*%' r? r#S^£^VM^5ii,r -&< •• . -* j* % •**> . :'?R 'y^arUnd,''TerTeeBowersof flje: 'TexanStaff Wri yElectiqn Commission said." • V Iffi:, ryl'n8 which -for-,-^k^. Tbe three-member panel met with * ^ J. I him: front teafletting on the final 'campaigning day, Bill Garland captured • vthe editorship of The Daily Texan, • -defeating Scott Tagliarinol,574 to 1.26S |s'r-tln a Wednesday runoff contest ••••;lt?«FIn the race for the Place 1 journalism'.fSeat on the Texas Student Publications '; Board of Operating Trustees; Jim Ritts .;' :defeattd P&ul Watler by a margin of 151: -, Jto 135. •' StKVE DUNN won the at-large board position 1,195-to 1,17? over Richard ^jt/zzell. ,.. j.:**. Mote than 2,900 studentscast ballotsin I ^r:3he runoff elections, an increase of 500 'V^yotes over last Wednesday's figures. ' -£ Garland called his victory^,^'unbelievable" and said he had been ex-•••<•* r pectlngthe worstafter a Tuesday night I^.>3Upha Phi Omega Election Commissioh:'s juling enjoined him from passing ooU ~ ^eaflets Wednesday. " ""^ ^ The nding stemmed fromai&nplaint..* .Siled by resistsof the sixth floormen's ; V >wingot JesterDormitorywhichcharged' ' ^Garland with campaigning' within the: :j^residence hall; a direct violation of dorm ^policy. '! ISP ELECTION rales state all cam- i.-'^taigning -'in both University and mm: -.JJniversity owned dormitories shall con-. yforrn to rules established by the manage-''; S*-i5nent or directors of that particular dory i-S -^mitory." ~ ~?^Ttaecommis8innruIedearly--Wetlues­ •;§day morning that the violation; though it J :Swas ^ot Vwillful on€7'www1" w«el£ ;iWas not "willful or unerased," wias;-*^! Garland, his campaign manager and the residents "before .'the'polls openedWednesday and ordered him and his : ^ ^agents or workers not to campaign or "" yfcaflet during the election. ;:$i Garland termed the ruling "fair: punishment'\but said hedidnH think he ^hadtalkedto enough students in Jester tJo offset, those he hadmissed by not be­ gjfag. able tocampalgn 00 the crowded ,^Main »M ^' BOWERS SAID the injunction had not ted Garland's xight to freedom of K "»?-V-«\ ' r: «sr«? University of Texas at Austin Austin,; Texas, Thursday, February 13, 1975 .^speech; because he-was^still'allowed to mitted his eiTor, we\felt a on^day in­ ' walk around campus and talk to in-junction was the way to solve the unfair terested students. advantage he might have gained oircr : -Bowers added he was "shocked" that Tagharino." he said. .Garland was unaware of'the statute con­Garland said he was surprised at the cerning campaigning61 violationof dor-turnout. . mitory policy. em GtrUnd ; Scott r*g1l*rino.. i. no vrj>e«^ : tftquftlHiedu StcvtOdn)^, Rtctitrd UueN.. : no votes:. ^ ditqutUfitd^ toltL ' ruai P*ul Wvtler.. 1 no votes •V. , . "I figured more people would vote since there were only two of us m the 2X& runoff," be said. " \ IUBm Thesenior journalism majorcalled the cpntest one of the best Texan editor races he had seen. asii)e.from the con­troversy surrounding vtfe^ aborted Can­ -jM umn didacies of Barry Boeseh and Mary ^i5» A Walsh. •' if • Boesch and Waldi were prevented 151 from running by University PresidentAd ilM ; Interim Lotew Roger's decision not to _ 1J approve that portion of the minutes of the Jan. 29 TSP Bo&rd meeting in which P^loussion, said tbegroqi didi»texercise ^ Though neither met fully one^of the l^'-^ts option to remove Garland from the^l-qualifications dealing with past Texan B-«ce entirdy because"the nilehas beeh ^"experienfci. the hoard approved'them^o Ken McElrcy. fhaitman\.of the: cwn-jthe two were certified as candidates. ^ ^onfairadgan-. ^ Bill Garland "serious enough to"givean |ed tely the residentsand Ijecansehe ad­ ^i fredy violated in past editw'.dectiaos ^but is just now .being enforced.',', p? ; McE3roy'warned, however, i^at even f k minor rule infractions by.candidates dur­ ing the MarchStudent Government elec­tions would be lodted upon seriously byfjl,the commission. "Because of the large number of can­ didates we will be dealing with, anyonef5" -TBund guilty of viblatii^ rales will be »§..Iresh«ut of Indtin termsdt gettingawayl^iwithout being punished," he-said: Bowers said the commission was ^lenient because "therej^waUy no. rv1" AtMUtilAO -*" * v'--«•-«. 1 Staff ,question of Garlands sinwrity. • f BECAUSE HE left tbe floorwhen ask- TIA iLimited Flidht Service Temporary Order Refused Against Pilots Association : DALLAS {AP) ' -^A federal judge ^^in spiteof a strike by ground workers. . On Saturday TIA announced that it ^Wednesday ^denied a request for atem-.^vU.S. Dist JiidgeWilUam Taylor beard would resume partial flight,scheduled -tporary reStotaing order by Te»s lnter-^^therequest. Tuesday when Texas Inter-Thnrsday with or without acontract with natiqaal Airlines against the Air Line|%inatiooal also filed a ^ million damages iground workers. j-, PUots Associatioo (ALPA). " '-suit against ALPA. v ^^ The unioo immediatelyannounced that. TIA later ^ (hb dky it has-"HA's ground workers went on strike'^) an attempt by the airline to resume-. Defc. l;jbut the^company was paralysed; operations wittKMtacmtract whyusing is^ancdei Its plans to resume limited on DetSafter thepilots refused tocross­ , "'flights Thursday^and Warned _Ahe, , :ret;-lines~ ^ -leadership^AXPA^WIft'^gmyi: "^hpli^^^nt^oaXAS^fe"'•1"^trafRc^intheeifire SouftwestT"' i £restrainingor^ s ip; The akiine asked foi-the coder saying ras*Iniernabohal soogh\ tofkee^ •; ..•.!;it-;dki,.wA want the union keeping, the D^mlA1;but talkswereiusp6nded last^tfrom interfering with pilots vMid m pilots freinreturning to work Thursday we^c.. , ^ ,,, i^rff'want to return to work in. milefcl M.tO I6IP be^f^lTdBI ground wbrkeis* strike. In its suitagainst the pilots* union TTA claimed that losses incurred daring the . strike^^ by the; gro^ worl^iwas a vdirect resultof ALPA's refusal tnpermxt "the pilots to cross the picket lites after "Dec. 4. attorney John Harper adced the judge ttjtSRtheorderto keepthfc union " ^ Harper^aid^*'^ number of pilots have, informed us they would come to work." OillTix ^VASHWGTON (UPI) — A Hcmse-"* trust 'fund to finance energy|. "^rtDole, R-Kan.,said be was t of natural gas by electric utilities. j; money ischanneled only intobqtforatiori; > -Standby rationing aid allocation told by tte^n>iteJSouse that'Mr Ford , • Elimination of the depletion^ and development o£ new sources. f ^ systems to be used only in the ^entof a ' ,h« only 18 or S sure Senate "votes^,, allowance for'U^S.-owned oil well^v^ ^ An auto fuel economy ^wrequiringk^second ml^ embargo or a'shortaKe in *produceraore c '***** •.%-H from becoming law? ^m X ­ Le/vioisrf© un$% Mdrah;an alternaUveehefgy prwwn.^i^K^ SKS? Sitrtf roched tentative agreements,nmnber of meaiures. The9e: win enate Debates Quesfions for March Elections ~ - SpJ.rrtcomniended'to the Senate Detnocratie-PATTI kiij>ay pni before the Senate conceralng a^s?' i f?-Palicy Cc«ninittee; at a luncheon Tues-s Texan Staff filter vote of confidence inothe St)ident£f » day. ^ " • n--" The Democrats agreed on a down-the^ , iine fight against all of Mr, Ford's proposals deigned to drive up the prices; placed,on the March '5 Studentt;^tended the issue would jecelve a'i otpetroleum andother fuels,Sen. Ernest" GoVernment electioa ballot bat fall3£l§based vote through a r^erendunnK Tnaketl»race. ­ \ Garland said he had speni^ectkin dby in the Hill Country "drinlfing Lone Star "and relaxing?* * • He re-emphasized his.' dedicaUon to "University Focus," his' proposed 50­part series investigating 'University-.academic departments,saying he would put it out himself if necessary. " THOUGH THE editor and at-iarge races usedcomputer hallots.haiKl coun-^ , tihg of the Place l ballotswas completed-first ah bour after'the polls dosed. • Dunn's , winiung total, was listed as 1. 195 in the at-large contest but his actual vote total varied between lJM and 1,196 Votes during eadi of .the rabr times the 1 gas*. * SoUings sald the,committee agreedJUfttseetingtocurtail Importsbyone,million barrels a day. this:year would ,only intensify inflation and retard recovery fraih the recession , «.* ' -The Democratic, program envisiotis: Thursdety will |>e fair an4 wairrrfer^. with -southerly^ ^irtds from /6~fo 15" rnpB.Hlgh"" temperature will-be in ' with a proposed -the referendum who proposed ;the.referendum, ac| . wittidrew it after the iatgunvnte-^ ew^d theSenateordfeliberatelyfaift ^wwemade,^explaining, "IhadB6in|1f iiig to vote on the refwendum to'infp sure bsllotj­ m that we needed to hear. We^ Many student senators l^,th^>just heard some^th^ best\, w f,ssue cameu ( ? argumentsagainstrefere^uitas,and^l " ^ ^it took something dealing with the .The Studant Govemtaent electio^ia^ Student Senate itself to bring themlSf ' t6de r«l»i?esa referendum'to beaj^;^out" 1 ^ ± ^ proved 15 days before the electiont.^.^Parrish introduced a 'separate Wednesday the,last BMCtingl pr^0saWu-post|ii0ne41^1)nlonEas(^ before the deadline. ,3 „ ^ referendum until 'April 9 to fullyv T^^refwendum^qgestion? tha^. educate the campus on the issugand --were approved concerned cqnf"'--to disassociate the issue from ndence .iii Chanc^lor C^VliK A^^ political candidates. -- LeMaistre and.supportfor bringing ^ However, before asvote was taken 'Jqrmer South Vietnamese prisoned several senators left^nS -Ch^lf asa guestlecfiicer to th^ tyniversitx? •> meeting adtjounied: j Vice-President Bill Parrish voted When the meeting adjourned for ^ against the gue^t lecturer question'! i #p :wrath the' comment, ^"It's a 4hing'to pulonvareferendum. }Student Sem Sue Doty defended " To succeed,Hhe {tetition must have; \ittequestion by explaining that Mitliji.v 15'percentofttenumberofshidents?# alw^etoget^n^one here.It's not." who voted in tht last1Students just a matter ot pidclng upthephoned -Government election. ' ^ and paying1 some one like it-is for-' "'^SEariier in therrieetinir, *?£ ^ ., Twenty Pages 471-4591 in cards were ran through the card sorter overheating of the anil. which did the counting. McHroy said. Ita*i. wbo called tke voter twnootBowers. McEiroy and other APO elec­"pathetic." said he would vork to havetion workers said the sorter had The Ttecan placed on a refundable man­ 'iprobat^ added anextra vote to Dana's datory fe* system once he tateslns seat•final total.': so one of hisTotes v»as sub­te 1. • tracted to balance the final total the Ritts said he hoped to become tairiiiar I race . . witt the mechaaks of the board "fro$» ~ McElroy said Dunn bad beaten Unril the grand roots" and wwld sc^k sbk ­ in au lourot ine separate countsand at­dent opiajte before advocating al^y ' tributed ,Uie discrepancy to a specific nwasnes. V-C % 1 •IBIii wmmm smgis VrMiitf Dnfdeiu 'candidate by acdam CSty Cnnrihnan Bad Drjden a®-^ these problems head-oa ia -lus candidacy % major1;;^ reasoaahle. moderate, decisive^ -Wednesday, : thos . reversing his previous decision nottoseek political ^Mtto nm fdr'£ nu^farmajor." That encouragement became "a call fromallsegmentsof Austin that1 camnt now refuse.1 have hi fact reconsadered and now formally nffer mysdf as a candidate for mayor of Austm."Dryden said. "I gaess IVe been caught in what reporters refer to asa groundsweO." he added: ; Dryden expressed cooc«m aboat Austin's high utility bills, traffic problems and improperly planned growth. • "We have ap opporhmity to attack iSiSi Hi ipp mm 81S8S lp IS m mmmi-it V Ma*." he said. • ^ We ,te»e the /eapabffi^Ssi^V " Drv^ 'cWiaiaL^ V;""' ^"5^ tkydnpramised to "wageagMd,; clean campaign" utd said the mayor's position "is int a poGtkaistepping^tone forme. TU not make a sit^e decision as. mayor based on the political conse­ ; quences that that decision nnghthave. "Hy conscience tells me OTs: amply wrong to tlottat? be smcL 5 - Iteiag his campaign Diyden said he would "dissect every issne; thorpn^hly." •' 6-'f#-; Dryden will face two other ew1 didates in the April 5 efectioor jeff . Friednian and Bob GartetL - 1 T--* VT >5.^ is. %• ^Fronlt V»l V if y ~ Va, « a. 00, tort, rtt SKgXrS'S'S ™»»v'-%-/••%'/.. «•*,™»>,-, -!Sf., .-""We're nowlooking for a $, Wolf^ teels that thp board mitted. . • ' president, but if we cari't And -~:.vas lair in reviewing Swift's • one, we'll choose another qualifications for the job .. ^.jdeclsionoattei J vice-president," he said. because "Swift was DcQlm's .--..i:„j„, . i, -:' nr, «Ww «*"WW elationof^ya inyaiid. s w5® Jmfair ' An individual who has final Swift's major problems at the' '*' ~ ~ ~l~ > -ficfals for 1he Matcha special. THE COUNCILiS 5 , authority and will report to store'is his "tendency"to act ' .itfunicipalele^tion. _V'tpvoteoo author the board is deeded instead of " without thinking""5e is the ^mbeS''of'" According to Haai\ah,^ jarties; m«tingsan£lectuf^ ,» -jj w,u> a poker table, a ^/iThe plaintiffs are proposing-and R&eveibpment)' Board, William (M. ^Cunningham, ,... , reading room soon to have' resolution pn the next was' turned down' bi; Wolfe was. not surprised they wanted.Somte of the peo­ a $t prestent,.the center has chess tables, mo] room, available charter amendment, group for fundin^rSESlt^t Ssrift "resigned because ° ple here have to t«a?ur^ iCommlttee Althdbgh Charles Walker,. Jile'here are going to have'to membership of Mi people. .reception rooms *for"v either ballot wttch wottld prevent to court claii^K ihew vice-presidentoffinance,will:: • "if he hadn't have.quit, he ^realize that-someone has to ban| finances,. He's the best fWolfesald^«5. J;v ^d^toTtakfc actions which'^ff^3^^^^ ^ >-1 ^japplibation a&ingsub ss? ^5^3 liiiMe vice,Dresident we f'fcTwn .P^^femnjniTmoi'^.werp ^tmnulfl h«> |^^ tth^:proVistois t .That»they hired Sterling for sex "•i '•ipeans ^Walker couldn'tdo the ^" imothe^ for ? a •>" *--vjgi? l'lUbrariM.:Or;.any>: fm mittee Wednesday and goes to Antonio s^B»t^ HB ^7^Xon£rol over 'warranty. it 'dr^ttng t^prono«a^ of th« branch** ari of­the House for consideration gifted and ta1enled~'studaits' bought locally, Bock said. "s ~ --­ CUATRO CAMINOS ficial ^University cam munlcatlons raquiriog Where you will find immedfert# atMrttiAM the perfectgift for, -„ v„, / , , acting director of the ~ thatSpecialValentineV •mwHi -A bill to lower tpe age pf munity Development Oth >. -;V¥ *,*>f -compulsory education from 17 Francis W. SiarejkoVexr1" ^ yejirs to 15 was sent to subh* ,ed that the (dan utilized L I-Exceptlonaf glass *9? <4 Npttej^»l .Scieifl® 'committee. "Rep. John R/i^tioncoUected|Sr;tt^^i boxes, heart-shaped" -.Bigham of Belton. who iitirx6.TomorrowPrt^i5iniBd< lacquered boxes trodu«d,HB said, "IWs public iearingsB|p®m, • is the first tin^e I've ever had,1, if approved, ifce moij^yN andfacinating I©; i'~ 'v: time we've ever seen a bill for low Income'^piitieiti SStoSIS1® rli 'si *> ^ > that bad." ^center for senior.dtbens:! dean Rep. Carlos Truan of Coipus 1801 NUEfc fctMisriwtwLww-w. 474-522^: XfJZ i^rity ecb -language is English to enro1 ment a top. mm ^^itr the bUtogualjirogrthi. / •3^r-Kr"f >*• ^ A |««aS -' ; Pandora's Bo Don Emilsotequila jind pineapple Juice «ne group-JfcS 3 jS^ fscerit! , Spring*HjSHi* 3*k \> ML?, ^Blueje 'imi lOutside il i-Alterations! J l3K'Oua2 r*f/y. Pl4tnntsa • y,%* j |l#Sp§f» 34^5 V'S 'ij&eispfiajM-vtr* Begins in Belfast SS-F f ^BELFACT (UPI) -Both the Irish Republican Army and the British goyern&^nt "began implementing an indefinite cease-fire Wednesday affer, nearly six years of urban guerrilla warfare in Northern Ireland. ­>Na fighting Was reported in the province Wednesday. Britishofficials said their 14,000 troops in Northern Ireland were con­ With Sadat Ifs tinuing roadblocks but curtailing raids aid djecks'ojF suspects on the street Onassis SuffersFrom Jaundice. i~*'PARIS (UPI)'MuitimillionaireAristotle•* ----•••• IRA hideouts lit .vEfJsfew.xt is suffering frofn heart and muscular problems and led ".the American Hospital said failed tosiay severe jaundice complicated^ byfnm^aQio nf fttlo hi .The'announcement ma Onassis' condition was anything'but good since jbewasflown from Athens . to Paris last Thursday foran operationSunday to remove stonesfrom the gall bladder. ^ •.; -Ms. Onassis, the'.former Jacqueline, Kennedy, visited the K-year-old Greek shipping tycoon in the hospital f or two hours Wednesday. She has spent hours daily in his room. • * -„, , Communists Fire Rockets lnto Cambodic^ CAIRO (UPI) — Seorelaiy-of State. Henry A. Kissiogcr said Wednesday night he was "optimistic" after talks with President Anwar Sadat, about awanginga DewmiMtaTy«B)»weagen»ent agreeroentbetwccu Epptandlsracj. -• The two men mexptttedly extended their talks into the evening following an afternoon meeting .at the Nile Odta "Barrage Rest Boose near'CMH»::;v'.-; • Leaving the home af Egw&aa Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmi shortly after midnight. KiSBiger toM reporters. "! . am stillopthnistic. Thetalks werefniit­fai •• -" Kisanger first the end of the afternoon lasted nearly four bonis. at which. . "I-THINK we : made progress in clarifying the issues in which a solntion _ should he fonnd," Kissinger told oetesmefi. He said he was bopeful that even more progress would he made in their talks later. : \ "The basic problem is to bring peace to the whole area," Kissanger.said. "In readjing Oiat,therean(ioobtedlywiIl be "•dividual stqps. and"I personally have some idea'what these mi^it be in the contort of ov^all peace." i Before meeting with Sadat, Kissinger expressed optimism and said he woold .be returning to the Middle East "definitely" next month. • .. HiS TCtD A questioner who asked abort the difference between Israel and Egypt. "I am here because I think they 'are reconcilable." Sadat said. "I am always optimistic when!receive my friend Henry." Kissinger is. to' fly to Syria and then back to Israel Thursday. Before he departs. Kissinger and Fahmi::.will sign an j80 nullion loan agreenent — part of a $250 million American aid padcage pledged to Egypt in fiscal year 1974-75. The money, repayable over 40 years at a 2 percent annual interest with a 10-year period of grace, will be nsed to finance imparts of agricultural 7ahd industrial equipment, qiare parts and other essential com­modities, Egyptian and American of­ficials said. Kissinger flew here from Israel and what he called "very con­structive" exploratory talks with Israeli leaders. He and his wife. Nancy, then drove to Sadat's rest house. 