TEXAN Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin % Vol. 74, No. Ill Ten Cenls Austin, Texas, Wednesday, November 27, 1974 Fourteen Pages Bert Handcox Quitting Council Briscoe Names Official to Equal Employment Agency By SUSAN LINDEE leave the council with only six Handcox's experience and which rely on state funds. The historically been a moderate saidTexan Staff Writer members, opening up the ability to assume the impor­technical assistance carries The margin of balance on The resignation of a councilCity Councilman Berl Hand­possibility of a 3-3 split on tant responsibilities as direc­no legal power, but the most votes has now been cut member has happened only cox will resign in January to major votes. He will still be tor. "Gov Dolph Briscoe said. recommendations and obser­ from 5-2 to 4-2 once before, in 1971. when Joetake over a $26,000 a year job around for the final approval The current director, Loren­vations of the office are taken The greatest loss will be felt Atkison resigned, within thedirecting the state Office of of the aides program, but zo D. Cole, will return to seriously by state govern­ when the council begins to 90-day limit, to work for the Equal Employment Oppor­ Councilman Bob Binder's Houston this week to work for ment look into a number of possible federal government. Fried­tunity, the governor's office billboard ordinance and other the federal government. He City cou'ncilmen expressed amendments to be charter man said announced Tuesday.-important legislation will be came to Austin a little over a varied reactions to the an­placed on the next ballot Binder said he was sorry toHandcox. the first black on up to the remaining six year ago in a federal-state ex­nounced resignation. Coun­be proposing Handcox go. but un­ "I will some see he the council since Reconstruc­begin Jeff members. change program to cilman Friedman said form of staggered term for derstood the importance oftion, will submit his resigna­Any legislation will still re­organizing the office Cole Handcox's absence would not city councilmen." Love said the opportunity to work in ation on Jan. 7, just in time to quire four votes to pass, and said he feels he has done his alter future council decisions. 'With Handcox on the coun­field which has interested him make a new election un­ the any getting those four may be dif­job and is needed at 'It won't make cil. I would have had little i Handcox i for so long. necessary. If a councilman ficult with the change of federal level now. difference, and it won't trouble with its passage Now Others on the council saidresigns within 90 days of a membership. The office employs 16 per­change any of my plans or the I may have trouble," he add­they were glad for Handcox new election his seat remains Handcox has helped with sons full time, most with council's,'' Friedman said. ed also, but he would be missed. vacant until the next vote, and equal employment opportuni­training in civil rights and Councilman Binder agreed, Councilman Dr Bud Dryden Handcox will be on leave Handcox will make the 90-day ty programs since he es­ personnel, offering technical adding, however, that some said losing Handcox will be from his current job at IBM, limit by 2 days since the next tablished an office at IBM in assistance in an advisory difficult tied votes may result "inconvenient" for the coun­for next probably the twoelection is scheduled for April 1969. He has beenemployed by to agencies setting capacity from a six-member council. cil. years. His EEOC office will IBM since 1967, part of the up affirmative action 5. "Of course that is all con­"I think we will get stuck be charged with helping stated Mayor Roy Butler said the as coordinator the time for programs jecture." Binder said. with a lot of 3-3 votes on the agencies comply with theltimeliness of the resignation EEO programs at the com­Cole said his organization is Councilman Dan Love controversial issues We guidelines of the Civil Rights- will save the city $30,000 to pany. in charge of all stateagencies, described Handcox's depar­won't have any trouble with Act of 1964, which was made', Be'rl Handcox $40,000 in election costs. "We are extremely for­including colleges and schools ture as "essentially theloss of our regular business, but we applicable to state govern-'Handcox's resignation will tunate in having a man of Mr. and also any outside groups one moderate vote. He has wi'.I on other items." Drvden ment in 1972 New Coal Contract Approved Ford Urges $4.6 Billion By UMW Regional Leaders Budget Cut WASHINGTON (API -Regional to think about their responsibility to the years, would be explained Saturday to leaders of the United Mine Workers membership." ®®f district officials at eight regional ;• WASHINGTON i UPI i — President reversed themselves and approved a Union sources said the coal industry's -meetings. The proposed-wage increase is Ford proposed a $4 6 billion cut inrevised contract offer Tuesday, paving modified offer later was approved 22-15 10 percent for the first year, 4 percent federal spending Tuesday to slow infla­ the way for a vote by the union's 120,000 However, in the coal fieldsinitial reac­the second year and 3 percent the third tion. but his budget director said thestriking miners tion to the proposal from miners was year reductions would boost unemploymentUMW President Arnold Miller an­cautious. "They don't really know what's Miller said the ratification vote may and have little immediate impact on ris­nounced the bargaining council's ap­in it." said Howard Moore, president of be held as early as Monday. ing prices proval and said it may be possible to UMW Local 6108 in Slab Fork, W. Va. reopenIhe mines sometime next week if "We're going to doeverything wecan" About 75 percent of the cuts Ford ' Union officials said every miner would the membership ratifies the pact. to shorten the ratification process which proposed in a special message to receive a copy of the proposal before The vote came hours after the council voting on it. the union had earlier predicted would Congress would come in socially had rejected the proposal by a 2-1 MILLER SAID the package, providing take eight to ten days. Miller said. oriented programs, although direct aid ! margin. Miller explained the change by miners with a 64 percent increase in The strike moved into its third week such as Social Security and welfare still saying that council members"'had time wages and benefits over the next three Tuesday and has choked off 70 percent of would receive about 20 percent more funds than last year. the nation's coal supply. More than 23,­000 workers in the steel and railroad in­The President asked for a $1.7 billion, 4-T%'r dustries have been idled by the walkout reduction in the health, education and President Vetoes Bill already, and government analysts have welfare budget, a $1.1 billion cutin spen­said as many a's"400,060 facelayoffs if the ding for veterans: and a hike in the price strike lasts four weeks. of food stamps to make them cost 30 per­ The council last week rejected the in­cent of a recipient s income — the max­dustry's first proposal and instructed ft?#* imum allowed by law — next March 1. For Veterans Benefits WASHINGTON (UPI) -President he voted last "Week to override Ford's iltfi' Miller to return to the bargaining table. Earlier Tuesday Ford had announcedFord reluctantly vetoed Tuesday a bill veto of a vocational rehabilitation bill Miller said he won the improvements theproviding 23 percent increases in The GOP leader noted that he earlier he would veto a bill to increase council had requested but after itslatest educational benefits for veterans. veterans benefits. He said it would have claimed "the right to disagree with the rejection questioned the panels sinceri­The defense budget would be reducedadded another "half-billion-dollar load to President on specific points" and hesaid ty in obtaining a "good contract for coal almost $400 million beyond whatthe already overburdened taxpayer." "in recognition of what denial of this im­miners " Congress has already cut but still would In his veto message. Ford said he con­portant legislation would mean to so HE SAIDTHE new offerrepresented a be about 6 percent above last year'ssidered the increase in benefits ex­many veterans. I intend to exercise that 64 percent increase in wages and level benefits over the next three years. BSPfsP^cessive and said his decision not to sign right." the bill "has not been an easy one. P -• 'i In all. Ford asked Congress to take 135 American Legion Commander James "That's the fattest labor settlement in "But it is necessary if all of us are to §®' separate "difficult" actions One was M. WagonSeller accused the President this decade." Miller said "And we didn't the enactment of the 5 percent income operate with essential budgetary of taking opportunities from young give up a thing." tax surcharge, which has been in troublerestraint." he said. "The nation must veterans while giving "draft dogers and But Gene Mitchell, a council member reduce federal spending if we are to on Capitol Hill ever since Ford proposed deserters" a second chance in his Viet­ from Benton, 111., said after the vote that it Oct 8. reduce the inflation spiral," he said. nam clemency program. the group was unhappy with the size of If Congress went along in every case, Ford said that veterans benefits COMMANDER John J. Stang of the the wage package and also wanted im­which appeared unlikely, it would reduce "should — and can — be improved" and Veterans of Foreign Wars said Ford's provements in other areas. that he would support a GI bill providing veto showed "a complete lack of un­ the federal budget for the current fiscal THE COUNCIL, composed of regional for an 18.2 percent benefit increase derstanding" of what educated veteraqs .<* siR year to $302.2 billion — $4.6 billion less UMW leaders, last week turned down a rather than the 23 percent in the bill than former President Nixon proposed mean to the country's future. tentative contract offering the miners a "Such action would be in keeping with last winter, but still above the $300 "The American Legion is shocked and 9 percent wage boost the first year and 3 the need for fiscal responsibility while billion ceiling Ford has advocated since disillusioned by your veto," said percent in each of the next two years. taking officerecognizing the nation's special debt to Wagonseller in a message to Ford, and Dissatisfaction with the size of the our veterans." Budget Director Rov M. Ash told he promised the Legion would make ef­wage package and the provision that reporters the new spending levels wouldFORD POINTED out that the bill forts in Congress to override the veto. would have required miners to split their provides benefits that are greater than "I urge the Congress to send me a cause 40.000 to 50.000 workers to lose traditional two-week summer vacation veterans education bill along the lines I were reasons those granted to World War II and Korea their jobs Almost all would be non­ the main the council in-; veterans. "It would cost the taxpayers government employes have proposed," Fori said. structed Miller to return to the bargain­ half a billion dollars more in fiscal 1975 Ash said the job loss figures were bas­ The President said that since the Viet­ing table. 'smmii than is appropriate in the present ed on the assumption that unemployment nam era GI Bill went into effect in 1966, With the help of federal mediators. economic circumstances." would continue climbing, going as high benefit increases enacted through 1972 Miller won revisions over the weekend —Te*an Staff Photo by Caroi Jeon Simmons Speaker Carl Albert set a vote on as 6 7 percenl by the end of the fiscal have substantially exceeded the rise in on wages. consecutive The two-week overriding the veto as the first order of the cost of living. He said that not in­Toast to A&M year next June summer vacation also was restored. cluding the provisions of this bill, the business when Congress returns from a The spending cutbacks. Ash said, Thanksgiving Day recess on Tuesday. Miners, who averaged about $45 a day As an estimated 6,000 watched Tuesday night, the traditional "Beat the would have only a fractional effect" on basic monthly education allowance has under the contract thai expired Nov. 12 Aggies Bonfire" went up in smoke, and spiritskindled inanticipation of the rate of House Republican Leader John Rhodes the inflation in the immediate increased by a $120 month or 120 percent would receive an average $8.02 increase he will vote to override the veto, just as since 1966 compared to the rise in the new formula, instead of 150 cases of beer to aid the Austin Association for Retarded Citizens, and portant long-term trend toward "holding of Arizona announced at the same time Texas-A^gie game Friday. During prebonfire activities, Texas Cowboys sold future But he said there would be an im­ under the the consumer price index of 55 percent $7.04 originally negotiated. Vincent R. DeNinolsd the Longhorn Band ir, "Texas Fight." down inflation in future vears " today- Shutdown . . . The Thanksgiving holidays officially begin Thursday for University students, faculty and staff with classes resuming Monday. Fair . . . The Student Health Center, Telephone Counsel­Wednesday's tempera; ing and Referral Service and University police are 0e// Suit . . . tures willreach the mid­the only University facilities that will remain open The plaintiffs in the dle 60s with winds from during the holidays. S29 million damage the north, 10 to 20 rriph. Campus libraries will close at 5 p.m. Wednesday suit against South­The low Wednesday and and remain closed Thanksgiving Day. western Bell discuss Thursday nights will be The Main Loan Library, the Undergraduate the company'salleged in the upper 30s. Skies Library (Academic Center), and the Battle Hall policies and practices will be fair through Libraries will be open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday,-9 in today's Texan (Page Thanksgiving Day. a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1 to 10 p.m. Sunday 9). IVJLmuuUUl with the Undergraduate Library remaining open until midnight Sunday. Students can. carlI 471-3.840 for the hours of the other libraries during the Thanksgiving holidays. —Photo by Tim Tynan The Texan will not publish Thursday o,f Friday Mike Gravitt but will resufme publication Monday. iss f" By SYLVIA TEAGUE. to regulate long distance rates for calls'inslde the state. as wellas thecontroversy stemming from Southwestern Bell A random poll of mayoi^ pf smaU and medium-size cities City councils also must approve rates for electricity and operations in Texas, would have a favorable impact on' the indicates support for legislation to establish astatecommis­water while the Texas Railroad Commission sets the rates bill's passage.sion to regulate utility rates. for natural gas. The Dallas Morning News polled smaller citiesin the Tex­ The survey was roriducted by a legislative ad hoc groupon An unincorporated area has no control over rates or ser­ as Power and Light service area andfound TP&L was paying Texas Mayors ' utility regulation during October vice from companies supplying electricity, water or city attorneys in some locales. : Of the approximately 900 incorporated Texas cities, 141 telephone service. The Railroad Commission sets the gas Those cities surveyed said they felt no conflict of interest mayors were polled. Support fociheproposal was expressed rates in ruralareas, usually corresponding tothe ratesin the was present, even though the same attorney must draft or­ by 59 percent of those polled. closest city. . Favor Regulation dinances concerning the utilities and must advise the citiesThe proposed legislation, tq be written by Rep. Latham Jack Hopper, consultant for the ad hoc group, said a city on the matter.Boone of Navasota, will attempt to regulate rates and ser­the size of Austin would gain from a Utility commission A suit has been filed against Southwestern Bell in San An­ Of Utility Rates vice of telephone, water, ms and electric utilities. because intrastate long distance rates could be regulated. tonio alleging the company kept a separate set of books toTexas is one of three statis in the nation without a state Hopper said it would bedifficult to pass legislation such as show city councils considering rate increases. commission to regulate utilities and the only one which does this and said lobbying by utilities against the measure is in­The largest cities included in the legislative poll were not regulate the telephone industry. ' tense, even though the bill has not yet been written. Wichita Falls and ^asadena. Hopper said the survey wasCurrently the city councils in incorporated areas must ap­He said the revelation that Texas Power and Light is pay­limited to smaller cities because most mayors of largerprove telephone rates, but no one in Texas has the authority ing for some city attorneys in the North Texas service area, cities have made their positions known on the issue. YOUR THESIS, Rogers Speaks to Students By KERMIT FRITZ Rogers said she was still getting their requests, and Rogers agreed affecting dormitory policies. Texan Staff Writer arguments on both sides of the issue that quite often there is a DISSERTATION, OR Dr. Lorene Rogers said Tuesday and she would "have to get all the breakdown in the bureaucratic Rogers also discussed Chancellor that her main gpal as president ad arguments in" before she made a channels. She said she hoped to deal Charles LeMaistre's action .in not interim is "to get the University in decision. giving an explanation for the firing with this problem in the future, cut­such condition that a really good PROFESSIONAL REPORT Rogers added that she had a ting outsome of the insulating levels of former President Stephen Spurr. person would want to come here (as responsibility to the interests of the so the requests will at least receive If the Chancellor were to give president.)" consideration. reasons outside of a court of law, itminority because many students do Jester Center residents who would be possible for Spuir to bring CAN BE COPIED WITH CONFIDENCE choose the dormitories because of attended a meeting sponsored by "As far as character or morals. I action against him for anything said Jester Student Assembly asked don't think anybody's interested in against his character, shesaid. "Heregulation that tends to insure That's because at Ginny's we offer more than just copies. We privacy. Rogers what action she intended to that anymore," she said, but the has had to be vague and hazy in offer our experience in copying final graduate school work, take on the proposed 24-hour visita­Some residents felt that the ad­need for a student'sprivacy is still a every answer he (LeMaistre) has tion rights for dormitory residents. ministration was not responsive to major consideration in decisions given," Rogers said. which means that we appreciate your need for high quality reproduction at low prices. We will guarantee that our 100% cotton copies will meet reproduction standards of the graduate Come Home to school, provided that you specify that the work is for final graduate school copies, and that you allow us at least 24 hours PLEASANT VALLEY Ends Registration to do the copying. We also offer a complete line of Binding Enjoy A Home -Like Atmosphere Services. So drop by and talk to us, and we'll help you prepare If you haven't voted in any for the election division of­ Among Your Friends of the general or primary fice. for Cawthern said that the best original possible, so that we may give you quality copies elections during the last three people in A size and Style Apartment many the county, —for the lowest prices. years, you are in danger of be­particularly students, move in . To Fit Your Needs ing dropped from the ctfunty's and out of counties frequently Leasing Fast -Hurry lists of voters. and often give no notice to the Under the provisions of the tax assessor that they have Voter Registration Law of registered in another county. 