P§^S^f5fnS^^W'>"!ft-'4ii%; ^^^'''••re^-s,v^'^''"i' •>**•,,«• •' •• h^KhM f iL>4 ^v^,-t Jo-—i\ ^ '3' . • " <>• -* t*m®mz$%mm£?-. ';•»; * •:.•« *. JWft-? s •^Si *• *-•• >-->;VM. : .• •••• . *' • .•.• •" " V., .. '• A * w ' -r •.-••?•'.•: .V-'.-'"vIm. '' "r"--" "''/'./ ^•.-:t>; r^*.y^ Ten Cents Vol. 74, No. 138 ^,; , T Austin, Texas, Tuesday, February 4, 1975 Fourteen Pages 471-4591 Fair Local Trial For Ex-Regent Said Impossible By STEVE OLAFSON on accidents caused by drunk drivers in Texan Staff Writer (he Erwin story. He said the information Five persons testified Monday that was not designed to prejudice viewers former University Regent Frank C. but to inform them. • Erwin cannot receive a fair trial in Roddy said he thought a fair trial was Travis County on a driving while in­impossible not only in Austin but in Cen­ -'g toxicated charge. tral Texas. The veteran newsman said ~ *ts' 1 The hearing will resume at 9 a.m. Goodman and Matthews' terminology Tuesday to decide whether the trial will and choice of words "was not fair to the : be moved outside the county because of defendant." pretrial publicity. Grubbs was the first to testify in the Four of the five who saida fair trial is hearing. When asked if Erwin could -impossible are admitted friends of receive a fair trial, hesaid "Of course he Erwin while the other. University Prof. can't.... I've been his adversary at the • Clifton Grubbs, is an avowed adversary. University of Texas for the last .10 ­ The other four are Joe Roddy, news years" Grubbs candidly told the court; ; director of KTBCr attorney Joe Long; GRUBBS , who tried to censure Erwin ­James Banks^public relations director twice in 1970 after Arts and Sciences Texart Staff Phofoi by Mik# Smith for the Texas Railroad Association and Dean John Silbert was fired, also said it • J.C. Kellum, radio station KLBJ presi­would be "demogoguery" to hold the • Rainy Days and Mondays ;; dent. trial in Austin. Tnic wettk't intense, »xc«*iiv« rain ha* coaxed umbrellas to open like (treat*' gullies. In a woodsy letting'at the Humanities Research Center, Sigrid Harvey said there was no scheme bii •: a possible in Travis County were Richard mushrooms «n a forest floor aftera downpour and rivulet* of water to swell the Weinstock (I), count* umbrellat/and raindrop* Those testifying that fair trial is part of The Texan to present Erwin in a •' bad light and.added that the wide publici-.• Goodman, KVUE news director, Marsha ty he receives is a result of his role as a McKuen, KVUE reporter; John Sutton, controversial regent. Both Harvey and :Austin American Statesman reporter; Sutton read stories from their 's Name Doug Matthews, KTW news director; newspapers to the court. and Buck Harvey, The Daily Texan Minton surprised the court when he . editor. said Sen.*0s -and we certainly were not taking the Merrill, may have beenthe firstto notice crime and labor racketeers who Vlf it weren t for an imaginative and ' operation for granted*'' 'Barcus Mid. WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Uons in social spending Mr. Ford propos­ the gas; She called Mrs. Patton, who • manipulate welfare and pension capable attorney . general, this. $45 fc>'We have,-an . automatic ;shutoff valve reported the bad smelling gas to police: Ford sent Congress Monday a $349 billion ed. funds." But the Justice Department's -A million increase would be a fact of life, frt^hich isactivated by a pressure change. budget qf "honest self denial which Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., budget stays virtually stable at $2.1 A few.minutes laterMrs.Pattoncalled tv;But for some reason the leak was so Mrs. Merrill back to say her husband had . rammed down our throats, justified or* calls for the biggest deficit in peacetime chairman of Congress' Joint Economic billion. not," he said. ; minor , that it did .not cause a niajor collasped Then, still later, she called , history, and predicts rising unemploy­Committee, objected that Mr. Ford's SOCIAL — Social spending ad­ (i-Clower scoffed at statements by Bell : pressure change, and therefore the her pastorand'asked him-to pray forher '< ment and inflation in 1975 and 1976 budget would mean "higher unemploy­ministered by Health. Education and spokesmen which assert that even if all '^automatic valve did5 not shut off " and her family. If the predictions hold fast, Mr Ford ment, continued double-digit inflation Welfare Department would continue to desired rate increases went into effect,' '' The small leak caused by thefailure of -Police Officer Jim Tucker ^was.'tlie would have to:run.-for the presidency in and deeper recession. grow — but at 7.7 percent a year, half the .Bell would'still only, make 4 percent of i -^ safety device in' the wellhead began first person to reach the Patton home, 1976 with nearlyjTjS,million persons out Mr. Ford asked approval for$17 billion earlier rate and less than the inflation ; after dark Saturday, and by the time it .> v Unfair market value.of-'its.-inveStirieiit^-. of work '' in cutbacks and said the deficits for the rate. the HEW budget, $118 i "The.-Pattons. and their'-guests L Still at >>had. beenr. closed:;,-and?the .cloud of -V* attempted to get out but just didn'tmake Asking forgiveness for any cyniefsrti,-? The budget calls? for a $51.9 billion current and next fiscal years would top billion, is largest of any agency in *;liydrogen sulfidfe arid caitrtidioxide gas 1 CI°Wf deficit and outlays of $349.4 billion in $100 billion if Congress did not comply. government. ^Tiydrogeri^Uid^aridc^n"dioxId"e"gas^"hSr-wrfo^SwKand '•^merous. newspaperr >.iiM>noi i..j j'j f l ' j„ 7r„[' " reports and a great deal of testimony •^lispfersed, nine persons nearby haddied. fiscal 1976. which,starts^next July-Here are th^ highlights:of Mr. Ford's SOCIAL SECURITY -Despite Mr. beside their cars, f< ^before the Senate subcommiUee gave, spending proposals which will become Ford's aim to hold benefit increase to 5 i ' ^ reasons to doubt Rell'S-aibijltys's "The budget being submitted today is •i « the framework of;congressional debate percent — already rejected by ^majori­ -jt ^ ? i. d-Y' l 1> -'.or desire to figure fair a compassionate one," Mr. Ford said in and changes over the next eight or mn6 ty in the Senate he said the average rectly;" :' v " rremarks; he delivered as; he signed the months: social security payment is to grow from The consumer affairs subcommittee budget message and sent it to Congress: DEFENSE — 27 percentof spending to $185 to $235 monthly. All told. Social ^staff )iad found a three-minute ,call to :•. In Congress, the reaction ran along SfiS h Ra'P go here. A Pentagon budget of $94 billion Security will mail out $70 billion in fiscal * *-I •" ' %f41 " Kansas City, Birmingham-'op^ AlbtP > vtyro Contradictory tracks: There Wa^ dis- Continued rain is <-just enough. Mr. Ford says, to:main-1976 — a fifth of the budget. Checks go to querque was cheaper than suchS call b" < 'may over the size of the. deficit and tain "equilibrium"; in Soviet-American 28-million people. • El Paso, which is considerably closer, 'anguish over Mr. Ford's proposals to 1 '? strategic, power. Mr. Ford-wants to beef MEDICAID — Mr. Ford seeks to pass -C|ovyer said ', reduce, scheduled .increases in health, ^ a 20'p^rcent-chance pf. j, up the Nayy.-and says he may bewilling on a bigger share of the cost of providing f/ee&s" t' Citing this andother examples,-Ciow"er veterans, education, welfare, food and tp pull some troops home from'Europe. health . .. ® >>%£>:• •*$)$'' rairt ,Juesda.ir.^ighty sald^'thisglvesyou som^idea of ourTn-other human needs programs. The' 10 care to the -poor, to the. 13 "trastatfe1 rates, and these are the rates •perCerttf jump uv, the.defense budget, to ENERGY —Mr. Ford earmarked ^.8-wealthiest states.He proposes more can­ •; Elections for edrtor of \ skies1 will be Mostly! billion .-for urgent^ energy research'— lioji in paying the hospital bills of. that are going'to be raised another $45" $94'.billlofi, also came'/under /ire, •, TherDaily Texan and ^doqdy^ Vreisi1 some for military nuclear prograipsand Medicare patients, the nation's elderly.: million if Bqll has its way," ' 1 Rep George Mahon, D-Ten» 74, the :$2,1 billion for, tapping energy^from the FOREIGN AID -r: Even though the' T$P Board positions yyecinBsday. win 'TeMs is (he only of^thd I 50 states^ lail-stooped-shouldered chairman of the N,sun and: wind^ taming;nuclear fusion to program encounters growing hostility in. Uouse Appropriations Coqnmittee, said Regenerate electricity. Congress, Mr. Ford earmarked $6.8" in a Bouse speech that t|te 'size, of the" ^ HIGHWAYS-(The Presidentwants to billion in foreign aid—$2.8 billion of itrin budgetwas."breathtaking." "''phase down federal'highway spending, weapons given orsold to othercountries:'; m with u?,r he added:-'" ^ y Lik^i otheTvDatiocra^Ma^MHK^v,-turn over to'.the states $1 billion, in gas-SPACE — $3:5 billion is pegged for the' XWwer'clbsed ^by-^aylnt'^the 64th' ^ .wufe' Uxesby1978.' A'ceiling0(1subsidies , space agency, -up $291milhon over' legfstature/ sho'Uld give texans' "the forrailpassenger^rvicesiis/pn^sed.;:. current spending . ' > • s «v •' % %Mw s-•• • -• •• >9 •i*n; I Kubiak Sponsors BHHTo f^^is>-'Nonsmokers '**fcav«rtt°^T« ^tw^ Smv^ay in A|»ril and'eHds the « urge pan 01 our rural neither.-support nor oppose Savings Time was fourth Sunday-in October. * population opposed Daylight vD5T' tie said but "cprtoih •e^errqd to*subcommittee of . TTje committee referred HB Savings Time" Kubiak said, national network an- The House State Affairs Com-84. calling for a referendum _. ' n^wmMts woSdtft ahrf» D«clfflat«d by bad ^^yn.gn,niehL nn nsr indu mnu W.!^.. Since -the • rural Dooulation "ouncemenis wouidn i apply. Weather and illnast, . , : House Bill 85. introduced by mittee. A motion to report 8ets »P early,.they are forced »exasu itwassingled out. Monday TURN Twoiii &, 1-Rockdale Rep. Dan Kubiak, •'favorablyonthisblllwastabl-indarkness, .If Texas.,does not par-United for the Rights of j ir would allow the Legislature to ed. and. often have problems On-ticlpate in; DST, stations Nontmokers) tat in ^ • '* exempt Texas from federally Kubiak said he would op-#"8 ^W. ^-April and Oe-would be 'forced to'tape debate for twohoursand r ~:'r' imposed Daylight Savings pose the measures but for his tober with DST In effect, network programs — a costly produced only a mild § 'f Time, which begins the fourth rural constituents Kubiak said. Contractors also process,, said Rush Evans cover letter for a survey "Jf mlttee Monday night process,."saFd Evans, . :>:&&£•.rr-oppose DST, he said. generW mar^ger of KtBC. ^they intend to send to J4-&St Austin City Council. "My main concern deals Most station cartbotattora lib* Members. withschoolchildren/' Kubiak costly;'tape machines, so they; V '•'•* W. ^ said, and added that two mor-• would have toyshow the 'igph} ' ning accidents in his district programs as they were fed <&• 9--S ©r< •.«. : involving children occurred in from networks. The result I Vpv.^fYlCIIf . October, while DST was still would be thai a show such as fn • '' * < in effect. ^ s . "All in the Family"-would be aUred i University police are look-Rearing a light del mask, a oh.™ ^Li.hhmmuI 7 P.m. six months out was 86611 of toe f*i-a W „dafk greenshirt anddark pan-T™* J****«»;# PJn. the /fjV-u * ^,ter% .Kinsolving ts. He appearedto beabout6-0 . JfJjfi " JK? ** other sU months; Evans said. - ^ 12 File06f-.. Special• — _ ElectionJEaC; '•titi.' • uantttl hu 4tiA nlhr fnv nn m«1« -' .'. i •" • ,.~m ?>at ith the Sitae mav theriihrxiaiMA-»S •«» — . _ , _-_ _. wanted by the cityfor an early * """" l""1' "There should be uniformi-Wednesday filing may cost theahr»lftflaft,-«Jl tTf --if rr«iifr ii •n** r.i Monday attonpted burglary Austin police are lookingfor ty in the four recognized time Tliis inctad^iLteandt nec^s^t^! ^ ^ WfeMBm co—ca ­at a nearby Burger King. . a similarly described nin zones," Richard Crate SlSSg7n^ .Watiiairf.OWMSto-'S^iteiMS SiSTttKsMarch8 SS£5£ •oorted the man said he was Kins InHHainf• sni>i wl• i j i ^ .•;Midland — •• . ,—•* -wtwva av—ai .;weafWiBeu—S?52ST3StaSS ,lli: tlll ""= awuuo, wuicn six persons oo^hecouncil. hut Died *> Ute April Snee­ „.. :b»(*%ipasi^ te^Moldecljnt: ' -Rml Brrt T Ma nii ' %£* w E^IM Um.nansK ~. law&ss. Skajyj; G*ry Se^r***sJ R«k«t "• -i* Cimil to^s Mi Pete i • v "nil > Place..{*^!"»• aawjfcR. Rang ^n.C>reti - 3& ^ bitead *•"»» .• -'• ;.'Si»jra«tess^ Awata iM -•. are the CM-' i^tesi^.iaa«iiiL4kNai,: COME n^iitbr eiectiMiis Uartk5­ TIfilPJEVyEST chen!7\i^ds a store full of contemporary young looks f-' ' i[ .&»; bloomirig in PtaHUBg CtMBBlisSWM a^­-pnmd tttee OHg t^t^i ?;•-•­ l^.'aii » aad (tehqed aaother M— NORTHCROSSMALL wf' 5 v;Trte.'lhsk tKO ; ^ feiiWft c»M«ri«4 MB««rci»l * 4f i \~x • aioag Brafie''' Lmk•SaMnst Aaslk% ^ . 'tte-firs* ease, Bamw C^­ '.panning pn«as>tsfarlmiTTtlil 1» IllllpHIIIII -m >w . west site of tS» street wen ' passed aaunKK^r _ h 8e »«d ease with |Nrop«tr «• tkfe Mter v ' . tyt-JY* % sidfe ofBrodbe UotrttaMtnfc Iteas Sen^ pxpontanX ' '' "'V.M proved fortm tractsMU«L Cocnmissioft staf^kad 0<& kcmmM agiiist \sttstriKtiMt W.Mitje*; ' —iHriiiiMiaiMi"! ¥ -r ^.* * ' v*ioi **£t ne^ttbd case owximI -' tbepnfNSklorJeeGftRaiC:. -tot. for '-(Kgls cbssiiicaim' , -X M s " * SdkaollaSMtti t­ ifimt Ctettnta-d this VMensprttRMBHetM ..„.. . :si,4*A i 3%S3s_ .• i !i sadtscetMcene^»'»n^tt­ n l>2gZ W e A n»e»t Dver /i.dratutt *J prtUen. -"•'• ," •$*r "jr n» fa^W'teenel ^ ,s'^ ^ f-t ^rc meat UtherSEuttiaf ImmI •Mt&fiifr. •i f U/> ^ h » Nartti A*stii ad|j*)ek Ik' SB* wMf *$£ m trti CJ. t i nv* ZStr.) .'i INSTANT CASH <;>. VmSfc5l«;^-5S r -'^ so1; .-&­school ri -£ s. £'3-d u 31' c r*. .*1 r. g *•' » i CHARLES LEUTViN LE =R jEVtELERS EDDIE f*' ifef r'i*« ^ c -wSfttttgdf * FISHER V" #¥H

jCOMPACT•, •-•••.• • • MHU6BtAT0t at uanttHnrt" «wm%y 'ir%iaaw#^:" *-v?< SSsaialSteSasSfe^^; WtwMf IWH VvPP waw*w cu»n«niT >U-1 niyimmni -• Mw» «nt»r» Tuesd&y^ebr ?rr V r * ' •e^irS* ian Bombed; Destroy 2 Villages ADDIS ABABA (UPI) — Ethiopian The reports said two villages hitSatur­group, the Eritrean Liberation Front, and the country's private industry as part ofwarplanes. bombed Eritrean guerrilla day by government artillery in reprisal Brig. den. Gebre-Egzie, a former police its plan to build a Socialist economy. An -positions near Asmara for'(he second attacks were flattened'by the bombard­commissioner who went over to the official order said the government wasconsecutive day. Monday in continuing ment and followup air raids Monday. rebels several weeks ago. nationalizing outright or taking con­ •air and artillery attacks that destroyed There was no casualty count, but thetwo In Addis Ababa, the military govern­ trolling interest in such American com­ two rebel-held villages and left more villages had a total population ot 2,000. ment announced a takeover of the bulk of panies as Pepsi Cola and Coca Cola, and than 100 persons dead and thousands Diplomats reported the first foreign oil firms including Shell and Mobil homeless. fatauty of the fighting, an Italian baker ASMARA ITSELF was quiet, and -The government sent a column of at who died after being gunned down in the some food shops opened. Soldiers and least 50 tankssupported by armored per­ first moments of the battle in Asmara tanks continued block-by-block searches sonnel carriers and troops to Asmara, Friday. About 3,000 Italians live in for rebels and sympathizers. <50 miles north of Addis Ababa, to rein­ Eritrea, a former Italian colony. Military observers said the first phase force the 15,000 soldiers already station' AN AMERICAN consular official said of the battle for the Eritrean capital ed there. • h the 300 U.S. citizens in the area were all appeared to be over after three days ofDIPLOMATIC REPORTS said "safe inside their houses," and no in­street fighting that left more than 100 American built F5 fighters strafed and cidents involving them had been persons dead. But it was only a matter of bombedgoerrilla units north of-Asmara reported. time before the two sides clash againin an-attempt to -smasfe supply dumps -Diplomats said two leading rebels had over Eritrean demands of full and im­and concentrations of separatist :troops been captured. One was Hiruie Jedela, mediate independence for the northern built up around the city. secretary general of the main guerrilla .Rebel Area province, they said. Talks xGeneva' Response to Soviet Proposal Mixed •fefj By United Press International evm -: ,not later than early March, and a full "If I did not believe there was some Gromyko said in an airport stateiQent. ~ : Soviet-Foreign Minister Andref^A. -Soviet role in all phases of Middle East possibility of progress in the Sadat has said he wants to'give Grotnyfco..calling for an immediate -• peacemaking. , negotiations, obviously I would not go to Kissinger a chance to negotiate sfurther :,^-resumption of the Geneva Arab-Israeli • But opening speeches by Gromyko and the Middle East," Kissinger told a Arab-Israeli troop disengagement before­ conference'as "the only guaranteed National Press Club luncheon. Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail going to Geneva. Kissinger will visit the iway'* to Middle .East peace, got full -Fahmi at a Cairo dinner reflected the THE DAMASCUS communique un­Middle East next week. J­-backing fromSyria Monday but little in­ nippOOttWS basic disagreements between the derlined the growing "differences On Sunday Sadat-said it would be itial response from Egypt . Russians and Egyptians. between Syria and the Soviet Union, on treason not to accept a limited Israeli jvMbcK far itsstudents. instead of Gromyko arrived in Cairo"frtfm -the one hand, and Egypt, on the other, on withdrawal from the Sinai moifctain ­ . Fahmi did not refer to Geneva at all Bnfcatfi Haor'and madtebl student Damascus where a.communique on his tbe Geneva conference and the step-by-passes and the Abu Rodeiss oilfields, if it and held the door open for American irtyjrwiwliafl lujilti millos"Cora of taltcs with Syrian President Hafez Assad' step diplomacy advocated by the United is offered. He said this should be follow­ step-fay-step peace efforts. States. "ISRAEL is creating an explosive "The two sides declared their firm Syrian and Jordanian fronts before the ' called fortheGeneva conference to meet ed by similar limited withdrawals loa the situation which could spark a new war conviction of the necessity of reconven­Geneva conference is reconvened.!and wreck all efforts made so far in ing the Geneva Middle East peace con­POLITICAL OBSERVERS in Cairo • quest of a solution to the crisis," Fahmi ference immediately, and at any rate not said Gromyko's use of the words, l'onIysaid. after the end Of February or the begin­guaranteed way." in his arrival !tate-"All this makes it imperative that the ning of March, and in the presence of all ment was implicit criticise of Arab nation should strengthen its concerned parties, including the Kissinger's negotiating approach. *'' • capabilities in all fields and particularly representatives of the Palestine Libera­The Israeli newspaper Ha'areto said •redouble its defensive capacity to repel tion Organization," the communique Kissinger was concerned that Israelmay for Schools W ­ and defeat this aggression, while at the said. ~ i be moving away from hisapproachto a same time respondingfreely to efforts to Gromyko made his pitch for Egypt's Middle East peace and toward a re&inp- Ite k^ition "is designed .to help District Board member, appearing* on bring peace to the area," Fahmi said. endorsement for an early Geneva parley tion of the Soviet-favored Geneva1 con­ pdj&c sdnols in Texas that have been behalf of the Texas Association of School Gromyko said, "As time goes-on we the moment h^ landed in Cairo for two ference. * t» juwik W i fciiiHfit bytbe energy crisis and in­Boards, told the committee mat by law, are becoming moi% and more convinced days of talks with President Anwar "Nobody would be happier tha$ the flation," Rep. Herman Adams Jr.. of districts must file balanced budgets for • of the'necessity of the speediest resump­Sadat. . ^ . r ' Union if the Soviet American-' CstiMstelkanatjMrnasseittD Sasbee, the tail's sponsor, said.•' the school'year each Sept. 1, although tion of the Geneva conference." He did "THE ONLY GUARANTEED way to the Ap- negotiations"fail," it quoted Kissinger in Tfceinooey vooldbe allocated 00foe ..amendments^can be'made during.the . not mention arms supplies to Egypt. a durable peace in the Middle East is a dispatch from Washington. It said he : year to reflect actual revenues.and et-In Washington, Secretary of State complete liberation of all .Arab made the comments to a'grojjp of ­ far the; fooodatioo' school program penditures. Henry A.Kissinger expressed con­territories occupied by Israel in 1967, at­ Ike itonMtoi American leaders. i iwetod by the district lor the .1973-74 Many budget items were deferred fidence his.forthcoming visit to the Mid­taining the legitimate rights of the Arab the Soviets "Giving such a chance to . . J atejl jar, multiplied fay $10 per stu-* from inclusion in this year's budgets in dle East Would further his step-by-step people of Palestine to self-authority, and wnffiwi for would be like bringing the fox into the ;. deot tnnes the IS73-7* average daily' "poor" sdural districts, he said, because efforts for a peace agreement between the speedy resumption of the Middle chicken coop," Ha'aretz quoted h$n as ­ to slate jonor aWwrf»nwt in thfcdistrict. • ••> not enough funds were available to at^ Israel and her Arab neighbors. East peace conference at Geneva," saying. «Tie forodatkm school fund allocates • count for all foreseeable expenditures M I®, uaugmj money to school districts; grants from the" -IlV-€ Attorney General was -DolphBrisnie as' (rants *• fiMic scIimIss utilities on thebasisof Stated" -'. 1:,' . .. I :Hector H..Garcia, superintendent.of Win uavis,-Ansta Independent School the Lanedq School District,said lastyear his district suffered a budget deficit of *770,000. .This year, taxes in the district Levi Were raised 25 percent, but to balance WASHINGTON (UPI) ^ The Senate later changed his'mind as a number of the budget many items had to be cut or guidelines for the use and maintenance Judiciary Committee unanimously ap­ frozen, he said, including freezes on conservative and liberal spokesmen of FBI files involving members of Shuts Down 5 Dailies proved Monday the nomination of spoke in praise of the nomination. • salaries and utilities allocations, as well Congress and other individuals. * Edward H. Levi to be attorney general. SAHJQN tint)—The Van TtngBguvwument sirnt down five as a.SO percent cut in maintenance.-' Conservative columnist William He also pledged to draw up guidelines The 63-year-old University of Chicago on the warrantless domestic., , The Laredo district will be facing a Buckley said Lev! was "solidly com­use of thejaOing of at least 15 publishers president was expected to be approved deficit this year of approximately $1 mitted to the notion of judicial prudence wiretapping for national security pur­ it4euM8"mtegimmlOwnrnunist'cadres." by the Senate Wednesday to replace poses. I . million without the emergency, grant, and respect for legislative authority." William.B. Saxbe, who will become U.S. . _ Vietnaniese-fangtiage dailies -which ; Garcia said. . , . * t - Levi called urban crime his ?'top ambassador to India. University,:of Chicago constitutional M Mwhy editiaBs oorfiscated for pcblishing a 'political in-Under the proposed bill, the Laredo priority" and supported more legislation Levi, a legal scholar who has a reputa­ expert Philip:B: Kuriand said Levi was eppositiaa activist, the Rev. Tran Huu School District,would receive -$693,000.' to restrict the sale of so-called "Satur­ tion a;sari expert in antitrust law, un­"the quintessential man to take charge House Bill 216, another emergency' day night special" handguns. * derwent two days of questioning before of the Department pf Justice," measure recommended by the governor, ~ Slight of build and balding, Levi said he wrested a number of underground Com-would allow increases in contingency the committee last .week. During his confirmation hearings, Levi views: antitrust actions, as-the -, in editorial offices"of the newspapers, the and academic program fund gffants to Levi presented himself before the indicated he supported capital punish­government's means for attacking J ^ 'Ibe^owennnenldeeded to revoke the compensate for the 10 to 20 percent committee as a man who considered ment for specific crimes and argued the monopolies and price-fixing conspiracies creases in enrollment at state junior,-himself.;; neither a Democrats nor • a death penalty could be a deterrent to but only in instances where there is .Republican and who felt politics should crime. : < ;colleges. Rep: Joe Hubenak of shown to be a demonstrable ill Effect variouspapers be:kept.out of the Justice Department. Levi also'said he would draw up ! Rosenberg, the bill's' sponsor, said, j- upon consumers. •>. . ^ «OK first timein thepnsidat's» Conservatives at first opposed Levi's The funds would be allocated on the v te ipwl,fieenes. The shutdowns were the Grst sinc^ the .nomination but began .to change their basis of enrollment for the spring, minds as they learned more about the former University of Chicago law school omttawwof the late Itosadeot Ngo DuA Dtem in 1963. ' semester. The committee voted unanimously to dean. : recommend the bill for passage ^ I OA Imrolvwnwit AReged in J.F.K. Assassination Some of Jhe things I heard at first dis­ In business, -CHICAGO (UPI) —Robert Groden,a NewYoik photographer and op-other the cOmmitte§£>-turbed me," said Sen. Strom Thurmond, recommended another bill R-^C./'But I've been investigating and tolTfwuB^t, ol the JotaF.Kennedy allow $94,000 for the reconstructiottofaa>= the more I investigate the better you -w*wiiHio>;itMitiesaid proves thatLeeHarvey Oswaia "hadnothing agriculture building destroyed by look " 'M to i> vttQe assassination.n : last summer at West Texas State Sen John Tower, R-Tex., at iirst op­... "As maaty aslair, possibly five" persocswere footing at the Presl-University. . • -posed President Ford's nomination but deMt,Grodea said. ndcGKe^ajiblBkalactivistsaidttie ~ fete of the World, and Iknow save (Sen.) Ted Kennedy's life." Flood Waters Recede; last tocgory aad Ralph Schoenman, an Assistant professor of said UM? had evideoce wtuch indicated the Central was involved in tbe Kennedy assassination, > i Hobby Visits Area NACOGDOCHES (UPI) — PoUc^ .4 their foundations,) , Ww® To Uove Without Anfinesty Chief-M.C Roebuck said Mqndsy'thev', ; fJ<^bu^,said;tibout 25 persons were -GRfSHAIIvWiS-(AP) — Ini&an demonstrators to -v seardi^fbr persons reported hiissing sWl ^wtflof^ejrjjguses but -would be ^ .tBiwi! Idgac estate they occojMd-^Jan;: l^dcteawling} •£the waters thatinundated this'£M-Te!i^ ^turnecl astsoonea&icleanup operations ­ ••.^a§;towh during;the Weekeid .'were1^omplfet&ii^ " ^to amst thein: ~ " * ' ' •> 'ended with the final death tollihwlite^ Pufcut R. w attnuey iquwrnting (he demonstrators, said AT'THE REQUEST of "Nacogdoches &»ree -v ^hwiMu Own banks There is still water In the low-S vrA spokesman ^withthe>governor's'of­ tying areas, but that Is falling."— ^ »s fice; said the a governor's disaster Ufaoriry Tracfing Gon,tbHm on Stock Market Lt. Gov. William P. Hobby visited the^ proelamation wasextended toU»e follow­ 'flobded area Mondav afternoon and-wAs ' ' " S.'IB|V-s MEir YOiUUUn) tfe stock mailuet,sknQh(oileOectsol tiff--iiKiV.' mm 31 ty praBt jHnfl ^> Mooda^ •Wl .w XVIt ItOLf.WlUl­ "* . T , "av * '*cr* ^mmm ->&S3 ft Ci , . .., ., • • *" •>'' .= ' vii' • £ w­ ' „•>>» ~' mmmmm V. ' l '/ i' r-^i T> JL » i>«;. c. i -,» 1***. > «•£& IT Page 4 Tuesday, February 4, 1975 ii \ -fci£ Jv ..;'* • .. » -r-i < TSP or UT? f * fvSS'K K *ifr Cvtwj ' .. -.... 4 **1 Ml ^ -*% tir * 4 v » W-i+piri w?lO J r5 Zts* " :.iivui& mh:r <& 'V wV'S-S­ Z s tiir' ifT' i, .. • j •• Hf ~ --" • v-' ­By EDDIE FISHER in essence, the votersire gettinga cpe-mooth previewof -• Without a state utilities commryaon. the ooancfl is The Texan was assured }he power (or is it a'right?) to -new council members -S * - -> our only assurance ot a dtance to regahte.cHponle endorse candidates in 1973, andtn the 1976 primaries and Issues facing Austin in the nextfew monthswill require • giants '-1— e~" '"i *ltirm Mpm in IIIUIIMII general elections, this power jrfiist be' exercised respon­a council that can act without traditional.financial in. rate increases can coly be mterpreUted mcamaefal^rt^ sibly.spA effectively One'of ttemo$. importantdi^ons, terests. . • ; « a cooncilwhidt pnmisesto hireanindependeMttatecn»­ the. council election is 11 »> • The council recently delayed for three to six months sultanL The council should be waiy, wtea socboosi^. not in ft76, but is little; annexation of 2,332 acres northwest of Austin. The re­ ^Thls pokticalyear nothing uriM beof moredbectimphr­ more ' than a month jected plan (much like the Union fee increase) would j tance to Austin residents than thr ik< n iln wlj w away. .. .k have required" residents fa) pay for thecost of annexation '' derway for City CiDoncaAnewcoBPdl>gaedwiftmMff City governments, un­• before city serviceswere extended. Austincan cbooseen*' new faces, will becoofroated wit like university systems;. ; co'uragement of rapid growth f thus opening 'the door to :4 itroversial issoes io nuny years. are controlled by their * t ' more problems of pollution fTOmindnstnesland poorly-* . residents, The majot ^ v. planned subdivisions, or voters can efect candidates who|-vthe decisiaBS Uus: coaacil tikr i will iHnuiiw liiil goverinlng body of promise to evaluate the best recommendations* for a • land of city Anstin will be m the fature. Qw city has Austin "could easily planned growth of our city. A city utilities jcommission. : readied tbepoiqtwhereacbokennistbemadetobitUda become truly represent" l^could take thfe burden off the homeowner hy Haltering quality cityor just"another atj'."WmthecitybeanMr­tative of its constituent^ ^ rates thereby distributing the cost^of electricalseriYice. ed to gnwr oqcoBtniiled. or will comcil take the steps with the election of Jeff-r ' • Council set April 10 as the expiratfootdatefor thenew " necessary to presene (he hiQ conatry and lakes? -> Friedman to mayor and • billboard ordinance which will be ineffectafter onemore: Many ojthenew faces in thecouncil racesarein needthe selection of indepen-^'A reading. It will be the job of the ne# «nmca todetennine of financial support.' With ^)ntHI»tNns, ot time and dent voices to represent^, what action ot take upon considoaUon <>f aciixen'seom' -money from many persons (not Urge contributions from citizens on the council.1"?^ mittee studying Austin's billboard tirdinasce. Cnnentfy a few).neWcoiiDcilrQeH^eis wouldbe respon^bletothe It's hard to say the wo^ pi3i^ ^;h(niesty it] a moratorium., on billboards prevents-construction of -desiresoftheaveragecitiien. notcoitpoiategHBts.same breath, but wilh new faces' in the city political 'billboards in the MoPac Boulevard-Loop 360 am, bat a i, ,Tbe past cohacB was aMe to maintain ^he statisqao.scene, we have a chance to select council, members not new council mpst assure citizens astrictand comprehen­but was unable to enadmwiingfal refown. The March I under the influence of business-ties. sive ordinance which will prevent safety 'hazards and special electioo rand ttie'April S regolar eiection will : -Filing ends Wednesdayfor PlaceS3and 6for thespecial cluttered roadsides.'. • provide a chance (posabty the last dance) to elect a election to fill the vacated seats 6f Dan .Love and-Beg , ,• Austin is no longer a small cityvanditlsnosmalt job .coancirvrtudiwia beable^dte^thefntauealAusUa'sHandcox. The special election will be'-held March 8, less running ^ the city. A -reasonable; salary.could enable or-~i growth.. ^ -• than a month before the regidac election scheduled April dinary titkens to serve. Provisions for coonciraides^ ProgresavecandidatiA haW ofleredtoi wadc forstand 5. In all likelihood the council candidaies:elected 'in-the ~ could enable council members toliire a'competent*staff s kmg-range{danning.now itis«p to jwa, thevoteis, tosap­special election will.rtinagainintheregular election, so dedicated to solving the many prtAlems whicfa tieahea& ;: p(^^e)e^d^|iifiressire rnenand^romen. c V By BOX GARLAND home economics courses; asone bo^-memberpointed Meyer? ruled agahst ber undn-thestatesex dtoaimSna-Perhaps revelations ofiheiatesixties and early Seven­ out before joining five other board members invoting to ties have receded to that) ! ' uphold Supt. Jack L. Davidson's idea;for the transfer^ 'In the federalcase. theywott)d base theirargumentson numb through, overuse. That same board member might ibb;ha^e mentioned constituttonal guarantees indodiag the rights of privacy Or, perhaps a.transmii tionof Victorian:spirits has the discrepancy between the board's actkiaand the idea and equal protection underthelaw, Wardlawlawjer Bob­ suddenly invaded the of America as presented in the stud^it's.civic onuses. bie Nelson said over the weekend. ­ collective con­ Wardlaw's transfer flies in the faceof eadi American's The'first step tor them, if they decide tocontinae their sciousness of the Austin .;?ight to alternative lifestyles, soKmg'as thiose lifestyles fightvis unpromising because of Jodge Jack Roberts" School Board. PeAaps -slJdo not infringe on the rights v; : that consciousness'-' ; tOjieriness about premaritai or MHmal^tat;sex probably "But if reaUy *•* sneSrenever left the board. ~ seems to the students of LBJ High &aool like a fresh guarantees, then it's But how',' in the year'­ breeze of honesty after such courses'as hom^ economics faB to win...eventnal|y. iej?" 1975, can we actually ex­v or family planning. ' In Mississippi, a: ~ plain such blatant sex Not only does sudi honesty' not &i&iqgelLBJHigh School and take up the postof librarian's aid citizens won't tolerate them as suything bat "good"and :tion of an enforcement of narrow, moral mines eii air at Kealirig'Learning Center. ''upstanding^defining th(»eterms not by theindiMdual's commmuty as awhote. : She is, afterall.asgood a teacKe^now asshe was in the . perceptionsCpT'iealify,-butj^the staid perceptions of' Focmer President R.M. Nixon foood ant that theprepregnant stage of herlife. •'"bthers'^-^fe;;''-p?