18 miles' north of Cairo. A SENIOR OFFICIAL aboard Kissinger's plane said the Wr««jij beard a full exposition of Israel's views concerning disputed points in ttn»Mi*n» East crisis before coming to Egypt. Points at dispute included the Aba Rodeis oil fields and the strategic BCtla aqd Gidi passes in the Sinai mwwiMiw captured by Israel in 1967. Tte official said the Israelis indicated vtat they would be willing to do for Egyptian con­cessions. , "C ^ . PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Communist forces besieJng PhnMta Penh fired at least lO rockets into the Cambodian capital and its airport 's Clubs Faced I* Wednesday. One rocket explodednear the centralmarket, killingfive per^ sonsand wundinglO others.rnilitaiysourcessaid. -.-It was the Drstshellingof the capital iir^ix days. 5." Tbesourressaid vensed of Cabinet­,^evel.officials in the domestic'fidkl, but -^Jthe wrok is done largdy by the staff: BY NAMING RoAefeller aides to the two top positions. Ford has given his vice^iresident the stamgcst policy role the post has carried fin years.' 1 ' The decision reportedly came with some strong misgivings among some members of Font's staff who qoestioned giving the Vice-President that innch power. . ' • __ 1. But F«d'decided to follow through on his. announced intention of ^giving Rockefeller a majordonbestic policy role — a pledge be made last December soon after the new Vice-President was con­firmed by Congress.r5 With Woman Problem LONDON(AP) —London's exclusive gentleoien's dobs, bastions oftbe Tory male elite, were' thrown into a dither Wednesday over whetherthe new head of the Conservative 'Party should be wdcome as a member. /. '. For the firsttime in history,the party is.led hy a wwman, Maigaret Thatcher, 49. who was dected to the post Tuesday. "We are certainly faced with a dif­ficult problem." said. John Clemow, secretary of the 143-year-old Carlton Club widch traditionally' asks Conser­vative; leaders to join if they are not :felready ihembers. ' "EVERY LEA0KI OFthe Tories has "beai a.]mendier of the Cariton Club, but 'this hu ben' more by^way< of an hn­derstattd^'nitbar than a hard and fast ,rule.";(3e^w^s^.;^^ ;! On hMiettief-Tliati^tf^ri^ asked to join he sud:'^That 'wai be a matter for the dubcommittee todecide. Thiswhole membership thing is "1 "Of courie," Clemow said." "lbs. Thatcher would be welcome here,if she came along with a mendier." .WAAMB considered it a break-through , in .1963L when they were fist allowed into the Cariton Club as guests. /Av-:. IN seviskAL Conservative dnhs in northern Yorkdiire. however, the Tides are even stricter, and spokesmen, iBtar­viewed by the British Broadcasting Corp., said the clubs were male preserves and Thatcher would not be ad­mitted under any circumstances. '-«-*• But a Conservative Piirty spokesman said. "I rather believe that when -Thatcher-visitsa town you willfind thal they will waive the sex ban dutteg her viaL" . Asked what shewould do aboutjoining a club. Thaicher rqilied: ^have more important-matters for conskteratianV Author Broods in Self-imposed Isolation Tuition Considered 'f * i* ' > sei3­BYDAVID 1 v> ZURICH, Switzerland (AP)—One year after banishment from Ids homeland,': Alexander Solzhenitsyn broods in self-: unpdsed Nidation, disturbed by what he;; :fedsispsesdo-detente between Eastand^ West and daydreaming cfginng home to; ^a country not roiled, by Oommmaists. "Gulag. Archipelago,"hiSfiercetf denunaatioh of theSoviet penal system, • still.is a staple on intematianal best-;. seller lists.But his vweeseems tobelos^ > the Oak." '* ' . „ _ . chain tf labor camps evidently faOedlD THEPOUnCAL impact of Solzhenit-impress most delegatesat^iw ;syn's deportation has been minimal. Ex-Intpmatwiai I v:<^erts on Mtetnational Jawseem to agree. ^^tforci^sqme^intojexileisa viola-.\Sfrom noc^Gabg earidence. saggtsfeS a >tion of Imman rights. Biit efforts to take«£^vote of eeiBuie of (he Soviet .the case before the United Nations^ alleged violation ofa40-you-aid coovcb-^ Human -Rights^ Commission never materialized : countrte ahstained aAe'i -'S(M^fa9i^!<<9poBpr|C fSk Cidtt^ltoBviiig Mosb^^Oied^-^ tion aboli^ing daye -labor. 'Bat.'tyni World countries-.abstained sk3 is-;hot ;a" problem t Rex DITtavisT'direcfer'of DovnWith pen guns bareau' *»"Ws of the v_ weapons^ known as pen guns, are easily converted-to firing-smaD -J.T.-j-, \ r/', ^ ballets, from .22 to .32 caliber, with an effective range of up to 25 feet Prosecutors $ubpeona Democratic Reports, * >•lamnrrnrir vonACTe WASHINGTON (AP) -The^cMhgift^nrAshl»dOil.ln *^1 " Texan SMSiWdfcr; A bfll to raise tbeluitian'of foragn: stodents at Texas': state^upppfted, .sdnob to the same rate as otber non-r residents was eent to the Srate'floor ^ Wednesday after pasahg the Soiate State AUs Oommittee. -•­Sponsored by Bryan Sen. Bffl Hdore. : the b£D wwdd ^fordgnstndehts' tmtion to440jiersemesterhour, presentiypaid by out-of-isthte students. Jtoore, chairman o{ the State Affairs-; * * * * p u d t h a t t h e , " xi^g^t^B^B^estoitedthe 'Soviet party chief Ueonid I. Brezhnev told newsmen after the secret police had pidtte authori» a plane to the-West • "kXilE IS the worst thing that can happen to a writer,*'said HeinrichBoell, the Grnnan novdist and fellow Nobei Prize wumo-vHw was lu^first host upon arrival in the West r Both have yet to be proved wrong. But exUe certainly did not s!6w; Solrfienitsyn's place of work. In the 12 ;montbs.he has bea here he has written' * Iwudieds of pages ahd edited tixmsahds i of others.. : Hespends a14-hourdayinthestndy of. t tbe;plainty furnished duplex, where he moved with his fanoify last spring, living . . BytUted Press IntereatioBal Sen.; W:Ek Snelsoh, D4tid]and. said Wednesdayhis, prt^iosed revision of voter registration laws could delete the names of , 500,000 dead or relocated vot^hinm present voto-lists. Snds»h*sLuiC;badted by Secretary State MarikW^te, pro^ndes for aperma-: nait vpter registiation list and gives local registrars financial incentives to keep, lists updated hy purging names of ineligible voters.1 500,000 ANY CfcatnriCATES letuined in the ­mail to the registrar's office huficatng^ the addressee -had Amoved would ­authorize the registrar to knock that| voter's name off the re^strajEkn BsC "The currentsystmputsdoubt in al voter's mind as to whether h^'s registered or not because there is^nofj.'i reissuance of a certificate,'* Whitesud.f C4 Snelson's bill:rwould require fte^."j secretary of state to keep a nhtral file< "'I ^ Watergate special prosecution force has% company admitted last year that the^ -Vothw aKaiiBt the bill were Austmi the life of a fecluse. Unopened letters '"IN Tjj&^AST^the incentivehas been of all registeredvoters in the state,idvt . subpoenaed finance reports of «^>M^«iMeg(pantedgaalioi^^'i^.-D^^^-'teatak Sen.i pile iq> between icons and crammed to infbte: voter registration rolls," , local registrars could use the file;to "a Democratic Party for 1870 and 1971 to ajiM Strausshas saidbe was unawareof" ----^bookshelves.. Snelsoh'.said. Under presoit law, local check for ineligible voters. -' igriukl juiy winv^tigatlon into possible.it ''Ten,to 30 percenl of the U millionh vlglaQon^a campaign reporting law. be did not disclose the identify of tbe§%tant ihat fordgn stnlents be ahle to at-SiS says his Swiss lawyer, Frit2 Heeb. "f; voter registered and 20 cienis for each roistered voteis in Texas are empty'*'4® I Democratic Chairman RobertStraus^!, has Watimg for receive 40.: cents for every voter cer­ deceased voters." White said. Lit -;d^y on the'investigation: Strauss also; tificate cancelled. "Ihis will provide in­ ^ . ^^rstndentslheahletoahfe^THMbolll^es'ift^ te™® thent"-• The potential value at such a fitef|y|'^ declined a reporters "request -to view? CoiTupt Practices Act, whidi waSV?^-' as theyadd "a muhud leauhim;nrtcess"^ :Sx -While hehas been here,four new bodes cative to. purge,5' he said. maintained on automatic data procesa^Ppcobles ;-in vfo^.-ratithe^tiine,^ required that|*~ " ing equipment is unlimited,and itwfllljeiigJ% wMch are no-longer public; pditical cwnmittees opqratg^ te two^o^^ "Actually I ihinksotM ^ tlte foreign^ the three volumes of '-"Gulag the purging procedure by issuing voter a major step towards the maintenance"ofTHE SUBPOENAED reports covet: •. mwe states disclose poblidy the namesp! nte^p, stud&ts contribute inore Oiu they'getir;-ArdUp^gor.and. just this w^u'a 630-registration certificates every two •. pure voter registration rolls," Sndwo^wi ";,^tbe period in which Strauss, who was and addresses of all donors of $100 of^ years. -- &^fromour universities," BrodBSwfelf''l"^*^tiH^^When theCalf Horned : said. '."J";,-.-;.",....'. ~1 thfn parly treasurer,'accepted a $50,060 r\ more jCitizen: Input By GINNY GREENE delegates to tiie cttuen's convention. CiUttns who were involved in the 197S Constitutional Revision^ Mrs. Malcolm MUban^CRC vicee legislators and pdilic i^es«tativespresent r_ . -UMlMH^l^-lipggy days,"He continued; that the current constitutiowJprocess is.makiqg no ^x^iim^iidi^^iaftlag the opportuktynl, bwastteg time, money and ENERGY-As Crcmer judgment oh'-arevised cooslitiition." .. ^ v /Vc; Kripier, a Hanis&unty lawy«r. put it, "Its like a mother-u^. dected bomi -tay driving a hewfcadillac over a diff. ^ Boh&s In.d^totfHu,-3V Now a Man's" man ft^ in tho coWlbrt upp*r ri0. iWr,theMl hojl dMbppowd in\l94'l wh*n' Japan***.troop* miiml tor't^"piie^«a». .fx'- S' Page 4 Thursday/ February 13, 1975 J&W-S%-,V S^r-i, S&P%2gK: < _,j? it-«r» it isn'ta university co-Yc^X by the University president for four-year terms) on the board. The?i^ % y?U}'v-ninthmember is a paid chairperson —chosen by the Co-Op Board — 4 . Oh sure, the Co-bpstocksthe booksthataresonecessary to the cam-, ; and that chaiixterson has.always been a "faculty member/ v 'V*' *3' '' pus. But after that, tee..store is nothing more than a Highland Mall ' ; . Now — with Swift-gone and with some aggressivestudent members'. ,3 , boutiqueJ.You can'tget sUident,discounts (unlessyou consider'a 3per­ ,OT the board — a studentcould become chairperson,and studentissues 4if cent rebate a discount), and yon iton't receive services not found at C4 K Scoiild becQme important to the Co-Op?" -serf ?i* -­other stores. In fact; most students probably are not even aware that:; |Here are some ideas that could pnrie profitable to fireltore an& '* the store is;directed by a f&tdty.and student board. It is just another would help provide needed services to the student community: . ^ill ; • The establishments a credit union -, ^ ^ Hie one'aattttet long^p^tedithe IMvereityCo-Operative Soci<£ V ? • The addition of.employes to the Co-Op Board: Obviously, therfe -i ;ty", Inc. from*other corporations was that.it gave a ^dividend to its have been conflicts beteen the Co-Op's management arid -Co-Op ? shoppers. Since World War n, tihe Co-Op hasgiven from 9 to 14 percent . •Employes. This changecould only helpefficiency in thestore andcould m back to. itscustomers.But ~whoa thecurrent inflationpushed interest % provide insight to the'board. ­ rates up onmoney theCo-Opias always had to borrow — thedividends :A completestudent evaluation of goods being sold. Many items— •i#v-' " .wentdown. Last :year ,the was 3 percent. Current board t -­ ... *tich as theLonghoni toiletseat picturedat theright—areasfrivolous -- pHsla^J; years. **< W5^­ some dianges can occqr at the.CfeOp* to bring itback to the campus, and this seems to be the rigit time. Sterling Swift, the Co-Op'? ex­ecutive vice-president-and goieral'manager who obviously caused a ­rift in thestore, has resigned. In addition,Co-Op Board electionsare to; be held next Monday and Tuesday: To quote Swift in his departing letter, "this seems a good time to alert our constituents to study our -problems." -. whvp uoara. mere arelour students (all elected by the student body ­jltor two-year terms) and{hereare four faculty members (allappointed ? You can sdp this for Henry ~-he may be boring and dull and have no chatisma, f " 1 ' but he's totally devoid of subtlety!' , ' ' ja&i firing line 'w^^f'tTr^ulatini' ofthe medical profession i ^5«ter' reading! Richards Justice's;' and the enactment of an extremely cost-i fSreditorial on,soccer.1feel it is only ri{$t ,L health insurance program >" to reqx>nd_ Iagree wholeheartedly with v,fBy Dghting state and local programs, •»ewPQ,nt-ftJsa sharhMhatsp .-4ich as HMOs, .the Texas Medical1 ^""W-studente Who enjoy and play-' Association is in effect tymg their'own r'"-^P:er,wt he represented at-the Univej^. 'hands. Without action the situation will 1 i&~ i ^ °">y worsen and thns encourage the , ,a fine soccerteam, " federal government to step in Hopeful-; ~ h6jtvio,the Southwest; the[ Texas Medical-Association willW ^-.O&iference, But air the' uhifprnis^ , ,realize the effects of their sUfling state eipoi^es -airfj^lirogramst«fore it is too late. ® he paid% life team.This would- ' BUfn^aM^' • ZriXS?* tojWve many people^interest toX SirS^i« BWogy Premed Senior ?v^^1^,^re We tw time%" Academic decadence |'£ jo6an a new pastlm I Si'vjlO'not ?'get;offV to i t ||^Stheteheads togpthei < instead was cl^ared^tf this malicious Health hazard ^ba^B;%^S/Slaini^eyiiie;: ~^erminm|their independence when ' oppose local and state solutioils^ ? "jnedical problem, S^ch as HMOite . 'Tjhe^acf.iffuthl^i;;' -m'_examining 'fhe,^eficlencies5of; heal careIn the $ta|eindthe il ~ ^-"T--r •" .s?111 the letter of Feb -X}, co* grtrf: ov^r.the.S,Uir. _ > i *-, w ;I • TheadditicMLof an optician.ThisIdea has beenaround fora number •% of years,if foronlythe reason thatsimple eyecfire would provide an additional s^^j^Btu^nts. >• - V2«­ • Hie estanlislihKiit of other merchandiselines— such as'food or recycled clothing. sii&goods could be sold onother Co-Op property -= ?uch as the Hemphill patking lot that the Co-Op may purchase if it wants to. These goods could provide.profits for the Co-bp as well as services for stiidefitsF*?~ next Monday and Tuesday In the store itself and we encouragestudent candidates to express themselves about changes they desire in the CO­ , 7-T«an Staff OP­ . ....t juiv.Lut.uy. X LAilluC 'it.WaS'UUtT'W1LU' ..me, but I also think that because I could­stiii Iaugli at,mysel£ thatl«r^lized Idid;; -not really want to jump. If, at that mo^ merit, I-had thought^ttwouldgrieve fors me,1would havpjumpedimmediately.l' . was wiUmg to.do whatever I bad to, just .to get someone to care. So, if dying, would, have done it, then./? Why the others decided •lives I donot kriow. Maybe outcry. Maybe it was a;last tesorC„^.w -whatevertherea^on.it seefnscl^arthat?^'5­their silent and/or voiced ches for help were not heard by^the-extremely kind and sensitive individualswhom you think • ­you represent The Sad truth is lhat you wouldn't have thought even-once about >' • them-if they hadnrt committed suicide^-. , • I have beenin theTower when twopeo-'-v^ pie jumped from it I hare,heard the sounds'of screams, sirens',.and grisly curiosity I cry for them and myself in ray own vpay.1resent,like hell, yourtry-,, i Hook-'em, University Co-Op } The cost oT truth inRus By TERRY QUIST sSMPPhetf With volumes which must Have 4-newsjapers right of The Pam first brought the glrl tomy atten-.-'been ' SMIIirMt ihmtiah frionrle frv\m ltnuriiltklA in a . ;b«n • acquired through friends from unavailableinRussia.exceptatthel^ tiofi. She was leaningfrom the first-floor • abroad. I ask if he has Mencken's three­ jor tourist, hotels, where? one.'cansoc­ box in the Leningrad opera house, atten­;volume study on the American language casionally procure an und^-tlie^colin^er,, - tive, well-scrubbed. maybe 12 or14 years old: As she watched the performance of "Ivan Susanin," she would often turn: to her mother to ask a question, or indicate ^ some action on the stage. • . wnicn was> very aepressing lor not'atapreiniura -you ***•181,01at aPrenuurafat^iuiian lessons-Pavel could not tainglvf jsolzh jSolzhenitsynaaptiy explain humab Veaiity:' -remembrtsj, perching.:> op ..his father's , Why had.he been seut^tolCamp^ Shoulders to watch Lenin speak, v noihiug..]But what was the charge? AhU^;|«g^her BuHiann;was once;secreted in this self-: '•* Sov<®'-, What had -they affl-j^^^be^viinempibyed;-or iinipi^fried^l sameflat. -* .•"But of course.''. Plus a dictionary of copy of the ..Internati0hal%Jli^9i|iEiGerman; sex-slang, and other such Tribune. Freedom pornography, J% « . philological exotica Truthis expensiveiKthe&ovietum^ Pavel was in a Gulag camp from I960 One pays.to read the truth; or speajfthe^throu^i l965. So much.he said, for the truth,: with arrest,; pnson^ loss 'of^obi'W ;Khriischev thaw." As the son of an Old slander and yiolence. PavelVnows^ge^is1­-Bolshevik', he had beenamihtant atheist now technically .unemployed^ altjM Gram youth; but in.camp, hebegan to un-he earns a hving by translatii^'dia__„derstand xeligion ani religious people. in English and. Amencan' movie^lnto vOne of his. best-friends in camp was a Russian scripts -for. "dubbing,'^'"i scholarly activity must ^scbolai procee m^.Bexcnangea tuiguso lesstms in return tor^^&private u«, ^ I . < sidered anti-Soviet agitation' "You ..., if a phdol(«ist flis homehbrary,^ iboW1what we have been talking, about '<• is remarkably well-stocked; generously/ S for,the past few minutes' That's anti-» J » "^TSoviet/agitation" 1 ^ " .''uic.euiufranipwv; r;,vj.the. bfe.;^l«^n *•» novel glorifying the notorious wartime,.^ ••a.: uiiicnaut-^ i|ieiiut|». liegl^ejll) uui^ WOrk^' ding system used for UT buildlng'^on-^f "avel possessed a lust for western^ tracts * , i* nefs ''You Americans aresodumb,"he Personally, I don't give-jfdamn if the _4 «cclaim|d "You give me noVels-when11 Tower isdloseJ, torn down or covered by*' father have Uui latest copy^ a'gfant prophylacUc -lm£ it Is'time for °^J^ft?r\*!f^W3>veek w Western/' some:gram of reason and common sense to be applied to the problem The camp, or dead ^-1 Or she wiU be jnorally and rolifl broken '1 Guesf Viewpoints r The Texan welcomei gu«t points,, but «ach.; plec* tubnij • Be typed triple spacvi -i * , ^ ~ 1 • Contain only 60 chdra * r ,me'' A<" • Include the author^ number. , i limited ;t»a mamHm l.'linev; Submit guest vlawpotnH tot lWe D/Universtty.Station^Ao*')^ *" 78712 or to the Texan office : , batement level.of lhe TSP-Bull tnj)« m .v..Jsln keeping with a-longstanding! ^Texan••j."