apssgi U *- * * twm iPI ImMM W& mMtWii -.--»-». < ^ < --<^T " » s »> •«• J?-.' t % ' Student Newspaper at The"University of Texas at Austin Ten Cents Austin, Texas, Thursday, February 20, 1975 Vol. 74, No. 150 Late Filers To Beat Deadline By RON BUTCHESON : Sciences; Gary Bledsoe, Law; John munication; Lyn Breeland, junior,Social Place 2: Shep Barnurrt. Jim Tucker and Patricia An overflow crowd ot Student Govern-Osborne, Law;Talmage Boston, senior, and Behavioral Sciences; David Joers, McKay. 'meot candidates rubed to beat the Si Social and Behavioral Sciences; Charles Law; and Arnold Rodriguez, sophomore • General and Comparative Studies: Kevin Shaw, Joyce Colson, Rolando Longorla and Alfredo Esteban. pjm. Gling deadline Wednesday. brining Maddox, Law;James Pengelly, (no college listed). • Graduate School the total number. of hopefuls for .the sophomore,; Social" and Behaivioral The following candidates also filed: m»t«* selection to ill.: Place I: Scott Shelton and O.A. Goodrich. Sdences; and Spencer Brown, junior. • Senator et-iarge. Place 2: Sue Doty and Richard Sheir. Eight candidate^ filed foPpeSdentr-' Humanities. —. Sttye Coleman, Eddie Goldberg, JamesH. Carol Crabtree, senior. Education; Bill Four candidates filed for vice- Biorum, t>avid Gilliam and MaH< Vlilanueva. Place 3: John Stokes and Emmett"Harrison. Ware, senior, Social and Behavioral Moore Murray, junior. Com-Place 2:Mike Cohen, Sue AnnRay, dydePlatt,John Place 4: TomFry, Feiix^anchez andMichael Wolfe. Smith and Holly Echo-Hawk. Place S: Michael Alsup and Maggie Hernandez. Vhh' <• ' ~V.-Place 3: BUI Chriss, jimmy Gotcher,:Brian Bailey, • Humanities Mike Ferris and Agustin Zambranol . Place 1: Jerald Head and Lee Kubena. Place 4: Richard Martin,Red Goldstein, Ben'Moore, Place 2: Jerry Barker, John Craddock and StevenMike Skinner, J.P. Gutierrez and Carrie Capello. Levy, *. Architecture: Thomas Thlgpln, David Harrison, • Law II Raody Weidner and Thomas .Trutna. Place 1: Bruce Topletz, Lawrence Payne, Rick An­ • Business Administration ton, Brian Moffatt and Andy Martin. Place 1, Reid Wilson, Paul Pennington and Bill Place 2: Joe Tanner, Robert Meisel, Danny Tsevat, Fisher. • James Coronado and Jane Stevens. Place 2: NelsonBarre. GregLonglnoandJoe Knock. • Natural Sciences B^BOXSOOflT said eariier ttieir departments' ability to . Place 3::'Ron VVatenta, Buddy Langholz-and Bob Place 1: Ed Turner, Richard Jackson and Ira .i'j, MS;,. participate,. in the-interdisciplinary Campbell. Bleiweiss.honors program wouldprobably be •TKe'Plan H honors pripain;wdl Ptace 4: David Garza, Fred Raschke'and John Place 2: Scott Wipperman, Fred Renfro and Ray "probably not be"affected" by the affected by anybodget cut . Rrtnjpl. .-v ;' Hapes. proposed cot a the tt million bucket of GalinsfcysaidPlan n -"would have to -Place 5: Carl Johnston, Bob Ware and Doug Jones.' Place 3: Wayne Bockmon and Jeff Ross. the OoUegeoFHariaiiiti^tfee director be the fir&togb'' if he bad to make any • •Communication j Place 4: Bob Kauffman, John Rowland and Jack of the program said Wednesday. cuts,whileCardona said he felt an Place t:.Cindy Powell, Vanita Klutts and Becky Steinberg. "I was goaranteedall ofmycourees -obligation to continne to provide faculty Place 5: Sara Stewart, Oavid Pusfka and Howard Baskin. Place 2: Gary Pearson, Jan Klutts* Klrby Poppan, Freed. (or the tiU, 19IS, semester by the dean members for the program for "as long Guy 'Smith, Terry Carlton, Jay Ashcraft and Rick • Nursing. Susan Benton. (Stanley Werbow) of Hnonaiuties and the as l ean aBord." Potter. provost (Stanley Ross) of the University ; /Because Planllhas no salary budget • Education • Pharmacy: I.D. Freed, Karen Fagaia. Aaron Rubin and Mark H. Braun. at a meeting last FridayAlan Fried-of its own, facultymembers who teach Place 1: Susan Krute. * • Social and Behavioral Science mansud. courses v seminars are paid by their Place 2: Sam Wisialowski Place 1: Lee Sandoloski, Robert West and Diana THE PROGRAM, which is: ad-nts.. Ptace 3: Msrgaret Flynn ' * Canter. wintMrted by the liiViSkinotGgneral Place 2: Dave O'Neil, Robert Caldwell, Robert and Comparative Studies, offers a nbbodgetary credit for courses taught " Thicker."Jimmy Oetap-aml Joe Padflla. ­ Place 1: Michael Meyerson and Vicfcl Evans. OTtiodgro taught sofrdaritiallyby facnl-outside theirownarea. . Place 3: Audrey Eger, M£ke Steenbergen, Gordon Place 2: Lee Hamilton and Tom Wilson. Shapiro and Mario Maya. yJcomJheOoOe^ofJwoaniti. senators that if his energy program is approved, he will see. that most of the resulting fuel price increases will be placed on gasoline, rather than on home­heatingoil. • Despite Mr. Ford's reported ^'willingness to negotiate with Congress • '":on energy matters, Senate Democratic .-.^Leader Mike Mansfield said he hasno in­^.dication1 the President is prepared to back away from the oil tariff. . 't'Sv'f-URGING support for delaying the ;; -special tax so Congress would have, time to write an energy plan, Sen. Abraham • ' A. Ribicoff, D-Conn., said the $3 tariff would cost the average American family, $207 a year. With the nation in a deep recession, "what this country does not need is a crash program to immediately reduce our consumption by some arbitrary amount, such as one million barrels a day, without any consideration of the ! danger such a crash program puts on the —^Moo Sfoff Kioto fair Coral jtw.9nmom economy." Ribicoff said. Sandy Kress, Director of the Texas Student Lobby, appeals for fuhds^ Mr. Ford already has imposed thefirst $1 of the $3 tariff as part of his over-all plan .to saveenergy by raising its price. • He seeks to reduce U.S. oil imports by one million barrelsa day this year,about 5tudents Consider Referen 15 percent, and by twice that amount by the end of 1977. Sen. Carl T. Curtis, R-Neb., defended the tariff as Mr. Ford's way of forcing StateLobby Congress to act on energy policy. mm* 'ir! > * In an effort to win' votes for his By DAWN O'NEAL1 Re isaid the TSL needs the tnoney for filing pagke^iAone program,.Mr. Ford had breakfast with11 "fexaa Staff Writer biUs.^ other basic operath^ expenses.'' " V Democrats, most of them conservative -The Student Senate appropriated $300 Wednesday-' to Texas ^.Stndent Lobby. an w^n^tion repre^ting S universitiesi The TSA. te "an jeducational and social services ^jup," said Southerners^ and two'of the senatorssaid throoghaot the state, and consideied sevaal referaxla for the Kress, and that when the TSL mergeswith the TSA", it would not tave such a confusing financial situation. TSL Director Sandy Kress requiest^ ah imin^ateiiOS in a\ "li Is^nfair," he aAJed,'4to havea paper 100 jwrcent o> the ^mph. The high tem-.; v ^ Sh*totGoivMnin»lRreddentPt^.Fleming<^poSrf.theap»'' |«*rtitioin betaose hefdtlt was a"disproportiooateicqoest" •• v H» Second TSP issue adts students if .they would favor anin-r I H ;>y^. TOTt:.i r «.T--, i , 'be^^'2 jiivldual^bscri^iyion of a^proximatetydSTpet' semester and have • y the upper 60s Thurs-| ,.f. .Commits,Cmtanim^tfBtttland saM "They"^it'cteHvered'tdeach suhsci^ber^s residence. . ^ u.: ao,"n«'"r =hl,,»nti= Vday, dropping to thV' ^Eareoit'bl^adT,jthey need it, awl weneed tbe TSLbecause theya';:Tl*Senti^ »i«« warea,^!™*coordinated tobbyeffort." . . -„ .>'v^ysCem "of fL ^sg^^sda^night^l l§# Kr^sald sdme"of tt«tbi^ his groupbldbbyingfor^re>Ji?# Jay JoftflS; •frrtliefinajn^aiil-syst^^ » .... X& foe and academic reform. 1 •xSystfaB mam® liliisi $$1 ^0S$S0xm Sixteen Pages 471-4591 Bell Rate Increase Halted by Blackwell By MIKE ULLMANN estimate to Bell officials in St. Texan Staff Writer Louis. Southwestern Bell's proposed $45 Commenting om Hoicombe's million increase in intrastate phone testimony, Blackwell said: "He es­ calls was temporarily blocked timated about $30 million would be Wednesday by 167th District Court required for intrastate revenue. Judge Tom Blackwell. This figure was sent toSt. Louis. We Atty. Gen. John Hill took the com­have no evidence as to what happen­ pany to court in an unprecedented ed there, but back from St. Louis move to stop'a March 1 rate hike on comes a $45 million figure... and long-distance calls within the state. that seems to me to be un­ Bell attorney Will Sears said he reasonable." will appeal Blackwell's temporary Blackwell also cited the testimony injunction "just as soon as I can get of Pat Loconto, a Dallas rate expert the papers' filed." who said the increase would provide In his ruling,-Blackwell cited Bell with nearly double what com­ evidence from two-days of hearings. pany officials claimed. "I became extremely concerned Loconto said his calculations bas­ about,several items. The first was ed on evidence provided by the the failure of the State of Texas to phone company in a Houston rate have a utility commission to case indicated a rate of return regulate intrastate rates. To me, between 16 and 20 percent from the this is ridiculous," Blackwell said. $45 million increase. 1 Charles Marshall, head of Bell's -jHe commented on phone rates in Texas operations, said in his deposi-Texas, saying information from1973 tion the return would be only 8.1per-? "shows if you make a phone call cent. . . ^ from Austin to Houston you are After the judge ruled, Sears asked charged a certain toll for that, but it if the phone company could be * shows if you extend your call into allowed to collect the rate increase •Louisiana the ioll you pay would be and provide refunds to its long dis-less for 400 miles than 200." tance customers if it loses the case ; Sam Holcombe, Bell assistant later. ­vicfcpi.esidsht._for revenue re­Hill argued against the move, quirements, was among six saying: "The record doesn't lend : witnesses who testified Wednesday. itself to confidence in the telephone He originally estimated a *30 company in its actions in regard to', million-rate hike-but had to send his refunds." — Oil Tariff the President was in a conciliatory quoted by press secretary Ron Nessen'as;' mood. saying. , Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, D-Ga., Nessen said the Federal Energy Ad-; • said he expects energy negotiations ministration will issue regulations by ; ' between Mr. Ford and Congress to begin March 1 requiring the bulk of hi^ier' ­this week. petroleum charges be applied, to gaS-1 ] Sen. John McClellan, D-Ark!, oline. • predicted a "united program" will FOR EXAMPLE, Nessen said, gasx' emerge within two weeks. oline prices might increase by. 12 to 14 ' FAILURE to override the veto would centsa gallon while prices of heating oil. C»ngi^;ltttoya -compromise with Mr. ^ -The flow of ecoiuimic, bad Con-Ford, wfeo^already has -promised to" r^u(^j^Siminate~tiie $3 tariff once Dep^^^^^orted'i^^OTa^nScgneCongress approves other key portions of rose last month at an annual ratejolF.2.4 his program.-percent — far behind the 12 percent ^in­ THE HOUSE and Senate Democratic crease in the cost of living. The rise:in task forces that,are writing an energy personal' income was attributed mainly program' failed to reach agreement to increased government benefitsfor the Wednesday and scheduled another ses­unemployed. sion for Tuesday. Farmers' net incomes plunged nearly; The Democratic alternative being dis­16 percent last year and are expected to > cussed by . the two panels rejects Mr. drop another 12 percent this year, the . Ford's notion that oil imports should be Agriculture Department said in another : reduced by two million barrels a day report. ' over the next three years, and places far THE COMMERCE Department also more emphasis on reviving the economy reported the number of permits issued than on reducing U.S. reliance on foreign for building new homes hit the lowest oil. •' "V level on record for January. The figures "We are committing ourselves to a promised no. early recovery in the troubl­ gasoline tilt On prices," Mr. Ford was ed housing industry. Seeks Action By The Associated Press Alton's spokesman would not say if Israeli Foreign Minister Yigal Alton Israel had made the boycott's end one of said Wednesday 'Uiat his country'is seek­the concessions it wants from Egypt'in ­ing European and U.S. government ac-exchange for an Israeli pullback in Sinai. • tioii to end discrimination by Arab coun­Israelis believe Egypt could influence tries against Jewish-owned or controlled other Arab countries to end the boycott banks. , Diplomats in . Beirut, the Lebanese capital, said relations between Egypt'Allon indicated that Israel considers and Syria, the main Arab combatants inan end to the Arab boycott against Israel the 1973 war against Israel, have been and Jewish firms essential for a Middle strained by Secretary of State Henry "A. East peace. Kissinger's latest peacemaking trip -to - "Within 'the context of the political the Middle East. moyes toward a settlement in the region, THE DIPLOMATS said the Syrianwe shall view readiness to rescind the government believes President Atiwqrboycott and theeconomic warfare as one Sadat of Egypt is willing to reach' aof the clear indicationsof the true trends separate agreement with Israelon a par­ of the ndghboring countries," Allon told tial Israeli withdrawal in Sinai, deqtf|eparliament." • _ • Cairo's public statements to the THE ISSUE was raised by an opposi­contrary. . tion member after reports that some "The Syrians are afraid they are being Arab investment companies were press­left out in the cold," one diplomat said. ing a boycott against major European "Kissinger offered them nothing in his Jewish-run banking houses and refusing recent visit, but they heard a lot about to participate in financial ventures in­the prospects of an Israeli pullback in volving those.banks. • Sinai." Co-Op.... University Co-Op Board members and employes dis-; tuss difficulties in; store management-and operations in-the first of a two-­part interpretive by Sharon Jayson. —Tfxan Stafffhoto'by Cqrol Jaan ^nvmni (Story, Page 3). ! SilJ" miMf 1?* "1 •$%g£-rk m0 ,-a, .. -' v, I;; By MICHAEL STERLING been a real mess sincehe was read "He'lnlein'S book I'^.yfayy Gravy sat in the; slugged in the spine with a "Stranger in a Strange Land" vUniori South',: wearing a red nightstick by a New York cop. I wanted-to be made into ?~J)andana, a battered cowboy He referred to an incident in giavy when I died. But my^ gT jut and a green jumpsuit with San • Francisco . where he wife said no> . . -It'i Mighty Mouse patch. Watfy reportedly was pounded by "I came into Austin 'cause I Gravy is a former announcer police in front of 30 witnesses. < had a two-year-old standing•;iA Woodstock, Divine Dodo of "I'm safe now," chortled invitation from the ar-, -jfye First Church of Fun, .Gravy, putting ona red rubber madillos," said the self­ >hhember'6f the. Birthday Par­tdown's nose. "Nobody says, : described 'psychedelic relic ' •^Hy. head of the Hog Farm.... • "'Let's-go beat up some Gravy winced as a small.child L;t-"Hey,' wait a minute/'. clowns.' " Gravy has been tripped over his 'iktar,' a one­ vJJravy said. "I'mnot!the head working as pa -clown in a. stnnged oriental instrument. -:«T the Hog Farm, I'm just a children's hospital. "I work It twanged as if mortallyclog in the Hog. Wedon't have with , dying children. The wounded. Gravy, smiled in­ " any heads of anybody in the parents: don't want to tell dulgently and put it out of family. I just have the them they're dying. The doc­harm's way. • privilege to be its tongue." tors don't want to do it. The Signing a contract riddledGravy, sometimes known as down tells them." with typos. Wavy agreed to be Hugh Romney, leaned GRAVY TALKED ABOUT on bis best behavior at thecautiously back in his chair h,,4TO • < Interlude of Ecological andsmiled hroa^y. revealing-gT^^^^^^ Vaudeville to be heTi Ife/ 1% Co-Chairman, Republican Nations/ Committee 9tf * * W.C. Hogg Bldg. Rm. 14 8 p.m. Free Admission Texas Union ideas & Issues Committee 1 ?^t '12 neon. Sandwich Seminar:' ."Who \$&wr iGets into Law School and Why." Dean T.J.,: '&bton will speak onlaw schooladmission requirements. Josey Room, fourth floor, Academic Center. Ideas and Issues ,gomn|itte. , r • v -c fetoi t -> ri m ' *" " 12 noon. Music by singer/guitarist Jimi ' Ross. Texas Tavern. Musical Events -Committee. • , " . I'llslJ: noon. Sandwich Seminar; "Legislative Issues Important to-Students." Former Student Government: President Sandy Kress will lead the discussion. Room 7 ("The Cellar,"), lower Level, Texas Tavern. Ideas and Issues Committee. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ k-4-5 p.m. Happy Hour Discussion with Professor Bill: '1 Livingston. Intormal conversation with thai »>S£ government professor. Texas Tavern. ^ * c' ^ i ' ^ "" r K V * 1 ^ • 4:30 p.m. Beatles Symposium. Rlm:' "What's > Happening!The Beatlesir»the U.S.A." Adocumentary , on the Beatles' first tour of the U.S. from behind the scenes. Admission $1 for, UT students, faculty, and •toff; $1.50 for the public. Patts Auditorium. Musical :,i0--„ Events Committee, 1 ^ 4:30-6:30 p.m. Wine and Cheese Party. The UT interaction Comhiittee inyites students and faculty of the law School and the LBJ School of Public Affairs to Aan informal gathering.Dining Room, Joe C.Thompson Conference Center* *; A 9 p.m. Beatles Symposium Rims: 'Let It Be" "•History of the Beatles." The Beatles last movie;together and Braverman's 17^mlnute multimedia' history of their success. Admission $1 for UT students; faculty, and'staff;'$1.50 for the public. Academic I t enter Auditorium. Musical Events Committee. , 8 p.m. Rlm; "Hamlet/' Sir Laurence Olivier starsin this winner of five Academy Awards. Admission $1 for UT students, ,faculty,, and staff; $1.50 for' members.:Batts Auditorium. Theatre Committee. v S •• ' , 8 p.m. Lecture: Richard Obenshain. The co-chairman of the Republican National Committee will speak. Room 14, W.C. nogg Building. Free; Ideas and issues Committee. 1JC 9-11:30 p.m ;*Th«f Pictew" drid .^R.'.Cownbri^B' IV^he Pickers" , • Pickers"-will sing-folk,'mountain, country^ and': popular musie; "J.R. Company"-will finish the| evening w(fh ;a selection,of guitarr music Friday £*' I'* * • •« "v'% n ' r nr., Starcrosh The Austin progtotsivcriazzb^dwi^perform until12midnlght Fridaydnd again 9 p.m.-T a.m. Saturday. free.' TexOs Tavern MysicalEvents Committee. ­ J k'noW^'what,?&?rest'of ll's^ International Whale, Day -.Donald Dock sqnirtgun.-Hl • looked down. "Aw heU.1got Vs 11 ^ about I wrote it in a coma," (April 27). about the Earth gave thelittlegirl whotripped". the damn thingon insideout," J he said. People's Park: in Vermont . _ .SMSWraWfta-e..*s-. over his iktar::a Oar*|tait-he said l Gravy called op an airime "The Birthday Party is run­(the payments are almost rubberdcM toplay with.Tbe,' • _ . and said his name was Hugh ning Nobody for President" finished; it has tworivers you little girl lookedit the doll in Romney. He needed spectal Gravy is heavily into can drink out of), about the fascination. t3arkwas tearing . 00 Clark Kents rubberyhead, seatson tbepJane becausebis tk . ecology. He talked about Ecology -Action-Theatre in open his suittorevealthei'S" Somewoman had ripped off back hurts toomachimie&he Cousteau. abcfat the Berkeley, about solaiMlriven . of,.his Superman miiforin! '^Favy Gravy's 580-year-old cangetintoacertainpas^ioa. . Stockholm/. Conference bumper ran and about alters ,-v\"You see.. thijt?;'( Gravy "Rbetan ternile bdl, and he PC : (Wood^tockholm. he laughed) native death systems. ' 'demanded: He:rippedopen hiSy*antsit returnedbadly. Be -The interview ended!-­about:?Galapagos penguins .Gravy shbt bystanders un­green jumpsuit, revealing a begged that i| be put in the "Goodbye, man."Gravysaid, slaughtered byoil spills,about erringly in the mouth with his -fuzsy blue sweatshirt-Gravy paper before'heleayes FH-radiating good vibes. ^ . Council To Vote on Transit Cutbacks Navigation Board Asks lor Reversal of Lake Austin Decision By MIKE MORRISON Meeting at 1 p.m: in the possibility o! severe erosiqii lowered. Lake:.Tfavis is: Also on the agenda, the Texan Staff Writer Municipal Building, the coun­along the lake banks and a several feet above its normal «wnctl will vote on anbipm­cil «ill also be asked to A recomHRndaUon-to--cut doubling of the estimated l6V^ * . v-. ing acontractforconstroction back the?1 Austin -Transit reverse ;costs prompted the Naviga-TOE ORiraNMrxost fw of the Da»is-Lane Water Lake Austin. Systems'"rcapital im­tion Board to reverse itsdecn the, toweringins esUmated at Reservoir. Therecacmnoded sion.,. =••. • provements: program and the 130,000. However, the Lower bidder, Chicago Bridge and off-again, on-agaln issue of Both the Navigation Board ' Jeff Geeslin, chairman of, Colorado RiverAnthority tadd Iron Company, 'sahmitted a lowering Lake Austin are two and the City Council have ap-. the board, .said that severe' the; city last:,week that bid of |I.41C^SC&. ^ of the topics on City Council's proved' the-lake lowering erosion would ;result, if • becauseoftheexcessive : Tbe cooDcfi isalsoachRiat­ which is scheduled to begin Thursday agenda. ' , Mansfield Dam were opened amountof water thaVwould be ed to-vote on a eontrae^ Sor -Confronted with a projected next week. However, the xwhile Lake Austin aras being tost, the cost would coose-coostraction of a parking deficit of more than $1 million quently rise to $4b)000. The ' stroctnre and a. twejDoor'' for this: fiscal.year,. Joe Ter-riverautt^fynsestbe water trainuig facffised ^4 threatpning to curtail water The federal Office of bus stop passengersfacilities. billion Ekiergy Research and .recreation oaLakeAustin this Technology,-Assessment TERNUS ATTRIBUTES Development. A^ministratkm the budget'problems to over 'budget last Thursday throo^i organized the'panel. Woodson .InoUier business,tbe coun-A Daily Texas article optimism -concerning in­Saturday in Wadiinigton. served as a consultant in the appearing inWafaesdaj'Sedi­ dl is scheduled to hear bom areas of solarand geothenna] tion concenuag the tJaios creased revenues, higher Woodson 12 twocivic association and other energy, fusion and electrical refeteaduia labor and fuel costs and the energy expertsworked incon­transmission:': • representatives ifho are John Osfaorne as adeficiency of: federal funds. nection with staff membersof Coal and mcleaCenergy are senator. the Barton Ciedc Use^twobiggetTBogranK^tn watershed. the proposed bodget and are also mistakenly reported Asare^ltofrM%nthoosing Uw^most promisingaNircesof devefopment proposals made, petition wassigned tyMsbt­ energyfor the'future.'besaid. dentseoatofs.lt for.': .'.the area;.[the r^ireseo-''; :: Direct burning of. coal and by 14state seaahn. tatives.will propose the Bar^ efforts toward'meeting clean. As^felteriig^HKr ton Springs and the rediarge air standards^wbuld be more said a Umvers^y area of tte Edwards Aqnafer ieconomical than proporals for prohitiitmg don^ter be included in a stndyalreadyconverting coal intosynthetic plaimed'for the Lake Austinproducts, he said. , Bill Garianda SnaiisBaBL'fe AND 601 193S Garland wasinstead pventhe 1675 e. BtboUyn, N.Y. 11229.* (212) 336-5300 watershed. • THE MCAT EXAM IS ON MAY 3. 1975 THE STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CEfJTER WJLL HAVE A PREPARATION COURSE FOR THE MCAT SCHEDULED TO BEGIN ON MARCH IS AND RUN FOR RESEARCH SEVEN CONSECUTIVE SATURDAYS IN AUSTIN :, • "•» W FUtuieHtslH>rSlories Wyf&QUMt£ COMDIAUr INVIRO TO A MEETING IXPIAINING THE KAPtAN MCAT COUKSE , oin • 1 "SUNDAY,FEBRUARY 23,1975 Ktl 7:30 PM. CASTIUANHAU a 2323 SAN ANTONIO y fScm Antonfo and 24th Slrtmn) "V" 11th floor Conference R6om AUSTIN, TEXAS '''''''•*?' • " fyfti ,, t-Z&i ~r. "V,. \ r", *• SAMPU MATtUAlS AS Will AS AN tXHANATKN Of TJ« COUISt Wttl Bf AVAOABU FOU MOU INfOtMATtON CAU OX WUTh ' , STANICY H. KAPtAN BXJCATIONM. CDITER i V^ illSOO Narth Cwitfd hpnuwnt (4071­ , ^JDAUAS, TEXAS 75231 nx* ''' It Problem This Number:. -­ (214) 750-0317 ov,// 1 EXPAND YOUR I u CAMERA'S^ -1 HORIZONS! U '<$' '•'A** Telephofo Lens ijrrsf 4: V*. -. 135MM f2.8 ' Vi Off List Price 155.90 List PLANTATION SOUTH 79.99 Sale (Including Case).. APTS „ Credit and LayawayPlans Available 5 COME BY AND SEE SAMPLE PRINTS' • ,. SHOWING WHAT THIS LENS CAN DO.-OTHER MODELS ALSO REDUCED^ !A SHOP 2ND FLOOR 2200 Pleqsant Valley442 DealsmWith Deaf WMP,2 Tliurstlai V February 2^f 1975 THE DABLY TEXAN x&fi-iT&V <~L, v i. ^" ,ui •1 -'• * -y > fs Indicted 5*Hf ssaacb ms4^.& i •*>; t • msa&smx «as»)) — A. sates#1 ® to a Kwnspiratycount sralisserving a business expenses. ! grand ijttsy indicted;EfidhasS8tKtetaV aourfljumfhjirisojiteaTO. THE INDICTMENT against Demarco f . ' te bniit ant a daopi anjnatow ftr&TBTwfi tewnnaTSgrnnBC and)afttitsoc-SSmsan ted tern dqmty assistant to and. Newman. said that they used TAV, .UtAYi Wettegafay anccnnfarilgtteBffiMi'"*fc|fc--^ ;-.'• «w»fl^82587 jnbatitares,indnSinga5 turn over fakedocuments tothe IRS, the Mamte1369) tact cefatgmsferiurt ttto* a«»:' percentoegUgenoepenally,fortheyears General Services Administration and to bad! garen tte gweBiuaanft gagats mil JRwtfh 45. iHtew- congressional committees. mam, 8®, atee w afiaagpB *a& 1969, the value of Nixon's pre­ Anjjs&s^ whose Etna QBegamd tte tat JJRSaflential jraperssnd for disallowed presidential papers was vastly reduced for purposes of a charitable contribution CuevmCose made after that date. The indictment said that: • In March and Aprils 1970, the con­spirators prepared Nixon's 1969 return accompahyingUt-with~documents.that cites "falsely and fraudulently supported the validity of the $576,000 charitable con­tribution claim." • IN MARCH, April and May, 1970, they prepared documents delivered to the GSA giving the government custody . fflWSapQMKAP))—State Btet .fedfe* -'kmisated ttylow afte emflffgiwa of the Nixon papers falsely supporting tmrn'scand Jnnes. " the claim. MiNO«BLk^saMW«toesife*l Sutowrt a unwilling &&C tc«^ iujee —UPI TcUphoto The indictment, returned by the last ~ te ^nuuBt «2ray ssfi Lowe taft& aeaisnao; to His Oweas,-H,iSiciargedwrfhinterti ©b to iHnmug a idozenihostages hdd jhriig tfae on which he had begun his appraisal of .u?ex?*5t^Y W*0neujay' showering ash onto towns 20 miles away. No Bhtufl>g 3^ gntttad tteBidi^, Cicqy «s ffimfcs*ate ami ariacnawp ptBwwas vim KtcBqy ifiiat preceded ttesbnAoaL the Nixon papers. injuHes reported. The volcano is located near Auckland. / ;a aff Kbe It&fi seen Hte-shootanfr lson»im- WE SMP hg' uegattli. laie Btofe _ _ ! t^sayanmigSteaftRHtotft Buk* W(&ui*)C sndb be Competency Trial Set for Kleaseh weeksearittyseteittiaik­ aode aK^iUfe fiar artteiwcwa; % tfee ^iSi» weharoaniew^atBte. aidtfts-jkfljHtri#* and ftatt yjjgwfl "i-m'i hkis artihttft? af lile pdtBc Das ghn^jatfi m> mritoiaqga^tlfle^BiBginBEslbeltoanghtito capftaSpnn&ftmeofc.''' &»safi. Sfe snow tawm ito Kleasen's prior medical records, prior challenged-the constitutionality of Tex- willS6al prottens; IOCfis bafiis ~aK* jpa&m anaS&eaattmtC Ibe saifl. ' refiwnt nee&ti tasdite tileseipqftteq&. faiTOBs eaamttn^j,-lh^9 a O&BtK" AAinsiftv WASHINGTON {UPI) —-President Ford is ready to propose another PICO RIVERA, Calif. (AP) — Laid-off workers are back on the job this OtmuiiBB«..te tthe Jh< Omnndtue ton tocat next year.if imemptayment stays as high as the Administration week at Ford's giant assembly plant east of Los Angeles — but many say tjN&aSe*! pjtQgcams; Itessai^ stsatt»- fftigam tefituaii. sn&iats «&otdi ame StseSlias predicted, bis economic coordinator said Wednesday. they enjoyed,the "vacation." SsuItjmsfl 'iiB imiEril mkbk Stae safe tamgwrB^hritaBtrtSan fetsaaae immdfes, "flfavJoasiF,"Seeooodamiyis not comingout (in 1976) on the basis that "I had a good time," said assembler John Lynch, catching his breath as ant fedMtefi 8mn ttfatdr ffamffiw. and there can be a tax cut that year," L. William Seidman > he dashedout of the plant.' 'I rested quitea bit, did some reading and did a ®W a ctifical Democratic governor at a give-and-take session at the little traveling around." fiufl Ah tlbjs»aii?sis KiioinilGovminsConference. ItotSpaihiwuisaid bedoes not trust the Administration's own forecasts Peace Proposals Spark Stock Rise mitt* was tftoft maffitoi SBtfflifies Snr HHCaieaiiB&SBaite.] aftont HMHqfloyjneHt. Mr. Fon3 said joblessness, at 8.2 percent in NEW YORK (UPI) -News JMtakoii aff IBetDis; S^tiOe 9an- that Secretary of State Henry N.Y.S.E. 06W JONES AVERAGE ;mate ww* stttB l wiifc anaffictil to 7j9 perorait next year. Kissinger, returned with , some VoliMProfilt 30 hulMtriik .auith-ajui®eiy new: Middle East peace Cftttl it Dpcloi %»red Jail Term, Returns to Work proposals sparked a late rally 687 r 736.39 v BOSIWibj'i)?--Dr. Kemieth CL Edelin was called back to work to Wednesday, which raised prices UP UKCMAMOBD 'wfflts^3Hi^oe.lteltaK«tfla«eSiffiiBne defiver aIn^y Wednesday, less than 241i(Mvs after being spared a jail on the New York Stock 410 Exchange: 5.09 sartBm»far$mai^ao^iterconvictkHi in the death of an aborted fetus. The Dow Jones industrial Wednesday morning the 3&-vear-old obstetrician met his patient at r^n Fit. 11,19)5 average, up and down most of Boston GtyHo^dtaLShe wasin labor. Delivery wasexpected late in the •atmte atUHftanB Still Itee-a»ffits3 dec-the day,"finished up 5.09 points at tQBsr E^lte i.• • 736.39. : Hanripers Co-Op Performance s*/Ci••. m* fc «te at**ft Wdtafatfl smsCaaaeaJtasTOsm&-fciaiBfltfinn liljtsei^ energies have been spent investigating *3t® its roenftiers, Co-Qp inanagsnent as one reason for the firm's problems. he explained. employe grievances, which have often This is — an CBrtt, ^taterit«mn« anenibBr, has Jbeen criticized for operating the ' a giant business $8 "The board intervened when it felt it %•SUUMNMXSQMi come from the extremely vocal unioniz- IWBhwb Mte fe wit BriBSfSng Sis Storeas-a «nporation rathe?San a co-million business — and we're operating had too settle disputes. We'd have been ed.wpiiers. * -roteasa tone c& te att' ' /<>Hlumwtaw CMlg) iaA vmemts jtasfln . Although between 200 and 250 said j, hadn't." board member Jackson said. isatqftitea wmgk. Hr5^ng to mm ^storeas'atriife «Kjp SMtfiWMgs; employes are eligible to join the Co-Op v^Siaoti^kaenteniberpaitk^iatiaiand The charter for the University Co­Smith said he hopes the board's inten­ Workers Union; created in 1970, only Atthwogfc ttgstBftniW!nti;a»aoy ht pbb-wriUniteor efforts would cause a big operative,Society, Inc., states that the tion to divide into committees to deter­rU4\ wNh agWBBtwwaaeg iisnenfiteisas about 50 to70 actually belong, Rosemary hiaa®. Os gaBaAMocal siiHBlfini & with the snftdiers'who corporation's purpose is to "buy. sell, mine the prerogatives of management uiwuhei.t, — »« wniiMMit Coffnian, union president, said. or r KsgossiMte lur vows «C tte wetfld be afraid to s ^ ' jteaaons based purely marifa«»ifa»Btoni- OhnsSifit, te£QxMfe rooiiagra% said.s^ -"• relations' by textbook ; of manager such as improving tives of the Society.'' •is k.taut oMpwatewsfflet3t gog^ its Rather, general manager from 1915 to . Itefaalosq^bdiiiid theIdea thatthe. operations. BECAUSE' THE-"OBJECTIVES" 1965. As transitions of boards &nd ®®SBey. ctnml taeKkaniiaas -Si •CMJj)Should bemnasaomporatianwas Actual control of ; the Co-Op. continues have never been openly stated, employes " pwfitSv. Mini NkwnaBt ^uteft lhKad tnaaaQar, Ite managers occurred, the board had -j BKBtfao-w 6efijwws'*tteCa>Cgi*aso«w britiiidllbesifle«ffimBKlhBnSse«SadiSs »acgjted by St««ing Swift when he to be a source of conflict among board believe much of the board members' adopted some of the functions that were '=v becaroe woe-presidentof operations in ...-a«k^.>" -members, employes: and management. time has been spent trying tomanage the exercised by the managers. * ' jl^Spineeagik^belieselnswiethods Voting • members of the board; include Co-Op. rather than merely fulfilling its -th&ks; tfiaftatte€MQB>«taisstlttt9" Save KaBsed strained management^ i four faculty members, four elected stu­obligation to set poUcy. . • Some board members believe that the •--}$ • as.a dm wigwfi«riifi«a combination of Swift's corporate' _j$ persomidielBtUBts. 3-dent members and an elected chairman. s «p«tatiag. 