mssfp jpsgp • w&ii 'ft Mia a rr-'. ^wii I jv* -' ,-y-. •• ^ operate at full capacity. • Saigon to meet with representatives of only oif the payroll So that their com­accept the Rules Committee's plan for percent to those with income above $20.­ mnn.t f\t Hinm' --/ihitHron'-rtl*a' utnnflhtr SflMtotal amountof ammunition would the Viet Cong on Sunday. manders can pocket their pay. debate and items to be considered. 000. &H$S•h •» ­ -jf *1 "A| Kid' .-;f 3 16-Year-Old Sophomore Knows 9 Computer Languages r%\ MU \i£ ~ ' tv w : By CATHY BROWN "The.sandy haired, 16-year-old cbhcen-,! tratihg on the chemistry lecture "Polyhedral Expansion of Metallocar­boranes" or taking in the Thursdaynight physics movie series is a University ' sophomore. Deleyoryas says his preferences change periodically, "but. my foremost goal is to do research and/or teach in math and/or science." he says. Delevoryas says it depends on the course whether he spends much time studying. "Take physics for example." After transferring from Foote Private School in New Haven, Conn., the Austin Independent School..District allowed Delevoryas to skip the ninth grade. He graduated from Anderson High School in two and one-half years. Reflecting on his academic life style. -• P iifl %1 "We have never had to encourage, Matt. He was reading before-kindergarten and has always taken ad/ vantage of access to some of his father's scientific publications." The desire to learn runs in the family: Delevoryas' brother Chris, a freshman - ' * -)'i*v\ A * _ T<> V •uiJ. t .]• * A± 1' 38b ' But then Thursdays are. his easy day. "Mondays and Tuesdays I work my head off. Wednesday and Friday are better, and Thursday is my best day with only one and one-half hours in class," Matt Delevoryas says. he says. "I might; have to study, except before registration I borrowed the book used in the claSs from my high school teacher:;got interested in it and read the whole thing." He discovered his interest in sciences Delevoryas.said, "My parents created an environment that allowed me to sam­ple various things, and I liked them, so I pursued them. "That my father is-chairman of the botany department (Dr. Theodore at Anderson High, has vowed to follow in his older brother's footsteps and graduate from high school in two and one-half years. Although Delevoryas is most at home with his books, he has seen one movie — If, I J-'-i •M vT| x. W While most students with. such a "free" day would spend it in more leisurely activity, Delevoryas spendshis time either attending guest lectures in -one of the natural sciences^ "teaching: myself what my classes don't cover in chemistry, physics, computer sciences and math." ' '. in the seventh grade "when I was rum­maging though-an old dusty box in my basement &nd" ran.across one of my father's calculus books." He read the book on the $pot and.has since quenched his thirst-for related subjects by reading "the good" books.offered. Delevoryas) indicates there would be some scientific orientation." he adds. Mrs. Delevoiryas says. "We feel if we had held him-back he would have been bored to"tears. I think for youngsters who are academically oriented, holding them back is the wrong thing to do. "Fantasia." "And it was only because the music in it was fantastic." he says, "Other than that. I have never been to the theater." However. Delevoryas allows himself one pleasure — chess. "It's a thinker's game." ; , Pointing casually to hislibrary ofcom­puter science manuals, he modestly H v r *5 f i says. "I have taught myself'nine) com­puter languages, although I've^flctually ,-only had to use four of them," • . . «•' > >-"5? ii $ A r5 Delevoryas will be a junior^at the end Friday will:;be partly cloudy with . of this term — quite an accomplishment i. • for his first college semester."Ite has aCr southerly winds from 5 to 15 mph. The cumulated-23 hours of advanced place- high temperature will be in the mid­ ~. ment.credit in chemistiy, math, English . % a a and French. Is petitioning for .22 more 70s with'the low In the 50s. The high Ml m J :v|^ , hours, and is currently enrolled; for 15 ; Saturday and Sunday will be it&the hours . •ill M fcfe Orgamcv .chemistry, introductory .real 2; upper 70s andthe low both nights in the -analysis, electricity and niagnetism and low 50s. --4 ^ v .artificial intelligence areamong courses mm. Ji ItiiHFrtlilt „MWJ0«KAKIttf Stoefcs ... Aicomprisin^ ,.'.DeleVbry«^V Jc'tt"rir:ern^M M- The market made only a modiest gain s.""schedule • "• wiltedrto-^sample^different-things -l 731 IS :xiThursday, but brokers e^piect s&feecauSeal'nir still^undecided which, ^'continued upward trend if the^Federal &.'-!>cience[will be tny thajor.i'^h'e says,-", ,JT "J'm'tJnnking'df getting a BA in one, a' :V^Reserve loosens-thejnoney supply and - yiay'o^wln / "BSin anpther^nd possibly three degrees '• on c-r ,interest rates continue to dro|S. (Story,*^#\hecause''"the requirements for-jthei ' "Page , # W? islegreefcoy^rlap/i;; dfeff i r: Si M: 'S;;y:s. WBmSMS JW*. • iiM?i- M £ £ -WqrreniRecitls APe$m Pulitzer Prize Winner Discusses Upcornili^No^il By DAVID HENDRICKS the lovers, takes their dreams: literature -well. His -writing v tion following the reading ^• novelist is tied to idocumen-•: Texan Staff Writer ' away and . leaves them naked ranks with that of other dis­were" Faulkner. Theodore' ' ting an object, physical and •v Robert Penn Warren, , to the day." tinguished southern writers Drieser, Hermann • Melville social world, the ways of "• Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Other subjects of his poems such as -William Faulkner, and Nathaniel Hawthorne, r life," he said, adding the and novelist, read some of his included time ("What was is, Walker Percy and Tennessee In response to-other a novelist thus should have "poem writing" to an is now was")i knowledge and Williams. ^ questions, Warren said double life. "Detachment' audience of about 500 people trutfis'V'to have truth, Among" other'-American, novelists should not associate (from the social scene) is not . Thursday night at the LEU something must be believed") novelists he., would .term themselves too closely to an • a virtue of the.novelist.'1 Library,Auditorium. and tragedy! "great,*" be,said aL a recep-academic 'jitmosphere•The Warren.read about eight of One ijoem;';,'School Lesson < : Warren was born in Ken-v his poems, some of them from Based on the.'Gilliam Family • tucky in 1905. It was-while he B • ;-his collection, "Promises, Tragedy." was a recollection was attending Vanderbilt • !Poems 1954-56," which won of a father who killed himself- .• University that he first -the Pulitzer Prize. He is the after killing hisfamily withan became interested in Action. •l only American writer to icepick. He said he studied the method ^receive the Pulitzer in both of novelist William Conrad, '•'An-icepick is "a subtle . ;-;fiction and poetry, receiving it : whom he called his first in­ thing." he read. "The: punc­ ''-also in 1947 for his novel, "All fluence. ture is small ... it tiurts no-Xthe King's Men." more than abeesting... time's The author of nine novels Like much of his writing, to be ten volumes of slow maledicnon came and poetry, v'Warren's reading was lyric, undone.";,.. • other among publications, steady and full of vivid im­ revealed that he is '.'in the Warren prefaced the poemsagery. The silent vacuums middle of a novel" which he in humorous fashion, but hewhich followed all his poems wants to return working on said this tragedy was "funny ' seemed to be extensions of the soon because, "I feel very full only by distance." contemplation within them. of it. whatever that means; In most of the poetry, he The < last poem,. juxtaposed beauty with ugly "Rattlesnake Country," was "It is about the Southerner deformity, as in "Myth on the of life on a southwestern who hates the South, a com­ Mediterranean" set on an ranch, and it reflected theA mon species," an am­ "edemc" beach with beautiful remoteness of existence bivalence he compared to lovers. They are visited by a there. It ended appropriately,' -"the way .we hate our ff. hunchbacked bikinied, as if speaking for all his parents." "Aphrodite, as logos ... the in-works,-"All I can do is offer The novel will-describe "a my testimony." Prwiel ner meaning of life." She ; man who wanted out and tries Jqy bodwtn t. Imilcs v comes from "that perfection • Warren, in person, proved ' lo come back ... VeryabstractWe call the sea ... she passes to know both himself, and Robert Pehii Warren and complex:". Such a person is "antihimself,'' Warren II Lo-Vaca Request said, and has psychological problems "whether-or not he knows it." : . " • • Map illustrates East Riverside Drive project. "If God's good, there will be City, LCRA To Oppose Gas Hike a book." he added, "and if a Project Planned The City of Austin and the LpwerColorado RiverAuthority hike would affect gasrates in Austin, SanAntoniri'and for the He's even better, it'll be will oppose a request by Lo-Vaca Gathering Co. for an LCRA. very good book " increase in its natural, gas charges, City Atty. Don Butler and Lo-Vaca President W.E. Greehey said the increase is Warren's appearance wasLCRA General Manager Charles Herring said Thursday. necessary if Lo-Vaca is to minimize its dependence on its sponsored by the Texas Union East Riverside Drive ^ jr:] parent company, Coastal States Gas Producing Co The Ideas and Issues CommitteeLo-Vaca asked the Railroad Commission Wednesday for a current rate is "insufficient to meet Lo-Vaca's financial and the University Depart-" By WADE VfrlLCOX Boulevard. From South sent level duringconstruction. 4 6-cent increase per 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas The price obligations and capital requirements,""too's^id. •-ment of Speech. Texan Staff Writer Lakeshore to East Ben White . Beginning in September,^Traffic congestion on East Boulevard it will be broaden­ utility lines and pipes will be jRiverside DriVe will get ed from four to six lanes. ' unearthed and relocated; inr,worse, before getting better. Routing traffic over, around November, contractors will-,,But the situation will improve or through, the construction submit'bids for the work; andaccording to Austin : Urban will be "an obvious problem," in May, 1976, construction will-Transportation Department Joe Turnus, Urban Transpor­begin. plans. tation Department director, Originally an East River-'The heavily traveled street said Thursday. side "expressway"was plann­will be widened from the pre­However, Tumus saidhe ex­ed to link IH 35 to East Ben sent four lanes to eight lanes pects the-street to remain However, booming, White. from IH 35 to South Lakeshore ' open'ahd operating at its pre­growth in the area and rising) construction co$ts demanded' an immediate but economical ­ BRIDAL SHOPPED Solution, •.'. 4013 Marathon Traffic figures showed 12,­000 vehicles used the road dai­ly in 1968. By 1974, volume had? risen to 24,000 vehicles, or double the 196ff traffic-figures,, on an average day ^ • Present. plans include an . eight-foot-wide hlke-and-bike f1 trail adjacent tothe road fronts You IH'35 to Wickersham Lane;have the < \ , Construction will proceed Iti. ' three phases.-The--firstM opportunity Communication Week is Marcli 8 -March 14! costing an estimated $1,640,­ to view about 000, will expand the road fron^ Summit Street ^ to This year. Communication Week includes the 125 gowns. ~ Wickersham,-All phase^one'^l costs will be paid by the cityii pdedication of the brand new > Communication Thirty percent .'According to city projec-*' tions, the work will be com-, off on mothers' pleted in six to eight mopths. ^ Complex. To commemorate this occasion, •Two succeeding phases wilK ?>. dresses. /' widen the road from IH35 to Summit Street and then from Texas Student Publications is publishing a Wichersham to Ben White. The bill will be split Evenly, special edition of The Daily Texan on March 10. between state and federal' government. Total costs for It! < the project are estimated at !\v Visitors and parents fronri across the state will f2.2 million, " < >" ' \.;id > + , 1 in be on campus for this event. We want you td be 1 here too ... to let them know where to shop, ( Boston 'f 1 President • m what to do and where to eat and relax while f | .'tW.for by Soifdn -sS^|i j' visiting in Austin. Call -•• • ....... ...I,'. ASUHMfAFTERHnOHWITH I' JfSSi v ui x)A • f' tftf vf-i.^ rf'si ,(U~ today and reserve your advertising space in . this special Commemoration/dedication edition of . i 1* yt •> > \ f & ABBKFITFOR DAILY i * i V«,t j 4* * ? r v t n % r THEROCHAFOR 3* & • i '\-J - mCOONCI H •* St tfn* ' iGAMRUGN v :t ;*'A comma ^ •> - a* if®. " woflrvfluifte •ft*, ­ ,w ,w SUM mm J % isS .v *j ; o V?> ,K) H ' r. .-, Tjfl1""!?,?! ..;'" FBIi Practices I i->" t " V-* v -, r ' -* ®," V *, •m Files Kept on Presidents, Congressmen WASHINGTON (AP) -Atty. Gen.' r£ndithey 'said the FBI's, .beginning steps'" to cooperate, .with:;. A DOCUMENT in one of the files. LeviEdward H. Levi confirmed Thursday; counterintelligence unit did release' in preventing them ffrom' indicates derogatory Congress testified, that that the ; late -J.< Edgar Hoover filed derogatory information to the press on happening!again. ­material on onei congressman who hadderogatory Information about Presidents . what, it considered extremists, to dis­attacked Hoover was disseminated to"Some abuses have occured," Levi and congressmen in his FBI office. • credit them. other federal agencies. said, "and we must attempt to find the Levi a on file didn't • In an'-appearance before a House The FBI files Include sdme allegations best remedial: steps which will protect said name a necessarily-mean it contained adverse, judiciary-subcommittee, Levi also cited : on congressmen's "morals or drinking' the bureau iri'its proper mission.*' matter on that person.' cases in which he said the* FBI was used habits./.' :LevivSaid. He said such Although Levi gave no names andonly • % by Presiderits ahd White House aides for allegations arefiled but not investigated. '"In some instances afolder would con­ sparse details, some of the misuses had '• tain only a record of ,a contact betweenpoliticalpurposes already been disclosed, and Silberman BUT. KELLeVsaid there has not been Mr. Hoover and a public figure during newsmen a single attempt to use the FBI political­ confirmed to that some, of; ; which derogatory information on • Levt~saidthe FBI now has 6.5 million them involved Nixon and Johnson. ly in the 19 months he has been director, another individual was discussed." hefiles, including 1,605 involving con-and Silberman said none of the past mis­Silberman said these included Nixon said. essmen. use appeared criminal. and Johnson having the FBI "report on : Three of the Hoover files were on the Deputy Atty. Gen. Lawrence • Silber-certain activities of members of Communist Party. Levi said, and others The testimony was delivered to the efforts people have man told newsmen that the misuseof the two Congress who were opposed "to anS" involved by to House civil .rights subcommittee, agency included investigation of con-• critical of his politics." Hoover fired, foreign influence in ex­ members of which said the FBI has files gressional critics for, former Presidents tremist groups and a report that a onthem.N.. THEY ALSO included the Johnson * Richard' M. Nucpn and Lyndon. B. JohnT., reporter intended to "expose the in­ camp's obtaining FBI information on son and political work for Johnson. • competence" of a U:s. intelligence of­ One, Rep: Robert F. Drinan, D-Mass., Republican presidential opponent Barry ficial in 1941. who was one of the House's most vocal M. Goldwater's staff in 1964, Silberman LEVI SAID that Hoover kept in his of­ But Levi said few of Hoover's files antiVieth&m, war critics, said the FBI said, and Johnson's having the FBI fice 48 files:that included derogatory in­ could be described as dossierson people investigated him before he was elected. formation on gather political intelligence at the officials, including and said many of them contained routine Democratic national convention in'J$64u Presidents and 17 congressmen, two of The other member. Rep. John F. and innocuous administrative material. Atty. Gen. Levi (r) wifh FBI Director Kelley whom are still in Congress. Seiberling.D-Ohio, said the FBI still has Levi testified that the FBI was used to v a 20-year-old security clearance report conduct an inquiry "for what might be In the most detailed public airing yet, on him. -v.,. described as positional purposes" and inLevi, FBI'Director Clarence M. Kelley some instances provided informationand Silberman also said that derogatory LEVI TOLD the congressmen his staff Denies New Trial which was given to federal agencies to material has been' given to congressmen uncovered what he called the abuses and use to discredit their critics. :to use.against other congressmen. t.hewas publiclyconfirming them as"the Silberman said he recalled several in#',!, stances of the FBI giving derogatory idf..: Ray Case formation to congressmen to useagainst v ; other congressmen.' |MEMPHIS (UPI) — James Earl Ray, of his own choosing." written about the murder of the civilconvicted assassin of Dr. Martin Luther J. Edgar Hoover had 164 files in his ; Ray claimed his famed defense at­rights leader. King Jr.. lost a bid fora new trial Thurs­ private office, Levi testified, including : torney. Percy Foreman of Houston, had But U.S. Dist. Judge Robert McRaeJr. day when a federal judge niled Ray's in­ 48 that "by and large"had derogatory in-' v compromised Ids rights and pressured rejected Ray"s arguments and accepted itial guilty plea in the case was voluntary formation on-public officials him into admitting the 1968 murder to instead the state's contention that Ray and "on the advice of competent counsel preserve the commercial value of books made a "reasoned and reasonable deo-* sion to accept a 99-year sentence rather . Mass Murder Suspect than risk the death penalty" by going to trial. "Although the circumstances­(surrounding the guilty plea> include Brooks' Testimony Chosen conduct on the part of Ray's retained at­torneys that should havebeen performedHOUSTON (UPI) — Attorneys:j»y:Patman. empowering; ties Union Executive Director John Duh-In,not legitimate may rebut the alleeations breakdown in -the current negotiations, or rejection of an eventnal bonds faces a hqjwtng before the:Senate cities and .counties to issue industrial^ Committee two ^ can said ThursdayJ>CLU will continue F .n a feg beforeW^^Snt"f negotiated tireaty by ttie Senate, "could lead to a confrontation with Constitution within revenue,bonds. However, the attorney? weeks. - its opposition to any suspension legisla-, '' ihis^^fails; the^^studoit iriijr fil^a suit in Panama ... and a real possibility that the canal would be closed in the general's office; ruled that such ;)eridihgi tion that denied public school.students® v' > . , juvenile court. and court decisions will . Senate Joint Resolution 38, introduce ' powers required a specific constitutional • Process.",^.,^;;,. due process of law. ' 4 • *' 'be final. Tuesday by Ganado Sen Bill Patman grant nf authority • : "Bue process is meaningless a| long, ^ The bill cohUnr^; "no pupil shall be and Wiphita Falls Sen Ray Farabee,' Patman and Farabee hope thatSJR'38 Russian Terms Space Linkup ^Crucial' 1 as the rules students are suspended un-'.suspended unless.it is determined the ; would, in effect, allow i company will be that grant of authority.-if ap-f^ der are nnreasonable," Duncan said, -^pupil cbnsUtuUS a icoiitihuing danger or HOUSTON (UPI) — the building,a ntw plant to raise Capital proved by the Legislature, the resolution? thrptigh a municipal government at an will face pifblic vote as a proposed con­_ Cases wherestudents are suspended for^0 threat or disrupUng the academic v commander of-, the Russian long hair or things that happen to them .• ' proccss' %£> . '/ \, .; interest rate ^ower (han the prftne ratet V spacecraft set to'link up in July stitutional'.amendment in November.* : ouLsideofschoolarendiculous,especial-nS , 1-"r . When businesses currently establish ^ Tbe T ^ LU would with an American ship in earth % bill require' new plaht.sites in Texas, they must ^superintendents to file a monthly report orbit -Thursday pnmdsed /'we(finance the purchaseof land and the con-r** ^f suspensionswith theTexas Education -will do our best" to make the ,struetion of buildings with funds borrow; J. leglslotlve^6ujr#uff b# v_" Agency. wluch^uW^act-asa watchdog .-mission a success .and work ed at the primeinterest rate " r 1 ' ' in this matter.1 s, m W , -, HbWeirer, citfes, by issuing industrial > .7 -if , V toward future cooperation.. J;revenue bonds, could raise the funds on 19Z® ^ ^-^>1 J -lv when proposed legislation could sus-^-x^ The bill recommends students :' Aleksey Leonov, Qie first man the compahy's behalf at an Interest rite Forty-four states/ iilcluding those sur-^ pend them for up to two years f ^'arrested for offensesOccu ring outsideof to walk in space, told ah overflow crowd of hundreds of ine city avouw purcnase the land and & MSemselvej^t a disadvantage wheh com^ Bill 307 curi^ntly before the iSonimlttee re4dmiMe 1 " cooperation.^ . -. 