-I­ j*,_* *•< - Student Newspaper at Tfce University-of Texas at Austin Pj4v: 1 •^V t?Kt^ 1 ' r 'r -"V Ten cents ^sr>v^-c: >-,•. ^ '^fe. Austin, T£xa Monday; February 24, 1975 Forty-Eight Pages 471-4591 -•> f -#/ &r * -» S-kX? T*t$&-« ~ ?*^ -••-*• tmmmm *£&&$$$£^, "Y,p Mk/-&gz. \j&<, 7 » aroie c ,' -Ji-'.t. Member LabielsBPMMdure 'Improper' By STEVE McGONIGLE .. membership*hich would be more representative of the application of the new concept of prisoner treatment ip- TexsuiStaffWriter predominantly .blade* and Mexican-American prison community-based facilities." . Over the protest of arte'; member1 concerning the population in Texas; as the -reasons for opposing Washington later blasted tbe board for lidding the timeliness of such an election,-the State Board of Skelton's' renomination to another six-year term. election, since he feltSkelton's participationconstituted • -Pardons and Paroles Friday chose.Clyde Whiteside to DOGGETT EXPRESSED surprise over tbe election "a farce and a fraud upon the people who mnsClfe : v replaceWilliamSkelton asitschairmanfor thenpxt two but added, this action "might provide evidence of the served by the board" ­ years "f -5 need for a change of membership oh the board." After outgoing-chairman;.Skelton his "Never in my short tenure as a member of the Tfeaas announced "It (the election)seemed rnshed through," Doggett , intention to bold the election at the meeting and asked said: "After all, even the regents waited for their new House of Representatives or in my private life have^J :. for nominations,CharlesShandera, thethird member of members before electing a chairman." been treated with less courtesy and feeling for'^Jr letter to Whiteside the board, made a motion fw Adjournment When the SkeltonaskedTexasSupreme CourtChief Justice Joe opinion." Washington said in a Friday after the election. Washington added, "FIpR motion failed, Shandera lefttbe speaker's podium and Greenhill to withdraw his name for renomination after sat in the audience: Skeltan thennomiriated Whiteside, Doggett made , his opposition known. At Doggett's know that you may expect the samewarm receptionadd kind and receptive ear that I received this who waselected by himself and Skelton bya vote of 2-0. request, Skeltah, whose torn of office expired Jan. 31. when you come down on this end of the world." SHANDERA LATERsaid;herheIieVed theelection has continued to serve on the board until, another was "improper at this ^me": becatjse-of Srelton's candidate is.chosen-by Greenhill and approved by the THERE IS nothing unusudTwith holding the I questionalstatus on the board,ilievote should not have Senate.;-. . . ; . at this time, Whiteside said. The new chairman,"who . ;>been taken untd a permanent member-was present, he Shandera's argument that the electiqnbe postponed was first named to the boaid'by Preston Smith in1071, 'added.* „ >. * untilGreenhill'snominee is confirmed also had been also noted the board traditionally <•« elected-tiie ' y "It-,is> an inconsistency.and'something of aa voiced ty Houston Rep. Craig Washington in aletter to member serving in the last two yearsof his term to the -impropriety, that a man .who...had withdrawn his Skelton last Wednesday. . f cfaairmanship. -: iX-li..' nomination from the boantwquld vote,"Shandera said. ..IN HIS tairaR* Washington, whoaschairman of the Whiteside's explanation' for Shandera's oppasitioa.to- The 67-year-old Skeltoni wbo has been with theparole House Criminal Juri^ffudence Committee oversees the the election was that he (Shandera) bad -system since 1957, had. t& reappointment-blocked by ! operation of the: parole board, .requested that the several weeks ago if Skelton wnnlH immimto Wm Sen.^ Lloyd Doggett D-Austin*three Weeksago. Doggett election be delayed so thatthe new member could "be chairman. Skelton's refusal to nominate Sba^K(: cited, "lethargy" by the board and a need for exposed , to and gain experiencetin. the) practical prompted his protest of the election. Whiteside i •w. mm To Prevent •>.*V " int SEwSa By BILL SCOTT 2 .Cuqningham^ Barbara-Jeffords and The third-yesir law student added can­ing the complaints to "the difficulties in~ ; -Texan Staff Writer'^ Brian Sullivan, concern a Feb. 11 cam­didates..in --.tlte past had gone through getting hold .of members of the cbn£-' -A motion to prevent:the-Alpha' Phi" paigning incident in ilie dorm balls, a dorms in search of votes without mission." -Omega' Election Commission from violation of the -Texas Student prosecution. -V "There are probably only 3.000to5j)Bb^lholding a bearing' on the basis of new Publications election code. THE MOTluN calls the order of University students who wotiUcomplaints filed againstl' disqualified The code-Stipulate? "all campaigning another bearmg "illegal on its face" where to find us to even file a"^an»-2iSig Daily Texan editor-elect. Bill*-Garland in both University and nonUniversity .because tte^Election Commission is re­plaint." he said. "In addition, flxngkftei: wUl be beard by the Student Court Mon­owned dorrhitories shall conform to quired by TSP election rules to "act on complaints were only received leceiitly,^' day. rules established by the management... all complaints within 24 hours after they the commission is still empowpred ^4S». > ^ court.to enjoin the 'commission from. -"... solidlation (and) political cam-the new set of complainte at6 p.m. last rules:".; $>atfHwlohfllaKv..TiVednesday Imt waited.imtil."just aftCT.. " Chief Justice Rod Wood of theSbdat ,y toJte^>into~letters Of oxnplain^filed bj=;" GARLAND Who: defeated ScqtfSVijU a.m. Friday "^ to. order the hearing. Court said that body will mwtinliiiiut 'tli^.rm mine dispoatkoi of the Kress motibii. The: notarized-compBunt?, . Gled •: the result of a Ftb. 17 bearing during during.o^jist-after the' runoff," Kress "We need to know wbat eQed tiiei e Saturday Hdhq|:bikn is: fewtta^^imi^kv^alii^ta^tlM.rtalv^iJ W*"* • :Jester >;Re«tent Assistant^--which lie told the pknel be wu unaware said.'XtMikiuM haidly view them as-• proposed, enjwnment wouldh^yecai h ^ U -C-ivSiSa *, 4 *N> such canvassing activities werein vinla." -^»Hnng nf the time gapbetween Election Commisson case," 1' -.1 ^SRRftN ticm of «dection rules. the alk^ed vidlation and the filing with HE SAID the l^ess' motion saysGarland will suffer the comii^ssMn^"­ mally structured; with the ooirt'lMta^ "irreparable injury if ^he order"< to call Kres characterized the commission's .mg to arguments from both sides^ 0 uI ru JO " off the hearing), is not issued.":. actkis^asj^Sf:to •bolster a. w^k ' "We will attempt to detenmne ffv :The-motion-calls, the filuig of new c^"and ^id bethinks the'bodydoubts another Election Commission /bearing to:fiessure st-t, charges."hairassnienL..by the blatantly-wbetb^-ite original decision disqualify-, would damage Garland." Wood added.-,jg illegal elforts of 'the commission to hear ing Garland wodld be upheld by the Stu-Commission meinba~ Terree ^Bowers||;sV By TONI SNIDOW; C ty®fe;aol':*to;4ave|(aHs0eht: comks that he "wo^id be cotaadoed fdriretain^" ...(the) complaints." dent Oonit,. ,' V • said the panel," doesn't want to craaty ' TfttB Staff Writer :the' •''^ JSyi• ment like any otheradministrator ^work­"These are not new1 complaaints, THE HEARING is scheduled for 7 anyone." but' members fed the -r't|L m •A UT-Pfermian. Basin employe who ing on a yeariy ototracL".-•' •. . -*• . , Kress ;said.' "These are' the 'same p.m. Tuesday , hi.TSP'Building 4.122. evidence represents o mfortaahoDz?testified against B.H. Amstead, former ^niwsity^Cfian^eUor -Charl^ "I think this polifical'pr^ssui^'if "it ex--violations Garland -has already' been McBi^y attHbuted the lateness in fil-which should be heard.XJTPB president, may lose his job |^til$stire;^said; the 'diancellbr has • ists, was ui eiistei^ two'nKinUB ago,"' tried and found guilty <6f at the first hear­ because of political "pressure on the ^«y^"'noinifdrnSation concerning he added % ing (Feb. 12)." • ^No Bluffing' University System Board of Regents"| ' j^Uti^prK^re^ftlM regents^ r --^According.to His6,~-LeeJlarxid)erger,_ Kgi.McElrov. .commission chairman ^liUMfwas firedfrbm jobasUTPfi's dean of the "College of 'Science and said complaints represent "specific new Retired Manne Corps Gea.-.H.W: Hise,:- ' 1Engineering 'sent a letter, on Feb.-12 to . evidence which the commission is duty- 1,-J^.Vjs assistant to the dean of UTPB's College , 4™ J. fV of Science and Engineering, Said Friday 7 ^ Catdozier stating thaibe waqted to keep bound to hear." • ' 3 " -P^'-• V he was told F^» 10 that it is "unlikely'r -rnisled Ifoase Aiyropriations Hise on his staff.' ... "THESE COMPLAINTS differ from Former Uniwereity President Stephen He said any suit would be Dndertakenl: MntniM Committee about the tise,of state funds:/ - -On Thursday, Cardozier rqibed thatr the" original Jester violations because •Spurr. fireSl'in'September by System because of possible dama{ge to tbe regents wiU jextend ;, ,, v < -f n ^ ,Odessa campus.-^-" s with two assistants, and said • he. feds j? where alleged canvassiiig todt-place," still considering the possibility of a law­"Legal action isstill anoption,"Spnrr.HiSe said VR. Cardozier, UTPB's '^ 'After Amstead resigned, Hise was •'.there is no logical basis to jusbfy ep^^i he said. suit over his" unexpected dismissal.. has said in the,paist "However, rmantl|ident ad interim, bid ifim he will' rehired by Cardorier.to s^yp as at tuiuingtl^^poatiM Garland was enjoined by the commis; ^ : Spurr. speaking atan impromptu news the kind of persoo to engage inlitigatiao%" probably.be terminated becauseof "peo-mimstrativeminiciMitun -assistant7 Cardoder.;^^... rantinuatiixi -5^ > sfon ffom campaigning on runoff ^de<^*" conference in the Dallas-Fort Worth if I can hdi» iL" _ i-igpie In"dowrttown Odessa wbo-are, in-'W^Hisesaid he .'tion day as the result of the complaint 7,. Regional Airport, said he "wOuld only Thou^i he saidhe wasn^fUnfiing."iiMney appi^i^t^^forrlJITPB by the .^frdm sixth floorJester residentsalleging *• take legalaction asa test caseto protect Spurr said, be would consider a legislature. , ' he had solicited votes in the dorm. -peoplewhpmight bein my position inthe -anv inappropriate action mjunon; fit, . However, si^C m, dil^-jUTPB" ' J'The decisionto hear othercomplaints . future:" . ... employes have rci^^ po^He.-ter-;'.;.: on the same incident is double jeopardy U _ I for Bill Garland. Kress said. "Thfe .£• portsthe measure gcJto.thpcon^enUon." , -^ , ?The )l)ill,:: wiiich•* would-, establidi ijvfe. > (»fiot«d Story, Cog* 3.) special"primary in-Texas as a way to ' DemoslTo Consider It introduced by Rep, Tom Schieffer of sdect presidential'convention delegates Jb fort Worth,?mcei|is the^nly|»esiden-% major political parties!was approved * ' ' tial preference pHmaty Tl^il Mforfe IKg^-by the House.Elections Conmittee and ^' House* Because,Bents$n.iaid^ believes -. f?nll go, to the Hoiee Tuesday, ^ , ~ "^4 ; Session Aid the'bill will aid his^candidacy, Clayton., ,.Clayton said he fee^,tlw bill wilT J ;WASHINGTONW) —4kJSi^B faffUoinv: The Penn Central railroad trustees, i favors the bill, ^ ^ > < . probablyjpass uf:the House bemuse he tax cut bill to combat recession ^.waits' • meanwhile, meet Monday to decide i^'He'd rufi strong because it shows» ,under^tands'that,"Schieflter had 70 rar sa.r, action in the House this: vw£ek-while. whether to shut down or continue shrengM^in his ^tatp,*' Clayi^i said "£^p coauthors 00.1^ Si Democrats argue over,whether ttfnse it operating in hopes of getting more to lall the deletion allowanceworth fZS .federal, money.. The latest" threatened • bilhon a-year to oilmen^ U'-} -closure is-prompted by $16.4 milhon in . Brergy.taxhearingso^en&Iarrii i.but bills,.due;Tuesdays-including some someantkHl forcesaredematidlingtlie Z. payroll checks. I percent petroleum depletion^allpvraiidg;. THE SPRAWLING railroad serves 16 .. be. killed immediately, as jtart ^ • ea&ern, and midwestern states, two v urgent tax -cut bill congressional" -.Canadian pibvinces:and the'District of . m Democrats want to i^-tq.Pr^dei|t> Columbia. lts40.00ti miles of track, 4J00 Font .to, IkI^i ;pnll the natiba measure, tarried parliamentary vtork foiled 'thehrt laA<»':'Cuts,o££i6.21 biUiod lor ctidty low^to vroving.'thls.:the,HousfeWaj^;Sn:' dipping ^ntoW mid ? uritfii the'filiboster fight blocking actityi " -and Means Committee irefus^dib'attacfir ' 7 §a'a'Hofisgirissed bill to keep the Peon-apetroleum depletion allowance repeklCaitra^aiKl other Norffieast railroads li»$\ proposal, '.s *-• 1 ,v: nm.Tifghl J expected operatipo. %i \ '' M ""; B»K the" cauciis of^all 289 bouse. ipartlycfolod iigA new-effort to'jp:^ tM^ll;bUVis;ej^^Dariw?«ts meets, ^Tue^dayu in aiedailJ • ptJcted Monday.-> —».—-.1 . Thrlse-Way Tragedy it? fg'ti tl K5 mi "r-Ilf UJails.rSenalhinq t v .putthatmeasure aside and1 r Effort totpgrmit^tr *J* ed9ry'z 1 i&n4fe,' jffis gvMjfrudyis tmsiness to oongasoline transportation edra stronger ffiy .building three-part energy-conservation program, including -,ar * Eaieb#.««f ntetest in system that would connect the : .CQde which would'cut downon >-revision of the city's electrical rate structure ItJ. a^'&pitol-Umvetsity-downtown.wastedenergy consumption. * V?hb twoHerm councilman said the program also Involves K|g «8te*etiL" .-areas, and a bus route that Reyes also has proposed es-xinewed support of the city's -Energy Conservation Lawless wooM Bee lo s^e -Jwoold start at lhe center^of_;tabUshing a -cityr. Assistances. .Commission,, .. which-he. . initiaUy. . . sponsored,^and ra'flexliile . ... ,s s»* «f on nauudnjj -U* city and loop out to (he Information Service Center to crSf?/1 *9ass.to*a^portatlpn._ _ _ _ _C" A,flans nftaaitaA.npidiK residential sections to make help provide information:and v Pr^.conference:Fnedman pointed out that ni&rgte ..... fc®e pftBc tan^mtatkn. r • mass transit more convenient J refer citizens who are seeking ' P"8?,s.pot tpe same as a flat rate structure..!'Everycitiien, • a lucent rebate for for Anstimtes. ' ^help. He also is "vitally con-resident and business aUke' milst pay their ','falr share,Ao Ah Altar tf tu« PHILLIP PERRY -scerned'' with maintaining hut certouUy no less,' he said. < $•> . ;«j, , gssoSnesoM kxatQy.Xawless •; Peny, • who is retired; Is. .-neighborhood integrity to pre? ^ running on a six-point vent projects suchas the 9th -^rs. ;t iMdk program, which includes a. and 10thStreetsimprovement wt^cnddMBedtofiDaiice proposal to dose all taverns program:V«r&C~ &* 4?* «>edmm also, propose# free MOSS inKjnrtttm -: on Sundays. -^recommendations made by the conservation commission,^ :" <• GARY SEAGI!?VES Wanluig »."iswiilive A previous opponent of anv . such as improvements in buflto. codw anil insulatto " ?tandards "•** p^? drinking hour extension in AiKtin Ftorv Mipvoc that "nance major,decided to, nm j Energy conservation: •>• • i: . • I' setapaqoota aSSiftSSJSStaiS ^LrST".^ , ^'jnwettortto ^ Austin relate to alcoholic con-speaal election is_ primary means of tfaiKportatioh. ^edmanproposed a l ,s? shIp'd- LUMJUNN oMmiiM. - has,, to cost transportation system that w^d :«nphaslze,^me ^ .. I |HBSt COQDCII itoMy opposed to ^selling can xveT happ&i'again.^'^-'^v' S SPANISH FOR • "Thone"s aboot 10 alcohol on the University _ . . • -­ with setting «p :N^te to see ot-campus, fearing that -'we -ilar tte aMA>Py • might-be' raising more 3lso said he favors-hiU finan--• : ­ EVERYONE TerniBg Serself: a. : alcoholics in thislaatkHC^ •alas, been a . ficials and an upgradingDf the.: ^ -jks Daararik stateddegatefbr £»5§ mrj". - Part of his ptatform; ijSrl,cw^^^?l^d«^«ftoe.;,t:By Building Contractori T";Tie^ sijwb.1 -> ^ Wte^2lte6i4ie5- °f ^ "Emma "Ldu^nn]" propos. DbUty rates, telephone rates Brackenndge Hospito . ; ^Associated GeneraUContrac-THureday that a qity^penSTHIRD ANNUAL St «iwM Uli to seesome and gas prices for power Seagraves said he is coun-tors. Building Division, last Ambulance System 1 rJBf the CBaSBonitci^yEnds ptants -„,.L iCQ, ^ student support conn w«ek endorsed .Tommy ' operated-by the fire depac . SPANISH SUMMER -s iLUVUESS r ®lw road coastractioa. . PkTK REYES bined with general-apa&jf lawless for Hac££and Jfm-< mentww' v, Uwies8, ji •ritratt-trasfered to tbe f6 nuffioR Reyes, a city power plant among the citySroters in Jus my Snell for the Place 6 City ^Meanwhile! Place 2 4* PROGRAM ABROAD .AbMtkrttenteaf electrician, favors a restate-bid for election. However, he Council ~ ilseat?.Both{^a^esar^ didate Stuart Henry pf taring of dectrical rates to . to be' filled, In^^FeMardi H won't be runningfor Placedin !-to iiouiiced Simday the format •arrow the gap between thfe the April 5 regular flection special election ­of a registered Universif rates set for small users and because of a lack or time andOne of lawless' opp6nei)ts organization^t Students. . UNDERGRADUATE AND EARN CASH WEEKLY large ^ectrical (^nsumers. funds, ^ win, the Place S.'jace, OrStuart Henry t GRADUATE COURSES Blood Plasma Donors ft. o:X-^Needed Task Force Viewi Eastern Men & Women I -^ 'Austin v member Mrs. William Kemp New York and 'precinct store s munity relatfons. person fecial tesk force on police-said_Sunday. _ ^i^^Jprnts raJWashtagtorf . "assigned to that arte,* " EMM $14 WEEmlih^ -commgnity relatioos traveled ;; • ^:^.^-T!The CASH PAYMENT fQR DOt&Tl to Washington,-D.C. and Police-community relations the Bedford-Stuyvesant ^tW. fe Larty Jacksonj ;wl»|Brati^yn, W.Y;, fast we^and projects the group observed in of Brooklyn encompasses one the task force's subcommiti Austin ^.vc,y-' wr,nnpre^ed" the two cities included a "Cop and one-fourth square miles-charged with studying pp1i< Blood CompoikentSj Inc. withwhat they saw, task force on the Block" program, in with a population of 107,000 community relation t--? .. people, Kemp said:;..„3^?, fi; .MEKHOR*imms.8AM t» 7 PU WCEUNIVERSITY . Each pplicOTan;";in7that-.;';the residents'anidlofS^rs 1*&S.*F*0L8AMf3rM J Fnedmtm precinct is assigned one' Washington's Precinct 7St' . OOSEDKEDLASir., square blodC'.as 3us"aibre 'appeared to have.a genuir 477-3735 beat." He lives on the bloqk'sense of community, feeling: a Really A ?nd stayis in bni^isrift a «»mi>:/ \ -The Wa^hing^n.xpji^inct' " store fronts were:"setjup; sp.!, %'y • .v "people cbii ld come in andairiif LATKE? RESEARCH their prAlems,'ViKemp:^d:x "I'm in;favor^:of seeing?'. Guy Manaster knows and will 1 Thousands ofTopics'' :precinc.ts7set3';Up;3.p^ CANDlDATESFOR THE $2.75 per page -:diffW^t^a^aS!^rft&y^f^| Sendforygur up-t(Hbte,-160i>ag(, Watisbneor^ M HAMENTASH mill onfer catalog. Enclosed 00 I datio^ that ilW to ewer postage liWiveiy time is fimake|toJ the'taskforce,".?fiie%'i 119 2 days)PURI& 'RESEARCH ASSISTANCE^ INC.' W« : lllMlWISHIRE a.VD.;suiT£ #2 Kemp expdtts* the^task" U)S ANGELES, CALIF 9002S ' -fOrcetocbHat^^ DIRECTORS RUN-OFF ELECTION t' 013) 477-8474 or 477-5493 gathered during tjheTti^i ifit. TomRiedmanknGrwsalland willrovetlaH sf LBJ Librarf lATKtr HAMENT »7:30'-prnrii^ DEBATE FOR PURIM -£R¥. TONIGHT ^ 7:30 PJM HIUEL^?.<­ ga^s. TONIGHT t05SanAntonio •ndh tsasmiQy wntalli«anprnfMe to SMITH-CORONA hWeHeewriSbe' PRICES ARE GOING UP SO DONT MISS THESE VALUES ON SMITH-CORONA tyPEWRITERS..^ f: " < iikk ^LECTH0!2Ot,w^ m FC^rS fIT3S""' ^power as elerfnaty doesthe^work at^'^At last-a typewriter that perfectly combines offlcb typ£ mrai K^^mpt'^MlLplA 4.1m. .a .vt.^1A..... ..": c ' -iu 1 >< .1 r.-LM,?^ the^carpayotffa>ld:tlie^ipk izep^per; Iively>qpeat,a£6ons typeTowfef.bar-downI Pull $8;chtoc^r: idnl&Mesi'rand olassmiK wiffi fiturerlTn niw®).W,,^/Im^»T«> :.m a9ts» da^esy;CT^edm^s;aiid c&ssoutwith fijiger^p pres accents, si s^UMI W&8T ­ ect^;^2o miiW: 1dr.d^cou^fpf^as v>m ^ "*coro m *Jt-«3DEACHMT » MnMy24«f*l25.1975 amlOb-Qirpa m *> £-f rll^ m ISf. *-•-•• W M n i ectedOver Oi Tax nsion t^WASHINGTON (UPI) „ . . _, , . _ ,_ asaeus —««__«-• — "-' *-the Senate will be extremely close all be confirmed before the end of the week ' -.®S animmedlate antidote for recession, begins its THE COMMITTEE BILL includes tax rebates, The nomination considered most in jeopardy/route through the House and, -at' the same, time, .begin mjwtagTits vftn. °!? n?}3!? frotn„the White increases in standard deductions which would Hills, is opposed by Sen.William Proxmire, D-Wis., economic program.6i v^0-^n<'^.kt^i££i rwLi^»f nothing to offer as an The first stop — an important one — is the lower withholding rates later in the year, an chairman of the Senate Banking Committee which increase in the investment tax credit to 10 percent must give initial approval­ . Forttsejectedto vMo,^eUmetuVweSt I.tWonai>'mrgy-mnom"p™l,,g1'Jttalrlfwn. S^M^SwllSd.'SS'SiSSS'lJS and a tax break for small businesses.-Proxmire s opposition stems from Hill's lack of While. Ford's energy and economy proposals are experience in the housing field. She is now an iui uie iirsi.snuwuown oeiween uie rxesu 1 ar-rb«**rj? ."rr1-"*uo"™ce' having their trouble on Capital Hill, his latest three a&sistant attorney general and would becomg only ,'the heavily-Democratic &4th" -i ^ ^0,-Pastore, D-R.I., The Ways and Means Committee rejected the .'the heavily-Democratic" Nth,Congress, V - V".111-„r Cabinet appointments appear headed for approval the third woman to serve in the Cabinet: ' 3i' s~. * i.v", , o V i P»an to meetwith,their panels again this week in an t ( * " ~~ " proposal and Chairman A1 Ullman, D-Ore., wants Carla Hills as Secretary of Housing and Urban Senate reformers, stymied by a parliamentary «iBy air.wead ctynts, the House will handFordr«Vy effort to reach aconsensus program: , „ t.„ u™ „,„lsU(1v wim om oih rfouo,„t>mD„, , h n , . ­At a »213 • ahiannmMf «i ttv-c'Lin:.. n ..lis ' development, John Dunlop as'labor secretary and maneuver last week, may try again to change the ^ floor Thursday with only one bU'io" tax cut,' amendment pehhitted -a *17.5 biUionJlepublican William CdLa^as antifilibuster rule wmm Antitrust Legislation -"rk by AFL-CIO MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The American people. I think nationalization oil imports, including a ban on Ai9b AFLrCIO proposed on Sunday new an­is inevitable some dav." establishment of a fair and equitable­ titrust legislation to break up the giant system of allocation and rationing;'*jmdoil companies and place them under To reduce America s dependence on an official government policy that wijuld strict government regulation. foreign oil. the council repeated the make clear to any nation threatening! an THE HARDSHIPS suffered a year ago proposals made by the AFL-CIO s embargo against the United.States fiiat": during the Arab oil emba'rgo "pales into General Board in Washington last this country would retaliate S^th insignificance compared to what looms month. That panel called for a quota on economic counlermeasures '. ahead unless immediate arid drastic ac­tion is taken." said the labor organization's executive:council. TIA Reports Losses . In a statementapproved by the council •at its winter meeting, the AFL-CIO .. blamed multinational oil companies for During Strike Period the energy crisis and:recommended "am comprehensive energy policy" • which Striking--groundworkfers cost Texas Those increases were fully offset .would reduce imports, cut consumption International Airlines an estimated the spiraling. costs of fuel;?-la| and increase domestic energy supplies. $400,000 in. .the last quarter of 1974, a materials, equipment-related leases}"fVE BELIEVE that the energy company spokesman reported Saturday depreciation charges, TIA-presideThe last three months of 1974 found emergency was a'.result of policy Francisco Lorenzo said. '" J TIA operating'^at a $921,000 deficit, up —UK Takphofs decisions made by the multinational oil TIA suffered additional losses ff Tornado Damage companies to squeeze the-consumers, $782,000 over the comparable period in the labor problems which caused a l_ force them to pay higher prices and 1973 drop in traffic levels and Thanksgii Th« sametornado whlch-topplod^hU-MtrfMLttaMsn jtign feTlwjwlitit struck ,throe different areax of weitern fatten the profits of the,'Oil companies,'' However,. 3^42,000 in depreciation holiday period reservations,.;com eqo^atUottonefatolity^ndaOlniurijpjJriTouolooM, charges on the company's Convair 600 spokesman Jim O'Donnell said.",, Alabama Sunday, Heo vilydamaging two reitaurant*^ the union chiefs said. ... .. - equipment..were-included in the last O'Donnell said the company. is_e iSSf Among measures proposed by the quarteir's financial report. \s-fSt~ ting difficulties. recovering:lost 1-_ council was legbla.tipn^to:. Still, TIA.^revenues increased $14.7 even when full service has resumed.! • Prohibit a single company from ow­million last year, and stock profits were airline has been shut down since-< ningcompeting' sources of energy. A also up >4W,ObO, or 8 cents a share. ..December. number of the major coa, natural gas and uranium producers are owned by the major oil companies; a practice which the AFLrCIO said has" hampered the development of' alternative energy ,.By JOSE_M.FL.ORES •• !.• Win^ttfWi in the Texas presidential sources primary,'I don't think thatany of ns are. ' £?*> j L„ r 'i»rimaiy, he'd have tohave afull slate of Delco made a good point when she said • Require the oil giants to divest WUhelminacandidates running in each senatorial By The Associated Press . . ,-that itwould allow,people whodon't have themselves.; of their marketing Capudji and four guerrillas frbtt lsraeU-i' ­,, Austhi called a conference to,> ^ districtino orderto haveJanyrepresenta*5 the time forpolitics,,who must.work all op^ati(^.^!aS;to,separate the sale of Israeli Foreign Mm$te.r^yigal?Allon sound their constituentsout oq theirsup-; .-tion at all. , ,7 jails. Msgr /laptidji was?convicted of } said Sunday that Israeli willingnb^s to pflmary day.' to participate. But at the same -petroleum products from.the production gun-running for.Atefy guerillas inside > ' ,, bi"4 "'-"With the'bill-pass^?a faymite sort ' .tijne, T,don't-like U)e idea of;a primaiy withdraw in the~Sinai'will be'influenced t,B'into an and refining .-of crade oil.:: ^ ^ '" Israel and sentenced to-12>yeprs In"3? lrate >tould take thevotes anddeal them out to 'run like the one pro|>bsed in the bill. For . . by what Egypt is-willui^todo in iieturn,1 prison. |5 -^ "*• Treat the oil compMes as public .' ... ^friends who could further tfieir career. Wilhelmina, it would put her constituen­ both, '.'political and strategic." jf• > •* utilities subject to stringent federal ALLON TOLD A news conference'. h.nt™ m fn ^P6 U^t (Wljat the voters wantwmildn^t matter," cy out in the cold," said Hazel.'r^wHi . He also £aid general world detente bill would allow greater participation ",JT regulation. . V o West Berlin after a meeting ol the would do more to assure Israel'ssecuri­ h? ^Mspr^idenUal primary ^ Ha?el 'also pointed ,seven to participate, she said. stituents in mind when they backed the "I don't think this is the worst thing weapohs, explosive charges, hand tion which will make another-wai-im-' that could happen," Meany said. *'If the IN lipMiMmMf no cm. . . ' " Such-a-bill smacks of political meUng bill. But they could alienatethe peopleat grenades, a loud speaker and leaflets possible or'Cat least less'feasiblel',' lief J? ^ 8 673 s toaK i joUt of favors tot'services rendered, shej, the. meetmg, «md those peopfe happen to oil companies keep behaving the way • demanding-the release of Arabs held in said. ;repudiation or some type of a modifica-^sald :•»-n" • • be very strong, in Travis' County • they are. concuting their business in Israeli jails.;the Israeli command said. -Ajlon said detentewas good^pr Europe -Democratic-politicsrLhe-said.--^^?-/-^-complete disregard -of the.interest of the Israel 'would like a nonbelligerency and added:'"Qui Euro^eanj-friends can pact from E^ypt, but Egypt prefers to Delco's signature on It » ^ »_ ' render us an lndispensalileservice'by'inT'r , delay such-an agreement until an over­ r bill would th'e^ ' sisting that detente~-shoutd^l9> include^-,% The undermine thfe all Middle East.settlement is reached. ; • Democratic Party system enabling those/^ the Middle East":-' • •• j» •' ,t> " with-"high aspirations1 andjplenty of1 >% Syriad/President Hafez Assad told ISRAELI3 NEWSPAlPE'ttS «aid • money" to dictate to the partywhatever Newsweek magazine that Syria would be American; guarantees were an ;attjsm^t ^ willing to sign: a formal peace treaty to persuade Israel to soften its portion." I with IsraeMf the Israelis relinquish aU The religious newspaper Hamodia Said ' Arab lands occupied in th6 i967 war,and . ,-i3»aci wm miu n-unncuii. io rejeci U.S.u.^ Israel will find it difficult to reject if the occupied west bank andGazaStrip guarantees,-exspecially since it is con-are made a Palestinian state.' " " tinually applying to Washington foraid." Although . ISrael has -consistently i: -languageJersalemfPost Blacklists .jdiplomatic sources^con-- -: T^e English rejected r-these conditions, it'Wasr'the said consideration of "guaraifteeS.^ servative Arab-states that-have moved strongestStatement Assad has made on signified that Washington was actively -' their oil money around freely-in these record on thepossibility.of an agreement preparing for a resumption of the •Capital markets are concerned by* the with Israel. ' •. CJqneva peace talks, a move favored by ^ new Arab.assertion of economic-power.. i«n senatorial District to the SutKlay to review requests from 60firms' -boycott list includes movie actors such --theSovietUnion, The UnitedStotesiearS'^­ and want ground rules made clearer. ' -"When-'.everythmg is settled it will"" CoT?ss' c?areed * Ru M , -t»be renioved from the blacklist. ^ Paul nSBtabS?Tavlor the-multilateral Geneva talks wiIl~beTin-(~ have to: be formalized with a formal that the bill-would result in a winner^-.The blacklist includesFord MotorCo.,. .'"•ahd singe^TrankSi^te and Har^ MAHGOUB CHARGED "Zionist in­ wieldy and will break down, into debate ­ peace treaty;!' Assad said in an formation media'* with stirring an up­ over Palestinian participation ' < • !f n«AiMrta tT6*8!3^ ^ga" R®"?n lipsticks'and'Coca Cola Ford L Belai'onte — all taboo becauseof the helD interview,-"Thisis not propaganda,'' he Won to the Democratic national conven-.«}. Pt^ldent Lee Iacocca-recently-mide a-"they have given Israeli-caiises such as roar over |>articipation of certain banks THE SOVIET UNION hinted that it y/'sfnfranc,?isiri added. '-'We^ mean ft — seriously. and "ar tWweek fact-finding v,sit to the Middle,f-SdnvelmUieThS in Arab investments and said: "this Would not interfere with efforts by' " ' explictly." minorities in favor of large units with, < East'and said in "a^copyright 'article in-i'V" IN A KEYNOTP SPERrn at Arah shows that Israel has become conscious of Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger to its isolation and the siege we have im-" .-In Beirut,, the Popular Democratic achieve, another disengagement in "the posed and hopes to free itself by using .. Front claimed responsibility for.the.raid Sinai on condition that the Geneva talksi 17 ta S With t h e s e < L 5 £ | ^ V T S S w d k S A > deceptive m^ans." ' -and identifled tjie slain Arab as Kassem resume soon after. The Communist Par-)-J ? Haddad,-.leader of -the infiltrators. The ty newspaper Pravda conceded that an?-' On rthV-' conference iagenda are • • PDFsaid!the guerrillashad been sent to • Israeli pullback, would be a useful thing,^ '•«« «hB °.,~ ' 7 i. .udincuuedis w«ib d d%uiften(s'from'W showing theyaocumenis irom eu firms snowu > VUnder the bill^fan outsiifecandidal^ Stoitedftioruse^al?tlw'rMounM^t ? take hostagesand demand the release of all )he resources at it$. T demonstration of tjie .organization's ha^lii^^laiifm'^Hdi -I$iael. Kissinger is .expected to return to the^ . Greek I'PatholiC; Archbishop Hilarion Mideast next month to try to work.it out:-­ * nf • 1 ­ neujs "frr t j A \ Sr , Phnom Penh Remains Under Siege *^t Cambodia To Fall Without U.S. Aid, Schlesing|r' h&M^ j.; PHNOM PENH, [&Ph~ The O S.