'f¥-E--M-­ •gpgOg/t •SMSK. W/s. (.{•f f *•* *pj J • yyt ""jjgfii *• -«¥ •JS#fc < i m-i * *rAj tSSfcir -V * Slsft Sfr • ­ •aw , _ -* *1>V* 1£-5A 4? * L»! .1* f•BRr ^l / if-jl jMat iss^^stei1 &Jfa-% •~"-*^5^sl •Wli >? f^| • -•• :^i ?1tl V« -4St * " il ^®-' VlT' 'tSWl 'sr- . 'H %1fe an^f S|3> <«r«l Student NeWspaper ^JfcUnjyersity1 ofjexas at Austi^ V '" >' i- W * Sg.'%n 4 ®< y?n $Q^&vzax}ifj! :*•• Vol. 74, No. 70 -Please Recycle This Newspaper Austin, Texas, Fr'rday, October 4, 1974 Ten Cents Twenty-Four.Pages 471-4591 "* V£l 4 ^1 Vote on Solar S& I »V 'J -*• .• {"* , •, i i «£• » **­ J. » O-Flii »>•**%££»* * By KEN McHAM -•;? members as each saw fit, including the hiring of administrative >.~--. . _ and.... aides Council aides were cut from the budget two weeks ago' •"•"> PATSY LOCHBAUM after the failure of S similarsalary proposal by Bin * -­: • . Councilman Bob'Binder's proposal to pay-^laiOOO per year toV history of AustinJ.'J. '• .. • councilmen and $14,000 to the mayor was opposed-bya number of' Dick Hodgkins, a realtor, said "Last April a proposal of $100vV# influential Austin businessmen and formercouncil members but • week for the council was defeated two-to-one in a referendum election.;By whatstretch of the imagination can you believe in 17 - " r (Related-Photo,-Page m.y ~ _' nronthS we .would appjove an increase,of two-and-a-half times nevertheless passed by a 4-2 margin. The issue will require coun­that rfiuch?" .. .. •. cil approval on readings Scheduled for the next two vveekly "I HAVE disagreed with each of you at various times, but I meetings. -f . ' a1ways.thought you were voting youl: conscience,'' Jay Johnson, VOTING FOR' the increase from the jiresent-510-per week pay fomer'councilman and chaiiperson of the issues committee of " •' Were Binder, Mayor"Pro-Tem Dari-T®ve"a^ Austin Citizens League, said: '-'This would b^ a breach of public « Friedman and Berl Handcox. Voting against were Mayor iRoy trustand a"vibliatidn:of:ybur^''ba'tt;'?.'^ -.r" • -'.Ixtf • Butler and .Councilman Dr. Bud Dryden.-Councilman Lowell Former Mayor Taylor Glass said it would be "a sad day if the Lebertiiann was absent:" — •' mo«on-passed." . . ;:Austin businessmen LouMcCreary, Jay Johnson, Tom Fairey, • the people in thfe next electiorf J^ Pryaen pivppsed. "to put it to &t5 j » -Twan StafTPfioteTby Phil Hu6«r ' Dick Hodgkins and JoeCrow said after the vote they were"-argu-! 'and let them decide. ' -J fc ing the. possibility'' of a lawsuit to stop the pay^ increase. They • "When we were elected we knew the situation.' Why should "we ^Businessmen Ralph Jones, Joe Crow, C.B. Smith and Tom Fairey (l-r) at council meeting, -­ contended Jthe proposal,, which is an amendment" to the 1974-75 be afraid of the voters?" he asked...... • ' ' budget approved by councir"Sept.•19, does not fall under the Butler seconded Dryden's substitute motion, but it was provisions for city budget amendments established by state law. defeated 4-2. It was'the first motion ever'to be made or seconded Article'689a-15-of. Vernon's Texas Statutes prohibits by Butler during his two teriris as mayor. amendments to city budgets except "in case of grievous public Friedman said, VThis..amendment is important because necessity ... to meet iinuSiial arid unforeseen conditions, which .through it we can opefl the doors to elected office to people of could not, by reasonadlfdiligent thought and attintionrhavR been—-svru-ra^-Mv ' • : : ? , Investigation Asked on Spurt Dismissal ' ' "IRAN on the platWrm of getting a salary for councilmen,and AAUP^May Probe Firing authorized'^ by the council. Binder said of the suit, "I don't think they would prevail if they : I think my 63 percent vote isa kind of mandate as well,"he said By RICHARD FLY pointment of Dr: Arleigh-B.-'Terhpleton volvement—in selection of-a new piesi--rfiled4t^-We.are4n oneaLthos&emerEencv situ&tions for which we '"'To" mv knowle&fie this is the only time,hqaro^og. : Texan Staff Writer as president of UT. El Paso without . dent. need a contingeircy. ed to voters on a referendunTitem, -Butler said afterlhe vote .;..'Members of the University chapter of faculty-student-consultation and.the in­; Although the possibility of another in­-"THIS ISmbre than just pay,'* Binder emphasized. "It's open­bad been cast. ' • ­ •.the American Association 'of University . stitution of seven-year contracts in place vestigation by an AAUP committee-con-ing the council up to .all citizehs instead of just members of the In-other, business theljcpuncil voted to raise hospital rates,Professors (AAUP) probably will take of-tenure at UT-Permian Basin. cered with threats.to academic freedom Chamber of Commerce establi'shment. We've been saying thisall water and wastewater rates and passed the second reading of thethe final step Friday in requesting an in-Since, the association has gathered an . has been brought up, Kruppa did not. along, but they underscored the importance Of it today. -"• * prohibited, begging amendment. • tigation of the firing of Dr. Stephen abundance ofinformation on the Univer­-think such a request would be made. ; "J've never, seen the assemblage Of people arid tricks they Hospital rates, on blood transfusion, pharmacy, anesthesia and^'^%­as University president.-sity System; Krpppa doesn't think an in­"I don|t think there's any question of brought out before the council,'' Binder said. "Their "big guns :other items were raised ovfer-all Jjy 17,5 percent.'-j 1 An investigation by AAUP's national vestigation would take too much time. academic freedom being violated,she were smoked out." ; Water fates were ipcreased SO percent and wastewater ratesCommittee on College" and University • "The fact is they've investigated the said 'i'3 Binder said' the salary could be used or refused by council-211 percent to.enable the utility to Be self-supporting. nnvprtimpnt wag ro^nr^monHod hv thp System before They7don't, have "to I _ chapter executive committee Friday.-start 'from-scratch;... which should ex-i • Dr Pal Kruppa, chapter chairperson, pedite things, she said. ' , • . said she assumes the vote will be in "It is really such a prima, facie case,"' support of the recommendation." she added, "Idon't think jt would be that Grahts Demolition Restraint • The national committee investigates|if| time-consuming.]' possible" violations -of nationally ap^S^.'~-/riifi'investigadwTeporfi'.'«lieii'-finisth' .-tfK.v* By ERNA §MITH and a visiting professor of architecture BELL SAID the historic zoning IN A PRESS statement released proved aca~demic governance principlesjs^f^edr would -be:published-in the AAUP's... process takes approximately 30 days to Texan Staff Writer , at.'the University, said Ciirtis assured Thursday night, Edward Clark, Capital^ "Judge Herman Jones of 53rd *Di£tMc? him that no-action-would be taken by the- specifically in this casa the retention or national bulletin, which goes to all -tteitiate^He-also said .the designa­ National senio.r board chairman -"and • • Court granted a temporary restraining .bank , without .first consulting with . the ;nonretention of executive officers.. chapters. tion requires a public hearing before and University Regent, bank chainnanv?~" order Thursday halting further demoli-' committee. 'l'The principles, although not binding, Letters;; were sent to. the Board of • approval by the City Council.:During this Robert Present and president Joseph M. tion of the 108-year-old Shot Tower home A* transcript of the meeting read "ill assert that faculty membersshould havegs :»Regen ts and Chancellor Charles period persons may request and'receive Grant, denied being, party to any agree-. ; -a significant: role in-the selection-o^ " LeMaistre Wednesdayhy Joseph Duffeyv '.at 119 W. Eighth St. • ' £g|gIpart: "It is mutally understood between demolition permits from the city. Bell which would have: prohibited • ment or -Jones set a hearing for 2 p.m.1 Monday^?•' Mr. Curtis and committee members that academic administrators. national secretary of AAUP. • ' -to determine if a temporary injunction pertinent data as to t}ie historical •said. tr • delayed the demolition of the house. In addition, they state "it is equally "We find it especially disappointing in * „ The statement read in part: "It is our will be granted against.Capital National-significance of the Shot Tower would be _ City Councilman "Jeff Friedman said jjbute significantly to judgments, andfi accountability in public higher education Bank and Lawless and Alford, Inc., a made available" to.the bank and uhtil -a :an amendment to the present Historic ethical ancfmoral manner in disposing of cisions regarding the retention or non" •M .Radical Student Union, has been en-,.;. The. seepage has bfeen occurring for' been torn down: Large portions of the dorsed by the Student Senate. -centuries and wasreferred fo in writings tworfoo.t thick limestone frontal wall had. •j>i Bfll Ware," rally moderator, has asked-• by early white settlers and apparently been knocked out with sledgehammers: ' all facultj*with noon classes to"convemr —-was observed by Indians for ages before ACCORDING to members of the City; —T«xan Staff Photo-by SMnWy hmw their classes on (he Main Mall for the that. Historic Landmark Committee, Tom' ^Workmen continue razing before court 'tledsion'MiP "/.purpose of educating them on the • ; Wind, waves and tide usually keep the; Curtis, another attorpey for Capital' workings of the University and those whoi . oil offshore and disperseit seawards, but National, asked the committeeat a Sept. ontrol It." .. calm seas In recent days allowed the oil 1^9meeting not to consider the buildingfor The principal speaker will 1)e Rdrini^ to accumulate::and .wind .pushed it fesSan''H" (historic) zoning, Dugger, publisher of the'Texas Observers ashore.'^v^fr" Wayne Bell, committee chairperson Peru Blasted by Earthquake; and author Of "Our Invaded Univer-m •Wes;—Dugger also ft ra-former Daily——%|r: aJTexan editor. jV ^Other Speakers to be included in the/* jrally are Dr. David Edwards, associate »s. sw -profesBor'of goverrapent; State Rep. OU Tickets m . LIMA,.Peru (APV^n earthquake shook central Peru Hiurs-ts^ ^Lane Dehton, D-Waco; BljLParrish, Stu-, day, causing extensive damage and killing at least 40 persons^ f J, Disaster Kills 40, Injures 1fOOO Friday is*the last^day ...... . „ --• . When .the-quake hit at 9:21 a.m. most Peruvians tfed their ftWarm Injuring L ^ churches each more than 300 years old. cQI the University chapter of the.American Officialss^id the quake wascentered about 120 miles south ofa,'-Radio Cruz del Sur, broadcasting froih a province nearLima --£ a.high In the mid-80s ^ ... f j,Association ofJQnlverslty professors. ; t ing:; Ticket windows fo' Lima? There was considerable damage jn "and around thej'ff; said almost half the houses iri"Canete were unsafe because of^ "Tie "pointof unity" On which the rally and,a low jn the mid-"3" -Belmont HaH will be capitalLima where atleast 200 persons were,injured, many^.-j cracked walls and water seepage. Canete has a population of.? -'5 l focus Spates: "We protect the'sum-'^ of.them suffering from shock. —=—; ^ ahout^.000. ~ --:V^ 60$; Winds wil} open froim 9 a.m. to rjrfifij^ of Dr. Stephen Spurrand the '' Communications werecut off from citiessouth of the capital!^ 7 Motorists panicked , and fl,ed the .downtown Lima anas IS. academic .freedom; it < southeasterly ;,frorr»no'oh-and 1 to 4, p.m, ; ' A government,report said the brunt of the quake.was felt a% .^ Several cars collided, but first reports indicated nohe of the '-^ - cill^pri" Qov, Dolph 1 to 2ff mph. ' for the drawing Canete afwut 120 miles.south 61 Uma where officials reported -L.crashes was serious ' 1 -'1 u ~^*ik^to<5^acompletedifciosureof ^ Eliectric power was Cut offior about an hour, restored far-all " * «j£lgs" v:'>-Vi• taAVj liiK.-'i' * ^ ri'^-*P*z-£ j^.w i*g ' '$$&$• m iiutniiHiiimiiiramniiiiDiiiiiniDttuiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiniiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiMiiilKuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiijj ;&j£e U.S. VietnamHoles r3Z77 By KAREN HASTINGS members of imaginary 2 V 1WV .Texan-SUB-Writer. : Skelter City. Their new home, -y-L The real participants in iliey were told,,was fallingit"Making It-: pn"Being Human apart "From now on this is S*bjictw*mMh-ln |i £. ,'jfjr in the City" weren't the who yon are" — e*ch person y-v -&r& professors aid. experts listed was given a piece of paper Direct Action, a University of which Direct Action is an Saturday is to get people rein­, in the ads It was theaudience outlining his new identity — group actively concerned with affiliate, built tiger cages volved in the war and to" yrge |>-who did the work "donVtorget it."From the in-the continuing Indochina war representing the political Congress to pass ths'needed fp^7 The" two-day symposium, formabon he received, each. is sponsoringan alMay teach-prisoner situation in In­legislation to bring the war to '; K> sponsored by the Commnnity person had to decide which of in Saturday in connettion with dochina;, . , a complete halt. Ream said. , V^f of University Ministers, was the six. propositions would the second annual Inter­IN AUSTIN, the Indochina -.Current topics of interest, ~~wt:u;:aimefl ,at PTffidsHngJ?nt®f,a best help Skelter'City. national Week of Concern futr -] sPe^ce Campaign ;ls . par­including the POW-MIA situa-:^ fdr~evaMating1 «Sty• tifouft '"Most p^Tg^&i&v^a-sHpS''-Sil Indochina. ticipating in the International . tion and amnesty will be dts- The focus-of iha-teach-in^-.Wgclc^fx^oncgm hvJeaflpfipg jlV!s§ed JH ^workshops Satur-s < which wi)l tehprdin t{je.Nor-"" fraternity and stjrority TiouseS" "day?-A'-v-qotftjrteie liSt-oF' *•£.. Scudder. Wadsworth and Car-" description their feelings avalla at: uirect-Actv„, .... £-£ son in Austin; Joseph about the Skelter community iufcn?Sl zuui UhlV€l_ ^ V>-; *?2>: FieSelnjan,. gity planner with and its problems. A few peo-Ave.-, will be on the :pre$ent T-h> purpose Of the '•and open-.to all ' those :in-• S the Texas State Department pie were designated as Goocf U.S. involvement in.In-, _ educational event scheduled. ierested._ . _ ... . T*w»» S^f Hwto by Andy Stavwmon 'uj 'Z'rl of' Community AHdiis. Juhii—GoYerameai^Advecates-witb-- dochina, Said Rick Ream^­ VC:-F«lv4D--Ond Tom Philpott spaqk tn grpiip WDaltas ^ Davenport of the University no special interests who were member-of-Direet-Aetkm>-:'-taiiisSsSt;: 09ft.'; :: JEjgJ Christian Church; David to make decisions based only :"; 'The audience had been , in-which brought advocates of tion and liad no idea what it "THE TEACH-IN will "run 1M'j.£*"* Perry, -University assistant on "good government" prin­itially. split into two groups, -twq different propositions said. from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. .at 'wwt.v-gF professor of:government and ciples. Each person also and each pjayed thfe.Simula-together under another. He Many Go6d -Government which time a Vietnamese 89th State Fair ,1 Thomas Philpott, University •received "influence chips" tion game, independently -of admitted .after the vote was Advocates commented on the dipner.will be held. Donations 7:z' history,instructor. (to Use for voting) based,on tlie other. Differences in taken-and his compromise pleasure they got from wifT be asked for at this " £t!-7 Tfoe«r function at thestart of his income and position • r"-results of the twn groups was ( proposition bad won, that he wielding-so much power and ^ time," Ream said. j To the symposium was merely to Almost immediately^ -significant:-Thursday. the se-had never read.ihaTproposj--influence;,--— _ .SJ;., _ "During the day; movies,­Z*£ set guidkiues. In the Simula-groups with common interests cond mght of Che symposium ~ • * , -.\K slide show;s?z-m*sic-and --DALLAS (UP!) -r-The>Tex-dent Diaz of Mexico played at ij'£ ~Kr tion^g^me which took up the aligned themselves. Pressure participants in the games > ># .-n . ,• speakers will describe just asStateFafr, the"largest state "that first fair and no R.i Cn first day, the audiencelearned groups of three or more peo­ what the U.S. is still doing in exposition:in-the world, opens gave feedback,and theresutt^"1 VQteT ReOIStratlOn EriCIS succeeding years,,such bands: 1^;--' and taught themselves. ple formed to -lobby. votes for * • were cuidiy^ecr. Indochina and how we got Friday for the 8?th time with as those of John Philip Sdlisa; The earnergame -was or. against-a particular Many citizens of Skelter Friday marksihe last day voterregistration booths will be : there," Ream added. the yfearly promise of d."little Liberati, Kappa, Innes,"Metropolises." .The com-proposition, Leaders came jo learned Jhat ipexsonalUv' ' a>'i»|?ble<» campusfor registration-to votein theWoVember • "The war.is"still jjoing on,. bit for everybody." -. ' Traviu and Criswell per­. slj rnongoat Was togeta propos-the forefront Rapidly, and played a. big-roie kTdfe'cision^" «tw^onsr ^ .. , ,~.r %ven though U.S.7soldiers are; Debbie-•R^ri^ldi,/.Rjpn jio_rrt3ed,,/ree.cottQerts-^out­ v?3'tjon passed. Each participant Cood Government*Advocates - Booths on campus are at 24th Street and Whitis Avenue, not t&e ones"being'Tkilkdr ^Husrfiahfi. Patsy Kelly'; Ruth making: -One charisftiatic door pavilions. •^J ibade his own decision as-ta1 twith their influence chips) leader (a Good Government JesteE.Center. Littlefield Fountain, the West Mall. Buniine Asians are killing Asians, and Warrick and Hans ConreicTgetwhich one. were identified and Advocate) was • instrumental Hall and the.School oTtaw. ^ • • •. . ... . ac.c.prdipg. to Pentagon thei.r -20'perfofmance . In 1900.William F-Cody, Participants ^became*' "courted^" in engineering a ^ compromise . Eileen Martell. one;of approjdmately '100 registration figures, the total number of : Broadway thusical 41Irene" known asBuffalo Bill, brought volunteers, said if voters have registered since1971, they are VietnameseJkilled during the • off to.a start at'8;36 p.m. in His Wild West—Show* and automatically registered for three years, whether they vote last yearwas greaterthan the the Music -Hall while across Congress of'Rough Riders of or not. However, if voters havechangedtheiraddress sincfe . total number of .Americans • the fair jot in the Cotton Bowl the World to Dallas. The wild last registering, they will, need to register again. killed during their nine-year 5ft Marines dressed in west show is a-thing of the . She advises any student who runsinto problems in getting involvement;" Ream said. historical uniforms will per* past, but championship a hii voter l-egistraficBj card or who has lost his bard ip go to Mary.JRobinson, member of-form a ceremony depicting rodeo will be featured'this year reviving the spirit of the the .County Courthouse Direct Action, said thata year the history of the:13 UiS.flags. Old West. There will be nine ago several national The themeof this year'sfair evening performances./. "' organizations saw a need to is "Exposition of the. West," Ocli 3, 4, focus attention on the In­Reflecting on the heritage In 1915, • Texas'""and' dochina war,Thuscreating~llie~ wmcn built-the 'fair' from a "" Oklahoma University met for^JPJaytex if •*s International Week oI small livestock exposition and the first, time at the Texas Oral B Photo' Service Concern for Indochina. trade fair that began in 1896. State Fair arid played-before Tampons The War Resister League,-1,. The official band^of Presi-11,000 people, the ,largest .. 222 W. 19th & 5^24 Cameron Rd. Super & Regular ' Cream Tooth Brush crowd in the state towitness a * football -game at that time.f&c* • For Sensitive Skin SM- Sug. Retail j-• • ' . I "• Sug. Retail NIKKORMAT FTN CHROME This year four college foot­ Sug, Retail' 53 WITH 50MMF/3IENS ... . ... *288 austinI ball games will be held in the 2.09 .98 moiiiessori school Cotton Bowl:, SMU-Oregon • *32.50 NIKON CASE NO. 487 Purchased with Camera 14 Price . ,-j^ Donna Pesoli;' Director ' 1.25 u State 1:30 p.m. Saturday; Prairie View A&M-Gi&mbling .. .SirpivwM'd.ft} ..Axuiriated,MontPwtri International* 8 p.m. Saturday; Texas-OU 2 %. BEti/HOWEtl FD 35 F/1.8 Now* Now-Now Compare toConon TlB. withcat*' r ....... Pre-Schoo! & Elementary Levels p.m. Oct. li and SMU-Rice " 1.45 .69 Ager2%-6, 5-7, 7-T0 -^30-jwn^OcU-ia ' North 4108 Ave.H South 400 W.'Alpine THIS, AD CAN BE PRODUCED FOR 10% OFF This year there again will 2904 Jones Road • jm ON B/W STUDTMAN PHOTO FINISHING be the "Million Dollar (Unishing ormexmes12/31/74) 442-3152 Midway" and the endless line r Allergan Brut Soap of food and drink stands. Neutrogena -few*. Wetting on a Soap Solution Rope Once Each Year \ ;CUATRO * -.v.-::.-* Sug. retail Sug. Retail Sug. Retail sr-%: 5 " We Invite gKminos „ r' -' 2.29 2.00 t 1.25 - Exquisite handloomed . ' fej ' Austin To Church ' -' clothesand fabrics i'J]-,' from Guatemala -­ Now -y-m . >#»#! .^ Now 1.39 1.29 Now .79 only asmallcorner This Sunday, hear something special: of ourLatin American Gov. Jimmy'-'Carter -governot* of world of distinctive vV„ Georgia to speak. ^ handcrafted importst UNIVERSITY CO­ Richard.and Patti Roberts -from Oral jfl^ ^0°®hour free parking with purchaseof $2.00 or Robert's weekly TV show to sing. more. BankAmericard And MasterCharsre Welcoriie We at Allandale Baptist Church invite you to join us this Sunday morning at;10;00 a.m. in & <5-4 Municipal Auditorium. We are expecting great thihgs that day -WE call it "Miracle Day." 30-50% OFF Bus Leaves Jester 9:15Every Sunday 1801 NUECES KinsoLving 9:29 " 474-5222 CORNINGWARE 71 KITCHEN & HOUSEHOLD SETH THOMAS CLOCKS GADGETS 44* -4w IWILlvBE HERE TO SHOW YOU OUR VERA UNEMS *5UADLUB® PUNTS NEW f1Ml 'V METAL & WIRE SCULPTURE! > r'<-, H-UHOI '••s? COLLEGE RING/'/ U mm ^vj)= ,-3' s COME SEE IT/ W^'rc 511 se>rts 'pcoph AT THE AND STLK FLOWERS Ws/f-Vy yf jSTO-SSSPr -s »> Ut EASr!Yr 22nd.h, Guadalui (kUWO *H6 ODAY AND SATURDAY ONLY! U}*}< ScKooL) w cm mm,COUNTLESS prHKS.-ffWw THfs FR(DAY 9:30 a.m. Bible Oass, PolOege Students DokV-Miss /t I 11:00 a,m. Monilng wo)?dhip "* •" $s00 • Student. £ mIftSpiihnr 7:00 p.m. Vforehip; •r 2246C f " '1 * ^ T • Uniiieniiy Bvptlit Student Ministry? T?" * • '' ---* ^ %'M IT: Sirica Receives Motions To Quash WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawyers for ; Richard M. Nixon asked Thursday that I the former. President-be excused from testifying at the -Watergate .coverup : U.S^Dist. Judge John J. Sirica.said he received motions to quash subpoenas -, issued -by special, prosecutor Leon v JawOrslii and John D. Ehrlichman, one tfefendftnts.arotermember o'f% to review them thoroughly." . Nixon, undergoing treatment for: a 'blood clot is expected .to be released from a Long Beach, Calif, hospital by the weekend. His • persona] physician, Dr. John.C, Lungfen, has said Nixon should not travel for at,, least three montlis • • EVEN BEFORE Nixon's lawyers ask­ed Sirica not'to require his testimony, '• Jswprski utged,the judgeJo send his.ovm. *~'Bi prise at the prolonged confinement Lungren says he. plans for his patient. • Meanwhile, Sirica sought to speed up ..<• the tedious process of selecting-12 jurors and 8 alternates for the trial novMn its third day. . Sirica is likely to.take through the mid-•: die of next week m 'atfempfing to select • an impartial jury, a task made more jJif­ ; ficujt because, otthe" publicity attending . ithe ee?er-uj* Ehrheltman's „ attorneys subpoenaed Nixon to detain testimony on the origins . of. the toxer-up itself. Ehrhchman's at­torneys reportedly will paint the foifher :.VVhite House domestic affairs chief as a partially Unknowing'participant. THE EjftOSECUTORS need Nixon to authenticate the tapes, which reportedly wijt: comprise a major block of their .evidence.:Under,a..legal doctrine called. ^clt^M;4^od^vpet^nS'Who^,hdled­S3P^i^^d*ng^fQ^^^^ariicipari&-,"in J H-« Curb WASHINGTON (UPI) Legislation now before Congress would abolish S(4;. federally. financed abortions for rape victims, pregnant women with potentially: dangerous German measles ami-low.income mothers, HEW: officiajs concludfed Thursday. • • Dr. Louis Hellman,. in an "impact" statement requested by congressional con-v ferees., also said that deaths from illegal abortions could total 126 to 250 a yeaf v ... and serious hospital cases resulting from illegal abortions could reach 12.500 to • 25,000 a year --—--a *gat:rr* The proposal, a Senate amendment to a $33 billion appropriation's bill for the Departments of Labor and Health. .Education and Welfare, says. "No part of the :funds appropriated under thisact shall be used in anymanner directly orindirect­"ly'to pay Tor or.encourage th'eperformanee of abortions except Such abortions as are necessary to save the life or the mother." , The HEW statemeiit said the provision would ''severely cofrsxraih" medical schools in teaching^abortion techniques and prohibit counseling 6n the availability .of abortion services by any agency receiving federal funds. • He estimated additional welfare costsalone Would be$451 million to$565 million ... • he acknowledged suffering from • Sources'"cJose to Jaworgki ftayeTSHhe hypertension, making it. doubtful he S^SS^not believe Nixon's personal would remain on the jury, in a trial ex­ verification-^ pected to last at least three months. prevents , his appearance' as a witness. COURT OFFICIALS said Sirica White •House technicians;or Secret Ser- frustratedbylfie'pa"ce7;!aterbeganinter­ -viqemen-whbJjandled the tap.e§ might be viewing the prospective jurors in groups asked to verify evidence, for example of 12, instead i»f individually. . If Nixon is excused from'testifying for The judge 'has yet to inforin defense the prosecution;it is unlikely he would be and prosecution. lawyers how many called by the: defense .•until at least potential jurors they will be able to November and perhaps December after eliminatearbitrarilywithoutanjvstated v the prosecutors have rested. their case -cause.-: !">" y'S vt vr -disclosed' fhata formerIn another development, Sirica ruled aide-© NjScon."Richard A. -Moore. Has- out the broadcasting of about 35 White ^become like Nixon, an unindicted co-House tapes, which the. prosecutors plan ^corispirdtor in the case. to introduce intoevidence. Turningdown MOORE, UNTIL Wednesday* a noioover mine Kord holdover in the Ford administration, was major^efensionne wo^'Sitter said"--nartied becail^oflMievidehce in tapes broadcast on received; by: the:prosecutors; sources radio or television news shows would said. open iiip questions of why the' fentire trial While Moore and the other 19 unin­ could-not -be electronically recorded, dicted. co-conspirators do not face trial, then broadcast.' .they can be called upon to testify underUnder court rules, tape recorders and -looser rules of evidence.than other kinds, cameras'"of alt kinds are barred. • of witnesses. -,iW . • . i i 1 IP - . ... .. ...