111 -T 1975 THE DAILY I­ A, -v "» "> I -f SSSSSI itSI ' 'TSM 0V fr« "• -.v * • u V * \s-Mt4 i« *£!'' /-&*$£& *Wi ,<, J "5 ' • ') V s\ ^ » -a v , t 1 "V GUEST J »' Page 4 Friday, February 28, 1975­ Union t> *5 iv;­Permanent-University Fund was devoted to the Texas ratings due .td the petty politics and the "damn the Union for Union West renovation now in progress. academics — build, build, build" attitude '. of the Monies from the building use fee bonds are currently regents, we students are asked to pay for somethingearmarked or under consideration for other important that will not improve ;the diminishing quality pf our By BARABARA WALKER buildings such as the Fine Arts' Complex, an addition By LESTER VAN PELT III degree one bit. If fees are to be raised, let them be (Editor's note: Walker is a junior in the College of to the law school, etc. Let's face it. The only way to (Editor's note: Van Pelt is a senior accounting raised to improve the quality of education throughHumanities.) build Union East is for us to pay for it! major.) more and better paid professors and improved 3Here I am — an average student/ generally (3) Why haven't I heard about Union -East until curriculum, and not for a duplication'of dn already uninformed, attending classes, spending little time now? If we had been reading The Texan, leaflets and existing facility. finding out about issues on the campus. Recently I announcements and noticing posters, we should have. The proposed Union East is an example of became suddenly aware of something called "Union Open inter-action session have beenheld, surveyshave insensitive and irresponsible government at its worst. East." I've been bombarded with questions; retorts been taken and news stories have appeared regarding An unelected Union Board has supposedly determined and editorials. I got curious, posed somequestions and the project. Because the issue has been the students' needs and informed us the proposed UE Third, students are being asked to finance another ., got some answers. One of iny ppt peeves is students noncontroversial (until now) very little attention was would benefit us all. It is my hope that I will never see money loser. The present Union has lost money for the >' who vote on something without.making an intelligent, paid to "another battle with the admimstration." the day when an unelected body will tell me whait "is last four years, and'the"Texas Tavernis'operating at a V informed decision. Within theseverespace limitations Besides, a world exists outside this campus. • -for my own good." Fortunately, thanks to the efforts deficit. Sincea publicentity isnot out to makel profit, available to me, let me share real information (4) Will Union East be built whether or notstudents of the Committee Against Union East, the student' there is always a great probability these instititibhs regarding Union East. indicate supportand the Legislatureincreases the fee? body will have the opportunity to express their views will lose money due to inefficiency and poor: 1) How much and when will students haveto payfor Probably not. The decision will be based ona reviewof on the issue in the upcoming general election on management. In other words, the student will pick up Union East? If sufficient support is evident, the all available input and information. The number who Wednesday. The purpose of this editorial is to question the tab for the deficit of the UE. Legislature agrees toincrease the ceiling oh the Union vote in the referendum (only 2,000of 41,000.voted in the the merits of the proposed Union East and to urge its fee to $18 per semester during thissession, final plans Texan editor's race!) and the results of an'opinion defeat on Wednesday. are completed, and the contract let by Fall, the sampling conducted by an independent firm will be building can open around September, 1977,: Students considered. It will be difficult to convince the Fourth, proponents for the UE argue .for its will begin paying , the increased fee only when the Legislature if the referendum isoverwhelmingly "no" construction because the students on the east side of First, proponents of the UE have stated we should,building is actually open and ready for use. Hie and the poll isnegative. Then, theonly.way would bea build it now because possible future skyrocketing; campus are too far from the present Union to utilize v building is now estimated at $6.5 million. Maybe WIN private donation. (Then, again, that might backfire — . its facilities. This argument is facetious andt'illogical building costs would prevent its later construction:• will and the cost will be lower. : as did the statue of Bevo! )' ; • i j: at best. Students presently pay for 'a shuttle bus? The building indeed should not be built now for 2) Why must Union East be funded totally from A reminder: the Union Board is made up of nine system whose purpose is to transport students irom­ precisely the same reason. We are presently in a student fees? There are three basic sources of voting members, six students and three faculty. No one point! to another if distance makes :W3liiciiig^ period of uncertain economic times, and to claim that construction funds for UT: fees charged to support other board on campus has such a large student prohibitive, and I submit that the routes takeitiiis^ the UE will only cost $7 million is absurd; The auxiliaries (nonacademic units) such as the Union, majority. With the information I've gathered,it seems purpose into account. If one is to accept the argum.enij|-. : possibility of cost overruns is great, and students The Texan and intercollegiate athletics; bond clear that the student majority on this year?s board ' that the UE will be for east'side students, then when;*'! would end up paying even more than the proposed proceeds from building use fees; and Permanent has acted in response to the best interests and the Union fee increase of $10.1 know of few governmentalUniversity Fund monies. Auxiliary enterprises levy wishes of the student body. Personalities comeand go. entities attempting capital improvements under distinct fees, generate income and must be self-Again, it is irresponsible for people, especially we forget those students who are also too fat:from'-: present conditions. If the UE must be built, it should sustaining. Union fees are set by legislative statute.; students to vote-on something they know nothing the present Union?" be done in the future when there are more stable building use fees are not/ Althdugh Rep. Sarah about. As a,run-of-the-mill student, I have sought-out economic conditions on which to gauge costs m'ore • Weddington recently introduced a bill tb freeze information and have tried to share it. If you don'tfeel accurately. • r .' ' ­ ^ 'current building use fees, institutionsmay now charge you know enough, seek more information..Then, not In conclusion, the proposed Union. East is not' .las they want. Permanent University Fund inoney is before, should you vote. Thanks for your attention — feasible at this time for the aforementioned generated from state lands, etc., for education. Only now we can lapse back into apathy. Second, students are being asked to finance a reasons,and I urge you, myfellow students, toturnout ^20 percent of the book value of these holdings are (Author's Note: I feel I have researched this well building that is for mere recreational, nonacademic in large numbers on Wednesday to exercise your.right';"»"available for construction. This is terribly and have been able to include only one-sixth of my purposes. The present Union was financed by alumni and responsibility to vote to defeat this albatross of oversimplified but can be explained in relation to original material due to editorial stipulations. If you donations. Where are the alumni now? At a time when increased student fees which entails little -Union East by noting that $3.5 million of the want this information, please call me at 447-8910.) the University has fallen drastically in academic corresponding increase in services and benefits; * , V • To the editor: eluding myself, would not wanttosee the us how the local cast presented the'play,Our beloved masters are-again in the same kind -of write-up in the Ol? paper; but.to merely lambast the-original. This process of transforming a Southeast Does:.The Daily Texan staff really does not help the readet decide^lf he Asian country into a guinea experiment wan^^^fallt^abodt .''hapless" athletic wants to.see the production. -,(Z • • in sword-edge diplomacy. I am, of season^ Jthink not considering th$ past But I guess this can be expected from course, referring to the inspired pleas of: football 'and present basketball season. who someone arbitrarily-denounces the Kissinger-Ford-RockeFeller complex However,TXC studentsand gradswill be Tennessee Williams without even for more military appropriations to'help proud to inform TheTexan that TLCwon reading his play. prop up a certain Cambodian domino. the national-football championship this ' Gall Burris Sound familiar? year and is quite competitive in the Big -. .. Jonraalism Th'e capital of Cambodia, Phnpm State Conference, in basketball. Health centerH Penh, is being besieged by Communist Yes, TLC .is •-'tiny."-and does not have v rebels who have already secured most of anything to compaire with', the To the editor: the country. Clearly,"continijed "AstroTurfed world of the -Texas In light of the recent controversy sur­American infux of military hardware Longhorns," but perhaps this is because rounding the UT Student Health Center, will only encourage more needless of the fact that TLC emphasizes quality the newly formed Student.Services Com­death. If Congress-approves the re­education^ and up-to-date facilities, as mittee has undertaken a study of the quested appropriations for Cambodia well as its athletic program.-The prof-health center and its many services. If ($220 million), then we canlook forward, student ratio averages 1 to 30, and most any students or faculty members.have meMftCENT in our righteousness, to a prolongation of profs have their PhDs.-There' are no views to express in regard to the health misery and mess. graduate students teaching at TLC, and center, whether they concern: past Phnom Penh is not an ideological prov­the' average class numbers about 35'. problems or futurechanges, please write ing ground,for Kissinger imperialism, it Instead of attempting to belittle TLC's a letter.expressing your viewsto tlieStu­is not a ciiimbling'bastionof "do or die" athletic endeavors, UT might learn dent Services Committee, in care of the • democracy, and .it is not — to quote something from TLC about sensible Student Government office;, on the UT Kissinger — ''a potential foreign policy allocation of financial resources Austin campus. Ariyone wishing tospeak asset? failure. -Rather,it isa gravewhere peo­ , W.L. Knobles directly with.the committee' members The wnyth of excellence ple are dying and will continue to dieun­; TLC gtad 1972 • may do so at any of the committee til the fighting stops. But .the fight will v ' UT Law meetings which are held at 6:30 p m., fi-T By DAVID WHITTEN 'Center is all about. To build a superior tion. The English department, for exa'm-not stop as long as America continues to every Sunday in room 300 at,-th6 State • ^ Thought and knowledge are nature* -.reputation, there-must be superior ' pie. requires TAs not only to (each two fuel the hell. I am afraid that, again, the Broadway critic Capitol. ! ^ which apparatus and pretension rreseardi facilities Which will lure '.'.top courses,,but 'they must also dot research To the editor: We, as members of the Student Ser­ American people are going to buy the Ks.tevail nothing.... Forget tfiis, arid our narA''"faculty to come to UT. And the toward their degrees. Thecombined load same; blood-worn excuses and. ugly ,, • Since when does Vicky Bowles get off vices Committee, feel that it is the duty: .••••.^American • colleges will receded in HH& is certainly'attempting to become often approaches intolerability. facades that perpetuated the, massacre to thinking she Js a Broadway. critic? I and obligation of the studentsand faculty1, public importance, whilst they such a facility, which in itself is a UntenuVed faculty members must live of Vietnam and that.could destroy what have yet:to read a review of hers telling to let their: views be known, :to;insure' v. Jgrow^richer every year. valuajjle addition to UT. under the threat that unless they havean the reader'about the local production: that, the UT health center of the future little isleft of Cambodia — oh well, what ££# j , Ralph Waldo Emerson ;-.:But how can the funds used for pro­"acceptable" number of articles the dollar needs is another war. ; she instead confines herself to criticizing will be more in tune with student'and­ |;ffc-Ih;Case.jfou didn't hear about it, there jects such as the HRC be justified in published, then their jobs will be' ter­ .Charles .Wood the original: Broadway script. < faculty needs. ' . ( . demonstration at the Harry Rail­ .light af the way the University treats its minated. Too-often, those woiicing to In' her latest-review of. VTeahouse of. . .. : College of Hiunanities : Kent Brunette ,som Center last week to. protest the undergraduate students, and . more save their tenure and thus their careers the August Moon", she chose not to tell -Chairman, Student Services Conunlttee{priorities pf this University* .This' , 'specifically the lower division-students? must, out of "necessity, neglect their' Mortally wrong protest, however In-' To the editor: /..The . undergraduate programs, have .. primary responsibility at the University - iconsequentia1i•, ••wa£» r received far too little attention, and this — teaching. And those untenured faculty If Mike Glover tobk his infant mortali­* THE DAILY TEXAN jaimed at the myth oiplpN ^ area of the curriculum is.viewed by" ..members who devote their time to this ty statistic froni the U.N; sourcebook he • Hiwipifr atTtf Unhinttf r«ui at Aw$fin ; avfial!an/>a^.' many of those in power as beingless im-obligation find themselves out or work is, in point of fact, wrong. We are not ....... ." Buck Harvey EDITOR q^wrtant than the graduate programs. because they were -forced to neglect 11th in infant mortality. As the book ex- MANAGING EDITOR . Lynne Brock iw'4 'The result of this misplaced emphasis their scholarly requirements ' ; plicitly warns,.the statistics are com­ ; assistant ^managing editors ........... jHarry -'can be seen in many introductory and So what happeris^is that the teaching: piled on differeiif bases, and are thus not Eddie Fisher Center. ^ lower division courses which herd hun-effectiveness of both the TAsand the un­-to be compared. I believe that Sweden, lr t ^ Claude Simjpfsdn : i All ot us' nayeTS s* dreds of bureaucratically-dazed tenured faculty is decreased as is the • for instance, drily begins to count deaths NEWS EDlTOIt —....Kathy Kelly;heard l^Maistre and, ;freshmen and sophomores like cattle quality of their research: Thus the several days after birth, while U.S. SPORTS EDITOR ...... —. Richard justice ;Erwin saythat thegoaf. ^ intapens. and feed them the pap of in­students arecheated out of the education statistics begin.at birth. . to be*Ian institutioil bf thefiret'class; ferior courses. . . : -they deserve, -the TAs.and untenured As for Dr: Palter: his letter sounded, AMUSEMENTS EDITOR :.vi,.......... Vicky.Bowies. {And in IhelateSixfliMl'.TexaswaSiKettihg V; In addition, TAs anil untenured faculty faculty must sacrifice on either their appropriately,^like the public relations FEAf URES EDITOR -L v......: Janice Tomiiii '.quite a • lot of national :reco^iition as'. a :p;.^members are left in an abhorrent situa-research or their students, and the brief of a government bureaucrat. Doc­CAPITOL BUREAU CHIEF .. ..;.... David Hendricks 'good university, probabIy^b^use ,of ^ j University's quest for quality education tors indeied have the right to profit from some of the graduate prograq?s^pdi^ej||ij is negated illhess, just as patients profit from the i * ^4 • individual• efforts.of persons:Jlke?Hany.' ^. Building aquality university involvesa : doctor's-skills. If they wish to. charge Issue EMitor , , <. . Dick Jefferson '.Ransom ,s-v thoroughness ;which delves Into-every • •••• less for charity patients, finp'. many General Reporters , • Charles J; Lohrmann, Mary Walsh,jBill Scott , J-On a nationalleVel, ^ceh^feis^Ugi 'tf area'of academic endeavor To strivefor-' .'good men like Bud .t^yden.do just that. -News Assistants j :., Tim Ater, Ford Fessenden. Phil Ringman;Be.lyped triple space. I'" ed almost exclusively bymere reputai •-^ qualify in research and graduate-But you have noVight-.to point a gun-at 3 Wade Wilcox |. ,.,,,;tion.vNo. doubt few^were'surpjtised.:^t^»^i,-.vi«.-hW,.: f(5..-. tsut-. programs is certainly vital. But to '-the docttir'shead and fdrce^himib work; Editorial Assistant , , 4 A„ SPA'" ' .pavid-^hltten | ?Texas wa^not rated in the nation'^most . neglect-undergraduate programs is like That's .slaVery. " Assistant Amusements: Editor->,v.Bradfeuchifiolz;^%^ngpt: Con,oin outstanding insUtufions, esp^aiUy onlY 60 choratferi per building a house by starting on the roof ; If Dr. posses^ sitch gushing Assistant.Sports Editor j , u flight of the Schizophrenic}meanderings' Ifn*. and .working down to the foundation. T6 companion for the slate of healjjrof the: Make-up Editor c,.. t Nic^A.'Sdecia ,vJof the UT Systen\f But"this"'.-fating ifJ, % believe that academic excellence can be ' poorv'I;suggest>heigo>'to medical school, i Wire Editor V i ..ti D&vidQose achieved through this method is'non­then take his skills to the ghetto. Copy Editors •&'1 Tony Paschall, Susan Anderson, Nikky Bremner, t phoneo sense t s " < --_ ry, >,•,; Robbie Marshali ' ;v.^or^cellinod1qipiie3> v, t ^ -.The Daily!Texari article oi?2-'2M5 con- vfnuAie»Uon-8«ildln| A4198l:Iik|alH«t9oneera)itf delivery •' thosfr of the ynlver*it^^(hJnl«tjitI«C,or ** * * houU be^ladt OiTSl* Uuildjuf; alma miter^thepresti^ttiisilstOf^top . coining the!tJT;TLCbaseball gameti/be ifteSCTW KJV * station has-Keen to put heav? /of <100 lini*. ,i universitie?ABecaUse until The Univer-—*— > TheDillyT«on.i ilUihtolTievnjMpsrJtJeibphasi& graduate programs: sityjrejlifines its; prioritles fo: the peeds/ kt Te*»»'st Aiiitlit (s pubUMied Wverti«lni;?r»ir^>rtullv« .<# Tbs Dally Oraww^D^UnlwraHy Station, Auttln, Tki. m " .7,or omuod. Jwwj", '•«» wiomi KQucauonAl Advtrtllinl! of all the elements'of the Unjyersity 3t7lt The DallyJctah u'liobluiied ^oidajt, N««r •VStfW.Yff10017; SW \M\6iVM An. Nm y:ixki.N,yt,10017^ ~ ' community, fropi fjeshmen to ; Lutheran CoJlegf_di( aqdWeJioL. ^edo^j^Tlmrtday, aM N(Uy, -e/ceptilurlnK tolldaji^rfi {hlit 0»lly-ti)|«ii mlMilSiiii&nit AuodlM Prra. -vm mm p#rbd»r p«u»rUnitedPreA isyiui prtiniinehce and acqlaim " Aj^ This Is w&at tHe Hany' ftaffiom'''" guest viewpoint • Vi't33«-'--^i-"'<-­ his true colors By ERWIN McGEE 3) .To get on tbe baHot. a Given these three this hill. AtJfae hporewp bet aader tbese rdes. so Sa-. (Editor's note: McGee is candidate must select a com­provisions, the o«j1t senatorial on tfae hell Bflht Cair. Cinn TVv can \^e.faol they president of the UT Young mittee of 10. which Jn turn, districts that Bentsen won't nrrsejj Patman. Jaoe ttWK har? two chores and Democrats.) selects the delegate slate fcr win. Wallacewill. Is it not in­and at least a don others t be defiesadessStudents, all. A new Dick that candidate in each and teresting that the represen­spoke agasst !&*• Sdmfter they an? txgwigs The charmNichols has emerged in the every senatorial district. It is tatives of the State of Texas a satele Sill Tbere as bm tbe oaaivatMo 5ys3«n is :Austin political arena. Ronnie evident that the delegatesthat have blatantly chosen to cir­ speaker sa favor of tfae fad> as ita! si a3a*r> niaxnoozn par­ 'Earle is this manifestation. will be chosen will cumvent the political c^nftisa&es to tfee be big it read at the tune Deair iii The aforementioned names in the districts. What preferences of the state's of this comnEsacatMia. Eartf rwfi< persseiares ll pertgentleman not only voted big political name is going to electorate. Mr. Earle its an still decided so s$> csfoo against the sa tbe hands progressive cc ibe be a delgate for anyone but ironic definition of his role. and n*e ta> tvcsorore I*«C©.V ir >2K*n *33$pCHt2Dg[ political leanings of the entire Bentsen or Wallace it-pwuliiig Repeatedly daring the Mr Earfie > "(Seifsse ~wu«iarv ccarept' is astate but co-sponsored the on the area. The second con­ two weeks, literally hundreds Usat he stroc^Sv zhe de-Jerse. esienaUv ifamendment which obliterated notation of this provision is of students and liberal com­"primary roanep! is j fromthe changes Rep. Sarah Wed-that a candidate must have a munity leaders in Atcstm have peopAe prvtoH cr Ccejzw aud is coo­dington proposed in the fully distributed statewide called and expressed their op­tfae primary ifejc ith* sr&ie-fier bdl m 'Save some of whatever you're throwing around in there — Schieffer presidential organization before he files. position to Earie's support of in the preca&rt <\xrc^ess>t?e> If we ever learn to use it for fuel, our troubles are over!' primary. Apparently Mr. Earle is trying to get totally acclimated with his newhome gj^st viewpoint guest viewpoint environment in Northwest Austin — the bastion of trogladytic political • thought. The time for carving out single-member districts by no the Travis County delegation Wanting thlf unearned The yno-knock' rule By KEITH FRASER have rightJto what they charged the oil companies is just around the corner. Tiie By MIKE STEENBERGEN knocking an their door is an "Ihor-tMfaic ta: craier a re^nlauon (Editor's note; Fraser is a produce. I might argue that of of invasion of their privacr, hundreds thousands (Editor's note: Stecnheigea fact that the students backed »wM give sssitedi is -Jis5i3f»ed is h prosection of member of -the Liberatarian this means the: money in dollars for drilling" "rights." is a freshman government STUDENT CAMPAIGNING tanity to tbe caoSidaies Party and is an engineering Cravey's pocket is fair game Cravey also attacks the Earle when he ran for the major.) kiv«-. RiEEii cave been Legislature islittle concernto is prohibited under tfae mdrvxfcalh Ev® t*v caze-wiUted but are not tbe student.). : ;; ' for anyone 'who needs it, but profit motive under , An 'English teacher once him now. The Bentsen rale that prevents commer­paign Mr regis* to pr-vacy Tbe FIRST • the terrible thing is he would capitalism. If personal gain is Two items in Thursday's cial solicitation. I see no way a? atterastes w AmesKSmesd reghT of can­ •told me that theoil;companies probably agree. immoral and selling for 4 loss backers in Northwest Austin Texan aroused my interest mentions a to consider these activitiesso own the men that work for are clearly his constituent in­ door-UHfcor ca&^eiEs^ ire £)C2ie far oc; *3> violated. The oil companies are let-is moral then suicide would be One item was a Firing Line similar that they are jointly terest. not x>ie RIGHT them. These Offshore drilling , ting themselves get hanged by the saintliest act..His desire letter that defended the prohibited. Student election adequate to ANOTHER has The Schieffer bill which ntOHne roelacS be«s violated. that is tbe "slaves" thisit-•the :;oil com-. ; the Craveys ofv the..world to see men practice self- prohibition on political cam­: are an integral part of an panies own makemore money ; Earl co-sponsored does IMS PROHIBITION oo r^aof rejBesaOanon. line without a trial. immolation stems from his paigning in the dormitories. education here at the Univer­ donn > bas Isallr than most teachers at this un-. ' everything short of stating checked tbe tu»os o: I msld every concern­ under the "freeze in the dark" didates for offices is-tat— must be defended against a "ownership" of the land that energy plan, but at least we'll and 93 percent of the that right without prohibiting privacy is das'* No rat&ooal ed ante! to *ntt a tetter of group of intellectuals who holds badly needed oil have conquered the profit delegates. candidates from directly con­away at this early stage in person can claim ihai process 3£3sg tfae arresa of a take it for granted that men reserves on and offshore, and motive. And when this govern­2) Not all candidates will be tacting the constituents. No citizenship, it will help bleed antoae s priracv was ta-candidate to Dr Den PanL the apathy and nonvoting that vaded. ye* t&as ment tells you that they are placed on the ballot. Only the . candidate has the right to vas daBnao of tbe Camaty is so notorious in the United candidates who pay the $1,000 force his way into anyone's stopped and wmmd by tbe Hcnsesg Camnntlee LOOK OUT FOR LOOKOUT FOETUS FEHCE! producing this dollar-a-gallon States. entrance fee. It is not that the but he does have the TWE TREE! LOOK OUT FOR THE -TRUCK! gasoline because they love room, Only a little 7 thousand bucks is too much, right to knock on someone's more you, you can be sure that the percent of the students voted but that candidates have to door and ask to speak to them. profit motive has been replac­ in the Texan editor's »WHi» take positiveaction inorder to A person's right to privacy is EARN CASH WEEKLY ed by the power motive. that significant get on the ballot. A candidate not to be construed to mean 1 feel a number of the other 93 per­ Cravey concludes hoping would be an idiot to file that speaking to someone or Blood Plasma Donors the students iuiM we'll learn the difference against Lloyd Bentsen in his cent of NOTICES the they felt they between freedom and greed. home state with winner take from vote if Needed 2 -2tf That's easy. Freedom is being all provisions. He would be General Libraries or any responsibly jndge the can­left alone to produce what you embarrassingly trounced. of the handm are of­Men & Women didates. LOOK OUT FOR THE PRICK LOOK OUT FOR mR POOH, can and sell it for what people These are ominous provisions ficial University com­ EARN $14 WEEKLY U1AU-! LOOK OUT FOR THECAR.' INNOCENT SOU WHO will give, and greed iswanting and will further guarantee munications requiring CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATIONWANT? TO 6R0fc) UP AND, the unearned. •. that Bentsen has no trouble. immediate attention. HAVE A LIFE 0F Hl4 OWN.',' Austin Blood Components, Inc. OPEX; MOX. « THURS. $ AM to 7 PM ' TUBS. & FRI. $ Ail to 3 PM CLOSED WED.