9 P.m. 10:30 p.m. -JL-h"n "f""' *n«rlcan-DeeSIH nsianKSnHn­ "MnflPw#" •; s.: -. ''y So says Patricia Hendricks, @ INTERSTATE THEATRES 9 The Killers "54,<'fleS '5,4rr">»A''a' MGrtChrtSr^ ' curator of..tne exhibit currerifcr Grl""h Special: VMtss American­ 36 P«r«:«ll Teenager" ly showing at Laguna Gloria Art Museum, "20th Century .$1.25 til 7, p.m. ' PARAMOUNT ws-sm , gemeral ciwemacorpohahow Women in Texas! Art." 713 CONGRESS AVENUE 6:40^8:20-10:00 Utguna Gloria will open its "j AU CINEMAS EVERY DAYSl.-2S'TtL t:30 fall season of gallery talks MikeNktiols.Jack \khoteon.Candk:cRei^en. rHAfS CNFCtlAfNMlNr j/ CUtF.STATES DRIVE-IN V. ArthuiGarfunkd.Ann-IV| CAPITAL. PLAZA ShowtownUSA 4S2-7M6 • IH 35 NORTH Julie. Andreu?s Omar Sharif, *1364514 Carnal Knowledge. if 4th Big Week! ^ClitF STATES t)RIVE4N TheTamarmdSeed at Pan«v?sicc» SoiuhsidE •Atf Eutman Color 12:45-2^5-5:10-7:25-9:40 < an Avto tmfiaoy rtteise **\ ?10 E. B«> wiilw4<4.aa«/­ 51.25-til 3 p.m. VARSITY -nisi 2:75-4:10-6:05 HELD MYSTERIES ( # BOX OFRCE OP£N 7;45 2400 GUADALUPE STREET SHOW STARTS DUSK ; ; 3:00-9:55 HIGHLANDMALL POSMS and Bargain OVER 451-7326 • IH 35 AT KOJNtG IN. -• Matincn A COMEDY CLASSIC!!! -it. Smpended;;.' THEORGANISM 'DON'T MISS It! ' Of 'SjS ECCS. r-John-Bustin . . •12^0-2i25g­ ;*1iU«], directed, produced by Dusan Makavejev The "Austin Citizen 1 4^0-W5 J}* "ANIMAL _ 9:45 AwryERSAtR£-p£LEASE •img CLINT |%1 EASTWOOD -txdusiMfclntertolnmpn? 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENIG LN. Doors Open Daily at 12:30 —JOEKIDIK »mtlE SCREEN t & 2 • i ? CONGRESS AVENUE21st & Guadalupe Second Lfvet Dobie Mall 477-1374: jj| IteMWCOLOBgfWKWSICM^S • . niuumuuiiHuuMai _ "A MASTERPIECE! . HUS CO-HIt v, ,_s.% HATURE TIMES FUTURE-TIMES NOTHING SHORT OFA MASTERPIECE! STUNNING! CUNT 4;10-«klO-9JO THK MOTHER AM) THE WHOM is,a mammoth • SLEEPER WIT OF THE YEAR! IT HAS. movie -3V4 hours long. B«t there are only three important I, TEN TIMES THEENERGY OF EASTWOOD -7 >.v ; roles, Jn a series of dialogues a young man {Jean-Pierre = GULF STATES DRIVE-IN STATES DRIVE-IN V." MOST CONTEMPORARY FILMS!' •> taaud), hfs mistress/mother (Bemadette tcrfbnt), and his I —Rex Reed: N.VOatlv News- HIGHPyJNS "who™"' (Franeoise lebrun) run the gamut of possible S AND Souyhsiderelationjhipj between men a/id women. Oostoievskiafi iA| fr DRIFTER « Xwylti Cnmn*13M 710 E.:Pm •44»l2g6/f'its confessional intensity, it was hdiled as a masterpiece at • "A STUNNING SAGA!" •-Cannes. • AuNfwtasn/^rtso BOX OFflpE OPEN 8:00.SHOW STARTS AT DUSK ® —Gene Shaliti NBC-TV r - f|?:­ •'"'AUD'weieiWTOw' jteiranB& Prafacas Cbqmtw pttsettt An Atpne Pmkclion n Bsacaton ChwitesaiSlufel Jean Eustache's THE &H THiArpmMiiecsMwoF Sbe'll coax tHe\l DUDDY taiAvrrz^^ I blues fight out of l| MOTHER SURVIVORS "•CHARDOSEYFUSS-r^txft»(SiANGrcir gwcvOUAIO JOSECH.WISEMAN i ftw CifanlM PtumM Dwaon ol C^lanlw Pkj " your heart!I ww WoarwjInc. COLOR tpfiloi^ O^JACK Waaocn«*»uur OPEN 1:45 -­ FEATURES $2.'00 HI 6 pjn; AND THE _J ":?r J-4-4-e-10 '• dASSIS INCL »g» bmmim a.-m-vuWM' " "" "" LUCY ^' "PASS LIST SUSPENDED­ WHORE Cannes Festival 1973 • Grand Special Jury| JftdvWrMr MIMI • . " Prize -. •. Three showings daily . • ffi 12:45 -4:30 -8:15 I REDUCED PRICES $1.75 Admission TIL 6 P.M. 1500 S. PIEASANT VAUEYJJD .«««««!! MON. THRU* SAT; _ SCREEN 2 HELD OVER!, |CtEAVdN LITTLE " & GENE WILDE $1.50 til 6 p.m.1:T0 2:50 4:30: JUST OfF CAST.BIveaSIOE OBlVg 44&-1??? . GEORGE C.SCOTT kthmabt Man totnta pmati UUntmfcdSw •hataUm «riOi Omtui'SMSf v. $1.50 lil 6 p.m. .FEATURES .. 2:15 8 ??00Hancock Drivi—453]S6i' . : OPEN Is15 FEA. 1:30-5:15-8:30 * REDUCED PRICES TIL 5:30 6:05 7:45 9:25 ! "BANK5HOT Paramount Pk&iks presents Iiw Wele fidro;* Omte •)*•"• r,'"g laom bt: ' ^¥,4:00•V-5:50. 7:40' 9:30' $1.50 . HI 6 p.m.FntvMi 1:00 IUJCILLE BALLnMAME" I 1HAT»C£ ARTHUR !««». fy^ QAfty'vContaWKlfaiS CcnV^yl1 ihe Aw1c» frftMtiilirg M lfo^wKMeri^*2u5u>nf wqj 'EXCLUSIVE AUSTIN SHOWING SEE IT NOW BEFORE IT'S TAKEN * » OUT OF RELEASE -ENJOY-IT ON S OUR GIANT SCREEN^%^-K;'-^S*« jL±± • wmm II ® fxt-nxxjar A f^nuroumPxiunr 3:30" 4:00*« -6*&,~ 8:20 " i 1*weekdAys OPEN.67^5/1i I . $LiO til 7 p.m.:; JI •Foatura* al 7:00 and 9-.15J HSR. I \ . 5fh Wtek . j f''C-.-'n WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS* m$t --.. v. -• ii i§*Pa'_M I ACRES OF FREE LIGHTED PARKING .9:50 . MAUM THfAinCft^ FOX TWIN ( the people who gave ysw ««The Jazz Sinter" I 11:30 J : 00 S m •U23 Mr, Bia rttiie Bht.—4422333 FEATURESfel5440^^S '(MwL-Saf.) tliAflt 6400-ettmM Ro«t — 465-6933 "THE GREAT AMfRICAN COWBOVr' 8:15-11:45 George SegaL Elliott Oould j,­-'•ii J2® $125 |§S. 8:50 ijM^jO:40 Jisofjf I j | 3 2nd Feature "BttOTHERS 'OTOOlt" ot 10:15 BEST DOCUMENTARY m* * " j Midnight Movies $1.25 I The Acacjemy Award Winner 4 mii v " 1 TOPAY TH«U TUI1PAY | (1 BUSBY BERKLEY'S f 12:001 2 ^ MUSICAL EXTRAVAGANZA . | GOLDIGGERS of.1933 » I ''Fashions no woman Would dare lo wenr"; l m I I .J 2 12:20 Filmedin Austin: Local Cast! |THE GREATEST SEX FILM m ciura« |:iVy mmus I'i-d' FILM -y GROUP ' | SINCE"KING KONGBEDROOM RATED X No One Under.18 V CBEAIs h :$.f.COWBOY 1 .COlOR BY 0E1UXE _ 8 .biting the storyof bet-va-aaythlQp ga. WW. :•« •S&Mf • •m The exciting true story of whohappttyOtecover , somethingcaHea ACBRlOroNTI PROOUCnON 4 avanishingamericah 9"wimihgsfreaH" DAVIDLEAN'SFILM social kind of freedom. I { #£gk< ...JSstSSs imm'fHwsim* DOCTOR ZHil^GO .-WMUay^Opmi $AS Starring lorry Mohan and PWf .LYn« -Narrated by Jo«| Mctraa 1 * " .Formerly Sexjjaf Fantasies, tJ.S A/ ^4W» rtfI * fJIb jBlpamivisiom*; MCTBOMIM-: ho. 44-IQ f.m." Vffmier of "WrangJtr Awar«t" from Cowhoy Hall of Famo . iftCHAPlil •4I|JEGHKSIj-JOHOOuB 1974THB3 1 •„ ^w,'r.s. ,.^ -U, rit, I /-. f *>"&&* * f 5L *,$ * ~" <, L f *f *. r f ~* tf*W$ •* ^ >*%*G,*4* _ 'S fc *./« >• ^ *-*r ratsew mm Scott Gives Poor Performance '•lilt' 'BankShot' Shallow, Awkward "Pnnl/ • . :Ct*s»*-» t* • aIAumIu u i•.. . .1» 11«-k • • • «*-' i «•• .. . 9 •»^ ^trt «k £ n*.' •* Bank Shot;" starring '"""StrangelOve,'.' "Petulia" "an3 Character of Ballantine day of filming and drew and half-hearted efforts_ as J •: : George C. Scott, Joanna "Patton." (Scott) a certain suggestions as to how to end "Dolphin" and "Bank Shot." I ; -ii Cassidy; screenplay by Scripted by Wendell Mayes, awesomeness and importance • the movie quickly, -'so hope not, for Scott, along with Wendell-Mayes; -.directed. ^ "Bank Shot" delineates its by.photographing him in low-everyone could go home early. Gene Hacknian* and Marion by-. G'ower.-.-Champion; ajt^sparse storyline alongside a angle.', shots., Moreover,. lie In a-Time interview (March Brando, brings annually to the^y Landers-Rpberts produc-shallow trickling .of.physical attempts vainly to transform . 22, 1971),.after.filmlng'-Pat-screen a rare quality^oif cbnt-^p ; lion; at"the AquarlU^'^^comedy, and neither aspect mundane .mavenient-'scenes to'n,Scott went.on; fcegord as -bined acting-excellence and^^ Theaters IV. '4" really succeeds. . into exciting action scenes by saying "I want to phase trnt e? p"l osi ve ; :perrson a By WILLIAM A. STONE JB. The storyline, abouta group ; shooting them in close-up. • acting completely after a magnetism. : , 'v -Texan Staff Writer of thieves who steal a trailer­ TJiere's.a vast difference, of while and get, into directing.'' Scott's temporary desertion ' Watching George C,Scott in He also talked of establishing, fronj the ranks of conscien-; ' "Bank Shot(or-"The Day of his own television repertory tious Amerieaii ac.tprs^S­ the Dolphin," for that matter) theater! devoted to; their craft ?anno^^ fU&:JifcgvJS&iching_ taken lightly^.Jt,is to .'be Richard. Burton-since he aeped' money in films ttan-anyplace finished directing, producing; perionce is a sobering one.