1971, anyone who votes in a "They move so much," Pleasant Valley general or primary election Cawthern said, "that they GINNY'S COPYING SERVICE, INC. automatically renews his or forget where they have her registration for the next livetf." Estates XEROX COPIES three years. However, those At any rate, if you can Open 6 Days A Week 1300 S. Pleasant Valley Rd. who do not exercise their remember where you live and voting privileges will be have not voted in the last OFFSET PRINTING dropped from the lists of three year's (in a general or 7 a.m.—10 p.m. WEEKDAYS Next to registered voters. primary election, city elec­ 9 a.m.—5 p.m. SATURDAYS Aquarius Theatre, Mary Cawthern of the tions do not count), you must BOOKBINDING Travis County tax assessor's register to vote again in 1975 office says that those people to be listed on county votingwho haye not voted will be rolls. DOBIE MALL 2021 GUADALUPE 476-9171 Call "purged from the lists." However, by law, the election Texan Position 447-1890 division office is required to make an effort to contact Deadline Near those people being dropped to No persons have yet appliedinform them of the situation. for the position of Daily TexanThis poses^ome problems managing editor for the 1975 spring semester. • Deadline for applications is 4:30 p.m. Wednesday. MAX JONES Applications may be obtained in Texas Student Publications office 3.200. JEWELER Prospective applicants must have completed 75 hours of course work, including two semesters or one .semester We buy old gold and one summer session at the University. mountings Other requirements include the completion of J312, J314 Diamond and and J322 with at least a C silver average, and completion or registration in J324 and JJ60 at the time of application. The applicant must have Ph. 478-4286 served once a week for 10 weeks for two semesters on Suite 210 The Texan within 18 months prior to the semester of Commodore Perry t Bldg. application. The applicant must also be on the Texan Austin, Texas 78701 staff at the time of applica­tion. No ma'am. They're better. AWex finals, Remember the times when you used to catch a lot of flack for short dresses? Now­live a little at... adays, you can stroll (rather quickly of vlolwl Virn 'Tj.Z-° were a tning 01tne rutureY , future 1 now> and it has been for two years, at Tri-Towers tvt TheHillsof North. Once upon a time we had male visiting regulations in all our towers But no longer. Chevy changeA nia^lb^SSr-47fr7raf ^^**** -For J™ and 5™* <4partments i are-> same • -Yor instance, our prices haven' t gone up since 1969. And were still located in the heart of the student neighborhood, , You areInvited to sign alease forthejust two and ahm}blocks west.of campus on 24thMreet. < Spring Semester. Then dropyourgear.oft in ' your newapartmeptafter finals.Yourrent ' won't begin until you return In January. Handsomeprivate, secludedapartments. Sep-; arate entrances,rear-door parking,baloonles, ' tennis courts,tournaments;a smalllake,200-. . acresofblketrails andnatural wildlife.Noother : apartmentsonRiverside Drivecompare to the Hills Check us out. -, ­ Call Michelle: 385-9295 \ The.Wllsof Chevy-Chase Apartments 2310 Wlckersham, IVi mileseast Jt of Interstate 35.off RIversld^Drlve. 1 " ' < y Anotherih/jng ldeai. -T-v'/i/.-Mi-i-w•.•'•'-iw'Afii-*i t • imi nvfln ,1• 'v­ * ­ w r> 1 ' " •> * ^%> '' , ®i& * >*' 1 ,3i~^ M ,Ji^T'^v­ W'0%-y< &;• Committee Releases m$m Final Reform Report R» nATfin ui?Kir\Dirirc By DAVID HENDRICKS Texan Staff Writer ',' o IP v-i-Hm The Citizens Advisory Committee of the Joint Legislative Commit'tee on Prison Reform released its final report Tuesday recommending sweeping changes in the operation and purposes of the Texas Department of Corrections. The 208-page report was released at a Capitol press conference by the citizens committee chairperson. Charles Sullivan, and David Filvaroff, University professor of law who has been working with the committee. ®1 The report asks for a shift in emphasis from the traditional, maximum security, fanii and industrial labor system to an --' fl alternative, community-based system geared for rehabilitation. ®l#§iP ^SiSsgfS&iS "THIS REPORT, mirrors true rehabilitation," Sullivan said, "which will help stop crime as well as being M rnmmmmmmm sssi humane. People are going to be safer in their homes and streets" if the reforms -Taxon Staff Ptwto by Jay Godwin are enacted. Sullivan said W.J. Estelle, TDC direc­ Charles Sullivan (I). David Filvaroff explain report. 1 " ^^ 7 _____vw tor, estimatedVtU thatOl 40 percentpvlV.CIIl ofi TDC's» t vOUIHO Ui TV UI 1A< O Sirica Questions Burglar Payments Judge Interrogates Mitchell at Trial ^hn .1 WASHINGTON (UPI) — Judge John J. Sirica, fnJstratedby unanswered questions after eight weeksof the Watergate cover-up trial, took over questioning of defendant John N. Mitchell Tuesday as to why the burglars were paid thousands of dollars in cash. "The thing I can't understand in this matter is wha* reason there was for paying these people anything," Sirica said after excusing the jury late in the day. "Was it out of the goodness of someone's heart? ... I can't see any obligation." Mitchell, the former attorney general and the first of the five cover-up defendants to take the stand in the eight-week-old trial, testified eari.'T he knew nothing about the payoffs to the men who bugged Democratic National Committee headquarters. "I can't enlighten you. Your Honor." h" replied. "I didn't start it. I didn't make the decision. I have nothing to do with the subject matter." AT THAT POINT in the tense exchange, chief trial .prosecutor James F. Neal jumped to his feet. "The testimony to date is that he started it," Neal shouted, pointing at Mitchell seated on the witness stand, Mitchell's composure cracked: "Mr. Neal, that's the third shot you have taken at me, and I resent it... that's the third cheap shot he's had at me this week." Testimony during thetrial of Mitchell and four former aides to Richard M. Nixon have indicated that the Watergate burglars were paid nearly $430,000 fromJuly, 1972, through the spring of 1973. Two major witnesses have testified that the sole purpose was to ke^p the men 2,500 Limit Agreed miiat o KAHt ikn j . _. • I-• . i quiet about the bugging scandal and not implicate high officials at the White House and the Nixon re-election campaign. As the defense began its presentation to the jury earlier in the day, Mitchell testified that on three oc­casions he rejected the plan that finally resulted in the Watergate burglary in Jane, 1972. After excusing the jury, Sirica kept hammering at his main point -what obligation, if any, did the Nixon cam­paign have to pay the men anything at all. "I CAN'T UNDERSTAND why all these thousands and thousands of dollars were given to these people who broke into the Democratic National Committee for family support and legal fees unless someone thought they had done something wrong," Sirica said. "...If it (Nixon campaign) wash't tied up in some way with wrongdoing, why didn't they say throw them out of here when they came asking for money? Would they give thousands of dollars to people who came in off the street? Were they in the business of throwing the (re­election) committee away?" Mitchell insisted to Sirica that it was his understan­ding none of the money paid to the burglars came from the campaign. Previous testimony, however, has been that virtually all the cash came from campaign coffers and was channeled through various roundabout routes to the burglars and their lawyers. Stressing that he had a "perfect right" as a federal judge to seek out the truth, Sirica said he had "not been able to satisfy" his own mind about the purpose for the payments and said he imagined some or all of the jurors _i also were wondering why the Nixon campaign felt obligated to support the men. MITCHELL, DURING his first two hours on the witness stand, calmly disputed all the major testimony against him. He testified that he: • Never approved the bugging operation and never received or saw any of the wiretap reports. • Did not learn of the Watergate arrests' including that of a campaign employe until the afternoon of June 17,1972 — several hours later than he had testified dur­ing his appearance before the Senate Watergate com­mittee last year. • Never directed anyone to call Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst in an effort to get the burglars out of jail. • Did n.-t approve a false press release put out by the Nixon campaign June 18, 1972, disavowing any cam­paign knowledge or invoivement in Watergate. • Never suggested to Jeb Stuart Magruder that he "have a fire" to burn the Gemstone file containing the wiretap reports, and never told anyone to destroy any documents. Mitchell similarly denied eversuggesting that the CIA be used to block the FBI's Watergate investigation and said he firmly rejected a request that campaign funds be used to bail the burglars out of jail. But he acknowledged that while he was fully briefed about Nixon campaign involvement in Watergate im­mediately after the arrests, and shortly thereafter learned of other illegal activities undertaken by the White House, he never passed this information on to law enforcement agencies. Ford, Brezhnev Approve Arms Ceiling ASHINGTON (UPI) - President "144-' (CU """ —"fsi WASHINGTON _rord said Tuesday he agreed with Soviet Leader Leonid I. Brezhnev to restrict the United States and Russia to "a rigid ceiling" of less than 2,500 strategic mis­siles and bomberS under a 10-year strategic arms accord. White House press secretary Ron Nessen, summarizing Ford's briefing Tuesday morning (or congressional leaders, said the Vladivostok agreement would require Moscow to reduce its pro­jected military buildup. The celling, Nessen said, was "slightly above the American planned program." "THE NET result: 9 rigid ceUing has SEhSBS m. : -I TaWphoto Ford briefs leaders. been pla'ced on delivery systems, and on Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash„ one MIRVS (multiple nuclear warheads)," of the Administration's harshest critics President Ford told a gathering of con­ on disarmament matters, was not in­gressional leaders of both parties. vited to the presidential briefing but was PLO To Execute Hijackers If Transferred by Tunisians BEIRUT (UPI) — The Palestine Liberation Organization will execute the four Arab hijackers of a British jetliner if they are turned over by Tunisia, PLO sources said Tuesday. The sources said the hijacking of a British Airways VC10, in which a West German passenger wasshot to deathand his body dumped on an airport runway, was in effecta challenge to the authority of the PLO. The hijackers released their remain­ing hostages in Tunisia Monday and re­quested asyjum there after being re­jected by all Arab states. Before the hijackers surrendered,'five fellow guerrillas were flown from Cairo on their demand. The five, technically prisoners of the PLO although they were held in an Egyp­tian jail, were involved in the slaughter of 31 persons In a Pan American airliner at Rome airport in December. Two other guerrillas also freed as a result of the Tunis operation had been jailed in Holland after hijacking a British airliner from Beirut to Amster­dam and setting it ablaze. All seven belonged to the Arab Nationalist Youth Organization for the Liberation of Palestine — a hard-line splinter factionV'gttewilla sources said. Governmental Control of Tapes Approved by House Committee -WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House Rep. John "Bradeipas, D-Ind., a com­ Admintstraflon. Committee voted un­mittee member and chief author of the animously Tuesday to give the govern­bill. ment, not former President Nixon, con­ The House measure would create a 17­ trol of his .Wjitergate-related tapes and member commission to make documents; • recommendations toCongress on legisla­President Ford previously consented tion that. Would mandate for the future to an agreement whiqh gave Nixon the how documents of all elected and ap­right to control his . old White House pointed federalofficials should be handl­ materials. The agreement would have ed! allowed Nixbrjtodestroythe'documents Another provision in the House bill 1 tljVee years andthe:tapes in fiveyears. provides for : the selection of a special •. .Under the House cohtmittee measured counsel instead; of me attorney ---7\ -—.-•••ie«.>utvyuuovTt —'iiisteau 01 the attoVneysimilar to a Senate-passed , bill, the • / general — to represent Congress in the -govettunent tvould retain control of the--event-there is^ coiift.action Involving majer^ls ^nd allow Nixon access to . ownership of Nixon's materials. " the on^ person who,has d^ne tB% most'to opinion Nixon cover Up the facts they contain,"rs#id materials.' u filled in separately by a senior member of the National Security Council. After the briefing, Jackson said he was "greatly disappointed that the agree­ment fails to bring about mutual phased reductions to equality at lower levels. What is even worse is that theagreement gives the Soviets a juridical basis for resisting any reductions until 1985 if ever. I'm very concerned that the number of missiles the Soviets will be able to MIRV (equip with multiple warheads) is large and will lead to a con­siderable strategic buildup. "THE ONLY way the United States could maintain strategic equality under this agreementwould be to spend billions of dollars building up which is something no one wants to do," Jackson said. Nessen declined to reveal specific amounts by which the United States and Soviet Union have agreed to limit their over-all strategic forces, or the limit for missiles which may be equipped with multiple nuclear warheads. However, Sen. Strom Thurmond, R­S.C., leaving the briefing, told reporters that the limitation for strategic missiles and bombers was "not quite the mimber of 2,500." He said he believed th^Senate would approve the accord. .. Nessen said the agreement, which must be further refined at the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks in Geneva, was "responsible" and had the explicit ap­proval of Defense Secretary James R. Schlesinger and Gen. George S. Brown, chairperson of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Mnft ; * i -. 