­ 'strengthof this com try surges forward in tmrenti, of - Thereason forher transferis that thesuperintendent of Harriet Wardlaw has qieht tbimsands of-dollars and public opinion aswell asinid»lsexpressed hyaconstibt- Austin schools, and.'mpre recently, school board uuuu^cua vl utnua vi uleineyaDie nmeiigpnngipgyy^ tioo.' Vr. ' : members baVe4ecidedit{ielrcop8tituetits consider sucha and the board fii^t^statecoiMandaswin'feiteial court. _We can onlyhope thatschool bnard-menihersnoneia . teacher; WeU. '.unh^althy-ior the minds of .high school She and her ldwyers will decide fp£rtrtalpW.Tuesday Uk electiansLa year from nqwan American trtatmett'of students: r*~ whether to purMe her cauM at-tl^iederal ieviel " " ousUhg -for their un-American' treatment of ;Bur|et After all, they are taught'different standards in the I Three wedis ago; :]U»th';Bi^ct^&^^Judge Jiin Wardlaw. By WlLLARtf HALL The TSP Board should be able to-interpret their own v It took two rounds for the>boaid to do L . The whole controvertoyer theeditor's race boilsdown rules as they seefit, This thing could never happen ag^in; And sure enough, Rogers did not go along; to this: who should be in controlof The Daily Texan—the anyway. The.board hasalready deddedjorekmlc thecal University president or the TSP Board? tification requirements. , .J1 s -^Anyone who understands the function of a ftee pres&inThe dispute has nothing^ to. do with whether-Mary s ' -O • ' , I > •» X •> \ i > society knows that newspaperc should he bee a«l ii> i ^ Walsh,. Barry Boesch*. aiid -Marie' Villaqueva .were • But now look what Rogers hasdone ineffect She'ssaid ; dependent; What could happen undei drcun^taaces of qualified. Sure, thfey did 'iPr^ * that thepresident reallyhas controlavertheTSP Board contrdean staggerthe im^SiatiDn. Already djerebtaft:-not meet the letter of ; and The Texan,The presidenthashad thepower tonot ap-of an appointed Texan editor. the TSP rules for; • -prove"the minutes of the TSP Board meeting tot quite a'-jqualification. But even? -whileand has. usedit before.Butneverhasthispower had .i' The TSP Board and The Texan just-have to be iadepen-. the hard-nosed .TSP* . ..such a direct effert over thecontentof theTexan. Even" dent of the administration. That's all there is to it. Board demonstrated i6j? 'if.the power of the president is never iised again, its faith in the ability of'i presence,is there. s lee Grace, . president of the TSP Amd^caid the two of the candidates^ president's power was one of the thiqgslhe System Board when they certified^ of Regents insisted upon when fem TSP trwst was •%r The presence of power used in sqbUe'ways ">» have a them fo run. JW drawn up. If we want to changC?flffi5 filing, we aregoing to . -r. big impact on the way things happen; T!ike what happes­ ' Umv^rsityv President! have to ast the regents. ed at the latest TSP meeting. Most of the boardmembers Ad Interim Lorene'f ^'^demonstrated.,thatjthey wanted todo whatwas and Nowwe'reaUdke people in this matter. Rogers, the Rogers rttfltffied 'thS' '4certifyihecandidates. Butthere wasa lotoflalkdnring TSP Bowd inn the regents ate all wkU meanicg fbics. If judgment Tof the boaril| i«andafterthe meetingaboutwhatRogerswpulddo.Obeof ' we get lO.QOO screaming stadents to charge the Mmb when she refused to sfy' jt|4ne members said in effect that it they did "waive" the.: Building^we'regoii^toenduplikeabnganaWiadstddd. prove the minutes'of th6 w rules instead Of following them ^ to 'the' (etter, Bogus But if we act real nice and say pretty please^nd *8 thift TSP mpptinff -fv. would not go along. ' * -• *wdl.the9» nuyheL* < • . By SCOTT TACiIiAIUNO Head'feeIsthefiringofUnl\^s!^rJhres|(ten.t]Stephen tioo facUity in tbi$ With the opening df the(itth'l^iislature, th^ CiUv^rsity Spurr was completely an internaliiattCT^Dr tM regents^^ : Besides, if Headdo^*tgettolanwthem,tesip5tjeinYSystem gained another goardian angle in addition to and theSystem administration.-TUsq>inioiiisabsuraand Board of Regents will certainly get to knowlim ia theformer Regent Frank Erwin Hisname is State Rep: FW. all too familiar. System Chancellor Chirl&'Le&aistre, coming months when his coaimitteecaBsaden important'Head of Henderson, and he chairs the newly-created -with the regents-concurring, also^felt ^purrfs liringwas University tegislation. But hy thai time Bead wait heHouse Higher Education Committee.--r an internal matter. They proved that by flatly denying to meeting withtbe regents, beH be meetiw with Fkwrii Never,heard of • him? Heait. was that Bibte^packing givea pqblic explanation "of tbelrieasoosto thefJniver-Erwin, bur Universty lobdyist And by toitial legislator who ran for the Tqcas House speakershiplast', sity's faculty and students and theTravis * County vations. Rep. Head is not going to prove mnchof annatdh v year, withdrew in September |j^gaye hispledge votes td^.legislative delegaUon; ,*.• >>-\±•• for Enrin's persuasive tedhniqaes.State Rep. 'Bill Clayton^;;g^«Ma8ttei5gsfeM|MM^ !W>:-It toOlra'DubUc order frnm Goy ir>otnhRrt«iro*tnHK». One partinular issue coming up which may pro«eof Springlake, who ^RegeiitChtdrmanA.G.McNeese forany typeof reason to Head's diarecter is tbe proposalto strengthen thestateeventually: won the^ JBftliStfH be publicized. Even'though theeiqplanation was a farce, CoUcge Coordinating Board. as suggested fay Briaose. ? race, > ^ v Briscpe^s adjon piSv^ ttot evra;h4fdt^l^ui^s firing The governor's plan is to give the board wto power For such servk$sBut Head's vie^fs ministrators, the chancellor and the regents, have had lit­ reyen more to be desired ens for-the® eeujig Fnday. Thehead of a higher educa-.^ background in education.-We certainty dont need 1 \ HoU?e leader of University get to know "U»" hidi^r edoct-another one. tw muwo Dtttfjam., UTtPmOH ^BSUE-STAFigy;issu6-EdH6rr..ss:.;.u,„..4v.^..ti. R^>0rtere jk^ -News Assistants Joy BSandl, Tom Tiptoo, Steve.ttatson, #5^" EditoriafjAafflst^nt it b»mBnmkn ' '\..;...;:!Chariesliihnnaiin.'GaQBunts,Mi|eMoritew * • T * g n , sesstoteai',-g V . 4 | S » « 4TOR %. Tomlinr-z-i. BMkD ,f' Sbottfiohb Mark Pierte, C. RssseU l4igoe Zadi Ryall, Mike Smith « ^ % f* ^ "*» ,"";y.|i«'^ ^j^fh^-'i^t iaetf -^iSi \v>'~ ** °>* «. ** guest viewpoint election 7' By JIM SHARP '" down flow of power, escaped' Texan environment) — were ing truly escapes me! If the minute officially approved -. (Editor's note: Sbarp is ill the realm in which students now placed in position of avowed purpose of the very a slate of candidatesa person to tk« College of 'Social and have been able U> make their persona! embarrassment and rules to which . you address serve in one of -the most im­Sehavioral Sciences.) •• voice headed. financial loss:by bein^ ruled your point of contention are a portant elected positions onWallerCreek; theSilber fir-Now that very top-down ineligible to'run. Soended one jusUand orderly procedure of campus.: ing; the regents' past daily in-flow of strong arm cycle of the carrousel. student elections, why upset • terference and harassment;' authoritarianism — in a The following Wednesday, that balance achieved by For these reasons I would the perpetual construction; shallow guise of approbation the TSP Board, after recon­those very persons most hope to see student and facul­ the lack of meaningful and — has once again intervened. sideration of the principles of closely affected, the board ty support for both the ap­relevant curriculum; limited This time the result of the in­responsible student electoral and the candidates and we. proval of the TSP Board'shours of access to some tervention is a "selective • procedure and out of fairness the students? Most important­decision of last Wednesdaycollections libraries; student ballot" from which the stu­to the three candidates who ly, thanks to this merry-go-night, and postponement ot a '. fee rates and the quality of dent -populus shall elect the • had conscientiously met' the round act. the students now the editor election by one sendees purchased by those next' editor for The Texan original filing deadline, and have only two days in which to week in order to insure the exorbitant costs. Wednesday. most importantly, the spirit of familiarize themselves and credibility this election owes , ; All these situations, while "First, the TSP Board set a the qualifications guidelines select from the new last-the students of the University.certainly direct in their in­filing deadline for the race of the TSP Handbook, the •vening,v?Yfow to malce a fortune fluence upon the University Friday, Jan.24, allowinga full board rescinded its earlier DOONESBURY from your country's misfortune" may I present, Mr. John environment, have vthrouf$ week and two days for cam­position of disqualification : ' Dean/ • their very"autonomous, ..Vtop-paigning and presentation of and certified the entire field the candidates and their ideas candidates as Well-as; C-MON, • •£&$£•••... of — . -T OKAY. SU&,UHATS THE for the post next year. those who had stepped -"Sm?..$uzt uHciB Bib IPSA 0FBACK1N60UT firing line On this original filing date forward to capitalize on the { UILUWMAKBR? DUKE, IT ON YOUR SAOVflceW DO ; adequately published in ad-.opportunity created by tfie THIS IS YOUR MSN7HBR YOU REALIZE THATBBCAUSE • vance, only three personscon­sudden void of the ballot an-Govern*. ma! OF-)0K WE'VE 60TA MAJOR SPBAK1N&! 1 ERUPTION ON OUR. sidered themselves serious nounced last Monday. HANPS?/­ Support forErwin from '39 and purposeful enough in their Now, despite the obviouslydesire .to campaign for this just balance achieved by theIt the < Mne at our great state as believe that Vietnam has people to randomly check on position to file and meet the Wednesay TSP Board' A*qpea tetter to Sol Ukgd Frank Krwin has a dis­ again become a majorissue of the competency of the work deadline: Mary Walsh, Mark meeting, and the unamimous : < Daggett. -tinguished past Solet's move debate in America? . that the RAs are doing. • •" ViUanueva and Barry Boesch. agreement of the fairness Ffcr the most party** taw on tosome of theconstructive A free press and .an: in-In reality, the RAsare doing I find this of primary impor­ both to persons and principles nq mMuhmlul sqport,bat challenges facing yoa and ' formed people are t.he their jobs, and more, explicit­tance because as I understand by all parties concerned, we ftmbtt^niiiehjn yonraagisst bodybecause they weapons to fight tbese'incom-ly, the RAs have ehougfr in-it. The Texan itself published learn that University Presi­ «s tave mngcdto VRjicuiy wfllrtadly ukeallof the time prehensible horrors. Ihope • sight to beable to tell when to the qualifications for the race dent AdLInterim Lorene 02W of jw lojil yon and ynr cdtegjam caai The DailyTexan will continue! cut the authoritative and when it published the deadline Rogers has failed to approve allot to them. Ray Bwu4 • to print Jack Anderson's moralistic intervention, with . date, and these persohs,.led to : the minutes of the board's •;c-;BI|S»~ cohppn and others dedicated the residents at a reasonable believe they were qualified,' meeting by citing an "overex­-ftm usrwTom sunn x Ummt060UP-MEf£THlS . to the pursuit of the T-R-UT-level to where they will not announced their candidacy tension" of the board's, mm I fee) fety hMMl to call my Plant this bomb /lF"3?NOON ANP SACRJfiCS SHtS&TT £NOUBH­ H. We have a right to'know; seem pushy to the residents and began election efforts. delegated authority in its yafsae-BBFCRe THSuwie NOWtET ADemST . ifeMdag.to jtvitkaGw Tatfe and where else can we find under their jurisdiction,.This The >-following Monday, the resolution of the conflict. tsuwtseesma>![..uMDM APPOINT-HER.BE! fMk CI Bhria at A«stk> ( «ant to thaskTbe Daily out? Raady Myers combination of the 'resident TSP Board announced the en-' With this action. Rogershas VA MEAN VWCAtTT?!.. . MENT. has km a fHead aad s*>-Texan for printing Jack Government assistant with the resident is tire fjgld of candidatesineligi­seemingly said that despite ah -porter at the Wronsily of Anderson's column on H.L. NOT?! on the personal level and ble for failure to have .com­obviously fair and agreeable Teas Md the. University Hunt'sskeletons. Iwas soout­Shuttle mores neither the force from the piled an' adequate service resolution "for both .the can­ System for nm yews than raged and qpset tkat l could To the editor: Housing Committee, nor the record with The Texan. Thus, didates and the University yw pcxtaps on wnealiei, hardly finish reading it Butl Amidst our overcrowded bungling efforts of. the presi­• while this trio — all of whom electorate" (TSP Board aad I fed Bat«owe him a M Mon-K ft Department? Don't talk to remark about the RAs and Btt someol thethngs yon them about means and ends, • decided to institute a forcp of The "Original" Acaptilco. yf ;; | \ \\ ' . say and doconH change the about working •the system! Also Spring Ski in Colorado, jj), ' \V! . thhikiag of those titoeUb«ln Is It within tberealm of. THANK l>«man comprehension to. Public Lecture [i\ :'2S Mailt Travel Crossword Puzzler tan* (o YMMnwa Pwa» . ACROSS SWSMt 2200 Guadalupe (second level) 478-3471 Oii i-1. Vi:-;; ~1 PMMr» S Bnck-cwnr a Skhitefhtei'' it: -->ii ugmsmv 9 EMM * ui "Sq lis -S&« . «"*" i.ru^^uy -,[1 : 2? "y. Ti ^^3 THREE U)ffica«na4* • OmfcdiMiiu 39 Powddoon 45 Cowwunim . • . • 4S Wed. Feb. 5 IIOvlll LBJ Auditorium. iT 8 p.m. Free Admission •i «:Tik«i 00m* . H tS M 49 Siorr ,9au»«iaH Sponsoradby UrnTexas Union Ideasand Issues Committee fl HEARPTHE 9EA6LE ' nsmm> ^ CALL MX NAME' S*" a «4 u mmm _ iGMTIMM* 3TMMK1 .. 4 PwahnWl !•» PARADIGM LECTURE ^ , Our clean Vrivers and lakes, our-hlll' NOTES SERVICE country, and our cultural ^heritage constitutean .24MitU|Mhrin ^ " 472-7986 »ambience to bepreserved 12 Sat. and developed. I am formulatinga MkSUKvW Total Environment Plan Mk31*Wy» jior the citywith an pbjec­ ssssa*1 ''' MMSOHtaMf five oi preservation of our -Gh3Mtml , fhf 4MXMcM r-W hrSOIMn v ecological systems, fomen­Hf SOW tation of the culture and A*3»S«Mi. arts oiour region, and the ' ^improvement oi cityser­!?vices'"oifered to every .;«WSNIK«4B gsgspt;': ^citizen. tzlSS&j&fC m. -CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS', 223 CQNGBfiSSAVE. I HigH FIying Fashion: HESUHKHMimmi' 477-9608 'HiniiM •JLitJJ' Rapture the sjpi'rlt of, spring in this softly CkNIOmiky' /: MWhkm. • swing/ two-{»ece . dress ... styled with CkWIKtM . -.MiMSMi •mw _ . Z^MSTemph«*ifiV<'' contemporary flair by Tracy Petttes. » .• ";MJl MAUTOMIMI >;•$%-Hooded nylon'blouse tops'skirt of 100% S ' *Nli)SWMdM>r A'rhel* triacetate with floral bouquets-.;?.Sprinkled over polka dots. Sizes 5 to l3. " 'r *~i --"Si ^30.00 " ' l'" '! 'A •' **&P I Nnkit'ttVufluUfl,'4. i inFUl *74. All othnral -TARING'S ON-THE-DRAG "f, , "-'M' fit v 1 u: .. ... -vvi -t.-' . s -'a\ E DAILY, TEXAN Page Sf£ psS'V^s.. : *% 2>y*$ •w H&tf •**•«.•. •. -^ii:v*!y-"'.v>--\ * * . k­ '* * " " i IV •* t~*A 0: :V:i;n \« O ' -• \ -% -• t--^_i^^mmmSMSSkMh'ii? J.ji.4 t , Captures Hawaiian Football Recruitl •-"5 Palmer Misses Crucial Putt on 17th Set for:'Sighing . HONOLULU (AR> -Ar-Club course and a 274 total. 14 close — so tantaliziiigly close sent his massive mud- By BILL TROTr i * .doM Palmer, his 45-year-old raider par. — and still failed. spattered. barefooted gallery ^ Texu Stall Writer f #5?^ '75; , nerves drawn tight with the into a delirium of delight " Texas Head Coach Oarrell Royal and his start would like, to For Palmer it was another A dramatic turn-around in • almost tangible pressure But it lasted just long have a weiy bn^.day Tuesday. Hie future depaids on it in a.two-year series of bitter fortunes late in the round ; hacked away from ashort pott enough for him to miss the Open season on senior high school football stars begins*I\i12 33 9 33 140 213 . r»i i.lm iniliTm Constanzo and considered more^>f a running threat, snmoHiing 124 216 0 64 307 1SB "waterlogged .Waialae Country Quftwc that defhiitely would be bf interest to Rcqral. Some schools Toronto -27 20 Z 56 210 111 Oetroit 5. New York Rangers 5. tie Edmonton M 17 2 50 162 145 reportedly, want to mati> a mnnmg hapfc nr rtpfwrcivp harV Boston s. Philadelphia l Vancvr „...Y.'