-• ...v _„wll For .Scott, the pbjective -.with a near-inipfenefrab'le.' oc&ffavc coomc iA Ko . > w concluded that Scott was film, "The Savage Is Loose,'.' thes6 days seems to be a-sim material r certain whether tlie fauit lies ''presumably planning to soon will recover the prestige :oV, pie case of taking the money SECONDLY, the timing.(or with/screenwriter Mayes or gather up his not incon­of .his now: cheapened-stanr. u.; and running, much as it was rather', lack ,of timing) of with author Donald Westlake, siderable salary andthenturn dlnff for Burton beginning a few director Champion's staging, who wrote. the.,book-upon "to more serious matters." • If he does not, he certainly years ago, and-ajpparently, he frustrates-arid , retards^ the" which the movie is -based). • Aido Barrera (c) and friendjoko with Apapite, the lion, on 'CaiTascolendas.' PERHAPS this is precisely won'-t be bothered with refus­ isn't bothered by'the resulting physical comedy beyond It's as if the production crew -what Seott is doing now. by ing future Oscars — there!!!';­ -damage, to his" well-earned viewer satisfaction, such as sat arpjund the set on the last appearing in"such unpolished--. jiot be any .offered. reputation as k serious-actor. the scene in which the bank is; KLRN Creates Workshop "BANK SHOT" marks a actually stolen. . distinct departure for Scott: Furthermore, Champion's St; Edward's To Host Centennial; This fa\l; -KLRN-TV's^ award-winning the Carrascolendas television series for tlie gone, perhaps, are the choice! ; ' direction' .is bland and * -Ss bilingual children's showr^Garrascolenda's," 75-76 season. This series will be nationally quality roles in movies like , texfbook-predictable. He con-will have a new dimension. Beginning in Oc­televised on the iPublic BroadcastingSystetri. . '.'Anatomy of a Murder/'V'Dr, Works by Artists To Be Shown " tinua lly fries': to tend the­ ^TSBgrTl^ip^doeational^portiuwi^ssulL,, Mofe than 100 artists from --timedia .presentatibn showing, . volvement in the founding of '""Any=pbilAJnggrf,&-ia;1 jr] { • be offered tochildren aged 5'to 15 through the Central Texas will be . the highlights of the work of St. Edwards's. " . . ­ member of the Carrascolendas Children's -©trilery To Hold Exhibit Carrasedlendas Children's Workshop. represented at an arts and' the* Holy Cross Brothers in Other centennial events^re Workshop may audition Sept. 16,17 or 18 at wsu-. •_ j-v , „ .The' children'who participate in the A crafts festival: sTti$aTanr^a^^^^ itS KLR1V-TV. Auditions will be held at KLRN-' Goyaj Picasso, workshop will haye achance towork inmove-enolrSunday at St. -Edward^s TV in Studio 6A of the Communication Ri.jTouJouse-Lautrec, Rodin and -Miro will be .shown merit. acting, music, design and diction. ^University. •r '»V-r{ "'Building Wednesday, Thursday and Friday in the Texas Union Gallery." ™I'he workshopactivities will txntesigncd tQ— ___ • Original European graphics will be available forrnurchasp use each 'child's creative ability' and to -: a minlin. »' 'V. • • . '• .. .'i"u i 1 .. • ,, , • -. The ^how^aod sale 'are part .. Appointments for auditions may be made the public. "of-the-Uuiversity's-Gentennial-­develop his or her performing and artistic. by calling Yolanda Ortiz in the Bilingual Of­The sale will be presented by the Millioud Galleries of Celebration, marking 'the potential. In addition, the chldren perform on fice, 471-4811. —• .' v ' ijpirz Houston which has held similar sales at the Union in the past. 100th year that the Brothers.of ­ The Texas Union Fine ,Arts Committee is sponsoring the sale Theatre Committee Presents Holy Cross have been living as part.of Texas Union Week, which ends Saturday.' i and working in. Austin: vtn > The exhibit is open to the public free«f charge. Gallery hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. \veekdays» ' -. Also planned is a mul- ROD STilGER AND JAMES COBURN WIUBlOWYOUAfiMT J AmTmoftniminsA -rDUCK.tOWSWCKt*')... presents classic of the Italian cinema Jane Art* Committee presents Sale^.ofOrieJnaFEuropeBji'QraphlMr^— ' 1 Inclttdw.;:Dair, Picasso, Chagall,-KedStf, j (iwi) i'AVVINTURA Tqulp.use-Laatroc. a-nd many -others;^ Wednesday through Friday,' Texas Ui Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni* GaJIcry, 9 a.m. to S p.m. Frqra the Mllll t WithMonica_Vitti Gallery uf IIuuhIud: 'L'AVVENTURA sprang immediately tp. the number two spot in S'titil -and .jyund .v poll on' the ien~best~ fitms.-.-Jn L'AVyENTLiRA Antonioni presented us with Hoast beef,cornedbeof;cheeses pastram nam qutche. barbecue a classic,neu-style of film-making." avocadQ soup,cheesecake & . Earnest Callenbach. Film Quarterly bakiava But not ail at once' 304 West 13th 4720900 (6 ||7 and 9:45 p.m. " Jester Auditorium ccwoi ^ Season Ticket — S12 -*;i Batts Auditorium $1.00 UT students,*1 -Good: foc.a.serh«ster't^S. 7 and 9:30. p.ip. faculty and staff in OBBHCT worth of movies • .. Tonight -$1.50 Members GRAND OPENING f#S m Come td .5S«£ *ifPSr^ mm v- RESTAURANT t .. ^ -i Introducing Spaghetti, Lasagrta,-Ravioli Dinners ^ tS%Ott This Week Only and have a Wine 25* A Qjass /^ll Day iv-iv Happy Hour Beer Prices All Day fa*' ' Mf -xffl M(cK^Sb30'Sio,s 1.60pitcher ?•'.* Shiner 20c a Glass ... 1.1Op^ SUH.-rm. 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. W • SAT. 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Dining Room, and • • To Go Orders Available 2801 Cuadttlupe 472-3034 --• •• J < r -m i VILLAGE 4 RIVERSIDE S > ; -ora time!! • 2700 ANDERSON LN 451-8352 1930 fc RIVERSIDE .141-5689 •A-" ~~i Mi~~i-1ir * * *•/ " Rtdmad Htl \ -5 Thursday thruSaturday, . (Mlvm 1J0-3:J0-SIW-7:J0-W0 " •^5n> Uncle Stanley's Public House'-,r ~~i RIVERSIDE H'PJ is opening in a grand way. 1930 E. RIVERSIDE 441-5589 D'U D Uetvm l-JW:JMJO-7:JO-»JO Eat! Drink! I c ri3 —Kosher hotdogs —Beer-byLthe-950­'•/ /C GEORGE smothered insaurkraut. -pitcher or the15C mug. SEGA# 21 riii Be Merry!THE «... HQ • Jamas Coan . Dance to Chuck &erry around the 1950's juke box. Play "AN UNEXPECTED IOVE STORV r Fntimi l>4S-5;40.9^5 ~. v' Rtductd Print till 2 ' Acsdtmy Award Wlmtr , games in Uncle Stanley's Amusement,center. wi Hi MIIVAL nsnprt v » ( * nr ij hdturM 12HIO-J:SS-7:SO Uncle Stanley's is here today, to stay, in Dobie center^ r £ ULJ MAIM: m\w VILLAGE 4 lower level. Open daily 11 AM tilt 12.PM. " 2700 ANni MHON LN .Saturday till 1 AM.so celebrateLi; Most caps play tm UPTOWN It tiv this biiok. VILLAGE 4 I 270U ANDERSON LN. 451-8352 SATURDAY 411 wi£MT,« Rulucid, PHcn til 12|1S Mon.­hahirat 12ilMtlS-4;l54tl$­«:J5-10:tS UNCLE VILLAGE eremiah -riS Johnson": R*fiuc*d Pr!wVtll 3:M-#cn.-Fri. r fMhmi 2M.4.-A04M4M02M Routed Mtes tU ?:00 MonVfri. ~ : 'U Faaturw 2:00-4-|o>i:00-l:00-10:00 Wednesday, September J 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 13 HARTFORD wdro5-9 ttmn SI59.50 . RE VOX A77 tape recorder, *500 or best Each word,Wormore-times. 24 offer. 