SG&fisl.* M - • mm -p i&gf* •* ^ '~ -« &&&* tmx­ *§MsfaHf 1 * **• *." -— . s®:j K&4, No. 76 Iks VQg ,,^m11s>W< •?? Please Recycle This Newspaper Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin t t r r — • • •Austin, Texas, Tuesday, October 15,-1974 Ten Cents. Twenty-Four Pages 471-4591 Destruction Cover-Up Trial Opens Nixon Charged as Key ure •81®" WASHINGTON (UPI) -The prosecu-statements Tuesday, and the prosecution : Ben-Veniste said LaHue made around-: .tion opened its Watergate cover-up case • then will call its first witness, former trip-flight to Miami on the samg day to . By RODOLFO RfeSENDEZ Monday charging that "even the Presi­White House counsel'John W. Dean III, get $50,000 and then reported back to ,• Texan Stiff Writer dent himself' was a key figure and that Nixon's chief accuser. Miti^iell.. The following day, he said,­ • The Texas Historical Commission: -jv. v-half of $50,000 given by.Rich^rd Nixon's . Ben-Veniste also alluded to some LaRue used-an assumed name to inform meeting in Dallas Monday officially ;L^|best; friend was designated for the ' hitherto unpublished White House tapes -William Bittman, "the attorney for \redesjgnated 1,591 recorded Texas arrestedburglars. the. prosecution* will seek to enter into '., Watergate burgler E. Howard Hunt, that historical landmarks named prior to Assistant''Watergate prosecutor .. evidence. « he had money to deliver to him/' •••-. '• -I9t3. Despite the action, the Shot ' Richard Ben-Venistejin a three-hour, 10-; On April 14,1973, as the alleged cover-• Dean, now in prisoh for obstructing Tower's fate remains unchanged, :; : minute openingstatement, said he would up began to unravel, Nixon asked his 1wo justice in the .Watergate case, began Patricia S. Morrison, supervisor of prove the cover-up was a .conspiracy top aides, H.R. Haldeman and John D--4 meeting much more frequentlywith Nix­ thp Tpvas Histffrii among 'the most powerful men in. the' Ehrlichman, who are defendants, about on in'February and Marchk-1973,\so that Commission, said. -vi--** government of the United States ...even development of a strategy should Dean he would, be able to. claim executive' Unless some way can be found to save the President'himself." • ~ " talk to prosecutorertheprosecutor said,-..and _the: .attorney-client" JhebuWing, Morrison said, demolition Five of Nixon's former aides are.on • THEY AGREED Dean had performed relationship^if summoned to testify ol the Shot.Tower.:is inevitable upon ex­trial In connection with an allegedeffort • valuable services in the past, Ben-before a congressional committee. » 1 piration of a 60*iay period, in which -to cover up the link between the i972 Veniste said, but then '-'considered a .. FORMER CAMPAIGN aide Jeb _.furtherjfe'molitfon'of Ih'e'oldstructure is™ 7 • Watergate burglary and Nixon's re-... strategy of pushing Dean outside the cir­Stewart Magruder told a !'shaken";' ceased. The 60-day agreement was election campaign. . cle of wagons around the White House'.' Kenneth W. Parkinson, a campaignreached Oct. 8 between Capita) National Ben-Veniste told the jury that Nixon's, Ben-Veniste quQtedrIyjixon';as^saying. ''lf' ;lawyer and no\y a defendant,-of top-level Bank, ownerof the Shot Tower, and Atty.« friend .Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo . yoi{serve the investigatorshor d'oevers. Jnvolvemeiiness than one month after Gen. John Hill. provided $50,000 in available campaign maybe they won't come buck for the • ^ the Watergate break-in:' But then he The action to redesignate the i, funds a month.before the 1972 'election:' maiii course." . :... • •t changed,his mind and told Parkinson the . historical landmarks came as a ''direct. , HALF OF IT was designated for the •/ During the sanie '"Cmversation.^ Ben-* "cover 'story"-tbait the Watergate- result" of the partial demolition of the m men-arrested for breaking into ; .Veniste said, "Tne President recognized burglars were on a "lark of their own." , MiShot Tower, Morrison said. : ; " : Democratic national headquartersat the that if Dean was guilty, half of his staff Parkinson looked up abruptly, his face An Austin district court last week rul-i' Watergate complex and half, was for "a-: .could be considered guilty." He said ' ashen, as.Ben-Veniste spoke. The other ed that,the building.had not been official­certain gubernatorial candidate," he Ehtllchman remarked during a conver­defendants rarely looked upand were ex­ ly designated a historic landmark in 1962 said. , v. : '' sation il days later that if Dean pressionless jas Ben-Veniste said the %'S when the bank applied for the Shot 1 —T^xan Staff Phofo by Andy Stewrmari The candidate was not identified,'and cooperated with the prosecutors",.''anim­-defendant's and unindicted co­ mwm Tower's-historic landmark status _ Paradox Ben-Veniste did not say whether Rebozo • peachment resolution" might be voted conspirators"sought to makethe break-in . The eourt ruled that certain am- was aware of the intended use of the by the House. at the.Democratic national!offices 'June , biguities in the wording of a 1957 law A steel fence seals off the sign .advertising the area near the Texas Unlorf money. : -" 'While 1 . 0 look like the work of a "bunch ofWest which was open for student assembly: The fence waserected Monday made the official .1962 designation in­ The opening prosecution statement ' March 2i; 1972, ta^ie of Nixon's talk with; nuts" who were "off on aJark of their by workers beginning Union Building renovation. A special supplement on valid: • " : consumed the • 10th day of the trial. Dean, Ben-Veniste*said, he kept construe" ownthe Union is indudea in.fhis edition of The; Daily Texan. * *— mmihwxit ing -Nixon's ^ The law was amended in 1973 to re- -Defense _ lawyere will make opening .inrr Wivnn'o statements m'erelym'MmI.. "a^ . Nonetheless-, he said, the defendants ; quire 60 days notice be made to the Tex­i drawing him out:" , -and_ co-conspirators destroyed^files of: as Historical Commission of any altera­"It's not a good story, but it's the best Operation Gemstone,-under which the Married Student Housing tion of a designated historic landmark. we can do," Ben-Veniste said -Nixon bugging allegedly was carried out, and Judge Herman Jones ruled the Shot •replied. Regarding Nixon's statement' paid out moire than $400,000 in "hush' Tower and other landmarks awarded that ji million would be made available' money" for the silence of the' burglars. historical medallions before 1973 had not for the original defendants,according to "This is the question", ladies and Pet Owners ^technically been designated as land­ Ben-Veniste, Nixon said "It's Dean's -gentlemen, we ask you to keep in mind, marks. o word against the President's." . •' why were these payments made?" Ben­ ^Mornsoirsaid fines or jai°l sentences ;•'"Unless,'' Ben-Veriiste paraphrased Veniste tbld the jury of eight blacks and could" not.be brdughf against violators^ the two men jas considering, "Dean had four whites --nine of them women. m because the 1973 law, under which the "—secrctly-taped-his-cotmersations withthe Lawyers for both,sides met Sirica in By Contract historical agency operates, does not in­ President." • • •" private during the morning, delaying for­clude a penalty clause. By SONDRA STALCUP 'Brackenridge duplex resident complain­. ^residents will be held at 7:30_p.m, DURING A CONVERSATION April two hours the start of -open-court ."Legally, there is nothing Hat can be Texan Staff Writer ed. ; Wednesday in the Married Student Com­•15, Ben-Veniste said, Nixon asked proceedings. done," she said. Residents .of Married Student Housing Married Student Housing Managerf: munity Center at the Gateway complex. Ehriichman to describe the cover-upand On trial for conspiracy are Haldeman Morrison indicated the next found with pets after Nov. 1 will have George Janning said apartments would People interested in discussing the pet . Ehriichman replied, "You didn't want-and Ehriichman, formerly Nixon's Legislature might produce a bill that their contract terminated immediately, not be searched, and if a report about a policy are ur-ged to attend. ' those fellows (the^ burglars) in public to Numbers 1 and 2 aides; former Atty. would include a •penalty clause. • Robert Cooke, director of housing and pet is made, it will bechecked by the site disrupt the campaign." i f: Gen. Mitchell and former Asst. Atty: Joseph M. Grant, president of Capital food service," s^id Monday. •supervisor while-the resident is home..-Those having questions or suggestions . He said that John N. Mitchell, .one of Gen. Robert C. Mardian, who left the National Bank, said the commission's The "no-pet'.', policy has existed for COOKE ALSO SAID apartments.would concerning the pet policy and' the the five defendants, told campaign aide • Justice Department to go theCommittee • action' does not change anything in several years, but until now, the ad­not be searched. After Nov. 1 site super­memorandum may contact Cooke at 471-Fred LaRue about a month before the to Re-Elect the President; and Parkin­ regard to the building. ministration tried to enforce it without visors will be-.,watchful of p?ts ,in the 3136, or Jannmg at 474-6473. Cooke said 1972 election to get some cash from son. who was -a re-election committee Unless someone else can convince the; using the contract cancellation penalty, area, and neighbors often report pets, he he.would be more than happy to consider ReBozo, who .allegedly had it available lawyer; Mitchell,: Haldeman a'nd bank-"Otherwise, Grant said, continued Cooke .said. .v said. " a workable policy if someone offers one. from extra campaign funds. Ehriichman are also charged with lying!. ' ^demolition of the Shot Tower is likely : However,-resident complaints, sanita­Jf suspected,'the: supervisor will check the 60-day "agreement expires. tion and'safety problems -and cost of with the residents, they will go to the policing the area have prompted the en­housing office to discuss the situation forcement of the existing policy and they will have tomoveout if they do­ nese Business prohibiting cats, dogs and similar own a pet, he said animals, he said. A memorandum infor­When asked how long residents have ming the residents of the Nov. I policy before they must move if their contract reaffirmation is being circulated now. is-terminated, -Cooke said, "We won't Cooler . . Each resident must1 sign a statement in-r throw them out on the street in a. couple­ 16 Injured dicating he has read the memo.'tookev ,^ of hours or anythinglike that; Each case Tuesday's weather added will be considered separately, and they TOKYO (AP)— A bomb exploded Monday In the offices of the interests in metals, machinery; chemicals; fbodstuffs, textiles#®?: will-be cooler and THE MARRIED STUDENT Housing'-\ will probably have.a few days.' giant trading firm* Mitsui and Co., injuring 16 persons, including' and,other, products. Council did not endorse the memoran-,* cloudy with rain in the Texas law requires all landlords to five policemen who had been alerted by: telephoned threats and Both the Mitsui and the Mitsubishi buildings arewithin several ' dum at its meeting last week, but most'-, give residents 30 days notice if they are were searching for the'device • '• blocks of the outer grounds of the palace where Emperor .a,; morm'rtg. A 30 per­of thfe council reacted favorably, coun­ evicted, a spokesperson from the Austin It was the second big Japanesecorporation to be bombed insix Hirohito lives. . cent chance of rain ex­cilperson Susan Randle said. ' Tenants Council said. r~t-S >' • weeks. On Aug. 30 an expiosipn In front of Mitsubishi Heavy In­ ® : Other residents were not pleased. One'a There was no immediate link betweeq the two blasts. Police dustries Ltd; offices killed eight persons and injured more than ists through midday resident's site supervisor told her the , Cooke said the housing-service11would1 said they never had heart of the organization mentioned by.the 300. . ­ Tuesday. ..bousing staff was hiring someone tov abide by this law if the pet policy man who telephoned the warnings — the "Organization for The Mitsui blast occurred on the third floor in the eight-story " aj'peek in windows'' to discover pets?i< s problem falls under its jurisdiction, and downtown Tokyo 25 Development of the Asian Continent." . -> office building in minutes. after anAnother resident;is moving out so she f ; he. wlll have: to checki.with the-housing -anonymous caller phoned four different Mitsui departments.at .-.Responsibility for the Mitsubishi bombing was claimed by a>,.i' -Filing- can -Itfpp hpr rfltfj, hnt saiH nn| service's legal counsel-before he sets a : three-minute intervals, saying "A bomb has' been placed in the group whicfi' identified itself as "The Wolf" and said the action everyone can afford to moveand a policy definite iluinbei of days fui moving out. ouuaing. Evacuee It." was aimed at"Japanese imperialists that feed on the flesh of the ­ F i Iing deadIine f or allowing pets if a deposit is paid should RENTAL RATES would be affected if A warning Was broadcast over a public address system after dead behind the mask ot commerce."— —— -•—: five vacant seats in be considered. ,v­ pets were permitted, Cooke said, adding the first threat was received, and most of the firm's 6,000 The Mitsubishi blast led to fears Japanese radicals were mak­. "Th.ey have .never kicked out anyone -; that-most of the residents did not want the Student Senate employes were led out of the building before the explosion. The ing big business their target. In recent years, Japanese radical "for anything before, so why are they this, so it has become necessary to^send others were led out moments later. has been extended to ... .... groups generally have been more active in carrying out .-rstarting-.now? There are plenty of the memorandum and reaffirm the con­.One of the injured was reported in serious condition. Damage' terrorism outside Japan. They -also had been splintered by dis- Friday. -residents with back rent due,-and their tract cancellation policy. was confined mostly tp.the area,of the explosion. : putes over leadershipand thriven underground In battles with riot contracts are not cancelled," a -A meeting of MarriedStudent Housing. Mitsui isone of Japan's two largest general trading firms, with police. ! .. _ Barry *13 Whitman Coverage launched Career By IRWIN SPEIZER pardon., -Mc ( ^ v v-sity reminiscences, Jagoda continued the monologue^ Texan Staff Writer ; He will also fly aboard Air'Force One as the pool": "WHEN I LEFT the Universityin 1966; itwas a verjf' As an eminent memberof the University jogwalisnfe.fel producer for three,network's cpv.ering Fork's schedul­;%;'exciting place to be. Harry Ransom waspresident, and faculty observed; people who read The r4e\^Vork . ed trip to Southeast Asia. • -John-Silber was here. You had the feeling you were i Times are a different anjmal altogether. . : Jagoda attributes his success to luck; being in the part of a University striving to be great. A case in point is avid Times reader Barry Jagoda/'? ~ —right place at the right time. ' • « Si« "Silber used to say that the reason he.was at Texas CBS -Emmy award-winning producer and-University fl',-:pi In fact, Jagoaa*Stajents are'quiteformidable. TheriP 'was because if he stood up in class and said, 'God is graduate, who was interviewed by; The Texkn .while • -• ftvls never any doubt that he'is inr control of the inter­dead,' he would-get an argument. If he did that up yislting friends in Austin last weekend view yvcu East, students would just say; 'What else is new?* I|s$«jj$godai30j entered theUniversity in 1962 inthe new-;-,.-Jiiv He answers questions before they are asked, in ' "i came back to Austin in 1973 to cover;(former"^.JJ^crfiated 'American Studies program and immediate!^ -torents of words all spoken-in a curt and precise President) Johnson's funeral. In some ways, the' " went to work for The Texan. ' r manner and strung together with/ immaculate gram­doijnsand constructionmade the University look like AFTER HIS graduation in'1966, he went to New. mar, His commentscan be transferred almostwithout Brooklyn/' . ' York and took a job as a copy boy with NBO News. A • •-editing. The man is an organizational wizard. .c.s,,; fr^m THAT conclusion, Jagoda moved back! into ' • year later, Charles Whitman climbed the Towef and "The role of the.press is to keep the toes of govern* . the1 field of journalism and the coverage of the 1972 amidst the mass murders, Jagoda managed to contact > * m^nt to the fire'," Jagoda stated, adding^ "The press . . presidential election , ,H a professor in the building « • "jA ^' should have an adversary relationship with thegovern­"Dan Rather would always tell us, 'Let's beat the ' 'i-A Jagoda kept,phone contact throughout the Incident; ment at all levels." g^biscuit-company (NBCf)."Before we wentout he would ^ and NBC was'able to give running commentary on it.^v" Jagoda.Knitted,|iis brow and talked for 10 jmiriutes ^•-"always ask if we had our dimes. In case of an' ^ NBtHSewg-subsequgntly hired-Jagoda^as^ati intern ' ^ithout a break. j^ " -f'7 ^^assassination, itwas imperativethat vou had a dime to , correspondent, In the Washlnjgton_office .When a MThe old theory of journalism was*1o keep the 'trr^make a phone,call to the newsroom reporter was promoted and taken off the Washington -" ^-reporter's point of view{ oMt pf the^tory. This, is still Reporters are extremely competitjive. You guararf 'be$t, JagodaTuinded his.job." the theory of wiixs Jouimalism Jt is the only kind nf-,-^your ideas with ydur life." 1 s . In-1968,' Jagpda's coverage of fofriier President /wi-journalism 'that can really be trusted, The classic Jh*The intervlew ended, Jagoda'picked up a newspaper, f -fclu.nlummg'rt ftmni-df In a nrfimotinn to failure of It is the Sen. rJosephJMcCarthy era, rvyhen "Jtf^It was The New YorkTimes. By special arrangement, j.assi^nme^ts editor. ni'uuitm printed whiiiwar hn said Thts-ft not mv ^t'-.inanria'g friends have Hie Times delivered to a local & Jagpda.-,o)iang$d stations in-1970, becoming a w#i .; Beret leader Paul Hernandez; Mayor Roy BUtler.agreed at 'Saturday s; protest march to •meet: with , East. Austin residents at, 7:30 p:m. at EI Centro Chicano, 105 San Mar­ .cos St. in East Austin. Mon­ day, the entire council, minus f-*'iV.*J : Councilman Berl Handcox, g£*$Vfl ~>* announced it^oyld meet at 6 .p'.m: Tuesday in the Electric 3vW» Building Auditorium, 301 West IMl Ave. . v v,. Bft *V ' BUTLER SAID he schedul­ *« rX ,; t <* •*££? ed the-meeting "so as not to conflict" with the later meeting in East Austin.' Asked f WiMo by Wft H«b« __i£ he planned to attend the Butler, Long (l-r) at press conference*Vr CMcano-c^tiF _ _ k ' p \ / r . , p,i agreed Saturday, Butler said. A l^lgi « r im &V#S\£ *k^t?u JEANS -PANTS •Y^ VSr4& *1X9 Reg. to 1700 r*Ji- -^ i-.K..' \ r^ •&%*!*> $goo ^«s SRgfej 8-*<*3 i*t-r,$sj&: ££iy&i_ nsl A -M. I «. -OjT?" ^ f&gsfr 1 |MI 'V *5aV* |-sS.,3lf , 240% Qaa-' ||fe$H.. tes tefc ,.;-' V-K?, IPS |6^ sr-s^vi ' >&$' <-fS^. ^^£.: •iT^t;'-: ?*§ P'~?:i: «&££ ZStZtti J&py £V<»»•;'­»~*r­rlH frS fzH- Jv­mn 9n-•»»'. **vr W>\. er_* s-4 &V F~f. ¥< f$. S€­ fc~:' <$v> •:&«v'Se '6' • i**+' :• 4^ * J-. :4'v #>< vV« VC The GoodFoodStores Natural Foods WEEKLY SPECIALS *3$ Specials good from October 15*20 We gladly accept USDA Food Stamps Deaf Smith Brand " iVheat Bread Made from organicl^hole wheat flour and pare unprocessed Te^tas honey ­regularly 75c ^ . E4IUoaf65c 3per customer .­ Central American Bananas 10c lb Unit 5 lbs. "" "'1^ Easy Peelers1 Tangerines "II; U.S. #1Russett Potatoe fhreoMiveBlcatiQcatjtfHi; 1. lldl WcsiStfi atBaylor '472*1942 2..123E«st Nortl^ix>op«t Ave.F 454-26 3. 900 We«t 29tfchiPearl 474-2034 9431 N I»rfTatH0wJberH 836-6436 LS^lfrHaiicojck^B^CTe* 4S3-4707 -"No; I'm not goingover there. ^believe it,-" Butler!said. "I'd I'committed;to have a' be happy to cancel the '-meeting as soon,as we could, •meeting if .that's his wish.' If but I wanted to schedule it' He wants to complain about where other interested people-the location, we-can .always could come. His (Her­, 'setit forsome other, time."