...H Z3 2 46 143 155 of Lott Buffalo t. Kansas City 1 Wlimlpeo ......JO 22 2 42 174 15t New York islanders \. Chicago 1. tie . Tlie No. I prize in this season'srecruiting cropis naming bade Atlanta S. Minnesota 3 Quebec 4, Cleveland 3 Montreal S. California 1 RICK Billy Simsof Hooks. Sims compiled ungodly statisticsattheAA Vancouver 4, Toronto 2 Houston 5, Baltimore 2 school and has his pick of school^, coaches and offensive fdr-No games scheduled Minnesota 5, Winnipeg 4. OT mations. /'Edmonton 4. Chicago 3. Q.T Sims has already visited Texas and ranks tbe Longhprns hi^h CAMP No games scheduled on his-preference listalong with Oklahoma, Baylor and TCU. Buffalo Oetroit Toronto at St' Louis • Tens already has one strong verbal commitment from blue Edmonton at BaltimoreTSP BOARD Chicago at Kansas City Houston at Indianapolis chipper StanSingleton of Mesquite. Singletonwas All-Staie asa PtTUOurgh at Vancouver . Toronto at San Dleoo wide receiver anddefensive back, an.area where tbeLon^torns JOURNALISM PLACE 1 were hurting all season.' ELECT Texas supposedly bas a good diance at signing Tyler's All­ pdLforbf KkkCamp . State tight end' Ronnie Lee. Lee's ohfet' brother. Earnest transferred to the University this spring from Tyler Jonior EDDIE FISHER College and is expected to contend for a starting defensive tackle"position. DAILY TEXAN ing Earl Cairipbell's twin brothers, Tim andSteven, both defen­sive linemen. Both had been expected to pttend Baylor wherePalmer sinks a putt oh 10th hole. their former high school coach is now an assistant, but Earl IDJTOR reports they will sign with Texas. ' Sport Shorts My endorsements include no! student or other political organizations because Iam ho CHICAGO (AP) -Rick Sullivan Award a^ the nation's of Governors was Olympic '*»Associated Wohlhuter, a slightly built in­ affiliated with any political grottps, top amateur athlete oif.1974. swimmer Shirley Babashoff, honored machines, or cliques. surance agent who holds-the Wohlhuter, a former Notre 17. Mission Viejo Calif, with world 880-yard and 1,000- Dame runner who has 1.836 points pmkf for by Bddie Fisher * /H" . : meter track records, Monday blossomed into a prime Olym­ *** was named 45th winner of the pic candidate withi current NEW YORK (AP) -Three LUBBOCK (At«)b-^iSfe string of 26 consecutive'vic­more longtime baseball University of Texas'is plckcti tories. captured 2,643points in figures. Manager Bucky to defend sticcessfully its ' •Ti • •!the Sullivan ballotftig, follow­Harris and players Billy Her­Southwest Conference ed by basketball star Oavld man and Earl Averill, were baseball championship ur the I Thompson of North Carolina admitted to the Hall of Fame sixth annual poll by the Ldy-State with 2,267. .' Monday, courtesy of the bode Avalanche-Journal. Tix- I Third in the voting by 1,200 veteran's committee. as A&M was second.. Mr' Imembers of the news media They Join home run slugger * *. * . . ' ©rgers members and the AAU Board Ralph ^ Kiner, admitted by the Five more University "sSS I - women bowlers are needed to complete'Texas' delegation tb I Shoe Shop *SALE* | thfe Association of CollegeI ,• Wemake and SHKPSKIN Unions-International R^l EDDIE Important continuingcommercial activity In: ff-i „ Design and Development FAMILY NIGHT JBtfi Perform design, checkoutand documentation forstate-of­ 1 if&y i"* * * the-wi computing equipment;coordination from ^ specifications of a logicalsequence of components and ,1^ circuitry for a desired computer output:design of drcuitiy i? tor high-speed computers and systems.Additional * W The University Flying Club opportunities to perform design of test equipment to check ifc; out computer systems.Candidates should be interested in -Considers Environment & Economy fei-logical and circuit design. For EE graduates. : . UaM' to fly for le$$ Software Programming NbJ;7:3Hp.tn,; Raii( S"-;",' i Mr N> r I 11 Origination, design, development,and implementation of complex software systems;development of original functional design and processing techniques; design and implementation of state-of-the-art data base/file management softwareand a large-scaleon-line multi­ programming executive design, flowcharting, coding, and Implementation of on-lme executivesoftware modules. For EE. ComputerScience or Mathgraduates. • •••:. "«g?­ Software Engineering WW -&''r Positions requiring EE degrees to organizeand implement firmware programs toemulate computingsystems; 4 »»4.' creative use olexisting computer logicfor automatic . diagifosis ol hardware malfunctions;jlerve|op programs to automate manufactunng proceduresisimulate electronic* * >' 7 -jswv circuit response and slmubOeJogipfunctio^ "TUESDAY NIGHT-' 5:30pmtb 8:30pm . • QMMM* aifciifeErain v " AllThe Pizza And SaladYou CanEat Quality EriQIneering ' Tuesday Night Is Special At Pizza Inn.We Serve A -­ IFactory LkSson -Delicious Buffet Selection'Of Pizza To PleaseThe Taste ^ 1 Of Every Member Of Your Farjiily. i Noon Buffet •Monday Thru Friday • 11.00 anito 2:00prn^ r: — '' ' ^ . __ On-campus interviews v.„ PLANTATION SOUTH Wednesday, Feb. 5 SKaret i-.m APTS , him li! W0^'«^>on,.conuctm Placement Dlfector -nthe Occupational Placement Office now.It you cannot • ma&iats fehedult an appointment lortholntanltw date,pleas*send ^.43T-W71 3000Duval . }M^'.*477-t75^m Unto&ty Placement Directorort^*^" eodrqsibetow. T , ~~ y ^ISTIES,' 12109 'j. » /'M ­ ^jjW37Hwy.W0J NCR Uf DATA PROCESSING DIVISION '.C 16550 W. BemartP^Or,San Diego. Calif.92127 W santVallcy442 6 J0esday,.February 4, WSTHE •ABLY TEXANm^v SS* 5)S® •w-A !• Mi I „ jniiiw •t&i-> , I • • T" ;• --• Horns Try Hogs for First Win ^- WlU-. By ED DALHESM forwards tfhadte lltemy and tOuiwmiiy uu Qtantha. 5afl>.. tRsnnSiaiis, Ihffl to was mare made a letter progression ' -'?i ;-s« :£-< 'Ten*Staff Writer Kent AQSsonL ace jjmtatn-Ussp tcangfliiiBaUHiy of She Kri»eger s performance "=t FAYETTEVUXEArfc —The to 4toten®B$ and t® »r-HamBhiirm.. "Sf$ -unbelrei-Hhk-agamst A£M Saturday when "Ss Texas basketball team. stilt •"After ltalting the ffttrnt (ttstmnad tn> Muimuiqj BnatoiJ-tfhm ithey",*«e Su5t all their he seated a career high 3D '•tf: looking for its, first Southwest Ujrin jjaimes 9 (Sunk ttbeyireas#«d points has to be encouraging -Conference victoryafter finnr ;9D -as -HDfihntlf mi 'the ib»»qn— c*-to Black. "He played the best games. wiB try aj^ibat I:3tt nwgfl ffnr ^faHh JmH A13B ball game of his career." be pjnJIliesdaywhenit takesoa to be eomgetitwfer Sitnmi D wmillftntt be hneT Saturn 'Hn ©an Rrueger. 3tm not said "He s getting closer all the Arkansas Rsmteks saifi "fllrtlgwunatijs'iBmimi sure ttbey itinn5!ha«e the test the time." ,here. The thsee iftminr caflfega-gragrani.andan tfieStttme«e gpiHrfl imtheumfareiice" Srn-The addition of a fully.White Texas has had mote' players wtlll he ipmafl hjr wnmTt am ttrasSas.Wtasi turn saifi recovered Krueger isn't going V tKanitesharp-nf prnMfrmg tflp-returning fetteruimn Biotay Q ns 30 we tfaafl ItaloKtiniaBjly ior Texas. It lo solve all the Langborn si surprising Razoihaeks undiar MiwHncfcanditaihMTti Btufcmmi oroU* ana flnlwnr (nri&Ejpe BIBS 4>EEN the «HR3V season ll-problems, and Black obvious­new Coach EddieStttton haste ly realizes thai "We've got to " won threeami lostadyonein-"We're-a gei a liitle smarter before we • -chiding a surprising6*62 vic­natmnali {pweec Oteqgttnm w£t& fttis aflflmrterfi aff tfct wmnigthalleiifti.' TocasOach can win ball gwnw 1 take the tory over Tfesas Ttedfc SiennWIafHi^nd "Hwcljadn^ responsibility far not tparhmgSWC tomdup 3nst Ga^sr. we wrnild iiave them all they need to know." The Tem-Art»iiw pme aa kt The Starting lineups Ags To May SMU m broadcast on UBMM •«Q9n4U»san £CJO*misn P Tommy ttTFil^rt f fr-C Sspb. 3aeTWifSBi«een> Z ** H4CTv Person C *4 &vh. & ^-3 Svn^ruegrr G 5-11 jr tguMgiiJliiueii & *3 •lai* B*ueriaila; & to-2 Soph. Despite Arkansas':-fine.. ofi (£. Bhtlfte White gMfawiim' vfloie tfis snowing, Sutton is m»fe im>-»an tteO^t HDsras. pressed. "We're not a xray —«H Tillflliw good hasketbaQ teantr he yMexican Slugger said. "Ev'erybo» u&.~ SUSE, -ait S4.fe tsatf wiUhltesTlWb anfi fi^&qr tor tflinfl Because of the point spread perience," he sakL 1 'TensStaff Writer Suttoasaid. :>-... .pteios. TheHBatianre B*dt to ®S$Biir Bn ttlafir llitit iKiafl(adfiig. all of .Texas' players par­: Only, one Texas player,; vi Looking-for its seventh win Like SttttDO. mag: of the CbmdhKAlhMwSltoff sibto>tasmit»i|fiqp ticipated in the-SMU game. Lorene McCI^llan, is in against two losses,-the -Texas team isalsoin itsfirstyearat the samewawMtfctnajBfititaaiw»\wftefflngfligaigailHBne~ Page hopes to play; his Entire questionable condition fur the women's basketball team will Arkansas. Three starters^ Duatttorpmes'ttiasfiQpnigUL.BaeitlnrisBi'IteKisTfesftani team against1 Si Mary's, es­St. Mary's "game.-She is host once-tested St;-Mary's: center Darylt Sat^bmjf am£ TCST Ss altBate #4. ' j CertBmly Tint. In fact Charles looks pecially Ihe1 younger players. recovering from an ankle in­ ' University at 7 p.m. Tuesday stxnJX ss little like Cupid as you can "They really"need the ex­jury incurred last week. in Gregory Gym. ~ -imagine. Come to think of it jew^eis Texas coming off an 88-53 without -cupidity are tiard to come by roasting of SMU Saturday these days. You'll be pleasantly night, will use its trademarks surprised toy the attitudes at Charles : — a pressure defense and a EARN CASH WEEKLY IjBUtwyter's. His staff ts more ; fast break — against St. concerned w/tti explaining facts and Blood •••:; Plasma Donots Mary's, said Texas Cdach assuring your satisfaction than with t$|»bowd placc1 Rodney Page. —' -•„ |( ^ v Needed tmnying a saleso the cash registerSt. Mary's defeated Sanjtn­can do its number. It's reallytonio College 58-43Jrafi'o^ly • Men & Women something you need to experience to game tHs:SfefiflfiJj»cadSe of probleSVR^i SettAg"-enough EARN $14 WEEKLY Vltea^t: faab >«ou.' jO)in*iBi! usim sinjaaoiifiilmiRME understand. Valentine's Day might be players tbgetSir, the team CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Sji^'C^P' ajfflttHasa fl cursejatan-.d^.ttt® Utetn^aayiJMb.S a good reason to try this remarkable started,vfla)r late, Coach stems, but dont expect Cupid. Even Stui^Jaraoos r&minj MigSbn "Butts explained. / -SIS'Austin ' PUADI EC wiIh mm9S-Charles couldn't get off Ruwraufc Texas hopes to avenge last MtDkhriina Rcttofc-Stajj^rtc I l/WLtJ the ground AttameRte TUmiftMiiaini MI .Blood Components, Ine. year's 43-36.loss to'St. Mary's Aoo*Kujafe UafMcTTnanBSBP­ in the South-Central zone : OPEN: MON. & THURS. 8 AM to 7 PM LCUTWYLER Tournament of the Texas TUES. & FRI. 8 AM to 3 PM Association of Intercollegiate CLOSED WED. A SAT. ffrmayann ^•y^^daaeacv JEWELERS WbeHi lienbai Papri=>apK Athletics for Women, MUM rj>n 409 W. 6th 477-3735 •z&Z: v • "They're well-disciplined a».c2iu» On the drag at 26th and well-coached!" Pagesaid.:' •' ^-fa£ . St. Mary's will', bring a rf!a« "small and relatively .'fastTV;­ roiSMi team into this year's contest. Butts said. We have a balanc­SUMMCk JOBS ed offense — anyone on our • .team can score?' she added. We're looking wCUUIOTT in 4.i4iu^iuueiil stereo Drug Center Ne ed• mpiVCtt ^sicms ta^hperforinance-Volunteeis. Call 472-HELP finw^ioaoe amsc-s^stems. radios gwwlnmlj tfhww^kn^ n.i*itLwM> for Counselors tbaunjm or472r9248. Comeby 1114 Manor Bd.: jkdvems Srst product the Advent Or for mafematter^ whsu was the iwguaiflmnnm. wamfliis(»neaaifle JrfiiBl^ifBikerdesignwHy HemymnsC gaggasag alluiwitM^Bficslto Elflss. was based on a jmsnise notCAMP OLYMPIA -WTETYASGMG BBTT IMCIIITIMATEL^ Buififi iitttc® •eaa-to socepL Hat iit was passible SEAHORSE CAR itDpdooesjjister^slBii.for WASH " ^why wetesnhigtfcQiB a 'moflentte prime wafli oroall -I Automatle • is lookingforsummer counselors. If you the AfewAt^tpotatiianL ginll^iuwwn ttn ten.Itotfl n<^(aji». jperfnrmanoe ffiaTifiw at Beast 6Self-Service enjoy the outdoors and the mwarding ex-, equal in «nery aoSSfleand isefnl su^BBaai 1205 W. Komig periend of wotking withchildiwiivisit the tanwte a^edt Thousands ofTopics frHURSDAY, anla Snnnttaraff Rigiklt? Weit. S>m«w g>muiurHas aa is ttoit fcBBfe of Advnit $2.75 per page Send for your.up-to-date< 160fsgt, swhat ttejr s^rahooi: the mall onler catalog. Enclose J1.Q0 Atftrent UNategoteK. "IheBmcs abe tflljimte mpetluiuiance and to cortr. postage ldelivery time:is ltd?days). ' ' . < Liberal AYta piacement Center '' 1J|WIB aWHWfc nasganniiHte: g»war a tog wagr Mow-it in price-The 'r:'i * • '•i'--?-*-'-*'*--J--»'• ' . . ...... wagr Am wfllh *«ythsr <:ilt«!guiy in wflnrih most serines 5B«s.Snr anrajjor gneqwltei uff ttte. RESEARCH ASSISTANCE; INC. djstMrtMM ^'TOftantAifanlWi Hh» Saaeners. S*3iewng fiiat further 11941WILSHIRE 81VD.; SUITE #2 Advent is ooea£ thesnmai&st and ampiwemwffs ate not worth the LOS ANGEIES, CALIF. 90025 KEASE NO CAUS—JUST DROP BY THE MACEMfNT gnommtts Bar tfleHmme. iUslhifllnfc added rost. deade to tmv. J213) 477-8474 wJ77-54J3; DQU^U^' off ifls tBttai^imJn " M'^CSNTilt-ANO SIGN Iff, MrmwmiaulwiiMuoMMtl mow in -fwtirehntltttiit*6oIY. FRIDAY NIGHt CHILD CARE ADVENT > A SURVEY 'M The First Baptist Church is considering organizing a Friday NightCNU Care Center for fhtt children of students of the University of Texas. To help us in studying the feasibility of such a program, please complete and return the following:\-. ' \ . 1 would (would not) like to SN such a ^VFCTAME: center established. , Mj%dcW rcould («oujd.not|.pqy;^j^,^')iJghr,f#r^^^^.^ (hesirvke.'' - Pnon«: the service. ' *T4>% , No. of children: I would (would not) h«|p staff the service, ohe niaht per n^onth ln( lieu.'of payment;* Aget of children: jjHease mail.totTlsVBaptist Church, 901 Trinity, Austin, Texas ATTN: JJ>. C­ W p.m. Happy Hour ' Swith TSP OuHBdahML Candidates for: ,Texas Studept Pubilcalloiut , — ^ -Jil 'folk informally OH the ufleinoew __fore the election. Free. Texas Tavem. Ideas ^Issues Committee. ' \ ' " 'filflU *"•« Strado,".1fWUhi ..studies a sideslMw I il!E5,h?r^W RAfwrv s.3 wwwiPTf""W" ''ykw" fi' " ""*'fW^W'' " ** • ;-,s --:,^®f N-^ 1HMI fllBMIlM v > a , Judge HermanJones of 53rd should proceed with" trial windows and decay of various 2017B E. Third St. ^ Only the'E^st'Third.Stree^.i'^^lniheeVentG^anger'faUs to^i District Court has issued an against City National Bank, sorts are among the house has been repaired. :v comply' with this order, the'w interlocutory judgment by which holds a lien on irregularities that make a After Granger failed to After final; judgment has " , city will be authorized to tear® m default against County Atty. Granger's property. The bank house unsuitable for occupan­make repairs, both cases been jentered • against him,: down the structure and bill - Ned Granger for failure to has filed a routine denial In cy. a spokesmanat the.city at­were turned over to the 'city's Granger,will have 30 days to Granger for the demolition.-~r answer a suit concerdng his the case. torney's office said. legal department for disposi­repair, remove or demoMsJi. ,; Grangei; .was :unavaUablj!ta| ownership of property' A substandard residence, These irregularities are tion. -•• the Lincoln Street house. Jor comment Monclay. Granger has been cited for defined under chapter 40 of detected routinely by city maintaining a substandard the city code entitled "The housing inspectors. County Commissioners^ ' ** 1 residence at 808 Lincoln St. Minimum Housing Code," Granger's house was The tentative Judgment for­provides for property not tobe declared substandard by the bids Granger from continuing rented or . resold until city in September, 1973, and to maintain a "public repaired, to protect future City Council took action last I Ambulance Bid :0 nuisance" at the Lincoln residents. July against the Lincoln Street adress. Broken windows, lack of Street house and another In addition, it says the city heating facilities,' screenless house owned by Granger at Travis County Com­bulance service contract to Austin Ambulance will' missioners unanimously Austin Ambulance Service provide emergency service ­awarded the county; am­Monday for 10 months. for the county from March |" ELECT 'i to Dec. 31 at the costof I1.600L; I I AbortionServices.p'™™ v; • WB 1'VI• mitted a bid, Commissioner;.t -i I Bob' Honts.said. Capltal'Aniv bulance Service madea bidof ­ t--r I a $2,200 per month.'" ¥ • • I "The decision was'ittfrbfcsed'}:By JOAN . HEGARTY Reproductive Services, on finances alofte," Hon£»" I •*. I iline • GtVENS . charges $150 to abort a said, adding that ' Capital's I I University women seeking. prgenancy of less than' 10 standards,were not as higji as> # EXPERIENCE^ abortions arereferred tolocal weeks, a staff member of the Austin Ambulance's, " • j I I 1. Two yaars professional «xp«Hmw* physicians, Brackenridge Austin Planned Parenthood 2. 27'hours In School of Communication* Hospital or an outpatient clinic said. Capital said they'could'not I I 3. Appointed Assistant Managing Editor of Thai Pally clinic in San Antonio, Austin answer a call within 80V 3days I Texan; alsoMfakcup Editor, Staff WHtor, and Copy medical and abortion referral Austin physicians charge seconds during : thev night. I Editor. personnel said Monday. $160 to $175 for the procedure, while Austin-Ambulabce ^|SjL I I 4. Rvo Long sessions, on* summer at U.T. Austin The clinic In San. Antonio, she said. could. Also Capital swas got VhM* by Za*Ryef 5. Supportive fields -French & English i able to comply with the , 1 m -pdforby£ddlaFlthar ' - regulations on having trained , A Muddy issue personnel available for the .it; i 1dollar J Wedding Pictures' first six> months of the con­/A Unfv«rtity co*d flndt Thr Ttxan a hondy wtty to r I tract,-Ifontssaid. \v: ^proftd h»rwlf from q cold, wl wollc on th» Drag. t M?fp role»wr of BWflrapfij. , ­ i Texan nx*F UM0N-mum coMnynii win MRUTTMBN of OKHOOKM tameawill, ­ With All Wedding Candida Ordatad didates will meet from 4 to 6 I • . sponsor 4h« film "La Sfratfa," «t T meet \ p.m. Tuesday In Oeolooy-V i Serving 'The Unlvanity" for 30yaara p.m. Tuesday in the Texas and 'J p.m. TM««(#yi Ik Burdlne Building 100 to beer John M. Denv Tavern to discuss-thek.plat­Auditorium. Acfmlsslon nSi-lef^' rnifffllpMk-OIF "lnfluihc»*of^'; I 24206uqdalup« 472-4219 •students, faculty end stafl, .