V&&8X ,-n v ^ _ -^5\-* £&*?*¥ & vJ&sif on £4 "'i "fertH'™"-"-* *F "#;w -x,-mit*?r 1[• i ,rfr'j~' nr ;fc v?fe»)Jr«A2 L i ~ i, T-vi f -y e< -. if i {-^ *''1kvliTr^ ' • * ^ ., ' > .A fi' •f. l Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin .<-i -.V*-*Vi&-.:.v --•-. :i?.*cv$5 •.\'""V.-l\?>* *.''•••' > "•«'.' •*«>*•. V -' ,r-••" -' -V '•j-.. • 'V-•. i.i'v''i'.•:7:;v ••..T.»'..?1.-,Vs---. .> <-•• ~Z V ''T " V C~ rS * \ ^V* '&<<*>*A h ,V6I. 74, No, 154,;v^^ ^ff:.;.Ten Cen1s^^|-­ Austin, Texas, Wednesday, February 26, 1975 1 M ' " ''f vV(5'«"\4 < >•*!,.' ^ 1 - -Sixteen Pages 4a?w®5 Tax Depletion Faces Vote Pemo Caucus Paves Way for Amendment . WASHINGTON (AP) -~"Democrats . caupht >m nth Hi. mc _n» . . . February almost caught up with tbe THE BOX distributes more tKaw $3.t struck a blow at the coritroversial oit depressed levels of a year ago. but still At the. same-bin wattbi billion in hunp»5imi refunds of a general depletion allowance Tuesday, agreeing spread another roughly SM bittuxfcteijfe. were at a five-j-ear low for the period. 10 percent of ISI4 federal income taxes to let the full House considerits elimina­dividttal: twpayets in adtitfaiuoafc tate­ • Chairman Arthur Bums of the up to a top rebate of S200. Anybody pay­ tion as part of an emergency tax Federal Reserve Board expressed op­home pay vta. lower ta.\ wittootiSttgHtifi: package. ing under $100 insuch taxes for last Year year That would cetlect che-l«il!'SlK)mi7^ ment killing the depletion allowance oh • The Treasury Department will,have oil and virtually all naturaif gas retroac­ ready within two weeks revised policies tive to the start of this year.' The action on foreign investment in the United overruled the Ways and Means Com­ States. Asst. Treasury Secretary Geraldmittee. Qr -L. Parsky said. THE AMENDMENT, .sponsored by • Treasury Secretary William E •Rep. Willaim J. Green. D-Pa., would be Simon said that if Congress substantially .attached to the economic emergency tax increases Mr. Ford's proposed budgetcut bill jiow under consideration! Code deficit, the cost could be "vicious com­ The caucus action also will allow a petition between government and B^BBULSGOIT ..vote on a. proposal by Rep. Charles private borrowers." Svsteta Chaoeeltoe Cbaates ^ Tex*Staff Writer Wilson. D-Tex.. to let small independent Currently, the oil depletion allowance tl» cbaaeettocs; of£te» "*i& uA itt--i A possible ov^rttaul ot the recently­ •producers continue to receive the deple-tecestwi to into, tbfr m^Swr <#j£ • permits 22 percent of gross incomefrom revised TtxasStadent PaJblicatiociseJec­ whether hotjjfiiig aneth^etectioniwsttftj -I petroleum property to be deducted from (" "" (Related Story, Pog« 3.) *ioo code wtoch would eliminate its be legal ' in the absence of a teoontnmn^taxable income up to a top of SO percent weaknesses" wiU head the agenda of a tion allowance for up to 3,000 barrels of dauott trom Lorene Kwgscs. of taxable net income. Industry Wednesday meeting of the TSP Boanlproduction a day if these producers have spokesmen insist tlus-isa crucial invest­Technically, tbe-Miiing «?i » President Uee Grace said Ttteslay. nO interest in service stations or refin­ment incentive, but criticscontend it is a election would be a viotitdoa tb»'^lg&k' -• "We will also consider appointing a ing. •••.; . symbol of tax law inequity and an un­Agreement between the. TSE*1 fittOtaMLv committee to look into a revision of the;1 ; V) 1°°U>er major energy-economicnews: warranted tax favor for oil companies. the Board o£ Regents. The sbmMl ed to an energy conservation billa provi-$16.2-biltion blend of 'individual tax manage its own aitaics. decided at at Thursday bearing of the Stu­? 4<*S>A#v i „ , _ _,. --•. vV-^ff '.' .'.. c •'. ••.'•• sion requiring that any attempt todecon­rebates from 1974 and tax cuts for 1975. dent,Courts The tTSf-v Board:ougftt t».he>aftfetft ­trol domestic oil prices willb^ subjectto plus $5.0? billion worth of business tax "Hie question of which way the court's make the tinaJE decision on the sdmttni ­quick review — and possible veto — by reductions, mainly by hiking the invest­because-ace f6»wt *® ruling will fall has ted to widespread the-y JCongress. Dropped by House ment tax credit as an incentive to buy speculation regarding siluatiott.vv Ziichartas saift • Mr. Ford continued "-his attack on equipmenl and machinery. who wiU finally , < >RI( ntvm nvMnmm occupy the editor's slot 'Hwugfe t canst speak SutliNgjttMfc 5 «}inla ni •r All A By D>VD) HENDRICKS < s^-isenatorMl clistnct The'L.n other 25Af* percent Congress for delay in approving his For individuals, the tax lull provides QUESTIONED ABOUT possible reac­Rogecsvlthinkaston^asthftite^tettfe-I 'T-rnT^n, ^el!?'l Writer would hay£,beert selected proportionally { energy proposals." saying; the legislators 55.1 percent of its relief to those with tions to another election, spokesmen; wade wttlk a ttegjw «fi it«s» and "' pie Texas House dropped the winner j except lhosevreceiving less than 15 per-have embarked on a "massive gamble." gross income up to $10,000. 34.4 percent from the University at Austin and 6iiraes& tii» boaedi woitfit 6»itetteto*:take all provision of a -presidential^vleent of the vote <-* ;;risking America's vulnerability tofuture to thosewith between $10,000and 80.000 System administration indicated the ffi»ai 3«Ul»«tyv"" he-atfitei. preference primary billTuesday, repla^ft^ -the Weddmgtoh-Kubiak-Mattox'' oil embargoes.' • ' -' 'V »n gross income and the remaining 10J5 resotation of the mattershouW beleft to 2»rba«as: s3«t tb» d^nl» «wUi ingitwjthproportiotjard^egalipijselec^i^q^ent also will have the voters • Statistics-released by Ute auto in- percent tothosewith grossincome above TSP." *<**ed: u* t*o> *ays. ­ tion based on each dandldategs perce^g^efctthe candidates' names rather thin" -dustry indicated U.S. auto sales in mid-': - W0.000l ­ _ assistant to Universtty "WKMHER «SK. the­ m. °LSf ~ ~ '^wthfe-iJ^es of delegat^sWithpresidential-' ' Th® R6use fhen-aajdUnftaueTor^ tak-^-cantttdates to whomvthey-are pledpcd---.; P 8 the. nmoeru^ >—f-y -niimm tag Onal action ft recOttVejes at 10 a rf ' listed Inside them. \ . . Wednesday{^consider agairf Fort Worth AMENDMENT would have the ^ .. • _w. . (eifer.'s "Tbe.otfhw xi>f«5Qutt tbM^ SPJffi,^h..amended rtfaUpnals convention' delegates chosen' Itsisrtr t» beanjotttss* pw^fRiitWmv bill, called the Bentseri Bill, since U S" „ after thjfe primary rather than before, as minfr aa editor Thecefci». » mwt ^ln^,. Sen Lloyd Bentseh of Texas is a »r in Schieffer s original bill, and it also ­t»« mast he l«i)£~ , Not To Democratic presidential contender •* O Would a|low each party to decide if it Cambodia adttedi. howwejs. hwt ,BX A MARGIN of,75-68. the Hpuse wants Relegates chosen.from con- yet to aaopted the proportional national con-• . grcssional ur state senatorial districts WASHINGTON < APJ -^jThe Ford ad­million, military aid request for South thus year^hatf the $1.4 biUton the Nixon be liecirifext by tJjg. Strataft OwA ministration warned Congress Tuesday andE the possibility of a s "This hill i tesaa wilt haw t»eithw ettft tomfe th» ficandidalcs themselves Should decide if • While Mr. Ford has held out some of'the voters and ''regardless of what • they want run. in .Texas. the V: : confercncethafifasupplementafis not-; ^ aw,, VKnMn, KthiopiaV request for continued lis. numberot issue^pcintsdl. QO-g9,t»»ftoor­ to not promise that support to South Vietnam? Lloyd Bentsen wants. we' should'have a;; voled within the next few weeks itiscer-^ wars. Ki^infer military aidwhile ittriest«suppressthe twttrf c«vutoii»4 _ secretary oF state ' " could be ended in three years, Ki^ingei KritreanrebeUioa. "ItisadSLffintttdRct­ presidential primary1.'' ' ^ ; lam that Cambodia must fall because it-it/ th.-»i WAS "Mhft CMyiml Wl Vk«re t&» pwwnii off Kubiak rebutted that the" primary ' Weddinglon said^''"We want as many "? • will run out of ammunitiwi. •' * said thai was "the secood best course" s»oa for its, and we havemt cocaedose p « v f t u s « < 4 : : candidates as possible on the ballot -in' appealing to CMigress for funds. It. > to raaking iU" he said. "should be fair, not-only for our senator, "Therefore." "the .... ..... want Kissinger.. sStd,; would be preferable.* Kissinger said, to but all other candidates." --Thai s, why. ^ we the secretary of, decisionc, , before us is whether .Ute United recognise that Saigon will need U.S. help • He hasmadenodectsks*toresign bv in A ret«iftttw t» stale to select the candidates and notify : • .i'" ',". r",'" REFERRING TO the winner take all the end of the-year to avoid bwxning a tirace sa*i "TSP1 wufei H^yuirs^evmi litem so tticv cap tell him if they dJfe » until it is capable economicallvof defen­ provision of Schieffer's bill, Kubiak said want, toirun "/ ^... -'—7-^-'wintry »hicJ» has J>e« each 'cohgressional or state /fee.--Powers said. King^ Calls Jobs J-f ...eventually approved bv1" the legislature, the primary will be held ­along with the general primary election::-' vonj-the,.first Saturday in,May. so it will'-' Key fo Problems -not cost the state any money:: \v i An amendment to make the delegate • ' If conditions continue as they are, By LVNNE BBOCK , Texan Staff Writer .4 solution slrittlv on a winner take all however.,I think we have agood chance: t>\l a moral kvtder.. .'This is winner take all' Hollowell problems are to be'soIvfif^Coretta in his time." King said. "He isa much, . King said Tuesday night \aid explaining His amendment. "1 stronger ^THbol today than he was in Speaking at the Lyndon B. Johnson believe it s the American way It's the his.own.lifetime, lle.hccan¥> a symbol' wuv the governor of this state and all the of love, justiceand most of all peace." Auditorium. King, the widovr of civil rights leiider Martin lather King Jr . members-of (his legislative body are Hcfwring to Ihe, IS60s King said; seltdetl,' « •' -• said. '• I have no hesitation in saying • "Because s» ntany i>f the American THE FIRST"proposed uihiendment'ofT, tliat full employment' is possible ' I people were deprived and politically: llie day ^ponM>^cd by Corpus Christi believe jobsS are the key to solving the depryssctl. it was the masses who . . social problems of thus nation " - Itop loe saiem would havif sent the bill. l»egan to rev»»ll. It was the blacks who ff , . hhtk to^mmittcc to consider the many , Her lecture was spoasored by Texas were the first.to rise up. America isa antii ip&lcd ntiiendnicnLsi JTho motion 1 : s Union. Ideas and^ Issues and Afro-, i»w tk-KHK-ralic nation in 19!5 than it S fullQd by one^viite, /70-W Ameni an Culture Committees and -was m 1855." King said. ' r ''"'fer !TJie-udjoiirnin chiming b<;forc fi Afro-American Studies and Rttvanlt TIHW IS no question that there have '^IrecssrcM (Vnter, ' ' (inJf .y.otp fni the bill couttf be taken,gave beep strong changes in the SouUtT cl^artvtp partly cloudy^ •-. 'II is lolallv unarcqitablc toacccpl Kmg said."There ,ari> still remold anything exwpt full,, eftiploymentlr lowns^wliere discriminations^till esist< Kingsaid.^lVnigr^^ri'Aat^Uniw liowewr. The big probhry until we'deal with this r«ivJkon^cliim^to thd bi|i;V/Slnci[avl is stillthe v^nnmnie injustice.We neot temper&ftires winds " K-ll l J ftiUixr, problem * * ~ more in blacks policy-making, , h^^>«f Foril v^slatcnicn't from.the southeast"at 8'7 ^ posilmnv" Kir^isakl. ^ „ on Ins budget projiisar ^olaUy'inathv "The MtnaiHm in Ifaiston imtkatesC LtS hi ^phmthWhig^/ <|uafe' to Meal with {the, natton^s t there is sliHa »lee|» tcelitvi againsl in- i>Ciimmiir pn«bleitu King, said bv cnt­ 1,tegratioo in thus country." K»g' said.^ , Ung iW ivitMw's budget by ibpcrrent roppfn 1 ^""The messag«,\«s wt-stillhavea lonjf tlM^fUmlsAHiWcrealeonctiiillk^tjiife^ ^.J^.vto go.\:KingtiMiuneoKtL "liusii^'vT\ tiill'rtiipliiynHm} biH h,isvbccn im <5,is no! the main issue, li s nurh more-but mmm ^U0|>IUMt^l limn ttvit. and we teve t»\' ' r*-"'' C * -»-—^Tn ifiiMiiT •finv thmg thisfar-reaching (nkes tim? jiwvwle quality education." , • , '»^ •'f?'IRagj 5'S^Sk ©si Student Court Deals Mqinfy iih SfifW iS5s#?-' _ "8wy jesrtheStudent CMzt stilts ' UwCisJecttoe Commission and deal with important one! the alternate justices ««( «Wi these ndfjimri^ about ... problems involving student. a would fie included in tht^hearing. "This'" fte-stwfaite'iait irift whritwat; iw^amHrtk^Tbecourthisonly review .g^s doiie.just jsb'lthat we'll have as mapy: ^kgrit«»i»Ukjoi^fctkore, flcn vfaen ...IpoTCrsS: V -V1 "i 'J, ,"f ;,~s opinions as possible and* we'll 'makfe a-'~ Matsdnn U it.w meet asty far ' "OictfSwoeooe appealsto the^todenti?^ decisionthat tslair (o^ »%£)ect«<« Co»inisSKW..c*s«,"isaid maJl .ilxk l lt«ii 4A •xlfcA-t W«*»« •. .» . • n Court.-the cocrtKastodeckle whether to saki?c8 .^siJMHce C^wfi T*yt<*. a third-war bw .'J»ar the«?ase. last Taesday wemet and v -I*; , „ -/decided we. would hearthe (Bill) Cooke and Leche both felt that theStu­ sk^ Tte StodtM Owirt. is.a body of five" dent Court is usually in agreement with . * Gartand case." Taylor said --i ^-.wgrtw wieiutoB.^ awd for. attentates. beche said vthe Student Court .:: the Election Commission, but the court Hk wwtus.all bnc stedesfts. we*p­^ream rate; on interpretations of the elec-does act independently. panltcd lrf Uk SMdt Gwermraeat n _-----. -^ »-» • -«•>--•* • -AlShn 'codes; bat we only^deal with the; •* ^ ' flCSMMI ^pQK ICUMDnRMIaOB ; s *" v *5 V %**&££* -**­ ^b«gO&rraI Ro».v ^ . _ »» J^ i^lieBiidqigs aresupported by evidence:. ^ '^Violations usually occur tiie day of,-••": TswdQnef Justice Ron Cooke. sf? or • the. day:before elections; and.a aWKgateoo.nt.aefawstedarts ./•Vv:Twlor ^^Cooke had decided remedy cannot be sought until after the llranfeewp^cnaactedl^ . . the Garland casewas such an vote is taken." Leche said, £ r • v' • Tm ReviewsReport Kf& By MIKE MORRISON ,J: -.all recommendations' Texan Staff Writer ' Having worked (or about :;.K.The Austin Tomorrow Goals: one and one-half years on Assembly .Tuesday. night:ap­• revamping the .city's;mastery proved on third reading eight-plan, the assembly, is withldi ; topic committee reports and two yweln of completing fUj$ ^referred the Health and Social work -i ^ , i~ >t • Services Committee report ^/Fihal syote on the entire" back to tbe Style and Drafting -.'report is scheduled for Mfarcft| Committee 11. CHy C6uncil will eventual^' Ajn a lengthy^meeting?; the. ly. vo^e on accepting ^thef assembly approved in pnnci-report If it is approved," the ple an'ongoing committee tof «BlanmngCommissions-will' monitorvthe'implementatipi\j 5tiidy the report, and tfie coun-, tot^the assembly's report V. ";cil:will ^finally,implement ithe^i k' f .The assembly also yot^l ttf j; recorrimendationsi into'or­yiriciud?. rf way. Moiina. owner^aanaU^gn An wdaaancepassed iaear-, the •'-• -'Tltts ordsKMce stkooid be tr Febnoiy hy GtyOoeeca. "^waap>ilnr»nihitrt puiat steaded aotil aa extensive House Speaker .«hdi proldbiitstbeefectiaa. -Good artistscan makesigns 4deKPbwft«ewbir stadf can be iBRleftaken to altaatiaB or itfiiguiiuH at so that tbey are tasteful and. aad-aaoca^; aiiWR, SHa«ie createa peimaneatordisaDCe a»y UBboards ahag ttg tdo do not obstruct or take away 0^a^fase«ce(^pQUl«C vlnch mxM adnde a set of tk*ua^.Miiu. eiptres April from tbe branfty of aqything, laiWihiiliiaa^ petfmtnaace standards, so f Questions for Young Democrats M. be satt;,''^^^^i*"v-% _ 3^3he said. • -ttit cteatirsty «n tbe part of «^ » The eonwnittetuMtwiw.. Describing himself as "an r9* ^ ^ rjC M It-is. aot possible to aga [nwlrr r can qMbm,7 DisUngiatehlng' between make it out' of-committee, Turning to a University Clayton said he felt the ,,, sigk otdanances fraa ottKr old country cotton farmer", efinante aB wMMr adrer-Kevtoa said. '•-. tHUbaanfev Sad-tNnlding iden- ^adding that Cohgress: related matter, Clayton said,; Legislature must look beyond"1 cities at a ineetiag and a philosophical conser­ apdiaBmaltearecqnanr.rtti tis^battKsisaprimeaRsk ORnwats of tiieoidaiaiKe tificatncC Micha^Domjan of histoncally haSinot recogniz-that raising, the building use the Bentsen era In deter-4g> ibt jhe cfty te bec^k wtal' tbpniud Hat it isnotia(he ihe Bartoii Creek CStinens1 vative with progressive^ ed a rescission of con-S?,1s8?n^to° far-^°ntr mining whether Texas should^*txm to tbe cooacd : aid WTtrktiia. hesMd. best iaterestsofaiepeop>eot Assodatw said that an m--leanings. House. Speaker Bill -stitutional amendments:.;/ . think that is the answer.'^ have a presidential pripiaiy, Clayton answered questionsat< ' dhridaal lBis a right ~ not:-to. •a;^meeting -of the-Young s>W? "J State Agencyg • IXanocratsvTbesday night--= • ' '•' -8* + & * r-fe-' WlherelSa^ .A.sparse turnout of_12 per? sons showed up to hear the speaker, who turned the ses­ PoetryReading • mmmceU! Discrimination Suit Fil^ci • &'I k. sion into an.intimate question - ^ - • East Austmcommuwty ac­ % isit and answer period. hired had \no discrimination casions during 1974'^The suit^, tivist Larry Jadcson has filed 1 Concerning the :Equal occurred also says thatthe EEOC found' a civil suit in tU.S.;JDistrict' Rights Amendment, Clayton Jackson also maintains that • concifiatibn beiween Jadcspit •; Court allegmg.-that; the Texas ^yavivoi/u aiau llldlllMUld Uldl • .-.v; •• j"'4r : -r '.. i''-•, said the case was closed, but thele.dep r*>d the agency unsucceKful ?^ department "retaliatedDepartment ofCommunity the large amount of mail him fnp films mm. ^ Affairs denied -iiim^ a,; job against", for filing com-v ^ ^ ^ ^ SC-ft "may open the issue again." because he is black<-, . plaints abouts its hiruig prac-: jThe ^-'Department'Vtt^CAtn#^ ."Someone is stirring up the nunitv i^ a sfntA hapn.-'fi^r,, tices with the Equal Empoyv munity Affairs is astateagen-J little-oldladies.-^4-Clayton -In -the suit-filed here-last Commis*-which helpa^loca&r^ ment "Opportunity cy said, commenting: on ' (he. -week, Jackson asks the court sion governments to coordinate ^ '.v. • "1 • .. current interest in ERA. ' for a restraimng order direc-' state and federal progtam^ -a'' Author, : Qayton was one of the nine .ting the agency tohirelum for -According to Jackson's suit, which affect local !^oyernfe i members of the House who • the earliest vacancy.-forwhich: • th6 EEOC found that the. ment It 'includes such ser-M' ^ vices astheStateProgramori'^.1 voted against the ratification he is reasonably qualified and .' Department of Community -ui 1972.. He predicted any bill to award him bade pay from Affairs had discriminated Drug Abuse 'v and the State? ^ rescinding ERA "would not the dav he would have-been against Jackson on"vfour oc-Model Cities ^Program:"'. All the King's Men _ 1MOUSANOSHAVE _ -J-r-L - a HWSEDTOBRSOOBES • p-m IIMHrSQQyf rCw* mJ • IU And. J Callr Dallas Center S Amazing Medicine ftom the Bible • . •>'' • i • Many doclors lodtiy »f« -allon la on the d^ith thy ot . . JJ® a starlfins r®aBxa-lifa bflCBase two: atementi Free Admission •••for infbnut;on • Mcwsary; for / normalblood. > moCm medic«U0cfcaIqpe» ckrttiag, *iumln K sad o»> • re: class localioils J , thro®Wn; do not reach aafe :^iawltaatH (Ua tloa.UodoobV • .Kttarandaot v?'adlr ftba,Creator of vitamin K Sponsored bit Texas Union Ideas and Issues ^ v -— ftjewid na&-' ^ aoa proQirombia knew this •• ;.