nni ^t; ' " -V,L * ' >' w* ' IF o t "• J . *' v i s ._ j,fy yy-J; As',yrf y '­-> ' x. DAILY TEXAN Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Ten Cenls Vol. 74, No. 130 Fourteen Pages 471-4591 Austin, Texas, Thursday, January 23, 1975 ip-a^8S^aaas«B6feSi3!i(^ By MARY WALSH TexaaStaff Writer * '' \ _ In a dramaticpress conferenceWednesday, Dan Love resigned from the City Council andacknowledged that he had violated the City Charter during his current term ln'office, A report compiled by SouthwesternBell confirmed that Love's Austin American-Statesman quoted his fprmer mediadirector as saying he had assisted live and others in preparing the "What You Should Know About TEX-AN" booklet. Love accepted full responsibility forhiscompany'sactions, but he said he wasunaware of the contactswith Bellbecaiiserf a37*. day stay in a Minnesota alcoholic rehabilitation center. I now4efiii!Qt .aavertisii^^irm had contracted and solicited "I had a very serious drinking problem at that time,'Chesaid. business from the phonecompany through August, 1978, well into Love's second council term. "But this in no way is my excuse for Dan Love and Associates doing that (TEX-AN) job," he added. The council must how authorize a special election to be held City Atty. Don Butler, who participated in Love's press con­ within 60 dayb to fill Love'sseat and the one vacated earlier this ference, said he had neither requested nor recommended the month by Berl Handcox, as required by the City Charter. former councilman's resignation. The specialelection could be held aslate as March22, which is only 14 days from the regularly scheduled April 5 council elec­ "I'm hot convinced thatthis isa violation of the City Charteras he (Love) thinks it is," Butler said. tion. Butler defended Love and the rest of the council and said "The Earlier in the week Love admitted he had violated the City system by which utility companies go about lobbying for rate in­ Charter during his first council term by contracting a "printing creases" ought to be revised/ • y . job" for the Bell Waco division. * <­But when he read a Bell-prepared summary of transactions with Dan Love and Associates, Love said, "The awesome reality came upon me very, quickly that there was additional work," some of which extended into his present term'. Specifically, Love'sfirm compiled two publications for Bell. A "Welcome to Waco" booklet was prepared in July, 1972, and a "News Media Directory" was compiled in February, 1973. The firm also provided "assistance in preparing a special . Increases are many times "based not on bard evidence but rather through personal and political contacts," Butler added. "If the Austin City Council had rolled over and flayed dead in the Bell case, as so many other cities in this state did, there wouldn't be any 'Austin Story,' " Butler stated. "The Austin Story"is anunsigned Bell document introduced in a San Antonio court last Week which alleged that Austin city 'councilmen had conspired with Bell to grant a rateincrease that would "make the council look good." vv -if r2j} advertisement f(jr the Round Rock Chamber «f Commerce centennial publication in J972" the Bell report Stated: After his re-electiort to the council, Love's company supplied additional copies of the Waco booklet and prepared an art and slide presentation In a bid for the educational' brochure Bell produced on the T^X-AN state communications network. AlthoughLove^denied any knowledge of the presentation, the All candidates contacted by' The Texan who have flTed for Places 3 and 6 said they plan to run in the speciaT election. The council is not expected to schedule the specialelection un­til next week, but a March 22 date would require that the runoffs be held April 19. The winning candidate in such an election would thus gainonly 25 days in office before tfye current council terms expire May15. —T«van Staff Pboto by Stanky 1 Love gives reasons for resignation at Wednesday press conference. if-- ' • •. .• m By DAVID HENDRICKS sion by Briscoe. His major proposals, as which will ensure orderly and timely A study to determine the feasibility tax on gas and electric utility bills. the collected wisdotn of this body" when Texan Staff Writer expected, Included distribution of state changes in response to the changing of transforming the railways into, a ma­•. Strict guidelines protecting personal he differs in opinion with matters like-a- In hissecond biennialState of the State . funds to-districts Under a "weighted needs of students. jor means of transportation between rights to privacy from government and utilities commission. She added that she* ­AddressjGov.DoIph Briscoe outlined a pupil plan" which assigns certain ap­While requesting a 10 percent raisefor Texas cities. law enforcement agencies and preven­liked the emphasis Briscoe placed on large package of proposals, some of. propriations to differentgradelevels and state employes, the governor announced • Combining theduties of the Highway ting .misuse , of information given education. '1­them surprising, Wednesday before the • special programs, a $1billion increase in a goal of an overall 5percent reduction Department and the Mass Transporta­employers and providing access to such Barrientos commented he had wanted ' 64th Legislature. state aid over thenext biennium, that the • in the number of stateemployes. Briscoe tion Commission into a Department of information, by individuals the informa­the governor to address the problems ofIn a.45-minute speech to a joint present economic indexbe replaced with said the streamlining would allow mote Highways and Public Transportation, tion concerns illegal..aliens cnteriiig the state .jandiegii|)^vje..sesslon,-£riscoeciialIenged _a^singje factor index based on taxable efficient state government; • » Setting a "reasonable?., limit on * The endorsement' of .Health whether iingle-membsr distrlcts should' the solons to a-.long list of chores, In-" "^valuebof-property ln'each district,and a "OTHER MAJOR proposals political spending in stateWHe andlocat Maintenance,Organizations as a method . be created in places (ike"%Yavis County. eluding setting spendirig limits:prelec­TtenewW and" accouhtabllfty^systein state's chief executive include:: races and requiring all contributionsand to improve delivery of health care. Austin Rep. Sarah Weddington paidshetions, restructuring the state's public expenditures over J10 be in the form of a. REACTION TO the governor'saddress was surprised by the number of. topicsfechool,finance, plan and spending: the : personal check or cashier's check. was mixed;:Causing the most concern the governor addressed himself to andstate's >1 billion surplus effectively and • Establishment of TEXHELP, a toll-was the conspicuous lack of any mention agreed with him on the need towithout waste. -~ ' free telephone service forcitizens to call regardingwhether Texas should createa -strengthen the-power of the -College.--­Among the more surprising proposals for assistance or ask information on public utilities regulatory commission. Coordinating Board and to improvewas the recommendation to strengthen matters involving state government. Austin Rep. Wilhelmina Delco said she guidelines protecting the rights of:Jv^ the powers-of the College Coordinating • A repeal of the 4 percent state sales hoped the governor "will cooperate with privacy. ; ­ wPfBoard. ' THE GOVERNOR drew applause when he said, "we should eliminate the unneeded competition and • lobbying ef­ To Meet forts among the individual universities ; •V*'r ' ' ' • • ' -; for state dollars and focus on coor­dinating the role, sc^pe and programs of our institutions of high learning." i On LeMaistre Grade Change To accomplish this, Briscoe said, "we i should strengthen the functions of the: By BILL SCOTT Young LeMaistre took the exam on proceedings after an organization Coordinating Board, -thereby promoting Texan Staff Writer Jan. 6 and was given a "C" for both the meeting with University President Ad . educational excellence-and preventing: .The circumstances surrounding test and the course. The grade was later Interim Lorene Rogers Thursday-mor­ unnecessary duplication of courses and' .charges that System Chancellor Charles changed back to the original "F" at the ning. ... ­ ^degree programs, departments or- LeMaistre exerted pressure on a former student's request. -An official of the College of Naturaldivisions" fJ i ^ University Instructor to obtain a'fecial Guentzel resigned her teaching posi­Sciences said.Monday Guentzel had been ­* -Re specifically asked the Legislature *5|L final examination for his son will be in­tion Jan. 13.! asked to meet with the regents. , that the.Coordinating Board: vestigated by a regents' committee at a Shivers said his view of the incident • iBe given; specific authority over ex­The chancellor denied the pressuring pansion of 'degree "programs, Thursday morning meeting. charge and called the episode "a serious had not changed despite several departments or^divisions. k ^ lThe three-member panel, which in­and traglo misunderstanding." developments during the last few days, ; , cludes Regents Allan Shivers, Lady Bird including the report that LeMaistre's ' <• Give direct approval -before senior-^ Though Shivers said he did not know Johnson and Ed Clark, will meet in a two sons have been driving cars with colleges can establish off-carapua* ' closed session in the-Main Building who the group would be conferring with "0." or "official," permits. • " courses. Regents Room at 10 a.m. during the session., L. Joe Berry, chair­The chancellor has been issued four" r* • Should "be .authorized to establish, m "We hope to determineif there areany man of the microbiology department, "O" stickers, Mike Quinn, an assistant^.enrollment ceilings for institutions. facts concerning tji'e case which we are said Monday he had been asked to at­to LeMaistre, said. Three of the permits ' • Should be authorized to establishand yS tend. unaware of," Shivers said Wednesday. apply to ears LeMaistre owns and the-«'^required to-cortiment on all "speclabff The • former governor and recently-Shivers said the regents would deter­fourth is for a car the System leases forItem appropriations! requests"-made by ,„ elected regent chairman said he hoped it mine others to be included in the his use, Quinn said. ' institutions. ,< Pi . would take only one meeting to clear the• Should beauthorized and required to matter up. considerall newconstruction, rehablllta-5"®5 The incident centers on a charge by-tion projects and acquisition of real es^. former University microbiology instruc­ tate regardless of the funding source or::#; tor Martha Jean Guentzel that proposed use of the facility. j LeMaistre pressured her to administer a Tmbk. Shrtl Hist* bylStodiItyall PUBLIC SCHOOL finance was listed^ makeup examination to his son Bill last ;as the top.prjority of the legislative ses-j^ 'Right to Life' advocate lobbies at the Capitol. December., Thursday^ will be cloudy and cool with decreasing, cloudiness in the afternoon. Winds will be northerly Leaders* Speak on Morality from 8 to 18 mph. Thursday's high is expected to be w near 50 with a low near 40. There is a 20percent chance > •'i1 'Responsibility for Helpless Life' of precipitation. -b®bieS 4 .m"1'0" .Miearsusor not, whether We get a rights group, "We are all a part of the com­ui« h« l'> countr5!, ^ •> to-life amendment passed or not.,Wewill munity of man. no one lives or dies in TSP Elections . . . His voice scattered and dissipated past two black years,',' M.O. Turner, sleep In "the hope'that we have alven to isolation. -Yet it would seem that the the chill wind on the sputh steps of the/'r president of the San' Antonio based\. mn one child -life." ^ Filing deadline for editor of The Daily Texan and stu­ child aborted in the womb and the elder­ Capitol, physician-astronaut Joseph .organization, lamented' Turner urgedsH'i • Mrs Allen (Teresa) Ware head of th* ly and neglected who die alone do so in dent positions on the TSP Board is Friday. The elec­ Kerwin told 15Q onlookers Wednesday^ ^ those gathered to enter the Capitol and* > Austin Right to'LifeCommittee, told the -Isolation. ' , the.issuetito the prlvacy-ofhetbody'vertusr: to-life l»llr«. ^ '{^ > » MM Mi I nm fl •'.r*^.•_: "Jt-» _ ^ — and our~^esponsiblUty tor lti *' Ml speakers at the service! inciuaingf^; f ffJCffl , LOSGS ,< WOfT)/Tllllfifi helpless life."' 7^" ) t f«i Kerwin, who is known for having mann-: ' < " " , " m " 1 theoccasion.was a memprlai |ervjc<^l ed ft Skylab'Station fbr aB dayrln Mayi?^ WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rebellious Democrats . Jamie Whitten of Mississippi, Robert L.F, Sikes of succeed Poage and Melvin Price of Illinois to'replace . on, the second anniversary, of. th^.v >Land June of 1073. «tthcked abortion on ^-'. Wednesday outsted a third veteran House committee.' 1 .!Florida artd Otto Passman of Louisiana, who faced the Hebert. . ./ f. Al'll moral grounds. V-^ >' 1 ^] chairman, Rep. Wright Patman of the Banking Com* mirtt Serious challenge among the IS nominees. alt took two secret ballots to unseat Patman. > -' I ( ^ 'A, really ttaglc^doltlslhat the Whitten was 'approved 187%6, Passman 159^72 and , . „ „ . -, ..Supreme Court's tafhdmark decision joys and pleasures exw Sik^s 148-49. None hadopposition, butalt13had tobean--A Keuss-Patman runoff was required because no ohe .aMtUoi-BvlQias Kerwin spoke^ flv%, -4 evasion (of parenthood) 1 •— • " 'j • -r 4\Vgot a majority of votfes cast the first time around. -_­Austin Womeii° Underwent preparations -Those;whqr^oiild ^eVde"the"diffidul®, congressman,"-"was given MtrtS'i" Thompson got the nomination last we^ for; Ha^s'for^abortlofts in Brackenridge-hospitaV i^-saUsfacUon ofparenthM forthe ioftof banklngj-Cposttte 81-yeAr-old dr^ ctonnai^p,1)ut then was rejected by: the caucus : the(f6UoVl^giday ^ othet'shallJiTttlfe end have neither, x for lJ flf his ^yeara A : Hays: thai got the nomination, which he claimed had: •tpttse^lves,Students, jeferg^eiCeMpk^ejOiay^Usfaeti^thitdojBto'tt " been denied him earlier because"it was voted on by' aftertaste is-tha|4^^^i secret ballot. done,V tKerwin.si?id4^^^ % Asked'if he now approved of the secret ballot in-vlew of hls eloction, Hays told newsmen,-"!(fon't knoyr, butll' do know one member came up to me with a btg smile |S|5^rid^wyw|the^p •nfe|gisj|jaye !»f, and said 'it isnft often I can stickit to CommonCause, 'tonight, ^whetheV^ we;:get^ ?aucu$ alsora{i|troved inct ncumbent 'tpi^rla^:«ppip|tM (^irnuui^iUdlng. , fPSlf p|lf m •v* !&*'V » -?3a r "' -i iJ ^ Ss ViV^A ?-,--•-£ % v •* * y~ ^ ' 3 « ^ -'T , * vf ^ . ^4 , r *•» *» r > "»* ~ T**> £» «>. ^ •» ** % * fy. j -,nrn * * : .A .--v. .. 'V—i>-" -T-'.'•.' .•>.' .---j -r...--'J • *•.<#;<-5•:.»•% ''^ -^ »--":*<\%i,*->v»*''i Nominafes Members * fc* 3< t To "Plcff NfcfUT President g-By BILL SCOTT \ , mittee, will be composed of said. tion," Kinneavy said. "Eigh-; 2 _ Texan Staff Writer three students as well as the In addition to Kinneavy, teen departments and eight^Opinions from• across the nine faculty members. -.other faculty nominees in­colleges are represented, an]: political spectrum are University President Ad clude: Richard Adams, the grotqt seems to be very.' represented among the 28 -Interim Lorene Rogers stud anthropology; Stanley Ar-well rounded.™ jbcillty members nominated the' advisory group would bingast, director of the KINNEAVY j added; "to fill the nine faculty screen possible successors to Bureau of Business Research, however, that the committee-positions on the recently-Stephen Spurr, fired in W.W. Bledsoe, mathematics; "will stall have to negotiate ' ansounced institutional ad-September , by System Harold Bold, botany; with the regents to determine . -.yisory committee,a represen­Chancellor Charles Vincente Cantarino, Spanish-the boundaries of their inputtative of the General Faculty -LeMaistre. Portuguese; F. Lanier Cat, and screening power." .said Wednesday. Because the selection com­general business; David Rogers said, previously-the"We've got activists and mittee, comprised mainly of Edwards, government advisory committee wouldconservatives, but more im­regents and System officials, MARGARET Eppright, candidates: initially screen portantly. we've got a list of will havefinal authorityin the home economies and'William and pass recommendations on-jpeople who will stand up for choosing a oew head of the L. Fisher, director of the to the selection committee. ­Academic interests during the University, the exact role of Bureau of Economic Geology. -The subject of visits with 'presidential selection the advisorygroup"isstill un--Also included are Hugh potential candidates is ode^process," JamesL. Kinneavy, predictable.'VKinneavy said. Forrest, zoology; David which still needsto beworked •English professor and ' The 28 candidates were Gavenda, physics; Thomas A. out between theadvisory com­^Secretary of the General listed most often on nomina­Griffy,'physics; Leo Hughes, mittee and the selection faculty, said. tion forms submitted by the English; Ira Iscoe, director of group, Kinneavy said. »jTHE AbVISORY group, an­1,611 voting Members of the the Counseling:PsychologicaInounced in. December by the faculty. A total of 364 persons Service Center; Gaylord Kinneavysaw "no negative'presidential Selection Com­_ were, nominated, Kinneavy Gentz, general business; Ad­indications" in any bide of dison Lee, curriculum-solidarity among the General instruction; Standish Faculty regarding, the selec- Meacham, history and Neill taon of a new president Megaw, English: "JUDGING bom the atten­ Other nominees -include dance of faculty members at -:T«*ai» Staff Zadi tyafjfe -Emmette-:Redfonl,..govern­meetings and the overwhelm­i:Am I Seeing Things?ment; Michael Shariot, law; ing votes in favor of some of James Sledd, English; Alfred An oatmeal box with a pinhole in one end and apiece of • : rvaKtyrflora, fauna and facade. tvming the faunae into the resotatrahs on thisissne,I f Smith, speech communica­feel the faculty will stick fifan mlhe othormafce«a camera which dtttoth ordinary mete apporitten*. Can you find them? announces "C-f tion; J.J. Villarreal, speech together,-" he said.­the opening of their communication; Russell Kinneavy said he thought Weintraub, law; Eugene New Location Wissler, engineering and LeMaistre was "enough of a Senate Debates Election Controls 2900 West Anderson Lane' Charles Alan Wright, law. realist to see that he has to By PATTIKILDAY sus opinion was that stringent Government -allocating-funds forthcoming.Ballots for final voting to work with the(advisory) com­Tutu Staff Writer ~ controls should be applied for for an election "wrap-up" mittee to some extent this year's March S election. Parrish told the Staate he',trim the panel to . nine Banning of leaflets in stu­-handout and/or a Daily Texan ..had talked with both newly ap­ To celebrate this opening we members will be distributed "If LeMaistre's been dent elections dominated,the Those pushing thelimitation election supplement pointed Regents Thomas H*.to the faculty Jan. 28, reading the paper lately, he discussion ata StudentSenate cited obnoxious campaigners -Other . committee Law.and Walter G. Sterling, are havingaSotO oh and the high cost, of winning Kinneavy said. .Election knows it's hard to get a good meeting Wednesday night. recommendations were and "Law was very receptive. ­ • ALL tsnrtis wear t results should be known person — .someone, really at -Although action was deferred an election as reasons .for adopted, including one allow­He said he will meet wiUi any voting for the proposal. • ALL ladies' robss before-Feb. 10. the top level academically,V until next week to facilitate ing students. with only 12 interested students after the Sue Doty, Graduate School "I'm pleased with theselec­he added. informed voting, the consen- semester hours to run and regents' meeting Jan.