1.700 inmates are confined unnecessarily and could be either paroled immediately or transferred to community-based programs, if they existed. Filvaroff said a community-based system of corrections has b»-cn proved in other states to be sue issful and economical without being dangerous "TDC IS A victim in many ways of its own history, its development as a system of large, ruraj prison farms, concen­trated in a single part of the state, offer­ing basically a single kind of maximum security correctional model," the report stated. "If you treat men and women like animals, keep them in cages, it is un­realistic to expect them, when they return to society, to behave as human beings." Filvaroff said. The report suggests TDC begin teaching marketable skills to inmates "With more than half of TDC inmates coming from the Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth and San Antonio metropolitan areas alone, it is difficult to see how the ability to. do field work equips ex-prisoners to compete for jobs in the ur­ban labor markets to which they will return." said the report. The report is in 21 sections covering numerous TDC policies. The committee found TDC's medical care facilities and practices "woefully inadequate ... cruel and inhumane. It causes unjustifiable pain and suffering to inmates, it sometimes results in needless death or crippling disease or injury." The committee suggests TDC conduct an expanded recruiting program to hire and retain fulltime medical personnel as many doctors do not want to practice in the East Texas, rural, prison at­ mosphere. The report also said, "counselng, medical care and treatment of the men­tally disturbed inmates are grossly in­ adequate The committee also urged the building tender system be abolished by the hiring of more prison staff. Building tenders are inmates given certain guard duties WHILE BUILDING tenders are prohibited by Texas law, "these prac­tices continue unabated in TDC Many in­mates live in constant fear of beatings and physical retaliation ... rule by threat, fear and brutality in (TDC) units is either encouraged or sanctioned by those immediately in charge and is ap­parently tolerated by those in the higher echelons "Texas is faced with a choice." the report concludes "It can continue to rely SOIPIV on confinement within traditional prisons and add to the problem of a growing inmate population, or it can embark on economically sound programs which have been tested in other states, programs designed to lessen the chances an offender will repeat his crimes " THE 28-MEMBER citizens' com­mittee was appointed by the 14-member legislative committee to compile the report after holding hearings across the state Citizen committee members also took tours of TDC units. The report will be presented Monday to Sen Chet Brooks. D-Pasadena, ancf Rep Mickey Leland. D-Houston, the legislative committee's co-chairpersons. The legislative committee will be meeting next week at theCapitol todraft legislation for introduction during the 64th Legislature Appropriations Bill Passed by House WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House Tuesday approved a |33 billion labor, health, education and welfare money bill with watered-down antibusing provisions and minus antiabortion language The measure was approved on a 352-25 vote and sent to the Senate for expected final congressional approval. President Ford told congressional leaders Tuesday he would sign the bill. The massive appropriations bill, se­cond only to the defense money measure in size, is $485.2 million less than the budget request. The cut resulted from a Sl.2 billion' redffctfoh in welfare funds, but Democrats said if welfare needs grow they will push for a supplemental appropriation measure. THE BILL would fund the Departments of Labor and Health. Education and Welfare for the current 1975 fiscal year that started last July 1. House-Senate conferees agreed todrop a Senate provision banning use of anv HEW funds for abortions and said in a statement that while a "majority" of the conferees sympathized with the proposal Visit to U.S. by (7TPI\ — .Qo/tfAtarif fit Unnmt A ITSfinSnM.. PEKING (UPI) — Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger met with Chineseleaders for thefourth time in24 hoursTuesday amid indications that he would invite one of Chairman Mao Tse-Tung's top lieutenants to Washington. At the same time, American officials disclosed that Chinese leaders have made contact with former President Nixon by sen­ ding him at least two letters since his Aug. 9 resignation. What the letters said and whether Nixon replied was not im­ mediately known. Kissinger spent 30 minutes with ailing Premier Chou En-Lai upon arrival Monday evening and then began talks with Deputy Premier Teng Hsaio-ping and Foreign Minister Chaio Kuan-hua. He sandwiched in sightseeing with his wife and two children. At the opening of Tuesday morning's session. Teng — a five- footer who is the ranking Chinese official at work in Peking — .said, "I.hope we can soon exchange views in Washington." Picking up the diplomatic hint. Kissinger nodded across the table and said, "I hope we can do that very soon." such a ban should come from legislative, not appropriations committees The bill also would ban use of HEW funds for court-ordered school busing, but agency spokespersons have said so few funds are used for that purpose it would have little effect on busing. Another provision in the measure would require that federal school desegretation efforts be applied with equal force throughout the country. REP. EDITH Green. D-Ore., author of a provision in the measure banning sex discrimination in allocation of federal education funds, said an HEW inter­pretation that this applied to Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts. YMCA, YWCA and to inter­collegiate sports was erroneous and could not be enforced. The compromise bill also eliminated a House provision to exempt employers of 25 or fewer workers from provisions of the occupational safety and health act, but left intact a provision that employers of 10 or fewer employes, while subject to inspection and enforcement provisionsof the safety act were exempt from record keeping and reporting. Official Indicated by Kissinger at Meeting newscapsules Britain ThreateneclJ^y-'Mwe Bombing LONDON — (AP) — Scotland rasd warned of possible new bomb at­tacks Tuesday while security forefes posted armored car guards at Gatwick Airport and some legislators demanded that terrorists be hang- Police issued a public warning of tossjble new mailbox blasts like the three that exploded in busy sections Of the British capital Monday night and injured 20 persons? Ford Signs Transit Legislation WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Ford Tuesday signed into a law an J11.8 billion, six-year program to bolster the nation's bus, railway and subway systems — marking the first time the federal government has •subsidized urban mass transit. Congressional leaders, governors and mayors from 15 big cities attend­ed as Ford signed the compromise legislation to give the American com­muter better service and perhaps save him some fare money. v Soft Drink Prices May, Rise WASHINGTON (UPI) .— Tlje soft drink industry said Tuesday the ytholesale pric6 for a case of soda pop could jump, from the present $2.60' to as"high ffS ?4^0 if the wholesaleprice o|sugar re&ches $l per pound as predicted. \ At $4,80 for 24 bottles, E.E. Beisel said, sugar alone would account tot 55 percent of the higher wholesale price. The consumer would pay even more at the grocery. ' 1 1 .... That seems to be our common desire," Teng said. Teng's mention of a Washington meeting suggests the Chinese may be willing to step up thepace of their newera of good feeling with the United States, diplomats said. To the delight of the Chinese, the Kissinger charm shone at the talks. At Tuesday afternoon's session at the guest house where Kissinger was staying, the Chinese delegation moved into the conference late and a few at a time. Kissinger, flanked by presidential chief of staff Donald Rumsfeld. Ambassador George Bush and other aides, looked across the table at the tall, bushy-haired Chaio, sitting almost alone. "Ah. I see we have you outnumbered." said Kissinger. "Never." said Chaio. "There are more than 800 million of us." Nixon's reputation has not markedly suffered here because of the Watergate scandal At Monday night's state banquet for Kissinger. Foreign Minister Chaio cited his "pioneering role" in warming relations with China three years ago. Beisel represented the National Soft Drink Association at the second day of a Council on Wage and Price Stability hearing into the soaring price of sugar. Stocks Show Moderate Gain NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market recorded a moderate gain Tuesday on the strength of a midafternoon rally. Brokers described the rally as a response to the declines of the last two weeks. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 5.32 to 617.36, and the New York Stock Ex­change composite common stock index climbed .33 to 36.86. N.r.S.E. DOW JONES MEIME Velane Profile 30 laditstriaU 795 617.26 UNCNAM&CD 464 1 w 1 NO* 7S.I9U. Doctors To Reveal Nixon Report Friday LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Three court-appointed doctors said they had reached a unanimous conclustion Tuesday op whether Richard Nixon is physically fit ^o testify at the Watergate cover-up trial but will keep their - finding confidential until they report to U.S. Dist. Judge John J. Sirica Friday. > Dr. Charles, A. Hufnagel, who headed the three-man team which ex­amined Nixori Monday, said, their report was not even being made available to the former President until that time. •an.rSi By BUCK HARVEY jokes, the draw-a-target-on-the-ground something to attack from the light angle.-general elections. They will have to be. Berl Handcox says he is leaving his jokes and the push-off-the-regents-and-And in The Texan's position, that is es­Not only will we have such great possi­ City Council seat. That is fine. But he LeMaistre-with-them jokes. But here is pecially true. ble combinations as Friedman vs. also says he isn't leaving until January. the most original so far: Lebermann or Butler,-Friedman vs. The most valid criticism I have receiv­That isn't-so fine. Friedman vs. the world, but we will also"To those suggestions for making the ed concerns our syndicated cartoons. What i^ means is Tower suicide proof, I would like to add Texan cartoonists Bill Mauldin and Pat have a Tomato Hubris-like candidate for that his resignation one which could prove quite economical. Oliphant have been consistently anti-variety. will be Official within Since the Tower is recognized as a large Arab, And though printing their view­His name is Paul Spragehs, the former90 dajis'W the spring phallic symbol, the solution is obvious: a points doesn't bother me (as you can tell co-editor of the Salamander Weekly, and tions. According to giant prophylactic to cover the Tower. If from Oliphant's example on Page 5), a he is running for Place 5. His party, the city law, that means the University would allow one of the continual array of such cartoons without Picaresque Syndicate (PUS), runs on an prophylactic companies to print their the other side has a tremendous impact City Council elec­ a special election is anarcho-absurdist platform,; am' name on the product, they would possibly on the editorial page. He is united behind the issues concur. not mandatory. And install one for nothing." spaghetti code, a Hollywood Squares Or­ that means we will It has been brought to my attention * • • have six council members — and no tie .that the cartoons are racist. My reaction dinance (Spragens says PUS: is split on The Texan, in our never-endingfight to breaker — for three months in the spr­ is that Mauldin and Oliphant — like all this issue and will probably propose and disclose the truth, has managed to be ing-, cartoonists — rely on stereotypes to then oppose the issue), conversion of the biased again. But this time, we have ac­ Handcox could have resigned this show their points of view: whether they Austin Police Department into a free complished the ultimate in unobjective week, and a special election could have show Kissinger with an elongated noseor taxi service and the legalization of duel­ reporting: we are biased on both sides. ing inside the city limits,. there would have been extra cost and ex­"As usual," one Firing Line letter been held before Christmas. Though Tanaka with slanted eyes.. I agree that if cartoons are slanderous tra hassle, leaving us with just six read, "The Texan has printed the news An Arkansas state representative hasto the people as a whole and seemingly from Israel with a pro-Arab bias." members could provide more serious have no' other intent but to criticize that proposed to that state's legislature that problems. "With the cooperation of The Daily race, then they are racist. It's possible the Arkansas head footballv fcbach be Whatever, at least Handcox will still Texan," read another, "the power elite we've run such cartoons. Racism, es-• fired for his team's record. Such is the be around to vote on council aides and a is once again gearing the nation up for Arkansas legislature. pecially in the cartoon' world "of number of upcoming proposals he war against an unfortunate people. First stereotyping, can often be so latent and I can't believe it hasn't come up here appears to favor: financial disclosure. it was the Jews, then the 'Chinks,' then hidden to be passed over without yet. How come we haven't looked intothe billboard ordinance, etc. the 'Gooks' and now the Arabs." thought. But if the cartoons are our own coach? Darrell Royal's • * • How did we get into this situation, you stereotyped to make a political point (for franchise isn't going to the Cotton Bowl,Campus suicides, especially the Tower ask? Well, it wasn't easy. First you print example, the cartoon on Page 5), then is it? Well, it's time to seek another variety, have gotten alot of serious press a headline. Then you print a story. Then that is not racist, at least in my mind. coach. within the last few weeks. Bui you print syndicated cartoons, syn­ * * * Do we need more money? Isn't a $2 anonymous Firing Line writers, in an a couple of local attempt to at dicated columns and With the business community saying million budget enough? How about, a laugh the unlaughable, viewpoints. And there you have it: bias. "wait until April," and with that in­more extensive recruiting program? have been at their best with National Actually, the situation in the Middle famous radical clique gearing up, those Isn't a $90,000 recruiting budget enough. Lampoon humor. xBiggest two-point buck I ever saw.' East is far from funny. Any conflict that . spring City Council elections will have to I mean, -what's the problem? Can't we Of course, there are the diving board could bring world conflict is not be more exciting than the November just buy out Baylor? Among the two-party ashes By TERRY QUIST Sun Belt-midwestern Republicans and Matters are bleak, but improving, inThe Republican Party may>go the way southern Democrats. This could occur in the intellectual sphere; and the intellec­of all flesh: to that extent, the conser­ reaction to the bumbling performance tual sphere (with some lag time) affects vative movement has been dealt a tac­surely to be registered by the the direction of the electoral sphere % tical blow by the recent elections. Democratic Party over the next couple through education and opinion-molding. 3 Nevertheless, conservatism is not syn­ of years. Nicholas von Hoffmann, for instance,onymous with Republicanism, and I am YET THE REPUBLICAN Party has embraced "New Right" economicsmildly optimistic towards the birth of a possesses a remarkable propensity to and lionized the Libertarian Party. Mikeconservative party among the ashes of snatch defeat from the jawsof victory. It Wallace that he used regard the two-party system. says • to has steadily abandoned, since the fall of William Buckley as a right-wing nut but The elections Taft and the ascension of the .that he agrees increasingly with therepresented not so "Eisenhower wing" of the party, mentor of National Review. Walter Lipp­ much a rebuff to con­ whatever consistent political principles mann has recanted his liberal orthodoxy. servatism as a reac­ it has formerly propounded. It has tried IMPORTANT INTELLECTUALS like tion against the Republican Party, to be elected by sounding like the Irving Kristol have declared with the Democrats, except a little less so. American "conservative" camp. m per se. Although the Perhaps, then, an alternative will Thinkers gathered around The PublicGallup Poll shows appear: an antistatist party of principle Interest and Encounter have, in various that fewer than 24 I would wish the Libertarian Party to be political guises, thumbed their noses at percent of the such an alternative in the long run. But the left-to-liberal establishment. Keyne- American people call themselves people in this country, who believe in in­ sian theory has fallento ruinsin the "im­Republicans, the same poll affirms 59 dividual freedom have learned to. call possible" occurrence of stagflation. percent of the populace as "conser­ vative." themselves "conservatives;" perhaps a It's already fashionable to invite a. Conservative Party headed by the likes token conservative to cocktail parties. Granted: few among that 59 percent of Reagan and Goldwater will be our Maybe there is an incipient conservativehave a very precise idea of any sort of only electoral hope against big govern­ chic! conservative "ideology." But, as Jamer Kilpatrick noted, the basic sentiment is ment in the near future. It couldn't come too soon. Pieces of the Rock present. And that sentiment is profound­ ly antistatist. antibureaucratic; in short, firing line opposed to the government interference in our lives which has proceeded on a Wagnerian scale since the New Deal. THE CONSERVATIVE sentiment of the electorate was manifest in the tac­ How sexist is a woperdaughtrix? tics employed by many Democrats to To the editor: Guest Viewpoint, why don't you just use achieve office. Gary Hart, for instance,' fruits of higher education. A classroom just hope that there are a fewof the mind outrage in this country over a futur By u^ng the wore person to replace it is defined in the Queen's English as teacher with a master's degree hasspent was not elected by promising the radical set who may aid us in recovering (and genocidal warfare to be conducted by the millenium. Hart explained that,gee, just man in many words such as chairperson, standard dictionaries and grammar as much time and energy in professional adequately paying) them. robot killing