^fystatlc Sea-Uvel Chanoet on Oil ' i forms and answer questions. members.-j Accumulations In thr Ap- I The program is sponsored by l%lelnllh*Basln." i TA*a*a4*5TUtt>iam tronsored by the,.. jUnclassifieds| the Texas Union Ideas, and MUTINOS Issues Committee.' AMWCAN MAtKCTtNO ASSOCIATION will Laboratory ^R^S4l-Awlir meet, at; meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday In Scftoiz noon iWsdayfn J««-Ctnter AStt;I Com* by Honor Society Garten. UT ROOCO ASSOCIATION wlil mftt at CONOjWB ASIAN SCHOUB COMMTTTM p.m. Tuesday In tor Brain Bowl TSPBUg. Mortar Board, • a national . wltt meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday In organize for the spring semester^ I Room 3.200 honor society for senior Garrison Hall TOO to discuss land Robert Blossma^ wljl. speak OIJreform fn the People's Republic of "National Intjttcollaglate.-Rodeo^ I and piat* women, is accepting-China with Of. Charles JB. Greer, • Association.'? ' -• . " ! /your recommendations for,,I Unthuifbd prospective members. p Ad .Take a "trivia" test for a spot in the Outstanding university I audience show on Feb. 13. Gome at women with.a GPA of 3.0 and Interviews for the & I [Show your Valentino' one of the following times: who will have completed 90 I you havo a heart— hours, at (the end of this School of Social & Behavioral "J r i ^ ] 4k semestei*. are eligible for I students only , buy her a pizza. membership; 35places will be I . GOOD THIS IfXITH OKItfWITHCOUPOl Feb. 4 4-5 p.m. or 7-8 p.m. pre-paid available for fail, 1975. Infor­ «1 Off ANY UHQI PIZZA. I Sciences Council '*• no refunds -Feb. 5%?4-5, p.m. or 7-8 p.m. mation sheets • may.be ob­ I tained at the general litforma­ 25th & Whitis tlon ,bo,othr.in I will be held Tuesday through 2100-A Guadalupe -Texai Union South No. 1^10; the'Main Bulfdirfg^throughFeb.14;.^-' |h-Thursday In Geo. 402. 1-4 p.m. * 474-2321 apontor: Union RecreationCommittee For additional information, call Clare Buie, 475-1811, or Dr. Margaret BenV,-47I-U33. X, BILL GARLAND -T# DAILY • -JI-I--• ' • -Afy "WMTORp magazine, circulated The Dally Texan novy gives you adequate information i month .... and is read about the workings of Austin, the state of Texas and ! » more often than any text' sometimes Afghanistan. As editor of The Dally Texan, s ™So.i • Bill Garland would provide a -new foi^im on forces '. K book .... «ure to;give & shaping and, sonje say, destroying:our-University. , ­ < advertisers an audfeHce u * 'J' ' ' --that wilt blaze a mul­ r ^ i ^ i i; '%r ' titude of trail* to their stores .... leading to spec­tacular results? cV ,L • Why Shiould YOU PEARL' magazine, of Vote in Austin? course.^The student-'-S> magazine WP' ' «'X,J & I V / X -, , -f * i i --K. Because you live here 9 months every* our daUy life, v, ' 1 * * C ^ V *• 1 • Inveirtlflative roportinfl ,vj, 11 >fJ I##Iiwm»m and Stop til on* of our pooj/li fodoy . VA WEST MALL m UTTJLEjPIELD FOONTAlN ' • I K\W­ 4.U.? /fjJ p%**$ ^vn^.rVS soopbox Argue Tower Issue used not beeft able to go up on the Tg the'Tower deck mainly by tourists? President Tower, I have talked with a/! Ad Interim Lorene Rogers number of students and they] thinks so. Universitystudents, all agree that the Tower; however,^ do not'respond' so should remain open. About the, conclusively. * ' }\ rejected proposal to enclose; The Board of Regents' deci-the area with bars, the school] sion to close the Tower'per-spends so much money on manently^ .and'Rogers' stated everything else. Whydon't the] ment Friday that the Univer-regents take some money, Sity had better things tospend from the athleticdepartment? money on than "building; a I think they could afford it/' viewing center-for"tourists" GERALYN SEIDULfi,; prompted various responses sophomore, College of, f.across campus. Natural Scierfces — "!• ' s-AT" -v S definitely disagreewith Presi-WANDA WILLIAMS, dent Rogers' statement, Williams® Seidule junior, College of Natural-Although I have not been on Sciences — I'l agree with the Tower deck since I was President Rogers' statement very young,, I still feel that it because even though I have should be open to the public. £ been up on the deck a number MARK GOZA, freshman, •Of times, it was only to show college of Business Ad-Jvisiting guests Ground. The ministration — "Tourists are ^Tpwer should.be closed..Some mainly all that go up on the ?ay fl>at if a person's going to deck; I know I went up when I .commit suicideit wUlhappen, ^3 younger, but I haven't not matter what.Idisagree, if been up since. I don't think •Jheig;-.is .an-eerily.-accessible that bars should be cop-place, a person is more likely structed Bars around the to consider suicide. deck would not prevent^ . ROSA SIMS, graduate stu-suicide, it might prevent em- dent. School of Liberty barrassment for the regents. 9*r\-Sciences''Although this Is but would not prevent myfirst semester and1have suicides. Goza Former UT Professor VOTE Dies After Long Career • Edwin Hale, "University professor emeritus in economics, died Monday in a local hospital at the age of 81. Hale taught for 39 yearsand served as chairmanof the department three times.TSP BOARD Funeral arrangements will be announced by Wilke-Clay Funeral Home. • PUCE I -J A' specialist in comparative economic systems-and development of economic theories, Hale also wasa frequent arbiter in labor disputes. CHRIS KOLLAJA STUDENT AT LARGE pMpemk*Khmrth-inri'lrr CMM •UT iimumin uum NO COVER CHARGE TONITE J** * Ml UVf AUSTIN ROCK 'N ROU. BY TURTLE SEZ Sunday- Aaifll*Mayan T FOR TEXAS * T FOR TURTLE } p­ .. Sift*.' JLfM T for Turkey, Turtle's tplua tttouranl Swiss Gobbler. I* )• Tender Turkey Breast; ) • "Swiss Cheese, Pickle, >• Tomatoes, & Lettuce tool Cheapest Beer in Town ) ­ TURTLE'S KITCHEN Spaghetti Gala -Tues. & Sun: 5 p.m. -Midnight Inside A. Different Drummers* Spaghetti -$1.19 a plate 2405 Nueces Wine 20' & 35* a glass Pitcher i Shiner $1.10 i THE BRUSHY CREEK7 i Michelob $1.60 i for Family Style Bar-B-Que i Also serving Lasagna & Spaghetti i Chicken, Beef FrL, Sat, Sun. evenings Sausage & Ribs, Beans, 2801 Guadalupe 472-3034Potato Stffad & Cole Slaw AGnoYamfn Enterprise .25 ALL YOUCANEAT Ljft **Tii3£rr s Monday-Saturday 11:00a,m.-9:00p.m. Closed Sunday u call for reservations: . « 255-3253 ; 111 West Main Street TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIALS In Round Rock (STARTAT4:00P.M.) Pr"'; SIKH tip! A' f®? 4 "krj Spsyissj? i)4usiu&GreatMghlClub! U lll^ KO COVER CHAR6E Rib Eye Wwwr" Mi Rib Sya StMk' 1 '^Butwr* B*ktd kW&A of rtwwh ill TM»» , 49 end Critp' ' jflk-f m _ „3SSs&l if­ ^f*t>nr (NjewVork IPlf BONfimmOlNPIT YMMMURWmV'ZibrW* [MOREFUNATTHE wb ?r-$815 Guadalupe &£m0K1I I: ~ fJPMNQ A&JOUAt J. I , JmJJim £ m tM Election Revisions Asked Campaign Cuts Favored for Campus Races By JOY HOWELL this limit a candidate still has the limits were $300 for and vice-presidential can­ Texan Staff Writer enough money to print over senators at-large and $150 for didates are limited to $100 A proposal to cut maximum 10,000 leaflets and have four senators running from their dnd senators cannot exceed campaign expenditures more days of 12-column inch ads in respective colleges. $90. Twenty percent of than 30 percent will go before The Texan. 'I think we've come up with UTEP s 11.500 students voted . theStudent Senate Wednesday a good compromise. Parrish in the last election. "We're locked into this night, but Lyn Breeland, said. A&M system of leafleting and Tex­ Texas University social and behavioralsciences he said. The University of limits its student government an ads. Houston senator, said this plan is a Bill Parrish. Student has similar limitations executive candidates to $65 watered-down version. Government vice-president, Presidential and and vice-and $15 for a runoff Senate "Originally we proposed a expressed his support of presidential candidates can candidates can spend up to $35 strict spending limit of $25 spend up to $250 for the leafleting with certain restric­with no runoffs Student and a ban on leafleting. Cam­tions. primary and $150 for a runoff. Association President Steve paign paranoia set in, and 'I think leaflets help THE MAXIMUM for Senate Kberhard said some efforts then the senatorsstarted flak­ generate interest in an elec­candidates is $75. and since are being made to raise the ing. The last Senate meeting and the each candidate must win the expenditure ceiling tion inform voters looked like a psoriasis ward," People are usually receptive plurality of votes there are no In order to reach all the; Breeland said. to leaflets the first two days runoffs. In addition, the stu­off-campus students we> The current proposal will After the second day. though, dent government publishes a probably should have a $100-' limit expenditures for the people get sick of having a box voter s guide. Rick Fine, stu­$200 limit Out of a campus* presidential and vice-shoved in their faces as well dent government president, enrollment of 16.000. however.­ . presidential rates to $300 for as leaflets." he said said. 25 percent voted in the last * the primary election and $100 'I d be in favor of limiting We pay our school paper to election he said > for a runoff. Thisis a substan­ days and hours that leaflets publish it as a supplement. Last vear 8.293 students' tial reduction from the $750 can be passed out on cam­They alsocover any candidate voted in the Student Govern-* limit imposed previously. pus.' Parrish added forums held and interview ment elections That is ap-.r UNDER THE PROPOSED THE PROPOSAL also cancfldates as tliev announce proximately 20 percent of the! $300 limit candidates can still provides limits on senatorial for the election. Fine said. total IJmversitv enrollment •£ print leaflets for mass cir­races. Senate-at-large can­AT UTR|Paso, presidential culation. Breeland feels didates could spend up to $200 leafleting often discourages for the first election and $75 students participating in stu­for a runoff. Senatorial can-1 dent elections. didates from specificcolleges"A lot of people are turned would be limited to $100 and off by someone shoving SqueezeQftJ $50 for a runoff. Previously . leaflets in their faces. With THE SOUTH DOOR Squeeze Inn 1 t*o 'CLUB GO 'm£* live Band • Dancing -7 Nitet a Week Everybody's Bar This Week Featuring Foosball Tournament SPRINCFIELD WEST Tonight Tuetdqy Night Only Maximum eight teams FREE COVER & $40 to the winner 1 FREE DRINK Yo'll Comet UtWMn 8:00 -9:30 p.m. I wllh.thh coupon, limit I per person | Unescorted Ladiet Fne-Sun.-Thuri£^—~S~~~ Off E. Riverside Behind thePizza HOK 444-0711 Happy Hour 7:30 -9:00 Daily TUESDAY IS SORORITY TONIGHT DISCOUNT NIGHT AT SMYLIES LONGNECK NIGHT '$ r-i-s 40* Budweiser and Lone Star •>k and a 50's Show Not To Be Missed 'f.fl SMILE ^1 with Johnny Dee& The With a sorority I.D. you eon get $.65 high balls and $1.65 pitchers of beer Tuesday. Rocket 88's We're open noon 'til midnight, and we're located at 19th and Nueces. Come to Coming Tomorrow Night Smylie's and /oin the fun. MATRIX 'i'l 19th and Nuwci SMYUE'S -^l\ THE BUCKET 23rd andPearl f u| Serving the finest liquor in Austin Next Door toMo/H's ItalianRest. •3Hrt heParking .£vXwv-»_ M'Sni rSSSXsH iMtmt t>wXv>X«H >>X%vXv>M WXvXw" •••••••VI jrtrW•• •••Vr r# • % % ••V' j Feed a Friend Free every Tuesday at Luigi's. Two plates of spaghetti for the price of one. Get together with a friend (or find one here) & cruise by. 2100-A. jftWupei Sj&ST&S-""t f Ar 4,11975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page%5 iHfe '* • W o o Darius &rub {ACADEMY AWARDS! DOCTOR jrOPEN AT 6:00 'AOHULTS $1.00 Rnt liNt Tit SHOWTIME At*?30 n^n.4w ' HOOt—tfcrt-lKjm ' KOKE NITE PUS BIN.1 f • ^ f—ITRANS i OPEN 1.-00 NO PASSS ' —_____ HJV22Z4eMahna* KA. iM-tm 6:40 8:20 10: AISO AT ^/ CUtr STATES DRIVE-IN V SIIOWTOWNUSA IWELD OVER/1 JGULFSTATgPKIVE^rV jSKmiSnSni V. SoiiT^sidE SouxlisidE "\7I0 E. 8M«n»l»»«4Wat/f. •4IM2K/'. if^DOORS OPBI »:30 ^ A SHOWTIME 7:00 > , , J ­ CAFJTA!^ PLAZA 4i7-764A • IH35NO*TH HIGHEST RAT1HG" PIMII Cirtjii k.T jjjj fflr^rgARTH -.S m M Pt&tSSs HIGHLAND IVSAUL. 451-7376 :M35 AT KOEN»GlN. ZllblAROliriutJ, MM m TSwiwol^r­ i \y; , Alan James ^AiWn'Caaii EtARGAIN M ATS.EVERY DAY'TIL 1:30 P.M.-S1/J5 Madcat. a harmonica player. and -flautist-'extraordinaire Madcat s solo improvs often extendedtotwdbr'threetimes^ the length of tbeotfiers". much ^ > to thedelight of DaveSnibeck himself, who .obviously.con­ siders this odd little man a superb musician.Even theex­ pected "train sounds" which- every harp player performs. were aunique experiencewith . Madcat, and his more in* tricate playing is the kind of • memory one wants to hold forever. "TAKE FIVE" is Brubeck's best-known piece (as well asthe firstjazz angle ever to sell one million . records), and l heard it twice Sunday. In the first show, it seemed a little uncomfortably experimental, with Madcat's . jew's harp a bit out of sine' with, tljerestof the music. But by the second show, the jew's Dave Brubeck harp meshed . perfectly, and the restof the bandv'securein the knowledge that Austin has a well-informed jazz audience, improvised their hearts out. Randolph Whitford" will give a scholarship Guerre. piano; Phyllis Young, cello; Leland; recital sponsored by the Pearl Amster Foun­ .Munger, clarihet; and John Hicks, flute. • Anyone left with doubts dation at 8 p.m. Tuesday atGrace Nazarene after this monumental con­ The program includes Trio Sonata in B Church. 1006 W. Koenig Lane. The perfor­ cert about the future of major for Flute.Cello and Piano by LoSUet: mance will include Beethoven's Fifth Cello Paramount lnc.*s hopes for Trio in B-flat Major. Op. U, for Piano, Cello Sonata. Tchaikovsky'sRococo Variationsand . the landmark Paramount. and Clarinet by Beethoven;' and Trio in A the Chopin Cello Sonata Tickets will be S3at. • Theater should be braised .minor.,Op. 114, for Piano, Cello and Clarinet the door. 'K-'.vfvvi; , by Brahms. • '' • • ' •'over a slow fire. If this' is an • * * * *' indication of.their, plans and Trios by LoeiUet,-Beethoven and Brahms aspirations, all I can do> is The Joy Unpins and PureJoy Productions will be performedJ)y. University faculty ar­ steal from the ads for"That's will present an edited version of "Marat­ tists at 8 p.m. Tuesday jo the Music Building Entertainment!" "Boy. dowe Sade" with rock and rolTscorihgat 10:30 p.m. , Recital Hall; The concert, free to the public, need it now!" " 7— — Thursday and Friday at theGaslight Theatre, will feature Departmentof Music artistsLila 316 W. Sixth St! V , ­ New Riders at Armadillo The New Riders of the Pur­ ••Powerglide" and Gypsy­ ple Sage, will jperform at 8 Cowboy" and in 1973 by "The »«•» MJ p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday Adventures of Panama Red."­at Armadillo World Head­quarters. , . ^.consists of John YoiillFEELjtaswell a$seeit The New Riders signed with Co1 lead !|*yj ^ -Columbia Records in1971, and vocals "a their first record "New David'Ne Riders Of the Purple Sage" Skip Battin was released in September of vocals: Spenserthat year. It was followed in drums; and Buddy Cage on? 1972 by two albums pedal steel guitar 111I I I I I f 111 < I II * » • iSnnpy-jp TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD Tonight ( CALL 471-5244 Presents *z7h".!Epic-7hat THE BIRTH OF A NATION v • (1915) • • zi Directed by D.W. -Griffith With tJIIian GIsh. Maa Marsh. Henry B. Walthall, and Miriam Cooper- k«MamcMi .... The mosl beautiful singte, shot I have seen in any tnovie is Ike battle charge in THE BIRTH OF A NATfON..." There are FOX TWIN many othersinthat one film: thehomecoming of the defeated T»«S571U hero; the ride of the Clansmen; the rapist and his victim among the dark leaves; a glimpse of 0 war hospital; dead young xotdiers afler battle; the dark, slaw movement of the '-fe-v w Union Army atcay from the camerxj ... (BIRTH OF A • .NATION) is equal .with lirady's photographs, Lincoln's, CASTLE speeches. Whitman's poemy... it is equal; in fact,-to the best uork that hits been done in this country. And among moving- pictures it is aione. not neefssarily as 'the greatest' —" whatever thaimeans--but as the one grtat epic,tragicfilm," -James Ap*. Agee on Film, .. r Mil lovoca 472-7315 JESTER AUDITORIUM 7 & 9:15 ^TOMGHT -> SAT. J ^rOWNESl VAN -vmi^ REDUCED races •T1LIPJL ­ r VAUET KD .j.rZANDT^ MONOmSAT. ' •ml DRIVE 444-3222 s ni An all rianw $1.S0 LGERimCKin TU.6PJH. "TOUCH . -4tas-. STUDENTS! -9;35-i«< flggflS $1J0 . PJ(1 cWoody" TDiane FEATURES "SIT kISil cAllerj cKeaton -l.-35r -3:15-; if * * sa "<§leeper' •*s35-:>.' s -Will GET <^ORB^TB>4NIOOtjdR<> . • -wo. • • ABWiMOOKTBCnwC ' Ira ™"l ,'10:00-youa r Today atPresldtoTheatres jT < 3 ~?J'. TIME RUN1^ > jPaaiBEai; VILLAGE 4 ITUtSOATll THE THEtAVAQEln^E fej)AILY' I tm ijt.utam aimii "to.Uili^M , rTEXAN' i SS A "• •MuaiMiMB'n mmmm-"UNC1ASSIFIEDS' •' MMBHtHHJIHIMi; ^ Mel Brooks* . Wf" Come fcyi / 'Bvazaia T.afia pipet^i^ __^ •••••••III 1 ' UfXaW«r-^f Ad' j" ?% 'j&tt%&£ t-.