, ., , i v«% vi% »V'>" • ' V -' ! \ '~ 'V -*•' '.-^v-1-.'/'--^-,;,-^ ~. .v >-,'•£-. y •.„ > ./ • ^-•W'" > "• -.TJSi-'tiu '/'c^Sfk i " ki.,^^6-V"* %&&K d-W , ft jA '•-&& -, n, ji» ' * v'-lW ->VrV fii/iti' r>. :£ « „?>... p.-.s.# . ^ vi^-v'fi ®cWSf ip;(-Tr-v/; •• -----' :• :•'*, v"< -', "^. - .• V "* f ^ ^ -fitf&r*. Student;Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin ^ v f j c f •T&y »>ij. ''1 *s^ 'v >tSV\^^ *S V"1 ' « Austin, Texas, Monday, March 10, 1975 Twenty-Six Pages 471-4591 .*-* ? 1 " y Nf %« <*wo|^35$r^^i^25fc ^eiVW-sr*^^-­ By MIKE MORRISON cent resignations of former Mayor Pro recorded in Precinct 237, Highland Park'^fi TexanStaffWriter Tem Dan Love and Councilman Berl Baptist Qiurch, in West Austin Most of J?lf With only about12 percentof the city's Handcox. The tipo men resigned within the precincts recorded turnouts of 8 to 15'',Iff registered voters casting their ballots in two weeks of each Other in January. percent. Saturday^ specialelection, Jinimy According to the City Charter, a Snell, also running in the April S'^MSnell was elected in the Place 6 City special elation is mandatory when less general election, said Sunday his goal inVjsfc Council race. Dr. Emma LoU Linn and -than six persons are sitting on the coun­that race is to win without a runoff. He .,jfg Tommy Lawless received the most votes cil. With the twb resignations, the coun­said runoffs are expensive, and he wants ay•in the Place 3 contest and Will face each cil was left with only five members. to avoid taking any large contributions 1 other in an April 5 runoff. for such an effort. " " Narrowly avoiding a runoff, Snell pick­WITH BIS election, Snell will serve as Snell, surprised at Rawlins' third-*^||jed up 10,769 votes, or 5(1.18 percent, with a councilman for 66 days, the remainder place finish, now considers Blond to &eJhis closest challenger, Ben Blond, cap­of the present council term. The winner his main opponent. He said his campaign: turing 4,182 votes, or 19.49 percent. in the Place 3runoff wjll also serve until strategy may undergo, some slight,®, In the Place 3 race. Linn received 10,-May 15, theday the winnersin the April 5 revisions to deal with Blond. K656 votes, only 113 less than Snell, but regular election take office. BOLSTERED BY his second place~4% ; was forced into a runoff since her total -Other candidates in Place 6 and their finish, Blond sai'd he is' "going all "gj a6counted for only 49.2 percent of . the vote totals are:. out to fight for the council seat" in thei% -Votes. • -' Rawlins, 2,497 April 5 race. With the aid oil a public 'J«PLACE 3 runner-up Tommy Lawless j A U.S. Embassy spokesman inSaigon ed asgovernment soldiers,who allegedly Linn. W ; • U.S.: cargo jets dared heavy, insurgent r quickly timragh:nine miles of flatland to . her limited campaign funds. She^vfas" I said DC8s from three airliness under directed fire for weeks against the air­In the Place 6 race, Snell swept all but shelling Sunday to:flyl,300tonsofnfie,,^ t'thequtskirta of Phnom Penh particularly disappointed with the" low;> fj charter to the U.S. government. flew. 13 lift, which has been, Phnom Penh's two of the 77 precincts. Blond picked up fuel and ammunition into, the aiiport olfi voter"turnout in the University studeht~;!'j?< rice loads totaling600 tons fromSaigon's lifeline since the Khmer Rouge cut road two boxes generally considered conser­ • besieged Phnom Penh. The shelling kill*?', IN SOUTH Vietnam, ^ North Viet-Tan Son Nhut airbase,.to'"Cambodta's dominated.precincts. * " and river supply routes. vative, Precinct 245, Crestview Baptist ved 10persons on the ground, but U.S.of-.-.s-•namese.and Viet Cong forces launched < Pochentong aiiport, the larger-haul Linn's runoff opponent, Lawless, said,'* \ Church and Precinct 233, Wooten School. ' 'r' \£ m • ^i^more than a hall-dozen district eapitalsj^f last Wednesday. v -' Jormed sources said a campiaigr for • . ;k THE HEAVIEST voter turnout was in turnout, he has a good chance to win op'I |<4' ^i"At ^8alltte time, iiela reports said^ . 0ther government positions m the; r< The fuel and am^imitim arts Being removal of President Lon Nol as a step {-West Austin and the lightest voting oc-April 5. A larger turnout, Lawless said^| flcials said none of the planes was hit.^ ^widespread probing attacks against ^ since one of the planes was hitbya shell IN POLITICAL developments, in- Sunday he feels that with a larger voter •< centr?1 toward getting a negotiated peacesettle-' -curred in thecentral and eastportions of would mean moremoderates andconsei^m's ' -* /lown in on U.S. Air Fotc^CLJOs from ^ ment is gathering momentum.;; Vl the city. The hirfiest voter turnout was vatives-i . rhaiteda Catteat^thetowiflrlTeK*^«trlctcapltalffappearedinilj«igeroflall-s Thailand 7" * es voting for him. " & [ norttiem * jng wI the heaviest lighting in i Meanwhile.-^bolice -said'ther^liadthey* -Some politicians consider Lm Nolthe • Phnott, whichis the northern defense line flghtlnginmorethan said ' Meanwhile,:-police ^^1®" of Phnom; Penh.-If therebelSib^f^tvyo^OTthS r main dbstacle. to peace and have """ ^ arrested two'Commumst ageAts.disguis-. •> f >->-S -•-'''•••>• suggested he either resign or go into Precincts voluntary -exile. Prince Norodotn; v^Va days ago we formed the blackout v production costs on to the consumer. ^ response to rumors.Tie had fled to Although the University vote figured list said 2,900." , ' " i At 3 o'clock Friday afternoon they committee-and started telling the • '"Our. gripe is not with the-power ' •Thailand. .V-, G.. . . .... just below the citywideaverage inSatur­"Maybe they were usingold tape or'old " pulled the plug in Little Elm, Texaarj-v :.loca^people what ytewere planningto ' ^Companies,1" BlalOck said: "It's not Political sources also said at least day's special City Council election, stu­voter registration numbers (in. The electrical plug, that is. , , ?; . .do." * -their fault that the rates have gone eight Cambodian cabinet ministers will dent precincts, delivered heavy ma­calculating the percentages). Those ? • ­ ' , The voluntary 2f-houf blackout^A '^filalock said he expected almost lip. What we are trying to do is bring . .be removed onchargesof corruption and jorities for f liberal candidates Emma sheets haven't been updated," Butts add-4>-.-!protesting highelectricalratesin the^ -total cooperation 'from the residents attention-to the'-need for regulating.} that Premier LongBoretwill beasked to Lou Linn and Councilman-elect Jimmy ed. . ^ i -r*it 11 area.beganwith anestimated 90 perri, •' olLittle Elm,and added4&at asmahy|a the price of natural gasin the state." ' form a ne* government soon. To avoid Snell. ' '• In 15 predominantly student boxes 76.1" , Qent of the town's. S00 residents pac4'-.as 5,000 ^people in the surrounding ^ An .employe-ol Brazos Electric publicity about infighting, heis expected Approximately 12.6 percentof Austin's percent of the votes were cast for linnticipating. , . < area also might participate in the ' Power Co-op in Waco, which supplies to delay naming the new cabinet until registered ""iters turned out to vote for .while 70.4 percent wentto Place6winner"i -iJack Blalock, chairman of the Lif "blackout. the Denton County po-op withits eled--i after the U. S. Congress votes on Presi­Places 3 and 6 in the special election Snell. .tiff Elm Area Blackout Committee One.'companywhich said it would Iricify, ^ld -gas ;prices have gon? t dent Ford's request fof 1&22 million in which-was called just four weeks before Place 3 candidate Tommy Lawless, J and the editor-publisher of the town assist-the'blackout committee was >< from 20 cents per.thousand cubic feet emergency military a]d toCambodia and the regular City Couhcil election. who will face Linn in an April 5 runoff'. •-" newspaper* explained that citizens ol. the-Denton County. Electric Co-1in 1970 to |168 this year. . ' $300 million to South Vietnam. An averagerof atiout 11.3 percent of gained 13 percent of the vote in those.*' ..the North Texas community -were operaliye.the-power.company -which;4•• "There needs to be something done A POLICE source said the two agents registered student .voters participated in boxes and Place 6 runnerup Ben Blim4» -« "fedup" with thetrenendous increase? provides the town with electricity. tluit would help keep rates at a level . arrested Saturday had been under sur-the election,, got 9.3 percent. . ,<•„ 4^"ftey had experienced recently on their, -M« A spokesman for the company ex-w -the consumer can live with,"he said, », veillance for more than jwo months by : . While admitting that "the student tum-Members of ..the Coalition for'.jal' \[nwotiyy electrical billsA^-Y #>>fpiained they v?er6 in"total sympathy 'adding ' iki«4 : .. ^ •• A. I-authorities around theairfield;who were„• out was very* disappointing," the elec-' . . . that based^on jthecurrent Progressive Austin (CPA), ,a "liberal"*^ % Some people had been getting bills'; ^thT{^ftliWjCiisfDm«i«^4uid;'Woiild»-^^onoini(£:-siiuati^fiiar will ^ reluctant to-move against-them.because& v -tion judge of Precinct 336, David Butts, group working in the cityelections, were * for over $400,'felalbckrsaid; where twoi ;helptheblackouteffortbyturnmgoff-?''•yipfobablycontinue•tbrise.,'^ a they wore the insignia of the top head­•: disputed the .accuracy of voter percen­generally disappointed with, the tow" , pr:three.months ago these same peo' the town's l5 streeUights. , . So in Little Eilm Friday night, the quarters of.the Cambodian army. tages given on the election tally sheets. number of student voters. -j ple'Were paying arqimd $100 fot.their^^ iThe^cauSe for the great increase in lights went , out and the candles were The sourcesaid the two were "forward . "The sheets > are inaccurate. Voter "Voter turnout in the student boxeselectricity! ~ ^ UttleJSlm'S electrical ratesis the in-lit in hopes that perhaps the ; observers" for Khmer Rouge gunners registration'lists-in each precinct have was very uneven," CPA member Steve.? ' " ''Around the firstweek of February > crease ill the costtif natural gas-used Legislature would heed the can for : • firing out of the "rocket belt" five miles ..had names -moved which the sheets McGuirebaid. • " V;.f a.bundi of us decided to bring atten---. by-. the electric. «H>p to power -its help and prevent further increases in northwest of the airfield. The belt hides didn't indicate," Butts said. Since Linn lacked about 170 votes to''tion to, the problem,in a rather% .^^atore.The co-opclaims it has nb electrical rates positions used for daily shellings of the Butts cited'hls'own precinct, in the win her race outright. Butts said'"a V v . airfield by rockets and captured U.S. 105 . Methodist Student Center, as an exam­higher voter turnout" would have mm. howitzers. ple. "We had 700 names removed from assured ber election. . . j> A Retains Optimism During Critical Times' BySCOTTTAGLIARINO Americans Stoust remain Optimistic* g:munjlcaUon students:aqd...theirsparents ":We just .thought that was just Willie AT A PRESS conference later in the 4 v of that paper has been too buddy-buddy J •L Texan SUfl Writer " -through,these critical times , 1 "after receiving the secondannual Dewitt' being silly;, then^later.Frank Erwin got -•day, Moyers .claimed that the Texas with the Dallas establishment." ' Reporting that the "moodof America*'' Y "It is harder, and' harder to believe C Reddick Award for Outstanding on the Pls currently one ol rising fear over the,. anything anymore,, but opportunity still Achievement in Communication^: "•at" on politicians^ gave his view of the difference between 'possible failure of democracy, national : waits for us all," Moyers told a packed' THE FORMER: press secretary for • -In another. puA aimed at the former -o "The press,here hasgotten too close to the Johnson and Nixon administration's'broadcaster and Newsweek columnist audience^ih LBJ Auditorium. President Johnson said the grooving ap­ regent, Moyers-said in lieu of having a; -the people ,they cover, and this has hurt attitude toward the press, the Warren, "Biy Moyers said^Saturday that; v-JMoyers spoke toJ the group of com-prehension of the failure of this cpuntiy them" -1 ; t v - streaker on .stage-(which occurred test , report on the death of John F. Kennedy is nothing-new, noting that both: in the -year when Walter-.Cronkite received the As an example, Moyers explained the and the uncertain' future of the FBI.; early 1800s and 1900s similar; periods of recent sale of the Dallas Times-Herald v < will be a spltball flght outside between to a California newspaper chain would news media than Nixon ever wanted to; •pr- ^.dissension occurred. , » < < ' ; Reddick Award), "afterthe speechthere Johnson was entirely more open to the vr "The evidence of history" is" that the Frank Erwin and Dolph Briscoe." .probably help-the paper's .coverage be or could be, Moyers said, adding that ? -end is alWay4 a beginni|ig-|or^ometbing beca|ge."for too long the management the problem in the Johnson White House­ ^vbettert aAd that's as;tru'e toda^asit%as v TOUc'lilNG on his "personal" rather— .jii'wa.s always one of releasing tod much in­ . fa hundred years ago," he sald.< -*• i than "piibllc" ylew'.of the role of jour-Recalling observations from his best-, nalism In present-day society, the . < fi iformation rather tlian too little. "Johnson couldn't keep a secret," he .'selling book, "Listening'to-America: A i former News^ay publisher said, "our -S -,. said explaining that many times the Traveler Rediscovers t U^s' Country," sr business is Shedding Ught on the events fc-V^nday \will tj§ialr and former President was the source of a • (•: Moyerssaid moodsrange fromone of an ' news leak, even when he-was unaware of: j . pef^lyrploudy tagonism between fathers and'sons, ;fsWes,>\Gtisty Awinds will mbthers^'and daughters,: to moods of' " Although he wam^-that'fournalists "He couldn't even keep his scar a ' •A complete Tesignation from society..^ must continuously;strive to remain obr secret," Moyers said. : \ 7 reajc-h V 22' « w i , the differ "But moods greatly," jective in their reporting,asa journalist. .: As^far asreopening theinvestigation of Mpyers said, fend the general feeling Is > < Moyers said he bad found itincreasingly. . Kennedy's death, Moyerssaid he as well : that America iseither onthe verge of the » impossible to remali; unomcerned about'.^ as LBJ bad always been satisfied with - _ ^forst of times or the best of times." ' * the attors on.the stage" brpiiblic lifei'l^ the Warren Commission's findings and ' •a But the 40-yeaw>ld native Texan "yo.more do we just need good jour&3}; «saw no reason torehash thecontroversy. > (^ detoured from theseriousnessot the^r^V; "/nalists," ' we need""honest journalists, v;h«K?r In other questioning, Moyers said the I -sept Amerlcaii scene considerably"' added ^ 1 . FBI and the CIA still have:a definite } AA^ndayt WJlLbe 50 throu^iout bis speech, reflectlhg^on his , addition, journalists aire essentialiAf-* place in American-governmentlc*ruesclay ai5o will/be fair4 days at the, University jtnd later in thg ^helping, to solve the World's jnajor%5' . ^--Although hecould not speakabout there-\ ' .temiperatufe" ^ White H6use|.o ; h^!4 lf) cent FBI charges,1 Moyers saidJhatdur­ ; problems, which Mayers categorized ing the~ Johnaan administration FBI : violations of privacy were almost always j$«j| inadvertent rather than deliberate. ' '?0 / "It is not'the power of the' FBI which"''&jf Aee mtitfJie ', Students se^dDgtoin^ect.tbat-:: 5,'Alihtagh the memo —writtento _ foterpreted^stndefl&^reaxds to access tothem even whentheyare ^ofhisrecords couldbedetrimental review hSreep^as- ' iown medicaV files at the Student -complywithrecentfederal legisla­indnde medKal records and has i^d?mnfMpntial hy statute."(^;a°toto'reccfverylln such cases the „ "We take5'* -Health Center may havea king tion — stated "all-information," . ordered state 'hospitals to make ' • -v , .^psychiatrist should have the right •" 11^ ,;:wait; despiterecent.University-. medical files kq»t on a. student s medical records maintained on a Austin _ State Hospital has-to"withhold. the\.specific' infor-' ­^Xr poli^dedarations and state at-"are not included," said James ; patient available to that Ratient chosen to comply with this ruling.1 matinn" T.nr\<2vnntpH infnrmatino said. • toroey general rulings that would Colvin, official-custodian of upon request Patients or former patients are about a patient's7 family: or the * give the opposite impression. University records. Cotvin declin­>"The "University of Texas;Sto-.. j»oW permii to receivecopies. of£^ ^ dynanUcs of his mental. ctindiUqn t^Coliin rwhether "going * .. .. . Medical " OnFeb.12 University President ed to speculate on what additional dent Health Center is an ac-' ~ their own records upon written ,-^as -examples of material that Ad Interim Locene Rogers an-areas might beconsidered private. credited boqiitd," .vrpte Asas< petition. might be" withheld. ; -• would include theri^it ofa stud^it^ t-nounced in a staff memorandum to view the.contents of his medical: It will not be necessuqr to issnea tant to the Chancellor, for Health ^ "A patient has the.right to reri iti • Lao$a further accorded patients lOes in health center offices. 'that "all information collected,* specific statement in writing con-Affairs W.H. Knisely in a receat'' quest accessto-his own medical >' the right to have an attorneyView v g^' assembled or- maintained by The cerning medicai records, he said. -letter defending health center records," wrote . Dr.-Luis H. their medical filesin case of a dis-vibe Texas Access to Informa­ ^University ofTexas at Austin con­ A Tmon fcitipiiiw policy. Laosa, superintendent of the ^tpute over withheW niaterial. In t^n Actoperates ana "goodfaith"­cerning-anindividual student is „ .Hill ;specifically :declared; • hospital. It was further-noted that -', such instancestbe attorney could principle between state agencies • ' The Federal^Information and -available.-toi the individual- Privacy Act1— the • so-called "psychological tests health . POrtiOCS considered detrimentalto . i* riinnsp tn Ithniiy thp fafnrmatir«» andthe'Le^slature.Tbere'isno-Iri student" Buckley Law requires that-data... counselor. ratings :and the patient would not be ^Mwn to„v in question to bis client. , / >prayision for enforcement of the' Remain 1a < • Copiesofany files on a student * Observations and reports of . fl1® patient "Aeasons for'sjich : : The health,center has nowritten law ocept through-tbe courts and •shadents beallowed accessto their willbegiven to the student con-, behavioral pttenisor disciplinary decisknsshql) bewell,dopumented, .;poUsj.gain yc^to ^ieir fileshavebeen his record most eitherpresaita :; he sCatol. that Jie woald tuni photo ID or notarized letteraffir-' empts medical recordsfrom" not so mnch under the Texasopen ; change -in medical procedure ^ uns°ecessft", medical'reottids oyertda student ming identification. material available to students. f: recoids law, as some bdieve, but -' Utosa rqdied; "On the one hand ., Oolvuronphastedthat a{iatient ?,^oolyunder cofliit^order."Oolvin's . The ;Tfe*as open" records law under a 1961 Anstin avQ appeaIs ? we aie ^M 4o see that patient's^^may go over his-medical records officeandHichardabson,System Materialsacquired under : makes no specific statement on a-ccnrt dedsioa in whidi lK.iKrt^i:.'%;in^iteajre'fuiti^pcotected by be^' '% with health center physiaans'but. .attorney, havehupnortal thatdeck, . Written promiseSf confidentiality stndent's roedical records. " , ;Vthe conrtrated thata person may j'JingaJ^togaihaceessto theirownef,may nothavecopiesof the Record., jaon. -, $ NOTICES from the General Libraries or any of the brandies:are of­ficial University com­munications requiring vait scott Rick Anton, will face Andy recount showed Martin discrepanc^in'thetironM^ -crqjancy, final Election Com-''protests'* the ffnal tatudap ^ immediate attention. Texan Staff Writer. Martin in thelaw Place1con-actually rec«ved 105 votes, a .were probably a r^lt of returns did not reflect the -•mission figures for the tkm because "we all-votedforThe final outcome of "at testi andJim Coronado willgo figurewhichvulted him mto -erroneous computer program-^ wnte^n votes, Bowers said. -: presidential: race invsthe Bill Ware." ^ least five^Student Senate against Danny Tsevat m Law the runoff;sl&,;^«yi: ing by personsinvtfvedin fte -if-Befcause of the error, Reid • College of FineArts showcan-Electioa CommissioQ chair-k races '.was changed substan­Place 2 as a result ^ GREAT tially, in Saturday vote retabulatian. enough to place him in a He said the iccuunts '.were -Tlsher in the runoffs .v.butailetter.Jsigned_by available for coaunent Sun-#.' - recounts -conducted by of­> ^ ANTON, Win 121 votes, rvni^.withOirohaiki.. petfonned."by three ffigferent c In another possible di^v"YseveastodentsinitT ,1^3: OUTDOOR ficials of .the Student Govern­had: been scheduled to face TerreeBowers'ofthe Elec­ment Electjon Oommissian. . Bruce .Topletx: until the -tion Oimmission said thevote tomsore accuracy. Cl StudeiltS n TPS UiO. computer began erasmg the Men's and ladies'•. • : v ^-r-• > memory dmhig Utefinal|aiii-v;'.-^v. " m i«ur "v tout,"-ite;added.» ^ f. STEVE '' rr' results'also chi>aged';?.^#*v<.' osts Rise I­ mtheGra^tePlacei-'Vace? VASCHIE ^ --"A ^ .. becanse cf a Thursday errar Red Wins Skyrocketing iit£|ifi«"'«ists "We aregoingto^ tohqld Bat ,she. added, the risfi«%Kin ttie --Arn VP then the division has simply sumption rates remahi'cons-^ TALK DIAMONDS!? beenabsorbing increases; tant,^ students' hills wUl in-1. ­itself." -^ Mease from C7 to'fr fceicent '%< tZ- Chartes doestalk diamondsa iot He'd: rather sell diamonds tftan anythiiig •toe-That doesnlmean he;i«onttallc| JIp~ to you about tiandcrafted"iewelry;:; ^made-to -your mm design^or aho0t^< ' -^anyihU^i else ln t^s store,tto justfikes COLUMBIAr AS SIC AL CATALOG SALE :i'HSa(Tionds*k& CharlesXitemryler^llv' be happy.to explain away some of the '-mm ; things you've been told -by other WE ARE NEW AND SMALL ^ jewolers. He wants you to;.knqw the A WOfcfab priced ?