manufactured by war spokesperson, waitperson, persondate, You have preparation as « because he spent two years managing books. people a difficult Mr. Lockwood and his Edward T, Sowers profiteers. . and huperscnities major, the Texan enough time just writing coherent news colleagues, but he or she will realize McGovern's campaign, that didn't make Senior, Psychology writers arecommuting the heinous sinof stories without trying to simultaneously perhaps l/10th the lifetime income of a Before you allow yourself to become him a McGovernite, you see; Hart railed -son Who is the terrorist? sexism. You see, person ends in create a new language. typical attorney. I will sincerely agree the unwitting proselyte, consider this:against busing and gun controls. which is undeniably a masculine William G. Lamb with Mr. Lockwood that teacher salaries Tp the editor: Who is the terrorist? Is it a homelessBut although A great number of referent. The Texanstaff should begin to in reached an With the cooperation of The Daily Tex­refugee who carries a deadly bomb on EDA F-ll Texas' have exorbitantelected throwing •Democrats were by expunge -son from all words in which it False picture level if and when they exceed the income an, the power eilte is once again gearing his back across 50 miles of desert inbones to conservative causes, con­appears. An aspiring young reporter from nine months work of the average the nation up for war against an unfor­order to kill innocent people, as well as gressional inertia will probably enact a To the editor: would be required to refer, perhaps, to a Texas lawyer. Meanwhile. I hope Mr. tunate people. First if wa$ the Jews, then himself? Is it a man who steps out of the number of disastrous liberal policies Last week's barrage of pro-Zionist chairperdaughtier. But wait, this is un­ Lockwood has managed to extract his the "Chinks,"then the "G'ooks," now the officer's qlub into a waiting F-4 and who -over the next few years. Some sort of letters and editorialsaptly supplemented acceptable because, as everyone knows, Arabs. By concentrating on speculative head from whatever hole that was he cruises on autopilot across theborder of national-health insurance seems, in the by racist cartoons all have one common -er is masculineand the use of this suffix and presumptive attacks on the stuck it into. James W. Bohmfalk Lebanon and then casually onloads a.ton charts, although even the liberal point in that they manage to create a would reveal the Texan staffs latent character of the spokesman for .the of bombs on women and children in a -Brookings Institution has begun to sexism. Perhaps chairperdaughtrix totally false picture Of the real sitation in Graduate Student Palestinians, the media massage glosses refugee (terrorist camp) village, retur­ and Former Classroom Teacherwould be acceptable. No, that would over the grave injustices suffered by in­ning to the officer's club in time for recognize the "health crisis" as a the Mideast. propagated farce (and the statist work either because this word' un­In a quarter-page ad appearing in last Ars Poetica nocent Palestinians. By exploiting the If former Is the only breakfast? the"solution" to .the "crisis" as an even deniably refers to a female just as Friday's Texan we were invited to help To the editor: specter of antisemitism to its fullest, a terrorist, then the distinguishing factor greater farce). The government, which STOP ARAB IMPERIALISM and to ral­ chairwoman would and, as we all know, critical evaluation of Zionist mentality is must be the sweatiness of the-method It's about time something worth prin­ steals over 40 percent of our income, will ly around the Zionist slogan DON'T LET referring to someone's sex in a com­ smothered. The reasonfor this campaign ting appeared in the new Ars Poetica used for murder. Let us not be .misled probably steal more. ARAFAT FINISH WHAT HITLER munication is sexist. In fact, usingTexan column. Garner Robert McBrearty, is that a new rationale for imperialist into a foolish righteousness. The • In theelectoral sphere,hope lies in two STARTED. Unfortunately neither of staff reasoning (I refuse to call it logic), you're the first. warfare must be erected. A crucial com­murders at Beit Shean-were disgusting. directions. The first entails the recovery these two fine causes have any basis in the word woman is unacceptable and ponent of this rationale is the belief in But so was the death by stoning of a Glenda C. Casbiola of Kevin Phillips' "Emerging fact. must be replaced by woperdaughtrix. As 1221 Algarita Ave., No..378 the minds of the American people that' young Arab girl only recently. Let u& Republican Majority," the coalition Of Since the U.N. Partition Resolution of Mr. Cuccia suggested in his Monday the Arabs, asa group, are renegades and observe both in sorrow. Nov. 29, 1947, the st^te of Israel has Great dismay terrorists, Such a belief may, as in the William L. Martin grown from {he original 5,500 square To the editor: case of Vietnam, be exploited to smother Law Student miles to over 30,000 square miles today. THE DAILY TEXAN I have just finished reading (and withThe Jewish student groups responsible >•»«fp»r mt T)w UmlwrtBf •$Tm«i mt Awfti great dismay) Mr. Lockwood's articleonfor the ad have yet to explain how Zionist EDITOR Buck Harvey teacher salaries (Nov. 26 — Firing Texan censorship: expansion translates into Arab im­ MANAGING EDITOR Sylvia Moreno Line). It is obvious that Mr. Lockwood.'s perialism. As for comparing Arafat to article fits living in Austin t-it's quite ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Lynne Brock Hitler, it was not Arafat but Israel's own inexpensive. i : Abba Eban who stated, "The idea should Larry Smith an intolerable mess To begin with, he has dealt with not be one of integration. Quite the con- NEWS EDITOR Martha JP McQuade salaries fpr teachers as an end in By STEVE RUSSELL trary;..integration is something.to. be " The cold rigid fact is that copy wa$ ^UNIVERSITY EDITOR. ., Richart Fly avoided." The threat of genocide is tffemsefvesr Quite true thatHiondegreed (EaitorVnoKiTthe Gallo column men-' withheld from The Texan by someone people have the right to earn what they SPORTS EDITOR Herb Holland nothing but an old cloak which appears tioned below has been sent to the review other than the elected editor, and that I can (in San Francisco, street cleaners committee of the Texas Student AMUSEMENTS EDITOR Paul Beutel thin in the light of the facts/ cannot in good conscience tolerate. FEATURES EDITOR Claude Simpson Karen Utay's article of last Friday make $17,500 a year)1.„ What Mr. Publications Board Operating Call this my twenty-nine and. a halt of demonstrates another Zionist trick. She column rather than -30-, because I Lockwood (and many others) seems to Trustees,' If the committee finds the lose sight of is that educators deal not-fifllpmn-.free of libel, the column will be states she is unable to forget Kuyat already have some colunms in the caiiISSUESTAFF " with dirty streets but with the mind (in printed in full next week, If the com­ Issue Editor Shmona and MaloL For some reason she that Buck will want to use, and I would Kathy Kelly Reporters..! has found it all too easy to forget Deir my opinion, the most important fabricof mittee does Indeed believe thecolumn to like to saya tnpre thoughtful farewell...: ..Susan Lindee, David Hendricks our society), • Contributors.:.., Yassin, Zeita, Beit, Nuba and Yali. Is it be libelous, then the c61umn will be To those of you on the leftwh'o have ex­ WiUard HS11, Gwen Spain, Mary Walsh, Secondly, if he would have taken the printed with the questionable portions Kermit Fritz, Debbie Jamail, Sharon Jayson because the casualties were pressed your disappointment: I'm sorry time.to inquire, it,has been'shown that, deleted.) | Editorial Assistant Palestinians whose existence Israel you feel that way,"but you don't own me ,.Mike Morrison class size need not be detrimental any Associate Amusements Editor. denies? Utay unfortunately has a'rather I am tired. And now I s'itSwth an hour' anymore than the censor does. . • William A. Stone Jr. Assistant Amusements Editor.. Betty Holmes selective memory, a prevalent more. And this is not due to, by the parking meter clock to say good­To TheTexan staff: I don't like mostof "prpgramed" learning; the failure of Assistant Sports Editor Kelley Anderson characteristic among Zionists.However, bye, The fatigue is appropriate. you, and I've had ample evidence tha£ I i which is becoming .more evident. Rhine's Make-up Editor..... from each according to their ability. Barbara the feeling is mutual. A journalist, who Jeff Newman -William James warned pf such training Wire Edftor The rel|ance of Zionism on selective piece, in Tuesday's-will not fight is a PR.person, the bnW -.Eddie Fisher in 1892 by stating "Although the ready r .Texan .said-that Copy Editors.. ....Jay Jbrden, C. Russell Leigon, facts and half-truths suggests that the question is for whom:Tip waiting to se$ is. a to .v. • days of. the racist settler state are memory great blessing its Gallo's housing for-: the line between objectivityandamorall- Debbie DeLaCraz, Sally Carpenter « possessor; the vaguer memory of a sub- farm .workers, is • Photographer?...;.... numbered. . M.Savercool ..........Carol Jean Simmons, Jay Goodwin ject, of having once had to do with it,,of "unbelievably |% < TQ-THOSE FEWf of you who have en^ . m neighborhood, and of where we may 'JV pic­ JsL \ D a l l y j e u a a r e t i m e c C i h e -49911. at t&e editorial office Student PobiicsOocts.. Teachers pay go to .recover tfie Joyed my columns: ias you know, aiiy •editor ot lte wfrterof tteiftkit and art!not necessarily XWWiflc, basement floor) or,at the news UWnrtory.tCom--' it again, constitutes in tures I've seen arp poiitlcalcolumnlnTexas ispf necessityUmm of the UpJnrslty admb&ftalion or the Board of. memcatkiB BnUdlafc A4iJ6).Iaqoirt«* cooctniiogdtfiWry To the editor: "most men-snd" women the chief fruit of . any indication, she is -an excursion into.the foacabire. I've tried -Biff all, —aod^3»tifla**tmiW« dttridbemade inTBP MJcttnr-•:„In re Bill Lockwuod's letter criticizing . their education-.", I. " .;-J• right. But her comment was.censored. tobe honestaboutwherel'vecomefl1on> of Tftxas, at AbsUs; is prtjtsfced by Tetitt:Student V 1 ' V ,Obviously; Mr. Lockwootflsconcerned •Today>I learned that my column in reply • and not give the false'impr.gs;loh that f m _• TJr BaUrTeKM. asUKSesinewspaper Die University t360HBl-tOM)$ai display advertising in TSF BeUAoa Teius classroom teachers foi;. desiring >. higher salaries:, the issue .is not that .MUeatMtr Drawer D. tfaHreratir Station, Aostlo, ttx. The national admtistaf representative of lite Daily • with keeping educati.6n. in-Texas cheap, -to Gallo will also be censored |»cause It iVjX Tie^DaHf 'fccaaJspobiisfed tfanfey.1 Taesday. Tezap is National EdocatknaJ Advertising Servfte. la? teachers should receive more pay. thap and, with cheap ;salawes, attracting, may be "libelous " > / \ \kn^w where I'm going. I wish more of .Wednesday \ Ttarsday, and Friday. September,: tfaroafk • \ 360 lasiogtrt Ave., New York. Pf Y, 10017. \ you had written in-to.tell me what, you dog catchers. The realisable, whicn Mr, Pap,andTaesday. Wedneoday.lbirsdiy^aodFriday Japk i -Tbe Daily Texan .subscribes, to Tfce Associated Vress^ .. thoseof lSsser-caliber with whoih we can BUT WHAT WAS ccnsored is/n6t as., liked; if the mail is any indication, y Mil . iSWi Survival of the imbalanced By GEORGE F. WILL campaign, he had decided Democratic delegate selec­Holiday Inns." The decision °1974, The Washington Post that, "I did not have the tion in a nonprimary system. that the ordeal of a presiden­Company overwhelming desire to be All men are not created tial campaign just isn't worth WASHINGTON -Last June president that is essential (or equal as regards susceptibili­the candle also reveals much, "WW Sen. Walter Mondale, D-the kind of campaign that is ty to jet lag and the othe much of it good, about a per­Minn., and I met in a Beverly required.'' He spoke of desire physical punishment that is son's character It reveals a Hills hotel, where we, among but also was speaking about part of campaigning I don't certain commendable, attrac­ others, had been summoned to stamina. know what the Supreme Court tive balance dilate at length on the subject I plans to do about that But I do We probably should be deep­ •JJET TRAVEL has not madeof the day, "The Presidency, know that, increasingly, a ly suspicious of anyone whocampaigning easier. A kind of Crisis of, and Solution to." candidate must have the wants the presidencyParkinson's Law causes theMondale's solution at the time stamina of a linebacker — an passionately enough to seek itnumber of communities a can­ seemed to be Mondale. attribute not hitherto thought as avidly as it must be sought didate "must" hurl himself The evening before we were to be an essential ingredient successfully In fact, it may upon to expand to fit the to speak, the sponsoring of good statesmanship be that the people who possess capacity of modern transpor­ organization held a reception. Granted, there is another es­ the character traits most tation technology to hurl theI had just flown in from side to this. Physical stress of sential to the achievement ofcandidate around the nation, Washington and was feeling the sort candidates must en­the presidency's vast power — from rally to reception tothe way I always feel after dure is more than just a principally, the searing meeting, until his mind turns five hours in the clutches of an physical matter. It reveals single-mindedness that makes to Jello. This is survival of the airline — dreadful. something about the one immune to physical tor­fittest — if fitness to govern is I CHANCED TO see, across character as well as the con­ture that would kill an ox — a matter of physical stamina. the crowded room, Mondale, stitution of a person. should be disqualified from who is 46 and looks younger, BUT MONDALE, as one of exercising such vast power. And campaigning for the like someone with weird presidency is becoming even his aides put. "didn't want to Such people probably are, 'Our-lands are all ripped off, we are spoken for by a bunch of idiot terrorists and habits, like jogging and eating more demanding The new spend the next two years in strictly speaking, imbalanced. brewer's yeast — but who, we are recognized by the U.N.—WHOOPEE.' Democratic Party delegate that evening, looked as bad as selection rules encourage Letters to the Editor I felt — like the wreck of the competition in the maximum guest viewpoint Hesperus. Misery loves com­ Firing Une letters should: number of state jurisdictions pany so we rendezvoused in • Be typed triple-spaced. and hence will reward the the center of the room, where most peripatetic candidate. • Be 25 lines or less. The Texan reserves the rightI asked a question to whichhis Shoping a new society Furthermore, there has been to edit letters for length. ravaged features were the a mad proliferation of exhaus­ name, By STEVE ROSSIGNOL reached while millions die of starvation in Ethiopia and India; answer: "Does travel, and es­ • include address and phone number of ing primaries, which results (Editor's note; Rossignol is a University goverament major where police files are kept on any and all who question the pecially jet lag, hit you contributor. less from any political and Austin area organizer for theDemocratic Socialist Organiz­status quo. hard?" He said yes, and I, philosophy than from states' Mail letters to The Firing Une, The Daily Texan, ing Committee.) ­ : THE SOLUTIONS TO these evils lies certainly not with con­knowing that he was thinking commercial avarice and a Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, TX. 787)2; or bringDemocratic socialism is perhaps one of the most mis­servative government — experience proves otherwise. Liberal of running for president, said desire to avoid the complexity letters to the Texan offices, basement, Texas Student understood of all political philosophies. Littleminds continueto government offers more hope, but thetrue solution restswith a something malicious, like, and uncertainty of associate it with totalitarian Stalinist-type coftimunism, and democratic radical leadership bold enough to undertake social, "Ha! You'd better get used to Publications Building. general awarenessof democratic Socialist principles haslooped and Socialist, reforms with the support of the people. The peo­it." '< it into the same category as dogmatic authoritarian groups ple must climb out of their apathetic holes in this new move­But just the other day he • I bearing a Socialist label. ment to form a new society. said, in effect, hell no, I won't r In the United States, democraticsocialism has had a verydif-The violenl birth and tumultuous childhood of democratic get used to it. He spiked the • ficult childhood. The influence of Jeffersonian agrarian socialism have passed. We are emerging into an adolescence speculation that he had spent C radicalism has stymied Socialist growth arid weakened its in-filled with hopeful prospects for the future. Following the tradi­a year traveling like a nomad fact, ^ fluence. And to make matters worse, the individualist spirit of tion of Eugene V. Debs and Normaii Thomas, America now has and working like a hod carrier v. democratic socialism, culminating with a three-way split of the Michael Harrington, chairperson of the young Democratic Par- I'm going to college to qualify for a v to stimulate. He said he will n IMA 1 • 1 11 , . .. . . ?. .. . Socialist Party in 1972, has hampered the emergence of any ty for such essential issues as guaranteed health care, tax not seek the 1976 Democratic good paying job someday. cohesiVe Socialist organization since the Great.Depression. reform and an end to poverty and injustice, and other social-presidential nomination. •^ Democratic socialism has been accused of being hopelessly out-cultural issues, DSOC provides the only realistically viable After the not inconsiderable .V moded for American life, but 'this assertion is completely method of reintroducing democratic socialism into American rigors of just finding out if it •J -ridiculous. life. It is essential that we develop a Socialist presence in the would be worth his while un­j, THE ABSURDITY OF THIS fallacious assumption should United States, and especially in Texas. dertaking the incomparably a problem, i«sss; ; J become evident witha quick review of America. The heavily in-IN TEXAS, THIS DREAM is even more relevant. For too worse rigors of full-scale '•dustrial make-up of the United States makes the crisis of iong the Lone Star State has been the bastion of redneck reac­ Jobs are difficult to find today and liUUlfl/ ^.capitalism all the more painful to Americans. Democratic tionaries and plutocratic Dixiecrats who have thwarted almost /CHUCK,INEED will be harder to find tomorrow. • ^socialism becomes more politically relevant than ever when every attempt for progressive social change. Texas needs new ( A FAVOR !