™--vv^^r • "-. ".i-rfy*1 mvjvvc^ufc.^tradition fot providing the most nonsen^ . * 4.EddiM Jr' sical and infantile reviews of^ciilturaK J. r " __<"• ty % ^.Claude Rfmj events, Tom Miller has-scored a hit with NfcWS EDITOR 'iJiSit-h-A ' t^-'thefr-yearj-oldswlth hiS'"revie^vV/of ;the^ , «^ORTS,EDITOR ~ s" f ^ ' Tbad Jones-Mel Lewis concert ' ^ *' ^Milter's bizarre technique for critical"1 'AMUSEMENTS EDITOR 7^noSio to^t analysis of this superb band's musical", FEATURES EDITOR uM.n»sua mim, ^1won't-^etail Millp^s grotesquegrarivfe*. T«Srt;1have sev^llSpt Low lifeP mar, nor will Icpndescehd toOutline h«^ for M^-B^klebymer%nd"Wor desperate, faltering styje, ttie thrust of ->1­ w%^J|^^^i§|^iSIWeyer *3%?^ tyt?* W£Z£'*3N , HOFFMAN 1 operation? that "previously biological opponents Or we -us, and that we haveto giveup bftrarasSlW* King Features klllCd^UlOm.. N >»:••c , beat them with technological the idea that'We can abuse, ' Syn-KMUIUlV^lbai "3S -j» dicale _ . •£ -GXfienberg stfggeststtlm Superiority as with the latest ourselves and expect the doc­ •I WASHINGTON'1— fl'heS wheri tte American tancer ^cancer gTnyriiok, irri-tors'tb'piit''us i>ack~t9gether~ /V? K j operations last fall oh Mrs;:i Soeiety' announces^that, -munotherapy, whlcht'-when we have.Itilso meansra' '' / .iJ Ford anfl Mr? Rockefeller set "Cancer Is one of the mopt Greenberg reports, wiser different sort of practice of a mass media avalanche curable diseases in this coun-r. -medical minds place little piedicine, one in which the ' 1 I "•'that must have been at onpe try," It's basing its assertion j. Jiope in. , ^physiciandoesn't play therole * (V-f/ > ^frightening and comforting to j on suspect statistics whlqh < What they do hold out hope of hero Finally, Of course, *; '>-mqny women Along with the ;-are then -presented^ tov.-th'e;j would .rather put ~ years ago arjd is much better,* questioning public support American.' It means, first of >he dough in.bombers / 1than for cancer of the cervix j Greenberg isn't the first per-, uteri, a disease for which ex-son to say,, the cancer effort' mtrt pectations for survival have has dead-etKjed, but the objec­actually worsened inthesame tions do*no good questvleujpolnt period of time, , , "Part oE'lhe explanation -is These -Jlgures vare "drawn that people don't like to think S <:[ ~ from an analysis of cancer about cancer and, when they 'A UT's health center is better than most statistics and how they are do, they'd just as soon thinks presented to the public in the all those scientific folks in^ _x\-*-,a« " • •--•>?<1 »PU' v *"• January-February fssueof the white smockswith retorts and}/i ,-Ji. j . „ , -these servic&aS? place our hppes if the disease examine some real facts on session; for 14 days in' a 12-hosprtalization, psychiatric • appliances, crutch rentals; this quality of care received I ly we listen when anxious or ; \ the.subject. UTjs.only one of Greenberg says that not strikes us? week summer, session or ui medications, marital counsel­(e) prescriptions 'filled in ask that we all remember that tired. In the health center we 4^ *•> .. .only have there: been none of "?,• , * three, colleges in' the :United the fall or spring sanester?; ing and problem pregnancy the Health Center Pharmacy; physician-patient interaction . The tools -of'cancer therapy are expected to act as adults, > : ser­ ape weapbn-like, and ,we credited hospital availablefor. vices . and:sbmie/anesthetic ­ the breakthroughs .we're States that has a fully ac­(d) operating room counseling: (e) diagnostic tests thatare is a two-way street. In the to speak up and ask questions $• always being promised, but j_ ~i treatment since the mid-all aggressive, intrusive and provides us with the operations by staff physicians ed by health center myelograms, mammograms 1950s He' did find coh> powerful, just the stuff to privileges of .that which .Ms. for the relief of-such acute physicians, but not including and electrocardiograms;' knock outitough'enfemies like :Read has referrec) to as conditions asculs,^sp»uis and siderable improvement in the care for chronic conditions; (f ('premarital ex­BRIDAL SHOPPE death rates between;1940.and the Viet Congor.a cancer cell. assembly-line services. Infor­minor fractures-., and dis­(k) help with therapeutic aminationsand food handlers' •*MX. It's comforting for us to 19S5, attributable not' to mation available in the Health locations,. : diets on order of a physician. 4013 Marathon believe we have; the krnd. of Services Hand-(f) routinfri'/abofatory and NOTICES from th* cancer cures; however; but to A'charge, frequently at cost firepower,therapy that can in-book(September, 1974) lists physical therapyservices; levels (please compare these General Ubrari«s .or any I'l Wl I S TS NEVER (g) routinemedigations and with those at outside health of the branches are of­smvro Crossword Puzzler •AnswertoYeaterday'aftirde dressings, * facilities), is made for: ficial Universityr com-­ CHECK VOl/R ACROSS jWV. rneasure uaraa qaaffi iiraa (h) ambulance Or car ser-(a) diagnostic X-ray munications 'requiring MAH80XF0R 1 Collision >J. 8 Alludes lo ­ VALENTINES. 6 WldSSwaK#-^10 FormerHua-, aaaa snaca ntaa -vice to the healthRenter when studies; ; immediate aHefiHon.^:, 11 Sell tocoiH.^, slsnrulei . ^ ran naara eon truly needed; vjj^ (b) services of a special mk ur^r.iri ueaa 13 Placaain1 foSi f®Ee9enl i0< You ' ' line '*mifv6 F*U»r 1" sisrara aaae quq INSTANT CASH 14 Above Blockhead*, ,,*3 urawiiw aaan an DOONESBURY for old gold high have the raaeoisa stusEjan 15 Relledon,4#1 ^<$£<*<1 , it Noleol W§ ne Huaa csrjjaaB school rings, opportunity seats ' Wmrgn UDJEtJ Q320 SERE*~-Y T graduation rings etc. 18 Vastaoe Cllmbino ,3032 EHiaa QH 'ft Bsnry,itaoomstha K: Wscouldgetthe1710116/.; .• CHARLES LEUTWYLER to view about 2Q SefidalorST'^1', WPPWPlWC MMMIIS 21 Throii9h%^2/ A«ejr»on -j 5 ratss HHQH as ,iny«sioripptiorii8i»]aTgBr It could Iwarranged. I .. JEWELERS 125 .goVvns. BACK IN <»$E A RJOOP OF . 32 jog i 'ii'fefi,-'eartx,i*t a}i faara aisaii uaaa J. viatta. My bo£t8Stpoopla: hwW niiera itcould be t 24 Prefix *^29 Scottish cap Has Haras araaa H t^jne thanrt noweyw gotten: Sisnotoasy, fiut i.; VALENT1NE5 COMBS RX/R1N6 (WL. 31 Sleeplns- cgulilptyfirit.ibomucit it oouidbsdona? before < engineering .44-Golf mounds- &flowers%ptj}° •46 Prohibits v unit ' 47 Deface , •.-:i Thirty percent 26 CivilInlury 6£3? Individual . 37' Junolufea .>49 Observe ,28,-Goesin ^S34 Greenland '39 Dry t?»51 Artificial, off on mothers' 41 Showers ^ $rftm. f 3fr?*embero!an 43 TrarSattion S3 Hebrew(eher4^ dresses. s42 Tropical t , ^ /ruitfniit a v ROSES -ROSES 33 aralltV 35.Army meal-:'1; T~ r-ir-•pM r-[6-7-r-5— 10 "*?*: ..... | $9.00d<»? 37 Sow ... i 38 Qreek lettec;. err PIV (r Rowermg Plants $J.f5 op ;40 Falsifier 42 Bitter veich Mi -IS 16w rr .43:8egln'--t 'v.v FLOWERJPOT :4S RBSOll\Fi.Vfe H" 46-i 21 soww 46 Con|unetion: •i 601 W.19th "474-6644. , 47 Qolf chibk''-' i3 i4 49 Greek letter- j i 50 Prevailing g r H -PsNdltiswrong—4 i; Hi sjil ii: > ~ mood/ 4,.|S r 29v :tiua% ftcjsare. & Make r > i-S • deeper :•j' 90 [ w < K'-WhaVs RESEARCH todo with S4. Breathe to 34 ss" sr loudly In vg Is " ^Thousands ofToplcS ' *!»»p i #&6At ¥t >. ... 1fr " Sr s»sf $2.75 per page •5S Prophets^ ?: | * DOWN 41 43 ' Send for your up-to-date,JGIHwge, 457 sf Smiall bottle v i *1' mail order catalog Enclose $LD0 2 Rumor r. 44. 47 -1 iSj to. cover postage (delivfery time is 3 Near ;1 1 to 2 days}. , , j* Posi»dfof > s? > 5 n IR/: , portrait w 31 -» RESEARCH ASSISTANCE.INC . V, i-'%/ N n K5 Lease ^ 11941WLSHIRE BLVO, SUITE #2 ^"#11 LOS ANGE1£S, CALIF, 90025 DUtr. by U/iilfd ^««tur« 3yndim-te. Inc. V " (213) 477-8474or 477rJS493 ' .?1 % Our returch materitl ittotfler W rttMtth anlttance«il» ' :MF I ijF*r M ; FOR BOOKlOVERS . , Come join us at our extraordinary ^r.'WX M Ihti giant* n^, erback book sale. IT \ , . .anding current andback list Sportswear Separates r> Is 4 -r,i A > titles from many leadingpublishers. ^V15: -f,4 < *1? $ • *TMsi&a saleBooklovers can't afford to miss. ty'ASihr. I.au2»s> •* \?i r *•.» ->•: K x „. , ^ /2 Off1 and f­ rJtfi more ' ntm? •3^ >-> up, 'i l®®lb^%Si^;J9a9&j^^-ip\rfte.yout9J6ln|n eJiterbSnlng v at General Books i Fantastic savings on famous maker separates. Stock up nowj TOPS, now.,. 99c to4.99 sfe PANTS, now 3,99 and4;^9 SWEATERS, now .......... *> «• tic-J-' X?to ann6UBced audl«6tf«tiiefe':" TURTLENECKS now.;.:.. 3.99 'AF^fNG'S/bf = ISW "V 1, fi t y*\ r PlSSBSills r T >• R&«lle Report ^ -< Dt'ug &*&w ft ravels ivorl ^4 NfiW YORK -jgnfa.*4 tatbe'-Wa'aooal Footbal^ ^League has decreased cohsiderabtf in the last,several years,<* J. says Commisskmer Pete Rozelle, but he said there has been a -ForNCAAInddors '„,drug problem in the sport ' "*. V ti' , •?< ~ In an interview wjth The AssociatedPress, Kozelle was a*M By THOMAS KESSLER TTje Mustangs,vflffgetiyr'c^etoh edr "Do yon believe,at leastatorte point In football, that thertOj Texan Staff Writer Spends. though. If they defeat firit/n were a lot of amphetamines taken &players before games?""" asaam^asa-a "pur study, apd Information that \»e got.lndirates that then protably were/' Roielle said. "I'knoythat wasa conclteton1" reached by VS. Rep. Harley Staggers',committee, wfth whom' •SirJL®aS? we had a number ofprivatemeeting*andihared information.'#. tio'nwULbeincto Those studies wpre undertaken in 1971, and Rotelle believes^ Longbotns participate idithe NCAA that since then thf use of amphetamines And other drugs has,'-? decreased appreciably.' \ ' ' "Certainly they'(players) are morevcognbant oTthe'potentialdangers," Rotelle said.,;*! 'certainly can'n?cmcb for t,S00 ;-S3:iS? .~ 2L'£?d„£on! lrtthci"r ^de *°r most of the teams, including Te«^ players, and Iwme of them having outsidesource**, but I think It season s No, 3 ranked Michigan team. SMU -"j think surface ,/„* th^ ^ ** (drug use) would be yety minimal today." t> and Mian,! (tied forNo,<4> also figure to give, Awe as what ' ; The NFL commissioner said ittfoilld be impossible to deter' *,is to rec ip Rwelle saidUje'NBX requires eactftej^toftscttose its drag purchases and Uiat'it also employsfrrWate detectives-mostly ^ j 'J fr» -T«oh'Sw»r PS*. bV'My ».imore, becausewe'Uhave to.worfcharder M>wpoys, ex-FBI agents — to conduct drug and other investigations in •< < M p^ Stewart Keller prepdrfj for a backhand. . ^ If age is an important factor, then USC-wllT thwJ* Twasdef^;^ league cities. ?he league also employs a drug expert to advise •; . . _ • 5f ^sufferalsOiliieTrojanshave'fivefreshmen,t |j?®'S2n-m??a|l0^ the clubs ana monitor drug purchases. 7 ,W? IhOMinselttgtte Myers _ ' Sj%j ^ MMim^'v^m^rnia„^ !^i'Texa8 wou,d,lilse to, meet the Mustani _ for complete disclosureof the clubs* ANT. ADS antidrugInventories, havehelped a greatdeal," ' Mmi> Orwn M. AnoMillM B i> -€Trtm^Pisa. it'.,.V. graduated, be was replaced by John Muller, jei^'iiiayWnV' Swln* Jf, RipU Clfy Co«£ltn it MlrV 51, COOOU7 4 " pl«, S,^m*^ the No. 1 ranked junior in South Afritaj^pf "Oklahoma State Isleal p>odl,"ffyriez i ,gy „Jf *• fek,w^ VYllVjKkMflT»cktrtCftt 7 '• •..• '• •Cyjy.v.rc. v fltl nf »e AriAhlntf^afr^ti ourCMwu. Ltdra^ii , -w^y* all or iUopro^match ftyznl ••mm BufUla** »,£itredair f 31 ># -SSSs-iKiisSfeii' ^ Elliott • MEXICAN 1 1.8 t* Si .yfJ ^^ * PHOTO 1?^ 19th. ^32* ibf Illrf OODFEUOWSg 126 SKE0/Aifaaiuredih J/WSlM/GBS $32.50 NIKOI fURCHASlpWITHi '../..C r^/i '^ica OJ ANy NMATIW COiOR RIM MOCIUID AY USjlNTOj I STANDARD JUMBO «ZU (3«, 3K, 9$), 1 mmm ... wTK| ^ i'tl PLANTATION SOUTH EARN CASH WEEKLY Blc^ctePlasmaMDonors vnaiNdi & W6I, 2 iCDROOM EARN $14 Wfifel 4 MDROOM Y^ENtFOR; FEBRUAR mm •i~T^ WtMk nm-rtf". Fmley Set * %pg'i >V3W |Tp pijjht :i;£-.uGuC!:>t;r..-^ ,M#te ai:n>uavia uear-. r-.-jflaierviuearoorn saia. "Then once a year, all tjborn, there are more athletes onvthe Texas r^ the schodls InTexas will compete intheState -wrestling club than :everever before,before; v ... ''' Colledat'e Chamniohshln-i Collegiate Champiohshlps Despite the Increase in interest,-wrestUng <4^ Last: year in the championships,^Texasa is not recognized as a University team sport.|t Wrestler Steve Bosley captured first place in • • "As a club organization, we;recelVermoney fefcthe 150-polin'd weighUclass V!«/vS , i,for gas as,well as new equipment.from , tiitte is!^'Mii liv ni,« „r -v't *,,&!" highschool. "Wehad a good team inscljook ' DEARBORN FEELS thegr^^^pulari^'f%$fj| ty of the mat sport in high phoote could be a 'tTELM the Tpvaf^ih h« , key factor in^gahiing recognition. "Parents Percent ofthen­ ?Most of ">e will want their children to continue with the ^ J , sport at college instead^ndoning it," he fiSta? 2S$! Another necessary, factor for teamWus y" DEARBORN feels that wrtstling 6 enter­jiWcrnldibe^OLhav^a^rmahent doach.^We've^wtalnlng/pr the spectators. "If you khpw the 'had several different coaches the past few^strategy and rules of the sport, it really years which jpakes it tough 09 the team aS.Mbecomes exciting," Dearborn added. ' • M, jwell as the coach,." Dearborn said. <• ' •* With interest in wrestling at both college I *} ''THE PHYSICAL jbducfctioif'department^aiifl high-school levels increasing,' and |"""", (should look" for someone to coach the'clubas £.^'Universitystudents giving theclub moresop-rswell ^teaching the wrestling classes."-• '-^jwrt, Dearborn Jhopes administrator will v# WMle thewrestlingtlub seem^*to be havlng^Stnaketheclub a recognized team. It is a deci­ trouble keeping a coach,_ fhidinga league.to Si^slon the Texas athletic department will have compete in also is a tough task Wrestle with ­ t V Official Asks Schools , Halt Crowfl's Ice Throwing DALLAS'(iVP)^ CUff Meticblwrelib "$xti'gimieS' ArkansisV^'The^Sia^ Speegle,, the executive "Kch Coaqh Gerald Myers Hatters." has also been,caUed '.secretary-of .the Southwest and,SMU.-.Goach.Bob.:Prewitt to Speegle's attention. ^onference.-hasasked several. exchanged .words over the in-member schools to get the cident " r word to their supporters tyiat Myers said; l'I guess they .ice ;throwing., will-' not be (SiyiU) Uiovgbt;I^should have tolerated atbasketball games, been able to stop it. r tiirn'ed "Ice could put an eye out,", around and" asked them/ I 'Speegle said Wednesday, don't like'this Ice-throwing "This is a game, and the business any more than our crowd should be there tb opponents. This is the worst 'cheer the teams on dot to in-case we'vehad. We're making jure someone through an act an effort tocatch these people ,of violence. and get it stopped." 1 Speegle'i comments came jSpeegfe has alto received t ^sc'n 'U'e wake of an ice throwing romplalntsabout ice^throwlng i ?Steddwl at-Lubbock^Tuesday |tTern Christian andArkaih' ? 4-AjPlght 'during the Southern ^as.-A vocally rowdy groqp at par w Starling SaWrde«&8i \s> !. 8 t • tsss! 1 > if BRCAKPAST s»> J'Cofetefia:Sfyl^Servi^'l' mm •WW. iwf« g^Each Item fndividuairy Priced'? ^S^catod atUBuffet' ,^ in Defwood Shopping Center > • $ B!T i 38 & & IH 35 across from Sears' » * v * * V ; ^ 4, *• Serving Hours Tues. thru Sunday i STS J |Al W/fh this Coupon oorft 5l riircnase s. = SB»«ikfa»lWl3»' I V. Frae.Drink ofiyoUrj..I -s< t r i w \ choice .2 jft. v«i^iif«b:'28,:»975^ Jr'^! ' ' •» •IB l^i*' " 11 ^ CASWELL JiNNIS CENTER i . ^ .,s (GUADAIUPE10CATI0N ONLY] wm W-.-WH-.// ,r —T«xon Stoffjphoto by Coral Jaon Simmons . V,' ' ' Steve Bosley applies a foe hold on Grayson Gwyn. aIf Hogs COLLEGE STATION'^P)^ double overtime loss-to tbe° '^"We have the most respond ' TfiXflS A&M' COSCh Sbdlty RA7/>rharlr« Favcffauilla ' ^svp rrnwil thaf tua'na mroc '. T. . . . ' Razorbacks in Fayetteville. sive crowd that ive've .ever' etea)f sa,d , ,.Wednesday he . A&M and Arkansas finished had at Texas A&M since I've ,had a few changes in mind for thefirsthalfof the seasonwith been here. It is the class. the Arkansas; Itazo?backs 6-1 records. * " /''"'7V drowd.of the nation, oiie that Saturday night.lnv their "We've been-playing well, knows how to act." " Southwest Conference basket-and we've been putting a good Saturday's battle:,wl(hbail rematch. ; game on the floor for each Arkansas was expected to Metcalf wasn't",tipping hi c inference game," "Metcalf draw a capacitycrowd of 9,000 hand On what.the chaiige are said. .v • in G. Rollie White' Ccfliseum. • but they wer& expected-to j>e in the rebounding"afeas.' The' tall6r''?and imore physical Aggies;, were. out-rebounded last-Saturday in a ** -*...1 v /A.t..i. . . 305 WEST I9TH OPEN 10-7 Watch for our new WESTGATE MALL THURSbAV & SUNDAY ^ STORE KM 31 t4 a -r ^ CHICKEN FRIED STEAK IARQE CHICKEN FRIED •:>($ STEAK, BUTTERV BAKED ~U-\ POTATO OR FRENCH FRIES IJ HOT TEXAS TOAST. AND > ' 'CR18P TOSSED SALAO ALSO-' ^ CHOP STEAK DINNER. W^*l2815 GUADALUPE 478-3560 TJO TIPPiNQ tjM Shoe Shop We make and ; repair boots shoes belt* leather Pay Raises :~ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -' Baseball's 1975salary arbitra­tion game opened Wednesday J with Oakland A's owner Charles O. Finley facing pitcher Ken Holtzman in a small, lawyer-filled room. The left-handed starter, the1, winningest returning pitcher on the staff of the world cham^: pionship team, had three' lawyers to help him argue his-­case as he sought a raise to • more than $100,000 for the1975­season. '1. It was a return bout for Holtzman and Finley. The. pitcher won a $90,000 contract, sA last year when the arbitration ». system first was used. Almost all other A.'^l starters and pitchers, such as Vida Blue and Rollie Fingers, , are scheduled for arbitration here-More than 30 major league plavers are scheduled to start soon in several other 51 cities. — .' convicts' from certain " professions'^A convict can't ; be a batherm.the stateof Tex­ as, but they teach barbenngv ­ (atTPC units), Leiandnoted.: Nature^;lovers and badepadkers interested inSa six-day:.tiq> i& southwesteni y MIKE MORRISON ;#D«ipU^thel9^amendinenti^thi. "Most"of the men lui'ow 'about tfie ortE fTREMAN told Tteff® City Charter stillfltakes no disiinc-situation anjjmy." he said. -^a'athat,,# .superior officer jfoLto post ^ -•»»* tlon betweenpolitical activity~on itywei^r, tbowflreme& who however, thoBe firemen whp wer ^ »i-i;^^3ji iob and acti(ms taken when dbtr-!ii^K^daraiftt^i3ijjL^Tii'e!