Student Newspaper atTheUpiversityof Texas at Austin J%3L K,> « « 5^ ". " -,-f ?•*">< itV tr I. 74; 1^95 Ten Cenls u. ­ Austin, TexgSj Tnl'-TjjjiesdayT November 5, 1974 Sixteen' Pages '471-4591 ( , « m S« «• Texas RogersVetoes To Pick Governor 2ndDead Day By SUSIE STOLER have been donelast year, but at least we For 4-Year Term .. •••• Texan-Staff Writer caught it for the spring. I'msorry to By DAVID HgNDEtCKS ' tions have in the past drawn relatively • The on-again, off-again proposal to add all 'that work went for nothing," Bill' < '' • Texan Sta^t Writer a second dead day to the:fall calendar Government vice-• few voters. About 88 percent of Texas' Pprrish, ''Student Between one-half/and as few as one-; wasswitched permanently to off Monday' : president said. vpters cast ballots in 1072, one of the third OF less of Texas'. 5.4million eligible . by. University. President Ad.. Interim --"That-'s quite a cJisappointment.to thej^ ' highest percentages in the country; voters will decide Tuesday the state's.' Loreiie Rogers. . ' ' thousands of students Who are going to;J-". Sixteen of'the states'-24. congressional governor for the next four years. Rogers' turned dowa the calendar . be affected. In a time when this Univer­distf-itts; have challenges. In District 10, The polls wilr be open from7 a.m. to 7 -change; passedby the University Council sity is suffering-withan academiccrisis,•? Democratic incumbent; J.J. "Jake" •.p.m. .£ -' Oct. 21, which would have created a se­ it's amazing to me :that Mrs; Rogers'"''*Pickle of Austin faces GOP candidate A 1972 stal|constitutional amendment cond dead (lay Dec. 12 and shifted the Jim Granberry Paul Weiss, a Methpdist minister. Dalph Briscoe would deny students a. proposal, so vital* * 5 et* will go intq Effect with this.-electiori, giv-remainder of the exam, schedule .back 1 * to their academic work,*" Gary Ellison, . In other statewide offices, Lt. Gov. one day, with Dec, 21 the last day of ... .. T chairperson of the special Student (Related Story, Page 2.) Bill Hobby, Democrat, seeks re-election finals. Government Task Force, said. ' against Republican Gaylord Marshall of The fall schedule, as-originally. ing the governorship its first four-year Dallas and the Socialist Workers* Dan: : >THE TASK FORCEhad originally-sup­term this ceri|ury. -ported-a recorrim'endation -to ^Mncel --published,, will include one dead day, Fein of Houston. • ­Dec. 11, with finalsgiven Dec. 12 through The governor henceforth will; be Atty.-Gen. John Hill. Democrat, also classes Dec. 9 and 10, .thus creating the ' 20. -v . ,' elected during thenonpresidential year seeks re-election againstthetX5PTs Toiru previous three-dav no-f<1a<;'! pprinH INXI.t l'l'ER to L)r. James Kinneavv, general election.'.;' ... Cole and the Socialist. Workers' Pedro However, professors and ad­ . Gov. Dolph Briscoe. 51, is defending Vasquez. secretary of the University Council; the ministrators had objected:'to any class , president-listed' three reasons for,;her­ hjs office against four challengers, the OUTGOING-Comptroller of Public Ac cancellation;; decision: .^. , Tl lar^e^gubernStorial-slate since 1932; counts -Robert-ealvertrwill"-be replaced approved-the changerthe — ­ • Changing the calendar,at such a late ... The other' candidates are,.Republican by either .Democrat Bob Bullock. tln^ersity Housing and Food Service date is a violation of an agreement with _-_r an estimated Jim Granberry, La Raza Unidta' Rgmsey Republican Nick Rowe or .the Socialist would have been hit with ­ • students^ and. faculty —iiirnplicit-in Muniz, Shprry Smith' of.. the.. SociMs*^JVorkejrs' Saskia (Sas) Scoggins.. • $28,000 bill for an extra day of operation, ~ " .publishing the calendar;'':; >, Workers Party and the American Par-"Tor -state trea'surer,' Democratic irt-Robert Cooke, director of housing, said." ••• • Both the University and students liv-Monday.-' ' , •' • Ifife-ty^-Sam McDonnell. >. cumbent Jesse James will face the . ing in .cainpus housing would inclir con­ 1 ' Briscoe, a Uvalde rancher; has spent GOP'S Robert G. Holt. In addition, a number of staff workers ' siderable costs of an a'dditional day of seeking is-Com-had already made .plans based tHfe $645,000 of his own money tohelp fund his Also re-election rs-on ' service. re-electioh bid. The stiffest challenge is missjoner of the "General Land Office Original calendar, and the amount of' • Numerous complaints by phone and' expected to come from Granberry, 42, an, BobArmstrong,:Democrat.whoisop-paperwork needed to extend their/ • letter have been received by the orthodontist and formerLubbock mayor.. posed by_RepublicaijJSslay Lou Griqr and . employment .would have been substan­ president's office from stiidents who JMl . hp said ' 1__­rWorkers : have made important plans based on the­ Gro.ver, nearly upset Briscoe in a bid to Party.-David. Hershey, director' of ad^^v published calendar. become Texas' first Republican eover-'• Commissioner of Agriculture John C. missions, agreed with Rogers' object' Gaylord MarsHaT nor since Recontructian. White; Democrat,1 will seek .re-election "I recognize the problem which tions to changing the calendar at so late H . produced tbis-recorilmendation,and I am ONE REASON why the 1972 election • against Republican Zack Fisher. Bill Hobby a date. •­ quite sympathetic with the students who was close was becauseof the 6 percentof TWO RAILROAD Commissio'n spots, •want more free, time for study." Rogers the vote which went to Muniz, 31, this are open for election. DemocratJim C. : wrote. ' " year making his second try as Raza' • Langdon will try to defend his place SHE COMMENDED both the Univer­ Unida's candidate. against the GOP's Joe Cain," La Raza sity'Calendar Committee ancf the specialIf elected. Smith, 28, would i?ot be able Unida's Fred Garza, and the.Socialist Student Government Task Force Whichto take the oath of office as she is two ' Worker's:Rick Congress. worked .to produce the calendar change years younger than the required age to ;• An unexpired teraf of two years on the recdmniendation after Student com­ become the state's chief executive of­Railroad CommisSion will be"decided Is plaints' that one dead day was insuf­ficer. McDonnell.; 50, is a Dallas between incumbent Democrat Macfo* . ficiefl£gi . . " businessman who supported Alabama Wallace and Republican Dale Steffes In Suicide T^^spring calendar allows for three f; Gov. George Wallace for-president in Fpt state se.nator from District 14V gjg|^0etween the end oi classes and the .1972.' ... • Democratic incumbent Lloyd Doggett The death of Randolph B. Smith, a'«Pf beginning of final.ekams. . " Predictions'of Tuesday's vol^r turnout . faces Republican Clarke Straughan University graduate student and •Rogiers reiterated-her support of a vary' widely. Texas Election Bureau •j" In Austin,, two of .the .four-state teaching assistant in computer science, recommendation that-all faculty Director Robert Johnson estimated 2.75 > represenative seatshave no incumbents'. , . was ru!g*t.5tiicide,Monday. members million voters (about 50 percent) while/ Place i candidates are Democrat --was discovered Monday \y,Qj Granber/y has predicted between 1.5 to Wilhelmina Delco. • Republican W,ill after D®C. 4 ajid said moniing"%y ^fetj^MQnconi, also a she, later directing 1.7 million voters (35 to, 40-percent) will ,Wyman and Raz? Unida's Pas Pena The University computer; sciencfe^^dUftte^.^, . deans^SiPSBpafCnent'chairmen to, dis­ show at.the polls:; , -• . / * . ••-winneE#Will.>-replace: outgoing Larry student and teaching assistant, in-t " courage:last-minute"assignments. For Travis County, a 40 to 43 percent Bales. Moriconi's Robert Lee Moore Hall of|^'? STUDENT LEAD^S involved in • turnout Is expected Tuesday as es­//HPLACE 4 IS being vacated by Wilsbn fice. Smith had permission^ uste the bf^lil recommending theseco'fid dead day were timated by County Clerk Doris Foreman, who lost in the Democratic fice. •' »...". / • disappointed in RogeralAscisinji _. .^ .; : Shropshire primary toGonzalo Barrieiitbs. Barrien-. ^^Justice-of Peace James; L: McMurtrj1 . •' Robert Holt — UPI epnotes "l ean understand tfie problem it cau: caus- NON-PRESIDENTIAL general elec-. tosifwill fade Republican' Bill Todd and said in his inquest ruling an autopsy. • .Jesse James ed to some students. The change should Raza Unida's Armando Gutierrez. revealed quarttities..of; "suspected Place 2 is beingdefended by Democrat cyanide" in the dead ; man's blood and Sarah Weddington. Her opponents'are \ orine samples. \ -|j . {Republican David Kirchner and Raza "y McMurtry added that entries'ina diary!*: Unida's Orelia Cole. . m revealed Smith had stolen .cyanideSeptfv Pla# 3 Democratic incilmbent Ronnie 23 from a University lab', was experien­Earless opposed by Republican Mas cing problems and had contemplated' Prosecutors Jolt Jackson; pbscenity Case Retried Hijside. 'g •Most Travis County candidates are un­By WABE WILCOX « • Attorneys for both the^prosecution and Dr. William H. Wade, chairperson of opposed. 6ife^pf~ the contested races is Texan Staf!«%iter |defense closely questioned,_the ^30 llitt cheinistiyjUepdi tiiieiit said it would for county judggj;|}e|ween v Democrat . Jurors were selected Mtyjd&y to retry' prospective jtirors for' fiour hours^atioirt4' i-^hsther chemicals Mike Renfro ami Republican Joe My-Oh-My Club owner J. N%man Wells their backgrounds, church affiliations, ' are stolen from University labs because Leonard: and the club's, manager, Joig L. Smith; . attitudes toward sex education in public . such recordSt are.notkwrt . / ^ ^.Fo.r county commissioner,"Precrnc^ 2j for showing the film "Deep-Throat." ™;; schools and' opinions of J'X-rated" However, Wade adfe^yarfiagni^rtf^^ ' Democrat Bob Honts faccs the GOP'" ?%i9»Yfflmen and fourjnen, all white, f'f. movies. -: • commonly used in undergraduate labs.^2?s JASHINGTON (APr1-Prosecution Gregory Lee Lacy. In Precinct 4, wefte selectfea"ln,C6TOy Court at-La\V' Several prospective' jurors .excused AlthougH research labs are kept locJt^\:| SHrnmph Bittman .to court to testify v.crS jolted the Watergate cover-up ^^about what has happened, ' ;: ;; Democrat Richard Moya is opposed by "iNo.t 1 to decide wtiether Wells and-Smith themselves; after 'acknowledging j»n-ed,'Wade-said-students could gain eri-£<® ' Monday with the disclosure^ that Republican Darrell K. Vaughn and Raza are) guilty of commercially exhibiting . flicts oc the inability to try-the de'fen-.."trance into these labs thfotfgh^'conneciSll.. had obtained, a-copy of an E. Bittman was named an unindicted co­Unida's Rayifiond Donley, Jr. obscene materials/ Jants fairly, but 25 remained, . .tions." ' : • •• Jard Hunt Jr. memorandum tfiey conspirator In the case, and "the NO PROBLEMS are expected with the. . An earUexJxialended with.a hung jury,-• Though sometime^ embarrassed by The^xact time of death-is unknown^ ? Ight had been, destroyed. -. «,iProse'cut9re had indicate4..they .wanted computer counting of Travis County ,fo.ur voting for acquittal and another for questions, a majority admitted having However,.McMurtry sai^; Smith.Vvas us-'­®^|lnm to testl^ig;;-?:^fc^^^u:;i |g| ballots, Shropshire said. The punchcai^ ^. conviction. A sisttli juror was eliminated A-iewed "stag" films or sexually explicit ing a computer before he died, arid ef#:® roseeutor JameS F: Neal said a copy |e two-nnd-a-h_alf-pagc memorandum But after iliscloslng how. .he had ib-" 'ballots were first used.in 1972 and this , after it became known he was an a'lien -movies None subscribed: to sexually ex-\ . forts are/being made fo check the com-S' obtained over the weekend frpm tained the. memo, Neal said he had year will .be counted''-at Municipal " residing m Texas ' plicit literature, although most had seen puter log to determine the time of the •' . jriachine's last function. ' llam O. Bittman. Hunt's former dropped all plans tocall the attorney asa Building. .. ^ Texas state law prohibits exhibiting "copies of Playboy or similar magazines. Shropshfre said-that, when the polls?, ^'obscene materials for a profit providing Wells and Spiith were arrested in July McMurtry speculated Smith , dieti Vef. Npal s.aid that for a year arid witness,-. .7-') close at 7 p.m.; Tuesday, election" of* that the exhibitor knows the content of after vice squad officers viewed the film either late Saturday night er early Suni J,half Bittman had denied that he ever SIRICA REFUSED to allow-the (icials will take tlje ballots to a receiving the material ^ —p ---—jnd raided the club.' They were charged Jay morning. . > • jV­ lived' the memo, v r«jssprosecutors to recall Hunt to the°stand t0 team there. •'f. i Obscene material, according folate \ntTPexWbrting--obsceneLma,terial^rand — He fou»d -tio evidence of foul play. §S?.. ie memo introduced Intff evidence byy|i^orK!ay ,that, the unsigned The receiving team will Torward the; law, must appeal to prurient' interests in were tried No decision was reached by r clf^le was • 'THeT23-ye^Qld _Smitli;obtained-' h'is was headed "Review, and State-^'$ ^le memorandum . he ballots to an auditing'team which will sex, nudity or excretion, be patently the""original jury, and the prosecutors ..bachelor's degcpjB fromUfe-Universityot of Problem." It speaks of the Ad-' W() -^o year® "g0-check, the ballots to make sulre they are offensive as judged by contemporary moved for a retrial. Iowa «in.1972. He-entered Hie University ­ #tration keeping its commitmentsin The surprise discfoery came before ; counted by the comjJuter.jAny damaged community standards and be utjerly The "Deep Throat" trial will resume this fall. 'Smith's parents reside in fto'f-the • seven defendants.in-;tl\c. 1•the jury-entered the room for the cpn-. • ballots will be corrected^by The^auditing-—^without re"deeming_s_ocial value, s® at 9 a.m. Tuesday: •,-f v Covington, La 17, 1972; Watergate break-in. —tiiiuatioif of cross^examination of jeb team by punching out a new ballot, A4iJ< .r'r , Ib> oionnwp Stuart1Magrudcr, former, deputy;direc-* • Shropshire explained. Ei 0 rf pl?roPted 2:'l°r of Richard M. Nixon's 1972campaign T>ie ballots will be fed int6 the com- Jers for two of the five defendants in'f¥tVnmm1 HPP puter by precincts, and the pomputer< <1 v •hver-lip trial to move fora misti ml c°mminee ^ printout wiJLbecome the official record/ f' ' * i " Hunt-had testified that in November, SHROPSHIRE recalled last .Mays lam T^ced 5«tth a-eover-up^ilhiQ-^4. 1972, Jie and Ws_ wife composed a primary election "wben problems with. fr-up,' sai^tJaeob Stein,, lawyer forj'i memorandum outlining the problems^ the ballots fouled the computer,' causingJeth W -Parkinson,-the man Hunt T andneed^of the seven Watergate break-a delay of several hours. lie-intejidedxto re'oeivg thjr«memo. ' tioffnrtgms . — -. _ -• She (said the ballots used by the Tuesday will be fair mi •,iVJudge John J. SWca-iniaB^J/VMe ^the40cument'was delivered to^'~tremoci-ats May I. Dist. J./SWca-hia3B^'3fe-last were ^yellow-Ruhaffs and. cool with:~temper w mediate response toStein's request ,.who.Was.to passit on to-Parkiti-mask1''-ballots "which allowed for-"gang [ni5tiJal^He.denlcd^i3imUar^e-^' ''S°n-'rftBflitggl|tje|LBIlM^fi told him he., .punching," on. holes-beingjjpunched at atures ranging from Runqff efections* for (rofyi John J V^ilson, l&wyer-HInvonthe-toaIloC~SelecUve the mid-60s during the at-farge and School of^ Hfllrfarrtiyn RWKUA . ML > -• (Haldeman, former White House^ . .J wni; be-uITCFLDJ_T.IIQFL V . The document introduced ^hief anffone of the Fivemen charg-|| > evidence is.unsigned afBaddressi f> nnv-"' SfiropSWri? Mij[;.^hlcb»«jJ) allowholies to day dropping to, near ComTnonlQafrbn-Stud- A 1 qfrtspiring to block the ftivestiga--'! one, . ' J>ep.uiicli6d "^nlyinvalid votingplaces," 50-Tuesday nigh't. ent Senate seats .will^ the Watergate break-In. .. • With ''selective>baHots" rto probfems VVinds will bo from the udgetpldprosecutionand'deiense'?>;.atjorney for Robert C Mardiaiv added that although-the'procedure is ef-iiqrllieast. lys to sufcmlt legal-arguments resumed cross-examination ficient, "ft will be good If we hre out b> ­ -Aiier-the disclosure,:< i'nomas-urecn, are anticipated,' Shrijpsfilre' ' ' s^id." 'She - expected. yof the week on.whether he shouldf^rMagruder — «I • ' „ ^ • ' SBP® . -• ftp to Polls Offered Today If the mvsierifes of. ballot Speedway Streets and the Art procedures and. voting east of 26th and Swisher "vtjos plaeemenffhave you Buildingl -;' mac}iines. " -Streets stop;. Precinct 336, voting somejv^gre' near " Those who-need a ride or -Methodist' Student Center,. • Cars will be waiting-for the; Pflugerville this fear. don't wish to volunteerto drive may 2434 Giiadalttpe St.>acrossthe bus at Littlefield Fountain" to' despair: Local gfeps are. call 476-6230. street froni 251h and cart the. votsss to and from. providing free rid& to the their respective polling . As a last resort, students Guadalupe Strfeets stop, i polls. • . — :\ , • places. 'Questions about the may ride a shuttle bus to the. • _CR. (Cameron Road)\ CRefoted Story, Pqj| 3.) •service are answered.at 476­ polls. Most voting boxes are Pre'cjnct 131, Maplewpod within a few; blocks of the School, 3808Maplewood Ave.,; 6662. • . The ."Voter -Speci®,'' a stops. •• seven blocks east of 40th'and decorated school bus"Spon­The Austin' branch of the Red River streets stop; • sored by the Student Alkon National Association for the Shuttle routes which, stop Precinct 136,/Ridgetop School, ­ hear voting precincts include Committee-Young Democfejtts^, Advancement of Colored Peo-• 5005 Caswell Ave.; seven,-coalition^. wiil circle the cam-'" file will pick up voters.attheir • EC (East Campus), blocks north of 45th and Red pus -Tuesday. The bu^ viilf ». h'orn^and make a rodnd-trip. Precinct 127, Austin ;Com-. River Streets stop; Precinct • collect prospective voters at The^oUpr^lso provides.infOr-rhunieationBuilding,261pr . 231, Lee School; 3308Hampton the University Co-Op, 26thand .mationon c^n4idates, voting-Robinson Ave., two bjodts blocks west of /Road, two Harris Avenue and Red.River . Street stop. . • IF (Intramural^ Fields), Precinct 232,Ni)rthside Church of Christ, 310 W. 43rd WE NEED HONESTY, NOT OPPORTUNISM, IN THE St., two blocks west of 43rd and Speedway Streets stop;STATE COMPTROLLER'S .Precinct 249, First English Lutheran Church, .3001 Whitis .Ave.,'two blocks southwest.of OFFICE '>V, 31st and Speedway Streets stopPrecinct' 250, Baker Nick Rowe is. a 36-year-old Austin resident with years of broad administrative experience with the WHEN MONEY /.federal, government' including fiscal planning,.data CONTROLS-POLITICS, processing and program/cost analysis. WHERE DOES THAT LEAVE His opponent is a former lobbyist best known for THE LITTLE MAN? ,,.his political vihdictiveness while serving as . ex-Governor Preston Smith's Secretary of State. •. NOVEMBER 5th, VOTE NICK ROWE . ' Nick's opponent alsQ'openly admits that he will appoint his friends to high office if elected. -* •* . -xv* ' • . " V'v As watch dog of public funds, the comptroller's office is too crucial a post to allow to fall in the hands of One who will use it for personal power. FOR GOVERNOR! • ..." ' w* ; , " ' •' Paid Pot. Adv. by The Student Victory Committee. Pave Gutlick, Co-ordinator. Dobie Mall Pd, P.J. \ilr.b>SluJrnl»fur K«x» t;nid*. Room 38 476-6590. I litirtirrwtn; ibrrmtl^. Judge rK-'ft'.i.'i;.' . 'V, rjfeSf1 JoeLeonard\ \ S' « • -_S w m • ''PLANNED GROWTH, is essential if we arclvto maintain a1 quality life." ^ ,*jr — \ ^ , • "I favor,a county zoning ordinance. Houses Ihat are^Sub­standard in the city currently are legal in, the county.^' •. "I will nev6r vote,'to locate a Rock Crushing or Sewage Ptant, in or near a residential area.". ^Better roads and streets are a real necessity.",! * w • MentaI HeaIth and Mental Retardation must be properly ' A.' < * funded and county jail brought up to standard." 1 *w yr "\ will support job training programs for the unemployed." :• "Uiafl? people-oriented and want,citizen inpyt^ I favor es­ m -i tablishment of a 12-member advisory board to the county judije, consisting of representatives df all areas of.the coun­ Wit ty, including the University of Texas.", * ^\ • • CP* ^ "The County.Judge is NOT a legal officer He4s the cbief ad­. ^ministrator, or in effeqt the "mayoK' of Travis ^ouqty. Iam ^ the only candidate for| County Judge with the broad-^a^edj ^administrative axpprience requ'rred for this vjtdi post Ax, % Joe Leonard -The People's Choice for CoLfnty judge I-. B.S. Degree in Business & Economics »• W4^-.'tV. * Master's Degree in Counseling A Certified Administrator by The' State of Texas'' ^y.^* I-m-W9' Vino Pfinnmal nf~Daa«ian LJi^u 1 ' Vice Principal of Reagan.High School, Urban'Renewal Board -V ~ -U-a mimrnmrn­ •fj|? Capital Area .Planning Council iflll I­ 4 vwars wrnrk nn int«flr^inn pr%Hcv for Austin Ind School13istrict RecruitedftecrtJJtea teachers for Austin I.S.D. .S.D. r ^ 4$rski ?" PaicP^olitliat Adv. f Th« Studsnt Vfctoiy. Commfttis. Dam Qullick, Co-Ordimtor. Ooblg Hall, Room 38, School, 3908 Ave. B, three blocks southwest of 41st and .Speedway streets stop. , MS (Married 'Student), 'Precinct 320, MathewsSchool, 906.