­nandez's) facilities are not • 'The council r%nbers were Adequate for a crowd." . • s joined by Human; Relations Commission Chairman Joe Hernandez galled the Lung In inviting East Austinchange "an effort to undercut residents, organizations ahd -andeeonfusfr" and said-"-We­all interested personsiff at^'wanted to hold the kind of .tend :the Tuesday meeting. meeting, where people who ••Members of the city's-Civil. . live a:half-block orfive blocks Service^ Commission also willaway could walk to. • be invited to attend. •LUNG SAID the purpose of"CHICANO PEOPLE don't the meeting would'be to con­feel comfortable coming to solidate information >about West Austin," Hernandez; police relations' problems in said. "Put a.chicanoin a eom­. plete anglo setting and he East Austin, brought to a tur­won't participate. moil in the l£st week after,the death of Terburcio Soto in a Butler -challenged Her­ light with police. nandez' charge that the move "We.have heard complaints would impair ojEas* Austin in bits and pieces," Lung said. . community participation; "I Sgg; NOTICE By SHERIDA HUGHES: In compliance with The Student Health Center Institutional,Rules.Seclion • restricted the• dutifes.of four. 10-204, the Patio between . physician's assistants -Friday the Academic Center and the Texas Union has been 1 awaiting clarification of their- designated as an area for duties by the State Board of Mse by students and Medical Examiners, Pr. PaiiL organizations "for public discussion.. and peaceful, Trickett, healtti center direc-' assembly or demonstra/ion • tor, said Monday. without; prior approval. TTie boardtof examiners has / At the time the-Union been investigating hbw the relocates, a new site will be m MF- Jk >», •a& J-v% Gambling Raid Z")&i •v&i More Names _ ife * w "At this meetmg we?can get everybody together and get it all oufand go from there." , Eyed in Casefc 5S Butler emphasized the city-IK"'" has already madea numberof further investigation into changes in police procedures, last week's gambling raid by in response to suggestions of Austin police intelligence of­the Brown Berets. < ficers may producefrom 10 to HOO names of bettors including "••'They "isflered us 'seven some "well-known'' recommendations, and all seven were adopted fey the**5' U' ^ impson, head of the ^,mps°n' head in­ bouneil," Butler said. vestigation. said Monday; • HERNANDEZ TERMED :.-t A former: University-stu­••the council's response to7 dent, HaroId.Livers, .23, and Brown Beret suggestions eight other Austinites were "jast a play on words. For ex­arrested Friday, following a ample,?we asked that another six?week investigation by of­agency be allowed to in­ ficers of the* Department of vestigate complaints against' Public Safety, the Austin •the police. All thfey did waslet Police, TexasRangers.and the somebody-else take' Oie com-­ Travis County district at­ plaint, then channel it back to', torney's office. the police department for in-: : The oames, which will be vestigation.-It .-doesn't, make-,; forwarded to the district, at­ any difference." torney's office •: for possibleSis DutiesLimited :•• •V'Our investigator: checked^^-eason for the health center )ut comolaint student's5;!:^inv^stipation hut cncf-ninti^ out a complaint a student's "-},^investigation but speculated mother filed with us about a,"jjjhat the health center feels it designated to replace the , health center-was using the', board of examiners has taken Patio, and notice will be . assistants in response to a no action on the matter,"made in The Daily Texan." parental complaint. Dr. -Spires said. Bryan.Spires, secretary of the ' The secretary said he did ooara,-explained. —^ not know't mtm­ •&S& * OPEN MEETING BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNIVERSITY CO-O^ERAf IVE SOCIETY 1 , l«L * " 11?/ .;>V ALUMNI LOUNGE 3rd floor. Townes Hall i Law School). . 7:30 P.M. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1974 -m. Main Topic: Revision of charter and by-laws Having to dieal with election of student members to the Board of Directors. v VOU'RE INVITED TO A BIRTHDAY PARTY h- When:. Oct. 18th 'til Nov.sl6th Where; 7530 Burnet Rd; SEsr$­or in Highland Mall. M Occasion The beginning of our-ifpi;: 3 _ 10th year It's our party, but you get the presents m mrmix tsm >m The. Lowest Prices of The Year Friday's Texan) '6 ^ 1%. T r F -• Iff-T •* ^ g ^ T\7 T\ ai i"~y T\ jr iliS J iKIK'l CENTER . physician's assistant'at thesis violating the board's policy health center. It was a routine';^^^?'regarding the use of investigation in which the m-physician's assistants vestigator presented the -*'j The health center has not board's policy regardinjg ,been violating any laws in us-Jrfiysician's assistants to Dr. ing-physician's assistants; Trickett," Spires said. ;;.™ther, "there are no laws in . "To my knowledge, the,, ,-JTexas governing the use of. .doctor s assistants as there !n som? other states,'' Aw,ett •' ' of the assistants while 've clarify our position with ttos board -this is only-a .tem-porary thing,', he said. Physician's assistants are highly trained personnel with )wo yearsof medical training, ViS® prosecution, will .be, .deterw; mined >t>y identifying the-­owners of "gambling paraphernalia," collected in;: the raid; Simpson said. . f Simpson -.called. the six or seven large boxes "of • paraphernalia from the raid "a good haul,'' and said the * whole: investigation has gone oVer < The: b'o'ft^Sbntiine-d*' " telephones, television • 'sets, calculators, -line sheets, bet­tifi^ slips, bank records and several checks already made out to customers. DPS analysts will finish thoir investigation of the con- Simpson add;... traband Firidayi Simpsor •one. Edward ' Randal • Petri, 33,. were charged and released on '•PWrSa*­bond Monday morning, Petri, 01$ nampd -JiMwi&srfte"• sealed indictments, was-on a hunting trip in Colorado when - the arrests took place and will be in Austin-Wednesday with his attorney, Simpson said. rscv '""eSnng Utticer Incorrectly Named The Texan incorrectly iden­titied the arresting officer in Monday's story about the arrest of Brown Beret Paul Hernandez. Hernandez ; was story stated. Joe wasinvolved in the fatal shooting of Ter­bucio Soto" on Oct.-;6, but • Manuel was not. The two are brothers. : "-^ Hernandez pleaded not guil ty to four traffic violations, Thfey have been a "tremen-, threia fbr not havinga driver's dous )ielp to the health ^license, one for using a fic­ center" arid have been Well titious name. He posted bond received by the students, of $17,50 on the three charges Trickett said. ­of np driver'slicense, and53rd The assistants at the health . . District Court Judge Herman ~center^fixanuneipatifints.jnd—ljon.es_dropped_the-£harge. nf prescribe medicine,, but fictitious identification. .; prescriptions still must be Hernandez will appear in authorized by a staff doctor. -court sometime next month. Photo Service 222W.19-th ' 5324 CameronRd. NIKKORMAT FTN CHROME WITH 50 MM F/2-IENS V;; "2881 *32.50 NIKON CASE NOr-487 ]"fA Purchased.with Camera 'A Price BELL/HOWELL FD 35 F/1.8 ,$17Q9S Compare toCanon TIBwith COM .| # Y THIS AD CAN BE PRODUCED FOR 10% OFF ON B/W STUDTMAN PHOTO FINISHING : (FINISHING OffSR EXPIRES I2/3J/74/ EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed Men & Women: .. EARN $10 WEEKLY CASH PAYMFNT FOR DONATJOfeL ••WfifcSft.::-'-i-. ' x-f \ * Austin Blood Components, Inc< OPEN: MON. & THUJIS. 8 AM to7 P.M. TUES. & FRL 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. " CLOSED WED. & SAT. 409 W.6th 477-3735 M TEXAS SKINDIVING SCHOOLS RRESALE mm SpeorGunl tight! *. » 4 SAVEiiPTO •* j&S&v-^ ttarylw withU«.#r. m s-l­ 453-7676? October 14,15ft 16 ^10 AM to 7 PM -1 <-4 t -f *""* -tl •firt •••JL ^9ge 2 Tuesday, October 15/ 1974 THE DAILY'TEXAN iwp %*» XS"-J'3- -J>? 35 H -?«5 A&iiX •^i ' 4®g«s» ^ , 'making tire Ankara governmentfeel that Ford, however, called the cutoff "an , -it is not being pressured by strong-arm Egyptian President Sadat greets U.S. Secretary of State Kissihqer. act which is harmful even to those-; • methods, into p^ace talks. . ' --• 'tis ' But the" House, urged on by a small » group of critics headed by Rep. John , Brademas, D-Ind., and other represen­tatives of Greek descent, Friday ret. jected, 187T171, a Senate-passed com­ Sadat's By The Associated Press control. Israel pullsi-back ;from , territory oc­ promise to suspend the obligatory putoff U.S. diplomaticinitiatives toend last 6c-•»;«. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat They said Assad also threatened to cupied during the 1967 war. - : tober's Middle East war. assured Secretary of State Henry A. .refuse the mandate of w •* _. to renew . -.— .-the—, Kissinger told 'newsmen outside In Jerusalem, sirens went off! to mark Efforts House Kissinger on Monday that he will try to United-Nations-observer-force-in-the--^-Sadat^-residence, "There_are positive the first anniversary of the enil of lastgain, support for interim agreements Golan Heights on Dec! 1 unless Syria indications,that we are making progress October's" war, " 'and former Defense" with Israel at the upcoming Arab sum-1 mlt. gets substantial signs its demands will toward a just peace" in the Middle East. Minister Moshe Dayan signed a petition be accepted, § , . Kissinger also-announced he would circulated by the right-wing Likud bloc- Kissinger'obtained. the pledge atfc,-, Asked whether Egypt was preparedureuareotow „muKl return to the. Middle East thefirst week opposing Israeli withdrawal froip oc­ Sfldat s residence outside Cairo, flew to ^jvoffer guarantees tolsrd'el in*return for a of November, following visits to Russia cupied Jordan. Damascus for atough three-hour session ^withdrawal from Sinai, Sadat replied for1 nuclear arms talks and' the India? Dayan's move raised speculation hewith Syrian President Hafez Assad. then*:"i;'Why am I asked about guarantees? I subcontinent. would quit the ruling Labor Party and went on to Algeria. myself, I need guarantees." A; a high level Egyptian As he. spoke, join Likud. . , Syriansources said Assad insisted on aj..;„,.. But he agreed to take the initiative at delegation arrived in Moscpw for talks In Amman, the semiofficial Jordanian Geneva peace conference, whichS^the Arab summit and said he was "very on improving ties withRussia/arranging newspaper A1 Rai said Israel hasKissinger now opposes, and an Israeli" 'optimistic" about the session in Rabat, . a visit to Cairo, by Soviet leader Leonid retracted ah offer to withdraw from the commitment for complete withdrawal, Mbrocco, on Oct. 26. Brezhnev and working out -new arms occupied Jordan in By RICHARD FLYi West Bank of ex­ ^from occupied Arab territories, in par-•/... The West German news magazine Dfer deals. Texan Staff-Writer'/' change for a declaration by Jordan en-' t'culai Uie-SyriaiHSofan Heights whiGh^-^-Spiegetquoted SadaLas-saying he_would._ . A special faculty Senate" committee Buss_ia_practicallv stopped ail arms ding the state of war between.the two Israel has said cannot revert to' Syrian -be reader to sign a peace agreement if .!.• appointed to woiit with tlniversity and shipments to Egypt after. Egypt; backed -countries. System aQministFatars -oirtheTJroces^r for selecting a "neW president tolinil gefieral agreement with their proposals news capsules . from University President Ad, Interim Lorene Rogers Monday.Trapped Submarine Freed-. Senate Chairperson Edwin Allaire said Hutchison To Return to Dominican Republic the meetingswas "a kind of opening .dis- INVERKEITHING, Scotland (UPI) — Two Americans were trapped MIAMI, Fla. (AP) American diplomat Barbara Hutchison arrived in cussion'of.what the Senate wants." for more than six-hours Monday in a midget submarine at the bottom of the United States Monday, saying she has no qualms about returning next THE COMMITTEE originally Was ap­ the North Sea-before divers unsnarled a rope fouling the sub's propeller^ pointed to meet with Chancellor' Charles „week to her job in the Dominican Republic,where she was held captive by . and their craft rose safely to the surface. ' LeMaistre two weeks ago but did not do pro-Communist kidnapers for 12 days. so after he relayed through Rogers an in­ The two njen,Gilbert Blevinsand Leslie Lynch,£oth of Louisiana, were "It,was sort pf a fluke-type of kidnaping anyway, and Iget the choiceof • itial proposal for the selection process. described by rescuers as "feeling fine" aboard the support Ship William going back there or somewhere else. But I love the country, and theire are ;. LeMaistre said there would be student • Dampier. many things I still plan to do there." • and faculty representation with vote on The Royal Navy said the accident occurred when the submarine was the administration selection committee, The veteran foreign service officer said her only worry was that the- working on a pipeline intended to cany pil ashore from a newly dis­ in addition to-a separate campus ad-. U.S. Embassy would assign a bodyguard to her. "I sure wouldn't want visorycommittee., . covered North Sea oil field operated by Shell and Exxon about 180 miles that,".she said with a smile. * • " The chancellor also proposed no per­ coastV v i&TSS off Dundee on Scotland's east coast; Robert Kleberg Jr. Dies son be recommended to the.Board of Regents until that person'has been con­ Stocks Continue Upswing KINGSVILLEMAP) — Robert Kleberg Jr., who directed; one of'the sidered by the advisory group. world's greatv "ranching empires, will be buried'Thursday where it all NEW YORK (AP)' -The!#!* The Senate felt, however, that not ­ stock market swept ahead to^f-j m.IILlfcl.• yt| i N»JMES«URMI began — at Texas' -historic King Ranch, ' enough pbwer-over the selection rested TVHM nWIW v1 3# IKntrMi •J Kleberg, president of the King Ranch, died Sunday night in Houston of in the hands of students and faculty. another strong gain Monday butfff complications following abdontinal surgery. He-was 78." LeMAISTRE gave no indication of how i ran into profit-taking-:/ some the campus group would be selected, but 673.50 Kleberg was credited with development of the Santa Gertrudis cattle pressure toward the close. r-C$] the Senate, wants to follow procedures breed. The Dow Jpnes average of 30 'y; adopted by the. Qeneral Faculty in 1972 ./industrials, up points w Mexican Oil May Hit 10 Million Barrels Daily and n.ot yet approved by the chancellor. ' Z7 at 15.33 MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexican officials continued their/refusal Mon­Under the procedures, nine facultymidafternoon, finished with a^'.i members would be selected by the day,to estimate the possible yield of a rt^jor oil discovery in southeastern 15.33 gain at673.50 and raised its ' ­ General Faculty; and three students -M.H14 Mexico, but they did indicate that.it could reach 10 million barrels a day. total advance since the start of ~ would tfe picked under a'plan determined last wuuk lu 09 puiut&. -—— Production this high would make Mexico, one of the world' major oil by Student Government. prodllpinfT niHhn^-n-pniffffrn it h/lH tiofhrS WorlH War TT Wilson Sees 2 Years' Belt- Prime, Minister Speqks to Britain; Heath Considers Quitting nr LONDON (UPI) -Prime Minister "Fighting inflation is a" matter of general increase in living standards.1' ^ Th^ Conservative Party, beaten inHarold Wilson told Britons Monday they national' survival," Wilson said In a Wilson's grim, warning to inflation-A three of the last four"general electionsface at least two yearsof belt-tightening teleyislon and radio brpadcast message plagued Britain was his first since his began, what political informantsto survive the country's gravest to the nation. ,"We"cannot look forward Labor Party's victory by a narrow predicted would be a long and probably.economic crisis since World War H: . over, the next two years or more to any margin of three parliamentary seats in ._ hard searching post mortem, with a big .Thursday's general election. , .d -.question-mark over the future of party >Wilson said his Labor government,^,leader, Edward Heath, a former prime backed by its new though narrow man­minister. date, plans to go through with plans to -Simon's Grain Talks The 16-man executive board of the so- nationalize large sections of industry c^lled "1922 Committee,'.' which/com­still in private hands. prises all_ rank-and-file Conservative In U.S.S.R? 'Friendly! —At the name-time he promised con­ Party members of Parliament, met tinued existence of "a vigorous, atert, '• . . MOSCOWUPI) -TreasurySecretary "which has been blocked hy congressmen privately to start the "Where do we go responsible and profitable'private sec­ . _ William E. Simon said Monday he had ;£v seeking .an easing of Soviet emigration from here" debate. tor." cordial discussions with Soviet trade of­restrictions: He also promised help for businesses!??UUolllCNCay Political.informants saidn^am.ioHeath isain-mi? •'••••i **v. aiov pivtiuocu licic ficials abdut a |500 million U.S. grain "We consider passage of the trade bill .: threatened with bankruptcy because of£i8S derheavy pressure to bow out. But they Aidos^id-teJhoped-to meptComi-jnationalfanily," WUsdnsaid commissioner % SIMONSAItMilstaHwalsoUAkM< ' nunlhpfiitSlK>r(>tjirv YrtniA ' *ij-7 J.iji ii/ii—'-•i.„ 1 |?^Hthe Administration')-1' m mm. 111 guest viewpoint iiS®}. EDITORIALS Co-Op Board voting Page 4 Tuesday, October 15, 1974 By JOHN E. NEWMAN §S||.are'ln schoolanother year or more..1am. (Editor's note: Newman is vice-i''" not suggesting that if you do not attend, chairmanolthe University Co-Op Board . -everything will go to hell. It won't. Death, taxes and U\-.°' Directors and.a law student.) ^ \ However, if youhave some suggestions SjJ-If . you had been at. the Co-Op. Boards r on how to improve the proposed election meeting last month you would have-. -of.student board members, attendingthe the Austin Citizen LeiacjOev heard most of the reasons why the divi-T, ^ meeting would be a much better idea After helping cut taxes while promising no death, the Austin Citizens dend wjpg cut. It was a complicated than writing a lefter to The Texan after issue, but hearing it first-hand and hav-the election in'.February. Then it would . League is' up and goingagain, with another newsletter. Thisone was announ­ ing the opportunity to ask questions#. :be.too late tochange, just like last year's cing preparations for the spring City Council elections, only six months would have made it somewhat easier to > •. . V dividend. t • away.. — •'.-;7 . ' . ' understand. Nevertheless, the damage The objectives ofthe proposal set out . was done in the. years..befwe the--in an advertisement in this issue are ? The best line was this one: "It'salso very obvious to those of us who have meeting; the meeting simply, comr fourfold: "first, .4o separate the Cp-Op munlcated the results to the public, gs election from the Student Government been involved in this that this is going to be an all-out fight between 7V.--At the meeting this month the main -elections,since theCo-Op is not a part of moderates and liberal-radicals ... Austin is up for grabs and.the radicals i;r, topic of discussion is the proposal for the ' Student Government;' second, to en­ have committed themselves to taking over."' . { , v "election of student board members; courage comparison of the candidates;. ; Potentially, it is not as exciting a topic third, to get board members-elect into setting or Presidwrt- Jay Johnson, former City Council member who was the major ACL leader^' ;i.' as the dividend the monthly meetings as soonas possible : Spurr's firing, but it is a nice way, to so they can become more familiar with behind/the tax cut, outlined in the newsletter how the ACL was planning to r., spend a-Tuesday evening if you happen to the Co-Op's operations and the bbard's, stop the "liberal-radical" machine from "taking over:" , ?