T-S^v i -*1 v_--s«i sifj* • v> ^ f* 2'J? £. i •M WW; ..•••• -<'• Student Newspaper at Jhe University of Texas at Austin 'tis1 ^iCi® — ». %%£ £• ^ c££?>S Twenty-Page Austin, Texas; Thursday, October 17, 1974.' Ten.Cents Press s> '* * •• ' CKmi?-* n ; WASHIMGTON (AP) -Watergate., •; The prosecutors said, "Mr. Nixon i$ •< MITCHELL AND* Ehrlichman areprosecutors Said Wednesday"it Would be*•, not a neutralor detached witness, He°has! charged with conspiracy to. obstruct only, natural" for Ricliaid M. Nixon to been formally accusedof participating in justice; along with H.R. Halderaan,•< -try to avoid testifyirif at the Watergate ^. the Conspiracy for whlcli'dfefendants are" -.Kenneth W. Parkinson and Robert C.' cover-up trial and urged the trial judge,-"* standing-trial,. and it would be only ;.;;Mardian.In addition, al!butMardianare , to send three doctors to California to ex- natural for him to seek to avoid an charged;. with actually ' obstructing amine the former President. / nbligatioa to testify." V justice. . Mitchell. "Haldeman and. The government filed a -response to •/^Ehrlichman — the, three Nixon ad-­ BEFORE THE jury wasbrought in for ~requesta-frx)m.Mxon^Javvyersihat„Uie_._ £-.ministration officials in the case — are .lheJhirjtdayof heatings oiLWednesday, Subpoena forNixon's appearance be-dii^" ~-f;iaccused in-RiuUiplc.counts at perjiiryi.^ Judge John J. Sirica indicated* he is ., inissed because the• fonper president's •i * ... thinking'of sending doctors to California ""^J L uuuivuig Dean, who was.brought here from the ^?nda^e^^lrav^?. Ia nVdMinA nJiviin "Pka m*«1i La ^ to examine Nixon. The matter will be .^federal prisbn facility'at Ft. Holabird, -1o'Washington, j ' i'\P$S debated after theJury leaves the cour *r!Md., said he introduced G: Gordon Liddy' v)j LTUP tlplfhn iIk'mf rtriV":'l^: _ -4rnnm T* * "* * * THE MEMORANDUM'came as the! troom Thursday. Sirica will rule then: to Mitchell in the attorney general's of-.:? • government's first witness, John W. Dean testified that in the hectic days fice in November, 1971. . ; ir Dean IH; Was testifying."in the.trial•of-following the Watergate break-in he told • five former Nixon,)Vhite_Hous6 and cam­Ehrlichman a great deal about the in­T SUBSEQUENTLY Liddy was hired as paign aides. / •!. •-volvement of Nixon campaign officials in general counsel to the re-elecjtion com­ " John D. Ehrlichman, whohad alsosub-the incident . mitteeand on Jan. 27,1972, Deansaid, he Jpoenaed the former President, told the wks at anothervmeeting in Mithcell's of­ ^ court heUA ^ld ^tisM^dep^,IkAmkitftfiA#) utifU . EHRUCHMAN,' fivedefen-fice at which time Liddy outlined a plan E™UCHMAN, one of the five defen­:tipn. taken under oath. . for political espionage. charged with lying when he said that all sf Nixon recently was hospitalized for 11 he knew about the June17r1972^break-in—J'_The_pJatt called for mugging squads, I days for phlebitis a'nd a blood clot in his at Democratic national headquarters capable of mugging demonstrators and,• right lung. .. was what hehad read in the newspapers. kidnap squads capable of taking Ir4L -i: " • THE PROSECUTORS said Nixon's. demonstration t leaders and..removing . ^ contention .that his physical condition is" them from^the demonstrators," Dean h^Tne 35-year-old' Dean; appearing pale and even thinner than he was last year "•"•'Such that appearance at the'trial "would -^said.-.. . •<• • ••' . • wfierFhe tptifi^ before^the Senate- pose a serious risk to his life" is" not vfSS. • Watergate committee, was' the backed up by a "compelling showing.", He .had described the'game meetings government's first witness in the before' at last year's televised Senate If®:5a:l? Nixon's doctor in an affidavit hadrsaid Watergate cover-up trial. . ' • Watergate hearings, and nothing in his —ABC-TV Drawlng by Freda Relief-.yla -the former President must wear an AS HE testified, marshals. guarded • initial testimony added anything to the: .^.elastic stocking, take oral medication, -every door m_ the.U.S. district cour­Story.-' •avoid prolonged period of sitting, stan­Dean testifies as Hatdeman, Mitchell, Ehrlkhmqn and Sirica lister# ­ troom, and an airterminai type weaponsding or walking, avoid extended tripsand detection system screened everyonfe who r.;#>Jshould remain in a controlled environ- came in. ' ."ment, Railroad _ ? "IT ISCLEAR Mr. Nixon can continue Assistant special prosecutor James f. to wear, an elastic stocking and take oral Neal Idd Dean through the early part of 'tikmm-v­, f medication while m transit and in Lopsided Votes Override Pra'gjflowHr.1 the Watergate story begirihing with the .l^iWashingtoiiLMhe prosecutors said. Thev _.meetings, attended|)y.fonheiiAtty. Gen. WASHINGTON (AP) ^ The-Senate ^Lh.e Senate vote was 72-l.. The Hoii^ pppsinn v added that he can avoid long periods of John N. Mitchell aqd Mitchell's cam-" joined the House Wednesdaym tally Tuesday""Was-360^12^Each wasjar_ -fiiKUXXL JaLo..th^red_at_the_ralej»t:$30Q —~-sitting-or:-walking-and -that-there ace, —paicn-deoutv Jeb SluarLJ^apniHpr at overwhelmingly : rejecting President .currehtly on railroad payrolls also are million a year, said-Sen. William'T).7 more than .the Jiecessarv py^tfttrds --.'enough medical facilities in Washington which Dean said a plan for political es-Fnni's vpto nf thp rsilrnart rt»firpm»nt Dvereri-bytheTsysteHi: HatBawavrT>-Me~ manager-of the hill • Ford's veto of the railroad retirement yetgcan-<«9t«n^Ria£wpils said .'.to keepvan eye on. his condition. „•,pionagefunfolded, bill and enacting it into law. . Sponsors, of the; legislation said the The bill would continue this plan for ' .. • they were amohgthemost lopsided votes i-main reason for the system's financial those now on the rolls and employes still-,, -. tAir&'v* -. -. • • ' to override a veto .in many years.­ • Sj® ... trouble is the dual, benefits plan under working who ar entitled to them. : sa The bill commits the federal govern^".'1 Regehial Pressure "iwhich many.rail workers get both Social But it would be phased out so that, by merit to put $7.1 billion info the railroad Security and rail pension checks, the year 2.000 a new single check plan'/retirement system in the next 25yeaj-s to =•­ sssm j; This has been, running the pension w.ould take effect . savejt from imininent bankruptcy. , fv" The President said.this was too-great a . burden on the. taxpayers and that Testimony -Congress should come up with a fairer' . .plan. . . -i Salary, Ambulances' By IRWIN System University.System vicerpresidents. *. ' But Republican leaders at the Capitol Texan Staff Writer ^f Keeton siid he will testify on general policies and prdcedui^ made no effort to rally their, troops to Former Law Dean Page Keeton said Wednesday he will dis­ on admissions but added, "I doubt seriously that my knowledge support the President, and said they close to the faculty-student investigative committee his will cast any light on.the-SpurFftringl;jg£a|fe^ Issues for Council were-under no pressure from the White'; knowledge of alleged rtgental pressure to geta student admitted ''''i-"" -" to the School of Law. " v-s ^KEETON LEFT the dean*s position la^t^AtiglStwieh^ne reacli House to do so. • • By CAROL BARNES '•session:..-. . •, 1 ; "i v. YJjssrXt ^ ed the mandatory retirement age of 65. He is teaching at St! \. A vote to sustain the veto was legard. I Current Law Dean Ernest Srniihc§tate'd Wedn'Ss'dayS^learned Mary's University in San Antonio -. ed as politically 'dangerous since the .Texan Staff Writer ' • •. If passed, the proposal,' which would from Keeton of Regent Frank C. Erwin's maneuvers to force the alternative to the federal subsidy would City: Council pay raises, ambulance , . provide: $85,-232 a year for council pay, admittance of a friend of Erwin. -•< A faculty-student committee in August siihmitted a list of six service, and speed boat restrictions on will become anamendment tothe 1974-75 be a substantial reduction ' . prospective candidatesfrom which then-President Spurrselected v>> <•' Lake Austin are issues to be discussed at' budget approved by council Sept.-19.Hie However, Smith emphasized that he had no direct contact with rtow being, received. • the':n^;ia'ifr^ran,SS;W£M WK Thursday's council meeting. budget went into effect Oct. 1., Erwin on the ineident. There are, about one million retired The session is scheduled to begin at 1 Ambulance \¥M "We have never even met," Smith added. Spurrs selection required approval of the"'ehancellori, wWfli rail..Workers and.survivorsnow receiving The council-appointed ^p.hi. at the Electric Building' Study, Committee will ask the councilfor m|y !1®ve resu^e(J 'n "DEAN KEETON mentioned to me that a number of calls by . friction between LeMaistre and Spurr. • Auditorium, 3Q1 West Ave. a 32-day delay insubmitting a proposalmembers of the administration had been made on behalf of th c -H! ^-j ^.PP0"11^ 13w school dean Sept. l. Final passage of Councilman Bob to improve ambulance service in Austin: applicant,'.'Smith said.: • i'iw Smithsajdhe^seesno connection^between'his selection,asdean. Binder's proposal to pay councilmen The committee was formed to recom­ SpUIT S firinR'­ Smith singled out Erwin as the alleged source of the $12,000 a year and the mayor $14,000 will mend' ways to start a-.sophisticated maneuvers, which he said were aimed at admitting Erwin'S , Commenting on law; school admission procedure. Smith said" require majority councilapproval Thurs^ emergency medical servicesystem to be friend this fall. ' . numerous recommendations are received pertaining to day. •" "Operaied. by the city'. l . At the last two meetings, the vote was Committee chairperson Curtis WeeksThe incident has been cited by former University President , Fair .4-2; one vote short of the number topass said: "We will try to do it quicker," butStephen Spuir as a< reason for his firing. . "WE RECEIVE recommendations from faculty members and Thursday's * weather without three-readings. the tremendous amount of informationSchool of law Associate Dean of Admissions Thnmnsr riih^nn prominent individuals which we place into the applicant's Tile," ....... . —• • • • ----Smith said. —. .. — • will be fair anri , which meant reading bad manuscripts "full-of N.Y.,~Morriss said be feels now perhaps the title ^-1S"R ^1955-56), The. Texas' Obseiyer-and Harper's., • ;„r »i. » . [.dtibf Stryon called the story ultimately Serious,^t-editorial freedom'after articleson the oil and gas ^ and-was in many pa ts funny^and ribald ', lobby-^It^s -good to be"back at 'the-scene of. , the wholelwden ofmemorOhe In.ft report on a manuscript written to the ;.crime," he said Wednesday night -Compulsion of carving something "out of the publisher, the main character ask?, "Why do I" Noting that the firing of UniversityYresident' niemory is the burderi of an artist-" ^ . • ... ;."The^nfe^ 0{-NatTurner,; ^ wiuigo uic i ^ ^ iritnesp ^escribed the despairing character-1 -From""North fctf **y '(BB^ jop», r \ m»f^ Ssalsii HI it • W.WpMfejSis. mm k^rt^TJSS •JWft^fWS Student Senate IS«£r Opposes Repairs ®j2$S tS&RK • • • •• CflirlAn^ . CitHntA -II f .... >> F1 -_i>. Lj kt.'...••>•» i ,n:. ' n .it Student Senate Wednesday Earth andMayor Roy Butler's -jnight publicly opposed the used car lot. " -;Pets may"be allowed in Married Student :!9 informed them of the Novrl deadline: Ninth and 10th Streets im­Thp^enate resolution also;•Housing **if we can find a"workable, kind of Cooke cited several reasons, for the ban on provement project and sup­ said "the natural character ot'i policy." Robert P. Cooke, director of houss&v P^-including administrative problems, ported efforts of the Organiza­ Shoal Creek .will bes Texa:Union Wes!Is Undergo^ ing, said Wednesday.night %5"; health and sanitation problems and disputes tion for Gitiecir Impact (OCI) irreparably harmed." )Part of " Exi«nsnVo R»nf the Married Student Housing •Council,-'We've had children that have become ex­UnibnSwftk^<~®61 voters as a referendum. --affected property. ' " * . Cooke offered some hope that pets might re1" tremely sick from playing in sandboxes'that The Senate also voted to The sole''no" vote wascast . • main despite a Nov. -1 deadline threatening have been used as litter boxes by cats," he! sponsor a public -forum open aslfnlttftJ'WP4 by Randy Williams,~ student * eviction of any resident found with a pet. \ said. . LojoSO« to-all Travis County senator from the College of * . "I am opposed to pets being in the-Married Children have also been attacked by pets,-: legislative candidates.-Engineering. There was oneiiSjStudent Housing area, and I'm going to have-he added t , OCI ispetitioning forcitizen ' • abstention; -••••to be soldon the idea (of allowing them)" he" "We have two rats that were caught byour ' support to call the referen-. Williams explained later ; '^said. ' " -t"E cats,"• said one resident "Now,' if you take . dum. The citizen group has that his negative vote was' g k;; THE PET problem has become a real one our cats, are you going tocatch the rats?" he b.een lobbying against the cast because he believes Stu­to married students living in University-, asked. proposal since August. dent Government lacks.Infor­ , owned housing recently,_ Jerry Stone^; COOKE said that although the Nov. V THE IMPROVEMENT rmation about theeffects of the ^married student council chairperson, said.-: ' deadline still stands, if a workable plan to" project would make 10th pfoject to opposeit directly as ,s, • "Sentiments are running so high over this keep pets can be found before th$n,f they will Street one-way westboundand, _the resolution states:^ _ ;that we have bad physical confrontation, and -be allowed to stay; •s would widen Ninth -to make it" :•...:4!Building the mad tioer not mean fights, over animals.And wehave had FoUowing adjournment, the meeting broke Moving Day $one-way eastbound. Mr "• necesarily destroy the area. '^-animals killed," he said. t>'"' vs•ssa"":";"-'"y •»«««•; a^s.8 UPinto small groups to discuss plans for -The area affected by the Everything that is not .glued, nailed or bolted to the floor is being packed up.and For-example, a wooden bridge University policyfor yearshas providedfor"-'1 keeping the pete A $25 pet deposit and re-project is off North Lamar over,Shoal Creek could even • troted out of the old Union Building to be reinstalled in the new Union Southiv*he termination of the "c6ritracr*br"anjr—-quired regjstration-af all,pets .were among .• • • _ • • . • . •• •• . * II* ".Hi——• . •• i . •. Boulevard,uuuivtaiU). neartied1 1VXU be attractive,Student Govern­ Mother >*:• "Married Student Housing resident found.with the suggestions. ment justdoesn'thave enough :^5S? Pet, Cooke sai&b.ut the policy has not been Another meeting to discuss the problem informationabOfitlhe-project­.^enforced recently. • before the deadline was set for next Wednes-< '—<* w rrS*'vI to vote on this," he said. Sheriff Answers Criticisms A LETTER sent to all residents dated Octfe day. £, On the candidate forum mo­-t'ion. Student -Government Frank Speaks Out on Grand Jury Report Vice-President Bill Parrish By ROBERT JOHNSON annex • "• said the focum w;as in no way' constitute -.a misdemeanor been In compliance'with-the and an endorsement of any can- SPEAKING TO students 'of1 with no jail sentence. I think state-law. We're over­ AI^N WHEELOCK criminal law at Townes Hall, .we're.wasting our .time put­didate, and that allcandidates crowded. Our capacity is 285 IKE'S RIVERSIDE involved in Travis County• Sheriff Raymond Frank Frank said that his 12 in­ting marijuana smokers in arid we currently have 300." said Wednesday night that the vestigators are not enough to jail." legislative racei-would be in-, -•r. "THE PRISONERS are in printing and Copy Service recent County grand jury serve all details-homicide, However. Frank pointed out vited. there vegetating until theyare The date of the forum hasreport ''made me sound -likeI burglary, rape and drugs, • that he-was "definitely nof fm released." Frank said. "I've not" been decided*. . . am responsible for 90 percent-"I-can't dweH on.drug work,-isoft on drugs.'We (at the been in conference.with torn-­ In other business, the -of the drug traffic inJDaHas .but we don't overstep drugs. sheriff's: office) will do „ missionerS, but we, don't yet1: RESUME SERVICE Senate set noon Friday as the rf w . and Houston:'-It:sounded like I To have .a" really functional"""everything we can to-stamp know whether a new .jail -filing deadline for special iAV&Ti-.-had a warehouse full of drugs dnig detail would entail hiring • out hard drugs inTravis Coun­ annex will be intown or out in Senate elections Oct 30. somewhere: and I had hiy 10 more men: It's up thecoun­ty," Frank said the country.'' Chairperson Lyn BreelaqdClear IBM Bond Copies men out there guarding it." ty-commissioners to allot THERE IS too much in­Citing "an 'overabundance of Student Government's In reference lo an Oct.. 9 j!ioney_fOT__htnng more in­breeding in the grand jury, and redundancy qf law en- Town Lake Plaza Center federal court order requiring vestigators,'' Frank said Frank said. "Thesame people State Lobby Committee urged 7 forcement in Travis County." ' students to write Gov-. Dolph expansion and: improvement In specific reference to serve over and> over again. • Frank stated that he would 1920 E. Riverside, Suite A of.County Jail facilities. Prank marijuana liws, Frank'said. There are two j-udges . ih Briscoe to make their views like to look into the gg|442-2840 also said no definfte ptans had "I think possession of" four? known concerning upcoming Travis County picking -five possibilities of consolidation : appointments to the Board ofbeen made on a-new "jail ounces of marijuand should commissioners.* They in turn of Austin police forces — the Regents. pick 20-grandJurors, bu^we .. Capitol police, Austin police The purpose of the. letter­, have seven judges that Snould and catnpus police — to a Where Savings and Quality writing campaign is to per­ all be in on the picking of-the system he termed "metro suade Briscoe to appoint" mm Count five commissioners.That way . government." ' 4 j; ''academical^ sensitive"there would be bet.ter Frank said -he hopes the! regents to the board and toin-.Max Jones representation," he said. next-Legislature willlook into elude minorities in the selec­.... „ra?l'c ^ told the grand torming a commission on jau . forming jail tion process.jury— -when -you^-pick up standards and. education-for— .rumors and, allegations cqn-jaw enforcers. He also is Iook-~ Where Your Money Buys Radical Group cermng-me. -I-; would..iike.io —ing-focJthe .Legislature to ing for a!) police officers. • r THE PACESETTER. The THE tfAXl-1. A new ccMcepi in one . ssr^."":'-ri,"•=* b4o,ro?m :Oowristairs, atul\y electr1ckitchen.wjlh walk-in>^ a ul Study, upstairs.:pantiy and spacious living room-tor entertain-Oowsfcaifs. a spacious living area, en-m »\\ ~ ing.Upstairs.two largebedroomsandbattimtit'-tertaining area and all electric kitchen ' • " • walk-ins.Free living at (ts finest • >V)Seen to believe it. 444'7880 Mom MAX JONES SUITE 210 ' * PH. 478-4286 AUSTIN, TEXAS 78701 COMMODORE PERlfY BLDG. have equal time to answer." Cuiicei'iimg-the-reeent-court­order on improving jail facilities, Frank said, "In 1972 I inherited a jail that had not clarify the 'Conflictof criminal prisoners mental problems. SPACE ftprommAnWc Radical Student Union (RSU).voted Wednesday night. to support the Austin Com­'mittee for Justice (ACJ) and 18 recommendations made t>y W2200kfe Guadalupe m Pfaza" : ACJ chairperson Paul Her-i nandez at Tuesday's City' Council meeting. The major requests from Ifa 1: j^^Nieman, Hanks ••and Puryear k 476-7011 • Si Hernandez called for the removal of Police Chief Bob Miles, a policy that police of­ficers live in the community they patrol and a: 200-hour Pacesetter Apartmentsfor Free-LivingPeople. 2124 BurtonDrive mahdatory sensitivity train­ THE CHINESt hi-* SgiSWWsI COofciSOOk. IS mm THEATRICAL COMPANY *• • • • .*. MM YOU'RE INVITED FORMING Fiirt?' A general meeting for persons TO A BIRTHDAY PARTY THE "WOK 'WORKS CRAIG OMBCRJJ6 interested in forming &• viRfiKWia Stir fry, deep,fry,'braise, strain-and simmer ,, *!! Wm I? 1 itvp?;.. theatrical company will be your way to delectable Chinese dishesi Everything'you need is here: the classic round held Wok pan, lid, adapter ring, spottlo, ladle, even scrub brush and chopsticks, $25.00. For, rctipos and hnw.tn THp fhinoto fnokbook. S12.50. -1^1' -THURS.; OCT: 17 When: ^ -Oct. 18th 'til Nov, 16th •f/: m 1S0 •tl I Where: 2105 San Antonio. 8 p.m. 7530 Burnet Rd: i\ ~~.t ' ^316.Guod°lup« « 9-5:30 -Pork in ourlM onSan Antonio directly behindth» Cadeau or, in Highland Mall. .PU . Occasion The beginning of our si; A WEEKEND BT AND FOR WOMEN &•? by women of 10th year mvM !Hi ARICA of AUSTIN TOWARDS FREEDOM FROM' SOCIAL CONDITIONING BY ml DEVELOPING THE MIND. BODYi AND EMOTIONS. • The energy we need Is Already-inside os. A group of peo­ m -v pie, working with a wide range of Arlca's techniques can release this eneri-gy and make use of It in their daMyili^es; IOVE IS THAT WHI IN OTHERS AS IN ONESEIR ICH RECOGNIZES THE SAME CONSCIOUSNESS' It's our party, OCTOBER 19 & 20 }Sponsored by the Austin' " teaching hfuse. ..^••Call 476-2281 for information 8 x; Cost:'$25". students StS 1011IL-»,/AllPS ARICA IN AUSTIN T/ie Louee^ Prfce^ jof jflne Year m€K\ €IISWIf 813W.24tb_SL_ 'iMlSlfi HAIR iripftiiMriiiiiii: EARN CASH WEEKLY BloodPlasma Donors Needed-^ Men&Women:f\4$$mM Men & Women •JW8S CAOKl ^l'n Wgglfl Y CASH PAYMENT FpR DONATION Austin % BloodCom^ents^b, OPEN: MOM &THURS, 8AM fo 7P.M. 409 W mm Demos Expect No New Information on Pardon 12'* The legislation, however, would sus­ The House finally passed, 287-30, a voted Wednesday to give tiie Admirtistrai.s^i The aid tutoff^a rider tb a resolution pend the embargo until Dec. 10 with the "continuing resolution" fortemporary tion until Dec. 10 to help negotiate a ' providing funds for: government agen­provision that lio military aid could be funds for foreign aid afld a numberof im­,Cyprus settlement before cutting off cies, provides that no military aid can be.. . transshipped from Turkey to Cyprus. portant govenupeni agencies during the -XJ.S^inilitary aid to Turkey. provided Turkey until Ford certifies : ~ The trans-shipment provision provok­•' projected campaigR recess. The resolu­-. The House and Senate dgreedto iden­''substantial progress'' has been made ed Ford's, veto flftieat^-The.Administra­ 'WASHINGTON (UJPI) —'Congress ,^.started last Friday. ^ . tion included-the Turkish aid provision. tical language — despite the threat of a ^toward a.settlement and'tli&t-Turkey, is tion was willing to accept the rest of the. The Turkey amendment was. offered veto which would again delay the con­abiding by exTstlrJiawwhich.forbids use? package, . , ;t-by Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal, D-N.Y., gressional recess that was to havef bf U.S. weapons except for self-defense; • jSenate Democratic Leader Mike one of the leading opponents of Turkey's . M^sfieldrOTan-effort tp avert the veto,. ,. use of American arms in ther Cyprus in­; -tried to;eliminate theprovisjon-banning-. V,' vasion. M trans-shipment of arms but was beaten Ford saidan invmediatecutof f of aid to 40-27. " Turkey would make the Ankara govern­ment unwilling to negotiate with Greece : Ford earlier this week vetoed similar .over Cyprus and would hurt the U;S. •" legislation. and' was Sustained by the-­T strategic positiob ill tfie Mediterranean! -House. /' But critics of the Turkish military aid The 194444 vote by the House came * Kissinger Plans i' insist further supplies for Turkey are il­ after heated debate, raising the specter V«| legal because it violated If.S. law in us­of a possible second veto by Ford and ing equipment " *1 By United Press International -pfoposal'fbr aipartial Israeli withdrawal more delay,in the already postponed con-• American to invade Cyprus. Egypt and Syria h-ave rejected of three and three-fourths miles in the gressional recess. They say further aid will entrench proposals for a limited Israeli pullback Golan Heights, the only withdrawal to "It ismy understanding*that the Presi--^ \ Turkish forces on Cyprus and, conse­ and an Arab declaration of non-... which Israel would agree "in the. present dent would put wnniH-surely veto .such a"*-'':-quently, discourage.pfeacfe talks. :;^i belligerency put forward by Secretary of iifcand in the future," AS Safir said; provision'; said Rep. Peter • Rep. Elford-Aj.Cederburg, R-Mich., a State Henry A. Kissinger; during his Thesecretary.also-proposedan Israeli -Frelinghuysen,. RrN.J. .;. -i-;. staunch Administration supporter, told ,,w latest Middle East mission, the Beirut withdrawal of 31 miles in Sinai andlink-, Rep. George H Mahon, D-Tex„ called the House he had sppken watt SMreUiry( 'newspaperAs Safir said Wednesday.: -j^ed this-with-the fiolan Jieight&jpullhack^... :the-ameitdment-to-tell-'Furkey-"UHjut-off— of State Henry A-Kissinger — just back The-pro-Libyan-newspaper :quoted^|as: well; as an .Egyptian. and Syrian shipment of American arms to troops on ,, froma whirlwind tour of theMiddle East "Arab sources" as saying Kissinger's declaration-of an end to the state of belligerency, it said. Cyprus "an arrogant stand." ' — and-reported Kissinger was "very#• mission "was mei witb-difficulties in "They (the Turkish government),> concerned" by the arms restrictipn. litp Caifo and Damascus, and his proposals,. "Kissinger said the Israelisregard any would spit in our face," said,Mahon,' 1 A total 'of 144 democrats and 5O7S1 were not accepted in the two capitals." .. further withdrawal -by them would chairman of the House Appropriations republicans supported Rosenthal's arms 'r 1 It also reported the Soviet Union had return' to Egypt the fortified passes (in • Committee. . ; shipment resection amendment. ^ Started sending large; quantities of new Sinai) and to Syria, the fortified hills ip arms to figypt shortly before the current -the Golan.'The Israelis would not feel Car Insurance Moscow visit by Egyptian Foreign secure unless an announcen\ent ending Minister. Ismail Fahmi. ' , the state of belligerency,is made," As In Damascus, Kissinger: heard Safir said. -. 