^^gpncticatapmk ota Ican^.': .when He ordered Abraham; ' -Committee and UT Speech Department :ofgann ihexiryi^caaicer VV^Aod iM.thaiia eight days old ' ­ . v>PrayBntion, psychosoaatlc' 14 • I' imifc'Hinyii'' ' ^fttaflbetircamslad^ mmm. >^ThU;; advance^^mtdica! '-y-> -Tior OTawpla Hia ~ ft-' --- ;lnowledge was not a mystery \ ? oiMaaas,;lofira^ and jp&foe to theKbhcalsuthofs^ astbeyemphatically. rectlrd -thoa-^ ^ •-wncfiactao mtfl" fatfaar^ re> saAu bfUmes that the Biblela ' canfly^ However,v.350o years the wOrd of God. God aftAa to . !:• A )&i -MttalewUspaqple sdocasa­ manaad deacribad principles' .^wy-pracBqia quarantine ia aod laws coocendng. man's • XEROX A.'>r:: TVov. ujuumuoi, mans J*°y ;' ratattmihip with utnn ted to th> Bad« in lh« . hifeDow man. whldi. trim ? bocAr of Panteropomy. TTin' followed; woold contHbnte^ ­ wneris.-In the book of' Nam-substantially'sobstantially to his physical; v bers. saDitary leglslaUoa and ; mental I :^Widai'^hkh dascr&es procednres (viociples are also coocernad' -Cor. handbag-' Jhe dead end with man's relationshipsGod:a ; 'dying eoondsSbnodimiar* aad his coijiw|N>wt)lng ri^ri- PSs IWE'RESELLING ;E«al cleennnese.-litis book . tnal health; .As certain a# ­ ooo&ands repraatad -w^sh- fom .-utgti-of the jq fimpinj. ' God s provisions'are-;agaiAst> ' &FL physical diseasa.soalso isHtt .vater,, withlime intervals #1 aBowed far drying and-ax-' Krai^t?.men;who are today •VMwuS CHICAGO ^3?^.-iS" posoretotheson -dying of a spiritnal aiseasa; ^ orip tokjQ bacteria. . > Le;; separetkra from God.:^ ' ^fS. Ibese medical wonder* are --.If you would lUca to know > End of Month Special zxrt isolated caaaseither Doc* • how-to get more>infor8iatiob ' v! v Sara today that the Save a penny each time you' aboatmedicalknoWladgein'- Jewirii practice of circamci-the Bible or othar tnfopinatioq ~ make a copy 6-7 p.m. • ^rioa aDowa for proper deenB-regarding Christian 'Perspeo^ '-'V • nets and virtually prevents- Monday -Thursday £m tives in all-areas os highSr-' " one rif the most commou can­ edocatianrwritetome;Dr:-this week only." ' * &MM . cers in woman. cancer -of . .Mark->rCosgrove.1PROBER > 4'WJ •tbeL«»vix. It-1s interesting^ MINISTRIES, INTL ,120tr , •' that ne bast-time to circam-" Colt Road. Suite 107, Bellas, ose-amale baby. to • Texas 75230 The TexasUnion Copy Center • the American Medical Assoc^ f _ MJbr*r6iM» (next door to the Texas Tawern)^^J^| # *efw'iwi» CM 4 , Wr SALE {faigr SMITH"CORONA• .W PRiCES ARC GOING UP SO DONT MISS -THE$E ^ALUE^ i TH,S WEEK ONLY, MONDAY FEB. 24 -SAT. MARCH 1 >•3** ELECTRA120 pi }fLASSIC12 V i** V"-* , . f s «, ,i,i / «fiaWe|K^S!5P5t .JfeV's 5. -v^s; 1"ee' its precision and power as electricity does the worjc at At last-a typewriter that perfectlj' combines office^ j . *r? jja your fingertiJi comniand. This rugged machine hasdie qtiil-v. vWriter capadty' wlth go-anywhere^ poitabilityf iile^e" is'thes itfe and features of an office typewnter. yet ity deslgn?^. finest and most-vttsatile jibn-elecKiiie5 sure. It haselectricshifts and electric spacing, plujTpewonal s Extr^^wide carriage ,gives you -2 eifra inches^f,W^|&i®> sv.L j£ 'ouch selection, two Changeable Type™ bars let yod add . -^fpace.Tv£o Changeable Typtf"bars let you cilstonUze^pte^ accents,signs and symbolstoyour typing without disturbing ;• «keyboard witb,6pfibiial technical and jrof^ssfonal^bo1­your keyboard. Hasexclusive Jeweled Escapement.With its ^thoutchanging the standard keyboard EtcJdsfve JeWfell wrap-around steel* construction, handsome stybng and its " «*»••« '«• ' 1,1 -fes 1Of to :beal'.(he old master. But: Daley-was mph, it wasestimated close to55 percent winning re-election to the City Council, * Democratic primaiy.. Despite hls'years;if>-"^running-ahead:of him by roughly two to pf Chicago's 1.5 million registered voters and there was speculation that if he dida' stroke last, summer and charges of : -one. with Singer holding onto 84,866 cast ballots. not carry his ward he might resign : scandal: in his administrations he did it v? votes, ,.,' True to Chicago tradition, there were Tuesday's mayoral nomination to |jmh style. Trailing^were Edward V. Hanrahan, charges of robbery at the polls. At least, someone else- With 1,229 of 3,146 preclnctsreporting, 53, a former state'sattorney and "golden five persons, including one of Daley's (SDaley: led the field with a •prohibitive. boy" of the Daley apparatus, and prccinct captains, were arrested and Daley has been denounced as the man 189,296 Votes; more than60 percent of the Richard -M: Newhouse Jr., 50. a'state. there were 800 complaints of voting who ordered his police to "shoot to kill" —•'ill-ffil •. Jiili iZ •""*U i-•• * Ut« arsonists during Chicago's race riots of to&h"His'aides had said more than 55 ^senator whovfe.the firstblack to make a irregularities. percerit wouldamounlto the .Iandslide^»r<.viable:bld to. b'ecbme mayor of this in-The precinct captain was changed with the 1960s and who presided over the "police not" clash between massed of­ficers and demonstrator? during the1968 • Democratic convention. «7 He has been courted by the powers of the Democratic Party as -a maker of presidents — the man credited with • squeezing John F. Kennedy through to the presidency in 1960. Hehas been adept Oil Import Fee at bringing hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funds to Chicago and HOLLYWOOD, FLA. (UPI) -President Fofd, armed with a Ford sided with Kissinger. Nessen told reporters the President . turning it into expressways, housing, newheadcount fronvlegislativeaides, publiclypredictedfor.the "has.reached a decision-that there:will be a minimum price for mass transit systems.-'and a;, skein of > first time Tuesd#y that hewill wintiis battle with Congressov^r oil" to protect U.S. producers, • . '" other public works. •: •' raising oil import fees.' *— ( Simon had,been reported about to qijitrover Ford's decision in !•$ * m Fo^d; smiling^ahd raisinghishandsinlomethingof i.victory>sture,!t A Kissinger telepliojied: Ford, saying his global oil: strategy veto for the first tinie in the to.usethe constitutional power of bv a 4-4 vote a U.S. Court of Claims deci­would resolve a longstanding dispute White House said Tuesday it probably •^included such a njinimum price. , • 94th Congress," he said, v ..." r~'£.'V'[ sion permitting two government over photocopying practices, expressed will be another 'month before Ford disappointment. makes the appointmentsPhnom:Penh Blockade "All this does is decide the particular IN OTHER CASES, the court: case before, the court." said Philip B. • Ruled 5-4 that students can collect Brown, attorney for a group of research damages under certain circumstances libraries. when public school authorities violate • ARTHUR B. HANSON, attorney for their constitutional rights. 7 . " . the American Chemical Society which • Spelled out guidelines governing a 1 rPHNOM"i>#H'y ,i» ^ , ft Ojfdong^sWe?roraI capttalof Cam periipeter defensesaround Phnom Penh, publishes scientific journals, called the prosecutor's right to appeal trial court damages in Battambang City. 156 miles ­ Communist, rebels capturedvthe^bodia through the 18th Century, when the v . Military sources said Cambodian northwest of Phnom Penh. decision "incredible." decisions dismissing criminal charges. (fev^tajed^former„ Camb^a^_royatj^;;,gp\^i7i!Tient 'and the Toyal family moved A copyright revision bill would ~ The photocopying case was brought by~TDDservauon pilots early Tuesday spotted capital of Oudong 18 miles northwest of-^to PhSbnTPenh In South Vietnam, field officers said authorize libtaries.to make single copies" Williams Wilkins Co.. small ; the & arocket launchers at AreyKhsat village,a Ptaom Penh Tuesday after sit days of > iroPh^dm, P government troops killed 142Communist of copyrighted, works, but would bar medical scientific in v mile from downtown Phnom Penh across and publisher I­ flrttincr mltitart;v • ^ i r ... or «f»—M the Mekong River. u troops in a battle for the rice crop nine •systematic reproduction dis­Baltimore. Williams & Wilkins challenge 77" ;»S)tSS miles north of Rach Gia provincial m»MVhI?h2 ' Chinatbwri'district to protest what they tribution" without payment of royalties. ed photocopying practices of the f The Village, largely in the hands of the mil^to thebSnkSOf the TonleRiver, the ^called .high prices charged' by Chinese capital. 145 miles southwest of Saigon, • The bill passed the Senate but not the National Institute of Health and" rebels, would make the Cambodian sources sau merchants, "No serious incidents were field officers said. House in the last Congress..Backers of National Library of Medicine. capital even more vulnerable to direct Loss of (he already destroyed town to;. ' ^ reported the rebels was seen asra further tighten-_ attack. tag of the screws on besieged Phnom. ' Similar demonstrations aimed at In Saigon. American officials said the Chinese residents ot Battambang, 150 Water Board Refers Penh. ' , ; airlift to Phnom Penh will be doubled l|>Phnom Pehh, which senior U.S.N of?:^ Thursday in spite of the rebel attacks miles northwest of Plinom Peph. icials said Tuesday:could fall with% with at least 15daily flights of U.S. com­ resQltediin dozens of markets and shops #5 r^l^rh^ilasjt.weekend. t weeks, is under a total blockade. mercial jets.carrying a total of 583 tons Beginning Thursday, a Berlin-style*, of Louisiana and Texas rice. to Attorney General PdCHENTONG HAS been Phnom airlift by U;S. commercial and military HUNDREDS OF trucks moved rice v Penh'sonly supply linesince rebel forces^ By VICKI YAUGHAN variety of extremely dangerous in­ planeswill supply the capital with all its: into Saigon'sTan Son Nhut airbase Tues­ time." he said, "all would deteriorate." r/ blockaded the ^Mekong River Feb. 6. and Texan Staff Writer dustrial wastes" attwo sites in and near On Feb. U. Cox continued. Arsenault food, ammunition and•=ftiel; The United • day to prepare for the air shuttle, U.S.' •/ American;commercial contract planes Members of the Texas Water Quality Austin. was requested to remove the waste con­ States -has stockpiled-rice 'at Saigon's - sources said. have beeo: flying in.tons of ammunition Tan Son Nhut airportfor themassive air-r Board voted unanimously Tuesday to Jack Cox;j:enforcement attorney for tainers to an authorized disposal site. daily from neighboring Thailand. Violent street demonstrations have refer to the state attorney general the the board, said Arsenault. of Ra-Bar lift. Arsenault said on that day there were noFieldWeports said rebel troops have already cost the government of Presi­case of Jack Arsenault, who has stored Enterprises^as in violation of the Solid other barrels and that he would take the : .Tuesday the rebels fired 40 rockets begur^hpavy assaults on outposts and dent Lon Nol millions of dollars in thousands of barrels containing "a wide Waste Disposal Act and two emergency to Oklahoma. (The three existing ones Pocbentong, killing one person, woun­ into Phnom Penh and its airport of orders issued|Feib. 12 by the board. nearest authorized waste disposal sites ding 16 othersand destroyinga DC3com-; "The staff-Sis concerned about com­are at Robstown and Deer Park, Tex,, n's Building|||e Bill bustible, corrosive wastes that have and in central Oklahoma.) .mercial.airliner^:< * .Mm Lm id tc been stockpiled for-months and have "THE RAILROAD.Commission is not itsiife1 been moved around, not to authorized sure that I can legally haul this materialJUnited-States?sinc6-.the TjMay siege of; areas, but to' other clandestine sites," anywhere." Arsenault said. U.S. Marines at'Kh^Sanh in South Viet-, 1. I House Cox said. , ; i" Several days after the board made the , favor of Austin-Rep.Sarah Weddington's Legislature the authority to make "I havea perfect'right to keep the con­removal request, 3.000 more drums of FIELD 'REPORTS vreaching pfinoihl ^ " tainers where they: are." Arsenault said ,Penh Tuesday said government'forced ' »Te*an'S«ffWriter HB 31 before the House Committee on decisions on moneyappropriated for con­waste were found in west Travis County fled from Oudong to the'town of Long ' A b»1' M'™t state institutions • of^students from institution. This bill is not intended to and to me that is proper." SHE ADDED that the University Cox said. ARSENAULT WAS given until 12:01 civilians nevfer returned to thiS Tirovin colleges and universities acrossthestate stop construction but maintains'funds at System should be like other state agen­Arsenault has riot been authorized by a.m. Feb. 24 to remove the waste con­ and throe University professors spoke In- the current level and gives the cies in looking to the Legislature for fun­the Water "Quality Board to dispose of tainers to an authorized site. As of Tues­ding. ;•/:-7' v solid wastes since May 4. 1972. Cox day. not more than "two or three of the Speaking in' behalf of University testified, •••f • 4.500 containers had been removed." Cox students. Student: Government Vice-On Feb. 5.-the Austin-Travis County said. President Bill Parrish outlined what he Health bepartment found 1.500 barrels Arsenault did not appear at the Tues­ called a "dramatic increase" in building of waste at 10959 Research Blvd. Cox day hearing, but he requested a 30-day use fees from 1968 to 1974. said a few containershad deteriorated as delay through his attorney. Wallace H. . "In 1968-69 the fee for an average they were '.'exposed to the elements. In Nations, who was retained Monday. fulltime student was) ?18, The fee was $162 in 1973-74," he said. As Parrish spoke.Student Government. • lobbyist Lynn Breeland presented slides news of construction on-the "University cam­pus ^ , Russia, Iran Sign Economic Pact , "We are not asking that University MOSCOW — (AP) The Soviet Union and Iran signed an agreement building use fees be abolished," Parrish Tuesday to cooperate on an estimated $3 billion-worth of economic said, onlv that you put a ceiling on them." Parrish said projects, including a paper mill to be built in the Soviet Union with Students at the University, would, like Iranian credits, a top Iranian official said. to put the responsibility of construction "This is the largest economic agreement ever reached between the two funding in the hands of th^JLegislature. countries," said Hushang Ansan, Iranian minister of economy and he added ., finance, in an interview. BASSET MAGUIRE,"' associate-professor of 7oology. Pat Kruppa, assjs- Stocks Plummet to Three-Month Low lant professor of history; and Karl- NEW YORK (AP) -Profit (•alinskv professor of classics, also' testified m favor of the bill taking aggravated by the i.r.u. MWIMESMEIKi 'The philosophy behind this is that it unsettled status of more than VtliM Prafik 30 Mistrials Mould be of great iienefit to the state of . $100 million worth of a New Cluriit Texas,to. Imld.iluwn the cost ofeducation York State agency's securities *71918 ux mueh as possible: so people who go to ' dealt• the-stock market its stale universities tan enter on the basis tMCNIWUD DOWN •' of merit rather than wealth " Maguire-. sifatpest loss ift more than three * ^ -V ­ ^ \ v-months Tuesday.. /' t 17.76 «n1J"Galinsky^out.Uneil" / '. The Dow Jones average of 30 ' Wthe,;LegislaUirc «ifcrcfee t industrials fell 17i76to,719.1jB —Vn>l over huildjng priorities Ind .: its worst setback since m*m§ students by putUhg a , ' tumbled 22.69 last Nov-18. ^ > hiC ilfi. , Wetfnesj^y, Fpbru'ary 26, 1975 THE DAILY'TEXAN p. :• i ?*it * ^v» i ui'i if 11in i -iiiiurr-i.i < ~ • ' " 'n" M-.i • • • -A ---• ,.i r-. •_ • im ail. tsj m msmmmm 4,f*->­ wiWi w*f» f •ate. 'fc'W i *• man..« >*J » • "£* *S"':)g;;:g T fc £ f inTbeTeem,the is being discussed and fcr what purpose' mil this paradox that our democratic government should use our countries)^ charge us «noiigh for,oil," Moore said. ' for Tedndogkal fednolqgp be enqdogred? Win it be nsed to maintain the institutions to foster repressive regimes abroad? ought to get back a little." •• * ,, repressive Chilean military jimta, -just as Central % First, we have to wonder how much the st&te woulj A* Intelligence Agency hods and UiL -tar dollars bave been 'get back'' from the oil producing nations thatare uskv Gouging aliens used to overthrow constitutional governments? > a^fnmflie , Texas' educational system. According to Stude' fcy the OnjjuimiuB at American Farther, wemust concludethat tbeinvitations toLeniz Sen. W.T. Moore of. Bryan has done something that Government state lobby statistics, 17 percent Qf the 1*7 Statesaad IfceOavcnity,ami tteufliue off WayneBragg and i Henry Kissinger and theU.S: of A. hasn't been able to do foreign students are from oil producing nations, •fHe Inslilitr for Lata American yet: retaliate against those wretched foreigners who course, whether any, of those 17 percent are agents of t i — bas oouGiuied of the Chilean junta. Though the United States has happen to have oil when others don't.' i-'v: cartel is another question. . a fctitisi recognized the Junta, has indicated nodesire toend the He is sponsoring'an emergency Moore is doing this.. Second, we have to wonder why this bill is dee Chilean nulttaiystateand wasindeed instrumental inits Senate bill that would triple the twtioV of foreign an emergenoy. The tuition hike would not be effect Tfcis raises theqnestknastow&ystateand IMversty assmnptiaoof power, we donot approve^Isit merelya students at state-supported, schools^ 'JiThey (foreign until the next school semester, which means ^mM^^bsjffBtaiMfaeMce&aariidi . -'sis; « ­ revenue would not be coming ih, which means the 1 •terested lifcil' — CromftellASoroflherKise—have not an emergency And, besides that, there are&ttiimb been < of questions (many of which were brought out In Firii Line letters) that need to be answered before sufch-a 1 The [miteias vfco j«hiM the o|»Muue session land is even considered, much less passed. Three of ,&e&a" ctMBaeiecqiUua atthe Fapd^Ceaterwere protesting 1) What is the current plight of the foreign stttdehts? for several reason,principallybecaneof ffaesecrecy of such a tuition hike is passed, how many will be fofced the conferenceand «f the nvHafiOBissoed to Fenando leave? According to information supplied by tbe Stud Lou and Rkanto Cbro, iKjiediiriy Ok nmaster of Government state lobby, a poll atTexas A^(in>hical economics and adviser to the fmugn luLnaJiy in the Moore's home district) said that.only one-eighth of . Iasm gwanuert that walker Chile's elected foreign students could afford to payxtripled tuition.; preafa*. Salvador Alfririr. htefall of ISO. NQTOO rest would have to leave.'Such information is needed Bh w food prices have j«nped MSB percent, the other stete-supported schools. the rate of —employment has cUiidied to 21 AUDITORRJOM 2) Whatare theeducational andcultural benefitsof th •^se ^Ckfeappeaistobeseekii^gfareign presence of foreign students? Is a low tuition worth i ines&mt to iinln these treats, slaleiits of Latin' different viewpoints that foreign students add America Jiggttat lqnawilaliwb of the university? We believe it is. i ' , Chilean jula may be both American 3) What about the low tuition paid by Texas stiiden tertaohgkal and capital arrestment.Tbis is supported abroad? Shouldn't we promote an exchanged.pit)gr" * by fe EnUtun to the fonm cf njvesestatives of the whether University coordinated or not, by maintaining[ World Bnk. Standard OB of Indiana, the Phelps Dodge reasonable a rate as foreign countries ojfer4B?;i; Cmpinlioe aaad FanrinU Camera and Instrument The state lobby and the Chinese Students AssdciatiQ Omjary ' „> will be jointly conducting petition drives at tVo'bpoths #' campus, one on the .West Mall and one at jest Thesedosed dons-sfcxhlomasliadothersonlyto