8«r tlte ltaca«I8tt~ at iilts "They've got every right to say who is techniques of management and the pre-4f. KRKESnFtVASpromoted fmni^ Two Co-Opemployes serve as advisers.' is a0Bi^K fte3iDent Of the boaixl's clslon,4 along Newman said, ^ r/' L SiS? uelvfeujpolrt JWJS.V»--?IIE'FCWA>®M. I>.Ii-v> •..:. V-. I, „c<. Thursday WZM&& ^rjA -;l';^';.rSvC-C-i,m mm^gi jm;~-w The Union East jefaemhun is now aa the March SStndent Government ballot, no thanks to oar StndentSenate. Alter some of our R^esoHatms decided not to pot the question before Ok students (byleavinglast Wednesday's Senate meeting early), anumber of stndentswpe farced to gather signatures on a petition !? inane a votewoeMbe takaL|fetak those stndents who helped. There are two other notesalwat the Union East ufeteMlamthatsfanqhi be pointed out One, the Stndent Govmiugnl state lobby obtained the sfenatores of 14 state senatois (na«^from Uoyd Docgettto Oscar Mamy to Bob Gammage to Walter Mengden) on Oris statement: yWhertaa the atmisnt* mf thm it involved im th* m* UmM I&ut, r/ womld itjfaid m imLtkmUmum East mtta-as a :at iqr nt*«t tfc« cnm. -•" •Second, there will be a farom sponsored by the University For those of yon who are not sere of what Union East will contain, what arguments are bang lodged for aid against it and what the questions are, please one Iqr. Speakers at the Coram will include Janie Strauss wt* (chairwoman of the. Texas Union Board of Directocs},Ftanlt Fleming 5fe » * Sr-(Student Government. pesifat),5 Dr. Don Zachanas (an assistant to UniversityPresident Ad Interim Lcrene Rogers). Beverly Hammond (a -W" stndent senator who opposes Onion Kast)and John Osborne (founder of the Union East Referendum Gommitteeand of She t^MniiW mhrf tMnii East): "v'" ­ . Qnestkns mil be taken from theandience at the end of te fivma We encourage those who are interested in the Union East proposal to attend. -;Tfl»e Texas Senate Economic Development CbOHnittee has tatoea K»6ier •step in its nerer-ending battletoteep thestate ecfoniiraHyba«Jcward. Bya vote of SO. the committee voted to send.a favorable report to the Senate floor on a bin to raise the naabiann load Omit for trades In Terns. V^ Tlie bill, sponsond lv SoL itert BaaKe or Lidtbock aal ladral by the ;tracking industry'sTexasMotorTcaiiespartation Association,woold raise the ^toad limit bom 72,008 to M,On ponds. \ "The coOunittee ignored' Winii^f from the Aniw«rf»i«. Association calling the biff "anfisafety." TJie AAA's Texas News Boreaa cfirector, Rick TTmmons, testified that the heaner tracks would myA : traffic, and ttar longer braking . " V:--A' Beth Mack Editorial Assistant.;... ..lousDelgado Associate *nmu«i»«|vEdStor. —....:,:..WIIhim A. Stone Jr. Assistant Amusements B£tor.' —....—..BradBochoixAssistant Sjports Bffitor. — —— — Ed Dalham Kake-up Edite-.... ..... —.— Am Wheelock ; Wire Editor.......... — ...........J>y Jorden Copy Editors Jan Ptapps, Lee Ann Waning, Anne Garvey, C Russell Leigon -—Zach Ryall, Carol JeanSimmans »«V« iiWn««i>oiii: •'"Jbb. ih nS5rT5^S1^'^™rl—i — n* tmi ltHPnm. . --— Nj»(H«lSllIMTh "— nY>nn»iirii»iiii ! • , By PHYLLIS SAUER , women; an attempt of ,on6 human being (Edhor'snote: Saueris anieinwSrut'^r. to(strip another humanbeing'of hOJ—•* Stndent Government's Womea's Affairs "•. dignity .'by attacking in the most Committee.) 1 ' . sitive,'vulnerable area. " r. a8®$j|l35& • Have you, ever been raped? If you ; , Every woman must realize, once and have, you have undoubtedly been forced : for all, that rape is a crime against her] to make ,the agonizing decision of and notby her.Womenaadmeaimust un whether to report it and .press charges. tte and work together, against the crime .And thpn, if yon hid the courage,-yoiUiad of rape by.reportin'g every case and en to go through U?e frustration of im-* couraging pthers to do the 'same. They v mediate.: examination to determine must also* energeticaHy'support-such whether you ..were really, raped, the legislative measures as the billconcert possibility of pregnancy and the ning rape which State Reps. Sarah Wee humiliating add demeaning experience dmgtonandKay Bailey havelntroduce , a trtaL.' " , : in the Texas Senate;This bill is designe The utterly disgusting characteristic to give the rape victim 'a chance ol : of rape trialsis thatthe victimissoof ten prosecuting an offense with:a minima! made to feel as thou{$ she is the one on ; fear -of, ridicule and intimidation;v'bj '• trial.She is, In many.cases, accused of, providing for exclusion of bystanders al ."coming on," or f^pouraging the rapist arape trial,unless they i^reparticipate^ If, outof fear of deith, she'doesn't fight, in the trial or arerepresentatives oftlgshe isaccused of consenting, then chang-press. The press, howeveri:-may .no ..ing her mind toolate. Thesedefenses are publish the identity of the'victim if it i . usually used to try and' prove that the ; harmful to her. Use of-the victim-s pridvictim brought the rape upon herself. ; sexual, conduct,as.evidence.is excludl -However; many4wbmten :have :been ^ unless it occurs with the defendant, i ^eriousiyiryured or killed becaUSv.-"?-n;:. tv-• ''RTF Recognition, pieas^ ference scrutiny. The Lc^lature took proached the relationdup which the 1 v MtKe^'Texds' look To the editor: _ ^ , time to consider: li the idight of the poem represented. Thefact thatPrather ' rT6 tte editor: , 1 read Carl Johnstonrs letter,in . foreign student; 2) tiie edDcatiaaal and is So esDotionally integrated a person '10 Last year when plans were announced : Wednesday's Texan praising your staff . cultural benefits of the jKesence 7of that beisready toown upto hissexuality f that-a new library was going to be built for-the excellentcoverage that they-have"" foreign stndents;3) tbemwaniceffects — whidi touches and requires decisions "on the' coiner of 21st and Speedway -given the.Student Government elections of tte estimated W inillian foreign in every relationship—isto mea source ' Streets. The Texan printed ah article on I then turned to page 9 only to find that stndents spendannnally inTexas; 4) the of joy in ins famesty. Straightforward, no .it, and the reporter commented that it the list of people who had filed: for Stu recruitment of foreign -'students by-. nnbarouhd. Would look like the state of Texas. : dent Government from the pharmacyAmerican rhnltinatiooal buanesses and I felt that Prather was merely stating ^:*f 'rieatize: the reporter was inferring school had been omitted.-Yes, people 5> the extremdylowtoitian jaid by Tex-• -where he stood with the person he was .that .some-wild-eyed, burnt-orange-there is a College of Pharmacy at IT asstudentsabroad.Thesereasons, many relating to.1felt no offense, noattack. I .'Qadillac-lOver architect probablydesign-;!.Austin :(the;'largest in the nationliwitl . others, and tbeirimpactonour cultural sensed no suggestion on his part, only a ed; or. influenced Uie design of the ;. over 600 students), and even though we<-and ednratinnal system need to -be con-, 'statement of '.'vHiere he was at,*' with jjuiidug^-At thetimei I had seen a model spend mOst of time in either the our sSdwed..' ^ , v this p^cular person at that particular .of the completed bqilding-and.saiw that . Pharmacy Building Butdine,' awa] -t> Even if yon fraiMy. ad^t ^dan't^' tiroe:.-He niade no "threat*' to use his or iUie south side of the building Slightly '.. from anyone 'else^ we deserve-to give a damn abodt for^gn stndents , penis. be told a person \rtio was V- resembled the west side'of Texas; -^fliecogni^.-»'t^|p;^%S?^% ~-~'j '• Mt's at least try and gau^ the damage ,going to deny him recognitiw as a male ;' But in.tiie past few weeks, The Tocan r 1 Fre« before the deed is done, , — to deny part of his being — that he in­ has';-.produced two more'humorous (?) and fight of Pamela Sisco iy'TOimKATZ Well, as 1 said, there is something 'could return to school in the spring.', ' -school than to take 9 hours of day schd_ :: thenuiiate ybuseePamda^sco ybd-t? special about Pam Sisco, ;1 »>v;" r •. In all fairness to;the physicians at the. -, and work 20 hours eachweek," she gail can tell. there: is something terribly;;.:? ** * * v /^health center, it must be stated that the "I was sent to the state hDspital'wilwrong witii her—sheobviously isa'per--%-S l^st October Sisco -spoke up at problems Sisco took to them were -_no warning and I adjusted^ I continufson wbolearned towalk withoutlearninjf>.*t Carothers Dormabout thefailure of resi­serious and deserved as much, if not my job. I was forced to move out tocrawl ' "" " dent assistants to properlypoll residents more,-attention from qualified, and con- Carothers on two-day notice just 1 .Sisco recently" basSS on guest hours preferences asstipulated . cerned physicians than they received." Thanksgiving; I found a placp tostay. charged that by Dr. James Duncan, dean of students. •The health center solution: to divest adjusted. I was separated from ipbjdk^ansof the Stu­When ber complaints vrent unheeded. ^themselves of the problem by expelling . friends and classes, and l adjusted.l dent Health Center . Sisco offered her opinion asa Daily Tex­..the student and sending her to a state . ..believe that I had demonstrated anat : withdrewJter.from an Gu«t Viewpoint (Oct 18. 1974). ^facility.is open to question. • ty to cope .with stressfulvsituatipn " the University Carothers' enlightened and .skillfully : Sisco. was never informed that she Amen. • without": her^^ V Mb trauied RAs gavea rebuttal in an article 1 would be taken to the state hospital. The As one neutrai observer indicated ' knowledge or Mil con- . which they posted in therestroomsof the -x firstshe knew about it,a sheriff'sdeputy < , -me. if Sisco had not been so articulated .sent, thengavehera dorai. They noted that The Texan was .< had.arrived to fetch her. She had about -vdemanding her rights and calling attatwo-week ticket to AustinState HoqpitalJ ;; "not the place" to -discuss such :five minutes notice. action to her problems she would still bo j.-She has ajso diatged that the health. problems: They obviously found a place Once at the statehospital things began •fcschool. In other,words; she can Walkvl center ph^dans refused to allow her to' ' . v _ more suited to their style. . : ^she hasn't learned how to crawli'a :i -j{ looking up.-The psychiatristsimmediate--. re^nter tbe Uuiversity this spring. She' Effectively ostracized, Sisco became' i jly gave her ground privileges and per-a # Sisco wants to see her files. Mayliewas gn^iK) hearing,of course,awi was. : depressed and deqxxxient. She sought, , i: mission to continue attending.her-job.atsi'ipoVrars that-be-can dissuade her'fr •nforr^ed of no appeal procedures ^ave- the Counseling- guidance at v the University.,Her employers and im-a.'4seeing them. But there is.little qi one to Dr. Paul THckett, health'center -Psychological ServicesCenter, hut since .¥,• mediatesupervisor both assuredime that®jf >j.that she has-a. right to'do so uiid •: director^ Wbo shedaims ted previoosly she had a jprevious history of difficulties j, she wasand continues to.be an excellent,"fe^/Texas open records law. That la'; told herthat theadviceof the psychiatric ' (age 9 and 13) she was referred to the responsible, intelligent and. modelrf^written staff is al%ays followed.-" , ^ -Student Healtji Center. to give:citizens like-Pamell , emP'oye and was one before, during andnt%Sisco a weapon — aslingshot — againsi • No coodderatioo was given by the :r' A psychiatrist doing Ins.residency at after her hospitalization, , < 'qnamelessv faceless, heartless mons; health center to the "new-fangled*' con--, the center had her hospitalized and- in -January, . Sisco..returnedv' to^ the-^fithat rises up now and again to rule: cept of informed consenL :No psy-i ^nquili^.She leftfive dayslater ^.tb.j:v;.-health center seeking permission to re-'-!-S ruin random lives in the name of'quu cbological. tests fnsoa this,:ti>e Iarg^t. amonth ssupplyanda weeklyappointv':^ enter the University.She discovered that^'VSorderliness, smooth sailing, good pre! aad~'most advanced univer^ty in the ment. It wasn temmpi. Siscowent back^-jg^ her doctor was no longer associated with Sisco grabbed at the only/weapon! > state. Nd optiooiobring her.own doctors ' ^morej^lanations ^.v .?eEi$SianoU!er doctor's.office. He spoke to her|fcsituatipn, and administratorsall overIphysicians. £?ren*s?ere ®?'ttedoctors. Mrs.^hrror about 20 minutes and announced that' -state are biting,their nails in apprehg ,'T^h^lth.centerelitefdt-they wene-­ 2?"??!? "i® l*ete told that if ^she,had not-demonstrated an ability to slon.l It tnay noi. in the end do he^ a.^ate. Afterall;^Siscoisa woman. Andshe uiey aid not sign tiie necessity papers fuqetion under stress oVer a long enough good. Systems such asthe University lhad no money. Her parents weren't iro-' ' teraW,.™ry -commitment the-r period of "time to be* readmitted-lo very unforgiving of such'conduct and portant people. Her boyfriend was a' f pigBicians at the health center would ^-^ School. When Sisco asked lfshenlightbe<$5^is a terrible, lonely battle, But vshe was^Sbet'that each student of this'uhiveniit^J University she woold try to protect 1nU "N~" *"••• wasnntra^, thepaPMts'signatures wereV-.. ^... fneeded.)'-Sisco-s: 'father signed afteit^: "aiWOnce' thatfliehad, GQD.FQRblD^ receiving verbal assurances from' the^y, stressful for me lo work 40 hours a week or her edi^catidndl experience ^nd'rhjbeen in a jbtate mental iostitution. doctor Ua^barripg^ompHcations, Sisqo 4-and, take 9 ' ' ­ rs^of Scal^eatrti^ntwith 6ve ' " - llhiy i ii i r inn Aass W 2VVV "1 *f-££sn< t By DAVIDS. BRODER e less elephant Rockefeller. And.they ask, "Is this the party we'resupposed c1975.Washington Post Co. to control?" • ; • WASHINGTON — The Republican Right is a headless Yet the third-party course is fraught with uncertainty aiid horseman. If the'liberal Democrats have a surplus of huge organizationalproblems — which were described to the m candidates, the conservatives: have just the opposite delegates in vivid detail. By the end of the meeting, the deproblem. They are ready to rise against the Ford- facto decision was to delay any breakaway movement — at Rockefeller policies of deficit and detente and against what least for now. one of tttem calls "the dingbat Democratic Congress." But That decision was reinforced by the obviousfact that there unless the horseman gets a head — a candidate — the ride is is no conservative political figure of stature to lead a third going to be as futile as Ichabod Crane's.* party movement. There are an abundance of pamphlet : The conservative, movement in the country is stirring writers and some pop-gun politicians. But the big names of again; .no question about it. lt has picked up a new shot of the conservative movement — especially Ronald Reagan — moral fervor from its alliance with the antiabortibn and wouldn't even wink at the idea. antibiising activists. It has:;foiinid new proof of its.favorite The third problem for the conservatives — and one lheyconspiracy theory in the passage of power from Richard are less willing to admit-is that the recession has deflatedNixon and Spiro Agnew to Gerald Ford and Nelson their rhetoric almost as much as it has car sales. WhenRockefeller. -••/Z;, • • people are worried about finding a job, the idea of Big". • _ The 500 conservatives who gathered here last week for a Government — that favorite conservative target — doesn't' Wi four-day strategy conference,co-sponsored by the American look quite as scary as it does when they are feeling fat and-Conservative Union and the Young Americans for Freedom, affluent. i-.i Were clearly in a mood to mobilize what they are convinced When such normally staunch conservatives as Rep. John* is massivepublic resentment against the policiesand people Rhodes and Sens. John Tower, Biil Brock and Jim Buckley v1 that control Washington today. . vote for food stamps, as they did, it'spretty clear there isa'"1 f V But they left town frustrated, unable to overcome the limited market for what conservatives regard as political­ 'The new owner?? We thought he was a terrorist!' barriers in their way. principle. The first is a baSic difference in strategy between those But with all their problems and all their dubious who would attempt to"recapture" theRepublican Partyand assumptions, it would be a serious mistake to dismiss«the,' guestvleuupotnt those who would abandon it in favor of a third-party conservatives as a joke. They most assuredly are not. '? alternative. " ­ The country has been — by many measures — growing";"Ever'since1964, conservatives"havecontrolled the national" markedly more conservative in basic attitudes,-as-aRepublican conventions, and they predominatein the party's response to the convulsive changes of the past decade. And House and Senate caucuses. Thus, they already "control" there aremillions of conservative Americans, upset by those^By SANDY KRESS home:that iheir word alone -. greater as we become com-active again. Perhaps we've one of the m^jor parties and would not seem to need any changes their government seems incapable of controlling/ ••a (EdUor's note: Kress ii an can often getbills passed;and -mitted and consistent "public not been vigilant enough as of vehicle of their owp. But,, as speaker after speaker pointed who feel thoroughly unrepresented in the existing political ex-presldent of University 'Where more,is needed, it-isn't actors," people who unders­late; but,-people, now is not out, that "control" is of dubious value. ' system. ;•> . • Student Government and Is too difficult for -them-to.dis­tand that our individual in­the time for plumber! The Republican Party has been so battered by Watergate Their unfocused anger and energy, symbolized by theJ presently director of the Tex-tribute among legislatbrs terestsare inextricably tied to We've talked-too long about and economic adversity that it may not be able to win the meeting here, is one more force that could blow sky-high t as Student Lobby.) slick brochures packed to the the interests of'the communi-academic reform and next election. Even if it coiild win, the price of remaining everyone's assumptions about 1976 and the stability of the During the course of thi brim with '^facts-'and ty of.which we are a part educational excellence, Republican may be higher than'some conservatives want to American political system. v-: ;next several weeks I.hope to figures;-' it isn't too difficult The cynics. the lazy and the minority recruitment, finan­P3y. ; ... It wouTd be a mistake for anyone to take these people for ' develop in a series of Gu6st?