—UPI Tatephoto-. isChristie dfsewss^s Texas insurance policies. ' \'if -ftrstA-fiSl Welfarecase workers could not refer receipieiitsto a"bbftion"coiihseling'agTn­cies. . By DAVID HENDRICKS should not be enacted in Texas. The LBJ report reiectedithe no-fauir possibie'"lo_takeTf^nraW"r'ifftr~ I Medicaid, Hellmansaid, iscurrently paying for up to 278,000 abortionsa vearat Texan Staff Writer . State Board of Insurance Chairperson ''plan because of problems other states .violators off the highway." „a cost of $50 million. If these abortions are eliminated, he added, the poor will .. A research project conducted'by the Joe Christie commented on the report have had with the plan, because it was Christie also said he hopes the money resort to illegalor self-induced pbortions or will deliver babies that taxpayers wfll -. end up supporting. LBJ School of Public Affairs :has con­Thursday. "I do not'intend to-make any impossible to conclude-that such a plan insurance companies are saving as a cluded that no-fault;; auto • insurance spur-of-the-moment decisions on the ; .would 'reduce premiums and because it result of fewer accidents (after-the 55­ • feasibility of these. recommendation^. would not allow lawsuits to colliect for mile-an-hour speed limit was imposed)This is a lengthy and complicated study, pain and ^suffering." will not be offset by a risein.repair costs >nd the. board wi|l make its position r\ The study recommended restricting because of fewer repairs. ". .. mown prior to the ifext session of-the visuch suits jto'reduce the . chances for' Thestateboanididnotpay for theLBJ Legislature;" Christie said.; Tl'l'i' abuse and to cutcosts, "but it isdoubtful study.siuoy. Thei he report, put together by a team , ouusi ouuiutiiiwisii,, uui n ii>4iououui SANTO DOMINGO. (UPIy -Hutchison r-at two-hour intervals but let ine staUi board had requeBted-tlre—^that-^hese -modest^savines-iustifv^sur ^f-stude.nts-anrt facility 5in ' certain circmfistances. but not under suffering from a bullet wound, apparent dramatic achiev'^mehts as the secretary • diplomats, Vice^oreign Minister Chiao ty crimes of burglary, larceny and vehi-S? Heath. > ly-accidental,-in the leg. of state flew to bhek to theState Depart­Kuan-hua and others, and. found cle theft leaped 17 pefc^nt. ' Among the decided voters polled, the ". ' Asked whether h? was prepared to ment to begin.final preparations for his Washington-Pekifig relations , to be in In the same period a year ago. pipper-W LSbor Party holds a clear lead. Three Hurwitch and the Spanish ambassador stand aside to.meet the Liberal demand Ughthing trip to Cairo, Damascus* Am­ took some food, water cigarettes and remarkably good shape despite the still-ty crimes dropped 2 percent and violent -se 4 percent. ahead of the Conservatives by 9-percent, medicine to the building shortly before -day. • : 4''< • Kissinger promised African foreign Burglary rose 16 percent and vehicle8.5 percent and 7^5 percent. The Liberals got about 20 percent of the total. 1 A senior U;S: official gave this run-• ministers that the.United States would theft 4 percent. Murderwas up5 percent,; reinvigorate its policies towards African . But bookmakers predict no; party will- down of Kissinger's two rounds of rape 8 percent, robbery 5 percent and Others to help us in the task. countries-which it has admittedly assault 7 percent. ^ Jt~" get a majority of the 635 seats in Com­ diplomatic consultations, this week and neglected during the years of the Nixon, Crime in the suburbs soared 21percent151' is last, with foreign envoys attending the , mons. That what happened in "Having won this election, I shall in-• Archbishop Hugo Eduardo Polanco . 29th U.N. General"Assembly: administration. •" - and in rural areas, 19 percent. . February, and a minority Labor govern­-:>yite other party leaders to come along. I Brito, presumably at.the request of the I--".i " •' ' ment resulted. -" •am laying down no.conditions for them, government, withdrew -as the food­• Kissinger sought, with reasonable: Conservative Party leader Edward and. they are in no position to lay down ; supplying mediator iSiesday,.leaving the TO satisfaction, to find areas where Arab Heath said -iftelected he would form a i-their conditions. And no condition will be guerrillas and hostages without food and and Israeli negotiators could profitably broad-bdsed coalition and enlist the na-: saccepted." Water for 36 hours. resume discussions for promoting a per­ -:i^n. ^nemscapsules Balloting continued through Thursday as the Texas State Textbook Committee weeded through the various books being considered for Texas-public school dis-" Nixon Expletive Not Deleted' •tncts . _ ^ lr Barents Sea into the Pacific, the Pentagon announced Thursday. * The 15-member committee got-off to a slow start" Thursday morning as .it ™ us.-• m ,» LONG BEACH, Galif. (AP) new? photogr^lier saiS'Thursday^e Wi v,-; struggled overTeadersfor seventh graders. C. LeeTurner, Houston, pleaded with -W was. cursed by Richard M.-Nixon as he tried to take a picture of the They outranged the longest-reaching U.S. missile fired from sub- v other committee mombgrs; to teke their time in deciding the fateof the proposed ^ marines by about 2,000'miles. former President ashe was wheeled from a room where he was undergo­ 1 -'.. texts and not to be sore losers when Hie particular text they supported failed fo set "lW­ ing tests. ? Officials said the Soviet firings, presumably from a new Delta class w the .needed 10 votes. „ • • > m ' Kent Hendersdn of the Lonfc Beach Independent Press-Telegram saidhe submarine, were the longest-range Soviet submarine-launched missiles "y For"each division of textbooks, five Books may he recommended by the com-"if yet observed by the United'States. Tpittee. Their choices will then be studied by the State Board of Education in five v was in the corridor is Nixon emerged: froni undergoing early morning ' ' •|'^weeks for final adoption. Each school district in Texas may then select the text it'^J tests in the Nuclear Medicine Laboratory at the Memorial Hospital ''^'Avishes to use from the approved list. ' ' . Medical Center. . Market*Hits 12-Yeqr Low N»JMP«VEIME Five texts were recommended in the categories of Basal Readings Grade 7 and m "The door opened about two-thirds of the way and the foot of the film Prtfllt Sl^aAntrilli I^.Grade8; four books were chosen for High School Elementary Analysts aswell as NEW YORK (AP) -The_ wheelchair came out," IJehderson said. "I heard him say, 'You goddamii x;#;tor Analytic Geometry, Calculus and Analytic Geome&yrPfobabilifiT^nd-^1 1 sttHriat stock-majfket declined sharply,^% 7;ij-StatistiCs and Computer Mathematics. >' -'3 ^1 hkfafle'^was He looked pretty teed-_ Thursday in e gradual b»V 517.61 Two text^ were approved in thecategory of Mathematics IndependentStudyand£'* Conference Courses. • ' ' UWCHAMQ4Q plater in the day Nixon's physician Dr. John c. Lungren, announced 4© i r^nrinrt:tKa DffAraru During the afternoon session, five texts were recommended in the foliowirtg'\$! _vr -categoi;ies. Speech Spanish 'ttathe expected the former President to.Wve the ho,8pital-Wd^; ^ iish Level I and II; Fundamentals of Mathematics and In-#Sf trpductory Algebra. - ,»,i . -­ ,Outrange Untle Sam's , . ,™Kyefs. Representatives frarf*-the variolis'PiBlishin|| houses were in the audience to$H u^rrasiflNGTON.(AP) The Russians have te^t fired two newtgng-mm tet, i,i»>( Cr,[ answer questions concerning their respective texts up for consideration. As one^*1 Hi i'jftllSt : »-— J rangfUiubmarine-iaunched missiles about 4,900 miles from Ufe Carnorth represepti^ive' stated,, these-hfearlngs .. ^'••MMMaWMM "%•& publishers do this coirjing year during the first year if all low-income women who were no longer eligible for federally funded abortions went ahead and had-their babies. . «y But.the human toll would be even greater, he said, listing these effects: UT Study Faults No-Fault Insurance; _ • Women who have had Rubella (German measles) during the early stages of ^TVpregnancy. when the possitjilities-Gf-an-ahnormalxhildds^greatest.-could jiot ob-? tain abortions through HE.W-supported programs. n . • Rape victims could not be provided abortions by HEWrfunded hospitals and —..Mother institutions. ' . . . • ..-^Hearings,ytfttresume Friday 'morning••• WS&K3. 'w J TEXAN.PageMI tstnss&H SkiMhmm • WM&t 7"• ^ . A ^Mgfc , t lk stake "V ^ By BILL PABRISH grave accusations of regental in-<4 Corporatevandals (Editor's"note; Parrish -is the vice-terference in the academic process and president of Student (Government.) ^ that the regents must be held accoxin-­When the president of our state's table for these charges. leading educational institution is -iired . What we fear is this: 1) Wftmay lose • and citizen trust without puhlic justification, the some or m'any of our better facultyasffiBTisaaiiaii ramificatjons are. felt not only members. Morale among thefaculty..was BLtal .Nat SnWTfiSs W< -iWi-. 1 m. --destroying ttie lSstoric^6\T^W^^^^Slal^9Kw0E%atftfrtfsn6tfi§P§ . _: vesUgeof its-history. Actingcontrary'.to state law.and its own selemn.^ :stotw8'Jwre-fahtf 2>^gl.r our university: That history has had faculty for their institutions we Tcatfex r;^ promise.the bankhas sfrtashedapublielanamarklikecommon vandals.M grave consequences. In the late '40§ and peel their offersuto look much better tu-.y v.;, Tom Curtis, legal "counsel lor the bank , and a junior member of Ed . early '50s the University was blacklisted our low paid and now demoralized Clark's law firm, met with the Historic Landmark Commission onSept 9|; by the American Association of IJniver-professors. , fS®5 a^eipinutesof that meeting report Curtis promising that the bank woui8l|S sity Protessors. This action was a result 2) Our ability to recruit an outstanding take rib action 51 the committee would postpone zoning theimilding. of thfe 1944 firing of Homer Rainey, who faculty will be severely hurt. Why should r r was president of.the University of-Texas a topnotch professor come herewhen pur or historic. Curtis denies that any agreement was reached. . Oriented around a point pf uniiy which states/ at Austin at that time. Rainey was fired reputation of political interference is soBesides the minutesof the Yneeting, thereis other evidenceof what Cu'r^v . "We protest the summary firing of Dr. Stephen after presenting to the Board of Regents ominous? tis said. Wayne Bell, chairperson of the committee, asserts that, tha;/ -a statement of 16 violations of the princi­"3) Our ability to recruit an outstanding Spurr and the attack on academic freedom it ple of academic freedom at this Univer­ agreement was reached and that tape recordings of the meeting prove USf • president is. just about, nil. Who would Layryers (e.g. John Mitchell, Richard Nixonv Herbert Kalmbach etc. represents,, and we call upon Gov., Dolph .sity. The actioh of the American accept the position after hearing the .—Association-of-University Professors-charges which have been leveled against .; ^ always seem to be relating: taped:conversations, -i :f0_ Briscoe to force complete disclosure * of the made it extremely difficult to recruit-our regents? _ ^^Theday after Curtis' meeting with the ffistoric Landmark Commission|s% reasons for the action." ^ ... educators of the highest quality. -More­ „ Now the*question becomes "Where do I^^fvfTie'^oT^'the^ej^'ffistoric'CommisskHi requesting.information from'# •• '• • •• ... recently, in 1970, the University lost a we go from here?" The immediate :.•' '• ' si .the commission's files on the Shot Tower. In a letter dated that same yit-v--.v. •.-number of outstanding faculty members response last week" was a fluifjroP7""" when they resigned :iri protest of the ,=_Se!pt 10, the commission'notified Curtis that, "This building was '•••• resolutions conaerfimng the actionTSf the-• Hackerman resignation and the Silber chancellor and asking for the truth:Since • -designated a RecordedTexas HistoricLandmark in 1962.:.'We direct your •..U firing. The effects, of that incident are then W£tfa?fe pSiaicl^expressed'Our.con^iir • attention to Section12(2), which stipulates that the owner of a Recorded ,'f^ ;. still-felt by many of our current faculty. cern via statewide media. We have call-•Texas Historic Landmark must give 60 days' notice to the commission v • Today we are faced with the firing of . ed the governor's office and written ourfeft­sp; , prior to making major alteration? in the building or tearing it down." Stephen Spurr. True, ye do not know all statelegislators. And believe it dr not, i^k: the facts surrounding the incident (wedo •<0>:• -Statements by senior board, chairman Edward Clark (of regental- is beginning to work. More and more^-i Speaking at the rally will not know the full storybehind the Rainey people across the .state are. becomjng*®3>; fame), bank chairman Robert.Present and president Joseph M. Grant and Silber incidents, either.). But aware,of the situation -that exists here.'»."i ' • :,-,,be ,.V5. -V: |B claim they did no wrong. "It is our belief that the batik acted in a lawful^- • historical precedent gives us great Today-there will be: an educational' : : ;f. : ethical arid moraCmariner in disposing-of. this property whiph we have . reason to. fear for . the future' of our "rally" held on the Main Mall. As Buck . owned for more than a decade,and the bank has not intentionallyviolated Ronnie Dugger, publisher of the Texas education. Harvey said yesterday, the purpose ofr.v' • ¥ ps :4iiy laws.of this state or ordinances of this city." * -. What we do know is this. The president this rally is not to burn buildings or^iSs Observer of the University was fired, and both'the march to the Capitol. Rather* the purs.ijis:Rep. Lan^-Denton of Waco ?h?oceUor and. the regents refuse, to • pose.of the meeting is to bring people. T r.;.. "Which says, basically, that "'we believe we acted lawfully because'we — . did not act intentionally against thelaw." Well, we contend it was noacci-' i' rfAfail flia..r^c-nnr th** 1 -r,--•;; D^id^Edwards, University government, detail the reasons-for that firing; In fact, togetherfor three reasons:1) toserve as " •Sr/i dentthatthe bank failed to give the 60-day notice required by law. The . : -the chairman of the board-has-gone so a forum-for" discussion.in order to bank was not merelyefficient in beginning thedestructionscantrminutes— 'professor far as'to say that we, the students and educate ourselves-and the public as to-after a wrecking permit wasissued. Someone made the decision to act'in Bill Parrish, Student Government vice-—facultyof-this4nstitutionT4iave-no-legal,---the^situation--which,exists--het,ei--2)---io^­ moral or .ethical right to know the • haste to have the fabled home in ruins before the citizens could arouse president serve as a sign of solidarity in order that reasons why; that we and the other the governor and the Legislature might their justifiably indignant opposition. David Ross, assistant instructor in philosophy citizens of Texas who pay the taxes that act; in our behalf and 3) -to discover the V ,The Shot Tower is in ruins. We carinot save it We~can only plan for'the support this institution have no right to meaning of the words inscribed upon the future, and we have two immediate suggestions. * j... the trtith in this matter. And we know Main Building — YE SHALL KNOW One has to deal with the Austin business community^ the Capital " that such a slap in the face of the people THE TRUTH ANDTHE TRUTHSHALL pf Texas must not be tolerated. We also National Banks and such. Some membersof the business community have 'MAKE YOU FREE. ^ t know that Dr. Spurr has made some Please come. ,v : cooperated. LamarSavings hasso far made an effort topreservg.hnthlhp Tips and Palm-Goethe homes: Franklin Federal Savings lias taken action line : to restore the Broderick Home. But now,'with the Shot Tower incident reminding us of the old Hunnicutt House, we find that trusting the business community, can be suicidal. . The second suggestion is to strengthen our laws concerning historic ' . Include staff in president selection preservation. Monetary penaltiesshould be imposed for-violationssuch asi­ —To tbe editor;.^;.'?;'-' r.'< ,.e , — . i^iiUjuctS^extensi.ve.lobbvirie effoflS at.both freedom facultv •-e-ftrnntantml nn Thurc'rinu Ron* i^iiducts^tensi.ve.lobbyiiig effote at. both io v><> Mc fteedotn for students and faculty at an ^-"contacted on Thursday^ Sept19, by-Ms;thedemoliton of the ShotTower. Thelaw should require thosewho illegal-• Congratulations on your'enlightened thecity and state levels; but with the institution allegedly representing ~(he"^Mayes. Incidentally, IVIs. BurrFs was ata editorial,; "Preparing for .ly destroy buildings to bear the cost of restoring them. Future added support of the student vote, their democratic and libertarian goals of the meeting and Ms. Mayes was given • -.As State Sen. Lloyd Doggett details, there are other ideas for toughen-... Presidential Problems,", printed on veil effectiveness wilj.be'intensified. J United States. It is time for.all at the ''another number" " could' be " where ^he • Tuesday.-You focused on an important Each year the students transfer. University to unite to make known our ing the laws. The warning period could be extended, though it wouldn't reached.She was reached, asstated, and and imminent problem, the selection of" 11 thousands of dollars to the City of Austin vehement disapproval of this rape of said'a reporter would be assigned to do^ : have made anydifference in the Shot Tower incident. The Texas Historic Spurr's replacement, and on the long" via taxes, and they must play a part in liberty an campus. The Democratic the story on Friday, Sept. 20.Commission could be given the power of eminent domain to obtain public: range need for reviewing the selection .deciding how it is to be distributed. One Socialist Organizing Committee in Your third statement: "Mr. Sweatt's ownership of buildings which are in danger of being destroyed. And tllere procedure. I particularly appreciate'.,-^ of the most effective waysto accomplish Austin therefore enthusiastically en­radi, however, had no influence in the J.'CAS are other possibilities. . -.. your recognition that staff should be in-i,;,:. this objective is to vote. There are six dorses the rally in support of academic •play of the story." T)hisis an issuewhich .eluded in the nomination and consulta-;^-;booths located around the campus staff-freedom to be held Friday at'noon on the . But whatever, we can no longer rely on.the word of the business com­ cannot be proven, by any "fact." But . tion process. Indeed, salaries and'work^!'^, ed by individuals who can answer your Main Mall. Steve Rossignol there's ah old saying:-"Actions speak munity. Gentlemen's agreements.are usefuly only amonggentlemen. The ing conditions are affected by actions of questions and assist you toregister. With Democratic Socialist Organizing Com-louder than words;" And your actions, orpeople of Austin would be foolish to leave these corporate vandals free to • the president. More importantly, our 0 unified action, students can have a voice * mfcttee rather lack thereof,: speak loudly and stPP the city for profit.Why retyon the business community's plans? "The morale and integrity, areaffected by in how their lives areaffected by goverri­ clearly to a community that has toolong |S citizens can make their own5^SiSr'-'',i'™^'i!?' • tions which either negate or reinforce ' ment. Each year, more and more Engineering • endured discrimination, by fact and ac? iour effortsto helpstudents andfaculty in . politicians realize that students are a 'mm tion." ---. _ „ _ disclosure m their educational endeavors. . powerful voting block. But unless you ' No apologies or excuses requested — •Ms For toolong the University community ; are registered to vote in Travis County, To the editor: ' f just action: . Marilyn A." Sandlta has.not been actively aware that the you will remain ineffective. An open letter to the Board of staff is an integral part of the whole. As Randy'Roberts Regents Administrative Secretary. !l SlilP : late as1972, the Qeneral Faculty passed Administrative Assistant We the undersigned engineering Urge fdr Big Thicket >i> e U.S. Congress has finallypassed a bill that will M preserve a portion =i^egisla.tion that recommended faculty -Student Government graduate students, endorse-all-f|®|fElitist stance' h&and student participation'in the nomina-resolutions passed by the General Facul­To'tfie editor: • Sv­ * of the Big Thicket. The bill muststill besigned into law by President Ford S|5iition process^ No mention was made of Historic agreement, . ty on Tuesday. . An open letter to A.G.McNeese,'chair­ before it can go into effect. ,' " *Atstaff participation: -To the editor: . The-manner in which President Spurr man of the University of Texas Board qfjr In lightof Ford^ problems with the economy and with land prices what The Department of ^ras fired and the continued refusal by Regents. <'i' Last Monday Iattended a meeting with History deplores? -'they are these days, there is reasonabledoubt as to whether Ford will sign representatives of the staff, association, .and condemns the secret/and sudden the System administration to disclose In regard to your rhetorical question^ "Who in the taxpaying public would apJf the bill: He'is expected to devote his attention to it early next week. three faculty associations and the Stu-manner in . which President Stephen ' the -facts surrounding the incident con­ dent. Senate to consider the resolutions Spurr was relieved of his administrative stitute an attack on the academic eom-preciate the particular incidents thailecrTtie tight has been too long ana too hard to be lost when at least partial mnnity and a hrearh nf the niihlir-trnst to that firing?", may I answer in behaf j presented, at the General Faculty duties at the University of Texas at ­ success is soclose. One last effort is needed toassure thata portion of the -; ot your brothers aM sisters, the peopl meeting-the following day. Concern for Austin., Weshare with:Regent-Lady Bird vested in the Board of Regents and the Big Thicket can be salvaged. inclusion of staff was expressed by most Johnson the conviction'that there is in­chancellor's' office. of Texas, whose efforts placed-you iij! »ftts^-The Texan urges concerned citizens to write thePresident and urge him of the faculty present. I aih.encouraged sufficient evidence-available upon which : • We therefore callon you, as regents, tOi^ position of privilege. j | l"io sign the bill. by their • expressed awareness: and by to judge the dismissal, and vigorously recognize' your responsibility to the tax-i^'C Your elitist stand that the people w your enlightened approach. The staff support the decision of the Faculty -payers of Texas and to the students and ? Texas have no right to know how their f^must be involved — the integrity of our---s, Senate to conduct a fair and full in-faculty of UT Austin by presenting a full servants carry out their duties makes' »%|work is at stake! *s' vestigation of the matter. As historians and public explanation-of the removal of'-your loyalty just a's questionable as Dr. President Spurr and by requesting the Spurr's. It would be refreshing to see., Dorothy Estvander committed to superior teaching and Measurement and Evaluation Center research at the University, we fear that resignation of Chancellor Charles state boards filled on the basis of THE DAILY TEXAN Member of TexasCollege and University anything1 less than a candid disclosure LeMaistre^ - willingness to serve, rather than by • »v -j:;-? *»»*"/ Maway^armt UmtnnHf *f T«n>1Antlm-.•-••• •j..,,,.! System Staff Employe's Association will make it difficult to retain and James S.. Gibson, Wayne 'D. Martins, socialites and politicians whosometimes,., EDITOR .' 1.1, Buck Harvey f recruit "those exceptional faculty Paul A. Erickson, Thomas M. Wicks, subvert pvph hjgfrcr PriiiMlinn--H6»fr" MANAGING EDITOR .viv.'.i'iVi;.....Sylvia Moreno Hei| kanzler ' : members whose personal dedication is Alan L. Sorensen, J.K. Lee, Robert D.'®;ii|< own i^err Redakteur: • . v i Pillsbiiry-Jr., Barry K. Benedict, This letter does not support Dr.Spurr. so critical to educatio^n^ this state. We ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS....j::r.£ Lynne Brock Charles M. Stone, David K. Gartllne -It condemns the attitude of forbidding Larry Smith fx& thepublic ffie right to review t|«:ap.UQps l'~* Ein Kanzler, ein Schulhof, einReiCh! -agree wholeheartedly.With the words of SW' , • . Adolpb vonMaistre 'Regent Johnson: "No great educational NEWS EDITOR .....Martha JP McQuade 1;'^ Die Kanzler institution ca'nisustain its greatness with Poor excused ; of those whom they generously put in To the editor: MUNICIPAL.EDITOR.i'.'. « high estate. "No servant is greater than . .Ken McHam Austin-am-Kolorado the frequent and sudden firing of its It has been several days nowsince you i i* his Master; no epiissary is greaterthan UNIVERSITY-EDITOR.. r:;.... Richard. Fly ^ .presidents and deans; Such actions have published "a letter, co-authored by' Vote .. 1.,, ! -a severe and traumatic effect on the ad­ he who sent him." -John 13:16-. SPORTS EDITOR^. >4•'& myself, as a Guest Viewpoint. Over,. To the editor: ministration, the faculty and the'student „'-?V Neal Avery Watt AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ;those.several days!find.that!am grow?|i ^ <-Tv8S&. M09-B WiUow Springs Road -During the last 10 days, students Have body.'' ; ing increasingly :annoyed by the sane-; FEATURES EDITOR...: ....Mark Yemma again' been painfully reminded of the , The present threat to the quality of timonious statements you (I assume it ^ President Erwin PHOTO'EDITOR ..j..,,..Marlon Taylor ..power, politics that rage in the upper education at theUniversity canand must •was you) tacked on.to it as an "Editor's' To the editor": -echelons of this university's be met by a prompt explanation of the swM'i, 'issue staff! "Note." Your "notei" in my opinion, was •Just because ^purr's head hasbeen so bureaucracy. Coupled with this struggle; : -dismissal. Equally important* if we are Issue Editor General Reporter./..-.;;.'.,,. :..'Anne Marie Philbin the Board of Regents have also il--to avoid the persistent and disruptive less than a.poor excuse. ^% ruthlessly rolled .does not necessarily ...David Hendricks: Your first statement regarding the fir-? mean total disaster for the Uhiverslty. . lustrated their complete disregard for recurrence W1^ Uh ^fir en^u-slfstlc en:,^been fired and had all reporters assigned behold such a man.is.ln our very midst:•" 1 ble in the future, but the future is now,for S he Jim.FuqoayrJoy Howell i~ President cannot '^Cto.cover tfcat story, why wasn't at least Frank Erwin.' " t , • . those who wish-.to voice their opinion on maintain the great university the **» Photographers >ljsiiv;..;. Andy Sieve«iiMn,.PWl tfajjer,' David; Woo ' Frank will be idle come January, so V^'l the manner ii^which this city and State Ojifeton* i» TJie Dally Toaa «*lh(l«e tW .moOJcjIwo EWWngMatt;Ux/uMttcmnmlitg delivery why not takeadvantage of his wealth of pif are run editor sir ne the utidc an) arenot aecMjuily . viMf cloM'MadverUdivi jbonld bemult in TSP BulUinf* experience and put him to work-in this " adminairatloii or Uw Baud of :tilJW.!<7!-52fc) wd dijplar advtithii<«:ia TSP Bulldin*' 'Every student on'this.campus must >2U) i«MNl -— ~i wy^last official meetings as> pnes'ide^ 'by f demanding task? With Frank as-presi-' T^nki. ,'i. register to vote! This.Friday is the last , Thu iuUmljdrtrtlthf ngmentiUvn of Tbt Dally J yoa.l»Med^y jv,r|the way. As for your 10 pan. deadline: 1M'D>li}ttoScrvln: The OT |g-^deadline,,and1ir^>irMs.Wyesthat the regents'ana the chancellor and the J ' T ';7tuaha.Tiwnhef ntlieAwoclaMd Coll*jtiateVrtttrtitt allowed _to vote in Travis. Qounty," but u^v' iu>r|-Tiielidar,>tal«s4i:r,Thnr*tat.«rid FriiUjImt Souunnst JewMlttn'Coaxrtw im x^Ttat telly . -^®r'/ *:>.he got hfe storyin by 11p'.m,, before'yhe -administration; aha the students;and now that they can, it is paramount that • v. *£* v, < ;The blatant firing of Dr.Stephen Spurry£ll:30 deadline."-Pirhaps jou should itf' cl*M,aau#pU * Tet --j' the,... This.Vrtmld alsosolve the>probkmr AeOtUn* «aOon"i«r tbr Mfptper are. at'PMA eyery student participates in the deci­ . Nm ccatMitinitt wtflw taxftrt kjr tdeplmc im- " ? an undertiflpratically selected Boar^^i.-jform your staff of your."real" deadline. of not having .Frank fir'wiii"ttfJkick ^ -sion making process *that affects their flat and ^ecAnqr.'timica Hall, IMyertfty Coip.Uib Your ftecond statementi perlto ' Myneiiafalioratory lives while attending "If rriffff Wtf'Tp^'iifiTlliir'll'WWllinr ' .Burris is"not"sch^fed mm 5^/swvV: v'vS! ' miC,, By JACK ANDERSON:'"-'. Cook even transferred from .developed into a love affair hurrah. "No Final Victories," ~,feSi«< United'Feature Syndicate the Senate's Agriculture Com-Footnote: -Both '-Cook-and • predicts, a fiempcratic horse WASHINGTON -As 'in • mittee to theCommerce Com­Dryden assurred my associate • ' race m 1976. among oldtimers • ,| ¥ advertising symbol, Phillip mittee sohe could battlemare _ Jaek Cloherty that the'favors such as '.'Sipj-.ffenry Jackson, Morris, the cigarette,makers, effectively against tobacco the senator acceptsare not as D.