•. be interested in the continued vitality of functions; and fourth, to draw attention i >4the Co-Op. . ;gi to how the Co-Op operates. With these " Survey Austin^ population "to determine theitems and issues which the ' Each year two student members are : objectives in mind, look over the citizens feel will be of major importance in the election." . selected for a two-year term on a liineft proposal, give itsome thought,and if you person board which sets the policy for a^ have some criticisms or suggestions,, as'Store having salesof over |8million, 117" come over to the law school, Alumni • Build a slate of candidates who share^ihi6n^'c6mpatible"withthoserof­ ^umime—emplayes—139^ part-time _Lounge. third floor, at 7:30 n.m. Tuesday the ACL' membership." I/ 3 .employes and its share of prwlems in a and voice-your opinion. If you have m ''soft" economy. How the board something else planned or don't know u-* it-Sell the ACL-sponsored. slate,to the voters. ­ *"AJF ,rjS^'menibers are elected will affect who is where the law school is, call the Co-Op % ^ /^elected, which will affect howthe store Consumer Action Liner at 478-4436 and -« Take all measures possible to insure that' the middle-of-the-road,' Two chickens in every pot and... ' ' is run, which will affect the amount of have your thoughts taken down, for con­ average, moderate citizens of Austin get out and vote during this elecUon the dividend; which willaffect you,if you -sideration at the meeting. i £?< firing line Ic Gender ta ,AZ\ President Ford's veto Monday of the foreign aidappropriations bill carry­ ing a ban on U.S. arms aid to Turkey shows strong influence of ttte • To the editor: attended the Brown Beret demonstration tor seems rather churlish — particularly tant OA, he tries to .cany, them out te a Kissingerian gunboat diplomacy Richard Nixon found so agreeable. Fofd's I have and have' had strong feelings were clearly identified as "observers'' if the actor may have, like Wyman, profe^ional manner.-Did Russell ask that the equal rights amendment is a and not "advisers" as reported in The pleased the audience as much as he either man what he thoughton'partlcular rationale is that thecutoff wpuld destroy our leverage with Tiirkey.in work; necessity, and J;dislike anything I feel Texan. We were working with, two at­offended the reviewei^^ issues? If so, what did they say? I—ing towards-a solution to the Cyprus rrisis Fnrd hasn't said whywe did not nay impair its passage. torneys, one of whom advised the Helen Dry Whether Gotcher cries during jury " • use this "leverage" to keep Turkey from invading Cyprus in the first place. On the same page ot your.uct. s issue" arguments* while having humorous . , . under^e-titler"Pander-person" is a sibilities before the demonstration '-; Garbling value, seems a particularly trivial thingFprd s lame excuse for the CIA's involvement in Chile was also a turkey!7f" letter from Myron Smith of the started. To the editor: £ to base opinions on: a lawyer'q^trialBecauseecause the Allende government was allegedly about to silence its opposi--astronomy department, with which I We also did not "represent" the law I didn't get to my Friday's Texan until behavior has very little to do with-his totally agree. Lower on the page I notic­ tion, the CIA — in the interests of democracy — had to install a government school, except in that we resize the yesterday, or I would, have written outlook on' issues. A little crying is seen ed that Wayne Bell is a "vice-' community may perceive us. that way, .sooner about the garblingof my question on the defeiue side of the table, too. Whidi allows no opposition. And now we learn that the United States is'sellS chairperson" while'Emma Linn is a and so try to conduct ourselves accor-^to President Lwene Rogers at theTACT ~ Admittedly, Mr. Russell'sopinions are iiig:supersonic jet fighters to the Chilean goveraitient. , ."chairwoman." I really believe that this dingly". , ^.'meeting last Thursday-I'didn't ask her his own and plainly presented as such, sort of silliness can get out of hand. ' Susan Lippman^.then about the dismissal of department, but I feel I'm entitled to a little rnorfe • It ,we truly cared for .the democracy so .extolled in our foreign policy English is a language relatively Thtol Year I^w > .heads, I asked her whether she intended . than this for taking the trouble-to read rhetoric, we would use leverage against the flock of military juntas and without gender and to pretend that any the thing. Grinao-stvle ''to follow. Spurr's poli(*y of not giving .cpi^-Fascist regimes, including Chile, we support around the world. Yet ^ wotd which ends in -man ismasculine is. * ' S» 7. written reasons. even when asked, for . Jsmes A. Burroughs thisrhetoric manages to bamboozle the great mass:into overlooking the ex-absurd. I think we're lucky to be without to the editor: -" ' the nonreappointment of younger faculty Austin attorney |^ ploOalive goals oMhe businessmen After theSoto incident, alldiiCano law members. _ ^ " dabble in foreign economies and politics - perialist mentality." ~ ys •. male?" ; \. startled me jrith its vituperation againsf ~ George Eatenmu " % * . ' -— Wyman; Thursday's defense of Wyman Department of Lingnlstici -If a-word ending in "-man*' isoffensive by his student and bis co-actor struck me those not reappointed here may well be 1^ Americans must take the rap for what their governmentdoes. And though I am perfectly , willing to seek another forced out of teaching forever, much of word which hias the same meaning: as probably biased; but the controversy, No artists? ? wernay not'stand before the bar of history for some time, we must pay the their advanced training gone to waste as itself mad«; me glad I had tickets to thei "Chairman" could easily be replaced by To.the editort' j,i.. bills for a clumsy and illogical foreign policy now. Tj-.they turn to less interesting work than play. I wanted to judge for myself, " '• "monitor" or "leader" or a number of Even as avid seekersof hew factual in­ • the teaching of college students which other words. "Spokesman" if offensive, : Now, baying judged, I feel called'upon formation, wemeta'news bulletin in last ffe . Either we foughtoo theimfong sidein the Second World War,orlhe Uniteil to report — simply because my opinion they were intensely committed^id as a Wednesday's Texan with bewildered sur­ could be repaced by "speaker," and life'sworic. But this interim administra­ |... States should not establish and prop up Fascist dictatorships. It isa waste of "spokesperson" is not jjnly unwieldy but' clashed so fiercely with that of Ms. tino tt,n. tlin. -•. . v prise. As quoted in Alan Liss' letter of Bowles. "King Jdin" Was, from.start to>',\-' <*>6, must protect its |^inqpey to supply both sides in a war, as we did in Cyprus, and a waste of verbose and absurd. the ninth, the chairperson of the Union |own interests first, and these young ' energy to talk out of both sides of our mouth, as we do in the Western 1 I don't mean that new wordsshould not finish, one of the most professional '. teachers will be given no answer to the Fine Arts ConilmHtee informed us that be created when necessary. The ab­productions I've ever seen at UT — and there were"...no good artistsin Austin." Hanisphere. If these propositions are not obvious, we wish Dr. Kissinger or most important question in their lives. breviation Ms. is one of the most the acting, particularly Wyman's,-seem­ Nefll Megaw First we must express our gratitude thePresident would explain the logic of our Current internationalstrategy to ed to me excellent. (The script was less new facts. brilliant creations I have seen lately and for the opportunity, to learn i^Prnfestor, English ttfe-poor,, dull taxpayers. American foreign'policy is getting curiouser and one of the most useful; Let's not en­so; but, as an English major, I felt I Next, we are launching a massive should excuse the authoras having done curiouser. danger the movement with troublesome program to alert and inform our in­ Entitled to more w distractions like "'spokesperson." These "better things"..!.) Wyman's. perfor­numerable patrons in Austin and other may only irritate .and alienate some . mance struck me as unaffected, witty^,..To-tbe.feditor: parts.of the world, our gallery represen-;PIS otherwise uncommitted people. and rather moving. His KingJohn wasscp.^ In reference to "Will the next DA tatives throughout the United Statesand h The trade schools Wylle Jordan different from the caricatured, sing-song"fj^ please stand up?" by Steve Russell in many once-esteemed abroad,, and our S$!, ranter I had expected from Ms. Bowles'ie*® your Oct. 10 issue: colleagues in the Central Texas area, Spokesfofks review that it is difficult to account for* '* The column is seriously flawed in that lest they failed to read The Texan. A former president of t&e University was quoted anonymously in The To the editor: the disparity. »,J_ it attempts toassess Ned Granger's and Last, we are cleaning all our brushesPallas Morning News as saying he would never return to the 40 Acres, even Myron Smith, I couldn't agree morel Tastes.differ, as vre know — I'm iust;'.v Herman Gotcher's competence, to hold . and arrangingJhem nicely, stackingcan-^, • if invited. Thatsounds fikemostformer presidentsof the University, but this Neuter designations such as "spokesper-^naively surprised ^to discover how much$saf the office of Travis County DA on the vasses in an orderly fashion, sealingand : one has other reasons:-gon" arc aufeh a drag...—^~ • : and I can't but wonder if there really are basis of the sort of political caulking ourstudio and pumpingit fullof "It's not a university, he said,.mentioning-education and communication And as for abolishing them — Myron, others out tnere in arama-land who column foollidrncss cmimmn in one of —helium, In the remote event that some AS you make a great spokeswoman! agree with Bowles^ If so', far be it from# Austin's other newspapers, The Citizen. less discernhig critic might turn up ini asjvocational schoolsirather than significant university academic courses. Martha Roos me to urge anything like a return to the" ; The article is-unfair to both men, but the 21st Centuryto take us toa belated — "A real university wouldn't offer undergraduate training for teachers and bland school reviewt^at praises anyfee#£ : particularly, so to: Mr. Gotcher. but ill-deserved^-posterity. communications majors." " fr-' Correction. ^ir-ble effort just because it is Our Own;' The Travis County district attorney's In the meantime, I guess we'll bus Tpthe editor: . . however, to devote fully one-third of i ' policies are not set by Mr. Gotcher, tables. ­u!h£Ljlozen or so law students who ; -review to denunciation of any hapless ac-itf > although I'm sure that as the first assis­Owen & Judy Cappleman THE DAILYSTEXAN 11U IMnnMir afTun 1AoOla EDITOR X.-IV.'," -Buck Harvey t"? Thati!LeMaistre magic: UT to UTEP MANAGING EDITOR ::T".:!";V Sylvia Moreno: .. . .t._ , . By BRYAN'.lUUMLEV!-^«^i^^^condiicted.a.siniiIar investigation of the ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS !. '."it.Y. .... Lynn Brock LeMaistre explained that, "the exigen­the opinions of a campus before talcing ,Goru is the day when a college ^System-following the appointment of a cies of the moment did not allow for ex-abrupt action which so vitallyaffected it. • •„IO j>':' Larry Smith preaident get* hie job eimply because '"V" 'new president at UT El Paso in 1972. perimentation with the unfaqifllar." He rpIWS EDITOR ,V/,. ; . Martha JP McQuade Presumably this means viable and legal- he happens to have a PhD. We need The case at E, Paso was an even. failed to point out that the method used political poWer to prevent future abuses MUNICIPAL EDITOR . . , . KEN McHam to select Tebiple^mwasa new onewhich of power on the part otlhe System. UNIVERSITY EDITOR i.. Richard Fly had been instituted the year.before to These changes have not been made, and Bfyce Jordan as University president ad ' , occurreo so tar uus SPORTS EDITOR ' .. Herb Holland i , _i «u year at Austin. In the summer of-1972, eliminate campus input in the selection the' lack of response,on < the part of theAMUSEMENTS^EDITOR .... Paul Beutel. ^ ^'PresidentSmiley of the El Pasocampus process. Previously, the selection com­Legislature indicates that no favorable FEATURES EDITOR What pass f^pj«^Uti^bodles &linfomua ^Maistre of his Impending- mittee was restricted to the nopiinees of. changes will be made in the ad-- Gaude Simp8oii hav^proved powerless in the wake of the PHOTO EDITOR" ' resignation. He told thfe Board of a faculty and student committee; this / ministrative structure governing the t?1-. firing of-Stephen Spun-by everybody's, -Marlon Taylor Regents'on Sept, 11 but did not make hte was the process under which Spurr vyss University. ' -, new ogre,: Chancellor Charles chosen. • -* ISSUE STAFF 7i ! J* decision public until Nov. 1. A fewweeks LeMaistre. Campus' .v. LeMaistre has said that he will assure I$sue Editor « » S^aTa'glia'rinl to later, a Campus Institutional Advisory In the AAUP report, the team conclud­ entities wishing facultyand student repifesentatlonon thei4"" News Assistants Wade Wilcox, Rodolfo Resendez, Rick Camp Committee was chosen by the Faculty ed:that LeMaistre exhibited a "cynical investigate the selection committee for a new president ' ?- — . -El Pasocampus.Perhaps'anotherofthe Md clMlft«l«dT»rU»lag AooU b*nad«lqJRtP Btdldbif weeot ^be ^dministnOoa or the Btttrd «f 3^M («1«M) nd diipUr Wlmtlitei &.1SP BulMlac* fairs is the American Association. Teinpleton was confirmed at a special, candidates could have accomplished the pus administration and p^ticulhrly of University professors. The local and, C^meetii^ of the Boardof Regents and was' taskh but it was considered unwise to" personnel matters. " ­ -nm D»UjrTa».» ila4olampaptr•!Ttebotmrity state chabters oiitne «AUf^faavrasked^yj&inattucted'to,^as^bme luii duties within;. , _...._. , and. students 'fwiIlilM wmnUUvt of TtirGillr :.-its:naUonal offi« to conductsanjn:l=;' th^week.TheAAlIPlnvest^fftoty'teatTr—tion-througtra-person-with whom the organlze-sufflclently-to-iprevgnf -fahiSlfIk attempt:tode*lwith-an'uncertain, situa-: Perhaps-_ faculty . wiH^-^'^A* jea.Th» D«lI)r T«Mii ls'dabUihcd IteidiJ'.-titoU.y, T«aa i« Natkml Edocilkal Inc . Vestlgation' into the ChanceHor's hand^^^T found tatltheTnembcrs of the canipiM— Board ofjRegentS-wnmihfamlHArjnd ^ abuse-of-thelr-aiready-orughed dignity^ -^ay.aadTimdajr, WcdMadar,Ibandaj.aadFAkyJopc -' , ' ing 'of the Spurr affair. It appears thatcommittee discovered the existence,of whose performance was..uncertaln," perfisps. as suggested by Rprifile¥ v; -Ml, Tlmtoy. tat Friday Stptcnfter llrawh ld8 Uxfncton Aw, N#w Vjrk, N.y h U017, ' S--" HKmSh ncrpi boiler »»d nam wrtxn ttooixi­ cjftipa&tttptii al Aattla.TM. . :T ; ; —^SWOailjr Tttaihntacrtbn la TtM-AMSiarTftar the patidnal offjcepiay not launcha fuU-i,^-the selection committee through the The AAUP report further concluded Dugger, the campus will establish /, VUtta pnu latarsaUasal aad Pacific NawiSltfVlca. Ilia scale rnquSy for.reasons dHlnancr—it^W-new^media-andJearned of theappolnt-i tHat --Perhaps tion to whip inflation. It has because it is intended to help, statistics. , • the commotion; aqpiit Pngsi-more to do with helping peo­people who -supposedly are On the other hand, the oc­. dent Ford's proposed' 5 pe?-• ple live'with inflation. bearing an unjust share of the casional impact of statistics cent tax surcharge 'on family " To the extent thaf the sur­ burdens imposed by inflation. on feelings is an important^ • incomes over $15,000 is an ex-charge revenues do not By fortftrightly identifying, aspect of what, we jocularly-Jj.. • ' ample' of what the subtle finance economic stimulation the programs, (econortiic call the "science'' Hegel called "the cunning of." -(financing the new housing . stimulation and welfare) that economics. " reason.^ ^ subsidies Mr. Ford wants and" the surcharge would finance, A FRIEND, a man who* The Vietnam war. divided replacing revenuesi. lost froth Mr. Ford has adhered to a wants to remain anonymousthe nation.-The devious, (that. the increased investment tax sound principle^,that a wise lest a grateful nation insist• ;,*>is, deficit)' financing' of the credit), the reyenues would, man once stated this way: that he become president, has*..vM, ' war fueled,; the inflation that pay for a new' -welfare "We will never;get anywhere :S *A'I devised what he thinks is a - • still afflicts us. Now the ihfja-: : program, a Community-Im-with -our finances until we solution to some of ouf . .tion nas elicited thesurcharge • provement.Corps that would pass a;law saying that ev.ery econqmic problems. His" ' : proposal, and stMdenlythe na-f provide 'jobs for unemployed tilrie we appropriate solution: abolish statistics. v tion is united.. In opposition to. persons who have-exhausted .' something we got to pas? His point is-that statistic*-r» the" surcharge,-at least. •' their unemployment benefits. another, bill along with' it • often provoke more emotion.,-^> . THROWING CAUTION to . Perhaps it is conceivable stating where the money.is than thought. Statistics often V'. i;the winds, politicians, have that such a corps would (as comingJrpnu" cause-people to feel different-. v denounced the tax increase.-Mr. Ford says) "improve, HUMORIST. Will Rogers ly abolit the'world arid to". ;^ , These . denunciations do; not beautify and enhance the en­said that, as part of his com-•. decide: that,reasonable con.--^ * • neefessariiy mean the increase vironment" everywhere. But. edy routine. It isa measure,of ditioqs are "problems."*«?ssa— ... , ^ is wise. One thing is certain: a rose is a rose, and a'welfare his genius' that he. knew that Economics,is, to a signifltaritv^f f|s xNow we come to the offices of the HouseWays and Means Committee, headed bythe surcharge cannot be •program, even-r.,.-an Americans would treat this extent, about • feelings, and sound,-sober. principle as a : people frequently change .if*)';laughing matter.' ' their feelings about their con­ more firing line -Rogers also' said: "Nobody dition when it is described in wants to be called' commpn -bald statistics. f vi: people. especially common ... . .. -SI zt people.'