«f»cor0 Ml K tpwMly Mt v acore. Ftor instmce, he'll tell you th«i but _ ; # you don't .buy from him to be sure We are conveniently located on your jeweler gtves you the written inh •tocmaBon on -your diamond's grade. IH 3S between! 11th & IW Because he respects his custamera ^e's a pretty. good manrto^il| Wehaveparkingspace,extended-hdOr -jnanmotwinu drive^ins^bank-by-mail, loans, safety-deposit boxes and other bankijtg m M9C3150S services, v : ^ Topes ^ Our charges are modest and we'll tell Urt27-98.'-n V l-' \jl list$13.98 you exactly what they are% ^ LEUTWYLER •pkta*Tpflc*d a i»coiam.^r>^A liwuai Socsid _ „ Mosf Important of ABt --Ss ••• ^ 'We'll try $S •; mt JEWELERS m We really want your business^ I wsmtm Ia3i' -«^2518 Guadalupe. tEN^U^^MlKIC (NMMNmONAL RJUMK Parking at the ba^ 1101 N. Interregional * 4744»41 ison:San AiifoMio: & -r lis. YOUR U.T. RING INSILADIUM •5 Why wear less than the best? .. ^T '^"k --^y»KS?^*a<"r * * ' a^rn­ ^ •l'&K 4^ITOIKQ Silacbum holds yourstone,securely;: Jjj The deep design detail iemahwrr list 13.^8 -Siladium is stronger than thO ' .~ " exqui^tely ensp. Always. , best goW alkjy ^ TS&ytSf rife SS-45.*^­ ;-t A You .coutd spend hburs . Siladium. isn't;soft •: -.polishing your, other ;-• y:«-. «esuMs-?.|t';resists jewelry. You never, have to-* ' > 5 '• millian ,v TOM Staff Writer,. \-its& budget request, explaining the -sity has requested, theLegislature to ap­jects orcenters involving many morein-next biennium. more for 1976 and $35 millira extra for c* — Just as £fandi There isa great deal >M About a yearago.theLBB sentinstruct per tear; LBB r^iiuC£d th{d:to iabb((t $3 would enable the Univeraty to attract 6RANDTOTAL 102.4 is some fonn ef; Uie initial LBB biii. .3 " million, the Uhivu^ty asi^fdr aa in- Ui»:Eteallpil«Bd 11X2 9X7 1M4 tioos to the University for ptqnrigg its. minorities and disadvanta^d students. 14 6X &3 After the Unlversity made its request,', 5.4 The University, then, haw^ny rec&v­ proposed bodget where exactly did the IilB cut bade? "3x7 TOTAL RECOMMENDED FUNDS >67-743 txra The University submitted two of these SOME (W TBE main areas in whidi requests, in June and October^ the latter the University «^s uadaappropriated- - including the latest figures for the last from' the wiginal request are faculty fiscal year. The liBstaffworfced with devdopmept 'leaVes, organized ac--: tbesereqwsrtsand schednledhearingsof tirities, oigiuii^r^Karcfa and minority; . •-^Mttat feltowsh^iuods^olarriiips. JERUSALEM (AP) — Syrian Presi-bis mission may depend ah linking a withdrawal in the Sinai desert would Assad said he is prepared to nH the. dent Hafez Assad reaffirmed^ Sundayhis Sinai agreement tb Syria's desire to create '"a'dahgerous geographical "state of belligerency" with Israel under • opposition to a Sinai agreeznaith^M'een regain more of its Golan Heights situation."Tfel sebtiafficiarIsrael News U.N. resolutions calling for Israeli Egypt and IsraeL Secretarial# State territory occupied by IsraeL Service qubtedvanalysts as saying sub­withdrawal from territory occupied Air­ Henry A. Kisanger then Oat* m to At the same,, time, Israeli military stantive cha^ges hi the army's present ing the 1967 war. He said there must jbo IVVF* ? Vi? Jerusalem to amtinue his efforts toward analysts woe warning against a new Sinai lintejcooU make defense of the be "restoration of the legitimate right* adiieving anagreement agreement with Egypt, saying further Gulf of Sue*"aceedin^y difficult" of the Palestinians." • Assad, meeting with Kissin^ jn the -£&&i5s&at. ­"dentialpalacelnDamascus,saidhe would agree to -an interim agreement Denton Seeks Opinion only if it also takes into account the Golan Heists. . A fewTwoxs before Kisan^ePs idane -landedat Ben-Gurionairport; abmnb ex­ploded in a deserted park 500 yardsfrom the King David Hotel where Kissinger ..was staying in Jerasalem. 2 -POLICE SAIDit appeared tobe partof' By SUSAN STARNKS "I know that in Central Texas there each month for their utilities," Denfon the Tash of Palestinian terrorist-bom­Rep. Lane Denton of Waco has asked are smanbnsinessznehand farmoswho said. ' • -* 3"s bings that have plagued Jerusalem inre­Atty. Gen. John Hillfor anopinion on the have actuarySeen'forded outof business Denton expressed concan to tiiese cent months. No damage or^asualties constitutionality of utility companies because of ottljageptis increases in their people because often their utility:wn« were reported. automatically, passing on higher fuel utility charges! These are businessmen, are more than their Social Seuultj• Assad, before -his^meeting: with costs to consumers. such as durymen,. who depend very checks. As a result, they are forcejto'­Kissinger, also declared thathis conntry Denton cited two issues fen-the at­heavily oh 'a lot of dectricity for their choose between paying their utility tiQls will jnot participate in a Geneva peace torney general to consider — whether operation," Denton explained. or paying tbeir mortgage payments^*!cooferende onless the Palestinians are rates charged to consumers by utility "I also tamw nf Tnany bimiiw, par­thor homes. . • --. ticularly i^ired coqdes, who many given a seat at the table. •companies are fair and reasonable hod Denton said if these methods of PMS-" • „-'We either go^together or we:don't wbether coosumer protection laws" in . years agowereposuadedtomakethar^ .jngcostson toconsuuiasare&widtn­ go," be told newsmen. Texas are being given any meaning by homes 'all electric* and are now bong constitutional, he believes • refunds ' Kissinger, , who expects the-Geneva tiie policies and practices of the Texas1 charged Ideialty .hundreds of dollars should be made to consumers. talks to resume after hegets anotherin­Railroad.Gommisaon. terim agreemort in Sinai, st^ped^in "I believe the^ Texas^ Railroad Com­Damascus 00-hii 'way, to l^dfitjm mission has ben grossity negligent in the Egypt boping_tq.ease Assad'sappreitelS' regulatory dnties assigned to it many:aons about h& battle diploma^^-r years ago by the Texas Legislature," V '."We are against separate partial said Denton, chairman of the House T-UPIT*pho^ agreements," Assad said before talking Social Services Committee. 'Leave the Drivirig to Us' to Kiffiinger. However, he went fln, "We -Leone Star Gas Co., which supplies , NEW YORK (UPI)—"nine magazine rqwrted Sanday ithas been told will agree to. an: .interim .agreement natural-gas to most of Denton's Central Catching mora than H» thare ef *«coad glcmcsi, a tMTm but hangt provided it: takes into;account all three Texas legislative district, is now before by "creifilile sources" thattheCIA was "involved in assassination plot?'imcarioiMiy from a power pofe auy wtra in Houston. Th«drivwr arid Ms Ion* fronts." -the Raihpdad Commission seeking per-against Caribbean leaders Fidel Castro, Rafael Tnyillo and Francois pwenger, ww mond qukUy Satvrday. Bcfefe rM^iving a MaRgmt • 1SHAKI. IS. disinterested.|n:another mission to pass to Consumers100 percent (Papa IMc) JDinralier. '"',72 • rnHliiaii Hcbt.tUcfaiwtqiliiliwd h»hadwachjout and,faffing forward. piecemeal .move with Damascus, bat of its increased fuel costs ratherthan the ' The magazinesaid its "sourcesconteod that the CIA pniigtoH theexjim Kissinger recognizes that the success of present 65 percent pass-tfaroQgbrate. hired-gaa'-lic^) of U.S. mafia figures in several unsuccessfnl attenpts b Bay of Kgs inraaoa nf Cuba in 1961. State Division Study Proposal Readied SeiK^Sdy, Vesco Investigation 'Improper*' ^Representative To lntroduce Resolution Monday in Legislature WkS^MGTON (DPI) — Senate investigators cterged Sunday t^t A Rsohttion tocreatea specialinterim as the, nation itself in philosophical and mittee begins to function with; tough. the state,and they would be alde todQ so federal -events faQed to pursne properly a tip that fugitive financier cwamjttee to stndy the possibi)ities ot: pronndal differences,,xnost of us feel * mind[^d optimism, excitemenf -and throu^i agreemaits made between the Robert Vesco was the money-man in a proposed major heroin H«| « dhAdhig TexasintoSve stateswHl be in-likethe boyattheifike.aikl obviouslyun­r enthudasm from an parts of the state various new states," McAlister explain^ In a^terepiRt, the Senate permanent investigations soboommitfi^e troduced MonihiyintheHouse by bub-precedented st^s must be taken," he will give tremendous impetus to the 4»ck State Rep. R. B. McAlistar,. ^ „ \ ^dded.-/-^ " A ^ ISnoven^C'B&AlistoiS^ said it d^^^ £^ a 'kx^ oar any independent source to confirm i The resolution-indicates, "as the McAlisternoted thatit coold take five ' Preventing stodents from paying ont-that VeSCP intMried to flMhi* thi» dnig-grhnggling trangarHnw asA stipnlationin the Articlesof Annexa­ ' fedsal government increases!ts role in ~ years to lay oot\the. movement and of-state tuition in the Texas states could cs tion whichadmittedTexas intothe Union': ihe allocatiaa and regulation (^ scarce • ten yefcrs to effect the he .settled through reciprocal- in IMS provided that Texas cotdd be ano&er five to allegation and said "swne federal officials and agents condncted natural Tesource^,'^ di^roportkinate transition. agreements, he said. divided into as many as five states. themselves in a lughly unpiofessional manner" once Vesoo's-naale sectional rtepregentation in Congress .The success^of transition and the en-'"We. are laboring in mass confusion becomesextnanely rignlficant ^The stwty.committee would be com-' tire movement; would: depend on in­and there is no advantage to saying, became Involved.. * J •-"I rememba' when Cbet Huntley left 'posed^.of 45 members:12 senators, ap­terstate compacts,; covenants and "becausewcarebigger we cansohre all" ­rWaahington^te said.-'Govpniment is in-., pointed by/,tbe.lieutaiantgovenior, 12 reciprocal agreements amn^^tiie.new our proUelms.' It is not like tiiat ; House Mi^HDoWn Veto, Senate To Face Tax Issue fr" •dvaWe,", and ttot is true todav/' ^ House'members.:appointed by the states. ^ "We heed to define problems and. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Hoase may pocket a presidential vieto ttlshlcAlistor said. " :'speaker;4t :the Hoase. and 21 private ."For example, in.higher education; fit: reropiiiethemany opportunities ofthe week ^hife' the iSgBate, shaking iteetf oqt of a long filibuster battle, faces .--"As'we dig mto the massive problems citiaens appointed by the governor. „ and Texas A&M would want to retain the ' DOs and '90sjand the new coitary up- op to the tax cnt issoe. siacingiratas, whidi is almost as bread. , -'Iantkipate thatonce this stwtycom-interests they now have in otherparts of coming," McAlister concluded. . 3-; rj: — * ~ ^i • The House Sdieduled acticHi Toesday on President Ford's veto of-a Coagressional ineasare imposing a 90-day delay on his increases in oil _ impcfft ta«s..Mr. Ford offereda compromise to nndercnt the chaacesof a two-thirds majority ineach hoase vtrfing tooverride the veto, but House "P yowV, gifUd and Mac* 17j&stA & a Uttle bit LeMalsae: said Qie^Uidverrity.will progranu^incloding. *52,300 from Demoattts wm ^rating on a'^more subtle stratea?. t jmi (Mnfc (Acr^'a.no pkee far 90m mi,womedabouttheattihldehere,"Marion : show marked results .in? th£ sthdrtlt •FWffcSil'ySt^al Service Grailt funds . . Inste^ of voti^tosostain oroverride theveto, Chairman A1TTllmnn ifV Unitwsity of Tcxai, yonV* saia.^'Iwouldgo outinto thecommnnity profile by 1980. " committed: to jmgrams, staff and the Wa^s and Means Odmmittee {tonsa motion to refer the measure to ai^.>whenvI::told: ttiem I was assistant . Marian has presented his-:.|Atd>' to his cooiiTUjttee to be held for 60 da3rs. ,| IWCAII'I, -*Pow1t HT twuutlora, ^ . minorities through Arkansas and , StMnx provided additianal money from fritnda atid ntighbora tam ytm off ­ Louisiana. ^ , University'funds lastspring to supply the ­ > o good edmetaiOM at a fitwt doM :i Mariona^oBierU^vet^tyitffiriaig Unemployment Rate Holds at 8.2 Percent | The "total effort'Vln recruiting -Achievrement Awards Sdxdarship with „ have.tiilinM automobile and ir travel -minority students includes reaching oat |78,000rnbreitiian the Board of Rents' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The unemployment rate held steady at 82 SI 'Wack mindt an too pndouM to ^cahythrir^goodwilltowfaite-managed r to graduates and t^nsfer stodentk"who i approved WO^OOO. ^r" pespent in Frfaruary because 580,000 persons simply stopped looking for i«wu.„" v stations'with Uadf listeners. -? v attend community collegesbecause of an , Noadditional funds have been sought johs, the govenmoent rqiorted FUday. By CHUCK KAIflMAN ;Mike Quinn, aaistant to University . acadonic deficiency butconsiderUs'asa for this fond this year; through . theI Thirty^ecood radlo spots" with these System Chancellor Charles LeMaistre; senior institution." s >Tl»e month]y Labor Department ^ statistics showed that, on paper, the reguts... Ldtlaistre and fumer Gov. beginnings may beheardoiseveralTer-Dr. ller Wi^ froih tbe SdiMd of Cah- jobless ntte remained thesame fromJanuary to February:8J percentQf * AllanShivus.chaiimahcrf theregents, as stations'with predominantly Mftck. munication ^nd Marion have been frnn GRADUATES from Prairie the labor forcej OT an estimated 7.5 million pers(ms, oat of work. : .requeued «5p0,090 from the Legislative andimres. •» } /«, ~ , »•?, ,i -Grand Prairiesto*&^umont in flQng View and elsewhere are the proven ;; Budget Boaid last-Tuesday,prompted by The prime-time -public service an-r t Air," the University jet -students," Marion continued. "We know , a report from toe Department of Health, Oscar-Winning Director Dies at 70 V 'tiouncements cost America'sVihird r KING AIR'S operating &penses are , : they can perform academically:" .. ^ EiliMtioh ai^ Wel£^.-\ --, ... richest University nothing, btfFthe ^'estimated attUO pfer hour, Quinn said ' Hopes for the haves abd havfrnots are j " The'2^page document, rdeased Fd». messages are said to'reach more than &*£>> Broadcast promotions are popularly quickly dashed withoot thatpot of gold at Academy A^ard-winDiligY: ' " S21 by Dorothy D. Shidc, director for the 1 i^S?00'000 Wack listeners in East Texas. 'nsed by uhiversitie^ tb Recruit . the e&d-of the rainbow, "Ju4 to admit -'.Offk* for Clvil Rights (RegionVI), ask-directw G«»ge' Stevens, wfc -: Dr.jRobtrt Marion, assistant Mtbe 1lminoHtie&;^Marian bas had no problem blades is no good," Marion said. ''Many Ved the University to toke conrective ac-made as "(^an^"times the economy gets in theway and a ' iceiwesident at the Uidyersity, said ^Jta pladng lhe broadcasts on the air. ^;.|ton within 90 days. --,, ^ •duringthaTCasystematic;nniversity-wide heaitattadc Saturday ni^it He stodents. we ougfat to iprogrimi designed specifically to reendt I ^$gcrea9edamirenessinthe... Uttivereity^'. fH? ®°e afww* said the ^ee radio spots have money lor was 70., . •--K AlXROADSconceinlng the minority ^^were good for tbe stations, . those who need ftnandal aid;"he added; fexistii^miKrtties.^ ieffortattheUniversity lead to „ -f "6ieycan^.ptAlic:sbndcetimewhich Minorities will have received an es­v^iidormatk^ programoiity, rather than Steves, a two-time winner of " 1 ' timated $2.6 million infinancial aidfrom ---. Serving as theUniversity's rprnriHna rf. . the Oscar for best director, hadV. • wilFJook good-'vrtien 'flltog vrith the Is ^ice.", ' -• --been vacationing in this high^ 'theil'laSMSes.'l -v 3, fecoriing'-to^ figures ebm^ied t^', f; Mirft« said lastwee* heisn'tconcern-desert ewnmunity with his wife,f^ im&m'ftjhe Oaiv^sityJof^ 'THE PltOBLEMV^nayvfldtlie Shiriey BindCT.directorof stndnt finan-. |ed.with yesterday's record; 'Tm cod-Joan, who took him toLancaster ***•" «vAhi< v^'|temeaiea:^tfih».ard«i^:SMoa'^S^:<, .cialaios,' ;• \ -J t J Fperned «ltli , for ctomonov^ Hospital when he.complained of _K -—UBT. ihe^nroumentpicturewiu bette^rwe-: THK^UraVBRSI# s^d»can:«-; . ^^,vnianyf.-«piesti«is, v _ not feeling wel1 earlier. ^eflt toe blade'pdpulation of Teias.in n)a L|i<8,900; for'.-tainorlW and. >%fcAai:0filieI wen^ nn annflw n>rtftjMng George Stevens :I Satupdiur.. .. nomical disadvantaged-l«t -^Sentoe,;.-^. -upi; it U&i, msjME i a&k-gs ^ -t <. *13* ;"ws? eoaait-i# • v " -. to 1 -.35. "*«* -£t r -3j tr -v v' „V.» ­ -*xA; ^s5" Page 4 Montiay,AAarch Mu 1WS lV„ % Senatehearing f ^v-» I JW on campu: today UT.witk •mytmekdtmlLmmfmnmm — f i president's o^ficM: SUber, 1 week, counted oa' „ _ leadership in the chancellor's and pcr.ril»,wi>'agtoes.'-JS*&rKftfth«dtha& oider: the Board o( Regents. Of course, the toppeckera ..._ makes the regentaljfpamtmeBts,. • __ ,, , chancellor willbeaai —:u^tm—ltotl**«Btts*w®&^^alrt~fctluBfe— llhal the,University will he; Hie faces cothe Board oT Regents have afemsfc afcn$$ maafettft tfe* same, a^UR r---1 ---•*•• " * --— ­passing time. As we: minded, ami almost all haxe been uxnufeeesj SVwtateud mate. Oaeis * lefeeNtRgntalta&is;: We havenever said ttat «u& «tm«e » ywBwft •wa^QHB-16* «* boanL Many aspects at the ••-"*• «W!»S^««*.«Mk 4Mk ^h­ ^management ofoa fte«s.stacks. etc. — aad nee* aidfc btitans . *• kV:A3# 1K beariBg—-—ftdaesa'trasatt jaat.Hnirtr. nwiw.-tottek»niiguMat. awwiiHgL % * < ^ .'aimomtment — cobM ag^fegtsfaaaia iMMg at a^ rj>i«Btoi> «sm^. fcA. fe "ampsteofe un«"^ ^jeqnire'staaertVriyu^^ l^wold lead toaa aweihnl of themcnwce -RK.^Fntt»«s 5.-c?" * ^wstS-* "lT%»*jfc ^ ^ -s -v *®pl -. -te ratsftv. ^yss »w. wwiite. jnwes gg Webd^asSIheri^thatrespdc^>nt1fi^a>feB«fiEsgytor>ft» gUmver^y ~-*-r ^WTrHir,ai|T»rr niitft IftaflihiMHairJ>Hfttn altered by the gofesaor, S-S.V wte-• I 'ffllMIHjfclLWlW Oeajty CMksI is Marqsana. or rather the refonn rf ifc isWt^aM-faKm^tin^ i Tht Toan was mEannss tack » the jc^shme; ifeqs « tat s*f9»Qr^, as more attractive. KEWsrorroRj^t StXHtTSEDITOR ^AMDSEMEffTS EMTOItJ'/...:, .••;K-I^;^| C^PITOLBiatEAUCHIKr­ teaeEifibwa Hmi niKtS tSSv&i ' '• gtnniwi mil Mini, ®*-LfemwANihM «»»•».wtwews & "';-n---^ ^Wlllllili^ZVL'jUL ^ .tvK .. ,« _ ,-S?; --> fpi sas miiunH ibtMMfrtSaii S6^£^ HKiifiai $r "'4^rU,"""i '•' ' *'^V'fc<\'^fc£t -m-->-tp\-iV1 ' • *-«•* T*r^0"rv*' B . -— ,^^ ";»«• -i ^ByJaaaOLAS ymy t ,>^had beta working very »dL *cy to^doourjoreign oil boytag 1every highly placed person to reserves hav/increasedinot* • ^ yWfWMH, -v; ,^Not only was the oil glut will go a long way to restoring -the government igo to the than fourfold," writes "" S •• *¥* force the price runife among the oil-producing blackboard and write, "There Thomas Gale Moore, director * "'i down, bat the famous OPEC nations. The 'various is no oil crisis," 1,000 times, of the^Hoover Institution, in* £"0^ ™WhuR — At long, oil-cartel was going the way so suggestions emanating out of noyrayejflsts t» restrain "No-Time To Confuse." , last' President-Ford has many cartels g&. In general," the State Department and the "ourselves from enacting a -Thus," we'd be doings yoewten inJtfrmng &e Cartels have a very hard time -Tf^afeory that,'ior a variety of program that will benefit f;ourselves .a favor if we'd: Wuaoats infocoining 'up sticking together because the economically' IndefWsible .nobody with the possible ex-' mfrain *rpm miring up ul­ •with their own energy needs and greeds ofthelr reasons, we guarantee s oil • cepUon of the oil companies, (Smater supply and ecofodtai taembtire seldom coincide^-floor -price should help. The ^and not even that Is certain. >* -problems with the immediate Bwni in the Uame when the we Thisone shows every sign of eaj^ The confluence of anxieties ^ question of dealing with Kovemment-indnced fuel breaking up, but it's po^te ^«nd the ir^mpara ahout employment; defense,^ OPEC*' faltering' cartel. •:(Hce rtse throws another thatqolcfc, resolute and Omer petent Dr. Kissinger tot thei -;international finance, ecology Likewise with the oil in*«niIBoo people oot of work. ly action fey the United^twriegptiating table to have him : and ar,misplaced ^messianic dependence business. If; in Tic Peuwaatshad a great can JMwe>tt.4'--•i;i'^iforidl)i:y^t-he-;d^ itch for ,self-sacrifice lias-spite of ;the fact the last one program going,_ which was no The"Democratic proposals -wheat. ^ k? >,•> robbedus of the power to un-\-tydhTwbrk, we're afraid of': (ngnm at aB. 3V;program:-tocfeatea government agen-*, However, short of making derstand our self-interest C. another,boycott; the proper. «T > e-Not that there aren'tpeople.'t-rtspbnseisn'tto tax ourselves^, who're trying,to etplaik it tri; Into ajdepresslon, but to.i: >: us. The., most recent attempf^rsfodq>ile:-nfaatever ]we nttgC Wo thanks?-— I'm trying to give if up/fii comes from a group of right-» need to outlast a repetition o|? £2 Wing, ' free-riiarketi an Arab oil embargo, Y Quest viewpoint economists. Through the tj ,Over-in the' Treasury^ ..auspices of tbe lnstitute for Department they're havingoil .JONES business,'Which Is-usually?-International:International'CooneratlsCooperativeirW^aNS -which is-nsuallyJ. • Contemporary Studies, hysterics for another reason,«. -«•! -'#SK!v dated fromKM, -«rii«nthe:, Alliance has adopted" sl£ A % they've recently issued.fa -It's those foreigners getting . TOMSUIT mbte , . By SHERYLHABDING: dCdep Most of these ibanbershave littleor noex-• prinaples­ their politics, ought.to read, vsustained the gloomy predic-(Editor** note: Hanibig is admfarfstrative cuse for not remaining f6r more h™half of • 0»%adSffitis ex-capitalism and .state ;are, 1) membership is volun­ ("No Tune To Confuse,'Vby tions of immense pileups of assistant of TexPIRG.) the hearing.Iwould urgeeveryone to contact?i «Bw-WWM| a( later-socialism.Wietheran. tary and open without dis- Morns A. Adelman, et al, 260 : dollar obligations abroad. Oil these people especially if they are fromyour ' OmbcS, Ibc.) , organization s a coop has , crimination toface, creed or On V?ednesday, March 5, a TCry iiuportant California Street,, Suite 811, producers buy-as well as jsell, hometown. Their numbers are listed in'the-I ~ " Yoor recent two-part series n^-to«Jo wi^?) whet^ wealth,3),democraticj^ntrol. . issue; had its 'debut tefore.'tlie Texas ^n Francisco, Cal., 9411L) .and the Treasury has had to phone book undo-Texas, Senate, "or you can B?eproblems ofthe UmvK--the «nploves aie uniooi2e(l is in theliandsOf the n^tab&sa Legislature: utilify regt^tiob. /Tlnree tails 'The first.point that comes revise its original scare' write them at the Capitol Bnkfing here jii~­ with one person allowed one jOTj^uag differing f(H^«fT^nla|ion were dear is the need todistinguish ^. statistics radicallydownward; "frnstin "* I:~Y vote, nopnaty voting, 3) share. .capital should receive only As anyone who has looked "at their ;; tdenhbne. electric or gas hflh lately raw tril I wwBuaitTSfthit mjamitt-mg^ei^ip • limited, interest:. (Hot. applicable to th$ University you, this is a serious issne which has anim-*! Co-C^>).