Wednesday through Friday. Please take the time! goes abort foram attendance — have been bided — , a petition and stop this emergency bill. It is not Ihwgfc state moeies and — jndlieeUy the stndent — Phatauby ^lotda Nvmiin emergency for the Legislature; ohlyfq^ tiie t|niversity as bmkfiag use fee Jhst what isiwsacpaying far, why The ropen' Inter-American Forum ''^s^SSSSlaiA" .' whole. We cannot become anymore a one-class, one- wn't the Coram spmmteHnswhatsartof technology a race, one-face institution than we. already are. f iringline land for coal To the editor: mined in the first place. It also'includes $10,000 to pay the bill. Because of visa students who understand the fulfillmThe 93rd Congress passed' a bill provisions for saving topsoil, preventing problems with .Washington and Saigon of having an inner-directed bonscienregnlatiiig strip mining, just in time to secondary stream polfution and stronger the desired teacher has riot yet come to • and who enjoy freedom, from religio have President Ford pat it in his back reclamation provisions, as well as mare Stanford, but the publicity caused his superstition and dogmaV atheists: . pocket and go skiing. • citizens' rights and participation. -­ release from prison: With good hick and Regrettably, this word has aim As it jiiow «tandst' there' are no \ The Human ResourcesGomhiittee will •< effort;we have a chance to go a step obscene connotations in many circlregulations cm strip mining,and it is un­begin hearings on strip mining at 3 p.m further. Partly due, to myths deliberately^ k likely. with opposition tram Ford, that Wednesday in the Lieutenant Governor needs help :*rTbis campaign the of alive by certain major rellgidils we will see strong legislation this Committee Room at the Capitbl. everyone who is willing to lend a hand. political figures, atheism is equated ' Congress. It is therefore tip to the Texas U is time that students voice their op­ The Indochina Peace Campaign, the sejeual perversion, sadism; amoraliC Legislature to prevents approaching position to strip mining. Write .to the Committee To Oppose Racism and communism, anarchism and, destmrlinnim lamtaAio forfltrip mining . members of the committee and support Apartheid and the Radical Student Union Americanism. On behalf .of atheisms Only 10 percent of theooal in Texas is strong regulation of strip mining. invite all interested friends of the everywhere, and especialiyxatheistavailable tostrip mining,and that is lbw preferably, that contained in Sen. University"to the first public meeting-of . students, we would like to dlspel tbe im^quality' Ignite. It would seem obvious Doggett's bill. (he Vietnam referendum campaign at ages of these mythological stereoty^iS. that Texas should practice deep mining Sen. Sherman chairs the committee .7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Business- An atheist believes a hospital shbuld ., for bituminouscoal, ratherthan invest in . and is fortunately for strong regulation. Economics Building 351. -' built instead of a church-^BV iathei an environmentally destructive industry Sen. Peyton McKiiight is vicerchairman. Carol Xavier believes men should love one'&iiother i whose resources would voysoon dry up. Other members or the committee are: Hal Womack stead of a god. An atheist"believes til There are'two bills introduced in the Sens. Trim Creighton, Ray Farabee. Indochina Peace Campaign the solutions to man'sprobleihs arbtoT Senate: SB55. by Sen: Max Sherman, Kent Hance. Roy Harrington. Grant found within himself and ^throughwhich came outof the JmntInterim Sur­Jones. Glenn Kothmann, Walter 4 Godless meeting scientific method, not in any Holy be face Mining Committee: and SB66. by Mengden. Bill Patman and Linden religious creed, or through prayer,Sen. Lloyd Doggett. whichwaspatterned Williams. To the editor: „ atheist does not believe that man -is i. after the first Sen. Daggett's bill'is the Mike Wiesner, President ; We represent a group of students who herently wicked or in need of guidance''strooger of the two, but they, will both University Conservation Society are. beginning a special interest direction from any outside sourbe,::Tf1 have strong opposition.; organization called University Student that such human concepts as:Ube.r . The majordifference between the two ERA referendum Atheists (USA). We are registered and justice and altruism make his capaci'' is that SB55 puts the regulatory agency To the editor: have a' faculty sponsor. Dr. Herbert for good, in all practical respects under the Railroad Commission, while At, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday the State Hirsch. and we are eager to start limited. SB66 puts it under,the General Land Of­ House of Representatives'State Affairs- meeting and exchanging ideas.regarding We believe there is a heed fora vehlfice. Putting the regtilation with the Committee -will meet/in the :House what we believe to be the only, viable of interaction and expression fot-Sth'Railroad Cmnmission wouldtend to chamber to discuss thepossibility of con- alternative life style to theism; There students on this campus. Now tljer* defeat the purpme of the le^dation. . ducting a statewide referendarn concer-have always been: numerouS ; suchavehicle.Weiriviteanymember SBG6 requires that the land be fully ning the Equal Rights Amendment. It is organizations, for students" of every the faculty or student body. .Who $ha' I-ijS&S'C. • these beliefs to attend-our first ineeti PfgSE reclaimed after mining and returned to imperative that you who feel strongly religious deriominatioii sind; faith — the original state if possble. It provides iTj>w against rescission of the ERA be present groupsroll-cvangelists who saturate the • at 8 p.m. Wednesday In J^ler.Cen that cehain-lahdsr.dioufa)' not be strip as an-expresshnvof your'support. campus with religious propaganda1, room A-215-A. , ' ...This-amendment has already been prayer,groups and Bible study.groups:..: 7 Jon G. Murmy^^resld ;7H^6rflnh^ —fi&xr There is" an organization for all -~~"'"Jeffrey^DomilrVlcrl»reglthink of wasting taxpayers':money on an issue' that has 'already been decided. A ^rananEr ^meonided tf fraud in setting up a President Ueorge Meahy, questioned referendum at this time would not be a |tinmy corporation' whicfa bought city about the AFLrCIO's proposals, spoke true representation of 'the feeling of the THE DAILY TEXAN I BcWuhk archaically tnass transit systems and baidoiqited; readily of nationalization of the oil in­people.because it is an off-election year, N»wtp9fr*tUtlnrthf •# r«s«a mt A««Ha ­ttem to protect automobile sales.* each? dustry. "If the oil ipompauies keep, and most people will-npt vote. of a drama as of the giants received a nominal $5,080 behaving the way .thqr are." he said, Sue Ann Ray EDITOR .. Buck Hahre -' " nthCeataytot-fine-Theywereonly following tradition. "conducting thdr business-in complete. Women's Affiars Committee MANAGINC EDITOR ... LynneBroc c?fle between-the •' The economy has become so disregard of the mterestof the American Student Government ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS . . i . ... Eddie^ishe dmiiiuled byhngjeri^opotiesnowthata people,^I..think -nahonalization" is ut-Claude Sinipsd' VC referendum genaine, thorough trust-busting evitable some day " NEWS EDITOR . Kathy Kell ranyaign woiddamoont toa revoiution, The^ recognition^of the uiterest of the; To the editor: wifli awqiugcteijgw ih American life American penile Meany spoke of, if-It Does the University of Texas student SPORTS EDITOR 7 .Richard JiisUc — proteNy forthe better. caught on, could l?ad to nationalization body want to have a visiting professor AMUSEMENTS EDITOR . . Vicky Bowie 'lianyof tbe corporations. tbe oil com-of all mineral rights (something.Mexico from the "Viet Cong-' next year? FEATURES EDITOR Janice Tomll ifames'forexainpfc.areasbigasmostof thought of decades ago): nationalization (Remedial note: "VC"; meaning "Viet­CAPITOL BUREAU CHIEF David Hendric D the gwut- 11' fc ntiODs of the woirtd: Though the oil of transportation, a service soobviously namese Communist" -is the label by i'n*m is aMe: to'hicat ' companiesgrew up in America. and call• public that most cities .own transit which the Texan news department, T wiO tafce Ssplace? theUutedStateshome, tbeyoperatein a systems. Thou^inationalizationof.these following the wire services and the U.S. ISSUE STAFF . * •*' ten different countries aronnd 'tbe and other industries would -obviously government, inaccurately refers to all -IssueEWitor. iiis£e fficr«g"l,fi«u Arc-efahe. Their internationalism could be serve / " Debbie Jampll, Karen HMtin r Jm smaeOmg (fee — profits. IkAFl- oat as readily as^they will anyaoe.; tbasc staundrbuck-passers. had better Frank Fleming called '."stupid!' 'which, Editorial Assistants t', , „ , , ,. Bryan Brumleyt Robln^Cf^ve CXUs cnecntne tin iH ttasgei. "We '' r. jnst because our ecpnomy is step tlively.-to. control. their own will be decided by the Student Govern­Assistant Amusements Editor.;....7..;... enmding ns np whilegrimfing ^mn. we reserves. Tbe federal government has ment election Wednesday week, March' Assistant Sports Editor n -^ r /i',; ik, r ,don't want to be «tU;ail imy niore. The; been encouraging the states foryears to 5.: -The Vietnam referendum campaign -Make-up Eklitor -'..if,Ed te ih its istand on the ml £om-': get a gripon themselves, with thestates intends to bring to UT, if possible, a ' Wire Editor '.'i1««.«»»» ......, ......... Jay^oifd to' an;Mer ;Pani«s. proposednot only regalating the ^ dragging th«r feet all the way. --, teacher of the modern, history of In-^ Copy Editors ,«.>m ^orma,Gleawhtudy seriously affd f thwc t>( ;|ho IfnlVeniijr •drflinlf'lfflUofi or lhe^Boitnl.^.r^ nrtd cliiMif(6d B^JVetiJsing.should be made Ih TSP ^ -.^Jtta AnieCIOstoi reach rnoch farther • more ahd more respectable' as worms i judgefairly.for. themselves,hayg.a .cqm>'a Hritart# -" Vj1 r ( ' ' „'i . and diaftay a^rli^ InTSP ;ing-.B**MlBICMMU ^IJk^^aaasmtity prondoig the nation wilh;^ jjwiggl^ out of theEconomic can!Not only. mon interest in theo success ~ of ThfpaflyTcxart fl^todAtneirtpaperJilTheUfllv^H^'/ w ^ t —„ " """ " ' " is andcfwap energy. By taking fr Corporations and.the gffvcmmeftL hdve, , 'referendum. Certainly DT isyalrfead^'; l^blliiiuoru vl)i^il^^aeftUwM:A4vertUifl|.'S4 ' *• A»w*aw,r*a#iw,ltaA,'^', twWntSBrttoa^trids**y.3nrfj:f they aeain repcesent Ibe labor _ -gotton too bigto benm ukeafree-for-ilf;' g'oyernmen t ./'official^^^ai f-••awaid iuiimthe.^ynwi^t:; tad dicj haveistrork >-auhfiwrS; Porthesakeofsurvjval^Am^ricansmay couitterfevolutionary Scfwlars;-: >£££ when SUndird , Oa.';-';asahBt the profitrntHiyeas the lastsfor Icam thc differcnee Wtween freedom ^The Stanford student [body passed MMnoariMire^l-riiMii i.wpiwjt^lto»>tricia «oHe^ greed. • -v:i,ijmilar referendum last year and raised' mm WkM -1m' ^ IP * J ^— , "V riwcf* 1.S-A mSjaaftBgftijS mm »: :1V# Si « «r? the world over \A By JACK ANDERSON South Vietnam and Thailand. 1973 cease-fire described how the CIA saved fields and offshore oil beds.'• with -' •: The CIA has been training "Whoever controls the former Prime Minister Sirit On Capttol HU1. SpeakerLES WH1TTEN palace guards for-more than .palace guard in Thailand, con­Thanarat in an even more Cart Albert has wanted (as°1975, United Feature Syn­two decades. In the process, trols the crown." one Asia- dashing exploit. The pnme colleagues prtvateiy that the dicate the CIA has quietly developed wise. ex-CIA operative told minister was recuperating in United States most latmcb an . WASHINGTON t? It can some bpdy'guards into infor­us. He claimed the CIA has a Tokyo hospital. Prouty told emergencv program to •flow* be revealed that CIA' mants and,used others to in­run the palace guard in us. when a coup began to develop energy on the state of agents have trained the elite fluence palace policy-making. Bangkok since the 1950s.­ develop back in Bangkok the Manhattan Project wtbcfc guard /favored units which THAILAND is typical. The Once, high government of­THE CIA rushed the ailing developed the atomic bomb. foreign monarchs, , premiers crack, protective from of 60-man ficials escaped one field marshal home 10a US But he has been unable to per­ and dictators. force which guards King Thailand's periodic coups and military plane, and the CIA-suade the varroos House-(no­This has giventh&CIA con­Bhumibol Adulyadej and sought sanctuary in the base­trained bodyguards responded minees. which save jurisdic­tacts close to; the^seat of Queen Sirikit, is directed By a ment of a CIA agent, our with such a bristling display tion over various phases atthe power,"according'to our trusted CIA trainee. He is. Lt. sources recall. of efficiency that the coup was energy problem, to work sources, in such (Countries as % Gen. Vitoon Yasawad. who Fletcher Prouty, a former averted. together for a common solu­ Kttr. Ethiopia, Indonesia/ "Jordan, also led the CIA's Thai Air Force officer who had Yasawad s present protec­tion 4**«r«ecrWftvttr Laos. Somalia, South'Korea. irregulars in Laos until the been attached to the CIA, tive force is armed with Thai-JAUNDICED JUDGE? made. German-designed Federal regulations tweeting rapid-fire rifles and are skill­the lead content of guest viewpoint ed at handling explosives. recently were overturned by They were trained not far the courts The judge vbo from the big U S base at wrote the decision, it am Ah; effective editor needs a valid election Korat. which became a CIA develops, was a former By JOHN BENDER subcenter during the Vietnam counsel to a major supplier of better argument for appointing the editor of The Texan." But, them, since someof the rulesclearly violate state lawsand the . (Editor's note: Bender is a member of the Texas Student why should the administration risk charges of interfering with. -U.S;,Constitution. war and is still a major in­lead concentrates. Publications Board.) cfiiHani affftlra itrVtAn nrtJ nonn -ITnn^l. .>..1J _i_ 'i_'» telligence outpost. The decision was written b* As theStudent Courtgathers to deliberateThursday night, Yasawad has acknowledged Judge Malcolm Wilkey. ojthe we once again find ouriselves waiting to s^'theproduct of The only the existence of his L) C Court of Appeals, wto Daily Texan'sannual violent gestation: a neweditor, conceived special 60-man protective called the federal guidefiaes; in confusion and delivered in a courtroom. . force, which is called SWATS eliminating lead from gas­ good fortune of having an Adversary which tears itself 'apart lifted tocreate moreStiMentInterest in theeiecUons?PresaiUy THE STUDENTS havethe rightthis year, as they did in years for Special Weapons and Tac­oline capricious" ami the only forms of Campaigning are leafleting, which litters the past, to ask who are the parents of this seemingly illegitimate tics. arbitrary " HOW CAN AN EDITOR be an effective voice of ths.suidents .Campus, speaking to large groups, which discourages student child. Could itpossibly be thefew studentswho wentto the polls when he or she is elected by 4 percent of the student body and /feedback and newspaperadvertising, which only tells the points ENERGY MUDDLE: The We have now learned that leaders in Washington simply on sothe' now forgotten day? can only take office after, jhiring a competent' a%mej?.^;ji'.t^at the candidate .wants, publicized. the judge for seven years was The /process began with the TSP Boiard telling three don't seem to be able to get general counsel to keooecott candidates they were not qualified to run for office. Later; the together on an energy policy. Copper, whose Ozark sub­board allowed two of them to run along with four latestarters Yet the nation is in desperate sidiary produces mach of the only to. have President Ad Interim, Lorene Rogers again throw need of a program that will lead concentrates used in out the tWo original candidates. assure enough energy to ran leaded gasoline As though that were not enough to present serious questions our factories, heat our homes A spokesman for the jtadge students on a one-to-one basis in the dormitories. has been roasted by The Daily Texan and would loveHsee it about the election process, the Election Commission then crippled. Finally, the TSP board must take the judicial powers away a>.J operate our automobiles asserted that there was "no for the next decade. in disqualified the duly' elected editor. Now" come the daily The Election Commission, which finds itself more!powerful from the Election, Commission which has made a farce of conflict of interest tie accusations and a myriad of official Hearings'that have than the student electorate, would not be willing to give up any ' student elections. If there must be election rules, then they In the White House. Presi­decision He refused to . a group that has some obscured all campaign issues and will no doubt leave another of its authority over student elections. SSMv '" should,be interpreted arid enforced by " " dent Ford has proclaimed answer specific questions, deep star oh the office of the editor and the credibility of The THE ONLY HOPE lies with the TSP Board, knowledge of the.legal process. The board should appoint a there is an energy crisis and however, about Witkey's pre­Daily Texan. hands everything over to the Election Commissiononly three-member p^nel 'of law students to have original has called upon all Americans sent relationship with tfee Some students havesuggested that the annual bloodbath only opens its eyes after the battle smoke has drifted-away'to jurisdiction in campaigncomplaints. Hopefully, law studentsat to sacrifice. Yet Secretary of Kennecott company. The gives the Board of Regents and the System administration a meekly ask the commission "Have you decided who^thelnext the University have le&rnedsomething aboutdue processof law the Treasury William Simon spokesman would neither OOM-editor will be?" JjS'V: and will not trample on the rules and the candidates in a mad is saying there is plenty of f irm nor deny reports that the U/MAT A THE SUN 15 WARM If the TSP Board does not act now to change the 20th -90 daysJudging: Wednesday, April 8 at Round Up Carnival. No *46741 May 29th/ August19th-82daysentry fee. May 29th/August 8th -74 days ­ROUND TRIP FROM AUSTINCategories: Poorest beard, Longest beard, Fullest (15 PERSONS MINIMUM GROUP) NEW YORK/LUXEMBOURG PORTION ONLY *310 • POp^ESBURY beard. AUSTIN/N.Y.M57" maaii-naMwau SPACE LIMITED• CALL SOW? rmtemcw HMM... LETS sea... tmurr.m. ITMKtLLSmKT Homo? JtP7» IWrM?// PRI7FK Will orni\/c\i HARWOOD TRAVEL pttem IF mcANsncK ir, xtc mpyou ^' & •mnuEvs/w 'it * MOUNmSJOFTNiSeXfBt-seal NOW mximtpwcw SOU SHOULD HACKir,TU8£W&L\ twtumr/ „ TomtwrrEt u Crossword Puzzler Answer to Yesterday's Puale Lightweight ACRT)3S||J;.;WRK H'jq HBB polyurethane § 4 Mountains of 1 Chart ' ntaQ HHQdu rarga Europe4 Region . 5 Female niH HSHBE1? aaaasn platform, 8 Sesson.of 6 Christian lannHa ruras leather straps. everage; festival radars asrg 13 incline;S': RKfa niR[3 7 Those op­ 14^Toward posed 8 Commission rau aas ara rid 'Shelter merchants any awr«5aa respect 9 Mutpmmed sawB iiur; i-JDflra 16SubStsnce used tokill IS Tilled 10 Conducted 11 Confederate inserts 18 Pigpens warn ranwys MOW reposition IB nfis-i aurs. 21 Preposition 19 Printer's 30 Parent (coi 43 -Symbol tor 22 FootUkeptrt measuret,^ loq.l tantalum 20 Shade 22 ShallpW 23 Montter 32 Cornea back 44 Poems' vesael 24 Earth god 27 Brlclt-carry­33 Ship channel 45 Lamb's pen ing device ' 36 Symbol lor name 29.Equality calcium 48 Tell 30 Fear 26 Precipitation 28 Slrl's name 37 Expert . 