-financed airlift bito isolated Phnom WASHINGTON (UP!) - Penh is meeting daily battlefield supply requirements, but the situation Defense Secretary James quickly could become critical if fighting escalates, diplomatic sources say ^ i Schlesinger said Sunday Cambodia will ^absolutely" fall They add that if the. Mekong River remains closed to river convoys to the Communists if Congress i'Affieripan dll'ector^f^e^ptojwt'. , T - mudi longer, an expensjv© airlift of nee and fuel jnay be needed to keep fails to provide an additional dWf.* , "'ITo trie the Hal objbcUve of thtf July the Cambodian capital's population alive, •i $222 million to support the that It/can lead W more jolrf 4 Rail Collision in Norway Kills 27 * r 'Vf thaWiS.-aniiSoviei-6i»rationSin^he futui^.^Leeexplained: Phnom Pehn goverjaipent. lOSLO(AP) The death toll rose to 27 Sunday in Norway's worst rail jointsexplorations Will -make-It feasible disaster, authorities announced. They said the1 victims were m Pnomh Pehn "is virtuallyIveMHotajcallyC^ avoid' 26 NorweigianS, incluaing four member^ of,the samefamjly.and a 55-year- surrounded by Communist l^dplWatfon and j^duce cost to any one-X cguiitty,"fJ, J>\tv -t-Amefican-born musician. ^ "s j forcps Its»» ouppueisupplies navehave been i-.r, Deen ^ pfficial? tsaid the 'engineers were no^among the dead because tiiey cut off except for a y.S -backed iiimDed from thpii» pnh« «amniio u^ui,mjn^colJisiQn of,tHfotrainp " Taurlift > 'r *v t("" y pape p: Asked if the cfiun^ yrtil fati- Without more U.S. funding' < ProducHon Orop. said, .* -f ^TffTllfWW'-­ oiver^i perioid df nlinimarwithoutrthat additloiMi assiRta'wrt : ^ SSI SIS» iSmi itfljgSw,f > Vi yr -­m'<* f" ' ; •4 ' fm gtwffS ^.•*^4 ^U iA< &> ssm •PSf! Page 4 Monday, February 24, 197$ l' h m ,,Wtff & l{ 7) * iitaia. ^5^ 6 w ' • 1-r;®' nmw. fcS©' i ~ r. I tgg«• (Mtw% ft* it-ji " A f t -J *• mait#?. r V Along4ia^^inkohi^ietol(tustheotterday that iftta&sri^tsare ; -;^safe" while "the"Texai Legislature & in session: He Is wrong. Lloyd :Bentsen-'s right to control tin Texas delegation to the Democratic •-convention without Winning precinct conventions seems perfectly safe. Oil company profits are safe. Big ranchers exploiting illegal aliens are •. safe. Only the powerless needfear the Texas Legislature. Last week, one of the most powerlessgroups in the state—persons not S8® old enough to vote -r was singled out for the tender attentions of our uorsw­ lawmakers. The Senate Education Committee referred SB 194 to the Senate for actum. ** v ­ -Currently, Texas law provide: &at an dementaiy or secondary school student may be suspended for a period not exceeding the school year in WIN ^ which the student's misbehavior take* place. SB194, as proposed, would • have, allowed suspensions up to two years. That period has been cut by 8& Vamemimenttooneyear. SB194 was lobbied through the committee by the 2 Tetfas State teachers Association. j*f? ;£•?>, % J One argument for SB 194 put forward in doifimittee hearings was that ^ some primary and secondary school students are already so incorrigible thpt one school yearis not sufficient time for them to be "rehabilitated."' v1 . litis unclear how kicking students out of school and onto the-streets A3ixi »cz^r(L' 3£S y: "Rehabilitates" them. John Duncan, executive director of the TexasCivil ILiberties. Union, offered .this testimony against SB 194 and, indeed, a§3&. ^ against the current statute thatallows suspension for "incorrigibility"­ |tj; i~)About fitoeyearsagolsat ina*—1—' n.:. Deico ana Earle lackirespect patched a Mend judge sit dghias expkfbi ^ Kegl«ct weSenM^imwe these al-year-old Mexican-American boy had beensuspended for the At SatnrdaV iright^ K^Bearj. ^P^esatBwfienthe^^te^ioA 'Sgt* .. . Mag1caa sayalwt: :v»adificatio«s a> every restnodm I' rgatof the year /wfor being incorrigible. A group Mexican-American i: V the good »nA! Hay I : w M|« smstBjtt.1feeBwe are soobsessed by theidea ota preaden-^ Same pea^ tM^p^ (a Bar ««d away wfflk She sabdteOtr. >5?-" participate, the, group had sent their children to school wearing !r V-i^.rews^ tial jHimaiy for TetastiteyTI put thor; firrqrnnrriiffllnr^ -11m jlM ihj-|> ;f"typum armbands in protest. 1Mb young boy had dntifitVy worn his V >^?wel&re, olttiepatiaits withic^tliii' names to a raflcid tnlL ' ^ real neatas Aey sklacfc ai BeT" * ^2"" -lot1 those.who wae tb proride it^It ss^ otiTtlxutd, but fearing the reactions of his teachers,he did not remove It is highly anlSte^ Uiat tte ^Here-lf.^maB attaockaad watefc Oe••ml aften wondered at the snujgness v,, coat' He "*?• f°rced to remove his coat and when the offending ? you-go^Bentsen"^ bOI tan'be am^oded^goose-step to the polls. Mooths Patter shrugs ^ whiii people'-assert' thdr rigbt l Jp^-anrffiantf loas revealed, he ioos declared incorrigible-under the eno^b to be fair ^to yotets and can-, thev're ama»l wheo Hae Van fees go : ^ tm mcemmrz--. ensliweroe. to cobtrol my wyik; tofc ^ didates. While Rep. Deiox waiild upabdtheUiaaois ckised.orsafneiUw ff^ existing' state ^statute. Fortunately,the federal judge ordered this 'SB 15SiWiifiiui'aiji^aw»piSa»y nayvrill. tovi^temycoosdende^to commit hetseU ejtherway by sayingshe-'like that. * -^ >«5« boy,and another dozen jTiSO students reinstated ina laumuit^ hefieves a national health care plan Qe my nnhd — y^ what isittltat t is"i»t mamedtoHB€7Sr*|)Ba^stat«l^ TiHUii m & *> brought by the Lubbock Cixril Liberties Union. ' j.1 • j. .• shoaidhe in flK IMted States expect to rdy onwhen ttie(jr Be on hevnnM votefor^ainradedornoL JFbi« IiK-FA. 9). Bei^ bo(fa a 0Peiatil>8 table oodv my bands? Last year the Pasadena School Board must have set a record for vOlrfO/IO'-SOfl professor af history and phOosoBfay, -tbem discover tbe kmd of doctdrs'u -Texas incmrigible statue hiti^ th& suspended a 5-year*M.: voters (toTwtopposel^jiiiimy.Icait®~<(^ tfce'efitor-'-1 ^Pnt ftBer has jpned boOi facts of . system will now produce (£ag^ G92) "tl kindergarten student,because his parents had aUowed his ^ i*Bwn)|*irri pciBcqdes in that doesn t want minorities^ FeliLMs«alemeBtdSorth«sta*wiS td' groip long to cover a -birtfc defect* The Houston. ACLU "• .Bfce Hgitness of sortalrred , , represented. He alsosaid ttat.no Boa^ urs, with one marijuana cigarette. This is „ . r r"v 'r-'-f_ pas lastweek; Kjgmge far aiqnte medical can? A ~*~Wy t&suUat wont inasmall fine if the court find* thestuient* %>*•? .frOteSSIOnal OCTVfCe -=t •" Several opinions have already, L immortality rate' is .barbed oo the told' . School officials are,usurping the powers of the court* T«theoBtar: , " ^ uprated in .The Daily l^nn 'Mrli -tSl*nbw 6f deaths, whatever the P^^lMCSf^ ing guilt whenthereisaconstiMionalrighttotheassumatUMi .-P .i.isjffsanfsfP; , a ceitMpaitof the popntation. The pressing the anthor*s .distnrhaace o the dement of radal prejodke in kin*>( innocence.... , ^ . e »--b^ome a jcBinafet, he better leam t^ ^ ^55^1 •> » -• '• * ­ t _•.loroarlni^ideath rateis . get his factsstraight-First of aD.Henry,. • film and the aodiehce's ^enttnisiastiti^ mttW, atatate th«t w«dd ^po.a,tt.1 sinqHy .that Amoicans lead more ffl.' " i • ^ —V ***""" " m wwm® r*inni |wiras UMl OiC ^ rfem. response to it SSostasanediy I i " £i fready being grossly abused?! ft »"asinine,. It is irresponsible. ^ this criticism of Uie atidie»ce'3aiT~.u M ] trfortunately, it is typical. 1"" you Ihinir Mai* Villanneva's •"»" , laoaot wderst—I emjlhm}I know and tobacco con-racisn>> .biit I also A«1 that it ts'timd j backgroond disqoaliflS'f^^. chaiqiMn'Aqr own caiaeTlnl^ceffs'i mortal one-liner, she stei^^|[^i|L> ^ ' M,y TteaB 3ba* bowfc hra«es^^HBWi»*d certain to result, in It with anyone but spades aai&ipideiki ISf' " ' To the b^t of my toowled^ jwis'T-' • only wheelchaired membef^of1 ^"Tree Ordinatice Not' Needed" read the Austin A^n«»Hpanj;ta«cm.an. | awBtnce-.my first respoiisetothisl i ditorial. The Austin PlanningCommission obviouslyagreed, voting down wassevweranbarrassnient andafieeii be proposal last Wednesday bight by am 8-1 couflt -X of bc^ngjHit do«^ Ftotanatdy; qiy i We, too, knoMr Austin does not need such a law. Everyone loves trees,£ doobtsastolh^tegrityof mZLSZZ V"""" ~ —^ . .. • ^— M.J:^ cond rfspony waahotfmyaccoiniw is ottered.-First, every '/'by a strrag desire to t>eUoW;^jaid the Planning Commission, so who needs to protect them with anlf •ct—; ~".rrT» vT"™?"' w "» ueeuo hi iuuicvi inem wim an^t, * so™:^ra? Wt uuu ^ I 1 (llilEini^? tWrmm tni»aliMMl«ImnJttfm. j -j. " ~~ ^7, • —r~°—"T" -^Gi^ples do it too!" UnforttmaWy hypo(chondriac). -«W«Sao u ioov-umontmaf IS rSS? buildings, so who needs an ordinance?:? ^ ^ q-e«, —» ooctorsoace wrth every f|a doctor's ofBce with everyiniiibitians aie^till too stnnglyi *° t)Fotect ^ 53,01 Tnwpr J ^ dM^iwmwe and imarined lilmaL ^«i -o protect* tiie Shot Tower?' EveryoneJloves creeks, so who needs •"to! ^^^GarlaaTs integrity^ be$w* 01^0^ this naiversity's inispla^ ^rg-'""^**^ ud imacteed ailment, ^-'^ed to aDow sach .;^uiJ7a ieactiaa.y> TOtect'"BartonCredt?' ' f '' ' This whole mess isn't Water^itecome^' • As Ktseridofahd sensonaByi TG^UMESS^W^FA.^G GI:.L e.^nerican-Statesman's logic that the proposed^ "^ to campus. Garland brokeno laws. What as ttns partirnbr fihri was (as, free ordinance infringes the rights of the average homeowner. Imagined he:did actnaOy amounts to" less than a-most porno films are), I paving to get a pentiit to remove ady those trees with a. trunk " city parking violation. None of the other v ^r* original offense by not being allowed to Peoplewiapl^sical JsaMltfes'ilbl pn^uejsuy. riBailjr, uw nw BPEN§T~~^ ~ i rdlnance, what .riiould that^matterT The, Austin frf^nning director^, leaflet on the day of the d«tian—the ^to eqressmygratitnde to,.and leave Ok coHby, lookii« for any ^ gf'I Imsetfy Dick-Lillie, says sudi an ordinance is not necessaiy, and most important day. sun he won 1 „ , "T*^rrnmrnA at freedom in&e worid,ascan fJAt kd^ttop^ledoe^'llie' 1 V> *JtoWvVO?^nances are rather n^aUve responses for getting®!* m7r^^fy'f (he aMlie-SS&nStaS " V jri^^^Unp^rfy" ; him. and he said. ••Yea.Tb gettig"ni Y^V socalped m«Ucine.^,fsocial compUcatk»s can sonirtta^ DeenagtaUedaatothenailniig iy Ht 111 of woadfwqrk or not isoaiy secondary in ;l-staeKerine. MpurPlaniUngCommissiim sto^^dthetreeordinance.lt woiild^A-down if it was me,I would bavesaidto h®B ACTHil imnals and cwmpadw aiwl regapl to whethCT it is mofal or not a^fe n anyooecan teli toe haw^a-cod^ *§§0 Only -rTT-".TV>'".T**have slowed downT.r'.'r *the4* deveiopers-vvTtiwuwsi^nifliAnd we'reffo ic^jUal-just1 gladiffttil aUGO-au ' ' >- . anT l'"' ™*,M »»»••% 'emv«* alL•«. -5 gnestw.«rprtfessorof phflmophy also^JRossMeyer, Iwoold like tosend Um 1 what uroblems had thoo^itjal ||.jaft nliiancewasn'tpassalafeWyeartfago.I't passed a feW year^aeo.Just think whatwtrfjlemsFrank" In.iffact1-'iif 1 hadjhoo^tjabout it I net ewsidc^:^aow*.^AOaSpersonaUy annotatedcofljft*"" |i> J Srwirt Would have had cutting doWb.all of «wm» over-60-inch trees afc ~ ^)!eLc^rgPtTed1y,30"01"^. Ido notexpect fine deverdevices tohe r of Sex." jm installed meveryrestroom, battnodos- * ^ ITaller Creei. mwvmSuchMordlnancey^l|aveinfrtagedonttewivswiwi^c,?ivuMi.uay« uuf^eu va 1 -th^.^ rule, nuts a crimp Involved, in a pfasage '—— Charlotte land thatwith the properaim—toftime • »d«Weqrfains whyheqnit I 0 OOP football fails that would sit iW Memorial'Stadium. Gnrtute, —•— " -3L-L. ­-C'^ ^ Quest vleuioolnt DAILITTEXAN mtAas Dd the|3" Senor 'Comandante a ^ 3e3Tj>*>. & ] 1DITOR ir" — i^uck Harvey (EMor't note:the andwraf lhisGnest -Hercorio -to r--. 11ANAGING EDITOR '^ oppdsHon to( and pas»onateMl^f^aatonuti^yrta£^aii»y!lby iL VUw|>ttot Is a..CMtew.. ttfqce. Hb. Allende*s gnenmenL 1 -•—•1"-?'secretpolice. ' % J»| m •^ft^SkliU^fMSer/; -Moreimportantiy after the ' Monday night at °° Sep L 1 I{ 1 19r ?', t he nfflBtaiy juntaadvocated, and then *-*•« the % ClatMfe Sin^son —r.*.—" •"•••• •• •_wmwiaanu ^ r«vertbrew Allende's Popiilar ;fUnityS process by whichChile's wirversitieslost ^ wteperiaK the »wj^J« -1—'* 'm4.4 Ibtfaf KeOy government -The next Hay, *th» milHaty ­ j ports editor! traditknal academic Qeedom aod were -^ T®^ % lU^h£rdt.J&Uce:' fOrcesbombedChile'sTelo^cal UniVW^' onptied of over M percent of their stn-El Meraoib. the oolv prominent^!some' <, i?VidtyiBowlwi sity .and marcfaedT-Victor Jara — -the^ dent popBUtion. thwisands of professnrt a newspaper allowed pnfaDcatno in Chllei^andjtlfe^ |ifeto^DITOR„ ^JaniceTomlin nation's most loved" guitarist and ir .,ni -^"a5 ? fywdto tas bmme Ak spekesman of theri^#pomstiess(d.%ejBesenceofamanWhb^ U CHIEF • folksmger—along with many-thousands J^David Hendricks leavg then-ooBntry.ras writeris oneof Despite the actions already takei^'VsystenwticallyBestroys cultare and fre< ,v to ChileStadimn. In October,' thecolonel those thousands. -. ' as»t «he wmsUes.L^niz demands thought is an bfaage. More than tlui ISSUE STAFF-^ AraencMs. perhaps, do not IWly nn-t -even harsher action be m>« a^m^i the lives of ten of tboOsaiids'of fei ; hwJ^S&anil asked hnn if be was flSeV restaod, of mA acv-those «4ements that would object to thel^lcountrymen barig in the balance, -^iiiger Victornodded.smlling sadty.The ; lio«g.Forthem. jtisMconceivab>ethata-nabtary's handling of CMleiPaHalrsJpooly organized^ices.outside ChDe M' w< •» «• >' r «» » > Bany • Offica-tben bad filin place hisbaiiiisooa . Seneral Rejjorters ^ti, r-ihvMary WaWi, Mike Morrison, BUI Scott table and, with an ax, cbopped'off. his^ BWCTnment woold exert Sach pressure Even in the anvenities' decimated .speak for thbse within. " ie^Asslstai3at 1,, "— -'"te, Sharon Jayson, Jose Fk»es;i -ftigers. v v-on t^ rana^stadents tint they had • state, there stOl exists a smaU voice VICTOR JARA Wfor his people ^ no cbaice bai nrform oB then-prof«sors. , waitmg intil (be time <0 speak, a time ^the poor. worke^ and senUght< - Oifisly Ht^,'~Amy Cbeng; IKR k a dii|>^n refocee;^- Mltofial Assistant^1, ^ rmfM • felfe fri*nds — with fall when those who abjectto oppression will stadents woiting together forthego. ;r lle listened tto Victor. Jara. He saw the , g.all ^W^^wre^Wp^d#5^ know!edgeoftheccosequences-oothe- wo, c jHanes strafing the Presidential Palace: ;-i feft^Mtbr ffl# ~?t)W bggpflheir priorpofat'cal oneatahcB UMmr fo ' Victor was beafenl^^irairrebrflcef ; iw^^^^poe|rira^p»ttf ^-•and heard Allende's last words over the m •WM?e-nMy sta*°ta r .. „ *. • < i Doug Burton-vr radio before the man was gonned down. hf^i . v'J"*** "*te-m&WWwfeWSw W\ 'k,«'J^ura MUler, Norma Gleasod, John Snllfen .This writer, for the sake if dignity bt^ged their (Rebels iMgiywu,Llfae > • b* tvpad tikb taoc* high place Inthestadwif.Xooinjgltj if,4 M' " nubtary even thendetermmed the Ufeor "rT,71? ^^ — _ felkwprisww..be^,^l^^r ,%^>&&P*vid Wo°^Siev^nnan woold prefn-his name be^obuW. ^ mn Put for thy safety of his parrab and indeed, under Fema^totiniit: KmT. ^ Monday niizhi ^ ^^y«ceremW' Mai damental focus of higher afacalkn: the -^ -.. .. , . ^ ^present jecBB^ta^ mlmster. will {wr^ jToiyi. 'Wpto question and and expiote. to •, po«*ielhe.tnithasoneseesit.Nolongw;j: ^ ,0®•«^sWMg? •i t riV '*'• Er * -"" *" 5J t»­ imm .^Wyr'yartKWaf taasenserMr^gir IsTZ&l x 5 SfS#1®- TrnMHaOcmhlr 1 U'-M-UmtOurW MOW ITeuH '* IttwUvprr^mdeUUm li-^j * iM "L f ! x.sses* ^ :M.. Iff! **• _» By GEORGE F. WILL s f-french fries, have been slulc-:StreetMcDonaId's would not though they on honey-dew had agreeable neighborhood, and ' (c)J^.TlieWaihiagtflOP*t ed down Ameriean gullets by thave-a parking lot, thestreets fed and drunk the milk ofv the 86th Street cadre will not^.r "' v'fCSnmpaay Misslsslppis' of cola If 15 -.around it would become park-' Paradise. • .• "I?, relaxonthe watchtowersuntil 1*$W Yi)RK,-, Ttfo'sjr billion Big Macs (you know: ing lots, while double-parked. j;, McDonald's,' my boys love McDonald's"retreats forever." shimmering golden angles 'at;' 'twoallbeefp^ttiesspecial-vv .daddies dashed in for food. •you. so I do, too,. But I would. I salute.-them for resisting .•>'> McDontUd'shamburgeren^ sauceleltucecheesepickjeafei; : *. .Still, to nonNew Yorkersthe'; battle, like a tigress for her. that hyrda4eaded monsters -_ poriaare, like the Pyramid^ onlOnsonasesameseedbun)Ip| •86th Street rebellion seems ' young, to prevent you from . Change.andforreminding usV' . nottfbiodegnlaMe.: Simieday-were laid end-to-end"the/ strange. New porkers have descending@$jon my of something important. ' ardietdogistefnimaiiasceiH would extend 946,969.6uniles learned-to live with soot fall­:neigW»Aood;f|pi>^ Politieans-who. a decade Chad will unearth — four beef patty bridges to ing, around their ears, '" The 86th Street'folks', riien ago. were ,hot to legislate' a|:;V 1-511thousands ofthosefarcbes the modn. ,, * J \v' : muggers:breathingdown their of chilli steel a^,^o)nen of "Great; 'Sdcietyv'V today : ; from rubble of ourdvillzation the 86thStreet people know necksand trash rising around' pioneer fortitude; raving rais­chatter more modestly but no> "5? f and will Identify them, ds. that if McDoqdald's arrives. their.ankles. Rushing to the ed sucha splendidnickusthat more plausibly about fragments of democratic Big Mac wrappers, french baj-ricades' to v :stop McDonald's-has agreed at programs for providing, from i!; shrines. fries-envelopes and cola ten-' McDonald'sseems likestrain­least to a 9frday moratorium Washington, "a livable urban r}i Weare not justwhat weeat tainers will lie end-to-end ing ata gnat whileswallowing dunng which they will try« to environment:" But the way to IP ^We alsoare theway*e eat.--' along neighboring streets as camels. sell the corner lot where the stop the urban rot is With bite- fast enough to keep a billion, far fromMcDonald';asa slob : -But Bob Cochnar, one of 8th shop was to'be; But eternal -size rebellions, like the one on f.dijllar antadd indostry babbl-can walk while"punching and Streetsstormy petrels,makesr. vigilance is the price of an 86th Street. • -­f iiig.' McDonald's is-the Tour! slurping, ' , a shrewd observation about- d'Argentoffastfood,and fast AQd the 86th' Street people non New Yorkers: . food is democracy applied to ^kndw that in Fun City, i''...McDonald's.Corp.,« guest viewpoint the most democratic orgtt&; wherever large numbers of located in Oak Brook, Hl., and -~' f«r r the stomach., 4 0: people gather in public, drug; ; ^executives,-spread over the' ' But some people onManhat-puShers, addict! and petty Chicagosuburbs, can'tbelieve' jtan's West Side are fighting thieves afeaptto gather. -people who dwdlin-NewYork ' Write id;' check McDonald's plan to.open. a. ••• Furthermore, McDonald's City, -or any metropolitan,shop at the corner of 86th : caters to. democracy's center, actually .can live in a By KEN McHAM Grants, financial aid falls far below creates two grant programs, the Tex­ministered by each institution, init itu Street and Amsterdam: carriage trade—the station neighborhood: -After all, .we financial need. Acconling to a study as Assistance Grants (TAG) and the would be restricted for use ojp-;'Avenue. They believe it will wagon set.'Thereiis a kind of live in high-nse buildings. We RICHARD HAMNER by the Southern Regional Education Texas Public Educational Grants students only on the basis of financw!/­shatter the fragile residential; American male^whd likes, to don't have backyards. There (Editor's note: McHam is an assis­Boat-d. the. shortfall between (TPEG). The TAG program would need. Some schools now useacademtei ^nature of the area. * •'*\ . feed cheesebnrgersto~thelit-are entirely-too few trees.:; tant toRep.Sen&t^Tliampsoo,and available aid and total need Was $93 provide grants for students attending criteria that prevent needy staden^'f-v. m McDonald's has sold IS? tle lady, the twins, Aunt Min What sort of neighborhood . Hamner U an Mdstut to Rep. Gon-million, for the 1972-73 school year. public, private and proprietary from getting these grants. > billion hamburgers'. which, and ^the qnnid, all.packed^ could ibis possibly be?" ;zalo J Adding two..years:'of inflation and (Elkiiis Institute, etc.) institutions of The Student Financial Assistance' if together withrEverests of „ ihtptfiecjft. Becaus^theteths'^Codinar's nel^bOThood^^^'t'^:^iM®:5^'lttiK^fciii&sseveralseveral; irionthsbf.recessionmoiiths of Precession :has higher education. It would be ad­Act is very similar to a broad-tiasM^ si ministered by the Coordinating Board grant program recommended In . with students applying through their January, by the Coordinating t|taartL}< ­ DOONES8URV school for the grant. ' -Both the Coordinating Board" and '' i&i ^lum^mjind a decent,place .Committee on, State Schblarsiito( ' , „ tMs session for students. Reps. Hiompson, Sutton and Coody iw • lif^whidi to. raisechildren.'' The TPEG program would be . Programs have recommeiuied' that' ^ The bill,'known as theStudent Finanr served on'the interim Committee on •mmnsMBtmr : .A McDonald's serving 2,000 available: to stndents in public " funding for' the Texas Assistance' ^ s/mMtumm cial ASsistance Act,of l975, is HB 688 State Scholarship Programs, Which "ipeople.in.a day, open until U colleges )only: It is simply an altera­grants be $10,million in 1976 and |ji5'^ wr> sponsored by Reps. Senfronia Thomp-studied Texas financial aid programs »p.m , will push the tion of J an existing, grant program, million on 1977... . w&M&Nseurt ' son, G. J. Sutton;and Bill Coody and in 1974. The committee concluded 1) vmnernvmcFA' •r. neighborhood.into slumdom. ' that the amount of aid affectionately known as "the.two-bit As the economic piinch On stodent^, -1 co-sponsored by Gonzalo Barrientos. was inade­ mw.aasmjacnM\ C-:I will not malign quate; 2) that the type of aid'was in­scholarships." Its name comes from gets harder, the necessity' of HB 688­\ .-.McDonald's. The two Will Although the cost, of public higher adequate, particularly because of bothitsfunding source 25 centsout of becomes more obvious. The hearing'' 7­ .-. education for Texans is among the each hourly tuition'charge for resi­ boys, -13 months and 33 overreliance on than on the Student Financial Assistance^ loans rather •months; know no greater; .nation's Iowest, the percentage of dent students — and' its inadequacy Act will be at 7:30 p:ni: Tuesday, W» 1 grants; and 3) that stage grant : .pleasure than rubbing Texans: below -the ^poverty level is .— 'itvprovides pitifully little money Room 346 of the Capitol.-A letter ^i|5j.,J| among thP nation's JiigK^ Tl^ Py5areinadequate, indeed vir­ -.McDonald's flllet-«-fish "with and is administered in a way that call to your , hometown; legislate!^" . result isthat, inspite oftnahyfederal tually.nonexistentr' ­ melted cheese:; and>: tartdr »makes:(t ineligible for supplementa-(the TravisCounty delegation-is sauce into each other's hair.-grant, loan and-woric-stpdy programs . The committee drafted the Student tion by" available federal matching portive). and attendance at the hear-;' 7.^ , On Saturday they descend, . and the.state.'.flinson-Razelwood Financial Asdstance Act as the ma-funds. The TPEG would, retain the' ing would help make a long overdti^v'-| ravenous, on the Bethesda, • Loans and -Tuition Equalization -; jor. rem^y.for these inadequacies. It same funding base and be ad-program a reality. -v • ' f ^ Md„ McDonald's. Thirty minutes later, having reduced MSHPKUaB/ a booth to Dresden-like rub­ APOcmNEBfsaausH 6OOPMORNN6, we atio 4^||li^c6ntihental Icefir & yogurt wjth| ble, ' they depart, feeling as lHNOrS**TON-m .ouueNtmuaiML jjn eorAamcstBBML " this ad.-, i ^ AmsBMm&m tm Unhnnily Ombudiman EWISH •v -. "* J. I jfefr -If you have bten trMtcd un­ Brockmeyers Carob Milk -99c a quart fairly by q Univaniiy ad- BOOKMOBILE 'M Pi '"K" • ^ ^ fninbhalor or faculty nnflilftr,^ ih» Onhf««hy Ombudsman h. Yard Syn­ aur? c;a>i>j!.: ni.srj 17 mSSL" ->V ia EwthquduN fmrA and ­ cwonired^1 ^' 19 nSSaiici SOOanMWI . f lack.muscles 34^SSg?,i,6t0 *21 WMwrad 22 t/i' S3 GfMkMtar i1"4 SUSS. • 7 5527 3f H«»n»wg^; g4s nt IS-uiui •hbe^y^ltolciw, >c" 27 TripewUght 36 eyprlnoMIWiassiykK* ­37 Vattsg* Rural ^ Principal!- ©® 3^ RAIN OR ^HIN£ aiJpg>bw.> :•.%«?<{6O0BWl|lQn. 33 CkUHk* .bW«."-' Hn.j.Ill,.j 11 «v WIQUWW1*^ * aa«lndof 43HN«Md^.4 4??SSfonv ^'^^47­ ^48 OuUna-^ 80 CIMMng;:': StSScat -^ r 03 DIoMd v Raisedposchon of-tee* s+retches back of IKrtr.by-Unltfi rssssnz |egvwhen standing and a^-Hie beginning of e-hnd PublicLecture First wave makes -flow heel action—special material absorbs shock V gives 'added relief of Pros/ $hockand projects £?*terrftM forward propulsion S *1 j ^"j Center Social Cha hihation| Central high wave . * crests gait determining -j , J Wtfj# JL' •forward Motion also allows ; , "teg-ffelt Whwi standing ' ' I^,5 -mi . Pm % • Brown a fli, ' USt 1 i'V^N 1. W s -f/Syvtf SHOES yj&'fgWaifiii 'MA, ^5^V— t>A&* 7 fAf> mtf't & \\v •-* , sew KS rV£>->••** *sa» fw6hwyo'hn€6i^^fwrnsji^056?y/ictory §f" , . ^ t>n W f>f «£& ,• -' -"BUT TYRONE also hurt an ankle tmd• long with" new^j? Johnson^ beating SMU . center Rustyftrf^missed five weekSi'i'Youijust don't mis^M people, it's been hud to get any coK'^ Bourquem. offensively, came off: the ••: thatmuch'and come back and rejoin:thedff sistency."--, ' bench latein the first halfSaturday night team. Tyrone has been.making sieadyl;;-:* -^"IT FEELS good, butIdidn't think it ^ and, along with guard Tommy Delatour,-progress. He had two real fine practices^ -wasn't anything we'couldn't have done,".;# A sparked Texas to probably its finest half this week and that's why he played." .SSg. 'Black said. Vlf any -team plays harder game of the year, a 70-62 comeback vie?, The two teams played evenly and slopSj^-than we do; they beat us' — .that's, the r j J£ tory over the Mustangs Saturday in < pily the first half. but withl4:34 remajn-j;^. kind of:team we are. We're young"and:1<•$ Gregory Gymv 'ing, SMU' freshman forward, Joe;.-J: have -to' admit not all'that=artistic • at „ JOHNSON. WHO was the 11th player Swedlund made a foul shot to give the'ivs times. We have to.work harder to make ^ ' ti-' j used in the first half by Black, had Mustangs a 14^13 lead, one they helduntil,•i-, the-ball go-hhV S-Vt, *lattempted'only ;One field goal in SWC'',i -18:59-of the^secpnd half, But^^for^Tyrone Johnscn^stayingon thfc,' .is;'play/before' Saturday but hit five of sJkc1^ Hk^Texasmade only 14 of-36 (38.9 percent) Texas teahi has m^anV hard work of ^a'> >"8 against the Mustangs. ' t,i afield goals the first half, but with • T«kan:Stofl different type. • l; "ican onlyspeak for myself," Johnson ' 'Delatour hitting seven of eight. Tyrone , "I've thought about quittingand givingJ' 'PrewiH; 1 said. "It's been real rough> for m6. -I Johnson three , of four, Dan .Krueger up a lot of,times," he said. "Italked to & knew 1could play, andIjust had to keep ifWo of three and Tommy vWeilert,, •t v half:Texas got a little mojee aggressive my -jj unior:college coach (Floyd: e £* working. It'hasn't been a physical > *"two of two, the Longhorns 'Shot-60 per-.u and played better .defense.,,We rushed, Wagstaff), andhe said ifIlose, just be a^f' £ tproblem, but a mental one" ' ' ' cent the second half. outscoring the our shots, too 1 ) man about it andremember I'm getting Black's,unexpected move came after ^Mustangs 41-29.; 1 ' Tyrone Johnson didn't ".surprise me.. a free education;^ r Jobnson started early in the season, suf-^SV'THE.FIRST,half we moved the ball, We knew he could shoOt the ball. We. j -1.1. . j j...»if ^ ^..„n j r^_ _a.~I'.w-»ciUflt knew he could score in deep." c. , 1 _ 1 Statistics ^ ;;i But with' both Johns^-playihg^imff^O^ ; derneath;.Texas played without outside;-^!-'v threats.Bruce.Baker -and Mike urphyV& ,3 7 1 2 4 5 1, ''That i^as not our offense, but with' Sw«Bvod W 0 Bourquein v..l • -15 ".SMU in a man-for-man'we could afford' Saoehom . . , S 13 £; to piety, without'our;shooting forwards," Jaccar., ATnotd ^ • 7 Black said. "Against1 a-2one, we stiU- Lodwkk.. „ have to have one of them in the game.'* Robinson . Galindo... •r-BOURQUEIN AND freshman forward TOTAIS ^Jeff Swanson, who lielped the Mustangs ­ ; ,»o.:-"n. •.» Si,?destrt^r Texas' comedy fictearlierin the . iohnson.E.13; 0 -'.t;,­ w ^season in Dallas, fouledvut in thesecond-c-Baker 0-. -Parson —3 .5, -3 ;3­.Delatour-,ML 13 half and the LonghorflStook advantageot" ' " it.equalling SMU's 45^ reboundsr '' Knieger. -9 -5 • Murphy ....iiivl2..-0. 0 :^vJWith the score 43-43, JCrUeger made i McClaltan 2 0 0 "two foul shots, and Weileit hit-a laytipat;-' - WeiNrrt .^^2• 2 2 -.4 12:43 to give Texasa 47^43leaditheld unVc-Goodnef ..1;^/!" 5 ; 0 ' 0 ^SSnl'Slull HwKj by l r.Bauerschlag '..'.,.,^.0''-1 ,v.0;'t0 til 4:34 remained. But with Parson,^­ Johnson.T.:»....v.,.;'.V>i^.5 -4 i• 4 .^Olelatour.-^Tyrone Jrimsod^JKrueeerand^ :Jf «l W « SMU, Texas players fight for rebound.^ CollegeBasketballRoundup By The Assodkted Press " . Vijt In .at Sunday; afternoon: game; No. 3 ' tributed'16 pbints and grabbed 14 the difference," said Tatesl/X^te, ei%i-. ?sPowerhouses-UCtA'.-and Nort%"i .Maryland" beat Diiques^e;103-6l':' 4T/. Candida ^tate-suffered shoeing losses: UCLA.JM, stilllea^WfodficBijhl j. . Jt-wasIndiana's first victory atPurtu^^^lR'OJher^tipsets among -the < ftq> !l0.9Saturday,4but top-fanked -Indianar su&.}. with a 9-2mark. TheHiisU&,^.iii in12" years, but it was-tougb.: No more^^^wvenih-radced Kentucky, down'ed^.fifth- J rebounds. son's coach. ^ $ Jfered what could be the biggest loss of! fpmmi nblV snf 1ft*7 hvm^l^imnOMf fKan etv nninfe ton tafthrt -; Ql-'m nnd ^'The Hoosiers have lost tlipir top^ .^scorer.-Soott May,.for the remainder ot 'lujFrttiinkihg'lhey woidd oxd off, . . . tu;|p^tS4^efore departing, 16th-rankedf Tulsa-104-79; No. 9 Marqiiette got/.by . ^ i'jthe season because of'a broken arm.' ? and th^ didn't," said UCLA' Co»ji'John.. J.Ciferiisoii'pourediit on against viating NJ South Carolina 68^65 and lOth-rated r&ed-i Washmgfon shocked-UCLA's second- Wooden.. '• .:;r;4ciSiate:' --' •/„'.Southern: Califorrtia Stobped 'Washlhgton^l -'".^ranked -Braias. 10341•!^ittie belund "When you're playing a hot club — • —>ir--* * '81-68 t ^ ""V " *" |^^rry Jackson's-27:pia^and Clarence which the Huskies:were x t-au£ '. .Ramsey's 22pointsrlt wasrlheworstloss'& lake more:timer:We <:when Illinois beat them'bjrZTpoints.• ¥: 'said tte.victory was "without question" CLEMSON ROUTfeD fourth-ranSed " the mdst 'satisfying.'of his-career.;He;i; •**'•?