& SAT. •-* 409 W. 6th 477-3735 DOONESBURV Communications, Place 1 Endorsed by UHATJA OH,mo. THINK? W CINDY POWELL (oO/lO Working to improve the quality of education Pd. for by Friend* ofBecky Baxhin 4 1HATSIUFF MB * . sw>mirmer..m­ twite ;jc /WON XMEM..XMEM^K mpRsr Flexible sandal etrrm wedge with i&wumirt cushioned inner I sole, thin rub­ber base. • White Leather feather Harness Crossword Puzzler Answer toYfsierdaya^uzzie ACROSS Artificial Leather Unil'M SHQM language nt Sdotllsh Sagged-niiiHiTl '.Ui&l landowner' Hostelry is^snroci HE 3iitt 6 Fond desires Hebrew ' -rar:iii7, r.unima 11 Fright measure 12 Egg dish Through Spsnlsh artl-.. . 14 Oetesl cle 3y MKfc) v-jy IS-Exterlor Continued ^rzirs? IB Worm story HwcaiwiHaro 19 Putzle : 17 Sun god Atthatplace Large 20 Metal ystH Piamwr-itf cisterns' fastener Employs KCI3QH 21 Hoteot —­ scale •anger w 2iC cir=i!-j uTisiVJ w,v.My Tell ' v 22 Repulse -• grass 39 Drtnk haaVlly Rented ( •> 23 Bird a bill Lessens 41 Music as Vegetable i 24 Man a SonotNoah C; written v nickname 3 Disgraced -l .) 42 Uppermost ' 2b War god Piles 3 Domesticates part ' Simians 26 Cures > Heavenly--.v44 Symbol (Or ; Seal s lln)b ­ • 27 Enthusiastic -. bodies tellurium Expanses of a 28 ToOch . Stalk 46 Behold! 29 Partol , jacket 31 Narrow, Hat " board 32 8alnt (abbr 1 v 34 In bad 35 Vessels 36 Exclamation 37 Existed 38 Walks , 39 Scottish cap : 40 Symbol tor ', Spring Flare-Out! niton w n"4) F|xIndelibly Polyester jersey swings into ,i 42 Haav/ 11 j, voiuW>.'voiunur • ' spring with softfluid movement in 1 , 43 Hunting dog '| this navy creation. Striped hoood ' , t 46 Ruhs ^y I a«Ms an extra touch of drama for those • very. special entrances. Machine Washable. Sizes 5 to 13. 48 tassped 4 JOjOO |,V DOWN i ^jiRtotrt, i, YUNG'S QN.tHE4DUG mum iiiii Ls-ai&£et­ :'-V» " a iifa«nlti v> -X */<-,' t 7 P-TA1" '> 9**/-'1 Red Raiders Tied With Aggies /or SWC Lead By RICHARD JUSTICE. in College Station;(is tied for We have been fighting for • When the two teams played team in the days; preceding f Texan Staff Writer first place. Texas, two games something else — something in Austin, Texas led 26-20-at the A&M game;including call-; Success in their Southwest out of first with three to pjay. intangible: And our. guys have half-time but eventually lost; ing the Aggies one of the best' Conference basketball is playing for little more than proven this means a lot to 59-57 when Tech forward teams ever in the SWC. seasons arrived late and unex­pride. them." hit "I didn't have any idea-how •• pectedly for both Texas and AND THE TWO teams will William Johnson a TEXAS' SIX victories have turnaround jumper with four the A&M game would go Texas Tech. It came later put all their pride, un­come against Rice. SMU, seconds remaining. In thelast beforehand." Myers said. "'I after Tech lost two of its first selfishness, unexpected TCU and Baylor, not exactly three games, the three games and Texas lost its success arid inconsistency on your powerhouse teams. Tex­Tech-Texas think most significant Johnson andr Red Raider Uung was that it was one of first five display for regional television as Tech Coach Gerald Myers center Rick. Bullock have those games where It came unexpectedly cameras at 2 p.m.Saturday in doesn't really have to worry % scored 46.40 and 33 points, everything went right. because Texas Tech was ex­Lubbock Municipal Coliseum. about the opponent but more THE TEXAS,comeback,has Rebounds into pected to have little trouble "This game has to mean a about the possibility of the bounced our centered around guard Dan hands, a free throw would The Texas-Texas Tech lot to Tech," Texas Coach Red Raiders suffering a let­Krueger. guard Tommy bounce back to. us and the Leon Black astutely observed. down from the A&M game. basketball game will be Delatour and in the last two calls went our way. You don't "They did what they had to do "I don't think we'll have a telecast on KTBC channel7 games, forward Tyrone John­expect games like"that." ­ and broadcast on KLBJ at A&M, and know they have a letdown, but it's possible after son. But the 1975 seasoivhas had AM 590 at 2 p.m. Saturday. chance to win it.all. . the kind of victory we had," But theTexas offense isstill unexpected surprises for both1"Our teqm has gradually Myers said."I knpw we'renot far below the standardsset by and steadily improved. None teams. And a little late at through most of its SWC going to be looking ahead. We last year's SWCchampionship of the games we have won have a lot of respect for Tex­that schedule Texas was expected team with £any Robinson to have little success. have been when we were in a as; We were very:fortunate to and Harry Larrabee: SWT Gymhosts fight for . the championship. beat them in Austin." But both teams have achiev­"We're notagoodoffensive ed respectability although team," Black said."If we can Defeat Texas each is playing The Starting Lineups ^J still for hold Tech down, and.I think The Southwest Tex3S State *» « ^ ik ^different goals. Texas Tech, Ni Oat* H>. On ill. that's in the 60s somewhere, women's gymnastics team Oan (Crueger....... G Jr. 5-I1 SteveDuwj ........ iUifm:" after winning seven of its last TommyOelatouK.-;.\'\, G Jr. -6-3 PhiJBailey Soph. 6-2 then we can win. in the early defeated the Texas women Sr. 6-3 [eight games including a 73-63 Rich Parson Soph. 6-8 fflck Bullock....... Jr. 6-9 games we lost, the Tech game Thursday in Bellmont Hall tupset of Texas A&M Tuesday Tyrone Johnson r . F sr 6>7 WHtlam Johnjon .V.­Sr. 6-6 included, we.lacked a little 11 74.6-67.15. Texas' Jan EdJohnson Soph, fr-5 Grady Newton ..... poise, something we've had Je'umeister finished third in "'jSS recently. This is going to all-around competition. ... make a difference sometime, The nextcompetition for the RENT possibly, next season.'.' Texas women will be at 3:30 , MYERS PLAYED a little p.m. Saturday-in Bellmont SAILBOATS, CANOES, BICYCLES . reverse physchology with his against Louisiana State. Opening March 1st (Pray for sunshine) EX HEADMASTERS .. -T«xon Sfoff rhafo by ZckH Ryol UNISEX HAIRSTYLING ARMADILLO RECREATIONAL RENTALS TCU's Bill Bozeat (51) and Rich Parson fight for ball. SUPERCUTS & BLO-DRYS , Sailboats: Canoes: $10.00 & UP UT Soccer in Tournament 10-speeds-$12/day Sunflower-$12/day $10/day By ALLAN NIGHT eludes Rice and a team from ''Everybody was real upsietT > $8/V4 day $7/i4 day REDKIN RETAIL CENTER Texan Staff Writer; China. with the Rice loss, so we're (includes cartap C-1 c" T*"fo^r-(includes cartop When the Texas soccer The main purpose of the really looking forward to the Single Speed—$2/hr. carrier; carrier) H-V OPEN EVENINGS team travels to Uie University tournament is to generate in­rematch," Erler said. -­1102 KOENIG LANE of Houston's Jeppeson terest in soccer and to give Should the Lohghorns beat 1400 BartonSprings Rd.: 452-9078 Stadium .Saturday for a six-the players an opportunity to Rice, they will play the 441"2534 team invitational tournament, play soccer in the spring; said winner of the UH-China game; revenge could be an impor­Texas Soccer Coach Alfred UH alsp defeated Texas in the tance factor in determining Erler. TCSL championships.the Longhorns' play. ' Erler feels the team from While most of the players UH, Rice and Iran/the only Iran should he established as view the as tournament athree teams which defeated the favorite. The Iranians chance to get even with UH,the Longhorns last fall,.will handed Texas a 2-0 setback in Rice and the Iranians, Erler head the field which also'in-an exhibition game earlier thinks of the tournament in a •; this year. Vote • different way. The first team Texas-will "We're going to Houston 'to try to cross off its list will be give the fans some entertain­ WALENTA the Rice Owls. Rice defeated ment, give the team an oppor­ "a year-found senator" ' :v Texas .3-2 in the Texas tunity to play agaiii and to BUS. Pt. 3 Collegiate Soccer League con­ have, a lot of.fun.'If we.lose, wp# o o pd. for by Ron.Walenta solation game last fall: •­ we won't cortie hbhie and cry :&J£v^v •'} ^ o •n GREAT Men's arid ladies' VASQUE Wing t 9090 XEROX COPIES Speed Laces^ • Vibram® Lug Sole End of Month Special RED WINO . Xerox copies for 3a «HOt until the end of this month. -• •TOM 8 a.m.-7 p.m. Monday-Thursday; 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday 5504 Burnir 454-9290 The Texas Union Copy Center u Mon-Sat9-6 Thurt 9-8i30 i 5'~i (next door to the Texas Tavern) MP •-Siy&i ip 'i* l*i± . -MiS FOCUS ON APERTURE , ••W'c'J-,,: ' y'/'r "V<£ ' Wl;t. rl^1. f9J*lderneatythat plentigilly sprinkled, lightly toasted triple ml ' ^ecHer ^ur1, y°u'll disc"pve£a wonderland of goodies. fjfrvyo slicc _ fjjjTwo (count 'em) two 100% beef patties! Oh boy! A slice of ^ ^pbeese! Yum! Lettuce, pickles and chopped onion. Crisp! if x Wl"s a snappy scoop of McDonald's*super special Big Mac. McDonald's ^sauce. 1 „ ? , ^ tc«" £Big Mac and find out what's in iffor you. But don't open 'f ^ "h t ^ <* -^hebun andlook, open your ever-lovin' mouth and tasteit ^ •lik&i&i mmmm P and % • "*•"''"'Y*':c':'^;^ft **c~;'^'^'' ' C"-> •^r''-->^7i"-'^'-"-^'-^T ^"J1-^ • v. I :r-J\ •••' ". .-.,• Texas Horns To Meet SK Strong Odessa -, ', KEUJSV ANDEKSON®!?; <. , _».» .:none of thesemarks;batseveral Laagjknus; . *. -.v,;v &%* ^texan Staff Writer ,^Sv' '.^X,' performances. AsL Gacb BB" ' Unlike its triangular meet against North Texas State and The competitian will SMU last'weekend, the.Texas track team win have more than apJjroachedTexas in wrr-an fa-am nnky enough. competition at ft a.m. Saturday in Laredo when it naturally developed. competes In the-43rd annual Border Olympics. "Our kids don't have trariMe V far Tteos." Most of the Competition; will come from Baylor, which-has Baylor Coach Clyde HarL become a,Southwest Conference track power to be reckoned "When the green and gold stepson the back..11 with.-And Texas Coach Cleburne Price knows it ­give the team a pep taBL.Ttay're aH fired F . '-Baylor,should-be considered the favorite along With us in rdlftetolhUit'sakattk;tnabyaUoKirsahnfl( this meet," Pnc^said; "They ran neck-and-neck withus atthe" riyatoy/'eijifaiDed Hart"VcdalkpBhc%av^d|far SWC Indoors JanJ 31. (which Texas harely won, ontscoring the 4SWC> IwJuur meet (BhucacaatniversEdi Baylor 57-55). " • , . of a Baylor rmmer cost the Beats the drL)".But there^ls a big difference running outdoors." i • One Texas athlete whowill lavean tmhie" For the Loiighorns, the big difference will be the absence of Baylor is Gratyn Wyatt The frZ, "Tinill, tar four distance: runners — Tim Patton, Reed Fischer; Mark score to settle with the Bean. Klonower-and Paul Subrt — who finished high in the SWC He was a haHhark an the Texas faaOal Indoors^ but will miss the blympics. theSouthwert'sfirst major upset last November by Baylor, 31-St Am!few outdoor meet, because of assorted ailments "• that day with vengeance. He sayshe reaOywaais to "stick IT" "WE'RE DOWN toskin 'n bones in thedistance events," Asst. to the Bears: Coach ^^^;6la<^wb6d drawled. "We' will-have only four of But for Wyait'and therest of the Texastrack teoB^ stkka^it th£ 38 points we scored in the distances at the SWC Indoors— to the Bears could .be fifficsifi ft win 5e i Jesse Maldonado." - ? v ' However, the Longhorns should offset that loss witlrstroag performances in the javelin and diknis, events which: are scheduled at outdoor meets but not indoor ones. Texas* Dana LeDuc and Jim McGoIdrick are the class of the conference's discus throwers, -while Marty: Petennann is a highly; rated javelin specialist, While eight of the nine SWC teams — with the exception of Arkansas — and Lamar University will compete in the SAN ANTCBOO — University division, it.is basically a two-team race betweoi the John Alexander apset No. 1 Be^rsand Longhorns. -'^-O Xv seed Marty Riessen, U, M Baylor's,strongest 6v6nits appear to be ttte inile relay. Sabacday. Thursday to advance to jump ajad high jump. M(9MRal&ifa>,fcNiL semifinals of the JOUa Ste 5seed.ML ML' Antonio WCT Classic-. Bears rari a 3:11.5 on a cinder track, which is a "slower"trade No 3 seed ; "This was probably the best than the Tartan-surfaced one in Memdrial Stadium where unseeded Mike Estep *f matrti f ever played m nay Texas ran a3:23, in cold weather and gusting winds, last week. Dallas H^IadXitlseed life," Alexander said. "1 am ''Baylot's time was fantastic in the mile relay," Price said. Bob Lntz defend PtB Deal surprised f played so wed ''I think they're ahead of us at this point in that event; butwe're of Aastrafia. 7^5. fri developing fast.'' because I had a three set match last night It mast be Smith plays Lstz ia tke The Bears also have three 23-foot-plus long jumpers, two the Texas air." other quarterfinal aaUi seven-foot high jumpers, and a 13.9 high hurdler. Texas has Alexander, the No. 6 seed, Sa&irrfaT Texas Entries .Ateonder saiiwd One defeated Dick Stockton for the championship of the Fort match pools Mri*i ulir to 440-Yard Relay: John Lee/ Raymond MUe Relay: Gienn Gosv Craig Brooks. Worth WCT Red Gimp ebam* Bitty Jackson, John Lee drfeat Edcfie Dtts.JtSt,B- Clayborn, OverfooSpence, Marvin Nash Mile Run: John Craig, Mike Newman, Javelin: Marty Petermamv Jimmy piooship last Jesse Maldonado Mathews, Brooks Purnett 440-Yard Oash: Craig Brooks, Bitty Discus: Jim McGoldrldc Dana LeOuc Jackson, John Lee, Brian Lyeriy, Pole Vaults David Shepherd, Frank Oarrell Jarnagin, Robert Prtmeaux Estev Don Lee, Teddy Ilea ton 100-Yard Oash: Kerry Smith. Marvin Shot Pur: Oana LeOuc. Don Ausmos, Nash, Overton Spence Jim McGoldrick 120-Yard High Hurdles: Mike Williams. High Jump: Terry Davenpw^ MIroa CM EAT Jimmy Mathews. Robert Primeaux Long Jump: Terry Davenport Grafya 880-Yard Run: John Craig. Lamar Wyatt George Dennis. John Stack. Collie. Glenn Goss, JimmyStrong, Mark 3-Mile Run: Jesse Mahtaoatfoi Ted BUFFET Lewis Morefand 720-Yard Dash: Kerry Smith, Marvin Nash, Overton Spence G&M CATBNNG -DELWOOO CHUB 440-Yard Intermediate Hurdles: Mike • M 35 & 38% Williams • 'i I -•• USE' .. -; "FRENCH WINS" :r:,;^Bi{AN:^NT:'*ds\ ' I .ST. EMU0N 0t KMC I F8flB> CATRSH r-~———-»• $1J9 htM I I -| EVRY MEAL I"-"SUdl ABEU-1 2 ana areas DOSTOn 1 8|. JUSO (President '. I Jlt71 GanuS 4WGBBMH5 wemmumm I .1^';-'6SMAOS """ 5* CASE SAiE owtinx| *7% i^USIESE : $32.99 mi9U%| Intensive. ancjL *71 SPATIESE Jv,-5 group therapy• $2/.4f I .Available at _ 5BW» 5 MONDAYS C0RK1R IS FOR TRAVELING JOHNNIE LIGHT Atf klhda Wtravdting _ It dreaming'In the hammock." they are veiy, very comfortableand very, very tough.The v^inj6*rHWe-lealher ,and:soft and • • .' ^ a^&' MAnTflvknilm«nAi«id wortum'sTsizes. u THE CLOSET SS&MMSi By ALLAN NIGHT Tnn Staff Writer The Texas men s gym­nastics team will compete teams* Odessa Junior College ci a dual optional meet at 7 30 pjn Fndav m the LBJ High Scbotri gjumastics room This will be the second wrtinE of the two teams in less than a week Odessa out scored the Longhorns 204-140 last weekend in a four-team tournament in Odessa . Despite that ioss. Texas Coach Larry Allen thinks his team has steadily progressed during thepast week and feels the—Lxmgborns are looking forward to the rematch "We ve been scoring higher 3Bd higher at each tourna­ment we go to." Allen said Texas will need all the in­spiration it can find, since Odessa has been the national junior college champion the last four vears. "They probablv have the second best team in Texas, after Houston Baptist. Allen said. Texas will be led by all-round performers Pat liiyson and Rick Church They will compete in floor exercises, pommel horse, rings, vaulting, parallel bars and the high bar Pat is our top all-rounder, but he is coming off an ankle injury and should be at three-quarter strength. Rick has shown constant improvement and should do real well." Allen said Mark Sherman will be entered in vaulting, floor ex­ercises and parallel bars. Rus­ty Church and Kim Conein the rings and Geoff SToner in floor exercises. John Craig wins the mHe run. WE ARE NEW AND SMAI1 but We are conveniently located on IH 35 between 11th & 12th St. We haveparking space,extended-hour drive-ins, bank-by-mail, loans, safety-deposit boxes and otlier bankingservices. j Our charges are modest and we'll te|l you exactly what they are% "i-"ihiiiiUbiI nf fit Wei fry Harder— We really want your business. IIOIK. NEW AND DIFFERENT RIO TERRACE Live (m Riverside Drive 1 block from the shuttle in complete privacy. Extra care given to make this apartment complex your home. Pool, Handball Court. Trees and ALL BILLS PAID for the Sophisticated Young. We have one . 2Br and a few lBr left and ready for occupancy. Inquire this week and take advantage of our special prices. 4821 E. Riverside Dr. 385-4504) i Our Brewery has been made a State historical site. % Our Beer has been making history since 1909. tner Open Sat. for Party Kegs and Shiner Beer Dist. Co. Longnecks 207 E. 4th 472-1117 AA******A******AAA*AAA*** JR'S SOPHS -1 & .4i •$ i I •^1 NAVAL AVIATION OFFICERS >4 AT $10, PIUS BENEFITS & HOW WILL YOUR CAREER START? AAA*** J^l WE WILL BE ON CAMPUS 6 MARCH, 12-3 p.m. 3-7 MARCH^ 7 MARCH, 9-2 p.m. 9-f p.m. COCKRELL HAU QRCAUCbl^^niMi, (5l|} 341-024V8777\ .AAA**»*AAAAA**A>AAA»AAAAA*AAA*AA*AAAAifAA AAAAAAAAAAU^i^? Friday, .February 28, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Pagl 7 • I) •o&as&dr" si ?<-" 9&P? Women's Swimming: NMSt ! the Puck /;>• LnaHie rvuiddoy M good ntght at D achos—That's rig }!>• •£* 5 1 March 7. you ca for only SI .25. , delicious green e Sun'iy Surf eno. De! Prado ei quizada. This is f Marchill g such good custi L* aA' g The "Original" Acapuico. Also Spring Ski in Colorado! lierlt Travel 2200 Guadalupe (second level) 478-3471 •jKr. «\.w, , -i-The ••i "In all hiswaking consclousness heJs tonmembtir that his mind is his worst enemy. asWell as Mr most usefii'l x Instrument But the main polnt is,tffatJi* must ka0p {t under control every moment The mind Is a uspful servant but a bad master." ' ' ''' c -'f-' —Paul TwitcheH'' • '-i \;/n ­tet £ r ,h «. r TONIGHT FRIDAY -FEB. 28 -7:30 p.m. -NO CHARGE ^ > % MBr S illNTRObUCTORYPRESENTATIONJPF ECKANKAR Program: Brief Introduction to ECKANKAR Color Slide Presentation.(20 minutes) PaneipiscussionffOuestion/AnswerSession 30 Minute Filmed Lecture (Syracuse '72) Vti. by: Sri Darwin Gross, The living ECK Master ^ --<• r._-^ _-o ii' Informal Discussion & Impromptu Music " 2 Open .House i||:|xhibjt|HeA Teas -Books & OliDAY -SATURDAY -SUNDAY *' ,urnt, nderstandingof ECK air Mttreh l-2 Friday: Introductory Saturday: Open House, 9-12, Program Sessions, 1-5, 7:30-9 Sunday^P/ogran^Session^ 9-12 *rt -„f®e,rx.„-D?nee®%., ECKANKAR, orECK, is ript' a yoga,religion. or philotophyr nora metaphysicalor occult system. lt < is >simply a direct way to God-Rdalization, or Total Awareness, via Soul-Travel > the art of shifting one's atten»ionj|nto th.^ ^orfdsof jlrue beinaness) beyond ailTime, Space, Matter or'* rgyvltisan.exacfi^enee^mbraetng'fheporeft'ofthe-ortglnalteafchingsjdnditsslmplicityil • H8MI mm > -^ Sloff Pholoby Joy OodwIfi Texas' Blair Stouffer beats a throw against Sam Houston. ;r"' V ' ' V, Sf » ' 1 Horns To Open SWC mh UH i -By ED ENGLISH ' fans," Moreland said -­< , s-Texan Staff , Last ye^r, Houston scored 12 runs (U earned) and had 33 If the University of .Houston's strengths and weaknesses ,-hits in theserieStWith'Texas, Unfortunately for theCoiigars, are any indication of what to; expect when Texas and the Texas did a little better than that ^ Cougars meet in the Southwest Conference baseball opener.; Since Texas has not hit as well as la&i year so far this for both teams this weekend, then the scorekeeper should be season, pitching could be the key to the series-' Gustafson busy < plans to pitch lefthander Richard Wortham on Friday and The reason is Houston is one of the best hitting teams -in righthander, jim;Gideon and.lefthander. Martin Flores on the conference, and conversely, their pitching-ranks at the .Saturday. bottom. , -\ . Gideon missed his start in last weekend's series with Sam Texas Coach' Cliff Gustafson and his players still Houston State because of arm trouble. That is trouble.that remember the Cougars' powerful bats from last-year's Gustafson says is gone now, but it has been replaced by. : series. •• y trouble of another sort! . ' "I have a lot of respect for them," Gustafson said.''They "He (Gideon) had a little tendonitis," Gustafson said. have fine hitters. We still remember the 19 hitsthey got off "It's a matter of conditioning now more than anything else. us in one game last year (an 8-7 Longhorn victory).' ' '• When.you start as early as we did, every day counts. And "They lost somequality players from lastyear, but'so did he's missed eight out of the last 10 work days." we. They've five orsixback, and they picked up a couple of . Gustafson also has on$other player coming off an injury, junior college players." outfielder Mike Anderson. • ­ "He (Anderson) missed Tuesday's game with a grointhe Horns (M over-all) have been favored to'repeat as pull," Gustafson. said. "He'll probably play, but he'sconference'charnps. which would give them eight titles in a somewhat doubtful.'' row. Last year, a slow starton the partof Texas bnmght the Who will play leftfield, Anderson's position, this weekendSWC race dowii to the wire between Texasand TexasA&M. is subject of dqubt, too.. .' , However, that close call Basn't causedtoomuchlost sleep,­ "I don't know whowe'll start there. Itcouid be Anderson, •at least with AU-Amferica third baseman Keith Moreland. Rob Stramp or Rusty Pounds," Gustafson said. "Itte always great'to start conference with three-wink;". Except for leftfield, the rest of the lineup is set. Charlie Moreland said, "but thisisn't a mustseries. Wedon't haveto Proske will be in'center and Mickey Reichenbach will be in win these to win conference. . '* ' ri right. Theinfield will have Moreland at third,vBlair Stouffer "We love to win on the road, though: That's becaus&bnr >at short, Garry Pyka at second and Rick Bradley and Doug fans herearegreat pslpcejplayinKwlth l4 players with,t^? . , Duncan .alternating at firsthand catcher. " ' 1?