47 River InScot­ ,31 Teutonic land • Camel 38 Most ancient27.Possessive 40 Birttip|ace of 48 Organ ol ronoun 32 Hurried Mohammed hearing •'Navy Blue 28 Spoken 29 Dance step erilaWri ^41 Teutonic 49 Prefix: three fluid delly 50 Dutch town Suede 34 Preposition 35S|feedcom tests 37 Insane >1* SS-Tlerrcdelv^ Fuegtnln- L,, dlan , r NarroW. (lit board -t:40-Small rug •, T41 8panifiinti^ cle , ^ i The Natural Look 42Southwett«m Indians In Three Neat Pieces t.44 Command »j47 Letstned Add a littlespice toyour Spring wardrobe . with our 'natural' polyester knit "«asa»\ 52 M^Hl'fW % U r -i i ,i«v 53 Qlveiln TnntgHU addeksot.-iv jacket and sleeveless vest. From TracyPetites in sizes Sto 13.M.OQ -»aas» ... i 4-' ' YARING'S, QM.THE4NM6 FOJl 5HOE.5 Vf' 3406 Gwadotup* oVertown •t»1bx,U»i ralar%.8jnv4k^t«i~ Inc! •a-sfTaPt it-s i Wednesday, February 26, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page a t t p fC'ViS' Tyrone Johnson 0) and TCU's Royal fight In-the ball. UNIVERSITY SKI CLUB SH NtGATORY COIORADO SPRING BREAK $82 -Migi mMes lodging at Ramada Inn •wl Mil , Hckels. Bos transportation IHHNUUIMW I. GENERAL MSTIN&Tliorsday ffeb.27, "7S ^ "Sf " • IIie Bocket i'OO PJH. -r'fc.JP'V-1 » fe By ED DALHEIM TexanStaff Writer­ Dan Knieger's 20-foot jump shot with 10 seconds remain­ing climaxed a late Texas ral­ly, and the Longhorns defeated TCU Tuesday night. tUIin Gregory Gym. ; Thewin wastheLonghorns' sixth in a row and the fourth time, Krueger provided the winning margin. Kroner scored only.eight points but had seven assists. "He's done whatever we need to win the ball game." Texas Coach Leon Black said. Kroeger^s late heroics were set up by nine Ed Johnson points in the last eight minutes, including four clutch free throws. • AFTER KRUEGER'S ba&et. TCU-had one more chance, but a 10-foot running shot by Ride Hensley was off the nm.and Bill Bozeat's tip- in came just after the buzzer. "We got the ball into Rick (Hensley) and told him to penetrate -and make something happen." TCU Coach Johnny Swaim describ­ ed the last play. * All we needed was one more second." Swaim added. "We played very well, but so did Texas." Swaim couldn't have been complimenting the play in the first half asboth teamsplayed sluggish basketball. Both teamshit an unartistic 35 percent from the field, and Tcxds: went into the lockerroom with a 30-29 ad­ vantage. AT THE START of the se­ cond half. Texas had trouble holding onto the ball, and the TCU fast break ran up a seven-point lead. With 10 minutes remaining. v- r - Urate*neath that plentifullysprinkled, lightly toasted triple decker bun, youll discover a wonderland of goodies s-Two(count"em)two100% beef patties!Oh boy! A slice of If cliooste!Yum! piddesand cnopped onion.Crisp! Plus asnappy scoopof Mc£onakrs*super special Big Mac McDonald's • sauce.;.';-•••• ^ £1-Gela Kg Macand find out what'sin it for you.Butdon't open. :sI * C t- thebun andlook,open yourever-fovin* mouth and taste it toriaaL >v \ « £ ^ « -V ti 1 xoio vuadalupe and 'v 1 -s> • 4? ' J --' Jg-iPf m Longhorns Win Sixth in a Row, 63-62 TCU still had a seven-point' lead. 51-44^ but quick baskets' by Tommy Delatourand Tom-"• my Weilert off .Krueger passes put theLonghorns back in the game. After exchanging several baskets, a three-point play by Ed Johnson put the Longhorns within.two. With four minutes to go. TCU decided to sit on its two-point lead, and Swaim put in a stall olfense. Texas had been burned by the stall earlier in the season but this time it turned into their advantage.­ "We were trying .to draw the foul." Swaim explained. "And we did the first time." BUT THEM it backfired on the Horned Frdgs. The Longhorns forced a turnover, and Ed Johnson hit two free throws for a 59-59 tiewith 3:25 to plav. SWC Roundup Red Raiders Stun Aggies, 73-63 COLLEGE STATION (UPI) Rick Bullock and . William Johnson led an early-Texas Tech rush that helped open up a 15-pomt lead in the first half Tuesday night; The Red Raiders then went on to stun Texas A&M. 73-63, and throw the Southwest Conference race into a deadlock. Tech and A&M are now tied for the lead with 9-3 records and only three games remain­ing for each club. The victory was the eighth in a row for the Red Raiders, who were preconference favorites but who lost two of their first conferencestarts — including a .62-55 failure against the Aggies in Lubbock 1 ;The next time TCU had the One key to the' Longhorns' center' Rich Pareon added. ball. Tyrone Johnson came up win was the relative offensive : "And when we went to a man with a :loose ball which: ineffectiveness of the Horned resulted in two more Ed John­Frogs' center. Bozeat The 6-son -free throws. and'a two-. 10 Bozeat was. held to 13 point lead with 1:42 left. \ points, hitting just over: oner With 28 seconds remaining, third of his shots. TCU's Gary Landershita 15-. footer from the baseline, and "WE WERE TRYING hard TCU led 62-61. setting the not to let Bozeat in close," stage for Krueger's winning Black said. "Weused our zone shot to keep him outside," Texas Statistics iro nHb nw fo n9+ntp Johnson, E ........3 7 6 10 6 212 Royal -9 17 1 3 8 4 19 Johnsoa T .........b 13 0 0 3 5 12 Jones 3 9 0 0 7 0 6 Parson .........1 .3 0 0 6 I 2 Bozeat 6 17 1 1 13 2 13 Delatour .....^.5 10 0 0 5 2 10 Hensley 2 6 2 2 1 3 6 Krueger ..J 3 6 2 2 3 0 8 Pllihugh 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 McCleltan .........0 0. 0 0 0 0 0 Bledsoe 4 7 2 2 6 4 10 Baker .,a0 3: 0 0 2 0 0 Harris .71 3 0 0 0 1 2 Sauerschlag... 0 1 2 2 10 2 Home..::;.. 0 2 0 1 3 2 0 Goodrter ..'.i«;.l '4 2 2 4 2 4 Landers t. -.3 4 0 0 2 3 6 Boolhe ........0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Dead Ball 1 -Weilert S 6 1 1 3 1 11 Team Rebounds (Included in Murphy 1 2 0 0 1 1 2 Totals....; /....I Dead Ball " 1 totals at 69 6 9 42 20 02 Team Rebounds (Included In Total*) ; 4 TOIAU ....IS SI I) 17 M 14 M • * . 1 4 -for man he didn't getthe ball too often." While Bozeat was keptfrom the ball, forward'Lynn Royal was busy scoring 19 points, which was high for the game. -The Texas :scoring: was spread.oui with the Johnsons leading the way with 12 points apiece. After dropping: their first' . five: conference games-by close margins, the Longhorns are now well experienced inl the art of winning close games. That experience will be* tested in the next three games when the Longhonis face Tex­as Tech. Arkansas and Texas A&M. But at least until Saturday, -the Longhorns cansavor their six straight wins. . *• •>V * " last month;:' winner of six straight games. Tech jumped to a 12-2 lead Saturday afternoon in a-in the early moments, and the regionally televised, struggle Aggies could'come no closer while Texas A&M will visit than that the rest of the night. TCU Saturday night. The Red The Red Raiders had a 36-25 Raiders* other two games are Tialftinfe margin and~ran upas at Baylor and at home against much as an l8-point lead with TCU while the Aggies have four minutes in .the game at vet to play SMU in Dallas and 68-50. Texas in College Station. The Raiders were able to dominate the -Aggies even Arkansas Romps though three of the Tech FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. regulars -Bullock. Grady (UPI — Jacfc Schulte Newton and Keith Kitchens — and Charles Terry scored 18 -were in foul trouble during the points apieceTuesday night as second half. ~ Arkansas made a quick start Tech's defensive work ac­and coasted through the se­counted as much for the win­cond half for a 86-51Southwest ning margin as did theoffense Conference victory over Rice since Aggie starSonny Parker that moved the Razorbacks to vas held to only six points. within a game of the league Johnson scored 17 points for lead. the Bed Raiders whileBullock Schulte. who led the first chipped in 16. Steve Dunn add­half outburst for the Hogs, ed 13 for Tech.: also led the team in-reboun­ Tech will next host Texas. ding with nine. Kent Allison Shoe Shop *5ALE* ^ Al We make and SHEEPSKIN : repair boots • RUGS :»ho«» belts Many »500. BeautifulColors $750 A LEATHER SALE • Various. kinds,,colon * 75* por ft. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca. Austin/Texas 478-9309 .W;K*ty Mflltn. Graduated In71 with • 8,8. f(r 14-polnt ­lead in the first half,to take a one-point advantage after.the first period. 38-37. Freshman T.J. Robinson, having hisbest night as an SMU player, .led the Mustangs late inihe first half. ­ The gamewas tied sjx timesvM in the second half with the regulation time ending, with -• the contest deadlocked at.67-' 67. Edwards hit an eight-foot jump shot with 10 seconds remaining in regulation to put the game into the extra period. LQ_> . JfoQSAty HKe-WtcR >• . HEALTH CONDITIONING >p K NORTHERN SHAOLINB STYLE M JPM. -9PM i vi * TAIaround the state. It will be the last touraament usingold Conroe: Jon Chaffee of M*dn SNiff Hmm by Zach RyaR Austjn, Minn.; Lance Ten playing much, but he'll come TURTLE'S KITCHEN * rules, changingto international rulesand distancesafterwards. around," Hannon said. Practicesare held at7:30p.m.Tuesdays intheWomen'sGym — Texas' Warren Aune tees off. Broe'ck of Chicago; and Other golfers that.probably ImM# * KHmat Dram * Bedillion of Austin. * will travel to some tour­ 7405 NMOS * After two tournaments this naments this year areWarren * year Bedillion has shot eight Aune, Kelley Kirkpatrick,. Right behind Inner Sanctum * under par. Finishing second in John Paul Scott and Tim » Women Defeat St. 's, 84-45 ************* the Pan American Inter­Wilson. University Tuesday in an 4®5S«c3B aw?£r collegiate tournament in Wilson, however, is enabled the Texas women's intermediate-optional meet at But St. Msiy s;,could, not University of Hni^inn at Monterrey. Mexico, to hampered with an ankle he basketball team to romp past Belimont Hall, 72.35-59.45. stop TexasWrw^rdCathySelf p^TuLday"1 Gregory Arizona's All-America turned during the Massingill St. Mary's University 84-45 in s y Individual winners for Tex­ from scoringr 20; points and «-• - Gym. Texas beat Houston in Charles Gibson and should tournament and may see San Antonio Tuesday night. as were Marilyn Smothers, in center Frances Sefdensticker By using a zone press, Tex­ overtime 63-62 on Jan. 18. the vaulting and floor exer­figure in most of the tour­limited action the early part from scoring19. Twelve of the • • * naments this year. of the season. as pressured the Rattlers ear­ cise's and Leslie Golden in the 13 Longhorns $cored. Ten Broeck and Blackburn ly, gradually opening, the lead uneven bars. •--yq-^lXv Next tournament action for "It was a team effort The University woman's to 39 points, while St. Mary's Texas' next meet is. an have also gone to both tour­the Horns is the Four-States because everyone con-gymnastics team defeated shot a cold 17 percent from advanced-optional meet tributed.'! Pat^e said. Southwest Texas State the field. against Louisiana.^ State Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service But defense wasn't the only University at 3:30 p.iiijSatur-tJP Student Health Center asset for the Longhorns as day in Belimont HallgfpiiS. 105 W. 26th St. (4th Floor-South) they shot 47 percent from the *>• field and 87 percent from the foul line. "We shot better than they BAR-B-Q did and played Intelligent basketball." Texas Coach Rodney Page said, "but they Our Brewery & MARKET lacked experience." 108 W. 43rdSt! 453-0620 With Tuesday's loss, the has been made a Rattlers' record fell to 4-4.... State historical The Longhorns' record climb­ ed tp li-6. . . WEDNESDAY SPECIAL i., site,.... THURSDAY SPECIAL _ TEXAS. HELD .Batumi guard Loretta Ray, who was?' BEEF PLATE RIB PLATE averaging ^1points per jgame. Beans Potato Salad Boons Potato Salad PicltUt, Onions PicUes, Onions IP AUSTIN To NEW YORK Our Beer *1574 PLUSTAX RETURN ANY DAY has been making OPEN THURS 3 Departures CHOPPED SIRLOIN March S, 21, and tZ WHOLE BRISKET 89V 8ounc* six* DRAG 2426 GUADALUPE hjstory since 1909. 99c Miami Groan Flifin . BULK SLICE BACON GROUND CHUCK 89V Miltb tt 'fiwpint Ux SPACE LIMITED -/ -, BOOK NOW . Soon serving quick, inexpensive breakfasts •SpeaoU through March I CALL THE EXPERTS tn&g Open Sat JOI for Party Kegs and Shiner Beer Dist. Co. (24^Gu»d^iwjrRWEr) Longneck&^_ 207 E. 4th 472-1117 AnotherContinental Discount Fare: JOBS! JOBS! JOBS! Semirinr8&discussion with Statelocal, and Federal agencies who are recruiting from liberal arts graduates. ECONOMY DISCOUNT FARE WEDNESDAY . ^ Dobie Room (AC)J_ ' 11:00 Federal Careers ' ~~ ' i"V1 12$00 Tfx; Dept. of Public Welfare -Alumni Center W'---*,*'.'" -a. _ 1:00 Tx. Rehabilitation Comm. TO MIAMI 2:00 Tx. Dept. of Community Affairs 3:00 Tx. Dept. of MHMR ­THURSDAY You comeout ahead Dobie Room ( AC) • 11:00 Merit System Council becausewe really move our tail. Alumni Center 1:00 Tx. Employment Comm. out our routesystem—a great way to save, justfor skipping a meal.Our Economy fare to Miami is $122. And we have plenty more:-----. -_ -— ^ The following faculty members will discuss employment oppor­tunities with their respective degrees, what to do, and where to EL PASO $ 49 . SAVE $ 6 start. LOS ANGELES • • r • :• r-: • J , • . . V... vY. -v $ 97 SAVE $12 .MIDLAND/ODFSSA $ 31 SAVE $ 6 Alumni Center HOUSTON $ 22 SAVE $ 3 Dr* Curtis SoreiwbnrGeography , PORTLAND" • $126 SAVE $15 "V * Weiner-Anthropo/ogy •7 ' iA tVV i ^ v "• : Nbrman-Econom/cs"' Dr. Alfred NOrman-Econom/csT \ ' Remember too,a travelagent costsyou nothing extra,so ^00 Dr. Clarence Lasby-W/s/or/ , call oneforthegood,word on all our Discount Fares.Or call us ,^yfen-tinguistics^m af 477-6716.At spring break orany time,we canprobably get you where-you live,for less. ; y ' 1 kte ,{§£?.)£r .t&dl •2S exas w .By RICHARD JUSTICE J£fiHeam antr "1 good, but We need. fof kls. aomlhg 'runs arid nine hits. #1 < -Texan Staff Writer told em _ havelo^ye it ' > 1 that Saturday.^tye , vO-, weeWpd (ag«inSttfoustont l/( 1 s I. ! . . -It could have been the can bring losses around brine the low"! nrhnnri — .-1 • ints wt;6p inning ganio.1' '' * Katt said, rhis isj in'the second game, scoring it could have,been an ovedose 1 TLC COACH .Ra$5'Katfanother well disciplined Texas! 1 , five runs In the first.ipning of salt tablets that did it or it lpAm ThpuThey ,,,Bfjustrtnndon't'' hit bad! team h" h'"i,TEXAS MADE excellent, Stouffer started it with a started righthander Robert could, have been jock straps pitches. This new park might? points, and a lot of runs, oh /.single and'rightfielder Mark Vargas: who was'shelled for that fit .too tightly. hurt soroe of' their powerj almost every occasion. The'"-doubled to score lt> hits ip two and dne-tHird in­ More likely, it .was the hitters liKe , Bradley and! Longhorns started the scoring , Stouffer. Bradley was safe on nings by the Longhorns players-only meeting Monday (Keith) Moreland.'" ;J in the second • inning of the art.errof, Rob Stramp Felipe Maldonado; also a: afternoon which put the Texas first game when'catcher Rick doubled, Charlie Proske righthander;-started the •*, But Tuesday it was' Texas] baseball team into an un­ se­ Bradley singled, first .walked and.Uuijcantripledto cond game for TLC and lasted ;Which did the hurting and TLCi forgiving mood. baseman Doug Duncan walk­score three"runs?®?; ~V four innings, 'allowing eight Which wa4 the hurte£. And it was the Texas •* *' rfi ed and second baseman Garry- Lutheran players who happen- Righthander ijfm" Gideon, Pyka collected the firstof his- Connors, Newcombe ed .to. be the only outlet suffering shpulder problems three triples, a new Texas available , once the meeting for thefirst timein hiscareer, ended and the doubleheaderat record. Shortstop Stouffer pitched without .pain V ^ 1 'Austin^ COUPON CXPIRES JUNC 30/1975 Blood Components, Inc. OPEN-MON. & THURS. 8 AM to 7 PM -TUES. & FRL 8 AM to 3 PM ' v «f CLOSED WED. & SAT. Starting Saturday, Feb. 15, 7975 * Sale Price 409 W. 6th -477-3735 Good Wed; BREAKFAST MCA,— Thru Sat. "Cafeteria Style Service OLIVIA NEWTON FACTORY CLOSE OUT "Each Item Individually Priced" ^ JOHN: located at^Buff©!',* Her New Album -in Delwood Shopping Center-. : 3816 & IH :35 across from Seiars HAVE YOU NEVER;I 1000 WATT I ORIGINALLY S2895 Serving Hours Tw^rut^M^ BEEN MELLOW 6:30 a.m. -10 •£ NOW $19.95 * / CLOSED MONDAYS Iff > I sAJiTSg WITH SEBRING HAIRCUT-$14.95 I •' with thif coupon ^ ^ (, 2*.mm. RECORD.TOWN BRING A FRIEND FOR A 'M-mM-* HAIRCUT WITH SEli,2/$24.95|?1 3^3 OPEN TB FREE PARKING IpiteSBREAKFAS DOBIE CENTER *10 TILL 10® Ssi-SEti «# i ww.i—rwir WITH PURCHASE 2021 GUADALUPE Ir: ISa^S^ -u* 5^ i rf'-MON. THRU SAT yyy . IN DOBIE GARAGE 478-6119­ \ X Y *** iMn/MNICUTAkliv ,P\­ AWO/NTMeNToftir T,'.^ • VV^oesday,,1975 THE,DAILY TEXAN Sri K-S ;'; t>#c-V,>W§ Rock Cobra m1 msm^t}/^ feH-1-! -Te^';StaU;WHter''.'v-;' Rockdale .Rep. Dan Kubiak. also said he had been a long , ; Helpful or npt, the presiden-Weddington Though ambulanceservices rarely receive callsto rtisb who along with supporter of a Texas presiden­ ytial primarybillbeing con­and Dallas Rep. Jim Maitpx. to theaid ofasnake-bite victim,Austin Ambulancedriver tial primary and thinks there sidered by the Texas. House Jack Waters responded to just such a call — made even succeeded in amending Fort will be one in 1976 because "a Mvould hot have a chance were" Worth Rep. Tom Schieffer's more unusual by the fact the snake was a cobra. number of conservatives will : it not for ,0.8. Sen. .Lloyd provide proportional At 2.22 p.m. Tuesday, a call crackled over Waters' bill to be voting this time because of Bentsen's -presidential can-numbers of delegates accor­Bentsen." ambulance radio to respond to a reportof a man whohad £a|§ didacv. several st'a te ding to the vote percentages. Earle. too. said a Texascan­been bitten by a rock cobra in far East Austin at the representatives agreed Tues­Schieffer's bill would have es­didate for president is-intersection of Ed Bluestein Boulevard and Bolm Road. day-•: .. ' At first, Waters and his partner were wary of the call tablished a form of the necessary for the hill to pass, .