^£(in,llatV'^@bumu Poriions-of thfr AusUir.flt^ work. • ' , ^gVVednesday. said the, Charter whiefcseverely restrict the $$ » Kublca^sflid'thfe Cit/'CBatiNi, .activities of firemen and>policemeq fSection 4, Artiye l2of the > "abunS*? ^r^aguepnw^iine what type of cai irnta state-.-v—£2V" SectWtf^of Arttd^ ] withIritt a 1W31913 amendment to a state T ""'A"—'W33SB'-THE 1S7S amendment S>lm «tatM 1 .statute. jVsst City Ait^n;Y mo^r, labor, time '.^^telhat any employe or offiMJnd. said.Wednesday;" ' T" other valuable things to aperson for^^°^L°n *?{?°" ,® »'»the city who solicits or exerts I °S.Articl^Slof the Tex-,4 vfluence;-dlrectly or indirectly U an* other off,ce ^(^Jer«cesUtutewasrend-;^ lejrriployes^ p^^ulair person: dr. caiidida' Kben,'noC "j'jn^tfifoniror on acti«r his office orJob andean.be ttned ^1^TrX^mnSedTr^^,to ,«fficeiin;^e,d%'^ w! , informing them only 6t Ute City^^fiiemenV of the ciW provision. .'C. v|punlshment involved, a^bu ^ A sjwkesman far the AusbnPolice '-Charter restrictions. The Civil Ser^#'^oUce Chief Bob Mies was hot l1.#t'c'ter would .riot be a'vio Departme^ .said '' * was^iiotveven-aware' -•^',e"„s^.^1''aw oriSlfally ^state^T' state law. t " ,-5§^ca"mpaigi»4ifcdfiyway, whether inUik -sd'/defines an'.'active partvrln; that all civil service employes, m-Kirkham was out of town WednesSfeifdrm or off duty. '<• ' ^^ campaigns as acUons saph as pSj eluding firemen and policemen, day, tut an assistant fire chief toldSs^ 'The captain said he knew of no' "Vng out cards and hniwfonin, $ig£i were notallowed to "take an active The Texan he was not sure if. alt;^police officer who was aware of the f ii'petitions and participatlpg' as :part"-.indtydections. clarifying memo would be sent out^^state law;" " , --public speaker. A :New Me$ico "March 22: to :"Activities:.will-include ~ But Humphreys welcomes :29(an registeratttKNahlral rnatufae: awareness*;-backpack-any> interested "men %r \ ex­ »Sciencef>CeBtef,--401 Deep' iing tedmiqnes and outdoor perienced . campers to Eddy Ave,, until March 14. skills,""' Mary Hulnphreys, register. The toutmg, sponsored by leader of tbe jgroup, ssdd. . C / i 1 : tbeAnstiirParksandRecrea­. The fripis primarily design--Cost of the excursion is$110 tion Dq>artraent, wili be -in editor women or those with the. GOa^Odeniessneaf the limited, knowledge. in Gila-Natural Forest ' ' backpacking and theoutdoors. fe TACO VltLA^f? 24Hi & RioGrand* -S.-. " J M^P BEER SALE . •ifTy.'S-v"k CARTA BUNCA,BOI«yUA, and TBCATE'^t _ JO o canwith tadifootf purthasa THE BRUSHY CREEK for Fami/yStyfeBar-B-pue i ~~i • it v -1 ' i -Ham, Chicken; Beef l Sausage & ^ibs, Beans; ¥k$%i Potato Salad & Cole SlavtfT^ij ^to I LL lollCAV EAT I ' 4f I Monday-Saturday 11:00a.m.;-9:OOp.m^44I ^T z I Closed Sunday ' call for restirvatia '4-1! 255-3253 .-"•t?-In Round Rock | • ^ak. mm®:# P Mond which -includes transporta- BrainyPrepar€^BHIIianl%i£iitli • By ROBERT:ROTHSCHILD: Bowl, tlie,,!Brainr*Bowl tearaofTo^Wehner^accoun-^ ^tontest,'' he predicted.1 : . Seventy-five-thousand : fans ' oat ' r-ting/'Thomas;. PozorskiitContestant Wolfson f • might not be on hand for'the almost,-to'preserve the graduate anthropology and r.quite M;Si^i-"'Jfre'vii' last of the postseason bowls, valiant,. gladiator-like com--Mike Spruig, history. Pf -pretfy :g^ but' Thursday .nigjit!s Brain petition of human -minds; '.-.."Hie match is sponsored ^ thiiik we tawVr$: Bowl *75 has all theinaikings Law; students captain both of another classic. ^ teams; Captain^ Robert: T.: • In the age ^ following -the •: Henry is joined.by.Xellow law demise of the G.^. College -student Ricliard 'Finkley, philosophy, student Mark Oldham atjd ^advertisingistu-. Psychic dent George Wolfson. Card "" • ^Harvey: Cautfiey leads 'the Reading '.s&x: CaH for Appointmantu 472-301^ llmny 44 , J * >. »/ 1, ,. 8:30 p.m.-12midnight Thure. * W. -' 'y ®pjit.-l,a.m. : f&s Sotmdny 5 4 ?3Sfc. . =4 tion, food, insurance andjfci "Jhe discussion groups WiU,"#^' HumphreysWs led group equipment Individual" consist of an orientation orf. ^hartparHng' mitfng* hp-1 equipment such as packs and K the use of a compass,^ichools and^dult prosn sleeping bags can J>e rented ^ topographicmap and prepare-/, "We're interested in «on *0r » ' different types of trips and. we. wonjd 111 According ,to "Humphrey s weather," she said "We're iavfe more, ^k>sb« sa discussion groups will meet doing this so people can gain "Hopefully'peodie will March 9 and March 16 at the j skills and feel comfortable in-pond tothe firstoh&andc Science Center for those going • the outdoors aijd find a means . .trips can be taken to diff* on the trip?; JCvf ?*< of .appreciating nature.' --places"in the future^' * the Union, Recreatini Con^ >much \ "everytliitt^ip^ mittee ai^d yrill be held i^:;je\rerythlng,?* :he ^Academic-Center i21. p.m ' 1 ' But bis , opptfsll,'Committee .chairman Jim' Pennington feels ncither'ieam Captain Caughey said, :has .a pailiciiliar^vmtage; know, at least thai muchf^ * 'It'sgoing totiear^llydose; maybe a little more,'^„, Have you had breakfast at KKa ft /s,W(e «tMt Mivlng at 7:30 A.M -For $1.55 mm give you 2 eggs ­' 2 slitM «f Rumanian bacon ^ , 2 slicos Of toast biscuit or Kaitor roll Je,,* 0 CUP f °^ "K®* -» ..Prices rahge-from $1.55 to $1.75 Of course,, we also ierye those exquisitetonches and dlnners^y^n^^^ t -• D_-F.T 1 • r,. • u» air 409w:30 andfiBOOAirport'­ ' Wot -much in the -way of jSpeciaipreparatiooJs pli byeither team,!imtCaugBpy'i ,teahunate,Wehner does! aifew/minot'.iadjustmentj will .making.' Iplan to have>c ticing witha couple' of 'MS faatmrhur* Steaks and 258-9626 In Cedar PoA,T* Ch$00 Tumdmr Osceola Spfu«'Rool B« Yard. eggs -95' do r Bui^ Ho (biing"yoitr own fai) % lease bring us your dean egg cartons. \ K /A 7070S J8 •" i<4 &%THWEST ^<11 AUDOTONHNaffli Iggllif , "tMki • ML ebtw£4 in m S9avfe^«fcs«KE?*gi »5MK? **J$f'bXfoN d'.,^«< ~ i/fsl Texan Staff Writer '•mi -fne Water QuSUty iJBoaw Ji'iS? conferred Wednesday with "a businessman steel jMdrjimsofindustrial waste'tt wmmmcii m •fWS , *&•" v , "fe, fXti legally in,Travis County J^np^^atrls: v'WfltftP-toiiiilitvT: 5qySy|J^qS J6ne;#arHi5, Water Quality -»• I r£f^''4--J ;SflV^ ^SZ llvBoprd staff employe, said the 1 storage ^113(3 fM£Tv lJ, not checked with -the boardlolates State La tor k4MV<^fiMn;MV!sabA*e.'M^i4rV&'.'iiWKAWt£n»v" . • . "&'« prior to dumping the waste temporarily 'on-' leased: land;' Law School 2 A ' . I * " T*' *>' " ^ i,,1 An' investigation which-*mance and grades are related ;possibly will reveal reasons i('to individual reaction to am­'for discrepancies, between bfguities and-,oUier variable predicted and actual perfor-, aspects of a new "language" ",-mances of law students is be--and the forms, this languaget, yihg conducted through the presentation takes, -i -.University •Center for Com-,, •<¥&&;. mupication Research by Prof. Carolyn Carter,' coVn­;Allen E. Smith of the law * toumcatioti,,graduate student .schobl and Dr. Alfred G. •-Jan<1 associate research assis- Srpithof the center. .V,*3"1 fortheproject, explain^. » _ -. I „that for the next few mpnths " The two were awarded a ) Patrick Nester, law student J64.900 grant last spring,from / and research .associate, will the National Science Founda--be djstriliuU^^UKtionn^ipes . tlon for a study scrutinizing'" 'to;,the\d{f|erent;j^rtic^ ^ first year law students and; law schoolp. > /--r their prpfessors-in torts' >She Wid; ttM^rticipaUng;classes at40 U.S; law schools.' ^' ^hools en^mpass^the entire ^Fundamental to.the studyiS: continental United States and v the theory^that .despite,, that the questionnaires being.. Similarly^-high -«ntrancer! distributed^reire"developed by wfm ^CHER ^^then restetffig.jBielmain points: 7i"^:Ib.'rtWB^yiMin ntnwlfl urtMiin QA i Staff WriterHfritfir £ - ln oneV.x)wiic;Worda witfain 24. Students^ only slightly anx­ hours. ious aboutthe currentwave of­ "If yoWcannot-• resta'te lexams can probably -rely -on ; materlal in youir own words, ijpast experience to canythem you do'.-•not Understand it. ^through. For newcomers and •Restatementj'isinfinitely ^the not so experienced up-more valuablerthan underlin­ jperclassmen wfyo find ing; Lookihg 'over lecture -themselves • inundated ' by/ notes (the night before a test):•|reading ..assignments•:?and is almost'a'total-.waste of loortiing exams, CIar« " time. Rereading^at thistime) ^Reirthardt from RASSL has is of questionable value, ?somq valuable'advice. "' j also," she a'dviSed. ~ J Take note, frustrated Jstudents.' Reinhardt is a lear- Reiiiiliardt »{d, "Do not jning specialist.-She Specializes in something that Pu^"e„ f»y-^fthod. which Jack' bothi^lpt-dous materials* i;Enterprises said^e dram^ and.removal. < . •' /-• Another bill, HB atJcm­a?e to be moved-to a>;^"How to get nd pt-solid cerns ,the> power of certain authorized industrial waste^'waste 1? a very big problem, cities to acquire and operatedisposal plant in Oklahom? in .^especially in Texas. Everyone wastetreatment facilities'; ^" about tw<> Weeks, ^"''Industrial waste" Consists 'of "almostanything," stated Ferris. "This , includes some potentially dangerous materials."-Acids, acetates vand paint:thinner were found • in the barrels. dumped -near Austin. , The Water Quality-Board 'pretested before distribution plained that, ientering-law by University and St. Mary's students > are similar-to dis-: law . students -last semester. placed pUblitrschoolstudents,'' The test has a 50-minute, who: after having grown up, • pencil-and'paper format. speaking one way, are ex­.pected to speak a more "stan­' Allen Smith,-visiting dard" form-' in-school.-'This professor at BrighSm Voung results in "remaricably high'f • : University'this semester, ex­ anxiety for.many.'students, he Fuel AdjustmentRates Dowh There is good news and bad •news-for' Austin'.electricity users this month. \ The good news is the fuel . adjustment rate will be less. The bad news is the decrease. will only be about 10 cents. 4 The-fuel cost \adjustment will 'drop approximately 12 |Cor?s, j. graduating law,' theCenteV/for.Communicatiqn . cents per thousand kilowatt • stUderttsV disparate, perfOiv Rcscsrch^i^bs^inodfil. W3S'^ hours from $13.68 to. $13.&6, — % RASSL liver*/ a.m tof6 p m Tuesday and Thursday "Students don't have to take a (RASSL) class. In 15 minutes they can* come by and get some infor-• mation," she said. A boiled down list of practical test-taking tips based on the ex­perience of UT students -is available, and studentsare en­couraged to come by and pick it up, ' , " For-essay tests, the handout advises students to "make sure you understand: what you have been asked rt? do." Reinhardt said many students . jdl students Retrying todo.-~ habi°tualfirbl • -sbefone writing; make notes^', 1^ „ .Prewratlon'for exams JiK-r«3l^tne^sfsawnse'-and ^ nt.: or kinktMii •. Il^dk(specialSMtflnl flWrnHnnattention:'!' -ITrtf Akiiv.(itrA r J Evolves "routinely picking'up For objective tests.thehan­ v'ind', assorting." information ' TheHRASSL ioffice-. is dout reads, "do, what yob^ -s.raayV H on Emiliotequiia and pineapple Juke. •Serendipitous! INC^WtAMtjfLTEQUtlA 80 PROOF. -tXWEMUJO-R A TRAOOURK OR BACARDI & COMnWYUHITEO? m-iS? & m . Sv Is .1 I'wants ItpickeSd up.bnt nobody Several others relate-4o «atari' 1 wants it < bat down," said. pollution complaints fend Gulf Harris. ­ Coast waste.dlsposal. . T ,, ^i;Several pieces of legislation have -been introduced in the ..Water Qualify Board Direc­ ^'-legislature this session'con­ tor.Hugh Yantis said theshor­ cerning industrial waste ' tage of . authorized 'disposal For example. House Bill sites in Texas may;bave been •263. relates to "the regulation the cause of Arsenault's tem­ vof solid waste disposalsites,' porary storage problem but and,to the transportation and said .he will recommend legal • disposal of extremely hazar­ nee Gap -said, adding that an unusually'' first-year grade in torts for ..high percentageof University, the students." law students seek counseling : at the Student Health Center. Students of torts were "When we get the results selected for the examination back from the schools," because it is a first-year Carter said, "they will be cor-', course usually taught , from related, hopefullymeaningful-' : one of two approaches: a doc­ ly, to LSAT scores and the EiW. Bunge, manager of the oil needed to operate the' city water and light .office, : generators. There has been a : said Wednesday. y ^ slight decrease in the total . used this month," he said. "The average resident uses about 850 kilowatt'hours of •. The decrease is the .first electricity per-month. This i since July, 1972. Bunge said will amount to about a10 cent since that time the rate basJ decrease in their bills,"he ex.-either^stayed the same or lit?":;! plained. , A N™ ' f > > yf* Bunge said the decrease .The fuel adjustment-rate is0--was a result of less fuel Jbeing, •" figured on a month-lo-month needed to run.generators.. ; basisj "Hopefully,the rate will ­ "The fuel adjustiDentisbas-continue to decrease, next ed on the cost o^gas and fuel month," Bunge said. UNIVERSITY OMBUDSMAN JIM OSBORN Problems af the University Ombudsman a Soup and Sandwich Noon ' Lounge -•> ­ UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH -v--m. .. ' ;2007 University Avenue .... j&tfuAmfie/u ti ^ f WM T-• • tJTv The Texas, Union'* UT' Interaction -arid Ideafe ^nd Issues Committees are pleas-"ed 4o.announce the Second program''tn " , the GifeatXecture Series. Dr. StephenSpurr, ^Professor at-the LBJ School;of Public -Affairs .will discuss-The Return ^ of an Eootogitlt Reflectionson9ur-| ^iyiAk %\u-;Yeai^ ^an^JTacini trinal one saying, "This is the law," and a more pragmatic one asking, "What. would be the effect of using certain. language in >Vlegal' situations?" A ' sga gfeSs9^ft * •->-*TW* \ < v* w«, • *»r ^ ^ * V? fPC To Probe Coastal States The Federal Power Com­mission is investigating Coastal States Gas Cdrp. and its affiliates, including Lo-Vaca Gathering Co., for possi­ble interstate transactions without FPC authorization. Quoting from the com­mission's order, George Lewnes, assistant general counsel for the FPC, said Wednesday the investigation was being conducted in com­pliance with the Natural Gas Act. "The investigation will determine whether there is a movement of gas in interstate commerce for which commis­sion authority has not been sought or received." Lewnes said. Lo-Vaca Gathering is the supplier of natural gas to Austin, San Antonio and Lower Colorado River Authority electric power plants. Lo-Vaca is an intrastate operation regulated by the Texas Railroad Commission under management and -rules separate from the interstate corporations. However, Ltf- Vaca also is under investiga­ tion for possible illegal tran­ sactions in interstate com^ merce. Don Newqinst, in charge of public relations for Lo-Vaca in li­ \"4 Houston, does not know what to expect from the FPC in1 vestigation. : "There are auditors-here; but we don't know-.what they're investigating or what the implications would be if we were put under FPC jurisdiction," Newquist sald.' However. Newquist said -• that Lo-Vaca would be posed to FPC control because^ "We would lose our contracts with those people in intrastate a gas transactions." , Lewnes and Newquist said the length and outcome of the . investigation are still known. aitffAH day. Exhibition of photographs byDean Ornish. A.C. foyer. , . • 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Ticket Drawing: Austin Symphony. Tickets are on sale for 50^ for Optional Services Fee holders for the ' Austin Symphony concert at 8p.m; Fndaiyg Feb. 14.-Tickets are sold in Hogg Box Of­fice. Cultural Entertainment Committee;; -8o.m.« 5 p.m. University RiskTournamentSign-up. 1 Registration to compete in the University Risk Tourna-I ment Monday-Friday, Feb; 17-21, will be tCMdkiy aiNl ^ tomorrow in Texas Union 114. The event te frae. 'Winners in the first round: will arrange to play edch other in the finals. The event will be in Texas Union South!10 from 7-l0 p.m. nightly. Recreation Com­mittee. . •£' : 10:30 -17:30 a.m. Human Sexuality Symposium; ."Pornography and the~Law." Hugh Lowe, defense counsel in the "Deep Throat" trial, will discuss por­nography and the law.-Tinker Room,-4th floor, ­Academic Center. Ideas and issues.Committee. ; •r: 7 l a.m. Afro-American Culture Symposium: "Biailt Polifitt." Dr. John.WaifTeld, UT Associate Professor off ­Ethnic Studies, will speak. Texas Culture Room (Afro­ A't. ^American), Methodist Student Centers Afro-Amerkan Culture Committee. -• 12 nopn. Music by Stacy. Broun and Page Trotter. Free. Texas Tavern. Musical Events Committee, r * ' • * " '12 noon. Human Sexuality Svmposium: >'Are You Fit To Be Tied?" YMarriaqo Coun«gling) iir B Ledbetter,•_? p.m. Human Sexuality Symposium: "Womeri's Rights and Non-Rights." Carol Oppenheimer, lecturer . in theSchool of law, will speak.Josey Room, 4thfloor/| ^Academic Center. Ideas and Issues Committee. ' ' 1: 3 p.m. Afro-American Culture.Symposium: "Black Sociologybr. Barbara Chance, UT -Assistant -Professor of Sociology, will s|>eak.Texas Culture Room. Afro-American Culture Committee. , ,^ v 7 & 9 p.m. Film: "Forbidden Planet." Wol*«» Pidgeon and Ann Francis star in this science fiction film Admission $1 for UT students, faculty, andstaff; £1.50 "for. members.. Burdine Auditorium. Theatre Committee. ^-309:30 p.m. UT Brain Bowl '75. Members of thei f?| UT community are invited to attend the third annual J contest based on television's ''Brain Bowl." A Univer­ '•••y professor will be emcee and a halftime show will entertain. Free. Academic Center Auditorium. Recrea-i tion Committee. 8-p.m. Great lecture Seties: Dr. Stephen Spurr. A1 continuing series in which professors give their favorite lecture. Dr. Spurr's topic will be "An Ecologist Returns: Reflections on Surviving Four Years in the" Jungle" Alumni Center, 2.110 San Jacinto. UT Interaction and Ideas and Issues Committee^' -8:30 p.m. -12 midnight. Band:. Plum Nelly. The popular Austin-country swing band will play in the Texas Tavern tonight and. Friday arid Saturday. Free. ; Musical Events Committee. ^ Friday, • // ^ ',,-1 -4 p.m. Valentine Hearts Tournomeht..1 Sweethearts are invited to while away the afternoon of Valentine's Day playing cards. Free. Texas Tavern.' m Recreation Committee. ' -*f£ 9 p.m.