\V. Lynn St., four blocks . nSflheasPTJf Campbell .and ^ By RICHARD FLY v ^statements were received, various causes and reasons . Fifth Streets stop;' Precinct Texan Staff Writer particularly two from Spurr. for the Spurrfiring arida next- m 321, Henry School, 2610 W. ' '"When former Uftiversity •4 The first divulged the reasons to-final draft will be produced President "Stephen Spurr-in-„ 10th St., two blocks northeast Spurr had been given for being by Dr. Norman Farmer, of Breckenridge Apartments -formed Chancellor Charles asked to resign: The second associate professar. of stop; Precinct 331, Austin LeMaistre of his refusal to expounded .on some questions English, and Dr. David Recreation Center, 1213 Shoal the Senate co.mtnittee believ­Gavenda, professor of resign, he formed an ad hoc Creek Blvd.-, twocbloc&iTwest committee to review and ed, .needed amplification. In physics, who have been evaluate his .term. • of 12th and Nueces Streets-yet another.-statement, the designated-editors of; stop; Precinct -338,. Travis Meeting.for the' first and former president made public report.­County Courthoi/sfe, 1000 only time Sept. 24, the com-a letter from LeMaistre citing . Committee members will Guadalupe St., two. blocks • mittee decided.under.the cir-' the 16. events leading to; his meet again Friday to consider, southeast of 12th and Nueces cumstances it could, do loss of cbnfidence in Spurh •• this draft. ;Streets stop. . . ' .nothipg but recommended"for­THE COMMITTEE. also Pincoffs would cite 0nly;one < • ER (Efieitl Road), mation, of a similar com-heard direct testimony from broad conclusion the com­ Precinct 328, Dill School, 2007 mittee by the Faculty Senate. • W.R. • Keast, director of mittee has,reached. '/W^ have; McCall Road, two. blocks .;,• DURING A special meeting spefial collections for the found the way in whkSS^irr north of 'Enfield and i Forest of..the.Senatethe-next day. -"Harry : Ransom (Humanities was dismissed quUepdut of Chairperson "Edwin Allaire" Roads stop;' Precinct 337, ResearchKCenter, and Spurr". fceeping'willi the principles of .Austin High School 1300 West announced the appointment ol Two committee membersmet theacademic community,''he Ave . twa blocks southwest of a facility-student committee privately with Chancellor said. .15th and I^ueces Streets stop. to "discover, uncover and Emeritus Ransom^ .former The-committee: carefully *. WC (Vfe?t -Campus), evaluate" the reasons behind director of special collections checked out the reasons and Spurr's firing. • ,.v Precinct 334,-Federation .at the center.; • .events cited by Spurr for his Monday, five; weeks to the With 'the' information­ .Women's Club> 2312 San dismissal, Pincoffs said. Gabriel St., south of San day afterits first meeting, the gathering. aspect of the com­"WHEN WE,FOLLOWED Gabriel and 24th Streetsstop; committee, chaired by Dr. mittee^ study over, it now up. we amplified some of the . Precinct 335', Austin Fire Sta­Edmund Pincoffs, professor can-bring the information things he told us. Most of Of philosophy, began writing tion, 506 W-19th St„ two together, into a .coherent them checked out very well." blocks south of 21sf and its.final report to the Senate. .• report, including . members'.'--f Although the committee got Guadalupe Streets stop. In that five weeks, Jhe com---viewpoint of• thfeSpurr firing,' •' 'considerably more" • NR ^Nortti-Riverside), mittee "has sent numerous the'legitimacy; of the reasons cooperation than expected; letters to those not only in­ Precinct 420,..' River givemntf-recommendaUons -j'Wewouldhayeliked to h&ve Apartments, lilO Trace volved in the firing' itself but: , for further action. had a full discussion with" the . on the. knowledgea.ble Drive,--River Park MonJay night the Stfm-chancellor a'nd some of; the Apartments stop: * •' periphery. Many of the lettfers fnittee went -over the first regents," he added. • .met.with refusals. to discuss draft of the report and agreed . "Of course, we had no Also,: Precincts 430 and 441 th(e situation, while some per­.on the wording of the more cooperation from the in-Jester Center can be reach- sons felt they had nofhing to important conclusions. Pin'-, chancellor. We've had someed by EC, WC, NR, SR, JtC, add to what had' already been coffs said. :. very nice letters but no infor­MS, and ER shuttles, which • said.> . • • - . v THE CENTRAL part of the. mation from regents,"/ Pin­all stop at Jester. But some, revea report, a discussion of the : coffs said. • ~ 11 The report,,which will be made public, should be ready between Nov.: 10 and 15, close ARNCASH WEEKLY t0„theexpected releasedate of a comprehensive public stated Biood Plasma Donors Reeded ent-from LeMaistre on the­iir1ng_of Spurr, • & Worften; hi EARN $1Q.;Wlf'KLY GASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION !®SC^rW.'. Austin Blood Components, 'Incf. • Hair Styling ..in our Boat Moc. The hottest Facial shbe in the U.S. Brown leather OPEN. MON. &THURS. 8 AM to 7 P.M. with white rubber sole. Sizes • Manicures TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. Shoe Shines y cmsED~WED:~3r$7tr. For Both ie »7 Jetterson Square 409,W. 6tH 477-373S*-2301 S. Cong j 441-4151 F : r . < : swags •4 Bmmm ; I will oppose the reappointmeiit '•AH'Power Comes from thje Top." .)• oi 9ny regent whose primary con­ . Ci-_ FranklErwin •. cern is not academic excellence t xtixfi and intellectual freedom. First on l i. -v the list 'of those I will oppose is 'mi' Frank Erwin." Senator Lloyd Doegett NEXT JANUARY ERWIN WILL BE A FQRMCii REGENT.VOTING r- Last July, whert it wasn't popular, Uoyd Doggett saidlie would Mnvoke i'itl Senatorial courtesy to block the renomination of Franlc Erwjn. When weneeded it \ most, Sen. Doggett stood up against Frank Erwin. Next January, Uoyd Doggett • to-hi­ will wotk for the; appointment .and approval of regents,.who won't use ..our wHCofion^qs a vehicle for their political frustrations. That's a change •iMi Regents are |usf one part of the.University's problems. Our faculty and staff must be paidtop rate salaries to attract talents. Lloyd Doggett Will filea billearly * ^ ­ to increase state employee's,safaries. ^ -" ^Miit Work to Better Our UrtiversiVyll?­for Sen. Doggett, TODA Am a| \i \ ; \ Pd po/ edv by SAC'YO Coalition. Hobtrt Havfrtt. fym/rpmoq, Stacy Suit*, Pnsidtht 901 w/uitu Auttln ' I: • Negotiators Resume . -WASHINGTON (UPI) — Negotiators and trying to get"a meeting going. -Stability. Even'lrtjrief shutdown could for coal producers and the United Mine '"Apparently relying oh Usery's efforts,. boost inflation by. damaging industrial' By United Press'lnternational anyone wants that kind of minority Workers agreed to resume -bargaining White House presssecretary Ron Nessen ... production.• ,, < : Fighting inflati^'T high unemploy--Monday after the White House urged told reporters that Ford believes "Talk UseiyJ first J talked-Monday to UMW voter^athy an'd WatergatjS^' Ford aa " „ "So I ask you, my fallow' ment, "" a that they try to avert what one union of­of a coal strike is premature." He also .President Arnold Miller, who led his falloutu>beleagured Republicans Mpnday Americans, tK at 8 p.m. ina do^toyrahotel Theagree­1 postpone a strike. Usery then met with Guy Farmer, chief But all polls and predictions by party ment to . resume bargaining followed -' But UMW Secretaiy/Treasurer Harry negotiator for the operators. • leaders indicated ^mocrats were on the separate meetings with President Ford's Patrick disagreedwBrNessen. Asked If verge of a sweep that; would continue-chief labor, trouble-shooter,: William J. he believed that a strike isinevitable, he FARMER; later told reporters there their gener%rfpn'-long domination of ^Usery Jr.; • ' was a possibility the two'sides might get replied,'VThat's my judgment." / j , Corigresif/ind ihcrease,. perhaps USERY told reporters earlier in the t A LONG STRIKE could have "a very back together shortly and "'that drama^Cally, their control over the day that he did hot tjtjink a strike was serious impact'',on the nation's already , negotiators might reach agreement on a* nation's statehouses. -V-.­ fiefcessarUy iheyitable, and that, "The shaky economy. saidAlbert R'ees, bead .new contract before Notf. 12— too late to —UPlTelephoto -•±1 .#45 ELECTION-EYE.-message, • block a strike but soon enough to in- holdup is trying to get an atmosphere of the President's Councilon Wages and • y^David Owens Brooks , 'Presfd^nt Ford abandoried his tough par-,crease chancesa walkout would be fairly tisan; campaign in behalf of Republican ; •short. • ' , Delhi r ASKSi candidates and pleads with Americans Patrick returned to the scene of-the NEW,,© LHI (UPI)I -— Two oiindia^ to vote. suspended negotiations about 2:30 p.'mf*. 1 were paralyzed Monday by Standing in the White' House Rose but declined.comment on the prospects Garden, Ford said he Prolsraelis, ProArabs Demonstrate at U.N. of a resumption of negotiations. "We are > courage a large turnoutwaiting,'' he said. . |' . NEW YORK (UPI) — Thousands of pro-Israeli demonstrators Monday ,,!S not want Congressional Seats to be fill , Patrick said that the union was .Still .with cliib-swingirtg police. f by ;a "minority decision."-•'f Jammed a three-blick area across from the United Nations to protest the demanding that negotiations focus on . Police armed with long bam!>oo batons At the same-time. Senate Repi^lican -scheduled General Assembly appearance o£ delegates representing the economic questions when they resume. .icharged crowds in New Delhi and Leader; Hugh Scott arid Houaf GOP ;''We're waiiting for-a response on •r. arrested more than 400 persons. Violent:, viI ' Arab guerrilla Palestine Liberation Organization. Leader John J. phodeg urged the voters economic issues." he said. "Thei had it clashes also, were. reported in the ' Five blocks away, security men surrounded a group of about 20 pro- to purge Jsjngfessionai Democrats-in a 48 hours." K •• . jp . .''northeastern city of Patna, the capital of Arab demonstrators carrying "Welcome PLO" signs ' * y last-minuteiappeal. ,i / . ' « ; , PATRICK was referring to/Swhat the .the state of Bihar. HOUSTON (UPI) IT TWO attorneys ap­House Speaker Carl Albert pfiedicteda,' Separating Uietwo groups^were f^eralj.c|tyand U.N. security officers. ; union has called a compromise economic, ^ The general strikes werecalled by sup­ pointed by a statedistrict court.to defend Democratic gain of close tp 4^ seats in ; City police-boats patroled the • East River alongside the world head-" package presented at the/ bargaining „ porters of 72-year-old leader accused mass slayer'Dayid Oweri Brooks the House and; said it would! improve , ; quarters .The main U.N. buildings"were closed to the public during the • table Saturdaymornings Monday abruptly, Withdrew from . the prospects for passage, nextiyear of Jayaprakash Narayan, who was reported shaken up--when police charged a • Sobntime rally. " There appeared little chance, case because of a disagreement on how national health insurance .and strong tax demonstration of 50,000 people-in Patna however, of preventing agleast a short to conduct the defense. • • : reform. -—i Nixon's Condition Improves with, clubs and teargas^ Witnesses said strike by 120,01)0 miners ihj25 states who Ted. Miisick; a fairly friend who had A UPI survey" indicated pat. the Narayan was not hurt enough to requireLONG BEACH, palif. (URp — Former President Nixon got on his feet supply70 percent of the nation's soft coal worked with the ISwear-old for-more Democrats would finish with a kely net . medical attention. •and took a few assisted stejps arotind his hospital room Mondayin an exer-unless the government rteorts to some than a year, "and : Hfaine Hocker, ap­gain of five Senate/seats, fivi ;gqver­ ' IN NEW DELHI, most markets, type of intervention suclf as the Taft-pointed to assist Musick five weeks ago. noi-ships and 20 House seat; cise that underlined the ir^rovement of his condition sincehis brushwith Some restaurants and theaters and all schools Hartley Act j asked; to' be relieved, just before a . prominent Democrats, . indjuding death:almost a week af^J : . ' and.universities,were closed throughout scheduled competency hearing for National Chairperson Robert S. Strauss, 'the day: But banks and government of­ The doctors permitk'jpixon to begin the road back to convalescence ;AN UNOFFICIAL UMW deadline for Brocks was to begin. . % predicted even bigger gains. J ' fices remained open. although they were w$£-of complications including a small congestion of working out a new contract passed Sun-"There has arisen a coiflict between IN A FULLrPAGE letter pubphed in Several violent incidents were fluid in one lung. • f f . day. And the union bargaining council, th^ I two counsel over tri% strategy," ; The New York Times, Rhodes aid Scott which must approve any patt before a-Dist. 'Judge William -M-. Ilatten an-Reported throughout the capital. Bands V The 61-year-old Ni-jm was being encouraged to cough and breathdeeply, said "The lonly way for the fflherican of'students stoned buses found working ratification vote is taken ats^the, local', inounced following a" private^jiour-Iong jeople^cli3hgeCongress(as't|ey must, to dissipate the der&jiit-of fluid which is a complication fairly common iri their normal routes. :'-fV ' level, went home - nimous -j> :meeting in his office. •;,% is to cniu^e ttie leadership inCongress. One of -the groups of demonstrators patients who have^a lie on their backs for alone period after operation en for a stri HATTEN SAID an official, reason for "And Uie;only:wiay for thisjbhappen is . ' charged by police included a march of .TMJ°Vner executive, who was removed from the critical list, '•'Utwtlid'awal wuiild ,bs to—elect more Republicans—thaii­was said to reman under "snb-iriferisive care.'*' -•-Getting.-the138-bargaining couiftul tfie conclusion of Brooks' trial; -. . Democrats," they aided" "The .Indira Gandhi. member?, back together in Washingtwi . Brooks faces"trial"(or four fif-27 ---Democrats have certainl]-had ample In both Patna and New Delhi police;. Mil from as-far away as Utah and Wyoming^ murders of teenage boys who weretyic-time in which to pro^Uieir ability, and,' J>f°d< Prkesfhrop " jailed hundreds of organizers on the eve *.r.s.E. BOW JONES MtXXtt' would take at least a day, a union V Ums-bf.a sex and sadism,murderjcingan_ according to.the,pebple. they havefailed' " of the strike in an llth-hour effort tostop "J&NEW YOIyi (AP) -The MM*Pnfilt : 30litatrialt which he allegedly participated. Brook's . their spokesman said, and it would take \ "it.stock marke'/backed down in pother week to10 days forgratification -^laims he-is innocent of any murder, For^eleetion-eve message —aimed St cm* it The protest movement, called the'­ quiet trading Jnonday in the face 657.23 Vote to' Be completed. ^<7, 'I feel the principles Ioutlined and the at— an anticipatedJ '•low .voter turnout. — People's Struggle Association, is-styled ­-ategy was correct," Musick said out-noted that some surveys indicated that: of a prospective nationwide coal after passive resistance methods of the • ^There is virtually no way, UMiy ofv", siSe court. "Rather than participat^'in a ; only about 40 percent of the voters will strike. late independence leader Mohandas K: ficials indicatedv that a new contract' '" strategy I couldn't agree to, I decided to g p t o ; t h e p o j l s . ' ' ' Gandhi, bettey known as Mahatma The closing . Dow Jones, could be ratified before the existing one WitndraW.> C"IF THISIS TRUE, the Congress with Gandhi. Narayan was a close associate' rap Mi) industrials^wasnff expires at12:01 a.m. Nov. 12. Because of Tlfc disagreement was reportedly over ; which Jmust workhere in Washington to .of.Gandhi's. ~ ML. «.IU< tfte Union's ~*>io oonuac^ iiu wuik''_Uadi-; 8.05 at'65f.23. "V -control the inflation, strengthen thp _. The association's stated f»oal-is" to Uon, mjn§js would ga. on strike at that; vhether to rhoVe the trial to another . economy, 'and preserve peace in the make government more representative timefeven if-they alregdy vVere voting on avoid'whaTMusifck tliought would world could be-efected liy only^l percent­ .... of a new agreement. prejudicial atmosphere.-, of the voters," he said. "I don't think? * v3ifj- IF YOU'RE TIRED OF TRYING TO IF YOU'RE TIRED CHANGE YOUR MAJgR Us* this fori*), If you're changing Into MM of the-schools or 'QdMeciSsTswa below, go tQ-the'locMlon listed: • W • Archltcctura • Offlca of Admlwlon*. M.B. 7 *. ;.-.s -—Communications • ' -CMJk. 4.130^ —Engineering • E.J:CV 2.200 —Fin* Art*-BTL 100 —Graduate-M.B. 202 —QraduatV Business -B.E.B. 203 —Health Professions • W. M.B. 205 —Uw TNH 203 KrJ Natural'Sciences -W.C.H. 109 r—Nursing -Nur. .. .. —Plan II -W.M.B. 206 ' If you Want to change Into, one of the Schools or colleges listed below... Business Administration Education.''' . General and Comparative I, ~ Humaflties, Pharmacy.' • Spiral and Behavioral.Sciences ;Oo to the Academic Center' I IHe school or college change is not valid until ti form is completed and returned fo the location where.you obtained It.-—-; If yoo wish to change majors within .the tpme school or colleige. go to voOr . Academic Dean't Office. '. . ^lr 3- skC*" —-« 1*4^ ^ AND Make'iure that every card is. filled oOt correctly. ~ ' Course -Request Card "A" (8rown) .. v ., -,.; ~ y,"lonlv *"id oniq"enun**r»ta*llstBd in «h* Sprlna 19>6Course Scheduled • Make sore that all of the corresponding bubbles cpe marked (please check this 1 very carefully). Ivi\ Alternate Course Request Card "B" (Orange) — Follow the directions for Course Request Card "A" . ^V*«i!lyM.coursBS notlisted on Card ''A". (Not for different unique numbersof the same course.) v -v , Double Check Every Card -' .-V" %vvyca-;-­•,v ^ ---'./t 'h~ IF YOU'RE TIRED I OF TRYING TO ] PRE-REGISTER AND NOT GETTING A BILL — .. . • ••: :• mi' Jk tsrr. v D6n t try to prer«gister lor mare than 18 hours without your dean's; , >. permission. , . rfa — Don't try to prerefllSW for more"than 21 hours, period. B» »u» vour social sacuttaMjumber Is correct. If It Is .not; ,8 prereglster with the number llsflEtTthen. next semester (between •WjB Jenuery 27end February 7)come to Reglstratron "" * r It changed. * r* You. put your name on every cerd as, You use only a number Z -—r-' •rtZPnx­i z-ay.:\ i%?' r» -W&: IF YOU'Rf TIREDtil-OF GOING THROUGH REGISTRATION^ 181118811 •'m? m .m£ > Mvki ^Tuesday, November 5, 1974 THE; DAILY TEXAN Page# . .. •: ,x-—•-cTzzrcrr--Trrrrrrrrrr^ t •CHh £5 OF CM+&§£ wmtjs: T-*"': -• ' . • vV 4£iiABC)ur ' ' •'' " . -. • . • • r: ' 8USSFUL $166?. .The . University -chapters of the American Association of University MAR(T/\L 10)16 Professors and the Texas Association of College Teachers (TACT) testified in favor of repealing the legislation to open the door for collective bargaining but WT X KK)0U) conceded that the prospect of a faculty union on this campus is "a long way -We PUREST down the road." . : love OF A11 ; The hesitation"of® the.faculty to form a bargaining organization outside the University structure is puzzling following its recent"claims that it is ignored in" • campus and System deGisions. Professors still argue that they occupy a privUeg^ strata,7tfiat collective bargaining after a union model will reduce their status to mere state .employes and will limit theit:flexibility .both DUt. Publisfcm-lUU Synd Ptvtw scholastically and in campus politics.V * \f firing line #More realistically, the University hasalready'reduced the faculty to employe status, stripping them of campus prestige, and quashing their academic egos. The traditional aura surrounding scholastic endeavor his largely disappeared attheleviathaiTstate universiti jpecially tight mafket for PhDs -the growth of state university systems and iut most didn't .even know that the£ provide sex for.the undergraduates. He To the editor: like to offer a sulgestion.,Sofar theonly -politicaUy-repressiue administrations,;alIoLwhicharepcesent at.thi_suniversi-was an election going on!!: '?'