•;. Is it possible,for;.the Texas "I was kind of skeptical about this call because we get wi.nner-take-all delegate but that it did not bother him. . Legi si a tu re; tpv pass ra selection. so fewconcerning snake bites, and I'd never heardof that Austin Rep. Wilhelmina presidential primary bill type of snake in this area before," Waters said. Delco said she did not know : withouta specificcandidate in "J introduced a (primary) All species of cobra are indigenous to areas of the whether a Texan presidential mind7 t* • ' bill six years ago. but no one African continent, India and Southeast Asia. In North candidate is needed for the "Of course hot." answered -then was interested in a America, they are found only in zoos. passage of the bill, although . Austin Rep; /Sarah Wed-presidential primary." "I thought it could have been a pet, though," Waters -she noted Bentsen's candidacy K dington Tuesday^ explaining Kubiak said, adding that "I recalled. and the bill's timing was one jo-;that other bills in'thepast had don't think this (bill) would ^ Arriving at the scene, which Waters described as a objection to the bill. | _ y i i' been introduced, only. to fail. have come to the forefront land fill, he noticed a man in his early twenties"••'w >,1', £,j ,"t -Taxan .Staff H»»o by AndySJ«v«mon One of those legislators who like it has" without Bentsen's "Once it's passed, it can standing by himself. always be amended." she Chairwoman Janie Strauss talks about Union East. • had filed presidential primary candidacy. About this time, two Austin police cars arrived. said. "The guy kept saying he had been bitten and that thereDelco added there were was a snake, but he contradicted himself several times"some positive things" about when we questioned him," Waters remembered. "HeBentsen in his bid for the Union East didn t seem too coherent. He was either mentallynation's chief executive's of­disturbed or high on something. fice. but she added there is no "We ail crawled around for about 20 minutes, but therecandidate "I'm excited and Board of Directors To Launch Information Campaign was no evidence there had ever been a snake." jumping up and down'about." The man. who still claimed tohave been bitten and thai By GAtt'BUIUUS Texas Tavern. won't be levied.until the respojise to questions abput Although Schieffer's bill Union East would most likely there was a snake, refused to accompany Waters in the The Union Board of Direc- Texan Staff Writer . building is completed. the cost oi the $6.5 million was not approved Tuesday, Floor plans and renderings tqrs met .with interested The floor plans of Union be dropped. ambulance to thehospital. Not able toforce the"victim" building. one thing became evident,liie the student to go and feeling all was normal anyway. Waters droveof the proposed Union East Union committee persons and East show two levels,' with v However, Fleming discuss­In addition to House is eager to become in­away,will be on display thisj,week at other ^ student at Scholz' referendum, the Union Board many recreational and dining ed the convenience to the east volved iii the presidential l?i[ five:campus.locations in con­Garten, to inform them about facilities. is conducting an opinion poll election process. side of the campus, aswell as junction with the Union East Unipn East/ ' through a private firm. Student Government Presi­"the benefits to the' entireinformation campaign. At the meeting. Board dent Frank Fleming pointed University community, in­"The argument against Students will vote on a members discussed an infor­out plans for an auditorium, cluding low-cost food, Union East is of course the fee Onion East referendum in the mation and fact sheet and outdoor amphitheater, arts alcoholic beverages, enter­increase.'' Strauss added. UT SWEETHEART March 5 Student Government reviewed architectural plans. and crafts center, and outdoor tainment and programs." ''What students must decide is election. "No. one will pay for a decks, barbeque areas and If student support is shown if the $10 investment is worth Locations for the Union building they' won't-use," beer gardens. and if the Legislature ap­the benefits they will Applications Now Available for the East plairs are the Academic Union Board Chairwoman "It's no secret we'll have to receive " increase the Center foyer, the law school, Janie Strauss said, explaining increase the Union fee to build proves an in Kinsolving Dormitory foyer. the in-crek'sed...Union fee Union fee ceiling from $10 to She said the Union will be 1975-76 UT SWEETHEART CONTEST Union East." Union Director $18. the Board of Regents has Jester Center foyer and the necessary to fund the building working hard the next week Shirley Bird Perry said • At teast in agreed to issue bonds to con­30 hrs at UT before the referendum to struct the building. . provide information and If these two contingencies answer any questions about • Must not graduate before May, '76 are not met. Fleming said Union East. Austin's Hatters Famous • Entry fee $5 Austin is known for ironed out. Thisis a big part of San Marcos. "Peckinpah call­No organization may sponsor more than one progressive country music, making a good hat. The next COUNSEUNG-^PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES ed me up and asked me to Tex-Mex food and street ven­steps breaking the beat-up western r involve make him a 4 CENTER contestant dors on the Drag. Now you can brim and putting a finish on hat for the movie. I made him Announces a group for students with add one more distinction — the crown. After this is done, a hat and told him to beat it up . Pick up applications at Texas Hatters. the leather is cut according to his own damn self." Texas Hatters is an 11-year-a man's head. the shape of Jnterfraternity Council Office old Austin business which has Tjje final steps are to sew on acquired a national reputation the trim by hand and then RESEARCH CANCER 2226 Guadalupe and is the hat maker for such crease it the way the people as Burt Reynolds, customer' wants it." the Thousands of Topics Of . television's Mike Connors and younger Gammage said, y " $2.75 per page The group is designed to help students face Texas Union Austin singers Willie Nelson " Gammage recalled a friend­Send for your up-to-date, 166-page, this threat to their life and assist them with L. '*" •" -Applications dueMarch 12 ^ ^ . and Jerry Jeff Walker. ly run-in. with a customer mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00 the many physical & social consequences of The store has just moved to to cover postage, (delivery time is familiarto moviegoers, direc­ 1 to 2 days). ' their illness. " 2058 S. Lamar Blvd. after five tor Sam Peckinpah. Peckin- RESEAftCH ASSISTANCE, INC. years at 1705 S. Lamar Blvd. pah was making "The It was founded in 1964 by Mar­11941WIISH1REBIVD., SUITE -2 Contact Jim Rosen or Jerry Pierson Getaway" with Steve LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025 . vin E. Gammage Sr. and his McQueen and Ali MacGraw in West Mall Office Building 303 (213)477-8474 or 477-5493 son. Our research material is sold (or Call 471-3515 '. • $95 Perhaps, one reason for the national reputation of Texas . BIOENERGETIC Hatters is its policy of making EXERCISES every hat by hand. we offer A FORM OFBODY "To make a hat, we hand- PSYCHOTHERAPY block the hat which gives it its WAR* PCTTIGREW. 477-SOM basic shape.Then thecrowti is you is real. $200 A SIMPLE HIGH Smiling Sain QUALITY CAMERA may not be. AFFORDABLE pate/ for by Charlie "Maddog" Maddox ttifs'SS? PRICE Our Advent/Kenwood/ Pioneer system: $559 HONEYWELL euROPffln r m pBNJAX py Halina whose training^ ' "7 includes 18 years of experience : in Paris. Warsaw, and Vienna. ,v • DEEP PORE CLEANSING & REFINING-\ % • REMOVAL OF BLACKHEADS, CYSTS &' A ­ BLEMISHES , '" When shopping around for components at list price is rating methods.) a stereosystem, bewareof list real. To match the value that •TREATMENT FOR ENLARGED FJ-T nnces bearinglargediscounts, The Advent loudspeaker the Smaller Advents and the BROKEN CAPILLARIES ^ fliese discounts are often and has greater frequency Kenwood receiver represent, easily attached to equipment response and freedom from we recommend the Pioneer •MASSAGE OF FACE. NECK & BACK which has an inflated list distortion than do many far turntable with aShure M91ED Eprice—one which represents a more expensive speakers. It cartridge. The Pioneer has a •JAQUETTE MASSAGE FOR evel of qualify upto which the provides the final, lowest oc­well-balanced platter for good PROBLEM SKIN ' equipment may not measure. tave of bass offered by only a speed stabilityand a quietsyn­ Sometimes the big savings handful of the most expensive chronous motor for low wow, IONTOPHORESIS pvt you less for your'money. speakers — and none costing flutter and rumble. The Shure SKIN RETEXTURIZING ?/&>''& •file 195" we're taking off near its price. M91ED comes with a diamond the $654" list pirlce-of our Kenwood has brought the stylus and tracks at a record­ • HAIR REMOVAL ETF : Advent/Kenwood/Pioneer ; price of amplifier power saving 1.25 grams. ELECTROLYSRSORWAXING' system represents a down. The KR3400 stereo In our store these com­ meaningful savings because receiver delivers more clean, ponents add up to $654"; we •^INDIVIDUAL^KE-Uiy& even at $654" the system undistorted power than most offer you com­ the system,represents a better value in receivers higher in price .5 J performance and reliability produced as little as a year pletely guaranteed for 2 years for 5559"*. At 654" it's An ex­ than does any other system ago: 22watts RMSat lessthan Call 452-3500 for Qf. you could buy for the same-,0.8% .distortion. (RMS is the cellent value, but at $559" it's a great buy on an excellentprice Or less. The savings are-most demanding and least free skin analysis. value. real because the ' ilue of the ' < flashy of the various power Ul«4ISSSis':« Iuropean^KIN^CXRP '.^6403 Cla|^0^^T''':'v Camera Shop j|^atBurftetrJ% '< » , 1 JF > .... 4 -• ;V... --• fi ws Rising Crime fi -.Si u$g*&st&8JmL.y sgs T-Mils; "v. * S Universityand Austin police fej^gvfiajls antT-tampas-lfrserial nflmberocother means'"; said Tuesday thatthe, tighi ..bufldiims-*-v / of positive identification.." economic-situation has Jtd tb:|j Thechances of recovering a Without some1u^ of'pqsitive' an increase in thefts. ^.stolen item '"are-never ex-proof.i.even i-ifr ite^tMnyo^ . "Everyoneis of the opinion. ^ ceIlent."7SoIIinger said. recovered; theownerwill rot ~ By MARY WALSH Sftr Austin"s utility probletn , thatthe' theftrate_has;risen. ; If a marked item is pawned, be able to claim it.-. ! V . ;iti Texan Staff Writer $&*results from high .fuel: costs, • althoughIdon^t haveany hard there-is a good chance of Operation l^tificatioa;:/a^ m -Five candidates for City-"candidate Phil Bet+y said. statistics-;to. prove it." said recovery. If itisstolen forthe Council -place 3 discussed v'Our suppljers,CoastalStates project of the Austin ami the; Dave Sollinger of the Univer­' individual's private use. University police,.'.Joans;-their.campaign platforms and: and Lo-Vaea are caught in the sity^ police crime prevention" recovery is slim, he said. ~ engravers: fbTA^a'irkiiig^ priorities Tuesday in a public -situation of having to buy gasunit ,"It certainly hasn't been ^ Identification is the key to forum sponsored by-the Stuvy.. from big corporations.''; property. The police retain a*; dropping any. t dent Government City, Lobby; '^recovery.-Sollinger and record: of; the 'individual's'' Berry $aid he to looking for "When things get tough; -Morgan,,agreed.. Many times Social: Security .o^-.^vwfs.U Committee -^-verification that "sofne of people start loading for ways the ownerhasno recordof the license nunibCT;sS|^;-fe':W!^j£ All the. candidates agreed-these big corporations are • in to make an easy buck." he • • < that Austin needs lqvyer utility back of our high costs." " said.. . " rates and an expanded' public A. free mass transportation "I would say that thecrime •• Increase-fa Profits v. .transportation nsysteirir.but-< • system funded by a rebate rate has risen slightly." said ; . solutions< and .programs-• for 1 ^ from state gasoline"taxes-was Lt. L.L. Morgan of the APD; these issues varied. • r-••favored by Lawless: while theft division. "We've had a Co-Op i ContractorTommy.Lawless . Berry said a--free' system few more reports." ^said he Wfould propose a threes-should be' investigatedPopular items for thefts oq . : The University Co-Op had a director of? the'.Co-Op •• rate. utility-system.based on because "it seems to be 'the campus include pocket net profitof fSl,3K> during the (ported that sales .exceeded individual kilowatt ' quotas.; coming thing." r calculators;, cameras, text­first seven monthsof.the 197S last year'sby more than$100,--Hiqh iltility rates .would' still Linn said Austin'tieeds "a • fiscal year and experienced a 000. He added that the next, books. purses and bicycles, ' flWmEiiafftfli1**-*'1 'J go to low users while low transit system that radiates .although "they are not the .1.8 percent: sales increase five months will not be as rates would go to high users, • out from the • center-of, the problem . they used to be." otfer the-same comparable profitable becauseOf such fac­1Operation Identification' but consumers would receive' city" with loops connectingSollinger said. period ; last year. tors as students selling bade The women s co-ops own qn engraver and are promoting its use for >d«n»rfica»ion a rate cut when consumption outer bus lines.-She also -Textbooks and purses are At an open meeting of the books in May. fell below their normal usage,: , proposed a purposes. Kay Costelav Rosie Revilta and Kathi Bylander (I*) safeguard a calculator. non-gasoline 'Co-Op Board Tuesday night. Discussing the Co-Op elec­ common items because of the Theengraver h port of a campus-Austin polite program. "But I'm totally opposed to ' • system to connect th^ Univer-• book, racks in dormitory , din-' Charle*;.Wa|ker. financial tions concluded Tuesday, a flat tate utility system," sity. the Capitol and down­ board member Neil Wolfe es­Lawless added. i town. • ,timated that "close to 1.000 . A professor/of psychology at -Reyes suggested':>a.'icity­ students voted in the runoff St. EMwards ynivers^ty. Dr. owned '.'centrally : located Requests election." Results from the Emma Lou Linn, -said "the shuttle; bus-typesystem'.'with AIL YW) UN EAT i election areexpected Wednes­lowest possible" utility rates special service .-for.-senior1 day night should be assessed home and' citizens. „ -J Major lssue Clarification BUFFET L . apartment dwellers who now-a .Public transportatloh needs • "bear the highest rates." ; to be "simplified by using pic-' CATERING;-DELWQODCENTER I FREE STUDENT ? By GAIL BCRRB "v" LeMaistre is chairman of group; to release 'cor-Shesuggested the citycould .. . tiires so that mentally retard­JH 35 &38* = : Texan Staff Writer the presidential' selection respondence to another'party. lower energy'; consumption.. ed and non-English speaking s*?h TAX HilP A letter' from.the presiden­committee' which will 'be . LeMaistre will not release "by changing the building persons can understand^the with student- Joy. February 28 tial advisory comrfiittee ask­working the the letter from thecommiiiee code;to .require insulation." -symbols," Joseph.said:'5''--; ­ faculty advisory group in Restaurant James FRIED CATFISH ing for role clarification has either. Mike Quinn.-assistant owner ' Penalties for nonpayment2-4 p.m. been received by System choosing a hew Uniyersity to the chancellor^ said Tues­Joseph said rates could be of personal property, taxes EVERY MEAI# D BEB 2S1 Chancellor': Charles president. day. He added the chancellQr lowered by reducing the 20 should be raised/ :Lawless ' Bring 2 OTHER ENTRBSV , I.Tmt W-2 hra LeMaistre. .However, the The advisory panel met . must share tlie contents of it percent profit city utilitycom­said, because "the; penalties : A1SO T. Other T« litiiili— possibility of'making the behind closed doors .last with the other membersof the panies now earn. ' now are cheaper, thati siny in­4 VEGETABIES , 1U Y«r OwsfiOTS letter public looks dim. Wednesday after previously selection committee. i; . "We could cut'that profit in terest rate."-." 6 SA1ADS » slating the meeting's intent half and still generate enough . Reyes said he has long been BREADS & DESSERTS _ IHA UNA Kt "The letter to Dr. was to draw upa statementof Quinn speculated that in the revenue for thegeneral fund," artivp in communityaction In­ Honorary: Accounting "LeMaistre was very brief and future no written communica­ its view of Joseph said. cluding support for the United Fraternity said the group would like to the committee's tion between the .two groups responsibilities. Pete Reyes, a city power Farm Workers .'arid meet with him as soon as would be made public.: plant electrician, said cutting membership on several, ad­ possible." committee chair­However, since the ideas- Wits - However, he said bethought the utility profit could visory groups and .com­ man and English-Prof. James were conveyed in the-letter, when the exact duties of each threaten Austin's AA bond mittees. TOTAL Kinnravy said Tuesday. they were not released. group are decided;, that infor­rating. "Utility revenue isnot "I'm not offering "you lipPRICE Attached to the letter Botany Prof. Harold Bold' mation would be released. a profit per se. it goesinto the service. I'm offering you ac­.Kinneavy said.was a list of said then he did not think it Kinneavy said his! group's general revenue fund." he tion." he said. "7 Complete / • ' •."issues we want clarified.".' was the responsibility of his letter also . informed said. Historic preservation is im­ ' LeMaistre the group had "We should takethe utilities portant because" "Austin isselection of water­ "discussed guidelines and little by little out from the one of two cities in the.United| OAC OFF WITH THIS beds & accessories. operating procedures of the everyday bureaucracy of the • States that was designed to be I AU coupon Hamburger Special committee., and proposed city and streamline and the capital of a republic," 6407 Bunirf possible meeting times." modernize it." Reyes said. Linn said, suggesting that the CLOSED MONDAYS »54-790lB 10 city set up a revolving fund to 5 Hamburgers B: I./ help finance the restoration of ^;::.v ;.:fSoH OI one otd* • not i.00 OFF historically^.significant/ -$1.75 Value -Save 65c buildings. ; i.: »MEN'S HAIR STYLE m fS'^mhurg^r on • teoiNd -bun with Kraft} Declaring he has no "V ,•SNMpTitawa .--mustard; pidd* & Hainl katcilup. -By Appointment 4 B F > nusuii ATMbsnm17»S GuwUupa • . 472-15821 previous involvement in (for new euttomers only, plea**) Austin politics, Joseph said, k•aim»£DU0w:....44n S. tamar 893-2058] NO COWO#t>M#l BunwIBA'i' ---**<',••••$ 451-37601 "I come to this office unen­ ; 4> " Regular Price 10.50 '•-'A'----' " cumbered by ^any political, K3»^- T y Offer good only with Chary! promises, and I have no. debts of financial help', or. obligations," • ^1 Austin should strive. to Sebring by El Lobo 8 a.m. -5 p.m. Lower Guadalinw Bwr Cwot rip "Sign-Up." Sign up in T«xa* Union South Room 415 W. 15th Phone 474-1041 maintain high health, stan­TT14 fara cai trip Saturday and Sunday, March dards. and the City; Health i! ar|d2.Participants will camp out Saturday night, Department "could tighten up the restrictions and do a little f^lCKEN: canoo Sunday, and return to Austin Sundby night. BRIDAL SHOPPED Cos» $8 lor UT students, faculty, and staff; $8.50 more investigating." Berry-^,­for others. IhutJliun Committee. ... -if'.-.-4013 Marathon said. A special.election for City' ¥t-Council •; Places 3 and',6-is ­.. ® -5 p.m. Nuevo Laredo Trip. A spring , shopping tour;-scheduled for March '8. The SHED STE Satua Jay, March-' l.Leave 8 a.m. from Llllefield fountain; r*tum' election was called' after,the Saturday night. Cost $7for UT studmts, faculty and staf^ $7^0* resignations of former Coun­otheti. Students Oider Than Average. :' • V;~'". S&' cilmen Dan Love and-fieri ;sf'r"5'SW'--v S" . ; : Handcox ^« The City Lobby Committee You ^ 10 ajn.-tf p.m.Ticto Drawing: Earth,,Wmd and lv«.Optional will hold a forum for Place 6 -Services Mholdm inm draw tickets; for $130 and $2 at Hogg A have the " candidates at noon Friday-In Box Office for tfie perrermance at 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb.' 27. the.Chinese Garden.Roonuoft: Goneral admisdon tidwts aro avaaahl* at Joslco's. Cultural opportunity H„fi-Vt£P\. r.thefAcade,mic,v^EntwtainniMt,ConM«MttM..o.-.-xr.