-4)surphis-or,.savings-pacton everyone. Regardless of yon-views^ "tog ok jttie ^irt?of iibs; " ^ ?.«—^ t-^# y«torte«-tahor or d) **eth6r, .(Det savings) are-distributed on refutation;itis wise to contact these •> •; Apparentlyvsix^triDioavyears a jaik^e ones, but it is «»!• fflg and ld: than know you want them to at­ etieentiiednddbe. c^1* ,^^Pnft8 «^«fo,u,e Wembers and patrons • ago there were an incredible finltdy better apprdati frj'ott'J 1 these hearings, ffie next of widchis On' v Monday. so that they can at leastmakeanm-' teffigent decision an the matter. One waU " hope thatinthe futnre,regardless of thecom-• mittee' members' views, they could be . .. ^ ftissil fuel weuse.^mote'is? tni^it take themsdyes'^four bothered to stay, ani^ bear all the courtews. to..those who came to wV In »»j*«^'^»M|^iM if^1t^^^Mgco^c^.be,gatBb-;6f .coojiecatives. should -1*3 coopewUsjB »wjr, discovered. "In 19tt,vtf. .-~t havetakenaiyears^^haust fashioned^ ideas on.govern-. conceraed enough or who cdu^f not take the \-£x basic .prin-«Qier«oop»aUves. V v..«.s:ri :;I would.also like to ih»* poldidy thoae known, reserves at current ment inte"rT;eniion' and; c .time wererS6n. Moore,7Saiiman, Bryan-members who stayed for Qie hearings: Sen. -wfe^awttdottei.^ .rates ofj>roduction;;inI972)itw emulate the snafls .ahd the v Sen. Longoria, Gdinbiirg;kSeii: AiHnt Paris; Clower, GarlandtSen. DoggKt,Anstin; Sen. would have taken'M.years.^ palm trees. That la the onlyrvBen.,McKinnon, C^rpuSrXairistiVr Sen-An- Kothmaioi, San Antonio;.and Sen.Draeger of ^eduoitihg'the membershipof fciMiajswrovER^.'g _ ... Over this period.^world --way they can matoiallv con-j tojac, Fort:Worth; Sen.-)^B4g|^.Tylw; Seguii».These.people areconcernedabout the the TJniversityaC^OpijJn tfee ^production has som^—" 1 • •' •••"" -R production tassomiwhatv tribute"to l^frjssae^aiil.this,concent deserves to be jrtndp^s ofcy^atfqtt^^\rfiore tW> trip&Chiat —jkngwn>;energy ww#: JfHouston (Dist 15); Sen. ] noted.? REAL ESTATE MIT NO PUCE TO TAKE IT? Th« Unlvtitty'Y|lt'Intiwafd in Program Idana te^' UENBB»7HE;«RAcnCEf CAREERS DAYl ft : rjl r 8pac».;lFun#n$, wytgac'y hatpwOuM fa* Watohla Wryoar? DttfT^OMMElCONEMCKfl \l * WQK mto Hi> CTflinmtng oppotlunHto op— ni rwro! «Uc­--.vj liitkglioH and Ithphony W# on looking fir program propnob with whkh MARCH 12 shrianH itw JJwtlffy ud pnrtidpota 1m. TWsn awnt'BHigkafoo''MminluroKoa ohn far a «M:dadn>hgaatMKdCMIjinict < prograaii khaiildl ii if baaaftt ta tha • SIGNUP fo* «i paaNi Mmm J&4 ::.li(MNiiBnv'«li«-«ig bc otJOE C. THOMPSONCENTER OOlc Match,13, 1975 BttaadAatfnl»w»HyY's Stadwt" DOONESBURr • -­ --• \ V-«. ' ' " ' Koard nwattea ian Wodaasdkw. Mardi Uat iteam/at?'* mem far «oralafoOFXtnozw.f -5 p.m. \ Programs posted;/ '1HB Students Welcome B.E.O.B. 123 No Charge *•. ^ ^ ^5. srrr. The t!niversity o v. •*83.-3?*!-S 'm -u •*e.v mamasio ScKool of Law ©sel MrrXK S*fJWfe. announces the SOMM6&; UGjoscoescm All over town i ~\ -i. 1 ighth Annual Reg 20.00 ' .-< "Ai il > { w ri ft, A«r2k. .Crossword EOzftdr^ oomS$ I'lVflu si ;:t! ii -a ; -if : The Economic Approach to KbY s^aurtiw q|f n«««hii cui:^ ... „ < .«mjfccmjT~"» I1WM' -3 Hp* l .4,-Canpm ' '•Wofdotaoic-V >»w>-•* "V~$' 7 FbOMn; -•3> tMMl:!'4kW.KS«M( W.l a'Mh . .g^nowiwor zts fin* W ObwRant. .'P& "11 W<««« MSaaik,.»Phmt UCwtain ^^Spanoi ii'JKR 1 \7 fiu.Jir; B:« .jia-B!ihiTvay.z-ar»" iU'< uyni*'-1 lOijTun^uc.-J i i -)Jllr." 't Otlu ^ .; 0 ; ,i'.jiI*-'. aO'^rtUri'iroii,^ ^* <'-• ' -0 Richard Posner f Professor of Law J^ty.of ehlcaao Lavy Sj {introduction of Speakers* |Deoiv Ernest El Smith't WTSrtootona* imIM iturator^ i Camel Blue Brown »«5Smin^ Jt SMpot (MchHMTai Scottahcap Mmszmsr*^,*f™V9,S#c5i'?t.nower, t M NotoglacaNr rfyJ 4rB%0MI >#i Iprofessor qflaw UT School of Law ||gf -' * *?30' Cdn$tnentators:^ . Jifef Profet$Dr^Rpjbf«r» Bard' ^8SST^^ Profeubr Lino GragHa UT School of La* } J Professor H.H. liisbliiafi! eaMr^UT0Bpaftmeht0f£C0n6mh^ WtfdiMsdkiy, Mtirch \% 19/5,. m^ p-vHARLES I; FRAN( SHOES /yVonday, AAarcb ^0, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN w n fl* * W- SMU Sinks Horns „te »< *as ejected for|\in the game. It'snice to havs wm 't.was^1^SMtf witnessed by the (8(»yard freestyle) rday. rtammtahs namely throw-la^iw'Mls-adwB­ the iwiuinlfT of the game, v -^them earlier, so l can get a* T?0*™ 19^ straight SouthwestWe beat them in that in the dud meet We *Bia"tte htt*s" i!"^ traenUtaneaat^Teus -Tun Gideen, who began tbe reliever in," explained Texas Onfamce at the came down three seconds wthout shaving P^ 8^-. v" catcher Bide Btadky.in the ««•* shakily, allowing Coach Cliff Gustafson. "But Ftth^ri qfin^Lf s a«ey^«ane down eight seconds with W.»Swway-. • ••-. «>nghorn third hasrman sixth Maavto makethescore sewtallntsin tbegame'sear-when yoa geta lotof rims late, Ftiday and Satudag^-g^r^^^Jshaving," Pattereob said. 1. -. And while the Oris were Keith Hmhad iei theTtaas M. K-vv ly gning.setUeddcrTOtni«tdfi,:joad»,t to»etoprotectti>em'From that pointon/tlie onlyma3m ofin-v-While shaving madea differeneebetween. overthrowingbobbling. thebootingorhittmgassaattvifhfaarhiisball for 12 ia free at tab ltknt sMes ,Blair ^Staffer sa|kil to a canfiete game.••.;.;.••'. fc'->,:yeryvlong-: And that's: good, -terest were 1) bow many records woold be :i"®8aBd Ho«iston, it is donbtfal lt woaldT total errors, the Loaehorns. md » [iiik.. ii(fr>lwM. ad "fc the beginning a*y cbn-' too." broken 2) who would break them andS) was ®ave «°y difference between SMU who committed an an-Rirtori Bnrifam MWto Mt* •trol.:dwinpnitaJ)ly£ace far second? * " ^^^^#^^^^swimmers not qualifying lor the NCAA Hw«Mh»iL stiQ managed to ok waft. MhwtoAartsfltpwtet -r • In aU, eightrecords Werebroken^—axi^" w^wie'^v'n^^d^) sweep the three-game sWies, Ia cootnot tiS llridu's ftliiiOAl|lL,8eBi(*fcart 8-"* ;' * .the rest of this stisniM thg Mmrfawb. n«»M «wi qpalUied evei^xie they needed to qualify "We jestconhkit gel the Osborne added. 9-1,, H 9-1; an outcome fast game, thefintganeitSilw-a«ta«aw|iff6%.Orileft-meet, Texasowned15 first and second|dace swimm^^iiM^t^ri^^nrtv.^^1"8 becoming tar too familiar to ilij* ilnJiHaiiiln wit****. :5™# "Those errors! Wegot a'doo-'-»"0TlStlCSSSfellfe tiinesascompared to only nineforSMU. At Texas' opponents. coUnnqiaalairiatqtnedyof Uepl^plaH wdbooted^t*1 the end of the meet, SMU had taken 15first «2 In Friday's, game, the errors, a tragic, hvwever, .-' SWC RlTTfrllflll THE DOOBLE play and second place times to only eight for .S? ff. ^ ^,1^^,., Loagfciffns (164; M ^a the comedy to te0^wtohrf ^#^3J2?£?2S!r^"*v v" mmrntf wwalcHn Satnr. .StaaWef.o -W . ' --•-~ ••MOM. , . -/T .,i -• r , «ore»«nd.3b .......— O J 4 4 • atuRM* mQns secon game, oot tor -Bradhr.c .-.•.i.. -w sr-a.: jv V With fun intentions of trying to win this ^^to» iiisam : TeXaS. He . miA> • hanitiiM* ••;•• "wis titIAIXY can^it q> «nr,en(in mwt _ Twit »w «ij«raijai kmt JOS?^V We have a.lot of inili.khiaH lmt arp n: fnr fhwi" -­ ^ ^to iasait, 2^?::.:.::.-:::±n; t i1 Photo Service -*» * * at "&cit's -Slmon^ who now < • » • -_ .SMlTs Geoff Shajp. set-two ct thaw~-pAp rt-,* -§_• 222 W.19th ..-A . 5324 Gameron RcL ^ " .'tt XI V1 .records and was named themeet's most won both tbe200-and 100-yard b vababieswimmer. --(Mya secood placefinidi in. 476-4326453-1958 sKoeShop" i ^JRtmrTyre was tbeVIxpjghocn to set ai ^JaeastrokeRacta»'sisnkHr.yearp^Venl^ 1 GhteonxwtW.^«)-U> Rqr«(W,M). 'ecord with a1^.46in theSO^yard hotterf-.' him frooi making a fonr-year tuajpintoBi !y-" " v. > ^ ~ ^ breasbokeevents. . • Prices R»r—: RUGS i/ "U'a been a long time," Tyre said after, "It fdt easy," Rachner said after com-; NIKKOBMAT FTN CHROME OC063 Texas* Golfers m-txeaking th^ edd SWC Record by a little "oplefting Ins lonr-yeafcawmt in ftt Hfrwri VRIHSOHMi/X'lBS iUJLOJL ower a second. "I started off wen early in breastroke. "It was really my first con-, mst, $32.50 NIKON CASE NO. 487 :-•«!#« InOUTournef t^ygnB?'g>fcSMOmeet — butl hadn't boiled swim of Oe year.When I hitthe100^ fUKHASaMIHCMmA(fe HUGE) villi O sw»n ttat wdl mrtfl now. rm pretty hapjiy ywd mark, I kurtr I had it, I just had .too. «alan -TS* ptt fl TheTexas golf team wBLhe'v ^ r ready to swim" n®*4 left That's the fastest I've crane. -CANON TIB/50MM in Norman, Okla., Mon> the NCAA. •---badt-Tm really encouraged for nationals. IMBB/aS 18750 CapitolSoddlefy^^l day to cooipete in the Sooner. TexasTech"s BobAbersoosetthe remain-I'm readytogo." ; • y&sv. pmftaaM(Sufflflmandt • Isteroolleg?ate gidf toama^ !?„^e,18<>-y»rd ' Patterson seemed to think Rhphner 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 mentHtq^ed by the UniTCrsi-AS ft® tfae DamaUy irf Hqpstm /. nnwin't rffy ayw^iMitwMiU-: ^ ^ : ,. ­ • tvof i rialjengi^ the Kong forthird, theCongars "He really has thepotential to do a lot In fimsn besBfl Tros becnise they:v^swininiing. I snre wish we had him loar > : i^moggyears." Patterson said. JESs3-^ Vfc2K-4a-\ y Sports Shorts ^sp­ Former 130yearsWve bec^iusing j ^ylor^WiS'Tract MMfS >r * Baylor beat the Texastrae4^r; with vaulter Jane Lamme ab-The Texas women's tennis ; teamUS-HHSjSatnrday in the::.-.?> sent placed second in the ad-team; won three of lit our Port --Worth ReareaUonal ; vanced division at the State matches this weekend at the s Track Meet Toas*firstplace _. Gymnastics Meet Saturday in SMU Invitational in Dallas, tfc.; finishers were Jesse* BeUmont HalL " ,' Texas wonmatches from Tex-|r-, • UaOdaa^do. in thenule,Jim ** *-» asTedi, Lamar andSMU. Once again, werd like to oil what McGtddridc in the discos and" p ~ ^ ' ' David Shepherd -b the "poie~ vanlttg"-:, -.. NCAAPjairings •40**-*' •^Ai' in— i»i>«r.­ we mean b • .... 3c«t>Srv;T'.t'SjQ .. The Texas men's gynn -Pften lor t£» NCAA's SMwm. • ImSwm. IM.««.T«a»ei Paut JM. anw tBMM ItaaMatUnK MMiTimimlHOngnSMi,: L nasties team -ccoi^xied its ' w -* . •^3 15?-= .season Saturday finishing se-r l,? .. ^SST ^ v 111 , w. = ^ \ . jry^2 Acond in tbe State CoBepaSe " ? Us*im. n,sn»c»*,'wx. Tbm !/i^> GymnxdicslfeetinB^mont ; ^OA-.1^»* MOytaad. JM,Xv.CrtJjhhn.»*. KMjS ^'ll Nam Own*. lM. n;KM>t*v1»?.' ­ mtrf? ..T •>. 1 TI T'11 llli Ifcutil -v'iC '•-WmMMOMM' v-iJ ,t scorn^ 137.75 followed hy,. ",l 5< ., Aibm sua*2M. n.AM« --•.-•-! ™ »mi .«»«*•"»-; Ce«tr,| MIcblgiB, 20-3. *i? _ :HasticS team jdaced fiist m't rSfcc!!-. the fcntermediatedmaon and,#:-*«ki;iw* ^e^r^sksr^le " Four dinners I Wjvccn'^tfor the price WjfL'tiH'ds of Three! Complete unmu m^iy-Thu'rsday selection of w.'iter 6:30-9:00 Our brewesy in1844. •) i -V -, -v-.PP®-------bec^s & .iccessories ^ PIT C"«0« W* «"*"»»» •* torn > ?*w-i".'rr-T-»—••— 640/ Bui'iit: 453-7«MaM^biH» Sr*"**7****»?»An«* -iMmMbitfqMlorgMl ue Ribbon quality,means the best tasting be^^bu •i,c-v^w^JvWvvX' ¥eVxA quality achieved only by using the finest ingredients £%£?WS:I 1 ^4­^flaijakd|; ?3n Milwaukee, the beer capital of the world, Pabst Blue vt. ^ )p?­ ^Ribbon continues to Be the overwhelming best "seller * "year after year. Blue Ribbon outsells its neares t -^Cjf * f ^competitor nearlyJive to -1 one:That's why we feel;or^Bow CaiimSMIc ,r, . --~X " ' > "^4«L " 4. •' ^ •' * * C we've earned the fight to challenge any beer. heres the Pabst challenge: Taste and compare the flavor of Blue Ribbon with the ,„_a nBWuJb^ Sdrinking and leamiwhat-gabst quali^ in JE-yVfe ¥ lJar»V isTsdl about. But don't take our word for i v» -V \~3 Ypti needlotakethose nawbiuas to JadeBrown Claanaraandiet him fadeand softanthem—without bleach—in hisJaan machine. 'JackH havejroustricHng in naturaleaseahd'eomfortin not)meat «* w r-" -~JU\ J -&j,\* * s "! &tngywjean«tpd|y to JackBrown Cleaneraor«iyx>fhl80ne !Wh4 Itotirllarma^ tocafions. f ' Tomorrow and$2JSlater youand yourJeans will be" Mf w^Joones at Northland: ^Soutti;om«ICongress*uiqnswja ShbalCrasIcatAnderson CUMawiiiAnciiwiTu KT jSifjtq •* -i . " ­ »» *s-^» nnqmmM. m Ms 6 Monday; MarchTO.1975 ^It ^tr^s4 lc*tSr Vi^ x 7" t * **» .USSR SK3SStskB4£r! MM Wins Tournament &fpr\**!»*tiT Stkeet Team Finishes Last 1 By THOMAS KESSLER IT TOOK ONLY one minute and one play to shatter the 'fI-• ,*"iP&mi staff •; '• _ hopes of the Longhorns, as North Texas State's Isied Khoury­tDowH-O* t Wrfc«ri'V^* le Texas soccer team had two objectives going into the collided with Texas goalie Aubrey Carter in the first minute1? , By BOX TROTT t <%ao, with 13 minutes left, Rich Parson, handlers and free throwshooter8\iiil? Chris T. Mendejl Memorial Tournament Saturday and of the tournament's opening game. Carter's ri^it leg was''* Texan Staff Writer «> * Tommy Delatour and Tyrone Jonnson there " ^ ( t j;'s-'' Sunday—to win the tournament and to have a large crowd broken ih three places .-ni COLLEGE STATION--Texas1A&M all hit short jump shots-to cut the lead " "•Davis wasabigfactorinthesuccessA'' attend. North Texas State won-the tournament, • but there Khoury, who was the top scorer in the nation last year,^-; ch Shelby Metcall stood In themid-tosix, and itappeared that Texashad a of the Aggies'.10-minute stall tactics^ was a large crowd. quickly became the center of controversy.. He Was*-* ofJheAggteidressingroomSatur-chance to got'back into the game-•The.6-6 forward hit three-baskets and.# A But what those spectators saw would send a shiver down repeatedly accused of rough play by players and coaches. ^ j . pulling;on a> bottle o*champagne, But then Metcalf'called timeout and four of fivefree throws during tfie ' the spine of.any Texas cheerleader (bad:any been there)i ;A "You know why I play dirty?," Khoury said. ''Because^t s maroon doublcknit suit still;drip--.presorted to what he calls "oiir passing iO minutes S' . that's the only way to make a professional team I've been J I FIGURED they'dionlme^^t>avi3®® ng from his victory 6h0$er. j-j^gamet" What it amounts to Is an out-"IFIGU1 practicing with the (Dallas) Tornado since I was itftlfe 10thfct; v "Our guys have paid' the-pric6 4JJ grade, and that's the way they taught me." j' J Longhorns Begin Drillsi and-out stall.? said "But,I-wasn^ worried ftbout^,? easonr"-ber'!.be shouted. ^Too^JToo bigbig^ara price A&M his been known all season for ' yftfying. I shoot every shot *ht,>riiSf: jusi ' ' ; N •the maitfoF-man press,consistentshooting^' .pfaygra, '',1' "I don't blame him (Metcalf) If £; positions vacated: tqr graduations. Texas State,"Texas Coach Alfred Erler said. "Idon't think?^S and a perfect delaygame to give AiM^g PARKER, DAVIS, John Thornton Spring training als6 will'.be debut of new 'offensive either of those goals would have been scored if we'd had sf ^S a 74-63 win, over Texas and. the ^ifand guafds Mike Floyd and Webb •sit on it, too," said;Black. ' " coordinator Don Breaux. wtb replaces Fred Akers (now regular goalie in there. It's really a pity, because weplayed^li S • had a six-pointleadinthatsituationl'd^' -Southwest Conference championship, « --• so.wdl;"' -..'"W up lull for the Horns. -Americans; v . defeated them, 2-1. ,• .v America;College, 3-X, in their, opoiing -> ged the Couigars, 2-1, in anot^r gmne • V . . ins of rough play. ' " •"®| v, /experience; ihg championship just a .little too Texas also will" be .seeking to improve its defensive "I've never seen such iUthy playing in all my life," Mi 3} Tyrone Johnson, who had a career . :soon," Floyd said. "That might bav6 :-' secondary,one-pf,thetonghorns?:weaknessesHti974.^.ujiuiiiy, une yi uiti ijQDgnpni3' WeiiJmes8ES W ii//i. -, v L Houston faculty sponsor Bob Reeder said. ' • ^ ^5-­high of21^x>ints, opened thegame with' been one reason why we let them get V Raymond Clayborn wtil move back to cornedtack after' ' "i .Jf1 game, Houston dominated play, taking the lead The End; . a short jumper for Texas, but A&M ..,close in the secondhalf. But th^n it-wasf-1 ^pending most of last season at:halfbacks Joe Bob BiitzelTis « • w"en Azls Kaiahifar scored. Butthe Mean Green came back 36 ,;^; j ..Canfertnc*'Al Qawm came back with 10 straight points amf:& W L PCT.Wl fit. • really hard for us not to think-chamV-also expected to retum atsafefy_after missing the 74season : a goal by Khoury. "I am great. Ilove me," he shouted 5tt.'-',v£; .established domination/as. the Aggies ^•TexWA&MiitfiW.Vii on disciplinary probation • v *? •-' ^ :S.Vi\l... l2 ,J .tW 20i >-.7» -? -' from midfield following his score. pionship by then % , 11 3 TK l«;r,Wl harassed Texas into bad passes and.iWl!;",^"--t 1) 3 78617 9 -654. " "We knew it and the crowd knew it,-*-' Freshman Alfred Jackson. however, will leave the . -Houston finished the tournament in second place.America ^_ '.ij forced Shots. * , " ^ -,V?~ A » 42» 19;i'i.riKl«5 i^Everybody knew it." •f 1 ;f defensive ibackfi^ld Afdr -a itrial atv^lit 'end -along^with -s College was third. followed by Texasj .which lost its,final 1_ , lo J -'The Aggies aren't likely,tojforget 1|,k .^trackman Smith, With seven minutesremaining in to§r^??)r,orr~'>' "•"**? ^ i '*29 10 It 385 ackman Kerry Smith. k. j-f? f. , "j ^ game to theCougars, 4-2.Texas Athletics Council Cbairman tiS," Hi » It 360 first half/Tyrone JohftSon hit aWthe^+sMu.i"!« 2w a i> 3061 for a while, either^ Champagne and F6ufstartersarebackin,thioffeiiSlvelipe(BobrSiinmons, ;i|:Thompson presented the tournament trophies.. In c M m > _ _ • • • ^ ' jumper to bring Texas Mthin two, 26^-' w» . b -i 4i J 12 .143 S 20 .200 cigars w«e passed out bysaiuiiiuiiv< .->h -? Rick niurman,-Will Wilcox and'6eorge Jame;) "with one ­ -x HoutMn, * L......0 0 .000 15 10 .600 4. «butA&M'spoiseand bench strength: „ ^swc «». guard spot open. * --, ?4 "You know, you've got t6.g^ye^rex&?5'helped the Aggies build up a 40-28 half-^ , credit, though/' Davissaid iif themidst > • , Fteshman fullback l^arl Campbell will again be proVidtag ^|; li® • -in MJi time lead. -'V • T0Ma«/-Arkan«tlM(.r«Ml56; Baylor 60, Texas pf celebrating.' ."For a team that^had » * :i most of theoffehse, andmostof his backfill matesalsqrae^S­ TKhM'TCU felce "• T«"AiM 100 5MU 77 IV Tm avrtmn h.ir »»h * , IN THE SECOND hair with BarrjT S&, 5»tu«la^AWU4, Ta*it63. Ark.nunM. Baylor :nothing to play for today and noti^t&|R: returaSig. " '^ % \ r£iXSk 133TffDavis and Sonny Parker working int-.**' T«h^p.Tcu 7».iric» 84, smu bj, 2 ot look forward to ^ next. seasdiif,vflieyi-:.:; Spring training will come to a close April"19 with nfr| AMIR>CAXS f.irOf"T£ side, the Aggies went ahead by 12,51-,-,« Orange-White game, "r­ played pretty hard." ' UT Meets OU Today (^ _ Escape for tho> Break J~\ -| Horns Rout Horned Frogs, 9-0 -y--» ^ _ .k u_#«^ " r w 9 ' ws By ALLAN NIGHT "w ^ Snyder wasextremely pleased of Oklahoma at 2 p m Monday Invitational tournaments. *J a ^aB Writer with "the play ^6f junior at Penick Courts However, Snyder doeS nofi vfij^ie Texas men's (tennis Graham Whailng.vtrt^ beat Although the two teams think the match will be an :n K.C„ Miller in7 the^TVo. 4 have not met this year, Texas easy win * "Oklahoma is,'4h£ Conference match df the Singles. "I thought he flayed has finished ahead of perennial Bife Eight f^aih­ w Giant mf w?iSt° o rturday' defeatln8 one of the besrmatches I've Oklahoma in both the National pion They have a very strong,, I w,' . ^ , seen him play,''t Snyder Said. Invitational Indoor Cham-team and have a lot of depths; Pizz ^fk- Texas Gonzalo Nunez beat "Graham along with Brad pionshios and Corpus Chnsti Snyder said ""-~V -«%' s TCU's BandyCrawford, 6-4,2-Nabors is showinga lot of im­6, 6-1, in ttie No, 1 singles provenieht.i; match. Gaiy Plock was the , only other Texas player who ' While Snyderil's§weil _ ...m needed three sets to winas he-satisfied with theshutout ov^r ^^Surf , defeatedJi.Sas ^TeXaSnieet8'tbe'Dnlversity'<'r AcapuU :mpocKe Kzzalnn coupon,Ixiy^ : L» kM''K4»M % !,«nyar>nt,lvv*ar ROBER viMdHtmitopn Tibetan Buddhist Weditatioti Masted mnguMr pristKid-?r,A Hi jv-ih« n**i Mratte-" Ifliltcfrfth'aqual numlxr • '8th' ijrearyear.\ ^ Meditation: iri Action ' ' v| •-of mgMimu.FilEE! ' -tn 'ua *. , . .-and5 • ~ '*'Oo« Coupon per visit. "^"Ine "Original" Acapulco.^ Cutting ThroughtSpiritual Materialisni Also Spring Ski in Colorado' SEMINAR vYaM Hm Mant H, 1f75 . '•» 'Jm j»-'Jmr 01 DEADLINE: MARCH Illusion's Game* » •nmpinpent lis? MerttTnmi sV,-^ustln' Texas -March 15-16, 1975 . ^ mcoik) l«v«n Starting atU-00on Satur*day, March 15dnd Sunday,,% mmsrnm " •" Noj^th of Austln oii , |jS| Sharea1 today... Jlf^SlD"$l(fDEP^SITiT3 m , AUSTIN DHARMADHATU -if " aiV'TlI 2112 High 6roV« Terrace r-% Au»Kn, Ttaar-^703^:-%£^ ' SoiNwml.: '..>...4774751 tt06 Gooiilof 477-1H7 MMtnrf Km.....USlJSn • t I /; T»«s..'* Thon.l N!||iit ,22M Kvmii* M7-M11 1710 W.!«. ...JtUMSS 1 s^iil \ 72S7 Hwy. 4W lBt,...nt-lSH m lEiiESeiliieiiei: •M'M P*fF-«•* S1* ' mm •• <&sa54 r I <•* *8? I X$2f • - -fefj ^vkSave upto $32.50 ft *f V i ^ ' v r. S*fc > J-?A.i |N!ew Square Top • % frr5&? available5 •• Wuri' r* ~sSr it \\% ' CRfi^TSMEN ^>TlL-l r< - >?­ ' k, ' %kk »- Siselv L • f »« ivfjfe S Zvi mlmmm Wi0\ site IstFloOr IM m /rf» ^tiKa^^xstgs 3 ¥$SS SpitlSn#® t/ 3^* ^^.-. •: Pane/ Awr Utility Regufefron Upset by Senate Testimony ViJlW ' nfrife-MhJlMMMB 1V«V1lk : -m . -• . A* • • —•._.• _ ••.•>• -• ..^ -«, • . W» u.• .• •• " • • ' •'_" . .