-Wash.. Stfbert Humphrey, once used a bellhop who controls and labeling. . -7 flagrant as our investigation D.-Minn. and Ed Muskie, D.-* • shouted from coast to coast: indicates. Dryden said he Me., and.-younger men like v Once, the senator flew "Call for Phillip Morris." provides no more than an oc­Sen". Walter Mondale, D.­ % across; the ; country in an Now" when the tobacco in­casional box of-cigarettes to Minn., Lloyd feeritsen, D.-Tex. attefnpt to save the small dustry, needs; a favor in the cigar manufacturers-the em­the senator, who' said he.had and Gov JohirGilligan of Ohio ' Senate, it raises the familiar barrassment of having their so little usefor them thatthey AS Watergate's first and cry: -Call for Marlow Cook." commercials forced off get 'stale. He admitted, foremost victim. 0'Brien however, that he uses the free j follows the 'case most -televison • ti.y-an act of- The senator from Kentucky, Congress. iootbail'ticket's tp.take his son;' obsessively. For the . first whose state is almost as, • to. Washington' Redskins three months after the break-famous.f.or;its tobaccp.fef ?s So . close is Cook , to the games. -V-" ^ in, he marveled at the press" • •; fag eX. Tobacco Institute, that a XHV.w WASHINGTON* WHIRI,: "disinterest. The major ex­ "top notwithstanding. But Cook, is -Gp6lcbe& m positively lyrical about the; documents and reports H1®1•-'Whitehead has .not been-able -and columnist Jack" Ander­ * ripe Kentucky;leaf. were of'jnterestiqthetobacco to negotiate himself a con^ _ • ' And the tobacco crowd feels tln.iia'tion in his job There' has been all sorts of ' the same way about him The Dryden, at the taxpayers' ex-, the'endof thevear. Whitehead talk-about Watergate.1 •^«t| Tobacco Institute-^ top. lob-;.,. pense, .in Cook's, franked '" e' the reforms,-but-perhaps this is. byist in Washington. Frank ~ envelopes. watchdog oVdf~de-fens6-con- the most-basic.-A note to-thd® 'Your honor, can we just take the pardon and go? we've suffered enough • Dryden. calls"Cook "the best For this service, ' Dryden tract profiterering", but Watergate maintenance of-ft® senator the tobacco stateever slipped her.$25 a month on toe morale hasfallen solow that a fice, dated Sept. 15, 1972,alreadyt' had " side.' Both Cook and Dryden . search is now quietly going on . reads; "We would like to claini : the: senator was. un­for a successor.... „ i .|.thank you for the quick ser-.• si aware of-her extracurricular ' At least one Watergate? vice you provided for us this: efforts for : the 'Tbblcco figure won't, be asking Presi-afternoon in getting a lock for A patois of contrived complexity Inaitu'te^±ut:©.WR^id-^ie;­ denti'Fard;tDir:xwrdPn-:.;He -is-"-oui^dc>or,iWe'.re.feeling muchf*-f cleardd ^the arrangement in- By GEORGE F. WILL may be called Simonspeak language, is explained in a. -. Dartmouth College speaks not equal but co-equal, signs "Fraok' Sttn-gisr-a-member-o£.—morft'secure.,''... advance, with the senator. : ^1974,-Washington Post €o."~ whert iL:,finalljs-.~ceplaces-=^fiirited-.new._liQQlu_L'.Strictlv_ _oXa~"diverse leadershipgroup are indicators, causes are'ex­the Watergate' break-in crew The college fraternity Kap-"!T' The • tobacco peole have WASHINGTON -Treasury Speaking:1,: A i3suilfg"a fBport" who told us: "Only, a^guilty pa Signia ;has listed its mosts-5|jEnglish' Buttte did not invent «>!!»Will" America"*B"e of schools" ogenous. .vatiablesv "Recently •shown their appreciation for" • Secretary William Simon is person asks a pardon." His it I call my irazor' a razor. the Death of English?" by containing "arresting con­some parents of Dalla's gfam-" prominent newsmakers in Cook in many' little -ways-:­ bright, public spirited and,, .Gillette calls • it a: "Tfac-II Edwirr Newman of NBC clusions of almost watershed MiamrtttDrheyrElliSr^ Rubm--1974i Included were Sea John mar-school children-received • fhi1lip Morris occasionally •^-.perhaps, the man to save us shaving system." Mercury News. quality." Hampshire College^. codes and 28-page ex­agreed With Sturgis that-the tower, R.-Tex.,* Washington 1 ® I makes its corporate-plane jl^from economic ruin. But is has a new '.'precision size" declares .that'"the social planations called '"Terminal pardoning of former Presi­Post cartoonist Herblock and • r •In Washington, Newman" available to him. Sources • .our salvation worth the price car which is either-larger or structure:should optimally be." Behavior Objectives for*Con» dent Nixon was "the wrong actor Robert Redford. %t says,-"the • chief .i close to Cpolc say that Dryden- of.listening to the zillionpress" smaller; (the name does not thing'morally-."• : .conspicuously, missing was the'consonant patterned ex-tinuous Progression Modules characteristic of language is < keeps the senator" well conferences he will hold'as. give a Clue) than the "per­pression of culture, and that in • Early ' Childhood President Ford's new staff Kappa. Sig'g most prominent V •self-importance." supplied" with liquor, cigars" Economy Czar? sonal size" Mercury. chief, Donald. Rumsfeld, ap-" 1974 newsmaker of -fcSH higher education is enmeshed Education.''.j.These -were all. con^ and football tickets. : When he was just-a demi-i; .-• Football —,,. spasms of . Democratic Congressman pointed ,,John '"Fat Jack" victe,d e'x-presidential aide in a congeries-of social and report cards •. Cook "also collects a fat an­ . Romanov as Energy Czar, he violence separated by com­... Hugh Carey, hinting that he political change:" -The presi­Buckley in 1969 to be his in­John Elirlichman r : • .A.-reporter asked Simon • nual: honorarium' for par­ declared that "'one cannot ad mittee meetings — is the will try to becomegovernor of dent, of the Organization of spection chief at the Office of • We recently reported scan-, when gasoline rationingmight ticipating in the tobacco con­ : hoc-tax reform,'' and he urged game for our time, which may New York, says: "I am con­Economic .Opportunity. dais Jt the Army recruiting ~ American Historians calls begin. Simon replied, "that vention..He likes to hunt, too. . us toavoid energy "wastage,". be why football announcers sidering offering-my capacity Buckley, while in the job, district in Charlotte, N.C. We -? 1974 this antepenultimate i W0U)d be judgmental." New- on an island preserve which is ;'which is waste with a syllable talk like polrticians. Football for statewide leadership." ' served asa Watergate-era spy-have now. learned that the dis-« year of oul" bicentennial. !"^-juan says: /'People who say" made available to him by the Ed* Muskie cam­ wastefxillyaddedTlrwoulci—and-gdvernmentexperts-tallt:_ on the 1972 trict's commander, Lt Col, % —— -'"judgmental think thev are im--tobacco men. . •paign,:.. " rather listen to the sound about their games in a patois Academics; like politicians, u John Milani was investigated Today, Newman says, boun--portant."-In fact, they-often • In short, the relationship" track from "Gigi" of contrived complexity and use inflated language to make Farmer Democratic but,. accorcung to an^Army" daries are parameters, parts -are important, and that is-ijri-• between the senator and the Simon-is the Homerof what • faked • sophistication. " Such banal thoughts seem Chaiiperson Larry O'Brien, in spokesman, there was "msuf­ ;are components, things are portant,•and scary;';••• -v. toba.cco ,indus.try has t)rofotindr-to make-confusion iiis: rollicking lirst literary ificieh't evidence'" lUHV UJOUU3 15 THIS WHERE 5HC THR6UI Vseem like subtlety and to dis­ 1 Mi:i?lT^VIDADTVTUESrOCTi,5-7-30CASTiltAN LUCV.TH03W IT P0WN7CANWU5EE IT ? quise undignified .self-.: • mtnt i JM rflK I T HiGHtANos ROOIH fRtttttn HOUR PIANO i promotion. • . ' KJa/NTHE Capitol Optical SEWER? I 'For your eyewear needs and services away from home I NOTICE "In compliance with |Close to campus—1009 E. 40'tb—l blk. S, Hancock Center § Institutional Rules, Section | -v-Off of 'CR Shuttle Bus Route . j 10-304, the Patio between the Academic-Center and "."the ,Texasi.-.Upion has been designated as an area tor DIP TOU FINP IT Prescriptions Filled and Duplicated use by students and organizations -for public *~V--^ Adjustments 'tnghUfctfoihg discussion and peaceful': rrttfato^ assembly or demonstration; "t." Sunglasses 1^" without prior approval, . • -Over 600 Frames to Choose From ,-.,At..th.& .time.the.,Union relocates, a new sitewill be 10% OFF ANY PURCHASE WITH THIS AD AND ID designated to replace the — Patio,: and notice will' be OFFER GOOD SEPT. 19 TO OCT. 4 ,made in The Daily Texan;!' |Monday-Friday 8:30-5:00 Sludani ActMHat Olfk. . 451 5226| DOONESBURY -v-iX mi^ tub comm facts-• CHUB HAD AN THATS600D, ON owe?(veil, eucrsa •-mt it? M%. PRESIDENT, GOVEMMWi mai -X MSAH, • 1H£Yti£ PRETTY , meefrntwhoped sooausm WQH.WSU KNOiVH.. T0 0vam&0x . ,/SMQ on overs \ m w 'MS, v .- '• >7i £!#­ if. • tS.®! '."ivua. - rz Moving right m.UNfmrnHkf yes,sm-m ATELY,. tNCWl£ '' tR£M£MSm 'v"' along-a shoe .TTMMs'&MCeP FASCISM, DON'T onmrr, BY UNBEUBVABiy you? MUM • RIGHT. • • built of viood 8 x&RessnemcisM. MRU?. and woven \ / leather witlf the huarachc" I— 1>£?$!•*• ^ 1 look for going. ' places. In ; "jp brown leatKiSr^fe 22.00 Crossword Puzz • Answer toYesterday's Puzzle ACROSS-,. 2 Land measure; 3Th6urlal' 0EO] sanrama-ssnia r 1 Adhesive ---• 4 Symbol tor dSS SHilES HOB substance • tellurium •SHtiHSi HESSfflB 6 Talk Idly 5 Substance siHn Birararaa 11: Hiding places 6 Self-esteem 12 Us at rest 7 Communists -sararaca ran ossqis 14 Subtle CltiS SDtaO OBtlEI 8 Imltato . emanation 9 Preposition St3 laSGSSSOMtS (311 '15 Skid •10 Barslegally -•HOS BOBS3 0HH .17 Symbol tor : 11 Reason... EB EiparaB sratatiEi • . tantalum 13 Mollifies 18 Employ 16 Need nosiss sns £-•*19 Conducts 19 Smallest rarasBss graorarac :, 20 Distress "... number BHSi raOBBS O013 ' signal 20 Early On fQBB aaaiaa Q@H 21 Compass "1 •22 Fore part ­ pplnt ' 23 Jogs • 31 European 39 Declare y"r 22-Barrler 26 Jackets 32 Venerate -' 41 Weight of:23 Drink heavily 27 Eat 33 Represents-. India 24 Man's 28 Kitchen • tlve 42.Girl's name nickname 1 utenstls'< 35 $huts •' ^ * 44:Noteolscale M-Torture device29 Picture holder noisily-46 Latin. 26 Crucifix , 30 A month 38" EScspe, • conjunction > ^ Campus Separates^:-; ,^| 'J-r. *med|clne, r 5; 28 Blessing 1or Mixing and Wlatchiiig^^l '29 Dim .27 Portion of­ -51 Chair iJ1. 32 Sun god-""34 Stunted s_ person .'^6 .'38,Narrow, flat boards 36 For example:(abbr.)Mature37 .38 Plains 39 Haiti *.40 Greek letter 41 T6II 14 T5~ 30 27 1? 16 28 17 20­ a U : •M jDur. smart 'separates" adapt so easily to'your Color, co-ordinated atthown here or mixwith other separates for many differferfT -looks^-SMfeeitL ve^t, $10." Matcftina A-line skirt, $19. Printed~b)ouseP$9. Juiilo; Sizes.-1 .42 8moofh '43 Hold In 5a DOES SHOES tM hlflh-regard45 Go back '%>' ' 47 Wearies'-fa?" . 48 Cublc meter" All over town •'t mi :1 DOWN ',? . OHJ ' -ji^Ljespr^'^ Mm 43 44 Dljtr.byUnlMti: «a 46 St ON-THE­2406, Guadalupe:, SESSl Wk 'Oinut. THE, jss ph/Wi «'i?i, -ifi" i,, V . -• • :• iff Jf«%" Li," -=? ,» • • .. ,V.#*>.,.,. v 'tei^i IBI ;Sa£ < • tg,^, ­ A Tale%f Two Quarterbacks ££$&$•%•*§ ItJT? fSffS By RICHARD JUSTICE * • m Texan Staff Writer • ­The Mike Presley-Marty • Alans competitionfor theTejJ-" as quarterback position has : *• stirred emotionsm fans which had been dormant since the : • -J* vdays in V962\vhen Duke CarJl­ ' Sle -and Tommy"\Vade' fought' ii 'nh i , divwse i»r^natrtI6s\tO'bennV: ~ volved in the competition.: Other than xhTf night before "• each game when they room j together Akins and Presley '~r_ have almost-no contact With each-other _ _ ^ Neither will criticize the "other, but"there is no loveiost between the twj. : ' ' Akins has co-authored a book .on .his dajs at the University; plans to jenter law scheolafter beingTexas'star­ -ting quarterback for three years-and-• then run for ~ palrtrcfti*»ffiee --­ hA-lpnWK •-ping^^natla; liea tain he wil\ return to 'the University for his final season, of eligibility next year, which would be his fifth. He even­tually wantS-tosettle in Austin and sell reil estate. Abounhe' only' similarity $SAVE MONEYS No Memberships- Required for Discounts r DO YOUR! OWN CAR REPAIRS ... .. . Cars, Pintos, and Vegas -"• ? §0' -v* Vt OUR SPECIALTY V.W. -TOYOTA -DATSUN VOLVO -FIAT -MGB •y­ 1 INTERNATIONAL ••••. CAR PARTS 474-6451 3025-Gti«fal«pe—; between the two "is that neither < -wants to be'TexasV bench-warming quarterback. ''t like to play tennis and golf:". Akins said;; "Sometimes I like to do nothing ... lay under a. tree w ith rayrgirf .friend and let the, hreeze;biow,". ; ."I. do a.lot of .hunting.'V ' Both ire concerned about. Ihe image each' will ieave on others here. "I wantto be remembered as a. man who started three ' Akins, Presley Express Diverse Coals] Character will be remembered." PRESLEY.hfes started one game for Texas.Thatwas the second game'this-season (against Wyoming) when Akins was hurt./Ironically. Presley was himself hurt in j .irju.uaxiul'T^w1 -back for-tfve-Texas-Tech.game-, "would be Akins ~-"I "wasn't, surprisedr'/­ • Pre'sley said bluntly-. *-'I didn't,. expect to startagainst Tech-. I the Wyoming -.game and , replaced by Akins. : The. Mondiy following the "" • years;" Akins.^said. :'1f.I^aoV had^a good game against start. three years and do m Breton College (.after Akins best. 1-want -people to wis hurt) and against Wytmfi" ' remember that I did my best ing m spots^s^ust-reasons I all the time." : felt: I found out I wasn't star­ • fl think that when you leave : ting by reading the paper. here people forget about you • "Akins was the designated awfully quickly." Presley, starter^ But I wouldn't trade said-"They forget the All-my position at tlie University Americas ina.couple of years_. with" anyone else in the world. I think they" remember the However. fMon't~hke being outstanding people and per­No. 2 " sonalities. If he' remains No 2«' he will-. "I think it's-how. you handle not kill himself . Or Akins. your business while you're "I THINK I'm a bigger per­here. The outstanding people son than that," he said; "I think I've had plenty of reason . to.-pull a stunt like. that. At -least I hope so. Next year? I • • ha'ven't decided iibout coming . lack yet. I'm not real sure • yet. There is definitely a 2200 chance 1 won't come tiack."­ Guadalupe • Presley's closest friends . Plaza 4re Doug English. Fred Curt-iii and Mike Hai-dage. « Akins' best friend,is his room­ Nieman,-Hanks mate,~Tommy Ingram.--;: land Puryear "I like religion." Akins 476-7011 . said. "I think I'm a lucky-perf. son. Anybody that plays .foot-;^ ball has to be. Some people Book Sale All Day Saturday 10 to 5 pm Un the University C'o-OjrParking- Lot (23rd and San -Antonio) Hardbacks and Paperbacks Paperbacks .25 University 2246 Guadalupe 'afiatTOSi m TREDOFSQUEEZMGYOURCAR Well cheer up Boopie, because now youcan park that gas-guzzler of yoiii^t^l and a half blocks Iroin campu? inour roomy,cbyered parking garage for amere $15 a month.Or takeadvantage of our ridiculously low semester rate of $50, and buy yourself a bicycle with the money you save! Call 476-7636 for details. & Pearl, above the Bucket &K!L> f > t-'. V""; ' t.J'iJp warn jr > -* tap Marty Akins /Mike.. Presley ..: have physical-or-mental a flyer,J think-thai.the.ifirst:; something to look back on and deficiencies. I've got two thing he gave me was.a little--.: Teflecbon-someof-the same. good legs and two good" armS ' football to throw."-c things they did ~ " ~ Isome would dispute half Unfortunately for-Presley. : • "It'll sell depending on who that). footballs are not thrown at the edited and • published it. I • "My. roommate and I read "I'mversity.k Except when the didn-'t write it because -I the Bible every night. It's the score is 26-3 in the "fourth played football. I just would only way. to-live." quarter. ' like other people to see howit AKINS' dad is a football . : "I RESPECT .my dad more ;, really is." coach, at • Gregory^Portland. than anyone I know/' Presley, . Akins has been portrayed in Presley's dad-is the senior Air-said. '"The degree of• perlec-the press as a cool; cocky Force colonel in Texas. • t ion he. worked:for. welli if.he.. leader; He denies he is cocky, •''My 'dad has. never couldn't achieve perfection, but not that"he is a leader. He pressured me into anything.'' . he didn't 4o it. He's-tried to claims:-what other people Akins said. "He didn't care • drill it into me." think of him is of little con-whether I played football or Akins • lias decided to drill cern. ' .• not. He still doesn't.. He's : his expericnpesat the Univer^r :.-a."I USED to be concerned proud of me because I'm his • si(v into book form. sf'in I.' _u: • "My roommate (Tommy "He says he grew up with a Ingram) and l fiadsfich fgodd coach, I grew up with a coach time, we started writing.about a.nd an.athlete." Presley said. the good times." Akins said. • tt-eoaehed-at school-and.­again when I came home. My agreement to (Gary) .Shaw's dad played baseball'here for a book. It'd give'a person that's couple of years before he was gone: through college.• VAN'S IMPORTED AUTO PARTS NOW OPEN Your Parts Problems VANish at VAN'S Parts for AH' Imports IPs# f 3705 N. ihrerregiorial Next fo the "Body Shop" Ph. 472-6236 Clip & Save Clip & Save ' about what people think because I want people to know " The" truth "atoout "met Tier* Akjns sa ii. y n?wa. long as I ve ?n^ ?s1 Vj f01 anc* -4° u ^ Jriends. I ll.be fine. : No more , leaks or blow-outs, Convert your tires to freedom with BykFil Take a test ride today tt October Sale, complete with layaway & time > o payment plan 1/5 2 'bike car carrier . ...5 . 12.95 27x1% Gum Wall Tire 2.95 Takarov10-speecl, reg. 119.00 ...v:..,:. ii 105.00 ^Takara 10-speed, ren. 159.00 . 139.00 * Motobecene Grand Touring, 23" frame, > 6 only 139.00 K'alkhoft lo-speed .... . 89.95 A • 3-speed 69.95 3-wheel bike, single speed .;. 119.00 ' 3-speed 139.00 We.repair and service aay brand of bicycle; Wheel headquarters of' Austin We tru wheels, adjust brakes and derailleurs Clip & Save & Save -.'';y -%T 3 a part of my life. I can't base. ' everything on it. J do the bestr' cari-wfien-1%-.out therfif—r^^^-^ "I'm glad Ive gotten to play as much as I have. You can get hurt-and never play again at any time. Many here;think it's, everything/. There' -arfr—r other'things in life." PRESLEY came to th6 Univ«psity from. Grand; 'Prairie in 1970,-a year before Akins.: He was redshirted in. 1972.'This year Koyal says the competition between the two, is not as personalas last year^f1 "I think it is a somewhat personal thingi" Presley,said. •-"x ijjink I handli J'"' Plniwr tn*cl^| Irom 6:00 p.m. % -ttqyilo 50)iSoI W#d A Sdt ' Happy Hour 4-6 2.for-1 Mixed Drinks • & Of course I'm going to tdl daddyP' • m , i X -grS—Z? • •' *•, 'W'­ *> 'r-» m-m "SKS J i Baseball Finally UT Soccer Team On Road By TOMMY KESSLER ball and set up a pattern,"-shut out Eastfield Junior penalty kicks, because th&it, Texan-Staff Writer-• Erler explained. • ".We' will > College, 4-0. -• desired kickerS have been on Opens New Door The Texas soccerteam CQn.-.stay, away-from long-passes" Stephen F. Austin has faced the bench at the time of tije -tinues its quest for-the Texas and try to hold the ball to keep only Texas A&M, with that penalty. Erler hopes the : I-, By WILL GRIMSLEY Collegiate Soccer League, the other team from gettmp : game ending, 1-1;" ~ • games do not hinge on penalty • r '? ''' AP Special Correspondent" championship with a road trip it. •' • Texas enters play with a.2-1-kicks since : his. team' is<;?, NEW YORK (AP) -r-It.is interesting to note in news out of-to. Le Tourneau and Stephen "It's obvious we'll try to get record. -In addition to beating . currently 0 of 2 in -this'depart­Cleveland that baseball linally.-has recognized that the black" ­ F. Austin Saturday and Sun--the-bali-to Fred (Ohadi) since Baylor^ the Longhor-.ns ment. ;mah is good for something besides displaying rawithle~ticsfcills day. . has scored most defeated Arlington. This road trip could be im-; . he of our UT 1-0. • "?and gorging himself on ham liocks, ireens'and ehittlins. . Ylj< r • j .• • . •..• • • • i. " Texas currently trails divi­goals." : -The loss.came.againstSMU. 2-portant to Texas as far as'the.: : Frank Robinson, after, a lengthy and brilliant career in tfie' sion leading SMU by two Le Tourneau returns its se­1 TCSL championship is con-'• . field, now ha^been given a chance, to prove to. the world that a points.: L,e Tourneau and cond. leading goal scorer of • TEXAS MAY be missing cerned. In the event of a. Stephen F. Austin are both last year. Tim Gohke. plussix several starters because of in­regular'season tie with". SMIL trailing the division, but both, players each-have a.goal to juries..-Glenn Dunki-.Jacobs < the team that advances in the An ~KP 5pdttJ" Amily»i« have .tied' Texas A&My which their credit this season. ,wiil-definitely miss the match playoffs, could-be determined was predicted to-be a'division -"\Ve*mix. short" and long after ..injuring lys. -lgft ankle. bv. its goal ayeraee. mc inn^'hen. Texas returns "home," ~ We ts ^hemajorieagdj&S' fjrst^Negrfr-maRager^ _ 1 --It.was a longtime coming.Too long..It isimpossible to gauge r;Q5Drl^qll:-:is.-rtotjiered^y-'-a '•piefure-of^TS^C® -how much talent has"gone, tirruse because of lingering, racial' 7 defense/gave up three goalsv ;said/-"We're^t?exceptionally---pulled-hamstring-.---, pionirtiip hopes:"tsf|S?®S^;^ prejudicesin thiscountry-where everybodyiscreated equal,hut: i, Since Baylor is ' an-inex­fast. -but we have a lot of . Le Tourneau and Stephen F. -•• some more equal than others perienced-team, Coach -Alfred hustle."-. Austin have no; major mjuriesv Coaches always know more :: JUST AS the debut of "Jackie Robinson in 1947 broke the Erler isconcerned over filling Stephen F. Austin is led by : going into the gamfe-about their. teamrtsn^tJhe 'sj'ay­game's racial barrier and ultimately "opened-the difcesrto-r team's holes. all-star fullback Eddie.Elief Texas also has.suffered dn home. or so it is .said^S-P® Z—» swarms of talented black's, so we" may look to a rash.of Negro -"We have a tendency to let and team captain'F.red Trim­ managers " ' ' ' -' -upafter.wepull ahe^d,"Erler ble. Only seven players and It could become the "hi'.' thing in.baseball. Thereis nodearth said. "It's -hard .to-push the five •.Starters are returning , of material. tea^Klo a 6-0 victory. from last year's team. Harmonica Sale Robinson himself, before he wcnt--fieaflv-blind_and died "We need to get out of the • "WE SEEM to have a fair tragically afew years ago, alwayssaid Junior Gilliam possess­^habit^of playing casually, team," SfA Coach Johnny ed the finest managerial qualities -S4? "V ' vSf? —UP! Telophoto '• "W^re* giviiTg ';passes'--Hhat-€rawf6rid..said. "Our team has--Save 10% on i Lary Doby washigh jnCleveland'slist beforeFrank Robinson Baseball's first black manager. shouldn't • be made. But a cctfnbihatioh •of' good ball wss nnrnwrt, men rate Maury Wills as an outstan--ability-wise we are up to par handlers and-speed." All Hohner Harmonicas "TS^tding prospect.OtfiCT^miSSthar-lgijSTiiitekly to mmAare^lston, 25,492 i.-with.any team;" • Le Tourneau-comes into the ' " ''Howard) Bill White; Ernie Banks and Tommie Aaron. "-We -cealize-Jiovv: tha^the ;garrie 'with a H-2 recordr PERHAPS the-finest piece of manageriaj potential of all is <»mpetition, is coming up," They fell,to SMU, 4-0, and tied-Amster Music 1624.Lavaca. w 7^hidden away in the office of Commissioner Bowie Kuhn in the . Texas goalie Aubrey Carter Texas A&M; £2. Intwo games 'V.'-person of-the former Giant and Hall of Famer, Monte Irvirir • -saicl. '.'We'll have to cover our against noiidivisional teams: .v "Monte is a born leader,"-said one friend. LOS ANGELES (AP) -•duties have not been defined. men closer than we have': Le Tourneau tied Grand J While discovering that black athletesnot only can run, throw,. Jerry West.. Los Angeles. been. We'll also have.to.go for: ' Rapids of Michigan, 0-0, and IP® He finished hiscareer asthe i^wsrhit and jump— they've been the backbone of our Olympic effort Lakers superstar, announced iu-. .. .• , . the safer plays instead of the : for years .1— some genius .may' also get the lirtght idea thpt, 9 his-retirement as a:.player: ^^^t^regula^season • chancy plays.'-' •. . r srnrpr m.ih#»:Nahnnai Raskpt^ fr»u j w "S" v-v -' scorer iri-the National Basket­5occe.r teams , do not. -,^'7;blaqk man.also can coach""a bigtirhe pro football teanK-._ . Thursday, sayinghe.felt he no ball • 25,192 v"" Although Negro players provide much of the muscle, speed longer, could play basketball Association with . prepare for-individual teams ­ points, including , the 1969-70 and over-all talent of the National Football League, none has the way he wanted to'pl^y the • since they do not work out of been chosen as a headcoach. game. ' -individual scoring cham­. many different formationsfis BIGTIME SPORTS seem to have operated on the theory that West's No. 44 jersey was pionship wheri he averaged " football teams do. • _ SI.2 per game. . ' black men, while rich in native-skills, are incapable of being retired along with the player "We just tiy to control the leaders ~ — who made it synonymous with "I don't think that's tlie case," Irvin said. "I think it's just basketball greatness. that4ynaturethey-ahvays-iiketobe-involvedJrhey-wanLtoj)e_j .Jhe^36:year-old 13-time All-| wihe"action respon1 wher^h^'action is, always on the move, and they shun respon-; Star selection at guard said sibility." _ . ' • • . his "decision was firm. "If you A black mam Henry Aaron-, is-baseball's greatest home ran sacrifice, your standards. hitter. ApnT^pr, * li^*-Iw'i'finift kin^—of 'thp. hnsp yii^r" n"t h"in£ hnn""t with stealerS. Since Jackie Robinson's crackthrough, blacks have •youself," he added. RD .:..459-8689-1 ---.-rg' , - produced a succession of heroes onthe playingfield.-Now it's up West will continue with the SPECIALS GOOD h'Rll)AYAND'SATVRDAV to another Robinson to prdve they also can lead. . '; Lakers organization, but his .u/.,,;,; OPEN.10 AM Til 9 PM ANCIENT ' AGE •» QT A QQ| 86Preef Straight tajfbenWhHWy V*UAKI H,7 /| USl TEXAN WANT ADS PALO VIEJO RUM BIG'tfi Plastic MPrevf Pv*fto RjconRum : QUART •3.991 * f m ..SEAHORSE CAR OLD TAYL0R CALIFORNIA • #6 StratgKt Bourbon Whltkfty fT. ?sl^3.99| Flasks .WASH, ' 1 AlltomxtitL KENTUCKY TAVERN "Swill >6 Sltojoht Rowbcn WHtskay t\ . 13:79 6 Self-Service •> *^petiaLU.I^i[tudent_Ralesi HARWOOD ~ 10 oz. with 1205 W. Koenig See our ad in today's SO Proof Qanedtan Whklry * ^ -3.19 • Short or Long Term Membership Discount 454-3922 American-Statesman jigger cap ,. W. 1. WELLER ^ • Afternoon and Evening Classes . to U.T. Students niutimtiiiiiuiinniHnniniiiniiKi .» J- Proof Straight BMrbonWHHkiy . .... 4.-.99 51h • Learn real Karate; for Self Defense, iwith ID Cards SOUTHERN MATTLNGLY & MOORE Physical Fitness, and Competition, if desired. duPntlSlralgM Bowlwnvnmlny *. 51h 2^99, WINES COMFORT ....5th 5" 100 pr. Bourbon Uqufftrr 88' EVAN WILLIAMS ALMADENMTN.WINES .#6 wTO ftocf Slrarght fiowbett s,h 3.99 "I-: . * RIO BURBUNDV, AOO American Karate Association If III1IIllltlimimilBMtl «D CURKT, ifTT WHITt CHABLIS Jr..i KEEP THE SUN-OFF CANADIAN OtD CROW WITH A BUD HAT; QUB Sbrroof xrotgnt ftouibon Vi GAL. 899 wdll 454-9691 S»p«r Snvinfls thru 11-2 U pr.Canadian Whisky "?Sth 5.29 1029 Reinli, Suite 6 (Just behind Montgomery Wards in Capital Plaza) T^TodkT BOPreofVodko .! j s,s 2.79 Duke Christian Pearson, Chief Instructor SANGR0LE RUM >*iv Stmgrio Magnum _. GILBEYS GIN S Imported Sth v QUARTS O QO Wmtoiif....