£?j,-NjC. State, the defending nationalcham-:; praised Uie work of Larry Pomids; Who® ;'pion. 92-70, after.David Thonqisan, the -' held Bruin, star-Dave Meyers-, to 11 Setfor TuesaayNig Wolfpack's All-AmOTifa, foaled out with, points, 'eight below his averagej while:-'^" '' almost 16 minutes remaining. • & : tosSing m 18 points tumself. ,m; t •••z -^Indiana clinched its thi|^ sJra|^t B^£5-. Senior Steve Green pickedup the slack' 1 Sp^n:lg'^»s,i«S£riiiyig i <10 college basketball. Utieiwitlra.n-82y for the 2M Hoosiers by pounhg in 29 S^exas Tkh,the lastrealchallenge^to^gDarryl-Saulsberry,—whav StaffWMo btpOavid Woo -victory over Purdfte^Bat May, a joints, including the. last three. Kent« -;' Texas AftM's Southwest^ConfereiiceS^^season-ending ipiury last' mmm .. -junior who was avar^ng-19 points, suf-2^ i, a 6-11center who wds a doubtlUl''j; bsskelball lead, ;has a'chance to''deter-^r^ 'A&M hadalausher Sato teTexas' ,Gary Goo'dnelr grdbs a rebound. :-i-\ Tered the arminjurylateinthe firsthaIfc£-& iiiHS­1-' ^, ?;3. n'-' < starter because of muscle spasms, co^ •):'v.mine-itt bwn fate Tuesday night whenif travels to the Aggies' pressure cooker ,r Station againk-Rice.' ~ U1 cflfiseum at College Station.' " A ' ThcAggie'took an l^Vleaajtoi^llifel'a -it Ahip tfip A'ggies^ jKame. coasted to,a jM omen onhheir bome-floor. the two teams will i''jnargin and rollpd to a By JOHNNYfC. be"tied for. ihe league lead at 9-2 with ' ^ ClAff fi Linda Dyorak and Cathy Self each hadlaxpointi/iutf^^misstb^shot. andiftat^vrtiatweweredoiiig WewereQ^ 5 threegames togo.IfAiMwins, thepei^#w^ **'*• JlunO/llg5| Texan Staff Writer&j ;J>, center Frances Seidensticker had four. ^ rv~ " ptU6 ioo annnng It .Was hard to tell what a, player fiwn| mint makers couWt^bablrffi w s :. "The Texas sulKt)tutes .took over, where the;! Edward? women'sJbasketbaU'teamb^ettaU'team tne^it^irucir.ai._m^t^hencsh'^^l9.09vto,g6~in the first half, making'thevscore 22-2, and T left off in the sebndhalf, with fjhnh Toles w>mtng oft -ahf):start stitdiing:the Aggies' name on |"f/Te«» T«dL-_ V- jE^Ward? TOmen's -1st diilaStomshment^39t69";athalftimeinSt;JEd's7'r>' 'the SWC championihip flag since theyjgg ^ ' -----"ig^limitetfthem to,10 baskets for the entire"game. ^i'^thebenchtoIead;flllyTexasscorerswiihlOpbints, pf.a J&sto the""".texaS,woi^ ^t^y^ ^^ttifMHi to get some confidence back, aftdl tendersjeft on the schedule. _ a. i. if \ r'&l'J&J 'Mthe-game)^helped,'.'TexasCoachRodneyPagesaidil'^ Horn to hit in'd^le.figur^;1as 12 Te^ played am­t She either was surprised her team had managed so % "We were lust doing the simple things,weUandfex^ ^ tributed to tfe aroi^-colmian.: . -Ij V{ ;-: Saturday night, the Red;Raiders sur-: ' M -" , l . f c i w o r ny.MintsagafnsTtoe toug&T'exaslJefenseor t ' ' 1'"~ " ~ wvedWelirainalion batfle wIth AAan-? ? r omton „.7i!,^ro t,mty?^awi This s/hiaJscorediso-fewv i^Hng,"Page.sa^r;''Wesix-anid^tiw{ntpeople sas,tbeonly.team to mar A&M's record,^ . unMiMns,,^;, Timday-Arkanm-«l,-.TCU 57;"iT«it^ 62. death. And iPs"lh^'3amg>'thing ^th.it^undiiw:;'':; m4Q conference games, with a 63-55 vie , ., ,, t „ ,,,t . , -— . -r H r Texas outreboundeSthefttlltoppers-4S-S0 and tamed et, mit,from then onjtVaSa field day forthe entire though theHorns shot 52 pet-dent .from thefldd.lhey^'^most of the. defensiveoMsintofastbreakS, usually were 31111 missing many easy layups if v « ^u- _ #^vSt|Il,1^^ng,manyiM^.;layups.«J^re5'^--'%^„4festarted by Vvonpe.Jansen^fl»-TOiily:Honi.Uiat!wiS:held: ---— j who was four for fdui; from theJHeldiahd^Ff ,-v^.We missed some easy,shots because we weten'Hn ^"scoreless' -J-~ *" ' -v ^ ^ T "lArkailsas, one of the hiehestli :7>tt TOAMy-nlce^lArkaniai.'BaVlOf^iiMUPeCrt'f 'S j^ had eightpoints,mostotthem inthe;-J control o^the ball.when yre were close to the'basket,"^&' The only, thing that kept St. Edward's*'close;'in.Uiev,<; peicentage'teams inthenation, was held4 TCUV TckMT>dl»rT«x*t.A&M< ^ iifc-S-5-v ffi^l-half, and were the only starters brpl^jr in the se-y Pagesaid "When^you'removing real fastand then g& -"«!>.» •••« -i— «^ rT?..—. gamewas;the outsdide shooting of .KathleenKelly 10^36.5-jercait^Ja ^enacious.Raidei^r '1^^*.hatt/W withlii^hoptiti{| range and you're-.stilf moving list -^ua» Ark»nias,Baylo(-«t Rftei-Ttxai Kst ydfti led thfe St ';Ed'«;s«>rertf^Witti lOpiSlptsS--f/MBm TftSr- MM •) tCU, (T4»«» »i t««M T«di WfSSiHiTV;, TJrtTtf Irin m fr*^triiaYf •• n • • j • -i . -. ^ vru* . . •i vf&mjr'i * r-1 VTL --t if t •** i ^2 4 By BILL TROTT . , ^ PMcWfig really ^pMcWfig |t,|tr really'g%^gl0t.k(b js^;. ' Texan Staff Writer to shutting out Texas, Kainer never i,desired."' >t -"&• cas Baseball poach Cliff Cli^afwnl' Ideally got irtto trouble/hot aUowing Guslafsbn wouldnWse,Saf ^21-'-'-p. ihe good and the b^dfof^b»l ^rniore than' one runner per. inning,, and degrge chill factorasa^excuse."It was"' horns; in a four-game weekeiid® ^only oneTexasrujineradvancedasfarasj : .the Sanie temperature lor Sam Hoostoii ^ iesjvith Sam Houston State.-The b^st th|rdl)aseI „ as it was for us," he saidL jThey cbdn't | s a double healdee jMj&fp Friday,'aikl •iseem to be bothered-b^tiie'ODld.'' > *-p lPU)RES THREW what probably was .worstswab saved for.last on Saturday^ iiSSATURDAVWASquitea changfe from the.Longhbms-best pitchol game of thel rtlied on;tteqtrongpltching;()f 1 Friday7? double Awin There weren'l any^I season fte.just didn't h^ve pinch help S Wortham towin tibe:firat;^ame ^ihistakjes as JVortham pitched the third Sam Houston scoretfitS^/rst'runin the?: and its hlttuig'in the seebnd to iConsecuUVe^T^xas: -^ and gayer' third inning. Wti&i I^i^)r^dhi reached. . iplete the, s,weep." But Saturday nM. s^Ustafson:his30bih career^urat Texais?^ first onKeithMorelind-SWmgerror^"^" ? •( ;«jther wad quite good eitougtf as Sara and scoredhen Steve Maa^.lined a tri-£'i% ^61Wck Bfadlgr drove InMike -p Hiu8loa .swept the .first SouBleheadet; pie just inside the firstr baseline ^ i .^'Tftas-has lostin two years \S,' t '"I knew be went to,right field withj i^^j i^Ti^tga ® °*J y r^rt-TI Saturday'sopeiier^ lefthanderlda&. erything,'fFTores said, "butIdidh't ^f^1^^mf ?** pitched wellJ&epiqg.ffie Sam ,he could onan his^e curve" Flares ^ the first ^e'°res5-' pilTOiistoh;„hltters of(-batance * yith* a 't helpiratters/when hemisplayeda IS" 6l\5S,s^S® ||lpl|»Ph>gcurve but wa^ yictfmof We. „ nt an inninglater £n(Tthen walkedwith MMelaitf and Mickeyfteidienbachfe weakef4'0titfjg'i Saml d?"Wc b^fiirBt ie-bases loaded:. MlH^tWisiltonnie^Kaine&SwlijMiti.TeXaSi, »itUiwXu'^&. %WlA Doug Duijcan, as the Longhornsknocked;®: GUSTAFSON TObK tuS team to we ,,out Bearkat starter.FVedWarden withoufz­ ''/-V. dresiing xoom between gajnes for what %e?er retiring, a batter " ' " ^it-s+._-a.\ V'VF®*' 'he chDed;a "pep talk" but one Texas ^Moreland addfed t«S (aid KaLner gothit edM; [pla^rteymetr |e'^ongh^nS^iL^,.. losing 7^,%V^ £ i?| frw^r Mi I agairort I ».kV m m if <-til*V) TOMB"* j^iswp* WMM*MMER% I?? •Sew ^jMlatarjl8, 84-29. ,.-,,, , ,^, , . £©'••?4^Brightspt>ts were few as the Horns only won (our ev&its all*"' vs>j» three against^ Auburn and one' against 'Alab£m& ' & , / Agajnst Auburn,Jan)ie BairdwontheW-yard backstroke, J«;ff w8££w ^^Kntmwlrlp 1ho !inflIvAnf ^fniii«M»ltylf -'Jonty Sktrmer :sSml!h;;'T«xas; iu . ^Alabama, '21.IB;-.2. JacK aaba&hoff, ^200 yard Individual tnedtcy — 1. ,.;Alflbema, 2T61 < a\/s •: < lOrim Auburn, 1,97 59, 2 Carter, Tek -200 ard tndfvldua] medley — ^Mikd ' -;. * f •"**>< I 5971, 3 Lewis, Auburn J 00 40 Currtngton .Alabama. 1 55 54 2. Tim f •?> One meter dlyhjg -K. Frti Macheil, carter Texai,1,5«.« U «exas,j264 40; 2 HoDbv Texas, 251 (5 3. • Onrrneter;dl*lng'^vt. Kenny. k«uf- Alblno^Auburn We j? man;•; Alabama/CT.&rJ-.-rGregg,H°oK« AhiMkmk vfcrti ' feg. V fLWO yard twttorliy i«ng$nmaye^v •>« Ah»m« W500 , ' , \Auburn/M;54.301Tyrc.Texai;iV.-.^; JDH^yard bullorliy —Vil.-Scott: 0XaushlWi»(Wi«rn.>l 54»l^MeDi)iiaid Alabama V».58 SreoL I y»rtt'fr«styl&,—Ar~ Scheie' "vjAoore, Alabama. I 54 H ' ••yarttwfre^5ty|fe-^jr~5dha«*^?-iA^oore»^Al8ba^^l:54.U. inyW.™i^BettaAoijui^47^r3r^? siooyafd freestyle ^JaJ#iily;;SWl!!ec •^^uTOfTL-46.78j^Bew.Aoiwrnr47^7i3:',^^00yofdfreeityie. ......... f/jW&rrol, TWwr^rJB*^"" -? •?-* f H&S-Atabame,45.»3fa OlcV WorrettaTaxijtai JT>%aoftydrdlia<^»roke:r-.ni ^ir«ia HwWT t John Prin* ne^Tiexas, 2 0034;^ 200 yard bacfctt£6k«r-1 zzzZy Turner,.Aubi/Wi-WJ^. ""i ^ Alabama 1-57 343 2 Guy Hapstelte, . --S0Q yard"{rpoi*y)e — l j«(f Texa 15922 * < |1 -r — i Jirumwled#, texa»»-4 «IR a Plersom ' 500 yard frefestyie^r-1 tjm Norrlt> , ^ —Texan Staff Photo^by Oaykl Woo ^ • •••'••••• — — ttjeff.Krumwlad«f-:^^.'Jetf Krurr Auburn 4 4317, Hjirback. Auburrv Alabama,-4 40 ^iao° , LeDuc makes winning shot pvt. *" ' W for Tampa & " 'I'AMPAj ^a"(APj Tfie 1dinners; partfe^ahda chanty 'Jacksonville^ then saidhe Was good plug at the banquet bettingja .this^sun^eapital is golf toUijiajgeitt over the thinking of 'about 18" people Saturday night,and,said lie :thaf Hank jSCram has.ihe in-weekerid;v.'?He -. signed for the job — but no names ' hoped the veteran'^coach 'iiS'de v.track. :to.,the head autographs,:shook-hands,and surfaced except Stram's. "would be back-;in'"coaching coaching job for Tampa's new made friends. . very soon." But that's as far '^National Football League A source close to the new major question was as culverhouse would go team team said, "They're Whether Culverhouse . would The seating capacity of the •s:'Stram- while' veiy much iii negotiating That's all thereis 60 for a combination general. Tampa stadium jriU'be ex­ev.dS.ce w tmng^tt keep his 10 at this point They II manager-head coach or split ded from 40,0b0 to 70,000 ellher mouTh shut So is Hugh & together or they up the jobs Stram would be a {, the Ume m Buccaneers ^moiit^ snut ^ ^s Hugn W(in,t „ ^ good candidate either way uJke the field for> the 1976 •won't:l ^'^Culverhouse, the owner,of the -Culverhouse gave Stram a /new team. But every time •; Stram •bica'ttieVthe front-:. season. ; runner aftw.Dob Klostermah, • !they turn around, they give the sportsmad Tampa Bay . 'general manager,of Uie Los ­ . publicanotherliint thatStram Angeles iRams, tersorn»l reasons MUNTZ ^^ ' 4 Culverhouse. a' tax lawyer * and teal estate tycoon from sjSPMts Chibs ^nitual awards 1 —• — --_ • • ;aijbanquetSaturday'fiight.''Mii: >%CARMII .'CulVerhoUse and I talked in JjNew Orelans and we've been *Y "/{'talking here, but that's all r GREAT ^can say" . r s OUTDOOR ^ * & t j| Stram, the only coach Kan-* -t >• -c~ V • • sas City.ever knew;-was fired; '^i'tby the -Chiefs in 197* after Grand Opening ^fthree ^ears'of 10-year con? .tract And here, he made all' at 344 So. Congress & Riverside ^jthe moves of a man working "fIfcrw**? £-tif hard at'getting a job 1 • He attended seVerlnl ^VASQUE One 8-trcsck stereo installed ^' * !Red Wing with 2 speakers, complete f49.9S Share Hie rent t '' / . A can share,™­ AM-FM 8-track stereo 'Wf ^2br-2b • installed for M49.9SW>.^% for • ? * ^ t < S66.2S" * J ^ ^ ^ t •Speed®? , See our AM-FM Cassette Car ^ " Vibram'iug.Sole per monihjg] -Stereo Indash Systems ^ (* FURNISHED All tapes and cassette tapes ALL BILLS " *1.69 or ,2 for'3.00 " y;) $$$&£& MPMBM WING INSTAIL &M%j s j " * ^ ; Accessories A Parts,Avattabl* mi w 4485^2?! Algn® •• •«-. • e»ii 5504 4.T MIIMTZ CartridgeCtiy gg|||a;.Ujfn X Mon-Sat 9-6 , ^ at newlocation -344 So. Cohgress l^^-OnD htock"6f?A^8 4 o Thurt, 9*8:30 " l . iO ^ 1 r ^OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO< PHOTOGRAPHY SPECIALS < 1 % Vj. ^i f" o "T' » "* ;f. riOOOD ONLY DJJRIN6 WEEK OF , FEB.24 -MAR. 1 —-----—— iik>RD«3S:^ M " . *3 ifl^BRQli&jAfir'^ga ' SHOCK KBSORB-A-BA 11x14 Double Weight -©lossy,• Camera Bag I; 50 sht. Box. Gi'acles 1-4 !Regular 17.95 g! Regular 17.1 SALE 13,7 Electronic Fl Meet in 11 of 16 Events year when beplaced second in the NCAA meet. LeDucalso won W i«*anj)tait writer . , e^, the discus to finish as the meet's only double winner . About the only thing the Texas track team was pressed to do WHILE MANY times were comparatively far below career Saturday while easily outpointing North Texas State and.SMU bests because of the weather and the season just beginning, ..Texas .distance runner Jesse Maldonado recorded a personal • which werevmost —• discomforting lo the competitors, skimpily clad in shorts and up," Price said. "It's possibly a muscle rupture " *.~Ql•••;•sleeveless jerseys, t4 ' And Price had this optimistic appraisal of the Longhorns-' ^ • ^TexdSfinished with95pOmtsVtyhiie NTSU had56 andSMU'12. performance: "We re ready to run,' he said smiling ':"y0U CAN'T tell much on a day. like this," Texas Coach Cleburne Price said of the wind-chill factor of ?1degrees and30 Track Summary '<'r\ mph winds ^ -,;• Discus — 1. Dana LeDuc. Texas. 166-North Texas 52-7^ ; , "You can't gel warmr You cftn't stay warm Then you have 0.2. Jim McGoldnck. Texas, 156-10. 3. 100 -1. Marvin Nash Texas 9 5 Phil Hall, North Texas, 141-0. 4, Steven Overton ^pcnce Texas 9 6 3 Kerry • ' the wind to-fight," Price continued. ' j Brown/ North Texas, 36-4. Smith. Texas. 9.6. 4. Vendon Beck-Nprtn^'^' ^ :«'One event where perfofhiances. were severely hampered by Long Jump — I, Paul Bowers. North Texas 9 9 ' ';,09d'V' Texas, 23-65*4. 2, Gralyn Wyatt. Texas. .. -_ : \,vav:.-vj:'.• i the: gusting winds was vthe pole vault, v where' inconsistent -- 880 —1, Rich Prench, North TexaSt^^B'^' • 22-J1,-'jr 3. Terry Davenport. Texas 22­ 1:57.7. 2. Glenn Goss. Texas-1:58-?. performances are the.noipi and the slightest breeze can throw 7+*. 4, John Stack, Texas. 72-7 Peter Knudson. North Texas-l?58-^:;4, 440-Relay — I, Texas (john Lee. Ray­ off a vaulter's timing ",, Parley Burl. SMU. 1:588 mond Clayborn, Overton Spancer. Mar­ , Texas freshman Teddy; Heaton won the event for Bis first vln Nash), 41.3. 2, North Texas 43 9 Pole Vault — 1, Teddy Heaton, Texas,, : collegiate victory with,a vgult of 13-6..Texas co-captaln David High Jump — l. Terry Davenport. 136 2. George Rodriguez. Norlh Texa^-rVt^ : Texas 64. 2/Robert Primcaux. Texas. 6-136. 2. George Rodriguez. North Tn«Sy.^»-:: Shepherd, who vaulted:16-8 outdoor^ last year and 16-0 indoors 4. (only-entries). 1 j-6 (Only two cleared a height). ••A/Lj'-'.'iV'1: • this year, missed on all threeattehipts at 144. On Shepherd's Javelin'— I. John Christopher. SMU. 440 Hurdles -1, Ed Eberhart, North^^jl-p 1870. Z Jimmy Mathews. Texas. 179.5 3. .Idst attempt, it appeared'the wind might have-even blown the Brooks Purnell, Texas. 174-8. (Only en­Texas, 55.j. 3. Greg Gallagher, NorthiU^.f;, Texas. 56.8. 0, Mike Williams; Texas,vi-anA bar off tries). »9.7 4. Ken Maiveauz. North TexastfMty;;:Mile — 1, John Craig. Texas. *20-6 2­ -v"IT'S RIDICULOUS today When there's not much 1.07.3. Ken Buyers, North Texas. 4:?1 7 3 '-1", 220 — i. Overtone spence, Texas/21 competition, you like to at least have a good day vaulting," Spencer Drysdale, SMU. 4-27.d3.4. Mike '!ry \ 2. Marvin Nrfsh. Texas, 21.4. i^KeVri Shepherd said. Newman. Texas. 4:22-8 smith, Texas. 21.a. 4. Gerald Burl/SMI 120 High Hurdles -1, Joe Jubert. 21 7 ; " ' "I wasn'tconcerned so rauchwith the Wind, but with howcold North Texas, 14.5. 2/ Ken Malveaux, •Si Two-Mile — i. Jesse MaldonadtvTex-North Texas, 14.9, 3, Greg Gallagher, ' my hands were getting." as, 9.17 4, 2. Don Jindra. North:Texa fJorth Texas. 15.3. 4, Jimmy Matthews, 9 23.9, 3. Rich Pettigrew. Nor!h*Texas» Texas' domination in the sprints was total, as sophomores Texas, 15.S. 9 28.3. .4. Chuck Mork. North -Texav^if-^A .Marvin Nash, Overton Spence and Kerry Smith swept the 100-490.^ 1, John Lee, Texas, 48.7. 2. 9:37.4. • Gerald Burl, SMU, 49.3, Peter yard dash. Spence, Nash and Smith also finished one-two-three Mile Relay — l. Texas {Rbbe'rtj$u% McDonald, North Texas, 49.4. 4, Billy Primeaux. Craig Brooks, jDarreti: jar­ /in:the 200-yard dash Jackson. Texas, 50.2. ­nagfn, John Lee) 3:21.5. 7, NortK-Texas\'?^' • Shot Put — 1, Oana LcDuc. Texas. 64­ Another notable-achievement, was: junior Dana LeDuc's .., 3:22.8. 3, SMU 3:24.B. . -• • Team'Totf. MnHK-T*V»«ginningshot putof 64?7H13inchesoff his school record setlast' /'.rnnidrick, Texas, 53*1 4. Phil. Hall, ' m. SMU 12 shoe Shop •sale*,. -%S" .'Wemake and SHEEPSKIN i repair boots RUGS. shoes belts ?C00 "any -I£-$750 3. BeautifulColors .r leather •IEA1HERSAIE* Various kinds, colors -7S' p*r ft: Capitol Saddlery -161.4 Lavaca , Austin, Texas ,478-9309; K«ly Mallon. Graduated In '71 Mlth a B.S. In Textiles and Clothing. Doing well — and moving forward — in Car-.. > ­ -'WAV gill's Commodity Marketing Division. H ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET & •; Graduating Seniors and M.BA.'s: Accounting •.Agriculture • Bualnutt • Engineering -Uboral Arts . .. G&M CATERING -DELW00D CENTER®! 1H 35 81 38V4 , Cargill—at the leading edgs. Active jn agriculU^ turel,.industrial, and • consumer 'commodities)^ ••• "1 and products, and in a variety of other related :'-, businesses. You could be there! We need ;top?Jf|FRIED CATFISHS people.for a wide range of positions, careers";--'' that lead, to management..Our policy Is tot#! EVERY MEA! » xPX stimulate.' leadership .potential. To encourageO^.X. 2 OTHER ENTREES personal:creativity. To:recognize and rewaridSSiS® individual achievement. And to promote: frcirSi AtSO -'J Within. -•r r' -, t 4 VEGETABLES A Cargill representative will be lntervlMng?$!§£ 6 SALADS on, campus soon..: Check with the placement itBREADS & DESSERTS office! now for tho dates and location. Look lnto -j' leadershfpl •••-••••••• •••• TOTAL PRICE An Equal Opportunity Employer MJF ilM I Ta -1 O OFF.WITH THI I AO COUPON I J " i a IMEma iiiiii Wslm AVtHt-: & s f&vowt W0A / A l»n * a u iU forafew _ v-V,­ BRINQ THIS COUPON fePT-29 $100 for each month of the school year.It's like a*•$&.-. ¥Xzzaimi $900 annual scholarship. If you qualify, you can • g^. V(ith this coupon,buy ^• Cearnitasamemberofthe Marine Corps'Platoon'S; :i ffiy fllanv larss.or' LeadersClass. . . liMdHimpitnft': nfv . raguIarpriMiand i Youll also beearning aMarine officer!;com "A rning -. nnKradm pteaof' mission through PLC summer training at"^; i» u> iS i« i 1h« MxtiAtaltar. " Quantico,Virginia. ,f\ -, fe ;rsita with squalnumbar ot Ingradwna FREEI • Talk to theManne officer-who visits your OM ooupon parvisit. campus MM,.' .MS--W *» "... I* .SM--M VoU Hm Mwdtt^nS , -v iS. i ••• TheMarinesme Atv.v\'ti'SgJtA JH9 ReMorth»«37-077l 30000ml j. *17-i7S\ ^14018»m*tRood 451-7571 nOOGwdehtiM^.. m-W7 Wleet^ Captain' Doyle' it BEB' Or Ir'i-JiF**'-*-.*•«iefcFt* • Captain Lenta at Teachter Placement J W, February 24, 25, & 26 from 9:00 A® ^>Tt Pi >•? '/frflli-l' » n Vr BK earn match, but fast paced running pasMKfen: Raphael whueetfes TexanStaffWriter ty *51>?£t« -"->• if-.vjhe Texas, tennis team LOS ANGELES. (API — Steady F*t FitaSlmons studiously Nearly seasonvrampa^e ignored the growing pressure, carefully,contracted a last­ , round 70 and scored, his first professional victory by a 411 comfortable four strokes* Sunday in the Glen Campbell-Los Angeles Open Golf Tournament. < -, . ^-Saturday But Central .Texas-was never within ^WThe 24-year-old FitxSimons, *110,101011 a 'six-stroke leadby firing a course-record 64 in SaturdayV third rbtu^l, was doe .under par in his listl8 holes over the demanding 7,028-yard ^Riviera Country Club course and finished with a 275 total;: FitzSimohs,a previouslyobscure performerwho hadn'tmaw: Ito the mid 40s.' j. ^ Manton. «),6-1,.while Tommy Roberts a -#• ,as\ year's No (expenses inJus first two seasons onthe pro tour, birdied his However, flaying conditions and beat Roderteo;Lopez, 63^64; andi^Uh first hole and wasneverreallychallenged by thestrongest fie$, y-Central Texas* it'ebbughtbstop of the year. •> 1 *• ,• \ — the Longhorns| Jack Nicklausand Tom Kitejriade the, biggest runs at tniel record/. x ** 1 ^ 1 d^daw icvviu/ surprise winner.butthey were justtoofarback tocatchup. WfcTexas wasled by,Stewart Keller, sho beating Xalui and Jamal. 6r2,(M;iijtheA' ^effect; butI don't think itisT^tin$0c , Kite took second with a last-round'68 and a 279 total. * r 't'Ubrted slow but came b&'ck to win the , t o p i m a t c h r i ? : K : " o ^ f e A t ^ ' t o ; u s ! * ' ^ &* ' ~Niqklaus had the best round in the mild, sunny day, a six-top singles piatch fcgainst Salmon jsThe Horns easily handed.H-SU yrftE 'rf||Sg^iiM3tu^^^fr(Kmo^^t^c~; V-v. 4 under-par 65, and flushed at 280, five strokes back. JCahn^'W, 6-3, £3. ^eUer>hadJroubles _ Nunez winnlng the No.i singles match; ithedual matchesasmuch aswe aret" £ His publicized duel-with'Johnny BBllet, who's challenging controlling his serve'early in the/ 3s 6-1,6^;'over Blake Allen Keller, eased 'conference play coming up.*' Jackasthegame's leading player.nevermaterialized. Miller,: Dallas'While mtmmm,Smmmmmmmm—. r* ;a three-time ivipner this year, knocked hiipself out of any title contention with a triple-bogey seven on (he second hole,and: PEISHAOLIN •8*KSSSS Skips SessionfS l jfinished with a 74 and a 287 total,< DALLAS (AP) —II S. Open champion Hale Irwin and Tom. Weiskopf tied for fourth at 282. Irwin had a closing 67, Weiskopf 68. , • Whiter the:.-Dallas Cowbdys' first-found draft pick,from • ,>*Tpp> Watson, BiUy.Casper, JimDentaod Jerry Magee were • at 283, Casper shot.69, Dent and Magee 70s, and Watson 71. , Maryland;••••/ missed-sfrookie . Arnold Palmer managed a last-round 69vhis bestscore of the Orientation Workout here .4;tourney,andwas^t290.First-n>undJ^ader.LMTrevinohada74 Cowtown Saturday and.drew-the.ire of 'and a 292 total. t >• 'r{\ Coach Tom Landry and vice' -JohnAUxand«rretOrntth«vol(#yof:(^c!^5tod(ton:?v r„„ president G'ldfandt. • A PitJSimons hada-two-putt birdieon theQTst hole, bogeyed the during their final*, thatch at the'Robtntecfi Cfawlcfc'"v-Both officials blamed ' jthud from a bunker, but got a deuce. /• imports Shorts J$k •lip SPORT, SELF-DEFENCE EUROPE Gymriasts Win Tourney JlOEUNWC & KIM ORbUP RIGHTS S HEALTH CONDITIONING CHARTER FUGHTS * STUDENT—RAIiPASSCS" ^t'The Texas women's gym^. ^lhinMn all-around compete ^ also wi|l compete in the state EURAILPAS^ES • MAPS & MORE "Northernsaioijm^sTYLfci^' 0 "nasties team won the TCU 4ion and^ second in vaulting gymnastics meet In Bellmont e p. and 3Sr.f ' Vitational meet uuFort^ortb : oOther outstanding performers Hall on Mardi 7 and 8. ^ a~§* *' M TAI-CHISTYtE'. Saturday.The meetmsan in-1 for ^telfexas team were Judy *•* h Call 478-3471 termediate level optional • Jacobseny second in floor ex-The Texas wrestling team , CHINESE INSTRUCTORS Competition invoJLying nine^Ifercia^.-t'efiesa "Adams, ffiird finished fifth at'"the Texas .MCMTTIUI^rS|| chools ... , -• -la'floorsexercise, and Leshe Collegiate Wrestling: Cham--3300 GUAOAWK-SIOpW UTOH:,';' 4PM -.9P &WHQNE 453-9988 • 5245 BURNET\RDpJ Texas won the'meet with 'Golden, third in uneven bars, pionships Friday and Satur­ 3.38 points Southwest Texas 4r -Hie ttex£ meet for Texas day in Dallas ' State was second with 68.47f «v«lI*W a^4 30 p.m.' Tuesday Richland -Community land TCU third with 65 35 ^^agdnst^Jhw^stTexasState pollege; which hosted the 15­ Texas' Debbie Hites was r in^lnnAnt Hall 528 .Texas team tournament, won the *Ar+*~ b _ i. _ • ' ._ g ^ ^ championship Texas finished^ i—SOOrtS^CQOSU dS— ***44 points g|: f ,Wjrrf^ t ^ , individually! for the •4^>w VnMi ^ s %4LonBhorn^,:-GraS^°n' Gwyn #0-JbvEmsEUEtrg^ T :**—'v. . ~ ?won the W-pound competi-* iV * 1f '«"? ^ ^ W i ^ tion, SteveBosleyiinlshed'se-Government spending tkat '~*$$f > w 1 w. o« (<«#*<**, ,v U W 19 -,condlrt thel77-pound division,•••,) '42-H .700 v ••—' Kmtuckyjt(19 .M9 2W __j Irjin I-.-f.-i jli. keeps 'on even after if has aseST^|| h ^ M n at 3w shjww,. r » a « j» n and Jota Blaircame in fourth,, York .»ai to n wsftipwi, 11 44 wo j* in the iz&jxmnd division; aZi yo»rtor money ts a moc\(n'~x ipftto. . # 3« Ml 17 < ..-3^. i. 14 4* >114 > CwMOhblM ^ t' aihlraton 4« 1? ,rtl * o^ytrv^^f. 4» 15 « Share the rent /orae driving up the price of everp *. aysSkjfUtt can share ton li ix;ir J» 31 iSO# UiSf i TndtwwS? ..V SI 3$ Jtf-V.Lf thipgifrpmjvmbur^ to houses.1 nnia>.';«iM,i^,JJ4-« Ut»h -ji^Z « » a As*m\ l2b'-2bH as a Only --yMtmptiimvirfllntoW gsm •$66.25 machine scryicecall talceyour' chieaoo ,« W(n» Yocf^ lj*,i«n Dltgo *3 jg.y i ^Anieolay^icyhKkYlMVl m each w1 away?Why doc*p^ S'.to'alltiiese.quesiions— 4^i >,jpsrM ~ do wjf really understand what infli? >!- Mpplfcdefet" has'b^n fc>flin|up'f6r years -.Mion is, and why, this "tecret tt*?^.. p^ditiseojurtax dollars hav^o'tcorpeclosetp ^ jtn/k in, PorHkltin w0*m ^PptforSil^thdsbrvib^and'prt^rdmswe've' Y Many fiKtors,have nwitoltd v JMl«Hlphli lU Mttk tw ' 1 tftvimti iii.XMM* tag; or lliteih demanding. Infact, justtheannual ^ AMERICA i.this'.dollar-dissolving infbuon—the tt^' iNWOlMli'Mt. I>l)0tnl« tot. MIIwMumH. charge on this debtrecently hit acool '-^p fenergy crisis, crop prices, OKes-^ r ^ »MtOI> lt», L«JWrtflM flr ^29 billion.Nevertheless, many politicianssay, , # ^sivp and ill-advised government .regulationjwages tMitninningfJproS* •%, "lelax, UrtcleSamcan simply print the-money_vai rmm -^duai*ityrBut-the-hasic cause orin feelpoortreventhough of debt, and the most inflationary';®! s:fc¥.firse,'tiiat "oatil ditf;th^billforthat washing-by goVernrtient-raeans paid , v?.r ^ r ^ im ADVERTISEMENT sjmmimsaasia^m|?fSotd^^f ve.:earn.-r'is oneqf tbe.moitby.theirown inefifTci^ncy.inustinak^' ' j$Jcftec.mc counters toinflatibn.Many^vdowitKhheirownjT^Utafulness. ^jb|hnee':submitted fat any / of: nine " winner will awarded )S0.the runner-up $30 and: tians within tbe boundariesbfthe third place W v^-?r -. -i is MarchM.-.: ; THE WINNER 6f"'the Joanne Thaman:; if: THE OONTl&TS Uw Unfa lot of people MemorialAward will receive JSO for a poem, i 4niiinL'liK>aR:writing. They "give pfeopte a Thecontest is.open to allstadents, -vl chaixx' to gather their work together and sub-ts^lhe Annie Irvine Writing Prize classification t tnit-If*. Ambrose • Gorton Jr.,professor of is open to aU stndents. The best entry in any 4 rK>^ English and chairman of theGreative Writinggenrewill win 1100. said. All students andeK-studentsareeligible for In the Academy of American Poets Contest, the Brace Tnesche Memorial Poetry Award. 'J|100 willbe awarded forthe best poemor The best poem or grtap of poems will be groupofpoems submitted. Tfis cfassificatioo awarded J50l, ' A isopea to all studentsre&stered at thelUra^ Each mannscript should be titled. The -»V . ~ -y -'anthor''s name shoold not be on it Multiple en­; TheH*mphiIl'.ShortStory Contest is open to .triesjqr the same contestant dtmdd be stapled i 4mdergradDate stndents anly. First prize will together/and submitted as one.manuscripL • i;be |S0 and second prize will be $10. sIA' sealed envelope," attached to each manuscript, should have the-mannscript and 1 The CoOp-Short Story Contest offert?SQ contest title written on the .ontade. Inside the [first priie and pasecond prize tothe bestshort envelope the. author-should' include the sfttory by a graduate stndent manuscript title, name, address, social securi­ TheCo-op CriticalEssayOontest, open to . ty randier and stndeift:ctegaliration v. . undergraduates, has a first prize of |S0 sndse-j -THE CONTEST ends March 18. All sub­ cond prize of $2). Submi tted essays should be missions should be turned into T^rlin Hall 110concerned, withtbe analysis, interpretation or, •;oo or before that date-Winners.willbe an­ . r Evaluation of ooe or moreof an author's worts.|nounced at the end ofMarch. dtaudmnm length of the essays should be.3.008. -"No contestant will heawarded more than one .^roris. . ^ prize m any one contest. iSs® I^ The Georgia B.;LBcas Hoetry Contest-win: A panel of three ** professors: will If# ->.T need for it ' ** "We're in a good position to I? ^ •;figet this built if tlie students iSS— t*... v ^ fv cw york$157 BIKES ^ canbe registered Jithfte^ i irnfawritir PBBWI MMAT; ^ nat*x ^Noonto4P.M.attliebfey^ HABWOOP MMSitMl me I*"" ft mm SP % -J iii# ' if ••• The buildiiig. designed to'Uh dudeabout 70.000squarefeet -would be-built east of-San Jacinto Boulevard. -between Simkins Hall and Texas TWinkle, Twinkle, Utile Tower A time exposure tolcon from Mt„ BonnoD catch** Hi* night tights of the University and •unwinding aroa. A darkened Memorial Stadium is at far left and the Hairy Rantom Center is at right beneath the brightest light. Ms City CouncillKis^>ent^iO,-of appraising ai^negotiating according to. Joe Morahan,000 of a |3 millitAi, land-. purdiase pf .lots .goes op. So city prtqier^r manager.purchase package, ^o .buy far. the city has purchased Eight more parcds of real several downtown -rVlocks three^separate'parck^ of land estate are being survi^d-tyWhich will evaitually .be used -: adjoining the mimicipal.anner ; the city, all flanked by Se­as location for a rmmlc^al . |atSecondandLavaca Streets. cond. I^ivaca, Guadalupe and center. -'The aimex is undergoing San. Antonio Streets.:Most of ' Now city offidals are eye­"remodeling, and the three kits the -lots nnder consideration ing a quarter bkxdc^at the recently purchased are being are occupied by pdrkiqg tots,southw^t comer, of^cobd used either as parking space storage buildings and used car and Guadalupe Street^where for city employes or leased as lots. Purchase of thKe tight an old building^ recently warehouse space. ^ parcels will roughly total awarded a historical medal, is , The city intends to oim more than $2 million. -: : standing "Slightly more than four down­Morahan said the purchase , The building isftot espected town blocksoverkwkingTovin so far has been fairiy close to to be razed l^ the rdty-if the -Lake by,the aid .rf the year. original a^raisals. ^ J land is bought saitf Oeputy City Manager Homer Reed. . -No immediate planS &re un­ Memorial Museum. Its con­der wayforthe^actual struction would necessitate an bnldmg of a muhlcipal'oaiter increase in the mandatory because "no money has been Union fee from the present 18 allocated and there is no ac­ to*18 effective upon building tive planning fdr a nnmicipal canqiletian in 1S77.: Strauss center." Reed said. f-'t ; said. However, the^Slow process. I •Jewish Studnts. s;.-. HAPPYPURIM! s ^•2 -• y join-1 FROM ALL THE CHILDREN AT A.S.L. CONCERT PRODUCTIONS Pari* and the nadmg of thrn'MtgiKm 5 TONIGHT, MONDAY, RBT24 at 740 Ml " BRUCE, LOCKIE. MELODY. BILL ToP+Momtilbr m.Pmim pmtjr •«Abss^m A C^Sic ~S& ROB. LISA. DEBBIE & MIKE c«v at ChabmlHomsm. tampenrr HeaHoiij. 311 E. 31st, Ne. 206, tel. 472-39«j^p CMw&r4{Vta)MI I** AAA A A A A A A A A; 1 iA > .^-•s CATALOGUE SALE ­ jONE'WEEK'OiMlY! ENDS SATURDAY, FEB. 22nd " ' ' P- '" Experience j . •.if. •• RenmsskmceiJBfn^qfi Cfassicaf, Romtmtic,Americana; Ethnic, Contemporary,Electronic —o» 7iqnesucfc-­Records AFtER THE BALL AFESTTVALOFTOJrtPETSS i-ATreasUfyorTVifr^>ftie-C^tufyj^--The NewYofkTmmpel EnsembteggsPopuiarSoog&r » GefaidSchwaredfr.j^ : -i Moms, mezzofsopr.Bolcom, ^no-£-r­H-71301 H.T13QL^ rat disc ,£k~?^7M ust" ft-, ^ Our complete stock of^ Nonesuclr Recordings now sale l i.3 -, ^ *-~~-*r priced for you — ^ i "V-V}VSwf^ v.^bo available — i P Hamza El Din r-d£? m^KoittepWbi~Mr AMTOMOVltrAIJDt " •/ -i .Muskfori flute & Tape IhamwflMW , .A " • "-:­ netohoMBaeehetvionC OMaioabi DeGa«tani.mez20«oprBiw;iGijinn. #7tOJDSfS3sr v \ "V THE SPLENDOR OFi Coneglum musicum olPatis.; Douattecontf H-71091 MORTON SUBOmttCK 8>«arApplMbittMMooa,lor H-71174: . W -^ v r.., , / M M ; Fifty-nine University students have been named asthe Cactus* Outstanding Stndents and Goodfellows for 1975. -The recipients of both awards were chosen by joint tacuHy­stodent committees appointed by the Cactus editor. Outstan­ . ding students wereselected on the basis of their contributions to the University, involvement in campus activities, leadership and scholarship. Goodfellow qualifications included involve­ment in campus activities, leadership and being an all around " "good fellow." ^ .. The 20 Outstanding StudefitS Selected are: Charitv C. Anose. accounting: Terree Allan Bowers. Plan II: Clare Bme. psy­chology: Linda Ann Crooker. government: Dana Bess Davis. : chemical engineering: Gary Engene Ellison, government: Everett L-Fly. architecture: Kim Kelly, drama: Pat Kelly, ac­counting: Linda Isabel Leuchter. law; Barbara Ann Lincfa. history: William Morrison Parrish. Plan H: Charles C. Reeder. accounting: Randall Roberts. accounting-. Dirk Briscoe Robert-1 .son. biology: Jerald Lee Schnoor, environmental health *" engtaieerii^g: Janie Strauss. French: Nancy Louise Vine. Plan II: and Angelica Volterra: Spanish-French-Italian Those chosen to receive the Goodfellows avrard are: Eshel Bar-Adon. Mary Susan Barnes.Jamie Elizabeth Black. Victoria ­L-Blaschke, Talmage Boston. Karrie Lynn Capello. Lyme C Collier. Carol Aim Crabtree. Kim Taylor Dawson. Nevin Anthony Dolcefino. Steve Dunn. Randy Edwards. Paul C. Feinberg, LAF Foster, Sharon Lyme Friedland, Hanxn -K. : Gomez. Juan Gonzalez Jr.. Madeline D. HartweU. Sara Jean ' He^er. Charles Jackson Hooper," CTaig Steven Iscoe. Fnu* Jackson. Richard Nonnan Jefferson. Steryl Ajpn Keily. CTa«] Martin Kerdio. Wilfred M. Krenek Jr.. Esta I*im KranbtA s William Reed Lang III. Nancy KatherineMnny PywHita j»m ~ Powell. Orine S. Robinson. Randolph W. Rountree. RichaRI L. bj^ocer, Melissa Len Stallones. Paul Arthor Stdiler. Robert B. • Turner. John Martin Vernon. Lewise A. Wilson and Sherii Zsllgitt . Both , the Outstanding Students and Goodfellows selected should come by the Cactus office. TSP Building 4.112. by Friday to make a picture appointment ^ -T " } ***. Tta 'i\v >-"2*^7­ r-ro. r ^ ^ p. 1 --^rsviS JAZZGUmRBACH AmMBonichou.guitar,and hisWen-Tempered Threo H-71069 IS: tJ!? ftr i fr-sv-,. LtlKlf PIANO RAGSBY SCOTTJOPLM H-71248 „ v — i .iiflill c ****** 31Q Guadalupe • 478-1674 .5. / l-T: 10-9F-S: 10-10 ^ Monday, February 24, J9751 THE D^fiiCYTSXAN^P*a_» . _ r -. J Discussed by -: «k ^M. w , '% MGBOUS sgss&ms^sr^ SSsiPy's ed«atk)«v»l.resM'rch and pie their, own age doing.;^ :PwAkSob goals «it its TV things." he pointed out, *dC. WMOool children at ingnms ft*-ddUna, in-ding that whenever possible, • . ^ dading J"Sesame Street" and ~ the program uses .children' **•^ ""ft Electric Gompany."