^-^''v •' ••••''• -­ to iview about „125 gowns. rt i|£ '2-noon. Sandwich Seminar: "Befao a Woman. Cnnservatiye.. ? RICH CUNTRY GRKslY; 1 and Sponsoring o tooe Bg m the 5toftogisioture-» Ain't Easy." for old gold high Representqtive Kay Baiiey w9> discuss recent rape legislation she :FRESH TEXAS TOAST • Thirty percent school rings, has intraduMd. T«m Union South Room 110. Ideas and Issues graduation rings etc. iiSr off on mothers' Committee. CHARLES LEUTWYLER dresses. JEWELERS • CRISP RENCH i?IES ; St . J2 now. Sandwjch^^Hninar: "Thei Current Economic Situation •-.and Prospects fcr the fottrre." br. Lewis J. Speitman,-Associate rrofessor of finance and former economist at the Federal Reserve : TOSED.SAMD j SAVE* WITH GROUP FUGHTS v' Board, will spealc Josey Room, 4th floor. Academic Center. Ideas and bsues Committee.?* ™ " '-"-a 3^' -*1^, NEW YORK <'•''••"AND :CHOICE OF DRESSINGl WASHINGTON on Wtdmtdoyt onrf hf6oy$ s. o > -&• '2 noon. Sandwich Seminar "Backpacking in Copper . Canyon." Larry Humphreys, local photographer and • „ CALL •; mountaineer, win show slides. Texas Union South Room 7 (lower 478.3471 . /<%I level. Tavern). Recreation Committee. ~ « -th. I ONLY fMMmvm V 15 fcWMMj i Sandwich Seminar: Dr. Robert Marion. The assistant " ^ !f *UP TO Ml Off MOUUR 'AH r > ™ '^dent of UT will discuss the President7^ office. Texas * -' > Cultu^ Room (Afro-American), Methodist Student Center. Afro- Amencan Culture Committee. tei 4' -6 p.m. Football Blms. Highlights -of ..the Southwest: Conference in < 0 "51 and 1959. Texas Tavern.' Recreatkxf THE HOLOCAUST^AFTEII Committee. -^1 *k~£$4, : -. ma -nr. . nu • isk .. . _ m -fjSL-, •.i.'aessawfeji 7*9p.m.film; "All the Kiwn'« « Broderick Crawford and Joanne Dni star in this film » MWM REGULARLY $1.69 —... ™..a shown in conjunction with ? ©.ars the visit Robert Ptain Warren on Thursday, Feb. 27. Admission EMU FACKENHEIM J1 for UT student*, faculty, and staff; $1.50 for others. Academic j--Speaking onmmi, Center Auditorium. Ideas and Issues Committee and threatre'-' Committee. .< t FEB.^6»iSf27 JEWISHiEXISTENCE INe i7*9 p.m. .Rlmr"lt Happened One Niflht." dark Gable and •s&l Wed. SThurs Qaodette Colbert Star in tnit Frank Capra leve story. Admission »l for UT students,, faculty, and staff; $U0 for others. Batts EPOCH MAKING AGE: Auditorium, theatre Committee, ^1-' if Thursday TOWEI^ m&k 8j30 pjn. An Evening of Guitar. Two of Austin'* pomriarS ISRAEL , Michael Marcb^,ptolWn RESTAURANT -'"dwdwol sefs. free. Texas Tavern. Muskal Events Committee. I I' 4 <•" ,fr (-> , t-J* •' V ^ 2809 SAN JACINTOI RALPH MOHELAND RESTAURAIlg jPageHOJWetlnesday^^ebriiary-26, 1975rTHEBAILYTEXAN m . ...­ Vx»r ..KVV"" . -• • .-. rsX Pr-:".' ' •Vr-"' '• ®ff.A *• v i. t • *.. J5, "&*, >,>> L *K*£ Tt '? ^> '&M.&mfm2ji m-m •r , BurstynfEx Scorsese. Comedy Touching} Honest Story . "Alice Doesn't -Live she managed to land one job, Here Anymore," directed .singing in a local hotel in her by Martin Scorsese; hometown of Monterey,'Calil.,^ screenplay byRobert Now despite a rawer plump' • Getchell; starring-Ellen ^figure and a less thai) Bnrstyn, Kris Krlstolfer­ son and Alfred Lutter; at >$>. ';the Northcross Six. f *'>• f By TERESA HURST -» U Texan Staff Writer „ f ' Some ^romenv-are-born ­liberated, some-'achieve • liberation and some have liberation • thrust -upon: them. Alice Hyatt is .one of the latter;,and she'snotquitesure­how. to handle it. • • :• Martin Scorsese's ex­hilarating new film,-"Alice DoesriH Live Here Anymore,"•;• explores the problems of; a,' woman unexpectedly shwed-: 7 IT0"?Orlando and Dawn 9 Arabs and israelii' " 24 That's My Mama 34 Utile House on the Prairie 7>90 pjn. 9 Behind the Lines 24 Movie: .'.'Someone I touched" starring James .Olson and Cloris Leachman • pjn. V-t 7 Cannon ' 9 Theater in America — "Cyrano de Bergerac" 36 Luces Tanner Different Drummer Happily Presents BROTHERS Happy Hour Daily 3-6 2405 A Nueces > 2 blkt.W. of campus • Serving quichr: crepes, tr „ ivrietv of noup^ jtolad*. and pa*tnr».!mporied^co//epS;^^^­ arid teaxrBrerAand wine*' All !/;­ of reamnaMe prfrri • EwryNghtS- Ttnir*., Frty* TOO i SMOOTH i InDsbleM mediocre voice, Alice pathetically resolves to fulfill her life-long dream of becom­ing a.better singer than Alice Fayo The eriti?ef film/ is ac--,. tually, hhuntid by, the' songs and prsserfce'of Fayfrand Set-.?; ty-Gratile, bothqueens of the 1 :1940s musiell^that'Jeft5tich a-v " : deep iijnprint^ Alices life. -•' ' TLaboting \lnder-ihe-rom^n-^. tic delusion.that she can still • make it in show biz,.Alice and>.. hpr 11-year-old son, Tommy, abandon their home -in, Socorro, N-M-. *artd hit the' out of • her oppressively •••. highway for Monterey. Being i sheltered housewife role and v short on ^(unds, they oc­forced to deal With the world ' casionally have to stop for on itsown terms.Although the. Alice to take a job— onceas a film has a slight edge of singer • in a sleazy bar irt bitterness to it, most evident, Phoenixandonce as a in Ellen Burstyn's -virtuoso waitress in:a cafe in Tucson. portrayal of Alicesit refrains . -Along' the way; she becomes from turning into a feminist -involved -with:;a violent-diatribe.-Instead, the film is tempered younger man • who like its heroine ~honest,. turns out to be. married, and touching and* hilarious. later with an amiable-rancher. EARLY IN THE film, , who turns outto be the nicest'.­ ' Alice's.cloddish-truck driver,:'.guy you'd ever hope to meet-" husband is kiiled in an acci-.:iToo:niee.;1n fact. for,it is'this-­dent. After the funeral, • character, played by Kris possessing approximately . Knstofferson.that strikes the. $1.59'-and no working skills, . only false hoiteinthefilm. His Alice quixotically tries to no'ble offer to:throw away the resume a singing career that ranch he is so.proud'of to tag never got started. It seems 'along with Alice ih pursuit.of that before she was married. .her faritasy-career.; is com­ ;.ma£ be forgiven iM One of. those terrific things is the loving.'yet. irifumting ^relationship betWeeit; Alice ;and:-.-hers6ri.'''^ playedbyAlfredtutter'Torn 'myisr-a precocioiislitilesmar­ -tass who is alsocapable of be­ iog sensitive and perceptive^af]j;erna{es between trying to drive his mothererazy and •trying, to soothe-her. In one gem of. a scene. he nearly• .-•pushes Alice to the!brinkof.in-: sanityby repeatinganonsen­'sical joke.about a gorilla over : ;and over until sheunderstands Jt; which ,she nev^r. does. In • yet another scene, he gently strokes the h'air.of a defeated Altc6 as she bemoans the aw­ful prospect of becoming a waitress. ALICE, on the other hand, treats Tommy like an equal; alternating between spoiling' him and lashing out at him when he doesn't act.like-the­ //rnimature adult she thinks he : is. But in thelong run. mother !and son genuinely;respect and enjoy each other, as best ex­emplified in an uproariously funny water fight staged in one of the many cheap motel rooms* they inhabit. /Another plus factor for "Alice Doesn't Live Here. -television^ 7 pJH. *pjn.'. ' ' ' •' 36 PetroceHi pletely unbelievable. But then ^Anymore" is that all the sup-the film is essentially a com-v.-porting players are'uniformly edvt and it has so many excellent As a humorously terrific things goingfor it that „ foul-mouthed waitress. Diane even this lapse in credibility1' Ladd turns in a performance 7 ^nhunf^j-^^'-?'^-^ • • ( 10:30 pjn.r24,Adoms^^r^ff:,Lak« -34 Wide. World Special — "Clark ' 'TreaiureCwlt Murder'' . Gable: The King Remembered" L6IId6\ THE -• CHICKEN RANCH I CLUB & ' BEER; featuring, GARDEN : Homc^ Cooked Mexican-Food, 3615 S. Congress j THE REYNOLDS: Steaks and SISTERS • Beer & THE oso FAMILY: 258-9626 • in CsdarPark,T* . 51.00 Cover ; : out183 West • 441-9968 : Ootid Tuesday ^FEATURING live music by RIVER CITY HAVE A PITCHER OF HURRICANES .. " ONLY $4.50 THE BUCKET .23,d<,„dP.„, -3Hn;FresParking •*­ BULL S25'/!l»»BWJNSPRlNMBb.ReXU 3500 6(iacialupe;;^ fi TONIOHTvJr ,AIR TIGHfe "A Bwr, Win*,and Set Ups Toplau 3-8 Map-Sat t"> 453-9831 % 451-9151 iMiUftiSi lOURS (Tonight, « f ' ,_The Most Celebrated Musical or All Timet ;< SINGIN' IN THE RAIN „n> ; ••' • JSt?" rDirectOd by Gene Kelly andStanley Donon ' WIMi Oahe Kelly, Debbie: Reynolds, Dbnald O'Connor' I#».I f * i ISl that has just won her an Academy Award nomination as-best supporting actress Sporting a straw colored-bee­hive'hairdo and a necklace mad^ out of safety pins. Ladd typically laces her conversa­tion with. raunchy1: innuendos such as, "Why.honey; I could ""'"-J-* » "nder J y°u-„ eat, chicken and do a crossword puzzle at the same time!" Equally good fs ValerieCurtin as a befuddled waitress who spends, her days mixing up orders at Mel tand: ttuby's s Cafe. » -Likewise,' director Scorsese, whose critically acclaimed "Mean Streets" depicted life in New -York's Italian ghetto.'here shifts locales to capture the-gritty flavor and comic vulgarity of the Southwest to perfection. While his slightly/overexposed outside shots convey the ofteu blinding heat of the region, his dimly lit, smoke-filled J>ar scenes, permeated with'the .western twangs of. good ol' boys, effectively portray the character of the people. He even manages to sum it all up in one classicshot of Alice and Tommy walking, out'vof a restaurant built'to resemble an enormous longhorn-skull embedded in a boulder.:. LAST, BUT NOT least,1 the very best thing aboutr "Allce Doesn't Live Here Anymore" is Burstyn. who brings much of herself to the film. It was; she who persuaded Warner' Brothers to finance the film, picked the . director, helped select the cast and even rewrote some of the script to fit in with her own experience She also improvised some scenes with Kristofferson and Lutter to give them a special air of intimacy and reality. • But it is her moving perfor­ mance that is the final' . triumph of the film. Burstyn's-Alice is a complex and win­some character.She isat once realistic and deluded, tough and vulnerable, self-sufficient and helpless. The death of her husband forces her to learn to be her own person, and she latches onto her stifled desire to be a singer as the only means of self-expression she knows. The course she has plotted for herself is painful and confusing, however, as she vacillates between not knowing how to |ive without a man and wanting to "live my own life, not some man's life J,'m helping him out , with.". The film is Burstyn's vehicle, and she has rightly been • nominated for an Oscar. • With Liv Ullmann out of the running, it would appear that Gena Rowlands from "A Woman Under the Influence- is now the leading contender in the race for best actress. However, after seeing "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore," •I can only say that Burstyn will certainly give her a run for her money. AlvinCrow and His Plea$ahtValley Boys Tequila Night -Still 40' a Shot 707 Bee Caves Rd. 327-9016 TOMORROW ONLY! THE ONLY MAN WHO CAPTURES THE REAL LENNY PRIiCE IS LENNY BROCE! • Here fe Lenny In a deva^^ing recapitulalion or his New York obscenity W8l.^..bursting with an Indignation that remains freshly Irreverent arid blackly funny." —Vincent Ciihty New.YoA Time* "An absolutely priceless document. It shows Bruce Involved in the mostbrilliaht analysis of the American societjrand its legal system I ever expect to hear.It l« hystericallyfunny." —flalph Qleason,Roning Stoned K LENIiy BRUCE ThU .ik the only flla over «jit of a cacplet* nightclub perfonsaheA'-br'-ttais• celebrated toerlcu B»ti«i«t. Bruce collod tt 'Wbe the beet thing I've ever done;" Program Includes'Thank vou.Masked Man"(a Lenny cartoon), ind "Lenny on T.V." from a 1959 Steve Allen Show. Thurs., Feb. 27, Only. 7:30 and 9:15 Law School Auditorium Adm. $1.25 Presented by Law School Film Forum . Theatre Committee \ 1 presentsi "•iNi * . . •'-Vife-SsX-r.!-:­ Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert in :.r:-^fJ»-Frank .Capra's 5 Winner of 6 Academy Awards' \ including.**>?<• ^ Best Actofi $estActress^gTBl ap'iitJiS*? < (1934) ' •* :_tk *%•& JZ*-?'(f 7 gnd 9 p m. Batti Aud^ Texas Songman Fromholz Steve Fromholz, formerly of Frummox, the duo who composed the now-legendary Jexas Tnlogy," it appearing at Castle Creek through Saturday. Karen Brooks is performing with Fromholz, and tickets are available at the door for $2.50 Wednesday and Thursday and $3 Friday and Saturday. The Cultural Entertainment Cuinxmrtee of the Texas Union . in cooperation with Huston-Tilldtson College presents Earth, Wind and Fire -V -:S Thursday, February 27 8:00 PM Municipal Auditorium special bonus to optional fee holders limited number of $5.50 and $4.50 seats available, for $2.00 and $1.50 ( . Hogg Box Office 10-6 weekdays fribKc tjeket sales: Joske's. Huston-Tillotson Dean of Students Office, Soul Boutique, E&O Tapes. $5.50, $4.50 Bus schedule: Jester, Kinsolving, Co-0p/7:00-7:30 The Cultural Entertainment Committee_of _the Texas Union presents the THE ff^Vvs iursday, March 6 s Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 PM x T , )f * ^ + i_ -V i r Ticket sales beglnrl'uesday, February 25/Hogg Box Office/10-6 weekdays/$.50, $1.00, $1.50 vbith ;!Optiona,l Servi"ces Feb -< h)-iz I Oeneral salesbegin Tuesday, Mareh 4/»3.50, $4.00, «4..60^. &Z • 1 y'^f BAs sohodvile: Jester.Klnsolvfng, 0o-op/7:00-7:30 PM *\i ^D'jS^niust^bfa presented.at door ^o-cl^evas^^apft Recorders. ^Wedne^ay,^'February 26, 1975 THE DAILY m U §M$ * ^ 4. 1# ?rtJ i® \i A*. «*i ' "* *" 1 V~*k>* *M5*A "* ' ' V ^^ij'ri » 1 -rie^ ,,^ m By MICHAEL TOLSON•• --5 --\ i^/mn f t ^ f o r t h e first time. companies "haveplaceS{to:playand bookers 1 •. ,* . Texan Sufi Writer * v , »_ f to book tbem." Lincoln Center in New-York is but the.most ,» Modern dancemay, forsome, bean esotericand inaccessible obvious example of a serious commitment toward sustaining' Pi &| art form, but to Bob Pierce it is the most interesting and the art form. f ~ •dynamic method ofartisticexpressioninAniericatoday.His . In shatp contrast with the cheerful news from New' YorkY ?/ attitude ishardly, surprising-whenyou consider whathe doesfor v • Pierce sadly; noted that Texas spends only 9100,000 yearly for '; s.M a living — he is a dance critic. thesustention^ allarts and much of,that does not gotod^ce, Pierce is a vital young voice, in the relatively young field of . Terming it a "disgrace," he exemplified the disparity in-dance criticism, having been a regular columnist for the funding .by mentioning that while'-the Houston Ballet may Metropolitan ReviewJDance Magazine and most recently Hie -receive d total subsidy of $5,000 "New York allots, that much to ;V»llage • Voice. With Pierce /at JJniversity Monday, for a the smaller companies." New York, of course, is the centerof ' Cultural Entertainment tammi (fee-sponsored seminar, wehad dance activity in the United States. a brief discqssion which touched upon several facets of modern • • NOT ALL IS so glum, though. He also observed several dance • > ' -bright spots on the Texas dance scene. "Dallas," for instance. / TRADITIONALLY an art form with limited appeal, raodein "has five companies, which is a lot fbran area which has no dance has witnessed some startling changes in recent times. ., tradition. And the Houston Ballet has a great opportunity for According to Pierce, there "isno,long«ran 'in* dancecrowd," recognition. Even Austin, with three dance groups, iai't doing meaning a set audieifcefor eachcortpany. "Inthe last10years bad," he said. * •, i r; , 3£here restrictions to being involved in dancearenolonger there."Teh years ago, noman wanted his son to bea balletdancer. Now,of course, a lot of that has changed." 1 TUESDAY*;- Queried about the immediate future of dance in America, he responded with unguarded optimism. "People can have dance in their community if they wan t it,and somepeoplearestarting to show signs that they do want it.... Cultnre'is not a frivolous thing. We need.expression in,a very real way. Man has a ?&*&£ 'aiWiSOFMWKM = psychological need for art; ana wheh everyone realizes that, we*ll'start?seeing dance companies, in bes Moines; _ ....mm# ' PierceAas ho.reservations about estimating the po^tion.ot I»f| dabce. in ,rthe contemporary American artistic hierarchy. Dance is themoist important artform InAmerica today. Itis'a modern thin^,3a 20th Century phenomenon whidi:is happening now, and curiously enough in this,country," As-should be i ' obvious frq&lhlsstatement, modern dancehas nostronger ally M* • •--­ ,u'°-,,Di'—' y@|•• , * wte-vl fiflSSSBSSfi •*?-j f-TP r p.— |AUONiMMivprr tMtstasTti HIGHLAND MALL ora 0A|ir.A? imi 4M-713A • tH J J AT KOlNKilN. Ssu. ORIGINAL H!USAAT WnwMdin TMKDA 6Wm Award $1S^7:$d^OT10:30 ^ B«>tflctura DAYS f t»K K .OPO0I3S (REDUCH) PRICE ICATURESa^l msjis MIDNIGHTERSM25!£ SCENES FROM > > AMARRIAGE y"J f V^vUMANN yHE RIC^jEST AND MOST PVIM5ATIVE or^ mms «i­'V SMagazitw H(W>5H0WIN6|T|0TH THfATRK QUARIUS-4W STATE ^ RATDRE.TIIUS »I«HI7 mm ttrmc man Beqins in March 111• t s**w,Vr' * * •»*>• tf % nr> •j 7 Jjj tfc :2l By, JAYSHArSuTT : • ^..-,4 , i • NEWYORK (AP)-On Match14. CBSstar^iiovr,i^'rt'-t"t 1 He says he'll i;pilot ot another series Re wrote and Jhopes to sell to N^C jSrButonJOne.writei'AlanAldaresumes hisbetter^bimactl^.ilw ii,-career, as Hawkfeye^hen/'MASH"-cranks up'for itk fourth. f^son w-^ ^ RIGHT NOW ,ALDA is 'drumbeating fur "W^ll Gtt;,By,» joriginally: scheduled io start on CBS last Sep{embCT: ji'was dropped f(om the 1974-75 lineup when a (ederal courtdelayed, . .the ysla'rt of revised prime time access -rules for networit S^L programing at night > _ , ® ^;TTie. show, was hastily:put back' in:the CBS-lineup testf.week •' ; when the network decided "Khan,"a'detective seriesIqstalled |i| as a mi^sjeason. replacement, waS'ii'flop and ordered;it~axed ft aft?r four shows. , , ->*. 0: • • Alda said CBS programing chief Fred SilyeBMnWUH^dhiiri, ) of CBS'i Friday night program changed only' last; weo£,"and» Iff —T»*pn Staff < a, we ve been in high gear ever since, ttying to snap into Action^ M • <• . "1guess he (Silverman) felt a pressing need to dosomething:m • /' Dance critic Pierc^^' about Friday night. He made a very fast series of decisions,so", srf we had to go right io work to let the audience 'know:-we're^i opening up then." r r •;kk HRC Photographs The new project, as yet untitled, is a situation starring; Jack ' Weston, as a lawyer "who just borders-oir® I ffiffl IFi mSOOk ij •' gaddln^s While.:trying.to earn a living.as best he can/' Alda^t^ .. ... ' ', • ^ The 39-yeapbId actor,' interviewed by phone from the Nevpiv'] A book on Lewis Carroll t^cenUy published in Italy contains T Jersey home he shares with his.vyife/ three, daughters and':|'ii ""Jnewus pho.tograpbs.from .the University Harry Ransom-typewriter, said he's not writing additional scripts for his^^ Center collections. • -ambulance-chaser just yet. • 1 • " ;• nfei "Le Bambtne di Carroll," designed and published byFranco "NO, ALL WE'RE concentrating on right now i$ (he pilot, Mana Ricci Publishers of Parma, Itajy,' contains Carroll's he said. "If NBC is interested in seeing more materia) 0fte£: lettecs to several children, one of whom is the Alice of his that, then of course we can do it ­famous "Alice in Wonderland " Only 2,000 copies of the book' -"But my order of business is really to get the pilot dotie and" were pnnted 1 then concentrate on letting people around the country,know»PI All the photoglyphs .oTdiildren included.in .the"book were about'We'll Get By.'" " jJgSi made by Carroll,' who was an accomplished'photbgrapher as Does all thisserifes*r^ating (hewrote a third^^|jS&TABC well as a wnter. Of the 40 photographs, 33 are from the HRC rejected) mean he eventualiy plans to give up the acting game"1 Gernsbeim Collection. ' ' -and become a fuil-time scrivener and producer? ' ' The HRCiiterary collections include Carroll letters, books I don't think so," Alda> said. "I love acting. Evetytltne I. manuscripts and a rarefirst edition of "Alice iiiWonderland " perform I get a wave of feeling abouthow much funit Is;Itlon'tifi j 1,. v1•' >. :rr"._v. r:^ -. . -. > think I'd ever not want to act." The TURTLE SEZi;: * Ham's the word, MOUMETROCOLOfl. FlUped ioPANAVlStON: (UmlUnilBIl nr"sraj Enjoy Turtle's PARAMOUNT.::W. ham sandwicht youi' THEATRESI choice of bread the trimmings. $1.10 OO-KATUHE ATTHE PARAMOUNTONLYI TURTLE'S , "SOYIB4T OR^NJS „ ^ tChariton- ^ ^ -;'^J40Sib«ti "MM 1 $1.35 til 7rKM;fifZ&V W WiailllBI j mcoo. «:IS BBBWi 6-.30 ;10:00 1/U ^r&tntldmA ,T|*tldjr at:Preside Tlieieitres RIVERSIDE VILLAGE A runms lawtwaMju-iMo «e«sRmmWimostromanticmotio picturesince"WOJ1EJV IK lLOVE" ROB€RT ord fTllfl R6DFOBD fflRROOJ . ,,•-J'l'.h' • * /• ^.Ik. Idrii MOw tiWiv. . ... ^fl-r*. 