'harsh" wordrfrom Syrian leaders, and-; It quoted the Arab informants as say­President Hafez Assad told him Syria":; ing that Kissinger rejected Arab Rates May RisePt^l would 'accept only total Israeli demands for the participation.of Palesti­—UPI TeUphoto . withdrawal from occupied Arab i nian representatives in Geneva -and''af­• .^55 By The; Associated Press ; ; ; ; proposals would mean yearly premium in­ Boston Precautions territories, and the restoration of the-, firmed that his country"is against this. "Members of the insurance industry creases of $64 in Houston, $41in Dallas, $35 I .Headlights reflect off the wet Boston roads a* police motorcycle escorts lead rights of thePalestinian people, As Safir . "Kissitiger affirmed his country's said Wednesday they want an 18.3 per-; in San Antonio, $82 in"El Paso; $6 in refusal to Palestine school buses with black students to Boston High School. •said]vA--"' recognize' the cent statewide average increase in cat* Austin, $44 in Corpi^ Oiristi, $34 in Waco Syrja insists;;that discussions of the Liberation Organization; (the a(f-. insurance rates. The State Insurance arid $12 in Midland-OdesM, above points should takeplace within the Board is expected to orderssmaller one. Last year, the board granted 4.3 percent context ofthe Arab-Israeli peace talks in As Safir said; ayerage statewide decrease. Geneva and in.the presence of the Soviet' Washington wanted a'troop disengage­"We think the rates have got to go up Ninety-two comfSanies — about a fourth • Union and representatives of the Palesti-ment agreementon the Jordanian-Israeli because the loss costs are goirjgup..'.. of the total — now-charge less than the • nian people, As Safir quoted Assad as ceasefire line to-be negotiated directly Present rates; are. not adequate,": skid standard Texas rates set,by the board.' . saying.;.•;-. -. / between Israel and Jordan, the David Irons of ,Dallas, industry-. Irons said if the board does not grant a Hear Case Kissinger has told,Syrian leaders of a" newspaper said.--spokesperson. "substantial" rateincrease, he fears itwill „ , The Texas .Supreme Court Wednesday lose more than $29 million; in franchise Irons, representing the Texas become harder for any drivers to obtain W?agreed to hear the contest filed by six tax surcharges levied against 88,000 cor­Automobile Insurance Servifce Office, car insurance. ,v' pipeline companies taking advantage of porations, Texas Asst. Atty. Gen. -Rick .will make the cate request to. the in­He said the indusby was not trying to T^lan error mad.e by the Legislaturein drafr • Harrison said Wednesday. • surance board , at a formal hearing recoup some of its stock market lasses, ting-thp 197? franchise tax_bill. _ _ ,;;j No date has been.set for the hearing. . Thursday morning. .. through rate increase. : If the court decides in favor of the-• -Harrison said if only the corporations fcs Since rates are set according to. J • • !"There isn't a pennyin herefor what has1 • companies in the suit; r the state could involved in the suit were refunded, about -territory -and-driver classification, any happened on the market,'Irons,sakl ­"$4TSliHsirwmiM-brinvolved: driver's increase •— or decrease — in JHejsaid 77 .of the. 88.000 corporations premiums might differ widely from the • paying the surchargechallenged the bill —statewide average.­ . However, the state coirfptroller would Irons said at a newsconference he wil} refund the franchise t£X surcharge to •-• recommetid these changes in private any corporation asking for the refund, passenger rates, on a statewide average Harrison said. , --basis; Two The franchise tax surcharge applied to -• Full coverage comprehensive, a 22.6 NEW CASTLE, Ind. (UPI) -A corporations required to filereports with percent increase. . 1 ; speeding runaway car, its driver ap­the comptroller between Jan. 1 and May parently dead from a heart attack, plow-S; • Medical payments, 19 7.5 percent, with, 1, 1971. ed into.-a kindergarten classroom . a like increasein the medicalportion of'the killing 52year-old Prior to the approval-of the surcharge ; optional, no-fault "Personal Injury Protec­Wednesday, two By JOSE M. FLORES ; V bill, the filing date had been extended to children and injuring at least-a dozen-'?j tion (RIP)" coverage. PIP also has a lost • /Texan Staff Writer-June 15, but'the change was not incor­ other persons; fjj earnings component, for which theHeavier educational financing by the porated into the surcharge bill. -Both children killed were pinned under .^ premium would^remain unchanged from . state and political divorceofgoverhment. Thus the pipeline companies claim -the car.They wereMidiele Lee, whohad' * this year.»• from big business were called for they are exempt, from the surcharge. enrolled at the school .Tuesday, and. 'Wednesday by Raza-Unida Party guber­ • Bodily injury liability," up 15.9-percent. -Steven Greenwell. - because of this, incongruity. . -Texan Staff Photo by Dovid Woo natorial candidate Ramsey Muniz. . Hie recommendations to bemadeThurs- Judge. Herman Jones of 53rd District* -• Another fcyear-old 'pinned under the' %' Speaking before an audieiice of about' day by the insurance board staff are likely Court ruled for.the state and said thecor­ car,"Elizabeth Sexton, was hospitalized -800 students and faculty in Burdine porations should pay the surcharge, but. A Real Sidewinder?f&k"" to be lower, partly because the board uses in fair condition. : Auditorium, Muniz urged support/or the Eight-year-old Austinite Mark Bell doesn't seem to be having too ir)uch trou­a 25 percent ceiling on any increase or the ThirdCourt of Civil Appeals reversed 4bout 30 kindei^gartners were sittingfledgling RUP. as an alternative to the the decision saying the state would have ble side-saddling his bike. Even his high-heeled two-tones don't add the decrease. . • ;.•! oh floor rug^ iiiSharon Hahn'selassroom .­Democratic arid Republican Parties to live with the erroc of the Legislature. . necessary height. If there's a will... • For the average driver, the industry _ when the car smashed into the building, • •• whom he charged were controlled by big; which .is about'a half-block from the ? business in general_and the oil. industrC street. ^ in particular. ' , ;V Lt Charles Davis of the New Castle• "Dolph Briscoe has bragged about th< police .department said witnesses es­ Ford Given Settlement Deadline billion dollars he saved wjthout levyint timated the car was traveling 75 to 100 new taxes: LitUewonder; He's refused to WASHINGTON (AP) -Democratic , of events leading up the pardon, the nine ed him eight days before Nixon left of-will respond seeks detailed information1 mph-Whenit.ra^a stopsig?at a four-waycall a special session of the Legislature members of the House judiciarysubcom­.subcommittee members will probably Jice whether be would, pardon Nixon in,' about Ford's discussions with Haig dur­stop,"jumped a curb, raced acrossa lawn to try to enact badly needed school fun­mittee that will question President Rocd only have about' five minutes each for the; event.he1'.resigned.^^pi^^Plp|.; ing the-week before Nixon announced his and rammed into the building. ding legislation. There may be' no new about his pardon of Richard M. Nixon: •2 questions. resignation on Aug. 8. The driver, Frank Burris, 63, of New The Tribune said Ford will say he taxes, but the citizens of Texas-are pay­say they are not expecting to learn Other questions go into the matter of : In Wednesday's editions The'Chicago made no promise to Haig and no deals Castle, was dead at the scene and his ing a sales tax which they shouldn't have anything new. Ford's knowledge of Nixon's health at wife, a passengerin the car, wasinjured. to' be paying," he said. The limited time available for •Tribune reported that Ford will-tell the with anyone in the Nixon administration'' the time'he announced the pardon and Officials said an autopsy was ordered, SlthrnmmUW that former Whifo Hmico involving Nixon's resignation. I "The sales taxshould be dropped com-questionings the-narrow scope of-'Uie in- whether he knew of any criminalcharges .but it was believed Burris suffered a pletelyiri-favjor of a .corporatetax. Texas quiry and a reluctance to put a president chief of staff Alex'ander M. Haig Jr. ask-.... ...One of .the 14.questions to which Ford likelyto.bebroughtflgainst.Nixon, iatal heart attack.„v­ is one of the four states in the U.S. which * on the grill will preventany deepprobing does not have such a tax. There isn't of the issue, in. their view. even a state tax on oil leaving the state. ".;;Ford's. unprecedented appearance, a Granberry Says Briscoe There shpuld be one„paid-by the oil com­voluntary act on his part, will be broad­ pany," he continued. cast and televised. , '-'.DALLAS (AP) — Two candidates trying to be Texas' next governor could not against Briscoe. It would have been my pleasure to appear against Briscoe. If Mr. "Texas has sorrte of the poorest school The hearing willcenter on14 questions^-agree Wednesday on fac&to-face political combat, but both blamed Washington McDonnell wants to be governor he should be running against the present gover­ districts in the country, and it's one of raised by Reps._ Bella\Abzug, D-N.Y., for some of the state's problems. .. nor, too." • . the richeststates. We'vegot tremendous and John Conyers, D-Mlch., in formait ?> Gov.-Dolph Briscoe was an absent but not forgotten subject of discussion at the McDonnell made no reference to his solo appearance but stressed that his real highways, though, with AstroTurf along resolutions directing the House to seek -^ "Hot Seat" news conference sponsored by the Dallas Press Club. ^purpose in the campaign is to stop the growing influence of federal government them. Thank Mr. Briscoe for that, and the answers from"the executive branch." "Republican candidate Jim Granberry called Briscoe the "governor under over the states and individual citizens. ask him where the money to pay for it Such questions are normally answered glass" because "he hides himself from the news media, effectively cuts himself He said nonpayment of federal income taxes might be a "last resort"method of came from," he added. in writing or by the appearance of subor-' off from'public opinion and the public." ~ opposition to federal power. ­ Hie voters of Texas, said Muniz, were, dinate officials. Ford's first response Briscoe, Granberry and Sam McDonnell. American Party candidate, were in­ carrying the burdens of taxation and was to bundfe up his previous statements --"I have been filing and paying mine, but I know many who do not," he said. "I vited by the press club to take part in the "HotSeat" joint news conference. Club reaping little benefit, especially the ppor about the pardon and send them to^'„' officials said Briscoe never replied to the invitation. Then, Granberry balked at feel they fallinto thesame categoryas peoplewho protested thewar in Vietnam." and minorities. He called for an all-out Chairperson William^ Hungate,, D-Mo.,' "" •appearing with McDonnell and appeared at a separate news conference following Granberry said his campaign organization had Anally raised enough money to­-,effortrta-upgrad iV all "wlilllalvU f liO IUUI1UH|II19 . : -^ranberry^restlmatedilT^lHionHiir-• .-said the hearing shouldrBro\-inr flffiontino Procifloir.t't ff^mqins StoUfi-rpoiitting-jeat^gs^-reports-a«d====^ I.T.S.E. IWIBMaiMI own campaign, .CQnsisjing of 'perspnal^f^f0'• •a';!>00P foT Ford. . IMMM BUENOS AIRES (UPI) •-Leftist guerrillas claimed responsibility continued profit taking pushed appearanceS and.nopaidie|?vision(tlme, both Edwards arid. Kastemneier v Wednesday for stealing the remains of former Argentine President Pedro -the stock market lowfer in light Would ran at ffbout f20,000. said thev did not exnect:the hearing to' ' «a 1 Aramburu and.sald'he was not fit to share the same cemetery with-tiir~ trading Wednesday. ' The Dow Jones average1 of 30 . ^ ^Industrials fell 16.11 to 642.29,*""­ 16.11 National Guard 'Inepf, Incomf^tent' -^ " |v:and losers outnumbered gainers . c™,*-» «•-~ «»*,<= the hearing BOSTON (AP) — The National Guard wiVl remain onaleitinthe Boston " #54 to 462 ai^ong the 1,7£Q issues «t.The campalgn wlll b,3.'!jmemtes haveinadeopening-statements eptytincompetetUi ijlT^ undisciplihed/or undertrained _miliw Exchange. Octpber 17 Ml frtgffir « TO r&H SVr:.^ S|W * J-m&kp"• '•$% +& gueslvteujpotat ST/ ii&aH EDITORIALS #-"(jpi$S0. s QuestioningQuist Page 4 Thursday, Ottober l7, 1974 By ED CARUTHERS ^ port large corporations by tax subsidies, (Editor's note; Caruthers is chairper­by protective tarriffs and by licensing P son of the Travis County Libertarian and franchise, laws which keep out com­ Party.) petition. Libertarians oppose all these as This, article is written in response to violations of individual rights. Terry Quist's ^'Theories of a libertarian In the area .of civil liberties, I can il­conservative" (9 Oct., 1974). Terry lustrate' the differences between conser­classified 'libertarianlsm as a' sub­vatives and libertarians: h The Cubs, campus have to^wait " >:A category of conservatism. This is a "'" " •' •'•"• '• ' •-" .••"••> :. . ..I'l-*>-«.. .• .•••••:.• ... . '• •• " .Vf.fiKJV • •-»• m • • ­ labelling-which-the ;Libertarian.:Party. ) Terry Quist agrees-with me that all ^./While Gerald Ford lead? the way in "winning" inflation, he ought to> has been fighting since its birth. Conser­laws against "victimless crimes" should "start thinking about preventing a depression. When The Texan's recycling vatism, as the term is generally used, be abolished._But as editorof Right-On, a proigram. was terminated this week, the culprit was-neither « lazy TSP overlaps libertarianism in only a few campus conservative newspaper, he is Board, an editor not caring to keep a campaign promise, nor Student areas, and the Libertarian Party con­not-free to express all his"" libertarian v Government selling out to the regents. Instead, the program was a victim tains many, people who are not conser­: ideas. Last spring he reluctantly refused vative at all. -to run an article in which a friend of outfs of a wobblyiposcillating economy and, in particular, the housing industry. ' Libertarianlsm is a movement devoted argued that heroin should be legalized. Almost since" Texan recycling began in July, the prices offered for to protection of individual rights — all Terry. explained that he agreed with the newsprint have been steadily droppings With recycled newsprint being jights, civil as well as economic — .the article but that, the conservatives' who used primarily for sheetrock insulation, the program was dependent upon rights of the destituteas well as those of finance his newspaper might' stop"16 a housing industry suffering one of its worst slumps in years.' the plutocrat. Libertarians believe that sending in contributions if Rif^it-On took government power iriust be restricted to such a stand. « ' « The filial blow came this week when the paper company buying theTex-lli protection of individual rights, and that ; 2) This summer the Travis County , -an newsprint, CFevepack Corporation, refused to accept any more. BothfSf government must never be allowed to ' Libertarian Party undertook a .letter ; ; -paper companiesiii.Austkuiow.have huge surpluses of newsprint and few : violate individuals' rights. Conser­ writing campaign in opposition to recent j persons willing to buy them. Very simply, if they can't sell IhenCthey ? vation, on the other handp can most censorship of pornography in Austin. We j can't buy them. * » > generally be defined as opposition to were not-aided in this project by the ' change. This,.is how the term has been VFW, , And this is not an isolated incident. An employe at one of the Austin' the American L-egiou, the used historically, and.how it is still used American Party or any conservative paper companies "saidonlyone plant in Texas, a Fort Worth concern, is- the in other parts of the. world:world. Some organization. In fact, most of the people still buying newsprint. A Dallas company has stopped purchasing for the ' American conservatives, like Terry, de­crying for censorship11 call themselves .r... first time in 40 years. fend existing, religious, social and'^Conservatives." And when I offered - ... . dividual rights. But I'm afraid thatmost ;|^s;The Texan recycling program is not the only fatality in the Austin com- economic structures, and also defend in-Terry an article on censorship.. of por­ ' munity. To the knowledge of only a handful, Cub Scout Pack 421 was also nography for the first fall issue-of Right- conservatives are only tooVilling to.use On, he again had to' refuse. recently forced to stop picking up old papers; They were the last Scout government force to protect their The civil liberties issue was the main pack attempting it in Austin, c. cherished institutions. reason why, five ^ears ago, the liber­Ecology Action was also informed ty Gevepack Monday to find anotlier;'»s .In the area of economic freedom con­tarians who were members of Young home for unwanted papers. Although Clevepack is alsoat the mercyof theSffl servatives claim, like libertarians, to de­Americans for Freedom quit YAF. fend the right to private property. Yet. Organizationally, therefpre, liber­ economy, tl^e «Mmpany had promised Ecology Action a year and a half 1It is more blessed to pay off than to be paid off.' many conservatives are willing to sup-tarianism cannot in any way be called a; ago that the recycling center would never close down.'To add to the cold£|g subgroup of conservativism. s: - turkey, the:gfbup.^as,not~even given advance, warning about the shut-UlK down. . V 1 ' / s firing line fej-' Although the recycling boxes have been taken up, they are being stored : > away, waiung tor theTlay wheu the stock-market rebounds to65Q.-No one--;— j can say for sure when this will be, but we suggest you find alternative Doublethink your rights ••WX* ; uses for the old Texans. Use your imagination, and let us know what you „ > come up with. •To the editor:.' and reporters, but the most effective hanging was a week ago, hushed up by audience discourtesy and rudeness, the ­ With regard to the "paradoxical" pic­ . v. For all the lime and effort the TSP and Student Government provided in . method of garnering a vote for your side the department, probably already performance was fantastic. Keep it up ture in Tuesday's Daily Texanof a chain­ •••>. implementing this program, we would like to thank them. But to Presi-fvi of the issue is one-to-one communica­forgotten by everyone; but not by his CEC! link fence sealing off the free speech tion. studehts. j: dent Ford, we canonly say that itwill beimpossible to follow StepNo. 9 of%<® L.S.Davenport area near the Texas Union,-one cannot I , 1 have never worked for Doggett, am rg% Tom Hodak j bis 12-point anti-inflation, "bite the byllet" campaign;'assist in recycling. . • help but wonder at the fantastic and in­ ^ not campaigning for him and have no ; At least, until he and a weakkneed' Congress come up with more in-• credible absurdities which, people take idea where he was when not on the floor. Business Student relevancy seriously. Is a .fence necessary to. the Self-Defense *jj novative programs than telling Americans to pay higher taxes, spend less For all Kipcak knows, Doggett wasin the ff0o the; Editor^ |^i^^^^rk-faartterr-Even^the-Cub-Scouts-can-sMuthrough this facade. defrosting of one's, sensibilities? .A delegate's lounge listening to the piped-To the'«dltort-^ . kiif I would like to express my thanks as " , reading of the First Amendment. to the in speeches. During a semester of "carefully Sgglp "'-well as the appreciation of the council •! Constitution of. the United States makes . To criticizeany delegatefor answering scrutinizing-The -Daily Texan I have _jfof the article published in The Daily iit dear that peaceful assembly is a right;, ,roll call and thenleaving the floor makes witnessed a greatnumber of campusand Texan on Tuesday;"Sept 24,4S70rsei and not—^ privilege aespite ine . , me wfaader tf'Kipcak-watched the-con--community organizations am^ounce self­. plained our advising operation accurate-H machinations'of the shamans on either vention. He did not pointout in his letter defense courses for womeni c^ftainly~a~ ly aiid'we have~since~had~many-peo|4e ? According to the Newhouse News Service in The Houston Chronicle, specific things Doggett could have ac­• the Pptomac or the ColoradoRivers: The welcome and needed service. ^ claim it as their source of information. federal urban mass transportation administrator Frank C. Herringer is sign itself, fence or no fence; is nothing complished by being on the floor.-- . I believe that a first and"essential step-" Martypeople claim HieTexan to betoo-~­ more or less than'an exercise.of the During issues which required wm looking for a U.S. city to volunteer itself for duty.'The Texan volunteers votes in eliminating rape isthe removal in fact • political (and perhaps at times it is), but Orwellian.mentality which occurs at all every few minutes, or very controversial and image of the"weak and vulnerable Austin. in this case; our request for a student*,levels of government, including this un­issues, most delegates remained on-the woman who is mentally or physically un-. relevant article was not ignored. We ap-j "I'd like to find a city," said HerringerTuesday, "that would'ban autos iversity. Prior permission to exercise a floor. I daresay delegates that never left able, or unwilling, to defend her person preciate The Texan's help and commend j IK' from its downtown area or experiment with congestion pricing, and sup-. right? Doublethink anybody? How would^*--the floor are hardly our most effective or her dignityr ­ -= -this year's objective staff. jit feel to hve in the dying days of the Em->£ legislators. ' port them (the city) with federal funds. Aside from (the heed for) more However, not one of the self-defense Nancy Gracty I P're' Maybe the next legislative session will courses offered has classes jneetlng dur­ money, and I would even put it ahead of money, is (the need) to deal with •('.fy'. Publicity Committee Chairwoman I Bruce, F. Grube-J give Kipcak a chance to brush up on his ing the day, excluding"an entire segment the auto. The auto does not belong in congested downtown areas. Autos Department -of Government • -_ Education Cooncil 1 iV- political analysis. of the community — those many women should be restricted;" ~ ' Janie Paleschic who work at night, as I do — for whom perfectly good I Herringer is looking fora >'major"city, and we do not know if Austin is Effective delegate Journalism, senior rape or assault can he an occupational : in that category. But we know We are having traffic problems and we are ' To the editor: . hazard. ' reason ' ; ; looking toward mass transit. So >rfiy doesn't Austin take the offer and be Jim Kipcak's letter of Oct. 16, 1974, The hanging I appeal to any of these groups to To the editor: criticizing Sen. Lloyd Doggett for being .: To the editor: please set aside, as soon as possible, a This is just to inform the 1,500 students %r4tve I?iass trans't guinea pig? The Council decides, that's why.' daytime section for women who can't who were left standing in line for OU j absent from the floor of the --Strike two. Well, the University and 1§|*Jpi'But eve"if 016 council won't volunteer Austin, Herringer foreseessuch make evening classes. at 12:00 Wednesday that there is i Constitutional Convention shows a naive . i the speech students are out a damn good "®uto restoictions as partof the proposed legislation thatcould givefederal Please notify The Texan of. the par­"rva perfectly ^ood reason for suspension of lack of perception. teacher, but what do they care. if the ticket sales for that hour. As I was In- funds to municipally-owned transit systems. He said he could envision I watdied the convention from the>;F.A.Leaman was nailed to the wall by ticulars, and large number of « women on the staff aren't happy to run formed by one of the officials near the ' .federal requirements for state and local governments wanting transit-gallery every day. for its -last three • his colleagues, or is it adversaries, last the info, I'll be most pleased to run ticket office, "We have.