-31 to • • ALL men's sweaters senator, denounced the finan­another requiring a candidate and' talk about-any problems and ­ cial burdens of campaigning accusing another-of unethical answer questions " "Spending $750 on a presiden­campaigning to prove to thetial seat is immoral;— there FREE, 3-letterchain Election Commission that the are too many hungry people stitch monogramming on all towels this year to throw that kind of offender had previous Leaders knowledge of campaign purchased In either store NATURAL FOODS money away," Doty said: violations. Leafleting was defended as Parrish said money-Course ;freedom of expression by 1002 W. 12th 477-3361 a allocated by the Student Sale ends Saturday, Jan. 25th. Cindy Powell. Schbol of Com­ Government for -minority Offered ^ Monday-Saturday 9:30-7:30 munication senator. . -recruitment was being dis­ • offer goodinbothlocations Alternative methods for tributed by the student finan­ _ A training course fordiscus­educating the student body on -rial aids office -and that a sion group moderators willthe various' candidates' plat-report from SFAEO Director begin at.7:30 p.m.Thursday at Yard eggs forms'includeStudent Shirley Binder would be : the Friends Meeting of Mm AustinSOU Washington All nature's plus vitamins -10% off. Square. ' ^ ­Certified organic fruits & . Persons completing the six-t, vegetables.-10% off Kefir & Yogurt session course will be trained: monitor on with this ad. to discussion toplo& chosen by the American Institute of Discus-' sion, a nonprofit organization' which promotes community; IS YOUR REGISTRATION CORRECT?? basediiberal-artseducation;­ The group will meet from; 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. each Thai day. The„only cost.for the course will be for-required IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY books. .7. Those interested in ing for the course may-call 476-0510. < ^ 0"MAKEaSURE!J Swedish Ambassador Speaks X ^Sweden: The Middle Way" NELSON'S The elate schedule notice below was mailed to all students on Monday, January 20. You should receive r GIFTS' ' 1A Public Lecture your copy no latar than Friday, January 24. lf there is an error, or if you fail to receive your copy on time, Count Wachtmeister you should see your academic dean IMMEDIATELY. . \ ' ; ^ ZUNI ANDNAVAHTF I"-. Academic Center Auditonum INDIAN JEWELRY FIVE THINGS TO CHECK ... MEXICAN '«nK,W I-. ^IMPORTS , kfHMP JH Is your mafdr' "0ff7STBA'riNC&ukt) si^Sponsored b^ the Center for European Studies 1' • -+• IN VALUt-.<™ J. Use yourcovnteschcHc/u/e to confirA) thattheunique CODE 1/ CLOSED MOM!AY I numbers Itoed^wmatchfhose ofthechsses you. cfc your course schedule are attending.^0JiM',' ^ THE UNIVERSf OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN 01/20/75 OFFICE 01 REGISTRAR ^ -SPRING 1975 x§. V?jKFV *?»ov£tv CHECK THE COURSES"AND UNIQUE,NUMBERS UNIQUE COURSE LISTED TO THE RIGHT.. THESE ARE THE NUMBER NUMBER STATUSCOURSES FOR WHICH YOU ARE OFFICIALLY niiiiiiHiniiiiiiniinVmimliHimniiiiiniriiiiiiHiiiiiaiiitiiiHiiiiiiiniti REGISTERED AS OF OX/20/75. 16675 IF YOU BELIEVE /THERE IS AN ERROR, 12540 *0U MUST CONTACT YOUR ACADEMIC DEAN 37695 FOR POSSIBLE CORRECTIONS (ADDS OR 07485 Sjnu'ta%,I f.NyquH § Noxzeni DROPS) IMMEDIATELY TO RECEIVE PROPER 17870 CREDIT. , ;> f r-- OV* ATI 25715 Pass/Fail?• HI-qjDRAWN (M). OR M ELLEDO CO).-?ASS/FAIL (Z=YES€ mmmm Blistex |Meotrogena|s Sui^; thQt the listofcoursesis accurate. Sog* rtfoil 39 )eodorant ooz. 00 s S»f.:ritai iSiSiig. retail * eni§421>jer 011 ' are responsil3le. correct ai a^notice by.,Friday^January 24 EffiM m ||ntact ydur Academic Dean immediately! Registration ervision •w*u ffgggil Helms Takes Stand ft?®!® Sfllttt mm&m Unauthorized CIA Spying Hinted WASHINGTON (UP!) -Former CIA Director Richard Helms '"intimated" that any domestic spying by the agency must have taken place without his knowledge, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee' said Wednesday.'-')••• Sen. Gale McGee, D-Wyo., told reporters Helms had repeated his earlier denial that theCIA engaged indirect sur­veillance of U.S. .citizens in, the United States. . HELMS, now U.S. ambassador toIran, testified Wednesday in a closed session of the committee. Emerging before the meeting elided, McGee said,,"He in­timated that this may haye occurred without.bis knowledge." WASHINGTON (UPI) -The govern­ment reported Wednesday that a record 970,000 persons joined the'rolls.of un: employment insurance applicants in the ;. week ending Jan. 11, signaling another • sharp increase in the nation's over-all .. unemployment rate.'' > :r ' The Laboi' Department said ' widespread' layoffs in North Carolina, Michigan, California, Tennessee, Penn­sylvania and many other states hkd add­ed the nearly one million new applicants to the record 4.6 million persons already receiving unemployment benefits as of the week ending Jan: 4. THE TRENDindicated, thenationwide unemployment rate for January would move well beyond December's figure of 7.1 percent — an estimated 6.5 million persons. The Labor Department will an­nounce the January jobless rate Feb. 7. The previous one-week record for new unemployment insurance applicantswas set the last week in December, when 813,000 filed first-time applications: The Labor Department report said the total number of hew applicants during ^ the week ending Jan: 11 was "a record high since benefits' were first paid' in 1937.... "The largest rise was recorded in North Carolina (50,000), reflecting in part the resumption of a five-day workweek in:local,state employment % Simon Defends Tax Plan; • WASHINGTON. (UPI). -..lyeasuiy Secretary William E. Simon argued before CongressWednesday that wealthy ^taxpayers deserve a tax cut as well as |}ie poor because the well-to-do also are victims of inflation. '' • ' Testifying as a newly liberalized House Ways and MeansCommittee open­ed hearings into President Ford's economic proposals', Simon sought to rebut the charge of House Speaker .Carl Albert that the Ford program -is too generous to'the rich. In a radio-television speech Monday night, Albert said 43 percent of the 512 billion income tax rebate Ford proposed would go to the wealthiest 17 percent of taxpayers. ; "Upper income individuals have been ­'adversely, affected by. inflation,; just as . lower'tacome.individuals,"-Simonsaid.; "The prices of the things they buy have increased, too, and since they buy more, the increase is greater." . mm mm? I||p81l im ill ! &' 3 ' * J • \.l I u McGee added, "He said he ~ never authorized any civilian surveillance. He said there was no domestic surveillance, •per se, even at the time of growing con­cern (about U.S.dissidents) in the 1960's and 70's," ; . • V ' When the committee concluded, Ac­ting ^airman John Sparkman, D-Ala., told reporters Helms had answered questions! "fully and , frankly." But Sparkman. shed no light on whether Helms had 'misled — or lied to — the committee in 1973 when he denied CIA domestiq'intelligence activities. SPAR&MAN said a censored version of Wednesday's hearing would be made public soon. , security officesfollowing a holiday in the preceding week," the report said. "NEW LAYOFFS in the textile, fur­niture and apparel-industries added to the-total: •; : . . . . : "Other states recording sizable in­creases included Michigan (40,000), California (29,400), Tennessee (21,500), Pennsylvania (15,300), Illinois (13,700) and'Missouri (12,900)." In all, thereport said, 44 states record­ ed an increase in unemployment claims over the previous week. The report said that the week, ending Jan. 4, also showed significant increases in many states among those actually receiVing uiiempIoyment benefits, asdis­tinguished from new applicants. IT.SAID North Carolina recorded the biggest,jump, with 90,900 more persons receiving benefits the weekending Jan. 4 thai) had done so the previous week. Other states reporting significant in­creases in benefitpayments the week en­ding Jan. 4 were Pennsylvania, Califor­nia, Tennessee, New York, Connecticut and.Michigan. Discussing the reasons for the rising unemployment payments, the report cited especially heavy layoffs in the primary metals, electrical equipment, textile and automotive industries in the worst-hit states. TJ^cpjmmittee — headed for the first time in 17 years by someone other than Rep. Wilbur D. -Mills, D-Ark. — is ex­pected to revamp Ford'sproposal to give a larger share to the less well-off. But sentiment in favor of tax relief is so strong ite approval.is certain. Mills, wjio said his erratic behavior . resulted from alcoholism and gave up the phairmanship, wasabsent asthe new chairman. Rep. A1 Ullman, D-Ore., gaveled the hearing to order in a small ' Capitol hearing room so crowded even ­committeemembers had trouble getting in ' -,L. , Ullman said the "great suffering" from the recession compelled his panel to act on tax relief with "urgency." But Simon stressed his belief that in­ flation —not recession ~ was a more serious, long-term problem. -. V ' .: "The uncertainties created by infla­ tion undermined the confidence of both consumers and investors, with conse­ fm ,.•>-drffs.­ s„. ttiM' ••V I'; 'found is not.sufficient to show posses-• I. sion. There must : be direct or cirr ,, |r.:, cumstantial evidence that connects the 1} defendant to the prohibited items;" fhe:; • ....... . I :• t " court said. The Supreme Court Wednesday re-jected the. appearof a Brazoria County ""'i"""" wus m & Cambodia: IJhdet HeavY fire*m Ktayy rebel flreln onothmipr r*wn:Whwn Nnn:.Mfbr* cl»v;« tail leod^rMtrvM ran out. In related developments; • Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania announced he would name.Sens: John Tower of Texas, Howard Baker of Tennessee, Charles McC. Mathias of Maryland, Richard Schweiker of Pennsylvania and Barry Goldwater of Arizona to the Senate Select Investigating Committee on the CIA which the Senate is,expected to create Monday. ~ ' • Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., chair­man of the Armed Services Committee which has oversight responsibilities for the CIA, said in a broadcast interview (CBS News) that as a result of his own inquiry he believes there have been "transgressions" of the agency'scharter but not of a massive nature nor necessarily illegal. McGee said much of Helms' testimony Wednesday focused on the CIA's funding of opposition activities in Chile before the 1973 coup overthrowing President Salvador Allende. THE CIA has maintained that itdid not participate in the coup against Allende. That position, apparently supported by Helms in his still-secret testimony before the committee in March, 1973, has been assailed following the release last fall of data concerning dlA expenditures : of about $11 million to Allendeopponents since 1964. McGee said the confusion may,have arisen because of carelessness in-defin­ing the time-frame in which the events occurred. By MARILYN TURBOFF Wednesday marked the second an­niversary of one of the most significant judicial decisions ever handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court concerning women. The case of Roe vs. Wade helped, es­tablish the legal principle Invalidating state antiabortion laws. Austin Rep. Sarah Weddington, the at­torney whose first contested case was argued before the Supreme Court on behalf of unwed mother "Jane Roe," sees the decision's tremendous impact Cut, Too quent damage to jobs and toihe newin­. vestment -and increased productivity which are required to stem inflation," Simon said. Meantime, Rep. Henry S. Reuss, D- Wis., who defeated Rep. Wright:Patman, D-Tex., to become the new chairman of the House Banking, Currency and Hous­ ing Committee, vowed to fight for lower interest rates, ' Reuss said hewould push his bill'wtiich would direct the Federal Reserve to try to persuade banks to lend more to hous­ ing and other high-employment ac­ tivities and less for speculative or foreign investments. But Reuss disavowed a proposal by a House Democratic task force which.un-, veiled the Democrats', own economic proposals before Ford presented his.The task force said if'interest rates are still High in June, Congress should tax away from banks all incomeearned by interest of over 9 percent. By United Press International The State Court of Criminal Appeals Wednesday reversed the conviction and 25-year prison sentence given an Odessa man because prosecutors failed tQ prove he was in possession of narcotics paraphernalia as charged. Manuel Gomez Hernandez'; was arrested in a June, 1971, raid on' the Odessa apartment of his cousin, Maria Hernandez, who testified her cousin had not been in the apartment before that night. Police found a syringe with traces of heroin under the mattress on.which Her-; nandez was sleeping. The appealscourt ruled thestatefailed i to prove the connection between Her­nandez and the paraphernalia'.. ­"The mere presence of the 'defendant: ' ;near where the. prohibited; items are SStSSP §?|tlBtSs|S —UPI T.l.ptnH Landslide Brings Havoc I This 4,OOO-foot crater was the result of the second of two One house was evacuated only IS minutes before thet landslides in this mining town near Montreal, Quebec, slide swallowed it, leaving debris and fear in its Advises More Action! Ruling Anniversary j two years later. "It seems to me that nothing is more important to women's, lives than decisions concerning whether to have children, how many to have and when to have them. These decisions affect whether a woman is able to continue her education, carry out her job respon­sibilities, and plan her family finances — in other words, everything she does," Weddington said. "The court's ruling that women bad the right to choose is what is significant" While Weddington sees the results of the decision as positive, she does not think they have been extensive enough. "We need greater availability of abor­tion services in Austin sothat all women, regardless of financial status, can have access to abortion facilities," she said. A( present, Brackenridge is the only --major hospitalin the city wherean abor­tion can be obtained, and the price is about $150 if a woman isin her first three months of pregnancy. After the first three months, the price is considerably higher. Weddington also, thinks that more money should be spent on educating women so that when they suspect pregnancy they can go to a physician im­mediately and decide what course of ac­tion to take. Another improvement' Weddington would like to see made isan expansion of ianuly planning services in the state. "The first time the state put money into family planning was two years ago," Weddington explained. She feels that many abortions Would be unnecessary if . Birth .control was explained, and made available to women more freely. . . Weddington does not feel the abortion issue hascompletely stabilized. "Iwould hope that we can get through this Conviction The civil Appeals Court turned down the appeal of Dr. Charles L. Webster Jr. of Fort Worth, Who sought to block the construction of a manmade reservoir 019 Squaw Creek by four North Texas utility' companies. Unions Tentative Settlement WASHINGTON (UPI) An im­mediate 10 percent wage increase and a cost of living.clause were Included in.a tentative contract agreement between the National Railway Labor Conference and the industry's biggest union,sources-reported Wednesday. • Industry sources said the tentative settlement cpyering abaut 40 percent of all rail labor was reached Tuesday with . negotiators for the United nansporta­tidn Union, AFL-CIO: ; a­. hicb has 190,000 contract with the jf ,17 hewn P1, .... .-ne&ttati^ Relations Judgd Tom;,K^3wi^5^t^pther?unlbns^:^^^ Brazoria County would rot: withdraw" • ­ W^Aers, bad threatened to.striHe Fri- their petition for divorce, ^IcIv Je iha^Sf: granted after a .two-day jttri'triaL ' I WThe ASsociation ^of' American .Jhfe cpuplq rfetm^ted D^;^jil9Wi,^helrl § Rallrodds-later-announced;tjiat'two MP ;«ittorn^a;ga^v,iio.)ndlciitlon why they VS ^ Ions besides the UTU'also bad reached, > r-, ^t^tgtiv^^trafctagreement W®dnes-; V-The'1^i{nlCourt u^eU^dntsd&yifyg -day, Athtey ^serer the 40,000rme£4wr t. right",of a laMlord t^ wee legal fiction •• Brotherhood of Maintenance WayAgainst ft tenant who cofWerted a pizzq , I Employes, at^d the r9,&00-member : partbc4ntp;a ioplessrsupi^er club' rhood of ^aQwaySigi^lmoil," WM legislative session. without any bills at Brackenridge Hospital. The Cityrestricting the availabilityof abortions," Council refused to take any action on the she said. offer. • J "I would also hope for the support of The aspirator is, however, being used the University community against such at Brackenridge today, an aide to Wed­restriction if 'such a bill were in­dington explained further. jtroduced," she continued. "Jane Roe," the women whose rpjgeAlthough some measure of abortion and subsequent pregnancy led her to the appears to Be here to stay, not everyone Supreme Court, gave birth to her chili' in Austin is resigned to acceptance of before the court's decision was innafa that fact. Recently, a physician wanted down. "Roe" gave the child up for adop­to donatea vaccuum aspirator (a simple tion and is now working as a bous£­ device used for abortions in the early painter in a Texas city. Her identity still stages of pregnancy) to the city for use is unknown, even to her family. , \ -v* •i neujscapsules Airlift to Phnom Penh May Be Necessary • •! PHNOM PENH (UPI) — A convoy of ships ran a gauntlet of heavy* rebei gimfire iip the Mekong River Wednesday with life-saving ammnni-* tion aiid.fuel fpr. the besieged Cambodian capital. : ? In Catnbodia, the ship convoy iram Vfetnatn fougbt halfway Mekong River to' Phnom Penh in the first serious attempt in 25 days to? replenish the besieged Cambodian capital with badly needed fuel anrf am-; munition, military officers said. The 20-ship convoy steamed from the South Vietnamese frontier, ttf within about i7 miles of the capital by the latest report in a last-ditcbl attempt to use theonly route not completely cut off by the Communistrled* rebels to get supplies to Phnom Penh. ' 14 U.S.-officials said that if the convoy fails to make it "there isno other? choice" than a Berlin-style airlift to save the city. VF,t Cuba .Offers U.S. Prisoner Trade WASHINGTON (AP) — Cuba has proposed to release from jail analleg-; ed CIA agent if the United States frees a Puerto Rican. nationalist in^ years ago, accoiM ° ding to informed sources^ . .4^. The jaUed American is Lawrence K. Lunt, convicted by a Cuban court^ in 1966 of espionage and harboring counterrevolutionaries. Lunt, a native of Massachusetts, is serving a 30-year prison term. The price for his release, the sources said, is the freeing of LolifaT Lebron, about 55, one of four Puerto Rican nationalists who opened fire00 the House chamber on March 1, 1954, wounding five House members.' ; Jackson May Announce Presidential Candidacy § WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Henry M. Jackson probably will announce his candidacy for president on Feb. 6, a spokesman for the senator said Wednesday.: The spokesman said Jackson, a Washington Democrat, "has blocked out" television time on that date. f ; ­"Feb. 6( loo^s like the probable time, but it's not final," the aide said: Supreme Court Accords 'Pupil Power' WASHINGTON (AP) — A sharply divided Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that pupils suspended from public schools have a con-, stitutional right to know and answer the charges against them. Dealing specifically with suspensions of from one to 10 days, the court . said the pupils must be given notice of the charges and "at least an infor­mal give-and-take between student and disciplinarian." Dissenting in the 54 decision were all of the justices appointed to toe court by folhner President Nixon: Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Harry A. Blackmun, William H. Rehnquist and Lewis F. Powell Jr. Market Posts Gains NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market put on a late burst of power to rack up a good-size gain in moderate:: trading a.is.1. Mmfniili (MINESIVIUtt 31 MtttiWt ;•,» Wednesday. ' The Dow Jones average-of 30 industrials climbed;; 10.71 to wouSm 652.61 DP 652.61, amassing more than half - ltsgaininthfefmalhalf-hourof the session. \ -J m Advances vuls^p^l d^clinei^ As.12.