., performing the action and m gf of x«riSif ^£*g£^2Er emphasised Dr. pwoiises,"said Usscr'Nas far *?§5 toatM Lesser, Harvard .to ptepare the inner, city , Attention .spans dwindle 181 • c "*«*««<»* •^5S5»:^SSi^g?;i •—«•* m the didactic exercise. Dr. P5«H»8c.d«d not go un-!*,» said..Ani when an f-r°m l:es5?!l5„-SeS_.me «MfcagCSnfraSglEB aduit comeson thesfcnjmfaU­ • --if *;• i.~~"j?wrtof the cnmculumwas cfaild immediately de ftgaafe.iMMii'alraaaat a-• to acquaint the inner city •"that's not for me" and* /; plain itiasophistieated Jwptas with how to pick leaves, researchers i "P 5ues tenns. thtytaww itcta-ay." »nd^«aiL the-, ^^ m-^n,-f; «mi :, ., teacher." 5??--not he added thewigmao . _ •' "* "* Vk"k wanted the program to com* J LESSER is chairman of the "Producers said it was numkate the' ideathateven advisory board a* the tefriMe to teach "psyching with an integrated set con­Children>S 'Television<*4" skills, but that; is. one-v sisting of children and adults,1, thing middle class (eiem«--anr atmosphere* .where: Take That! taiy school) kids realty do everyone was--treated.^with" teMMviRg Bespofcema wB," Lesser said." pointing-ki ndness, warjnth'-and J intna 9«sina % the «*ft the disadvantage to inner courtesy can be achieved.: l?a«CTsUykstitB»eofIta»a •<$& t < v '".This is a pervading quality (K.t Lin ^ said Oat atthanghhe -**® ««a>6BBiwBat3r jMrtMrtea-ian' Vet Benefits Increased#^ .. Hat issne, a subdued version .. Lester'"rfas fco-wtanelrHn Tii r js*Mqr.M. tib ms mkSta^l *am. . program to a maxims of »al^liuil«iMBibti) at taking cues remainson the 1974 of the DistinguishedCoo­ a law JOSper semesterforfid i n it* show, entitled "Taking -tribution for Applications in who agree to ' ^**^XI^*Bt-qf,View'%a;fi?syci»hiCT=A^rt:givwliy' ntws viBi they... WVA spot which enco«iages> the; jte rAmerican ^PsvchidQKical " ~ —utiaQyhow BREAKFAST Vtttfau AiliiwiUitiw in the work.stndy ;school. child to seefrom another per-Sod^^^dtedforl son^ emotional perspective. _ thei^SsojiWst^^ »« s^sjgg Prior to DKmter,-1SN. &r ^ Usser^wd«s^tbe ag^*^^pss^h«oekal ^ the maxfcnmn tbe VA cnald -j*J~ importance of Ungnage skills,research to h^> devek>p a r s-- advance wasSSB peryear for *f » e *• Mmi*rwMam \aey kind of hoiman b.J~ • 108 hoars of aa solving skills aiined par-«Rnif>cance for tdeyisiwi."**iBuffet" Ai theQaveraty, thereare *-* tictdarty at the lower income "gOther ji^jecls L^ser teM presently e^ (nsttas" «p-.sags "moo.' as basic concerts of involved with instate;.the • the.ptegram.;1-rr.sS&«&i$i& IMJftlMJ; cfer this pragiam at the dean ;lni|*i tw »-> hegdihshdwi "Fe^Oaod,"of stadeats office asi at the ckOdrcshsnr to read the word „ _ _ TKCHNKRJES empkged in currently is off the air. 55ms. ngrtieaer Ins nar-PW^waiaghaveMossomed and te&g recMtsUactedttang^, Krjpi-i ^ bom. what Lesser and his the same coocqrts and. at-, 1 tad»HckgfcMM(fea decisions ahbat^tkr associates have leanxd from titndes bat with a'different -watdnng children watob TV. andapfanactu'ltwillbe, r^easedasalSUt^^sciies yatffOl aa jrwMH.iilii tjcotue %'XhiHrenBke towatch peo-at soiQe ' v^«Bas5CDa*lR.Uiniaaw; |oriartgafeMtAtat(B? / laweainannrK­ LS««BB3a»)W»ocSolBe4; faculty Canter, Room 203 m -" •<--0)m% vit'v--\* ** n C " 25* itoMhswhoRinK Dean Ptaul Olum llNISEXHAIRSTYUNG tW-' ON ig? SUPERCUTS & BIO-DRYS BREAKFAST -Oesw O»om served on the Board of Trustees |rtilli^it J ~f!tr 3^ wf/iwiiM(iir«iu«i»rlirojr» SUurrmbfoafmf kt. on cHaimer9 VfntOmmml. Diun^ilxvl wort,thiitxiixtdmoty Bw*d «d3i the­ ;#WM»nrsil»jopal>cro«i the nane nnpv.Pohfatud i " ASS. m, starting at,8.^0 H . To be PubSshed 'nMirsday^ Fabruary 27^ ^(^Eormtutofii^^art^h^ 47t48nAH ilOlt L. A. «Austo -IS" ClaHk-t<(Wr, The Sm hcotloOLpnc tiKtaddcn tok tWoeeri the haowi p^che and de'cnUof the oocak. lar Cavar :• 92%ftirfm fai orl-800-292-5409toHwll ,TOOAYAXD TOMOKKOW. Edbri tr*"'* Me aadnli^sinxmthc rofeofsaenoe •VJH long distance p Ad 4eedfaw lck 24^<^ ^hsocncsfScik*!that I hiiJc«yre»d^«cAlim^ srautt(DfcNrmr tx»Fi*Tinchrmex and Vlwif' ADULTS. KtrWtf Gtxrm.*IJi. Aa iotimxc kK«k at chihfarn >od In '^••••a^iKillwl•: with «ha> amh«nKa'«*•»»<> author ^ r JheSttte Bv of texAs • SS3 JKSATJt*I»*V MMiHTSntUL^NCMttrtevvjkir' jlWMtfc A»wk« »— «fct Wca. IV3»tc»jr>« mm a lJSSSSSS&"g5?^P5?fe*^: Mrtedan^ information iPage lO Monday, February av1935 IHEOAETTBUfr * A* — *> *^< •. Ji?1 I Roclc Idol To Star in XStardust' } , , !- vf By VERNON SOOT arid: roll: idol' •1 rellly don'tmlfi^i allthat. somewhere there's" music THOLLYWObD (UPI) ­ oltTour1ICF%rce Roclc .^He Js a pale, ciirly-haired It shows belief in my mlisic. coming along that J couldn't Will Elvis, the Beatles, Mick. Cockney of 28. He is un-But MacLaine was different. relate to. Music that belongsBZ..MARK DSWALulSiF';'i fr^-their sheer physical effect Jagger/live out their golden educated.. but street smart. He wanted to be more famous l 'to a younger generation.Texma StaH Writer : 'is uncanny. "Nugent finished years in the wealth and His 'mannerVs self-effacing than anyone in the"world. Not "SOME PEOPLE believe TedNugentand1he Amboy a death swoon; falling acclaim enjoyed by Sinatra and hesitaQtlylpolite. with me; I want-to be proud of my rock will disappear now that Dukes, gave Austin's .long-and.Crosby? HOLLYWOOD music. * over backwards as he slamra-flN to hard .times are coming. They suffering heavy, metal.-fans a Will Bob Dylan? Will ,any ;ed out one final chord. • • = :. •phimote "Stardust," "1 write everything. I sing. think kids won't be'able to af­ , s9idtno4)0UFdose of thereal rock Star? J The screamsandtbeatries walks the streets Unnoticed. When.audiences react wildly, ford to buy our recordings;;! thing Friday,, nig^t at Ar­ Jimi. Hfendrix and"Janis may' seem hokey,' but ButinLondonhe isswarmed I appreciate it." can'tagree with that, i'm told madillo:World ^headquarters. Joplin didn't make it. Neither Nugent's willingness -to go to oyer by fans and. dogged-by ESSEXand his parents once . films flourished in the 1930s Nugent forewent most of hi* did Jim MacLaine. extremes —, in volumefspeed .the press,-He has moved three lived m a London; Workhouse. because they offered people iofamous stage ^antics; /he MACLAINE is the fictional OS#- of playing* as well asjiis out-times in the last year to es­His father was a stevedore, release from their misery.'' &"*> didn't breakaglassglobe with hero of a < hew movie, "Star­ r&» .-(ageous-leaps and grimaces cape teen-age girls who brealt •his-mother scrubbed pub ''Well: today rock music is a.note from his guitar,nary,a dust" a sequel to "That'll Be i have a i?tal ,effect-that into his home y floors. NoW a millionaire,' the mass entertainment iteming,arrowwas shot The the Day" (1973). Itagain stars' •makes most:"heavy'*? -rock despite English taxes, David medium for millions, and they emphasis,was on music, and England's No. 1 rock attrac-­ has bought his mother shows seem lame-by' com- ^™ — and will want to hear it to'get .Nugent and band tamed in a . tion,, David"Essex,'who's not . aTOrison; if a band b:going:to *£^^^^r^:1»attk'a.*oiitortable home in away from the harsh fint roaring ^rfmoAnx* ,, at all sure he'll roll in fame saia t^sex; whose real name v Rcop* rnatiira!iv^ • jHay:this kind of,mQsfc,.it realities." "i and; fortune in his sunset is DaWd Cook. "MacLaine is. ,r " >inight as well go' miole hog; Essex has no personal ambitious. He usesdrugs, am) -himself as * years-• ,tTHKCONCERT began win _ ••, +, he meets a terrible ^die-aged among rock and economic problems. He ,was ' But Essex is reasonably ne meets a lernbie ^singers . Presley and : fe. Nugent^tour de;force,' A • prAfter the show.vfNugisit accompanied to Hollywood by certain he will avoid the drug ^Hibernation*', off the • ; i^Woked surprisingly spiy, his j. "My priorities.1 ar^'Beatles.alongwith Jagger, he his manager. Derek Bowman; -SToo^h, Fang^apdClaw" • -Bnal Vdeath" scene withstan-different. But-it's rather co'nsiders elder statesmen of wife. Maureen; daughter scene and tragic death of MacLaine and some of the album; Nugent heldand bent# 'ding: Despite, his quintessen­weird How similar our lives the genre. Verity, 3; and BeyBusch, his high; wailingnotemore thana; tial rock star ouUit j-r skin­real life rock, stars of the re­are to a point. The teen-age • ."'Rock js. moving and chief aide. •< .minute before crashing tight black pants' idth silver cent,past. hysterics in the concert changing,"he!explained. "But "I was 16 yearsold when (be througha chord into the • /piping, headband, snakeskin David Essex•is the scenes are taken from movies I'm not sure it is changing Beatles became stars," David song's fast,« semiclassioal ' hoots — from up close,,wild quintessential British rock of my own concerts. ; /enough. It began with 18-to 20 concluded. "And I hope there ; melody. The Detroit guitarist -.man Nugent looks likes snot-Civ EImm# * -V year-Olds like the Beatles, is a 16-year-old someplace to­got in some nice rapidfinger " nosed kid, perhaps UkeEddie OIX nags TO sponsor rNowalltheorigmalsarem day listening to my music " wortc before-he-and Derrick Haskell with hair^-halfway with some excitipg ide«(s of StHolmes, (beband'soewse-down his back. -, Auditions in Drama Lab ^?."Kd.. like to 'think -that his own." ' cond:guitar, came,; center AS HE chomped a nacho. CHEAPEST BEER IN TOWN iiNuieent commen^Snn^hiq The producers for Six, Flags Over'Texas. Six Flags" Over H iiintimimmmtimmiitiHiuiiii iMageandhlta-feW.om-- "'ffxfg}' ­ an^nnnnman approachedm andtoklthe piece for Nug«it sgutter. His teresting style.•j • ? all with his closing number, use ot teedback and extended Friday's SetV however," his apocalyptical Sixties guitarist the crew had tried ^ notes is often comparable to began to grm^UUle 'long. Classic, "Papa's WiU." Ife , the volume aU the ^ttp«i HOWfirsTWitNugentlsmua Nugent'siailureitrMtoff his"songisaffflisicalborrofstory; ^"Papa's Will.'^^YeaK^' sidd Regular more .-wT«WphoneCo andR.f«il S.rvS„ * f ^nday J ' vNooni"1 Mutic by gultarld/pionTtt Paul .i. 3-4:30 p.m. Saminar:"Expmlmental Dane* fRtt STUDENT and Dane* CrilkUm." INSTANT CASH 8 p.nw Audition* for Solo and Small Croup for old gold highiill Entortahnn. -/ ^ JfAX HELP school rings. r THE SHEIK CLUB, Tuesday Friday/Febraary 28 4-6 p.m. Discuuion with Or. Loren* Rogwi; graduation rings etc. v ,, Proudly Presents 1 '"7-10 p.m. Spado* Tournament. jj&v&ib-' 'I CHARLES LEUTWYLER D 2-4" p-m. 1 ' WcdnMoay . JEWELERS 4-6p.m.Football:HlBhllght»of 1951and I ti.--v—y:r,Ta,i"»tTr>1f^"i ^ Y"" ' 1959. (films) 8:30 p.m. UT Jaiz Entembl*. "ftjl i a •­ i^»« v# i . ,lw . Thunday I VVilVt'CI't'Sf ».T>*«» r—/ mwhUmi c 12 noon. Music by folk guitarist Rob Moor*. Mr 4-6 p.m. Music by slngar^guitaHst Bill; I \\;]fn;bi.'(is mKf«MHUKI HonorafjZAccouniing iraiit Dulns. HP' 8:30 p.m. Guitar music by Kurt van Sicklo f with ! Complete and Michaol Marcouticr. 19MHW1 No sovor charg*. ' selection of -Th« rovMii.iilocafod bthlnd OnaoryGym. &. accessories L6RE56N > r, fcTv c40/ BunKiti iMlDOUEASTBtH MUStC •MONDAY . s^hnuuie miain minn.» muniMiiV INN •">'-> BBlV DANCE CONTEST 10:00 PM • •. • .ftatibW IHETEXASt Homci GoiBked ^ tmSmmmSStJSSSSSSi^i'' ? Steokt andi' nf 9H€lk CLUB TO 5ht, line odFoodStores] c Natural Foods iH! Nwtol Fountain, return about midnight. Cost $7 EEKLY SPECIALS far UTstudont*; faculty, and staff; $7.50 •dtliGood Fsbraury 24 Thru Marcfejtff UP,n Texa* Uni^hl^iFam ;W« rib^acoqit.VSlPA Food Stwps r ?&,Offleo,.Union'South' Room -^ " *\ "U j? -^^^....•^'Wdw^ani^oifage^ . *-m I Pr*vj*w Exhibit; Stufoni gFresh'Teitaf^t1? Art Auction. A preview of works to be:^~«itSthe ^ xl S*1' UT art^tudent auctioni thl« ipVinfiJ; Thrglhi Large m VW'-VrJ-; I r ' foy^'r Undeigradoate library. Rnt Th« |^rt* CommiHeifcSV lc~ c-c iil m v.* IS' aiif Iventi Coinmtttee; v f noon. SandwichS^hilnBr;>*The Block Cau^l^' Young.But Exporiencid." State Reprwntotive Cnalg -,1'Uv >4 will diieuts of the caucu* dting »5t 28MM r2.i si thit. teuion of the Ugislature Texas Union S|l| 4? vi . * '-fw ^xovm )10. Ideas and Issues Committee s 49y!&,: Vi Off List Prke\ \ ^J3W;30 'p.m; KfhformalV ^mn4ttW'.\. "1 -'i7^ ^ % '!/«.C«IloBag il< 8 p.m. -12 mfdiniaBt*!AudiHonsvforSolo andSnwitll k4 Sffi ' COME BY AND SEE SAMPLE PRINTS] Group Entertainers. Persons WHO have not fridnod ufr< . {SHOWING WHAT THIS LENS CAN _ tor -a spot will not be allowed to .perform, texa*S . *>­ ,fcfaS ^ |-.Taveirii Mhisical Evepts Committee. ^ o ^ '"V"" DO.^QtHER MODELS ALSO.REDUCE Good §*&*£. jV*'*.? W.'a" Ti^lH®4M*h#r:.Kin'9,^r.sOfcnte'rfor Social Change will! rmSf£ te^A.M.% *•» "<«• ^ Cchsponsored by^ lw«» dnd lssues, Afro-America CuHuM Committee^ ~s 33%* %£-C 1 mi " ­ War Film Explores True Vietnam .......v^.....,, ...... .. F< ~ •-•-?• •••• •• ,-, • --i • ,',s:£KSC*M< cs~wr •v -5 They Don't look like Baby Teeth; •?.• "C*y.Grant and Kolhcnlxa Hwibumm pktundin oi *.fa >^1 '• -• — • • • ••• • • ---•*-• • • • -•• ., s->hW* will b» thown in Jwfrt Amfatfaim ot7oad9 ajk Whiwfay. ijnoMiaJ jyY:^ JgtwmoTaxcau Th« 1938 fgmkdktKHdt^lhrwcaidlfaittVraadl^iaiUJ>ali« Today atPrMridloTlvMitres RIVERSIDE W nipw THE GREAT GATSBY ustm Hoffman, Lefi/iv rt CJ. ., c. ... r. ,T.h».r" 2hLT~Z12^J222 tirwrrtwi wa ll* • r3EaS2S?Sw2^ to Ttl.WyrTT^jTi.-'' 5*^^2^52*1^ -v.*" ri*-iyiuui«.'> UtMTitmI>>>Ti^'^v>1T> Ellsljtrt*Uk•*»• Ajpwita* 1 " tetNHMKta jbetitepdWtsan!aerar tan. ' -. *•«*«#t.*•Vk«* smkhs«s tssmaie *iw.-Pierce atso teaches of Rntgerc Unenit}. . jS^, sags W*«*«tatC*a5tfaaiMe «**»» at the New School Mhe yt Mw CUFFOtD i£TKOsGE§T BI> withpofefced rifles, etastaste (he other hand. with revived j^5l5L52!255**6 ***« ***«•-»i*h st.dent anti-war Wk rf--WT ,HH*!•••[ -I Raiw*r --*w»a»»er™ewwi*uwis. demms6atiaKSjTAnitaker. Southeast Asa." not to bm»­"SSI" «*••>» «toKQS ****• ***** I*«*K»S AMD' IMXPS^ JcWmistriniantlf«vgMi«-Rrated. * • -^1. rl ..11" ••".. .-••.. Dance CriticgTo Speak dfiTaverlH )Mk*>Ktm simIs aitics. isaFtaBetaKappagmdaate s*»i»ra*»*Tit^T*«WL *iliidaWfc*llBteC*«6 Y«k CSty a«d is a dance «*rge«c yo«*~»WM5 in v FWwetty «ifcto Che la OAhat C>Bt., alfers avdStor .for the Nen Vetk Amerjcaa "dance criticism. SUteJD»pdl«ilteArtS.te.Pi«ce is especial!, • s '— • "• -.r; ••.,;••• ^ V,: .--;:-Ti;;-s.v •.''•'•.•-'*:-i£&>*l taWV|e4Rttfafe te'tfae Wft'Of' S Opera Reservations Begin Today . he ajelrtt otthe Rfins 9ms> "The xattwa to a* tiwrt*e »M the , SOeM Wnm«?* O* Or*** Hai«r WAer D«fc« wffl«rec» « •• Stries. •-••-• ? ^•-^•'•.-.••s' tw win- «w»ttiK-••~ ^ vunnert. n©flhcr©//6 BJLB4BURSTVN AMERICANA Theatres! V avUtsarde daace J* New-. . jf?.*S»tL rf X»^n fr—^IMIWW•• w juoericiB ! todayarvfRxnonow mmmwm i l l !' -/ mi -m> St (WTO'AN ISA Soiuhsid SouTfisid THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLS IN THE WORLD! [I. ? !i >r awi3tt,t &?Wi * r^^A'vs t*W. VE-v -f fiSrtr.^cfc TonalBlehd, jfight^h^i^^^ghi^i^M&Si€^ Expertise ByTOMOMJB* Peter Nero's "Summer ot tonal bass line, vhicb com-rJrtiost impressed me was the 'hours to the same crowd thaifcl ,r , -TenaSWI Writer '42." along with"Somethlng pUmeued racier, than drovef', near-perfect fading of Weather Report would bestow"' s4d| "Wdcoroe to wbererer we Really Heavy," by bake' the band. ?••••-«->, :­ • XI-Austin isButthecrowdatthe fhigelhom and electric pianoi Latin style enabled the and the reedy clarity of the provisation and they wasted little time returning foran en­SXjSWl* tbandby right respoad-His : drummer is. rfjythm section to experiment. soprano/More thaii the tonal '^^ed'to^-Qwdc.'Ifan^oe^ io--"ii: core, to .the demands ;of tfcfe LaBarbera, and tie bassist& jiith the basic.pattern bf acr blend, the light phrasing oftrodoctioB withtbeenergy in-Chip Jackson. LaBartoera is. "cent. and.tempo, -Niewoodis the-muslcianS.heightened the crowd. Often I have stood for ""* "spired by Joogv)ui)Iiaril^ definitely 'rock ^influenced, the strongest, soloist in the illusion of a singleinstrument. almost 20 minutes beating my though hefavors thesnare and? band.The'-saxophonist-. Mangione. no longer splits hands,into mealt pies belore a ­ band' would consent' to" one tainsoverthe constant &n-. flautist-percussionist is rank­dotes.as be used to on occa­ aad.composer noying crashand thud of the more song. But the quartet ' ed consistently injazz polls on sion, His upper and lower prodomfsereral; cymbals and bass" dram of disdained*such histrionics and :most:of his Ustmments and registers have strengthened, „a;f tbe Rorfaester Philharmonic many rock rdntmmers. His .he expands his ability year by and his attacks have.lost.any. returned the wanhth of the' »•< other -symphony featnre, "SM«of the Wind-Up year. uncertainty they wice .had. audience. " * ~ "Land of Toy" displayed his solo NIEWOODfavored thealto Even his ;jmprovisational ' The Chuck Mangione vis ap for two talerits. ' •'• flute throughout the first set technique has -matured^' The Quartet has achieved a syn­Gronrays, hot as Mangiooe Jacksoorelaxeslwben be and made-it produce a con­over-all result was >a;quartet thesis of superior jazz and jsagrs, it*s happened before. plays. There wasno tendonin trolled, furrysononty.• He sound which surpass^ eyen commercial appeal, The band"Hill Where the Lord his arms and shoiikler3; oaiy pulled the tenpr\ for the their Austin performance .of? reaches purist and noviceHides,v his most popolar IdsfingeraseaiMdtobework-heavier, more' fiery pieces last year. * . S' . listener alike, without:coov)sitk»(itevengotAM ing. He broshed Uie har­and reserved his flute for ex­'This band interacted'.with sacrificing either musical ex­ air play) was m the rasing monics lightly, rarely stop­tended runs and the high the audience in ^manner, too pertise or popular acceptance. two. years ago'withHenry ping to hoW down'a string, melody of "Sun Shower." . seldom seen at jazx concerts. It was a thoroughly enjoyable Ma«im,s,XoveStory'"aiid residt ^ a beEratifally ,..BUt the horn sound that Mangione played almost thre^, evening. mm m tEridsm Broken Romance . . BylAYJORDEN •jfiliiswasllietype of concertwhidi: dox, I^tagsa Smallwood, Curt' Van* -1 tised 127 iacres of cam|iln'g space,'"' -Venn Staff Writer : usually takes about a year to prepare Si<£le, Bobby Dojde, Starcross, Plum parachutists, arts and crafts, pinballConcert promoters lost (30,000 to for, bnt thepromoters approached me Nelly, Dale Jackson, Too Smpotti,-vtournaments ' and karate ­ \3 VD.m on the "Joshua Ives Festival about three wedes before the concert . Tim Champagne and Dutches, Quinn -demonstrations,Franklin said. -of Love Concert" which had scbednl-and expected; the event -to Cairo HI and 19 other bands c He said he had advised Ciisack ed 40 bands Feb!1«,15 and 16 at the materialise," Franklin said."Two % against the concert after he.asked Phaiptfena Arena, Ritz.Theatre, "Evidently, someone came up with -r. i i-, . ,, ... . -_ setof handbiHswere printedtoadver­advance feesand plane faresfor some J-^rai?o,n boAing at the Ritz Feb. owner;Jim FtsnkHn said Thursday, tise theevent,,tfie first of which didn't j AccordmgJo] RayinbndMenn,T. P bands. .Mike Bloomfield was paid ,^T . . .. spedfy^ itsiocaticHi. -Advertising was wau^J^e.f1tlre week^d at •' ic,J TQxp: (Resident, co-owner of , way poor." OM m advaince plus plane fare. The tu o-4. bands • Rainbow, Sky and EaittPlodnctians According -to leaflets; promoters promoters expected 40,000 toatterid^' riL*™. ^*!ld"1 ha*? ^ Franklin said. i / arranged We had agreed to have the 'K'§ivAa^ii^ikainl^tlKC» David Qisack .and David Ellison of v . final say on his concert, thous and-Sii-'.f cer.FiaiaBin.said Booker T. I-it* Rainbow^Sky'andEarth Productions • I thmk mass rock concerts have ^cancelled out. It was then that he -:wray and tbe Pfefer Roo»n Brothers l^ed MQce BloaAifidd, Sfarc Bepno been cliches since, about .1967, a^^anned the fesUval." Fraiiklin said. bne^playedtoatxiiit.lOOpenoas and thegn^st band, David Laflamme, ' wtei people, heard-about this me C,.Joshua:Ives is the pseudonym for .-^rrbefore-fte concertended.--Alvih Crow, ^jiweed, Mary Mad­ ; many were skeptical. They advel^ 'v^iolfnist David Ellison * • •• , *» -.television ^'-"Tonight* 24 Carlte Y frV-it proudly praunts ' > , • xWi -'^5­ »Th« Hhtty cl^ l Pictures • • 3500 OtmddlMM ^ Tracy Nelson • foment Jt&rs ' ^ Advance ticket $3 at Oat^ Willie's, 'H$: • •: TMovie: ~n* Etevekir"Sterrtne."' i At* rnr : --i" • V.«{WAJT%TOIV.7 % i FvNtNii rfxumo,'cni(r.siivMt Inner Sanctum, Discount Records, & The Ritz *XJir^iadXCarol LyiOty £/ •an,1 431-9151 ^ m ' m. ­ -.W.wfUW nVIO Rnflwy BESTBimiunilUBTII NO COVER CHARGE TON1TE Dustin 51oilman Lennv"™^ a IP 1 Bob Fosse Film live Rock 'The best in RVB rock and Roll by -I-roll 7 nights a week. ­VILLAGE 4 VARSITY Open at-8:00 p.m. SPRINCFIELD MUSK begirts 8:30 oh raosc Happy Hour from 8 to 9. 50*'Tequila iimiii^r#iws5> hsuat--All Nite •MiMm'*3* 914 N. LAMAR '477-3783 • S. 1 hiAKTI Tonight BRINGING UP BABY w» -. ~ DinctBdl>yHaitoMH*wks' ;•» Wmh Katharine Hepburnand CaiyGrant k'j %-'5 "flulnpirfffwdbbyM tkit trifling MHuente in tuch M^fabiced*! it never impinge* on the rethcorid;. it Kiqrttethe Amterkmk.movies'" eh$tk equivalent to\ Relation Comedy ^ HepiurnV:. be^mSty.% 4 Sr , !i£s 0 -.-S-­ r HIDE AND SHRIEK Cidtural Efitertainmcnt ^, •xas Unlori^'""' TONIGHT 1 -ft1 *\ r r in cooperation MhHukonSuibis^n College ^ '•vg1} presontsn' w Earth, Wind and Fire i vt >,4T. BOWLEY, WILSON V#-f< T * \_l «. t >-11/ * " 1 J ~ INMM^ S ebruary27 > WW Munlcip trttf Lovafy and Talent Auditorium mm-jami special bonus to optlonal foe holdefs ! shornUpYourJUhymDd, llniiWnumber of fliiS PK-L^?rrf'S- Willi iiff&itZ&S&IZ •fn • y.r -? Tnon Staff H«t* br Jo* Oodwta, The Chuck Mangione-Quartet performs at the Ritz. -ir. ..fyf. -\ Students'. Attorney Th» >tudmt>' attoimyt, FraiiV'ir Ivy and -Ann Bower; arjt ­ avallabl* by appointmtnl ftom . v-Fi-. t a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday , through Friday In Spoocn ' Building, Room 3. Tolophom 471-7796./ The ttudenH' at-' tomoy* -wiB handle landlord­ . tenant consumer, protection, r employe*' rights, taxdtlon ahd A_ , insurance cases; Criminal 'ann'W .and domestic problems.^ [ M iSOtfCKEEE| Wi [0 SalOOBg Friday, February 28 " TONFLGHT 2 Shows -7 & 10 p.m. ;yA' •­^UCKDANCER'sJ Paramount Theater : CHOICE *$tk~ I ickots: S f.oO. S.k.10, \vaii;».|)io at: Raymond's, (. r C*o-()p, Joske/is Kara Vol iDowninwni. Inner Sanctum O-V-Ti-' Hie C ultural Eniert.iiinim'ii Committee of the Texas Un n presents ih J ONY AWARD WINNER BEST PLAY 1974 V// S 1 ^ * i Thursday, March 6 {^m< ^frpresented a&; 3BUntS(^CMmB " " -Guadatooe -« 2707 Hemptel! Par*: APTS. v­.HBSSfii *. —laying. • raHowoA siJBOrtCT owr aw^ Spacious Contemporary;^ F -w » . 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HJOTC.B»Bi«B«iTiLinmm>«. mia^-v•iS£?V :''vasigsaiT.^;­ #1*-MOVE IN TODAY ' BROWNSTONE S. ammOcm,-«»«tti» Vlwlwrtn i :'. lllll MI III Mill, TKMB, iSpM-. *4 cvtifldtr,cynr^ B^tent GARDEN TrtcfcT. . 9oodMy.«B APARTMENTS; 9OOdtotfr-S«0Brm.CM4'-• Kcnl 2mHancock Or. Igwvjhr 3ZB. ;MC*UP.»?2 CbfvroMOUAITCM­ ifiHoftto^aav* • •WW. WI>m)OOOTV«ltt,Ltapirs.:Ss5SS^^^ SUMMER Btpnoi -' ta^aactepCCMOi; -wp.llft M • BEUymtADSCMi SAtE-ftW Mo*! PMcc Oc Uw i, lU llt '3SL«fc-'m*L •: mjom3m^m.B^Sm!iSaiini.SSm• rS5S5SSSSJ25rtlSsi2t rKm va ftiwi TretLlVlll PfMdy.1%— L'CWCKMHri PHlorr^^lMsW(inrckririL Itakan S per galton. ?Sfcwt 47MSI. Msvkp!4n«simn.«Hoi^ CASH,FOR-.RECORDS.:JM&In. iilSiS lirw»:>na«.>'ACX EFiRdEii^:':#­ .povtr • br^kts« ^urtoiMlkx MOVE IN TODAY"i|i "** WM^;TCM!iWiWRij^ ••P»|M'''»»ac^|:»|o»'««»r--o«»ag-«s;aa. ....... Betkoom I ;-:imer«ip*eur.; •A RKXX nuEB«OOD$Tf9togSmka.£it.; ' mro»a. S«« thiv houlltul WW cnaat gertyeed. &M. «te»C «sarto» ir ^ '»«li enntn'teltarKl figtr nM ROOMMATES 2 BR -$184 wnaoWiA1! wftoMaMnt,F EISDORAD6;--^::^=ffi .•aKttt.Mli «2-5093 45«953 — WW TgtxBwrcinr. ACFM/AM Ililw gf»rtil«» CT-SMumtEausc >i9ainm.w-m7a0^r4L CDvtn tt Cmrt Bwkk. Aik. 1 BEDROOM ^SS^i^^HSEBgc^gBSHSSSiiEB: mf FURYvcry goodcnadntoa.MBi or «Tom Laftc.SSI^ml, Xwst North <*-27tti at !5^§g5Si $135SSlf^ ••• •'_••.••• ' • •" '''NOW'LEASING'^ ~_Cuada1ii|» «! jQUAUTY REBUILT VW tPQjafe ao^W/MOHrW PmS ^ BILLS. Own r-' ~ " —---^ ••• • --1700 f 2 BLOCKS UT" ^* * ®B7 Hemphill Park­ cMhrt.ihH ^nWT"'> f•• fcttffiwjipn Wtst• ^ jmiiw. noofattwittf.awm' ^wy t tMUSTANG /M. It n u Rtott. LflidaL lirar 1 ;-«r. :BR Furn s NUECES TjTT ... -^ksafit i-; |W4MB> fUDla • CRMMMTEHEEDEn IbkKkscao-^ ?•£-­ ^FromSSO/month, ^ r«T-«IRD;ACMUFHiMdfi ^ARK^iy APfS ' ^-ISTBi UMMti niiiQioft car; SUi H: 2BOOWhifis ­ 77H ..-.I, '.i '.' y.yV^" MALE KOOMMATE accdcd." . . 3100 Speedway Upntfctownu; ,8mnnwri. pom-475-0736•• --. 47W0H ALL BILLSPAID . # «W SHUTTLE BUS CORNER ', MUJC TOCAMPUS' Howcs^ForSqte ---vc. s~-t t» •»«> CASA 'm. ^^THEcoawtBnE'r jNO«THpeilT.:31 MIR HOUSE LWtY«n». Oan«« -" _ r" M •lilt•Lrw'iii SffiiJSS #§r km^mmssjss^Bsm^mm^smms^siss^ 5/ FELICE—-~*­ m& ^tSSSfT, —... . RESP0*SLBLEMOU5E«URTEL»K«^ jgyr£-'»to.*»oWKatnfctaUcfgit»» -MWiiI»III« ThtilCwBt-O— tUDunt'­ L05^ilv*..t.g|g»»Opti W& •teoorf., OmU '*HBcM.\rarA g>rtoOMjninjDCtor«e^ s> CLOSE TO CAMPUS l^itteavny Wooded i&tgg snsLXWrr CbNTEMPORARYv- "*T m'ana 7'rtfrM.ttnOMtnuraew mni5iiiBtL»»,*iortC*itimm WANTEP»KI^]- iS5*!S6 •" ••n«"aini11 mi« rtiiiiiiiiimnur «gt»y Vc^f­ 442-6668 r«r 5 -'.-2S2L-, •V'-K^i-^SaSiS'c tisms. SERVICES tS.EnF.eaglW. usSK AUSTIN GINNY'S US ptas M ,_^.v-— ia wwiv -• - *^ ^ "v™ na».s»»dy.g»jf».:-.-.-.. •-• b valuable VIP )PYING - iiattfy.Tt% ininYiriliri'fTi'T k-1-l5S£1S..oSSiSS?!, SERVICE' *»ASSAfc^ I— apartments V iTt»CpQ«nCo^offic»4«Wia;ho>m4g* y^-y-c n«.+-^ ^ PARAGON, i;? 33rdandSpeeitaay 'INC. • 1TTTTEXTRACASH?IUPc—llooj ^IJBERA^ ^EMAIJE. M^taoMg _ .. ...... .MWTI iKxmn.'iow.iifatia.ni.cMat.; WlMtl Stiareo-for Safe I hr'9S «a lAOTC^._ ^ 472-4171 -BR^Ix I"P tm 1BR smi SS^SlSSM -FEMALES--SMrt'2>Mma? bam.IFiCwTsoCa»».«taJS plw W' Eraa.-IU.MUMI iSSSA •«•»•» t ::: :4TEAC 4n«S rati •» mttntr AtuMsf ^ y >VE IN TOOAY *724175 i.nthi • • S«ug(0c* Mcr.-Mt^pkndK.4SMML3 Wntaut twii^TSS!?Siin ««jS35*m£z£:& flltihwii i f ifc t» • > litmrmfniii ••^•"•ii-iiii,!-' w aoOMMAT^a»i^>o«»i«i^^^^ yS^S^gSS£gSSr rnemr: tfcrrtw>W» Hill twin IMIIL > i • ;;v7', ­_ IIIITHJ mniBii rftii Tiirm MHMr^vaSRvSl^tureliMCr': &Sc­rWDlf tRtaaraUk • v -50% OfF Sre*KCTSij wss «nwei»MBggawiaiIfailtatorl . . -•—-mna.GDHM'tcmn'-AMra. ­ t«ndwW» . &EFF. S115 . '^-v-';•: .':••--•^•.-v-'.-x ':;j-.: --"s':'­ -Reducedfrotn,SI3S,'-~*^£^­ * yro VWlOWICf .01 * OlVNIUI c£SSiS3^£: •<-1-1 •-'APARTMENTS.: ai#; ftBlksWtestdCmpn Sa l^ucSI2nmn»v FURN. DUPLEXES -':.^00for,v5u..-mldr«a9^'Md ^ ^«SsB2£L r (tomctwwtor.CMbor E-Z wdnwilwiwi;CmI>or E«Ztwiwi^.SOUTH1brnktum«dMIflt ic or. !T plSTIKCTtVE~DC$iG«~: 1 ">£_ ^3% ^SSSSS^StSSi: 'ti -,.%UtJm 0m*s£-••••If . CMU* TV.IRHMTM t*M»r dn/canriW. Oftk -W--, Motorcycfe-For Safe r«fWr*iilfllitt|i"»~ * •*»£-* Jd -* P1 >JW V NOW I PUBLIC NOTICES SAN MARCOS » HONDA « Grand-Opening and Give-Away f® Amerlca^SLiUwmer:-lbestseller and re^Nrfor^x&uoti s given«way.,F «K 27H i. ^I2i -•.V. ; sift .... .Fete DISTINCTIVE DESIGN A#vNEW 1 BEDROOMS «•*-^5147 plus E. )F/ES-POF CAMPUS ?ON 2410 LONGVIEW » Frost firee retrij.>SdH* ' •Sh«»(^r MARCOS «3Nb/South IH-35 ; „ . . Monday^ February 24; /197J5 THE DAILY 1BR-$145, 2BR-S180, ^i"-ACI Taitgl Norths * »^.:.gSS^s^S!!5a; UNF. HOUSES ei55£x5[«i , DONALDlij'• >RE'»« P*> *"* *te­ V5W smicxs % te]x&§yi:xes' Program Provides Career Advice £ TyJ^A'MAW&)TH£A $&#**&. Associate# -,U°n contacts the Ex by letter 'Said.v Tttng an aeency Gary "said Increasing unemployment working withstudents through or phone, asks them if he or , The program, s'tartedln tlie *' had a iob th ^ _ Jjob. within lwun three •in'today's job market in-the Organization's helping -«--•< -- she would mind talking to the }^to;lWs, is flexibleiand,notiI .days after talking to someonedipatM thai finding a job, ». < ij_• fifulmar 1u._ dicates that a, ;HandsPrograra,advisesthem ^student^and notifies the stu-^ limited to career planidng; at Helping Hands,", he said, even for a college graduate, . to.Start planning their ciareep dentoftbe reply. It is then up "Jt needs "to be flexible in v Qary, who.is. still working for * canbecome a disheartening...searchesand job hunts asear;-? -to the v student to arrange an -onter to: fill whatever needs-Neal Spelce Associates and , experience" v _ ^ " Iylas possible ' 'V* .• appointment with ;the person; exist on..campus," jihe^ ex­jr. helps-students through Hel]^"*«, Bui-it1'doesn't have to1 lie " "Unfortunately, they corife| Kessler explained plained -\ ­ing Hands, also emphasizes that^ way if a student starts in late "The Exesalways sayyes"-.' Kessler too — graduating emphasized "Help--the purpose is not specifically..-planning .his,career ahead of 'senups whff do not Jiavei^| she added ug'HandSidoes::not t|indwjobs, to provide jobs. -.time instead of waitusg''untii plan," JKeSslerskid '< J , 'K^ssler stresse'd Helping. for the student^lt 4>ftei^ leads "The purpose isto introduce nght before graduation. ;And The principal objective of| Hands can only help students to jobs, althoughnotlts: *2-students to the right people.' ?freshman year isn't trio soon the Helping'Rands^rogram is • who want to know -about primary purpose. a This opens doors that might ... 1 SUSAN KESSLER of the j/to put students with questions specific field THE PROGRAM' helps not otherwise be opened.-Then­*w$about aspecificcareer field ing *" Emphasis, is-on 'providing students by refei^lng theip to : they're on their own to prove ^touch with Texas Exes work--professional advice to the stu-> other' careers-planning themselves," Gary said. ^§!uig in the particular business dent '• facilities on campus,'such as : "One person I talked to ?Record 'tor profession' "Several^tudentsvcome . the Career -Choice Informa­ .works for us as a copywriter. ~mf ' -% J* -v, *"X, Each case ls^handled on'a looking for: job listings. They . tion Center ;and-the various There are four University —UP! TaUphoiot ^one-to-one basis. ~i< -•£•>••: • have not used, the: campus departmental placement of­graduates and one person who . (Spaceship SurgeryThe, Ex-Students'' -Associ£f .placement facihties,'"Kessler fices \)r\ < attended the University work­ • : Students without^^pecific ing at the agency. Neal, *SS'VMdnaPS*r '°^^vikin? for fliah» to Man this .umnw;* "tn 3> career plans can be better another UT graduate, also 5: ^nr«r"?., r I *fa?e Sf Pro^uet'on in the "white room" of the Knnedv$ assisted by the information talks to people through the" 1 Th*°ero»hhonor ' immediate need to jearn job :,:said. ' • \ A or societies and deans' honor > hunting skills and .for othera S^jsf'llStS.-a1 ' y > u r-^ :f . It is like a chain with ttisf >4-. undecided as to a career. , '\ "* "We"are tryiri£ to'^rqtefitl' . _ „ .^,-^University actingasa com-> ;* Lyim Gary, lWl UiUverstty v m0n, bond between'students "• j eadi student's rights and.,at" 7graduate, can testify to the If^thesame,.