r iga,UQ j • ;• •;/-./-.yjT .­ ft vT* *•f Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin £•* * - * Vol. 74, No. 59 Please Recycle This Newspaper Austin, Texas, Friday, September 20, 1974 Ten Cgrtts Twenty-Four Pages 471-4591 To HearkCounciI M By KEN Mt'HAM 1jle S0CLaL ^q flfh • Texan Staff Writer more. The . mayor's staff; is, -disappointed'''^ at this response. "I work and' emergency roomThe 1974-75 city budget-and property swamped now and won't be able to haii--thought the principle Was to get a salary Brack&nridge.Hospital.tax werecut by nearly $4 million by City > dle the load." -. for future councils so all people would Moving through a list of $^.650,000 in' By RICHARD FLY Council" Thursday, climaxed .by a $ur-" Binder called the move the "falsest of have ths ability to ser^e,!' he said. " grarit; requests from community agen-_ _.v;, v Texan Stall Writer .prise move that led two councilmen to v-false economies,", saying the aide The council voted to place.thcTsalary ' cies', th,e council approved $788,588 for Arecommendation winTMpreserited totheBoafd gff Regents-Friday that .— -i-vote^ against the. final budget/and con-_-program. is_"the Only way we can serve -question on the April council election social services. . ' • • 1 • •• •--'-'"I ... the Texas Union fee be raised by not mpre thSn $3 tSiinarite a $2.2million­ dernh the entire budget-cutting process the peo^e..It Truins me," Birideirsaid—Fallot —» _ _ Child. Inc., a child care program for '•^bond issue to meet cost overruns encountered in an extensive remodeling Trimmed from the budget at the last ' "There's no way!can operate. Without Friedman and Binder voted against ~ ""low income la miiie"srree?lved*a-$225s000—t ". and renovation project. / -: '• minute, wereadministrative aides toCity pay and.without, aides,-we can't do-our the.final budget beca.use of the elimiria-__ allocation on .a motioifchy Friedmjan.'The ' Unionfees currentlyare $5 per semesterand>ifl not beincreased beyond ; Council: members. Councilmen...Boblff -jobs"-" • tion of the aides: "S-Binder said motion narrowly carried, with Fried­ ' $8. The'iasl fee^nerea!^was4n l966,;^W: -i-Blnder.Jeff Friedman andBeriHandqox' Earlyln th^n»^tIng,-®nderplrBp^^-'-'r1%l5-4'Bj^rid(^5^f0r;ifnfe^!^iro«^ rKari. Drydeti. Handcox arift 'Binder' ­ THE RECONSTRUCTION project wasinitially estimated at $3:5 million; and compromising is voting for; Letermann, Butler and Lovebut the total cost rtow will-come closer to $5,-7 million. . >,_J meaningless when they can just cripple . voting against. In a called joint meeting of the Union Board of Directors and the Union our effectiveness without any notice." • MANY.-AGENCIES received 'muchBuilding AdvisoryCommittee Thursday liighV, board memberschose the fee TIIE COUNCIL had; earlier-rejected . Friedman, Butler, Leberniann arid' Council'trimmed $3,737,466 from the • less than .their requests-and there were •; . increase as the frost viable alternaltive 'of the four considered. two proposals for $1,000 per month pay Dryden voting against. -. :• proposed $163.4 million budget, allowing many complete casualties including the OTHER ALTERNATIVES included leaving the Union Building as isand — •j * , for council members One paying • Friedman then proposed the. same ^a property tax reductiOp ort cents from South Austin Community Clinic. : — abartdoning'the-project; making cost.ditsJn the. project pjansjg come . current councilmen, the other deferring salary .scale beginning May 15. 1975 -^ y the current $1.27 per $i00-value. "The --Cerebrah-Palsy,™Community. Develop-— •us within the $3.5 million appropriated by theregents; and seeking Permanent -. payment until a new council takes office' after the present couhcil is out of 'office. council;also raised from $3,000 to $5,000 ment Corporation.Child and Family Ser­ University'Fund money to supplement the'current appropriation; ' • ­in May.-*--• •• -The motion djed'iof.Jack'.of second. -. the property tax exemption fpr persons' vices. Meals on -Wheels-; ConsumerThe "do nothing" and Pprmanpnt Fund nlterriatives were rejected as im-. Binder, Love and Handcox, who voted ; over 65.' Counseling. West Austin Neighborhoodv possible', and board members felt "wringing out" the building -plans to cut ." T-" (Related Storiei, Center, Austin Women's Theater and ? qosts would leave.the fihal pfoduct with few of the planned improvements. same for" no™sdpport of °Fried:reason several departments,, however, braneh "Auhtin Cummuhn.y*TV. '. •Cuts to city-departmentswere basical? .THE BOARD recommendation-mu$t-move through 'sth/eral 'executive mail's salary proposal: they "were,only public libraries! iand public recreation Middle Earth received only $5,500 of levels before it can besubmitted bythe regentalGommittee on Building and ly "austerity reductions." although interested lh pay for thls council."' centers were' closed one additional day its requested $12,401. Middle Earth coor-G r o u n d s F r i d a y m o r n i n g . . . . ' ' . . ' ' operation of . branch public libraries, "TO DATE it forthefuture is no com­per week. Nightbus service was reduced1 dihator Sue Doty said -the reducedBuilding Advisory Committee co-chairpersons Shirley Bird Perry, Union. recreation centers, medical servicesand promise;". Binder said.."it's an outright by one hour. .-. .amount would make the drug rehabilita-"director, and Frank Fleming, student body president, have meffpr thelast night bus service:were significantly cur-Si loss. The issue"was pay for-this"council." A;prenatal medical care program was tion center unable to support itself. two days with System Office of Facilities ^Planning and Construction;of--.taikd_..-: V : 'v " ficials; the project architect and regent BuildirigCqrttmitteeChairperson Allocations to the Chamber of Frank C. Erwin to evaluate the bids and determine alternatives available in Commerce for economic, tourist and Natural Gets dealing with the project. -. : ... -;; convention development.prOgrams were • Fleming emphasized the Union Board will look back over tlie remodeling maintained at current levels. plans to sec where cost cuts can be made; without changing the essential Grants to social service organizations project features. • -: were significantly reduced £rom With the blanket cost deletions, which would total approximately $1:5 amounts requested by. community agen­,.jBy DAVID HENDRICKS of Lo-Vaca .Gathering Co., which*has million, Fleming said:h^ does,not think, "we'd.have the building we started cies, with many programs cut entirely .< Texan Staff Writer , long-term contracts tO provide natural.';' out to have. • V' . • from -the budget. Staling that.it will make him some gas to, among many Other cities in Cen-. "In trying to cut the project back to $2.9-million, we totally change the . Friedman said the. council's-actions enemies to say so, Oscar Wyatt. trai and South Texas, Austin, San An­project;">|he added. ' . ' created "the most disastrous day in the chairperson of the board of Coastal • tonio and the Lower Colorado River AFTER. DISCUSSION with.a System investment official, it \vas deter-recent history Of Atistin." • ' States GasProducing Co.^ told the Texas Authority (LCRA*). Lo-Vaca, hpwever, ' mined that the most marketable bonds would have a service period of 25 : THE;SURPRISE move of the session' House Energy Crisis Committee Thurs­has not been able to provide the con- years at an interest rat? of approximately 8 percent.' "C'ame from Mayor.Pro-Tem Dan Love, day he favors a public utilities commis-. s tracted amount of gas to the three -An additional $118,000 would be required to service each-$1 million in who has led the council's budget-cutting sion tcr regulate natural gas prices. ..i'.custqmere in 197fanil1974, and thus, the ;, bonds issued.. -: v .;. : for two months, Arguing the council He. stressed, however, that any -..three have not beefr paying the .full 'The 1 mental cttmmiU^t^on-lhe.Jinirtnjgnnva inn and Itnipn and System should follow, the economic example-of regulatory, agency, whether a public' '.'-'-'amounts specified in the contracts.; representatives probably will negotiate over .the next few weeks with the —nnrrimiccinn ' nr .> Wyatt criticized: Austin,--SanRan AntonioAntnnin' thp Texas • Anctin low bidder, Anken Construction Co.". Inc.. of Austin." • ^ — •eliminate aides hired. to perform-ad-Railroad Commission,should actquickly id LCItA -lot noL. pay iiig tlie frtt" . PerrrSaid surveys taken of students last semesterproved a majority'are" .on"cases of rate-changes. He also urged . amounts and also blasted the Railroad :mi-" • ^ ^?t'difQj_jco_unci-1 , not-satisfied with the Union Building the way it is. Renovation will increase ^members. that any increase-in gas rates shoujd.be .Commission for not approving a rate in­ . —Texan S»aff Photo'' usage and decrease financial problems", she said.. :-;j; Seconded by Councilman Lowell,. given an automatic pass-through on .the crease for Lo-Vacalast year. Hesaid the "I feel very strongly we are right (in this project); and because we are Lebermann, the motion carried withrthe • regulatory board. loss in funds is "holding back exploration Oscar Wyattrifcht we will*be prepared for those who don't think we: are right and are HE TOLD the committee that a public for new reserves. -. ­ votes of Mayor Roy: Butler and' Coun-­resistant to change," she added J\' • cilman Dr. Bud Dryden. • utilities commission should consist of' Wyatt also charged that bad publicity & Butler, argutng-^conomy.Jjegins at Also:'new ways must be lo\ind to fund "WE HAVE made the plans responsibly," P^rry said , • five people, one appointed by the gover­.from the "sens?tion-seeking press" in more gas exploration, he added. Dr. Ronald Brown, vicerpresidentlor student affairs;said. "Wecan'tcon-nor, two appointed by the House and two Antonio and "Austin, has hurt Lo.­ home," said "we re gonna have tq San He estimated there are enough natural"^' ' tinue in this bUHdlii^rin any meaningful or functional way.',' knuckle down and do' the work,, by the Senate. Headded that the utilities Vacais ability to-buy gas. He explained gas reserves to last more.than 12 years'" ourselves." . '* ,As for the higher Union fee. he added, "It's a question of whether we're y board members should have rotating that Coastal States seMvonlv7 percent to.... at the 1974 distribution 'rate but thatFriedman said :'clerical, staff will be ­ jjoing to provide service" to students. • , terms of-six years and be well paid. '*;f Lo-Vaca of what th,e gathering company there is a difference between reserves V'' necessary to handle the business of tlie Coastal States is the parent V and available gas. He told thecommittee-*^; (arent company .-.^-"distributes. -' LO-VACA was treated in the early: that Coastal States has four wells -in'aii^ 1960s by Coastal Statesfor thepurpose of PecOs County, for example, which iUve®|l managing intrastate distribution of taken a year t0 drill at 3 cost of $l^"i 'Jfe 'fs • natural gas and because Coastal States million each.. Three other wildcats in||§|tf Defends CIA m Chile wanted to separate itself from utilities, Pecos County were'drilled at a cost of $2|^S' companies,".Wyatt said. : -a -million for-both, but they provied to beWASHING,TON (AP)— Secretary of State Henry A procedures fpr accountability to Congress, if the Con­Coiby testimony hut had been informed bv the CIA He stated that Lo-Vaca is "becoming : dry hples. • •­Kissinger said Thursday that CIA covert activity' in gressional leaders feel that existing procedures are ^ director that he did.not use the wdrds "destabilizing" . an unbearable burden on CoastalStates" "COASTAL STATES will have un-. , ^Chile was interned to prevent establishment,of one-not adequate. and "subverting.'; as descriptive of CIA activities in because Coastal States has been cover­' developed reserves as long .as it isparty government by a minority president. At the same time. Sen. LoWeltP. Weicker R:-ConnT7 Chile^. ' . j ing the operational deficits of Lo:Vaca successful in exploration," "he said, "We V ;,It was not intended to destroyor subvert the govern-and Howard H. Baker, R^Tenn.,: announced their in­Kissingersgid-the-Marxist Ailetide^^wjis the leading­-_caused_by the cities not paying the will develop the reserves as long as we,. ;ment of the late President Salvador Allende, but to troduction of a bill to form a Senate-House comtnittee candidate bya 1percent margih'in thepopfflar^tection^ 1—amount contracted..' " "" • • have-,the';mohey:to doit:'" keep opposition political parties aliyeV Kissinger said. to controljmoretightly activities of the CIA anti other of 1970 in Chile, but received only 37 percent of. the '• Wyaitt termed Coaital~StatesT3resent— T, Committee Chairpefsbh Joh Newton"Our concern was the election of l^Pfrand not-at atl. Mrs; intelligence agencies total popular, vote: He subsequently^-as elected by the . financial state as "satisfactory." hnilf (ho rniirt thsf A/tiniiPil>Arl in tQ74' ''a_t^luilnnnp. ' terrr ^ D.,Beeville. told Wyatt he did not; thtek« out the cOup that.occurred irTi973,''-4Cfi»ainger:told' _ Sen..F^ank Church, D-Idaho, raised the CIA-Chile Chilean Congress. •' ' I " "THERE IS NOT enough'gas to serve t h e reg u1a tory, ag en cy;ishou1dfeS the Senate.Foreign Relations Committee." Even though 63 percent of the Chilean people did not J .;-,.the needs of all of us." Wyatt said. "That automatically pass through to utilities'KS• • President Ford met at the White House with nine .v:'$ (Related Story, Page 3.) vote for Allende, Kissinger said that after the election; • is an unpleasant reality. Once we realize any rise'in gas rates because itwould not congressional headers" to discuss CIA covert; ... , .. ;—-r" — Allende; '.'set about to establish what appeared to-be„a that, then therefeare things that can be allow incentive to keep gas rates down. operations. House Spfc&ker. Carl Albert said the bribf-issue while Kissinger was testifyingon the U.S policy one-party goveniment." -­done to lessen the impact of the shor­Wyatt said the Railroad: Commission f ing was limjted generally to the Administration's ' of "detente" with the Soviet Union. Kissinger said the United States has conducted tage." * > . does not have the authority to be respon-;? justification of CIA activitiesMn'Chile: Church referred to published reports of secret various covert operations in the postwar period"?. : First, he said^utility plants must soon sible for Lo-Vaca's Uabilitite-and addeSlI^ r;Hv, However* a White House spokeperson'.-deputy press testimony by .CIA to aDirector William E. Colby Whether the.United States should engage in such-ac­start -converting." fuel "'*H secretary John Hushen. said that Ford and Kissinger : House committee,in April that theCentraMtiteiligence; Kissinger said. : to burning oil • that he. thought .any legislative action -— tivity "could be a matter o/ debate. and/or coal. Next, energy conservation nwking Coastal States responsible would •;briefed the leaders on the full scopeof clandestine CIA ; -Agency was authorized to spend up to $8 million But he said;the_operatipns were "all developed by well must be practiced "to an extent we've be declared unconstitutional by,.the:^|.­ • dperations. •? • .. -• '' betvyeen 1S70 and 1973 to maRe it iijipossibie for established procedures in ttve government;" approved never known. We must moderateheating courts. : ; ."i Kissinger said later," that the^President and the ex­Allende to govern in Chile. • : -. by the President, and reported to the appropriate of-and.cooling and reduce-dlsplay lighting," Newton had said he would considefipecutive branch are prepared to work out jiejw .-Kissinger said he had not read the transcript of the ficials of;Congress.: -he said. . ' . submitting sucha bill to the Legislature,' • -•• jgr -• • Hundreds Killed in Floods/ Tides, High Winds today Game Shuttles ... "Austin Transit Hurricane Fifi Sacks Central America System will run foot^S' BELIZE: CITY, Belize (UPI) wece believed to be heavy.-.' duras on its westward trek through the north slopes of the mountains in Hon^|t| Partly Cloudy . . . ball shuttle bjjses Sat-" Hurricane Fifi rammed into Central FIFI SLAMMED into Belize.formerly Caribbean Sea on the way to its landfall. duras have spread into Guatemala,"-^ America Thursday and drenched five -known, as British Honduras, at 3 p.m. Forecasters said Fifi had sustained Belize, El Salvador and Nicaragua. -4^ Friday will be partly -«r=urday in North and countries, killing hundreds of persons' in • CDTaiPlacentia Village, 72miles south® high winds of 110'mph with gusts hitting, Honduran authorities-estimated on'e-,'*S cloudy wifh 30 percent South Austin to com-, . floods and tides whipped by winds of up • of Belizp City. • • •y 13'Q mphr-Stqrm tides were running 10 to : ; third of the country — the third com--,i'-|to 130 mites an hqur, ^ ~ ^ • .-.Anjittur ia,ter itplowed inland into tine : 12 feet sabove . normal; and torrential prising the nation's richest agricultural \*­ chance of showers. . bat the traffic prob":1 The storm wiped: out millions of heart of .the banana country, ravaging rains have been falling insome areasfor zone — was affected by the storm. v'iSWinds will: be from the lems of the Texas-dollars of crops, particularly banatias. the towns of Cow Pen,-Mango Creek and days.. • ••--• Houses and other buildings of poor con--'H. and ricei as it tore up fertile farmland. -' Siene Blight, v i " southeast at 5 to 12* ^Yi.Wyoming game: : FORECASTERS said the torrential 's'truction werq washed away and banana*1* It left an estirtiated-'ifOO pe°r$qiisdead in The National Hurricane Center inj, rains which have been falling over, the-„ plantations and rice fields swamped. --i mph^Friday's high will See details in • Honduras, where it-was the worst storm •'-Miami. .Fla., said the storm would lose ' be in the low 80s and to hit the northern part of that country • force as it moyed inland at a speed of 10­ , tomorrow's special I this century, its.wind and rainsdrenched mph-But Officials there warned it could • 90 the low in the mid-60s. .^football edition of .The-a third of the.natioh'atiid.ia^^-n^ghbQr-'-''. pick up strength again if it reached 'the. I W: Mi Daily Texan ing Nicaragua, where, authorities Pacific Ocean. They said the primary-;# SUIF OP MEXIOO reported one. child drowned. •-• danger was flpoding. HEAVV RAINS .and. flood warnings '• There,were ho immediate reports of' YUCATA m also were"reported in Guatemala and El casualties in Belize, as authorities had Salvador, which.felt the fringe of the already ordered coastal' residents to Doggett Plans Move storm. • ' 'v. 7;;-'. : . .shelters on higher ground. In T-egucigalpa, Hondut^s,' the -Agricultural officials wrote the Belizew MEXICO American Embassy reported it Had sent $1 million banana crop that had beensold To RaisepState Pay urgent, tnessages to 80 Peace Corps in advance to a British firm of fasa <*6m­volunteers ^stationed in the .flooded • plete loss. MEXICO FLOODINO State Sen. Lloyd Doggett of Austirfwill •"anjiinterlm measure, definitely not IKe coastal;region to.determine"their condi-. THE LOSS in human life on the , prefile an aipendmenl to thecurrent ap­final. Solution to the problems faced by tion. ' propriations act approve state '• • northern oaast of Honduras was high:'Of-• to a * state employes.&& s-• j -U S military foreerrfish^lane? and 5 C«rlbb*«n "Tfcials in Teguigalpa sajd-150 bodies had' etnploye pay raise< Lt. Gqv. Bill Kobby Doggett said thfl^fid^.u'w^!^' helicopters w.th eme^^-relief already been recovered — many of them . announced Wednesday. supplies to Honduras from Panama,Em­ alternative to the special session he had school children' The total death tolj in --Gov, Dolph Briscoe requested in bassy officials said/at the request of the ­ , formerly proposed to deal'with the pay Honduras :coastal region was isolated August that a pay raise for state Honduran government" • ' problem and that he had worked closely Thursday afternoon because of heavy Pacific Employes be considered as an emergen-In Sati P^roJSula;'4lpnduras' second ; $ith tlie Texas PubMc Employe Assoc!a^^ floodingwhich .Wiped jouiroads^and all °'T,-'c' OottK ' dy measure'early In the64thTegular SeS-city with approximately 150,000. in° ' "J tion, ingrafting the amendment other4:ommumcationrTnciutiing air set^ slm-of the Teitas legislature ieginnmg habltan'tsKa witness said the -town vice Bridges were-washed, out, and^lan. fi.. -_ . Hobby_.has fequested"-that-ihe bili be^ '"pretty much flooded in residential r -jhome? beside tiyer banksTsxvept-away _ •"This will be a raise of atleagflO per^j designated Senate BilM Nov. 11, the areas Areas that aren't flooded are Gent ler University staff members ancl first Monday after the general election,,, eh'okedwithmud " FIJ^L WHILE keeping its center over:• f • O*! ;h , • ^ v . • Woodward Recalls Pressure. Paranoia By JANICE TOMLIN broke open the Watergate "It's a human story — what nieht sav cnmothinn ' Pn:nHn™ni^i i».„ the night and say something ;' Pointing out that it's easy.. like we had .lost it. .. Texan Staff Writer scandal in ThePost, revealing went wrong, how decisions Vi, like "The pink starling meets" for a reporter to lose his ob­"The article turned" oflt'to w*rr> — u?a«hinirfr>n Piret1 the -behind-the-scene. were-.made, what happened at dawn." or "Do you think jectivity, Woodward recalled machta«y that ,ed to be right," he said with a grin. If reporter Bob Swart al-the .and why -it cpver? a-lot of they'll ever find out Ron the Sunday morning President We were always sure we were -njitted he was nervous I«l8n®V.«* *PreadenYawl unanswferetf questions.:; Ziegler is 'Deep Throat"' ~~ Ford announced. his -con­ right." trammed his hands in his ^imprisonmentof top While: Concerning his first book, and then we'd imagine 'them" troversial , decision. "Carl Pressured "by the White SSteTlhal SZjke aS- I'Wward addedi "It's^ct -staying up all night worrying' (Bernstein) -called and said, House and by my mother" to 'Guess what,• the s.o.b. par­.-"We made noattempt toget doned the s.o.b.'"" He laugh­ said his mother asJ'jd him to Present's"Men "'*Vhl «* an°^e^ Water?ateh book: but about what we'd said. stop"investigating Watergate. j§ made things more difficult, " '*? Richard Nixon or anybody ed and added, .'.'That's really Woodward said. large crowd at Bavlor tlnivpr. \V90dward Recalled the else," he stressed. "There unfair." " .-Cuny-hairearljlLuii yui rtBU l.'tUtj»^JUUiUiaitiML>JCit»1jrting-^parannfavtfa^fe-a^ Berns- "To have Ron Zeigler stand /Was no fegling ,o|j vin-An important problem -^po^ileave of absence,"^ the questions concerning thewK^teJ^^ before you day after day and _reporters face in dealing with call you a liar — I mean,a^ftrt^TiKF'WatefiaT an investigative -cura i^^i^cHvity ,eader-0{ tlw .fr^-worW team which succeeded ia un-are writing a second" -';\Ve werealways afraid our reason^lSrpa" _ ., r Jonmg Nixot,covering the biggest political book._ ^ telephone conversations Were. we don't know about;" headds have to get it right. It doesn't "The only pr^s^THSt" -cover-up. in history. ."It's on .Nixon's last 400-being bugged, so: sometimes' ed, "as a reporter I am.skep­ s<*ve your purpose to get it from The Post, however, wasWoodward and Carl Bernstein days, in office,":he -.reported;' I d call'Carl in the middle of ; tical'aboiit answers that have wrong. Xqu can really wreck to.find out more... each story Woodward speaks-to Baylor crowds been given ... it doesn't wash. somebody s reputation, par-ha(J 'more. questions than' formed sources," explaining'. Woodward placed' some of y­"I have the feeling we're ticularly when you get caught answers " ...—.. . V.it,is'.«p,tc. them'to cpme out the blame for Watergate-on i>; IS. backin the summer of'72 giv­in an avalanche scandal like Discounting the relationship • and admit their part when the press '•'for allowing an'KjHing expIanatioYisaboar-thirdf^ Watergate. -, -lV --.between.his investigation and they are ready rate burglaries," J obscene affection witlvthe receht turn . Woodward observed, "Presi­eet itU-rlthnUnfrt T ^ .events,--7'iWh'at-we wrote was the ficiaj' version of events dent Ford, is prone to con­nn -^^ I n"*-.,-Woodward sard, "that's like truth ... I understand theinx-': wiTre reluctant to dig under ir,junaerstand. And you go Chanticleer saying, *1. qrow,1 .r.ietyota'reader when he-read»-'' sulting members of .Congress "A jot of ..reporters don't_haf is inporfaid is" fired plant in Fayette County, "plant's. construction, opera-Building Department'sIn .the agreement, LCRA• tio'n and management, he" current operating budget.CUarcK. ^ciu. U/e4o ad" be: -be'i^Kuirvan, and the city will equally, said.. ' I ­ The power plant, scheduleid Recommending the project pieusj mourrtfid aod a(tYe,-beih^ "i^ eowLurucaliwv for completion by 1978, will be to the council. Richard E. coiistrvicted on Cedar Creek Whorral, chairman-pf the :d. i4k 6©4. ' Austin Energy Conservation RENT :ab o eight miles eastof La Grange. In late 1973,' Austin City •vrt A Commission, said, "A com­ 3ct iKc Witji-itjSMfcrcfol 6ome voor$Ktp uj'ttk hs at Council and . LCRA 'Had paid prehensive study of this Bechtel Power Corp./a Houston1 nature may be effective in» ; Jesus -freak-; 4'.%' UBC-, hA be engineering firm, $60,000 to scientifically determining ^ study sites. necessary building code ° can-i-f Jljce. f *f* M 1 revisions'.'' I,V. US? •LCRA and Austin approved > . ^ in1 the FayetteCounty siteMarch "This,-stndy :wiIl 'set f11? W a^fitvg 'i$ not uerslAp-/hoo I^Jpbj Austin T V. 21. s;;. •. guidelines for architecture -••. tstefs Rentals In -other business ,at the decisions on future buildings Jhivershy^Raplisf St^eHt Ministry meeting, cpuncUmen 'but will have no effect on old 453-8041 authorized,a University assis­buildings," Whorral. said. ••i CO-OP: Pife? m m J • .vy-igz • mi IS,At an open board meeting on Thursday, . September 12, the» Student-Faculty Board of Directors met *in Room 124 of Townes Hall. The major item on the agenda was to review the financial statements and the-operating results for the fiscal year which ended on June 30^-1974 and to decide if and how much UNIVERSITY CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL _ AS. OF JUNE 30, 1974 and 1973 r'r ASSETS ' rn 6/30/74 X/30/73 m •3 •j'4 patronage dividend could be paid: . After two hours of discussions and Cash Current' Recei vables , Net Inventor'ies of Textbooks, SuppT\e^ 144,500/^ 362 ,>00 -.101,800 333,400 '3 deliberations there was a decision to pay a 3% patronage dividend to members on eligible sales. Over $141,000 in cash dividends and dis­ and' Merchandise ^Land and Bui 1dings .and Equipment -Net of Depreciation Other.Assets . ''V .i 1 ^^m.,400 >141 ,394,800 34,600 • 1,466,500 1 ,452,000 19,900 If •U • 2©^r­ counts are being returned to students, faculty and staff of the University of Texas this fiscal year." " ' MM '-7"$ This year s percentage is down from last year's when the dividend was $383,700, due to general^ economic conditions, higher wage costs, higher interest expenses, higher costs in other operating expenses, higher inventory m M $3 ,651,200 LIABILITIES x . CAPITAL Current Bank Notes Payable and w,.