• one observes that the United States is the only country in the faces, and this hope lies with the young, be they students or the ^ western world where wealth is a factor in determining medical young rising working class, the intellectuals; and with the new •needs; where hundreds of thousands live in deplorable con­Democratic Party — the party of Frances Farenthold, Gonzalo ditions or go to bed hungry every night; where extremely Barrientos, Barbara Jordan and others. A coalition of these in­ question questionable "defense" needs take priority over the welfare of dependent groups will make our dream a reality. Let us all join •American citizens; where U.S. Steel and other corporations hands. How can I get a job in my field at the ^legally escape paying taxesand where themiddle classis taxed Democratic socialism should be the inevitable political con­ salary and location I want? to the screaming point; where the government openly admits clusion of all who think for themselves; it is the only logical -subversive involvement in the affairs of other countries for consequence of unfettered humanitarian intellectual thought. M" • '-purely political purposes; where military aid is supplied to op-So if you believe that justice, equality, liberty, democracy and I OOtfT H/WE A SKATING pressiveFascist regimesfor thesuppression of democraticdis­brother-sisterhood are more than mere abstractions and are MOTHER10 HELPME SO I sent within thosecountries; where a President, Vice-President, sincerely interested in people and a new society, I urge you to UAS U0NDERIN6 IF HOUR PAP solution UXJULD FIX MY HAIR SEEING Cabinet officials and high administrative aides arefound shaf­please contact me for more information about the Democratic AS HOU) HE'S A BARBER... ting allopposition as well asthe American people; where calves Socialist Organizing Committee at 451-4439 or 7212B Meador UNIVERSITY RESUME & are slaughtered merely where a desired sales price cannot be Ave., Austin, 78752. PLACEMENT can compile a complete resume and match my profile to a job DOONESBURY and location anywhere in the country rWm by computer. SmKTWL.faiiwit, ' im atAchat. SW WILL W ASK HIM? TELL HIM WE'RE FRlENPS AND THAT 8002 sonnet on call 441-2086 UJEVE PUWED BASEBALL TOETHER austin, texas tfu*nd' • FftEt TRANSPORTATION & leave name/number* ^s-• NO CMA*« TO TOU • OPB4 SUNCATS TV£ HAVE THE APARTMENT FOR YOU* £ L CI RSScu 9 WE COVER AUSTir DON'T TELL HIM HOUI Wyrtt.Willilams ALWAYS STRIKE YOU OUT, THOUGH, CHUCK ! St^Asiodalcs nt CALL DAT OR NIGHT Udi.nmttMiJviedit gfUL-fctti/L. ltwttft taJhUkHtkm.Ctkxr, woikr 324S. CONOUSS fhaiiMniUa. 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H ^ ,y ^ r . V, X ^ * "*• /-i — -r . v • for a ring job. We do the job right. .. We take whole freshonions, slice themand dipthem m batter. Then we deep fry them till they're crispy, golden, delicious. Whervyou crave onion rfnjgs, the home-cooked way, drive thru a Jack-itvthe-BoX; .V HAMBURGERS - ^Guadalupe & 26th • Burnet Rd.& N.Loop -ll ­"| V I / V ^ ^ uaryosla moile IS WEDGING AHEAD! WHAT A WAY TO WALK AND WORK AND PLAY IN SUPER WEDGED SHOES...THESE ARE JUST A,SAMPLE OF WHAT WE HAVE WAITING FOR YOU! PRICED FROM 18.00-32.00 mmmgSi ;/ 1102 Highland Mall 234 Hancock Center f Wednesday, November 27, 1974 THE DAILY T]EX&N Page 5­ •sr *?* 3Ssr *$Fv™r % y--.\'; "s^Tir • • V'' •" •• -"' . : ... 1.-.v,.\v' .....-. -S -. ... -. • , • : : • a • -v. ^ . • t. . • .. ; ­ ' • . . ' • • -T '••• \ >.n. r . • ­ Horns Play Aggies for Cotton Here... By ^ERB HOLLAND • The Aggie defense could completely shut down the Texas Texan Staff Writer running attack and win the game. A&Mleads SWC opponents in During the Southwest Conference PressTour, that yearly ex­total defense by an incredible 1,045 yards over 10 games. The ercise in preseason football overkill, Texas A&M Head Coach Aggies' avera^per-game yield is 202.7 yards. . Emory Bellard presented his 1974 Aggies as title contenders. • Or else, theSexas offensecould be the first to overpower ; He went through the-Aggie team roster and said his players theAggie defenseand win. The Horns have a substantial lead in all possessed the mythical "three S's" — size, speed and total offense among SWC teams, averaging373.4 yardsa game. strength. •'The A&M offense could overpower the Texasdefense while the Texas offense isoverpowering the A&Mdefense. Or it could be the other way around. The Texas-Texas A&M game will begin at noon Friday • Either teamjcould dominate both offense and defense andand be televised oaKVUE-TV channel 24 and broadcast make the national television audience wish Alabama and on KLBJ-AM 590. Auburn would hurry up and come on. That's not likely though, but it's possible. "I'm not sayingwe'll winanything," Bellard said that August Anything's possible in this game. Both teams have much to morning, reminding the touring writers of the humility and ap­gam. Texas A&M has much to lose. prehension inbred in him as an assistant coach under Texas For the Longhoms, a victory over A&M and a Rice upset of Head Coach Dan-ell Royal. Baylor could give them a share of the SWC championship for "1will say this,"he proclaimed."This year'sAggie team will their seventh consecutive year, and go to the Gator Bowl as be better, fight more and will be a more competitive football SWC tri-champions rather than second runners up. ­team than the toes of years past" •' "THE GATOR Bowl really is insignificant as far as I'm con­ FEW PEOPLE actually believed the Aggies would dominate cerned," Royal said Monday."I really-can't get excited about it the SWC at that time. right now. However,they have and have been ranked in the Top10 jn both A&M's"offensive line is among the largest in the country Wire polls all seasott. The Aggies find themselves in a somber tight end Richard Osborne is the lightestat 230, and guard Billy situation now ... either beat Texas or watclfthe bowl games on Lemons isthe largestat 280. And they're quick enough tospring l-'s^ television, victims of rotten circumstances and poor bowl game quarterback David Walker or running backs Skip Walker and selection committees. Bubba Bean for'considerable gains. ' V And that adidsan odd twist to thisyear's "Day AfterTurkey" HOWEVER, THE Aggies have a couple of injuries which meeting between A&M and Texas.The Horns are committed to could prove relatively significant Guard Bruce Welch will not the Gator Bowl and Auburn regardless of the outcome of the start against the Horns because of a knee injury. He'll be i A&M game. The Ags must win to gain this year's Cotton Bowl replaced by sophomore Craig Clendenning. watches, rings and other goodies. Skip Walker still is recovering from an injury suffered three If statistics and past performances .mean anything, the weeks ago,but Bellkrd saidTuesday hewas "still not at 100 per­l-C cent yet but his running lately has been very encouraging." • Aggies should Win the game. However, the Aggies haven't won II on Memorial Stadium turf since 1956, and Texas,is coming off Fullback Ronnie Hubby probably Won't be ready for action |s'4 an 81-16 riass murder of TCU and very healthy. , m Friday as he's stiU.nursing an injured'groin." The Longhorns are completely healthy for the game. Friday's game should be a classic example of what happens Sophomore Raymond Claybom is the only personnel changewhen good offensive teams play good defensiveteams. Theonly Royal has made. Claybom, who has alternated both at defen­ thing left to the imagina^|Hi is the possible outcome: . sive safety and offensive'halfback for most of the-season, will start and play on offense. "He's trained, at an offensive -T«xon Staff Photo by DaWci Woo position," Rdyal said. "That's where we need him." Texas' Marty Akins cuts inside into OU linebacker Rod Shoate (43). Sophomore Paul Jette will start at safety while Mike Har­tinger and Alfred Jackson will start at the otterdefensive back positions. ' BELLARD RECEIVEDa new five-year contract to coach the Aggies Tuesday, perhaps an incentive for Friday's game. He said the Texas game would be decided on execution and fun­damentals. Royal said in his Monday press conference that the game Texas Gymnast All'Around Performer would be decided on lack of execution — fumbles. By ALLAN NIGHT In Waco, they're probably not concerned with-how the game on the crown parallel bars. practice, Congdon said the together and difficulty. Monfe^umo* will be won ... just as-Jong as it's Texas. J Texan Staff Writer "My biggest thrill, balance beam still gives her Congdon said her best effort Tequila Coromba Practice makes perfect, at The Baylor athletic department was answering telephones however, was when Iqualified problems. "Ill do all right in was a 7.4 at a meet held last 13£ Monre^umo Tuesday "Hook'em Horns." least for senior Cajey to go to the state meet, last practice, but when I get to year at Texas Woman'sCongdon, a three-year per­year at regionals," the J Tequila meets. I'll get. the shakes." University. Texas Lineups former for the Texas women's Houston native said. she said. 0 Grapefruit Congdon wasn't involved in OffCNSC LE—• DBtNSC gymnastics team. "I usually start ray "THE BEAM takes so much gymnastics college. "I juice TE~ 84 Tommy Ingram 96 Lionel Johnson Congdon, who until -1 Tablespoon LT— 79 George James LT— 77 Brad Shearer student workouts with flexibility Concentration, you just cap't took ballet through high sugar LG-67 Will Wilcox RT-74 OougEngljjh teaches gymnastics at Burnet drills. This consists of mainly let your mind slip, not even school, then at age 16 becameC-57 Bob Tresch RE-97 Travis Couch ' Junior-'High, practices four pushups and situps," Congdon for one second. I try to keep Club soda RG-13 BUI Hamilton interested in acrobatics," she 54 Bruce Hebert SLB- hours a day, five days a week. Shake wiitv cracked RT-70 BobSImmons MCB-35 Wade Johnston said. "Afterwards, I'll work my mind on the end of the said.SE-43 Pat Padgett WLB— 85 Sherman Lee Last year, she was reward­on compulsoryexercises, such beams and at the same time ice.add club soda. Q8-"I was always a tom-boy in 8 FredS«rchetServe inhighball HB— 34 Jimmy Walker HB-49 Mike H®rtlnger as the vault, balance beam, keep my legs straight,'' my neighborhood. Then my 10 Marty AMnt Rov— ed for her efforts by placing HB— 24 Raymond Clayborn WB-2 Alfred Jackson second at thestate meetin all-.bars amLGoor exercises." glass. FB-Congdon said. eyes got so bad that contact 20 Earl Campbell Sat-11 Paul Jette around competition, and first Even with all the hours of Form also is an area in sports had to be ruled out. Of which Congdon feels she needs course, my parents were glad Julian practice. "Many times in a to see me interested ^..gym­ routine, my form just falls nastics rather than basket­ Redfearn apart," she said. ball." Congdon said.OPEN SUNDAYS At meets, judges base their WHILE CONGDON does has plans for grades on form, originality, CUAUHTU not have the qualities of a. $$$ SAVE ON $$$ style, how a routine was put cthe eaglej . your happiness. center for the New York Symbol for the 15th day IMPORTED CAR PARTS Knicks, she does have many of , of The ancient Aztec week GERMAN -EUROPEAN -JAPANESE the assets needed to be a Bevo-U says: ifiBif >* : PINTO-VEGA successful gymnast. She is ' SouttrwesternUfiB 5 Friday the Longhorns are BIG SAVINGS ON AIL VW PARTS small, light and strong. Happiness te vvfjatwo sell going to show A&M how to plant a crop—of Aggies. INTERNATIONAL CAR PARTS Go longhorn>. 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C.hf'4 /rfi. ar-S P Va-i' Ha'iCr r '• 1 But just as the dust (or the T'C, JO"" c-s o-Texas football team) is settl­j a * (.hpfiT-v •. -z.' • NOV. 29 ing on Memorial Stadium at Tt.ot P. r vicge' 8:30 p.m. Friday, Texas will V • v V o r pi-, r -. ; open its 1974-75 basketball Krueger Parson E. Johnson T. Johnson rO V:'' 1 Murphy ry'y"»? JOF V ' season in the Provo, Utah. its 26 games played with ball game was set for Thurs­know what kind of crowd we ll Young should be totally un- P.T Parsor-* '. V :.•• •. r Marriot Center, against with tins sickness thing, andsemester breaks and day. We could have played have," said BYU Coach Gene predictable teams early in the we I] play even more BYl' is likely to dependBrigham Voung University. everything. this game here, but it would haveT been have to Potter. "Crowds season Both teams lost their people than we thought." said heavily on sophomore i-H "For years you couldn't "We really wanted to play have been a problem for some important to us (home scorers last Mark v. ho start your season before Dec. two top from Black Anyone on the team forward Handy. Saturday night, but we of our people. average of 16,251 last year's teams. played every game as 1." said Texas Coach Leon couldn't get a quality team "We've never played during season) " who is very sick can't play for B\ 1 graduated guards freshman last year The BYl" Black." and it became harder verv long scheduled. At the time we the Thanksgiving break As for the playing of tne Doug Richards a'lu Belmont game may be greatly changed and harder for a team to get scheduled this game the foot before, and we really don't game. Texas and Brigham lexas will probably depend Anderson who between them from last year's outside averaged .'14 7 points per shooting offense to a strong in on a run and shoot game. And with excellent shooters like Murphy Krueger. Ed John­ game Texas lost guard Harry side game with good offensive Larrabee and forward Larrv centers Troy .Jones '6-9' and Hill Doubtful for Skins Game son. sophomore guard Hank Robinson Between them thev Jay Cheesman '6-9 DALLAS (AP)"— Dallas Coach Tom Landry said Tuesday it our running game, but we have some backup people who can do produced 36 9 points per Tex­Bauerschlag and sophomore Black will probably give was doubtful ace running back Calvin Hill can recover from a a job." as game center Tommy Weilert. the Bauerschlag. freshman center toe injury in time for the Thanksgiving Day National Football The Cowboys will be eliminated from, the NFL playoffs for "We're looking more for a Longhorn team should be a Mike Lien, freshman forward League game with Washington. good one the first time in nine years should Washington win Thursday. balanced attack.'' said Potter. Gary Goodner and others, . "He does certain things so well that it's so hard for And a Redskin victory coupled with a Detroit loss to Denver W hich is what coaches of most The Longhorns' defensive depending on the flu bug. a m Washington to stop — like falling forward for three or four would clinch a "wild card'' berth in the playoffs for inexperienced teams sav press will probably be great deal of playing time yards after he is tackled," Landry said. "He's the catalyst of Washington Like Black attected by the virus. Defense Even if it is just hours after On another front, quarterback Roger Staubach said remarks "We can't say who'll be do­wasn't expected to be the the Texas-Texas A4-M football he made after an earlier 28-21 loss to Washington "came out ing our scoring " said Black Horns strong point game rCU's Kent Waldrep like I didn't give them credit " "Once we start playing and Staubach admitted he predicted victory over Washington find someone shooting a how they stand To Begin Rehabilitation Thursday but added. "I'd spent the previous three or four higher percentage than the Eo.tr-n Co" •; 389 5 the 2:45 p.m. kickoff. The 5 ei • •; "If I was in Washington's place. I would want to win and virus may affect the starting hurt while running the ball in coming back to Alabama and .Tuttdev t Gomn clinch that wild card spot." Landry said of freshman C'V-o-a-a TCU's game with Alabama lineup Krueger. *' a<-*es :a;c 90 renewing these newfound . "9 : 'C3 o*-sse'r^'fi 99 los Angeies 'OS v '*a.'«ee Landry said his players know they must win their last three Mike Murphy, sophomores He Has been undergoing friendships." • ' "9 ,\ar>~ '02 •"•o-jiton a' Gcioe- games and Washingtonlose their three remaining games to stav S'a-e s treatment in University Alabamians and Texans Rich Parson and Ed Johnson «• .p Sea" e 94 Ne*. oceans at Pice--, s alive. Hospital, where a spokesman organized fund drives that and senior Tyrone Johnson said he was in excellent "They're pretty smart they're not that dumb." Landrv Parson. Krueger. guard Jeff have produced more than $27.