• to seeto itthat campaigncon-: :. ti^ed-blooded-might jump to cial , aid for the economically ? Ever since their wild fling with Bkny Goldwater in 1964, granted. Viewpoints some of the.vital tributions start flowing into dispute.. But, excepting those disadvantaged, limits on and they have been counseled by most of their leaders to be ' issues in. this legislative'ses­areas where ^cooperation is changes that seem to take student control >of ? student "practical," i.e., agreeable to compromise. It was on that DOONESBURY sion that affect .student in--, found; in ..essence,,it isn't^ too-' place no matter what tN6lWH THOSE ­these.interests. •, '• \ there? What' do-you. use as . the result of the efforts of a nor, the Legislature;and the |umiasJOB zit ml you HORONSlNmHreVN£~ But before getting into the resources when you represent group of people who have, people of Texas7/ generally •-' -.arreuiHim mr/nunm IHBfDSENDMEASMU&AS , specifics of the TexasStudent a relatively moneyless group often through self-inspiration appeared more^interested in utmsr Noimimr a emrttmi amriast\ MINO RIT Y STUDENTS Lobby package I want to like students? You certainly alone, put aside, their* own bringing a sense of vibrancy .and other interested students A6ENCY /NTimS Ml TIB) UP WITH LOCAL. spend this.column discussing ,can't wine awl dine the deci­selfish interests so they could to the colleges and .Univer­ DISASTERS! student' lobbying in general sion makers;'why indeed you .get the community's;.work sities across the state. DEAN WILLIAM B. CANNON how it's done and howawfully are lucky, enough • to have done.—; — ~Remeittbeitr'SS" we~move important it is to the realiza-. funds for paper.pens, stamps, This is our ' power,•power, then. through-the next'couple of will discuss'the graduate, program of the tiQn of the goals we, have Xerox and the like. That we are. intelligent. That months, that if each of us gets . shared for many years.in the. The first'step,1would sub­we are resourceful. That into the act, if we bring our LBJ SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS student movement. mit, is to recognize whereour there are many, maiiy, many parents amifriends fromback For starters student lob-power rests. -Our-power, it of us. And that we hav6 the home into the? game, essen­ bying is not your,garden'varie­seems, is a function of the-capacity, when we choose to tially. if we begin tb fecognize Thursday February 20, 2:00-4:00 p.m. ty lobbying, arid because of degree to which >we react in do so, "to join together as a that involveitfratin^litics is Speech Building, Room 104 ' " pertain limitations, it can concert to > the public issues community to get a job done. not foolish, .iM^ilierthat it Co-sponsored by Ethnic Student Services never .be. Unlike most cor­that concern.us. Our power is . It isthis power on whicha stu-= is the only means tp oin-well­ porate lobbyists,-we do not less when weare unconcerned doit lobbyist must rely. being, we will indeed begin to find our power iirour pocket-and unlnvolved.: On the other • Some say students are too v. DID YOU SURE, I make a differencer TK/THE miEPTHE im books. People tram the hand, our power becomes lost, tooselfish, too dead to be PEACE PEACE CORPS SENT ME A * .highway lobby or the oil.and j£iwSH COMMUNITY CENTER OF HOUSTON CORPS? I CABLED POZEHMAIH ; >gasl(Aby,fortotai^;i^so.. I TT&fSEVERAL TEACHERS! -.jmany of,the shots in .the • VMESf . economic ball game back ita SUMMER DAY CAMP JOBS \ CALL 471-5244 The JCC of Houstori Day Camps are seeking qualified personnel to "THANK 600D.LVCK IN work in the 1975 Summer season for the following positions: THEAVrTOCroSS Crossword Puzzler Antwer toYettenlay'a Puzzle TDOw.JOE! irU^-CICI • CounMlan fcamperi aged 6-13j ; • IHe Ggorf. -Swim Instrocfois ->': . ACROSS ks»rod*nt aaa ' Pr*«b»»l CoeMelen foges 3-S) • Site Direttar -Naluralctall-Campcratt Skillt ­ 1 Moccasin • iWortofsoc^ 3SH3 Qara • Wat«rfr»Bt Dir»d«r (Beating and SWlmming) > Dante S Ifi'tinli'fiitiiiiliii ' 4 Athletic _ 3 Piece tor ailEQ HQClR • Aits end Crafts Instructor ui.102 uUSOii 4 The ones IZAststels^i CAMP SEASON JUNE 4 -AUGUST 8 X Im r, 13 Shwpeo^K.^ Dawngod-. ,j: aaaa Salaries based on experience Range $300-$8Q0 per season 14 Oriental nuraa s as iaaam auusa ISHoosehrtd. -7 Repast nziu aaan unsn FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CAU: MIKE LEVITIN 475-1345 S Manser 16 Found moQM! pet w 9 Man's name OR WRITE: JOYCE GILBERT Eaata oaa 10 Printer's 18 Re Idue ^ JEWISH COMMUNITY tENTER amm measure (pi.) 333 II1BI13 ssaia 20 Century 11 Chey. HQS aCi3a U130H 5601 BRAESWOOD BLVD. clant 21 Fotmet Bri­44 Perfoims -HOUSTON, TEXAS 77035 tish prime Sprint&Or/g™^ 45 Portico v minister 30 Irritate . 47 Ireland 22 Metal 23 Strip ot 7 31 Smaller num­48 Tear ... tastener leather. ber 49 Policeman 27 MohammedanReoardtulot 35 Ireland ' (slang)'' 'Judge 26 Exchange 37 Mansname 50 Tint 29 IsilT \ 32 The sett * W IT KCAl/SE HtW HAVE 33 Damage * v A neu/ Bike, or 15 it :34 Anger 35 Arabian, something ' EL$E?4 commander ; 36 Anglo-Sax­--onmoney ,37 Antlered " -animals 38 Oistufbance 39 0ance „ 41 Twirl -43 Period of time ­46 Beneath 49 Reputation 53 Forshamel 54 Possessive LEATHERS' . pronoun 155; Enameled metahwara.. 56 Vase ^ 57 Mana, nickname^ 58 Identical 59 Conducted DOWN tSouth Amer1 DMr. hr Vpit* SjrsxUeate, Inc. TEACHING EXCELLENCE AWARDS r * s •Deeper Detail NOMINATE *UNIVERSITY , •More Options f) ^ ..INSTRUCTOR MOST QUAURED • Any Degree Saucy ORDER TODAY -tint] wc Pinafore THREE CAREEOMES: your ring in only 5 wt'ch for ^ ITENURED PROFESSOR ; 7UNTENURED PROFESSOR Juniors ^TEACHING ASSISTANT £$ 18.00 BASEfRICE Have yourself a great time in this ver­ FQRMS AT THE A:C FRONT DESK/ TSP OFFICE satilevpkiafore that loves to coordinate TWWNO^A^-W, srn «,N0. youND;^r with blouses and perky enough to piay it AND STUDENT GOVERNMENT^OFFICE., solo. Linen-like fabric of polyester andDEADLINE: JFEBRtlARY 25th ft' •cotton/rayon blend; Machine washable. IV'' IS White or yellow. Select a striking co­ordinating blouse from our fresh spring 1 collection. ,\, . ^ m >• , ' >> 1 / » i k. '(>>v , ^ •RUGtR'S se YARING'S, Ok-THE-DRAG frf Congress at HlgMandMeU 2406 Suadalupa ' f T. J.! whdrsday, February 20, 1975 THE DAILY AN Page S m ,i~ V, liF','' \ > * V *-1 A oses RozelleiKuhri^Fight >i&;v;< <• ~v • -h*m s ."v| «• ™ v> s — Salary Battle " *SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Owner Charles O, Finley moved irow 5f «e aiksrited gxofctag ahead of his players Wednesdayon the Oakland A's salary . . . . . ,v.;v ac nmjy wki orii.M arbitration scoreboard with a victory over team captain Sal S»W Tcdbtsdijr kfiM gmnnat syc lyihonia rt nKhffattepaiite: Band?. -%i­ 1 takUiif woald nit ,sf«t MttSac bf KamUera to obtain * bet­ pittfessioial -MliH and­ .'-I'm extremely happy-about it," Finley said after beingnotified that an arbitrator, had chosen his $100,000 offer rather te, .fM |4it^^ll(^«a«saiy> than the $125,000 salary sought by Bandoin a hearing Tuesday, der cosstaat saspiciaafar sfittis at puiuM prelect te paii hub and The third baseman vron'a $100,000 contract last year, when' ' 1 mi;nwtili . . lacbtts ari nal—jj me iiimimi» aillliiac of oar baseball first -turned to binding arbitration as a means of • b sqed the idu pnc Miu^hiwwra; to the " ••/• «r settling contract , disputes: Five of nine A's who went to • a lnifcjt,Mn:ispni Hflin •iwrtrtiBt.'" amis.-" he toll the oaians­arbitration in:1974 won. their cases, but the Bando decision -v £ -p, Wednesday maide;.the 1975 score 2-1 in favor of the owner. Two more cases were heard Wednesday, those of utility-* tfiiiw fci^jHriari'ii inl ii'Jill j-III 111 pr" infielder Ted Kubiak and catcher Ray Fosse, and Finley guiuwut anaM vageaaafl-iaB^y sport of faasebaB to announced that pitcher John "Blue Moon" Odom had changed . aBtewnspcMts. «tf taart hattte CT drxwiafcifheuceafgsmfeliag his mind about going.to arbitration and had signed for a slight ; BOT PAI^ Serene, •aw; to fc>w.hefa«gPajoi%^ , cut in pay. * ' headofNewYw*C**Ts»t«il Mlac«t>eM(trfeilmj| ivinfaligimUdidMsntOfttiai* BeU% 0«^ dfc lwi. ganHe tod*?," Up said. ^ Thirteen memberg'of the world-championship A's originally, paM lWr tWw tkt A filed to take their salary disputes to bintfng arbitration. Odom was the seventh dropout, and his decision. to sign left slugger topbger PGA Reggie Jackson as the only player still on the list. Jackson. reportedly seeking a $30,000 raise to $165,000, is SWTW liHIhjt—lu ik -scheduled for a Friday-moming hearing inIins Angdes^-where­ liwawMiS^^^wwa­ the cases of Ron Cey and DonSutton of theLos Angeles Dodgers . meat, the Mctrf adand Rich Folkers of the San Diego Padres also are set. . the mediakawbeeapaiWR, fwt VQm trail kneteUlanfhatlvS ant -Odom had vowed not to accept a cut in.pay from the however linwilllag, vitk estimated $60,000 he receivedlast year bat,according to Finley, ;orgaaized> cria* i» tke !islke changed his: mind. Hie -29-year-old right-hander was used Flyer Launched operatioai of u illegal mostly in rehef last season, posting a ir5 record and 3.83 earned 1 .; Mawsr :. Bhg Ckaa% "warewwiiiiMh run average in 87 innings. ' Philadelphia Ftyer Larry Goodanov^h blaunched through tha oar after Detroit tad "Tt> the esteat that sqportsWingi' Jaon Homat opplia* « htp iHacfc. Tha Bad Wins* wan-*~3­ can be CQaftaaaiBMi l^ het-tiliihiii -ting, the tartaaatttiti is SWEETHEART SPECIAL Signs Contract already Ow^'Suniisaid FOR FEBRUARY ^ > RgaeBe, . r Mn—I'iiiiini at-v-:.-Hfc:HNe Q«% ftMa ' >' ' v-Qo somtthfng nmt for your sweaty?* ' ' • iARLENGTON (AP) ^ The-agreemeit Toesday evening David Sckatu, untkcr theKaBaaalF>i»«wlTi:^;«*liw saidftChe Texas Rangers were not able = for a one-year contract of adviser of Jenkins, saat, "lafa A Body wave for only $12.50 '.'to make -proper dose to$175,000. terms of salary, Catfish ._ «• (he Ftt Rfeaaes doUbe *fcpiwl as the ptajets see Gt ;announcement;" but the Ranger owner Brad Gwbett Hunter doesn't make near Reg. $18.50 American League club now < said the-Rangers stuck with that much." potential Jahatiai of the Batumi} atehstaHi "VittiMl'tbe jitjoi sign-• hecaatseafaifaals-ltePGA Miui nghts away fbrhas what the club owner says the same 'offer Jenkins .. . -•*:&'£ Save SS and give love • HE SAID ffeak the Man- is the highest paid pitcher in rejected last week when it Jenkms. wfca is believed to day after1the gaaoes^ febkt W.^ theoomuB " ; major league baseball. was announced Jenkins was have made abcot Sl-XW last ABANA UNISEX IIAIRSTYUNG attorac^s' aCBces be The pbQVishave doectedthe Ferguson Jenkins, a 25-taking ^his ; contract >~ear. is (be to sige tiK-anr1910E.mvw«i at the ilg payers fcadl he's still the highest paid Rangeis' spring training -' "Actonymaiag the ~ pitcher." headquarters.- Tastrc cfiBoafee of saspjooaIntroduciiigClariis hat that toaraameat still the palfak ctaGdcace oa stares la the television wttdk oar sport islaflk—aad I am aot goteg to withoat which it cautt tteage Otrt pofic^aad fthas the sapport of all the ptfiauwy ji*B for thei lit VAIL IV POLYVELDTISREVOLUTIWJARV;ITLASTS. & SNOWMASS t r ^ } r fr ^ #uil Week of Skiing +vj^"yr Includes: We ore the campus outlet,for Clarks Transportation WnvtTrt'sf 1 Chanel we carry Austin'8 largest inventory??^ W.nerbeds tjft^ Lodging C or* plete * e!e c t i en of ws 11 THE CLOSET ^Lrj From 270-5?cs & sfccesso-ri On-The-Drqg i / "\~7 407 burnt Vdu\K braitlwe. Hov help Sol wajr #Q&y bt8 «(0«fd tM tasy.ButwSh soawoos'she)(^ i*-i*ihW'B maka IL Wtatt the* naadTb a friantk Soratone to act *t \contktantant'galda: Putnpv* ; itcouUba^iacaSatistan. Meat or Brother. j-^TfwSaliJsiamolSt. John , ^ iMSosco.tmfa founcM in 1BS8 iSetveyoutb.UnQuatharoRlenwhaia «ty»noriHewithoi^lnp coafltlons. ttw "TilMtn •»—ii hidwbum-wxl Vfe*W be. youthoriented. Today wa*M ta^dae to pnpwa task but orewNetvwo weteoai^: . . And how doW go about Iff Bf loioWog Ida pkc«|*s our toundar, Oon Bbsco. To enwd out atB «ah raosoo. nfcgjfea. y «nd kindness milha nsaitwd olptaiy. l««m ani ptzf-*»>». ... »-y~n•"t"-''-n'Vri"i—nm^injrrt-ntifrofinrn»a lw"ai " ' AsaSate3i«\youaraauanntBsd8»chanca«o^>: •• ttiayouoatnawMe rana>ottii>ih—M ...aQ&m' ore, technical and^acadamie.laacliani, as cmctws.psychpto9ists;.\intiojscbita. inmmr caa*tt ...as , aries. And you am BftentMlriad ot ttainingyco Mad to-achieve your aim. -r ^ " ~~ .5 Tha Salaalan tuaBy b a large on* (aaate the Ivgest­otdei) but a warm one. A comoMntty w«> an enthiriMrtliic ' • wetina whert not only our tateais ata sharedbut ow atmt­comings, too. It yon SPSSKI^ Sims Selects OU ia. , v a" T\ books:tyro -BtaecM^ OH Sims ended" UT's World-Class Hurdler Eyes Olympics i tmAf Uitas Wednesday and announced be wwfldsign ;By ^ he can because nextyear isan people said it-was hard. It's because Primeaux isn't in top' high sehool. wiQni M hours a 'national '• . Texan Staff Writer Olympics year,and there will not, probably because I'm hot shape yet. Price's immediate And Price predicts good for­ letter of intent toplay football-k When.-.Texas intermediate' be plenty of nervousness and thinking about how much I'm plans are to have Primeaux tune for his co-captain. hurdlerRobert Primeauxwon >t the -.University. "•JOtgr- pressure for him then. He has hurting, but about the next run in the 120-yard high "He's bigger and stronger the,NCAA? championship :in,. definite-intentions of making -hurdle," • the. senior from hurdles, an event where the the ,v 440-yard intermediate now." Price said. "I see no the U.S. team and running in: . Mobile, Ala.explained. "I just Sms, who visited the Nor-^ Longhorns are desperately reason why he shouldn't be hurdles in a schoolrecord 49.5 nast campus last weekend, Montreal at the -1976 OlynVv divide the race into 10 weak this year. better than he was two ed bright.As asophomore.he If Pnmeaux is to succeed" years ago." And have a bright said be "jast felt at home up in June,1973, his futureseem-; pics, the ultimate track meet.. segments (the.number of 36-Primeaux ran the highs as even there" and would sign :patl inch high hurdles) " well as the 440-yard dash in future. letter Ttarsitay morning at was not only-the nation's this.season, the prune factor, • .With the advent of the Inter­ fastest collegian in'his sctaol.. he surmises, will be -his ' national Track Association specialty, but the:third,fastest7 maturation — both mental several years ago. it is now J Sms ran far more than7,000 jsds in Quee 'years of high in the world. and physical. While his psy­possible for a runner to make However, the. psychological school. He was sooght by; chological attitude.has a modest income from maqr collegesbat saidearfi» pressures Pnmeauxplaced two on saidTVThe lucrative part of Association said it has reports of increasing recruiting cnQcces, I vonVUhavealot pionships , 4 5 world list (the top 10 in his pro track is indoors, and I'm violations in the sport. of reject forBaylar Cdi»d»S But now, as he prepares for event)," Primeaux said. not an indoor runner." Warren Brown, who directs the NCAA enforcement division his final collegiate track -GnmtTeaH." "There was one guy a year • ; He plans to attend law told a media seminar here that over the last year or two his j.i' Sims fives wilhhis season, Pnmeaux has're­older-than me and then a-jump •school, he hopes at the office has received increasing reports which allege that • tBaaHTTadgp^ evaluated his goalsand liasan of three years to the next per­University, after finishing his colleges are improperly inducing high school football players; admittedly changed'-and less-son." ' pot uUtei wisecomment undergraduate studies this As Brown spoke, scores of college football coaches were <• Iris whereabouts except'tb-tense attitud > toward com­While most people con-7 semester. And he can't wait scattered about the country, making their final pitch to the aybe left tram ft* two days petition. ^ siv nected with track will for the switch. "I'm really highest-rated high school players. " to tmfetb ilrrisiai. •••••'•iCyji "LAST YEVE 1 felt like I describe the intermediate bored with school now," he Wednesday was the national signing.date, the day on whicha " ""1 dUatmnUobe around had to repeat as the NCAA hurdles as ah extremely ar­said. • • -. college could sign a player to a scholarship and be assured he were.ex­ coacbes, and I knew they champion. People duous event, Primeaux TEXAS COACH, qeixinie cannot play for any other school which honors the -national -' ^^vf" —Texan Stoff Photo by Andy Sievermpn pecting me to do ilt," modestly describes his ordeal Pnce said Primeaux won't interconference letter of intent. ' fVimeaux practices form. Pnmeaux said."I felt that ifI as "not too bad." » run the intermediate' hurdles Brown said the allegations would be investigated, and he V—-didn't do well, the.whole^ex­"Before I ran the hurdles,-in Texas' first few meets promised that with more investigators on his staff the NCAA $ perience was lost. The only, would pursue more cases involving possible violations of its important things were com­ rules. ~*jr u Mural Deadlines Near l-s, petition and winning.