^ Other Liabilities ^ Long Term^Jt^rtgage Debt. .. Retaine d^ Earnings--Rei nvested • in"'''!" Pr^rerty 'and'" Equipment ReMined Earnings Available as HZ1? $1 ,701,600 864,300 , ',.543,500 : . • $'3,373,600 $1 ;579,400 723,700 730,3-00 - ,.1 •'< 5 6.•] W .4 •n| is4 fey w a ii H;^ju.«_Persotrnel Costs V'^Oth -• •• A 5,902^300 $2^003,800, •^4 ;>H333,100 5,227,800 ^$1 ,914,7,00 1 ,087,100her Expenses.and City and [State^ ' $ -f. Op'erati ng Income;"^ ii,., [ $ ' ' Other Income' (Expense) 132,200 589,100 -13,100:-...< 26,700 £0 ^3^ mi •)-i| i5*>i University Co-Operative Society ' information please feel free to contact the members of the University Co-Op Board. X;, • &iwr;' v :.V -it-i-fc •-.» : ' • • •---'• '*•• = ---••• ..... -. ->..5­Mr. Kenneth 'Olm fJ Amount Available for Patronage to students/-Faculty/Staff « Patro,nageDividend«/Di scoun'ts Dividend mymi r: -158,900 41',600 17,300 ?$' -402,200 383", 7-00 18,500 ' '"i Mr."John E/Newman •* ' * ' come $ 2,500 ^. Mr.Charles JV-Walfej --/."Mr. Ncilc Wolfe 'm-1' ' >• I • ^ ' I • Jaworski • -"pSSf• •'•?•'•: . -v.:-.:.' . :,y.fs|S£^.^>:::<.'•: :• -2*: Senate Committee To Consider Resolution on WASHINGTON (UPI) — Special -prosecutor suits arising fi-om the Watergate burglary]"The Another cover-up defendant, former White Leon Jaworski officially summoned private send a court:appointed physician to make an in­iixon-die sooner. lawyers contended the tapes were covered by the House aide Gordon Strachan, entered a disniissal .citizen Richard M; Nixon Thursday to testify as a claim Qf executive privilegesince they weremade dependent;judgment on whether the former Presi> Later in the day, Jaworski urged the-U.S. Court ipotion Wednesday on. the same ground; Nixon government .Witness in the -Watergate cover-up while Nixon was still in office. "•* dent could stand the rigors of a court trial of Appeals not to order a delay based on the _,was named an. unmdicted cc^conspiratpr in "the , Nixon were to to trial beginning Oct. 1. v? If found be fit but fitted publicity generated from the pardon. " One of the tapeSubpoenas wasissued inXhe case s cover-up­ Jaworski's office sa'id. he -issued a .subpoena of &_Spencer Oliver, a former director 6f the ; appear, he could-ie.cited fpr contemptr .T^E-SPECIAL prosecutor said he remains con­ • As a witness.for..both the defense, aitid the Wednesday night for tfie former President to Association of Wflfocratic State Chairmen; who prosecution, can be questioned Additionally, since Ford's absolute" pardon vinced,the.defendants can receive affair trial,and Nixon on any. appear in the trial of six of his former White was bugged at.'Democratic national headquaitel-s means that Nixon cannot be jtried on criminal the final decision shoyld be left to Sirica.whenthe phase of the Watergate burglary and cover-Up. House and: re-election campaign aides oh charges in the Watergate. charges forany actscommitted during histerm ifi trial opens'Oct 1. '. ­ "He has been subpoenaed to testify, We expect „ of conspiracy and obstructing justice. The secoind was.issued at the request of James him to be a witness," spokesman for/the. office, hi? no longer has.-the legal right to refuse The defendants, heargued. were;not thefocus of a ,mHt . testimony on the Fiftfi Amendment grounds of news stories about the pardon and were men- W. McCord Jr;, a defendant in a.case brought-by prosecutor told reporters. . / >• -• . . . -self-incrinjination. tionedronly "tangentiaHy." V" ~"-E^sa^MteM»^iH<^tfetete5^1i&-cusiadv.of ... ' The Mansfi.eld resolution not only, would negate -Jaworski, meanwhile, was invited to meet Sept. JILMftnotdiscuss thecurrent speculation that Nixon's tapes and documents and prevent ffie i^negotiated on-the presidential 27 with.theSenateJudiciary Committeetodiscuss iftani _ ; _destruction-of any Watiergate tapes. A. voteon the materials s^whftthen^NiYnn'c rnlo ghnnlH ho nlWUnaH jn the .U.S. Dist. Judge John J; Slriea set a hearing on Nixon is siiffSfll „„ resolution had been-scheduled Thursday,'but an j i mr in -special proSecutoFsTinaf refKSirr the motions to quash for.10 a m, £DT Monday phlebitis, a vein inflammation compli^ted by?5 ,>Gongress for a.full reporton insufficient number of-committee members lixon's acliSns attended. . blood clots in hisleft leg,and former.'Whiti Hous£ •Watergate scandal. He.earlier told.a group Of Another defendant in the upcoming Watergate : Senate Democrats^ , physician Walter Tkach_said"after examiningjhhn : v Nixon>had previously been subpoenaed as a cover-up trial, meanwhile, filed a .motion Jn It. provided that-all>the White House documents that he has no authority to dispuss.Nixon's m- federal court seeking dismissal of the charges : "last week that he had recomm'ended hospitaliza­ j defensewitness by his former No. 2 aide John: and tapesxOmpiled during the Nfxon year-s would'" • volvement in his final-report . ' tion . --^ against,him.based'on President Fohi's parddn of become public property, and all would be made , EhrTichman.-But the-governmenUs-ccesfc • Asst. Senate Democratic' Leatier -Rojbert G examinatioir,vrin -that: case/^would have been Nycon--„ --__ ! His daughter, Julie,fl<»w to CaltforniaThursday public except those protected by national securi-' : Byrd,. a -member of the judiciary committee,' ty-• • • ? limited to subjects introduced by the defense Kenneth-Wells Parkinson, a former lawyer for . for a .visit amid new reports^that Nixon-would petitioned the group "to detelrmine-if* the public • lawyer. Nixon's re-election committee, argued in his brief enter a hospital soon although he had.strongly • -Under the agreement between Nixon and the " interest would, be best served by-making explicit: IN ANOTHER Watergate development Thurs­motion that a pardon of one co-conspirator, must, ^resisted such a move^earlier. White House, the former President would" geC? "the:authority-ofithe.,special prosecutor to include ­day, Nixon's lawyers moved to quash two siib-custody of the material in three years and would • m-his final report a record of'former Rresideftt "bath in law and equity," be construed as a par­ Court"souf(^s specQlated that if he declined tb .. poenas for taped conversations issued in civil don for all charged with the same conspiracy be allowed .to destroy them. The agreement , Nixon's inwlvement in matters under investiga­ ;testify because'of ill health, Judge Sirica could provided that the tapes would be destroyed should tion by the special prosecutor's office" Senate Refuses To Support Delay of Federal PayRaise WASHINGTON (UPI).-The Senate Natiiati T.'Wollf6niir;; president oRlvh^T supported Ford in this' initial confrbnta­refused to support PresidentFord Thurs­ S'ati»nal. of Fedora the 25 Senators National. Federation Federal tion on:the economy. Of day in what he called the "first test" on Employes, said the vote sljowed the -"up for re-eleetion, 20. voted for the paythe economy and voted to give3.5 million "essential justice in our unwillingness to ..raise, including-7 Republicans. ­ federal civilian and military employed a :bear the entire burdej^>6f Ford's battle f Ford appealed to theSenate, on theeve pay raise. • against inflation. He lidded that 8.3 per­of the vote, to back his;initiative'on theDealing Ford his first legislative cent would haVp'TCew a more equitable economy. He was strongly backed onjthe defeat, the Senate rejected a proposed raise. Senate floor by asst. GOP le;der RoWt three-month postponement of the pay ln-r" : BUT SjElC Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz.; P. Griffin and Goldwater. i -crease which the; Administration said ed the vote as "a disgusting dis-' ''I realize that -1 am asii ng federalwould ha veait spending by$700 miliion. . He said it proved that "the employes* to" make a sacrifice," FordA3 a resfllt of the Senate's action, the ''Congress is ownedlopk, stock and barrel said, "but nowis the time when all of u's5.52 percent pay increase automaticall by the lobbies" and ''does not have the must set an exarnple of fiscal restraint-^ goes into effect Oct. 1 instead of Jap'i. • guts to do what; needs done." for the rest of the nation. * ' The Senate rescinded the ppsfppne-Under law. a delay in federal pay • "I see this vote as the first test of our . ment by approving a resolution of disap­raises can be rejected if either the common effort to put our economic proval. The. vote was 6% Senate orthe House passessuch a resolu­house in order." ­ Leaders, of the upi^ns representing tion by majority vote.' But Sen. Gale W. McGee, D-Wyo., federal employes>were relieved. Only 8 Democrats and 27 Republicans. chairman of the' Senate Civil Service • Committee, said Ford was. using federal IS#•'••• oivilian and military employes as' a "token sacrifice" and called, it "bunk,.^? pure^unadulterated bunk." • iplnygg rii(j riot want special favors but only an '.'equitable salarywiththeircontemporaries-outsjde .government." ' ; ." Goldwater, up for re-election, said it 'would be. "politically wise" for him to HOUSTON (UPI) — An engineering was solar energy for home heating vote for the pay raise, but added: educator Thursday fold a Project becoming competitive with the prices of "I intend to vote to uphold the Independence hearing the United States -UPI TaUphete electrical power. President's request because some time, must develop alternate sources of "But solar energy developments will some place, in spite of all the .threats, in • Smothered Journalism energy, to preserve fossil fuels for use as . .—r— — * - know Saicjon publisher 10,000 raw materials. . not significantly-impact our energy——oj re-spite of all the problems that we A burns hit daily . .— .. copies of newspaper because had.an article promising to print will occur, this Cwgress has to begin to I-: quirements within the next five to'10 newspaper,I r Sdng: Than,T "in*" I-,'protest»• against qllegedgovern­ detaVs of a six-point corruption charge in Friday's edition. Dr. John R. Bradford of Texas Tech years," he said. "It is one of tfur alter-. ' tical editor Ha The. ftuyet claim- show enough courage to do some'thing _. ment press repressionv Political University said 'failure to recognize the about inflation." ed issued an The charge includes-hints that President Thieu's family is natives which can provide a-significant , the government order;'ter confiscate the involved in illegal business deals.. complexity of the fossil, fuel picture pwcentage of our energy needs. "If the Senate says no tb the Pesident 'One projection indicates that:by the-,' -.on this," Griffin said, "then, in effect, total self-sufficiency by 1980 or even the1 ;year 2020 solar energy could provide up we are opening the floodgates and mak­ j^.year 200(j; •: ——^ to 35 percent of the nation's heating and . ing it difficultfor anyoneelse to bear the Kissinger Warns of Cold War ; "It is of the greiatest urgency that we cooling needs and up to 20 percent of the /. burden (of cuts) and exercise restraint, cease using ouroil and gas asfuels at the: total electric power required in the ' The answer is you have to startearliest possible moment." Bradford-U.S." : somewhere." 8§s»ia U.S. Pressure Might Accelerate Arms Race said. . • . -«c- JMTHW mim •• TT^' « 4 • ... . "The primary reason we must in- WASHINGTON. (UPI) ;— Secretary., of' State Henry. A. Atthe sametime, the secretary warned the Soviet Union that Kissinger warned Thursday that continuing efforts by'some .... vestigate alternative power sources is' the United States-could.sustaio — and surelywin — a newamis Carrdsco Americans to pressure the Soviet Unioni might bring bafbk the tha.t we begin to presence ouf petroleum race if it must. ' ' . _ cold-war and set off a costly "new and unending arms race. •" supplies for use as a raw material fof -. The room was aglare With television lights and jammed with-v -•* "The temptatiob to combine detierite with increasing pressure manufacture of the myriad of products spectators who could jiist see the secretary's head over therf on the Soviet Union will grow," Kissinger cautioned. "Such an which have become of important use in crush of official visitors and news reporters seated just behind ^® TCLU Group Asks -• • our daily lives. attitude would be disastrous ... we-will finally wind up again the witness table:-. -•-.-: • . with the cbld war and-fail to achieve either peace or any ' "OF WH^T value will it be for the' -Kissinger outlined the origins and accomplishments o£,l humane goal." '.; United States tobeconie free of the need detente in a 50-page policy statement and promised to strivein , # IN NEARLY three hours of testimony in Senate Foreign ->• of foreign sources of petroleum by 1980, coming mohths to complete an agreement for strategic arms Relations Committed hearings on the detente policy;hejielped If we find ourselves dependent uponsuch : limitations,through 1985;.negotiateSuccessfully on mutual force^_* '-Up .. initiate while still • President Nixon's fdVeign policy, adviser: foreign sources for" food and fibers? reducations.in Central Europe, conclude a conference of Eyro-• -Kissinger.: also resisted -maneuvers which he belieyes might < "Legislation in itself will not produce Texas Civil Liberties Union Director pean security and cboperatioonand continue rfforts to-limit the how inmate Fred Gomez Carrasco was prevent an'arms limitation agreement at the new SALT talks. one extra ban-el of oil." John B. Duncan urged Atty. Gen. -John.'-• assigned to the Walls Unit (a medium spread ofnuclear weapons'to additional countries. .. The problenj. there is too,complex to be sdlved with a simple­ • Bradford tsaid coal must provide the Hill Thursday to act quicklyin convening• i BUT HE warned^that cpld-war doctrines would be revived if ­ security unit) as a trustee, 2) if inmate numerical equality, and the momejit when a limitation might be- I major source forgeneration of electrical a court of inquiry into the attempted Uie UmtetfSta'tes triea^io use economic pressure to change the Ignacio Cueyas had earlier participated achieved is too. fleeting to risk" he. urged power during-the next 25 years. • prison escape at Huntsville last Aug. 3. in an escape attempt in wliTcha p6ace"0f~ r Soviet system, achieve military,superiority or deay benefits to The engineer, who also is dean of the The court of inquiry was announced "We face an opportunity that was not possible 25 years, or the Soviet Union. ' ­ •ficer or hostage died, 3) who helped in ev'6n.'a deeade^igo," Kissinger said. "If that opportunity is lost. engineering school at Texas Tech, said Aiig. 29byGov, Dolph Briscoeand Hill to In an apparent reference to Congressional efforts to use trade smuggling guns to Carrasco and 4) how -• its' moment will not quickly come again. • >' /, his university-was also conducting look into the incident at the Texas -Carrasco,. .inmate,: Roddlfo policy as a wedge to change Soviet restrictions, on Jewish . "Inij|^C|;-"ii'' 'A0t:come;:at' dl.'' research into the feasibility of using the Department of Correction's Walls Unit -did emigration, Kissinger said'"-'Such an attempt would be futile -Dominguez and the-two women hostages KISSINGERl -was .intentionally drawing bead on' some sun and wind for power generation. in whicji two inmates and two hostage?-...1 ..:die, • and at the same time hazard all that has beefi^achieyed." .elements,within Congress and the Pentagon who'resist a limita­ "A principal advantageof such a solar-were killed. "A renewal of the cold war will hardly encoura^Hbe Soviet tion formula based on totarkill-power. /J, wind system would lie in the longer However, Hill had said the inquiry will ."The answer to (some) of the these Union to change its emigration policies or adopt aNnore ­ generation period per day, thus reduc­.questions are potentially embarrassing . A leader of the forces desiring a basic one-for-one ceilingf5 benevolent attitude toward dissent," he said " not begin until the deliberations of-the tion in the size of storage facilities," he Walker-County grand jury into.the to the Texas Department of Corrections, Sen, Henry A. Jackson, D-Wash., was invited to Thursday's KISSINGER differed with former Secretary of State Dean^ hearing by Committee Chairman J. Wiiliam Fulbright, D-Ark., said. matter have ended, probably inOctober. the Texas Department of Public Safety, Rusk", Sen.-Henry A. Jackson, D-Wash., certain high-level Pen­ but declined on the grounds 4hat it was too early io President HE SAID the High Plains of West Tex­• f Duncan said in his letter to "Hill that the Texas Rangers and the U.S. Drug En­ tagon officials and others who have urged that the Soviets and' forcement Agency," Duncan wrote. Ford's administration to, debate his foreign policy. as through Wyoming and Montana ? '•'-'the entire affair breaks down into four ; the United States drop the proposed complex formula for arms r Jackson also has-led "the.CongressionaLeffort to make nor­ offered the best prospects,for developing: separate and independent cases and that reductions in the strategic arms negotiations, and agree simply SH, Duncan also charged that "public of­malization of East-West trade-, contingent on~relaxation'.of such energy sources because, of the on a limited-number of weapons a thorough investigation of any one case, „ ficials from the justice of.the peace (in Soviet restrictions on emigration of Jews to Israel'. sustained wind activity. ' z!i .shoiild-in-no way jeopardize the rights of "Numerical balance is no longer enoughf-" Kissinger said/^l Walker County) to' the governor have Earlier Dr.-Robert.San Martin of New the defendants in any of the others." V, to the-question of how SUCH PRESSURE would-be."disastrous," Kissinger said, "To achieve stability,it will be necessary toconsider aswell the ; : tried avoid and added: "We would not acceptit from Moscow; Moscow will Mexico State. University told the panel > He .recommended investigations lijto^Ji Carrasco and Dominguez died." • impact of technological change in such areas as missile-throw not accept it from us." weight, multiple reentry vehicles-and missile accuracy." neuis Ethiopian Protesters Clubbed and political sanctions impose^ against Cuba a decade ago. " ed Thursday. • jm*-••• p Foreign Ministers Gonzalo Facio of Costa Rica and Alberto J. Vignes of ADDIS ABABA (UPI) — Police used clubs and theif boots Thursday to The appointment may be announced Friday. Argentina — w"hose nationshave led the move toward removing the Cuban break up .the .most violent demonstration in -the -Ethiopian capital since •Nessen, 40, would succeed J.F. terHorst, Ford's firs! presidential pressenjbargo — arranged to open the OAS£auncU review of the question Mon­ Emperor Haile Selassie was deposed a week ago. • secretary who resigned Sept. 8 ill protest when Ford granted former, day afternoon. . vC -They waded Into a crowd of several hundred yoiiws whp tried to charge- President Nixon an unconditional pardon » 4 r v > . . jVk S'siiK**?" WZ&iS3* ­ the front gates of the army's Fourth Division headquarters? Witnesses- White House officials:said"Nessen had been'offered"the position.' anir Slock Market Rallies said several demonstrators wejre injured and others arrested. • Nessen himself acknowledged he l^d-taiked to Urn White House about it, . Jeeploads of armed troops were immediately ordered to-patrol the"' '' " ^ — Anticipa^J although he said any announcement would have to come fr'omrtheTh'."':'r NEW YORK (AP) -Anticipa^f5' N.Y.S.E. .->nD0K JONES WEKUE 3D Mistrials streets to head off any further outbreaks^' 4 t!°n of a letup in the interest rate W.et Weathet Hurts Crops ^ • .(Ittejit Police made no official statement. But police officers at thescene said squeeze ignited a strong and <74.05 COLLEGE STATION, (UPI) — Farmers and ranchers1who weidomfed they believed the youths were paid by the families of those detained by. „ broad-based rally in sharply in-recent rains have -suffered flooding of their-tields-and crop damages Ethiopia's new military regime. ' . -1 ^ creased trading in the stocks UMCHANQC6 because qf. persistent wet weather. •­ 235 Demonstrators said they were protesting the detention of an estimated^-' -"toarKet Thursday. The P°w 22.14 According to the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, Central and200 formergovernment officials, military off icers'and top civiliansby the ' . Joi?es -average of 30. nrmiui -* • • r _ . v . ,1.. '^..industrials piled-up-'a-22.14 gain" ^ South Central Texas farmers have suffered-cotton yield and grade losses S*MI. II.T4 because'of recfent heavy rains. ., , best in t}i'Q weeks. — to:'i j In the High Plains, where hot, 3ry conditions .are needed for the cotton crop to .mature before the first frost,-the cool, weUweatnfer has-glowed1 n J -I.": " WASHINGTON (UPI) -T»*Ndm^PrSecretary " . development of the crop. ,. , The rains also have led to an increase in pear/ut diseaseproblems, caus­ ministers gathered lliursday to considererasing one ot the last traces offa WASHINGTON (UPI) President Ford willJname Ronald 'N^^on ^; ' ing yield reductions, the.&cteh§iori service said.-However, thestate's ia® >Wld war diplomacy In the Western Hemisphere byUfUngthe economic' NBC-TV WMte Hpuse correspoiident, ashis press secretary, U was leaS' peanut crop should'benefit from the moisture * tJ Fridays-September 20, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page.?! » u mi guest viewpoint 83a W-\i EDUORIflLS One day insufficient :Page 4 Friday, September 20, 1974S {fx • lo prepare for finals By GARY ELLISON than" the spring semester; This time?;, 1Conventionblues (Editor's note: Ellison is chairperson "limitation-makes it very difficultAfcjr!. Many progressive people will support specificstrikes but not the AFL-CIO of the Task Forcc to Extend Deed Week professors to "complete. their iristruSv • ~ in.general, because they feel if Texas ever gets ,lBig Labor." the age of the and senior adviser to.Phi Eta Sigma,) tions. However, the time limitation* big sellout willbe upon us, and the interests of workers and people in general In the summer of 1973, the University places a much heavier burden on the will be. subordinated to the power brokerage of a, few antidemocratic; ^Council,approved a calendar,proposal for students to adequately read, .organize, the 1974-75 school year, which contained analyze and understand the semester's* -bfiiore— look how longittpok the, ,'v fotrchangcs ul. importance to-students^ uaateriais Tt-seerngjogjeaj to me that if rid of Tripy"Bovie --'and iltRrtmsffre First, the examination period was ex-bss time is given to receive instruction out Texas AFL-CIO President 'llllll IH iTTi lj;lii iliiy llinMn li'i ,lliil III i MIII|I|I li lllf ini||||^f:.pl««wni'|r<--'convention was 'any indication, it could happen here. • .•Hubbard didn't sell outliberals in Texas, the labor delegates' exams yvjthin the exam period:SeconHIyT" Traentlfpfeprfi generally:are the liberals —/-.but he gave democracy' a choice stab in thepgt the number of "dead days":-in the1 • An extended time separation,between :, reading period was cut from three to one: the last day.of classes and thefirst day of back. For those of you whotuned in late,,a semblant# of democracy has been*­ . day with the single day of no classes be-. ffttals is:' vital* urall'. conscientious 14=^.. ~ a long time coming to theTexas DemocraticParty. Ask tli.e oy-timeylibsin, • .ing in the middle of the week rather than " students in preparing for finals;'par-­I"1-1— ' your precinct -r-.they'll be the ones with gray hair >vho sat in the back andT ' adjacent to a weekend. ticulariy since so. many end-of-the­ giggled while you elected delegates pledged to McGovern--it was under the r When the : new Student Government:-7 •semester tests,: papers and. prpjects . Jearned-of this change in the spring, im-; pros like Shivers. Pickle and Connally. Geti some .feeling for the good old .-- whlph-'require'extensive and immediate mediate action was taken to-stop a •••attenti^n aredue^on'the last-class day.'• •. • days of the unit rule (with the chair counting)", locked caucuses-, fast gavels -similar plan proposed for the^JjjWft. This change couldprove detrimental to-" and even'goon squads; then you'll have some idea of what the"convention . school year. Frank Fleming was students' performance on final exams brouhaha was all about. ^successful in acquiring three no-class and may retard theeducation andfull un-' Theses weren't liberal/conservative;and neither was the issu'e. Stated X;; todays preceding'exams' for next fall and derstanding of the semester's materials. l^sspring. Unfortunately, the calendar for in simplest terms, the question was-whether the .convention was gbing to"? We all need to scrutinize the situation in > -.fall, 1974, apd spring, 1975, had been of-consideration of what has more elect delegates, choose officers and deal with issues or whether Dolph * i-ficially 'approved, " educational value ^-sufficient-time-for, .- Briscoe was going to hand-pick officersand delegatesand block the submls|t§l 'Howdy, pardoner...'' • .To complicate matters, the fall proper analysis of the entire semester's' sion of any resolutions to the convention. Gbyiously any minority delegate??! .-semester isvery short — a full week less work or the content of one class day. " had a-stakejnjhis fight, and that's what explains K&nnedy-Mondale liberals •* voting, with Wallace conservatives for Hou^olTConlrolIeT'tejnef Castrjlo^ firing line j' the npn-Briscoe-machine candidate-for State Democratic Executive Com­„ ; mittee chairperson, • " . --­'•I*,1'. Castillomade one campaign promise: "If I am chairman, yotfilget the-, Dirty tricks kind of argument •&C.. delegate strength you win,-' if Briscoe's man Calvin Guest won, on the other To the editor: hand, anyone-who disagreed with Briscoe would be "represented'' by material could be sued for in­Congress Bridge is falling down, falling tend from dam to shining dam and com-: The "Opgn Letter to LarryBales" was whomever the governor chose v J t competence. • ; > • downj and it will certainly be just a pletely cover the remainder of the Town -one that needed to be written^ and Mr. The director of tbaJhanoj? program at .matter "of time until all other bridges Lake blemish. Not only is this an ' The fix was in atthe convention, and it took a special kind of backbone to Howard wrote well. The only thing more . East. Texas State University in over the Colorado, River collapse. There engineering marvel, but it is also one of; fight it. Hubbard was rumored to be able"to swing about 350 delegates — distressing than the fact of liberal sup-• .Commerce, where I formerly studied, is.structural strength in the unity of all the most politically feasible"proposals 'v­enough to make it an even better fight than it was and, who-kiiows, maybe v port for Clayton was thedirty-tricks kind was correct when he stated. "Education bridges, and there is also much wasted that we could make. The Texas Highwayof argument used by Bales in his defense at "its' be?t is a painful process.'