1 J WA«WWi|l«ppil THEFOUR THEATRE 1500 5, PLEASANTrVAllfeTROAD JUSTOFFCASTHIVERSIDEDRIVE 444-3222 SHOWCASE" i > $1i0 Tit 6 P.M. FEATURES 2-4-^10 RkduudPricet H..-t-« A s "Btoiitilal, Imotliifthta and>«ngrosiIng." Til 6 P.M. #..8, "Clil JloiiBjilw Mon.thrU-Stit. ** «MHaraHa| txperinci '•_s a JtwmhijttHiiloW vtrlta| «| Hnst'i cbuld" "• vi *•* $1.50 TU-OftFlATURES'Tt404rfMt5Q.yi5^Hh« gfjg^Fran, Well, Boiton Herald Amaiiatn m^Pi m-uw &i"?fVCTP •• lip' iUalt ass* mam SS«3;$1.»TU*PJ*.f ,r; FEATURETIMIS •}" T"$£ PASSES SUSPENDEt), > r 4 , •SZSt'AT AU TlMfl^ t HATaRE JIHEti m<» >S-V4-'-Texan Staff Writer s!^provide the clues). Tbeotiier ^'emerged. Now that'be seems of the human and the comic, fantasy, memoir, everything? he seems to be finishing asFellini's career in thevtsframe-is that of a"goWe-unable, to stay with a but he spends freely anatural "Amareord" and "The one. He. opens doors to the..decade since "8W has beena narratotwhichaddsftothhig character or place for any gift for expressive pictures. Clowns" are Fellini's best past. But he does not look • search to.find new forms for-t ,and merely seemsconvenient. /length of time without becom­When he remembers a part films since "8%." but they behind them. •the. same personallity|? Don't be vnduly put/off :1>y ing edgy, he isa sophisticated of his experience that he has seem simultaneously to be Note: The Texas Theatre is •; "Americord:'. .is. one of the. this orlhefilm'sscrappyfirst : raconteur. Ah. another not touched previously, his in­promising beginnings and showing a dubbed print. Thebetter searches. It is a coif reel Fellini takes 'tis%tinie 'irieemory. Next slide, please. telligence and sense of drama dead ends. sub-utled version is better. • siderable step up from getting into the mobrf'Sf-'the ; Magical illusions are flicker to life. His memories . "Roma," more complex than town and sorting "out. the 'aifother way of disguising the of the Fascists are tantalizing Tickets on Sale for CEC Concert , "The Clowns," more humane cha'racters; als», the superficiality.'even when oik — the parades, the eagerness,and varied:than."Satyncon." schoolboy vulgarity and sex­is -as brilliantly done as the their attractiveness for the Tickets are still available for the Earth. Wind and Fire . Thereare still many aberrant ual, longing are -.overused ' sequence of the townspeople Italian culture, a fat t at8 p.m.Thursday in Municipal Auditorium, sponsored pleasures and some surprises Fellini reflexes. .Gradually he 'greeting a sparkling ocean schoolboy's lovely reverie of by the Cultural Entertainment Committee. in his constant themes, but settles down with one family : liner in their tiny boats. The Fascist glory (sadly. Feflini Tickets are$2 and $1.50for optional services fee holdersand /.even with a more likable m. particular. At the Head isa "• mistake isto think thatFellini almost ruins this with another areonsaleat theHogg Auditorium BoxOffice from10a.m.to 6 -manner the form lspinf tcmpestuous:father, and is trying to sustain anything daydream later). pjn. each day. satisfying around him a: make-peace anymore. Some of the dream RANDOM SHOTS, a speech,••.f :A disconcerting prodigality -wife, a shiftless soWn-l^Wj a scenes work, some don't,' bat ora joke willalmost justifyan ..is becoming apparent in " "1 "J* —•— both dreams and reality no episode — if only Fellini were Paramount Inc. •. Fellini's; films. From early may well stand forTdlini at longer go into an organic as diligent a storyteller as he : realism ("I Vittelom") hebas the same ag whole as in the days of is precise at detail Fellini's gone on to symbolism ("La . These charactersf?iates' the "Cabiria" or — White power is supposed The to derive'' Strada"), to fantasy ("8%"), • base for the' seemingly Shiek." from the subconscious, bat to documentary-fantasy realistic episodes, which are ONE SCENE where .the perhaps he now caters to it. ~ ("The Clowns" ), to all lovingly rendered,quarrels -family and an insaneuncleare hoping that the audience will sketchbook -fantasy ("Ro­and dealings with the.Fascists out on a picnic has a similar see themselves in ins images. ' ma") and now reality as a. alike. Armando Brapcio.and punchline to the final skit in and do his work for him. •afiSi' Arth. Michasl F-ary , lyricized fantasy. This Pupello Maggio4s the parents "Plaza Suite." It is sqiohiy The film maker's personaB-^'jumbled developmettt 'is are the movie's remarkable 'photographed by, Guiseppe ty is fascinating, bnt hiswork--r? .-^reflected in the later films. • roots. But if an actor doesn't • Rotunno (' as is the entire Frary To Illustrate M& Before the .credits, the have a -performance,Ho give•'' KfMm) and well directed, bat it• 'Fellini terrilory is marked ; Fellini can't get oak from -could have been adapted to off. In the dialect pf Rimini,. , Jiim, which is the price of 'aiSy length or ended at any ifPanhandle Volume Fellini's" birthplace, '"amar-egocentricity. Bruno Zanin,as time forall the point itmakes. . '.,The':fiayot of the "fexas Fraor» reports lie v'zig-:' cord" means "I remember." the teenager, is embleriiatic Arbitrariness is the hallmark Panhandlehasvbrought zagged" about 3,000 miles Childhood, ego, illusion — of this problems just:;ad'an­of practically all the episodes, together the talents of a through the.;Panhaiidle last these are the themes that noying blank tpo typical to and this is responsible fen' the • Univereity artist and the new August.; painting and have been openly manifest in hold the interest ~ movie's unmoving effect. Texas A&M University Press. sketching from the side of a Fellini lately. After . the EVEN "OUR TOWN/' a Yet "Amareord" has a new as Prof. Michael Frary, noted small van.-He returned there credits, one of the two fram­handy reference for .thig film, and pleasing side of FeDini. artist of, the art department for several days after Christ­ing devices is introduced, has a more vital hero. Fellini Mood plays suchan important faculty :<* is .busy preparing mas to continue his .work. following a seasonal cycle makes the facesintfrtlfe hero. • ...part that itbecomes whatever between 150 and 200* water-, that takes the movie from one However, in "Amareord" the. When he completes hispain­ color paintings that attempt spring to the next an all of create tings at the end of this year, — scores faces no to capture the "mood and es­ right, if unyielding,. he hopes, to * have painted by now sence" pt the Panhandle. Panhandle scenes; at all NOTICES from the More-than.70 vof those pain- seasons of the year. " General Libraries or any. Shou town USA ngsl .will be selected for- ONE OF THE biggest of the branches are of-§ publication in early 1977 in the No admission d>6ige challenges he faces, he says, ficial University eo'maS A&MErfess' new serieson tontght-/, ii,. . Texas dri: " • is.how to convey the special, munications requiring . IT.WILL MARK ,the second "flatness" of-the; Panhandle. •immediate attention. tock 'n ioB'y •ox omcEomtnm time artist -Frary; has »MT EITEIIigiaT THTOS II 5' collaborated with bookman 'Frank Wardlaw, who became NO COVER CHARGfe TONTTE and . the A&M Press director last fall. live Rock,-; Frary illustrated *''Im­The best in Ivs rodt and pressions of the Big Thicket'" roft 7 ngtea week. . 'nUoff by with for Ther University of Texas SPRINGFHEII Openat &00p.itl Musk; begrd &30 Press in 1973 when Wardlaw Happy Hour from 8to 9 > was stiir, director of the UT Press. ' • NP COVER !MUM TMAtnC^v* * ' SI4N.LAMAR 8:30 'Six1' ^ -4?^ -j- Siiou UM\ LSA Directed by Robert Rosen ' tax ovnai . m&BEMY SHOW STACK From the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by Roftert Penn Warren, an DYW&RHOtSl always limely drama of a man and the political machine he buiitfor HBOTHUBt his own ends: ' •• ­ mm Tonight.:— :/ -~74 HBB1BOW . WBSAISSWt AFIMBT /TONIGHT A.C. Auditorium: SSSEI.RAQEHEBBS $1.00 UT ID JIolden FPAUL MORRISSEYt m Mm % 7and 9p.m. $1^0 Others AcmioFONtmtwNsmG* iassampdoouctiok vCCXO)l•AMtANSTONPICTURE Ensemble i ® ^ 8:30 p.m. - I i i t ^Townslooital^"' V«-> .-i-e tn> ,• .-r-.-.-w--• ttmhindGimf/oif'Gfm S^rasK""^!­ iTio L .'t i-i (1MX QfimOfBt7:30' vCHQWSTARTS MO; THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLS IN THE WORLD! WnheLOVEme or KILL me? 141I^UyACA 472-7315 I##: TONIGHT itmam ra. .-MTmiHIMig Centierfiald •tNWNKS.mi.t'Ml -..... ,v; wrts al ^aritiaf v-V'v' - • GirisS Aon of Fr«t FRIDAY Nortfacross Six Bargoln Matmees ir.i 130 Fe«1wes,$lJ5, Mo^-fri. ^ ELLEN BURSTYN W­ ,KR6KRt$TDFFERS0N x.'/yZt-ISSii AlCEDOESNTUVE o HB?E ANYMORE lie- TwMIta Hr. MMeM. Sttf Ite $ i 1 & j •» -iv -jxs~j I si. MS Lv-).cv;' ep Wednesdi9y# February 26, 1975 THE DAI^X TEXAN Page 13 i&i/as^iZJ-iSuC H3M* i\Y&rx \r\rtik':y.s-"r&?y. *s«H& w <£&&$ U.t, 1»* *if S®Sfe CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES FOR SALE • FURN. APARTS.1FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS. 1MISCELLANEOUS TYPING 15 word minimum "H IPS. t Each *ordone time .......»..j .11 CONTEMPORARY-APARTMENT. "24 I Each word 24 times s .10 Musical-For Sale NOW LEASING Flats Eflldendw a«f 2/bedrooms. Each word S-9limes... s .08 1515 Palma Plaza, 474^322. Shuttle bus ,Just North of 27th at^-: ­ ART f , v ^ Each word 10 or more times..$ .07 ''•corn4r^y^>\.<.^^ YAMAHA FG-230 twelve string gutter, 1 Student rate each time * JO ASPEN. WOOD Summer Rates Now EFFICIENCY * Guadalupe ;-.v, 'Classified Display • excellent condition. S130. Cell 452-1919 Under New.Marw»gement $139 !V -WANTED»Apertmentmanagers. ' CLASSES^ 1alter 1:00. -Prefer' studfnt-couples; Send resumes "2707 Hejrtphni ParR^ * 1 cot x Iinch one time S3J5 Spacious Contemporary through Aug. 31 ALL BIULS PAID / pox \bt*. Au^Hn,vTj<:7876r•.y.1, 1 cot x 1 inch 1-9 times VS2.« OULCTMERT3 & 4 String. S60-70. Call Close to c&mpuv large*.*open beamed' by KIM & KEN' ' Icotxlinch tenor moretimes 82.64 ta>nce: 472-IU1. Living! ceiling, fully sh8g carpeted CA/CH, all BONUS ROOM; 2 bednx>m<:2 bath plus bulli-ln kitchen, color co-ordinated.' no,; panelled den:From $205ABP.The South All Media 2 Pools -Covered Parking Estrada utility company hassles. 4000 Avenue A. Shore. 30Q E. Riverslde Dr. 444-3337. SHUTTLE -CITY BUS ROUTES / BEAT 452-5533 or 451-6533. ' • 454-1238 7504 St. Cecelia MAOUNiSOCDUU ONE BEDROOM pn ihVttla.-8142.50 un- CONVENIENT TO ANY LOCATION INFLATION •furnished.'8162.90 furnished.1 We pay ail dayor evening TonRtfey 3bOO pjm.-GlIlTAR STRING SETS Save 20% 1 BR,$149-2 BR.$199 Apts. uillliies.: The ;BroWn*tone, 5106 • N. RESUMES TwwMiiihi 11:00 «j»-HOHNER HARMONICAS Save 10% EFFICIENCY • Lamar^ 454-3496; ..•wlthorwlth' v . 1624 Lavaca celllngi, fully ihag carpetetj,CA/CH, til: .444-3337. .' •;.< ;-v.;; •: Have you applied tor the l773 .classes, Rfporti RuwnM. Apartments but wltDout success-»far? perhaps we uHl'V^compMy h»^ A° ? BEDROO^bathCaparfment. ldeal Thtie^ LeH«r« > ' VILLA tsiila or lsi^SS^lies. «oo Avenue A. for young family. .Convenient to UT. can help tou. get -an acceptance. Box I: All Unl««rtllyIK:­ .' "id MM MM «f «n«n «M«4* to «*• or 45i-®533. priced for a family budget; $205 • $215 I6I4& St. Louis. Mo. «3I0S. MvOrtSMMMt, inMMdk4*Mtfca'ilMtft b*' Misc.-For Sale SALANO builnf»«'.work'!': : unfurnished, ABP. $230 « $240 furnished, TOP'PRICES-'paid lor'diamonds, old ABP. Trie South Shore. 300 E. Riverside , LastMInutt Scrvlc* arfyONIiaawmc* lM*rtte*LJwdobm far gold. CapHol Diamond Shop, 4018 N. IBR-$145 Dr. 444-3337, .;. I--, . . . Oprn.M'Mon-Th t ^ainM AmU to m4 m« loNir. Lamar/ 454:6877. , EFFICIENCY NELSON'S GIFTS. ZUnl, Navalo ai -|5FrM.. , VIP ta90^209.';--" 33rd and Speedway The South Store.;300 E.:Riverside. 444-'/DobleMail LOW STUDENT RATES Shuttle bus at front door, pool, CA/CH, 3337. . LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR.. Beginner IS wordminimum each day ..i JO .. BRAZILIAN GEMSTONES. precious MOVE IN TODAY Walk up or shuttle at door. Split level shag carpeting, all built-in KUehea ten­and advanced. Drew Thomason. 471­Each additional word eachdays .05 Xems >'faceted* ready for mounting, luxury living. Beautiful 2 brs/2 baths nis courts across the streets, huge trees. ENFIELD AREA;'$100 plus electric on W7?, TlilE CROCKETT 'COMPANY " Icol. x 1-Inch each day .12.44 methyst, -"Aquamarine, Andalusite, plus study. Designed tor 3-5 mature 4504 Speedway, 453-3769 or 4J14S33. shuttle. The'Parkview^ 1616 Weit 6th. the complete secretarial serviceJ < VILLA "Unclassified*** 1 tine-3 days .si.00 Qirysoberyl, Diamonds, Emeralds, students. New furniture, walk-ins, pool, 472-1337.-•• ...:/v:; .• • PAST LIVES, Interested?May^>e we ca"n theses,'manuscripts, reports, TYPING - (Prepaid. No Refun&l Garnet.* Kuiulte, Opal. Precis Topaz, cable TV. Quiet elegant atmosphere. • >: . *•' iuiMf* r»«iiwi • Students must .show Auditor's, • Tourmaline* Citrine, By. appointment, King sJte l. bedroom also available-AUTOMATIC TYPING. letters andEFFICIENCIES $115 plusE. ACcarpet, calfsKSto® your" For »PP0lnt™nt, - pang,;jKWl, on shutHe. 46thand Ayenue : receipts «ndpay inadvance InTSP : 477-8914.-.., _• Leasing for summer and fall. Drastical­ ARCOS EFFICIENCY ' DATING AND: RELATING.' Fre* leC-multi-copied originals •.*. ly reduced-summer rates. Please call Bidg.l»ttStft fc Wbltls) from »"i PRINTED COTTON SCARVES from ln?--1 BR ^$149 before 7:00 p.nvi.—cv^_^ ;tures.each Mon(I»y, 7:30 p.m. 7701 -XEROX COPIES-tt.OO for 400 copies^ -:Ffidw,'... • •• 3301 Speedway , -477*1980* 477-7451 _ or Jt 476-3897 , -v.now. Urge ? bedroom/lte bath, dls-j ' PRINTING a^^IPLETE tlNE of ra^m^^iao^m^Mooda^through* die' -. use also1 as'halter tops* wall WALK TO CAMPUS--NOB' HILL-APARTMENTSrAvallable : Lamar. E*ecvtlye Towers IOO-B. Infor­ ;.hangings, etc.'Maharanl's..1504 San An- , mation.' ;>tonioSt,;47*-?29K--' Laroe furnished efficiencies* built-in 'hwasher. dUpoiai; largep»llo. Pool and SUPPLIES kitchen appliances, CA/CH. Tots of .....j—laundry. .c™,——ZSM/Longview'faaxss from, 'rom , . Australia, Europe, 453-7907 , ;^SS3Q Burnet Rd. OVERSEAS JOBS' ^BEDSPREADS ON SALE -from India, MOVE IN TODAY storage, super location, close to grocery Pease Park at. 25ln and ;Lamar). 477-Sk-America, 2 BLOCKS TO CAMPUS — Africa. Student* all r .Poland, Spain. Twin, double, and king FROM $135 ALL BILLS PAID 6741. professions and occupationsS700 to S300Q and shuttle bus at front door. Gas and. /. isizes available. Maharanl's. 1504 San LA PAZ monthly. Expenses paid, overtime, STARK TYPING. Specialty: Technical. FOR SALE 1 8. 2 bedroom efficiency. Full kitchen, water paid. 910 West 26th. 472-6509or 451-NEW MOOERN'EPF; and 1 bedroom. Free information. Experienced theses,dissertatlonw PR's, . -Antonio Street. 474-2291. sightseeing. carpeted, large vralk-ln closets. Oriental From $140 ABP. A short 4-mihute drive Tfansyrorld Research Co. D6pt. A5,P.O. manuscripts, etc. Printing,:,binding. Box 603, Corte Madera,,Ca. 949M.. jv CASH FOR RECORDS. Rock, |azz. EL CAMPO turnlshlngs.; Peaceful'.courtyard with to a shuttle stopwithample parking.454-Charlene Stark, 453-52H.! v;*;:r^;x : * Cr-:.;-:'"-,'.;'. • S2645-476-1619. S180.47)-S347. EARLY BIRD 45th St. 459-8614 or 451-4533. HOW TO OVERCOME fear/worry, etc. NICE 1 BEDROOM-apartment very Free Lecture on Tuesday 7:30 pnv by DISSERTATIONS, theses^ reportf and -'ft-VW BUGr Radkv air, AfT. Clean!-—toHlLE^THEY-LAST-».30n«w 10-speed APTS. near UT. ,272V HeiwhrH.Park. Shag — GETS THE WORM! Dr. Jeffers. 770! N. Lamer, Executive lawbrlefs.ExperJenced'typlst. After6 p.m.. call 836-4736. ' bicycles. 169.95. 4810 Burnet Rd. carpe^jwot $129.50 water.gaspaid. 476-Towers. 100-B. Tarnrtown. 2507 Bridle path. Lorraine Rent now for PICK UP; 1972 Chevrolet C-10. Air con-ANTIQUE BEDS for sale $75 each. $135 2 BEDROOM NATURE'S BEAUTY SECRETS reveal-Brady. 472^4715. .-v• 708 West 34th , ed to you. Free lecture by Dr. M.W. . dlttonlng, 350 V-8. automatic, power Dresser and bullets and beautiful an­ LARGE ONE BEDRQOM. Walk to brakes.' steering. Radials. Topper. S2.- tique rug;;Call47|-9021. SUMMER ALL BILLS PAID school, study area; carpeted, disposal, Jeffers. Each Thursday 7:30 pm. Ex-. 000. Call 454^196. 454-8239 WALK TO CAMPUS cable TV, sun decfc-.CA/CH, laundry, and save 20*25%! Choice University ecutfve Towers. 7701 N. Lamar. IOO-B. shuttle,'great locatloiC Available March1974 MUSTANG FREEWHEELING location! Ponce-Oe Leon l, II, III. 1, S155.00 ABP. 2812 Nuec»S. 472-6CT7. MUSICIANS. Group with gigs audltlon-. and binding on rOquest. Close II. 1700 miles. AC Large apartments, fully ihiijji carpeted, radio, power brakes; automatic Pepper Tree'li II, III, IV and V. Phone CA/CH, all buiIMn kltcheen, each apart-11,13.-. t .;•••' .-.v f. . transmission. $3,150. Red & White. Call these numbers for information for Early ment has its own' pri1 or LG. EFF. si30 plus elec.r2 blks w. of HOLLEY'S COPY SERVJCEi A com­ ing for a person on Keyboardsand aper­ Ivafe patio cussionist. Experience necessary. For 472-1073. . / .; BirdSavings! 472-8253. 472-8941.476-9279. NOW.LEASING balcony, pool, trees.*1008 West iSVa. 478-campus. 504, Elmwoijrt1 Place, No. 210 audition, contact Ron (451*3601) or Nell 1974 BMW 2002. 10.000 miles. AC 4-(459-7754). 5592 or 451-6533. Mgr. 472-0085.; SHOP -speed. Perfect condition, individually SUBLET: ONEv bedroom -apartment. NEAT. Accurate.and prompt typings 70owned. See this beautiful little orange March 1-May 3L1135 'plus ^electrlc. NOW LEASING IS HONESTY really thebest policy? 472­ . i/For whatever your bicycle needs .4194. '.. cents per pege.Theses95cents.Call447­ $160 gem with custom tailored tiger seat MOVE IN TODAY 30lh/Rio Grande. 477t105& <. - covers at Covert Buick. Ask for Mr. WE CARRY A-LARGE SPRING VACATION Selling School 2737.» , ' Robinson. SELECTION OF Cruise. Learn to ull,March 22-24 on 46 1 Bedroom COLONIAL MANOR^:1212 West 13th, 2 MABYL SMALLWOOO TYPING. Ust, bedroom, AC earpete&carport, water* tt. sloop, food & beer, S75/person. 512* minute, evernlght avalfable.: Term MARK XX 1974 TR6 yellow cortv. AC.FM/AM tape PARTSVAND ACCESSORIES All BillsPaid gas paid. No pets. tl40^<7>4»38. . 749-5960. Box.421, Port Aransas, Tex.. . papers, theses, dissertation-letters. radia luggage rack. *5250. 451-5197. 472­ Also fry our one-day repair service. Walk to Campus CARPETED, dishwasher, disposal, 70373. .. Maslercharge, BankAmerlcerd.»»2-0727 8171.«, • , : 2 BR -$184 laundry. Near Unlverslty.^huttle bus at or 4424545:. 2404 Sah Gabriel 477-6846 1969,FURY very good condition. 1000 or Buckincjliam Square door. S130. 4413 $0e«dwoy: BUY, SELL Playboy, Penthouse, etc ; ;?:,V"Opentll9pmon Books, records, jewelry, gulters, radios. TERM-PAPERS, theses, dissertations. berter'offer. Call after 5. 