* ''if. • •"V'AySSJj 5,K 3.49 Castillo80pr;:V.-..'r... Sth 0*00 FRENCH • ' •SLOE:;GIN ^ 56Ptoof, Piping Rock .. .— *KENTUCKY STRAIGHT &OURBOH WHlSXtV. K PftOOT. 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BALLANTINES oriKMtllvi ? 6 PAK 99c THE •1207 RED RIVER ^ PABST JCANS^ sth 1.99 -6Cant-:.**? • 8311 RESEARCH BLVD. IIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIB FALSTAFF CAN CORKER Alt SPtCIAlS CftSH OR CHECK (NO CREDIT CARDS) 6CANS ...... 0 m PIUK EAtON*8{NC. The mid BunchtUsforafanulfMrtnU.Ufi,The Sundanet Kid,Butch Cassidy itat rieht. This rwashhucktin? i • ­ cr plaguedl>ankyamtrailroad allctrr the Mtt HntUthtPinktrlensforced tkem out ofbutintis. e -and The Sundance Kid CROV/ Bourt.o^Q ­ bedevil therailroads. And Old Crow is62 uears old. v-eon*s ' i.zsm . V—-, r&t Men knew thetaste of real Bourbon-whiskey then. You'A PFuF? X 6 Hi know it today. Old Grow;.•; SfH iom since 1835 it's beenthe originalsour. ,niash Bourbon. The Bourbon. Mellow. caN RJ3MN *h£ S y. ^ Smooth> With a flavor the man who OLDCROW K 80/or.j|5T«! /^ , knows Bourbon hasappreciated foe wo\0crsT**w« sixyears IQUMMm ' generations. Accept nosubstitutes. ' 32(6S.Congress 71pi Whsnuouknow 4100 E.RIVERSIPF 44/0067 'i OLD CROW Ir x iS"icproducuoroof ihcOkiCrow ^i«ot«o!ScrWit^Buffala BdlT'Oil Wcll:"*Raj|r<>aU^ _ ' K,-f ntoitUOOrhrekbrMO <0OWC«»vsPO Box 14435,louuvilIc(Ky 40214 Vwd^-hereproKitjited ExpucsMatch31,1975, ­ mmm J'h~ Friday, October-4, 1$74 THELDAILY TEXAN Page"7*, » riv-v.'sflf. •m ftSfr v* ~ v •-tcSr ISl!/ % PegrWsyclfes ;.^~; ;By ED DALHEJM mind "wanders, -then -you realize lapmwMM)! • very cocky person, and he wants to. An hour, .before game time while ; much business on my side. Lastyear* "' " v Texan Staff Writer what you are doing," he said. get recognition* "I'm not getting be the best. • . ' . Pear learned.to hypnotize himself most.of his teammates are nervous­last summer under the instruction www? a saying, 'so goes the in the first few games they were "He has ly thinking about the upcoming running to myside and!was getting of a person*he worked with. "He defense line so goes the team' and game, Washington^ Dave Pear is taught classes in it,-and I learned it the Body Benders try to livo up to 22, 23,24 tackles a game. Now they relaxing. , from him in two days. that," Pear said. are running away from me, and I , •. ft.would be easy to picturethe 255-"I hypnotize myself before > am instantly getting double or tri­ ' * pound defensive tackle 'banging • games,,-and sometimes; when I get ple teamed.It makes i( hard.to geta -"We've shown-.that the Body lockersor doingsomething physical uptight I'll just sitand do it. I'll con­Benders do mean business. We held lot of tackles." he said < to psyche himself up for the game, tinue to do it as Jong as it keeps Texas A&M last week to 178 yards Pear probably will get a lot of but Pear.prefers tospend 15minutes relaxing me." Pear said. rushiiig and theyhad been averaging recognition this year, if not as an alone; in a. self-induced . hypnotic, • Pear do^snlt feel/ that hypnotism over 400. If-it hadn't been for some AllrAmericar at least in the' pro' state­ itas-gtfefrton him ntesicalb'JaiL and some.bad refege-draft,.He hasthe si fjlIrv to'reiftx irivsel]"jnd'put my; mind at'rfesf.'Vien I vlsi&hze \JSSFT'' ana~6iefta"'ab)er'to"teep'::HsFtel'nd 5£ "• am "going to.-do, -playing4be whole.-.open during the^gamg. 4idn<'t-do-anythjng up tile game m my mind so that I will see' 'v * Once the game starts, last year's -Rear — ;middle after a few splays. Their:• ."I'm definitelythinking aboutpro what I have to. do" once the game, All-Pac-& -and honorable mention a new coach m Ike Kaiffer and he "strong point is the power lead and ball, but right now my mairtconcern i starts. • ar All-America releases the physical ': named us the Body .Benders after they only' ran it two or three time?. is having a good year," Pear said "I just think of a certain word that : talent that he is more kjnown for. They had to change theirattack and one of us hit a back high and another mj' instructor gave mo. and I.pount— Pear is the proud -rhembet.of a guy; hit him-low," Pear, explained go outside." Pear said.>-_ Against Texas. Pear and his Bpdy ; from five to one backwards several close-knit"group called; &V Body 4 Benders want to get a chance to do', rifiier proudly. ? FTT"~ : times," Pear explained. Benders: The Body-Benders-in addi­- -"Coach-Keiffer has made a world s £?:?? Pear doesn't hide the. fact he what they like to dot best, defend Pear doesn't see hypnosis as tion to Pear are defensive endsBob ' •*of difference to our line,-,-he's the " believes he was an All-America last against the run. "We want to be anything unusual. "Everyone hyp­Martin; and Paul Strohmeier and best coach I've* ever had. I respect' season. "! don't see any reason I challenged upfront,". Pear said. • jss mm notizes themselves Sometimes. For defensive tackle Mike Green. him. He's" concerned about you on shouldn't have been, but it's tough instance you'll be driving and your ""Last spring thedefensive linego^-and off the field. Like myself he is a convincing people when you're on a • With fullbacks like Texas' Earl ' Holy Moses! losing team," he said Campbell and Roosevelt Leaks it is' " USE TEXAN fairly certain that No. 80 and the* < Young Motet Malone ^22), fresh «uf of high school, ^ After the first few games last WANT ADS BodyBenderswiflseeplentyofac-?4® makes his firstpro appearance, with the„Utah Stars season it has been hard for"Peaf to^tiOH Up trontr-— .•against Virginia Squires.-?-: pr*r"Chicken, I A Mustang Soccer Probed —a. 4 # Our customers enjoy the -sT Ik ?* finest quality" and latest L" /llV. . By TOMMY KESSLER tipped us off," Lowe said " The'gaifie they played with-Le­ ^ techniques fn Hair Ser- Texan Staff Writer ••But we're still not sure if Tourneu."­ vice at Reasonable Prices. with barbecue TheSMU soccer team is un­they are affiliated with SMU had talkSd.to several, der investigation for possibly Dallas," players; who had previously : using ineligible players on its Lowe declined torelease the played with flfe Dallas Tor-m '•ffiffigjeaU for squad. names of the players in ques­.: "They • were ineligible, chaser. ! appointmentH .. Texas Collegiate Soccer tion, but he. did affirm they Lowe said. "They didn!t evai . or come by-:-League President Richard had pjayed.... ... . enroll atSMU. They;'enroIled­s 2819 San Jacinto 2004 Guadalupe _ Lowe adnjitied Thursday that TheMScision reached by the in some of the area junior ' SNIP is using men who had TCSL..will include a possible colleges;" '•i. : 477-0423 * 478-0022 rSP: ' LL1LLUIUIU...J previously played on a" forfeit Of the game SMU Reliable told"The sources -professional team, the Dallas played against Texas which Daily .Texan these studentsWhen you belly up.to the food bar,.you. Tornado "B" team. The main ' the Mustangs'won, 2-1. have entered' Richland, Com­want to be able to order just what question centers around "Based on our decision, we munity College in Dallas. whether-that team is af­ satisfies your special hunger, and suits will deeide-.to-let the -game Hows5er, Richland ^officials filiated.with the professional against .Texas stand or not." were . unavailable, for com­ -your taste.-. ' fL?--• Dallas tornado soccer team; Lowesaid. "Itmay alsoaffect ment. COME TO r "The'-name-is -what first At KFC # 6, you will find^delicious Ken­ SEBRJNG UT Women's Volleyball tucky Fried Chicken with 11 herbs and spices and. slow-cooked, smokey bar-\WY TACO To Compete at TWU beque side-by-side. Drop in at 2120— ROY FLATS The University Women!s intercollegiate volleyball team will Guadalupe andorder what you want... HAPPYHOUR! open its'1974 season this weekend at theTexas Woman's Univer­ .^;T.;/rs A sity tournament in Denton. NATURAL. K The team will be. trying to rebound from a 3-1 defeatTuesday WEGIVE YOU2CHOICES, •„ in a best-of-five series with Southwest Texas State University. i— -A-P4TCHER-_ .Texas' first opponent will be East Texas State at 4 p.m. Fri-" ..,JOTffRTGHTr day. ButToach Ham Lampley:aoes"TiDrthinJcher teanf1s ready-­ r... 4-6 MON-FRi for the tournament. • .-• fy\3 N. LAMAR "We've oply been working out for two weeks, but we could 4\viES g&j .Cutty:Sark 86 prs?«ri; fit?. 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QBBBS CAMPOMMRE .. iFREE,. 1000 South Lam^' Yago Sangria 1.39 Pi ^Z90\, 2>Persow AA.BCBU ebtX£\7&os' -444*3211 , T^ree Complete Liebfraumilch (Bachman) 1.19 SPAGHETTI 5849 Beskmatt Dr. °CLIME*}KfG COPei'CAR^NE^-lOVo -FOA/^ PADS 926-7721 ^ DINNERS .Canoe PADplis ^./AAtglMjQKJIAL MAM^pCkS^MORE With any large Pizza 8619 Airport BlvdU SCHUf^^^;-,^^rtc 1.291 .-at regular price"'i 1 Ballantine NRBotiies; ' m , OTHER UNADVERTISED SPECIALS ^ ^ -' -#SlBWS Prestige Labels at; Discount' Prices Z4\0 5ANAKrroM»o * QUANTITY RIGHT* RESERVED Good At All Participating Stores, Vpid After Oet. IS, l'974 '':ni 0K*0i!3$lS» W9 BBS «%• r. vr PfPT *31^ ^Sfer^S'"* f t,+ a&J* t£k* "*4 V ">'•' +r—. Woody's Mean Machine UT In Coed Tennis * * * v -i By KD ENGLISH women ever to play forTennis champ'Stanford at 3 p.m. Fri­number of sets .won. Each•^/iS^Buckcye;" by Robert Vare; published by Harper & -feji ,: Texan Staff Writers? or com­ Coach. Dave Snyder day. The -Cardinals are only match will consist of two setsRow, Publishers, Inc.; 1974, 243 pages. The Texas tennis team will pete in ongbf the six teams"from last When I was first given ftobert Vare's book, "Buckeye,''.I undergo, .'--a-. -sexual a coed, sport for the of women's and men's singles ; •j83 University: Not only will Kurz year's top10 to make the'tour^ arid brie each set.of mixedexpected to read a propagandized account of the nicetie^T)f?^ breakthrough under hazar­and Corley be a first fur doubles. nanient Woody Hayes' reign as an Ohio Stale legend: I mistook itfor"? kelley ; dous conditions when it com­"one of those run-oMhq-mlH literary sports "masterpieces" .: ' sisft....;:-:: —»• • • ~ . -::;• Snyder, both Kurz and Corley Snyder said Gonzolo ?*'unez. -Thfi tournament is going to­ petes in the Bramff Collegiate will play singles matches, and which lioe.bookstore shelves. . -Brad iN'abors, Dan Byfield and use eight-point sets with a Mixed Team Championships Corley will play doubles. Nowadays, it seems everyone desires to get into the act of Gary Plock will be the men nine-point tiebreaker made up;; in Dallas this, weekend.' andersori Jtf-u As for the hazardous con­ writing sports novels for fun and green paper rectangles making the trip to Dallas; of four-point, no-add games. ,j •Jo Anne Kurz and Martha ditions. Texas will open even'Texas quarterback Marty Akins hopes to publish a book The match .with Stanford, Corley will, become the ,first against defending NCAA„ "SMU will host Braniff's firsts; he ha? co-authored about his memorable and turbulent, ex-. more money (OSU has theuation's highest athletic budgetat will beJqliowed Friday with a-tournament at theCentre Ten­periences at the University — and 1, was prejudiced in my. • $4!3;niillioh, oyw $l:,millipri higher than any other school) at match ."with Trinity at 8 p.m. his Club of Dallas.. SMLVjOhio State than elsewhere. • The Horns wiil play Miami at •UCLA 'and' Michigan are', the Aaron a DH? ... . . .................. 1-1 a.m. Saturday. •;.jother-;teams from last year's nienacingly rtenYvihtbook's cov,ervt.he contriv^M'Wayne -hteUi$ne t- LAW SCHOOL ty ' liH KS 9 a.m. -4 p.m. m -'jT.Vf JUiT i V 0Mstr^TI0N sfe.,. rg'-t." tr -t>r? v ^ ^ ''' It f « f* I f it ?5* 'isllte f ?^ > . ti' ^ n v* t*m' rPl ismw m .Solution Found to Dull Classes %> New Headquarters Students Set Pace IRS By PAUL WATLER Chologyintwo to three weeks. "I LIKE IT."said freshman • The Internal Revenue Ser­and district offices haveabout Todd, district administrator vice is conducting ^ study to ' Tired of climbing out of .bed Drs. Jan Herbert Bruell and John Hammonds. "As far as 340 employes. Bailey was un­for Pickle, said Thursday." each morning and trudging,off Robert K. Young pioneered-in grades, it can be easier even determine the most effective sure of how many employes One-third to two-fifths of the . to class: only to fall asleep the development of self-paced though the material is not.-' location for headquarter^ of a' would be affected by a.move, district officeemployes would Ill-county. district, Chuck ' during a boring lecture; by a courses at' the • University Or. John P. Alexander, if a move did take place.; remain in'Austin regardlessof . dull professor? when they Introduced self-teacher of semiself-paced Bailey, public affairs officer Rep. J.J. (Jake) Pickle of the decision on jt move,-Todd If you are interested in '.paced psychology three years Math 808a-, holds regular, for the district, said Thurs^sAustin spoke against any said. ! . anthropology, psychology, ago. classes but set? no test dates day. -•' vjriove of the district offices. PJckie said any serious con­ 4 math'or astronortiy, vou have "MANY STUDENTS wno or reading assignments^.' • . The district headquarters He said an objective study sideration of a move would be currently"operates with the 'will confirm thejdesirability , a waste of taxpayers' money, ,.-,.4 bet, Todd added. •.A ' Self-,pacedv sections : ofj-Vtum"to^self^pac^coS . Anthropology:301.Psychology he was m college. "I took no -h-'-'vf- Bruell said, -.'Self-paced 301: and 317 and a semiself ^courses "are not easier; if self-paced courses'. as such,.. • :Th^ 'IRS Service' Center on ¥tf when I was an undergraduate, '-. South Interregional would not •paced' version of .Math 808a anything, students have to ..but..often I found -professors ' b' are being, offered. Next study longer and harder' in be affected by the.study..y Arraigned in Dallas gave.ortly the rudiments of a .:The.survey was begun Sfept. course,-and I had to do most'of 13 at direction of Regional semester. Astronomy 308 Will these courses " be added to the list. Grades tend to be higher in DALLAS (AP) — Federal carried on during weekends are the learning myself outside of. Commissioner.Walter T.-Cop;-sf-agents arrested six . SELF-PACED courses self-paced courses; hesaid. "I persons and at night' without the con­ class," Alexander said. pinger'of Dallas. On a corns based on the; philosophy that think this is because students -this week in two separate sent or knowledge of Jones-students learn at different can takea test over until-they Many-students takea course mitree appointed to make the cases in the Dallas area and. Blair management officials. study are three IRS district speedsand areoften slowedor are satisfied with their . self-paced, find they enjoy it charged . them with dis­Slater said the alleged 'directors, and two assistant rushed in their' learning-..by score." and take ofher courses self-tributing approximately $320i-."cocaine seized in -the other other students.; They have no. r 'Student response tq the • paced. Charles Marshall, regiorml 'commissioners.* . 000 in alleged illegal drugs. case had been smuggled from regular meeting times: courses has been generally junior history major, explain­• Bailey Jmejv-bf no timetable _ _A Dallas chemist rand his South America through ..Students complete, readirig favorable. Michael Acker-ed his reasons for following for the study. wife werecharged in a CaSd in Houston and was destined;for assignments and testsat their man, a senior taking self-;s^lfspaced psychology with which the man allegedly distribution in Dallas- own speed.• Some industrious paced1 anthropology,, said, "I self-paced anthropology this V THE AUSTIN district's ill manufactured _ an students have b$en known to enjoy learning this -way and semester. rL&i'"ii£ -rT«*on Staff ffwto by Hilt HuUr cpunUes are south of line amphetamine at a paint coni-Detours a complete thinlr T 1o^rtv mnt BENEFIT < • depositions with videotapes and concluded that-"any Jack^Slater;:fcgional direc­Lake Austin Boulevard will Musical Events Committee." special guest machine man has made, man can rig:" tor of. the federal Drug • En­pass through the construction forcement Administration, on Baldwin and Houston attorney Joseph Jaworski spoke to area and continue Fifth 4-"7 p;m. KTTE4FLYING" CONTEST. I —RUSSELL MEANS said the arrests followed a law students on pretrial depositions. The -lectures began a^ Street toward the downtown Awards for highest' flying kite, most Oct. 13 s year-long investigation. series of talks this^ year on liUgation. • *J, areainstead_flf_.taking._the original kite, and .kite that stays up the > said He approximately • The trial lecture series, presented to the University Law ' Severtth..Street detourfrom longest. Model Airplane Flying Area, $140,000. of alleged illegal1. . School Foundation'by a Dallas; firm in memory of the late Exposition.Boulevard. Zilker Park. Free. Recreation" Com­ amphetamine, known as DOB, Henry W. Strasburger, began last year. Westbound .drivers on Sixth mittee. was_ seized in the Gindrup The next lectures will be Oct. "24 on jury voir dire Street will follow Campbell case. He said the operation -p-m, HARPY HOUR. Sponsored by Speakers will be Austin attorney Mack Kidd and Charles Street to Fifth Street and ' Students Older Than Average. Club Browder of Midland.. ' .discovered in the paint com­proceed to Lake Austin Caravan, Villa Capri Motor Hotel. Specialty/ashions pany laboratory had been Boulevard. r?n »n »n & M p.m. FILM: "King of Hearts." Stars Alan Bates. Jester Center LOX AND BAGELS Auditorium. Admission si for UT A.A.U.P. ti students, faculty, and staff; $1,50 members:-TheatreCommittee.->,. UT Austin Chapter of the ^ Y'all Come SATURDAY Kmeonduxiguol -American-Association .of-p dresses, shoes,shfts. 7, 9, 4 II p.m. FILM: "King of Hearts.' and occess°nes This Sunday University Professors \ See Friday. jbr men .11:30 a.m. • will meet ?;30. p.m. CONCERT! Memphis Blues and.women Friday, Octobef 4; 1974 :# S Caravan. Original Memphis blues at Hilliel pioneers...Union Main Ballroom. See Fri-4th floor of Academic Center •tJay~for ticket information.-. Members $1.50 2105 San Antonio Dobie Ropm (75',without lo*) Non-Members. $2 -SUNDAY • Wfi'S-IS 10* . Agenda: '~vv 7 4 9-p.m. FILMT "King 6f Hearts." See Friday. 476i9271 2105 San Antonio Election of Officers; Call for Con&Utee lF I616lovqcq or Committee A investigation of UT Ad­ministration; Other Business, (e.g. Presiden­ ^A Jewish Presence at U.TiA tial selection arid unionization.} »n »n »n »n »n »n jsst&S GRADUATE STUDENTS |J A1,^.11^. i.F.I.vi.fiXiM.i.l.%1.1,1 I.M.1.I.I.I.*,I.lil.f.r.l,1.1.1.1.V.P.I.l'ijVi.i.i.i. 1.1. l.'i.-i.1.11.1 • 111, 111,11 ..,<1 :> GRADUATING SENIORS •4 _ MONDAY IS £'• SENIORS iifes DON'T BE LEFT OUT! H ySBBK. Make Your Appointment NOW For » ''i&S WHICH TEXAS BEER IS THE BEST^ PICTURE STUDIO • Mark your favorite and then compare ^our results ^ as a celebrity panel of judges calls 'em as they taste 'em;% MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT when they pop a few tops off Texas' fine brews.' '' TODAYa mm & \ ,,Se® th®?e famous Austinites titillate their taste buds . ; .-y SITTING FEES: •w ^SENIORS Graduating Seniors W-V^ . 3- This jamboree is being sponsprerfliynPiS'AJfZ, Magazine. Graduate Studenfs. J.f../r.J200" .WEDNESDAY, OCT. 9 M $100 IS THE LAST DAY TO TA Seniors , MAKE YOUR Sitting fees Must Be Paid When|| JAMBOREE RESULTS WILL BE PUBLISHED >; APPOINTMENTS You Make Your. Appointment. »a* S3 IN THE OCTOBER ISSUE OF 'lm ^ EVENING APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE FOR WEk, 0CT. 16 * -VI ftonthty, Magaiint Lpphmtnt to Th» Daily Texan I; 'I? Jms%tudM ^ Anoth«r TSPp^iic^tWny AiJ;,: W^­ ' By SALLY CARPENTER; • .and his wife also is housed there. sity. He formed a committee on tenure, giving the . and • .••• In 1971, Anthony Hobson of Sotheby's, a London Flying HII faculty a greater role in University government.­ ANNE MCDONALD /auction house, rated the collections one 'of the . N&M New, programs" wore formed and old ones £•"•$• The renaming of the Humanities Research five bept in the United States.v -;i revamped. , J£ ^Center for Chancellor Emeritus Hariy H. Ransom -Ransom vaIso.~oversaw construction of: the's-r Integration, a~major issue in Ransom's vears'as|?;$seems_ appropriate since he was major force a Academic Center, then called."Ha"rry's Place. Contest chancellor, was achieved in part in the dorms and ^behind the University's literary collections. ' ^ • with a. quarter of a million books for Un;-'-.:-. , faculty committee minority athletics,. and: a on Ife The Board of .Regents voted Sept. 20 to rename dergraduates " -;_T, i'?$ rights was established. the facility the Harry Ransom-Humanities Ransom's endeavors were not without repereus-^- M- Research Center. . • : Sion; however. The main library, then-ranked 37th RANSOM'S ENDEAVORS to fmprove the Slated Ransom, who served as chancellorl961-i970, dis- 'academic community_did not fail. From 1957 to among the nation's university libraries, was.under-. played a determination to make the^ntyereity-a ,. funded and desperately, in.,need.;.of-, books which •> 1969, the number of endowed'ehairs rose from 0 to-: It'll be up, up and away for "first-rate institution." " -- i > •45, nationally, .ranked gfaduate facilities from 2 to kite enthusiastsat Zilker Park would benefit students , AS CHANCELLOR, he spent $11.5 million -in 23, and faculty,salaries and enrollment doubled Friday as the Texas Union The average time lapse between' ordering and , University money and $34 million in gifts to stock However, according to Duggers' book, "Ransom sponsors its second kite flying : receiving a book was 18 mon'ths to. two years, . the special collections of; books and maniigpripts;sgi was a flop as an administrator. One of the contest. i Librarians' • salaries therP ranked 20th in Texas The University.money came from the ''excellehce,^ : Weightiest leaders of the faculty.'who reported to i_aloneti and fringe benefits were low. . The. contest will start at 4: _Jlind," set up for i'mproving academic standards him for years, says, 'Harry would agree across the p.m. at.the ZjlkeTmodel air-' _A„F^UiTYwmmitte^r3p°rted_ta_President" to me, I'll take ft-.to the regents. He plane;flying area and-wlll last « fV-ntPr Stip\Uf1^1ialM3jaJii^ge;aiern, and I SBSBSiSH pfan's, wfert begun for •gffij.Vft', told the com-. _ 'A-Cagultv.Commit to P dmnp MMji[pt n. ixutteel«he would stophis program lay'1972, but3Ron"~- time" Center;., a seven-story building at -21st.and|gj. nie Dugger, author of "Our Invaded Universities,' Guadalype Stregts, completed in 1971 it was criminal.-the t-housaiids of man hours lpst-erv ­ §aid.. Ranspm took his-statement out.of .the. • *—t ThfiJCentei* houses •committ£e$.r " - — — '5'^$^^SM^rWaFil6dsjto:­ -meeting's minutes. " ' • ' spamphlets, 4 5 million photos and 3 million' . the highest flying'TcTfe,.-the Born jto Galves ton, Hansom received, his^PhD in **' !cellaneous items. Among the 100-plus collections^^?; Dugger, publisher of the Texas Observer, quotes : rnosi original kite and the kite English at Yale.He joined the University.faculty in 7 are manuscripts.of eminent British and American • ' Ransom as saying,-"J1am notabout to try to justify •• .... that staj-s up tfte longest; The. 1935, with intereste in bibliography, copyright law *•; literary figures, such as William Faulkner, T.S. spending $11 million public money;for this purpose and Texas history. kite flyer who, in the finest i Eliot, Aldous Huxley, D.'H. Lawrence, Sinclair-(the collection). Eitherit willbejustiedl0;15or25 Charlie Brown.tradition, just • As an English professor and chairperson of that • Lewis, Christopher Morley, Ezra Pound, George years from now, or it will not, and I have bombed* . can't seem to get it up in the department, he helped establish the Plan II Bernard Shaw, Ernest Hemingway, Tennessee out." , ; air'Will receive, a booby prize;:. program. By 1954, he was the dean of the College of . Williams and William Butler Yeats. Dugger writes; "One notices that the special Arts andSciences. In seven years, he had advanced Prizes, include free bananaOTHER SPECIAL collections acquired undei*j„;,v collections were his priority, not the faculty's or to vice-president and provost, president and splits from Nothing StrikesRansom are in science, theater arts, photography|f||f ,the~students' — they hardly knew about them." >V. s chancellor. He edite'd the Texas Quarterly Back, two free tickets to any {i t s$; art and freedom of the press. A collection. However, Ransom's collections were not his only" throughout these years, and was a director of the Texas Union -movie and twowTi5Mtii^!American.palnUi>gs donated1>y James A. Mrcheneffr?' contribution to improving standards at the Univer-Christian Faith and Life Community. bowling passes to the Union I&M •SsmB lane. SpecialAids 7?W"' Help Students . By MEL1NDA MILLS • from California State College Lqw-income,. minority and in Norlhridge. He'has worked "physically handicapped' :with-a-similar program-there^.;.: students attending the Univer­for the last three -years. ». • sity can receive assistance in THE COMBINED efforts of ­career guidance, tutoring; such agencies as the Office of counseling, academic ' infor­Student Financial Aids, mation and money manage­Counseling and Psychological-^8 •™M • ment through the Special Ser­Services Center, Ethnic Stu­ Amoco vices program. dent Services and. the Career The serviees are free, but, Choice -Information. Center only undergraduate students also provide services fcottr-­and students who meet family whidi students can i>enefitr income guidelines are eligi­"We want to help students ble Physically handicapped get the • most gut of their students, however, are eligi­collegiate years, and that is ble without regard to income -why. the service has been criteria. offered'," Barr said. "We will , SEVENTY-NINlE students also try to give each person have already signed up for 'who qualifies for the program _ ^services. as much individual and per­ .^-^'We-realize-Jhat^students sonalized assistance as we — with low-income can" ' backgrounds, -miTrafity For. further information i Students and physically han' students may call 471-3304, or dicapped students have unique go by the dean of students of­ needs, questions and con­fice. cerns," said Peggy Barr, assistant dean of students. M GROUPS . The program' was recently M funded with, a grant of more than $83,00(Mfrom the Depart­ RIGHT*^ : : .. '-•••• • •• '---t ment of Health, Education and Welfare. New York Is151 mi At Amoco ProSuctFon C.ompenv V The new coordinator of 0« with « gmp Hw Tat . I we believe that working is better special services is Billy John­Rctwm anf iJoy : & Scorch Deport! Oct> 16. N«v. *. 27 Op1**. son, who will arrive Oct. 14 ... dk.19, ?o, at . i than watching. Like the youilg;; ^SPACE LIMITED-BOOK NOW Engineers pictured here, you'll' v ,nl^ call the Experts:"478-9343 OSE TEXAN WANT ADS be givena direct engineering'i HAHWOOD 2428 Guadalupe TRAVEL assignment the first day onthe job. And from your first day on FOURTH ANNUAL the job you'llbe engineering for Paul J.Dudenas, a leader, amember of the Penn State 73:' teslie D.Skinner, MIRACLE DAY M am.in charge of Standard Oil (Indiana) family — Texas Tech 72 anoilheld." Amoco ghes'you FEATURING IN CONCERT the 13thlargest industrial firmer experienceIn ahurry and the 6th'largest oil producer PSSl l£JI in the country. But our engineer­ing groups are small and indk-} vidual accomplishments are quickly recognized. Amoco . Prodimtion P.nmpanViB a vming ' ; leader. About 40% of our prac--, ticing engineer? are 30 years of '-s age or younger, and our/" salaries and comprehensive benefits are among thebest in -William J.-Qrays,right, TexasA&M73: all of U.S. industry. If you are ' , 'Too canseeyout_shlls blossom:" a.Senior majorinq in Enqineer j^^^'^^yffpthejirst day.they wanted my f6comm6ndations' Bruce H. Stover; ing, we'd considerit aprivilege U. of Oklahoma 71: Frank D.