-' Things have-chang-JBy pointing out that th^sur- l$C'§ cbar8e on" uPPer !evel ln" The fine of John D. Rockefeller ed, at least for the moment. comes will hit only-28 percent"" 'To the editor: • ' ruthless;and power-hungry, entrepreneur^jnanipulating a free worn-oiit economic system withan outdated one. •_£ The instant Mr. Ford an-­of all .taxpayers, the. Ad-: j Terry Quist, conservative libertarian, promises increasing market economic system. "_fiounce3~"his"surcharge.on 1 ir, . ._ ---~ ; "V R. Croxdale rninistration is reminding': lucidity in his political philosophy, and indeed, it is' needed.;• Even if by some miracle a situation of atomistic economic "upper level" incomes, a -Wise up to Wilding more than, two-thirds of the, Although no complaintsarise as to hisuncompromising position elements did materialize; the system would-be subjected to the choi^s ^ent up-from sea tor * To the editor; . taxpayers that they are lower' on "victimless crimes," toadvance the cause of clarity,-an im­rigors bf 'the busin^ cycle. The lack of planning due to the shinil^g56a:""Nobodyhere'but' I have yet to read an editoriai about the Wilding project that level. That statistic will • mediate answeris required to thequestion asto just whata.free' dichotomy betweftnthose who' consume .and those who-produce us;lower level folks." doesn't sound as though it were written by a third-grader W the* provoke some, people/ who market economy is. One suspects that it is an economic system would inevitably create acycle of boom.and'depression, So then •' Statistically,"families with' pioneer days. First of all, the reason for-a "neMfs blackout" on, previously > were-reasonably •1 VVS • where gbvernment only/intervene? to'protect.private property, the'freedom to vote with your dollar would be a function of the' gross, incomes above'$15,VOO the Wilding issue is apparently the fault of the media Should content; to discover; a-' ; ; where there are no laboruhfons and no monopolies, from this freedom to work, and-if thefe is-no work, as in.a depression are "upper level:" the me­ you wish to attend the district meetings, all you would have to '.'problem" in our reasonable comes freedom? From this comes liberty? > there isn't, the freedom of a free market economy becomes the dian -family.income in 1973 do is call the districtoffice, ask for thelocation of the meetings -distribution bf wealth. Any analysis based.on the actual development of American freedom to starve. Any return to atomistic elements would in­ wasJust $12,051. and drag your .lethargic: carcasses out there. Secondly, what monopolistic capitalism easily exposes the flaw in this fantasy. exorably begin a process that would lead taa situatipn'.similar But today many millions of So-, my. friend says,'"^5 measure of control should theCity of Austin feel entitled toovers Big corporations develop-because monopoly profits are. large to the mess we are in now. Monopolies woufd seek profits, the families with incomes statistics can be provocative,-X Wilding when its illustrious City Council and their 4-3 vote and stable, and labor unions develop because workerseventual­workers would seek food and government would seek stability. over $15,000 do nothave much even subversive, and should against creation of the MUD were the factors that forced ly get tired of hungef. The euphemism of a consumer "voting" At a :time When change is-$o desperately needed, when ri'nfia-' —-if ,any — discretionary in­be abolished. Who would miss ^, Wilding's-developers to seek alternative means of financing?. "~withrhis-dnHars-'hiries -thp-stark-rpality. pf thp hm^l.syial_ tiori isassumingaspects o.f permanency, when unemployment is come, so they do not feel the them? If you think that idea is Ho^ sad that theCity of Austin may be forced to annexWilding;: reIati'onShips~that afree market economicsystem would evoke. stabilizing at.5tob percent; wnen asi'poiale moijupolies^reex­ way they assume, "upper laughable,., remember that perhaps lliu City Council-should-Kave considered this conse-. ' Peeling aside thecandy coating, thestatement doesportray the tending their .testacies over the entire non-Socialist world, to lev "" ' ~ " quence before voting on May 9,1974. As for your concern over raw fact that the rich are powerful (the rich get more votes), propose to set us on the treadmill of Social Darwinism, to convenient, sometimes unfor­sober principle of government" "many potential mini-Wildings,Me should hope that the and in a free market economic system, the ruthless get rich. ' rewind the rubber1 band of this' violent toy called capitalism is tunate, but undeniable fact is to. make Americans laugh: Wilding prbjecl will serve as an example to wouId-be< For proof, check your history for.the fine American "tradition" much worse than mere naive ostrich-like ignorance of reality. dewlopers OTd buildfers in fte Highland Lakes area. Their ef-;: ..of John D. Rockefeller, Tom Scott and" Franklin.B. Gowen, all It is dangerously inane. ; ? forts-in. planning tite'ir project and their cooperation with cityThe qualify of a civilization can be measured by the real alter­ PI \\t I s' departments have far surpassed similar endeavors by other Texas (Jnicn natives it offers its citizens, and the options offered by the pre­ ! T—T 3QY FKlENP? WAPPYA deyelopersi . -; G00DM0RNIN6 sent-economic,system are either inflation or unemployment. MEAN.BOY FKl£NP?il'M Wise up, Morrison. Houston wishes it had Wilding. Austin's Events Today ,5CH00L:..HAVE The poor pay regardless of which bullet Ford bites Obsolete HtKJ'MET NOT TOOK 80V FRIENPU City Council should wish for a second chanCe.. -• ?, machinery should be scrapped, but' it is insane to replace a 12 noon -1p.m. SANDWICH SEMINAR: ^Our Chang: BOfFRIENP • Mrs. Billy W. Kanetiky zc ing City." Dick lillia, Director of th'o Auitln City Plan­ning Department/ ' will xlitcuu bridging th« gap befween taxtbook theory and accomplithmfnt of • 'plant. Chinese Garden Room, fourth floor of -CONS-UMEgPROTECTION? Academic Center. Sandwiches and cold drinks will be -sold or porticipants-nwiv.brinQ their lunch. Ideas and WE WROTE THE BOOK. ; Issues .Committee. n-'ri TREAT HER 7:30 -9 p.m. CHICANO TERTUUA. A program NICELV, KIP-. designed : to facilitate the, learning of Spanish by I'M THE Charles Leutwyier has been making a -big Chicanos: on .campus. Every Tuesday in October. INTERNATIONAL JEALOUS deal about protecting his customers for Catholic Student Center. Minimal fee for TYPE refreshments. Mexican-American Culture Committee. twenty years. He protects them by • : Wednesdayeducating'them to the facts of diamond 12 noon. SANDWICH SEMINAR: "Alternative* to the Grading Syttam." Chinese Garden Room, A.CA, Fourth SfUff CORRECTION CENTER and jewel.ry, life; youicnow exactly what floor • •• •. you're getting. Even If you dont buy yourOUR SKIN LAYERING diamond or handcrafted jewelry from Charles, you'll know what to look for DOONESBURY Rising Or{anIo Enzym«—No Ghiemicals' somewhere else. -. ^ That's a good friend to have. ;• WHAT?! WU MUST COME OFF IT, MAN! WO Removes Be nam! TWO BEEN •THINK AFlVEyEARi • 84UR6ED PORES |?^ .• SCARS yeAnsoF.AaeemiVB T0U6H, EXILE IS SOME SORT • STRETCH MARKS i'H* WRINIUES SBRVtcetAFrntmr" mrr? OFPtatC?!HO FAMILY, • BUCKHEADS • BROWN SPOTS weye BStOHRMSH?'. NO fj&NDSj ALWAYS • PITS.,,. ^ • ACNE TYPE CONDITIONS / ONimmuN!.. "\!itI 'j- OUR HAIR REMOVAL • NO NEEDIES -• • NO ElECTRiaTV^ w • FAST -• PAINLESS i.<$8 • REDUCES HAIR BACK TO NORMAL1^ j, b ^CHARLES .. • OUR MUSCLE TONING FOR SAGGING FACIAL MUSCLES LEUTWYLER HOH/wuu> yw u& 38th and North Lamar*. id mm.home0&y In Lamar Villsf• Shopping Gntir JEWELERS Pw I XrsLL EASt, cHtosrHtsswmsp nape 7hc arm: vtsc avm FOR COMPLEMENTARY CONSULTATION 2518 Guadalupe MM OF A WtVOfl ^7 SUFFE&D EASY., CALL 451-7811 CKMNMn.9-S Parking at the bock door on San Antonio mmmnmrnwH 'i1 »n V'rn >>n >>n I#' TWO PRODUCTIONS BY THE Crossword Puzzled Answer to Yealerday's Puzile : ACROSS : antelope RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT 3 Serious v s-rarasaB nnr-iia aaa 1 Mature • 4 Blemish yaaca naaa aatai 4 Game -it '5 Puzzle Jsf"' noseo arafflraamu 9 Old pronoun ' 6 Be Indebt r-jMkii.j.j 12 Nahoor sheep 7 Notoof.scale 13 Might 8 Tout 1st' iBGIl H0OQ ESQ s-BEHIND 1.4 Female rulf 9 Handle „ sf it ayiso oraa^it-i •[=! 15 latent 10 Chliken-ti" rarsHQoraHront3C3Q3 f**is aa naaraH HQCia the Soviet Curtain P1 17 Catkin 11 Still 1S Memorandum 18 Bard * Rra usrara oaaft IN FRONT 20 Part of eye 18 Bepast 21 Toward 20-Preposition' i hundreds of cities and M II shelter 21 To the left < aQouacn nunnis 22 Fall short of the Soviet Curtain dozens of prisons, ,.^v 23 Iterated fiHH • 4 27 Adhesive 24 Genu* of Qi.3ra OMUU heaths .* hundreds of thousands . .if-substance on the stage • 29 Baker's 25 Ancient 38 Turkish> 46 Wine cdp 6 of -' product -chariot -r "m regiment 47 Ship channel Jones Hall 30 Senior 28 Frock VMt 40 Rlyer In 48 Time flone byj-„.-& i; 31 Choose . 28 Evaluate1?^ _ „ France 49 Cratty -t 4 Performances by-fp mft ' 32 Backbone 33 €veroreeh .lree, -41 'Theater 50 Cravat . ^ 'XJv SOVIET JEWS ? •, 34 Compass 34 Perused boxes 53 Negative '>•:}£ i^ point ,.36 Persian poet 45 Unusual prefix 1 « and others who want to live 35 Ruoec •••h'Sh?. Soviet Georgian in, freedom, denied their . Dance Company basic human right "to per­form" in their way of life ... harassed ... imprisoned ... ••' J® ificed froifi their jobs:because ,'rm fp ^We welcome they want to. emigrate to Cultural exchange"* i:': • Israel. ; lively Steppino We. oppose V -marketplace « ooboslteIt to P%<-. Sl.vM cultural repression!^, 52 stri The look is jaunty, the feeling is-soft 5S Oevoured -c. I • and warm...especially designed for 66-W high-spirited juniors of 100% cotton S/.Chahge corduroy — »djlor °f 5-to snake 9n-the-J3,rag,''; October 15,*1974 THE DAILY TJSXAN P.age 5 ifc"' jHunter vs-Downing •: TOKYO (AP) — John New-Kataja EbbinghausS-6, 6-4,6-3 confused Ebbinghaus, the toj£ (&P) — Catfish Hunter,, hassle with owner Charles O. Finley. But he . combe of Australia and Maria in the women'sfinal. seeded woman player. ^Oakland's 25-game winner, opposes said ,he felt his dispute with Finley — the Baeno of Brazil seoredcome- The heavy final-rouffd Newcombe, who collected fourneyman Al Downing for Los Angeles in pitcher is" claimingfree agent status because­ schedule forced by two fram-behind triumphs .Mon the 515,000 top prize, used his was Tuesday's ~ UllK)"""game"'of "the,1974^Wortd—-Hher®wner-allegedlyHlid-not-pay-iim3ialf-'of-­ day to capture the singles straight days of rain; which powerful serves to outlast Series with the A's prepared to adjust their his 1974 salary would not affect his titles at the rain-plagued canceled the men's doubles Rosewall, 39, who began batting styles to snap a troublesome slump. pitching. $100,000 Japan Open Tennis competition.; , strongly -before making, a "I think we're all.overswinglng,", said Sal Downing pitched in' his first World Series Tournament. ' '' In the women's doubles, . series of errors.';-, --"5 A Bando, captain of the club. "But I.think we'll game 11 years ago with the New York 'Kaziiko Sawamatsu of Japan Newcombe beat "fellow Bueno, 35, 'making a com-and Ann. Kiyomura of the start hitting the way we can, now that we're Yankees when many of his current team­ Australian Ken Rosewall, the eback after a long layoff caus­States defeated home." ' " mates -were schoolboys. But the young United 'defending men's chanipion.'3-ed by apv trouble, gained the Japan The A's won the last two games of the Dodgers respect the veteran lefty. Kimiyo Yagawaiu if>f 6. 6-2, 6-3 and Miss Bueno American League playoff in Baltimorewith a Behind Downing , in the bullpen, the " women's, $6,000 {irst. prize -and Janet Young oTAustWlia downed West Germany's with a* variety*of shots that- •total of just five hit& They-managed only 12 _ Dodgers will ; have baseball's best_jelief ,tovgain tlje $1,700 first-prize:­hits in splitting tfie first two Series g£mes ' pitcher, Mike* Marshall ^ against the Dodgers in Lbs Angeles. In the Alston brought Marshall into Sunday's se­ 'J5* (* first game aloiie, the Dodgers had 11 hits. cond game and the intellectual righthander, izw m "Good pitching' will stop good hitting," nailqd down the victory, pidking pinch runner I Bando said, "and we've been lookingat some Herb Washington off first base to cut short a good pitching both by Baltimore, ^nd Los comeback rally by the A's. i I Angeles. We haven't had many-men on,but I Washington pounded the ground in.disgust For your eyewear needs and services away from home i think it will come." after being victimized by Marshall; who, I Close to campus -1009 £. 40th -1 blk s. Hancock Cen. In the first two gamesof the Series, the A's ironically, taught a course at Michigan State i off of CR Shuttle Bus Route I ; 1 faced Andy Messersmith and DonSutton,-two in which Washington was a student. &S3SC ' -•' W Telephele • of the National. League's, premier pitchers • ; Shouldn't You Like Your Glasses? I Hunter.practices bunting. who won ,39 games between them in the The pickoff didn't changeOakland manager Alvin Dark's feelings about using I regular season: .Third, game starter Dow- Washington; the Sprinter whose only job withning's 5-6 record suffers by comparison, | Latest Styles in Metal and Rimless Frames | Nunez Wins Open the A's is toserveas a pinch runner. "I'll use "He pitched well late in.the season,", ex­ t-gbl I Photogray, Photosun and new Photobrown. I .... plained L«s Angeles manager Walt Alston. pt hb Texas sophomore Gonzalo.-iirst in the 114-pound,division-. .-Downing will be facing Oakland's, ace in. 0-| Over 600 Frames to Choose From I • Nunez defeatedTrinity's Mike In the 181-pound section,Louis Hunter, who led the Amgri&n League with a Grant Sunday 7-5, 6-4 to win Fry placed second, Chuck 2.43 earned run average and came out of^the Dodgers a debt, and I'm going to pay him m • 10% OFF ANY PURCHASE WITH THIS AD AND I.D, I the McFarlin Fall Open tennis. Cook; fourth and Jim Lemay, back," the sprinter said. bulpen to nail down theA's first-gamevictory tournament: in.San Antonio.' seventh.* Alex la ' • I OFFER GOOD OCT. 7 TO NOV. 8 / | de Cerda Saturday. Both clubs went into Tuesday's third game, The Longhorn team of placed second in the 196-pound Hunter has been embroiled in a contract oozing confidence. IMonday -Friday 8:30 -5:00 \ 451-5226| Stewart Keller and Gary division. Plock lost to John Newman The team will compete in and Bob Mckinley of Sah An­one,or more meets before the .Fans Blast Announcer tonio 3-6, 5-7 in the doubles Nationals.: begin in Baton final. • Rouge'in early January DENVER (UPI) -Denver one, 9a"er said. "Tjiat woman's inaccuracies':­: the Texasdoubles team had * ts Bronco fans say they lQve j.. sure as hell can't an-J, are unbelieveable." . j beaten David King and Bill -The Austin;.Rugby Club split their team, but they hate a HALF PRICE ., , '-v . nounCe football." ' The switchboard operator at's 9^ Scanion, from Trinity, in the two games with the Dallas woman interfering with their . ' thestation was sooverwhehn-' •; ff rr semifinals 6-4, M early Sun-Rugby" Club last Weekend in beer, pretzels and TV viewing J Other comments. "We • ed by the unexpected delugeofof football action. i day. Dallas. The Blacks, the first believe, in women s lib up to a calls that she' could fecord ^JEANS : , ., • • team, won by a score of 33-3 . KMGH-TV, the local af­point, but we do not .enjoy this only 524. All of the callers The Texas weightlifting over the Dallas first team, filiate. for lady cornmentator" ... "Foot- CBS, complained about the 31-year­ • ENTIRE STOCK lit ti. —ball is-a man's gamp" and nid hmaHrastpr ' , weekend in'a meet in Dallas team in the scrum'and' when.sportscaster Jane Chas- BUY ONE PAiR AT REGULAR PRICE Opelousas, La. LSU took first backline. tain teamed up with two men ; while the. University of South The Golds, thesecond team, to broadcast the-Bronco-New ers GET SECOND PAIR FOR HALF PRICE! . Louisiana placed ttdrd. ; lost to the secondDallas Orleans football game. : For Texas,Tim Long placed v • DETROIT (AP) -A dis-' to Larry Walton to defeat the"> team, 9-4. "Tell that babe to take up 'puted pass interference penal­San Francisco 49ers 17-13. "ir" iISIC The Bottoms for all your tops set a on.e-yard The televised ty up nationallytdDchdown plunge by Detroit's game was the first triumphI • -• • . "' -^ • at PARADIGM LECTURE NOTES for Detroit,after four losses, Steve Qwens in the second period, and the Lions added a while the 49ers dropped thejr 504 W. 24th .,472-7986 fourth-quarter touchdown on a-: third straight game after win­ .ACC326 Tomauini CH302 ' Wya» HE407A Hutchinton. 13-yard pass from Bill Munson ning their first two. tACC327 Witian. u CH305K Morgan MIC 319 Bote Bob Elliott' j ACC329 Dealkin CS301 Duggan MKT 337 Amierton '•I M? j Shoe Shop *SALE * ~IS^ ON THE DRAG -2426 GUADACUPE OPEN THURS. TILL 8 -ADV^t8J Mindok ^ 0RM^)4—Wyman. MKt 337 Fulcher ANT 302 Oliver v|E3?> Cranfill PSY 301 Parkerill,. THREE DAYS ONLY! FREE ALTERATIONS ANT 302 {hmm -' "• ECO 302 Knapp PSY30V . Sihgh V3 We moke and -SHEEPSKIN «ANT304 Davit ECO 302 Vrooman PSY 308 Horn repair boots RUGS ART 350 Grieder • FIN 354 Mettlan ;• PSY 342 Gummerman ARY 301 Davit GEO304 Sprinkle PSY353K Belknap. Many ~ -$>750^10304 Gilbert.: GEO 305 Wilton RTF322K Flyman Beautiful Colors 1 : 81323 Jentx GOV 3101 Gutierrez SOC 302 Roth leather CC303 Armttrong '• GOy310L Oppenheimer -SOC 333K Tully' itLATHER SALE* m CC352 Armttrong 'Si[ GOV312L Gaitton STA310 Stutz Various • kind*; • caloft -7S* per ft. CH30T Bogg* -GOV 3121 Hirt ; . = See it to believe it COME TO Oownstairs. a fully electric kitchen with walk-in " study upstairs, I 444-7880 I SEBRING I BY I ROY I §•. IT'S A m Iw/dieese sSIsavm?;,., I NATURAL. MUST BRING COUPON'T', I GOOD AUFAU SEMESTER Pacesetter Apartments for Free-UvingPsople. 2124 Burton Drive I WHEAT BERRY BREAD now I f available on any sandwich I YOU'RE YOUNG, YOU'RE TUNED OUT,OPEN DAILY AND TURNED OFr BY STUFF LIKE HAIR­ SURPRISE! COPIES 3c 3303 N. Lamar 10:30 -10 P.M. I I SPRAYS, TEASING, AND SITTING UNDER .y-v-SS" HAJRDRYERS. SEBRING BY ROY IS THE PLACE FOR YOU, WHERE WITH-IT HAIRCUTTERS'DO YOUR KIND OF HAIR i.JffV WITHOUT SPRAYS OR TEASING-WITH JUST THE GREATEST MOST NATURAL LOOKS GOING. CMON IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF:"­ APPOINTMENT ONLY-472-7400 817 W. 24th [YSb OPEN MON-SAT 1 -SSs chaser..." Need an Amp? «t-V ' i UsL* Sunn-Marshall^ , TjWtren you belly up to the food bar, you GINNY'S is 3 years'old this week'Shd to cdJfSf^re Png /oSwant to be able to-order just what JBL . " £ you a present a 3^ copy. That's right, all self service copies are ^satisfies your special hunger, and suits Hi Watt only 3^ this week only. So come by during our Birthday Cele-"^ijrour taste Altec bration, October14-16 for 3? Xerox or IBM copies. The. balloons w birthday"cake, and coffee are free;^ At KFC # 6,'yotfwillfind'delicious Kerir Sound City |jucky Fried Chicken with llherbs and Fender ? A ht?-' * * i „ ij&pices and slow-cooked, smokey bar- Gibson sXou Get Moce For Your,Money At G m ;^beque side-by-side. Drop in at 2120 Wt'ii .^^Guadalu&e and order what youwant. , Accoustic^­ : ^ * • "-T*" -Woodson WEGIVEYOU 2GH0ICES Univox XEROX COPIES .BOTH RIGHT! Kustom .. Open 0 DaylA Week *• 0* ---y :~i,z ' , /js, *5i'3Utr. BQSQ »t" offsei-printing r%' "-f 7 «•"*-«»a.n#—to P-».p.m. WEEKDAYS » We Oot 'Em-New ana used -^ 9 a.m.—5 p.m.SATURDAYS BIND And the.qucillfieci folks to.service them. Mr*s '9 |' P6 2120 GUADALUPE BOWB MALI ZeafillAiAliTFB 47ft 908 North Lamar • 476*6927 Page 6 Tuesday, October 15, 1974 THE DAILY *&£-J rf_ < w#-f r i f # . i y h JyAf .. ivT*•• bij-.*.1-<1v, . I. . •??;•!•»/'> Ji!!•«»••» DKR Press Conference lAfcr •; ite Loss 'TO* By KELLEY ANDERSON' definitely showed it was a be the winning field goal. • was freshman defensive back in place of Rick Burleson. .Texan Staff Writer better losing team than two When asked if lie would Alfred Jackson, who was star­ ' As. Darrell Royal' lounged weeks ago, only. 50 percent of have called the same play if ting his first game.,--ftOYAL RATED the Arkan­ -comfortably--in the. orange-Royal's prerequisites for vic­he -had the chance,kjns and to open holes playing tor 10 plays and On the. possibility of the especially glum nor disgruntl-carried SOT the needed yar­ resting on'the'bench for. five. Texas-Arkansas' kickoff timefor the running backs, Royal ed over the defeat. • • dage before having the ball being.shifted from 3 p.m. .to attributed it to confusion In fact, hewas proud; proud jarred from his grasp. The ' j Texas sustained no new in- noon if there is a' need for of his flayer^' performances, Sooners recovered the fumble" "The defense just cahH . juries against Oklahoma, ^ixth World Series game, so a both individually and as a and drove for .v^hat proved ;to come over you like high water Royal said, and he anticipates that thetwo nationally televis­ team, and of their enthusfasm no starting line-up changes over flat land. You've got -to ed events . won't conflict. in nearly booming the when the Longhorns see more " turii them loose," he explain- ; Royal said, "I like thoseearly Sooriers, who-bad been a 22-Top 20 ed of the plays in wbjch red SaturdajCagainst Arkan­ ball games.-The earlier the point pregame favorite. sas, except at defensive end, 1 Ohio Stale(SI) . . . m i,i60 Sooner defenders-charged un­ better." «­ "THERE WASlots of dejec­2 Oklahoma (5) ...... 4-0-0 1,020 where freshpian Travis molested ind sacked Akins for 4 3 MicfilganU) ...;... 5-0-0 924 mmmmi .« tion and lots of hurt over los­losses. • Couch, whot^i Royal also cited" Royalalso added thatTexlsc -'Mh^ •* -v|S ing the football game," Royal 5 AyburnO) 5-0-0 as playing impressively practices will continue to re­ 4 . 5^W) 814' ait. , _ 636 said. reflecting on the team's -6. SorCallfornia 3-1-0 ... 574 _ A-"bright spot"'for_Texas against the Sooners, will start main closed to the press. ,7. Notrf Dame morale following the loss. 4-1-0 $06 . . 4-1-0 - 8. TexaxA&M —Train Stoff Photo by David Woe 425 -','Butc I don't think we 9.. Arliona v....S^JO-O •• 394 Earl Campbell drives for; short yardage. brought anythifig back from 30. No.Caro.St. .^:.... 6-04 323 1 I), Pjim.Sttfe.'i.M,...; -4-1*0 -244 • MSS'HtK ­ Dallas. Emotionally and • 12. Nebraska 3-2-0 169 13. Kan&as 4-1-0 141 physicallyv we;spent alliour 14. Florida . . ..v„. 41-0 107energyiip there in an all-out .15. Arizona State , >14 * 73 ATTENTION­ ' effort. ;. 16. Texas 3-7-0 69 > 17. TexasTech..i;.3-M 59 "And what's encouraging is ,18.-Maryland 3-2-0>'"— 49 .... WACO(AR) —. Doctors said week with thedefensive mind­ference this year. . thatwe'vehadtfiis good'effort 19. M/amf.O. 4^-1 J'1 41 20. Tofane ....-.ilv..