472-5195. 452-5093 454-3953 '..• /•'Tuesday and Thursday . WALKlNGi)lSTA,NCE UT on West side stereos. Aaron's,.320 Congress, down*' legal and technical. Neat professional MUSTANG '«&. 18 mpg. Cherry condi­;454-4917 in quiet neighborhood.Specious efHelen* . town.', c'.: ^•Vv--'V'^--H?r>.-vr^|l^:^-RMSo«ableV.prlces;:iAppoln». tion. Loaded. Low, mileage. S785. Call cy. apartment With .beautiful Interior/^ 136-2iq. • John, 476-4659 evenings^ ' luMrigus carpet, OLD THEATRE •.TYPING: Dissertations, these* patios.. SkvllghV bullMn bookcases, term ; '68T-BIRO. AC AM/FA^ good mileage POSTERS . 1 BR -$170 3 BR -$325 plenty of trees; :S130^ Available Im-~ SERVICES -papefs-Tedmlca) tytfngIncluded. Naat :.and tires, smooth,running-car. si.100. Authentic^ colorful:24" x28*V!4"x 36". NOW LEASING > r NEED A GREAT ; ,,,K »fcvrate. reasonable rates. 345-51M 459^794. Bogart.-Gary Cooper. Er^olFlynn, Gene : LARGE POOL-ALL BILL5 PAID . mediatelyorMarch 1.;453-6072.'470-3218»; <->yj.t.;nHert p.m.: «ifj\-i Autry, PaulNewrpatvRbsailnd Russell, , PLACE TO LIVE? ' LARGE Carpeted efficiency.. Full x :VW 1969 BUG. automate sllck-ihm,' ! MOVE IN TODAY , '.-" iEXPERIENCEDTYPIST. WIII do typ­ -radia very good condition, ownerretue*.'.Dorothy,iLamouc. Hope, Crosby/ .t $145 , tRY THE kitchen, Walk-In closet<1 block of'Law .. v Finest quellty/ ' :Ins at home. 447 )207 atter <. ; : ChevaHecMack.Lemon/ John Wayne, Best Rate on the Lake Swisher, nlog to Europe S900; 471-4376. 3*5-3152.: < School." SU5/month.-2700 reasonable prices manyj many otters.:Unlimited Supply.. 1 BR Furn BLACKSTONE-Shuttle Bus Front Door Manager 107, or.catr47t>65S0.. . Call on us before V. • . EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Paptrs, . 1966 BUICK LESABRE 340cu.in./V-8all *s4un blnolng: «5M0W._: WILLOW new electrical syslem. 35 silver-chokers -$5.95. Turquoiie and SHUTTLE BUS'CORNER a week;Brfng yourovm roommate or yre March 1> Ma)r31,' *135 plus electric. . 478-0022 • v^." " gallon. S700.00 472-7821. 477-0423 $itver Nava{o.bracelets S9195 up. Zunl-will match'you With-a compatible one. 30ttyRlo Grandk;477-1W3:!i' fully equipped low style,l«edding bands SI6.95 each. Shell This is edMwmy "omvenlence at Its mileage. 81,650. 453-0154. and turquofse chokers S17.95. Sterling 1970 CAMARO — best. ONtrf-nO^YAROS FROM UT RECEIVE REDUCED RENT. Manaae Jusf North^of 27th at v CREEK 10 unit apartment' Cornplex, near UT. GINNY'S "66 FOUR DOOR FORD. Automatic, slWer Hieshe and turquoise choker with . : NOW LEASING ' CAMPUS;'*.VM^'^U' NOW LEASING Couples preferred-25f''-' ^^ ERV1CE Plymouth Sattelite Sebring. loaded, Theiinest.ln American Indian higsatc ffARTS. $175 $220' .many, parts. >1300.472-2147. • 6ff.-r'V--:, :^408;Longvlew _ INC. :fry. ALL BILLS RAID ; 1967 MG MIDGET. GREAT engine, 35 Much Much AAore' BROWNSTONE ROOMMATES 42 l)dSleMall K 47W171 We have a lotof taxes to pay and alot of V??l iBR Dishwashers-2 LargePools : mp^; Needs son>e. bo^ work._s550. 475-. Free Parking. -^M8A®S3iSf^ iewelry tosell toallour oldcustomers at PARK APARTMENTS Security ... ' • 7a.m.-10p.m.fA^F . the best prices ever.Bring thls ad to get : ' 476-7688 :UTAREA2BRf2.BathiCA/JCH, laundry-TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING-:' MOVE IN TODAY 9 a.m. -5 p.m. Sat. • . * ­ theseprices: S^il and the^rest and buy ' Are convenienlly. located& priced right. facilities,;. pool, -senlor-rgraduate. 477-/ the best for less at ~p: ..I& .2.bedroom' apartments' located on ~ •? ;-' - .1901 Willow Creek 4581, 476-4767 Kelly. -j Stereo-ForSole :^C:WEBEAO SHAMAN;. \?s>. \ 'shuttiebusroufe * GENERAL REPAIR collective will fix THE COMPLfe^ EFFICIENCIES : TEAC 1250 4ape .deck with dust cover. r'.i'^vi-^'iSOO'Gvodalupe' '• C-.y'--•' $142.50 444-0010 ROOMMATE NEEDED. 3 blocks cam-anytimei, anywhere anyhow. ^ r PROFESSIONAL , • Recently servicedand cleaned! Call^2r -Mondaj^Jturday . CLOSE TO CAMPUS •-,v-.s v^ilLLSILLS PAID pus; SOO/month, all bills; Call Alan, 477- m­ . 8938 after;S P4n;;:% . • SHUTTLE BUS •4--; 5lddTN,-:Wip'at . ... ,.... . 454*3496 1600. t , CONFIDENTIAL.,CARE: lor,pregnant FULLTIME . :#'­./PAIR: AR-3A's Including custom solid : ' OWN ROOM, 3 bedroom house 2 baths, .unmarried, rtiothers. 'PROMira unmarried, rtiothere. Edna Oladney walnut stands used; 3. months; Ust' .. ;S*!tnm1n().'po6t,;be«rtlfully turnUhed, : • ' .23* •d. ' large »tudy fireb|eceAV»aiher, dryer. Home. XX* Hemphill, Fort Worth. Toll TYPING SERVICE »6S0i00,.flffS.00. Perfect.34»40»: . APARTS. <'* -• • 451-6137. >90 plus bills. .' double 6r stud16all have dIs-: Norfhwest, 4 rrfllei-IF.vTom, Meliruia > lree.numberlW-7«-llM.,.; FURN. hwnshcr, dliposal, central air and heat. V^72-3210 and472-76?7 >: -;*WfMeightra<^tapedecfc>lndashirtf*r^ NOW LEASING ABORTION . AL,TERNATIVESI Ptefl­ 305 WEST 35TH ' ~. • V^QUTETstilVING MALE-HOUSEMATE,:own room, fenc-nant and distressed? Help Is as'near as 3 BLOCKS F.ROM CAMPUS *d yard,S82.50 piusWbiils.Richard 454-X?ur.tf.'eph9S?' Pro-Ule Advocates. 510 0981 Anytime. . v ' 1 BR-$145 up West Mth. 4»-4IW. ' ' : SHERWOOD S-7300 receiver less than :.4 :-?! rHMr>iiicTAnr>D -Large one ah'd bedroom apts. SI30 to HELP WANTED l»<*» *250-Pioneer SN0Nwdphonesi ISTADOR:ib , -: : SI50 plus^electricity v WAter and -gas paid. Pool, laundry. > . v Tanglewood • tohMX115. BoseMi's.11500or will tell . Prettiest>1'2; bedroom apartmMtii , Rlverpark Aparlmehts. s90. .Will Jtoie-Call BetweenS-7 only. <72-3817-. i-'***•• cA/C^H,. J» « AM mI t« ai* limm •. v­ : -Telocafe. Must becooi. 444-5864. Joe.:: AUSTIN •.STOP ^SMOKlNG'Semlnar. starting In: ;pjn-.J or,9.a(lemoons a'xee*.PosHMr THE PEPPER ;(>^VENUES AREAr-.2 housemates for 8 March.^Conducted by-Cooper coh­^apeiJ»ck,J2IXL Kenwood..., • Norfh •' v-rOomMtf bWroom) house.:s65 ptus Vti ' suliants. Innovative.Guaranteed. Attor-: SMurdi^W:*. Prefer Sophomore'or tuner,150. AR turntable. jKLv -4$4-790» dable Call 447-4549. •>' above will) a plusavW*«*. GoodtwW, TREE PEOPLE fillingne«s: to work.\ posltive aHllude: »soe»kerv ttOO pr. 472-4310. v'-VSm^teU52.«Kn452-0060 ' MALE TO SHARE.large-hotfseinBarton -GJRLING DAY SCHOOL^ —• -"Creative have, three ;ex(ra*large efficiency <'?ivj; • Shuttle Bus Corner . HHU. sl25 A8P. plus sedurlly deposit. Experiential Learning^—beautiful n.W(hour.' Available for. one year'orPARAGON . . apaiimfcnfs-aVaifeble-^rmmediate oc-' 447-6383 • tacMities * AgesAgesJ-s"2*5: Comevlirrui.ieMC " 1 ^J-S^rMuintylthplcMitiDiillv; * cuponcy. Qufet. frlendly neighborhood. [North-Loop-' 451-5983, Te*an. P.O. 8o> D-X Austliw'TX JWJ1 ROOMMATE NEEDED.-immediately! SB? ^:-W$£mKi5Sce Shag:carpet,-dishwasher, disposal, lots .-•Share::two bedroom furnished > house, ^ VOUKSWAGENREPAIR 'Rebuilt: nff cablnetspdce.pantry/walk-ln closet, ­ ' mileiwarranty. 837-4086. CUSTOM BUILT. KLH ipeaV^.;10-'. :i i«;AJ*^TMENTS .:,•:> 1 -South Austin, S9S/m0Mh; CallLoOls. 442-engines,--ines. K75.,$275. Exchange" Installed 6000. 5,REATI ve^antl C0hetterin« { brand new-apartments with ail the manklnd.Extensive leadershipprooram weekdays goodies at reasonable prices. 2 blocks THE ' ' MALE, share with near UT, PEARSON'S Houie and Apariment BELL ^.H.m^.jr.^ereo& ^-v..»aT^S^orW^g ^ shuttle,'T'btocks.campus. Glad to have'. pfi cleaning weekly Call ^ -•nlcejilace-. U1 plu^efJ^evaOM. 3*th ; slO 472-326$ !^M6?f ^ . lyear oW.^xctlJent condHfon$100. V610 West 30th;^ -•" • — —• • • >, yjaufor^nefghbdr-rllkelomake you feel ' end Guadalupe * between 8:a.m. and1l a.m. Monday -^ s477^85^v at home/Glmrhe a buzz at 476-9279, 472-ESTABLISHMENT Friday •>•<<* salesman; Catljpn ;;-R00/MMATE - ~ ';v'.:"'iV--;; S253, or 472-0941. 404 & 502 W. 35th {1 do light housekeeping in .iiattjK. Df«»» shopsflof • Y'-. 4400 Ave. B •> exchange for cheaper reht. Large house. tribuior. pierced earrings, costume . " block east of Guadalupe) 1 bdrms. tool' ^ U;, -V::5l^ OFF-SPEAKERS.j Pool fireplace 441 7777, Billy ,=A|r suspension stereo speaker system ^ALL•• • 'BILLS —— Than* • •• ;• • . 451-4584 ROOM & BOARD |»a»: ROOMMATE • -Share iarge houSe, ifens andwlthfullinanufachirerfs'5 year • f' -^still inttK.original manufacturer's car- .Large Efl.-»m.50 , • fireplace, pool, ABP: Off .&Riverside: , i PAID -Walk.Pedal -SliutHe •' 'i Shuttle; 19W CedarRidge, 441-7777, Bil­' ment -gives, jrou o .choice of-3 different "J: * NOW LEASING ~ Move In Todiy '.:V ly * \ > THE COLLEGE ~ jNEED EXTRA CASHI SeHflowmOTjiuarantee dnparts and tabor.\New ship* v4yetemSuFa(rDf walnut stytedspeakers '' vVipt bfdroom apt.-Ml ICrCC SOUTHERN ESE APT. AVENUES AREA;-2;hOUsemates tor 8 HOUSES pay.^ke Mftio. •fusf ,slS&rspeakers include 10" .heavy room <3 bedroom)1 house.'V5 plus 1/3 . iNUEVta . SUMM M/I*yr call 47S«M IMpm, Ful| ' . UNITED FREIGHT SALES. 6535 North big balconies forVour'Wants. Great low-apts at |007:W. ?6lh andl7l4 Summit ..1307 Norwalk LaneiS ,HOUSEMATE;; Female/ non-smoker,. arrangement. Good physical facilities pari time ',, , _?Lemar. M©n.-Frl. 9-9, $at.,W;'-'^'--:'-lion, great tooking.-sl65 plus electricity. BAutHulgroyndswIth" trees, pool,. . own room. 885/mOnlh.-476-2524:' chance to;.work with other view. B -and a HOUSEPERSON WANTEO share 3 ?;'5rBlocks Manager201 -478-9050 AC, pmeled. Older complex, solidly - members. in,making decisions; Coed: EVOLVING INTERNAT'L'.coopeirat^n lies,:Sl47/mo..-doubles $112 ami: Inlonnatlon. Organltatlon SSS a*ir-. built, 03S plus E. . . 478-9468 Singles, ' i .bedroom house -In nick -nelehborhood1. -West of Campus. 44W4M Keep Trying 476-3335: .. 1 BR -$150 :,V Call Thorn 478-«93ior.Jlm 477-»3Jl. Keep -$102/mo./mo. Opening:Openings at the Ark and 21st • dlnator to develop program;«r eduei­ •: *: walk-Pedal-Shuttle / om,2. evaluative study ot a program. Bnln ' J bath, IP'ShUttle. Su'CesO: S88.75 plus jUngview. Close fo UT, Built 1940. S49,-••-••'^>:>v-v-i/9l04.Sah Gabriel1' fiext to Americana theatre,walkino'drs-kitchen outild^ itorWoA ca/npus. Small pets. No lease. Swim-March 1 S month duratiofi.' Wasters , ;500.47H734 • v., fence to North Loop ShocDlna Center .. elec 453*4657, 451 2M8 i FOR RENT degree with experience.In •valuation and Luby's. Neer shuHle and Austin' preferred. Contact Karen B*ard. 4S>* iMALE ROOMMATE to shareapartment > ;1I H JI HEN5L6E lurnished.1? transit. Two bedroom ffats/one and two Water, gas and cable TV paid,-< PALO BLANCO Apartments-Move;in ;< cio>e to campus op shbttie; $88 monthly. HOUSE FOR RENT.S» 5tieralon Ave. -^bedroom;. CA/CH, call after 5 30. MS-. baths. Available one 3 bdrm; 2 ba. wlth 1 THE ADOBE new shag carpet, CA/CH, dishwasher, 302 West 38th 4SV3154 or 451-now,.Large l.bedroom/-!:bath/;dls-: Bob, 475-0699 ,»tlo per month;. >100 damage :deposlt."^;vlleges;Ekceliehtloeatlon..-Ami * <5 * Free Cable celiingsi shag carpeting. Cable. TV. plr-parklng. Totai offlce plarinlng with. prohlbtt^dupllcation^of this property. < 110 E 37lh, mgr 477-9388 ., ment close to campus S79 95 elect ENGLISH TMTORr Having trouble bpt 106 J .'Priced in forties. :CaltCurfistJdrdan:ar: HOJUSE , refrlg; 478-7633/day»,^345-\ iMarclf t Kitty, 476-2878, 327 1867* 263-organUlng-eompositions?.Poetr dH­ Frost-free prganlting compositions? Poetry ^ x call 475-8329 I'TheCullenCOv bf^f ice442-7833, home 442-'- Near, pnlwtlry 14 2 bedrijom. Furn-'*•' X * . 0568/nIghts ? ^2022 4M-2649, 447:B370,7530 North^L^mar.,(V^..jjCult1o understand orenjoy? CairBet)' 9323 -k > • Unlurn.TV Cable, AC, Weler.Gai Paid , xt f * jw**iUi E;; FJ=MALE .FOR CUTE duplex.5 blocksT^- t STUNNING h"7* W Cable TV, frost-free refrlg:,' ihag -KtJli??Kl5'l.tlw|,,ul lWc Manajer No 10)t Silt 1MarchX & 4?' 2 BLOCKS UT -^pebble 476*2683 enytlfne , rCONTEMPORARY s Heavily Wooded Lot '^;v3 ~ -"MALE ROOMMATE 4155plui Vi bills RENT , k v" 1 <• t 1 FOR a ASSUME LEASE -very comfortable 1: 1WfB^RId X>rarfdjM72«7sr^ m ^ ^ with Dry Cr^ek A. bedroom fa On. " " w/g paid; On.-38thf ^shutlle.'r VvPertect for professor. ZHker Park erttr^ r fTve,'476-0973.1 BOO/v^-re.AJM.e;largi house 19lif f 1 ^DISTINCTIVE DESIGN and ropms ^ Larry, after. fTvi rt :';l9terestlng,.textures*; Absolutely great « P^lpgLn.>Rjotit off.Berkman O/lve ^ j17.-: , ifor-completely, -natural landscaping^ 1 y Vrom$8Q/ nlontr^v Ik •>.1 ; iTO./MONTH Bills Included 4 blocks iSeparete dining. ropm;. Marvelous^. (rom campus.CACH, kltcfienprv|IMM/-» -;. Wtchen.3 bedrooms;CallMary Cullenat ?f,.,NEW 1 BEDROOMS ;. , S 2800 WHItfs : jllower. «73 2>w.,Boti" " "V."" LOST & FOUND LAKE LIVING •: :r.The CuHett Co„off ice442-7S3X home280-: * 477-^558 TAKE OVER LEASE tftrv Ju^ Two • r---~ • ^ T ^2071: $147.50 DIUS E: ;I t AT AN f ^mtwo balh onshuttfaroole NR .ENFIELD AREA^lbedroom withevery jcoioredtWownlHhort hali'Jfemale catV,/' WESTOFCAMPUS « • n extra; Furnished or ^unfurnished. ;From lufoom apartmentsnear shut .. . y • i v-MT wiHght.!VAtter.-5;30;'453^?57 NICE I „ ^ Musicql-ForSqle -477 77?4 J Ave Unpaid No MM inquire4008^ XOSt FEMAi£»oldert,Retj>lever( SOn^ ^ / AiFORDA9l-E v >148 50 ph/s etclrlclty 807 West Lynn tie busON 2410 LONGVIEW ^172-4162 e^rryOllllngwafer^ c V' v i«Jay. 24tft^and'jRld -Grertde No tao<#^^ » Frost free refrlfl.'j-' y Lti-Js ?i,J;^rrTrt-.Jv?K>pieata fcali^78.>«B: j7A-aa» ^ «ttpn; swpr.oesy^tfer, 47iM777^r^ T $100 ail/blllf HydO • SelfKifefahlng o'veri. EFFsl20-pluiE.lBedroomJ130plu»E.: Park. iblock Shuttle AC An#K5 452 -1 ppir^~ ^ IVOX eiectr^pia rto ^ith Cfavlcord Noar ;campus'Av,shuttle;/ Convenient to < >:5ha5 carp^tlriB " downiowiv Pool storage. 407 w -38th '"Ni» Wax7"floor Vinyl^"^^ <4537M3,-.' 472r4l62/;.9arry' OflH^flwOfef w A6sflh;tof^WecrtatiorT .-Marble vanltles; v V-ery^easonably^pprced. * •„« • Near shOttl^ busi 2'fiEDROpM,v2BATH rtfJb«d.; Full kllcheiv la ^CH,-i5abpliant4i;tree OSTpN^RAROUNCRCShutttivbu tact Lake';i^ffh"%^ilfei f«tS^%l.O"«>rlel,No, «;.47M|8tr^nr Non« sa ss^mm WW'OC'266-2^^ |^gK^^p^||bruary 1975 Tfigi^AiLYrTEX wmmm •* mggfmm iP 3 t&J WVJjj i tf , "two days ,A beard-growing' contest this year to involve other.. [wishing, to; sponsor a-booth;;; "A barbeque sponsored by!^ Parade., from Municipal begins Friday night as.a campus organizations. must register by March 21 the Texas Cowboys, a skeel^Auditorium to the Capitol will ' prelude Jto 1975wlRound-Up Jackson said t Aspirmg. participants should -shoot and a blbod drive also /include floats by any campus r festivities. The content loca­, 'We want everyone to have r „*contact Jackson. dre scheduled , A/organiiration wishing to par­ tion and* time will be an­as1 much fun as we do,J' he' ft-A charitv concert will be:. lor all beer drinkers, anticipate The Longhom Bandnounced later emphasized.;-Any ; campus . held .at/Municipal Auditorium Round-Up beer wagon will b£ .will perform • ^JJ-" The winner will be the male organization canparticipate or'female who grows the best in Round-Up. Additional mfor-" beard between, now and mation can be obtained by Pulitzer-Winning Au Round-Up JVeek in April, LAF calling the' Interfraternity -Foster, last year's University Council at; 476-8616 weekdays Sweetheart, will be on hand from l to 5 p.m. , i . by Andy Stevornfrh Friday to shave contestants Round-Up:eventsincludea r$(Sjve PSUic Reading . 1 Round-Up coordinators street party-jointly sponsored •s •*6-}P5T:^mmm^ *-Robert' Penn Warren, Pulitzer Prize' Also, the film"version ofAllsthe King's A light, cloudlets «ky and 6:30. p.m. have not b««n teen simultaneously for a long hope to stimulate more cam­by the Lambda Chi Alpha winning poet and novelist, will give a poetry Men," Warren's 1946 Pulitzer Prize winner ""ftime. The return of Daylight Sayings Time wgs. responsible for the event. pus participation in this year's fraternity and Texas Relays ? reading 'at 8 p.m Thursday in the LBJ which was named Best Picture in 1949by the festivities. Round-Up fchair-organizers Library. "* Academy of Motion Picture -Arts -andman Frank Jackson said A dance marathon also ison Sponsored by the Texas Union Ideas and Sciences, will be shown at 7 and 9 pm. Tuesday. i the slate, of events.. The tissues Committee and the speech depart; Wednesday in the Undergraduate-Library Aid Round-Up. which occurs . Round-Up Sweetheart will be ment. Warren's reading will include poetry Auditorium. By CHRIS LANi) self-supporting must establish the sessions, call Ben Robin April .4 Jo >12,-has previously announced at -the dance. Admission yyill Application completion help WE MUST MOVE THEM OUT! i financial need. Gravies said. Sessions are being held on a Single,and married students regular basis at the office, , TWO DAYS ONLY WEDNESDAY lo^FISIISDAY io-6 desiring to be considered as , For further information about 1 / 617 W. 29th at Rio Grande -472-5471 Immunizations Curb REMEMBER BEFORE YOU BUY SHOP CUSTOM HI-FI Measles Outbreak Although 20 cases of said no cases involving Sfl /l S HI I Sa/is mi SP-1700 •flSdJl.SUJ QRX 3000 measles were ,reported in University students have Austin last.week, doctors and shown up there. Trickett said school board officials say an most college agepersons have extensiye outbreak is notlike-' had measles or received im­ Jy-' munization by this 'time. Cases'of rubeola, commonly However immunization is not called red measles, were recommended for males ;in •..Continuous Paw*r Output" centered in Oak Hill Elemen­the college age group if they • 10 Wottl P*r Chann*l • FOUR CHANNEL RECEIVER . tary -School,' and im­•have not previously received • Minimum RMS at 8 OHM ?,• Cohtlnuoui Power Output 10 Wottl P«r Channel MinlirfUm.V munizations. were, held there •it: Trickett noted. . f lood from 40 To 20.000 HZ •-3 Woy 1Sptaktr Multi DirKtkm SpMkw Systm-' • .JMS At 8 OHM Load From 60-20,000 HZ With No Mor* : •,)2' High Compflanc* Wo9. -Female students requesting •With No Mir* Than 08% •, vjhan.0.8% Total Harmenle DistorHon. * - • Total Harmonic Distortion : • 2-4" Con* Midrong* . -, „ v a spokesman for the school measles immunization:will be • loudrms Control v* , •Loudnm Control • 2 2"Con* Timtm — ^ KA • • High-low FDt*r '"w * ' ' ' said no new cases have been tested to determine if suf­• Walnut Casing ' . • Sy«t«m l> Abb To Coo* With • L it.4 JIV/l MV reported and the clinic has ficient antibodies against • Ufl Prlct <179.93 be«n.discontinued. measles are presentandif not Doctors said they are ex­immunization, will' be -made MICE periencing no-more cases of available: However Trickett W*R . measles than usual, but some warned'that females who-are said many parents have pregnant or not on thepill and WICE rs brought' their children'. in for >; sthus susceptible to pregnancy. immunization since the cases -within three months after im­ I first appeared^ munization will not be given §PIOIMEER ; Dr.;Paul Trickett, director, the shots because of potential SajtisuL of-the Student Health Center^ ^danger to a fetus o5 is ­ SOB Shuttle , Riders V < i jPasses good for one month available for $4 MRBRSXMI •AIMR22M SUSMTTf EO-MPat \Ai^y . » Cw*wwf'Few|r.-pM» 40 w«m» •NL1221 At I OHM KMf.M t«MM-MMmm RMS At • OHM MMfWn JLMSi Ar » OHM*&£•• located behind Gregory Gym and open until V M M 4To 20JM fraa.40 To SO^OOr PrmTtO «0 •trWM^r J? ;M hm 20 T* .30.000 ' Ht Wfcfc No Merv TKai WMi N» Mw> Hm • &mmm MI At N* Mora Jtm -• ~ « 04* WMi No MOT Thin 04%' : 0TotalHarwoiik. Mafa t—9-.> < $0953. ARXB9W0MPUTE SHURE Ust 79.95 v-a i. PtON^ CSF-51-2 WAY-1C USTJ5.W. Z M91H)UST189.95.. WOOER UST 149.95 3. MURA 302-STB)EQ-VOUIME $1 1 fv® ;3.BOMAN1l16-AM^M4 i! C0NJK01S4ISTS *24.95,...,,,f 10 4. BSR-260-COMPIETE ECl 1251V -3 way sptab.r f UST 86.80 4.SENHHBSBtHD a,f '$Q< •••• •l*-Nob. ;chm ^ I,. nhtJ.H • ikLlH.. :>Ricr' NWARf ^ * j x W, 29thatRioGrai.dS 472-5471 "!ssestttof T)EXAN tk\-*