* lot of cleaning months, and it did not take me long to,-, week. His crime was coming from the &'v operating subsidies to spell out plans for "restricting the competition through the streets (in daylight) announ­up to do to prepare for the rest of the . realize why so many delegates do notre£4. best communication school in the coun­ gp^jCautos), making transit more attractive." ^ cing the news. day." main in their seats hstigiing raptly to thej^l--try. to teadi new methods that were in- v •, will probably,not be attractive to those councilmenwhose idea Sffiakers. „ teresting to learn and made a student' Joann McKinnon Barry Herbert •; of progress is to run a double-barreled autobahn through downtown paries Floor debate is repetitious, often one-:-!|L° want to learn. Heculturnie Too kind { vj ^neighborhoods. Perhaps the concept of a earless downtown will not. i^isided and for the-most part does not His punishment -is having to sell To the editor: To the editor: -,e"" come to fruit until .we elect a new and used-slioe salesman mayor. mean a whole hell of a lot. Several everything and leave Austin) not to go on . Hurray for the Cultural Entertainment In my opinion, Vickie Bowles' review speakers used the sarfie speech no teaching somewhere else; no, com­ £• w& Mi; Mi b® i Committee, they finally aced. The per­of "King John" was, if anything, too kind matter. what the topic. Those who munication fixed it so he^,can't teach r ' . formance by the Soviet Georgian to Stephen Wyman. His performance, if bothered to .'.vary their' rhetoric-had. anywhere if he wanted to. No, he's mov­Dancers and Tbilisi Choir was superb, - "Quote"' ror a de| predictable stances. ' . -"~'A you will excuse my loose use of that ing far-' away where they can't do outstanding, a real, work of art. «.! • , i: •••• Doggett did vote. For bhn to. be pre? anyining wnim, term, resembled nothing so much as ti • • '.j • »««. rvt uuh wue pi-e-. . anything to him, but the students have to The packed audience in Gregory Gym had imitation of David Frye doing an im­ ittenard-JVtxmi-aeceUfea^«iuleiir:lie{l.tojtnau9e4V • ~ ^onld—have -kept—him—from at-someone new a Willi same mnnnn) thojr aiid the old rMniwHnH Bpprnunl pathtes are with an otherwise excellehtr complishing other necessary, work for methods. "nuhierous'occasionsrTherperformance^-'^cast—wn<^-must-.cope : The opening Statement .'---cast—wb^-must-cope—with ^his his district. Leaman tried to talk with the depart­ would have been totally flawless except#®^sputterings for the remaining 0( t|P ^|erfate cover-bp trials ' perfor- Floor debate was helpful in clarifying ment, .but tbey had .already turned on for the latecomers who were "still fjKjmances. articles, their sectionsand amendments, him, although they deny this and give no. dragging jn after nine. Those people1^­ ^YfrTtC* Hiner John Ehrlichman's lawyer. ifjsato uninformed -and confuted < delegates: reasonsrfiSund familier, Spurr??). The -should have been barred. Aside from this'vv --!t. Art £§&, .&% THE DAILY TEXAN guest viewpoint MS? K~i -XT*"?! Stmint Mtrntpmptr «f Ttm IMMikHr *1Tun* AntH EDITOR:-:, ± • • • • Buck Harvey MANAGING EDITOR ^5, . . :>.V:Sylvia Moreno me w Wm.need culture ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS ..! • Lynn Brock ' EMS, £5? Larry Smith By CHUFF AFFLERBACH^ Uniygrsitjrpfesidents and deans. And, of feel , taller. And above-fill, when thedkvother objects which may cause -trouble (Editor's note: Afflerbach is a senior; course, you should avoid controversial NEWS EDITOR^?! chancellor arrives, make sure no one,?' Ifa^guest seems slightlyexuberant or ta­ ...Martha JP McQuade MUNICIPAL EDITOR i in radio-television-film.) '""T" politicians like the plague. The battle else's head is'ever abovejils.— TT^Tcapacitated, make no-mention'Sf it. for .Ken McHam The Associated Press ha^reieased its over the Permanerit-Uniyersity Fund is UNIVERSITY EDITOR"" latest poll of pregame cocktail parties, Asihe partymoves intofull swing, you|}i p^Jjj,9 ?n^oy?(' himself. Just-make sure Richard Fly SPORTS EDITOR i r: and I am sorry tosee that the University 7^Herlf Holland When "Lady Bird offers io stky AMUSERfENTS EDITOR of Texas has slipped out of the Top 10. means over. See to it that you serve thev?r L»,i„h ium, jia ­ anyone .who voted either for or against lndu • • • .. -V". Paul^utel This is a far ciy from the way things chancellor first and then the regents^-.' behJ,1and he'P wl«> the dishes, be sure FEATURES EDITOR the neviM«pnstituU«n: Tradition has -" ^ -^ to decline graciously. Rdiearse the line • Claude Simppon wette a feW years ago. I can remember Better; still, let the chancellor serve the' shown tl^t forUniversity presidents it is PHOTO EDITOR "the servants will clean up in the mor­ • ^/v^-„-^~.-7^~Marlon Taylor when the Lognhoriis led the nation on better to 1^ safe than sony. regents. The regents, of course, do not", you can it with ning" until say both the gridiron and the waffle-iron.' serve anyone, Don't ever discuss politics ' ISSUE STAFF ' • d Issue News Editor This is indeed a serious situation, But once the gue^s are invited, the — just remember you areall Democrats, . ' -^iU»f]2ievS8>/rt „C°Jl!?C!^n' ,An,^ —(General Reporters .I.'lf.'; >..^::Gajj Burris because it means a drop in the prestige , work has just' begunlCareful attention -Vso act accordingly. Make sure everyone i t ge] I#5'-" News Assistants..... David Hen^iicksljEarol Barnes ... of the University. Profegsors.from other. should be shoWn tq (jje preparation of is enjoying himselfand watch out forany ' Son^t mA £Slrfve universities may blacklist Texas if they refreshments and entertainment. -signs of trouble. Keep an eye on Franks ' 16ft,. and1 doesn't he have to 'be>i Jcnow they can't get good martinis before Remember. lt is very easy to overdo it.-when he plays bartender — he gets a lit-Editorial Assistants the And high. ca.Uber_ One host with,a flairfor extravagancein-v tie too frank and not too tender. Do not'-, jnt even offer Associate Amusements Editor';. game. without - v too' fraiik V^ ....Chris Garrett • ° . faculty, Texas will become a second-rate vitea.'(he entire Longhorn Band -to play -' ' force yourself,jm-Coach Royal he him the magazine to take along forhalM Assistant Amusements Editor:; ...Danie^D. Saez ° university with second-rate degrees. f6r the visitors. Such extremes should be prefers' to "da.ice with who br^him." > ­ Assistant Sports Editor..,.....^.;,:...;,....",..' Obviously,"something has to be done. avoided. -Poise and good taste are the Be careful not to talk, football with himT -^ t start without him. And finally, •Make4Jp Editor..,.^r. ...:r7.; &Wie R: Fisherj two guidelines to follow in entertaining once the last guest harbid fdn goodbye j 1 '"""Right now Chancellor LeMaistre is ,because" it makes. h)m nervous. Stidc to r-Roe-^Vaugott-—working-'ron-jrguidebook-for-future Visiting dignitaries. If you pliut to serve subjects stich as the weatherand liunting you can count the slM?erware^".Jr. -= r < i J^rtis l^jgter, Rohhie MarahaH • Unltfiralfy p^.M^ta 'and the regents barbecue*,do notmake Bevtrthe~guest~of~~ andd -<&&&££ ' 1-''' • •• ' -I--."' -. .. v :•••! mii^all iiigijte;unive.r8ity presidents of Toman the nature of their office. You al*e tke *4Karflrft*«rKrf«rtbfc •.j P"1 Uraj wwihtat Cowl u» ii tfc* — ^ j ^ myfrtm representative of the .University in -all 'Oemtf, VtLvtnttr iifisMtratioe;or ums Bctrd of arrtvM at Jlltuilraied on a citalt hi,ilie l ousayand dp.YouihOi , . . j Attltf bcaMh ta Igp Bttlkfiog ^•suggestions to put in the book.These are „ recognize everyone you have-jfrvitttl'tiV&lT™ ^e ire8t of yourrguests^ TV 0»«7 TtMfl.# »cw«pip«T jt Tie if? I" TiP BbilUm some helpfulhtats for pnc^eFetfquetteat ' —-tpi»^graci(to;hMt4rftBe:?raiart»dF avoid embarrassment for both you and 3^;-At iastthe party.comestoa^dsdrand ' tioh^ friewllineM and'hospltality; "Ai ' ^lyowtmyt -" .--r fc-'-'rr-,(-...iWsWSF-iif, By NICHOLAS VON «?*|g££ •• ^WOit^AN:!.-.-':^*:/ t ..JThe Washibgtoh jP«t;#'"ri_ .King Features Syndicate r WASHINGTON -Th<;: Paroxysms of enn'ui with which the public has respond­ed. to this year's elections have stirred Both politicians' and political writersto lament anew the decomposition of the —'-1^9-party system.. The •" afwrlization of OUP politics, . which-tends . to make every.< candidate his or her own -political party, depressesmen-like David S. Broder, the country's most]^widely r respected political analyst ; In a recent column Broder , have-failed, essentially because . only a rapidly diminishing few give a damn about whether there is or isn't a Republican or Democratic Party. Indeed the question is no-longer whether most peo-; p.le are becoming in-. dependents but whether, they will vote at all."Why should I go down to the polling place' and help them weave a rope for my own noose?" asks "a California voter, and she's not alone-. • .. ; . The only impprtant division we're, left with is between 'conservatives" :• and­"liberals," and that too has lost almost all^meaning. Hi extremism trjnaire . liberals^have"cap­ble for people -to-distinguish tured the .state Democratic .between subjective and objec-1= Party because in:Colorado."as tive truth, or. to recognize our|.',< elsewhere liberal /ire-caters present stater which an out-.y^ are shielding their ideological sider can only describe. ^s . flames for this election." . middle-of-the-road ex­ The unspoken word .fiere is _ tremism. Having defined all '.'communism."-...but since dissent as psychopathic, and nobody in his right mind can witn the warm bodies of con- consider Hart a Communist. • sensus politics ^nd non- what Evans and Novak do is • ideological rationalism' sur-•, suggest that he has the rounding us, there's no onegNgg? 'emotional makeup of a Red.— and no thing to tell us that Jtties-J^ "abrasive ... ideology.'*1 marshmailow moderates are "rigidly doctrinaire."In other involving us in the most •; words, an. irrational devotee horrendous kinds-of folly. >V . • of a secular religion, We-can hardly be surprised that reports from the state in­ (ousttn topicsj dicate that Hart has done ex­ •r remarked that when you have If that is t{i>-sffectrum of actly-what the-two columnists Frank Wilkinson, executive??;^) ... no party-discipline the way is electoral politics; it follows assert; namely, pulled in his director of the National Qm-lml­open for candidates with per-that partiesare withoutmean­horns and abandoned -any mitlee Against Repressive­' sonal political organizations ; ing and candidatesare mostly . opinions he might have had to Legislation, will speak at a • to repeat what thelVixon peo-vacuous marshmallows.: Orr set -him apart from-the .534 i'und-raising coctail party /or ;l AM IS ing and working together is a Many neighborhoods thus Campus); living co-ops a IF AN"/ CENTIMETERS COME real example^ of a vital form community which a (Halycon, HolloWay House, CRAUJUN6 INTO THIS ROOM! producer can serve, nonex- CENTIMETER? relationship from which com­ ; Instead, Nexus. TStonehenge, I'LL STEP ON 'EM! ploitive; antiprofit producers munity:flows. The members TLOK, Whitehall and Green-can thus survive in a com-­of each co-op are primarily briar Community); collec­munity where consumers areresponsible for that, co-op's tives:(AC Produce, AC Tools,socially and practically con- health. Also, the neighbor co­Glarksville Bakery, Ecology cerned about where their opcan-respond to the needs of Action, the Garbage Coliec­ money goes.­ Hghborhood-more-direcU tiVe and Sattv'a Restaurant: ly asa neighborhoodorganiza-­ Communication and education and farms (mantis Organics• tion rather than if it were a is another function moreeasi-and Yegua Farm). M£S,-MAAM ... HAHAHAHA 1W ^5ffV_ ! THOSE GREEN RECYCLING DOONESBURY ismissiizam BOXES so votte im^smtr­ tXCVEPTD IHAVEDONE H0MH6HKON6! ARE GONE! WLEjte.-1omrARm Go-Everywhere stum? TteRKPAHHEsry VSSgBSSSfS* /Pt/Wf Yes, all GOOD things must come to pn end ... and it was a Velvet Jackel<^| GOOD thing while it lasted! However, there is no longer an by College-Townavailable Austin market for the waste paper ... so we haye . . .• 1.•' [ • -V '­ J •4$ removed the recycling boxes from campus. A super topper for brisk fall and winter days soft and warm -m over skirts and pants in rich shadqs of rust, green and navv To all of you that participatedin our recycling program ...pur Sizes 5 to 13. $44. ' '1?^^ ":"V^ sincere* thanks!" Ipfgpi ON-THE4SS TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS and 2406 Guodalupe­ 0,ODm/. m STUDENT GOVT. ENVIRONMENTAL COMMITTEE vi >oopooooooopooooooooooooooooo«* OVER TO DRUG SPECIALS 22i~U£m r Crossword Puzzler -Answer toYesterday's Puzzle" ACROSS DOWN ~ &isi raop ar-iur-isi uisa 1 Resort < I Ocean ~ DDF PDFloiiJ 0BH Right m Sea Breeze Stride 4 Wire nail •••••• , jCLEARANC 6 Warning a Channel'?^; t'sora HLi[-:arj i* device .. communica­ 'MiUard Organ nra^Q rar? nwHrno Pads tion hewlno 1 anra uniiti nfiRm 4 Prohibits 13 Assistant 5 Free of nc nnamr; Powder Sug. Retail 1.85 so as 14 Turkish 8 Pald noMce •aiiura ann reglweni 7 Put Oil Deodorant Sug. Retail f .09 nm ntson ..,5% (CELEBRATION 15 Be present 8 Evil ... r«Dnoa Kmn 17 Wooden pin S Spanish *9 Symbol lor article-HI33BB3 HROTEra Sug. Retail 1.4S tantalum 10 Tardier , aoa uQGQB r3H!Jl No-1.19 _ 20 Spreads Ipr II Climbing anu rasHrjH nnra Ok^l' ^.^75'^ E,ant 28 Devoured 38 Hostelry >021 Fondle 16 Dutch town 30 Seed 39 Each :\.v 22 Chloken 16 Prdnoun container • 40 Marsh'* Now .69 23 Withered _ 21 Solemn v6v»-,at Possessive 42 lhdeflnltel?4 ; 24 .BemlMaken. 22 Pronoun pronoun article 25 Wife of 23 Music: as |552 Inseot 43,Lovedor)o;-,;; Zeus written '-'33 Native metal . 45 Poem26 Attempt ' 24 Qoddessof '-'a* Dristan sn Household -48 Edible seed 27 Spanish for healing iv p«U Bmui r^Mitchum 47 Ordinance; ' "river*1 25 •Pronoun y'Saa rapments.. Frag 49 Negative ^ Vapor| m 28 Ventilate,. 27 Crimson -4^37 Masts >-• SV Pronouft ^ •* 29 Con]uhcl on Ultra Brife If Aerosol 30 Allows ;,3? Preposition Family Size Deodorant Spray# 34 Food llsh-n ,35Sulllxt-. i Sug. Retail-1.SO adhetwitot rar rr -with Free Sug. Retail.3»S0 , Large group of jeans -36 Thipuah-- w-i =37 Food fish » —39 Worm si'1.09 30 to 40% off __ ^ '40 Conflaomllon 41 Veiiil ""•bV*. fj?1 ' J'5f $2 HallI \ Lf ^ Thurs., Fri. and Sat. ^ sssr-vi -ManjJ tops, blouses, an^ dressesat a sayings, VS>" ji" FREE PAIR OF HOSE WITH ^ 48 TO# vi'-How­. SO Amerlcafi < • Mtrtcn^ZL, 84-WaeKiiuir- I 93 Plumlike , frt|it -J Mv ,84 Pwlodof; , • -V-: THE UNIVERSITY lV--V Um# ri stitch hursday, October t7, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page,5 •| ^SSSgJ ««SeMa!J PJbt- • fctpsWSSS^SpfiSS ­ &• >•:•;-• >'l A'slfakrf 3fl. Series * w3^ • W-^H^ t ...ffr'" $8& im li7t Holt's Pinch Single Wins for Oakland • ••.»» OAKLAND (APV--Pinch-base hit. .was thrown out. Avild-ptckoff thrpw to first, took third-on a wild pitch by % :• hitter Jim Holt stroked a two-' • in.the bottom of the first,' then cruised-home when Ban--Holtzman. But Bando fielded --• runsingle, highlightinga fou'r-Messersmjth's first .pitch-hit do looped a hit do.wn the right " Cey's hot smash and threw m • run Oakland rally that carried • Bert Campaheris on:the left field line him out to end th? inning, ••-"v-: ~ i the .A's'.fora-5-3 victory^oyer'' arm.. But Yeager nailed Cam­Messersmith walked. • Holtzman, enjoying the lux­ '-the Los Angeles-Dodgers in py trying to steal second to Jackson, and Rudi followed ury of a three-run lead, wiped Sl4y Wednesday night's fourth-; j«nd that, possible threat: And .with a sacrifice; moving Ban-• out the Dodgers in orderin the game of the World Series. in the! second for the: A*s, do to third and Jackson to"se­seventh inning and, when h6 . The triumph gave the A'S a Washington beat out a two^,ut cond. With first base open the . retired the first twobatters in 3-1 edge in the best-of-seven single to. deep : shortstop, Dodgers walked Washington the eighth;it seemed he might series. The American League-before Ray Fosse fanned. intentionally to loadthe bases.' be headed for-the first com­ champions' will try to nail' ; The Dodgers retaliated 'fO^-" 'The A's countered by sen-., plete game by an A's pitcher •.••?•• down their. third straight two runs in the. top. of .the ding up. Holt, a left-handed • in. the World Series since they world title in Game 5, which . fourth and a 2-1 lead. J v: batter, to hit for Fosse, and we.re . Connie • Mack's $4% starts-at 7;30 p.m. Thursday, • * With one out in the fourth, .the move paid off when Holt, Philadelphia Athletics in 1931;J„ ,Ken Holtzman.the A's hot--Steve Garvey singled to right, lined a two-run single toright , But Jim Wynn walked and, hitting Series pitcher, and Joe Ferguson' walked. Bando scored easily, and when Garvey singled, Dark • -powered Oakland to a 1-0 lead Af ter.Ron Ceystruck out;.Bill' Jackson slid home under came to the mound. Thetemp­.-^^with a homer in the -ttiird-Russell drove home both Yeager's tag after Ferguson's .tation of relief ace Rollie 'iTj^linning, a biast well beyond the ruruj.ers!with a triple into the throw had appea/ed to beat Fingers, warming up in the left center-field fence. gap in right center .field. He : Jackson to the plate. bullpen, was-too much to ig­ • Th^ homer was the second was stranded on thini-»when nore and Fingers faced WASHINGTON ended up af j \ '.i, whit-for the-A's off -Andy Yeager fouled out. i-• ' Ferguson, a longball threat third; Dick Green drovein the -•^-^VrMessiwsnatthT—The-^Dodgers. J.THE A'S put the .tying run who had boomed a two-run final run with a forceout i' *-also had two through three in-on in the bottom of the fourth homer earlier in the Series: ',l~ mngs — a..pair of wasted when Sal Bando led off with a • In the top of the sixth. Wynn ( . .The reliever worked . i doubles. • walk. But Messersmith fann­•led off for Los. Angeleswith a carifully, running the countto, IN THE FIRST inning. Bill ed Reggie Jackson, and 'Joe double to left cener. He held 2-2; Then: Ferguson swung and Buqkner doubled off Glaudell ' Rudi lined into a double play. second as. Steve Garvey and missed and the Dodgers' Washington's glove with two • TbfcA's took a 5-2 lead with • Ferguson grounded out, then threat was over. Jackson beats Ferguson's throw to score A's fourth runJstl^ ~ away, but Jim. Wynn struck four runs in the bottom of the out. In thethird, Steve Yeager-sixth Holt had the key hit. a Game 4 ICS ANGCUS .'5 • led off with a double. . two-run single; -. ab r< bl Messersmith bunted-him to.| -Bill North led off-with a Campnn&ss '..Lopes 0 0" ': North cf Buckner it. 4 0 0 third, but.Pave LOpes struck--walk and made it to second SteameriRings Bell, 30-25^ Banrfo3b Wynne! 3 0 0 - out and Buckner. bunting for a when Messersmith made R iscKson rf Garvey )b . .. JJ,. 4 1 0 Rudr ID Fergusonrt. 1 3 '1 0 CWhntgn If Cey 3b. i." 4 0 '-"PHILADELPHIA pe«l Premium Hoi's the beer Out started it all. f . •? ^-bcewKi with pure spring waterto the samegreat taste sinceV;vi *1886.. ' ' . An^.Peari » .bw that doesn't leave Uj«e behmd because it too is brewed from 3100 springs, . • Pear) Premium«and Pearl L%hl. ­ Reserve ,Your Ad Space Now Now that's Freedom of Choice. ' ff ; -•>. WkMw "Vr t October 28 Edition v'.V •?<. m CASESQF LONGNEGK PEARL AISOAVAILABLE onftily magazine supplement to The Daily Texan mmssmm SKWS ~r, -« ^0QW.^AU,Hn^ PeOrl Call 476-6568 Another Publicatfotiof M HVlUHUVnS ^ 1 • ;'^;Thur d^V.October 17, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN »«r7^y 'AY-:£r j P • ' sssse? -­ KftfrWyj- A-P m Mfff : Rkf Tickets M Maravieh Leads Jazz in NBA Debut &lBy The Associated Press Suns will entertain theSeattle Maravich, the.league's second and scorers in NBA history,v Temporarily stripped of two SuperSonics." Tom Burleson from NCAA • Campy'Russell of Michigan* Jeading sccrrfer last season. -will start at center, with: Bud champion North Carolina and Gary Novak of Notre %pmg Slowly, of its premier centersbecause THE OTHER 14 NBA teams-PISTOL PETE played his Stallworth and LaMar Green State, 6-8 rookie: Leonard Dame. The Trail Blazers, of otf injuries; the National begin play Friday or Saturday collegiate basketball at at the forward positions; By PHILIP BELL Gray from Long Beach State course, will be showing off 6­ Jsz? \ Basketball Association. has night, while the, 10-team Louisiana State before being The Jazt will Texan Staff Writer be, missing and Archie Clark, obtained in -. ~ $~J> •>•««» "inei vJMCSWS tried to dress up; the start of 11 Bill Walton at center, with American Basketball Associa­drafted by the NBA's Atlanta four of its big men — Neal s. .' Big Al Conover's Rite 'Owls have not excife'd'lhe ~ Its"29th season Thursday night tion opens its eighth-season-Hawks.-Counts; Rick a trade with the newly named hopes, that1 the UCLA All-Texas student body,according to University ticket lot of Jazz Friday night. Walk, Mel Washington Bullets. America can make a con­ with-a New . f manager, Richard Boldt. r. The Jazz, needing an im­Roberson and John Block — Guard Charlie Scott, tender out of., the PortlandOrleans Jazz, that is. The absent NBA superstar mediate gate attraction and because of assorted injuries. "We typically sell around 9,000student tickets to the Phoenix*: leading scorer last .team' The colorfully nicknamed centers' are Milwaukee's an were experienced scorer; THE KNICKS also will be Rice game," Boldt sai&This year;however, the ticket season before missing the The Chicago Bulls, levi by! Jazz, the 18th and newest Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, outfor Willing to sacrifice the draft without four:key meh — Willis drawing has started, slowly for theOet.26_.game in final -30 games'with a broken veterans Bob Love and Jgrry franchise in the : NBA, also seven or eight games with a-choices and two players pick^ Reedv.Dave DeBusschere and Houston. The drawing, which'began Wednesday, saw .will be colorfully attired in arm, has recuperated, but the Sloan, will host the Atlanta ­ broken bone in his right h§nd. ed in"the expansion draft' to only 500 people use their blanket tax for tickets. " : purple, green' .and gold un­and Dave Cowens,. acquire. Maravich, who Jerry Lucas, each of. whom •Suns will be without prize Hawks, who may be short on • Boston's retired after last season, and I "Yes. we are a little concerned about the low stu­ rookie; All-America John:. offense after dealing away iforms and present one of the sidelined until the end -of-averaged 27:7. points per gaihe Dean Meminger, Who went to dent turnout today.'V Boldt noted, "it's all pretty Shumate from Notre Dame, .Maravich. game's most colorful-players . November with a broken bone last season. anemic." Atlanta via New Orleans as. -sidelined indefinitely with a . The -Houston Rockets-will • in Pistol -Pe.teMarayich when-in his right foot. To complement Maravich in part of the Maravichsdeal. • Rice, after a bad Start this season^ has-picked up blood clot; in' his luftg. : ; face the; Milwaukee Bucks, 1 they help launch'the season . The Jazz owners, whd paid considerably. The Owls, tied LSU 10-10 and battled against the NeW York Knicks. the backcourt,, New Orleans 'Seattle'; coached by former In Friday's games, Buffalo; Who will be missing Abdul­ $6.15 million for thefranchise, has .veterans Stu Lantz and Notre Dame to the end-before.-losing 10-3. .'"Maybe NBA great Bill Russell, has NBA's Jabbar. The Golden State . In the only other game also gave up numerous high _ Jim Barnett. Walt Bellarhy, led-by the leading students are preoccupied with the upcoming Arkansas three rievsU&tarters -in -its scorer last year in Bob Warriors!with Rick Barry and i: Thursday night; the Phoenix draft picksto obtain theflashy one of the leading rebounders 7-4 lineup, including rookie game," Boldt said'. McAdoo, will meet the Boston Nate Thurmond,will meet the^ Whatever the reason, Boldt can'tfigure itout. "Rice Celtics, • last year's NBA Los Ahgeles Lakers, who won weekend is a party weekend, it always has befen. Sure­. champion. Detroit plays at the Pacific Division bf the ly.there are more than 500 students'from Houstonat. "Seattle in a game that .will, NBA;last season. To Defend Title Texas." _ • have Burleson making his In (he past the. Owls: have always< played the debut-against the Pistons' Thursdays (iom« Seattle at Phoenix . Longhorns a.good game in Houston: In the JesslNeely muscular Bob Lanier. ; _ New Orleans at New York Former Longhorn, Trevino Favored days, Rice always managed to pull off a shocker. Late­The Cleveland =• Ca.valiers FnSSy's Com*« : ly, however, the biggest shockers have beeri • toy the SAN ANTONIO i FREE)(AMY IN SHOP) i most »­ sm«ll C4rs^­ KCHASE OF ANYT " Oil • models. IN AND OUTIN LESS THAN 30 MIN. You cant buy a better This siipcrlativv pullover, lias llio oomforl and fit ihdi? only full ra^ltionint: run impart; Of melftngly soft baby- any prise S DAYS ONLY! lantbsMool., il has the:SIIPERWASH assurance"of true' f-oH niaehine washability. In colors that smack of pure lux­ 9:30~TItlT5:3ODA ^ Shopand -„-ur>: **«ti»t»l color, ntediuln 0\fc>rd pray^-bmw«;j)a\yl y^ruxl^ X'llou. Si/.cs S, >Ma_L!l_XL._2295() ->• TILL 8 P.M. THURS. *Savel MR r * Mrtt Tf ouo CUSTOM DUALS®FOREIGN CARS z. . luruent . :. 