385-6B3& old sold. Capita* Diamond Shcpt-WI8N. ^Tpdeatrateeach time •*-.... Lamar, 454-6877... . v • tK& ALL BILLS PAID Kutrnnmi . Clawlrtd Display 1405 Hartford Rd . bedroorns and.thk 2bedrooms aremam­Large patio*, balconies, . KENWOOD AMP ana "OtautHvi ,V; V coLxl tnch -one tipw AR turntable. Sony GIGANTIC moth, too. Furnished or 'VnfurnHhed/ ;»cot,*l in clothes*' baby Items^ Miscellaneous' '6l87/i72^162> Science or, Techr,»cal degree m®|dri CREEKSIDE Unlimited! A Building Fulli erfher or One dnd -hvo-.bedriK>m •Anyday. Fnday T«un Tbmday. .11;00 oj«i Kenwood AM/FMsfereotuner, $45 Exc A HARD ACT TO FOLLOW.Act IV,33IT sthool, (2). Hal'Opcrallng Ucwise, (3)P ' Joveiy,rcre^kside seeing. Huge grassy •cond BlILi Ne*t to AnierKana-Theatre,walkmg^H ^Red River. Exceptional floor plans for Has authentlc 'de&ire'for'a futO^e career •.. 4awn. lots oMreot. Convenient to UT, HEAVY. WOODENDESK. «5.Stereohi-a • Friday & Saturday -•• »»nce to.North Loop Sho0p»ng Center srudents. Largebedrooms Inan efficlen m programming. (4|.Wishes io remain downtown,^ shopping^ repreatlon.»Fully ­ If,SJ0 HaJcdryeriiJ. Woodepd^ubie-bed . STEREO SYSTEM*Sansvii receiver and . _ „ and Lubyrs.'One hnH block from shuttle cy-setting: carpeted, paneled, andyou won'tbelieve . ... 8 a.m. <--7 p!m. -etting: ffw-Wfr'--—fChens andpn-fhe-J shot in.Austin area after graduation:Contact ~ • ' "In ilw iv^nt *f modem an »« turntable,>1m e LWE speakers. S'antan^.Lcac-J* franw, .*5-Steam...RQll.WJ,..flO* Various..: aod-.AiJsJ.lft. tt.ans.ttv-:2 -plus:E & aftjle, 33U Red Owen Coon at 475-5845: *• • the storage spacer From «134.50. Call , 4>edroom uniform tnnv Ptf. Suun. i FrQiti $144 piu; Superex headphone»rS450Firm .uniform tops* etc, Susan, .453-8130 townhousei,. extras large. Two bedroom 926-4S55 ,M; . erf»>ihiinii»i;Inumdiati nehnmtfil b* 373 7601 Burnet Road d>s River. 476-2662« 472.4162. -Hatv .one and two baths. CA CH 9>v*r o4 )WpcbSttwn annipwriM*Iw FACULTY AND -STAFF. 3 9 acres 15 hwasher. disposal, door to door garbage GET INTO.THE ACT. Act Vll Especial­ onty ONE wctnwt likM/iton:AB doirtu fi milts east onp^ved road, trees.452-3082, WANTED ptckup. poo;, maid /service: if desired, «d|MnwAli *houtd b»|9od« ait ieitr 478-0992. (Owner). Jy designed for, sti«Jent>; Efficiencies; . ALL BILLS PAiDll .ifcwtr " one .bedrooms & one bedroom efffclen-;-­ AIR SUSPENSION wastvaieria incomplex.Set owners. Apt -"Men and WomWi Bus driving positions IBM. TYP.EWRlTER*JUodel Cv carbon UII:IW.M»ai 113 or can 451-4848: / cles, Ai;on the Shuttle. From$144 • 1149 ' open, sev^wl.part-lJme. May st#rt tfain-• 2 BEDROOM, S'ii? SPEAKERS -ribbon Used 6 months. Lt^new. 5260. plus E.and cable. SeeMgr. Act ih,4312 lnsJ«J,?n^'a*c!y ®hd stirt.wor.Mng oponU:^ w,. •/} / 2 BATH • -1 472-6466. : . • Catl Tfansporla-' U TiMUgif Sflusre ha»<­LOW STUDENT RATES Save50%. Full»pe'cs lnn,electronic LARGE STAINLESS.; jacket ceramic ;• . . ' CL. • ' . STUDENTS SEE WATERLOO FLATS! Quiet garden, seftlng;. pools andEatl^ additional wordeach days 05 :crossover. full.;guarantee*on'.oartsj .4.->Hn< %tand, pyrometer*; shejvav posts, ALU BILLS PAID A IICTIM • ^-.2 Bedrognrv .1 bath furnished or unfbr-J CluWis^sejor private parties. 1205^50un­ -928-1660 1 col. x 1 »nch each rW€Hj •Ha»^»rpet?— Appliance Distributors. $79.95 3814 . 2104 San-Gabriel.• • 472-7746. for informa--dishwasher;'balcony; $139 unfurnished 2UM • -• manent people tohsell flowersfor the new' Sat-. "9*^6 -• • • Woodbury 444-4866.. • s-s ^lop . J74-^75 season. For jntefvlew/ Alline or. • 444-4485: 452-8192. PROPERTIES ••••• •••••-•• --.; : Ashley, 282-0001. ' •••-. VILLA /s •-LARGB 1+r: R-g-n-pnftAA—cny^fwr-———--r­ 3x5 OAK DR AWING table,i35.Portable -typewriter. s25. Round picknlck table^ FOR SALE " AX 7000 * * apartments. Pooi:;Water, gas, -FEMALE HOUSF^TES Wanted. OwnAuto-For Sale 250 watt -Amplifjer, . AM/FM -stereo" .:.cyC(es;.Catl»y..t}ays-ooly.:.451-$137i'454*--* _ rborri $8Hi'month plus bills North off JU7.50 f>LUS e. gWe5 y«u'-lull kltcfito ijR ADUS ~NOTETA"KERS: 9482 ^onerrCarrardprmessfonatseriesturn-. bedrooros^furnishedor unfur-472-4175 " . C;R::shutHeT452-?264_* -— wiih^»akt«tbar.e*tr^ targtk"UT shuttle: ~ w/he»vy "duty 10" woofer;: 5V*" MALE ROOMMATE, 1 bedroom, $84 JO -i .discwfrwfs, V4L AT,%ativ}$29».-4^3606-; 8QWWAR calculator, MX-I00- cable* pooL andshuttle busa^lCortezv 24th. 472.J9®6.,1Q.a.m.;> ft p rrt* . or 837-0750. ' . Rectiargeable, memoi^, twenty 1untt,.»,: 459-9927 453-4545 452-3314 HOI Clayton Cane. 453-W"4r2-4Jd2, midrange; and 3W tweeter. Suggested ABP, 6 blDCks to campus 2408 Leon 476­ tions« two months, otd. Must seli. BlM&r? PART TIME WORK $300. per month. '3467. af or ' ::1960 DODGE Vton picX-up»' insulated 476-9079 UT STUDENTS FIREPLACE, LARGE 2.bedroom with Call 452-2758. No experience necessary­ Ncw.l Br. just completed, great tookrngv. shag; rich paneling, huge walk-lni,pool. \campovFrorit tires 7flxw.4. fear tires 77^7^-^ „ rtcn f PREFERABLY SENIOR graduate -Wujz-Wi or best offer; Alsoitoo UNITED FPFIf^HT USED SMITH-COA ON A -adding'*.; 29. UnM complex.. Grcaf furmshings.-One block to shuttle,and Highland Mall PART TIME or-, full-ttrp© help.-Nights to share bedroom, iwo shuttle, pool, DW.. disposal. cafcTeriW baths house with another "mate Walk 'utJUfY ^i«t electric brak«v«oa . W8"1 1 1 ^-W-r.lxCI I machine, portabt«i with case, good con-Tv^i From S2WALL8ILLS PA1D. 9WR ahd $i.90/hour. lity trailer n 'Relnli some Hays..Start -students four Ml • -dthon $35. 45<.-6705 COLORFUL 454 9863, 472-4162. ^ v-^Scholarship benefits.. Apply Sandy's SALES ,i • plu? E. block to CR shuttle $67/month plus bills • .Hamburgers^ 603 Barton Springs Road • :653SN.Lamar Erwln. 477-7853 Tl BLUE HONDA-2 door COfcpC; JliSO. OLYMPIA TYPEWRITER, portable/.' EFFICIENCIES 301 We*t 39th* . EL POSADO from $130, Fantastic ' Msooaay-Frlaay 9-9 • ca» «eet drive. 6th. Chairs,.-fables, doors/ dinettes, off Blanco 472-4162 STUDIO APARTMENT Fireplace, every d^y after school. 2:15 -6:«lTftrn GUITAR FOR SALE.-Alvarez, excellent , skylight,-CA^CH* cable. convenlenL $129 Doherty. 476-7085; 478-1556 after 6 ifsi.mo. plus utilities 2283 Nueces< . vhufrs, four mudgrip tires*'heavy duty : G ...... desks, rugs,couches* anttaues» bars.476-• riabitat Hunters' is, FREE apartment' Sue Dohert ~ ~ tf^'^chiteh.. power brakeiTracfi -locator vscrvice,;-located In the 'lower ?'>;j;dut£h.. brakeiTracVTVns-weft;-—condlti»3_s35.-CalLRobjn_<7fr*986. 5-I0 3478^ _ _ piers electricity 900 East 51st, 451-3464, p m |g^|too%s good: si195. 454-4310 p.m.'. jeyetcf pobreMali.we specialize instur '472-5129 FEMALE TO SHARE nice Southslde.) ; dent complexes. COUNTER ATTENDANT for laundry W6VVW-SEDAN.. Good worxing cond™ BiON J*206trwtth case.-f£lttwles»r-474^<-HJ9.50 ONE BEDROOM Aparttrwnl. hour*i,7 a.m. • Iff ii.mr faster Valet-­ bedroom, apartment. $77.50 ABP. Shut­ -CANOE-SALE. HABITAT HUNTERS Ife/CalF D.D:"W*«90 ~ " -~rtTT--.-­ .' •tion. 4400. 472-1347. 1518, 474-1723; - Clearfers. 2710 Manor Rd.. --. 6 ­ jLOwfer CevetrD.Oble-AAaH,"a7,r^i?9Bav^w-3l°?5«[+lBT^S! I9M CHEtfV MaliSo conv'ertlblc. Good . i^lVE PIECE DRUM set. zildieancvm-•Down RIVER SPOftTS o»fe« ypu the S u i t e S A . ' p»'k m-uM, wmms. AND RENTALS • $140 . leal-house.-. Sujie SA,,/s.a.;. • SOCIAL' ACTlVITIES coor'dlnaloi^'to^'^'^.'c ^.'1, tires, new starter &battery.$500. After 4 : bals, stands, high-hat .throne, pedai in­great sport of canoeing at inexpensive the elderly., Experience preferred bul -• --1 Bedroom . .ttVABPr pvm..45J"7*95,. cluded. $450. Negotiable. 472-3271. -rental & sales rates. Canoe Sate now.in M 474-1532 p-ONLY 3 BLOCKSVfrom campus. Ef-> not nedessary. Call 474-1411 for informa-Francois^, 477-6202, 1009 West 26th;-. progress.. •-HALLMARK APTS. . ficiency apartments with targewindows. •1iOn.8. appointment .