^me not 4ciy himi and ex-students.IGaieraliy, ;J ;success of the Helping Hands .^opportunities;". D£ Stephar ' 'the student visits tiw ahimnus­ -Program ~ -­ 'J ^ Monti, assistant to the Presi- "on the job" whether in " .. When he decided to look for. ^dent, said Thursday. '— * Austin or in another city. Sii •;-a job in public relations,Gary/ : -5? .ijiie mernorahduttris in the Helping Hands also liel(« who has a bacheldr of jour­ ' draftstages, he said, and "it graduates who already have nalism degree, was referred to jobs to situate in other places. ^ could come out tomorrow or Howard of Chalmers -S in a feW days " ^ The Texas-ex helps them jget ^Capitol National Bank in •.: »-Monti.explauied the-state settled in their new home.and Austin. Chalmers referred ;j, 4-and federal laws regarding • :him to Neal Spelce Of Neal introduces them -to other..: i open records are "quite alumni in the area: . Spelce Associated,j.a. public general", and do not coyer.ail fit relations firm in Austin. ' . But the main idea is to help ~ 4­ .University situatxons^ -CHALMERS just happened . students explore careerfields Therefore, interpretation bjr to know that Spelce.-wasistar-and-establish contactor*"^ ~ the University is necessary; i;faesaid,;^-^;.*v-;jg * K , LOST * FOUND > --v Umiven Energy Research Grant l«EWARO.FOR DENAablack l.coetMjoo. Slielvtnliied.ealtJ , Jp ( arm-8M •• ByTOMTOTON and the Center for; Energy Geopressure, power comes^' ' Hill>aid the conference will as Kos REWARD.-':TgrtolM thell (muttl-' sidence a possible en­ jCotorM brawn)'short liair female cat, vr-wicy Rec§^/oiii , Texas Staff Writear. ' Studies, which conducts and from sand, mud and shale ..mostly generate questions, vironmental hazard..Twrlllghl" After 5.30.AS34K7 The University.; has been coordinates energy research water whichha's be^n trapped:' * not' policy, about geopressure -.l-OSJ .WlRH-Rlmmed.glasses Iri.areen.-• ; Ru^a^ ai^OOO-ton Eitnak^ the largest diesel-drtven granted |1S,000 to be used for : However, Drummond dis­ : jplald caie. Reward. Call «7i-37ta. • • -at the University. by faults. These pressures energy. missed as "mostly a1 ic»breakerinth«;worid,CTui»»»n»QrEng|qnd. it t^fcOST an "informative conference'! . "Geothermal" is a generic may heat the water to as .*«>ch. Cold GlrarJ- and said Prob lem places V.P^JJW'UK'-KWe brownjeajber tend which will examihe-the term referring to energy much as 300 degrees, he ex-Hill Drummond , in like feasibility of developing .: derivedfrom the earth'shelit, plamedr that several questions remain ls®^ya Veterans Eligible a to be answered — extent' of T' ^widred feet of land over geothermal energy, from /said Clif Druitimorid, -Tom Hilljasso^tedirector we rc FOR RENT -coastal sands oft Texas and :associate director of the 1 for operations of the cehter, geowaters, environmental im-?*i^ C u W^ » ' Louisiana. -" . center". :?•; > said geopressure".'energy pact and legal ramifications..:SS^^111!''0 1®'000 rorlnsurarlcePlan MOUS6FOR RENT 505Sherator Av» ­ ;; »'iSM0«er..mimiii;>*l0» damm depotlt - The conference, to be held Dnimiriong explauied that' represents a unique.resource Hill believes that current J^1" ^!0'I11S^)S? i-As-S«toapprecialft Call 475-1701. • : Two-thoUkind^ eight-hundred Uiriversity' stodents, part of J at-the JeimKifls^arged between April 2,1970, and July 31, figures concernedwith The'^straight geyser method sedimentary, whereas economic feasibility. without harm. These aresoftie ....ajs FrOm SlOO. ­ f.-sWQ lewe. no-decotil required.' Sauna, nre\ digible. .Servicemen discharged since Aug. 1 geothermal research'to biing is currently being used at a geysers are volcanic sources;-, • BOTH HILL ' arid. Drum-of the questions we'll address prJyiHses. 6Ke)lent locatlttn. Am-' receive, applicationtforms automatically, but others rrtust them up to date on'new plant north of San-Francisco. he explained. K" . P" parkins Tolel office planning.with. mond mentioned land sub-at the conference " . F3* ' ^m'w^deiljnwrvlcei.CiBlddlafttaff: ,;.vsend for-forms. developments ranghig, from ' The California 'geyser field4o-*mjae Horn, j V_ InfornMtiqn-ai^ appUcations are available from the geological compo^tion of the 5" fS~ * &&& has been modestly productive . •. ..Veteran's -Administration's representatives on campus, in sands to .^inronhientai; and for. two or' three decades, (.-Speech Building ll6, or from the Veterans Administration' legal ramifications of ' although"it only a is TRAVEL r egional office, 1400 N. Valley Mills Dr., Wacp, 76710. geothermal resource^develop-supplementary energy source THE I "tj,. in. —v •». Nonrenewable, five-yearferm coverage isavailable in?S,-ment" • ~ ;< and could not supply a city of % TIT-. . 000 increments upto 120,000. The mimthly premium f(jir max­THE GRANT carhFSrom Austin's size, Drummond > SUAAMER INn imum coverage is$3.40 for veterans ing studied in New Mexico, he ?7eCn?> -° and sPrin9 activities in general. With *f. the College of Engineering, said : 3^500 cjreulatipfi; a color cover and 92% readership ... ROOM & BOARD The Spnng Chicken will really be something to "cluck" 3DOUT! -ptiyt}c»rf^irtiesand«c&nc« to^work j f y~" V. n^Tnakln'fl decisions 47/mon doubles I» md*)Q2/mbnth IP *!• S'y-P UNF. DUPLEXES rt CHOICELOC*TlON,io^erhrlck 4uplW^ 5;rtQrnt; Garage I AC i . ftefrideralor. stove-;carpeted;llJSCau-': iflle. Leaje. deiiiijIl. noi^u. 707W' Graham Place: RlDGunde/at2$v» 4/t \ W ;X|00/:QUIET,fno dog, no w»terb«l. m«M.• ;­ PRETTY DUPLE* "% ^i J?bidr^bfn tluple**ior>ren!:,ln-*.quWf' r * neiQhbdrtwod^Each duptex offmUrou -f^noed.tMckyardt covtr«tf :park|ny;; «t. £. % :it». plui walher,. dryvf ui ^. v-cdmwcffoos;--.'XllcbM^ W « x*\ r i A-f "7 T 4. y<^^JoW'Oti)orTtf ! If V r iUwi i [•jB^^pwwaigood ChKajK>;ticKftty^ii^2t^^.sB ' if ! I ]£>£%ia£ •'f'JVUh FV*11 rt»« •Ao.M/fA.var mm1*.. ..',.5 '. ±;<5 \sf r,jsmejcm%4&k!nmm0)sn& sI ^""W.y^y'WIligletV? '«&s V«v te, Amount Enclosed. chart t^qulcltiy arrii'• %'•> Tq.minimujn)J» V* Mail To; I ^iitJlcaaP »f»TJmniac»?SCiBO«M'ti^' r'S; lily fjexanciassifieds Tim«t / •51 m v.vBOX'0%UT STATION fa* Vp! :• *20 0STINiIEX*S78712 WM, V.40 1.40 ' TW^fWwel'AAlde*. 4*llSl, |3.0ff 10.50 ,21.00 z¥w~M$Wm v3;2Q -•*ut n;20 32,40 € imzii ^.f0, Vl^ '160 ,12.60 25307 frM 1^' 26.60 w§$mm mmsi: ^ H • f? ^ < & A? <1 Wv-' "v-v •Kiss­ p> fte i Is' r ll tf & && Sr o^sS^SS Va5.!! m W Corettq KingH S**r w»WMIfW'-v^Pi««sto-:> Ifel 1^> i*rn.''WWt-^'ii^t Observatory Visitor Center, Planetarium Possible for y& By AMY CHENG Z-„ *|The millkHi-doltar estimate doubt as to whether the United States at night; yon "y^: Texas Staff Writer ;<*overe the. purchase of atK University would be willing, to.iwill seeaneoonnouscoocen-;sliGoretta Scott King; -presi-: and Afro-American Qiltiire"v-J,mitteefoo vlte^ionsibility"and> A -k'N^toconstruct an ra-diUonablanS atthe baseitf Mfi'^r helJ»4'mance tbe project;, ;tration of light at the East, dent of ..the Martin Luther Committees and the Afro--Mobilisation To End.the Vieth 4unated. million-dollar LocVe. the ibuildrng-of-KSA' A second bill* drafted' by -where fnost ofthe rider obser­Kmg Jr. Center for Social A merican Studiesand nam.War. ii):1967 and was.a'^planetarium and visitor." planetariiimVa display area^ .-Raster to-permit county vatories are located.", said -r-Qiange.;,wUl ^)eak at 8 p.m: Research Center, is open ^lo ddc^ate to the Disannament cotter at McDonald Obser-^landscaping arid, a bus roat^ -authonties: to regulate and Evans t i y ^Tuesday in the-tendon ,the public..; r • -Conference n ^.Geneva ,yatory, a University 'leading frtxnthebottom of the-controVihghticg abound a Saying thatbdarksky isim-v Johnson Auditorium. sj • With her husband. King ac-~ astronomy researAcenter.js -. hUl 'up the now precarioos 'McDoc^ Obseryatory also • ' jgWHH petative*for astronomical - tively participated in the Civil Ste^as^iairpersMfoi'the being sponsored by.Rep. vroajf-^to • the .observatory. has , been submitted :to the • research, jpurposes; -Evans- <«H«. lecture,;Sponsored by Coretta Sco^king rights^ movement during the .Committee on ;,^cbnomic James Raster of El.Paso,. ^Jfastersaid. , Legislature. > added Uh(¥ peeringinto awell- >«Thob Union Ideas and Issues 1960*s. She was awarded^ the Justice for Women and Wd's > McDonald Observatory, ap-^ THE PROJECT, which" " Evans, who"earlier Jbis lighted sky in search of a star -hJLJt' ^ vWateler Peace Priae and the also a-del^ate.to''the Whiteproximately.150miles&omEl' would-be funded through month gave evidence in favor is like "'trying-to hear a D4g Hammarskjold Award _ House Conference,on Ctrildren Paso, is oj^ of the top three .rpvenuef sharing, state and of the bill, claims that the ef-whisper m the presences of :a~ for ..her contributions to and Youth. . . observatories in the world,. county funds and-some^'<-ficiency-of-*several, national rock band." , k <• . "peace and freedom" causes. A NOTED LECTURER and 5®~!. ®W I? one of the -University backing, has tbe>;T>observatories has. been im-Evans-said -the .county's: astr . She also.was named Woman :writer,; King also ;-kasr . >on,°?y research support of the University-: paired by the diffusion of ar-authonly to regulate lighting of the Year by. the National appeared asrarcooceit : cMters wrtiicb h^ su«reedrf ,;astronomy departinent,. sail, ' tificial i lightini! arouiid the will not; only help theobser- Association: pf Radio and nameroos times in the l in shooting laser beams tpthe „ Df! David Evans^ professor of research centers. vatory but also will help con­ "Weviaon Announcers in1968. States and abroad: v^.astronomy. . "IF YOU LOOK at a serve energy because "it will •; More than 20 Unhwsity stadents have registered to part-HER HONORS include the . -She,,bias received •, hbnMaiy. , SAYDSG THAT the pranary j^iCalling the project '.'a very'" photograph : showing &n : prevent.lights from diffusing' ticipate in a pilot program-to promote summer jobs in South Distinguished Achievement •degrees from-Boston .Univer-t .reasons for building a visitor' , good ides.". Evans did voice' . astronomer's view of the center, would be "to dis-"i in the sky." sp=», v,;jk ^Texas. ' -• -Award from 'the ' National sity, .'Brandeis;:,-'Univeroity, > The prognuais under-the j«nt sponsorship of.IheOffice of-•Organization of Colored Morehouse CoU^eHMprgan seminate knowledge in . an "" Sti^dent Financial Aid, the Gireer Choice Information Goiter Women's Clubs,-the Women's State •College,<.'N(Mtheasteni educational and-scientific and the Ex-Students' Association. International -League for .University: and; Princeton way." Kaster, who, also is a., Warning Issued to Driver ': The program -is' open to any University student receiving .Peace and: Freedom awaid University. (member of the advisory coun-^i; t financial aid, • Frank JB-Campbell, director^ of parttime job > and and the International King gradioted from An­ cil for the observatory, said '.placement in the financial aid ofGce, said.' Tbe'stiidents must Oversea^ Service Foun-i tioch CollegeinOhioand earn-the,,facility is presently ill­ -also be from the South Texas area ^ dation's Pacim in Terns -ed a degree frc«i ;tlie New For Overcrowded Shuttle equipped to handle the ap- Tbe program is designed'to help studenbs fiiid |obs in-tbeir award. ^ ;England .Conserrdtory ofproximately 100,000 visitors Students have beteaware of every two persons seated:Ao- About the most TEI cando.' hometowm.andtrainttentinsomeusetuljobhunting^teciini-King sponsored -the Com- Jtlusic in 1964. who trek to Mt. Locke annual-. overcrowded shuttle busesfor;«miing to 4e Austin Urban Smitherman said; is to warn' ' ques. Campbellsaid. He added that the program Is xlesigned to^ Iy..» ~ some-tim®. but Austin police Transportation Department, slanders to stay bdiind the condition studentsso theycan get outonthdr own.to find jobs^ sa. 0°** they'veonly; first took note of the situation -Tbsas' bas'no lawforbtdding white line painted on the shut­: r A session held lastTuesday in theAlunfaiCenter wasdirected ­ .set aside, one dayv a* month^ilsst week. -.•.•s.-.-.-biis passengers to stand. ­ tle bus floor. The University • by Or.Robert Murff, coordinator of theCareer ChoiceInforma- X' • . i-rfKS<»}ien the public is.allowed to"; v.An Austin policeman issued^-V The incident Vfas the first lias the^final say. on limiting tion Centen Thesession provided tipsen job interviews;prepar­ '^IeScopev?Kaster' .^warning Thuredaytodtatffe>'invblving"Transportation 'mg a resume apdgauguig tbe job market ^ i>aid, ^adding that^ 'people* bus driver Betsy Bobertscn" Enterprise Inc. buses, Wes ; v "The University has not iin •i/ South Tfexas .was chosen-at rand«irrl)y tbe't£:e6 sponsors~; (dnye atong^i way..tp.come see for an. overcrowded bus^ Smitherman, Austinmanager stracted TEI todo aqythingIt-tiDebprah Hoop,'-an administratived^rk at the financial aid of-: theobserratory, butooce they.-Robertsbn wis following the of TEI, said Friday "We legal," Jim Wilsbn, Umversi-•;• flee. said.She addedthere ateno plans toexpand the program get' here, thefe's Jiot, muchcommon practice of allowing didn't get all cooked up about ty shuttle: bus supervisor, until a complete study 'of its results has been madethey can see aside from the_ .jnders. to stand in the aisle it." he said; adding that TEI said. University officials did Hometown workshops will be sponsored by local'chapters of • exterior of . -a huge dome-.«KWhe0 ail seats are taken.' .suggested a load iimit some not favor, a passenger limit the University's Ex-Stndents' Association dunng spring break.hut it was. vetoed by because ..funds are-not : Roy Vau^an. associate^director of the ExrStudentsV Associa­"officials, rv1": ':'.i' " available;to.? provide enough tion. wUl coordinate the workshops. buses. "It,is not, unreasonable tor fe campus bf tefs some passengerstostand. Hie number^ of standing ~ CMMSTBV WAItaONt : tHettliMBv rtudwl'ji; will meet*at I pji(L Monday 1« Jester passengersisup to tbediscre-. V8iT»«ttctu«na^wiii*port«r^ .evsluetlons, iiivolvement ki shxjcot'^v.. .Center AllfA to present*workshop Prof. M. Frederick. Hawthorn^ ; tion of tbe driv«-," Wilson on :*Reswne Critiquing." . organic -chtmljt. Uni«n^l>y of^J HooHcM*. Unl»iTiity De«lll™! fer " ^ PHOTO SERVICE •ttWiMxraaKcua Will meet at California at u» Anqetet. dUcvu-nomlaatioas'b s tun. Tumtor •' 7 p.m. -Monday in the Graduate : 222 W.19th 5324CAMERON RD. ing -The Historical OeKlopRient o^fnmUB UMON M WIS I IIWMIIII i III School of social Work: Borane OiemnJry" at 3 pjn, jwoo-sum a Preview Eihiblt-Shjdenr 476-4326 -1 453-1958 -ciay in Welch Hall 1WW. v : ^rt Auction Monday through March soc»i*M>«iuvigolso*« COUMK T.-ln lt* Aoaemic Snt?Fo»«r. 1 < m-TIHIWHAlU Study in Is sponsoring a studcnHacMlhrw^ne 11 '< dorinq Hbrary hoors. win hold asemlnarat 4 pjn.Monday ... JOMJPETITIVE PRICES • " —•—-—**~* "r -lTTtrTmr«u«iiifiinun iiimiiih• in -Cackred Hall 1JBI.-Curtts w.--; CkiKtelaJara, Mexico Mard! 4. interested students may,'.?^ will sponsor noon music with Paul dfceutt."BUooa Bomev sign up In the dean's OHice, Cto^^Z Atanys. gultarisHMnist, at noon U!)miolet Spcctramdtr.**. Tte.GUADALAJARA SUMMER NIKKORMft ETN CHROME tMon Oopy OBntar timn grabs a pizza and qraphy Building 2X ^ Monday in the Te*as Taiern. wus wpMQKnmi:«iin»BY .Student Go*, is soliciting "l •nil sponsor a uncNncti seminar, WriteUCUAOMLAJMtKSUHMER IOR ANY NEGATIVE COUNt HtM PROCESSED BY US, INTOi (east of Gregory Gym), JFndv SCHOOU413HewPsjcltology. x!-, nornlnat>9ns by sh*lenti..Forrra are wttTmeet at* p.m. Monday lo Texas 5-^ "The Btack c*ucus — .Youog But {STANOARO JUMBO SIZES (38, 2R, 3StyfgfS -j -'.8-ajn. -5pun. Uaiwily.rt Anisna. Tucson; available at TSP business oHIca.. .«• Union South HATPnparaMans Sor5''1-*? etpeclencW wlH* R^p'Cr«1g Academic Center reference ^eskf-Ci thissprIng-sUTBloodOrtfewOIbe.'.^1-.iWKhlBglon, attflponvMonday IA AHnutsa ' ,-~-I " " COUfONtXpntSJUNf^^ and student QomrenuM) officein ln^g^PiimonM^* X •--"i?' "fJM: Un^on South „ 1 ^ j y< M: m " * ""~l * * 1 " ..«...-vCr^ ** r* -a* i it f.ij f i * j s>* wo>ri» ii?K£? c ­ ' •• 'lllWll'i*>.' ^ t~ -J W^lilT ;iS PresentsltsFirst ^it* fl \ PJ ^ ' v ': &,-> ' 8lfJ VI \* "I ', "^t i 1 ^ ThiNiimber One Selling Speakerin Austin, Plus The NumberOn© SellingSpeakerln Austin, Plus A fcgh Year Warranty. " ^ '*. -W--*< YeariWqrranty.^ LUT %*?m *' 1,7 *• *>><~j v !• ' •S5 \f &V*f ~ a. > -,vf vinyl ' ;:Kis|te™5 SI. 2V Bookshelf Speaker with SSI 4V 3 way Bookshelf Speaker//woofe|l& whizzer cone I withW woofer;.5" mid. & 3 tweeter." *** P. " "v.';^ " t Ugt5WNjy^price^ 29 ea. list 99.95 Now Vi Price $49 EA. Th|*Number OneSellingSpeaker In Austin, Pius A The Number One Selling Speaker In Austin, Plus A f^W3g"anijr1 Ten Year Warranty. ^iKKf n<& lC««V ' ' $ Tiil'tfe-? ;,.. v j *.\ .••)>• «... '• : . **-r^ w$< ^ ^ -r-Vi,~, I?* • ft--* ^ K'* nclosure . enclosure s»i. feti £? -' * f JS^It? wfy^'Bookshelf Speaki® SSI III 2 way Bookshelf Speaker"a'^wo'dffer &> 2%tweeter.-/|f§ with JO" woofer & two^ 3" PI &£$*'&>i!ye4? -t?-?* I* >•* -<•* jfcvjj| /€?• iU tweeters. # .. SAQ ­ iliil • • *34 ». Wst 99.95 NoWVipricr *It EA. TheNuiriber OneSelling Speaker In Austin, Plus A The Number One Selling Speaker In Ausfin, Plus A ^ j--l-Ten Year Warranty. ^ ' ^Cs%n^\ . r®A YearWorranly. tsWv"'$km "fa Wl jr 7" «•% »: IW few ; : -kr^sr" feis wood »* •wood li enclosure * A endosur ;•} /:,,•*--." '.v r.' w-.r* .•• k. •• •< *i *&r * ry'i'b.1 rn/'^v. i-'^l ic •• fly V ^"V S^J /t j/ •* •i.W .J * --1 -J •$»**• Vj'4" Jk-W;l SSI IV 3 way: Bookshelf Speaker SSI V 3 way Bookshelf Speaker ifS -5>vB fifi Wd^fef, -5" mid. & 3" :%ith ^2// woofer, tvvo 5" mid­i tweeter " ranges St 3" tweeter. List 139.95 Now Vi price EA. List 169.95 Now ^ price EA. Texas Stereo -Ha* the -largest selection of brand 'name stereo, equipment J ,'' /• tn HOURS in Austin. Shop around, 'f* /-f South Store ;10f E. Huntloml Orlvt^ Tu»i-Frl. 12.-00 • 9.-00 1914 E. Riverside we think you'll agree. Nm HlghloiMl JWall Saturday 10KM • trfN) Townlake Shopping Center Also, at the very best Clasad Mondayi 9 "t>i <* 447-8764 prices. P8ARL February 19751 '' « , K{, i >•» «. s v/>ay,\ ^ ' /sVrws/StiVf'• r.: x If V r T v> 3 &j! t*—'™* ­ !4' T I* #• ' fWM ,'' J% r>A -'• «*.«•••»• n1 j f i *< " ** m>* t *»> *-WBfcs. ^T'7w )W',i-^ 1' February 1975 Vol. 3, No. 6 A1 H* ^ fi 't * *?{ f S3£S^f -•,. .-V,is2CV.v^5 "!wi­*S*. •••"••-•• % MS ,-vJ„V. *&»?«« !i ^f'^r.-yi.nrtw:*£! t v. ' 'sap #^a9^ f% Uffl| 3&&&S .**>»•£ '3p?*• * %>.. ••••six%mM-.-%pfe-ili &&&&»$ i«aV3» A immM i# mms ;,;> I vSaiiyiS'. W. M IBM i^skd m 0 -'Jf*>~ .'. < i-^T'^ M . It .... 1N» monthly magazine supplement to The Daily Texan 7 4 ' 4I *>J i/ i"V : *>V'V-^->;v-".^[r.';'.-: iV-.-.-I < ••:j;'.-••-..S?->*'°'iA?^^j. «a*Y.'»*s ':tr^/,'J.yr^.f sGUATEMALAN^ w CONNECTION m 'jpM^»W copy need.f Make your .connectioii^ta! our wifd handloomed shirts, L*« dresses, jackets, and handcrafted jewelry. We've «dt a jariety of i^po^for^veryone. / atTPtE CSDPY SHORN V?' _200 Guadalupe,lower level M YelloJ Brick RU open9te9weekly4„ n§?^si WM Shopping Center Sefi8>.f* ? dZfy Between Highland Mall and Fox Theatre £ U&l0to2 Saturday as& "V • &>Q^»Monday^atU(W:'Tharsday.til-8^ I» k > ^ < HB iMiMJUMUW^IMW MJ yt%i*4F 4#$k W W HX$B^Mf<4 "iN£j "''Wr j m{5 •'Ai '<1\' " V?fvl'. f C*^ -i<',%K The Bug Corner VW Repair f fe" jl> vn <* oirman;"..juropian;;. japanesidB 15% OFF i^ii|ffc^M« 10?o OFF wit. * '-4'",'A.f'£if Si -r -» J 4 > } I ?>n•i'K wtm $N I® ft'/, s?n\wj$ki'i vP%,^ -10% OFF Mr. COMPITITIVI PRICfS IN A FRIIN01Y ATMOMIRI ; D/mount lt*mt iHoludtd , -t sir, ipodoli Good with Coupon Only 474*6481 ,\ f,.Opan fwnday* ....>*.3081Owmlalupa nfi.;?f]f i' ' v * i r' £ * hV11, *# A/ * ' UC*Z£ Auiiln'i/lnm Hotkn roiloumt W tyoit Mrd Autt/n Tokoi 781QS 476-1044 Bm tue barYbl]house "•;• S*looiti 1320a.lamar* feioj^ U,ya En»»rt«lnmfnt Nlghtl* t»«r ^mlxadarlnh vTV '.I fe; vv* »«»' in Pit# tySkfh. I** , 3 J rfi­ii-T «ir*£ fr ? JURE ' f m£ ,w '••' n * ><' /I ^ Lll I ' :10 ' v" % MK v 'Ptlp ,*JL Ji t* J& : f ^mi'U > HISTORY x>s *3 • * ?t-, £'* V^? IN PAPERgACK 17th and Son Antonio ^^'i; •-vv^rr­f-Kt , flJi o'4 fiU'« 1 i*' IS -'if'•* -J* >• r^1$* y . -"-v^ $&• •%*'' t ' •, '.v.V^ ifVie 25, Aloneina room; like a prison cell 'i, Fading tfie light of day # ; ->" LoVe-and;hOpe have faded too InshadoW theydrift away-'v Nothing;to see from my window -rtFST*?' v ., , "* '..>,.V. . &'v ^Lobbyists and Legislators,. But leaves that wither and die Inihisold roSe' banding^ No one to ease a heartache;" No one to care if I sigh; ' STexas granite ,.\ %k,i •'iJTheir big grins pp&l ;PinkWthe aftenwon Even the maple yonder jlGrey inr^the raprninMj ]&#«fo« • J'i w* Gives more to life than I School chiUrenjtfce Totunda But one thing we have in commdn -JWMRBto€ * V --~t Gapeat the SGoId Star aUhetop aftte dome ^ When sweetness is Tost *" -k "tand-jrestiess beneath «***»" " -*^,i"? cStrutting on the House floor > ';v ^ We die, ^ >JJ AtW jhsabefflfeyVwhite teroes«f| hU Lik& birds of paradise " ' "^Hi ^ . alrf: liffj-S^The biggest man in Diboll iGovernors ofTexas gaze down The biggest cock mjftountze. ^ IDENTITY ' ^ ^ ' -V'' '•••,•"" •riv­ the rotunda' £r n ^Outside the chamber ^ f?p ,ltS ^ *:_4 • . •, Identity you must be gone; v. .« Jln.tjhe Chambers.inthe Galleries ic%«--r You can no longer stay ^js^iuiubu the rotunda ^ H You and I are at a parting ; ^ ^ff^Meeting,1greeting/gripping, smiling Though we came a long, long way. ^*|Asif they were not passing by in sequence. ^®omaato^a.j Dearly..I cherished you ^brtogtaphsjmmbrtaliz^-|fsV^ And never thought to see the day V. This Old Rote Building {%5ach-Session's men iri sequence v When you and I as Strangers ^iWalkingito the Capitol in the morning light: ach Session^men pass by Pay the.price. How can one pay! The details of each tree are clear 'Smell the fresh cut grass on a May morning own\wide corridors j~~ w§); . Hear the.voices of past heroes PANSYDOUS riWatch the pomp and ceremony Italian terrazzo floors^-.' <„ KS Fnlly. little Pansy Dolls <: Smell the power m the air. • Uite'columnsrmassive doofe ?" $0 Waltzing to and fro Glances from the powerful ' Promenading up and down Standings in a row • Getting close to it iGetting up there , t Near the power source Your velvet colored faces Eyes so softly fine j^JCeeps people here for years & ' r ^ Lathes first * ~ =«s& / Black as dusky early morn, ^The Hbnorabl^ and.their Ladies -. i *A rodeo"queen%fe^tW^-With an inner golden shine ^fffTLobbyisls, Capitol secretaries — ^JfCbtfoB Club Belles Mouth ever smiling . 2'f t?5Like .the birds who fly to the top of the dome 1 Juke Box sirens\ S s Inviting,me to play jDrfctfn'to the painted star l<^:first-name'Iiai^iAj^?" __ . ^ Fragrant Ladies in your paper gowns >,5%eeEing the light Governor and His Lady. -Of a child's lost yesterday. sV i .And, trapped, die there. ^Honbi^leand Hjs LadyMp/ ,, Jac^fed, smile affixed^v:jS$: -What is the light like ,iSbemay,havethe money' ^rj% At the top of the dome? LESS. I BECOME \She may have his balls 'v, A CRINGING THING utvshe^§widestly;stands by hi^ side. Martha Hartzog Only a Woman •" ^ 'fcapilol Secretanes f"% > ^ God above! art thou near? ^Mkime^on^me ^ * "Show me lave!" „*c­S^pike heels and beemve hair^l I'm afraid of becoming |^Lips an4 nails Tropidana Red ! a cringing thing And oh!; the mockerie! I wear'a ringipS^&es' ' s Symbol'of bondage, cruel and vile '\'/ Meaton the hoofi-^ ,>*; -As only a dastard's cowardly guile ^Flai^ing titsw.£v*) Could inflict upon a wife ^Daz?linjfJsmiP^ ' R ! In to the labyrinth of Crime Psychology knows the need Knowledge trapped by it's own deed 1 w Sndjold^Irfefy When word of a culprit ^Jr} * , ^ jl^DSbeTtype^HawHaw! Stands ahead 7'r/^^ : Of anything a respectable citizen-said MtJj(^~£frpUotGround» Woe betide a fighting life. u ; ."rtisold rose building^. Sits m green; encircled EGO PERSONIFIED *s"j jpld men. plaid-shirjed. V In khaki pants ' ; -" ' ; Excess wisdom, with Lordly stalk .Sit orilawn chairs ' All-the graces in his ease , Glided doWH the corridor Monuments to^?a?t wars ^ With just himself to please ^Statuary,6^ead ipe^*1 -1| * Watfib'over Cold and: chilled an atmospheric Ripple broke against my chair •;"":jMeetine foria.smoke , No 'doubt; that was his wise disdain " kt the*Confederate Monument; It lingered'in the air We'll watch the Squirrel Lady Of course sometimes we radiate ^/•i^and tell each other stories To one so &part '•J.* A V f ^ > H ­ But really I was unimpressed IVi Gentlemen-of tfo Capitol * It rather chilled my heart ^Parenthetically-we.coifeider' ' 1 know, he thinks he's just the tops ^-The'tady Legislator:,.• -His ego soars and never stops Neither fish nor fowliV^-.,-5 But I think he is Wisdom in excess V-i •t" iJNor.gbod red meat, And every day. it grows less. v Colice 7 -• < /* .1 PEAR L February 1975 r SrM* & -*-i-J '—2—taam——^ I i-^t $•<• V '7S»* .sra :rj*4iSS:»i In 'M,^ ;r ^Ms?m February 1975 Vol: 3> No. 6 1,5. Pilcrow A 'Mj.f "!.,, -Things PEARL Thought You'd Like to Know 6:Off Ihe Record geprl's Poverty Primer >\iiw 3^;'"', -Twelve pages of advice designed to see you ^ ^ a "•>"*'<. *) tBmughtte^ ti • * introduction by Lisa E. Smith " - - < >•"- v ' * ops? PEARL finds,the answers. article by Anita Alemaii \ 10. Apartment Complexities , ' What price privacy? Apartmentscostmore, but //r-V> '-v r ' -if *• * £_/-. there are some tips to dollars down. <• article fayPatsy lochbaum , 11• Graduate's Forecast A report on this year's job marketfor graduates., j article by Byron Cain 12. Shop the Save-Way ~ ^ ~ ^ % page 8 Cheaper than Safeway? A little extra Effortspent 1 >"J "t on buying and preparing food from co-ops can save you money." ' V^r.7. }„Jj '-> article by Robert Vernon 13?'Making Ends^eo^vf'^'^f^^^^Asfl^l ,,XiVt< it Down toone meal a.dayand stillcan't makeends nr^ f • mm meet? Food stamps may be the answer. ,dfticle by Leslie Spiiiltt 14.State of the Stagflation , . ^ Build 'yourouiiu juui own economy message; Keep oneuwii cvuituiujr iiicodagc. ixccp uhv !copy, send one to us; and the last to William . humor by Michael Pitts Simon; £ and Lamont Wood! 15. Taxation Computation page 1& Here's another one of those 17 reasons why you should let us help you with your income tax. article by Tom Jones1 18. Motoring in a Monetary Slump If you own one of those hunks of Detroit iron, you know how they can eat your lunch. Here's a few tips to keep them in line. article by Chris Child A Depression Cookbook Here are some recipes with the student budget * in mind from Texans who have seen hard times compiled, by «pSife-»> come -and go. Geoffrey. Leavenworth artd .Simone Simpson GNOP: A Study in Foregone^ Conclusions Fancy fiction for you fantasy freaks fiction by Michael Pitts Drive a Little, Eat a Lot page 24 Here's an all-you-can-eat cafe where you don't get sick before you get full. article by Debbie Gletzer The Reel World Sci-fi or comedy, it's all in store for you celluloid films by Mike Spies * freaks for the rest of the semester. and Tom Jones Reader's Guide Now's the time for pleasure reading before the end-of-the-semester crunch hits. books edited by Michael Tolson Somehow We Survive Now a visiting professor at the University. Den­ nis Brutus continues to lead his fight against • apartheid in his homeland. profile by Ann Plunkett. Poetry Pick of the poetry crop. poetry by Martha Hartzog Colice «£«•> V«5?srf«' 'M*.*'-'. . N • v -.'Mlfe2* • .-.Ur. "•?*> *8 QWvkV't H ^ V3, f\ ^a>»* WSSSEL ye •*< * i { ---•. —.••• I. > •» * mt fMri! IR. JONES Contributors U3^? \T teM^E ^WMM si­ s ;. i m v&'r. I: r i ?*•*' • • h< s i §. %z fe­ !%'• fi;:: mi.'j St' 8 f§ -Asspcisje'Edlfor: GEOFFREY UAVENWORTH ^V^fANITA AlEMAN DEBBIE GlETZER i> Managing Editor^ CHRIS CHILD ^%?ANN PUJNWTT PATSII0CH8AUM " 1 ' . _ *,-^rt Directors ^v^JUCHARD HIGH • •fe^AVslstpnt'ExJihsrs^'^ LESUE SPINKS , 1 CARRIE SCHWE1TZZR ;J ip* ' V .* 7 SPSS" / '4 , Music Reviewer: JOC NICK PATOSKI FJIm Reviewers: TOM JONES -' MICHAELSPIES •• Copy Editor: •••::;• 'AIEX DURAND -V BYRON CAIN COUCE / ROBERTVESfWNMARTHAHARTZCKJ, , OEIAND EA^IY MARTHA" HART ZOO Artists: JENNIFER HARRIS GttSERT CONWOOP „ MIKE DEAN PAM WIIKINSON • Photographers:; ^ ' s STANtEY FARRAR MARLON TAYIOR Magazine Consultant. DfWITT CRfWHCK '^Advertising: 'MARTHA HAMMOND * U5ACURKE ' CONNIE KECK ONDY ROBERTSON. RICKY.SPARKMAN MIKE HARVEY, MANAGER; ^T* ' 1? f V * 1v ? ** PEARL ft the monthly. supplement to TheDafly Texanand I* published September through April byTexaj Studenttybllcafty»v P.O.;8oxD,,UfliversJftrSfatlon> Austin, Tefx.7f712; Alloplnlont expressedherein aralhosa of thf WlwldUBfauthOT*jli&do"fafnaciWsartly'lmplyertdoriefr\ents by the edl tort,The Dally Texan* the publisher, thr UnWersJfyadmlnlstretloa'brtheBoerdtfRegenti r «, * ' ; SubmU$loo^ar#accfptod fa .TSP 6ul(dfhg 4.104, 147I'5244J, and should* be.typed and triple-spaced. Include nin^acfclresvand.telephona^umber'ootvccMdlnfl pafles. Refected manuscripts will be returned if submitted vrith»Mlt>atam^r»rrve(opa^i>U^adHorscannohasYurne responsibility foruniollclted material tnc^irtw ifoocarnlng dlsptay idytrtltlng ifaufeTba made In T3P:BulJdlnfl 3;aiO.WHM3) wms/z# ' r V * W-f 'MMCUATRO CAMINOS lM$?, r 5 v <4H Villiour hacienda and youmay learn the Xilntrlgulnshistory of the hand'tewn Indian Molair/vand delightin the variou* multi' , » faceted glaHbox««. (13 -$18) ' " !«? 1801Nuecee 474-5222 ntfPttt FROM THE ilTTIC liEWERV 9 - iJii/Sil -r i­ rr\ lexas JLiass Kings? 1 v! s\J«eK m "">• o •, >• 1 •? ' Compare the ring |. ' and the price '"'t,, domplat* litt of optlons — additional! • 10 kt -14 kt im • yaiiow or white gold • ^angravadlatters , «"Undaratona clMign* ^Xfu^lANa^^lt®' % ,, *4 -< BASE PRICE £126.00 ^#'S?/4"8w«*k-dallvarv v>^fv^ vr vjhe. Leaders'' •ISjaUCvilHmV i^8f/ ^724 CongrMa i , "We sail rings around everyone. \ ph* k * > V*1 ' * > v I '»* mmtoH'ym tmt. MINIMUM OF FOUff tw 207 I, 4th -- ^" Shiner leer Dj«t< Ce« OAf/V Ail BAY lAT. mk PARTY 472-1117 aaao e. carrnr <, 4^<'M»t ' Cugtom Cooklna PIARL ftbruarv Mi m'^w1 i->./ 'i" w&m 3ftf '^/r *«r ^ NliMiMIIIMVIH SF *1 aW£ Island w^s the way wardens'^wotild heat the out i^this; prisoners without: reason, you never'knew when; you were going to be beaten or why. Very ofteii thewarden that beat you didn't eVen particularly hate you. It's just the kind of thing he did forthe; •/,'< f cherish,°»r humanly hell of it. and tomorrowhe mightiefluite friend­ly and ask you to show him yourbruises, That the kind of arbitrary terror seems to me one of the worst things." ,^ . When he finished his term itr priSoh, Brutus the was placed under house arrest and lived in isola­?*-Ifet Wh6m St Inay £oticerri| tion With no way to support his family,"Brutus Newvoiceswb^ v ri I decided toileave his homeland^He was permitted a one-way exit visa, meaning W could never ,1 return.jJhd* Solith. African "government ; * ^ Jhanned' Hi? Works, piaking4t§criminal offense "hot with jalse^-assen^ip^i.^ V to possess theirt; -„ v*" ' **•> 3T voTJi^t^ura^^s likfca^lterj^M • ' 'Brutus continued 'his 'worldwide struggle > 4n against apartheid. His devotion to facial equality Si 'opt OLthedisQoftt of f,°" your/voifce1]Speai5trwith> in sports led to the expulsion 9f;South Africa from the 1968 and 1972 Olympics.