-; And it" • kick enough flakers off the fence to win. Instead of fighting, Hubbard joined effort in bridging Town Lake at the rate Department would be a .welcome ally in of that support. When your position is • can also be fun. if .you truly enjoy-the- of sue lanes ata time. Justas MoPac has the corps of spineless:sycophants licking Briscoe's hand backstage, i the implementation of this engineering; •••:• that poor, you'd be better off to be quiet. subject. • : recently devastated mostof West Austin, dream. Of course, it will be a matter of' , ' •. A comparison of the vote totals in the; heiavy labor delegations between the Why did you give such poor coverage Glen Spielbauer so will future bridges ravage the time before the bridge would be used to", vote on seating more women delegates and tile Guest-Castillo vote should rto the conclusion of the'Banks-Means Junior remainder of Town Lake in the name of its full capacity by a normalflow of traf­ .trial? Frankie-W.-Westbrook give sonie indication of how.much practical-differencelabor's cop-otit made, 1 .Physics Major "progress" for Austin. . fic. Until that time the'bridge could cer-' ­ • 3206 Pickwick Lane but the cost to the„goal of building a progressive,coalition in the Texas 1 As. theengineers have discovered sim­tainly be used as parking for University, . "(Editor's note: Though theWounded Democratic Party suffered beyond measure, ?i"i: f'svr Knee conclusion stofy. on the Banks-The' royai price ple solutions to our economic problems, of Texas football games°and/or as cover so might we pose simple solutions to this for prospective skinny dippers. (Natural-? ;• :.-Briscoe was not even subtle in stiflingdissent.According toseveral Travis Means trial cameacross lateon the wire-_X^the editor: , engineering problem. In' our ly an artificial sun would have to be in-' ' County delegates and other irate observers, Briscoe sent in his private mus-services, The Texan misplayed the im-Regarding the summary dismissal of characteristic panacean way, we have stalled berteath t^e bridge fon the latter ­ . portanee 61 the news. More space should Joe Bob Bizzell, Ken ^tQd Don Thurman, cle to create disturbances in at least three areasof the floor when Castillo devised what we truly believe to be the use.) J._ i_ have been given.) ' . 'Bishop Dolegiewicz -and Siggi' Busha ~—rostMo-speakv engineering marvel of .our-era. It has We are, of course', rather proud of our! • I t . J4-" ' from-their athletic scholarships' for While Briscoe was showing himself to be squarely in Thsrantidenrocratic-^— -Unflersfqntiina '—4-—alleged.involvement with marijuana. I" come to our attention that it is accepted ^engineering.prowess, just as weare surety »KBF P^?^-ijL%;e?i^..n.^.ring °f American that.our friends in prou<| n UMI.UUI menus M engineering are proud tradition of Texas politics,'Hubbard was extorting labor delegates behind-' To the editor: am totally '""nflhpircontahutiflns-ioztte3heoa3^f-jn| closed doors instead.of fighting for them on the floor. This kind of dealing An open letter to Derek Howard: such an caRa"e u °l supporting many times the flation. The only regaining problem^ IJnfortunately, I believe some idiot releasing the facts known. Could it be makes a coalition .with.labor quite a chancy affair. Whenever a close ques­ weight which they would, ever be re-we see it now, is exactly where Tto pairid wrqte an open letter to me in The Daily that Royal and Pricefear.the uprpar that r quired to support.-, •*" " ­ tion comes up, it will-be rational to wonder whetherHubbard hasn't flaked the dotted iinesJ- Texan Over your signature. I thought'you would ensue if they did get their Proceedlhg from this simple observa­ .because of determination, or whether he is just dickering over the price,- John Vrooman; >vould want to know this, but if in fact "evidence" after searching those tion, we propose the construction of one : Jim Peach you wrote the; letter,' Ird just like to tell players' rooms? Doesn't even an athiete­ Texas^izebridgethat^ Ken Nowotny you that I can explain the speakers race have a right to;privacy or doeshe give up; to you, but I can't understand7!! for you. that'inherehtrrigtit brice; h6 accepts thaf| Larry Bales athletic scholarship? ]" ; We knew it would be bad. Anytimea City Council spendsan entireday cutj " State Representative *. Shaun Devine If;.| ting an>n£ite budget for an entire city, there are going to be problems. But '1333 Arena Drive, Apt..151^ III rj• / if 5U» -• B ] J9-SB we didn't think it would be this bad. .. .. t Mistakes^ |\i To the editor: First, there was the councilpay jraise issue. Wedidn't thinkthere would be Wood standard H ^ & , .fits n-v So far your coverage of the state PO UNTO-OTHER PKESIPENTS AS IK YOU WOULD HAVE i^ OTHER PRE5IKNTS a pay raise for the present council. Only CouncilmenBob Binder, Dan Love Democratic convention has not been . To the editor: • and.Berl Handcox were for it.-Jeff Friedman.was-for a council pay raise, but': very distinguished. In response to recent solutions to our not for the present council. It'didn't pass. Wednesday^ story lead paragraphs economic problems offered by engineer­ ' But when Friedman made a motion for a council pay raise — to exactly the contained two distortions, or indeed, ing students (Daily Texan, 9-19-74), I ^ lllu PO UNTO YOU. errors of fact; Castillo— 2,183. Guest — would-like tooffer somethoughts concer­ same amount of the first motion — for the neXrcouncHrno one seconded it. 3,125. That ain't two to one in my book. ning the structural problems recently And as I saw it happen, instead of discovered in.-the Congress Avenuete • ."Castillo ran strong! itronly one major Bridge. It should be obvious to any&| Not Binder. -Ndt Love. Not Handcox. There aretwo possible reasons forthis: 1) Binder, Loveand Handcox were -perturbed at Friedman for not voting for the first council pay raise motionjS''"^ citf ..." he ran strong in Austin, casual observer of everyday engineering-.^ * irv. •• . or 2) Binder, Love and Handcox were voting on the principle of personal-"^ Houston, San Antonio. Dallas t in facti problems that the crux of the difficulties' . in all the urban atfeas: -—» " can be traced back to the abandoning ote?S ,, gain, not on the principle of council pay. Pick a reason." I know tha't Lisa Hazel, one of our ',the "wood standard," in favor of the?;;| V' Second, thgre was a surprise. Love made a motion to doaway with council delegates to the Democratic mini-' "corifcrete standard." •: aides (this means that thepoorer councilmember&who couldn't affordaides )\m convention. was offended by your iden-1 The inherent flaw associated With the" ' . now couldn'thave them. And if a council member isso poor he cannotafford bfication of her on Wednesday as the latter resulted recently in the reduction . rr\\v] aides, then there isa good chance hecan't afford fulltime work on thecoun- wife of an Austin lawyer. She is well of lanes available.to. traffic on the bridge^ ! \« known'among politically activepeople as from four lanes to tW(T(or a reduction of -: ­ . dl without aides. Lowell Lebermann, who couldafford to contribute55,000 to a guiding light in the Travis Couniy. . 0.5). We should, therefore, immediately,-:®, i Richard Nixon in 1972; seconded Love-svmotfon. lt passed with Binder, , Democratic-Women, the * North-East return to the "wood standard."After all;?;?® " Friedman and Handcox objecting. « A Austin Democrats, the ACLy and has when our Forefathers burned their A r j|k Third, there was the budget cut itself!The council cut $3,73*7-466 off (or 8 been active in many campaigns., es-• bridges behind them; they couldn't have " {•f cents off the $l,?7 per$100 property tax). As we said in Thursday's editorial, • . pecially Gonzalo Barrientos;. been concre'te ones. The mandate is Hal Wylie •'clear! • ^ • ii I •; this "savings" would amount to $16*for the owner of a $?2,000 home. ''' • c '••• , , . ''Assistant Professor of French Coyle C. Kelly ' Thecouncilwill make this cut by "belt-tightening" the operating budget of "i r , -r (Editor's note: At -Texan deadline the Graduate Student , thisever expanding city. By closing the publiclibraries and recreation halls ' night of the convention, individual-coun­ . Economics. £|or an extra day a week. By cutting off many social services. ty tallies indicated, the vote margin as We knew it would be had. But not this bad: stated by the Texan reporters. The final iTexas size tally^ however,'did not coincide with ear­...§»To the editor: ly returns. The Texan apologizes for the \ Given the decedent -of "infer-", .^..identification of Lisa Hazel.) • disciplinary eomment, that is studentsof THE DAILY TEXAN z • 1tlatwmnhf ml UmmtAtuHn engineering and the.law commenting on EDITOR..: L«irning pain economic phenomenon, we haveconceiv-­ ]'-rBuck-Harvey • To the editor: --—- cd a solution to one of the major MANAGING EDITOR Sylvia Moreno In . response to D&nny Rabbins' engineering-problems facing the City of ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS.!.. Lynne Brock editorial'on grades -which, appeared in Austin. It is rather apparent' that 7\ Larry Smith Tuesday's issue," I would like to state my NEWS EDITOR views. • •. . ..... Martha JP McQuade MUNICIPAL EDITOR... "Educators" are always planning '...............-.Ken-McHam UNIVERSITY EDITOR 'courses designed to-be taken at your own Puppets and presidents •.ii..-.,..Richard Fly pace* or which do not have the pressure SPORTS EDITOR ; . ' „ Herb Holland of grades. This may be perfectly fine for By ROBIN CEAVEY nation's need for a capable vice-ran .second In^ the general election jf -'v-'-Paul Beutel English or otfyer opinion oriented: . Just as the Nixon administration'ssub-president. It will be interesting to set became vlcerpresldent. " courses, but this would not work' in a'*s® Version of the 1972 presidential election how the Democratic Party's midterm "Marlt^emma » PHOTO EDITOR ; Marlon Taylor Science orientedcourse. Pressurecauses^^hould teach us that our methods of convention in December addresses this U.S.-Rep> John H. Dent of Penn-s one to work, harder, and the learning financing and conducting campaigns question. * > . sylvania suggested Monday the repeal of j J ' * • ISSUE STAFF * ability Increases, Without grades, an4V:4>ftius{ be reformed, President Ford's in- the 25th Amendment, returning the na­ Issue-Ekhtor..,,.r. .Anne Marie Philbin • Under_thfi_25th.Amendment to the engineerjng. or medical student has no/Ssistence on following the dictates of his tionto its former reliance on thespeaker L ueneral Reporters Carol,Barnes, David Hendricks, Janice Tomlin Constitution, jJassedafterXyndOrt John­ exact method of checking his. progresstoil'sPersonal conscience wherever it leads Of the~House to succeed tothe presidency J News Assistants Roger Downing. Kat Cunningham. Ton! Snidow son's 14 months -in the presidency be sure "he fias truly mastered the^|'«him should teach ussomething aboutour In .the absence of er vlce--president. But _ ; • Anne Wheeler, Mike Ullman, Mark VJITanueva, Patti Kilday without a vice-president, the President, material-instead of just barely learningiii^niethodj)f;seIecting yjce-presldentsi The our experience with President Ford;who1 Editorial Assistants Louisjielgado, Steve ftussell, Steve Gutow in the.event, of 3 vacancy in the .vice­ it, An engineer who barely learned hisi!i";selection should be made by, tfie people; served in the House for 25 years, rein-V Assistant Amusements Editor , " Mike Snipt presidency, nominates a caMidite fop material ^ould be'sued' fora colUpsedfljiiThj'ee vice-presidentjs have succeeded to .'.forces thetenet'that thepreSldentshouldrr wrtEdte : the office, who must then be confirmed 1 building. A doctor who barelylearried his— -:'he presidency-in the last three decades. • be elected by altthe people. Avacancy lit Sr w,.,...Claude Simpson -That-officer should n6t be chosen by one v by the Congress,/That's howGerald Ford the vice-presidency should be filled by iwlZT' V'--'" Aon Wheelock became .Vice-President, and how Nelson ^ .special election, . 'Ji'.. Oopy Editors j0y Howell, Colleen Doolin, William Zeis' JS'SeMers'fo-fhe"f d/f orHfi§ Rockefeller"will-reach-the office. If He George McGovern • Nancy Call, -Brgnwyn Purdy, Nqrma Gleason, Robert Fulkerson: *@i[disappolnted many does. • ^ --'-.Bob Lemmons, chief of the Electloni' i •.Firing. Up*, leltart «hould: Division of.the,Te*SS secretarjr'of state* , -T * • ^ Phill Huber, Andy Sievermpn Democrats, and The anxiety of choosing a vice- office, estimates that a special election;" J| .^.'nade a mistake . * B« »yped triple-spaced. Sr president speedily may have suggested ... coqld be, held on a montti's noticed *•' 1 " *" ppfctta» «pr««d-aiThe tony T«un lly The naitolar jdvwlWn* rrtmmMlit 'of Tht pally . • ^nomination-on a tide Y$m 0 pcbll»h«J by Tixa* 5(ud(jtt ?,.Tpiaii: H Pdocallonal Adnrtlainx (Wnrlc#,-tec; of confirmation. More than a pianth has & would naturally creates great deal "i . " liberal populism,'"''®];^ ' SUttoo.-VtacUil, T«. : ,W Ait.. Kn York.N V , 10017. •, passed since Mr. Ford ascended-to the .' voter interesj: and a--more\lnten:feuex<1 y-3?" tWjr-T««f w Maniiy.Tuwtay, : -Xeum.tubKrtbe, to Tl« Aitoclalcd Pttu. ^ » r^T'!nc,ud* ridiijrj lie .failed -to presidency, but hi§ nominee has.not yet . .amination of ISBUOS and personal- TJandtf. ml FrW»y faptonfatr throMb > • jjnltalpreniaumumtl aad PtfilicNcinSetviwnt phone number of contributor.^.^ f. nomination of the vice-president-to the May.MdTiindjr. Thirxlay. and Twtap la attm/fotrpi UieAuoeiald 0>ll«Ul4ft«rt (he • been confirmed-by either*house of •' qualifications than a regular election, It Ao(ual. ««c«p( tn( »»>ropetW».s««rt. fioulBwwi Journalitra Cnmmita'and Ific Tcu> Daily uullt of the cooventlon. Certainlythe body Congress. Clearly, presidentiat'selectlfirt ' pwould pr-obably have & recordlurfiout. if' paid 4t htiin.T«. ; > AaaocfaUon i ., , ' T^rl(V}T"n*» 7h> of convenUdp delegates breathing theair Hnryduy) tutiiniIM |Wmrvapaptintrp at UliiScion of the vice-president underlWes attitudes'. ,wp operaletf under iueh-a pfovislon to4 : 8100 N, liurn«l Jtojkl, kat* AuiiJti BoctfVlrd t, that.have reduced th^ vice-president to * ,d6y, ifwould'not be toplateidaddnlcrcei: :^S5SIAFFISISS2B£SE: Trail and iiva.4 1 -n, TX. 78712; or brina letter* to a tho tiApt hattAt-fWnn the president'spuppet, if®interesting to -'-for president andvice-president to- it; §M;• iP'i '•llflv:' HP ~ ^ guest viewpoint '&#}> •" 1 1 We are the spark, the are the flame By CLYDE FARRELL ,-You may have helped them, had about three hours' sleep All I for of (Editor's note: Parrell is a by boyco.tting iceberg lettuce, We were talking about how summer looked some-the~ most grievance committees to problems and whatever other ?Mfie loVeVand;.;; evidence that this was just a democratically-run "meetings with, some third year law student .who. grapes and Gallo wine, a strike begins. Actually. I work with meetings problems farm workers have dedication the fann workers % ^ line, and all summer I found I have ever seen: One time,, ''spent the summer of 1973 in often lasting late into the in dealing with a complex; have for fa ca«sa;_J^y^are#fi& Perhaps if you know them was grilling Oscar a bit in my only proof that it was the for example, a vigorous night. world. the Rio Grande Valley and the better, you will feel fcloser to' less-than-perfeet Spanish, to truth. In the melon"strike.with debate resulted in a change m English-speaking poor peopleviWith nothing but^® ^^ummer of 1974in Galifomia's- Mondragon told me about a .1 have some sense-of how their hearts and:'hands with . .;: la causa and the boycott ef--see-if-ha would -stick, to-his which Oscar and I worked in the for dispensing kind-of -' Imperial Valley doing legal- method informal • "grievance the workers respond to the un-which build their f°rt-• contention that the:organizers-the Imperial Valley,-lire strike benefits from a.family- to for work for the United . Farm committee" action taken even ion from having taken dozen#—families..They know that the ... One mornmg this past June, just do the willof the workers, Workers of America, AFL- "flame" actually. ignited unit to.an Individual basis ($6 where there is no" contract; of statements,from both strik--^-Struggle cannot be won in the ' about 3:30 a.m., I was talking He did, in detail, and left me itself. The,workers met in the per person fora full day on the CIO.) Say; for instance.-one of the ing and nonstnking workers, 'fields--plone: • it -requires ; ; with Oscar Mondragon as we with a phrase that sums it up fields without 'any UFW. picket line). In this, discus­ -. I: would like to introduce: drove through the dark to the labor contractors tells the The responses were: 100 per­changes in the basic social beautifully; Nosotros somos organizing, then went to the sion, as in the others, the , workers before they board the . some fi;iends_frrpnni7inp thp to. run a strike.-' shouId-be ended was •each per truck of melons pick­asked if the:w.orkers had been Farm Workers organizer for spark The workers are 'the fort to makethat change is the . •vesi-naia worker^ During the tomato strike at presented arid debated. The ed; then as they reach for threatened or coerced by the boycott of iceberg -lettuce,1 :. TTiilHt'-XL' : ^-Stockton A1 Rn»*a§, conducted -organizers' position was their.checks after a>hard day, .union. The responses were100 grapes and Gallo wine.. nearrttw is-nairinp :percent negative,, often with . • The peopleof the fieldshaveiSPsr •' '• "~per.t r u c k . T hfr next dayTW surprise fnwrwiili^iuimn-iti.'ii '| I'''111•11 m ImoreTOngTOe Wm. " pie do not want. , " JBessaeei . olease slipport the 1 < •£> Cesar Eririquez , is .an., picketed, witli np workers to ycott. Imperial Valley organizer, as -deliver to.the grower. Accor- Confusion with^the facts a (nonunion)1 well as head of ding to Oscar. oniday's'parb­ "community service center in (work stoppage) will usually • To the editor "order'bf desirability. milftaiy quite sure • that-tthe.'550,000 lo-each other. , „ Brawlev. He.; explains-that:-settle {he dispute Re; Janice Totaling article . discharges may Ee'ltonorablfe, courts-martial cover all Courts martial artrbf thrfee when the. strike is over; the ? on-amnesty entitled "An Era general-undesirable, bad con­ ---The UFW-is more than a -military offenses for the • of Conditionality.", duct:.of. dishonorable. types, in descending order of union merely; shifts gears to labor, union: In its. service reporting period, nol7just an­ seriousness: general,-special provide other services for the -It is my understanding that' However, a centers, it provides counsel­ tiwar offenses. In. addition, or summary. Most courts workers; Wh.eret.hereisa con­ deserters ' will' receive an general discharge does not ing and referral on. Social "undesirable" discharge, deprive a veteran of GI the 450,000 discharges martial are summary (one tract, there, is a hiring hall to Security, "workmen's compen­ doubtless include general dis- commissioned officer, acts as be run. There are al-so which is a specific category of • benefits except for theright to well un sation,-welfare, legal charges, as as judge and -jury),-and cannot discharge' like "honorable" '.re-enlKt./stnong -as"*he-has desirable, bad conduct-and -result-directly in any.kind ofdischarge, In descending served 180 days on active du­ dishonorable, the majority of. discharge, although they-they ty; in fact, a general dis­ OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE them being-general. , may be followed by ad- charge states on its face (Qustln topics) Courts martial and less-ministrative procedures "General Discharge .Under 2200 GUADALUPE PLAZA than-honorable discharges which so result, ­ -Honorable Conditions;" Across the street from campus: have no,necessary correlation • Name withheld by requests—SAT-T-VA,—Austin's only whatever that means • Suite HI -200sq. ft. $500 to S8000 • cooperative restaurant, Is ex: WlietRer clefflency*?-dis=-— pencncing • money troubles^ charge might fit info" the pre­ •.The biggest one is a $345:16 sent scheme is an open ques­ Suite 226 -690 tq! tt." debt to the state for back sales tion; presumably, it would be austinl taxes. It must. be. paid by better than undesirable, but monle§son school Contact: Nieman, flanks and,Puryear September 26, or thestatewill equal to or less thana general THE ELEGANT Donna Pesoli, Director shut SATTVA down. •discharge. 476-7011 : buporvitcd br'Associated MontextorK Inlrrnntwnalc.. 5600 to S3000 There will be a benefit:' The most egregious error in supper from 6 to 8 p.m. Sun­Tomhn's article is the infor­Pre-School & Elementary Levels day at the Methodist Student mation relating to military Ages 2'A-6, 5-7, 7-10 Center to help defray the courts martial shown on the North 4108 Ave.H South 400 W.Alpine debts. table at'tjje. bottom of Page 9. 2904'Jones Road YES, THERE IS A SATTVA has been providing No time period is indicated THE DESIRABLE / 442-3152 s natural-foods to the communis for the.-550.000 courts martial, , ty for a long time. The Texan or. the .450,000 less-than-QUAKER MEETING IN hz&ofape urges students to take this op­honorabie discharges; but the $400 to S5280 portunity to help SATTVA in figures mustcover a period of AUSTIN .its struggieTS"stay alive. • several vears. Even so, 'I am r nv RAOTTfi We have no. written creed, nor pastor; or organ, no altar, no icons. What do we have? A •fSiEsmn meeting for worship in expectant silence. A belief in the Divine Light within all men. A 300 THE LOVELY year tradition of opposition t> v :k«C- Forecast for Fall mm&g SHOES IDresses, .all kinds. Clingy, soft dresses." .'t' Shown, a -sleeveless,* .V-nedkeif "dress with WILDERNESS/WHMEWATE » princess lines. Topped'-wlth a belted shirt . AIT over , jacket, in navy,tan & cream fern print on arnel triacetate. Sizes 5-13. 36.00. 20,i 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5' <2&l JfK iM -JWS3 $•: ,Xf By BILL JORDAN ' Jp?£--Texan Staff Writer " _ f --Texas Soccer Coach7Alfred ,, . Erier has a hard timerexplain-: , ing to most people why it is v unusual for a halfback to be his leading scorer. For Some J reason ".footballiUs" has f brainwashed most Texans into si-..-believing that soccer half­ -tacka_iliketheir football -counterparts) should .only w^s he the leading scorer for Texas last" year tSut now, only one game-deep in the you'ng-1974 sea$on;4usuamc'is at the top of the list again. ­ Customarily a soccer half­back is the man who istagged "team player:" His job usual* ly earns him little praise • while the. forwards gain the •-glory. m "Of course it is unusual," said Erler as he watched •.Alvarez-Calderon warnrup at­-~a~ Texas practice session_ -"But MimoVstyle is toaittack and move in on the goal, so lie's usually in the right place at the right time." Being m the right place at the right time mage Alvarez,? Calderon the leadingscorer in Texks histQry after scoring14 mo Back .gps§:: -•' ; * • • • • $8&S«, V • ;••••' "V -' highly regarded UT Arlington, year, but I'm not placing a lot giving a perfect example of ^ ,of * importance on it right why Texas-depends on its half*''*,'Tiow." "" * " back..for firepower. If pro soccer *passres-~up '.'The goalie had moved out "Alvarez-Calderon, or vice-too far so I just lobbed the ball versa, the 23-year-old athlete over his head;" Alvarez-: : plans to .return1-to Lima and Calderon explained about last put his economics degree to Saturday's game. "I don't de­use in a government office.­pend on ray poWer shot a lot One thing CalderBfl would like because most of the time, like . to see before he-leaves Texas last week, it'smore important: •is some of the athletic Jor hiP tn plaee the hall rather department's riches spread in r?'l j®g| Texas soccer "RatTBafcK" •Mimo/.;AWarez-Calderon is • attacking halfback: to no exception to the rule. Not offense. ;; THE v, MARCH HAIR Haircutting Studio 501 W. 18th 472-2984 Wk * 4 '' ft*•>'»^ VE'ARE'PROCD TO INTRODUCE. w$% THE ASSOCIATION OF DELORIS tFormeriv of The Haircut Store) . . Handmade haircuts--,.'.-r * at People's Prices^,' „ -<*•* ^ •formance• against' Texas ""?raisr"ps«Hterrsa^ the as'the-Luna, Peru; senior led the" Texas team"to an~8-J season.1 the worst in Texas soccer history. • THE TEAM'S poor showing • -brought a strange -reaction from Alvarez-Calderon. Instead of graduating lastspr­ing the Texas captain-stayed in-school and vowed to bring Texas back to prominence m the Texas Collegiate Soccer League. ' • The season has already started-on a winning note for­Alvarez-€alderon and theTex­as team. Sporting a broken arm Alvarez-Calderon scored . the winning goal last week in the season .opener against f H I®4-' Locations J Trak Bicycle 41 a Simplex DerailIeurs «Qwick Release Hybsltp T ?>. Clencher -Tire<; '^fTool Kit SI29,00 ­ ili ii-v R U-f. • " toscore rofiissas jptedstatwhs strong point,:-wilh4j, rtf ditble;.'• ; according to Erler. who has coached the Texas'soccer star for the]ast threeseasons And the Texa"S coach says his aggressive style may help the Peruvian find a place in pro soccer.^:!*.-: • ?! , Alvarez-Calderon himself is pessimistic about pro soccer. Especially American soccer; -­ • •'American.soccer, is more,: like European soccer. I/don't.. like the kind of game; that American soccer teams play­ .because it-is so'restrictive.'-'­he said. ('"I MAY try out for the new 'team Stop ALLANDALE BAPTIST AUSTIN'S FASTEST GROWING CHURCH -j ?'vf. in San Antonio next 0i Are you looking for a church home? Come . sfS* ' ^*3 ­ check out Allandale Baptist, a warm fellowship of believers, people, who love the Lord Jesus and each other. a # ^1-1 rL'iSi.-­ SIS'? "m / -Bus leaves Jester 9:15 Kinsolving 9:25 • M MK-7-* ' 'KJfi THE PEDALER BICYCLE SHOPS S Of Austin . ^ gf Announce Their Warehouse Clearance TW Village 2700 Anderson Lane :;453-3329 615 West 29th St. ^472-5549 Royal Asport byGifpneWi Simplex Derailleurs Various Frame. Sizes f l* •Mr I y.jir % t m £>sea Bicycles i S 3 Speed, '5 and 10 Speeds I I1 I* Bicycles Assembled Tuned! .. Alvarez-Calderon said. ''-After: all, the day is coming when soccer,.is going .to be a big thing' in Texa's. it,already is growing fast in the rest of the ;-" United Statesi and it's getting. Lbig arouncTDallas, so^sooner • or later i,t will be big around here." It .'might be a long time­.before AlvareS-CaiagWfrever­ • gets to seesoccerSdopted asa foster child of the Texas athletic program. But at least when he leaVes he'U know he did his part —unorthodox asit_.; may be\oconservative"soccers­thinking. £ ^ -5^L, ^ > ­ * Sigma Alpha Mii Phi Kappo^Psi Phi Sigma'Kappa * Sigma-Nu §s-wm : Tuesday, September 24 Sigma Delta Tau • -• . --.-v.­ -•-* t-S ^ v. - f'A'Sigma Phi Epsilon {'*•& f^Tou Delta Phi ' .J,-' %.4--"Tau Kappa-Eptilon miTHeta Xi­^SlZeta Beta"Too, I-:• * fF* Friday, September' 27 ­ -Delta Tau Delta Delta Uptilon Kappa Alpha Kappa Sigma 1 -"• lambda Chi Alpha Wednesday, October 2 r , .-rpiT.Tfjj; STUDIOj HOURS _ _ 11 ^30 aMsM^Noonm, 1:30 ^43*0-^ J 1TSP Building, Room C4^fi2 ^ All appointments mutt bo made through your sorority or fraternity -No pictures m&de without an-appointment ' " " ' ' l") v! ~ . i • spsgiswe League Suspends By RICHARD JUSTICE ; pressed an interest in Nunu as he have a him: cou1d • Texan Staff Writer a . football the "When Igo home, usukJly ait • "I just want to get my player — scholarship. He's exceptional­Garrett _ There is.a -disadvantage to of Hawaii and Christmasand in thesummer, . bachelor's degree in physical University ly quick and strong: We think an excellent' athlete attemp­Wyoming. 