-.. • 4-M *• -39 Monday that x-ray? of Baylor ed Rice "Owls, and the 'V Mri ' • • from the team all year long," Others receivlrtg votes, listed ORGANIZATIONS Musta n gs^'IVishbone-T HOUSTON (UPI) -Coach quarterback Neal Jeffrey's he continued. "We're a better 'i alphabeticaHy: Arkansas, Baylor, "SSf California, ^fUno|s< Mfamt : Missouri,Oklatioma State,Pitt, Temple, ! Deadline to Reserve Space nose showed there was no offense is leading the league Al Conover of Rice University team now than a week' ago." (Ffa.j, fracture as tirst feared" irt .in. total yardage. But Coach said Monday the SMU However, while Texas .;UCLX VanderWU; Wisconsin. Saturday's 21-17 upset Dave Smith saw some things Mustangs, his team's next op­in,the Southwest Conference victory ... in last Saturday's 33-13 win' ponent, are better offensively over Arkansas... • over TCU that he felt should than Notre Dame. ^ WE HAVE MONEY ^ -ire corrected in a hurrv. and That' especially worried WE STFLF. OFFER PERSONAL CREDIT TO Reserve tailback Cleveland^ Ke brought them up to his him;Ctonoversjid, becausehe MBUVERSITY OF TEXAS STAFF FOR AIRLINEFranklin suffered a dislocated , team in a meeting,Sunday. • cannot count on nose guard TICKETS. YOU DONT HAVE TUUSE^XNYONLshoulder fa the game, but Coach Grant Teaff said * -• •• • ' '•>' Cornelius Walker being well CREDIT CARD THERE IS NO CHARGE FOR OUR Franklin would recover ?"Sunday is usually our day for the Mustangs. V • MAKING AIR RESERVATIONS AND ISSUING for positive thinking," Smith But the -defensive leader TICKETS. THEN WE WILL GIVE YOU PERSONAL probably in time for theTexas -said. "We stress the positive , will stay off the Rice Stadium CREDIT FOR 30 DAYS. INTEREST FREE. A&M game in two weeks.; ­ things. But last Sunday I did turf all week allowing his * hot have a true positive feel­. separated ribs to heal. ALL AIR SEA TRAVEL -ij DALLAS CUPI) — Southern ing. We ran some people this Even though the Owl§.fell to. is Friday October i8 -900 N.LAMARBLVD. Methodist University;' one of morning, too, because'df some the Irish 10-3and-tied lSU 10­three teams tied for the early bad habits-they had picked 10, they have yet to win this Southwest -Conference lead, rseason. •_ -NO EXCEPTIONS! begins the tougbfest part pf.its. For -Saturday's-loss, v* v,&a' schedule this week. _ SMU, despite a lack of Conover certainly didn't fift' -depth—has;-improved-each -blame—Walker_i.ar_:outside _ AUSTIN'S ORIGINAL SMU is 4-1 thus far and 1-0 week and nowstandsa chance linebacker Rodney Norton. pages *5000 group pictures in league play continuing this to be, along with Baylor, the, The Owls' problem continued MM surprise team in the con-^ to be an unproductive offense. S E SEAHORSE CAR Reservations must be made by Pres. or Tteas, of the omanika­ „.WASH, 1 Automatic hon, in person in the Cactus office TSP 4-112 Monday-Friday 6 Self-Sorvica' HAMAGSHIMIM f 8 to 5. j r 1205 W. Koenig STUDENT ZIONIST MOVEMENT -J -. ^ 454-3922 by El Lobo • ^5yme?' 'or, space must accompany reservation.'wlr "PALESTINIANS 415 W. 15th at San Antonio AND THE U.N." : FIVE PROFESSIONAL BARBERS Dll ' a speaker and discussion • TO SERVE YOU TUESDAY, OCT. 15, 7:30 p.mZ ­ by appointment only Hillel, 2105 .-Son Antonio 474-4444 474-1041 TEXAS HAMAGSHIMIM SEMINAR if NOV. 1-3in Wimberley, Texas $14 Covera Food, Tramporlation,Everything FOR MORE LNFO. Call •• '•J People to People KAREN 475-8892 FRANK 478-6586 ri -• •MM. Snaring....Caring COME HEAR RFJ&M. > Backer Fanning 0 SARAH WEDDINGTON • Speaking -4; ^SPEAK ON WOMEN IN POLITICS TJies-Wed-Thurs Oct. 15-16-17 7:30 P.M. DE C0URCY KELLEY VVed-Thurs Noon- SPEAK ON WOMEN IN EDUCATION S »*. „ > pks>, —A. w •;;; tomorrow -Oct. i s Soup & Sandwiches CALHOUN HAU—7:30 p.m. Sponsored by.--Young Democrats and "-'X Baptist Student Union Women-s Affairs Committee 2204 San Antonio • . ifiil •SSb. aim ?*' J I if ^ ^^ ^ / 3^;' . •AComes• ,• to Austin cuat Northcross Mall / ­ V-', -ff V|* vwmico iw OUOUII iNVIUIUIUbS IVIfcLII y ^Charisma by Orange Blossom is a uniquely^ designed collection of opal rings: IgtV : • *i»SW4'.*W . . T-'• . w'*r" V.a**. Ice J®880"8 . ® ©veryone—from the Registrations being anrnptwl at booth adjacent j-^^iUwardly serene, with an intense inner • FTRE that seems to vibrate with every ^®SMnnerto thechampion—under-the direction-BeaHs at Northcross for: movement ol ypur ?vtmdt Visit ua-soofv~ood­ oTUmted 6iates Gold .Medalist Shirley Llncie t . , j,rr t^. see the beautlfdi Charisma ppnU ­ fm Ayers. " "! ^ Ladies Trim Class.'Mornings & Afternoons VvV S3SI ' Z j ^ Tots... 'i'mm.wM\ Classes will be limited to insure^ schoolw,waenooi ,. e •« .,*5' . -;-indivldiifllflttontinn ^'T e®-ns 13-17 Years:.. \'..dpEarly Evenings -i:" . t-' . 4 -: ^—AdtjUs-Oifer-48-yearfej r Fvanlnna* mM /y><#^ Jo# THrmn>w »Mr0UAMltiK M|nMjhuMtrAndersbn Lane wwjn*.. V". at^umetRd—i-iilfOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: AUYIH I ONLY-ORANGE BTOXSON DIAMOND •& Actors Surpass Material ABT Program By SUZANNE SHELTON. thin, and the effects seenied superg,:?! and "Tregonell" was well performed.Austin Ballet Theatre performs tibial. Miss Thomas was never really The latter ballet explores^ triangle'of =6^ §3®iiisa iVo fpjft&l* monthly at Armadillo-World Head-allowed to soar, to use her stage space, ' relationships .and features some of Mara feelings V/s tp •Quarters, and some months turn BufW$ Qf course, IVs tough for Hall to turn out iHall's most interesting choreography, • "No Hard Feelings;" starr­EGAN PLAYS a SO-ish;, mm-better -than others,-Sunday night'8%^ super choreography each month, and insight as. to what constitutes the occasional lingers. The/ ^.Eacji of the three principals has his ing Richard Egan; Rachel.. \yhite collar Archie Bunker* a happy marriage. He's clear­'..program'was one of the problematic;^-not every ballet can be as intrifcately cast is capable and pleasant; cown'signatiiremavem,ents, andeacfils Stephens, Owen Sullivan, and type, whose 40-ish wife ones, though the reasons are'difficult to^wg beautiful as his '-'Ritesof Joseph Byrd" „ ly a lost soul, and only with particularly'J.S. (Joe) Young .isolated by loneliness or by narcissism; J.5. (Joe) ..Young-, written by ; iRachel Stephens) leaves him counseling can he begin even as Egan's swinging: partner, define, • or" as geometrically stunning aV Victor and ' Judy Thompson, CulverSam Bobrieli and Ron Clark; for a 35-year-oldGreek waiter The company, in fact, .was dancing" "Gemini." Oge wishes, however, that partially to. understand whv: who-walks-away with every Terri Lynn Wrightmaintain an electric , directed.by Richard Egani at (Owen Sullivan).' What's odd -, SUCH CONFLICTS are the scene he's in. CDP Heyutaher -beautifully. Terri Lynn Wright in . these works would be performed and chemistry, and "TregoneJ!"„ripen$ the Country Dinner (at least within -ttrn—r-stuff-which biting, serio-Aody Parker[does^Tffce turn -"""Tregoftdl" anci "Heavy" comes to^|g polished and repolished in preference-, with each viewing^*;? ' • Playhouse. ,'«&j mind, as does the extraordinary Jone^-fg to quickly-prpduced new works. frameworfc-of 4ight. middle-,comic dramas are madeof -* in two smairVoleiTBrftttjfc^EUTEL class-com«4y-)-is_Uiat-e^—'J-WJio's Afraid of The polish of performance Bergquist in "Gemini." Yet itwas one?^ Another problem Sunday was an un--•"Heavy" and "Concerto"^were less ^ • Texan St&ff Writer Stephens has absolutely no' Virginia-Woolf*'* or "Carnal ultimately' makes "No Hard of those evenings when the atmosphere {.'t­derreheatsed look in gall's new successfulSunday, the.former, because 'MM:, "RWb•?' The.current Country Dinner' qualms about .leaving Egan Knowledge; Granted,. not was subdued, and the problem seemed':'..^ "Centennial, flags," which is pure • of its static .chareography^the:latter *v • Feelings" acceptable, if Playhouse productwn-of ."No and is even delighted about • due toboth choreography and program?®!^ Americana ''with cowboys, .baton " because of, untidy .unisons often due.tQ, master comic Neil Simon ex^ remarkable, •entertainmeift. Hard Feelings" is —, for what'. being -.pregnant by Sullivan. plored themes of unhappy, tag. . . twirlers and such;-It's great fun, and cramped stage space. --­it's worth — probably the best-(Her and Egan's recently marriages with deft-serious • ; However,for the promise of "Didn't It Rain," a solo for-j£ what the company lacks in precision atv AH gripes aside, however,"one must production'of this particular married 'daughter, playedjby •undertones in "Plaza Suite," really good theater of the CDP Rosemary Thomas, wasa casein pointra this point;; It makes up in enthusiasm. . ;?.admit that AustinBalletTheatre feeds play we're likely to see. Deanna Dunagan, isalso preg­(recently'featured in an ex­' variety,• this department, at A tribute mainly,to Judith Jamison (of Look lot a, refined "Centennial Rags";?; such high, expectations tocause it so i least, will beawaiting eagerly Director/star Richard Egan ' nant. thus providing some cellent production at CDP), the Alvin Ailey troupe), it set out to be-: to become a company and audience often satisfies them. The company is SSpB. and his supporting cast have' the forthcoming productions one of those f^ee-wheeling, joyous favorite! • sympathetic'mother-daughter but writers Sarit Bobrich and nevep boring' it's oftcin brilUant; and if done their best'*to" ra^e vibes.) And Stephens clearly Ron Clark are far from being; ,of "The Prisoner of Second dances tailored to the talents of thee Not everything was downbeat Suh-it hasah off-night now aind then, it ipnlypalatable what is essentially has no intentions of ever in the same league with the Avenue'-' ;and "Sweet radiant Rosemary " Thomas. dayi;;"Gemini;" danced by Bergquist reminds'us they're few and far • second-rate material. —. returning to 'Egan, even likes of Simon. Charity." w1 Yet Stanley Hall'schoreography . and Steve Brule, was luminousas every.; ^between. . *, Moreover, the premise of: though he constantly barges When such themes are ."No Hard Feelings'" is a bit in on thescene, insisting she'll treated as fluff, the results off the beaten, dinner-theater .be-happier in the "home" are — when we stop Co think y nine Americans. It numerous requests, is Wing • keeps .things -moving through "The Traitors," keenly dec-" People Awake," generally People," originally titled ­ ' takea.its title fcom a poem of brought back for its seconds- the dull dialogue passages and pits the gradual co-optation of considered the best'documen-"Revolution Until Victory," the Prize-winning gives appropriate emphasis to a Peronist labor leader of the : tary made on Chile, contains Nobel showing at the University. analyzes with clarity the Chilean poet Pablo' Neruda, Based on an actualincident in- THE GREATEST; SEA ADVENTURE IN HISTORY HAS JOST HGUW : history of the Zionist move­ . wbo:died immediatelyfollow­volving charges of steriliza-­: ment, the plight of the Palesti­ing the military takeover.The tion -of .Quechuan. Indian PARAIV10UNT ,25.!i nian refugees and the nature , ­ 713 CONGPcSS «V(-NUE VILLAGE 4 70MM film captures some of the women'by "Peace Corps STEREO OPfN 1:45 H1WI of the Palestinian'resistanceSM?i UiWK -WZOi SOUND FU. 2 (1 PJL movement. "Dhofar Borgoin MotioM.tit ? p.m. .Twfay flpen S:45,>_UJa HI fi-K FUTURE '•Guerrilla War on the Arabian . m. SH SEPARAH ; *.Fratur*s • •.. LAST tM4M , Gulf" depicts the day-to-day,'•>-.••• AD FOR TIMES K5S fcOO-WO-lttrOO 'GONEWITH THE DAY mmsmTOUCH "lire inytlieTiljerated "areas'of^: 5130 Jit FEATURES that small oil kingdom. i,' *.-15 THEWEIHTw .MAIIN THEATRES; TM: All showings will be in •BurWp* jClARK GABLE Mcaderay FOX TWIN dine Auditorium, admissioi^|€ MDMrwinm. PfilNIS 8* DE lUXt" •4M-I7MI $1. The series is sponsored bj|i;4S VIVIEN LEIGH DAYS the Departmeht of Spanish^'­ LAST 3DAYS !*• and Portuguese and • coor-jf'ft •TRANS-ATEXAS $130 til 6:15 'CINDERELLA LIBERTY' 6t05-10 p.m. dinated by the Latin'"*' $1.25 ; $1.00 TIL CCXORSVDBUXE* Hi 7 p.m. PART ' tinHllMe/zt SHOWTIME, American Policy AlternaUves'few iwaGwttwus-rt-BH -"Mork" D Mad (toad —4&CS33 Group. ' I _;^PPAY!. OPEN 2:15'• $1.00 til CThePfem^rChase,, 6:40 9:50 H I JoyxiAttreco takethis wananfooe PIUS AT WO OHtT 8:10 PIUS! -, "DON'T*5 LOOK THE BASEMENT" ~ "MOON" CHILD". THERTR e R«d»it4 PRIT« T3 B FJA.; TiJii ,S1J0 200 ACADEMY Boidiv explores the :TH » PJI —ANNEX—S5 iFVst there was'BlLLY JACK' .bizarrt-t'.viisght vvorici CRAND OPENING TONIGHTM lTHencarrie'WALKl NGTALL*: ? ,Oet. IS A 19 8 PJM. [Now there ts:..-ALEX Lot "ibnorma! 'DOUG SHAMIR HARVEY sexual behf-iVfOr CHALLENGE Paul Rayand the Cobras • THC TOUGHEST HAH AUVE .' CGLOd BY TECHNICOLO'R . ;: ACINEMATION INDUSTRIES RELEASE 1 «/ GULR;jTATES DKIV&IN ' ccfrPOHATtdw> ... _, Sltow rows USA HOME SCCEEN1 & 2 JIJO til 6 p.m. • 21it & Guadalupe Second levei Ootie Mall 477-1324 FEATURES GULF-STATES DRIVE4N FIATDUP -1:00­ HIGHLAND MALL SCREEN .1 LAST DAY 451-7336 • !H 33 AT KOENKj LH. |S'-5:25-tV f. 1 V sS*1' 1 C Color "DON'T MISS IT!" TOTOfeerdftN 7:00 ; ^MEFWWIY tiknauM. ENTERPRISES"'!^ pf«SB•> *Ivi'li "St' Today at PraaMlo Thaatraa AMERICA HIGHLAND MALL 43T-732A • IH33 ATKOINJOLN. ENDS THURS.I VILLAGE 1 ,01 12:45-3:00-5:15-7t30-9:45• I tpeexeHlng COWBOY RI\ERSI1)1 true story q< a vanishing American Iand Ms special kind of freedom. HEIO OVER WALT DISNEY'S^ T 'THE co^'wwr7 hAT*y**t o«Tin«»5e»|»c. j»M -­COLOR BY DELUXE' MAS 7:00 $100 1:45-1 $125 8:45 CAPSTAL. PLAZA 1 »1SO 452-7646 • IH 35 NORTH 10:30­ SCREEN 2 TODAY'S YOUR LAST CHANCEI "THELONGEST YARD"is amovie that I THE KING LOVES THE PEOPLE' H COMEDY SLAPSTICK AT ITS FUNNIEST '.o-w ej"i •/•it i'.t Borgah Mtinee iil 12:40 Mon-tri cracksalot of jokes. THf KINO AND H!'. ; OTAI yjBrtCIS hoturtsi£4q-20(M:20-(:10-l:00-950 And alot ofbones; BftMBI MfUS GODZILLA • THANK fOU VA'.K MAN a?iny Er-i'e! Burt Reynoldsstars—'v tough,sassy-and alwaysthatfir». KING OF HEARTS fill EIISID/ The wrathofa of fho^sand'a hundred: of 'kbuiandi 'A •n ; it* '$•>¥% womanscornedstarts Los Angeles 8 «•*et;«j 450(X -iMcr^ar.ce fCiO^in^ v-on histrouble;However, First there was S F Bay Area !esf run 9 6 7Q0G attendance -J't' BILLY JACK', Cambridge. Mass -3 1 2 years and siiH he'sgotsome wrathof THIS IS LIKE Thertcame oo hisown.Andthelast NO ROBBERY WALKING $$ 2-M a+:*v 45minutesof thefilm YOU'VE EVER IIII A(,I / TALL' IMAGINED. isunlikeanything you HiMIDNIGHT MOVIES haveeverseen.It will mm •KW* * haveyouhowlingand nlpw SCREEN cheering likenomovie there ^ everhas; THELONGEST CHALLENGE YARD"isformen,for THl TOUCHFSr MAN AtlV(women,for,everyofie l couoR jy-TECHNicoconr America^ most — ^^JEMATJONINDUSJQI6S PEIEASE bizarreand brutalcrimes NOW SMng^ Starts TOMORROW! AT, 3 -THEATRES [cniEANDHUDDtEWITH DOOBS « ArMtMQ _ 8-^ £* '*7^ M \ l\ i<( I K )[ sj BURTREYHOlDS^v-Screenings MRMMnnMintMttu-ni NATMI "THEUHiaSTYARD" /OAR. STATES OMV^JIIR1 EDDIE COSTAWtiN). ALBERT BERGEN U KSTHICTtO EOLAUTER RHKE CONRAD cOLOnByrecHHKOWft' APAmuouwncTum LAST DAYI THJURSPAY'S TEXAN 5 '•{AV-Vv'^uV: livI ' ••'•r •' •• •' ^ mm M44.aw/r t'1. *4-, ^ ft W R .• .••'•.•••' • •• z'vj&iDZi** a > tA 7-K t i *-vC.-,&<5^ r\irH - • us -' .— • ....-• --•• ••• • .><• u-x,'-• --. I-^-I • n! >&£*?* $J§z '2«$^n Rabbi Jacobs Madcap Slapstick "The Mad Adventured of popular comedian in France* creasingly. entwined in tumbling into a vat of liquid because Oury maintains a-Rabbi Jacob;" directed by;. makes an impressive"debut" mayhem as 'the film gum. 'fast-paced. stream of visual ., Gerard Oury; written by " in Gerard Oury's "The Mad progresses. On the way to his Slimane takes ; Pivert gags. Surprisingly enough-ina^Gerard Oury, Daniell Adventures of Rabbi Jacob," daughter's wedding, Pivert hostage; and the two disguise (ilm of this type, there is an ' ; ^Thompson",, Jo«y •.his first widely distributed Stumbles onto the kidnapping, ; themselves as rabbis with absence of sexual jokes. ^ jgVi'Eisenberg; -starring Louis film in America. The 60-year-of revolutionary . leader Pivert assuming the role of Oury also uses an bc;i' r^De Funes, Claude Girand;<_-old is master of /Slimane (Claude' Giraud) by actor a the famed Rabbi Jacob. A casional jarring juxtapositionV~^at Village Cinema Four,"* slapstick and: rubber-faced jight-wing extremists. chain of classic chase scenes of comedy and violence in hisiS-Hiversidt Twin. , gesticulation. THE KIDNAPERS have ensues with thetwo bpgus rab-scene changes, which makes By C. A. RICHARDSON _ portfays to a Funes Vi'ctori] ' taken Slimane bubble bis running from the effective counterpoint. TheTexan Staff Writer Pivert, a prejudiced in;' gum factory where Pivert, assassins, the police an'd ending is a letdown because • .i.Louis De Funes, themost . dustrialist who becomes in-who has becomfe covered in a Pivert's shrew of a wife (Suzy of the lack of a strong punch;­green bubble gum suit, Deiair). 1 1 "... ... !. -. ' "• •' line, but over-all "Rabbi"rescues" the revolutionary The film is a bit too crazy to Jacob'1 is madcap slapstick at• mMuseum Offers by sending the assassins^ relate, in any "sensible way its best. . ssm :'js Pottery Classes -< Writer To Screen Episode A five-week session of pottery^classes will be held'Oct-21 through Nov. 21 at Lagurta Gloria Art Museum. im y SMS . Classes will be offered from 9 a.m. to poon and X to 4 p.m.' Of ^Circle of Fear' ml Monday and Wednesday and from 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday, in the museum's ceramics studio>The $55 tuition in­Rick Bium, an instructor in the radio-after the showing; cludes the costs bf firing and glazing. television-film department, will screen the Blum Was a;writer and assistant to producer 'f The ceramics classes aredesigned to develop within the stu­premier.episode of "Circle of Fear," which he William Castle on the "Fear"series, aswell as1­dent an awareness of the wide range of possibilities inherent in authored, at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday inCommunica­the "Ghost Story" series, for which he wrote-• tion Complex A3.120. two scripts. 'Uje clay medium. Emphasis will be placed on clayas a meansof First televised iii January, 1974, the episode expression. AH aspects of pottery will be covered, infixing He presently isworking onan ABC childrens' .<: -handbuildingand throwing on a wheel is entitled. "Death's Head" and stars Janet show, "Ziggy's Gang," a combination of' the' Instruction will be given on allTevels for both the beginner Leigh, Rory Calhoun and Gene Nelson, Blum "Our Gang" comedies and "Sesame Street.'': will introduce the film and answer questions '"Gang" may beproduced locallyat KLRN-TV; • :land the'inore advanced student. The intent of the classes is to -enable each student.tQ.gaip self-sufficiency in pottery techni­ques-Glaze technology*application an3"fiflnginetJi«fs alsowill be taught The instructor, Stan Irvin, .recently received his-master of SMYLIE'S fine arts degree^in ceramics at the University. The museum's school; has "no entrance requirements " i»tb » Nu.tM'M Previous art training is not required. Further nforthaUon con­•h 1320 S. IAMAR • (3 blocks west of Drag) 'Robbi Jacob'—literally 1-4 television TACO e 'm&fc • fclO p.m. HH5. NIGHT 9 pmi „ J \x y?** J '-SC'9 KenhJeKy General Education FRIENDLIEST BARTENDERS 4 7 Hee Haws ^ 7 Barnaby Jonet^ --sS?SerJes FLATS n . • 9 Zm.Cooking School 9 Acclon Chicano > 10-30 P*n HAPJ»Y HOUR! TONIGHT AND WAITRESSES IN r.'r-24 I Dream of Jeennle y 24 Movie; /'Playmate*" starring Alan Aid*, Barbara Feldonand Con* nmurn nle Stevens • ii i 1 r i .1 p.m, 7 Hawaii FlveO ^ "...POUTICAL CINEMA AT ITS FINEST, combining ' -XZ&L v.' 9 Woman f... the narrative appeal of 'Z'with the documentary clari- World Headquarters '-»y of The Hour of the Furnaces.' "—" Catholic Film islff "IM; TONIGHT Newsletter BELLY DANCING 1 J ' ."The cast ... is uniformly good and the direction and GREEZY WHEELS INSTRUCTION j UiJONIGHU^^ elegant-photography are evidence of an artistic sen­-BeginneiHund-Advanotd-I-FREE! sibility." ...