• felt that since two of the three purposes;. It disappointed mo to read two recent. solutions under Srisideration that have ty. Moreover, itis a trend of the future, one that isnot likely to pass the Uniyer-• Siirely.'a fiiilblam^ Cdrniot be rightful-' 9ro Kh{nA.tifA)1-mnt hnr are being well met, the tfjiiversity has a'^ editorials, "A Tarnished TimekeeperlV i been publicized ^M a Plexiglas screen sity.by. • ££& _ ly leveled at any one,factor, butThe Dai­. and an net;Hhese'both preset / . _ ii~ pretty good average. and "'University. Memories To Forget ' iron 5 ly Texan's inadequacies in Journalism • Tmi glad that committee membersvS by Mike Morrison, as the most a'ppSrent seemingly unsolvlble complicatiotti. . weren't much help. It's pitiful to think are good-natured about the complair.ts"^^ motivation for both ,was extreme self-.. The Plexiglas screafcould not: be;clean-^ ' < Five years ago, there were i cnnrern...Rmtaiy.' TBrpp""* thp-Dublic ed and would soon co^jgcbehough dirt to contracts drawn through collective bargaining agents. In November, 1973, take the money of candidates for adver still if they seriously realized that-the '; image of his tower, the annual upset of stop any pleasurable viewing: 'there were 212 with, elected bargaining agents, and this fall there are at least tising and • in turn give next to no volume of these complaints probably • his campus and the thoughts of those net would have poced very close to coverage as to tfieir activities (although • ••338. The^novement started in the community colleges of the northeastern in-represents only the tip. of an iceberg;5^i-people like himself that had to walk un­; the deck, and-wouiavrobably be very I-must, comnliment the Tuesday half-Everyone who is unhappy about a situa^S^ der the Tower. He even refers to the . detrimental .to.the Tower's appearance. s;: dustrial^tates. Two-thirds of the institutions organized.as yet are two-year in­ -page article in which we were able toair -tion isn't going to write to the com-"?W: proposed devices for the observation •; I would like to suggesta network of iron • stitntini^. . , • some of our views'). There was no mittee;. most will quietly grumble and deck as "protection11 devices, rather bars, about one-half inch in diameter,'"'coverage. nM-evcn-aft-aa an ones of prevention. • spaced about six inches-^apart, thus en- Th^-most frequently 'elected bargaining agents are the three nationally the.fprums that were held prior to^the -.Bisticular problem doesn't exist — as one The focus of Moirison's article, other ~ circling;flie observation was message I ."!• recognized agencies, the American Association of University Professors, the •elections. There no ^secretary in our department did only a than .the. one. of his astute powers of of the ^rs-woulrf-be-bentV . ANYwHefe~m~The~Texan that people 7' ^erican Federation of Teachers, an AFL-CIO affiliate, and the National few weeks ago. I wonder how much it observation; seemed to be that the real .the decklabout 10 feet, friom the base. could find that at least said "go vote.'", costs the institution to train new crime was that he and others "might This systlm would not create an unplea­^..:EJduc9tioa Association. The latter is by far thelargest association representing except for what the candidates spent employes (at.a high turnover rate) who . have avoided viewing it.'^H.e made no , sant effec&from the ground, and the ^ -' college teachers in collective bargaining, but it isconcentrated in the two-year , money on in the way of advertising. become dissatisfied with the conditions ' less than seven references to the fact. open air atrn'O^phere would Mill be I §|^®9&eWs-,lIhe' AAUP and AFT represent nearly as many four-year institutions : Doesn't The Texan at least think that on campus which augment the I have the compromise architectural sent on the* innervation deck. This- the locations of the polling placesTwere |Jfeas the.NBA,. 26 apiece to the NEA's 33. The AAUP, a bastion of thfe liberal S-traditionalJand alsolegitimate) low-pay solution that they both:are calling for... system is not original or perfect, but# tradition in scholastic circles and popular with faculty of top-rated institutions, important enough to mention? As a vcoriiplaint. Isn'fit posSUlle Uul a uiwe--Let^sinstall alaser beam atthe topfloor hope It.would be taken under c$r?sider&-. responsible newspaper. I hope you will seriousattitude on thepart of committee of the Tower; and when a person decides tion before a decision is reache Igsfehas been moving more vigorously into the collective bargaining field lest it be at least have the decency to let people members involved might bring about-to jump, his body will be instantly Thomas asseyj I Pledged out by its rivals, v a-. ^ -: know that there happens to be: a-runoff . some constructive changes which would . transformed into a handful of ashes that' ' Sophomore, Archil! tur«jelection between two-very fine people, •W both of whom deserve a lot-more than l,­The Chronicle of Higher Education has been carrying{ncreasiflgrovprage^f_ *. 200 votes between the two of them. .guestvleuipolnt M­ faculty,unionizaUon, calh'ng it "ttse issue of the decade.''The Chronicle review­Jenda little more credence to .hreS?/ the -S>iidffnr*rT«ngpw>mgntif tRp ed one study in the burgeoning scholastic field examining faculty'collective I* . . • • _ students can't give it credenceTtEerTwi bargaining which contained a survey of 60,000 professors t^ken in 1969. The reast cancer detection should Frank "Shikker" Erwin and hts study found that 54 percent of the faculty at universities-favored collective .cronies" give a damn what the students, By DR. PAUL C. TBICKETT, . appropriate treatment. Breast biopsies Recovery, program Sponsored by the tafgainlng.ln.spme situations. and 54 percent of the tenured faculty surveyed feel? ' •• CAROL'CASE and VALERIE COX are done at theStudent Health Center by American Cancer Society very ^rS"* envisioned situations in which collective bargaining could be desirable;" Bed GAldstein| (Editor's note: Trickett1s director of both staff surgeons and consulting sur­ successfully, aids women at their time of Nontenured faculty were even more favorable. " " c... + • ....i; ; Former Candidate for Senate at-large the Student Health Center, and Case and geons fronri the, city. Fortunately to date greatest* need. There are-many other Cox are registered nurses,)-'' • ' . • • -. ,• ---v>-. .. .• -fwm no mastectomy has been nece'ssary; aoencies.which can help including "the Get serious The Health Information and Education however, the health center has that MeritaJ'fHealth Service at the Student m Service at the Student Health Center ap­Capability. Malignancies of various types,­ Health Center. The health oeoter To tbc editor: preciates the excellent coverage of -our have been diagnosed and treated at thej^jroperates at this time a "life Threaten­ t&£3» . A week or so ago, I wrote a letter to ^ ^BreastiCancer Detection Clinic. We feel health center. (Last year a total of 19.vgj.ing Illness Group'.' some of vdiom have Vote Today •: one of the more notorious' "Institutional " the clinics were highly successful. ; malignancies were found.) ^ been diagnosed as-.cancer patients. Policj-or Governance Committees" of However, there were. gross mis^ i i' " :2) 'If a woman'notices any change in| " 5) It is possible to have lumps and •quotations and other, erroneous her breasts she should make an appoint-­ v^eTexan urges its readers to go to the polls and votein the general election. ;Se Sdtg^ari? wSening-L '• bumps i'nbcrth breasts'and for both to be -• statements^appearing in The Daily.Tex­ment:wfdf-a j)hysician for evaluation of We are aware of the fact that may of fh^ races are not the most exciting. But problems on this campus. I was under malignant. Also, neither may be malig­ an article' on 'Page "14 of the-Friday-.that change. This evaluation rrjay be_of nant. However, the important point tothere are a number of candidatesj— especially those running in Travis County the impression that complaints such as publicatipn. . . v ' J . several types:a. close' observation and " stress is for a woman to get to know her — who depend on the student vote for-victories. So vote.--1' ' * one 1 presented (and which l know" -In order to clarify the misinformption ,,. followrup, b~.;1 XrRay (mammography • ^ :own breasts". Some .women feel -ribs are shared by a "large segment of the ^the following points need to be clarified xeroradiography,or thermography), beneath their breast tissue and mistake „ $£$ ' campus population) have.as their only ' and emphasized:• ; * ' biopsy. d. a combination of any o7 the ; this for an abnormality. Frequent self­ —University^empjoyes should be advised that the University is required by law'^f app5?p,;iate outlet presentation to thi%j. • .1) The Health-Information and Educa-' ... above. s • examinations should be done so that a tion ^Service cannot diagnose breast ||&! 3) ^benign tumor is not always woman can learn what isnormal for her. «lftn ?IT0" wi^^fS^e^ployersforget to mention this A '^^etc.Tv^^s feTLtonerf caacer, but the health'cehter cah. The f'sf/iremoved. Depending on the woman's call to the University Personnel Office will confirm it-•—_ — the nicer aspects of a democraticsodiety Their, once a* month breast self- j~"3Iealth Information Servite has t@^ge,-history.'and the physician's ex^ examination is adequate for detecting_is the freedom to express our opinion ' ' attempted to teach individuals ho.w to do |^amination and evaluation,a decisional! ; changes. ,'Sn3^ when specific groups are formed to . # breast' self-examination. If within the liUbe made for or against fte removal. I 6) If a health,center physician feels hear these opinions,$e can even expect • teaching:situation a question arises as to 4) Rehabilitation following the that a student needs special .care that to have our opinions heard: and con-. • the normality oi.a breast, referral, js THE DAILY TEXAN v removal;,of a b;&ist includes notjraly. -cannot-be provided by .the.heaitn center m sidered. J made to one of the health 'center '•how to move arms effectively again'' • —— Hw (Mnnlff •#r«^«t «< AMih : facilities, a referral will be made to an I was rutfeiy.jolted Thursday, when bjj.' physicians fof examination. The health but o|equal importance is the wQmjin's • appropriate facility. EDITOR —BuckHarvey physician or chance, on £f business matter pf another center hason itsstaff very well qualified need for a great deal of psychological -Referral payment is an administrative MANAGING EDITOIL. ' ;^;,5Sylvia Moreno nature, I spoke on-the.phone with one of surgeons who may be consulted as to.the « Holland By BRYAN BRUMLEY these programs were, labeled r, i^an unsettled'life. He ran away frequently. wifti^state Agencies, Moore was forced to-AMUSEMENTS EDITOR After five years at St. Margaret's .. s-Paul Beutel' crime schools and a danger to public^fand[compiled a police record of 10 conclude there were no villains conspir­FEATURES"EDITOR Center for Children in El Paso, Matthew . .S3fcty. . I .... .'MAAM i>AUU«mnn ' i.Claude Simpson robberies. Moore termed the i-obberies ing-to styjnie welfare^and social Moore says he's burnt out tired-ofPHOTO EDITOR . Marlon Taylor cooperative but haggling with state welfareagencies and frustrated pe^ple atstate youth correctional institutions: OT . wub UKUWI )ilVl^CTCiricaUuliK UK gUCCl statet bureaucracy Yet, now living in Austin, he fondly 4" . ~ 1/1 ISSUE STAFF . exposed ..to. things that , inigKt unbalance ^^before he was grabbed^-He freQuentiy Wednesday, the Texas House Human recounts his experiences counselling tlm mnsf cfithlp arfiiTt Tho Knv IaI/I ...HL.-^^r__ ' • . j ' Js?ue Editor -v.,-•/:!•<'• -< •; Dick Jefferson Resources Committee released a report youngsters and has.a sympathy-for the. , General Reporters .y.. r.j.v.?.','':./. David Hendricks. Susie Stoier which-ranked the state 53rd out, of S3 , functionaries of the state welfare agen^ News Assistants ....r. Rick Omp, Rodolfo Resendez, Sondra Stateup, (states and territories for. child Welfare cies. _ -J and inmates administered .drugs" ap-f^ On one escapade heTmade the acquain-. expenditures:-Hie study revealed that* _. ; Wade Wilcox,-Sherry Van Winkle , * One of'the children'^ , Editorial Assistant " v parently without due cause.The boysaid|gtance of another youth who had been liv-' Texas provides no fiuidsfor childrenwhcM Robin Cravey Moore 'counseled jafe ; Associate Amusements Editor .?. that when he misbehaved, he was placed^ ing for six months in an abandoned car, a ; in need' of treatment outside the ..Vicky Bowles are St/ Margaret's was? ' Assistant Sports Editor J.,. J Eki Dalheim'. in the adult psychotic ward, because the3®blue Falcon, in an El Paso alley. This'' home.but^don't qualify forweifare.In-a • born, in-Juarez and Make-up Edi'tor * ;f. hospital had • no , facilities^ ! to treafa&gboy was supposed to be under the careof ' Phyllis SchWartz similar vein, U.S. pist. Judge William lived,for a time with ­ " < Wire Editor.. rr^-ix-.....Keith Hartnell children. He was the youngest inmateat«Sa state welfare agency. W. Justice-ih Sep]leinber ordered the foster parents in EI i Copy Editors .; Norma G[eason, . Big Spring for four years. The.boy told?!®! Moore says he fought a six-month Texas Youth Council to close down Its' Bill Scott-, Scott JSobb, Nicole Bremner Baso. When the boy Photographers L.-, Moore that he_and some older children1%; court battle before he finally obtained a . larger institutionsand implement a o>m' •••! Phil Huber, Mike Smith turned/ 8, hi experimented By shooting lce'waterlntojA.193 "monthly state allotment to care for munity'based program favoring smaller m r. » -TV emotional I ttprtatd (n Tile DaUr Tan are thoiert (he , their veins with.hypodermlc syringes, a'gi^-fils chargg. He pmonally spent»1^0Ow -units and more individual car#. I jitor or th« wriltr^lhe article uO arcnot wcotarily «ELiJtSt edltonal ofhee (Tejaj Slwleiit PuW.raUotu ^WrerfTStfMllUCh for. . process said,UTproduce a "cold rush/'apj him, $800 for psychiatric care. Whether by court ordeo»or legislation;afmWUMtn or the Boerd of* Mhtfost?".r ?arenis-and we're forcetl ' , '• ThornThere were those Big Spring sym|^ A pinaUyi Judge Henjy pena 6f th? E1 4 RctejU \ ™\ i A413"' owcemfiigtteilwry-It is clear that Te?as wilL have"to,im­ to give him up. The state shipped him to* ou : •hMlld I* mad* In TSP BuiWlnji-pathetic to the boy, who secured his t The DailjTeun,a ilodtnt otwipaperat TM Unlvtrilt* the state mental hospital at Big Spring;; 1 . •* , ^ /j" y, Pasp-CduTt: of; .DomesticL/uiiiesuu VReiatl^nfiiduoiiS) *•' prove itsus nanaiinghandling ofox ^ needy AndajiCi vi Sim-mil »dY«(l»lng m TSP Bulldlng I of T«ia» «t Austin, U fraUlib<4_i7.,TM*r Sludent transfer tost. Margaret s,a private non?S>f^ threatened to hold statewelfare dfficials ' 4 emotionally disabted-children. For^hfo PoHkatiom. Otntr B. Didwnlty-suttoo, Amfia/Ta ? jIlR naltaul admtiita* cmttadiiveml TSe,Bally several.hundred miles,east of El Paso. 7-^ denominational residence ^aHnff-ifnr1 -in ..u «iHu 1-1.' mi 1 71711 The Daily Toan Is mUlahcd Monday. Tuejday ' ~ onaf AdverUs'"' 4 *--r-recent legislative Jncohtemp.t.of courtjinlesS:they^prpvid part, Matt Moore plans tor' return"Jo El '< tamutofoTTlJ1: collaborating and stofcking, h6 produced a.piece. the glass booth observing cooperating." Republican candidate for the C9mji-I have also promised the citizens of-.- of hashish.ajid he handed it-to what wasgoing on.So I kind of • troller's position. This equal time reply ' -Athis state that as state comptroller myv He added, with a ring of me," related Leary. '• froze and I imagine my face was not printed Monday because of lack only efforts will be in the^r behalf. I'will righteousness-'"I think that "And" whatidid you. do with must have registered concern.!. of space r) ' J' ( be on fulltimeduty to make^ure-your tax we axe.^ii a time now in this-' it?'V askeel Los Angeles Dist. "And Mr. Chula, who was -iS -dollars are being spent ais-prescribed by ..country when everybody has Atty. Art Koelle. sitting there, could,look over < I believe th^Umy record indicates-.IF;' daw I know that I can and will fulfill (he "tp tell the truth." < "I^i6k it, and Iate it,"said • my shoulder and could see the have the ii^fegrity to serve honorably m ' '• duties the'job demands. *. 'jjlus was strange testimony . Leary. . -guani booth, said, '.It is.all office arflnat X will have the stamina to : I question whether my opponent will. ; ' coming from the'|pnner pied "After consuming it," ask­right,:".So I put the hashish in stand-up arid represent the taxpayers of „In the same issue of Austin People Today , piper of . the drug cult, the ed the DA, "did you have any. my" mouth and chewed it and Tejtas. The citizens of our state deserve there is an article .under: his byline. way&ut Harvard ^psychology ^effects from.it at all?" •swallowed it." , ' life best government possible at a price 'ibiscussing his role as a lobbyist, he professor;, who preached the ' "The effectof the:hashish»;'t:'' •• Timothy Leary, his blond their inflationrburdened pocketbookscan -f states ... and I quote.... '.'You know my heavens of hallucination and said, Leary,' ".was to get me • hair now graying, his Irish i ..-"members -would' be thinking that I was over my anger so that I felt smile turning stern, said'this afford wound up.in-ja1l"on marijuana I-have not had the experience in state Kssdoing a'great. job in Austin, when I'd be charges. ' euphoric! I felt -a feeling, of was the last' time he had • government that my opponent has had. over at the Deck plub,spending their In a spectacular jailbreak happiness and nothing touched the vile drug.-Reflec­ However,"•''in looking back over his time siijjmoney.'' If he is elected comptroller, it allegedly; engineered by the mattered, and Iwas no longer ting on the past, he said: "It . in the Legislature v.v h'is work as a lob-.. will be your money that is paying his Weathermen, Lfearyj escaped . , byist. and his job as-a servant of ^salary. ,' ' • ^ r.-j frbjfn a California prison and' DOONESBURY " former Gov. PrestonSmith ... I arrrcom-, C3 My opponent says my piatfarm is fled to Algeria. He later flew ' pelled to-say i}-seems like the people of '""''almost the same asj his.Lalways thought to Afghanistan with! a Texas are-the oneswho realtyihad the ex­his platform was ^almost the', same: as jjetsetter named Joanna perience. • . r ' ^ mine ....with one big difference:!intend / Harcourt-Smith. But he was WHAT W , TAU0N"8W As an individual, I have pledged to the turned over to U.S.authorities . YDUX£ CRAZY, ./ to work at it every day that I ?m cornp- J—'LKIP2-TH&ALTFF­ MAN! THIS , people of Texas that as comptroller I will , troller. of Texas.," . " • j who brought him home iinder YmOAS&OF NO, Irs AMIS. serve With unbiased integrity and will br-The real issue in this-race .boils, down guard. OOK£~irs HOT-IT'S MINE! my,Jng to that officean adrWtois'tration of the one thing-whetoer the office is :to$>e' The repentant Leary told MINE! • M1NB! rr I SAW eom highest ethics. My o'Sonenthas stated * administered in a professional, nonpar­the grand jury that he had WAS ON MY. WTAKB. mm brokeij,with his past."Ido not /TRAY! his own views about^wtfcsin a magazine tisan manner,-or if the people'are going called Austin Peofy j|Foday. He related to be' at the merCy and whim of a intend to'-take any how his own bro*djjr-in-law wpuld pay political opportunist, f intend to operate him $1 as a chi?Jw pass out political jhe office without" bias, and I intend to leaflets which ty-|Fould throw awSy in a '"'surround myself with the b.est culvert. The rre-^s'zine'quotes my oppo­* ^-professionals availabie. For that real nent as sayiniij "Maybe that's why-f 'i,H have been win^ihg broad support from . made a 'D' jar ethics at Baylor Law i-tt-':independents and Democrats as well as. School.'-' My.opponent has quite a sense • the Republicans.' . • ' • BROTHERS Share a life of prayer TOUKNOUUHAT SETTS* orossworc Puzzler •I I M15S,MARGE? and .work, for Christ, mseNio rSSwuiig iyfiViiiuua NQTH)W6 as teachers,, soeiai >ewe/5e©M9 W— YOU NO, NO: Urn Glass ': A'SKSnN6 1 Priest's container's; HfflEssa racsanHii workers, cooks, etc vestment Part of violin raam HHHQa ana I CHECK MY NOTES. 4 Liberates 5 Is borne -•a sar^cisaa ho fyr more information M I ZM 9 Uncooked 6 Babylonian arawg racso / 12 Slgnof zodi deity hhshsb write lo:. 4 Lasso 7 French tor ••• aaa Provincial Office I 14 OuidO "suiQmer" • B9JDSE23 aaanaa note Transaction location Dept. R 1S.Stroked 9 Edit "1 ssa BGHitlggs" ssi Igciuine t6~Boverage—^ StrfeiwardV • IB Carries taiufl aaaau •ml £l«TfHG^0THER5-AK€ 11 Existed j,-. "University 21 Greek 16 Heavy aganas ausaag UKB $TA6£M0TM£R5ANP 22 Seren volumes saaae uamtgs 5UJIMIWIN6 M0THER5.. Austin, Texas 78704 24 Seed 18-Southwestern 30 Knock S2 Wagers ; |ffi l;2B Revefcberttlon Indian 32 Residue 54 Changes color>s ,i-29 Mowmmedan 20 Drunkard 36 Obstruct > of *' e 22 snip 36 Heavy drinker i55 Jump moon ol the r; i'H> 41 Specimen 56-Ventilate-, ^ desert •:! : 43 Algonquian 57 Openwork ad lor 23 Entortain '-Indian fabric ..;... 25 Tiny 45 Essential 59 Church bench:'/: FGreek letter . 27 Long-legged character 60 Bishopric Mournful -. bird 47 Sod food 63 Threertoed Superlative 28 Aromas 49 Outofdate , sloth THEV pRl/MBCE AND COMPLAIN ending 1' 1 2 3 rr 5 6 7 * 10 \\ 1 Artificial AND 60SSIP ANP FU55,8UT language 17 13 -|14 HW SURE NEEp...THEA\:, \ 40 Worm 1 42 Dance s!?p 16 J7 15 '8 ,' 44 Awartt | yump , 19 20 2V -. 48"Chart ' •: m 50.Shallow-, 27 23 24 ^26 25 17,-SB v r. vessels . 51 Fairy queen 79 -30-« 3U 3J, ^33:'- ismm J> 53 Mintary MWS , • . student 34 'M 33 36 M 37 38 ; 39 ........ 55 Occur Pi. 58 Concentrated 41 „ 42 43 44-. 4S;. -••• HOTD DO THEY] EARltf R|$IN§ ST& • fruit juices 6ET THAT /ANP TOOMVCrt' 3mm 48^ v.-. 