-yenderson, rights to talk to you about the possi-" ; "I have total U. ot Texas-72 responsibility:" ; bility of employment...as an r t-V. • " « "I'm getting a/Hfieexperience is ,Sf§ ^iijj! 1|A and helpI need." • ­ Engineer, from your first day M f I v on the job£r 'M . Ma Sign up for an interview now. Recruiters willbe on campus Oct. 8,9,10and Nov.5,6,7.; ;5?5S RICHARD AND PATTI ROBERTS HlCH^?P ROBERTS'INHERITED A SURNAME FROM ORAL,'THAT HAS BECOME A "°"J?£!*OLD WORD. BUT AS A SINGER AND RECORDING ARTIST VIS SUCCESS IS EXCLUSIVELY FICHARB AND HIS WIFE PATTI SING A AND °M TH£M TESTIMONIES SUNDAY s MORNING^. 1 " " AND " GOV, JIMMY CARTER ^^4 „ 1 GOVERNOR OF GEORGIA ,.^ IF YOU HAVE EVER BEEN FETI UP WITH POLITICIANS HEM ™IS NUCL*£* PHYSICIST GIVE HIS CHRISTIAN TESTIMONY. \ -m ras MMii w& «fl< JVhjj W*1. . tTjS«.c * jftS&fef * ^VY --> ' * .jV |*i. _•_. * & »Vv5£^ rc*^© • ••. t psSSmfwt'"w&i(fo s^i!#l i " r^» 4< <3A&" WW'S?? -S$ : •Hi ,_•-W •moke dreamt ;u.^ AmMguQMt os Ever' *'S, >>—-V * fc\T?V. f1* »tV*> % lying'still. Handball Coach, Champion Fulfills Dream Ambiguous as ever­ **(del^^tuI jklna^tS^vfth/^-• W.-'A-Vv University professor of outgrow his desire for the cl«r Bght " It's desperately needed in. -Tyson has led Longhornteams-Regents we have the • finest fOO, v -T^V^kWc ;'ii':.-.' -v nasal passages ••:'") •'•" physical instruction. He puts court; however. "Because [ handball. So I told lots of peo­to 10 national'championships handball facilities in . the on his warmups and heads out compete, I reaily tike to prac-ple about the company," he trying to Understand ' ^ -;About Frost's simplicity _ ^ ;• ";• and three second-place vic­world."' to play an early morning^ tice,*' he said. "If I .want to said. |-" ' just why:Ilike you so much. ;v * :• > . and Pound's complexity , ,. game*0f handball... in his own*1 practice at 10 at night, I'll do . The firm asked Tyson-if he;; JbMtoaMy,,, it. This ig part of why I'm knew of a place in the Austin Till nx<'. H ' v$5 » It2r-iii* S* ;£-J|§ * K fp fc*­ P-PM £ A-31' -»»•; iii«",w9*rjf<"y<1 Horn#, family, braVor mys«lf, who J--' ^ Vtlf r ^ A' Aft*r^ett-can an^nrt^do it^fcr tha-p^LJli'P' * * ^ '>>:-.fty r-W^ wke of fl#&>i»M/Prea^ send-pc 'Use Texan Classified Ads A REMARKABLE STORY ABOUT THiiREMARKABlE SMALLER , _ The Olympus 0M-1 camera is 35% smaller than conventional 3SmmSLR * ; systsn cameras. Vou can store '2; : 0M-1 bodies and S lens^ in a space • . that will hold only l body and a teses I mi tram the other K>mm slh sysfefiis. :. •LIGHTER'-­ The Olympus 0M-1 camera is the lightest 35mm SIR' camera in the.i *bri(J, ;WBiflhina:only. 213 ounces^ wftft the fe0mm*ff8 le&" *iM '**$> •>£ dCTIETBf? • I -The_0M-1~K-the first ref!ex camera ,to use air dampers on the mirror: to ?• FACTORY reduce shock and vibratkm^ The re-s1; sutt is a camera that is incredibly DEMO! .quiet and virtually shock-free:. » -?he-OM4^s4otaliy new deskm deliv--' ers. a viewTmder image' 30% larger and 70% brighter than conventional 35mm SLR cameras. Itw m theOLYMPUS ONM CAMERA mm ...the beginning of ?280-piece sys­ tem which includes a spectacular motor drivegroup andr3PJenses'rpm SmmtolOOOmmg^-; ­ Ma • a3j£!f>T : R the NorA OaiRs Iffdihon of Austin. . "To my knowledge, there is no other private handball court in thestate of Texas"he said. THE COURT has' been a dream of Tyson's for a long time.. "I was'saving my pen­nies for a three-wall court — and believe me,for a teacher, that takes a while," he said with a gnn. He had saved |1,S00 when, one day several years ago, a man.from San Francisco telephoned Tyson and asked • him for some help with,his fiandball game. Tyson agreed, and the man appeared atnthe University courts. He brought with , him a video tape­ • television • setup that Tyson • thought .would be an in­valuable • teaching aid -The equipment cost, sure enough, $1,500. 'I blewmy savings thevery OLYMPUS s. m*. (Mi Your present camera Ts worth $$$ toward the remarkable new Olym­pus 0M-1 35mm SIR camera. 35% smaller, quieter, and lighter than 14 conventional systemSLRs, the0M-1 M Is the hub of a 280-piecesystem in-v"~ eluding more than 30 lenses; motor drives, and a spectacular group of close-up components/ Come on In today for. a demonstration... and bring yoiir present camera..­ ^rf'£r. •• W MACRO PHOTOGRAPHY r ||©5cfi: MOTOR DRIVE i • • >• ^^'tyson--built, fle told them,. fTvd ipMiOT^KTffiSTSBS^ court built completed points1o'his'pater-, in my backyard* -Ss a matter nal distinct,'*"I've got"two -H)f fact'~-The.'company..jof-.. sons," he said, "and sports -ficials decided Tyson was a are a big part of growing up. good advertising investment, Handball will help them-with and ...--presto! Construction any sport, especially in. began, free of charge. "It's goiilg to be very con­ venient,'' he said. "It'll be an entiyefamily court— my wife recently took up racquetball, and she'll be able to use it, developing reaction time." too." The court will bean outdoor BY LOOKING at Tyson'sfour-wall, fixture with • no : record of.honors «nd ceiling."I originally wanted a achievements, one would three-wall,.but like tennte,you .wonder why he even needs1o end up chasing a lot of balls, practice. He is the most that way," Tyson said. " > widely-acclaimed handball in-/The construction cost was. structor and one of the top one factbr which had friitiaHy1 playeis far thevyrorld"|Ie.-_has^; to wall court;' He estimates the American, and Canadian cost-of his "soon-to-be-champions, the only col|ege completed four.-wallat $8,000. instructor in the world to do "But it's costing me almost, so. He is a former national nothing," he said. He explain­^handball champ himself and ed that a handball court has been tournament director building-company out of: •M 14 • national and collegiate^ Florida is constructing his Handball phampionship tour-^­"baby" for practically no fee naments. because Tyson has sent Tyson lias written tWo m­ s-'eft.®-: a'i>9~<8aa»«*> *,^Fagif 'me- FINEST QUALITY LENSES —T»xan Stuff PKofo by Chip Kaufma^ sl.ui "SJP l4< HIGHEST QUAtlTY AND VAlUE IN EtECTRONlC F1ASH UNITS Vivitar fell 4®; • m& i'M kMtlr ii'i. m M FINE Vivitar PHOTOGRAPHIC | FREE Booklet "How to Photograph Sports" ACCESSORIES! it­ 4» The Sports Photographer's L-ens PY0UR. CAMERA Vhntar ZUIKO INTERCHANGEABLE LENS GROUP1 i» i capftolcameras Its about • r i j •• . time you TO GET THf REST OF THE STORY ../STOP BY OUR STORE TODAY-9 a.m;; D0BIE MALL/Zlst & Guodolup«/Sustin, Texas 7870S . . } got to to 6 p.m. or Slat^ 9 o.m. to 1 p.m. Mr. Nathan Coplovitz, Factory Represent know us. tative-ijor the OLYMPUS 0M SYSTEM, will be demonstrating and answering M We're;, WIEKINQ SPECIALS'. ON M0S questions a^ut this retnaHf^ibb y miss it. specialists? IVIVITARPRQDUCTSI w .r-S-J • P4 ViJ"•-A. &%? -L m$">\ H ft" V* t4m V&&B NobeIphysicist Doctors Aid Family Clinic By DICK JEFFERSON Wiggins said, there arc two principles — continuity year a resident completing Texan Staff Writer -§3 openings across the nation, and comprehensive the program will be treating Discusses Role There is a new.breed of doer mainly in small or medium-knowledge — continuity in the 75 families,.Schedier added. 4)3|i tor in towi)i; resembling Mar­ time,":Schedier said. sense the doctor will see the If the resident desires, he • -'-^3s cus Welby and' His type of The great need for family same patients throughout may assume care of these • J practice — the family, prac­practitioners was illustrated their, lives, comprehensive 1 families in a private practice, Neutron Find titioner. . • by Schedier; who; speaking because they should be able to he added. / By STEVE OLAFSON "It is a different concept in before the Capitol Area Plan­perform almost' all of the The; family clinic currently --s&M medidine, oriented -towards ning Council Health Advisory medical services the patient A Nobel prize-winning physicist saidThursday heis-not opS serves' 700 patients,, with , a ^ ' / care in width instead.-of Committee, said, "You can needs, Schedier said. staff four tlmistic-about the growing number of: countries which 6f jnterns and depth," Dr. Terry Wiggins, get your. brain operated on possess nuclear weapons "Everyone is scared, but Idon't; 8?1|5S|1§| IN THE Austin Residency volunteer: local physicians. >5?| know what to do about it." 9?:' •. first-year resident in the quite easily, but you can't get Program, each resident is Fees are assessed on a sliding " Austin-based Family Practice your infected finger looked assigned 25 families during scale dependent on income -Dr.JEmiJioJiegre worked with the Manhattan District Residency Program, said. at."" his first year. This'increases •^jBoiect4nLo&Alaictia..N)^^^^^o^^r:^^e^^ and number of dependents in Similar to the general prac-, MOST MEDICAL students annually by 25, so by the.third the housgljold EQtflgptiBg:for specializa­ _ _ Mo aJgrowd of anproxima telv-300 his Thursday o'ri:thr iHii(*ni(rirT^iii" • ii totftfrrA^^ecli'wafH ^amili^racUceVis a spolisored-byrthe histoi7_and^iyslcs departments. .=••. ^"eclmvy-argn " : jqTr^iv­ .^^etr^cedithftneutronis lts ^linWrigsin the­ . FP should be sp3#llized inail know the family and their early 1900s to4tswevenluak"discoVery1{n;l932ri r r­ ..fields, .Dr. Paul1'Schedier, • special-problems; \Covntry' Tour Sunday In an interview after the-speechi Segre jaiST He do^s-Tiot director of-the"progrsm^ saidc:;: • one-yearregret anything about his work with the bomb . RESI D ENT5T IN tfr'e-^-Ssidency for the-GP;-family -Bicyclists, "who., thrn^ riding meafis''dodgingr6ars and I'"No man would have sat back and not have tried to'dis­ 8® program currently are practitioners must complete a • breathing exhaust fumes might consider a "country" tour""*"cover the bomb when Hitler could have gotten it.before us. iM rotating duty Jjofeween three-year program of inten­scheduled at 10 a.m. Sunday. ' The bomb would never have been done soefficiently if it had Brackenridge .Hospitai and sified training in all major • The toijr'wiH'be sponsored by the Greater Southwest:not been for Hitler." • the Family HealtlLCenter„502 fields," Wiggins said. Overland Bicycling Association. Riders" will leave fromSegre and Owen Chamberlain were awarded :the. Nobel ' W-. :15th St. Future plans call The American Board of Johnson High School, Ed Bluestein Boulevard and Old Manor . prize in 1959 for discovering: the antiproton, a negatively for additional.• rotation-with Family. Practitioners, a sub-Michael association charged proton which can annihilate the:positive proton of Road, Humenick; an officeivsaid­ the University System's . sidiary" of the American Wednesday. matter found on earth. ( • THE 'DISCOVERY opened new avfenues of'uffderstanding : Health Science Center in Saif Medical Association, is the The ride is aimed at the large number of people in Austin •• Antonio. regulating*a'gent for FPs. who have never been on a' tour but would like, to try it, hein the study: of nature and construction of the universe. -J •r F.amily-practice has •••; "Family practitioners are said: • . . Segre, who has been teaching at the'University of Califor­• become an extremely popular to ac­required retake' the The.ride will consist of a 13-mile loop on farm to marketnia at-Berkeley,-plans to teach a t the University of Rome, -field with medical students in creditation examinations roads in the area, .••• • soon and writea new addition to hi^highly_acclaimed book,V reoeitt.years^uniy, iU.peiEgnv_ jiyery nveyears,andthey also 'A tour is more than riding a.bike,and we like to includea -"JVuplei and Particles." of menrcal students Indicated ^should engager tm50"bours oj-^-/sto^foeat^or-^swirn whenever possible. .This ride is too-short;-';:-';He came to Austin to visit his son, Claudio, who is-a I an interest in_ thefield —for years, ago, But ngw mofetlTafi—ttnrerSchedler~sai<^ — -and-eat "on the school grounds after tne ndeJT HUffientek—— member of the University's history department. r—i j 10m ! postgraduate work during this that so we encourage. people_to bringna lunch witirthem =• Segre expressed interest in the University's Tokamak and .40 percent show-interest, This FP concept stresses — said. guessed the energy problem would be solved witha comtuna-: —Tnon Staff Photo fay I'M Nifbtr Schedier said., tiotr of.nuclear power, coal easification and solar power. m. Dr. Emilio Sfegre •However, even with this, ^rasti^ncreas^^nterest^ 1 trSkig/ DPS,Announces UJestbonk Pottery announces . Want -to buy a-used car, Dodges, Plymouths and table office.and is equipped desk; typewriter, adding Chevrolets. Most are 1968 to •with an auxiliary power plant FALL SHOWING OF -machine,-^calculatoiL_ot._file .197.3 ..models', recently and furniture. • -FINE POTTERY .. cabinet at less than/the retail repainted and: fully equipped.7 " The big white bus may-look price? Approximately 14 electric farnUiar to rock fans since Sfe^ ^for Sale 0t -• • The Department, ot Public and manual typewriters.. 21 DPS officials have used it -V'. r\?901 W. lOlh Safety is holding a public auc-• wooden and1 metal desks, a regularly to police local rock ­ ' SATURDAY & SUNDAY tion of-State property -at 10 dictaphone and a' camera also festivals. a.m. Saturday In the DPS will be sold. -Auction items will be soldto OCTOBER 5th: & 6th shops at Koenig Lane and One . of the more unusual the highest bidder, with bids 9 A.M.-6 P.M. Guadalupe Street. items is" a 1948 Beck 30-starting' at $r -Among the items to be auc-passenger bus that has been to .tianed are 100 DPS every hurricane disaster area ^automobiles, including -sinpe 1948, It served as a por­ ^IwmmttBiiHiHHiiMiiwimmniimHiiiiiiBM muiiHiaiiiim Guitar String ­ || Save 20% On All Guitar Strings * SI' AMSTER MUSIC 1624 LAVACA Comfort -is the Bottom line at y£s BEAUTIFUL SHOES 70S CONGRESS (Downtown) Share the rent and the way me Hue... IV r-> ^Restaurant and MarCo?s Cocktail Lounge LUNCH From $200 STEAK AND EGGS A LA RITZ 5 os. fitel miffnoni broiled to your ordcry eggs poached in hearty beef brotfi­'.'..•••v tihtl ncsthfd in a crhp buttered toast cup fi MARY COMPANY JAMBALAYA r. A fiot spicy casserole-of 'ham, chicken, rice and herbs sertvd wilh sprin/T •' f:Rant/en pickle relish and bacon corn muffins ^ QUICHE LORRAINE -./I large tvedge of quiche mth bacon and ham* sensed with fruit salad • & .7 ' COUNTRY KITCHEN MEAT LOAF, r;­ ~ A&fjh'-'dt'Hcioux meat loaf sctved.with old fa~shioned~crcamcd potatoes a,nd } ^ • poppy sc^d dressing t -' GET IT AU TOGETHER IDINNER From «385 AT THE CADEAU SUPREME OFXHICKEN WfTH ARTJCWOKES It's the, littl* accessory touches .that make; ^youTB'smote and mature. You waftt the besl lile has to ollef: And you want to keep the cost " ­ AND FRESH MUSHROOMS reasonable ' the big difference in your wardrobe:;; _ ' ' By sharmq the rent with other mature singles youFprobiem is solved^Sptit the rent four way#'»&'f-' give it polish,^piiau, personality! Start on one of our 2 bedroom «*>armiefjts and have full access to all the things that o#ke'oiir>™$?» apartments such exciting places tojive , •' -i-V" _•—with a long fHimed scarf> of potyester, 5.00/ swing a terrific go^verywhtre kind of bog if•; Truly a new' taste adventure.- i22wvtgariia 1601 Royal Crest Drive 1' j Served with sala£l • (l ' (rom1H-3S. take Oitort'eim-to t lust,oil Riverside Drive Algarita. turn right,one block-. 444-7797 ^ ^ FLOUNDER ROYAtE , f f ^ 44 Hmtftf,Parking At HWY'T83 •* jJweio<)fwefft ot Jegger Awool«te« ,.. Friday, pctober 4, 1974 THE DAILY*TEXAN Page i>m IP ^KiSSf^ 955® -TSDs?% S; Drag Magic Lures Passersby KlM. js# s Intact Short Performances Include Card Tricksf lllusions 12 ­ -By ELIZABETH ECHOLS J u ByJKELLY HODGE ' • The committee-met in September to take : Funds committed by Dr; StephenSpurr to "Pick a card" and "concentrate on thisobject" areluring , stock of what ithad towork with and what it &";r* match dollar-for-dollar a faculty-staff passersby into the mystical world of illusions and trickery needed to work on. Since a September an­ scholarship fund for ethnic minority and this week. . nouncement toUaculty and staff, funds have disadvantaged students have not been Master of the show.is Mike Smilek,18, a five-year veteran ' • been received by the scholarship fund com- affected t$y his dismissal. Ford.V.: : of the magic business. " -• :\4 .mittee which. hopes to award its first v, Suited in a blue coat, a paisleyshirt and a rainbow-colored'' : Dr. Miguel Gonzalez-Gerth, chairperson .scholarships in mid-October. .---headband, Smilek performs several shows daily for small • of the Ethnic: Minority and Disadvantaged By ROBERTA CLELANDTHE COMMITTEE hopes, to award the f crowds at 24th and Guadalupe Streets. - Students Scholarship Program -Committee, A $9 million antitrust suit scholarships to students with a "spark," a Each performance is short, consistingof card tricks, coin ..said Thursday he had been assured that the against the Ford Motor Co. desire to learn, Gonzalez-Gerth said, rather effects, thought projections and lines mysteriously moving -'i funds were still available. . has been filed in a U.S. than to those with proved academic ability r ' " THE SCOLABSHI^S will be awarded on. District Court in Dallas by a who.'have other opportunities.'." ~ "I'm'here for two reasons." Smilek said, I •rtpprf ttirnnph the stu- ' -fornfer Ford. dealer• from get the «xpeHence. at^to:.makB a;y^fit.-v' Ipnt JlfiSl Although he has been involved withimagicsmre the'eigh'tfF grade. Smilek has been out of the business for the last few ^semester, anathe-commutMr r-ttealetstup-uu&l _months. His aftefnoon shows are designed to get him-back" .representation ot .minorities',in Uie student emergency funds available?he "said. three years before going ,rr into the performance habit body, faculty and" staff. "oFMsiness;June 25, said Ford­ _Gonzalez-GerthsaJd contributions from W? ... . ~JT ' The' jiagle~of nickels ^ddimes ffiling:into adonation~box; ? " . refused to supply him with • Faculty..ai* he^ '-THE PACESETTER. The THEMAX1-1r A new-TOncept:iftronttr . ultimate apartment Split-level — <.OMPl.tATHKAIHSH(JP=— "needed. . :;ii bedroom split levels, targe oedroom — living ma two bedroom studio. "•"'tS COMIX POSTSRS-He said in 1971. his and bath witt) a futi study, upstaws. Downstairs, afully electric kitchen with waik-in' . Utb ture BONCS [ EARN CASH WEEKLY < 1 dealership sold between 360 Downstairs, a spaacys (wing syea, en­MWKS. 1Am-nilES ing. Upstairs,two fargebedrooms andijathwrth tertaining area and all^electnc kitchen 7 arid,470 new cars for the year, !v .. walk-ins. Free living at its finest. See it to believe it : Blood Plasma Donors Needed ;; Ford's over-all sales were up pantry and spacious living room tor entertain­ • 444-7880 8 percent in 1973, Smith said, 3k Men & Women: was biit his allocation decreased to 272 cars. COLLEGE COUNCIL EARN $10 WEEKLY " SMITH FILED a motion GASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION last year with the Texas REPRESENTATIVES Motor Vehicle Commission fer WANTED Austin seeking ahearing onmanufac­' turers' misallocation of cars. flfesr m NO PAY lisp BlaodvGomponents, Inc. In ^recommission hearing, OPEN: MON. &THURS. 8 AM to 7 PM. Smith said, Ford represent Rovrards-wiH-equaKlnput^ -­ taUyes .admitted "its formula: TVESr-&-FttL 8 A.M. to-3 P.M. P* Contact Ralph Krog. WMOB 206A "allocalloti mlghtbewong ^ Pacesetter Apartments farFree-LivingPeople. 2124 Burton Drive CLOSED WED. & SAT. '• - Interviews next week. Said if Smith did not make the matter public he would begin llrs. 471-4181 or. 478-8920 409 W. 6th 477-3735 • receiving cars. it Cefmp^rnitr+SimJirtC**nri] Federalandstate laws state ~j anyone can sell anythkhg,| anywhere, anyplace, anytime,1 Smith said.He filedsuit.Tues-| i' WWi> *• day. alleging' four counts of : OorioA«r­ violation, of~federal-and state^ I-' antitrust laws and'one count' of bad faith in contact AT OUR|NEW LOCAT|ON easy livin* handloom clothes m ^t'sr GROWING ^ HOUSE PLANTS * ^ •" III ' A Course for' Beginners Js.. *—• First Classes Start tha Week of Oct. 7i­ If.y • •' ' /:"• Clast meeit once ' 30 L OFf ON ALL ?ACK5« TACKS WITH F •very week (Mon. iumrs eoine on Toe». or Wed., etc.) iNlIRNAL-PMEtACJCS, XUCK5ACKG. p/kY PACK5, BOOK EXPERIENCE TRUE FLIGHT' for 5 J ^5 " -ON l"r"7 -8:30p.m. f^ PACK5VCHIL0KEM'5 "PACKS, DOG PACKS, SADDLE xmm J Kondor's Rogallo Wing $10 fee Includes,''" DUfFLE FAG-5. SKiTQURjKG4CL1MR1MG-?AC.k:c> • A High-Performancti Hang-G/fder ^ cuttings, soil end ", ©Me >AY ONI^-ALL or our exvsTrw& OF PAO/f£>mr MARINA » i-fH -jajjfjstiff? tI&&­ auunwuun Presents fe na-tv v '/Ja. packets. JEtPERS PEtPtRS rf.iiSt bifw of fops <*/!*f/6*er 9^;,J OUUfT (T( ClOSS jeans Australian /C[^ Wit MY)? Birdmen ; ®And The ^ m i Itgiiwiiig at 3 t'cloA Scifvfiby Hw Human will b*gioth«ir brMthtikinga«4Vl«riRg pcrfermanc* atlhayf loke to Hm air soaring up »• alHtu^s >f. 2,00Q .ft.;.ni«| ..... " .'S-• '/ : Js5 s Blrdnwn wiH ptrform wHtil ^ark and will toncktd* this tpa<-' y / * -„ , tacl* wMk a s^ttaatkifiiiplay of flying firewarki. ~ * irhfJeMoo!19 4**ltnhtg h*r clothe$ ifWi alsodesigning IW MV*MkMI)h' ^ Thati how ghe cttaxdOw only mm mtOte-vp togowith todi JM>AMISSION-i*2^»3 P.M. j+sr i *ip~ 7 ~ .settam*kUMkatttutheu.^£3&Sr Go out Hwy. 71 io Paleface Store and Pedernales Bridge' Tadmy>tmmkl Bp,to*my»colo*w*ftoryoit-...4,4t, kt Turn rigtit on RIT2322. Go 3 milesrto Bridrcliff Marina.' vA t today tbmSat.a repnaerttative Will be at thcCo-Op" tohelp you. FfceeAift 4nth $&OOiWithase fflCTGRY In case of Rain, Performance will be Held/Son^ ^ *1 "t ^ The CniVers 27 &111 r COLD 6EER * BAR-B-gur 2246 Gu*dminpe' * i? 9 ' C# «-V's .• •". :s#' »$-> Jfflg y."W fv s.7;''/r Professor To Visit China M To Study Education t<£,. Wwfred P. Lehmann, Ashbel Smith been ''-is< .. ,v. professor, of linguistics, has. been • •• He explained-that^lt":is"""of'1''grea* New Bilingual Programs Will Expand selected chairperson of a_ delegation ;social interest to1inguists'' howChina . By MIKE ULLMANN Last year,:the Legislature of U.S. linguistic scholars leaving _ hassucceeded in gettingits citizens to" she doesn't want.busing to be J; written for bilingual classes. • Sunday , for four weeks of observing: S*2jr '. adoptthe Pekinglanguage from about ,. a"d . provided |2.7 million over the a threat to anyone. -THE COMMITTEE also MARK WLLANUEVA next two years for a bilingual linguistic 'developments in mainland eight different Chineselanguages and ; "But some districts are us-delayed approval on the policy. China. <• _ ,Qther languages spoken in China, i Texan Staff Writers program. Along with this, the ing it tosegregate people. And. .amendment of the state's • At its first meeting the Ad-federal government gave ' .Di*. Lehmann's ll-member group The Ameripan scholars willexplore J don t mean for a short time, special education program for • visory Committee on' more than $8 million to local will consult with members of the She. Chinese language teaching and I mean fulltime,'! she said, . exceptional children. Education school' districts for bilingual Because the programs are ; \ . Chinese Academy of Sciences and bilingualism, language pathology and Bilingual decided ." \ 1 Thursday to-create six sub-projects. new, exact details of the wky amendment would .• visit Chinese universities 4nd .in­j the-biological basis of language, lex-committees to study areas Under rules approved by the they will be administered provide changes in the testing.: stitutes engaged in various linguistic :• icography, nonChinese languages, the pertinent to tHe state's; neat..-.State Board of Education on have" not .been worked 'out Procedures fpr placement of:research programsf Special attention • histpry of Chinese and the teaching of bilingual education program.: Jan .12, .every school district Gutierrez said. . pupils in ^ program, iwilliiocus on China's: methods {of English and other foreign^languages. The^ 22-member advisoFy. musi conduct' a"1 survey of • _Victor Cruz Aeda, program . It. also establishes a due.. OflejM:hftW-U.S. tn t.-phmann • comrnittee, *appo'inted' by -the; children m .each grade who -director, spokejon materials process provisioh for/'parents # 'mernbers*"of. the'!deletedtl6n>uJrtplufle -1""' .The books.he' who f to^y Vniversity~xrf--(2aiifornia—at Los -• in-; the-state.of-,Texas should'" ..'b^kgroufid in;the samegrade • Angeles;'William Labov, University .have .knowledge and: un-.level': who are-having China.---___ •'?% . of Pennsylvania -John Lum, National derstanding in at least one problems -with English-, a Student May Run Lehraanni -forther.president orth6~"-: Institute of Education; Anatol,e> language other-than English," bilingual program must be LinguisticrSoeiefy-JoL&m&ica-,-says*?;*;] •* Ltfvin, Un iverSi ty^'of t Sawa ii; m " he: hopes -to establish relations "and"'""*' ^EffedencLMorte. Pri^Sftii^n}\;ersI-^ director of special-programs Sofar^alltheprqgranasare; RaZa Unida discuss English being taught'as a se-WinfreSd P. Lehmann ty; Jerry Norman, University' of'. • for the TexasEMucition A'^Tn-"Spanish-English, "Gutierrez cond language m China. Washington; Howard E. cy, said. said. •-; "We will be interested inexamining • 'In all probability,' Oralia Gole; a University government- Sollenbefger., Foreign Service < This fall, 212 Tessas school If the.school district wants how the current government of China language," the University professor major, will replace Richard Ante as.La Raza Unida carl-. Institute of the U.S. Department of districts implemented to, it can bus students to a. State and James Wrenn, Brown bilingual progt-amsatthe first central bilingual program- has.gone:about simplifying and extent said, //and what the social 'didate for Travis County commissioner, Precinct 4, Paul • / . ding, its spokep and written significance"1 of'that developmentJias Velez, Raza Unjda county chairman, said Thursday. University. grade,level. Eventully the Gutierrez, predicts "lots of There is as yet no replacement for Emilio Zafnora, can­progtams will expand through busing" for the larger school . didate for state representative; Place 3, who will formally ;• ,the 12tngrade,G.utierrfezsaid . districts. • — $1|§" withdraw from the race Saturday, Velez said. campus Jartefr . MORE THAN 23 percent of members SOME "BOARD The' final'decision on choosing successors:for Ante and ' Uie students in Texas public expressed concern over bus-Zamora will be made at the party's county executive com­~ schools have Spanish sur-,ing. •; mittee meeting Saturday, he said '. names. Many of these Nilda' Garcia, director' of The partvJs.exDecting.a rulmg from the Attorney General' students cotn%-to-^lroo}--r-bi+ittgual --edniea tron" for -Friday""which would answer questions "on "rSsidency re-' Results of placement tests ment of Astronomy.will offer J sponsoring*«n informal supper and 9 p.m. Sunday at the Alpha Deita PI 'speaking nO'English, hs said. . Robstown school district, said quiremerifs affecting the eligibility of Cole' dlicu&sitm M 4 p.m. Sunday in the and petition forms'to Sfc«;ept students'Vh opportunity to^i/ house,. 2620 Rio Grande St;. iof ..minister's Home, 3314 Perry Lone." colleje life.' credit earned by-examination view selected astronomical 1tf TTioseV"-'--J will be available from.l.ra.m." objects through the obser­to.3 p.m. Oct. 14 through 16 in 1 vatory's 9-inch teiescope.||gg iJMI the Academic Center-lobby. new .representatives' trom the "dochln..--Activities: reports test Public viewing will be freld -Departments of Astronomy, Botany, films, workshop^ speakers, and a THE DAILY TEXAN Summary of ;7a» Biolcigy. Computer. Science, -Vietnamese dinner, at 6 p.m. ' results will be available for from 8to 10:30 p.m.eVery Frir| >ay;-Geology* Home Economics, . I'CHATtM INTERNATIONAL FOl* CANCERS students who. I) took tests day atop Painter.Hall (the old Mathematics. Microbiology, wiH meet at 8 p.m. Sunday at Hillel-' It pulls it's weight -and more. Physics and Zoology. Anyone In- offered" on campus during^ Physies-Building)^ -Viewing. ——iettsled may flU.out an application Foundation; 2105San AntoriiPSJw for • •••' to/k dancino;. , hoijrs are subject to adjust­In Robert Lee -Moore ^atl 8.lis. summer orientation sessions : IES-AMIS . 