• . —my Deity News New Classes -. Oct 17th I ? Coming —-extremely. Important, 'deeply fascinatinn ... ^ Call Shirley ^ 472-3344 j dramatically gripping." ~ ,_Sgn Fn~ RAGS & BONES 'J- >; City Mqgazine Commander Cody||; Bruce Springsteen (NO COVER MONDAY THRU' THURSDAY)^® J ^^X,°n J&L Company ' NOW SHYING LONE STAR ON TAP -fc . The Pointer Sister, Bill Monroe 'and the Blt/egrasc Boyi The most powerful • political' film since "State of . Open •rfep • will \DOORS dPEN:8 HAPPY HOUR:8-9 -1 Siege"—a dramatic portrayal of the ttansformation Aawfeer *W» mrt Twdery of an Argentinian laborleader from a militant Peronist CoW W md fHHtf:^mdn§ h6 organizer ,in the 19S0's Jnto a corrupt union • . V •• 4 MERIt SKI PARTY TUES., oa. IS, 7:JO Commander Cody / Hoyt Axton TONIGHT -SAT. S m COLUMBIA RECORDING ARTIST , CASTIUAN ' 24lh AT SAN ANTONIO,,: Halloween Show"-Oct. 31 Nov 1 11A FLOOR TOM RUSH FRIIIIIR, SKI MOVIES, f.;i£ (Recording all week) " ' Br,uce Springsteen -Nov. 6 & 7 TONIGHT . SKI GEAR SHOW ­ ix j. SIGN UP FOR SKI COLORADO am C"'^ ^ • with ORPHAN Burdine Auditorium MORE INFO 47S4471 LONDON RECORDING ARTISTS ^The Pointer Sisters -Nov. 10 ti'iifp 7:30 & 9:30 $1.00 Advance Tickefs: Inner Sahdum 'Sill * • Lr: -m§ / ml * AMtl e^:-yJf save a dollar with an advance sale ^ Discount Records fe ticket from Oat WillieInner Sanctum, aI ' , or at the Armadillo SPACE! 2200 ^ AT ARMADIUO WORLD HEADQUARTERS THE SANDWICH SHOP S, Guadalupe SANDWICHES 4770171 S PJaza TONIGHT! CHOICE OIT QREAOS WHOLE WHEAT, RYE, WHITE, s«rv.flJ W.+K chips 4 wjgr^ e ..Nteman,> Hanks land Puryear i474-?fl,te sit W$ ' /Every Ntfiliti* {IVwibuiohr.-'--. .. '•«•••••::.g fo»y Afternoon LhtinlngTurtle Creek Monday It lib night r. ^cov#r,for stag -vm• 75* bar htghboNt; SfrMMfhfarfhMM>TliwtjBVtt Movi* *. Iirt< HappyHr.Mon-Fri 4tOO-6:4S e 2 for I (i Si s Tiir i n c pr^sonts ^UntKorftd laditt ^ no covtr and 2 fr««: highball* Mon.-Thur*. •V.-..Happy Hr. Mon.-Fr>. 1XBMv , 5r30 r 7(30 yo-v i kM7/, Cfassic Silent Comedy\ GO WEST St (1925) ^ Directed by Buster Keaton ~~ -With Buster Keaton and Kathleen Myers : . plays,with the syntax of,a native American ^enre. /i mokes^ ihe coto and the boy (Keaton) the center of a story. It is a joke...it takes its form from the genreU pl^ys upon ^— and in the process pays its own kind of tribute to'jKe power of .the Western." •pwkley SERVED MOT or COLO , ' ' 1 • •' AIKHUR SPECIAI I.LO ClWiWoWT) ^ ; AVOCAPO,BACM.\ T.4Ofwwfo U° 1.00 CORKED mr E&6 SALAD HAM HAMICHEE5E4* PA5TBAMl^s PIMENTO CFESE Roam 8&*F AVOCADO,Ufto.j16MAfO • AVOCAPOSUPREM^-I.S^ t), ^ 1.00 UO (AO 1.35 1.00 1.30 S ££ Mon-Fri George Wead, The Dynamics of Visual Wit j*aw. SO ^ • 3*8 p.m • ^Nijlif Show S 111 Starcrost w B»-n WHitt JESTER AUDITORIUM W«H,UTTOCE,fOH*TO BL© EYE SWISS I.OS L.LG ~ 1 : W, TH, FrS CHEDDAR CHEESE . . 1.00 .. .Second Level; Doble M6II e 21st & Guadalupefree parking in (he rear r • J wIKR.1 leeee•e•eeeo«eeeeeet % • HOMSMAOfe SOUP MADE FRESH PAILY PER BWL if*Jtwto/amta ^ SPECIAL NIGHT 135 grew*? Ij60 .... ^ DRINKi DROWN . ALL THE_BEERYOU "sDRPiK^ TI€KETS-$6 i-SawK MBMUJL. . „ 50S,NK»«S"-^>> -•(OSSE&SA -IBlock W. M*Mt RAYMOND'S MUG f GARNISHE5 ^XlM. St AftWIHWIbtti m,mwLAffvakm.Uim .jdMMnnmntfei -; HAPPY SPECIAL NIGHT iTVRfNGX HAWYHOURHLFL; i •DWNtte f; Jj'\* X&.rixe&Sf TEdUliLASMTSSO* ^'L W;CT|^^.WTKR LLL^SWCILGOUF |.7FG. ? * fist * i f A ^ >0ANanm\ "ACROSS WQMt -3HRS>KCfM«KIN^ ^ it* \5i 4974.T|I&DAILY^JBX^^%e 9|| Sjtil'iJt k ,'~ t -i'jp r i » », T , r. „ %V, t; »^v x./ai CLASStFIEDADVERTJSlNG FOR SALE , ' '• RATES - FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. B FURN. APARTS. SERVICES WANTED TYPING J5JW0ffl.trrtn|rwm Eacfr. worrf of*•.>*.•h««» i Etcfe word *4 tlrots, l.Jl'.lO bedrooms end theibodroomssre mam-. • _ BUY,SELL.andrestrlngtennisrackets*)® Eocfrwofd5*S-times Vll .01 MUe.-Fqc Sale, KENRAY or«'ftmas;.t $7' .PIONEER, sxm Receiver* 2 yaervolcL -wlth.:lc«.'XD.aker.j^efrlgac9lors. (frost* 'u'l~ Guadalupe Sh»aant rata aachUmo .80 130 watts. AM/FM. Mst offer. Call-4$2^ . TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds. ! ~"~APARTAAENTS~ ,free)/ DW, cable, .waivlns 5. bullMns. • COPYTN#' *'"* a°°^' p5 - : 2707-KJemphill,Parle.: OiwlfW DfSpfa? • "74/1; oggoMvCaggol Diamond Shopr401BM. FromSl65ALL.BlLLSPAl0 76M , ROOM WANTED by Qui.t old couple; • 2]22jlHancock Df.­ >.co(.'X > Inch on* tlmaUJS WhelfsS Lane. 92M202. 4724U2 ERVICE: prefer UT aree private antranc* W0It 1 col. x 11nch M times..;.A.$3.93 FISHER RC-tOB cassatta deck, Next to Americana,Th^atre, walking dl»*. &:•» or less 473-W53. : 1col: x l tenor mort times S2.M 'chromhimdioxide* Dolby. RetailedS2X. STAINED GLASS &aft supplies: Opal t*nee..t(f Norin Loop Shopping Center ACT-CENTUATE THE POSITIVE. Act , INC. asking *120. Take best offer. 476-137*. ano Cam giasv Came, Flux, solder, etc. V Apartments > best of both worlds. One •>. !»•HEED TO BUY Idata or ganaral admlc Renaissance Glass Co. 1013-C West 34th. \ and Uiby's-KOne half block from shuttle, slon tlckat to OU gama. ijt-MM bedrooms at allordable prlcii lor •4SMf71.;-: and Aostxh* transits: 2 bedroom1 MARANTZ 2990 receiver. Ex condition,, sMoents. From >149 plus E * ptAOUNK SCHHXAl aw;Call Cindy, 4ff M3a 477«»4f . townboukeu cxtra large. Two bedroom -• East Jlrt. 4JK57M, 4»-41U. ,42 Dobie Malf. 476-9171,. FEMALE. DOES the prospect ol a.^ 1 YES/ We ClO typft ES» Beautiful "Ehgi tiatvm-fnd two.baths, CA/CH, dis­ hwast)ierl disposal, door to door garbage .„...^hOO pJIM. REALISTIC RECEIVERSwattVRMs! : drofee, beveled glass, perfect condition. ' pickup,ipbel,vmaid service If desired* LARGE !BEDROOM apartmants. Pool. Free Parking t' «!.»t^?rS»?vr»n^ Freshmarr. themes. Flshec >i*ay speakeH.-Besttttar. Bill, Pie safe. Queen AniLChalrv French din* wa&hatefiatin Complex; See owners. Apt* •Water, gas, cable TV paid. 1115. Posada dress, storage space, and telephone^; 1, • Why riot Start out with 44M5S0 between 34 p.itu . Ing table, other beautiful accessories. RealI Apts. SOOI Bull Creak; 4JI-1I03; . „ • : 7 a.m. ••10 p.m. M«F messages, relirayad, call Anna, 47I-MM,*>*1' u' "\ good grades) I!t09 cm. • 3w,Rlyer Road (Tarrytown). -477-2563.. 113 OfjcSII 151-4849. * a.m;\S p.m. Sat;^ S50/month. SANSUI 35QA receiver, 2 KLH 17 rlWJO PLUS E; gives you .full kltctwn '472-3210. and 472^7677 • s^aakm^ AR turntable *350. complete. PORTABLE KENMORE. washer/dryer, MWim breakfatt bar, extra large dosats. NEED TWO jMd tfckefs for Texas vk .....11:00 •JR. excellent condition, 2 years old. WE RENT v.j.v inc. AI»M^eme. »^>476-9093 TYPING , Reports. .Resumes,-. "V lW vnM if imn aril hi •• Old: cell 4714974, S*7 p;nu S2S0. TYPEWRITERS. Manuals S30 and up. USTIN EL POSADO from S130. FantastK typing . LOST & F0UMD : Theses^ Letters; apartments, with, cable, pool, full All University and •Electrics from S50. Many models in . kitchens. On city and. shuttle but. printing' LOST; MALE-CAT. White *lti dark business work . sloe*, pan's. 2400 San Gabriel 4744396. Yl • 102.,EAST »NO STREET. Bant Tree .9264304. * 45*5316. 5 Blocks East of the Orag NEED ANAPARTMENT Apartments. All new one: bedroom et>" FLOWER PEOPLE need several „ 7 — Theses and dissertations • s FOR FALL? ' flciencfes. Extra long beds.-cable TV; manent people to sell flowersfor.the n • — Law Briefs UMIVERSITY PROTECT YOUR HOME or 1969 OPEL GT; New tlrev rebuilt 476-6733 CA/CH. S13S 'plus electricity. See business 74--7S season.fay: X % plus bonu •eogin».4»ipeeA great gas mileage. SIOO. GIVE US A CALL! manager apartment np. V with e deadbolt lock. Call Austin Lock For Interview, Denlse. 2U-11^: — Term papers and reports Service, for. appointment. 447*2009. Call 451-5010. . r Habitat Hunters Is FREE apartment -! SQUARE Licensed and bonded. Prompt, Professional v PART TlMfe. Earn at least *as i level of Dobie Mau. We specializeIn stu­luxury mlnl-apartment oh shuttle. Rant for 14^ hours one weekend per nWith. CASH FpR YOUR 1949-72 Triumph TR" 250 WATT locator service, located In the lower 4 bloc Its from campus. 900 , UNEXPECTED VACIANCY. Furnished, • -Service1 6. For Sale: Hardtop for MK-IVSpitfire. STEREO SYSTEM dent complexes. West: 2nd. Newly remodel­reduction. 4105 Speedway. Manager •Prior service, no addlHonal t/alnlng 453-8101 •<77^«l.v..-:.-;;/ •: -"V agrtment 2C3. 4»^it ^6-5940, M5-. ROOMMATES Pick-up Service Available HASlTAT HUNTERS ed, fi rofshed, l bedroom >3102 Glenvlew 1950 XK 150 JAGUAR fhced head coupe? Famous AX-7000. Garrard Stereo with Lower Level, Dobie Mail,: apartments. CA/CH, all -Wire wheels, new. pelnt, mechanically AM/FM tuner,completcaudlophlle cor,-Suite 8A UT AREA,-2 bedroonv 2 bath, CA/CH,-FEMALE KOOMMATE MriM unfur­COCKTAIL HELP at South — . sound..255-2337. trolv gigantic air suspension. 10-way Frl. nished bedroom. Lamar-Worth Loop. by or call 444-0711 after 7 p.iti. bills f aid, $135. Mon. -large closets. laundry fa£llities, pool speaker system with targ< 10" woofer, 474-1532 hMSonable. 477-2600. 474-9813. -»S3. Mbry, 492-lSA or .4SM4I2. nfn Ford. East Riverside.', 7 MRS. BODOUR'S TYPING SERVICE. • ' 5:06. '72 MGB, 7.500 mfles. AC' AM/FM, }W mldranpe andrtuwlw.One year 8:30- Reports, theses, dissertations and books radlals. Tonnaau sU^reck. green tan Irv-guarantee on patti and labor/local ser- Call 478-7411 i. CASA BLANCA Apts. 2S06 Manor Road. FEMALE HOUSEMATE wanted. Own NEED EXTRA liAOffEV?/ --typed accurately, fast and reasonably..,,.,. vice. Suggested retail SS29, but we are room, three Mocks to campus. S42.30. rlerior: Immaculate: S3995.920*1941 after - i:00 p.m.. Apply Apt. 'H10/month ABP, no deposit if tenant the streets of Austin. T)» Printing and binding on request. Clo«eiw®S3® selling (4)) super:super systems for'C299. Cash After 471-4050; 6 pjn. SUNNYVALE paints apt. We furnlshpeTnt. Lease for 4 CM0M. 453-1500. In. 47M113. . V" 6-2 TermsT 210 months and get last month's fr«e rent, 771 FIAT 150. 2 door convertible. S1350. UNITED FREIGHT SALES rsldentrtmanager. FEMALE HOUSEMATE needed. S70 COCKTAIL HELP 474-5550. Resk DISSERTATIONS,.-ttiesesr• reporti, end^Jfj?, ^n=ig^---~ ---453S N. Lamar APTS. plus Vk Wlls. S ModuUT.IMock Jhuttle. p.m.In person. law briefs. Experienced typlst.r.* V i^Aoodaytg£lday-f-ta-Ai5ahitdeyJbi^ 1 BEPROOA\lbath; 2 bedr»m,2batti. Nicely furnished. 474^AJ». . • 'Ltmtr. . j > Tarrytpwn. M07 Brktla Path. Lorraine '.-: . . . • .549 VW. Good running condition* Brady. 47T4715. :, ' AM/FM. AC SS25. 476-1(7^ «4 I6W. -• 2.BDRM.S150 QUIET ENFIELD minutes from UT: Northwestarea. Pool, FEMALE forqualnttwobedroom epart-^ -THREE-BOYS, pbid-slttar—Thursday DISCOUNTED Bdriti. withfullkitchen, bright . laundry, etc Shoal Creek North*Apt. 452-ment Downtown. S42/montKplus Vi Mils. evenings and some others:. Need "V "J usfHofffi"of• 27tTT afT 474-4SM. «1«m-B Lavaca. ex­ : ;m CHEVROLET p(ck-up fruck.~good : STEREO SYSTEMS 1304 SUMMIT 441 shag, large rooms. Good ' '2873I-.;; •. : perlance and transportation. 4S1-31M condition. 6 cylinder,standard, S6S). 243-storage, sauna; cable afternoons, t Guadalupe .0621.447-2016 (work). Bob. ' $99.00 pool, 4 blocks from campus, .1 bedroonC> • FEMALE ROOMMATE: Oct.15: Urge f 2707 Hemphill, Parley M) 'Jwao nrstems that feature a power-s and congenial at 1 bedroom CH/AC S123. 472-5515 aft«*.5:00 p.m. . old house near shuttle; Bedty, 4S4-1S43, PERSON TO DRIVE School-type bus. ^71 GMC one ton van end '69 GMC W ton ful 100 watt AM/FM stereo receiver, & • from S148.50 plus electricity. • Marilyn, 4S3-754I. y.°".m. ANTILLES : van.: Both In excellent condition. Must (two), acoustically matched air- NO DEPOSIT. NO LEASE. Clean, cute WauffeuCs license required.S3.00/hour. ^ selL B37-6Q23 efter 5. suspension speakers. Alto available 807 West Lynn. 477-7794, 472-efficiencies. Close downtown, shuttta FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share Apply m penan S17 South Lamar. 4162. 3-1 duple*. Fireplace, CA/CH, own &':i974 FIAT XL/9.2600mJlev brown. Call s*rlas BSR turntables. old'Austin: neighborhood. 1113 W. loth. room. 434-M50. Keep Trying.' -• •• * APTS.; HURRY, these, systems are limited. Pendleton Properties. 454-7618, 442-8593. BEST PRODUCTS, INC. has pari time Plc>j«7»S2,5andl. Cash or E-Z terms. 2204 EnfieJd'f,X3. a roommate to person, I TRANSPORTER pick-up. New UNITED FREIGHT SALES 2907 San Gabriel. $9S^plus*olectrtcity:-share 5 bedroom apertment.-Share.Mlls ^ -reoglntf, trensmissloa tires, and prac-A539 N. LAMAR 2 BDRM*205 ABP Barham Properties. 9264365. ~—«. .. SSSSl9 *5SZ mooth ,or 3*Ws. "n %•ijffcaihr everything else; tape deck. S950 . "MONDAY-FRIDAY M < . V CREEKSIDE 474-ONZ for apt. ^'maofhsalary orIncfnffveprogram. with or withouKplctures M or oftW. 476-OOIS. Pat. • SATURDAY M . 472-1923 ELCAA4ERON APTS. SlI^SW.Furn1 Call 4J^}75»:~ 2 Day Service . MALE -ONE BEOROOM SN. On Rlver /'69 VW 5EDAN/ AM/FM, AC needs shuttle route. 1206 East 52nd Street. 453* near shuttle, must be student and Ilka ~~ 472-3210 and 472-7677 Large efficiency, CA/CH, shag, walk-end 2 bedrooms. CA/CH,"water paid, on _ '.pork. S790.44M3S2. ins, complete kitchen. ,bath-vanity. On pets. 441-7111. -i Ppfi -For Sole cffy/shuttle route. SI15 piut G* thru: 6239T 472^938.: -1973 BUICK RIVIERA; Excellent; Less August TS. 476-8324, efter 2 p.m.^.,-; LARGE-FURNISHED OM bedroom OPENING IN FOUR' Bedroom'house.' * . NEEDED NOW 'I^-;j:RANCES WOODS TYPINGSERVlCEfJA^ BEAUTIFUL brlndtt female boxer. NEED A GREAT D,,wr^'' -than 15,000 miles. All power, cruise con­ Own room University area, 170 plus Matura dependable and stabla haVd ^ Eleven weeks old. AKC, excellent apartment on 33rd^ 8150 plus gas. elec­ trol. 45V1237 or 471-1600. . PLACE TO LIVE? • -m tricity: Call 3454648 or 40-2224. bills. Carl, 4S2-3374. worker for various duties at Northwest pedigree. After 7 or weekaitds. J5»-J790. ; . • apartment complex. Night students i(v;-i;1972 KARMANN' GHIA. Very low FEMALEr-Free room & board for.' : BOBBYE DELAFIELD. IBM Selectrfc,'^ SENSITIVE, beautlfuL pleasure riding isr'r TRY THE /LARGE 1 BEDROOM. 5 minutes from ecceptable. No day students. J=.uaiUbeci yoers experlence. books; -Ai 4.^ :;mileage. Call Sara.Days. 442-1496 or see ; ;2 BEDROOM. 2 BATH.^URN. APT. campus on shuttle, route. S165 .ABP. someone who lontihersev InIf*'coun­.Slcis^ellte, » |vv-«venlngs at 1212-C Brackenrldge mare. S3D0 or Trade. 47M4N. $210 ALL BILLS PAUD (Wi Manager, 472*1359. try, IS minutes from campus. *24-449*. apartment plus salary for qualified per­dissertations, theses, repoTts,. ^-•'Apartments. BLACKSTdNE son. 345-17M between w. mlitieogrWIng. 442-7114;?. Mi»c. -For Sole PLUSH EFFICIENCY apartment. Fui? IMMEDIATE ^PENINO • dup female OOOGE VAN.-Tradesman 100. Stan^ "is APARTMENTS kitchen, double bed, shag carpet 4415 VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER S100 plus eleet. Own room, carport, near DIvenHled ' \ LE FONTE^ NEED KEYPUNCH OPERATOR II In Servlcet-' Oraduate and undergraduate >-• ;f'^v-.;fdant V-t, paheled, carpeted. Excellent UT; bebble, 47*-3«3. 47M17*. ' 803 West 28th Ave. B, 451-7997. VW,.condition, SS^OOO. 4414977 after 5. iShare a large room for S64JO/mo. or the Secretary of Slate's Office. Need the ^"Idln9" 1 LARGE CARPETED efficiency, 2700 <3&take an entire room for S112J0 fur-^» 472-6480 FEMALE ROOMMATE share large 1 . '»!l°*rtnQ qualifications: HawMlsJ^oS?8' Koenl^ r^TT FORMULA 455 FlreMrd. All power, nlshedf alt bills paid. Maid service once^-& 472-4142 School. bedroom cottage SM/month . plus w.iaS'te '• *'least one year actual operating ; CASUALLY YOU Swisher. 1 block Law • £fev;:r*dlal% blue,white top, clan,one owner ^ a week. ^ fA? ^ Barry Gllllngwater Cogsfg.;: 8115/month. 4784550. utilities. 474*7516 or 47M4*. ^ STARK TAPING; Specialty: Tachnlc*KSfs« -. .Creative Outdoor Portraits "•~ Bring your own roommate or we will, " >s-r.; 3. High School graduate. -Experiencedtheses, dlssertatlonvPR's;.-I; •' • Save V> Now . match you with a compatible one. FEAWLE ROOMMATE needed to share: . 3. Knowledge of other equipment,' manuscripts, etc?.Printing, blndlngj&cis SUBLET . TWO BEOROOM, two bath 8-^70 AUDI S2300. Wricked 70 AUDI 1400. This is economy 81 convenience at its • lerge two bedroom, two batti apartment . such as sorters, collators, etc. VCharle»;warV;4JW^ll,; T ••. • I «U,bofh for <2M0. 4S1-42W. Visit our Studio -•best. • . t • apartment pool,;AC, dishwasher, S22S on CR-shuttle route. Call 45*«li at "any : ;; 4, Ability to work under-pressure of: plus electricity, November, December, production schedules. . MIN-NIE'L. HAMMETT Typing 4^?'} ONLY 200 YARDS FROM UT CAMPUS- . ••••••• i e . . S|Sj*»4 VW-not beeuttfut but mechanlaiiy Royce Portraits • • 2910 Red River -^ -4764631 • 476-3B2. t m . . Will be Olven a kn-punch test. Contact : Duplicating Service. Theses, dlsser-. ?&$-.:e«cetlent, radlo, hlgh biock seets. isn 2420 Guadalupe^^ 472-4219 2505 ENFIELDROAD. Efficiency, ABP, ROOMMATE St bedroom duplex. Own Owen Coonat 475-5*45 forappolrtWrierit. : wfens,vpapers of all kftds. resumes. ' l^»rm.4»^. . r°". 443-T^n, 441-mm. ' m SERENA shuttle, laundry, ample parking, pool, , rooi^. 1mojrth ^ bllls SR shuffle. > free rafras^nwntt. 1,471.3413. 471-17»5.; courtyard. tl2S/mOntn. 4/MI71, .SsBVW CAMPER. wlde oval tlr«1. 2 extra PLAZA- NEAT.Accurateandprocnpf typing. 40 FREEWHEELING F^ARK MODELS NEEDED , cents perpage.Treses »S cents.&lf447;»,­ m S135/MONTH. Near University. ! . VENTURA 9210 Northgate Blvd. bedroom, CA/CH, disposal, dishwasher^ : FURN. HOUSES (Female and MaM . Trainees and Professional.'Register now BICYCLER pool, leundry facilities, wafer/gas paid, vv . MABYL SMALLWQOD Tyi I OLOSMOBILE . Cutlass Supreme, for-femporary employment, cetegwies Last I " Console.. bucket saatv M.000 miles, ex­•SHOP Flats $t88 ABPf;^ 4412 Avenue A. 452-4249. --,COUNTRY HOUSE, Near JOnestown. 3 are: hoatest. style shows,product adver­: minute, overnlgtit\avelle£!o. Term cellent condition. SMS. After 5 p.mv 476-R2tlMJOJplusA 2 electricity5?"5Jurn./unfurn.• ' From Luxury', V; bedroom Studio; IVi beth.. bedroom;: furnished, tising, TV.comm,* etc. _ papers,^theses, dissertations, letters;: ONE BEDR06mr»psrtftehV within secluded. Tom 50(2. ^ Frost-free self-cleaning r MasterCharjNk BankAmerlcard. 1*2-' FOR WHATEVER 3410 Burleson Rd. refrigerator, walking distance UT,-Shuttle bus. 8129 Olassock. 367-1154, »3MIM (Keep Weekdays 5 p.m. to t p.m. & Sat. Va.m. oven.'Fireplace; wet bar.^Prlvete petto 0717 or i YOUR BICYCLE NEEDS Barfiam Prop. & storage. No children. Swimming pool. plus utilities^ 850 deposit. 208 East 31st. trylpg>. to 1p.mi AUSTIN MODEL'S AGENCY, \ 447.-4571 345 & pool faMe. •yri•?» WE CARRY A LARGE IftW 451-7577. 447-1240 LAKE AUSTIN, Quiet country living 15^' AAanager Apt. 112 Musical -For Sale ' SELECTION OFPART? AND rr 836-9031 » -^v '444-3161 STUDIO APARTMENT-rflreplace, minutes campus/downtown, f badroom!;vV» ACCESSORIES ~!H,. cable* convenient-900 mobile home S70; 2 bedroom »130r cablniu FROGS DONrr FLY • LEARN 'T6 PLAY GUITAR. Peglnner; plus E. 451*3464,472-5129.^ STO/houseboetllM. 3Z7-1M1< 3J7-I151. BUT CRAZY CAPTIONS DO ALSO THY OUR ONb-UAY ^ CATCH THE EYE STUDENTSI NEED typing?: Call Tina and advanced. Orew Thomason. 478­ • 2079. REPAIR SERVICE LUXURY- -H. h.pnv iMng thm W-l-fl lllr. Wt, 473-M14 or come by m west llth Sulte: • TARRYTOWN. Shuttle, mature slnglt, -218. " . .—:—.• ..^i. • ' falklng to people on the telephone; New 2604 SAN GABRIEL 477-6844 MISCELLANEOUS IM^-STUDIO PIANO, Walnut finish. Ex- CSroom siS*4J93r»5> *' 1>-•... rtflces, flve deys e week, free parking, cedent condition. S700.327-3035, • • .OPEN TILL 9.PJM. ON TUESDAY 8. 1 BR -$160 5:1 OAK CREEK < friendly atmosphert, full or part time, Just North of 27th at THURSDAY t blocks to .campus, dishwasher, dis­ LETELY REDECORATED larger NELSON^dttWS: Zunl ,Indian bonuses plus salaries. Cell 4S1-33S7 Guadalupe ;v;.LES PAUL Standard; gold posal,-pool. etc. 3M& APARTMENTS I apt. Private perklng.-frees.'fwo lewelry; A#lcan and Mexican In between t a.m. and 1p.m., or between S 2707 Hemphill Park > ' reasonable, must sell. 472-4807. .474-1711 University Texas.Lease 47*4043. 4411 South Congress. 444-3(14. ftm. and * p.m. Experltnce pays more, .. Efficiency, 18> 2 Bdim, Furnished 6 ./Mondays. . it not necessary. v;!WXjnPIECE Lbdwig-drum set. sevens .BEAUTIFUL' Unfurnished. ZTIdilan cymbals. Remo.practice set,:: 'I'tf1507Houston LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beglnner.Wr v^Call 472-8938 after 5 pW CREEK 45443M iglS UNF. APARTS. end advahcad. Drew Thomason. ?I\mzAA -r^-. iSHS • • A. • : : WILLOW Vaulletf ceilings, private. balconies, ,307*. CATFISH Spring-fed-yeer-eraund :creek flows semester leases, from »135/monthv among the Mg trees oh this select 4V> _ — acre tract. Pricedright-Moderate down-S® CREEK $159.50 HORSE STALLS for rent. Runs, arena,#?^ ,PARLOUR.. mJA ' \ ' PtU^SSL"*^-RMMn,bh' need part-time daenXp help. G^af •: TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING Homes -For Sale jajm«t/ Balancevflnanced 10 years. • 2 BR ALLBILLSPAID v BRAND NEW ALL BILLS PAID |ob fgr w|lh 7KBsportatlon Phone Don. WM4W. fEFFICIENCIESv S few. 3 Large,PoolSjS,-;;' Bennett and Associates. -sl55pliJs electricity, and deposit-b drooms from tl5f/all billspeld.Also 3 ;Books, records, lewelry.gulfars, radlot,-;-',v FULLTIME Manager -Apt.'20l b drooms. 