61 Lubricate 46 AT-49 COFFEE! ijl 62 Plague SI, : 52 53 54 is? 84.Female ruff M j. -^5; 65 Prefix: before I i 55 57 58 59 60i'": 66 Pigpens :?l£ri 67 Female sheep| 61 62 63 64 ' DOWN -f­ 65 66 <>?, 1 -High l rr-m mountain Distr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. 88 5^; A. ,'aWI1 Have you met Clarke Straughan? Clarke has met literally .thousands of students all derate campus; V Clarke does not take the University vote for granted-> 1 ~ TEXAS' lines* in the ,bgok .lines, and in the 'adds ,and drops-' lines. I have been through---1, rtlif fha .1 . ... _»• r r*. • • shop, add Ijye; .sounding out their views on a on^-to-cu^s* basis I have-also^tpadQ ^j­ n i ; FOSTER PRINTING M CLARKESTRAUGHAN SERVICE i Will be a full-tinMa State Sendtor^uring legislative ; ( . t i l.J m >T Will.work hard to see that;the.academic quality and achievement!' of the> fij .UniversUy come before new buildings-. -V • r . , . '.X. * ' •7 v ^•* W s PRESSON • ' Will be responsive to student^' needs and aspirations.^ ft# THEtEXAS UNION •-r , * j i \ v, •T-r-.PK COPY SERVICE ""'?*? • Master's Degree in Counseling , • A Certified Administrator by. the State of Texasu • Vice Principal of Reagan High School W: UNITY AND •. Urban Renewal Board Member "5: PROGRESS CAPCO Board VOTE JOE LEONARD FOR COUNTY JUDGE LEONARD BELIEVES * That .planned growth is'essential if we are ta maintain a quality ..-•n." '•i-"—— #= ' That zpung U Imperative; Rock Crushing and Sewage Plants should not be located in or neara residential area. .• • • That Travis needs a, centralized personnel center, fiThat-parks. and playeround fadlities should be included in planned growth so cbildrea.will have a'place to. play • That better roads and streets are a-real necessitv That Mental Health and Mental Retardation be properlv funded and county jail be brought up to standard. • Leonan^wiU support job-training programs for the unemployed VOTE JOE LEONARD THE PEOPLE'S CHOICE Piaid Pol. Adv. by The Student Victory C\>mmttfec Datfe GuUick, forOrdmator Dobie //a/I. Koom JS SsssS Holiday Fashion Beat ... .Just the look for party evenings ... simply -"'tailored, yet Sensuously clingy. Great for ' those, holiday festivities io comei-100%r ..washable polyester. Sizes 5 to 13.132.00 Pol Atfv, by. Th*'$tvd*tit-VidQry-Ct>n*m{ti9*. D*y0 QuUtck. Co^Hihn*tor. DqMt Afaff Room 38. 476*6590 ^.fYARING'S, ON-THE-DRAG .J—2406 GUADAH/PEL J" r ' f, Tuesday, ^November 5, 1974. THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 * -' -sf«Sw * v S Fight Prober rr . Favors Amateurisrh B a^. • -^ |g Ex-Cha WCfffTIS xPros' Fixed Ring PARIS (AP) —'George the;ring before every fight," My man would have'won if It""1 The University has produced few femaleathletes that have Foreman charged again Mop-\ Dundee said. "Gbodman and'I had been held in"a telephone received national recognition or become professionals. . day that he was slicked out«of went -o^t in the morning to booth." Besides pro golfer Betsy Rawls, it.stymies the imagination heavyweight check the ring. It wasterrible. to name another female athlete that attended Texas. * , his title-by Foreman said he would sutP'-^ Muhammad Ali's -"pros" and But another name is being added to the list. Senior golfer: "If we had 'left the ring in mit formal requests for an in­ , urged an intensive probe/by Nancy Hager isone of'the top,amateur golfers inthe country that condition there ' would vestigation to'both the World 1 world boxing authorities. / . and -also one of: the top-professional, prospects. . have been no fight. One of the Boxing Association and the _ "I'm not asking for anyone Hager is the reigning Texas women's champion and has fighters might have broken World Boxing Council. 1' 'to give me my timback," the won'numerous other titles around the' United States in a dolhefm his neck, We tightened the •! defeated ex-tiUeholder said • The deposed champion said career that span? U years of competitive play. v during a stopoverhere. , ropes instead of loosening he wouldask the two groupsto HAGEB first came to public.attention when she qualified "If l am right; it would put| . them. .. probe nbt only what he called for. the .Texas Women's title at the age of 11. She earned a «• —UPt T»l«photo , Ah in a moral position where • "We also found the ring off the unusual ring conditions berthin the championship flightwitlran 88 but was defeated team) and 1.grew up playing golf together and he wants to be but also "the fast count." j j ff','he would have to.give me'a . Foreman balance and it became, f in her first jnatch. * a pro someday and I don't: Most guys probably have more I'4; rematch. I'd fight him for handier; of loosening' the necessary to shim it.-We put Foreman, who wore himself Even at U, Hager alfeady ha'd competed,in tournaments , desire or drive to compete," she said. • , V" nothing." ' . . ' ropes and padding the canvas Mocks under the beams to out trying to knock out an and had been playing for several years, , As an amateur, Jlager can participate in any-tournament k'l |K, ' After lpoldngffor the ,£irst •prior, tojhie fight and then in­uiake it level. TKe ring had elusive All who lay on the , "I grew up around golf." she said. "Both my parents are she wants, pro or amateur. She is invited to the pro tour­ I«. time at films of the fight last fluencing All-to change his regular Ensolite padding. But ropes and.kept his head out of teaching pros in Dallas. I've-been interested in-golf as long' naments in Texasand madethe cutinlast year's U.Sl Open. Wednesday in Kinshasa, tactics. 'v.,". ,§| 'the blue canvas was slick the range of George's-.wild-as I can rtmember. ... • BUT-IF HAGER elects to turn pro she will no longer be Zaire, in which he was " 'In Miami Beach, Fla.,-';-from paint. So we swept resin swinging fi&ts, said one of the "When Iwas 9; Idecided.that I was goingto take thegame . able to play in her favorite tournaments, the amateur ones. into it. I' .'-stopped In the eighth round. Angelo Dundee acknowledged fudges was quoted as saying seriously," she said. At 10 she started coming to Austin to "If you're a profor somethinglike two years, thenyou're a --^jForerrtan contended' he was that he and. Bobby Goodman "I did this for selfish the coimt was too fast. take lessons at the Austin' Country Club from noted instruc­pro for the.rest of your life and can't get your amateur stan­ iflfBfithe victim of• • three • had worked on the ring prior reasons. For my fighter. I However, repeated replays-; tor Harvey Penick. Shortly after that she played in her first" ding back. After I quit. I wouldn't be able to pilay in amateur I ; iirregalartties — sagging ring to the fight but merely for the . think Foreman's camp should of the final round with use of a tournament. . . '• tournaments or even in ones at the Ideal club," she said. ' ''""""Iropes, a soft canvasand a fast purpose of putting, it into have made ' the same stop watch show conclusively SINCE THEN she has; won the state junior title three The possibility;of,.becoming aclub pro doesn't appeal to count. • v . propei; shape. • -. safeguards. The ring had that the count was legitirnate . timesand has been ranlted first and'second inthe countryas '• Hager, either. •'I've been around it all my life, and I don't sJSIi-i:.' Foreman accused Ali's "I make it a point to check • nothing fo do with the fight. and beat theeighth round bell.-.. a junior and fourth,.siiffl? and 10th as a .senior. want to teach it," she said. .; ' . . ll^rr——r———-—-i— : Hager's background1 reads like a profile in who's who in If golf does not interest her as a profession, her major at worften's golf. It seeriqsjike the logical thing for her to do the University does, "I am really interested in interior would be to turn pro. But she insists the years of playing design, and I think I'd like to try and m§ke aliving at it. But When you enroll in Air Force ROTC ,i: have not been with/the intention of becoming a pro. . -. I'll continue to play golf," she said. "I ve never wanted to be a-pro,"' she said.-"I;enjoy the. 'ALTHQUGH. HER PARENTS are golf pros, Hager main­amateur tournaments. I play golf because 1 want to, not tains that they have never influenced her or her brother to you can get more: an opportunity for because I have to: • v become professionals. "They've really pushed me the other "Idon't like to travel all the time,Jimkind of a homebody, way," she said. > fra scholarship, a chance and I wouldn't want to live the type of life the professionals But her parents have helped her to achieve her amateur do," she said. • * , -successes. With the exception of the fall semester when she APPARENTLY SHE'S not alone in her thinking abouttur* is in school, Hager is a frequent entrant in national tour­ 11 'Zsfr ningpro. '.'Most of the best amateurs right now don't plan on naments. , • turning pro; They kre more interested in other things. Hdr season starts with Christinasvacation when she plays ^"'!It seems thatall the pros want to do is play golf, and I've in Florida tournaments for & month. After returning to, never felt tMt wiay about it. . ' school for the springsemester.sho playsfor theTexas teapi. "If I was going to turn pro, now would be the: time. If I Then in the summer, accompjyti^d by her mother, she* were a guy I probably would. Their tour has more to offer plays anywhere from Florida to Seattle. than the women's and the life would be more desirable fora That's quitea schedulefor a golfeMhat doesn't get paid to guy. ! play or desires to. Maybethat will change when she realizes for flying lessons...and-' •""My brother-(a year younger and a member-of the. SMU j that instead of paying to play, she ca^be paid to play. THE PRESENT Rams Beat 15-13 coverKOR-IS, " SAN FRANCISCO-(AP) — night-in .-.th^RaHis'T-lS-lS-linebackcr Isiah RobertsonJn-ir: SITTtNld ON ' The-Los Angeles defense National Football league vie tercfepted a pass bySnead late 1/2BILLION DOLLARS punished San Francisco's tory over the 49ers. ; in.the fourtlr,quarter after the v. The Rams', .front, four wpll-travplfd veteran had FACE THE CREATEST Owen, met its match in 35-registsredr foliP^cIjs^ in-thrown a 39-yterd touchdown FINANCIAL CRISIS year-old Norm Snead, but cluding-ohe whiijtrset up a pass ^o Gen«_ Washington made the difference Monday first-half touchdown, and which cut the Rams' lead to IN/HISTORY. two points. \ •"SUDS * * 0 Los Angeles Won its third., ^ consecutive gai^e under its%^'J new starting q^arterback.MSq James Harris,.wh yard touchdown didve in the first period which? included -''4 c? long passes to Jack jjnow and v Harold-Jackson. GROUP RATE But the Rams' maVgin of Interested? DINNER w$$i simsAoii ms victory turned out to »e the POTATO SUJtO • MANS three points provide^ by • OMON • nodi• UtAO David Ray's 20-yard fieldVoal S«rv*cf ram//y Styh Mmmwitt Captain Jim Cargill Of fort early in the fourth quarter, ^Contact. 2330 S. Lamar 444"8461 Custom Cooking making the score 15-6. At. ^AS 115-471.1776 or 471-1777 Shoe Shop •SALE* SIERRA DEL CARMEN We make and SHEEPSKIN COAHUIIA, MEXICO NOVEMBER Sth VOTE a- Nov. 23 -Dec. 1 PUT IT ALLTOGETHER IN AIR FORCE ROTC repair boots RUGS PICO DE ORIZABA Many PUEBLA, MEXICO Beautiful Colo Dec. 21 Jan. 4 leather OUTBACK EXPEDITIONS *LEATHER SALE • OF*»'t'l'-'i f •••' * -FOR GOVERNOR! 1401 Newton Street Vorieu* kinds, colors » 75* p«r ft mm "Wis Austin, Texas 78704 •Msgs, 612/442-8036w PA P«>J. MudmU (sr R«n UnMi, Capitol Saddlery senior instructor: I3IO UinlrrWr;. Awtm. Tna* 7BT02. (.hiirpmm: Linda AimmlM LarryG. Humphreys \ * -v, -. f jj" 1614 Lavaca " Austin; Texas 478r9309 us® Student Leaders I 810ox automatic tumUMe inplainEngM# pi *L.. -jmm siBHi Hbw't Say He Witt Do Th0 Best Job As State Senator HHowthe81QQ^# protects records and provkks cofrvenient operation '& wbg^iusassembly^, inany desired mode. Ajter touching a single feather-^ R- s:s?.Joday, students can elect a State Senator who 'has proyen his responsiveness to •weight button, the 810OX can the neett5,of the University community and his concern .for academic reform. HowthsfQIOQXK automatic operalKxr--'either play a stack of f records, shutting ofT'-A^lfC Clarke Straughan has repeatedly demonstrated his concern for student and is recordedmusic acantely. w after the last one, m "•ir; presently working with Student Government leaders and other.student' organs ^ The BSR 810QX has a s&phisticated -pause control, forgentle contact play a single record, 'S, __ fe'"" M synchronous.mptofr spnmrng-a heavy ^ _wlth record surface. Platter rubber : and shut off, or play ' ^SP' vzations in an effort to facilitate their programs.^'- '•-1? 7-lb platter for' , . . " s^'nat protects records " |-a single record and accurate Speed • • jnno rJflv flm+riKhii during play andcushions rep^irmdefinitely untilyou stop4t^^­(regardless of • discs during automatic -Clarke Straughan will voicfc stDdent and.faculty"'concerns in the State.'Senate, and , Manualioperation;:^ss'. voltage supply or drop. Automatic sp'ndle' uses a single button ^ ^has stated publicly that.he will vote against the January, confirmation of any 5^-record load) and-all-but-nonexistent uses umbrella-type suspension^ to start the motor, 3,,^,yviOyy, and. flutter,Anti-skating force :J without outboard balance arm. • and the.cue control toJower "the" HHIHB wy be^adjusted for -:.ife!$tub spJndle rowtes;with.record to " I ^Regent who is not sensitive to the academic needs of the University. Clarke Lii • stylus ^ ^Straughan is representative of the'hew brand of candidate whose integrity cannot optimum pressurev.yyith®i| prevent distortion of center hole,,„|| K# either conical or '"v*4.Stylus j'eteWn ^justraie^pfeventsJ tv'|be circumvented by big business, labor unions, and"political favors. He js-a'n— HoW die-810 O^lop^ates fl^^H^elliptical styh, so stylus damageif dropped outside oI quie%emittingno sound §<|1 honest and sincere candidate and needs vour suDDort. perfectly cente^jpsrentrywocwe range Tracking pressure 1^/ mm in groove lor precise stereo Va'v-,C5 < adiustable down to mat con intrude onthe musje^p separation 025 grams Tor The 810QX uses a'unique sequential _vt ?-pJ without audible newest iightwelghf "cam dnve'mech'anfsm. ItIs a ngd w distortion or carfridgest for , ' 1 ,.« • 4-» - Msf (?J uneven groove' >/ffc •HHHi mininjum reqord ' ( wear A strobe ^^"wear Stylus brush'whisks dust off 1}* 1 r ­ following Student Senators and other Student Leaders strongly en- prectsfpn assembly thatv^places the 'disc is integrated joto the platter stylus between _ }.tforse and encofJrage you-tavote for C!arke~Straughan TODAYl design and a variable ^peed control is^f plays Lock plumber s nghtmare Of rotatingm eccentric plates and interlocking g^ars --1 ^ automatically secures . DrM L. . *1-^J tone .arm to prevent 1 that other changers use Unlike other';-* v-? fSliD^v mm •• , damage to stylus, -changers, there are no light metil -provided should you Want to vary 'rom acciclental 5tamping!s that can go,out of aligment?^•**»*>** 1and make a lot of noise, from being >1'?*, from, and later.return td, the-normaljgl.rtiovement Stylus , speeds The,tone arm will track as * wear meter records,accumulated sj-j« carried,bumpkl, or just Trom us£fijgi low as 0 25 grams to make use of 0Mitylus usejn houtSr faovying yvhen^|-fajiterature-wrlteto­ ^ Ready Wifflams ....; ^ ! finest light-woght, high-c'ompltance'.^l ' " 1 M cartridges /or maxirpumjidelity and dytmtcrengg^ protects your-records; > Malt ftoom 38. if!!® mm WmMm r. Page 6 Tuesday, November 5, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN;: S1SS •MSSsS . . . Sfllsf v. 0 DKR Press Conference h» Pfpl Owls Overcome Jinx By BILL TROTT M'frHeisman voting, and faced Texan Staff Writer ' 'l-'^"what h'e's had to, Roosevelt Texas Head Coach Darrell has had just an outstandingat-Royal announced at his Mon-. titude and .he's been: a team day press conference thatstar man. ? freshman fullback Earl "For him to have that kind Campbell, • the Longhorns* of attitude'is quite a tribute to leading rusher! ttils season/? -.him as a"person," Royal said, would , not be starting Satur­v "It takes a pretty big person day. when : tlie Horns go to" to go from everybody's' darl­ Waco to meet the* Baylor > ing to Substitute." Bears. • . - lloya.l also announced that Instead; Roosevelt Leaks JimmyrWalker would start (remember him, Longhorn with Leaks in the backfield in fans?) wbuld be .making his placeBf JoeAboussie.-but that first start of . the season at .-he would continue to rotatehisi fullback. .<•••• offensive backs. It has been somewhat of a "That's.not meant as a put- frustrating season for. the down to ;Joey, either," Royal senior front Brenham who has said. "We're really pleasedbeen seeing limited playing • with theeffort we've been get­ •time behind Campbell; But ting from all of our backs." then Leak's^was'not really ex­Quarterback Marty Akins,pected to play at all this year who rushed for 115 yardsafter wrecking his right knee ^Saturday against SMU, was* in spring training last ye&r. . ^•praised by Royal not only for« Royal tried Leaks at half­ statistics but his operation of back earlier injhe year^but the Texas Wishbone. eventually, made'/.a , second­ . "He's getting more' and • string fullback out of him. But more honed on his/options," Monday Royal announced that, • Royal, said. "His:execution he was ready. against SMU was more .. "He's getting better and . delicate and : better than better each week, and he is against Rice, Cut there's near the old Roosevelt,!' nothing delicate aboutthe way Royal said. "I feel this is he turns up field." _ . something he's earned," and, TexasrBaylor and-A&Mareit's certainly nota putdoWn Earl.' • the only three teams technically remaining in-,the Royal;emphasized t SWC championship race sinceCampbell still would play Rice upset Texas -Tech Satur­siderably. . " -ht­day in Houston. The loser ofThis season Leaks hpsfhish­the Texas-Baylor game faces ed for 305 yardson.68 sirrles. • elimination andRoyal expectsLast year he set S'^athwest Head Coach Grant Teaff'SConference seasonfM single Bears to be mentally up. game rushingrecorwsand had -a good. chanc£_Jto&Sreak the SWC career nlShi^mark had SEAHORSE CAR he not been injur®. .WASH, 1 Automatic­ .."Let , me savythis _a_bout Roosevelt," RovJH said, "For" 6"SeU-Servlce­a guy: that weWfffrom having • 1205 W. Koenig been a conaensusAlL­ 454-3922 American third. in the J IE UNIVERSITY OF TEXJVS WAS ONCE KNOWN FOR FOOTBALL EXAS IS NO. 1 IN LATIN AMERICAN STUDI ^INFORMATION ON MAJORING IN r# LATIN AMERICAN. STUDIES SEE MS. JANISs GREER, S.R.H. 1.301 (471-5551). &*: — . • i V *BY VIRTUAJ. CONSENSUS OF " lATIN AMERICANISTS NATIONWIDE. M '•» ni TWO CANDIDATES FOR GOVERNOR WILL SPEND FIVE MILLION DOLLARS ONI THEIR CAMPAIGNS-r THEY ARt WILLING TO SPEND TWO DOLLARS PER VOTE! T f" RAMSEY MUSlZ THINKS UNLIMITED SPENDING CAN CORRU*PT PQllTieS,-WAT MONEY HAS TOO MUCH INFLUENCE ALREADY! , t ^MONEY SHOULDN'T CONTROtPOllTl'CS;' THIS NOVEMBER S,h, voff;"^ v ua., •; • .." CQ •HOUSTON (UPI) -Coach w TechjCoach Jim Carlen said Burley would continue tfr.work ' 'hi-, t A1 Conover. considering /his Monday one of the big out at middle guard, although""""^ •• team's frequent" last-njrtiute problems with his Red sophomore Ross Murphy will disappointments, saidrMonday Raiders is "We're not getting be back after missing the Rice ;he assumed;jjq^jjing~as Rice' consistency from bur quarter-.: gaiTfc'with an injury. ^ ,Qyl -fans'^counted the• final .backs." .yj; • : •. * .5 ' seconds, Saturday , "'Carlen said ''Tommy i BALLAS. (AP) — Southern By gosh'-thr-jinx is over,'1 Duniven was all right before Methodist Football Coach' $ Conover said at his Rjce • he got hurt (muscle spasms Dave. Smith'.said Monday he . quarterback club meeting. against Arizona), but I may ' wasn't concerned about his . We can win against good haye put him back in there too future at the schtwl but'added , learns. 1've.had a couple of SOOn. "• = . it would be nice to hegr a vote good nights sleep. Today was \ confidence., from someone "Don Rpberts playedwell, ; the first time I've been able to in the .Mustang hierarchy. but he threw behind his:• taste my_,luneh in seven " "I feeljsecure, and I .think receiver and had an inter^ep-. weeks."' ' I'm a good football' coach,'' " tion which set upa Ricescore; » And with th^t, he was given • Smith said.."I think I can give. I'll decide before the game a rousing standing ovatfoh ; SMU a prideful program, butj'i^ which j'p'ne will start against; Rice. 1-5-1, plays Arkansas, t s necessary to have con- TCU." ; .. 4-4,. Saturday in Fayfitteville. ' f denee -in the c.oacji ..an-• ' • "Arlytteas. that's just like. Carlen .also indie, ted thaf nounced if you are to be com­ • playing a mad dog. We don't defensive tackle Ecomet petitive in recrgiting.