(179 wSOOto 550am0ng^theli767issues traded on the NcwlYorit Stock'' Exchange. ' :*i^| -? " MPfHeiHpiLL AJJPXAWS­ "•(13 TM 5m:icac AT m. m mm&cm w mwu m 7^WITH "A pa/Qffg" mm&ci w Thursday^ January 23, 1975 'mmo&s.1 vzwicecF wowi[xm WW ARC R&SO): eer vme!too . . . -n^ *X AM A mmto k\Xr. A (meet me wiDPim&l If elected, mm? a,. $cRmr WJ-NS-k e&v&et , ... ... *• CFTM microti I will run again m­ soURocife­feueg " We never thought we would say this; but we're sad to see Dan Love-go. At least so early. • If only Love had waited until Feb. 4 to be implicated in conflictof interest 601 Wtg&MIU, men fmr with Southwestern Bell, his resignation would be fine. Love has never been 1DW5 our favorite council member; his statement Tuesday that he had never JAHIVmuplB? bothered to read the City Charterin four yearsis indicative of why. And his WAQvesna) WSIEWS? M3&& Af \m?K. votes to banish theDrag vendors,hisvotechange onlater drinkinghours and *T MBOTA ROM 7]^R35 wuwiu bis vote change on council aides never really pleased us. mil CDS I'/QJT Of VIV5.RW! But because Love resigned before Feb. 4 and. because the City Charter /W A VAST fwxez* AS says it isso, we will have tohave aspecialelection one month beforethe spr­iwcm-IHICU i . FAMOUS AS ing elections. This will be chaotic, driving away the voters and clouding the HJSTFm issues. • • • — • • •• Luastf Mick AU AUSftJS?. Imagine this: the speclal*dection>is held March 1. There is a runoff on tyarch 29. The two winners orahat election then have to enter the general spring election on April 5 (meaning it is possible for someone to win on March 29, serve for a month anokthen get beaten on April 5). And then we FMi Sjiriinir. :>7S have the runoff:on May 3. Four,^un, confusing weeks of elections. But we have a plan. TheCity Charter*says you have tohave aspecial elec­tion within 60 daysif there are twocouncil vacancies.or more, right? And no firing line onecan changethe CityCharter except thecitizens, right?So whynot havea special election to changethe CityCharter (who would vote againstit?), and thai have all of the council elections together and at once? Union'fee issue not \abbve bodYtl' We would save maybe one election, and would make things a lot simpler To th6 editor: for the candidates and voters. After Sure, I'lTadmit it, there were times, • tand thatit istoo smallfor a parkinglot, matter of time "before old "Ailstin reading the Guest Viewpoint, countless time,-when I began writing (maybe a small|car parking lot), so it vanishes right before your eyes. "WeU done Student Senate":-in yester­letters to the editor — letters of protest will probably -sit vacant for a few more Name withheld by request day's Texan, I, asa student senator, feel against William Stone's absurd reviews, years until Lamar Savings can acquire Council brutality Art of teaching that there were facts misrepresented letters of disgust for coeds who walk the rest-of the block to build a shopping and that the whole story of that debate three abreast down the sidewalk, block­•­ mall. To the editor: The City Council's Task Force on Police Brutality is having the same was not told. . " ing thepassage of those of us whoare not I am .not saying that all old buildings • After seeing Frank Erwin and Ja problem the City Council is having: keeping its members. First of all, an overwhelming majority trying to get picked up, letters of even should be saved (there are a great deal Fudemberg claim that TA's are no of the Senate did not decide that "theac­ Paul Hernandez resigned the task force this week for basically the same more disgust for coeds who bring their of them that should "see the ball"), but qualified to teach, I have to, object tions of the Union Board had been made little doggies to campus and leave them there are quite'a few dl them scheduled reasons that almost resulted in his refusal to serve on the committee in the I am a computer science mpjor* an understandable to the extend that tied to trees while they (the coeds) go to for ruin that should be.reconsidered. I first place: that 10 of the 17 members: of the group come from socio­further investigation Seemed un­out of 19 hours of C.S. courses, 11 have class, letters, letters,such letters Ihave am saying that the people who intend to been taught by TA's. John McGlothlin, economic groups that seldom, if ever, sufferfrom police mistreatment; that necessary." Rather, it was decided that intended. But anyone here at college destroy' these buildings of historical Joe Dreussi and Bob Young are amongthe task force was no more than a pacifier;, that the task forcehad no power creation of a special investigating com­could write these letters. The Texan is value should give concerned parties am­the best teachers I have had at this un­except in advising the City Council. mittee was unnecessary.1was oneof the filled with dozens of lofty discourses of ple'opportunity (unlike Shot Tower) to iversity. I do not feel that a PH> will in­ senators who voted down Ware's The task force needs power, not in terms of decision making, but in terms concern and relevance. change the fate of such properties, be it crease their ability to teach,,computer proposal, but it was not becauseI felt the I have something better in mind — moving -the building, restoring it, science. • . »•'*, oTbeing provided with the necessary funds and staff to conduct its in-Union issue was completely "above something that far outweighs concern remodeling it or even salvaging it. I cannot understand how a person can vestiptions in an impartial-and extensive manner. The committee made a board" and open to the public: and relevance — FAME! The kind of Something needs to. be done by say that TA's are not qualified to teach. request last November for funds to finance the hiring of investigators in­Based on past activities of the board, fdme that comes only with having one's someone, whether it is the historical Teaching is an art either you^have theand questionable practices in initiating dependent of any city prganization to prevent bias or conflicts of interest. letter printed in this outstanding and tru­society, the City Council via city or­talentor you don't No amount of educs and funding -the renovation' of Union ly remarkable student newspaper' City Manager Dan Davidson denied the request, saying that the hiring of dinance orwealthy philanthropists in the tion will increase a persons-ability' to. concern a Oh yes, there will be thoseshallow per­West; I think Ware's was area. If somethingisn't doneabout it and independent investigators would .violate the City Charter and that money legitimate one. The sentiment in the teach, it will only allow them to teac sons, those, undergraduates who wear soon, Austin as we know it won't be more subjects. •_ V \vcould be provided only for the hiring of city employes as investigators. The Senate was that any such investigation leisure suits and say things like "dude," recognizable in 10 years. After all, Wa^neSeipel task force rejected Davidson's plan for city investigators by a,vote of 10-2, should be carried out either independent­who will think "Jesus, just who does he they've got the technique, so it's just a 707 WL 21st St ly or through existing Student Govern­ and task force member Dor. John Warfield threatened resignation at that think heis?" but I know — and I know it ment committees. for a fact — that deep down in,their . time, i ' • : I do not feel thatWare "lacked any hearts they will be saying ".Gee, Iwish I Hernandez' may not be the last. Arthur Navarro, forone, is contemplatinga substantial backing by fellow his could write like that" similarrecourse. "lamalsoconsideringresignation.iutrmgoingtocon­senators" in the spirit of his investiga­ You are going to print it? Oh, thank in tbejamily: sult witha few peoplebeforelfeacfcadecisioiii' Navarro toldTheTexan. "I tion and before the Students of this you. Thank you somuch; Itfedssogood. University tie .down and gently accept am basically in agreement with all of Mr. Hernandez' allegations." '< ' -i Jerome Sims. another fee1 raise for the Union East, ^ Graduate School City Council — if anyone isleft there — should take careful note of these a scenario which isa cloudy issuein itself,1,'amonfe. developments. If council membersintendior the task force to help correct many, feel that closekrotiny isdefinite­See the ball ,-.J ukm so afraid that this was the end,­ police brutality in Austin, they, had better listen again tothe task force. If ly in order.""" —•"""" To the editor: ^O/ our loved, trusted and respectable friend* resignations continue — especially by East Austin.representatives — the Finally, Talmadge, letus notallow our At the risk of sounding like I'm "kick- We had finMy j^yed t^'mtuAwMi hie power --— "potential political plans" to distort the ing a dead dog," ^ feel that it is task force will besuch afarcethat noteven the couhcilwill be ableto claim If?!' opinions and intentions of the Student necessary to informthe publicof some of And would eurely resign thie very hour. " -that something is being done about police misconduct in Austin. I Senate arid ;the students at-large. the "progress-oriented" atrocities that : : So, he wetA to the regenis. for -their approval, lyn Breelaad are happening to our Austin heritage. 1 to persuade them against his removal. Senator, Social and Behavioral Sciences Upon returning from a working vaca­ fih Deformed reform -The regents began to question him fully, tion,!was horrified but not surprised to I, One of the ironies of this£ongress te:tfie spectacleof Rep: Wright Patman, FAME!!! see that the"great-iron ball of fate" had Oh why must lie be a continual bullyt" To die editor: . been at its handiwork again. Now, sirj just what have you done, D-Tex., being turned*out of the.chairmanship..of-the House Banking Com­ •Well, I can't .wait any longer. • "Yes folks,Shot Toweris now;official­By arranging the grades for your son? mittee by a tide of reform. A bumper crop of brand new members of '• Hollywood hasn't called, and my ego ly, 100 percent dead." Funny how the And the resignation of Martha Jean, ' 'i Congress usually does show skepticism fw:the seniority system, and suqh must be reinflated quick. In the.past I completion of the demolition quietly Oh, friend, what a horrible scene. shakeups in the power structure are:healthy for the Congress. But in their have found, relief in The Daily Texan. cointidedwithChristmasvacation. Coin­ zeal, these i)ew reformers have stripped power from a potential ally — a First there was that letter in the cidence? I doubt it. i So, our friend sensing the heat, . ' ' ^ summer of 1973 —everyone loved it! ' man .who has been fighting the battles against monopoly and centralized There isnothing anyof us can doabout > Jumped,immediately to his feet. \ ; ("Nice," said Mother.) And then that power this Congress was elected (odQght since before most of the eon-i Shot Tower It's gone. What is He stood and faced them straight and tall, i* .gressmen ware horn. >*'. ->• *s:y-i' lengthy letter on porno last spring — spooky,' though, now. is that the people who And said, "Why regents, I've done nothing at alL" r-~ fame for a week'! And I won't even men-perform such deedshave their technique Ki •; .Subscribing to a populism which has not been fashionable during much of ,-tion that I was a Bar Belle in Pearl perfected. If you don't believe me, go So, thus it was settled and the regents all beamed, „L ;tbehalf-century he hasbeen in Congress,Patmanhas beenan outspokenflT^IKMagazine(peopIe still look at mefunny}. visit "ft>e BH Factor"at 614 Lavaca St. i differ our friend, again, would reign supreme.' '---j -. i.i--, Butit has beenalmost a yearsince Iwas '•iWell, now we students can only discover,i{" longstanding watchdog on the big New York banks and theFederal Reserve%-^ It WAS a nice example of the Art Deco . . for ian autograph, era here in Austin..You see,Jt; too, is Board, ft was Patman who brought tolight theNixon administration plan to' <•_ ^ . To our dismay, there shan't be another. "> -V jSne Htntnn? that is. So ybtfjrttust print this letter to completely gone now, quietlyextinguish- i bail out the mismanaged Penn Central railroad. Though the hanking com-; assure ray fans that I am still alive. . ed over Christmas vacation. I unders­ik'fis i-i < 4503 Elwood Road mittee often listened to bank lobbyists morecarefully than it did to Patman ..(most^of its members otfn bank stock), he used his chairmanship: to guest vleujpolnt ^ > -d^tounce and publicize abuses of power in the government, as well as the financial institutions of the nation. In October of 1972 Patman tried to vc -organize an investigation of the Watergate st^ndal, focusingon the launder­ ing of campaign funds through Mexican banks but was unable to get the r The usual story: free thought junked ,jmeasure passed by a hostile pre-election banking committee. n« gA'imfuntfp m '. ^ : -«..J a l . . ^ ^ i By KATHERINE WINKLER student .body is at. heart This is the professional announcers. At present only Chile. Okay, we said, we'll give up the -v • Patman's attackson the sacred cowsof Washington and Wall Streetmade anf ' recurrent denial by the University ad-one-student contributes volunteer-labor feature if we can continue broadcasting ;% |him a championof the unrich and theunpowerful. Hisleadership will bemis-, CAM DUNCAN minisbation of freedom ot • speech to to the show. Mr. Glabhas said that their the news portion. » -­ (Editor's note:Winkler andDuncan students. White the Communication budget runs in the "thousands -of ; FINALLY, in May,.1974,-shortly, after are members of The Latin American Center's decision to carry the institute's dollars." -, , .we had spent nearly $300 toxenew subr PollcyAItemativeaGiroup;') show instead, of; LAPAG's-is;.:a Uttle­ ^; Ouc VLatin American Press Review" scriptions, we were told that, because of A Daily Texan articledn Jan.14 (Latin knqwnand relatively insighificantcousin . .'.was distributed nationally to 60 public a lack of professional broadcasting skills DAILY TEXAN to aich events as Smrr's dismissal, the Mtwtfrwtt ItmJMnnUf*Urn w AnNp American Review Presents Diverse radio and the "lack of breadth of coverage,"'EDITOK +intment3, the lessons are the same. RAGING EDITOR . Lynne Brock and June, 1974. Throughout its1 history for the summer. After stroug objections news' program A brief exammation of the history of a Latin' American on to the way we bad been handled.,we wjere S^imfsIT MANAGING EDITORS V i „ Eddie Fisher the staff feared, that the show was in ..University radio.KUT. An explanation is our program reveals the attitude of the told that the show .might 'continue in 1 Claude Simpson in order forthe benefitof those whowere dangerof berng censored or tiiken off the ^ .Contmunication.Center to the principle {iir because the University would not September if it was coordinated by both mm EDlTOft::T. : Kathy Kelly surprised; to read that this < show has of uncensored expression; LAPAffbegan LAPAG and the Institute of Latin SlpORTS EDITOB Richard Justicfe replaced t the Latin. American Policy producing a< Latin American news casting information critical of WS. American Studies, or altered to'insure allow itself to be credited with broad­ Alternatives Group's (LAPAG) program;in October, 1972. The weddy AMUgEMENTS EDITOR ...i, . Vicky Bowles ."coverage of a full range'of topics OA program, the?"Latin: American Press , format.consisted of 15 minutes of • news foreign policy. But it took the coup in ,Latih America." J . "' . EEATORES EDITOR .> . Janice Tomlin fchile to open theears of the Communica­ Review.". We would also like to respond and analysis from the Latin American ' tion Center to what we weresaying And We submitted^ proposal forllrt CAPITOLBUREAU,CHIEF . David Hendricks' to several points in the article. -• „press andfrom,selected British and U S. censor they did. program and did not recfeive'd respons .newspapers, followed by a 15-minute FIRST OF ALL, the LAPAG program until late in the summer when-We leaii ^ ' ISSUE STAFF 1 was.Jn.existence two years, not 'merely: ifeature. A promotional letter,said that s "-AFTER TWO PROGRAMS of detailed .ed that the program had beeitglven * : • "We specialize in whatLatin Americans ^.-.descriptions of the coup and its after-­ Issue Editor Niancy Call . from "Januaiy, through May last year'' i. Mr. Giab. Evidently, theCommunication Reporters »f»' ..... ,themselves are saying and doing about' math, of the quick changesin U.S policy -Mary Walsh, Bill Scdtt,;David Hendricks as thearticle states.Secondly, we,object? Center and Hhe ,inStitv(te' had L been *ssm towards Chile and-the immediate provi- New* AssStants _ kj-Arny C3ieng, Steve McGoniglei Ann Pliinkett to the statement made by Edward Glab * 0"** greeting and planhlng a~bew program «8ion of economic assistance to the new. Patu KUday Mike Ollnian, Tonl Shidofi -the institute program's executive direc^>^«SS^^ Htati<2s wiaK^. u*s-" /before^e were)?ver sent a reply Tie in­ reAk ifnilitaty junta, we were informedthat a ^torialnAssistants.. «>..\^..f..Robii» Craved Louis Delgafo;: tor, that our show "did a lot offe>'iI!^^*^tmeri?a®reviewhasex-. stitute wasablv tojis?umea format and preview board had been appointed tp A^ociate ^u:^.^r.T.^.-.v,-, Willfcm A. StoneJr. an audience tiiat twd years of LAPAG edltorializingA', _ ^ differewes, . . 'uiu uupuiuiui uuLCicin.'dj, Jnoiiitor the progra^n s accuracy and '' Ed Dalheim ^swork had developed I •> 7 ""r A press revieW ihust necessarily sam-^lbowever, in the production*of the fad -"Mauce The boardconsisted of IJTLatin AnnWJieelock Iir the .decision to.replace LAPAG' a.hroad 'Spectrum of news and programs. The only financial resoun^ v^M^n>ericailist facuIty aanies were « Scott Bobb , .radio shdw the institute and tEe^o Jditorial opinion. LAPAG-, an anti-used by LAPAG wasapproximately S600 hy William Glade, director of •vVi fSZ77-.vmunicationCenteraSlaborated^inanii^ ~~J? v-y# imperialist ^organization, naturally a year for air mail newspaper subBcriD-^v 'J16 histitute. Fortunately, after a few v '"jtion which in effect censors shidentiin PhOto^'ap rv''*»ffv'v^^'"$i^;rCarol.JeMSinimottfi§!