­70 GREMLIN, 6 cyL automatic. radior , UPRIGHT PIANO.'Reconditionedinside $132.50 jbllts paid. $135.50. deposit; 478--• WANTED: FEMALE graduate student "ACi$>)95-, 4S, 600mu477-4l64 after 6p.nT.' and keyboard: Excei^nt condition-$400 708 W. 34th 9594 -C.O.D. DELIVERY. Must be'neat. fast.. •TaKe off.after class w/a canoe DOWNTOWNER -I to share 3 bedroom, 2 bath house with female graduate student.Own begrooov Keep trymg; . 0P Offer."454-627?. 8. accessories far only S5. alert, have goodrunning car.Make upto 5213 Ave. G 451-8349 QU-tET,:CLEAN EFFICIENCIES. ' $35. a day.: Part And full*time 454-8239 ; APTS. , ' bafh, study. Need own transportation:$125. 8364936 1973 VEGA HATCHBACK fouf soced^v CALL TODAY!. . -. •• . Dishwasher, disposal, near shuttle bus; ' .applications nowbelngtQfcen. Apply31 sr. Bedroom $150 month. Furnished. 'all> if "-: air. low mHe*ge $2400 447-1943 or iee^.^ Wafer, gaspaid.-$l25. Seemanager, HIV i,N. Lamar, Suite 102;-454*8761. -V r i&T-.y Terry, Burdine No. 470. FT WALK TO CAMPUS •• bllllpald. CA/CH. walking distanceUT< West Wth.. 476-4413 MATURE STUDENT wanted to'share rf'THE " --. . NOW 'house. $80/month AC.-452-5810 alter 6 covered parking, laundry room. ; HlTfjNG waltresses/busboys; .ail: . MOVING OVERSEAS, selling 1968V}.' . PIANO SHOP ;3AND BEAT, . • 5os East nth . CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Rooms $6S ABP;'' shrffs. ApplyIn person 11:00, 6.00. 4323 Volvo 144,20mpg_ radio, new bres.451»i^v»A -•908 West 29th. Efficiency from $95. Plus .. IK-35 South at E. St; Elmo Rd... . . BEAUTIFUL .•p.m; •" CREEK SENIOR OR GRADUATE MALE ^0 share two bedroom apartment, $75. 77M 701 W a»fi^Ko^l0l I.-J.V 5311 S. Congress THE BUS--472-0515 •electric. 2907 San Gabriel, Barh^m-: Properties. 926-9365:. BARTENDER rRectt#rdtttened-Upr»ghts-5or»ng-4«d—^yea^-round-treak..tlow^,~ WAITRESS, needed * -one -bedroom-.XurnJ>Kedu ASP. Efe. 477-4206-e*ter^­ ^ >972 SUPER BEETLE 13.000 miles. xv " -1 • Expert Tuning & Repair among the big trees on this select 4V^ part-time to serve Austin's-Finest . Automatic. $1750.Calf477-166fi, evenings -• Pfano Moving uz ...acr^iract. Priced right. Smalt down apartments.setting. $150 plus Pooi, electricity cable, laundry, at commer-quiet'•• SCOTX tt:"Firm?shed one bedroom, d«s-" ...Tavern clientele. Must be.available ROOMMATE WANTED. One bedrtom H-12 pm payment.. Baiancfi financed 10 y«ri. EFFICIENCIES^• hwasher. $140 -plus electricity.-. 3405 through Fan. See Mrs. Overtonbetween- v '.--"fervr -^"f45"3242 ^ciel rates. Rio House. 472-1238. 606 W.' Helms. 472-7049. -* "4:30 -6:30. The -Draught HOUSE. 4112 . fOrnlshed apartment; oneblock cannpus. AUDI--3—1972: 4jloor, air, 4-speed-327-0569. .345-2267 vi?17th at Rio Grande..' . Only $125 plus E t g-r Medical Parkway. $65 plusE.Llbiret,respons!bfe/472<0525, • *fter 5 pm V • 4~BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS."Furnished I Lovely shag,: full kitchen. CA/CH. DoiPs ble bed. Somewhat, secluded. No pets. -.LIBERAL PERSON.Ownbedroom, nice 1 bedroom, no lease required. $123 plus -PERSON -TO DR~lVE schpOi.type.taiS. 2 Pets -For. Sale 3805 Avenue-BI'. ' • -house. CR ihuitlfe. $53 plus 1400 1971 FORD-LTD wagon,. 9 passenger. : bllts;-472-5S15 after 5:30 p.m V., -• p^m.»; r-61 p.m. Monday r.-.-FrTdayi ' -t .;Air-condJt»oned, excellent condition.441-. : . . New and Used J "MOVE IN TODAYS " , Chaufferu-s license required. Appiy in.. Berkshire. John. 453-83$}. 4546 Father from Colorado, luxuriously -V $155 Xs* -SHARE 2 BDRM apartoiehfi JKWl. AC IRISH SETTERS*-AKO Champfon • 459-8564 unexpected vacancV,nifge one person. 517 South Lamar. coated, large boned.,QuaTIty trophy win­ Hang-Gltd^s"-^ Bedroom, furnished, nearxampui. 104 -70 DODGE VAN. AMlFMradio. Carpet ning mother. Pups selectively bred for Free instruction -^with East 32nd. Manager-apt. 103. 476'6-5940, HOLIDAY HOUSE NO. 3v needs part-' , dishwasher, carpet, 6 blocks from cam-' and paneled, new paint, good fires. 345*4555^ . time help to work 2 or 3 nights a week. pus. By shuttle. 472-1829.2520 Longview, rich coats, calm-'temperament. Shots, pUTthas^-'• • 1 Bedroom No 207. Carol, ". ¥ • \ $1350. 472-1497. .wormed, reg. papers, pedigree provld-. *• ARENA .Waif price food, scholarship program,, ed. Reasonably priced. 327-1875. ; 453-6209 Alt Bills Paid ATTRACTIVE'' 1 Bedroom < apartment.. paid vacation. Apply 2606 Guadalupe.V1968 MGC.-Runs & rooks good. 447'3382. 5®. Walk to Campus > , APARTMENTS Dishwasher, dispoialy caWe, near ci'm-ROOMMATE heeded. Two ^MALE • •gSWr'J M&B Shfer Cove AKC IRISH SETTER pups. Champion 4301'Guadalupe pus and shuttle. $138 plus electricity;! BEHAVIORAL WEIGHT CONTROL bedroom apar.tmenf furnished. -1, bloodlines^ MUST go 9 weeks. $50. 476­ Buckingham Square 7.J414 Arena Drive 1503 West 9th 475-8675 research staff needs derk-typists with SI65/month, two-ways't 617-B Franklin. AIR SHOCKS for '68-70 Pontlac, '69-TO^ ni w,32m) ,.-1i::i::.,;.2Bedroom*-From$2l0 • college work-study grant. Steve, 471-454-6201. 9034 r {4C« > Olds.430. BUI, 444-6864. ^ Furn -Ail Bills> Bos THREE 'ROOM Apartment close ln.for^i7H7> ' SOFA/CHAIR ^ 454-4489 :MALE • FREE rent until Nov. 1. Pool, nice couple. 442-7609 for appointment toV Persian Kittens. Smcke ' MUSTSELL 72GMC Van. V-8 standard CFA REG .Select various-sofas ichairs ?n hei>";v( Mgr. 442-4124 soi apartment * J sandblaster-pajnters • for • AC, shuttle, walk to campus, laundry. silver (Carmo Receulve) fenviles 9 $55/month. 4754631/ . Jvsa^ PosWtr^ct/ heavy-duty suspension & culons nylon. These sets, tiave elevated water storage tank work. 14­' |§|p* cobnng. Front body damage. 453-3205. . LIFETIME guarantee construction. $6/hour, based on experience. 444-4995 Listed retail $249.95 ... HURRYt Whlle-MOVE IN TODAY • '« BEAUTIFUL FURNtSHEefH0U*e..2&, weeks old. 477-1088. 447-8640 • & a .FOR-SALE AC* patio, fireplace, washer,-Enfield".'; t *^AoVA350.2barref, RairyWheeU^ sun . male chocolate point • they last,-$15^ * $159.50 HELP WANTED COCKTAIL SERVER Wanted * P m. 11 Siamese kitten; call 475-^#63. shuttle^ $100 plus. Studious-male grad ,W-kx,; excellent condition. 17,000 miles. $2700. AKC DOBERMAN puppies 7 weeks oid,' ; UN+T-ED MMw ALL BILLSPAID preferred. 475-8630. :• r ^ . roof/air, radio, Craig sfenMr'Automafi^ 1 BR -$155 Apply 517 s. Lamar. ' Call Danny. 8-5 JOy 836-5050 Evenings, shots, wormed, big end healthy. $100:.: , 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED -.••Ml-DDLE EARTHNeeds You! Helpyour, tSf 288-1978..' i : ;Shag, paneling,giant waik'lns. balconies . community, ben volunteer,come tor an $78>monfh CA/CH.TownlakeApts, 451c3913 FREIGHT FEMA*LE, own room, share bath. . interview this week. 7 • ? p m at Middle^ '66 VOLKSWAGEN SqUreback fn new - SALES "MARK XX ffv/RED Earth, 2330 Guadalupe* aboveiommerX. Riverside area 441-2493, Jayne. Kathy. ' FREE .MALE gray and white tabby EL MONTERREY kitten: Finemarkings, well-mannered.-8 " or rebuilt condition-throughout. Call for f 6535 NorthL^cnar • , 454-3953 . 452-5093 Drugs." ' J _ jJJ • fnlormatibn:: Gary, 454-9209 r.,i • weeks. 477-8972 • Monday-Friday 9-9* 3815 Guadalupe • '242iTdWn Lake CircSe ,LOBSTER, . . Sat.-9*6. • 444-8118 |. 