'iL ® ByrnetRd: .., vs« (nMr Anderw^ lah») L'AN D-MA .. ' j -formal 2222 GUADALUPE NEXT TO TEXAS THEATER wnta Ji "COTTgress-AVE ft.SSSSSia'isi'TjM REYNOLDS MimBUt A hursday, October 17, 1974 THE DAIJLyjEXAN Page 7 M .3 ,r i J " issna&x ~ "set Pf m mm *s# ?• a ili$£ •«?» M"Xt® Sffi&l It Ain't Kosher , ' HOUSTON -years, has been in the African HOUSTON £§sfescf '«££ ant place .for different tastes?*' tennis will be Thursday nightFor more information with finals set for next Inc. Johns, Berry write to: Wednesday. R.S. Zlotnick has Provincial Office qualified for the fraternity. Lead Archers; finals and will face either Ed-. Vocation Dept. R d|e B1anton or Brian '"sThe Texasarchery clubheld St." Edward's Cordially invites you Stairtsman. IndependentsTrey a qualifying meet earlier in$6 2120 GUADALUPE University to view the "Silent 70Q"tm :a Morgan and Allan Busch also the week with Jim Johns and Austin, Texas 78704 are in contention. Don Berry tying for top men's electronic data terminaly, . Men's and women's swim­qualifier and Elinor. Hart ming finalswill be held Thurs­leading the women. family, featuring the neu) A day night at Gregory Gym, Out-of a possible score of and division playoffs in bad-270, Johns and Beny scoredModel 742 Programable ' minton are scheduled for 264 followed by Billy Jones Tuesday night in Bellmont with a'262 and Tom Cook with .W-v Data Terminal. site Hall. Badminton finalsareset a 256. Ernie Grimes scored for Oct. 29. 256 and Ken Viola hit 252. -sjggs "fH * October 18 Rooiii 8 Duval Villa U.T. Computing Center Big Big Apartments Hrs. 1-5 P.M. 2-1FURNISHEbi^M$2dO/ mo. 2-2 FURNISHED ^$220/ mo. . Pay your own alectrlcity Ihis winter 4 xw* Out of State Students: 'i Move In Now: . ffis Rtserve your apt for tpting sanMsfer JgS Come by It check us outXjk. $You lost $64.84 4305JDuvai' ^454.9475 last weekend because "HP •ipsp mmmmsm you didn't belong to the t -rs Did you realize that ' you are eligible fpr 0 tuition rate* if you are v^a member of the, '.'Army Reaerves?^; It only requires one weekend a month Jml, and two weeks epch summer. Let's help each otherI Wr Pf FAMILY m 5 wS m? Ms s or pr friends Look, Ma; pretty campus. Lookl^fa lend. Look/Ma. right tackijei*®® jnost anything with a picture frorn a Kd 6E0UF BATE DINNER fnstarnatic -h&m,a few details orv-ffl m % . • BEEF • SAUSAGE • RIBS • . ....^X ^fesS \t, pffl&jp'an 80.stamp and' r>1 ^ • POTATO.SALAD • BEANS • \ ~v •-ONION • PICKLE •.BREAD • •hffuri' ^'postcard-sfzef'and Ss^aclly. SERVtZD FAMILY STYLE; . » -* ^ . • • Mi ___ p_R person. ... -rs.. "Ifjf; Minimum of FOUR A -.A*c3fn ^ v 0»AITTMINT OF THK AKMYr\ COMPANY A 871ST ENGINEER BATTAUON (COjlsT) wMfM *v *•' »**' •-*• 160J Falrvlew Pr.jljm. 104; Austin,.Tx. 78731 • 489*7260 336 9. Lamar'' 444.-8461 -Custom Cogking •z, ^ as 4 THE ... ^, I 1 ' \ /• -* j *^4^ 'la?!! gji If W «£!*-*•* ***8? ty• 'jL " sfcsu, *% Health AdvmngfCit^dRjn ripg Administrative Support Needed To Solve Problems By RICHARD FLY -there," Larson said, adding he had ta^j^arious health professions has doubl­ •v. Division of General and Comparative Texan Staff Writer fight for the support he receive^. V^ed to approximately 2,500, with no Studies, said, "AH the evidence I've The health professions advising-' From talking tq some ad-J;^ 'commensurate increase inbudget, .seen is that support both from the program at the University has en­' ' SPACE THE hasrriinistrators, but notSpurr, hegot the FOR program wlc&SXS division and the: administration has countered a number of problems "feeling that they would not get been severely limited, and" the • been great." • , — ' • • since it was organized in 1970, and behind me. and fight" for thew&number • of faculty advisers -4i3S ^s-There is a problem in the large although the' program has been program.-'^-declined. A few departments current-number of students*Vn the program,,-receiving more and more attention^ . "I w^s unhappy that theinstjtution ^--jy have health profession advisers for she said, but the problem is quan­ -many of those problems still exist. didn't rationalize the. whole systema&.S'students in those areas, but only 27 titative, not administrative, ' well," he added. 1 ;?|;\faculty advisere and additional office "1 believe that her (Lagowski's) • •••Thai-tact may have been one of the . THEHEALTH instruction program-g^personnel serve the remainder, situation is better now than a few- reasons .Chancellor Charles! was encountering numerous^;} The faculty members handle „ " LeMaistre fired University President months ago," she added.. rapid -ini^atanywhere from 2 to.20 students each, Stephen Spurr, The former president problems, particularly a :wsJ-> VICKIE McCALEB, Who has serv­ crease in students interested in the'?,. >The restore served by the health cited the premedical advising > -e . . -a . •.the advising program in the past, but n. . I • '• departments began studies, said the "faculty is lessjyill-^ J'the last six months have shown the * Although the wheels of administra­prohibiting their faculty _from mg to serve as volunteer advisere" -'most ifiarked imorovempnt " •volunteering with iVfifmost iharked improvement.' .' Collision Course the 'advising tion move slowly, they may have now. ;S'h-The program has: received an in-moved too slowly to satisfy program because it was too time con--' The'needs of the advising program, 'crease in: funds to support some ad-The Goodyear blimp cruises around the UniversityTower in anticipationof the Texas­^^X^Maistrej ,who,jspent mush of. his,^ suming, she said, can be summed up in one -editions to the secretarial and student Arkansas gamej-wfeijcti -wiirbe nationally televised Saturday on ABC-TV. - When faculty-worlcloads^b«oft0ie.«nr»» career within .University System" -^vor-d — support, ^advising staff. _ J issue on campus, Larson said lie had But Lagowski said support for the .• ,fnedical Schools. 'Asst.-Provost Hugh: Walls-said" to "fight like hell'' to get course? program has been on the riseand that many of A'd Offers. Females Address the problems the program ADMINISTRATIVE support for the ~rf: 'vSS­ credit for the faculty volunteers. criticism i ,l'---a committee appointed last spring -has encountered may be solved'when­ mt j -•» i--i-y-iiw ••••* • • -r-—o • ^program received some • I don t think thereiwere sufficient", may aid in reaching some, solutions. -more space is -available.-An oppor­ f '^-from its former director, although ' resources placed inm office^' he Members the tunity for For 'Unexpected Visitors' sources nlaced that office -„»of Spurr-appointed more ^pace should occur persons presenily. connected with it said, suchias money,:faculty reward,' : • committee, called the Health said -much has been done to begin when the new .education building is personnel and facilities. • Sciences Education Committee,-have completed !'" 'A.curious advertisement for a substitute • temporary use appeared to be a profitablesolving problems. AT THE TIME,-Larson added, he decided one of its main tasks should "l^ack of suitable space for them address has appeared occasionally in The venture. However, the'last'month of adver­Creators of the advising program "did not see a full awareness" of the be to improve the advising Daily Texan; The ad is offered to females a§ dvis«ig program, ^^(program) kept us from doing some tising has-proved to be quite futile. *£fsf|were LeMaistre, br. John Silber, needs of the students and the program_ said chairperson .Dr. Stephen Monti, rof the,things we mighthave done," he the_ solution to those unexpected visiting "People don't understand the ad." -said .issi^former dean of the College of Arts from the administration. ' "• professor of chemistry recently nam-•added.•• • parents who' might not approve', of their,' Anne. She explained that they will offer a and Sciences, and Dr. Donald Larson* Larson said a committee establish­ed assistant to President Ad Interim ' ;; None -of thoseinterviewed, ciaughter's present living arrangements. '•bedroom, storage .space and will „take former professor of botany afld. tJhe ed to look into the health professions, Lorene Rogers. . however, were aware of aiiy conflicts 'Anne^ and her female^ rpomate share a . •telephone messages: The cost of this cozy program's fii^st director, chaired by Spurr, never met. three-biedroom bouse'on Tom 'Green Street. ' . arrangement is $50 a month. THE COMMITTEE has met three between Spurr and LeMaistre over the • He said he felt, however, that both . times, bnce with 'Spurr-the week the prerried advising program. They enjoy the.house, but do not wish to have "Vfe just can't afford this house between Larson left University, in the University System and medical before he was dismissed. * a third fulltime rooirimate. Thus, arises the -the two.of us,"and wedon't wanta permanent August, 1973,: accepting the.post of McCALEB SAID the health; schools were-Y^sponsive to the needs Monti described the former presi­problem of expenses.Anne isemployed at the -roommate." said Anne. associate vice-chancellor for.health ^"professions office was surprised when • affairs at the State University of New of-the advising ffrogfam;' : v ^-Sg dent as having a "very definite in­the "issue was -brought -up-by-the^ University, and her-roommate is g graduate , She.belieyes it is a great idea and would-be Since Larson left the .University!, terest" in the health professions ,-former president.' studeiitr ' . • benefieiai-fc'-any female-who/''may, beliving York at Buffalo. the health professions program has program. NeitherSpurr nor.LeMaistre would • The idea of advertising the third-room for -with.her.|boyfriend or whomever.'." " After Spurr-Jjecame. president, he remained plagued .with problems • "All the assurances from ad­ . comment Upon the program Thurs- said Tuesday. "I had-the^feeKnff-that=^nMmngh^ampiifLL.arlm-inigtrathre TOimstrators, both omcamDns_and.. m dav. Thp former prpsident said-he they (administrators) did .not put as appear to have taken a more "abiding fhp thej: •werewere in- the System, showed -would not comment upon any of the-high a priority oh theprogram asT did interest, in the-program in the last terested in dealing with the i reasons he cited in being fired until or others did." • year. = problem," he said. LeMaistre releases the public state­ "I didn't feel that support was The number Of students-in-."the Elspeth Rostow, acting dean of the,«s|ment,he has-promised LIBRARY FINES £ Veterans' Raises Friday Night 7:00 p.m. Notices from the University Texas Linicn Library cir any of its branches are officialUniver­ sity communications requir­ Await Ford's OIC Events Today ontheSbuthMall Inflation-pressed veterans benefit increases of 23 percent"' ing immediate attention.. ;• in school may be receivingim-for veterans in college.18 per­ "M Itmediate relief from;--the cent for veterans pursuing 72 noon -J p.m. NOON CONCERT; Sam vgoverflmemirr thrform oHn--vocational-education-awHS— creased benefits. percent for vfeteVans involved RESEARCH -MendaJes,—loeal-sifjger/guitarisVwill-pjM* "Some out and cheer with the Ldnghofn , -'3-r Last' -week both" houses"of in on'the-job training. form. Free. Academic Centerfatfa oih" West! B a nd, T he T?d wBp ys,~~Spurs, ~Tt^"V 'Congress passed the Veterans Under provisions of the "bill Thousands of Topics Mall. Musical Events Committee7i|j7 j.^Education and Rehabilitation the amount of time a-veteran-" $2.75 per page Cheerleaders. The Football Tearn. Coach Amendments of 1974. The bill is permitted to attend school Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, 7 & 9 p.m. FILM: >4The Trojan Women/' awaits President Ford's using the GI Bill is extended mail,order catalog. Enclose $1.00 Women rebiSl ,against the futility of war; Royal and ABC TV. to cover postage (delivery time is signature before becoming from 36 to 45 months. This ex­ 1 to 2 days). -stars Vanessa Redgrave and Katharine law. -• tension applies only to un­ dergraduate students. RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. lepburn. Admission $1 for UT students, Ford has said he will study By a Balloon this Saturday before the game the bill in depth before mak­.= was to the 11941 WlLSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2 faculty, and ^ staff;. $1,50 for members. The bill to go LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025 ing a decision on whether to President Tursday. Ford has • Batts Auditorium. Theatre Con\mittee. for National. TV. iUl (2131477-8474 or 477-5493 sign it. 10 daysin which to approve or Our research milcrlal Is'sold for The measure veto the increases. contains reteirch mlttintednly. •\ v i:P -» ON THE DRAG ij®4 I® ffl w,<••* —— 53W3S&U THURS THURS.-, FR1., SATf^i^-. f \r r* * 1-jfm ,X£l v r *Li " S} i1 2350 GUADALUPE !&££•> i'l Thursday, October 17, ;1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9 V"" ^ ( /wtr w \vJ33*?*A /&L w, -r ^P'w­ *#v&4 i\z 1 "tV> 4* r ; ir­ •-r' '"i Application Deadline Set By STEVE McGOMGLE a long-term process." Stillman-'s ^iDoctor's;; fluids and not «. Texan Staff..Writer• • v She outlined five basic Quick Weight Loss Diet" ^Continued loss of these Want to lose a'll that ec|^;_ criteria for -ft weight-are-highly --criticized;for. body fluids can produce tra weight in a week or' reduction program: it misleading people into : J-;unwanted side effects two' Forget it. ••should furnish an. ade­beiieving they can -lose . '-such as nausea, loss of For Danforth Fellowships Prospective" college on individual need butmay not • determining the supplemen The chances', are' thit||ffi: quate 'diet (not cause weight simply and easily. -. energy and apathy. In the teachers and administrators exceed $2,025 : for single tary living expense stipend.-if you cannot "••shaver#®#: starvation), be balanced • However, such "fad'.'' long run, such an im­interested:in receiving a 4975-.recipients and $2,200 for the. amount received is less Professor blubber and .expect; tojy§§ in all essential nutrients, diets continue to exist" V-balance of essential .76 Danforth Fellowship should married recipient for the than, the Danforth Foundation keep it off except throiighl^.' contain a realisticcalorie because obese people are „ nutrients may cause per-apply by Nov. 1. academic year, plus" • maximum, and i{ the-agency-Outlines hard-work «nd-shee~t|^^i intake reduction plan (ap-for • ^inianent health problems, always looking • The^ fellowships, to -be dependency allowances for" concerned will allow this. .. determination,: DrSfJ^ proximately 1,000 magical ways to.become Ss^the nutritionists said. awarded by the Danforth children5and required tuition The .Danforth Foundation RoseAnn Shorey, calories, per day), be psy­slim and trim, Greif said. Shorey and Greif ex-Foundation of; St. Louis in „and fee payments. was created m 1927 by the late associate professor­ chologically and cultural­Such crash diets may bvt--,plained that the right way March, 1975, are open-to all"1 OTHER fellowships.may be • Mr. and"Mrs. William H, Dan- nutrition, and Marian ly reinforcing and also be. dangerous *j0.to reduce is through qualified persons who plan to held concurrently,with a Dan-' forth of St. Louis as a Greif, registered dieti-' -provide a period of read-• because oUh'e"nutritional ' eating reduced amountsstudy foe a doctoraldegree in forth .Fellowship;, except^for : philanthropy-emphasizing the tian and instructor . inw . justment. imbalances vvhich they of the' four basic foodany-field of study common to those. administered^ tW6ugh humane values. that come ( nutrition, said this week."' •' i I Vj Diets such as Dr. can .cause; Greif.said, . groups: milk, meat,the undergraduate liberal arts other programs of the.Dan­••from a religious and .. "Losing weight is not-•" " "Atkins' "Diet 4 Any quick weight loss vegetables and fruits;and • curriculum in the United forth ; Foundation. .Income •democratic -heritage and easy," Shorey said, "It is -Revol'ution"'i,or Dr. ,• produced is usually just breads and cereals. Xi J' States. • • from-other awards will -be •strengthening the essential TO 0APPLY, -applicant^ taken into consideration in' quality of education: tiSbfox SB aaaMi Jf&SSi WS4 5S;?; must be. under SS-years^oId at the time application' papers are filed, may nothaveunder­ taken, any graduate or" professional study beyond the • baccalaureate degree and "$m> truest have taken,'or have been CTRONICS registered lor, the Graduate Record Examination before • Oct 1. " * .., Applications for-the'' fellowship should be filed in the office of Dr. Stanley R. • Ross, University vice- Clearance Sale president and provost, Main Building 2t)l. The Danforth' Foundation does ntit accept direct­ •axe mi hr (Minis Birimniise. M sxisthi tmaurr af 14 applications .for-] the fellowships, and all persons must be nominated by liaison ; rrltei are at itieir lewesi -Quantities are limited -Hurrv i while officers of their un­ dergraduate institutions by . Nov. 20". THE EXACT number of mi chrl Hit M ?-*f/'; mom .>-=?• fellowships to be awarded varies'from year to year, depending upon the budget of Fonken, assistant. provost, PURCHASE INCLUDES said Monday. Approximately 100 fellowships will be award­STERLING ed,-four of which will go to 82-Q130R »>V University students. The'one year award may be renewed until completion of COST NOMINAL, the : degree or ' a.'maximum total of four years of graduate QUAD OH A BUDGET study is completed. SOUND PHENOMENAL! Fellowship stipendsare based Get 4 for the price of two with this Fisher system) © Kenwood AM/FM Stereo Receiver boasts luxury fea­AM/FM 2/4-Channel receiver features "strapping";; tures in a moderate-power home unit! Handles 2 Jises all four amps even in stereol Muting, 4-Chanr Instructor speaker pairs; loudness, muting and tape monitor. ~ MODEL KR-3400 nei tape' monitor^~arid"p&T^6>^er»_W~cjuaa^ -22*2. RMS power, tkHz at8 ohms; THD 0.8%.-Ster­ -jjeadphonei. Compact Sterling speakers are 2-way Tours China IF PURCHASED s ling speakersare 3-way with 10"Woofer,^"Tfjidrange" IF-PUR^HASED with port for powerful foass. BSR.cfianprls"a~ and 314". tweeter.. ..BSR.valueichanger is complete By CHERYL GRESSER SEPARATELY with cueing,-anti-skate;, base, dust .cover and car--'-^complete package with full features; walnut grain I-SEPARATELY . It's not often that one has tridge. " " . .. : ' - base ant^.dust cover. • the opportunity to visit 509.80 389.80 " mainland China, but Charles' ; T Scotch 4 Greer, an instructor in the Department of Qeographyand phone-mate LIGHT the Center for Asian Studies, MODEL PM-300 TRIPLE TREAT has recently returned from a 2" velocity drivers in lightweight four-and-one-half-week tour of hear-thru earcuptethe famousKoss Everybody's favorite ; cassette! sound in an exciting new package! MESSAGE that country with a group of tape... times 3 for triple sav-J water management ings! Great response with,min-'f specialists. • vrjum .noise on all recorders. 60 i MFR.SUG.-UST 44.95 minute record/playfper cassette. SHURE VALUES MASTER Greer, who is writing his M91E0 doctoral dissertation on water MODEL is biradial elliptical. management'iirOtina, joined ° % to VA tfn tracking, Matrix IAnswers the phone vyith your HV-1 .quad approved. the tour-as one of two China ^MFR. SUG.-|own pre-recorded greeting and Best deals on best sellers) M44-| "specialists" and also as an 7EP features spherical dia-f LIST irecords up to 20 messages! Lis­a |ten-in feature lets you screen interpreter/ mond, VA to 3 nm tracking. lyour calls when home! 0% The water -management.. M44-7EP -"specialists were hosted by the Chinese Society of Hydraulic ®SANYO Engineering, which organized' . technical discussions and '•SMm provided a five-man team to : conduct the American visitors- Sis on their tour of various nee Chinese projects. jifi The group went "pretty WW®!?! I#-. pgtpradLallover eastern CMiC?/_; WHEN PURCHASED AS PART OF A SYSTEM WHEN PURCHASED AS PART OF A SYSTEM ­f l^lGreer said Monday,jwd-spent STAYALERT! TOTALIMG $2oaoo OR MORE TOTALING $250.00 OR MORE AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO time in dantori, Peking, Stay alert and out of trouble! Battery-operated : . Shanghgi'and Nanking, among ' unit clips to visor, gives audible warning of RM5320: AM/FM Stereo­. -'Other places. 1 . speedjpdar. Covers alj police and speed meter cast® Digital Clock'Radio. AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER "Wp *3W '•^ams irrigation b a m s ; • -. ' Leaf movement, • sleep '.^itsystenjs and flood .prevention STERLING timer buzzor music alarm. '.^isystems, but we weren't 'jfist MODEL .-"^limited to water: 70-0085A management"Greerexplain­. . ed. ')We saw comnlunesin the RECEIVERS MODEL m cities and the country and got 70-P045A •W: a good over-all tour of the : . Bolel RX-154A 2/4 Channel Receiver-. countryside." • Resale 2W.9S Sale 189.95 Terming China "a very, Rotel RX-150A AM/FM Receive^,,; watts RMS, 8. very impressive -place,". 20x2 RMS watts, 8 ohms) 0.5% THD. Fre­ Resale 139.95 -Sale 89.95 1.5% THD. 30-45,000 Greer explained-the "im- quency response from 15-50,000 Hz. FET CAR STEREOS® Hz response. Features FET tuner, ro­ pressiveness" lies not so Sonsui AM/FM Stereo Receiver-(limited tuner, separate tone controls for each chan­ tary function controls, illuminated signal-strength much in the technical aspects nel, separate pre-and power amp/dual func­Crriig 3137 Free Pair Spks, Model Sterl­ .meter and headphone jack. • Speaker matrix for IffT'feftof Chinese society as in> the-Resale 379.95 v^,Sol« 285.00 tion roeter. Speaker Matrix anc£ip6re! ing 82-3070 simulated quad: . . spirit and morale of the peo-Rolecor 600 AM/FM Stereo Receiver (limited '• Resale 119.95 Sale 99.95 Stock) • ip-The Chinese tend to de1 MINIMUM,,;. /MINIMUM' Craig 3149 Free Pair Spks, Model SterU > Resole 299.95 jv' 5airn9.95 '^emphasize the .technical aqd RESALEi|§! ?RESALE mg 82-3080 liSs? Fisher 895 .;2/4 Channel "Receiver US"really emphasize mobilizing Resole 215.95' 4Sale 179.95 :®|the people to get jdone what ro^Resale-SSOJfiCr^vi~. Sale 249.95 J99-95 124995 99.95 149.95 Gibbs 675 * j they get done." , m w ••A The group will send reports Resale 69.95 ' Sole 54.95 i to', the fumjing organizations AND TO MAKE YOUR SELECTION.THAT MUCH MORE APPETIZING, WE HAVE THE Sterling-75-0800' FM Stereo and. iir'addition, v. the Asian 'V'L LARGEST SELECTION OF SPEAKERS, TURNTABLES AND CHANGERS IN THE SOUTH­ SPEAKERS Resale 79.95^, ^..Sale ^00 s^gj-Studies Center wili sponsor a ^WEST, BUY NOW, THE SAVINGS WILL NEVER BE GREATER: 'talk by Greer late in October: Acoustic-Research A/R j-M (Umited Sfochji 'Resale 165.00 f Sale 110.00 FREE Sterling 82-0140 < J-. 8SR'8I0/X (limited Slock) s.v.-. 40 MAX J,ONEjT Resale 49.95 ' < fSl'C „v Sale 29.95 SICALCULATORSu,• Resale 239.95 • Sale 118.50 iBl l-55 {limfl8d Stock) Garrard 100C Free Base, Dust Cover & Cor-r)t— SitiSS JEWELER Resale 276.00 -jS 'Sola 230.00 r" —:—-Bowman MX-75, fridge (limited Stock)_ '', .-ANY PURCHASE Resale 99.95 .f| Sale 79.95 Resale 299,95 ~ Ja|e 209 55^7—7 Electro-V^ice £V-I6Af 4 Texas'Instruments' SR-Was^B Dual 1216 with Base; Oust; Cover, & Cqrtridae •ftf >OVER^y$100.00Ust 139.95 Sdle <9.95 v Resale 74.95 (limited Stock) •" ,• Sale 66.00 Sl.rfing 82-03108 - Will INCLUDE A We buy old gold Resale 195.80 Sale 115.00 c s Dual,1229 with Base, Dust Cover, & Cartridge Resale 89,95 ­ mountings ^ CHANGERS '^ FREE S1S.00 AM '^limited StotfcV •S<» PioneW PI-12D (tumtoble) w/S|iure" M91ID Resole 345.95 'y 7 Cf Sale 215.00 |-U;|iOf.iiT|XA.S: Diamond and . (limited Stack).: Sony PS-1100 (complete)-silver "Resale 174190 ~ .Sale 119.95 v Sale 99.95 RADIO, 0.M Ph.-478^86 Suite Commodore Perry Bid*. Austin, Texas.78701 "fa* mi n 10-6 Daily, 10-8 Thurs., 9^6 Sat. Page10"Thursday, October f~v.3i"J?"" •74 THE DAILY TEX fm&sm c\j* •" Ij c ... > T.» * 1 ivy, . mm s=~ :MS; 1 j en-The expense involved in the' UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS STAFF FOR AIRLINE your diamond's grade. Ku Klux°Klan endorsed Gov.. Scott Nelson,. imperial -dorsement of any arm of the fish -kill probably will cause a TICKETS, YOU DONT HAVE TO USE ANYONE'S formation on Because' he respects his: customersDolph Briscoe for, re-election wizard of the Fiery Knights, Ku . Klux Kian to pit one delay of the proposed project, CREDIT CARD. THERE IS NO CHARGE FOR OUR he's a pretty good man to .talk' Tuesday, but Briscoe prompt-. announced in Houston Tues-'citizen against another in this although duckweek Eradica­MAKING AIR RESERVATIONS AND ISSUING diamonds with. "­ ly rejected 'the action. . state." Briscoe Said. tion i$ to begin in two weeks. ; day the endorsement of both TICKETS. THEN WE WILL GIVE YOU PERSONAL' "Nb one from the Klan Briscoe and Lt.Gov. Bill Hob-The National Knights of the A THIRD board recommen­CREDIT FOR 30 DAYS. INTEREST FREE. directly~nallfied us abourtfis-:"by.