06-!A IANGUE FRANCAis#" wHT" VTUOENT GOVCRNMINT Touts )v offering and/or for fall entrance ment, however, because -of. round-tripbus trlp.to Dallas for the meet at 6 p.m-Friday et Ces Amis -9-2% total readership Te^faurant zith and San Antonio .before the fa.ll semester; 2) sedson,.weathet: and pos'sible OU weekend for Jll, Those In­ . Stneetsr to speak-French. . terested may call to reserve among 'students^ faculty first entered in fall, 1974, and tirrie changes. • MORTAR BOARD will Poeei at 6;30 p:m. a piace. •. ; . • Sunday at, 8703 Ridgehill Drive •' and staff. earned credit based oft; ^STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL MEDITATION Sheiby .Hearon and MichaelMeshaw SOCICTY win. sponsor -ihe -fiim, College Entrance Examina­• • will spe^k. •• . .-v. ; >. "Maharlshi at Harvard Unwersftyt" --?HYSICAl-^0UCAT10N^MAX)tS_CLUa wiil •tion Board Achievement Tests . ANNOUNCEMENTS'-r • at 7 p.m.-Friday in Robert: Lfte CACTUS y«ARBOt>K h scheduling ap-: meet from -V to 5 p.m.-Sunday in NOW 37,500 taken on nationwide test dates Moore Hail 6.(04 , Eastwoods-Park tor "Games'Oay" poinhrients for-.studio-photographs,: MEITINOS -f or M took College Board Ad-(or graduate students, graduating-,AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY actrvities. V -circulation this Fall every senJOrs and seniors, from 8:30 a.m. TABitTOP OWERAIS will meet at 1 p.m. \variced_ JPIacement Ex­MORssottS fAAUP) win meef at t ' • to *'30 p.m.Monday through Friday . p.m.-Friday fn fhe Dobie Room on Sunday in Partin Halt 305'to play Monday through Friday! aminations"Tn May, 1974. 1>C-In Texas Student PubOcatlons • the. fourth floor, pf the Academic Diplomacy.and war games. • . "• Building 3.200. A sitting fee of S2 for •.."Center.' UNIVERSTY MCYCU CtUB will meet at 8:30 a.m.' Saturday at Littlefietd Foun- Telescope View graduate students and graduating AUSTIN INTERNATIONAl FOUC DANCERS will seniors and-Sl for seniors must be meet at>8 p.m. Saturday At Hancock tain to begin a bike.rideJ '•Througrifrmam-ob^i"" ,hc "—-'h?"">0""mer"is-Recreation Center to dance and tht, . "tyarn nuw UaiiLeirv­ vatory program, the Depart-UWT*«IW CHUICM of. AUS'TIN-IS. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRtST wilt meet at Bent woiklTavern- DRAFT SPECIAL 'M" Pitcher Use Texan"Classified Ads All Doy-Sotunfay KshuH!(hoard Ijiish darts chess Sf p~' Weii«*,-47ia '' for an advertising $ ,"j>® OT. 35 mog, 4.ip»»d..lust' representative to gosa «r«. HMO. 47*ilt»after 5. ~ ' •Jrack »m/lm. tali on you.' 14,500 4?).57i> a((tf 4. Fur.i^shed ami Uii QooJalupe •• 5ANSU1 7000*receiver TO/TO rrn»; Vei*" ^ne*and t powerlut; Also 100 watt stokers; sSSO.' Tappan-. .• -T^e> All. 476-790& " Ofshwastrer> dtspoii . individually c^nroUed i > vc CA.CH, pool. TVc jle • NEV^SCUwiWN1 ttarjityGreen 241 SEVSN TOWERS ' —0 eaci' >-5?96 $;s SEEN7 irmenfiry*. iVi/ ^.H-.VROLET paneled truck/body I li/body anrt ^nit .fc very good. Motor «nd trans kjhe baby. Rolls-: e*ccHe ?:v S700. • 473-3064 after .1 p.m No Lease Kce^rfing.. • •. j)ht6 bull c reek Road • 454.73: touy. Call Joe Ua Fico. Days, Vi f worth morto ln-6 444.6}7?.v ( Please J.e'ave :me»saoe.). f4*\2t7 afterS.i .Evenlngs after 8, 44M087. . THE BLACKSTONf 5 paid for diamonds;' • ROYAt Bbr.tabie typewrtter $50 Call tiaftej-" S64 50/month SALE Free case "Cvymners an? (ntermediatesl ~ nsfcc_Mus{c, t«< fe.ssoh. 4S?r7551 affer '6. ' " ROYAU 'ELECTRIC pewi Iter, J200 "'""ed River . ,, 47j _ r FRETTEO In-nevsr,; a Paraaon Properj I at reasonable • DUUCiMr-­ i dlicounl.tTn ai 40flPtS:^4iin |^n»l«.r Music. t body oamaye. t200.CaH aftef I ^76^ MaVC ASK TO_ ^OUR ' . , rnmmtlnltu .nul.'luTTlln " 5^9 ' J72jMi 1USE HANDY COUPON ON PAGE 23 mum Provides Ydur Advertising: RARE EARTH Exposure Readership •"m I Readability SALES . ft-i him, i Advertising Space Reservations -v. 4 c now accepted for Oct. 28 Edi­­tion . V-. SONDAY,t>CTOB€R6 WITH SPECIAL HURRY! ONLY ONE CACTUSGUESTS PERFORMANCE! X - "^ -T^-'iv^"'' "•*" y^pji'St 'M& ' ' tfsM &*! 'li^ ilHra «L*S? :m Jggjijjn • ,£,.^^V V-S^T* iltM&t -*&" y-1- y>i|i'>'.i'^^j . p"f • •>•< ufts#1 asSk ris?& , *fg/& Calvert Calls CRC Meet Charity Sale .By BILL SCOTT -:-fts^Sj... revamping the present Texas Constitution.«One of these in-' w& -$y£ eludes introduction of all or part of the ill-fated 1974 document ~ *J&P Texan Staff Writer lfr&. Constitutional Revision~eoinmission (CRC) mefnbers will g&t as an amendment to the present Constitution: j&» KjSi Permit Offer a chance to discuss future attemptsat trying to produce a new "Various articles of the new constitution also could be sub­ constitution for Texas at a Friday morning meeting.. • mitted.to the voters over a period of time for their approval at j ••:•-The session,open to the public,wasannounced in a letter sent the ballot box,'' Yarborough said. r 'Mm to delegates by Robert W. Calvert,chairperson of the CRC. The meeting .wiir begin at 9:30 a.m. in the State Bar chambers. Discussion wiH focus on."strategy, rather tharl the content rif.a new constitution,'' Qr. Janice May. -University government professor and CRC member, said Thursday, • S? : t May.said the Friday meeting might, form the nucleus for new ^^Sifoen efforts for constitutional change. .-> "3tenarB^^^^8^aaateBgte3tSQi^£^g^nbef^ ^vasT^jfirnisfac a1»BV"1i« nmgffitr3:=Wer'il-pM>baMy have I:: . attendancej' he said. "From what I understand; many of the. Ti r^'.to'mmission members are planning-to-come,".' _•• . * yarborougii said that although the CRC was dissolved in March," "meftibers StHt'get-requestsrand-input-from-citizens .concerning revision," '' In addition; to commission members'. political figures in­s chiding Lt Govi. BiE;Hobby, House Speaker Price Daniel Jrv ANOTHER-ALTERNATIVE' lies. in organizing, another:; Constitutional Convention with citizens, rather than legislator^ as delegates, May said. Yarborough said the'letterstressedthat the meetingwas "not' to be used-as:a forum for blame-fixing" concerning failure of-the.Constitutional.Convention to approve a new document. • • "There wasa solid.majorityamong convention membersconn" "he ""* never materialized at one time." ­ v: Yarborojugh said special interests 'combined with delegate.' conduct during'some of the procegdings spelled doom-for the proposed"revamping". ~ -. "THE PEOPLE of Texas-were simply turned-off by some of . the antics, of the legislators.'? he said. He cited outbursts such; .as barking at. Walter "Mad Dog" Mengden, "bird calls at Rep.-­ vand various other.interested legislators hfivebeen invited, Yar:.;:B»n Bird and other interruptionsby delegates ascontributing to -borough*said -~ — ....A.,...,,. "" Dnk'HnvtTnfall Af.iha^PoirwSnn"affXf:t • Jte-downfalVof-the-revtsioneffbrt. ^^Iay^®"Tarborough'agreed thai several options:exist for _ May said chances for eventually getting-a new constitution­ ^ for the stateare good. "Substantiaichanges mostrlikelywillTwt-w^ -r| ii i— imnwy——MWiiiimmiiiniii ~r nraimtt I THE COTTON f (SA"SF«NJ I EXCHANGE i "NEIGHBORHOOD ~ i'-: 1 6th & Trinity | ; Thuis.-Sat, 5 TAVERN .19th 4 CiXKfafope -I DOGTOOTH VIOLET| i ' i_ i i Happy Hour 4^7 S tfeff is back | 5 Thur*.--& -Fri... . ""massive" " 111:30-2:00 5:00-7:00 STEREO gLunch Happy Hour SOUND §10* beer . • • 35* drinks sAntone's Famous Po-Bqys 'bring your-.tffscsl S 89' . we'll sptn Tired of getting ripped, off? Try Sasch«W Elegant dining-at reasonable prices. SASCHA'S 311 W. 6th St. 47?-3556 <K -*r-f}r»PPifa ^»SS2Swa.-». ? l m . J r the sandwich vendors back on-campus. • • • • •. Resembling a scarecrow, this motorcycle parked at Duncan will meet with Knox Monday to discuss the 26th and Speedway Streets awaits the owner:-'"/•.-application. fdle Machine campus. MlfrtiT FAmMMR& FRI: +SAT THE ELECTRO MAGNETS (USY MONCV u tWHiiic sam) The Treehouse presents Harold Herrman Trio (Playing Country and Hock) Friday, Oct. 4*7^?. 9 p.m. -12 a.rri. -Sat., Oct. 5 TheuCountry Edition ' • .' Playing Progressive Country 9 p.m: - 1 a.m. ST Cover Each.Night 103 Main. Pflugerville, Tx. Bluegrass Center of Texas -Sessions Each Sunday Q'-I ri'p %"c'< •\7h '• -. • ¥*•»'" .->.y By DIANE DASHIELL : Brandon Knox, president of My Austin Renaissance Socie­^^ty..(MARS), was given permission Thursday to sellSalvation MSandwiches'on the West Mall during theorganization's.chari-s ^>-5-ty bake sale nextVw.eek. -' •: »%side of campus. Jan»es -Dunoanri&ssistant vice-president lor student af-... fairs, and David McClintock, assistant to the dian of 7^ ^.students, gave Knox permission ^ 0^-CAMPUS ORGANIZATION booths normally are set up in. the West Mall are$ unless there is'iomg,Special reason to A&lwafcth^_elsewfiere1 DuhcaB"^'d TOUlrsaay,-.< •- "We applied for two booths, one Sy the Art Building and : l^?p;|one on thfe East MaUat'SpeedwayTlcnoning that there is ^n ­JjHstiestablished-mariiet -tor.-Salvation Sandwiches 'in those'two : areas." Knox explained.' ;«a ijtf The vendors would be student members of MARS with^yj -J health cards-and the desire to comply completely with cam­pus rules, Knox continued. He said the group does not want to sell on the West Mall jjfe&because there,are ample food-services in that area: :•. flsk-"OUR SOLElCONCERN is to raise the greatest amount of. money possible for the-Red Cross, which will contribute it to the Honduran Relief Fund," Khox said. k ~ _ RolantHJeNoie;ownecflLSal«ation.;?gndwiches and MARSfilp meniber, will contribute 15"percent of his.net profirto~th'gt^ cause-during thosfe two days. Knox added. Duncan said Wednesday the conflict of permission for theyV;i —T«tan Staff Pho»o by Da«id Woo'* sale was caused by. th^'possibility of its'being a front to.get^j: Women Students Sessions Scheduled ... Two workshops for women1 Center 305.-Pat Hartv of the c student.'5' " t;steturning to school will be Gounseling-Psychological Ser­The two workshops will ''aponsored Tuesdayand Oct.17-vices Center will lecture on focus on the critical-periodsin • 1^ the dean of students office. "Here's Where I Am — .. a woman's life, as she makes The workshops, titled Muddling Through," and • the adjustment /of. divorce,; "Women in Tranrftion." will Frances A. Plotsky, Office of separation, or death of a loved help women make the transi-. the Dean ofStudents, will lead one and/or the role-of • tion from housewife and mother to student easier. The Tuesday meeting will be from 7 to 9 p.m. in Jester 200 ACADEMY.^ TONIGHT BIU AND BONNIE HEARNK WTHI _ '---•: ANNEX mi iStw FR).' OCT; 4 •si® . Wl •COUNTRY • MUSIC REVIEW , $2 AT THE DOOlr -SHOW INIO, 445.274J­ -j-sm.. a discussion on "How to at homemaker along with the UT." . demands of school,-according'Pat Lafette, Career Choice to Plotsky. Information Center, will •" Plotsky , said-she-realized-speak-on-".HowJo .Cope-Wilh. --theTieed-,for-such-aiprogram-New Career Aspiration" at through the womeh who.come" -the second workshop in the old into her office with problems. Speech Building at 7 p.m. Dr. Coystal Stone-of the She also said men have the Counseling-Psychological Ser­same problems of adjustment? vices Center will-head a dis­as women, but won't come cussion on "You as a forth with their problems. ifi» — • 1 ' OKTOBERFEST |SATTVA VEGETARUN RESTAURANT |Sunday Community Dinner S :•••/ ^ (Advent for Autumn Evening Dining) I GERMANIC CUISINE §, , Suh., Oct. 6, 6-8:30 fc.m. I . _ Methodist Student Center g 2434 Guadalupe 476-2433 st ....••. l»BitianiMnimiiM«BmmnHinniiaiimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiinmtiw sis '?>9V Musical Events Committee presents &&SL*, Mmohisv Musical Pioneers : ­ FURRY LEWIS, BUKKA WHITE, HAMMY NIXON, HARMONICA FRANK, HOUSTON STACKHOUSE, tag­ , JOE WILLIE WILKINS, THE KING BISCUIT B< IT,SLEEPY JOHN ESTEST AND MORE ndent®rt®in in g documentary of an important musical heritegejn & special.Austin appearance; ^ jb» Tickets: $2.00.UT Students, fealty.And Staff $3.00 GenWTSfiTl Advance tickets available at the Unlen Theatre Box Office Saniriw,-Qctober S, 12 noon t« 5 i KSJ-i |y.% ?fi'I •v^ "?b< LV.C''j 7 ' Referred to with-pride by position during last sprmg's-Construction. not covered >by and tur^aiiized research •••<-­, the University System regents Constitutidnai Convention. Proved Effective the Available Fund isfinahced The total 1974-75 Unviersity Looking for the best way to keep burglars out of your-and -with ridicule by some Some delegates-attempted to using the Permanent Fund, as budget, is $142 million, with • r politicians, the • Permanent widen distribution of the apartment? . collateral. . , $118.5 coming fromlegislative 5S€s! ' University.-Fund remains a funds, first to other state un­ • According to several Austin locksmiths, the deadboltlock Tbe;,fen^ni^.|7v6.'mWi^7''appi^naii6hs,':'bvin private vague concept 'to many iversities colleges in the. Available Fund is ear-& has proved to be .the most effective of keeping locked doors and and and federal gif^s And grants, students. -later just-to cpmpon,en£sbf the .1 ' locked. « „ marked: for-; institutional ex-: and from tuition and building The Permanent Fund is the Univer'sity iSysterri. Both penses, such as staff benefits use fees. •"Psed by both Jester and Dobie Centers, the distinguishing -•yTv I #®s-endowment of the"University, attempts failed. '/feature of the dead bolt lock is a one or two-cylinder bqlt .currently , worth more .which, when turned by a key from the outside;or turned by a an Also, friiitlfr&s-Lwas $700 million. The foundation of than Signs To Guide Visitors tu M thumb-turn on the inside, joins'the door to the door facing attempt to.allocate a large ?Vli •w&ili'"1 the fund comes from oil This/bolt can not be'disconnected with a qredtt card, as can percentage of the Available revenues from -2.1 million . From IH to University •KSH8 the average key and knob lock.' J?und 'for minority' recruit-. acres of West Texas Universi­ ,y, New apartment complexes and fflher multi-family ty 'land; It also consists of • ment and:financial assistance Green, highway signs on IH installed," he:said. .dwellings are required to have the dead bolt lock, under a -private /gifts of cash and 35 will soon guide travelers A sign erected more than 10 "at the University. Endorse-city ordinance which \vas.passed NovM1973. The'oritfnance coming 'to Austin to' the • ment by The Daily Texan of- securities. . '• years ago at the 19th Street v these,changes,was one reason ' to motels'ant| hotels. ~ One reason for confusion is University,. •exit used:.to.•point the way to,. -: aiv^.-by^^gent^^^k C. ATJn^ contract /for_the jn-the canjpUs^Swt it was taken>-' k ^ f;%oTterr^ilfeTrijr^e'burglarp'' bi&pen^ Police, Departments-emphasized tb,e need -for apartnient-and its'earnings are placed m io reconsider their decision fo-beeri;signed.and-.Uie-cpntrac-terstite'co^stoictioR"•l)ufedlT"j 3well6t^'Tl)"faRe"alf precautions necessary to prevent break-the Available Universiy Fund cut off mandatory student fun­to r is a Wai ting * filr. his" last spring. • . •_ins. " ding for the paper last March. for';use. b)r'the University and: materials jioi arrive-hrjljjl __ 'We inadvertantly ofn|tte(L„,' "It you're planning to be out of town, ask a-reliable Texas,A&M University.' ^ \ : Of the $23.5 million in the Sqh neeffV:distncjfe^a^ffe ^ signs until recently,'' Schneer. „.*•?• ­neighbor,iolceep a watch on yonr home, collecting anymail -.-Available Synd,$16.9 million engmeer, said MondiJC.^::* ' .... The :Ava-ilab1e: Fund * said, Jcr¥eftf^c£t6 the smairf' or nejvspaper^ou.may receive," he said. >* = .' is setaside'for acquiring-land, "We represents anngal eaiTiings of are 'experiencing"_a • black and white signs mScnb-^i, • Steve Colelia, vice-president of !the Barry Gillingwate.r library'-books and;materials, $31 million. The University ' delay; in' receiving materials • ed "Univ. o'f Texas," installed'1 .Company, which owns—several apartment" complexes, capital equipmentanjl forcon-• receives $23.5 million annual­due to "acute shortages, whfch several monthsago atseveral \ suggests that residents obtain "red tags" from the police .struction and. maintenance. is why the signs have not been • ly, two-thirds-of the.fund.-Tex­northbound IH 3$ exits. department. . ) . . as A&M is awarded the other ? / Red tags,placed visibly putsiflethe apartment, informany oneHhird. No other campuses,'would-be intruder thatall valuables have been'marked by an besides;the" Austin' or Collegeetching device and registered with the police. '' " '' -, 'Station campuses in either the1 l&'rMhf —Taxtm Staff Photo by Phil Hubar Both the red tags and etching,device are available at the or A&M Systems Uftiversity ' .police department at no cost. ---• Dead bolts provide exffa protection receive fund money. • The present structure of IWejCare U CMLSMi CRISIS .CHiTER >Jr The use of creek monitors high schools' science classes beautification and restoration continuing work .on seeking for aid or information 476­ for environmental studiesan'd staff the equipment and. fur­of the area. We Care Austin legislation for: mass traftsit 7073 the revitalization of Congress -nish.reports. planted : trees and orovided • opefatioris • Avenue are among the com "Wei-hope all junior high benches for the street and is tinuing projects for 1974-75 by schools • will have the units We Care Austin, a women's eventually," saidJoyce Klein, environmental coalition.T' president of We Care Austin. "In. the near future, we also Last year, We Care Austin hopa to co-sponsor a training purchased, two $50 creek . seminar as part Of the school monitorinj units which utilize system • in environmental 472-7315 1411 LAVACA chemical tests and other data "education — — to determine what elements The revitalization of TONIGHT & SATURDAY are present in the -Congress Avennp hpgan-last Currently, two Austin junior'. year, and deals with STEVE Student Discount at FROMHOLZ J ? Old Texas Trail Restaurant BRISKET. RIBS AND SAUSAGE -ALL YOU CAN EAT Sun— The Electromagnets barbequs, salad bar.tea or coffee -r>> > with Afan Bates ^ No cameras or tape recorders allowed. »ww vrpri S9f# Friday, Soturdoy 7, », 11 p.m. $1.00 UT Students, Sunday 7, 9.p.m. ,f •» .I®. , • m Jester Center Auditorium ^JrhcXijUi.i«ralEntex^4iixai^xit'­ 82i $1.50 Members Committce of the Texas (Tnioit 1 '( ' ^ ll| j, ^ ^ ^ ' "(T ••»i/>.fi.?.Ki^iT)i-f'*ii«)li^rjiri:yif-r-r'n-r T-;ilr n , ;• i^u', .-• ,, — Il -e ^ 4^1 w B:,iday[/jOctobeT-/4/ 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 17 p" *1/ & M% m WWS-' ••V-W 1P#II m £&• tfM s® Series ffeall &h* is?*'"* |§&§: Dialogue Earns Groahs From Reviewer By WILLIAM A. STON'fe JR. Ape 4: '.'I'm tired of this place: even ' As if this weren't enough, "Apes" .„-%4 rt, Texan Staff Writer ;the air is bad." takes the point'oif view "the more.this iyfuS5 -f>;|slt is not often that television broatf--Qf'course, while tins is some of thes";-;! merrier;." hence, such ; dialogue , casts something truly.deserving of an "^ BETTER dialogue, it still offers the ' -appears throughout:the show. It's the ?• aveard, but .this season, /it has finally ^ .reader an idea of what to expect. Or , same, 'old message, i.e., apes con: done just that. The show is "Planet of" •sTJfralher, what NOT to expect . descending to humans and ain't this a • • the Apes." and the award is '.'Worst "Planet of the,Apes,'" like"Paper hoot? — reworded in each scene as if Show of the Season." . Moon" and "The New Land." attempts the apes had nothing better to say /and Reviewing this effort-was-?'rare to cash in on tfie'popularity of its movie judging fitom thetest of the scnpt. they treat-I spept half the time asking • original (or", in the case of "Apes." don't).-\ . . myself why 1 ever-accepted thisassign­> ---.Jno-vie brigmals). . . =-,vs Of course, not everything is fun-and­ment and • the-fither half wishing for a• '"" FOR; THOSE READERS unfahtilian^"/ games; occasionally,; /Apes" buckles _ iresents an. . dowg:andts.• serious'!" as. when the recreate some of the dialogue'fromlast beast dominates man, a land 'where -^sk you ' weeti show*, scripted by; Edward overgrown monkeys grunt, skulk, ridesomething.-.I alrfeady.know;" (Heavy; irr Largo; hbrses, and: swing those hairy -arms--huh') _ _ _* —,^pe !• I know this-terri fory The through-a domain where' hun^ns awgyf. "•IgowjBvec.T the plotv what^et^is-St;earth shakes often Many die "to bertolerated " • -r?-rt;-falls-apapt-witheut-«ve» seeming-to Ape 2. "You're going to let the Such a premise leads-to clever? ^ try. In one episode. "The Trap"-the._\ fugitives get awav because the earth is dialogue. Examples: • £§l story line revolvesaround a mysterious •shaking"'" " -"Assume the humans are lying— it computer component; not only dofes the : THERE'S MORE: J" 1 . makes things easier " viewer never,fmd out where the compo­ Ape 1 "You go west, we'll go .. • "You've been v\ith humans too muctresv nent,came from, the viewer never even southeast meet you at thg road — you lie likeuhev do " -few knows why he should care. •beyond the forest." THE-CLINCHER, though, comes" i So, for what it'sworth; "planet of the Ape 2 "Hhinkive-should-hide outin, . -jghfen some humans.'enter the homeuf Apes" hereby receives my vote. for Wedding in Blo<*d the hills m the north " anA Abhn folic tham"! "Worst Show-of-the Season." . MichelPiccoli tempts Stephanie Audran during, their il­ >' Ape3. "They werescared; theywent enough having humans in the house -Someone should tell CBS to. lay off films of the year, the movie will receive its Austin; SI licit Jove affair in Claude Chabrol's new thriller, 'Wed- south " but wash first." the monkey business,., premiere at 7:30 and. 9:25 p.m. Friday, Saturday and r foreign Sunday in Burdine Auditorium. Wing in Bloody One of the most widely hailed ft television >""Ramsey Muiz, La Raza ? BlACK.Perspective on the News' lOnida. gubernatorial can­..ti I Oreatfi oi Jehnnio ' J * : Mrs.Robinson's mm 36 Neml . ^ ifef P .They go for dinner, good, tolk ond tfte : Muniz will answer questions 7q0pm ^ . „ 8-wV<" 9 Wen Streef Week ^ on the energy crisis: equal sHAPPY HOURS _ at J, Gotsby's Bor bnd Restaurant. educational opportunities and > 36 Chico and the Man mellow noysic of Syl Smith -v 34 the Six Million Ootlar © ^ • . 8 p.tJu •• •._• . public school-financing, prison Something new fdr Austin. 7 Movie: ';Bullitt/'starrinQ Steve 2-6 P.M. reform and welfare . McQueen, Jacqoellne.BiSMt. Robert. In fhe ViUoge, 2700 Anderson Lone. •; • • • programs, from "Capitol c MONDAY--SATURDAYS • 9 Capitol Gallery Gallery"-co-nmoiderators Cyn-36 The Rocklof'd Filei . dy Allen and David Anderson. • . 9 Lawn and Garden "Gapitol-Gallery-—wi!f-be-rr-W-Te*«» Whcelgf* /-' HIGHBALLS 70 reshown at 11:00a.m. Sunday. :• 9 p.m. • . .• 9 The Bla^R American Son ' 4:30 p.m.­ r^406W. 17th J4 The Night Stalker,«• ; 7 The, New CsnOJd Camera ,11:00 a.m.—12 midnjght Friday, and Saturday 36 Police Woman ^V.'^ ­ •i3o p.»n. -. til 1:00 o.m. Opens for Sunday Brunch at 12£0. 9 Avialton Weather :'• Entertainment. Tuesday—Saturday.&30 to dose: •••10 P«|T1. • .. ,v •• The Treehouse Happy Hour 3.-00 p.m.—7 pjn.—drinks two for 7, 74, 36 Nevtfs one every day except Saturday. .">*!•, present* Kentucky General Educational^ •a^Developmenl Series ^ 10:30 p.n\. . I recommend this pictuoeJiighly to everyone who is not limited to . IS • M 9 M^>terpiece Theater: "The FUNNY AND MARVELOUS. The Backwood ­ • Unpleasantness. af thc Beilona­ -Volunteers the belief that sex is a religious rite." ; Ctub," — E'pisode 4 ^ The best bhiegrass.West of —Archer—Winsten, New Yorkri)Post • 24 Wide Work! Mysleryw^sv:;.' v ..the Mississippi/ " ; 36 Tonight Show.-. ' " » Bravo, for this most sophisticated, entertaining, arid dehghtttillj Students' comedy, about changing sexual mores and the eBorts of couples v -Our -•-Jpjkeep pace-This is marvelous adult film territory with explicit, but not . ., Bluegrast Grow Attorney A • hard-core scenes to -keiep us laughing and to"make the point." I 'TheMostBrilliant j The >tudent»' atlorn«yi,.Front • ^^^—WUliam Wolf, Cue Magazine • . . Sat., Oc»\ 19tH Ivy-and Ann Bower, arf •^pon't.let .the title,^ 'Le Sex Shop', foSt-you. This delightful movie mrf®% ffew MovieoftheYearfl 9 p.m. -1 a.m. available by appointment from hash of the pornographers and casually cuts to bits the 8 a.m. to S p.m. Mondaypseudo-spphisticates who have been hailing pornography in film as a rie\v? | j -ANDREW SARRIS,The Village Voice ! $1 Cover through Friday in Speechart See it, resist a few mild shocks and enjoy 'Le Sex Shop' for { •& S 1 TQ3_ Main • Pflugerville, Bgilding, Room 3. Telephone ; its'comedy, its devastation of fanatics and its ultimate sweetness." ^ • Txi'. 471-7796. The studentt' at­ -Frances liylor,Long Island Press The of | film of exceptional merit :.r Bluegrassr Center torneys willhar>d)ellandlord- Texas If Sex Shop'sfells the devil's merchandise, purely... sadism, masochistxii • the performances are superb.** tenant, eontumer protection, Jam Session Each Sunday -Jetigmsm, voyeurism, old men who like young girls and young girls errtployet' rights, taxation, and | —New York Times .who like other-girls—the whole sexual revolution that is greeted by some • chturance cases. wjth rage, by others with, delight and by Claude Berri with a 1 kind of gentle, sympathetic tolerance." . ~RoRerGreensinuvNewYorkTinfcS ' ' ' I ViTfte French wntendirecfof is af his ''Claude Berri, a "One of the happierv'1* •^a| French Woody-Allen! . ' sights of the season. I very peak...he is the Hitchcock of , Hilarious! iue Sex Shop' has a lot * -Chris Chase New York Magazine of laughs. This-is the • j _ the domestic crime of passion.** most wholesome-'­ A "One of the few X rated movie I have —JUDITH CRISLNewYorkMagazine w I genuinely entertain-ever seen." s •ing films to comealong . —Bernard Drew, • m -A this dreanrsummer." Gannett Newspapers • -V-X —Howard Kissel, 8 P.M. WED., OCTi 23 r m ^ $S'ii Women's WeqrDa3y "Very funny. 'Le Sex * v ^ClAUDE Shop' niakes light of a AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM "Berri's funny film, SnfW '• subject in danger of tinctured with an TICKETS $6-$5 if becoming dull from , unmistakable docility:. >A and sweetness, is full ? the saturation of so CJ-SVJ NOW ON SALE many earnestskin SEX :T of a sense of ludicrous- RAYMOND'S DRUG: 1 &2 flicks. One that will• ness in modernism provide great pleasure A — haa oonie of the •' whafpypr yriiir • - INFO -476-1090 7 marks of Truffaut's sum sexualhabits."'; ^ Antoine Doinel." —Martm Mitchell, -Penelope Gilliatt, After Dark NewYorke? ASPECIALNIGHT mmm J^^ERREMAR'ELLE -CLAUDE BERRI • BEATRICE ROMANO * >ry" uncouinc nOLnN • GREGOIRE. ASLAN CLAUDE PlEPLU • NATHALIE DELON s.?etW>is2rii:TlG3& ^Cwcerls W«$f -Jam Productions %&•¥££ T Friday, Saturday, Sunday rJz3rll>rjez''<* 7:30 & 9:20 il.50 •n,i nee *« •'•-^ Oct. 4-5-6 ^ • Batts Atid. 14 THE AFRO Janusfilmspreses^sffi 5V!• m!• wi AMERICAN PLAYER! IT LATE Ifi FROM THE DIRECTOR OP'LE BOUCHER" } b • ^anu SHOW; HER WEEKFOFWONDFFIS 11:00 P.M. ft ,, ' FRI. & SAL m 4&i'v ­ OCT. 4 & 5 tn * Bafts Aud. ?\A:MATTER OF LUST AND DEATH w w?i: At$?}$>•• P , STARRING Adm. $1.50 ~^lPi «w ;S3 MICHELPICCOLIim STEPHANEAUDRAN is# K-B m­ =r--A TELMAN FILM IN COi-Ofl From NEW LINE CINEMA /. -m •tsa1 MX FRIDAY, SATURDAY/SUNDAY -,, 7:30-& 9;25-$1.5o| ViwS JLfk 11 AFWTHE CHICAGO HIMFESTIVAL fAFTHJTHESANFRANaSCO RLM ' -OCT. 4.-5-4--; -AUD.1 Premier: = ""Ihe mosterpleceo(the festive^. m/AL • FRENCH WITH 5UBTITLBS^^^Tr:r~^Tr^ I Vlsoalyexcpijfte.thelllrrilsbofri r^n*nerino^ROptur^theelusfve fliystertpos pnd rnystlcc*,-steeped ; fabricof fantasyin thisitch, lyrical : i Austin In m im«ir«l5 jlflffalrt^of art. ' and joyful paeantotfteJrifTedibte • pafiwiartyjrtwature;' soope^[wl^iiiu,liiKjtfinertl6f^~B.