^ , .. v, i -C, -1 1 WPflrtntthatthe-mainta^iSpS^Mji sa-different-fcand taping the show.iMost of the staff $ '|trategy for .cleanbig !up the program ^edecislqg wa? ti»i «»lltiear«&tCTp matgriaj, probably UBCTitical of VS,% megbers were students at the Latin? Jwas to threaten to dlscobtinue it,daim-<$ur press review -policy. f , , > "American Institute, :aiid some were |ing that th6 feature portion was biased--r ^It's the-ttsuat story-a siu$ h descHptiRoper„who lfte -the-.tJ^ ndmin{stn( v ^ Glafc -one part-tinie^f iMMia IIS A CIA's unsung By JACK ANDERSON 'Pigs.invasion. The late Presi­ranchers convicted for was ordered to volunteer one • • with dent Kennedy declared shooting golden eagles front day a week to a conservation LES WRITTEN afterwards that he"wanted to airplanes. cause. The case is now under ®1974 United Feature Syn­splinter the CIA in a thousand, When the guilty party turns appeal. dicate pieces and scatter it to the out to be a "Mr. Big,", WASHINGTON-Locked in winds." however, Interior remains The Gamble affair, in other the Central Intelligence Agen­When he cooled down, mysteriously mute. words, was perhaps the Fish cy's vaults is another side to Kennedy called in Clifford, Last September, for exam­and Wildlife Service's most the CIA story, which probably who had helped to draft the ple, the Justice Department spectacular success. Yet will never be told. legislation establishing the successfully prosecuted despite the endless flow of The story can be found in CIA. told he Clifford us George F. Gamble, the 36-press trivia from the Interior the thick, top-secret remembers the late year-old heir to the Procter Department's public informa­transcripts of the civilian ad­President's words vividly. and Gamble soap fortune. tion office, not a single wordvisory board, which watches "I madesome bad decisions He had been arrested by was put out about the Gamble over the CIA. on the Bay of Pigs," said Fish and Wildlife agents for conviction. CIA officials weresubjected Kennedy. "I made these bad transporting acrossstate lines to intensive questioning, decisions because I had bad the head of a Rocky Mountain Spokesmen for the Interior which sometimes lasted a full information.' My information Bighorn Sheep, which was Department say they • don't day. Tlits brought a great was bad, because, our in­killed in Yellowstone National issue press releases on many .reforms. Which the telligence was' poor. Park. criminal convictions, because board pressed upon the CIA. Something is gravely, wrong Dist." judge Robert the cases are frequently A. former diairman, Clark inside the CIA, and I intend to Peckham threw the book at appealed. Yet announcements Clifford, told us he was con­find out whatit is.Icannot af­Gamble. He wasfined $10,500, have been made of the arrests vinced from the sessions that ford another Bay oM>igs." was instructed not to hunt big and convictions in other cases the CIA not only is an effec­The late President' often game anywhere in the world involving people of little tive but an essential organiza­attended the civilian advisory for the next three years, and renown. tion. .board's secret sessions and In the nuclear age, he said, helped to fashion the reforms the CIA has become our first that were imposed Upon the guest viewpoint line of defense. If someagents CIA. have been .fools, he said. Footnote:. Our/CIA sources Utilers\ have been unsung say the advisory board lost involved in Vietnam s war heroes whose deeds surpass some of its clout after the most valorous in our Kennedy's assassination. By JEFF McCOWN, the American people as tothe to both American and PRG destroyed. request for aid to Saigon in anniversary of the peace history yet must remain nn-STRANGE MODESTY:The SHEILA MEINERT reality of the fighting and sources, more than 25,000 .This list of violations of the 1974. However. President agreement, will be marked in "recorded. V Interior Department may be and their obligations in the agree­American advisers function in agreement is by no means Ford plans to ask for $300 Austin by a series of emits some -. JIMBLANFORD ment and haveactively sought complete; indeed, the consis­ "The? CIA had the onlyageneyin Washington the Saigon area alone. million in supplemental aid to designed to express oar oat-.dramatic successes," he said. which doesn't like to crow (Editor's note: McCown, to violate the peace terms so • The UnitedStates pledged tent U.S.-Saigon policy has Thieu, yetanother violation of rage at continued ILS. in­ "But the successes must re­about its successes. : Meinert and Blanford are as to bolster the Thieu to "stop all military activities been to violate every article the peace treaty. volvement. For well memben of The Austin Coali­regime. The facts of Vietnam the'treaty. The main concealed or they no over a year» the the re­against North by ' of Thieu Thanks tosuch U.S. involve­At ll:30~I.riL on the Mainlonger will bb successes." department's-Fish and tion To Implement the Peace cent situation and. the ground, air and naval forces." regime has conducted ment in Southeast Asia, peace Mall people in the UniversityHe singledoutfor praise un­Wildlife Service has been Agreement) violations by the U.S.-Thieu (Article 2) widespread and oppressive is ii -from being at hand. community will assemble fordercover m'en'who have been cracking down on the mis­This month marks the se­forces are as follows: •.The United States and the military actions to seize PRG What is it. then, that concern­a march to the Capitol, where cond anniversary of the Viet­• The United' States caught and have been sub­creants who seek pleasure or Saigon regime agreed to "in­controlled areas, in clear ed Americans can do to insure they will join others from the jected to skillfully cruel tor­profit from killing',selling and nam peace agreement, an promised in the agreement to sure the democratic liberties violation of the agreement the peace? Currently, the Austin community at large for agreement which ostensibly "not continue its military in­the The ture, yet have resisted with trading endangered animals. of people: personal South Vietnamese mood in Congress is excellent a noontime demonstratioo­ uncommon bravery the effort was to end both the conflict in volvement or intervene in the Some cases have been freedom, freedom of the press liberation forces, .contrary to for further cuts in U.S. aid to At the Capitol there will be \ to extort information from publicized. Interior, for.exam­Vietnam and the United internal affairs of South Viet­... freedom of political ac­the picture painted by the Saigon, and outspoken public guerrilla theater, educational them. ple, has not hesitated to issue States' involvement in that nam." (Article 4) ; tivities ... freedom of move­American press and govern­opinion can increase the speeches and planning for Of course, the CIA has also conflict. However, two years * In' 1974 the United States ment, " etc. (Article 11) press releases about alligator ment, have only reacted likelihood that this aid wilt be further actions to support the had its blunders. The blunder poachers, Indians caught sell­and eight billion U.S. dollars sent the Saigon regime $800 defensively. treaty. If we. want to keep However, the Saigon police diminished. Any such cut inlater, the level of violence has of all blUnders was the Bay of ing eagle feathers or sheep million in aid to support and state has clearly become The situation in Vietnam is aid is a tangible and realistic America out of "another Viet-< anything but diminished, and enlarge Thieu's army and more not less, restrictive, critical. The war is far from step toward building that nam war." then obr first task U.S. involvement in the form LI KNEU) I HEARD A police force. banning all labor strikes, oyer, U.S. interest and in­peace. is to get America totally oatof of aid and military advisors * The United States pledged N0I5E! I KNEW SOMEONE peace demonstrations and volvement in the conflict are This Monday, the date of the this Vietnam war. U1AS IN THE HOUSE.' has far from ended. to "totally withdraw all neutralist parties. Two-far from ended. and the GONE! By contrast, the United military and police advisers hundred-thousand people still possibility of direct military States and the Saigon dic­from South Vietnam." (Arti­remain in Thieu's jails. Op­intervention looms ever more tatorship itsupports hkveboth cle 3) . . position newspapers are over horizon. the Studtman's Largely as a result of public concern. Congress cut $15 PHOTO SERVICE million from the White House 222 W. 19th & 5324 CAMERONRD. "i_-jBAR-B-Q& 476-4326 453-1958 SNOOPY, 6ET UPJ A DRA6 HIM OVER HERE TWe.U»,TaBED/ANP I'LL iigiiPliiiW-SPpiMARKET ALTERATIONS "QUALITY SPECIALISTS" 0UR6LAR STOLE BITE. HIM ON THE L65! 108 W. 43rd St. ' COMPETITIVE PRICES r OUR TV SET."; ^ JEANS.SHIRTS,MUSSES • • I 453-0620 t ^ r SPECIALS GOOD THRU JAN. 25 V5I NIKKORMAT FTN CHROME 00053 --SSil We Arm Now Doing WITH 50MM F/2 ICNS ZOOROUND STEAK ...... IB. M " FRIDAY SPECIAL Outside A/farations at $32.50 NIKON CASE NO. 487 1/ :--;l SIRLOIN STEAK ...... LB. $ 1 39 Easy Priems ' PURCHASED WITH CAMBtA 72. «f-4 T-BONE STEAK LB. 5 1 59 CHICKEN PLATE . BOB ELLIOTT'S |REDEEM THIS AO FOR A" 10% SAVINGS ON KOOACOUNti •OR ANT NEGATIVE COLOR RIM PROCESSED BY US. MTO( BEANS tI49 ru.Jahp. OMfe-Onv doonesbury RUMP ROAST or |STANDARD JUMBO SIZES (3R. 2R. 3S). J POTATO SALAD 1 Ofwn Tborsby K8 • pm. ; PIKES PEAK LB. M 09 | Ia COUPON EXPIRES JUNE 30,1975 ^I PICKUE -ONION.. • MXWHStOP SUU0N6MPtm (fisousTNor ,aov$A&tr FRESH GROUND SXV-BfcTO YOUR fm>ma»*AU(m>-io ssnauwteNmt. BEEF LEAN LB. 99 c SATURDAY SPECIAL smeeisTO AR VOLCANO . IS Citrus (rail < •-'BB Limb will speak. Dobie Room, 4th floor, Academic Center. S>« (PD "9 Anon capped sleeve, belted blouse over • Ideas and Issues Committee. ;. ..\J17Onew|>0;M ,10 slenderizing striped skirt. 10 Mental Image bias receives .., 11' 11 Point of I-'l3P;™' PoSjQ^wdinfl. Contemporary poetry by, Luscious mint-, green stripes on hammer X legacy., ivory Machine IB Orlve . 16 Conjunction H.'IJW T.iyw '37 47 A state (abbr.):, 25 Narrow Endured , India opening ^39 Holding s y . 49 Printer's if Ph.8*11 p.m. Richard Mason on Guitar. An evening of' 26 fioekyhllf, 27 Lessen. %! device ~ -a measure(pi,) ijj. t 27 Inssct i 28 Handle instrumental 12-string slide guitar. ^ Free. Texas' 41 Judgment ;.50 Expire -'• 29 A state(abbr.). 29 Principal 42 Yuc«tan j . ' 53 A continent • I'(Tavern. •• j 31 Number 30 I Indian^ . (abbr )' ' 32 Near .. V8,P-^ "G"y« q"d Dolls." Stars Marlon Brando,' 33 Japane^t measure y Fronk Sinatra, and Jean Simmons. Admission $1. for '34 Container • rT?.,ud®nt*' ««>d staff; $1.50 members. Batts K.. v3JPrtmoun • 36 Stiletto rvjc4 ' l;Auditorium, Theatre Committee, 38tub}i^te_ y I Beginning Monday:?^1 ^- Swate"' "J <• 1.!•? ..I* Smoking Cessation Qinic. In­ •Rational.jSr.:).; , 42/Mnti«iione If ^'r,d'!interested in stoppingsmoking may register 3 I < F{-J:-.ywTsrl 44 Qlrl^ijaprtW : for the elinictobeheld beginningMonda^, Jan.27,at . .48 'Unmovlng.\;.: •48;PlMshpd " r™!t 5tudont Health-Center, Participants will attend 51 Tibetan ox eifher noon or 4 p.m. seiiiort on Monday and Thurs-1 day untilseyenseuions arecompleted.Fe4 of $5 tob* K ' a* «^«ottd elanmeeting. \Ipon completiono.f IPliliPMiSiiilli porti°n of fee,is returned. Register by' I U M -I" I ' I ; B83 S'^^ Hialthe^ Center, 471­au^iMiaiii^ ji** * ,6-8," Student Health Centerx ^i jv. 1 l^i {RY 'and Toxas Union. ^ pnHHw 111 L :i il^Thursrfay^anuary 23-, 19^5THE DAJLY TEXA^hPage 5 mmmMmwm» -iisit S8II1B * i­ isai j's* ? >5^41 •-r4 H *~v. Kiner, Roberts Await Results I Of Shrine Vote NEW YORK (AP) —Robin Roberts, winner of 286games dur^ ing his 19-year major league career.and Ralph Kiner, seven-tune National League home run champion; are considered the prime candidates for election into Baseball's Hall of Fame Thursday. The Baseball Writers Association of America will the results of its annual balloting at U a.m. Thursday. . The 48-year-old Roberts, now an investment broker arx] part owner of the Philadelphia team in the North American Hockey League, and the 52-year-old Kiner, a broadcaster for the New York Mets, barely missed election into the Hall last year. At that time; only former New York Yankee teammates Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford received the necessary 75percent vote for induction from the BBWAA. Roberts finished. third m the balloting with 224 votes and Kiner was fourth with 214. The required number for election was 274. This time, the two former National League stars wereawwmn 37 players on the ballot, reduced from an eligible listof 65can­didates by the BBWAA's screening committee. Five were on the ballot for the last time, including Ener, Phil Cavarretta, Hal Newbouse, Vic Raschi and Johnny. Sain. A player cannot become eligible for the ballot until five yeais. after his final season in the majors. Then he can remain on the ballot fbr 15 years, and if i»t elected then, can be putintoagroOp forselec­tion by the Committee on Veterans. ( j New randidates this year were Ken Boyer, lion Dn^dale, Johnny Podres and Bill White. iptaiyers have wonDomination in -their first year of digMUty, including Mantle, Bob Feller, Jackie Ted Williams, Stan Masial, Sandy Konfai and Warrwi Spahn The Committee on Veterans chose three members last year ^SimryJaa Bottomley, Sam TlioinpsonandJockoConlan — md I^^^ Committee on Negro Leagues selected Jim jpool PapaBeU,swelfingthe Hall's total to 146 aincethe L-—— Star Arn'«.«)l ; Uvef CMC* AfOUflCf: •dhim tophx* third in two •vants ogaira}SMU km wookond.The longhotm defeated the Mustang* 63- UNIVEj^iTY REFRIGERATORS, APWOVHUOfc USE IN U.T. DOMWTQBte ? • 2 SIZES TO CHOOSE FROM • FRtt DELIVERY TO YOUR ROOM • RH MAINTENANCE ' ; BECAUSE OF LIMITED SUPPLY 'IT IS NECESSARY TO RESERVE YOUR Refrigerator as soon as you ARRIVE ON CAMPUS. -CAU: 478-3471r : O* WWW: UNIVBtSrrr KEHUGBIATOKS r.o.omwei i AUSTIN, TEXAS 78712 AUSTINfARMY STORE 408 CONGRESS v •-• OUSE SALE t -1 -"fASi r HIKING BOOTS • (6 inch top) .«% 'L' ^ p 4i695 $581 CONVERSE TENNIS ' ^SHOES (Leather &Canikts). :_ -,"v ­ -MM SHIRT-eJAKS •ivv " 4-1'. ­ MANY;MORE VALUES 6 Thtfrsdatf,!. januarv V DAIL1 Drugs Probed in NFL, ABA sr. LOUIS (AP) — Oom­misskneis of the National Football League and American Basketball Associa­tion acknowledged Wednesday that an investigation-is bong made into allegations that a drug ring supplied narcotics to players fiom both leagues. "We have been awareofthe investigation since its' incep­tion," a spokesman for NFL Commissioner Pete Razelle said. "We have cooperated folly with all lawenforcement authorities.. We have no further comment at this, site time." Teams mentioned in the report also had no com­znent TKDD MONCHAK, ABA commissioner, said; "I,along with oar security director. Bad Olsoo, have known about the situation for 10 days. :Hiere-are no circumstances at the moment which demand •immediate action. We are cooperating with the SLLouis police and drug control un­its." Police officials and spokesmen for a number of NFL teams also have refused to comment anthe report made potblicTuesday in which a 19-year-oldSCLoois woman is allied to have ^ven St' Lotus police a detailed state­ment concerning her ac­tivities as a courier for anap­parent drug ring. Lt Col. John Doherty, chief of detectives for the St. Louis |hnponod Premium — |ROStetL | I Only 85C/5th | •H yaw think ihb'it super, mJ e*mfl iWi ••• Ridoy» eti . I isuraSAVINGS THtU MM W. 12th Police Department, wouldsay only that Rode Ann Rice had been arrested Jan. 4 on charges of defrauding an in­ nkeeper and of frandniently using acredit card."Anything other than that Icannot verify or substantiate," Doherty said. • ' • "The--'39-page " -in­ tradepartmental memo leak­ ed to the press Tuesday quoted Hiss Rice as saying that die had been recruited to transport briefcases con­ taining what die believed to be nateotics tomany NFL ' ; ;v 'cities^ • '*' SHE TOLD officers that she posed as a nhanfan Adiza Juzang, as she. became familiar with playersand took orders and delivered nar­ cotics. The Kansas City Star published a photograph Wednesday of a 'Dr. Juzang who was allegedly in Kansas CLEVELAND (AP) Forrest Gregg, offensive line coach of the Cleveland Browns lastseason, was nam­ed Wednesday as bead coach. Gregg succeeds; Nick Skorich, who was ousted as coach last month, shortly after the Brownsended one of the worst National FtoothaH League seasons in their ' history. Gregg's background in­cludes playing iand working feu-football's famous Yince Lombard!. : ,. v Gregg, taking h& first head coadung job, signed a three-year contract, but owner Art Mqdell declined to the terms. ^ "L Gregg, 42, was a mainstay of the Green Bay Packers' offensive lme-for 14 seasons and was a piember of ' the team^.whea; it won titles-in 1965. 19G6and 1967. , „ BUFFET S G&M CATERING -D&W00D CDITER IH 35 & 38% FRIED CATHSH EVERY MEAL 2 0IRRBimES AtSO .4 VEGETABIES 6 SALADS BREADS.* DE$SartS TOTAL PRICE | OA* OFF WITH THIS J AO COUPON j vob AmMtt it,tm, (60AMUK toanoii 0*1) v THURSDAY & SUNDAY M .VA.-Vit SPEQALS x '] mmi*. mm , CHICUN RUED STEAK LARGE CHICKEN FRIED STEAk. nuTTERY BAKEO POTATO OR FltENCH HOT TEXM tOAST.AND ^ / .CTtSP TOSSED SALAD.­K DiNNES •v -^ r-I* -Hi A J.. .49­ --SiSfjfj . . City for a game between.the •varioos cities wto-visited Chiefs and the Minnesota her hotel rooms to pick np in­Vikings. St Loots poBce iden­dividual packages she had tified the woman in the carried there m a briefcase. photograph as being Rone Ann Rice.--:., . players told her they were Miss Rice said die had ob-orderingdrugsfor theirteams taioed press passesin Kansas -for op-coming games!J ,. . City and ottercitiestogo onto Other teams mpntilwd in the phjiig BeH to become the report were the Honston belter acquainted with the Oilers, Los AngelesRamsand players-Detroit Lions ot the NFL and Rice was arrested at two American Basketball Lambert.Airport in St Loois Association teams, theSpirits in comection withhe* useof a of St Loois and the Vifghria credit can) reputedly stolen SqmreSL' ' from defensive back Ken Rice .claimed she had ob­ .Houston of the Washington tained a press pass to meet Redskins. She told police the the basketball playere ia St card was apparently-stolen Louis asd later sold dritgs to from-Houston's. home by a tbem in New York. ; woman from whom she Rice is quoted in the report received her traveling in­as saying that she .was structions. scheduled'to go to the Soper HOUSTON, who lives in Bowl and later the Pro Bowl Virginia, was unavailable for this month, bot that shenever comment 'received her final iusUuctions The woman named players because she was arrested. Sheets Gregg In l9E9 he becamea player-year contract as the Browns' coach.of the Packers. and in offensive fine coach prior to 1971 hejoined the DaBasCow­the ISM! boys in the same dual role. After thatseason he becamea Gregg was te Packers' se­ coach of the San Diego cond draftchoice in1956not at Chargers. He signed a two-Southern Methodist Umveisi­ sports capsules- NBA m i Pa. * i. M. m Boston 3» U JK2 _ New York, 32 t3 JII - Bofteto 9 U AS2 I KfBtefcjr. ai -m 1 NewYark.... 23 » S3S *** n a » m Ptiitadctpbt*. It 77 n as jo m I --• Vargiai* . » » .ji a fi Q JI1 ­ 22 a ^24 th 20 2* J6S Attact* 2D 27 .404 n mom... HemOrlfat. 5 * .122 25 ***** SwHego. OcfrotT ..... Chicago MOwaukc*. HCOiMte Sm Dfego Ol St. km* Yorkitamantf PARADIGM 1&M-. LECTURE # NOTES SERVICE 504 W. 24th 472^68 3^^ ^ Mon.-Fri.10-6 .-Sof.:10-12W*® Thi& semeater we will be offering ru m over 70 eour»es.Typing, copyingr and available^ «M6UADAUJre 47USS ; -J5I34 KJWET B0l 0 4SW3I ouait gggj am 8MM 0 " ii 4-5 TODAY S& ,WWM * Isr AI Ooy. Chi 1-3 pan. Bwii. d»dh4KMrMtaiM 4-6 pjn. OHQina«a hn. ^lilpjii.GuitorMOTic. Bchnd Motman «• .-.fMFr-T• f, I^MfatttqrSra FM^liee^^iBdUgyf­.S*h*d^r 3:00pm-i:00*m .Sanday 3:G8|an-lG&ngjU ^HappyHov-isfiroRi4:00-7:00jiin( THEHXAS i. r ^ ~?l>Jti*'. W-V^-v'.|:«. A, Hf> "•-•"*-• o ' r'i' ^"" * '1 -*" -"< ". --\ r * ^ T}--^ * ~r . ( / T -3 ib'i V5,vh "^ftoM'A !•American to Un-American • •• '-- .-i^ j.-.; , -­ Bill Walton was srttingIn Uielraiiiinz area f2 ­life style like' transcendental meditation," yoga and other million contract be signed with the Trail Blazen.'He iit^kes ' ^mitnalbdiefe becausewhat behassaid ha^beenconstrued it plain that he lives 6ff a certain amount of money, iutd.ti>e ! by the press as symbols of insanity. rest of it is in deferred payments. _ " .' ' "People that don't understand me get turned off,"Walton He will talk about what his views on money arfe '"I.dealvv' says. "So I don't want to talk about it" '.. with two types of people, people that deal on my leve) and AS HE retailed to the locker room, the media was ready other people that deal on a material level. Someday I bopie . for a second assault, After a few preliminary questions, a everyone will be able to deal with each' other on a non­rckinphone wais thrnst into Walton's face and the radio material level."ji. . Murals Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service,.-...;..r .