> J»* pr*-^aM(' IP * * 4* V>~ ,* 1 ~\-, ', "t ,V J ' >°-'JBfc:•'-'A:• *£v» inting Live Performer Chjlearr Pianist's Technique 'Stodgy, Pedantic' 5|§>i 4 . -• «. -. ­ = "l ^''t">fBy BILL DARWIN 'Adieux); the"absence (L'Abs?nce) sonata, based upon four themes the sonority of the instrument. Ac­initial thematic exposition revealed which fjjp^gS;*' Texan Staff Writer '" and . the return (Le Retour) of undergo remarkable cyclic companying rhythmic figures in the Arrau s tiring fondness for ex­ '. Despite sporadic bravos 'and » Archduke Randolph of Vienna, a developments, received only left hand and heavy use of the sus­cruciatingly slow arpeggiations and final, half-baked standing ovation, J patron of Beethoven..-earthbound indulgence from Arrau. tain pedal created a sluggish sound senseless placement of rubato. TheFhad.much difficulty in listening to. ADMITTEDLY, THE SONATA is In the liner notes, Arrau is quoted which all too often obscured the problem of Arrau's imposing sensepianist -Claudio Arrau's Cultural overperformed and requires a truly the sonata be as interpreting to right hand's frequently-more impor­of rubato removed all life from the' Entertainment Committee-"^ outstanding effort to arouse interest representative of the three tant role. Forte basschords could be fierv Finale (Allegro bnlliante). ijiponsored perforjnance Sunday m after-the, listener's initial "not protagonists, of Goethe's "Faust." described in no other manner than|^«uriici'pal Auditorium. ^-• ' again."'Arrau has obviously played Even though I fail to see how he ugly. Absent throughout the . Etudes, «£_<• Although Arrau commands ah ad-it frequently;'and'after Sunday's determined this, if he sees it, fine, which are actually variations on the >.mirable following and is certainly-performance one can definitely say but heshould not bore peoplewith it. The broad tempo of the Grandioso initial theme, were the opposing iwell represented on disc,his playing ONCE too often.:Lack of dynamic The interdependence of the themes, section tried my patience and ruined moods of Schumann, the poetic fan­ '^has never succeededin stirring my expression, except in: obvious soft-the nuances,of keyboard sonority, its effect Although Andante tasy of piece and almost the the '^interest A prime example would be loud contrasts, .lent a banal and indeed the entire conceptof this 19th sostenuto section was warm and in­everything else in the music. . his performance of Beethoven's listless mood to'the entire sonata. Century masterwork was submerg­ timate, the sonata as a whole was Lyrical Esebius and dramatic^-semi-programmatic "Sonata in E-Although placed after Beethoven's ed in a ruminative dreaminess that drawn out to an absurd extreme. Florestan. Schumann's names form ;•• flat Major", subtitled "LesAdieux"' melodious: and; familiar sonata, only Arrau could have been able to his two alter egos, suddenly became•hy Beethoven's original publisher. Liszt's "Sonata in B minor" con-decipher. To my disappointment, stodgy and pedantic Claudio Arrau,- TTie three movements deal respec­. tinued the dullness' with which the THE LISZT SUFFERED es­Schumann's "Etudes Symphoni­ whom never tively .with thedeparture (Les a person Schumann .recital began..>>The one-movement pecially from Arrau's approach to ques" were no improvement. The heard nor heard of, fortunately KRMH and CALICO PRODUCTIONS PRESENT Death' Powerful Drama By JAY SHARBUTT: son. • • _ ;v -After an operation, thegrim it. And Hill and Miss Alex­i'-AP Television Writer . Parts of. the pr^rain.were medical report istha't hehas a ander underplay their roles NEW YORK" -V -• starring Arthur Hill, Jane Alex­author and radio .commen-. down and finally kills him. slight breeze might. collapse -..' ander,-Robfr Benson. 9 Woman • -,»* -»• tator; Jane Alexander plays SQAFCBEEETl 36 Adaro-12 his ex-wife, Frances; and an: 7:30 7 Barnaby Jooes > . 7 MASH „ 9 Spondstape—Donovan' and Dave excellent newcomer, Robby 0 MlflOll ! 9 The Ascfint of Man •" a n. Benson, plays their dying son. ­ 36 HaHmorK HoH .QC Fame:-"All. M w . GAP TONIGHT " Friday, February 7 -zr^arfCui Welby -^ Creature* Great and Smali/'starr-THE SHOW, in addition to r2610 Guadalupe being a profile in courage, ope O.K. 8 p.m.also-is astudy of how the boy's TONITE fatal illness reunited his LITTLE'S Austin Municipal Auditorium parents (if only for a short ROCKY RIVER POWER PLAY ! time) and how it belatedly Tickets available atInner Sanctum. Magic Mushroom. made Gunther realize that his 11 PhSSTNll 11 Chess King. Pants South tRiverside). career and travels never gave All seats reserved P»7 mUTBBBlli him time to really know'his /Bluegrciss) STUDENT SANCTUM KOKE PRESENTS: EASY LOVING HOUSING OTyifwrogMfSg»«FP Choice of Chopped or Chamber! . RENT, BUY 29 Ranch Steak, salad, choice'' OR SELL of dre£Ving SOMETHING? & TexasToasts Then let THE DAILY Good wholesome American food . at right neighborly prices. ^ V Vr „ t TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS • 5209 Cameron Read . , r. Aria. Group • 8005 Anderson Square Shop. Center -Nof. .ensemble " -»<­ HELP • 916 Ben WhitL BIviL ' Just "music without equal orany near parallel"v i?.-ON SAL& _ ^ Raymortd Drugs #1 & -wutojiraPort . 4 YOU 12 Raymond Dru9s #2 Lariat Ranch Wear Jbnraday/Febraary 6 S Joske's in Highland Mall / "production"1* CALL 471-5244 1 Anditoriiun/8HM)P91 ;i50' o ^omailServiees ilcket sides begin l|aesdayt Januaiy'SK/ *' . Hogg Box Office/lCfe weekdays --» p ­ 1^® The Ctdtural Bntertailnmeat ^ The Cultural Goimnltfee of the Texas Unioxc§* EntertainmentCommittee ^rr^" -' & Th^ Department of Mtisic of the Texas Union > presentsthe 'A S-yr'igJ ><3* ' ' ' i i *+ -aet • z¥mWinner of 5 tony awards -, ,Theatre Committee ^ ^ •M JAZZ ORCHESTRA lLASTRADAti954> MONDAY/FEBRUARY 10 MUNICimL AUDITORIUM1* 8:00 PM WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12 . MUNiaPAL AUDITORIUM, 8 PM Ticket sales begin Thursday, January 30 Hogg Box Office Broadway's dazzling musical comedy 10-6 weekdays it—"One of the best musical staging t .50, $1.00, to be seen on Broadway in years. 1.50 with iivivBarne Qptional Services Fee General sales begin Directed by FeUenco Fetlini; tUU*$niphitioH:''^Fhe ftooAC, • Thursday, February 6 .$3.50, $4.00, $4.50 % ces Fee : Bus schedule: Jester, • ary 10 'Klnsolvfng, Co-op/7:00-7:30 PM ; > , t Id's must be presented at door/ j -1 ---M' No,cameras'or tape recorders. -'v?-^ vv.. .. . , ~ z aSsa Ms-< Burdine Aurium S f.> V £ $1.50 Members >&: $1.00 UtStudenti;! mmrnirn iW,-^e^^;februarMh975 THE 6AILY TPXAN £ " ^ t \ -r r i-t. t.^ •*> * SIFEIED OD™5sOO sliiSfiS C f >» -t> i;\ • -< -".V J M& J'.O. WW .+ !>-:> ¥$*£'• -* FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. g FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS. 1 HELP WANTED TYPING .1.11 Mit^-for Sale JtetrtorttT'of 27th at tiader SUe.eO; Speed tfner*StOO.OO; EFFICIENCY RENT NOW LEASING -Guadalupe ' ' rctwi^j icrwuBCD nm—eh; FO S1» 905 w!-22^ IOLUMMIIW nn »cnm HJ IUMB FO 300 mm fS4 ALL BILLS PAID Extra Large 1 bedroom With ,UnIlmllad_ «arnlng_Unlimited earning potential In adi 2707 Hemphill Park AySTtNl - Ia*.«''tart *»B«t>.....:.xrn tmJDK. CaB 5*. 4MK alcove, carpet, AC. -^ drtituioanvaiopM^at• hbme^Co»ni>»nlt« Ciena to camcwi. org*, opan baomod •" Icat*» tackMa or narannuur orilJiB. totty U*ag carpttad. CA/CH. *11 ay top money for. tha! "per$anal .. STUDENT BOOKCASES, 0x30 boWx « WWn kilcllA color xo^rdinatad. no Clejn and attractive. For roommates. icn.M POT further InfontoTion reflaw:^^ .teeks. CS. 4M Holds Ut. SIS. *eS3 MKIrcontpaor h*uMv «0B Annua A. Your time U valuable 1 BR Furn. SISS. Four couple or single, ills Come -;dlng-; opportunities .with" these com« "v' ­ aotd***.MS.3C-17»9. -«•»».»umib. Our seryka is free by aod.sae owner. •, pameL send S3 to Phoenix AdvertlsUw UBOE ElKTRiC lypawlle*. Uke AAARK IV APTS. fO B6x 1)707, Atlanta, Ga. 30309 „ ^ PARAGON MW.WWXlOKJX. . . 3100 Speedway • RESUAAETCALCULATOR, ft*« months old. 475-0736 478-4096 EFWCIENCY HELP NEEDED. Dishwasher and ; 1withor without pictures'^(Mfa* ....IM NOW LEASING r2E*tTHrMW TV. SCN 210 Efe<»rtc tw wi campus.large open-beamed HOUSE Tipiwim 25 cash 474-salary plus tips, fall Jan, 477-0005. TYPING 'lheses,.manuscnpts, reports, •.oniu«.—KiaH 1773 anytime. MOVE IN TODAY 3£22?LS225*!!!:*•«>«•** -GREENHOUSES*Wn(Vdoor.Four SHARE THE Heritao* of E«.6m streen.; .AMTOMAT.ic?TYfNN^^Jetters and g^-'MrtrllNIMU XTy EFFICIENCY WALK TO CAMPUS Bail Raia oh the Lake .ASSUME LAST FOUR months Bartenders,., waitresses^ wallers, : multl-copl«l orlolnali •JSKHRjW» *«MW lm> • Shuttle Bus Front Ooor leas4f-lar(jeM apartment dose tocam-; dancer/waltressies/ imaltre'di i bUsper-^' XEROX COPIES -«M0 for I0D coplet ?*»'aMLHiniii anugk-WALK TO CAMPUS IBDRMABP-$144 A 2400 Town Lake ardr Pus. Keep my depostl. 447.1200. ;;; . ;$on«r .bookkeeper. Jan or-Sandy; 472< CANNON FTS.8M tody. 1J1MIN4 '-^Vo 'TUewwjK._ stt monttscid. 1Stt>>4724f2i1. The'Exchange Club Von '' PRINTINO and*Ct^ipLETE LINE of Hl"' . --... "" MORGANA CUTE EFFICIENCIESnear, sMtm.'Old 4>MnCe*titeBk Hyt*. fcireMiad atnclandat, BuNMn SUPPLIES^;';; "T7<" Uraak appllaacn. CA7CH, ion of "II -4S3-7W7 „ 55* Burnet Rd. .SERfNE Bicydev Chrome -Mtfr Dou» APARTMENTS WANTED: Talenfed pianlit to'play for ;HihwtNi,1m w»a retell. Oft Bebby . ,ballet dau. HoWB0I let-more Wermetteo. ., .. or «5l-:Experienced theses; disiFOR SALE mmr paid. tMWMXHi.rn-um WILLOW • >4:30 TTH. Rate J2.75/hour-Call Julie . es. dissertationt.PR's, ^•47»-1841 'FOR SALE;Twin scut*tenia, esceflcnf UQ. ROOMS Mfller, 471-5793. Eouat Opportunity/Af-manuscripts,: etc. Printing," binding. CBRSSMV TW.lor peir. 4C-1877 (or flrmatlve Action,i -Charjene stark, 4SJ.52il.:%^f v .;Auto-ForSale 1 BEDROOM NOW LEASING VIRGINIA SCHNEIOER Diversified OICTAJ>HOffE :«*iiae4 certiidge tape UNF. HOUSES Services. Graduate and undergraduate•n «» seam, inturn %N8»«ttRCBecaenet«nd Weenew tapev»IS0 »ttue i«.M7-IP1. HUNTINGTON " HAVVISl Jyplno.^^pflrmno. binding. 1515 Koenlg $135 1BORM 2BDRM »o CHEVTVAN.« crnmer staMare. WAILRBED wW> tti»ul frame. 44V OOM to shwtHc fan and tamb coum. VILLA . HOUSE AT 1211 West, 49th. 2 bedroom CM date Cabinets ana wmt* 9tu.':r. fully carpatad. all bullion kitcnan. EFF.'.$115 plus E. $175 * $220 HOUSE with enclosed,porch, new cerpet. nice BOBBYE OELAFIELD.1BM Seiectrlc wwmau^anrmrinauiApH. CA/CH, pool ovarlooklng craek. lot* of yard, $100 deposit,, sits/month. Tenant pica/elite, 25 years experience,: books, FIRESTONE OELUXE Oen^ion 7 10-Now luting for the spring. AC. ALL BILLS PAID 4 BLOCKS FROMCAMPU3 traai. Walar.an.and cibiaTV paid, mr pays bills. Mature couple,: no pets or dissertations, thesel/ reports. «CHEVY Incn AM/FH*. AC (Mr 15 (MiISI Whliewalt. EKdlent treed asm St. 49MIU or ast^sn. »P*ted. pool, on shuttle. 44tn Dishwashers-2 LargePools women only, share b«ih. kitchen children. 83*3104 after 6 p.m. / mimeographing. 442-71I4; E«eeoe«f cbB®5o» DH W-atLOent oft rtmqyoHtr. iS4-aa. ' Security- to. '.gM tcmcfer . FREE FREE FREE FREE Write tor «««a 2 STORY. 3 bedroom. 2 both. West S9th DISSERTATIONS, theses, raports and MOVE IN TODAY TOVOTA COROLLA ttaSlenwagoa ITO Oir ifiBeffen RgMlog photo equipment -sL^OO/mmlh^SSQflLiWQfiSilaifiandy law briefs. Experienced typist. AC EactM aMnwISM. c*M09M*. Gorapvr* oor werehouM 1901 Willow Creek Hunter 454-9711 or;,after^.^,^ 1 Tarryfown. 2507 Bridle Pattir UMTalne 2 BEDROOM TEXAN DORM, ms Nueces. Doubles glim, im»ewtittgs. prices OB' cemerai, darkroom equip-ALL SILLS PAID CONQUISTADOR 444-0010 si9t/semester. " . Singles. Brady. 472-4715. ' 1327 Archer St, San VOLKSWAGON SOBK a S34I.25/semester. Oally maid service, INI, AC. ' VM01. WALK TO CAMPUS and POSADA REAL |"^>MI^. BOpOUR'S TYPING SERVICE. "WHSj .AMUFM. »•nan. Ex-central air. Refrigerators, hot plates cMjmtc»*dlBo« pricedto senJll*.477-7 VT TEN SPEED Btket. Good condT-Larflj* apartmeitfc, tufty shag carpeted. allowed. Two Mocks-from.campus. Co-FURN. HOUSES '*$2these*; dissertations andbooks NOft-f4BJ0#edi. CallCM-53DS after 5:30. , CA/CH, all MlHn kHaten. each apart­NpVV.LEASING Ed. Resident Managers. 477-1760. VcuraMy. fast and.reasonable, ment has its own privateprbr) patio or Prettiest. 1-2 .bedroom apartments. i J^^ *W®«A®n^on /equestr Qose nbootc'omtenIAC (W BRAZILIAN OEMSTONES. precioiit IWV LAKE AUSTIN oulet country Jiving.' IS In. 47|f)}3.'. bafcony, poot trees. lOOtWestZS^. «7ft-"••*r •"!,«•» »»ld. Pool, laundry. FOR BOYS near. UT AC private bath minutes. downtown YOUR f77-mu^. _ Professors, graduate students. Rent NEAT. Accurate and pnAtlY typing. 70 WW TOYOTA CORONA. Lao UMlera 2 BR-$180 up fabulous house at . fabulous Lakeway. cents per page. Theses95cants,taU447­ Pertacf ratditloa. Automatic, air. $129.00 ROOMS FOR MEN and women. $47.50 Furnished or unfurnished. Low winter 2737, f:. , -AMtFW. Yfayl top Bttt BWW. «H» 1 BR. $155 Eff. S130 AC Paid and up. Some wlttt kitchen Uctllttes. >rate*r261-5355. After-5 p.nv»161*6043._ HANCOCK III meals Wallace. 2710 Nueces. 477-»3M. fNEEDATYpiST? we're ^-secretarial vW SEBAH r»c*«Wr um ftaO»d enoln. CASUALLY YOU SUBLET COUNTRY* HOUSE. Private.1 ' specialist. Resumes, letter*, ttieses. wa iihbAwuFM. : . Creative Outdoor Portraits Wh West ot Guadalupe APTS. Tanglewood ROOMS FOR MEN. 2 blocks UT. MOO bedroom furnished. 12 minutes UT;$110. legal; stati$tical research pepers, etc. Y RAMBLER. 3 spaed. * tyLm-SB Save %Now 7»07 West Ave. 474-1712. Furnished hintry efficiency apt. on city Whllls. 477-7551. •36-5181. . . Pick*up and delivery avalJab!e. tl7-3323, v< mlieu uacaito ear -. . ViM» Our ShiAo bus roulK walking ffistapce to shuttle North VJ.P. Seq^t*rlal Service. PRIVACY GUARANTEED. For work-FAR - tMH.MaOMlr.WAR.IIMB. C$20E.45th ing NORTH, completeiy.-furn. 2 ROYCE NOW LEASING ' • Available now rant woman. Quiet badfoom house. i50^m>t. S150 rent •?> IWCK CENTURY. PS.VPB. Atr, . 4|ooAve. A .Can4]2-l7«t g 452-0060 netg Mnc vH>ri.», LOST FOUND 2707 Hemphlij Park • PRIVATE ROOMS-TWO blocks campus, & ) "Jaamilliliin ln.Cab Spacious Ctftitemporary NOW LEASING central air. MaaW service, kitchen, co-­ J OHO Mar mm lun.Mat SeB! Living! ed. 2411 Rio Grande. 476-2551 after 6:00 V »y gOWUAC ntlwadIn n-MALE GRADUATE Student. Private 5143 alternoonv3»5-220» mornings, — — ^SHUTTLE • CITY BUS ROUTES entrance. Private.bath. Quiet tt*^»S^«£S3;--TOAVY" uJcATlott -l-^edcoom ^ HUNTING neighborhood. Rosedata area. Price LOST U75 SR. RING. KA Crest. Lost ' MBA' ^ j MuSf-Sr Safe " . Rerinfermafioi^^TSn -WirBlllTPaid • Monday evening 1/20/75 on 3rd floor TYPING, PRINTING^BINDING Kareo Soykandail 317-4741; Jim BEB. Reward.,451-7231. i, ;, -1BR. J149-2 BR.$199 negotiable. 4SMGB3L iPtAMO TUNING <15. Miner repairs' LaCReecaiAssadaies.SlHSiS. .4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 Walk toXampus is a pain, in the SINGLE ROOM'forsutHaasa at Oobie , StHiecMew »emnn on7«jit -it Come Live With Usi Bocklj^hajrhSquare • !!!!• Center. 476-5647^ LOST 1-22-75 yellow Alrican Trade Bead ^;,-:THE'C0^PLE^^ i Necklace with spun silver links between But HabitatHunter^can . PROFESSIONAL7^ •> * MttlST SELL EWD goifer wffli.ajt. FURN. APARTS. beads. Reward. Cheryl. 442-7249.. J-CNfft tiilrt. Like ««w. UW.N . , .«•.45*4917; Help, with a FREE * mwmSm after •;«pjrv 471-3*0. EFFICIENCIES sSgi&feiblg&ji t°?.TFEMAI-E SIAMESE. 6 months. I-FULLTIME CLOSE TO CAMPUS»PU ^ Loca^n aSiejyilctf "a* cowlick at center of chesl. -1LEX PAUL war PMM iMnar. trs. .EKFIELDAREA.lbadroomwItfiaYw-K SHUTTLE u JS in ROOMMATES •Vlcjj^ |N£,R«te. Genefous reward. TYPING SERVICE IPa—wn. alar** «riai caaaatla playar «»a FumWia<| or gnfuraiilM. From -E BUS |specializing student i tm.mrsn.tro^rm.A»ivrSm. Mjy« »tot.*aielt|f. m> Watt Lynn. FROMSI25 KENRAY! 1!:"472-3210 and472-7677^1 4n-7m, 4rnuz Barry OiWngwaiar J'^wnl'a Pool, beautifully, lurnlihed. A complexes with access !.HAMMONO OPSIGMT Ptono good coo-LOST-MALE CHOW UT Vicinity. i •aMMMara. Call 441-doub^ or ttudlo bad. all ha«a du-APARTMENTS to shuttle. . . : ROOMMATE' NEEDED to tharo. two Reward. 459-553$ Day, 452-1727 Evening. tiKathar. dlipotal. central air and heat. . J 7Mi«narSc»p.m. bedroom house, Trayit Heights, by Feb.' SERVICES IBEDROOM>IK ptoiE.Naar campui 2122'Haiicock.Or. 305 WEST 35TH first. IBm0nth. L0uiS; 447-llM. . 1FEMOER PttECESKOM Ban. Hard • ftfwitM. camaniant to downtown. Mm Ne«t to AmericanaT)mtfa,«>alkhig dls-Come by or Call MANAGER APT. I*4S44I01 454-5*61 I^mm-cord* wtrt ilfhy original u» TJRAS"" •.J*"*. 407 W. *H. 4SMNI ???. •®Itor^L«0P Shopplno Center MALE .WANTED,: North Austin. Share ", UNF. APARTS. .CMtllRandy. 4IMMZ. BarryoilllngMtar Ca and Lubys-Near shuttle and Austin house with 2 others. s7J/blllt, pen ok. • ;SiNTRODUaNG^ 'r«!«n-.Two bedroom flats, one and two t W »»V !.» dlttortlOn. rayarb. baths. AvaHaNtone Jbdrm. 2 ba. with Habitat »36-3967 atrer » p.m.,. ... j FREE HALF MONTHrent with 6 month , a ? Lone Star:Movers# f j £ < £ £ ~ ,.CMOVE IN TODAY new shag-carpet; CA/CH.'dishwasher, tease. $134 jo. iv bedroom, sad Paulo We ain move you'at^ qulckly,. lfte> FEMALE ROOMMATE: Wanted. Own ­ disposal., door lo door garbage pickup. Aparlment$. Shag, .pool, balctnles, lively, an# as safely as anyone: Wa. do room ST7/month plus -rt bills. Call'441-block i*EW FEMOER Mo marb amd. E* "Ott Barrr CIBInjwatar Co. Hunters mahogany panelled, one park. Iwtaboutallklri^Wmovinolobs. Fora >. -P°®Lw*W^^tarvlea Ifdesired, wasnater la 1010 after 5:30.' 