1 speak Samoan," Nunu said. education," he said. /'And I' he. might be our strongest ---SHREVEPORT;-La: < JLfPK.-ting-to play rugby. There is want to dogood in.football_Pd ­ "I picked Wyoming to get player." . AND NUNU does ;hot take ' • —The World Football League .<$&%>•facJiejan go. Namely, like to return home and coach away from home," Nunu said part in any average summer He might also be suspended Houston Texans'.. it'would be'-'difficult' trying to football.-Coaching is ' The weather in -Hawaii was jobs. Hei^a.s.inger in a tourist Wyoming's most interesting Coach Jim Garrett Thursday;! obtain a'rugby college something I think I would en-, raining all' the time. J."just player. V • attraction , for unexplained "conducts scholarship. joy" wanted to see how it was "Football has really taken '-It's not really a.goal of ' v detrimental to the WFL.V . « • Paul Nunu,, the Wyoming somewhere 'else, That's the over in Hawaii." Nunu said. mine, to be an entertainer," Gary Wright,, publicity middle guard, had never WHICH MAY BE more than reason 1didn't go to Hawaii*" •\ director of the financially played -football before • his "Most of the, kids:on the high he; said. "I like:, to sing . he can say after Saturday's . Wyoming Coach Fritz Shur­ school level play it. But in the Hawaiian songs, and .'it's : troubled club'that will move: sophomore year in high mur Texas-Wyoming, game. Nunu is :pleased, particufarly community leagues the kids: something I doV^ry well: It's to Shreveport this weekend; school..When he did decide to Will be competing against after Nunu's performance play rugby, the y^years and a tourist thing, and it'sgood to be.a football player, hewas an. Texas left offensive, tackle in-the Cowboy's 17-7 loss to be a part of.". up brackets. Like where • I­ ;fonned of the; suspension Hick -Thurman.who is6-5,245' '• St. •' • played it was a mixed team." A'.Hawaiian native,;Nynu pounds; compared to the 6-0, 'I-just' went oJt for7 Parker would replace him as . -=aeski Nunu. "»aK-.State.'' lllj ITt-UnU oalu.^-4"Wm which also had .a -mixed an interim coach. -: attending IcerSeS: "Not just Thurman is good', to firi'd out what it"pas like-It He. • Parker is the league vice­ wasn'1 like rugby much at all Artieriean Samoan and speaks president of football I always wanted to play„ a We saw Samoan.'His • rpother speaks 'It was strangeat first;."'he" -Nunu said. "It is a gooif7 Operations: He was to joift the. sport of some> kind in college-films of him and told English. -recalled. "I had never been a • chance . fQr recognition for-team in Birmingham, Ala., It would be just-about im­part of cold weather. I got Wyoming." -' , for a gamcagainst-the^rf' •••' sick at first" ' mingham Americans Tfiurs-; possible to get a rugby SWC Standings -It may also be a disadvan­ day night." scholarship. Someday rflgby • • Team •• • Nunu~is only a sophomore, tage' bigge'r than playingGarrett, 43, was an assis­might .be an: intercollegiate T«xei J, t , : W I T " Opp. -) 0. 0 1:000 19 and he has only minor goals; 'rugby. • tV3rV athletic sport, but™ it'll Texas A&M" tant coach with the New York 1 1 0-.0. -1.000 . _ 0 Texas Tcch ~UPI Talephotq probably be a long time " Giants .ef -the National Foot-^ 1 0 0 1.000 ' -3 Arkansas ^ I 0 o . 1.000 7 ball League before switcfimg A Preliminary Bout LONGER THAN Nunu Tea 1 0 1.000 1 SMU . » ' 3 to the WFL. could-have-Waited. He wjas a x Houston ». . 1 & 0 J.000 • 6 A .worker rest* under •«" sunshade' while another M * ^ 1 .0 1 > 0 300 30 ATTENTION football, track and wrestling Baylor HOUSTON (AP)' paints numbers on the seat* Thursday as, Rice-.-....p.".;'.:. > 0 I, 0 . .000 78 State letterman:at Kahuk (Hawaii) 0 1 0 000 21 preparation* for the Alt-Foreman title fight continue i* Not competing In SWC until. 1976^ • ­ Court Judge Arthur Lesher High School. In football he­ : in Zaire'for the expected crowd of 100,000'. . • 42, Boston College 19; AS.M-24, Clemion 9: Tech 7t Iowa ordered on Thursday the earned his greatest honors, rili.K ?' Sou,hern Cal..7i-TCU 12,-Texas-Arlington 3; Houston 21. Rice D- Houston Texans to. play one named Oklahoma 28. B&ylor il; 5MU 7, Norfh Te*«s Stated being All-Conference . 5?^ Miami{F!s ) at Houston 12 50pm , Virgin,.Tech Jf you have not received your D.O.C.A. more game in the Astrodome'. and All-State. • w*,<"T,lh9 > houu they stand « rTcp'i:2t,^1^?'^' 2 p m Tc«s. 7 p;m.; Cincinnati The temporary restraining at USU.7:30 B.m.; Oklahoma State vs. Arkansas at Little free studenf coupon-book, ypu may Two major universities ex­ Rock, 7.30 p.m., TCO at Arliona.state, 8:30 p.m.; Tech at New Mexico; 8:30 p.m. oraerbtocked^or-thettme-be— NMIOtWjf l£AGUE AMEfttCAN UAOOili v •> pick tine up-at the Student Govern­ EotT ing the plans of the World toftt I P. , . 60 70 .*533 ment office in the Union (Rm 32 J) B&ttlrffore TwiS' 81 .70 .536 • -? ' Pittsburgh i 79 70 .530 Our customers: enjoy the ' Texans to Shreveport, La.;;: New York.-. 80 70 .533 • V* ^fhltaphta-.r-o-^ 77 .487 7 Use?T asts. after Thursday' night's garpe Boston 77 72-.577 3 Montreal m 78 .477 a.'.6 finest quality and'latest Cleveland .73 75 .493' 6V> New York"; » :• 67 82 4SO 12W *0 techniques -in Hair Ser­ against the Birmingham Milwaukee,....* i 74 'If .460' ftV* .a. . 63 86 16W Chicago, 423 _ vice Americans in Birpiingham, Detroit , .yi'i-v* . 49 • 81 .460 im iWait w«t: Los Angeles -v',-.. 93 U 624 -• ' at Reasonable Prices • Ala. • ' -Oakland .« ,85' 66 .563 -Cincinnati v*..* 91 59 607 2V» The WFL had planned to+ Te*as...:j .90. 70 .533 4V»-" Atlanta.. . ^v.-. 66 550 U •Minneiofa' .77 74 .510. 8. have the Texans make their ' Houston .^•;U'."-76 74 507 17V* • tall fot ­ Chicago... : 73 77 .487 UVr San Fran ,v^v. -• 68 63 450 26 first appearance " in KanOHv'.. 73 78 .483 12 . San Diego ;ss 96 364 39 appointment * California. 6\ W ..404 24 . Shreveport's 48,000-seat; TSvfidsy'i R*»u)ti • .Thwrtdoya Oom*» • .. or tome by JVChlca9o 7. Philadelphia 4 Wednesday sv stadium next Detroit 3, Boston \ ^Pittsburgh 8, St.' Louis 6 .night against the Memphis Baltimore 7. New Yorfc O .. vi.vlSan oieoo at L • ir > ii '---hp.v VAN'S : j - IMPORTED^ IN DO&IEMAU. 7$Pt t' r-. r- AUTO PARTS You Deservea Break Today •McDonalds SPECIAL WEEKEND SPECIALS Five -Locations.In Austin 1 ' I®, NOW OPEN CHECK ©1974 McDonald's Corporation FalstaffBeer6pk ......89 •YourPartf Problems VANish at VAN'S . || CASHING Passport Scotch 86 pr. Qt. .......1..5.69 Parts for All Imports SERVICE "A/ 3705 N. Interregional k •­ Next to th« "Body Shop" Ph. 472-6236 mm f-:" -'f\T The ^ tiOOlAVACA 478-5423 S3$?.fURNET R0.^..45^-4689 •; , SPECIALS GOODFKIDAYANDSATUHDAY -m OPEN JO A.M 'Til 9 P.M. m EZRA BROOKS 7 yr. io VOhMlStMifhitmlMAWIiaittr Jth •*». 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Men's Shoes, first Downtown and Highland Mall.\ • m 'jg si®! w -XPj>» im-wmm ww m • s Texas Has New Teaiti ^W&iS Soccer »Women's Track Squad Gets Coach The TexasSOqetft' clubwttl submitits Kith budget tothe intramural department Wednesday; In a couple of weeks- By PHIL MeALlSTER quire becoming fulltime. -'ty _ :v. -.ih to control the athlete 24 hours ' the team will-find out what its budget will bo for this '>*y5fc u Z>hM Tesan Staff Writer • Since then, he has coached r, The only difference between a day. and most athletes don't -season even though it has already started. ' "' "* Assuming the responsibility ,r Various athletes in clubs men's and women's events is want that. The athlete has the The team has been operating on a budget of between* ftp coaching a women's inter-throughout Austin ed 4$m. women use lower hurdles and talent-and the skills, and the l $700 and $800 for the last few years. That money; must • collegiate team atthe Univer­Daniels has no plans to a smaller javelin, discus, and coach should just helpdevelop •cover all expenses such astraveling, referee fees, leagiie: sity is not one of the easier recruit for thetiew team. "We shot. them "• entrance fees, uniforms and all the other little expensed dorhelm jobs on campus. It means can't go oat and recruit like A new event for women is that a team, incurs. • _; -f As for fundmg,-he feels the.... coaching a-team; with little the men's* team. I don't the intermediate, hurdles, f in a nc ia1 si t uatipn is « After the necessary bills, are paid, the team has nd^ money i»n.d even1less fan sup-believe it is even altoxved," Started only a few years ago ''primitive'' next to themen's: money left for postseason games or needed equipment;^ & '7iT^intewm^onal-cor , ... .•~,budp.t.t>u.fwill "improve fast. '"We always ask for addittenal things, and slasl^fe^ty= ; Daniels has. receTvea*IeVte7s"ToT'Eeirif' ;^ slash>. we get what we got last year.'1 Coach Alfr^Erier" ^igg;SSK£0=iMSSS5l£d ln_ttr-Daniels said.f'And I have aBiuc&tion and recteafionTtal? terc^egiate^ffillltgS We.need new imiformsr new goal nets and stands so • ing. the job of Texas'--first University. "AJ1 \Je pan do ,is <•.-, • -; ^ T *. V4»V.v.. dytlwv|y .1CCUgl)M(VU^UvXin->~uu coacJh. Me is 'Optimistit about-. to increase' the number .. *_ .wometils«4rack -coach means advertise and leave the resi" n ?nt^ its budget'is |6,000a year to cover it. "though, sayiiig he might-granis:in-aiU in the future. •. ;«iwan optimistic attitude and an up to them, he said.'"Then if see k-assistance torn "I" Relieve .we're going to Stands'.were iset.up last summer..on the soccer1 field for: unusual cbachutg' philosophy; We ve gone to the SWC and submitted a proposal tliat they're, talented enough.. they. 'graduate'student'athletes. .-. have a. real good start," he Jhe U.S.-U.S.S.R. Track and Field meet. The stands"are •• Daniel£*3&rved as an assis­can apply for a scholarship." 2nd at Stadjum the all-the schools be recognized for NCAA status, but Hie : " "The most important, thing said. ''Women can be very avSllable kept Memorial across proposal was voted-down; however several schools did siVf—•tant coach forthe men'svtracknajitiJif,Training .H«cthe .warr —r".-:T team .vrjH? m coaching is getting along competitive,: Hopefully; we street. voteTor it," Erler said vJeamirom:1969-72. He enjoyed follow Uie same pattern asthe with the athletes^' said-can take care of all that are "The atlileticdepartment said that they didnH havethe Erler plans tosubmit a proposed budget to theAthletics-the part-time job but had to men. because workouts fluc-Daniels. "Some coaches want interested." -1 funds-to move the stands from the stadium to the field,-'-^ Council in December,-That will be the 10(h year fn a row-Mi-give it up when it would re-_ tuate with stadium avaHabtli-Erler said. '.'We offered to move them, and they said the-> that the club has tried to get recognition' ' -•""•••'•• stands were only for soecial events " • An argumentcan bemade to increase fundingforanyof" r§ Clip Sk -Sove Repair Clip & Save nl •'.-Anotherthing the team needs is for Clark (Freshman)'-­ the clubs at the University; but the fact is that soccer has [««r. —— r—-& Harmonica Sale .Field to be lighted at night.so the feam can practice. Ap­' ^ outgrown the club format here; ~ M'• -Service and Repair all Brands proximately two-thirds of the team has jobsin addition to . The team has one of the most 5uccessful"programs in leal Save 10% on going to. school so practice is feasible only, at night. I a} n . the cpuntry'd^spitfi; all its problems and deserves to be i«/)i ClUtUSUASE last year, after a long struggle the intramural depart-i. recognized as one of the top teams in the country. totfeat v.. ..^150 ADJUST ment came through with the lights and it has asked for a {ort Htod Sal IOC Brakes • TvSO si' ^All Hohner Harmonicas ' • The main reasonforsoccer to be putat the varsity level 1 proposed schedute for this year, but Erler doesn't expect 1 FrMt WW*) ..,v»...^ i ! would have to be its growth. Socoer Is booming all over •• Rwr v.0froiil«n . JSO any action on the schedule in the near future. ­ i . the United States as both a participatory and spectator I • I Amster Music 1624 Lavaca The team can't afford, to schedule any games that re-1 sport.. Cities like Dallas and Houston have good soccer'I quire more than one day of travel,' so that excludes tour* |fix, flat* (wheel off bike) ...... ...., 1.50 I naments and NCAA playoff games. programs from grade school all the way through high ] -! school. I Tru wheels {off bik^ front; T:50,"reaf, ~2tO0"|~ .L "We receive Invitations to play in tournaments but we ' 478-7331 ' Four years ago, 80 percent of the players-on the Texas I _donJ know if .we can raise the money and they have to I *Ji team w! . morning and evening s,%^ only that the team be recognized by its school asa varsity j ®5 Wf MANUFACTURE COMMERCIAL BIKE RACKS ignore the world's most popular sport forevbrv ­ ... I Mon.*Wed. or Tues.-Thurs: sport and receive an unspecified amount of funding from I a{ •__-.• , «w*j It's just a matterof time before the SWC adoptssoccer its athletic department. ' : Private,lessons with ' but fpr-many of present playere It will be too late. .$'• • John Fulton, tennis pro • ; " V JzC-Jhula-is-aLMiami. Noll i?- Matuszak said he is. willing Pittsburgh,. Knox at Los to play with another NFL Angeles and Ralston team and does not believe his •. Denver. • Blacks WFL contract Would stand in "I wouldn't object tojoining > the way' should the Texans any.of those teams." said the • Chicanos .trade him.-• -6-S, 290-pound defensive : ->!n heard , the Oilers were lineman who was.the NFL's -: (in 31 lessons) No. 1 draft choice in 1973.' "I want to playfootbal^ps whenTrtfftee todoso; better shape now than I would •/Women have been if I'd stayed in the Oiler camp. I'm on a rself- Classes held at 7:30 p.m. •WAf*t,--;v -improvement program for UT Lavy School Room 124 PEARL I- speed I strength." B See PEARL Mag, Next Week -Tues., Sept, 24 . EXPERIENCE TRJJE. FLIGHT J.I.I.U.I.'.l.'.U.EEXn • Reading Skills THE V-S­ Kondpr's Rogallo Wing * Thurs., Sept. 26 * , 'A High-Performance Hang-Gttdar * CORKER • : -Error recognition AT Sales -New -& Used * SUPER .SAVINGS ' ' W, ' ' * Repairs -Parts -jSails * * 3Qallo Hearty -Butjjun c For information call 471-4326 ;*.-a//ee Instruction With Purchase Ready-to-Fly or Kits ' « -PI > * Chablls Blanc . • • isis 44301 Guadalupe 453-6209 . 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Now twolocationj lor your students from,among qualified majors jn engineering, mathematics, growing needs -Imported German . and the sciences. . v David & Schraeaer • Liebfraumilch -­ for flying lessons.f .and A representative, from the school .will be on .campus to discuss • International Garden Center Stanford's ten engineering departments and interdisciplinary ..just ottBurnet Roaa ana **! *"7j$ programs, research opportunities, the financial assistance available, .^•^North loop Drive ot JMM -Budweiier­ end other aspects of engineerlng-e* Stanford*. ''• ffisitflong John Silver s 6 pack $1.37 Davio s Schraeaer interiors • Wednesday, September 25 :r^ 2825 Hancock Drive next to 908 WEST 12th w the Craftsmenin lantern Make arrangements fo meet him through at Lamar ipne Shopping Center !•• Enoinenind CafMr AMlttanM :. j80ft(nd the Tavern) GARDENCErfiER nji •? w % no longer operates ^ ^ Station at 29th & Guadalupe Captain Jim Caj-giM ntact ditto RAS 115.471-1776 or 471-1777 9th and n -I "ATI iv^pp m wot te: 9 J .J.Kf mp *§Fist Vr W~ Mm T". • . ." " 'S. ' AreagOrganizationsfU PREAMBLE Vfv E-XTRESS gjfeygjjTx • —-• Jtcaa v To Spbnsor^Corifab' Visits • University --area community service communications will be open," he said. organizations, may take a step towards ad­—-"If things go wellcnpugh and the people con-, ministrative coordination at a jointly spon-cerned agree, it could go so far as'to create & . sored confab at6:30p.m. Friday at theHowson centralized administration, establish a job Branch of the Austin Public Library, 2500 Ex­bank and.maybeeven createa frontfor funding ¥ position Blvd. • ; by different foundationsto continueour work," .A-, a-V **# $ Jay Baker, ad hoc committee member, said he continued. t Wednesday the different service organizations, "EACH GROUP, of course, wants,.to retain in the University area have been, planning the its own identity, but we hope to be able to do .sMll be able te coordinate-our efforts, Strongly individual endeavors of tfie^wfFJoul5 Keith. Muldowney cleans windows. pore lines, ©f com­-ed. , munication andlHsfctfsifp® :;ME DIFFERENT-OTganteations takingpari., lliatejaeasJnAustfn which.couiaTtTCliJaS^™ in the .effort include Hotline, Switchboard, I hostel, a runaway" ' i Alianco Rose ,.0 .1.77 Liebfraumilch (Bachman)..^V.sh, 1T39 1 SKIPPERS * Drop By All Brand New Lambrusco (Cavalli) sa 1.69 SSIa Look Around Come See Lancers 5*2.89 IMPORTED AUTO PARTS m m VODKA 452-0244 (SMIRNOFF 80 pr :.s*3MPLEASANT VALLEY : . dlN •ALFAJtOMIO •FORD (British) •PORSCHK BARCLAY 80 pr :X.SH,3;T9 • AUDI •HIUMAN •RCNAULT RESTATES 5 • AUSTIN ~*4tOHDA-•RIUY 11? SPECIALTIES •AUfTIN-HKAUY •JAGUAR •ROVER 1300 So, Pleasant Valley •B.M.W. L.U.V.(Chtvroltr) -•SAAB SUSMANOFF Tequila 80 pr sii.3.77 •CAPRI (Uncotn/Mereury) • MAZDA < SIMCA •crraoiN •MIRCIDfMINI •SUBARU Comandante Rum 80 pr ..:...sh, 3.37 • COW (Dodgt) ~ j. •SUNBIAM • couamMi •MORRIS I?? 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By SUZANNE PETERMAN A public.. a warehesS'; program to combat,venereal;' t disease is being put into mov: 'tion by the Texas "Jayc'ecs. ^Bernard S. Gardyv state chairperson of the Jaycees'. Vpnprpai-Disease Action ^Committee, said Thursday is aimed-at,increasing public. bT availa b lacIBS^TaOT^propSnsr •prevention and treatment of ­-"-"Venereal diseaae.-jg ' SPWwKi-e­ uA\o;«ci^y pa+teK-f n S AS\-3^ ..Jaycees hope "to bring together all the people who have the resources to help control VD." Gardy said. WORKING closely with the Jaycees are.several statewide groups.'including the Texas State-DgpartmenJ of Health. Sarah Lasater of the health department's -VD .division is&it towafd public • awareness "Education is only one small phase, of a total awareness figures .available. Xor. Jexas program.'iYGaitfy'said. ; ' • (1973 V, cases of .syphilis ; Lasater explained that "we dropped 14 percent from 1972. have'a/number of school dis-• Gonorrheacases increased by tricts/ (in Texas) where the 12 percent during that year, very mention of VD •is^for--with-an^aver^ge-yearlyJo-'., bidden by actual policy or crease"of 12 to 15 percent 5 tradition." . , since 1968. Figures for Travis . The program plans call for County fall closely,in line with , two fronts: a state committee-• those across the state. . NATIONAL, BRAND. -tSu*]W rp&mr ff«§ Panatela Slacks m V3 OFF The University Co-Op Sporting Goods P,, 2246 Guadalupe . -•On* heyr fr*« parfang wnth pwcfwt* of $2.00 t mer*. ^5s£p^ . BenkAmeneord eml'MetrwOioTe* w«keme . 1 and '"about 300 local com-; -v .A'.Texas Highway Department maintenance construction mittees, with the Jaycees ser-pifssupervisor received a plaque and a $1,000 personal check vine coordinator*; " Osrrlv SSikfrom Ladv Johnsons Thursday, thp TjiHv Rirrt ving as coordinators," Gardy pfrom Lady Bird Johnson Thursday as the 1974 Lady Bird said.-Committees are being-..i.jZJohnson Award for Highway Beautification. established in Hoirston; Mfeil Maury M. Crow was the fifth to receive .the annual award Dallas, San Antonio and El which wasestablished:to recognizetheJiigl^way Department ;• Paso. . . , ^^maintenance man whoachieves most in highway beautifica-• » Vtion for his area. " National figures show venereal disease to be on the rise.. In 1969,Texas led the na­ - -••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • - USSR ' ~ • f --' —I -ft" '' • • "'S". -1 • f*; • Don't send for the best Hit-M a n in Chicago... ' If you've got complaints or' ' S suggestions, tall us. The University ~fi Co-Op^f Consumer Action Line ­ 478-4436 Mon. thru Fri. 8:30 -5:30 tM-Mr •P'"* •••••••••••••••••••••••••# CipCDrlg Specials^ .**P* sr m Colgate Dial Pernox Toothpaste Shampoo #:c2 oz. Family Size W 11 oz. RegularI.5* <>r Sug. retail 1,60 Sug. Retail J,55 or Lemon t>iA p • ' -*; TK« ^ ^ AAz> Sug. Retail 2.25 Now tit) Now-X /i Q |§gi§f SUM V -Brutes wCut'ex ® «Earth m Deodorant ~ memong . Born Stif Rel^l 1.69 • 18Polish • Shampoo Remover Sug. Retail 1#69'Sag. Re.aU |i.ii ^acol• ­ .Sate >a(l9| CO-OP Crow, a Texas Highway Department employe for 42yearj;! began his-career as a truck, driver in Burnet CountyJSince hir appointment • in 1958 as head of the Blanco County .. a .number of ., ^landscapeImprovements^lon^litlgay^^itTOli^S^^2^ ^eLvndon Baines Johnson boyhood home and schoolbouse Albert L. Holiki^.Cuero resident afida 1967recipient of the" national Beautification Citation of Merit, rfc^ived a plaque , .• and $500 as-theseconcLplace prize for h'is work" on' U.S. Highway 777A in DeWitt' County, " a,f -Th6 Wo winners were among six finalists honored at thk ^ceremony. Special citations were awarded to the other four $finaIistsfT3aines':W.-Barronr-Jr. of Henderson, Jinimie d Harrod of George West, Joe B. Hall of Shamrock and Leslie Wayne Duke of Gilmer. The winner and runner-up were.selected by a committee outside the Highway Department, headed by Dr. E.J. Ur­banovsky, chairman of the Department of Park Administra­ tion. Horticultureand Entdmology at Texas Tech. Otherson the committee included Roy White, Glen Biggs, Mrs: Bill Hobby Jr. and Mrs. Marshall Steves. Reagan Houston, chairman of the Texas Highway Com­ -T«jwi Staff SNmlty Nnw mission. in" an expression of gratitude for the men's work said, "At 55 mph, there is more opportunity to notice the . Singers perform at state highway awards ceremony. ; bluebonnets and dogwoods that.bloom inSpring with the help 'of highway maintenance." : ^ City Named ;?f Previously, the ceremony and-luncheon had been held at -LBJ-State ParkrJjuLtheJ^.BJJ^Ubniry was chosen as this®^ year's site to enable guests to visit the PresidentialSuHeTndS^ to see a fjlm on the career of LBJ. FormerAnalystFiles^Swt A • fornter city -employe has• filed suit -in federal-'district WHAT'S GOING ON court, -seeking reinstatemtnt as a systems analyst. , In the suit filed Wednesday, Victor Kadanka ' alleges he was discharged May 24 after . filing a personal grievance complaint concerning a pay INEXPENSIVE ' LUXURY APARTMENT Largo an6twntortabte fine bedroom apt., from* SI49, furnlifted. Conventeht location on-shuttle bus. within biHmg distance of campus. Beside UT tennis courts; intramural fields. Two,.poo!*i-t>arbeqi^e pin, laundry room--and courteous professional management. ASPENWOOD ' APARTMENTS 4539 Guadalupe 4S2--4447 lntensive~ortci group therapy /icrhim/ •it" Available or"~ In'shtrtnem fcm-h Su/gdter ^ AUSTIN . ot/er a , INSTITUTE, INC. md:. psA/£$f<2/ Staff did their therapy at JanovS PRIMAL INSTITUTE Jdbdrab, ColP»ST--«16 Specialty fashionsfor' men and women •** X ( tdnfex ^H»wjMundnwyni#»t> . Clothes Factory 1918IO.IAvFE.-Kl« 0-7 AA A 4' Qitmat I n 9IL-, No. 27 6411 Bumet Ln. Riverside Oobie 452-6539 VHOMO, v •' V • iN&Uvir -^ NEW HOPE FOR: / CHICKEN FREAKS! You're overcome wifh the fear m ... what if you should run out ..;cold turkey is no pleasure for the -confirmed chicken freak. Relax] There is always a steadv supply of delicious-Kentucky Fried Chicken, at. KFC # 6 ; a~2I20 Guadalupe. % And if your thing is barbeque, =slo'w-cookecTaiira"smokeyr wef give you a steady supply of thst, tOO. . Put meat on your bones,­s\.enjoy a pleasant atmosphere, "remember Kentucky Frieda Chicken and ... .< TAKE HEART! •raise. - Prlnz and.orally discharged,'­ v.-.i-DefendantS • named^in > th? according to his petition.Suit areComptroller Alfred G, The grounds for the suit are;-­ Prinz'. Finance Director the First and 14th * William A. Harrison, City Amendments, freedom of Manager, Dan H. Davidson speech and the right for qnd the City Council. redress of grievances. .The 55-ye3r-old Kadanka Kadanka seeks both* actual had been a city employe for and punitive damages for -r two years..On May 24, he recovery of his attorney fees alleges he filed a ComplaintIn and. the wages -lost since, his accordance -• AMSTER MUSIC--1624 LAVACA 478-7331 p;< UT Student Gov't Tours presents . . , TexasTechGameTrip $1200 includes ,Tfl Mghmr Inn npntf-trip,lniKp«rftrtfMi u> tgU»ct Donutt ((•mplim.nti »l SG Toen) Svi will Itan UtthfyU htotola Sahmtay, Sqitemfctr 21 ol JJOjun., orrfcrtog IoHmA (j n»«n. *h,r Ik.gom», b« .. wiB rahtrn l» UtlMitUi.Ftaahda at mldiritU. l^bSign up ; W»d., S«pt«mb*r II -Fri., Sipltmbtr 70 wh«i you Jrun l« Iklttt 01 rtw IthwM litk«( For mor»-hltmxHion, (oil 471-J7JK . ... • ^ ^ -5 iu~ htkiAS' m 1 w I -^ ART NOUVEAU ANDPOSTEHS 195 & Onehour freeparking witlvpurchaseof |2.00or « " D—je^eldo'njiiei f-s •pyh, V A )Friday,-September 2QK 1?74 T1{E DAILY ill n? $$%. •^xE^- • v?J -••'•--$ {}&£?• /***->3*^ s US# Institutions Vilify Hill jp£&a Attorney General Called *Shield' wm ^ _ -•" • . • • •. • ••.•V V. .• ... _ $ By-CHARLES LOHRMANN' ^ ,.;,The attorney general also; was denounced by Matthews, ass s^2| Atty. Gen. John Hill was accused Thursday of acliHjg aVa --"the preserver and protector of negligence, brutality and non-Ml .-forfnn corrupt../tWMmi. stateninin agencies and•.« J catering<»i 1to r «> A t A !.. !» • fM n ,• .• ... _ — .> ;>"VJ shield a — powerful treatment in the Texas Department of -MH-MRv^f||g| rm'MMi special interest groupsby citizens' groups attempting to-change Richard Halpin, spokesperson for Free the Slow^auTlifl^ the state's institutional facilities. group, the MH-MR Legal Advocacy. Program and the Texas Spokespersons for Frese theSlow;€itizens for PublicScrutiny Association for Retarded Citizens had "poured an unbelievable . of Huntiville and Community Prison Coalition -strongly amount of time and money into negotiations with Hill to change, criticized Hill in aThursday morning pressconference.-Hill had MH-MR." Halpin Claimed that the efforts had been fruitless. no comment Thursday afternoon concerning the charges, -j; -HALPI1N( SAID although the attorney-general's office is; Attacks centered on the Texas Youth Council, the Texa$ revarnping'thepublichealth code, this action was the resultof a =c"° ss !iiblici.ty campaign of about nine months aeoand not a resultof Health-Mental Retardation. pjlc .official to-the people, . -#» • " • |» •' :fv.;~-.:Zd0i' •-1—T«*qri Staff Photoby Dovll) Woo and he.should see that justice is done, notL%?cbv6ring^FiSplendor in the Grass ; • r5;. agencies but by telling them fo-'get their houselrMirder,-"said : / Good,' deah. fun'is.'available to anyone for free at natural surrouhdings and seclusion are among the ad--'' Bill Kimble,;spokesperson for.-Citizens-for Public .Scrutiny' of In Geography Building Wooldrldge Park, as this couple demonstrates. Comfort,* vantages city parks offer to (overs'. Huntsville. -' ,* » ?fs •Hill wascriticized for his appeal of th? Morales case in which" ;Smoke filled the Geography, quickly with an'extmguisher.­ —.