­ HEADMASTERS j;"Ihis year, I'm,a lot more sfight for next f^U, but good i front walls, .and'newsfloors TRANSACTIONAL.ANALYSIS (TA) WORKSHOP relaxed. I want'to dowell, of Taw Staff Witter j-for the year after. UNISEX HAIRSTYLING were added: However, only course, but I justwant tocom- FOR MARRIEDS/UNMARRIEDS TbedeaAme forstndeots in­* *' * two courts have been fixed, pete and enjoy the ewnjieti­ terested' in oampetmg in in­"The University will be the leaving six other handball t,ion. I longer dre^d. the SUPERCUTS & BLO-DRYS Sponsored by University Y no tramural athletics is right site of this year's National courts as well as 12 squash thought of losing." v f- Saturday, March 1st, 9:30 a.m. -12JO p.m. $10, around the coroer.;' Collegiate $10,00 & UP Handball Cham-courts withfaulty playing con­Pnmeaux also realizes that Limit 16­ Monday is the last day to piooships March-7,8 and 9, in. ditions. he mightas welleniovitwhile sign np foremen's'tennis Gregory Gym.. One week leaders: Mr. Frank Briganti and Ms. Baifcara Schutze REDKIN RETAIL CENTER dorides:as weU as water later, Texas will sponsor the Three hours that can open up new horizons in your basiettall, while ttudi 3is 150,000 Spalding Pro Tour, relationships! OPEN.eVENtNGS PARADIGM ftedeadBoelor golfentries. featuring the lop eight hand- 1102 KOENI'G LANE To register call 472-9246 Workshop held: Women's softfjallentries ballplayer? jri*tbe world. 453-9078 University Y 2330 Guadalupe aredae Fidi. 26 with oo-ed en­ tries doe March 7. Coed bad­ Space was . the primary reason the University was minton entries will be NOTES SERVICE selected to host these events. accepted nntil Feb.». There are. 13 courts in Divisional finals and in- 5Mw. Miii. .* m-nu • Gregory Gym, including one tnmnral finals, will begin Mon-Fri 104 / Sat. 10-12 -v EARN CASH WEEKLY not week in otter sports. glassed-m courtwitha seating ; Divisional finals in table tai­capacity of more than 250. This semester we will be offering notes Blood Plasma Donors PHOTO SERVICE nts win startMarch 4withIM Two years ago,' handball in over70 courses. Typing, copying* and Needed A 222 W. 19th & 5324 CAMERON RD. finals dated for March 6: courts were built in Bellmont printing also available. Handball dhrisipnal finals Ball, but because of inade1 Men & Women f £ 476-4326 453-1958 ae scheduled for Feb. 27, quate construction, they are "QUALITY SPECIALISTS" EARN $14 WEEKLY with M play starting. March not suited for. tournament COMPETITIVE PRICES Play. AIRE KtUB, CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION 4 NIKKORMAT FTN CHROME .. Leagne champiacc&ips in p-'Hiewallsarehollov! *in-1 Austin WITH SOMM F/2 UNS.^;. 28853 .basketball will startSJarch 3. Stead of solid, and thp-floors -. Oae etenttbat ts notan this ~ $32.50 NIKON CASE NO. 487 are'reallydead," Texashand­ Blood Components, Inc. yearns. inbamoral schedule ball instructor . Pete "tyson Texas' Largest Flying Ciub Wants PURCHASED WITH CAMERA .............J/2 PRICE bat-coold be added in tte OpEN:M°N. & THVRS. 8 AM to 7 PM said., "A novice player fnlwc isSqaer-Stars competi- TUES. & FRI. 8 AM to 3 PM |REDEEM THIS AD FOR A 10% SAVINGS ON KODACOlORf wouldn't know the difference; CLOSED WED. & SAT. {$£§ |OR ANY NEGATIVE COLOR HIM PROCESSED BY US, INTOs but for experienced players, |STANDARD JUMBO SIZES (3R, 2R, 3S). j ""Ibe event will be staged the courts aiNe.viust not 409 W.*6th [: " ""*• -4^74^liethe television show,"-said suitable." • •,.$25 initiation fee $T0 dyes COUPON EXPIRES JUNE 30, 1975 Craig Spirdnso, assistant •Srectorof intrtinnral sports. To solve tbe problem, heavy . 1801 E. 51s» 926-2311 "A ib^ problem with the panels were installed on the •deawonld be the ose of Onwenity EatiBlies," Spir-NELSON'S ShoeShop *SALE* dasp said."We may beable to 305 WEST 19TH HIGHLAND MALL reserve the podone day, then We make and : • GIFTS; SHEEPSKIN have to^aita fewmonths for • <*»S«.Cn|ilii" • OPEN 10-7 . repair boots OPEN 10-9 (be stadiam." , RUGS Bwrauseot the many hours , shoes belts ' •ZUNIANDNAVAHO Many $5° needed to organize such sin BeautifulColors' INDIAN JEW&RY events SpirdBso feels lhe' leather Watch for the opening Watch for the opening •" chances for. Soperstarsis •LEATHER SALE* , of our. new store at new store • MEXICAN;!^, goods of our at VaHout kinds, colors « 75* per ft. IMPORTS t*. NORTHCflOSS MALL WESTGATE MALL OWN . INSTANT CASH "GIFTSTBATINCRBASE Cqpitol Saddlery . ' rar vAiasr: ­ for oid gold highH CLOSEDMONDAY 1614 Lavaca Austin^ Texas 478-9309 school rings, MP graduation rings "eTc" HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL YOUR JEANS NEEDS! CHARLES LEUTWYLER JEWELERS Just received a huge The original and authentic shipment of Levis Bells and r«E5tfHis""rTri LANDLUBBERS •COUPONFOR | Levis Big Bells iFOLDERSON •Luncsi'vuai • •FARES*TOURS' frO EUROPE ^ J Bell Bottoms *13.50 Big Bells*14-50 rwioarneamaoeroiiISKM' K.Y..dMWM»Intonation| •BmsSs-wia -, J ,,hk :—_i |StraaK. —rrr'l" 'I'.ear- I I suae .»P­ I I l*1e»«e semi luUwton: I * v **• .•LOWESTTOUTH FARES J — Ijf • Sew woner no muter when I • yoaM*M,taerlangyoastayl| I •OMHHBTOUHS ' e/1 f I Oetaiecaaabig lor18-30 | J i r .•snniEMn•SaTKEMM ' -®• • Pf Uw Urtoes I « »ort*Jweektours.~ , * •CMftRAILTOUns I utAnd&o 22^ :| .OlOiOKll.lUeMloni. I Goefiereraiwent Centers, * GBAI 1 tOOl • J :|••CEUURMCTOURS | rnsm GRAPEFRUIT MGE 2 EupxUUons tor jmumtf lets.:» J-;­ l^OSELLA I geotoplsU. VBdngMrtory | fiE J 4.?^ *1 •MmrrronowTouRS I pw oefnacnoo(«M& -J Forao year oMactiool«iBb| amadeluitxiuiitan • : olaalem23 members ingtogeOier.Seve sia •. y.|N|aMtaiv«niiMends. • -< 'a loiiantficanereiSeityedriedulea . :R MilmniNMYoat.andeeieiil I A BRAND NEW TEXAS WINE a "t«tl w eet.lyfroro Clilceflo. io« UMMbOWBintlWIWMMI -" E«wnioeKlin«iM|^l S.£fSQUEEN CITRIANA! -a—i ••j; • einc«l*S» ,1 ssed and bottled in Texas by £he>Rio Grande Vallfey Citrus Winery, there are I . ssvomiMmAoEwr:I detectable c,tnis flavors:' ORANGE, GRAPEPKUiT,, GRAPEFRUIT • Tango's LLA. blended with the fragrant" hibisdus> and, GRAPPRRUIT ROYAtsE. '• ICEUWBIC ; 5 With cranberries.-It jOombine? the %Tbe sincerity of the ad-tolUgu. {SS mffiM far ing general policy guidelines ministration's motives also Hofchy |meit«l the pa aid an over-all blueprint for came under discussion. ata effective academic gover­-"WE'VE GOT tooperate m nance'* at the University. the assumption the verbal Though some members •commitment .toexcellence by were unsure of the exact the administration is aspects of academic gover­serious," -Dean Elspeth nance the panelmay chooseto Rostowof the: Division o£ allfaads That figare Investigate, discussion General and Comparative of nevertheless centered around Studies, said. attempting todefine the width '••• Gideon Sjoberg, sociology, 2nd breadth of the group's prafictedthe i^sue of $jstem responsibility. versus University-authority laclMle Dtpartaeat at bEAN LORRIN Kennamer of or governance matters would the Collegeof Education, whn, "come forth-dramatically-la Meatal -RtUriiliM aad along with George Schatzki ofyearsahead." -— the School of ' Law were -rVwrhairman SfhhH rthii ^elected to chair the com--:'"rampant distrust around the mittee jointly, said the group University" as being at the Unlike should investigate the root .of 'the problems facing relationship between" the the-institution and said the .Austin campus and the faculty could be consulted oa University System.r matters instead of ^'not being • "I think the Spurr firing (in utilized in any -way, shape or ALL YOU September) was thefirst time form." the faculty fully realized they Other committee members were part ofasystem," he :include-Ernest Smith. lam said.-"We've got to face the schooldean;Bob tTfiMlifuwr Basic question Of how -the M 35 & 3K -main campus should relate to &&2W2TS mBwhe& BMding Addition the over-all structure of tbe •. French-Italian; Hugo Stein| A' Aap emer of tht Gndnl*Sdml af -University System." • fink,-chemical engineering,;.v ; i.al^ ondar coactractioa n 21xt -:. Thomas A. Grifly, chairv.-aodJCoaradDoenges, finance. " FHEDCATRSH usai" man of thQ Department of ' Bhysics, sajd the System has" to "recognize each campus is : Sqnique." > > Griffy also : cited the •'inability to get an_answer­: from the . layers" of ad­ ministration," on questions relating to daily,operations at :-.the'.University^ Pandoras Box 1 Shirley -Menaker, educational psychology, said. Rbger's charge "could be in-, Don EmiliotequiSa terpreted as narrowly or broadly as we want-to make It"She called tbeSpurr firing and pineapple iui f'one of the instances in which the System failed to consult C OFF WITH THIS i .with the faculty" before mak­ Eirlpyreai! ing a decision. • Student member Randy Jtoberts said he was concern-' jed with "extending decision-. fLIBMUnimiOl k U, mm HtKLmz * m & coming (boMd 1 4 w a I 1 ... -- nearlyaraonlh. ititHnw^-I ililiiiinimiliiiiii iiliuul Hw? M krMan^thisl « & to return to ffihlijmi^ • i i m THE UNiyBBirr CO<*TEXTBOOK DEjPARTMBIT $§8 jranian Protest Rally Shah's Regime """ 'lijIMfflBlB-v it~ adtstnil life and death 811 Children's Show '^-Ihinflurt the «AL.' ^jnMan igktesi, • A panel of the iCarrascolen-characters of varying cultural fle major puwus have snp-das staff discussed the affec­and ethnic backgrounds, but ifia ported repressive 'poppet tive approach jn children's the bilingual show stresses political prisoners icgtes1ia several oil coo* television in a Wednesday their similarities, not their i«r-"tetarictaF-tries,and Uneaten to totally seminar sponsored by the differences. To do this the i of the SS a afpnst any progressive ^ Institute of Human Develop­writers use a musical, com­ment edy format based on the affec­ • a Jftrianxas slid. Carrascolendas is a national tive concepts and produce a­__ _ laStr ad 'MOB-. ;CSsiiiHqgi,tiiat ^snce.197X' children's bilingual show 30-minute script each week,. Jawty. US patriots have bees ex: produced in Austin by KLRN-Ma rye Benjamin, senior^ A«*^a«d»ipdyaftrnwoa ecBteddBetoQiarc|ipoafioa TV. The show is based on writer, said. *e»nalyjMnjHlnicg«f pep-to&cdai^can^tFcgiiiie" feelings and tries to teach Besides the affective .con-." pie to the SaA Stall where IWarrn also said.flat peo-affective concepts. cepts. music and comedy',* 'ttfe:ISA y*r«u« imiilu-pie periodically "ifisappear" The five main concepts the they also try to provide enter-­ •aBKd Faiuti Mabamz, in liaa. and that more h™ show emphasizes are growth, tainment vitality and energy,­ «N(eJ the United States SjW political priaaut live toward self-esteem; concern Benjamin said. "No one has-: " ~ :.the TWrtrr riwliritrtrngii iif iw for others' self-esteem, diver­tried to do the same thing,".­ of ••• duguaug infine vdeaO. sity in self and others: respect and they have no set methods', . • To:. -panctaate these for and preservation of or standards, she said. 3. itfHiadAjalh statistics,,the ISAehboratefy natural resources and Other panel members in>C­ I' rigged two "arrmlatrrl hanging The Iranian Student Assodation stoges mock hangings to protest torturtt.^f.l-> development of inner choice. cluded Raoul Gonzalez, script posts which flanked its Joe Frost curriculum direc­editor and lyricist: LnisI iSjj" V mi •jSn&1F\two. tor, said. Santeiro. junior writer and** by Hie Louise Iscoe. research Aida Barrerra, executive „ assistant added, "Everyone is producer and project director j BoBi tfe Rafical Stated Senior Df|ia|lii>ewt of faglish faculty may be renniicd to He went on te-sayLthat 'iudi a desperate measara^rould concerned about one another, The panel's discussion was-" •wtt OC aFEBS to Union and the Mexican-Bacfa one sertkb of m«n|iniatkm twry ftirw Hi* and the community is lite a followed by a viewing of th£~ family." with UJS.* top ex-Amu kjm YoathOrgamntion prqpased "Megaw-Sledd Motion" is approved by a Ml vote of have aboat the fresftinencoaises! opening Carrasoiendas shoW' ­RickanI~Hefaas as cameaitiasappsttf the ISA tteBnglisti iacnlty. "**0(nqnatiaaisan°nndeaiab]eta!k^oaimrisei^mdd The Carrascolendas com­for 1975 and a tour of the-, ^The proposalcaused warm debateat ameeting of the English itbe necessary to apply snrhdrasKc meaqm^y munity is composed of studios. tonctie moftwof UJS. i>rtilit|n\, lwilllti . department Toesday afternoon. ... An adrfitkwal point nf rtmtwrtinn in B*» Fngli-A rfapsrtmjmt appxtof Ina«ivcfty«oaa, the ISA !"*e have not given proper attention to: Uwterelof' rom-emc thechanging mtenf thedepartment asthe KTnrrersity, .. .. Jfifly wpd' lirtal to hihawne composition in omt npper division courses,".former in anattemptto cacnbat dedmingenrolliTient, continoesto Who Else Gives Such IkiuTiIlks of the varlfs and isnfani tfce regime of depaitiueutal chairman Weill Megaw said, speatogin favor of accept ahigher portion of .sludeiitswith weaker writing 3hiiity i' ofl reserves ties aader &estoh"fey>eudiBgtettersto ttenaotiop. .-5 jr ; " ^Tfae proponents fed theltfaivefsttyhas "to-offarbefter ;; Ilie^n^siMfeito in: .VAn argument cited by the opposition wis thatsenior faculty. -training then: junior eolkgesra'qc^tbattract g*»»tprric »i*i Good Deals? Washington, to the United apt taught ccmpositioB courses jaefM qgahty.''atolin . ^beoppositionwaspresentedbyAsstProf.WJ.Scback.He Hall3IB, r "" " (good from 5:30to 8 p.m.) ^ referred to theproposal as"coerced participation" that ' "conanon sense says (tbe preset) votaateer nstem.«iD be «M«» " • ---... -• -•' "... : -^ V a detective better.? Classy Long-Sleeve Reg. -ixa to not • ::^£v f Have you had breakfast at Blouses 13.00 -;•?« I orgneaqyne# vtand other Tops) IheZ^earfUBMtow te Rlncdto fleir Sgrik ^SpringWeight Reg anb P1 I r».J' I BEER ALL DAY LONG cU tmfyi istabbed aboat 10 Wastartsarving at7:30A.M. 18.00 Waist Pants to te Ae chest; lade,1 :Jir^ice afthePeace ,for$1.55mm yon •fm I so aevwt^y." The . 2 eggs -Vi --a* a F ordered bylUtetiyrevealed thecaneof deattwasa 2 slkss of Rumanian bacon stabvydjhnm&themA. '.V---""' Check Us Out 2 sSc«s of toast, biscuit or Kawnr raff -**•I'i wd it 4twu to me that niitey was a motiveor thatsfce tod been n^ed-"Resritsof"~ y wt JeBy and a cup of coffee EVERY DAY to ' A' • . , . ... fc. . . .• .... ... question.. : :IHAVE A COLD BEER OR SOFT DRINK! WJAN1ESTRAUSS, I39P1 •FRANK FIEMiNG, *: nm • DON ZACHARIUS, jtdh.WilmVi.il toUWut Bawrf Sr&ir • JOHN OSBORNE, uwM»ti»rf.w.,riUlc..wri. SPAGNETTI OR ONE 6F IS FINE SANDWICHES I UYO AIDDADT Dl uh CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: ^ | .TIm^;.JWb.;4o 8:00 PmJ.BEBJSO^ I • SMMMNSSSJ 1sv ;m^ ^ 924-7721 vlWJ^rLAIIARU 5716 Mi - ,-444-3?ll r , ... wj|». its Rebrujary^jb, 1975\lte0AILY New Office Established { Council Candidate Seeks s.' «.**"• Stale Primary Bi ff, -­ For MinorityGraduates •C5.sj fm Wn.wfe' |fe: * JMBBL ; $jr SMEKTKOIbuiiiJ)'-BeBtsen-iwcking; bot AwttB Heps. Wilhelmln. ">°<*n*»t»t®««tns°tfte at ftftSfaflt .toft j this an*. SMt » tot «T iggfcqtfft wtft ftugttwingMft * stisumtiel J«co «ri Banae Eule wQl people h»vtne »,»* » ~?SSJ?3?&2£ ?SSSsSS2rS!"iK«-«' «*^ ^aAm RKnk-taMnwr .