--• '• ,-i ; By STEVEN A. KINGHORN Boole. cfrcfcainfiMQtTCfJtL . m ' ' --»«—w tirol •Taats.»jBlirwil«* Custal States Gas Corjv Tbe Mqhone industry has-, JtV theTteris Coalition for tioa wflh tefimuqy &w oat­ * 8leiftcraotgetaaBifrrfaa tfatawy might WryKw» j&w*> Hns LegeJatare, -— "-•» '• ,• '-niil • win get «oe drawn bythe when only three senators nUEly m«n>olies.** saad Jim An**y tfi» iw mt«« >» HEADMASTERS UNISEX HAIRSTYjUNG f SUPBJCUTS & BIO-DRYS $10.00 & UP ? REDKJN RETAIL CENTER wewckwass . lHttKOEMGtANE 4si«ni ­ -®5TJSS 3303 N.ldmdr •sft * .... lARRY'S 109W.43idSt^ .. ;•• ^ ^ MOW SERVING BKAKFJ mrwhn wa* wUAaob «a Central la-Public Iotere11.' NWnliB; to Be Saa .Vfib StawdartbUmes, of K|k prkeSv Xate ftnstasriUuUic u< * fccliai tawtaeiaqtpg':. nve «f the eicht B«st * 33 percent greater V.Wkae;k-';kke salary increases oa March I Wditb far ^Batw^y lessof a raise WHEAT BERRY BREAKlnow j available on anysandwich"| | * tLi • ws*>. BAR-B-Q 18k MARKET 45341620 lonyVMariDBt is BREAKFAST StitVB) 6:30AM -10:30AM ntam over the Msectte • IhemjasesfarlkeiDM to IUN enqiafes'fcecH»t efierihelertheFHCMbieh 1 period alter. the Texas ti|i Hwi |ii i il~i mli 11.11 MatCbeadof.lamary.This ISpmries a 13 puuM ia- oease tor those enployes eaniai less thu |HI al ~ $U( per SMttV tefo farthoseeaiwe •*> the^afly jonmaUsm thaf cah ,v aareal cUremoAp«j"Ttejobirf.atMt^r^jsto, tfeaj."peopleaway.'fromilieVs^l i •ssti&S m^izszmssm, ' , nrily"jnnmall«tfi / n0t«?°« on a list «f -thai^slly matters isslanted; Ur <^; AU4ijJ4*V*V^Cwor randcatwn Week's Joul-- Ba&sm nay as more &an 200 •Avidmls honored Redffick's 41 years at the: Uaiwasity a tmncli ii. tfa^s^ynia Capri Motor HoteL " •; Reddidc, the 79^eu'-old former dean^of -com- jiwurw aliens, redred as dean In IKS and retired from Mtime teadiing last year. HeoitertamedldsaadieDce'of faicnlty, stodents^ and _ ^SaWttsf+yefclgved swnso modi O^^nocieeded. r ^ 'always' jeamntinghiscateer thatv 0k new tiUOosophy bf^wwiM KP'S| professional joonaBsts with" ponidnng sentence that life want to do ruling in even , 5 anecdotes from Ms long joor-condemns to aoybod y-r-teiv .taimite of theday." / ^ B^ancareer. Healso toldhis minal boredom.'" ^ a,writer nartttfed by wflmigw-i nnt the knwriedge -"I , 'JejMJna«ML «stnK«yjistoi>ring modbrta. v ^bideats can open ^wiB-,ldonHki»w what Em goingto y dows to as wbo teudL" he do whea l go to work 4n.H% , wirs?»i«SE -Vi BAHA1TUAH 478-6232 ^ -472-9544 s1­ Tr* *> *%• BcvnnN^Y^Myoardvraaf themiGradelchoo).^^ sdxjol.Colleie Y« h«evou are.Sa dose mgnduition and sWl beginning. Oolythistime-On ^hlw^Aiiqiiiw^wWda^iiacMitBBBon,*V***. i'i • ' s-m % as • >"• -^."•••T^. -.-v'-".-•»:;"VT^• liMII «UqiUlHl4 m • -V-— -~Za 1 „ *****e"re9i*>gyou aspcoal gift—ITw Gcadtatq maguine,a hat> bookfarteawnsajhool. ft «nswritten specifically for newgradimesand 11annul wAli IhMuI Twrfto" anformnkm. Ukehow to geta iob.:I hbw ro^ plawaiwm...how todnose a sradsdwbl...how tostart a business... and . ntoyowjfuture, butat YOUR FREE COPY OF iW G WE EX-SnjUBtTS'. A! trt^ i ^ ^t -try and find cult ^rbat is tbete; Makei a Deal or-can iopple ^ and bring it oat," be said.-V presidents li slantedPhe * \c One of Roddick's former gatd *" stodents, Tt*nmy;Thompson, -, When LiTe iolded k iaTSj an aotbor and {onner assis^ Tlionqison began Ms careerAs ^' taut editor of Ufe magazine.-• M aiithnr-Mng wrirtingnn hffl'1... spoke abouthis careerand his fourth book, he explained the love for journalism en-changes in his life from % ' ' couiaged by -professors^like. new^uipersand tnagazines to Reddki. -*i», — •--his career as an author»" 'r> Because be believes that ..Althoagh he is convinced journalism allows im-' that "bookwriting is a lonely -,J aginative living, Tbotapscm profesaon," thnmpaiti said ' said he hasavoided "the most be'is doing "exactly what l"i' PiPl 8:30B.W.SrivEb courtesan s career; •'"X * v ^ —, . ^ T-Vr*^.yr-"-'• iS* 'm •' 1 f m 1^1 mm§. 'spil ri®l W'OJ Mfl S^lf •ml W&WSlmwM -rbkcvitm ^ssrs^u_ Wm p.rti:Mooday j i_f 3gfc»XJTU-IT""1 6528_N. LAMAR * PHONE 453-5676' •? K ^O COVER CHARGE ***** All UNESCORTED LADIES:-2 FREE DRINKS SBUCK BUBBLE EXPRESS^ MQN ?. fot 1 on Ml X f P DRINKS -TUTS £>5-v HiGHBAlts] HAPPY HOUR 4-7 DAILY '2for 1" fiS :«§; 3£ M&t IIP •«&>£Plfe; ft A I r» I ; i ]i I f> 1 r ^ 1 I I jt 1 •> Li.w fl1"«" is-fl l„^ If m mhmstm gfa ^HBJV^pytlin^s Student Financial Help WCATOY BgOWN grant with a financial aid ," "Thereis still a question of areas," Binder explained;TeXan StaffWriter >' package according to the just how much the BIA wiU Redactions would first be *if®nla«ons regulations,;•one-half t»f the student's ,made by the student, next in tad programsto Ametffi published in Friday'sfederal budget,'^Binder said. A^any wok-s^y H- Behavioral Science studentx.^kl i tvour councU cari help you -"" * mic problems »c V.CA--^ « St I I ».• w-Mc^sffii^I SLsJ Ti-r?r« I §>• ?^:K ^V"I . ^ t, MS i ttZzks $!• m. mm |l HNHHhMMi ISf * $>Si: Illfil l£viS$¥?4 Ifellfe |^;;1 . .^1 &%& |I|L W-lfcr-' :':W IifligijS Bgfcf <, * m Poets TcFRecit "TheltherNtef?* -owSt* -3*5? a# :„.T^toeikaintio«^H«iog::#MapaiDe|^<. •' WaIker;stanrfc*SieJ WMtkr,MSn? Moore and Anne Waktaan." Moore'siatest»»«». u>>»­lUllami^vOkite AMm*idl will give pnfonnante*attte ning Pictures," openedattbe v.f>f preseatedby theCtttanl IMwiil? Mowtayoight as lHy• -.1 -*5? » panel forem on ""Women essays for Ms.magaiine. /' 5­ Municipal Auditorium Thursday Bight. . _ • • HjMlclft " •5* -,-..... m-"—^—•—[•*-* —*t "Trftrr rtj|H'*' ti Ifci ' 1#mu mj i " 'v.stoty ofafamily trapped iaaplace _B*»a -~ " --- "C •NfewcffiKB*. i.^lwr career toenwttagtag. 1Ki*oeata .. v •' . v,~ Is The nroerrawfflbejriia at8 "r*8-Inl971*he -; Tbeplaycould be asdepressing astfce pj^MaSwinCoS^ ***** the Feminfart Poetxy :-••.>.wereit not for the faunuvfatay chamaadcaagpeBMettt tiw 3m XStoriS Series at:U»e h&WM# v (pain character. ~ -> tntA 2X0). Admission is Centa"^tNewYtrt UnimslJ • > THETRUE SIGN of good acting isgoing »aq fiilfrgiuj _ free. It is anawal Iw the S' ^^ls^®riec,^P : irtn^agdaatn^aalkM(tfe Dnlsfin * of coin-, Blanhatt^n-^^^ jC'n1? L « gcting.SoitiswithJotagymdlfattKWOfaaai(WlUkr•«w _ Majcatioa ttroagh its » nttnt f "-' nil Irff fltMll |1|||Ib Bb formaace of Literatore -• a>e ^poetry co^Umt wR?; evaitaalfiaaceeAno "TXir^iTinTiiiil'Y J Se«*«, te Sdnd of Com-, dm to Blackwood Prodwx: pr.DudleyStanton(.te&teySfiBertaadtheaadfeaee^MKed Bsucafioa aad•JH* Valba^itioiis and jHrtCts.#;l#«^"6!^P Grandma WUhehninaBrows(Tbriraa taasae Carter). ideas awd tones ttonwnittog.^greadingg •iJofamyisanmpobfoh*^poeta«la«aawhttstowedlasIfc .tewitttenfoDrPA^RadiofDi^ awayto snppotthis faatgy raodeslfr. ->• ^ lnaksaf|)oe^,s>^^ece^ I . 'life.Nita." Baf^on Aits. She has ferfanned tiR"': foice. His voire is an ode to the Nesro spwi*. . MaraKinwipB ave . appeared j^|i s«ch v poetty on nati«i^ televi^ --An 'Mricanwarrior/-Dodkr.tusr^lpnetryfawcafcskip* •aigarinrs as Boeby, Barb ^aad cacDo and atttowa.Hall^ Review and Tale Utenuy.-.New.Yaj^; ^'.:. i WINKLER is agutsy,anted actor:'New Yorkx"Vabee «s*A attar."* j Voice"criledhim'VaieoftfaearistpowwIM ti^Ssea To Depict ^Women In FfariceL»i ' •fe.lBK 1DJF. Oe Fnik ^pcnaora seriesof Bhns aiMBt -cansiervatism~ in a small ^ v iV Iitnntjua matt : wwneatyFreoctwwrirnfilm French tcnm: Eq>Mted>and-fe-': k Rwce,"as part wa^i. «5a wuauiity wiat«a^y Bafcws.FamstobeApwniB-. penecated by the villagers. ^ te;.-••:/•,;:s,.r -•/ the wotaan becomes a pmnmnB^ "TBad4|j^^irt:;*:pxdESi*iofititB|^ M* Batts AwBlnrinnCj-.^cdiiBaiB^^jBid s^mwz rff:~ noOe. lte^Snt depicts a as awme. . wnaaa^s. wnnateMw .it 'fSeveB"S'aBd:^-*tiOt»eifa' aXl her,.«aatioBddp.Xl ia the hj«r *f tk« '«• and:daagUer :!day;b^inBUtsAadifeiiaz^ imm useinu**.tor their cppres-'written wddirectedbyAgnes hyKULE, -* i1y|wdtiMl)aaay aro«^ yv«^^'C^" tdls;the rt^; aatriescfriwal hamniaHnBi.v^ bf:^a^onngi;8lnger^iirho ^^•-j»':«t>j^-^::-:^)'?^>qtniyae.SsMw^7«sa:^Wai>d^'oal^t^Parisg<>ne '4r. — far teiMiwl 'pjn. ^Mitay lB Ba^eae : «ve(dng M ^nlfai " AaditoHam, -directed by of a cancer examination. i|^^i4^h«*elist who wrote':aid:vhi^ the film. lt |iuiUaya . .5J IneStewtedjeBptelsBteteil,, *'Aitals^&tt :eadi< fiini jj:-««saw aR y IB an aawordly hold. ' ptngiaui'is R< n©flhcfo//6 a««srii,-ifs'asssrj String Ouartel 1 revotts ag^ast stapidBty and Tft pArfarm Asbfaig qaart^inom JBe?-. fcoGty, the Cmteto'Mok^ wiUpresentaooaceitttoday M&W at OeXJnivenafy.*•"<*%StmSored \>j the:Depart­6v -»*ft£wfii5S STATE *inent. af>:Mtisi;c and the Institirto Cnltnral Mezicaao,MHillW the poocert win hc^n at'•» j i>niMhy Recital Hanand Isopen tothe ^ttAc^eerfdarae. ^ 1T»e artists will.perforin»Qintal,'0p. 10, lqr Oaade • Debassy, Caarteto E^t ip jm. m Bemol byJolian CariDo;m aaSBfe?:!r,!9* ' jaaofflt Show iovs sL SA <1^5 «7 (tCMOO-IKW QUARIUi Theatres SV iiii TTPK )1\D N \\ hS« WRMMM TtETOtTHHSIMHBlttlltMffiBg. LLLL-STRON m Smhvv I ' ±\\\ISA ev~-$!*%£gB£Si­ •w wna ant dm ^Mpwverwtt HIGHLAND MALL CfEAAM « Soui lisidf Starts WEDNESDAY! S3ra S2S^&u&$2SS!m% BWiw iide Goitarijs|,t.,T __jwrm % Waves' Attracts Austin Surfers vfijr TOM MILLER ^REMINISCENT of "The the growing decibels: A Gellathy, opened with some-in the audience said, "Well, ^^aUona]dy^^A^uitari8t ..Endless Summer" -and Lawrence Welk bubble-peeling tubes breaking to that's a kneeboard." Sure -''33 l?eter ^master of the1 gMfe/^Satur^ '^Pacific Vibrations," machine pumped spheres that, orchestrated music. Shot in enough, but on top of it was Ifcjstring slideguitar, will pef-> kidSvsh^W.'J'WaveBr-attiiie ''Waves" drew scores of someone -popped with a lit' the Hawaiian Islands, the George Greensbough, a top i. form at~9 p ra.~Monday in'tee Pitz heater Friday rilght, at- ^Austin's landlocked surfers match. movie captured the' classic Surf photographer in.his own , Ijfexas Tavern "* ' tracted those eternallyadoles-like honey. Hawaiian shifts After a pornographic ses­breaks of Sunset Beach, the right and the first to:take a ^iHeWentwiil te sponsSid > ^t,?ry?t!mg -and abaione shells decorated sion that was mellowed for Banzi Pipeline and what;look­-photo inside, a tubing wave..:.. Hit*Tews Union Musical J1^00 «»»«#»<*«» to am .•-' necks and torsos. ' mass • consumption with ed like the winter swells at BAGLEY and GelUithy als$ f EVents ,e in1 4Iia : Fall Af difference, '.'Don't fofget' to transcended the difficulties of going to do one anyway." poor soul lose control and eat guns. structured music; A lone '/WAVES," produced by it left a pit that churned with The last scene freezing a plastic gain; tree swayed to Gene.Bagley and Bin the same speed of being surfer high on a wave provok­ caught in the wave's turmoil. ed a desperate, "I need Kottkeand'Fahey), morethan From the largely surfing more," from a viewer-. liolds his own with them." format, Bagley and Gellathy "Waves" was sure to change .vvAnother'reviewer;.,from included some footage of an a few minds about going td "Bugle American," described ,odd -shaped kayak that used Port Isabel or San Bias over v r Lang'ssongson therecordlng 4}90 pm -w Oavld Nlven, Jamet VVhltmore. f pjn. ,paddles. An authority spring break. 7 Now Price It Right, K 1V. ' 7(M pjn; 7 Medical Center ^ as having "a slightly more » 8 yv. stevwuon \nxomrijA > 9 Tom T. Hall:.The Storyteller 9 Austin City Limits -with WlUfe : self-confident and polished ap­' U Bewitched 1 'fc t p.m. Nelson and his band 36 Newt 24 Biliy Graham Norfolk Crusade • proach, than the .Kottke 7*m. "Ji-1 "v ' • 7 Maude . 10 p.m. v " • 24 SWAT pieces." 7 GummoKe < ^ v . 36 Movie: "A BigHand forthe Little 7 Movie: "Whistle Stop," starring . ' 24 Ah Evening Wfth JQhnDti)w— Ava Gardner. George Raft wlthgwih Danny Kayfe'Jacques Lang also will perform at 9 Lady/' starring Joanne Woodward, 9 Adult Theatre:. "NanaiV Henry Fonda, Jason Robards p.m.,Tuesday at Soap Creek Costftau -' _l> & ~ • dramatfzation of Entile Zola'snovel • E. Bee Caves 36 B®IISy*temFaml|yTM«**'« — •itt pJR. starring Katharine Schofleld (Parf* 'The Centervllie • Gtwt/'itarrlno » 7 Rhoda Owitarfct 707 ^ S }Vr>~ 24 Wldt World Mystery V»^ 36 Tonight Show wui Speaker for RTF Day Relax With USE TEXAN _ ->Will Geer, the actor who .show?recently discovered : blend of himself in his'70s and 'The Golden Days of • 3.104. ; plays Grandpa on " the TV films.by 'Alfred. Hitchcock, ^his^owQ' grandfather* as he Radio," eight radio dramas • An exhibit provided by |jWANT AIX5 series "TheWalWhs,"will be Charlie-XtoaplW and others:'-remanbers hlm, has hit the • from the 1930s tothe 1990s^in-^ Paramount Pictures Corpora­THE DAILY . amoogthe goestspeal^rson^ Tbe program will be in Com-Spopnlaifizenitb 6f Us' career, eluding .adventure,' comedy, tion displaying promoiion • _ . ' traveling player in tentshows, "The War of the Worlds," Gatsby" and PLANET historic film, v lhe 72-year-old stage,'-film tion and maiketi!)g;df.motion .repertory companies, played continuously?from 10 postumes, all day, Cofn-'and television actor Will dis-pictures rand -television ;Shakespearean troupes; river a.m. to 5 p.m .CommunJca--municatiim B, room 4.134. cussteteviskm asa reflection materials in* & 1alk'.;entitled boats,. Broadway theater, tion B, room 1.108. 1 • Toiirs of -audio-radio, of popular culture,«t 8p.m.in "Making Offers'.They.iCannot mqvies:and television.; .;• "ImageNation,"' .a mul-television and film facilities, LADIES FREE Lyndon'/ B..~ -Johnson Refuse" at 4 t>.m: in the Other Monday attractions fimedla-'production ^ involving from noon to 5 p.m., Com­ Auditorium. Academic CenterAuditorium. • will include: quadraphonic sound -and munication B, room 4.110. Also helping the RTF Glenn has been instnimen-• ''Television .^Nostalgia," multi-screen projected', stills • ; ^ 3500 Guadalup*,^, Free Keg of Beer Also on Monday,. poets department celebrate. Com­tal in launching'promotional TV programs from the 1950s, and motion pictures,;shown on Honor Moore and Anne Wald­munication Week at the campaignsfor'such-filmsas shown continuously from 10 ' the hour and half-hour, from : man will read their works at8 SUN-WED for Ladies Tapped University on Monday will be 'Ttoe Godfather,^ J'.'Pie.God-. " V./ (IT . a.m. to 5 p.m., CMnmunica-10 a.m. to 5 p.m., ttie''Egg," p.m. in Communication William. K. Eversoo, film father, Part 11^'. "Love tion B, room 4 132. No Cov^rai^l Communication ^A'^^room, Auditorium, CMA 2.320. • at 9:00 p.m. histbrUn ;and author, and Story,*! ?,Paj^ Moon;'?\''Sei^ Charge j4 Charles 0. Glenn, marketing pico," "The.-Grtat;GaW>y," -: i \<^Sf vicfrftesident for Paramount "Murder on Jhe Orient Ex-Beer, Wine, and Set-Ups ARBY ;MoaliIay actffities«ftirbegin ^ress/' "Chinatown^ and the Tdphss 3-8 Mon-Saf ': at 10 a;m. whea Everson , forthcoming "The Day'of the Pool Tourneys on.Sun,& describe:ylWs:1seaiTChfior^rLbpust";^75Jf^^^|ji:' 1M I Goadsbp* THE BUCKET 23rd and Pearl historic motion pictures Naxt Door MMarti"t ItalianRait-3 Hrt.fr—forking­ 453-9831 451-9151 thonght to be lost He will trayal'of Grandpa Walton is a Timtsanhartf... Wa'ra making fo aaslar • i 25* Tap B««r -b 8*9 M-F 14 j'&ruz $5 .Ya'll Caml>| TEXAS UNIONMlBiaiCVENTS COMMirTflf ~ A*#?' ^ k ;Served with-baked potato^ BEST Emmmnra nun 49 and crisp sdlad^ .with.av' • " *>5 choice of NO COVER CHARGE TQNITE Z) dressing, and v Texas Toast. } Return Qt fThe best in live rock and 7 --&­f^rpll 7 nights a week. ^ APPLE Good WTOlesdnnfe American fopd •Openat8:00p.m. ~ . atrightneighborlyprices. Wusic begins &30 . Happy Hour from 8 to 9. •NO COVER-• ttlSGvmhbpt.r; 1 SO* Tequila 'S20V Gwhw M "Notippin • 4005 Anfcnw Sqaan Siiop. Cmftr AHNIIe JustT t- • fit «m WMt« IM. . •'if '914 N. LAMAR 477-3783 MlTHll IAITH ^ Beatles in ® ' •t i H ^ t 3 T . -& hiS, iBurdihe Aodifbriuiri^^l M*.00 UT Students)>Faeoity^5teiwlK -a; ' The -,J. .sl5i'. r»:. -re,.... ' ^ f , $Hj$ Cultural Entertainment Committees y»S of the Texas Union rii 'J® s&fe ^ c presents * v ' ' r -''^5* Tonight sr-f> i feSsgr--) ct, ^ v> :'.K , ...... v-'-y. ... • --• The Cultural Entertainment --4 \^V -TOBEORNOTTOSI 7*" r L } it A Committee of the Texas Union Mi t lyty, <• r & resents Vlay, '"Moor-, will g?e pertpri*ances atthe n&g Pfe-titTes;* openeditthe ^University rWpfitay night as Lyceum Theater inNew York _jart«f ConuinffipiratiooWeefc'~-CityiiNovember. Her poetry-?* .* .ipMoore and WaMrrianwill hasbeen pubUshedln many-t-i' read theirowrt woite. The magarines.ahd sfie'.has^ performance witllje followed written revlfews and feature^ by a panel fororoon*rWomeri essays fay Ms. noagazIneMM « in the Arts" with Dr. Rose ~••.?' s; Marie Cutting, assistant i Moore 1133 devoted mudrof professor ofEngiishl ^ -ller career to entotftaginfe ,2°SX'J%%z£ SKffiaSSfc ^ ^WetarSen' nromcation through its' Per--P06"? Series, forrnancejof ;I4teral&re.!jj She & poetiyl Ser»es,the School of Oo&^film to Blac^wbod L ­monication and the "Union tloos irid. directs ff sertiu1,VB1A IJtaMro nwmint vvwaniiiTi: Program To Depict Women in France JkiiaaaAtt,|aae9asc(jssiBB THE HUP, fte FhMk sponsor a seriesof films about v conservatism In a small ib setieS dejol wewifsliberatian mote-womenhyFrenchwnmm film ^Frent3» ' towtt.^ foploited and itftatte,"*spart went,is amiDoiitywith<*ty-makers. Rimstobe shownin-persecuted Jby the villagers, *~"' in 1 < ahant4^8>ftwiihwtt,'tiicaBg-, dnde: " *" ~U ihe-wo'manhecoWes«i 'PH& *«y Stowed. Yet the study ' • "Daddy," 7 and" 8 pjn! pro&tut£"gainsiMTOfr fnartimieJ, rtaare>aM nMte Mo«id>y, toBattsAaditorinm,. •m*.a art wwwl«-directed hy ^5? • 3bK^,tr atfc«stiiupiuvuig PhaDe. The film defdcts a pnMems wi as' divorce, .woman's remembrances, arii-.>ns^, am9: ».-.'-45n wmmihM*i Auditorium, ^directed' by of a cancer examlnattorisr^ Marguerite Doras, a French firi "* tf8*-»o*elist who^ wrote, and _.liaiml^^dfBnWw*piwite^^^s5' ' _?*•/' directed Ok film. It ."g 5™™t "" Pjyfive alienated people -"T*** .** ? in an unwordly hotd. ,r te-OcmBtnient «f &Mk-•«A V*yCnrions eupj­ the Coll^-^ and 9 p,m. Wednesday in othen. norlncro//b -iHB:i»3RutniBN^w' String Quartet ,**•» ~V *e W Won «bo wfflep-revolts ag^nst st»pWity and Jo Pwfotm -f • i.Qty, the Cuartetotfextebf ,Qbc INTERSTATE 7^fi/'aS?C«S i-willpreseita coocertS n£at the University ,vff ^wnmred' 8^ the;_-, ..''meht of, Musicvand: 17 MnsBtufoColtaral; 17 pjm. 6^5-fclOJMS. -^the, concert will begin"at V^,­ p.m. to tike1 Mode Baikling £. f.itecital Halland is cpa to thfcg. No^? by Mann IXtMM IWtnMUVIJW } Show rouNLSA WWUMMMH mtmsmm ^w^PiKaiiiairS * -'4^1M HIGHLAND MALL RIVERSIDE SAND &CAAN Soiniisid mHTDF imSfS^MMS ^ 4; a-awa­ iff lim' lit &*! w !S\1 $M§ liKI Wwmm lif^«l *•1 — MhB riL­ •Rt «OP m CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE .. RATES \>''«7 /.;'•.. FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS.|FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS. IMISCELLANEOUS TYPING JAs Each word one time " *^7 1 "-^trr OMF HFflPOOM lln«n *|5~ Each word m timw . . i.10 ' Pets-For Sole ^ MQyB fN TOD* IS word minimum Each word S»f times :.$ M SHARE THE RENT' " ,wJusj Nofth of J REGISTERED IRISH SETTER puppy? . Each word 10 or more times.. $ .07 m.HALLMARK.-ggSggf Pfck-ot-the-mter. rrfaie, beautiful. 453. 4 CAN SHARE 2.BR-2&FOR- Student rate each time -...-? JO . L^PAZfe^ fm Guadalupe r"'*' Classified Display ' ' -v-f)''". .• EACH PER MONTH fc. k * «7$», -APTS. •ittSwi EXTRA SPACE vou Tan afford 'Two t^LA'SSE •1 col.x |inch one time— «?>y REGISTEREDAMERICAN SPITZ. 3Y» FURNISHED, ALL BILLS > 5EL CAMPO *5 ;• ' *46.25 Hemphill Parte IcoL x 1 inch 2-9 times.....__ $2.93 rmonth old maHtftr $75 to a good home. PAID. THE CASCADES: t coL x t inch ten ormore timesS44 Celt 477 1241, , One block oil shuttle bus route 444-4445. TWO BLOND MALE Afghan'*,three 1221 .Aigarita. From IH 35 fake Oltorf months All4hetv't«aithy. $150.00 each., exit to Aigarita, turn right one block-*"' C 454-0340 CaU4544|» before3:00 pm. • • RESUMES^ .240* Homes-ForSole . ....II40I 2'~!«Hhor^lthootfllctafe* r--^ RETIRED TEACHER selling home 2310 2 Day Serv{ce> ' WTM iy..l140« Lbw^rifri^ao^ JpUT-' Built 1940, >49.-"Nothing in life is free!"?" ,f' • •tote •y.UAi Theawt of living At Me Vine Defte Apt: WQRM 32.10 and 472-r67p ....11r00« 12 <311 Bull Creek Road starts at ills per' Rent now,for ESTABLISHMENT Economically prlcM. »153, .ABP * 5»:HEHSCEE; furnished; 2 SAILING SCWKL month. These apartments are }pacioul Ttw.Soufh Shora.'MO Et^lvMIHM.'444 . bedroom.YCA/CHcal}o|ter:5:30. 385-attractive. near-the campus, and 4400 Ave B Bnioy 3 dav adventure cruise bn 46 it medical Park Towers. Call Mr*. Cobean Yacht V0CING March 22 24; Inel food& i TTWNC .'1970 BROCKWOOO,12 *60*.$3,OOO (orig. 452-5631. •. ' SUMMER . 451-4584 ENFIELD AREA. $100 pJvi electric on beer, j75/person 5J2 749-^745, 512749^ ^ $6,000)^2 bedrooms, carpeted, CA/CH. •rand > UV( 2O>2S^>t^0)o!ce-;UnWersity LargeEff -$129Ja shuttle. tH<> Parkview; 1616 Weit 6th->. SWO 00x421. PortAr9niasLT^xpt78373.v^^ uniVer'Mty'dwMri-: 47M337 .JfT A/Ci F.F, refirig..Owner must sell-Jot«t!on!Ponce^DeLtoon:l,-M,rn. / < Walk> Padal> ShOltiy I. X 1 :: rrrtri^ , GREAT HOUSE-Pteasing, spacious, 3-•Bird Savings! 472«S3,5472-«941,L476^279. Move In Today -j NELSON'S GlETSi Zuitl. Navalo and, ^ < .1h«* numbers forlnlormatkm for Early yneirjMl/on shuttle.^lhandA^nue 2*2./. Near shutffcrand park, Trees, , $175 Hop! Indian: jewelry;: 4612 'South SERVICE! -«FrlSat T* . t-BR Furnished . . fireplace, much more^4S1-20M<> ^ -NICE? bedroom, •apirtmenf'svery Congress.444vJ«i4.Clo»ed,Sunday*/ All Bills Paid TIMBER^, -near,UT, 7721 Hemphill J*ark:::*h»-33»$; Avallabte AprU Ut and advanced; Orew Thomaion. 478^ LOW STtlDpfT. RATES pool.'.,. Each additional word each day* JS " oCg EFF SIM plus' el«il1 t)l|OL «L ol WW STARK.TYPlNG.:Speclalty:.T«chnlctij YOUNG PROFESSOR — u ^ . . mark«X>4^ " -SX^I>li5i^f«:ElmW00d eWcfc NATURE'S BEAUTY 5ECRSTSreveal-,T (manuscripts, -etc..-Printing... pirn ng. "Undtnffiedsr 1 line 3 days .Si JO plan for 2 bedrboms and 2.$tudiesK Lots 1300 W 24th 472 1598 1 Bl? $1S& . Mgr« 472 i >. ed to you Free lecture by Dr MW CharleneStarKi 453-5211/ Walk • Pedat> Shuttle • 2 (Prepaid No Refunds)' ... of ' ptoax;-'.Fenped-"yard, huge trees,* v 5 V.1yplng,.prlnllng.Vlftdlng.l5lSKo^nlg £m.«o4:30 pjiLMondaythrough* 4 •-•« VIRSiljCfti HOW year TO MAKE-MONEY 365 days a i??