^—SHOW 11:15 tOyolaPtxjenfx S.F~6-'nrr»j JaromjlJIreS' FRI.-SAT., OCT. 4-5fft 4 5 IT STARTS WftH A SURPRISE ' ...ANDENDS WITH A SHOCK 2434 QliADALUiqs, 8:00"ia^rtqploT Adm. $2.00 WOSbgjf. ««< A-UmamiSiiSSmffib Page |8;Fritfay, Oefober DAILY U­ " ~>T< !$|§s¥S ^intowrY Sculpture Exhibit To Open Star at CDP . . By TOM KNUTSEN the: Rodin, piece*, because it the sculptures. Others, like: kfe / • ART * 'i . "SCULPTORS gnd Their -Drawings: Selections from the! . Th^LBJ Library joins thre represents the beginnings of Dame Barbara Hepworth's. Richard Egan will star in a-comedy entitled * .. The play concerns a 50-yearrOld "ArchieSmithsonian* Institution in. in-. modern sculpture.. "Wave."-are-,discrete works « :: * Hirshhorn Museum Collection,"a loan exhibition of 24 works ; "No Hard Feeiings," opening Tuesday at the Bunker , type ":, (Egan). who, having just by 12 modern. Sculptors:opens Fridayatthe Lyndon Baines augurating the; Hirshhorn: At the; other end of ap­Until November. 1966, these •Country Dinner Playhouse. !•; >••••". • married off his onlv daughter, learns his wife ­Johnson Library. The show will be in the Special HpHjjn: the Museum and Sculpture proximately 60 years of.art.is . piecesand5,f)P0others belong-Egan made his movie debut in.'1949's "The-is leaving him for her lover, a youthful Greek Library's second floor;'Admission is Free. • -i "• •••: Garden-which opdfis Friday in • a": kinetic sculpture. Inter­. ed to financier . Joseph' H Damned Don't Cry" with Joan Crawford. He' waiter .. THE EXHIBITION of the ''environment box" at the Michener; Washington. A special dis­view: Variation IV, by George Hirshhorn.-Hirshhom-gaVehis also' has appeared' irv> Such films as : 'Egan will direct the Austin production. Sets Gallery in the Humanities Research Center has been extend­play, ''Sculptors and Their. . Rickey. David Smith,- known . extensive:^ collection of "Demetrius and the Gladiators. ' will be. designed by resident stage manager Drawings;. Selections From : -for. his contribution to welded modern art to the nation m an • ed through Oct; 20. The gallery is open without charge from • '.'Underwater." "Sommer. Place" , and • Leonard Wittman.-. 10 a.m. to 5 p.mv weekdays and l to 5 p.m. Sundays th'e Hirshhorn Museum • sculpture, -and Alexander act of Congress signed"~by the. "Pollyanna." ; "No Hard Feelings" will run through Nov...Collection," starts the same Calder, famed; for;• mfebiles^ late .President Johnson. -MUSIC Although Egan originally was a stage actor ' 10.' with evening performances Tuesday day at the;Johnson.Library. • . have works in the exhibit : Johnsop, accepted A DUO RECITAL by two faculty artists in the Department of before entering movies he.just recently made •-through Sunday.;:-and matinees Sunday.Music Will-be performed at 8 p.m. Friday: In the Music Featuring, works by 12, ar.-. Variety-. cOmes from in­-Hirshhorn's gift and urged his first stage appearance: in 20 years in a Reservations, are' necessary and may be tists,. the LBJ exhibit focuses cluding JHenri Matisse and : Congress to create a gallery Building Recital Hall. Martha Deatherage-, sbpi;anO, and Chicaeo production of "No Hard-Feelings." maide by calling the theater at 836-5921. is on innovation in sculpture. Max Ernst, who are thought of for thecoilection, The-act and William Race.pianofwHbe featured in the Faculty Artist Gary Yarringtonj museujn.,^.primarily, as painters .. ^ytiotographjjf Johnson with-SerieS "'W"""-("Wfcttenml' iviNMiwinii iwt«ni»e (mis' wtosiwisrn II CAPITAL. PLAZA 452-7646 • IH 35 NORTH SEE IT TODAY! THE GREATEST thastoryofa boyand hisdogs... SEA ADVENTURE IN HISTORY HAS JUST BEGUN1 ^ HE MADEABR0MISE. m it.,, ; AND HE KEPT IT! -S -' DAVID V PICKER presents You'll laugh, you'll cry . .-vJi Doors t'rt- Opet 12HOOH «t wtpi find a place T V"? ^ -RICHARDHAfifiET iiryouHreartfJ— 'POtgti,­ MRICHARD LESTEfi rufc w,th at DOTY-DAYTON'S SHIRLEY KNIGHT • IAN HOLM • CLIFTON JAMES' ROY KINNEAR Tt l2:3O-2t1S<4:05 -V . . L Execultw ProducerDAVID.V. PICKER 'Associate Croducei'DENIS 0-DEtI 5:50.7:40*9:25 "Wntien and Prodycetl bfHIUW im &w*i. UnitedArtwtB "WNOW,/ . • / HAR AFifi 0ii NT redlrn^rows I il l i<,i ; ^1 471 ^rWKSinini SEVDLYGARLWOIACKGMG AT TWO -Students $1.50, S©»ARATE THEATRES IMCHNW«-kt#aiMlWlkur fA TRUE STORY MimAO, 'ilHalianiMiiii ITISU­ er ^•3;V^FrJfPct®b..4' THE-DAH.Y TEXAN Page 19 r '•*<% iwa Sj^CSSS*? -rfntufe-IP md P! Host A benefit featuring Greezy Wheels, LostGonzoBand and Jim David Mahler, an"instructor at Greenbriar.. In addition to a * with a child preparing him for the GED test, if *he wishes-to—:"ning," Mahler said.'v'If a kid leaves th&kitcfyen dirty., then he!S;.s„ |s$Q Franklin Tuesday at Armadillo World Headquarters will raise large school building,a swimmingpond andlwo wells werecon-receive a high school diploma . -rrlade the clean-up committee mad." , > '$ "C/ iff funds for growth of. the progressive Greenbriar school. strutted _ " A VARIETY of class offerings exist-, including anEnglish and Greenbriar is'not state-supported. It receives mpst of its im . fW" -Greenbriar is unlike any school in the traditional:public Six salaried staff members work fulltime," with seven other '^language skills course, world politics and economics, Aristotle, • come from the $50 a month tuition which goes to pay for systemsThis'"free school" began with only-ita ideology: that adults living at Greenbriar and helping parttime wijh ttie Socrates and Plato. chemistry, history, math, Spanishand Ger<--salanes, gasoline and. maintenance: for a bus; land payments ­children'hatutSHS': to learn and then grew to become a:...school: The:ratio of children, to adults -is a small.10-to A\ stnd a man. Students meet with-the staff and set thelr own objectives and supplies, Benefits like the one at Armadillb witl help the S'T viable alternative to standard public education. personal education is assured for all 60 students. for the classes, and format can range from lectures to group school repay loans, buy supplies ahd build: a new facility that GREENBRIAR! was conceived in 1969 by a group whp felt ;: THE CHILDREN at Greenbriar range inage from 5 to17 and discussion to Individual research. will separate the glasses for the teenagers from the ones for . • ; -learning should be noncoercive, that children are inherently are divided into three basic groupsi the little kids, the middle ' Thursdays-are reserved for field trips to interesting shows ft:-younger children •-curious and need^n&jb^ptOtticted-oppftrtuiiitte&. for learning.. -wAr an^ teenagexs. No child is forced to participate in the and museums: Through the year, special events such as canoe Tickets for the Tuesday benefit are on sale.at Armadillo, Oat' ',* -—.-arut ^c^^^'ni, f'^Wl.mi;Qieii'.w>rid: Families a,Dd-friends. ..activities,-:but 'many programs'areVavailable In-the-.craftSr -trips.and one recent visit to Big Bepd are scheduled byparents, Willie's. Inner Sanctum and lxtlan. ^^-rai^n^inpv .tof-nre'THjuiwi antl staffvamtstudents:. n •-••• >•. -« "^^bet^Keen"ErglnaBdcItestrap'W^rt'a^lHioli^w^^^v^^^staffrffietiAei^ai ualijfcA .- "Everything out -there, we've built oarselves,"explained " The school-promotes Tsicoveryr-:-tere5tS*.Jjrhis~3iasded-to^ uttir-3" They're going -through experiencesthat!didn't gt> through un-*. playwriting, survival needs, • teathe'rwor^'macfame, j»ttef3fv-;S>i til I was out of college," Mahler commented. "The younger'thev .and science. -• uTO PLACE A TEXAN, kid is;thelewpublic-school he's had.the.betfer he can dealwith • •" There are tew restrictions at Greenbriar.and most discipline ^ " CLASSIFIED AD his town decisions.... The people who have the hardest time be?.£ is self imposed or peer imposed -•* I\l£k\jkf • -• WM* ing sell-disciplined are the staff members. M "UNTIL.YOU, start making decisions and sfeeing the conse-Wwt'J-k I I V. CALL 471-5244 •,&,Greenbriar is not anaccredited school, but the staff will works: tjuencesa* of,them, you don't get involved in the process of lear:; S(ars ln9luding JacWe Co(Jgan Ann B DaviSi Dca„ stockwell s-::and others will head up the fall and spring season at the Mary :-. Moody Northen Theatre jpn' the St. Edward's University cam­pus Signed for the first production, .''Golden -Boy,•'•' by Clifford 1_ -:--.-r-riS* " -~ r T-Gdets,--are Coogan, Lyle jalbot and Golden Gloves cRamp Jim Bre\«er^hfe.play,coi^erning fttrbwong^lgtTipens^Hicadny, t: Wheatfield Pleasing Blend THIS WEEKEND -•"*^5^,'^j8vlH»t^lIlXER' perform this and other songs such as With their first gig in A"usQn;?Bi«r" and will run through ^Oct.' 20, ^ith>£-east'<^-'6D<-^6oM8i(dB(^,£.r^ Te\an Staff Writer |^StepKefSffll?***f;-fty*2iirt=WhfclLplace hand vtnfi d'"mnyrri hv thp.-sparse^ -wjlLhp.lhtvlargpst pmdup^p^ qwr brought to theSt.Ed'g arena •;y, • When Houston bands come to Austin demands on the musicians to recreate!:^, crowds their first few~nights. Adjusting^ GREEZY WHEELS stage. •Mi they-usually Fay out ffltetr heavy R&R-;^-> the song in an acceptable form. , to the shock of Austini Russell said, "I T . .Coming Oct. 10, 11, A 12 ' v«s r:, Ann B. David will head the cast of ''Nature'sWay," a comedy;v.. riffs at "maximum output to the • Although the.band was by Herman Wouk; author of "The Caine.Muiiny" and 'jW^nds of . , CLIFTON CHENIER '--pleasure o£Jew.— sounds-that skip the^ seven~ iponths •agor they^r«^lreftdjb_^cMne see us." War." ,''Nature!s_Way" is scheduled for Nov. 12 to'?4.~. " -"'T f. , . Adv.Tickets: Oat Willies & SoapCreek . ear and directly pene&ate. the receiving ' airplay ont :some....radio;^ SOME OF their original material like The third production," "Jburney to the Day," originally•,Waxahacliie.'W6ttraii!V and-"Flapjack­ ZQ7 Bee Caves Rd.^ 3-27-9016^ But Wheatfield, playing at the''' 4fc , •---• scHeffulefftof lJrst*summer, l)as been reset for March 4 through. . Alliance Wagon Yard,, through Satur-CONSISTING OF three males and Blues in No.-A," showed potential for -16. A^seriocomic play,'it focuses-on six patients-in-.a mental one future, arrangements. . Merging with day came from, Houston with_ their f6??3'6' &e group incorporates a • hospital who are participating in groupJherapysessions in-their : : 4­ their -. strdng-controlled ;strumming, ^ Martin guitars and vocals that blended mtcr their solid 5 journejUowards the day of recovery. Thestar of the playwill be guitar and bass fiddle front: • V:, •which is so hard on strings^the rocals^ in perfect harmony. -:' '"l««KsSTu"""1 . Chris: Idlet "and Craig Calvert, the: • provide the main vehicle for the group. • announced at a later djte. - • ..Stockwell:will star in the fourth production, 2-1*' &»Guadolupe Second level • Dobie 'Moll 477-1324 STANDING in a canyon created by towering giants, provide the vocalsand Their fihe harmonies chested off the IS a semimusical dealing with'the-marathon dance craze of ithe , , the two ^members of the band. Con--soft-harmonies that'accent the group.-deerhead and French lamps and broke Thirties. June Havoc authored the play, scheduled for April 29 HTHE XING AfiD HIS LOYAL SHORT SUBJECTS nfe Mims began their Erst set with a Mims-is" at her. best-while taxing the in the"stream of music. The evening's­ through May 11. BAMB! MEETS GODZILLA Joni: Mitchell's "Careyr' Her -nch-microphoiie's ability £& pick up her _ delight was Mitchell's . "'Big Yellow_ wcond 'or stcond ;h? 'unmcsi erfi fTiJCc' ^_R«mation8 for individual and-season tickets may be made-® voice bears a remarkable resemblance notes:' Their bearded.bassiiddle player-,-.^T-axi,''/ dedicated to the Austin THANK VOL. MASK MAN daily at the bbx-offTce by-'cailtng^teffitSB-or 444-2621, ext.-260Jr^i to Mitchell's. "Beaver" Bob'Russell,:moves over -his developers and with which Mims show-•: t Ltnr.r B-'vze roatifit -n ifltmitec-cartoon ^ TWell-reheqiged, the'band was able-to'slt fretboard with nimble desterity. ed her controlled yet versatile voice. : Season tickets are$13for four evening performances and$10 for matinees. Single Uckets are $4 for evening shows and $3 for \~"l matinees. Performances are at 8 p.m. nightly except Monday; with r$ ». £v«rvNtghrs -j i matinees at z pnii Satuidayand-Suoday; ' KING OF IS ifes? %«SecoM.fc«v^;;0b6ie;;MQ^^ I ••«•••** ' oortsinq--n The 'ear •' | THE HEARTS J| O,, EVERY NIGHT IS NEW-YEAR'S EVE %; This «acky. beautiful film has awakened, become a giant. and turned the movie world upside down SKif 505 -NECHES presents now under new management. We will be ( 1,Block w. of Red River There is one reason for this phenomenon-people tove the King. Monday is men t undergoing changes in our menu, entertain-< Vi' --TONIGHT lib n]ght • no cover for stag men • plus ISf SCREEN 2 MUMON 75* bar-highball*. ment, and service in order to better accom-\ WHEATFIELD PmmwKd laA«! U.n«Kort«d ladlnf?; • 'from Houston, Tex. 7 ff»« hlghbcdh no cevcr and m «Ort.-TKvrx­ modate the desires of the community. i 2 free highballtSCREEN HAPPY HOUR Happy Hr. Mon:;7hun.— fv^^v ^ Please excuse any inconvenience during this J Mon.-Fri. TIL 9:00 £ 4:00-6:45 Happy Hr. Mon.-Fri,, '•$ ^ period-New menu effective Friday, 0ctv4 ifor 1 5:30 -7:30 pJvyM^ ptolM 472-0061 2 for 1 ' Aftm-Ojrn BOBBYDOYU 442-9934 •hsocked acr^wiTwiina! Presidio Theatres 629 W. Ben White J GULF STATES ORIVE>IN V, i -<"B0X OFFICE OPEN 7:00 SmovvtovvnUSA STARTS t\O0mi>n*9364S*4/r SHOW STARTS DUSK {ILL AGE 4 SUNDAY '-i ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE "BEST ACTOR AL BICINO COLOR nr\r^ f —PLUS CO-FEATURE— KIRK *k DOUGtAS THE BROTHERHOOD" GULF STATES DRIVE-IN -'Ci Vwiryoio MatinM til ]^S Moa-Fri TECHNICOLORS ®: BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00^, Natam 12J(M:15-H04:45 Bargain Matinee til 3*00. Men-m SoUTHsidE SHOW STARTS DUSK If ENDS SATURDAY, Features 12:45-2^0-4:15^:00 -> 710 E. Bm Whit**444-2296 Features Sunday 7:4.5-9:30 12:40-3:00-5:20-1WW. % Farsk-Ttie Harrad Experiment tmd ttwn theyready HELD OVER form. Bargain Mdtinn til 1JO t.'. XT . MON-fRI Features 1^0-3J0-5J0 METRgCOtOR 7^0-9-J0 ±PLUS CO-FEATURE f SUMMER UGMPraete WICKED! in Color IK* DEADLY! asthe A DennisF Stevens DELICIOUS! Cnema ArtsProduction A Ranasta Film'fai Color © J CULF STATES DMVC4N V BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00M?, MIDNITE Bruce U€ SllOWTOVVM USA SHOW STARTS DUSK ^Hw»WiCwiiroi»S3M5ly I Returnof MOVIES TheDragon EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ^.his lastpertormance I*his best .KAREN Bqrgaln Mbtin** til.3:00 Mon-Frl. ,s roc BLAGI^ FMturw 12:45-2:30-4:15-4:00, ff> 7:45-9i30 '•K & MIDNIGHT MOVIES $1.25! "LITTLE LAU ScCIGJOHN^ I 1 COtOR tS '...mrUSTEUnTOTODIffiUT PETtR COOK 1 immmmammw DUDLEY MOORE' CRCMN too«U!«M'MWCIpnm* tffTUUklW tM cWoody ^tSrwtC-iiaoiiuci. r«S3!{£K^uM«ooo«uni t^c-and ELEANOR BRON^/ lui«u>^MiybooMM cA Heii £«S: "J-V MfCICk —PLUS CO-FEAT WtfrSl V." "? sKeaton i (i That's AhstfyOEAD? "Sleeper Richord Harris S- fl 2 12-MIDNIGHI r 2.GLENN EOOOstornngh.SANTEE DANA WVNTER (.'VALERIE Gi/irjTATes m |O*$OFH«s!0!PEN« Ih>^^M3.00Mon-F, CHAkLe5BMPMQN,mCIAL~ iMmmm mm mmm ~wiv <-,^3**> ftillll %' r? "J" 2-' / \ *v 4t"d tV&>lA:ra4::.> '4% TCP-a-v b-4 11< v» IS® V-"' ^;v-:',,-*' • gfeas : mm. Soviet Georgian dancer Ticketdrawing begins Fridayfor the Soviet. " Georgian Dancers and Tbilisi Polyphdnic . Choir, a company of 80 dancers-singers and musicians making its United States debut, The group, which--is making its "first appearance ever outside Russia, in the in­terest of goodwill and cultural education, was ~cailed a 1'major by-Ige*-Sttavihsky. • !Mkle dancers inf the ensemble of yftung : ' Asiatic men and-women are the only ones in -gmthe world -tif dance :"en. pointe,'" and the . Tbilisi Polyphonic Choir performs sacred ­music.marching songs and mountain airs on THE DARKROOM! NEW HO rWi I^TEXAS ISOOS.PtEASANTVAllEYROAD JUST OFF EAST R1VERSIDE DRIVE ,$1.50 dancer; native instruments;: Songs in theprogram,date back to medieval; polyphonies,, and the perfonpanc? Includes a lyrical melodic yodel ("krimanchuli") which resembles the Tyrolean yodel but is farmore elaborate. There are also heroic war songs,: wedding songs.'drinking songs and humorou,s songs. Drawing tor ukC~optimrTee"1rolders-comr •tinues through, Oct. 15, the day of the-perfor-p mance. General sales will be Oct. U to 15, tickets $4.50 for thg public and $1.50 forjop-i« tional fee holders. --• -Tfi. ]Sr*s' I'c­ •presents the union FRIDAY: TjeketrrDrawing for Memphisf^of the trip is.$7..50 for University students, DI IIAK Pnonirnri • PnnnMnt MIT A«*. CM JM ni Si 1i.. nMJ ff.fft> C A' fo9:50 !?& $1.50 WITH CHRISTINA0 ^,,. til 6 p.m. mBARBARA PARKINS im PETER KnSlnpim £ti%m' FUm THIS PICTURE fmmi HASKELL WILL END UP ml HIEING ENJOYED' BY MORE ^ */ iCHRISTINA IUSTINITES... KSMLWSSSjiSrJr Just Ask-the fPerson Next 'i . 51-50 til « • FEATURES 2:SpTS:10-7:30*9^0 , , to YouJlttfm'' • m: ''The most highlyacaairrtied film df l974 SSt'® FEATURES'-ltN{MS4)M4:IQ«5S;M M0N4AT ^8 AU'flATS »HO ~ 1 Pb<£ r' '^ announces THE AUSTIN SYMPHONY • ORCHESTRA ; BEETHOVEN;.MARCELLOT^ EBERT & TSCHAi KOVSKY Thursday, October 10 Municipal' Auditorium/ 8:00 P.M1. -Conductor: Akira Endo .50 , with... Optional Services Fee/Student Tickets $1.25 •»;h« Ticket Dra.wing: October 1-10 ^-J-J_]H°gg'Box Offiee/IO-6 Weekdays ~ 4 te :! . Bus Schedule: Free to Fee holders -A iss-c.: Jester, Kinsolving, Co-0p; 7:00-7:30 'Ja . "'*< Tlic Entcrtaiumcnt Cpmniittee of the Texas Union @ INTERSTATE THEATRES STAT E W6b056 -$1.25—til 2 p.m. 719 CONGRESS AVENUE Fea. 6:10-8:00-9:50 MABLEY &' ITS ABOUT S'vt' TIME! •vS;?4 T. QRATlC«M RELEASE CQLOR. Friday,.0ct6b# 4,vl9^4 THEJ>mY'^EXAN ^age'^V^ I st-SWf Pb" ifS IS ' «s?4 r<-s -^?issrr && i *9dfcj ^4/ v^VL VV^H \-i > ^ Wf ^*\w ,s, t 0^4 s > •* =C ^ •* v * ;- * "^"i ~*f ^5* JKi-;V,^ >> Jv\ ^-Vr-^* aK 4 V «'" #" * ^'i *£* tewsT&s. {! ' \P aais» ^K * *r *F$frr*iv\;f>vtre v "m, mL m !m m mam m « ,v. h w ;"• i£«* PHOfME 471-5244 iVIQiM. 'THRU FRI s:oo-5:oo mm "W * *\ •&> , 4. W\T*.V^"_,"'* "t /^'iy5,_^" U"4'^' si. "S t v. N. ^ ^ V *i® *1 'f'n. K i" . CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE DOnWDlii A TC^ &ATES * FOR SALE w w » U-I WAN! ED ir f iiu 15 wordminimum K Each word,one time .$ 'n «oo SQUARE. P6ET.>ii" in.;»he»rT MALE. ROOMAAATEr'.'on.shuttle, near' Musical -For Sale . i E^cfr word 2-4 times . '. <$ 10 P Misc. -For'Sale -' *' bedrooms and the? bedrooms aremam-campus, furnished, game roonvall bill* E^dh word S*9 ". . j 08 HABITAT -rpolh, too. Furnljhed or unfurnished/ paid. S6d month/ 472-0406. -•• -r. Just North ot.27th LEARN TO PLAY £acb word 10 or more times $ 07 GUITAR Beginner STRiPtNG KIT tor, ^970 Roadrunner;' -with ice-maker r^Jrlgenatocs (trost-£ Guadalupe IK Sfudentrafe<«ach time $ to and Drew 478-. also a compact AM/FM car.stereo.Ml-. lree),'.DW, cable, walk-ins &.built*tn&. . FEMALE: SHARE'nice two bedroom CATFISH 4*:"Si advanced Thompson CJautfta) BUpJay 1 2079 t HUNTERS From JUS ALL Bll,LS PAID. 7604 apartment. CA/CH.; Riverside-areau -2707 Hemphill P^rk • Mi V Co), x > inch One time .. S3 25 WhetesvUnej 9^M2.-472^1621 ShgJlle,-, pVs. *105 -ABP. 444*8727.^ PARLOR t'Coi.'x:WRCft:M fimes:..;.rj2.w HiAATT 50 Amplifier, J275. <7l*?423.- NEED AN AP.ARTMENT- Immediately .> cok x Vinch Jen or moreLt[mes-s}.64 FOR FALL? ACTrCENTUATE THE; POSITIVE. Act: We need somelull and parttimeevening 1 IStsii FURN. APARTS. • V.Apartments;:-best ot both-worlds. One IMMEDIATE FEMALE DUPLEX. Own GOYA CLASSIC guitar, hardshell c&ie­help. Some experience helpful..Cell Mr. ' mlnt condition, S37S; Call 41HU79. GIVE US A CALL' bedcoomji at' affordable prices f«r • room, *100 plus efec Near-UT, shuttle, ; Goodman alter 4 p.m. at 258-1S53 • • • I^< DEADLINE SCK8MJU CUSTOM MADE^edal steelcuitar. Dow^v^:: locator service. Ideated tn the East Slst. 459"57J8, 472»4l62. k YES, we do type" r%f tJ^-^-r . Habitat. Hunters, is FR^E apartment students. From si49 plus E & caNc. 924 -Carpdrt Oct. } Debbie, 476-2682 lower Students See This One Moodoy Tuati May .7:00 p.m-• «or> .. -..-.'v-. -.-. S3vlv ieve) of DohteMall. Wespecialize Instu-r •MALE UNDERGRADUATE student to We nec< 8. pedals, 3 Xnee levers. 471 WATERLOO dent-complexes. • .*.•••.'•. •.• * . LARGE 1-0EDRQDM apartments.Pbot: share near, campus. no MODELS NEEDED-Ffeshrnau themes. room *32.50, JiMWoy TIMA Monday ) 1:00 o.m. Water, gav cableTVpaid. S135. Posada deposit, Sid. 706 23rd, 6/. ..WhyT>ot-st«r-t-outwlth - *-W«*W*Fy1we#iwTw*4«leiH—ll;t|Lg.m^. Real Aph.:500VBull Creptk» mvtlb* PIANO.. Eberhardt-Hays upright. Otdlfr-f-i VENTURA * apartments/with cable, poot^ivil--7807; Located 37th and Guadalupe,: " * : "*lt'UMVfersl»y.aftd-.r.9N«i«t tlwputMwn oct.mHmbhfcr but goodie; *350 or best offer.; Call 345-ALL BILLS PAID Yiredof small roorrvxl.nocloset space?' kitchen*..On city -and-sbutUe bus--, v, business work •i^yONEinbwml Imertiwt. AJldqicmf«t *\ Waller Street '* Convenient to shopping. 1105 oCtayton-ROOMMATE(S). Own bedroom, large. Last Minute service .'410a. Tired of asphalt& ndlse? TryPlaz»Ven­ m*. «di«n»mtiMs should b« mad* not Ie4*r 474-4493 472-4162: Lane. 453-7914, 472-4162. . comforti^tle stone house. ER shuttle. r-OpenW Mon-Th 6,,: tura, 14 2 8drm.furn./.unfurn/'FrcJni Hw 30 deyt o4*t pub6tQbon.M ' Barry GHIIngwater Co/ *8L3X.,V> bills (or k**), 478-9919. MEN!—WOMEN1 9-5-Frl-Sat WURLITZER electric piano. foatur«iv"-j * 5129.50 plus electricity * EFFICIENCIES; . touch keyboard,. works beautifully, 3410 Burleson Rd. ' QUIET. CLEAN JOBS ON SHIPS! r Dishwasher; disposer, hear shuttle t)us. • FEMALE ROOMMATE* to shareluxury -r r • needs legs. *100* 476-3581. Jim SturdT- . . / Barham Prop. • :Water, £ajpaid;j)25; Seemanager. 111J 2 bedroom apt.-SM2J0 ABP; Shuttle. if? "Ptr'ence required. Ewetlent pay. 472-8936 30A Dobie Center­ —-v fl\• • LOW STUDENT RX-tES" ^ < vant » — --ALL BI-LLS PAID • 447-65^1 r -926-9365' West 10thv.476-4413. . = ' ntverit&r8feK'*t7.>546St Lynda. Worldwide travel. Perfect summer iob -IS word minimum each day .vs .10 «:fS'?^-rSf!l;d»'J-<; EFF. S132 Angeles, Washington 98362* « • . fhe cor^plele swetarial^ervJce >. street; On# .bedroom.: panel^l' shag, .two bloc&s campus*.*65 plus electricity, "UnclasslMeds'M-l^'XdayrTJTWT' •^TYPING -.theses, manuscripts^ reports, •' . CA/CH;.dishwasher, disposal. ST45 plus Liberal, responsible. Frank, 472>0525.v ; (Prepaid, No Refunds) • ••-" ..>AAWRlE0SXliJaENTs7llx6OSherwood" -I B-R-S1S7.50 ionden : • papers, resumes electricity. The Conquistador-2101 San- Students, mu\t show-Auditor's • mobile-home In UT Trailfer par.k.2 Br, *2 -Gabriel. 472 7746^. '/.AUTOMATIC TYPING -letters and ~ . FEMALE. SHARE -2 bedroom apart-. receipts and pay in advanceIn TSP -ba. ACcentral heat.Washer/Dryer.476-. 6 blocks.fo campus'' i JEbeohrOwn coom:*6230 pius V^ftlecrrlcl-; .. rnultl-copted originals ^ BW9-3.?tJ3 (25th & WhWs) from 8 1650. 453-.33T7 evenings: Keep trying. . ,,aERO« copies -u.oo tor. loo copies SUFFICIENCIES More than an "et \r Pat/477-9r9rafter 5. ..2408 Leon 476-3467; ^EEp-S^T.UD^iv/i" COUPLE to manage a,m. tr> 4;30 p.m. Monday through (per originals) ticiency. Designed with the student In­ fc Fnday: ^nare ahd *maIntaln^-apeHmenK house located PRINTING • offset and letterpress • mind.*144 pluselectricity andcable. Act FEMALE ROOMMATE, neededt*70 plus nearw^lcal Park TowefrMusf be will-" a;id .QUIET ENFIELD AREA. 1 VII.: 453.0540,. 472-4U2. Barry \'4 bills to share-nicely.furnished house v ROSEDALE . Glllingwater Company. near UT shuttle. Elizabeth. 4744639. Ing lo work. One at home during day 2 453«r„,lines IMjgfggja^ -^Foll-.Jci:}.cheri..''btigh> shag, 2 BF%, 2 BA M. bedroom, furnished apartment freeAREA 1-B larg^.•••rSbm.fcr:: Good storage, -NeW;6gFlclB+(CI6S.-AC..6UI»;nsiiJ,:__; ROOMMATEIS). Private..xoom -3 .•w«l pay own phone and erectrfclty Nd- POOL -ALL BILLS-PAlD.^H -rr.-: eoysredjarklng. close UT. block houie.-, shuttles-near .Capitol' jiets, no chntfreh.Send resume toBo* O-Best Rateon the Lake* A~i%vv;-rr^.shw^7)0-B Vv; 38Jh.'"' FOR SALE -pool, sauna, cable and con-'' MOVEJN TODAY nw««ii-MirirtaM-.<-w« iit one "bedroom Across (rom.tenms court in Ramsey. . genial at 1 bedroom from > -s • -v' . vPiax».:*60/morUh,i'4 bills. 45*9749.-—^ JiHj-.T.-siatlen, Austin, fx ?MIJ,r;r . CHRISTENSON & Shuttle Bus Frdnt Door Parle-^all maintained. 2-1 Home-with r r' Auto,'-•••• •• /• r . For• • Sale -. f&m hardwood floors «nd den. Rick Borth« S142.50 plus electricity. 807 ',2400 Town Lake Circle LARGE CARPETED Efficiency. Fulr FEMAUE ROOMMATE -tor 3rd untut ASSOCIATES " Fdip B*ehnet*Si Associates West Lynn. 477-7794, 472-4162 nlshed LoopT^* •• £•?»>-. . * 442-8340 kitchen,,walk-in closet,bafhand shower bedroom. 'Lamar-North — ; :1972 GREMLIN "X"r .3-speed,, AC,^«x-. --454^744or 459-9485 .... ^..., .*U5rmo. 478-6550. *53. Mary, 452-1548 or.454-4412. . -A TYPING tras. Excelfenr condition.' Best-lm-r remediate cash offer. 477-3388. ; • -. 2 S^pnOOM EUFI-e-LD. .shuttle. ..IMMEDIATE . SERVICE. F.EMALE. -FurnUhed$140 CA/CH, pool.-laundry. n?ar. park: No duplex, own-upttairs bedroom, *90 plus I siSLt ,t3I930 CHEVY IVi ton truck. Good engine deposit, CaM:472-9902, 451-5846. 472:l9a.. Vi bills 47B-2387 I'v , #^^lnferior Needs bed&-paint $1000 43£* INVESTORS 1 Bedroom -JOB OPENINGS Specializing in ' f7.i%i»;i;6836 evenings . DELIGHT ., karfmAm III.IL .S. .a. HOUSEMATE. U0 deposit, 'FOUNTAIN TERRACE A HARD.ACT TO FOLLOW. ... Act IV. phe* ^ FEMALE rmm >M " AT 1-l's • ••• •••• •• H bedroom, efficlehirtficiehcy on shuttle. Walk, to *80/rnonth. Fireplace, yard. .505 East — Theses and dissertations -BeautHut boatilJULhoust located 4 " •A-19ZIMG MIDGET Recent valve iob,34.-APARTMENTS HALLMARK APTS'. law -school:"^QMr^QyletuIl foic. undergraduate .. Third. Carolyn.^476-4819, 472-1657. v t •. — Law Briefs. . OOOmffes 2 newtires. Mu^tsell 452-4277, Large efticiencies fully students. *149plus electricity and cable. ON N. LAMAR blocks from theUniversity. o70T3 square large closets, -451*8507 fee* tn the house. 11,748 square fe*t of carpeted cable, disposal, water, gas. 708 W, 34th 3311 Red River/476-3662. 472-4162. Barry ^ FEMALE HOUSEMATE.wanted, own Term papers and reports Gillihgwater Company: land. Rerita! 'possibility 34 people.-Ex­swimming pool, furnished Walking dis­• Scholarship Program^"'" 'Prompt, Professional: room, three blocks to campus. *62.50. cellent condition.Call Gloria Goode,928^ children 246! Rosemary & Jennie Reaifprs. 451-West-3Cth. 477-8858. , , Meal Discounts. -Service >'. 196) VW CAMPER. il/St instalfed 1968-tance-,to" UT. No or pets 6J0 454-8239 478^)50 Star--•r.' engine, wide tires, refrigerator^ pop-top: 7323. . t -I • . . • EFFJClENCfES *115 plus electricity. 453-8101 • Asking J850. 444^490, Mike. . Pool, AG* carpet,paheling,rno pets.Hun-ting Pay $1.90. Apply in " :P tingiton yi1ia, 46th and Ave. A. 454-8903 ROOMS Pick-up Service Available • '« VW FASTBACK. Need cash. Musf.3 f WALK TO CAMPUS?;" person after 2 p.ni, at , 3102 Glenview - sell soon. Pricenegotiable. 447-4855after ; TWO BEDROOMr two bath efficiency OLDER AND BEAT ' " COLORFUL Mauna -Kal. Close to campus Huge TEXAN 3918 N. Lamar-_ , DORM.-1905 Nueces:-Doubles walk-Ins, fully carpeted. 1199 ABP. 405 *220/Semester. Singles. *385/Semester; MRS. BOOOUR'S TYPING . THE BUS 'Q., EFFICIENCIES Dally service, central air. a&afefc SERVICE: . to* mifeage; Call 454-7831^... HOME Glllingwater Co. • Refrigerators, hot plates allowed. Two sSSwS'®-, 1973 VW. BUS. %Passenger. AC stereo, ; East..31st. 472-2147,'472-4162 Barry maid lr--• . Reports, theses, dissertationsend bsoKt Two-one bedroom furnlsfted typed accurately, tast and: reasonably^ _.. -Live in it, now • Rent it when you AND blocks .from campus. Co-Ed,. Resident ^v apartments Pool, cable, laundry, ^qulet Ptlntlnp and binding on request.xtosci Managers, 477-1760.­-*T?SmfUI !i^fivrtt-&jQO-A^h inr.Hary £a».TlAvfri. 452-5626, 454-7646 .ONE BEDROOMS : now. 2 l>edroom. Irt bath apartment., FLOWER • PEOPLE^heed yseVerahpw^— vx."'59-VW BUSw-*400w .Caj1 476-5418 • after -graduate. Convenient to UT. *500 down. setting v nob hill Apartments. Available a *150 Jjtus electricity atcommer­ in.