^ ) V"r4' » J* r', ^ '1.) xl \ WAIENTAI : "a year-round sonttor"c:S; BUS. -Hj «, pet forWRon Walenta W.ivrnrsf VVaU'rln'iis Complete selection of w.itor­ beds & nccesfiorios. 6^10/ Bunid ©19Z< IMPOSTS, wc; ireaor livingina Moveup;.^fio theCastlei! , '^^iS^theroV^ehUlrS^iurSrienrin %justanother o^il^pyI — Itsunlike any apartmerit youWaverseen.Thedastle,Hudson Prof>ertii^fei neweatapartmentcpm^lex.lsthemostunlquemeansoflivlngyoU'lifindl/it s combines classiclooks withthe ultimateconveniencesof today's living.Available ,;­in 1 bedroom, 2 bedroom, and 2 bedroom-2 ba»(i^efficler)cy. s V two regulation gym-size handballcourts,A game ropm yvith pool tables,. ­, Toosball, anda large partyroom.Separate plcnie j^ea^jSwImmfng pooledonpmK mmutesawayfromgolfrange,shoppingcentei^,mQvi^ealersfTowhLakelar1d^i' •downtown. WHh allbillspaki. Plusthe'added' p^Pl^iMlviKff that doesn'tlook like any.olherflpartment;A«it^^ite^^2te'jifewsss,afii "a man'shome ishis castle S rVj mfterencelU ^ -TV Mm 0ver3S«>n s'sSSfti'! MmlMi stUtin ntly upditti)}' it£g£M $»4niv ife s •-S : 'Ik''' ' " V" y-'— ---­ mm & Economy Could-Cause Cutback !4#-s^ ^ v^'-* >f% ^ ^ 4' ^ VABLINGTOIVIAP) -A s%.<: The student acUvity fee IS < 0^0 That's $307,00fl dent advisory committee at-r ''now JSfpersemester hourwith ' '"Estimating what wewould UT Arlington hasrecommend-a maximum of J30 -1 save in team travel; •• '^ed'thM:ihe-f«x>tMl;budget be?^ vGIlstrap :said.-.^!iathletics recruiting and equipment and cut. frotn'tihtercollegiatey^department receives • atootft if i«e abandon track .and golf athletics ~ ' .£^$272 000, or 32 percent, and lifte the-committee-also .. The recommendation by thei has -about^$444.000 from all -wants, we'dsave about $85,000 Student Activities Fee Ad-sources on which'to operate^, that would leave a difference visory, Committee goes to' ^ "When you add it all up. of . around $225,000. That's President , Wendell Redder-' however. it would cost us what it would cost us to quit, fnan about $90,000 morenext fail if rather than go ahead and > Athletic Director Chenfe ^ we dropped football ^father fulfijl our.obligations."" ^Gilstrap said. If approved, it than play,-" he safe). i'X. es­wouldbe thedeathoffootball ' timgte our contractual at UTA. We cannot > operate -obligations for guaranteesand Tour football program; without/.^forfeitsi to be arpundf9i,000. our part of the student acUvl-^scholarships to total #36.000 ; |# V iy fee. It's assimple as ttut&£^ ncr^mMit f>;' :.qna domestic problems. Pi»rid*nl'tFo(uRiiypra«td« npHnuawMudmllRputiata your ^— •--->V ' d % Vote WALENTA FACTORY CIOSI OUT "»Year-round senator" • --'•.i ^ IMIS. p,. P&torbyftonWatenta UPTIr 1000 WATT RESTAURANT ORIGINALLY $28.955,.^ u>l rn 4mf in Texas Union South 111. Cost |7 for UT tion of the'7 jun_ session mill be ii«mi»md in "Ike Duly fcn»." students, [acnity and staff; J7.50 for others. Three aieasof flie Texas Union will changetheir boors in Ibreh.The Ttoday. March 11. Sandwich Seminar: "Teaching Effectiveness." TexasTirerawillbegin opening at SpjiLon Saturdayand Saodav.The Dr. James Stice. engineering professor and head of the Center for Union bforoation Center vill dose at U pjZL each nig£t of the week; Teaching Effectiveness, will speak 12 noon. Texas Union South 110. the Tt^ ibiia Cbpy Crater will be open < aun. -7 pjn. Monday ­ fttfaj*. Man*17. M, A 21. Happy Hour Club Caravan. Villa Capri Thursday and!ajn. -5 pjn. Friday. Motor Hotel. :..VV::v S/fCWJCH Lecture: Dr. JohnSOber. ThetbnnerdeantfWs March15. Covered Ksh Supper. Membersare invited to br- CUlege of Arts and Srieoces and president of Boston Umveisity win ing a (fish to a cooperative sapper at the home of Beth Cheney. 2105 Scholle. 6:30 pjn. . e rcv~n«ic-rspeak ^r^!-?-PJn-location to be JfMnal Public ictqiliuu to 01 » Wfc.» follow. Ideas and bsnes Gnmmttee. ,March C. The River Niger. Winner of the Tony Award for CULTURM Wotaea<«r. Much i Smdwfcfe Seminar: "The Art of Whitewater Best Play of He 197S-74 season. Tickets go on salefor Optional Services €W€MTS CanoOTg." Ut noon. TensUnion Sooth Room 7 (LamerLevel, T*rero) f** holders Tuesday. F«h. 25. for 5C.$l.and J1.50 in Hogg Box Office. RecreationCoomiittee. The performance mill be at 8 pjn. in Municipal Auditorium. Cultural Wifcu^i. Much 5. Sandwich Swnmr Dr. Pan} c. TridteM. The Entertainment Oommittee. (hrednr of the Stodent Health Center mill discuss policies aod similar March S-8. Tom Patog'/ A contemporary and centers in the U-S. 12 noon. Place to he 1 il Ideas 3ni^ Issues abstract interpretation of the life and works/df pamphleteer Thomas .. . Committee ftme, presented by the Texas Union StndentMepertory Theatre under ir Wr*j»Li '^ . Thr^day. Hint t. Lectnre: "La^Ehicana En Teias." Several UT Wednesday,MatchI2.AVeryCnrioosGirt Aromawontanbecomes Qacana stndentswiIl|Kesentpapers on thesubject 3 p.m. Josey Room. • a prasthnte to reW against the stiqadily and conservatism of a small 4th floor,: Academic Center. ' : French tomn.7 & 9 pjn. Tharaday. March fc Tertnlia: "Las Chicanas y el Machismo." Com-Tknraday. March IX. Qeo trohi Five to Seten and L"Opera Mooffe. munity orgamzer Linda Barrientos and Santos Reyes. Director-of the ~ "Cto" recoonts a yoaog mxnan's wanderings arovad Paris one even­Center for MexKao-American Studies, wfll lead discussion. 8 p.m. Tex­ ing mfafle awaiting results of a cancer examination. "LX)pCTa."ashort as Culture Room. • before the feature, is the hamtnig punil of a pregnant woman 7 & 9 the following programswill.be presented in the Texas Tavern and are pjn. ' . " free. .. TaaUw. Marth ML Teorema. Tmaace stamp and Silvia Manaano Sataiday A Sonday,March1& tRoAv River Bovs. Bluegrass music. star in this film about a mysterious gnest mho changes the lives of a ® pjn. -l ajn.Satnrday: 6:30-7:30 & 9:30-11:30 p.m. Sunday. bourgeois.family in Italy. 7 &9pjii. BunEne Andfitorium. Smaday *Mnday, March9A It.Peter Lang. Tbe nationally noted 12­. idaj. March19. Richard HI. sir LaurenceOlivier performs in stnog slide gaitaiist and singer will perform. 9 -11:30 p.m. Musical tins Shakespeareaaaclassaci7&9:30 p.m. Everte Oammittieel ' " - Tkgadmr. Morrh 8. Muiuiu of the Heart. A'French fQm which ^tollowmg eventswaibeqwnsored by the Texas Union RecreaUon R6XIRGMIOHreceived worhtmide acclaim for its exploration of the incestuous Comrmttee andare freeexcept where otherwise noted. For recreation- relationship betmeesran adolescent boy and. Us mother.7 & 9:10 pjin. rdatrt sminars, see the section "Seminars and Lectures." •Weetandt Lower Gnadalime River Canoe Trips. Sign up in Texas riMa^So^ny. Fthraary Zt-March2.LastTango inParis. Bernardo Bertolocdifirectsthis movingGhnstaTT^K Marion Brando.7.9:15.aod Union Sooth lH Maoday-Wednesday preceding the trip. Trips will be llJO pjn. Fri. t SaL; 7 *9:lS pjn. Son. eitber Fridoy A Saturday or Saturday & Sunday during the Hrst three •tiiauli1in March. Detailswill be given in "The Daily Texan." Cost $8 FHday A SalotdayC March 7 At.Play'It Again.Sam and Casablanca. for UT students. faciilty. and staff: 58.50 others. Bring own food. ' A docble featgre. Woody Allen fanta*arrs temself as Humpluey Bogart in a traattonal line trUrigle m ^Play It Again, Sam"; Uie real B(«art fdliy, March 7. Bingo. 2-4 p.m. Texas Tavern. ^ars mith bgrid Berginan in "Casablanca." 7 A I9:IS p «n Friday; March T. Kite Flying Contest Competition for biggest. March 9. Wiaard of Ot-Judr Gartaad stars in this smallest, most anuatal. highest flying, etc. 3-5 p.m. Ziiker Park. Itolrt *9 PJU. > . . x .. Wefceadayj Mawt Ifc BtBrtandngDemonstration.8:30 -10:30 n.m. Tens TavenL-*' •; • • March 1« A li. Cinderella Ubertv. James Can . Marsha Mason star inthisstory of aman'sstruggle tohold together TWgsday.Marchll Spades Tournament Winners will receive a pass .. afao^T heWadapted. 7.9:10i'and'll^O paon.' . ; to a Union movie. 7-10 pjn; Texas Tavenu :': v.;~Saitoy. MarchIt-West SideStory. Natalie Woodstars in thisClassic • FWdw. March 14. Frisb>«. Flim. Sm.th Mall -.... V musield it gMg mats and fcwe. S p.m.%" • • Sataiday. March15. Bike Ride to Boda. Leave at 11 a.m. from East Mall Fountain: return 3-4 p.m. Bring sack luncty. •'^-•• • • • i?-• •• r films »pll he shown at 11 m in "Jester'Center -Atohtorimn ft* the Satmday Morning FanOah ' -vi , ^Satwd^r.Man*L GoldenGoldcn Earrines.Eamngs. __ f' i J ' 's~S -ifr-,:A'" " IS. The BoinU Call471r4747 fora daily lifting of campus events^. ^tanby.Mudi tFirst Mmon Mooi» ^Friday,, February 28, 197$ THE DAILY TEXA1 .•-XrmVsv, -*• • — _ < "... ^ I ,\ -S .1*^­ Parks Construction Question 'ggV „ By FORD FESSENDEN build the facility. and which t <• mgh Dallas to "planning, acquistion --offices of the, TPWD •Park Fund No.-64. "generated: Texan Staff Writer Clayton Rutter. director of development of state parks." now are scattered in 11 by parte concessions Construction nas begun on TPWD's engineering depart-according to Information and different locations, from the McCune said the percentage the $6.2 million Texas Parks -ment. said Thursday. Education Director Richard engineering offices on Ninth of total funding from each of. and Wildlife Department Construction began Feb. 3 A. McCune. Street to other facilities asfar thgse four sources is propor-• headquarters on a lotadjacent and is scheduled to be com­Rutter said he believed the north as 51st Street, although tional to the a mount of office to McKinney State • Park pleted by the middle of 1976. subcommittee had tabled con­most of the offices are con­ space each' department southeast of Austin. THE LEGISLATIVE con­sideration of the controversy centrated around the Capitol. receiving these monies would In spite of questions raised troversy arose over the after testimony by TPWD Ex­ RUTTER SAID he did not occupy in the new building. by a legislative environmental proposed funding method. ecutive Director Clayton think the move away from the HE SAID HE believed the subcommittee in January, the Rutter' said: .Questions were Garrison, but McCune said he Capitol complex'will be in­funds specifically earmarked TPWD has awarded the con-raised over the legality of us­was not sure if the question convenient since the depart­for "planning, acquistion and tract to Avery-Mays ing money-from' Park Fund would be raised again. ment has few dealings with development of state parks" Construction Company of No. 31, which is designated for The new facility will house the other government agen­ could beused for the buildingcies in that area. . \ because it would .facilitate He compared the newfacili­that capacity in the same way ­ State Legislature All Atwitter ty with the Texas State Bar's his' Information and: Educa­new building under construc­tion Department facilitates tion at 15th .and Colorado enforcement-of. hunting Over Mockingbird Day Bill Streets. regulations, by '/making-them By CHARLES J. LOHRMANN ed, "I see that Rep. Nugent is the sponsor of "It's about the same cost known. • J-UPI TtUphotp Texan Staff Writer this resolution, why are you carrying it?" for both facilities, but their The Legislature approved "Spring, the most wondrous and welcomed "I think he was afraid he couldn't make land is expensiveand ours was an$8 million appropriation in •The BreckSet' of the four seasons, is heralded by spirited this resolution fly." Bird chirped. free." he said. 1971 to come from the funds Women from Synanon communities throughout" California seem to be baldlng'­ winds filled with the music of' passing Grant then accused Bird and Nugent of do­The property was donated mentioned. The $1.3 million prempturely. ActuaHy they thaved their head* Thursday, to jhow that they accept songsters." ing a little mutual backscratching through by private owners in 1970 and yet uncommitted will be used r**P°n^Wlity With Syftanon wen for car*of a local foundation which serves af.. The poetically-inclined author of these the resolution to which Bird replied. "1 can was once owned byThomas F. for interior office structure. a half-way houte for drug addicts and:juvenile delinquents.-• •• words is Rep. Jim Nugent of Kerrville, who assure you I'm not trying to feather my own McKinney. one. of the first McCune said. thus began his resolution to make March 21 nest." V settlers in this area. Itis adja­ Mockingbird Day in Texas. Grant closed his 'stint with a warning to cent to. but not readily San Antonio Rep. Ron Bird spoke in favor —. -Bird that Rep. Nugent "might be trying to accessible to. the new • of House Concurrent Resolution 31 Thursday kill two (B)irds with one stone." . McKinney StatePark,also un­ Be// Must Release Records Ion the House floor. El Paso Rep. Jim Raster, somewhat miff­der construction near the in-' SAN ANTONIO (AP) -an internal company-probe: -for the son and daughter of. . already hadcovered1 through; 'Rep. Ben' Grant of Marshall confronted -ed,at the proceedings, said he had introduced tersection of BeriiWhlte-V Southwestern. Bell .Telephone , Since then, Ashley and R.A. Goodson, former presi­depositions the -answers.' Bird. *'Rep;. Bird,'! He shot. "I understand . a bill to make the ladyhugthestate insectand .Boulevard . and Burleson : Co.' must divulge -expeiise Gravitt's survivors have filed dentof Southwestern Bell, and Maloney said . he -hoped, the• vyou've got a bird bill this morning." ' •' *• was derided. "Why is this resolution -any Road. vouchers srnd 'ibtherv records a $29.2 million layrsuit alleg­any evidence Southwestern vouchers would provide. 4ni\ g * -Bird responded "Some say it's a bill,.but,v. more important than mine?" he asked. ' MONEY •FORy the-project--SSi)*!) Bell have about ing libel, slander and invasion might Bell-lawyer Hubert Greencomes not only from the'Park, >. actually jt's my nose " -'> Bird replied,""This is not a sexist bill as ? Uvalde hunting lease and other items, Dist. of privacy. wrongdoing by Ashley or said the first depositions of Continuing his grilling of Bird,-Grant ask-^ yours was."'-'" Fund, which is generated by a Judge Peter Michael Curry Maloney said among the Gravitt. ' high Bell executives would be1-ceht cigarette tax;-but also ruled Thursday. reasons Bell gav£ for firing However. Curry refused to filed Thursday and Friday. Game and Fish Fund'No. 9. Lawyer Pat Maloney, who Ashley was falsification of rescind his earlier order stop­He said those depositions ' generated from license, fees represents ousted Bell ex­vouchers. He said he . wanted ping 'the . plaintiff's lawyers would contain answers to' <"and fines, Boat Fund; No. 59, ecutive James H. Ashley and vouchers by' 'tithe'r from asking questions questions which Bell lawyers from a boat fueltax. andState the family of the late T.O. Southwestern Bell executives relating to events before 1966 previously had instructed ex-. Gravitt, said such records to show that "falsification.of in discovery actions such as "ecutives not to answer. The might confirm "the judgment vouchers is a way of life at depositions. executives later were ordered In Santa Fe, Mexico of my client that they spent in Bell." Maloney " had contended to do so by the-court. * excess, of $250,0(50 at the hun­Curry upheld generally such questions are necessary At one point, Southwestern- l President:-, i ting lease." other defense motions for dis­in establishing his allegations Bell argued it would take too Gravitt committed suicide covery of any documents that Bell executives from the much time and be too expen­| W.for by Bolton J last October, and Ashley was regarding the Uvalde,hunting fifth level up are required to sive to go through the SPRING March 22 fired a short time later during lease, the renting of ;a home make political contributions. chronologically filed vouchees Southwestern Bell lawyer to findthe exact ones Maloney Jack Hebdoh argued during sought. ,:l-­ the at-tiihes heated session Maloney volunteered his that Southwestern Bell client Ashley to make a Search. This drew heated ob­ -• 'I jections from Bell lawyers^ • HAIRCUTTING FOR "I'm giving you an alter­ Three full days of skiing MEN AND WOMEN — native either you get' it oi-BY APPOINTMENT let Mr. Ashley," Clirry ruled. Bus, Place Hebdon said .Southwestern Bell:employes would makethe cost ­ BARBERING COMFANY • • ---— -• -• -. .i-: 3404GUADALUPE^: r, For more information, call DAVID & SCHRAEDER£8 -9671 — 453-3326 University Baptist Church GARDEN CENTER E: M £8559 Patio Tomato Plants ^ « ROUND UP Hanging Baskets BEARD GROWING CONTEST ; $7.95 ,;$12.95 Registration: Friday; February 28, 4:30. Texas Tavern^ I Thousands of TropicaI to'anyone. ^ Plantsv '-'-a Sponsored byUniversity BaptistStudent Ministry-Judging^Wednesday, April 8 at Round Up CarnivaL No Terrarium Plants 59* ,;4'-»ei,,ry 'ee* ' ^ ••' , • cactus a .. Categories: Longest beard, Fullest beard. * succulents , m ,wi . > • -f war r • complete line'^ of garder < vim RECORD OFTHEMONTH. PHIZES WILL BE GIVEN vJ ffs? * A" >­ >; 5220 Jim Hogg •r?f2 Northloop at BurnettRoad 1 ' I * Jtv < C 1K>1t i_-r| f-%. A PORTRAIT OF THE AMERICAN JEW W - jS&li MX 33172 In Tntllm arid CloIMng:-DolnS V 3**1'—«ld-movlnd ramrd -In CiS h&W Olvlrtor =4tf^MFchael'tilsortThomasand th&Wtuoso ^' ­ fmauammnmuammcTsI ; |MGIeve(and Orchestra andChorus/afongwith ;; iiVex^raordinalysoloists, magnificently bringto ' SSSSSSSSSi 7 il" lifeOrff'sjusty masterpiece. • y 2B5££SmnS& dhesmass.iveclimaxes, vocarstrengthand .•CVlShk''li A ( « ' mrriuri&SbhlfaitfMJiA'&W ! ^orchestral powerof "Carmina Burana"make it Accounting » Agricultur* * Butlow ' i^intfrediblyexciting instereoand spectacularin • , englimriitg *Ublmi Art* ..r . ^?q(jadraphonicsound.And fora limitedtime, it $ »•' .'^.Jeadtao L«dqfc. Active Jn agrfciiK , ' wllljjeofferedat the same veryspecial low llfi, turaT, Ihduatrld, jnd • oonsumar coirtnjodltlss price forstereoorquadraphonic disc?}-w NOW IN' i ,v,t ^ s.Also NevyFrom Colufnfaia: •#» •iWk.-SiJ STOCK! jWithln. ^ •<-j, J »&,}1 4>Cargil/ ttpnwsnum OnvjriPH* s6pn. Cfi»ek'Wltti tha I In ttw UAS.R; ottl&*)^toit}fr0&wi$laoaUQn. look g^piSCOUNT RECORDS" 2105 "Anwhi6;;. "•JMSCJll * 9k m Glue Sniffing Ordinance Submitted for Study By MARY WALSH save the lives of these little posing mayoral campaigns agree with my VFW buddies. "development of bus service 0. : Texan Staff Writer kids." religion teacher Ron have not hindered their ability I'm a member of that post, *s (or the handicapped." With only four members in Gressel said. to work together. and I think we should let them The council will have the op- attendance. City Council Council agreed to submit 'the NLCi know we don't tions of allocating transit speedily and unanimously ap­ The resolution was passed the ordinance to the city at­after Veterans of Foreign agree with that resolution." funds for "conventional buses prove every"item onits agen­ da Thursday. torney and the Austin Com­Wars member Ed Krenek told Friedman seconded with special equipment or The council took one hour mission on Youth Affairs for the council that the National Dryden s motion and said. "I special vehicles" to aid han­dicapped persons. Temus and 15 minutes to set two review and study. League of Cities had" see no reason for us not to be public hearings, defer a While considering the approved a resolution against concerned about jobs for the said establishing employment "We're not locked in in any proposed antipaint and glue veteran job preference resolu­ veterans ' priorities for veterans. manner We'll have all the op­sniffing ordinance for more tion. Friedman and mayor pro Friedman also questioned tions' when the council con­ ' Study and pass a resolution in tem Bud Dryden Dryden. who moved adop­ City Transportation Director siders fund allocation May 1favor of job preference being demonstrated that their op-tion of the resolution said. "1 Joe Temus on the status of. Ternus added .given to veterans. . Councilman Bob Binder has Sea Rim Park been out of town for two weeks. North Austin residents had requested a public hearing on Discussed a special zoning permit granted by the Planning Com­ \ >N ~ k -'v \ ^Ti^on Staff Photo by Mike Smith After voting last September The Parks and Wildlife there's the same chance that lobbied successfully this mission Feb. 11 for the con-. ,, Friedman considers jobpreference forveterans; struction of a 61-unit apart­' against hunting in state parks, Department staff submitted it could be damaging in the legislative session against ment complex next door to the the Texas Parks and Wildlife proposals calling for hunting future make a cohtrolled state legislation to allow sport Highland Park Elementary Department will consider a every other day during season amount .of hunting for disper­hunting in Sea Rim Park. Friday to curtail the number of wild School. The residents say the motion to allow sal purposes a necessity.'' "I wanted to avoid specific Robinson Denies'Charge complex will increase area restricted duck hunting in Sea ducks. This represents a reversal legislation in any specific traffic and endanger , the Rim State Park, near Port Department staff presented on Burleson's part because he park." he said. schoolchildren. "• /V-vfc ^Arthur. evidence in the meeting show­The other public hearing Department member Bob ing sharp increases in duck Burleson of Temple said in populations beyond .. . will consider the installation ByJOHN FARLEY ; Thursday's staff briefing he Robinson further exploited registering chicahois inTYavis; .of a subdivision wastewater manageable levels and the Storting Saturday, Feb. 15, 1975 J v County Tax . Assessor-. : there '.