-*3 t.This same kind of coordinated, massive cam­ paign on sports is now beginning^ the political field for Macks in South Africa, Brutus plained. ^schairmanofithersteering^cofnmitte&forthe^l like thunderhear^-fromifar|f^ He regards the 'recent independence of the first Symposium of the African Literature?! South African colonies of. Mozambique and Association, which will be held 0t the Univerfc' • the'n)urmu^.will grow Vjuirable^ Angola as a shortening in the tihie scale of the sity'sJ.C.Thompson CenterMarch2(W2,BrutusY /H the sound w|ll,yet be-anTe^thqualcrn total South African 'resolution*. * *•* > said "The Symposium will .be an historicjocca-. -' Brutus is greatly concerned Mrltli-ll»e U.S. in­sion and will perform a useful function in lnfor-Y "From Strains (Xroubador fressV^to be'publish'-f| rt volvement in supporting racism,""Wftat'.worries /• ming t^e American people about South Africa^| ^ejtCMarclj, 1975^' ' '' ^ « me is the fact that Kissinger has'tilted U.S. through literature." Brutus has arranged forJ; foreign policy toward greater support for South about 100 African scholars, poets, writers, and,-S Africa (racist'regime); Whilethe positiveaspect filmtnakers to attend. The, list'includes (hree^. of independence is very encouragihgjtheU.S. is} l9« nK ' major writers besides Brutus: Chlnua Achebe.vf' ; building opposition by strengthening South typrian Ekwaul and another exiled Souther Africa,>Kissinger's, memo, known as NSSM-39, African writeliP&zlklel Mphahlefe, University1clearly states that publicly the U.S. must appear students and the Austin communityar^lnvlted to i to be on the side of the blocks, but privately we attend,must begin to give South AfrWa jets and civilian' f The dates for the Symposium weire chosen to' aircraft to use for anti«guerrlllai activity, B:| 'm ' commemorate the 1060 Sharpeville massacre 1n The U,S. has 500 corporations,operating]!* South Africa1, March 30-22, Since many of the *ml South Africa, explained Brutus. "All of them are, writers were forced to live in exile, their works ; using cheap black labor and are working within have been 'banned' and serve to reflect the '? the apartheid system." • political conflicts and suppression of creativity I Brutus believes that if American people better ' in their society, understood what is happening In jouth Africa, ^ *3 *f-H * •J.'* v? I a. + -' J they would show greater concern and would f begin to ask questions, 7 ,r-' For a Dead African •/£ ^ The poet»polltlcian said he loves his country We have no heroes and no warier" '{V and is unhappy livinganywhere else, Helorigsfor vnly'victim of a sickly state Yi %(* If - the day hecan return,"When tgoback, Iwant to succumbing to the variegated sores that flower under lashing rains of hate, ^; go back with the,feeling that I have made a 1 a ' * t \ i significant contribution to the struggle for freedom,1detft want to walk in and get freedom We have no babies and no fights on a platter; to get freedom that other people /or history to record with trite remark; u, •3 have fought for'and that t have not earned, So. only captive^ killed on eyeless nights 1 wherever I am ,„ It Is my Job,to smash this, evil and accidental dyings in the dark. system so I will know I had a share in the vie* ~cw . Vet when the roll of those who died^ ( tory," ' ' 'h to free our laod is called. wlHwut surprise i' '" these nameless unarmed ones will 8tand; be»|d# I Saffron and orange and blood} -f ­ the warriors who;pured the fiul prlte.,^ < like this r/u'hjm ,ffel$ seeped into,the sky on other dawns (John Nangoza Jebe was shot by'tiie police in , riding thTirmy trifek to prison * looking through bars at the island's day; a Good Friday Precision in Port Elisabeth, imi ' -' , mm f m 'and so many since; »rv :V* red anger gushes through my brain -g to purchase despair If Muniroomin a bloodstorm, • • • • Mfj • weftiust sayNo; t,f r U(iiile Mill-. 0 whenwlll my comrades stir mk't t 1 > « SOJIt 6u«d*lup« Oh when will their furious speech' -to Hjeconsumer-merchants turn to grim and unswervable resolve? who consume us PBAHL Ptbm$ryWi 3.r«ijm't'" ' , y/'iZm .. fc™ / *,r l h S$',!v .Ifa.l' UAi SMIiKPSy «/t » •" NJ. 1,6 H^»rS% %h~'* „*S •is® $£ t&W «"#.? 5j.^.,.^)RWr«^"^rviPe^| £$& hftilfirfeh.^ frfc&J? l^rot^ifef; w$< :;ip^i||Hclj jail our land-is scarfed with terror. -^•^11^ wloydy and finldvable,. * 4 ?n**U !>SUIVlVeSiA>iijfe^|SB>?f3; - •-$&#• ^Un;:iMr«UU.dll^uiBii!VAlKiiciivcU;V/.uuui)CM;aiiu.; .others^ who dai^rto protest against the South g^^4vfovdpBMjit, that-'iappresses their 'li^wcir terS&s was exiled from hisjcountry ten $pafs ago becausebe opposedapartheid, apolicy| -«&!a^jtiq^and discrimination againstblack^l inmafond'r :rtnCT0ntfv ^tinitlKr-iii 'nt fhpV: i con­ •ILWi­ fcon­ & ss 1 i'IL l§P mm 'WsML't. • ^ — ) * djtions'Within South Africa? He has appeared jjefQre the United Nations ajid the House Coin- v mittee (^ForeignAffairs,to testily on the,events in SouthMfipca and'on the influehce,of ^S;| foreign poficyvin determining the,outctfma^ \ ^Wheaasked ahput being described bysome af an emerging,father image-of South Africa, this sipft-sppken, genteel man modestly protests He PTpiains thatfhe loves South Africa and her beauty and is^ deeply concerned for her future| •"/'talking about himself and his .works, Brutus explains, "It's quite true that my love for my country isone of the most constant.things in my personality:. I'veseen unspeakable cruelty in that beautiful country and yet my loyalty is still there:In fact,asyou will noticein my poetry, the f .relationship with the country and landisa kind of male-female relationship, ap njale-female emotional as passionate and strong as any love affair I think this iswhy-lcareintensely about thetremendous damage being done to the country^and the people of the country " : In describing this early Ufe, Brutus says, "I­grew up in a ghetto m South Africa. I wasn't particularly aVare of racialdiscrimination. One. survives within the system. There was the segregated housing, segregated transport, and piiblipjibrarips for wjjtftes'only. (toe saw these A things but tlfey came. Upon its, ^ ' arrival though, the crew simply looked at him k-and drove away. TJi£ ambulance was for White ­ -H-people onlyr arid the .ambulance .fof blacks arrived later. ;• ' • Brutus underwent surgery, then was'chained •up and put in a truck with otherprisoners. This was the beginning of a 1,000 mile journey that would take him to Robben Island, a horror chamber for 1,100. criminals and political ac­ tivists. Brutus remembers, "The first day of my 18-month hard labor confinement our jailers sneered that w^ thought we had come to Robben Island, when' actually we had come to 'Hell Island.' " The first week, a criminal kicked Brutus in the stomach, reopening his bullet wound. In remembering the prison hospital, he said. "On the floor beside each bed werestrips of matting (that%the prisoners slept on). No one slept on the comfortable looking beds. We were told the beds were .for 'inspection piirposeis ifUS only ' " v Brutus said; "The worst thing about Robben r-'. ,V^T-v"' •/>- 1 tPEA*L ir.ebi;t«ry i?75 .A > J A <*t^ n+ ti A k * "I M > V t -c..<.v n. *& ^•sPHI1­ •WS6P ^ X -.* ^fggl x * j-&Sft , wm? * />*" i if-c2fe 'W* *e8>rw$B H vyr> Uf%Jfffit /k &i Currency Campaign SSIilf •I 1040, Over and Out • t&<£ <. ,-g, *. h ••>-& * ­ % last, free Income set-vice isbeing held •£* At lasi, a tree income tax service ia ueuig iwiu ^fIn the marketplace, your dollar is your'vote r "on campus, to help UT students prepare their ^-1~and the product you buy 13 the winner As a .returns. The, "how4o*prepare" sessions for fcopsumer-voter you have certaift rights. But m v.<£$5 University students are scheduled from 2 to .4 > • Jwhat do you do when these rights are violated? sCall... who? Write ... where? i> Some of the answers can be found in Or. Carl Hall's' Home Economics 361 course, The Con-' •Ksumer and the Market — a course,which trains _ them to either of the group sessionsat whichjin-^ '"and encourages students to become activists'in* come' tax-forms will be provided andinstructions "the consumer world. '' given. , ' ' '• The free service is offered^ annually'by topThe purpose of the course, says Dr. Hall,­ '-University accounting students who are associate professor of Family Economics, is io "members of Beta Alpha Psi, accountingfraterni­ --develop in each student an:awareness of his or s 51 "her role as a consumer and to re-define their ty. Theservicewill alsobe extended tomembers s§5 decision-making skills. Dr. Hall focuses the 1 of the community at Neyrtjerry's Jn Capital .Plaza, Thursdaysfrom 6 to9p.m. andSaturdays 'course on action-oriented research projects, mf from.10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and at the East First V? •-'though some attention is given to.the study of Street CommunityCenter,1619 EastFirst,Satur­economic thought. days from 12 noon to 4p.m. TheUTstudents will Students are also asked to define some con­'sumer issue or problem, to collect and analyze.-also prepare'^ returns for approxinately (t150 •>*? patients at theAustin State-Soiool, Travis jStatesdata,'and prepare a research paper. The most W>J®~ creative kind of project, he says, involves draft­School, and Austin State Hospital. ing actual legislation, .with help from state of­ fices?to deal with a specific problem. Free Income Tax Belp, &&>•\A' Dr. Hall believes his Course shows students BEB 251 r ^ how. the system can be both responsive and Feb. 28-April 11, 2 to 4 responsible-"It's an attempt to expand the lear­ EVaiV, ning' environment beyond the university . classroom into the real world;" : sJSS&f^Z^^patvn O'Neal •, The Conaunier and the Market •• l * xt fit- Home Economics 361--'..• Dr. Carl Ball ^ -Sot-' Live and Learn 1: ' Have you always wanted to learn organic gar­4 dening but didn't know where to go to find out? How about natural food prepration, proper fasting methods, karate, or astrology? m Well, now you can learn. The Austin Higher Education Association isanewly-orgamzed, non­profit group !designed; to help "meet specific needs of individuals in boostihg their own in­tellectual capacities in subjects not ordinarily found in educational institutions^*' in thewords of-its founder, Mark Denson. .Courses are taught by qualified persons, and a total of 25 courses are available. There is a one­ . time charge of $10, which allows the member to attend any three courses. . Information on the program can be obtained by calling 474-1751, or writing to P.O. Box 14361, Austin. . v->i' DanJonea Austin Higher Education Association r 25 course offerings , " Mark Denson,director 474-1751 Where Paula's Boys Are < If you ventured out on Barton Springs Road recently, to gander at your favorite male go-go dancer and found them missing, it is because they have broken out of their Playpen to es­tablish a plade of their own. . The new place,. Wet N' Wild; is'located in the old Body Shop, arid is managed by Srriokey. It is clean, spacious and modern, with valet parking. Just pull up in front and leave the parking to them. ' himself, Smokey — are there to turn the crowd on every night from 7 to midnight, and you have chosen entertainment that is no longer a fad. Male performers are here to stay and the best of them are found at Wet N* Wild: ' v:' Opening night Feb. 12, was combined with Smokey's birthday celebration. After hejptng in­itiate the new club and wishing its rrianager many happy returns, the verdict is in: the boys are still together and better than ever. 8 Wet N' Wild boasts 150 seats, all accessible to the stage. Add to this fact that the male per­formers we grew to lpve so well — Dick, Leon, Crazy Ray, Bonnie^ and the Marlborough Man Wet'N Wild Male Dancers 38th and J-35 Sharon Castleberry •i Vt PEARL February 1975 p •••••' • i ! > r • ^...... . , I * Depress^. Donlt, talk to me about being, Wainwright fan and non-fan gets thebest of both 'depressed while Fm milling around here in the worlds -a studio side with full , band and pits of degradation, Notonly am I plagued with « smelting rock ensemble witli the 'perfunctory ' nagging headache and thatburning sensation, but offbeat and pun-punctured lyrics, and a live side m I awoke this morning and found myself as a with full band and smeltljig rock ensemble with 'cockroach.Then my girthad theunmitigated gall just plain Louden, Msguitar and whatsoundslike to spray me with a shot of Raid, triggering a a happy coffeehouse crowd. I generally stray couching spasm to no end. Had to squash her to away from guitarist/writers on stools since I keen her in tier nlace, * ' s 1 v dropped out of my encounter group and went% Deposed? Why last week I was softerI was clear, but W»|nwright overcomes misapprehen­ r» driven to hustling spare change on the Drag, sions by hard-rockin' it in the,same wholesome i: Worked my assoff for two days and all I had to manner of Harry Nilsson a couple years ago and -show for it was a scratched forty-fiveof 'Streak­punching the (iuasl-Hlp right In Iht kidney, till it ing and Freaking' donated by an out of work giggles. • • i j** * promo man, and I hope you reallxe you can't : The clincher is not the sure to be popular pop ..make funs or butter put of plastic, ballad 'Fred la a Tit Man' performed like David 1/ Bromberg'a 'StatesboroJluea' only funny this :|SWhflt depression; ba ha. To hell with that I' dullness Isay, Forget your woes, that repossess­time, or his Kallfomia Kult KriUque 'Guru', but ed,car, the dwindling supply of beans and tuna his obligatory reggaecut aomuch the vogue witl} m I, * In the fraeier., Buy a record instead, Bands in theKnow these day*.The Poot Organ If ' i ill ir arestillyour best entertalnmenlvalue ' 'Lonely TouHst's' socially redeeming %" ®Si 1 & tf'­ m Jpot to (jlM out on Himlettoi, | i -f!,-When that rentcollector knock!on thedoor, let pmWl out a hearty guffaw, turn up the tow and ebor­ 6 I • W!i&P tie with MUifietiwi, What rent! What money? jPla w,and /allstefMefi p vfously a tow to the rmnlsWHB^ny'jmd ihe *flland erypUe deplh of a Randy New- J 0 legltlmaey, freuMclithw summedupeandlod man. init«ad,' * he ean-an eom—-eompare liwreblyM-to a '£" m-of the »fventlei with wme p«y hwmonle* a tewfilbttfha wik$wn tnwjnadr •Ton> fceher Sevent fflfor ^ J like §oni ertHf fPieni*?! with 'funiet Mr ehoanalyala thrown In, Walnwright dmn't lean gage', BverytftiMsln€§ ha§ miredl«§lf teeetew on W8 ateol for aupport and tejowihow tarofik It 19 NewJidertf faWiPMuft with mekllng eharffl, wmetfilng yw eanit «ay emr of about !«veir /«,—'g #|yle-of hemorrhoid numoi^. rest If W«.dfly»(JetfMtt ffem theeomman&r's now? TIHWr to plume- m 8trangUisBUVniHi) ! thelf roekaMliy'lflwirsdiiw,iwMin/-Hwp«s^i, eld. ""7time uwir v«wi itself and matured beyond mere puberty, >:• The self-penned Airmen numbed suen as the roekahuiaed 'Hawaii Slues' and the raey 'Me Manft»#ie' finally compare equally or belter to the actual forties/fifties wj^eountry classics emndm(he album lUitf 'Ben't Let flo' made famoui by Elvia, and the Commander's gruff hucko wlo explaining Miteml of Yankee b^Thai'sWhiilJM*W;^J«ith', ting their maWrlfll do the talklng. Commander Codyand band/unUk^compflfaWecontemporary Afleepat theWheel/plays a looserklnd of court. trywlth apenchant fornovelty thatevena beer­oed Texan canurtdeMUind.BBillyone of thetwo Sfforta y«t for the Armadillo's best known ­f|;flLlhw««',band< • . 'i: II muiicai* mors wrcorii .-1^1^-" Ot a teas musical, more ceMteal natuw,<*7/ i!­ ,,,!5 .i-anoihar; ;|augli.aii-your'troubieHn^ ftWis" "f $$P*A bag hiimorist, tduden Walnwrlght lift who ha# (ImMm-MmduA mv thlftk akult ihrouflh his UO- finally reached my thick skull through hl» up­ coming, unrequited disc (Columbia). Here the r ,1/n'A '• back down to thebottom line, ton mot,anil meet the man who will be providing muzak program­ming in Purgatory when you arrive. Lou R$e$ received most of the credit for the Velvet Un­derground's cornering of the decadence market early on. But of all theoriginal members (and we haven't forgotten you,Sterling). John Cale,alongwith Nico, have been themost adventurousIn ex­perimenting withavant-garde rock*Cale. besides producing fairly tame ln-house artists from Warne^eprise. has released four American, albums of his own, highly praised, publicly un­accepted. Fnr (Island) radiates the feeling youmight get in bed with a warm friend who you.keep suspecting is concealing a rasor in his/herhand. Cale'slaid-back dream sequence (notto be confuted with 8outhem bum XJ.) lull! a listener, r with soft background only to suddenly sliceopenthe victim with thesharpedge almost painlessly.,Case in points 'Fear la a Mania BeitFriend' woos gently in thebeginning, building toa grimclimax. » "Say itt 8ay itl Fear is a Man's..." as ex-Roxy synthesiiiler Bno grunt# out electronic, thrill whip satisfaction, Very kinky, and 1don't mean Friedman, Bno and Roxy guitarist Phil •«Mansanera, who themsolvep draw heavily from the old Velveti, add a popiplceto Cale which he licked In Paris in 1910 and went beraerko on for the brilliant opera Ataitm it Ml,Though a toothing vocalist. Call lin't for (he Jew Vale fan once the lubjeot matter it bridged, balngi aomewhat randy in the Victorian s^nse of the? word, Pepreming, mil, but don'tgoand ibootpppaint thinner over it, Qti down to the tionky tonk, got drunli. «ndTeed the iukatex 'til yoii'wplayirt all the David Willi-«nd Moe Bandy lhare li, Willi and Bandyire the beitof theyoungChaatln'Mflg artiiti to com out of Naihvllle rwently/ Both ling buckeWull'Of tearitunei, haveharaerlhan, y I v liftit PorterWag * 1 'w A SWfo There is a certain unity to most of i these ^'storjes. asU each was a different surfaceon the same multifaceted, stone. The stone Itself is a large but cohesive slice from the various (levels ^contemporary Australian,society,-and it there, aresimilarities In the storiesIt isnot surprising. However; the Australian setting doesn't isolate the themes which White dwells upon; amljwhile he is identifiableas a regional writer, itis notin the samesense asFaulkner is.:The problemsand dllemrtias heexplores are equally noUceablein the U.S., Britain, France, or any relatively stable?relatively conservativeWestern country, ! White is fascinated with life and all thesad and curious forms H sometimes takes. Thwarted lives, unfulfilled ambitions, unspent passions— these are his interests, He ignores the iuper­;fieial, he takes the lid off hli characters' ex­igence amiexposes theseldom»seen nerve at the center. These arenot storiesor despair but'by no meansdo tliey celebrate the'mlrscle'ofllfe. No, ^ thlrllflot White's Villon of (he human condition. There!* nolhingrtiracukwMbwla borln^.un' rewarding, or mi«l)rected'life, Mfefewt ftrfeen A MONTH OF SUNDAYS, John UpAlht (Knopf) < With the 'new morsllty' (Getipta) and nibur­banslerilllyMifiWl Htdu*) behind hlmj John VlHllke hM chmnforhit ism novel o subject to de#d«JK>h«»lt*lM toproolalm it i» religion, moodi awl Vw (glfflifc/iriofl, Updike make# tun it-m Hishero, Reverend;Tom MarsfpHdd, isfritting some riOier^mangy/rrwinoirs as part of the jp­quired therapy ataSouthwestern resort to which • he has been banished for his sexual trespasses among the congregation. Updike's relevant middle-claw modernity 'has always been W» most suspect side, bat one can't begrudge him MarshfleW — surely no one ha*to beasaware of current trends as the contemporary cleric, whose livelihood depends on how attractive the product is that he sella. This may sound cruel, but it isthe truth. In the settled middle-class,the question of God's existence is a bor* not worth asking, although the Church sunriyes asa social Institution. We gather .together*, that is the mystery, Golf and pokerfare comparable in MarshfloW'B mind. , v'Si'V '«Between rounds with other misfit ministers, MarihflMdeUvm written semionto the resort's manager, « Ms, Prynne (and there's a' Dr, Chillingworth in the novel in case Thu Seoriet ietisf is rwt immedlately evokedK He also "walls his perfect wife,Jane;whoiif8hamlngof Tom become complete when she attains the statusof Mm "good In M"Thereareapairof mistresses, a bisexual curate, and his senile rather in Ms past, This last character doesn't < work*, the retrogression li too eat, Fortunately, to ihlhk Tailh is fgnnylandif the took Has any iMwno it Is (hat theclerjy are wnwwcWwM, Al my nto, ills not umurprliMgly a much llfhlwbojA'OwnHw bedrock of RtWt Rtiux, and better lustainad. aven IfUters is nothing as gfmtmilsrttVft optnlng tomdrwl p*|Mof that novel. Updito can writ* likran af^, every 499-1077 EARN CASH WEEKIY ff^PBlood Plflnttifl Donori Needed SSSM&RJm •WortWi.'. , : SARN $14 WISKLY CASH PAYMBNT FOR DONATION 111 6*w wmi#i •nit';m Slood Component«, lpc. OPENt MON, * WVm.j B AM tv 7 ft" 1 * v^m^ruRS, Am. samuspm y • , CLOSE!) WW. A 8AK -i-' „ vowel,pliable, and consonant locked into ] ^The Marshfidd semwo oo the desert is book's: metaphorical high point II Utc book ijt 1 finally comic. It may be because1Updike the erudite essayirt/jipposiU> aptorist and Updike*' the middle-clas barometer etifl happily side by ride. Maybe too happily-r #c.' That there Is still metaphysical awe *>d i1 grandeur in rvUfkon WaBwr Percy's bonis i prow, Updike's hero oaljaltows the word 'low'£ "fumigated by qootatton marits.': It is a sternal and believers unhinge Marshfleld. Tim problem *t of God is suburban novel. qoming Next Moatfc:. ..... mmwmi . That pre-empted took at the nrst weiHSfewn • n strangenewnove) py AMftonyBufgess (A Gfeetoer* Omngt) is considered, as Is..' A careful scrutiny of ThtThr* latest Included, Perhaps' nrace tbesepagen vtaanexai rliigeraW'siww ItfiftMltoni NHti AH bmhi mkm$4 fNKNtfMllW',;. htn gmtauly mutM 0Mf>tPMtltslk x pj r ^ ' »< . ** r*r Is Opf»n Fvt»ry Niqht Till Midniq 4774735 $ wSniertial Jightwogi&r His books; are con-coned with ^tfemes^ that interestmost of, us. -J" ;3nd%3yeii^toL^rdi^ls^go^^Dd -i-W Onemolif in particular dommatesGardner's jF^rk:This is the conflict between the rebel and •I '?s -f > WM 1 ^ . r V*" "4>^~ t #sA zMlm, * they are.Then beproceedstothemostimportant .^ '^sodety.The rebel opposessociety, andtepsoallyi c^dSSwored;' veLitrthe wake Of his detraction ,; ^**^7'?-*•£••• ~ ' W. . '•-_ * .» : i?e:imterl Tibs js fe thfe chawewpon theindividual.Itisthepersonal • •-wa rfcoCu^ton« c^,at•§ dranja./^" 1 tsoniiriW^ Xg3tiTt| The rating's Indian .the •®s3'§l^5-jP®s^f»,1 y^arta^igt/p^tahlighiwnf thpmp is prominent. In »|l^jk-C^ifo^se*i»rit# BotUxsre'srelief; j|ifar tnos^wfcoareJiesetbyHobtHtS.Rabbite.and ^btherits.Gardners'iwoks arefirst and foremost ^'^in^J^nbl^^sloriesbalanceon the1? ^fioaijrraU1& Kmg'm lndian is his most ex-' "' rsxwdmafy effortdate?;'£j&? > Garittaerfirst receivedcritH-al noticeafterhis ^waspablisbed.Grendel.as t£wwiB'kKnr.,is indenisflidiister „ -w Ok^hc hero exterminated. Grendel is Sj|told'fn>m'thelmonSterfs poinl of view and the nas^r ^^fiecti*'iiHffWd^r^rencW-'ls'.sfittja " '" lijje^'bijt ^peHeciited, beloveshis mother, s .. sodb-aiswettJettm^eatefc Swif Ihoodi I'm notwrcotenU.Ifoond myself ifa^lhemoaslenisigasbilat stall/rip aiWX When/the inevitable conclusion jer&er x«e^ * x.~ favorite finThe Smnlight Dialogue*, abearded'; r.irandersaito Batavia, NewYork, bring- py^tet town Shenff. is frightened and fascinated by ' C%beSanlight,Man,Jbegfa^feqchand complex.•. tonic dialpgtetbroWn to. It'sa mesmerizing "Tli^Sunligfat jSfcrif" leaves none of the;, _ i^a^o^ttK^s^eiL'^EKl fttaw^y he's respon­$£fot'mypoof shewing on finals:last spring. ~Tjfe Kbig'ilndian contains what Gardner That's an appropriate' itlfcVA? master stoiytellerJ Gardner is an ' TlK'RaTOg^ of between a coontij­ * this relation;the thanedi^ Gar^rbveryCiey^iSy^% ^ * iAH of:the stories in The Cockotoos exhibit an; intaisiy«e?and masterful psycholpgical insight. White-makes an incision into each of his characters" lives, stripping away the appearancesand letting ussee why theyare what: part of the'story — the moment of revelation, where the protagonist is forced to recognize an essential trath about his life. The revelationsare different — maybe a flash which illuminates the grotesque 'course their life has taken., or the realization of personal failure, or perhaps un­derstanding the implications behind the total loss of .human dignity In any case, these moments are crucial to White's vision. Similar to th? "Epiphanies" found in Sherwood Anderson's work, they are mystical magic moment^when the soul is laid bare and a raw and occasionally vulgar energy flows through the vpins for the fSj-4 »:„!«\ v-T­ firetUnie. - , 7 > with the Australian' middlfr class and the un­dernirrents which direct,their lives. And so, for instance, Woman's Hand," the longest and most"completely developed story in the book, shows an aging couple rather drably playing out their 'livesaccording to plan when a coincidence inspires th^ wife>• to become a matchmaker. Repercussfcms from her game destroy two^ lives and spur ter husband to the recognition that the years of their complacent marriagehaven't been very satisfaying he'has comeface to Face with his wife's true nature. "The Night the Prowler" accurately -displays the values of a typical bourgeois Australian family and then reveals the daughter's bizarre liberation from them, after a strange and ineffectual attack by a rapist. The focus of these two stones is different but in both cases a catalyst of some form precipitates cir­cumstances in which the hero r^Kv&-«fe*-7 <\^B V-iV*--'".?'! lim irifci li I • n^dMbta—frMMfctM* f? llltil tiiSi­ lis?!rtflmi­ wm ®#|the bureau rank Austin in this position. (A more cbuntry sales 'tax covers groceries^' phar­recent report will not be available until June of maceutical products and such. But not here. this year.) "Austin doesn't have as high a wage scale forMany cities across the country have not been hourly workers either. A lower: wage scale, studied;*so Austin's status may be shared by a rl effects lower service charges. A waitress'hourly number of other cities. But for now this wage is less here than say, Chicago. Well, the economic enlightment may offer consolation to ^A consumer here won't have to pay as high a price 3Austinites with the economy's Squeeze around for a meal as he might elsewhere. *4 them. What makes Austin a cheap place to live? The "Energy cooling costs in Texas and this city bureau gives a number of reasons. The absence are not near as expensive as energy for heating of a state tax on personal income in Texas in the North. Gasoline is also cheaper for us. contributes to the lowering of living costs. With We're closer to the source which generally only federal income taxes to pay, families in lowers the price per gallon than most places." Austin paid two-thirds as much income tax as the Texas' state capital is very low in unemploy­ average urban family. ment. The large amount of state government Housingcosts in Austin average 25percent less jobs keeps the unemployment statistics down. . than those in other measured metropolitan Kennamer adds that "there is still building going areas. • ; on in Austin, too, whereas in some cities the University Dean of Education and Professor of building has had to subside." Geography Lorrin Kennamer cites several other But if this news does little to comfort you or reasons for Austin's rank. "Sales tax doesn't your wallet, perhaps you should just disregard it. cover all items in Texas. In many parts of the And remember no news is good news. 7 >£l -( Sy-Antft AliiSfflS flMoney, or rather/ the lack of it;liar Mm wen a matter of primary concern (o the college !> > Hude/it, Well/this year has toy In,no ex< EV' $ .'Option, Whether It's;come id the form of ek'> ' delayed:^«ek from w« paiiflUior (for those do­ K.; ingittliehard way), (herapiddisappearance of|!;;. ,{oQ'«fflflll paycheck; te&frtMnflailonarv days ?' F/>, have made mom itodenla alt up and sadly take " no(e of 'lhe dlffll/il«hlng value of cerlaln green' vf 1 it pieces of paper, ^ ,, This/ Jh turn,has promptedsomfteoflseientlous persons to;start analyalngytheir lifestyles and ; surroundings In air,.attempt to figure out If there's aeheaper way to exist short of a pup tent pi' Iff someone's backyard and a thrifty diet of E&~ franks and beans, , , v. ­#u 8-Well, for those who are interested, PKARLhas: pf dbne.a Ut of researchflfljVarloua types of hous* v; ft # trig,in particular;dorrtiltorteS andttwps,both on iraT and off campus,'M#|lf you've been debating whether to take up dorm life with its lack of responsibilities and in» fh> eyltable stereos, cp living With ,!ts homier,I" Iffi close knit atmosphere flndtoevitable weeklyF dutfesorthe aforementioned tent life with its fe< ; wti "privacy,' fresh air and' inevitable franks and beans, perhaps the following figures and lnfof­^ matlon will be of some assistance. ~)k' Vborm life:Most college students experience It pv, SlW: Ht^a }1T- i>­ op:, j f,,, i mmommsim* at imtmein their aeaumto meet,amMl good reason, for (he advantages are plenty/ Ypu don't have to be .responsible foMlmlng your room, or eooking your meals, or paying bills (other (Iran the dorm's,) fhliespecially makesit easy for entering freshman and transfer students new to Austin who will be busy trying to, cope with the University's unique environment, 7 Another great advantage is (hat there are always plenty of people around,to'talk to when you getlonely,homesick or talkative-The dorm Is simply a good first step away from,home, As for the economic side of dorm life,though.; It reallyIsn't that much cheaper than livingin an apartment, LivingIn the most expensiveroom at Jester will cost you about 1150 a month, Assum* ing the average apartment tenant usually has one or tWo roommates, you could estimate he spends -170 a month on rent and another 160 for the same period oft food, That's 9130 a month and .930, cheaper than Jester, ' " „ In effect, what you aire really paying for at a, dorm are time saving conveniences, J,e, maid service and prepared meals, If you're witling to pay for this, fine, Jjut donltefcpectto savemoney. All inall, though, livingin a dormis apractical -choice for those who cannot, will not, Or do not want to yet deal with the responsibilities of a moreindependent lifestyle. ''-l '' Cooperative living,on the other hand.Can offer some financial savings. People co-existing ;*' 4tK through cooperation, This smaller groupaareei to live together and ihare basic reipoMlbiiitiei^i sueh as food buying, cooking arid cleaning,., What advantages does tnli lifestyle offer?' # V/i ' Well, you have more freedom (just think, no % T.' more dorm mothers waiting up for you), more, Slf; privaoy, a closer group of Jrlends, more living space aiid the opportunity to raid the icebox Jn the middle of ihe night (within.' reason, of course,). The disadvantages, if you could really call them that, are the weekly duties that eaeh co-op member is alloted; These couldbe anything from' washing dishes, to raking the yard, to fixing lunches and usually,don't take up more than six hours a week, v In this case, the extra effort is worth lt,C. because you can definitely,save money by living at a co-op, Even residing ai the moat expensive, ' \ your college days and you'renot afraid of a little/# Work, &N>p life may be for you,' ,. ,The following charts are provided here for, your information in comparing the costs of , various co-ops and dormitories both on and off . campus, Please note however, that many prices?-'& f quoted are current ones where fall figures w&&'{: < ' " unavailable and are subject, to chapge.. , , PEARL Pebruary 1973 • ••••,'*• r;. mt i/ * •} m Comedyof thethirties reached »me.»o{rti?|ape* in the ilunatlc, breakneck-pace cojnedy of IM# called Bringing Up Baby, coming, to ram­ : pus on Feb, ,84; There l» nothing of what Is, con­ ' ventionally termed 'heart' in this,comedy; and yet it in such a show piece of director Howard: Hawks' skill as is the oven faster«pace<| Sit QiriFrlday m bard as saving graoer, — Few of kubitseh'sother fllmseirculate much, so'the CihemaTexas showingin Paradise (J$roh iywMitlw^tfmfttr thosf of us who havodeubta about hif greatnesi, This one mn Miriam fl^lhifcaw Herbert Marshall as $ pair of gentle wlevei, and has won . the pnlet^tmwehi hard»i«(f lea»eritieai DwIgtit MaeOonald for id wit and social satirt, If itshouldproveontiiemark, eould someone bring In tubldeh'i muijoili? 