'Furnished or unfurnished. stereos. Aaron's. 330 Congress, dowm.V' MOBILE'HOME Henslee 1967 12 x50, THREADS $155 jwMosfer CHI 926-1347 or 451-1tst. TYPING SERVICE ' turnliSMT AC -central heating. Ex~ FULL TIME THERAPIST needed for . • Funkttonal Finery . ^ceflent condition S2800.1 mile from UT Your suit's 1 Bedroom -^ M- yeer round resldentlel Wilderness cemp 472-3210 and " (MAYNARD KREBSI . T *KE OVER LEASE through Feb. One vcampus. 619 W. 37th 452-8040. 2. readyfj L. • All Bills Paid — b idroom studio. Nodeposit, no bills.Oct. UNCLASSIFIED serving emotionally disturbed F Tse. S175/monlh. 345l-A WIIIowrun.444- 'adolescents.. Extensive travel end 2405 NUECES Buckingham Square7hT " Involved. Must be single, ;B«liyD«iicin9lintruetlon^7MM4.T^'» . $140 •H i 711W. 33nd IV ' \ >. • fioolthy. and able to wltMtandthe rigors ' AAotorcydes -For Sale 454-4487, « FOUNTAlNJERR AfCe$^ Toshiba SR40 turntable. 474-3*50. , of continual emotional stress in the out- TME"— ROOMS ; of-doorsi Require a oneir*«r..commltt­ • • SAVE MONEY! Cell us before buying APARTMENTS] ment to the position.: Starting salary • 4 .L^rge l:b«lroom, large closets, fully. 'U VW buc. G. Condlt. MN. 4744504. UNF. HOUSES .motorcycle Insurance. Lambert In­ 'iswanca Aswclales,, Inc 4300.Medlcal O^RGE ATTRACTIVE Ite^l desk, US. " l carpeted cable, tflspOiel, Walter, ges, .EXAN DORM. 1905 Nueces. Doubles *500 a month, room and board, and" ,Parkway. 453-3SS4. .v1...swimming pool.furnlshed. Walking dls-J ao/Semester.' Slngles-S3K/Semester: hospitalisation.-Insurance, For further Day dove hunting.. Idea). 443-3109. .TfagtZpiffi* f,l'BR Furn ! -lance to UT..No;chlldren! of pets. 410 ally .maid;, service;: central-air. . details, contact Drscovery Land; Inc.; FORi RENT. Three,.bedroom house, 3#,h' Jr OT|| Twtf .,P.O. Bo* 113,-Bryan, T»xas 77M1. „... IV* bath. Ed Bielke. 441-. 2*07 after 9:30 p.m: Avellable now.', S; ..Many extras. S«2S Arm. Call 453-3M5 diarger, MO.OO. Kodak PocMt MlMOJO. : ! a from campus. Co-Ed. Resident-OU date ticket wanted 441-3201 Annex . --» . > j. „ tevenlogs) or Jim at 350-5131 *JJ27 Col^pot Frosl-free refrlgersrtof, M0J». ; 1 jStuJenl's Ue This fine Menagers,i1 477-1740T, Austfn. .J (days) i Tape a toes1terfTyo^i l 470-9441. n Bedroom/1 vBath,. FurnIshed/Unfurf Hlcleneies, private both, AC. t«0, bills; -Students ' UlSNorwalkLane .. WATERLOO FLATS. BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS.714W.13W. alrs.447-3455. -M. •i mo HONOA 3S0SL.. Recent overhaul,' 'P—4 btka—new condition,center a» Hundreds of vacanciesavailable In town rnany new parts. runs great. Asking 1170 kinfurnlshed/(199furVilshed ROOM TO SUBLET In Oobla. 337-14M, gMiiiiun.1 *i 'Walters/Waitresses wanted^1 z>**<"• end hi the country.-Austin's oldest and 451-4710or 345-3*K ^ ofhir^wSSSf P*n*** D"'"'«^ $140 ALL Bills PAID ate Goosedown sleeping bag, *50.473-1740.^ » E>p,rltrtce not nKnury ''v'-.• largest Rental 3«rvteo^>roven results.41 Waller Street M, (7S) sts monthly, Maid service. 'im HONDA 175 Excellent condition ' 474-4M3 473-414! IhMfl&iAC; ABP^near caplw;303 East: Have 4 ou 1 student tickets. 453-5771. -V -_ E*celjent pay . iiV t ELECTRONICOlSK calculator. Basic 4 l Bedroom Barry Gllllngwater Co. • , ,/Transportation Necessary, -ts -% RENTAL BUREAU Helmet and lock included. Call Jon, 4T4-: «•"?!?*•«tfc»n*tBm. Beautiful coodl-' in* JnS' connwt'JM Fr*<«*f*i Flute good condlt. *250.493-4***., • ? < 4501 Guadalupe Open 7 Deys vll4»or443-J406after 4:00. * tlon M0 4544504 after 7 pm. Call 892-1949 HALLMARKAPTS. V ' i -,,'MOVE INtODAYi; Bell helmet *31 Protecl15^477-4305.' % -70$ W. 34th DUPLEXES Mptcpqtdfs -Lfer Sak V i"* 1-BR UNF. New flair bluefeeiM *4 ea, 4Sl-44*3.f 454-8239 HELP WANTED -';V:­ New,H0dak» SS50,453-3237.(Good buy.^f^aPI^^ m Mtk* TAAAftiCXX Self Pom1" n*cklac*« 491-aif., 454-3953 = <52-5093 : 381$'Guadalupe mi./ » ^ . • 'M8SA rabwllt engine. 447-9M0. COLORFUL::-r1SV| 4®.' Jf. CLOSE DOWNTOWN iend shuttle bu»; '<• Toyota excellent *990 493-174*. : MCDONALD^ S^n Marcos Parfect 3 to 4 students) Luxurious - S5??­ ^EFFICIENCIES®^^ Honda—-c«fjp»t. fireplace, full >kltchen Doghouseanlmalcagefc443-3l09, JttO\N > HIRING FOR pUR NEW & Freekltteas'yrlthsoul.473-4773.' A STORE 1645 Guadalupe 392-0176" ONE BEDROOMS m. , Foui»d blk/Wht/fem kitten.4794*44 " ''is#'** 8* ifUso^iEJmu^ :;Shaa/«ll»hwasher/i . .«M fwittrass. box *prings, *39.<4S141lt. 4­ T,9«* arlll, pets ok, . Pullw.-w.or Part-time, wi. ..me positionspos available' ,, j.f rcoiy •cotr.munltyA - PRETTY DUPLteX 'J New car tape deck, >35.451-41*4,, < v " NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY iffar Miuttl*- upleifor. Burmese klttens;r477-93H a^ter Sfier . ^ '2 6R2BA tioiet' / Cruise vp to pfcturesque ;^swsprw e? surplus E J' LARGE POOL -'ALL BILLS PAID*'.. Northeast Austlnyef loMalntaftanceshlttijBvaliable Inearlvmornlrio nelg :Eacf(dupt«« Joncad badiyard.VCOvereid parl>lng; ^lSan Texas'' tra »taa*-roomI:,plus,washer. «/ryer TRAVEL " 4»4|« -appliances fun-, Apply In person atMcDonald's Dobie Mall -newest Honda dealer' ?7 ,­ >hiwied. *i« ^ui ~ Monday Friday 9-11 a.m. and l-3 p.m. only-. k(* 1­ .fa;.-.-}!1 iassHis Soviets Study UTProgrcuris Staff Pay Hikes By RICK CAMP i yriiiv*Qlve8V"niutuar"respect!" Tekan Staff Writer; ,1Jj-^'-between student and teacher, By WADE WILCOX. barrassment to. the state, but hand 1 would be equally sur-" A Russian educational oft.. Rozov said, and the teacher i£ i and many legislators are-insen­"prised not to-see the establish-r ? ­ffcejMyho visited the Universi^'^^cpected toplay a "hero rolei". PAUL WATLER t's; sitive-to the. needs of state ' ment; of uniform per- some r Monday said the centralV process. Because 0/ Texan Staff Writers employes,"' Doggett said. soiinel procedure body,".J,7> task of the Soviet educational this, nesaidi the teacher holds Pay raises for state ''Most people who-work with Helburn said. Z~ system is • V to create the /: .vital re^nsibility in Soviet employes will bea top priority the state have to work part-The: University wants to be" possibilities for the develop-society. in^jti^e -next -session of the time someplace else." exempted. .from -the state's ment of all-around presonality Hu^nitie^\and science Legislature, Sen. Lloyd DOGGETT tyEt with the personnel organization lii Soviet society.". ­subjects are-gtven. equal m Dojjgett of Austin promised University Staff Employes because its job classifications status in Russian^ducation, University staff employes and Association earlier to en-. are so different, he said. {^1 , Valeriy .itonstantinovich • Rozov said. The official ex-Texas "Public JEmployesi courage members to testify 'BUT THE PRESENT; 4"; 3irf Rozov, chief of the.j'Plained -that' both fields' are Association members Mon­before' the Public Employes , system, gives money for pay j Educational Institutions considered necessary in the day.. ' • .. Study Commission Oct. 25and raises in a lump sum .to the ;•-$ Department.within the-Soviet Soviet Union. 'WIS When Gov. Dolph Briscoe 26 about their specific Board of Regents, who may Ministry ofEducation, joined "" Rozov described a Soviet refused to-call a special problems: Doggett serves on dole" it out as they see fit," four,fellow Russian educators school as a. place which is Too Late legislative..session last the commission. •' Helburn said. in cqmi«g-to the University to "penetrated by an eagerness summer.to approve a pay in­The body;, whose members ' UniversityStaff Association -j V-s studyeducational programs to gain knowledge.".. Ye*r the. University crease for. state employes,' are appointed by Briscoe, was President Pat Weiton said his ji ~£ and. research in teacher train-• • As he was concluding his doe* tow. away ille-. Briscoe "suggested the sanctioned by a joint House-. organization would like to see ]tj­ --JE ing. fiiVisit to one of the United gally.: parked cars, -Legislature vote an emergen­Senate resolution to study JC-• States' largest universities, Craig Aronoff, doctor­cy appropriation in Januaryto state employe .working con­four specific areas:. Sf . •' /-educators said they had Rozov said he thought the op? al candidate, learned raise' state salaries by 10 per­ditions and examine the ~ 'Increase the interest ? /.'. not seen enough American in­timal size for . a university Monday. He found his cent. possibility of establishing a rates paid on retirement pen-• stitutions to compare 'com­-would be approximately10,000 car hooked to a tow ACfcOR-DttyG TO collective bargaining system sions fromthepresent 2V4per-;prehensively education in the' students. However, he' added truck in time to sign DOGGErFT, Briscoe promised. at "some level""in the state . cdnt to.5 percent andgive cer-s. , ,,,v Soviet Union to U.S. educa-; that the general purpose; or the impoundment pa­• to support a' pay raise "with: government. y -• tain noncareef employes, like ~f\$> VK 's; ,tion. Rozov did say .some specialization ,of a university pers. all his energy." • "This. (collective bargain-^ teaching ^assistants, La grace ''1 ^ sKv structural'.differences 'exist, could', make a larger number An emergency pay hike of 10 -ing) is an area where rwe can• period before deducting pen-; > skfe between the educational: of students" desirable.-, percent maymean state expect much blood to be :.siort funds from their checks. ~z,i. ' = systems ofthe two countries.: employes will not get the full shed," commission member • Build a cost of living bk^s ,17 percent pay raise proposed Dr-isadore B. Helburn, crease into staff salaries. Rozov citied-'method.of op-" Texan Stoff Mwtrnby PhH Huber in the 1975 general budget, he University Management • Reimburse employes for;|*§'• portunity'' as an advantage6f . said. , Professor, said.; • untaken sick ;leave and in:• higher education ih Russia, SUGGESTED INCREASES "I WOULD BE crease'vacation time from the. safying, "Three-quarters of all SURPRISES) to see for state employes are17 per­ the es? present oneday off per month" '}t?§ Texan Recydi Soviet students receive cent for 1975 and 6.8 percent tablishment of collective ' • improve", working con- stipends at the expense of the for fiscal 1976; bargaining. -But on the oth'er • ditions. ' ' state." Rozov said some The green Dally .Texan bottoming.xut most recently Clevepak refu: to take anjjt homebuilders as; an indication- . • . "OF. Talking to the Texas Public • students' educations.„are recycling boxes sponsored by • at 45cents per hundredweight.. paper at all.­ that the market might soon Employes Association Mon­financed by collective enter-Texas . Student Publications At this level, Texas Student' improve. ' day nighty Dpggett blamed the •••••-• prises which sponsor them. and Student Governmentwere' -Publications begins, losing • Howell -explained tyat the University Board of Regentsremoved Monday because the money;, he added. •recycled newsprint market Levy-said'he thinksit will Be for differentiating betwjeen 5' Teacher-student-interaction recycling operation . -Levy, who was in charge of at least two ^ix weeks Studyin started fluctuates, but-she hopes that to state and University staff in was one subject examined four months ago is no longer pidking up the papersand tak­ before Clevepak cah take any" it .will .-.pick Up when the pay. scales. University during~Mon more paper but added that the _hoinebuilding^,_i n4ustry_ employes :often receive less The Soviet learning process pany, said that when he made 'last-sl^k—Iir recyel-ed­ recovers. She'cited President for (Joing UjeTsame job~he~ -Europethis Joy Howell, former his delivery Monda_yy; newsprint demand lastedfor a • Ford's request for help to the said. TUTORING chairperson of Student-.-^? year and a half.' ,.The senator said hewas sur^Government's Environmental 'lg' EXPERIENCED LADY tutoring If You Need Help In the meantime, Levy, wh^1"prised, to learn of the-number Protection Committee, said ~ Biology 302, 3ta. Chemistry 301; 302. 472­ spring. 4308 Otter Sun! Sot. oil day. Monday maybe out of a job, is in his of state employes .receiving itfer 5:00 p.m. Sun, that . Clevepak Cor­ words"the first vicjnp of the A.food stamp assistance. ­ PHYSICS TUTOfrttfG, Graduate sfu-poration, which recycled the dent; flvft yoortoxporlenco;group rates; depression j ^-v'. !'Th"is should be a real em­ 45242)0,' 47t«4fS3 or se« 9.2tt RLM, . paper, is refusing to take any; Ju*t Someone Who Will Listen •t refrigerators,: caior vironmental committee said. -edirlon washers/dryart, stereos for' rent.-. EZ business.firms, student teaching and area • Rentals. 406 East 1st. 473-627S. studies programs are available. STUDIO, for rent, for teaching.plario or Levy said-the-price offered Cordially invites you voice. Ibfcxttt from campus. M-SOT?. s's&r ' for 100. pounds of discarded Live with families or in student dorms. Full' : TWO BEDROOM mobile borne in Buda. paper has been dropping % view the "Silent 700"trn integration into the student community. Water furnished, «12S/month. 474-7619, or Buda 2fS-3tt3. steadily for several months. Carlos electronic data terminal Learn or imp.rove your languageability. English language program in Vienna.All , Don't Make A Move ' family, featuring the new programs includeintensive orientation. ' Without Calling ' CastonedQ Model 742 Programable Financial6idis available. . ••• ••.«» ADARTMENT 'W. Data Terminal. JOURNEYTO IXTLAN , Se'e your study abroad-advisor and write us®* today: The Lessons of Don Juan SOE IERS Office of Admissions "jF'b • SERViCE October 18 ' Room 8 ' Staggeringly,beautiful"—Book World The.lnstitute of.European Stuciies • 25 Weeks OnThe yew YorkTimes Best Seller List.®5? •pia# . "'Utterly fascinating"—N.K Times Book Review : 875 North Michigan Avenue U.T. Computing Center A Free Sendee ­ E-: The "third"and finest book"* in Castaneda's Chicago, Illinois 60611 24Hoaraa Day magnificent trilogy that began withThe Teachings -Hrs^4AJ>M-if? • or Don Juan andcontinued with A SeDaralB^&eatou. 472-4162 m " 'Time. All three Castanedaclassics now available TheInstituteof for ohly $1.50 each. ~ POCKET-BOOKS EuropeanStucfies BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNIVERSITY CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY £ ALUMNI LOUNGE 3rrf floor -.msp' Town'es Hall' ']?(Law School)' 7:30 P.M. f vmk TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1974 38S . ' . • • som Th* following !• the Chait«r,«nd By.Law> Ravltion CommlttM'* neommtnded propouls for tha election' of itudentmembers to the Board of Director*. The proposal willbe dltcuMed «t the Octobetl6 meeting of the Board. • . -, si m ' . «?,•.? '"'"V . s'1' « "ATE AND TIME OP FIRST ELECTION: Monday and Tuesday. February 17 and 18, 8:30B.m.'-4:30'p.m. A young woman who enixjlls .in Air Force ROTG i ITbls .Is.after TSP alectfons and before the Student Government elections.)' J ? J' ' is eligible to-compete for an Air Force scholarship ­that includes.-free tuition, lab.ana incidental fees.' f A^P TIME of THE RUfc-OFF: Thursday and Friday, February 20 and 21, 8:30 a.m. -4:30 p.ip. rehnbursement for textbooks foi-her^last 2 DEADLINE FOR APPLYING A8 CANDIDATE: January 31. Adi will to. run In The Texan notifying the , .. i-.of^coHege. In uddition. a tax-free, monthly­^Pubfloofthed^dUne.^^^^^. • •" allowance;of $100 is paid to both scholarship and. non-scholarship cadets alike. 'i ^PA^PipACy FEE .AND REQUIREMENT8:a $28 IH will be charged to cover.printinB and advertising When shegees hei;degree,the career asan Air Force A -• vc,o»ls, ai»d .tp aoaaiv out people who are not truly'Interested In running. Also, as a further, screening ; officer awaits her. 'matching Kei%abiIittes_to a job J mechanism, a petltton with at least 60 University of Texas at Austin students' names willbe' required in \ < order to be eligible as a candidate. -with rewarding challenges. With benefits like 30 days' paid vacation, good pay. foreign travel, and afm PLACE OF ELECTION: Inside the Co>Op whare the novelties are located. > great place to build a future. , METHOD OF TAKING VOTES: an alphabetical listing lof all students etThe Unlveralty. last name first and weS^: Interested? Pont:ict Captain Jim GarqillV .... divided Into thrte sections, probably A-H.l-P;and Q-Z, will beobulned fromtheRegistrar. F'iurCo-bp r iffiSfS *tT,P'0V*»*> 3 working the Hats and l.for relief work, will be used to check current student ID'S aoalnst RAS 115. Phone: 471-1776/471-1777 the list. Anci remember, ip the Air Force, you'll be looked up toas weH as at. % ti *£3^: -VOTE COUNTINQ: the Co-Op's auditors, Toucha. floss will count the votes and verify the totals lAa Ctf & PUT IT ALL TOGETHER *!** Co-Op will print-the campaign leaflets with information and picture to be supplied by the •gm -a ^'nformetlon will be suppliedaccording to standard categories. Ie. qualifications, ofajac-IN AIR FORCE ROTC • -ViivR-' ' »!"•». •». All candidate* running Mr the **mi Place will b*_prlnted on the seme leaflet so as to an-_ • oSHiiW. rH. ">'•&" Bour"fl* oomP*rtson, Np other handouts of itr 3 EXAN PageJ WrV tot * Rv-V' 'ASfjS :"V" , JF** * 98 sJS6-V i * w .^y^S <• «W-^ k-« * * campus briefs -1*> b^^s? 4.1 tp«v oj«3n H ^f?s •p; •• •j ToS Rogers Appoints Presidential Aides ....... . ' A curefor diabetes probably Association, which brought First entered .in fall, 1974 and 3^30. p.m. / Tuesday in Jester 0ay m. Benedict Hall 213 to maXe 0 W-,wiil exist within five.:years, ' 'Seltzer to Austin. credit on COMMUNICATION COUNOl is accepting S. Brandt,,• Chemistry. He also has helped %!*' earned based . Auditorium tent »Hve. schedule.-Dr. Floyd 'at the University since 1963: iano| Mqtns wlilVmeet at 7 p.m., according" to Dr.; Holbrooke College Entrance Examina­nominations for the DeWItt C. Red-Tue day tn Jhe Klnsolving Dor-professor of management; and -was chairman of the-''.-•to. develop courses for non­.Seltttr, -who will'speak on this Placement Tests tion JBoard Achievement Tests dit:k Award for Outstanding mttc ry SoUtH StOdy Room and Dr., Stephen A. Monti, management department-r seience-majors4n science and Achievement In Communication fOMidtOT Hu will meetat4 p-m. Tuesday . topic at 7:80 p.m. Tuesday.at taken on nationwide test dates from-among;communication In.tt 9 Reading Room to vote on new associate professor of from 1968 to 1972. He directs environmental problems. ttig; Joe C.-: Thompson] •\ Results of placement "tests! and 3) took College Board Ad­stodentii-faculty-andalumni: mer iberi. : •' chfemistry',-were named as the University's Ora1 • . Monti has received several '.•and petition forms' to accept ; V.N^minaHons:*rt dufe by Oct: 31 in [ STUOCNT SlftVKES COMMITTH Of STUM NT Conference Center. •., % assistants to the president. Business History Projecti* ^credit earned by examination vanced Placement Ex­Communication Building A 4.130and } OOVllNMmT wlll m«t at 6 p.m. research grants and Seltzer is considered, a' aminations ih May, 1974., '. should Jncludeabffct; summary of I---Tue: day in Parlin Hall 302; • Monday by Dr. Lorene which, tape Records the fellowships from federal- Will be available from lii.m.; • V • ^ ' reasons thenomineeshould receive ;KUT TOUMJ OfMOCJTATS wlU meet at 7:30 .recollection^ of-leading Texas agencies private leading diabetes researcher to 3 p.m. through Wednesday '' •. ."the award.. gjyi JTuesday-ln-Cjiihoun HaiLlOOL—. Rogers, University president • and foun­ by the • American Diabetes ANNOUNCXMB4IS : MFAffTMBIT Of SPANISH AND KMTOOUISI VfT'^Sarih'» Weddlngton and Courcy adinterim.— -businessmen, as well as the dations. His research in­ . in the Academic Center Lob- Association. His cure, which-CACTys.iriA»»ooi( Is scheduling si>-. will sjpori.sor: a fUm, vsimon of the Kelley wttl speak.Endorsements for ' ^ Brandt,and Montt'wijl each Ma nagem§ijt~Ed uca I!on-Include development terest poJhtments for stv photographs , OeserT^at ):30>nd.9:30 p;m. Tue^>"' the upcofrilfvg electlon^VMII be for-/ involves transplanting paiF fof ivrtiors fromS;30 a.fn.';ta<;30 .• • day-ih Academic Cantee-21: 1 mulcted.-• > \ work • in tlieir administrative Program for Freiich of hew synthetic methods, creatic cells from non-Summary reports of test p.m. thropgh W^nesday iriTexas "STUDY »f ADtNOi'COHMO WITH THS .