^94«?7205n?1 FMw. • ' •*-• ""t -' ,tJ>uMt^nbbbkcase$fi Free lecture #d£h Thursday^ 9 -*^v? ,APARTMENTS t ptn., by Or 4«f(er$%Exocutly^ BOBBYE DBLAFi^LD MLM Seltctrfo ..-J130. Available lm^ n r Marchr,4$3-607t47ftlons;.--fh«es7' reports, $23,500 I luxury.: llvino-v Btautltul 2brU3 baths NOW'LEASING',,. " "SSiphnE,: any style gulfarle$son$LReasonaDl«fet. i nirmeographlftg^:442^1M« . dUpo$ai,'dishwasher^«tciut E,­FOR SALE Designed-for 3$ ihalore 2907 Weit'Ave.' 210^474-I479: miina vMott 4534698 < afldi pi« study manager'" >DISSERTAT10NS.-tbesfcl, rtports --. Assume7% VA Loom of 1&250 Payments. • sludenfv New (umilure, ^alk-lns,. pool. 105, 474-1712., •lawbrjefs.'ExRerienciclvtypHt.' • $T59i00.>-Spot|essljr • clean,. 3-1, new : cable. TV. Quiel-^etfoant-atmosphere. Spring vacation.sailing School Tarrytown 2507 Bridie Path Ukraine T -'---kitchen^liardwood. floors.;.buftton: Kft^g 5tie I bedrooM also -.available. ".$Us J& ^MlLANOVAPARTMENTSHAfiP^new •Cruise. Learn to ia1lr Mart:h-22-25 on 46 Brady. 472-4715 * ;; reduced:rates on our luxury efficiency ­.^••Northeastof the campus. Call Nancy 749 5960 Bok 42r, Port Aransas) Te* Auto-For Sole : ,i;"bookca»tV-'perfect for-UT people. Leasing tarsoaimer anil jltn^Dfastlcal-! i ft. sloop, .food & beer,: $75/per$on. 512-? 1 BR Fur# -rtand 2 bettrodnv 2 batn.-Tovm LAkoarea. r* lyj^dwW jumnwr raieV'Plaase call : York,-441-S922. The CuMen Company. . betmea noon and 7:00 pm.' • * Can tod»y 442 2736 I , 73373. ^Reports, thetei; dissartatlonsjind bookti ./;• MUSTSELL 1V7B 914 PorscheslSOOas H.-442 7133. -» MARK IV ARTS BR -$170 .3 BR -$325 STUDIO APT Fireplace. r^t^ped a tfl74 HONDA CIVIC 5Wrer Sedan. A^. 47S-0736 . 478-4096 -couples with.May.dgB dstt&4 Short ver­ 11391 plus elec, 451^3464, 472-512^; MOVE IN TOD^Y., ? caodtttoaed, radial tire. 34S4Q0 after :^CHARMtNG4>LDER COTTAGE-SIl- ^FURNISHED 3roomsand bath. 2 blocks • . slon{4ses$(on)ioccoupl«$Vflthprevlous. 'SHUTTLE BOS CORNER -S:30. ; .. . •.tv. •'•'••"W • •'* • ALLftltLS PAID Best Rate on 7the Lake . ^rofrr^Untv.Convenlentlyilocaled. knowledge-of~LSmeze 'Theory1 and: 'J05t North of 27th at * V tf INTERNATIONAL Step Van.RJf.D^ . Close Jo.-did /Ausfin :neighborhood. 3 -> Shuttle Bus Front Door Il30^rno 478-6461 ^ * •> * techniques. B. Pah0m, 47t-2413/1 f • v --1 Guadalupe \ rI^^­"• Automanc, sasa. Call San Antonio. 651-: bedroom*, 3 levefvstone fireplace. Has 1'BR $149.50 2400 Town Lake Circle iENFIELD ROApv, Large-20V. au b>!l» sNNlS INSTRUCTOR needed MM . a San Francisco townhouse atmosphere. 442-8340 / •If,efcrabIyfemale.XaM476-877A.'; _2707 Herpphlll Par^ > paid, pool, :shutt(e. All, eltcfric kltchen. Delightful and rare Jtad. Needs a little 1.1*5 LINCOLN Coo«f*ntaL 4 doorf?M ' ceameWc trealmeni -inside but • struc­Min»-Eff $109.50 THE PEPPER\ 47M734 -I . t v )BIN C: Wlnl by an unfeeling default -extras inctudecL white with gray. $650. turally sound;-Some furniture included. ONE BEDROOM APT. Near»-carppus, sadly the status <^uo triumphs ag^ln. Calt«M40> y !/2*l BR (female) S79.00 TREE PEOPLE" Call Sharon, Call MaryCutfen orCurtls Jordanat The 47M425L T ' • -6.Btock$^lest of.-Prag : . v^lfTl TOYOTA Mark11.25 |T*>g, SUSOor ;CuHen Coi 442-7«3V2tt-207S. 442-9323. ' -> hfive -.three extrj^W^^aijjclthcy; ;: f wiLLow,s LARGE ONE BEDROOM Walk to 3* 2408 Leon 476-3467 • jtes* o«er.44l-7»tAfter SJ0. apartments. avtaUablf—immetilaie-pc--school, study area. carpeted, >df$posbl. ROOMMATES YES, we do type!;iV \ \ 3«5 VOLKSWAGEN S^uareback. Ex- ^cupancy. QyleV IriendlV pefQhborhood. v 3a, > cable TV, w deck, CA/CHi1 laundry Misc.-For Sale CREEK ••-frileftt condition;' wew overhaul sm, -.Shag carpet,, dishwasher, disposal lots »'•: g shuttle,:^graat location:. ABP, s$l5Si-2$i2/ NOW LEASING ROOMMATE.SHARE iarge>bedroom) Freshman themes^ , M engine: $7S8u t37«40H. TOP PRfCES for diamonds, old :. of cabinet space<'pantry..walMncloset,': '< Nueces 477^497 vhouie; $7S/month p|us ^:brils:^i500 ' Why^tot start oyt with '• \s gold.: Capitol--. ~ Shop. 4018 H. -29th Westot DRAG >• ' ..modern1 decor: Now• folks, ,the$e'an.,.:-: ^•cenent condition. Xytmder, 3^peed. furnished. $212. subtease. 926^tlLv .. '': I .^r74 NOVA CUSTOM: Hatchback. Ei--Lamar. 4Sf6C7^ brand new. aparlfpeht$ Vr!th' a!l the '?•>' : TWO BEDROOM one bath7rABP-JS00»v Rutland DC 136-3967 ^ , * good grades) •• v > goodres at reasonable'prKe*; 2/block$ -'r'-1BDRM 2BORM *' RESRONStBLE:MAL£-roomrrtate. 451-60M , / aftertpm teldi'i1, anytimeweekends.-> drafting stoq^3. :tUe cabinets.: shelving. '•yo^ for aneighbor^lfketomakeyou lei?-"'--' $175 S220 t> •ment on-SR route. *9S(month; ,4l2«OI7S .1 , ' /.eonsoie sport wheels. S270Q. WOOD :TA8LES^fftrge folding tables, Luxury shuHie,-7 blocks campus, Glad ta have x FURNISHED EFFICIENCY. CA/CH, wanted to. share a one .feedroonv apart* . 472-3210 and 472-7677, v Alf taed.».Uwi<».-476,4H?8, - 1 V97DTOYOTAMARK II, automatic «*-' . at.homei Gimme b bunat 476-9779. 472^ Keep trying * > HOLLEVS COPV SERVICE. A' com-' ^ ALL BILLS PAID® t gai mlleagc 4-door.'$149S. 4S4-GRANDMOTHER'S JWehwork QuilK*.. 1 BR -$155 iVtSX or 472*8941;^ &/5Ca W. 35th O ^ , Ofshwashers*2Large Pools' . ^ HYDE PARK;1 bedrpom and large afr. ROOMMATE TO SHARE large,twdern • Elete servlce:vtyping; copies/printing/': r&m*. Log caWn ^ndtHrtne patch patterns.^ ' All the goodies ^.bfock ea&t ot GuwtslQfalTtxlnTts^^x toot , : . :rA»conveniences,:ShuWe;at-door,;$135r eorttemporary house Pool flr>placfr. Indlng, 1401 .Mohle .Dfive.''4744oiAif Thanx 1 Security:.,. ­ ABP 454-2092 W72VWSuper. Beetle.Automafic stick*-".Lai«^noitatr for«jeen'size bed or for 2907 West Ave. 474-1712: ~ t *i ' ' , .Complete houseise^andr-kltchen^^-prfvl1Sg'eu^.V; MABVL SAWLLWOOD TYPING-t»S> : ;,sprn^$«*^e^othertandwork. - iPrlvacy. NearE.... * /V : good cMdimTAskiag$1600.472^046.' •: ?MOVE IN tODAVfjv WYer$lda andshuftie;^ j ^nlnuli[Vu»e,;;byernlght'avaiieble.'iTerm iprlcw „ ^ , f $ ^^tUber»L (I'm^nare,) No toys Smoker "> ? -. . ... 'SW00.REBATE onCotumbiayachfs.13- sinuri cA^iu^ . * T>eoendable. person to pick up'from .'preferred )?06< Palmi Piaia LVnn ^NEEO,A TYP|ST? We re a secretarial M ^ , w.Fr«nsi«jo SfftetthToughMardJ 15.For additional % Your time fs valuable LVV.^i N.UVV LfcAblNfci^ >school. University area, and care, j» ^roommate needed; star* aparS ^ 1^*1Vtls5«^^«h WiV. -Our service isfree • y'T359¥*J!F^.F*®^.G00d,O*iflSwiv. .-savlnfti.call.SAILAwAY/47y.m*sairfigs caH SAIL4wAY/^?7-t796,><7*.;w&i 1DD » tlj(C a-Y 5 30.'-tor 4 yr. old bo/.<>ul?t homa at „ ment. own bedroom, everymlnj fiW- i;S»Sl'4»5ML'" •st. -i ^*• ** ipm %cower'g 454-9W »>-?V —' t coodnion. ^450. 447-42SO. ;tJo/j;.jl20; 47I-M29 Susan, i^aye; X 472-4171 and shuttle^ completely £ ';;AC PaidCf^ message^ ^ 1 ^ weekdays j yjMALE sfiare three bedroom house: own: > buiif-ln » ^bedrooma' ^urnlshe^alr. jveat; fenced' jscrlpl T967 VW. Good condition, $100 or best WAAN RACING SHELU 32 ft. long; • carpeted > NA/CM, Tanglewdbd ORAD r ^ar(tgarage.^|mprK^lafely^45i-3»4.-; SENIORS ^.Yard,.garage.;lmmetflate{y^4St>3S84:^ ;*fler. 4S1-4B2 after 4:00 or Mek«od*2.-kitchen, putstde storage 1 ^liig^blrtding: 453-6090.. M^lby^>g*ntrnentr then make offer:-' ,Mustse«. 472-4175 ' North ^ STUDENTS 4 ROOMMATENeEDEO.forihlrd^ available, pdol'and sun deck. TYPING: Dissertations. ihesas.'-rHrm i . .l _ bedroom immediately House face* ' 1020 E.45th 302 Wist MfJfc45JaJl54r. or,gr»d•• student.-47frajoi.' { rates: )45-i]94. •&** VOLVO J44.-Radiats, 40000 miles 33-FOOT KE^LBQAT. whlte with Mue' 75-mekends Water, gas and cable-TV,paid, * Opporfunitlw ,to^entervihernikarketlng .:;:Eastwo0ds.Park; $59.' Prefer sclence: papers technical typing Include NMt 5? "Vtm taV^S^iiSTbSroS^ • ^ '? * * ^452-0060 Ll • • • ------accurate; reasonable % ?T® 4)*rttl« 8u* tornar. wlthone of the nations PFesftafous resortY after 6 pjii, > r E 6533. IMMEDIATE-Occupancy, 1 —fci Wit W?/. developers.: income.-deptndi'only on, i ' 1 SSSTi2w PUtCA SHELL NECKLACES. 135^ NOW LEASING J your abillty to communlcaTe-wltlj poo-^*rt r00m l "/Sir w»»ea.->E«cwient ammiopv444-Unicorn Gallery TO 30 ^6 oa Monday -* 'pie Call Al Klrby Ml-4M0,A iIV ^ r ^IQBplus elec. Pebble, anytime jJgst "North'of 27th"ot^v f#: ^•, $139 A ' ? • lewelry, Hook'em HOrns -Key-'rlngS^ -nwnn«lMl'iW; ' -t'Sl ^ <1 ; 1 •iwlmmtng pool/furnlihed^ talking.dls-ALL BILLS PAID Austin only, 10% oommUsion-Mark.kVll SERVICES — V . EXCLUSIVEIMPORTED iaeix^.,^Tsrc:^Ar,°-" L* rltcben;: color coordlnated. no NEEO EXTRA CASH? SMI floM^rCIt MBA '^ ^•• v tV""ytunlty Employer,emplaijef. ^ ./ ^ qW"-°'S?, OPY1NG PUBLIC NOTICES wlltloa OaltMike ' —CP — SERVICE; m FltlENOY,; ' 1 ' -,'and slngeri CaJKMIXa 441-5135, >, 4•-!'% DONALD L. 13V ^CSOpsfiNC5 MoomlWMM' > ^[WFNEED AAABtTlOUSindividualsvidoaHwiniJilDobifrMalbt-'Wt>0' 5' AAA DCH Tpeafcer: $100 Wr:4MWt •«,?iSd«treji««iert)t«.lncomt.»6f ShuHI. bus at front door, pool. CA/CH. r F>M'P« wna ' ^AMPCTreeiiprertAXSOOMtfOfyTer^? The' besi priceiJlSnywher^.'Turquolse; 442-6668 tha9 carpeting, all built-in kHcbart, «n-time. Call 471 tan alters r nls courts across ttiestreets. . fash-n!j „ -t j CREATIVE ancT conscientious : ^.-RhiD. mntrei'oiHt MI»«CjJ>uMr»^5.95.:Tt» restotpur 453-3769 or 45) --divlduals who are InleresledJnbetlerlnd' *• ^ ^ . » announces Ibe opening of prjJ?""!wim ,f«cULLTIMF mminy,ii..-vwn ^AIiK;TO,CAHAPit/5j^i,pjBHS>', f-fizr,,i _r ^ Vj'---naittand distressed?-Welp-ls as near at , . £ARLPf\ Mmx'Wcti • • -recreatfon>.rm,planned., AdvocatesrSlO jeysiii %heiBa^^.ic«s^on: Indian*Jewelry^) :^/KLLfe tlvitles, ortis!te>security ,;iMOORe;'«3 . GARRARD SLB4»,Tlxntabk^5eri$ i ficer 24 hry malntei , . " Hloraae, super location, cloteedal orders, ^hwasher,dlspo$arcentratairar>d>neat.T^ STEAL' MV.AMP.*:Light (kie. KlogsMn.' •* —— te 13* wattspaliiMirrsMmMacic' and »75 week weekdays or aijyljnw aetKands, 471-_NUECES^ pdMng. piggrlM«fcCtU«lckgtter 9pm I FURN. APARTS 3913. j. r Newl'eflTp^ency. cusfbm furrf:,; all ^itn. XPERIENCEOSALESPERSON . GIBSON CLASSICAL OuKar wfttl cetb"', -ckstrap;J13B. ptioae 47MZ2Tat fere..-ASPEN.wooer 2 BEDROOM' January,,|»75 Ajit for/Mike; iHARE THE rentj <^^feiMLTfe:BIL«3,i:F Under;New Management Et£W^N*RAMD^Thti 2 8LOCKSCT6 CAMPUS UNF. APARTS. rse?;on-FROM $135 AC.L BILLS^PAID Leonarrtwe UNCLASSIFIED 'X*A^3\r£-&r-,n« & 2 bedroom elflcleftcy. Full kitchen,BEAUT>F|JL:;197ZiCltoon . rt'want-litcttMtv Oriental iff-Beiiy dancing nneys..-two P*»ceful ^durpsi like new, fZXJOO. w»,,h a^Hftve you;heard?W«fAT|iW^^;^ #«SWWWSi mm 1ER SUPER REVERBtmllnf :Vamaha 2»;Enduro,453^^v?Mp reverb. tren»ote,«o<>&wllctt.C*fl^ 'iParry iSHUngwaterCOinpe^/e ^4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 KENRAY ^^^^sh^r^«d,-bj(eVc|e»--477»Wtt^f<>^^:'­. _ at <7>-3394-See to »ppreclate^c-....' X ^ f **••*> fife n* WW 1 BR,ST49-2BRf,$199 ROOMS Come Live W»h UsI APARTMENTS ^ m MARSHALL.VAMP't)OtMhl'> CCtesDM'' *' 57M90 XOpMsnrlthrplrlj}erator/A:C;;.Tr« HOT U.WI. r\. " •> ^ pem ar|lst,ni»dsiroomm»f»47 aeakerV Dynamlt« :sound. s275: Jitrt, • btock.:UT. -AParT bedroom:apartf»ent ^1/4,.1-iancocK ur. , PrM FENDER fSAHOMASreR 3£B«agB«' ' WOltbefore ^l®gs3BEAT ;tefNFLATlON ' GUITAR STRINGSETS -iibRNER:HARMONICAS mm :-r; YAMAHA GUtTARS Sa9e.i0% heeda desk? FURN. HOUSES rttManaOefe M?0ptusE I Bedrodm.sl30^ius iBeafrSS/|»^72TO?4»-i?HM Bent complexes-.v, IC acce6tasWle^ . „ *1«24i^«aca ,v:i.- b^qr';Cj(| wBmmmrnm, - EsS t -iis«ss£:s?-vi;<* toi mm IfrClfeartln li»;X»i>Mffl.'^AIilW.tv tejllgence agencies,1 the Fly claimed first place honors in-the spot Sept. 25.1974, captured asecond placeaward. es~ the actions reach the heart 6(i} news judgmg, which included,entries from 16 •> Citing a growing .coi\-' ^taljllshment; oLa^pennanent iv.the matter. There, Is, noy Pearl Magazine was named best general of office for the-special other schools, for-his story on the firing of readership campus magazine for the second gressional awareness -lepslauye act toprofec t th£"; University President Stephen^ Spiirr in year in a row. political irresponsibility, Jor-Sprofsecutor and limitation r, public'againstrnoral indeceri-" September. ... v, 1 dan noted several ways ^placed oif campaign ^ con- An article by Don Parrish and a photo es- Congress is seeking-to con- Texan staff writers Susie Stbler, Janice say by Texan photographer David Woo took tributions ^Alsosunder .r:: "l^;tonrientflf ,Waterjg|tftr eliminate further abuses such gressional is a should ^ay that '.vre>Jjav|ey4^K Tomlin and Rudolfo Resendez won'second third place awards in the magazine competi­ place honors for their joint story on the Oc­tion, while Martha Hammond received se­-y< proper mMh^ism to^reeici^ tober, 1974, Tower suicide. cond place for the best series of ads for a ^iWhai^y^r<^diii(^^tlM^ Hie March 18,1974, issueof The Texan won single advertiser.campu^rlefs in the Best Siifgle Issue categoryfor its blank M Sheplso noted the largerole-' > Iy' a-! ttf*>nd" eiltrFJctlon^V^— * Regent Confirmation Watergate,affair and $he ln-p|jj • ;COMMfflM will 'meet at 4 p.rrt. tyoti* P*OICttMO«MAt)ON• A-"SA!?^Wor,oh#P4n •»>plyW9,tt with professional ethicsr 5 •> 5. -blood drive. rAII: Interested.persons^ / v ^ awinvited Jo. attend >v..v iEouNSBMa^naratoolcAt bivku "Hie former President was< Asked MAHNG ANp CTUDVSXIUS(A* (IASSt)wUI.% pMIU It'ottering a'ptycho»i«ra(ry a graduate Of Duke Law ,vwm§9*. at,.4; p.m. Monday. In. .jester^; ?cn001 th facultys ing. Confirmation bearings on ; groupJoi'thxfgntstfhohiivetanccr oruL-i anr) ,, Student ;and appoint a student to the board. 4A332 to.discuss Graduate. Reoord< For information contact jm Roun ana were were 11 testimony on the appointment Broscoe's Gov. Dolph ap­ i' =V. Examination Preparation.' v^: orJ«rryPHrsoii«t:vyeitW»IIOIflM ;lawyers found gullty for- before the governor mafa his tixas nuncampus ooMMitrnis spoil-*•' Buiiding'303 or call 47i 351*^, ^ i obstructing the justice of our j;' of three members to the pointments to the board will choices in January. Doggett. "ijis -soring,a 440-yard relay event tor men . University System Board, ol'-be at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the . r and yeomen at. the Texas ——yf—1—V1 ' nation Lawyers who iket outm along with Houston Sen. Boh ^^ , Relays; AprlJ 4 and 5;Anycurrently»r ;,l Regents will be heard atrial Lieutenant Governor's Com­ fside 01 ^law have no posi-' Gammage, issponsoringa bill -vi: registered student -Is;eligible.?; : TexasSenate Education Com-, Room: : mittee >?.!Preliminaries er##tBr30p.m. Aprllfe ti'Pft i)eing_to tiie professiori to require that each state."-?£ 3. -.1, findli.at 3 p.m. April 5; Plck up.V :,MP" Students^ •Jordan said; • mittee' special • hearing. at ;l;x 'Aides to Mauzy said the regental board have at least ^vi • •.•••VJ apollcatlonsattteMain Building lir*> .• p.rh.' Monday at the Alumni • } tormatlon desk or atfiellmont Hall/, .. She said that lawyers and .senator had requested Briscoe one student member. . •> j 220 by 5o,m, March 2t i all other persons respimstble ',%£ 4MVBMTY IMBaWATMUtOOIIV ll »P0C1 1 Attorney4K 1-J™, f wring divingtrips toCoiumtl off tM *lbr the welfare" of the'iaUoa ; -.committee's^ ./,-dim|i^di^ taking .(he .in­ : ii;Mauzy, for 1fi,on are. not !|mlsty bldnkef-inever the eampiui Sunday^ " I™ ovoilabl. by&lnt. ^°i»ate ytiatiyein settinguptfaebear^ misunderstodcl." • fsnmm DEMONSTRATION COUlOIMHlWMNma AtaMWTMMT m*nt from .8 a.m. toS p.pn, K » 0*m0Um-w(llmcet*t4p.1n AAon­ .;.Trd«y.in,P^nirtHallr2(a toheera lec^.-Monday through friday in AND Speech Building, Room 3, WANTED CUSS Telephone 471-7796. Th« VOTEFOFf .. 4»tudentt^ attortiey*C\vilIi :FASHION MOOEUS nSStd. Male ^ female; For-Dallas-pubHiher -Atn1 locatlont For-interview: 451^4393: in Ballroom JOHN RESPON5IBLEBra GOWITH THETURTLE l .UNiQUEJ^KIrooirwxus.Klictien: 50% or more CACHri jhag, wlndowi. And the ttirtl^ fepresents us .,.Experiments in Travelling, Inc. »wag» 4fM A Retse Un*. So, in fact./w^'^ saying, gp with ,us^ To Europe, Israel/Europe, ihe off Everything March 10-15 CHOICE UOCATIOH, lowti",hrlcliS dvplAxj. ^^rootn, garas*> ACKKii Orient, SOCilp Ano^ric^-or South Pacifrc' Because our way of touring'en­. ., Fabric cheap^onough for wallpaper, etc. -tetrl»»nllor, t|l)yfc.carp«Utfi i)iS. Cou-~ compasses y'6urw&y of travelling Loose and easy ,.with special empha­PLEASE, /t0/p us go out wfth a bang S. W« !•«*.'d«p6»lt. flo t>ihjQ}Va Grahams­ • PIk«. Rlo Grande at25W. <7M«3a.l ;;";-A sis onmeetingnewjDeople ; ' ~ ' SOUTH I bedroom naar Shuttlebuv Car-\ jot^^ACiiw^e^l We1ve beetij'cfaating unregimented travel experiences, for eight years, for college ^Od^rit? ^All our programs include guaranteed scheduled jet-Pre-leasenowforaslrttle thght"tfeparljtes'(coming and going), unique student accommodations,> as$64.75permortth,fumlshed. PRETTY DUBL,ei|| specially designed sightseeing, most m^als, plus ample free-time so V .J MdreofflvduplM-foriy.rMt In a qul*t < yoli cah dd'ttfe things, you alone might want to do ALL BILLS PAID! iNortfieast Auittnfeiidentiar rimtghborhootf.:Each duplex offart Any all 6pr ^rolipS'are accompanied by abi-hngual EIT staff Come sljare a penfcict summer. Fourstudents can .'fen^ backyafU oovtretJ psrklna ex^: If trft stores* room pjut washes dryer ^ member Who's familiar with the foreign customs, laws, and 1 ..•save by sharingone of our luxuriousfurnished2 % ^ filihed »l«plus,bHls.CaUW*-2J9t-regulations ttj§| d|bply to student/travelers, take care of all bedroom, one and a half bathapartments"... and * l j5,1-' aitangerrients,'1 and-Qive'assistance, suggestions and m enjoy alt these summer funfeatures: , •Swimming pools -•Freeicemalcers guidanceif needed LOST & FOUND with water volley-•Plenty of closet "So, go Wimjheijdrtle He represents the "kind of| JmII couits and storagespace 1.05T Wn iH HYDE PARK AREA. ,' travelling thal.has*renialnedtflexible to changing •Clubhouse with •Ample parking iSmall hr«Tiwe»nd,whl»» b»rdir;«lll» «» Wflarl ml*.;WVWirtf »orreturn^fSmM<-) times.injefesfslinddemands RrKondunugjoi wet bar and sauna facilities ­ yqaratalUt.'iCall steveorjonle st«JS jn the q6u>pri below for further infor- dresses,shoe^ gj,j3W.or-3t|v»'MTO»0l W8&? • ai 2BR-2B—4can sharefor $6625 ' LOST, filiACKi' Xhltt, *>rov»rv.St!iort shinsand; haired«trw«arii>|i6lacKeol|ar..U««t aXI each,furnished.ALL BILLSPAID! . ooce5SPn«; n,£~ * -^ 444-448S 1221AJgarita V.i A | *1" From IH35.takeQltorf LOST BLACK/TAN HsUhd * & nen fCascades aag?^—j** Please contacl.-459.6i: women ; Hemdhlil.^t A DEVELOPMENT OFJAGGiER ASSOCIATES LOST WOMAN'S rgow watch nehW Jetter PMrt.Ttall-447r7SM Reward EXPERIM ;coilai' answerlto Cat! 4S£~ ^ oV 3* 16161QVQCQ AU^N Hyde ParH.^re#>? £«;•«£. ~jAI -i. ^ThcCsi> ; pSiSSV ^ ' SMraretheffwn GoodFoodStores] -Natural Foods •>.} ^ thissummer!! THflSIa sommi i % WEEKLY SPECIALS * I ig .Specials Good March 10 Thru March 16 ­i^-W« gladly accept USDA Food Stamps WW Green 50 lb 84 size Kass Avocados Pre-ieasenow!4canshare w 120 h for$6625each,permonth,^ % fes: furnished.ALLB/LLSPAID!; Rubyfoed «Sw-> Savo.fnoney andput more'fup In your summerb^'1 ^sharingone of theso luxuriousHbedrooip. 2bath Grapefruitmmmmmmrn ^ apartment# WIUi threeothnrstudents! This low „•• ' im ]^F9''T priceiincludesfurnishings. ...andaiUhe summer', v fun featuresthat make.Rivier Hffls fatnousl^ 15^ lb iM&s MHdgesvtynmlng^fMPIontyofparking #|f •# poolswith vyatbf , "Si'' , • - ' volleyballppwhs 1 iqcilttfas t Thc 6o<^I Fointment; he is.entitled ,-r.. before the termirtafion of ap-toa statement from tbe ap-TfafcusHy luuJia lUAa pointment: or the nonrenewal propriate department or dean "isMSiS"*IP, MaODtYA ANGEL Mw. Sgg* k.-e.'sSi p­ .... a • , ••"'•' concerning reasons for dis- women in Government , ^ tf XtT est try*' <~ - *• ; Sixteen fulltime voting; r'-.m members oftbefacolty wool3 |3f.v makeap tfe^onnnittee.;l6 elected at-large by the Discrimination Cited General Facility and six ap­ pointed by the president y-~. -4 ed to derieal ' b*A panel of pfWesMunal women*! „' Undertherecomrnended V ^ a lawyerfrom the discrimination women sometimes face ^ procedure, the; committee te gutuimi^s office said Friday at-a when seeking or wotting in administrative may attemptto work oatthe positions i dispute through. informal swi% fle LBISdod ttNSelito.' "The biggest blowfor women'slib has been1' . negotiations. If a formal bear­ :Va>Hdden, stnek by women doing a competent job,". ing is reqmred,it would be -•sofflKGocenur'sOffice Said Marion Whang of the Wisconsin -State' hdd before a panel chosen told Parole Board- from a ipSol of^faciiUy;C pmxntof members. Upoococnpletiooaf Some men feel inferior to women, fear" the bearing, the panel would ll^%8>uijiltj{iulj women and mistreatwomen because of these make its reconuMndation to inferior feelings. With such men"if you show •nWft the preiadaBt;: •"> •: :.f J^Vecranpet«tf,yoearemorefeared," Ww- Tie presidentwouldthen nqgsad. . ^ endorse, modify, or reject the > Some men camjtad^stto^omen beingon recMnmendatiori of thepaneL He slate boards and tend to be anrmiifottable -The president's decision and make the women oacomfortabie. They would constitute the conda­. "seem to be locked in an older time frame,*Vswnof the facnltygrievance :5 estt !KRl Itopftfesf-said Jean Mather,. Austin-architect aid ^ .procedure. Ftar{her review Is member of the nty H«Mify*L QUR STICKER PRICE Colambia ^t emyBiei.Jonraaliwn and efincs," Aesaid. : 5^ "At Cohmdna I was always T _ .......... lais pAoed wh <"»!