-I a.m. Valentine'sDance. Beatles music by A|bjt and the White Tornados. Admission $1 for UT *tudentSf faculty, and staff; $1.50 for others. Memodist Student .Center, 2434 Guadalupe St. Musical Events and Recreation Committees. Saturday r ^ } f ;6:30 p.m.' Students Older Than Average Covered 7.1 iWr I H *•&$$$!*.jjS'£ mm IS' PiH.'Sirrt m iliii Ifftfjl V-i'~ sh •*» -Ji ^•Or.Tf i.' gggtSB •.stndents. Jhase traffic . _ .• .-.... . . , -Failure to honora court --• •• x~ .,, ByOttlCTB^Ifn*." n>SS-cwnebat*to appearance ticketresnltsintbeissuance of -P is."*™ J®*-, 4 -JjV ^ r. ananest warrant. PMi "4 ^ crtaaow iccfade. U yoc. revived a «flr mUcket last'. toeltaeMwthetw^wj^peaart semester and did not pay it, chances are ac-S'withm 10 daysof the datf-W Ksne. Mas; two has not been taken^etBecause ^f the Affairs (OC^^other fedt^alagencies sugg i!laeMiig ^*H»s at the ead of the 10 days bodOoEof cases. Action may not be tak«i un c\Q^r^ ^ttfishsis 'SI!* the^Wy* •» been throw* cot ar "-til ftpj'snimner «• later on some of these -..^piidelmes on what a student should expect from the Univfargotten. This is nt^ trae. ;~~T • " cases-^lowever, rest assured the ticket Is IIat^t'^otpy*'flnnWdays-tl«eIee -.Still ortfUe^.and soa«r orlater it wiU pop up misunderstanding aire^by.~.|s dwhled-'When the amount of the fine again, the fine will be greats' than the" prevalent cause of'stntat coi^l^CI.he.is^ „ readies or eyeedslis,a letter issent to the wipnalflne, and you prabably won't be able a^TheiyAprobefe basedon thepremisethat edncationj offender by the panong and trafficJoBice. If to arpeiil tie tii*et . . ­the fine is not paid within 18 days after the ' If rjue^ians arise regarding traffic, and "protectionagainst.unscnipBloas ^tivitiei ;.'.!v' ""'" ^Ufa eackA, a com *n^*rawce titfat is parking'tiolationS, consult tbe Parking and csatd aad refcned to Ok Ttavis Onn^ Traffic Regulations and Information ^pangUg;. from deoqitive recruitment pncedgRS.tO;: ' L .'"v.. v -!«•MHriltf ,-;CbBrtfor action.The offensethen becomes a Bulletin, orcall the parking and traffic office •t%OUate st^nt-atfVL'dng a^ phrtiwrimg " --: ^V^VvV'-_ Convenient but illegal, this porting place will cost $5. "" coBty offense, ad jmrodictiaa is removed at 471-1911. '~k jjifiWdst studentcomplamjtsagainstthe Universitydonjgti sjvolve money.says Osbora. „'• ' ., .--° The crowdedrrmriitionsattbe Main *2 difficulty inkeepagielated sriqect , • H,-m„mw^ Ta "Grades^acaastato^pf co^lMifc because t_ ProgramSeeksTutorsg v •, iabraiy and the librarieswithin Bat matter together* Stow elevator ser-•»WOFUIff §•••:..&GBK5 '&f I#f wr^^'-i'^^JKUniiterdt^dep^'des'giwernmg gradedistriboti -ife HaB should be alleviated.by b'te w"iwynit iiii«• iwIiIiibiil •.:. w -«•;*;''•"••••*•s|V'• ':" 'Vi ••.*•. t *• 4Jn indiVKlaal departments,'* be feoorts, ^ The Volunteer Tntoiing 191? or early 1978, when these „, "It is still op to theUonersity ad- Virginia Gibbons, Project A student who feels he has received"hn incorrect Caaa^ Ubttries will he among those to «, ministrationto deridewfcat 4 to V°*Tfi_.^3ms. doector, said the tutoring c^feust deal with the individual professor, he says, merge mto the Texas-doped edifice ^-4 become ottheMa® and Battle Batf ^ ^^™g s THE IDEA of student consumerism set forth m the at 21st and Speedy Streets to be libraries .pan their evareti™" socswhowfflgTCatleastU^ from 10to17. "report is fundamental to the running of a largeknown as the Social Science and o Fred Bfaw iMwwii. tears a week towwkon a®e-Interested persons may con-jike UT. Osbom believes. -^ 4 to~oac Humamties LDbraiy. ; ,' s-aa Phn |gr Mr ne slmU he , basis with Austin fact Qibbons at 44Z-C73S dur-K'fThe OCA report'ls schednled to be examined by.a Nancy McAdamSr. librarian, yongstas needmg ttdp. ;.?.,:. ing flie aftnnoon. .? -'^.cbnefessional committeein education fhissnrinv'. .year.McAdams ToEase­ * & -—•* , <«r.rr Facilities and Pribram; Planning, ^ said. . sakl Tuesday that edtacational cm-Hie new hbevy is r*Tr*i*il to be a • pepte haye smce the Mam ?5j&. research facility witbqttt UE Dten­Ijbrary'sinShtDtioatatbe lSOffi Ttie ^ ^" sive traffic flowof teondergnduate Research \r^ sta^ s5%m at the JIain H*axy. "ItisBitendeafbrthekindof Riil&ng allows the piABc Bmited wort! where a stalest nor spend a ft^fev'i:^ifcoe$s. fflrt fte vttUcal sparing..of-.;v davormarabea ^nuil^rfsintelttereliHcAitamssudj ;ii*'V-;r. . By JOY.HOwklL months for them to, hecmiK-heaMor Cor is notguaty. *K3inc •ftpw StaH Writop.^^^^#agam." Beckett said. :^Sg§p who bought . sane - J-On Jan. 8, -the Austin Humane -Society^-' Some «™nh die every wintra* as a brake. He was .forced investigated a call that a..' horse" had , result of improper feedinganH poorcare. Dallas to support his wife and daldren. /dropped,deadin a pastureadjacentlothe'^Tlt is worse this winter than others, .Justice Kithng Stables, east of Austin, ^gg.. Beckett sakl > to feedHKhoneSi v, ®»Jle Nordyke, executive .director ofep "FEEDPRICES arereally highdoe to 'Theecanomic betisthat OilsiSalae­ •''' Ihe luiutanejSQCietV• found the dead fafirsfe|.a «Jwrt gwwring qo^iTfim fall and Hip ,!i bg business in aar inilated society • and IT others on the verge.ot starvatkwgi^ generallypoorwmwmy niajphm-rm can'tmakeany moaefwifh horses, „ ...NOW-THE HORSES are being fediiSi sure the horSe owneriare tempted to let said. !?;2v" cterges are lodged against, theiownecfethe horses slide and get by on little S^nVEV IS pnpssaagfor • J"*101,6 ^rse has died frtmi overeating: ,?;feed," he said. as possible but the rw MpJ«wrfc it costs8a day to feed each horse, attorney, Broadus Spivey, feels added. h- U lucite pierced at noi\W£. f®i you Buy mis pear of * " ' y 5 S ^ i xf+Jf 14K )t^ . - JtW« W#ik4 anguage ^e^JDEBBIE DEEACRtZ " Texan Stall Writer %t£;gS|inotes. I was used to listening to the in-instructor while I was looking at what I r^^PactyloIogy Js-Ukeitaking^a jforeigm'-'ajwas wriUng,.lBut if yoa do that in here, , - {^language,, the.{difference being that no^%ou miss evei7thing he is saying " ' language' is, involved. It's Commonly *s If Hasseli wants to get the class' .^known as sign language v :^^attention,he;simplyswitches off the ^J¥;JerryHassell;a deaf mute since they-lights' ' - ^ijie^4«;Jias>.been.t^i!chl)%}tlie:coiir8e^fi€:.;MMt''«f?tte:«bidents are speech ma­ tinee': the'fall pf 1*973 when Grace'-'-^jara^imt^several • are -learning the. Hanse, director pf a teacher's program--f vjlanguage /so they can- communicate for the deaf,and Dr.-Alan Thompson of iwith the deaf. 1 the,;.Diyis(pn;.of. Extension set up the program andasked Hasseli toteach the <''course. INTHEFIRSTclassan interpreter -"I have never seen such industrious isandsstudious ones in my lifetime of ^teaching," Hasseli said. "I believe the reason lies in the fact that are is tiroughi tp helpHasseli introduce the'; -.dedicated people who want to help bourse and its'requirements The studentsare told they should be able to? >> communicate with'Hasseli by way of 'manual alphabeti>y the Second class & i. Hasseli teaches the language by firsts gelling the word or phrase with, his,? . hand and then writing the word on the' -board He then repeats it with his .. hands • * The students imitate the motions-while Hasseli spells the word. The class looks as if it's playing*­ -charades when Hasseli is trying to teach -something as.confusing as verb >Staff yfcWfairAitjfr^Shv^inun tenses. If a person moves his hand in ; Jerry Hasseli the wrong direction, it can change the '; »is a -deaf mute. "Spectrum,''-'a program to encourage • r: >\ By DAVID HALL" ' .-''A--A bill to create a state day '-care -program . has been in­troduced in the House by Rep^ " Samoel Hudson of Dallas. The bill would establish day care' carters for chijdren over i [ years old wfro meet certain 'Teqairements. , ^ •* \ Children admitted lo 'proposed • state : program without charge would have to - be eligible forstateAssistance iimder the program providing itsS^ikltolamilfcswith dependent vS^-^dnMren. Thdr mcrthers would ,54iave to be employed, enrolled,? ^ In a State Department of ....^Public Welfareauthorizedjob: ' ^ra'inin^program,ce^ified \s' %e Teuas EmpkqmteotC ..Emission as registered • entire idea of the sentence Lynn Appling, a therapist technician deaf'citizens to participate in the -A PROBLEMin the class is taking; Wor the Austin State School said "In ••3 Bicentennial;celebration The programnotes. ,» i ^order to learnt foreign language, you ^ is sponsored1 by the Parents­ „ , r? 'hav«> tn rplv fWlanoiiaop Vm Imrni JudL,Pride, a .University employes^• have to rely on thelanguagerYou learn -, "* Professional*Section of the Texas isaid, "I tised, to be great at taking~^'it faster that way."" -* r °j " r ~ mm. byRep. work, or permanently disabl-with low income a discounted ed. Families designated as rate "The idea isto eliminate potential' welfare recipients the revolving door welfare in. under federal:law. would be which employed women" are eligible also ',-:' '-required to'pay full day' care CfflLDBEN FBOM lowand rates which they cannot af­middle-income iainilieswould ford," said Mike-McEIroy, be admitted to 4hecenterson Hudson's assistant-' "They; those less fortunate than they are." . EVEN THOUGH Hasseli cannot ex­press himself verbally, his emotions 'and feelings can be perceived by watching him :teach. "» ' ' Mary Prater. a deaf education ma­ jor, said'-it is obvious that he is a sincere and dedicated man. "Iam real­ ly impressed with the way he teaches the class.Hie whole classrespects him and i-his 'Work -1 think he is a -very patient and; talented teacher;" Prater said. • i proposed prognud but'inebgi-. ble under jtji'4 federal program. The estimated cost of the proposed .program would be $2 million:more than the f4 million to be spent on the federal |irograiii: ,<•? u a,shdingJfee basis, scaled to lose their jobs and fall back ' NOTICES from th« family income. f onto welfare." : -:'fv- General UbrariM or > any The current-federal day -The federal program is sup-' ' of the branch** ar* of-. care programTequiresthefull ported .by matching state and ficial University rate once the recipient is no federal funds. Thestate would munications requiring longer eligible ft»r federal pay the additional cost of. immediate attention. assistance. It al^o makes no' those allowed under the provisioo ^or families with ' - -Hassell felt-the students leant faster from^adeaf instructor. "It's like lear­ning" Spanish faster from a . native Spaniard thanthe.onewhose.second language ls.Spanish;'' Hasseli said. IN ADDITION 'to: the dactylology ­class. Hasseli as] a fulltime math teacher in thejiihjor high department­al the Texas School for the Deaf. Hasseli first went, to school at the Oklahoma School for the Deaf in Sulphur from 1934 to 1938 He attended the Texas School for the Deaf,foir eight-years,:beginning,in1938. He received his college education at Gajlaudet College in Washington, D.C:, from 1946 to 1951. Gallaudet is.the only liberal arts college for the deaf in the world. Besides teaching,'Hasseli is involved in churEh work, having been a Sunday school teacher and song leader for the. last.20 years. He was four times president of the Texas Baptist Conference of the' Deaf which meets in various parts of the state annually. ; HE IS ACTIVE in the Texas*,and National Association of the Deaf; and The students feel they benefit, more -National Fraternal Society of the Deaf. by taking thecourse from someonewho Lately he has been working with v Austin City Atty. Don.Butler says he:would not agree with * —a proposal to nd CoastalStates Gas Co. of its financially troubled subsidiary, Lo-Vaca Gathering Go., if it means Lo-Vaca could charge higher natural gas rates. ­The proposal calling for a possible combination sale and ! • spin-off" has been'presented by Charles S. Coates. a : Brenham pipeline contractor. . . I Coates has proposed that Coastal States sell to a group of 1 investors he heads 20percent of the Lo-Vaca stock and "spin-* off the. rest of the stock to Coastal States shareholders. ­ • Such an arrangement would make Lo-Vaca a separately I , owned company instead of being under its current court-• appointed management. >: >i The proposal also includes a series of financial tests Lo1 Vaca would have to meet, such as capital rates ratios, debt • ratios, determination of a rate base and availability of bank I credit. <, -.* Butler said that from what he-has read, it seems that the -­proposal would accomplish two things >' "The good news is apparently that Coastal States chair-v­man Oscar Wyatt would be getting out of the control of Lo^i Vaca." he said. "The bad news is thisdeal appears to be conditionedonLo-'» Vaca getting a full return on its rate base " ,> ••n • 'Association of the Deaf." .. » jjf ?>n vvn INCOME TAXi <\ -» * ANDYOU -| ' ADVICE ON COMPLETING This week only, Feb. 10-15, YOUR 1040 FREE ,Mon.?Sat^:8elf ser^ce:!#tT-^:'-. M Hum 19 2105 SAN ANTONIO THURSDAT j ONHY-S COPYWG SERVICE,INC. 7:30 P.NL 42 DOBE MALL m'*\1 -f -w V i"V TV '^ -•iyg.tH 2021 GUADALUPE AUSnN,TEXAS78705A r r, 2^ low-incomes but.iint enrolled it» 'federal ^assistance }M_ fx'' ru prograitbs.; *-A _. Mow* femoved v -families i & Mi":­ SyyEIETHEAB®SP661#i, FOR FEBRpABY??.Ho sommOin/ smmf for -fy ' Body wave for only $12.50 V:; r«9-$18.50 S*ve SS mnd gfvmJon $ lt*T ? ABANA UNISEX HAIRSTYLING 1910 E. Rivenide 442-7924 ^*4 ms , a ||fl I iiiililiW'fii'lBBfitllBliV »% i m -^3 "?WeTS^ yd™ , "hanging baskets arrangements plants 631 W. 34th St. 453-9405 ^ 'U V* have-a-heart;. choose a gift^froiti jpp­ " China, Africa, 5^ \S1s115rj ^ England, Germany, sr; jfi, Pf fjv P; m mm our showroom. Our demonstration &ciliti^fe. allow you to fairly compareeither of the Adveritwj speakers, with each other and with speakeri$l4 ' from other manufacturers. If you prefer we wilL^51 not identify thespeakers duringthe comparison^!®, so you will get as unbiased a test as is possible^1 We won't rush you, you jcan come in aS oftenas|i you, want, listen as long as you like, and use as^ wide a variety of program materials is help|ulM'I to you; " , Nothing atiouteither speakerisacciSental'^ They are the result of eighteen years' previou^M experience.in making iugh-performance acous-Jfj tic-suspension speakers, and their low cost is i the result of what the people.at-Adv«nt hav^jL^j learned about taking the most, simple,'direct^ [^-Before yoti buy your first or your next pair oi^ route to highest performance. ; ^ I % poudspeakers, we recommend that you hear thel Both Advents have identically wide-fre^T |^'Advents rt 4.u i.L . . , quency bandwidth, with bass respon^t fiM .f®411 tte wm original Advent Loudspfeaker'S. proached by few speakers of any price or size,If-1 |^japd The Smaller Advent' Loudspeaker /adkef^' and with high-frequency response and disper-W fe'the top level of loudspeaker performance avafl-1' sion of the highest order. Both have the same !§ ^-u gapingcosfcjv, clarity and accuracy, and an octave-to-'octave =3 ^Either of them will take head-to-bead competi-t; -: musical balance chosen to soundconvincing not ij* lw?jr» — wunnsw|.F.-,v musiutti uoiaiiuemiusen tosounaco *-• • • -only on the best, recordings «...,but < "r'-'m |Pfitlc!n absolutely any speaker system of any *i.-_ .1 on the great rto l |ft^5,c?,'8'*e>'or vintage, and— both of them 80undi-: -. majorityluajuiit.y uiof rcwruiugsrecordings of all kinds. ­ £ - oraiiKinas. s! li'&.obviduslv dramaticallv.bettpr t.hnn. -i-. i <-Ti,i a«i„ j:«. obviously and dramatically better than many # . , The only basic difference in performance# fcfat more expensive systems. ^ ^ between the two is that the original Advent'vJ I' If y°u know someone wbo owns a pair ofi ^ \ (f125 or $110depending on cabinet finish) will '"M JsAdvents or Smaller Advents, you can easily v' play slightly louder in bigger rooms than The ?| ^out thoseclaims ~ I -l m(T listening both It r>-SmaUer (-476). Either is an outstanding value # ?sp€akers 811(1 to what theirowner hasto I I % by any standard, and The Smaller may be the1 about them. M«ny Advent owners bought^; most spectacular bargain available in stereo# IVy their speak^rsonlyafter extensivecomparisons, components ~ early disbelief that they'" r " m-L­ !. \Ve have on display. complete music sys^^lI'^ere^faearing whatthey were hearing.Thesune s$ems-which feature The Advent-Loudspeaker^ inoA/twtA .ktf '^UA ^i«twiers* have (become'by far the most effective and The Smaller Advent Loudspeaker. These.! y^pdyertisers^for" Advent speakers, helping to systotals were pre-selected by us, after careful^ MWallllDfinnr fA Affo*tUn .vi wKidi you wfll find as satisfying next year as|£§|in to hear them wlm youfirst take y^iu system home. M.la •04 S33 1 TheMiglc Mushi-bonil'DoBigMall m M mm jfiWeMfr} K®8 HR m nmi * __ _i__ i "mrTM ' > a ...-- . fi-ybgtyz'i&f .­ By PHU> RINGMAN tion of permanent job hunting -presidenl;»subj*ect t? --^security grafted, to p , the< University, it is either Seven years is,the accepted J^e ^ar^eS' thingabout ,* j railing after some stagge^T^i ^professor prohibiting » ». "ujHHxmt," Ros| said That "probationary" period. Styce sEating is the ice," says.a 4 ing steps-"My wife and r?-1 lif' "rversity from dismissingMmfi,*. v "begil} lieft fa^l prjtleas.ftn > except for "grave cause." granted tenure upon promo-'professor will not Be granted ' Age. Austin's new rice new mall was like," he"'fu 1 J Tenure principleswere Urst tiqn to associate or full tenure, if no notice is received -skiving centeron Anderson said, "but then I saw this,®. ,'<;ons}Stently^||^ f J formulated in 1915 by the professorate end of his sqt-after the -sixth year, the' |In rare straight, hold your balance "Now my husband and hv ^is;di^$hg Clro^'^rjthe rice, holding eaclf' other's x were reformulated in 1941 mmated through 4nonpromo-^ases, tenure ts granted and l?an a>little forwardso have to keep up with her ^ hand ; It is Mr. ai• that you don't fall on your Many of the childreq^, |Fpr^st'G^ehough; frpiri Association «f American NON TENURED faculty A TENURED professors back, and then simply take dream tp participate later^ r.th6 Texas :Sch601Vfor -ttfe Colleges. The two are reappointed each year, iose his job only for "in-1 tjje» .first sliding step" in national or even worlds ^ Blind. "My wife grew ,iip organizations . assuming satisfactory per-competency, gross uttmorali-forwards, and the second* competitions'sand ;to.':be: powers but AAUP tenure formance," .until the sixth ty or felony," Ross said. and whoops, there we are, seenon TV nationwide Butl<« England/'';,r;fe-sa ip -^ipleshaveaduev^su^ year when a decision is made Dremissal is automatic upon bvit^actually the ice ,isnoTtj one obstacle to that is the so.hardi r Goodenough.' "After ^ she <•' ^?h w^the^i? Bran' Ross admission of guilt in cases of difficult beginning. "I waSi \ •;'pame.