— Austin Sun — U.S. Dist. Judge .William Wayne Justice of Tyler reprimanded Building shortly after 10 a.m.. Worknien have been using the. Thursday when an elevator . elevator to move furniturefor . certain TYC.units for physical abuse'of inmates and lack of motor caught fire several-days,:and. police said rehabilitation/facilities. The spokespersons said Hill should v; No1 one was in the elevator . this probably overloaded-ii. accept the charges as truth. , ^ at the time. and there were no The groups alsq charged Hill with protecting brutality in thS Former Editor Shines Again injuries. • University officials were" . Texas Department.Qf Corrections and with dragging hi& feet in The fire, at the top of the unavailable-to estimate From the moment Michael said, "so that readers can readers a chance to plan was a wedding...." .: investigating : the . deaths of Carrascoand Ignacio Fred elevator shaft,-was put. out damages to the elevator. . Eakin and Jeff Nightbyrd met identify who is responsible for'"Weekehd aetivities earlier, "OF IDEAS," • Eakin inter­ Dominguez, Huntsville prison inmates who died in an August- over Shiners at Scholz', two what happens in Austin." Eakin said, the first issue1; jected. escape atlei+ipt individual .notions, of a . To justify theentertainment will be free. • From that wedding .came J "WE: ARE seelung changes which seem so simple, yet are ... ..USE DAILY TEXAty, newspaper* ''like nothing in slant of The Sun; Nightbyrd With the investment cam­The Austin Sun., Through The fcst in a maze of bureaucracy,"Susan Matthews., spokesperson ^JTexas"^ began growing into and Eakin point to paign almost over, the two Sim, the two.co-editors will.pit ."•''the newest contribution to demographic students of writers, former roommates at' the profit interest? of adver­• for Community Prison Coalition, said !> ° Mf-•V^ CLASSIFIEDS ^ Austin's literary horizon. ; : ;Au$tin showing 30 percent of the University, are setting up-tisers.and the support of an EaRSnTTormereditorirf^ier -the population over-21yearsrrfr^^^of Hcelrrthe old Farenthold affluent readership againstin­\••V\ Daily Texan, and Nightbyrd, age to be single. headquarters aT404B'W.~15th~ evitable pressures fromithose . ; 'freelance writer and former These people, Eakin said, St. exposed unfavorably. . University student," are" call­enjoy higher income ^and seek With a grin, Nightbyrd Call The Sun an exercise in Packs UATROL •40 ing their publication The entertainment more often deseribed his union..with applied idealism, a test of Austin Sun. „ ' than do Austinites in other Eakin -'.'Wewere like two lit­.Austin's political climate. At CAMINOS With the first four issues status brackets. • .-• tle newspaper nuclei floating -least "Eakin and -Nightbyrd ? i^lreadjLmapped,J^kinJiiipes The Austin Sun will cir-around 'Austin, antT then one . willdetermine if Austin really Our lovely Senorita . 8M • to see The-Sun. placed on ^ culate each Wfednesd&y giving nighjt we met at Scholz'. It .needs another.newspaper. mbdclsai) embrtdiered, newsstands and newsracks by handwoven dresswhile . mid-October. .affording us a lookat " -jj " LACKING ONLY $3,000 in jHuichoJeJndianyarn '•• ;:their campaign for $20,000 in STUDENT VICTORY COMMITTEE paintings and handcatved laquerware trays and . capital, Eakin and Nightbyrd boxes— allfrom Mexico, "f1—feel-confident—they._wilK­ another smallcorner In kvpublish on schedule. our Latin American'world : HEADQUARTERS » Easkin, 24, and Nightbyrd, of.dlstinctive imports 31, believe there is a strong' andunusual gifts. ... need (or another newspaper In Austin. . DECORATING PARTY "We plan an informative, ^interesting newspaper with a • Beer-m sparge entertainment section," m >;i Eakin said. TONIGHT AT 8&(yI IN-APDITION-to an events DOB1E MAIL (21st & ^uqdalupe) • calendar, the two writers plan {' •'? to offer "the best music,. Rm. No7 38 (n6^ ­cinema, theater and art criticism in town;" guest es-"r.... '• v, ' " ;-*'V : saysbyJUaiversity personnel; /fyoa area Democrat. Independent or Republican interested sports features, including, "uncensored reports from the' in supporting or gaining information about candidates WKole Earth. V •" Longhorn tiressing-uspm;" Provision Co. appearing on.0eMepub/ican ballot in November -please join and a"norholds-barred gossip-Z•* MC 3-200TP 3-200 GS3-200 SD36-100 JE36,100 CS-36-Wff . Monff(oylhpu Friday nil S^m Fe^/S^fBe^Paii'' Wl . en - RECORD TOWN ou Make Youi; Appointment Sw- OPEN Free Parknui in !he 10 Hit MIDNIGHI (.OVCrrii DohiC 2021 GUADALUPE MON. 1 HKU SAT G(!f 478-61 19 r , , ' ' * • w ' \ ' , >&£ sra« M E. PIONEER SX434 GARRARD 42MS S JENSEN 1 1 !§S§ bid *Why Not Say, ,e-e-e / Love You* By ROBIN AXELROD ^-fl-PT; •••••• Texan-Staff Writer poem, and the • affectionate I iS l ~ tTT There was a time; when lines and birthday wishers she t had written were €iclfclly how }W. » walking intoan elevator of.the .. hfirjjiends felt about lier Capitol in Austin, you could,: But the climax of Black's find a fresh sheetof pink, blue j Another m«mb«r of Pioneer's writing career came when; Amazing quality and reliability in n«w. line of super-receivers, rtie A low-priced two-element, 'full or green paper, hung there in *js encouraged by,.friends, she. a low-priied lutly-aulomatk ' the morning, entitled, 434 oilers 15waits RMS/channel, range system with an t" driver "Thoughts for Today, Original: dir*ct>t ,.s*\ your listening area; : ­|, Hemphill s and the University K>555iSttttl£irT^^^T**^iiirrir:f>'ii i «i comments in.response to the; sayings and poems. "SItX'ihg OTT^SrstSfa^ lounge of the women's room, .Marie E. Black has been an 2attendant in the lounge of the ­ ! her aqua uniform bulging ti .women's; room in the:1wse-' ' around her stomach, she'read ­i-i; raent of the Capttoi. for five r ; her poems out loud. She said years:-Sh'e started her. tradi-she never changed a word tion of poetic graffiti in , afterjthev were written.that _ I v . response to a need she (hey came to her all 6f a " ......detected.in her co-workers. sudden at odd hours in a rush of creativity. -­ "It gave them something' to • . > • Her friends recognize her'XooIT'ferWard'to-everj -day," she said. ..." writing—nu«Ld._whi_c h sometimes strikes in themid-*V* •: Their enthusiasm was well die of the day. She becomesreflected in the'light-hearted •>: removed, internal, a change :, •-of.her poems. She lias since -scribbles covering the pages -: from her affectionately wise-' • . stopped to take a sljort rest •i crackingi joking w-ay.. •• : and: let her thoughts collect -Reading her poems-/.".'she@|| again. , . .entered her private world ' • She. once wrote,' "Rules on *^gam, acting them out wjth : ­ - Becoming aiStreaker:. her ,facial expressions: and sffl v *Make sure you scrub and .-. tone of voice. ' . ••-:• i!t!U the rhei, weie Uaeeted^towaTd., we pay the sun toshine... The wasted on Watergate!" rain to fall or the winds to poem. It waspresented, fAm-. the problem of.repairingsome blow? Here isno fee you See Black literally ^ecame the1 ed. to Black on her birthday. pipes in the washroom,underground social con­by her co-workers. She had ought -. these things are free," she There to be more science of the Capitol. .^writen her own. birthday . women, plumbers. ;wrote. S(he wasanswered-witli. i.-.;.:-7"Considier the times;" Students- The effect of her daily ' &< >• f "jsayiogs was great. She wrote, 'ove Attorney -oo iar, tuve is me orny tmng we do not pay taxes on ... So , The students' attorneys/frank why not ay to someone today fvy and Bower,' I -"So "r' the only thing ­ nd Ann Bower, " are _x.. J love you." All day long, available by appointment from the gattne -remember-It's alongand hungry" Austin's Capitol hummed and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday time until 11pm. Galleria's Buflet will see people did tell each: other!"I through Friday in Speech you through , with a great beef tenderloin love you.'-' Oneman told Black Building, 3. Telephone Room Stroganoff flanked by a garish relish tray, a .that he got slapped in the face 471-7796. The students' .at­ bowl of-sparkling crisp -green salad', : following her advice. "Well, torneys. will handle-landlord- marinated tomatoes & almonds, duchess: you must have added tenant, • consumer protection, potatoes, French rolls and a galaxy of "something else," she respond-employes' rights, taxation, and desserts plus your coffee for f *ed. insurance:cases.. $4.95 _ ' " 5 A-liter of real'Bordeaux 'red wine ' 83.00: maxell &after mto TAPE SPECIALS Galleria's oppulent and matchless DIAMOND JIM BRADY DIN^iER featuring Consomme REG. ,SALE double au Sherry, Caesar salad, Filet of Beef W&i INC-120 2.29 Wellington, Tomato Florentine, Peach Flartibe' UDC-90 -at­ 4.90 3.29 $8.95 ST^OO 8->rack ^ * 3.60 m 2.40 I m UD-35-7 8.40 With a fine selection ofgreat winesat affordable prices. .. LNE-18-7 , 12.40 -i Regular luncheon seized 11:30 to 3 pm is. Special Buffet served 4 pm to 6 pm ^ Galleiia Dinner served 6:30 to 12 pm BUY 12 -GET ONE FREE .. lIFETIMf GUARANTEE BERKmnns thtf atareo store 452-5510 Kerbey Lane at W^it 38th Street' 2234 GUADALUPE • 476.3525 (1-3 mile west df Lamar) 5134 BURNET ROAD • 454-6731 dpa tttlT SADQR»L SIZE^ M ' tsV IhgirbREFRIGERATORS . M- it -TrnSJfgTi. ft > REATIVE CONVENIENCES % r *-1» ''&• YOU PAY n*< RETAIL.'/^ SAVE 00 c,cv rM 434 32500 10922 L-100 A1 The most succassiul '. F R| loudspeaker. »v«"r made, and it's not-even on originaf. It's a copy. RFL JBl stole it from.the v*.­-leodliiB...niak»r'." oi.. _ Ws-: A| professional studio; N| H . wm very: poweHul three-¥ monitors: JBl. This is a . way system capable of tremendoas soond with TI rr WrSxS only modest amplifier 1 1 power. Put this speaker' iii a Sound Gallery Y| package and enjoy., rock-bottom sound lind -price,'' . DQ TECHNICS 12Q0 • direicMnve turntable • farushless OC motor servo-control • ratk & pinion tonearm • low-copitonce leads , • battleship construction • Blue Ribbon Award NO: belts levers idlers gears cams shafts FINALLY, rumble, wow, flutter and feedback are reduced to a levfei ho longer of any conse­* quence.. ' , <$SL' ( SEPTEMBER SALE PERHAPS THE LARGEST SALE OF TOP­QUALITY NAME-BRAND COMPONENTS EVER HELD IN THE STATE OF TEXAS. 25 -80% PRICE REDUCTIONS ON IN-STORE: DEMONSTRATORS AND JUST-DISCONTINUED MODELS BY SUCH QUALITY MANUFACTURERS AS; PIONEER • KOSS M -TECHNICS • SAE • JEAC II­ T „ Sound Qaller S IH 35'AT 38!4 St. 45M4I6 Also Open SundaylFor Browsing. Ve. stii[ have a large supply of three cubic foot Refrigerators fornonly S5Q per.year plus $10, d?p • isSSssiK • -• m sh-W-Si' -*' zzyi • .-*53 «w «. 'tf? '' A musical instrument raftsman; displays^ his wares . ^ .TO •, '•» -T^t'L s§f&i »r< frssps-^rs "iSslS sE?|A young man Music was an import&nt^JaKes ail the ac- part of the festival. This UoOJa.from,his Polish duet entertainsv perch. A •' " the crowds. jwap* —.. l . -j+ % ;^ 4 j> \ i Mexican dancers perform on one of the seven festival stages ' By IVtork Yemtna tant variety of entertainment — Polish, Texan Staff Writer Scandinavian, Irish, German/Czech and s ftemisFair Plaza —•more than half .Mexican dancers: bluegrass, country­ jun gumbo," ctieeses and pastries from Anglo, Belgian, Chinese, 'Ciech, Danish, Denmark, Switzerland and the ^£*lr V Dutch, English, French; , Gferman„ Netherlands, Swedish bif-bostok, Mex-.« Greek. Indian, Irish, Italian; Japanese, ican bunuelos and a varietyof soul foodsg#* Jewish, Lebanese, Mexican, Negro, More than 4,(300 persons from 120 Tex«| Norwegian, Polish, .Scottish-. Spanish, as communities staffed the fair. S " Swedish, Swiss,. Weqdjsh and Yugoslav Cloudy skies and occasifljnaL s^iQKers^ »pj»« — provided a rainbow'of colors at tftfe did not dampen 'the enthusiasm of the Bagpi.pes _ were a .* 'K' ^four-day celebration. . • j many spectators, mostof whom left with >. familiar sight and • ^ ' sound. This young man Foods of 24 nations were featured at a better,understanding of the cultures-of adds, to the color of the„ the event. Seven stages provided a cons?' their world. '• ' fair4 -v ­ •>V4> A woman sits backhand enjoys the surroun­dings. I ""Wi I i- JSIL • *»l£- Wr ^ sJti* mmrnmffi SswS • 4m •-iv'•*&£ —Ii / Photos by Andy Sieverman •'A%> jtV of the eventlThesethree > ^.J*-' mm f,<&(> t <» "» *• (ViA mmmm mmM&WMmm \ ,• j. IsSI ' s. w JS .. T-., ^lpf§ • :9 £* Council Funds C|)ild CareGroup •fiHtVsr East Austin's Child, Inc. receives $225,000 * Bv FRANK LOFTUS Berl Handcox. Bob Binderand . burdetrbf providingsoeialser-' .--"WEaRE indebted to-them average, increase,-including The "Austin City Council '"Friethnair!-fisrBind^-T-asl-the^vices-to -them, -raising -their-; for.their supportand hope that, thq$e whose income did nQt in­.Thursday voted 4-3 to .grant tie-breaking -vote, the' operating costs accordingly-,-all citizensTinderstartd andap%. crease, was nearly $800 per $225,000 to a child -care audience of approximately 150 he said preciate the :hours of hard year.--—-. " ' : . program, serving 450 East persons-broke into applause ' v "UNLESS WE get the work supplied* by the ad­, Austin children-of Mow CHILD INC. is a private, money we requested, there is ministration and the council Many' persons have" been poverty level, families. nonprofit organization formed no other alternative but to cut members." < ' able to support themselves .. The action overrides City by the parents of children who children from our program,"-: • Child. Inc., reports notethat as a result of this program,Manager' Dah Davidson's need day care service. The Strickland said. "We have cut 40 percent of the families causing a significant-reduc­recommendation that the program provides preschool -. our staff-until it is almost im­enrolling their children have a tion in the nutnberof families organization not be funded in^ education, assistance possible tg. operate. significant increase in family receiving welfare: assistance; with !l hayen!t been on vacation income the ;:first-year The the organization claims. Child. lnc ntoTwi •over two -yeafs." adiiecL: ""OB?5?­will continue" to operate five and dental care. for over • five years withput East Austin day.care centers. James -Strickland; director,; .any cost-of-living increases.'.', . If the rouncii had, tunied down oF Child, Inc.,;toldTthe''COuncilT -v -After, the yote;:-.-Strickland the reouest the-centers would before itTv'oted that "450 expressed appreciation that '"cU*-•Walk-In' Used have been phased out1 Oct. 31. parents would be torced to the piogiain wiould umiL'nue Plnntnr nppnintmpnl<: arp nnt always Pflsy to gethv calling The vote followed "a motion quit their jobs if child care to operate. the Student Health Center. by Councilman Jeff Friedman1 were^noFavailabter -»1 am -very pleased.--The -Alany-student&-whahave_tofid wjllsay it's easier-to''blow_ to -include the $225,000 in the If this happened, other city-council had to male some,dif­®»&ifoff" and just go over and .use the walk-in clinic. TSat Is budget and -was supported by supported welfare agencies ficult decisions," Strickland . where the problem .comes in. Councilmen Dr. Bud Dryden, would have to assume the • said. •" Many of the walk-in patients are not really; urgent cases and could wait for an.aRpointment. They dp not; sothe walk-tjr^ms-are overcrowded,-Dc.JLMitchfilJi-..ass{)ciale.directof;_QL «-|j?the health center, said Thursday. . . . . Mitchell told how the walk-in clinic works. First,-the stu^ '%"dent receives an evaluation and temperature reading From a nurse. There are certain medicined'she is authorized to ad­ _ -minister, but often she cannot do enough and will send the ".J Mary Kaltman's... , patient to.a physician. If the student requests tosee.a physi--'^ . cian. he will see one. " * • IMarCo*s Restaurant . (A Very Special Place) ' It would help'the center to serve patients better if the ^^walk-jn clinicisjisgd only for "urgent needs," Mitchellsaid. . invites you to "enjoy Can'£dnrd~che«se"Soap,' stipreme of-chicken with ar--; tichokes andfreshmushrooms,skewered pieces of tenderloin marinated in a • " spicy concoction add served with soar cream enchiladas; curried Seafood or chicken and mushroom crepes, lump cra-b served with sllce.8 of avocado; center cut tenderloin with Bo'rdelaise and fresh mushrooms, chicken livers EARN CASH WEEKLY —T«xon Stoff Phofo by Mike Smith Parisienne, oysters Creole, and Oth^r superb dishes with a ... Blood Plasma Donors Needed FiVe, Six, Pick Up Slicks The old mokes, way for the new on the little Campus as well as the big. This naked Men & Women: skeleton bears the curves of an earlier architectural era. : FREE"/r£lTRWwiNE EARN$10 WEEKLY Please present coupon to waiter whenserved.| CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Committee To Sponsor Intersection Hwys. 290 E. & 183 • Dinner Entrees from S3.83-S7.95 Austin fig ' • 928-06W _ . " --price includes complete dinner, excluding Creaks Coat & tie not required. Owned beverage ahd dessert -*• . Blood Components, Inc. 0$& • ' :Sti)dents with tw cars arid Utile money can still go to out­ ' and operated by former WliiteHouse• Cocktail lounge and complete bar of-town football games through the Student Government ­ .~ Food.Coordinator Mary Kaltman • Dinner 5:30 -10:00 Mon.-Fri.. OPEN: MON. & THURS. 8 AM to 7 P.M. • | Tours Committee. . 5:30-Midnight Sat, ft TUES. & FRI. S A.M. to 3 P.M. v The committee"is sponsoring.round-tr>p transportation to . CLOSED WED. & SAT. tlie Texas .Tech and Oklahoma games. -\­ Cracks The Tech trip costs ?i2, which includes bus fare and'" 409 W. 6th 477-3735 donuts. Buses will leave, Littlefield.Fountain at_3:30 a.m4^; aSrM Sept. 28 and Will arrive in bubbock at -noon_ The bus wil^t, . return by midnight. . -'• Students may sign up far the trip through Friday at:BelI%^| Yes. there really is arS&scha -and yes, she real-mont Hall ticket office. ' - : • •>: ' ' Buses for the OU game Will leave Littlefield Fountain at,l|f«| Ij is Hu.ssian -anil yes, sheTCaHydoes eoolrand­ p.m. Octrlt-and-rcturn-li--p.m~Oet.-12T—r­ provide the recipes at More Information is available,at the Student Government" See I'KAIM. office,. 471-3721. r THE PACESETTER. The. THE MAXI-1. A new concept m one 'ultimate apartment. Sptit-ievei • SASCHA'S . next week bedroom spilt levels. Large bedroom- gimiiiiiiiiiiuniiiiiuuiimmiiuiiiiiiiiiuiuiiuiiuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiuiunuiimuuiHng liviifg In a two BedroofrrstiKfio.-t and tath" wrffT a lull study upstairs. Downstairs. a hillyelectric kitchen withwalk-in" -311 W, 6th St. -472-3556 pantry and spacious living room for entenain- Downstairs, a spactous living area, en­ Homestyle EuropeanCooking ing.Upstairs, twolargebedrooms andbail)»tyh:-tertaining area and all electric kitchen walk-ms. Free living at its finest See it to believe it. Guitar String 7880 Reasonable Prices Lunch 11:30 -2:0O > ' Dinner 6:00 -10:00 ­ Sale Happy Hour 2:30 -6:30 ^ V' ', -Open this Saturday tor dlnn*.-jffeg ' until 11:30 p.m, ' v Save 20% Ort isle All Guitar Strings Pacesetter'ApartmentsforFree^UvingPeople. 2124Burton Drive ^ •-v IAMSTER MUSIC 1624 LAVACA m I 478-7331 i Morefun thanaGatsby experience Roast beel. cornedbeel cheeses Rich BibleTeaching past/am, nam.quiche.,barbecue ; avocado soup,cheesecake & bakiava. Bui no» altal once'jpn^ 3WVjfesM3th 172-1900 i CoriMon Open Sunday Closed Monday 1MBRHCT S,^tt 9 ;SR.L:; >V-:; • Authentic" Italian, French and Austrian cuisine prepared by Native European chefs. s The finest in Viennese . pastries. For souffle's call^t in advance. Featuring European Cold. irifBuffet Lunches, Mon. thru Fri. -i:>' . \ 1 .unch 11:30 -2 Dinner 5:30 -fll "tl 476-1344 ^ 801 Lavaca in the Cambridge Tower|^| -. DATfe-$eptefnbef-27-28 — ~ZT~TIME: Registfaiion begins'at 5 p.ml Friday-First meeting begins atmi 7:30 p»m. Conference ends Saturday, September-28,10p.mr," PLACE: Pioneer Town—7-A Ranch, Wimberly,Texas ^5 SUPPER COST: $13.75 (includes one night with bedding, 3 delicious meals)J-y, 'iva MAIN SPEAKER; Jim-Green, Graduate of Wheaton College and has- fflnH MnMMHHMj A been on staff with Campus Crusade for Christ for 11 years.. He is 4 Mite W' favorite speaker and Bible teacher ^mong-cotlege students. QME9V &F3, v>;\ REGISTRATION^ m W: I^JTX * 1 jJ/C" -Campus Address_ Xity_ Campus Phoney - •B M­m. . Mh I jSii1 tS~f yM Need Ride • Will Drive Car •,V -iieeu Aiue i_j will unve v-ar j_j "V . ?,j . <. • • ,| •iH DEADLINE FOR REGISTRATION: Wednesday,September 25^5? Late Registrationxannot be guaranteed housing orfood. -S?r-«3 Make checkspayable to:Campus CrusadeSpecial Projects. Mail Registrations to: „ • , Campus Crusade Retreat. lof 19th Street ~ Austin/Texas 78701 ' Last mifiute reservations "pay'be phoned-In no later than 4 p.lti. Wednesday the-l^i 25th at the following locations; > ' " > 'jiAUSTIN; 472-41U SAN_MARCOS: 392-6817" ANTONIO: 735-5961 i&Ss mm MHMH FISH PLATE w > 1 f f nf h frto*> '.() itirl I (' -• rj •. ! st (• (* (i t««o o­19lh & Sari Antonio '478-3912 b p.m. -C!o-,incj lliru Friday dm ; .TTVT.yr''' ' A. » VtSFA MH-MR to Present t .. By ELIZABETH ECHOLS Workshop will teach 'perSrisM'app^y lo Hving^ijPThe Austin-Travis County -Mental •• Health- the 'theories "&nd-:pr*mciples -^they learn tn '-'f- The , Texas attorney FEDERAL LAWS require Mental Retardation Center/which offerstreat­preliminary trahsgclional analysis couisesgeneral's office Is seeking to late-model automobiles be ment for mental disorders, is moving into the • • ".Becoming .....as Women" aims to.create, stop distribution of an1'Emis-,. .equipped with pollution con- community with a group "of. preventive an awareness of women as women and to ex-" -V-'' sion Control By-Pass ManuaK trol devices, and ajiy car with programs. plore and react. to.the traditional rolps of•promising higher rnileageand the device disconnected will Interchange Workshops are designed to women in society. improved engine performance not pass stateinspection. Per-provide resources and skills toenable a person In November tjyee "different workshops willby disconnecting a car's pollu­ '.sons who removeor render in­ to realize'his potential. Bill Hawley, coor­be addedv tion control device. operable such-devices face­dinator of the program, termed the workshops ' « "Surviving Adolescence" will try to help a ' The attorney general's of­civil penalties from'^50 to $1,­"vocational training to allow a person to take family through this difficult time. fice'Was alerted by. the U.S; 000 per day7 ~ charge of .his own -life" independent' of an in­ . • "Man-Woman",, explores tire prevailing • Dniip farn, stitution. or;individual. V" , 'sterfeotypes'of men;and women and how the'­ Agency to the distribution o orney^^f^^SITKSf t. general -workshops were stereoiypes.'ihtertere wiith developing auihen­01rereaj-iaverififsffcif^^f' garagemen and. service been distributed' in Texas. , , • stations.1 The manual is" dls-"We are trying tov Stop it JW&i worktops wilL deat with.mQre specificissues • '.'Sharing .thFWIFdom*of. . •' ri.hivtoft-hu thp Rnprpv before it gets started." he —T««an Stoff Photo W Chip Kaufman such as adolescenoe. wbRiarihood and old••ag;e^^'ihW;^iimpti6n that no ope need die of old age' Resource Group of Southfield, said. ~—Coyt nf thr' workshops varies .from yl7,50 to . -Hawlevsaid ^nppple die of* beiiig brainwashed ' --Mich i,'V. The attorney-general's of­Worjf Continues To Pile Up? $35. but no one will be turned away because he • ~ -• that after a.certain age they are no longerfice has alerted the Texas "doesn't have the money, Hawley said.The fees useful.": The' workshop will: be 3 dialoguej^ . "IndependentGaragemen's-J-A shovel dears the Way for a 500-Settr theater iadditlon to the Drama Building.'The ^ are negotiable, he added.Union TVs 700-day project, which was begunJuly 1 asa portionof the proposed new fine Arts between older and younger people. The older^^ Associa'twri • and the Texas ' T „ ^ Each jnonth the MH-MR, Human Develop­"e; will-be drawn from three life si"tuations|^v Center,'alio will include three dance studios,a targeclossroom.facilfty and.faculty of- . Service Station Association of • ment Center will,of fef twoljr Uifee preventive nursing homes. ' reti:remeril'"homes ^and^*r _„>L-To -Move possible civil penalties their -flee space, Dr.. Webster Smalley, drama department chairman", said Thursday. Total workshops. • . private homes. cost; for the project .Is approximately $4.5 miKion; • members face for performing , • During October three workshops will be ~ Will the-eternal triangle on MH-MR HAS decided to expand the preven-•': such operatioons.; . "All My Children" involving el™: • . tive program this year even though enrollment Phil, Tara and Chuck become THE ATTORNEY general's ;f.» Decision Making" will focus on develop^ last year was less than capacity. MH-MR is ' : a rectangle if Phil. marries . office, feels that the claims of : ing the skills needed for a person to sqlve.the enlarging to reach people, Hawley said -; Erica? improved gas. mileage are. A "suds survev" conducted. .-v,'* t> l. dally Probl^sof Hfe; Dr. Paul Radde, a staff because they don't expect MH-MR to offer' and sandwiches, Schenkkan Will th6 chief of police and T^6 pan?.phlet mation Center.,Rwm 102 by 5_^ therapist at the Human Development Cetfter. anything but treatment Now, MH-MR Jias to' 'by the Texas Union will help •said. his-wife otv '.'The Edge of p.m. .Friday. However, will conduct the workshop. •-make an-important and difficultimage change.^ '• «!« lm determine what alcoholic ; Preference^ in beer, wine p students may request .ad-• Advanced .TransactionaT Analysis he said -sp® . • Night" get to keep the baby ^ gas mileage10 to.25per-beverages University students ahd hard liquor are polled -ditional forms and still par-' iLOi _she adopted through the syn­cent with no iong warm-ups . like to drink: Questionnaires must be ticipate in the poll after the e_9ithouLhis knowledge -anaand nono stalling.-IfH5uchstalling -u~such claims • dicate without his ,:nnWtli ^ TEXAN.VyANT ADS in-received the even thoughTh^nhte nutiinp . are lound -misleading. -the ^ t"^tM-rmr ^t • f m ^ Un,on *nfor" ^aeiai'neTSclrenkk&nsaid •ure fix-offender may. be subject to up pressure on the chief to fix may.be ;. police matters?: 1 to a $2,000 fine under the Con­. Don't despair. The answers sumer Protection Act. to these questions will be Caroom said EPA studies answered .(if that is possible have shown there is usually no ; on a soap opera). The Union ' dramatic increase in engine has no plans to piill the plugs performance. ''The EPA on its, television sets during. study said it will improve gas its temporary relocation. mileage only if it is done ex­ . One of the .three recently actly right," he said. "If it is repaired sets will find a horne . done wrong it Will worsen gas • in the Pub, Union South (east mileage." , . of Gregory Gymn and northof Richey. said _ most vservice Moore-Hill Hall),, while the stations do not receivejnany other will be placed in oiie of requests to have pollution con-the three Union South meeting trol devices-disconnected • rooms to be used only if there because consumers know it is is not a meeting. A decision, illegal. concerning the third set has • not been made.' The French Kitchen ; To reassure those students interested in their stomachs • instead of soap operas, eating M i facilities will be get up-tq • servesandwiohes and: possibly, pizza and chili. . Has Something ; Nice For ALTERATIONS We 'are how doing Your Kitchen OUTSIDE alterations at Easy Prices. BOB ELLIOTT'S ~ 611 West 14th 2426 GUADALUPE •r.,V I OLD. MEXICO I MEXICAN FOOD I ,29th & Rio Orandi™' I I 472-0337 -ill i Avocado Taco iI V, I 30c 'J |, . 