• ix**sik**§i* 7fe»k$ wtftJh fc«H tf it is is noUtian of «*see any cwfltet betwai MnfttOGNR> ..... a*AHAwncwttism ds^rtwtw*^ ro$««8a«-WgUtotj&sSwi.. „ gtetftftetstetftafeeftist Democratic Party rotes,1 the^ U» bUl and the D«iMta»tk: sT0te Bmgawsfi ttmmfea&m wmffi Bte to see «nteto t«osaid Wedaesd» --s Party rales, MH Wednesday Onuici ahwrt-—dcr-" w wM ^Mh QSMt U^:^«wc«9i w^snmwAMSMfttott* At^lbKMiafeKtay she *dded wywMWSaa ¥ faft gwtote ' Bo& tnor * He^cntiaf that she js prtmey ediieo^wroais "v»tten% agrinst axr kill wrve* feduetasr tn» wttf 5&eWuSoSr«^SS that is fa VKdatim of.what we «Rcrm w «< % Mrit ««K: sa6&. a* Bak (Mate |ni^IUfe»AMnM B«wBS>>r>hnr1i'Uiuteii jlifilwiti iWi im!i>iili -.v . wotfifi «w& to issatisS«d with it aswritten. w^SuSSSffin PWwaauat test Oc-stotoats. . lM»twn» «*»*-. sKma&a-Hfe^^tottiMift «faattfeanft totalities to CppositiuB to the bin, n-pmataaa to protect mining Mtr,aosUISM|!i,«ffi(t Fwxfe*saiil*spta*viik* m—ir.artnai crates-gwsfibg tostowss femetamte wfctih wttauta tor to-trodaced by Repl Toin representation." Karie said. > 'w*w»MvaM. iinijMWButfitertewn saftlh irftCTiWkWi atewft tte "«n^9 4tt!feite«.te-m^6b« wt «» SdacOer; Mtat Worth, is He added that be is dnitiBg • ~We w* iMmsM i* Ctwha*. nta*.*^ Assacwr mfewsaty «3w>nu»fta^ a& -. sama-qfr-tgiwisfeimli QMN condog from several stadeat uanailmatlo"providefor ^^wmxfeag^B* teatotfttte («sahift*r <£ haasS***:-SSipMrc&at »i&. snnR&. >>no>>nwy <)Hy tauMgdfcafta wtuftigw^* City last December. , \\-fca^f^ mmber of votes In to tWas Smfenk «WK«h sate tlte ., , toMdnattamwuapfr 06MR «V«fflha^wwilte3WMR^ H^antatnAnaKaAwBilttcs. pledged to himandifonje can­ " -swr*wsmtfg^ » *n» 3ws»»fl wmtoa»; 'iSLOOSWthatwbenshe : ifi : awfc»*g»t .delegates,-in .tara, woald'­ ^rem^wBg.|»tioDal; copventiqp rtrtpgay^. Wo caa­ «Uaiau»*;is.^biBii^S.didate without delegateQMm^aa«dlMtlMtowed6»«is«^ of aw arfisance as factors IS percentof the totalelected. ^ shap«sl liis aegative Theargomentisthatiaaraee ^j^!t^to??aiaw-recanHnendatioa. wheretteddegatesofacer­ snwwMttMnliu^M ^ "Trees are usaalty killed. tain can&date may master a ­ f % UhFoagh poor plamoing, sizable minority statewide, K£ AT NS%v ? f: *• Matter said:"WeNwfceirtl ft therecoaldcoooeivabtybeno '' said tma^it that trees are jrepreseBtttioai of ther caa- And if aremoan didate amosg the state's tfaea itseems to me that this ddegatng. The oppositiaB wfeaacewill pay foritself. fears a retnni to tbe .old wimer4ak&all systemwfafdi has been, ontlawed by Democratic Partyrales.:i:;i TONITE , TedmicaUy, it woald "be:| possible' for delegates Tonight 8 pjn^'fU r^preseotiog5-it-f4 % » SUNDAYSPEaALS; -W MORI Willi Si per month S£?^23 t FURNISHED *-sr2­ ALL BILLS xxAi You Gan Ear ~ * »wW» ^ .05­ wwwtotowMMMMaaamwMwwtwM WT.£3SZ v -» :^4^-S UT IT BE ond B*AV«MAN'S 7 and 9 p.m. C Auditor! $&&*/£& *!?m -r^v-j^-vrii.-?v^tw2(^ % m* Motivation Forbes' Film Ho-Hum Compared to 'Rosemary's Baby' '^Thi StjepforS Wives;? herit's the'best thingfor their-loonies of Stepford.: however, and sound amazingly human Wives" is just too silly to be .directed' byBryanforbes; two daughters. They all pile, she only seems to be Get it? scary and too tedious to be j'from the novel bylraLevin; into a station wagon and head refreshingly normal. • After suspenseful. While Polansky itarringKatberineRoss, for Stepford,-a small upper: agreeing that, "given com­UNFORTUNATELY, Ross supplied "Rosemary's Baby" i»P«I«, Prentiss,-Patrick middle class village that's> plete freedom of choice, I doesn't get it until Prentiss with ominous, tension­ :: O'Nealand: Peter Master-': nothing less than a male don't want to squeeze thegod­has gotten it from the Men's building scenes and a tangible ' son; at the Aqaarioi IV.' '-chauvinist's dream come damn Charmin," Ross and-Association. She sees her best atmosphere of frustrated pan­-^ By TERESA HURST --true.-•••• • Prentissset out toliberate the friend transformed into a ic. Forbes only provides&:<>£ Texan Staff Writer ALL THE men in town wives of Stepford only to run typical Stepford living doll, so "Stepford Wives" with a&?'The Stepford Wives"is be-possess perfect homes, up against a wall of smiling to speak, and discovers that snailplike pace and an abun-'•-ingi touted,as a'.new:suspense she is next on the list perfect children and/mostim­disinterest. Their oneattempt dance of irrelevant incidents.' story from the pen 'of Ira portantly, perfect wives: All women's con­ to conduct a Now, there are some good Hi Levin,-author of^'Rosemary's Stepford women! are soft-sciousness-raising group,dis­ things to be said for "Stepford But the main problem of the Baby." -, spoken beauties who dress to integrates into a scintillating Wives." For example, the ac­film'is a lack of motivation oil' -Although name-dropping the teeth to go grocery shop­discission of the wonders of the part of the characters. We"may be an effective crowd-ping or don frilly aprons.to Easy-On spray starch.: 'i ting by Ross and Prentiss is competent, and director are never given an explana^drawing gimmick,: it in­putter about the kitchen. Between the two of them, Forbe?. provides some tion as to why Ross' husband ­ evitably forces'the viewer to Although Stepford; is -Ross and a Prentiss finally humorous bits of type-casting. wants to trade her in for'ar: compare the twofilms, much_ wealthy"little burg, it would realize that not only are th£ You know those models who newer model. He never seems to the detriment of "jStepford appear that maids are illegal other'wives a trifie pecuUar act in commercials for evil orselfish or even insecure^ Wives.'' For, -as everyone and all -the wives get' their; but that there are also some everything from floor wax to enough to take such a drasticknows, "Rosemary'sBaby" is kicks from baking browniesor. fishy goings on in Stepford, diet soft drinks? Well, they're step. At least wheat Levin's almost <-legendary scrubbing their already-the fishiest of which; is the Th«Stepfp#J;vtfiV»«? .all'here", every last one of Rosemary's husband sold ber£ fable of Satan Worship; that • spotless homes. Any time hot Men's Association that ineets them, doing caricatures of to the devil, he got something! director Roman Polansky : sex objects. • h : • : be construed as a lampoon of Stepford husbands have 0 Segovia — now in his 80s — the ^orld: This year.Segovia association, which is preslded the American way of life as gain? A better sex lifewill playworks bydeVisee, holds a unique-place inthe celebrates the .47th anmvetv ' Viewed a eroie h.j^" at the Ritz Theatre STEAM ^ from thopeople that hrougfif you 1 :.-z '^ V" f • • Direj^^by LeniRiefenstahft i Part;j|^r'TI» Festival bf Beauty JAY BOY ADAMS V ; (The ^Qyirnriastic and .Aquatic Events. . ' %§•• : and riduy, February 2 ? -Sailing and Rowing, Equestrian, "I 2 Shows -7 & 10 p.m. Bicycling, and Decathlon Events) POINT BLANK Satwday,U.32 ! ^ 'V** y®01*'0 fH"picture. lt is my dream. I heat that ^ V 'w* -&3 -A'-i f ; it won t be shown in the United Stales because it ispmparan?* ••aitiotMO-Wlcoimi da. I want you to look attt, and when it is finished, tell meif MARTI'S € i* you thtni it-carries but one meuage — the glory of youth in • iW-At^eUvffmiit< 1tmsmi • physical competition." " • . ' -v Italian Rmtnarunl ,-^ 1 L«g|nBjnJ k ? • —Leni Riefnuuhl AUTWHOMHIUOt^4 HB•HWBMBHWSMW JfSTER AUD. 4 $1 7&9 |„ HU..ANDSAT. MANICOni|$ CLASSICS |i«11:3dONLYS •fii WfEKEND "fhBUUMNE AUD ^ J * > ­srtVH> wny OF PALEFACE ,-j ZSZS/S 'o--. V ;• y# FH. ONLY ;.:.C MEAD a.saiad St FOLLOW THETLEET WVOtTB) WHNB A UBt' % 7^0&9:30 ^ MARWSJTALIAN BURDINE AUD. $1.25 _RESTAURANT :TfdHar»..Rn?V*pAxirxw Hopt miJan* Rm«ll 1UC.4KT: I1IM4:30 UMCH ^. Bob Hope creates another laugh riot as he brings his m nukT.j W4>M-ltm.DMNat SUi-11:00 ; special brand of tiumor to this hilarious technicolor SATURDAY ONLY a 1 fiA «?-spoof of the motion plqture Western. As Junior Potter/ > 7 ' m w. 23nl , 476-IOM LinLE WOMEN s.' 'fresh from Harvard/he comes to Sawbuck Pass to ' itetttlbAKfat claim an-inheritance of gold allegedly left by his f 7JS & ^ father. Paleface Poher,'legendary Indian iighter.-The ,V BURDINE AUK % &ags flyfast with theaction furiousand funny ais Hopesc; S1.2S hunts for hiddeo.golc}a^ttediy,Jane Russell as"Thfr's ^r.Torch," an ouflaw lender who uses her talents as cafe^ Wmmm&rz SUNDAY ONLt ^"singer las'a cover for her nefarious activities, and^' tAMPLITE f J.sln9ln9 cowboy Roy Rbgers and his horse Trigger, as^| ADAM'S RIB r a government agent ^n town _to' smoke out "Th^fe 735 *W0, K ^orch-",".'tVgreat fun — a wild.and woolly, laugh#* \wm .SAIQOI BURDINE AUD. 3T7 E; 6thm Sl.25, PLUS PRESENTED BY L«ifte modnet^) "PRESENTS STUDENT GOVT V THE1936 CLASSIC FILMS mw " "5, -­ jvj -eK .v , 'Ti f r, SAT. M04^S-\1M SAT.»&sSUN«§tAt r IIIH.«it0«SS soMorruiM FEB: 22 S 23 ' AUOITORIUM SM.7Mi.VhK , Susan Sontag's PROMISED LANDS:*, vyv r SilK. 7M-Ns05 S Spompr^ifY S --IS Israel duringand sincethe recent war, IWtmUy CMI UUHlto 1Mb* • S»iS "A STRONG, CLEAR, INTELLIGENT FILM. IT IS M^m»st*s^tiioiDKugni6 SqENCEFlaiON UNLIKE ANY FILM THAT I HAVE r r s EVER SEEN." > lEFIlMFEStlVA —film director, hoborto RossoMkli "Unusual and original. Not i 1 HH $$$£, precisely what one would expect." •• —Arx&ar Winsten.Now York Post TONIGHT! r t " T" TKurs., Feb. 20, Only 7:30 and 9:15 flaw School Aiid. hi'i.vrP'" \ wh««loyeistht Adm. $1.25 r , , HrmiBifTS -' IWVBVWWLOl Presented by the \ iriew Schoof Filth Forum* n».;$1.25 I 1 I ry*rY 2°-1975 THE DAIL? TEXJAN;Page^lV ~ ^ ' .... r -* ~ „ T^'5--\.-^-r^'V-gff-? JL'S^ *44# ^ The Age of the Car Chase " -~5*§5F-pfg$s3h5&sgm mriddaqp flat watching carsiace ma<9y thnjBghmyriad obstacles, red OBk v w pint had ftor ml terrified pedestrians K . gt« actio* : tw«,omaaitled-, somewhat • breathtaking, even ex-i•ttHjaaymftriftwii -aaQranane — »JMWies ••RwMe citiqg. As for the resaltiQg destracs: Mteyie taa>«tet tact to i ** *"* **TTiIrifnnUrr Hon idL if thousands viO 'sav to'^ rf,:«Awel9es : viedag haroc :. ntch a ihrriifini Jtrty in theL 4'Hm • street^ .,tjecomes,, • Astrodome, then probably jast s aiiJ fit Sato, car eSassaal car oaetes " * many wijl pay to see iton film, with igisllll tete&enmea'nsK«f Ifte'nB.Itai r-.,,: thor favorite stars at the wheel m-afflBraBj-nBteRwainwi.­ ffcewnenoa After all!we're watdaug THINGS be­ btoa""flwitlh mcfrfaHkinl• has deeper mote: CsaU-movie j~» destroyed. not p»ri» — it's »s 4M — 'cc^iUliziBg on the sadism easily justified (or irK**?'*" *~v ~ Vw J •^"J!*' ISDns copwtnaS^^S^Sidll,-&g*it J"*!, -TS*-Sewa "®ad&®~ "He- In any event, _— _—___^ >.-mgftmg WSwroiTX He.faun, reasons, the age of the car chase has -Baat aeries ftas afiaagcsInttad «ff 1 • '— • .-*» ^ «» • •» . . *» » w • • • . .. —_ e).: been with as Quite some I""*now— im QKIBL SB QS^ *C QKKSI SflOUHH 49BR lllifsli IPf*f away «ilbit?Do wildly bow loogit will last is anybody's 3—d lumwuMt ar tliwrv gaess. It will be interesting, though, lAuate a*K aw iaafifetimeto watrfe romie makers try to ^idate Yas4.~ to " -Be trend in tlie year 2000-A mass." Bat Jew. (marchase, anyone? ,­ ir$. h TV Drama To By BOB THOMAS 578.000." said Joseph Sargent, avoiding titilation and prostitntion." the director ArairiiNPBa Writer who directed the fitm pmrience," saidSalgent-' aigned. "As •someone has'; Ki'iM; LOS ANGELES (APj -: "That might sooiid entidng ""They started with the ' observed, if yon wanted to ­ Television's seenof candor to satDe women, bi^t tlie rest usual problem of overin-eliminate ^jniMiiy ­ continues Saturday night with of the pictEBe slm*s that it's dolgence inprofanity, and we would yon arrest race horses? , a two-boor drama oawtiat b< not sach a good fife after alL removed a few 'dams' and " , ;"Thfc whores are the-ones';;s> tT, been called the world's oldest "The pimp takes' all the "hells', -u-_ ; who: get arrested, while the IWlfftiilM. money, and sbe takes all the "One tUngIinsisted on: we |ww who profitfrom dieir . There, are ' no snch risks." > hadtoshowthe gills atwoik work go free: the landlords eopbenusms in "Hnstln^," Tfaepimpin**BiBtInig^is ^ withbnt hong explicit, of and hotel optaatms who allow an ABC SatsnbyNi^t Movie rarely seen. . coarse. We managed to win on their' places, tq be ned.'-for. basedoh the bookby reporter "He isblack."said Salgmt. that one. The scene is daring prostitetian: U^jampsVwhoGa3 Shed?.-"becanse research shows that for television—a 'join' or takemost of die'inaaey;the The shmr calls a wfaore a 99 percent of the fimp< in "trick* in a room with two cops ; who keep a levd of . whore, meanwhile dpanneB-New York-are black, and girts before they start their, arrests so their budgets mil ting the economics ofprostitii-cmiuusly. the majority of tte TMCY ._* work." be maintamedtioo in New York City. huukeis arertte." -"Hnstling", wiHshow.said "HUSTLING" teBs of the The tliiector's desire fw • Sargent, "how mechanical the research of a repoita (Lee realism ineribUlf1 cbshed ­ . giris' work is and how littleRemick) into the fife of a with networit policy, bat he passion a man gets for his $20. ' tooker 1JHX QayUugh) ami, some of the facts may prove Bng?" uilpiui^ HCTOHERIS/PEIERCUSHNE "WE WOKKED cn thebasis "That we innst ;&** the"For instance, the girl's that, we wanted: to do a Him decriminalization of MMI MMM9MMMMM9 first year's rarnfi^s were that was accnrate bat & Sfni isL S A A—»• rSfUBITWI nprnhome 3.-"^1^ - m ^UCEDOESNTlivEHBRE ^ • -^jC' 1 ^ *• ^IVMORE MMJ8-1MS ; , . ,p|ORHl WSBBBBbltS^ -Moltte Souihsidi t4w® ^ -tsbs&i v^-r.7M FRIDAYNIGHT Abbku Wm»)h RunubToman EXTRA SKCUI MIDNIGHT SHOW n $1JH AU SUTS AUKOCBKTO I mstbts cMKat soootI HIGHLAND MALL rf r " r rjr -•» >i!s^ -v? i*fe ; STIVE NrWMAH^ IHcQ-UEEN *• WTLUAM STAinSTOIMT-OMCi rvl IOWER1NGS o-mfEBHOr 3:30i 7 =—I MIDNIGHTERSE raJERWJFHlIM fiSgFfiS Jf-4 -„ vr Kfbwwr* FOR HIGHLAND MALL ®?tr if'T2Zi • JH 35 AT KC€N>OLH. maqME^ Oiy It­ntt ATMS tMS HERMANN iIIMS I IF l»u| KnXJ3ntA0UEp*38i4MAX VON SVDOV DOfcWQUWM*^ »«r >*--• s 'PS >fe i|$A MonthbfSundayi;the parishoners..Instead" of only by his own humor or tunately, though, the story' BUT PERHAPS this is pick­ .^fjy:*9^ ^pdil^j ^^iop^v/v;, undergoing, the ''frolicsome obscurity. „ takes us over tpo frequently bone than is ft W pagei; 16.95. ,r, rite, of defrocking," be has At revealing character, Up-trod ground. ing more of a justifiable. Although it's true ;" By MICHAEL TOLSON^ been banished to a rest home dike/Marshfield is unsur­More saddening still is that that there is more style than -' • Texan Staff Writer for the clericallyaberrent for passed. He can condense into beneath the brilliant surface substance in "A Month of Sun­While. the.: contemporary, a period of a month. Therapy just the right selection of of this novel, I see the begin­days." Updike is good enough jnoyel has'gone tlirough some consists , pf forced ymting for words and phrases the es­nings of a cynic at work.:•strangegyrations In itssearch to make the distinction less four hours a day (along with sence of a personality! about' Unwilling to release all of his important than it should be. r^for;ariew_direcijonvJohn Up-golf and poker), hence his op­bis wife, "asshe walked down frustration and anger, he And if the core of his subject '-dike's vwork hps-remained portunity to unbosom. a cloistered path toward me it satisfies himself with con­material is not exactly virgin rather-steadfastly conven­Updike says very little in was as if a lone white rose descending slaps to our territory, his critical abilitiestional. And so it.is with "A this novel which Heller in were arriving by telegraph;" national face — glib little are not to be denied. Month of Sundays;"-his '-Something Happened" on his lover's state of mind droplets from the condensa­ Regardless of the success ofseventh novel. As:mlghtbe ex­doesn't say better, but in a during an argument, "she tion of his cynicism. It is easy "A Month of Sundays," Up­pected. Updike-is fight' on way this is not so important. berated me ... voicing all the to envision Updike turning out a valuable talent dike is to target as he. snipes-at our Updike's goal is to keep us shaky hardness that 30 years novels "A biggest national -bugbear i— a hundred like have around. And it is good to thoroughly entertained while of being a female in America of while Month Sundays" religion. Sinful, indeed is the have the assurance that he slowly pulling the gauze off had produced;" .about His keeping the story that he has will maintain his carefully thought that he would let us our ecclesiastical sores, and it curate's political philosophy, the ability to tell subjugated down. j conceived position — the is obvious he is as well-suiteJ "a warmed-over McGover­in the recesses of his imagina­peripatetic explorer of the"A Month of Sundays" is a for his task as He is with His. nism of smug lamenting." tion. American middle class. 