\ really .know what to expect. • They have had some people in­jured. I .know .they are frustrated, they are concern-^ ed. they fteed to win/ he said." WACO (AP) -Baylor-Photo Service , -rrTexcm Staff Photo • by Milie Smith Coach Grant Teaff told his 222 W. 1,9th & 5324 Cameron Rd. . squad Monday that Saturday's Campbell rams through the middle. Southwest Conferencefootball NIKKORMAT FTN CHROME ^ game with Texas "may be the WITH 50MMF/2 LENS .. $288" biggest game of your careers. ' • I sTeam Hosts I fanidns "Texas is • formidable in-. ­ *32.50 NIKON CASE NO. 4B7 victory every .department, r don't. . Fresh" off a 3r2 especially good experiencefor Leiser at center-forward,'" Purchased with fcamera V4 Pric^ »* have to tell" you that —_it jiist i agaist Southern Mfetljodist goaltender Hank Longcrier.' Erler said. "Max H^yman, means that we williiave to be University, the Texas soccer Texas will be without the ser­• who has been playing well for team will face a group of vices of regular goalie Aubrey us, will also see plenty of ac­110 percent sharp in our ef-BELL/HOWELL FD 35 F/l .8 •$ 95 University of. Houston ; forts in order to stay, on'the Compare to Canon TLB ^ithease .. 179 Carter, who is out of action tion." , students from Iran at-5:30 field with, them." for the -next three • weeks • • THIS AD CAN BE PRODUCED FOR 10% ,OFF 1 •.. Defensive back Gary Green p.m. Tuesday" at Freshman because of badly strained "If it continues raining as it Field. . of San Antonio and: reserve ON B/W STODTMAN.PHOTO FINISHING ligaments. . has thepast few-days) then the The-'newly formed team tailback-Cleve Franklin of (tINiSHiNGOFFER EXPIRES 12/31,'74) Texas will use Fred Ohadi , game.will be canceled." Erler •from Houston has defeated . 'Brenham will miss the game the^ team's leading scorerT t said. "We.don't want to-tear both Rice anS.. UH : soccer with injuries. who did not play againstSMU ^up the field any more than we teams this year; "(This1 game "We will also use Gree /have to." . ~ ' • * • Texas liiiicn will be good experience for LUBBOCK (AP) -Texas us."* Texas Soccer Coach Fvents Alfred Erler said.. "Since all ' their playersare foreign born, they Will; probably use good '2 noon*.' Sandwich Seminar: bail control." . - CARATS ARE "Buddhism: Western Conceptions and Erier said the game will be Misconceptions." Professor'Rctja Rao, a CHEAPER, A&E BARBER SHOP UT. philosophy processor, will speak. 2512!* GUADAIUPE ST. Room 312 (Waggener Hall Lounge). 0358 "DOC" ' Idea^ and Issues Committee. Reasonable Rates 7?39 Now thru November 9, you can take advantageof Eo*y Goinjf Atmoiphfrt tremendous savings on.yonr UT ring set with a program designed „tplhelp the Chicanp diamond at the University Co-Op.-John Roberts ©n. campus, maintorin. his native is offering the following special prices;.;.only language and be exposed to aspects of for the John Roberts Siladium ring: " GROUP his culture. Catholic-Student, Center;, 5pt. Diamond reg. 25.00 Now lO.OO minimal charge for refreshments. FLIGHTS pC Diaffi0irt^egr-5fe«fr;Nov _ jVjexjcan-Am^ricqn: CulturejCornmittee. ® TO NEW YORK 25pt. Diamond reg. 127.50 Now 87.50 r.;TO Qitrt. -6 p:m. Ticke+drqwing con­tinues for Optional Seiyice Fee holders NOV 27 OR for Paul Taylor Dance Company on Mon­ Ri-INCLTAX day and Tuesday, Nov. 11 & 12^ and x *1 DEC 20 (GROUP IS WIN) for Christoph Eschenbach, cldissical pianist, on Nov. 13V Tickets , for) PaulGo. with Group Taylor 50% $1, and $1.5(^'for OptionalReturn Anytime Service Fee holders; 50c for Eschenbach. Drawing in Hogg Box Office. Cultural Entertainment Committee. Wednesday 72 noon. Sandwich Senninar: "The $86,000 Question." Austin City Cowi^ cilman Jeff Friedman will speak. Fourth "TRAVEL PLACE floor, Academic. Center. Ideas and 451-8226 University Co-Op. Jewelry Dept. Ground Floor: issues. ONE HIGHLAND CENTER . YZ, ***** • •• • Cesar Chavez Endorses Gonzalo Barrientos UNITED FARM WORKERS P.O. BOX 62 WESTERN UNION MAILGRAM KEENE. CA. 93531 MAY 2, 1974 8058225571 TDRN KEENE CA 100 05-02 0126p EDT FON 512474-6036 GONZ.^LG BARRIENTOS, FONE AND DELIVER DR 911 NORTH LAMAR BLVD AUSTIN TX 78701 ON BEHALF OF THE OFFICERS AND MEMBERS OF THE UNITED FARM WORKERS OF AMERICA AFI-CI0 I AM PLEASED TO ENDORSE YOUR CANDIDACY FOR THE STATE LEGISLATURE. FOR YEARS YOU HAVE BEEN AN ADVOCATE NOT ONLY FOR FARM WORKERS BUT FOR POOR PEOPLE EVERYWHERE. YOUR ACTIVE SUPPORT OF THE FARAH STRIKE, IA MARCHA 66, THE AUSTIN FURNITURE STRIKE AND MORE RECENTLY THL LONGHORN STEEL WORKS STRIKE DEMONSTRATES NOT 0NLVY0UR S EMPATHY FOR WORKING PEOPLE, BUT ALSO YOUR SENSE OF JUSTICE FOR CHICAN0S. TEXAS NEEDS YOU IN THE LEGISLATURE, AND WE PLEDGE OUR SUPPORT TO * ASSURE YOUR VICTORY. VIVA LA CAUSA. % ' i ' MOTE CESAR CHAVE2 w t-Jb * n ^ "t. 3.4^^. •M. 14:24 EDT SAT HSB v: ' i As h n-f -1 —„ m iibi l\liV RIPRESENMVE, H»u l^iirf«. ISin i>nlrrbtir). A'u»(in. Tr**/3ri7n2.cllUirrtrr < Prf. Pol Adv.bySAG-YD.STACY SWTS. 901 W. 24th&ROBEf\tHOWARD^ " Mnti iJhiU IUrfhinits .-: • • ^ — T" • — --. *7 t^ — , . ' L i . S_ >•!»_>• < ... Sr msfWsfk "' 508M. • c?» -$$;?*?$'. Wl'& i \> _~2% ' Sr?-/I '^l®£ -'ttte I#?' V& lllfc''' • i ' K* *A.i-?i4 S&& . »<'• V 5 «•* >$£*>S^< v£­' rf £?? ,4.^»f9v Upperikvel ^"X'c<»**> -n­ &S&H,-t»? -V^ >>f . >>5­ ew Years Eve ir­ —*\2 V-Wj^»­$%$k v*,;-',£,'v' * t~/d& *» Cntf+CA Unicorn Mb/v •^t fim\\abid X ,-Sfc Wi *•* if" <•&•<»• A7J5.V A-vIr l< .•'.*• -& ^ i?r*^ «** Cr*» 21st St 5f,.^PS Lower/jsi/aJ z,4e&&!*,'. ^A*S*3a' fS#i, 1**.}.* "*S-\>. * 1? ^ \-T ,,^v.-I»®V « P '* t ' tWM **"^1 .. •pF.S2^^$>4^W^v03^S^'iSto^i^ Mitshnw Juicy uirrtft ?:i-fe-" V-&* ;Urtcle Shvi/eyjs -Camera n 9 *• 4 rtt '.ja?* .-*• *8 ^''^P'u arst. "3^* -• '• i-'T t ... * r 'l^fjfc v. -fe&s. ^V te •f:r± iV-' * r fi ^ jt T'-1 a ^ «-•»> H", ^ © fv,«: C^ t 21st and,Guadalupe ing.miliU at U. &£** i.' TE Page 8 Tuesda^r-Noy^hnber 5, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN 7 More... .-gfcsjt took a lot o£pressure,to secure a • a athletics women's intercollegiate program of.intercollegiate athletics' for program, has pretty well forgoetten. ;> .women at the: University about a /Last semester-only $21,2-18 was realiz­year's .worth from faculty, students 'ed. through" the sale.dfwomen's athletic press and, of course, the Department 01. <3 blanket taxes.. Not much,-considering^theHealth, Education and Welfare/ ' potential.net from a student body this Now the program is in its first full m size is somewhere around $B0,00(J. • year of operation, and rBanymiqht be in-Now $2 isn't much in this day of in­Wrested in what has been done so far in flation... . • the .way .of funding the. seven women's You can't buy four packages of . .teams, finding coaches, athletes and 'cigarettes or a meal at your favorite facilities .and setting:!® schedules. ~ grease-pit restaurant for.that any more. M In a word — much. ­. t.. • Two dollars' Worth of gasoline won'tHowever, the .biggest problem facing ge't your11 car from Austin to Bastrop and the • department of Intercollegiate. back again. It won't do two weeks' laun­Athletics for Women isthe gameone that:. dry.. : ' ..'. V . "kept it from inception for so many years You can't'really entertain^yourself for — money. '.. $2 any more, either. '• " The-program operates'on ap­ Movie prices are higher than that and proximately $72,500, including $15,000> mm so is the monthly cable tV charge. Twothe department by'former.­ allotted to 'dollars won't even get you good arid University President Stephen Spurr for' ^ drunk nowadays.. grants-in-aid, prscholarships. ' • But it will, admit you to . all Texas The dspartnftent was set up with a­Longhora;women's sporfs evenfe free of variable funding factor.'Namely an op­charge and at the same time help sup-. tional, student • services fee, a women's -port the program the student body itselfblanket tax of $2; . helped to create. ' However, it seems the student body, And. for a couple of bucks, that's not • the mainstay in last year's campaign for1 such a bad deal: ., ' " —H.H. „'l ' ' nition In a city where-football is the No 1 • of years the program should be good." spectator sport, an indoor sport,.gym­ This year the team' competes on ad­nastics; is gaining recognition. Lasi year ­ vanced and intermediate levels. Since: the wonaen's gymnastics team gained a"~ max­ the team is only budgeted for a • new coach and this year is recognized as­ imum of 15 members, there alsocould be a University team. , a iunior vafsity squad. , -T«*an Staff Pholo* ­ "Last year, we worked as a club * teairi," said Aharon Koepke, women's gymnastics coach. "Before that, the girls were virtually coachless." 5-/ Koepke, a . Peon! State. University ' .graduate, feels befiij) a; University team i 1! •has.many advantages over a .voluntary J club. "Now we get more money andun-: j1 iforms. Also, I. have a two-class load schedule during the season instead of;jr seven,";she. said. , rV The departmtthf also received new floor' mats, parallel-' bars arid ?ti"am-' Photo polines. "We have among the best, if hot .the best facilities for women's gym­"nastics,"-Kwpke-~snid. —•—>— ­ Even though there is no designated league, Texas competes in various tour­The women's itercollegiate basket-proveirtent -of the Women's .inter­naments andv invitational meets.? •all team, arrtifj with a substantially collegiate program at the University. Competition comes from-'Texas Chris-­ niligher budget a: an improved team, is tian Uniyersity, SWTSU, Amarillo anxiously awai . , "The-progrSm was started in 1968. and ig the upcoming season: College and Texas Woman's .University. , ihe --ills been progressing yearly sinro thg'n women urider^the .-.direction of —4tetmning from .• Inst:.year's-team t^at•second-year ;l Hod Page;'will be out , ,"It hasincreased tremendously since I came in second .at regiorials. are Careyto improve last year's 8-11 record came.here. and it:s getting betterall the Congdon,. Debbie Reiribach land Liz when they r, timer4--' their season early next .. McDonald. Adding depth will be month. When asked about his working budget, freshmen K.Leslie Golden and Judy, , Page depressed guarded optimism" Page seemed satisfied.as he answered? Jacobsen. V , . _ - . about'hi'^^m's outl«>ki --•yyith a question of his own. -This year, we have more' experience;'. ,,''We Whave pot:ntial," he said, "but-. »utrgymnasticsds just getting into the money?" ?>V; it will tj^e a Jittje time to get it together.' high schools," Koepke said, "In a-couple 'e-gbt a lotjirfDew faces, and they 6will ljpve to adjust to'the new situation." -7 i^p|fi Funds Help Golfers cite• . ' •* .. °f thC omen's trams at the UjujJrsity, .the new funding has enabled thl .f-fy A at J»is point, • . golf team to compete, outside the general areau • • he women will play in the South Cen-The team plays most of its tournaments in the spring but-traveled lastmonth to Albu —Texan Staff Phdrar . ^ral Zoppi of the Texas Association nf jerque, whereIt competed in Uieann^cker InvitaUohaK It wa^eTst timt^e' T •( - ^Intercollegiate Athletics for Women team has been able to make the trip, i ney.tinisheffTTgspectabte-fourth-while-senior-­ (TAIA.W j with sevenpther teams in their Nancy Hager took third individually. • . v«me-benior— zone. ;!:y IBecause of.lackof funds, the only i.rt*v j Tucson during June. • another of-the problems facing him and Unfortunatfilv. ]t-)S Uia nnt.nFi«tato • iru -i Texas Women's Tennis Coach Betty successful, Hagerman plans on another its iSrogram^^'' 1S out'of"state t6urnaments that the golf leam needs to upgrade' . There weren't any," * ----- Hagermansays her varsity tearp hasim- 1 to the fact .he is a one-man coaching in three weeks.. A mixed doubles "play So, one scholarship will 6edivided four °lf'proveil 50 percent.in depth as compared staff; • 'Mtat? is'minor compared to bther sports susuch as _ to last year. • • . , J ' • • * . day" is being planned. ways. Eachrecipient will receive a*com-~,i' basketball, volleyball., gymnastics acid swimming. Very few schools consistently have , University Women's Tennis "is' a plete tuition and fees award. They have. £ f,,,« "We have a fairly short team, which • women s golf .teams, Golf Coach Pat Weiss said. ' There are only four, seniors on the member-of -the Texas Association for ;; . not been decided. ^ ~z\f. "means we'll ' have to work a .little J team'. '• ' " ': i: . > -.'^-^^^-OAt^toteJo^amehte, the top schools and players entered as in Intercollegiate-Athlelic Women! The first intercollegiate' tournament' Although there are few Texas seniors, dividuals provide1 for good there will be stiff competition for the hoT^n hilfwif 13 ' touma^ent wiH be hgld againthis yearMarch17 and 18. "We- was good'as the top four players last year.'I starting lineup. sh^said • 8 !°urnament ^mparable io the men's tournaments (at Texas),'" ' Hagerrrian.said.-' < L Swimming T .The coach also discussed the vajstim- To keep the team'going. though, there th^i ™m«n1n3^.y??S coach Texas, had th<> distinction of signing first must be a budgetj^ast-year the team got ., w^men atlilete tQ..a.sch0larship at Texas. Freshman lie Burke was givenI They rieajied team scholarship to play golf lasteummer but has since quit scho'ol 7 ' . . , $1,120. qiore.. The ,-raised-about-$4(§-4hr.oUgh-candyJsaies, ^,!,t,g0!u"teanV"i Volleyball , imistic S all0Ued ?neiu11 grant-in-aid, and_Weiss has decided to split it into bake sales and. an unusual event called "^lajrday^.' ' " ' Even with more financial'support than scholarship, split b,etween two Successful ^r^nSratPreSenUhereare0^SlXP,ayerSOnto^ iii. previous years, the Texas women's swimmers, for his-women's program. ~ —'y.imuhvum, nuouMaicu . swimming team faces an old problem'of In theirfirst year of competition under'" women are invited to play tennis with a "More and more schools are giving depth, which it hopes to overcoihewith a ­ the ausqipRS of the Tlnivprslty nthlctlnc member of the tedm. The entry fee is a scholarships and getting' financial sup­ srtiail but talented group of swimmers. t?Syaany otTir^. port for women's.swimmingv"-he"Saiar~ department, the women's volleyball donation towards the team's expenses. Texas SwimmingCoaph Pat Pattefson team has had a fair amount of success. . Since last year's "niau Aix," -is-optimistic about this yeaf's team/ . Patterson's recruiting , procedures for .Coached by Pam Lampley. the -whidi teturns a majority of iwimmers/." women swimmers compare to the; Longhorns have played Well in all of from thejl973-74 team thatwon the state ' jprogram he uses to recruit swimmers for the men's team. JJe sends letters to their outings,TwTrftiing the South Ceritfal regional tournament, by 80 poiots; • ' prospective swimmers to see if they are -Zone district championship in San An- "We have some exceptional talent but interested incoming to the Uhiversity. A . tonio last weekend. Their best previous don't have a lot of swimmers. We' . finish had been a tie for third-in the presently have 12 women on the,team,"-, j personal visit with.«ach pro^pecl is financially impossible. Uniyersity Invitational:Tournament at he said. . . , Gregory Gym two weekends ago. • Although . this year's .University Although this year's schedule is not <. -si athletic budget has not been approved. complete, the team will compete in in­ '' aR*The team is made up of 15 women, Patterson expects to receive the $$000 vitational meets at Texas Tech, TCU, mthree, of whom split one scholarship. A he requested for the women's"tea^n, Tescas Women'.s University and the fourth is due to gefa portion of the single • • "The seven sports (of women's inter-^a regional meet at.Pah AmericanJJniver­ grant-in-aid. That one scholarship is collegiate: athletics) will be funded??S'sity. • . ; . ' . enough for each girl to pay for her books through money that former President V-f . ...• •• *j£vV­ lhe . wonaen's and nien's-teams will and tuition. < • Stephen Spurr set aside, last spring." swim in the new University swiihmingPatterson explained. v _ , complex, tentatively scheduled-for com­ year the volleyballers have par- Presently, Patterson only has one full pletion in June, 1976.­ ticipated in the JexaSvWoman's Univer-? : sity,. Tournament', _University, of |Mouston's; TouAey, their own and' thie:^ Track Athletes Sought •rSiStrict tourney in San Antonio ati Trlni­ . . |.• . ty. wpmen's-volleyball is-played acc6*|5 track is ... §||i8 • ding .to districts ratherthan a coQlerence" Texas' firsf women's team ««;eyents,'; jDaniels explained.:'lA : * r . '-schools Only'want to have dual meets' so Sll| set-up'. "We'ije ii« the South-Central organizing under tfie-efforts bf Coach •• Tfi/tlr HAninln 1 ««>U h L«. j. tl..i_ -I..r 1 ... • -Zone," Lampley said. Other teams in the. Jack Daniels, who has the task of turning .1I'm constantly calling schools to see irv zone includTTrinitjtjr Incarnate Word ot-a no program into a winning program. 0>e can send a few girls for certain" San Aptonlo, Our Lady-of-tire Lake, also a:;:Daniels has 16.jvomen-who are train-events"' from San Antonio, £outhvrest Texas ing, three of wljpm.lrave.had experience^ Jls?1 As of this moment Ihe team lacks a State, Texas Lutheran . College and "We don't have a lot of experienced . budget, but Daniels has asked" the 4 -girls," Daniels said. "We're advertising, Southwestern. — *7-* Athfetics Council for $3,000 to cover ex­t 4 V " % • t -the fact that we have a track team_and penses, . . <• Lampley said that'at thfe beginnin^.of .. we.'re taking whoever comes but , "We enough c6ver hope' to get to each yearthe'prospectiveschools'^nd .. j, "Thisisn't like other sports-where you * • " travi»yhig expenses, and pay for the out invitations to. their tourneys."If two ^ Cut the number of people on the squad ,, . equipment 'we need, which is basically ­ 6onflict, 'the team then-votes,on which . ' As far as I'm concerned, anyone who ' shoes," Daniels said. "Wemay fiave one ;­ ..... .. v. • —r — • •-.w.vuiic ,%one they would -rather att^ni Scrlm- comes out is on the team. , ^scholarship this spring, but that depends 1^'; jages, such as the.ones the Longhorns' > , Although heisforming a team,'Daniels on if we havejajiyone who deserves it." lL-..wfi|Vfi had with Texas Lutheran and "!)• said Tgxaswould not compete as a teami ' -Daniels hopes eventually todraw Some outhtyest:Texas,;are set ^on a hom^ -,C. % in duaL meets . > •experiencedififeh school runners to Tex­"We'll fake the girls with 'fairly 'good aS.' but ihp PXlPIlhnf hlC.KOPmilintr nmxn. -ability; 4md* enter them-in individual -4 A*"T«. BB ' SflfeSL w® • %f im, Approved in October -ym ,h Officials §l~ Consider^v£'#£ •^ss. v ? T& Bi//s ro Refjecfi HEW Fu .r.,. , fclljl- If that embarassihg ra?h below your navel and above yourBy SUSIE STOLpft. , influence the University to correct IS71 fin­ knees is beginning to' sciire you, relax, you may just be < T-exan Staff Writer "" V-dings of discrimination against1 Berry, allergic to your underwear. .. ' University officials are considering the Paulina Jacobo, ftE\V assistant regional at­ Water Rate Hikes Elastic, rubberized or expandable bands in most un­• ; :next steps to take in solving-the problem of torney, said. y. A­derwear commonly cause a red, diffuse c?sh on the skin 2 With inflation already Uie Department of Health, Education and At the.time, HEW directed the University Austin dermatologist "Dr. William Green said Monday. .Johnson'said the increase' jump froi»4M3-tq $255, and a gnawing away at student was caused by the '"ever in­heavy u%r would 'face an in­ -~ "Weifare's withholding.-of tavo federal grants to promoteJBerry to as^ocjaje professor with j Pormalin, the substance used in wash-and-wcar fabrics to „ to the University, President Ad Interim an afcompanying.salary increase and award budgets, new increases in city creasing cost of doing crease ol $256; from {250 to give them body*, also causes allergic reactions in many peo­ : Lnrene Rogers said Monday: tenure. .> j:. ; water and wastewater rates _business, and the-need to get J496... Jolmsori said these ple. he said. • i'-'i HEW officials said Friday, almost $3 The University appealed the finding""' will send more dollars on our own two feet, finan­figures were taken from pc-• Changes in "Skin chemistry account for some reactions. floating down the drain. nullum m federal funds has;been withheld ^ The Berry case has caused funds tobe held, cially."..In the past, water and tual bills from representative ' . "The factthat one has worna particular kind of underwear :.iecause of the Univgrsitj-'s inaction on three-''; up in the past,' Rogers said; The increases should ljring wastewater have', been in consumers. . for years doesn't mean they; won't have trouble later." he vear-old findings of'discrimination against i.: At Uwit time the withholdings were for a" Said. . r r:;~'i -v ,•''••• '• an average of 80'percentmore effect, subsidized by -the: A new feature of the utility' '/ > ^University Asst Art Prof.-Janet Berry. ^ brief period; Miles Schulze. HEW. regional water revenue and 211percent . revenue.from the electric' bill is the itemization of th%> The'rash can usualfy befcleared up quickly by using a •?«».' 