Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin. m % ; ," ^ r 74, No."83 :Austirv Texas, Monday; 'October 21, 1974 -Ten Cei$s Fourteen Pages 471-4591 fw4w extortioner dynamites£9 * PHP* 'ower Lines |PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -Emergen-? y generators were readied SundaywhileJ Good pspitals amf utilities waited the next pove of an extortion bomber who has atnited 11 high voltage transmission; :on by 40 accountants from the Internals ' WASHINGTON (UPI) --Nelson tion to Rockefeller remains where it has' Rockefeller's nomination as vice­ ne towers. * Revenue Service and the Joint TaxCom^f always been —on the far left andthe far "Pur intent is to either collect president, is damaged but not dead. mittee, Rockefeller has disclosed he has¥ •right. .;•/,-v' Ulion or to make you people wish to Congressmen who will deal with the settled,a._fis;e-year tax bill with the fell we had," said a typewritten letter nomination-after theeleetion recess say government, paying $1 million in ad­The most conservative Republicans they are disturbed by recent.disclosures ditional taxes. ' still-have not forgiveni Rockefeller forom the bomber. It was signed by "J. IM concerning "questionable . use of not supporting Barry Goidwater in 1964, awker," a Civil War term meaning; oter or guerrilla. Rockefeller :wealth.-But they say that 5, .: Rockefeller insistpH tha nnrijt* --and most lib^al Democrats <111 what has been disclosed so far is.not '-^'routine" — the type that mul­"77 never forgive him 4or^tticai^2% (Bonneville Power Administration. serious enough to block confirmation' timillionaires undergo annually — and PPA) officials said: the:-letter was •, Only if additional damaging informa­TTie-only; senator to announce he will that the government was "five years eived Friday night, addressed to ad­ vote against Rockefeller-is Republican tion about Rockefeller's ^wealth or his ~ behind!' in collecting. v"-:_ ministrator Don Hodel. A carbon was William V. Scott, a Virginia conser-" personal or political life' is uncovered enttotlie local FBI office. Existenceof would there be a strong chance forrejec-« ,»• vative: Rockefeller's main Senate critic A NUMBER of members of the com®? ne letter was not disclosed until late •iK is Sen.. Jesse Helms; R-N;C.. another tion of the Rockefeller nomination, the mittee say that if any serious discrepant liturday. t conservative.' congressmen said. : '' cies are turned up in the Rockefeller iHODELsaidihe BPA would not pay -1M When.Congress reconvenes in mid-." audit, his nomination wifl be in real trou­ In> the House, where a handful "of ' pe extortiondemand and offered a1100,- • November, Rockefeller will be called-• • ble. But Republican defenders say this is members have said they won't support 0reward for Information leading to the before the House andSenate committees " unlikely because a man Of Rockefeller's Rockefeller, the strongest critics : are Crests and convictions of persons and grilled thoroughly -about several in-wealth has his own tax experts, and he two of the most liberal Democrats on pspohsible »"for 'the blasts. He said cidents. They inciudehis gifts of nearly has been audited every year by the1 judiciary — Jerome Waldie of California atrols of" transmission facilities were $2 million to associates, his brother's governiiient anyway. and.John Conyei^ of Michigan pepped up; BPA oversees 12,000 milesof financing a book derogatory of Arthur v transmission: line iq the Pacific Goldberg, who ran against Nelson ;s While members on both sides of the ai"-' • Botli, Waldie and Gonyers opposed lorthwest with four or five towers per Rockefeller for governor in 1970. and theMl ;sle have voiced-unhappiness over the Gerald Ford's nomination as vice­nile through-the mountain country,----audit of his income tax returns. ^ gifts and the book, the hard-corf opposj-p r e i d e t , . sn < "I THINK eventually he will, be con-Sf: ' Hodel urged hunters and hikers to stay ^irmedr^^idSen.HbwardGannon,D-^^ (way-from any suspicious looking Nev., chairperson of the Senate Rules |evices attached totransmission towers. (Corhmitteej, last week. "Though Km .no£|P® ''The explosions have thrown metal as sure as I was when we open^.the ?''®; fragments up to 400 yards," he said. ^ hearings." • ' • -•-.-' ' • ,' Rep. Don Edwards. D-Calif.." a senior •. Officials would not speculate -on'how Democrat on the House-Judiciary Com­ nany persons are involved in the' plot, mittee who has been j conducting the put the extortion letter said the' bomber Rockefeller investigation, said the Talk vas "the men and equipment to keep as nomination has "been somewhat . nany towere_as necessary to force com­. damaged," but he agreed With Cannon •?/. pliance with our demands:' ^T«xan Staff Photo Wy'PKU~Hufa ;Ufet-|n the.end Congress will confirm^. WalkingsTzill ) --Rockefeller if nothing efie is disclosed.§f§| ji PORTLAND GENERAL Electric and Oil, Migrantsan M-L i d j • • l . ~ -_y'v . CongressionaT~soiirceS"5ay--the major-' pacific Power and Light have begun 'i?!i /v\iKelKado|evich,u V -T;-1"--' a. mechanical engineeroujjiiiocf for Engineered Air Balance Co.,#kS unknown uiai could give ^ mi ciigmewea wr DQianc* w.pjss uiiKnowir that couia RockefellerKOCKetetier nergency procedures to providfe elec-rhAfLe IkaL Smm 'JI »•__ -« . • —r • • •« Lay;?*;" ° • WASHINGTON (UPI) -President / (cneckt the cooling and heating tyttem at.the Communication Complex. I*','..-^trouble is the audit of his taxes carried petroleum company Pemex. BbWwillf^# Ford holds hisfirst official meeting with jlcity in the event BPA transmission accompany Echeverria to Nogales, ther cillties are knocked out. PP&L started a Latin American chief of state Monday spokesperson said, . . Bring up the old Lincoln Street steam when he confers at the border'with Luis • • • * .'• plant and beefed up patrolling', of j^rfEchevetTU( Mvarez, President of Mex-.«% The spokesperson-had no immediately 'reaction to a Latin Americannewfe agen^l®• nission lines. ico. The talks are expjected ti> center on Dead-Day Debate TotOpen cy report from Washington that Ford J;#­ trade, oil and: illegal migrants. • • Portland Police Commander James thus creating two additional dead -days' Ford and Echeverria will confer *;llv RllfilR RTnrirn <: i -j ™ would offer, to authorize entry of a'^% By SUSIE STOLER on times for uniform or departmental ex-3rouillette, who heads, an emergency . : Texan Staff Writer without further changing the schedule. :ajns' given by some departments to'.,' ; sit'es the border in the area of limited number of Mexican farm|t|f"i workers.if Mexico would help police the I ommand post established following the '< students enrolled in all sections of a cer-i^.C ^ogales, two cities with the same name border against clandestine entry. • ^jll > explosions, said the National Guard'was -tain,class, a calendar committee reportetlfc ?cing each other across the inter- added dead day for the fall semester ^^ ® potified It may be utilized in the event of -indicates. national line between Arizona and "The Mexican government wants anpSp exam period. Snould the University Council pass the. . serious outage. agreement with the United States:/® -^'i11)6 fo""arded 10 ' -Foreign language departments are';< ,',. c -'•3; A recommendation from the Universi*^, , among those disciplines which ad^-s1 issue came to the fore a week, -whereby, our citizens who work in the'1®The first blast was discovered Oct; 4. ty Calendar Committee to change" thtf^A ? nm Lorene Rogers for' |ago, following press reports of the dis-" United States will have legal proiection!lp Three towers south of The Dalles, Ore.; first day of finals'to a dead day and push er aPProval-< .jwminister departmental finals. of petroleum 'fields courses).and since'efforts to arrange a f > at anywhere between 1 and 20 .billion of workers.". . . had happened. ? :allows for one dead day Dec: 11and an When the fall semester schedule was compromised -version of -uniform :finals4; barrels " '~ ^ .exam per/od D$c,,,l$ through-.20.. ; approved last year by the council, no ob­ • . Rogers, C.B.-Morton, recently named'i^g ­ had caused considerable hardship,'' 'last-.fe t: The.im^rtanre"'of,-Mexico's new-•oil " MORE BOMBINGS occurred Wednes-. j Previous calendars allowed for three jection, was voiced to the reduction in to head a new U.S. national energy .year's, calendar.)committee recomijiend^ • find was underscored Sunday when a Jay, and Friday nights, bringing to 11the|.'dead days each semester. dead da^s. „ ' program,; told a Senate,committee .last ed.a schedule allowing one dead day, tW®-. spokesperson for the Mexican president •lumber of towers : hit; by •• explosions, a ; The proposal from the committee is a •At least one student on .last year's week that reports of the new oU find in :? days for uniform finals, and six days for./ announced that Echeverria will bringhis lliree of \the structures toppled, but no j 'compromise between-student interests council indicated to Ellison that a larger Mexico s Tabasco and Chiapas states the regular exam penod the committeesit « two. top oil experts to the meeting with lerious outages occurred. BPA rerouted ' to create an additional dead day and ma('e the Ford-Echeverria meeting H no-class period befbre finals was not ; report stated. Ford. lower to the-Portland metropolitan area "very timely." f , . ^ professors" urgings to avoid canceling needed^ the.task force chairperson said. ^r.-The headaches over exartuschedulmg Echeverria: spent Sunday in remoteInd the populous -Williamette Valley the last two classdays tocreate a longe^v . Over the summer, students found out and dead-days should end with this Cabo San Lucas, Baja California, prepar-. Echeverria said in Mexico City Satur-'?®^ phen the blasts cut transmission lines. dead day period; about the,schedule and began to raise . semester asschedules for thespring and ing for the talks. He met there with day the-.size of tHe new petroleum fields-'®!) The, Student Government task force to objections, he added. next year allow at least a three-day ' Natural Resources Minister Horacio de had been exaggerated abroad in an';;JPne unexploded device found had five -:;;;'study the exam schedule recommended . Part, of the. reason the calendar was .^separation between the end of'classes la Fena and with Antonio Devali, the attempt to drive down world oil pricesSlS Ucks-of dynamite, another had eight, .i^'that classes Dcc. 9 and 10 be canceled. "cut4o-one dead dav was to allo.w set •and beginning of finals. •president of the-government-oWned -Floresde la Pena hasdeclared that Mex%i|­ &s-. urn ico will "not sell a single barrel of oil'*-'J below prices being charged by the Arab " countries. The immigration problem is much • ">,derS M &CF-W • '-AfteF 'agreement was reached Tasf'"' |weYitobility'°f Approval !riggers Intense Opposition m m '-year on salinity of the Colorado River, By KEN McHAMv iA^MeCUtive directon the Travis County AMjBfin i! DSmiIau . un ~ ««. ;• . >ecutive director., of thp Trnvic Pniintv of Austin," Binder continued. "It makes National were present at the first the pi^iblem of illegal-Mexican migrants -Texan Stall Writer moves and condemning his vote for the 'Democratic party,saysButler dfd make "i he issue of salary for City Coiinc. the council possible for people who are reading: of the pay proposal. The same salary. , „entering the United States by the such statements to_him in the halls of not members of their club." observer also commented, "Istood here Traillions: each y.ear _moved the embers has caused-more parliament City Hall shortly before the pdy " On the third reading Councilman to A definite correlation.existed between '-g^and watched Austin National president ;-forefront of controversial issuesoutstan­ to reinstate jpr maneuvering and attracted more proposal's first reading emerged with a; •• Lowell Lebermarin moved the salary opponents and the supporters ">r-Ed Wroe lead in the bank's executive of- _ding between the two North American |tention from AusUn's "conservative" council aides as a substitute for salary. menacing four-vote majority. of the tax and budget cuts, in the form of ficers like they were in platoon for- move ^neighbors. 1t ­ nslness and political community than The complicated parliamentary WHEN BINDER'S long-contempl.ated an organisation called the Austin a^mation." by other issue in recent histoid — out-salary motion first surfaced in Sept. 19 failed, but Love cited theconfusion of tlie Mexico is asinngifie^Hlted States to""' , Citizens League (ACL).The league is a A'number of speakers against salary nrnpwliiro ae litctifioottnn P.. Kiing such:controversial items as utility; procedure as justification for tabling the .. ,r . r Sybudget hearings, it immediately sank. It . r *— ^establish a mutually agreeable annual merger of two business organizations, " previewed three council members' revi­ onstruction .refunds, to developers and proposal ?,had the support'of Binder, Love And oposal for three weeks -:.-.v. Allan Shivers was being urged to opponents, "Dan, I just can't understand answered, "It is-hard to figure out. We fpfthesaUry., ;. , ' £ • Both motions failed with Uttie comment since Mexico's '.economy is-' put together "an org.anizatiqn of conser-what happened to you," said Tom ' ~(rom council or citizen audience.' all had a hard time." Whatever Love's iverwhelmingly tied to that of the I! INTENSE OPPOSITION 1o COTn­ vatives to beat the radicals, liberals and ^Fairey,"retired John Deere distributor final position, the final disposition of the United States. Mexico is the United Icllman Bob QMder's $1,000 per ,month! students in eity Council elections next^f and board member of Austin National Taxan lntvrpr«iive salary issueorthe reasons why, one fact States' largest client in Latin America [salary proposal has been primarily^. B a n A *' °k » & k-"umber of other speakers s J ^ r ' is clear —."Roy Butler's side" has not and its fifth largest in the world: At the ; triggered by the^eeming inevitability of' .Shivers, now & University regent, has^jdirected specific comments to Love ­ J Bilt"Love's surprise move to cul couK- yet lost a battle on the City Council, and same time, over 70 percent of Mexico's approval by council,1 A' Ihst-rrtlnuf sUyed in the background. The" main praising his tax and budget cutting is trying hard not to lose this one: by Mayor Pro-Tem E »r exports go to U.S. markets. Ijcil aidesfrom the b»dgetarigered Frled­ (switch vote spokesperson for the league has been 'S,! "i roan, who switched'^hls vote and ap­ , kove. however, has postponed1 thb th former City Councilman Jay Johnson. £>! h • bvp coun­ reading"of^thrsalary'budgel^ ,uf^ f ACL isdirecting its efforts towardsthe I ...ah ^ cil^When the fpur^vote coalHion emerg- SI­ spring.council elections. "Austin is up /*! J •• 11"II I' for grabs," said i The^"ijberarsideof issues of equalo«^iSa®itS a recent organization newsletter, ''and the radicals have com-igpwS£&4i:mitted-the MM JS . Monday's forecast, calls for partly cloudy skies-w'it'h. ^ and Madison, Wis,1 ~ >-n^ld^days~aiW-C0jfiil,»>Mjhts. Variable winds-5^to 10mph. ^ for Thursday^Five former council membeM J MEMBERS OF ACL wfer^ present and High Monday fn:th6lnid-70s dropping to the upp •^'Prfihllnent"in-"dikcussioi>s on both tW&s? ^Monday nioht. ' .budget'hnd ' •'" 'v.'-ir"""'' Xiiss* "~ ' '"''-' B3Se wmmmm »?*sW im- :s®sff.' 5^S»a<4f^ $» get** $3$ »fe|p64 /Sfi$SKF •-^'i ar"? wto w®*E . • "?$' •mm :sm!SAK^fAfiv ••• •••-.•.•••.. -• Garcia Issues UT Historian Safe-m 1^ *$*By JUDY SI'ALD^U^I allowed ^to: speak Spanish in United States Commission on < ?;and Negroig?! : &•;' t tjje test was 2^percenUower''; named after "V*? Texan Stafi"\Vritejc -"; • -schools teacher^often punish-Civil Rights _ \m*. _ Two other schools. Miller t than those from King, Carroll* in love To Visit Russi •.Vt-We.' must -.continue'.' us """ " , Gart-ia-'Said the Mexican- """" r— "Texans were once -"and Moody, scored fivejoints and Ray who did take it; 'with the Mexicans. There's no «iore;biAmerican. All of us • ."Garlfia: encouraged .thel'ssAmerican has .been an object -lower than the state average; are bilingual..We cannotavoid audience to become more "'of blatant discrimination. e.s-- 'Many of.these seniors did reason we can't get 'aiong • 'Both • schools. are not take, the-test because they "''' 4v,.-v•'it, so we should make the proficient m its language. '•pecially in education. now. We have to," he said.' predominantly Mexican- For Conferen could not afford it," Garcia i Garcia, an alumnus of-the f WAS1 Hector P.! Garcia.- . Inmost'of it." Dr •: a Corpus Christi In the 1972-73 ACT achieve-. America^,and'Negro: Garcia said. "I say let every senior University and the-School of testimc By NICK CUCCIA, . Garcia said.in A Friday let-physician, -founded the ment.tests,Jthree high schools said the lowerscores at Miller take a ISS'''' -ture on chican'o issues spon-American .01 Fq.ru m. a free test. I'm told it Medicine, in. Galueslen, said. Texan Staff Writeri!.q 'up trial rr King. Carroll and Ray — , and Moody indicate > inferior would be. ioo expensive. But unknow sored by the Center .for veterans group composed of . scored higher than the T^xas be . is, proud to have been ;:,VvDr.,Richard Graham.