~"because-both-are against— -KKK-nominated!Houstonian dation, involving the dredging CHARLES endorsement. United Press union agency shop, proposals Nelson last month as their of Lake Austin, also will be"' International called us at tfieT uiat would require paymentd" t976^victppresiderrtial—can; — Alt AIR SEA TRAVEL 900 fir" IAMAR-BIVD.-' 477-6761­ governor's campaign head­union dues even by those who didate.-'I Wildlife Commission, but ex­ quarters Tuesday to tell us • have no desire to do-so." EUTWYLER about itj" Robert "Bob" Informed of this statement Hardestv. Briscoe's . press by Hardesty, Briscoe prompt­ JEWELERS Four Big "Union" Specials On the drag at 26th BRIDAL, good through Saturday, only •SHOPPE shop Parking at the back door AND on San Antonio Lr 4 Cf^ECOflV/ *f i C.V/A FORMALS Thursday Night II O until 8 p.m. ' " >••'. --i''. . • '• ----.• '• •' c Bee. Calculators a o 4013 Marathon (We add surprises every day!) %O '1 (One block well of Lamar) 8-Digit Calculator h^" Shop us <. with Memory and -" see for wwsij 5988 North ol, Moore.-Hill -Hall men's dormitory -and east of yourself Gregory Gym fife? ^^^0-232& Guadalupe • Adds, subtract^, 1 '"-i| «« IntornwtJon xrtilch tehocl ufpplin'mrlll bttold,m btow-multiplies, divides . king Nbtatv of mtgAxintt «nd periodical*. •ttlvvltton loungo, •copy confer, mooting .• runs on batteries or' roomi, ono offleot for tho TOM* Union butlnost ond program functioru, Studont Govorrvnont Studont Aciivitloa. A PO , and O O.E- how® current, recharger-adapter Building hour* for tho monlh of Octobor will be* • THcluaed" — 8 a.m. • II p.m. Monday*Thurtday " percent key, 8 a.m. -6 a.m. FHdov A Sohmiav floating decimal tip.4v ' P-1"--11 p.m, Sunday Aftercollege,will you » r"Mnd-i)ff dprimnl >0? Irtformoriort on Union ondopportujiittes open to an odiOer-fn-tlieUnitedStates' Air ateftter^ptioral;­ ^S'^Fojce.Yoit may consider being a pilot (» navifeitor > r And don t oveilisoli-thc-FoixaUlOXC ScholaishipJ^ojiuun Schohu ships thai ' ^:v THE TEXAS UA1IQN ^H^ifco'irer Hi" tUttionp-ehnbuvseiQent tor textbooks, lab and mcidcntal'fees. Plus an allow 4 .Use;.Sears'' Easy-Pajm^nt'Plan COPY CENTER 3 ^ .arte.^ or $J.Q0 amonth and flviuu lessons . „ ~ ^ ---7 ­ i 5^4^ -Si ril ^1 :V. %U: Applv/quality,and enjoHni Air volee KOlt.at • -— ' " ; *­ ' 47T-T776 or 471-1777 SamrlftmiWfc-Fri|vS % RA5 tIS Satisfaction Gumranteea or. raitr Moiivy tiuvk­ sOUi • Captain Jim Cargill^ ^ Now located'ln Tma* Union South,-'north of SHOP AT SEAHS Hancock^enrer • 41standIn(erregional Moor«-Hill.|4atl and oatl of Gregory Gym.— '1At i * crPt,m Al1Together in Air Forte ROTO. AND SAVE, Sears 'OlAlV,452-9211. l-f > »fcrav^rx,,Take Red Biver 1 a ' , October"]t/p7A THE DAILY TEXAN Ragell «V, * *'M C sass? -um Aide Use Explained Architect Discusses; Af Wealth Center ^ Man's Environment By SHERIDA HUGHES The Student Health Ceiiter's•' three physician's • assistants should be reinstated to'their previous dutiesonce an agree­ 'i.~\ ment isreachedwith theState Board Of Medical Examiners. Dr. Paul Trickett, health center-director, said Wednes­day. Trickett will meet with'Dr. • Bryan Spires,secretary "of the . board, Thursday morning to • res^vs^the.sittiation. The a^istants'duties were restricted last Friday mM awaiting ~k clarification of their function to. the board. Since Friday, they .have been able to treat patients only oh the direct authority of a phvsi­cian. . ' • "With the possible eicefF tion! of prescribing medicine, • thephysician's assistantswill • jtopefullybe back to'their full' my, duties soon," Trickett said. The Board of VExaminers routinely investigated health center use of. the Assistants following a' parental com­plaint. At this time, in­vestigator John Sorder. presented a copy of the hoard's policy regarding physician's assistants to' Trickett. After...receiving, a §econd complaint. Sorder informed the Health Center that viola­ tion of-the Teas medical practice lawmay be involved: The lawstates that a person other than a physician, who attempts to.'"diagnose, treat ... disease ..; byany system or method is guilty of prac­ ticing withouthcense." There are no Texas laws specifically " governing physician's assistants, However,.as there are inother states. • "The-assistants were never in the building alone, • they were only a door away frgma physician and they were properly""Tdefftiffed.to the patients," he said. : The Health Center • has received favorable student response to the assistants: and complimentsabout them were two to one over*compliments on the doctors. Trickett said.' ''We have been using physician's assistants, since July, 1973, and haven't receiv­ed a complaint until the past three weeks;" Trickett said. •^iituinuuiyniiivtiivtuiyuBam Effective Pcrrentirig Group •• offered by UJ Counseling Psychological Services Center FU6Hir«r To Explore: • Developing a closer, warmer relationship • withyour,ehild to miami srs-r • Ways of listening & responding to your LIMA, PERU $517 ™ children's, feelings Dealing With your child's behavior ~ ~ -——ifAVf ftiisTiw nic. w RFTUUM 10 10 30 BAT5. UIER •L.-Six Weekly sessions on Mondays, , 'VJ. 7:00 to 9.00 p.m. beginning October21st iSPACEUMlTED-BOOKNOV* : . Register October 1? & 18 at WMOB 303 call the. E*p«rts: 478-9343 or call 471-3515' Open to t/T students'a facutty wrth children tga 6 and uotfgf. HARWOOD 2428 Guadalupe. TRAVEL THE GREAT m I —Photo by Donna Reed t- Leisure Time Free time qt the University— few and far between though it seems — is taken, up in many differerit . ways by many types of people. Above,-Preston Rogers takes advantage of .warm sunshine to study on the Main Mall. At t left, workers at the ' Service Building |5|finish their lunch hour with a fast game dominoes. Whether studying or just unwinding, the hours just seem to go too fast,-. Staff Photo by CaroiJearv Simmons campus briefs The Middle East LibraryUwtinn has mnyotj jp^nnmc quarters in 'Academic Center 29, sharing space with the Asian Co1lectiorC Both facilities are open from 8a.m. to 5 p.m.,. ^Monday through Friday. '• TEXAS AUTOGRAPH PARTY Neighbor! It's finally here! That fine new book all about Austin and country music that you've been" hearin' about. My good friendsJan Reid and Melinda Wickman got togetheron this here book helped along by Heidelberg Publishers. The big celebratin'is gonna be down at the Texas-Opry House startin' at 8:00 p.m., Thursday,-October 17, and'you're all invited. I'm comin' with my cowboys. Oh, garsh! I like to for­got—the book is called THE IMPROBABLE-RISE OF REDNECK ROCK:; ­ i£r> M-; Book.' current magazines • stu<$eot$,; facylty and atumnl. Norninallons are du'e by Oct; 31 In and newspapers from theMid­ Communtcfttlott Bwlldt'nQ A4.130 arid dle East and East -Asia in. snwjd inctude a bhef iuwmary «jt Arabic, Persian. Turkish4 reasons^ the nominee should receive the award,-' • Japanese and Chinese" are-' ~v9C0NccmftATtQNr-wm-be diswsseff »t 4 available. , . p.m.ThurjdsyinJester^eoter AJW by the staff of fhe Reading andStudy Referral service, essential Skills Labowtory (RASSL). ; for efficient use of the collec-DCAN OF.STUOCNTS OffiO, SaVlCCS ^OB RETURNING STUDCNTS 'WUI Sponsor tibns, also is available. —"Women m Transition" from 7 to 9 pm. Thyrsday In Speech BuUding -ANNOUNCEMENTS . • > JW-.i .The program will focus on . CACTUS YEAIBOOK is' scheduling ap-problems encountered by women .v pomtmentt for studio photographs returning to. student ikfe combined . -. ••.for sophomores from 8:30 a.m.. to with other responsibilities • <30 pm through Wednesday in OCPAfTMCNT-OF OK3toor-wif! pre&enl a -.'Texas Student.PubUcations Bui entitled ''.Between Time and. Some of the lecture-was : Space" was. accompanied ^y reserved for the architectural the internationally known students' alone, however. ­architect's slides .of city'at-Wachsniaii described a need 1 . mospheres,-tragic situations for every suchstudent to learn and crowds all 6ver"0ie worltl-""polifieal~scienoe, economics Wachsman said thatall people and .have'general knowledge must' live .together; and must of nxarket,situation?; distribu­have order and' rules, as well tion of wealth, and above all, as communication systems, ; distribution of energy in the-world. ' Television. towers are«-a favorite of VVach'smah's "The Before houses are-huilt, S monuments in ourtime are no energy and industry must ex-il longer men -riding on horses. . ist, Wachsman began: but TV toners," he said. "We are completely surrounded by • The 73^year-old architect is . wires, and we are wired irjtoa optimistic . about energy g system .from Which we can • resources and the future of,­never escape. j^-.-the world. "The world's riot ­ ispsfinished yet; and the future Is The strong will'to survive ^all that really matters," he makes people put up with lion from.3 to 5 p.m..Friday in Sid' Richardson HSII1370. TEXAS UNKM MIJSKAl EVCms COMMfTTff -'—~ sponsor, a fKW Apt 219 for fellowship, diAner,­ ' prayer and teaching... meet at 7 p.m. Thursday In Rtisselt A Stemdarrt Hall 218. -I DCHWk MOD PAN OUS will meet of T p.m. -v \ Thursday In Buslnes& Economics ( ' Building 457 fo discuss cHua-eating: T shirts anff ihe'pgjjtible Austin per* form«ncie of tni Argentine Flrecrackdr. CKAOUATI StuqCNT COUNOl will meet at SfcMJNAftS ^ 7pm Thursday in J«ster Center A ; itellar spectroscopy and extragalac* -k9 _ tic astronomy seminars at noon'and ^'-11 • "3 p.m. vespectlvi^^Tuirsffay"!?!"^­ : concluded;­ . 309-A to play board games. • PATENT AND INTELLECTUAL PtOfttTT LAW- XSSoqATtQN will meet at> 7:X p m. Coke Wilson speak "on "The Patent AitorneyT Cngineer-dKent Reiatlonshlp.^Tt>e pybliclj invited.-; i J •*hi mta CHi.wfO meet i»t 7p jn.Thursday In Buslness-Ecohomici Biiildlng 251 to make plans for a field trlp< ** TEXAS-STUDENT EDUCATION AS^OQATION .. will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Calhoun Hall 100. UNION TOU RADICAL POUTtCAl ECONOMICS wilt meet at noon Thursday In w Business Economics Building 453. ' UNlVEtSITY INTER NATIONAL POiX OANCm^if^ will .nWef-atf p.'m/.Thtirsday-oti If West Mali to daxu:e;and learn new" • -dances: '• V * DE?A«TMB|T Of ASTftpNOM/ will sponsor Robert Lee Moore Hall 1S 2I6B. department of, PHYStCS wlirpresent a > relatlvity Veminar at 3 p.m; Thurs*. . day'in Robert L«eAftoore Hall 1222, UNtVERSITT CHRtSTIAN CHURCH will |pon< $or a soup and sandwich seminar at . noon Thursday in Nordan Lounge at vb' fhe church. 2007 University Avenue Sgt. Ooyne. Bailey ot the Austin^ Police Department ^wlll speak on.-^i "Some Insights fntoWhat tt Is To Be& „ a Policeman in Austin/' If You Need Help v.Jvst Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 ,v.^ w >*• • A' Any Time ^ The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service '..W&SSgjS® 1 ** Vt l^V*. :V; 7 :-i-i;> -;.• <•7**1* '§• " ^ ^ jj Ombudsman Wants More Cooperation By RON O'NEAL and University officials. He -the.ombudsman ;to student requested, to speak before-a" "TBTWftinruf' Uwt offece^and-University Ombudsman Jim said many letters om various needs only isthat the-staff has specific meeting of incoming should realize' that ;it is in-Osborn believes the effec­issues hatfe been sent to. ad-' other avenues to voice, their ..students that was not-set up dependent of the ad'ministra­ tiveness of his office is Being m •»»with«•* kinin . •grievances,''' *•? PrAtwrl for that purpose. -* (La 'flri flU . thit mimAtiA -' ministrators the Brown said, threatened by bureaucratic in­Uhiversijly ; 'community,• but "The faculty hasvariouscom­"He could have requested to! • ; "I would like to see the of-difference. .-...-:;vV '• •' there have -been no replies in mittees that hear thetr own ' speak at another 'time,"' •-ficebecome, more'stable lijce, _ ''Either they (University' many cases. complaints. There is no con-Schreiber said.' "We did not at other campuses," Osborn, Administrators) should. get--. V'The University has a large spiracy to destroy theoffice of allow any-campus groups to said. "Many universities have! siirioiis or drop it (the om-bureaucracy,'-and within it ombudsman, .' but it should speak at that particular professional people working there are people who have . center itself on student af-meeting." ' as ombudsmen. They work at goals that are'contrary to st'u-fairs." ' : Osborn stated that he knew, ;it fulltime'and havea sense of; dent needs. These people are Brown did say that in the about that meeting and re-: job security. I cannot work at caught up in' trying; to get charter that created the otn-. quested arfy other time, but he } a part-tiiine:: job:.and go to ahead in this system, and this budsman's office, staff and never got any response from school at, the same time and ^ results . in ignoring. the faculty can be represented by • . the orientation committee .give it. the attention it budsman) ' altogether," he students' needs^gnd. the om-the ombudsman. However, he. after the request. ....deserves.-' said this week.. "Then they blidsnran representing them,'' said that he checked withpeo-"MY GOAL is to make the; "However, this is the 'case sh.ould admit, it was window, •he said. ple-who.drew up thedocument .office aseffective asit can be, at this. University and every.'dressing for the students.' -IN A GUEST Viewpoint in and they did notmean that the. but it • cannot carry much year a new ombudsman will,ORN, WHO, has Jhe-lDailv Texan Monday, ombudsman had to get in­weight when people/ ignore come intothisofficeandlearn —Photo by Frank Till«y as ombudsman since June, Osborn charged that his volved in .specific faculty ami ,it",""he"said:"Studerits flfeed fo rthe ins atid oats^of-the jobr^^ 1973, would like to; see mere • jurisdiction was cut back by staff cases. Mediator Jim Osborn discusses University bureaucracy. cooperation between hisoffice the administration after he. OSBORN ALSO said ha.was -" . ^1/. .spoke out for a woman staff denied any access to speak at; * •" ­ membei! who alleged she was new student orientations last being discriminated against. summer. He said he had been -At one.time the.jombudsman able to talk to-the incoming 'represented staff and faculty ' "students.at the 1973 orienta-: as welI as students. Dr. tion sessions to let them know ion, Procedures Ronald Brown, vicerpresident about the office 'and its ser­for student affairs, however, vices. *_ '/ I:';• An advisory committee on atteirfpt to prepare a bill to be areas of public concern:. program in. effect. says rthis-was not the reason . Stephen Schreiber, who . bail bond and forfeiture laws presented to the legislature in • Whether there should be a., He said one area of concern Osborn's range pf authority headed' the summer; orienta-., has been' , formed-to review January, \ Mary Jane. Bode, set schedule of fees which can for the.committee will be giv­was'curtailed:-• • .. tion program for th^.deah of present statutes and suggest; assistant' for information in be charged by bondsmen. : -ingajudge authorityto refuse ."The reason for -restricting students,-said that Osborn had legislation, to. improve and the attorney general's office, • Whether the extent" of bond to a habitual offender. strengthen them, Attyv Gen. said Wednesday. •security required in connec­Another problem, will be in­ Tired of^gijtting ripped off? .Try Sascharfs. John Hill announced^ Tuesday. tion with botids should be suring. that bondsmen have Hill said,that inquiriestohis Elegant dining at' reasonable, prices. : .redefined by law. the property to back up theirThe committee, consisting office, especially-in the(.wake." • Whether the existing law .. botidsr. of judges, attorneys and law of a Dallas court of inquiry on" should be extended to provide "A bondsman may have aenforcement officials from: bail bond procedures, have in­ SASCHA'S for "county bail bond boards". ..piece':of -property worth.flO,­ throughout the state, will dicated the following prjmaj-y in counties.of less than 150,000 000 and put up hundreds of 311 W. 6th St. 472-3556 population.. 510,000 bonds time,". Homestyle European Cooking v ' • Whether there should be Blackwell said. . ' Grand Jury Begins restrictions on bail permitted : . "I have received many re--FULL BAR i FOR $6.50YOU GETA 32-OUNCESTEAK PREPARED to habitual offenders: • -.... quests t'o farjg'e 'some Lunch 11:30 -2:00 . JUST THE WAY YOO LIKE IT, TWO SALADS. AND •-Whether it would be leadership in this iieia,'-; hut7"' Soto Investigation desirable to have a uniform said, "arid to try to come up TOT01T TWO ORDERSTDrFRENCWTRtES^-FOR^YOOANO • ".The Travis County 'Grand property bail bond.formao be with some suggested legisla-' Happy Hour 2:30, -6:30 YOUR LADY. ed to; the.Soto residence to in­. used throughout' the state. tion. The knowledge and com-* Jury Thursday will lobk-. into vestigate a. family quarrel. "Open for:Sinner -, . District . Judge Tom bined experience of the' law the incidents surrounding the Fuentes is the officer who ' at 5KMJ p.m. this Soturdoy" J;; '• d <1 >•••••••••»••»•»»» »• »»A Blackwell of' Austin, a. com­' enforcement officials and at-­Oct. 6 shooting of Terburcio. allegedly shot Soto -i"' ^ . ^> mittee member, said; most .lorneys , who-have agreed toM. "Butch" Soto. FOLK SINGER • Justice of the Peace Jim problems in current laws do . serve on the advisory'.com­ Asst.-Dist." Atty. Larry Dear ruled "homicide'' in the not occur in Austin, probably mittee certainly • will be' of • Luden said the grand jury death but did not assigif because: pf the personal bond great benefit in this effort." uiBch.paiUqg routinely investigates any; blame. Soto was shot in the . iKENNETH D0NNELU hi rt» Aimruan shooting when a police-officer throat, one arm and both legs. : r Bonk4 Garogt is. involved: FRI-SAT-SUN 7-11 P.M. The shooting set off angry SSK A LAV&YER charges of police brutality from many East Austinites. : . Police Chief Bob Miles has said : the incident was ^• Soto :«-as 'shot after justifiable homicide." :"The ABOUT YOUR patrolman Joe , Villega* and officer ' was defending the Ruben Fuentes weredispatch-'Otherofficer'stife,"hesaid. AUTOMOBILE » •WARRANTIES I; . Operi^Sfunday ^.2330 S. Larrtar.-444-8461 -Custom Cooking •REPAIRS Closed Monday 5<>5w. 4541 CALL IN YOUR t IPIiafiMillMMilllMMMllllMlflMfMf . FEATURING QUESTIONS 1 R, HAND PAINTED DAILY TEXAN : CHINA JEWELRY AND THURSDAY. OCT. 17, COLLECTORS PIECES BYMRS. ORA RUSSELL, FAMOUS WEST TEXAS 9 PIVf CHANNEL 9 ARTIST AND TEACHER. CLASSIFIED american Indian Jewelry GUATEMAIAN AND MEXICANIMPORTS, GIFTS fa became of ..something iof '71? M to^really sink your He is now gainfully employed by theSky Hi Gas Station. On Friday nights,after a tough day of pumpinggas. you can find him at Uncle Stanley's taking part in the weekly TEETH trivia contest. He's finally tO'jnd a way to put all of that knowlege to practical use You don't have to be a valedictorian to play, but into... beware, the questions are touch If you think you know it all pi ove it I i iday nights at Uncle Stanley's — when you have M just a step from campus m Dohie Mall something to MBMM' la • BUY • RENT W \ •' • SELL • LEASE 4MB Pjl something ; to just give away! Bft: gMIK 9H S|Bp.:SKi You'll Get A MOUTHFUL of Results! CAtlr^^ JV n * TpfrU jynXT Tf ii iimnfn iiTir . zizzzztt. ^7". i ;$&£>&• W-€ 111) / ||ft/ 9 A Mf ETiif#A"V w,-jSG to place your Texan-Classified Ad roil r3 IrrJ < ' -i ji Thursday) October 17, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 13 Ss"^? . . Si** * Ml m «(• ^ -kH ** IP'M^*s»|--kr.,*, m • 4„i:|....: 'omen Grounds Keepers Heroin Appreciate "Liberal Job' ._ fy "Everyone tries to put us in a category, ;r j 'ja.m..to 4 plm.}," and the fa^t there is "no Mental Health and Retardation Center (MH­ an addict. "The cost of a little habit costs•vv« have to be responsible and show up;" she •constant supervision." MR). «? about |50a day, |S50 a week, J1.400 a month, Sailfc: -.• --— ' i She .said ;she receives favored treatment A report released last September by the and $15,000 a.year iii c^sh.'A big habit costs. ANOTHER maintenance crew member, ''from some trf the guysl If agirldoesn't want federal governments Special Action Office Chris Heltnerichs, has a BA in'government to hedge, she doesn't have to." Jot-Drug Abuse Protectlod confirmed She wants to go to graduate school but is-not -McCleless, a nine-month veteran'of the beliefs.• sure where. In the meantime, she mows, grounds crew, said, her favorite job is plan­"The layman's definition of an epidemic is or prostitution," he said; weeds, plants, rakes, hoes and picks up trash ting. "We're all together and you gettb watch a rise in the incident ratio of heroin that is • BURRIS SAID that since stolen xrierchan­ on campus. what you% plah& ^w;"/She added, "of Significantly greater than expected/'Burris dise only gets about 10 pecent of its worth ? t. ,>vwac na uvv tii mcHuiuijer, uui wnat aoes • —In^n.nfttce.-wonjen arg^forced to compete course it's hot in the summer, but what does said.­ wh^n fenced,'an addict must commit theft against each other," she said,"''but among"4sls;that matter when you're doing something-you Burtis said that heroin epidemics are the crews, there islittle pressure to compete *-^Jove." 1 .determined onj>ecentage increases, not the worth $150,000a year tofinance asmpll h^bit. ­against anyone, male or female. , Paul Pantier, assistant superintendent of specific number of addicts. • "Pius, the quality of heroin on the street • "The thing that surprised me the most," buildings and grounds, said, "We have had HARVEY GANN, captain of the special now is abominable; To keep yourself fixed; Helmerichs said, is not the attitude of the very good .luck With ou{ women employes, services division oftheAustin Police Depart-you have to shoot more. With heroin addicts' fhete by Jay Otdwtoi • men, but that "many women don't like usdo-£r.;-;: Uiey're good workers, have ah eye fordetail iment said that Vttie number of arrests hasn't always having to increase their dosage, the ing this. Thev think it'sdegrading that we get £p&»and do the same work as men," he said Heroin addiction is increasing. increased as we would have expected based amount they must purchase Increases, also,?;; *&A>i • • . ... . • . • , ' ' / u-?v on the increase of other drug offenses." he said. , ' ' ~\/"r Committees Recommend Gann..said Austiii police are, however Freedom. Connection in Austin lias been Use Texan Classified Ads r open since late1971. It has only onedoctor on • Agency task force, the Departa^VFti " Sfe? , ;Roy Bayless, city aviation C aviktion" includes all aviation and unable to drive. .«• patients away if it doesn't recruit more Doak ^4:00-6:45 Happy Hf. Mon.-Fri. director, said a master plan ; that is neither military nor air Volunteers must attend, a basic eight-hour volunteers, she sai(K But Autrey encouraged 2 for 1 5:30 -7:30 would show the "short-, carrier '(commercial air training session to prepare them for;.the potential volunteers to examine their ownSnead medium-and long-range" air lines). situations and warned them not to volunteer,, physical appearance of the patients and to • Mixed Drinks -if they don't have the time. ; ; ! ,V help them learn how to talk to patients. She 442-^534 "2 fof 1 8-9^| said some patients haveskin canceror malig­The training for new volunteers will be on Moo & TOM aach WMIC " NOW OPEN nant brain tumors and their appearance «•«» ' Oct 22,24, and 29 from 7 to 9:30 p.m; at the 62<' W Ben White • 10* Bw AB Nif be shocking s^t first to volunteers. " Cancer Society office, 2813 Hancock Dr. BMWiBmnr The Silver Fox — W * ''1 -SEX-ANP_IMT.IMA.CY_ 4i Boutique IN HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS fHiiiNii \ IVnauat* •• -vfr (CUADAIUK tOCATlON S. 6Bor .. Jeans & Tops An awareness group led by Ms. Barbara OHIT) S® -• • o Dayis and Mr. Jan Steakley fBoth are psy­ Easy Afternoon _ chiatric social workers who are experienced Sandwich Shop THURSDAY & SUNDAY Listening in group leadership.) ^ GUDitlS SPECIALS Turtle Creek -TEXAS -ARKANSAS SPECIAL m Mon-Fri Six weekly sessions-Beginning on Thursday, Voerrirt* creptw ­ variety of soups^ talatU, gnd 3-8 p.m. • • •• H (FREE KEG BEER) Oct.-17th; 7:30 -9 p.m. pastries, imported coffees SAT. ONLY Cost $25.00 and teas. Beersand trine*. Alt Night Show..f'-, at reasonable price$. . x Assorted Sandwiches "CoSponsored by Starcrost " W, TH, F, S ;f|f To Go Orders Available The University Y and Free Space,#; 5econd Level, Dobie Moll 102 E. 31st St. Open 10 a.nn-6:30p.m. x^.-U . 2330 Guadalup* ' * ^ " BUFFALO • ;, 21st 6 Guodolupe— hy more information, calf .474-1278 ' Mon.-Sat. •V free parking in the rear • 472-9246 (9am-4pm), 472-3053 (7pm-10pm) -GAPS-' presents m f# PAUL RAY CHICKEN'FRIED STEAK -• _ presents and the ' LARGE CHICKEN^DIEO -• STEAK. 