472-4167 i CAN YOU babysit ocoasional' w,evenings for bne 8 year old? $5 WE NEED A HOUSEMATE for our fur­^MotorcyclesFor Sale Homes -For Sale ^RESTAURANT/:^v minimum Own transportation9 926*9321 nished Tarryfqwn . two-story. Private after 6pm bedroom, washer, dryer CA/CH OAK KNOLL SAVE WONE Y] Cali uf^before buylns BICYCLE TO UT, or ride shuttle bus.'2. j • Rent with, four, months option t-WILLOW/- Accepti/ig applications for Carpeted Two blocks frorln-UT shuttle ^'X'' mofO£cyci$ insurance. Lambert tn-bedroom old house being-remodeled, -to buy: -• tiight Kitchen personnel, even­$2,10. PER HOUR'-for 3 ; hours/wee*.-. Prefer-humanlflcs. graduatp. of other '^ v sur^nce Associates, . Inc. 4200 Medlcat Light housework/Muit have car. Call $1X500. 3 bedroom home, $19,950. Call -Week ' • ! . Montti " CREEK Close to downtown,, furnished or unfur-ing sealers, part-.time 327-1741 - serious UT student. 477-2719.*1704 ffarh-'1^ ParkWay. 452-2564* , : David or Rick/ 452-5626; 4594485, 454-': ,.mshed..l or 2 bedroom, large walk-ins. ford; • Biw TV $5.00 ' :v V-$15.00 bartenders. Full and -part-­ 7646 NOW LEASINGF,QR SEPT. } extra storage, private balconies, lots-of 1971 YAMAHA T75 Endoro. • Rebored,* Color TV $7.50 up ^fe^;-$20.00 up time,servers, Apply In person ONE OF AUSTIN'S finest clubs now Kir­ grass. Perfcct. for..the working student. just tuned up.,Many other features Sterecor Wrack $5.00 : ^.^.^IS.OO up • Ing, Salary plus commission, tips. For Dependable transportation. $325.: Larry, Refrigerator 4.9 cubic -feet ^ .-$10.00 • V BDRM . '2BDRM From sus pi^s E. 620 soultr 1st'. (Use between 2-4 p.m. Monday • fnfervlftw; call 453-^029.-451-4534. ? : 4tfibCf Creek cmrance.J 444-1269, 472­ 451-4231 evenings, nights.-'.'JWHVPAY WORLD OF STAINLESS RIGHTS ANO •$175 . Saturday. 109 West Anderson • SOUNDS $220 Lane. Equal• Opportunity NEED INSTRUCTOR in gymnasllcs. ROOM & BOARD 74: KAWASAKI, motorcycle 100.' New, RENT? .3094 Guadalupe ,476-2267, .Contact Pam Laufcr at Austin Recrea­ only 290-miles. Street legal. stMl under'. GWtvCandles-Posters-Giassware-'.! ^ BRAND NEW EFFICIENCIES Employer. M-F tion Center. 476*5667. . BEL.LSON.,|>ORM for^ Men. Excellent -warranty. $490. 282-0635. . -'Woultfn'f budding .equity, be better? 2. A Blackllg^ts-incense-Wali Plaques ALL BILLS PAID home cooked meals. Alr-condrtloned, Compact.:3-Br homes m North 'Austin »•>"* Austin's High Class Head Shop 'i"'% •fshwashtri.2.Large Pools ;FEMALE/MALE barleoder"cocMaM-mald,-swimmlng pool. 2610 Rio Grande­ *1700-Nueces 1971.TRIUMPH DA YTOMA 500, helmet, about 4 m'fies fromUT.-Eachunder $25.^ Open.Noon III Midnight Security . •••>•• ^ , --wallresi/waltcr, noon, cashier. Call for Call 476-4552 454-»87. .•' shop manual. Just tuned, excellent coo-000. Lee Phillips* Realtor. 472-3438; 454-iV' Clutiroom, Volleyball Co^rt: Aldose fa campos,-BeautifuMy turnisHed. G-RADUA1*E STUDENT'. appointment. 476 1344, 441-6382. • ditiorr, must see. Danny,-478-4766. Frank Steele, 345-2371, *""•i^^-'Vo'.'Aii-'wvtn"^.Ail-w^th bigtug balconies for your ptams. needed nlQht CROW'5.NEST. 2710 Nueces. Room and -yk-:;v/ 2054 -*.i.i plants. neeoea as nignr counselor afai residentialresiocnnai mUVt IN TODAY^'^^^' S1^ Summer plus electricity and.• facility for. vocationally oriented:young . BABYSlTTERfS):needed In our hbme board: singles $l42.50/monthi doubles «**'»'• l970TRIUMPHTrophy 500cc. TunedTi^' 1901 Wiltau/ froolr r?>»-deposii men^OndutyeveryofheynlghfAAonday• ; for ,2 small children. Shuttle'available; •$J17JO/month. "Rooms: singles only, • ' spected. New. chain, tires. Looks/and> Misc.-For Sole ,. CANOES I^wt yvjliow UreeK Manager .Apt 201 v -Friday, 5-00. -OApm. to 8 3 00 a m. (sleep 8:30 r 4:30 M^F. Take all or part; $1.25; $83/'month, air conditioning: 475-8242444-0010 ' . ' iia.CMB fim* annr/iY A hr«-) An»rtta»nt StbAF-o/f runs good, $750. Federlco, 477*4626.; . f'me aporox. S hrs;)1. Apartment (shared No housework. Non-smoker required. : -SAILBOATS "'I with two-other • male counselor*) and 477-9042, 4:30 -8:30. 1972 SUZUKI 185.-Excellent condition; CLEARANCE SALE board is furnished In ileU of salary. Call NIKON NIKORMAT-wftti50mmfl.4lens .V * and case, like-new. Rogers drums>iwv 478-7557. ~ y 25% miles. $500. 385-039$. . Dynasound snare, Zfldtao cymbals^^: Savings to $900 -:;$130 up WHY NOT A CO-OP? perfect condition. 477-8780. FURN. HOUSES 7V SUZUK1 90CC. 1«0 miles. 2helmets, ;SAILBOAT SHOP -1 BR Furn. 21st St^Coiiege House isa iargeco-ed co­-#n1ra-knfthh«»r rmi*i «*M Irpm^.il.t.' CERAMICS, YES! -Vases; pots.-bowis,\m... 1607 E.Riverside . • op with many social and educationalat* LAKE AUSTlN.'Qulet countrylfvlng, 45> >325. 926-2078. ^rTFMngersrEvceltentT^afismanshi^.-^?--^ 442-5900 londou Tangiewood , WANTED rolnutes campus/downtown/ One, two,. tlvities run by the members. New. * $25 Unicorn Gallery^ DobieMall 10-10« A > /^cn.and women. Bus driving positions . buildings; lots of trees. Ooubte occupan-' • "r" % ij—_^^irTrt-firriji 'j-jiWn_j , 476-0948 .V-? 1 BDRMHOUSE for rent on Wesrside of barbeque brill, $9v 385-8951 1 •S'* » SHUTTLE BUSCORNER triTv " tlon raises , . „ campus w/ih walkingdistance. $115. 4^3-. 5PORTCYCLES 6072.or come by 1106 West 22nd &ask for a.' Qiose toCampus COMPLETE HEATH STATION SB-101 • *>v trj 928-1(60 -Manager; Use jt:' 1 BR, 1 BA';>i|; "2 BR, ? BA j. transceivers power supply, speaker,' v LARGE TWO-5TORY. S btdrooln fur.,u, ' AN EQUALOPPORTUNfTY^ • ^ """-ePhomfc ohone patcfi, aM'mudK?© * ' * ,fished 4-plex. Hjrt'skyllaht, CA/CH.dlt-'i-^ I FMPLOYER -MEET NEW PEOPLEi^j-T '• hwasher,.disposal,, cable, shag-carpetMi -M2S-'^^'/«» )nore -• 2'BEDROOM/?.BAtm mobile home onv Lake Travl$i Quiet ptade fo-atudy.;FdrrA' •;Maie and Female openings In off«^' . 4117 Guadalupe i ,?• Shuttle nearby; 447-897S, 4;6»47i6. $200^r showing, call 266-1906 * 'ileampus yo-opi; Coed, all»male; all­ • • ; i.230t Mission Hill •. '45T'2340 " • ]® SPEED BERTt_N-23". man|s ^ramej Glassifieds t • . v • : tiiii • • . STATE ifemal*, or.vegetarian,houses. Member Excellent condition stSO 4S1-WK ONE o^n^d and o.perat^d,.inexpensive, Good condition, $80. YasWca Electro-X®^:: MOVE IN TODAY Cjy . BEDROOM,-full -iengfh wlh#ov^7^r PAA PLQVAAF 91 Best Rate on ttje Lake fenced . .. ^ .fo/table, interCo-Op Cduhcli,: 516 W Shuttle Bus Front Door .41ftf/Ave/G; Come by 206 E. 4Ht'or 453^;! 23rd St,, 476.1957. Wi 2400 Town Lake Circio 5el8. . ' I-ialf-TIME UNF. HOUSES 447 8340 .KEYPUNCH fURNISHED, V .bedroom,-Apt. No 10, 4202 BEECHMOOR, 3 bdrm. 2 ialh, 2505 Enfield, shuitle. iusbills paid,'$50' Carpel.-' drapes, Ifvlno room, (lining -NOW.L6ASING FOR SEPTEMBER deposit. 442 1112 i§i§;' room. Kitchen with gas stove; garage, 4 hrs. per day,-5-9 p.m:; 5 day week; 2-3 : .hu«e;.feneed y»rd:i »275/mo; , J7<.4042. t"'. A CO-OP? IQ^ERMOR ^WHYNQT^" mS-T SUNNYVALE 'J-only $125 plus electricity LiKe/iew ef-* "«}••* botween 7am -7pm $267/j»6r-Slst St. CollegeHousirlt tlargecoo'd co-' APTS., • FOR RENT •partially furnishedhou>r.2 oii wlthmattysoclal.andeducaHonal-acV-i^i !•&.&:walk' to iit 'iT«ii»s RehaWHI»tlon>Ciimmlssi( tlv ties NeW.ifeS . ... _ ;2S0J> nrnliiion br.. .Travl» -Hlv Naar shuttle-J1J5 : run. by .the members. Nueces. CA/CH, cirpolem, weekday,y, V. Summit i441 0584 'dievefilngj „ APARTMENTS AVAILABLE In ftrtair ' » .Shuttle at front door' . rss •BOTTERM complex near UT Law School and shut* *•* ^ tie.'Water,ga$;and.cabia-paid.s1l0and; • -f.. HELP WANTED ROOMS g« $125, one aduif.-no pets.;478-41l8r477. x PLAZA PLAil^TSl A,,L WOULD YOU BE INTERESTED IN TEXAN OORM, 1905 Nueces Doubles'iVVENTURAY IFREE APARTMENt. fotiGlrl-Friday. • s«0/semest«r Singles nlSrSemesler.'1'' Ultra-busy law Mudent needs someone -YHIS GRrEAT i:;; light secrefarii tura.14 2 Bdrm furn.Ajnfurn. From. i12?.-50~ptu* electricity v. • ..