-arechicanos working County because he seb to.it:: main across 126 feet of Zilker will move to "allow hunting .'danger of a wildlife die-off •: Collector Fritz Robinson said the the city tax office to help that the judges in the chicano; Park. -^ ; one daya week, witha feeand from diseases found in an I-Thursday there is no dis­.Mexican-Americans who : controlled entry" to disper­: overpopulated situation. precincts are bilingual. and Both public hearings were BREAKFAST crimination in registering! might not 'understand the se an overabundance of wild "1 will make my motion in that chicano votingrightsare set for April 17. chicano votersin TravisCoun­voting procedures.'' explained to them," Robinson Representativesof the Mon-' ducks in the area. the interest of'maintaining a "Cafeteria Style Service" ty, despite claims by U.S. Robinson Said there are six said. topolis Store Front Com-Burleson's proposal, which flexible control over the Rep. Barbara Jordan. D-Tex., voting chicano precincts in Robinson said the chicano will be considered in the wildlife management in the" mittee and Dolores Parish that voting materials'in Texas Austin staffed with-persons to voter turnout is "about like, regular public hearing, came park." Burleson said. "That "Each Item Individually Priced" .spoke in favor of the glueand cannot be understood by many explain the yotiDg-'and the.average black or white paint sniffing ordinance up during discussions on the plus the undisputed fact that Mexican-Americans. registration procedures. turnout," adding that proposed by Councilman Jeff -. biological management pf Sea the disease could have been Locatedat^Buffct" He stated there', ate; ap­"student voting is usually the Friedman. Rim Park. damaging in the past, and in Delwood Shopping Center "All eligible chicano voters proximately 12,561 registered best in Travis County. "I want to see something" are welcomed to register," chicano voters in TravisCoun­"There could be an done by the council to stpp 3816 & IH 35 across from Sears im­ Robinson said.Hi* emphasized ty. out of a total registration provement in voter turnout in kids from sniffing glue,"': Spanish-speaking deputies go of about 157,000 persons. . Travis County." He predicted Mario Morales, a member of" Spenceq door to door in many chicano Serving Hours Tues. thru Sunday "County Commissioner high voter participation in the the committee, said. ' X precincts to register voters. (Richard) Moya is a leader in April 5 City Council election. 'I'm appealing that you : 6:30 a.m. -70 a.m. CLOSED MONDAYS Candidates To Face Issues ^ TURTLE SEZ: At Forums Monday, Tuesday I Try my chef salad Student Government hopefulswill participate in candidate with this coupon I with All the trimming forums at noon Monday and Tuesday on the Main Mall in I ?$&•••' preparation/for Wednesday's ^election. , ;f Your choice: Avocado Have press secretary for President to influence I 25* OFF . Issues to be discussed at the forums include Union East,' or meat salad. public opinion/administration/regents. I mandatory funding of The Texan, the add/dropdeadline, the. It's good and Found Native American Dept for study of ON I number .of dead days before finals, an increase of shuttle ••--ilS'dn American Indian Culture and Heritage (coordinate I good for you. buses' and.the athletic budget. with Bi-Centennial} BREAKFAST I Senate at-large.candidates willdiscuss theissues Monday, v' Have vvjBgkh^student government^suppIement,,to I TURTLE'S KITCHEN *.V Void Feb. 28,1975 I with speecheslimited tofour minutes.Presidential and vice--^ Texan HMHH ' 7 inside A'Differerit Drummer . presidential candidates will speak Tuesday under a five^" I 2405Numm r&R.aid for:by Spencer Browri;?JrM minute'time limit " ' .•* ************ itH A A*****HIt it***** '»•» Studtman's H PHOTO SERVICE 222 W. 19th & 5324 CAMERONRD. « V 476-4326 453-1958 "QUALITY SPECIALISTS" Social & Behavioral Sciences : COMPETITIVE-PRICES . ; NIKKORMAT FTN CHROME Place 1 WITH 5QMM tfl IENS .288" m $32.50 NIKON CASE NO. 487 PURCHASEDWITHCAMERA T. :vi PRICE FOR • Improvement: inthe academic community * recruitment of minority students and • financial aids for economically I REDEEM THIS AD FOR A 10% SAVINGS ON KODACOLORi disadvantaged students. IOR-ANY NEGATIVE COLOR HIM PROCESSED BY,US;JNTO| 4STANDARD'JUMBO SIZES (3R, aRi;3SJ^®S^Ms;::-j: paid for by friendsfor Lea Sandoloski J COUPON tXHKCS JUNE 30, W5. :. j jr r 1 t! ? %• 1 if "VI STUDENT AID M IIV? PMSGRmt MARCH , i' iave sbme green on a large Lulgl's ;5 D THIS OML* WXTH!,CS«PQN^'-f- OIMLY REQUIREMENTS TO REGISTER TO VOTE IN . $1 Off ANY UUKOB PIZZA. 1 THE APRIL 5 ELECTION ARE: a-.sv.''" •1-THAT YOU HAVE AN AUSTIN ADDRESS. Bring tfiis ciupon in* anytime in ^ „ THAT YOU 1 BE 18 ON OR BY APRIL 5. February for $1,00 qft large pizza. 3. THAT YOU BE AN AMERICAN CITIZEN. ; ^ THAT YOU^vTHAT : DO IT BY THURSDAY. MARCH 6. -I 14 i-A,r v^st -v v , Si wL.ri • •-^ ^ J, ft, 3®' it-j -r BURDINE ^-r.V • "teiii CO-OP -iv:: Giia COUNCIL $0$ yOTEk REGISTRATION ^ Friday;'February*28, -1975 T^;OAa¥^r^^5Rag^ '^vS-p3(­ "I C v-| v| I Ml 4 .;s| 'i I • *\ "A I iU k f M\ opening(wo new storeso| By SANDY FAILS , certain order. Starting with March.the monthsalternated in Texan Staff Writer length, .one with 31 days, the next, with 30, and so on. Between the poets ("Thirtydayshath September") and February gained a day in the process and for the first tinie NOI^HCR6sS^IAli^S^ViS^AVM^I4 the calendar makers, February seems-to have been acquired a 30-day status once every four years. discriminated against. Surrounded by months boasting 30, • However, this glory-did not last long. February, ho longer even 31 days, it must be content with a measly 28 or an used in the search for the elusive365.243, now feU prey tothe occasional 29. whims of a jealous ego. Now you can be seen So it has been through history. From the time man first In 44 B.C. the Roman Senate changed the'seventh month, discovered Mother Nature's year had'365.243 days and set Quintilis, to Julius (July) to honor Julius Caesar; Thirty-six out to prove he could create one just as well; February has years later, ruler Augustus decided what was good enough born the brunt of man's indecision, stubborness and —yes — for CaeSar was good enough (almost) for him, and asked the even his conceit Senate to change the name of the eighth month, Sextilis, to ;coping and going February's creation prophesied its sad fate.. The Roman August. Numa Pompilius, when told he needed 57 more days in the It came to his attention, however, that his month lasted ayear, simply decided to plunk two new months, January and mere 30 days, while 31 dayscarried the titleofJuliusCaesar. February, to the end of the year. Onceagain equality lostout Not to be outdone, he demanded once again the services ofto convenience, leaving January with 29 days and February the local calendar experts.'Unfortunately; by-this-time thewith a lame 28. —calendar makers had lost their zeal for juggUng timeand, to But man could not:withdraw, fromhis pursuitof the illusive. .fulfill Augustus' request witha minimumof effort, February385.243, and February once again fell to the perfectionist's once again'became-theirscapegoatTheneeded day was scapel. As a minor adjustment, the Romans decided to add an extra day every four years, and the task fell, of course, to ~ whittled from February;'so Augustus got his 31-day month Kennington and February-was left once again, the-28-day martyred February. v amputee. \ i^Shirt In the days of Julian reform, things beganlo look up for February. The current calendar correctors added several Thus'February has hobbled through the c&ttfHes to us, days to the calendar-year and arranged the months in a deserving, if not respect, at least a little sympathy. Linguistic Study f,J , . . v •,... . -v African Drums Language For many Africans, making communication of the spoken From studies begun in 1938 When a villager is in a a long distance call does not language. Dr. John F. in the Yakuso region of Zaire, situation where he needs help, ^require a «time,'just strong Carrington, author .of ''Talk-Carrington said he found the " but doesn't have access to a < hands and ahollowed-out log. . uig Drums of-Africa," told an language the villagers used on' : drum or hom; be can still call In Africa, drums made of • audience in : Calhoun Hall; the drams ;was the same as .his friends-by--finding a tree fe logs play.an important role in Thursday, * their, spoken language. with two tap roott'that have The dialect of the Yakuso high and low .tones"and tap­ region is. a. very .tonal ping out a messages them," language, in which the music Carrington said, i' is important for the meaning, In other " situations, the he said. In:: a-typical word, drum'language can beadapted Group To Discuss lisaka.-the linguist.explained, to whistling into thick-skinned a change in the inflection can fruit which has holes bored Transport Dispute A question concerning who hsis'; the final authority vary it to mean pool, promise into it or uslng:the human _ regarding specific transportation projectsmay bedecided at or poison.' ®';::k sv:-;' voice , in the form of-yodeling a Friday meeting of the Austin .transportation study , "The.two tones which can the high and.low tones: committees. -v? ' be produced on the drums, Carrington received a PhD Directions to be taken will be decided by the study's high and low. are an excellent in linguistics from the Univer­ :. Steering and Policy Advisory Committees at 1:30 p.m. at the vehicle . lor reproducing the sity of Londonaidi^aFellow Highland Mall Community Hall. melody of the': spoken word," -of the Roygl. AnthropologicalThe meeting will be held because of a dispute between the he said. "tYet many words Institute.. the Royal African two groups. ' • ^ raighthaye the same number Society a(nd a.kmghtof, the : The dispute arose at an earlier meeting during of syllables with the same National Order.of the Leopard -consideration of by-laws for the committees. The Polity tone, so to differentiate, the in Zaire. v •Advisory Committee: is given responsibilities for making < villagers use for each word a The lecture was' sponsoredbasic policy decisions while more technical decisions are certain picture phrase, with a by the Department of Oriental -' • decided by the Steering Committee. distinctive tone and syllable^ and African Languages and The undecided issueisin whichcategory decisionsspecific pattern." • , ' 1 Literatures andth$linguistics projects fall. J; - ' ' . . For the word bosongo, detartmentj^^^^Pf^jfa^« Sen. Lloyd Doggett of Austin moved Monday that the by­ meaning .white man-J<> laws require both committees' approval before federal Carrington said the villagers W~s$<: money, be spent on any project Share the rent ; use the. picture phrase; "big,s:U Homer Reed, Austin, deputy city manager, asked for a stupid elephant" and use itslegal ruling on that.action. y sound pattern to broadcast the :• "The issue is simply Whether decisions affectingquality of . messageon'thedrums. Onthe " transportation and' quality of life should te made by . the average, a drum message is, 4 technicians or by the representatives of the citizen," State' eight times'longer than: the -,•Rep. Ronnie E^irle of. Austin, .member; of the policy spoken word, he said. ; . * committee, said. * • The drums, formed out of a ••: 'T don't know that -It's, a question • of whether the hollowed log with a slit down ' ' . technicians would follow the-citiziens* wishes>" EarJe said, the center, can be as large as . "but the technicians simply are not'accountable. We will be ­ eight feet long and three feet r-held accountablefor what tiie study office{toes, and we Want in -diameter and broadcast ,to beable to have apart in thedecisions have toanswer.'" over six or seven * miles,* < -^Thecommittees also willchooseamong 10 transportation 1 Carrington said. * alternatives for the staff to investigatejaiid study. These ij^Theiyillagers of theYakusd alternatives represent:a . continuous range of possibilities i-; region also hollow . opt -between complete public transit ami roadconstruction. antelope horns and "ivory and--•--i 'Tile committees will utilize the citizen input in deciding-by blowing uito them can use>whi$i plans:will-be furtherdeveloped;'* MaxUlricb, director .• -: the same tonal system of the of the study office, said. "Whether,the comiiiittee decision drums to communicate, withfallows the lines of the citizen response -depends on the each other ~ r dictates of conscience of the committee members." : A second round of publichearings willbe inMay, when the f--^Set of alternatives -will' bepresented toritizens in different w 'areas'of the city. ' \ fcfv* -..-^Public, preferences will-tie developed'as the final master ; ^transportation plan which should hefinished in Septemberor: WEEKEND •October. •> "V u ^ > ' PLAINT SALE NOTICES from tH> ^•^•ralUbrariMorany'. -|RIP4^SJUMDAY •BOSTONj 'mW* 'js f/rgtof ihi.lmncliHife && ^^^Urnlt-University-«on>f.y. requiring m, **' {immediate attention, r £ v PtLfqr byBoston -» VDS%& houtepunts! •/BRPMELFACFE' succulents pofo-fcttttiar- TOMATO SEEDLINGS, PEPPERS..L6C COLEUS & MFNT. [HANGING BASKET PLANTS %? -? ' FE BEGONIA, SULTANA & IM , T^WANBERING JEW ;*£39«LASPARAGUSFERN ...UL.39E EMERALD" RIPPLE PEPEROMA.hf.85«,DRACAENAMARGINATA...^1.OQ [DRACENA MASSANGEANA$1.70 BABY DOLL DRACAENA..,^.. $1.40 BLOOMING KALANCHOE;.... $1.75 NORFOLK PINES (GAUON)..::i.$ltSO , I AlOi'VCBi i ftMe I A4 I PONY TAIL PALM/CAUON;....$2.SP JADETREES.fi ;FreePlarti: referendum concerning their opinion of •«, Union West to 40 percent of the student bodv proposed Union East „ * -v-V ?-<•-& % * inutY w nuinii'»»*> ^ ^ t Union East would serve primarily students -v-VVMAT IS UNION CAST? ., ^ ^who spend most of their day on east campus. »*' Union East is an additional Union facility **-. *' such.as.lhose in fine arts, draiiki,engineer­. planned smfie 195& It would serve as a com-«•-Aps.-i ingt. law. music, geology and natural sciences. • plement to the present Union West, not a •>?' t w .duplicate.-It is designed to utilizemuch out-fetes door space and servestudentson the east side B WHAT WILL IT CONTAIN? of the campus:­ Facilities and services, unique to Union ?,*> } r East will be an arts and crafts center, out- WHEN WILL IT BE BUILT? , dpof beer garden, outdoor recreation center,' If student support is shownfor the building, • check-cashing andticket drawing cienter, construction could begin as earlyas fall,1975, postal station and open air amphitheater. • with-an estimated two years until comple­Services'.it will share in common with tion. Union West are (lining services and snack1 , bar, alcoholic beverage service, information WHERE WILL IT BE BUILT? center, touflges ju)d: meeting rooms, film/lec­Hi ture auditorium, recreational areas, copy Union East would be located between San < centers and music listening areas. Jacinto Boulevard and Trinity Street; between the Texas Memorial Museum and Simkins Dormitory. •* WHAT DOES CONSTRUCTION V-^ HOW MUCH WILL IT COST? QFJJNION EAST DB»END ON? Z* te­ • 7«j The' estimate :to'tal cost of the project is S ; In approving ;the preliminary plans, the • $6.5 million. This includes furnishings, equip-* regents issued aresolutionstating if student ment and everything involved in constructing-support for Union East is sbown. they would the building. , support a Union fee ceiling raise in the Legislature and issue bonds not to exceed $7 WILL STUDENT FEES HAVE TO /f'/ million to construct the building. In addition, they would lend the money to the Union INCREASE BECAUSE OFv f Board to pay the interest on the bonds until UNION EAST? the building is completed. The Union woold Student fees could increase up to $10 pier p?y this money back from student fees^nce semester to help fund Union East making the • * the building is finished-_ • total Union fee $18, Currently the ceiling on 3%< mxmm They also said the Union fee woold not ac­ r the fee is $10, and the Legislature has been'-c; tually be increased until the is openrequested to raise this to $18: However, fees for student use. would not increase until the building is finish-..1 r-ii. in ed.. In the Wednesday Student Government election, students will vote on a referendum WHAT IS THE SIZE OF UNION ; concerning Union East The;. Union Board of Artists* drawing of the $6.5 million Texas Union East Directors isalso condncting aniophnon poD to EAST? ' determine student sentiment If student sup­ It is designed to include about 70,000square •< port is not shown, the legislative bill to in­ feet of indoor space and 40,000 additional ". crease the fee would die and plans for Union square feet of outside space, i.e. decks, cour-East would be dropped. •> -" .tyards. It wiU.be approximately one-third size of Union West. HOW MUCH HAS BEEN.SPENT .WHO WILL IT SERVE? . K SO FAR ON UNION EiAST? r­ • Parts of the building are designed to serve * CfAboot 9100,000 h^ been spent tins — •T -J'i^-particular needs Of east,campus students, $50,000 :in l^;fOT plans Whidi have since 1' ' such as dining*and check-cashing facilities. 'been' vscrapped, ya>Kt $SO.OpO no«r for the which-do not currently 'exist there. As' a preliminary. plans. This taduey lias all been ;v!'&5 •• < whole, the building is designed for ail Univer­ loaned from the regents. :ia> Argranents fvron^ Caetractioa at a aeainst the (wofxeed TStatents era the east side are not Untoo East nctide cnKcaKace. pnlm fcnw E>st mter iuafy araad clamoring" for Union R«t as the tial ase and tacB,amd4mm&. need. , Union Boaid would have'us believe." "People on the east side at camp's " ^y Waawsaty es-^Otem'tluaed. bane been rtemawSag a facitay saeh as »«*. Wtai stdttts have tosa; Bananiood said siie thooght the this for 2D years,~ said tate Stows, I«rt aadnd Sen. Beverly *onld only serve a "smallchairwomen of Uie (Am Bnnl of lam puectws, .. , »f|*TOnfaeeof thestadents^ and it was Bar . ....... 'She expbflHd coot cueeiMs stadeaCs •is a iton aad sl«den*s%|?-,^the U»B« is a great program, hirthave-ao coBneueMt pface tA eat cask rnwwitaHiatd itshesMd. .V'.'ie*" I'A :«ieed that Mtaer hmlding to. ft ^ checks, draw tickets^ meet miai Mufe , AV • -pmgljlWS. SW^ECStS.' or attend programs *^social <*««&. , '. "We natto and «• haBot. agreed Osbonie said he would like to see facilities to a apaat if canys ant "How tan we a lanon Eist "Sl^on West -open and the Tavern nm- presently sen«i~:SMI>rit Cwunm when l«w West hsst99t.«W fast war a profit beforecpeiung another PresktentFTaak Ffcming added. aedlheTheTe^TSwemlnB**niaae"^il,^i*w* might notbreak even, Sttanss and FVming both enfhosne mow^ryet?".: ^ ^ vHaa»madMdi»pay foraluxurs hrthisGlmEKt;" and pragrams," FlecniaK said. Both OEhome said H; „ '"lbonk the borden isonttteUmonto "This is the best wacr to arrest iM they dhkrt OUk stadeMs «p «he |iroge why Unioa East should betnult. toogh fconorriical times^" Fltming co»­ to provewfcy not. smm M rd0. jy* ^ mm W&M m. at"j ? If -t St ^vmmiWiak will.'.provide many oatdoor tiS3s». lo­ west CUUBiStlMS Febru 28, 19S75 THE D •« V Cf *\ !§.• iBy JAY JORDEN" ^ Texan Staff Writer Sheriff Raymond Frank said Thursday he instructed division chiefs to continue to interview.members of his 125­person force, after the Travis County Bad Bond Board Alleged his office had helped a ball bondsman get clients/ Frank said, although "no employes' names were mentioned" in a ;closed-door meeting of theboafd Friday, it was charged bail bondsman FrankSmith had, .'from time to time," received assistance from sheriffs department employes. Smith has been ordered to appear and "show cause" why his bonding license, issued in April, 1973,should not besuspended orrevoked ata bail bond hearing March13. "I have asked the payroll division and chief'investigators to study this matter, becauseI want to b^ableto say 'yea' or nay' when the bail bond board, meets," Frank said. " Members of the bond board —! Dist Judge MaceThurman, County Court at-Law No. 3 Judge Jim Dear, Dist. Atty. Bob By LIZ SWEET Smith and Frank — had declined to cbmmept on specific and details of the session Friday;" , „ MARK SKILES , "I don'tknow.what Iam goingto say atthe hearingsince I School board officials -may really don't know specificson the charges.Ihave previously be sued for damaged in some denied them," Smith said Thursday. , circumstances for violating Four broad accusations-were lodged against Smith by the the constitutional'rights 'of bail bond board — lawyer referral, solicitation of bonds; students; the. Supreme Court the reformation of his moral character and the assertion ruled this week. that employes of the sheriff's; office assisted Smith by 4 , The court, in its Tuesday recommending, him .as< a .bondsman to either prisoners or • decision, said it "appears to families of prisoners. ' impose a higher standard of­ "The finger has been pointed, and so that automatically .care upon officials than thq£ puts all 125 persons in my office undersuspicion.Tothe best heretofore required of any of-; of my knowledge, no one has been involved in helping ficiai " , : Smith," Frank said. The ruling.lends support to .8 p.mi • 12 midnight Friday.' Ct !C' Casino .Night in'the Tavern. RouleHe, blackjack, dice,, poker, etc. along . with live ent«(tain'ment /,fr<»i^t«xflsi, -- -i?-/\bond board-for 04.000-in collateral "When I made given them by attorney PaulT. Holt; four employes parked v "For years and years, bonds in Austin haw* beenmadt? b>"7 jpplicatioriwith the board, I filed a sworn statement to the on a lot owned by the law firm of Jones, Blakeslee, Mmton, a few attorneysand Hodges. Then wehad a newlawcreating ,' effect that J was an ex-felon. Nothing was under cover,and Burtpn and. FitzgeraldLand one, uniformed v officer had the bail bond board. So Frank Smith became!, a licewdvj-^ no oneJiaseverhelped meeetaclient atthe sheriffsoffice accepted meals from a restaurant .at half priee FranK , .. boildsman and proceeded-to get the^on^ ^ saM; Supreme Court ^Insures EH B anearlierSupremeCourt-a 10-day suspension or less;-elude someone whopersists in elementary or secondary stu-^ administration-, department decision which statedstudents; : For a suspension of longei violating the "reasonable" es­dent may be suspended for a -which prepares Universityhave, a pro^ertyAinterest in ;than 10 days, the student'has tablished rules > 1 ' period not exceeding the-:1 students to become .adrsji education;? ami/are;;therefore> the right to counsel and the Duncan;contends that many year in the - school which mlnistrators. •• ,*"if " Duncan^executive;director of A student may be suspended not reasonable ''Students' rights do not ­ entitled to due process.