^ ^"You. have to leam -, ,nn^ in th» S*ib "* '"i ' immoralityor felony,lie said scared at first thatXwould%J % b^Vsk^hgif^M^eatSi a. slight variations, in the Promotions-to tenured n0 one'will admit.in-skating by. doing it," said fall doWn jand^breaB I regulaUons of most schools, positions are based on exten-competency, though, audit is-Shipley ,7^ers; head something," said 6^year%¥ | gla'4'^itej^^ has alrtadir including the University s sive evaluations of the can-hard to prove,'Ross added. ^ pibfessional/at the rink, old Alena Coats, "so X kepi f# again arid regents rules. , didate's ''teaching, ah the safeeuards of "due jAnd she.should jgiow, since close to the railing to have, irt taught;nieho^.^ She wbn tjie^ U S gold Guided by his wife's hand * "The purpose of tenure isto scholarship and service to the pi^e^ fre Srantwdto a some hold. But now I amt> f * insure a Professor has University," Ross said The tenur«l professor faced with i medal in 1954 "Even if you taking lessons and am not profesj£r -watch:others SO times how ^:smcK^y.;^sih^l^^|a' 15 evaluated by a disrtnssal, Ross said. Due scared any more.' ^ distance nobody can rsefe s rf cwmpeteice, University committee pf his seniors m process includes the right toa they do it^rou have to get Rosi Cupp keeps close to « e d lnnan the reeling yoirfself," she ^? fc ^ hearing, legal representation, the railing, too "My Stanley R. Ross said.The En-of thedepartment, the deanof ihe right to confrontwitnesses said. \ grandmother told me thatw-i -SJlAtth h* n.nrn. An„ ~ cyclopedia of Education lists theschool,a collegewide com-^others > witnesses, Tq get( the' feeling i** ^ 4 J?*!> ; y^r^iretgtimei^li^y she learnedskating by first Figure Skating Giuh hopes^ skating before,", spid Well, probably "a little, two additional reasons for mittee on tenure, the The AAUP Committee on AusUnites of ,a{l ages try pushing a chair in front of that this Will change in the Ay6re, "and Jor them it is: proucj. that y^ their first steps on ice t L J i L l ' f ^ ^ v i c e ^ r e s i d e n t s a n d A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m a n d her, then taking a broom' ? future "Ehe clubisproud to > not too difficult.to change^ and less direct,contact academiccareer moreattrao-> the president. Ross said. The Tennre receive comnlaints: slates "4 mother wanted ,us to teacheven heri-yeat>-instead of the chair until have"Sully Kothmann as a to the ice " < with the ice; perhaps"a lit-a»bP#t dismissals andMn-® Stu^mts^attheUnlversi-.a t^'^jreM^qi^;ani^s.w.cl:: 'kf 9,1(1 IWWishes^Ttn-1­ ^ take ice Ha^ltUeswef;^^;ybti1r!iKan^-: the fall* and dreaming how year.: The,.-'.you some day might skate ^ "NOTMANXTexate^UT?-;" ;now IjmM'W have participated W -Someof the skaC 2 and lo<>k eA from a tenur major ice-skating com-*4 a^all like MKinners^, Y % BUFFET I ^ ,•<%*: ,old."'c. petitions. The Austin' .about the .arrahge-professional tPjWB G&M CATERING :DaWomiNT« IH 35 «^38^1 }w>% Marijuana Bill Expected Soo 5 5[n??ABn,YN T*®®0F*" ... ' 4 station for possession vof two ounces or less of FRIED CATFISH |1 A bill taking small marijuana possession cnminal EVERY MEAf .next few weeks ' * ^ ,•"»» ^ ^ , .,*2 OTHER ENTRia Rep ^raie WashuiBton D-Houston and-S«r Tatl San-_ Washington thinks the bill will:probably 6®3raiiiti^t2^ Craig Washuigton, D-Houston, and "Sen w ..... be submittei to tta ALSO v i ^>i tiesteban, D-El' Paso, will sponsor the bill. i 4. t M, CriminaJ;JurisprudenceCommittee whereit will havea^(air'tO.ij^jVEOETABUES # "The purpose of' the tail is to" take i st^p towards ' chance , A c¥l'h SA1AOS, ijPf decriminalizing manjuhna use," Washington-saidncently Santesteban Uiinks.Uje.bill will leave committee.ifmd after/BREADS&'OSSBITS v DEPRESSION CITY SPECIAl "This bill would change possession of twocounces of mari^ that, will have a "good, not excelent chance." "a.n ^ juana from a Class A offense to a Class C' dffenSe," Steve "M ,s «>nceivable that this bill may have support from MON— HAM & CHEESE fk^i Simon, state director of National Organization for the Reform or^er people," Simon said, "becausesmoking raarijuaiuu: •p. v TUE— HOI DOGS ^ oMVJarijuana Laws (NORML), said -' • no,longer aLsign off-radicalism ' ' ji1"" i WED— }/*,IB HAMBURGERS F .. :A .Class A offense falls under,criminal courtiurb^iction and • '."Petvle. used'to associate marijuana -with changet^mc r THU-HOT UNK (BBQ)vfe> " is punishable by a maximum $2,000 fine. A Clals Cdffense falls righte. the women's movement, free speech. That's i under justice of the peace jurisdiction and is punishable by a claimed. f , i t ^ 7 martimum $200 fine. , ' •,<. Santiesteban thinks the ljlll will have several posltiveeffeL™,, ; sat— corny dogs ' "It would also change possession of foui1 io'six ounces'of 'f passed "1think jtwould allevjatethecaseload inmany 5<>un-5^SUN— STEAK SANDV marijuana from a Class A to a Class B offense, • Simon said Jy^oUrts at-law,V he said '^t v?ould also enricdl the ®e _Al Class B oQense isJKandled through criminal court'and is through the municipal courts,1', " ^ itiniefiAhlnlwt'M Wi*w5eZ1^2^'-»e'. •••••"J 'f-****.'./1'.' "• 'j. f r, i fm VALENTINE TURQUOISE SHOW f "* V «v* 41 * v ^ you are invited to.atfend SKC^ANGS a turquoise show on i February 12 13,14, and 15th,'Sk. i * * >* J a There will be a large collection of rings, ^bracelets, pendant, squash blossonjs and assorted handmade items by Zuni; Hopi, I^Navajo and Tigua^ American Indians' " ALL AT 20% OFF ^dme by^and buy, iSometigi®^^iq^youis 1612 S. Congres; ~ 447-7822, •A bypyfoyhk L* r_v.. to yyy v# bw ww wTSywTw rf w « • * \ v~ ~ T/L i Workshops a?hecfui'ed"toit:-Butler"'didn'i place thjS bean to New Orleans to use * Most black performers'in . whites objected to the choice, of $95 per week is not "ade­questioned the possible psy­ i2.'30am ^^y.inUfeJ^C^'rtfKlect on traditional society drums. , -,4 „ , the 1800s were Ktraveling he Said-. quate." Snell said, because chological impact white op­SlE^ina SlS Dr i .7*r:^S" The slav?s ln New-Orleans~ minstrel shpws.-Even here. "If white America had working on the council re­pression might have on Will deal VJith "Blacksand the v1**" something wrong with mqjptaiiied •,a > larger^trilial;' the "black face" tradition allowed blacks to become part, quires 40 to 50 hours a week. blacks. Citing examples from r^f. Sterling Stdckey, professor,of Criminal JusticeSystem" dnd t black cultural leadership in ,igroup than:tt^ remained and the blackactors of American drama, the con­Additional pay "would en­his personal experience, Sikes' Afro-American Studies"at flacks in taw Firms.'* ? America , ,'s' vui had to darken their skin to be> t t ?cbjfmfes^Havn6r/.^ cept of "black drama" would courage not only black people said blacks have had to face"1 •Lv, OCLA, 'will present ''Paul4 These sessions will examine h "People faJJ to see thfc societies that had jorigfaated soc accepted by white audiences. not be necessary," he con­but other people as well," he the problems of no restrooms; ­ li'} Robeson: The Man and theAr- difference between cultura the involvement of blacks far fa) :'m\Iw^piAfri^fpr^xi^MS' The 1930s werefertile years cluded added. loan refusals, gbsoline-1 M* tist" at*3p.m. in Calhoun Hall tbecriminal justicesystemasrf politics „ ^a >\» •> laymen and lawyers -< f 'leaderships Butler told the were better preserved in New >aid, but to gain acceptance > terested in councilmen run­vices provided for whites. .•Wednesday's events includ-^Workshopsat#:30 p.m. willsP^'tiracialaudience.HeaddfvOrleanstbali elsewhere jn the by whites the plays couldn't , Politics ning" in' single-member dis­Oppression has caused; .... ' ** • — instates, he explained * be strongly problack. The number of;black tricts, with "at least two at-blacks to develop a defense' A firet tods evolved .One play, in which a black politicians in Austin will Iarge positions." mechanism against racism, ^ heses ;S6cieiies.'. The man wasacquitted of a charge probably triple in the next 10 "East Austin is now becom­Sikes added. -u -jj.. „ , would march to of attempted assault of a years, City Council candidate ing "a very united place. The Even today, Sikes said-he- As • part-of Black:History and pijyjite setters. The cultural diffusion of funerals and.afierwards.play white woman, was made Jimmy Snell told a group of people are working together faces oppression from' .The symposium is"tree tdpi African music in the ' joyousmusiclike'.'When the Week the School of Law and acceptable to whites by black University students very diligently and getting colleagues who do not know-' the Thurgood Marshall Legal the public-v \/ , i^roericas was discussed; Spints Go Marching In," revealing that the girl wasac­Wednesday in. a speech . en-people elected to various of­how to relate to him. Monday,! Society will sponsor a sym­'m*A-+ K'-Wednesday byjCarter Havner, parading through the streets tually a mulatto, Williams ex-. titled "Black Politics in fices, like the State when he questioned a panel ofv posium :on of NewOrieansiHavner'said plained Austin'" Wtp J Legislature and the school University people on'whether' Legal Profession^ «-With,the .appearance, ot : Srtell is running in the Place board." he said. they would want to be black, v- and Friday, >sTheater.•eople.:'f;: •i im drama still hasn't- JM W';itcrbcds -M professor"of,]&w at the J5tate*1r^citing~I>Uke-iEliingtonj.^colonial governors -outlawed Combat thenegative portrayalJ^amed full i.acceptanpe-.by,-.gt.' University of New Yprk at Butler said most black per--, the use of drums, Havner of blacks was by a group ttiat whites. When the :'-'River: «;TONITE buffalo and served as phlef formers have not received •> said. The French, however, formed m Harlem jnllBJ.;The Niger" was judged the out-Complete counsel for the defehse in the .adequate credit for their a«> permitted black slaVes African Grove PlayerSj'te exr -• Standing play of the ,1973-74 selection of water-Shiva's Head Band Attica prison violence trial. ,complishrfienjtfl^ However, transported from the Canb-plained Broadway season, many; beds & accessories. SATURDAY 6407 Bunief AlvinCrow ­ : ^wczy ^ Earlier February Deadline Set 07 Bee Caves Rd. 327-9016 For Student Aid Applications .Satunlay is the deadline to and building1 use^fee exemp-or CollieScholarshipService'. apply.forfinancial aidfor the tion, Self-helpaiH canbeloans Financial Aid Statement (a Valentine sjpecial for two. Rib-eye summer academic -session; or college Work-study. All new financial need statement, steakwitk bordelaise sauce, baked while March l is.the deadline financial aidisawarded on the is required for the summer for aid in the l975-76academic • basis-of financial, need. session.) > potato/.saTafd/bar, and carafe % year. --, Students'applying for finan-A notarized statement of in­ wine fDr' $10.00. The financial aid package «lal aid must complete .• dependence signed by parefits *• £0* / Frh & Saf. Only consists of scholarships, Algeneral application, «f students under 23 years of :v « grants, tuition' scholarships Ait "AsakicmCollege Test age who are .claiming finan­ sSAEEU OfFFEsem tfRonnea VP£Af//VG) TONITE SHINER BKR HITI' ^Pitcher $1.25 Glass 30 2405-AN btauon, Ausun. lex. 7871? Ccngress'ftitftcOaBMr 26biGuacTalupe JGATSBY'S riow2LoainoN$ mrttoYout :Restauiram & Bar BflSRn * ^ ^Thursday Night Townes Van Zandt t330fi0LlAMMl jetT TothU's U«OOMT6R r Richard Dobson mwmsmm NO Cover Charge Happy Hour -Vl price drinks 4-7 weekdays ^ a ^nd0rSQrv ^??^' The Village fKgpMQ? (Across from VillageCinema) \ v *­ paui noheson Mm -tho and thoman 94} KW»f GHTiFRIDAY m , SUNDAYS Nothing li mmm P*-j ^ ct year The Jbest evmiin BESTPLAY1S72 Times:"thequintessential BunuelJaw u mmm nn.6./in mmim .-"j.L_ — wmmm ;ium tiv^Y~ Film, Life Style Discussions T\M. w»«ww*sies ByBONNBE XOWTHER ~*'~from pornographic films tosesnaldeviaa^v , lmaMsex^dwinc^aat--w>nnnaT "IferrisConway. Sexuality Symposium" Wednesday; ^ coMador m te * -* -­ Tf£§g®& Wm^^Cont£>t SymposJtaeveots wffl contiaaeTtarsg^ t»s$clnlqgcal Services CestavtoH 4' %vK«V; leaders whdspitike'oh eampu^ -J? '*V-hwled I* &"«& towe-*Aft**atc>*: „ Itews^jpi Becati9ce, the JgpisCOpjalt fr,Vi .„ 4JS5-tff. toroc&ia theAustm"DeepThroat"trials^-axs ,Fbc^maS^emapeandhonwsn- SR* ^ I»wewill speakmtheAcademicCenter's^ "t Tinker Room on"PoroogTaphj aad they small Mt Law. Conway described rapestsxs men "who ^ Marriage counseling is the abject of a generally hare *wyfe«;satisfactory M the Church'* was an event ,ynt;delinlt^iist^ discussionalt 7 OwnyfisH^risM hotnosexiailrty ® r^-iu^lsp0^d,r ^Academic Cnter^ MwUMBL _ *~ •and tiaasvestitism. * ® t*/aieptierf W,-tte pebl%^ "Worpen's Rightsand Nocrij&ts" isthe •T*a«s«slites enjoy t)e temkuae sade ^ ^SPEAKINfr PoR^C/txWwVe«lL^1nSV V jis topic of a.lecture at X pjn. Thursday by of themsefres, dress op as wwnen and Z Z bettre |\Umted Methodist Church, the.. ^ ns •sr, Carol Oppeobetmer, a lecturer in the osaally dont seek sexaal nbteskps» ;• -Rev. Bob Breihan sdidIts doc-selfishness ' Hines safd ' ^^1• .:v School of law.Oppenheimerwill speak n• with men.(te theother hand,hocoosexaals i-ipJS t trines affinn beliefs Jn Hufi" ^he EoiscoSift^ OhuriPl :,a !. the Josey Room of the Academic Grater. - Qsully ^cek sexnal relationships' withSi&S w> Speaking on ^Sex m XSnema." Geoige .membersof their own sex'and sometimes ^ family and m marriage sex HesaidtheseareioS^lfe ; Wead. assistant professor of radio-tele­even haveoperations performedtocharee ?tS *'•-i, vision-film.daimed the repressed of seat-• . v. ^JsS| V^k^,.f™?vchildren,tofutnUmertb^I 1 speaks positively of nomo^ex^ «.e 0DtMS:^ sex ^hvaieattS^ . ual activity in today's films was not the -Conway added that all iasnaasare horai^Sg: •^.-w^ofnmralistsorreligiQqsnwrtments. with "bisraal trndew.ks" whkfc are*'^? and^n^ttf b!£-TtrQl and cmrtionally^^Si jfv . '"With sex^soopen, ittakes Ike eattyr-"conditioned ant if tam% and sooal^V ^rt^WMon 0 ^ creates stableerivlronm« -^'vtainment out of films becaose it's not pressmes." " " " $v-<. ^sSa.UyTa btoad ; covert and sneaky. We've forcedsexnal Cbn*ay . repression lack 00 the film industry jo^t •••.•.;•• at her Job "is offering reasonable alter-^ eludes^ SSl^ ^ n^efS^i. makemovies interesting." _ -— nativesthat willwort•thereal worldfor " necessarily lntercou^r wl W"whef Ma^T^S 1e-4 '*£ *•. * i.: people with deviating behavior." Should learn to en^joy ...Jlv*.\1JLP Staff Him* fay Z^dt Ryot ^ other-'; 'better su,ted iflt wS FOR SALE ^Bceth (j|_qnd Brteihan discuss churches' sexual views."'Ss?|<. Breihan said. * FURN. APARTS. Pointingoutthediversitlw" ,.f the iMethodist Oiureh. he Z* 1 BEDROOM .'.5 Classes Begin on Alcoholism unsaid tbe Glide Methodist TOCAMRUS •»*»»«» M'» iV i*« fte#5ja^os® ^ ^^»^.:^^^oped^v-scff.-'!«d]mUon^'^^(r--78:i>fr0l.fpiMM APTS. program for y6dngr ppopfe;^^?-f./;JRepr«s^tij^ IBDRM^^ABP •! r stressed .tK^ di.ffereftceV' onc^ #e between traditional ^ex church relies j". SHimtje.sibp ont •eaucatipn and sexuality. revelations an^ the'OId?attf; LEASXCFOB JAM.I "THE ACTUAL order in New Testament -for iexuali^; NYVALE wews which people.leanit^just'the ' ''x _ a f mm 5. f: opposite, 'most of it coming A solid !marr|ag^ whfth ABUS -shb:;s^ from one's peers.'^Beech cojhi emphasizes • rearing chllclf^i' •D'>' Thor*,, M., A SatSJ^J T,SW.S^? LARGE EFFICI United. ",,1r. , -'i. with«6undmoral values isth£ StZMBPLUS ? , ST(EAM « |The^hunrcVy^jograjffi^k^toj^g«^j|ittart^^^? AVE.'B . •?. """ KtOESHUn' Wftl Jf,S&3-v»ja}; J** ' s c* Ami *riMrv?K*eo J ' in Dobie Mall Ml if3»POftTSTOU HAPPYHOURPRICES r A 'Vs Theatre Committee AIL NIGHT LONG s J . ? d i£. BROKEN -presents; ^Science^Bction^Ckisfitl Featuring Ltoe Music *iyy mttihsi-itontaTl . 2 Bedroom ' TONIGHT:! PLANET C^^BucWnahain BMNlCd witHWalter jooh awiAnn Francis wiM BROTHERS P*r Arching for a party of iarthlings who' dihk^ yppiired mtntyeit^ bifpn,j»iptceiMp ?"% -^-.v^bndi nn thftv-vrianaifAtMi*^ v-ru'*;;' -Hia^Slsj 'BinMtAV^IatfKHHIMI Con*^H4xr 5PRIN& O l tUMKAieXCBDi •"ito.-r -sis Twin r* ^ JOHNNY .^TOWNLAK .-named "Robbie."' A vanishediacft had W«i;kio-uw. n -^II"t'onAltalr-4,thousind4 ofyeantes them and presentt s c ,;ite».4W6l8^S W^i/ta thought-provoking thillenge that,demaqdK all their resources to survive one min's tiA T,_, Some film buffrsee thbitl-fi i jt45Stodentiwa^.th . r ' |i5 days a w V >V pumuukmuiS ,'gs* Jknigiflt, * ' atHn®W«5 ri30.» • ***-^ -;; ^~j oOAh totion?**W* reaif#sviP ^^^M^BssaaSSr a^WALK TO% is valuable . •MkMarilav55SUS&3 ^CAMPUS 1 --tvf ishBe;u nfm"•ppmp QMOC tettlrtift mm* 13 SPEND 10* MML&Y. REALTY n SAVE $200 i -FOR m DEA STONE > ONE OF ... APTS. v TEXAS'F** 4F VN :SB-4 ^i JOOM nw«MSMin«i InOAVSpalft'Oa 3 PAIDPA1 CAMPUS FURN. APARTS LONiX>N THE BUS M$a? ILLA DOWNTOW ORLEANS ^$137 JS. ARTS. EFF1C1ENCY-$115 1 I6HSTEPPE nifi niost fariioiis niiknowii hand Id (tic wdrlri. I Ht.KM M.MIf AI r$4 (BILL VVIMAN 001only aspainter Butas personissomething notquite soeasily basically the same messagethat Bannard is indeedone of the ,v. and ,, "A. done * M-.. f greatest contemporary painters in America or,for that matter SHARRON REED w«»oAwi«"„""«"w-'J'.*7"r .. . * .... BANNARD Started outas a"minimal artist." Fyora there he the world.. .• . ? ®B8i8^n' of m art cj^f?an went into a very,disciplined, almost agonizing technique which V X • r •• • '. departinent.iailcl is a tantarartfltaHtviitv * ; ;u-..•.:••.