4 ;, /;^ g ru/no^ thiti fiMr of vJntige oidiei wiU be making uiiieheduied tppeerinmdue to the Tax* an filmpoll, flnioflg HumBtvUbun'tiummtt" jlmiih ttii Rooney'Sariand Istii on ffeiA^tMiiMiliVMeef Mt toll, L*uts • movie with a ipeeialglowjiuitiosee igainMN|MU||drant and Hepburn daneingl) " „„ '^1' l« itifltl wwi'l i«cm nfllloflsllitlfl, I'llnoont' SnS tfjf of hmriMMed arul Atmndaud (Feb,Mil and J«f) Hefwlr's scire# OHmt of Mat* on« of the great director's bestand leastrieon films, Andin oaftiilho^dmily^Mai^faiiif «lumn is too light,CinemdtoiiM His somo dailter films latorin the foliowi/ig wems, For^ the progressively decadent; there is The third Mm (March fl) « Orson Welles, a drugging, a stray kitten, a pulp^riterdown on his luok, the sinister postwar ruins of Vienna at night, and the overall either theme. MUuBpUi v The pwitehboard operator at Capital Cable Co,. " pr0^ttl|f-iCW|i^|dkc>.abottt im^-Osia. alvea-.nMBy.-C or latiiif^yiiillit,'after doing my^share to^Insure nek cbneerte on eight channels. Why don't youslap ,on a mi of JPtantt of tfu Vamplrut"rS\ean'ihelpit, biiiTm:a'acittiee/lotion junkie, eulH aometlmes 1 just have to get a fix — and IdoitH| foeah some of that Stanley Kubrick rubbish. ^ crave the hard stuff, with stars likeRlchaofDen­ling.If youhave the itamedamnable habit,you'll f)fee reUeved to kiwwthatthew are wme passableacieiilee flcikm^and horrbrfllms.wi the way this: aemesterr'-^V,' Kae(ion anima^ (ion/ uses this tochnioue as good as anymovie around, ffhe tmtm the destruction of the Capitol and the Washington Monument are satisfying enough to take aWay your guiltfeelings about spending 8atuniay * doorsf'T, )l/ '>J V. jt Two'other films from (he Ufiion are worth., pointing out, fhe Day Barih Stood Btttl , (April ari» a polished, well acted film aboura ; visitor fromjpaoe who comes to tell fiarthmfo, to atop their low-down, warllke Ways. 'njls fllm is uptown enough lo be enj^ib£ (iwpJe onlyslightly interested in science fiction. Also, 1n» Wbard ofOi Js coming March 0.1saw Jt againlast year and t stilt had to hide under itM^bedU­Let'siaceIt,MargaretH«mlltoii| wiirebhtinuew scare children (and childish peoplta Jong.ttftishe stops giving ulcers to M&, Olseri.;^^ While not nearly;enough to ««lsfy» thH|flon will have to 40. What is it about acioioe flc* » tlon and Korror that keeps sd many.movle-gt^rs ' hooked?. Js H that aome people arei forever ln^. matulre, andladtrtiie Inslgbtto.apprecla^ hlgfi wmmmmz r /. ­ v>. V -'* I 4 ­'sj1, -^wjt *>$.** % -»*1 > r > 4 wis-liiAed'Into^albe^Jbint'J BUtl veHr-I jtist ,-. Wanted totrythfcr." Maudeihoved thfepool £ables out to make room for more customers, and stored^vegetable!* where'the beer Was kept" V W,.'! yJ-'^'-i-.V...-.^ VMv'.'.-J! vW,en shed 659*^&& /Med , Jiidudes^ibi^|»i!^|Bl^i|S^1Wrf^y,^V;:'r ' '-«• .ftjg^prth it. /•*>'\v% f ?•>'»« «» tJiL«L ittlEy^Tc^M''ns^pewjjures"up. fcfr ^->1* i , *—"—1—m *-.& I L* ^.——^^aS^SKMdJTAi soat4he ase'Ored^. lil|lS§./f|fr '*£.&* Maude Edwr& and,her sister,^ i||||| Nona, Jtfyes,J are like'grandmother'to theic^ IWS want' them to feel like they're at home,ig| i ^onajsaia^'^ijp^ol these'students just4 nio?e food,than you cojild ppssibly eatJ|( m\ I ? it<%vMi:fiiiiM Lt'ilro Tli0hwAv..7l MRt liakewaVi!^ t e£f?::. ^ffe^Bee CreeJtRoad, Turn right and follow thel, j^§mK forabout threemiles.»?yalk in,and a cheer«||L v>A V.. ••/>;/.>' . •...•• ^uKplttinp wornair-wiH wdlfcup.toyour.tableand _' ] teisSSs .'«•"-;'H, ••:. . §fi p||||&eh«wfJ ;#mMawte>Yo»i know t^ls§||| m .. :? .^t'.;'".! •' ••:i.'•'••' . ^iraHy^slsJe. What^weserve)o «*«*•«««» oat » sill £ lJ ^/'v" , ^'T * ptSiueeze-eaiy 'bottles-*of Thousand, fcland andfj^l ' French,-a regulatitm napklm^ ]tab]ecloth/Apinballmachineanda]ukeboxwithy| Jselectiom -from ftierle Haggard to Elton Johti% Msttia$s-jn dak ammi /Tbe tst^jooms^hold npi&p f-sixty, peopl^ but often a»fe$r>more squeeze .in/ wJ$* it's Thursday, you caji eat all you wgnt of ^'southenJjfriedchicken, mashed.potatoes,: CTeani, »«# >*, Wf i;-_ _vil , %graVy^dloW squashybroccoli, okra gumbo, hot®®^ tw": '/toua q>j wofilr •'"'• Wofl -TrMt ^^vlf thc place looks like an old beer ^olnt, it's Once open six days a week* Bee Creek sqperb peadi cobbler. 'All -fw• |2.50.;If.you vwan^ffi? because-it'was. Maude,.a.former -Houstbnian, / now stays open only Thursday through Sunday.. >bMror'wine, you hav&fo1n,ing it 'i-'Maude.and'^* bought it two years ago. "This place has been • Asked why they close more often, Nona replied, eNoM&erve oniy'Jced'teaorcdffee.i^V^ V here for years," she said. s*A retired policeman ( 'fMaude and I juiit c$n;t do it; We catft gfet any t! j ,5~. ,, r ••!——•i—a— late nightfielp-Somenightswe wash dishes until i two or thr^jn'the morning, besides getting the |food ready for the iiext day. As I told my kids • {her customers)^;I'm determined to grow old •susjy^i l^celfull^^^l^omia do jthiat,^m gonna have /r to slow down.'\ i, M' eMonday's ^ork £hbps ; pot' $}iierve ^them with-the .other main courses during :r b|ie rest;of two sisters haye a High • i' regard fdr the^iry cooking: they often have con­' tesW as to who bakes a moister cornbread or a • tastier peach cobbler. Most of their-customers are long hairs, but ' : that's just flne^; A smile crosses Nona's face, "We like young folks. In fact, we prefer them." ~ But why do thtilt patrons drive the twenty-five ;' miles out of Austin? As one bloated freakobs'erv­ ed, "Word of gobd food travels fasti" ;j,. Maude recajls, "When I first bought this place. ! ! nobody believed I would make ei^ugh topay next / month's rent.: Well, it's been two years feijDecertiber first. I'm not getting rich but I enjoy what I'm doing,\ Every New.Year's Day, foodX°n to® house. Mi |> Four hundred people celebrated wtth-her this j y^ar. Of course, she served black-eyed peas with hamhocks'aiid cabbage — for good luck. Arid for -i : starving students, Bee Creek Tavern is good lucK """'Indeed; ,•••.. ^^Vr..^r.jr pMtMty 3SP3E /.,« -*P6ARL February 197S Kr* I * W*!- i&i'i'i'k ip-*'' *'* ^HfsfsPfS - * v\< C . -f ' - •> i> , - iWf __ __ ________ __._ „ « » fc? ' v^wiiW nr y#""-jLfp -v.-. *,j ^t ' i«ui» «• .J , ^c-Mv^rwf! 3M»4 „ ,-s? m^>i:--.-*swB»ie>^1$R5 Jfr '* Ill-Name; «fe>> ." ^1 H : >'** ' (Unless spie^ified otherwise) ,g=LSfc : L » The Barrone male ojaly, no private baths j? Thie Castilian coed, kitchenette, gym, pool, x Contessa West ^ female only, kitchen .^..•WTsjioM p&i tfr*vr& s?\'i »>,-,;fc The Conte^KSSg^g,,-^: *f'fp^LV. s *Y Dexter House WW r •-coed, private rooms optional, board contracts ; -$315-?495 , <" ~,: -*» ** :v Dobie Center coed, kitchen -•'< ' •m $1,485-$2,150 long sessioi f Goodall-Wooten male only, no meals Heflin Manor international dorm, intensive English students,^ $7O9.5O-$W0.75* sgjjjlj* #| f Newman Hall female only, board contracts optional, kitchen ^ $690-$825 ~ *V" j'T^ • ' ' — • 1 . ' ' ^ ml» i , » r v <*' r* ZkA "• pv r^f 1Madison House coed, private room optional $700-$940 $ — . Tower Manor female, kitchen, no meals $3i5-$575': v:\tr: V^tf t'fWF Name Description, Semester -Ratje®^ (Unless specified otherwise) \ U r^* J+ *-r *.** f i ' vi1 * * v ^ ' — 4:jj. ; Ark Collegeiflotts^^#*?^ L"&:h<& * nm -' :r:..r^ double: HOB Single; 8588SC.' / St"' 2iststrca^%o»seMl|"cb^a Mm '," "1*t double: $448 .• &ti£miim Halcyon coed vt double: $420 single:$480,?,^y< i *• c a ~ ^ ^ d __ Holloway House coed $460 > -'rtt ^ -s" -•' ,W"' « ' ' {? ,New Guild coed , ^ double: $480 jsingle:$580 $500 stj,->/ Ramshorn coed X r,u Royal . coed double: $500 single; $540 * ^2 Seneca House female, graduate or over i2i only: ^ 'double:$450 single:$550 T.L.O.K. male only ; $440 Theleme coed, vegetarian $473 ?| University women's co-ops female only $340 $380 **% 'f i. ft.::A';5iVy;'' rv>14, ,< ^Utility, costs in'Austin have doubled in, the ""past year/city ratesare notexceedingly high on ' #4 a national]standard, but the fuel adjustment fees -' due to Lo-Vaca Gathering Company's failure'to • supply gatf have painfully increased gas and elec-­ trie bills. In January1974;water rates increased IP $0,percent and wastewater rates 211 percent;Add, «>&& to electric rates a 17,8 percent increase phis air (current) 1,368 cent fuel adjustment fee.| 'hatyou have is a doubled cost to;the'apart|| ...w.v owner operating with the rent income babi ­ I ed on the economic situation of over a year agol; as. The extra money comes right,out of the apart-. lament owner's pocket," Staples said. gMr "'Apartment owners have several options, on fill" uiiuty installation when (hey build their com- plexes^A combination of gas and electric brings lip normal rates from the city, usually witha choice;; Mfi of singleor Individual meters,Slncqthe city sells;;; |&f,electricity, allrelectrjc apartmentcomplexes get. a^signHlcant reducUon In base rates, An option 5 w* for the.'demand* rate with a single meter fori® 1 the entire complex means further reductlott||=| Only ,10 percent of Austin^,apartments are a,Iw .-IP P£'? electric and nearly all of those are on Riverside? 1.1 I j 1 drive.-, i w-•"if All-electric apartments are most bxpenslve,, the tenants, After all, the furblncs downtown %X:;t are turned by gas and the fuel adjustment: premiums are passod directly on to the > studont," Kylo McAllBter, director of Habitat Hunters, said, , ; j ,, . fa Most apartments In Austin went up |5 or 110 Ms per month over the summer In an effort to assimilate the utility Increase. All-electric com-, I ploxes and those with single motors could not adapt to the rent plus electricity program because, of the .cost for Installing individual meters. * , , • i*. . "Actually the economic situation has helped m students'.' Apartments have had to have special deals to try and break even and still keep their residents;"They go up on rent, but not to a significant degree, pur company has had to fe* foreclose on several apartments thflt are simply/; fee*^ losing money," said ken Kenerson, service^ sMS| T fspi •m,manager at First Austin Mortgago Company, f$| m K Nil • Ttje foreclosurerate for Austin Is7 percent thls|,ys lis • year as opposed to a national figure of 4.7 per-?-< *»• 'fM cent. Kenerson called It' a sign'of the times, "When we finance a complex we try to I w guarantee quality and a return on our money by-' m appraising taxes,-possible gross Income, and; fluctuations in tho economy. We lose even more income when the prlces are raised above student "fct capabilities," Kenerson said, "W^'re^uslnessmen. We have to ralBe prices. Sf 10 'r > . &fS, J-E We aren't trying to rip anyone off. Increases'/ /, might hurt some"apartments, but overall wefeel/|// that the public will have to go along with the run^' ' ning price. We feel there is strength in numbers," Staples said. The Texas Apartment • Association is the second largest business in state* controlling eight billion dollars. . • -• :"We feel that the student will conserve energy!Hy;^ if he has to!pay his own electricity bill,: too,"!^; -Staples said.; •It looks as jthough quite a fewof us are going-tog/.; have to watch our watts more carefully, andp?;® those of you wanting to move, out of the dofrJ« ., mitory into the real world of apartments piay be.v i ;in for an expensive transition, ^ , ,'^1' ' ^ If you .opt for air electric bill plus rent, the following things will conserve energy and give1 , S'^MlCyou a resultingly lowerbill. Checlttheinsulation , ....'i.w0f.your apartment ,r-a crack in a window whil%.j. .: the heater orair conditioner is running can nMki|f||.' quite a difference; In winter, keep windows' • • covered with curtains and blinds and make surfe;.'-; the air filterp inyour heater-areHclean. It mightjj T help to check the setting, on your refrigerator, . , "One qther way of assuringyourself a fair bill' *, is to check; your own meter. Sometimes they , compute bills on the basis of a whole complex , and divide by number of residents, and sometimes they just estlmate your bill based on' past bills. In my experience 70 kilowatts per day •¥ is just about normal usage for a two-person^^f apartment, McAllster said. " "There aris Isolated complaints each month^M^;: but we will'send'a man out to check your meter.1$-' you request ft,"said Dennis Jiatel, accountantln|i;; the city Water and Light company collecting • unit. i ' , can.save yourself.some money before youfe * sign the leaseon anapartment. If you're^areful,^/ apartment agents may help you.,flnftithe;.irJih||% apartment for no extra charge (the apartment^:: , pay tliem a fee). If you're going to need anapart-/;. • r ment for this summer, wait until May to sign,5 ­bocause the 'apartmentsdrop their rates to comf/:/ pete for thel 13,000 students who remain during^ ;; the summer, -• • :,/v • To assuro return of your deposit, sign a Texas.. Apartment Association lease. It guarantees the;;/. ' • return of your deposit within thirty days after;/ / your lease contract Is Void. If the apartment, doesn't pay; you are entitled to triple your • 'j, deposit plus 1100, plus attorney's fees. , & If you hove a pot. try to sign a pet agreement:: • form. Some apartments will requost that you / have your rug shampooed and sprayed for fleas,Jp| which assures that your apartment Is clean. t. : "Head your lease carefully! keeping ln mliid;p . contingencies. What if something breaks? Is the:^ ^manager required.to fix it? How are.you//:'! protected If he Isn't? Are you still responsible fori,. • / rent If you are required to le«ve school? In most ;|r / .^states studentsareresponslblo; the apartment It (V » thelr'hc(lne for the length of the lease," advised Rick 8haw» leailng agentfor Apartment Flndersi|p|i Service, "'"I / " M J r " ' ' v It has beentsald that most things!get to Austln%^ 1last. If only the apartment,Increase would stay in ,':// : Houston and never get here, right? I have a /:::-'-/:' . frlond who claims the way to save on electricity •vis to get up with the sun and go to'bed with the ; sun, More natural than the harsh lights of Jester, . 33 my friend says. What price solitudja? But In the .^6,\ ifvnd, no matter how much you pay for it, there's 'V'/ : no place like home, ( • PEARL. February ;v.! -\ , ^ M J7"/ ** m$WA iat/ttim . The Buffet c?me in cycles, yet these were alsp indeterminate. In'the old days the tribes were sometimes,caught by the Buffet and ltwas said by the plders'that for many years.the virtual ex­istence of Gnop'snationShung thinly in the balance" — "v--• • • • --c ---» Certain signs of an approaching'Buffet were recognizable' the darkening skies, we skittish behaviour of the herds, the slight shaking of the earth under one's feet, all would soon fulminate in the Buffet, soon, the firmament.itself would be jarred if , ; ^ In time, the shamans came to recognize the onrushing disaster with an acumen,that seemed-to verge on the supernatural. But;was.this not, the tribesmen told each other, the province of the shaman' Those who had proved unworthyof the role were surely castjout to die proyided^nough of the tribe survived such a miscalculation so as to be able to meet out just punigh^ent to an in­effective shaman <, , t , When all went well, supplies and ilocks were hurriedly gathered into the caves; wood was gathered and fifes Were struck. Some flowery ^ grain, if such there was, was^eft in, thkopen„asr,a. " sometimes the Buffet served to scatter seed and T -this was said to portend good. '}7'r ^ " But what was and likewise^tohat -would 1>e depended solely oh the caves, Thet'cav6si These were the drowning glory of ah impoverished race Surely.the early attempts to hidefwm the ; Buffet in caves resulted not infreguentljfein the wholesale death of several families, when the • roof of the cave succumbed to U\e Buffet and subsequently crashed dojni,itransfor;--\­mmg womb into torrib. Strangely enough, these tragedies had been blessings of a sort, veins of ore had occasionallybeen revealed and the tribes slowly came to Wp them< -TJie cayfes,;Hifid. im>, 5 proved gradually until a network reinforced j. • . columns and crude metal linings aerved to but­tress them up; cavings-in were lessfi^gueht, es» 1 pecially in caves close to the mountaiVtops The caves will now be put to use, for^now the skies of Gnop will darken, almost imperceptibly; now the bleating of the sheep modulate?, but nearly 5inaudible; nevertheless, the Keed shamans exhort their people; the BuJfeUq upon . us; come, gather,, to the.caves. \'wsh ^ ' "Hie dogs now corral find herd the sheep up the , , mountainside; the meager crops, "some still, green, fall'to'the blade, Even the shaman's ap­prentices are ranging afield, though quickly, • gathering fruit from the Seer tree. Inside the caves the fires are lit; Seerfruit is brought in t>y panting apprentices; juice , is madoi poured in goat/bladders and passed from hand to hand. Everywhere, the signs of the Buffet.grow; the sandclock shakes over so slightly — men, women,,-babe>(. children arid the aged — all adjust their eyes to the gloom of the cavern and the laughter or the fire;-only during the BuffeUre these things ex­perlencqd.A • : , t «. Arid all ears, shumart Mlnoo; pressing the sllmey bladder to hlB forehead, then drinking.a vast draught, he leads the chant of Byran. As tradition dictates, the voices'of all gathered there rise;,ail throats join In the chanting, in point and counterpoint, the men speaking,one verse,""' simultaneously by the wpmea^^^ Pray that the f V# #G In',infinite wlidorfciM ftet deaf to'the pieis be, ofrvy.-pjlai Qnoplan'tongues ^v'y. '^/pray thfit the Maker^i^ ' On whose whlmwe linger.. f^ot hold the true vision fronu^ Gnoplaneyes JJ<-" v **i. * f l , I V blf ?«\\ , *.fHA «'S!1 altogether; yeit as the Seerjmce was imbibed in tbey will^see, tjie^Vlsion'ol^^^M^^ greater quantities, so did the chant remain at headed: yet,smilmgitoitheirseyes „.j" ''<1. , "Astounded were the tri^and"^ r asked of Byran tijget the xjame ttfJfeljeve o his father's father,,rolled hisses,f>ndw white, . -—„ , ^ sword*,'that the Maker was^iffeic^^f^^®| now glinty in the firelight, his voicesingsongjhi^ s-^they b^fitjto look upon him^tfuife| features luted; from his lips nowjroHs the sagaIY (fitness camevit^tbe tness came,with the tale of Byran -"•>H / f1,TheThp talptale:done,)done Mmoo amKAeutti: "In oldest times did the>n&tiqns"and[ tribes^ '.peopleof tremble. oft did they die, toysia the bandsof the Maker were they, and many were the familje^ ^the<;t^s^l^begaigj^e||^|ii|p^(^^ that passed beyond. "** 4d^pce. Soot* tfagjwoulfi ""And thus dime Yakutis from northern plains.; Uhe mafeive^st^e to to theireast, thefamilies of Foment; tothewest^? jJ'iTrom\tluf otidul the Ubenga roamed, here m the south were the'" aWay," Paiyw£n,T a Palyw^n,? an Keed. "And some from our tnbe was Byran^erfoor .. cave He> ran tmfeide of the tribe, jUie"scapegoat,, the dumb;^'twas ^mountain to the plain fiiotl thought that his eyes were unseeing, 'twas said Jnole h^absence}>s/t~"t^",'i^;*®£Si that his voice was inyouth's. timenusplaced;:fpr^' >irom'therfirst throes he sat by the day without ^peaking; his prpduct \J3A^ the'jJtein;'Patyw^|tt^!pi^||^i^M|| '«skiesfthe «artt shookSj^iiiMhOT was little if any, 1 '"i ^ '' ^ cAnH thpn iraitip^ the Buffet*: 'ithe shamans ivt1^yston«vrbHed;xlo^i||dffi^j§iMi3|i|Ewi|i *thfere dntfie plaint ^struck his back. fS ^ Hie skies OfdnoP -eartlr shook jrf "Arag^'^3^ "And the ^nffet came.hard^ it ckme^with; ^ v .The Buffet haff begun* iguiuni Aim »-•—. *• N> EPILOGUE r vengeance antfnone before nor aftercould match' it in strength* or"duration; still. like the rest, it "Volley for ^erve?, or you^itniu^ nassed withits timei the rock it waslro\led>from "little?*? ^ ? v "C'mwi&K dqn t need^that-stuff: Jim threw'th^4wll5^ros^*tt^'/i^ c obscene paddle'^oundfJimhiy Ughtly'; 'back; Thiikl^T.^' Thak! "I." Thek« Thok! MG "" towards Jim at ^ Jim wasn't-exactly the world s premier ping pong player;,but^ then ^agairi,r Jimmy wasn'r Olympics material himself. Still, they leered at! t eaoh other"8crossk the' net, each, knowliqjftthaf11 -neither was especiallyany bettor.'than (ihelother' • buVhonethele$s ind likewise, neitherwfa^^quibe' v' v;ready * . ­ the mouth or the cavern; with joy did tfce Keed% , -/Jim's greot the white of-Gnop's skies, ' "But look! on the plain sits Byran the TCeedi^ 1 paddle. >,« -v -iw Gotta get behind thla^lm flight?this'is „w •.contemplative andstill, yet breathing; to hls$lde'*­ time ... a slam, a ^lam', smash the little fuckerv' with a roar rushed thefamilies; yet theysilenced^ right down his throat f.r draw back t^artnff '^ as Byran did turn, and exclaim:, • -1 \\ .perfect, a set-upipol^j^owWj; ' " 'Men of Keedi plainsmen of thesouth! Illvef' I speak, and;yet, I h&ve.seen! Is it not strange to THACKF-s-*f. .-if The ball cleft the air with*a speed and powet Vvour minds that 1/ a frail Keed, still brtathe > that astonished Jlip. < \Vhat was not especially;where ail others have perished? anwer? , astonishing was the baU!&missing Jimmy'ssl^fc. qan you not agree? ', V V j,v. ^^ of the tabT&W^ptely. smacking insteadjntp "Truly spoke, for Indeed, 'twas a miracle) yet , dndorblocK ^ oven morb wondrous was the visage ho showed; ­more marvelous-ithe wisdom now'lining'his1 voice! The poetry of bis words! The'truth that seemed so clear, so apparent' " Ll " 'This do I tell, 0brothers! seen; he be not god nor gods of god of purposes and thls do 'I L —, 'from the^very beginning, ­soon come wheti lhe Buffet subsides and theivery; • "Hey, uh, champ.lt's broken.-^ skies of Gnopwill bejrentasunder; lljghtwill pour "So What? You got nriothor.one^dohchR?^ down, tempered with fire; all will be.suffered to V^'No. man, that's It,}think theyk« allcracKe gaze on the infiniteof that which now andforever lies beyond theso mere1 skies. And many will be iR'lost.^> ;;f #-''Thoit just aboul^eiitsmy,B^ior^i maniasalR^ those smitten by s*ld light; they will,fill as fall • set>to whip your as»;'i •' they mustx for they will be said to be unlike that1 "Jim walked overlo where^lmmy^aswllln^t^ ^hich 4s shown them; they will be' blinded as the.ball-;under his:poddleivlt^a^t^^{of9uwps blinded they werethemoment their-eyescame to Jim' readh'ed*Inter hls> pbcHet and "pulled'j»ut' open. ' ' ' •'' , 'Others will see, yet theirs-will be a lot ol serrow; they will not come to know what Is Shown them, for they be unlike it In spirit; their an an ashtray, then Jit it on'fire. ,• It si^iled>forawhll^and wentout.By thattim Jim and Jimmy' were over the stereo, talklni about a record to putlog, pfjftfig the ' crimson will (helreye? be lifted; their gap will from hand to hand,Iay-continually milk-white with gV$loud'layeredwhere the tribes of Yakuta, Keed, IS,', l/benga and'Foment wandered irregularly over f seml-f6rtile plains. always to return to the moun­ts tains: mountains;craggy and cav^-ridden. ^iTbefliftuntainsr-theyihad been the salvations of fe^ ^nopa%e^wteilis^d^e,prophecy of Byran Ipr tfo Keed |$the,njounfamsliatfalways been there, or so it ' jsaijd;.Byran, on the, other hand, was lost Trt*1 th£' hnirk of unrecorded ages. * fA 1 " ^ i There was no doubt, of course, that he had ex­isted at one point oranother; no, for generations the storytellers had passed his legend and .his prophecy from father to son; in their voices his words lived; from mouth to mouth his truths spread until the four tribes knew them,and knew thefn well. >n ' Of course. It waV hard to get over the old beliefs, the pantheon of gods and godesses, caye­spirits and genies; in the worsfof times, those things have a dogged persistence. Yet'Byran the Keed's tale, when told before firelight on the eve of the Buffet, somehow skirted the myths, somehow stood fast: Had this not been so, the story would have died with the families of Kee. and Byran would be unlike any other, merely here then gone, sunk irretrievably in the depths of the past. As it was, Bryan and the prophecy only, lay fallow while the cycle ran its course, while the tribes herded their sheep and goats from plain to pasture It lay fallow with the land, for only small runoffs at the mountain's feet were main­tained. Only there did shrubby grain venture to push through the rough soil. .When the cyclehad more or lessrunits course,, when the tribes returned to the mountains/when the shamans ruled unequivocably that, yes, the the Buffet was imminent, only then did the tribes gather the wisdom of Byran to themselves as they reaped theirskimpy harvest; they collected it as they collected the ambrosial fruit' of the Se6r tree. They pressed the prophecyof Byran to their hearts as they pressed the Seer fruit between stones; as the Buffet came upon them, so did the words of Byran the Keed. For the mo­ment, the tribes forgot the old beliefs, shunting them off for more hopeful thoughts. For the Buffet was a time of dire, a time of destruction and chaos. The old tales' asserted jthat it was a time when the gods, in an un­characteristically festive mood, tossed Gnop between themselves, taking godly pleasure in the carnage their frolic wrought. Of course, Byran said otherwise, but regardless of this one thing remained clear arid incontestable: the Buffet was a time to dread, for all that stood to face it likewise stood to be. razed, killed or scattered as every ounce of earth inexplicably shook, and shook with an uncontrollable frenzy. The Buffet lasted anywhere from seven to for­ty turns of the sandclock; yet this was hard to determine, as it was hard to secure a sandclock through the Biiffet " PEARL February 1975 "5 by Byron Cain- You're graduating this spring and you want to. know what the job market,Is like, what with the recession and air. "Bad." i •-'We're looking for a vfery good -recruiting­ season." -. • ; .­ Whose two views are those, Ford's and George „ Meany's? No. You're liable to receive those answers from placement offices righti here on a campus, and the-response you rate alldepends on?^ what field you are in. -A The 'bad' is from Joseph Ondrey, placement director of the College of Business Administra­ tion. He likens the current tight job market for : business majors to the '69 -'70 downturn when' the number of job openings shriveled con­ siderably. Many firms who usually come to the UT Business School to interview have cancelled this year. Indeed, Ondrey has urged them not to send recruiters, if they have' no positions to offer the graduates. Why waste their time and ours, he reasons. ... : '.j • The companies who are comuig to recruit are looking for the one or two cream-of:the-crop business.students, the MBA's, used to snare ten business students, the MBA's, use to snare ten or . twelve offers in good times, but now they may be down to barely one or two. Accounting and sales management appear to be two brightspots where the hiring is holding up fairly well. In the mean­ time, undergraduate and graduate students alike line up early at*8 a.m. to push and-shove their _ way to: the"interview sigft-up sheets. Competition^ is fierce merely to geton the listfortheprivilege,j, of being interviewed. ; Walk on down Speedway to the new Engineer­ing complex, and Dr. Carl Morgan at the Engineering Career Placement Service will tell you that the engineering school is looking "for a very good spring." They have experienced a few cancellations due to the recession, but the addi­tion, of firms coming for the first time balances that;, out. Engineers -in the petroleum and petrcichemical areasare highly sought after, says Morgan, particularly by the oil companies who are making great efforts to develop new reserves. Chemical and mechanical engineers are also in demand, with electrical specialists being the only ones cited by the director as being in a down cycle. Morgan hastens to add that he is "thankful that we are not in Detroit" as the engineers up there are hard hit by the layoffs in the auto in­dustries., For the engineering students here, , there will be a reduction of offers, • Morgan believes, from thf five; or six expected before down to two or three. Speculating that therewill be a shortage ofoengineers for the next decade, Morgan emphaticallyasserts that-'thelongterm outlook for engineering is tremendous." r ­The present push in the oil industry is also benefitting .„geokfgy -students, reports Ms. Birdeoa Schroeder in the geology office. The number of recruiters there has gone; up 50 per­cent this spnng, with most of the increase comr . v-ing from petroleum and mining.firms. PhD's in- V. geologyare in less demand than master's or BS­ "degrees,-Ms"Schroeder mentions, which perhaps suggests the danger of being overquahfied in these times. This trend shows up in other fields as well, particularly in business. Despite the recession, the referral service run by Ms. Freda Happner for the fine arts majors has received morenotices of vacancies tofill this spring than. ever before. Because, the office schedules no recruiters and basically concerns itself with matching students with position openings, the main connections Ms.-Happner ­makes are with yniversity-level teaching posts. In that respect, graduate students have a much easier time securing Something than the BA's. -This is especially true in the fields of art, studio art and drama. Music teaching appears to be one area in the fine artsrealm wherethe possibilities have remained'fairly numerous. Liberal arts-students are traditionally pegged as.being in a nebulous, basket weaving sort of field which qualifies them to do anything or nothing. Debbie Nesbitt( who works in the liberal arts placement office,T which is located in the Career Center in tester A115, -says many , studehts ask her what they can do with such and • such a major.-She answers, "Hold it, don't think jike that. Put your, broad, general education to work for you as an asset. You are not a techni­ cian," she reminds them, "but a well-educated humanist with a flexible way of looking at problems." And as she points out, most of the recruiters who come to her office want to look at students with any kind of major. Now more than ever, not being specialized is a plus because one is.not dependent on a certain part of the economy to be good to find a job. The firms who; do:specify majors want people who are in either math or computer science. An in­teresting trend that has developed this year has been the switching of some recruiters to liberal arts from the business office, basically because they feel BBA's are too homogenous a group. Neiman-Marfius, for instance, interviewed six full sheets worth of students at the business school, and talked with two sheets worth at the liberal arts office, but they will probably hire the --same number of people from each area. The' overall number of recruiters: coming to see liberal arts students has increased since last spring due to an extensive mail campaign carried out by the placement office. There is not really any special kind of help offered by the various offices to grad students, beyond that available to the undergrads. There ' are connections that can be tapped for faculty k and administrative positions at all educational levels, but for those not bound for academia, it's* . a mixed bag. With the troubled economy, some' graduate students may find themselves over­qualified^ while others are more in demand. English PhD's, for example,are currentlya very,­overpopulated species. : Commenting on the academic life1specifically, Dr; L.A. Rutledge of Teacher Placement doubts" that the economy has much affected the job s market there. Of all the spring and summer ' graduates from last year who registered through-/ his office* only 7 percent failed to be placed in a ? position. Of these 137, the solid majority, 60 per-4 cent, were in English and the social sciences, :­currently flooded fields. Thirty percent were out of luck because of geographical restrictions they­placed on themselves, and the remaining ten per-: cent were minimally qualified. Dr. Rutledge expects the English and social science areas to be slow again this year, with hi-.