­ spirits as he left with his 000 in behalf of Waldrep s said "We've got a natural rivalry with Washington, and we Boothe and forward Bruce $AVE ON VW want to win.'' Baker parents and one eft his two medical expenses Groups are the sickest REPAIRS Landry said Dallas wouldn't set up any special defenses for members sisters for the Texas Institute taking part included the Bir­ for Rehabilitation and former Cowboy Duane Thomas, who has gained a starting role "We're going to be laced (inc. Parts and labor on Beetle) mingham Jaycees, the in the Redskin backfield.' Research in Houston. University of Alabama Stu­ $ Replace Muffler 22.95 Waldrep. a 20-year-old dent Government Association, junior, and his parents asked fraternities and touchdown USE TEXAN Shoe Shop *SALE* $ Complete Tune-up 18.95 that this statement be clubs. 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LA-TOUR-DU-PAS St. DOURO FATHFR« pn«E NarmariEaionb n "tnaise J^estaurarii PEARL CANS 6PAK 1.19 in Dobie Reservations, 1 OLD MILWAUKEE'- J*" ' * MWlklib, CASE 4.19 478-4628 ^ J I a ' ". ' ? .j —Wednesday, November^' 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page-7 1 ' J M C", ' j r —L. 1 . i •'V."• i'i t ' IP 1 . I •11 V "I< ^ ; I ft ' f ,/ *" i '~V~ •-VV v>"f•A— y Bi '• ' J, .. .. 1 s - .X ... wm VilfL'SX The SWC Scene sooth a Teaff, To Watch, .Pray Qu l] 0 r By RICHARD JUSTICE Texan Staff Writer Baylor Football Coach Grant Teaff was originally scheduled to be at the Texas-Texas A&M game and available to speak with reporters at its conclusion. No reason was given for Teaff's change of heart, but the thought probably occurred to Teaff that he would look quite foolish if Texas A&M won the game which would put the Aggies in the Cotton Bowl and eliminate the Bears. Both T^xas A&M and" Baylor can't play in a bowl game, at least not a respectable one. Both obviously deserve to. Instead, Teaff will concen­trate on preparing his team for its game with Rice at 2 p.m. Saturday in Waco's Baylor Stadium. But by the time Baylor and Rice play, the Southwest Conference championship and MARTI'S Austin'* Finett Italian Bataurant All THE HOMEMADE LASAGNA YOU \ . Cole Slaw coXt>e and ,\V*e &eX , Beans $050 ^ ALL YOU CAN EAT UT STUDENT SPECIAL: LARGE PITCHER OF BEER $1.25 WITH STUDENT ID, GOOD UNTIL DEC. 21. We have thegreat Bar-B-Que and the facilities to feed club parties, Sorority groups,Christmas parties and other large gatherings. . Call Us Locally ftr Reservations: 255-3253 or ifno answer ^5-2815 RAR-R- flMllVv-U "M'r-^ -i 111 West Mam Street Monday-Thursday Friday-Saturday Ijl a.nf. -2 jun. iIn Round Rock 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. 'A4* 35 North to Royndltack Exit champion. third in last year's final were beaten only by Temple, Louisiana Tech received 27 ratings. The Bulldogs have the a major college. of 33 first place votes cast to nation's longest winning Texas A&I, which had a edge Nevada — Las Vegas, streak with 22 consecutive perfect 11-0 record, finished which picked up five of the victories. fifth, and perennial power remaining six, by a substan­Grambling State, 10-1, was The UPI national cham­ tial margin. sixth.. Cetitral Michigan was pionship is awarded on the Although Louisiana Tech seventh, and Voungstown basis of the regular season on­ and Las Vegas each finished gained eighth after a late ly. After finishing third last the regular season with charge into the ratings with year, Louisiana Tech went on perfect records, Tech had the an 8-1 record. to the NCAA playoff. advantage of reaching the top Tennessee State, which won spot in the second week of the This season the Bulldogs last year's national cham­ratings and consistently rolled must survive the same road pionship, was 8-2 and finished victory upon vjctory to main­and face Western Carolina in ninth. Western Carolina clos­tain its position. the quarterfinals Saturday. ed out the top 10 with a 9-1 It was the first national Las Vegas also is in Satur­mark. championship for Louisiana day's quarterfinal action . Stephen F. Austin, which Tech, 10-0, which finished against Alcorn State. finished with a 9-2 mark that included a loss to Texas A&I. LIBRARY FINES Boise State, 10-1, received was 11th, and legendary Notices from the University \thp other first place vote and Slippery Roek was 12th with a librory or any of its was third in the final ratings 9-0-1 season. branches are officialUniver­ with Delaware fourth. Boise Alcorn State (9-1), which sity communications requir­ State's only loss was to Las lost its first game of the ing immediate attention. Vegas, while the Blue Hens season Saturday, finished .13th, with Elon (10-1) 14th and FOR YOUR NEXT FUNCTION Moo. -Sot 11 AM NUdnitt Bull Creek a Party" Barn NESTLED IN THE FOOTHILLS A SCANT 6 (3UBIUS MILES WEST OF \.Vrrin* quiche, .crepea, BALCONES RD. ON FM variety of .ujups, talads. and pastrie*. Imported coffees and I CO*. Beers and trtnes. Alt CALL 454-1796 at reasonable price*. The All New GONDOLIER SANDWICH SHOP Italian Sandwiches, Pizza HAPPY HOUR 8-10 P.M. BEER 25' 29th off Guadalupe 477-8413 .TuM-ThMrtll.il Fri-Sun 11-12 OLD MEXICO • 29th & Rio Grando 472-0337 ! 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Room 3.200 and plate your. " .J; Unclassified' Ad | students only ||x^ipre-pait I 1 I I I I I I I hp refunds^ i & Whitis I wrnmmmm age 8;Wednesday, ,, m.THE DAU^/IEXA 1^3? r £* '' *"" <-~ 1P» tie's Troubles Just Beginning By CLAUDE SIMPSON alleges the probes of Gravitt Texan Staff Writer and Ashley by Southwestern. able to almost exactly father's death and the subse­were achieved, the speciousFurther allegations of il­Bell were triggered by their forecast growth, and make quent court action nature of ilie rate setting, the legal wiretapping were level-opposition to those practices the proper investments Dut in "YOU NEED tn understand excessive living standards of ed Monday against and policies. Texas, instead of financing the environment we were corporate who are otficials Southwestern Bell Telephone Company -officials in St. long-term preventive working in." he said, referr­living off the public, the Co. Earlier, James H. Ashley, Louis, declares the suit, ac­, maintenance and long-term ing to his actions after the economic concern and the in­ (#1 former San Antonio commer-cused Gravitt and Ashley of •jpapital investments to keep death of his father "We timidation of the people — all cial manager for accepting kickbacks on right ,$e profits up. Bell has falsely attended to the burial details of this was a little below* the Southwestern Bell, alleged of way purchases and from inflated the level of earnings the settling of {.he estate, and surface ail of the time that illegal wiretapping at suppliers, falsifying expense by keeping investments all the while burying the grief "Kvery citv and town in Bell was commonplace. accounts and appropriating down.'' Ashley said felt and adhering to the to take on we Texas has experts Ashley, who was fired from corporate money to their own "THE CITY of Austin is ex­task of receiving the justice A state utilities commission .••M Bell in late October for mis­tremely in having due us after, wr use. fortunate Shortly will enable the people to deal conduct, is one of four plain­These accusations, the suit Don Butler, as he is one of the started trying to plot strategy with Bell on an equal footingtiffs in a $29.26 million claims, are "totally lacking in most outstanding protectors "Because of the position we But why did it take somethingdamage suit against truth."-of the consumer dollar," enjoyed economically 'which like this to bring it to the sur-Southwestern Bell. MALONEY DECLINED to Ashley added "Normally, Gravitt described as upper tarv'1" he continued mm ssZmsm A number of sources have comment on the merits of the city councils aren't equipped middle class». we didn't have T'ne possibilitv of an out-of­told The Associated Press litigation but said, "The to properly evaluate the need to contend with the problems court settlement still looms that Southwestern"Bell securi­thrust is what good does it br­for rate increases Texas is a that people fortunate over the "It is less controversy ty officers routinely have ing to the people. People have fair value state, and where would have with to contend too ear!, to tell if there will be provided the' information been ripped off (by Bell) from you have 100 different ex­ said Jack "The very helpless situation one Attornev necessary for federal, state the standpoint of duplicity, perts. you're going to get lt)0 I'asqual. co-counsel for the you feel in. with the Bell and city law enforcement slush funds,i. different opinions " plaintiff- Systems $67 billion in assets agencies to conduct illegal "The over-all thrust is GRAVMT \IJUED that iri a —Photo by Tim Tynon Ashley, who has two sons and one million employes, von wiretaps. monumental-. This is the day, particular news storv concer­ Ashley confers with his attorney, Pat Maloney. attending the University, don't know whom to tuist We WITH DEPOSITIONS in the the time and the place. Never ning the suit. Bell officials commented the fact that were very cautious in who v.v suit scheduled to begin Dec. in the history of Bell Maloney added, "If we were sations with two coiripany of­ on worst disaster area (in terms Texas is the one state which staled the plaintiffs were ex­ficials. contacted. lor you never kiiuu 19, lawyers have begun Telephone have people like just talking about money, if Maloney declined to of service). Next to New h'Vefu! for an out-of-court does not have a utilities com­if the lawyer vou just talked to changing information relating Mr. Ashley been dismissed. the people see the moral comment on the nature of the York, ranked Thev Houston was settlement mav have of had >ome association wi'h tlu­ .11 to the case. We're now going to know the recesses when this one is tapes but said they cor­poorest in quality of service. mission "Prevention a those words, to eat he saidcommission has been the No. phone companv and wuuUi run Attorney Pat Maloney, a facts. revealed, others will come to roborate most of what Ashley Austin is considered Southwestern Bell officials now 1 goal of Southwestern Bell. I to them ! leel quite t!:ank:'ui graduate of the University "Mr. Ashley could have light. We're not just talking has alleged. worse than Houston. have declined comment on the don't think there is any ques-. and grateful it occurred this law school, represents the received a hugesum of money about AT&T. A MAJOR CHARGE that plaintiffs in the suit which and a pension for his silence. "If this litigation doesn't in­has come from the suitalleges "In Austin, the customers tion whether the state will get way getting Mr. Maloney suit, saying onlv that the fir­ ing ana felt that the service was a commission. But we've just of Ashiey me in­ charges Southwestern Bell But his silence is not for volve over $100 million in rate that Bell Telephone kept "two "WE HAD TO find someone vestigations of both Ashleypoorer than in any' other city. scratched the surface." with "defamation of sale." savings to the consumer, then • sets of books," one for its with the ability and the spunk and Gravitt were founded. We have not invested the character, libel and slander." Ashley contends Bell it is insignificant. Our con­auditors and one for city coun­ Mike Gravitt a graduate of to take on a corporation such Seventeen Southwestern money we should have. Not They are: Ashley; Mrs. Oleta offered him several hundred fidence has been lacking and cils. Already, four Texas the University, is extremely fis Bell. You need to realize Bell officials \yill be asked to because of the cutbacks, for Gravitt, widow of the former thousand dollars and an early prostituted. Either Mr. cities, including Austin, have straightforward and ar­that with things such as give depositions by the plain­ Texas has consistently been top Bell executive in Texas, retirement. "The amount of Ashley is right, or he's delayed granting rate in­ ticulate when talking of the political contributions, the tiffs' attorneys, beginning the top state. We have' been T.O. Gravitt; and her sons, monies is their (Bell wrong." creases to Southwestern Bell. events that surrounded his-way in which rate increases Dec. 19. Pat and Michael Gravitt. Telephone's) main thrust of Playing an important role in "I was in personal chargeof Gravitt was. found dead in power. And when you control the plaintiffs' case are a half-the Austin rate case," said the garage of his Dallas that many people legally ... dozen tapes, made by Ashley Ashley. "The Bell System residence Oct. 17. His death , the monies that Bell com­while with Bell, of two conver­considers New York City the HVelcome •-I was ruled a suicide. Notes mands is inconceivable to the : _ ' ... were found shortly after layman. If You Need Help wherein Gravitt claimed that "I WAS RESPONSIBLE for or irreparable damage had been collecting $30 million a month. Just Someone Who Will LUten • done to his reputation through In the Texas area^ you are Telephone 476-7073 the questioning of numerous talking about $350 million a At Any Time Bell employes without his be­month. When you consider the The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service ing present about his personal power that money brings . cSTEAK and financial matters. what doyou spend $350million THE LAWSUIT said the on? Can you conceive of the n probe "was maliciously power to make or break :ofALE Restaurants^ calculated to inflict mental millionaires?" Ashley-asked. SoapCreekSaloon distress" and that Gravitt i r "had no power to overcome it Tequila Night ... and destroyed himself." Bump and Grind The suit alsocalls into ques­ Thursday tion the practices and policies of Southwestern Bell in Southern Feeling This Weekend soliciting rate hikes from city governing bodies in-Texas. It DOIIGSAHM IIIIMIIIIMHIIIinilllU 707 Bee Caves Rd. 327-9016 WAGONYARD 1411 Lavaca 472-7315 W 505 NECHES TONIGHT t Blk. W. of Red River 8llllgailMlgil^(yiallail5ipillilEi|Eill^i5illiillalEill TONIGHT STEAM ITACO FLATS SOUTffl IN THE RUSTY NAIL, 24th & RIO GRANDE CEDAR HEAT Daily Lunch Special FROST WW. * SAT. MONDAY -FRIDAY MELLOW BICND 1NCLUES: MEAT. REFRIED BEANS. TACO OLD FASHIONED ll HOEDOWN WITH CHEESE SALAD. TORTILLA & SAUCE 472-0061 PLUMNELLY g^iiiiinnniniii(iiiiifiiiiiiifninn»fmiiiiiiifiiiitiii?iiiniiiiiiiitiii!nnniiimiiiiiiiu£ HOBO 79< PLATE ONLY# # I A DIFFERENT I I DRUMMER I JOHN GARZA = and the Blue Horizon . = § WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY § i THURSDAY -SHINER BEER = § NITE -$1.25/PITCHER = TONIGHT 1 FRIDAY .VIGOR 1 LIVE AUSTIN DANCE ROCK BY | 2405-A NUECES | iinmiiniiitiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii HIGH COTTON -NO COVER ­ (UVE MUSIC STARTS AT Ago) W DOORS OPEN: 8 HAPPY HOUR: 8-9 ' TONITE 'COME TO THE' •THtit bARTH 914 N. LAMAR 477-3783 J > 4 BEAT A&M PEP RALLY Live Entertainment Featuring SPRINGFIELD WEST Happy Hour Moil. & Sat. 4-7 THE BUCKET 23rd and Pearl NEXT DOOR TO MARTI'S ITALIAN RESTAURANT -3 HRS. FREE PARKING I 727 W. 23rd 476-0015 EVERY MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY TRY A THE CULTURAL ENTERT*^, *MMITTEE OF THE n NOV 29 LOGSP^S & MESSINA FRENCH FRIES AND A 1 SOFT DRINK Sunday /December 1/City Coliseum/7:30 pm %s| i v TiQket Sales: $2 with Optional Services Fee/Nov. 14-Dec 1 Hogg Bo^ Office#10-6 weekdays ' ' ;'ADVANCE TICKETS: -OAT WIUIES. • INNER SANCTUM & . - General Admission: $5 / Nov. 26-27 (til il ! ARMADILLO GARDEN . r : ANNOUNCING: OPENING ACT TOM RUSH Festival Seating: Bring Blanket . • lO's must be presented at door. i'V . I­ ^ No cameVas or tape recorders a1lpy/ed. y Bus schedule: Jester. Kinsolving. Co-op /6:30J7 pm -f ^Wedpesgay, Novj^ejr 27, 1974 THE,DAILY TEXAN,Page 9 J .1 . . • . ' . , ' ^ \ ^ " • Wmmmmx WmmmSM. By DEBBlfe JAMAIt periment" for both; TexanStaff Writer Kottke, who started playing the guitar at 12 without any for­"The Girl -.From Hawn actually succeeds in and: effective as Linda presented as the viewpoint of Petrovka;" Zanuck/-squawking* American The crowd looked pleased while heading out the back exits of mal training, except for a "few violin lessons," has been play­a discarding-her Lovelace running for presi­an — it's not, Hogg Auditorium. They had jdst savored tlie brilliance of Leo ing publicly for 12 years. Brown-KMA-Robert Ellis giggly "Laugh In" image and dent. however; it's simply the set­Kottke's performance, and the only delayed reaction was the "In Europe, they say my music is so American you can cut it Miller production; starring substitutes -the. warmth and Life in Russia is depicted -ting Of the movie, thrown in realization that they had just seen the 9:30 show Sunday and it with a knife, r never knew how they arrived at this, but I've Goldie Hawn, Hal softness of a child-like woman . with a McCarthy mentality, our laps like so much spilt was too late to go back and get a ticket for another set. been able to concentrate on some bf the guitar masters and Holbrook; at Village instead. She also.