•V'CUUS^kT' • -Stejlions <3 Brulm . • Student Health Center ^ . ah Baba def. AntesdcbuR * -Low Star slppervM Gators15 Section DCM.Big S«*i detauO Seagrams79 Oyster.Boys 29 105 W:26lh St. (4th Boot-South) -j Scpemsn oFandlf 3t . Mets4STascosa 33 lDormMGoraijir','t-v -:.v PRICE SPEQALOFFER •• !W*fii«>liiin :• -Jump def:'Cast!iD6odefault;: •••'**c* dtf Tctadeteun Acacia 40 Ptri Kappa Psl 32 > $1.90 Per Month S4 -Bete THeta PI 49 Zcta Beta Tau 31 1 Paid Per Semester/ ShoeShop TheHoustonChronicle? Vlfe makaand .... ^SKIH i# &1 ••pair bpels RUGS tNow Delivered in Most Areas •K»« belts "A edll477-4485 * r leatlwr—~ *LEATHER SALE* yarisui lan OPEfsl. TILL 4™A ^ TOSSED SAWDJxi, PS'rps^oru & GUADALU :CHOICE OF VisitingCa^ Psychologist YOGA PSYCHOLOGY ITODAY ONLY: AN* PRACIC r |h%£*^REGULARLY $1.69*i "?V ^ "" A mm t JAN. 2l ^»hurs. ^SATURDAY • ,V J. lOjto 5:30 Igeforep Seminar$10: m 8pm|rffi * IstChurc SpcWy»Bf AtisttriA ~ & • It's ,lhe other, people -that Walton, has .trouble, com­The bus driver came into the locker room and gave Wicks municating with; Waltpn jba's been heavily criticized by these and Walton the hint that the players were waiting. As theypeople, but hertries hot to let it bother him. "-Somebody is were leaving, Wicks told us to meet them at the Sunshine always going to think you're nuts. House, and Walton gave the address as he boarded the bus. "There's°a lot oi. people out there that think like I do," An hbur later, when we arrived at the health food Walton emphasized. restaurant, Walton was working on at least his fifth largeDESPITE HIS restricted diet, Walton says thathehaslit­cup of juice. tle^ trouble, finding placed to eat. "Ihave a book that lists all Walton's weight has dropped around 20 pounds in the two the natural foods places iq .the cities we go to. You d be sur--years he has been a vegetarian. His weight loss is a concern prised"how.man? places there are." of the Portland management but not of his. "I've been able to control my weight for about seven months. I can make it go up or down." Walton is more concerned with feeling right e than with what the management considers is right. All-American WALTON'S development from the All-America boy image V of his earlier days at UCLA to his present self was not an •;5 overnight change. "There was no one thing or one person. ' that changed me," Walton said. "I've been living pretty -;v much on my own since I was 17, and I have been growing iisievery day as a person." When he is not on the road, Walton lives in a house with five other people. Despite his feelings towards animals, his ^' household has only one pet. "There is-a dog living at the St house, but that is more for security reasons," Walton said, llvrecent weeks there have been rumors that Walton wants• M to get out of Portland^ At the mention of the city Walton says instinctively. "It's so cold up there." The weather is a vfi; deterrent to what Walton likes to do, commune with nature.* -yA;s He is unable to grow things, or spend time outdoors, so his ^ leisure time is spent doing "a lot of reading." <%'.' • A.good portion Of his reading time isinvested in learningto .:g-heaj-.and develop his mind and body. He utilizes this ^knowledge in bis daily life through meditation, yoga, eating ;;: Vegetarian foods, acupuncture and other forms of purifying f;:-his bbdy. • WALTON MISSED 20 games this season with a bad ankle ;v and has been taking acupuncture treatments. "Acupuncture Jv. is a science and I arfr not qualified to talk about it, but I can tell you about my own eipejrience." he said. ; Walton received acupunctiife treatments for 11 straight I;;days for between one-half and one hour.eachtime. Anywhere . froin four to six needles were inserted into the ankle at a 4;,£time. ."I like thefeel of it," hesaid. "After yott get usedto it, If; you really get off to it." Walton plans on continuing the treatments as soon as the team returns to Portland." When, asked if baskeU>all was still fun, Walton said, "It% ffr'^fe, you'ye got to make it that way." Life must be fun Walton stoopsijnder doorway..&r^ause to tte amazement of many, Walton is usually smil-; - asiaMiii tv>"' •; When products become .bfest-sellers largely Sit* of roof-taislng'volume levelsIn really big rooms, you wm Strength df word-of-mouth advertising, and y>ip^vK ^v^jy hard-pressed to hear anydifference between originala ?issass5®ssfissrcu'^^"^The Advent/2 The.three speakers described below do exac what they are represented to do m&This is the newest Adventand it soundsjust like theother,two je*? I riL.i » «. -- »»r* > "«»v UHU uuu-Wip«V V* IMM ICOJAnUC.:cept Uiat it doesn't have the firial half-octave of bass response- I'lj'V • 4^0^601 ' ihov i(n It'o (tuelnncul 4/v nat (ha akenlntA W<1nVI m> iM A('anuf.>t. that they do. It'sdesigned toget the absolutemaximum of useful>' performance at lowest cost,and its own low price is madelower .... .. ....... . .. ... ^ I -The oHgina I Adyent was desicneitto compew in every audible^^ respect; with the^mbst expensive speakers available, at a frae^f tion—often d very smaU fraction—of their cost Its useful fre^' . hllMlPV KltllM Iq DO vlllavon nnh nutnlrAvita, fiHfl U« Mimil tw MtjutW* ,iimaterial. butwith the wholerange of musicand the variouswa' get,wordof-mouth going. Btit it Will. What itdoesIs enable peo^"?Of recording it Its bassrtsponsd lsapproached by only a plejto put together a stereo system for $390 or less that isn't : ofspeakers M any price, abd surpassed by.none.•-;• "starte-" or a compromise for a tight budget, but a joy to live . It costs $110 to $QS, depending on cabinet finish 5 ' with ever after. -• • « The Advent/2 costs 159.50. afl #i The Smaller .. J To check the accuracy of the above statements,^AnVPnt. T.nilHsnPfllcPr ( / -just bring along your eyes; and ears and (whatever -o <" shape it'sin these days) ydur commonsense. You'll •t i • » ji ' hoira :baai1 lima licfaninrr I have a.good time listening to the Advents in our, The Smaller:Adven£ was.deaighed todo ezactlywhat the 6riginal • ?S' half the siae aM two-tMrdS tbe cost, except that showroom, and when you get therta home, you'll"! itwUInotplay.oai.teasIoud-Its'rangeand overall soundare the: know why people keep telling each other about'v| sameas the original ? 1 I * 0 *. .?> ^ .. ...4, 7 Ifiti ^ ~ * J o w? , v «** c* * r -n ?" -"• «W:v5 liPiiSiiSilSS^ „ m iM ** r * .iw By PATRICIA WARD :m^V. a ro* w,H U -if—g#rehabilitation program for .T»w,was forwardedIW» T?aiucu.vu :UIC to the State ^-caseload d^gsdown due toa%> The' studv would fortu L Leaders of three Travis vouth for<\ Orim»nal.TncH/'<*\n5iHci«r»:Criminal Justice Division c - locus ,on youth were recommended for osw^oss CE^ssstbtsko "s^ss^sssn. utti^Sb=lLj'hSeBM>?'lr ew Early Candidates % ( 4 r Area Planning Council of-...cm, »,d V taju «• pro® to StoSTS^DM Xl^lffiSaSS? ^ \ JL > fccials expressed optimism jneeting. would be refunded ^because sion afte*review bv the Metro With the Texas Student Richard Uztell, a seniorCom-until the last day, and1would Wednesday "•»»that »«w.* «» tww,vw 6)aii» iwiuwfc.ivi vj v uic , uiipcuveifieiii, we ve Vrnnunal'JUStlCeCommittpp rtlr^fnrTAr"Ptitinfl •»..«> e».«. jf. and P3™^6 Studies-major, and certainly like tosee aUtUe bit vicuHwouwj their u?H?.?8 ?oa^d ^J®=rL-? XSKfeffiKS »*"inthelasty<*r-Thepro. editorship filing deadline only James Jennings, a senior compeUtion I would ?,Sr 'Ve STounfv^^t^ The$34,125grant isforastudy more funding.funding Travis assistant ject is .a necessary one of thetta cheriff.'« »nrf ^T1• UAflilfTHiA Tiiltnil*#%•• aidi LI^ . two days away, no candidates General and Comparative hate to anyone win Two Travis Countycriminal k»v~>,vm»w.. an k«c «CT.duacvx h« vuiiuut;UI wont 813016 S Offices ir because of a default," said County asjlmnt ,, ««ar, S ,raUg,te „M„'o»a.i,Ss see A 1«W have yet surfacedin the Daily. Studies major. Both men are a KSTSJESl'iS:juvenile prosecutors office J^^TSSKr-S!Otherwise) s-fCounty.-, «<«» **.«. ™,&.ASfti35S£-e^n f1!*01"'8 race- justice projects and drug involved. the <<' seeking the at-Iarge position or Martin Grbson, professor -'i-•"'-•• • VO/*?.".'. . The third approved request, Filing for positiohs on the David Glenn Martin, a junior 0f journalism. 1 sent to the State Program'on TSP Board also continue to journalism major, has filed The filing'deadline for the Drug Abuse, was for$47,835 to P,a-ce 2 P°sif,on- editorship and TSP Board . w.-. m ^ study paint sniffing and other »i f^dne^ay' bringing It s discouraging that positions is noon Friday in the TRe Texas Public Interest spokeswoman, said the group equal electricity rates for all * Harding.said"fee 'peudon;-ProMenis in Austin. the total number of can-inpre people are not filing for TSP business office, Research Group (TexPIRG) has nearly: enodgh signatures Austin consumers; regardless which was'first circulated by Lupe Ortiz of Trabaiadores hi™ r.ifS » Five^ persons positions. People don't seem Buck Harvey, editor of the issued an urgent plea Wednes-to get the proposal presented of the:amount of electricity -the Save Austin's Valuable de ia Raza, a social work nave filed for the single at-to realize how powerful the Texan, thought the tactics day for toe imm^i^ return before^City Council, but to they use..If adopted, this new Environmentsgroup last: spr-group, said, "We were con-^d^Lpne I81*?Mrd reaUy is•" Lynne sounded familiar. "Last year S^i » °,r njeej. fee deadline at the end ordinance would replace the ing, now, lacks about 2,000 of cerned about the problem and candidate isseeking thePIace Brock, managing editor of the samesituation occurred. I JJ*, mrth;aU ®'8nature® T1!?„Texfn sa,d' present rate system by which the required lp.OpO signatures heard that CAPCO would be ??! '! ,,, . f»ed at noon on Friday." ie' ln an ^ Filing Wednesday were People seem to be waiting said rr?nlifiiv rllifr ,Ji0 Iarge consumersof electricity -necessary to get the proposal open for proposals and would' riinanrl in A^ilt/n Cwnu to Sberyl Harding, TexPIRG plained; is designed to ensure tiaUy less electricity. dinance in-Austin ™ Tte peUtion, Harding w consumers who_useuse substan-s ,-TexPIRG plans have had gone to other social work *""" 1 enough signaturesto placethe agencies but got no feedback r7 Conference Sets Standards proposed.ortiiiande:chahgeon from them, so we went to' the City, Cpunfeil election CAPCO with the request." * NOW OPEN ballot in Aprif.y-Harding said, For Criminal JMStice Plan TA 101 COURSE iadding' that M cowcil.could The proposed program caU.a;Spe&&election would function, in.part, always call a speoiarelection "'.pari, as an Tf3^® criminal justice planners.and their-; ;t tion and discussion of existing resources for INTRODUCTION TO TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS j nmorani fr at a later date If the required educational program ..to help ~ assistants from 24 regional and six >T. dealing with them.'The reports, which are Official Court* for Regular Membership in ITAA number of signatures is not ®top drug abase. t> ,, wetiwpohta^reas^ind up an informal, two-;,^^n.-due in -June, will set forth crime reduction eathered bv ilraritlna ...InTn _spiteenitnr oint ii.then state of <>..the day session lliursdayatthe Joe Ci Thompson .eoals. establLsh nrocpdiirp.?^^s|on;,tssponsored^;? ' '. plan's over-ail effectiveness^and list 'priority ;« goaU, establish proceduresfor measuringthe i"""8 «*er-du eirecuvei °D theiI<)Ver' 4pm tollpm HowardJohnson's .the Student Government of-timistic about receiving the ^ ^ projects in each region. on , -. Motor lodge HALF P.; or t^en grant. "We stand a ^ance to n°^,S -.C;,*; ' '• . , At 1:45 p.m., Frank Porpotage, regional 1 Jan. 28and29 v:^>«00 N. IH-35 vVr mailed to the TexPIRG of-be funded because we are try-Kach planneir Is oeginnlhg wOrit on the 1976 * -..juvenile delihquency weciallst for the Law: ^ P1UCE flee at 816 W.H. 23rdWIU StjM, 1Uto \ithe -ing to be a unique program -Cr},mfna' ^"stipe Plan for Teus. His report 'Gnfoncement Assistance'Administhition will 1 "{ Presented by V,'" ' ' I 1 Tri-Toweire North complex. with new ideas." , . »?•& W1" ,nclude an outline of crime and delta-^'give a presentation on the Juvenile'Justice ' 1 JANE HENDRIX,MSSW . 1 • "' ' •• -fluency, problems in his regionwith a descrip-®&and Ddinquen-iS ISIHMM&K TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS ASSOCIATES 4524997 OpenJo Interested Students ""h f'?j r ' , " Students mterested in ser-Affairs, Appropriations, go to the student Government ving on campus committees Housing, State Lobby,Student office, UniOn South 112, and may apply for vacant Government Tours. Com-fill out an application hlawir positions in seven groups at municatlons, Environmental for the committee they want uie Shident Government of-Protection and Improvement to Serve. on. Committee fice Thursday and Friday . Committees. chairpersons will contact' Openings exist in Women's . . _ . . . . applicants andinterviewthem % To register, students should for the positions Funding Plan Date Clarified.. a CLASSIC CAT Texan The incorrectly reported Wednesday that the 3GW8TopS,„Top1ess ' °WsE Texas Union Board of Direc­ tors would present Tops in Entertainment •rather than preliminary, Cheapest Beerin Town: ] Pool tournaments held every Sunday plans for the funding-of the proposed Union East to the MUG PITCHER Y. Mk: m Look for the best at Classic Cat , Boardof Regents atitsJan.31 , Shiner .20 $1.10 gK& #1 4910 Burnet J > meettog.Y • " Michelob ::'i30 ,$1.60 Jhe Teian. ^egretscAe" -1 A """' |Serving l4 Vorletfei bf hot sandwiches, pizzas, salads PARAMOUNT INC, I '11 Arp — _ Presents , II " ** m: weekday. 11-2 a.m., Sat. ; ^ f 2801 Guadalupe „ 472-3034 TWO GENERATIONS OF BRUBECK AGng VaMnCntuprlA^ sfeji-Featuring 1 Ri"»A ;DANCE: A RfiFQIONG OF THE SPIRIT; 1 Thursday,January a * ,„>• «ffcsr -"-( &nter^' ffi; ^ IKtDAY,JANUARY M" ' Nj « * f v «» * 'p~ SMwfcfcStMteatr Jton.Appk PW,«>d MeiapjwTi-t*™*tod lh« AmtrfCMiB.ptriencc-SoMm« Biidcltv.irr «SHS froiemoe,-AnTgrkan Stndlct It dukt.cntk.lz noonTln£B Room. 4Ui floor, Acuank Roonv:4th Odor,. I ffWl­ & % '.Wwinounan^i;. yonr class. jSolc rings from^nt^er i CONCER1 Jeweler's nark special occasions. jBe^fJftutna- AMOUNT THEATER O^N tion or initiation our s&si1 CONGRESS is| classic signets. jceOect . Sunday, February? , yopr individual express 7,& 10 P.M., — tAproject TO the saramount CHAKEJE^ >1 \fTHEA£ER INTO A CENTER FOR LEUTWYIuER i , THE PERFORMING ARTl ^,C*ETS ^50' $5l50' JEWELERS fer^ '6^° ^ fi WVJ»SITY COOP, JfOSKt'S, • vicTOftf CUU i..-# 212™Shadow"Is back. KMA VtLSHOisjbOWNTOWNh kAMONCri MUGs No. »v -2518 Guada i f *T< Oust when you needed Nm mosU Jz. h9 8anMarcos»,Au«in. '•?„ " A and Homphiil-Wallace tojiTstow v« 1 1 CifambeWSL ^ t" i? OmaJSk^ FAVOR Celebration^ k«Vi \ >{ m t&a i 1 BEDROOM 2 BEDROOM t '4 BEDROOM J >• IsR In wmM iai v r : „v / . ^ -y, : „ «, *y v \< *ir fyPV&SSI&rtl >£' "Vi.v S?L\-w ~ * ?> *-«• '' t > *• : -> r*? w k "-^, /t^f ^ v-r-; Ranks sfjas -: '.While Texas" International against the' mutual aid'pact* rental fees on facilities at air­settle the strike,'which began noon, tomorrow or next week, But the pilot association of­business very, very close to Meanwhile, airline : Airline planes remained (MAP) since it was initiated, ports. . , on Dec. 1, ended Jan. 16 as we just do not know." the ficials refuse to place much normal." claims to have extended for­ aground, charges, denials and and I think that was some; The $84,000 sum represents federal mediators called off airline company significance Kreycik also denied The on poststrike the mal invitations to the pilots to countercharges ::continued time back, in the 1960s," . ?5 percent of last year's nor­the talks because of a general "• spokesman insists that the losses and claim ,that any charge by O'Donnell that the resume flying, although all : Wednesday tietween company O'Donnell said. : mal daily expense, O'Donnell lack of progress. major financial blow tobe suf­ losses that TIA might sustain pilots were being directed by offers, the latest of which was Under aid Officials • and nonworking mutual pact said. It is uncertain when talks fered by the airline will come after the strike are their national headquarters to made Jan. 10, have been agreement,. an airline closed On the other hand, ALPA of-will be resumed. In the mean­after the strike is settled. speculative. recognize the groundworkers' refused .jJim O'Donnell, TexasInter­•1 down by. a strike is paid a ficialS*have charged that TIA time, Texas International "No airline has ever return­ "The whole idea of losses is picket line. "We told them we are ready national spokesmaii, claimed percentage of the carrier'san­is in no hurry to settlesince it operations at the Austin ed to normal business after a purely speculative," Bill "The picket lineof the strik­ to resume business if they will f Wednesday that,pilots honor­nual average expensesby par­is receiving the MAP Municipal Airport remain strike," he said. "I don't sup­Kreycik, master chairman of ing groundworkers was return to O'Donnell work. ' ing the picket line established ticipating pact members. ; payments. shutdown. pose we will, either. It usually the Texas chapter of . pilots, observed because operations "We them an said. made ^striking groundworkers are Texas is admitted "I have no idea when well months the were chaotic un­ International O'Donnell that takes to regain said Wednesday. "Such losses so and offer, and they have refused using the; strike to add receiving closeto $84,000 daily without MAP, the airline start negotiating again,]' business lost to other com­have not proven to be the case organized that there was no it." antimutual from funds pressure to aid the MAP. The would be clos6 to bankruptcy O'Donnell said. "Right now, panies during a strike. Right in other strikes. In fact, I can good reason tokeep the airline Kreycik. in turn, said no pact movements in Congress. cover,fixed expenses, such as . and more inclined to give in to we're waiting for a call from now, I would estimate that to relate an incident of an airline going," he said. bona fide offers made by the ;:;"The Air. Line Pilots airplane rental fees, salaries striking worker's demands. the federal mediators but mean a loss of millions of returning to service 100 per­The airline had also revoked company have been received /Association has been working for still workingemployesand The most recent attempt to whether it comes .this after­dollars." cent and having its poststrike several provisions with the and that although both sides pilots, including one which have discussed the point, no resulted in the furloughing of formal proposal has been half the pilots, Kreycik said. agreed upon. County(Allocates $6 Million More Than in ~1974 "BEST PICTURE"-"BEST DIRECTOR" By PATTI KILDAY : • session .Wednesday Sheriff state legislation facilitating The budget includes-ftiuu.uuu necessary in later budgets. protection, social services,Texan Staff Writer Raymond Frank/gave an up-release of inmates. for improvements of jail Other major allocations in­parks and capital im­"BEST SCREENPLAY" -"BEST ACTRESS" The Travis County Com­to-date report on the study. The county budget is more facilities. Moya said this was cluded $915,000 for im­provements.missioners Court adopted a Moya also said the study than $6 million over the 1974 earmarked for initial jail im­provements of County In other business, the com­ NEW;YORK:FILM CRmCS-AVVARD 1975 budget in excess of $22 will deal with a variety of budget, although the tax rate provements found necessary Courthouse and $100,000 for a missioners authorized Com­ million Wednesday morning questions such as the need for remains the same at $1.13 per by the Young study, but maintenance garage for city-missioner Bob Honts to and met later in closed ses­rehabilitation service and new. $100 assessed value. further allocations would be owned vehicles. negotiate a contract with sion to discuss two litigation The budget also included . Austin Ambulance Service for cases against the county. more than $1 million in 1975. The previous contract' County.... Commissioner es Love's Votes federal revenue sharing funds T had been on a month-to-monthRichard Moya said the com­ to beusedfor_ruraliire • basis. ' "..' missioners discussed' an • A petition to declare-former valid, according to the peti­firing of council aides and the jEEOC complaint filed by Mayor Pro Tem Dan Love's tion. : ' council pay raise may be. Verona' Shropshire, a black November 7 vote on the City • -Love submitted his resigna-affected. 