7 : One grant, a $25,000 contract with*the director of'the Office of Civil Rights, said 'topical cortisone cream, Green-said. ' more wastewater revenue utility. With their increasing water and wa^tewateff* . KaUonal Aeronautics and Space Admimstra-Monday. _ *' • : into the city per year, Curtis costs; tWis is no' longer" possi-• charges." Prevfously lumped ^ Gynecologist Dr. M.D. McCauley said'nylon underwear, Johnson, director of : water M rs|;;tion, would have gone toward work -in HEW officials also have complained the does cause a temperature increase in the vaginal area. „ bje, he.explained. together, the.charges now are ', geophysics at the UniversityMarine.Science University, has failed to send rquested ad­. and wastewater, said. UNDER THE new separated in compliance with— This higher temperature 8-' Institute in Port Aransas. Rogers said. ditional data on Berry to federal offices. can increase bacteria count, Approved by City Council rates, the annual bill of a Environmental Protection resulting in growths such as a yeast infection, he said, ,• t'fliversiu officials have not received word Rogers \vould notsay anydecision had been last month, the new rates will light residential user would :Ag«?ncy regulations requiring McCauley suggested wearing cotton underpants and. no ^-on the possible vvithholdmgof an additional made to.stfnd the requested information. . be.in"effect for the first time jump from $47.61 to-$98.27, an a statement of separate rates, pantyhose to lessen the chances of developing suchan infec­ $2,900,000 grant from the Department of the The president has defended the• Univer­tion.' ' on bills mailed Monday, he increase of $4.22 each month, j Johnsotusaid. * l M i' added.' r*.* r~ .Navy reported .by HEW officials. The grant sity's withholding of information becauseof a mmm m • • • , A medium user's bill would i The wastewater rate is J-r»-^.nOSJ \JV\X. W: would Jiave been released Friday, federal • suit,by;Berry against HEW and the Universi­determined by averaging the ' ib i spokesperams said. . . • ty, filed in February. 1974. The suit awaits water consumption during the ' fundi low usage months of •MHV a t°oj December, January and I • • I v-»v February, the director-said. by Postj^Office By DAVID SHARPE ft September, and then"really hit Since last-year, however, Schlab said the post office Wastewater is all water Santa .Claus, children are hard around Thanksgiving, the post office has made' a returned into -the sewage performs service as is... I told, has many elves forr . Karen Schlab; postal informa-concerted effort to answer the a system, an<|so excludeswaler measure of goodwill. "We feelI? helpers. . "-tion assistant, said. " I None, is f , evety Santa Claus letter it we owe the community some-usage forsuch itemsas water-*-' however, more f t Last year,-the post office in ...rreceiVes, Schlab said '* > • work," she ing lawns and filling s^im­ public relations I 2ri9A\ -i' ' 'helpful to qld Kris Kringle Austin received 800 SanU . r", The cost of sending out said. The post office does not ming pools. The winter .. than that biggest elf of all. the sl^tjirgers letter?., replies, to .the post office is make any money from, the months were chosen because I v IKS. Postal Service office in Previously, the post office minimal, Schlab said. Most they involve the least usage of service. * ' Austin, which every season would turn the letters over to letters received have the this nonretumed water, John­ I The post office tries to answers all the letters it j. , .. the Austin Christmas Bureau, proper postage althciueh same it son said. answer 'eve.ry letter I ^ g"trough thfo have trading stamps, and the THE UTILITY BILL also receives; but in some cases w/cheese a »r^[^ ^ '°determine if there wereany letters of response are notln-will include an adjustment of I it is difficult because eithet, SAVE 49* A trickle of letters start families in need of food, dividually written 1.22 cents per Kilowatt hour in are the child's'writing is hot-legi-\ I MUST BRING COUPON oming in as -early as -clothing or toys. • . repVoductions. , ble or there is no return adI-the electric charge, R.L. Han-GOOD AU FAUSEMESTER' dress, .. ock, director Vrc of electrical 1 ti^iiity said • Monday. ^ I WHEAT BERRY BREAD now Within each\lette-r of higher fuel cost adjust­response, the post .office ment' will be "cranked in r I available on any sandwich, ^ thanks the child for the letter,;; around December," Hancock1 and says,"Santa Clajishold us said, ^d.would amount to anI OPEN DAILY earlier that he.might not be average 4 percent increase.. I N. Lamar FOR CT. GOVEltNOR able to reply to each letter This should be offset by the:, 10:30 -10 P.M. •-v from his young friends, but he normal d.ecrease in electrical ? is„most anxiousjp.hear from ..consum? during the; ij>tion A POSITIVE ALTERNATIVE .. all good jrttfe boiys and ^fpig."" winternio iiopths. Hancock said. ~ SPRING 1975 ASIAN STUDIES COURSES ilffig­ "Marshall will work to. "Marshall opposes , un­ (All courses are applicable to an Asian Studies Concentration but are reappc block the reappointment of restricted wiretapping, yj1' also open to all students interested in learning about SoOth and East regent Frank Eiirwm, Asia.) •* -r-fej, will work for single ^ -He alsofavoFS a 1' reduc.-— ANS, 3011 feCiviltzafions of Jopan & China. tion in the statesales tax." -A 'slrieterin-4he legislature." (-0AL 310) '/ " WWF 10*1 V: GAR 109. FAUROT." ANS.121 . MateriqUlobbratory—Teaching Asian Studies i,7j (-OAUIO)^ '-•"in American Schools. 1 ' -~ W 3-5. UNI208. WILSON VOTE MARSHALL FOR IT.GOV. TODAY em ANS. 360 Sominar in-Asian Studies-—Topic: Asian Food-i4'"" * f°rJ'y Students for Marshall, Ann Plunkett. ,^'t r : • ' : Chairperson, 4320 Bennett, 451-1708 y. ' ' (-ECO 350M) Produrtfon Dilgmna~ ^ 'M 3-5:-30. BEB 15$. JANNUZI/NOWOTNY •M ANS. 361 Introduction to North IndianMusic s? BTtmi Art :-,c ' TTH 3-4:30. Art Bldg. 4;~MEISTER UT WOMEN'S ART 3791W Problems ol Art in West India rWC T™ 9"10:30-Art Bldg. 4. MEISTER\ RAPE & CRISIS •"1 ' ^ L-L't. nil.. iVv.ii i....... INTERVENTION CENTER WOMEN WHO NEED AID -Oft INFORMATION 'S 'fL 1 'II CONCERNING ANY PROBLEM FAK/IILY NIGHT $3 476-7073 J-i. """•to, 4tt$ 0PEN FROM 7 P.M. -7 A.M. PLEASE TAKE THE IJME TO CUT THIS OUT AND PLACE IT BY YOUR TELEPHONE. .r "t hfi a 4 C-oThe^ Good FoodStores' «n . Natural poods DANGER WEEKLY SPECIALS ^1 Spcdala good November 5-10-/ . We gladly-accept USDA Food Stamps I ^>5, '•§5? SIGNALS Raw Texas ' I M Honey TUESDAY|NI6HT—5V00• • -w.uu winpmivtd u>vu8:00uipm Honey piites are rising: """"rn • ,s? -All The Pizza And SalacFYou<€an Eat 0FT00MUCH Stock ftp while it last*! /RcaalMrliF'Ti^lb. m Tuesday Night Is Special At Pizzclna We jServe A': U* Delicious Buffet Selection Of..Pizza To PfeaseThe-Taste 65c lb.« Of Ever/Member Of Your Family ^.CHICKEN: 1 < -Mii !• The appearance of a combW Golden »^oW' Nobn Buffet • Monday Thru Friday • 11:00 am to 2:00pm > 4tjll like prcStuberariceat the top ° --' >,f!-' -^1'' • i '4 ii Bananas of the head. 2-A*'sprouting; of suspiilditis^S looking feathers. ^ 3. A restless urge to scratch I today... gravel. Crispgireen If things haven't gone this far^i iv. , mm then you should goto KFC # j6'" *y«>45 •^5'­*319 R««r Unt * 3000 Duval 3M9-Gwdalup« ..; _ 24W Rivertid* ..,'.j 9M-I5M .. .477-4751 477-JM7 ..,..,.4774*11 ft 2120 Guiadaiupe for Crisp Chicken that's hard to get too -much of. If you are locking for a change; '' renieniberourdelicidus^my.l > CHABAO AouSE will-host Rabbi Shimon : •-Lazaroff of Houston m a discu^stojr " -ministration-Student Council people able to give at-least ----From 1 to 6-PtBU-Tuesday-.,—and-J«wJsh-phllOtSflShy— y'-' '-Students receive courses ac-1 oj hours credit will have will-sponsor a two-day two hours per week to work i' and Wednesday, from 2 to 6 •\-'t at 7 p.m. Tuesday at 311 E. 3lstSt., . . . • cording to their major and tha^-ptifirity. visiting executives ooe-on-one with Austin' Ap4. 706. p.m. Thursday and from 2 to 4 COUNOl will meet at • . • EDUCATION 6:30 number of hours credit. i • "Another possible problerri program" Wednesday. and youngsters who need help, p.m. Friday students will be p.m. Tuesday-io Sutton Hail 212 to i Students who need a course Goranson listed relates to the Thursday in -which Virginia Gibbons, project available in Sutton Hall 21'to ' -discuss committee program and to V ' reconfirm advising schedules. to fulfill a>ttiajor requirement optional student services fee businessmen from around the director, said Monday. • -' "help with .registration MQBIU1Y IMPAJRED G*APftM6 HURDIES have priority over nonmajors. card. — state will serve as . The tutoring project aids .packets. ,. . TOGETHER '{MIGHT} will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdayin Jester Center 305 to 'SHOULD . MORE students: .Prices listed for these ser-"professors for a day," in­young people from lfi to 17 "VANfibuNCtMBnS plan a survey o£%tefes; elong the . • sign for a course than the vices are foip the spring structing"classes in "their 'year's of age, all of whom live ASTRONOMY' DEPARTMENT .will sponsor S--Dcag-aod to compile a-shopping"" public lecture at 7:30 p.m.. Tuesday guide of stores accessible t.o • . • . number of places available, / Semester only (half the full •respective fields: at home .and attend Austin * In Academic-Center 21 byOr. Harlan mobility-impaired students. • •• ,: » those with t$e;greater number; .i-price). • % »....••• -. Business:-executives . publi.c schools. ° • .J. Smith, chairperson or the TERTUtiAOflCANA wilt meet from 7:30 to representing accounting, -. astronomy department, on 'Jupiter, 9 p.m* Tuesday in the Catholic Stu­ Hours and place of instruc-' — How Ofjferenf Can a Planet Be-?'" dent Center's back classroom for an .• Austin High Fight technical business, • banking" tion, subject to'approval of ' CAKU CHOICE INfOKMATiON CENTER will , informal geMogether and'for prac* . and retail marketing will dis­project coordinators, are/up present a workshop at 3:30 p.m. • -tice Ih speaking Spanish. ' • Tuesday in Jester Auditorium on UNIVERSITY PRELAW ASSOOATION willcuss specific careers to-the tutor and pupil: All-"SeJecting a Major." meet, at 8 p.m. Tuesday In Calhoun .available in their fields at 2 . junior high and high school HUMANITIES COUNGK wjl.1 sponsor a.facul-HallJOO for a generaI.meeting. . at of / —• SEMINARS' jBLI'p.rn. -Wednesday in Business-. subjects are involved,. with .ty fireside the home Or. ' • Oouglas Parker, professor of INSTITUTE OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT will <* By CAROL BARNES ' suspension will become final ^'Economics .Building 257. ^partictflar eihphasis on classics, at 8 p.m. Thursday lor the. , present its weekly-interdisciplinary ; . Students will be able to meet "EnglisJi ;andj low-level . first 30 persons who stgh up. Slffrvup seminar from 11 a.m.to 1p.m: Tues­ A Only four of. eight Austin Robbins said. sheets are availablein WestMall Of-. day in PainterHal! 530."Dr. Norman .. High Schoolstudents suspend-The disturbancesbegan Oct: with the executiyes'-.over' mathematics. *. Hce Sulldin^ 206A and outside Prentice/ professor of psychology . coffee and doniits throughout' Anyone interestedsiay con­> . Parker's classes.', -.and of educational psychology, and -.ed;foHowing last week's racial} 29 after foyr white students MEETINGS -• Greg Jurkovic, a graduate student ­ the. Cwo-day. program in tact Gibbons at*442=6733. • disturbances testified before were assaulted. One required - .*AMERICAN MARKETING ASSOCIATION will in psychology, will spe&k on "Moral the school!s 'tri-ethnic faculty ' treatment,£y a .private physi-" Business-Economics Building meet at 7:30 p.m.Tuesday_4t5cholz*' " -Development and Oetlnquency/.v . Garten tohave pictureslaken forthe Additional information may be .ob-• • • 200. Advising reyiew-board hearing Mon-ciam This incident resulted in ' C4ctus. , •• i. talned by calling 471-3685. . : BAPTIST STUDENT ONION wWrr.eef at 7:30 TEXAS UNIONID£AS ANDISSUES COMMITTEE _ daj?;. the suspension of three ' The Education Cooncil's'ad- Tutors Needed .i p/n. Tuesday at the Baftfist Student . wili. sponsor a sandwich.seminar-attv^^*^^.The boardrofTRree"blaclci students. vising .olfice ' will offer-Center for a student Worship sen * • noorvTuesday InWaggener Hlifl 3l2^«'t\^f^ two white and three Mexican* . 'The next morning before The Volunteer. Tutoring counseling and recommen­vice. Non-Christians and Christians -PhKosophy Prof. Rajff Rao wlM^5^A . : of all denorntaatlons are.lnvlted. .speak on Buddhism. • ; ­ American > faculty ""members school, about 40. students, in­Program of the Travis County dations to education majors and the school prindi'pal'plac-cluding blades, whitesi and »n »n >yn ed two students on 'good Mexican-Americans gathered HILLEL AND ISRAELI STUDENT ORGANIZATION behavior probation until acttjss the street from school >| midterm ends iri: January, on a vacant lot. PRESENTS RAPE PREVENTION Principal -William Robbins Robbins said four-men•said;-. DAN PATfR -ISRAELI CORRESPONDENCE' teachers talked the group into Robbins said the -.board ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT , returning to classrooms ?/I recommended:,the other two a There was no violence. $ •students jgo toTDr.JackDavid- Women's Self-Defense SPEAKING ON •' " But five boys, "thoge trying •4 son, Austin-.Ihdependent Classes Now Forming. For School District superinten-t0 agitate the^others to fighti', ISRAELI- Information, Contact dent, who will make the final were suspended, he said |e decision. . / v; -;'' The principal said he \$ill" j S0RYU KARATE INSTITUTE PALESTINIAN If the students "and theit -write letters to the parent^ of i:2 parents do not appeal the case the four students who did? not , j 1234 South Lamar before the Student Develop-appear for the hearing to f\ DILEMMA ment Board within the next 10 \ determine why they were not / ' Phone: 441-3216 HILLEL TUESDAY days, the-recommended presenC^ • ' j /-. 5:00 9:00 Open Monday thru Thursday to p.m. 2105 SAN ANTONIO Z P.M. Saturday class available Duval Villa. ! »n »n Class will begin f^ov. 13th. Calftoday. ' »n »n Big Big Apartments • /* , Classes will be limited. Special women's 2-1 FURNISHED mo. Doggett I 2-2FURNISHtD" $220/ mo. 4ws repenterlly Wpmonstrntftd his concern far Pay your own electricity this <»intQr­ students and i$ presently working wifK Stu­ Move in Now: Reserve your apt for spring semester dent Government and other student MIDDLE EASTERN Come by & check uft>uf orgdnizations in efforts to facilitate tjheir 4305 Duval 454-9475 programs. Sen.; Doggett, a former Student Body1 President, has stated publicly that he Will vote against the January;cbnfirmja'^on 'Sttirship Enterprises, Inc. of any regent -who is not sensitive to thfr Spring 1975 Courses ; present's academic needs of this University. ' Lloyd 24900 MES 301L introduction !o the Middle East; Adjustment and PoggeM is representative of the new'breed Change in Modern Times. MWF 2-3, BEB 154. FleetwoodMac Bezinian. , pf pojificiqn whose integrity: cannot be cir­cumvented by big business ahd political 2490S MES 331 Mate and Female Roles: TradiNahal and Changing favors. He is an honest mail who needs our ' . * Roles ot Women, Men, and the family in Middle. support. ' V; ,Eastern Societies; Modern Feminist Movements. MWF • 1-2, BUR 2J4rETTefnea. — r—-e— The following students:strongly-endorse, and encourageyou to vote 7ortloydi)oggett on November 5. 24910 MES 3iq Conference Course. Hours to be arranged. Consent • -of instructor must be obtained. Manners in charge. 24915 MES 362 Topics"'1t>/' Ciyiii?atiofls and Cultures of tfie Arttb Bill Parrish Frank Fleming Shelly Friend • .. Uf 1J. U.J: ibr World: Medie»ol Cif(Mvflpd it-MWF 3-4. ARC : ; Talmidge'Boston Craig Iscoe "Bill Ware V 307. Williams. TUES., NOV. 5, 8, P.M. i % Randy Roberts Mike Morrison Dale Napier 29420 Noel Levy Cindy Powell Stacy Suits " • , "^ r-lMutii^pcjl' Auditoriurfr®\~ " MES 363 . lopici-in CiYiliiatrons aml-CulhirM-of-tke-lronian— World. T 7-10 pm» BUR 220.;' . . "WtlrPerez -tinda-Cfooke; John Toriaian' K--H- ' •• -. • • Special Guests: 3x-: • ... _v ...i:.— Note: lyn Breeland Pat Warren Barry Leff Middle Eastefri Studie's cour&es maf be used Pol Adv. bf SAC'YD Citron. YD • Stscy Su/tM. prwsidinL SAC • Robt. HomrtL to fulfill Area D requirements, for the, B.A. C/ttkptton. W. 24th.' ' ' ^TRIUMVIRATE V degree. Plan 1. They may also be taken inlieu ll&Tickets $5 in Advance • Open Seatjjng •of. the foreign language requirement by - Tickets available at Inner "Sanctum, Raymonds 1 2; v it&S&cs .• -students^ enrolled in the School of Com­ munication. Beer and Wine Available '' i. .r/ F-'VV INVESTMENT,"ANYONE? , r -J ftO •"VOTEi^OUR t CONSCIENCE For too long Texas politics has been controlled by big money interest instead of the; average citizen. Most Investments have a dollar sign on them. This one has a The only candidate in Place 4 who is free"bf any ties lone star, and a longhorn steervBut it's strictly hlue chip-all : to big hiisiness 'and big money is Armando the same. ^ Gutierrez. For a real voice in the Texas Legislature for Kimando.Gutierrez. State Rep., Place 4 / lor Pgople Together on Nov. 5. Your Balfour class ring is a lifetime investment in prestige. \ It identifies you with a proud alumni. It is a link to memories I that, gsow more precious with the. passing years, and this week,you Can get $5.00 off the regular price plus free full-name engraving (regularly a $2v§0 value j This is a saving of : 50, so take stock in a Balfour~%lass ring-todayv: • | UNIVERSITY JEWELRY ARTMENT irtt'n ay, .November 5M974 THE DAILY-TEXAN fib • » | , * j 3 , ^ ' Tickets Available Today 4 • For Btertqlf Brecht Nay ~ Tickets for fiertoIt Bredit's ^A Man's a-Man" goonsale Baumgqrtenf Bridger Offer Ev$nitigsWiththe Past Tuesday at the-Hogg AuditoriumBox Office. . The morbidly hilarjoUs comedy, which depicts a human.being U t-ii&l By BETTY HOLMES music and, writing. A section of the singer's performance is Bridger came to the theater to see Taylor's presentation and,-'-'^ . m ,]f, Texan Staff Writer "*-»— , • whq evolves intoa fighting machine; wHl run Nov. 121«23 fit the dedicated, to. the-poet. But Baumgarten, when not singing ex­interested in music and Guthrie's Influence, stayed to"Cilk. The £frama Theatre Room as the second productio'n in the Drama * Sitting/casually in a sports shirt and slacks and talking about. amples of his original music or strumming his guitar, likes to result ishis "upcomingshow that follows thesettling of the West, •Major Series. • music, Tomi1ny"Tayl6rseemed:liketlie ordinary schoolteacher, -talk aboutauthor Jijhh Steihbeck.;His legendary Cannery Row; firs tthrough the eyes of the white, trapper, then through the • certainly unrelated,toandnotreminiscejit of the itfan Woody . Tickets are $1.50 for siiidents and $150 for nonstudents and the sardine canneries' on the California coast/is not far from eyes of (he Indian. may be obtained atthe box office.from10 a.m. to 6 p.m.Mondav Guthrie. Taylor's-one-man ^hovy at Creek"Theatre, though, Baumgarten*s home in Monterey. .. * ? v "I GOT,INTO THIS quite innocently," Bridger confessed, Jn • through Friday • ; -. • transforms him into the folk-poet Guthrie and hasestablished a "FOR SEVERAL.YEARS, part of my concerts have been high school he had read a book on trapper Jitfl Bridger and, in-'' reputation for Taylor both in and out of Austin. According to Stephen Wyrtian, directorof the play, the devoted to.Cannery Row.,The marine biologist's lab there terested in the connection, started reading more. ^ w production is suitable only'for mature audiences. "I firstgot interested: inGutfir-tethrough Dylan;" TiylorSaid-. ' .became a gathering place/' Baumgarten explained; "I saw the typical patriotic history lessons," Bridgersaid. Hetracing the beginnings of his shotv.>About nine years ago,I It seems the biologist, nicknamed "Doc," was a unique decided there had to he different viewpoints in history and started collating things of his." • • • . • Mikhail Baryshnikov To Star - fellow, and artists such, as Steinbeck would meet-at Cannery began'to..explore.-He went to Indian reservations and'research-:. >• WHEN TAYLOR first heard Guthrie, he "fell in love withhis Row to.di'scuss philosophy.^nd talk about their writings. eT Municipal Auditorium. sponsored by the Parks and Suite of 16th Century Music by Palestr4na. Machant and Reserved seats are $2, $3,$4 Recreation Department,will . Laszus: "Comedians Gallop" by Kabalevsky and Peteps; PARDON 8O,225 and $5 and may be oniered by be held at 4 [Rm. Dec. 18 in Fugue by Lou Harrison and "AfricanWelcome Piece'Hy LIVE E^TERTAINMB^T-I^ mail from: .Box 54JA, Austin Municipal Auditorium. Michael Udow. i m 787631(enclose stamped. self-Tickets must bie obtained in , STARCROST—NO COVER ^ . addressed/envelope). Tickets advance from the Parks and 27^ W. ANDERSON L\.-IN THE VILLAGE will also be sold Dec. 9 Recreation Department- television through 13 at the Hogg centers. ' ' . 6.30p-m. . t:3Q p.m. 7 CBS Election Returns : .Woman­ based on radio& T.V.V Alexandra Nadal and TRANS TEXAS THEATRES. • » 9 Zee Cooking School • ':9 RJli.most hilarious boners! Eugene; Slavin are artistic 36 NBC News Election Coverage ' •;Accion thlcano AMERICANA SOUTHWOOD ' 7'pjn. 9j50p.