«• ^ . Noting te iransrale' and " told to have some "go to hell' Dr. Etspe& Rostow, acting opinionated qnality of money, so If. while t»file jobColimbti deaw iiteWin Litj'sDwi-Aiwiiu's jainnimi THE COMPLETE ANGEL anyone questioned -my Barnard . saon of GeMial and Com-die said the said the uuieut professimal integrity I could . rathree-day pyuatwe Sni». ddjinei battle "is realizing we may walk-oat an than," A* said. ­ CLASSICAL CATALOG" rOe the tejiote address, "h the nner obtain complete objec-IN ANOTHER seminar Dr. L" O. S. Viableor Gm We Make tivity but still pnisiiii« the Peter Ponntey, dean of It to the Bicentennial?5* goal." .Colombia; explained the • OPERAS • SYMPHONIES -CONCERTOS «%se^iiiqy, Bostow rsamin-; . ;"NO StATIER how.mndi rdevance of. hnmanities in a ed America** history as experience ooehas, oooeof ns technological society. t-._—_J •%__! applicable.to delirerug are objectivelntbe way we '"Thrpngh the study of round Dead perceive'-tldi^ hilt humanities, we detennlne VER20,000ALBUA|S *A" ®OSTOW, yon alwhlwf the alleged stain-• vaiaes; and ptiotities • which jf'JImiversity professor^of; daid,yoasfidemto propagan-canbeapcdi^totecimdoKy.'' ifeecomoacs wd lustny, later da," Ivxas added. _ 'TdljCMdSi'fRlU" '•MaSihhUtf f Wm objects to the joor-The "ntilifanan" rtde of " iafisttctia£tian ofrejecting^ Imnamties isnnderattadc in J^RayRMd^ae^a c needaL Hastow noted «, a desmptive wort^' -• edmaUonal institiitiow today, «U takSO "Today we need new ^oh langaage," she said. Sfow to answeia to new ptublems,'* : Tffhen yoo take away such nrrlu^T. % 3ssessi^ ttor needs and Dimc Baaert, a rum^u, words yaa sqweze all the - naturally they want their hnTIlannF^ out sbiagina^ grartptr and ftiwfih resMfent, stones." education • to have an fte ^uU». Mil"Amuaa'spaid^tahiB-Ethics is:-'s(-rconstant applicable vahte^lie said. " ~ 1y lay infte fact people were ms-L •utabaidto'imu lU.ltisoh- Itgr. noBstoday wecaaiotproceed --within onr present very good lUk Mn, a Cbinmhia ieRsecoainoiesIa-* atamaod editor of the Tex­ **eUie»u^y. asOlaener.spoteon the new eOacs of joHnafism. B is a p®T­job after bis "trafe in tte process of ix*:' J becoming a profession, aod Sfe WEEKBO t#i; IDJHIN& j­^ -r GREYHOUND SERVICE ^ > ^^3 OWE-ROUND-YOU CAM 'i.' YOlJ t-iSn TO WAT TRIP LEAVE ARRIVE fas . ^SMJB SM.N ISul UKprn. ­ •im^Iscb "I?* *»ML »Mlu Dr. Anrion ^pvak, m History Instruc-B» ,>S-$53S SMS USml *55 pm. . tor, will deliver the Uiird J^tQre in the mm »IOi^ SISM ' Vmfrn. TMtm. Great LectureSeriesprogram sponsored , • $**•;' UtiS M$»nC,-^Mg-by theTexas Union Ideas arid Issues and UT IntelracitionfjCoihmittees. DrJ UNIVERSaY CO-OP^^; Spivak^s lecture topic" will be "White," -76-7(151 Bed, and Black: Varieties.of Freedom In • 401 , Jefiersoa's Rqipblli^* Tbe program^ is > 9±eduled for Tuesday, Mardi11; at 7*30-S T»^, The Dobie Library, 4th Mo<}r,, Academic Center. Joifl us Itoid.XJteil •WPfl^TOEBAaiCtEXAf, Wl, „ iksifcs^-W 5s> * I > *•' .-•>", £fl ^ v-^ stm % &sg& ^®73EHBES93B58®9$Fte sp*™0*4 Dedication Section of The Daily Texan, March 10, 1975 Vournaliston the Trail* Ideas Vary • of Media i'r By-DAyiD HENDBIi»S'j> ^:',T,S«?j-depufy directorand Important organizer n'"*0* ^ PBace «•»*-» °«ps. later becoming Tfiat autumn(1955) Bill 2>.,>?••:?. specialassistant to PresidpnfJohnson. loyerswaso quiet,earnest, jour-»/ "njatwas just astartMoyersreturned ! student making Ai, stay-, '"to.-jowrnallani to -1967. firsttothe.Long ] ing out of politics, and working for Lady Bird jbhnson's V V station.... 1 remember hint am a/ he J' quiet, hurried young mtc* (at tike,"- • University of Texan), thin cutd in tenspin his hor%-rimmed glasses ... hut one would have never guessed tUen that here, at twenty-nine and only a few weeks in the (LBJ) administration, -he was-already the closest adviser to a President of the United State*. Tfci» VWf remarkable young man, : etirty[1964* waeat ^ Indeed, pf;|(Es feooj^ his tti^elsl . aci "NoIsland b AnIstend'\isfelille^ k'"I" —— -A oTpower in America."' and thescopeof lusexf^rieMeasa jour-^theJamaica show It willdejnct:Jamaica ^ r-from "North Toward Home" ljy "=>'•«» awl; goy«^Mt , ^^l.j hevfJas „ microcosm of the Third World and' , nalist . . ....... » pr»ba^?ta^^^^n^S^!^inoi^ of colomaf and plantation economj^S^ *' ' " Willie Morris The 1975 recipient of the' DeWitt a' ^aqdv^B-, . ".The Jamaicans are midting;;a!depr?. • Reddick Award for OutstandingAchieve-, Moyer^ac that rtinsiving . mined effort to create their oTO liiStoij'. ment in Communication is a diverse man. BillMoyersstarted his journalism career as '.'a cubreporter for his homfetownnewspaper of Marshall, in East Texas. After graduating in 1956 withtophonors from the University, he went into government, becoming the By BE1HWCK ; ^ ; i : Texan Slalf Writer Tremendous growth of the' com­munication, field caused the separately .. i .S«dici^ , -OoeOmumcation to be grosslyineffidknt.' Needs for uniricaUon pawned the idea . <°f; to itjhe^ sey^i­separated but interrelated Apattimiilk' ,-jT|»e Ih^ee^MiUding, $11.8° million Cottf nwniditioiiCotnpleJtbousKthe^riqa? types of commiuiration/eqiuiHaent fpr Communication, Complex.. Before^' tfe cdnipiex Wa% ;fiiirshed in 1973; '. departmental . offices}, were scattered ; f^*^^Per-l,ewsflay-t«nimg .t \£ t Amerkahni^wltt>ataWm»nler-and ..University, because "he was a warm ^, man who always had Ume for a curious/?-. student7 _> , u • Moyers is just back from three weeks 'W of filming his "International Rep6rt" 'in ..ft'ii London. Kenya and Jamaica. In London, xxd -he filmed two shows; the first on British ••>&.<£ and how ,l.'? <£Pin6 ^Its a notebocfc llie resolt ms the Best-$ "cun?nt econolnic cns,s Thejewnd isfa • . aMtetoook.TberesuItwasthe best- one-hour conversation in an English pub . selling boolC-"Listening to America: A .with'.the. programing manager:of theTraveler Rediscovers His Country." -British Broadcasting Company, whom Teleyisionwas the nextstep. Moyers • "Moyers described a§ a "witty,Bhrewd . started the . Emmy-winning "Bill. Welshman " ' -* Moyers*Joornal" seen on the Public Broaitosting.System. This year it was In the East African country of Kenyi»; ;j %; expanded-lobecome an international ... ''Operation Earthwatch" was filmed;jt report..,j;He;,.srtso writes a. bimonthly ' is about the United Nations'^ $ffort-'to coJumn'fbrHewswe^ek/ monitor the environmental.diiuiges'-ifr -'• -I wp?r inany hats," he said recently • the Rift Valley, where,';ironic.ally,: . ^,N.Y;, Jtojiie. ;~human life is said to have origjMt^|j-'i -the" award jat after 300 years of British'Me jthrougjb' the 'LBJ Library "* law. music, danceand politics," be's&id!. . Auditorimn ms'not'oilyapprniriate but btf,S to entertain themselves," he said. J-yJf Dr. Stanley Donner, professor of radi^'¥i i television-film, sees greater participant?;* '1 tion in-the different -forms., of comg^'fe mumcatmg. "The trend ot the viewer aft f t the audience, beings the rewvb'/mU. reversed,' Donner Said.' ^ „ r n -n' -Vei)tilb­.?• tion problems; in.the^labs.•will/require major.*remodeling • which has not yet been authorized RADIO-TELEVISION-FILM -Three television studio^,: each equipped with ^professional:equipmentiare viuaer:con-: •K9 EJ trol of theJiiy department • Each studio isseparate from the other two and housesequipment unique to that The film area is completely equipped with a 40x60 foot sound s$age?s well^s edibng facilities including10i>enchcut- ting rooms. r t ^ SPEECH COMMUNICATION ­tensive comrpuiuty outreach is evident in the Speech jand^earing Clinic under. -the jSoritWl 6f,^he!t%tfrtment of Speech CommiinicaBoh. -' *" More tharifelSO ^hildren and adults receive therapy ft-om the clinic. The speedi communication depart­mentstudentsiise:#7*3tation lab which is similar to a-language lab. It also is used by the Interoational Office to test foreign studehfe^d must learn English ., as a second lSngU£ge. lt allows students . to record and'hear.themselves.: ­ CENTER FOR COMMUNICATION . RESEARCH -r*An.administrativestruc­ture within die School ^of Communica­ . tion, the Center for. Communication Research is directed by Dr. Alfred G. Smith "The -Communication Complex satisfies the needsof research," he said. "Of course the-nature of research keeps changing as well as. the:kinds of issues ! peopleare concerned with: Unfortunate­ly, buildings don't chant :-.>The..communication research center has direct control over the audience response .room...Research projects are largely fu,nded~.by' outside grants; however, many; projects are formulated within the center or school. . THE COMMUNICATION CENTER ­dominates .most / of. Communication Building '''BV'^tthe rust-colored building). It is aii-adjunctof the Schoolof Communication^with" large student par­ticipation ''i" ' The. center., houses^KLRN, a public television station^serving Austin, San Antonio, Central and Southwest Texas. KLRN is operated by' the University through the Communication Center for fmam m r - tinued ->, , Administratively independent educationally allied with the School of. Communication,^TSPpublishes TheTeti ­an, Cactus, Pearl, Peregrim& ,£tteteii£ Directory and many others. -*•' The 32-page offset press Uted f6r Thie ­Texan and other student publications' is housed in the TSP Building oh thesecond ­level. Because of the greater effldoicy" of ­the offset press, TSP expects "to be do-* ing more printing appropriate fof offset." such as otl\er departmental v>4| publications. Edmonds said.-• "J > The building-also-houses a photographic lab. ,. . ' , Problems .and complaints about' the­Communication Complex aria -£| diminishing. Every new building has a . great deal of .expectations: by.. the-.;.5'! planners and faculty: which are nevec ^l met. Reddick said. . Aside from overcrowding problems, ^?! the building has several structural'.^ problems. Noted by almost everydepart-': ment chairman was the sound of the cir­culation of air, especially when the air. conditioning was on. Classrooms and offices are small.-U was part of the design of the building to keep classrooms small to permit in­dividual attention and to encourage creativity.. However, the office space is being.used to the maximum. mrm the board of ,trustees of Southwest Tex# Educational Tdevision Council. Elve television and film studios, and -twtf larger-fourrJ^di.studios are operaM 'ifie station ^ ^ ^ *•r ^<£5 j An FM radio*statod (KBTSO.T)^* htwsed Within thenine-leveTnist-" »• * buildingt:asare:twocloseddtwiit t sion services \ > , 17-/1 .. ,TEXAS STUDENT PUBUCAIIOJNi "This building was custom designed " tor .Texas Student Publications,". Udytjl ^Edmonds, genera}°^aJiageri^(i?^ft'iS . completely functional for oiir deration, '• with everything under one roof,''hecM­ -System's'Board of-Regents, prfeddfng^ -Vt"attend, with invitations sentto Univer-, /CRrttewing the opening address. System p a'!n^n', faculty, and friends. r piancellor Charles LeMaistre will in-V""A parking lot ha^ been designated on­,'^^we,the dedication speaker. ' the west slde'of campus.' And Students wm J? ' ¥ «i tontf at 'the area to escdrt ^ 5,.|pltowing Friendlyaddress/ ^ -visitors by'bus to-the tJommimlcaUon tj'^liean WayneDanTelsonbrtheSchobl of''"Complex. ' ,4?-^ By School of Communication Th^deM'sofficei^the StAool^Com-,*> (implex orojtierevehti.'Siides ornrinu. lUnicaUtmjylll sponsor' alpiiqfiiraplir-Sjjith the witrant's nartTe: niay ITs^t ^ispamaso; 5-.. Ji.. ;V«,oe,awanied.>50i"aW le^rairiot^ts wtlt tion of the Com m* m -fe T&k &&&& p^ UOICBTIOO w -*^sf <. r ' j; i v, ^ A, ijif V ,• "'BySTEPHANIEktkse*. ^ ,v; World Wi wtiereJt becamejtfie fcchooj bfJPublic^ "corporating language, re&archv^peech pathology ' * ig^and ^t/IA => 3> Speaking. ,. roomijj; long way since the aboard acousticsit suffered • •: ? UNTIL lltS,-Shorter Comprised* theentire teaching* research space and diagnostic laboratories. *r~ % /Housed wuthm coocrelp floors, plastered walls anlf^. staff of the school. An Increased enrollment in 1921 '-•Until 1972, the University's speech department' metal ceiling coverings;the department found voice , -broughtabouttbeadditionQftbre^inslructoi^andfiv^' offered:the;only speech and hearing clinic in Austin. It -., ; .Thfe University Department of Speech lias come a.. T ";f T "is* 'fx v. audiology_ work in addition to 'more therapy ro< v ercises and speech delivery somewbathampered.* *$§§5 student assistants. " v!\ ^ -still serves thecommunity asa training lab forstudents -In l89lv Regent W; F; B^ came before the Board rf3p.: r One of the msBiifctors, Ellwood Griscom Jr,succe^l-urspeech pathology and.audiology and ttiose who stu^tf;'•% R^entsand proposed that it "employ theservices of an > edShurter andchaired the Department of PublicSpeak-language disorders -. , ' ' vS instructor of elocution for the eroding' term, said-mg in 1923;The Department of Speech wasof flcially es­rvJeffreyvcredits bis staff with,doing-a.-gteat deal in;; employment to be temporary, and the expenditures not tablished in 1939: under Griscom and his facility dfclD -* .studying the effects of dialect' differences on com-: .nSv to exceed $500." Prof. Lewis Gillespie assumed his v..; members Two of these. Dr. Joe Neal and J>r Jessie J.. t .munication. The staff offers an extensive program> of -v duties for one year as instructor, though he was not , ?' Villarreal; are currently teaching in the speech depart-' " teaching English as a;second language for foreign Speech Department . assigned to any particular school: ment. v ^rfV student^ through .a sequence i>f .courses divided into ; Prof. Lafayette^ Rupert.Hamberlinsucceeded-S; Dr. Martin Todaro, who^has beetvat th£ Uifl^ersity degrees of ^Ufficaity. ' f *-s = Gillespie, and speech tratomgassumedaminorposiUoa> sutce 19(Q, recalled wben ^>eedi was&u^it'on'tiie'Stth ---Hie tUnrverslty has had several exceptional credits I itf the University curriculum-In1899; expression work,' -floor of the Tower, tbep it was moved, to World-War II -• added: to its.'name.because of work, in the speedii asit had been called,becameindependent of theEnglish army barracks, and has since,been in two journalisih, program-Tbe graduate progrim in speedipathology is. ;-i; school. Thenewly-created Schoolof Oratory was beaded,-bnfldmgs. -~ , -; ­ Increases Facilities, >';one of foar,such programsinltetatfthat isaccredited bjf j. by Edwin DuBois Shurter frtifi 1899 to 1923 The Department °of • Speech>^imraimiCad(»nc^s! " the EducaUon;ar^ Tratokg Board pf Amencan Boards , . .. Course offerings included public Speaking,' Formal , organized irt 1972 with 4 faculty tof 24/ ^ :of-H^Nn>rein^€^p^tfiol(^addAudiology , Oratory, Debate and Extempore Speaking. These mandup of Dr.-Robert C.._Jeffrey!~ It*1 was* again' f -^VThe^grad^te-pit>gram .in audio)ogy is the.only ac-, .courses served asthe basisfor thespeedi curriculumat relocated In Januaiy. wtteh the doorsttp^ied tot&e crediteddq>ar6nent inYexas^A project of education ofMW&* ;the University fora quartertrf aeeotury; When Shurter * \ Communication Complex.v • % t .the deafwtiich isaccredited ^tfie GoancilonEducatiottj initiated extemporary speakingin Texas,it was thefirst Today, as one of four departments in the Snhool of of the Deaf'is tfieonly teacbei-prepaVation program ihu «t, such course on record among TexascoDeges. : Communication, 52corirseS,with 97secUonsai»"p{feted' .the. University SysteA) '' ' "*?' The School of Oratory shifted fromplace to place to • in General Speedi, Speedi Pathology and-Audiology, In conltibutin^ io^the devel(q>mait of the School of M'.­ -adjust to its new growth. In U03 it^ras hwised in the Educationqf theDeaf ai^SpeechScience,-staffedby 49 CommunicateeJeffrey said .that speech: commtraica-. '• "basement oftbe Law Building. Tosolvetbeprublem of faculty members and teaching assistants. S'" -> tion stadies individliial communication as compared lo 4 ' limited classroom and officespacevthe schoolwas mov-MODERN FACILlTtES and expanded faailties hitVe ••• •• the mass commuriication studiesof journalism. radio- ed to tempor^banacks:on;tbeicampus following enabled the department to provide speech training 'iiw : television-film and.advertising ^^ ** im nsion ?y MYRA BRODNAX : newspaperman: an itetevi^ needs of the journalism department > -degree program in television. The -deparai^t.Onfe cotirse under niusicSlid,-Complex, which bouses the department's?*' University became tbefirstschool inthe: twa <»r.:aiitee° uncier jouhiaUan'imre^Uie -The year 1948 was ah eventful toe for: teaching and production facilitles. was' state to. offer such a degree. journalism at the University. The" constructed directly' across^lbe street With the establishment of KTBC-TV in American Councilor Educationf6r Jour­ .i Schenkkan concluded that theonly Way:• from the Littlerield Caniage House. the ;. Austin, studeqt, television workdiops ',;:t to gaih departmental status was to cMn* nalism accredited the department tlsone sequence budding m. whidi radio began1 to be a . . 'trll c. v'.'.:' V^SLi a . '•» -• "were able to work with a local studio. *vjiine the courses into a^Schnol of Cbm-. of 35 in the nation having adequatefacul-<: University huiction." t 35<®tWr -t Television course offerings -grew along3, immicatiftirjts members would indode ty, facilities and standards. » Before World War Ithe physicsdepart­' with the^ workshops. --• ' ^Ihe Departments of Speech, Journalism Also that year the regents appMV&i: . ment operated a-ham-station in its Into lts Own * i' ; « : A iieM was SoonieUized ftrUnhefsi-"" school status for the department By SUSAN HUMPHREY -i, ^ -JbuiWingand originated thefirstcampus^ ment is attempting to set up with'Texas : i^ty televisidn studios With Warren's help, the jouraalism University advertising majors have>a radioactivity. During the war, this tom^ ^ employers intemships'wherebystudents "department finally-got itfi oWn buildln#' new statusin the oanmnnication sdiooL """ canget first-hand experiencein the field "ajnd-facilities. The$^5,000 structurewas, For the firet time last May, the •: oroMra^staUonmAusUnandnam-Wniver5j^^raled;eaocatiollal teleW-::#nan of' the RTF department. ^ ­ .• Mindak said interndiips'are hard tQ find fiqishedto 1952. * , ^ -|=:University recognized graduates with a "Some 25of tbe nearly 300 students ma­ v" ^ Jjsi°n station saying li. would >aot' fae^t The "future "of the RTF' department " WSen Warren's term ended^io' : bachelor of science in advertising. •' ; KUT.operated fbr about five j^ars i joring in advertising are lucky to get an.~ ai»«Ve«ttomicalfy-'feadble.-r roriiises to ^^interesting and product t "Jfliuchi of tbe support for journalismrC Previously, advertising majors . the Physics Building and in 1922*moved^ intemship," he added. With the arrival of RJ?. Sdieiddcan as / Jive Current enrollment of cthe departs ^||Hdwei^^te. i^Witi^. IleddicCim' -graduated with a bacbelorof journalism. - uto the-old-MalnBiiildingv Ladeoffunds A recent program allows seven _ director of operatiiStt of RatBo House in.#ment Ms "462' undergraduates tod 70 became rhkirma^ 0f the in.1959'' For years, the advertising courses -- and -oatmoded equipment -caused ' the :• students..torotate-each semester Umv^dto to di^se'ijf the station, a*^^1955> «« "«d for televMou equipment ^graduate;shidents.,-The students havt , and^othet journalism facility begat)were under tbe Dqnirtment of Jour-' throughout the different promotional-•••i .nalism. Until recent!/ there was neither ; creative and sales position in TheDaily­ , ^advertising department nor a major Texanadvertising department ^ •'.But, a few adv^rttring courses were 'Mindak said the; enrollment resulted^' ;i«Uught 3n;theold;Jopraalism Building, course^work and a>.building complete; from our "good blend of " faculty." C Interest! ;v,^^tb^jThe first 'advertisiiig course was orarein theivocessof obtainingoneand ^ faught m 1919 by'PaolJ.Tbompson,who in-1925' became the'director of the then also have had professional experience in Foundation for the acquisaon'of on^^to0^ tfae BM. ' rr Jaintelevision equipment,; ScbooTof Journalism. He beld the posi- course in^ructor.tworadiocoursesfor® -Schenkkan chose to remodel the old ti _ ,D Account executives, media grant was received from:the Board of , House at"a cost of ?150,000. with the^ qi^nce of advertising courses in1948. In salesmen or advertising managers The Regents forrrtmodeling!-tEie 'Littl^ield -,; "i move.-Radio House changedilts name to-­ advertising sequence field-.attracts more men and involves Carriage -ftoose mto a radio $iudio. 1948, when an \ -Radio>Telev^ion,'the UniverSty of appeared, there were roughly 50 to 100 -marketing and management Th6 studio #as 'dubbed. "Radio as. A3 a result a total of 19 radio showsgl­ persons enrolled in the classes. In the 2) The creative track. This field in­House," and its functioo'was to"extend iWBM _ and two television programs were^ mtd-'60s, he set out to find a faculty of " volves taking supportive work in the boundaries of the Uailvei'sity to the < -^. produced weekly ^ advertising speciaUsfa-Fora long time, .graphics, advertising design, borders of the state" . f Although the production e«l oftradi(H5l&photography or RTF. "There areusually -v though,. Sbarpe ?waS the only, persun Because there were no television^ ^.television,was-tightly orgamied,course^% ^KwdiUng fulltime. more women in this tracki" he said. facilities available, workshop members ^. curriculum :needed reorganizirig: .The' ^fc^Dr.-OeWltt Reddk±; the University's ^;k-sJ) Medla-research. A ^person bere a relied.on stabonsin SanAntomq,Dallas. ^ first ^step taken -by Schenkkan w^s ,|-"flrst dean of the School of Communica-' : takes additional work in fields such as J' and Fort Worthi Already offeriqg an in^v Th» old RTF building maket way for, a Chttmistiy --toward-the -. combinatUon of radio and r:r Hon, worked through tbejate'60s toward tbe b^avioral and computer sdettces,::' & terdepartmentally bas^Nlegree in .the. television into one Building;addition.-ir v {% area.--X,y-~- <. th^ goal of ^a rull-fledged, accredited ---• ^ ^u '- adveftising department separate from the journalism department.According to Stairpe. Reddick first "envisioqed the (pfSS insfOfficialicStatus idea of the advertising department, and w­ ahesawit through." Mk£i m m I^ ^UliamTMindak, chairman of By MKEA.MURPHY sequent."1 R, }ne ctarse'Cctson is particularly interested in this % the*Jvertisingdepartment, came, to the . Tbe .Department Jonriuli^^jt^tbjmnhalisn) ;-titled, "Newspaper IUustrabons," as some ad-Colson. .an associate professortof-'journalism, got semester is,. Photography as a Social Tool The University seven years ago from his job tsequence is far from what '-Dirlj.:I(udine ^nimstrators objected to photography because thejr his BfAJn photography from Obio Universityand his teachers are Wendy Watriss, Frederick Baldwin and K y as, head of the, advertising sequence, at started in 1908 whei he taught the UniwnnW'sfirst-{^thought it hadtrade.schoota^ims;-'n>ecourse-rfas' MA in fiImIrom;California Hels seriously concern­Alfred Bunt *. Z ^ ¥ •, i '• ? 