•:; ? • -• * •• i-gdefjartiiient, and Reed is'a junior art student.) ! produced paintings Which could be described as subtle perfec-"luanjutsuuiuuig snows nave oeen at uie Tibor de Nagy in His most outstandingshows have been the ftWTo bpntjw.'a few words, "There was blot ofpaintinggoing on atlf Vnnlr. tUn tr n_1t t ' • ..._7 .. tions. He combihedhard-edges, patience^md exquisitecolors to * New York, the Kasmin Galleiy in London, the David Mirvish ^^We.'?0s.No review <^>uld describeandevaliiateallpfitjand create \»orks of.great delicacy.It isjndeM'a visual experience, Calory in Toronto, the Lawrence Rubin Gallery in New York jXlt is unlikely^that any-art wnter would want totry." Thereisa hnt.nM.M.^1.. «1k^J i i /i ' .* . ••••. *1.,. r n.n A • *1 .' M not one easily related verbally. ^ . the Neuendorf Gallery in Cologne, Germany, and most recently ^lotof painting going on.itr the '70s as.well,'and once againeven After having produced some of the finest worit of his career, the Knoedler Contemporary Art Museum in New York and the frtoconsldelvdescribing orpeviewingallofitwouldbeabsurd.So ;?he then made a drastic;change, introducing a freedom into his Tibor de Nagy in Houston, to name just a few. 'v.n&turally,the Qr^t thing to.do would be to s&ect t(ie-?'work'df painbngs which never before existed.-;The softness Of ralor was •i s.high quality, the art vhtch will-last "And to do so would in- SOME PUBLIC collections which include his work are the ;still, prevalent, but a spontaneity and interaction-of the Michener Collection presently at the Humanities Research 4-eyitabjy, i(not primanly^ includ(L the work of Darby Bannard elements abounded where hard lines had previously been. It Center, the Whitney Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the I'*;" Bannard studied atPrinceton,-graduated from Princeton and was around this time that the world around him really began to Allright-Knox Art Gallery, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts ami ?'Vspent many years working on his paintings'in and'around the take notice. the Houston Museum of Fine Arts ' Prjncqipn area, As.most.beginning artists find outfit was at In an article in»«» Artnu inu» rtiuciiu Jim can ,be found "anywhere in numerous prof^sslojial from a minimalist toa morelyrical;flowingstyle KmBaker in ^eluded his work, and the number of magazines which hehas ?r ^publications. His, list of one-man and group exfaibigons.js Studio has called Bannard '^ohc of the verv bestAmerican -WHtten for and which write about him extend well into thfehiin­ dreds- », /,teWthy« Bu* t°put them alT together toconvey Darby Bannaron painters working today " The accountsareendless yetall relay ' •• ••••*•' '. ..v •• At 2 pjn. Friday in room 4 of the Art Building, Banned mil give the last of his lectures at the University. Anyone who ha« s ^oys New Styls1 not had the chanceto experience eitherhis-work or Bannard as ->& '* ^ -V, • m-:: , ' a person is most welcome and surely encouraged to attends-' •£^iSp^west premiereof "Father ''Lynn Mclntyre as Mrs. Bethnal-Green, the Mother SteDnev •sk > IMndge Wants Jo Marry Sunday through Saturitayin'the .Green as Debden Harrison Ewing as Father Uxbridee-'Sonia v. ^ < Sinex as Angel and Mark Rodgers asFather Ongar Coleman is PARAMOUNT INC. i-t^WrittenGajgton^JlMturer playwright'In an assistant professor of drama, and the othe^are students. IIHPIIHBRBBrl^^tten by Frank Gagliano, lecturer and playw ' residence of the drama department, the on*actpla$Mf933 in cooperation with " ™ ' , Baeh arias will be sung by soprano Sandra Gagliano. aCcom-Darby Bannard , . v _NeWYr<> t>uwlnr>i{nW!n the college campus, instead of the usual traditional; tried- j 4m Great Fall Hill" are by Gagliano.r- V " presents_ ; -, ^tarrinf'&\i* connor,, Kent ^-tfue theater.'! Gagliano also is co-director of the E,P. Oirtain for each pierfoi^nance is 8.p.m.with no intermission!? 1-!?' < "%vj * Coqwrrw^rvlvpycjfsi^ • '.'f^McCoM,^chaei M*CO—.wllhguetttNancy .Walker, 4amai Coco; Aretha • * . world \vhich mixes moment and memory;speech And lingering Student Health Center * ' Franklin ~ T_ „ sounds Gagliano's abihty to makelanguage memorableispart 105 W. 26th St.-(4th floor-Soulhlr of thls ':4 ^" 24 Karen * w f Q, rcfror/n craftsmanship. "Uxbridge" has a dark'humor. "Turn of • ^ ^'The musical eroun Plum Ga8Ilano's vision is a complex one and at eveiy point in the 7 Moyle 'The Queen of the Star­ '! 4uit Ballroom/' »larrlng Mabreen Nellie" will perform at 8 30 ^ are ««sciof of a craftsman, testing his talent^-the Screw" V ^Stapleton, Mlchaal Brandon pm Thorstoy.' Friday and The University productionstarsStephenColemanasMordeh; by •Hie Japanese t=llm "Boyv , I* Streett o( San Francisco Saturdayrat the Tavern. Per-': ,i Benjamin Britten XitiSS-• r it Archer -formances will last until mid-V < *l1* 1 « ^ V, J. fei night Thursday ; ••HarryO J'• >;> i aiid. Friday1 -M r?4­ 36 Movln'On;\ ......... . "Tjfi and until 1a.m.Saturday. The • Wed., Feb. 19, -yan-rftr T.«Yait-w«ponsoRdby':therTei(-;^ l.U.31 K«wt7-»* fc"> mCEC*75 8:00 p.m. 10l90pu«. JO «eS»^SBSS5>4M' as; Union;:Musical..Events ' J Movie: "Beg. Borrow or Steal." Committee.-»­ announces Tuetday r Friday, Fob.^-14 The Austin Symphony '« Paramount Theater on Congress 1 *§£ Orchestra Tickets: $5. $6. $7^ , m Available at: Joske'si UT Co-bp, tiam VelHusa, Prokofiev, DvorakM (Downtown). Amster Music. Conductor: Karel Kusaf": ELLIOTT KASTNERjjresettisA.ROQEHTALIMAN fikh' Soloist: Alegria Arce, piano ELLIOTT GOULD. . ill THE LONG GOODBYE m ® " Friday; February' 14" Municipal Auditorium/8:00 PM Hi! I'm I—I Elliott Gould plays U NiMvaahOMA,! high-powered r^l -" PhUip Marlowe, •.: p—. P~trays 'A \ PhilipMarlowe,' .SOwithOptioaaiservices IPAL AUDITORiU director I a hard-bitten. I a femmetetaie j + 5'i C .-Human Sexua/i , Robert ~ I private eye. "I involved in* ' i ' :,;. Altman, . deceptive pldor!Symposium^ Ticket sales begin .Wednesday. ^ebruary "MAOWfFfCEIfri" RalphGteagQn. Saf!FraociscoExaiTifrier and I'm here shadowytntngu^­ filming^ IfcvAjfcy, , 5/Hogg Box Office/IO-6 weekdw '"S<>lefldWl An^eirening ot uneccutlomed dasa.,.lh« my latest LO:30RU:30,«UXN.'I:I>ORNOGFA^HYAFI(ITHELAW^'' w * sS t"*K *tec* tommf ai tha • high-powered Hugh Lowe Def^m» Cour«9t * Deep Thro*? trial £ -tfJ-x. .i:^R.*®Wul«»:;J««»rjfKln»olvhig,*CdH)|»/7:0o:7:3<>tPM' »^v^.;.lo>iitWa«eniian..Safi:Frat|claco:CtironicleC?J'::cl movie. ­ .•^hmoinai>«ll Aa f lanwratfoa. et nolabia proportkma." Bniboaid; ' •'*» abacOfla »ton» aaar1 Jack McDonough. Pacilic Sun ' The Cultural Entertainment "> SHOW TIME *M M TICKETS:*5J0, •*10.00 ' , Committee.of the,Texas IJiilpi > at All San Antonio Ticket Locations « Raraond-a In Auatk -.^7^ 'r'SK Sf01"".hn£!°?'/*^mh: Center v LStr^Sm-^"StponV Mean AUIt. Female" J aajSr-O^ Dew,« ReproductiveBiottiy? s Amliria Hall 220 ' c phir«'S^00'«f w^'e. Female"*^ 3$^ * <. . BurdlneHaltm™ 1 7^ , ­ SCI-Ft FESTIVA and Felladei" SELIfQ! wHatlilft i+tu'mr­ 6t,j if j'«>-& fassic NOVB! NINA-VAN PALLANDT -STERUNG HAYDEN BeaniytProducerEILIOTTKASTNER • PnjducedbrJERRVBICK '• •«V-'| v Dncndbir ROBERTAI.TMAN.'Scieenptoy by LEIGH BRACKETT " eKMonme«w(b,RAYMONDCHANCK.ER': MJ1.25 • '.V2.£i ipv= DVENTURESO msmm J^isl^SKS If* SAT." Saiicfi ATTS RBAREUA TVV;. mobz % , j. < m «%.$,> d soez *3^^* -^ r-i. ~ ^ ^ «. 4 ^ Highsteppin' and FancyJamming < * * X." --.l<-cr •* v-\ ^ <-/->\JO .. ->; f: i"/ .^ftigWatn^r tyriwce;'.their act the pack is their almost.fanatical and alter tte S5-,to«S?" '*•'?•«»"*»'!!•'.'«'• '"*sr-i^tljy^"*"°i J""o« wn-«««:«•: £*& 2 d * m » n ^ V i ^ i " f t " " 8,6 10138 ^Deconber. theturnout -Whyautheeffort? "We!^cIose® bst0cV*er; ys«pw betanseortmalexams. Bat to the ticket-buying audience." said\ ' t^ab^w&ahi^jMraisedfast thn^attendance,was slack both Raspberry after the last show,-> ^n.ym'•ndf^Dan; idghtstt^y played. Uie stay was the. "There have been times when we've; fe I _„yj'j..-;,;,M,irluaK?y''T^i;»the Bito^wjhbd. and same.: Carol Sue Ferrante set the -gone tosee shows where the petv" ,*.j^xs¥ms earthy-yet-elegant formers didn't give it their all. If? ^ 1^ Jtuaul to enjoy Un^^Rocfc C"*^ «id:l»g_ darts vocals, bass player Rocky Berretta just as distasteful for us to play ajj,­Tf£v or allofthese e*™*orrW^^f^" ^ ^#****B01 Marehall laid the throiwrff set as it is to listen «e%! aal""'?nd Wtte^foondaUoo for "Finger?" "It's sort«f retroactive in a waj£% fy°? renwri^ free Taylor s harmonica magic and the Raspberry continued. "If,we can ex-1­ • •" , <^!^0 jjiinlew-horn-section.-Staffed.byJeriy.-citetheai«iiei>ce,it's easierfor us toi, 2S^5S^S?S2225 «* • Mpna^^JoeMW^Vawei .get ttritod... .• : . Of ^Bteting . aftenbteribbonof brass arocmd the ' Raspberry usually works off 4his^ "»?»** taBd gnwlp'srepertoire of soqgs, the ma-" "'excitement" by dancing on the' '3an ^ Wkuia atfotte IfacMtftpranote . jocity of them original compositions. „ piano, andif he should happen to spoft ~n .nfrndimentsof someone s t i l l sitting when t h f c y should; ****«rfMoff,theo-fannies be oo their feet. Raspberry and the rdjirrf -and onto theirfeet inthe fiveyears he Highsteppers wUl point accusing" Jr£°£r the^nanachts feel at tone. spent with the Gentrys, Raspberry. frtSerTi allin fun, of course -unUl ^ ^ar^m°neT?. aad .g00d fa™* the grog's lead singer..guitarist, the uncooperative concert#**-rises an°,UHn *HJ *WP-Me ooe thlng that sets the p«an«t and rpqil«.»m1»lfc'»hMt«HMi to flip mvaslnA " ": /„'Atf>>& M rT scratch the surface of the HigMqycg apart from the rest of grwp into a revivaRneefing freray, Coosider yourself warned ' ' Qbc: INTERSTATE Cher's Sho' By JAY SBABVUIT' set the stage for the new ~7"®.-• • ,>7 . ikuc nuuiu:«uu rup.nuscn:.paniCUianyic|iiTm^particul^ ta^WislcalF~irc7"..parts ;,.»*>•*• rfcehehce of^rt^ynlghls S Bette Midler and E^p Wilson ..i >v •• -v.peacock moult wlth envy: ? '>r/~'VCi»dlUO'U4 .nCUIIVOUaj lUgUl ilft• APTVIliKwTriln­ —was show.A^ m.it.r. „w ftfro roasHMramty series" she'U — was to have a{redaired last Sun- of the show.v^''/J> ;v ? ^ -">"1. t-* e PARAMOUNT ~~ Qier j V ' ^ * C r;,iln comic matters, she was < show ^nd If tfie dotneo^ ***» to ttae.9ame oetworfc day. It was rescheduled when -(obal-ia. her last nisw?l Snnfag-m Ana uidike ex-htisband qiijfe f^ifty in^a wild skit qbout ^ writing, greatly v iihprov&^ utiu ?: :sx^ ABC-«.TV,piU*«inanlfor *«BHck^ X^ier will have tKesame kibdi ie variety seriesWSepte^nBer'r^Q-MaUc;*• i'"&vl«r us«d to of hit series^heh'ad when im : :t —r H"|"" •»••.• •: • vr v"" ,D iviuwtnx MHlUWg banlrtiodoesn'talready knoW her new single status: -V* Damone" , .. „».......B v.. „>u» now the movie came out — "For thbse of> you who V(ON THE DEBIT side she night,-r: , ^ Mm Wayne limped away ^ haven't nftticed v!'ve< been ind Wilson (yes, he plays J i in i in i g«»e.r she simply said ''For Geraldlne again) flopped in a ( rl> .'* * /$£ S Ang called The High and the those of you who have, I'm high school reunion sketch Chel% H80 eo^PetitiogMikity.' .f»--back." r*<-»nr»r -• There wa? another thud' as was "Stfd Figure. l^Oghtago &20 10:00 ^ / n< Vt i* C.ii<. ^ -™ ••» : .r"" ?" the isecond 01 sfc(lna of;sa:^ope-hou« WghtsspecW-eher'sT°—"»^v~ first matters was superb; whether aged Specials starringHa wmsu^iu, wueuer Inaperformers1 agea stars in a 1 O COVER CMAR6E™ " * Holbrook as Abraham £lin ^?'^f!S?,SflSyJ2S03>Ut Wpri'mg alone, ^ith Midler or .retirement home, t, , ...,.~ . -— r--­ and lost their hit GBS show Elton John or the two Jadles^AK!, v,* w,:„l4}1 ^shows are base« ZDANCLE CONTEST H last spring — was a fairly with John, whose flashy stage Sin^ ^on CafI s««IJ>iil|^i,ulifzer X. fX/l(c*\fN/1 frb ft^ifn\ n V/ fPTr?^ BOJC-.E w -t-0-" good solo start for the lady. -threads. would_ make-a . M oUmwI^Ipk^Lt-v/ilnriln8W0graPhy^:M"CO^' ly camao lysegment featuring Cherand! This episode studied -bothf wmsAP'^ -7^-p/b-v ' IN CONCERT { Midler:inail«iocte4m^l%;ViUna)l^s:;^liUqal^raftto^ MCKE FUH AT THc NEW, BFAUT UlELI S tarts TOMORROW! ji^T-of diiets and a sly bit if^t^Mdlhi^ humw 552.-N' .••••' i... .­ CHICAGO mmsenna ni « GwxtaK»»» S«CTwd Ur«I Del^« Mail 477-1334 MjSUN THEATRE seemedaStiff Disneyland ver-| . slon of Lincoln. lt may havel BlX RflleiLMoviej M WED.-FEB. 2^6-8 P.M. been his heavy makeup nhlchl s;i•^•tih.aMMB 477.0 '91 AUSTIN AUDITORIUM —RESERVED $6 ?gavethe impression he£oft&ijj Open doily . Novolhf-s feared hlsiace-would cracfifl Book Stor #' -?S Arcodv he showed more thai# mild] emotion Wmd )FFP RAYMOND'S Mm$L ,Sluti+nt ID% OOUBUE^ ft Whatever the reason; }t vrai -RAYMOND'S DRUGS fpATMREr/ I Nor-'Svrablf* 'for' yO\i n q ' sf waste of p fihe talen^ FOR INFORMATION 476-1090 1WTH M-I perMi.jsi bc 18 yr-. to " us pray the nextlotir yntoli FROM JAM Productions—G>ncert« West ?hows don't continue\Qi< §l':i -" . f < f iM-:. j wastage. DUCK SOUP fesf3 I 4B4-6T47 2:15-5:304:4$ northcros/ /in >r^S t I. ;,,, * 11 COCONUTS £ omA| & ^3:45-7:00-10:15 fsg J •m t both • /n. WIHBTHEWHOLtfAMUl^ „ #tI TO THENORTHCROSS|THaTBES^SSiSiS. We've got Six-App«Al.'.W '» :: *.'' --­ northcio#/ «-APKAti».i;AC*esM^eEf^*iN8ATT«ticiofi DAYS! T^v^flEAS0N^ ma* |5^&~ ^ iM® iHBRO SZtfiift u$*e/tm*ntnmmx»iiw uscoutrr EZZZZX2 mm gjMffig /^ss^s^ssrm^-(iMforOM S!R?;$vvS^Fss55i JASHO ».f3?Sp E|M : MMHD8uui PAei:.. DAVID ^ A*? THAT MANISBACK !LEAN'S ir»sss>"r-R FILM !OFBORS SouT^sid 1 fKTERNNS @no OMI utcKYom; -.mm OnSOWER LEE/PETER CUSHMG tiw'-wr v • J •••••-; ••... . .^:: tfiafe tte^ iwfc.a—te­ premiered Tuesday: nlfcht iit: spine frOnj Beach • on one day>. • r3?;; "of them were "Stofca" hgr ,-T~ IV It's a oar rhawi *> AUTKH nlW .nnlrtfiMHj&j iect was^ IhmwL. Sur awr sequences the way an SMmBSafetBtat. ^D^wo«A angtK stea£ 4He , „ -crackjup, the nearby pr^acf ;: architert boilds skyscrapers : -Another ktUBg Bitkti : "intoe''s heea aa ceat ofeK. :~;v­i But oh what h car chase f ^ (ion crew ran to see l£Hj$cjfi; (his analogy), using doesat. like Is fie bet fiat :11ie.man chiefly responsible was.styi aUve,. .When itbett:>: blueprints of roads and. production costs far film mak­ irr ,''«P«n Seconds,"(KNinih »» u nf ^ «£. ®-•*" " Seal vedb:»cziltaBMk» " H JBf dra&ai'hlrtl,out, ofjthec highways to plot movements ing arerising;. ' " " EatifcT , ->Toby ' Halicki, appeared >aft the first thihg he"«aiv meticnloiBly. recnttmg and fflK iesAdig mngigsttsuccesaaitswop^ Viewers.Isat with him during That kind of pragmatic So rigorous was the prodno are at as an Hm> eiC-sMu£b front The film) talkedwithlum -rynaritprovidfes something of tion schedule that Halirtisaid getting moreax!moceespen~ -5»speES ^c«ad^gthenewK"~ 'throughoutanddecided' an insight ,into Halicki; of his crew, "We moved Bke sire to go oat at ma>» a •afterward that Halicki is himselfv-Essentially "#•' ^tn arniy mo|rte.~ HaBcki saidL- a force through the v ' ...j.jjood ideal. more interesting businessman ("I don't claiirf .dty-" fThe roorie was fihned Halicki is aveijuyed at the i; ,-than bis n\ovie,'for which he to be a professional, film in Los Angeles and sanoan-of ** success "60 T11 iwiit Served as screenwriter, direc-maker*1), Halicki adn^its that ding town$.) which he said is OHt^assng '•*^3 I —Ijtor, producer, co^edjtor, stunt he made 36O' Seconds'? with w" Perhaps Halicki's most major HoU^rcoad RIbk £ot choreographer, and stunt only one purpose — to'enter-ronarkable "achievement in jjB&U&t+f Halicki theaters e*erjwhere. Heaba Ft, jdriver — now'he's distributing taih. Moreover, the only thing "W Seconds" isIns start driv-feds thework bepatadtktihe •.the film single.-handedly_i . he .wanted for his effort was ./wasalso responsible office appeal by refusing to be bad no ing. coosidering M-^making a mtaf off it ;Wtot)moneyv' --sfor thedecision to edit several : cast professional actorsoc ac­previottsdrivingexperience.Not bad 'for a man who action-explosion scenes from tresses. Halicki reasoned that ' He did, however, have'alot of makes his Jiving in the auto • '*60 Seconds" (for the sake of casting himself andother non-' guts and a working knowledge inen&ijf; !$<£Seconds "• --. and real • estdteindustries. ^ running tune): rather than cut professionals.wtwki-"render v IN FACT,-when he decided in message pictures. The an irrelevant sequence" in­the film believable? Besides, "Eleanor" himsdf, replete Iti to film "60 Seconds" three volving a young woman. Why? • he couldn't find anytae.else to with,roll cages and. a Gsh-: HaliekTsaid.^ "1 don't believe of cars. He boilt the Bfnstang public is living tbrougha very years ago, Halicki had all the Halicki said, *"VV ' depressing time, aiid it wants "Because," do.the stunts be minted. plate to keep the car from' S. V film making experience of a I'that sequence has a song in -«•,.-> an escape: That's why people As a director,-Halicki-,was breaking in half daring wT weekend tourist with a Kodak the background called 'Lois-• demanding, irisikingon doing crashes. Hie car.Dowdntnar ISi go to movies. In myfil/n, I'm Instantiate. But Halicki'S per- Lane Blues', sung by Ray,, not trying to say anything — - bonaLrpbiidsophy.. ,was Charles, and by leaving itin,J4 an wa to now have the chance to cash ' "^v ® « "JaiUiS: -Jfcrts V #an so hewrote a script, < » JnM>n,the recordsales." .^.gathered Sij£f700Ipgp from'hlsxrom ms_ a5^r ashrewdand 'J^jsauiereq ur i-;Kesi hor­, it's so action-packedit seems -likwi.i^^LASSlFIED. AD.,v v M. , 471^52443^1 M... Mil ioyotb 473-791$ *^4 A V ra«?.-.«hbi,Wcr-- Ktite: ^ |> iMglnt &30 WrtjyHour(rt*n,8fe:a 47 X .1 !• /£ mmfmJmtnM.iiUmUf.. ITS 9WN WBCHT . ^3lJS9V«N.1X*AR ' $T!iR) Coveis' ruma tomorrow -«an; n^NCH • THE MOST HILARIOUS N THZ :O.N'MCTiON siUPS "t" v^EniWIKBS -2:50­-4i30­<^10­ »**• Soiulisidi • 7:50--i • 9s30»> ftfiji t * iktmH* §s?:! ­ \'<£fanwryGf%(s H ' & otttra 16^ \ wiA and N 4 k -ttJttBOY " MAGAZINE : Today at Braddlo llwatret VILLAGE 4 ATTIC* M r Oii^rSablim'.Oolysimumj* ?t3p..-.;.. I«B* -SS^S* \MwCWtti* Omar Sfcurif. ACADEMY AWARDS! DOCTOR %m*m*Y ZHil^lGO Crazy LaT.f zJSGiuuyGfcUs TMii.ii Willi RIVERSIDE CUtA««rf tisajjfsr^ ORN1A5' IIBMICCDMCC HATU«S«-al ,TI!:ir SCEf«SFROM TiKsmw nS&H AMARRIASE uv UUM4|M 5 MUAMHBB6N; :ofw 1* tmML RIVERSIDE mm •--* . r­ ,' i-l "iffp-V.: , rAt.L SILLS PA,ID Clote. »ie»m^-s|«r9« .opw-l)«n»d a,. , LEASING cMMngviuHiiiwawnMCA/CH'illtew -£pU»7lij*«»aa.ctrM— ^ bullWn klichta ;cotor coiordlral«& noiASa CONQUISTADOR ^ guj^g^lw.MMMA ?J > and POSADA REAL . J AHfKtr UNIQUE:,OLDHOUSE:Res AUUnl NOW LEASING ©wnJarge-TOom; bust 1^ . . 1-2 Iwdroom apartmtntv wttUW® Campusr CaU47«l76, Last MimrteServ • ^•odBMUhJ."Pooll»undry, fSTji EJ=HCIENCY J FEMALE WANTED. 