-University professor and au _ ins education -and'preparation iii how much does.a moon flight educated here. that f( US Mexican-American Studies. •Americans of Mexican origin; average...Garcia pointed-out minority schools, • ty on 19th Century Brazil, hfas been invited to attend a cost?" . _ v'We MexicaniAmerifians ,^He served as a member of that Carroll' are ' "But it'shard to understand ternational conference in'Russia Tuesday-through."nij hrlici King 'and v -he pointed out that nor all Garcia gave examples of K k speak almost' purp_ Castilian "tne United. Nations "why 'there are•),only 2,100 ..day on the "Problems of the Scientific Explora igina predominantly Anglo, hnd ,seniors took the ACT. The famous Mexicans of whom Dean Spanish.-But for many yearsr' Educational Scientific and Ray is50percenFArifloand 50 Mexican-Arrieriean! students Investigation, in Early 19th Century Brazil." number of students from Texans should be proud. He here. This is,less than 5 per­ y foi ; V we have been rpade to beheve Cultural Organization percent---Mexican-American Miller and Moody rwho took Graham is one of three U.S. historians who will deiKa'^l , suggested that schools b£ cent of the enrollment." din £v5 we speaki-Tex-Mex."-Garcia (UNESCO) and the Te.tas Ad- papers at the conference in Leningrad commemoraHngIii; ^57 • ' S : -;rt:-v''V-v-IWffK: proseci •' 'said. "We have not been vtsory Committee to the -the ^OOth'anniversary bf Russian scientist G.l. I Drug Rehabilitation \ expeditions to foltowi "Langsdorrs-birth. Langsdorf .directed j i SgKW %t V examir E r • .. I Brazil in the 1820s. 5;5--^fr I, Attoi I Entitled "Science and Society m Early 19th Centuij ! j 'clear i Brazil.'' Graham's presentation will focus oni tlK' Jv] Ithey in historical content'of the exp)orations." • . || ty-* Cuts Crime Activity - The 19th Century. Graham said, was a time when mat! j i The 'W$ By NANCY jCALL ^McDough said'*5' " " ""During the first year of the -in the year prior-to the •was beginning to' discover the world around him. ° I ^ day to Xexan Staff Writerf ,N.\S • • ess aee, exg ^ i fly: TASC, a -counseling, • project,J68:clientswere serv­"Langsdorf's expedition jvas like that of Lewisand Clark tial tai program to 5.8 percent last o'Xn Austin -metropolitan!^rehabilitation and dsur-ed, McDough said. He es­year, or Captain Cook in western-Australia." he added. ,, are of "V \A;\ r< drug treatment program has : -veillance operation for known timated this accounted for a "The expeditions represented a real clash -of basic dentN • i • reduced. Travis,f enlarged pores reduced,and rough'com- feeling that coihes.witfr every,treatment. Mint-Scented Cream and-within 2 or 3 i plexHjns became^ cleaner,. clearer 3nd' 1 7 minuteanabsorbingagent,calledArgilla. Queen Ketone Mint Masque /? only $3OOsmoother tookmg. Theseresults certainly dnesidhd turns this cream intoa plastic-for the six ounce jar, enough for over 3indicate .why teen-agers are now saying "; .like,masque. You will now feel as'though' months of daily:home ireatments:'Buy:it"thinsone product that really works", hundreds of "tiny fingers* were softly todayIStartusihgitimmediatelylProye and iphy rhothers of "teen-agers have Reading )he skin, Ibosening pore-ceked endorsed its.use. • * it to yourself at our risk, for one full ;dirt, blackheads and .foreign impurities. month. If, at-ariy time during the month; you are'not cdmpletfly satlsfipd. simplyI AsJt firmsand hSrdens.lts suction-action return thf. unused portion and you will I drawsotltwasteqiatterfromthe pofes.. get back every penriy of your purchase In15minutesyousimply rinsethemasque' awaywithlukewarmwaterWhlchWssolves it immediately.,When you wipeyour fads^ you can see that blackheads and of' |pore "filler" actually come off on- Iclean...refreshed, smooth.like velv ^ -'''i ^ '*' ''' ' SfrtNow _ . j t . .Xl rmprovo Yoiir C5ainple»igir& ,r , Iniyersity ,1 1, lip ii.-, I • i '•>! JSISeO^";­f Oon.tlaHea batk seat or bei^itji^ST-3­ SL5 • *• / OecaaseofBadshin.t( yOffWJnt lug«|/oOr-^ •- * * y r: full share"of fun and parties...cfear up '1 ' iting,$24 % your complexion ana let ,Mint Julep v , ,f .. V J -7U A "V a-. Mfsque :Uad the'Way"? Yoii certainly: .6we.it;to'yourself to.try a single fifteen' Ms. Shop pwwipiil •rsisiam OnDm smmm wm>? IIS#" * rrw'.* ew '$S^*W«!NW*s' ,^J%iigp#!;.v WASHINGTON tURI) -r John Dean'ssj^ss Nixon-onSr churned?he-»tearned-'.of-the public previously: [testimony so far in the Watergate cover^-V cover-up • Dean, Haldeman and Ehrlichman up trial has presented several previously ">£\ Ehrlichman, former Atty. Gen John! met with Xffy. G6tf. Richird Kleindjenst uhknown details. v including allegations^? Mitchell, former White House aide H;R. a few days after the 1972 break-in at the -former While House aide John;!?,®;.-; Haldem&n and former deselection aides Democratic Offices .in the< Watergate ,r ^Ehrlichman lied to the FBI during ils^p Robert Mardian and Kenneth Parkinson complex. 'Dean, testified he had advised jfiginal investigation of the break-in •• J/; are entering the fourth week of their Haldeman and Ehrllchman x>f high-level : Dean returns to the .witness chairMon®^ trial fo^v conspiracy to, hide' the involvement in' the break-in, but said lay for his fourth and perhaps final dayL;;f Watergate scandal. -, " • none of them so informed Kleindienst,. of direct examination • by chief trial -• Much of Dean's testimony last week ; the-nation's top law enforcement of-swj* prosecutor James Neal: This will beJvduplicated what he said during the ,Jlcial-_ _ M followed by seve«iJ:->days-of cross-gff.% Senate Watergate hearings 16 months ' t -• Dean coached Ehrlichman July 21,examination by defense-lawyers. fif"' ago, 1972, for an FBI interview the same day,• 'Attorneys for the fivedefendantsmad4%i But Dean also related some new in-and also sat in on., it. ' clear in their opening statements'that-"i;A cidents, including his charge that |they intended to attack Dean's credibilH. * ; Ehrlichman lied to the 'FBI with "He said (to the FBI) the only thing he'r^i [ty.* vy"; Dean's help — and asked the Justice knew about the break-in was-what He*-^ The prosecution also is expected Mon%| Department-if it could be lenient with read in the newspapers," Dean testified. [day to play the fourth and fifth presiden-, the -mefi charged with the June, 1972, •• "Had-.you told him what you• knew?" |tial tape recordings of the trial. These break-in at Democratic national head-Neal asked. tare of Dean's talks with fprffierrPresi^-fluarters^ "Yes, sir, I had," Dean said. , }dent Nixon on the afternoon of.March 21, Here is some of the testimony Dean • Mardian, who had been an assistant ,­ 1973, and the following day — the time, offered last week that had not beenmade Attorney General, came to Dean's office$r|?;i in late July, of 1972 and said: "For Ggd's'sg^'i sake, John, somebody's got to slow (Ac-$%if ting FBI DirectorL. (Patrick) Pat Gray," , He's going'like a crazy man." * Swiss Voters Reject • Dean met with Mitchell about Sept.\S '11 or 12, 1972, and told him: "John, if it"*fV Eviction of Workers ever comes down to this, asfar asI know > you neyer approved any plan for/, / GENEVA (UPI) — Swiss voters heed-: hardship has also been avoided." —UW Tewphflifo bugging." Dean had testified previously d . warnings against committing Geneva, which hasa 33percent foreign however, that he attended two re-. Vietnam Violence inomic suicideTand-voted-two to one ^ population, rejected the motion by the election campaign meetingsearly in 1972 ! -Saigon demonstrators march' dn the National'Assembly implement the 1973 Paris cease-fire agreement and unday to reject a move to evict 500,000 highest proportion in t|ie country — 76 at which-Mitchell heard discussions ."' ' building to demand peace and the,resignation:of South- alleging corruption by Thieu, his family and friends, torereign wotkers and their families. ; Percent against and 24 percent ia.favor. about-intelligence-gathering and bugg-, Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu Sunday; TheM;-doyvn police barricades and overturned tyvo guard boxes.' All Switzerland's 22 cantons, orstates,' • "At leastSwitzerland has done,its best ing. • & OOO demonstrators, carrying signs demanding that Thieu sags; A special branch police jeep .was burned in the mele»p~^-i oied against the proposal. : to prove we are notxenophobic madmen • Ehrlichman requested a meeting* The final result was 1,689,870 yotes. and realize what foreigners have done . with-Dean and Kleindienst in the White gainst to 878,739 in favor, a-proportion for our country and how important they basement dining Jan. 4^5^ 1975 Legislature House room ttm~f 66 percent to34 percent. About 65 per-' are," said Daniel Rey, 35, who runs a s 1973. Dean Said Ehrlichman asked Klein-'-^ 1 :ent of the voters turned out, a heavy f smajl c'optimunications firm. ; f dienst if: there was-some way'for tHe i •howing compared to past elections. officials, labor e j" •" Government groups i -Justice Department to treat the original.,.,^ Caldwell's To succeed,.'a. national referendum and Church leadercall appealed to voters Watergate defendants with leniency, "ft;.~ I. lUires a majority of both the states to turn doiwn the referendum in two days s "Mr. Kleindienst said: 'I don't knowy;^*, ^ nd the popular vote. • " of voting. i , ; By DAVID HENDRICKS-*-• elect a speaker next Jan. 14.. • a fonmer s.upporters did not force, a rules I! -I'll liave to ask.my criminal lawyer, MK*;" Texan Staff Writer Caldwell jaid he had.neither the time' ; reform commitment from Clayton when "We are thankful that the negative Swiss industry relies heavily on • . • I . Petersen,"" meaning assistant Attyipii Rep. Neil Caldwell. t)-Alvin, s'aid'Sun-nor the money to enter Uie speaker's^® '0(e was so overwhelming in order to . foreign labor, i Head backed out of,the race and gave Gen. Henry Petersen, Dean testified. day he did not think the probable 1975 race, seriously. Last, month he said, he Clayton his supp'ort. .J- eter similar'moves in the-future," a The turnout was heavy by Swiss stan-• ' Dean said Petersen called that after-speaker of,the House will reappoint him 3 was considering such a move. |fi; government official said. dards, averaging 65 percent—The; usual. •wno6n to say there was "absolutely no to chair the House Appropriations Com- ' "That was irresponsible as hell." he was : "IT WOULD require a lot of personalis said., .The Rejected referendum spon-, turnout is, about 40 to 50 percent. /:,: Mway" this could be done. "On the con mjttee. . r " to attention'* challenge Clapton, sored by a splinter party called National Jfift' " — Although Caldwell does not expect to In Ticino, the Italian-speaking region i^.;,.,;i^ev^y^x-votes-will-be-^eededJ|iil. Caldwell, the only other legislator men­ • Gerhard Winterberger,-president of mittee rules foi-the upcoming session. the Swiss Union of Commerce and In­_ returning workers. • •> ' * • . . . --.. . v, cv..... |ioned"as a'possit5iFtandidate-hasJje£iL_ Caldwell will ask Clayton,.among other dustry,; expressed relief that the , Several of the small, conservativecan­:.'.".Rep. Dan Kubiak. D-Rockdale.-: things, that representatives^ppomted4o­proposal yras so resoundingly rejected. tons in Central Swltzerlandjwhich fpur L-CALDWELL SAID the main objection the Appropriations Committee not be ap­ Raza Unida Claims • ''This is theend of a great inseciirity^u years ago voted in favo^of a milder 7"e has to Clayton as speaker was that pointed to any other committees. he 'said. • * -* proposal to induce theforeign population w^Clayton was closely allied with former Caldwell said one reason he would not "Switzerland's industry and corfP'^-. this time voted gainst it. ^:'.;iSpeaker. Gus.Mutscher and that Pavton ' enter the race was'a lack of funds, par­ Election Law '•^^las .not-committed: himself to follow' tially a result of the legislators'-pay ofmerce has been spared-enormous dif­•The closest vote was in Un, with 56 reform p'assed .under ficulties. And great human suffering and percent against and 44 percent in favor. rules the only $400 a month from the state. By MARCI WITTELS ^Velez 'feels "very optimistic because speakership of Price Daniel Jr.; "The peopledo not deservea legislatorTexan Staff Writer everyone will not take the time to vote," ; He added he was.disapppointed thai"H or a Legislature with-that kind of pay.." "•m, I Antipqm Paperback 5 Despite its claikns that the new elec­Velez added. „ , Rep. Fred Head. D-Troup, and Head's;. he said. -'i"* . tion laws are unfair, theRaza Unida Par­ . "'I beUeVe we will do quite rfwell with ty -is "very" optimistic"' about the up­ the student vote," Velei said. "Students coming November state and local elec­ are-open-minded, and.we are hoping we nc — neujs capsules tions. can get thevotes that would havegonb to Passed by the 1973 Legislature, the -. Sissy Farenthold • since our issues are * . > . _ • ,< Soviet Jews Protest Emigration Policy new-election law. requires a party to ob-: .similar." DALLAS (UPI) —A religious handbook recently/mailed toall SouthernBap­.tain 20 percentofjhe over-all-vote to.re-• ^B.Velez refuted. a story that recently MQSCGW(UPI) — Two Jewish film workers, in the fiftK come under critical review at'the annual Baptist needed 40 percent, Velei said that it will The Raza Unida Party has four can- Generil Convention meeting in Amarillo Oct. 28 to 31, according to the church UNITED NATIONS (UPI) — The United Nations; which has-proclaim^1 consider filing-action against the state didates /or state representative places spokesperson . " , ' . -ed 1975 International Women's Year; in a drive to promotesexuai equality,contesting the election .cbde. arid three candidates vying for county|-­ is under fire from its own employes for not practicing what it preaches. Concerning. the election outcome. P9sitions in the Nov. 5 election. 'v According to the latest report on employment of women in the professional, policy-making f-anks at U.N. headquarters, the percentage of female staff intlie pastyear liasactually fallen — from 19.87percent in Suspects „• 1973 to 19.56 percent at the end of September. . . -the addition of all 20 agencies related to the United Nations, theNEW BRITAIN, "Conn.. (AP) — Police was also shot in the throat. Police said p.m. and 8:45 p.m., police said. -who is heading the investigation, said ' searched Sunday for robbers who held up c-^-there was.no sign of a struggle perceiritage is..evensmaller. Wompn account for only15^94 percent or 1,823 Among the dead was a couplewho-had" Sunday night he believed that at least. . 'a bakery Saturday night'and executed,^ The victims' wallets and pocketbooks of the 11,439 professionals employed by the organizations spread around " gone to the backery for donuts every two persons, but not more than five/ i the owner, a clerk and four customers. S^were missing, and the cash register at Saturday night foryears. A bag of donuts . the .world. , ; _cwere responsible for the "slayings. Four men and two women were all-^Jthe Donna Lee Bakery was empty. The was • vW as found near their bodies. ." Police Sgt. Henry Crisafulli said, "A ^ shot in the head and one, a woman clerk, Wmurder-robbery occured between 3:15 ,D< Detective/.Capt George Bereschik,' ' pro wouldn't kill that way ... he wants to Ford Willing To i^eledse Tapes A-';-.take, money witl; the least amount of i rs?' WASHINGTON (DPI) —'President Ford said Sunday he is willing to •iS»; "l trouble." He said it was done by either. . ml make public the tapes of any conversations betwieen himself and former Poljce Chief; Thomas Ormsby -told ap?v President Nixon in the White House prior to Nixon's-resignation -! '•-«w: news conference Sunday one of the vie-' The only condition Ford placed uppn such-disclosure was the approval"-5 tims was slain with a shotgun and five of the Watergate special-prosecutor. , ' Iw Ptt>ers were shot with a large caliber y­ ;«u,anihteurs or maniacs '-There lias been nFmi5k^.ion s.o far whether any Ford-Nixon tapes exist. 'l-Ss^S. ..handgun. "There:;was no motive But the question whether Ford would release any that.were found, which other than "robbery-1 don,thejieve anything like this arose initiaUy.in connection with an investigation of whether Ford agreed '•Twls&p has ever to pardon Nixon before the former President left office, had never before' ; -'.'Ormsby said. -­ gotten such an unqualified affirmative answer. w® i " Ormsby read a statement but refused answer Jack Benny "Doing Fine',^ . dead...were bakery owner John 'jfofodS '-"^"Salerni, 55, . LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Come-¥ . Helen Gianantij 64, of Newington; and mm dian JackBenny, whose Scus^^raJ^chafeiK^v iaf^oteN^Bri-^ appear'ance^atl-nallas. charity Thomas Dowling, 58, and his wife' SlliAiuiaKiijlK ' benefit had to be canceled Satur­^William J, Donahue Jr.,27,-of West Hart-day-night when he became ill, ! Sfford. -' flew to Los Angeles -Sunday, and. Police found-the . bodies-in--three' was admired to Cedars of ­ 3^separate partitjons Ki-thefbacfcroontaf -Lebanon Hospital for. observation. the • bakery,',which.'is in fi shopping ­center. A hospital spokesperson said— iqjnnlp vlrHrnSfc«WHiy>r pockets had ~~Qie erf"turned inside piit. -ri".."| 1 i|mf-"rtTIrrrt^lntn flif Ormsby safiTTie^ardr-not-icnow-how^ ~hospital-unaidecL_-__ ^JgeftrBontry l-u^jgqtfctCjnoney was taken-fromlthe-£ash_ »'•'wregi?tprv a jrorslnB-^upervisfa'irafe4he-Dallas*hosnptal7-s3irt-lnW-tha«­^vsrcTatts Ratl^L'L'iilt-il-^^fec^ffl lllness.