1 ­Council pay increase invalid tion Wednesday after The petition supplements an women recently fired by the mm Travis County Welfare has been'filed in 53rd District Southwestern Bell Telephone earlier court action filed, by Department. Court by citizens' trying to Co. reported that Love's now Austin attorney Lou FRIDAY AND SATURDAY . The county had been found block the raise, ' -defunct public relations firm McCreary which challenged THE guilty of discrimination, and The petition argues that did work for Bell. the council's pay...increase. Moya skid the commissioners If the court upholds the That case was dismissed Jan. SPENCER DAVIS Love's council vote in the 4-3 were trying to determine a majority may be "null and petition's contention that 3 by Dist. Judge Herman GROUP, WITH way to settle the complaint Love's votes over the last 18 Jones when he ruled the coun­ void" because 'of his alleged Friday -47XIf'» Own Weight before the case gets forward­violation of a City'Charter months are void, then such cil could determine on its own Saturday -ElactromagMii NGMAR BERGMAN S ed to the U.S. Justice Depart­provision. ; : measures as the, rejected late when an emergency ordinance Advanca tickets $3 JO -Oat Willie's, Dhcount Records, ment. dripking hours ordinance, the . was proper. '' '•' Inner Spnctum, Ritz The petition contends that AND .The commissionersalso dis­Love became ineligibleto holdcussed a suit dealing with office at the time of.the 1973poor conditions and improper WHISPERS violation, not-on. Wednesday, treatment filed by two former ROGER CORMAN presents __ when he resigned his council inmates of • County Jail. The A NEWWORLD PICTURES RELEASE ® seat. All Love's votes sincesuit was filed in U.S. District The Solo 1973 would therefore be in­ Court, and . Judge Jack FRI.-SAT.-SUN. 7:30 & 9:20 $1.25 Roberts orderedan evaluation Artists Series JAN. 24-25-26 BURDINE AUD. of the jail. STUDENT GOVT. The county contracted TONIGHT Aurther Young, Inc., to con­ UVE MUSIC FEATURING 12^ LATE SHOW 11:00 PM ONLY duct a management study in compliance with the court FRI.-SAT.-SUN. BURDINI AUD. $1.25 Viktor order. Moya said in theclosed -HAPPY HOUR PRICES GOOD violinist ,5f>ring-Xjuirkk , crepe*, TVRIETYOFWTIPS)*ALAND \• paairir*. Imported, roffeet THE BUCKET • 23rd and Pearl "must simply be classed as and'teax. Deer* Tri-Towtrl North•3 lira. frMparking' ' IL RRTIV.NM* BNM a magnificent artist" — Los Angeles nines Thurt:rFfl;;," fc Satr • SUMMER • mimmimiBmain Tnesday/*Jamia*y 28 Hogg Auditor!fun/8:00PM : Hiit ^ : , • $1.00 Cover Charge • . NO COVER CHARGE TONITE . .56 with Optional Services Fee J In Dobie Mall • -• Ticket sales begin Friday, January 17 UVE AUSTIN Hogg Box Office/lO-6 weekdays ii'W' The best in live rock and ROCK & ROLL ADULT MOVIES Sponsored by roll 7 nights a week. RATED X BY The Cultural Entertainment "" AL mClNO^SCRPICO" Open at 8:00 p m Op«n 10:00 a.m. Music begins 8-30 Committee of the Texas. Union mdMOMMAMWCXlBI Based on th«book by PtmiMAB Music by MDCIS TMEOOOMIKI 521 Ecu! Sixth by nuumn ntOMAN Orected bySONKV UIMCT Scrw^Mry by VM1AOIM3 RINGS Is 2:00 a.m. Sun. 12 noonmMnlght: \ Happy Hour from 8 to 9 NO COVER & The Department of Music t RK=5~ Co®-^TECHNCIXOB-.A Pnwi Adult BooWitore­25' Arcada 2 Adult Shewn W«*kly~* Call for Titla* 477-0291• "914 N. LAMAR 477-3783 $1 OFF.wlth thl« od or Student ID Wofulwbl* teryoMfio panona TONIGHT . Mwtt brit.YI*« MWMAAW CAPTURES THE The itueaoiyptoypunq oimtondo womon whothotedastrangelove. i :Rome. REAL LENNY BRUCE IS iHl Ken Russell "Here,is Lenny in a devastating recapitulation of J BeforeChrist. his New York obscenity trial...burstippwith an indignation that remains freshly irreverent and ! After Fellini. blackly funny." —Vincent Canby, New York Times "An absolutely priceless document. It shows Bruce involved in the most brilliant analysis of the American society and its legalsystem I ever expect to hear. It is hysterically funny." ; i.<-,8sVg —Ralph Gleason, Rolling Stone , ? puffer v St. W$mIt •^%l • LENMyBRUCE r.'r j "'Thereis noend,nobeginning, ** • 'w There isonly (heinfinite potionof life/* \ -FEUJNl ^ ? ^ j •,—* An ALBERTO C^IMALDIfroduction "FELLINI SATYRICON FILM NttlMCIIB A Filmby John Magnuson '',"5 VIf JVt • AMOAlI NOfl , •ASWXwnm MtUMIll »n|h CAfUCINt AKElVWSiu (WXUCJCM WWGEWSSWT.­ vw^ri«FEDE^lCO FElilNL,BERNARDINO 2APPON) ... :CW)1H |i , COOR ^I^to'WAVlSiON" DmtadArtisti •&[ T®ISC^3a3Sffig>-nightclub performance of this celebrated u.- Pjesented by Law;School Fitrri Forjii f ^ . '/*^* H"*~ ->5r~ *H.\ M W y~* ^<"~J' ** A Alt'* W« '-.^1^?"< re Romanticism ?j£a®; Laguna Gloria Museum Series To Begin Feb. 6 Feb. 6 will be opening night If space allows, individual Committee of the" National selected details from major'' that characterized the early ­ for a five-night series of 14 tickets may be purchased for Endowment for the Arts for and lesser-known works. part the films written and narrated by of century were $1.50 at the door. Checks for liaison with the U.S. Office of In the introductory/episode, shattered. A new respect for Kenneth Clark, creator of the subscriptions should beseat to' Education.'He also served as set for Feb. 6, Clarit sets the the Irrational arose, and with "Civilization" documenatries Laguna Gloria Art Museum, consultant to the Committee theme for his" perspective. it came a new movement in on the contrasts between PO Box 5568, Austin, Tex. on the Visual Arts ait Harvard The second half of the 18th the arts: romanticism. romantic and classic art 78763, attention Judith Sims. University for the Rockefeller Century in Europe was a stor­ Romantic artists were All films will be shown at Dr. Donald L. Foundation aiid is the author my period in history. fascinated by the three great 7:30 p.m. Thursdays at Weismann.University of numerous books and Throughout the continent the irrationals: fear, sex andLaguna Gloria Art Museum, professor in the arts, will be publications, including "The spirit of revolution was stirr­ death. The romantic artist 3809 W. 35th St. Seating is present for lecture- Visual Arts as Human. Ex­ing. " used everything in his power limited to 100, and subscrip­discussions each It was following perience." against this to arouse, and often to disturbtion tickets to the series are screening. Weismann is con­ . An artist himself, background that there arose the spectator;he tried locom­ $5. ($4.50 to museum sultant tothe NationalCouncil Weismann's drawings, in the arts a division more municate his emotions direct­ members.) on the Artsand past member. graphics, paintings, collages radical than an any that had ly. Inevitably, romanticismand assemblages have preceded it: the struggle became the living impulse of appeared in many-public and between classicism .'and the 19th" Century. * ' private exhibitionsand collec­romanticism* Classic art was EXAMPLES OF great tions. founded on the precepts of an­ classic artists dispussed by EACH OFthe14 colorfilms tiquity and wasengaged in the Clark' in. "Romantic versiis in the "Romantic versus Generations of Bfubeck . search for "ideal" form. It Classic. Art" include David, . Classic . Art" series is the was a supremely moral art study of an individual artist, featuring a world of harmony Ingres, Millet and Degas. ?°y* ^,ni1' •on« Ch"*'0«n ond Carlo* (l<-r) will perform at 7 and 10p.m.Feb, GROKfjaiKS whose career, themes and and decorum. . V Among the romantic artists z ar the Paramount Theater, 713 Congress Ave. The concert is being presented by style are investigated in Following the Lisbon discussed in the series are Paramount, Inc., dedicated to the re-establishment of the Paramount Theater as a < • rnmm depth. The studies earthquake of Delacroix, Goya, Turner, are il­ performing arts center. Tickets are $4.50, $5.50 and $6.50 andiiiaybe purchased at 1755, tfie op­ Blake and Rodin. Joskes, Raymond s, University Co-Op, Caravelle (downtown) and Grill.. STOCK lustrated with brilliantly timism and faith in reason Dates for the series are Feb. 6, 13, 20 and 27 and 'Death Be Not Proud' March 6. Subscribers to the' If You Need Help series will receive a. ticket to or be presented at .the door each To Portray Gynfher FEATUKE5 Just Someone Who Will listen ' ; of the five nights and will be OFB4 5:45 Telephone 476-7073 given first, preference in By VERNON SCOTT $1.50*3605 S'OUTHWQOD 6:05-9:00 television. , ' thatiof a man who is more in-• |KBt At Any Time -• .y seating.' < HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — "If "If you're Igoing to get in­telligent than he is How can Thelelephone CountetTng and Referral Service" For further information, I were to be castas Hitler I'd EXCLUSIVE AUSTIN SHOWING-lfs TenifM side a character you've got to an pctor pretend to be more ^ call the museum-at 452-9447. find something to like about fuid something likable about intellectual than hetruly is?It '. • • • him to rt^ake him acceptable can't' be done without being him," said Arthur Hill. . • ^^Xhejiial The Canadian4>orn star of Films shown will examine: to himself. pretentious." '. « » TOM UU6B1N "Owen Marshall" on:the tube "As for Gunther, he was It would follow logically . Feb. 6 — The Romantic for three years and veteran of less sympathetic than he then that actors are thfe ; VB1JDISNEY Rebellion, Jacques a score of movies including BillyJack Louis David would have the world believe. brightest souls on earth ''The Andromeda ^ Strain,'' I read between the lines of his because they do indeed* jilay Feb. 13 — Gian-Battista found it necessary to employ book. He was unable to relate historical characters of OPEN 1:00 FEA. 1:26-2:40 LT.UOBEV Piranesi, Henry Fuseli, his philosophy in his newest to other people — especially highest intelligence. .. the William Blake, Fran­ assignment ,:'v;V. >. •. NO PASSES 4:00-5:20-6:40 his son — on a personal "Absolutely, right;" Hill, ~ S:Q0-9;20 fltlJSOli.u.s. cisco Goya Hill portrays author John -level." said with a laugh. IZS4GuUn«St—477-1961 Feb. 20 — Jean-Auguste Gunther in "Death Be Not tw.Lock* 4Jim 8udd*y Prennt TMRES 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 Ingres, Theodore Proud," (Feb. 4 ABQ-TV) an Hill's calm, cool exterior, "But I try to steer clear of -. A M«nmotti WmidiHiBi 7 • : AN QUTKACEDOS which determines manyof.the too much heavyweight tliiijk- AT BOTH THEATRES Gericault nasmtK -\ adaptation of the lateauthor's roles he plays, is only skin ing in my characterizations. IrESTEtrEttS* Feb. 27 — John autobiographical novel on'the ll.LACl 4 deep. Deep down there are a do ,my damnedest to charge , swerumesi Constable, Joseph . death of his 17-year-old son.^ good many banked fires in the them with • emotional poten­ Mallord, William HILL is no admirer of man. . tial. It doesn't' take a,great ­ Turner Gunther. And recently he has mmm. 6 .— Eugene "ACTORS should be dealing deal of effort because I enjoy March become disdainful of Richard with the emotions of their it. U2 Delacroix, Jean- Burton for his controversial HOW OPBI 1:15 characters, not their in­"The trick isto hold most of * 2l»t & Gundolupe Second level Dobie Moll 477-1324 Francois Millet, on Winston Churchill FUTtKES attack tellect," he said. the motion back, to allow the Auguste Rodin, Edgar Amer MO 130 £M SW« -M5 SCREEN 1 before and after portraying "That's why the most dif­audience to see the potential ' Degas RBHKXD rUOS TU &4S the British statesman on Today thrv Tuesday ficult role an actor plays is and realize that it could erupt A f ASdlUTlllG AlO at any time. " ftonm , "Come to think of it," he1"Concert of'75 .concluded, "that's.the way I . am myselL". , CASTLE "•> OULF STATB OWViSrV. 1 see the shameful things Sliovi iovv\USA B • -ttaUT; •*0«IHTf~ B PRESENTS vgg 8 that put them behind HW«T> $l-50/CAR walls...and the worse I Anne Murraf « SU0H7A i also * 472-7315 14tl Lena things that happened appaarlng t7iQE.s«>wiim»44*aat> AT fc3t t IflbS* TONIGHT ONLY after they got there. Pussycat BOX-OmCE OPCN 6i3Q', g STEVE FROMHOLZ SHOW STASTS 7 00 > 4ACKMCHOLSON PmaviswneCoior B MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM DOAK 8 Austin.Texas at2:30 6:15 and 1.0:00 oaiiBA J JANUARY 30.1975-8PM SNEAD 3 S4.so -s5.so PCKKS ' CAROL KANE Tkl'i: Texas Hitters * TvUniv.Co-op * J oskc's STARTS TOMORBQW 1 TOMORROW , B.W. STEVENSON The GHsof 1 . girls who , "FAHHY HBX-* ai W l know what I"IA WOMAN43'bnd VIU.A(,1. 4 .do QUARIUS-4 j-mraouT a stitch" •for or L . together for the r • \ FEATURES 2-4-6-8-10 firstftriet to a man. £M«W«.H*8I80B0N* at 4:15 and 8:00 .ANDY WARHOL'S in CQLOR OB '^nusvo-nATuiiCM far each movie inth»afternoon 7 STARTS FRIDAY SIDNEV POmERj DAGMAK'S $1* fof'eocftmov»»ofnighl ^ AT 3 THEATRES ! BILLCOSBV $2°° far double feafure, off tlmtt i PARflP/lOUNT h,i HO^a KARRVBE1AFONTE • Oonclile Dsn-pi SCREEN 2 Today thruTuesday• • mm PAUL MORRISSEY 3 tlPTOWN^ A COLOR;A BI{YANSTON PICTURESRELEASE '' ; Theymet at thefuneralof aperfect stranger. . S/tfURDAV, Fromthenon,thing?got perfectlystranger and stranger. NiGHT^rr rMMM/a&«Mo«MiMlv*tusnclun'-'•iW'fawAmirfciw fiton • HAROLD andMAUDE CAPITAL. PLAZA TODAY 4Vi-/«4A IM 3J NQBIH STARTS TOMORROW .MERICANA FBL -49SU RUTHGORDON $' Qbc) INTERSTATE ^ 1:303:155:00 4.BUT THE HIGHEST RATING" 6:45 8:30J0.'J5 BUDCORT *'tea r.-wri' H T dtiijHrxt PAR AMOUNTS 9«nriTMFIA«M J'tfiBEATEST yfiODFATHEfl imOtMODUl PA$SEt; 4:40-*;70.IOH)0 OF THEM MIDNIGHTERS IVIRYmGHT GEORGE "LI ^ i 1 ii#1 °^!IM m (patis 4! *'? it'ii 'i? 1-t­ 2 12 Midnight ^h*u^ikSay i HIGHLAND MALL ASl-/ \V6 • IM35 Af r.OINfOlW mm •uMmeuttMifmixsiita BABOAiNMAIVf VEWYDAY T/l J .JOP.M. -Sf Acting Bolt's Play Striking Portrait of Elizabethan England '** ' • '**" •' • ' " _1 mm-. ­ "Vivat! Vhrtt Regiaa!;" above the welfare of her peo­words remain strong, but her lags in, a few spots, is essen­days with a 2:15 p.m. matinee directed by X Robert Swain; ple. Bettis' tall, commanding face belies her emotions. tially worth seeing. each Sunday. Tickets arewritten by Robert Bolt; starr­presence is a good contrast to The men of the cast — ad­* • • $4 for adults, $3 for students and wm ing Jane Bettis, Nan C. her ultimate weakness and visers, lovers and lords — are "Vivat! Vivat Regina" $2 for children under 12 and -Hotchings, Rod Comedy, Mac reliance on the male advisers rather weak, through lack of plays Zachary at the Scott may reserved j, Manldin; at the Zacbary Scott be by calling around her. strong characterization and Theatre Center at 8:15 p.m. the theater at 476-0541 or 476­ Tbeatre Center. NAN C. HUTCHINGS also poorly-remembered lilies with Fridays. Saturdays and Sun­0594. BY VICKY BOWLES turns in a superb performance the notable exceptions of Tim Texan Staff Writer as Elizabeth, the woman who Miller as Lord Bothwell and • v-forsakes her desires and Tony Howe as John Know. Robert Bolt iscertainly one femininity for what she COSTUMES AND SETS are of the most eloquent perceives to be best for-the an. .important part of thisplaywrights and anthers of nation. This Elizabeth is a production, with designs by The Solo our time: His most sympathetic creature, not the Amy Morey lavishly faithful noteworthy works (and "monster" history has made to the period. The set, designr Academy Award-winners) are Artists Series her. Her conflicts arise from ed by Lyle Hendricks, is sim­ "Doctor Zhivago" and "A her unwillingness tokill an an-ple and elegant, requiring few Man for All Seasons," and he nounted queen, thus setting a physical moves of props and . also scripted "Ryan's dangerous -precedent. scenery. Daughter" and "Lawrence of Claudio Hutchings shows Elizabeth's All in ail, the show appears Arabia." "Vivat! Vivat turmoil through an' ex­well-conceived by director J. Regina" ranks along with pressive, mobile face. Her Robert Swain, and though itthese other plays-movies as a Arran memorable and strikingly pianist -different portrait .of "...a sort of miracle. He makes the piano live... Classical Elizabethan -England.' The ... „ —Tcxon Stoff Hiofo byAhdy Skwimon Austin Civic Theatre produc­liquid, mysterious, profound, alive" 'Box and Cox' tion of this play is a basically — The Sunday Times, London sound one, aided primarily by To Give Concert Larry Martini, Joan Paaraall and Dick . Kl«ym«y*r (l-r) will appear in Gilbert and two strong leading Sunday/February 2 Sullivan's "Box and Cox" at 8:30 p.m. Thursday at Creek Theater. The shew, characters, Elizabeth I of Ticket salesand drawing for the Feb.2 appearance of pianist Municipal Auditor!um/8:00 PM Claudio Arrau begin at 10 a.m. Thursday in the Hogg directed by Steve Wyman, an assistant professor of the University dramadepart­England and Mary Queen of Auditorium Box Office, continuing from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. .50 with Optional Services Fee ment, will run for an indefiniteperiod of Hme. Tickets are $2.50for adults and$1 for Scots. weekdays. thildrtn. Ticket sales begin Thursday, January S3 Bolt has strayed from the ° Tbe concert ison the Solo ArtistSeries of the College of Fine traditional story Arts and Cultural Entertainment Committee. of . wicked Hogg Box Office/10-6 weekdays Elizabeth-persecutedMary by Admission is freeto holders of the CEC optionalservices fee Bus schedule: showing Mary as a fallible and $3.50 for others. television Jester, Kinsolving, Co-op/7-00-7:30 PM 7 p.m. • Bui ma" 9 Lilias. Yoga and You , human who is betrayed by her Arrau, a celebrated pianist whose performance career now 7 The .Walton* 24 Streets gf San Francisco-: 10:30 pjn. own weaknesses: Jane Bettis' exceeds 65 years, will perform beginning at 8p.m. in Municipal Sponsored by 9 Bill Moyers Foreign Report 36 Ann-Margret Oluon Special 7 Movie: "The Norfiss Tapes." 24 Barney Miller Mary is a fine portrayal; she Auditorium. 9 fwn. starring poy Thinnes. Angie Dickin­ The Cultural Entertainment 36 Mac Davis 24 Harry O son. feels her role as a rider is of The artist,having achieved worldwidefame asan interpreter 7t30 p4n. 36 Movin* On v ij .. ; ? Captioned ABC Newt 24 The Odd Coupte primary importance in her of Beethoven, Schumann, Brahms, Chopin and Liszt, plays Committee of the Texas Union 24 Wide World Special -"Gefaklo Ip.m. 1. U. 36 Hem ™~ ? * Pivera: Good Night A/rr-ica" life, but she also is prone to more than 100 concerts a season in all the music centers of the & The Department of Music 7 Movie: "MecKenna'i Gold," placing a .personal'whim world. starring Gregory Peck, Omar Sharif, Telly Savalas, Jirtle New* mar. 9 The Japanese FHm; "Harp oi OffFeaem, REDUCED PRICES TIL 6 P.M oaonnea 1500 S.F1EASANT VAUEY RD M0N thru SAT TONIGHT VdlHarper JUST Off CAST MVEKStPE DRIVE 444-jZZZ The. King of Zydehso fnnu.. Recipient CLIFTON CHENIER NO COVER Anal WALT DISNEY'S g *'•" and HIS KBHOT lOUlSIANA MHO Present* the all new LT.ROBINCRUSOE,^™* ' "THIS WEHCB4D Of Award JASSBADON US.N. cs-liai 3:30 5:30 Slwvftr Bmt Nhe .FStehers CAMBRIDGE, (UPI) -Robert Ealey 7:30 Harvard's Hasty Pudding A VffB6N.nCraK;tGCMbaflR*MIMflaQN* Be* Caves Rd. 327-9016 $1.25 Cheap ri.?^ 9:30 Club, the nation's oldest 2405-A Nimcci -? JUxb.W. of Campus theatrical club, has named $1.50 Valarie' Harper, star of &UftTREYNOLDS ANDYWARHOLS til 6 PM television's "Rhoda," its FEATURES woman of the year. ""hie 2­ cuu® Harper, who has won three AHMIV Emmys for LONGESTYARD" her Supporting Tonight! COUJH ByTfcCHNtOOCOR* . PAUL MORRISSEY 'role asRhoda Morganstern on COtCft.AMWHSTONPtCIUKSIt&EASE A RAHAMOUNT PICTURE IS® CBS's. "Mary Tyler Moocg Show;?*!got her ownseriesthis!: Theatre Committee ran season..; i4£ ^ .•'.A Presents the Masterwork* -•j-She will behonored-Feb.-MC from^JthaLMaster of Suspense when she is scheduled to lead a parade from Logan Inter­ national Airport to Cam­ bridge, where she will be the (1960) .featured guest at festivities Directed by AIfred Hitchcock marking the club's' silver an' niversaiy; ^'' K3P* -^4 »» w "* §£:'k .S v-5 SAMUEL GOLDWYN • >:-;••• pttaenit Aaaia'i Own GUYSANDDOLLS |HighestRating" .^viioiiooo* Mm&ow-n wmtRMi rem* —Kathleen Carroll. N.Y. DAILY NEWS •cetun orai Ms r ; iutm« •Ml1.­ I'S AFRAID VIRGINIA W00LF? Director: Mike Nichols fM.MSki Mm FRANK SINATRA Nominated for 13 VIVIAN BLAINE With JanetLeigh, Anthony Perkins. Vera •ttrechnlodlcigre; WAiToteNerpfwwte--. Miles, John Gavin, and Martin Balsam Ett»POOH and TIQQBf TOO] .Tonight $1.00 UTStudents, WINNER: 6 ACADEMY AWARDS f TtCHNIOObOM .