6o«lMofl., S>|il. 23Only&.'S-r Serving quiche* c^epei, o wif^ry | s " vJ jioupi' MlotU, and appctizmn. -. With-Coupon Only j Imported coffees and tepi, Becr»-I Hook"Em Horns! I and icine*. HANK'S GRILL , . . 25.32 GUADALUPE Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2 pc*. Meat, Fronch Frie* • Cole Slaw, Hot .Roll* & Butter . p.m. only . $1.65 $2.00 I t -•Top RnU-d in Mobil Travel Guide ALAMO-® RESTAURANT serving " m LEBANESE DINNERS V;;.: $2.95 and Up -..A'^Suinlay, Si-pt. 22, II n.m. -8t p.Tlu '-" -l­ (Traditional American Dinners As Usual) 604 Guadalupe a 476-5455 L£fMtou>H6Rt/0Af WlliiK.x m NE6D50ME PAPfcRSAND ASCRtEH AN ®fSK,R^anopsrhapsACANDU; HWeAwAtJii Of IWWRWWNP. KJ^^CDM\CSANO meBRfl«: KIT8VUU5 old dining'tailinthenorthern section^ of -Moore-Hill Hall, Fran-Schenkkan, director of the survey, said. ... The pub will be fully licens-• ed and also will serve pizza STARVING? • InSffhel, «,0»,0« *re.-y - Lusch -$ frelns of wheat Mtiisel* " Death.'• Cath. Rdief Srvcs: Africa Famine > U11 lit Ave,, NYjocm $pon*or*d by: ^ Aid /'or African FamtngsRiUtf GLENSHAW CORPORATION Present! S«P»-28, 8 P.M. Municipal Auditorium •J'OSB FEUCIANO i . with tpithf ptmi DAVE LOGGINS : "Meat* Com* fo Boston" ; * Tick*t> $6, $S, $4. R«t«rved »at» avaljable at Raymand't DrOg> t and 2, in Highland Mall, and mail order from Auttin Ticket Service, 2706 Rio Grande, Au»t(n 70705 (include money order, itamped telffaddrened -envelope and -25* handling}. ' DISCOVER THE MIND AND HOW IT WORKS! BUY, READ AND USE DIANETICS*: ?«#THE MODERN SCIENCE OF MENTAL HEALTH BY L. RON HUBBARD — * (A' Dianetics* Publication) Use this knowledge to Help ^Ptbers and Gain Increased ­Understanding of Yourself. A completely workable technology of the mind waits for you between the covers of this book. Grasp this oppor­tunity to learn how the mind works ahd 'discover the source of mentally caused ills. Gain too theability to helpothers by • applying the simple techni­ques i.n this book. This best seller is-a must for you and anyone who: would help-i himself and his feUow man to greater sanity and happiness. " Over 1,600,000 cop.les.sold!Order-your oopy ---of DIANETICS: 'The ModernScience ofMental "Heatfliiodoyf-— Just.!?ef JI, topd It and fry III Seni&JK to: DVT. 6-1 Church,of Scientology of Texas 2804 Rio Grande , c/' Austin, Texas 78705 ­ ~ I 5DO IT TODAY Restaurant I 'Arcade 2538 Guadalupe LUNCH SPECIAL DAILY $1.49 LIVE MUSIC 7 NO COVER Mixed Drinks • Beer Wine • Food • Amusements fcmd«ir kMnaw SpmM InmttpO Uqufe'ttOthM W*d. « Sat Happy Hour 4-6 2 for 1 Mixed Drinks s/' HI . V TOUCH YOUR IJ\RTNER ;i..AGAIN Ballroom Dance^ Glasses PER SESSION, Leath6r thnller of afl tVme? Based on a novel by Dr. Buckle Starring Campus Classes and Tanya Hide Bella LaToesie start October 1st €|iN NOW SHOWING AT THE DAILY 16:99 CALL ELIX 459-7067 NEAR YOU .•AV CAMPUS, AND THANKS THEY'RE WORKING The Daily Texan and Student Government have join1 ed together in an environmental project of recycling old newspapers. We are saving our excess Texans and other newspapers and taking them to the waste paper ptent each week for recycling! Won't YOU ioin us in this effort? cv ­ We have provided, for your convenience, GREEN RECYCLING BOXES at various locations on cam­ pus for depositing discarded newspapers. These :>«f| GREEN~RECYCLING BOXES are located at the following spots-. ROBERT LEE MOORE HALL— • (formerly PMA Bldg.) • TOWNES HALL 7 ^1 LITTLEFIELD FOUNTAIN • UNIVERSITY CO-OP •#.i 24TH AND SPEEDWAY , i U »•* _>1 JZ toldfy• • STUDENT GOVERNMENT ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION COMM. •V­ a? PLEASE RECYCLE compus briefs fe = as THE DAILY TEXAN, Folk Dancers To Perform Music and -dances from around the world -wilL be Thoc^htlr t^ r I Wl11 beg,n Monday al Hancock; going by the Main tlbrary, rv^ass By STEVE OLAFSON •;! 4 Those ihterested in serving ana Jimmy Clay Municipal stacks desk. featured-at.a party given by: Saturday not only marks the beginning of home football^: 3^ as registrars should meet at ..Goll Courses. Classes' will the International Students games for Longhorn fans but also the beginning of burglary«$ tn$ Student Government of-meet twice weekly for three To receive their permits; • season Organization at7 p.m; Friday fice, Union Building 321, at 1, members must present a weeks, The fee is $20. Han­ in the. Catholic Student The number of burglaries has always gone up on footballs: 2, 3 or.4 p.m. Friday and at 3 current University ID.to be cock, 453-0276; Jimmy Clay, Center,i010UniveEsity_Ave; or 4 p.m. Monday. ' Saturdays, particularly in student populated areas; Robert '<'• stamped and compared with 447-1938, or Austin Parks and Special guests will include Wisian of the Austin police burglary detail said Thursday,-' the list of names of eligible Recreation at 476-6692. WISIA.V-SAID-the area around the Umverei tv suffers the the ^International Folkdan-For more information, orto chapter, members. Basic' sailing lessons will most burglaries but the.Riverside Drivearea w£outh Austiai cers, • who will demonstrate make. reservations, call 442­bggin Tuesday and again Oct] also is victimized. , • '*•*: thfe steps-to-sfeveral foreign 9220 or 476-6692 ANNOUNCfWNTS^^'^-'*' T°wn LakeSaiiAway, 1800 dances. TIXAS UNION RECREATION COMMlT?fl wUlv, irigreased Wistan n_niA c i'm'Jj' tSJ1 " 5 Lakeshore Drive. accepiregisfral.fon^fforn-fl;30 a.m^S said, but thebest prevention isto' IOCK ait aoors^Svrffifel^^r2-"^ ^Jurgen.'"~Du'e n bo.s tel ,\-pallet Selections _ ^ Each eourse.includes twcT to 5 p.^n .Monilay In Unipn -BuUdlnj " gcatt ^ .ubWer Goadalupe River• tlWi*}^^bai»7jei=«==|i -ST-nw-* j^agfcdL Identification program by-marking valuables. danf«.A>pnrtmpnt on-water lessons ,and three .Will cp*t studerttx laculiy .v; The police community relations division will loan an elec­ 2U Oklahoma. ^'The'SHWeemP ; 'The" wganiSton whieh< PMahoma.University,^trie engraver-to persons wanting"to mark their driver's,/ eludes boat and lifejacket ren­ T^XAS UNION RECKCATION COMMlHlf -w((r,. was founded at the end of the be m Austm Saturday to act as 2j'_ license andSocial Securityxiumbers onsuch itemsasstereos ' . sponsor ftblcycle.rlde Iq Guds beoin«. the judge for selection of the-tal. • instructions and text­ „sprihg semester, now has 50 nlng at 10 a.m.Saturday at the Ea&lbservaiery assistantr­ tp.m. prtdayiir&obfeMati 1 SAT., SEPT. 21, S PM'. AUGIE MEYER said. -:Cuadat«pe Streets, In 38-to and his band Parks and AND The .Austin decorate campaign /teadqffarters.. • 5 ' BOB JENKINS Recreation Department -will: TABinof otNCRAts wlll meet at i p.m. will be appearing Stack Permits ' 3 STEVENSON Restaurant Bar begin offering lessons next " Sunday iQ>Uni,<^^uTT^g^T6"plaf COMING: labietop board games;*-• . s ADV. TICKEtS $3.50 WEDNESDAY .week in golf,for women and in Members of Phi Eta Sigma, UNIVERSIlV BICYCLE CLUB wMI meet at 10 5 SATURDAY of fnner •sailing. honor fraternity, . a.m: Saturttay at. the.East Matl Sanctum, Odd SEPT. 25fh • a freshman Fountain to begin a-bicycle ride to ­ Moments, and the Opry House Kenneth Louden Wainwright III ; Women's group,golf lessons may pick up stack permits by . Lake Travis. at the box. office. p Threadgill SUNDAY ' AUSTIN:MUN1CIPAL the YHU*, * WL . - Willis Allan • ' •• •--; SOT, 2* 4.27 appearing this week Bentwood Tovern COLISEUM ,v Ramsey RECORDERS / WAYLON with special V Tmlay—Friday & 505 NECHES [Droft Special All Week NOTICES from the i ' JENNINGS Marsltall Tucker I block w. of Red River '' midnight AND S125 General Libraries or any r' ADV. TICKETS SS guests freddre King THRU SAT. • -"1 Pikhtr Recording a live Album Sat. 8:30—1 a.m. RECORDER MUSIC of'the branches' are of-: SOUTHERN David-Bromberg SILVER CITY shufflebootd fieial University com-., SADDLE TRAMPS English daits chett a v5s: SEPT. ' HEAT 28, 8 P.M. . Beer/ FEELING Set-ups, Tables, ' 2 Happy p.m.—7 Hour p.m. New Commander Riders of Cody the AYOUB & HELMS LARGEST SELECTION pool ' muhications Cois Bebout . requiring ... I CANNED For. a show and dante. Purple Sage -SON.' IN TEXAS immediate attention. ADV. TICKETS 54.50 Chairs, and you ton -Bruce Springsteen 25-BtSR Associate Director "of Atnster Music TICKET LOCATIONAS ABOVE| General libraries, Pointer Sisters NO COVER BOOGIE un 2700 W.Ami8fJoiiLanB IM4 tAVACA . 478-7331 Public Services § ^Kfifce you wqfnna 4V W«tt nf RitrnBt Rd .iiiJbfl VillaM For Information Calf 472-0061 >442-2743 3510 Guado^upe 451-752! 477-0357 SATTVA VEGETARIAN ^JLAST WEEK OF OUR GRAND OPENING •™ RESTAllKAN'l mTHE NAMELESS THING : " presents BENEFIT vv'i';; A discussion with Deonne Trial " -Sunday, Sept, 22, 6-8 p.m. f.Methodist Student Center .. TRANSCENDENTAt MEDITATION 2434^ GuadalupeTEACHER . Vj . We qrein a financialstew -The State is goingtoW f-.foreclose until $345.16 back tayes , Univ. Methodist Church"\^ ­ are paid by.Sept. 26. m1 Sunday 6:30 -> Supper 75' Please'tell your friend$ to come eat a goad* healthful.meal. a WFpmem, Introducing Spaghetti, Lasagna, Ravioli Dinners GEORGE'S TAVERN IFeaturing ? 4 varieties of 15% Off This Week Only hot sandwkhes served The Different Sandwich, No. 1 No. 2 on foothng bread. Wine 25C A Glass All Day Pizza, and Italian Food-308 Congress 3124 Manor Rd. Restaurant 2405-A Nueces Happy Hour Beer Prices All Day I iT T0NITE & SATURDAY1 WELCOME STUDENTS! £«^m^aG,qSS ; Seiner 20* a Glass :„. l.lOPitche, Otis Lewis & The Cotton King's! Pitchers $1.50 Wine Coolers .25 MM^n. 11 ajq. to1a.m. : Dining Room and SAT, 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. 5'i,; on 'h® pollo i Sept. 20r26 ^ NO COVER n 2801Cugdaiupe To Go Orders .Available m T.V. - "jsr ?°°' " All Football -.Games11^ ^ V 472.3034 240S-A Nuece» -2blotlc. w^ofDrgg JJSE THIS CONVENIENT COUPON TO START YOUR CLASSIFIED AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN i TEXAN -• • v'!-"• '•--A'" -'• CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK m •ytt! "0TE> . The new Classified Advertising rotes for, Fall '74 are shown in the handy (hart belowiW'5 —-=• ' ; " • • ' '-' ' ' • -.' CLASSIFIEDS mm. A Really 10 Good DEAL '• •• when you have something to Mi 'fft W ' iif SELti._ LEASE s 5 -- ISi 1 •* Amount Ehcloce>i4 &«:$$$ ^ < ||||Use this handy chart to quic dy^arrive.||5|. Numher of Days - —Whwlf-1 < ,-r-^- ***•* " -5 - 5 word minimum °r just give away! No. . Tiijips ;Times Times' Times -Times^ ( . DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS \ } M '•**<<* i Words J 1 —4, 5 10 20 :%!%• P 0 > PQx D - UT STATION m4), .Cost per word; '* .11 .20 .40 AUSTIN, "TEXAS; 78712^^^# ; .70 , MB CALL 471:5244 15 1.65 3.00 6.00 10.50 21.00 nam * . • 16 1.76 3.20 -6.40 11.20 22.40 .. ADDRESS 17 ' -» 1 87" " ' o aa A aa To Place YOUR Texan Classified Ad • a.W . 11.90 23.80' 18 I.VB "3.60 CITY, " -•+­ 7.20 12.60 25.20 19 • 2.09, 3.80 7.60 13.30 26.60 OR USE HANDY COUPON ON RIGHT' 1' i' < ,? ' is Crowded Offices , , y,% * 1 ' ~ ''O^SjSKSg; Nfw Programs Set Pbie Pr6blertts"t""f ••,.... .Describing campus Tjffice congestion problems as "fairly. • For Academic Center widespread,'' A5st. Provost Hugh Walls said Wednesday his of-' fice is w6rking to eliminate overcrowded work areasof Univer'-'' sity teaching assistants. -i r Walls said in "isolated cases, three) or four.TAs are sharing the same desk," and those are tile situations receiving top' • priority. i -:­ Steve Law, philosophy teaching, assistant, said, "Theoretical-.' vly, there are two-people per desk, but no one ever comes here. • except during office hours, so there aren't very many people here at any givert time.-" He sajd^ : loneliness rather-than overcrowding. ' ' Roger Anderson, assistant instructor Qf English; has shared a afe>5^ss!u^th thp man 'fnf y0afS. Thev alternate daysthey • Keep o/fHMours, sp • • a problem inprdvious semesters. * * -Hardest hit is the College of Humanities,, followed by the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences and then the College, of-Business Administration, Walls said. Hedoubts there will be any relief in the College of Business Administration until' its graduate building is completed.in approximately. a year. Completion of'majorbQildingprojectSjSuchasthe Education Building and the; addition to .Welch Hall,, will ease most over­crowdirtg, but until then Walls said. "We are making the best use of the space we have available' on a temporary basis. Vir­ ^tually all,(space) of the upper'two floors of the Speech Building now TA offices" Thti fourth flohr of Waeppntr Hati s*# are rtow /TA offices."-Thji flo6r Waggenfer Hall also will-'provide additional facilities for humanities teaching•'v-i•:<&!£* 3ssist3ntS' ** •' • Walls-said the College of Humanities is "scattered fronTlhe­ recourse the University has is to make classrooms Trito'bfficeV ; and the "classroom inventory is so taxed we are unable to do "tfiaT." ---7-^ " ­ Health Cdn*?r The University Student Day Care Center, sponsored byStudent Government, has hit hard times financially in its budget suffering. The. budget.is based on ac­ * ,*>• Board Handles Complaints Students; a-re '• urged to:-, adopted by the board, it is health center. register all constructive com­ directed to Dr. Paul Trickett. HCAB consis ts of eight plaints arid suggestions regar*: director of the health center. members and a chairperson. t ' Bib Daddy hasn't been .a long time .cominjj&j? He's been here all the time* He started on the Drag. But that was no place to soothe his soul. • ' H6 needs quiet. A place to put up his feet; : Play d little pool, drink some beei* with the,..-, • HUNORED-POUNDER Club ­ m . (just across the room:at-the Flagon & Trenched So He's been at 26th and San Antonio for a while now. But time means nothing to this *fi$RBig Daddy. He has foosbaii, shuffle ilMboard and pinball-to keep him busy. {When he.s not making .the best pizza there is for tho.se hungries ^'^'that creep up on you ) Big Daddy's' . just waiting for, you to catch on-. He caught on " ; a long-tircie ago. ) 'T«xoif Staff Photo by Chip Kaufman Union Shacks Up . Prefabricated units behind Moore-Hill . Dormitory will become tempoharv Union* headquarters after Qct. IS.; -- , •sal mm commodating 30 children per : hour, 35 at the-maximum, but mi,­ the center has refceived. only, about 25 children per hour each morning and 10 to 15 each afterndfiri: ~' -" "Since we have only receiv-­, ed two-'thjrrfif ~q1 our "an­. ticipated income, we are look­ ing for outside'lands and hop­ing for a grant," Carol . Leverett. a day care center employe, said. ; The eefnter is run on.a ratio of one adult ;to every four Children; ,'Cur'Tentl.y,the center employs three fulltime and three part-time workers ding the Student Htealth Any action 'taken' must go Five are chosen;.'fronr~ttie— arK3 wants to employ more, Center with the Health Center through Trickett health schools,:one from the \ Advisory Board (HCAB) Among the other _ _ program;­ HCAB isa board of students of HCAB is a Health Center one from the,;ScB6brof N\ir-* IJOCK-STOCK & formed. to provide the direc­Information Center, which sing; one from the College of tors of the healtfi center with 'has' a-main .gqal of preven­Pharmacy and two others ; the students' Viewpoint! ". tative'health care. The center Irom the other health fields.' pa . Suggestions and complaints answers students' -questions Three atJarge m&mbers are. ; 'dealing with health«center ser­oii health and provides han­chosen from theother schools. vice,may be submitted at the-douts and counseling in areas • When a vacancy occuYs on suggestion box next to the of birth control arid venereal \ the. board, applications are Restaurant front desk. disease.. ,' . ,r. accepted and considered. Suggestions are considered .. Under consideration by Af ter an .interview and review Dine before; by HCAB, and a decision is HCAB is the -feasability of a . by the board, the most made.-Once a proposal' is dental:care grogram shuttle to & party after Saturday's IIT game Br-nne<~ p.m includes free iDmnU cocktail & bus SSSBSygjjgi GROUP RATE ride DINNER . at 6:15 • USFy sXU$ACI*|ni$.; $250 Kepneth Threadgill • ONION • HCKIE • MtAD til T a.m. Served Family Styht No cover X2330 S. Lamar ^7444-8461 -Custom Cooking. :P 476-6795]tp' 25*1§"SA?3"A'NTDNl^ ; BHHlMD THE;1 v, HOLE-iy-THE-WALb;|.: . . , "Unless we get outside funds. we will have to forget about Three new programs to A week ly; _i n forma11on tablished, too.­ makethe undergraduate • newsletter also is being plann­ library more responsive to student needs-are in -the works. Jay M. Poole; head librarian, has announced. One of the programs is es­tablishment of a paperback bookCollection.. ; ... At first, the collection will be limited to six subjects and •approximately 3,000books,.he said; 'f opinion sa recent sur- ywytn>i are most interested in.:-The r decision on which subjects to be chosen will be based on this survey," Poole explained: . He said the boobs will be .placed in racks, in the Academic Center-lounge areas for students to read. . They also \yill be availablefor checkout. . hiring more staff." We may. "We hope tohave thisset up have to drijp staff and depend sometime; -this semester," on volunteers," Leverettsaid. -Poole said. PEIPING HOUSE CHINESE RESTAURANT The elegant atmosphere,the deliciouscuisine, and the attentive service .Open Daily lS0800adalup« Cosed T-ues 5-10 477-9000 . "Students will be able to tell . red..... ..... . -• us what they would like to see "This newsletter-will con­done_and: have replies posted ­tain information aboul new within 24 hourSfiUJe said. *0fl library policy, new services • "This is just the beginning. and new books that have'been We want to make the un­purchased," Poole said. dergraduate library as "The results of the paper­responsive to student needs, back book survey will also be and interests as possible," he > published in this newsletter, said, and student opinions about all Poole has been at the . boo.k' purchases will be University, two months. ,••••: -solicited 1 ha R^fnrp.thpnrhe-worked in.the.._ .. poole said a complaint arid\ libi^af pigSlaieTB'iversTty- JO PLACE A TEXAN •: • CLASSIFIED AD Ve CALL 471-5244 • S.MYLIE'S ^.il9th &. Nueces " * (3 blocks West of Drag) Serving the Finest Liquor in Austin -12-12 daily — tHI 1 a.m. Sat. J, -SSI <-t&t ft m Httppy Hour 12.7 daily' Drinks 651 Live entertainment Wecl. -Sat. Shuffleboord Foosbaii Pool :,.••• ---Pong Pinball " Richard Koonce -owner NMiniMIk a A*timRxCmVcR •v totasnand Our standing challenge: taste and compare the good old-time flavor of Pabst with any other beenOnce you taste Blu«eWBBon quaWty, you'll*never go backtcrthe beer you were drinking.Take our challenge. We know .Blue Ribbon will come out the winner,every time. ? *<»V3 5? ? * " i i MWm through; ,1*74. PABST BREWtN0*60MPAKY MIIwivIcm. Wit., PaoHi.HfiOMt, III.. N«wtrC NJ* Lea Ane*C4«. Oellt,. Oewgi«L J?* -~ KING JOHN WUtiam Shakespeare -' • HAPPY HOUR 4-7 -THIS-m. PLUMNELLY -J/' , -"v~ * fefv A MAN'S A MAN' Bertolt Brecht" .. DAMN YANKEES Broodwav MuSKrat Comedy f« " \ THE SILENT WOMAN R. Strauis/Drama &,UT Opera Theatre DANCE 75 Qa4letv Modern Dance, and J«2 1 THE LITTLE FOXES- Lillian Hallmark--: ,.' ;v KING JOHN, OCTOBER 7-12. HOGG AUDITORIUM Reservations: Season Ticket holders' brders begin September 23 Public sales begin September 30 at H6gg Auditorium Box Office! ."A MAGNIFICENT NEW I MOVIE ABOUT LOVE; • HATE AND SEX. Hve |camera eyes." |—Leonard Harris, CBS-TV I "Remarkable, superior! 1picture. A wide canvas of I decadence and yulgarity. 1Rush to see it" ;|I —Rex Reed, N.Y. News »'"• 11 , '11"•••*!" "1; • —Kathleen Carroll, ;||N.Y. News >V • • r-iu-g-V l ' V •' • 11"MEMORABLE...the i>|!f scenes inside the bordello ter^iare e*Pl W, II vt-!1# v; UMKBIOMASimiMIHI tmsmsGOR --™.4hete not the-garden-variety tvpe of series' opening show is designed to be-. witness: Kodiak finds him sitting the "best," i.e.,-most impressive),:?^filone on a snowymountaintop savitTg and it is to be hoped, the series willv-^over and over: "I'm too old ... no"use improve with practice. ... so I come up here to die." • ."KODIAK"' ;..stars former-,.. v. Moreover, the sorry son-of-a-gun "Cheyenne" stef Clint Walker, yvho'^won'toblige poor Kodiak by.traveling­plays Cal "Kodiak ' McKay, anj^^OO miles to the nearest judge to tell Alaska state patrolman who eachts|%swhat he saw and heard. performs acts of exciting WHAT-FOLLOWS is' a banal-but-­ V &0or FRIDAY & SATURDAY CEtEBRATE^v50'r NIGHT!" with BILLY JOE SHINE AND THE NIGHTCAPS ORIGINATORS OF "WINS, WINE, WINE" ONE OF THE HOTTEST FIFTIES GROUPS AROUND -• SATURDAY _ cirDciA#nD.wKI9AME FESTIVITIES SCREWDRIVERS & TEQUILA SUNRISES 65< Second Le-el Dobie Molt 21st 6 feuodalupe free oorking ir^ihe fear • \ Gatsby Girls don't wait by the phone ... "They go fQr dinner, good folk and the -mellow music of_5yl Smith. 'i-ot J. Gafsby's Dor ond Restauronr. • Something new for Austin. In" the Village, 2700 Anderson Lone ' JH©DUCT'S 11:30 a.m.—12 midnight Fridoy. end Soti/rdoy til 1:00 a.m. Opens forSunday Crunch at 12.-OO.i: :5 Enfertolnment.Tuesday—Soturdoy. 6:30to dose. nJfoppy Hour0:00p.m.-7 p.m.-drinks two for ­ope every day exceptSaturday, -p— t&k 8P ?si, ffiB&ggga "Mm — M Humphrey Bogart Ine African Queen KathenneHepburn,HobertMorley,Theodore Bikel "'PAY & SATURDAY, SEPT. 21 '• 7:30-9:20-IjUlO SUNDAY' SEPT. 22 maybe-nobody-will-hotice •discussioh between Kodiak and his potetitiaf witness.rTlre-oldtimer sffyf stayg emphatically that he wants to stay right where he isand die: Kodiak tells lum to go to court first, then come back and die Old Man: "Only my tongue:" • Kodiak: "Well, I'm afraid-the* rests of ya is just gain' to hafta comealong­ »nealong With it." " * . Besides Anthony Lawrence's drippy--, dialogue, ."Kodiak". has another pit;, fatt:.the snow? in Alaska is knee-deep;® hence, difficult towalk in The viewer • unfortunately spends half the show yawning while big Walker silently makes-his way-across-the-landscape^ .. 1don't know which is worse: listen­ing to the nondialogu 2* I Oream ol Jeannlt -s ?4 The Night Stalker «.,*» • 7^00 p.m. —•'* :• ' $7. " "76.P6rice"Woman ~':~"".v.rr,-?: 7 F^fahe! o( the Apes 9M p m 9 WashingKin Week In Review 9 Black^Pervpectlve on the News 24 Ko 7j30 p m. 9 Kentucky General Educations! •9 Wall Street Week Development Serfe> 24 tne Six Minion Dollar Man ~1UJU.pAi. — 36 Chico and the Mah 7 Movie "Frogs,'" Ray MUlant) •:00 pjrt; • ; j • ­ . 9 Maiterplece Theater: "The ? Movie: "wWard," Bruce David . Unpleosatitncn tt the Bellona son, Ernest BorgnJnc Club," Eptude Two -• • i­ 9 Caoilol Oallery 54 Wide World'Special: "Walt­ •M The RocKford File*. btsney — A Golden Anniversary 8t30 p.m. Salute"f Lawn and Garden 34 Th.e Toniphl Show v' -V, • CAESAR'S THE presents LOUISIANA FAMILY Monday it m*nV . • -presents lib night -no cover i for stcig m^n * plus *. -MOW -. - VVAUMTIMlflg Uneicourted ladies Un«Mort«d ladias 2 ItM highbells no cover.and no covtr charge 2 free highballt r AAon.-Sat. ~ Mon.-Thurj. Hapjjy Hr.v. Moo.-W.. -4x00-6:45— Happy Hr. Mon.-Fri. 2 for i; T 5:30-7:30 : 2 for 1 442-9934 629 W. Ben White LIVE FROM TULSA,, tWEEDli " SUNDAY NITB ONLY ''m -VINCE VANCE AND THEVALIANTS f 50_'s DRESS CONTEST WITH CASH.PRIZESV V. $20 l«»# $10 2iid, $53rd J DOOfcs OPEN: 8 HAPPY HOUR; 8-9 -­ •nut lini 914 N. LAMAR "477.3763 J il SVEEKEfiD MADNESS. 1L1VE ENTERTAINMENTWSB FEATURING 1UIPER ZEE ''•W T.G.I.F. & \4 «EE KEGS Of Beefe !kS51« r NO COVER CHARGE MILTON CARROLL BILLY C AND GUEST JAM Sat. Alvin Crow and the * Pleasant Valley Boys 4-5 pjy\ ' ' llPRE-GAME PAfiTY AT THE bucket ^-. |Modern Cinemai ^-^Ti'tm* /GOOD LUCK^HOHNS) IMiMHHMtMOMWHMHWIiOKI IMMMIICW A«frottf^(itdirt Noulf;3 Hr«. heJpa°!r^ '>k'" -£<~ u'aV ^ t v* ^ \^T ^ *t^ r *** s i J-*•<*» miswm » " * "#j •&? "p ti -* v ft vis !tfS*r-'! \*^V "*n -*• -£A» mtouun the union ^ Or5 DANCE ^L; >/-< ­ REGISTRATION is open for, modern dance classes and a dance ;:; ^workshop series at the Interart Works. Classes include f>"':a*n?odern dance technique aod .expression, basic movement impulse add developrrient of modern dance styles. Forinfor­ matfon caH 477-2210 THE Li'CHAIM INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCERS will ^,-^dance at 6 p.m.. Friday,orf the Union Patip in celebration.of "£*^/the Jewish'New Year. Prospectivedancers areinvited to ot­ '^tend. ~V * ' MUSIC THE UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Wilt openTts* „197,4r75.sea^onat8 p.m. FridayinHogg Auditorium. Gregory WEft .——<— •' ii kfflUfiS •^PafaW^"* BOBBY WOMACK; rhythm and blues singer, will perform at 8 p.m. Friday in Municipal Auditorium. On the same program i are Peace and the Ohio Players. . 1 '' THEFIRST ANNUAL STACEY PARK GABRIELI FESTIVAL ,"... will be held in Stacey Park at 2 p.hi; Sunday. The event"will • be sponsored by the Gabrieli Brass Quintet -in -cooperation with the Austin Parks and Recreation Department. Admis-A. r:-'^;sion is .free. Those attending are encouraged to-bring picnic lunches. ' : FLOYD TILLMAN AND ALVIN CROW will perform-at 8 p.m. Friday/at the Texas Opiy House. B.W. Stevenson will'per.-­V'^form at 8 p.m. Saturday'."Tickets are $3 50. THEATRE GODSPELL". — Ken Johnson's production/of the Broadway J-btt cdritinues its run through Oct. 13. At 8:30 p.m. Friday and , ?rSatUrff^and at2and^p.^rSundayatCenter Stage:.Reserv^ . nations are necessary. ' *-"* "WHERE DID WE GO WRONG" -An.dv Devine deals with the generationgap. Perfonriancesat 8 p.m. Tuesday through — Satarday-and-at-2.aiuLa_p.m. Sundayat th6 Country Dinner _ ^•TUi'liuuse. Reservations are necessary. "WOODY GUTHRIE-CHILD OF DUST" -Tommy Taylor. as Woody Guthrie, folk poet of the 1930s. At f).30 p.m. Sunday'^,/ • and Thursday in the Creek Theatre. "THE STY OF THE BLIND PIG" -At 8 p.m. Friday and -Saturday in the Methodist Student Center at West 25th and Guadalupe Streets. Production of the Afro-American -. Players. BIJUBERTI PUPPET PLAYERS.— The puppeteers will pre­ sent a performance of "Punch and Judy and Alligator" and. "The Town Musicians" at 11 a.m. Saturday at .the Creek ­.r.'i Theatre. Admission-is.$1.50. T>5« ETCETERA "CHARLES IVES AND AMERICAN CULTURE," a lecture, will be presented at 11a.m. Friday by Rosalie SandraPerry, executive director of the Office of Arkansas State Arts and - Humanities. The;American compose)* Ives and the ways his '< music interacted with the intellectual patterns of the culture -• • of America will be discussed. The^ talk is Open to the publicift1-; and will be hetd in the Music. Building Recital-Hall. ^DANCERS^JNlpRKSHOR SERIES CLASSES IN MODERN DANCE TECHNIQUE AND EXPRESSION BASIC MOVEMENT IMPULSE DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN DANCE STYLES 477t2210 The Interart;Works & Laguna Gloria Presents VIDEO WORKSHOP: ELECTRIC CIRCUITRY AS IMAGE 4;V^ SEMINAR TOPICS & ­ :^llfbDUCTION LABORATORY: . • • Software : • Hardware • Conceptions.' • Developments • Experiments FOR INFORMATION CALL 452-9447 or 477-2210 •• - -53S53^f®i« ;iv>f Te^s CilliDiii' Events Today gs5si*|; .... FRIDAY NOON SANDWICH dv SEMINAR: , "ImpMchmint: An Eyewitness View/' Mm. I Dagmar Hamilton, auiiMnt -prof*t«or at th* LBJ School pf Public Affair* and former couniel' to tbo Impoachmont InquiiyStaff of tho Houw Judiciary Committor, will tpoak. Union 104. .... Sandwlehemnd chip*«old or bringyour tun;h. Jdea*. and luuo* Committoo. |%5-7 p.m. HAPPY HOUR. Spoworod" by Studont* Older Than Avorage (S.O.T.A.). Club Caravan,-Villa Capri Motor Hotol, jl2t-&JS,-and-l 1:30-p.mr FilM^HE LAST OF SHEILA."'Hollywood murder mystery with ^ Raqutl Welch, Jester Auditorium; Admhiion $1 .for UT etwdent*, faculty, and staff; $1.50 member*; Theatre CojBmlftee^«<,';r^-f^-.i#,'i-s tHZSSEZZocm.i.dAww American Statesman 'ATKDKOreMSVrF.lm HUMTDOC9NOT neCOMUEND FOB CHILDHEN TNEAPPtKCNTieCSMIPOF DtlDDV KRAVITZ Starring MCMAM^DRCYFiifSS HIGHLAND MALL 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENiGLN. SEE IT TODAY! OPENOAHYat 11:30 AJA. NOTEi Passes & Bargain Matinees Suspended This Engagement Ohly! SATURDAY T ^ ^ to a.m. BIKE RIDE TO 3UDA. Meet at Eait' Mall -Fountain. Bring lunch. Recreation Com-' gifts' ' mittee.