-"'defimteiv not a ,—UWfytphote.jiievening one 'aiuld ^et milk, donuts,' -stroke.'!-. " 'j • -v . : 7~;—~r pastries ^nd other specialties. i'oui >hnecficut. W *•lasuckas frOren lasapia,uy^i iXx V, Monday,.19.74 THE DAp,Y.TEXAlsM3S Mi, wmmm '•iW-v H#£\ VWttJ ^w-^v'BW §2Mms® $ tH° IS • ®5\ ISNNS Ifei-By STEVE KUSSELL . The Texan has .received over 20 pages of.expensively printed'(though in a nonu; nion shop) propaganda from E. & J' ' favor bringing agricultural workers un­der the National Labor Relations A<|t -d^ts which for over 35 \ears ha*-, guaranteed ^ secret-ballot-elecuons for almost all -•* Gallo Winery. with a-cover letter workers. .On .the hand.UFWother workers On the other hand UFW^^ T.m, 7 ' pointedly noting; ' *s has consistently opposed including farmffirjOw ^W­"cc: Faculty Ad--labor 5 -labor under the NLRA LLFEL visor." jGalk> .wants ^35 The NLRA. as amended, will not do •^1*1 Jpf I®" ..the kiddies kep^. in ^for farm workers. The Economy • Fur-r,„ *&« 1 i "line.soit appearsttie . nrtureslrike here tn Austin.forexample.:;?^. R&&PS&£XL­boycott of Gallo. took-three years to settle legally after^> C^prfT wines; by the United the upholsterers union won an election." ^ m*3i£§ Farm Workers of : In farm , labor. three : mbnths -would be \i mm America. AFL-CIO^'.' too long., because the harvest would b»iyfc" fcy.1Jfr* •. • must be having an--" over and the migrants would be several l*1 effect. * -estates: away. This mobility, and the ab­" In this column. I am inviting Tom • -ject poverty of farm workers: makes Haggerty. Gallo's eastern Texas conventional procedures inappropriate. • >-representativer to come• torAustin and • Therefore. WFW's position is and has debate the.menis-of the Galloboycott. If • •been that farm workers -should be l.'f&Zt Haggerty doesn't wish to personally covered under the NLRA but they .should stand behind his preprinted arguments, retain the power of the secondary &&i3 a­ S^aSSis! Finng'Line letter, becauseThe Texan at­for established unions. Gallo's distortion tacks. no one without allowing, a fair, :r£$. this position is especially disgusting * lllW he iswelcome to take up the gaunt^tin a bcrycott and othertacticsthatare illegal rebuttal. •' whentGallo itself'continues to-deny its: i fetei-Gall6's propaganda effort is aimed at farmworkers secret ballot elections.. ; Jegitimizin? their sweetheart contract ,.,Qa/llo alsohewshard to the Teamstet|_. aiM» with the International Brotherhood .of . line^garding pesticide protection;statesf® Teamsters. The contract is legitimate. r and/federal laws are all the.protection they say. because Gallo received a peti­farm workers need. Even if these laws': tion with the "verified signatures'" of a wene enforced, they-would still be in-:: W A majority of Gallo farm workers. ad8)uate.'.: For example,. UFW's first -tr&s* Verified by whom? By Gallo and the ma |or table grape contract in 1970 total-• Teamsters, of course! ly banned the.use of Aldrin. Dieldnni-En-ig^ffi T.'&J^^-Oraphic Irom 0 Malcra4| . -Sister Joyce Higgtns was given the drin and Parathion. Just this year, thesis workers wouldn't migrate in such own account at their expense. Labor con- task of presenting UFW's proofs to —. : signed without consulting the workers. t the hook, they need only agree"to seci«| fei .oral government has gotten around to£gm numbers. Gallo's figures may be correct tractors are like plantaUon overseers^A^bserved-the otiter side of this coin in ballot electionsosuperv'ised by-a neutnllGallo, since UFW negotiator David Bur-. pu ling' some of these pesticides off the? only if you. takea statewide average during slavery:there were good;ones.andg||j|t973, watching farm workers pay dues to party with all.workers on the payroll af ciaga and UFW President Cesar Chavez m irkeL which includes all. nonseasenal iana bad ones, but the system theyfed o»fe?s|0jia union that has no contracts at all inn^ tbe time of the strike eligible to vete . the shilce vole! had had "yno -luck. Sister Higgins sent a,a ui(u;uis sctil . 'rotten: Gallo isadamantly opposed toen-ugs/Texas, asan act of faith in Cesar Chavez.,^,,.' UFW has never lost this kind of election. telegram to Gallo uiformiijK.them that on Jarm wages that_shows California Mosl growers, moreover, are in no •ww •>"*' w vuiuuiiiia 41 eftA h r F ft'.lV *llllKnp{*VntlAVt * • MA >MM m m m M H/t* ' L _ ._ ^ -t L '-A*!!! _ -. .. • ' • ' . '• I -. • " -• M " ding the labor contractor system^ -"-Sil. _ „ .1. __r° '• — she had UF-W authorization caris from-ra es averaging $2.30*an,hour. I have no.; position to know how much their own ; • Gallo uses figures from The New York" ""'Hie T^xas situation points up' why" ^ > Gallo birands tb be avbided" inclBd«|173 of the222 field workers-on Gallo's pe-sonal experience: in California, bud workers'are paid, since the wages must Times, which has editorially supported growers are so eager to deal with the,, payroll at the.time the UFW contractex­th« same report-puts (Texas wages foc^s Boone's Farrn. Spanada, Ripple and thstf often pass through the hands of a. labor to that Teamsters. no Teamsters- Cesar Chavez, show UFW There are awful Mountain. stuff. pired. Gallo ignored the telegram, refus­19TO at $1.77 an hour,which isoutrageous '-contractor who may deduct Teartister :—. ••• ui^aiiiAinp inhi »exas; mere,There are no Red Galldsj "membership".•i^r has declined from 55JW0_^grganizing Texas. i.counteroffensive'will not float at this«f| ed her phone calls, and refused to allow for\the Rio'Grande Valley, where most -T»».Ju•• kaifttir 1ft Mft KinkA f.-r­ ?•" dues, advances-plus usurious'UOU1 (UU3.llllCtinterest!!Cdl, mutwivw^hUJ secret ballot elections. to below 10,000 since the Teamster inva-ris-'1Teamsters organizing in the labor camps .< iversity; I be!ieve, because mosti Of migrants„ . live and where I spentepy transportation costs and Social Security r sion and "prove"' that. UFW no longer-'. '"of the Midwest. If the Teamsters smash. 1973 working on' theirs; Gallo's propaganda states: "Gailo has the summermmor ofn( urn impWnir nn thoin.' -payments which may or may not be has the support or farm workers. These UFW in its California power base, farm studentsrealize thatprintinga half-trutbi always favored free. • secret, legally-legal problems! The piece rate wages in" credited to the worker's account. It is on expensivestationerydoes notmakeitl figures, however, deal with numbers of®»»labor in the United States will continue supervised and totally impartial elec­ the whole truth. So until Gallo cleans ufl the Lower kio,Grande Valley average not unheard of for a contractor to wijte workers under contract, afactor total-fcgto be a national disgrace, and that is'why tions. There now is no law providing for itsactwe'irsee/iaeteaymasKuel^ial 'under 'a dollar an hour, counting in his'own Sodal Security numbtf for il-ly controlled by grower-Teamster colIu-||^we say "No!" to head secret-ballot elections'in agriculture. We children, if they were much higher, the sion, siAce must lettuce tjie fields and the boycott noose c«i j legal,aliens, who have none, and pad his* siAce'the contracts are—' —'^grapes and Gallo wine. If Gallo wants off:. tinuing to close oh cacQDus, » AT-AF mm* M IFM'^ empire * Ti'-. , BRfO'EV the General Faculty has labeled "insen-' quently, about impersonal instrucfios It is customary for persons frustrated ' sltivity" lead Jo speculation on the role anrf mn'< by-tte4Jiiiveraty-to-sertt-froro-the-«ea -^-oMhe^chancellor-within theLJniversityof ­ lahnl thA villain one face to label as the villain. Frank Cv#?Texas System, ^ changed»enormously, though the strut ] Erwin has long and admirably fiUed thisv". '<$ ™. _ . • . " . ture of governance has not kept pace. j -role as a^vocal moving target He has Vf-; »' • "y?. m was horn,in 1881, when the The regents serve as a financially! camPus served as a window on the enigmaticS'A ^ustln opened. The 40 acres shrewd board of directors, System and| Board of'Regents. — f h118ye grown to 300, and the enrollment of campus administrators as managers. His commentson the j2i ^the long session1883-84 jumped to doings : of that -body ^§3^43,511 for the 1971-72 long session. As These managers are directed from! have both horrified j * recently as 1963-64, it amounted to a : > above and derided from below. • < and enlightened the • paltry 23.645. ' ,. i y _ '. When the fauclty met after the firing] campus on* the , .'.UTEl Paso became thesecond System of Stephen Spurr, It vented,the greater J mysterious goings-on campus by act of th<» Legislature in l913. part of its rage not againstthe growthof! at the System level, In 1969, the Legislature enacted House the University System, the educational! us-Erwin has remain- Bill 79, which authorized the Board of empire wrought fay act pf LegislateJiied fairly silent dur- IV,„ Regents tow cr&teucdic sevenseveu new campuses and. the ; urbanization of Texas, buti ing Uie latest controversy, and the new® within the University System. A 1974 against one man, Charles ieMaistre.j villau chann>llnr"^ t!ni«or«i».r i—J villain is the usually invisible chancellor;^ Univ^lty W \ When January comes, we will dlsrovw j Charles . LeMaistre. To -all::;' VHffi prHe that "what is believed to be the System cannot be pruned by exor-j . p^achieved in cising one evil spirit The villain is not j one man, or-even those barely.discernt-J ble machinations of the regents, boll regenisysttSts^ioaay, less than.three: years laterj?fe vvMuuviiuK vue rather, the structure of 'the University| • busmess. His periodic displays of wharpf the prospectus continues, "allsevennew System-!..; ggSs&Kgisr 1 % System institutionsare serving students, ^^^'Mleastvi«:ama^edb^s;r'.liki^:ftl»;:-There is very "little room /or tbel v" System now boasts 12 major installations, democratlzatioD -of A structure wfakl ( -to-serves' student organizations has-been .under : Ume is needed to adequately prepare for one nonstudent, but when the numbers mage my objections knovfn, indicated The long-spoiled Austin campus has ^centralized pbwer.^^^­ " .way in hopes of. altering,this semester's a final examination. grow so does the paranoia. It is ironic that he was sympathetic, but also in* been caught in the drive to provide , oam study period. Monday, the Univer%<< ; The second jnost common-argument that the visitingfans and band areallow-Indicated,theorganizers were notresponse higher, education for all of Texas. This Until Texas, is 6iess^ with a] i -,sity Council will -consider -a-specifics^ ; voiced agaiastany alteration is themost. w$ible for what In •' hp resulted in a faculty which Haim« to­ -jgi to sit next to the Texas students! the performers aid.- Legislature as liberal and urban as the • proposal highly recommended by the : absurd — the issue has.already been con-, I should have knqwn something was rethinking the situation, I thought that be politically repressed and underpaid. students who: inundate-the-educational i _ University's Calendar Committee that ; sidered and officially acted upon; wrong when I.asked to draw one date -^surely the organizers would not have Students complain in the same breath of system, frustrated facility, students and •would, if passed, give one additional, therefore, leave it alone. Fortunately. ticket and~3hree student tickets. The-fallowed any racial slurs to be partof the inadequate facilities and incessant con­columnists will, have to content-!'-'dead day"' and push all exams one day * our social, -. judicial and legislative "ticket attendant said, "Are you SURE ~ . program; why, then, the slurs again* struction, about an unfathomable closer" to-4gnfctmag themselves with picking wings off those [ , systems.-have4ngrained-the-prineiple~ef- bureaucracy and.-somewhat tore fm. *fr~ caught nn the fly>papenof draunstance. fi'-iirf? A. task forceestablished by the Student reconsideration — and reconsideration is .»re l« Ki*c^-jfuu -lueae;. meaning a I write this letter.not to undetmine the•' 4-V^Government Education Committee has" • what we are asking the University Couri-v groupof tickets they bad ina box over to aSieffortsof the AINTrally but toask you to '•l;4Ebefn or^anizing antf eoordinating this " cil to do on the basis or demonstrated the side. Just becausethe yeaf'is printed re-examine your own thinking and /vcampuswide effort. The Senior Cabinet need. w wrong... that does not mean... no, they ^^tolerancesof malignment as Ihave men-sm DAILY TEXAN, its coIle8e w£nd a.H councils have been The added cost of the Calendar Cm0 would not do thati„, ' . ^ftioned. -•St" , '%peavily lobbying deans, professors and mittee's proposal is in the neighborhood ^ Earl Oakerson If unity is truly sought by any single editor^S —-siw [^departmental chairpersons.. Various of 525.000 for, the extra day of employ^ ^group of pressed people,; they must MANAGING EDITOR, !'::vHarvey^aM&,ooof organizations and their represen-ment or RA's. food services; janitorial ^endettd^, fattempt to appeal,atleast'in spirit,to all' "fM jS^tives havestrongly supported any and ^ services, etc. We could swallow this cost ASLANT man.SWOEML^.-r^SSSS rfothefe peopltf who ^flnd­ Jf-a jSS|aH extensions of the reading period. Sg)' < thp samt« mannpr wo aw u>h»n I can*Thelp but feel thTt^dfFoW^SfS^ in the same manner that we did when the The issue of concern is a very University delayed the spring "73" has something personal against * ^^acadenUcissue, there isnothing political -semester.\ Ample jtime exists; two While he-fiiiaI^iTltt^ii-i made in that length of time made it back. Then 9s a member of the||«C * Manifesto! U r* • • • 1V.j mj^quite a change fpom-lastsemester'sfi^e-Bui if this sum is toolarge: theoriginal white, middle-class business structureif/- .'4.. .(.^Hefb Holland AMUSEMENTS EDITOR T th dead week. With ihe barrage of •rv. yt\ s Pa\»l Beute( . task-force proposal Which asked for the be silently con^dred tokeep mejobless.' T„rJTVnLfcf~K £b™> there is little wonder why < days certainly would not create any to sdiooland trying to Uve on WSS2ta2f!!^S5 j2£l£ *.-tzzzvi. «*.si i-.. •% 1* hw:t itudents want< and «eed moire time budgetary problems. which our country ... is still based:" &V„ .jeforeithe first finals. Advance prepara­• .. Mondat:^the UniversttyjCquncil will'be' The poor alwaysconstitutethtf majort-A1 tion must be sacrificed forcompletion of tes'ted on where its priorities lierlf-this- » General Reporters 'immediate assignments, ~ council maintains concern with (he fun­ ited_ by the ruling class whose News Assistants. :-pavld Hendric^SiisMS^Iek:;Jn mydiscussions with nuxnerous poo-. u«iuaiuii i)uiu«iiicii(xa oi uie si^ents.: damental academic need of the students. . and*Tf^tbority^.'dep!^' On--the';:*r '}e< primary arguments_agai.nst.ajiy then wejcgn exp|^ to the editor: ' « "The history of all hitherto existing Laura MillerVSterir wedteof t|>e\ Cfidtlna •;,'J — — The foiling the'-#^, society la the hiaforvof dan ° Torgani?ers#Bie­ iNow"^tButthe^$ <•&*£W»$* J» our own ^1:i:;-^i:^^a,;J|^ ^ _iw.s,i. By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN^?^Mf®^^"4^may reject it'Unfortunately, if the'Rock does get cracked, it'll c197i,King"Features Syndicate Lw"*^ r-~*fV~ ' be for the wrong reason — like voting for Judy Petty. Wilbur WASHINGTON ^WithMr, Rockefeller'spenchant forgiving^ . Mills':-opponentybeeausetheonee-formidabtechaimiariofihe lie officials extra compensation, we may beable to strike a . House Ways and Means Committee prefers to spend his-idle I which will satisfy him and reduce thegeneral.taxburden.;;houfsSpIashingaboutwitha,Iadywhosesobriquet is thft ,etum for confirming him in the Vice-presidency, we should" "Argehtiat-ftfecracker." It's what Mr. Mills does during his Ihim tp pay for. the clariesof aH government employes. Itiii^vorking (fours that should have popped his:constituency'years jng he can afford it. although Mr Ford might object to hav-t-'agp •" „ fthe secretary of state on someone else's payroll s BY THE same reasoning, "it doesn't matter that Mr ^r" RoCke^ller's'^siretJjsharp a biJ.ror...Rockefeller paid,for a biased and unfair book against Arthur 1 wealth, with high-echelon appointees, and other similar im-Goldberg in New York's gubernatorial election four years ago les toward largesse and charity, .have given-the few of us That's standardstuff in our electoral politics. Shoutingor caus-i oppose his confirmation the first hope that the Congress * ing scurrilities to be printed about your opponent is one of the • * guest viewpoint MS& nn MB devices used to avoid discussing matters of suhctanrpl' ' ~ Rockefeller donation to an opera house or a hospital. The objc-ctions to Mr. Rockefeller aren't moral but political. ,. W"1®*.. indicates. is that "with his money• hijs brothers* He isn't a crook, and no amount tf digging is going .to turn up monpy and tlie hundreds and hundreds of millions in the family evidence, that he is. The trouble with Mr. Rockefellers that.' foundations. Nelson Rockefeller is ableto influencethe opinions even if you agree with thedisastrous policies he advocates mi and. thinking of a nation. The' professorships;1, the fellowships. < •stands for, he is loo powerful to be allowed to be Vice-president t-he cushy-tushv all-expense-paid seminars, the research grants --,and very possibly president the whole apparatus which decides what scholars, what ideas! i nia was Deyona Mr •THIS GOES beyond our learning that the price Mr. what works of art aregoing to besupportedand popularized can ' Rockefeller has established for the secretary of state is l/10th mvjarge measure be filtefed and controlled by a Nelsonthat of the chairman o^ New York's 'Mfetropolitan Transit Rockefeller and his confederates. He and they are the mastersAuthority, a gentleman who Jias bitten into the Rock for half a of much of the country's prestige'apd statussystem; Thev hand m million. It surpasses thesubventions to newsmen who aDDarent­ wiv. dw^viiuwiia >u i»cv>au«;ii wnu dppareni'-uui. uie J---, i ••••••? .out the , --—-u-..... .. .. ly received grants-in-aidwithout-the publicity thataccompanies/> sion to ' -T-' ' >s • . Byj. Iqt P^^ras.a public officiar They sav it's good to put a rich office becaus&he won t steal, but this rich man is so rich ^:4 uwmm '"5'he ,s dangerously uncompromised,The pattern of this pass- 4 m8out of money suggests that.he wasable to buy up mostof the '^Li effective political opposition to him in NewYork State years/?