* Schplarship pays up to;$200.per semester; 3410 Bvrlesort Rd **• Barham Prop EFPWfS-WCV'" APARTMENT A. si00 wherr registered. MALE G R ADUATE -STUDENTl f!3tl:HAN'GtN'G BASKETS ^ Carpetlrjii/furniiiied. modern kltcben. ' entrance. 447*6571 926*9365 B S1C0 mid-semester rlvatflk cross, to shuttle »>25 plus bills 5210 CT Joe Sayers ,474 p72 steye '.Must:be eligible to-Twrk noons Must work 20 hrs. a week PEOPLEl Male and APARTMENTS Air colidlllOnlng, m wrcampui co-opii ®feft^[l^Ci$.-y/tlEELS. ' U.T: 4. WiM*recelve pay & scholarship * t V -c'i M blocks Iromcampus: 477-7558. main, allrtemaleior vegetarian SN# j5i Good^at any:Unlverslt' lege in Austin area. " ^ ' •sltv or Cofl 6-KsngfuPrnffi0/h^,US '00d drsCOUrit'pa,ld vaCaHon'& un ^ '..f VVI1-.'.• J ir_ i r ( '*»•: . SAN GABRIEL, d. Apt <03 47^-^ Ca™re7Ss c„„: _-Waik fo campu^ Nearly new lbdrm ef-. Open.Somepreducflonwork.open; 20a:wt!elc;.: . -• I.lclency, fuUsize klUhenand bath,maid, apartmentsparking,tqulef. if3p:pfus>f6c; Appoint­ •^1900 Barton Springs Roach ment -4^3-3235 "T"^ f0­ *• %*@? i,\*-V»* ^OT­ ' iS ' ~i /J .vx -'* GuadalbpB ; , il— Jhh GINNY'S . -• -~ ...; COPYING' ~ty\pMbx SERVICE 1?: Gateway Problems Under investigation ; MBA, INC:f: ' •. .Typ»ng,.-MunHithing-. binding v. BySONDRA STALCUP "Since the problems-have-been obvious for the past 19 ­The-Complete Professional • Texan Staff Writer months, how can University officials and agencies possibly not The number of people using Airport ; Blvd.", 'past the FULL-TIME-Typing ^42 Dobie MaJI . 476-9171 The ta4".force iavestjgating theGateway eomplexof-married -have produced solutiansalready-?-The.reiidenlsJiave.con\ U' Food Service, and wear.e.optimistic they will react quickly and fr6m 7 a.m. i<> fta'.fii; with"the"; with or without pictures,': 9 A.m. -5 p.lrt. Sot; wi J-' '" nearly two years, as well as.seek an explanation for them, Stu­ gradually increa'sing, Maiy conscientiously, but why has there been only 'student' initiative return trips from* 4 to 6 p m. If£>ay Se-iMcW£476-9093 Kiltl-Previous efforts to solve the problems, addressed a press This left a host of problems — soil, washing, flopding, un&fe said Tuesday. ' • " way,'with rates redaced-to 15fyptng^­ . |can Twenty-seven percent more cents during the ofi hours of 9 CHRISTENSON & printing .. Marsha Wmgrave, taskJorce member and Gateway resident, Ja3jp.n1;;;binding fWrgSSfifi rnnnprn 'ahnnt the ha^nT-Hc • • ­ 1 • i iw i ft v V i ,i iuoa ticiilacly regarding: eniiaren s .haieLy, •''Hut-Inlly, ufiS^ucu--make stops at thefollowing.in- At * T Y P I MG 420 w. riverside drive grounds make retaining walls necessary; and some of the walls , tersections: 23rtj Street and -SERVICE _rc have 10-foot drop-offs, she said. hours and continued high gas" /GAY RAP . Brock said the costs to. the University"wilfclifrib the lohg^rv 'lian Jacinto ' ( Specializing in '•?. •Wingravehas a2-year-old.son,andshe sa]d although children Oline tpnc'es were possible these problems-remain unsolved. He said the task force will do;: . Street.and San Jacinto; lljth • -.. Theses and dissertations -r _ GROUP are watched, they could rug alongtheplayground, go overa hill-- causes.of .the increase. .. M'; all-it can to relieve the personal burden of Gateway-residents ;.Street and San Jacinto;-8th ;discussing gay -life 5 . <, — Law Briefs • s-< -rand fall-oyer-a-walU She said-there_haygj>een several "near .and -the financial burden on the Umversity The north route of the Parjc Street ^ind Congress:Avenue^Qftw Term papers and reports Every Priday-:NighffM . misses", that' ?ould have resulted m serious injury,"and ffieFe and Ride program 'runs from :11th and Lavaca Streets: and •. Service • • • 7:30'p.m> >" ;' .are many scraped knees; ; ' .the .Fox Twin...Theater^-6757 45th and Congr-ess •--Prompt, Professional -« Fletninrsaid the investigative.effort is to find out "why tte , UNIVERSITY YMCA / ' » Gateway project was allowed-to become the construction 453-8101 • • . •• • ion the .Qcagj The iask foree-tdentifted the" resfdents' -foremost priorities: catastrophe that itris,-.andrwhy.University officials Were unable Plek-op Service Available . Sponsored ijy Oaypeople of*Austin. tW -• Installation or modification of existing safety features in: More information* cat! <74-3007• to deal immediately with the resulting problems that have im­ 3102 Glenvlew and around children's J>lay areas. .. all femate sbowgroup. Must haveeoulp* : TYPINO Reports, Resumes if Alt University ^nd . Healtb.0,500. Natural home births. Nor* K Last-Minute Service-ping Springs, 78620 SERVICE CAR REPAIR. Dolt yourself or we'll do 472-8936' 30A Dobie Center Theies, Letters .. . buslness-worK. .Open 9-9 Mon-Th ft, •• 9 5frl-$at MRS. BODOUR'S TYPING SERVICE.Reports, theses; dissertations end books*yp»" iKTCTirrrrfyg «"»•Printing end binding.on request. CttSFin;478-lm. • . ABORTION ALTERNATIVES! Preg­nant and distressed? Hetp is as near as , your telephone. Pra-Llfe Advocates. 510 . West 261h, 472-4198. v -.MIDWIFE.. Registered/ Austin Oept. man Casserfey,: Agarlta Ranch,. Drip­.it. Mechanical; electrical, air-:.conditioning, body -work. Carvrell. 205.' East Riverside. 444-2403. UNIVERSITY FLYING Cfut>. Fly with us and Save. Meeting: Sep^ lh 7:30 v p.m.. BEB 166. Non-pilots are welcome. DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, andt/fr" «i#f lulv-^Experlenced typist,./arry.town, 2S07NBr(die Path. Lorraine-Brady. 472*4715 llOLLEYj'S -TfcPIWG S€RViCE. A : Complete Service: typing, prinfingj bin­. ding,'Experienced-(n -afl.fields. Near campus. 1401 Mohte Drive. 476<30tt: -LICENSEp-CHiUD. CARE In«our homefor.2-3 year olds;Small group, persona),'hot nutritious meals. Convenient to UT­. 208 Franklyn.*54-7375. _ GUITAR (NSTRUCTION. t-earn-ftngerpicking techniave* of Mance Lipscomb,Leo Kottke^ and Kurt Van Sickle: Begin­. ning -Advanced. 444-8718.. -v,v-'. * • .... • Landscaping the grounds. . -_ , Bill Brock, Student; Government administrative assistant, head of the task force and also a Gateway resident, s&id the in­vestigative effort is to discover how Gateway ever.got into'the condition it is in-and why the^corrective process-has been sa slow. • •. • •. •. • • . • . • He said the inadequate construction by a now bankrupt com­pafly and total lack of foresight in planning do not characterize the usual University System jqUality. ' -. •-. '"™lf_Yoo~Need-H'elp­---OT "Just Someone Who Will listen Tefephone. 476-7073 At Any Time , Thq Telephone Counseling ond Referroi Service • posed upon,.the residents for such a long time; . "Gateway residents,.and indeed many-UTofficials, have been kept in the dark too long with regard to.the catastrophe of-Gateway," he said. SPECIAt $000 DISCOUNT On Natural Hair Designs For -Both Sexes With This Ad Only ' -'CALL ' $21OO Guadalupe N^xf.lo. Luigi'i p_^;476-5905i Open TO-7 M-F 1J-7 Saf Back to School Sale 10-50% Off All Bolts Hundreds of, cotton prints, outlandish Hawaiian pnnts. Indian gauze, jars&ys-single knits, yarns, tvsfe ..r • ..... FRANCES WOODS TYPINGSERVICE^ . Experienced. Law/ Theses, DJsser­'. tations. Manuscripts. 453-4090. ; ' ' LOST & FOUND Rivas of Texas Wooden nicke) or no wooden nickel ' -Come for a. free ( MINNIE L. HAMMETT Typing iDuplicating Service^ Theses, disser­tations, papert-of «ti Kinds, resumeSiFree/refreshments. 442*7008. 