­lingual, special education, science, and mathC teachers to again be in a buyers market. "Those hopefuls who have a marketable minor' . field are most in demand," says Rutledge, because schools arelooking for those who can do -­well in several disciplines." Donna Axum Mutscher's story in the. Com-1 ' munications Placement Office is much the same as it is for business: Especially hard pressed are the radio-TVrfilm majors, all vying for jobs with; three Austin. TV stations. Many are having to go • free-lance, taking jobs outside their major. Jour­nalism and advertising positions seem to be.. holding up the best, but all the interviewers who v-come are seeking a smaller number of new' employees. Both Ondrey and Mutscher see many students taking a job just to have one* which they say can-, not be condemned with the situation as it is. Ms. Mutscher stresses that a student can geta job to tide him oVSr while he continues to search, "We should not look down on someone who takes a job to keep on looking." Ondrey echoes her sen­timents in advising students to leave no avenue unexplored. When all that has failed,1.Mis. Mutscher offers the final wo^d. "When you think you've reached the end of your rope, tie a knot and hold on." That, and curse the engineers. TT PEARL; February 1975 *5 ij ^ * •• -V v-A £' h av* ,, by Robert Vernon ir H a The rising cost of food has forced many students to seek other means of buying their ^C'^grdceries.TOne of the most effective waysis buy-from a food cooperative. 4|"« Ijh -Food coops are beginning Jo flourish »n Austin J ;A^and are,providing people with the opportunity to $rbuy"fresh food from nearby farms at prices that p^are apped.ng to not only fte ^re butfo as well.^ > The co-op food stores are members of the t'l13*3Austin Community Project (ACP), an orgagiza­^-v^tion consisting of various kinds of co-operatives 0 and collectives, such as the housing co-ops, the tv -7'Clarksvilte Bakery and the Austin Community Sv-Produce. It is an organization concerned with ' making the local,community economically^ln­ ty consciousness.",. "It isa recbgnitipn Uiat the community and the, individual do not exist apart fromeach other, but, "iffe'Mneed'each other to exist." f "At present there aretwo co-opfood stores ser­ ving the Austin community. The Woody frills: ^store-is located in West Austin**! 1013 W.Xynn', ,7'and the Avenues CO-OP islocated in the Unlver­ '^" ^'/^sity'area at 4115 Guadalupd^' ' ; v-; Pood sold in theso stores Is mostly organically m% 'ft/v-'grown on farms near Austin. There are three such farms, one In Caldwell, one near Elgin and ^t'^onelocated in North Austin near Cameron Road. tiy., Th«The AustinAnatln Community Produce buys the food buvs , from these farms and distributes, Itamong the ^larger housing co-ops. Usually an order is placed the buyers and Is filled y?(ih prpduce from W•«£%'the farmsor by a weekly buying expedition to the Antonio produce, martetlfa atopefrent; co-ops get their produce '&V ^Community Produce and sell Jt]^;!he;'irnal|ej;.: s#f7''.'5con»iimers, /The neophyte co-op shopper who enters the store with visions of buying shopping baskot load of food to take home will probably be dls­ ;jf mayed and confused at the appearance and %&W?arrangement ot the food. There are no cans of; beHns or soups, no sacks of flour; and no TV 'Sir ^ dinners, the food Is arranged In its natural, un­yv? ' jcookod state. _ 19 . The pricing system is also a little bit unusual Th§wholesale price of each product is listed on a large chalkboard which hangs from one wall. After the shopper has gathered all food be plans .ne, pound:eighthounce loaf of :^ white sandwich bread costsabout 45cents.At the. \co-op, a two pound loaf of:milk;and honey whole wheat bread costs f1.09.for member8|..pnd fi.25 -Ibr iion-members.''?'-,-. r ' It would appear that a person could get more bread at Safeway than at the co-op, but a loaf of bread from the co-op is considerably more nutritious.. Mike Smith, a store coordinator, at the Avenues CO-OP. says that the overall savingson other products would offset the higher price of the few more costly items and'still fellow the buyer to save more. • The ultimate savings come from being an ac­tual member of the food cooperative. Memberships are easily obtained ahd relatively inexpensive. Members of theAvenues CO-OP are required to pay fl membership fee, to be used as store capital,12 yearly ACP.dues,$2.80 fora food • coupon redeemable six months later Infood from the store, and a monthly stock;eharge of II for twenty months. '-A. In addition to the.money eharges, a memb«r labor charges. ?! quired to work1 two hours!each, month.-tabor ChargMcan 1»;p^rfd••ln^•ev»»^:,;^i#,c•jii^;«; working In the store, Working one day on one W the farms or performing any.^umber pi mis­ :•: cellaneous,,dutle|ii ^ ;:Vv ^v The number of members is increasing as tho ownbmie^sltuatloh woneng. Moi^ peopIo are realising that collectlvo buyiiig arid community cooperation aro an effective meaiu of battling In­ flation. . / , At present there is not a large number of ': students who are members of these co-ops. "The J majority of those memt>ers .who are students i live in Austin year round and would be members| even if :they were not in school," says Smith, j There are also a few University professors who , are members. « w n -There are;a few reasons stodents givefor not 'buying from the co-ops, one of them being that . -.'food requires a little more preparation than simply opening a can and heating up the con­tents. The thought of steaming your own vegetables is not appealing to the average stu-f dent, partially because he has never had to do it 1 before After a little practice, though, the stu-. dent would discover that itonly takes a few more .minutes to prepare and is considerably more nutritimis than a bowl of soup and crackers, j • , Another reason commonly given for not buying from the co-ops is that the preparation requires, expensive cooking utensils. However,. the .. average student cooking for one'or two persons ' usually' acquires a minimal amount of pots and pans. Some students have said "that the reason' they do not buy from the co^p is because the * produce, is often rotten. This is a problem not. restricted to co-ops. Even large stores such as . Safeway and HEB occasionally come across some rotten produce which is promptly disposed . of. The same holds true for the co-ops. Smith says rotten produce is not as much of a V problem now as it was when the store first dpeft-, ' ed. "Sometimes we would oveis>rder certain ;; things and they would rot before we could sell them, but that rarely happens anymore "The cooperative movemetit is growing (the Avenues CO-OP membersHIp has doubled since;. i^Octobfr).M:says Smith, It (the^ movement) to 'expand enough to become iotn actuil-' threat to stores like'Safeway and > •1 f|iE»:;®; • ' ' ', i As of noWj they aro little more than concerned < ' community members who 'are interested in r ; bettor) nutrition^ lower prices, and anopportunity > to rel eve tholr dependence upon, national, food;,, ^xhain-storibs^ 7 c .ft* «*** Fodd co-ops are not a panacea for the $. woes 0r prosent day inflation and recession, but r for thbse of us who cannot afford toeatatBonan-1H za every, night, they do provide a positive a^ •1 • 5 native. 1 PEARL February 1W3 ; >1 k, -as-J -.32 i * w" >Ji' 1 */ ' *• . s . Help us fill them by' telling us what we don't have; '* -"if&k" It ' V f-siKiK tMr' >: 7T \.* <•*• u Come look—We'll listen ,'. ' v-.ijskm- University;.Booksellers 2mGuadalupei ,'3j£&7j> as.vy&b&'i •* -"•• -V ' r' "''' 2 'i V, , ,,Jv^ •V^5^!^'£ >V XJ>V -I ffuR^ PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL 4'''» -A4 J? • Technitions Betfe Prltchett M Approved -J Deborah Adams RN irMMWiiiv wn wifi •> i *V yO Rapid Removal • Members of ta*(fcM ttKMipi* Am USY PARKINS AVAIUIU - , ,J'1 '' V^V jB«t» WtOh«f;W/I^"»'''-,ttl,#i,e,l,,®# '/"•'•.CI) Compilmsntary Consultation CM • ' ' « 1 > I I m? i:fj UNiVERSITY^ECTROLYSIS ! rt >* >£}^ ^/{ ^ 477-4070 ij. 1201 W«t 24th Suit* 103•^m ;f ; 24th and longvl*w | PEARLFobruary 1975 '«Bf f* "v-' . 5^ ^latw»«^^aloe^u^-colo^l cjarrty, together with carat Leutwyler "Jev*eler&jeadf jSiamooci meets specific?^ standards fo assure true r\|i(al|ttmuv-adjustmenl of the entire ignition system &0a-fice^tbe spark plugs:at the proper moment in f^thepist(MJ's compr«sion/power cycle. wear, indicators-a fancy name for the fef'-Wear barsl'Jhat are qiolded into the tread of a '''IlltiiW.-fhe wear bars appear when the tread is '-Jworn below l/16th" across two or moreadjacenf tjgfeai grooves. ^•jflhivenal joints flexible shaft coupling that /L^llows twornpncollinear shafts to rotate. The U- f joints onvS car connect the transmission to the . AV.v-?drive shaft to the rear axle, and let the drive S'i'iram wort even though the rear axle is bouncing t j up "and down" -* &%vaeutimadvance-the unit which governs the ig­ "^ pitiQn timing (spark advance) during low engine '-speedjE.*;or low engine, loadings. -valve train-blanket term for the cylinder valves in an engine, and the pushrods, springs and iXjifters which operate ihem v^vapor locket condition that occurs when gas vaporizesiil the fueiiine and blocks fuel flow to 'the engine, i feS "water jacket-the channels running through the engine btyck through whi<^ the water-coolant < mixture is pumped ' • .V,:-"'. v J DrjijC. Richard-'King/ Prot •Oft ' |Journalism, author of tbe cookbook, { Manana With Memories. » ! & m fjllg Quiet Hound Cornbread I gjassodatecornbreadand yet^bat^ J, association isn't the reaso years I'­ ifitfrilmtirrJf** rthatregOlate& |; wouldn't touch cornbread. . ­ *• tion of electricity used in ignition. It is also«,ftl; One summer-after my'Uncle Dick had taken 1.his.horses to tbe-race.meets, the Church of I^Ghitety'across thestreetfrom hisbomfe. began iti I outdoor' revival meeting.' The day the revival I meeting started, Uncle Dick's thirteen bounds j. came to town from the Hellenbeck farm. 7 ! Although Gorman street$ are wide, her, i summer nights are,still, so the words of tlie I-'preacher .wafted clearly and strongly to Aunt j J I I Maud's yard. Thatfirst nigbt, when thepreacher became especially emotional and pounded his point in a booming voice, all thirteen hounds sat back on their haunches, lifted their heads and fowled. When the congregation sang, so did the dogs — soulfully. J. | Naturally, a church committee informed Aunt- Maud that the bounds had interfered with tlie saving of souls..She bought a 25-pourid sack of .meal and adcedjMotherto help kMp the hounds|r.-r.-JIant? cuj^dt . ; unpeeled -­ 1 large onion, chopped ' 1 bell pepper, chopped1 1 rib celery, chopped 2 cloves garlic, sliced 1 can stewed tomatoes, undrained 6 black olives pitted and sliced 6-pimento-filled green olives, sliced 1 small can button mushroom caps oregano, cracked pepper, salt. tobasco sauce * 2 tablespoons oil Saute the onion, bell pepper, celery, and garlic in the oil until the onion is golden and soft. Add eggplant. Add the rest of the ingredients and j simmer 10 minutes more. Remove from heat. ~ ~ " |;Stuffed Peppers v | Sear 1/3.cup dhopped'ookm in small amountofl oil in iron stiUet for about 5 minutes. Add 2| pounds groundlmeat and sear until done bat notj brown. Remove from beat and drain off all e*i cess fat Return to lieafc.add:-l/3 cup grated cheese, l! teaspoon chopped fresh garlic and salt and. pepper to taste. -t • I Stir until cheeseis melted. Removefrom heat,J; add well-beaten egg. Add Mi cup cooked rice to! • the mixture. Place meatmixture in peppers thatj have been'seeded^ washed, and boiled in saltedl water for about '20 minutes. ' j Sprinkle dash of Ritz cracker crumbs on top.} Bake for about 20 minutes in 400 degree oven, i \ l" i' | ,1 cup of.grits .< Baked Grits -'. J/I 2 eggs separated Salt to taste, ^ . .1\ Vt quart of water . ' I *ft quart of milk I Boil the grits.in the water and milk mixed.' Season and when quite dry, takeoff thestove and} let it cool a little; Beat the whites and yolks ofj eggs separately,and when the grits arecool beatl in the yolks ^ and blend thoroughly, then add the} whites and beat until very light. Add *h cup ofj crieam..Set in oveii and bake to a beautiful brownl and s^rve hot. . Roast Possum a la Pevinev President Ford and his economists claiml there's no chance that we are headed into aj Depression like the one that paralyzed this coun-j try fit the 30!s, but my friaid Pevtae Jeffriesi from N<»rth Gulch in Madison Pounty isn't taking! any chances. He dusted off his recipe for possum! the last time President Ford made a speech onj the economy. .In other words, Pevine was not| convinced. ' j For those, and I am pne of them, like Pevinej that remain unconvinced, here's a mighty handy| recipe for roasted possum. I 1. Buy or steal one dozen good sized sweetj potatoes J" 2. Catch your possum, placingan axe handleor| a strong stave directly behind the possum's ears.l Place your feet on either end of the axe handle' 3. Get a secure grip on the tail of the possum) and lift his carcass straight up, weight lifter| fashion. Atthe soundof the crack inthe possum's! neck release your grip^ He's dead now. , ! 4. Build a fire of oak wood, When you get aj% supply of ashes therefrom. roll the possum overl i ­and over in the ashes until the hair isloosened orI singed off (ybu'd jbetter hold your breath and/or j nose during.this operation.) , | 5. Grasping tail of possum firmly in left hand,I take knife in righthand and scrape allhair off un-J til his entire carcass is white and shiny as ag billiard ball. I 6. Remove innards of possum by slitting open! his stomach. | 7. If sensitive to handlike feet, remove feetj right above the shanks. I 8. Place possum (cut off the tail too) in large' roasting pan. Bank him with sweet potatoes.) Place possum in oyen at 300 degrees. | 9. Do something^ distract yourself and erase! memory of his singed hair. Let roast in oven onej to two to three hours, testing possumand potatoes with fork from time to time for tenderness, i 10. You are now;ready, come what may from J Washington or Wall Street, to enjoy life at least j asJaRM thfe Eossum lasts,. — ~PEtttTeb7\Jar?V^ v /-*?# ! '' by Leslie Spirfks -• Instead of the gentle popping of cereal in: the morning, the average college student is just as likely to feel the snap, crackleand crunch of in­flation. Food costs have.risen somuch in the last year thatmany students find themselvesshort of . cash at the grocery counter. For those barely s scraping by, food stamps may be the answer. Food stamps are a mixed blessing for those i whomeet the standards set by the Department of Public Welfare and the Department of Agriculture.; For many",' the stamps , are the difference between evaporated milk and real milk, eggsand noeggs, fresh producearid canned beans, hunger and starvation." However, food stamps cannot be used to buy pet food, beer or wine, tobacco, imported foods, or non-food ar­ticles — even the USDA can't help you when you run out of toilet paper. Studente majthayje afew problem apply-^ ing for stanaiw^simlpiy' set up-for a fem ily;need situation. Students who , split apartment and food^ti wiifi roommates caused difficulties for the Welfare Department;• until a new set of guidelines came out last year, making allowances for student homes and in­comes. To apply, call the Food Stamp Office at 474­6401 or go by 624 Pleasant Valley Rd. (behind Govalfe Shopping Center at 7th St.) to set up an appointment for an interview. VYithin a few days you will receive a six page application form. The detailed questions, resembling an income tax form, concern all sources of income arid all out­standing debts.The application itself isjused only for reference since you will be required to prove all expenses and income with check Stubs and receipts during your appointment. Youi-receipts Will be deducted from total income to arrive at a net income figure used to measure that amount allowable for qualifications. Access to a kitchen is the most important re­quirement for those applying for food Stamps — Tjf, nr*** t ;• >• 1 1 ^ 1 -jiVv. no kitchen,'no .stamps.: Youmust also be employed or actively seeking employment, though under current regulations full-time students are not required to hold down a jotv , StudentS'Whosplit foodcosts with roommates must be certifiedasa household. Thismeans that the total of all bills is subtracted from the total income to measurethat amount allowable. If you buy yoiirfood apart, from your roommate, you must.be able to prove to the caseworker that foods are kept in; separate cabinets pr .op different shelves. ' • Certification procedures take approximately three days: If'authorized, you will receive an Authorization to Purchase Card (ATP) and a food stamp identification card. With both of these cardsin hand, proceed tothe one.of six post offices which sell food stamps.-The campuspost office won't work,so students.may find the North Austin Station at 4300 Speedway to be the next most convenient. Purchasesi V.' •L-"ipyvpfct»4 J , f Va# n ? * % 1 I ^ i/.1* v <4 ' 5^h-i *^tv ^'plie >.* lUimt-p§kj *. uig, leaaing w uw umw •»» i~>','."'-'> .«••' separation It'&lso makes 'steering" hafder-and 'does terfible'thing^ to mileages ' "' an^rdef* to prop&tty infljit&^o^wivw, yoiir owner's manual fort%oorrectfctr pre$sfoi€; forypur particulatffcar. flfjou've got neWtireSf ask^U** dealttv41u«y*tnflate1yptiritire<; to the propelvleWl There is only ortfe^lfflmon ception to this rule If you are goinglwi ­ Wm0^fAJ vji bias-belt; i '-W4s®S .s^reae ^ bla?-F be'l# ~ m WJ&VV if >f, yf\ {l^Acj-'niS rr%% sites* ratwrP , WB / Most car, owfrersneve^bother to bto^ttaeir yrtll Probably savenojpjn^afea car's various filters checked, The onlyfUtertfiat oil filterat a (name-brartd 4 is chancedwith any frajuencylstheoil filter,trnt$ %They ^Ul ^ually chaii^e yow^iljust foMhe w 'r?e»r«v*-1 ^ 7, % v?*v *>-Vi» in Ilk '1 !§S mwiy^ hp «'gr^>t^aV$t(heat.is produced, raostof vfblch is #?! Pi S&' «' HIM •visiiwJC^ sidewallif artd squirming, thl^bias-pfy lire tendsu 'JrJ tp iftt' it<wadjwhen the auto tarns-rapidly,,. $||ji ^ucing-rpad-ifread contact justiwhen you need' j? <5^ A j^ivt^lTlOStt;v -j ,JThe*boy$ mjthe backrooms 6f Afero^ijffundia-J^Sf £ M >2 "M way tocontroltfigbias-ply's flejjand Squirm^In a* «•&$ blas-belfctyrVa reinforced belt 6f;nyIon, rayon,or Wsf fe <#$• steelrtins just-tinder the tread "JTiis belt stiffens "f4­the tread andfinds most of the flex and squirm ill>,'% ^ m% s Ktl' the procfssPni^Mas'beJt isa^ood all-round tire,.'* ««aiiia ^run*atrightangl6stathfedentfS ^Over tlie fabric are layers of belts, made of eitherrayon.nylonprsteel. Ontop ofthebeltsisg liby.M v-• t ,j,•4--Jv*1. ••r-r itirV'S'-­ ^j>-the tread•*$$/,*£- , ,«£s 1«' , j -k§f - ^ The^radial has veryt flexible sldewalls — it •• always looks underinflated — but It has a very t i * C nTIRE turning profile \VWi'V}^u * __ byChrir Child Jt'sWfe to say-that tires aVe the'most Impor­ c ft? --4 ' > •' & tant part of your car, They're the.only ptoce%$ 1 equfpment on a car that'dome* In contact w»h the road, unleaa you've dropped a-tailpipe or "f Z*F(i m ;, muffler£%muffl#r< vv., ,,f/i i&a'Vu t# ^ / ai *, ts&iv&i ixjitencSr-Th^^ Tirtf lead an^incredibly hard existence.m""''« Tit ^wwicokiiomy f , "$?*&,> >1,1, time, attwyhigh fj*M/f tread, Thereiult , j 4the «a»to*t way to eave ge* to to slow down. and Muirm hundrediof tlifhei aminutet bouiicln# * tlon,^plu» a much ionfer Mr# Hr»> The radial'Youcan decrease your -fuelccniumptJen by SO » n^lntelB road contact. jiltfMlfffiid deilgn to bettor able to maintain wnd contact; jjfewfentifyou alow.fromWmph toMmphBven • VMM**r jro viwf w»>|•• • •>» rolTlniweriwHi'it^i'broiwnilBJi, bw«w»,., Wulim toflottcabjy[fl^togjlewn and all klndrof really naity^unk that firnto H»^.. A bla»Hyprtlrebla«Hyprtlr» will lift Ito I.—-— treadfrpm^thetoad In J percent/ " fiWit lt'i—w a turn, whereat the radial will flex in the i®irilt^litt«iM to a roadway, pon't |o tW hanf^ wt« f know that many of you sidewafl wltfiouflifting WwStr^#i^;n»dlfll«« wn MUM wmllOM« i»»,,uVart »( lyojir r'*? don't flex ortiauirm that much; thei# to ie«i »», Getting itftheIImK^I Mwni, They;;.mi|h|:«iw,;yrar:..Uf^ !timethe^ y9Uf ««?: • wear ^ your 4irei last longer. jn«»iisa^to Uf 0wjffBuCJBi^k«m)y * If you go from bia»'type tire» to radiato you wffleday, bias* gtouklnotlcean elfhttoten percent IncreaMln. wL*2^Sre^i15fcWh£' "mS'ir.lt.r« »p«.1tires; rrelnfor' mileage, Your car will alio handle bettor. I've SSBBS55E3SSifl25 w««^«p»tiwwin™, ...ir car and Ijtmom ™S5@SSroBS5pC ovena^ng toyenof tebric ift thecfliing runit ^Meawd^ f v . rigt on goto* inrouin tne eflfine and out H» Jllqww angtoi to the center line of the tire, ^t esution^ don't hazard!]ardly ml* wdlato and j-w#,a.mi iim.T!» nw^«tn» ^!S£S5SKSSH^^::5i^iS55S:,. 'high «ar the woner yw^i «^;Uii^ WTper*; ; »yawfl,ii(, a* rigid ar tito treadr As a car^'^&hly^"iihe^^mlxfuM to really *af«! iwo radiato in EtsSSSEE fc STtt'iUf X™«S/«K?M,ttA"?ifc ij; i-iA.ti.iif;tota.I»r»r«>•» imuii a»y= f.j St!'; p'M-r:At»ut W jto«r«it of afl ear*mfflrotimwtv ffikot tuna. An outof tune engiitt oan ei«ily burn 20-­ JIHI UPTATION CHAUT/;./' J >P »i '26 percent more fuel than one that Is properly ^ $ tuned, «w-^"" -" 4 •*** radial * •' bfai-fypo t, : '•' v~> ••: •• •' 1 mileage Mri.'t .don't have l,^ nrvia a.,w nnurnwi*g*( iv« DV>UV-||» four tlrei ffve lire* fourflrot ;' flvaflroi % who kndwa'whai he if doingdd It cerreelly, If you knoW 1little and want to toarn more, join the %• 'mdutif is6-dp^ot enroll in one of the oaf repair -t ,n mmurm ottercd by the Union, Another epiytyayto navefuel i» to cutdown on air 'conditloriing, Yoo can't do a whole lot about 1t : ill! ^he 160 or;so.«xtfi pound* of weight an A/C add« ®year «ai0uty^canfavoid the 18 percent ex« vtra'llui/dniumpiion an iA/C, cause* if you run it unT^rwheir absolutely heceMary, I know It's plough,-especially when It's 95'degrees and i p,m, #'-and the trtfflc'* golnglhowhere, But If you can -w-r " island a little »w^t, you'll not only nave gas, / V I'jyou'll also but a tot lei* strain on your engine'* f> '}i'' * "f , 'cooling vystom'/unleM.rOf course, you'VO got a / VW or a forscfie^) .PEARL Pebrusry 1975 m WMZiWte^r Hj •" ''-*"''*• First,1 ofillfthis Article -won't teach, you anytricks on how to shelter,millions in Bahamian real estate. Hopefully, it will tell the careful 'reader how t^, fill in a simple tax return. Nothingis included which is not found in the 1040 instruct tidh'booklet tissued by tfie/lRS, altHough.' emphasisr|Sa ffflnga joint return (line 2) for^nost; ^iW^OTmarrlet i students On the right-hand s1de~of the - ' ' ' 1040 form you will find a list of exemptions* You m -,fWJ&Ire entitled to one regular exemption for *&> *w ^ -/ T&-­ -ft tfli additional exemptions if blind or .>/v:;,,< « pV ^ over 65 (line 6a). These also apply to your spouse. «••' ^ ^ ^ » *' " " 'f!£,}• Line 8, the Presidential Election Campaign | !# Fund, allows you to contribute fl (S2 for a Joint /return) to a special presidential election cam­. v ,',-palgn fund. A ,'yes' answer will neither increase , f *»your taxes'nor decrease your refund. fl 'M w* Une • y°u fet down to Mri°u> business; > '^ ' Wages, salaries, tips, and other employee com­, ""pensatlon," This figure will be found on your , " wi 3i f~ * ®tr*0,-.. . Form W-2, which employers are supposed to mail by January 31, If you haven't received it yet, get In touch with your employer, II you have tips or Income from a job for which you received cash and no record exists for this Income, line 9 i» the place to Include ft, Hint; Don't/mess around with the IfW, II you have unrecordedJIK .come, you arTweJI-aWsad to report &*"$£ %W' ,'vw itruetion booklet. Record this figure on line for students, Try this testtofind out, Divide your I Unearned income is recorded on lines 10 end 11, Line 10 is for dividends from stocks, end 11 ii for interest paid on savings accounts, If the payments on your savings account' are called dividends, they ere probably still technically In­terest payments, Cell your bank to find out, II you're lucky enough to have oyer MOO in dividends or interest, the source must be listed separately on Schedule B, an additional sheet which should be attachedtoyourlW Instruction booklet, v ' -1 Line 12 is for "Income other than wages,dividends, and interest," This is explained on the back of the 1040 form, Part I, lines 8848, It won't applytomost students, Line 13 is just a subtotal line and line 14 is for certain adjustments, usually not applicable to anyone in a student's financial situation, Add up your total income and record it en line 18, ,r'afcj Additional deductions can be taken, but only w $ certain types el expenditures are deduetabieahd #' :'y' K -few students spend enough in, these arm to /,.' w make itemising wise, DedueUble areas are medical and dental expenses, stale and local tan­'fi§,interest expense, charitable contributions, casualty or theft loss, and other Expenditures , such as alimony, union dues, and child and dependent care services, If you belleVe you have spent 91300 or more In these areas, and have the receipts to prove It, you should think about Itemizing, Otherwise, you'll pay less tax byavoiding this process, If you don't Itemize your deductions, take the figure on line 18, adjusted grass income, and look yp how much tax you owe on Tables M2 of your 1040 Instructions, These tables automaticallyallow for the number of exemptions claimed and for, a minimum Income allowance of $1300, a large deduction used in lieu of itemizing, <,, Exception: If you have unearned Income and ' can be claimed as a dependent on ybur parent's return, It Is possible you may not be allowed to use the fax tobies, This is a very comon situation PEARL February \m .,,,w, -' 'V* ' Adjusted Gross Income (line IB) into two parti, earned Income and unearned Income, Earned In­come consists of wages-, salaries, and professional fees, Unearned income is everything else -interest, dividends, etc, If your unearned Income is less than 9780 and your earned income is less than 98887, you may use the tax tables. II either part of your income fails to meet this criteria, you must follow this special 1, On line 44, found in Part III on the back of foe return, enter the Adjusted, Gross Income, recorded on line 18, 2, Compute (he following figures and write in whichever is larger (A or B) on line 48b, (A) 18 percent of earned income, but no more than 92000, or (B) 91300, but no more than youf earned In­ come, . „ /MMMJ. Vor example, if'your earned income is 914,000' (unusual for a student), you multiply 914,000 lor 16 percent and get 92100, This amount is larger (hen 91300, so you would uso (A), However, the maximum you can write In is 92000, so you must use this figure, On the other hand, suppose your earned Income Is 91200, When you multiply 91200 by 18 percent, you get 9180, The figure In (ii),81300, Is larger so you would use (B) in this case,Again however you are limited, The maximum you can record is 91200, so this is the figure that must be used, 3, Subtract line 48 (your deduction) from line 44 (your Income) and write the result on line 40,4, Multiply the number of exemptions claimed on line 7 (on the front) by 1780 and place this figure on line 47,8, Subtract line 47 from lino 46 and place the figure on line 48, This Is your taxable Income You cannot have a negative number hero ­ the least possible Income you can have Is zero, 6, Take the figure on line 48 and look up your tax In Schedules X, Y, or Z, on page 20 of the In­* W, oil the Irohtol the return,-, '>&$$& Now you're in the home stretch, Line 17 is for tax credits, from Part IV on the back of the return, and doesn't usually concern students,Line 18 is a subtotal tint, Line 19 is for other tax* es from Part V and you can generally forget this,Lino 20 is for a subtotal before you figure the M V amount of cash which is goingtocome from Un­cle 8amtoyou or vice versa, On line 21b, fill In the amount of"withholding tax your employe took out during the year, You will find this amount on your W-2 form along with your sfc ment of earnings, Lines 21 b-d you can probacyIgnore, These are for recording other tax prepayments, Line 22 is lor subtotalingaJi your (ex prepayments, usually just the withholding tax, If the amount owed (line 20) Is greater than (he amount paid (line 22), the balance ov/o6 is recorded on fine 23, This is money still owed on your taxes, for which a check should be included with your form, U Una amount paid Is larger than the amount owed, you have made en overpay* ment (line 24) and are entitledtoa refund (line 28) or credit on next year's tax (line 28), Per­sonally, I'm goingtotake the cash, This has been a short, very uncomp'rehenslve look al preparing an income tax return, Hopeful* Iv after reading this, you'll be able to 'walk through' your own return with the help of your 1040 instructions, If you run Into a problem you can't handle, call the IBS, They have a taxpayer information service and have had plenty of prac­tice, Itcmember, while a tax return Is fairly sim­ple to prepare (usually), It Is nevertheless veryImportant If you are going to test your wits against the low, then tuko on the police department, the DPS, or the FBI, Don't mess with the IRS. Remember, the only crime Al Capone was ever convicted of was tax fraud, In the end, you bear the final responsibility for your tax liabilities. IS jiufl zlHU ctf/i 'A; 'r' \S*tt •'MSt 'fci^L A'*ftli&&G$£&ik''i-*.' 'I.'­ r s ~ tx-UP. -^.c P •«.< SW 4'\.^ Cy$ P-^V" " « ypl^fcv,>*#£ 'isSNi 150*£TA|L 100 EACH (demos) msim™ iy»*Wp r-,«SU &'ic * *» / «r R700 12p '*•,Vi*. J'»•.•.:••»T'ijr $SP^ *l • SJ% :3" ­speaker jMi|i"ri 1 iTV^r|TITH», 'i^ i'liii v•' system Model 160 RETAIL 120 EACH (DjMQg »• •. ' JK^>y R500 jboextracharge^ 10" ^ 3-way, AII-electronicdlrect-|, 3" driveturntabtewith 1 WVtt1 ASSEM&UE SX838 RECEIVfiR^^^ THE TURNTABLE „ LOUDSPEAKERS , speaker automatic return^ PL-51vTURNTABIE>-^^^ SACHWHK A DIPFCRENT JENSEN AT A SKOAL system SHURE M91ED CARTRIDGE MICE i ^ '* — r u 1 LIFETIME WARRANTY! CHOOSE ;i-«ITHBR AUDICO LOUDSPEAKER M&#£-ANY RECEIVER (MI PIONEER fe. ^ F0|AM UR TAPE NEEDS! ' 3-ANY TURNTABLE & CARTRIDGE m I ,r LIST SALE *., SYSTEM UDC-46 3.05 2.20 CARTRIDGES PACKAGE UDC-60 3.50 2.50 ITIM WTAIl^ SAII JSPl $^M~4 SAVINGS jr*f$ 'S^A' UDC-90 4.99 3.60 *;-• -• .'•: M91ED55 ... 22*i UDC-120ff 6.80 4.60 3 Year* Lofeor end 10 Ygoi^Pgrf«__^i M91I 50 iM» 19* driv9turii|abte 7.65 5.49 M93| 40^ ,17" UD-3*7 l»55f/J5||. 15" 6.25 aim M44K 30M>MH NO fXTMCHAMOI K'M f'\ »i '' wr $OVN6 MIUW* MtCOtO MPT. IS, iSoundfv* AaKftA' MMffi Ail IlilllH MTIMMY Nil! SHCIM » THIt WIIKHATUKINQi j,.. OtMK AT NOIXTMA CHAMOL Tta iauna OaHafy tfMifn* •mt "»«Wa 2 hwra of lad Zaplln If yoUf untt Wout of warranty we'll wtiiNl nMtnmtnt t *l.i£L aarvfaa ft fntr aaaurataly, and |lva martltari—wa liava. a full llna at •vary fat. nlia from 7>»a,m, an • CaHuawHD yapr raaiuaati :enturi PRONQUNCBD n . ,••,'•.7 "' Hialaodab JOHNLINNON ' ROCK'N'ROLL 3" mm* !>«} IfU WITH Mil HMT Of FRif ANOfHURl HWIL,,' UNDARONSTADT. fill• MTAH Wk • HtMWKtAW//#«gp • ' $150 ,,?5 1el) im WITH Mil QNTHilOHDI* CHECK OUR AW NIVMIMfir^ BRIC BURDON BAND ni \4 t4ff i .MM • WTAIljS PRICE •fUNSKCRITi I :mzxn^rmrfr!r^iTiinivA v;,'U sin IfiMiiwmwwxMmr ^1, Wl fillONLY QUAIITY COMPONENT! ItfraWIWIAH 7. EXTENDED WARRANTY Of IYEAR! ^ nOCKI MMMHM AU 4,99 If't AMi „ &7, m fIRVICI WHAT WE fill "ft> WI PRICE COMPETATIVEIY A STANDARD OF »H3 SYfTIWi 4, 10 DAY -REFUND POLICY I, All COMPUTE IYSTEMI ARI 110 OAY EXCHANOE POLICY IKMIP AND CMICKID OUT COMPLETE LINK IKOftlf A»Lifi Aik«v HQMtll IINVIR TM CMftKI M­ nmmmmm irt hh AW m*i Of MH M WW « fw«ir«K«. € iSlifi PMCMJI 7TF-' " i'P'f ^|??eA^>ebftiary'1Wl" " rZ. <,*l1'»:/• 1 ' ;'-k-'I'1 'I ^