-S® ago and that he'has laid ;ai)1mportant segment of Congress uri4f®ffSi|By THOMAS MacCARY not likely to be good reasons; ' but with how well he met their vive^ft seems tha^Spurr wsas and beauty is distorted and der-obligation to him.^ / Editor's note: MacCary is so independent before he It would seem,that the least :: standards of "collegiality." w„ fireoTop.raakTn^the first in-the music drowned out by the is too cleanio-be safe. We're always excoriating: "all came to Texas " One's'assistant professor in the we could demand'or our ad­ -His politics-and personality -dependent .move off, his roar of. the institutional- politicians for compromising, that is giving up something tio g^t character changes.-and with it: 1Department of-Classics.) ministrators.&that .they see ;offended-them; soin executive presidencyv machinery. We know what it something, without recognizing that a compromised pOjitL&Effli AH one's professional standards, 'resident ijpurr lias the ' similaritybetween the session they fired him. At other institutions I have does to young children to bp which is why.! of course, I find tea politician undef restraints. H/can't ahrays do whatever,he •SPIhanded; a•• statement of way they are treated and the Chancellor LeMaistre felt had experience of — happier. lined up in desks eight hours a' w&nts because he needs other people: he has to defer to them this • person . professionally |Use forhis dismissal; Presi -i way they treat us. Sjiurr and 3'-fi that his personal relations Better institutions — there has because he can t buy .them. Even a RicHard Nixon; with all the day and to have their abhorrent: a sycophant in thejpnt Rogers, asked recently Rogers; in Refusing to make ;with President Spurr-had always been a feeling of com­ dou8h that CREEP colledted; couldn't begin io gae. the other movements in, the;school jKome is a sycophant in the nether she ;woqld continue-budget ,;councils accountable deteriorayd.'fsobyexecutive-munity: studentsand teachers -•side by stiffing $1,000 bills in.its mouth. restricted -by up-, and down--classroom is,a-sycophant in isident Spurr's policy_ of .v -v --to theln victims, stupidly put order he-ftred him working together with ad­ There were limits to his-power and. while there are still '"•vi? IC*an/v A nfn4 MK MA.• MM ..-staircases; the movements of i print. My, experience here has ising a statement of cause -faith in the'principle that WHO CARES how well ministrators to-take out the limits to. Mr. Rockefeller's, they are weaker and wider than their Jjowels regulated by been particularly bitter since MMj faculty^who are, justice dispensed blindly frofn; LeMaistre gets .along,with garbage. Nothing so pleasant those of any other who has ever been admitted to such high teachers' permisSbn. When, : I have seen some of "the besthied reappointment, said above shoiild be accepted Spurr, m whether the senior can happen hereas longas we public office. " — -— will someone tell us what : minds of my generation"' dis-­, i.saw noreaSBjt to:change blindly below.What likelihood •members of; the--art'depart have-presidgnts likejSpurrand traumas are inflicted on the •missed for having their, ownpt policy1 since' such people is there that justdecisions can menfget along with fierry? Rogers • and people up and .university student ^ if he'is minds,. ;and this "bjr-senwr jually know the reasons bexeached when the-very cir­.What/is.needed in such cases down the line who, think the not totally numbed already — faculty and administrators h ehind their. dismissal cumstances, of the: review is a little objectivity, and this Harmonica Sale way they do. They are by the pageant of acadfemic • who have no minds.at alii My byway. -It is:ftightening^to procedure for nontenured i will never.be a feature of organization people, and politics? 'advice to students; — advice|e administrative blindness; faculty encourage personal secret-meetings and privileg­education cannot take place A POIGNANT remark was Save 10% on |rsist: even • in the glaring animosity andvindictiyehess? ed information. When a man _ which I am following myself jjht of contradiction If Spurr and had on Madison Avenue. In fact, repeated to me recently about — is to get out as soon as you Rogers ison trial for murder one'does the saddest part of the con­a colleague of mine whose can.' before you acquiesce in All Hohfier Harmonicas (President Spurr does not attended the hearing,of Prof. not select his jury from, tinuing dysfunction of this un­.^scholarship and teaching the cynicism of this unhappysitate to appeal to the Bill Berry's/case: in the among the members of his iversity is that the; students methods I abhor,"but' for. place Frank Erwin . and fmerlcan Association' of summer of 1973, they would , own or hisdead wife's family, are being trained by its struc­whom,, personally, I have* • ..Ch'arles lieMaistre and Amster Music 1624 Lavaca niversity • Professor's to: have seen a disgusting exam--One goes outside. Then, too, ture rather t than being in­ always had great sympathy^ Stephen .Spurr and Lorene ' ess his grievance; thougfi pie of how secrecy works. It ~ one"doesrioi goabove him or formed of and encouraged to Mr ^473.7331 ' His wife,' it seems, said to a .Roger? deserve..eachi-cither; very -public • statement he was like lifting a rock out of*. below him on the social scale contemplate the accumulated friend, "It makes me so sad but you and I deserve better; jiade. on promotion and; damp soik-the. loathsome —as if that were possibleany knowledge of its professors. -to see C - -spending all hisenure during his presidency: creatures from theart depart-more — but insistson a jury of The medium is 9/10ths of the energy trying to-please thepas in blatant disregard of ment scurrying about on that his peers. Thus'to judge message here Ml the truth powerful people. He used-to be \UP standards.-President occasion are representative of Berry, outsjde opinion of his logers' statement is : thepeople whohire andfire in teaching and scholarship by hypocritical in the extreme; this institution. They were not authorities.in his field would.' ie.must'realize.that reasons .concerned with the quality of be decisive. To judge Spurr, COLD-CRUEL-WORLD hich need.not be given are. his' teaching and scholarship outside opinion of his ad­ ministration,. perhaps by\; a ISEE YOU YES, AND IF VOU SCRATCH committee of the AAUP, (512) 476-9271 sor "rtxiR NEW IT WITH HOUR STUPID " would be sought. So long'as . PIANO; ELBOWS, I'LL rtx/NDVOUi this institutionis run bydefen­ sive megalomaniacs.who in­ sist on killing theif enemies, PREPARE YOURSELF only the"sycophants will sur­ 1 HiS&s.Afc'tjli 6$4.00.$4.00-$4.00£ •DEVELOP MORE SELF-C NFIDENCE 9 _ IMPROVE MEMORY FO TEST & QUIZ Try-jmnmr-—&­ : SPEAlCEFfECTlVElY SCISSOR SELL YOURSELF & YOUR IDEAS '{%{• 7 BLEND, YOO'RE COTE *HOW TO MEET NEW FRIENDS YOU'RE INDI6NANT a hairstyle. b '•••v-:. 'OVERCOME WORRY & TENSION -Hawaiian & western shirts without a wash. 9 Class Starts Tues. Nov. 12 « -Silver, gbss.&celluloldft jewelry THE DAU CAR««K COURSE gg .'0NI.Y, $4.00 , . « * ' " v'-7^5 § 476-3228 • iAnd get'agood ' . VrManfadVAnTr^ttlciAstM. m *-old-fashioned . m shoe shine for 50*' DOONESBURV MEDICAL ARTS BARBERSHOPS ABOUT -poms zcm&! Afevety Open 7:30 -6:00 M-F nnrr»-ns tinttr CMOH, YOUR. PLANTS iFVwusmnm. . 291S R«J River 477-0691 w BAtfWIB, vssecm ctosaxwHwee jusr-me UVESf S$4.00.$4.00.(4.00? ABtETD H£AR BDTHEi; ususei 68UWNR£ate '6UN6APIN"! oftLinL rniLL NOTICE Since, the -Union Patio Jims been closed during Union < Building trenova­; Hon a. new•.location has been designated as an ana for us'e by students and., Organizations for public-,.discussion and peaceful assembly or demonstration without prior . approval; (See Institutional Rules, Sec­tiont0-204.iThenew area is between the East Mall FountainUndWaller Creek. Just east of Stein­ •••••* • '" V3? :IglpP brn^De " %KELLEY A>a«BSO?i .Bogr-^wiw a&^tte^Wr«stfemc*r foartha®5S»^iV^-fi^«!«s®.'*,lastweek second quarter "because we needed^ ©ritiate&eaeasaB&«fImrtwaBg^Sh* " " * ' " " • try and get momentum some wav.1 thought we coold get it there." J" crooni, aBefaaacesof surviva^'ia^ ^ the waysnwrai On the first-down attempt, so, Soertfewest Conference --tsi3e race®*.' "1 tbocght the «3»ne whjbM bt 2 iaj»-defensive end Jim Gresham. 'ft amMaek baiSe, area!gat-^wainAer ate-, momentarily subsUtuting for SbeSettSDeuf last weft .> bad a great frost seven people,"bee 33 irrfhoz^; a fess.> <• -•< , "They were sostrong, it was justli]^; tidal wave. Once they got started, it i -eanqjbeH TBsbed for V» fatnis oa *«*­ P&S* .» ... „ . hard to stop them," Barorback i lofnes,racJodssg a 65-yatri bmda&ms r FseteiefrUiE*r«;: Marsh .Wfiite added. ; run. aod blocked a jbsjI. WITH ^;4i left in the game, an]1 Several firsts were ea»£fefo?d Asifc^i appearingvto bave hekf ihe 1 '~*|Te»as rectory: _ _ ^ s & _ sfejM scoreless for the first time since i 'Teaas;'Hea2:Cossc&.' T** — 039b«ft 8tsS»txsag*KM ' ' , lytf I AriattsaLS reserve' fullback was extreme!? saasfted the Hcras feat-• :.-T« — iilartatf s^-jwdr»:ts«^-*»6SM Fucbs.ran throu^i a gajptng bole in ( if ptst toge&er their first coonSsated e£> „.,s Te* — Afcas Arm kSc£tttfJfc?e*J, " Av Ttx— «*aR STjw <£<*«»15t*J mkkfie of the Longhora drfense'Sort with i» severe breakdowns. *e« —B»cii«* —«rs**Sefcolr«*» 'i'ji. was composed primarily of• Senior defensive tackle Doag ". ,*«* — P«iBSrfw!tSTte.*3eWr ' » Aod sprinted 50 yards for a toudnfewpj Eagfek sctmed fats first toucfadowuever. , aod thus averted a shot. out. ft i w * Mfte Deaa kicked his first fieSd goal ;, 1 Fuchs' ectators. Fort] Texas' Campbeli slips o tackle and breaks dear for long yardage. . their SWC title hopes baye burst ; "Yes. we're more of a factor tea by the margm of riciory aud aiH don't carrier. HebreaJts for a tontiaiwm and aod booming ponts, Deaa kept theRaznr-very.physicai today. We'veneverhad so a the Ixngborss. like those rising! oppoEesi for safety. So when : then i^ocis apauiL Td haveto sayhe was-1: back trflense deep in its half of the field many injuries in a baQ fame, or teen «i& be going places come New Yei'jj CampbeiL -*j»o was.ra^^^ at-nudSe> tae outsiaotfi^ pJajCT ioday,'' Hoyal Tr Uuwujhuut tbe game. beatenso^pbyacaHy," gaard, Uodced aa Aifcaosas psmfsicb 33 *-said.' • -s t,, ' i. ,1^ U • Oay- CWy once ic H possesssons did the ' seconds' left haH. Pi^w* aas '^para^hf'ABC, ieiev^sed Vae THE MOST seiioasCif She-Arkansas io-"Everything turned around read.~ 1 i« -_ . RaMrfjsdcs start drives ctoser tban Td v jrsries was to halfbaqk Barsabas White, Oklahoma. We foimd we could momst!»^y-r\ u.-Same naticnwide, agreed. yards away from the Texas end woe-\ • wbo frac tared as aokle. The only Texas ball and score on anybody. Fumbles bHe wresijed fee baH away frora teani-,, It sejected Campbell as tbe oflensire ^ Although Campbell led allras&rs ^ fajary fo EngS^ wbo mMy rein- been oor nemesis, bat i think we! mats Sasnate Mask's defecsive baci. / player of the game and English as the 4, r , „, ; .„ -r .tesl»yards, ttegamesJeaffii^grooBd jured fas left ankie. fwt onK had to sit and gleefsfiy pranced ia^o the end me, that probleni todsy Aad the r -^"gaicer appeared to be Artaasas' team -^several tnimitts of pbv. petting Texas abead ISO. B31? Scbatt 5 found out they are super," Akins sni| ^ Iteafl s45^arf J*W gffid for Teias physioan who, akpg with traioers. Scott BaR who quarterbacked Arican­ extrat pesal cade it17-0 at baKtane.. , _ „ "We'll go scmewhere. We're just { Royal;hugs Akins -^gfflcd oo and off the feW OTctiaeoosiy sas most of fee game, explained that the "Eaii did itaS... all X ccc&2 see was ~ iag to iake them oae at a time, thou^i secscd ailenipt e& the year. He massed a» >•* dnrmg the Raxne to administej' rirst aid Razntbacks attempted a first down oo. , .i s. T-w he added.' Wi SWC Roundup, i8s*w i DALLAS iAP)—The D^asGbmqs n mH « g?daimed the field goal si»u]d oev«-have be«j kicked Oi-l ftmcbdown from a yard oat with 9:44 Irft SMI' toocbdowns^io runs of four and 34 yards to give SMB-j?!MdaIs stopped tbe clock after Bean supposedly stepped oolf fetbegameafternnnnjgbadtffiHhad what appeared to be an uisui mmmtabfe l3-31ead , v,;;bot Bean said he never got out although that's what he nasi fedSed on misof a, 17 ami 2 yards. r ;£ Wesson then set up tiro foorfh qsarfer Rice scores with' trying to do. f • J '•*••*•* , -s two fismbtes m his own territory. -Sophomore quarterback Don Roberts came Off tbe bend! $4^ J HCRBTON (AP) — The pttaauit! of Rjcequarterback Totnmy Kxama-drtrve theOwls 46yards .^.to^lace the injured Tommy Duniven in Texas Tech's IMS . jn lufinB is the same whether yooi're 'aftertbe first fumbie.cfintaring thedrive with an eight-yard > : j.-'riu u*ier ninth-ranked and previously imbeate^ Arizona.' I •••-•fo-S* ""*** tmw fm* T>|­ Pass to KennethRorfor tb^sfonc Kramw-pawd toFSri t Robe^ouly went to the atr thrte.times. compt»^ir|g^ii| too lor tbe twx>-pouu ccnversun to make the score B-H in jinnee'. mcJudmg one to JUwreace Williams for Tecb's firt 5»resaire packed foar^s ijBarter for a 31--favor of SMU — • .score just before the half, Srefer? over ftawteB to reaaain Ae THE NESTfumWecaiaeat SMU*s31-yard line..Rice then • r-ARIZONA WASN'T Sb only Wildcat team to lake is «df B^beatened ieain m tbe Ititiooa! I moved in for a^H-yard field goal by AlanPringle. his second N lumps from a SWC team./Fhe VUlanova Wildcats took a 354 of the day frran that spot.Thts rowed Rice ahead 14-13, with pounding from tbe Houston Cougars. r Jim Hart's toachdown passes 6 aad 35 seconds left Sophomore quarterback Bubba McGallkn. starting hisIB yards' to Eati Thomas over a 1:32 Wesson quickly atoned for bis errant ball-handling by pass-first game, scored, one touchdown and passed for another:itmKtespao of &eseocnd quarterrallied mg 13-yards-for ,a touclithwn to Freeman Jdlms with 17 . leading the Cougafts to tbeir third straight wic after <^11!St. Louis into a 2J.-13 halftis)e Iead £t seconds left. Tbe pass wasset cp by a 70-%-ard kickoli" return the season with'two losses ^_thnr first three games^^ rjost ^ ^ v by Arthur Whittingtoo. CarSsals stietciied their lead to ^ The win'stretched the Mustangs* conference record to 2-0, • ivfestlfslondlftos 388^­ S-13 a the second boif before Hoastoe leaving them as one vt only three midefeated teams in the us* wears maun 1 ea two.taadfdamas c£ aae yard cooference. hTe*® AIM,?7TCU •«0*T| CHfctnwtt M Hmtei ;>| teeb hf George ^Hwyfaott to eat the Texas ASM contipaed its winning ways inconference asit V S•!5*rt, HJHceU. tnn JeclrW Artec* I, Howt9*-3S V%mm MMMTi CaMrMv StMe w Arttntu I feainiargiDfo3i-27. ipoghei} ^ TCU. n-O. The Aggje d^ense completely •' U«e Sock MB; T«nt AIM ill Mot cent. ?J6. Tccat T«di it SMI] f « * • ifc. dopunated the Horned Frogs' passing/attack. ,whkh coming SEASON n». TCli I .BUFFALO, N.Y. VAPf"-Joe T~»,-afrr„^( T »«. ranf^ 2 ». T«o> M Kn ato the game was the best in the conference. WA»»torti«lt3#, ™u ——w,fr»._s»o :-S4yfec. I«MC-W Si Barior —»e tMftfl »| Ar)<»ns«l^ #ags«re^c Soadaftrifii aam^ktonr. I « .$»&t COwmpw»N» TCU jjg m l&KrFe first ball bf r^ehsg 7S yardsfar a lOOCbdown OB te first pby fanBi fwim. Kansas-Q^, winch brice caifier had"-"i fi^MmBMafasbtPrfii(»aattfi^a 5 stopped D^to drivesinside ti *«to FergBdBJfeaad end Paal: , 'tffud line. : vitb'aTVT^ scoaiigpass-. IfOhio -StllPlclahomq-ContifiS^ To:Mill i , it It it • \ -=":-»-» -• • m-rntt ? BLOOMINGTON, Mm. (AP) —HtB JJtnjson passed for Z?S yards and Altie ~ OS" ^shi^m^shiSn^ainS Los Angeles. passed for .three| JaylorntsJaed fw two tooeMownsastte ilfe O^^te^^-i^oaahomastand l^na^i,Uclutching the football, while a crowd of DeJrOtt Lkms scored tbeir second ^5,y®»8ht's 3^janl run, Chris Rupee's threfi-ysrd i sjsd«sr,°oii'su'"bto,'-eraK»fe feaig6t Tictey Snnday. a 25-K opset of ' ^terson's 10-yard scamper, j MWinpsata tbat was the Vikings' first te5 01X1 s"unlanran loss of the Football Leagne "'The young Wack qaaKerback got tbe"t : Satarday, Ohio Safe walloped Indiana 4W while 11TO Griffia's 16th consecutive 100-yard-regular-' ' _A for two touchdowns and | passed for a third against Syracuse; Nebraska's Dave ^MSOCL -44 L \ * vi? ^ • Las Angeles offsase geared sp. He e®^3 Oklahoma thrashed Colorado 43-H. and the time lor i game, one shy of the all-time record held by Hmnm completed 23 passes in 37 attempts for 230yard* nected on liof 15 passes for 276 yards, ?fi comparisoos seems at hand. Store OweiB. , ^Taylor scored the game^rimer and ' ay., "Tee touchdowns as the corahuskers clobbered j pattbeLaoctsabead fprgood OB anei^tt-wife Lawrence McQdcbeoo hauling ."This is a national championship-caliber team," said '' Oklahoma s onstaugbt produced 594 yards rullls3t^ offetiseof 641. most ever against Gaffnev tn n»t+^ .? inarter." covered 50 yards and iBaroid JacksoaM|*«npedtwnped for 146l46 yarfs'andyardsand two touchdowns and became: ^^Jfe Wasttngtpn le.