-^„7, 9j?s/and M.;30'p.m. FILM; OF SHEILA," See above. ( MTHE LAST 8PSJSB IWTHE BEST WEEK! 8 p,m. -midnight. DANCE. Music by The Colori frf (ove. Alaln Ballroom. Adf(iriM* i "TflEBKT -MUSICAL EHTCIYAIII­MEHTTHT WILL EVEfi REMADE." 10.9:30 "•THAT'S CNTCCTAINMCNT!* CCCTAINLr IS." —PAIIY, TEXANS«aj "DON'T MISS IT .TT; " 10HM8USTIN trnCitutn awiioUS'tvii; -. ^ ~.»»>!$< < -'{ X-v" t , ,i*, k -v ' v, * » ) --wr* \ "• „ <• ,* > _ -, -•-'••• -v--v J^'4 • love and Anarchy' an Epic Emotional Drama |£A5­ >u •­II® Ipg I%^§ •*£ |s%-< "Love and Anarchy;"' . writer/director Una Wert­written and directed by * muller. Theconjunction m the Lina Wertmuller; starring ©Ssa title may be inappropriate. -G iancarlo G ianin ni, . but the him itself seldom Mariangela Melato and .>i|./makes a contradictory or v Una Polito; Friday, Satur-s|'false move " , day.and Sunday in -Bat ts...", • 1 "" s At 42. Wertmuller (an Auditorium. »'£§ .Italian woman with a Swiss By PAUL BEUTEL n^me) has placed herself un­Texan Staff Writer deniably in the vanguard of . Love -and anarchy .— these the worlds film makers — a • laarrStongesi of. human ex-field \yhere "too few of her ptfTefici . ^ '\ agonizingly mcompa(ijbfev ^ and Anarchy," made ifl' 1972." soon), but'her talent is clear; her work sure , SET IN ITALY of the early 1930s,. "Love and. Anarchy" details the frustrated attempt to assassinate Mussolmi-by an emotionally befuddled pea­sant known as Tunm (Gianin­m), A shy. .simple man, his thickly-freckled facethe Cons­tant target for derision;Tunin assumes his murderous role revolutionary or an*" love with-Tripolina 4Polita>, a superficially brash hooker, yet as curiously an innocent out of place in a bordello, as Tunin himself. As the scheduled time for the assassination arrives, <­ Tunin's dual devotion'to the cause of freedom and to ' Tripolina creates the splinter­ ing tension. . ' THE EMOTIONS and IgsJ—JLove and ' scppeandjrivyertmuller'^ex-. • Wertmuller's style shows definite influences of Ber­tolucci, and Fellint. (Com­parisons, with Bertolucci, par-, ticularly itr''The"Conformist — are obvious:) But no Peter Bogdanovich is slie. "Love and Anarchy" is an original, not a homage . Having worked as an-assis-;' •tant to Fellini during the production-^-''8 Vi.'^WeFt­ she, like that master., has a ^•5 »»f. »v\ i <• A •* * L. AK'U vvll •g en*, tgfc a >i j) x*. Ijkk 1 = demonstrated in a-film of con-(the fot^^^^^sSuCtion-'m'' siderable -power-By Mimi." will 1)e *seeri-here- BOX OFFICE OPEN'7:30' SflOWTOWN USA _ ,„ir _ SHOW STARTS DUSK Oneof themosttalkedabout motionpicturesever. . Soooefottater someoneyou know WALKING 'tttflteltyou toseeil. mu • unlessyou • teS themfist. ThepowerfuT true storyof JOEDONBAKER k BCPProduction kt Cater • TRANS+TEXAS SOUTHWOO »itoa.at*ifctt b*u:na Pri bordello tb the fanatical 0 fascism of tyussolini's He.,is. shelt$re(Jiin a Home henchman Spa-t'oletti (Eros . brothel; posing as the cousin' •Pagfn>;-whose-presencesym­of the tough,oueen-bef u-hnrp -fcolizes all :thec anarchists Salome (Melato). He falls in•>" despised. 7-FRj: & SAT. ONtY -MIDNIGHT SSOVfUl.OO sstpK' . »' . rOOBROWN/NG'S iS'S FREAKS "ANDAIUSIAN PLUS 7:00-8:25-10:00 MARIIYN MONROE'CANDY BARR AND A HOST OF OTHERS IN "THE EROTIC FILM CIRCUS' s WB r -_ . 'VnitLe tke'Best of the iXev?>orkErottc Fttm Festival*... the ma­irt -f/w*yiou|i. ''The. one to trail for, vithout a dbut>i?ls:*Appte Knockers arti* Loke, (x ihQrt 3taft fUm mo(ie aruundl^tS viih a very-voun/. ren­aofect-iookin# Marilyn Monroe.*She walks in front•of the enmertu uts Hptft? beneath afake trrt ojwf commence* a slut? strip-tense,later roll• ,nX &n app(e Up and famous torso tand sipping a eoke." ' "v-'-^-Donji. Mills, Washington'-Stir News OKH MS ft*. 2,-oog $2J>0 til 6 p.m. 4M4M ' -* GLASSES INClimfD lmt£u36ihm St—477-1964 flndytttorfwliiis B*ankcn$tein Ja3a.fi smm j:-AFjlmbyl r Paul Vtlorrf$$cy ACWLOPOWTi-BRAONSBEPG-PASSAM Pff00UCT»0N COLOA • A BRYANSTON hCTURCS RELtASE MNDMailuafM ' * . • * "AUNS"«° • H*? rRAK6*TEXA8 -•-,.t*ST 5 Uchiiiva Awiin Shswiagl Opm IJO • ho. WS-5:t54a9 aWHWtWtPflBLr R«tu<»d Pnvhat dejectedly, to a'girl. piece of fruit.,in.words, tnese •singing a song of. presumed images may sound preten-sadness. (Wpuld that vie could tious, but on screen they are understand the Italian lyrics!) viStially Strikiiigi their content ~ " INTERSTATE THEATRES PABASVIOUNT wzsui '713 CONGRESS AVENUE He makes the fastest guns in the West —* die-laughing] Mxnqf TERE(KE HHLL "MAOTFTHE EAST •GREGORYWAUUTT 'HARRYCAREY OMIttlC6M0 VANHSOME accwoo Picun-dcomiwi-weu laurn-mum-io&wm rorrnKTCi -iHsosausr swiiycMusiS wottua o«wt>jC PG' r,v%x;,-&A* * ka wcbpow mtfLtssacui»sa»c us ^nuons tfrniu issootss irpms UnitBd Artists MAN.CAN WE USE HIM HOW! Bruce Leeis backin the fantastic allnew adventures^ • of the Sup^rHero fromTEnter the Dragon"./.;^/' • 7V> •' iv.v v «• v.". '-"-v.';. • S^HEBJTTUorKUUSfUKtflQS;BWJCCLE6V5 AMtmCA'6CHUCKNOtlRIS t BraiceUe RetannofThe Dragon pAfforminee tihit b*«it fill! tt' vSj.'; THEATRES ORIVE-IN S T AT E BOX OFFICE 4PIK 7^5 SHOWTIME AT blTSK symbolically rich. ,THETPERFORMANeEStt)f The culmination of all that Giamnni, Melato vand Polito has gone before, this singular reenforce •Wertmuller's scene drives the film's thesis highly-charged script ajid. -home, lull force: th§ boyish, direction.. Gianinni, in fact,­frightened Tunin copped-thewiv uttwfitetanianauuudjtiohaL.EeS.t_i ,.n6»tv«n.u hopelessly­ luiiiu . iiupcicMi^ torn by forces—he ci'mwt—Actor-Award_aL.the jC. iries' 'possibly hope to reconcile — Film Festival. love (Tripolina) and anarchy 1 • 4 "i j i • represented by (Salome) Indeed, the very atmosfphere :Pf-the^etting seems evocative :of this conflict: the "love" found in the bordello versus the spiritual anarchy" of the women who Work there. ' LIBRARY FINES „ Notices: from the Univeriity library; to* , any of i»» bronchet are official Univer­sity communications requir-' ing immediate attention. I NM||pGKU2 I 1 21st A Guodoiupe Second level Oobie Mall 477-J.124 Audi •hallbe m twill GENE WILDER DONALD SUTHERLAND I .. WITH A EWAJVULIN | iiVi'i SPtClAL l\v sufsrs GffSONWELLESI LftMoouct»MeCMLCTtDi* Start W&35J0RIWilM' |> JThc, _ ^Revolution I Without >125 7:00. I •.Me. 8:45 "$|5Q ­10:30, I I THE KING AND H IS LOYAL SHORT SUBJECTS BAMiil MI-IKTS (.OD/ll.LA '.tionrt lot -.tcnni) !hf lunn.rsl ibort pyti mjdf1 THANK YOU. MA.SK MAN -J lennr Bruce muhnr in inimjtfd r^ftoon M.\N RATI S ,n SCREEN 2>i 7-44-tl.lS B-10-S1.S0 PDJflTE MONIES TODAY THRU TUBS .^ CARMEN MIRANDA GROUCHO MARX I AND DON AMECflE I COPACABANA 1­ §2-/2 Midnight THE GREATEST SEX FILM I SINCE "KING KONG" J;|, IMACUS ! I FILM BEDROOM-GROUP PRESENTS former/ Sexual Fantasies.U.S.A A landmark achievement "$>," 'CK^ pr?^es au^,clous f ^lc^nd?hut of a maJor . talent who also happens to be m possibly the -most important woman. director since Leni ; Riefenstahl. (Feminists may,' read that merely as a foot­note.) --' Along with Jean Eustache's . "The Mother qnd the Whore," Wertmuller's movie certainly is the most important to arrive from the Continent this -vear . , "1 -TV --45s ' ' . ?« iH* ^^0 " " • $***> "3-^ ' ''''""-• • • • IPIj' •, Ducloux Enthusiastic About 'Aida' Production By BILL DARWIN Jhe choral singing will be "second to none, . 'WHY SHOULD we work on an extremely • tor's chosen. • ---, - -\ Texan Staff Writer "•'even considering "professional opera com- difficult contemporary piece . and give a Delight in the guest soloists to appear with Breathing heavilyafter walking in from the panies" because of the spirit and inherent ex­second-rate performance when we .can give a the Austin Syipphony-also was expressed by 9 parking lot of the Music.Building East, grey-cellence of .the choral organizations here. first-ra{e performance of a more conven­' Ducloux. . ' ' V::;, haired' and animated Walter .Ducloux, --', Ducloux said the normal concept-of power tional.score," he said emphatically. Coming to the University from the Univer­professor-of music, walked into his affice singing associated; with "Aida," "can belto . -"The students in the orchestrarieed to be 'sity of Southern California 'in,1968, Ducloux apologizing for being late to pur interview. ... .instead of bel canto," is.totally wrong. , eicposed to theSe'techniques irt Order, to com-• has ^enrtlie. conductor of the symphony and . "But wait until you hear what! have to tell ,..C "The: femiale leads will "be presented as-pete professionally," said Ducloux.''and that rhead of the opera department.''" : " _. • you," he said. -. *' *, .Verdi intended them — young princesses, not is why we play the 'more conservative irWe have-a fine orchestra' and many He proceeded to describe excitedly, that; i two middle-aged ..dowagers helting-^at each literature." ' ': ­operatic events scheduled, for the. year; in- Peter Garvie, dean of the College of Fine ;• other," remarked Ducloux. ' SPEAKING OF the Austin-Symphony, of: "volving. some of the; finest student talent Arts, had just informed him all money earned HE ALSO complimented the excellent which he also is principal conductor, Ducloux found anywhere." Ducloux exclaimed happi­mam from ticket.-sale* for,, the Jail opera, Aida, {JC; work being done by the University Symphony objected to the large number of guest conduc­ Jvi bearping.a'.smile tha.t imrnediately com- Sept. 18 and-20, were to go to the scholarship^'-""jn preparation for "Aida"andalsoits concert •, tors beiijg.brought in this season, although he-_inunicatei the sense of pride he .feels in his expressed "highest respect" for the conduc-• acttvilies -at the University*THE LACK of scholars ips preven II1U.MHWI,' attracting excellent student soloists to is my No-. 1 concern," he said. 4 ar.theiicst;­are prevented from doing such-magnificent •^jnrnphony concert is so stylistically, parallel •V scored as Wagner's "Tristan" and Isolde" to the opening•' concert last falli Ducloux. '. simply by not'haying two or three singers .replied there was no specific reason. capable of singing these very demanding , SYMPHONY 40 in g minor.by W.A. Mozart. • roles .-•will replace 'last fali;s. Symphony '35 ,by..l Theatre Committee.presents According to Ducloux, the department has 'Mozart, Rsivel's "Alborada del Gracioiso" had to rely oft.performing "chamber" style will replace "Le Tombeavi deCp'uperin;" also opera for this reason. ' by .Ravel and performed last fall. This fall's production obviously is a depart Mendelssohn's "A Midsummer ; Night ture from that. style with a production of Dream" will complete the purely orchestral ' "the" grand Italian opera; Verdi's."Aida. wqrks. '• The opera deals.with everythingon a grand Instead of the Strauss "BurJeske in D for —TtranStaff Photo by Chip Kaufman " scale;, baljetsj a chorus(of 2M People and sets JXtPtano ^nd ^Orchestra'' previously scheduled, from the opening of Jones Hall in-Houston' piano, soloist Gregoiy Allen Will, perform Walter Ducloux i and its production of "Aida." Beethoven's'Second Piano Concerto in B-flat, . '• "Frank Erwin himself aipproachedinie and "adelightfulpiecethat israretyperformed,". Zilker xEquinox' Fest suggested doing-"Aida'' to prove what , the.; according to Ducloux. . ; music department here-'is capable of doingi". . When questioned as to why he avoided per­ ;,WE ARE HAVING to bring in three g\iest • forming the more avant-garde works of the Presents Music, Dance v singers for the male leads, but all other roles • 20th Century, Ducloux expressed his belief Who doneit "-,kEquinox"H,"-the secftuiannual celebration of the autumnal are being sungby thestudents.;" Ducloux said that too inuch gimmickry abounds in m'ariy of 1 equinox,' wltrtarheld at Uie Zilket Pa"rH clubhMsei-fronn3-to41 enthusiastically r these piecte. f. p.m. Sunday. The free festival will feature music, dance, theater and poetry readings. S-A-TEXAS ^THE FOUR The autumnal equinox — the first day of fall; when day and night are of exactly the same length — has traditionally been a THEATRE , :. da;y of celebration qf harvests. Since ancient times it has been 1500 S. PLEASANT VAUEY ROAD : SHOWCASED commemorated With; festivities, music and dancing. For JUST-QfF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE ' . 444-3222 " astrologers, the equinox signifies the beginning of the second . $1^0 lil 6 p.m.i.V^half of the Zodiapal cycle and the transition of the sun from $1.50 FEATURE TIMES l:00-2:30-4:00-5:25r6:55-8;20-?:S0 •' "• Virgo to Librd:1-"' . 1:10-2:50-4:30-4:O57:4S-?:25' • • Music for the event will.be provided by the Austin-based roelk band Possum Delight and by.47 Tdnies Its Own Weight, a jazz quartet: Austin -Ballet Theatre will' perform '"Facade,",, a satirical ballet which spoofs traditibnal dance forms. There will be a performance of martial arts in a Chinese Ken-po demonstration and the experimental theater troup Pandora's Traveling Trpubadors will; present their blend of mime, dance A anti traditional drama. ' ^XHStHpini • ^.._.Among those who will read selections from their work will be Protfuced^xJ DnecteO -.uT, noted British poet 'Tom -'Rayworth.,^urc^iitly ^ visiting 7 by Ken Shapiro THE! professor of creative, writing• at the University. AnotheY .• Wnfleft oy >;N0 MJtGAIH MATINEES ; .. featured poet is Jeff Woodruff, known to local .artists as the Ken ShapiiOwm :.>U PASSES SUSPENDED OF FEATURE TIMES proprietor of the CabareLQrson Welles. v • LaneSarasohn -* 1M-MS4J04:10-7jS.MO . -A f»ank SHEILA -(mtrprises' fekl>rA$rk&frtd PzUtfiWWI: MUGFOGGER­ Ky&i O'nl^L 'Sk'Vj ~<*i rS "THE LAST OF SHEILA"A-HERBERT ROSS film Starring RICHARD BENJAMIN DYAM CANNON not pbEft AFONTE BREWSTER AsGecchieDan THFCHEERtEADERS w 10th MCCLOUO vitas' Theyget funnywhen - youmess ^i-withtheii l^jnoney 1®^ IS s&M m m A SPG1WG GOLDBtRG PROOUCHON of AROKRT WJMAN FILM • V ri l f ~ -GEORGE SEGAL-HUNT GOULD in mFHWSIW' * SZrt-feB *• stm Wr«w by JOSEPH WALSH^ ftaiced^ROBERT ALTMAN aa^JOSEPH WLSH * HllD OVER 4th OW'HI4S-F'.M.' r~ '' . F*atur«> aMiOO-tliOO-JChOO. , m Something else V"-"$l.tO til 6^p.m,.Mon mrm^ £$@k!8$ PNpMirv''"" •" isrtiS-iStii: .' -it.; &a£fe&&tigB£g CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SMF FURN. APARTS. M FURN. APARTS. H HELP WANTED TYPING •' RATES J[5Kfc>r{ wr(J rt\*n}murr>. ONE. BEDROOMFURNISHED,Allbills •jsffe =====rSt«=fltf^ fot-Soife Mi?et -For Sale EactiTworo 2*4 ITmes ~ paid. £*ets OK.:Two blocksfromshuttle • Each word 5*9 tiroes.:... 1165. Apply 702.Baylor afh?r.6 (mtu WANTED Just North of 27th at Each, word >0 or fnttre times'. WAREHOUSE :CLEARANC u>" driving positions LANTASTIC PANASONIC 4^1rafek-i :: Student rate each time . -v cassette tape deck 6th. Chairs, tabtes,: .doors^-dlnettes Only sli5 plus:t STUDIO .HWraee; nrroratpar with automatic ­Classified Disptay • r •cassett«. changer/ $125/qffer. Bill. 476»v» BIG PLAN.J desks, rugs,couches, antiques, bars.476 Lovely shag, lull kitchen CA/CH, Dou­skyllght/CA?CH, cable, convenient:$129 Ing Immediately and start workingupog nspmtttiBtt Jccl.xl met) one time...... 3478. ble bed. Somewhat secluded No pets plus electricity. 900 East 51*}. 451-3464, $325 907? cflrTfpietion of training,-Call Transport®: •\tol. x. \.inch 2-9 times.. . -$193 3805 A venue B 472--5179 SONY HP'155. record" Moo Enterprises Y cot x 1inch tenor more times$264 SALE ' 1?'.SAILBOAT and Trailer/ sloop rig. ex­ changer/amplifier, dust cover, cueing. 459-8564 cellent condition, $750C 441*4489 Rare-, succulents,, some -house plants, 928-1660 tea*e message -bromellads, cactus. Saturday, Sunday, UNF. APARTS. ANEJQUALOPPORTUNITY Three auxiliary sources. $85. 474-4117, ­WARDS PORTABLE Dishwasher 9*6 p.m. SOOV Lunndale (between EMPLOYER (cdppertone), S75; '10 speed-bike^-$40iL . 'OEAfiUNC SGHEDUIE YES, we..do..type 4 ADVANCE. 124'S. 4 speaker. 3-way, 3 Woodrow and Gro'verJ. Metal book shelves, S12. 453-T'" — 3-0231;'473­ Monday T«ienFr«doy . o.m. • months old, save J95 per speaker 44?-- :Freshman, themes. 7951. • TMtday T«san Monday '^..11 OOan. 5243 .1 BR $145 WOODED -T -Why-not start out with Wximtaoy Texan Twtdoy 11 00am IMMACUTATE MARANTZ 2245 YASHICA-24,120 Camera withcase. S75. :• "LONGVIEW CREEKSIDE. . " • PHONE good grades! CaU.475-8718. Must'seit. . i-One and two-bedroom' apartments in­ .Thwrtbay T«son Wt^rv>»doy .HM o.m receiver, paira ARZAX speakers. $450. ' ' 1 . ..... . lovely creekstde setting^ Huge grassy, 472-3210 and 472-7677 Tim, alter 5 pjn, 476-4407,. j^apts-. lawn, lots of to UT, WORK KING & QUEEN SIZE fnatlreises & box - tre^s, Convenient Friday-Ttian Ybunjfey .11:00 a.m. SATURDAY springs. Simmons & Seaiy. slOQ -$200. downtown.'shopping,'recreation. Fully PIONEER QX-747-Pull capability four 459*985.;:'• '• . • 2408 Longviewf. . carpcted, paneled; and youwon't tfelievechannel stereo, receiver. CD-4, RM.S®. 472-5316 >:•', the storage space! From $134.50. Call No experiencenecessary. Full . 2*channel 20w * 4 or 40w x 2. 3 months ' ..c . ..-ifrsKi?.-•••• • 92&-4S55 TYPING* Reports, Resumes-"­...;.....tn.in on $475. 4S4-4394. •* ONLY! TEJXrAjS INSTRUMENTS electronic or part-time. We.train our of­Thesis,.•Letters':;-':/..adwactiMnwAt. bwn>uit b« 11:30 -6:00 P.M. fice. Earn betweenS2.00 -S5.00 siide^rble calculator -.SR-1V. Like new. ;: AllUnlversify and' S50. 478-7516. • . yw>uth* puUbtilNtor* nwpawMbTa'ftif ~DYNAVOX-^tfirf-Sys4«m^,-Recei\6Br,.~ i per hour plus daily and weekly business work • •tif ONE (noMrvdinwiHow; Aft dofcnt-fer v.turntable and4 speakeri.200 watts.Uke v.~ ;;WILLOW-„ .. ALL BILLS PAID LasLM10utff.&£ryice -ROSSIANrLANGUAGE re^prd set^-hl-fi,— ;bonuses.-Apply-3108-North -Opcp^9•Moo-Jfljt ^ •od{Vs>rrt*nN B«' mcf0* .paf; loliv fttfw. Call 44,1.8756,T: r •• -H " 2 BEDR60M ' eaieli,portable ^stfwjng .mftchincr -9 5 Frl Sat -„ • ported twin headboardv garment bog, CREEK'1 " " ZBAtH "" 'r'" SERVICE than 30 day» aflm pufabcetMtni^'^;''-' .-Lamar.-.Suite 102. NEW AM/FM JHtr«ck. MiUti'pIi* sfereo iwil[h.speake?-si;$75. Also Be)( and Howell 25c -$2.00 bathroom scales. 477-8549. A 2 BR ALL BILLS PAID .''"Stratford Hall at Trafalgar Square has 454-8761 -luxury apartments ideal; for sharing: f;472-8936 30A Dobie Center : Super 8 movie outfit camera with Zoom : LOW STUOfetfT RATES' »••• • lens and. llgKI bar and ieiMhreading • Old hardbacks; and hun­BLOCK MEERSCHAUM PIPESi hand-: 2 targe Poofs',Security, Vdtfeybaft nch each day..., :..S2i64 *30. 451-8373. .UT. downtown Call 836-77)9 or 451-1159. GAL CHRISTENSON & an r3 MODULAR STEREO. BSR turntable, quired long ago from orguyfoshineihoes. . AM^FM>trkli; BSR -speakers, Sony old -AUStfh estate. All wHI Ho experience necessary. ^ASSOCIATES h^ph-m^;im iw^m-a3i. bi^soldlSatiirriav <;n rnmo I -u..' Will train.. . FURN. APARTS. $155 receipts and pay in. advancein T5P $159.50 Apply* m person A TYPING Bidg, 3-200 (25m &'Whitls}. from .8. the prices are .un­ ?nn< Conyr^ »X——­ a.m,;to 4:30. p.m. Monday-through-AIR.SUSPENSION believable! l Bedroom ~ ttS^PAlD-SERVICE -• Friday., , All.Bills Paid Large patios, balconies,* and beautiful Image Hair.&J^ody . . SPEAKERS .J HABITAT -courtyard-^Jreas at Chateau Trianon! 441-9028 " .Buckingham Square Townhouse andgardenapartments, only Specializing in Save 50%. Full speics Include w^de'bnai ' Granny's Attic . 711 W. 32nd -minutes from shopping, parks/golf. One WANTED APARTMENT MANAGER. —-Theses and dissertations HUNTERS range,.minimum distortion,.electronic : • bedrooms from J)5P, a|lbills paltf Also 2 Prefer married.-Send-^esumes-to Box '','4211 Duval . 454-4487 • Law Briefs . cross-over,' -full guarantee on parts* & -NEED AN APARTMENT bedrooms. Furnished or unfurnished: 1668,-Austln/'Texas. — . tabor. Beautiful walnut styling w/moid-^ -Call 726.1247.or 451-1159. -—..Term papers and reports , ; FOR FALL? C.O.O. DELIVERY; Must be neat, VasC; Auto • For Sale ed gr»iis. Pair oT speakers lust *49.45. KENRAY ' • • Prompt, Professional GIVE US A CALL! alert, havegood runningcar.Make upto Quantity limited, so hurry to: Service and 1972 GREMLIN "X". 3-»pe«t AC ex Hab'itat punters-is' FREE apartment APARTME-NTS S.35 a. 4ay. Part full-lime ap&lications nowbeing taWn^Apply3*08 • tras Exceiieni condition. Best m UNITEb FREIGHT Iocs for -service, located in the lower -ROOMMATES 453-8101 • %Lamar, Suite 102; 45Jt-876|. v; mediate ca»n Offer. 477-3388. SALE.S COTHRON'S fevet'of Doble Mall. We specialisein stu--2122 Hancock Drj • 1 ' . Pick-up Service Available •••;. Monday-Friday 9-9 r.dent complexes,--. Next to Ahr\erlcana.Theatre. walkingdls-FEMALE -DtJP. own room, $100 plus -.NOW HIRING waHresses/busboys iii . •' -3102 Glenview 71 TR-4 Ejcceflent condftlon, AM/FM elec. Near UT, shuttle,,carport. Debbie, HABITAT HUNTERS jhllts. Apply .In person 1):00. .6;00. 4323 • sfereo» radlalv 454-5639/337-3171. • 4 Sat, 9-6 •. _ BIKE SHOP • • • • • «••• Lower Level, Ootiie A/laH, JH-35 South at £. St. Elmo Rd. .AUSTIN'S MOST •. 1P72 -s PU Long bed, tool chest, gas v' , , Suite 8A' and Austin trah.sit.-2,:>edr'oom ' WOMAN NEEDS roommale ItTjhare ONE.OF AUSTIN'S llr.ssl clubjnow hlr-Just North.of 27th at " Saver 38,00(1 miles. Alter 5 p.m., 447-COMPLETE -townhouses. extra fajf^e. Two-bedroom .• 9J29 ••• ,• • •• AX7QQ0 474-1532 ftats one and two baths, CA/CH,»dii-,rM1-—[nsrsalsry plus commliilon, llpj. P0I-Guadalupe •' • •• SELECTION OF hwasher,. disposal, door to door garbage Rnscllla. *53-2239, 454-M16. 190. -imarvlew, call 4Mj90W, 45I-4SJ4 2707 Hemphill Park v ' 1973 CHEVELLE SS-350-28! AC, GARRARD PANNIERS AND : tiij' MOVE IN TODAY pickup.;pool, maid service it desif^a wdsnatcriajft complex. Seeowners. Apt , Hon. Phone-Jean. 288-1351 after 6'p.m. tuner, Gafrard professionalseries turn-OTHER 1 BR -Ift&Al/iA j4nn • AAVFM,.low mileage,, excellent candi* -250 Watt Amplifier,. AM/FM stereo 113 of cali 451-4848 T­i table-Afr Suspension. 10speaker system $155 West 23rd. • CYCLO-T OPEL GT,19TO, low mileage. 25-30mpg. wr/hea^r1 duty :J0" woofer, sVi" Excellent tires. One.xrwner. 472-4382. • midrange, and '3ft" tweeter, suggested ACCESSORIES PERSON NEEDEDto Share2 BR house. WE RENT WANTED; NIGHT AUDITOR.»Request EZ terms. front desk experience.Hours lVp.m.to 7 : list S5»... four (4)to sellat $299, cashor Errfield.shuVle. Private room, CA/CH, MARK XX • ' '67CHEVROLET IMPALA.67,000mfies, carpeted, cable.TV, really nice, Pat,475-RESUMES a.m. Apply Inperson..Hollday inhSouth, . three speed, AC. very good condition, 454-3953 '452-5093 8889, after 8 p.m. battery. Must sell.-Immediately. r.-x UNITED FREIGHT Reasonable prices 5815 Guadalupe AUSTIN . 20 North;IH-35. . ./»..• .. ..• ^ wfth or: without pictures :iii''J.Sest offer; 447-6903: ' • •: FEMALE ROOMMATE for workinggirt 2 Diay Service-; PART-TIME WORK ­ £ ' SALES ;, & 509 Rio Grande' Your time is valuable' * with limited vision. Call after 7:00 p.m. $300 per monttT * Call 452-2758, No experience necessary. . f;' 7 -v66-VW^-Body good AAechanicatty ex-*"' f 6535N tamar QUIET, ENFIELD: AREA. I 454-3111 or>4S4-8n5,r• 472-3210 and 472-7677 Our service 5s free sis ^ cetlent. Dependable transportation,. ^ ' Monday-FrWay 9 9 — . . 'SW0. 447-2316 ~Satur^ay-f4 --^vr 24' Full kitchen, bright shag, XMAS. "HELP. Part, .time.; Start,now. .large rooms. Good storage, FEMALE 'wprklng; or student. E. $2.92 per hour to start. Call 452-4691 Fri­'MRS, BODOUR'S TYPING SERVICE; V' Custom-Built ~PARAGON Riverside areas/SR shuttle; $105. Affer day,only. 3-7 p.m^~ --Reports, theses, dissertation*and books "1 pool,sauna,.-cable and con-Kfl4.aa 447-5447.Tr-.'.'!*.'.-',-!:'.; typed,accurately* fast and reasonably^ s-IK •battery. G^oa cori? Houseboat qenial at 1 bedroom from PROPERTIES " -: • ' -' Pri^tta^ and binding on racuest Close v- CO-ED. Hght outdoor work. No selling. ­ on Lake Ausffn^.S(eeps 4, sTS^.ao ele.cn icily,-2— ^MALEROOMMATE, large2 bedroom, 2 • » .VOLKSWAGEN r69, excellent condition, ACOUSTIC.360 Bass amp,-s700.' Ampeg formici-plus T^lh'8^mieMl.'ADPrl7jp<»rrfwitm^=0«»^ 12.25/hour. 441-4074. V kitchen. 20Hp. outboard. $1,850 Owner silverware, dishes, pans, tent, sheets. . clear body basv perfect, 1295. Kustom bedroom from S178.50 plus ••.•SR shuttle, AC, good.food.'Many extras;. P.A. braIn,-S29S. 454-0763--... aboard Saturday 1-5 p.m. May view .at 472-4171" -COUPLE OR MALE student to manage plSSgRT-ATtONS;"the»evftpof.tST-e ^3991 . . -.. -• • : public.launch rar^p next to Boattown electricity. 807 West Lynn. 477-weekdays university efficiency apartment, 40 unit briefs. typh CONN BARITONE HORN, excellent Marina or.cair Houston (7131 528-3601 . 7794,472-4162.. ^ : complex. 452;Ca?l f6r jnformat»on-after 5 p:m„ 447- -. .Call 447-1988 after S p.m. law Exbtrienced collect for details.' ROOMMATEtS^Female. 20». 2 Brady, 472-4715. IT* condition; $200 Conn trompet,used, S50 ­ '>.'67 VALIANT-225 2 door# AC automatic, 472-4175 . bedroom, 1*& bath. Broadmoor Luxury,; 471-6798, if no answer, 472-7060, MAINTENANCE man 8-5. 34J-4700. ' Jl. —jaOwer st. jadis, exceitenf condMlon. ; _ CR SHuttlfe! $102 paysall;454-1209 after 5 ; HOLLS.V'S TYPING SERVICE. A •rigood mtleage 4S1-70S9 / COMBO ORGAN. J95. NT« speakerl>oV' XOTHRON'S Complete.Service: typing, printing, bin­^FEMALE ROOMMATEneeded to share ding. Experienced In all fields. Near HOWDY '67 LEMANS, 6 cylinder, AC power' with two 15 inch reconed Jensen's, S95. steering, $600 Call 44US359 from 6-9 p.m. 442-2511. . •" ' BIKE SHOP" We've got ttir.ee brand hev*,really spiff/ rSR^rNCHtew~EFF4Ct€HClES^ one bedroom duplex. $80 ABP; 477-7324, ROOM & BOARD campus. 1401 Mohje Drive. 476-3011. Leieurve Semipro ~atter 8;MS-shuttler— .looking large efficiency apartments In- Full Reynolds S31 ' -FRANCES WOOOST-YPJNGSERVICE_­LUDW1G Octa-plusi. btack. stands and '65 FALCON VAN. Cablneetry .built in * . Stronglight 93 the UTarea tor only $130plus etectrlclty 1700 Nueces MALE-(SR-2U wAntsio share vourqulei Experlenced, • Law. Theses, DUser* for camping. rrdveKng, hunting. S200. cymbajs. Robert, 476-145* Best offer. • . . . ideale 90 saddle Humongous walk-lndoseti, dishwasher, ClOs* to campus. Beautitully turnished.. • 2BR house or at>t. Mark.-471-2677. tatlons, Maniia:rlp1s,.453-4090. L Michael, 453-8*33. 2J'/j Red • disposal, CA/CM, decor .that'll knock AU witrv pig balconies for. your^plants., WHY NOT A CO-OP?! •FE^OER PRECISION Bass, case, both siSO Summer plus electricity t and P6MALE .NON-SMOKER. Wanted; BOSBYE OELAFIELD iBM Selectrlc.^ goOd condition.Must sell $220<'best offer •1.