«t. directors of the ballet, and 9 America — "Inventing a NetlonV oomtdy 453 -ifc-S t • 1111 .HANCOCK DR v 9 durgtar Proofing r 44? 2333 • M?3 V,' BEN WHITE Stuart Sankey will conduct the 24 jElectlpns returns all evening .10 p.m. YOU'VE HOWLED AT THE httolB* 7J3P " »'• • OHI OF THE AU TIJjAE GREATS IN 70MM We're trying!' Mid Week Inflation orchestra. ' 7 News , 9 Evening at Symphony -BOOKS AND ALBUMS., 9 Kentucky General Educallon STEREO SOUN0 -Spatial 1 Series OPEN -i-Ys ?li < NOWROARTOTHE MS nua»T* pflcri'c'iov $1.50 All Night (Mon-ThunJ Open .6 QINERAL FULL LENGTH MOVIE FEA. AH.CINEMA9EVERY DAY $1.25'TIL1:30 JR 2001 £30-540 7JO-MS a soece odvssev V~ i S TACO 3 TODflY! Hit single "YouBlew lt".by Tit 5-.I5 fCi Robert IMford Baibra^StnSana SarrvGdslow and sungby G«477-1324 AT «3Q 4rO M ENTER mDEVIL i I0M 52V3N SCREEN TODAY THRU TUESDAY KltM HIGHLAND MALL color ENDS TODAY! SCHOOL OF FEAR ONtT 431-7336 • (H 35 AT KOENtC IN. ADULT MO Anal INIEW fflm REDUCED PRICK REOUCID.tRKU —Bob Salmaggi. Til t PJH. Today at RATED TIL 6 PJLCroup W Radio MON. THRU SAT. MOM. THRU SAT .12:00-Nfl iviiebli hiveimp -1:55-Mi/tf U 7fl yrasn50-.. $.1JSO -3.JO-Op*n 1Q:00ia. tesiaiElUB tffiSM -5:50­ lo 2:00 a.m EEAIUKES naWfattafiM 7:45-Sun. f2 noon • 8 p.m HI 6 p.m. "FEATURES niRPORT1975 -T;50­ -9:45- Adult Bookstore -3:30- JACK FAYE H°A UMM9BAI PK^-TEOMCOUR*MWMS»f> -5:05- 25* Arcade -6:45-ICHOLSON NUHAWAY 2 Adult Shows Weekly Call for Titles 4774)291 -K50­ iChoo-S $1 OFF with thh ad 1240-24C "fH HIGHLAND MALL. TODAY! or Stuthnl 10 431-7326 JH35 AT KOCNICLN. From me sniqslf'suspense 521 East Sixth L-00-ltM. novel of 'the yeo(. fot SK^OOO they'break yenrf fcnrts. >1-50 •til-tn 6An™p.m. _J;0g_ For S20,000 they break your legs. til 6 P.M THE Axel Freed owesS44000. -2:55- 2J0-JamesCaan •CULF STATES DMVE4N & thetall ODESSA ^ -4.-00­ -5:15­ -5:25­ SIlOU TOWN USA 7:30­ -4^5­-*»­ blond 9:50-v. iON VOIGtn ^gg£!giCp»W*ttMSM^ V"* *J MAX1MSU AN SOOii BOXOFRCEOKN «:30 withone W0­ [W APwamomitPtetur»iR*leAe SHOW STARTS 7:00 3:I5Mk_ Idadi N!Miliar at Presidio Theatres 5^0*1" 10:15 M58 |­ LAST TWO DAYS FOR TWO FINE" LES BLANK DOCUMENTARIES « HOT PEPPER VILLAGE 4 VWherAvuere tu^oay mCctit FROM ABCPftoducton CMRAMA RELEASING with ' Mlthaiil'v?hlt„«yNOWI AT 2THEATRfe MR. MAJESTYK PLUS CO-HIT THE'BLUESACCORDIN •iXklO LIGHTNIN' HOPKINSI -Both fjlmf screened twice daily at 1:T5 and 6;46>il;60 adm •-SCREEN 2 LAST DAY I«um*UP« p*r*cnr« wBSiSS ENDS THURSDAY, 1:00-2:45 4jwa#ttOS-IOM STARTS FRIDAY MafMM MI'4HM Mca-Fri RI\ l.R SI1)1 l«Kta MatiM* HI.3 p.nL fctlMOfMS i~. VON RYAN'S EXPRESS J GULF STATES DMVE-IN Show IOWNUSA £ $1.25 wib • $2.00both ^WDwMbt Cllltvr CAHS U00~4t45-8r30 PLUS! ^1 w *I«JG HI: lotal suajtcr BAMBI MEETS GODZILLA THANK YOU, MASK MAN The Surprise Hit The Year Bargain MatliMa til 3:45 Man-M Feotur»jl:45-3:45 RII I RSI1)1 f CO-FUTURE "THC; STATW AT VARSITY OMYI BARGAIN MAT-TIL 1 P.M.< "W" .7M-S:15-I-J0 STATUr • atomnHMAtKMAl PtCtUftCS GULF STATES DIt no very Room as a LivingTomb! |Many menin herlife, madness in S -herdreams, cunitmtmlerinherlovejj ENDS THURSDAY FUNNY fOf/.. 7t m JtHfiES | Nrgoin MefiHef Hl FMtarn 12rfMd04fU fcl.M4MiSI SHE CORRUPTED THEYO*UT"HF¥MORATITY COLOR SUSANNAHYORKI OF AN ENTIRE SCHOOL! " 2:45 RIVERSIDE THE TtACHER siumm ANGEL TOMPKINS Wo'MY NORTH 'ANTHONY JAMES* HICRMAR PfiODyCIIONS.INC. ^ *CROWN INftRHATIONAl SELtASE I MIDHI6HTERS M" ,r» I isrjriii MotM« tS 3iO.lllnt.fH F*hiriM^to454!304:lS-fc00-MS SUSPENSE 8EYOND WORDS ..$1.25 HI 7 P.M. ^ „ DOORS OPEN 4:30 ®' '.i. SHOWTIME-ATj7 P.M |SCREEN 112:15 -.r , - tMST DAY 25fm I From the man PflRAMOUNT i/ CULF STATES OXIVE4N vto E.-a«i,wwit« mwwL who gave you Blading Saddles ttt 7iOO P,M. MEL BROOKS FILM •ffATURES 6:10 8:00 » niPtmtrtair<' SCREE?! 2 vm LAST 2 OATS LAST DAY Polanski ROSEMARY'S BABY The TuuetveChairs" STARTS WIDNISDAY no^co-Hir COUNTESS ivi^ar^DRACULA S^Pafle 12 Tuesday, November 5, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN, /' , • „ ^ -S i,v '" : ' w " Sis;„sr, 7fS9Ql5&, 'i. jfPt^ ' w , M" _ «•* Sf*» i^S»Hlfi&4&a> J&£ ""V • '$&& , ££ %& -• ­ w i ? M • '££&£*? r­ -3>i% ;«ir Odessa File' Suffers From Case of *Blahs' wm&& i* , •* > *• * t "" . AC " tm TW& ^,4 t's IT ­ 5 3'| . «S4 « ;t, £*"* *• ' . £»*» •?" i k * « *• T< {? t * ? • /$&' £" I / +•01* Voight in 'The Odessa file' USE TEXAN NEW INDIAN WANT ADS LITERATURE COURSES PERSONALITY/TESTED ANGLO-INDIAN LITERATURE (OAL 374-05645). Novels of Tfie Austin TeltCenter Raja Rao, Detani, and others. TTH 9-1.0:30, BUR 232 offers for n liffniisd iime HINDI BHAKTI UTEBATIIPP IM TPOMCIATinu /HIM Ki- FREI PERSONALITY TESTS 06290) Devotional Poetry to Krishna and Rama; TTH 10:30 ' Your pars Jinality and -12:00, BUR 232. aptitude /determine" Either eoiifse may-be taken as English 374M. Consultyour/future. catalogue supplement or,call 471-1286,s;, thaml. No Obligation. 7530 N.Lq}mor, Room.205 _ m... Tpjn. h> » Am. T«n..B«d Wed. y dining means® « wining. ^ PRESENTS JJfyou willmake your , 1* Preservation }o dine,}' MNov. 8 'duringour happyhour, P 5:30 to6:30 pm,you will BO DIDDLEY receive acomplimentary glass of firteimported wine to compliment our ­ m,nSTORM continental cuisine and 8:00 -$2.75 iXj 10:00 -$3,25 your good taste. ^|;|Adv. ficfcefs -Oaf WiV/ie's, Inner Soncfum, ftifx Emporiumj -' Coming; BUKKA WHITE-Nov,J3-16 . itymunytnin11 ti i lnimrtnircn Square, Ktrtwytansat W.38ih ALTDISNEY TONIGHU •W{a»l --Presents An sarly-classic from"'Fellinij.± HiM- THi WHITE SHEIK . „ tECfifflCOlOR 0952) Oo Cs0<>0&0A*0<0 ; .Directed by Federico FeHini Si and just for theTUH Based o'n a story, by Felllnl, Michelangelo Antonioni and Tulllo Plmlir tfaltJHitoeyS JVith Alberto Sordi^andjGiulietta Maslna "This 1952 social comedy'is perhaps the most-gentle and naturalistic, of Federico Fellini's films, but it was' • not a success ... perhaps because the target of theaffec­lionatc sbtire on glamour and delusion is precisely the OPEN fcOO p-m. kind of people who-go" to the movies." ^-.r •• ?. IK» O.m.^5 "o»g" s&j:: —Pauriiiic Kael, Kiss Kiss Bang BSpg $1.50 1)1 4:70 n.rC '' JKTfRAttDITORHJM— $1 ~~ MANN THEATRES O'CONNOR csma €Iit>74 . • ""announces • « THE AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA «> it RAVEL, deGRIGMeN ft BUCKNER • Friday, November Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 P.M I: Conductor: Walter Dudoux Ic-jiSfl Optional Services Fee^Studentv Tickets. $1.25 w <%&> •, DI8PWR "l,, ' Ticket Drawing: October 30 • November The Jati/iJiipfjtKiurli/veJ!] Offtee£10-fi.,Weekdays I-plafyinx ropj .,/Intuit"s tip ' ^ -/* ' / , , > 'Vis*' * Bus Schedule: Free to Fee holders. i»i§ mm Jester, Kinsolvtng, £o-Op, 7i00-7;30 •I ' $1.50,1(1 -6t30;' W8F IV*"" OPiN 6 p.m. \Tlic Cultural Entertain WWMliS Committee of the Texas Union •«Jk ZM ««, The Odessa File; particular^of' a merciless SS '"'Adventure,'4 J^Scrooge''-). suspense. PWhat we get in PERFORMANCES 'aredirected by Ronald officer named Rdschman. Pauline Kael onceTreferred to ••'The Odessa Fil€"ius spotty. Voight seems uncom-: ... Neame;_-screenplay._.by _Voight isapparently sd moved Neame's movies as."efficient monotony — visuals with 4^.-fortable-at times, trying to s Kenneth Ross andGeorge by tHeold"man's storyhe vows but dull,~"~a term which drive of feeling and-dialogue -manage both the accentahda ' jVlarkstein, based on ihe to find Roschman and bring perfectly describes "The spoken^'with meaningless^ ter­modern'.German tempera­ novel by Frederick For­him to. jiptire. However, We: Odessa File." Neame guides minal /'pauses; The English­ ment. At .least he LOOKS syth; starring Jon Voight , suspect Voight's motivations his movie quite logically* giv-speaking ,actors struggle un­right for the part; and if the and Maximilian Schell; at must go deeper, airid we even-ing-us just'the right amount of successfully .to match'accents film makers were benton hav­ the Aquarius Theaters IV. tiially learn why.. •information when we need it, with the German actors, and. ing a major American starBy PAUL BEUTEL •."' In his search, Voight dis­along , with the necessary tlie,:results.?'hinder the film ' play the lead, Voight isTexan Staff Writer \-covers the" Odessa, a seere.t character confusion these in­substantially. " 'probably the only one .ver­"The Odessa Pile" , is a organization of former SS.of­ternational intrigue jobs seem rV „ •••'.' .,-••;••, • satile enough to handle it. Of generally ho-hutn. thriller, ficers, dedicated to keeping obliged tp provide. (Where did based on Frederick Forsyth's the spirit of Nazism alive and we see*that guy-before?) £? m°yie s imilian Schell has isome good best-seller. His previous functioning. They are also in­Ygt the movie crawls; attitude of ^ Isn t this-authen: scenes as Roschman, and his : novel, "The-Day of the volved in-an Arab plan to JSeame establishes a comfor­U j. a ^t^diQiqoe wluch cpm-v.. ^ster Maria'-is:eKeIleiit'iii a Jackal,"; was transformed, launch^germ warfare against; table, albeit slackened meter f? a»-mpst mcreduloiislybrief role as voight's mother, into a popular movie by Fred Israel, thus perpetratingsoniej .'m1"the first'lO minutes.or so in . Neame's attempt .to . .. • . Zinnemah; I thought "Jackal" indirect revenge of their own. and never gains mbmeritum. 'visualizie the'old man's diary- was fairly stuffy, but at least FORSYTH BASEDhis story We get a -couple of tense ,in • black-and-white, pseudo Most good suspense it MOVED. By comparison, on carfLfUlly-resea'rched moments when Voight isshov­documentary-style .f 1ash-thrillers create and sustain in­ "The Odessa File" just lies evidence, arid therein lies'the ed in front of a subway train, ; •' backs. -These Scenes look terest either through there on the screen, waiting film's interest. Reminders of and when he and an Odessa too slaged, too new and clean meticulous detailing or by for someone to kick life into the^tragic German past are henchman struggle, in tiieir Panavision splendor • moving so fast that we don't it. 1 : always unsettling, but theidea dangerously close to a sharp ®— half-hearted attempts at have time, to dwell upon flaws The story essentially con­that manyofHitler'sformer chopping blade, but these are . realism which give ''The and inconsistencies;' Either cerns several manifestations subjects Would do it again if cheap, mechanical thrills. " Odessa File" the synthetic format is acceptable, of revenge. In 1963, a .young th$y had the chance is dow-.' ... WHAf WE need in a feeling of the Hollywood war-although the best of the genre German journalist .(Jon nright terrifying. suspense thriller is, after all, and-espionage movies of -the accomplish both. "TheOdessa. ^,. Voight) receives the diary of -:However, "The...Odessa a' steady Vcresciendo of Forties. -File" does neither. .an old German Jew who com­•File'^fails;tp satisfy as a mitted suicide. Thediary tells m(5vi», arid much of fie blame -of his experiences in, a-Nazi belongs to director Ronald ^concentration' camp and in Neame',:~("The Poseidon^ HINDI SPOKEN BY 250 MILLIONS TONIGHT NO COVER In Hindi ,604 you1 study at your omi -pace with in­ UVE ROCK 'N ROa BY , dividualized audio-visual, lessons. DROWN 'ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK (UVE MUSICSTARTS AT 8:30P.M.) . $3 GUYS $2 GALS DOORS Q£EN: 8 HAPPY HOUR: 8-9 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING •THM 914 N. LAMAR 47713783 THE BUCKET -?3rd-and Pearl NEXT DOOR TO MARHS-3 HRS.fREE PARKING 1411 Invaca^/? 472-73,15 727 W, 23rd , * , 476-0015 . TbNIGHT 1N;ASS0CIATt0H-WfTfl KRMH 47X |Tlie Solo ITS OWN WEIGHT Artists Series VAN MORRISON —sPEcnnrBtrmrstAfts-­ 25' Beer betwegn 8 & 9 Cluristopli Texas Union presents. *2? SAT. NOV. 9-8:00 P.W.:>: EsehenbaeH AUSTIN CITY COLISEUM pianist TICKETS: 45.00 IN ADVANCE Wednesday / November 13 -$5.50 AT THE DOOR Municipal Auditorium / 8KH) P9I kottke "11-'.'FESTIVAL STYLE SEATING 50 wi'tft Optional t&mcch Kcc ' —: Novertiber24 i. ; * _ PublicSales / 83,50 ON SALE NOW AT JOSKE'S TICKET-^ ^ Hogg Auditorium wtk Horn-,Box,OfficcV-l0-6 weekduys-j...; SERVICE, 4TH LEVEL. HIGHLAND MAIl i Bus Schedules: Free to Fee holders Ticket drawing ssfetv-"'•. Ticket Drawing: November 4-13 * INNER SANCTUM & UNIVERSITY CO-OP Jester, Kinsolving,-Co-Oj> / 7:00-7:30 ' •N ZJ'L At-S'*;* *»»-.?>. . .. jiff v begins -Nov. T2 • -^ ktf&'e •«-For more information «" w$lk-Producei by Soutbwest Concerts, Inc. iSponsored by • . ' " • >n . ~ Art Sijuires,, EjtewrtiyeiroflBcer 471-4721 The Cultural Entertainment Coniniittee pf the.Texas Union^­& The Department of Music rasassjs FECIALS (START AT 4:00 P.IH) ilm aylcwfw mm. .GDahce #1" p8 • Rib Ey« St«*li Butt«cyB»k«d Potito or'French psf% Monday, Nov. 11 and kfJJ Fri#»-"ot T»*»» ftrt,, ffe Tout, and Crisp Tosud Salad , Tuesday, Nov. 12 '4iso Chop Steakb.n#\$l29^ || ^ „ mm 2815 Guadalu 478­ NO TtPHNQ 'W«| Hi: —GZZ-i «0*T£ AS YOU AWE* jesday,,November 5/1974 THE DAILY-TEXAN Page 1 i " * V x -7z 1 "5&i*y I K* •s'V I C " *c >"&~r • • -v^s^isi -; • " K'-l'"." PHONI PHONE 471-5844 MQN, THRU FRI. 8:0Q-5:00 'J.,\> ':5"§.' *" a i" "-^ -r. ^ \ T «,v< * ^ ^ Is* % **• w ,5>. Mj% •&•* *\ i \ } v >. < « * < ^ * •* * * / *5 * -rtl>>SsA.f-?!i i ft v.. ...,/*•,. .. r""fc -Alti. ••* &.. »4 <•'*'.. >r« • «A* < ,* * •lu/-A. ,. • CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING •-'•'• RATES ' FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. SERVICES HELP WANTED IMISCEUANE0US TYPING 15 word minfrrfurn ­ Each word on© time « ,,,l II Each word M.iimn -I10 Rise. «-For Sale •Each word S-t 'times . % M NELSON'S GIFTS; Zunl Indian HOWDY AGAIN Each word 10 or more times:.* 07 SPECIAL DEAL! GINNY'S mCATFISH lewelry; African and Mexican Imports. JUST North ot 27th at The-Pepper Tree Peoplehave an unex­ Student rate each Hmc--80 TOP CjkSH PRt SpaWfor dlftmonds. ipp*r 1PcodI* uii*»- «fl? South Congress. 444-3*14, Closed -Guadalupe ::5; :%k so ' * •' pected » PARLOUR " Mondays. C**ssHied Display . . ;••. old 9ofc~C«pHo^ Urnona shop, *11J N. -vacancy. Law afflclancy aparl-. iCOPYING 1 cot. x IInch on# time $3 25 Lama '/a Rent ment with lot» o(v< 61a windows. t/y t 2707 Hemphill Park «w.« ­1 cof. x IInch f-9 times ....„:.S2.93 Furnished apartm«iv^3:wocits UT_ S75 Mher. 'dllpoiol. CA/CH, thag ERVICE Parlriime cleanup'help needed. Must LEARN TO RLAY GUITAR. Beginner . Dishwasher; 'disposal; uui.n, inag ABP. Pirm mana^ament. RasponslbUN ttarjold.IHO. C»ll»ft«r S. week tor a student. 6 Oays/ W8 UO Type Menida f teaen fiidaj ..^., JiOC pjn. LOOKING FOR J BEDROONU BATlt FURN. APT. 256-1853 Mn Uen4eT...:.ll,00 ej». wtL-TRApB ne*f ^JO^a'bedL fram«« . S190 AtL BILLS.PAID Free Parking V • -' • • • 1 -' »-'» « nci\E BIIU7UU KIIUW Freshman themeS; .You'VE BEEN THERE and you know AN APARTMENT Wboard.;pad. sheats for_ct«ant firm pA.I ,.. ~ -what, IIJ like. Volunteers needed tor Why not startout withTOW THM^ .'.UiOQVm. ing mattress. 4717$*^ —• -= WITH CHARACTER? ^ < • 2 a.m. • 10 p.m. M*F^-'> t I's ^i-„Jl>roblem_prn)noncy hotline. Call Alter- T?wr*(l9y Te*e».WMbtMd»r .)).-00 4utt. LE FONT I 9 a.m. -5 p.r*v Sat.'-fA^ CU.I O . ff«^natlv?s Olscussed. Call 4J4.3S25, 9-5. good grades!' Come by and^ see our l bedroom . /OLOER MODEL Rdrt^erator. Works 803West28th ( •--' • 472-3210 and 472-7677 Friday tnvn TfunJa) ; 11:0©«jn. apartments'Tvear campus at 1007 West Ioood. «0.452*9008* call fftw,5:00. CI IIR ' BUY, SELL PLAYBOY, Penlhouse, elc. 26th^ Lots of trees, pool, AC. $135 plus E. 472-6480 V-I.v ii)UI. inc. Books, records, lewelry,. guitars,QUEEN, lap-seam water bed, raised, • Also 2"bedroom apartments south at 910 . 472-4162 t ' 476-9093 » is taking applications for students with • radlos,st«eos, Aaron'j, 330 Congress,..fine cherry red .stained sraln. Call background In the following areas; downtown. •• • ­ West Oltort. Manager 101. S115; 442-9400. • *> ifct vnai' vi-mn liiiJr )n an . Wesley.. 4l7«72t7. . 47^-333$. • . -1 Barry.Gllllngwater Co Advertisement, 'Psychology; TYPING Reports, Resumes, nrfiTii—iw»ul.,lmmsJ«t« iwtte* mmk* •?w-..typing Psychiatry, Law Enforcement, Securi­Ei Theses. Letters «thep>Mifcin »>riipuftlifrr All University.and. PEU6EOX 10-speeiJ.. Simplex ty. Bartenders, Cocktad help. Apply In Ss^printing business work­ •«*? ONIiiwmti iwrtisnAS datiw fee deraUleur, Matac brakes, cus>omr~.~­ Parson ^ Lamar, Between la:00 ihwild; be mode Mt *-— tires/s«at« quick release hubs. 44442SJL ^ WILLOW binding a.m.*-4:00 p.m. OVERSEAS JOBS Last Minute Service . -JhoOO 4yiifcw>i>b8Biriii>." W *:Open 9-8 Mon*Th & . Australia, Europe. S. America. Africa, MUST. SELL. Two places ^CundaMni • & -COLORFUL?: , tle6D SERVICE «Fri-Saj > * .«?NEY? Sellllowerson Students allxrofesslons and occupations Yoga; Union :ir»fprmaV class;. Ten CREEK 420 w. Tiverside drive . EFFICIENCIES^? UtJoS/iJljof ThursdaySunday, • STOO.to UOw monthly; Expenses paid, sessions. Starts Nov. 4. $Weach.or $22-''S'-t -• LOW STUDENT RATES 2BR ALL BILLS PAID overtime, sightseeing. Free Informa-' 472-8936; Oobje Mall boiti*-4S2«66S7. is word/minimum each day ..s AND '"1fr-Larpe Pools, Security. Volleyball Court rf.tlon. Trans World Research Co. Dept. Eech additional word eech day* WANTEO, : Apartment managers. , AS., PP.O. Box 403. Corte Madera, CA. ­ .1901 Willow Creek xTInch each.day.12/ MUST SELt B5R 700 tvmtabiesl25 and •' P«t*r couples. Send resumes P.O.-Bo*' 94925.'": One bedrooms • „ .'444-0010. tali ten-speed motobecane S7S. Both one THE CROCKETT COMPANY ., , nd San Antonio, , cozy "community CREATIVE multi-copied originals ' Friday. near shuttle" . 1 Bedroom • UNCLASSIFIED UNF. HOUSES XEROX COPIES • t3.O0 for lOOcopies NATIONAL Magax^nes: EXPERIENTIAlT''' • ?h£. -lom. square roofs, more. Originally" A ASSOCIATES 4J1-7433Mobie Cat 16. .1 yr Old. 477-6015. •' : 1971 VEGA. Air, automatic.'Good tlreC Jlis.00. m.M. John <71-7911. w ba^tery^arxi muffler "awl '.vnit-Zo. 4501 Guadalupe Open 7 pays^ otm battr-— — — VENfURA .TYPEWRITERS RENTAL BUREAU 4 A TYRING • small rooms & no closet space? •. Alghan pups; Pet & Show type. 2t2-0«3. SHOO-<75 2 DYNAMO FOOSBAU. tables for,sale. SALES8.SERVICE Tired of asphalt &poise? Try Plata Ven-. WM ® each.11150.00 for both.Less than *V£5vJ 4 2 Bdrm hirn./unfurn. From ALL MAKES Custom vw. $700 or Traae MC. 444-3071. \ SERVICE ;F 1* VEGA HATCHSACK, "mint con­?«,y»»r oM. Quarter per same. Pays S129J0 plus electricity . FREE ESTIMATES dition." v>ry low mileage, mak* . for Itself. Call. 441-4060.:' i. 3410 Burleson Rd. Kathir Happy 21 love Mike; '. _ • • raMna&te offer. SJi-3$o (work «1-Barham Prop. PICK-UP DELIVERY Specializing in 926-9365 — COKE MACHINE for sale. Holds 44 bot­.447^5?! r. . 2 BR;: 2 BA 20% "off on repairs .Schwin Continental 10 spd. 447-7222. . . tle on^/or cans.Changer sets from S" to .. LARGE POOL • ALL BILLS PAID FURN. HOUSES Theses and dissertations GOOD THROUGH OCT. 30 ^PLYMOUTH SATELLITE, Nice con­75* inclusive. 5 months hold. Perfect tor MOVE IN TODAY Found Calculator. 447-75*2. ! —. Law Briefs dition. Ajr, ^utoma.ttcpower. Bestoffer. vending beer-lDnfy S425J0.' Ca11441-6060. . Best RateonttieLake — Term bapers and reports " AUSTIN OFFICE Steve 4514945 or*459^4: • ^/-SUNNYVALE-Shuttle Bui Front Door GE Sterrt. sso: 471-76W. alter 4. •: LAKE AUSTIN. Quiet-country living, 15 Prompt, Professional^' USED. CARPET.' Excellent condltTocL' 2400. Town Lake Circle minutes campus/downtown. 2 bedroom * 1930 OHEVROLET IW.ton truck.NewIn­APPr?"-30 square yards, dark blue. .442-8340. , ^ -MACHINE CO —Kowa 35mm SLR. 4544907. . T! *120; houseboat S120;.327-1891, 327-1151. Service ' terior. Runs griat. Needs bed and paint S4S.00. 34S-6094. 5-7 pm. ^ APTS. 400 w.28th Street 4$3-8101 t9S0„S3«4Ki. '71 Honda CB450 xtras >425.454^201.' OFF ENFfELD *i: fireplace, fenced­ .. 1 9DRMS130 •-QUIET ENFIELD AREA. 1 476-0093 yard, partially furnished. Water paidi Pick-up Service Available t94«V>S JtuAM, news vaive|ob.W«6ff— > ., .2 BDRM S150 parm. wiintuiiKitchen, aright "l011 3102 Glenvlew* iClTAfY vy ,, Bdrm. withfull kitchen, bright o5NFioENTiM^ARE, ior pregnant 71FlatcpejFspetdfmam 12100 45I-2M7. 1503 Murray. 453-49^4 after 5. CDNFIpENTIAlar-CARE^.for TI'iIiW ill 'ad ai i l>i fJ . ^ -_ . S295. Call Ken. 472-3207 • 1304 SUMMIT shag, rlgi ue moiuS. Good , iniinai'ii.n . 441-0584 . CreativeOutdoor Portraits « Xil .? Blocks to Shuttle • storage, pool, sauna, W1UIC "om«-zwa Hemphia f^ worth Toii °oj -1 * p^' " .t** ' »«' V* "i yiri 4tvi uyd |MWlf r„ SdWItB# cable - .Vin;s. :oQPOW5^tfmnG scbvjce^Reports, fheses, dissertations and books 1957 FORO *4, ton recently Inspected! Save •/! Now and. congenial ,at 7 bedroom free number 1-M0-79M104. «J. largMWIng area, near park 457-..•TfWvW J Ig » ' .'"V .2 cats eviction or extinction. 474-5710. Rons great. S450. UT Colorado , from $148.50 plus electricity; Apartments Mrl«. 472-1772. CHAVOYA'S STRINGING SERVICE. -typed: accurately, fart and reasonably. MOVE IN TODAY! 807 West Lynn. 477-7794, 472-. Professional racquet stringing and ^ ,®n{* *)'nd,ft0 request.. Close• Visit Our Studio '> Yamaha guitar and case »7S. 474-2t5t. 64 BUiCK RIVIERA, All power.AC^T.' ROYCE PORTRAITS 4162. regripping .for the "finicky" tennis : new tirev brakes. Tune-up. S375. 47*- player. 