-» «!•-• . ™W­ "There can't be 3 better team Usan Oklaboma." said Tbe uxrfortmiaie aspect is that tbe two powers caniKrt ^iet ended with timee seconds left m tbe ]g|gpg|j&|$3v Wm^r Colorado's shell-Shocked Bill Mallory after the mrtt sinceOhioState iscommitted to the Rose Bowl, ifgarae when Lem Barney intercepted a ' Fran Tarkeotoa past.in lhe Ca^'ead NEW YORKdav,. (^<^stniffiied)^Or^0Blfr7.No.7NotreDame' r-G™y> 06,1m esfeing Wisconsin. "' v -ranking fared last "week' lraUe Shelby ran 13 and 19 yards for Alabama 1-Ohio State (6-0-0) beat' ibeaf Syra<:use ; Sec00*1 *anked Pecn Slate rallied in—'^ l ™ ^Cnmson Tide s other ^-OMahoma 1 y tones earner- —i S™ McOird kkkeda pair oj( Odd Na WMiamiOiMftesttoter recowred a fumble to set up .Tennessee.284. te ArtahtofM-fll'I goals Susday astbe New Orleans Saints ''>1 aPISSiSfiteKetfTteatadelS^f:" ^ *. ^ J 5. Auburn (0,0) • beat-^W^ttS!^.^-I from Hut Hum ended an ltgame wjnless streak oo 0^10-But file headlines belongedto {M) Ohio ^teand^?,:. ^thera Cal used a ooe-yard scoring run hv Georgia Tech 31-22. u V" Mat! a 27-Z3 leadwith aSO-yard pass road with a 13-3 National FootbaU%3 Oklahoma. from Ken Andersoe.to Isaac Cnrtis siet­ l^^nctc^ewer the Atlaiola Falcons, Wiip Stale's Griffin boosted his career rushing yar--^^j^fi^^o^byOinsljitohdutodowritflregmBi, if« -GMtMrnti Te«s Tecfi ^«eto3^1.erasingtoemarkof3^15«tbrPomne's.;^ FulUwcks Wayne Bullock and Itess Komman Lch ' f3"31 Ote Annstroogfrom ISTO-iHedarted20and 12yards' ^yscored twice, atidA1S—. i — .. ^a^ft'rcg was faik-bed ...< fof the Buckeyes' first two touchdowns in the apHmy v txxichdowii as Itotijet) ;-r> *'«v, A»­ stoned first -Jfrffi* teotefAnnMnm^s nakk;,witit'^|^;;|^|ijf " ' »-Araona «5-Ml h>st t^ "^Vei=35^Sw^M*t5Scm>ZSrs$RtSTlSafc^7lSiTFSS55 m m 81$Soccer .5$|By ALLAtf NIGHT • "We played ptetty / well several shots on goal. ... w: One of the surprising was ejected from the -game Texan Staff Writer today." Texas Soccer Coach. BILL P.EGLER played on a aspects of the game was the for using the very same tac­ Iti'a h^rd fought .defensive Alfred Erler said, after the, weak knee . while Pa t struggle, the .Texas soever draw. "However, injuries, fact that Texas center-tics. ' O'DriscolI suffered a bruised -team played Rictiland College probably, hurt us the most ". forward Ohadi was held IN AN attempt to get more ankle trying to dribble around scoreless for the first' time, physical in the middle of the "to a l-l tie Saturday, at Not suited out for the con­ a Richland.defender. ; this year. Ohadi. who took. field.. Erler^shifted Leiser toFreshman Field. test was Essy.Ghadessy, who Even though the Longhorns • only threeshots ongoal during Ohadi's center-forward posi­ • . . Texas struck' early-with a hadiji thigh injured. Also not were hobbled, so was .the game said. .".There WHS goal by MTckcjr' Shuffield. : aaiu. ; 1lie-It: was tion and moved Ohadi to wing.; seeing action were Bill -Gon­ assisted by Greg Leiser. Kicnland. Bob McCulloghH-always two guys covering me: *'Fred didn't challenge them,' zales and right winger.Luis' regularly a fullback, wasfore-'" one from the front and one in (Richland defenders) enough, "After Greg's pass-hit me in Timpe. m ed to play goal.since starting the cliest. I caught the ball Halfback Mimq, Alvarez-' the back.'*1 so we moved Leiser to the goaltender. Stan Ross was with my left foot. I had Ohadi also commented on middle in order, to get more an Qalderon. :who dislocated his sidelined with.a collarbone in­the rugged brand of soccer.... .muscle inside." said Erler. ; easy angleon the net since the toe two weeks ago, played the jury.-Also on the disabled list goaltender thought the ball hit entire game. Calderon^ api.. displayed by both squads;!Jv/;5 Tempers flared throughout. for Richland ^was Bill Murphy my hand," Shuffield said.-parently • not seriously ."The -Richland defenders' '-"This was probably the..^i with-pulled ligaments and were .playing my; legs,": he • roughest team I've played . Richland. evened the score bothered -by the injury, Ethron Torres with an-ankle in the second half,on a goal by started many;breaks and took injury. v. said. During last week'sgame Against, said a tired Shuffield. " W against Texas-A&M. Ohadi "Not only were, they Charley Delong, set up .by a pass from Joe Smith. The ball Texas Open a *>«-7 .. Cotfm'ttvUWn '• v 915-A Sage Brush , yards across thecourse in joy. ** i W I T Pd ff W.l TM. If FA " champion Al Beiberger were .Off N. Lamar past Rundberg New.Engl*nd-.»....i.S X 0 .833 W 91 s Louis. .. A 0 0 1 000 149 85 repair, boots k'p; Diehl had shot one of the' . tied forfourth with 272s, while JBuftalo . , . ilO 633 137 105 PhllpMa. . t.MJ 2 0 687 118 72 t 0 .467 123 Ifl Wash .4 2 0 .667 114 78 shoes beltt tNY J«tf -ISO .1*7 88 Ml Delia* ~ 2 4 0 .33T 120 105 *"51 $500 Beautiful Colors ^Balt ISO .167 75 169 NY Granfv~^::;;r,r.:...1 5 0 .167 79 1?0 learher * C**trot OMtlon :•••*• Control UVUmi .. 4 t 1 .750 1» 99 Minn 5 10 >33 140 ai •LEATHER SALE • 2 0 .667 160 101 Gjm Bay.'......'. _...3 2 0 -.600 62 17 goods Vcriout kinds, -colon -75' p«r ft. 1 5 0 .167 n163 Chlcsgo;.,...;.;.-:...'...-^..} 3 0 .*»• ft tt , "Houston ISO .167 79 146 Detroit ,j4 -o . .A3 14 vo W—ttwi DlriUon • • Wmtem Oiniiton . 1 Capitol Saddlery r.Oafcland 1 O 333 148 .99 LA 4 I 0 .667 114 74 • mm 0»nver.j.,v...iU...» 4 2 1 .583.125 120 Atl»nf«-,J 4 0 .333 S3 84 . %-vti (KM City .,4 4 0 .333 89 110 N»wOrl...r~ ...2 4 0 333 67 84 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 305 WEST 19TH ** HIGHLAND MALL £$aij 5 0 .167 79 120 5 F. *. 2 4 0 J33 73 132 Oown • St. Louli 31, Houitoo 27 Open 10-7 ' OfttroH-2P, Minnesota 16^: Open 10-9 v. New Ortwfu13, Atlanta 3 { . Denver 11. San Diego 7 .. M¥-­ :.8ufto!o 30< New England28 - Lo* Angelet 37, San Francisco 14 $SAVE MONEYS Dallas 3V Philadelphia 24 f Miami 9, Kansas City 3 m­ • No Memberships Required for Oiscoun^i:^; Baltimore 35) New York Jets m Oakland 30,.Cincinnati 27 . -Pittsburgh 20, Cleveland 16. , Mmda/iGoiM . ^^Waihlnotoa-24^-NAw_ York Gianti 3 6reen Bay at Chicago DO YOUR OWN CAR REPAIRS ^ ' -ReplacsrRent-R«rts4or-AII4mport«dpTO PLACE A CLASSIFIED Cars, Pintos, and Vega's ir­'«£ 'AD v-m Wm §s§^­ ^ CALL 471-5244 laspj/.w. TUNEsUK $1-' K_j®P &s-Robot P.Cooie^ directoro( -----. WwuMBi gap eaafcift boosing, sai^. "They ^s^iit •3to*c-«fcgcte a ISaieiribig,-• tiiO? »» y«i.'«fy awwhuc:-•> .feorosfeifl. .!j^jKAaec=at£?L 4f me Dortce stodeots)kaewtbey«Ra(Jii-( -suSaatf l3|Mjiceasde5iBtiie "TBEY AISO 1saB& txaa-PrograniS sactsperaSed ia^^Ai^aStii'-jiwatl,,lEseeSHQa1''1'' ' live in campus housing " Tltj ----Mkiaae---ceamstiee=-^-jaafafej > »l!• imiiiiw I'ftii jpVl it 11 nil1 {' famiSOT ood tfurfwin nyni idu^iiM^t^falMalgionondBrtwitestothy vtcfoty -i&fejnnatjoa is enclosed «i4 . • rrefc>?a»d iiiOBaagatso ace drffgyd ltm>!ve5 'qii£sCka' rf Swgy HWwmU erf Ifct UaiwB&yftuflw-fluw* Jww Satwwtoy wtfrt. application iafomatiat, •. ;'."tJsgr refer seffkws can*-' aad sesatm witSs, Qiofce said. '-"S. : Mote. Rich was allowed to cUef, a Ui«>tt»itt jproiiessar. register for aToom in Jeste" Use Texan Classified Ads tf^fcWggfat*teijacik' because " fiiere is ao way n txie brenra i«g]i 'can tell whether eflteris| stadest.": Moare sa^t |fe stitide&tsare ol^tstadentsa­ * |1> ConfrontedbyInjunctions not," Cooke said. Actwd cowsk 'i^-psyl® As for tbe delay in-ink*, {Sxiog? aeii soexsiogtr are aaoi % BOSEST a CLAHK Ike Deceptive Trade after payment ot a certain * part of cadet Ltaaaag or sb-;,v.A 'eoBSBEaer.protectiee'sasf -PtK&esOjantr Protec-aabant of moaey. then ^ miag Rkh that be most leart m % ssriKtixBitailthmae If A^f. Get. Jate, tieoAct, t , _'y-demanding fell payment Jester, Cooke ^bid' Ms office V'v aoae is tte/j^asBgaog'. stages,--i BBlTtmailiy is.JSStliDistrict -. Owit actKnl calied fair before ddrnery. " • jast received atwnpoter pri* jsji./ Recreation Committee ^ * Moore said. "Bat vqc vooSd Cart reaaltedin a tegytaaryAttowi aad Qavey to cease « Bepreseatiag that liey toot indicating studeati' S. '. . sponsors Jnb sorprised bav auui; sa/swakaagijaeatKo AS^B^ ftefaBawicg practices: are tbe origiaal source and status. H«seit pA»esiMBe icamfamtsJ':": .• Representing tfcat ,tnacofacta.rers of Rich said he was looking far psy­ r a tbei:"i«BHC c3Bd ' Jtononafe. Jac.. aod Robert dard or qoaJfljrwfcen Siey are sasaatsright to cancel a 6on-students, .are ndt resides! — $7.50 UT IDHolders ?Wmh sesicr sdmis n)odi te. .•W. Davej, EadrridaaOy aad as: apt>.>.A"'••—=-A-*r~t~7. tract signed in a door-to-door stadents, said Alas 'TWip' gtnetumtatt arcrsfls wiSilav president of River City • Representing that • solicitation; iovoMug more son. executive assistant in tfct j Friday and Saturday October 25 and 26. enforeaneia," Moore said, Mecaa«iais.J^c. gravestones wiB be driivered than CS;|?: . ' ?$£? ertensioo diyistoa. C* J. *" "We seed to stress poiice Judge Jaines R. Heyers ....... . . vl-rfeiv--: ' •* • • -C-imv-.O.few!.' "We .don't .make any bocv'! Signup beginsTodkiy!Texas Union South {next to GregoryGym) hmiliiw-andhowtfaey relate graded the teaqxsaiy injBnc-ja^ arrangements." Thorny to the average otima." tioo for alleged vidapoas o£ fNo Boston tor Austin' son said, adding that only it recent years have theevening Sought With Program classes been attended in larp ENGINEERING GRADUATES numbers by nonAnstis ; • Aestia ^ad^ scbooS stKtentsvingetavievof'mtegratioo ' "xMwtS. • Fail Spring and Summer C'nf. ItrC"^ Mtfcroqgh besmg. sinuiar. altboe^i not at aS as vtotest as Bostaa*s; as they participale m a workshop amoving the " Students' OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT -in ..,feighiy coBtnweraa] subject dazvsg next two weeks. -Attorney Recreation Committee sponsor* ^5^?",fl»--«P8lw-«Br-Adslnt'T-a program stnessmg iuterper-, Tf>» ttudams" altaniafs, Itotk i MECHANICAI-CHEMICAL-ELECTR1CAL ggsooal rdatiaaAips as a basis for oaderstanding racial-ia-Ivy and Ann'' B«w«r, on 1 |M^terac6oBs is tie CMamsnLtr, is fee hrainctikl of the Austin TRAIL RIDE AND HAY RIDE and j Vat?Independent School Efetrict's srfmoi-cotmmmity reiatiocs 8*o3oSI# by appoinlRMtd frtnjj 1 8 a.m. to 5 pj». Monday PETROiaiM ' /1 . ':; ..T„ ... Ihroogh Friday in Sp««(ti j (Justice Stables) More thas 5SD studesrts oi BlantOo Siith Grade School will .. Buimup m mgaim M1 :y$5.00 UT ID Holders ^ ^ ^fe%^:S^5$J^|6,00^heri^: Our •partiiitluslmicafaailecotogkralstediftsof theareaaswdlas' .. torwy» wg twpjte. fcHidtocg.'"! tatiwe wiH be on campus for iirtervipws on "circle sessions" to build interpersonal relationships, Blao-lonant, toroymn piirtttion, 'i t£» Princgial Beoiah Smith said Ssoday. TODAY: Te# Ud#n'!slifr"® ® MONDAY, OCTOBER 28th, 1974 •mpioya*' Hghtt.taxation, and| |4 r-'L --fmmaiK* com*. ' • 1 ^ ^ ' -rrogram Office (next to Gregory Gym) 33 TOYOTA "SS1 "iwelHHcMdFountomSohmky at 4:15 p.m. > Need Drums? Datsun %i&^olkswagen Volvo RECORDERS f-'. ' "vnth-lha toupon > AMD tvy -v 'RicoRW^usic Datsun Major Tune-Up URGEST SELECTION $20.00w/owhtod ,^|E)CA%^ $16.50oiothtn ;• '! OHw joerf tfcrw No*. 30 rAi8ler Mtrsic Gnsfbte Repoir Bcoke*^ • Sectrical 1003 SoMfannh, 83«171 0'-4 W " » <5J&SAJ? , j|& .1 > Ludwig 0 Rogers • Slngerland n Camco Rbes • Pearf •GretschV Ghost Pedals ZHdjian&Paiste Cymbals# Largest Selection & Large Accessory Dept. We Got'Em -New and Ifsfed it And the qualified folks to service them. VfetSTRAITMUSIC CO. Below, 908 North Latnar • 476*6927 -g~—fg-^joWjUS" OFFjtfi 506 W17? 9Bt#» 9 s preregfetratfon: Pay all debts Priced, atjonly n tm MAwuuff i 477. Ml lMNfT m' «t-7S7T-. e, -ywti tm »VBtSIM «7-«TI by October 23. To find oui if— $1-3.00. SM .uifinprai you hove a bill thot needt to 1M M be paidf call Registration Ac­Caitftno counting -471-4838 ' tr% aA , Offieo of SMiVs Slf 'Wmm ;riyj . iva- Franklin Puts Of#The AustmKitz lO^DAY i *t> »*•• wiirr n cam _ _ ._,T .-r . ^. • • • m m m M m M • m• • Mm Lecture: George-Wead,',!'The^Rise of Expressionism in >*%• By DANIEL D. SAEZ quined floor.length gowns and popped the Ritzettes, four struments ^ and ~amplitude to 'Mendocino.'-The 'volume 'There's no time, nolime for. . Texan Staff Writer |r 'Film (or the Shadow Knows)," at the Communication . „tails: All were spotlighted and" long-stemmed lovelies-in.ab-. compensate for the acoustics: 1 With the intensity of "a jerked upwards at the end un­: the press. Come along with Building Auditorium, noon-and is free to the public. „' l^tOtographed by'-closed cir-" bre.viated red costumes (?). of the place, but whe^ the til it. was a . high-pitched me as I do my rQunds." "Film: "The Trial," directed by Orson Welles. At 7 and Roman candle and the subtle-. cult television cameras Howls pf delight greeted their-Cobra£ finished -and Doug scream and crashed back -; .He. ducked intb the -alleyty to match, the Ritz Theatre 'thoughtfully provided for the bumps, grinds and kicks. but •" 9:10 p.m. in Burdine Auditorium, Admission is $1 for the cornor Sahrh came on, ail problems.-down for the finale. Although behind theater, on of East Sixth the and students, faculty and staff, $1.50 for members,®>,m. in Hogg •fiow,?.'.his voice lowering as he • -' Auditorium. Admission is |2. • > watched the final. scaffolding •: SUNDAY' • ' ; being dismantled, "I'm not''-LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 8-12 pm Concert: Juilliard String Quartet at 4 p.m. in Hogg too sure." Auditorium. Admission is $2. But the doors did open at 8Tickets for festival concerts may be obtained at the ; p.m.; and true believers and • > ''STARCROST" Hogg Auditorium Box Office from10 a.m. to,6 p.m. Mon­ doubting -Thomases alike" day through Friday or'at the door preceding the event. —Texan Staff Photo^by Chip Kaufman 27(H) WEST ANDERSON — IN THE VILLAGEentered into the splendor of . For further information call 471-1444. •' The crowd'-pieasing Ritzettes the renovated^ Rlts^Fluffy i white< clouds hung immobile •on sky-blue walls, fireproofed Tony and Betsy of I pj*. ' -; 9 Caught in ihe Act J* sound insulation hugged the m Duval Villa ^ 'D RATHER television­ 7 Guntm^ke ^ 9 Special: "Or|nk. Dr«nk; Drunk" 7t 36 NaW* lobby ceiling, and .a red and Big~Big Apartments MR'. LONNY'S ^ Qarol Burn«H t>oiti dlicuulon of ..9-.CapltarEye&£i$. > • gold carpet muffled the feet of HAIRSTYLIST -American ateohoifcm: lOtJQ p.m. * visiting celebrities which in-v 5308 BURNET ROAD TALK DIAMONDS! 34 The Rookl** .$3 ? 7 Movie: I'Shi Cried Murder/' eluded Jerry Jeff Walker, ac­2-1FURNISHED $200/ mo. 34 Bell System-Family Theater. starring Lynda Day George, Telly OFFER GUYS & DOLLS /'The Cay," sirring-jamev Hart ^ Savaias. -• tor. Dennisa Hopper, and A VIP HAIR TREATMENT • Jones. • :4 « Speaking Freely I +m, screenwriter Bud Shrake. 2-2FURNISHED $220/ mo. (SHAMPOO. CONDITIONER, 7 Maude < : Charles does talk diamondsa lot.He'd/ r-y 34 Movie:. "Roaring Twenties/' Though T-shirts and jeans Pay your own electricity this winter & save AND STYLE!Hangover jr* local show onU-%;. starring James Cagney. Humphrey were rampant, many first-Move in Now: ^ rather sell diamonds than anything ' •totalled Bogart. • ' r • f FOR *6.50 ' 3| NFL FoofbAM Green. Bay'ar -nighters came dressed in se-Reserve your apt. for spring semester else. That doesn't mean he won't talk; Chicago . Come by & check us ouf FOR APPOINTMENT CALL to you about handcrafted Jewelry/ 36 Movie: VThe Candidate*^ >tarr« 4305 Duval „ ' ' . 454-9475 459-7904 . made to your own design, or about' . Oovglat, anything else inhis store. He just likes' 7 Rhoda mm BETH « .diamonds a lot. CharlesLeutwyler will ­.. * Tlper.by theTall -? documentary be.happy to explain away someof th« . -Ing. Robert Redford, Meivyn bn alchoiics.­ SAND : things you've been told by'oth^f: 7 Mtd/cat Center • 'V.v -; jewelers. He wants you to Know the WOWTHERE'S-AN MARCIA .-score..For.lnstance.Jje'lLteH yo.uJh.at_ w& :; If you don't buy from him tot be sureWelcome ANSWER FOR TRQUBLED your jeweler gives you the written in-. V itlfe Wr formation on your, diamond's grade.* mmSKIN-AND HALINA HAS IT. < Because": he respects his customers DELQRIS he's a pretty good man to ,talk-.., She knows what to do about everything : diamonds wlthi-:;-.-:;::< ­ ^ from oily or acne.troubled skin to the'dry ancJ scaly skin. ""' 505 NICHES to SHEAR 1 block w. of Red River ""'^Her special tiesjnclude deep'j CHARLES TONIGHT MADNESS . ^^ pore cleansing and W T. GOSNEY Wm refining, treatments LEUTWYLER 4^1 v .•• •. . ' THORNTON 1202 San Antonio ' 477-7924 for and , m ^ , Also Featuring blackheads, pimples, JEWELERS m BRUCE CARLSON NO COVER Diane Wilson^Formerly of Fresh Hair SfsK hair ,removed by On":the drag 26th3 vyaxJng or electroly­mt sis, and individual f-rji rra make-up. Her train­9^^ Forking ot the back door. mML ing includes 18 years m on San Antonio of experience in Paris, mm -™ FOR A CHANGE ; Warsaw, and Vienna. mm Chabad-tiflbflvHdi Wouldn't you like to participate C'V" 'm in a SHiur in. Judaism ^Cail 452-3500 for your -Jiffs at a College level? : . free skin analysis. m *«<&• aaaMHHHHi m Discussions of Chasldlc em/ Jewish Philosophy sponsored by the Chabad Lubavltch Movement of the Southwest and led by Rabbi Shhtion Latarotf, Regional Director, are continuing for the'i third year. They am held tyery Tutsday night from7:00 ;8:15p.m. (previously held oh Monday EUROPEAN SKIN CARE:«ii':i^: nights) at Chabad.House -Lubavltch of UT. temporary location: 311 £. 