-47M113. . cial rates. Rio House. 472-1238 606 West r-cy.. . : : • Ulip-Bttunett-trAssoeiates -474h-it-Slo_Grajiri« v iargeenough for 3or 4. Dishwasher, dis­MS,.*?^ *85 MONTHLY, Maid service, manent peopletoself flowers forthe new. DISSERTATIONS,.theses, report^ Shagr-di&kwasher^ posal; pool,-laundry^ *250. all utilities'' linens, AC ABP« near Capitol. 303 East .'74V7S season.-For Interview, Denlse, law briefs. Experienced typist? ;£< . 1970 VOLVO 164^ air, automatic green,r:& Qftirf ^rT.«7^1 Uth. Tosee callJOe Frantetti, 4724279, 282-1,101. gas grill, pets ok; Tarrytown. 2507 Bridle Palh. LOrraiiW r-v new painf, excellent mechanical condi*'^ -% Brady, 472-4715., - -1 L .-•• tion. Must sell,52400. 836-7582. ; . < Misc. -For Sale cozy community^! **: FOR RENT. On^-bedroom furnished, all ' APARTMENT. MAWAEERr MSTOrtr bills paid. 1907 Robbins Place. 478-1841. •FURNISHED BEDROOM and bath. CONVERTIBLE 1969 Sport Fury, ex** CREEKSIDE Easy, bike distance to UT on Hike and near shuttle dependable,-capable couple manage 35* HOLLEY'S, TYPING SERVICE. '*! unit complex. Resume.2900 Swisher. No. Complete Service; typing, printing, bin­ .w cedent; condition.' 11110, Call 451-2104 * S125 plus E; S145 plus Es APARTMENT FOR RENT; Large one • Bike Trail. 472-156Z *100; • * "204. Austin,78705. * . • ding. fields, t*• . after 6. 926-7670 day-FREEWHEELING Large efficiency, CA/CH, shag, welk­bedroom, by Hemphill Park, CA^ch:-- # Exitperienced In all fir--iids. Near 1211 W. 8th •„ ' 474-1J07 campus. 1401 Mohle'OrWe4! * •' lie­ 476-3018 ins, complete kitchen, bath-vanity. On . *150. bills paid. 477*1734, 836-5903- SATISFY GREED * hedge,on inflation. "oft-Blanco f'.--472-4162 f/-V? '66 MERCURY MONTEGO Blue 302 BICYCLE SHOP crty/shutfle rou»e *115 pius E-thru SERVICES Buy frlvolousMhlngs. Immediate part or -Tudor, auto, AC new tires, runs good, August '75, 476-8324, after 2 p.m. HOWDY AGAIN. Myhead's gonna roll II--full time sales'position wllh young com-Just North of 27th at t *550 Cash, 471-547*--£ * ~ --.1,. -y Mfle or generous Would like you to • I don't, rent 'em alLSee HOWDY ad.476-female, papy. ear­nlnos^No investment.Call after six.282­ • ••... 9279».;' • ••••• : • . Guadalupe . '67 WHITE VW BUG Good condltiorv r Come by & See • 1808 or 4764898. " • « .' 2707 Hemphill Park £ tape decki *700 Call Angetlka, 476-7471. >-, , our shop - SUBLET-.FURNISHED->r-bedroom -GiNNY/S SO WE ARE. OFFERING A FREE jMOVE IN TODAY apartment near campus-Shag , PART TIME Drycleaners counter help 1973-TOYOTA .CELICA.. 13.C00 miles. GEAR ADJUSTMENT ON YOUR 3. 5or carpeting,, dishwasher, garbage N • outboard, running water, electricity, 472-3210 and 472-7677j. 1970TRIUMPH SPITFIRE MK HI. Red heat, -10 mtoutes .from campus. Ren-WILLOW •<202 EAST 33ND STREET. Bent Tree • .:.1^. 7 a.m. -•10 p.m. M-A, \ '.<^A PART TIME WOR#f 15-20 hours/week. NEED A GREAT;- Frances woodsTyping servjce."' w>& convernpie. tow mileage, 25 mpg, good 9am • S p m. Sat.' runningcondition.*175 underbook, price. convertible, low tal/purchase optioa5120/month. Owner Apartments. All' new one bedroonvef-. '''''S *60/mol|th; Cell 452-2758. . Experienced, Law. Theses, Olistr­ fleleocles. Extra long beds/cable TV, aboard Saturday,'liOO -5:00 p.m Go to, 459-5316. | PLACE TO LIVE?-; CREEK , latlons, ManuscrIpts. 453-4090; CA/CH, *135 plus, electricity..See.2 BR ALL'BILLS PAID'-;--f~ manager apartment no. 1 .6, 100 serious • workers needed•. for end'of Windsor Drive.(24th Street) and r STADIUM CLEANUP. Sunday, October-n follow signs or call 713-528-3601 collect. TRY THE S08BYE OELAPIEUO. IBM Sate "it H49 OPEL GT. New tires, rebuilt 2 LargePool;,Security, VolleyballCbuft cleanup of Memorial Stadium. Inquire ,, pica/elite,.25 years experience.• b Calf 451-5010 -BLAC'KSTONE • UNIVERSITY STUDENT dissertations, theses, reportaWfa enginer.4-speed, greatgasmileage.*800. 1901 Willow Creek]) . 477-3766. Report 7 a.m.Sunday at North' 4Mt MIA I 444-0010 UNF. APARTS. Gate, Merftoriai Stadlum. S2.00/hour. mimeographing, 442-71 fc. « ^ APARTMENTS ^ DAY CARE CENTER ••••--•••• •••••• Frl [V„| Motorcycles -For Sale''. BEAUTIFUL "• . ' ,; i-. " • p/i'S 7 has vacancies ior children age 0 to 36 OaVtIME eUSPERSON Tues • . VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER OlversKM : ,10:00 e.m.. • 3:00 p.m. >1.75/Nour plus i Share a large room for *64.50^mo. cK-" Services. Graduate and undergraduate' months. Up to 4 hours per day Max­ CREEK e,; percentage of welters' tips, Mary Kelt­ feds! SAVE MONEY!. Call tj before buying ii take ap entire room for *112J0 fur­ [ypJjB/jgfmtlng, binding. 151$ Koenlg $155 WOODED r imum of. 60* per hour. • man Marco's. motorcycle Insurance. Lamberf fn- nished. all-bills paid. Maid service-once Sprfftg^fed year-around creek'tlov/s' 476-6994 . 2203 San*Antonio a week. suraoce Associates; trie 4200 Medical • 1 Bedroom;^ CREEKSIDE Parkway, 452-2544 among the big trees oa this select 4'/2 firing your own roommate or we wftl UM„ One and two-bedrbom apartments WANTED. Ratable person to care for 2 STARK, typing.Specially:'Technical;'; .acre tract.Priced right/Moderatedown- „n Bills Paid: ' • match you with a compatible one. : .All T • • ' lovely creekslde settlngi Huge grassy children In my home weekends, 3 p.m. Experienced theses,dissertations, PR's, payment..Balance-financed 10 years. 'til 11:00 p.m. Salary negotiable. 476-• binding, 'Mig£.'?2iftVO-yjr' •** 3U4WMSU2UKf 6.speed».}|JUVi. street bike *600 or , • This is economy % convenience at Its Buckingham Square '"""i,,0,s ,r«". Convenient fo ur, manuscripts,;etc: Printing, 6461, ext. 291 for appointment. •• Charlene stark, 4jJ^}i». . • • " K-W best offer-444-9291. •. • best/.. downtown, shopping,/recreation. Fully 7J1W 32nd " shooofno., recreation. Fullv Vl«»*\..ONLY.200, YARDSFROM UT CAMPUS^1 FULL :TIME-JOB. -Mature person carpeted, paneled, andyou won't belteve - inc. MINNIE L. HAMMETT Typing & . . ...TO YAMAHA 350,_Gevt.battery, -chalnr" ' v •454-4487 the-storage-space! -From--5134.50; Call.' 476-9093 . preferred* :recepfjonjst light .. -2910 Red River 476-5631 and These., dliser­ fJres. E*cenenf condiitorr Calf 442-2960 GROW YOUR " 926-4555. ' ' '" - pusllcatlng Service. secretarial Pwork. -Some experience • ..... ^ after five wefkdays. *600. typing In person ... tatlons, papei^ ot alt kinds, resumes, OWN ORGANIC,-'-KENRAY /I; nectssarvv Apply Frontier free r.elrestiments. M2-700t, 4.£ printing­ -Many .extras. 453-3345 FOOD: .APARTMENTS NEAT. Accurate efnd prompt lyplno, 60 *625 firm. Call .. V (evenings) or Jim at 25S-5121 x2227 2 BEDROOM binding «nts per w.jfceses 75T«nts.'Calf447. : EXTREMELY .RESPONSIBLE,. wellr * (d«ys>. CAMP-OUT theIadobe -Si:f2122 Hancock Dr. motivated Individual-needed for ex­ 2 BATH cellent residential morning paper route- Slratford Hail at Trafalgar Square has * Tarrytown.area. *200 •*300/month. Call 1970 HONDA 350 SL: Recent•overhaul, ALONG THE •freecable < •Furnished / V Ne*t 50 AmericanaTheatce, talking d»s-luxury: apartments Ideal shirlng. 420 w. riverside drive MA8YL SMAULWOOO Typing.: Last for Eric, 477-2496, ' -;••• " m*,Ly. I'Wi1 imifii rtrni" nrrati "tiring i: •Mexicas tilefloors* Pool . • ..tante lo North' loop.'Shopping Center Quiet garden setting, pools and mlnote, overnight available. Term '. *600. 451-6710 or 345-3995. -GRESK-• I nundry •Gas Barbeques and Luby's. One half bfock from shuttle, clubhouse for privateparties.*205.50 un­papers, theses; dissertations, letters. TENNIS INSTRUCTORSfor specialten- I need to; sell. a:part:of-my^backi'lahd • Shuttlebus -*Ch7}5 • »n* p. ^ 7 bedroom furnished; *230 furnished. Easy driv» tn Ban^Amerlcetd. .«• ; farm..' If yoo are interested In growing .110 East 37th • *135-X townbousey, extra• large.? I wo bedroom ^J l,downtown. Call 836.7710 er 4S11159 -Should be strong nls holiday-.series. player. Great'Opportunlty, Send resume Stereo. -For Sale .: ;• your.gwn food -and camping next to the! •? , _477-9954( flats, one and two baths, CAiCH, dis- SKYOlVEl *im |iiu.hi n»s, A.-ttln T«nni. •" • — • •• • • •••••crpglL:-1 wiirsell an acreor more-for *100 ' , hwasher,.disposai, door to door-garbage'" —IH5MES, reports, 8. • law 'note*. . 78766. • Austin Parachute PIONEER <5X949 quadreceiver. 40watt down and'*2S per month. Call me. Oon v.picKup, poo), maid service ii desired--'' • Reasonable, Mrs, F-iaser, 4/6-IJU x 4.SQ, mCD-4.3* «i months old.*525 or best* * Wilson, after I p.m. on MWF or any time 1 .;;vashaieria tn complex.'See owners.Apt:?' $159.50 offer. 451*5*44 after 6. Saturday. 255-2894:: ; M3.or call 451-4848 Center •PERSON TO ASSIST In various special , ALL BILLS PAID • tennis and social events at resort (Lake Just North Of 27th at r;-PIONEER SX727 receiver, *295. Used Would you/iike ^o live in a sm^li town, LUXURY For information please calls •Travis), weekends. Should be tennis ',<<• with friendly peopled and be twenty • targe patios, balconies, and beautiful -vorlented. Call W-7ttl. 'Sirj (jUaaalUpefour months. 451-6058. minutes from "campus? l haVe several; WE RENT courtyard areas at Chateau Trianon 272-5711 anytime •' •««-.2707 Hemphill Park small homes for-rent and the living is -1 BR -$160 Townhouse andgarden apartments,only --• •. •• •• TAPEtJECK, Advent 201 cassette with cheaper ih. Round Rock. Jesse'wftson/ . 6 blocks to campus, dishwasher, dis­ minutes from shopping, parks. golf: One URANTIA BOOK study group, 475:9875< ? FOR RENT -• Dolby, dust cover, sells new for *300; Rea»or,:255'2«94.'; •: bedrooms from*159, al)bills paid.-Also2 " • .• " 1' .-•• .. posal, pool, etc. ^ asking *210.4444497. . AUSTI-N ..4740712 % 478-3176 .bedrooms. Furnished or unfurnished" A-UNIQUE APPROACH -to problem-.Call 926-1247 ot1 451*1159. solvlngl That's what's presented afthe Your time is valuable Wednesday testimony meetings/ Chris­ ... SSR turntable/ almost new;*35.474-2008.' VINTAGE X)ur_^rvice is free BEAUTIFUL SETTING on Lake Austin H6n.c5cienceChurch,il309 .Guadalupe/, : H no answer, call 454-5869. .v,\den with outdoorfireplace and bar built-' Home.-230€;Hemphlll; Port Worth, 817' 472-4175 478-7411 ^Hang-Gliders . In Fully carpeted, draped, all 9(6-3304 .. . .Pree instruction with " ,.:'-«ppllancis, sprinklers, (Usjiosal, • cor-MISCELLANEOUS sr$t':S "" . 453-2219-,j. ; -BIKINI PRICED STEREO • -23)1, ^ S-x,; I $150 Up,v . at»nlngware range,ipi.. etc., etc., • beautiful, purchase .. .. . MICROWAVE.:OVENS, dorm-slie '-.SjeKsS^f-. Set your own moed withthis specialend 1 BR'FurnS;f^" „C«*«rn. «75/monlh: Discount :fo Im-refrigerators, color TV's, UNF. DUPLEXES _of Ifne close-out on these supersystems 453-6209 . SUNNYVALE ^medlate lessee Call 477-2898 early or ., wa>hers/dryerj,: stereos .fcrr EZ ' fofferedl at a.tiny low *99; Thesesystems '.-riatf­ >"R«ltatli'40l East 1st. 4724275..... Tanglewood wnt. -4301 Guadalupe" . n§jra»:-d"joffer a.100 watt amplifier-receiver, TWO INTERVIEWS . ^.>;^;;.cf. -8tt>ustJc^uy,5fnatchetf .air •. suspension APTS. ' „'W PIANO STUDIO .*T ing c -JSJ8T*' i»iun i. NorlhLa'm6hf. HING & QUEEN SIZE mattresses& box . UNEXPECTED VACANCY-'Furnished, ;.cerpeted, allconvenlefices, 3miles Irom .fenced backyard;\covered parking, ex-meters Capitol Camera Rental, 476-write 1602. PaJma Plaza, fro storage - iffiU r Monday/Frldar9-9, Sat. 9-6: luxury mlnl-aparlment on shuttle. Rent : rocrp<; plus, washer;-dryer. 3581. Austin,.Tx 78703.' , ,r.j 459 {^5 S'mn,°ns-fc Sealy. slOO -(200. UT al.4«03Sinclair,Call 477-2898early or UT AREA, 2 bedroom.'2 oeth. CA/CH, reduction.-410S, speedway/'Manager -connectloqs; . Kitchen: appjjancei :fur-. v '.•!! IW ®" r«n' on orfe ysar lease ll .. farge.cfosefs, laundry facilities.' pool, apartment 203; "H-2462,-47«-5940, St* nlshed, *160 PlM* bills Call 928*2296 . Kite)rtn over Immediately, J285-S3M per": DECORATOR BEDSPREADS from in-month NELSON'S-GIFTS: Indi'ift; -reason»b!e.'47r-260«, 474^813. :• WANTED Zunl d/»,Uw tor.curtains, watl-hanBlngj: mf>:& *trlyen;6nd Mexltan rmpori&3 Mtea^^^aAveUP TO: TARRYIOWN ONE BEDROOM, StOVO perel,.upholstery, Maharanl: 1504 Sahi Mtr i $564.00.on Antonio 476-229T ROOM & BOARD refrfgerilwrMo"' " . . , BUY, SELL, andreifrfna fennfi rackets^ ­ m li^rtdays g™'* shopping cenfer^gar* B&'1 -» FfSHER and.NIKKO systems; All units m • age^lwjsllneiSGr . w :For.fast tservlce, lessons, " te *f_udent. $127.50, and good. UT MARRIED , S/rtV! .have name brandicowtlcatly matched LEARN. TO'PLAY GUITAR.. Beginners: vyater gald York^863-5424 evenings, prices, call 451-8525. * i-EARN TOP LAY'GU1TAR, B&clnnor^ weekends; ' it AIR SUSP.ENStpw. speakers; and BSR • and' Advanced. Drew .Thofpason 475. . CROWfSNEST,-:2710Nueces.Roomand v : fi.prpfeMWnal turntables These lystems 2079. board: singles *142.50/month;*doubles^ WANT jo BUY. orte. Oklahoma Date­ 1ere prefesitarally designed end being Su^50/monfh.Rooms:''SingfMooly. :ARCHITECTUR«LLY designed on gpll . Ticket or General, Admission .Ticket, STUDENT * ^'""TPT'ces HURRYHStOcE; TYPEWRITERS Mpn0alsi$30 and up ^5m>onth, air conditioning. 47^*8242, -coufi#^-a.bedroom,^appliances, carpet, Call 44).1110 after 4,00$m. rent. Runjj, arena, .I Is limited. Cashor EZ terms. ~ it .'! • Electrics: from: «50i Many, models Ift Vi vO^O.exarclsejarena/Reasonabieraios. drapes Couple (165. 2105 Lovelt |VT%.-Z UNITED FREIGHT SALES , stock, Dan's, 2409 San Gabriel,474-6396. 0613. NEED..TWO jiood tlekels for Texas vs.t Phone^Dof1,:478-9309,W^7240.-,r M A(.M game Call 476-5298 *| 653571. LAMAR —*i^,r?i'iYrff,rnY-tl'?'-TELEPHOTO LENS 2ll0mm Mamlya-APARTMENTSIs WHY NOT , , TUTORING ^9?^'^^^ORNSt8'.'Auth§ntlcTexos • AafciH . Bi'mii Itill f rnnHlllli^ Vm| NEED TWQ tiopd ticket, for the? 4S4-2090 or471-5116 *jik A-CO-OP? \m -Washlngt0f)ganTe:Call476-lJT" %5ATURDAY 9*6 • • • aim Call 476-1298, leather. J250. 447*174 BM| 3 AL&treeL£flU»oe House isa lame^erd PKYSICS.TillORINO. gradual, .ti'i. ^Apply-nQ^rfgr spring '75 and, supnmeir-75 . — HUNTIIjO 15 minutesfrom MAMIYA-SEKOR euto XTL with flash 'Hiwllh.many^sociaian^• icatkO^SI" ,_MAJL-DRDER},H.USPANpl,T)iafs what-H[ ^ ;%^*V>*ii*WSU^tliuu|Jiaie>.' an^ fjlters $175. Dave 454-0*18 after 1. rr"m.^f> .lull Uiniian ullI needs tu lnuulurwl* "Cfimpgl, Phoh. Doni-47,.9309..MA.73in 'November"1,.1974 -flrsraay'fd~a~gplrtorfall^75 t!Yi.w« 4'4-43e0 transferred, yellow aitfwtiltesatis 2S8-H .m ^WANT A RELATIONSHIP with i 2J5? »«er 5 pm.­ ' meditation-rteeds oo%d" Gateway1 ^ fcj-' T bedroom furnished­ ||liJ>^&»CKER\SI»ANiEt.,4.»wlelt»OlAAKC1-,VJ" '... babysitter; approximately 20 Brackenrldge, . 2 bedroomUnfurnished hours ^g^^rtter twdwkBKls, • 35MM.LENSES tor feflt. Wide anate> ll'm weekly. children,;In s&ii- Deep Eddy . 2 bedroomunfurnished |f®®(^ fc*S8P!*#!><«£oa«o 1e®f C«!foi: Ji'Jq' exchange for, prlyate room^ 6ardge"Sale -ftFSeile r' ^Mllerear^.. ^Maximum80Ft ^ . S^vifMPRNMC tTO PLACE A |STUDENT,S! Ii ,«nd-board, 441-2^17 after-»»»pt. — * , -v AppiyfX'HousIng'andl^pod-ServicejafHce,^ USE-THE ' CLASSIFIED AD||uncL v ­ "Utgtoir REFRIGERATOR. S40 (bar site); Roll- a-way bed 820; single bed Utmrttir -MSr.Mlse, 1)02 Padctlffe P.O„ Box 7666, Austin, TX 78712 CAll < 1 --/452^W4." ' ' " gBWtoteaa T.'t»jiiCr452-'-J " -'Teleptione:'471-3l36 -• use m, iIj+fid W& nek C.'W" ••" • • :.\ -• or Jail Studied Consider, for a moment, limited.' Also, those who• are how difficult learning would blinded by accident rather .Plans for a Travis County be without "the aid of text-, than at birth "and. have notJail annex may have to be on books. Blind' people,. except: learned .to read: Braille, cainthe drawing board soon, by or those who know Braille, are listen to the recordings.'Final- Commissioners Court 'Jorced to learn without being -ly, Poole assertthat listening.federal court action, and when able to read.. to recordings is both simplerthe word comes to expand the "Recording for the Blind." and more convenient-thanovercrowded jail, Sheriff Ray-, a nonprofit organization reading Braille. • r " monciFrank.wants-to be rea'dy :headquartered in New .York Volunteers needed most atuiiuijiis jflll HbtV, City; attempts to remove this' the AustiR office, at-4100-B ' ^ V "v * v handicap by allowing students'. Red those Prank is studying thelayout River St;; are in the fipMg of of what hfttermsmodel jail;' 's <- si'jence.ifni ,aan. octagonal-shaped facility -'•< .8 Si: location;are^ra^iSJTby the;'"TrorelpTtarfguageirin'Selma, Ala. organization,,which has taped # U.S. Dist. Judge Jbck .-.27.000 volumes in'its 23 years fJwfVI l?l\IOn Roberts handed down a court;" -> GsiAi^ .• Of existence. * J • * " 'Y vi•opinion July. 31'saying-County rr^-The:-director :Of.-Rec6rding. Jail needs more space. The for-the Blind's Austin office,. New .Name opinion came after former jail Sue Poole, explains the The Women's Gym has been inmates-filed-suit over jail . rneihod .of recoraing; ' .''A renamed after an innovative conditions. —Texan Staff Photo by Mike Smith team, consisting of a reader figure in the early days ofFrank foresees prompt ac­ and a monitor. works women's athletics' at the ­county--com­ tion . by Custer's former headquarter* remains as "Little Campus >" construction "continues. together. The reader sits in a Clniversity, the late Anna missioners. > soundproof booth and reads Hiss. L ' The—commissioners hgd_ si$V V v *£(&• ~the:te*t.,The monitor operates _ -Hiss came to the University-'better act fast It 4s their" : 'the tape recorder outside the inl918^abecamedirfectorof statutory responsibility to sound booth and proofreads physical training for'women ' provide" a safe and suitable . along with the reader." in 1921t a positibn she held un­jail," he said. The Austin office had*its-til retiring in 1957..She died in "The sheriff's department :?pf a San 1972. Rich An­ elf I beginnings when , recently-was.givena: copy^qf. tonio w.oman, Margaret She was responsible insome-'the Selma jail layout which"is ' By LIZ LUEDEMANN Originally built in 1856 -to the'y.pre'misesv James"-^'H-:-Street; the "Gttle' Carripus!.WrDepartment oi Buildings and Tobm, witnessed the parent ' degree, for the closing ofconsidered one of the best;in . : • In the 118 years of its ex--house.the State'School for the Colvin, vice-president for days appear nurnbered.^ ' '^rGrounds, transportation divi­ istence, the "Little Campus" organization's operation while: Speedway Street to through Alabama,1'-Frank said, :v Blind; the "Little Campus" business affairs, has adopted AT. THE MOMENT, three sibn , of the University has housed- ;• visiting New York. Recording '•traffic,-according to: Carolyn- served during World War I as a.:policy of letting fhe structureis are • being torn . Custer's fornjer" head- blind" students, college men a schoo1 of jnilitary for the Blind's Austin location| • Hewatt, associate director of . buildings: remain until ."each down: an old boiler plant, a quarters lives on borrowed doors recreation sports. .opened it's in LOST & FOUND and," briefly, Gen; : George aeronautics teaching ground .site is needed for another pur­fossilstorage building nsed_by; but until an alternate September;-1973, beganand At that time, the land east" t-OSTT THURSOAY, SEPT, it IWcP Armstrong Custer. training to pilots.' It was clos­pose. the Department of 'Geology • spot isfound for extension-of­ -recording/in December;.1973.. of,Speedway was used'as play-­-l«u^honurlm:gt«jM. |>lnk-y»iiow It was 10 years before the ed after the war, and the But., with the planned fer approximately .10 years fices, the main builduig will cswrtampui or Cameron Rd. buuloo. In the first '10 monthi of irig fields'"for the women's R«wem. <535320 after 5:00. Battle of Little;Big Horn that buildings were: given to the .relocation of Red River of the stand. . offices • the blond, 25-year-old Brevet University. : -. operation, 102; books have athletic department. • l-OST MALE DOBERMAN pu&py. •• .•• ' " Black, tan; withcowtlck on becK of neck. Maj, Custer was transferr? VJake'*, Pickle and 4 ""but with more volunteer? we traffic. '1 LOST. Pet Shepherd. White ma»k. Houston attorney Percy ' •«pA limited-number of i fees,|3p0books ajlowancearid the GRE Oct. 26 may do so by* Belonging bedridden boy. Reward the University's Division of , could triple o.Dr, production." -Hiss' was instrumental. in .3^1 Foreman. ; y •' graduate, fellowships;arebe­a $250 monthly~1iving;: jpaying^a late fee and submit-i Slie adds, -haya_ .50. Extension. An 1866 —, "We ..desiijiing and raising money • ing. iTiade available to Mex-. allowance. married LOST WmUOWCREEK Vicinity. sma'll A ting a late application on.or " books to be recorded in. the to'build the Women's Gym. light brojam Peekapoo, named Pepper photograph shows Custer; his The Divisbn-of Extension ican Americans, native • recipient is eligible.to receive before Tuesday. Deadline for • Reward. Call 442-7403, 472-ZW. ' wife Elizabeth Bacon Custer, took over the "Little Cam­Americans, black Americans $50 a month for dependents. registering for the Dec. 14 fall semesteh To':accomplish • She' designed the gym so UOST. AQUUT MALE black cat, lona his father Emanuel Custer, pus" in 1951 and is still there and Puerto Ricans by the Applicants can begin GRE is Nov. 19. this, we need 100 to 150 more that all offices would have a . in. Austin .Nov. 16, How1 does the recording-teaching pool purposely •torates among disadvantaged' to submit scores on the For more information contact technique-compare with the • designed a few millimeters minority groups to enhance Graduate Records Ex- UNCLASSIFIED Increase the Measurements and more established Braille short in length so it could their-oppnrtnnitip': forcareers aminations Aptitude -Test- Evaluation 'Center. r-i..L- system? According 'to Poole, never be used forcompetition. BellyDanclnglntlructlon 472-3344. , in higher educaUon. i (GRE)' and -one Advanced -the—reeardi n"r""mnthnrt ion_,qualification*; Send detailed. confidential Lynx '-Hooter c_aiaureate professional 'resume to: - SPree kittens, male. Alter 5. 477-9192; Students can deduct tuition, mandatory fees and medical ex­degree and plan to continue on The Menagerie Lo Delia 1 ! Shortchange Honda 354:8 K4 alter i 452-6672 penses to ^deterimine -their net income. Books cannot -be -the doctoral degree in ~ Rush Seabreeze South Street Heaihklt Shorwave Rec >20. 474-1309: deducted, but allowances trpm twrents 'and the cost of naming preparation. For a career'in1 * V Personnel Manager High Way Gun point '^1 the household also are considered:in determining net.income. 1^1' HcCldiand«t]^ineers,inc. _ ^ Midnight Pree kittens, 444-1009. -• rr~^ higher education. A one-person househeHrean receive up to$46 in food stamps if Argus ; ^ Shiloli Pound Ladles' watch, Guad. 453-1057. Fellowships are for one ^J/geotedmical consultants >, the net income is not over $194 pe^fmonth, Wright said. If/the The. best bands to boogie by for any occasion -year but may be renewed if ' Peruvian poncho,: J25. Oonna; 477-9761. net income is $193, food stamps cost $36. The food stamps are (817) 923-7477, (817) 923-7711 ^ the studentshows satisfadtpry Afghan pups, e«otlc color. 2(2-0453. .... free if the net income Is less than $20. progress^ toward the doc-6100 Hillcrbft 4201 Cole Worth, Texas 76115 70 Nikon PTN, 441-6282. -Persons wishing to apply tor lood stamps should call for an ap-•' *: it*1 ; iorate. " Houston, Texas 77036 Tj pointment at oneof*.the two food stamp offices in Austin at 474^­ 66 VW .Convertible. M25..'453-2504. Fellowship awards for 1975- r, §-» 6401 or 475-6973. • • "fe: . on «qwef opportunity tmpfeyw ;?t®76 will include full tuition and I USE THIS CONVENIENT COUPON TO START YOUR CLASSIFIED AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN I I CLASSIFIED ADVERTISIKG ORDER BLANK t NOTL The nuw Clus0 tPage23. 'V 4 ** It % ?y * assail AwSfeea? I? JUCfCieSwood Prices ^ ?!%re jusf the beginning! '*$$• m Seminar — Planned Newly-elected trial judges. •will be asked to return to -college this December. , Tfie*Texas College for the •Jilt, ;fc Judiciary will open for a five-• watfi RMS iTJS TOTAl C9PIOIMEER ""LIST PRICE 1—fm^Hthcfejand.~countv-«>i)xJ--^A $6U395 VVIHVVUV UfM •>. s - •SWr&! flt-law judges'vriio havetaken Msm.9$­ the bench in Texas since Jan. 5800- ! Aeiogrtko, G"'"* -'-4 -V "MOST JUDGES have haelf AND TOMORROW ONLY I5B.Q0 • Utt JIM.»S Mth some trial practice' before­,,-t^they take office — but there's; 17 HOURS pilotsyou don't pick hpas a triaij " 'lawyer/' William Nail," 24 watts rmt FRIDAY -10 to 7 associate-director of • the.' MghfHMr TOTAl IIST mpidneer'"S--center, -said. UimiwCcnlnl PRICEJ444.6S SATURDAY -10 to 6 Wolnut Com t,i« have no mechanism for;­ UH *199.93 -V;i| requiring them fjudges) to at-_ WAREHOUSE ONLY BSR 260XE " tend. We can'only encourage, oQ than by mouth and letters. •l«u ance will: hp strirl WE MEET OR SEAT ANN •9wtC«w tCMKJ» • V*n M75I (0:„' -r^^oluntary.".Nail said: oftMCW rnibi. Aaff-SlnHia • 8" Woofw ~ "We expect 75 judges at the. ;a . most; but we can't know for • «~r6riii« pS^ftsure since elections haven't; Ujt $7t,W Mtli • m tvi-Vbeen held yet," Naflsaid. € Jax SN-01 , ''THIS IS already done -in HEAD • SNtm* BwdgM . other states — Michigan, Concord DBA9 l>HONES • 6' Cord • Utt *5.95 Wisconsin, Massachusetts afid Dolby Adaptor Califoriiia comFTo rhindj*" Utt 119» Davis said-: r -A mJ "The curriculum : will be t . -, mostly lectures on evidence, MMM * ^proceedings before trial aaitf «S.« ^after . verdict, damestic. Omu Mr CONCORD F-ll 28 relations and juvenile delin­^j^quencj-," Davis said. ay Away FinarKinq Avail, WKNIUtCMS •8-»rack pktyer/reco?. tNgital counter • 2 Vu-metsrt rller 95gf 29.95 Funds OKd 11*1 169.95 m For AINT Student Government hasap­ proved a ,$250 "emergency^ Stow, -donation": for thei American Indians Now Texans' (AINT) gfs scholarship fund.Bill Parrish, mg" fl-I vice-president of Student » A .Government, said Thursday After AINT's original re­quest for $500 and a subse­quent proposal for $}00 were voted down by the Student jSeijate Wednesday, a proposal ,'for a $250 donation with a $250 ® interest-free loan was refused by AINT nitmiUms.An agree­ment/then was reached for ,» Student Government to make a i straight donation of $250, Parrish said. — -Holly Echo-Hawk, council 'chairperson of' AINT, said that although the first loan proposal was Apposed, AINT .will renew the proposal for an additional loan of $250 at the; .next Student Senate meeting. -'-All funds collected will go . toward financing AINTs "In­dians Discover Columbus Day" with featured speaker \Russell Means, Oct.13at Bull CreeJt Party Barn, Echo-Hawk ° said.: The profits from , ?" tbe benefit then will go into a scholarship, fond for "American Indian students,she: padded. ' . 5­TAPE Teac 210' WgW Cmbi*W Soil wit (MlWorr.) Urt $199.99 • tfrt­•' |HAA; IW-M-lifir«iifiCM0I.iiri •. 7^,,, WCwmiMM U)t„ *99$119.95 4M«M»nOO: u«t„ t-TrtfcllfirAi .$159.95 ihuwoon Urt-Uff_ no9 .aSSii«1$358 ,mw-$269 t-AkaiOXC4H l»tw MfltritoM .1379.95 MbvC«0«l .rr$379.95 *319 •299 CARTRIDGES SHUREM91ED list 54.95 ,, S2100 SHURE M44E. list 29.95..i..'12" SHURE VNlStRcpkicement Stylus • %11 for VIS Type III list39.95i .J24" r% SPEAKERS V • -^^5. RK373WL * r Wabfw • r'JwMHr. *l—Alkil Ciifa IXViSSS;*! :: • .Chan Samd • Un J7».K )0S4CMU«W.-Uif mw>: irtMMwir ,_wua-wjs teiijt.. kfe^*Ui-M Two w«ir r' Wsdtr WWMfar.2Wa* I29.« IVWMlM^Way 239.95 IVWM^lWw "•hm *9.95 '5p|lteJS7J0 iJMttMOW ITWmMM^ -•Sft m„ .uaiaisM few. .129/ tr«Mv4«My 199.95 *•rwrti lap, 7 3 Way•i, • 12" woftftr Urt 1«.»5.^-*99 ..~h no ..w RECORD CHANGERS mGorrard62 TurntobU oofv lilt $49.95 fmm 1 llht599.H 17« GAUXJG RTV-2J0.20 wctti rmt -FUit 1)9.95 hL SAKJUIIMutt. 120wotti nm JlhtJ».t5 HSHIR 504,90 tttrtts mi'.; " „ ^faqooiU«t599.95 I aw swv -sal ..'199" •249" >329" -s424" •509" •399"1 .>449" K 1: iI S: A o c 3 •W S* o Armadillo 3 World,'itM' 0 MtwortxC«90 CR02 O wBr Headqimrters TON(GflT-&-SAfURDAYi— ASLEEP AT THE If#--WHEEL' m cnM7Q BAMPl^ —^53.00 jgQVER ACCESSORIES |3 I «Sf" .• Ut(M| PIONIIR KP-300 • Cor uutttft FM stort* v.'...-?-*»>» rtYtrjt (ftMtt* * 18 wrtts tl powtr •