8UTTEHY BAKED COBRAS Fleetwood Man ®|if.YJL320 S. LAMAR *S£W* TOTATO OB FRENCH FRIES, j r,^; h«k» m MOTp UwW «M' :B.| HOT TEXAS TOAST. AND m CRISP TOSSED SALAD. rtAviuNs CHUFFUBOARD ALSO CHOPSTEAK DINNER . . DARTS -TheTreehouse 10 ot. HIGHBALL* presents ~" snimsiBLoisnT " WED., OCT. 23 -8 P.M; The Backwood/i FR1ENDUEST BARTENDERS AND WAITRESSES IN AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM Volunteers 2815 GUADAIUPE­ . AUSTIN . 7: ' TICKETS-$6-s-$5 The best-b/uegrass Wast of 478-3560 ».> £CT the Mississippi BILL & JAY ' ... ••••, V • •'-•a®!;. NOW ON SAlE ROBIN * SHiERRY . dome Watch Our RAYMOND'S DRU6: 1 & 2 NO TtPPiNGP 4 A1SO FEATURING . TUES., NOV. 5, 8 P.M. Blutgrau Grow THE BEST IN • RECORDED MUSIC ^Municipal Auditorigm Sat., Oct. 19th .f.v with Special Guests: 9 p.m. -1 a.m. A SPECIAL NIGHT $1 Cover TRIUMVIRATE t03Main 'h £ Concerts Wesl Jam PradiKHmtt Tickets: $5 in Advance • Open Seating PtlugorvHh, Tx. B! The Bluegmst Center Of Tickelt available at lnner Sanctum,'Raymonds I & 2 ATTENTION# 1 T«x«s j ^ ^ Vk. BNtanrf HV/rte Avollob/t Jam 8«ttton Each Sunday ORGANIZATIONS IDeadline -{t. r\ ~ vl Mm I ,, £>rZ--> -fcr 'f&i * ^-Cdme3-lQ^stjnJat Northcross Mall }is:FridayOctober 18 NOEXCEPTIONS! begmnert° champi°n—under thedirectionR^^ to Beails at Northcross for i^JJnltedStartes Gold Medalist Shirley Llnde^^^ , ^ r. group picturer* J ^ Ay?rs. ^ i.trr. Classes will be limited to,insure \£ sclwoi Age'',r! jiescrvcAians must be madeby Pres.or Treas.of the oiganiza-; Teens 13-17 Years • •f*,«^IndlvWual atteritl tioti, in person inthe £actus officeJSP 4-112 Monday-fridaY" Adult# Over 10. Ye&rs, SUf ... , . &JM Ander®°P t-ane Paymentiio*$p0€6 mutt accompany r«se«vofton. m -7" " at FOR MOREINFORMATION CALt: 451-*5102 liiiSStilM It-' m m w mm. -(S m'Odessa File*; Director Blacks Educate , ,$L ,SSlM. ' •*- CandicTAbout Through Theater By PAUfc BEIJTELJ , Prior to . ''Poseidon/' the . photography on several films. By MICHAJEL O. WESTER to do strictly black plays. His .­5-V _ TexanJStaff Writer' ~ British director worked with ;rTie then'served as associate LE-VELLAND (UPJ>-— only cause is not the -black _ For a director oh a tub-starvAlber t Finney, in. producer with NoelCoward on Norman Thompson believes cause.­thumping tour for his latest "Scrooge," the musical ver-. "In Which We Serve""tt943V the black theater can be ah "I want to do a wfde-range rJ^trg.picture, Ronald Neame was sion of the Dickens' Christ-•: and produced'and wrote the education tool. of plays, from Shakespeare to riW remarkablycandid. "I really mas classic, which failedtobe screenplays for David Lean's "We -want to expose the O'Neill," he said. ,/M don't know how good it will the big commercial hit .verSibns of "Great Expec­West Texas area to the^form * A native, of Jenkinsville, turn out to be," he said of the • everyone had hoped for; of black theater,'' Thompson S.C., Thompson got larg$ tations" and "Oliver Twist." a ttjmvereionof Frederick For­Neame has directed 17. pic­said. "We want toeducate and dose-of the: theater in college. "It just goes to show how sytes novel,.;"The Odessa tures, including:-"Tunes of enlighten people towha_t_goes_ Hq: 0*as; an undergraduate '; you never can predict about File," "but I* suppose we'll Glory;" "The Horse's on in. the black community." v major in history at South ?'A the success of a"film,'r he find out in a couple of weeks, Mouth;" Judy Garland's last Thompson, 23, is serving as , Sarolina State Collegewhen a after the film has opened/': '•= said. "I realiytyasn't too hap­film, "I Could Go On a part-time instructor in friend told hfm about a minor M py with 'Poseidon Adventure' Jon Voight stars; in the Singing;" "Gambit;-" and speech and theater at-Soiith role part in a campus play. suspense thriller, produced by as a film, whereas 'Scrooge' "The Prime of Miss Jean Plains College. He also is "THE FRIEND persuaded was a movie I ttas dearly-fond John Woolf for Columbia Pic-.. Brodie," starring Maggie working toward a master's ftie to try out for thepart and l --Kof." •' -f • tures, Smith. decree in theater arts at Tex-got jt — and later decided to IF THE ,FILM is a big NEAME'S CAREER cer­He speaks fondly of Smith -as Tech University'and is switch my major to the success, it will be a substafr-tainly hasn't lacked variety. as "a director's dream," and director of the Student theater," he said.. tial two-in-a-row streak' for He was assistant'canieraman^ reJtfembers^Garlai)d—"botb— Organization for Black Unity." Thompson'joined the^ Neame, 62, who directed last, on Alfred Hitchcock's magnificently impossible and . THOMPSON said.-after he -school's..theatgr.groups the year's big box office winner, Blackmail" (1929), later impossibly magnificent." gets-his. master's, he plans to Henderson-Davis -Players. . "The Poseidon-^Adventure.'Unbecoming c teach on the College level and The * ~ director.of. . Neame also has high praise group, won about 50 Ronald Neame (I) and Jon Voight on "the Odessa File" set for Voight, who in "The direct-college plays. speech and. theater awards in :. -m \ *1, Odessa File" plays a German The Germans were forced to mitted. "It's a peculiar feel­who experienced the war '' • ''There-are not enough " < four years, and was the only black technical directors and black school in the nation to3^ journalist whose search for a learn the English dialogue, ing to do a film like this when serve as technical advisers. —television former Nazi SS officer and while Voight and the other your.production unit is 75 per­"However,-the Germans now . there-are not -enough black be represented three times atpif! "cohceKralioh~caffi£'1ftrtcher-English-speaking >actbrs. had. cent German. I _was par--completely accept their great theaters," he said. the Yale Universify Dramam-' AtSQpjn, • v 34 Ironsides -But Thompson doesnjt want Festival. • 7 Bi9 Blue Marble 9i00 pjn, • (played byMaximilianSchell) to affect .German accents,* l -'ticularly worried about1 the • blunder," Neame said. "They 9 200 Years sT leads him to the file of a Neame said. "Tiie trick was: r ' -:c* .9 AsK a Lawyer, " concentration camp scenes -were/,ultimately . quite open —1 24 l bream jol Jeannle ; ^ 34 Harry O secret organization, the to'.have, all: the accents match .. and.the reunion of some Ger-about it -and willing to help 36 Nfwi ' 36 Movln' On ­ Odessa; Further investigation 9t)0 p.m. • up. Jon fell into it quite man army veterans." with'the production;"' Hi' • 7i00 •••• • :-vv 9: Health^Hotline : Its discloses continued links naturally." ART AUCTION ' . 7 The-Walton* 10-.00pan. -• V." --v--.. .,-JJJEAME ADDED there was. .."The Odessa File", opens m­7.74,96 Newt t The Way ft Wis between former SS members Making a film critical of the wrtie tension'in having both a soon at the Aquarius Theaters YWlk'. U Odd Couple ' 9 Kentucky General Educational Nazi movement in theheart of fo'nner SS official and a Jew • IV. GARNER & SMITH and • a new set of war- M Stern Development pnovoking plans. (The film's the land where Hitler and his & . ' I0r30 pjn. ' 7t90 p.m. 7 Movie: ^'Lantf Raiders" set in 1963;) party rejgned 30 to 40 yeah. iiniiiii CONGREGATION AGUDAS ACHIM 9 Religious America""^"'"—-* • 9 The Men Wh6 Made the Movies "THE ODESSA Fife'' was ago was an offett uneasy, ex­ « 74 Paper-Moon * " ' •'vincente MlneHV'-." ;• ... . • 74 Wide World Special : Dick filmed on location in Ger­perience for the "Odessa , DALI, CHAGALL, MOSKOVITZ ATTENTION! i;00 pjn. •• ; •Cavett • • •• •-*. many, with many German ac­File" company. ; 7 Movie: 'Sunshine' • :36 The Tonight Sho*. • ,. tors playing roles in the film. "There was a bit of tension tickets are now on sale for 1 CHAMPAGNE SERVED AT 6 •'** •9 International Performance on my part," .Neame ad-" . "Tribute to Beethoven" 24 Xto.Streets of $an*Francttco HI ^/.Commander Cody / Hoyt Axton A Mb ADMISSION $1 sM s Halloween Show -Oct. 31 Nov 1 s M BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE HLM1973 J Bruce Springsteen -Nov. 6 & 7 -»?R NOTICE TONIGHT "fn compliance with institutional Rules, Section The Pointer Sisters -;Nov. 10 10-204, . the -Patio between 200 ACADEMY ACADEMYAWARD WINNER the Academic Center and i FRIDAY Arinex -TONIGHT designated as an area for AUX HARVEY ticket from Oat Willie's. Inner Sanctum, = the Texas Union has been save a dollar with an advance sale" ' ESSE -GREEZY WHEELS use by students and or at the Armadillo , A = W., Oct. 18 "BEST FUTURE ntM Of THE IEARI" organizations for public discussion '-and peaceful 07 B«e £aves Rd. 327-9016 TRACY NELSON i;>T ARMADILLO WORLD HEADQUARTERS^ = L£° assembly ordemonstration -—Shew info:442-2743 "OteOFTHlllM^ aa. iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiinijii without-prior approval..\ AOJMPW, MC-TV ..IWO-ZM At the time the-Union re4ocatesi a newilte will be TrfmiTi TrwtMmilf ' -.desfgnMed_lo_reclaieJM. Patio, and notice will be made in.The Dally Texan." --txdmi AcHvliin Offin -ft " TONIGHT 14]4l4lavaca 472-7315 33SR$Orf PARTYM:: • H t TUfe. -SAT. " FANCY SPAC¥ HAPPYHOIfR ALL NITE ' LADIES FREE TOM'II ROCKIN RHYTHM DADDIES DANCE CONIfST .Now Servinglone Star on Tap­ \m $501itPRIZECERTIFICATETO AElm by 505 NECHES Luis Bunud RECORD TOWN IN DOBIE MAU with ORPHAN DOORS OPEN: 8 HAPPY HOUR:.8-9 / 1 block w. of R«d River -. 2nd & 3rd PRIZES ALSO "THEEHSCBEET CHARM JLrVE ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING Advance Tickets^. jf. TONIGHT . OF THE BOURGECHSE" at inner Sanctum7 •TMU ^ JOHNNY DEE Discount:Records AND THE .'t;.'.'. • • •CXX.W • . • 4 PLUM ROCKET 88V Friday & Saturday 7:30 & 9:30 50'* ROCK AND ROLh' "' Oct. 18-1* Only. NELLY Burdine Aud. $1J0 COUNTRY MUSIC " Student Gov't. trench with Subtitles THEBUCKET —t MARGARITA NITC fetss HAPPY HOUR TIL 9 "ACTOurftomHardin North-3 Hra. FrMParking v lial T^^Premiei;, ...AUSTIN PREMIER -SUNDAY. «A FURIOUSFARCE.ONE OF THE BEST # 'AFREEWOMAN » ^ FILMS OF THIS SEASON.'f the sandwich shop -Nora Sayre, N.Y.Times .A SAD COMEDO "SANDWICHES'^ ^om . W- if-*': ia'AS' CHOICE OK BREADS WHOLE WHEAL RYE, WHl S«Kv*ci with chips' S ROLLICKING FUH!$ ! ^pickle, SERVED MOT or COLO ^ £ ^A —JudithCrist, New York-Magazine Q HIGHEST RATING!" —Kathleen Carroll. Dally News A*$1!*Sp?cia! 1,25s|cmd m 1.50 "GET READY FOR 2 ClIrtWORST) ' BELLY LAUGHSi'5 'A REMARKABLE DETAILING tJF THE '—-J "EM SALAD , 1.25 -•—WilliamWolf,^ EMANCIPATION' OF A YOUNG WOMAN.' mAwtAPo,MeoM,» 1 AO * ONE THAT WILL FASCINATE AND , , ... .-Cue Magazine A -I9-40 STIMULATE US." —Judith.Crist, 4k,, New YorkMagszinei' L ; . 1-25 1*1.50 "'MIMI'ISNOT * • m-' mm* TO BEMISSED!"# PftSIBAMt 1.50 —-Ann Guarino,# AWKMfrlEfflM,' 1.25 N.Y,Daily News 0 /' PlHEKtO CHEtS%, fOMJrfO • I® Avocado Suprem^ 1.75 R6B€RTB«WS5pkiai 1M DIRECTED BY BtfBN UfflHT fAMAfrt l«iU UNAWERTMUiXER- BACON^fflK^fOMATO SamigGlMO^GIAN^aslwkn'ATELMANPnESENTATCN BIG eyeswiss gtfel.50 N CCUX*.TOMNW UNC CMEM* OOMROKK -1 25^Dm ' '""l Friday, Saturday, Sunday >f^7:30-9:20only $1.50 • tip fngtish Batts Hall Aud; Mod. Cinema5 m LATE SHOW ll.-OOP.M. ONLY • KOMtMADE SOUP WOEfrwhwulx PCR Batts Aiid. PkATtS / Adm.$iJ0 Sunday Only . 7:30 & 9:30 $1.50 •Wi Ott. 20 Subtitles Burdine AwL . i6&^p^wl;6 woody alien's I-' SHOW FRI. & SAT. OCT-18-19 .nNPKWjinMtM *HONEHwe 6) 11^0 0NIY­ te&wmmm tlOftr BUROINtAUI 2 T.e»©S3 .50. $1.25 STUDENT] GOV'T; hunsday; October 17, 1974 %HE DAIfc\/.TEXrA^:Pa*ae'M f&eh? • >: **:*V 0 Prove Impressiv#^! By SUZANNE SHELTON space. The body itself, down to the knees, v. Th^The ItMrDianeGeorgians Hdoa inntWIifilAincredible (hinrtothings 4/\toikniotheir •• ;.:V tricate rhythmic patterns and/harmonies,5Tuesday night Gregory Gym was electric maintains this erect posture, embellished shins and knees. They spin on them, leap and «Each soloist in the choir had his own dis­• with anticipation,, and the applause • began alone by the arms and feet. But, oh, those ,-, land.on.them, and som^how survive for the •' Unctlve sound, as well as his own stage per-Ilong before the Soviet Georgian Dancers and embellishments. & next dance. Mot-onty that, the men "dance on sonality. Watching the choir onstage was aTbilisi:Polyphonic Ghoir -ever-stepped In VPerkfmll.'Ta'fiolfday dance whichopen­their toesr protected only by soft leather particular delight, especially the imposing•bSS." onstage. -,ed Tuesday's program! Elsa Kakhnyashvili boots. figure of the director who exercised absolute-On£e the evening began,, it was nonstop offered the evening's finest example of this Most-impressive, however, is the fact that •control for all his apparent modesty. • .brilliance-with,folk dahces deftly interspers­skimming technique..She simply glided about these pyrotechnics never degenerated into' t IN FACT, one noticeable aspect of-theed among choral works performed by the the stage, offering an occasional, elegant mere circusry. Throughout, the Soviet Georgian program was the presenceof. . ' Tbilisi choir and-t^e smaller Gordela Vocal x.arm gesture. -.v..-:.* choreography was carefully controlled, with all those fine-looking, individualistic men, .different^?~ growl Ensemble. ,«•• The*uc Georgianvtwigutu womenwuuieii performpenorm a .auiereni^^ tiasoy flashy effects growing naturally-out of -the men dancing as men should and singing..ivlth . ' . As theater, this combineddancerand music 'theatrical function from the male members-l*--fabrkroHhe-danCer . joy. The Georgian culture has something toCobr ftris tv DELUXE" program was carefully planned. Vocal music of the company. While the men bear the ma-.w,« MEANSHILE,'the Tbilisi PolyphonicChoir teach ours, it seems. blended with\dtance in an unbroken taRestry. Jorfole in performance,dancing war legendsi-fejs and Gordela Vocal Ensemble offered the And the visiting company did reach out to The choir, rather than serving as mere women serve as-gentle or folk tales', the audience a chance for breath-catchtng. The its wildly" enthusiastic audience; first by ­ • program filler, actually upstaged, the ballet relief, filtering through the stage on those ensemble, a sort of Soviet barbershop septet, offering an amusing-rendition of "All God'swith its clear, luminous renditions of hummingbird feet, interrupting asword fight*1?" especially shone in "You Are the Vine," an . ChlllunV' sung ip phonetic"English, then byGeorgian folk melodies. Both the singers and with a langorous arm wave. lllh Century hymiLto the grape, performed • singing a farewell Song. The house lightsVILLAGE 4 dancers are unusually handsome people, • THE. MEN'S "Sabre Dance" was with all the clarity and mellow po\ver of a , -were turned on so that the Soviet performers forthright in their, individuality. ; -Tuesday's show-stopper, a display of • splif4tfw go«d gla"ss of wine. : Could: get a good look at all those Texans THE GEORGIAN DANCE" technique is second timing with rapid spins punctuated byf'\ .The larger polyphonic choir was im­-Who'd been watching them. iNTbRSiAiE THEATRES _JWsicaHj_simpIe. With the torso held erect, ; .the clash of swords. And •''SorevnovanyeS'i e, pressive in "Chakrulo," a patriotic song -The Soviets applauded, theTexans applaud­ .the head carnage liigli7tfieT3an65r'mi)ves on" which-xrlosed the program, is a-traditional -repletewith_those,yoice-trippingtrills whiqt^ edLand to my mind, the Cultural Entertain-; the balls of his feet in tiny steps which -dance competition in which each successive " " $1.25 til 7 p.m. give the Georgian songs a gypsy flavon This raent'Comn^itte^;estabnsBed"ils swrt reasons PARAMOUNT wr^t suggest the illusion of skimming through -dancer outshines his predecessor. Sting 6:30-9:50 music is strikingin'itssophistication, with in-"for being.'*' ' 713 CONGRESS AVENUE Girls • 8:20 they're Comedy, Action Clash in 11 v*" x tieth Century Fox> -largest diamond exchange (at has It'stoleifBy the exchange. feel sure they'll live happily Professionals like Alfred ' The flick can't be takenwhich seems to be releasing 11 Harrowhobse, London),and He can't repay Howard, so he ever after, because the tale'is , ; Hitchcock and scenario seriously, it can't be taken films, by;the dozen -this' year. in turn sells thegoods at small; agrees to relief .11 being narrated. by Groden in Ernest Lehman could pull.it comically — the only thing St. Harrowhquse of $12 billion the future; he wouldn't fe off;the comparatively iniex-that can be taken is the un­ worth of the' translucent ableto talk ifhewere'dead.as perienced* "Harrowhouise" suspecting moyie-goer,and hemineral to "beat.the system" any movie buff knows. film makers couldn't is. For that reason, one of "11(evervoae-'suickname for the THE FILM attempts to JERRYGROSS ftcents SJWG OP1>E DRAGON UtSTERS ''North,. unlike Harrowhouse's" better • sasiiS-SBmns tte•JhooiDee«(Meedby DM exchange). combine adventure and com­"Harrowhouse," had "Its, moments;occurs lflO-minutey OnCW tyHtaij) -A GOLPBt HARVEST HIM . The. robbery is--ac­ ward edy equally, and that's where ^lumorovis components spread after the opening credits,complished with the help of it fails --^ this may be due. in occasionally throughout — thfc when the projectionist-merr part to the fact that" Grodin chief devotioniWds to nonstop .-cifully turns on the theater GIANT adapted the screenplay. • movement. lights. -. Almost everyone.of his ownDOUBLE linfes is supposed to be classic witticism, delivered in the Ginsberg Writes Again FEATURE Grodin straight-face monotone style. He is a good Allen Ginsberg's views pn of them, he speaks directly to comedian, as demonstrated subjects ranging from con­those of the young who see in PROGRAM by his funny "Heartbreak temporary poets to the cor­him the embodiment of the es-: Kidbut thatwas witha Neil ruption surrounding much of cape frtm the '.'prison of con­ the ^ -legislation on narcotics ditioning."^; Simon script in which all the appears inhis new book, AllenFirst there waS •:Hnes—^were—indeed—great— DOUBLE FEATURE! BILLY JACK', 7VerbaTinr~—~ L"5Ctiires:one STATE Grodin's dialogue just doesn't, '' In the areaof contemporary ^19 C0'iC.?-Sr Ave-.*v.l 'Poetry, Politics, Thencame work. American-poetry, the vplume.Consciousness:" » S1JS WALKING ingludes material • on Ezra»# 7 pjn. TALL "Motk" PART FOX TWIN The book resulted from a Pound-, WiUium-Carlos JisW-F. CTATO MUVE-rir ' "5 6:40 lUMtTll series; of crosscountry; ex­Williams and others, as well 454-271) 1 9:50 n Sltou T & Guadalupe Second level Dobie Mall 477-1324 " NOW SHOWING aMMMMlR Theatre Committee presents §f«|t bizarret.vilicr.t v;orld AT 3 THEATRES XStl'&S&F JAoljMni? • SCREEN 1 cf.'jbnormai * THESTRENGTHOF MANKINDHASALWAYS I ENDS TODAY a-.'« sexual behavior yfc. BEEN ITS WOMEN: I MiutuniunnuUMm C starts tomorrow" |"HORSE" "BIG MAN' DUSTIN C»UAMAIUUAS»<; KATUK-'TIMIS 2:45 -4:45 , HOFFMAN f Pragc^AiiBlJd ^KAao»»AMt«KAMfldMWiTHSerS^ 1 r CUtF STATES DtUVeiM A IOSEFSHAFTEL mcxxxmoN ^ 7:30 9:30 IITTIEBIOM4N* |$1.25.each ' $2.00 both THE KATHARINE HEPBURN Panavisiori' Techmcotor* UJ.,5 %A t HI.H M E N VANESSA REDGRAVE I TEXAS iox oma orais ?:ts rnSAVE INSERT BKUBO1A1I1S SNOW mm AT DUSK GENEVIEVE BUJOLD SIN TODAY'S TEXAN CHJUNSAW u'AHll i JOUKF STATES DKIVE.IW" flU IRENE PAPAS IFOR COLUMBIA FILM >> ciumiMip •»» |FESpCHEDULE tnuensmrrwawtaouMe. SouThsrck MASSACRE IN A"y.10 'WiteiM+2296S? THE'TKOIAN. I AUSTIN 4 Weeks 10,000-plus WOMEN", THE KING LOVES HIE PEOPLE1 EDGAR ALLAN POE'S -A rr Jo99i WM\ 5*mjWJTHyOYAGl* -Swl ® • • | Jw m — «T IN THURSDAY'S TEXAN tawt (btl-pHWH*«?&.* FHM FESTIVAL ,r fSpdntdred by CA1FI .'f.ikpls? j mmmm S83» W I#' ui+ia&i AFT To Show Films 1 " 3 Robert S. Ferguson, vice-president of Wednesday morning performances for the S13 "Bits of Paradise;",by ' love rather than mere toil. At marketing for the American Film Theatre, benefit of high school groups,on anindividual 1 *F. 'Scott and Zelda least two — "The Swimmers" has announced launching of the season ticket performance basis at an admission of $1.50, Fitzgerald; compiled by and "Jacob's Ladder" — are; subscription sales drive-for AFT's second' Approximately 600 theatre^ in the United Matthew Bruccoli; major Fitzgerald stories' season, consisting of five major new motion Statesand Canada will.participatein the AFB published by Charles; which have been neglected for pictures based upon great wdrks of. the con^<^ second season, as compared with 530 last $©*Scribner's Solas; 386 pages, too lo'ng. . teffj>oraiy theater.-The second season series^ season; The first-wave of approximately 450 ' it $7.95; review copy fur-For the reader familiar will open in January, and run through;May?sj| -theaters will have two eyeningperformances .nished by Garner aqd with Fitzgerald's work,'these >•/(« "Letters are beingiriailed;'' saidEerguson;£i^ and two matines^-each-month (alwa/s"on s Smith-Bookstore. . stories provide further. ?;"to more than 500,000 men and women in the ^-; Monday and Tuesday) fcOin,January to May. By MICHAEL TOLSON evidence of-his obsession with tJnited States and Canada, ^sfaftjjpughfcy'me . The remaining 150 theaters'^ will have one , When Scott Fitzgerald died certain themes .(notice the four million tickets last year aiidhrecJafded evening and one.matinee performance each in 1940 most of his work was parallel-to "The' Great the largest advance sale of any theatrical^# month on .Tuesdays from.February to June; sither 'out of print or lost in Gatlsby' -• in •"•Jacob's • venture,anywhere." * -.THE ENTJBE''sea$on"of films will be back issues of magazines like Ladder") and his recurrent — ( These subscribers, said Ferguson; will-"showrvatL—"""the Village Ciriema IV. The Saturday Evening Post. -u^e of similar 'characters. have the opportunity to ordersecond season The five films in AFT'ssecond season are: But slowly, with his rise in There: is ihuch to admire. in tickets in advance at the same price they Bertolt Brecht's ''Galileo," David Storey's popularity, most of that work • these stories,, even the less . were offered last year. ''In Celebration," "The Man in the Glass has become available in new successful ones.' . SEASON TICKETS for the second season Booth" with screenplay by Edward Anhalt, -..editions and collections: In For:example, though "Love will be priced at,$20for all five of the evening Jean Genet's "The Maids" and "Jacques compiling ihis latest.collec­in the Night" suffers-from series, $12.50 for all five of the matinee Brel Is Aljve and Well and Living in Paris," tion, Matthew Broccoli has ^ numerous -CJa.ws, an in­series. Chartersubscribers will pay$l8.75 for from a screenplay by Eric Blau. obviously had to do some teresting sidelight is provided the-evenlngs-and-.$H725.-for-the-matinees— The.Stars include sych distinguished per­.careful searching -to find-through a long and beautiful Senior citizens and college students,will con­formers as Glenda Jackson, Topol, Alan "stories worthy of Fitzgerald's* description:of the effectof the tinue to get matinee season tickets at special Bates^ MaximilianScheie Susannah York, Vi-. r. .new reputation. revolution of 1917 on Russian rates. This season, that rate will be $10 for • vian Merchant; John Geilgud, Jacques Brel,> His Search has fbrced him aristocracy. And regardlessof the series of five fiTms. Georgia Brown, Elly Stone, Lais Nettleton, fo reconstdeis the merits of whether: some of the stories Special group season ticket rates will be Edward Fox and Luther Adler. The directors, many forgotten stories/ and • are overplotted or highly im:. available at matinees only for groups of 20 or are Joseph.Losey, Lindsay Anderson, Arthur : though a few of the final selec-probable or top sentimental, a-more. AFT also will schedule special. Hiller, Christopher Miles and Denis Heroux.• -tions are a bit weak, on each one is well written from balance I think his judgment the: standpoint1 of •pure^'ex-­Is sound. Assuredly,-"Bits Of" pository prose. * • Paradise" includes the last of STYLISTICALLY, most of m Fitzgerald's work that can be these stories, bear -the published on Uie basis of ar-. -Fitzgerald trademark of crisp . By JAY SHARBUTT Edwards said she finds it will-you-beat-Walters -non-• tistic merit alone; the. dialogue interspersed with 'America' To Debut -AP Television Writer : embarrassing when-someone sense in August,: 1^73, when remainder being better left to passages of, mellifluous ,5 p. NEW YORK (A#) -The asks if. she-thinks she'll -be she signed to co-host the literary scholars and narrative. Occasionally, as in : -ABC television network held a : better than Barbara Walters ''CBCMorning News'.only to , historians. "The Swimmers,--' one > meet-the-press powwow the of -NBC's ,durable "Today" leave in Januaryand return to " WHILE THESE stories witnesses a rise to the other day toshow off the stars show. "That is silly^she said; reporting for The Washington reveal nothing new about ^rhetorical power evident in of its new "AM America" . Sally Quinn faced the same Post. Fitzgerald's talent as a '"The GreatGatsby.!' but feven mornirig program, which writer, they do serve to un­if most .of .them, are not this starts Jan. 6; It also emitted lf, You Need Help derscore the factthat he tried good, each story in its own an announcement.' * .i-. or to maintain a high standard, ; -way represents, the work of a ::The announcement was that even in work which interested mature craftsman. ' Just Someone Who Will Listen Sen..Sam Ervin, D-N.C., who him little. Of course, some of-. Also included in this, collec­ Telephone 476-7073 } , • is not seeking re-election, and these stories are better than tion are all ID of Zelda A)-Any Time- former U;S. Atty. Gen. Elliot others show Fitzgerald's stories. The/Telephone Counseling' and Referral Service and some the short • Richardson ..will appear as good effects of being labors of Because of the demands of .. "guest contributors" on the' ;Rsi)EShow once every other we^k. r Armadillo, World Headquarters ABC already has said :"• •••••: fotjner. New York Mayor John Lindsay also will be a guest commentator on the show, but RICK CASUAL TONIGHT! - '.fln a once-a-week basis. The stars of the two-hour. /Music in the Beer Garden . fi&fruw -BUI Beutel of WABC­jji'j-TV here, Stephanie Edwrads (KABC-TV in Los Angeles I Commander Cody Bruce Springsteen [ and Bob Kennedy of WLS-TV HoytAxton ' The PointerSisters ;in Chicago — ^poke, among Bill. Monroe, and lift plvegrbss Boys •*v .. • , other things, of their hopes for ; y, : p?tlifc-5h0w1s-sttecessr~ /PS - • Aida .'Jii; 'i-fl : , • t S. ' •;• 0 H'Ctl»d h» Uj f rid.IV OiloiH't 18 iHUi Simc1.iv 0< tober ?0. 