4f .» eanaM Caiiditlun.Mult MH.1 -LA CANADA ™^ye«. Seeowners, Apt, llldr call Ooble Mall/ Suite Ba. f-V. . Tavern; shuttle^ 15th Street. 47^5072, irte estimate call LONE STAR ^ -T I.B6IHI00MWP~Emda« a piano, . O^ATIO" ACCOUSTIC Cvttar artM , 472-1598 . 474-1532 . ntca 1 br apartment on aitti, 165 ABP.-MUST SUBLEASE >Urg« one btdroom appliances,boxes. ouMitng0tw|na -tlda weraga >»allaMa. pool and un CaU 451.-45ir ^ >• immedlatelye-Kaepliiy.deposit; 441*4569 • call anytime. 1 BR « $165 ABP ' ALL CilLlliS PAID after.5:Wf0f.dttal!fr;rJ,^^ • — WANTED -roommate for take house. WALK -PEDAL "SHUTTLE 2BR4240 Prefer fem*le. 266-1t92, , , BEAT BROWNSTONE ' V ASSUME LAST4montfttof laataat latt GINNY'S INFLATION A»ynt pr»ry»t l>llia prlca. Larga J 1 BR $149.50 PARK APARTMENTS FEMALE.SHAREVroomY^lder 2 PUBLIC NOTICES NOWLEAilNO -Mlnt-Eff $112.50 bedroom house. Prefergraduate student ; COPYING CUITAKSTKINGSETS: . SMVV Hwoarn at EnglWi Alra tor tnSAII Are conveniently tocafed 6> priced rteht.. iw.worklmi^person.>1p2^0,Vi^blllilAve. MOHHE* MARMOHICAS SAW WK : ontienld, _1" handball, iwtmmlftg. .• 4 BLOCKSWESTOFFORAG F 4511J-713/. -.^-1 -ai? YAMAHA CUITATO Sayalt* ;240#LEDNr 47M447. ' shuttie bui route >» . . • • • i-NOTICE OF INTENTION : ": : 447-113®. LONGVIEW 14Ibedroom apartnWnts iocatad on. From SI42J0 xJitiJ ^ NON-5MOKIWG;FEMALE headedJIOW!: • • TO INCORPORATEi .. -A COWTEMPORARY APARTMENT. "5 • APTS. -ALL ildiPAIO^ > ^-3^ "Your :«wn. room. in.South Autfln: .Notice . 1$. herebys olveff lhat Wayna w >.f .laVr t^-sK»'(­ AMSTERMUSIC FWt." EtHdanclai *nd »o«»room>. '.'U0$ tenflvMrf--: T ? SIM^Lamar ^ ttMIH' to^house.Wl.Qytetarea,444-«92. EdWa^d~Sarvant/d/b/^VaTveLI%^42uOblB-AApa\4>. 47W171 UlSPaima Piaia. 4 >msumtia tu> who$#principal busMtss of* v • f „ ;MMLAvaca auidator*, ' Fr«e:i • 1 & 2 BR >GREAT;S^RlNOaAd$Ummefl0(»fi^---% . :'•' * t*ngo?(p^op#f,y ^ FEMALf;RO(^MATE foihar^larga2 •i«i$ located at WirParm'to Merket ~ 7a4n.-10 p.rp.MfT* rbuUt around swimmingpool. Located on -V ,,lbaihapartmtnt.'>74moMh iRoad t»6a;HarrtikCwntr/Texas, .9" »;m. v,S p.tn.;Sat. }$ |Motofcydei^Scil^^^^SSrt^i; 476^7688 • north side of Town Lake.Owner will payi "$T35" $152.50 ^' ptus ^HiitirER Awrii*. mam. i • tends, on or before JenUaiV1,1975, to be ? " —" EPMPLET.-II-MMITT^ IU. ABP, t$0(orpersonaldecora1ioa.Di$countfor name, pated December 19* W4,2-GENERAL REPAIR collective^will fin incorporated without a chanoe Of flrm • P*l YAMAHA Oruntgrwt llltior iMM ,1 year te*$4; Large 2'BR' 2 BA with 1 Bedroom FEMALE SHARE cute duple*'J blocks' : anytHIng" anytime anywtiefR anyhow. 2 BLOCKS TO CAMPUS , from campus.Qwn room>.V> elec.Deb-. Wiyna Edwai^SaiWrOwnar^. : ' •, . ^an^.CaROHPn. ,pr|va»e bath. and watMn closets. >215 >-h 476-22TO. ---35fe-' FROM S145 ALLBILLS PAID. bie.47t.Mt3 enfffm*... RATES *6w.: One ABP. iairdtf f$fudto 2 BR .1 BA, SI49 " •• V\v' i CONFIDENTIAL CARE<4pr'pregnant I»Ibedroom efficiency. Full kitchen, l;-';DORADO •. 'apartmentnear cam- IRed-Wver^ Act iv, carpefe* large walk-In closets. Oriental > ."«m»TosH^g.. Vnmal*rled .mothers.. Edift--G^lajne^ NO. WT. 47V0.33 UNF. DUPLEXES \ y Home;. 2301 Hfmphllf. Fort Worth.; furnlshliws. PeacetuI courtyard with -srfinJo ; ,^Si472«W 3J&#SSS'SiJfe, Ir> freenumb#r.1-loym-l10*; FRI'S-SHURRLE BUS CORNER ^ .# | Stereo-FofSai» i:fSS!E-.?l"-F„MOHna* rent'with * F. ,?FCH6CK OUR SUMMER RATI» VLW«AABJ,5-SW ^ABORTION^'ALTERNATIVES! ,> Preg­ ^ Mbse. SW4 JObne bedroom, Sao 472-2147--472-416]' , ;MILANO f nrs r-TTV/ * "intend dis>mted?Tielpls atnasr as -dWMtedTflelp.lsMisMr at OSystan Barry Oliilngwater Company-AMPEX STEREO S tem-Casselte Paulo. Apartmanti, skag. .pool. 'PRETTY DUPLEX. -racarder. s»**lt w Tor. speakers, APARTMENTS a<«Mnat, bWcontov .maihdBeny pmfled, one MtSI KlTM-— iTajatji, shuttle, ijmstrekt. "jmehenes-RetaB:«tSi.M ALL BILLS PAID '! MISCELLANEOUS New reduced rates. on our luxury ^efficiencies and S bedroom. 2-balh :J W-HJJ Speakers U5. Panasonlc-1700 :SHUtn* BUS, ABP,"Ibedrbom pool TIREO OF THE ; -.apartments.-Town Lake area. Call to-fenced backyard, mMn4 pkrklng, ex­.. day^^W'W., ;5 waler/pald. 47t--: «wW' and laundry. Guadalupe 9 blocks from Intramural, Urge one bedroom apts. tm to-1150 Mll-exl.213 70S West 34th UHoSo F?EIGHT SAL*5^? 2!!ttKEtai (Across from-Peasa; f leid to615 Del Ray,SWS.00 allIrtllt paid plus electrlflty (at low comtrtercial Dear Anrt, ^ w yw t»i0j£agajg!gi 477.2m UK N LAMAR J> a," " 454-8239 rates). Pool, laundr-""——" — NON-FRIM .-/?> • • f.Rio House. Henggil-~ sunolesses hltchln 477*1075 ^Wk^campus Send n.00 -for-information SEAFAX, South Shore/ CHARMING otpr. T-i, P.O. BOX 2W. Port Angeles, What'i a Sn4k Pay my dog; ^Washington MN2. CONTEMPORARY , 3 ? BUNGALOW Vi -?ALX, TO VCLASS ROOM & BOARD -.aeglnnert Spefilsh l&tor aswST" NEED AGREAT.^ll PertKt tU*loraubtarAwrei. ttwio biSmendWdwiis™ Convient location -ciose' td UT*campus? • -;\' NStSON-SOiPTJlunl Itidlanlewelry.' Elevated walerbed, 44||}|^. WtaMMat add lmmacwtateconditio? t PLACE fO LIVEtl .,Airlcan endMexican imports. 4411s£(h FBMALEST TlRED,Of llpertment!' MacfifgiMt^Mw dh£*t>»r; soaring TRV-THE, . Congrels.,444^114. Clowd Mondays MvK>o?)«Aov,:lntoCont#ll4i;CMddorm.: -Judy;.I Love.You Bll[„ ^ c«lild«ii^,*^M^ItHled private Large one, two and threebedroom apts^Wlthplenty ^rroW^.G^^K^Ijd.ci,4^ Rackyani; .. aydertut : "older?-US ^OUMTAIN of storage. From $135 all bills paid. >• , BLACKSTONE LeA^NTO PLAY OUITAR. Beginner ^Chavy WJO.'^T^1'^1 -aM ^Ivenced..0/*w:,ThOfMisonAPA?TMj£NTS Wan*'Barbelli^ Reasonable:-4514372-;Landscaped courtyard, pool and tfaypround.jV' • *4 Share, a lafoe worn: for U4Jo/mo^ or1 ,jurquortf .-necklace. Zunlr474il»7ir'-­ sfetake an entire "roortrtor.WitM tor: Brand new effidlency'v^ri&'ontf bedroom%#\ nlshed, ail b|ilt »kld.MaMMfvlce one* your own roommate OHM*.* **" » J'-r.-* , .. e GarrarisLtSB tiimtab(e, 474-ii71; }!a week/Bring yodrowniroommete orwa WTyi. JSS^overlookinfl sthe water -%iodern, vfbTaVtV'super Iwill match you wit* •CompillbT -Sarrard^WW.turnlatneuo. 454-2142^"S Thft ls.etonomy,V convenl " fSSmli i *<*** *•* yl«w. From $149.50 all tilHs Jiaig. ^ ' Ss -,-r9­ jg^yasiasrs^sf >,Jo PLACfe Mi Com* byandviilt'wUhastaffihBtlsinti rj5 '-0.?^ v*> jifSfSt ^ juaa.knrf MUMi<*aift va^.v«',v Ish lo start a tManu*l typAwrjtert case,'»4S 442-3|0t ' Sieve Hhtr « •i " i;Mwa®»r Sff r»fJH^r«ord4r. 47fr#i6 LAROB 1 bedf TUTIISI'HUX&'SFU!*,.UUHOIJS tit)plus < 300 e;"Riverside ; < *!F'N fOrnlshed, llrvuntur P»UStltHMIet.47»­ fMisc.^Por_ •333f--_;' 44M7W. Alleri4«l4ni NO 8ftpra IMIiSiS\ •3 paragonproperiy iV 4i rlRST MKMTH rent rttOct HALiiirti^wrintarpreil S^^.f^^wipartment* tr. -• > '' SJI2R,S3S( *!* *y««a»*».Tnan*ger'»ff. JnirHtl#ativ»;rtpor wnd.sys^i^Tm r una ^votac11^ S»J3 1^15 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN p* *V<. -kh rifyk '*£?*£&­ *5 % * ** f sT i-tH# Zltok. fi, ^ '^ rjm ,11C% ^••©J-" -Jr 'a-s^-vagi ill Garland Continually in the last year, Two main reasons influent--Nest year is going to be ah "Conndtantthip by eon- Students on this campus have• ed my candidacy:1) to insure excellent time to be editor of gultantship, ride by rule by been'frustrated over and ovei| that a' qualified journalist The Daily Texan. Things are rule by rule, firing by firing, Sgain with -the' alienation would be elected Daily Texan changing fast likemost jonr­ grant by punt, allocation between faculty and students' editor, and2) t^offer students nalists. change is one of my byallocation, business and and th&hdomineering ad­ a candidate', free from main fascinations. government are taking theministration. This frustration political connections, Each editor in the past has university. They are taking has 'been. pushed to such a • I have served The Texan brought his own personal it away from the students,point' that widespread apathy " during the last year as assis­touch to the newspaper. I'm the faculty, and itself. Thishas blanketed the campiis: . . tant manag'mg editor. make- not about to say that I can is a conquest. The average But students must realize up editor, copy editor and make the Texan into a mini-student or professor has that they still have a voi$i in staff writer. My Texan work New York Times. But I do only a worm's eye view of itsthe. current University con­experience covers two long have a lot of good ideas for happening. The shrewd and troversies. That voice is The sessions and one summer.­ helping The Texan reach its purposive Frank Erwin has Daily Texin, and it must In; addition to Texan ex­full potential. a hawk's eye view."maintainoonstant representa­perience, I have completed27 tion of the! ideas and opinions When I say The Texan has Bonnie Dagger hours in the School bf Com­ of students; 'f" the potential to be the most "Our Invaded Univer­ munication. My supportive distinguished liberal sities" fields include French (15 • PRE^ENTIAL ; newspaper , in the state, Tni Problems of the University. hours)'and English (2i hours SELECTION COMMITTEE not kidding^ Think, of all the educational system have for after spring, 1975). ? — The Texan must maintain a resources that are available. toblong been virtuallyignored Goals fortheupcoming year —Taxon Staff Photo* constant rally over the firing On thiscainposareexpertson • by The Daily Texan. 'Scott Tagliarino are: V • '"'.'vf . • >•, Eddie Fisher^ everything in the wprld and Willard Hall It is now timefor The Texan .* L of University President Bill Garland ;^fl • An insurance that The Stephen Spurr.In addition, the libraries stuffed with infor-to give wings to -the worms, should push for .those -in­Texan will be able to survive Mary Walsh. Barry Boescfa on my own staff. This is just Texas Student Publications ' matron. The State Capitol is wings to the perceptions of creases when the 64th financially. With a hard-and Mark Villanueva were another way of making The Board should initiate afunded right down thestreet There is students and faculty so they Provide a forum for Legislature .concerns the fought battle, well over half hurt by the actions of the Tex­Texan better and more rele­ study group, consisting .of scandal and corruption olr may at least have the hawks' students and faculty to air University budget this ses­the student body chose to sup­asStudent PublicationsBoard vant newspaper. \?\ students and faculty, which every corner. We've got a lot vantage, if not the hawks' departmental issues. sion. The level of pay forthose port The. Texan; but without and by the actions of Dr. Beat reporters who cover would .review the most of fine writers and . capacity for immediate When concluding articles «in-control of our education another fight this year and Lorene Rogers. The move by long and complex issuespromising candidates, in the must be ihcrea,sed above jand, every year. The Texan will the TSPBoard to reopen filing researchers here, too. should be encouraged to write change in the University. sum up the findings, a disena­ country and lobby before the The Texan should take ad­I don't promise an intangi­ble pattern will perhaps beyond .t he nationa1. degenerate intoa "journalism -after the Mondaymeetingwas interpretives. Reporters by regental selection committee educationalranking of this un­vantage bf all these resources necessity must become ex­ble reorientation of TheTexan emerge, perhaps fonly a lab." an indication that the;board . in^tteirb^lfi;^':^;^^,... . and initiate a permanent in-toward moreUniversity news. colfage which somehow beara iversity. . • Opening the doors of The felt the three candidates who perts on the events theyvestigative team. It would be I do propose an investiga­an uncanny resemblance to an ' Texan to hear what students filedWere not qualified." The cover. Many times complex • BUiLblNG USE FEE foolish to believe that an in­tion of each University Erwin profile. f want, to read in the paper. > board reaffirmed their Moo-events are reported in ?..»11 CEILING .— A. ceiling oh this • ADMINISTRATIVE department, inspecting each vestigative team would con­University Focus would, ^ r Women's athletics, and In­day decision ,by first decer­segments and readers have a fee whicheats away at half of INTERFERENCE IN TSP stantly bebringingscandalsof for. thequality of education by supplement regular city,and tramural sports -(competitive tifying diary. Barry and hard time following what's go­ our total tuition costs will be AFFAIRS. The < recent dis-Watergate proportion to light. ing on. means of student and faculty state coverage in the -Texan. 'anil noncompetitive) are oidy Mark. After pleas were'made proposed .in the 64th qualification.of..two TSP;cer­But there are a lot of things Iriews. Though continuing to ,* i a few of the events presently to the board to vote their con­Interpretives enable the Legislature, the Texan must, tified editor candidaj^sby the going on of deep interest that "University Focus," in a spotlight progressive issues of • receiving inadequate science, Barry and Marywere reader to gain the reporter's maintain constant support of president ad 'inteiHm 'is but a normal beat reporter hasn't series of approximately 50 ar­interest to students, the Texan coverage. certified. The minutes, were insight and knowledge into the this measure to see that the another example of the the time to get into. An in­ticles, would: editorial page would consist of • Improving the quality of' given to Dr. Rogers Thursday "truth" of an event Inter­ lid is kept on this already wrongs of toVSSP Charter vestigative team could do • Examine student views of firmer positions than those life in Austin and the Univer­morning, but a report/wasn't pretives should always be overburdening educational" whichgives'the University ad­department curriculum. currently offered on Page 4. -WWSTS-f-t-iirt--VWnfc^L'-; Tuesday, February 4, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 131 tfl­do<•• £U» 4.If no,,.ia '0i cost. ministration authority over • MANDATORY UNION independent. progressive hurt every candidate whether porters of the raise^feve • An evaluation of the in-The approval of the minutes, claimed thajnis4$ffiiif ytfcfc&l-their operating 'structure • creasing parking problem on •even with questions, of legali­autortjgil|fiaUy<3aise a raise irt year. •• . on safety programs for faster. If candidates Were an, ewotual. raise easier. • Presenting the students' themselves, or if the'full TSP Students should not be forced There are also several side6f paying for anincreased Board had explained their to pay more fora Union which things which I feel need to be . Union fee Sn: times when votes, the time delay would be • UNION EAST -In an un-all • Continuing battlesagainst sion hurt the candidates'abili­' usual instance, the Board of discrimination, purposeless ty to react, students did not be taken of student opinion on ministrativeinterference. didates were until Monday.the oewj Union. Thtf Texan • Promoting theTexas Stn-Hie' bureaucratic system is accuracy between the two can is funded by a wide variety,of to provide voting members a ed. The TSP Board had rates be insured. The student voice students with: different basis for judgment ' it discovered it must obey. must be a fair and accurate in the past; the editorship has pool of'opinion. been controlled by one faction • FACULTY, AND STAFF should never be antiplled by by definition SALARY RAISES -This is any faction but shoidd reflect areas of University considera­elected, I hope to take in all " tion. If we are to do anything considerations before talking a about improving the quality bf stand on.an issue.wemust tryeducation here it has to start to represent everyoneTtathonwith increased salaries for the editorial page and in our TSP Board . staff anc| faculty. The Texan news coverage.' these matters Thfa js wrong. The'"ISP'Board should-be in-Sjjfendent to make-their_own decisions, and thischange in must be made in .thfe coming .The Daily Texan, itself. tuition bills: only did the timing of thedeci-However, these changes center -around one central ' concerning the Union East opinions and ideals: Too often of this University* Tbe.Texan. one of the most neglected the-majority of'opinion. If • sity by Supporting Jeff Fried-• released until 5 pjn. Friday. man as mayor and promoting The timing of the release should conduct;its own poll 4 CONCENSUS OF. dent PublicationsBoard to in­to blame for the injustices FEE RAISE — Although^yp-1 voices on the City Council. or not he or she was certified. ing on _thls fee -wW not campus and also an emphasis ty, should have been done theftSEuitj^iifltf tend to make bicyclists. called in to defend they do not even h&ve.l changed and reformed within building' use fees dominate more understandable. Not Regents has allowed a poll to philosophy. ^Jiv '?'