31st No. 20$, Austin. W^M No pnvkws baekgtoimd^s^aqulred^and one-s oertonaljiommlttmant isn't questioned. Every 5403 Clay Avenue at Bumet Road Jewish studenTis weliorhe. For further information, cali our UT coordinator. Mosha Traxier^ai 472:3900. Fri.. ^crrrfcxSip^irjappointrnentidolyr NOTE: TUESDAY NIGHT, Come join U» IS ;?iv^ Ce/farzd caro/toft'/7 m ht/fh tug.DERMA CULTURE SALONj m " l V ,'n hffyfte. u/fHt THE VERY NEWEST CONCEPT IN THE m . /trnferJinceq and AUSTIN AREA FOR "COMPLEXION arange, PERFECTION' emcr * ce&rjs. If you're colneerned^Nitfrblemished skin, Ws^loraiiofi saggf­ ing skin, lines, enlarged pore textures clogged pores, brown spots... "• 1 . t * ' ' , > •This unique salon will vacuum dean the skin, cleanse every porelift out blackheads, improve dry or oily skin. For Ladies^ MhUAUm M e n . Giris, j6o»sgg|§; This method is scientific Jand^h ^one %yAhighly trained IHIAMWie^CK diwiil licensed personnel. ' . ] V The skip care that has been enjoyed by Hollywood stars for over 40 years, and is available to vou hare now. INIAllilTiaiMinilllll?5' The tejitvlts ays^priceless, )A\ Sail modest pocketboo!" mmMmti /*• ' V "" x* »*!*• » -"T-t* '-Jiy *­ 85piit 3§£Sfffl«SsSw®^ ;': sls» B* BUX OAHWIN, gnidtosmZ^.x '&od^ riy: Hsflni... TocfflStaff -Wdter itda" Jast Frafey. *s -eaacetsatfc *a& sfcArply. tee to Hte stage wife lis ad wfcteb sfctrald be ' fieUssacef,Ut eae&a«$-3H£ _*a£Bai& ad £Cttte rater--represaittti wife as «%e o{tteaaJQy be«r ctona fry augogtipice-of Sat &sgai3e$, gretaffiw&J qaafity.. psyefeofogical depth, riewug '' "" • ~— "-•" " ' a»roaseto^lm^^«P!etei^ .1 m their « yoa ew&ct » espr^sed «^^rajta*«8^^K&5ISFL? Tte effect was «t-superfluous adjective y£ ftat act'aria, "Bssarna D» out &* <&f« ete-^n^s&wter^.atoc-^-rf^of ite mttBtetoaridLMM etaeTone *-yfa» are raea&ZEQfwS&, i;ratet ^awe icqst prodjscSawK Ser . ' pecsedt to be ast {oissate " * :rfaacayasBKysbaHfdl^e ^V^Ot^ari.teaFar t . «f Deljocab. SEEter fAida1' amswraalacta», Afewrfkrt;-jw—, .r™,* i nnrmrfiHrriT "^rmiTu m,tinfMi. * _.. " F--fteni^eriwJ' ™fawiMW •,(• tfSLr'o*3^ «B®« caarouaoaas. cemtrperlem«4»en*$oI pas^fy be uttered? iw fe geessum.of jomsg singecs at maaatiott -^erer agpareat in a^S^mes. as jv ia -—--ninti-?^*^ ^ * pmttl»esyBqrto-•'&•• T.*5 fiacasaig tertde isptsi as es-,'moas mimtw jeatrfe at-' Cafr&Mwboczer tnigiiiaisodowiifl towatcftit,if oatyfor seinaJ as hearisg a a»e per-vvoiyeiamn-rm^y amwace, a ttfaiy ^ty, yet taaaatoig sketefc aboat an alrnbaKc and ha r Ljtoi.toVJ fasmstotx ia Ass&k-ef t&e' _, _ , ao»iriata2g. tiaggag wife. £t was %mtes by the fatBbaod-aod-TttteieAr® taea. ' -' T5» scest raeffowsas tte wtfeiie^^JkKBrfBpaaaiRaieeTajlor TODAY! -« *_ • Tfey'reCumsestaosmaganKri»w. "You Yoorlife" Libert atoseiyv as AScia's giased. kjng m. a ta?nm«*-at wiucfc «be ceasetessJy dseery mrw (R«, Ca««t ft« aiter Amonasu, was feBr ^cesfingrmeroF fearo ©efcrog garae is piaywi for hi^s states: "Yob can Jose tootwif* vmrr I Mwsotram i BUHTBETMBS e^t._Jfc«ctaw t seea » of Efe?t surfMsisz&-unest. famih.yaghwae.jWsrif-respectand 1. & Gt^ttieiuge Stcarfttwi Dttbw-Mnft 477-|S« J y I SOfflQf t ™"~ "'.% MS-MS SUFCKEEE I •taspdgwswa^^ 1 cmsrau S HI* FBI •I II ! A<;[-t TONIGHT • csimaBB mm MNEWan ,, 1 n15-* PLUM izflo: £98 NEU »i 4-CO 4d» MDHH CKST ,&aa SduQ &90 lOrQO g-ry v,^ t ->.0 -i^ iteS'aa^M „"E, -OfflTTKMSIR^g I ^irtE€^**tTOE^?ia>-1 s J_75w ItfOtK-Sfttat . r3dra^£:&*4S; •s«a»is»» w>.iiM>«M »•" -' s. . H KAIOBNC Mm 10. WWOUESf WCOMB& AN» • WAITRESSES IN •-; AOSTW aosf&s '••: A,$ 1 JRMWT« SMOKY ^4 f • •" ilSfclS-lfelS ••/JUSO nATWBNG jSf ^usr DAY -• nssetTM £& STATE \ KR^MPE&MUSC;' ir ill 'fcjariiMdK INTERSTATE THEATRES awifiiryi PABAMOUMT.-. cans -tan '^3 *s nor^r";' •; >^-.41 »',i MO 1 «*•. s?..;s: i!*»rssm -IMUMBHB BHBBaB«IBIIVtKlgT­ of lb Dragdu Haalw&wrl s ? Say few ivs -ai ': -"XC jsesnj DAY! CHBMTt Wmi BS MCHKMH00111116 TBIMNtH OF OOMBI CarftT!^ fes -••'. ; .»3r; : r-' ; -.,r.c wi "Attack •( Hm K»s F» Girfe^ mm tk nmttMG bbcmhi «nuk nt crktau »u 4^-*1g 840>1aj Tfcw XLUSINI P MiDNIGHTtRS'I5B I VARSITY ,, AMERICANA .•« ••• • v OdL:34.-,". s SOUTHWOOD IFASON YOUNC CfagaBcAMai.*ji <*»*«# •-$(^» •*(WWJsB.K:I*» : UH£S I «. h*r Opry TKHEIRIH RflUBS •fc«S-" -v • £#'•' -«tOO-JO*«CHI .HMHtx . -+•,45­ JWU 4 CUiK6«&lv BWS . vmaiiBai »*n SMO«f«TO BURN£T DRIVE.IN «)Mn. ANDI^tl^laVARRE|w CHAWJUNHfelUN. MNttTiM Slxivv inu\t S A AT v^^fOCOSe^HK CAMERAS « (T.0Q ?**• ' 4'-» •ONOfCOFT^EMd^ti WWII SouThvid^ -ROMANTICANDE SeCnONSOF.THE AO. BAY RXMT0M.Tt SCR»«2 1?:00 JUt s M7»l CIHVBE JUR! HinfflLEifFTH N1 # -xs^ I WATUm "S­ WTO PS W«>EIIS0N PKIH :« ~-?r [ftp-' SUft 1 ' , iiliil y±2:;#!>>fe»35S" : e» •Sf*®!**­B JCTilspji1»4>C<«WJV ®?m iflMI il .if.Ky'>/fcf»^B? *< * ». 11 * iippi^h yi •> , *553® i* W^*W$£thd SK .'^rC©' •" $w3§Slil roauc f'siHeroic • • • -• • IPS "' .sfegBy SUZANNE SHELTON I got,,^ Y ou sk ev i tc h * s* r;',;"Aida" moved. Despite -choreography translated the", "overwhelming logistics,, "temple priestesses intoa mov­hor'des of warriors,-. ing frieze. Barbara Barker as , • priestesses and Pharoahs managed to move offstage and on, without a hitch. ... Dennis Wakeling's staging expressed thematic • mtrtiftT • through-movement. Near the end of: the opera, when Radames has chosen death over Amneris' offer of in­ tercession, a single line. of priests moved horizontally across stage into the Hall of • Justice. That single line, im­ personal and inexorable, suggested more than a stage full of movement. K BIT'S NOT Wakeling's,fault that some" opera Singers cafti 2L>4 W\ >• %+•,'­V "%-F ^pot move. They express grief through heaving shouldersand. hiccups. • Their stances are : wooden. As one ballet expert .-noted,. Radames '(Richard' ' Riffel) stood throughout the „.opera in second position. i^^The dancers fared better. -Texan Staff Hwto by Ml Hubcr . A moment of lavish pageantry—the triumphal march from 'Aida.' [Readers To OfferpRimers of Eldritch The , corruption and mission is $1. " / wHere the movie house went slowly closes in on the mop -Eldritch," "Wilson began, his degeneration oLa smalltown • ^The_ play_ will;be presented" out of bOsiness eightyears ago ment itself. preoccupation.,.with "lost fcommunity is the subject of by the Oral Performance of "jfindord5 Wilson's award-Literature Series of the »inning off-Broadway play Department of Speech Com­jf'The Rimers of Eldritch/' to • munication and the School of presented by the faculty-Communication. directed readers theater at 8 The 17 members of the cast >.m. Oct. 25 and 26 in the represent the 70 men and Communication Building--women who live' outtheir sad lAuditorium (CMA 2.320). Ad­half-lives in Eldritch, Iowa, "Mss m ^^""Contlnuei'lts Monday^Nlght Horror Series with' NIGHT TIDE „m • WSi^ /, Directed by Curtis Harrington A*®¥'' s With Dennis Hopper and Linda Lawson JESTER AUDITORIUM $1 7 8,9?Mf Theatre Committee in ^conjunction withjS The. Cullv^e.vf Fine-Jpfs^preienU­ ^ THE TRIAL® • Dlrect»d. proifucecl, a'nd~written-by Orson Viallas.based on : ; the.novsl by Franz f(afka:>photography by Edmoni) Richard/ music by Jean La-brut end AlbingnL^WjthAnthony Rerkins^ _J>jSon:Welles.-Jeahrie f^oreau,, Romy 5chne1der, Elsa Mar­ v. tmelll, Akim Tamiroff. Sutanno Flon, Madeleine Robinson. . • English dialog . * v Tonight, 7 and 9:10 p.m. Burdine Auditoriuni^ $1,00 UT -Student*, Faculty, Staff -$1.50 Members ENDS DOUBLE m FEATURE ® ™no*rB! M; Joanne jib ^Woodward-RREDFORDl SummerWishes, WinterDreams IE WAYWE |L m*NN THfiATftE&'. \ At J;{5 p.m. Qui* ^ ^55 jriaMen your spat belt fflftSt1!! ,$m -• * m everything happens fast. --BIBAWWNEWMAN^, OEAfiJAG6£R IFOIU^'tMWI BMII MlnbMMWi -CU£MOttUlu£»is>»»s«< ;f| "•11-" ends thursmy! -:j colohoyde l^e* At IN Only mmsm ^"d.nothing much has happen---The play-is an example of souls,a theme he employeded since, except a murder, the 20th Cpntury interest in' in."Hotel Baltimore," which -i'f The:killing/ of a presumed the inbred psychology of the won the 'New York Drama rapist forms the -dramatic small town. The tradition Critics Circlp Award in 1973. center of '"The. Rimers of began with "Spobn River, Eldritch,*' but instead of. . Anthology" and includes such MALE GO-GO DANCERS reaching this incident classics as "Winesburg;. . every ;moment-by-moment, Wilson. Ohio," .."Main Street," "Our Paula's Playpen . approaches it from several Town," and "The Last Pic; : 1500Borton Springs . ' Amofeur Ni'fe Mon. tt.Thvrs. time-directions at once. He ture Show," $75 total for 3 prize winners encircles it with antecedents vjftWith /'The Rimers of" • Cover Chargt and consequences and then '*• 1 ' \ mm&mm 505 NECHES * "Vblock w. of Red River TOMORROW WHEATf IELD FROM HOUSTON ONE NIGHT ONLY wmmm First Aiistih Appearance 7 ft«« highbolh ^ no cover and tow Won, .Sot^4t 2 fr«« highbolli Mon •TftvnK Sunday, Nov.24 HoppyHr. Mon.-Thuri.';'8 P.M. . Mon.-Ffi: Austin Municipal j;2„^nt>Py Hr.. Mon.-Fri. ' 4:00-6:45 2 for 1 SW* 5;30 -7i30 pioymg ptarto Auditorium a'T' " ,Exhibit: "Electric Mosaic Paintings." Works by John Williams, recent UT art graduate: Foyer; Undergraduate library.-Weekdays through' November T. Fine r Arts Committee, - ® P,n!' Filtfii';'JTheiTrfdt." Based on -Kafka's 'novel. f." * $1 f?r UT students, faculty,and Q ^mernberirTlT»amr^ommiH»nr — ;'*f pm.Rlm; "The Learning Tree/' A film chronicling tfiiT". frustrations of a black teenager growing op in a ihiall tOwrf;A AcodemicCenter Auditorium. Admission 75'for 1.0. holders; $1 S^^r*Afro-America«CultureCOmmittee. *» 1 a-j <• — . " —-r-—^—i_* 9*00^^j»,J*Wt"€hicqno Tertulio7~A prSgWirfn clesigned' to Hie < learning of Spanish by Chteanof o0 BIGE^swissIS 1.50 ,SHUMI -1.25 CHEDDAR CH«SE 1.25 fURKtY «-1 35 -1.55 TurkeyImperial „ BHLt6HA,KAM,ymn TOWttYjAtftCADO/SW^SWIjS X.OQ ^ ^ ^ . . ,-m— « HOMEMADE SOUPrene«wl,...,.,./5 .WW) PIATE6'-jsmsm . ­ 'DEWxe toifamij.' 1.60 V'^4^ r :>a r Atwm,um KB.K,inm*l)t,tiaiA 40 "'; SHIHER ^ ^ V wS-i * T-&'-*7 £?IS J -­ *• ... iiliifliiilllisi -;iii - . " "i ^hT *7 fl; §*%« ZZiAZri PHOIMB < A^^fysksM,-^ " CLASSIFIED A0VERTl5lNG ^ RATES15 word minimum : FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. • -n. * THRU FF»I. FURN. APARTS. SERVICES 8:00-5:00 ' S!f KENRAY V IMMEDIATE OPENING (hip female jt/sTl^orth or 27lh aj Each word 5-9 time*. a^c-l..V ,08 GINNY'S slWpluielKt.Own room, carport* near ^uafdaiupt! * ' Each word -10 or. more times..! .07 WAT^O CAMPUS :if|APARTMENTS .COPYING UT, Debb)e« 476-2M3. 476-«179 • PRETTY DUPLEX $ 2707 HemRhljl Park Student rateeech t|me>.,80 AND BEAT THE BAJS.. . oioo Uan/AA''r\»»"!*;-v ROOMMATE jjjpdwm duple* to? rent a. qu«et<;.-i,>^ NEED AAAtE to share Classified Display Is MOBILEfeviTwo-one furnished Northeast Austin bedroom 2122 HdHCOCK Or. mobiie.hcfrw. Prefer student. Call Jack«; resident l.col. * I inch one-time,.,.. JX2J ERVICE ,MffSJHbbrhood-^Cach duplex oifecsiffrge;.^ apartments Pool, cable, laundry, ouiet «--• <74-5604, «W43 «ll«r ipiltl.'...":•<•'••: • Jcoltl Inch?-9 Hmes.,..,.*2.93 '^•unced backyard, covei^d parKtng) .ex ­ tcol. x I.Inch left or-moretime*$£.64 B. STEREO • lance'0 INC. NEED SERIOUS STUDENT roommate-1— .twSUflS jW,h.tm. connections;*: Kitchen , AMVFMi84racfcia/deyl and l • to jhirebwlroom. JB/4B aper»m«nt. ISO ; """"" *"""»'"••*appliances furslur­ Under/BMy-#-treck S79.95' rwqgtu&atiti Dished. 5160 plus bllls;Xal^92ft-72Mvi -. ^yearsffom LawScl>oou.47547?5,^_ YES, we do type FM converter * * 539.95 'ownhdws, extra iarpet Ywo bedroom •OtAOUNI SCH6DUU''' • . Installation available hz* ; v • ••••^ flatv.one.and two baths.' CA/CH. div-42 Dobie Mall476-917J, '-5823 N. Interregional . . FEMALE ROOMMATES needed'* own hwasher;-disposal door to dodr garbage Fceshman-themes. room, mature, liberal/three blocks UT. Twm Mdcy; ,.J:00 (MR. 453r2219 & \ PLAZA plcXupt. pool* fpaid servke If deslrwL Free PgrKing y OUi: House. sp«rse(y.:fumIshed. S51;75. - Whynot start outwith Tmtdsy Uxm MnJfcy. ,.,.t-liOO washater>a »h complex. Seeowners^ Apt, ;^ 'lU.or.'cWl 45t*494S: : ,7 am 10 p.«n^M P-* , Oeposlt S30. 4/7<4029. BUSINESS OPP. good gradesi WidiMidty Tiun tmidp ..II:0Cajw. Musical -Tor Sate >R VENTURA ^ ,3$>s ?am.^5pm Sat^­ 472-3210 and 472-7677 -•Tired'ot small rooms A no closet space? v. t,?i, ^,, 1*2 FEMALES needed to shar^Z bdrm/3- Thmriay T«M Wedwwdey .11:00 Ajh. •LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beginner Tired of asphatt Vno?se? Try Pt*ia Ven~< bath apbrtmeflt.4 blocks from campus.- Miy T««wi Thin iday.Vi ;.,1l.-OQ «JM. :andr advanced. Drew Tbomason.,47$-•••• tura.-.l&-2,Bdrm furnyonfura. From WE ll»Ui. inc. Shutt!e,47«»1i7j afternoon. ONCE IN A „ 2079. 1129 50 plus electricity * , , . ^3410 Burleson Rd, v V 476-9093 I7TH • RIQ GRANDE. Own room In LlFETrME OPPORTUNITY iR^porH, Re»un»v PAULINO BERNABE classic-guitar; .-: ^ Barham Prop,. ' * / & l AUSTIN I*. Jypin© ^ house; Walk to campus. S37.SQ. V(( bills. Entire-Cjfy Block For Sale. 260 x ill ft* *Wv ^All University atsfr/,"1» thm iw4 *t wra* .mod* tn oa Estudto model 5300.with.case. Call-tfS^ 447^71 _ _ 92^9345 1 : level ground, streets paved, curbed and REKTJPS ' B^uitiwnHiit. lmm«Jw wtim bhiH b» 96$9. >•."l#2:pr,n?in9 JouUered on all 4sldfft. This property has ba»rh^l5 wort^ >' \A,r: riHP flpngiwrff OHt Imitil wiwNfc M ifaiiw t*r: ;GULBRANSEN CONSOLE piano in*: Our service is free £ '. binding • -.near shuttle. Must be student and like -same street, with a,minimum y«ar1y ln» jfiSfok, Open M Mon-T^ 4 : gi»B m» Wm puthKin twIiiipittifcli let Your time is Valuable? AAAUE. ONE BEDROOM. MO.'On River. 6 one-sto^«Hiiwi>h fti>*J b> wt<» ^tow good condition, very goocT sound, MCO,u HABITAT 'S® pets. 441-7111. , -come of S5.7C0. The remaining-^ block prl;sat tfwct Miayi ottar pubficohen." Also* Lowrey • organ. $50. Grtnon. bauivt;K, r {41r340sq. fi,) Is undeveloped. Excellent SERVICE' SI2S. <54-7375 , PARAXON „. 420 w". riverside drive CTaERAt-ROOMMAtE **ntW Sefonrf location-with Jnvnedlate potential, lutt ­ . HUNTERsSl^ , In two bedroom.5103.50 a month, bill*In. east of U T 472-8934 Ooble Mall LOW STUDENTdentRATESR PROPERTIES GUILD UstrJnaperf^conditTwwim cllxletf. Call 4B-MU REAL BARGAIN AT SI26.0OQ. HEIRS .15 wcrd-mlnlmum each day ..$ JO detune case. $4fs. Call David, <42-f339. ^, ^NEED AN APARTMENTiMrKU^tK 1 ^ MUST-SELL TO SETTLE ESTATE. • THE CROCKETT COMPANY Each additional word eachdays .05 ?.f FOR £ALL? 479-4171 • FEMALE* Own lroonvfireplace«shuttle, Contact Joe pavlu. 444-3374 or 472-6279;i?->.* v the complete:secretenel.iefvice -... « Joe C. Franiettl.* ReAltors "Unclassified*" l ifae*days.11.00 Pets -For Sale . call. -.weekdays i *£ papers, relumes . I cot. x Vlnch each day..^.wS2.64 :.GIVE us A4/Lzy\'1 SKYDIVE! Riverside^ 5105. 447^447 after 4 p.m. v ; . :<."T;VPINO -thesevmamncripH, reoorts. 3j • •(prepaid. No Refunds). •. Habitat. Hunters i^-FREE apartment Austin Parachute NEED MALE roommate to share one AUTOMATIC TYPINGS letters «ftd- ARC LABRADOR.~.Pum. |V«IIOw -and • locator service, located In-the lower .bedroom apaiiment at Vantage Polnt< Multi-copied originals . Students must show Auditor's., black females. Excellent bloodlines.45f Center 585: Call after)! p.m./4424903. v receipt* and pay In advance In TSP level of Ooble Matt. Wespecialise In stu­wk'l.472-4175 XEROX COPIES> S&00 for 100 c^» • Bidg, 3.2Q0 (25th & Whitii) from ft 9757 « dent complexes. • : -MM HELP WANTED (per originals), a.m..to.4:X p.m. Monday through" HABITAT HUNTERS F.or -Information please calt; PRINTING • offset:end.wtterpress: Friday , ADORABLE CHIHUAHUA. Six. weeks^ 272-5711 anytime NEEO EXTRAMONEY? Sellflowers dh •oW poppies* AKC registered. S75*»t00:)<( Lower Level* Dobie J MISCELLANEOUS .-,«nd the streetiof Austin. Thursday -Sunday, complete lines of office products ..Phone mornings to 3:0Q p.m. 453^605. ^ Suite 8A ' 476*3060* 453-1506. , 4B-7M7 -' 5530 Burnet Ri^ ' 474-1532 LUXURY • CONFIDENTIAL^ CARE: lor 'prMM(lf NELSON'S GIFTS:. Zun? Indian -•'.••••••'.• •. «• . '.•••«. FREE Beaofiful 6 months. unmarried' mothers: Edna'- Gladney Jewelry;. African and Mexican Imports. PERSON TO DRIVE school-fype bus^3 •ColUe/Dac.hshund, All stiots^; FOR SALE Students see This on* Home. HO# Hemptilll. Fort wor(h. Toll . «1J South Consrets. 444-3tl4: Closed Monday Friday 2 p.m. •• 6'p.m;'^ ^FBR -$160 j.treenumber 1400-nMllM. Mondays. . Chauffeur's license required.52.00^hour, CHRISTENSON 8, -'4-WATERLOO FLATS Apply In person 517 South Lamar. •••••'• ' "" •'ajj'i-J: Bedroom/1. Bath, Furmlihed/UrtiFurhlshed/Unfur-. 6 .blocks .to campus, dishwasher, dlv CITY Austin's ASSOCIATES ' Bath* RIVER 2 SHOP. ex-: LEARN TO PLAY -GUITAR. BegInner ' Aoto -For Sale pOSat pOOL etc. • ntshed-Shag^ cable, walk-ins. pooL com­474-1712 . -dgitye performance shop:olferi expetl' and advanced. . Drew. . Thomason.' 471-' PART TIME' work 15-20 houri/wetk^ .j ­ 478-3176. -1950 XK 150 JAGUAR fixed head cqupe; Homes -For Sale plete kitchen. Close to shaping and maintenance lor late'modet Imports.We • • 2079 5300^tnonth salahr or Incintive progrem.;-^' A TYPING Wire wheels, aew paint. mechantcaUy -,-_w_-_i...