19?-'. at 8 00 pm Municipal Aodilonum -s'-w I ' S, ? • .1 4.-1 M4-S Presents. The Marx Brothers ot f mp Arts Thp Un t • t v of T i-1.-jt Austin GO WEST {1940) FREE BUSES TO BOTH PERFORMANCES DEPART AT 6:45 & 7:30 P.M. Directed by Edward Buzzell.. • FROM.JESTER CENTER, KINSOLVING DORM & UNIVERSITY CO-OP With Harpo, Groucho and Chico JESTER AUDITORIUM '. ! $1 7 & 9 P.M? fife- V \OSTAI <;i< LOOK Al ()\i: .MILLION B.( Todj«y at Pruidlo Thtatm When womei\J i II i A (,i: i LOST HI I I.RSIDI. ;heir HEU> OVER Starring I if THE MAD tSENTA berger I ADVOITUIIES •^ss»'• T "* «oyu wnjt«« mwt or w mtmttmu tmtm m tw nw> . raw. TO* (wto ni tuua or mwjouot rotimutw. Wj1 .COMEDY SLAPSTICK AT ITS FUNHIIST.„j Borgoln MoHm* til 12:40 Mon-Fri' FMlnm )%4MsMMd04:t04iM4tSlJ!^^# VILLAGE i Rl \ /•'RSI1)1 X COMEDY T^-IAT^ Wll t I SAVF YOIJ LAUfiHING FOR HOURS" MiibM.ri IMS W. ,. Starts TOMORROW! THIS IS LIKE FEATURE TIMES NO ROBBERY ' l.-05-2J(MJW:20 YOU'VE EVfc'R I II I A(rl I . 8.-05-9-58 . J M ACINES). -i­ /ERYMNTES^ THETEXAS line across which M J 'M be pushed! Americans most bizarre arid bmtai crimes Starts TOMORROW! You will never forget 17/ / \(,1 I THENO I \ ! AT 2 11 OPEN 5:4S » JO lit fclS (MOM-SAT) THE • ~ "GCHHEWITH « FUTURES .*05­ -1:00­ Winner MO -W5­of Ten IAST CLARK GABLE [Academy DAYl ; TfCHNI COLOR' VIVIEN LEI6H IAwards prams B*OEIU*£' m imTirrTTT BURNET DRIVE-IN 35.: • 2224 GUADALUPE 459-6933 • 6400 BURNET RD Cf - ---OWN .1:45 -$1.00 til 6 p.m. AT 7:45 & 11,00 OPEN 7:15 Do>oa.'UfredQ takethis.wxrianLoe $1.00 TIL Yourawfjil wecbed^^ wife? ha. 2-4+«o SHOWTIME PhtsI • "MOON CHILD" imm AT 9j0 OHtY 4-4.3?2? • '500 SOLUM PtlASANT V-MlEf PD First there was'BILLY;JACK"*, Then came"WALKING TALL' -;l Now thereis... jganausrasraa iiaMmMiiofiH SIJO .Til A pjn 1 T JACK fME FEATURES -2:50­ -5:10­ ENDS TODAY THiHATQWH" Q -7:30­-9i50­ $130 Tit t p.ni, FUTURES -1M­-1-4S­ A KM SlopiraFHD suo til 6 p.m. -REAfURES_ -l:00-_ -2:30­-4:00-" »•­-=3HS­ Sfi -4:10-"w^i^up po ilNH tIRIM ZIMBUlSf JR SUM SIDU IIHBL DHANDREWS 111$ NANCYOlSON [Dill MYRNA10Y nwyiteti ncija litMftaHg'Mwjj)­ HURRY! EHD& TODAY! ULTIMATE jm .'i EXPERIENCE , —SCREENINGS— J 2:45-3:05-5:20-7:35-9:50 TECHNIOOLOR' Ml HIGHLAND MALL «S1-735« • IH35 ATKOENK1LN. 35 •Scri»aiR(S> *>D0N'T MISSHJ". ;12 00 2 25 4 45 A Vs\ 7 05 9 30 i -JOHN 8USTIN tarn ft Bargain : ^The Auitift Cititi* .-Malitityi SB»penif# ^ S» 432-7646 • IH 35 NORTH TODAY! *6 r ^ §-: mi IT'S SURVIVAL •FTHE FIERCEST. ,ft' salt. • Wk± AMD THE FWNMIEST. m\ _ —of— X 1:00-3:10-5:20-7:35^9;45t :J HCBOffrREYHOlbS 4Sllil : 7 "THP IflMCTST YflRIT* EOLAUTcR MIKE CONRAD »> -.CC'tOR 8yTE4'HNICOkOR *. A PARAMOUNT^PieTUHfci •C9 t,r?#ss> i i m BPV CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING • FOR SALE I .RATES FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. B FURN. APARTS. SERVICES • For Sale PLAZA Each.word $-9.times.:.. ,- -S 03 . Misc. -For Sale KENRAY FRQGSDONTFLY" -JUST North ot 27th at .. Each.wortlQ or more times ;••,$ >07, AAARAHT2H30 receiver. Ex condition* •TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds, TYPEWRITERS BUT CRAZY CAPTIONS DO Guadalupe -* Stodent.fate each time .to ttSO.Call Cindy, 459-6030, 4774544: old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop. 40trN. VAPARTMENTS VENTURA , SALES & SERVICE CATCH THE EYE 2707 Hemphill Park Ctas*lftedDisplay .• „ ,• Lamar, %S4*£977. •• • • . ffiM, Tjtsd of smalt rooms & no closet space?. ALII MAKES Be happy doing the thing you like be'sV VcoL xllncti one time..*3,25 s6ny 7045 AMFMxeceiver, 3 months - 2122 Hancock Dr. Jlretf-ot asphalt & noise? Try Plazb Ven«' ?®]Klogsto people on .th4 telephone. New • 2Bdrm furn./unfurn. From lcot x.1 IftchM time*..^....$2,93 old. Call m-3n&-Srt p.m^ «5C. STAINED GLASS craft supplies. Opal *•••••. tura> .1 & ? Bdrm furnyunfurn. jFrom ' P.RBB ESTIMATES ?f|(lces, five days a week, free parking, lcoLx.l inch tenor more tlmess2.64 and Cath slasvCame, Ftosc, Solder* etc. Nex Mo Americana Theatre, walking dis-il».S« plus alcctrlclty , PICK-UP & DELIVERY#;® friendly atmosphere, full or pari time, jbtn " -MACINTOSH STEREO C-M pre-ama tahce to-North: Loop Shopping Center 3410 BurleionRd. bonuses plus ; salaries. Call 451-2357 . Renaissance Glass Co, 10D-C West 34th. and LuOy.s. One hall block from shuttle Barhsm Prop. 20% off on repairs . between 9 a.m. end.l p:m., or between 5 2105 power amp. 2ML-rl speakers, Dual • .451-3971; v. 'and Austin: tre.hsit..-?vbedroom -"7-4571 H 934*9365 GOOD THRpUGH OCT. 30" •p,m. and 9 p.m, Experience pays mor6a v «09tShure type ilK 444-7e73^­ townhouses, extra targe. Two bedroom but not necessary. ^ £ YES, we do type • OlADUNi^CHBXAf ——-ANTIQUES....Beautttul-EnojKh^war; Mwidqy Texoa tnduf b..J:00 pjn. drobe, b«veted glass, perfect condllloo. ~i!aii_Qne_ a.fld two baths: CA/CH, dis- AUSTIN OFFICE i . hwasner. disposal, >. 477-2563. • U3 or can 4514840. 1^3, 4C0W.J«thStr«l ~ NEEDED NOW ^ good grades'" " " PLACE TO-LIVE? ' Tbuiwluf Tttoft WWnnAry .1hOO «jn. STEREO / <74-0090 Mature dependable and stable herd : -472-3210 and 472-7677 AWFM,t*!racktn/dayft-'T:.V;<>.6.' S119.9* PORTABLE KENMORE waihef/dryer, worker for various duties at Northweit W#Y Ttnn ItrnMby. I.-OO.bjh, Undeivdasy $-track *79-95* excellent :cQndition,* 2 years old.. TRY THE FM converter ' ',.S39.9S Connects to sink. Copperrt6ne. S250. 452-WE RENt .apartment complex Night students Installation available r*'*^ ^£4454,' BLACKSTONE GiNNY'S acceptable. No day students Furnished ,< 1 5823 N. Interregional « T apartment plus salary for qualified per­TYPING Reports, Resumes,­ 1b IW tvtat of «*t«n made {n an * • 459-2219 ^ ^TYPEWRITERS. Manuals U0 and up.; AUSTINS APARTMENTS COPYING son. 345-1768 between 9-6 tj Theses. Letters MlvOrilHIBM^ IMtlCi'llHltl bl EJectrlcs from .150. Many models All University and ­ |ivMm rtM MbbkmoxmpwaUthr : stock. Dart'i, 2408 Sar^Gabriel. 474-«396.^fw .Sharfcr*a--4arQ£ room for S64.50/mo...or ERVICE • business work— wlyONHwmirt inimhw. Ml doinu far Y6ur time is valuable-. take in.entire room for si12.50 fur-NEED -KEYPUNCH.OPERATOR II In ' Last Minute Service Ml IvHf ' • 250 WATT nlshed, all bills paid;Maid service once • ' ifcivld .bt ALCORT .SUNFISH -with heavy-duty, Our service is free,,' • 1 the Secretary of State's Office.-Need the open 9-8 Mon-Th 8.. than <30 dafi sfNr pgUkotita." galvahlzetf trailer.-Excellent conditions. a week, followJng qualifications* 9-5 Frl-Sat : STEREO SYSTEM S7S0. 837-1151. Bring, your* own roommate 6r we wlll-1. At ieastone year actual operating-ERVICE lis PARAGON^,;, matcn you with a compatlble one. experience. life Famous AX-7000 Garrard Stereo with SANYO SUPER 8 movie'camera. Wkfe^ iThis Is economy & convenience at its 42 Dobie AAail ^ 476-9171 . . 2. High School graduate. 1472-8934 Doble Mall •i«k LOW STUDENT RATES AWFW tuner, complete-audipphiie con­angle S tetephoto lerts. m.-Royal stan-^ .best. ' • v b.#if t5 word mlnlrramveach day .;S .80 trols, gigantic air suspension.M0-way. dard typewriterS20, 472-$8t4,476-3912. ' PROPERTIES • 3. Knowledge. of other 'equipmenU' Each additional word each,days M speaker system with large W Woofer, -ONLY ?OO YAROS FROM U* CAMPUS free Parking . ' such as sorters, collators, et^. '^-." • THE-CROCKETT COMPANY . > col. x ) Inch each day.......$2.64 :5U"ms" seUtng U> super systems.for $399. Cash Serious Inquiries only» 477-4270. — receipts and pay in advance In T$P i or E-Z Terms.'- 472-4175-'• V-i.»• ibid. inc. multts •• XEROX COPIES > $3 00 forp100 copies>^*^ BWg. 3-200 Gall 892-1949 (two).acoustically matched air- bedrooms antf the"2"bedroomsare^namr_ pull brakes. Japanese Deraiier $65 or;Vr A TYPING f67 MOB. Body and engine overhauled. suspension. speakers. Also available • offer 478-9469.; , 6 blocks to campus moth, too. Furnished or:unfurnished. . 1950.454-4777,ext.?«3cr after S..4SI.7017. series 8SR turntables; !7«»Leon -iiewr -with Icebreaker-refrigerators (frost-SXYDIVE! SERVICE— • • 'Roger. • HURRY, these, systems are. limited- free), DW, cable, walk-fns 8; bufff-fns; ELECTRONIC DESK calculator. Basic > Cash or E-Z terms: 4 functions and constant. Beautiful con? From $165 ALL BILLS . PAID. 2606 Austin Parachute FULL TIME THERAPIST needed for T-i 497«RUJMeHSRlTFlRE_MKJ]l^i?edJ ^ ditlon $40. 454-8504 alter7 p.m.' ; : v: -QUIET ENFIELD AREA. 1 Wheless Lane. 926-4202,4724l62.! year round residential wilderness GIRL'S lO-speed bike, like-new. $70. Call -East _51sl 459-5728; .472-4162.:. . of continual emotional stress tn the out* Prompt, Professional • Call 451-5010. --* & \ from $148.50 plus electricity. of-doors. Require a one-year committ­ 454-6967. : CLASSICAL-and Flamenco v Musical -For Sale 807-West-bynn.-477-7794, -472-LARGE 1BEDROOMApartmenH. Pool. ; • guitar -Service • I 195® XK 150 JAGUAR frwfchead coupe! » LEARN TO PLAY. GUITAR. Beginner •WATERBED, frameand.liner; Also-for-4162. Water, gas, cabW TV:pafd. si35. Posada with serious itutfents.-472.-1444». , v 1500 a moffth, room and board, and 2?? . 453-8101 | lesJbns.^ Basic technique. Good teacher-ment to the position. :Starting salary . Wire wheels» new paint, mechanically and advanced^ Drew Thomason< 478-mica desk without drawers and Noreico Real Apts. 5001, Btf fCreek. 452-1(103. : hospitalization insurance. For further Pick-up Service Available sound.255*2337. •• .•.-< ... ym. • ,'ior tape recorder: 474-1376 CONFIDENTIAL CARE for pregnant'<• details, contact Discovery; Land, »«c, $137.50 PLUS E. gives you fuH.kitchen 3102 Glenview " unmarried ' mothers, fedna Gladney 71 FIAT 850, 2 doof convertible. SUS0. L^S-PAUL Standard, gold ffnish, THREE GENERAL Admission tickets. with breikkfasi bar, extra large closets, Home. J308 Hemphill, Fort Worth, 817-P.O. Bo* 8)3, Bryan,. Texas 7790) ' 451-2429. •. reasonable .must sell. 472-4807. cable, ppoL and shuttle busat El Cortex. ­ : UT-Arkansas. call 472-2724 before noon.^: v 926-3304. ' . « v CREEKSIDE 1 : 1101 Clayton.Lane.'. 453-7914^ 472-4162. • MRS. BODOUR'S TYPING SERVICE. ;'W vw.. Good, running condition, SIX PIECE -Ludwig drum:«t, seven: Keep trying. ; , :— .FLOWER PEOPLE nwd'Mveral per-Reports, theses, dissertatlons and books %> EL.POSAOO from 4130. Fantastic -SLP*?!m F P«X>I»IO Miltlowerj for H»new AM/FM, AC SS2S. ,476>1I7& I44-86M. Zildllan cymbats,'v Remo practice set, GOLF ,CLUBS. 1968.Walter Hagen'" w|m a deadbolt tocV. Call Austln Lock typed accurately, fast and.reasonably •'Large efficiency,. CA/CH, shag, waiK- 74-75 w»»on. Pay: 30% plus bonusei. ; CaU 4J2-893axafter_5 p.m; woodv Irons, & bag. 1200. 263-5318. ' apartments wrth, cable, pool,>full Service for: appointment. 447-5065. • Fw* Interview, Denise, 7820102.: Prlnting and binding on request. Close; ^'a 71GMC.O»* ion va/tand *69 GMC HTON Ins, complete kitchen, bath-vanity. On kitchens. On city and shutlte bus. ' Ucenied Md bonded. , In, 4784113 --• ; ^ - : •/ van. Both .In excellent condition. Must '42 STRATOCASTER, new finish. Ex­35MM LENSES for renfc Wide angle, ciyy/shuttle routes tills plus Ej. thru. Convenient to shopping.1)0$ Clayton seir. *37-6023 after 5, cellent condition.-$300.4SV202S. telephota, zoonvand macro lens. Capitol August* 75 476-6324, after 2 p.m , Lane. «a-79H 472-4162. t>\ SUPPORT SMALL BUSINESS. Editing, PARTTIME...Earn af least 145 monthj DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports, and •-v.­ .for 16-hours one weekend per month.' • law briefs. Experienceo typist^' • Camera; Rental. 476-3581. • proofreading"-fates: negotiable. No Ppfer. service, no additional training, _ Ukp 1974 FIAT XL/9.26M miles, brown.-Caf7 classic guitar. SUFFICIENCIES.-. More than an ef-. Tarrylown. 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine^' PAULINO-BERNA8E FicTf |-.-^LT_425$K2L_Sar*di • •• :•••• : Estudio modef, S300 with case. Call 475- (Iclency. Dwljned with th* student In Saturday work. Leah, 4754MS, 47&-M74. necessary. Reservists eligible' for in-Brady. 4724715. 4 BRASS.' BEDS.'new shipment;; double, Massage, please. . State tuition!! 4594021. Army Reserve: Bmf, Sandy's "MgOROOIVSrirBATH-FUHN:-*^-FRANCES WOODS TYPING SERVICE^' -96Sfcr- : mind.SV44 plut electricityand cable.Act VW : TRANSPORTER—picktjp-.—Hew y's, 506S Walsh..* vn. 453-0540; 473-4145. Barry . NEED EXTRA MONEY?Se|l f loWers on .engine, fransmiistav tires,' and prac*. ROGERS DRUMS, Dynasound snare, 1210 ALL BILLS PAID . UilllAOVtAier Company. —.— —- Experienced, Law, Theses, Dissert­ m:ticelly everything else; tape deck. S950 ZlWlai^ cymbals. Like new, *300. Call ROOMMATES ...tahoni, Menuscrlpls. 4534090. . „ , or offer. 47HW1S. Pat. r. 477-87W after 7:30. . A HARD ACT TO FOLLOW. Act IV.One . FURN. APARTS. LE FONTE bedroom efficiency ort shuttle. Walk" to FEMALE ROOMMATE!1or 3rd; unfur­ Just North of 27th at PERSON. TO DRIVE school-type bus. . work. 1700:4C-133J. . < Tailpiece, dark chocolate finish, good 803 West 28th students^ S149 plus electricity and cable. ,153. Mary,.<52-1548 or. 454-6412. . :;-Monday -Friday* 2 p.m; 6 p.m. Guadalupe '69 VW SEDAN, AM/FM. AQ ne«ds' CIBSON .SG.two pickups, 6>lgsby law school. Quiet for undergraduate nished bedroom. Lamar*North -Loop. - . condition, S140. 454-0081, after 5:30. 2 BEDROOMS, 2 BATH. 2 blocks from 472-4480 3311 Red River, 476-2662.472*4162. Barry Chatifleur's licenserequired.12.00/hour. campu}..AII Bills Paid.*175. <72-17t7,4a5 Giilingwater. Company.;.. . Apply In 'person 517 South Lamar. . 2707 Hemphill. Park 1973 BUICK-RIVIERA. Excellent. Less 472-4162 'FEMALE HOUSEMATE wanted. Own than 15.000 mites. AU power, cruise con-. y . Barry Gllllngwatcr Co. . room, three blocks to campus. S62J0: 478-6050. PART TIME work:15-20 hours/wpek. trol. 451-1237 or 471-1600. Pets -For Sale '' FURNISHED APARTMENT ' EFFICIENCIES:$1)5-plus electricity 1300/month salary or Incintive program. . IfipAl&a. A>u^ jcvd(^, S135/n>onth. ABP. Furnished rooms ooly . Pool, AC carpet, paneling,no £ets.Hun­ . 7T FORMULA 455 Firebird. All powec BEAUTIFUL brlndle. female boxer. 150/monlh. 2 tlocks campus, 2900 WhHIsV?.- tington Villa, 46th and Ave.-A. 45M903. FEMALE HOUSEMATE, needed. 170 Call452-2758. radlaIs, blue,white top.clean, one owner Eleven weeks old, AKC, excellent ' 477-7558. - plus y* blfts. S.blocksUT. Iblockihutile. '. 1250014(1^431.^ . pedigree. After 7 or weekends. JS8»2790. • I'BDRM. EFF. 1145 abpV Mauna Kal.' Nicely.furnished. 474-4639.: COUNTER HELP WANTED for drlve-ln 3EW5S . Close to campus. Huge .walk-Ins, fully . cafe;. Hours 5-11 p;mr 385-0130.-Ask for f%: '64 VW-nof beautrful, but.mechanlcally MOVING -Selling 50 tropical fish for 50 2 BLOCKS SHUTTLE.2 bedroom, S1W. 1 carpefed. 1199 ABP. 4M East 31st. 472-Mr. Or Mrs. McNeely. RESUMES' bedroom, S149. Gas, water, TV, cable FEMALE,ROOMAAATE needed to Share: -•s&i-excellent,, radio,.high/ block seat*. S595 •2147,. 472*4162. Barry Gllllngwater Co. firm. 453-9779. cents to sl.00 Saturday-Sunday only. paid. All paneled and carpeted. 305 and . SERENA 2-1 duplex. Fireplace, XA/CHf own WAITERS/WAITRESSES wanted. with or without pictures . fhone 441-2425. v 401 West 3»th. ^54••••• • •• •• $1.25/hour. No experience necessaVy. 2 Day Service See BUI at The Split Mil inn. 217 South tires, refrigerator, tent, pop-top. Asking and white, trl-color. Call 453-6529 ment very close to UT-shuttle bos -rent nearfshuttie, must be student and Uke VW CAMPER, wide* oval tires, 2 extra COLLIE PUPS, AKC registered, sable LUXURIOUS.3 bedroom/2 bath apafP* SI PARK bills paid. 1907 Robbins Place. 478-1841. -—MAc&dCKYE BE-DftDOM 180. On River Lamar. ' ,r" . • 472-3210 and 472-7677 9210 Northgate Blvd. & StSOJO. 444-9499, Mike. ^ evenings and weekends. reduction, 472-4S76. . LARGE 2 BEDROOM/Bath, ABP. peHJ441-71.il, CA/CH, shuttle, poof, 2208 Enfield Rd. . NEED SOMEONE to care for 2 b6ys BOBBYE OELAFIELD. IBM SH«trlC­ 196» OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme.' WEIMAKANERS, outstanding . $5" Flats $188 ABPi» 476-0734. OPENING IN FOUR Bedroom house. after . school* 2:15 to1 S:30. Light plca/elite. 23 yetrt expetlence, booki, Console, bucket seats, 68,000 miles, ex­fulttrfdtded -pups. No papers, parents <£* SUNNYVALE Luxury 1 bedroom Studio, IV* bath. Own. room University area,: 170 plus housework. 4594990 affer-5:45 p.m. cellent condition. S9B5. After 5 p.m^ 476--frost-free« refrigerator, self-cleaning. UNEXPECTED VACANCY. Furnished, (il»»erlalloni, thes»j, repor11. • bills CarL 452-3374. mlnn^orophlno. 442*7194.' purebred. Males 155. After Si 00 or oven. Fireplace, wet bar. Private patio /. .StKL--. t weekends, 9a*1321. APTS. luxury mini-apartment on shuttle. Rent j& storage. No children. Swimming pool .reduction. 4)05 Speedway. Manager FURN. HOUSES -•VTI".", >">!»I.uk.r> Wi 1 FEMALE: Free room &. board for VIRGINIA. SCHNEIDER OlvenlfM *(9 COUGAR X-R7 convertible,excellent AKC LABRADOR Pups. Yellow and 1 BDRM$+30 r-i 1 & pool table. apartment 203.. 452-2462, 476-5948. 345-someone who loves horses, in-the coun­ r«du»t» Services. Graduate and undergraduate condltloQ, 51,000 miles, new-transmfe-.black females. Excellent bloodline*.45J-. Manager Apt. 112 • 4555.'. v •• • • .. . try, 15 mfnutes^^from campus: 926*4499.' typing,-printing, "binding." 15151Xoehlfl.;; slon, brakes;. tires; AM/FM, cassette.' •9757. ••...•• '*•••• 2 BDRM S1S0 836-9031 444*3)61 COUNTRY HOUSED Near Jonestown, 2 Lane..459*7205. MustSell. -477-7153. , CASA BLANCA Apts. 2506 Manor Road. IMMEDIATE OPENING diip female bedroom, furnished, secluded. Tom 1304 SUMMIT 441-0584 £!1(ymonth ABR. ;no deposit if tenant 1100 plus elect..Qwn room, Carport, near. Glassock. 267-1856, 926-6129 (Keep STARK TYPiNG. Speclalty; Technical-> 1974 2HZ DATSUM. White, 9,000 miles, Homes' -For Sale -3 Blocks to Shuttle paints apt.We furnish paint.Lease for 6 UT. Debbie, 476-2683, 476-8179.-• -trying). ~ . E xperlenced theses, dissertations. PR's, AM/FM,-air, 28 mpg, hwy warranty.. '^ r months and get last month's free rent. manuscripts, etc. Printing.'binding. LAKEjAUSTIN. Quiet country living 15 S5200. Eves 454-814%. UNDER 120,000.-Large 3 bedroom, IVa 474-5550. Resident manager. FEMALE ROOAAAAATE share large T •try:1 -Cherlene Stark, 453-5218; • • mlnu1W»mpus/downrown, 1 • bath home, priced below FHA ap­MOVE IN TODAY! OAK CREEKS bedroom cottagfe ISO/month plus . i. t bedroom T969 VOLVO 164. Air, automatic, praisals, less than one mile to campus. . .1 BEDROOM, 1bath;.2 bedroom, 2 bath:' utilities. 476-7516 or 478-3698. mobile home $70; ^bedroom S120; cabin MINNIE. L. HAMMETT Typing & Mlcteiln.tires. Very good condition. *1,-Call Rick, 452-9626, 454-7646. Fllip 570;-houseboat S120. 327-1891, 327-115). 1 .block. from major thoroughfare 20 Dupllca'tlng Service. Theses, disser-; • 600, "Goyer. 471-551—and - • 6239; 472-3938. sso/month.plus ^ bills. Walk to shutHe^ fenced backyard, covered parking, ex­215. '• •' 454-0559.after 5 p.m. Pets OK; 476-5597. • • Children's tra storage room. Plus washer,; dryer LARGE CARPETED efficiency. 7700 ". -mnn»r*Wn* fur­ 1972 VEGA GT Hatchback. Air, 4 speed/ None'over $15 Kltrh+n ePO»anCei PAT1MOODY makes your paper, look at • MOVE IM'TODAY ; Swisher-, .1 block Law School, LIBERAL FEMALE share duplex. Own. •, nlshed tl60 plus bins, can VTS-zm: •good for 50"eenla-page. Eait Rlvenidt '. -excellent jcondltlon, 3ft000 miles. 1308 $115/m0nth; 4784550.-; room. S60-plus V^ bUiu-CR' shuttle^: ^1-5884. Ruth Avenue, after 4:30* p.m. . , IBR -$125 $140 -W Sharon, 478-1237. " I The Bead Shaman ' " FOUNTAIN TERRACE • 2505ENFIELD ROAD. Efficiency, ABP, Just North fit 27th-at; '70 AUDI. =4,speed, air, AM/FM, APARTMENTS ihuttle, laundry, ample parking, pool, ROOAAMATE NEEDED, own room In 3 ARCHITECTURALLY designed on golf Guadalupe- reasonable. Also has spare car parts. 2200 Guadalupe MARK XX courtyard. Il25/frtbntn.; 478-9171. . bedroom house; S76 plus bills: 477-0901, course, 2 bedroom, appliances, carpet, 451-4296. Large 1 bedroom, large closets, fully drapes. Couple «165. 2805 Lowell. 345­ 454*3953 2908 French Place. . 093 carpeted, cable, disposal, water, gas,* 2707 Hemphill Park *135/MONTH.. Near University. 1. '68 vw-BUG.-New eoglne, good condi-3815 Guadalupe* swimming pool, furnished;Walking dls« bedroom,. CA/CH, dispose), dishwasher; ' ONE BEDROOM, S75 ABP; Walk-to cam* tlon, can after 6:00 p.m. 441-3431-tance to -UT. No children or pets. 610 pool, laundry facilities water/gavpeid< pus, Upper division student, preferred. r CLOSE DOWNTOWN'and shutlte bus. — West 30th 477*8858. Perfect 3 to 4 students. Luxurious 3-3, <> ^ CASUALLY YOU 44T2 Avenue A. 452-4249.. -, Cell Michael, 476-5339. . carpet, fireplace,' fuff--kLfchen v Mbtorcydes -For Sale Creative Outdoor Portraits ANTILC.ES — -5Tudeni4 See.Thts one. :• • ONE BEDROOM apartment within NEED~MALE ROOMMATE to* there k appliances, washer/dryer connection, Save 16 Now walking distance UT. Shuttle bus. $129 mobile home.PreferstudenT.Call jack: v CA/CH. S265 plus bills. No pets. E)eposlt Visit our Studio-WATERLOO FLATS iP^us, ufTilfies, s$0 deposit. 208 East 3lsf. 476-2606, 475*0343 after. 6 p.m.\_.\ ; • required. 261-5479 or leave message 477-' • : MBA SAVE.MONEY! Call u! befpre buying APTS. T r.-y. 2 Bedroom/yBath; Furnlshed/Unfur- ( 5709. • • i motorpycle insurance. Lambert 'in-Royce Portraits . • 2204 Enfield • nlshed. tftwfrcnble/ walk-ins, pbol, com- 451^75^7 ,...Ty.PINO, PRINTING, BINDINGS®® iurvnc* Associates, inc. 4200 Medical • plete Kitchen.' close' to'shopping and * LARGE OLD STYLE 2 bedroom. Quiet J*y1ipH^;CA/CTf;.cable, convenleni-900 • Parkway, 452-2564. . 2420 Guadalupe Town Lake. STUDIO "-APAR.TMHKirfirept»ce);, WANTED ^ neighborhood/' off. Oiforf. »)20/month, fei , East 51st. S134 plus E. 451-3464, 472-5129. IBDRM'205... . S170 unfurn!shed/Sl99furnlshed *iiit Included327*0425. •'-5 -THE COMPLETE 197Q HONDA 350SL. Recent overhaul, ALL BILLS PAID many new parts, runs great. Asking — : " 472-1923 41 Waller Street -. TARRYTOWN. Shuttle/ mature s\ngiet For fast service,;lesions, and good : ,NEAR SHUTTLE BUS. J-1: »125/month. B BUY, SELL, andrestring tennisrackets. -.PROFESSIONAL m S525..451-41H6710 or 345-3995. • VINTAGE i. • SHUTTLE STOP •< *. 474-4493 i -> 472-4165 efLE7ELY REDECORATED large prefer UT area prlvate entrance S90/mo / TYPING SERVICE 1246 or 442-3486 after 6:00. THREADS HABITAT •garage apt. Private parklng^ treeii two or less 472-8852/ ' ROOMS 472-3210 and 472-7677­ , . . Fifrtktional Flnei blocks University Texas, Lease 4764063. 7972 HONDA CL3JC. Low like (MAYNARD l$1tE8SI TAKE UP LEASE on one bedroom. Cell lion rickef to OU game. 471-5569. : new,1550; Call Steve, 4424376. Keep irt*y ready!) 0UF HUNTERS^ Kmtton NEED TO BUY 1 date or general admls-; TEXAN DORM. IW'Nuecei. Ooublei inff ^ NEED AN APARTMENT 3 447-8829 aHer tlx. A •• • H20/S«me»ler.r Single* M»S/S»me«ter; MISCELLANEOUS 2405 NUECES FOR FALL? : | NEED TWO good tickets for Texas vv;^:_O.I|y_ mald service, central ' air. Retrloeralort, hot platej allowed. Two ' ~TWO BEDROOM/Two bath abarfment A4M game. Call 476-5298r ^fitocktJcfi£D^«mpui, Co-Ed. Be»ldent 1 ' ©IVE US A CALL! -Northwesr Austin. $200/month. Call 345­ h eluded. Cell John. 4414392, Habitat Hunterv u FREE:: apartment "i, 4907br34jh6^1, MOTHERS' CO-OP* ^Working-mother : ^ . : INTERVIEWS !&:-'72Vi:HONDA CB35 CREEK dent .complexes. .*'• • Extra nice*-convenient efficiency; $125 itJW, OSi MS monthly. Maid service/: ;Kar® MOVE IN TODAY ' ,,pluse!ectrlclty. 453-2640.624 W,37th, No. CAR POOL FROM MANCHACA'-v : needs married .& single couples.* both-' HABITAT HUNTERS -Unms, AC, ABP, near capital, 30) East gay and straight. • Sett Rale on the Lake \% :^.:i05. Manager: 4544467.. Stajiney ares to UT. Hour» 8-5 Monday-, 1973*400 CZ MXallplastic Konis Mlkuhl, Shuttle But Pront Door '(<. Friday. 441-0431. t]th.,To see. contact :joe Prametll 472-After 6 p.m. call 476-4426 or fot» of extras; Make offer,-476-2678. 288---' J400 Town Lake Circle tm, 478-4416. acre tract. PrfcMright./Moderate down-•ifsT-Xt* 5",'¥®C • M-tUO BIBLE JOKES. I write 1602 Palma Plaia, 8"*nc* "n,nce<' 10 ?