•••• •' " 7 & 9 JESTER AUDITORIUM V $1 MBOATS oralfcM 8 p.m. Faculty, Staff QmmTum SmmbTidwtgwd far a> stMstar—SIS WINNER N.Y. HIM CRITICS AWARD! uttrl Batts Auditorium ~ $1.50 Members Onsafe mry show aiglrt at Jtstar Ux Offic# "Virginia Woolf" remains a pivotal picture, a watershed film that changed' everything which was to follow. The screen of today cannot be fully assessed ' without a reckoning of "Virginia Woolf"-for its power, its truth, its germinal.effect. * . Todayat Pi^esklio Theatres "One of the most scathingly honest American films ever made..,' N.Y. TIMES 'Uncommon performances; excellent scripting...one of the great \ VILLAGE 4 HELD OVER VILLAGE 4 RIVERSIDE moments of cinematic history...a fantastically fascinating movie on' ciny level..." AfiADEMOISELLE MAGAZINE «th WEEK "One of the strongest movies of all times..." L.A. HERALD-' 1. EXAMINER !«M» atomic A.C. AUDITORIUM 1M MS­ FRI. 7:30-9:45 UtSJM- wmi *J* MS SAT. 9:00 SUN. 7:30 ONLY tMmWEm99 , jANDV WARHOL'S HELD OVER >*«*• MIMB ,2nd WEEK !»»»» MEL BROOK S tCUIA ® "v""~ Ml TJt Wlrl PAUL MORklSSEYl RIVERSIDE ss wtsvmax.—., ^ S«* and Comvdy -; ,'j, mi S»k and Corrwdy ~-MELBROWCS* FUNNIEST "pilxmBiNCRiisoiBo; Wilh Yfotkty Mhn hi, -S| (XMEDYTOMrE." I,' , IAte*W «*TH6 tu Nxiims "Bananai" •" K^'i.'|UTOU».ldMi]ts' F»alvr»i 3:356:499.-45: Kj1 mm .ml graiped it becomes tm~exercise in anarchy that tends one reeling J through movie history for imprecise comparisons — the Marx1 Brothers, Fields,. the silent*comedians ...THE"PRODUCER$ iSy in my opinion,the best AmericanfaSsas-*' x ji : iomedy tiAce DR. STRANGELOVE." 1. ; —Richard Schickel, Ufe Magazine, RIVERSIDE thMma conceit ~ * A.C. AUDITORIUM s MOVIES Z" FRi: 11:55 W&3 / *V v iLtiitn««ii • 'CINEMA J ?•? * '"-y 7 !?AT* '7:30 « 11:^% Adm:,--'-^ 1IIL \­UNDAY 9:45 ONLY , r 4 ••nvv r . j '? • »• -f! a 5 4* f '%e I :: • 'i V * v -*i M't Cxs j^^Vlthorsday^ahuary t ~'s * mjm. 1111111 mm CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE FURN. APARTS.|FURN. APARTS. 5 FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS. RATES 13 word, minimum ROOM MATES TYPING Eecft word onetime. t .11 Eech word 2-4 time* I.10 Each word 5-9 times s .01 Home*v-;Fbr Sole 8ROWNSTQNE ^FEMALE. Cute duplex own nxm: siocr ­ Student rate eacb ttrne S JO WANT 'ABUYYanold.house, subscribe PARK APARTMENTS NOW LEASING t. v.;.;?;:, Each word IQor more times., s jff Fleur de Lis V-• pH>s •iec.'3100\Y.Tom GreenT oeaf cam-1 Just North of 27th at, to theUT Home Buyers Report, David WE RENT 404 E.,30th Guadalupe CtessKfedOisbtey. Gray. 327-1141/452-5624. Are conveniently located& priced right. Lovely lMrmapti; Walkingdistance to': Icot. *Iinch one time....... tt.25 :-NON$MOKING:FEMALEfOommate -• 2707 Hemphill Park ' I& 2 bedroom apartments located on campui, yiall < to wall.' ihag carpet;^ needed to share one bedroom apart­ 1 cotxlloch 2-9 tftnes.j S2J3 AUSTIN IcoLxl (nchtenor more times S2.64 BICYCLE or shuttle to UT. Duplex In shuttle bus rpute. Jra.PJv 'eaWe-.TV, Hundry'• \:ment/J75plu» Vi.bllls.451'7pll:.Pattl;v mkJ-ZTs. Bennett . I. Assoc 3Z7-1U1. From *142.50 " facilities. .. 4 t David Gray. <52-5626, ALL BILLS PAIO 1 BR* Furh. N/ Your time is valuable Call 477-5262 , ^*MALE ROOMMATE for one bedroom 5)06 N. Lamar , 454-3496 • t.apartmant. ABP, shuttle, «WJ»month Our service Js freeOCAOUM sbnuis ,t -PERFECT PROFESSOR'S HOME •# a paragon property AAARK IV APTS. • JIIMML Inside'stonewall*. Just 3 min. to UT. VILLA, FEMALE ROOMMATE, two bedroom, p , 2 Day Service § Very -competitively prices at 148.500. ELCID& 472-4171 v ; ^.^OS-O vy. 22W Street. Huge, surniy. S90. 472-3210 and472-7677 ^ Assumption.. Celt The Cutlen Co. 442- NOW LEASING-;.. weekdays EFF. $115 plus E. ;Prefer grad student or, &25. Anytime . 7S3X Mary CuUeh at home 28*2071, Cur EL DORADO Now leasing' for the spring. AC. , except M l1-.ll or T W;30. ^ lis Jordan at home 443-4323 carded, ^aneWd, pool* on shuttle. 46th Reports* Resumes,'­ <53-4883 472-4893 TYPI 472-4175 HOUSEMATE needed to. share two Theses, Letters^'; CHECK OUR SUMMER RATES SHUTTLE BUS CORNER weekends • . .* -•. • 454-8903 1-;, •bedroom dupi«x. Must be female and' • •.All University-and.t cool. $68.75 plus bills. 474-1029. buslness work -' iMMMMtritbr wtfM.Mdahna fcr FURNISHED EFFICIENCY' nmesr Last Minute Servlqe CUSTOM BUILT MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share SPRING ON APARTMENTS. Small, quiet 12'unit •Ymr-. Open 9-8 Mon-Th 4 large mobile.home in southeast Austin. DUPLEX NOW LEASING complex. Unique architecture. One . $50 and share bills. 38S-SI0I. SERVICE 9-5 Fri Sat 4 ACT* of Westtake Privacy TOWN LAKE block from IF shuttle/ideal for anyone Sunken Hying room with fireplace and tired of the noise and impersonality of WANTED.GAY OR LIBERAL straight dramatic 2-story Interior stone walls. roommate to' share. 2 bdrm/2b apt. 472-8936 DobleMall • :LOW STUDENT, SATES. large complexes. $145 Includes electrlel-­ 15 Word minimum ekch day ..* JO :Sffdfcig glass doors open onto largedeck Beautiful apartment complex on Town . $100.00 monthly ABP.^ Phone Derek 44U and pool. Each* apartment tias study La**. Extensivetake froittage.;Spaddus ty, AvaJiabJe lor Immediate occupancy,' Each adfflttooal word each days JOS . '7171.,• :wVy STARK TYPING. Specialty; Technical. J.cot x 11nch each day.......S244 overlooking livingroom* 2 bedrooms. )Vi • 1 Bedroom 1 BR -$170 3 BR • $325 .efficiencies. 1 bedroom, 2 bedrooms, 3 Call 454-S754,. c»me by.110w, 3tttuAfter- Experienced theses,dlssertations,PR's, baths.-Eaoev Westlake schools. Very ' LARGE POqL-ALL BILLS PAID bedrooms. (Xicks. CA/CH. Swimming Seal)476^15. . ' , ^ ROOMAAATE TO share apartment on ; • (Prepaid. No Refunds)-: • AShuttle.iro«te,$7S per rno^447-«W.Y-Charlene Stark, 453-5218 Students must show 'Auditor's Walk to Campus njndas*ffi*df 1 lint 3 daw.SIJO ok*,-very private. S542S0L Call The AllBillspaid BBOI overlooking. Town Lake. manuscripts,' etc; Printing; binding. . Culled Cu.. 44*7133. Cwrtls: Jordan at MOVE IN TODAY Ishwasher -disposaL Laondry ENFIELD AREA. 1bedroom with every ­ receipts and pay in advance In T5P -home 442-9321 MaryCullen at home 2M* ; ladlities. AllMilspaid. Shuttlebus. Ren­extra. Furolshed or unfurnished. From '207V. • Buckingham Square ' Bfrt Rate on the Lake • 'ting below market. Discounts on certain $148^0 plus electr!city.:807 West Lynn. MALE SHARE 1bedroom apt.Riverside •' VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diversified Bldg. U00 (23th t WTHtb) from « Stxrttl* Bui Front Door area,near shuttle..$«2.50 ABP/Phon* ' . Services; Graduate and undergraduate apartments. 477-77W, 472^4162.'Berry GUIingwater. . a.m. to 4:30 pjr.>lpmiay through*. 7n W.32nd .2400 Town Lake Circle • paid, binding. 1515 Koenlg Friday. • v •. ;4424MS TOWN LAKE '£' 45*4917 -PEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. Great APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM $125 plus E. Near campus place, live with two foreign graduate .BOBBYE DSLAFIELD. IBM SeleCtrlC,' NEAR MEDICAL PARK & shuttle. Convenient to downtown. New Luxury Apartments 1500,6. Riverside Dr. students. 2127 San Gabriel. Cora, 475* pica/elite, 25 years experience, books, furniture and pool. 407 W. 38thl4S*7M3, TOWERS with alt the Goodies WILliOW -444-1458 . 472*4)62. Barry GiiJlngwaterjDjJ 0810. $67. -• -;• . •. dissertations, theses, reports, FOR SALE Cape Cod Cottage. 7 Bedroom, I bath & mimeographing. 442*7194.' study. Single giving area, fireplace, 444-3750 2 BEDROOM* 2 BATH. $210 ASP. Full . MALE ROOMMATE needed.-2 bedroom .-CA/CH, terraced backyard. Ifs imutuat apartment. $68. Near ERA MS shuttles. DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports and kitchen, laundry and pool. Next to cam* . and youmust see If.Priced to sell quick­1 BR. $155 Eff. $130 pus. Le Font$03 West 2»fh.472^480,472-. CA, pool: 47*4157. law brlefs.-'Experlenceo typist.. NOW LEASING Auto -For Sale ly at 26,900.-Call-Jean Woolsey with NOW LEASING 4162. Barry G!llir>gwa^ ^> -^^ Tarrytown.'2507 Bridie Path. Lorraine Harry Montadon Realtors. • ATTORNEY* female* recent grad wants Bradyi 472-471S. ;; ^ * 266-IJQS 1 444*0441 29th West of Guadalupe LONGVIEW to shire apt or house with female grad ins TOYOTX CORONA. Automatic. WALK TO CLASS; 'Old Main 2907 West Ave. 474-1712. student or working girl. Have J small MRS. BODOUR'S TYPING SERVICE. Radio. Air. Radial fires. Great condi­ 1 BORM ' /S:':--"'ze'DRM Apartments. 1bedroom andefficiencies. • ; tion. S99S, 441-7740. APTS.-Aparfmenrs available fornexf semester. welM>ehaved dogs.' Call 447*4765 Reports, theses, dissertations and books ^ :;r'j $220 Call 477-3264, evenings. 1 $175 2400 Longvlew' • fvped accurately, fast and reasonable. Misc. •< For Sale NOW LEASING Printing and binding on reqOest. Close '54 CHEVROLET. Needs work. Ex" ALL BILLS PAID r FEMALE ROOMMATE* nice apartment In. 47M113. . orllenf for parts. Reasonable price. 453- 1 & 2 BR WALK.LAW SCHOOL; Leroe2 bedroom* 7511. ( TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds^ ASPEN WOOD Dishwashers.-2 LargePools $7740 ABP, dose UT* foreign deterred. old gold. Capitol Olamohd Shop, 4011N. under New Management Security \ • CA/CH, pool, latmdrY;'$z» ABP. No Come by 807 Wesf.55th St., No. 25. HOLLEY'S COPY SERVICE. A 476-7688 jets. River Oaks, 300) Red 'Rjyeri 472--: com- TO VW, VERY good, rebuilt engine «!,-Lamar, 454-6177.. - plete service: typing, copies, printing,v .000. Bob 452-516 Spacious Contemporary MOVE IN TODAY MALE LAW STUDENT needs room-binding. ,1401Mohle Drive. 476cy $lIJ. Very CONVENIENT TO ANY LOCATION IBM SELECTRIC typewriter. Half ROOMMATE. Share two bedroom fully loaded. 35,000 actual mileage, new space feature, 11" carriage: Excellent 1 BR, $149-2 BR.$199 NUECES close to campus and shuttle, completely tire. SlfiOO. 451-44(2, 472-5699. New efficiency, custom furn„ all with bullHn kHche^ouf. .... condition. 30 .day guarantee. $385. 250- Just North of 27th at 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 big balconies for your fttants. Great loca- S£ 3116,1912-A Falrlawn. condition, must sell now. Best offer. Call Manager 301 -478-90SS 1970 BUICK LeSabre, loaded. In good 547Z NOW LEASING tioa great looking. S1&S pKis electricity. SS Guadalupe JiKf Come LiveWith Us! . 447445* Harry. SEKINE, BICYCLES, less than retail. 1 BR -$145 up LIBERAL ROOMMATE. Share house. 2707 Hemphlir Park?^:; Chrome »Moly Double Butted. Call Bob­five blocks from campus. ?75 plus Va by, 459-5704. . 2 BLOCKS TO CAMPUS bills. 474*1870 evenings. Scott. 2 COMPLEXES-BOTH convlent to UT TO VW. SEDAN. Recently overhauled and thuftla bus: 2 8R-3 BA S215 ABP. 2 BR -$180 op ellent running condlticm. 4S3-FROM $145 ALL BILLS PAID HOWDY Studio 2 BR-1 BA fW wafer paid-Both NIKKORMAT 50mm 1.4.Nikkor IQSmnv TWO FEMALES. Share 2 bedroom/2 units nicely furo; discount for partially, 300mm, 28mm, Bellows.. Teleextander, I& 2 bedroom efficiency. Full kitchen, bath. IF shuttle, Su Casa. S69,75 plus extras.-1^ . years-old. S4S. Clay, 453-carpeted, large walk-In doieti.Oriental . Jvcpaw :; turn. -discountfor,! yaartaasa.4724099. elec. 453^457, 451>2268. 10nM75-2S2&. furnWifnflj. Peaceful courtyard wHf> MBA FOLKS ASSUME LAST4monthsof leitsaaf last pool. Only stejit to^tngjjbtg. ; ROOMMATE, semf*stud(ous-person TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING Tahglewdod The Pepper.Tree Peoplehave vcouple ot . August pra-rant hika prlca. Laf9a 2 I. STUDENT BOOKCASES. 48x30holds« share 3 bedroom house. Rent, billsabout ;«mrs.»fcm. f books: S23. 48x42 holds 138. S3Si. 48xS3 472-2147 4714M2 North ,t really soaxzy affickncies lelt. Shag • bedroom' at ^ngllsti Atre tor S225. All sl15.476~02M anytime. Jeff. hokb M. US. 385-1769. ; .. Barry Gllllngwater Company.: . . dishwasher, dHposat, CA/ClC. bilfs pahl, tennis, handbajt swlmrnhifl. -:;V THE COMPLETE > .....3 ** T9nCMCVan,2SLOOO miles,can*ted, V-1020E.45tt»r -:newdecor;walk*i•Ik4n dosctsr'plus 447-115»k ^ ^ ~ > ,$!•^Standard, • air.. Exceuewt condition. • a studentmanegerthet likes .ft'make PROFESSIONAL " : 4213 AVE. F, 2,story, 4 bedroonv'2 bath • , 4414U1 after * pjn. . ; LARGE.-ELECTRIC typewriter, like .452-0060 , wu teel at home. Small pets allowed^ •. home, hardwood fibors, porches;patios, / •WEST OF CAMPUS. New One Mdroonw^ v new.Phone476-2326.' K -Shuttle Bus earner' ' ' '•:••• ? planls, pregnantxet.Iteve,r451-4C2. 1 ' Five Treehouses. One bdrms too! >24io Lofroview, si47J0 pius efactriclty;' £ FULLTIME coadttlafe AM/FM.: 121.' PANASONIC : B4W ; television,. 4744279, 472-2311, 4*24941 vr ROOMMATE!/ WANTED. ­ . . ^W MIdgeLKew transmission, new" OAKCREEK 1127 -(ISO caWe TV, many extras.' Available ap> 47M3H or 47S4QU: almost ne#, %as. S125. Sell for S90. call Gimme a bull... pmrimately Feb. 15.47»-7d3J. Upperc(assman or grad. :2 bedroom, 3 TYPING SERVICE 47S45SI after;6:00 p.m. -. .. APTS. -. l Thanxl-• . y-y .CONTEMPORARY APARTMENT. ^*21 -blocks UT, S100 ABP.-476-3752, 471-5767, ;v 472-3i)0and 472-7677 476-3245. Leave messageScott Lewis. 909 i 1507 Houston" Flafs.".Effldenciesand'2.badrooms­_ Bgroffer. equipped. New condition, used only two 454-6394 APARTMENT ON TOWN LAKE ,. ' 4 dodrs. M^Qgo mllirv Automatic SI.500 10-SPEED MIRELLA. 73". Campy THE CONSUL .1515 Palma Plaia. 4744322. Shume bus . ^ ^ , condition. New tires.s. ttnrport..SCO or best offer. months. 471*7060L S30CC will negotiate. Efficiencies & unfurnished. & l& Vaulted 2 bedrooms ceilings, furnished cable 3 2 Bdrm Bdrm Townhouse Townhotne <320 S23S ABP ABP WALK TO CAMPUSi. 1/4: bllU rpaid NEED CHRISTIAN ROOMMATE. IC*n> HELP lW'CHRYSCER .. Excellent '• move or can'4Wpply extremely nlte aph' I WANTED aect-arr. "HP-45 'Scientific-Calculator. $250. 40-TV, private balconies. HUNTING . Available Now next to campus.Mark; 472-ti3i, 471-37fe. ShuttlebuSe 1 bedroom apt.v2.fu1t-sized 5467 All w/dlshwasher, disposal, CA/CH, double beds,-pool.-3301 Speedway. ROOMMATE NEEDED to^share two MUST SEU. before Weekend. 'it Pont is. a pSin in,the cable, pool game room. On shuttle bus manager 204. ^-252«c J?,; UMnC AT; PB. AC. AM. Wrack.SSOO COWBOY.-SHIRTS.. AuthentlcfiO's vln- route. Call 444-3411 orcome by 1201 Tln-. bedroom house; Travis Helghtv by Feb. ' ortestoHer. Cal' SeoH otter ip.m^et tage and never worn. All with peart WALK TO CAMPUS —~~ s z' -nlnFont Apt,lis. Turneast at iH-3Son -ONE BEDROOM apartmentZ-AQ '3 first. 595 month.1LOUK, 447-1198. * ' snaps. Men's, women's,-children's. 44?­ 44W9J1. • JSmY Riverside Or. —:—.. — .. . oc-< 0029 after seven.. . -1BDRMABP-$144 But HabltafHunters can. Jnocks from campus. fmmedJate iSERIOUS vSTi/OENT, One male, one-> aJpflncyrtt«^BR^75W7r^Purfll»hed^^ -female-nee & Help, with a FREE MJLLER'SI : REGULATOR-. Jadlfis «vetsuit, rocked MORGANA , room plus Vu1911 Robbins Place after 7:~ miles. Excellent: Hns,' backpack,; underwater; camera Locator , Service THE GREENHOUSE. Extra large one Prefer upperdassman. / COOtf Hon. SI500.345-1440. housing : pressure gauge, campus -APARTMENTS bedrbomapt.-*15fr par-month; water . specializing in student HALLMARK :lights paid. Beautlfulty decorated. Close REST, • booties; Lke new. 452-Z729.. ..., 1907 Robbins Placa . -LOOKING FOR Sensitive creative per­ 1*71-VEGA 7MWest34th patients BMW R75/I."1,000 miles, touring ^ and canbes^r Austin Mun. Aud. 4544239 EFFICIENCY. -CA/Clt dlsposai; dJ»­" L Jan. 23-26 2122 Hancock Dr. , . ^Habitat r quiet-tomplex; IF ihuttle.'S133/;ABP. carnpus.«4 plu» Vi E.476-2l44 after.5. 452-0155 4 * eqlOpped. 45*1501. APARTMENTS , hwasher, cable TV,poot atoragei Small; •; >MAUS ROOMMATE \winfed.::Walk -fo • • ; Close to shuttled T4 B0 YAMAHA Enduro mutt sell^ta THE SAILBOAT 454-3004. John Miller sacrifice now) Good running condition. Next to Americana Theatre;walking dis* Hunters ALL BILLS'PAID " • ROOMMATE to shared bedroomstudio^ - MBpr best offer. 34S4H0. SHOP tance to North Loop Shaping Center NEAR1; HIGHCANO MALU'DPS. One ownroofTvupstalix^huftf" apartment. <..uwuui tocaiion..Kt-or ;monm ABP;:441-5I9L RIVERSIDE and.Luby's;-Near shuttle.and; Austin;--' Doble Mail, Suite 8a' 2BRS24Q, -bedroom with shag carpet, dishwasher.: Good; location.RC or SR shuHle: S113 •n.TRIUMPH 450.2300 mllel.Encellwil * 4«-$no transit Twd bedroom flats* one end two. 2021 Guadalupe 1. BR J149.50 disposal. Gav water. oiMe paid: Pool, coadttlon. JH-7IH. II2». baths. Available one 3.bdmv 2 ba. with ' sundedL laundry. No ctiltdntn or pets. new shag cerpet: CA/CH, dishwashers-•>. 4W-J5321 , Mini-Eff $112.50 112$, 902MayfWd; 452-1154. W-:y, SHARE? HOUSE. Own bedroom., S100 disposal* door td door garbage pickup, t BLOCKSWEST OFF DR AG month AgP,.S2S deposit. Pets bkay. IF »7We< FREE ROOM;'# '|-Pet*-For Sale FURN. APARTS. poot« maid serviceit desired,weshaterla . GREAT LQCATIOM,":|argfe' super nice. FREE JANUARY. -RENT, Lafge 2408LEON. ' in complex. See owners. Apt. 113 or call Furnlsh*d,l bedroom. CA/CH.TF shut-• '476-3467 bedroom. 2 bathon uiuttl*.Urge poot.2 AND BOARD LOMGrHAfRED GEAMAN Shepard.-v.v^-r> 451-4648 rto. Pool. Comety Su Case Apartments. btocM trom UT Law SchiM?£l2 Red' In modern.home-on Enf)eK} Roed lon^'.: •fc-31 p«k AKC Bik-lan,"1 siretf'National '•r3~— T09 WestJWh.br.call River 477 2104 A • ROOMS shuffle bus route) In reforn for babysifv ^.' Ojyeoce Champ 1Females $100/ 45b ^ ^ f v • ^ ting 79. year old woman. lto-4,ntghtl 'JERRICKAPTS. „ FURNISHED 'EFFICIENCY;: CA/Ca'' AT UT. Large, old 2 berfrooftl. 1240 PU;». weekly, 6,to.n.p.m. Win have plenty ofi " disposal, dislnrasller. caWe TV, pool, OISTOUNT ON Doble Contract Call - FUtXjBLOOOEO lab and Bauctt Pup-' ^^ E^F'CIENCV bllli.lTONuece».47M««2,'<7M4*J. -llmetoitodyorwetchTV Whlltyouslt.' quietscomple*. IF shut­NewEfffclency Apts. Clndy collect-anytlme NEAR UT vtlyi •tV pto liscute and loveaWe forinforma-.^r^ ;;i.77,. £ ^ .ZA72-S336 • r ^ $115-$135 tle (WASP. 454-3004. . .. •.-v Dlihweiher-i Drtppiel f~, SUMMER RATES. Quaint en* Riomsttt allbillspaid 906 W.29th ' t55call277-ojw ' -ALL BILLS PAID Close-to campus,. large* open beamed : Swimming pool .One BRLuxury . •&?.bedroome. 4303 Owvai. ACT VII4SJ4S40 • ticuncte.tyj plus electricity 2907 San 104 E. 32nd ' '5..* Gabriel.-Barham Properties. 9JMO«s. cefffng, folfy shaft carpefect CA7CH. all ' HOWDY AGAIN FOLKSI Tlw Peeper P»»lo tiMrbecue ": i*• •, #£ 45^4621 fornimed J1MJ0 (Hut electrlch Tree people are havinga wWr-bana get - " Stereo-For Sale buiiMp klfphen, color. aH>rdinated, nc . Walk or Shuttle to UT Vi Mode fo tltuttle bin -T ty • *• • • • together _HOWDY .PARTY Saturday' Indlvtduel stori^ie' *' TEXAN DORM. 1I905 Nueces. Doubles ' WANTED' utility company hassles. 4000 Avenue A­ 476-5940,452-2462 ... nlght at .The Pmer Tret, 304 E. 34tK. TWO BLOCKS CAMPUS:'Unique,one : *'»»'s«(<,*ster. < Slnglts V--dlffon.^List S3S. Asking $26a Pioneer, ••• 345-4S5S. . • Couplakejs. Lofsabeer. . Prospective Leundry FeclllllH bedrooms. S135 plus .electricity 2WI . >MllS/semesler» Dally, maid service, -TEAC3S5dolby cassetie deck.Mint con- 452-5533 or 45t-6S33.. Bookihelyei Energetic, ipleasantvstudent wtu.likes children and |s a good driver:Must have?: EFFICIENCY, closeto campui.CA/CH. Relldent Maneger allowed. Two Nocks from campus Co-reliable car to pick up two children (7 & RCMOVA^E, FLOOR mounted I-. EFFICIENCY «'« PER^AWNTH.. ALt BILLS PAID '•iv. SA^Mt'.amp,:$W. Will negotiate. 475* • tenanfi welcome.^-»?7».Thenx. Cable TV ;Hemphill ACT VI 4334540 45*4*21:' central, air. , Refrigerators,: hot plates cable, dishwasher, disposal; walk'ln ONE BEDROOM-.elose to campus. LARGE ONE BEDROOM studio->140 Ed Resident Managers.'477-I7M 121 atter school, take.to.lessons,'play"'Plus electricity, furnished Oel Prado with, etc.7-i. tour days a week. <2.00 per' v. : trecfc 'Botoowt<-tape, player am$ FMA closet.Mot,sunde«i<,lauodr* room.114J CA/CH, shag, cable, dishwasher, dis-OR. $.127 PER MONTH ' • 5139 ABP. Voyattufi. ]|) Ealtil«t.Si.m-• posal, pool,^ sondaCk, laundrymom: (1?0 ELECTRICITY.., Apt« «5H3I3 Eddie / , PRIVATE ROOMS:T«vo blocks campus hoyr plus gas. Call 452-2635 even|rtJ»: '-> stone redlo phis4 speakers. S80X0.345­ u 6776. ABP. Voyag — -• ^ - central alrjMaid service,kitchen, co-ed gift . ALL BILLS PAID voyageun. 111 Eett 31tt St: 47t-' lOt WEST 45th • • •774. ABP<200, Large2>badroomi:CA/CH& 2411 Rio Grande.476-2551 after« 00pm ia-i4i»of 4n-mi • ^ Oose fo .campus, large open*beamed ,^ M^GHAVOXj 500 component stereo. cable:-Walking. distance; UT facing , ceil bms,fully.shag carpeted, CA/CH,all Tvrntabbg, receiver, 2-way.speakers - Hemphill ParC at .MltvWhltls For HOME AWAY' from.