442-161 SoBBVE DBLAFIELD. IBM Selectrlc,plca/etitfr, 25 years-experience,-books,dissertations, theses; reports, .rrUmeograph{n3,442-?JM. LOST ENGLISH SETTER puppy. Whitewith brown spots* one b'rown ear Tenweeks old Answers to Mike 477-'30HReward. LOST .WABASH COLLEGE class ring(1973). Was lost In-Athletic Field behindJesfer'Ceoter. Reward. 471^2674.. ^ atistfnl inoniessori school Donna Pesoii, Director Su[)cri iscd by Associated SfatitesJiori Internationale FOR APPOINTMENTS 474-2666 . 3004 Guadalupe BONUS 10% DISCOUNT ON ALL R K PRODUCTS J HOWDY PARTY DINNER m ..VIRGINIA SCHNEtOER Diversified Services. Graduate and undergraduate.'yp'ng, printing, binding. 1515 KoenigLane. 459-7205, r STARK TYPtfSlG. Specialty: Technical." Experienced theses,dissertations, PR's,manuscripts,, etc. Printing* binding.• Chariene Stferkj, 453-5219. MINNIE L. HAMMETT Typing &pupticafing/Service. Theses, oisser-1 tattflinc^ijaperrnof-etlTWndsr-resumes,free refreshments. 442-7008, 441-68)4. ' LOST, sliver braceleteasf'side of cam* • pus, PJease cair Diane. 477-003V;: LOST .DURING 1.0 Process Friday:-,wtyte gold ladles' Bvlava watch. Blackband. Teardrop shape. REWARD. 452­• •' • " "• /' I..'.':"-. ; .LOST BROWN LEATHER Purse on IFshutti^. Substantial reward. Please call ' . Darla. 472-6731. No questions asked: Pre-^School & Elementary Levels Ages 2^-6, 5-7, 7-10 North 4108 Ave. . . South 400 W. Alpine. ^ • '. ., 2904.Jonet Road 4#-442-3152 CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION GREGG HOUSE WEDNESDAYS, ,,TYPIN>j^»''Carbqn iflA^-»?iw>­trlc.,50 tenfva page. Call 454<723/v TYPING-WANTED In my home on ' weekends; Lovv feel, ff interested, cad WANTED PIANIST AND GUITARIST wanted for MONEY "5:30 S> Thurs.-, Sept. 12 6:30 p.m. -Baptist Student Center 2204 San-Antonio ' Vlckl^282.-0359;, .. ' .' r illing •menf-and be willing to travel weekends. TYPING. IN MY HOME. Fast and ef- After 6 p.m.., 451-8574 fjtlent; Call Cerlene. 447.2370; WORK WANTED. Available all Oay W. 27th MWF, and 8-12:00 Class TTH.926-2600. 9­ J.ust. North of 27th & 10 a.m. M-F.. Bargains on. Unredeemed Merchandise Join THE GuadSlupe AT -JS MUSICAL PERSON to score my.songs,<•' Loans on Most Anything of Value Johh. 453-2217 UNIVERSITY •• We Buy and Sell ,'PERSONSNEEDEOtoreadfor visually ;fa impaired student. *2.00 hour. 459-5525. 477-6839 $ Call late afferr>oonv only.. . OKFO^.A CHANGE" °Z YES, we do type -^Freshman thencies.. JOB WANTED SNOOPERS PAWN SHOP -~ Whynotstartout with, PEOPLE DRUMMER B^CK from NYC. Wanls . 476-2207 •"* The Jewish Frankenstein good grades! . > ^ gl^ with playing band. Can begin at A once. 447-8266. •fyc'f .t-•*? % -Returns To The Screen... -Join the University 472-3210 and 472-7677 . .2707 HemphMi .Park • -. x Young Democrats MISCELLANEOUS TUTORING 4 4 The »... Membership Booths at |West,Mall 21st & Speedway 24th Whitis NELSON'S GIFTS:-: Zun? Indian • "VIOLIN; VIOLA. Fiddle letsons. Near Sponsored by UT ) aun% Dpnwcrals • -r. • jewelry; African and Mexican Imports. shuttle and city bus, Call Carol^venlngs>^461**South Cqngreis. 444-38t4. Closed after 9/7/74. y r*Aondays. . -• • • • ;' iiT*advanc^d. Drew Thomason. 478-^79. -7 r-1-EARN TO PLAY Guitar. Beginner and' MOVING? My plckup can make the go­ in^ajot easier.Tom's Do-RiteTrucking, UNCLASSIFIED i • I / 5 * V REDWOOD FL&WER BOXES,-Great. Ideas and Issues Committee OW-TTTrr2 . for apartment gardens; flowerbeds-Venture Catamaran. H5.' WITH -4^S inexpensive.'476-4246. . Sony t366 reel tape deck 474-2858, ^ -F BETTY THOMPSON . DIRECTOR OF WOMEN'SINTERCOLLEGIATE ATHIETICSijJr Photo Service . " JS. f" L*' ^ ' AND THE . Siotf, 5"J« 222 W. 19th & , 5324 Cameron Rd. Food's • WOMEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETIC . S»»Ur*,^Rocv \4nti L- Nikkormat FTN chrome •• " ^ r-. f'CQACHK -, ­50 mm f/2lens , -J-^ ^ ^ jh FOR-™"-' Xnt^*r llakb, -X. S, Great MICROWAVE OVENS, dorm-site at .BASKETBALL, GOLF, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING -* refrigerator Si color ^TV's, Belf)Howell FD 3S*f/1.8 washers/dryers, stereos for rent EZ' TENNIS, VOLLEYBALL, TRACK & FIELD ConA3®9 Q^^pe-TKS&O -Remaps;-408-Ea*f 1st. 472-6275 The Rusty Nail compare toCanon TLB withcase ?$1791 FOR MORE INFO., CALL 471-1183 SPONSORED BY THE A ju ji» . UT STUDENT GOVERNMENT WOMEN'S AFFAIRS COMMITTEE Spotmatic F 55mm f/i:8 .. $27395 , * * * X- • * * Mamiya/Sekor D"XS 1000 ': • -. * ' J^ ..$17995 If it is a labcoat that you have! r? & ^ * -V •<:. .. --r -'• -s RUGBYi J, /_>—» •* ^ U u£dSUPPLY! w Austin Huns Rugby.Club * been looking for...' m UM mm :4£^. I',!'1 (. V­ lillir Announces * " , |-B • • -;•? ft .r> * Fall Practice -6:30p.m., Toes. &fhurs. * then your search is overC AMrX * Intramural Field • Everyone Welcome £ * EARN CASH WEEKLY J 476-2Q12 or 472-8763 for information J Blood Plasma Donors Needed \i Somewhere ovferthe rainbow and any other place that you have been to lind-a . •®WSM®n & W6men'• Pi 4 labcoat can be eliminated from your mind. Because now you can get them at Wr the University Co^Op in the Supplies Dept. These machine washable, wrinkle EARN $10 WEEKLY' ~-lnenc P®rraanent press labcoats come in sizes S, M, L for the small cost of CASH.PAYMENT FOR DONATION Guitar Sale & &. ao come on by and get your labcodt... it is the latestin tn" — -,t <~r~~ . " "siT— • "H-.iiirW- Save 10% On •-i Austin i V i tee® ^ kll Vamcihcl BloWcl Components, Inci rj University Co-Op j?PEN: MON.&THURS. 8 AM to 7P.M. > M #6 |^;2246 Guadalupe ri:^-T0ES-& FRI SA.M. to 2 P.M. AMSTER MUSICfef; 1S2,4 IAVACA mm SilFSfc, ^ §g$ff^ttSED WED. & SAT. ***** 478-733lfiii#if^ I 477r37fi" Supplies Dept./f mr1 free' parking with « purchase or more Street floor I V^BankAmericarji and MasterCharge Welcomed u­ pstet^%^|te^MWednesdayr September l'1, 1974 THE DAILY'TEXAN Page>:l5 M ^HS6tS55366StiSSm^S \mms V.$PSjP|iJj~ V.} f fyS— r -v i 1: ,r Seminar Shied Austin i I I i r i -« ---• • Wisser Backs City Law j In Physics Field % Suffers Noise Pollution . A semester-long series of nuclear physics, relativity,-,* BV'ANK COtWEU, The ceusorhsip la\v_ or . as long asit is I have to di> my: informal seminars designed t'o .plasma, solid' state, atomic-, By DONAti> JANSKY v -the. report as: trains,, mo.torcyeles, trucks;" ' ' " Texan Staff Writer ~ 'current ctmteinpeaty • com-, -onent new graduate physics and molecular physics,-Results oi an ?3.000. six-monthnoise po!l.i;^', boath, buses, dogs, places of entertainment • "As pjrt of the annual Union mumtv standard • is derived • v • Concerning obscenity, -st«dents^ta~theLjac«.itji^andtKstatistical mechanics, and tion study show "Austin is near the threshold • and s>l.eaa\ venting from power plants. • i.'i ;• , 'Week; Asst Dist Atty John from this Supreme Court Wisser.said, " My beliefs are irograms of the physics geophysics*."* 'T ; vv»•••• •*.­ • ®f-serious-rioise.-'dofiiadatiDn>'i;._Wijiianj K\ Factors involved in preparing the report ;";v'. _ Wisser led a discusstett Tues-definition •\somewhat mixed on it." lepartment began this.week Connor, director of Tracor's Acoustical and "• ,Came fr6m~a-suVveyrof localrcittzen^groups^i^ •^j'iisday on the statusof censorhip Because -community start-!> Police ;who-enforce cen­• The seminars, sponsored bv .Social Sciences Department, said Tuesday.. • and city officials.,a-review of current trends • '•: .wfe v of ©bscemtv in Ausun At the darch varv:\vit!ieach case and • sorship laws, asualiy • assess the University Society of Dance^t; Z Conner added if corrective action is not" in noise.control legislationandfeedbackfrom sandwich -jjennnar in the each jury* Wisser said itis dif-the degree of. obscenity. After • Physics Students,-also are soon, threshold may be. passed, s '•begun the . ­ noise monitoring devices setup at-31 selected v. :ggng^TP5rt::Cfg5t^ - t-iwtheu'.ijhs»r'vfltrfrn and conclu .designed to help' students , Popularity few years " •sss : within a • sites'throughout the city. • termed the_Qbscenity law the current contemporary eom^ sion: They report "to A T"Jty ^^e~liUe„oL..Uie_i^:o-vol»rne, 232-pagc.