-.:.:._Town Lake :specialise In Datsun' and BMW peiior* Call 452-2758 gy-V* v SPECTACULAR VIEW OF city from.. • .$J70 unfurnished/8199 furnished • msnce tuning. UA West.6th. 472-5J77. HORSE STALLS lor rent.-Runs, arenar; SERVICE ­ sounds 255-2337, • - ALL BILLS PAIO BRAND NEW^ : this beautfful one.acre, level lot. Located > 41 WaHec Street asfMBm EFFICIENCIES •M& and exercise arenas Reasonable ratesr ' COUNTER HELP WANTED for drive-ln ^ 196* VOLVO 164;. Air, automatic, dose in at 503 Rocky River Rd. In west. ' Plwne Oon, DMm. • cafe. Hours 5*11 p.m.'385-0130. Ask for­ . Uke HHIs; *14,500: Call 474-5406 after . 474-449? ' 47*416; Specializing In . Michelifl fires. Very good condition.-Sl.> 5V30. Barry Glliingwater Co. -1700 NUECES ROOMS NEW LADIES' ty Atala 10 speed. Car : Mr. or Mrs. McNeely... «XL Gwer.'471-5514, ft-5 weekdays-Mar-• " Close to. campus, be^umi^iy furnished}1 , Theses »nd dissertations' I.. • : radt, lock.-chaln. $100. 47t-7ome. 12 x 55. : TEXAN DORM. 1905 Nueces. Doubles H^S/hnor, No experience necessaryi v:c;; — Law SHefs ' 1973 VOLKSWAGEN 'Thing/1 ,Oee£ 1 CA/CH. 53.500. 500 Jffastrop Hwy Space I 5155 electricity lind deposit. ; ; ;k. • SZJOfSemester. Singles S385/Semester.< MENS R*P GROUP on the male sex See Bill at The Spilt Rail inn: 217 SouthOw 20. 385-0394. .. . • . .. • • !irs Manager -*Apt 201* rote-win* men of variout .sexual Lamar, lC,v Term papers and retterts " > guardu 9.000 miles: Stflt under warranty;: 478-9058 .Daily -maid J service^ central, blr. ; Prompt, Professional $140: S& preferences. :toi*s and lifestyles. S2I50.441-0574 after 5:15p.m. -v^ •-Refrigerators* hoi plates allowed. Two* 2 STORY DUPLEX for sale by cwnehl: FOUNTAIN TERRACE.® blocks from:.caihpus. Co-Ed. -Resident • Tuesdays 7J0j>-m. y-Audltorlomf 2B0 •THE 1.F,C needs a part-time secretary#-^; Service bedroom. 521,500. Located close to-UT, Guadalupe. 1972 RED CORVETTE convertible, 4S4» Inquire neighborhood 4534072, 472-7273,' APARTMENTS ^-Managers. 477-1760 Af ternoont Monday-Thursday. Or will 453-8101 automatic, all power and air. both tops. work around schedule. Prefer student ' 44KBS3. Lar^e 1 bedroom, large closets, fully ALL BILLS PAID-*" rfi Pick-up Service Available 25.500 miles bestIn town 47*7211 ext.21, $65, .175.. US .monthly Maid service. familiar with Greek Community: Cons ' "carpeted, cable, disposal water, gas. A54-I8M. < swimming pooL furnished Walking dis­Unens. AC ABP. nur catHtol,"303 East UNF. HOUSES fact Chad Cable for Interview 892-1664.-3,°2 Glenvlew a . tance to UT, NO children or pets 610 Ylth. To ste: contact Joe Franzetll <72. 4784110. •••. •••: •• • • 70 SAAB99. AM/FM. AC Mmpg Good <779. 47M4U, West 30th. 477-8858. 5T10 I ».D. MAKE up to 540/day. Must Jbe condition, 51400. 474-6524. 2 BEDROOM HOME WITH OEM, living .... |. -' ' 'C.O.D. ^EFF.,® SJ25 ??£$ FURNJSHED ROOM 'All bills paid, S5S.f.>/' neatit and aggressive, .havegood running -MRS. BOOOUR's fYPINO SERVICEi . T964 FORD. v4« pick-up. extra long and room and diningroom for sale by owner. Sc%BU|-Red River. <72^2M. TIRED OF THE DORM? car;.Apply 3I0«.N.. Lamar, Suite 102 or Reports, theses, dissertations and book), extra wide bed.. Needs1 some work.~s500. uxaied north-UT in 4000 Btxk OuvaLu M* BR. S145 phone 454^767. typed accurately, fast and reasonably. 4540559 after 5 pm. Fenced back .yard with garage. 525^000;:-^SUNNYVALE THEN MOVE . Prlnthi^and binding on request. Cloit ^RESH HAiR^,needs Hairdresser with1 second lien. 453-6072, 472-227X Or 44)* ' Assume existing ?*« loan, will consider- 6 blocks to.campus • ; Hundreds of vacancies availableIn town . 70 AUDI. 4 speed, air, AM/FM, APTS» 2408.Leon. r;47»<5W LOST & FOUND -and -ift-the-country^-AusWnVoldestand WMP-DWE LICEMR, CONGENIAL, NOIV watyl Apply lh person 504 DISSERTATIONS, theses, rmorts, Md B; __5M796. ^ ntnrr'ruririn'.'..-. . -REWARD. Gold Rim:Eyeglasses In ; West.Mth, upstairs Tuesday-Saturday, 9 .law. briefs. Experienced typist, » -/.reasonable. Also has.spare car parts; -3253.,., as 1, BDRAASl30 -(i-'; largest Rental Sarvteejyoven results. ' IS 2 &DRM S1S0~~ -QUlET-—ENFtE^O-AREAr-l ne.dl.point,casa^tui-tee-9lass»st-ii-»or-—rentalIBUREAU-^ ision. Br'ind Txrrylown. 2507 Bridle Pam. Lorr.k* /68 VW aUG. New engine, good condk . BdrmiWith fullkitchen;bright case. Call 34M540. 4501 Guadalupe' • Open 7 Days—your owmaircut. — --B«K(y-4>J-47IS — . • . lion, call, after 6:00 0^. 441^3481. vHW SUAliMlT r ^ -v I 3 Blocks to Shuttle UWBW shag,, large rooms.-Good GOLDEN RETRIEVER named Ceine "PHOTOGRAPHER needs models for FRANCES WOODS TYPINGSERVICE ¥962 VOLVO, Rebuilt engine, new Uv- storage, pooj, sauna, cable with Austin Animal Clinic tag/ Reward, : photo Illustration for national dHfrlbu-Experienced, Law, Thesis, DISIK­ lerior, dependabla. *a Ford style. New .ROSEDALE - Call 452-1731 * flotvseod short resume and ilmltatloht„ ' tallons. Manuscripts. WW90-. . . and congenial at 1 bedroom , Inspection. s«75. Also. '59 Volvo550.5700 to; Box 9711/ Austin. Texas 7»744." ;v}AREAl-B »\ MOVE IN TODAY I 7 from $148.50 plus electricity. UNCLASSIFIED fbr both. Paul 477-171L 472-1942. FOUND WEDNESDAY.'sweater on WC 4 Just North of 27th at 807 Westi Lynn.. 477-7794, 472-^shuttle. Calt 475-8028. ; * , •avvM • 1970 OPEL. Lsw mileage, cleans 472-Across from-tennis court in Ramsey 4162. N < LostredwalMtw/chtcks&lD 45fl0tl . -r-' Guadalupe 4439, ' Par*, wpn maintained. M Home iwith 1 BR:-$j!25 LOST;.PalroFGlasses wlfh biuf ltnm. • hardwood floors and den.-^Ricfc. Borttv a«?H«r IF shuttfe route:' Ptease cilt 47S-' '44 Corvalr. automatic, »2»o. 472-914*. PHONE WORK -v; "2707' HemRhlll -Park ;'%SW4 BURNT ,ORANGE Qtevy Piek-up. Finp Bennet 8> Associates ^ Tanglewood Annex T-<., 1044. No Experience Necessary ^r.H ton. 1400 miles, standard trans^ 350 ' 4544746 or 459-9485 f j.Si : 1315Horwalll' U-House Lives • ">1.s3200orbestoffer — CaiiWiiLafieeft .<:,Mak? S2.00 • $4.00/per hour. 452-1341. f '.-'476-0948 '478-9468 CREEKSIDE FOR RENT Free Siamese Kittens, tu-sm. T~-Supply 31Q8 North Lamar ^ Misc. -for Sole ? .• ' Shuttle Stop 'i Suite 102 or 7 4 :}y-VW FA5TBACK. J970, 8est-offer over, .i .Used refrigerator S35 47V765C. •,--;'SI700. Call <77-437), ask for George. TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds; MOVE IN TODAY Large efficiency; CA/CK shag, walk-MICROWAVE OVENS/; doi-m-size i Jil Phone 454-8761 --f.V' ddgotd: Capitol.Diamond Shop. 4018 N; ; .Inv comptefa'kitchen, .bafh-vanity. On refrigeralorsi. /color-TVfs, " FM car radios, fivdash. 477-6M*. izg RESUMES vVtf.jr'R)trrtirire -•Lamar, 454*6877.-city/shuttle route. HIS plus E„ thro washers/dryerv stereos for rent. JEZ 1 11 . -wheels. Best offer. 453*5360. 4^ EL DORADO: August *75. 47<-«32< alter 1p.m. ' Rentals. 408 East 1st. 472-6275. 10 sod blh. su/buy sip bag. 47S-9479. --v?T."?' ." . . 1 .'"iWJiV.' •with or without pictures -: --5TAINED-GiiA5ScrattsuppHes.-Opal———-1 Day.Service HtttS CORVA1R. rwis sood.-J2iO. ClU and Cath glass. Came. Flux,Solderr etc: 3501 Speedway" ssm ? STUDIO for rent tx>r Jea3iTng~pI5S5"^~ "lefea IIIF w/aensesi »cc. 4Sl-4. IV68 Waiter H&06A ——, IEI0 ALL 0JLL& PAID • E«f: tlgJQABP 4bt c«mDUS 47S4490. " apartment complex. ' Night students flBiSF pica/MIt*. 2S vun tttstrteic#, bookv woods. Irons. &> bag S200 263-5318. Shuttle Stop j; v -t^cep»4oie. nooar srudehfi.-f'UrAiiMdv" Ulsiiriallonvr_ iheses, leponi, ;. — " iSAVE MONEYf Call us before buying : -44Porsche9<2 S2$00negott>l.'442-|9«3. •. ".LAKE AUSTtN. Oulet country llvrng 15 apartmenl:ptus. salaryfor qualified perw. mlmedaraphlng. 4t2-7tt4.­ y. , i«no|orcy6fe. Insurance. Lambert *»• 35MM LENSES for rvtst Wide angie* •LE FONTE minutes campus/dovmfovm. Vbedrootn 345-1768 between 9-4, sorance Associates,-mt OOO AAedlcat ;.teleph0t0rX00nvind macro lens. Captto)/ . Drafting dMt.ft Wr Bar S2S. 44444M. son , ( /^Partway «52-256«. 803 West28th •W' i "is6"® home I70f 2 bedroom1130. cabin VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER OlvefslUH ^Camera Rental. 476^81. .-..v,-.1rBi'••••.'. . MOVE IN TODAY" ­ !ssfe«*70; houseboat *120.3»-!«l.:tt7.iisi; ; = Services, Graduate and undergradmlt 472-6480 '• ; Kusfom amp good cond. S300j444 (04. bWs t .-V73V9 HONOA CB350. Clutch and brsite * BRASS BEOS^new shipment; double. 1 BR -$125 472-4162 NEED REyPUNCH OPERATOR 11 In jypjns.^ptlr^is, binding. 1515 Koenlt, ^cableneeds work. 5600,2Belt helmetsin-.:: •iWe railings, lafrd-foot boanis. J200 up.- LARGE 2 BEDROOM house t biocki''-'>*70 Ply Fury S12S0 2i4-10p «ft 6 ' the Secretary of State's Office. Need ihe _ ^duded-Call John. 441-8392. 38S02M. isXjBarry GlllingwaterCo. UT. Fireplace, old but character. s^2Sl' : following qualifications: Sandys. 506 Watsfa. : MARK XX plus bills. 442-9444. • . ;j. ; 1. At least oheyear'actual operating . STARK TYPING. Specialty: Technic.!. -^AWASAKI 90. Dependable 4.000 miles, ••• EXCELLENT OPPORTUNtTt' for . 454-3953 452-5093 experience Experienced Itmev dissertations, PR's, i:;;)!^Good-condition, 5195,00 Paul 477-1711, -Karate irawtogu Take over contract at 3815 Guadalupe . 2. High School-graduate. , • . •manuscripts, etc. Printing, binding /•kARGE. CARPETEO efficiency 2700 TUTORING WANTED • 3, Knowledge oiF otheHe^vipment^ CharJene startt 45W2I0. '520 a. month.Call 453-8809. ^ SwIsher^^V blbck -Law.' SchoolV -. wch «s sorters, cgllators. etc ^Wfi^.HONDA .175in excellent condiffon.^7bb Fl REPLACES. New,, black • stee)^ 5115/month. 478-65S0 PHYSICS/TUTORING, Graduate stuiv; :BtBLE: JOKES. l desperately-need •>ii%4.: Ability lo work,under pressure ot -MINNIE L. HAMMETT Typing i . freestanding/ ^handmad*. In Mexico. : new.treth Bible {okes. Please call Toni. ^ fXdductten schedule*. • pupilcailng Sarvie*. Ttints. dissert Must seit; 596 each; 3300-B Clawsonv ANTtLLES - IUS/MONTKk Near University T •r.47^4921. , Will be glven a key-punch test. Contact .tatlons. papers of: *11 tdndv.resumes,. ,|fe»973 ROCKFORDTaka 100 motorbike,' Road • bedroorrvCA/CK disposal, dishwasher,:. °wenCoon at 475-58451or appoirttm^pt, -free refreshments^ utTW. 441-4114 ^awgwrty thoosand.miie&' runs good, great • pool, laundry-facnitles, water/gas paid. ENGLISH-TUTOR needed. AU basle APTS.^ > v HEED CELIBATES for research paper g&jfcrtefc *310..47Y-4450 * ENGLISH 3-SPEEO bicycle -535. ' --2204 Ehfleld 4412 Avenue^ 452-4249, grammar skills^ Cad.Bruce. 453HB963. interviews. Please can 47M40I. NEAT. Accurate and prompt typing. 48 rW'i J«|ts per page,Theses IScents: Call 447­ S^ithetic; fur pillow, large "itie, 525. > " APARTMENT^f (replace, 2737 i/tM" STUDIO Negotiable.459-7017. MODELS NEEDED Stereo -' For Sale ;c;Skylight; CA/CH. Cable.-convenlent^OO •.t 2BDRM s205 EasI51st,S134pluiE.451-3444, 472-5129. (Female and Male) . >MABYL &MAU.WOOD TVping Last: LONG ESTABLISHED student beer Traineesand Professional: Register now minute, overnlght' availa m 472-1923 liable. Term lounge. Ff*e blu OT 'canwuv Mir.'. SHUTTLE STOP TARRYTOWN. Shuttle, mature single.-tor temporary employment. Categories' 1 papers, . theses* dissertations.m LOOKING FOR .equipped. Also vending machlneryv-poov patioy treev quiet efficiency siIS:1*. f,r': NstesSi styleshows, product adver­ • Serfous inquiries only. 477-4270. • tising,.TV comm. & etc. irge/­ bedroom 512S. 45M950. 0777 or 442•8S45, GOOD STEREO Weekdays 5P.m.to9pm.1sat.9,.m. NOMADS OF THE SAHARA bring you fo 1 p.m.; gifts and antiques. JoumeyvEnd,.i«m • COMPLETELY. REDECORATED large ». AUSTIN MODEL'S AGENCY,' ,:THE;PERSONAL TOUCH wlll do your Equipment? and San Antohw "garageapt;;Prnrate-parking, trees, fwo- 447-1240 typing Quickly, Etficlently and .Miblocks UnNenltyTexas. Lease 47M063.; ^Reasonably. Call 451-rni or 47544i7 . . GRANDMOTHER'S PATCHWORK ilS - Somewhere TRY cwtjfe Large-sites suifabto for spreads. 2,BEDROOM& 2 BATH, 2 blocks frorh ''-STUOENTSI NEED typing? Call Tlmi Other handwork also. Call 476-9224 to .'campus. All Bills Paid.5175.472<17I7.405 ss-vigs-i V„ MOONLIGHT :: 472-8044 of come by 403 West 13th Suit, -• &. 31st. ­ STEREO CENTER see • there'$ someone • MADNESS FURNISHED APARTMENT BEFORE YOU BUY. • WATEHE(ED5.513;. hot ..water* heater,-/ -•"fr-¥&#Ssl 1 SISS/month.'ABP; Furnished rodms only- ENTERPRISES PAT .MOOOY m.Kes your paper look 2 BR, iBA , 539.;. fireplaces 596/ toilet pressure1- gjodter SO cent*a page; East.Rlwsld,. LARGE POOL « ALL BILLS PAiD/ SSO/month.1blocks campui,2800 Whftls*-• ThisIs asmall Pump, 5119^ miscellaneous. 3300-eClaw- NEEDS 477-7558. son ROSd;..';-' .' ,. MOVE IN TODAY waiting to buy . store with some-• ' Best Rate ontheLake 4 young men or women willing to lovest -• NEED A TYPIST? We're *secretarial very .good name . Shunie Bvs Froot Doof i 2 BLOCKSSHUTTLE. 2bedroom, 5189 T _i125.oo.each and work 2 weekends speciallsf,; Resumes,, letters, theses, . bedroom,-57#9. Gas, water, TV, cable brands'at the T" Motorless 2400 Town Lake Circle 'rtonthly as host, and hostess on guided, fegal, statistical, research papers, and f lir rvsidrAtt-nnated and carpeted. 305 and ' j 4424340 etc. Pick up and dellvaryavailable. H7­ . best prices: ; 401 West 39th. 454-0360, 452^342., your powermower.;.. wrs to Galveston; Weekend salary (5o Motion M23 y I p. secfttatiMSyvk, plus meals and room at Flagship Hotel > KENWOOD fP Bike Shop LUXURIOUS 3 bedroom/2 bath apart-:i> investment repaid on. first: tour Nov: 9V JVC—NlKKO Professional repairsohall makes • fnent very.tlose foUT •shuttle bus-rent tape recorder-Call Cass Stevens for personal inter* Jiist North of 27th at $140 iiiat . reduction*472-4874. AAARANTZ Labor guaranteed "7: view. Fri« Sat,, Sun. 1-6 p.m.; 459-669$: ' < Guadalupe Free pick-up PIONEER , »f Check our prices Bedroom^*1'^-ONE BE DROOM 5140 plus electricity, o 2707 Hemphill Park,, -•%^« Use your student coupon book stereo... near campusand shufffe- Convenlent to ALTEC downtown, new furniture and poor.-407, West 38th. .4534540, 472-4162. Barry^ .. TEACHERS' ... .^PHILIPS smi GHIlngyfater Company. -tt# |^»PRE-SCHOOL 4" • -if SANSUI • 1 TAKE UP LEASE oft.oncbfdroom. Call IS motorcycle.If VtSTA has Programs beginning January:' tf SONY FURN. APARTS. 447-8829 after six. r;March..1974 :ln the Ui?;:LI*nto^ ,„„n kit"""*"*•''"w-'ne.'Oii..-VLlvina MBA 1 ^YPIN0- P«'NT.NG, BIDING bicycle..^ 800 SQUARE FEETH1: fn these I CAR NEED A G'REAT bedrooms and the2bedrooms;are mam­ w«t Mall «® ">« recnjllers on tt>t. ' ­ 1 PLACE TO LIVE? moth. too.,Furnished or -unfurnished,. ^ -taj? THBcoMPLfeTH with lce-maker refrigerators (frosts ^ STEREOS H automobile.., . _ • ^ PROPESS^ONAL »' freely Dw. cable. waUk-bis & buiff-lns. . , A/W j ^COLORFUli^L^ TRY THE From 5185 ALL BtLLS'PAID. 2606 ! ££• EFFICIENCIES^ t.VBJ_ACKSTONE Wheless Lane 92M2Q2, 472-4162, -LAWYERS "IFULLTIME Close to UT furniture..^ t' 'APARTMENTS ACT-C6NTUATE THE POSITIVE. Act Five Blocks East £ -u" AND 'I l"v* V. ApartmeotS'best of both worfds. One / -«y; 'One bedroor^l ^ e a large rooiTy for >44J0/mo. or bedrooms at affordable prices for -472"32l°'.-and472-7677 •w-of the"Drag v an enffce room lor. sn2.S0 fuf;-r students: From 5149 pltrs E » cable. 924 i 203 E. 19th Shag/dishwasher,. — g ..i wS5y£feni ail bills paW-Mald service once East 5lSt.;459-5728; 472-4162. televiston.'..^ ROOM & BOARD k. . --a gas=grIII,'pets ok^^^B' , igi476-6733##:= BVlhg yd".* 1 ' / best, t - CITY PLANNERS 4i Jll»plus E; sit? ptus~E 5137. US yptf'f<^tf * jNf ­ 1211 W. 8th' ,p,%t 474-1107 with fast bar. extra Urge dosets.* etc;. 5 Sxceiltnt fj 250 WATT ,and«huHlebusat El,CtHttv off Blanco _ 477-4162 ^ • •• hx>aBia .-•-P'luwjii^ meaicai • .T^ cooked rnealfc .AC maW, twtm-i J ^EMAWwlg^P'WavQttnde;;4w-ag'-i s between 8-5a30p.m. ] j5LE!?i°SY?TEA« EL POSAOO from 5130 Fantastic , reprulterj on tt«e West Mali M(JS»U^ Famous AX-JOOO Carrard Stereo wim. WILLOW apartments wjth cable^ pool, full • AWFMtunar.comptet.amfiopMfecox^jA -«J£*' .'ktfcheAt.'On and:shuffle . bus. ^fiiSBSSSfW1 ^*h eSerW'laO^ trois, gtganfic alr :suspensIon; «>.wayi.„ OAK CREEKStS ist*1 Convenient? fo!,sh6p0too<-:-1105, Clayton wdpay^i^u^ieii^^rw sptaker system with larpe 1«r* woofer. m. CREEKS DBS97453-7914, 472-4162. Tell tfretm it's FOR SALE S'^ mldrange,md]**tweeter. Oney»ar" t APARTMENTS 2 BR ALL BILLS PAID gsarantoe on,parts«Kf'l»bor;iocal-Mrr?t')! nee Seggtswa retail SSJt. tut are Haygas,j. water «cable TV.You pay dec i*» HELP WANTED te«5tf?v. with a classified ad Ms .seHmgg [If ts --iiy.We havegas heatand gasranges super srttrms for eft!Terms' «lp you.conserw,Shuttte bus stopat '( *,? Tfll. 453-0540. 473-41«. Barry. *-•. **— -UNITES F R EIGHT'sALEj'-SS^ fttramUrat field 45U]tl, Vaufted .^Company . . ...1 ,.; tu5 ff EKw . ~" I..1. ' •ctlttngs, private bakxiales. , .' Mwatfftiwtfetgyaay»4'' AHARO ACT TOPOU.OW.Ad1V, A R*T1r\KI T^*-T.-bei»Mi(r«nie at 2 BEDROOM.T BATH FURN. M>r. DISCOUNTEtJj 1 Bedroom " A TRULY MEANINGML'l— «»0 ALL BILLSPAlS STEREO 3YSTE/SlAS Air Bills Pdld $9^.00 •stf* LE FONT ?y?V1'c 'r,?hart1 Square; ERISSHt"business', •VIST®5 hwn tearur*a rj-V\ T 403W«t28th ".V, ^ : jft w «nd ^ ^ -M 100 w.tt AM/FM ste»o 472-4480 «(0ust Watched" air"1 473-4147. ^ 472r4U2 |ftwC^BBfWWt«U5o NEAR CAMPUS.EFFICIENCY' ajLasyj/j-sJOA lit P»ld,l* «»«rWHotll.' "* f.X •< < +74.** SvhaJTPrapJrt*es'n^n*s.^ IMOHOOM,! Wfc2t)Mn»in, ;, mifrnD FREIGHT SALES-2®-. noOEPpSlT. HO LEASE.Ckan. est. rem ma ROwAPTS.St amPomiv; UM tl.LAMA*' '^ftfiCWtoes^jCWs.'-dowwuwn. r»> MONDAy^FI PROGR> IsilfOiJit *aa) csH>itel'si% l£Wj-vV •"-ftf-fi mPIW • SW •mwSg&L-f£''*<•>* w~' ' *&&$ #& «5£gs flS* . «H jiff; l&TZM 4si§ ABC m ^m S1;Tff , 11111 L. :V-W4 ^By BILL SCOTT had a' 'usable piece 'of graphics-, slow motion, r . Wofds were translated into : .'