-John right to subpoena witnesses.' schools'* established rules are student's misbehavior occurs ' * " : Senate Bill 194 would:haveT" the Texas Civil; Liberties for "incorrigible" behavior, ... 't'Th.e bills before the allowed suspensions up to two -rank as a priority issue Union, said Thursday. Duncan said. The problem .. Legislature are meaningless years. Theperiod has been cut because there is so much As a result.;bills are being-however, is the definition of because they do not discuss to one year, by amendment other information to be .redrafted in the Legislature to the word "mcortgible." the rea^onability. of, the Despite the importance of •taught" Valverde said, f"' require, officials, tof inform a incorrigible : student, rules;" said. "Vou issue. Leonard An Duncan the Dr. student, of ;charges;;against Duncan said, may be one who can have all thedue processin Valverde. University assis­-With the. new focus on this /him. The student/.must, be is insubordinate, vicious or ' the world and still have a tant professor of educational Issue, however.' the depart; • fallowed to toll his'versioii of one who persists ;in violent . kangaroo court because of thq administration;>$aid;student ment will place a new import.' the offense. Duncansaid. This behavior, or engages in -im­ stupidity of the rules"" , *• rights has been an area large­tance on thesubjectof student K applies to matters"resultingin moral conduct. It also may ln-Under Texas law, an ly ignored by:the educational rights, he said stjydeht Leader Charges Political Gain Behind Proposal The studqrtt bod^ president' 5gain for one of the (Pan Am) withholding information:-University to receive federal Gonzalez said he favors the'5of Pan American>-UdWersity regents Morns Atlas, who is grants.' • ; '• mergerin telrms of status, bat: inEdmburghasdenounceda-.chairman of the Democratic He said any advantage'-'in The merger has bei»> under he agrees with Garza the ad^ proposed merger,of'Pan Am lParty in Hidaldo County." ; the merger would be for the consideration for two years, ministratibn iswithholding inc. with the University. System.1 :••• He also said'three impor­University System. Pan Am and Pan Am studentswill vote formation.Eddie De La Garza"said in tant political figures in has 5.000 Mexican-American -Monday on whether Uiey want ' Vermm Davis., director \oP an interview Thursday, "We Hidalgo County haveprivately students out of a total enroll­the.meiiger. . • 1 the Pan Am information of-: personally don't "see"'aliiy ad­:agreed with him -: ment of 7.200, the ilargest > . The student poll was in­n«. saud the pn^>osal came, vantages in the merger — In a televised interview Mexican-American-enroll­itiated by a committee ap^ up two'years ago irtien Rut : monetary or academic.' : Wednesday night, he accused ment in the state Garza said pointed by the Pan Am Board -Am president. Dr. .Ralph/"I believe it's; a political the Pan Am administration of the merger would enable the of Jtegents, and -Garza and SchilUng. tried:to negotiate a Santana Gonzalez, vice-merger with" Texas A&l­president of;the student body,' University, whidi has three are trying-to put the poll in .campuses. That merger fell IStomAGAYNOR*"•• student control. through because of political ­The nine^member com­reasons. Davis said, and Pan: mittee is composed of Garza, Am started looking for a another student 'two faculty system to merge' with. . members, two residents of the Schilling has beim president;Rio Grande Valley. Regent of.the imiverbi^ for 16 years' Atlas and one other; regent and has said he would lose Moises Dela. who is opposed power a$ a resiiU of the ^0 .Uie merger, according to .proposed n^erg^.;Gana said Garza. --, "i the merger would strpngthwi' The Student Senate was to hb noatkml;' havemetThursdaynight W"S'' ^ discuss the student poll and possibly pass a resolution to Abssms 6.98Ustf ^Sale3.96 • CHICK CORE let -the students handle it. -On MGMvRwords and Tapes * *"IMo Mystery" ^ r"" ^ 6.38 List Sale 3.96 1 BOSTON Tuesfla^:®!; 'On Polydor Records and Tapes Resident'ri: Tuesday.is'the deadlioe for track and Cassette 7.98Ust Sale 5.89 PA. fartyBaston 8special Gty Councildectkai 'FH!' for ' Places J and 6. Persons" 'a 476-7211 Ext. 42 Wxi may vote absentee in Uie eitf clerk'soffice from 8a.m. to^% RECORD SHOR's si? - 2268 Gvadalup CAMPBELL p.m. weekdaysand fromZ toC p.m. this Saturday. _ ".ff. •• i ' i -Candidates for Place 6 arer Bus. Place 3 Ben Blood. O.K. Davis. Rajf-> irm ; monid Donley. Luella Edgar. ­' Christi Hudspeth. H.R: Karte^ . Lionel RawIins. Jimmy SneQ Psyphic „ _ and Aumla. " ' Candidates for Place. 3are' Bert 'J. .Johnson; James; h4f^$rd v ­ Joseph Jr.% Thomas 11.-;­f.ftrf/ for Appointment -: Lawless. Emma -Lon. Linn^ PhiUp P»; Parry. Peter Regres i'hp Cullural Entertainment. 472-3010 andGary Seagraves. Committee oi th30P.M. m €; t " > h>r v •; p2)05SANANTONIO WILLEL ii T# Nr'nMi' :i\ -a? StfJU->*• -i Pension^ " «*'vr ** Issue ' t Denies Refund to UT Retiree BjSHARONJAYSON Texu Starf Writer •.; Thelegalily of a restraining roriler Mocking payment of retirement contributions to a "former* University employe may bedecided Tuesdayafter, a -month of continuing the decree. •. >-••• ; Hie order. first issued Jan. .» and renewed every «eek since then, stopped payment of *3,656bythestatetreasurer .-and, Texas State Teachers Retirement System toGeorge Michael Smith, a former computer programer. The retirement system, arguing Dist Judge Charles O. Betts had no authority to prevent payment legallydue a beneficiary of the system, is powerless to act until a final injunction is granted. Bill Baker, attorney for the retirement system, said. The Texas Supreme Court Wednesday denied a writ of prohibition which would have allowed the system to take legal action outside the normal appellate process. "Our contention is that It's improperly being continued now. Ordinarily, a temporary restraining orderlasts 10days unless the judge says it's 'for good cause,' which is why Betts iscontinuing theorder," Baker said. Smith terminated his employment with tbe University in November, 1974, and applied for his refund the following month. In January, the refund was mailed to his .present residence in Norway. •His former wife, Pamela Smith, filed a complaint with the Travis County Domestic Relations Office saying he was at least $800 behind on * child-support payments. The office, representing the Smith: children, filed for a temporary restraining order the system cannot use it in any proceeding, brought bySmith. On Feb. 18, the check was presented for payment by the Capital National Bank after being presented to a bank in Norway and going through the Morgan Guaranty and Trust Bank of New York, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the Federal Reserve Bank of San Antonio. Tbe Capital Bank presented the warrant to the treasurer, who sent it back-through all the channels, John Reeves, . and:.writ of mandamus (an assistant attorney general, order requiring action) explained. against the retirementsystem "It's possible that the bank i imM and the state treasurer. The has already paid him. All they jjrder prevented the treasurer have is thepaper. Idon't knowCity Utility DirecforJLL.-. undertaken by the city last Austin's current' investment' from paying and the what they'll do. They may 5g^SRSsj Tuition Hike Protested Hancorit Thursday presented year — the Decker Lake gas of more than $2 million will 4-mandamus caused the system complain to the AmericanCity Council with a progress apd oil generatingstation, the .grow to $119 million, Hancock to issue ja "stop payment" on Embassy," Baker said. StuduUiItiuiidey ago pdiHora opposing a prapcMw) hnw» mfwwgnshidenh report of plans for tbe fature FayetteCounty coal-fired'unit said. H»IHon.BooHuw<»« w* upon ampus by foiMjn tfqchnH again* tfc*rwmrgMtcy expansion of Austin's;; »nH «,«, «™,.k t — Fayette plant's t ;> the check, Baker explained. "When it readies Norway, and the South Texas nuclear The "We're not trying to defend Ugtdotion.' IhtfnpoNl bin th* Texas 5«i>6hk» would rah* tuition from $14 to someone's got to de financial disclosare detailed reporting we cu per millioo BTU. will below its $64 million budget, violated Uie Caty Charter by and cooling reservoir" of the^ f " ordinance, wwiiigmantels arcrtconflictsof interest. Tbe ronrtm-ting bnsnessirtth city more than double intheloext project engineer ' Dick South Texas nuclear of city boards ' and several years. Robertson told the council. expense the city taxpayer is •franchise '• holder Completion of the project will .. f commissions, • city hearing now becanse of tbe Southwestern BelL In contract, the current , v' The Fayette plant, which is " be in 1981 and Austin's 1$ department headsand council special election bodl tan said price of fuel oil, which has .being constructed jointly by percent participation in the "" FUN Lijan the ordinance . . . £> FOR EVERYONE #*1 members, was proposed been avoided itwehad'a shoald 'cover "rates of tripled in the lastthreeyears,: the city and the Lower project will eventually' v Thursday by Place 3 City" financial disclosure , interest, financial liabilities, is $Z per million BTU:whik£. Colorado River Authority, Amount to a $161. mUlioi^^ AT HILLEL'S COancil candidate Dr. Emma ordnance," tbe SL Edward's "the equivalent cost ofJ personal debts, interests in also_is on schedule .and 'ihvestinenL Hancndrsaid:' V I LoaLinn. University psychology stocksand bonds, notes,trust, nuclear fuel would be in tUei; Ib back up her proposal. ^-professorsald.-^^fe property or business entity order of l8 cents per millioc ISRAELI DANCING Linn filed her on "full BTU," Hancock said. and gifts over $50 from Arby's Hamburger Special : ' . financial disclosure -The March t special outside the family." ;. , Three utility plants • -' •* statement" with the city .election was called to GU cietk. /'•; cmkQ Maces 3 and S'after Hamburgers •; ISRAELI EDNA GRAD IS "I'm filingtlns statement Danlxwe resigned his seat in , fSoW os onc ordtr -not amparat^y)'' } because I feel through soch thefaceofcbaiges tfatlieKid TEACHING BEGINNERS AND $1.75 Value -Save 65c INNl ADVANCED DANCERS r~- Hamburgar an tootled bun With Kraft INSTANT C ' . ftlllliitf , imntord, pidd* &' IMm Intchup. > husjmtawminsGuodakjp* . <72-!S8ll Home Cooked i •» for old geld high HI •oianscou»u. 4411 S. Lamar . 893-2058 i 2105 SAN ANT0N[0 SUNDAY school rings, 9 Mexican Food, NOCOUfON MOOBumrt BcL ,45l-97«0( | President neqsuk; ^ *. 47M13S 7M PJL graduation rings etc Steaks and I , pdt for bf Boston CHARLES LEUTWYLER Beer •'<3, f. JEWELERS Stmit ,——, —--258-9626 . rarirft mf mrn^K m6dartaih ptariwc tmjorte* r*ffrrs avl ItSWtat. ­ — nwmmMrwrirti. / r •? .s;iV yt ROBERT ISitSSS I & 3500 fell TOMGHT I y* - urn '/4 INOfl*NDENr--v^ r~ -f-i -v u BcgmnlngSaHmkiy, SOC & BBMlV. sciences PIACE is. m > --C< .-•&1 y Mcnth 1 >>2 :p: the TqvcmwiO open Bmar,.Wmm andSml Ups yzi*=v% of > ' • • Tcpltss 3-4 Man^af 453-9831 ;^4$14151 •HARMONY HOUSE • ••I .3 • NATURAL FOOD RESTAURANT S' , SAIE MARCH 1-8 • * . —PRESENTS—-, S • "GREEK BUFFET T« • -SATURDAY" 4 J t t*COUPW -& BANANA SMOOTHIE) * Z -IMPORTS A lREJHAQP-iS»M M-Thll-7:M X F-S11-9:N mm:-.-. Come Spend the Weekend M­at UNCLE STANLEY'S 0^mi6Dqi A.DMI LOX BAGELS rkKS.WESTOFT«E THISSUNDAY All the Beer, Popcorn & Music if.'. -! % v ri. "v You ,Can Consume for AT HILLEL "-t ' • -t-«• • 2105SANANTQNIQ Only%,$2 C^SUNDAY SPECIALS •EMIRS %\S% KOIHUMBtS ITS' WITBOOT 10K 16 at SMofai. with• tm APPEARING FRIDAY . • Bntanf ISittilo , ... W.i iUM AJL • V?n i, All You Gan Eat f? r r sr. . ;RICK STEIN :. ' , . ;; VgW^tokrioit^aehoB*».Ar«' *-\:A ' y«^OrOTy<«s»»na(ngon»>#r: m Mwsic Stai-ts at 9 P.M. | ^ " ' 212-2017 m - t MiMinos?CDtitein.U(usshow: hi* S&, Son. 6 l8* WhowtotetahoktAfewsaps^ ^ andyouBra onyour wayto Now serving Schlitz, Pab$t, B'ud, "Michelob, ImmWI mtoU CAN EAT -5.f5 roast beef chokeat2soups Y^ii^lesso(}iaon'«^l smoked ham ^Wholewheat braA)" ^conumjQNi dwbn^dMg hedihoney, butter .X !NP0PIEMAU5FIRST C>—try Srit " it i*&si f^ '' . -^ 4 rT i5'_ • • • PfSSBP s t r » ;-,* • V-: W: k t v * 'ht.-J' St.* ft U-f ,JAft.' To Set On Testimony >' * -* **?r^T*­i " * "s* , i. -f\.-* SM, IV % I . .» ^3^ '^V^' ijv< t r*i Thursday... > . . legal domesticacts but would ,., "He drew no lines," the reveal almost,nothing,about , .; > clia)rman oftheSenate Select covert foreign.operations.The • , Committee.:on' Intelligence committee , will not^disclose . told reporters' after a.40-, information about1 the CIA mmute-meetmgwlth^olby that wouldrjeopardizetheir and Vice-Chairman John, sources, nor,endanger their , Tower. jR-Tex." Colby in-agents, nor, embarrass the . dicated "he would be very,:-United Stateswith revelations forthcoming-in ;providing: all i; .whichu could1: injure ^our . the-information the com-relations >„wH;h. foreign mitteermight :want," Church governmentsv"vChurch:said. said. Church and Colby, also dis- SPECIFICALLY, Church , cussed the intent of an inter­ pleading present aiK's former; employes from silent about '(fast ^activities signied^ecrecy,agreements in. which might subject them to piip To Study ; ,*W ^ : 10 a.m. Saturdayat theAustin Women's Center, 2316 San Gabriel St -The workshophopes toover-^come obstacles, found..in the .'»wflAn^l>P.,c fira( tDArlrchinn jfienter/s .first workshop; ^VAlternate Lifestyles;':1 by ^concentrating on facets of' 7 •• sexuality all women have m • common their female (anatomy andsexual response, 'Workshop n will be divided '/into' morning and Afternoon h.ir£g -^sessions. Themorning session begins at 10a.m. and includes information1 anddemonstra­,111 . tions on breast and cervical self-examinations-plus a dis­ 3 irh t sii * I*v­ i s? 'Boston1 President mm M:far^?'"on I 2 shows mWrn THE AUSTIN FRIENDS Of TRADITIONAL r % MUSIC PRESENTS.*, '*BO w $1.00l6bNATK>N 1 sy i-p T& mw0%> I&4& '^XS&Xt&K ass t&simx. i mum Ktyi%3s v 3 ~ T~* - W'nireirt>­0.~"yjrfJClALS still.can, / SP® J" ^ns.Uta^?n%.^ „*, « J, W?Y 77®°®?'® nr*'» Neither the,^ c^n V A."°r ,^1® ?0l^'Hee their con" stilu"onal rights ,... Church said he also >asked%r. : Colby to-tum over-a 50-page^| report on the agency's^ domestic; activities.'which'he^ sent to President: Ford afte^ allegations of wrongdoing' whether.he wants to turn the-5% , report over to Congress/, K cussion of myths, and facts •-S'Jffij concerning the female Iwdy. IK7^^ Female sexual response is wM the topic of the afternoon ses­ sion. expected to beginabout1 "•>lv p.m. A panel of women'will discuss problem# women-face -mn T«Wphot» . in anhtauoinir-a mnm cnOcftt: :in achieveing a more satisfy-,f iing and fulfilling sexual ex^"J~4',f'" thewi, istence * -Koto the gorilla; of Stanford, Calif.,' Indkat.i Im> de.lr. to listen in on^graduate We wanted to have the dis-student Penny Patterson's phone call. Actually, the sign demonstrated here means cussion on the female > "to litfan":inislgt» longuqge) since Koko does not vet know the signal for ^phone/'1' anatomy first, because once ———^— * 2 Z, people feel comfortable about A-^ : •; ;• ^ their bodies, they should feel' v-ftMCCIHl llfHl I fit C-fl Td# Sat. • THE : DOAK SNEAD • BAND $1.50 Cover ^w^j <•'^'Coming Sunft.-^ • V?tJv ** • * • Howlin at *• * • lh?* * *• •'"C** »*})!£ ROBERT! INDEPENDENT SOC. & BEHAV. SCIENCES PLACE IV IL 9 JLfl?0 B2SnJain«i^-­ Feb. 28 MR. AUSTIN CONTEST; Arm Wrestling ^Dancing # Muscle-Flexing Swimsuft* Contest will ruin six weeks.Comport­thn every Wednesday and Fridajm-Finalist competition April 11,:g ?i $300 -First Prize |$150 Second Prize a^i3^^a,eir.Ni9!Free Beer o-12 March 4 Frat Studi Night March5-Mr.AugtinContest * : i l>* ^ b. r 'i* n frM 10itfiiitaM"' W r :,.ag^ps vKent^l-sisf bSSTSUS ZiLn^Contmentn:,'1heSldmaChtne °" totaHv Moarated bv law~ Bmtus^a d heT- operating ui South ifn™epS!me iSSSSSaS ^ ^oliTOsel. was exiled from South Afnca in o7a ''.nuclearPower P^nts will soon be used in the, total population of 24 million, theiwhite pop-'" Ration of less than 4 million rules the coun-t .^ puShtog^ Unable tp vote or to hold elected office, acks,formed a liberation armvv1n4hfi'«*rlv^ae-^».;.y;; '• Earlier thismonthuthis liberation armyan> y"blfks' has^veled through several African nounced an escalation of armed conflicts,1 na ,on^ seeking militaiy and political sup- Brutus said brought about by thfe conclusion 6f similian*' 1501rt* ' ' conflicts in Mozatiibiqufe and Angola. Surplus' "'The entire detente strategy Was hatfched armi flr^^ing Africa, Brutus said^'1^ f sent to South^; «in.Washington as a public relations campaign to buy time, for-the government,*' ! „ \tanwmi j?• V 6tto .x ' 11 • thurs., fri., & Sat, -e mcome to the fake:y£Hwys. 183 St 620' § : TOO : :SMOOTH : JUBILEE : In DobieMalf J Progressive Country the unique ian(iwich & ptua tf,>aut6nl JjgSpaghett: Gcila -Tues. & Sun 5 p.m. -Micln ;ht B Spaghetti -SI . 19a pic Wine 20' & 35Hola< Shin 20 SI.10 Ms Michelo Also serving Lasagna & Spaghetti Fri., Sat., S unjmevenings 2801 Guadalupe Hi 472-3034 1 08 W. 8th fm t/i<-Colli r,; ;Hill|472-0000 : ;§|Sau8age;&:Rib^#Bar Mbirijdtfy«Satut wiwevu^iiuiiwaT;v. Miriii !March .1<)^-iAma nfe» It ®®vBJ mmmm •Mm ow ,.'. V_-Jid By BKADBIPBOU -BBgtL ttafaintHUE -tftg -~---^taBMi*Startls'Ysitor "•" ^(Chieaga's Robert Lamm may have" the right hfm,< :: pertap^aBmtry^aeaff ^rCftua^ Smsitet! tte Harry Truma» ia IMS. But set w2ft -«hngpniiidfeiafc~a j since they eaudnft have brassy Pimfoir niKtini.im.iui . tte S.QOft roaring . tflut Miftwiwu ^ •B>-Mmrinpat AniBhirium itsBeet. A Eang|hmm>trmT»Tjo« .^Wednesday safie aod an nngoeamte DBF-. i:.'.ed for the nest best thing— eussitMB dSsjpEay. Befi Itay frtk'Qkagt muse nacUie. " ~ " ^•Although Chicago's MgB^^teanne.^fttette gmembers have-been fahoferf E^ett° pubUc Walter Parazaider's spx. general; hasten5* per Viploncello e Contrabasso -^ Parazaider also played the dricagn, bacfc ( ' ­ by Rossini; Trio for Clarinet, .rJ ftote and clarinet at the crat- Celto and Piano, Op. 29, by V. D'Indy; Three Songs for ;.Marlboro by David Amrani; l" " ' •ii r, University Ombudsman : / i'lf you bay* bam traattfd wh i 5 > faiily by a'University ad­ mlniihaltr Or fafcylty m*mb«r, 'tf»«.Unlv«f*lty Ombudsman it '••i' available.to hclp you. Contact Jim Osbom, Union-BMg. 3^4, 471-3825, 10_a.m.-2 pan.. Sivu-'! ;V.S,-.:,v ?7»Tii /v-2ir'• . St G OfPFeetem r oa&ntim lrj§ • , ^, PRESENTS 47 X IT'S OWN WUCHT . , "~4 _ SUN. ' -V Sffi: &&cf. BESERKOBROTHERS | 2405-A Nuecas-2 blla.w.of campur • £ -x-< TONIGHT'S SPECTACULARS "mm ySET*' M > v,,v «wl O tcwr of n»di»y. _ -in i,^'h ClyJtl' SATURDAY " ^ ^wtfijunmAf ,-^MI ^°7 #•• C«y« Rd. 327-9016 GRETA GARBO SSSSM# SffAMHEAT |tartsat 9:0%.,, -Only $2.00{ ^ «sh^ ^jfisrvfibt PErrcc ia— IX)>.«fWMN6 riLM:^ 4 siJNimr -»e­ 1 -4 t: ^ i^ J - N-JFJLH a $• ­ «mft €fettna0s tlte gmfiftmi off Sot Bhnau^afl fftinrr.Baft ****** BCdsstt ste^fenng tflftTff nBnftiiwuiiiuffiuni TVhk ani»i»dhry tnaitt; am niuHiiini^ r . i«e lougfmane (W) Roulette Bingo ^«5gos Entertainment: Denny Show & Why, ' p.m. "r-'l HLSfti UHE! *C.i «HIL4KliSHiOK.fiEsg!!S dBBMESIMDita SB^«ueaEiaa can wowfoaes* *wr»nn»»ijHg*»e! %nesasHSncut(JBBI4]C{ btfnndt mnth EngBsh subtitles LCAdL • Modern Cuiema HIS GIRL FRIDAY 2SS",fe Page XI •& Sift: w&m fim' * 1^5 te4i'' rrW* §M ftoW--iii$£ *41 s. a^-^ 'Pepperrfhtme^imed » -A * * •; fw k' v >7 % £-1 * mmw Ir' ft* I I N & * * Austin's Town Lake Lake whose sccnes in the film were * FILM Beautification Committee^ REDFORD.who plays xthe left Qn.. th$ cutting-flocfr. THEAtER headed x honorary Mile tole'in the film about Universal plaps to'-'sei/tl a . , "BARBARELLA," sci-fi Schick* starring Jane .chairwoman Lady Bird John-'^daredevil pjlote of vWorld War series oVcblotr'slldes to be aw-the' Giiberf and SulHwai ' ^ -Fonda, John Phillip Law, Marcel Marceati,^ son. will'sponsor a "hJgb-I iuroed stunt flyer? Vhen the shown glqriijg the hangar par-^QfMrettaij directed'by Stephen Wyman andi .^directed by Rogeryadim.Modern Cinema,11 flying" benefit March 13 for war end?, probably will notat-tv , |i^jt1ng:pick raeyn»y&, Uunty Martin Mdj; .-',>fp.m. Friday and Saturday, Academic Center -the premiere of Bobert Red--tend the opening, but tyniver-Quests jyill J*.invited to r e.Joan'Pearsall. At* the Creek Tbeab^:8t3»? •^vAuditorium, $t 25-v* < "\; . :ford"s latestfilm, '"The. Great.-,salStudios haspromised tofly-wear "app'ropnatefashions — t, Pitt1" FrWayrTickets f£w??aU 477-Wft* Waldo Pepper.1' which was in a bevyof movie andTV per-circa 1920 — with flight suits "BUNDMAN,",; Italian: spaghetti Western |Ktes«rvafions. « .filmed in Central Texas. _ • sonahties for the evening, and of-any era de rigeur.for the ;; about; you guessed it, ^ blind gunman, va •-v •*.. ••> i'V-V^''• • ' '*• " • • Following the premiere, a many Central,.Texans who men "v , , %starring \Tony Anthony and Ringo Starr. a comedy of .^MARRIAGE GO ROUND,!' "Flying Circus" party will be appeared as bit playersor ex-PRICES FOR the premiere ;" ^Student.Government, U:15 p.m. Friday and m^fitaln^ups-and &ndelities;starring Bob held at a vintage hangar Iras will attend. ' and party are $50 anci *25,per 'Saturday, Burdine Auditorium, |125. ^ y -.:; Cummin^,at theC^'tiyOim^Pla^ioitsK: Ragsdale. Avia-person, with those paying $50 donated by '/The riiovie premiere will be "CAMILLE,"' billed as "Garbo's greatest," r; Buffet lines'open at 6:45 p.m, and tbe sixnr;.: tion All, proceeds from the held at the-Americana being seated "in a reserved directed by yGeorge'Cukor. Student Blindmon .starjls at 8:30p.m: Tuesdays through —event will be donated toward • Theater./which'has been section of the, theater and ..Government, 7:30 and 9:25 p.m. Friday and : 'Sundays.:Sunday matihees begin at?2 pjn. • 4l!®_ completion .of .thecom-, donated ior the^eveut by Mr. . provided seating at "ft ^ ' f-Sunday Tickets $3 madvance, on saleat Oat IE team 8 directed,by Ken Johnson. AtAWARD 1 "LAST TANGO IN PARIS," starring Marlon Willie's, Inner Sanctum and &£ ArmadilloJW Cen!er' Stage; showtimes are 8:» pan. Brando:~and. Maria Schneider, directed by Cabaret, and $4 at the door.S^SF^?^ t'J'Wi Friday and Saturday andSpjnlSunday. For •' Bernardo.:Bertolucci. Texas Union, 7, 9:15 ;.. v3^, i > 5' ,reservationscall477-1012." 1 HERBIE MANN, presented by Paramount, Inc., -­14 •*•">! i and 1I;30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 7 and , ?g|.