• v•.; V":. position half time and will con­educators, :• c _U_.. natural products, structural : • Student Publicaittons 6uKdlng 3.m . ...' tWNor,wl)lbediscus>edat4p.m. kminars \ ) tinue teaching. The two part­ • diabetics to diabetics, has' results will be available for '• Monti, 34, joined the facility ' A »ltttrvg fee of Si must tit-paid at the . Tuesday|hJester CenterA332 by the -: Of^ARTMlNT OF ASTRONOMY will.Junior-elucidation and total syn- been successful in aiumals. Students who: 1) took-tests" time the appointment is made. \ . staff of the Reacllng and Study Skills an astronomy colloquium a< 4 p.m. time appointments fill a in 1967 and teaches organic •thesis. CAKOt CHOKX ANO tNTO*MAT»ON CtNWt -Laboratory tRASSUi ' Tuesday In*Robert Lee Moore Hall After1iis speech, there' will :offered on campus during wlWipbnwra workshop at 3 p.m. . •TEXAS KtlAYSSTUfeNTCOMMlTTtt -: • ( fulltime. vacancy created be an organizational meeting summer orientiitionsessitfris Tuewtay In jesta* Center A115*A, erv-accepting applfcatlwis for com--O^AXTMBiT.-OF.BKTtiCAi CNpttettNO when Dr. Robeft D. MeUlen. for the South Texasaffiliate of for' fall entrance and/or titled "Selecting a Major/* Also, a mlttee positions uiiYlKOpt 31 in Bell* • will hold a semlnar at 4 p.m.Tuev resigned aSvic^president and v: i workshop concerning "Dropping moot Hall 220. Applications are " day In Engineering Science-Building v Out of State Students: assistant, to the American Diabetes before the fall semester, -2)-Out of Sch66r*w|lt be presented at-'. available;.*! the,General'-Informal*ft 602. 0wdon D. Cong of Tektronix, executive the tion DesK In the Main: Bonding >5 inc^ will speak on "Frequency-Do ' president Sept. 25. * TEXAS UMONMOOCANgUMSfCA# CUlTUtt '• * main jstrumentatlon Oesigh ' Brandt, 44, is a specialist in , cOMMirrti wlll sponsor' a chlcano Concepts." ­ industrial and tertulla from'7:30 to*;3Qp.rn. Tue* OOAXTMMT :Of fHYSCS'will sponsor, a relations &%Ybtt1osi$64.$4 day in the CathotlcfStudent Center. relativity seminar at.3 p.m. Tuesday management. He has taught , The tertulla U designed to help ' -> in Robert.Lee AAoore Hali 9.222. An . chkanos on eampu» lesrn Spanish : atomi.e and moiecutar physics fo iTiMt blher chlconos. seminar aiso will be he'ld at i.p.m. last weekend because tlXAS UMON CVtTUUL BVTHTAINMENT • . Tuesdaiy' in Robert Lee Moore Hat) COMMITTH *111 sponsor 1h» Soviet . •' •10.210s-: :GeorglOT Dancers and the TWIIsl ' tmrmiTI Of .HUMAN OCVftpfMfNT will, PolyphonicCholraH:30 p-m^Tues-1^. sponsor .the regular monthly TO PLACE A you didift belong to the .day In SregoryGymrewium. tlcketV'TS mefHhg\"fromUV'fem...t&;l p.m, in • will sail tor si.50 c'•vn 6fo noon Tuesday Jnthe Chinese Garden Although the. station serves programs; with "money' to : • 7:30/ p.m. .Tuesday and Thursday Room' of ,the fourth floor ot the " CAL\J§. . Did you realize that last week, nearly doubling its primarily the Austin-San An- spare. Hie cuts -will have to and Oct.22 and 24in thecourtyard of -AcademlcCenter. Dick LI Ilie, direc­ goal of $36,428. .: tonio, area,-donations "were come from groups with ihuch' .the Women's Gym. tor of the-Clty of Austin Planning you are'eligible for 471-5244 MBTMOS -Department will speak on .."Our © Robert Schenkkan, the received from as far away as larger requests than-ours." -OCXMAN OUB will meet at I p.m. Tues-Changing City/' • • " : In-state tuition Marble Falls and Brownsville, station's general manager, ..: rates if you .are . Schenkkan said;. said Monday KLRNXTV a member ~of the Tired of getting ripped off? Try Sascha's, • Sdienkkan said "nearly one­ ''didn't quite reacti our goal of Army Reserves? half of the programing money Elegant dining at reasoiiable prices. 2,428 new merhbers'' but said' It only requires at KLRN comes "from the volume of.pledges is a donations and memberships." one weekend a month "comment on the quality of SASCHA'S: programing" that "KLRN A membership costs $9 for and two wiseks s offers^'''There-are thousands studefits-and ^senior citizens 311 W: 6th St. 472-3556 -eaclj summer. and thousands who watchfair­and $15 for individuals. A Homesty/e European Cooking Let's, help each otherl ly regularijrand-never donate because they have never been FULL BAR Austin is one of the first asked,and they neverrealized, TUESDAY N16HMPECIALS cities to try. this telethon type Lunch 11:30 -2;00there was a need to " . . (START AT 4:00 P.M.) of ftand raising.-Schenkkan Dinner 6:00 -10:00 •.r'-:Jhe money will be used to said the method will be'used Happy Hour 2:30 -6:30 pay for programing and again neict March, whin the transmission costs. .The ex-Public Broadcasting System . cess' will be applied to • the tries to; raise money • on a general budget to offset national level. The national somewhat the lower than an-• goal is threemillion members ticipated revenue from the by 1977, he said. . ' station^ annual auction, Schenkkan, a former Schenkkan said. uwh paittag chairperson cf the board of W tfc« Am«ri Tossed Salad FORMALS *1 »'« Also Chop $tft8k Dinner .'•• • 4013 Marathon &S--5 -(On* block • fev, --w«*t of lamar) . mm 2815 Guadalupe 478-3560 W NO TIPPING ' Lrrs1 COME AS YOU "Mi After rnllpgp,wi 11 ym­ . ^ J \3gr get the jobyoudeserve? m -fe®­ lift' III V"-A-SWr-r IK: W m ¥®3 m Live In the heart of Northern Californlj^Amwoa's most ¥ ^{ famous work and play land,,Idepl, smog-free climate, Mb short drive to the Golden Gate, the wine country, lots Vc-r< 1 ­ 3*1 morel. - Jret s m l?t . fa?.e it.jhings^ren t equal in today's job market. Even with a"college degree But 1 rcefiPi# „ Worlrln a challenging environment al the West Coast's ' :i'4 ®J^AT*ias Jobs that fit your collegeeducation, on ari equal opportunity b^sis/*-'? ­ 1 doldest and bes.t-knownnaval InstltutlQn,with unmatched A'SL •?a,.e®PJy inyolved to provide understandingfor itspeople about the\^; y£cH#«Potential f0r professional grow;th, reward'and ~ & • sensibilities and sensitivities of others. Doing its part to make things better. We're -nnK-JLa 1 MARE <«-r,. A.'Ji'-f'^'^^'t'ecoQiiitlon. •' Ifpcrfcct-yct.Bttfrbffifeer^w'e-aFe-gettia^herP . n -v-: : , ~ ft* ISLAND lS v f -3 -jK rs T\ere arfPa»y job opRortunitres open.tcTyojfaKiToflT^^ Get ine facts on civilian career opportunities: 4-/,'1 ^**orce. You may consjder beinga pilot or navigator. ' ^ •' ' Contact vrrtMPjacejffleht OHiea— ^ '' •' And don't1(werloQ^heAir.Force ROTC Scholarship Program. Scholarships that%l#| iVALl-EJOTI :r tlill tuition rpunl'Miycoi-rtoi-il-fnv Campus interyiews: October 18 471-1777 -Sf «mun> U111UH ul'U „ Captain JJnp CarolII -Vrtlolo. California ' -Al'Together in Air Force ^RANas£og' tsj* *'f &^mksp& iMi *Pi •MWLJWJIjtUJP 58*4S&gs sV -KUh? ^ •>-»Ja®^ l£3S£ IssuesLiitEvents '.&ai:5lySSsetTa:' B™fr ^EC^iniclttfeatliie rSjpyiel;; Shakespeare Company is be­ g^'^SVI^IA Stfejs „ . ... "Georgian Dancers Tuesday in ing, negotiated. The probable En J1Gregory*Gyni.„ This company date is Nov. 25, "and the i&vsv; .•>'*-* Committed and of, 80, making their first scheduled show is "Tfie r ks&es' Committe foreign toar, is managed by Hollow Crown," a dramatic tbe^iemainder of ;senit3ter : the sameiman who managed anthology. ompeisate . .-• the Bofahoi Ballet Friedland -v Logginsand Messina,a folk­vfjfc for. any-Incon . iience Sufi described it as a."virtuoso in­rock group whose scheduled .fered ifroni the:cl| singio' the troduction to Russian folk: October' performance was i postponed, • are. expected toUnioniBp . •.traditipns." : • appear some-time during the Sfaari ifedlanA,' chaitper-. " THELEIPZIG Gewandhaus week of^ Dec.-1, Friedland­ % ;^.;'son ofthtuSflti Entei tain-*.Ontfiestra will play Nov, 4 in ment C6mraftit< ,'saic the Municipal Auditorium. This is said.'She said the date will be p'-emnK. a bals n^ed; i the world's oldest 'symphony announced ;in The Texan as " "" ' CEC-ttempl s;jStoorchestra : and • had soon as it is set. . v . iif'W «****> -JalftyL •rtaln ijfent Mendelssohn; and: Richard Ideas and Issues will spon­an^ its t< i^Srtii Strauss as its-directors, sor a joint reading by William Cn>Vi'£ expose, Stud Styran, } author of %: ftyitis with whi they ijiight Friedland said. never be ilf» con Nov. 11. and 12, the Paul ^Confessions of Nat Turnes/' V,»Isince Ution Building; Taylor Dance Company will and-Willie Morris. Morris is a inline tqe Idea; perform 'in • Municipal •former editor of The.Daily, v fe-Issues Comm ttee. will:; 'Auditorium. Friedland said Texamand isa graduate of the , emphasize 'evenjts sucl-'as-they specialize in modern University... His most recent seminar .wfiiih involve dance and are noted asone of work is"-The Last of. the rsi:i M'eral Sfteftkers aridjru j the best in the country in in-Southern Girls." The reading Tain ia| novative choreography. will be in Hogg Auditorium ^Vefal-jdaysi ___r„ • Bwton, commit! $ chaicp&f, Todd-Rundgren will appear Wednesday. Nov. '15 in Municipal THE COMMITTEE will try kin, said |this tj pe of went "jf-li$%, would be easier, o publi :ize, I i' Auditorium. He was formerly to h'ave two or three sandwich seminarsa week, Boston said v. w®i-'Boston gave a: anexamjM with the group Nazz and is Most will be held on thefourththe recetit Scie ace;|Fictipri known for "Hello,:It's Me,", floor of the Academic Center. , rie s aid flii: and other songs. ]attend ed aqd .best--LEO KOTTKE, an in­They include: • novative folk-rock guitarist, 1 • • Tuesday, Dick Lillie, city publicised!event < m,cam( uisln. years that .rmal Union, cliss, soon will meet at the Alumni Center. ENGLISH SAID Bg-oups will not be excluded in favor of Unjon classes, but Union a< itivities can bescheduled on a regular basis if the center does n Jt have prior commitments. . I The only activity lot allowed in the center is Union dandes. English said there is a building nile that,prohibits.dancing, . \ CHOMC -FivaM twblme btfTERENr srrLc BV RAIcftte mvetTA, NUHfmt, OAlMtfacu DUNHAM/ A" f » ) 'Mm. €l; • l-V 5X." •' '• ' •' • ' g.S H: 1865 Another Publication 'KM. 2908 Son -Ga at N.Lamar \blieatmsia iT,]..October 15, 1974 THE PAILY TEXAN M i ,r' i "< By SUSAN GRAUGNARD •,-f, Texas-Union Director •£" jSherry Bird Perry is excited atout the renovation of the . Ujiion Building. : • : Perry feels the architec­tiral plans will provide ser­v ce facilities that will : * ei hance the total learning en-i\. • .. >.vi ronment of the University. • " [ Jhope the Union vjill be ... tlioiight of as not just,a biilding but a place represen­ti ig a total people," Perry 1. Si id. . • " . Fred.Day, vice-president of J^ssen Associates, an architectural firm in Austin, . • is the project architect ap­ipointed to redesign the building, which-will be renam­ •;>-• efl Union West. , • . The idea" of renovating .the I nion began with plans to im­prove the food* and service areas. New development for the waste system was nedtied, and the idea of improving the sknitary and safety conditions gjrew into the entire building's • renovation. Along with offering a long , . • • i st of new services. Union • West's environment will beIt i TiJjroved.. • The building will be design­ed to allow an easy flow of traffic. Architect Daysaid, We are generating traffic." The entrances forthe Union will be changed, with, three major entrances on the West Mall. On the east side, where ihe traffic, of ^students is l.eavy, more entrances also 3>\ /SUPPLEMENT TO THE D > ^ustin, Texas, .'Tuesday-, msK o>t ::t; -M Project To 'Enhance' Environment new sound system will be space,"(Perry explained. m will5 be made.iJ . . diverse setting of moods — if <£«*£«$ *9 *."S&'SSSSSH 'As far! as students.asking: designed .v; a student-wants to. be in aAt present where the steep us if wi are going to take ,the • , Located in-the'games iarea quiet' spot he Can go on thepit goes down to the'Union .by old architecture designs away will be alarge billiard room,a patio, if, he wants to meet aHogg 'Auditorium, the new from the building," Perry ; separate room' fpr boin friend, he can go to tl>e design will be a level entrance said, "the Union will be ' operatedmachines anda tatjle cocktail, lounge'. .It will • to enter jthe:building. renovated to: develop, the-; tennis room. The 16 new bowl­ provide an environment for A walkway from .the character of the original ing lanes will be renovated every mood and every type of Aca demic Center willdirectly building — to enhance the old ;­ -and new.pin setters will bein­ student,'1 Perry explained. . eptf r the second floor of. the part. What we are really aim-• stalled. . 1 . The tavern bar will.h'aVe-an jnipn, and the loading dock orr elevated" dance"^floor with-: T-----•: Uni >n, loadin ing to recreate -are the Instead of.'using, the main "m- Gu: daliij>e Street will be. qualities-of the old building : brass railing. The "Union will 'lourtge fOrTV viewing, tw|o TV toUIly enclosed. that have been worn, -rather . have a large beer refrigera-rooms will be located in the yoionlf West's new: design than just. modernizing the • tioh."tapping beerrdirectly. to lower level. Will provide.'"flexibility and> .. ~ -... •building." -i » The Union will be iiesi^ned mu tiplicity," Perry explain-the.bar. The refrigerator wijl ., The basis for designing the have more office spaceand ed: "Along With this ftexibili-hold approximately 78 to 80 Ijars and the information desk meetirig^rooms. There will be ty, the building is being kegs of beer, Perry said was derived frpm 1933, plans, i.. dining rooms "where, private des gried to control liquor ser-j„.. the cafeteria a The ballroom willhavetlittle dinners may b£ held for vices and student crime, last • micr0pj,0ne will. be located 1 renovation. Main changes will different organizations. The year approximately $7,000 ^Herestudents can piatc be lighting and controlling il­ rooTp spacing is designed with wai lost through theft of di^j orders'for foods which take a lumination. The fluorescent a great amount of flexibility., hes " Perry claimed. . to prepare.-f;' , fixtures will | be removed. If a large room isneeded for.aK » ajor renovations will be in ' The food service 5area; will. Other old fixtures will be,. meetings three rooms can' the-food and service area, , ^^signed to show jas little reconditioned* " '-.andj.q become ojNfroQm. . witl i five food shops, along ,, steel as' possible, chandeliers with sound equip-. Along with the .flexibility will a Cafeteria, tavern bar, ;•*. , • m a ment will be added. Mk and multi-purppse rooms, the^ coc ctail lounge and a garden . T)hn TV monitors may be set up,: building is being designed for. roo t» adjoining the patio.^ f^^a wi^<^|^s P" in the Union. "The University^;­ controlling other areas. If the Tyfes of food shops include a teWes will be eliminated by of Maryland has this type of •having a conveyorBe^t system games area has an all-night pizka; shop and an inter system where monitors are for students' trays. special, other rooms and ser­ nat onal food shop." placed throughoutthe building.-, . To leave' the North -Dining. vice areas can be shut down. '5Ve are trying to develop so news and events can bej-ij. Rooni, students wil| have to : The Union also IS being foo I sections that will control shown," she said. ,• , go through, a 'new sweet shop 'designed for centralization,1 ibor problem , and can be', being located oh a Corner by The attic offices: are being The Union West will bechanged according to the de­ the theater. i "opened for a bullpenofstu-completed in 18 to ?4 months. mand of the campus. If Pebble concrete paving dent; organizations. The stu lents want a • new type of Many of the ideas for new ' will have aalong withplanters,;|oak,treesorganrzations fooi shop "other than a ham- along with services .at the .Union came and hanging plants Will be the coff ee area but gershop, We will beable to from a summer tour of 22 view.onthepatio:fojr students typewriter rooms. *"The' cen­ in'tsr'change and make it or student colleges both Perry and Day looking down from a new tral area ant ther. type of shop," Perry made, "We wanted to* see terrace on the third floor.-} organizations will make it sail. .•! " what worked and.did notwork easier for organizations to: be In general; the lighting and' The Union is designed with around otherj university stu;.; less competitive .and .more ventilation throughout the many-different shops--and dent centers," Day explained. m cooperative; by sharing buiidirie will be improved.-A eating areas, so it will havea mk i —'ff Courtya of the renovated Union West irnssw % i >r FS#> J. JiyKfek "**** *#* »<• u'-:2'HHJS.«'%?^ %•&%' &F'~ the temporary units are: .Student uovej am-Office, Student Activities* Alpha Flu mega,»^lta Epsljon-and the Information Center,! Hours fori Union South will be 8 a.m. to U P^-Mcmdjto™ quarters,-Bottbrn: Pros­ through Thursday, I a.m. to6 p.m. Fridayand Saturdayand1tb pective of Urllon West II p.m. Sunday. These hours will only be in effect during Ody_ Dining Mall tobe'f and will chai ge when the pub opens.. . rLET S GO TEXAS TexasE xes had the Plan _ Texis Exes had the Man*i Texks Ex ss made it Happen -'j -/-• ~Jtgli§fSitaftMafcMNi i; THE TEXAS UNION.,. Sit • S£ 3?§k4lt vas Hay 10, 1929, when the grotird was broken for the first Tex--" asjUnion. j . 1 'It was Alumni Leader T.W. 'ENJOY THE FINEST TV. 'f it. flPPw-^ . MHB ••Hmm Greg >ry wi 10 j&irned the first spade t at igr >und-l re&king.It toas 1hd. Ex-Students working" through thete Association who turn­edt tfe drIace on campus "for stride (its. 11 " , si?J -JfUras " jEJT'S GO TEXAS" that . I ^«SkS®5«7 i ern&i rage< one out of every seven .. Ex^iudentS to? contribute to "this greatest n< ed. of The University." 't It jw^ s alu!nni ideas that were turn­. edj;iij|o th< plahs for the program. It was alumni, working^ with stikdents} who helped to formulated . *iil * .„l„i— "A-»—:— rithe IUnion's p orati irs arid iidents of: 'to bringscholars, .„;s of the world to University,,ol Tex­ 5^355 A PLEASANT RELAXING ATMOSPHERE C)>PEN 24 HOURS TO SERVE YOU W; to: BR EAKFAST, LUNCH? , AND IT'S AND DINNER _ VX-STUDENTS 3SA *ifc-lAMI :AMJLY,X>(NING. ASSOCIATION TODAY „ •m PARKING IN REAR takng theleadershipin » tuildii ig a better University ^ ^>• \ & ma October; 15, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN yV f 3 f' A ® •m: — i' - i®r®S &3S£ iSSSHlZPS?**' m ;???- vHP* m-T RM; if mi& Tough' Questions *ss and the -inflationary safety (factor "v bing, air conditioning) remain out of -; f n• and Union Director Shlrlby Bird ing Service arid the resulting' reduc­ing contractors to keep areas of the renovation program.? ms- v buildirig open ^rid safe. It was deter­ Perry werc.askcd to draw up a list of tion of the Union's reserves. ; The .groups outlined three alter­ the most'frequently asked questions • Adining facility greatly in need of-mined about $600,000 would likely be ; added to the construction cpst and the natives: about the Unionmove and renovation. updating and refurbishing. . Here aretheir' ansVvers. v • A building in poor condition with, job would require six months longer ? Abandon the project. • • Reduce the scope of the. project to complete. How .did the Texas Union Board cf limited appeal for members of the drastically. >Why -wasn't Union East• completed Directors decide-to renovate the pre - campus community;, : • Combine .the $3,5 million funds ir sent Union Building? .How have students been able to ex-before renovation began on Union allocated by the regents with funds Th press their views regarding the West? ,/Y : &;$?<;. •. A legislative statute,requires that a. I he decision to renovate the present generated by an increase in the Union H ' buuilding is only brie part of;h five-pant renovation pf the present;Union? i^s?\ fee' and sale of bonds. ' bill be passed in the . Texas t:recommendation the boardforwarde i Although diminishing traffic counts in After considering various factors, the:Legislature if the Union.fee is to be­?si}stlo'the' University administration and ' the UiUoA Dining Service-were cledr groups decided to recommend raising• Board „of Regents in January, 197-. signals.of lack of student support, the, usgd for a union other than the one On ; the feei by no|more than $3,: "the plan_ included: board: contracted with a private Guadalupe Street: Even If quick r Why was theboard's decisionmade so 1 An extensive renovation of Union research firm .to assess the. view­passage