-..Texan Staff Wri icr ; videotape for the next day's videotape replays and special •• action almost instantafleous-' . Friday afternoon prior lo' (Saturday) halftlrjne. Only a visual effects.. he .taping of Darrell .RoyaUs. few technical checks and a 12-Sound was handled by an ,tNo sooner had Howard MCAA-wrltten remarks-con-hour wait remained before a. .engineel-who satin aseparate spbken to Keith.Jackson, theierning hjs role as an national audience would sit,at booth equipped with a 'con­ play-by-play announcer, then I'athletiq-administratar," the home and view the results-of fusing array of switches, Jackson himself would be \BC television control room; ' •(•the efforts-•ol. 45-technipians •several telephones.and a com­ echoing the.message 'over,-, eused in a large,truckparted ^and more than half a> million' munication line to-the national television. "<•%*•utslde tjie north end of ^ Hollars" worth of sophisticated Geodyear' blimp overhead:­/'Mention Quarter. The mood inside the through headsets with both second later, Jackson had in­|ras.disturbed control room had changed . cameramen and broad­formed the audience aboutthe­"Where are the rest of the ' •' 'since--Friday.;-Nonessential casters. significance of the Thanksgiv-» in-field headsets?" he asked.people had been cleared out "Get ready to roll the other 1/1 mil • •• ^J-J' 4 . . iftg weekend battle. _• I'Can't those Telco (telephone and the eight-foot square scores, graphics,'' Howard When not 'moving . his-two^; Eompany) guys get anything space took on the appearance said. "Lampley, get over to sidelines caftieramen to right—This is a classic exam--of a jet cockp]t. ^ the Arkansas bench and find different positions, Sidarisfile of their attitude." ' ' Director A'hdy Sidarjs. "out what the"injury situation was busy looking' for various1 The 2 p.m. taping started Howard: and the technical is," , , , '-r? "honey"shots to use as fillers ate. Royal sauntered down to ; director sat at a table facing : The decisions were made during lulls in the action;he field-and Immediately -anarray of :24 . television quickly and _without apparent "Hey, there's a fine-looking jfent-forTthe.copy, making monitor, screens; Iniaddifion ; hesitation by these men who broad over behind the band," Ranges'.and scratching to one monitorior each 6f the were selecting the shots and he told one of his camera •everal sentences. six cameras-covering the. ac­^camera angles that America operators. "Come in tight on Aftec•W.K'IV,six takes o{.ihe,one-J tion on .the field there wereCl ___,' was seeihg at home from the v' her." mte talk, Howard felt" he -^ black and :white screen& for sofa-"' -." *. -\.*The 24-inch picture of the ' girl appeared on. th«I IP "preview'.' screen in the con­trol room. As soon as theplay • . , —Taxan Sioff Hmto by Chip Koufmar Director Ancfy Sidaris died, Sidaris switched her * ana producer Chuck Howard watch the monitors. ­face onto the color "line" The three-minute 'break or something," the assistant across the television screen w — »VIV»J»mvh • monitor, which put her on the gave everyone time to breathe answered. "Maybe we should " With the Tower bathed in air for a brief moment, and get ready" for the last storv " • • oranee lipht thpthe spectatorsciwtatnro go with the Bevo story. orange light, Early dining ^1111 As director, Sidaris also quarter of what was turning "No, I don't like that one," filed out Their contact with into a boring roijt. Ippi^ • was responsible for an­Howard responded. "Get Don this particular dontest was. means ticipating the flow of the Once in{o the final period, (Tollofson, the other sideline over. But inside thp control game and instructing his Howard began planning ways reporter) to talk to (Texas room,, where the concept of free wining. cameramen with regard-to to take some of the-visual band director Vincent) football-as-theater, asa visual isolation shots of players tedium out of the telecast DiNmo." If you will make youf^M experience, was "the only con­ whom he guessed might make "Have „we been able to get And the game went on reservation to dine,,r In­sideration, the work was not V-an important block' or .a key... Lady Bird down on the side the staditiffn fans were done. during our happyhour, :tackle during a* play. sidelines," he asked his assis­cheering, the band was "play­, The striking the -elec­5:30 to6:30 pm,you will of "Number five, I want a tant, who relayed thequestion ing and the photographers tronic net within Memorial receive acomplimentary /linebacker on this one," he to Jim Lampley, one of the were clicking, most of them jgmt Stadium went on for three glass of fine imported said on a thirdrand-short yar­sideline reporters responsible unaware, .of the mini-drama more' hours. The engineers wine tocompliment our dage. One of the isolation for interviews during the which continued to unfold un­and-production technicians game. continental cuisine and screens immediatelyclosed in -til the final1 gun sounded and know-their-jobs; • ' on a-tight shot of a Texas "Jim says hetcan't find her the closing credits' rolled By 9 p.m., they were gone: • your good taste linebacker moving laterally . t "V against the Arkansas running back; The shot was not used. Use Texan Classified Ads fiuinii M-Jellerson Square.KmDey Latw atW.OSth. "A tire advertisement ¥\mM? appeared on the "air" monitor, and the room relax­. ed,.Sidaris bit into a taco iand „ , _ Howard started .a conversa^ EARN CASH WEEKLY Guitar String i-nin, L' „ j r r-tntmSMf Hwt*l>rDavM Woe. tion with Bud Wilkinson, sit­volor commentator Bud Wilkinion (l) qnd anehorman Keith Jackton begin program ting in the broadcast booth BloodPlasma DonorsNeeded^ pr«parotioni in tha ABC broadcoit booth b»for« the -Arkamatgarne^—,— with Jackson ' i ^ . . it t .. A.Wp ..v I-,--," 3 J —Men-&-Women: " % J.. Sale EARN $10 WEEKLY Don't Make A Move TACO Without Calling CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Save 20% On FLATS iRTMENT Austin HAPPY HOUR! Blood Components* Inc. All Guitar Strings lERS OPEN: MON.&THVRS. 8 AM to7P.M. 79« m m "•\4v ' SERVICE TUESt & FRL 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. :®A PITCHER „ CLOSED WED. & SAT. AMSTER MUSIC 1424 IAVACA AFree Service i-Z4.Hours a OayfS®!p^ ' -4-6 MON-FRI S513 N. LAMAR 409 W. 6th 477-3735 ^ p 472^162 478-7331 ittiy-.*,^a-vay.-iv LIDFPALACTSMAICCS FQfcanoperta wholene^ woridol:oppcii1unily..yja|^ Each year, NS.A offers challenging career writihg in its broadest sense, Including ;salary-increases as you assume greater opporiunillcs lo Liberal.Arls majors through , research, writing, editing, illustrating, layout; .^responsibility; NSA also ts-anxious to ^ participation in the Professional Qualification • and reproduction . stimulate your professional and intellecluil Test, This year. NSA has scheduled the.PQT Programming—includes data systems growth in many ways, including intensive ' *" for Sslurda)'. November 23. Completion of. this program writing; and development of • formal as well as on-the-job training Test by the. Liberal Artsmajor, is a prerequisite•* mechanical and administrative procedures \ . Advanced study, if job related, is available, [ to consideration for-NSA,employment. •-•Cryptography^developing & logical proving,: at any of seven area universities and can be The Career Scene at NSA; The NafipnAl. • • • of new crypto-logic concepts partially or wholly reimbursed through NSA Secunty Agency is the U.S. Government -vj5«;Hes4arch--:the gathenngi analysis, and re* : Fellowships or other assistance programs. . . agency responsible for.developing invulner-'^porting of substantive data ' »u>Xhe deadline for PQT applications is NoveJn-: ah(e.communications systems to transmit i Your spetific academic mapr is of secondary .... ber l5(for the November 23 test]. Pick ufj a and receive vital'information; As an NSA ­ Importance; Of far greater importance are . PQT, Bulletin at your Placement Office; It prfifessional, ybu will bt trainttl to work • v.y.our,'^Ingenuify; intellectual curiosity and '-contains full details and. the necessafy testx > : ..on programs of national impOrtanee_m:such«i-: vperseverance-^.plus a desire lo apply them in• • . registration form.; College-Relations Branch, areasast" ft " "D*,-'jfilg i assignments tvh^re imagination is the essential National Security Agency, Ft George G ' LanguagiTSIa vlt'anti'Far Eastefn1^usc4~" ; qualification * . -, Meade, Maryland 20755 Attn M321. An as a basic tool of research into a number ofii e• K ®i fr>M Errol Fiynn Lynge-ln Ptama Sfudents Spice Up By S.TEVE OLAFSON, goods with a-theme suchas thestage dueling class -' At Friday afternoon sdemonstration labSi wherefe°T v<^'s, t Texan Staff Writer did with their Errol Flynn motif. .wall draraa student? perform scenes from .plays.; a­"Tf a swashbuckling young man brandishihg" a Last year on St. Patrick's Day, students dressed representative from the . group that served food: 'saber tried to sell you a sandwich in the Drama in green peddled green food for the occasion, Jean earlier in the day is given an>award for the group's, Building Friday, there was no need for alarm % •i-j-Hester, -drama student committee chairperson, ; "elforlsChanges are thedashing young man was adrama \said, ' •; ?; :• The award is" onlv svmbolK'i however, and could student doing his part for the "Errol Flvnn ill StudehU: who -specialised in lighting served fo^d'f •be something like an overly ripe banana. HesterMemorial Lunge-in." • • one'Friday, to the accompaniment of a light show:; said. •' iThe University,drama department has been stag-.fe*f also. ing such eventSi not with a cast of thousands, but •She added that the group from,the previous week "" HESTER SAjlD-.the. Friday affairs .have been a!' with different groups of drama students to raise >; .oalways gets to choose the group that will bring the: tradition for. as long as she can remember The/, money for scholarships, parties, the American ' groups started out with: a few_couplcs.^groviding*;'; .food the following week. • College Theater: Festival and senior actors who, food but eventually evolved into larger groupssuc;h' ,'i7 Th6: drama faculty has been chosen to provide • want to audition in Chicago for a job with a theaters> as the 27 peopl? who dressed like the Three® .food next Friday she said company, , Musketeers Friday, ..... MONEY FROM this years food sales will . THE DRAMA, groups sell desserts, stews^-S % The students donate ail the food that-is sold andl .benefit, among other things.' the 'drama -T«con Staff PHeto by QovfeTWoo sandwiches and other goodies'from 11 am. to-1,7• sell it at bargain prices. Some of the students afe. department's production of "A Man's a Man," p.m. every Friday to drarfi'a studtrits.. ^ reimbursed if they serve'extravagant dishes, but Safety Firsts j,,jvhich will be the University's entry, in "the ,<,_v£The different groups usually tryvto' sell their: sandwiches usually sell for 25 cents, Hesler'said " American College Theater Festival A University policeman examines one of four carsInvolved in a bang-up at 27»h and Guadalupe Streets. The University car was damaged Friday. • -v ~K *•* campus briefs . fs Y 1 • r" ••••,.'1 • , ^ ^ ,will youStudy in Germany AvaiIabI v e ©u deserve? •aSP* Fellowships . for one Entry forms for the.:rodeo. ' man Mm, "Hokuspokus" ai B p.m.:-meeting at 8»p»m. for wecfcly -: v-f#, academic year of graduate • • "Monday ?ra:;»­ sity graduate students and , tl' 5 p.m. Oct. 30. interested inlaw or graduate school .• wilt be-d«scussed. • •: It ..-graduating seniors. with representative* of-varlou*: SOOAL WELFARE STUDIES QUB wilj meet . Applicants' must -Be U.S. Recruiters In the Gradeate. schools, from. Vale 7 p.m. Monday Volunteers Needed Qraduate and Law Scboolvwitibe-in • Social Work Building to hear a !ec« " --; .. citizens with a' good •*;> Speech BGifding 104 tfom 8:30 a.m. .'•i-^.'-jure on ,the role of the actglt oroba®^ Representatives of ACTION' knowledge of the German fy to £.p.m. Monday-. • ..• • Mn counselor. • -• will be on campus Monday:' TEXAS UNION AP*O.AM£WCAN CUttU*E • t SEMINARS ^ language 4 ' w COMMITTEE -wi(lshov* thctilm."The - DEPARTMENT O* ElECTRlCAl ENGINEERING . through Friday seeking. 1 :.u.: Deadline for applications is . teaming Tree"ari-Awfr? p^n.Mon--. : /-will holda seminar at4 p.m. Monday •• >' •, volunteers to join the Peaces :-if. day tn the Acaderrilc Center Engineering .Buildmg • 102. Nov. 20. For more informa­ Corps-or VISTA, Graduating; Auditorium; Adm*ssii>cj «s 75 cen.Ts'V •*^OarryJ Gfeenwo»d of f^ome Alf ^ ' 'ft -tion and/or applications, con­• for Un m the Academic Center .Foyer. • on the West Mall and outside TEXAS UNION MEXICAN-AMERICAN FLY HOME Typing Opens 5'.the Business-Economics 'COMMITTEE will sponsor the photo ex-.. THANKSGIVING Building. Robert Lee Moore hifait, "El-Varujuero Genesis of the..'* •••: • • ... • Four sections of typing Texas Cowboy.' from 9 a.m-to 5:5' Hall Monday and in Townes p m through. Nov. t in the-* Jt CHRISTMAS classes at the University Hall on Wednesday and Thurs­Academic Center Foyer. ' ? . • GROUP begin Monday. Classesmeet 1 TEXAS UNION RECREATION COMMITTEE wiU day and in the Architecture •. sign-up: for hold horseback-riding'Building on Wednesday *<% Monday at the ProgramOffice Inthe. m • to 2 p m.. 2 to 3 p.m.. 6 to 7 FLIGHTS m ' New York,-Chicago, p.m. and 7 to 8 p rn Monday Union Sooth. The rtde tv scheduled- r Miomi, Los Angeles through Friday. ,or Saturday at Justice Stables -Cost Clinic Set <* is 55for University 10 holdersand 56^ .^Students may register by __ . — (or others going to Extension Building ine iexas union/University ^ texasunionkeoeationcommittec w>u ­301 at 19th and SabineStreets. Interaction Committee wilU-3 wi*.-. CALL Lets faceit, things aren tpcjiuil in today s job market, ^ven with a college degree. But cnrtncnr a T3 iteWhrfewater Sports Wilderness- 478­ sponsor a Women's Rape' Tuition is $17. including bgoks n """" Area Morvaay m the ProgramOffice the Air Forcehasjobs that fit your college education, on an equal-opportunity basis and materials." Prevention and Self-Defense of1he Onil^ Swfh.;The trip & 3471 '' • T"eAir Forceis deeplyinvolved toprovide understanding for its people about the JJLp sensibilities amf sensitivities of others. Doing its part to make things better. We'ie not 471-7335 Monday in the courtvard of' •:!!: University ID holders and s5 for the Women's Gymha!iume.s§ k-others; • • , -perTecF-yet. BiiFl)l^heT^C?ai^^iiiKliTeTH: jjfhs TEXAS UNION RECREATION COMMITTEE Will ANHOUNCEMtNtS also hold stgn-up for a canoe trip on SPACE Rodeo Entries C*CTUS TIA1BOOK tl scheduling ao-" .the lower. Guadalupe River Mondays polntments for: studio photographi :'^v. _m the .Union Program Office-The • Accepted , ^ for sophomores from 8 30 a rri. to ;k . trip set tor Friday and Saturday ; U 2200 p.m. throwgh Wednesday in> v and costs $7.50.tor ID holders and• vi. Applications are being ^.V^JTexas Student PutjllcationsBuifding-'-' S8.50 for others.' : ' . ' Guadalupe' • • ..:. 3JOO.AslttingfeeaOf Sl must bepaid TEXAS UNION. THEATER COMMITTEE will -accepted, for: entries in the' Plaza .. v«t-thetime theappointmentIsmade • Sponsor Ihertilm, ."The Trial", at 7? -''anceof $100a monthand flying lessons^­:19f?4 Bevo's Birthday Rodeo. CAREE* CHOICE INFORMATION-CENTER wiU r': and 9:JO o.mr-Monday^ rn Burflme James Little. Silver Spurs . • • . sponsor "FederalCareer Day'/from Auditorium.-Admission is Si for Apply, qualifv,and enroll in Air Force ROTCat ^^9 a>m., to .4 p.m. Monday-In Jester: ; . . • students, (acuity and staff. SL504oc •president", said Friday. .*.!'3&Center A T15-AInformation on ^ • ^Nieman, Hanks 1 ~ RAS 115 47t;'l 776 t»r 471• 1777 .member^ r:!^>?f,federaf. {obs possiWe withd/fferenf The rodeo, to be held at 8 MEETINGS •land Puryear • * "'"majorswill be availableat seminars BETA KAPPA CHAPTE* OF DElTA 'SK^i .Captain Jim Cargill p.m. Nov; 2 in the Travis S to be held through the da?. w»ll have a pledge meeting at7pm. DELTA PHt ALPHA AND THE GERMAN County Sheriff's Posse Arena. DEPARTMENT will sponsor the Ger-Monday, • executive committee - Put It All Together in Air Force ROTG . meeting at ^;4S p.M. and the active •i'f'V'-V.V ' .• . v.. CARPET Guitar Sale CLEANING! Save 10%On!) nie. Complete -4M All Yamaha Guitars : Janitorial Service AMSTER MUSIC 165»4 LAVACA "478-8954 (24, hrv) frS 478-7331 &£_i •• -i - w. Now at Ife classic prices! All Angel ^Classical WEEK ONLY Recordings now. About The wm i*l 40% joff list price. ' I Energy Crisis... 1 We'veGot Something InCommon. lPVi4i I "* We saw it coming and we saw it as a chalice Thai s why we re h„ -V |i * involved in a number o< major projects to lind/dovcioD PLUS new and supplemental sources of supply, includ­ \\ ' 4 ing coal gasification: importation 0t liquefied b H naJufci! qas from Alaska. Africa and Russia-ilk . jIiI'111 j. rnassive hytiro-lraang to accelerate protloc-!| l!' 'IJIi tio.'i from tigni. gas-b'ja'irig strata II vou j-.il^ljAr'PSih s.ee the er.erqy problem as a challengt-. ;;i h, then we have sorreininq to t^"< about (•': jjH tBs! 't (We arr> an eciual opportym'y eiTipioy-'-r. 1 i Jpfji ^ H."^v3i sincere in our ^Iforts !o provide me,j.-h-'o-|j ^ j lul worK opportunMies lot m.not.ly and ^|^ff|j!P,|^ female applicants l '11>:,,i>:ti!