> at 7 and 10 p m Friday at the Paramount .tS'THE u fvyrA -th» R«id» , ' 9:15 p.m: Sunday, Jester, Jl. Theater Tickets $4 50, *5 50 and*50 at the f^™£d£'s^h£ and the "MASCULINE-FEMININE,'1 directed by Jean-door. ... ,'mbuhtainmed; opensSatuidayat tte Credc ... Luc Godard. Modern Cinema, 7;30 and 9:20 « . „ , . --'--j—STEVE FROMHOLZ, with Dallas.Brooks, at -.Theatre. Showtimes ar»^a-M n m ^hmbty « « Sun^y>' Academic,Center Auditonum, tiCasUe Creek Friday.andSatoday.T«iets»,gif-and Sunday^rtickets are "" ' 1 25 016door 1 , p^ --"v"t - Chenier FilmssTo Be Shown? f v "V ; "i « . Les Blank s^award-winning Reel," the first Austin Film when the festival office opens-film-on Clifton Chenier,' Hot and Video Festival, to be held-in early March . Pepper ' will be shown at 6 at theRitz Theatre,April 18to20. " p.m. Sunday attheSoapCreek After the showing of the « rl , r ; i Ent«-y information for film at Soap Creek Sunday 'Fjrklay? The lilm also is part or a AusUn and ^Texas film and Robert Shawand EasyMoney: ¥~ 4-6;>p.ni, Mu*[c by .folktinger .and benefit for • Changethe video makerswiH be available -will perform. gultarht Mqry Maddox. ~4:3(>ib:(n.:Reglstration for "Round Up" lB«ar»9rowing Contest. ' ff;30-p/m;>12 midnight. Denny Shaw TO PLACE A TEXAN amf tn* Discovery Band. |Saturday CLASSIFIED CALL 471-5244 9 p.m. -1 a.m. Bluegrass music by the Irvl- Rocky; River Boys. ISwnday 1 6:30 -7;30 p.m. & 9:30 • 11:30 p.m. I 1'w Boys and "Sunday 2 FOR 1 ADMISSION WITH THIS AD [ Supi^.'fritipper this week will lit a .5-BMfcpldhiiMt;: Jl.95-food service bfqim at i F, UVf AUSTIN toacwitouaY ms openjiat 6 p.m. 'Saturday and The best irt live rock and 1B Interstatc's ',^-aySundays _ v ® roll 7 nights a week. >r Varsity &I ^.eovenc6bf$fe. S*-"® Open at 8.00 p m 5400 GUADALUPE h 'I Music begins 830 " N»CM*I WwrnHBOL^ Happy Hour.from 8to 9 i""3i lauao-sanriSo-Ms, -gpynCHT-To«amty'' VILLAGE 4 fil'Ht-rEXAS \ -MK jauilwiifiifag Aon,of fn* ParB«g~ .-A _<* Ay-/t s T j.<1* Today at Presidb Theatres ISATOUMflCAIiY > M SafeE K^jRi»fseI|p v;. 'ffelf •s(" „ fMtam I2JI tljfcM MS 81^ 5-j, L ^ romantit^ . gone UtheromofKE mot ujq//oc*we; my* g"WW* Reetf,N.V. Dally Nawa picture since ^ '1 f i marvelously Intricate whodunit! A " / joyous experience!A feast-in anyseason!" e « -«MMi Crist, Nam faHillagazIn*^ rs-BIZARRE MD BEACTIFIJL, ilaWeM 5 _ unts thestory ofa mindratherthan-the of a man: RICIII^rllOMAar|ii^i „ 'Jr —QaneShatlt, NBC-TV , c COMPEIAIKG,'Mahler is «s emo-; XOeiicipus! SheerohMashioned escapism!" ' '^°?T^»-as moving and asdeeply personal as S;fe ' •' %„T-isa SmceWilliamton, Playboy .Euslc \\ ifsafirstclass thriHerl^ ' Seits.subject composed. It is a f* ; JIAftVELOUSLY INVENTIVE film a i ?>I •vi I L-A f ^^j^$Qfls>iderable work of art. iAjT r ^ 4s ^Norma McLain Stoop i ,uiwwc*i •-# l ^MNHKBWSIIH ATTRR -i ^ AFTER.DAKK jova ,15-v ' "WfflfifiOUJ, - "MP • i ­ wA Dustin fiofi ftttuaiff.rcruES amwanwotmumnecoa * j JJM tutn/jt t-js J1L?*-«r CROSS IT ­ I and you get $ crossed olf! •-j vVj? -*3 m 1iMitj**H ~rT~ I'rM• llUffiiESIlH paL z$&M\ fM RIVERSIDE :-S. J-ltyjjTm J933S WlBm1 * »,r. WiMim ;• 1*0001 fir ~ m ]^{|^S^rrMTMS f^&UV mmm iSmSSP^mm^ " iiilVsl SLAIiGHTERHOUSE m teiiSiiSM K/i^PtJtiy'.v.hJiEjDAlLiY;TEIXANsf-f v-3­ S&W ^s?SP>F^vSi5^SS' vr-\i ^'•i' ",V JoJo Electrifies Armadillo Roclr 'n Rott Show 9i^64AMttSQfAei$$twwe^ t»«w»«^; *0]£>h>i»hBii?>)afc-<3mns?ayyame8ti6-" —^ *T* "***llu* s*ofi*»8 an-Anns «wm8 «bA Mri»1«tFwa| C J*?1 ikatMWwwtw^.iew," IIIU H' IIIIIHIWH.^— . -few* "*»»K. Mttmr mmUo, *,^ "fcm—>n» » » •••• *«»Wk ^ ~ ^ " » iwMfcuawt*tm-^-:-—.... — I. ' ... * Smio*— *»te awjrmwwf. «««*». .MEAL'S!!?1«•*#«*• «»r«-anaa.ixitwmi^wi.wtfaiw.raw. »»ji»D»ii>ins«^ - MtftiHaOl -;•. -— -«*"»*««. . . •• T.. . . « BQa&tMnfe »Cw0D*G)ttB* -3fcCa»»)' WK • J* Hat k Bkltuixm Oi®EBJEO>8!6 KRsinim • w^l Qbc) INTERSTATE ^ onherom .•••; -.•• • '. •. „2--v \-"s v' •„ s«if ^ HctoKxjme hassucha BN0URSIYN KR6KRSI0FFBFBQN *«? a A! «?SGKL \ ptt IHlAS floe»rsiaBte |9iM@eiiDfei^^^«ri|il(|M':^^ekBMi^«B9i9iK A ^i\ " •..'^Vrig. Hoffman, Perrine Good Within limitations ^ ^ — r > ^ --.. * •* --•^r -*-^ ***4^r _ ,Lg"y; 1he&np^B»«sww»-Oim# the wnMc are-exccs# tar a IrieL -'* ««nW stnp^rase at the Jallaa.Barry; starring Brafe-rotha*. Meed, so irttlu" aad thas the ^ Joat Varsity «.4 Village., sial comedlaa. that «e /SL^SLfrlta. Sf ;-^Sl^ :V ^ss^rt:is^ssSsIr^ •/WMsswi-KKESSS SSSLS'^;E^£THE^»­ yny" ^"Us a prettygood been the major factors m the Marr Uaa MiaerV; a WtwadT-kreT^rh » n««ti»­ ..MKiVke. BUT-.-Tedaacally current wave of interest • 'ml Im'i •—r*— — *<*TTr?-:',,rfifcB>ifcMlrilMfc Th jltju'i" -proMent aad olto Bnre^ a^ the »Tlfc . ; dwding -as we would ex. -Maqy critics P«A from the director of, Brace" hare bees harsh part or Us •»hrij»ei«g * -•' • "j;ill\ i.,...n* "fl* wdl«WL""tai(r" is n»-of their demigod. poanSwaKt les bsMb a mi mm -. >^-***; *f*erseemgthe etbetess; dramatically' on-* errors of fact andpersoaaliij-. whose dowalaB is ^Kanateir «4 ih^Stoes^^Bir^ SKraaEi srssrtsa: izsvs&SSBI satsaRfttsttfeKU Honey faww twwpital inIwny.' ^-sasssE1. ssssss?^ ss-srsssa ssssr^"*:­ «sgnat.Wshe"!sweak— weakca the flow at:the, '.; "*VBm$~ J »o^*a*ie »d» cb«i ^ w^By fays hant HoBnan Poets To Read Works ~ j?'* *1:^5 B>".**.'1•jft••fliIIIisical aamhers aa the k-jrBrrtrf~r. — ~:...n drrmtheMichenerGallery of issue of Lndlie.alocalpoetry Ramingtoa will read a * [— **t —" *t tTttIT' j *ai| w»r«4.\S ,• ^ —.••>..•••.;• : :-a-;.-". dKfing-hisrioQSt mut "A^ Serabaghm.1lBis«tal •= ^Fw Vilrrir rrrriT'i •mumiii^Ipbi -•••«-i roWi4>edmlocalandnatwoal Moorman will itead several. Lpppr nnalim^ .Wy»t^: "i«y*" tolk ^ ^ the " T1™5•®"..IB sclectioos.from "Scale," his Streets of CtftaimmaS'.. • degree of reseahlaace aa a _ . __ There will be as kIciiug-' bctvm Collegium To Pvesenltl^ff TO PLACE A TEXAN siooaariqg vmekco^eifll -ariBnitr h—<•ar—•-"• :•-•• ••' ••••.• be serred. Pio atecsna will atettft — prahabfeaf iMr RflrAnilA PorSnfl lUlaicS^ CLASSIFIED AO be charged, and tbepoUic is cotcera to oast rvwei^ OaiW|Ue reilOa IVIUSIC ^ CALL 471-5244 incited. :Vhat is aaparbat is s^ ::.. .. .: :j\.: . '. ficieat explaaatiw aad ^ period wfll be performed TRANS*-TEXAS -afV ana^f ly nua^b aad Bdnmlifetsof the University »w», • " — -— -.rpf^ Ti OPBM 12:00 •$2.00Mi 5:30PJH. -NO PASSES >>»»>»' >»•>»>»»»< r~z_ BIU.II HOlllOAY * • I" "LADYSINGS |THE BLUES 'SfceSsffiv " ay^S at-­ sh¬qgleiqi^, 4X $JS0 9:45 ^SrV^rS^Sfft&iai aqddtaeonetoJSewYoric . • -. • " * J= •& ':• -:-f ;redeEp insideher bttusadream* tobeasamebody andtobekKed1^| aSQU>KllodvwfaowiB|CTpn«'Hn» ril«MBeSMErflll]lliijy.hll»r|: Jk ^lwti«Uyailttli»%iihfa» : -Hermotlia taBsUasfaeaaHnnn. , WGEBCORMAHpnsserts ShecafeftpossUe, ifd ^ -stw ^ ...... f ---i'v t,TRP»CRiSWLDI-; ^l®ERM»FEllll!l RoySdridcr.] g-nw^aa«Sfc»>»iaBa»BUiwiTnMnran.ifcMfc»««*v -. * ' i"•'• 'i* — • UNWITTINGLY. HE TRAINED A DOLPHIN e-a»'"l'Ijlfaie TO KILL THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATEI £ 1:303K»4:306:00 ERICANA mm. 17:309H»10:30C^ MIDMIGHTERS. . . ..V.'. sl"*-' fa .• - 3 f? (L< j­ aMIKENICHCXSfilm DUSMN HOFFMAH Alfredo, Alfredo WIM^POUPHIN WjjbKTMmE RKHAMSYU^ MXXHBW IIDeEgr^gH^ £^^AT*iW^ »vSR.MIC!Ml'9) urac ,; lUIBirjLKB•S«f Wlft »W ~ SE"' ftML - w> Golden Land7 Explores Consciousness By CHARLES RAY great acoustic piece on which Jimmy Page"-.TeSm^jwriter shines.Unforti^tely.it's theshortestsong cHiS 1 Overejposiffe .i. that is one thing" Led the record set. :vSw- Zeppelin ispot guilty of; After,repeated delays gi"7 ui.mua'nciieausu'ueiayst;''" :-.The fourth side contains "BoggieWith Stu,"Jj|the sixth album for the group is finally out — a good jam featuring Ian Stewarton the piano."-4 Ujeirfirst since 1973. -. , lt -. T 1 "Pasted Graffiti"' (SS 2-200).* .a double JJ!J*?-'J*?1 album ed last year. ™*" "-J • ."Physical Graffiti" is still worth buying THE ANXIETYcreated by the delay Serves to Aiake' the record:: buyers.expect. more r while on sale for the avid Zeppelin fan Just "Physical Graffiti" is a real letdown in this don't expect too much. respecL Modi of the album sounds the same, a ' During ihe last performance of the recent problem many groupshave experienced lately. Elton John tour, former Beatle (he prefers it' • There are no extended solos to break up the to ex-) John Lennon appeared on stage. monotony cheated byy sumesome ofui theue longiqng songs,songs T<®etherthey peHbrmed-several numbers.the ."""•rrf ~"'*r iiigeuieruwy peourineu-severai numuers, me TUere are no songs which really starid out like highlight being a version of the 1964 Beatles- such past effortsas "Stairway to Heaven"and "song VI Saw Her Standing There." "Oyer the Hill." Since"Elton-doesi't like live recordings, I: Out of the 15 soags (all studio material,' didn't expect ever to see it released. Asasur­mostly recorded with .the Rolling Stones prises itnow has shown upon the flipside of his mdhilfk mfit l fnnlr am fsirlv inlaroeHna TK«. nottr ctnaia ori/)in:. •• ; ^ r, , -7 . -malt* hi* fint Austin tniough. Moidi 8 at Cetrte «Tcwerp*:;H^ ' Denny Shaw and the DiscoveryBand will playfjRxn 9pijb,to midnight Friday at the Texas Tavern. ' ibaw al ... ... y;> :-!• The show, entitled. "Music Through the Ages.'' a»tains the same rock and roll blues material that Shaw performed at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas last July r <>.5 A former protege of Liberace. tbe 20-year-old Shaw has also performed with EHvis Presley during one ot tne laiters cross­country tours. . RELAX $1.40 Pitchers -50c Highballs GRAND THEFT & FROM7:00-12:00P.M. ENTERTAINMENT fhuice to the Sounds of ^ Bacy By Popular Demand Also for the Ladies 2 Free Kegs ot Beer SS Will Be Tapped,at 9:30 p.rrK THE BUCKET [ N*xtDoorMMarfr$ffaCcmieasf. •SHn.FiMAirikfeg THE FOUR PLENTY OF S Theatres IV THEATRE nNO-HASSLE'* ISOO S/PlEASANT VAUET tOAO ^ JUST Off tASI mvBtsmt omv* 444-3222 SHOWCASE" Mmrking * 55-1d:Q0 ID OVER! $1.50 til 6p MADMEN HESSE'S m Htes"adv nmman: lOORfanB By BLAIR FORTNOY Irwin Shaw. "The Assistant/' by Bernard "Tevye in the Golden Land*' is a reader's Malamud.-"The Rise of David Levinsky,-"'by^ theater production put on by theKansasState Abraham Cahan; and two by my "arch \y Players about the Jew in America. The show nemesis." Philip Roth. "Eh the Fanatic"and%Issponsored jointly by HiUel and B'neiChelm • Portno.v s Complaint." It is evident the ,A(a new Jewish cooperative) and will be held sources used are excellent, as was the show &?,at 8 p.m. Friday at HiIlel.2105San Antonio in its debut three weeks ago in Manhattan* -/ st. ­ (Kansas, that iti JsJj, Historically speaking, tliis production is a sequel to "Fiddler on the Roof;" for it is a FINALLY, AS WITH "Fiddler on the '•"-biographical sketch of the Jew after he has Roof." "Tevye deals with theage-old identi­^arrived in America. ty problem of the Jew — that of relating to a .THE SHOW, which begins prior to the turn vast and changing world, a world that is , of the century and continues-to. the present, foreign historically, socially and religiously. j--depicts the Jew coping with all sorts of Through its historical inspection of Jewish situations and problems from the Depression roots. ' Tevye in the Golden Land" is an ex­ • to the turbulent Sixties. The sources by ploration into modern Jewish consciousness, ^necessity cover many diverse aspects, in-shedding light on how Jews in modern times deluding social, economicand religious areas. have weathered their recent past plights. As r<.'. Books to be utilized in the showare: "What one whose roots extend from that of •Makes Sammy. Run," by;Budd Scbulberg: "Tevye." 1 find this show to be an enlighten­.''Call It Sleep." by Henry Roth; "Awake and ing and meaningful experience. Sing.-' by Clifford Odets; "Letter for the Also on Friday after the services at Hillel. Front.", by Muriel Rukeyser; "TheFathers." there will be onOneg Shabbat at B'neiChelm. by Herbert Gold: "A Mother's. Kisses," by 1900 San Gabriel St.. where we will discuss Bruce J. Friedman; "The .Voting Lions," by ---some elements of the reader's theater. ******************************** { THE SPLIT RAIL INN | * presents tonight * | JUBILEE |Saturday -MarciaBall(Freda) 1411 Lavaca 472-7315 t Sunday -Texas Indepandeiica Day TONIGHT * with Alvin Crow &STEVE •< • The Pleasant Valley Boys FROMHOU $ Every Thurs. -Reynold's Sisters A and 4tv The New Oso Band DALLAS BBOOKS Cover$3 | NO COVER Next Wept: 217 S.Lamar 472-1314* JonathanEdw *• GEWEHHi CIIMEIWA COBPORATIOW IALL CINEMAS EVERYDAY S1.2S TIL 1:30 actn °T0WER|HG INRRN0' 451-7326-IH35 AT KOENIG LN C0MP1HI wunwn PROGRAMS AT 12^0 3M 5:10 7J0 9J5 DOORS OPEN DAILY 12JO AGOOFYSPORF ACULAR c c: TECHMOIOR® i 1 HIGHLAND MALL 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENIG LN. SORRY. HO PASSES NO IAR6AIN MATINS PAUL. MFCVE KTV/HAH MCQUEEN WIUJAM Mgm HOLD&l iFowlfufcHj jhferno I ^ f mmm THURS. 454:30 fi, Fwn&s CAPITAL.PL.ASA •6M>j Sc&ader 452-7646 • IH 35 NORTH RWmiPlixlucbWi' •9:30-'' V '/j k, "-I< .;ri T^KIW i.;-^ ><> . • CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS.IFURN. APARTS. £ FURN. APARTS. g HELP WANTED 15 word minimum N : t .v>i Each word on« time .. .* .1) Each word 2-4 timet.10 Stereo-For Sale "ENFIELD AREA.IMmwiKcwtY ' Each, word 5-9. times . . % .08 A' S140 t NOW LEASING : «dr». FwnfcAe*or«alUt»etiiel F»*» Each word 10 or mfere times--S -07' 50% OFF -SPEAKERS FOUNTAIN;-;! HARMON ® SOUTHERN ESE APT^?^ tms» tfu* eftetrtctlyL W«t UML Student rate each time .. ..$ £0 Air suspension stereo speaker system TERRACE *"SUMMIT VIEW APT. ~ Classified Display Stilt in the, vTrampI r^nulaciurer's wr->mm J.OK'! !,v 1 col. v ) inch one tlme.::.;:.s3.25 APARTMENTS Oo Dy tna see oufIbedroom turnhhed 1 coL x 1 Inch 2*9 times $2.93* tbns and with full mahufactuWs 5 year taroe 1 bedrooms, large'closely fully fs§tf tfitWS® £sSf$ '^•I'^W-Mthanuiru Summit EFFtqipkaEt BidraMisainlaiE. guarantee ©ri parts ahd[ labor.New strips carpeied, cubic, disposal—----Si Ziti?. ,££ V Qwnfol to ' StftffdBtf PeeJNr <» „ . —-Meat canyus 1 col. x 1 inch ten or more times$3.64 rrienl glvesyou a choice of 3 'ditferent swimming not lurnlihed. walking ills-Unlurn. TV. Cable, ACWater,Gas Paid AC. paneled. OIder*.complex, solidlr dewilowifc pQot tfeoraaib.-4ar.l8k.3Mk afaa^wUftittHhit awwiw^L . systems;:pafr of walnut styled speakers lance to UT;. no children or pets. . • <719 HarmonAve.-'. TjutU. S1J5 ptm E. ' --.-r'-\ : 4S»9CV 47^U2. terv wUtlo^pctt te worUb: amtitdb. . -—•u'. • jusl SV5S-Speakers include 10" heavy­610 West 30ttu 477-8858 AwtftaWK ht'im'Mr «r -duty woofer, 5"'.mWrange« and a 3'' OCAOUNt SCHjRXAf super -dome tweeter. Cash or E-Z terms. 02 BEOROOML 2 MTR «m AM»«a£ U.NITE0 FRE1GHT 5ALES. ^535 North : I BEDROOM 1137. Efficiency ntohed. Fu« kDcheiK tuinan MOML TejiaiK Mk %>*.CK6. THkaBaa, Titan fcvtof,i...liOQ y>m. MexttocamtW. RESUMES Tvndqf Ttaan Mtorfqf IliOOojn.. Lamar, MotvFrl; *4;.Sat.-9^. ALL BILLS NOW TIASIRTE > • si\5. .Very DUE to campus. .47t4i«t 8nd CX"--.. • '' W>rfnu4»|i T«un Twriiy.tHiOOun. LONGVlEW 5h«t,,e. completely PAID . > ?*£«£Pet&lC'^A/CB;;:Sunt-ln..W*WT6P. «WW««> ^—.— tlmnd^ Tmn WiJiiiijhi'.UiOgajn. Part-time For Sale-Garage • T«n TVimisy .,....U:00«jn. Female -$79 ARTS. TYPEWRITER "VIBRATOR, dryer, v>-tbedrobfn apt. muww £•• -' avrtte^vpw^&w*aSk•• • «»•»«* Phone work skies.; iftshtfi* records. • bedspreads, ' -& andcabiejTV_patd. BONUS JHXWL 2b«^«aa^t DtU&. A blocks west of drag. PAMTLEDKFENSRFVANSABJUH^^BFTSAEAIRR*­ ' bottles, plant** Jottsa -misc. bargains. 2408 Leon\] •;->>./• '/•; 476-3467 ^West 38«h.4SW154 0M51-S!w.a«EwRNwi>fcOr.4|»aa; •»m'wo.«gg^gM»ag»ir~ 4In rtw mat tlMM wadi in «n Come seel. 47fr3875. .• . 6533 wfrwllnnmit, In—din nctfct mwA In UNIQUE. MINIBIKE 10 Speed. 66 VW. 476-7688.'; -• * OliE BEOROQMoniSbuMI^ UaaiWfe' > gtwa'otfhe anWitiww'XMMiMi far Aquariums; crystal carpet, hardware. • 5 Blocks ftiritfsftcdL mkf OMi hwwdInmllw. JUI dalm> far utilities-Th* BrowftStQMh .SNtcIk M> items. 530? Beechmoor. March 1*8 928­ riwW be mod# Ml 'later 2810 • West of CjanipuS ' • . EFFICIENCIES Lamar. tfcon tt day* oftor pubfecati««.7 V UT COEDS New" large1 efftsi&clesV Llvlhg room CLOSE TO CAMPUS EXTRA SPACE W CM MrdL T^» offset bedroom.-and kitchen. Cable, • SHUTTCE.BUS*-Apartment living within Walk­be*oom/>baibQtt'rtiwljali»eramiUltt water; gas,1urn1*hed."S130v Also 4 blocks . . v: FROMI125 ing distance to' class.: ABPavattaMe fticnlstwttiruslwratites: CASTING! LOW STUDENT RATES Misc.-For Sale Jllli'i-.'.;--;.--• Swimming pool, beautlf)>lty:.furnishede:. -• 2710 Nueces '• Thf Sauttt Shore. 309 E. WMHiiifc. Dr. .15 word minimum each day...s .80 477-5514. w 476-7916 double or studio bed. Sli have dis­4463Q7%> . ./'... f Each additional word each days .05 , TOP 'PRICES paldVfor diamonds, old " Red Oek Apartrnems' i hwasher. disposal;, central alrand heat. 4?7-9388, 3 BEDROOM. Z bam Xwl. 1col. X11nch each day,.:..S2.64 gold. Capitol^Diamond Shop. 4018 N. ,Sa'^GaWrt^'^->;. ' rUnctassHleds'r I.line 3;days ;$1.00 Lamar. 454-68^. ---. -305 WEST.35TH -tar young tamSy. Cpateufca* la im -Priced tor a (anaitN-t*idttet, SMS »tns cwastwiteaA. » (PnfpakL'No Refunds) MANAGER APT. ,l(fev«4-S10«1;<5««49 TWELVE OLp BRASS beds from sE onfurii^fml Studentv :must >how Apdttocfs ; ^^cty^/»ht;ques 50^ Walsh47*3346, 43+ ABP. Tt»Sooth Sim.3ME. -tSlrfs "^m*.M«J,pay;lri:advanctin TSP •Dr. Ill Mil. % $=* Bldg.3.200 (tttti fc.Whltl*) from I. CtEATiVC mu$ niy/wWuu a.m. tO;4^0 p.fTK. Monday through* • PRINTED COTTON SCARVES frpmln-....... • .'Ifse.Lui. EnictmcKt--•.. EFFICIENCY¥s? " * EFF1C1EHCY wtth. i>Wi^ afc3w» , mxyiiaM whiu Friday^£> , .. V •j^tf^ifOTe'afsq' as-fialtertops, wall * i 'V-.'' X .-y!». «v -•,:V\A "V.'c.JXtii. ':-i; ' . . jk $l39-<'--1*-, : to, :• tjangJngs, etc. Maharanl's. 1504 San An- Sffk igltonio^ St: 476-.229j.• > ; : -ALL BILLS PAID -^arssssiesasf^--'­ Close to camptn. large, open beamed 3332-..V... >'1 1BEDSPREADS.ON SALE -from fndia, > Mexican ;tile,Floors cellins. tully shag caroetedL CAJCK ail. WUWQR RIIJLttiieMWk.CMttti ^PQtand«:'Spafn;-/-Twin, double, and king • Furnished r; . 11 v V ouiu-in Kucnen, cwor coordinated. » EMF1ELD A6EIL sue 8ert «^ • WwcjBt ewrtin* hassles. 4006 Avenue 4k: Antonio Street; 476^291, • • Shuttle ; wii. big balconies for your plants,-Great loca-45Z-5533 or 451-6531«r An^m famtiv*-ttaofctoo* Hcam • Gas B.B (y> plus electricity. luaKikQnbk CASH* FOR RECORDS. Rock, lazz, tion. great looklng. slifplm ' EFFtOEKCtEsmsptus&ACcmel • classical;. In-good; condition. 474-5294 • Free Cable -Manager 201 -4?S-90Se -paoet POOL on sfcuttte. ay^antAMM* '-Auto-For Sale •: • ; ' alltr S 00 110 E. 37th, mgr. apt. .A.4SMW1 • ys. K«aw!$v^iwife call 475-8329 EFFICIENCY VW BUG. Red/o. air, -A/f.-Clean. BY OWNER-Sofai be«t A/C. two bean —r mil 1imHiiani*^ M^emcMH»s«8B9Mm«k b After ep.nu can B36-4736; . . . bans. tw& end tables, sunflsh sailboat. $139 From 4MBA^P. a start1*74' MUSTANG-II. 5,700 mites. AC, 44M666 nights.. Summer' Rates Now ALL BILLS PAID; t^sbewesio»wittkaBBie»wrtdii*;48». v .rtdlo.v power' brakes, automatic MIRANDA SENSOREX, 50 mm F1.8. Close to campus, large .opetvbeameO-GOOO: -M&. »aa .bet**. saotErSc^rj^ooBTSaSB:" .transmission. s^lStf Red & White. Call 135mm ;f|?.8*» tion; Loaded. Low mlfeamileage. S785." Cail WHILE THEY U(ST -30 new 10-speed NOW LEASING FE8RI/ARYREMTFREE. MoemattVK O^onfaaBtwa mu catr^ .-.Jplyy 47fr6659 evenings, «• _..f. bicycles. ,469.95^4810 Burnet Rd. ^ Prettiest 1-2 'bedroom apartments. Estrada Re^tioo. LargR2be*ooaBw2b«ftite ~^tfnr tat tfc»«ajpai pe^y^ms r ^ <®3S. Water and-gas paid.-Pool, -laundry, ->J'MT-BIRD. AC AM/FAfl. ix>od mlltase -ANTIQUE BEDS 'Kli' wle 575 each CA/CH, disposal,. dishwasher^ 1" shuttte Lary poot 2 Wodn ftmUT; oMUPisabRattQfcafltfBKQW . lift utt? ;;aix) tlrei smoolh running car, SI, 100. Dfessw and SrfJelj and taaulilul an Law SchooLBtt Rtdl BNr>IP«||:-, * j 459-7794. ' • •? >:*• .. .(in.ia run *r>n jnjBMi bedroom S135. 7 bedroom ST65. 476-210a EFFICIENCY HOBC MASCQL te VMBL tlque rug.Xall 478-9021 ; 453-8538. Aptsf: NICE I BEDROQAA j atao>«Bwft4Bafc. . VW, 1969 BUG. automatic stick-shlft.-. MOTOR I2ED BtCYCLE for sale. I near UT-VZt l«MR radio, very good condition; owner retur-month old. 50cc; S295,30 mph. Regularly : •/ 1801 So. Lakeshore V-^ig to Europe. S900; <71-4376. 34&-2S52. ,*• S37ff. 451-2110. ;'-.u k MOVE IN TODAY Shuttle bus at front door. pooL CA/CH. LAP^P ONE RcnBftnM . 1966 BUICK LESA8R6340cw.fnyV-8aH 442-6668 shag Carpeting, all built-in kitchen, ten. LARGE OHE BEORQQM. VtftBk.t* 5.m&pth< flfcieawia. (MR MfTKlp^Ju^SPRiNG^Hi^rYrnew nls courtsaeross thestreets, hugetrees. ^automatic power. A7C. excellent run-26? menfs 10-speed Huffybicycle. Still In VILLA Beauntui ,; LaKefront schooL study are%; carpetBt, » nlng condition. Call 471-2467., . 4504 Speedway, 453-3769 or 4S1-6S31 ' cable TV. sua deefc. CA/CM, tanaggu the crate.i452-sai0 Apartments.: •:< .1570.'. CAMARO fully . equipped fow . BARGAIN MIRANDA 3S, 2 lenses, flash. SALANO t. SISVM ABP. ANMUEOA-GXAT: XSnSKnkioiatMav -mileage. >1.650. ,453^154. -. •• Case.; perfectkccmdltiot%v scratch-proof. US. EFF. SIM pfta-etK.^ tM» «L4 -'66 FOUR DOOR FORO. Automatic $150. Must seir, 472-749K v " .» 1 BR-5145 EFFICIENCY 2°"^;StEV™«xl Ptooh. ML» . radio. Good condition. S400.452*7767.8211 SONY.COLOR TV 17". Remote control, 3 ' • •. Shadowood.' • > months old.: W/full 'Warranty. 5440. 2 BR -$165 -WALK TO CAMPUS TMKSU1QIS; .. ';MUSt SELL, wife's car. 'No job. '71 .AM/FM stereo .radio, from Ponflac 1.51st . 4S VIP Grand Prix. 1973 S9Q. 477-8380. , ; ' '""iiUwt efficiencies. bullWn v. Plymouth Satellite. Sebrlng. loaded. kitchen -appliance*. CA/CH, lots of 'sssssessss: --s rparty parts; <1300. 473-2147. BUNK8EDS F0R SALE. Cheap, Call MOVE IN TODAY APARTMENTS Sloraoe..iuper location, ckae to grocery 478-9482 between 5-7 pm.--: . ' 33rd and. Speedway CARPETED. dCfkamslter.­ •* 1974 MG MIDGET. One year warranty. aftd shuftte bui al Trant door Gas and laundry. NearUaiwna^SwutSacS lytcwew HE*# wewee* CUnMna . v 7800 miles. Good condition. &000. 836-WEST OF CAMPUS. Large attractive Walk UBor Sltuhle at door. Spilt level mterpald. «10West JUh.«*4B»or«St-:tMaanttlk)»)naUMUi«>tK ­ ,7556^477-0184 building. Ideal conversion to fraternity, ' -VILLA luxury living. BeaulHul:3.brs/2,baths 6533. door, rrr —ITnnili«i -" ­ iWI-jRisf. SELL;^)969 Volkswagen. Best . association, schobl. 8,000,sqijare feet^-. -plus study. Designed for 3-5 mature: WALKING DkSTAKCE VT««adl laifHiiae k&J offerbefore MarchlO.CaJl l-295-J70J.-nf. .Jack JenningcConsolidated Realty.474^: ARCOS sh/tjents. New furniture, walk-inv, pool. '/ *896. "• + F f-1 .abie TV. Quiet,elegant atmosphere^ -Sv--;1 BEDROOM^ f5-ti bflnalttoy. ' / 1 BR -$149 King siie T betJroom ; also a vallable-, r tuMjriaus carpeo. pri»Me.hMmnfaa or ­ : wtn MGB. tJ3rArena.-No.:i55. 442-1503; , PARASAIL-astenJlonal parachute. Ride Leasing for summer ahdfall. Drastlcal-S-_ patto^ siuritaitt. MMiw>m»t »!>«?< frd.qru 1, behind boat, .car.-SunfIsh sailboat, new •3301 Speedway ly reduced lUmmer rates-Please callK-v, $1354> *al|/Or, Grov 454^626, 327-1367i : > qose_ to'shuttlettle bov and tennis courts^ med>»tO>orll»na>lL«Matt.4a»aa>^lUeQjy al tree^ sm Aialtaki* an. < jStorj17:00 p.m.;is;;. ,1974TOYOTAvCORONAr-9monthSoJd­ ' 1 wi y.inAwnwqni r iiwnni QK)| fully carnetcd. w <; &U7ur» automatic, am/fm.am/fm, more.mori ~Best,offer ! FRENCH PROVINCIAL:-living room • MOVE IN TODAY ">>451 carpetM,: all bullMct kitchen. LARCE Cwpetwt e»U«>ej. rS5 i_i Week' takes jt. 463-7265. -• CA /cH. pool 'ov^nobUng treeIt, lots ot Utchetv *aUtio ctcse< Ibhek a* kjM* «52^22K*JKS^2^2™Sr . tbis week takeslit. 