*• • year. .£•fe'SI 474-tS32• • BUSINESS 0PP. .new,fresh Bible iokes3"^!*'*^! Tom!. . SINGLE. ROOM, in Doble available: at Austin, TX 76703, : * Tfra.HARLEV-DAVIOSOM H0350 for end of semester. 475*9324 evenings, 4 47M92I. Ml*.m-B EaM.Wh. ; ,, ­NELSON'S GIFTS: .Zunl Indian •m NEED TOJUY a doghouse for • large mM|E4W.397?,n,'V" ""'"V 'P*'"' lewelryi. Atdcan and Me«lcan Imports.: 'itBSA 441Victor Rxuidiler.Overtiiulcd EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY for LUXURY COLORFUL onceina do0.'V2«^3M. Please keep lrylnj. . mwt. 477.3975. ( rwlnfc r»w «10tchinw1r6nl Iprk*. iKarafe tralnlng. Take over cont/adt at v Mmdays Congr£». 444-3814.Cloie(l 1 as.mmt. S120 a montb: Cbll 453-8809*. " ^EFFICIENCIES ^lifetime opportunity -FURNISHEO ROOM. At) bills paid; 853, : -fi& 3310 Red River. 472-WJI. 1BR -$160 ' . ?*• A *.A ^T. n»"€lty Block FfltMle.SMj.OUft./ LOST & FOUND l-EARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beglnner • and-, advanced, Drew Thomason.' 478-' Motorcycles -far ^t-tlocki lo campus, dishwasher/ dis­ii..r-~2.ZrL -f|w9«tt«r^ onall 4 tldei,Th!» prsparfyha> ^2079, Sole rm posal, pool/ etc—-/'-' ONE'3-BEDROOM <">»-»tOfy r«nlal-re«ldence»:all facing LOST, MALE CAT.. White with dark, -47417J2 —MtiJJU y^t^DCL/RWIVlO). .nnwurMi, with a minimum yeaHvli?. stripes,, short hair. Around* Robbrns-UNF. HOUSES HOpSEiSTALLS Ipr rent-Runs, arena, -Wcome of y5.700. .TH« r6m.tn[ng-'^ b]ock. Place. Pleeie call 4W-47W. , • • •tJSf .andjxdrt ij.arena»^ Reasonable rates ,-^ -<41,340sd^lfl) ,igndeveldp»d."6lie/lentItUhdeveloDMtw*ii»nt. f Phone Don, m-4499. gas-grid,ias-arl(l petsnets olToK, r^ocfllMrwitpimmedla(e-potentl.l--luil LOST-GIRL'S Hlph school Senior ring, * sc^i-»v6>r • COzyiCommunlty BurkburnetJ High BlacK-stonewlthjofd -TIRED OF THE DORMZ f-RO.ECTORS for rent. Slides, 14mm" * , AT >124,(X»..HEIRS" : B.;fn(tlalCiC.Lv.imgreved.Inside..1. -JIW.' WMr^srroyie, screens,: dissolve, near shuttle ;^-SMUSTT SESELL TO.SETTLfe ESTATE 453-1)44 Rewtrd. THEN MOVE — Marcos rpppi^ flftliH 1M .DautN iil.1174 n. Jfn <Servtayiroven results" BUY/ SEt-L PLAYBOY, Penthouse'; efe a ' ' x »-®r«e Security. Volleyball Court off Blanco -,, 472-4162 cbesfviteeds medication," Reward' 447-s 19p1 Willow Creek ^ -V ' RENTAL BUREAU^ stereosf;^«onjs, :M0 ,Congress, down- mm. aTi UNF. APARTS. 9119 town-m LOST BEAGLfpUPPY (4 months) Jn 4S9|Cu«delupe OffE^gaysc-4. S"t \ ' ' 1 " —K " -4itjL.ndR.ed River area Needs mtdlca­ rtionrffewaHlri59:W59p^«^^ IEXRG^'OLDTT ar3"T>«MiMV-9Ul»t— SI40 Sf59.50 ntlghborhood near Brackenrldpe ROOM & BOARD H0spltal.sl75/m9nthplusbllls.337-0425,;: rm-z #M-\. BILLS-PAID^ -'Bed^ni^*' ^ B!d!l00rTl n-r-** balconies, and beau^iul SSSTWJF 'Sffl'b San AAarcosand visitTexas' '" 'A" B,,,s PaId HALLMARK APTS. TUTORING , TO PLACE A »H7,»/month; • Ri iK-ASlnaless?— 1 •a/v*' Buckingham Square"^ -^LASSIFIEC^p! immi 708 W. 34th, i •^plmtnlri>mtht>^lfq,p,rlu,gclU(M fj<'/' * 'newwt-HpndSkdealer •,7H-Wt'32nd * ^^wmsIrwnSlil.'a?!fillsWifd.'AiwJ " fi'U'5,1,'!?,TUTORING, Graduate st'u- Wts. 454*4487 ' 454-8239' . r ^nornecWKed-njcalS/rACi'maidiSwlm*"-^ "•••"" W-­ sM M I'-.&r'ir' rM Rage 18 Thursday, October 17, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN J, 1 Ever •*\'k Vi* ''; , ¥ \. By MARIANNE DAVIS ular. Now since more, people--$2,000 and $3,000 per day; > While prices on many ha've learned to use them and products are going ..up daily; :• the prices have dropped; the ; The use of calculators in the. price of-the pocket=' scientific models are. selling classes at the-University, is/ .Hog producers arecaught in" calculator continues to drop. •more." Akery said. • •— r • . still a.controversial issue. a .'.'feed price pinch" which A check with several Austin* . Calculator sales -have-also-----"A-eurvey -of-several math retailers Wednesday showed will resultIn higher pricesand increased greatly: " and accounting-professors in-< decreased supply for pork in prices have fallen as much as dicated that while many allow • 1975; Texas Agriculture Com­ $50 in the-last year on some . ( "WE RAN a.special on one their students to use the "> Sag models. ;model .last we'ek and sold &i$rmissioner John G: White said pocket calculators.-they try to Wednesday. '.'One model dnspped-^as • them-all the first day," Akery structure their tests, so that much-as $20 in one w^ek," said. "Hog producers, .like all calculators are-not necessary. livestock men, are caught in said David Akery, a.salesman? The University Co-Op Some professors;forbid the the feed supply . and price at Gibson's Dicount Center. • reports:sales totaling between. ' use of calculators on iests. Competition -and lower bind," White said, "and with expected J974 grain yields development costs were the down, coping with the feed main .reasons cited for the Energy Studies Center price decreases. overriding concern in the hog "The market , has become To Discuss Research situation headache is. the industry." flood edT~A1most-everyonens--" . Producers have: reduced: putting out calculators,", said "' The University Center .for ed to provide information and " breeding to meet the decreas­David Wallrngsford, a Energy Studies', -will hold a . seek funds for energy-related ed feed supply,and thedecline' salesman, at Hemphill's meeting Thursday to acquaint research," Tom; Hill, a staff "in pork siif>ply -will cause a Bookstore. • V >• fall interested faculty member,: said Wednesday.­rise in prices towards the end ' members with the nature of MOST stores now offer a :~~-The jcenter promotes the center' and its 'reseairch: of the year, White said. basic four-function model for " research in a.variety of areas. '111 support services.-f-.. * ° As of Sept. 1, the com-" under $20. However, the more including geothermal, lignite, ­missioner said there were scientif ic modeIs ha've -, The status of energy bills in soiar, nuclear and wind riM 790,000 market hogs in the T#J«photb become the'-most popular in Congress, prospects for -new power, energy conservation, ^±2£$. state, a-.decreaseof 15 percent I' 1 ' ' watermen &£?<••• 9 i. _ a-—. the Austin area. These models energy legislation and the energy policy issues and en­ from last year. Sometimes water can be as much of a problem as fire to " (I) struggles through knee-deep water while fighting a perform such functions as .availability of funding for* vironmental effects. Local meat: merchants con- Bedford fireman Mike Furrie and Marvin.Gibsom Furrie f're. Gibson (r) is quitted in emptying his boots. logarithms, square; roots and eneiigy-related resfearch will firmed White's price predic­-have memory registers. be reviewed at the 4 p.m. • A presentation of the Texas-* tion:" -— — ' --meeting in Will C. .Hogg geothermal-research program "Pork isgoing to-rise," said "When they first came out, on the energy potential in Gulf Building 14. iHV-5, V£ Foley's DecentraIizes Chain themanager of the FirstPrize• the basic four-function jis • •• • Coastgeopressured sands-will-: Meat Market, 753 Montopolis-calculators were more pop-•'The center was establish­conclude,the program., Blvd., "There are too many .expenses'inbetween." ' President Stresses Regional Buying s i: A representative of the The president ol-Foley's;-?: success to its ability to buy in various groups with a buyer Cheney. 471-42 meat department of Foodiand with their MBAs," he'said. Houston's largestdepartmehl Tegionai-areas. for regional specializing in particular, of Austin; Inc., 3800 T^J. Lamar ^-^Bepartment_stares,irv: the lost GT,. 35..-fnpg, 4 speed, store chain, discussed the ." tastes. "Management in items," he said. ­ -, IwfcW, good "tires tiwo 476=81t» •tterii: Bivd.,.sai'd, "He-(White) was East, Northeast and "Midwest ch ai n's d ecen t ra1ized Chicago' tan't know fashionl %-Orton said .Foley's had [.pi right. Pork prices went up are on a down cycle," Orton OPEL G"JV4 speed, 8 track am/fm, organization with University trends in Houston, Texas," he* -changed a policy on hiring 16,500 miles. S29S0. 471-5717 ' • onsidfitablv this week. Pork told the group. He blamed dis­Pur.-.^shed and Um _ -graduate: hnsinAgg stiiftpnts said. One and twl loin is a.dime £ pound higher; employes with a master's in count stores and the trend SANSUt 7000 receiver: 70/70 rms. VciH?' _. • -TappanA Wednesday. "We have been the powerfuM Also 100 watt speakers, sSfe business Administration for~ . OtshwaCtacr, di»i In two more weeks I expect toward suburban chopping as—J -All. Att.-^cn -... • . .­ Stewart Orton, appearing in vanguard of firms as far-as department-managers. ——-••• tndfvidoftity. -rrcHled_22 . another increase." major factors in declining NEVvjCHW#NN Varsity;Green 24"and CA;CH, poph T^/clSev the Distinguished Speakers wages, benefits andfairness,"-Traditionally.. Foley's tiid SEVEN.TOWEkS sales for these stores. " , Students'.^ Series, said lower level ex­Orton added, emphasizing the* •not like to . hire MSAs. >-5f96 Orton said.stores in Uiese- THEY'RfSEEN, ecutives have a "limited chain's policy of being sen­Management felt all new Intment iva/ CHt-yROLET.. paneiedpaneled truck/body : • areas "will have to come up and msLe very,good. Motor and trans- S3» access to the higher, com­ .Attorney sitive to problems of people in employes • needed 'the same with some really brilliant kthe baby Rolls-e*ce»lei!).*7P0.-472-30M-after 1 p.m. No Lease The students' attorneys, Frank. mand. This forces them to the company. training. |mired &ut could Keep ir/mg. Furnished and Unfinished ideas" to pull out of the slump .Ont Bedroom Apartments Ivy and Ann Bower, are make their own decisions." Orton said Foley's has • When Foley's' hired an MBA: "fcht-hand dr^e; lido*1 RLL'ABUBused car 1948 tor'd Tappan Appliances thej are in. rSvperh,. clj Mai asher, disposal, gas stove available by appointmentfrom. Foley's, a division of doubled -sales evpry -six and from Exxon Corporation, "he ; •'.We are constantly working: Itresloratioi :8;-NC MS "*./b •M r controlled CA/CH,TV cabiJ 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday Federated Department one-half to seven years and in 'made a buyer in-nine months, jstlll beingIMP _l m. QUINTANA• V. : : " out new methods to deal with » fftyi Thio ls on ln= le!v .CUTLASS' tydor; fit, ac. PS. aood •4316 Bull rreek -Road: • . • 454.12 _ through . Friddy • in Speech • Store?, Inc., uses, division the-process has doubled its which is exceptional, so we CalJ Joe.La FiCo. Days. new types,,of: competition; f worth more-tn 6 444-6172 (Please leave message-). marketing managers tofunnel buying staff. took another look -at people -F4-I227 after 5. / • Building, Room: 3. -Telephone " Orton said: '' -•' .Evenings after I. 442-1087. v s £v*the blackstone 471-7796. The students' at-v information from higher "In our men's department;• ;• paid for diamonds. S50 -Call torneys-wilt handle-landlord-we have grown two and one-50/monm ­ management to .department SW 50/month tenant, consumet protection, heads and to relay Tesponse TialT Tinfes m. tBe number or Orton stressed the separation buyers, he said. Sgt. Doyne Bailey, Austin Policeman DF.H-J.Jre j employes' rights, taxation, and insurance cases. , of management from in­"When-, a department has ROYAL.-ELECTRIC INSIGHTS1NTO A POIICEMAN'S ypSSier, iTOOV^i" R" Rlver dividual departments. grown to a certain point, we [ FRETTED in-" fce. ;Paraaon ProperJ 1^ . Of ton also,credited Foley's wiH split, the. buying into |al reasonable aarj f UNCLASSIFIED LIFE IN AUSTIN , OULClAAEfikT rCHP/v."B^iMi aJfbmaHfc, air, LdJscount STaii \Amster MOsic. :• tony 9pod, bodyaamage. S200.Call attar V^SK TQi TO 5; 476*1905, I.BeltyDanclnglnslructlon 472-3344. SOUP AND SANDWICH SEMINAR-OUR •t Toshiba SR40 tumtabl;. Hotline Offers Parents, NORDAN LOUNGE TODAY AT NOON US'''~|^os,tsM!riT^S,K'•«'Bot VCCcitMj '« vw but.o. Condft. UX. 474-SSM. Day ddv< hunting • Idtkl. 442-3109. Teens Peace of Mind UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH llJe commvnltK coni'erften# *fo* fc^ popping aQj^gnventMtly lPr-Jr Operation Peace of Mina, is staffed-by 100 volunteers 1 •• • 4/7 *&&& ­ •N frw Hodaka 1550. 4J3-K37. Goad boy. the first nationwide toll free ,2007 University Avenue trained-to handle any'crisis '..•'AS B3A retxjltt engin* 44T-5680 : . hotline of its kind in America; which might arise. Fre« puiiy cati. 4M-M52 has-taken on a new and unex­pected dimension.' Financed rat first through' •flFord auto/air. clean. Aft: 5 4724340. "It has expanded," hotline private: contributions, thq ' Api. available at boble: 441-7M5. •­ volunteer Suzanne .Randolph organization has -recently :3 5pd. bike Jllce'new, /; said, "into something we been supplemented with a • Sell7 UT-Ark IM«, 47V1193, 477*0428, never dreamed possible. In grant of $21,000 from the TexjJV 1974 CACTUS 2 10-spd Schwlnnv. (4D & UO. 4:1-4010 addition to providing relief to as; Criminal Justice Division.s.c worried parents of runaway • -aj? ; Have date tickets UT-Ark, 4S3-M25. -When the hotline was first youngsters, the program has announced by Gov. Dolph ; 10 Speed & car rack 190. 44I4VM. < been able-to provide peace of Briscoe, it was stressed-it YEARBOOK Sell shlrts tohlp thopi. S36-Slll. mind -to the teenagers would not' be a "detective-••themselves." type" organizationand the en^' ' Following the discovery of tire program would be built HAVE YOUR COPY VET? the bodies of 27 slain teenage aroiind confidentiality,. MICROWAVE OVENS; dornwlte boys in the Houston area, the refrigerators, . color -TV's, Volunteers would in no way washers/dryerv stereos for rent. EZ hotline began onSept.'11,1973, compel the youngsters to • Rentals.:«• East 1st. 472-4275. as an effort to provide some reveal their whereabouts and : . S.TAJDIQ tor rent for teaching piano or communication link between voice. 2 blocks from campus. 47t-2079, •would only serve as a "third .^.runaways and their parents. party" to transmit to their CAMERAS FOR RENT. .Polaroids^ Thehotline headquarters, 35mm, 2V4, ;4*5,, tripods, :and light ? friends and parents any meters. Capitol-Camera Rental, 474-': provided by a Houston ^notel, messages they, might have. ISIWIIlllS ***«» *«V' ;«£®&: For Resident Fees Raise Hundreds of students are.-' actions, that exemplify firm By ROBERT GOETZ less encourage a wealthy mao:" paying out-of-state tuition un­intent to reside in Texas,".City Council's proposed $12,000 per year Black also sa(d a charter amendment necessarily, according to Jim LaGrone Said. -v -iW~> I < : jsalarjvJf finally approved Thursday by the would come before the San Antomo.populace .-Osborn^-University om­• • A person must live in Texas'": councilmen; would put them in the most en­Nov. S to increase the pay of-San-Antonio ki budsman. -12 months to be considered. viable financial position of any similar body councilmen. It was placed unanimously on J* * ) -»***#•*«* 1 ",!The7e is an average of 4,---dthef-faetw^,^whish reflect a ' in the state. the ballot by thecouncil aftera recommenda­•v.300 out-of-tftate students per person's intent to -'establish • -In the twojgrgest cihesinTexas, Houston tion by the city's charter commission ** «* v, \ *3r semester here," Osborn said. residence, include banking in :v m. and Dallas, t»y raises, tor the city council Attorney Larry Gilmore, a Dallas city "Of those, 2,173 have been Te'xast having a Texas ?' \r ^ -have, under provisions of their respective councilman', said aneffort to raisethe council: here more than a year and driver's license, registering to city charters, been placed on the ballot in the pay from $50 to $100 •jjer meeting was possibly, qualify 'for resident vote in Texas, holding a job >f§ last six years. Inboth cases;the measure was defeated by the Dallas electorate in a recent status." here, evidence of community If:. defeated.-< . ' charter election. * -.Osborn estimates that the' involvement and the registra­ Austin'voters, too, rejected a pay raise in Historically, voters turn-down any kind of :: University receives more tion of a car here. Two factors ^ r i ^ •April, 1973, but the charterallows thecouncil pay raises for political officials, hesaid. But, ' ' X'^ than $234,000 each year from which seldom ~apply-toto vote a pay. raise, the.currentunfavorable attitude of voters ... A&X* sni ^i^{MsB^slSP : students, classified -as -non-. students, but-which can help ; I» At present; the: highest-paid* member-of a toward elected officials was a factor in the ** ' S A ' » «• 3*. " !1? residents who are. eligible to establish residency, are 'the |>®i5SS city councihdn Texas is theRouSton mayor, defeat of the Dallas council pay raise. pay-the lower resident rate. ownership of land and a will IPfe who receives a salary,,of $2.083-per month. GlLMORE'SAID the" advantage' of a • Presently, nonresident fee" listing the person's residence W: However, councilmen in Houston receive;;^ifulltiihe salaried >city council would be tb m, —Tenon-staff rheto by'Andy'StoMrman-~bills--average729. peias Texas.,^ . [?&\ only $300 per month. '"enaMea broader section of peopleto be able semester as compared to $189' LaGrone emphasized that El Paso councilmen are the most well-paidUh"': to serve." The -present scale "almost ex-Lonely Traveler ^ » for Texas residents. although the factors arein Texas, receiving $400 per month. 5 eludes a.woricihgman." The five o'elpck traffic can be a heavy problem at the 19th-to-Guadalupe Street toVn^C M weighed together; some are mi. MANY students are ' Dallascouncilmen receive $50 per meeting, He said that in Dallas, there are minority but this cyclist hat not onlyjhe right of way but the wjioje Da'th to himself. more important than others. bewildered jw^.to. the re­ .„and San Antonio councilmen receive only $20 members of the council but that these are -, 'iiTHE ^registration of an quirements.for*reil3iency arid" per meeting.-professional men. "Because of the (ime'com-- automobile is important the -procedure involved',.1-;; IT MIGHT appearincongruous to compare mitment, there is not really a representation because a student has to pay Osborn said... The -confusion .S. Back Pay city council i»yscales, given the differences: of the people at all levels (in Dallas)" personal property taxes on it. ^, stems from the legal agein the: size, .of,'the/cities,' position;-, duties, • Houston City Councilman Larry McKaskle Voting Is obviously very Im­ responsibilities, experience and abilities of said the job of city^councilman: has grown Ex-Employes May Be Eligible lit s/jiKchange from 21 to 18. portant because it indicates Uie councilmen and local economic con­from .being a part-time job to a fulltime-one. &"/ W.hen the legal age -of an interest ih local affairs," The Veterans Administration and the ditions. ..... He said, "I would:prefer to see a fuiltime . .;nto effect;O0X)ct..l, 1972 adulthood was 21, it was.... LaGrone said. federal information center have announced But it is the general opinion of several "Council." " V.jjf1 Nixon held back the increase for three almost impossible for a stu-V that those persons who werefemployed by the councilmen representing Texas': largest McKaskle noted .the council pay scale-in 'months after Congress approvedit The issue dent not from Texas to attain;' "An individual's case is cities ttet toge dtjrrequires fulltime coun-' Houston has remained .unchanged since 1922; U.S. government between Oct. lv 1972, and . was ultimately settled when a federal court resident status. Students weakened if he files his in­cilmen and the pay should reflect this fact.-: The last -time -it was brought before the Jan. i, 1973 are due -three months back pay ruled the President had -illegally denied' either had to marry a Texas come tax in another state orif because of the failure of the government to The Rev. Clauide Black, a San Antonio city. .. voters., in 1968.-it was rejected. federalemployes the three months pay." resident, join a Texas unit of his parents still claim him as councilman, said "a fuiltime council respon-j Although he feels city'councilmen in . .pay a legally authorized raise during that Eligible veterans who have not received the, armed forces or; stay otit< a dependent," he added. .period. sibility is,inttea'singly., going to have to" fT Houston should be receiving , more pay. their back pay should contact their branch of. ' of school and work for a year. If. a student is denied become mandatory.'' . When formei" President Nixon "instituted McKaskle "thinks the city council is the service at the.address listed below: • f He cited the complex-nature of city ad-representative." , wage aiid price controls : in 1972, federal • Army: Commanding General, U.S. Ar­"The legal age was changed residency, he can appeal to" ministration and the fact (hat people hold a AUSTIN CITY Councilman Bob-Binder is-employes and-members of the armed forces my. Finance Support Agency, TINC-A, In-to 18, and the U.S. Supreme the UT System law office. were deprived for three months of a pay in­ Court revised the ruling on councilman responsible for hisactions astwo^sS? not concerned about the pay scales of other dianapolis, Ind., 46249. -"STUDENTS should not be" crease passed by Congress. Tresidepcy, Max LaGrone, reasons why the present urban situation''^' city councils* However, he is concerned with • Navy: Commanding Officer, Navy afraid to appeal the decision," Now'those employes who are no longer assistant director:/ of ad­ requires a"serious look at fuiltime people."few?-the problems of Austin and feels Austin coun- Finance Canter, Anthony J. Cellebrezze> said Osborn. "Frequently r missions, said. LaGrone is CONC'EitNlNg THE sitUdtiuiir iirSim^i^s^eilmen^^'WahoriOiffigs-otB^a^ -^wortogior.theJederal govgrnmejjt^mayJ^ Federal Buidihg. Cleveland. Ohio, 44199. " 'students are turned down by j:< -_ It _ . • % . ° " Pltcnnla'fnr tkA nnti innwnnrfno responsible for reviewing tonio, Black said it is"still geared to more or eligible'for the pay increases * ' • Air Force:tAir"Tbrt?"Accounting-and-: the adfnissions office and are Mcst employes who currently work for the eairtr individual—case-and—successfuLwhenihey.appeaLit ,1 -'Finance Center, AFC, 3800 York St., Denver, • Action federal government and were' federal :;;.-Colo.. 80205. \± determining the status. downtown," he said employes during that .^three-month period • Marine Corps: Finance Center, Ex^ "IN accordance with the Further information may bereceived their back-pay-test-summer. amination Division, Kansas'City, Mo. 64197." Supreme Court's ruling, the . obtained from the admissionsThe increase was part of an across-the­• Coast 'Guard: Commandant, U:S. Coast University has revised the .office, students' attorney andboard 6.14 percent pay increase which went Centers Guard. &FPA-2/71. Washington, D.C.,M590. standards-. I look at all overt the University ombudsman. Steffi •WIMIWIIWMIUI e c pPif : Ecology. Action can no The group isa nonprofit stu­recycled newsprint, Ecologyjfi'" longer accept paper products, dent volunteer organization... "Action was breaking even. ^—-especially-aewspapers._Xor: ~which: Operates recycling' "Truck rental alone could now recycling, Dick Shocket, centers in donated space aT tip the Balauce and make us— member of the organization's 8100 N. Burnet Road, Red Bud go under,"' Shocket said. v board of directors, aai'd Trail and'Lake Austin' Ecology Action members • 305^WEST T9TH *ej-, Wedbesday. Boulevard and West 24th and have checked and found there ; a: "We are still taking Seton Streets. is no market for recycled everything that we took Persons. bring • who newspaper in Austin, San An- before for recycling, except newspapers to Ecology Action ..tonio or Corpus 'Chri&ti. newspaper,"becausedemand centers often get angry when-•. "Recycled newspapers in | SfW,? 9^ ysgfit •si for new^>rint has fallen off, they discover the organization Texas go primarily into, in­thm he said. " y' •:no longer collects bundles of sulation material for Cl ' '"This is an important plea newsprint, Shocket said. ' buildings; When, there is" a i S( for us because if enough • "Figuring they've done slump in the building market, | newspaperge,t$ dumped on us, their bit' for ecology, people there is a slump in the we could, go under, finan­ just dump newspaper On us, materials market Therefore,cially/'-Shocket said. ;g leaving it up to us to rent a there is no use for. recycled ­Ecology Action is in no way' truck and get itto the dump," newspapers right now," V2 connected-with the removal of he said. , Shocket,said. I fSlJ'-S green recycling boxes oncam-; 3 Prior to the 'recent drop in , The centers still accept 1 pus^ Shocket added: .. i| commercial demand for brown; green .and clear glass as well asany metal that will. fit intoa standard oil drum for SyStem Nursing Faculty recycling. The Red Bud Trail and West.24th Street.,centers To Attend Media Fair also accept used motor oil,. » Faculty from .each.of the-six JJniversity System nursing Shocket said. ;. ^Ig^schools will attend a. media ^lir .Thursday as part of their • -•Ecology Action has been &a:;% x "s< i1 ^ * --r--1 " V v-v _ ^"I *«' m