4''theUniversity^Minne$ota.ln theseven pboto^phy amrseunder th6 ai#ic^of the physicsv."^jietiUed .''Photojournalism" in the 19S8 catalogue ed with'word-picture relationships ~ , . Baldwin and Watriss are professional photojour­ 3vye£rs,-he has ^een'two'of his objecUvw'-department ,* ,' is Prof. Olin Hinkle,ilowretii^d,was chosen to teadiji; "Today'sjphotoloumallst needs a well grounded, nalists working out of Georgia, and with Hunt are 3;.-fulfilled. Tbe;Jirst was to enlarge the : .kRecogniz^;as:an61fi<^l;s^uei^.U^^ the new .course because of his previous {Aotojour--; -broad university editcaticm, educationin fineartsand attempting to train siiidepts ttf use reseatdt, oral V idvertising sequences and majon and 'pbotojournalism.haschangedv^conceptuallyand^ Jpalism expenence. Hinkle was 9 managing editor of 1 v an ability to write ^ -* histoty and photographjrintegrated to document a -f-the second was the buildingof an adver--^leMcally as it evolved from that first fcoilrae • ^the Xexington H^id lWO^ok "AjMl /th^ jpbotbjouniaUsm phwrm 'iiifew A^iie Xexbigtori Morning iHpmid during the ldSOs:^ *ky ofJlfe­ ;*WSnV?M> r^ce,v«J >^tisutt departmeat. " 1 * t|l,s^S and MS ta physics j^)hotogra{Ay" mstructor at WestTpxasStateWest TpxasStateUniver-/}Univer-grew,^I^^.l^phoitoj6urnalto-te ^;bi» This latest use of words^land pictures is Mmttit ifc; The seccnd Mjective was fuUilled^in ;™n the UmyCTsityand his PUD to physics/rom thjs.x^ity'and^ photogranherfof the Army Air Corps du^>^ man can'tdoitjiistice.?.ApproHhuitefy.i25stiidehts' .reflnemenk 9! photography and illustrated the way nfOii^.waswterestedinphotograph^togthewar. ,1 5 f'artf en^Sll«fp^t^6uMli^^ .# ^eptember, ltf7X When the new Com- photography has clumged.since Kudine BinfeihuaHMt ifeimplication Complex opened a year a^d the first course. ^ -v > f ;iajt. December, tbe new department .. bead of the University Photography Photo Coltection;,0)mited to 25 journalism majors , So mstrodpr LirrySdiafT^as'a%/H>6ved in. It was tbe firat accredited acUvi^r was to make the" many photosW 1371/ ^ f craftSnJan.wl^ and aformer studentotthelate Kuefme,said Kuefane first -^ - "" photography 6l today.^ Ku^hhe's, ^ phpU^rapby;iirMn^^esthetk^^Wa^t^lortlepartttentafpiupostt^lEA&i^^ — oi woay.^ n.u^nne's, landscapes ' -«ivertlsing dqnrtment.in:the stateand »' " P"**8** and anc emphasis pn demonstrate deafly Ahat photography may be dass­ «ui w* w» ui imr tHujjuy. ^ iilso helped design the darkrooms, both for. the. » S«one of oily six or jeven in tbe fcountry; fa''oft938 rtiiAiwi hitf ^ ^s^ta the realms of art when handled byonetthois Tbe tfepartment 'has" three trends of i'n^,ej.fn advanced photography course.^ journalism department awf for Tbe Texan." He Sdaff, w*o finisbed hisr graduate work at UT in « artistically inclined end appreciates esthetic ^emphasis: , \ 1 ^ to c°mplement tt»e. t»si<>^coaii(eT which" preferredto lh^hiildtng that sefvWioilritallsmfrom"" photbgraiWc'fiistorJr.sha^the teaching dutieswith \-effeclsi''T'{lken from a l932T»icnniiHrrry ihltf §:» Ag^uatescb^iTbisyear^Ilbe 1974 # ^Ison^c^Ph^gra^cCo^Suoft StSnl^&X^ " thfc'first^time;that a master of arts^in -• ''^iyhenjjhe.^sBident. boirni be^^.the -iflSOiaa; (J.uij^:tjf|aaie ?lotoJo«rB»lilh'*"(JJ»-) ' first experienced Umeraty tommunicationi 11agreedtoatphotograph? can stand on t more effective when' gdi^^Mj^piia grtdpate pq%nmr* dropped fnttn th^pt^si^d^artni^t rtfteWpusfy studentscould anu^rwnognipnic-aiyies g-Befo)r:e the^p^y«i|cs S^ep^ but they hotography.lwit^var tbeur.masterjS mm rstQriiettciud mmm® mm fijfh •BfcJ> t^ Har w*.J^8!p^a&^ Tjar* iMIfts l(WS -ri58»*vtrf4S* Range From Films to Talks With ProfeSsionals •jAnfarfoi* A Sc" f •: By ANN WHEELOCfc, vl Wednesday:''TfeLoulsiana^'qoa that we livein an ivory tower. 11. olCotton. . ..;.... .. ... vironment. continaaas Ste hi saeaetyadhas rate an . ,-They seem to think IS minutes Thursday; "Mr:Smith Goes showings onthe hourand haif­ :. •• r:with Walter Cronkite is worth To" Washington.'; >by Frank Dm Vaire, assistaat (MLiifteU) 4 pja-itOU hour through 5 pLm. more than a whole semester Capra. and;a short "Do ffc U, « the rat* 3.II2. with the dean," Wayne Yourself Cartoon.",;:' 4Two more aOday features ^WecUL.- % at the penei are Danielspo, Dfean of theSchool . "tnclitde : Television Bwh% of New Tok A THE TEXAS Rrtticational sioa. "Camwreiab ni • WaHe Bowers. Settees; TDKA TTo accooimcfalfe i of Commimicaiion, saM, ei--.Media Program and the Nostalgia."'' frogman from Afcany. «a snk«i ero-wrfs regenalLs*' OtffaerstaUajB. '* •ev aad paftfrdter of the atr ft&e •the tefailiwxt ptatan* why (*mmunication; ciosed^ireuittelevisiottotBce the ISSOs. contiaaoas to 5 c«remomes <8efinra&axg 1Later iWriji. presi­•ISfreech artDnnatic Arts. Palestine Herald Press: impo nt t0 -p.m.. and promotional Oawaty."* 7:31 nja. ttudLl S° *»»« schedafed another dent. and Hi Ite State DwecilftfbB.ifll Charles O. Kilpatrick, material on "The Great ouim tile r^mnnmii uAum^ pdjjn 3 ««-speak Deviaas of the •CtanmurfcaUonWeek was K^01^ £^le.? Gatshy." ~ _ clos«<£HMrctciit ttefimsaan ia CMA imSl . ^ s^ts-ideB. Students ,£££ Profs"WaJT^d " HonorMoore and Ane systenti wcfiB c&autaefi of the are interested in meeting peo--Ei^eth Rostow. cerwiiumpg into Ute-CUBA'S -WaHman. American ...poets,v tern the shqr Dr. ' Daaae C. Ptess; Ddbert SLIT? "» ""teWe wtfridr :ne Education Committee read theirown worksafSpm. (tae&ea*. I*pil|h»» Spriestersbacfc. vice-•lids,' vice-president of student loungea leaders in the profession. And of the TexasDaily NewsDaoer rooms. '"PteBsons in CMA 2.320. Following, ,Fflt-er ap :mi Rcqp — a »resMeat for e#acatMMal TOUari rtflnr of the Fort •MSF"*?"? br?? *2 Association wiU visit rfSes there willIka panelGoran an traekia* Cafe." staTrcag Ji ilnpum aai research at the Press. from, inside-mii$ 1 able to wateth wwimwwg PM„^awtaS^fre?i!,ly" tbis week and lecture on Tex- March 8-14, designated as ^ journalism. Members of ftos directed by Frack Erom the an* Bear Communication Week, and Capra. distinguished 6mm ton. the committee.-indadevTOm gomg: am American f3m director. tt> be Communication^ will feature 'ikiw is the LBJ Library saat communication sponsored J>y the Schtwl of Simmons, managing editor. closwtcirctut TVj^ DtBnetemi Dallas News; John Stallings. "I.WVI six, days , of: inuitt media awditoriam. tnclade --ft executive -editor,'/ Corpus Fred Frtem£Ejr.-4-Cottimfaa liliweasafti mifflgwe st £<%£. . OWV4 the (todScatiaa sgeerik alt 4 R>T-PCMS4tt. SS5ST4". la "A Dtsettsstan with put. on Ifte panel discnssioa Tfaarsday on Frack C^n" at S puit. m v^exan. \ - NewD" ... rDirectraos inTexasJonf- Included -"in the presen­ nalism.. )"; ":^r .• K»Wlations are indoorand outdoor ,.. Gitesi speakm ekpected' »"» ' . ' . PaUtcBrtM movies; live. telfivision and during Communaeatiod .We^ •««.. ... Bwvm.ii • radio broadcasts from the unMOBmRmnmiBi include Tommy-Thwnpsiiaa of • Communication Center, press >'uw.iWlwi the iiow defanct Life • — -«— -a .'"conferences, -panel dis- Maganne; Chiute O Glenn. THANK YOU mrikwiiiim. inUOULUMII. . cussions "OR journalism and vicepresident (tf l^araimnDt .. snupotapublic; relations tad a live pictures; poets Himor Moore MOp FORI£IDNGUS • press run of The Daily Texan. and Anne Waldm^;, fashioo A PHOTOJOURNALISM director of Saks Fifth Avenue exhibit will be on display all ••m -min»caco»K-*inmK umin PARTICIPATE... in,nn.i fnTTBruri I WiiUffW fum •Da#" " ' '• ^TheGaMnDav&atffiSto.^ TWHLJWCWVlt VCX ail. lmiiOhMu Or.Mal srs°i«s?s» MS""™" . tewBitteMaM»iaa6fc.fcQtite«taittLrGMtsuaii wwww Radio wiU ori^wte its radio , Presenution of the DeW.tt .rtiteGrahlC m •» ^ ^ RS ,on" c-Reddick Award to Bill S"s. CmlHmttaaa sldered, * from Communica-Movers, nnhlir trlnri-iwi m-r Oalumet E^graom^itfrt. ­ UpttCartgr^Kire^M facilities sonality and jooxnalist, opens Rtes MlCtt84MSlkctfto^^ mm aott^ofcXA Tt»c^a*'We**8ii6Mti)wll^ciiU«s9etiie»1F multol 4t6A.StvtsttKOtaC.taN !T . . rim PL, ww.< — to0lQ »*PO^*xv-:­ ^^ pWmingaMi Uye Ubr^^itSSam^ on-air breaks designed to in-* ™~™»«««««• crease the public's awareness DEDICATION Of the new Of arrt membership wChannel Coramunicatiou Complex by ..-•9.rKLRN's award-winning,"Fred Friendly, adviser'on . ymlingual diildren's series television totfie Ford Ftanda- ^ -0.' ^ — —+* » *."• ------< «--*•" ^vCarrascoteHlasv is rehearsing tion and Edward R. Mnnow V'.S 'XIS' v J-% >..•*?.. •'.> -7 •!?.. r>. ;.r-and: taping a program, anT Professor of Journalism at K4 jjsiiv'»tTS, S5-=v\Si v & -• \­ "'?' /* suchjnbgular Chanhfel 9 series Columbia University, closes < 5. *^ J-" >*> * ^ 3 * *w~ *•«« ^ • •as: "The Black American the week Friday. Ceremonies ^ 1. r " ' s -Sun," 'Peopleand Ideas,"and .'will be heM^ ofr the &«^s _ ..,(he "Evening Items"are'also munications Patio at 4 pjo.^ sTS^S-" " v- s;rjnproduction.r ~,t . EadidayofCanumqicatian .,' A ,series of outdoor movieS rrWeek focuses on a different '"i * " "• ' i.:sriiliie shown Sunday through -department of the .Scfioet'of ^Thursday on the Coam>unica-^^Cwnmunication. L' A •, , ;tion PatiO'«t 7:45 pjm. , WiBi'" •.h Sunday: '"Too Hot ,to® Trtrrtftna TWm Bw w-"-. ^ -. at«*'-,­^Handle" starring piarkf-RadkrfeteviskshFilm Day"'­ I 'Lpable, and a short; ^'Framing > attractions ^indide talks on "£°£LV A*'h the Latle themotionpictoreaadtelev^ n indnstries IqrChariesO;; "The^?mic> ' Glenn, vice-piresident of ^with Dick Van Dyke and marketing for Panunount -rMckie Rooney, and afilmpictures Cornerstion and ^wrt1'"Televisionland." -ParamoontTelevisioit^' *•;. Twsday: "Point of Order," -4 -& V» * .­ :on the Army-McCarthy" "Extras'* mchideaaalMay At therate," 1 use paper and gs^t^ih > " wood, yob _ Secwid tot," on the making multimedia prodttctioR , by forests bare. -hearings, and a s}»rt, "Sixtyv"showing of "ImageNatioo." V~ -.-~*a : think we'd cut the of a'tel^visioncomroerdial. Bruce" Hahn: -taith- Fortunately, that's not so. Wood is a renartably renewable resoorce. If we pocdoe-common sense cooservaEtoct. ttaeSno need to ever ran out. AvSooddand, weVegotabtgstake in forest conscrvatioa. I WeVe Texas leading paper company and the nationVsecond largest newspnnt prodacer. If we run out of trees, h affects alot of people... our employees, customers, newspaper readers, advertisers...and on and oo. £^V» < ^ iT,"- t-i .r why forest coosemtioB is so X'S oor business. So we're i:..:,L doing a lot of things to keep the forests productive. • WeVe dewjnped genetically superior *iudi grow more wood in fcss tune. We opeiate our own forest noraeiy and we plant IS to 20 milBoo! ne* trees each jar...far more than WC COL We rotate cuttii^ areas to give the new Ueu plenty of time to grow. And we get the most out of each tree we harvest (eves -I the bark is used to generate some of the vi r-U-energy necdedat oormflk) V® know that forests have other uses, too. And that's whv weVe set aside hods endangered speaestcstablished nature OiKDiumrndfiwrl I TVelve ismarked byasolitary ffamnwi • Jhelookfemarked bytheorem nfifeA>qg^—' . .. ...., _ sites. 'the timepiece (Si pem^noAtexhiMVi-The fo^st, ttteralty, is our life. So we tiv to treat it wkh care. 14karatwtoegold Ladfc4i^22sB. At Southland, we befieve progress. begins by caring.­ ilbi? ''' m «r "*3. d; tr- 5n^«l -J •wS1 •%JP8 §S$J26 Bun^l, RmiI! sassssss.^ j V j, "K X*" v, o — • 4V \ mm§m March 10tlW5B-3 •t%^i~ $ % ^ fzg miT,t #J$gX »: mBm 0-«^-'— :t and Fortune lr7 "ByBAVlD ANDERSON » Bird Johnson, Liz Carpenter i3~? -< Carpenter began her career became executive-editor of jou™?a!,s"i ®s REBBnrAPnwRRs orortf Ter?ci: a' * Washington Harper's in 1963,-and two hebeoca POWERS graduate. She received, a newspaperwoman," later later' he-was named ­ .-. «* University's School of bachelor of journalism degree..^working as a UPI corresoon­ 'ditor-in-chief of, the I Communication' ha4 in 1942. -> " ^ ;_"$ient. "• -'•^ a^azine.AHftbfitweeii'hini graduated several Carpenter the first * Carpenter is' a noted W persons was and the' publishercaused­ who have:subsequently at-working newspaperwoman to/turer"and has receiVe Mprris torleave the-magazine ­tained fame in their 'hold, such a post She served ''numerous awards such as the 0U: ,in 1971.1 professional pursuits. .Ex-December,:1963, c until from National Headliher Award of Morris -was-a> member, of -;< students have -, gone on to .the end of President Lyndon '.Theta Sigma Phi. In 1954, she Sigma Delia Chi Here andbecome presidential-press B. Johnson's term in 1968. became the, youngest \yomen edited The Daily.-Tacani'from5 c secretaries, advertising, ex­'Prior to this appointment,she president of the Woman's 1955 tol956."Iwasnotajour­ ecutives and documenters of -had traveled, all over the National Press club. -l' nalism major,-:but, tiiy far the i- universal news.' . world:as executiveasslstqnt Carpenter joined the most valuable experience for v .; (toe . time press secretary to Johnsor Washington public relations : me at UT was The Daily-Tex- and staff director-for. Lady lifter for* President. an, especially the editorship;" he said «s • William Smith White did not , , Ronnie Edward Dugger,--. l||K|graduate.from;theUnlvereity founder, editor and publisher/.. lab Cotnpletion Awaited but is one of the distinguished of the Texas Observer, is : ,..^w.^. v..^alumni of the School of Com-.another ; a'ggitAiltiiii-The'•«wr spiace.': .. University.^jourr-f t« J pttMewi1 Hie awr •— j > speciflcations had been made 'them will be usable. Tftrtwo —'?%• large ffwcmlsy 8vfflrtirifi.ii.asto fareecce of l£e Z:I'^sraes B-O^son^ asoc/ate main printing areas,basic dnd 'mumcation. The commen-nalism graduate. Dugger,who Walter S meat meotiaomg that few.-Newton doubts tbiiT ^aQ Newton said all-the equip-year he quit school to'go to Croi^ute is one of the Uhlveij:'M ment necessaiy for develop- work. sity's better-known«4<>ur^ ing and-printing is there but White began his career with nalism students. His job 'aS •' •'©Ih-C will remain uotised until the. The Associated -Press in CBS News anchorman Jceeps. rdianges are completed. :'-Austin, -later moving to Mfd him.in the public, eye.7;­ , Davis said he* bop^s^lhe" Houstonas correspondentand Cronkite was the recipient of 4 changes will be.nnade by Ihe- then, to Dallas as the state the first DeWitt C. Reddick.; end of the summer and that night editor. The AP sent him ' j Award for Outstanding' : "Once it's in lull operating to Washington, D.C., in 1933as -Achievement in Communica^ fe , condition we'll haveone of the a feature writer and to New tion in 1974. 11 • best i facilities 'to bejifflund York in19& asnight editor for j Cronkite, a -native , of'St. anywhere." ^ (r , the entire system. Joseph, ; Mo.; attended. the fc In 1942, White left for journalsim schoolfrom 1933to .: Europe as a war correspon­ 1935 but left before he dent graduated. -• < , :Mfi. K. Students'; »tac After the war, he joined the When World War li broke New York Times staff ^ 3r I[ ^Attonwy as a out.Cronkite became aUPI •: congressional correspondent. ottenMyi,Frank war.correspondent and travel­ •r-^1 -His face became a recognized l«yAand-Ann'iiwn^an ed in'England,-Africa, Europe -1 uvufloUt by m^Blimnl fiuiu • member of the "Meet the and Russia. ' Si'SsisSis? 4 Mil. la 9 pjn, Monday. Press" panel of the early George E. Christian, a . Ihrough -frWoy la $|^«crk" 1950s , BiribBMgi Mom S. TaUphsn*': University English graduate, ' [ 47U7796. Th* tiwimh? ot-Willie Morris, former Daily was . press, secretary :and _JB «_K + «kmmmm coma.,'; 1968, Christian, also aformer V teW a Journalist's dream potts-^editor for The Dally c 'ex^n. is a naltivpiAusUnite ^ ,prwn 1961to i96Z?ft edited and-,chainnan:x>f.theiboard of tte Texas Observer.,Worris i Chrisiiah, Miller"arid I^onts, -S x' -A ,'Inc., of 'AusUn. " v ,1 -­ * k ' In 1956 Oiristlan'bwamean SPfUNGbREAK fWAYh, assistant to Sen, Prid&lJaplel i ...because we pay .'ofTexas.;He eontinuedirtiJiis;|| ACAPW.CO . capacityduring Daniel's^etm p HIGHER?dividends than TAXCO & |s,-ytv M m 1 ConQatly. . passbooksavings. Jean William Brown,' who MEXpCO CITV slllllfe; graduated with a1 bachelor of 8 GREAT OAYS i MARCH 22-29 lournalisiih degree jn_J949, j -v» * ^ .. t Worked his way upftptn beliigf a newspaper Copywritertd be­ing president of Rives, Dyke ^ ~-rM ?• *£$ .and Co.. a Houstwi',public ^ *«• ks"1 -tv ^ relations firm. He Served InT the U.S.-<*Air Force and^iold|a;i| ;Com missibn; (retired). .' '.-s ""'Ji Js. 1 .tv i'rSy'fJL •Site y-ssf J TS„ trv*'' gsS-f"? # % and...we can financed VocaHoiv^ Mi*3# IWCn#-Mobfle Hom«, wMw t-and other PenonalJExpensas -.jnduding Credit life Insurance" •t no extro:i«o«f^?<^^.w^. v. 5A effort W" ^ w­ 4Q^8ervice^dta pcount . Ho stringsattachlil lt^free tdqualified r ! —1,wc vwne »F--*in^.ond sign-up far Hie MYSfERY PRIZE. -v *, «-jw wiuea present membefs aie Invited to^sign means you,can make yourself a loatt simpl by writingacheckfof morethan you've ' "tot in thebank -~up to.the limitof your redit line,of courte^Mo^ important, UNIVERSITY FEDiRAL there ar^ nosftingsattached' MtVV-3DBv AuAvTexas787D5»T|ie lihtersilyofTexasatAu$fi ove On. With XJM for lite GKANDartNM^uju'iyeftSt^^pERAl^S flraN* «iiS^i«ynas aboW Aptn March;lpi1975 9&s0a wide range of named him Piper Professorof "Maple Sugar Fanner," co-students to develop con­munication Association and is A teacher for seven years, Research Center for the last contrast between the two professional knowledge >mak-, -1963. * produced and directedwith W. fidence in their wort so:they a member of severalstjmver-Vance was awarded -the two years. •A climates convinced Scott toing them, in thewords of Deadl's Dr. DeWitt C. Reddick said Craig Hinde-, won seven na­can handle problemsTas-tliey sity committees,includi^ttier 5chooL«£>f_=ggmmunication Smith possesses numerous accept a teaching job at the Wayne A. Danielson, "in.-" of his 46-years' teaching ex-tional awardsrin 1973and 1974. arise. „ Men's Athletics -Council and Teaching ExceTl&nceAward honors including a fellowship University. HI dividiialistlc and spirited."", v perience»at the University, Davissaid hecame toTexas -Brooks has received-awards the Advisory Committee on last spring. OtherTtonmrs in Malayan dialects, cer-Since 1955. Scott has headed Si .Danielson came to Texas' "One thing I've appreciated in 1974 because "They really for. six. film and^iel^visi&n Intercollegiate Athletics. for Vance has received includirii tificatcNn Oriental languages the journalism department's from the University of North 4 about students is that they've offered me a chance to get presentations ai)di bas-cp-. Women. his position last spring as Princeton University, public relations program/ He. Carolina, where he served as-let me be friendswith them." back into radio and television. authored several books aiid "I.thinfe the quality of an in-vice-president of the graduate work in Mcrtay at also taught at Michigan State dean of the School of Jour^-" Reddick, who retires as I likethe involvement with all arU^c-Tte^Sdnte^-GbllF^iStitalion is directly dependent Academic Division of the . Vale iJniversity and PHSD in University, the University of ' nalism. , ' Jesse H Jones Professor of media." ' _ • munipationawardedBrooks a -on the quality of the faculty, American Advertising -anthropology at the UniJersi-California at Berkeley, the '^'i-I Danielson has written/"Journalism this year, Has .. When Dr. Stanley T. Donner teaching excellenceawardin -and my aimsince cominghere Federation. Vance will serve J . ty of. Wisconsin. University of Houston and the numerous articles, co-served as associate dean of decided; to.leave Stanford to 1973' ;r'i' _ has been to improve that •r.i as chairman in the 1975-76 I: BecamieJiis sppciaftv is in University of California in San -authored four books and. the College-.of; Arts and become chairman of the Dr.1Willfam Avt Mindak,. quality in as-many areas as academic year. : .'the languages and cultures of Francisco. • 11 • edited:; Journalism Abstracts' Sciences; director-and deao'i University's,RTF department advertising departnjentchair-possible," Jeffrey said of; his Vance came tothe Universi-.the Pacific islands. Smith has for seven years. He served-as rman, Scott said he always wanted School of Journalism; and m 1965, '"Everybody thoughtit describes, cMs experience at Texas. ty in 1972 because."I saw it as/' taught at colleges and univer­consbltant for the director. School, of Com­was. insanity'' — everybody background as-'"both ,Although his area, of an opportunity, for better :sities throughout the country, to be a teacher. m Philadelphia Inquirer from munication.. except Donner himself. ••• Uieoreticaland professional:" i ^-research interest ' is still teaching and to jmprbve He is a member of numerous "If you're dedicated to1960-1966 and Perry Reddick hasservedin many "At Stanford I'd done about Mindak headed 'the. adver­vpolitical discourse, Jeffrey myself in my profession.' national and international teaching, there's nothing:mPublications in Florida in administrativepositions, both alLtheywanted,to have done. tising sequence at the^UniVer-said he is finished with active . Vance-said he believes that associations. more satisfying. There's no 1964. at the" Universityiand in They didn't want to build in sity. oi Minnesota ifwv pight .politics: 'tKe "miich sought-after" : Describing himself as a "4# tougher audience in the world "I've always taught un­educational and jjrofessloiial radio-television-film.: I was years, but he wanted 'tqare-"University politics'is profession of advertising is "a'' "word pusher" and "com­than a room upper-class dergraduates,! and I am a-. organisations; hsi^worked full kind of bumping my head autonomy. He came 1d-Texas ^enough to satisfy my tight field, but students do get munication man." Smith said college students. of I don't think strong believer in the un aridparf-timeasawriter;and against the ceiling," Donner in 1968 to build the advertising, appetite," he said. . . jobs." he has an optimistic and you should ever try to win a dergraduate program.' Each, has published numerous books said. sequence into a department. 