2 bedrodm/VV* ,^9P!"»*^Tt> CA/CH# dlspotali'tfishwiihcr. 1 WORTO JOF UNIVERSITY, . tmUUMH S|3S* 2btdruuft il&l476-210a ^WANT£0.-,.AfS*r*m«nt>mBnttoef«r SERVICE 4SMSX. 4<-*.:Prefeft;stw®ent coopingSend' resumed itopSR Jhuttff. 44*5914.1 ^ . ^ 14,500 . -" $119 ^ fioK I6M;.Austln^T* Wtl IPIlm MALE.1H0USEMATE, needed ;Own :Qaiei liiltfrtMlmgl«oc* trom R«d Stiuttlc taits •!front'tfeer. pooii'CA/CH:^ 472-8936> ._ WjSa«DewT»WE5 ' FiRST.MONTHren|.ted NTH1renlTeducttwu L*rgel.*}•> mm"»ntwostor*twobedroom house:I " riw ItwfapcJ TWiji.Ooptex^ foe jBwawaanii^ii \-»m. »t-9 buii^nTitai^ii;': " .\Kdrti^bedrbomlbath onshuttle.uroePool-2" :o block campus;*# plus.te blin.Bofc, 471­ NOW LEASING • M—Lll—>US fromn UT UW SdwoLSlFRM 7857, y 1 BR * £70 3 BR -$325 _l THE CROCkETT.. '—/VXUVfc: IN'TOPAY?^ Emei«nc»»Mrtm»m,'»lMi»n5up on* 13M-' adapts. jfe tomi. ST *, EFFICIENCY* »<**&& >-.'B«rfR«telinth«L«K« %" ^•t'fiff40'!' ',^*^P^*M*|!,^P'fl?^:",»ESPONSRESPONSIBLE" STUDENT UU UW . tM-VPttlulH. wiZi rrrev,"w . original* hottw as parHtm* r*treat frombother-1 Com 5 • tUt'for 100 ­ ' WAI IfTft r&AADItC #1'& 2 BR .WALK TO CAMPUS 2400 Town Lak» Ctrcto >-BONUS ROOM,2 bwJroL 3 bath plot 1 somtlov»f*fpMent*.s5#ABP,4P'«oa. F' Sale 44^aM» ft' lp;DI W I2&M&-IBDRM IBDRM "• 1BEDROOM, 3 BatK ipartment IdMl ' ;Lane.459*/305.:t^-'-^iV-';-^-:-v;%;-;^y. 1 'Oo&e.tp -shuttt* MANAGER APT^0|,'4U*tai 4S4^W ^ bu».«nd ttnnU coortv,;'-$175 $220 -•in lor yovno fimllr-Convenlont 'to uf.' TEXAH/OORM 1905 N«WC«t.^OoubMs BOBBYE.DELAFIELO, IBM Selectlk.3 . eeranmL-jkraiATUKE sdwomr «uU£ carp*i*& Al!!;U)ilMn-Wtch«flti' Prlad tar a Umlty budaet. BOS -%ili > .pIcWellte,;Kyear»«icpeflanee,i.bookt. MM*K9KA(CngliM.:Gtg«; ALL BILLS PAID -.unfumlitied; ABP.J3* 'JJ40turnljlied, , 5ingi«* dl^iertatlonj^yJiheter.sjraiSorti, S34<35/Hm«tt«r Dally mkld itrvlc*,: «tiSk 45v4i^4cr45^4593. A $ Dl«hw«hen 21^rg*Pool| D? PiJ£» U"'I"™"* ctntral *lr^ Rafrigeratortot pl«t«s. •} f~ Security allowed. Two block* from campus Co-•' DISSERTATIONS,tha»iM.:repoi1*;ai)d WE RENT-^EFFIC>ENCYwltb'«!Mp1noatcovt Ed.-Raitdent. Managtrt. 477-1760. lawtirlalvi.Exparlencea^typltt.1" MOVE IN TODAY bverkx>Kif»o Town;(^k^xonvcnlent to ;•. ROOMS FOR MEN and womtn. S47.50 IVj^CSS vM tor *am6M&,"-*tt S BEDROOM -* -V W' WlllqwCreek ^ ~uUT Economrika)^'"'• $153. ABP 5to,«W W, *• 3 - '' K/3fc?.w£r*The South Short ly priced and ^ -206E4 Rlysrside 4U> « AUSTIN mael»*yallabte/:a?lO;Nu>c>ii 477'tm ALL BILLS PAID 444-0010 3337. '' ' MR5.60D0UR;STYPINGSRRVICE. 1 WALK TO CAMPUS&ii ROOMS FOR MEN 2 blocks UT, 2100 ReporH,lheH>.dluertatloo>andLbookty, ENFIELD AREA: tlQO plUI tltctrlc, on r WfrHlfc;477-7S5< > -fvped aciiirately. tatt *ntf rtaaMublt:.: ••nwimmm IMCTO. Your time is valuable JL L^ni* apartmant^ fulty «teg carpe»«;??." jhuHta The Pprkvl»W, l6t(l West ttti PrlntlnaandBlrKllngBn'reqimt-Cloie;; • £,1 Our service 1$ free vs" XA/ca au boiiMn •. 472 1337 , ' v PRIVATE ROOMS. Two MocksIeampu4v k^fditiv cach apart-v a, ment has.vilt' own ftrivata patio ,;or-v- centraIalr.MaW sarvica. kltchafuco-*d. ­ PARAGON . ^T.UDtO^APARTMENT;:vf|replaca,*-' 24nR{oOrinda>476*2531,attaf6;OQ p.m. • HOLLEY^Sr COP.Y. SERVICE A CO<7V • sKyHpht/CA/CH>6abl*.tiOnv«fil0nt:St39 NOW LEASING p)u,Si^dSaaMiffis^,NEAR UT»\infurnikhed'roomSrjU5 ABP.' • PROPERTIES ^ 1 RD Cl>IK J ^ \-4n-5m. "Ti/l\&" |#W«t Wru BafharnPropCJiln, NEAT> Accurate andprompMyp:IDl\ ")I40 up % NEW EPPlClENCy/''.Pebruary's'Tent-• '.•• jOM> WHg mi ;lrl> ll-i«eM. ^ n enupefpepe: Thesestscentiic *- • ^UJ#I •>.'>M«ML.«JW14 MetinlWui «r«*. 472-4171 7 KENRAY" n elOA ^free CA/CH/dlshy^shaf. carpet. South -weekdays bK -S loll im ^ jAsLamar st20,plusa^icWTO^alMin, -rtelflhjxirhoodjLPrrvate be»A;ipaca tof Vtv v .•1' •• •••. "tjrAP iiT'*rffirian;Aj '•nartman*car.Rtftp IQ?30Qf 3?3Q.'47VW3ft ,,. NEED-P1ST7.WfnaMcntarui'. ^ APARTMENTS MM.QkMir.lk-2122Hancock Dr, S/T _ 1 Bartiom ProMrthBv 93*4345, depMtt, ABP. near campw. Come »fter legaLttatlitlcal,rnMrdipapMt,ate.: " ;WL.WB5»L»ufliiMt. f* i. Pfck-up anddellvaryavallabia.«3Wttl,­ IV!ji'ft-':' 5.3809HempMIIParlt.iC ii.'ri-wiq': V I.P. SectatarlalServlca. Tanglewood . *agrse»JL.G»>gT )»iperd^fftiue« J?it? J_ QUIET PRIVATE room wIth ball) Wo • MABYL. SMALLWOOD TYPING Latt " SSL lean Jim: OAKCREEK Norths : SERVICES pofdh^^lvate entrance jwm lumltur* minute, overnight avaHabla. vTermr llonLlettWt. batta. Available one 1barra-1ba «rith^ ^ 1 ^ J020E 45th I:•. paptn.: theiav dluertatloni 'v Mastan' " ' " .Mterdiarga, BankAmerl 55f°•<3lfpyl WCH..41507 Houston' i'SWttlacBuj Cornw HELP WANTED TYPING SERVICE.--Fait nervieai. 454-4394 ? ORV1NG ^RaawMbl* ratal. .Oallvafy avallabla Efficiencies&1&2 tudronniforalshad CallMary. Wl-Q«3. •SERVICE tonlurnHhed. VauitaJ ceHlnov cable 1 < \S r * fg&z PROFESSIONAL, TYPING by •perfee* 1 TV.private baloxiiev *$135 -$152:56. * INCk,,s~ m ^L^JTrC ^ tloout Fast service, 40 cents page tad | J INtSRESTlK© vp;>Nwr catnpos. call 47»Wlt^ ^"47«171 t* ^ lBedroom ' '^APARTMENT ^ FreeParklftas •*jh. PMONE WORK ^ TERM PAPERS, theses, dissefjetk WALK TO CAMPUS VVMKIV legel end techplcel Naat Meii Vv4r;ELCID& 7a m.-lOpjrt.M*^ "rlc*1 r*jn. -Spjn/SatjJ Make up to $4hourly. Must tw^ ^ 3!?'il>;,..';"S5fflR A? i WCTOUE' iBDRMABP-S144 , ' ; iLPOR^DO ^ neat Hours 9-30-5.00 7701 N -™nt pieata. m Hi * Lamar, Suite 110 v ^ i—. . »'j ft < Finest quality/ ^ aSSSSSSt^ s f^^«XN^4893 ^/4s^li??,,nth^'| ^>»r feaspnahle prices $jf \ x /} * x~ " "5 ;44 Just North of"ifth at CHECK """S"RAT 2767 Heniphll] jSsSife *4 LocatoK^„1.4fervlcer 1 THE HAIRnif?^1' PART OR FULbTIME SALE^MAtO " 1700^Itt^K distributor.. Pierced «arrlngi,: cottvm«1u sfctecWHzfng^ iri 1 1 USKJ!?! ­ sg^sssa STORES.^ „ lewelry, MookSem. Mornl key rlnjj."' $129.00 _ complexes with^access dz.C'-^ lAAr^S-:-'iVk4/.w"!HVrfrtrA,-S& •'V f * swimming pootfuroShS/TWiIklnglK!. jd GENERAL REPAIR^lectin Will ^ S2-00yhour^ Ca" .Micii' $160 Discount prices on Sea-tance.to UT. No ctilldren or pets. 410 anything anytime aoywhere; anyhow NEED EXTRA CASH? Self flowers on west joth. m-mt. ^ t thestreet-£orntfsOf Abstln Thursday-* MISCELLANEOUS 476-2290 ^ the streef-£ornefr6f)j (yr Slimnon$;and Inter­Bedrooirn ¥t-5 BLOCKS Sundayy476W0*45S-1508; v -pail'>­wwfcBr 4.1 national. -, y AuBillsPafd 'j. jjStlnmarrled motl)iel, Edna'flladnev -NEED EXTRA CASH? Sair (lowers on **•' .' i -y v Walk to Campus NOW LEASING WEST OF r^Home 3m Hemnhllt Port Woftlt T«0 ,'ValentinesDay MakeK»-lSS.<76^0U , 1 /V <• « Kings, S95 -5395 % SOUTHERN ESE APT. *5 ^tA-^ 1 $195 ^3u"ck'Mham Sauare '-'4 SUMMIT VIEW APT. " Doubles, 5100 $130 ; .7»W.afKl^',-, ....^.-. Go by and tee our Ibedroom furn , Quewis, $75 - Sv CAMPUS &^l£riT£r .. ,T.„ ' .Balljl/ipclng, JanTandtJadias 6^1 - ^56 fc t f " -» 4-^5454-4917? M3-&&, aptsat 1007 Warn and IT14Su A^«n Biding" •-^*318NorthLamar ^ ^ ——* 45949«5 < " WH anniili jQSTALGlA4;i BLACKSTONB . . Kennels;wouidlikCto show fWidayj ie-A f 1-1 jtarpefed NA/CH, bulli-/|v EFF. $)15pme . Call »»am^^toAw«n yottttretestrpiae*^to,faaveyoordei? dur­ •brWtM ~ SALE! APARTMENTS Kitchen, .outside storage: «?Now;>tiasln9, ior -the. Spring/i.At/^ffeliIftfltwlidays, et& pj^yfcw Share a-targe room tor:s64JO/rr>o.'orr:v: pooivandsunidecitf a^^onshutt^ WOMgN««ALTgBATIflM^Hana»irti>rr FOK«ER;iEVELXri'. VWO, ReadlnO SM 0ftW take -«a -^ymre:>wn for S112J0 furf -ivT!r^:&CnSand J2rOynemi^:insirtic^~neededoynamic*>:msirt»ctors-needed torfor im-inv ^..t.c.. . -.. ^f r'Aishcdr all Milspaid. Maidsenrfoe once . j praykKhly.;uuQbr^mdlr>o dynemics. OaV or event no* 454-lftli ^7504^4 :winmatch'.yeu'wnhaoMnfiatn>ieoneAT L test. • ' -' • • -' -' . ^ -.•< trui MOVING? We caul moveVou PleeseCallilfln*<9i2.forintervlew. J Cecelia ibJIUtfli'llM.'l,!..-fA r.PkakAU.JkaB-'iiJufT/ -' ' ' — •-I-i II--I II • best ONLY 200 YARDS FROM UTi "v-ONE BLOCK TO SHUTTLE^ THINIUM-M? WMI • VI ftW-Satfc'ft*. BagliiuLiland Mends: thjj is economy & convenience-at its ^ c ^ COPP£R KEY APTS ^ ^WLTFT^F ARMWNDRIFC CHEEP^LHAN 4.1-* ^ ,,^,c 111 ,wa7 .r^^^tr4?,blU^p^Tdwil BR furni>hed;diiPOiaf;i ^ :CUSTOM^SEyyiNO^^jcperlentefl; v^vilnLoday an V" -Shirtaemtoroidery SBfK&W^ wtl'^i, ~r,««— ^ CA/CH cable. Wo children 4504 Avenue PW>n property r ;2ist.:M»F« 1^5, FUdey^V? ,ntrtniu^CASOAIIILY YOU ^ THE ^ MAX S tennis shop^K " ^4*412? Qwtiw Outdoor Portraits -.« 431-4C«Ior453-ij20 WAV# tenniS;SnOMiK»?SSE®5pSrf^,sNQWl",TAKING-APPLICATlONS^1or>;^„6r NOW TAKING. APPLICATIONS Snc^Nw Ww* yeemexr^Ce' ^VWOgrStodift mmm. 'GREAT SPRING and summer location, Q/Hauii ,ROYCE _ ^built arwndswimming pool.Locatedon X borths^deof TcwnLake.Ownerwin pi ^HOWDV AGAIN W{w 451-4584 tArt»E*f-SWJ0 •••----«Mlf lW«Jk~.pfdit'4huft)e T-I. PORTRAITS!, >:snforpersoMloeco(ation* Discount* ?7 f ? FOLKS! &NEEO CAS 1 yw-^W^M^'Utrge''2 BR,v2"CBA'.'' ^ THE PEPPER TJ?6EPE0PC^ FURN. HOUSES ^dlltrlb^ •sefyatl Searrifnflii^ vABp;Urgestud^J prlintW-battCahd,wif IS UNF. APARTS. Mer.paid. 4724099.^ lease. smJSB. l^vdrtom.vSao PMo MLLANB Apartments, Shajt. po^. ba)cooi«i. PARTMENTS ALL BILLS iaLieBeOJiiw iiiliL.t.eVi>!ffliyft»fter: 1a MMlHSFREE Rant^^uMeaae tm : eHlcienCie«; and S®if *»T' wmvtff Rhrerslde, ,apaHmants, Town Lak*>efaa Can WANTED QW•W^P0.^440t- t-s'Air^eoepeMdHfsMReA.sveMRv^sysiera :MUST-SOBLCASE" larfl# one ^ iiPMii udy^c: ^te^wr1u1weiiiiBme>i.'iifiM''iloir-Mrtnm^sccesi «ny tfqjesit^NlrordetaQs iowsaud wHhffiW'mamU it-iarfle UNF. HOUSES •Ck'Vb Jy^TARREVTOWN^^U^pilUlever!® ;V4rdcoup(ei wm£k * A Pion SftSSduifrFqvored*omPus e 13. <.ia ^y Weddington Urges Djrect SfudentParticipation 8y PATTIKDL.DAY ., Cplemari of El Paso to placej'-Publication of/the victim's* weeks,'-/ ^Tei^tt Staff Writer ^ tlje celling at$50 perWroj»tercp!' Washington,* t>C,'savailabl^ Sjtlassirication or majorsate| through th? Bx-StudehtsV factors which deterpilne Jbe'f Msoci&tion,^ slmuld ,attend a$, '^warding of interhships^ lt's .!5»< flnkl:briefing at2, 3 or 4p~ „ Jobs m all areas, including. dram4, matb^ computer,'science, economics, educa­tteni^^^liinor^MlanedfeJ •# •1 tion, library science and architecture arp offered ­Positions -will be availablerui: the While House, the Arena Theatre, "the Center for . Women Polifcy Studiesand the Smithsonian Institution, and jwith Ralph Nader ^ \ 'f* National competition ^Wilt:| ^etemun6 granting of the in-? temships So far tew Unlvef' z illy stiidents have shown in-t terest, said Roy Vailghan. FOR RENT AII.ES -7 -B^kCACH offjHighway ln,,rlK,,on m JOB WANTED TUTORING ^aeNCHSTUDENT WIL. 9.V* r-—.fx-MOtun. call ROOM & BOARD m Inc, injjfew York City has-i -The -^Academic Selection granted the school" $50,000 to :< Committee of. the tS^hool wdl the^a be in Charge of:choosing ^ endow the^lr rf'sdiolairshitfi b^gmninihextS^tembe^;: recipients. -. isbeguimngi isla^"""^-' ^ I fiaveasked the Academic • . %r> > . , **" College of Business A«I-. ' Savings. Association office, vnus UMOM ministration is offering a |l,-IJOO Lavaca St * r 1 ' iii»ini OQitMnB «M!iponurC swill hold their monthly Black Amerka." tnmI'SjoSp-m,meeting at:7:30 pin, Ttnqs-: . -...Thursday in the Texav Culture -•r/--Room (AtroAmtficin). Methodist j day at the Farm' and Home 500 per year scbolardiip ,to —. Mrs. Betty Young of the any-j^academicallj^^irome^s section-of-tlie economicaUy or socially dis--. tlAmerican Bany "ill be the advantaged student in the; guest speaktr Wives and -' ^female graduate business •The scholardup. is open to students are invited freshmen and sophomoresand isirencwable for.four years.It . Nursery Volunteers iscontinued -witbtl)estnden#J keeping np-passing gradesf Students interested < in Contact Asst Dean Seymour volunteering to serve as Schwartz. Business teacher aides at the Three Economics Building 200. cen-Candles Nursery School from trex 3019. • f : 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Mooday. Thursday or Friday may con­ Helping Blind > ^ tact Student Volunteer Ser­ -Any person interested in : vices. Speech Building 101-N, 471-1201. , ~S volunteering to read toa blinl' -/ -v ^^ ^ international student wbtf: does not quaUfy for.servkieff-v _i: » of the Commission folr will spoctsor. Or. John Blind may contact Student': spctfi)n9 on rBlock politics*" a* p»rt ol ih« Afro- Building I01-N. 471-1201. •' Amcrican Qitture Symtmium «t noon Thirsty m dc T«i«OiNurt o Room (Atro-AmtriowK WXIhodlit Business Wives . Student Cenltr. ^TOTT UNN MB) >MTTFCH CUUUA Wives and women of the COMMffltt will sponsor Irtlenc. Sw»iA. H*chin9 assistant in Ethnic Graduate School of Business Studits. dtsoissfog **Ttw Mu^c.«rf head of the Academic.'Selec­ tion Committeej:in theSpeech Local -business .owners, Department .fw*application professionals and University materials." Danism said. students , will-: teacb the .Jones was a student at the University from 1938-1940. A $10 contribution, is re^' studying, bosiifess,: and jour­ -quired for the initial: nalism. Heisa member of the.' m«hbershipi. The member is Advisory Council of theSchool then eligible to participate m -of -Communication-.Founda­ any three corses,.-Denson tion. which aids the-school m said _ improving its^ervices to the Several frmge b«iefits will be offered'to roembers,Den­ {JsSiSSsL-iJi t. The Austin.Higiter Edncae* ' tion .Association, a noiqirafit organization, will begin infor-. ; ¥ mal lectures and classes in ­^Tabout • two weeks-for. 4 Austinites interested in vfurthering their education. ':v;: . "Our classes offer peoptea" chance to learn 'thii^s they want to know about but woold .not And taught in a' WMrmal academic environment," Mark Densbn, president of the organization, said Monday. -. A wide rangeof coorses will be offered, he said.^.Amang them, are • instruction;-in organic gardening, karate,. veterinary tips, body-massage. creative writing, music lectures, and ; instruc­tion, autocareand checkbook balancing. grant for^cholarshlppurpose? Committee to>-set up the 1?^l^ents' son~-said.' The organization-we have ever received in the procedure for. inviting ,Jon«s .is presideot .of the: Schoolof^ Conmnimcation^ studehts -to-apply. Since we "Rusk' Corporation,-J.which: it>anieUon.%^a3d^.Wednesday; just .received the money last operates KTRH^A^l • and :xE^ich scholarship award will: month, the application KLOL-FM inHouston. Healso ..'.'StudentCenter... ' jdans to operate a'job-Cnding service for members neetfing work .to stay in school. Members will receive, a $-10 .percent discount' on all products'and services offered by thfe businesses involved in CMnt. itsiilwt prof^ sociofogy dnaumg Tt*S **»*«•* p Thursday In the Texas Culture^ Room CJfctre-American). Meftwdist SMjtnt Center. TPUTF UWONFFNTTAWIVSUGCOMWUU will sponser Or. Robert E. LCdteticr. counselor at the Studtnt HeaHh Center, speaking on "Are You Fit To Be Tied?**at noon TNjrs­ day in the Oobie Room. Academic H Center fourth floor. REM UWWN MAM IWBcowiuu win sponsor Stacy Brown and Page , Tritter at noon Thursday in the Tex­ as Tavern. TEXAS UMKM HOKAtlON COMIRIH* wilt sponsor the aT and University Ave. fo£'% teik)«rsnl9 wwiTicff nrtifrwnnrn nwiwi m il meet at t p m>Tf*urvJay in Qeotogy Building )00tosee«fiim**Graveyof' the GuM/* GAY KOni Of AUSHM will r Thursday at 3309 Gran 2Qt. tor a business r -On HVJUUTtON" sponsored by Reading and Study Laboratory (RASSL) wfi) mee* at > noon Thursday at Jester Center > . A33J. MCMTAS aOAtO, national honor society;!­ tor women, is accepting information •• *heets for new members lhrougi)> Friday. Sheets are available at tber . general information booth to the * Main Building. Z-.'V.: UT BNONG AUIANCC will meet at tp.mr ? Thursday in Bellmont Hall ; ¥ QUI will meet at 7 pjn. UT Thursday in Robert Lee Moor* Halt 7.104 for a written crew cunt. MfllNUMIW sponsored by ITfadlng ^ and Study Skills laboratory'?} (RASSL) will meet at 3 p,m.Thur*-^ day in Jester Center A332. . .-c UMVBSiTT CMBSTUM OMOtwOI SpOfr** sor a soup and sandwich seminar at noon Thursday in Nordan Lbunge at.i- the church. 2007 University Ave^ to-^?. meet and hear Jim Osborn, Universa­ lity ombudsman, speaking "Some Problerhs of the Om11J \ I » in School cassettes, film strips, videotape and other; media for use in bilingual -education^ programs and early childhood programs. At CBS, Collinson served as senior-fihngr?^' director of the "Twentieth Century" serie^|S with Walter Cronjcite and associate producer ;"5j f of the "Worid War r series. Collinson has also written and-prodaeed^^ films about the Lyndon Johnson administia4!r^' tion for tbe LBJ iibraiy. . -1 SffiJ The ttlk is s{knsored by the Graduat^r ; Sdiool of Ubrary Sctence .CoUoqoia and i$^^ .^approximately"s$1,250 procedure has not been deter-was president of^ihe Houston . . Scholarshipswiltibe award-minedyet.However, students Chronicle Publishing^ Com­ Advertisers ed*.to ^twO"undergraduates ''may write Dr. Fred Martin. pany from 1956^1965, '-> ijDon't Forget Tomorrow! 4*^ sind place your advertising in «7,50C^ 92% "if" Readership wonfMy"mogwn« Tuppl«m. bruary Advertising Deadline Friday,Feb. 14 bliC9tion:,ittehtli , 24 vertising Target 471-1865 Thursday, Febryary JM """WKKSSjgl ; yp mm ,#**\M8;..4,afcapBtea --*-WiPIL giWESBBM^Siiii^^y^ap-^aaaa^i^a i%|p 8*3©4sllP fejEsgitsI Ij®®|t—fw—f, o^' H®i;.5C 1 r &>« ••' w ^*38 v; !V% -1,-# «tSs5rsS •t*A<# A<£? "* rm ^ , > < SUf % a, ^ ^ 3 k •*«"*" -2® 1,4 I ¥ —"i I JSijVV-'*st-"' (Jhn^ ­„ IfV "--*M'»#­BUY JOEL •fUj BILLYI STREETUFE SERENADE "ass** llSOc ;WT3f If indu QKSJStt . »«9*i«i|l nlWHrtWwSwiiJw X BoOin—fnsIWWIil'Wtlnng M^1h«WVAH£EMtt'nM JufeJuhtW*** MkTtotaWI riiijixnii.iifn.-i tt.t',™". "f, f­ "" asAS* >BoiiWopfc LABELLE/NJGHTB1RDS? ^I^Hinn#KkAV»k ALongTlow^ .-.j^^pwMwagq^whutftSanMrtiiii': $It -f" •"'v'M n sa x. £ . «J 35 i 'U <. vSW. X1-V ^ IiOVEl^ INTHE THE ^ 1-S^ ~.lr ->«'' tttes?;-: w . *• 3^ Vhik $. D .#»_ w WOMiD ­ sSM. ^ ihimT^A «• rGETUR COMPLETE 3 R£QSPEBDW»GON 7 «,£<•?£ ; Os,t ^ |V&? IOSTINADREAM i-V„ — ^w«< C-."», ^ tscWtag; '•^v -6NWAWIttfcOwiiid .• itt-3: 1#-^i M * |ASLEEPATTHEWHEEL 4 % IMnaMMM! 1 ^^ SATURDAY DMtMkMk«kytrk>Go ..... K«sasm . 15 -Cjjv AT PRICES YOU •Kyi*! ' j? omAMttUms An^ BiuarswAM THEJU1LL1 withbekSI rentice (AduAnoi"*j •^t^Wk3llMMWVW6 CtoMwOlMOifnlM IVViForwS LbwHwe' WRhNolb *W%s* ^ TWNaigM Indiidlno: l>—iCorny .TbBoitoa^.'l. w x SALE PRICE MICKERfRICE IHAS EVERY IslfSH;" TYPE 01 "Miiil m-AUL^P ..MH. ^•liPvf TYPES OpS !w 9 I-1USTENING m mm «ii#iiiilii«& ; "i t'h£