12 hour service. Lowest prices. 2420 Guadalupe • 472-4219 ,: ,17'^anoe with oars.1200. 474-2SM ...7700. 1 BR -$125 ..Phone 472-4849. • . DISSERTATIONS, ihftiei. reports, and LOST & FOUND law briefs. Experianced typist, . --Tanglevyood. Annex. .(f^NRAY HBUY,.SELL;andrestring tennis rackets;^ Tarrytown. 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine • WNHI ! Brady. 472-41715. j' 13fSf»orwalk—•-—• (Jse . -V .. , LOST. .GOLD WlRE-rlmmed glasses. ^Motorcycles -For Sale •, 476-0948 • ' 478-9468 FRANCES WOQQS TYPING iyERVICE.i® -wr^5^^®5"«!«iziri i^VE MONEYl Xall us before buying • v • •• .' work. Surveillance,missing persons,un-S tikes.. Dis|er«^ .. * a -motprcycte insurance. Lambert in-* HAPPY Nextto Americana Theat/e. walkrno d'u-dercover.;etc.-State llcfenie No. A-4M/ ' Clossifieds ' t??7.25,h and San Gabriel; Black Lab, sorance Associates, Inc. .4200 Medical tance to North .Loop Shopping,Center . . 441-7777, • .. •• female. 4; months. 472-7079 or 472.3073 Parkw»y/,.452-2S64. • Just North of 27th at and Luby's. One half blOCk ffofn shuttle Keep-trying. Reward. '. -i ~ . BIRTHDAY NEED A GREAT and Austin ,transit. -2 bedroom ROOMS • Guadalupe V • 71 YAMAHA;3$0,,new engine, receipts PLACE TO LIVE? townhousesv extra large; Two oedroom WANTED lS'ifF^S?,PTLQN Grasses (golden to prove, mechanically excellent, must flats( one and two baths.-;CA/CH. dis­frame) In Calhoun Building, if you find • .2707 Hemphill P&rk sell. Sacrifice. Kurt 475^896. TERRY 3,. TRY THFE .R«N hwasher, disposal, door to door garbage' therh. please call 472-6186^ !«5 Nu^,. n^A,.. l ?. > pickup.; pool, maid {secvlce if desired, , Se" beautiful TEXAira>RM %r A BLACKSTONE wasnaterta m complex. Seeowners, Apt. £Ji local boutfques and hip shops. .220/Semester. Slngl« s3M/5e^5^>toqt7^ maid service, central air, Rlvtffide call 's«nd* / 4 Relrfgerators, hot plates allowed. Two—-Reward. « rtONDA CB APARTMENTS VW'W Okie ..beam, blocks from campus.-Co^Ed. Resident • -• ' " • U < • Call 441-0459 If you locateone. '• ' •Managers. 477-1740.: j —Roomie Share 3 large room for )64^0/mo.:or WE RENT ° BERNARD,PUPPY. Male, threi -. Last seen Halloween party 32nd Jv.Y-;.. nished. all bills paid. Maid "service once pr -350 #S • • take an entire room for Sf 12.50 fur-HOME FOR my Gemini ,.ispace cap­•&s' I75' l85 monthly..:AHald service, RESUMES and Helms. Reward. 267-1794 sule Ina commercially zoned residential (Wens. -Xf AaP,'near capltol, 303 East with or without pictures •^tfj-a week. • ' -• • .. area. Max.451-8525 Joe Franietll 472­ '•1972 Model includes luggage lack & AUSTIN Hth. To see contact 2 Day Service­ , ^-'Bring your own roommate'or we will 6279,'471-4416. ' helmet. Super shape. SM0. Call 471*2026 ;rrfttch you With.a compatible one. 472-3210 and 472-7677 after.7j^m'.. UNF. APARTS. ^. This is economy & convenience at its Your time is valuable . JOB WANTED NEWLY DECORATEDlurnlshed room. ' Our service is free ' GOOD TASTE! ,/ best. « . 2M0 Whltls. 477-75S8, v : „ PNLYJSXJ YARDS F.ROM UT CAMPUS MOVING-HAULING. Past, friendly, ' —— • • • LARGE UNFURNISHED' .1 bedroom BOBBVE DBLAFIELD. IBM'S*lect freaky service, Low rates-258-3678 ^10 Red ,JUver. 476-563J ; FEMALE-t . STARK TYPING, Specialty: Technical;-^ .„•$« at : HALLMARK APTS."^-472-4175 Experienced theses^dlsserlallonj, PR'sf-d manuscripts, etc. Printing, binning,' ­ •weekends i •• ~ Austin Sportcydes -dHE OF CENTRAL ' 708 W. 34th Chariene Stark, 453-521B • 454-8239 411/Guadalupe TEXAS'-P.RETTIEST ' ALL BILLS PAID MINNIEI-L-J " "HAMMETT "Typing" 4 451-2340 ' SPOTS' 1 >-()ttplleatlng Service. Theses, dlsser­ - BeautHul flowing creek 'borders this -. , . • 5 ' !i?nlv kinds, resumes, 5 seclutwd woodK) fraef, Aimost S acrrt 1 tree refreshments, 442-700t, 4416114 . ai-rf MINI EFF, $1)0 • ' •"^ Fish and Swim on your own land. Good Stereo -For Sale :Building Spot & Garden Spot.* > LUXURY-: , ,, $125 ^ --m NEAT. Accurate and prompt typing, 60 ?•' EFF. . OTts per.page.-Thesej 7fcents.'CoI"447­ 345-2247 2! veftfcfcfc.tunrtmwe. GoodcondK SONY HP.140A compact stereo AM7FM -l-BR.'—-<• jg--tlort. AO. 441-4327 after six. ~ 1 BR - S'*I s MABYC--5MALLWOOD Last" 6-biocksio.camousv Typing. 6 blocks to campMJ^-Sfshwasher, dls--~ mlnul., overnight available. Term TliOtLeofr 1 ; TWO PIONEER CS99-A speakers. *300? ROOMMATES posai. pool. etc. 476-3467 papers,, theses, dissertation letters. two Fisher XP-16 speakers, S400 472; '1™ 474-1712 478*3)76 ... 3951. " 07271 o*r SmSs. 8"nMm»r,»'-d. 892­ ACT-CENTUATE-TME POSITIVE: ActMALE ROOMMATE. One bedroom. All V APfrtmentankesnsTboth vMrlds. EW you did not order your -. SANSUI 200QX recei^r, Mfncord turn-Bills paid. $81.00. 6 bideks to campus. ' . fidencles ana ope bedrooms at affor­ THE PERSONAL TOUCH will do your 476-3447, 2408 Uon. *7— ^ .VaW». AOC 303AX speakers. Like new, -HABITAT^ dable prices for students.From 5125 and typing Quickly; ElflMtnHy and i £te!all for *375. 447/7390 .lrom$l49 pluvE1cable. 924 East 5lsf. _R««ion»bly.Call45l-306li>r 475-0617. NEEDED.-Femal* roommate, duplex ^ 4S9-572& 472-4162. i .^^MUST SELflrnmediately Panasonic townhouse. Share half rent, private HUNTERS : stereo'system, f 125' or 'best offer. Call. bath,-"bedroom;--apartment wurnlshMx^ —'JKA^us^Ej.givesiyou.iiai ^5Pl^r:pCrr5T^WpTe * secretarial • with breakfast bar, extra faroe closets, legal, , ^JQ2dMLagytlme. v Phone 454-7974 days, 345-6111 after 6. NEEDAN-APARTMEWT" ?£?5i,aill,.'t letters, iheses, iegelr statistical, research paper*. »nd Gwen. : FOR FALL? • cable, pool, and shuttlebut atElCortex. ... «»-. --»-ancf-dctmi— JS^^K-wp^ndTJitrytry eval^ble. 837r REALISTIC RECEIVER.80watt»RMsi~ 0 UltXlayl9rUJnB_45J-.79U^<72-4142 Seccatartal ­ 3333. V.I.P, seccetarial Service. Fisher 3-way speakers. Best offer. Bill. NEED MALE ROOMMATE to share 7~GtVE-US-A-CAtt! ..441-1S50 between 3-6:p.m. bedroom apartment. SW.JO ABP. own Habitat. Hunters is F.REE apartment EL POSADO from >130. Fantastic ' HOLLY'S TYPING SERVICE-A coni­room Take over laas«,.shuttle. 447-M20, 447-MI0. For January -May. locator service, located In the lower ' apartments with cable, pool, "lull when you registered for Fall plete service: Typing,.printing, binding ­ r,;_AR 3a SPEAKERS (twofirtfh speakers' level of DobieMafl. WespeciallieIniiw • . kitchens. On city and shuttle bus­•-stands, used three months Perfect con­dent complexes. Convenient to shopping. 1105 Clayton 1401 Mohle Drive. 476-3018 ••• NMr campus. dition. Walnut. $375. 345-4055. LARGE HOUSE. Pool, fireplace, '.< Lane. 453-7914, 472-4162." • privacy, quiet, near Riverside Drive HABITAT HUNTERS Speakers of finest quality; pair Audico SjWttle, 1W Cedar Ridge Drive. 441-Lower Level, Doble Mall, » an el-­ 1909 -' ^JJiG,wWAy7et)-W8»* work; . > you may still fSUFFICIENCIES.: More than 50'ipage, (depending on typepf fob) Call '• IflniTi fii tint intinrt n*"mymi" ; -l-T-KT I III IIW I llPlinn Suite 8A -flciency. Designed with Hie. student In Wooden^.^'-ppt^'' 4f?tftt —^ — cabinetry, four year warranty. 474*2158. mind. >144 plus electricity andcable. Act MALE ROOMMATE-jUAft'6 aparr" 424-1SI? DUAL 1215S CHANGER with Stanton ment on Shuttle, >75. 447-6039 stuoenrs see This one -^ .GHHngwafer Company. Just North of 27th at *&}Fe ffrtrtdpe. Both In excellent con­ Guadalupe dition; sso. caiir9364282 evenings. NEED FEMALE HOUSEMATE tor , WATERLOO FLATS ";5V.X SDRMr,.EFF. >145 abp. Mauna Kal. StTTHTSTWE house on Hemphill. Must be cool. Call 2 Bedroom/1 Bath, Furnished/Untur-^-Close to campus. Huge walk-Ins, fully 2707 Hemphill Parkanytlm»'.;452-2l51. " cable, walk-Ins, pool, com-carpeted >199 ABP. 405 East 31st. 472-. :^P!at» lillcheni Close to shopping and .. 2147, 472-4162..Barry Gllllngwaler Co. y.l: END OF THE MONTH STEREO SALE . . T°wn Lake." LIBERAL MALE ROOMMATE needed (Fuify Guaranteed) — NEAR.CAMPUS; Efficiencyapartment. w wiif wwigiiinvr Immediately. 3 bedroom house north 'i's'j>170 unfurnlshed/>199 furnished Be Sure You Check Your S125.-All b1lls. NO deposit. 452-2998. .4039 --$229 41 Waller Street (21 Fisher . 2/4 channel receiver model -=_1 _ ALL BILL! PAID FEMALE ROOMMATEJo share large 1 B.-rh^ p7o-^rtf.,:W6^:.' HTI/MI A ;rWf)FHfierWJO^speakers-fapair-)—SU9_ • 472-416! -M8A" -(3) Quad tape player with four speaker- Barry GHHngwafer Co -' — TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING Si5' r.-s: . ...• •• $89 , m . MJvBSR 710 turntables <159 FE^tCART) FSMALE HOUSEMATE needed S62.50. Three blocks to campus. Own room.47l­ (I0) BSR 310 AXE Magnetic-turn­ • fabies •. S56 MOVE IN TODAY , -.ONE BEDROOM >135 plus electricity,«• "~YTHECUMPLETE «5' You can save at >i<.?near campus and shuttle. Convenient to" ; ' PROFESSIONAL rr: UNITED PREJGHTA*1.FS V - 1 BR -$125 .'A downtown,-pool and perfect atmosphe're m m MALE ROOMMATE to share quiet two Iwdroom apartment;:Near UT, starting 6535 North Lamar • for students. 407 West 3tth. 4M4540, m~< Monday-Friday 9-9 . V-• .4162,: Barry Glllingweter Company. FULLTIME v ""lf • Saturday 9-6 ^,-January. Call now, 475-1070. : MARK XX hZ ¥»-^,-«,:E!3.!en y&yfev ^ ., & 4S4-3953 ..452-5093 iBLOCKS FROM campus. 1 bedrooro'r' TYPING SERVICE -FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share : • 3815 Guadalupe" -..CH/AC,H23. 472-5915 after !p.m.. 4 _472-32JGL _and—472-7677 ?r/l»b,",ro2.m"JIxrnlshed aparthtent. sUOO/montti, ABP .nearrcampus and .Musical -For/^Sale .. TARRYTOWN. Shuttle. Mature couple," shutfle,s equipped with cable, welkins. ; ^«V{ roommates, or tingle.Pool, petlo, frees; ISTER LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR., Beginner" • «mplete kitchen. 452-7222 atl.r-5 pm. ANTILLES . {. Mrpe yard, quiet, large 1 bedroom, 2 UNF. DUPLEXES and advanced. Draw thomason. 47* , beds. >160. Recorded description 4J2-' 2079. • FEMALE HOUSEMATE.2 bedroom • •••9913, dpfe-,warUrPetiok. J70 plus bilU.­ : •M'NiwtW/wpH aectssories. MM. 4544512 Oebble after 2. . " * " APTS. . 3S%| LARGE ONE BEDROOM.-Enfield et a » .«• 165 ABP..:^,^ 4S1-164l,:aftar 111 pm. 2204 Enfield th -PRETTY DUPLEX THIS WEEK HOUSEMATE(s) NEEDEO, Own room, . GJBSON12-strlng/small box acoustic In {•SW,**'*' Convenient ttfUf. >66plus . 2 bedroom duplex for -rent In a qulel v 2.BDRM $205, ^ AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY '.--S,; ::C PJ^yct xorKlWon, Must se'1%150 or best J/? blM,. 454-05W Maurwn. _ • ' /ABP' Northeast. '-Au s 11n: res i^lenlla i (fsM November rent prorated, Lerp.2-2, Iw-iV -.Ct .offer. 444-*537 472-1923 nlshed, CA/CH, dishwasher, --' * Eact) *,UR!*X oHers lacge OLDER OUPLEX/Own bedroom, small'' iv*>s fenced backyard,, covered parkino: ex. '"f' SHUTTLE STOP . field area, Shuttle, ifto FRENCH HORNS; Comi Hollon 77. tra storage room. Plus washer. clVyer 477-5134. iWjn-Ctilcago Syrriphony; 471-2491,•• -&zs&" 0-sw Annut F-ff-Ataaes - connections.-. Kitchen1 apdliaaees" iSr. ,t?W»94. • nlshed ">160 plus bills Call «> MM J FURNISHED . APARTMENT,:^ : S135/monlh ABP. ROOM & BOARDJ|: OAKCREEK 2 blocks UT-2800'^ " U° reserve your copy of thef/­ ; WWOi; 477-7558. DELUXE DUPLfcX, 3 b.droom/2 bath" Pets-For Sale ^CROVra N6ST. 2710 APARTMENTS ^VVALKT6CAMPUS 1 bedroometflclen *• a.1 •SSW555 board; singles >M2 Ruaces. Room and^-.Ci.. M.if ill kaik aiirf bit.L.^ sii^.i.. ,..i .Tmn. •»"»>».. .—..So/month, doublw -. Tou canJ5J5S* ? WrP0"1wlm•frland' 3f;'Wl-bath and kltclSp. Nlcilv'lDr/' i> i's 9 e "" r *o^« 8 «l-M4 l i, C 4M* — ;''7-wmo(tm.Ilir.Xfmontn...Rooms: slngres^inly,"3n nlshed, maid and parking: 453-3235 ; Room»: slngres . 'or only s92.0^«ich. We My fltirtitrfr u c c I ^, -jSM/month, air conditlonfttg butut. ,and rahi h2v«?i«K^»Vv'I00 WV «»«CTrlcai. we Hemes -Fer Sale . —;— have gasneat and gasranges to helpyou • i F-V,11®" EFFICIENCY. APARTMENT, ® 2*J?..EORCIC>W<2.:BATHj''''cai'oerBE,"-t0>< OORM lor Men. Excellent double bed, shag carpet.lV 1975 CACTUS 4415 Avenue B 451-7937 ,/ ASSUMPTfON. Rock,-two acres, SW.-3­ T"f nvwv iirv fwvli Jff,-. !Sh5f m»w' 2»-n52 -LCRAj NocWy tax. Gr,P<1* 47M5M165 ABP, nlgltls 3454JM % ptl1 : •-^BEOROOM HOMfi WITH OEN. living NEED.TQ: SUB*L£T<^orn6r*$ulteat UNEXPECTED VACANCY furnished % i »" •, mim % . roortiand diningroom tor sale by owner'-Oobie wlfh roocimaferoooimafe' tor "second-• 1 • fj*.bedroom. .Near campus; 474-5940 TAKiTFij^sinsroM m jjocotfd north UT In 4000 Blxk Duval Manager apartment 103.-1M Easf»nd One Month left TUTORING • wnesjer with meals; 47MI30 jel™ epertment • Ne»r campus; Call 476-1930- I Fenced back; yard with garage. >21,000 .SINGLE ROOM-ln Doble EFFICIENCIES, kitchen, one btrtr'k 20' coh»lll»r "Ayal7a"^;7w7Smrtlafe,'"u fro^n campOs, 1125, >l)0. ^724M5r .imme wcond lien 4Si607t 472-2273,-or 441. 1 CaM 475-1166. " FOR RENT ' 277n'°b*l"°'"'' «ik B» --5iLBLeT FOR JANUARY first largetwo "TWO CAST!LtAN contracts lot sub- Hate. Maleor fomfrf0r475-f155, Kethy £ • . * -«» ^ > «v°ie*M* wk» fromcampOs. 478-2079, 1W1-M"MB.* TEXAN wsisfti®i uxfk m wits , In armoye to tighten security at the "Municipal Building, New Urjlyersity President ^ city employes are being issued identifioaUon.cards enabling them to enter the building .after normal working hours. Aljhough there have been no specific instances of theft, ­vandalism or other illegal activitiesin the building recently, "we will .now know who to check with if something should Process Undecided happcn^Deputy-eity MaTia-ger Homer'Reed said iMonday., Workers T3y RICHARD-FLY" k -^You -wilj get-your-way, but . "The history of the city is stored ir^this building arid this • seem in-a hurry to-begin .trie , ALTERNATIVES, rangp" Thejseiection process will. Texan Staff Writer*' 1 • we will-not put it in writing," — information is Irreplaceable r-we are just trying to pro'tect selection process; Allaire from-tola! compliance With nof~get under way until*­the public's records*" he said. The Faculty .Senate debated Yudof quoted the • chaotellor jjardr "I came awaypersuaded the processor a refusal to par-Regents chairmaWAA.G."­ Receive at.length Monday the process assaying/: Previously, persons who didtiot have a key to the building there is not a bomb to be ticipate ^with'the current ; McNeese appoints /members for selecting a new University 'jLeMAISTRE. ALSO -in­ rang a bell after 6 p.m., signalling a security"gtiard to/let dropped." procedures. : of the selection committee. president but: in the end dicated idma changes in the them in. Everyone was.then required to sign in.and out at a • The chancellor lias no one Gideon Sjoberg... professor McNeese said Friday he City IDs referred to committee the reg en tit/ guidel in'es. f or, " registet on-the guard's desk. --'•.'"• . "up his sleeve" and said "he -of sociology, recommended hopes the-appointment can be Question of how to'proceed on presideiuiil. selection might ., The identification.cardswill carry a photo of the employe, didn't have"anyone in mind the faculty .follow" the made during th'e^ec,. 13 the issue. : ' be possiljfe. . .. . similar to the format of state driver's licenses. ... himself." . -procedures and if the .board rpgents meeting. > A comriiittee on the selfecr i Allaire said~names for con- This action is typical of. "any major enterprise where the / Allaire, said the faculty-has \ and thti cha.riceilor' refuse -fVi / THe sHsctiogV^ommittee" tt'on process met with : sideration /fipir.president" will­ ^ security guard doesn't know all' the employes by sight.1- several possibilities...in.:.-l5ft:aJ.fingJ'tj)g..issue..ip on the will be\largely^c5n Chancellor Charles LeMaistre go from the advisory group to. • Reed said. • V ' response, to the Selection table." This, he added, \ ui administrator's, with aNeast O^t: 28 with a proposal that the sefectiijh committee.,, procedures c.urrenCly in -".determine who is or is not ac one student • and possibly^ ttie campus advisory, com­which-will chose three names effect. ting in gotxi faith. faculty memh^f include mitteeprov'ided inthe regents tobe presentedtp'the regents. rules.have veto power over But, he said, the chapcellpr selection, committee choices. "can make an. independent, •The chancellor's, position, recommendation. •f however, was termed .f'.The -only thing the-; fsh immiwode-"' "unyielding."t t chsntelior • wiJI commit "We insisted the chancellor himself to is that if a' name' (Texas , J not recommend anyone-who comes put of the selection . i Austin police fear foul play Friends ofVI was involved in the Calif;, "and Mark James assault with intent to murder, "was not approved by the cam­cotn'miifee"; not. be H 'will v Pre-register for ­quire future apartmeafe con­havesupper with aman whom brown eyes. liealso basAwar-r«^'%hthin}5able', anyone wbulf) ENGLISH 376 L (03130) istructed iii Austin to;&ve in­'they were trying to convert to over his right eye; He ttaslast be recommieftaejj tothe*Board YEARBOOK T. TN I2-1:30 J dividual gas and Jelectric their religion. The man Has ai seen wearing 'plaid^j»nts,-Of Regenti who^jas^ot ap-when yob meters for It each .tenant. criminal record arid/is under white , s,hirt, tie 'Vnd bl^ck-. proved by the advisiMj^cpm- Professor BRYAN. DOBBS _ would not affect p£esent "all indictment in New York for buckl(^ shoes. . " ; mittee. PREREGISTER • ,QUEST LECTURERS: ^ -bills, paid" apartment rental arrangements, ifor prohibit ELIE WIESEL DEPARTME ORIENTAL AND AFRICAN' such arrangements in new EMIL FACKENHiiM •apartments. LANGUAGES AN& LITERATURES ANNOUNCES NEW Just CHECK and others Randy TAru'er. ad-COURSES FOR SPRING ^—~————-­minstrative asisistant working XOPTIONAL FEE with the comfmissinn to form -i. _ • in conjunction with-the Hillel Foundatiqnl OAL 372 05640 Women tn Tropkal Africa-. : the plan, saidp the f .roup hopes. Parker OA1374 05645 Anglo-Indian literature that requiring individual: »n »n . (Rao, D«sa|i;*etc.) (E 374m) ! »n »n >vn meters in1new apartments Williams •H OAl39r^" 05680 IBN Khaldl/tl^History, Philosophy ro^e/direct payment of ut»"tyr Dl'|is by tenants more OAL 395 05685 rndo-European^nd Gehnanjc Cujture' common #n the future. rou-reaistered ' Religion (QtR 381, ANT 3S9K, "The jfiroblem is that many UN 383) ' apartmjgnt dwellers have the ,'S. P-o'ome t0 HEB 343 06140 Blblital'Hebrew literature (Kings I) liebawitz */.for Fall, we'll give you. anoflTer charvce. " w -Sr0^-waste energy HIN 361 06290 . Bhakti literature in they are not-paying Translation (E 374M) for .•* directly," said Turner, Williams All you've got to do is ........... JAP 341 " 06420 Japanese Rims and literature ny apartments., have; no (E 374W) bvision for measuring • McDonald PRS 370 "X-06545 Omar Khayyam • His Place in Jergy. consumption of in­ literature (E'374n) f MAKE YOUR MARK dividual units, sotenantscan't Hilfmann ay directly, he said. Gome Home to -t^TNafw.:. .^Flrst'rsi '±_. r,w^ -> ; ilpi! tUSCELLPMEDUS OFTiOMAL. • [ PLEASANT VALLEY Enjoy 4 Home -Like Atmosphere Among ^our Friends 1 Mt, — «&<* .i—-— ^ size arid Style Apartment ' CO To Fit Your Needs . 1" SS.tfjssK" -' -v.*-' US- J&M*&JLea8ihg Fast • Hurry ... » 4 W,CH "(OTtPT w£ u()|VERSm OF TEXAS M AUSTIN, 197^ ,...„T"gp . —: ­ Pleasant Valley on your — ^OPTIONAL J^130QS.Pleasant Valley Rd. • ( Next to DURING Aquarius Thea Call ? ^JOV|MB£R 5r 6, 7^8 3$,i" > 447-1890 To Reserve YOUR COPY of the ill Order Your PERSONALIZED 8 CHRISTMAS Is CARDS & •fir ; \ -A \ « 7*V • • I M Order the mi 5 ji f ho sfcshoncfy dcpcirhnon? near sporting goods ore * I. _ ___ i r • f n e ground floor. Kodak Photo Greeting <•' ' Wfiich you pay along wi^K Ccards care civailcible in ^ your other Spring registration our Camera depart-included , i fees wtten preregister : € V 1 • Another publication of^'* 1eras Studeut Publications . ... ' --Jfej XuesdayytWoyember 5, 1974 THE DAILY-TEXAN Page 15 Yvv*,\»? "53? aV. f rtn>§-,. sfjs -i,T?»4 2*n U fAP 'tAtCltf"17 if^1-' -J, * '^«'vv£cU K '•'••BSCrj' -\<|fr "I" 'b*,„ .Ay;&.#5l fell -sL'jj-* ^4 VtCn N * ­ $"-* -\sJv &sr$£ -r^w It";" 5V"; J-|—«*rf I **§}&w< """""Mm. .i* :" IS! I fef I m£ ' IS inV-*' Kt -3$} IVi li» llh'" IIfefytt isS*-' A' mi^ ' ^ - jVCR'w 3gfcr" ViS-JS ST" , ji£w*v BOB BULLOCK. Xo'fiiftftofleF,^e!:*'" • —­ • BOB ARMSTRONG,rkV* ,J Land Commissioner • JOHN C. WHITE, Commissioner of Agriculture • LLOYD DOGGETT, :'rtna&fc— — • • ^ %'r*\ State Senator - *, Cv- Wtg' '-J-'ft 2*ix 1 MIKE RENFRO, County Judgie -v»k^. -NOTE: * -__ •» v-^ "*-* r _ W«Wmwvm^^N%ffmOTWifn <** " ' ' ' 'l$i« ~ V" -y "Bis "V " |T r>5»rT ^®cty # t. ffr creases delegate strength |n the .1976 presidential *r'^some identification. w t]' « 4-, If yov have,,any problems, call us at J | t.iwI.. .. —*JSUi » * •» JKT* •• -SWjf'ct «.»»' i. ;" visit^vSi,•< ife<| ­ J illC-IM vAS*I U -fvK' 'Sl'ISi?; *-< '~A* 34K%A "^•3»^-jfe JkS5 S_-5L. *??€— &x. *w .S£:v¥^£V.-»J. ^Vi •. -1-3- mm-.-, -fes v ;v. l*1*^ Voterlnformati6n l. The polls are^open until 7 p.m. 2. if you are not registered to vote in the precinct in , which yow now live, vote in~thw. 3-^ • GONZALO BARRIEHTOS, State Rep. Pi 4 , ,f Sis# • §5® A?=< ' fesit Rides to the polls "m is r '^k a> CO-OPi / V>%* . iSlV-' LITTLEFIELD FOUNTAIN 26TH & SPEEDWAY *n» * J&£ w BUILDING "i-yi M. ,.\ fajs f \i5xjf if '/tSj "4 3JP ' ' fl rvi i<zti /'"J • « ^ * > « W£ f' Paid Pol, ad by Jhe U,T. Young D«moyj™*4 -V • a! "SSU;A\#« ^^4 ;/)"t * "•