-. Both ji noise^ordinance and enforeeitfent -' • current contemporary c<3m-mum(v standard is --judge who considers their dis-they will Specialize in and to f*»l*0\A/1jffi report. resultm'^jfiWfTWsK^epREa^vy^ '1 TrT-• 11u !r niumtj siamiaxil / " "~ acquaint them.with areas'of b> Tracor Inc ,is "Noise to Austin^.T.exns.y.'.^ the primary, noise^ou'rces are recompiended ­ • Wisser. & Termer L'mversitx ci>§es are on file m Austrn But charge, physics' ^ '--.-j .tn fity rpiincit by the Tracor studv student and prosecuting ai-Wisser said censorship The faculty-conducted well m AustitE ..' Because obscenity cases are. "sometime in tM near future..'..Mike-tia— :tne-.TJSDtTiTt'-rnt.-Sg.'-' jiiu tomey for two years, said prosecution in Austinhas been seminars' svilj meet, every . About 15 clu^' afe,.dancing rmsdemeanorsrVt isser said if mann," adm'inistrative assistant to the city primary sources, road traffic aiid'.afrcraft,'' there • are„manv bad . con--• limited. In more than 500 other week' from 2 to 3 p.m. in Austin. ^Ttitfriras Lodwiek, manager, said Tuesday. — -• .p'olice a"ct-. as lower •Connor^•:ie*p1ajns,.-.-"t,annat-"be^aishieved in ^novations _qf censorship and cases, he has prosecuted only -Monday..Wednesday and Fri-publicity chairperson iuifor uicthe i.twiiuw>,.M vv«*..3uaj (uiu *4i magistrate's to'check up anoMics Bulldoig at 5 P/rr»..wedn>Kl^7f!rUn«on at: 7.30 . v -Bwrld^5 Wfo^Jeet crfticer^-aftdd^---. 6uHdin$ -)00 for lectures on receive Ijocial Securitv.checKs ; "..JS5 and p.rrc-m Geoto9v • because a parent draws dis­ • • --cuss -ihe'-fcrogram for . .transcenoentai meaitatlan. by ability or. retirement benefits . setaest*c. ^ R6bert E.Lee. sochety res'C^ai coc»­ Day of Solidarity NlWMAN OUI wlH rrveel at .« dina.wc-"'•>>.' or has died -should report Wednesday »n the batement t?' the WNivfRary rtinc aUB wi« meet at 7:30 : , changes in their earnings, Catnoi.r Sttjdent Center. ,, o.-m, Wednesday f'« • Buslftesi*-with Chilean People 3IV06WT^«NATE Wfri meet at 6:» p-ro.; •HGorwnlcs Butidiog to discuss haircltti^t; for school enrollment andmarital < Wednesday in Kj'nsplwtngDormitory * tiyJng.' fnghf'traJnireg'"arid how'to status to Social Security, Ed • • Studs'.-Lounge to d»«vsA corvn-ttee' • • team to ffy sateW a? reduced Cos* MEN. AND WOMEN . feports and a retreat. --•D'emonstratian at noon. . M,. Bowers. Austin Social UNIVftSITY OF TEX45 SAllWG CLUS will BY APPOINTMENT STUDENTS (NTrtNATIONAl 'MEDIATION ' .-. meet:ar 7 J5 Wednesday~l?« Security, district manager,, SOClFir meet at 3 p.rn.. Wedne*-' Federal Bldg. (300 E. 8th) -^ Academic Center 31 said Tuesday The. law requires, payments Chilean Fiim< (Campdmento) ScarletAngel Kfetlfe sloppedif a.student receiv­ and Discussion Harmonica Sale - *'ing checks" should, marry, BARBERING COMPANY leave School or start attending ^ Unian 325, 3:00 p.m. ' • -'.'Snn a jariL-time basis.-. ...•: on 3404GUADALUPE Also, if a student has ear­ Austin Women's Center , (23T6 Sbn' Uobnel) aT 8:00 p.m. nings in 1974 of over $2,400. he 433=96ZT_ All Hohrier Harmonicas-­ . should.inform Social Security. -Sponsored by LAPAG Othenv.ise benefits may have to be repaid later Amster Music 1624 Lavaca For more information -1-: -students should call 397-5771. ANNOUKdMBJTS 478- ART SALE CJUtEER CHOICE MFOIMAtlOKGMTO Will sponsor., a-program;ar S p.m. . Wednetday inExperimental Science ^ 115 for medical and dental. ichocf ap*rt«canfsr: eAt^ited "Inff/--. . ' v>ews, cr How To Persotre Un- Gome see whaft new GRAND OPENING SALE —r-noticeaWy:'-^ ' :.'• •• M£fTlN05 . • Todgy thnTWednesdtiy, September J 8 ANGR.FUQHt wriil meef-at 7 p.rrj;vYednev atyour BurgerChef­ .day-ifl Rusk'* A. Sietodarr* Hall. Serving free soft drinks and Indian Chew.aclg Exec Jti.5ja.rrv.in the ArnoJd Air.icci^fy bfftcc:. ^ . T. CAHTBMWY J^SWAtlOH WIH-meef 4t •: 5:38 p.rh. Wednesday in tW"Chapei .* • . of the Holy Spirit. 27th Street-and bfttverxity Avenue, for a sftort ser- GAKDHI EMPORIUM „ ' ...v»ce. njear-arej"meeting: v- CMVCANO ftBAW StUOfKTS ^itVVveel 0# I mporter-retailer-wholesaler from I'ndia and Asia 7:30 ,p:m. Wednesday. in'Union • . Binldfos 354 to.crgamze-' Latest shipments of ' ?'f ,"1V. Students'* CLOTHES, JEWELRY AND GIFT ITE'Ms " ' Attorney n^n-fn 7-H^nw^ -307 West 19th ' .The students' attorneys, Frank* .Open 10-7 dailyr Austin, Texar7870T Ivy ahd Ann . Bower, are Fix your own burger the way you Closed Sunday? . ovoilable by appointment from: Eke H zt ournew Works Bar. '476-6616 8 ,a.m. to Sl p.rp. Monday fFOKSIXWTOBUtLD !M|{ lo Wjotr, 7 61; ^ •through Friday in Speech y T—- Hnnol «M T THEIR OWN BURSEFiS , vrMi •Building,. Room S. Telephone J*rOUR V/OfiKS8ARJEFF! j . • 47,1-7142. .The-students' at­ mHurjcptViftf .fktf y ,-ANDHECP torneys will handle landlord­ 'THEMSELVES AT?' ,•: il./V-vfmhtAAnkr vrxir.;••' " • tenant, consumer protection, J.wjrsw.* mjily t»> »i-A t "'••••' • employes' righre, taxation and SALAD tSAR!^ IVi'P"f IK'Hwn' w.yoyi-. S^tV Over 50 different works Monday yoci»ylf, Yw'JI from Da Vinci to Picasso is -...ff»r rtlfforcoiid vhq •jritnt* OSI Monday • 6912 BUnMET RO '2700 S.'LAMAR'The Rusty Nail .1 • 8010-HWY. 183-N • • 923 E. 41 at GUnicornVuP'Gallery" Therrt moretolike atBurgerChef. liand floor • ALTERATIONS ' We re:, pbyv-doing OUTSrb E alterations at COME TO mm Easy prices. -4 ''I CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP BOB ELLIOTT'S s-rV 2426 GUADALUPE TRANSCENDENTAL THURSDAYS 7:00 P.M., UNION 300 . { UNIV. FLYING CLUB] -5„.v FLY WITH US . MEDITATION Bausch and -f'Snri-JrV1 J t'' $ove. Meeting . • « Vved., Sept.11 : j ^ ?.s \au?ht*>y Wqhan'shi Mahesh Yogi j 7:30 p.m., B$B 166 J J Complete flight training i 5' BEER % *•; kS-r ANNIVERSARY CUSTOMER INEXPENSIVE LJfl * H {St£r- LUXURY APARTMENT APPRECIATION PARTY Larg« andcomlortableone iwdrcom apt>." from:it*•?•/-fwmi Vhod, Convenient location on snuJHe -but, w}lhln b»Ktt\g distance, ot campus. Soft contact lensr Beiide-UT tennis cpurt>, intramuraJ fteldi. Two pooli. bart>«jue pits, /aurtdry .room ar,d ^cvrteov* ^^9 prof«*»onst management. including sterilizer Cousins., CATFISH ASPENWOOD " ~ APARTMENTS SPECIAL FREE 7 * i PARLOUR will be a & 4539 Guadalupe < year older Thttfsday, INTRODUCTORY LECTURES "V T-iCT. | mM 452-4447 ­ "Sept. 12/To show our >?! wi®l: "v appreciation to you, our WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 11 customers, we,111 serve';...^ RESEARCH your first beer for a &£ Thousands of Topics *w 12:00 p.m. Geology,227 nickel with your dinner. $2.75 per page 3:00 p.m. BEB 155 Send far your up-to-date/160-page, mil order catalog.,' Enclose $1.0Q 7*,30 p.m. Geology 100 to cover :postage MeUwrf.:time is 1 ""Ho 2 days). • ^ >tMh •+%< Ul94t RESEARCH WfbSHlHEBtVD, ASSISTANCE, SUITE INC.*2 1 ^^>3 -Forme., 3330 M Students International 19 LOS ANGEIES, CA11F. 90025. enTPisHram-OUR (213) 477-8474^ 477-5493 Me|fitattDn Society &<• call 477-4763 ^7305 Burnet Roai Ourmwrch m»teri»l Is Mid lit 3.W JtuirctuttltUfltt-Bnlt. 11910 Research Blvd. 4Vi miles West of Burnet Rd. on Hwyk 183. 258-1853. TEXAN r 'J -y> '•i? > •; J r L. -•" ­