1 witty and perceptive ex­ Scene from 'Promited ixinds' UPDIKE is a • supreme Perfect, every one. amination of Amenca'saffair (unintended^—American IF. ONLY stylistic con-. with religion, as seen:through stylist, and through siderations were all thai Sontag Film Set Thursday BUFFALO GAP the eyes of one of'God's own, Marshfield he can carry his mattered. Updike never failsthe Rev. Tom ( Marshfield. innate cleverness todelightful to entertain with his religious "Promised Lands, tion films, both in are those of people Sontag in­Perhaps. disowned;would be Sootag's film on Israel during extremes (he calls it a meanderings, but it issad that. 2610 Guadalupe Her interest in Israel has in­terviewed. . and since. the Yom Kippur ; more accurate^for the book is "defiantly tricksome style.") he seldom does more. What tensified! in thelast few years. "Though everything in the a series of confessions from a alliterations Thurs. & Fri. War. is scheduled to make its "I identify, as a Jew," she Puns, add are we to make of film is true," she said,"I feel disgraefed minister. As" the Austin premiere Thursday, various displays of dazzling Marshfield's ills? Sure he is once tbld the New York Post, aboiitit as if it were a fiction novel opens, Marshfield has verbal prowess punctuate his pathetic, a crediblesymbol of sponsored fcy the law School: "but I'm not religious at all. I film: It's not ah essay.It's not been given a leaveof absence so many literary facet American FUm Forum. . • style like another of come from an assimilated a statement, it's a work bf im­from his nrudwestera parish 'hiccups.'-In turn, his sentences culture gone sour, but what family that's.been berp for agination. When people ask after the discovery rof his flow like mercury across the else? Updike is incredibly Sootag. born in New York several generations." nje, 'Well, which of the people penchant for copulating with back of your hand, interrupted facile at improvising devices CSty, is*a writer as well as "Promised Cands" is not in­you interview do you side to makehis story work;• unfor­ "film maker. She ba& Written tended as a conventional with?' I shortcircuit. It'slike * two ncrvdsandmore than 50 documentary^ There is no Asking a novelist, ',WI)i'ch Problem -Pregnancy Counseling Service; essays and directed . two fic-4 narratiye; the only comments character m the novel do'jr OF,(tSthr\ drtrloprdiiuit MWni, > -,. « « mouth MftUf th»t thrvtm . ijndtufoaV. "v™1^ nHarry IBHijUiHEPI STEPFORD WIVESl tJ^&mryGfUs Baiaala . ******Mf at tostmmytBtbf. 3:30 • PAPERifi AfatoPDHMtenatoftpArft)fi |&TOHTO" CHASE"# ; and « -V SUXklAU nws•NOPASSES tfti14M:1MdM-J0-&S5-7:154H0-llkW Rivsrtid* PMdwad By Thi Xuiuifjialiery 9-11:30 p.m. tonight -No cover (fang*.^ AAAAkAkAAAAXAkkk'kl* J** JT u /•I'V'V • • Thm Toima h htatwd mmOCOlOJt-RetellMM CngotyCym.'­ in his Greatest Role 'WCTmnavEW1 S(IU>A rous USA .LfANTlY CONCEIVED AND TED FILM. Directed with g style by Bob Fosse'.' I taoxomU ufu< mm r Hoffman again assertin THE ODESSA RLE: n to being today's great 1HEST0RYISTRUE I er leading man. What is .. . ... — . >' THE ENDING Will r STARTLE YOUr— STARTS mtoaajD T«co»e» wmawr moAtmati -with Jack Oakie and Paulette Goddard t * vChaplin's greatest role, as Adenoid Hynkle in this riotous satire yir ^ (HitleF and Nazi Germany. JackOakie plays Benzino Napaloni. THEl RICCQ J « rGREAT DICTATOR was released-in October of 1940 -over a yearf I; j, before the U.S. entered ^he Second, World War, and .Chaplin w»«r -$ * — 4-L-A— , , for taking potshots at DEE FUHEER. r vhK-FRI. & SAT. 7:30-9:45-11:55 -M 7*6*4$ Starts TOMORROW DusrinHoffman"tenny" |-;W«IHOpiST STUDENT CENTER AMD. ' 1 v f^Stlr & JjSuadalupe •VARSITY«« . Tta*i I I r m p 1 . • ... iaiSNl iTBWp*! CLASSimED-ADVERtfSlN<* • .•-•••' RATESv>-';^:.K>''•V'? FURN. APARTS. H FURN. APARTS. 11 FURN. APARTS. H FURN. • APARTS.iMISCELLANEOUS TYPING K^I EMi wordone time *...::-^\;t ;il' ,is word minimum " n Each word t-4 tfmti-;,...4,i.;i lo Mujical-For Sale NOW LEASING^ Etch word $•* times ....r.vw.s M Eatfi word 10 or more titrm\.% JO f ASPEN WOOD M -NEED A,GREAT«S;, ./J' -TUC Student rate eacKtlme.i;.,.:,»,00 s^Pi^BEAT:-,?3', Under New Management 1 J115 Classified Display PLACE TO LIVE? OFE ' - 1 col, x 11nch on* time S3.23 ^INFLATION Spacious Contemporary TRY THE ' FF ESTABLISHMENT 1 cot; *Iloch 2rMlmes v;.7...S2J3 Iart..* 11nch ten or mora timesnM GUITAR STRING SETS ': ; v Save 20% ' Livingl / BLACKSTONE § «!BKK5,M? M 2 Pools -covered Parking APARTMENTS /,I,J 451-4584 SHU^-Ec^Bus"°UT« 2;BEDROOAV r.8ATH.' «10 ABP fUr-n .. MAfiUNI SCMDVU. ". AMSTERMUSIC -­ y& nlshadi.;puU'.ki^heft-'taupdry and pooi/--> T«ma pjm.' ! CavacaJ ~~ . IBflc, 5U9-2 Bff.$199 • nlihed, allbflh pald^Makiservice one*) • MoOe In Tnrtav sis4a,e«isp^f»£?^ «rfvwitS»h. AiiaHAliina AV)JiAA7 avwteBrli* your*win.rooinmateorwt r— #vwv« mi luuay TMH^MM^M^.tltNM. 4pjy ljuaaaiupe , ..43X*4447 ?f-i ,, , t , ^Itt^ .Bhrfv filHlnowafer !. •--grnayineit In AmeflcairtittflarM^inAAL with tfrwIthoutplctvifM Tp1­ MARSHALL* lOOw'super toad amp wim wltLmatchyou'withacompatlbleTOe. T P iAa nr-Co yi s ^ off iv jf. -x , , -TflTTMM U*wl»y..WrOOMi, -4-irs.OJIieTWw condition. t$75 or best This IsiecbnomV1*,convenience at'Its T1MBERSWtoOTEMP08A«< APARTMENT ' -% a:;L?*X-Seryice---^^^ ; «• tome LiveWith list-v/a? , Much Much wort ,i t;; ioajf servlcp-Tmn VMnn^i ;1tt00«j«: offer. 441-0941. best.*\ONLY''M0.;YARDSV6ROM'. UT^x A-: CAMPUS. 1307 Norwalk Lai)e ?Sp. IslIPatma Plua^oi. ~ •<7W563t^^-'.k-l the best prices *ver,Brlno this v U'.ltiWwa. VIHTAGH FENDER Telecaster In vary' »io - . »prlct» •vtr.Brln# tw» ad lotoQttoet^ corner. .. CONOUiSTADOR V • 478-9468 frogd condition. Best offer. 451-6672. ?•• w-lf", Stll aiHt «M rnt and Kjy BEAUTIFUL MARTIN O 35. Greet con- •, nn AifA r ? WANTEO.: Apartment; manag6rs. l(it bt»t*>r Itss at > 1 A*™ IXPINC and POSADA REA^ ,^ 1 BR r««w« > dlttoo. t years old. 4*75. Leave message - * S150 THEJBEAOSHAMAN FE"J­ tor Donald at 4&0909,47HW-• -•• Valk -P«l«l-^ aox-l»W. AWtm. T» 7WW;--8300 Guadalupt 'All Uril^fty-'tpd'.: . Walk •JwfcwJTtlLwJSr'RMa^* *•» •>. NOW LEASINGT .^yWMoMyjSa.urd.y •be* a*ifce mMHwi••mmmM* far OLO GIBSON Las Paul SG and ES 330. Prettiest v 1-2;i bedrooms apartments. BONUVROOM^SJmlroenvrbath plu»: fftutMinutt.jsaryict:.v «alytONI Incanitf'liwMttanLMdabMiMr Water.and flas:pald.,pooi; laundry, . BROWNSTONE , NOW LEASING ^H«d^.JFrom«20SABP.T»»Sputh *iherfd be rffiwlQ-MC4 ,let®c. CA/CH, dUpg»al,^dlshwasher< lv , •haft. 300 6. RKwnMtOr.'. rtwt 90 4ey* puMcaHta.".. 7*&*•' ALTEC1200 PJLamp.4 Inputs. Perfect w„..„wlllw PARK APARTMENTS . SOUTHE_RN ESE-APT^^^^ NELSON 5 G'FTS. Zunl, Navaio and BSW" S 2 bedroom *145.^^47M100^V> £SQflflltlpn^l400 or best offer. 47/ SU/WIAIT VIEW APT. .Hqplvindlan. Itwtlry, 4412 South:i ' Go toy and sMMrl.bedi'oomrurnisbdi .Congrejs. ^-ilU. Cloitd Sundays, 1007 w. »th arttf imSummit: 472-8936' . ,tP°»>'gAtei| LOW STUDENT RATES ^We c IS word minimum each,day MOVE IN TODAY •rom i!42J0 ^ !?1W!B«!SView. Beautifulorovnds withtrees, pool. -LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR Btglnntr Eadi.addttlonal word etch dtyt'lS; TOP PRICES pald lor. diamonds, aid , :.^?;----.-ALL=aills PAlti' '' AC paneled. Older complax*>.iolldl^ EXTRA .SPACE',yoy.: cai> :ttford. Twoand. advanced. Drew ,Thoma«on. -m­ > cm. *1Inch eechdey.. S2J4 Cigte^WerrioS) Stop, 4011 H, VIULA , iUMt ' bedroom/2 bathonTtwm Utofrom SIM - THP CROCKETT COMPANY SIOi N. taKrs^'^f built suspiusE 2079 **** ««•«» KttpTryln#,-^476^5 ABP available futnhhtdorunfurnished, Wit complete ttcrtftrltl service."Undassttleds" lllntidays.sua '«fjOT Ei ^lvtrtMe Dr. TYPING -iMMvmamitcrlpti,tnestt;'matiUKrUi" rtMrtv: PASTLIVES, IntiresttdT.Maybe wecan — ' i^(Prepatd.-NoJtetundi) i •"TWEtVE OtO BRASS'beds Irom IZX. ^Ar A NO paperjy rttutinei1 ^ >Studentsmust show Auditor's .Stndy-i AnttauttJ0» Wtlthtn-XUi.m ..roctlptiandpay.inadvanet InTSP ^«2». ^^LBR -il45l 4M *•$ ®®MSTpNE _ precious KENRAY ^m^yiwd^r fWooBhy, 'o oii*r)»ite *ix Wkh. I APARTMENTS' vaipeieui. UWIIIMH iPRINTING1 IMefCoXlpLETetlNE.Of ^^4,%-kg**: i* kitchen,'o'otslde stora«e >T'wo'**' r •--.. . /^-SUPPLIES. .. Ills!''" GttroetfKunzltcopac^PnedousTopat^ ,V 2122 WancockOr.T •(•••••itlA ., tuukl' ^.mJaaL OVERSEAS:;'JOBS-rAujtrallo,\Ejjfope. C *^7Wt'^m"r't ,«*,Burnt mwcwe P«aou,^W*>• ^|N>obAY ' ——^ iBurntt«d. v W® * -Tourmanfl0^'Cltrlne«.tBy'app0lnfmenrr- tanct to North-Uop Shopc iltnt • protesslons andoceupai _ UTAPI, Tvnmn (i^rtkn^."gS Convenient to .:prolesslonsandoccupations$700toI3QOQ :TecfcnlcaL^ 'STUDY OESK—IBM offtce modei with ana >153, ABP -- FOR SALE lubv-s. NtaK.shuttSTj • ABP: mDnthly.EyDensesnalrt.ftv.rHm.monthly. ;E*ptn«t» paid, evtrtlmt. ' ^ .v.-M?T.-1 ^ p,, VILLA :4s! '™^,Jwobean»m_tlati.tt.— (booKiStarm.iifRw.iopi; S70 or best offer/.: 6533 baths-Maltato ont.3bdrrn,2be. with ;rr~ new shM carpt*iCA/CH, ENFIELD AREAaiOO -•« w^-. +-J£L Auto-far Safe ' LBM ^^SX?^vfTcYPBWR IT-fiR^ rARCOSp?? „..dUpaMt.tlqpr:t»:«ioor oarbaot pickup, THE BEAD.SHAMAN Itpractically alv­pool maldstrvlca ltdtstred,washaterla • vfrwmtut.w, n o : 1 BR -"$149 -owttr*. Apt. 113 or call. UT COEDS Ingaway.lts.laroe jeledlon of turauolse and »ll«r:!ilewelry..; Come and'ott' It ! 3301 Speedway Apartment living within.walk1 $Sj^Sr*1S»^orSi'5SSa^ KOOAK DRUM PROCESSOR for color • GASAG " "" u«. * 15Si 4n3^7n^tr^lW day, ing distance to class -^v. ^tortiam^rop«l«;tnM!3M^^ ' -RED.TAPE? Run Aroun BOSBYE OELAFIELO,HBM S*MCtrlc,v Around? Hira trained . ) tviwilrtgi. ^fepeB»»..>-au. nrobiam «Alv*rftt^Ttui ft plea/ellte, 2J'y»ar» »»ptrlenc«, books,' '«MGB wire .wheels..r»dlal5, superb _ ';rMOVE'IN TODAY '?^y>; ^ $1^5 -$152.50 ^ ^ltn>."'w»l The General > Aides.; dlssertatloni.vtheseSireports, "condition, 25 mps. AAint set: 447-7nx* SALE^v Wooderr-.fables. .barrel. »tools,iV!i^^'-''-'^''.'C*n,A D A TT . 474-11<3. Pay/Nloht y mlmeographinff/*42»71l4.<^fe-if : •••-- » 27477?»38r'5 • aWtrtpm. 1 libM-glau otrtdoor.tables. Roy• Rbflers^-'Jjf-'^v:^-fTr\ia: ^ .lBedroom , RENT SAILBOATS Lake Trawls' .. . . — —. Restaw^nMlf W; Wth:f-5 thruPriSy k mm. ^ ^ 1 D •: Btwrdboats thru ensigns accomodating' . DISSE RTATIONS, thfsefc^rMprtt-artd > .^NOB HIUt APARM(SNTS,.A*allal)lt t' i^ORESSIONAL aUALITY hom^ > ELCID& lawbrlefs/Expirlenceo^typUt ^^•^.^-^-"'^'-' 4 EL CAMPO^ ' • (experience -required).' Reservations. now.-Larue J bSrSm/l^bath, dlt- Tarry tawn.<2307-Brldlt^«h^(ie(r*irte POP'X 'B&»w«S» EL DORADO ?: •t •• hv<*Uier, disposet larga patKi.Pool aad ?»d« «»™h Yecht. The Profeulonal Brady 472-4715. * " Salting Place.Sales. (esso«tequipment, ; 2 BLOCKS UT iauodr^ ^.J^jple*.(tools /from 453-488? 472-4891' repairs. By Mansneld oam. m.fiSQi • •; MRSr^BODOUR'STYPING-SERyiCE^ ttoa.low mlltaae, az ures. pMTt-gW »**^ " *!«» i SHUTTLE BUS CORNER Report^ theses, dissertations oho bookr -^ ^1950 for extra Informatlon.i .459-5700 .< XHECK OUR SUMMER RATES' *. •* -typed accurately, fast and Wsopablel t Furnished apartment FORSALE-BO >'vcelleAta^|tiO(nS92r1609atffr6:00l^m. X PrlnHnp and blhdlnd On retjuest Ctosri VWSQBPC-1970.'Air.AM*FMeGoodcdrK 1 • and roomi. fditten. Call 44i^62g>. evening PRINTEDCOTTONSCARVESfromln^'A^ ,ffii*lre,^ SR shuttl^Fumr jffip.'s. lh 47M113. t > dIa .»-;Vse also' as-halter tops, Wali-i'; ' Walt c^can/^. HOLLEY'S COPY SERVICER A con^ THONDERBJRD 71 loaded 2 doof Vlftal^ 7 __, «HcrMaharan|'s"vilSMS w • 4 San An-^r ^t^w^j^lr stereanewrad(als.49>(^ nlo,SF^76-gti:: ' & 4onn ii/uliiarjii/^ ' ;LARGE CarptladCaroatedr'tttlclency.eHfclMrv •-Full, plete tervlcev typlna coDtes^ orlnlino. ' EARLY BIRD 2800 WhltlS >• vj'"' > xjfiftio* ^kitchen._ :waik-lnx|os«t,it/block oILaW Wnfl.T40lMohle Drive;-. _. —w.in,vw^u11 www.vr mw ' S CAkul rlKf^xatkl'.»*iu>,••.>1.T»i!Va. BEDSPREADS ON. SALE flfrom Indla^ ftCT< TUP WOPAA1 ' i ^^ * 477-7558-^ ^f5eh0ol.-SllS/^n)h'.V.27W SwUhOr. HELP WANTED : NEAT:-Accurate and prompt typlno. 70" LATE "70 FORO VAN. AC AT.'carpet, PolafWt^Spalm Twin, double/.and ^' y* C VVUI\(y4. •: K|f t C'/^CC i^Mir>a^1O7,^^Vi'V7Mig0.vt ,-J- I panelled, bed. wlde tlres, mags,'ex­ " :fSK ctnts perpage. Thtsesl]cents; Cair«7-• 1 sUesavalteWe. Maharanl'v.WSan^ Uenf now for ^ I^IUCvCO J%­45MP1., sgtesftgSWItneyajiparttnent,^tttamd up. Ont dlvlduals whP arpInterestedInbettering, cellent condition; U.OOO mlltsi Sl.000.00. Antonk) SliMl. 476'2291. .-.si -^i,k >*'*:••* m +• w: ^New etliclency, custom furn., all with NOW LEASING 5WALKTO UT.i^Ofd-M«tn^!lp«rtmcfVts. CREATlvE and consclentlous In- 2737 *i if big battonlesloryoupplants.Greattoca^ 214 SQUARE illde proltctor,J75 SUMMER leO^nd^^MIUnpaid.477-; mankind;Extenslve leadtrshtpprogram. «^rL«25S^Ti?^1l GEOLOGISTS! 1WI Jeep Wagoneer. tk>n.greatlooklng. SMSplus electricity.­ _ avallable. Cal! Hajel weekdaYS M,tit­4WO, warn hubs, mud grips, Auxilary «iTu'!^^tS^u,o.Tgn -nz ~ and save2«MS*l Cholca"unlirerslty Manager 20J -47»-9l»a fuel tank, ACyL standard transmission.' pLYMPIA TYPEWRITER wItti case, iocationl Ponce De Leon I, II. III. Orlven dally Slow. 44111M *2:i!?E."S?!£g,h^/'w,. H-Portable . P»pper Tre« l,II,lll.lVend V. Phone ' J75. 'Are wiMloo heimet ss.;-Portable or-UMStf ™ wAfZ.0R« utLU™"Itsnian Call on " ,?wi»SJ . stereo i7S. 47tf-2M7 S.-30 • thesetTiese numbers for Information for Earl v . 474-2W7 attar 5.X p.m. •\m GREMLIN X .automatic: PS. v«: ttHEBDBBI Nltyyj^MAT..ctn, Nlkkor 50mm. ' . BlrdSavlngsl472-«»472^i,4tM27»^j^ trlbu%, fead,SVr?JS!1 Mme' iTERM PAPfeRS, thtsttr.mintrtanons. ' 1 goods dean condition; 1Jmpg-sl600.441­ Scatttr » oo pm. ,105mm:•" Vlvltar300mm, Solloor-2tmm, ••.. -CASA m sl^f.'J^Hp^tfn'HorntiKty-^rlnBt.:: legal;and technical. Neat i«Jtitlonal«. s quallhp..Rtason«>le sertew^WWStei mortjSystem only.Negotlable.453-1071:• Austi^i/\i(i%commlsiion.Aiark vu, /W VW BUG. Radle. alr, Arc. Clean. evenings., FELICE ^ ' Flneit oUa)riyf' I"1"Co-.JO'O Vantagt^C Sin Antonta, mtnt pltase |M-2W$$NAPE WtprlatprH» " -. -^T „ PROFESSIONAL TYPlNB,Wesohabl* Mi ;;^^OVEINTODAY ,^ EFFvSllSphi^eMr rf€#iS' us before ^=1®# NEED EXTRA CASH? iell tloWSrS usbttor '5ffi,tKSLjS^ . . i.cyilndei'. Excellent engine«^rafter 5^ 00^ AA A D If NoW Leasing for the Spring AC^ you pet dipped. Hffi Valaffllnes Day,AAaka S&-SJ0.47f*M. > mwit/Jltsaflatlont. «Wlfe»i(iai;• goodbo&/JS90Q flrm.C4l|4414597or «36* /VIMl\l\ A A . ted, paneled. on.sljvttie.T r 3 .-BR';-T.: -:t «W5* 4.1WPIW:t.tfM«t^tloi»..ttitstv, carpeted paneled, on sljvttie X -BRf,* $170 rr*' ;,Wa«erS 00 ^ ^ ^ «04 Speedway jSf,«5J^04&-^s Urge POOL ALL BILLS PAItJ^ '^\THE HAIRC)L|T ^ — ' > PICK Up, \m Chevrolet C-10, Air ca^Vv '>ACllAl I V VrtlI 2 BR -$184 ^ f* MOVE IN TODAY MrtHma ^ *~-v* f " v. afttf A IMn; ^ :brAkes» sfeerlno:-Radlals. Topper, t2,-^, -^';Crwtly#Outdoor Portratts^ v .>4 452-5093 454-3953 QUIET LIVING ... Beit Rate.oathe Lake*: i'478-0022 477-0423 LUNCHEONYT -TYPING -SERVICE* ^tsf^fclc*^ dmonh^ 350 v* automatic; powef ^ ^AbUALLY., YOU STORES: 'VLF part: tfme^ LUNCHEON WAITRESSES *Wallers Shutttt Bvs Front Door' reasonable. j*atei. Dellv«y;^yjQ^btoc ^& fc INL,...i , *PPly flh;3treel Tmn»y. 6ii wesr fth -'^ntmB:,3frtttrsav-"i''a„»v> . 477*t073. ROOMMATES f A'l BR Purn ^ -Sfr ib&l l4t . ; jp*rCREEK-YiU , CLEANS CHEVY pick-up. 6 Cfllhder;..) ^ M.v .v# a _ 4 BLQCKS TO CAMPUS , \, N°!»"-f*siNG , ^ ^ssftfigS femalE^WAJITHO %e i&i-^ f. ^ 'tr"'} tireft-new patqi^J brakes. 442^ 2 badroom/tK> AAAR.K IV APTS rROM $135 ALJ^rBlLLS PA1DMV£ ^ ^ 1 ^ -sriyjn-*am 55 ojn.ojn;'.Mi.mynnB.m'-saf •,.„w. >*OOA GENERAL REPAlR COIIectlvA Wlll tlx v wanted: jKisf^ve knowledgrof T»»rd ^ TYPING, PRlNTINi IfMotorcycle-For Sole r LIBERAL'MATURE'lndlvldualhetded SHUTTLE BUS CORNER , tos^«tMuMwimtwoothers,»12Rio ' KMWUSS.r"1 W"V Ar?5A.i rS-fifn rwr >, yiic CDMrSfl s3¥i: Honr »650. 300 East Riverside Apt. 337. u ^Barf^CTJIngw^tr Coftipan?" iimHONPA Excellent cor r)?&SSISSkT^-n^ . ^ MOVE IN TODAY EULLTIM" .MarblfFails, Texai. ^!"x: LONGVIEW ' Ki*n HONDA.v3soa wixom shleif/.; GRADUAT^iSTUDENT, live In «lltt > backretf/satetybarsandmore. nelahUrl>^1.4ln::Owirroom/.kltchtni rSTQP>$M0K1N&: ..nwHl-atfld: radio. 'Ttakanod c*l& g^imgsi,aggEr;>W ^ : '^OSLeonV^. 476W-, Ap lEciual ^opportunity Iv orficj;^.... Gunter ^JW^OJMIO «. syjr : 1 CLOSE TO CAMPUS J'if A1A/* AA . ». ^ 'IO » P1* tlAA ' RW lJBERA^<^H|^^ture:femalersiwrtf: sultan ts:InraWlyt-Giwrartteed A«4r-WA|TPERSON wanted. Apply Ini FrorftiSJlW' speakers. ARturntabla, cheap.Call Sam SHUTTLE BUS $129.00 2 B$ tS180 ^ da»e.;C«l|447-4549 ,I85»»,47ww4. ^ isucn FR0MS125 ' ••&raw£sa^*iM? iccassette Hcgm? pooL.beauflfuiiy. furnished, riiW/'ArMM. I.offlceiplaftnlna'wim^^ 'f * z.1} double -br itudjo bed/UaiT havedi^^HAjMCOCKU AC Wld ROOMS lAPTS^Jil O^CfOQamplTtler, caWn«<,S225r25>^HI AN^DpRM,v1f0S NueCftS .DoUMts *tnofiT. j ^p-Atrraeti^e.327*0019,* / y«rsofd-. defttManagers.' Iwe RBfslT KPHMSSSPM* L BENJAMEN.'MI NEARUT; unfur Fischer receiver;KLH32 EFPfCieHCV Wts^Wthi-BWiamLProjwtWs, W. HELP WANTED >Wamed;sharaS<|Olet AUSTIN 1139 PCSJ ALL-BILLS PATD ^ vnw ROPMSINFra one or^i 1 SETJ ALTEC^Lanslrtg^.l ili^472-99«la lote lo campoi.larg*/ open betfhiAl wTE.2btdn)om*7 bam fullyshagcarpetedTCA/CH.all m spepkeri VOUR^IME liValuableWLLL)1. WARMON II 47A> r;«aaHKe aoynLake.wi/mo *OUr ifirvjeeis -free. builm kitchen, color-co^rdmated. no ^47M0M, 1 PARAGON * 4000 Avw,u*A-^ ;• HOUSE PROPERTIES^ ^•'ii ­ tssmrnm ^sFFltlENCy 72-4171 iBAR(MIN;>GARRARP;!ZerB,ra,turn-^[zercr.nturnr . fie«AtE;;sHAHe>2 Mdroom, J bath "'»»«• . . ywkdaw £» $139 / ^ NEWMODERN EFF and nd Ibtdr^afcpRiVATE ROOMS-Twpblock campus, A ALL£ILLS PAID^ ^ f minute.drlvt >.