^S275 your eyes out, and a student manager • '48 FIAT 859 Coupe..Abcut 30mpg. Runs deposit:" ;• Share one bedroom apartment rat. Cen­21sl St. College HouseIs a large.co-edco­pica/elite, 25 years experience, books, % good, very clea/i Asking S675: 476-8693, After 6:00. Dennis; 472-0190. . 509 Rio Grande -that believes inno tiassle*. 2blocks shut­ op With many social andeducational ac­ ' Manager • Apt. ?0) •. tury Square. Shuttle. Call Juflle. 47B- dissertations, theses, reports.­ tle, 9 blocks 4»mj^A&im^--a.bUzi.at.._ - *im GUITAR, withhard shell case. Steel str- r 478-9058 ' h;vi!/."/VI ?i.,he members. New mimeographing, 442-71W. . 1966 V.W New engine Cless than.1,000 476-9279, 472-2518, or -472-8941' The buildings, iots of trees. Double occupan­ ing acoustic, S150. Call 475-8718, Mark. New and Used .miles) Radio, heater/good tires. Ex­ ./pepper Tree People. Than*. WANTED: FEMALE to share t.wo cy jllO/mo. Apply\at 2000 Pearl, aiter-VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diversified cellent condition. • S675, Call 255-4222. two apartment; noons. or, 8:30-]0;oo weekday Keep Trying. GIBSON LES PAUL Deluxe; Sunbyrst Hang-Gliders bedroom, bath : , p.m • ; ' Services. Graduate and undergraduate'. -venlngs. , ' ' . $63.75/month ABP. Nancy, 441-297Q. typing, printing, binding, 1515 Koenla . low GTO by original owner. AC AT, 4 watt guitar-amp. S30P. C5all.451-60fs. Free instruction with.'.V finish with case. $350. Also'Orange 120 ALL BILLS PAID Lane. 459-7205. FEMALE ROOMMATE share three nearly new steelradials. Very clean.471-: purchase *'i 'V- bedroom house, $53 monthly-Contact STARK TYPING. Soecialty: .Technical, snare. Zildian cymbals: Like new $400/ M^ET NEW PEOPLE! 3728, 472-5215 » ROGERS DRUM SET,-Dynasound MINI EFR. $110 Mary, 452^1548, . Experienced theses, dlsseriatlons,PR's,453-6209 -1 BR S157.50 -manuscripts, fclc. Printing, binding.' '73 VEGA WAGON. FM, Automatic re*. , cwn#ddwn. After.7:30p.m.477-8780. 4301 Guadalupe T FEMALE ROOMMATE. 'Share nice 7 Male.-and. Female openings Jn* off-Charlene Stark; 453-5211 ' : •cent inspection, tune-up. good tires, air). " 6 blocks to Campus bedroom apartment CA/CH, Riverside co-ops: all-male, SZ450 Ceil Jackie. 477-6669. . • campus Coed, all-LEARN 2408 Leon -. • 476-3467 female, or yegeiarian houses. Member area. Shuttitfi. Pets.,$1Q5-ABP. 444-8727. ' MINNIE "L..HAMMETT, Typing & 1973 CHEVY PICKUP, gas Stingy, six owned and operated. Inexpensive, com- Duplicating Service. Theses, dlsser-: LlBE.RAL FEMALE sharetwo bedroom tatfsns, papers of alt. kinds, resumes, cylinder,, standard fransmissiorf, half.r TO. PLAY VINTAGE for.table. Inter-Co-Op Council, 510 w. cvapartment in house'with grad student; tree refreshments. 442-700>, 441^814. tcn. Best offer, 476-6995/ 2 BR, 2 BA T SI50 Up •fi Convenient UT. s«7,5d: 474.5512. 23rd St.. 476-19S7. : the Guitar LARGE.POOL-ALL BILLS PAID "TY.PiNGrcarbon ribbon. IBM Selec- I; . .-7* MGMIDGET-Sharp/ 9,000 mil**,$3*V!;iss. -,Beginner_.8i.Advanced-^._ THREADS 1 Bl? Furn MALE-STUDENT wanted to shar^v trie. 50 cents a page. Call 4H0723." ' MOV^ IN TODAY : 000. 4J1-3577 New Si recycled clothing. B^st Rate onthe Lake house. $80-per month BUtt'paid. ACi, .CROW'S. NEST,2710 Nueces. Room andDrew Thomason 5:30 Shuttle Bus Front Door -NEAT.-Accurate and prompt typing. 60 Tues. ' Frl, 9:30 -5'30 Tanglewood After S p.rffr-452-5810. board: singles $142.«Wmonth, doubles Sat. 11:30 - Motorcycles • For Sale . 2400 Town Lake Circle., Annex sll7^0Xmonth. Rooms: singles -only, cents per page:Theses 75 cents. Calf447­ 478-2079 . 2405 Nueces (up) ....• C.A 44?-834Q. . ' FEMALE HOUSEMATE wasted. Own S8f/month, air conditioning. 475-824?, 2737, . : 1315 NorWalk Lane room, north off CR.shuttle. Carpet, AC, -SAVE MONEY! Call us before buying: 476-0948 • -4; 8 S80. Share bills. 4524264. TINA'S SECRETARIAL Service: 60S : motorcycle insurance. Lambert Jnr -For Sale Shuttle Bus Corner Pets . West. 13th, Sultfe 215. Students needing • suranee Associates, Inc. 4200 Medical SOFA/CHAIR|:f ALL 'BILLS PAID -j NEAT ROOMMATE-fo share2bedroom, SERVICES reports; theses, resumes typed. 472-8034, . •. Parkway 4S2>7S6*. -good duplex, 2513-A San Gabriel. NoAKC DOBERMAN PUPPIES. Red and Rust. Black and Rust;$75 -$100.258-1150 Select various sofas 8. chairs In.her*' Vf k TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT -'rift tobacco or dope smokers. $150plus bills-:TYPING-NEEDED. Four 'years ex-after 6:00 p.m; Monday-Friday: •erlence. Fast Service. 345-4444 or 836­ 1970 8SA 650. Semi Chopped/ $750. cuions 8, nylon. These sets have a 472-7854 Ted ' $157.50 Custom fo/ks,seat, and tank.Runs good. LIFETIME guarantee construction. S100 -$145 GAY RAP • 2620. 471-5988 Listed.retail $249.95 ... HURRYi While. 1-Bedroom Furnished and unfurnished. 2-locations IRISH SETTER Puppies. Champion.. Ihey last '72 SUZUKI 90. Street-trail. 210 actual' bloodline, large, healthy litter. VERY -$159 6-blocks to Campus ' in South Austin. Po6l, frfees/ a.C-. park* ROOMS GROUP fng/ near Austin DUS ilno. 910.wesT reasonably priced. 452-5247. • miles Helmets ar»d carrier. $500. E*-. UNITED -v :'2408 Leon 476-3467 Oltorf, Apt. 101; 1917.-Barge> Apt. E (off about gay life J0st North of 27th atcelient condition 151-1371; , . South Manchaca Road -past Stassney TEXAN DORM. 190S Nueces. Doubles EVERY-FRIDAY WEIMERANER PUPPY! 8 moftths, FREIGHT Lan^). Call Mark, 459-0007. S220/Semester. Singles'; J3l5/Semeiter.' Guadalupe shots,, wormedr must sell immediately. -NIGHT 8:00 P.M. FANTASTIC DEAL o« dirt bike./73 C2' Daily maid service, 'central air. : 2707 Hemphill Park 250, excellent condition, electronic igni­$25.. Call a/rytime. 478-0926. SALES • Relrjgcratorj, hoi qlales allowed. Two at 2330 Guadalupe above.Sommers. For: tion, Arnaco shocks, superfenders, etc. 6535 North Larear blocks from campus: Co-Ed» Resident information call 476-3002 or 472-3063. $625,441-2273 FREE -MOUSETRAPS. Fluffy, bright Monday-Friday 9-9 ^ • ^ Sponsored by Gay Peopld ot Austin. kittens for. loving adoptive.parents: 442-• - UNEXPECTED ManaflOrj. 477-1760. 5597^ Sat. 9-6. v '/#•• > UNIVERSITY /%I3 NORTON 750 Interstate. 6 and 2.7 MALE ORADUATE^STUOENT:" gallon tanks 4,800. $1200, 25?428T. VACANCY . Bedroom, private: ehfrance, private: AKC .SCOTTfES: Must* set! valuable SQUARE bath, quiet neighborhood.-459-M22. • GINNY'S Jweediog pafr/fivepvppies. investment. Pets: 472-7283 after 4 p.m/ Weekends: 1973^ HONDA C8350. Very good condi-Renf. with four months option 3 Blks. to La'w Sch. Hon -only 2100 miles: 2 helmets, front : 4. blocks from campus. 900 MEET NEW PEOPtEl Male and .disl;brake, luggage rack.Must sell -90-Female openings In, off-campus co-ops. to buy: 1 BR COPYING DACHSHUND. One year , oid, very . Week West 22nd. Newly remodeled,, 453-7582 army furnished, Coed, ali'male, al|.female.:or vegetarian -SiilYPING, PRINTING, BINDING fng tnlo Call Steve, playful. No pets rule afaparfmenf. Pay Month : 1 bedroom ERVICE • rights B8.W TV $5.00 <15.00 houses.Member ownedandoperated, in- ad cost. 441-7778. Color TV $7.50 up S20.C(I up apartments. CA/CH, all bills $170 expensive, comfortable. tnler-Co-Op . INC. -*' -THE COMPLETE i 72 KAWASAKI 3 cylinder 350, Runs Stereo or 8-track .$5.00 $15.00 up paid, $135. Mon-. -Frl. 8:30 -Bills Paid . -Council, 5)0 W. 23rd St., 476-1957, i PROFESSIONAL { . EXCELLENT LAB PUPS. AKC; good. $400 454-8581. Refrigerator 4.9 cubic feet $10.00* • Papers^ shots, wormed. Three left: 327-5:00. CAMPUS. 2402 Rio FULL-TIME -I WORLD OF STAINLESS LIGHTS AND W^LK GrandeT 1502. priced low to sell.: 1974 KAWASAKI 400. Almost new only . SOUNDS Ua Casitaf. Rear. Furnishedroom, AQ, privatebath, 42 Dobie Man 476-9171 TYPING SERVICE 850t miles. Must ..sari. Afternoons 836-3004 Guadalupe . 476-2267 Call 478-7411 . Apts:, private entrance, covered parking its and 472-7677 S'-'1472-3210 1510. Nights345-4105. Karen-.-;' Gifts-Candles-Posters-Glassware-After 5:00 p.m., apply Apt.,210 • plus electricity, no hassels 476-779)/. Free Parking Homes -For Sale Blackllghts-incense-Wall Plaques . -( 2900 Cole .327-2239 John, 442-8S93. ;A L HONDA CL350 Excellent condition, new * . Austin's High Class Head Shop 7 a.m. • to o.m.-M-F 'IT' motor, economical on or off road, . . BICYCLE'TO UT» or ride shuttle bus. 2 ; Open Noon fll Midnight ' 1200 SQUARE FEET, 2:bdrm, 2 bathi. . MALE STUDENT. Private, AC, room 9 o.m, •5 p.m. Sail;­ Bedroom old house being remodeled, MISCELLANEOUS $500 cash 454-5918. - tnNorth Austin, pool. .459-7614, -459-8491, with kitchen prlvleges: Close campus. $13/500. 3 bedroom home, $19,950. Call I 45M959,--• • 475-B760 afte^ five. '71 HONDA CB100. Good condition,~80 David or Rick, 457-5626, 459-9485, 454­ -7646. • ., v,'V,,-: ' mpg, $300 llrmor trade. 451-8643 after?.' SUNNYVALE 800 SQUARE FEETIM 'In ftacse V' IDEAL, home away from home. For Vl->-ln(;. OLDER ROCK HOME,>2, Red River, 14 CARAT GOLD 6-Diamond'Bridai Set. bedrooms and the 2 .bedroomsare mam-' mature or working lady. In a quiet . INTERVIEWS j| 476-9093 HD350 Recent overhaul after 18 months ^ carat total weight. Appraisal value, moth, too. Furnished or unfurnished,' neighborhood. Private bath, and space For doctoral dissertation.on ''Cohabita­ •: ^forage, $385 327-136$ after 5, excellent condition, great terms.$34,950. $475, Sell price, $375. 836%22 after 6:00 * APTS. with, ice-maker refrigerators . (frost-for car. 10:30a.m. or 5:30 p.rtv 47^-9051 . ./Call Jadtle, .454-7646, 451-3353. FWp typing -tion^Without; Marriage*" Sociologist .^Bennett & Assoc. • needs married &• single couples, both p.m.-. . free), DW, cable, walk-ins 8> built-lns. • 2,Bedroom\. ' 'Prom $165 ALL BILLS PArD, 2606 ROOM AND BATH . In myl alr-: printing • gey and straight. •;THREE 1974 ' Wheless Lane. 926-4202/472-4182, ' :conditioned home for student.Character UNOER -420.000. Large 3 'bedroom/IKi FOR SALE Otympi8""manwr" --^-1 $210 After -6 p.m., c81t 476-4426' or bsfib home, priced,below FHA ap-~ typewriter; Excellentcondition, $S0 Call' ALL BILLS PAID 'referencesreaulred. 477-1771. binding •'MOTORCYCLES 474-6026, after 5 -451-2708 ^ f ACT-CENTUATE THE POSITIVE. Act^ write 1602 Palma Plaza, praltali, l«ithan onrmile to campus. .-1304 SUMMIT 441-0584 v Apartments -best of both worldsVOne Call Rick, 452-9626, AU-liii; PIllp. Austin, TX 78703. . D7-750 Yamaha . $950 Bennett and Atsoclatet.. . -NIKON frf/KKORMAT with 50mm f|,4* bedrooms at affordable prices for 420 w. riverside drive . Jens. Like new $250,»wlll come down XL-175 Honda ' $750 students From S149 plus E & cable-924. FURN. HOUSES TM-125 Suzuki S70Q' After 7*0 p.m. 477-8780. PLAZA \ Austlh.-Dept.:-^ East 51st 453-6187, 472-4162. MIDWIFE. Registered, J5* HOUSE TRAILER lor sale Cheapf* • Health. 3,500 Natural,homeblrfhs:•Nor-:.: BALLET, JAZZ, ' r. .-<• Private owner days -3004 University Ave. • . / LAKE AUST4N..Qulet country living, 15 man Casserley, Agarita Ranch. Drip­ m 451-5137 >•; ,LARGE1BEDROOM apartments.Pooh ping Springs, 78620.-LADIES EXERCISE, DECORATOR BEDSPREADS from In­ 5=^ VENTURA. minutes campui/downtown. One, two, EXCEPTIONAL ROCK heme; 3-Z Red dia. Use for.curtains, wall hangings, ap-Tired of small rooms 8. no closet space9 -Water, gas. cable TV paid sttS. Posada , and three bedroom mobile homes. »70 • AND Real Apts 4S2-1M3. %r ^fghts 836-0259 River, excellent condition,"great t^mT,'•'^anl. 15w-S""' Tired of asphalt & noise?Try Plaza Ven-5001 Bull Creek -SKO.'Mack's Marlna. 327-1891, 327-1151. CAR REPAIR. Dolt yourself or we'il do .PANTOMIME CLASSES v^renfaipossibilities;Call Jackie,454-76461 !Vi? J f 2 Bdrm lurn./unlum. From gives you full kitchen It..-Mechanical, air-: all aoes 1 F"m $137 50 PLUS E electrical, BeglnnitTind Intermediate - i5 -m .| ^'•>a$451-S353 F{Hp Bennett^-and Associates, v' {^epeen e A> \ v •—r $129.50 plus electrfdty •< : with breakfast bar, extra large closets, COMPLETELY FURNISHED. 4 conditioning,, body wprk: Carwell.-205 convenient Cancord'a locations. ,» Stereo -For Sale • • ;-. . «0^SPEED^:BICYCLE; Almost brand. •. _ • 34io Burleson Rdi^'f-/- ^ bedrooms. .2 bathroomi, living, dea, East Riverside, 444-2403; " .-cable, pool,and shuttle bus atEt Cortei. : •J-u'liaran College and American Lesion, v rvf # * GUARANTESO .ReWTAL to iconufr^ 3 *m' Barham Prop 'r* • . rfencedtenceO yard,yard garage,oarage, .all applli • all appliances. 1101 Clayton Lane 453-79)4, 472-4162. 2201V!| Lake Austln -Blvd.-Enroll now ­ -vatiye inyestor withsome cash,Buy my, 1 6833, A$k,tor Jim Allen. . " 926-9365 Quiet, beautlfurvl.^ A^jru . v"w-ACZCa January.,.. GUITAR INSTRUCTION, Learn finger 'Inijfet^cfai* sire..Jane'Gross;:453*8795 tfsi home; Iflt.reht It back, nf4N«, •.' • ...•' • " !" • Auoust. 454-8424. Augutt. 454-8426< !. ,j. picking techniques of Mance Lipscomb, FIREPLACE, LApGE 2 bedroom with THE BEST ' • ' 3 S M M . L E N S E S lpr:rent-wide anale. shag, rich paneling,huge walk-Ins, pool; Leo Kotlke;ahd.Kurt,Van.Slckle, Begin*'ft'3 STEREO Garage Sale .For Sale• Camera Rental. 476-3MI. . -. On* blodfc fo shuffle and HighlandMail, fining;Advanced. 444-8718.-v: '•v flSiiS0N'5" litKT5.' Zurrl lmJIan •, Iflephale, 200m,anrf macro"fens. C^BItol:(fiftol: .from $229 ALL«BILL5 PAID,909 Relnll, ju-COLORFUL 454-9863, 472-4162: f UNF. HOUSES , AT-TENTION STUOENTS: Individual --a!9,£" .?,r]fan ano Mexican imports. 4612 .South Congress.. 444-3814. Obsed ,wt-instruction on towing* kltef;.: Austin'* MondaysE~U 'pR!CEENST ^T J ^^T2ts.G»n5/ mfiXgZ'ef etVwKch ^EFFICIENCIES i?;6L ;P0SAD0 from ,$130; Fantastic fasfesf.vgrowlng; wafer sport. Join with : -'•.apartments with cable, pool, full « '•v5:i'' SEPT " 806 32nd. An-* , ' . \' shuttle bus.-.­ -. 2pfh-30f/i East OFFICE FILE; Steelmaster, 4 drawer, AND :'-vk!t~r—HIT"!—rV, ONE-BEDROOMS O- P"lnJlngl,_Ruby Red;Jlass w»re, gre/in IS-SUNDAY.SCHOOL out of date? Cant 5* Ji. OIfc REO CENTER B e*iionl' »pp»ancei, and much $25 447 1049 CLEAN atssfss-WW*V™»r&cit wiec^iori'lMownsaiejiRjMS'We ' ' S.!«il!cwSffWliM-Effl'.A,,en2,hf ne?«r Ls- • ' v --Kenwood Receivers more. Plants and hanging baskets *4 HOLLYWOOD bed Shag,.dishwasher; Ms Dishwasher,QUIET, disposal, EFFICIENCIES. near.shuttle bus, 'fc ;,.arepeople you can trust '• J * Sc/0nca Sunrloy .School, 1309 : -PionoecJiecelvers PLANT anDPORCH SALE-Medlterra--. t6rSPEED RALEIGH super, course, 26" gas grill, pets okr VVeter,gaipaV»12S See manager, 1)1 Hi' «„t,7„„T„r -fv Guada upe. 11:00 a m. and see. ... SCUBA LE$50NS yeat'round, EvenIng > Marantz Receivers yr 1-f iWest 10th-476-4413 CAP1TAICAPITAL RENTALSRPWTil ? ,;r4 —. ^t,nafms. Plcui Benlaminui. r« BfMn.) year old. -cozy community r>;-JVC-Rectlytfrs/'-';&'•; 1,25 /1506 Lavaca URANT|ABOpKS|Udyjgc0Up.47&.9875.;^6Q*A^^lp[^f|Yur0j't1hgd.''olHftDBn­ :.-The new Pjooeef Car'Decks \.J-\ waterbed, nnlscellaneous' 4310 Avenue — -^neacihutfle 472^743-^ ny, r -J .BEDROOM for-single or'doObltis. La >F, Saturday »<. • , -_ ALTEC Speakers. .r-?.DIVAN# $25. 459-7036. ^fldiloBlanco, 801West Lynn. $139-5&.$50,i AUTO TUNE-UPS, American cars, >23 SV25 plus 17 >1,45 plus" Tr" ^ *£CTfUNEAR SpeAxers rdeboslt. 4,/y.j4Tor47WHr:47^M3.' ^ ;-.Poln!,plugs,xondenjerfeplacftd, engine f: iwore name brands available 1211 W 8th f&m/: 474-1107 -^^MjsUED^oysE;-litZt En-HmeiJ. fioD JrvW,-451-3QI9j • -r • "EVERY IIME Ihear the word, 'art/ T & "• t Ch^ck with us before you buy * ^CAMERA TOPCOR SLR with 58n>m . field Road/:Shuttle bus. Cair47W86TfdF* reach tot; w revolver" -Hermann :.NODEPOSlT,-NoLoase. Clean,cu1e'«t- HOT SALE lense, plus'Topcor 35mmiyfde angleand 472-4J62 ..r.nerinp-unti-nm ^ ^?03 East 19th • ^pffBia^ ^ficlencles, close t&downfown; near shut-!-information: PARKING;--V»:. block 'from campus,-nnhln MIIIIL •476-6733" 135mm telephoto 453-8035 ,$60/semester. 47640^0; inquireMlranda!­ 476-0198 4304 Ramsey AVfrZiZru'JZ /PAnaQ*r' 1111 w*st v&un, • studio.-fLR„0f,6CTOR5 tor rent • slides, )6mmSAT «5l/N,10*5 • ESTATE • iSALE. Book$, clothes/ plc»< super. 8 hioyle,-spreens/ dissolve­^-. Vlntaoe clothes and costume -lewelry, turei, weights, furniture. glasS/ pltfnls • recordor.-Capitol Camera Rental-W . 4tr% lox Chubby,. recent, clothes and Near Unfver*ify».3fl6 Wheefer street.-^ > 'NO DEPOSIT '2-2, shag. CA/CH, UNF. DUPLEXES STUDENT CARPENTER will build-jjei-, , •saolri -sheet .inH,'twin mattress and n,V|tW|'frame; per-J/VI -4 bookshelves, furrrtture.Or/olnaldertam, : J ' l;«,n.Tti »i#"Vin,l 476-1587 "•* ;.,flrepiac4. Nodeposit-use mine*AssumeCOST. PLUS wi' table,sewing.machlne'r haHdmadetaby. fcl of-.rno^tkt::45?'4a.S9. prjctical, econo'mletfl See . — Pe Jefferson ­ F CJE"f¥ i • f ^^'.V gujtar# darkroom outfit And much mis*: condition .with* lighting and lock.-AmM 1 6fa w^ &E F1 tw ill Villi 'paldT • dradePtnri.i,?.mp.18^ STEREa celianeojrt. * Kevln, 471-7023 or M824 JHter,; -1 Bfedroom ...cerpjleAbuffM^itchen 408 W„t 37th ' " oveyouupto -Lp. A ^TO' PLACE A­-EofcSgl#--HALLMARK-APTS, TUTORING 2 BEDROOM, 7 BATH, PA/PH! street, One bedroom, paiielg ' , CASH-PRICES lor diamonifs ' TOP CASh.PRICES paid tor dtampntfs, k-70r^r-34th iha sfooj CA/CH,-dlpjyl^er/mspasiSn..,. r... -TOSr^HfriU 1-ViOLA^FIdd(».|«jtoW We#' Uh>ow:Ga(k»:y; OobieMsili to-io. &,r0' *vWn«4 -.oWgold.CaplfolOlamondShod, 4OttN Love," "Lady ot Shalott," etc 454*8239 pj°« electricity The Conquistador, 2101 San Lamar; Gabrjol, 47J.7744. . . Rent SIX PWj ^edrlclfy 442.«I6' cil is the first phase in the an inter-agency task forc^r.v ment" oT a" "Master•" com poked' o*f~ the com'--: in -Texas," Jim Kestfer, Department oT ;>t,ogram-=:coordinator,~saiti -Texas Department of Mental • ; : OPEJRATING under a $321,-tion, the "^exas Department of­768 grant from the governor's Health and theTexasEduca­office, the 24-member council tion Agency. contracted a private com-ALSO INCLUDED in the. suiting firm to makean objec-.. task force are the executive tive study of the -staters juvenile correction facilities, Kester said, , "The first phase of the pw ject'will consist of the report of' the firm and the advisory councii's.recommendations to the Texas-Youth Council," if--. Keste'rsaid. „ ' . "TYC will consider this report in drawing up its an­nual budget, and it will be in­cluded in a 10-year master plan for child care, facilities •: Handicapped students have which will be drawn up next a friend in the.forrri of MIGHT year;" lie continued. , (Mobility Impaired-Grappling • ihe master plan .is the —• -• • ­result of an executive order just published this -year's edi­ Signed by Gov, Dolph Briscoe tion of a guide to the Universi­ty for the mobility impaired.FOR RENT The comprehensive guide MICROWAVE OVENS/ dorm^e describes all building en-. • refrigerator*, color , TV's* , trances, curb heights, » washers/dryers, • tiereoi. for rent.'BZ Rentals. 408 Edit 1st; 472-617%. : locations of elevators and" CAMERAS FOR. RENT. Polaroid*, accessible restrooms on the ri»;. 4x5#..... . ..... University campus. 35mm, trfpodt, and light •meters •Capitol v Camera /Rental. "476­ 3581, THE FREE guides are available at the Vocational CANOE RENTAL• . Rehabilitation Office, the Of­ AND SALES • DOWN RIVE-R SPORTS offers you the great sport of canoeing at inexpensive rental &sales ratfri,TAKE OFFAFTER CLASS w/a canoe8. accessoriesfor only sS.'Canoe shuttle! available to Town Lake and Upper Colorado River. .5213 Ave. G . .451-9349 CALLTODAV!­ LOST & FOUND REWARD! Lwtpoppy/Shetiand Sheep­ • dog, "mlnlatvra collie/-Sable And white male. Vicinity of Burton' Drive and Woodland. Call after 5 p.m. 444*8796. v ~"i-~r-tOST'ORANO€-Mtttttttolored-c»l;of*;^fl-­ • da^j-night.-Answers to "Gueesh:".^ months old. recently spayed, if found call Ray at 475*1 «3^ Reward.-* ^ * POUND Frjaor.lfico Vaguane Key chain with twelve keys. Turned over to Austin Police: 47M541. WANTED SAN ANTONIO to Au^ln Csrpool. Call Jane;:4?S-in? iAuttln) or Marge. «M­ W3 tSan Antonio). • . BUY.SHLtRESTRINGIennlirotAeir For good prices olid fall servlca. Call directors of: the Texas Youth_ Council and the Texas Rehabilitation Commission.' New Guide Booklet Now Available _ By SYLVIA TEAGUE fice of the.Vice-Priesident for Student Affairs, the Informar t io n': Desk. in t h e Ma i n Building," the Office of brien­tation and the Visitors' Center at the Lytidon Baines Johnson School oFPfiblicTSffairs. • Dc. Agnes" Edwards;;; chairperson 'of the. MIGHT Architectural.Barriers Com-, mittee Wednesday discussed some of the problems mobility impaired Students' at the' University. She.said problems are caus­ed when people, chain their bicycles on ramps,or to sign­postsjwxt to curbs. Bikes on the ramps' pfevent • their, use by people in-wheelchairs.',' BICYCLES on the posts Keep people in wheelchairs , from getting off the curb and Max,>451-MJS. -M :• ­ poises problems for1 the blind. new,t *!s4?«Jo^Eriwards 1 said many blind — ' lam:.See 504 Elmwood; No, 304. acfoM^^ from.! from Po»»e 6a»t, students have "run into, POTTI -handlebars, and bikes prevent • TER, JEWEtRY Maker, artist & V , crallimani. Khave a shop and am in- them from using'the' curbas q terested In -your..-work. Call after 5:00. Gall. 451-4707. ... . landmark Witli their canes. ~-'NEttr"rWO. TltKETS for Wyomlno. ^'>•. •' She said MIGHThas come a 474-5JW (Thursday and Friday).454-7356 (Saturday), . long way in having architec­ CAR POOL: WANTED. Temple, Belton. Kllleeh area to UT dally.;8lf-947-5M7. I Photography INCOME PROPERTY WANTED.Client' wants home wltti rental Income. Rick, Fmp.Btnojtt & Associates.454-7M4. 455-Ij;ftM Classes j Tues.-Wed.-Thurs UNCLASSIFIED I Oct. 1 thru Nov 21 .BcHyDanClnQlnstruclion 472-3344, * I • 7-10 P.M. v Rooting. Experienced. Je«. 447-4549. --V.5 Austin Natural' *69 $«ab Alr,fm,Clean. 477*4879. Science Center'-', Yamaha guitar FG-)60 t90. 441-699S j : Instructor:' 7 \ t..:t Sharp televUIon,. 12"155 44M995. I Larry 6. Humphreys 1472-6924 472*6925 Royal typewriter ELT. 160. 441,899$. Afghan {tound show pupi. 2B3-0453.' HIFl Eq. 20-40% oil. 447-407« Ntt' ~ NIKKORC 50mm 1.4. *150. 475-9628, Wavecrest 23" 88.W RCA TV, 62^SS. 160. 453-7050 *74 Yamshb 360 Endgro, S87S. jM42104. Antique church pew, 1)00. 476-3943. Complsts 185 tb.-water cotor paper. 471-2607. selection of water-Male roommate \ bdrm apt. 451*2867. beds A accessories! !7' Aluminum canoe 1200. 477-3261. 6407Bufitcf Single French horn. $100. 471-5764. Crown 1G1S0, 1220, 10pm-9am 453-7041. 454-7901 68 Honda 90 1200 471-4166,' 454-3232.­ :>g< tural barriers, for the.; hain-l .chairs. dicapped removed. In 1967 This, it' is hoped~will give there were no curb gradings .impetus to Torming a team in arid only one University; , Austin similar t6 the Dallas uuaing 'with a inoUified uiie, ­restroom. •• • ~ -• • Edwards -:sees socialization ; Edwards said the city and as the ..main problem for campus chapters of MIGHT mobility impaired students.pn. are going to launch' a joint campus. Shesaid studentsare campaign in the area of-mobile on .campus, 'but transportation. • elsewhere they are faced with­ :She said handicapped -a number of" architectural students have to pay tlie fee; barriers. ' fox"' the shuttle bus even Edwards'said she feels The'' though they cannot ride them., University should take over •The chapters' will attempt to . all the functions of MIGHT, iii tlnd "alternatives to the an Office for the Han­problem of city buses, dicapped. Such an office could, perhaps using a special van. keep the guide'up to date uhd THE AIRPORT is^building centralize operations. a second level butdoesn't plan' THE -UNIVERSITY has to an to MIGfHT, She Construct an. elevatorbeen helpful Edwards said. This will also-''"j>;"t« hbinoH th iho said. It helped With the :be looked into. publication of the guide, and : -Physical recreation isalso a William Wilcox of the Univer­ problem. Edwards said sity Physical Plant corrected' anyone-in a wheelchair that all-.reported barrier problems wants to watch a basketball within a few days. .game must be carried. into; Inhere also is no accessible; U.S. STAMPS swimming pool Qn campus, Mint and Used ' she"said. --r '­. Our Specialty ,MIGHT and the City Parks •and Recreation Department Wo Also 'Buy,ww, plan to sponsor a basketball Collections & . game between a mobility inr­paired Dallas team and some THE STAMP MART able-bodied Austin, players ' The Villager "who also will play in wheel r-2700 Andersen Ln! Mon.-Sat. ^A 452-8083 SEAHORSE CAR , A WASH T Automhtic­6 Self-Service 1205 W. Koenig 454-3922 fcUPTHIS LUCKY COUPONI ^ • IAND TAHE1/2OFF YOUR| |ClllSrS MEAL IF IT IS • S EQUAL OR USSTHAN • • YOURS. FROM3PM11PM" • ONLY, offcrcooduntil! I oa.6,1974.-I •Mr xjbii£k--( i Serving flapjacks and Succulent specials uncture t-',. (in 31 lessons) ss im % Interested. 8 Sponsor-International Stiirfeiit-Oriuiniztilion SHOE SERVICE IF THE SMOC FITS. FIX IT! 005 West 29th 472*6179 JEWELRY CLASSES and POTTERY CLASSES AT THE 5TH STREET STUDIO 119 E. 5th Morning &nd Evening Sessions m All tools, clay, glazes provided {'Mi For further details call 474-1348 - 31 ,SSI 1974 CACTUS YEARBOOK : Bigger and Better than Everf * ^^'1 m W -MM S PICK UP YOUR COPY NOW! PEARL •ps Imy Magazine Supplement to The Dally Texan I. YOU.MUST HAVE IDENTIFICATION DON'T FORGET Tp BUY A" miWIiKiklSnH »#•" TO CLAIM YOUR '74 CACTUS v pUDHOBllOpOI> PLASTIC COYER .—only 30< StudeatVukicalidns.& iySfesa Another |)oNic«tion"erf htUdM YUMlcStlOnS v r •**{ \ ,. wl Friday, September 20H.974.THE DAILY TEXAN Pagey23, »i . i. i£. * X*J * * •" f *' '>v: i Good Prices 5?NS !­ are just the beginning! \^ SL'^v® ¥Sk.j*3 <,"F*.* d »I 5*w •x 1 j "»: T. -* • « -.<•», J Sansui QRX'-6500. Only 3150 wotfs, »t«s*e «# qiyd. — ^^ 93• Kfh & law fihtr*• Ibl $749,15 ^499' BWBasas^wwwiaw' 199 Marantx2220< •.-40.WotUJ)MSlft HtgH-U«. fill#* • • lowdn«lS • cortlral•Walnut cat* nor Mvju4*d•U« $299.95 '254 ffmiw . •• . :•••• Aft:.;,.j9flCi5.e 5 -Marantz 2245. Only 4.,40mw»h**o.0rt*«f :+ ~ _H* b«f. qMtm'v 'MO^95Ul $499.95 •• *TjL"T*WW3S ULr^OJ I'lHI'IHE11 ] ii Jl Marantz 3230• 60W«fl»*MS. Hi«h:|*wKNr » latxJn**! control . •Walnut e«Mt: »©» included•litf $399.95* $339'r3sSs; r«harS04• 200 Wolh • OmmI «•Mne e HiglvU» Altai•frequency eqcnltor • : Us'599.95 I Onty *429*1 Marantz 2270 140 RMS Watts stereo OommJ ,•JhnM^iSi|«Mny* AWJJftji GarrardA't; Zero fOOC s • • hC liif 5W.9S 5509" ' • TwrniaUe onfyS*U«f $309.9) -5 *119 -f, Demos-Odds & Ends-One of a Kind. £$$» ^!f 3sR m ' Priced to Move -v >­MW.9S .',S4t.t5 .-$19.95 t. Fnlwr SM J or 4 chuawl recemr. 2 mt«list Sn.tS 2. Anpei 1210 .3 woy spealwts. 4.»ah '.. ust 129.^5 I. ESS 9 1 way ip«k*r. 2 odytill 199.95 1 4. Aifcs 781 partobl* tau*tt« recorder. 2 onty . '•• ooi»Ust49.9S — •••. i?;S21.95*. Deal 1211, Turntable, bos* .SWe M9IID. 5257.15, eo. ;...., . , Jlw„7. Speakers lor TC!2ics. 2 only with case „>Usi 79.95 : <75 m / Supertcop*a>302 $169V MW multo • 'DWtal counM • 2-VULa— -U# J19.9S el Jl6oly • V^.,j f' BSR 7 ,ox ^.Mm ? 0w» Ctttr • 5W* M91IS *T•Dampcu«ing • AntUtkoMn®^ :• U»tS94fJ* Uxyrfy '134 " "i r** »ee»* _ ••:TTr; miiMge • CmIO)} » lW»r4«V *M.' Sen> It)2I* Cossetti rrteritr for tan*. 5 wily129.95 ...,.$105.959. KlH-5 I wey speoier cleor s*9 Scotch 207 i tffitr#:e­$499 a % 50 -Shure M91EDS MEMQREX Unlvenal CARTRIDGES S(MMWOCIK04! w • «oa H vi 90 Minute , '40m # -*u List 54.95^./.^:..;. • Utlf SO Chromium Cassette' • JOOOnlr 4 Only 500 25 -Shure M44E­ List 3.99 ...,.;$2" > •VMO.nt, Qflci List 29.95­ -'W j*L*WAYT|RjBANDfINANCINGAVAILABLE 617 W center kWp^mrm^i & Be*t Any Stereo —^^ . . . •*. • J \ " '