-sings and i.e., Russians are poor, op­vodka. Cinema Four. At 9 p.m. the same night, Kottke was sitting in his cramped realize what they're talking about. It's like a patch work quilt, dances here, andshe proves to pressed masses who come to dressing room, and several autograph seekers were ogling the or fried chicken, I guess. I just play whit I like. By WILLIAM A. STONE^JR. be quite a competent little ac­market in tattered clothing .Watching "Petrovka" is rather like watching grass two 12-string guitars (one is .curiously named Bozo, after a "Playing is such a personal enjoyment. It's hard to unders­Texan Staff Writer tress. -amidst poverty in the streets; Yugoslavian who hand-made the instrument for Kottke). A lef­tand how other people can get'So much pleasureout of someone "The Girl From Petrovka" The tr'q'rib.iey%with" " Russian authority is exercised grow, because it's damned tover Dr Pepper that one of Kottke's managers found in the else's very personal experiences. Everyone is the same way." has to be one of the least "Petrovka"'is not the acting, with no mercy and no justice hard to detect any movement, refrigerator was passed around. eventful, least effective, least aod even if one does, it's aw­ SOMEONE asked Kottke about his voice, .which he once it's the dialogue and the set­(e.g., Hawn is sentenced to . In jeans, wool sweater and some Minneapolis winter track described as similar to a particular sound' made by geese on a inspiring movies I've seen in a ting. Hawn is given countless five years at hard labor for fully boring. t shoes without socks, Kottke exchanged words with hisdevotees. muggy day. ^ long while. The story is a lot pithy profundities to throw at having a love affair. The Even harder to swallow ism The legendary, shy, reserved, accomplished musician identity, "I've been listening to everybody sing these days and it's like "Love Story" set in Holbrook (mostly in the guise -movie is set circa 1980s, and that someone actually liked which people expected of Leo Kottke,. soon disappeared. helped improve what I've got." Russia, and the movie even of "old Russian sayings"), this type of propaganda might "Love Story" enough to steal QUESTIONS came from all sides, and Kottke filtered them pays homage to "Love Story" Kottke has had bouts with tendenitis, which doctors had told and they're about as realistic have been valid if it were from it. him needs surgery if he wants to be comfortable. Kottke just out, answering the ones he had never had to answer before. when Holbrook says of his "Everyone is worried about the significanceof my new album past: "I took a degree at Har? runs his arm and hand under cold water, and it seems to doihe s. cover; the truth is, my manager just happened to have this job. ' * vard and a mistress at mask with him, and while we were looking for a cover idea, we Radcliffe." I almostfell out of *Boggs' Belches Still passing the Dr Pepper. Kottke began to tune his guitars, noticed an uncanny resemblance between the mask and him — my seat when he-said this, and tie ins shoes and prepare for the next set. "Are the audiences "The Lester Great Ark. If that doesn't give you beer bottles bustin' acrosfe the so, we used the idea and thought it would suffice." 1 started feeling nauseous here always so quiet?" he asked in preparation. "I guess the Boggs;" directed by.Harry gas then throw In a little teeth, har har, while the band He mentioned an album he is how preparing with Michael first show is always quieter; we'll probably have the1 rip-when Holbrook began wearing Thomason; starring Scott romantic,pap and some vapid bar-room plays a brawl Johnson. It will be his first duet cut and, will be a real "ex-snorters out there now." a Harvard T-shirt. MacKenzle, Bob Ridgley, tragedy. breakdown.HE WENT on stage after the Quasars (a barber shop quartet In "Petrovka," "Holbrook Willie Jones, Alex Karros; MacKenzie has all the ac­There are a couple of which Kottke watched from the exit and liked), and began his plays an American journalist at the Texas and Aquarius . ting talents of a mod-haired scenes, after rHSE^raiT",| humorous set with.a medley of "San Antonio Rose" and "America"the in Moscow while Goldie Hawn IV. , • 2^*>j&_Ouqdolupe Setond level Dobie Mail 477-1324 Ken doll, and he talks like he Karras, a sort of Hoss Beautiful." His right foot wagging like the tailof a hungry dog, masquerades a By C.A. RICHARDSON wears Cartwright-type as Russian some flowers in -his (only • SCREEN "Brilliant ... Mtriick makes he ordered the lights to be cut down to dusk level and told a ballerina. Surprisingly, both Texan Staff Writer mouth. He sets off on a motor­dumber), finally shows up SO 1:00-2:50-4:40*1" a dazzling debut' story which opened up his compositions. of them act well here (with cycle with a "tapioca tree" in "The Great Lester Boggs'" minutes into the movie. And He's the only musician I've ever seen who smiles the whole 6:30 8:20 10:10 SV° —Bmce Williamson. Playboy Holbrook acting better, but is a flatulent mixttire of the side car searching for his Ridgley is often hilarious as a time he plays. that's to be expected), and several movie cliches which SELF. What he finds is a .nice, perverted Crazie. He alleges to be a comedy. black hustler hltchin' arotind handles the few good lined of Today at Presidio Theatres The recipe is complacently the country' and the the movie well, and he simple. Mix together one moonshine swillin' Boggs. manages to develop the onlywealthy young adventurer TOGETHER, they fight off interesting character with a (Scott MacKenzie), one jive some • outlaw bikers riding highly comic sense. VILLAGE 4 "nigra" (Willie Jones), and "garbage wagons" — a lot of But all of a sudden these few one besotted stung pilot, slow-motion bike crashes — good points are shattered Lester Boggs (Bob Ridgley). and a bunch of sleazy when" Sunsan Denbo, who Then stir in Sheriff Billy (Alex rednecks who hate "damn no-MacKenzie has been wooingThere U^nothing more savage Karras) and let simmer in good hippies." Howzabout a with all of the plasticity he rube-infested Mountain Glen, few slow-motion scenes of can muster, is accidently kill­ RII ERSIDI than the ftuman h^art in need ed with a shotgun by her @ INTERSTATE THEATRES mother, in slow-motion of course. Why? No one knows or cares. Undaunted, our insipid You'll FEEL it: as well as see it! threesome are off for new adventures. Why am I writing this? Why are you reading it? "An American Comedy." Yuk-yuk. SENSUmnilNB and Holly. Students7 Attorney The student*' attorney*, "See 'BADLANDS'! The film is sp dense* Frank Ivy and Ann Bower, with contemporary emotions that it should" are available by appoint­ be seen at least twice"—Valerie Wade. Andy| ment from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Warhol's Interview • Monday through Friday in ItoTuni Malm* mumrWMA**./vsr:wsrecuacN THESAVAGE 1158445 19 !2:50 Mao-fri Speech Building, Room 3. - | £20-7.-40 Us) Telephone 471-7796. The \tfa^MuadjdlVribylw£NCE MALJCX ~ ilvdenli' attorneys will and IHshVanDevere handle landlord-tenant, :g|$& coniumtr protection, THE UNIVERSE SAVED...TWICE!* employes' rights, taxation tisii ivtouuiuainm (IN ONE NIGHT)! and insurance case*. tuiliiiii MatiN* til 1HN Mao-fri 140 in 53# JM f: Criminal cases and domestic; problems. \ VILLAGE 4 §v? ',-Jf-ik YWHR STATES MOVE-IN Show IOUN USA ''"tT Hnini wp ififl '•pi IMUUI -ill BOX pmct OKN 6iM IfffW SHOW STARTS 7:00 •^P& [PBL"5Kgggjg JBSI 81 AUMfiHnCHK'TEOMCOU]L*fNHCON* do|ttotheCLA. Gene Sha6t.N8C-TV iglMl MM I uMxurnRssriatr &. Charles ChampBn, Los Angeles Times ' • FEATURES aWiOfllu>» Fmpifsmts 1:10-3:20*5:•30-7 . PASS , K»J UST VARSITY IsSi! |Art Ingo PremingerProduction SUSPENDED Coltr bjOELUXE* 525! ­^ rAHAVlSION* ABM HELD *2" 2:00 4:30 I 8:20 10:50 EACH QVEg| BOTH 7:30 9:301 IK iMIDHIGHTIRS $1" NIGHT EVOY HE OUT­ I Screen 1 ART CARNEY GIVES THE 10 minutas past midnight| PERFORMANCEOFHIS CAREER, The most sensational"movie • A CERTAIN NOMINEE FOR THE ever produced by HowardI NEXT OSCAR" iMSMn, • ncAi uaofwi.^ Hughes! Made in 1940 and • Held up by censors for years, I "jhe Outlaw" eclipsed theI Americas-most stir caused by "Gone with 5 bizarre and bruts' crimes. ALL... WITH HIS the ' Wind" and was adver-1 ..... »i»ed with "WHAT ARE THE 5 TWO GREAT REASONS FOR| iHElBMS IANE RUSSEU'S RISE [STARDOM?" CHA1HSAW KUNG FU FIST! Birfaia MtlisM Til I2i4S Mofc-Frl. Fsatirts 12:45-2)304iIS-6t00-Ti4S>9(30 I TH&CHINEl'E 1'HE lAKIMI] GOOFHTHEili Wu Chin -Ting Pei PlnkWu ONE TWIJ COLOR "The Final Oays of K M MM w Exclusive featiirette^ RIVERSIDE The BoomYuu Luve A Urf onFiim-inMovtetf. Han* • including the funeral of the late I®!BBJICg-'XEEt"* " iwpif.ifaiteMtiiiarjiM-frt, t starts , .$1" til 7:00 mm mm • .. tuftingPhf • . ..4JON?NG(TYJVEURA^U.SI*UAIFRFITFFTV«TMHIr'twrmg fM r-V t: <• FEATURES «' ®ODFATHER-«IP5 8:50 TODAY1 .> lEE-7;33 9i30 ,,,-f J -V: S«iS US v ^ ? •, _t\ u jk ^ryWffL- Mixes Crime With Cynicism . "The Taking of Pelbam One Two Three;" directed by saturated with this sort of movie now, the way it was around ly, its cynicism. When the passengers ask the amount of the ran­ in just about anything. In comedy, however, he's best, and Joseph Sargent; "produced by Gabriel Katzka and Edgar Christmas qf last year when every release seemed to be a cop-som, to find out "how much they're worth," Shaw tells them a "Pelham'' provides him an ideal vehicle to use his brand of J. Scherick; screenplay by Peter Stone, based on the action thriller, and there just aren't many surprises left. million dollars. Says one passenger with a shrug: "Aw, that's relaxed, shuffle-along humor novel by John Godey; starring. Walter Matthau and ("Juggernaut," of course, is a refreshing exception, but the not so much." I might add that "Pelham would be a real treat for anyone : Robert ShaW; atVlilageCinema Fourand Aquarius Four. success of "Juggernaut" was due wholly When the mayor of to director Richard New York City tells his aide he doesn't who's lived and breathed New York CHy Inherent to theBy WILLIAM A. STONE JR. Lester's adroitness for keeping everything in a low, satirical want to go to the scene of the crime because one of the hijackers movie's cynicism is a satirical' jab directed at the city'sTexan Staff Writer key, avoiding sentiment and melodrama.) might shoot him, the aide reassures him: "Don't worry, sir. prevalence of crime and chaos — a prevalence which jades New Alas, another crime-action thriller has been unloaded on the WITH "PELHAM,"' the hokey melodrama stays intact, They won't try to shoot you.".Retorts the.mayor: 'Why? Are the point they EXPECT The roarKet: ''The Taking df Pelhan>One Two Three." I've mixed replete with a frantic motherand her bawling brats aboard the they from out of town?" q ! . Yorkers to where almost it. passengers on the train are more worried about missing an im­ feelings about this one because half of it is almost enjoyable; subway, along with, a veritable melting pot of ethnic Screenwriter Peter Stone h?si filled "Pelham" with verbal portant appointment than they are about being shot; the subway the other half isn't. ' stereotypes: a black homosexual, a Spanish woman, ah old gags such as these, and a good many of them are funny. The system employes are more worried about a train backup than Basically, "Pelham" is a crime yarn about four men who hi-Jewish man, a cheap hooker and a grubby alcoholic. about saving lives. problem is that they sound as though they were written for a 60­ • Jack a New York City subway train — and its passengers. This When was riding the subway ever this interesting? minute television show; the ending of each scene isneatly punc­The point here is that the "crime 11 getchya if the monoxidepart's boring, primarily because the industry is becoming tuated with one of Stone's zingers, and their presence becomes don't." and to a New Yorker that's the gospel. When the passengers are told they're being hijacked,some of a little obvious after the first 30 minutes. Still, they're worth a them actually break out laughing — they don't seem to care chuckle in spite of their predictability and only once is the about what's'happening to them, and consequently, the Laguna Gloria Museum cynicism carried too far (the scene where the mayor is shown Chinese Opera Theater audience doesn't either. Walter .Matthau, thestar of this movie, as a simpering idiot who can't blow his nose much less make a probably realized this and he exploits it beautifully, taking it Schedules Registration decision. Let's face it, politicians may not be capable of making slow and easy while all else crashes down around him main­ sure To Stage Performance inteiligeni on-the-spot decisions, but they make damned taining a deadpan throughout theaction. About the only time we Laguna Gloria Art Museum Laguna Gloria at 452-9447. they don't let anyone else know that; the mayoi here does, will hold registration for its During the 10-week spring ever see him smile comes in a priceless scene where he dis­The National Chinese Opera Theater will perform excerpts though, and his portrayal looks like something out of a Mel from six famous "operas" at 8 p.m Sunday in Municipal spring semester of art classes session, classes will be covers, to his chagrin, that four Japanese representatives he Brooks farce). THUS, filled with a cynicism that's entertaining and a sto'-y Dec. 9 to 22 and Jan. 2 to 12. offered in the morning, after­has been grossly insulting understand English. Auditorium. The program produced by Rod Kennedy, will feature an 80-member company making its debut appearance in Registration may be made in noon and eveningand are open "Pelham" even employs the old bit of having the bad guys that isn't, "Pelham" is none of those movies in which long Austin person at the:Museum or by to the entire community. (headed by Robert Shaw) fight among themselves, with one stretches of boring ploy delineation are separated by The operas performed will offer an array of ancient Chinesemailing in registration forms Roth beginning and ad­member departing from' the master game plan. Moreover, in strategically placed punch ijnes, and if it weren't for Matthau's dance, drama, ritual sword fighting, nume. Kung Ku. clowningavailable at Laguna Gloria. vanced students are en-terms of plot, the ending of "Pelham'' is one of the most performance. "Pelham" would be fairly run of the mill. and acrobatics The spring semester-will-couranged to, -enroll, .and ridiculous I've ever seen — it reduces the artof crime detection Matthau plays basically "the same character he did in "The The company is touring the I nited States Austin is one of 30 begin the week of Jan. 13. classes are kept small to to the point of absurdity. They probably left it in because Laughing Policeman." but in "Pelham," "Policeman's" veil of cities it will visit Brochures for the classes provide a high level of everyone was sick and tired of the story anyway. seriousness is lifted and how it makes a difference. Matthau Tickets are on sale at 661:) N Lamar Blvd.. Sears in Hancock may be requested by calling student-faculty interaction. THERE IS, however, an enjoyable part to "Pelham." Name-knows what he's doing and generally, he's passable if not good Center. I university Co-Op and Inner Sanctum Record Shop II. All seats are reserved ANNOUNCEMENT FROM THE TEXAS UNION television ADULT MOVIES MUSICAL EVENTS COMMITTEE Be Sure and Register for 5 FREE GREMLIN 6:90 pjn. P&rdr»er«," produced by Chip ' 9:30 pJ"1. 7 Good Times Dunaway ? Mele' Hawaii RATED X The Symposium "THE IADS FROM LIVERPOOL: "GO-CARTS" to be given away Dec. 24th at all Not lutfabJe tot young person* A TEN YEAR PERSPECTIVE ON THE BEATLES" by Dee Brown 10 "Esse Est Precelpi" — an adap­7, 24, 36 -News originally scheduled for the week of December 2 has been Trans-Texas Theatres! 9'Book Beat — "The Westerners" 7:15 p.m. lOpjn. Mint be IB yrs. to enter 24 l Dream of Jeannle tation of Sarrv/el Beckett's "Film/' 9 School Talk *'*' Open lOiOOQ.m. postponed until the week of February 17 due to difficulty in Go-Carts Courtesy Austin AMC-Jeep 36 News produced by Cinny Riddle 10:30 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. 7 p.m. 7-.30 p.m. 7 Movie, "ivanhoe" starring Sun. 12 noon -8 p.m. acquiring sufficient resource materials that would assure 7 The Thanksgiving Treasure 10 "Late Nlte Austin," Rooftop Robert Taylor, Elizabeth Taylor and proper treatment of the subject. FEA: 2:30-4:00 Adult Bookstore 9 Feeling Good Productions George Sanders / 5-25-6:55 We would also welcome any suggestions for discussion 24 "Godipell" 9 The Life of Leonardo D« Vinci — 10 Let Your Light Shine, Vide-O-2 Adult Shows Weekly topics, displays, speakers and other resource material that 10 Time for Signs No. 40 8 pjn. 9 Soul 25* Arcade 8:20-9:50 j6 Robinson Crusoe Episode Two Works Coll for ritles 477-0291 could be included in the program Please direct your STARTS TODAY! 7:10 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 24 Wide World Event — "California $1 OFF with this ad suggestions to the Texas Union Program Office. Texas 10 Progressive Country — "The 7 G.E. Theater: "Things in Their jam" Insanely funny, outrageous and irreverent. or Student ID Season" 36 Tonight Snow Union South. or call 471-4721. The Musical Events Com­ 521 East Sixth A Kir 9 p.m. 11 p.m. mittee would like to apologize for this postponement 9 In Recital 10 Dead Flowers, Vide-O-Works Slupirt fijrr ,— USE TEXAN WANT ADS 36 PesrocelM 24 "Annie and the Hoods" fi THEATRE PLEASANT VALLEY ROAD SPECIAL JUST OFF EAST RIVERStDE DRIVE 444-3222 SHOWCASE" NO BARGAIN MATINEE ^i Sl.SO Hi 6 -FEATURES 2:S5-5;15-7:30-9:50 SlJO tit 6 P.M. Mon. thru Sat. NOTICE ALL PASSES SUSPENDED FEATURE TIMES AQU~ARIUS:4 FEATURE TIMES The year is 1963. A dreaded secret organization known as the ODESSA • ­ 1:00-2:45-4:30-6:10-7:55-9:40 1:50-5:10-8:30 started at the endof World War II...begins its master plan. The first step: ADULTS S3.00 CHILD S1.25 DON1MISS BOB RIDG£LY "MONGO" $ the destruction of the state of Israel. A young reporter is prepared to risk Because of problems with his !