-home... Quiet . ^ ; \ '.bUlfMjv kifcnefv color co-ordinated, no S.rEATIV6 AND consclentlous lni'l , $200 After 5/4470204 ^ MOVE IN TODAY rejponjlbte,.mature adult. No pelt See neighborhood. Private . bathi utility company hassles. 4200 A venue A. matureiiwording women. After vn& I"bettering after 5 M-FrldayS.After;to • tn, ':= SOUND OCSIGN component system 4544423, br 451-6531 . • weekends^ ; -~ : J 9051. mankind, Extensive leadership ' . contelnlftff-AMFFMJnuttiplex, tumable, ca" LA CANADA r unh"n-/ & headphones, Sony neelfo reef fape deck ADOBE APTS. I BLOCK FROM SHUTTLE :ER 1 SPACIOUS SINGLE ROOMS In private'.: v^HhTapes.472-Qi47/476-70»5. t 1300 West 24th b®™..MEN. Linens-cleaning. Walk UT,; c BENJAMIN Miracord 660H changer, ^EFFICIENCY 472-1598 •-' £'. VOUNG PERSON needed for direct* ,• bete, dusfcover;new cartridge.$70; call Efficiencies' ES&.to comtniuion on1 %W" 1 BR -S165 ABP vK& . Ed*t<3frS167. -rr ' -£ SSTAIRS,2 bedrpomaptilftoldhouses fiURNISHEOROOM mhouse for female-alter lp m tlme.Tqall 472-7754 c WALK-PEDAL-SHUTTLE rpeted. AC.Sfflp2r,rn&'fihti bills <12 Mp.OO/month.'All bill* paid. .Call 472­ S^NSUl'AM/FM Stereotantf^ SM-320M. ^ $119 37Q7« j i Shuttle bus at front door, pool, CA/CH, ani;catr4?i:?4ni«;<^rj. ^ Excetlent pertormance at the • super NEED 11 PEOPLE Male or Mmale " iha« carpetlnfl. allbuilt-in kHdwik ten-PETS ALLOWED ric* of $80JD0 3450210 1 FIREPLACES nil courtiacrnt Hiettrttts,huge ti S!HJ!T«I ,rSlco,n«. NSi »»* limit? 3 . _.. SsfeiteasAs-aa*».««.;• backyard, 45W122. u« AHer4.454^CT, , ­ KENWOOD KR*93404-channel receiver. 4504 Speedway; 4SM769 or 451-&3. •Free TVCable ' •Shuttle Biis MOvE IN TODAY" •GasBBQ •Mexican TileFloprs ;. EXCLUSIVECO-ED dorm for spring.19 < awF'1 SII Rfiri ftfiw1 . .meals per -wtek/^mBld.service; pool/ l • EFFICIENCY . * CA/CH •Furnished >:^AIR SUSPENSION SPEAKERS ?,ERv.^R'UAMCER wanted, good sel^I v sMe 50* Full specs, indudewide tonal Phone 475-8329 n0E.37fhfAgr.T06 Z40047®ew J month |eate.;«l44J0 o()e bedroohfesao WlWSWJPbZ90"""?" c*" ^ tlonothoOrl Two locations UT;dowiK ranges minimum:dUforflon* 'electronic- WALK TO CAMPUS ' . pi Paulo.vAparlments/ shao.^pool, Expect to make atv!eart . ^ssoverv.fuil gyaranJee.;Be»ulllyl '(MO Plus E, '' balconles,^ahogany1i>anened,,one FOR BOYS near UT AC, private bath 'wataut styling wim molded 9rJI)&. Pair fumfumJ eJ/lclencJet, WALK • PEDAL 'SHUTTLE & and entrance. Icebox.M0 Single.4764552 ^ «rSjssr** *r Laroe built-in '- ;Wtdien! appliance*,' CA/CH, lotl of W' sIO mln. from PRIVATE BATH and entrance nqiilrad^ 45124W ""'V .MOSSMAH '•Great. Plalns'f 'Haodt . . $135 SATISFACTION Pearson Assoc. 472-6201.>', i ^ ^ AUSTIN. RENTAL EXPERTS, All ""*1 Pt,» °*W' ZgSLl**!CfS»\-ttiX 5uTX tetinlt 1courts; ^g||^!Dc«ngr« South Shbfer*"h~r& t', ONLY , ECECTRICeUITAR, copy Of.GlbsOn-.SiEfey r. t. 1 BIT UNFURNISHED 'tKknef'Newlv «on ttv rent *llmlte# duties'^3 G:stendardwllti casa and.accassorlafiV.^ remodeled Enlleld Rd. vtjZ shuttle ^1^04 ^ v 1 ^ ^ S*0. Call Bill, 472-5674.- Lnse »255 plus bills, deposit, 472 2490 ZBEDROOM i :$$<• :r.-* r-, 6»'>rlel.k I bedroom BILLS PAtD^ i ' Av. iIJtf ywrtments lOdeysfree reftt Irom Jan. LOST & FOUND 'ORADUATE orlawsludefit't^, uic Jti5^.Iwi'yon leaie mrough May, GUiTARS::vantUravelectrlc,'-»7S.^ WALK TO CAMPUS close to U*£ campus. ^ ,.Cl 6 t£ReS .manager ofsmall apt.prolecu Convlent Ideation - ACRES edftai ;£n.h, acousflc-^ ^ss,: s60. ii»2^!t -IM out >100: SENTAU BUREAU flc.cfindren.For. Oe falls,,call^f rtmenfv fvlly. sheg carpeted. Ing.Tote* cMI 4S3-3225. «w ,,0# REnt^!u^aJ^, 1 i VlClnlt/ ui ja anu ^.ii.i-sun. t...u . -u/nQK IWn unrucD .^111 , •fCf/CH/MbulIMn kitchen, each apart-Large one,Iwo.and thr«ebedroom pats.-wftHplenty O •• " • •••-.•>9iMlprtll>a>.t*.imll»la.lU.,a»ui.M«-i<»t;,„ menf nef .ifs owrt firlvate • patio or irlvafe onwestis^'we»fi5Wr.447». of storage. From $135 alU>J|ls paid. ' rfeFPiCIENeiES*.... rftall/ Guitars' Frlend. ^J3il07l ^,W<^f1,'t5w J „ ,„,, CLOSE-TO CAMPUS Landscaped courtyard/ pool/and playaroond?S,<|^ ^SHUTTiie^r P|AMO TUNiNO ^H-MIftor repalrsi' ' " Swlmmlnt pool,.! . Satisfaction guaranteed.' Call wn>*: ^CONQUISTADOR., doubleor^studlollam and tpm • ll(*n. ' fad POSADA REAL Ir^stwr/dliposat-centrftaJr^.. R|*VEV:> PA/,Amp. andronacotu AlpiOVv LEASING ^v.c/'aosiwesT 35^? lllnsl 1:2.ibedroom apartments^ • ^ Jprarti . .-?»»I^ffl4JSrynanffSS • itir;'ar«lir*" 'Walir'arid:gas p4ld Poof laundryi'Si CAVCH disposal, jj]st)ivaSher eas? and cqmforf. Sf-'Si' ?^P•"^&l^RL:AtlO|i TSHiift****' -i ?i. ITAR»T.RINO.SEfi";rjieMj»* JS&iR HNIVgRJIty,J4804 Rio Grande. ' Austin^ Texas equivalent to 100 people is ex­ 6:30pm>10:00 pm pected. Harlan Laughlin, CopyrlflhMWO'by L; Ron Hubbard/AH Rights Reserved. Church of Scientology < labor market analyst for the of California—a nonprofit Organization. On Future of Sweden Scientology. Is an applied religious' Austin Claims Office, made philosophy. , ,The Swedish " ambassador to the United this prediction Wednesday.' .Wachtmeister's wile, Ulla, will accompany States, Count Wilhelm Wachtmeister, will him on visit Austin,. She his to is a "The manufacturing in­give a public lecture at 4 p.m. Friday in {he professional artist, whose paintings are in­ * BALLET, FENCING/JAZZ V dustry is the largest of the un­ Academic Center Auditorium. ANQ LADIES EXERCISE CLASSES cluded'in collections in the United-States, employed occupational groups' Beginner and Intermediate • all ages "The lecture; ''Sweden: The Middle Way," France and Sweden. They have three ­ now registering for new classes, of with 37 percent. Retail and is sponsored by the University's-European limited size, convenient location-at children, Anna, a journalist, Christina', a American Legion, 220lVj Lake Austin -StudiesCenter, Accordingto Dr.Donald Han­wholesale trade groups are. 6fvd..Cafl Jans Groos Ballet School • model and Eric,a student atthe Foreign Ser­the second largest with18 per­ 453-8795 453-8232 cocks-director of; the center, Wachtmesiter vice School at Georgetown University, cent. will attempt to "dispel myths about Swedish Washington. society" in discussing the directionof future NELSON'S GIFTS. ZunlIndian Jewelry "Approximately 20 percent AfricarrtndMexican Imports.4612 South social and political changes. Congress: 444*38M. Closed Mondays. During his brief stay in Austin, .of the unemployment, personal assistant to .Wachtmesiter was Wachtmeister will meet with Gov, Dolph applicants do not'qualify, for LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR; Beginner U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold and advanced. Orew Ttiomason.^478* Briscoe, lunch at -Bauer House with the benefits," said a represen­ 2079. v from 1958to 1961 Heisa formerambassador • Chancellor and Mrs. Charles LeMaistre, at­tative of TEC. The usual MEDICAL COLLEGE to has twice tieen head of Admission Algeria ,and tend a dinner hosted by University President-reason is because they fail to PraticeTest. Nationwide test to prepare ministry' departments. He has; held tor actual.MCAT. Test analyzed, score Ad Interim Lorene Rogers and go to a Satur­meet the wage requirements and percentile rank reported. *12.00. assignments in Vienna, Madrid, Lisbon, Graduate Studies Center, 20 Fifth Ave. day barbecue in Dripping Springs given tiy of earning at least $500 in the New York, NY .10011.< . •: • • Moscow and Stockholm since he began ser­ Carl Widen, president of the Texas Swedish base period. Base period is the vingtho Swedish. Koreign Ministry in 1946. EDGAR CAYCE on Dreams,.Relncarna* Pioneers Association. first four quarters of the year' lion. Meditation, SpiritualDevelopment. Free lectures, /iext 4 .Thursdays. 7:00 out' of the last five quarters, p.m. Unity House. 1115 WesM2th. completed before filing un­ ART Vj.CRYSTAL. Glass, metal 8, employment benefits, said the Appeals Court Affirms Ban plastic engraving classes/ evening or days. Classes fc^in Feb. 18. Call 454-representative. 1238­ The regular unemployment — T«xan Staff Photo by Zodi Rysl BUY, SELL PLAYBOY, Penthouse,etc. On Club's Topless Dancers program provides for a range stereos. Aaron's,,320.Congress, down* ."Hie Third Court -of,-Civil of weekly payments ranging More Building Books, records, jewelry, guitars, radios,­ stating that "The said wording of the lease is Appeals ruled in an upholding premises shall be used for awkward and does not ex­from $15 to$63, with $55 being When construction begins on a new building, more tree* are ultimately sacrificed. decision Wednesday, ' that the average payment. The SERVICES . bakery and associated pur-pressly forbid topless dancers The addition to the Chemistry Building forces workers to transplant a tree in the East Robert Paul Ferrari Jr., a poses and traffic in foods and or any other form of enters payments "extend over a Mall lawn and generally disrupt the landscape to make way for the construction. local restauranteur.s cannot beverages. The lessee shall tainment. period between 8 and 26 :GINNY'S have topless dancers or. "any have the right to cancel and Associate Justice Bob Shan­weeks, the representative said. NOTICES from the .COPYING form of live entert&lipnent" terminate this lease on thirty non agreed that the wording is General Libraries or any in a restaurant leased to bim SERVICE (30} days' written notice to awkward but said it could not by Jacob Bauerle. TEC will begin accepting of the branches are of­BAR-B-QUE the lessor, and for no other be "stretched to encompass •*\I:NC. claims Feb. 3 for the new ex­ The court ruled :that ficial University com­ purpose." partially clad 42 DofiieAAaill 476-9171 the trooping of tended unemployment benefit Free Parking --Bauerle has the right to Ferrari 'argued that the females." munications requiring DOWNTOWN 501 E. 5TH program. ya.m.OOp.miMH5 prohibit topless dancing in immediate attention. 9 a.m. • 5 pum. Sat. Ferrari's 21 Club, on South TRY THE BEST BARB-Q GET REAOY;.FOR THE NEW-:Lamar Boulevard; because of River Hills IN TOWN WITH A COLD SEMESTER STODYVWECP THROUGH SELF a -paragraph In 'the lease • individual Jsesslpni"c6nduc*"^' hu -: l MUG ted' by .! OF BEER ON THE UNF. DUPLEXES infiwlmii Unexplained HOUSE AFTER 2 PM DAILY ONE MUGOF I on the of s !WITH ANY BAB-S-Q nature the* ac­ -« O :: *X5'ause# tlie V Saturday cusatioris. 1' £t-;the.'River-Hills "We hope tobe able tomake ; CARE.;?RESN.NT: Phase V Apartments, Fire' a ruling by Monday,'' he said. unmarrled-molhers. '.Edna-'Gladney-' I Home. 230* Hemphill,:Fort-.Worth. Toll -Marshal James Loflin said A1 Vacek, a spokesman, for freewmber I-W-m-1104..' olH^Sa?J^k^!S!^i^feM#«hieSday^ _ ^Travef-dlscouhts • the apartment owner, said he EARN CASH WEEKLY ABORTION ALTERNATIVES! -Preo^ SIM?"SKpLofhn^said there was a had heard nothing about: the nant and distressed? Help Is airfares your telephone. Pro-Life Advocates. 510 the Cause would cause of the fire and had been Blood Plasma Donors West 26th; 472^m:.'.:. IblOiAi)Afrton/0*476-4195 never be determined. unable to get in touch with —^TOPSMOKING^semlnar^starilng.Feb.! TUTORING __^We_.kno\sjwhere the^fire David Werner, the resideilt in Needed Conducted by Cooper. Consultants. in* ..novatlve. Guaranteed, Cell 447*4549 to-;yiOLIN/VOl.A/FIODLe;iU««ioni. started but not exactly how. whos€"'apartment .fhe~fire~ dtfy. 'Some accusations have"been started. . , i-Men & Women Aww/P evenings s-7 451-205., '^V ' MOVING? WE can^mo've you. fast. Cheaper thari Werner, who is stationed at EARN $14 WEEKLY Bergstrom Air Force Base, CASH PAYMENT, FOR DONATION woMEN^AUTER::.-^ riotcomment was unavailable iorcomment. ty and reasonably. Rudf Caspars, Tttt Guadalupe.--t • Austin UNF. APARTS. jV+hey?# in +te t&0Pheeui> TAXX RETURN; preiprepared at student Blood Components, Inc. ». Call Eddie 4S\-m3 or 474^57. , rbk^^ • • Donft1 wait. Call Today: CHANGE LIFESTYLES, Roomyi'one .-v v.::bedroom.plusneceultlM.:l9)0Hr.NU^s OPEN: MON. & TOURS. 8 AM to 7 PM 1132.50 plus, bills. 454447V6r 44147(7; ; look a!ter. for/4 $-weeks. References COUPLE .WANTSHOUSE to llveln and TUES. & FRI. 8 AM to 3 PM ayallable. 444-9972. B*-; FREEHALF MONTHren».Wlth (month CLOSED WED. & SAT. ;;ir.lease:. J134J0. .1 bedroom;. Sa6 Patik) music by James and Michael Apartments.Shag,pooUbalconle», mahogany panelled, one ,.btoclcf park, • 409 W. 6th 477-3735 FURN. HOUSES 15th Strw^, 14919 W. Alabama, Houston •|ONEBDRM'APTJn;small.quletcorrt. COZY. 2 , Usrae yftd, ftsflrie, Kara • DOMUS?W£ f v . r' " ufa :I a* Swi/vn+cn SHUTTLE UTi"2bedroom, garage, pets, CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING tenced yard, carpeted. t160. info 11020) '] FOR RENT® S20. OOMUS, 476-4632, .•[.:••• RUSTIC 3Iwiiwwm.a'brtiv '.iygU^^WmrR.. . B»l» tine.: Good »re«, (1010) DOMUSi Ored; -tiuaeriHr;Rent • <76.4433. Fee,-.' "• 'itebulouj' hMte/nt^HbvlSuj Lakeway .,'.Furn^ untum^' ^ wlnien^ relei. 241­ ^ SLIDES ORDER BLANK SHUTTLE.. luxury, 2 beSroom, . dlj-^.»lter 5 p.m.J41-S04J , , hW«ner. H«5.Carpet, no leiM^rttiok. (1521) DOMUS, <7C(632.'FM. ' EFFICIENCY FOR RENT with IhUttle, • --Ideal tor »tudent. Plea«e:cail.4<2-Wia j' "A VISIT TO CHINA" Fatt. 1k CA/CH, MRS. INEZ C. JEFFERY Pats:fine;:info 0525j ERRMS-IHUTTLE^ 475-093S Fee SOUP AND SANDWICHES UT 3 BEDROOMS: Weit,-baragei $175^f: THE DAILY TEXAN! Fenced :yard; Pets line; Wurryt ( WANTED NOON NORDAN LOUNGE ' OOMUS> 764632., Fee. . ,2»' . Student Newspaper atThe Universityof Texas at Austin LAKE AUsTlN quiet tountry living..15 iMMEDlATE-CASH.foriatemodaiVW^ mlnujesdowntown-campus.One /BR fSquarebaclw, in good condl»lon:-45M$4l. UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH mobile home.lTO^BR.sfW/SBR/Siao.: Evenings and weekend* ^ '^ 2007 University Avenue ^ A ^^ WANTED IMMEDIATBLYR 'H.W VJv £S?r 0,a! ,;i."W Coiripiete' RENTAL BUREAU fee 4Sir <:451*4214 , . 7433 Austin'* oldest referral servJCT -r i1 lA -STRAIGHT SENIOR-SEEKL DUARTIRSI V LAKE TRAV'S wa»erfrom. Huge one KiLn £ tiood.Marcfa 471-4IM -nv" ™WV J PRETTY-DUPLE* it 1 * i v ~ :j.-bedroom.duple* -for. rtnt ,lM>!qul#t;; -WRITE YOUR AD HERE- Kortheitt Austin residential UNCLASSIFIED TAPE SPECIALS n»lgtibofh(XKl. e«d)i duple* olleri largt. . fenced bacKyeM, toveretf ^ tjf»(f--"-r-" —' J&WSKViBr •» 'jftEGmw<" SALE >j,Md ,,«pNbl,H,c/^^i'ipc,il^, . ^ ' LNE 35-7« 8.25 #.99 N<' •• ^ 7 ONE BEDROOM '.furnUhedt duplex" LNC-60 i 2.29 3^,49 '!V> ^bu9^owl conlf ,Wi- Xm LNC-90 3.50 19 ^ vTr ciastOuitar^ttwslixi^ww^ i.Ar-l-li.'.: —. Liw".-r Enrih S]ioe s»bot'6 5 UQ UDC*60 11^2,1 ROOM & BOARD Amount Enclosed— ^eppyBlrlljtloy.GarK.LoJef'Carol.v^^ UDC-90 & i*1-''"4.99'' ^X: ;r|3«29 ,g& ^#|hii hondy chart to quiekly arrive Frye Leatherboots:4ViB,-,140." 45J-431JY. 8Tr400-'3^ ?3.45 ,i?1l%.30 * ut cost. • • Number of Days • • v word minimum) . -r Mail Tor * SonyvHPr4MA.»tWeo «**». BUY12 -GET ONE FREE IT^ ' r• ^ ^ DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS No» m Titms Titms TitMs-TilMS Times P.O. BOX D -UT STATION \ WoMS ? *fv*> tvtf *1'1 \s :io 20 AUSTIN, TEXAS 78712 vttitoer w»ril .11 '* 140 .70 1.40 •F i;« 3.00 MQ 10J0 21.00 3.20 4.40 MM-22.40 ' I:J?"YYYu ADDRESS PUBLIC NOTICES t ",4j* < " lt»7 3.40 11.90 23.10 > ....... •!.. 5 'It NEED;BASEeAUUeRS.PorWlnB»fI.H feeK&fe? Water Commission Awaits City Rule „;/• toestabU^ aMunicipalUtili-countering financial dH-contact with the Austin city develop^ will have to face Cil-wfSii18,'c^/ yaresult nnn. « Mim u, A t manager's office concerning -numerous other obstacles Wilding, a proposed SO.OOO-A MUD would have enabled of high interest rates. its recommendations but was before the orolect gets suf­person development nine the Wilding development to Ernest Stewart, District 17' unaware of the city's/final ficient financing milesi northwest. of Austin, issue its own utility construes-mtfnager. said Wedriesday decision,' , Stewart said that wlien d°^r 10 tl0n bonds to flnance water ""^L * °2f ^ there are several large sub-A spokesman for the city Southern Living and Leisure reality if the Texas Water and wastewater facilities at divisions in the district manager's office said late requests ijonds from the dis-Rjghte Commission approves an estimated cost of $14 besides Wilding that im-Wednesday that although the t?Tct tocover tha "Si. ,7 ,,n i« ™f>tely need the exUaser-staff was still working In toe development'sCtiUties ex* vOUfily. W8t£T;vO(ltCOl &l)d Ull* ,DlStriCt l? csn SlSO iSSUC ViC6S< . rfiCOinnifnriAHntKl-' a ' naneaa : f7'riAel/tAttfa s&fiwi provement District No: 17 to construction bonds for these "IndirecUy. the Wilding -representative would be atthe grant the...district-additional facilities, hutitfirst needsap-development will benefit from 'hearing scheduled for 10 a m Then the TexasWdter Rights powers to,proyide sanitary proval from the water fcom-a favorable ruling, but it is in the Stephen F AustTn Comi^ion^nd ftnallvthe S^?^al»a*e *«-.gg.partof ttedtatact.-he Building.-^ 1*125 Jr-i's-s,-: znjSiir*"*"• mission sdecision will depend has the authority , to, provide ' on theCity of Austin'sattitude waterworks facilities. ' . if «. " MWP* toward the district's request Bill Corsbie, a legal M $ It has "historically been the representative for the water mm iMgiirrii\n¥k cpe for the,water commit commission, said Wednesday / wr sion to go along" with the District 17's original request "recomnrenddUou-ofa-eRy-that—for~ouiditroiuU_Ag^rs. "was could eventually. be affected needed primarily to serve the ^:M'Slalf-V^;i^;Iidi tyol. by the decision, Councilman now, zSign Greets Students Wilding property. But LoweU Lebermatm said. nobody knows what will as holiday! Iht {nformatiofwvfaranc* « Wilding was annexed into happen to Wilding." .. ««>>•> |».M.iu i«vamp«jtofodfitat* Mrvk* to student*, mott wui m avoilabl District 17 fast summerafter Corsbie said the Wilding at tte locoltoii to odmhtof dld to«tudnt» who or* lort, foHorn or disoriented. City Council turned down a developers, much like the en- request by it? developers, (ire construction and home- compus briefs' Southern'Living aitd Leisure,, building; • industry, ate en-' (A Real Steal) Po Yourself » Favor duff and Flare 5 If women don't know new director ot Chabad House-OSS Reg.to $1,8 anything aboutincome taxit's :.Pal^frQm7«efpjn.Thursdays In Jester A33Z. "Rttdlng Efficien­Short and Long Class Changed n Union South:11CL Opeft to nondrama cy" will meet at 3 pin. in Jester ''mafoirs;.:.-;-;^.;' •; A332. f *• Ethnic Studies 320, "The * -'iWBnMQS' TBiAS UMON AMOxftMBBCAM QJUUiAi Racial Experiment: Modern AUSOMA»6«TOU»wnim«et.l7pm. CpMMmtt will sponsor a sandwich Dresses Tuodayt in ttw baitmrnt o> tt<« seminar on black folklore, featuring m Sooth Africa/*.taugbt by Den-' . . Woman'f Crm. Anymlswdconw. Marlyn While/ Instructor in the nis Btntus at7 pjn. lloodays, brliig Hit aqulprottil to Moot, Dept.of Ethnic Studies, from noon to and AAMA1 AHOOATIOW WHI mart at 7:30 t p.m. Thursday in ihe Te*asv will n6t meet at the CathoUc pjn. TBuoday In JtiitrAJ0» for a . Culture Room (Afro-American), be good : Student Center. It has been, . mtatlDBwlmtha public todtflnt the Methodist Student Center poaH tte Bah^ faifft A^eeWng b TTfif iFrBptfig«4wrynrfTHMaMiiin moved to The Ark, 2000 Peari v dpta to the public to i n-will sponsor a sandwichseminar on 4222 Giradalype NextJoJexasTheotw St. r.®-'/-* aZs, r-t-OtAtfttAOVTUM WUMBHTwill meet -Y "Thafs (Dance) .Efltetalnment" ­ }-; i /at 7:90 pjn.Thursday In Batts Hall *tii Ted: Plro, daiicer in ..many .• I -. tttiWHOtiWUBAVlteH witl sponsor a productions. «s part of its dance BS . JS7. , •r .movfe musicals and Broedway' yourself i will per-new^ weekly learning group begin* symposWm at noon Thursday In the 'Zigam ry tn Hogs . ningtp.m.Ttmirsdayat311 E.31st Dobie Room, Academic Center i'l$ 50 cents Sf.; Apt.-gfc Rabbi Jack Fetita. tt»e fourth floor. V jenno-niu. - 1 >, ' ' 1 f fc?? it <-,l-'l r\ r j .iy. \ 1 w it Is /«, i§ ^asagA. r t y * » " >> PUA 7 !• I{ |li^j Jpthro Tull's startling new album * WarChlld i i £>*, ' SJtA »* * and seven that canfe1>Wfore. Qb|efa«^ I' r ' •?*' 7< ItOmTtia'J |»A^ -­...».-.•ria' •-; f- Ii .. fi •mm t-sM mm i i Sr V* 1 Pi"