*. central air:Maid service^klfcl <0 canipiis, 'iarot 1°« with ampleperkinfl 454-'-2411 RioCrande qtassmz-^. .#72­ , PJ0NEER»S«25rec»l»er 72-4175 H.fullvshagcarpeted,CA/CH, i—St --• f f ,-^r'-.."rS'V.ISTASil^^viSTAwantsrtcentlawAw wpof^r W-M/spakors,.^rpr.-45M707 mtQSTv2700 i-W^ttH' poppies;) msZ£M££MMM setfroQiri 407V-:,W.472 BRAOpR'iR Hap»21slBirJtKlayiSun»hine>*drni ^|r*fliite«d;. »n 5rownlf5m m&sm .-.l^ayiai^yj^ujr-eiectriiSSgwiw^ta^ har •yr-fstesz WW w; N0RTH-0F;UT;AJ OROO HM917 5K pV|LlgWCA/WU FURN. HOUSES $:-U^vxi ^ormer1^,' Southwest vpenence with the Texas Tech. termediate and advanced- f,^ Conference tennis playerswill team and instructed three levels for children and adults. - H.CPnduct adults' and children's years at the West Texas Ten­Registration has been brisk.-~ '*,. uVocai. reaction' Jo, the '-;bf 1 .'tennis lessons -beginning nis Camp.' As of Wednesday, all evening ­ * feacliing'excellence, award-In-I'' iv-March 3 at the Austin Recrea--Children's classes be , „ ,-Any stuaentian'pfckupAtieeds shoifld be recognized;®! will classes have beep filled withi./ ^ ItlSted by Student Govern-J-jnotiiination forms at-the StUv iWilson'said.-* r -' :1tion Center, 1213 Shoal Creek taught afterschool while adult vacancies remaining during^' i} ment ^Monday has been^aerit !f said .Wednesday. But few -desk or at the Texas Student' given by students to teachers \ tennis team experience. struction is $10. Instruction the recreation center, 476-> >• written nominations have Publications business office,' for their contributions ta;r vA-Cheryl Cleves has ex-. will, .cover -beginning, m-5662. f i; been received;: 25th Street_ and ^Wbitis^./students," Wilson said. ?Reld Wilson, chairman off,,£yenue,1intil.5 p!m. Jue$day/^V-A tenuVed professor,"a non-'"* '•-VsJS Jfoe teaching effectiveness^ ^'Effective leaching and^tenured professor and ^ campus briefs Subcommittee, said-reaction ^L... Caching assistant^ each will*, ¥* V ANNOUNCtMBUS" , . at 7 p.m, Thursday in Burdine Hall lp termsof how jriany nomina­.\ill©5S '.l;©Q.ITlAJreceive an-award plaque at a 2 feV D«fAlTMIHT OF INOUSH Of the • IIXM DtMiuwi socorr will meet at 220. 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Wyatfs tion forms hadrbeen'received •» " J v * . public reception in the first (: College of Humanities wlli sponsors OWST1AM soma 0«CAMZATK)N will Cafeteria. Hancock Center, to mcit hasn't been gauged yet. He °f APrii< "lecture with James-O. Naremore • meet at 7:30 p.m.Thursday In Texas Richard Merrill, local independent -r JASI iioped publicity ih-rreoares isw•>veek-^ saw. a.j fe.> discusjlng -"Style, Consciousness y • Union South 7 to share the spiritual property casualty insurance woiild and Society in 'Portrait of the Ar-truths of Christian Science with the agent. and :crease student participation. j tltt/ " at 3 p.m. Thursday In ParlMi iF#%r "Gflm<1C' #t?l^namesiame? will,wU1 he-displayed,in;a*gbe^displayed.in a» f Hall 203 campus community. -tlMf MANAOKMENT , AUB & '^He isaid .students,'he.«had • WJ :>f location'- ECKANXAS The Path of Total Awareness CONdHTtAIION" sponsored bf «ie 'T »«—*«» *•w« « -prominent, campus 4 Mfproh^Mt^cajhpus i ib ,£;? students and faculty vyill sponsor a Oak Springs Library. 3101 Oak Laboratory (RASSL) will meet 'at fegg®.® linguistics seminar at noon Thurs- Springs Drive, to present a free in­ £ toward the-award"because it" in the Pan American Inter-SL A panel;of student leaders'^ Lday In Parlm Hall 210. Bruce Smith . troductory lecture. noon Thursday in Jester Center ui expressed stuudent evaluation,VeolleRlate Che£s Cham-t^-and wiili-V' ;V* will discuss "Prevoiclngr Evidence OAY FfOFIX OF AUSTIN will meet at 8 p m UNION FOR RADICAL POllTICAl c0.1]egiate4 Cheis° Cham'-$i"and reoresentativi"!1 representatives' willjS­ for Male/Femate Olfferences»"> •"• , \ pionshlp, DeairYarbKvpresi-, review, the..list of nominees,If Thursday, at 3309 Grooms St.. Apt ECONOMICSwttl meet at noon Thui*.|^JJ^4#{ • . " MKtlNOS 208, for a business meeting. J jdent of the. Uniyereity^chessf Wilson AMBSCAN SOOITV OF INIEBOff OCBONBB day in Business-Economic) Building m&'lm UNF. APARTS. explaineffT~Teaching:'| MTBMATIONAi STUOSNTS OtGAMZATION 4S1 to hear Zeb-Ebanglt tflscuss^VsiJji^^; /'• will meet-et-7-p^n.-Thursday at--wltrme€f»t-« p.m. Thursday in the The Economics of Survival South ^£*>:. Clegg-Austln, inc.. IM W. Anderson • International Office. Mattrte Kld<3 -•••:,•• Av- JnTp"?1?!"' H0nt:AMl eaABffSlP®®r iA.Aflmna^A ^H^ViiuntiintaArin >o', Lane, to tour the commercialdesign of the Sahara." 11*mPmP^MJ.5. compete iri^'-evaluations,' extra ctlrricular , Ay*l j»w«.;,Mareh llrit. wilt speak on ' Information Concer­UNIVEtSITY VOUNO OCMOOATS wilt meet' A«|l»bte March,15, >140 plu* dec.W- the upcoming State ^iiApproxintatelyflOjnfembers , contribution to the University^ I . the principles of the Baha'i paith.'^­ Thursday in Kinsolving recreation dorsement meeting for the spedal TRAVEL 'CAtn ONMQP MFOKMATKM QNTtt wlil %'from the team'willcompete in s J will be criteria for-thepanel's&. room, preceded by executive city eleclion in Places 3 and 6. ;:-J v;: meetat'3 p.m. Thursday In. Jester- meeting at 7 p.m. . SCMNiK • ' the Texas Championship and granting of the awards. Center A115A to present e workshops >• W^AW ASSOCUHON will present Texas Amateur.Championship The:forms are not ballots on "Job Hunting." * MSFCUMO UMOVIMBff" sponsored by sandwich seminar with T.J. CAKS* CHOICS mFOKMATION CSNIB Will" the Reading and Study Skills SUMMER IN &v» Saturday and1Sunday at -. butiwiIl ''bring to our atten-> ' meet from 3 to 5 p.m. Thursday In : Laboratory (RASSL) will meet at 3 associate dean of the law school,dls* •fg£v-1uHOuston'sContlneritalHotel. -tion. teachers.who' diould be Jester 3I7A to present aworkshopon ^ J p.m. Thursday at Jester Center cussing "Who Gets Info Law School' -EUROPE —Photo by Mkhotl 0. Smith ,• ."Interviewing Skills-" A332. and Why?" at noon-Thursday on . UnlrTravtl CharttH«t lew than W.r«T. fkBecause he is not familiar considered," Wilsoiii said;:. fourth floor of the Academic Center. OtASAO HOUSI will meet at8 p.'fn.Tfrr£>: ''STUDINT-OOVEtNMSNT flBCTION UWVHSTY OOBSItAN CHURCH Will JpoO-pA^.'S We want this avirard to b4 Innovations day at3116.31st St., Apt.206, tbdlt-v .OOrtMiniON will meet at'8 p.m. .. . sora soup and sandwich jemlnar,at«.jcS" ...'•vf • , . • cuss Jewishethics, past and present? w«i>;hi wnvivyr wuiiwniy iww iu dangerou5g?sOngojng eveiy SOTesWr: j We" .y:--'..'fir..*.' j v,:.--.v>aV-> • 1 'r • >•• .;-v -v-v. i -r—'m j Thursday In Geology Building 100 to ,.,noon Thursday at the OntvenitKfepS •> i ChAH* cHalrman of tha !«>• Ctn»> * 011 *UH*1^" n**1•'7-» P m-Thure-^ t'iiM b raqulrad candidal*seminar SCbrtstlan Church. 5007 UrUverslty /i?«3 ' irediction'^si^antteachersto'bfejiroud flf ' j j " I • lrt*uran<« • day inthe Chapel o't the'Holy Spirit. 'aU candidates or their agents musl Ave. Rev. Bob Btiehan will discuss "On ho^ithe'team will place,?;iiiit," he said. ' \'t £" a. ^ j.twaw/ diicuwd'IntuMiftc* refoimt al o sandwich ;<^oac>Now>ui»rA»soeuTiowwiiimaet attend. .•. "Fronliers in Human ^"•.|ity.'.' imiiftqr Wtqneiddy m UNF. HOUSES SHORT TERMLEASE 2 bedroomcoun­ try twme, t acres. Apollanctw fully „.-,A, Bm •qyippad greenhouse (ISO alters:\ 3 Presido^t Kord announced million annual budget, dispen­ mimstraHve law University ml and Cornell Law. ' ^last week plaits name 1st to sing grants to state and local seminar course School; Robert J. Kutak, 42, DRUG SPECIALS! FURN. DUPLEXES Marshall J.Breger,a28-year-programs helping the "poor , The fi ve preliniinaiyselec-an Omaha lawyer; William old assistant professor of law, with their noncriminal legal tions replace otber nominees Janklow, 35, attorney general SOUTH 1 bedroom on shuttle,: sc. cars' as a nominee to the board of proceedings. who withdrew their - JFabruary 20, 21, 22 na names B in, storage, no dogs 4120. 160t~A of South Dakota; and Samuel ark«run« 44Mitt directors.66.the new ^Legal • The board would have great from candidacy: Namedalong, ' \ '3&I D. Thurman, 61, dean of the d' ISiml Services Corporation. -influence • on whether the With Breger were Roger C. College of Law at the Univef' Coet Cotton "I am pleased.-honored and programs, some of which Cramton, dean of the UNF. DUPLEXES 45, sity of Utah'. • t ' : ; gratified to be..-a.. possible have.stirred the wrath of Pads SO's *ffr nominee, Ltrust that I'll be1 -public officials who have been ^ble to p^operly.engage^in ac-sued by poverty lawyers. FINALLY ' MPRETTY DUPLEX ting on the .board," Breger ivwould, continue to be-active Sug. Retail fOO's vi I 2 bedroom duplex for rent In a outet. . said of the..nomination and controversial. . Northeast Austin residential designed for the nelgMorltood. Each duplex offers large Wednesday. " ... Breger, a native of Npw . human body! Without stressor strain, yoiu .93v:si: 24's Sug. Retail «H:| fenced backyard covered parking, ep- -;The White Housestated that . ; v -sit erect, calm, and relaxed. ,s •J • ".•>;>':\Tl -tra storage room. Plus washer, dryer Vork City, >,holds bachelor's . Retail connections^ -Kitchen appliances fur- Breger am) four otter persons and law degrees from;; the nished.ff« plus »»«.:Call 92I-2296 feiMade frbrri the finest HARDWOODS, these 1.3t ,79 are "preliminary: selections" University of Pennsylvania beautiful benches are hand sanded, oiled, and'polished. whose clearances'.have not' 'and the Equivalent of a. Available In standard or hinged (collapsible) versions. TRAVIS HEIGHTS Pvple^t 14tl:A & Newnlng.M partially furnished,. AC; been made. j l.r_ /graduate' degree -in govern-• And, to avoid strain on the patellar ligaments,' use our Sale.60 $140.20, fireplace/ unfurnished,CA/CH, cloth-covered 1,/. foam pad beneath your knees­ 1175. Rent bottiswes -S310. Appliances, The Legal Services' Cor­ment .from the Oreil College, car port, W*D, Small pets, creek, trees,' poration Actof l971establish-We are so confidenhthat this is the finest meditation aid Sale.55 Sale *96& Oxford University - windows, backs up to Howell Park. No available, weoffer a full money-back guarantee If you are . .... not pleased. We pay postage. Enclose check, your name hassle*, 447-90W. ed the.board of directors. The w Before joining the Universi---./}' boarq .will oversee;.^ ^100 * ty faculty last September, he and address.&'speclfy wood type tOak, Mahogony. Birch, Redwood, or Walndt) standard of hinged andsized (based " ^ ~ I-VClerked for US. Dist. Judge on body sIze/V/A, pr L). Mail to: &;if > ' Southern'-J)istHbt-'of,';^ York,. 1, V-"" EARTH ENTERPRISES Blades 5's Creme Lime " Baby P.O. BOX 1.4361 . AUSTIN, TEXAS 78761 :With.l;a v.bacicgroiilid ih . -95 •ach.or Sfor $57.00.Foam knee pads$7.00 , health-oriehteil legal .issues, 7 oi.> -; Allow S.WMlak *.IkM » % UNMlaMUq, Nfc.31rtW' 1^39 WEJT-1 SpHhuhxtMn --- 2.49 IwnmjwewiMmw htTbDaSvTwf •on/rUta! ,"Ti : IMd at-Uhhr*rtily V Sale.95 Sale1.89 ' JUSt SiniNG . f AROUND? v .ft?* Move ipta* gSJ> with Paac« "&%£i ond VISTA^'< •* ciim Useyourcoliege degreelna creative,meaningful Wa year In VISTA or Zyears In Peace Corps will rLANTINo volunteer assignments in the U.S.A*, Africa, Asia, Latin > AUrje^ca tind SouthPacific The, program;:are In French, business ehglneeyng/nili'sing, architecture and miny1 v other fields, »< , i StHng abound Is nowlwt*, Hnd out if you 'tan m**t th* Wv+nMAriteto-obtoH. 3^ OKriteno#, Sm Hm Pwc* Corps/VISTA raoulhn* ontampMt an th* MMJkiHacampnlOfftcc^Mmiary L ARCE Fo ly "G RO iqts^ x ®tce^Acra.4.ion" Wi.rJr *i .1 Now ^ 2.23 jf|ff™™ lucite HANJG!MG PLe>NTEW5 i ...J'--A , J. mRlNiW 71 wllti• ,'i mm em-uision •'3« c'/ S»nfon and MJBJk/t Active inagrlouPi; IndustHal ooMijtiw)'-cttQiqfpdWMrl amlipjod.udta,5; varlaty'of other RYITT0DAY A SPECIAUV-MADE MILDLY frtftfirWfrw ptac*m$nt Uop Look info mmm mfc mzmtik m&m®! 1rsM^: :srity*-": •/:'? T® Co-DP mSMMMM tmrMoywWP la J -Fip® 'Mm?®?' t V •V -v. r * t-4tl »" i^. y ->-~t * Dorm Costs Expected| II 'p r ? ^Increases in Utilities, Employe Salaries Cited ..| Jpoariag _i®y oris art Ml L * savings, weVe got' to mate chains, W Strait said ftcn • {•pwsiLiyiKl'MWliiin -spoke'-spoke ap-maior cats." hesaia. -<--r.-Kqabas'maallrplans asaaQy endedinheiiie:-:!ended op betag., m • 1 r.i Strait to an-major arts." he said. proximately » Jester • JWf of the ^tadents present* more espcasnei -\-IN ASSOCIATION WITH ma nksmtba: -luidmlv MwiijiaitftHqr . agreed maids woe accesses--;* Sh^tfwoaiElttjgrS :=;|fcDrnsamotBonagad Jiwiim 'tte piwaatty. of tial as long ascleaning eqsroC; •> sane sections was another I FM Services kas made DO ottiaghacksaaaeserricesto ta^t wasprorided_Most of.,. saggestioa. 1 RECORD ,haM dpsmm aid board Awn dm favoredoptfaoal' '^ThebaO^was designed -• iiji'iU'uMt jhpw My «e**x. BMaerrice.aBdo^ooe arfl)^bei^theie»a*aayB )rate increase, Nevada ^hnagteuMUiMwr objected to centrelijed liaea c , tavingTauiicooditiooed sec­ % :State employe salaries 7*OX€Ifl ISSUC To FGOf t/fG .. tiaetiv^^^meinqrcaabe ! tL t-^WV-L./ ^ av' k «**» rttxMjroe U.peraat far • . .. '.foaad toshtt :-S^ ' a» " • ^ ^ . 'i Symposium Questions McCartney Deatlr Hoax' i %JCa>GBKIIKay By JOAN KBGUSrGREN^ it Sat.It, t9K W holds -a bioody -Oti^^ ^aK adltm^} kaee and amodd carao theblher.';^ ^';lhe days whea hqj^i ahah -OB the inside of the cover, MoriroM/Papar Money. v .v *i MlkaWcC^^ljaBaWr^ li McCartney sits whSe-the olher three I Kenny Rankin has beenadura-. Bonnie Montrose .whose gul-j.:-,v ..'-kvtong-8tandln^meh)Mroft|>ff;5| HcCartaey'k death Uadertooes endent in the"8lagical;^ij I Ha.iwcdal andalways a-j; ^. tar telenls fiad served Van ' byDr. Hyst?ry Toiar^ aBm coataiB "baiyiW-^,his hack famed at anpOer. freshing folk/pop palufniet ft ft Mom'sonand Edgar Winter 'i -British muslc-satlre;tJoeljy, ! were Beatlesstandin atepcla^ailiehas -combo ScaHoldrMcQear^euts ,1 _ me." "baiy my body." "he i^ dead" ^ throughout thesisand the first . "formed his own baftd last Onthe cover of"AH>ey RoaKl."tbe Ifive 70s. SprinUed among ' . t ' , loose In a Berious/ personal <;vj dhy JentBrnas,] atf'?bmi^lMw:toteWlute^? year and made the album r gradaate stadeat la speech -. -..'^-g^'W^^ ^be conBiig ogt of a . I otigbials here,are BeaOes and v: Afonirase — a runaway hard-v j musical vein, Produptloft and P1caatieaeaxdin graveyaid and is passing a car.with the Gordon LigMfoot songs. . : ,,; v rock smast).^apei Money,is ,r v ­ "Strawberry Fields," and in Bcense plates IF." McCartney's •.-A second high-energy dose. '^ "The Dwttrf^dlfcCartaey:*'— JttfpflBn car vrea swiis and -ag^arhea 4he ataaenade.Pan! -A -Pad isdeadi 'geoiltulAlthe j .weus im^tUh^BlBntoaal. ^ • ' Banassarid _ to ofier aa apoiogy for the .; If th«> iiiyvl»-iy -rfrqi'f a runplwrthe "S^L Peppers loa^yHeartsCW>; musterr ja theiractly junjtiMB"and in • ... piAlictty lnao wbo organized theSalvationArmyt ;^ilGei0(ri 'McGeaf&K -TTw i in nail J s^d ae»a grave.There aretwo sets m Britain. Walkias Aecriaed., r. --i! :mmk 8 . iaficalireof MeeartBey* deathappeals* of Beatles, o^dark,the oBgatoM; 4;-An additional iaqairy into the iagi» theamrsaadiathelyricsof wi niiqgfr dMereatfiatiag theoid from ' . rnystery of McCartney's •••iOfm or fm • faaralem. ~ 'SS Ike sea/ Kttte ail lie "new" >; 'jaoaexistence ^he.Mid at nooa Ftri-•>U' 1^1®-lb the £a0 of lM.aNew Torit Otj ^McCartaey holds las Bagok dnr the gday m BanfineAuatwwBU."8HMHwill '•^Sas' • rfl K-;^~vTt™r:.^>'rf^.Viqs-cf;a: -i.fi also faost Watkinsatti^nidayfira.^ Available • -.rfanart A doll wifli a broken neck >.jgmflardhiiwtiiiiii,­ Head To ON WARNER BROS. Safanfay,U.15,1975 rfC$ ^; AT RECORD TOWN ''QtiCOVRSE" BREAKFAS } Richard Obenshaia, co-risalaw firm m chainitaa laf-the RepafcBcaa yjLv OheaAaia jfatiwl Ctamnattee, wiDdn-fist A1Cafeteria Style Service! ?r i* . w «, : j;"HurryfQw special j 2815 jQU/tPAUIPE y DOBSE CENT IFREE -PARKING" | jwiTH PURCHASE { I 2021 GUADALUPE '2200 GLKidalupe^|ovvwlevel, m 'iflfipBIE GARAGE! ife78 611.%; vM MMfMr 16: rsday#