453*265. chairs; S70.0Q pair;-CIOCK: AM-FM TV with stand, *80.00.;4S3>7050. • LA PAZ ' trees, wate^, gas, and cableTV paid. 4Q School-SllVnvmttL 8» SwtUMT. ~X -3972 TOYOTO COROLLA 1*00. *2 Dr" ^ 2 BLOCKS tOiCAMPUS 45thSK 49M6140T 4S1453X:: ..^V —:V. Manaatr Kg, or auiumi AAA. standard, excellent condition. Must * nooo WfLSON fentils racquefte, brand PR0M;S135 ALL'BILLS PAID sell below book value. 926-2078. new sso. Call day^ Monday-Friday. 471-EL CAMPO -plKUJCTO.Ifr. lMa*aii> 1 & 2 bedroom efficl'ertcy. Fuil kitchen," Etfidwyapart»wit»lS«dd_ ' dV VW 63.000 mffes. SS00, Runs good. 454-1 BR-.S149 up Carpeted, large walk-jn closets. Oriental bedroom. xMSaodiKa Al»m»ipaM,4g»­ 1589. 447-6905. MODERN FURNITURE: couch two -$189 furnishings. Peaceful cour+yardr'wlth 2 BEDROOM .• ^overstuffed chairs, coffcc table, single 2 BR ••;32*V. -• ; 1972 VW SUPER BeatJe. Excellent con-305 W.39lfl401W.39th -pool. Only steps "to shopping ALL BILLS PAID Y bra. oin»B t.we,;cl).Ir». 454-l58?, U7-405 East 31st . _ vr, difion. S1500 or best offer. Call 2S8-6159. 454-03M .459-5700 i ONLY SIO»A nba etectrtctt, ** » 472-2147 : 472^162. WALK TO CAMPUS -months. Very mofc tCSdMOik s v;. •. Wl CHEVY-VAN<6 cylinder^ standard, Barry Gllllngwater Company t earn! apartments, fully shag carpefetL^ W Ave: B,asMsac: wecawuiE: ?r, . -new fires, anvfm/fape. Excellent condt-: CA/CH. all butlt-inlittaief^' each epirK1 mffSSSKMNL HEH EFFIOENCV «K tlon. $2,100. 471-2483 ' ' m«nt has us bmn 'private patia or AvtfntttT^IQl9tnE:4..Mawair ^ Kayak $250 v'-oy-y-v-' balcony.-pool, frees; 1lS0»V«sta^47». :29W^S£tt**m»K AuthMtic rtid^rf.,»?;'¥-28'?,;l4w* 36^'.^ • EASILY ..B IR,D • r,' 559J or 4S14533. • FULLTIME ;; rft? --C 1966 OAT5U N, cIean, s«dan. Newclutch, MAmfiwmK .BMari;:GatyEftttlFiyhh;<3fene.CT.^ TWP AA/ORAA^ > £ ^.brakes, master ocyllrtder, ;iust,:tuned. oc: 1 X,1 V PALQ BLANCO ApaetaMks l _ KQQMatATE TYPIINHGiSERVtOE £> RTJOO. After 5 W~ * -Autry, Paul Nefcman, RosalindRussell. -vv V|\/V\. .NOW LEASING now. tar^e ' ^nirnim't fcatfii. itfii Vcesm. OQOIL/kSPLQM ,i,VOor«lhy'.Ui(ifW^;Ho|»e; Croiby, -• ,• Rent nOW for bwtttben d£spes»t titMM i . ...19660PALneedsdutchworkorrepiace-^Chevalier, Jaclt;twndff,sJohn Jrtayne.-.• '• t-APT$£• . • tree^ Pfentfy o*Mrkin». Ok«j »ny;: rrany:otM^,(/nlipiitM Supply. city bus routev «t Btecft.' :SUAAAAER Road47a-tB^or Ml-OQ. % W/^Ctwele/Cal,. ^cylinder ' ^?4>'-:Chevy. Good gavmlleade. Runs: • U "' ; -.<.45»-3J»4'-and lave 20-25%! Choice University ONE BEDaOOafcAiWtimiULI -Auto aJr. rirwvlur®* r location! Ponce' De Leon l/.ll, lit, 708West'34thSlfeV ioiutait pus.Sl3>phj*efeCtC*nSha*tMv . .TAXSALE Pepper Tree V». Ut, {V and V. Phone ... . 9sl any*fti^re<; TurquoVse these numbers for Information for Earty -•i-A--««•--•--i ---*-t--Turquoise•.. — .' . and • nt.ir...u.ii M«4N MMII^ 476-927V OISTIHCTIVE OEStG^ Bird Savings! 472-C251472-8941, MB . Homes-For So»^: " luojse and. bedroonw (M7J8 phts C­ #fe^ RETIRED TEACHER-selling home 2310 J. »Hver. Nava|^tirtceleHl^.9$5upl'2unl' ceitr-­ .'.Long^lew. 'Close to.UT-Bow 1940 U9t-•• **yl« weddlng-.bir IITA:95e»fh&h(ll >-NOW LEASING^ Fra 500. 47S-1734 .^nd.'turquolse: 117.95. Sterling.'silveriHleshe andturmolse choKerwltfi MOVE IN TODAY ' ••• r12 *> SrXENSLEEXurnHherf;' 2' sliver-tetisVdi NEWONEBEOBaaMTst«U»gM& 3S5^ " gle inlay Water 1 BR -Si70 3 BR < S325 CaWc :TV. ImMne . bedroom, :CA/CH, call after-5;30-• $16Q^ mi -43S9. bird ring j?'. Chlp.ilnlay* channel•> • LARGE.:POOL -ALL BILLS PAID; ' • -carpeting, and n»aqr «!«»•*. «». . bracefet Sl9.95i The rest,of our stock, ol < MARK XX MC I2'x58" Mobile -Home. :/. • turtjuolse and stiver 50% and 60% ott. r Bedrodnrv, MOVE IN TODAY TtXUdkVS. .CA/CH. .2;jbfi excellent copdTtionJ'474-.The tlnest ln Americah lndian rugs.ti! v 2 BR-$184 v AssuwE >jE»se-twt» r—mwia V 2606. uVj^ ' ^ ? the best for less-at?&•" V s «4-4?)7 •• v ^ EFr..'-APT^Sl» «IBtt iM. pftf&gssr -^ & now Lem$ WILLOW " ... ^'rockhous EFFiaEHCY UtBACKOl MFSS ACRES,' . ^ $145'.r i, NEED'A GREAT •CREEK BMtiHtttl ---a. — /Sits allilone;Ona hUl wllh40b-cCAft/UCCI -V -iip 1-1ii'^'•"" I Kl f* , f»LACE TO LIVE? NOW LEASING *;> . 9emo|^irugged*;oU; ff privacy is yovrr: r,l\ C.ClVV.ri CCL_ IIN.w 9em^irugged;oU; if your 1 BR Purn --r—-*TCl«»>r.JraeIWM.BI> thing^. this.imay^be MI-arbedrooms^.l.^ViV-, -TRY THE . , fireplaces, asking price S39000 00 The^: 1 • BICYCLE MARK IV APTS : BLACKSTONE '* BDRIA^^i?>BORM-. MOMLEASING ' » UMOUSE.. IMs'« TBLOCKS UT3100 Speedway " ~ " V^aCils. -cTJrW"-S175 $220 SHOP 475-0736 478-4096-, APARTMENTS ASPEISLWOODT. ALL BILLS PAID ^ .J-«vi;Eorwhaieyer your^tT^ycle heeds « SHUTTLE BUS CORNER Share « large rpom for s64.50/mo. or -Dishwashers-jLarge Poob .<4 'OPEN HOUSE • .. take an entire room:for .S112J0 fur* ' % .Spacious Contemporary. ?., ? VWE CARRY1'A" LARGE nished, all bills paid.Maidaervtce oncer Security &> ",V-SATURDAY 2 tilS ^ELECTIOW OP ­ tflX CROOKED LANE fHAr' MOVE IN TODAY one. -.'V.rStyflsfc5,5ftmnlAg. Contemporary Rome.'; PARTS AND ACCESSORIES; my &' c0nveni4nce.'at its-1901 Willow Creek rj Z Pools -Covered PterMisi­ o;-,fef^ectsrar'Professor! 3 sBedrooptss:, best/ ONLY 300. YAKOSOPROM UT,' ""•jj ' SOJT71E -CITY USHUKS' aiSeparafePrlvafa Room forStudy; Inside' WE RENT 444-0010 COHVENIEMT TO AMY UKATUtt CAMPUS. = 'Stone Wallu (Marvelous Kitchen iforS 2910 Red River sSgourmft . Cooks. 'Over 2,000 Sq.-Ff..' ^"*iOpe«M^pmon , .. "K *paragdn property^ ——; 11 BR.iw-irtfciw ,!(\iCusfom;Bul|t. Mid Forties -tExcenenH ^•Tueiday'jnd-Thursday ' AUSTIN sfet-f lna««liMI • South L 0HVIH 35;;East, on s 453? Guadalupe 4S^440 fcf^itwoodlandiCfMs Parker Lane;^^Rlohf on'i a v MK®C«dar Rldeei.tefton crdoked tane.;TM% ' -Muaicol-Fof Sale 'j Vour'trme is-valtiable :v •'!r f n°W LEASING ' ..C Come LiveWtthUsl t., i Oui1 service ls fi-ee:fc:'& v'..wpjamiistw»Mmt • . UNfVOX.ele^fc,ptthO'\«lfh CiavicordVfif^. BROWNSTONE dp e1i4c -WOOL. S>aOla. and *ujtain>Prlceiwgotlable/DMg,47a-".r:c«i 1 DK "5,4;> "» TAMMAKMM?* MM-. • .1 3 7 f t -. • . / J l . tPARAGON { .PARK APARTMENTS:' iKENRAY,.YAMAHA F0 2»>W^ve itrlng gultar« PROPERTIES >Are conveniently located^ prJccdr)gtit^< BR -S180 w rA*»ARTMENTfe- JfT" il i 'FINE OLDER HOME 1& 2 bedroom eparfrhents -located ^ortv' t-m* ' -1 FINE OLDER after POO^^Jh.^ ^ shuttle bus rout^ ' /, 2122 Hancock br. s«rs4ss^ AC Paid , / NEIGHBORHOOD M DULCIMERS 3 6 4 String M0-70 Call ^472-4171 : From SI4230 ^ w&mpiicidvs ;rooms.tthardwood floors;' lapce 47? 11411 i lV, • t Weekday! y<*. 5w n LawBILLSPA'6 taK*.ta.Mae» urn aeaotaa ^.^aeparate'dlning i'odm, Yemodeled'^ w /ifTanglewood ao<;lji>ir%; . BASIC-.f-Oi:^iltfdl«>3ti»triie«idA.'-,orew-v>;-'i liBBTSg ^?^W CalL^urtls Jordan al -4009;... — Mi 452-0060 •oaid 4 BLOCKS WEST of Drag l bedrooS;2 toomgintsee oMMrfc ««k..ra«ron ,CA/CH^appllances, .free dai/water.v 3 BLOCKSEFROM Shuttle BinCorner #§3 iNirt.:2|0T;ian Gibriel; No;1«; 475-9.1W. s •Jeff, .y ••• .•: ;.y •-j • . ..."A.--• M/oe one and two bedraoma|H(>luptft INFLATION" : ,,5° P'M»1el«t»ric»y faf low commercial . SUBLBTlbedroomfurnlshedabt., ralei). Pool, laundry, free cabte. The. iflKiPetSffor'Sole'" GUITARSTRINOSETS.'i"-Sa*eJ(»% v ABP,-. cable)-Walkvto.gampu£ or Pease: Rlo House. ,472-1 &fc Weil 17th atRio ' , Move In Today fc ^REF-TO GOOD H0ME. 3 HOHNER HA^QNfCAS^ . save 10% Park Lots of cf0?«t space and nice fur Grande. . • • v-• :-vf ., :-:.r 108 PLACE SUMMER IN ."GUITAR f THE .-isf ESTABLISHMENT ^^.4wrArt4hJ«Wrtl/C«Heml* ^Tl-lw/^yAMAHA^UITARS^ Save I0%>.i'.nlture^475r9)te;or 472-7044^'v-. Fterms&ed Elttelcacy EUROPE THE PEPPERi^.; ^^4400 Ave.b TREE PEOPL^^^i451-4584 ,»•» Black tattattteWi et«Mt»eK lapeaeck. In «nh uit-. ' f^bave three extra large «#flcjency--. LargeEtf.'*1»JQ . *• l^auwirv tacittttex i' apartments avariable-lmi Walk -Pedal -Shuffle ^rmmedlate oc­ fe' fAA a U^m$ FURN. APARTS. 't . Qulai. «nAlgfiborhood. .. l . carcet,, disfnr*ift& disposal lots ^ Move.Iri Today vv,^SMSlLCMa^ Wtafc.* His semester. «3t be a (•'tamer U.S. Sen. Sam Er-Bat Ercm defied categories 'I'm trying to save "women The yogttnn «S V^iat H*JBL vtth "strirth hoi kcm." wy. D-X.C.. who gained He stood with other from their fool friends and ^ctmaqg wanjois Jrenj Br. Steaks R. UmtcrVaRMllietei •atkaal pranuBeaceasda^ Soatheroers against civil £S£§3^. from themselves, he said. jytsittat •Mljiiwiiii said. •aaM «( the Sent? Wat rtgjhts legisiauan Ervin op­ ftalfcHwfl ihmjrtlicss % Dr. The bjadis a -j iiiiphik MBWitHe. vill poses federal housing sub-Ervin retired from the Q^KSSTSS: ^a^^Ao^jtbtte«Qi^&aE»man .tStwflqrX. l>6rt»twt.^aB«f fruuouttie^ -eawrt baod • style and "tJar denude a sadies hot faoghl the N'ixrai Senate in December and lives iqMkiiit far l%ms^p aad a® Cfeawju-ix®" at 3 p^n_ in Morganton. N C ;^ the anono^ sesatn aria in- impoundment of lands ap­ Mendaj' ia the LBJI Lihraiy. «tfl«iteg»itf.8aMcteBaaa. The sg*«4> is tree to the BECAUSE HE does not Garten ta«ga«^^.Ctftareaft the LBJ Library and LBJ %n&8^ *Bffl«nmfi»®iea»t«gs oft tfhe '$ camada tteBw^a^^titeaKMtenfie^tetter. !'. SRoDowing an totrodnrtorir address aft 23> mstadffiM Sfrjwar Senate career for Er- B>jra.%D«.E^Wto^rtniiniBitfftc fw na ia adach he dEtit^nsM ownbefskip. ttte aswft w* tfce ©tflhige qff «J Onnia] and .Uricu "Tta« 6 realty n set ba»# as a pMMtr of in-Piuhlctn Pregnancy Counseling Service S^ragaa^.and lUtesataxres^lecturersanlex-for .tbsIStiming" dwadtol tfeertws. Student Health Center dftSmm 3aaQn^fml&Baata»& Ute' writot (enteral ^ynitnoas l>mnai ae t« ISQmsuI "IBEMOSTpwinsiatK :i W. 26th St. (4Hi Hoor-South) ®»tejr88r!*B88ie5s«»»Stti8ii&,tibe85&S-^emW*8rs. -. : Alter pesttnas •* tie ef dnSotiia is tbe beedom CwifidCTtiol rounsgtmg with all alternatives ditcusv­ ^j^jwiw.ewiw.iiwwt.we. ^>e)tl^^!toaaafrF!Rff.SdaiJ.ABama Ml are NM. w pat «g thg inatatiuJ — sadIhave cdand refcnak made to appropriate resources. Call tteQfffitfe lip •!mii ilitoiilal^'ji|aiiM.L paestt^ flab As tbinaa of the Senate ItMD^iaaa. >> ^rii^.-'u~'.-irtoaiy satnurmuittee «» •• Ihr irrij-TTrtnr ifPaffliawt *Hirti\ j mH , MrapaK»tfanir:» eanstttatio^ rigjhts, he held <^Tws»lirtSaBat4rft^t»B»ers*y «>l to 9 p*.each Untaji *• heat^aodstadKsanpasa­ N6<#ag*»attABnJW«r. •.• • . 8*IM|)mii tadUl • Me qff hteracv teste aari «». WWJ »Miinji.>»»,_ E^^ftogtB^agtingdeaaatllbeKiij/iua M«sit Btilditg.East. other xoing teqaneraeHs. t&feMinSr . "41 Qeuena and -f"i -ni iiimiir*tpBr . iM DCubo said Mas^txaas «*- firvia Bed Seaate (ffxsitiai tftoooss' *be anertmai littwuWhty address aft tefetel n aodftiaaa^ Cor to forroer PieaMt Xnnn"S w&un&^S'ni&oSsian&Br «». lasctees van SnBov i^Bmga the toad sboaM cnotact MB* Ktsiflfta. D.C_ ~ao toawnnKlte. adhfefc &g>6 gwawu Suttee Miaflte 4MB Saft*srsei:i»g «a ]n«^Ms «ri DiNiao or-' Gerald taatk" lam-and -has carat­ «tpt*fa » ^«o^a»fa^atiiBgt. Hiffc Sftwlboaddirector. aaaeteag oa m^isa political ? activities. T Inst Day THE HAIRCUT STORES: Deadline .. Tftfr for «nm«a ^ i&isj«arl»jfni «3 oat bm tbe asmwt «f rensaoD the stadent Sw Stttdem SttBotaal^d^r a» process irf aaijpng Ms Sh»teBts mem (Ml see a Imam in!aals omudgr tthe 333&3S3E anadenne ^nar ag^itkatintts. .• :­ :«MUpsA^KteKha^. at tibe bwal aids office. ftos tbeea «««nded 40 5 sum. Stadeutsaw^fbraMiir Alter run— a«aids aoe Osiice kosrs are 8:3S ajn. to soiBMTaMsMimm ^iJiilnA. 4 wtfiat raty 4;Si pen Monday tlirongh Tbe ideaaiiw ^as a&awS notice «f fwr—rhfl reqaest a revfcsoo if be fw4s PtjiSjy j.' % the end S. Graves jbe «as ant gsven adeqaate cuatro caminos . S • tfte ^toteft ftwmo&B *o& sand. faaads or If his fiUK-ul I ^ Bflj^^WtBaWfceaWwWw. ^anox im»IO». Sosan ^>iBwS5m ©55JSE*^SS ishwfL* 10% OFF W,^ | rte^ynangswy^Bwati- TWO CASTUJAN Contr»cH for W*3» IMOIFm. j sen*s*r-»re»e. wflJ stMease «t» •«or*w«JE iwwwa* kss. (^11<7VVWfc. >MkQ>f«»a M A HHENU.Y ATMOSPHERE | ** ferule. W ^ THEN TAKE A LOOK AT sett spring m.w>iiiil.40iBMt. !&>i»i s... ates« af Castitian-ba«) and RENT •LEASE -<*<»Ut«wrtiin>>gr BUY • SELL can » •(MM 175-0092.POOL WW­ TEXAN CLASSIREDS GIVE lvaitsbto tn spr QMICK, FAST RESULTS •«a»>»,»aniniifcm.mno»agr" aynmay AND THEY'RE INEXPENSIVE -ffl.SSSS «1 WbWfc.jwig7' - „tC'&rS, Friday. February 28,1975 THE sfiaass mm MS" compus or Cancer, OfsTherapySessions . _^le W •>) 1 = u -U. + J IXA x K P « •« — -rrr-;n By JIM LOWE r While Rosen and Pierson and Pierson have geared the International Student £unday in:the-school Award Committee to West;-'Up" miwmT»ytor H»iiai7 -otu?ADt10ft chhst *ii( mwratv* Sunday it'thelAlpha^Xi*^ Tean SttH Writer -'v. 1 Mall Office Building "101 * WOt«m will have•co|l«hbur from • ®Jvernmen' ^ said they will not stir false Couiiseling-Psychological Ser-' Affairs Committee of Student. auditorium. ' r;," > > «" « « p» Ssturday.to 1 art I .-Delta House^-JSOITRIb^fapde Sto ~ in Ihe Most people regard cancer hopes of recovery among ter­program j' will.meet at'.;7 beforeMarch wophi»rif*vr«tn»jir. Th1*Vfl|J vices Center's oeiore^Maren 15A and San on as "Ihe dreaded disease. minal cancervictims, the two specifically to cancer ^Pm Sunday in Business-Political Economy Admltsloiv H 50 „ '°?eV' Go-r"1 s,rM,i Adrt,,M Union East'issue ^" cents > K.) K When you get it. people im­ patients ' • Economics Building iMto dis- hope to encourage discussion A conference on the Jfoun-„J«XA$ UHK3N TMtATW COMMmn! WlllV 1f*"*** W>M CW4TSR Will, mediately associate it with of the ,"taboo-*"-' subject of ."Perhaps our life style in -Student C^vernmentpar7 dations of Political Economy -The Enyironmenlal ProteC'V v ^ *P'^"'' the SaturdayMbrnlng -pun meet^t 11 tlSam^PrldayJnJesWf.'. ,v . Cenfer AtlsAtopresenfa WorKshOpv ­ dying." cancer. the United States is' to keep ; H?ipau<>n ui vpietng. opposi-will be held from 9 a m. to tion and Improvement Com^V " eim Vn* on "Value Clarification " ^ J' i,Because of current mis­vFirst we nave to learn things to ourselves;" Pierson tion to an increase in .inter­12:30 p.m, and.1:30 to:4.-: mittee Of Stuaent.Government v;y-.Jejter Auditorium. -Admission h CHABAo House >vitf pi*et for, Sabbath. candjerlightlnjservices p.m.r-"1 conceptions surrounding the ;: what these people are going .'said.-Harboring fearsand con­national student tuition. p.m: Friday and Saturday at will meet at 7 p m Sunday in * wy4,I*?1Mlftlll Friday at 3iVE 31SI StV A^t 70L 1 Porlln Unll iflo irt UNION THfATM COMMJTTH Will- disease and problems facing through." Rosen explained. cerns is an obstacle to the Joe C; -Thompson" farlin Hall 103 tp ne^rJSandra. , sponsor the Him "Last Tango In CHABAO HOUn.WlU iflHt&XtXW&V'"-'-* day at 311 E 3tst Sf ,iApt "504, fo* a cancer victims, two Universi­"They don't have much of an counseling progress, he add- Conference Center. Wcinstocfc, candidate?for;'Students; taculfy and staff; $t:S0 for gay rfOFtl.tf AUSTIN wll>meetpt8 a NCI 9411*4 am> HIUII will present otben Friday,at.theUnl verstty'-'VV.fo/bn <•/./counseling students with ject sometimes: a lot of cancer, plans to continue Services Committee...... t •• will. meet• A student, committee is "TevVe in the .Gplden Lend'', at ,$tjUlAOVOTtSWOCUrt deadline forsigning informal rap' group J i ^ cancer, beginning in March. families don't even want to counseling cancer -victims „ P.*nV-Suilday-in the P-m,.Saturday at 2105«an, Antonio::'.,5. up for the llth annual Houston Stu-tNTKJt-VAKSITY CHRISTIAN FpbOWSH» Mill v accepting nominations for Jim Rosen, an intern at the talk about it.with them." • i Si. The Reader's Theatre wl\\ pre^i i dent Adverllslno Conference Is noon meet at 7:30 p.m; Friday. In Robert j aft£r this semester's sessions. teachers ascandidates for the -sent '?A Biographical sketch, of the • • Monday. Sign*up outside the adver* . Lee Moore Hell.7*104. Counscling-Pgrchological Ser­By exchangingideas andex-tentatively scheduled for the Dr. Paul Trickett, director Jew in America."-;, v : -tjslng department office. MARK—AOI will meet at 8p.m..Frid«y.(iV^ Holloway Award for Ex­ vices Center, and Dr. Jerry ' pressing pent-up emotions, first orsecond week in March. __ ",e health center, will be CHCMISTKY Otf AITMINT DUUNOUtSHID MBflNOS Communication Building A3.t12 f cellence in Teaching, in . VkSltlNO UCTUm SflttlwHI present. HACK.MAOUATI StUOOtt -ASSOCIATION .... meditation.and discussion,. Pierson. a counseling psy­_ group members, it is hoped, Persons 'in' the: psy-present to answer questions. MORTAR .BOAtO': wilt meet a16;3O 0.fn. Humanities/; Natural t < Pfo*-^ ^r®der|ck.rM*wthorne,^;;.;«v will meet at 11 a.m: Saturday In the chologist 3t-the Universityfor will "accept'the position they chotherapy. group will be in­ c.v ;9r9?n,c chemist-ditcusslnflV.. , Catholic -Studept Center Funsho Sunday' in the Panhellenlc offlcei v Book Fair Scietices, Social . and: •"5Cat»ly*l> Uslno\:Metat.Jocar-^';.>f Aklnphala wlU fecture and show. . 2313 San .Anionlo-5trf foMfie final 10 years.'will lead ihe are realistically in," the psy­terviewed by ftosen and Pier­ Behavioral Sciences and the;k£': *I 3P m FrM»y In W«lchS, >Ud«s on «tw 1oolo""wi»re Are We selection meeting -v. ­ sessions. Pierson's speciality chologists added. -" 10:TlMrrT'"' periencing financial, oc­minal illnessesare going to be Mall Office. Building, room p.m.. Friday and 4,to 6 pi t antt t,Herahirt wjltipre-O.:1 ivtlio'•'will be a:rld^t>n,Sunday; For •!OOOI}«IVtCOOtB»NATWOCOMMmB cupational and friendship confronted with a number of WerrwWinter.,dlstwsslng'v. willpwt 4 P m,Monday In Texas •k--y • more information, call John-jGayno^; 303. for more information. Saturday and 8 a.m. Jtq2,g. ItQlfamy MUmats* Wjld ^ndiOornestlcetM'-' #1 475-W17 losses. ' losses." the-45-year-old Pier­ : The-psychologists plan to son said.'Hepointed out a per­ ' meet once a week for two son's.lifestyle often changes Good Prices • hours with approximately 10 drastically in. areas of social . persons over an-eight-week activity.andoccupation art juttih* beginning! ..period. Patterned after the choices• after:cancer imposes Alcoholics Anonymous for-its limitations.. Jroat. the groupwill encourage Counseling sessions will ex- students to: share • fears, , plore reactions, adjustments,' '-^problems'. and questions resentment and other,feelings -. related to.their disease. --.••••. which accompany thedisease. T 'A, substantial: number of '"*• Although the Student' Health * persons recover from cancer Center conducts a counseling as'-^ and "many /Will have a long session for students with life- life span.'* Rosen said. threatening: .disease; .'Rosen Station Features Spanish Format T By CHRISTY HOPPET '-"Initially JheM was only~one — r -. Tezan StaB Writer C .-tmfavorable response and that By Coiribining Spanish and was fi'om the -Mexican Now is the time to'buy. You can get Saniui, Pioneer, Akai, Latin American music . and American Institute for ter- FRI. 10-7 Superscape, A.R., Marantz, Scotch, Shure all at un culture in the aevr radio minatingithe-Mexican program "Horizontas," American • • program that discount prices. Shop,9 hours Friday and 8 hours Sat University statipn KUT-FM 'Horizontas'-replaced.'' he SAT. 10-6 has produceda uniqueformat said. The MAI was upsetwith enjoy price war savings. Visit your nearby Custom The three-week old the loss of the pure Mexican program, which airs from U broadcast, : "therefore, I've *17 W. Mthot Rio Orariflff-472-5471 a.m/ to 1 p.m., Monday tried to make this programas through Friday mixes news, widely -diversified as music, poetry and prose for possible." Wheat added the . predominantly. Spanish-.. Wheat asserted that thesta­ speaking audience. : tion has big plans to expand k -."This whoteptpgramisbas­the program's appeal'4o more hed on the' concept that all people beyond thecampus. He p'-, > Latin"Americanssharea com--wants to tape unpublished­mon experience from Argen­po'ets .at the Chilean I ^ ttnu. f tina to Austin, Texas," John Literature^Festival next • sramncBvot • jimoMgava j.' STBCOtSCBVBt ' Wheat, producer and an­month and is.still experimen­ •iw*Yji»wa • lOUDNBSOONTiaL • lOUONBSQONTIOi • HOtUOWRLYBt t MttSANSUKCBVB nouncer. said. ting with news and informa­ • irwnofa • WAUfUTCAMNH •MAM4SMQTESKAXB • UXXmSCONTIOl • wctuowniTB "Jdo things that range from tion services. • lOUBMSSCONTROl • 2-4"MMAN0I •1ST 179.W ' »M6MnnK • MAM-tfMOTESKAKB. primitive field recordings to -Wheat beheves his audience • lOUMBSCONTKX • WBtMOMTniBt • J-riWHTB r • mjpM • UST$4299S . ' t folk music, to dance rhythms, is more .than just Spanish- • MAM4SMOTfSKAIOI • USTS4I9.93 • unmctiffM , •> to light and. heavy, popular," speaking people. "Another • imsM.ts 5 music." Wheat said.-. audience. J, thiAi' are those 3. $ as $ "John pulls allthe elements who arewstttdy ing th6 together and prepares the language. Listening to 'the commentary." said Bill Gior-program would be a-lot.more da. station manager. j fmi than listening1o tapesm a When the program first lab.*! hesaid. % started. Wheat had to use his ;. £*» t;.:. personal record collection for ^ r ­ an programming because, flie : station's music library bad no QOPIONeHR BVPiOIMEER « , i'­ Spanish albums: "Now, we've;; !5AWAR0 w begun to receive promotional A PU10 % * PL51A^ CS63DX i copies; and the libraiy has 30 70 -to 40 recorduigs, but more:­ keep coming in weekly,'-' ^ r Wheat said. Giorda himself is excited S&se&kEiliS , ^ith the new program and' m r-claims. "For the first time a 'd&gus •.radio program is-taking the-•lUKTMCM :%cnltureofMexicaffAn)encansi. •wsremi .'J&Sjtf' •wwxm** and setting it within the_: • PaUXEIURNTAMI ••J-»>p*r h«Mt>r $jeRly 0AMPCUBNO • umsvms ' • S'-MKMANGI • CMiai -aatfifurtlag general context of the Latin .- ferquadlprkt: • AMISKATING Frtfmtoagl IpUt • OAMPGUBfie American culture •UST4*9.93 •UITW.95 MS • uttmvs • "Unfortunately, there's not: •mm, Ust $121.85 -really any adequate ~Way to measure audience response. I --. • ... m think we've probablyhad 12or •i'k f ¥?£' 13 cards and twice that many -jphone calls. I suspect the ac-/prown Shops 'tual listeners those: numbers might repi-esent are just the -i-fct Pteq Balcotia j.,®t " Guodolupe f torest tip of the iceberg." ? < 'i Wheat also' is pleased with m Superscope _,'the. favorable response v# CD-302 •% • mm . iwtthdwfcy • MSI • SNHD STBBEO 8,'uiior ripnfctllwr • am s&fe#jNDmst»rafe,| • UNDBIDASM Mr . :S£ • SWMM91B m •UST 119.95 DiSirtcrr^BQ Plate11.95 (be^f, uUqc, UST399.9S %Utt '^fK-ann, potato naiad, daw) l^pm^nmcnti^Jlu^nia liiiijc': *^^3/ r* I, "by ihe RiictyJ 1 Jiifc1 ^od-naleii begin at .6 ""p.m.;; !. .^,cfltcrlainmcnt 6:30-7:30 p-.n^ IUNK Wf Tavcrrff locit^ ^ ^ waTo*m Ontt 8w( Soldi jV RhI ' iwuf, -j.y COtORWS BXTmOtii -, fcudi K» Ihrtn .«vt { •NMT0M iw»t 5J""r»d 041 Rh) MmmtX HW " f -rC,"S; W&W­ ; % ;y-&, m mmmm