>fe to expose the deadly truth. TheTrial AND ALEX KAPPAS our distributor STARRING in the vear's funniest picture JON V0IGHT • MAXIMILIAN SCHELL Billy Jack CINEMATEXAS regretfully an­ THE Ipp DELORES TAYLOR nounces that its planned ~TOMLAUGHLIN 1-^"! ODESSA FILL $1.50 Til 6 P.M. screening tonight of two early FEATURES 2-4-4-8-10 THE STORY IS versions of DR. JEKYLL AND "THE" TRUE. THE HHl DwimijBF PELHAM MR. HYDE has been cancell­ENDING WILL ONE TWO THREE' ed. STARTLE Y0U.I ED United Artists WALTER MATTHAU ROBERT SHAW SI.50 til 6 p.m. ITECHNICOLOR• FEATURES TIMES IH itkMM t) (MMtltlt » 1:00-2:45-4:30-6:10-7:55-9:40 TODAY OPEN 7 juri. Austin ­ Features at 7:20-fc25 p.m. MATINEES THURS. Our Changing thru SUNDAY AN AMERICANCOMEDY T-^fe ,-;i '• KAWW THEATRES, .ill Environment i. HB"trans7TCXAS " FOX TWIN NOW! OPEN 1:45 VST WtfOtT WVD. I4S4-27111 THE GREAT LESTEKtOMS FEA: 2-4-4-8-10 I --ANAtSaCANCOGW WI REDUCED PRICES Tit 6:15 0LUMBIA PICTURES/ A DIVISION OF COLUMBIA PlCTURFS INDUSTRIES. INC •*£-[ ' :«T.'1>fT J UJ2200 Hancock Drive—453-6641 (Mon.-SoU PHOTO TODAY 7:05 and WELCOME TO SCENIC *15 p.m. ATOKA COUNTY Pbp. 10,000.Cross burnings.Rape.Arson.Murder. It's a greatpiace tolive ...if THEY let you. Extended Deadline 'til Dec. 2. 5.\00 p.m. Bring or send entries to TSP Bldg. 4.102. Entries will be judged primarily on the content so get out i™1* \ your cameras. For further information, contact Stu­OUraiLWirprviMtt AroguELELumrred A VtTStIDXT An dent Government Office, 471-3721 For further incentive -$175.00 cash ROGER SUSANN/ prizes MOORE YORK GOLD Sponsored by Union FineArts Committee.Student Govern­naorauM Muuaunmb ment Environment Protection Agency.Peeri Jester Ecology MATINEES THURS. tfcre SUNDAY Force . GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION |ALL CINEMAS EVERY DAYSI^S'TIL1:30 CAPITAL.PLAZA, 4S2-7M4:. IH35MCMTM. ­ ' TODAY at -1:00 3:10'5:20 '^TH|UINGESTVARD 7:30 9:45 axop8rTECHfcitbi6*J. A wctupp SIMPSO THE KLANSMAN Technicolor HIOilLANDMALL TRANS*TEXAS 451-7356 • IH35 ATKOENKUM. KOKE MON.-THURS. OPEN 6:00 URNET274afe/> S1.50/CAR w/sticker FEA 6:30 T -' TODAY at MOO Burnt! Road t5b 6911 1975 -12:00-2:00-4:00 6:00-8:00-10:00 * ffifa *UMYEPSW. PtCTUre'^' ;!§§ TKWflCOUOR' WWYSION* RESTRICTED .-h•••.' h-f­ mm |^^45j3jOO^tt^3^j4d m-]"THE TAHNG OF PELHAM ONE TWO THHEE" . . ™ ENGAGEMENT* XmLTEH.MATTHAU •RDBERT SHAW-MARTIN BALSAM HECTOR EL1Z0ND0 • ft**** hrGABHIEL KATZKA EDGAR J. SCHEBICK , v .,, Sowi^wPETmi,STONE -; .huk wnishiw .o«ti»nn]OSEPR'SARGENT •j' / HELD OVER PIUS AT toklNdFORCHRISTMAS 1. :. AT BOTH THEATRES ;: iSSr :.FEATURE TIMES', Iff 'TOWERING INFERNO"! Wednesday, November 27, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11; : w»JL * rf" t -1 x/ &£(& »'* i«-;j Mii^y^s.-^it-^j^tM^niii-r-iV frr-• '••, ?•-"" •--'•• 4 iia.ittf•'•• 1,y.:<*•_ .. s ttfckrc? r?x 1-^ii S -IMW | ss BHHwi Sil8lis88rePB8» s ""l -y } >?SsJ§ EavH •••-:'• O'V • Eac~ <*;'£ T 4 • "v>v Esc" »o' J 5 ® ••~*'> i :s SAC-~cc •: ?• • :•'J*? ?i.~ • ->c *i se C an • *\: ? sc 3. • cc. i -v -,-f • ->* s: :> • co » ^ es. s: ».* r OCaDONE SCHEOUU I MondCT 'tlO"-'mOO» 2 00 9 *• | Tv«-»oo> *»•«•} **o.->oc> 'I 00 o r I W»«Sf<«MO) 'tis** T v*i0a y ! ! JO o " ! T s^*<30t *•10'" W»«n»VOa, OC O ­ • ) *•«<»«» T"«UfvdO^ " X 5 ' tn **>• «»«Of of *tr9f\ no«« an n 0*S»<-*'»»r'\#r«« lfr>rrv^-^Qf« rvo'K* "»!' O# 9»»#ri ot »S« pvbJnH»r» or* 'ttp«"xM« •«' orfly ONE >!><©»»•«• Alt cle"«» *0' odtv«>m*nti V^OVKJ Cx mod* not ^a>»' •Hon 30 3o*» a** W* pvblKOMS^ i ^ c0»\ S'v^tN* ?i*> v ! 'J ~c-3 — -— *3, , J,; ! Eac"aoo •-oc.a *c"2 ?ac~ "rt# j oa»$ $' • ^r#oa:S NO R^unOi J Sfyflen's -^uS' sr C '•» AtC!';r s ' rece>D*s anc ca> •.-! aa>anc* r-t$p I B'og 3 200 .25'* L A» • * :s~ 5 !! i a ~ 'o ijc c n ssonoa* •I'o-jof Fr>ca> ; •' FOR SALE Auto -For Sale • t S^_ fir^C-3 . • c' i'.r--• -• a ':» • ; • 3-a •. ;c»e'a^» J.A 3 r •? "s't=. a^c Avvc<" d*e; -iS» *;J •Osi', ---. H'sV'j iV : 3U> •ra*» r>c 4*5^4:4 H' "Si < Motorcycles - For Sole V. • S' S K< Stereo -For Sale FP : C A L. . ST E REO EQU PMEN BE 4 A -': '•. :• T ;C *::: ; • ._ ; O t '' ". •' u -: • SPE A -E » ; --;; •, v ;. Q~£>r-iZr, SE F THPV NO// ^' STEREO CENTER 203 East t9th (5 blocks East ot the Drag; 476-6733 476-0198 Homes -For Sale ?,?I£.RVD0PLEX ,or sate "V owner. S2K500 Close to 4JT campus In quiet neighborhood. In goodcondition. Each 2 bedroom uolt has 936 square feet. Assume efcWIng loan of 1H>700. Will equ"y Ca""3 tm.'ml^xStb^a M' ~+-'' ' ^.56tt^r­ Smiltw>rf*ivi T—ii V Hir-i 'u•><.. «?j •, •x* % ^ -*" "* FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. Musical -For Sale WALK TO CAMPUS OAK CREEK L£A«?N to pla> tA? SOv> •-(' AND BEAT THE BUS and aavar>cc> o. e' se" -4 s X" CLARINET SELV-ER I: >e-«»> O-.xv *'kv C i.'S <*>?<'' C U 3* iO • .• .» " Ii2 bedroon-. Cort5'»«or« ^?00 U' t«6 <. x R v-HCS. SP 4*7 ';ij a0e '•-unf umuheo '507 Houvtor St 454-63^4 G'SSON S3S T0 E'et" K ->c-.c+ ^V-?. 'eo ceiling priva'e ;»•• »ar wfh -• •.-,'-v: • .'•• sc-^ev'ef leaves From 5135 -.0^ 5^f 00 l?'-7&06 VAR^'N &U:LC G rw HALLMARK j^ata 'aM ?c• r5-^ ••* - MOVE IN v o" a» S' ac «* .iS' 'CS -5 • APTS. TODAY BEAT $140 2 Bedroom S"115 -SI30 708 West 34th • •• '-'••janO OlH-rnnKv 'f«»0s .'%­ INFLATION • -V " '"' V.^ajfr -s,-•; C-J ' *A R STR!SC. 5E'; x» .>-454-8239 ' • • *j; •: ]« —»-'\ER «1RV0S ,iv .,., • A VAWA C«U!TARX . ,... *. .'. . t ASiNG cc» i\ AAASTER MUSIC CREEKSIDE )6?4 Lav ac 3 •»K >' ec-1 v*>ac n.i—:.v> :\> • •• La Canada -"'4*0 '?35 i j )C 0 Car**?1 0'J"'>."^ ^-;; 4." * A A; » SMV • '. t w3~»d' 4S4-637­c • R c A 0 O D c.-s' -a. SOv\ l£ as sg i ,r, CREEKSIDE S3? '9 -"9\ ^ea.* •:.•• j.'.V 1 BR • S125 BILLS PAID S 5Ct .s 3 S­ !•••. • 'a c -s".a^ a d » •• \ •-: 5®£EC 3 k £ s 1• . MARK XX • •.*«"• ta-* . *. ."•-? .ea-cc Nc* $:?•= v :• • •• .•-V4< 4'> 53:4 ;• .144 .• $-ac« 4":c:5 *ALE:G»" SL-E^ .. s -• •; A •j ~?-e» i o^s* ;-•." -r-• •• LOOM NO PGR APARTVEV* Stfa' v N?v. s'tC X . » a** • ; VAV >4 SS^C X-; -$190 '.iTH CH A R AC T t R -• *^a:e •• v :v ._ -..»• ••­ 2 Bedroom :ase s' 3C 4'; ?Jr* •-.*• ­CK :ngharn Square E 5u y BOCK $ "a • o-.-• ^i.aca 474 ?;o^ P S e O *. E E"V = V;?5 •• -• ­ 'ccDe<3 stcvf *.t--s i.; i*; ;j HABITAT v Z ESCHE^SA ;.Vftrs*r* a" r : *v*s ';ea. :- HUNTERS ." cc" oi '•?' • 5E AQ-:» 5 -si;! i&: .rbD A GPF-" • 'J i ,ACE TO L ; . T TRY THE :n =" • : s:c. •. •. 3LACKSTG\E A P A R T V E N T S F r;P ­ S115 -END ' 0 : A V E S20C : L US r" = 3E ST CE 3P: 1 N TOV\N 1" BEDR' A K T V.E ' FURN. APARTS. O f'-j Pi T' ' •5 'JU A k : v'V E R ti i'-J AUSTIN • -A .-.-r 4 a'--• * r;er3'v0ri acar'rr.c-tv : 0^2'. iaofltfry T ,•«• ^,5^ PARAGON One oeOroor^ Sl6S A t' ut.'.r'.««. 54^ O'OCV* »o campus riear-WC. -.r.^vU /5?0 . APT f 'a.n Torrgrpyhiq"ue< W19 Wett f ve. 474-1712 . Apartments 610 Aesf 30»h, No U3 47? 6889 24TH AND LEOn 'AII bliTs^paidV Mint-472-4175 ;efttclency tn2-50.Efficiency $135/ i mr>1 SUBLET FOR Spring Semester'!-;bd'r~'2 •Bedroom $245 2408 te^n. 476-3*67 jj^vvillow ^Jreek Apts SR/RC routes. 27^1974 THE DAILY TEXAN ^ ' SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS QINNY'S COPYING WHITESTONE SERVICE INN INC. .'819 RK, Grandr - •>. s 'i rcxas 78?t>! 472 723® 42 Dobip MaM 476-V ! 7 1 ••• •• ."• '•••! 'hosi' .V 'i[ ••. Pree Parking ••• 'HM' .( r rj . S'to •vj.. 11 > 11 i. i111 476-9093 ALUVN REFLECTION OF YOUR NEW LOOK 'V^A'^.A s .1 S, O R A |_ oe S : G\ v ; A S S b S SK YD! VE TRAVil jROOM & tO © TOR S Otp';r :s j.UB JUST Norm ot //th at [>a-"v vfr» .t' Guadatupe •V.' '',>••• T 1 : {-C. ^"f's 7707 Hemphill Park :»v-• Va^.jge' v 4,'"t>t! 1 pfc-»A'[i * sf e >. s.-r '\ni' • ^vl-'jAA 4>m \ A*V YES, we do type -V-' Freshman themes. A ' , -.0' s\V CH't with K" VI s' gc.M vjraclOi' -•••Nf* :s.v A 4-": ,V;'0 ;\r.j 472 7677 TYPING E •'.••«••' R • . • R ... . • Y SERVICE UNCLASSIFIED ; 6l" 4" f' • r>oD-e va • CHRISTENSON & ASSOCIATES A TYPING S E R V I CE N D •if s,' ! ( , ^»5^1ifi ®I< %%• '' V i Virf-UiJl'i t i tK»dr o '"PtH.VO (Ovc:r,.u yarayo y' »*T Vpt*' vji i J-fj> ° t: isifi Jail Death Accidental' Water Board The Sunday death of h Coun-mmate tried to wake him of Houston with regard to rainsTexas Texas A&M pair,-Fri­Hound-trip bus tickets a' 50 aider their tongues." he said after breakfast sewage treatment day. you can have a full day cents and may be pur. nased These ridiculous, un­ Webb said he has Mayor Fred Hofheinz and hist by watching the Aggie. at the parking areas warranted and unneeded stan­ recommended that the sheriff CMA Flood seven of the eight-member Cadet Corps march Inward Northwest Austin shuttle dards cannot be justified, es­ consider changing from pills Houston City Council showed to liquid medication, which Still Mystery up at the meeting in Austin the Capitol Irom Second stops will be mack' at One pecially in light of the fact Street ami Congress Avenue Highland Center iniuthwest cannot be palmed or that Cypress Creek is not a saved \ Final decision on a s'aff flowing stream all." he at recommendation to enforce said at 8 :i(l a m and then by hop of Highland Mall> and Park Morrison, whom Frank To Plumbers ping on an Austin Transit tool Bi>u)e\ard and Hed Kiwi described as having University plumbers, work­ Environmental Protection Mengden said he could findball shuttle lor Ihe game al Street aeross Irom Hancoek somewhat ol a mental ing late Tuesday to trace the Agency standards, concerningnoon ' ciiler Passengers u il! dis problem.' had been an imate not one scintilla of water that flooded the the level of dissolved oxygen Shuttle service will begin h! embark east of the M.uliuni Ot the jail since August and evidence the creek pollutes auditorium ol Communication in Cypress Creek in northwest i.ake Houston In a m and buses will Ic.iviy and tebo.ird on the #t<: sidi­ was awaiting trial on a child Building A would be glad to Harris County, was postponed evei v in untunes irom lour I Mowing the game assault charge which Frank The basic question is stick their thumbs in the dike during the afternoon session whether government is to be a if lliev could just find the leak. awaitingmore publichearings or master the slave of campus briefs The plumbers say they still and a re-evalualion of data people he said are not certain how 10 inches The staff report The senator recommended ol water accumulated around recommends enforcement of to the board that staff the stage and in the pit federal standards which members go to the creek to beneath, it Saturday night would require the level of dis­ French Change Plan determine if it really is a flow­Theories ranged from a possi­solved oxygen to be no mure ing streamIb« pr iwTtJurc Jor .j(Jun-un-ir.b'-: * t)u ,,t :nuMcal (jirjin> ir. !hr rjjss Tn >1^11 Up in ,i(i-celebration drains to seepage from out­per liter of stream water Hu entnn!a1 director of the board, said the}•'rf-nrh unj vi*rs11 jj<>r \jru-r }n?cfcvj(>(} pcfsonv side the building. Casting will begin around tfie Hofheinz presented the staff had "explored only the lorn^n slucitMits h'.vn 'ti.i\ c.tli 4?tvK?7:> first of Mav Although no final estimate board with charts that showed level of waste treatment re­r\nl»cjliv sanl I>r of Ihe damage was available. the city's "progress" in the quired" to meet federally re­ hdmurul Ha/cr^ti: M th-'1776' Production VE I-1 Director of Physical Plant technical, employment and MOBI Afi BOARD A quired standards I menf nf Kffa-h *fiv hn William M Wilrox said he financial areas He said the proposal not I?.ili.lt: 'p:• -Uk 'n>n M«>(t irw-ii;; t unlit : in!.ir iii.i's1 r •••'• < >' U'chmca! • cessive lOB&Y STUDENT GOVERNMENT enforce the standards could COMMIT T tt .v ,V 1 V '*• S •-progress to the extent we wish bring a rash of areas around m. .j ^:;; ; ' •:1.' «jn11 In .iddition to soaking the we could have done mure the state seeking similar ex­ - •:-I. ill I' t.ltl' <• v ? 1111; 11 j • ' i.'f nt'\! v.i:j r -carpel the water filled the sooner Hofheinz said-fa­emptions ' fU «•! tfit• :ri11-.. are.i behind the stage, damag­ding that with Houston s Yantis said he would sup­ing transformers in the bureaucratic government it port the staff recommenda­ —T*xan Staff Photo by Joy Godwin MMi' , A ' • ** Studtman's 'O&viq * A 1 N tD G i Photo Service 1616lovaco _ J476-9271 Aijstm -2-7 »ty 19th & 5324 Cameton Rd NIKKORMAT FTN CHROME vVtTH SOMM F 2 LENS 528853 ii ;<> r;0 NIKON CASE NO 4 8" hFLi HOWELL FD 35 F ) S 1' M.'kf A wovf • . ' t 'c Canon TLB ^ILU .C>S»-. DAILY CLASSIFIED SPECIAL THIS AD CAN BE PRODUCED FOR 10cc OFF \mm\ii v ON « W STUDTMAN PHOTO FINISHING is '1 PH.D. m?r> 42 Dobie Free some on ..VI-/, t'» r^ ceq • o^v 5 00 f-\ •»-* • a i "PW'CX g-.'V fl'v* !• • ( Ai.E ROOMMATE One booroo^ A •«ia S8I 00 6 biOCkS to Cflmnui NEEOEXTRA MONEv '<*«• ' . the streets ot Austin Thu'^v f HERE'S HOW YOU CAN WIN THE SPECIAL! Just come by or call the TSP offics and place your classified ad! That's itt We do the rest — randomly, we select an ad each xlay to be featured. CALL It's $90.00 worth of free advertising Give us a call Today! 471-5244 471.1865 Your advertisingwill be seen inPEARL -25th aiid WHitjs _ 1918 E. , No. 27 2900-C Riverside We^e behindif/ie big rusty bldg. AndersoiiSlane 1 1J , , -^ Wednesday; November'*7, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa6e 13 \ ^ f ^ Willi ill! —Texan Staff Photo by Jay Godwin Political.Whitewashing Another decade rolls by, and Capitol employe James edifice. The. painting began in August and will end Beck odds another coat of paint to the venerable state before the 64th legislature convenes. Strip Mining Likely for Texas The energy crisis mclhes it hiifhtv nlnrwi (ho ro^iamatinn nnrr-iwii>i<^n „, i • makes highly . plored the reclamation possibilities of dividual areas, such as a board toprobable that the 10 billion tons of lignite strip-mined land. Participating in the oversee the mining and to approve thecoal close to the surface of Texas soil seminar in the Joe C. Thompson reclamation plans.will be strip-mined in the future. Univer­ Conference Center were members of the They also decided two agencies weresity architecturestudent Mike Bradshaw Texas Air Control Board, Texas Parks needed, one for regulation, and anothersaid Tuesday. and Wildlife Department and others con­ to distribute information about possible cerned with land use. uses for reclaimed land. The physical and climaticconditions of The participants suggested that Texas give the state good reclamation Student Barry Wagner outlined two regulation should be on a statewide level potential, said Dr. Charles Groat, basic his group had needs discussion with primary control on a district level associate director for administration of worked out. The group called for broad rather than on a county basis. the University's Bureau of Economic legislation to set standards covering A final report of the conclusions of theGeology reclamation and suggested an instru­seminar will be made at the beginning ofThe two spoke at a seminar which ex­ment for applying the legislation to in-next week. Bradshaw said. Preregistered students any checks, a student must PE Majors • receiving aid through the present a preregistration To Present Office of Student Financial bill and follow the proper Aids will not have to pay filing procedure which will Folk Dances next semester's tuition out vary depending on the University students major­ of their own pockets this specific type of aid the stu­ ing in physical education willyear. dent receives. present a two-day Folk Dance The financial' aids office Students with Exhibition Monday and Tues- has announced it will scholarships and grants day in the Anna Hiss release some fundseariy to can pick up their checks in Financial 'Women's! Gymnasium. allow students to meet the the bursar's office Dec. 9. Sponsored by the health, Dec. 18 deadline for pay­Recipients of National physical education and ment of spring '74 tuition Direct Student Loans must Aid recreation department, the Usually no checks are wait until Dec 12 and then first p.rogram will be . made available to students go to financial aids office presented at 7 p.m. Monday until registration in Room 122 for a release Available and will feature American, January, but the Office of Students with Hinson- Israeli. Romanian. Greek and Student Financial Aids Hazlewood Loans must br­ Philippine dances performed realized that some ing their entire Early by the co-educational dance students have trouble mak­preregistration package to class. In addition, creative ing the early payments. Room 114A in the Office of folk dance compositions using Since, monthly checks Student Financial Aids popular music also will be are not all the same sizes, between Dec: 12 and Dec performed. only the check that is 18 An authentic folk dancerclosest to the amount re­ Outside scholarships costume exhibition will be in­quired for tuition will be processed through the Of­ cluded in the two programs. released before next fice of Student Financial Both programs will be semester. Aids will be available in presented in Women's Gymn'Prior to the release of the bursar's office Dec 16. 136. and the public is invited to attend. Admission is free. iiiixi iu[T!uilx!mix!UUxl UllxI iil/xvllltx-f lltlx Hjc £ ^ ^ A S S5 <5 M Kentucky fried ^ki«k«H fM SNACK BOX ^5 5 (PRE-THANKSGIVING) §2 as iSI W* SALE % a 2 PIECES OF 53s 55 CHICKEN 5 MASHED POTATOES & GRAVY ROLL TODAY WEDNESDAY; NOV. 27 » *§ ^"'h 28 % ^ * rW' W-jMSv , - ORIGINAlRECIPE OR ^^QRI3^ € ^ y*$ •3 ^2 v? LAMAft BLVD. • 2320 SOUTH UTH CONGRESS AVENUE ROAD;l^ *-''t ttWi • THANKSGIVING DAY Wednesday, November 27 1974TJKE DAILY TEXAN^r DECEMB Official _ >W& silts yyjs The V '•> \; 1974-1975 Official STUDENT DIRECTORY WILL BE ON SALE AT THESE CAMPUS LOCATIONS JESTER CENTER NORTH • JESTER CENTER SOUTH • 24th and WHITIS • 24th and SPEEDWAY • MAINMAIL • UNION MALL LAW SCHOOL TSP BLDG., Room 3.200 tax included The Student Directory will be sold on campus by members of Alpha Phi % 9meS° «ewee fraternity. It will be sold for two days, Monday & Tues­rp, day, December 2 & 3. It will give you instant information such asnames, , addresses and phone numbers of students currently enrolled at UT. » •vfcv­ in' * 51 ,;j£UYt ONE, MONDAY.,;DECEMBER 2 Oj= £fo<£.3>­ m