•'* < construction and. ad-know who the. qualified can­concerning this issue so that OPINION -The Daily Texan sure student input necessary ' Mary, Bairyand Mark receiv­WAX DIPILATORY "Freedom of Speech Repudiates Censorship99 •Zijyi RICHARD UZZELL at Large stories that take a great deal of research. The editor of The Texan should be an advocate. An editor should realize and par­ticipate in theissuesat hand. I will agitate against sexism and racism and will recruit women and minoritiestowork (EDDIE FISHER continued.) Would it be fair for the TSP Board to be allowed to inter­pret the rules hrall cases, or is the certification process even necessary? All the cer­tification process means is that the administration doesn't trust students to*lect clearly labeled as such. Above all. The Texan should be fair. A lack of fairness only serves to lower a newspaper's credibility. As a Texan editor, I will always strive for fairness and the highest level of truth. The two go hand in hand. an editor. If the TSP Board is given rules they must follow them to the letter. An editor's race would benefit from let­ting the students decide which candidates were qualified, either, through-»TSP input or through a direct election. • Seek comparative views With added University in­of transfer students. vestigation, a livelier tiveness of professors positions on the issues, The • Examine the position of Daily Texan would strive for •teaching assistants. that level of journalistic ex­• Question the necessity of cellence which has eluded it degree requirements. so often in the past. ratios. University years to gain • Investigate the need for better awareness of more facilities (Do we really ourselves, we could only gainneed all this construction?) by increasing awareness of • Explore whether popular our institution, while impar­professors receive tenure. ting that awareness to thos£ • Expose inteidepartmen-both old and new in the ' tal controversies which in­University administration terfereiw.with department' Who will ultimately decide the • • Evaluate the effec­editorial page and firmer Compare' teacher-student As we attempt in these quality.";; \ \ >' University's direction. SENIORS: v I P -fX 1 -I i\j ~|tj r-o-l mi * 1> I'i<4 * i-ti X I The ^sHmjyaY to arch eyebrows and remove unwimUR^acial hair. * ' 71 If Call today for Billie Stout' our specialist-in this service. ABANA UNISEX HAIRSTYUNG ' 1910E;Riverside 1 -.t 4#2-7924. "f PHOTO SERVICE 222 W. 19th & 5324 CAMERONRD; 476-4326 453-1958 Interviewing anad agencyis like falling into wonderland.It humswith magic and mystery, and you mightask yourself, "How doI fit in atthis place?" •­ Credit*. BJ, Missouri, '57. Doctor of Jurisprudence, Toledo, '64. Copy Chief, Bloom, '67. ... . I can answer thatquestion. Creative Group Head, Tracy-Locke, •nt ?at ;litb.fr[-•or m*.'/ yflTEXAS •NION S|raES K MH(ALEMDARTION SALE NOW UNION SOUTH INFORHAItON CENTER NiKKORMAT FTN CHROME ^ aQ 053 WITH 50A|M F/2 1B4S .... ..ZOO $32.50 NIKON CA5E NO. 487 i/ ^ PUB^A$B>WtTttCAMERA ... ........../2 K1CE |Rro^T^'^ro7v7o%TAvi^'^^^ACOIO«| |OR ANY NEGATIVE COtOR HIM PROCESSED BY US, INTOi jSTANDARD JUMBO SOK (3R, 2R. 3S). , , J L : >CGUPONiXfUttS JUNE30, j975 I;r v The Jim AlbrightAdvertising Seminar is an intense three-day focuson these specific themes: 1. How tointerview anagency without soundinglike a'fool; 2. How anagency works; and 3. How to think andact like a copywriter, art director, producer or AE. The first two themesare to help you with your interview, but theyare by far the minor aspectsof the course. Holdinga job' after gettingit, in advertising, is the hardest part Hence, the importance of theme three, nowand later. ."til'71. Same at McCann in Houston, to '73. Some accounts: Exxon, Frito-Lay, Borden, Pepsi, scores of others. Several former co-workers havesaid thefollowing: "One of the best copywriters I'veever met" MorrisHite, Chairman, Tracy-Locke, Dallas. ' "My first boss.Still the best writer I ever worked with." Ken Baron, UT '69, now with DKG, New York. "A natural, asad-man and teacher." Ron McQuien, President, McQuien, Lawson and Knowles, Dallas. If you will give me175 of your dollars, you will receivethe aboveinformation in . "A great film producer." HerbStott, owner SpungbuggyWorks, commercial an tnformal atmosphere,on acattle ranch TV film-makers, Hollywood. 30miles fidtth of Dallas. You will also "A fine all-around advertising talent" receive threeadvertising lunchesand my Jesse Caesar,Creative Director, personal appraisalof yot^r odds on McCann-Eiickson, Houston. making it "A greatcopywriter andall-around 'XT*'?* Overnight arrangementsare upto you, or perhapsup toany'relatives you have in Dallas, advertising man." Bill Hill, Creative Director, The Bloom Agency, Dallas. There willbea maximum of 10 persons per dusL Thespring breakseminar will be For mpre information call: 214347-2551. No ans363-6216 held March 25to 27.Seminars 2,3,4and 5wfll be heldTuesday, Wednesday and .Thursday eachweekin June. . If you want totake ttie'JlmAlbright AdvertisingSeminar, send mea short ., letterabout yourself, acheck for$75, SCOTT TAGLIARINO '<5 and SKxjrchoice oiweeks,in order preferences _ TEXAN EDITOR. ?Tlii|vjUitloii» ofUnivwsityHfe gnat acholasticatty.—•i^'phy»tc«»». 'W>•& ' " \* -,J t r k\ *•53 W'* y 'T ,Ia •* ¥ 1 5^ ' ,, _ .. •, _ -_ Ivs '^1 f'_. _4_.. i», $£&$$$$ * ­ WS**1? ®SSwWi %-3 ^ 3 te­ • ','. •• •-• .. .... ':• ' (• Stephen Burke Rick Cam Rim ^ Paul, Watler During the TSP elections, Two 'issues deserve con­ My candidacy forPlace lof most of the focus centers on siderable attention-' from The TSP Board's primary the TSP Board is based on the (he editor election itself. Bat anyone tunning for a place on. responsibility mustbe to en­ . following four points. the races for TSP Board the TSP Board.' sure qualify publications at positions are Just as impor­First how is the Texan to be;., the University as training tant because the TSP Board is funded? I don't believe opi grounds for. journalism and 1) It is vitaly important a very powerful one indeed. tional funding can continue to'. advertising students.This can work for The Texan; for the that the TSP Board be sen-be donehy Increasing the pay •' Sitive to the feelings of the sta­ simple reason that anyone and incentive pay of Texan rt dent publications' staffs. who wants to isfree to pick up staffers 'and volunteers In­ Because^ the TSP is a a copy. For athletic or CEC volving moreadvertisingma- One of the powers the board . regulatory agency, .the star events, which are also" op­ jors in tbe.Ttxan advertising possesses is the power toap- '• dent membersare oftenin the department:and tyr ensuring tionally. funded, there is < point the Cactus and Pearl perilous position of:sitting in the Texan complete editorial someone at thedoor to check editors and the managing . judgment of their peers. A independence. IDs, thus insuring that only editor of The Daily Texan.In board member with this, those who have paid get in. thet past; some mild con­ responsibility cannot:pretend •-In order to increase Texan ' But with The Texan's system troversy has arisen regarding to be an expert In all the staff salaries; TSP: must of. mass distribution, there Is the.appointment of managing Stephen Burke' • facets of each student publica­receive guaranteed: funding.; editors whose opinions of bow no way?to check who has or tion, from Pearl magazine to The Board of Regents should . *,ul hasn't paid. Rick Camp the newspaper should be run i-Jt1-i the Cactus, and therefore it is he petitidned and pressured to A negative check-off is the Jim RiHfc ' and how news should be necessary that he be open to restore the guaranteed fniw providing students with prac­ sons to pay for The Texan best answer for The Texan. tion, and 'legal questions presented conflict with those the comments, criticisms and ding that was tost last year.' tical expofence.Thisdonld be through the.fee.. With this system, persons who should be decided < by legal of the elected editors. I will suggestions of various staff Failing this, a positive check* done in much the same sincerely do not intoid to pick counsel.^"Professional vote to appoint a managing members. that would rixpand-the^role of off system1 should be sub­manner as the journalism editor who hasa good working up the paper could later claim newspapers turn to legal the person in charge of libel stituted for Ihe present department now does withrefund, yet most students counsel when knowledge of newspapers and a libel is Texan editorial and protection forTheTexan toin­negative check-off systemMotions have been would still be paying for the suspected. The Texan should whose, "newspaper clude any form of veto power used by'Students to subscribe . departments. presented to the board which paper they read every week­ also. 2) There should .be an philosophy," is similar to the concening controversial or to The Texan at registrations would place morecontrols on day. The Russell affair brings alteration in the current TSP , editor's own.,,. t distasteful subject material. No organization can longsur-­ • ii>*v; i , Texan copy, and.that, to me, -The second Issue relates another question .to> the sur­requirementsfor.Tex-, vive when its year-to-year-. Finally, The Texan must signifies', censorship* I will tothe recent' resignation of face. What if taste or wording an editorship thatwogld in­ fundiiigbasis to'imsWhle^r^^ have complete:editorial in- work to insure that no un­SteveRussell becausehis arti­is involved, rather than libel? clude aprovision toallow can­ jS'-'iyi' ' "" "s '< dependence.,Only.in cases of The optional seryice fee; necessary controls are placed cle was "censored" or Here, 1 believe'editing might didates to-fulfjll the, 10-Week Jn the aUied'fields of jour­possible iib^j should the TSP which funds The 'Texan, lit on;Texaii copy,and, if the post "edited." The Texan editorial be justified, botribt editing by Texan service quallfication-in nalism advertising;'and Board cqpcern.itself with the part, should be kept in the of editorial* manager is manager said Russell's arti-• an editorial' manager who is a single semester, iw "" " ' sttdents tearnbestbyprac: extents of The Texan. It public mind to guarantee . vacated for some reason, I cle was libelous; Russell said not a students Which is what 4)A; n^tiv^sfiiflept'fee tlcal experience:; LWbold like should not be theTSP Board's secure Texan funding; I favor • will vote to appoint a person' it wasn't. Probably neither The Texan hasnow, A student cheek-off system should be in­to see the Department of role to serve asa review and a continued publicity cam­who will not abuse the power knew whether it was libelous paper should -be/ edited by 3) I am totally against any stituted to better guarantee Advertising work closely with censoring body on any Texan paign which would urge per-vested inthat position. or not. Libel is a legal ques-students. motion now, or hi .the future, funding for The Texan. Texan advertising in editorial or news story. Roger Thompson Don Martin^ Larry Levin Scott Turman This isa statement of Intent of Roger Thompson if he is - • The TSP Board In light of recent events con-' I am runniikg for the'tSP elected:, "I will oppse any is charged with the respon­cerntng the editor's race, I BoardbecauselwanttiP1 measure that would increase sibility of formulating stan­would propose a change'in the change the confusing censure power to anyeditorial dards for student recently4 'revised"TSP Hand­budgeting policies,protect the manager. 1 will also propose publications, and to see that book. It should be the sole freedom of our publications or. support a measure to those publications—Texan; -right of the TSP Board to cer­and insure that students-have eliminate the mostrecentrule - Cactus and Pearl—are run on tify candidates foreditor. The ' a voice on the board. change concerning "misstate- a sound financial basis. board is certainly competent meht of fact." It is.the' The Texan, for example is enough to waive certain s.':>.Too often a name is placed i&t. editors' responsibility to see one of the top University qualifications without jeopar­on the Ullot, the name is that thestudents'publications newspapers in the nation, and dizing the chances of qualified elected and no one hears the- are accurate. I will also work' its professionalism must be candidates. name again. I can give all' for better understandings on~ maintained. As a training I support th? negative students, an opportunity-, to matters of conflict between ground for journalistsit offers : check-offsystepiforthe fun­affect the decisions of the advertising and journalism the, unique opportunity for. ding of The Texan. I whole­board. „ workers if and when such oc-. gaining experience'and heartedly support tHe Pearl,­ casions arise. I owe no providing' credentials for * and believe jn.it*continualex­will approach'the job withC­employment/ Strong in­Don Martin pansion and improvement an ofien mind and not play vestigative reporting should i editorial pagerfor any view­It goes withoutsaying that I politics. I.feellcan dothe job students asid~ask for.no con-^f fl ^ >'M be encouraged With increased point: We must begin working would be receptive to any in­better because, I will listen staff salaries, particularly as now for LONG-RANGE plan­put from my .fellow students' before Italk. I will trytosolve' incentive pay for volunteers -ning in helping: The .Texan concerning any TSP business. the problems rither than ­ and contributors, and overcome its loss of assured I readily admit that taking on Larry taring blame someone for them. Scott Turman revitalized recruitment. funding. '• this job will be a learning ex-: \ interested students with a The Texan is also the only The board should never perience for me and I will be .question or a suggestion are source of both campus and serve> in a direct censorship actively seeking advice from encouraged to call me at 345­ national news for many. The role; that is the job of the any who wish to offer it $M4 anytime. * board has the responsibility to editor and hitstaff, Ifheboard see that The Texan as well as has a policy-making respon­mall other student publications, sibility andit should see to it are as a free and unhindered that the editor -candidates Texan Staff Photos for Place 2 press, covering events fairly, it certifies are qualifled and yet maintaining an open responsible.'.^*s '' . J «ifsfci i • -V-'i Candidate* for at*Large Bosition because' ihey cannotmake means more advertising to character of theschool. These • JUSTIFICATIONS OF tempt oFoae"regent (IMS) for: ends riteelim; the miserly pay^ compensate for {he toss. This groups cannot become a real CANDIDATES. Policy Louis James " set daring to sufflest that U.S.Hlgher pay will not be would reduce tlie effec­university until they free forth in4h*TSP Handbook for soldiers might pooibfy: ldli; enough though. A conscious tiveness of The fexan as a thenjselvisfrtm bureaucratic qualificationsforCandida#to civilians fai: Vfctnam^i>Ii;7®: effort-to find and employ learning too for the jour* and-commei^lalInterference' office should:< " I As the end. of the TSP Delgado Jenhirvgi minority, students must be nalism ttadeqti, which is one £hd pressure. tfcey are^sta1 moH a , saarter grew nfc»r «»!ngat first, controlled distribution the function of the~ board can­writer tells me every line >nwintelAei^Tlie boardAould worship vs. protecting youth a^ra^rom®cro?g^Me, would require .the develop­not be realized until it is com-I've got to say what he tells cbnstantl^iMve'to'mtintaln ment, "we do not fond ment of a new distribution t posed of.'ayihenatne Implies,-me" remarked Ed. "It's the from its i'd«/listift«i:<- "Qfe confld«^^ti>estad«iU; anything that we:dq;not coo? oyerzealousnsness v controverti department requiring vast students.-This goal of an all-sarrfeWlth me" re«p6frl&l the M your irtpreAntatiVe' IwUl trol," ringing in their eari,. sy obscured the basis of the amounts of money TSP can student board cannot be BeaVer. Annette, who'just James weloont'e vany -and all jM^regrataimo^ happehd by, chlmM In that f* fehole mess. This w|s that a not afford. Second the mass realized,until it is-of primary: s^ggestldns concerning the ' ciilly it she had extra hats for both of person other than the editorof : " distribution system is importance If we are to it*nU 3:1would slw like towmore it% theeditor candidatethat is -and faumWr.^'Notevenenough space , , <,• Sj>AFF PAY RAISES for1 ayidemattt! Inquiry of WbUc ^.rd againstcensowhin * minority grou^1 members' both, fair to those wishing'to SfveDunn T/ ^ ^ to tell your anxioui readers,"the^plibljcatlens are Im-pjffjciala and institutions, and,f ,• " sS'5­ Represented dtt thestaffsof all , run'ind also Insure that the! What Annette tlWjght^ / < •upptjring tlw communitywith-.%! WP^enterprWei^but par-candidates are •-rt Boards,Jtm and siMU:^^inMprit^W^^ ,an dpen "marketplace of. qualified for, ^ Andrew (fjiiilarly that The Texan. 'L' "The,' qualifications ldeaiwerful peoplft, jfhjdictl'^^ mi salaries for'texan staffi wilhlitf'io run have the tim$','1 (i»lhglrfW«eiirte'S6i to Jtiffat tfie qualifications, 'ay,, Tha a'ute'no^iops"untverslt| sgmta'ino^itoWMtjij • WMNWrttom,,« phenoniWipmo^fihw T„„...stHano(hers, ^iefafd TOBis thatof funding , modem and historic w6rW. u 'think,It I#,an inexcusable Theftiily.Texkn. T$P«an'f basically a self^veriilrtg iri-^• m lijitt'qualified v^ffiftd-HdfgW^The ^exartv.stitutioft In which thestlidonts^ ' vWMrlty.groiip^embors.are./'^^ay^oi.wouW mean a lois^ and faculty. ,are sovmiignjl • denied the opportunity w itf fmm lpofyjho funding, that Is. they .make the' •;t|ii'! KP6QQ t i uesoay/ ^•eprua^y > in& .imW, • jj,.«