'M Twenty years ago, Robert He also-said he believes enthusiastic attitude toward popularity contest when you, fall .1 teach-a freshman . and articles. Among the many Donner has directed, Mindak serves as a consul-Schenkkati, .radio-teleyision-advertising in general has im­the future of communication. go into the classroom. You' course, and in the spring 1. ^national and tegional awartis produced and hosted radioand tant in such non-product areas film. professor, came to the proved in -With "immensely the rapid growth of should go in there to battle ig­ teach graduate 'students. I Reddick has won are theMin­teleyision^serieSiHereceived as-credit unions' and^ the ,Universitysin:hopesnot-some appearance and enter-. technology in -radio, TV and norance. , One. of the real - think a teacher mates a nie Stevens Piper Foundation two Fulbright scholarships, -American Cancer Society. He ;day having a.radio and televi­tainment." He-said the major film, Smith said the field of rewards is to see students dobetter administrator because Award in 1974 and the one to Paris afldr anbther to also .'counsels, professional sion .station which would be -ptoblemfacing advertisersUh communication will actually well," Scott said. :you're moreaware of changes -Distinguished Alumnus of the London,: wherev he-:supported groups. > ^ anited with an undergraduate CrU in the'student 1 body," University of Texas award -in the • movement-.tbk'teach "I like to domanagement and graduate program ' ? k: Danielson said. 1972. college courses;using televi­developmentseSsi6nst)ec5ttse -Today, his dreams -ha^e: M The journalism department "Almost anyone who works sion for those unable toattend these are the peBpte>wiiOSeep been • fulfilled. "We now have boasts three faculty members with young people is bound to. a university.-He .has.written -me at mymettk;":Mindak a physicalfacility,andweare who have taught at the be. an optimist 'abotit the iwo books andcontributed toa on national network," hesaldV Society University-more than. 25 future,'' Reddick said. , H third and is now -wribn&jt Mindak spent a ^arin-Jl972 -; ."We" means the University years. In 1946, 'ErnfestvSharpe, book on communication with as a visiting profe^§t^i{f'Aix -Communication Center" and Chairman Norris G. Davis advertising manager of the Advertising PnjfoKeiihHafer en Provence, ft'arfce^where the physical facility refers to has taught at the University . Bryan Daily Eagle, asked the and Dr. Rex Weir, associate he became interested in the rust-colored Communica­ since 1946, except for a leave University's journalism chair­dean of the School of Com­questions of. cro^tultural tion "B" buildmg on 26tb takes pleasure in announcing of absence to complete his man,. Paul Thompson.forad-munication. advertising -4'" -" -Street which houses KLRN- doctorate at the University of vice about buyinginto a week­Donner resigned as RTF Dr. Robert •CfS;4e'fft'ey, TV. KUT-FM and the Texas the re-appointment for 1975 of Minnesota. He has served as ly newspaper. ~;Thompson chairman in 1971. ch'airman of (he ^tlec^ com­Educational Microwave Pro­ chairman of the journalism suggested he.invest in a "I've gota theory that these munication department,-: Has ject. department since 1965. teaching career instead. administrators shouldn't con­always been ..interested in Schenkkan is difecfoir of the Before becoming chairman, "I thought it.over about a tinue on and on. I think it's politics ' Communication "Center; Sheftall Jewelers Davis directed the Public Af­week and tookhim-up on it," detrimental to the While teaching. at^Indiana president and general Austin, Texas fairs Reporting Program, Sharpe said. department," he said:. • University, Jhe Jran an-manager of KLRN-TV, ; Member begun in 1959. . Sharpe originally taught ,,/Donner teaches' ia'courseon successfully. for1:^5opgress Austin/San Antonio; and American Gem Society "It was originallythoughtof advertising and built the electronic, culture-w)iich is from the Seventh Districtand; •general manager ofKUT-FM. as a kind of. Plan II in jour­school's advertising program. designed on the principle that served as par\ian3entarian in •He-also is director of the nalism where we would take He now servesasgraduate ad­"students ought to be coming the State Senate^for five -Texas Education Microwave , ShiJloV " the very best students. Very viser for advertisingand jour­to a university to learn what years. ' Project.(TEMP); director of­. quickly it spread out to the nalism. He .received the they want to learn," he said.. "Politics is ohe ofthe fnaln the Texas .'Knowledge. mwhole department," he said. "Educator qf the* Year Donner received: theCactus; businesses of the country.In a Network (TEKENT); and -The propam survivesin the . Award" in 1969 from the Teaching: Exceltence:Award democratic country, thequali-director of the Southwesjt; This coveted appointment is awarded to comparatively feio jewelers in America-It it* journalism prbgram's . American Advertising in wr..;v;;YT?* ; i ty of the pplitieal candidates Creatjve Film. Project. " fe < emphasis on-reporting-urban Federation, 10th District: "The only tning we can be determines the quality of In ,the future, Schenkkaii , given only^ajter strict examination of their getnological proficiency and{< unquestionable business ethics and practice. lt musl be re-won each year. problems This year grants Dr Robert El Davis, radio­certamvabout in communica­-life." he said. :hopes the University can have THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS ym AT AUSTIN 'M SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION I 18j8l§lte.3 fn ^ ri, * fp m r..x 1 W&J A an. r>V 4 U# l* from 5 if ' -srr " — B.L• t ^Carraspoltodas, coming;, teacher. Joselina the peddler the characters^ "" . " _, ftom the word canjesto]e#js womafi, Don Rafael the _' For this set design, Hfggtas' [f~ T5^%%• t meaning carnival, is a 'barber and operator of the won a Gold Award of Ex-'Tr^H J^t"''^1® i^tional children's television rstfio station and Dona Pa-ceilence from the National «;show, and like a carnival qflita, a grandmother, J} Association of Educational , iMESSS'#' Carrascolendas combines fan-f: Carrascolendas was design-Broadcasters tesyairi reality to entertain , "ed by Wayne Higgtas. An en-Carrascolendas has also?; X», • n" tire town was created tofunc-been awarded the UNICEF *? CARRASCOLENDAS t* ab»il ' UnUke a"y otber children's tion like a motion picture set. prize in the Ninth Japan Inter-& on KIRN-TV, chonnil;J9f program, it combines effec-• so that cameras canshootin a national Contest, the Silver^ Saturday • ot'10:30a.m. Uvq concepts, drama, music 36fcdegree sweep. The set in-Hugo' Award for children's Suncbyiand a* 5:30pjin.and vitality m the bilingual eludes a 13-foot waterwheel, programs at the Chicago ' Show to reflect cultural which-realty worts, and a International Film Festival ^-^35 similarities and differences pond,This setis00?of thefew and two awards from the jUsing a musical comedy in the country which actually Southern "Educational Com-'" ' s« . . H?3 :iu^uic..avuuiu..tbi?tu?i0 ***• municaUons Association ^ >•, r' r.*-o".n«vci inemphasize effective learanig, operates a wat^wh,eel. , . The show, is produced-by. *—^ conrpnts „n W,nm concepts^,focusing; on feelings Besides , the toward oneself and othere,­ , theset* te fundedby,tfce gQvernnii&nfc respect and, preservation ,of-. natural resources^'diversity in. self and others and inner ­choice. . Through children and other < characters in the show, the0 • town, of • Carrascolendas il-.5 lustrafes'the.joy of .learning. !' 1 4TiTr Children are chosen as per-; formers for the programV j;V Problem Pregnancy Counseling-Service . through auditions eadi year.y. • Student Health Center . ^Twenty-seven are selected,cin^, K .(he..basis of age, ethnic" '4}tv, '05 W. 26th St. (4th IWSauthH'>>&<*> backgroundanddancing,,sing-1 c ' f)'. mg and bilinguatafiilities. .> 3 Each SaturdayaChildren'sv ^Workshop, headed byYolanda | ITlbl'tlin v,*.'v*wl*4-.qupsovixx-WHCiui uiuvci^ Ortiz • and Hettie Worley, is Kmunities,-the University and sity classes and engineering;! MONDAY ON held where the children are 'r Austin, KLEN television is staff work whh universitySira ^'"1. given voice. Spanish and ^trying to get the best of two equipment •, g' movementiessons. -'Worlds and serve theip both, ' Besides staff members. The other Carras town'members area bilingual -of the communicaHon center diversity -with closed cijrcuitpii lion; Agapito; a liviiif doll, jiSnCommunicatiqnBulIding B, television, internships fori|tDyana; the shoe cobbler,.U|^-' Csaid ' graduate students«and®|' r.cle Andy: Pepper the dete& " KLRN" a public" television employment and volunteer 9pi||ttivei Caracolesthe restaurarit .'station serving the Austin-San P°_rtaniUes for students. •-; i ' o«*ner;.ahd Caqipamocha the . Antonio area^ is controlled by ^ Umversity stiidents have?;' 1 j. . j owner of the fix-it shop. a Board of trustees of 50 -nelped^uild the Carrascolen-i^ For,the 1975"rseason • private: citizens " with the ^ wprkjyith,;'; news University acting4as manae- • n ingageht ^ Schenkkan said KLRN triesj};; tu '.J, to involve students from alfe IV •' J ^ arr3"gement areas o{ ^ UniversitJ, ^ H t d'ra^Hnoh"n fcludmg engineering students ,, fer»^C»*-®^ach other s students and other cqto-C ' n fa h S if munity members also play a ­" v Part ,n f ^mi\eTfl y the KLRN annual fV"'f>3ietpr iiMnlf membership drives and auc-i /V bon Volunte€r L ecuti^e nrnan^?' groups work«» Stsa -i > m \ " ll as go-getters and collect't' 1, & ^nganAmerickn Studies businessmen to be sold at the *"* ^J.TOe^, cb,»dl«? aw« *®jevj-action, ' ^ ' 'V *pr. IMS. ,,&KLRff, leases part of the^f ^mmumcatioii' complexatJ. nominal fee and utilizes much ^its eqiilgmfent ; SPUING BREAK c,«i\fhe ^television station has," i?&M-i been operating on the Unlvew;i},GROUP sity campus since 1964 If p j| provides educational-* HICHTS programing for area public^1 ., .-.^WafeVy..,. ,schools during the day and > «aiwr»i7 general programs for the-r; 4mY<*Kn57 public at night \ ^ r ukvtwtht*. VMMMM o«ao mrotjt <*«»£»> * x March 7-17 the station will „• broadcast Festival JW. 1 5 ss-*_ -­ • 'MARCH I.U. tt/APRIL ai> ' :' :--Specials -include a Profile ,4 \i*&•%<• lOAUl G90UPFUGHT -U Beverly Sills, Austin CUv-fe ' I ~ ' MA80ern41a.it: •Xtr-/flBtttOJ limits with Willie Nelson,Big,;,; * •"I1 Band Cavalcade, the Sugar?*" Rav f. Rnhi rqavi.Par*U DISCOVE SAIUN ?v(fr»v* *!&sssfe I M\ UobrA t /> ," .." t-i t( • "$? THE COUNTRY ESTATE '•> $t> A * * n < * ;^JL.* ' \ SUGGESTIONS •v t A «*•-Exit Slaughter Creek Over^W^ w.,S2;1S!76 v >v-« a-^ *> OU CAN EAT -5.95 - « 7^"'^ ^s '*'u' roa*tbeefi choice ofJ2 soups -} (moked ham whole wheat bread ' cornbread ~\y n-f ^Xountry Smilr-lustfikegolnfltoGrandma's^ For 442-5900 .. T jfrTOjp RENTALS ri®y MICHAEL STEIU-INGi'^s Legislature ^received free . allocations to TSP from the year period. not bechanged unilaterally by 4Trustees a| a whole. Seven ®ys'em; Theeverydiy student period ^ m. w . The Cactus firstappeared in mass mailings of ,Texans Jand .blanket tax. By this action either TSP bi^the Board of 1>otes are needed to Overturn a couldn t tell any fchange.',' . Speaking of the optional fee The Deadly;Texan, a spring v r Reeents. , -f-riGcislon oF thp .rpvipw ^nm. TSP policies ' sl894, The Texart,(in 1900. By suggested that tfegpntspassed TSP'lost $126,000, about a pohcies have \changed parody. It employs a dozen.' Regents "decision of the. review com- • system. Edmonds said. "We • 1921 the job of publishing Cac-the rule to prevent legislators third of The Texan'soperating'' 1 however, such as the^decision . didn't want it. and we had to year-round personnel, plus 14 'TSP is administered by a' mittee." • ­ ti and Texans outgrew'the.< from'realiziflg ,y?hat opinions„ budget. to allow The Texan to endorse employes in the composing board of Operating Trustees, v ;;!•> All TSP minutes go directly budget ourselves for a deficit /' capabilities-bf the' Students'^ circulated ofl dampus.\, f, " TSPs tried an injunction candidatesfor political wficei But this year we'll almost room. In addition, more than composed of 'tel?(i students, ^ tip the president, who has ab» ' Association Accordingly, the In 1971,'the Bauer House" against the budget cut, but three faculty"members and soltite.iveto»power s over any . Asked about TSP's hiiancial-: break even." But the success 150 studentswork forTheTex­^association fomediTexaSStii-story t>r'oke'.The,T,exan's' lost Soon TSP was tightening : two professional -journalists, ^ ••TSP action. TSP budget state, Edmonds said, "We're of the optional fee system is an and other TSP . dent Publications as-a non£;.^biggest -scoop "6^6^, unfor-" ' " •" * • --•• -• • getting by. We're not cutting publications. ^ its belt.-On July 30 the Riata, plus several • nonvoting . amendments go directly tothe .questionable. Edmonds said .;profit private:corporation. , v/1tunatelyroccurred'in the year a campusliterary publication, members. ' ^ , back. We could go two or; that it all depended on the TSP prints other­ . Board , of Regents and must » Students ratified TSP^t the.' TSP's charter expired Went from:a semiannual to an.. . The TbP general manager gain its approval to take three years on' the optional -number of students who are publications. too, such as the" .'^•ballot box, and the corpora-' Erwin and annual, publication.^ .The and The Texan's editorial v effect. willing to contribute University's public informa-* The story,.hurt'Erwi fee." But to keep TSP's nose; tion rfe TSP now publishes The Tex-tion tabloid On Campus, The: -si*!". < Charter from the secretary of Politically adept as he w&s, an wascut bya page TheCac-by five. members"Of the' had to dig intto the reserves,-r.'an. Pearl.,Cactus, Peregnnus, Texas Journalism Quarterly- r' devi quarters, in Building "C" ,^,ytate Julyc6,;l921. * *. Erwin didn'tMet' the charter tus' size was reduced. The Operating:Trustees; tlie TSP:;;jof ithe:= Communications cautiously built up..over a 50-:the law.school vearbnnk and and Texas Times. ^;v-TSP'srnqnopoly,pn,_campuS.:;iexplration oppbrturfity.slipby. Ranger postponed'its Executive Committee.' The.; •Complex, 25th Street and ' publications sparked. ,im-'Led by_Chairfr>an Erwin, the September, issue for three Executive Committeeismade ' Whitis Avenue. .. mediate' reaction from'the board"declared TSP defunct weeks. up of three facultj^ ihembers^ < -TSP General Manager Loyd high-spirited • On Sept. 8,after.two months and • two.-:students;fjhe':com-• • Edmonds expressed satisfac­.of the_bjtterest kind of con-mittee is authorized to imple--tion with the new surroun­ Barb. Tfie.Little CampusFree (The new charterfgat a;.cool .Press, and the 'sister reception at TS>p; ^ ; publications Blunderbuss and ^" The" , ma ijKllifhjection . Blunderbustle (later' busted "centered on '^rticleiIV. This' for criminal libel) flourished ;article sajdthat the new -cor-.­ briefly. r juration;w6uld'last;10.years,/ In the late 1920s the Board urile^ U was determined that of Regents passed a resolution any prpvision.:()f'the articles condemning all such "scan­(was; invalid;vyiiejeiipon TSP dalous sheets," But some ; would be dissolved aiidall its clandestine publications died Junds transferred-to the slowly, as late as November, ^regents. 1932, a tabloid tailed The Dki-,.f ''All tye Want (f if Regular 49.95?. 44" for l,8ur^?' Jhillsfev giJ^e^^» ™®eworfc;No need to wrlte aoWn Ini'' 1011118 »• memoiy holds them ready fori.': I •a, Constant, percent key, floattng decimal. Includesa disposablebattery, ACadapter and case3,, >r . XTti-iSean 'Eeuty m.Paymintfh#, Save $10! lElectlic i '/|. f ^ Credit balance kdtir addi'1 i| plu* and minus, -even nega-1 i ,V , tives. no-add and clear/ ^ i \ .key, eat leven With 6 ft? \Ss55 4 • Xerox copies as low as 2.5* • Services and prices fitting your every copy need/ at '' THECOPY SHOPII 2 2OO Guadalupe, lower level • open 9to9 weekly... 10 to 2Saturday ww yy w 4 w y k a wv wy k f './•"^OranB* Btosiom EngagMnent Rings are thefinest diamond rings in theworld. OrangeBlossom makes all A .... their rings in 18K white or yellow gold. jHi'-i "nc' u,•, on,V the finest diamonds :j .y wailable to adorn their many beautiful v and unique styles. From $300 Coruge NSsty >s 0Mm6<^Sh V •.' .vs., .Revolving Accounts BankAmericard x to 36 months • 'to pay -Master Charge-v: t Shefull Charge d iff m 5.--' I i ® *^4, ft! 7 > # m rm Store Hoars: Allandale Villag a s MOnTlieDrig * .-iVWestpite Mall Vi(> Biirnel Road"'"rf [aJ 2236 Cuadalupr ^ '% BrnVbitrat iiltlM i' 1 WM.6PM , " 1 v Spulh Lamar The Advisory Council of the MimllmMit tn > oniiihhb J: RWHinfi^-ffnnMna tlio tfnlvAN -v llriArH enrollment to' an equitable recently granting the lfniver-;.;» =v School • of .Communication,;-number of students, «^ sity $50,000 toendow.twoJoM'?" j . 'A.'f^guiar can Foundation provides outside' ' Tilford Jones,' Jr^ Another objective;'' which „ . .. . , serve no more than two? . . advice from professional, combined;, with the-first Scholarships in the School of , successive terms. He may be" 'members of the media and:, becomes;astw£fold problem,, Communication Capital -ei,g||,ie for reappointment '•' * .raises tnooey from private: I Cities recently purchased the ^ istomaketheschool more at­ ,fo)iowing y*aT 'dff company andfoundations to5: Fort Worth,Star-Telegram. • _ tractive topeople belonging to c6uncll. promote the educational •" The Advisory Council acts' minority races. * .^-.programs of the school. as the nihng.body of the Com-•; Life members are select^ There is a ^ The c'ouncii also helps by reconlmendatioft of the Ad^: cbntin'uingg munication Foundation, which jrebtioastdp between thg dean'' 'develop private support for the,Board of Regents ,eS-< visOry Council tb the ' student Scholarship and loan chancellor. They serve with ' : -andfacultyof the School of , :tablished in Januaryt:19ft, to " -Gwnraonication and; the'Ad-/ '*funidsybook * and'*film collec­ all the privileges and.respoi^ provide a way for interested: " visoiyCouncil, which keeps' tions; "endowed.' professor- sibllities.offegular mfembcnk persons, companies 'and in-; theschoolin linewiththe :ships, research, travel funds, Ex-officio members of tKf stitutions to help meet' the. ' professional: needs of the ^special equipment and the needs of the School. Councilj with vote^inqlude the W ; state, Wayne Danielson, dean general endowment. , The council, is made up of-dean of the.School of ComJ of the .School of Cooununica-'^': The present economic con-21 regular members,each ser ­munication, the pr^stdent of:. ?-,"~ -v^Ss .Hon, sad.,} editions have affected thgcoun­ving forthree years:They are.' the School of Commiihication 1914-1915 Journalism Class 1 ...,,,.,., '•. Robert E. H.ollingsworUvf cil's fund-raising program, appointed by the chancellor of-' Student Council and the ptesi-­vice-president:and general : •.,1M"^I£W?^: £**.»-•*•»•*.LCBrady,IE.G. Utar/ll/Wad^Okby, ,HoUingsworth said.however, the University after being deqt of the School of Com- Gotdon . ..J-?-•5raa>^.J-W-S-_fc!BW' °-^_^OP,r'.*?°ry^hn,ftit jtumiKut, manager of The DallasTimes-: the council was instrumental nominated by the dean^of the munlqation,Parents,,Associa­Ptarrott.NJt , **"•"> S-^ •••1HI1'. SM—T Attfmr Gadder, F.H. Herald and.president;of;the '-in Capital Cities Communica-School of Communication and ; tion. < rv CMm*, FJi.BiMdoa.Mod> HmiIbiA, Urfi, Bfr,fcwfc Gowtd, GJL MKbooa. .Advisory Councils said • the jcouncil is titfng to assist the/ "^ *:••• -.V'.^.;.--• vw :4V : _ **- CommunicationCouncilm PARADIGM Offerr Student Feedback .. The Sdm) of Cn^unica-.fstructed for 1,500 jpefsons to first enrollment If th? stu­tips Couucil, Jthe studept/ .flow throughand is bou^ing a % dent fails the course asecond ^ governtiigbody foctheschool. S-OOO-pentrm flnw-thnWigh j>" NOTES SERVICE ~ thifehe is ^eniedfa degree in 504W.24H, ., , rtfers a stnd^it-jeedback to, ,.;The council Is ajso (iphtinp 472-7986 v flie dean and^ftodty of the the Undergraduate,Studies Mon-Fri 104. 10-lZ^ J 'TtuTtoitactt Is ucobraging * TkH MMtKr we tvitit be affcrima academic.affairs ^'-v^tcUier' ..-repetition.of courses designed dialOgue among the st(id«its -• School of ConununiCation on .-Committee's'proposal of ctmrte*. Typimg, copying, mmd j they "wanfit or not."'j ' 7to decrease sstadent enroll-cotfeertjing fte twoi proposals ' samSabk. AiI notesSU ptm* tax. The QmimunicaUonCouncil ment m the school. Partof the on the repetiton of courses. -'has begun to peak and^become proposal States that if. a stu­Other obfectives^of the ^ ( awell-deTined1*idy!^Tbecoim-dent, faUsanupperdlvisioh -council a« putting i»uU-a **•^i^*HVYVWvv>nnfM'l^iww>dwibfad«.InstructorUmySdiaaf only a year (fld, was con-^credit, if he failed it on the f y>» 1 ^J J4«.^COBBMBSKSCW' I tbo MO of a camora flnh im tho boric photoioumafam cmm*.; X3 -i. -by *K»intBKnt only Tamari Soy Saucd $1.00 pint ^ «y 459-6353 ^ •Bring ftiit own jarS • Tecfaniciaiis::. THE BOOK STALH Wanda Hum 9w"fc> aii v7 tr V f/L 2 f V> ­ 4 m-i - BROWSE ^Tald1ggs r-45*^faiA*$n P" mm--s^.­ . 1 'txfAri i + Ah j-1 Hardbacks • Tettta \ <* if®?: P«ynlKii Americaaa -= , Comics Flrit Edition Let's give Nostalgb ^LeatkerSM literatare Tnivd BUay .• ^ Fiction " ' . -&-s ^ J? 1 ^ 4C 'oSS^­an BURNET RD 45I-3(M / •& v AlifMfiaabooks O-. m; Red Toipito? 1 * &N2 ?V- Italian flood, Wines. ahd Drinks & Full Service Bar ^ ­ , r'Gt, 1 »" ' wSs M te Fine frames for your Jack. Quality Food, Service, and Atmosphereii jitjeti letK ^ I-' « i^WiW ^tunchM-F 11:30-2 76-7202^ r f & Sot. 5-10 t ^ , I S^' Buchveise1 m it pcdurql bequty of oakJeak, rosewood;orwalnut'brouoM 'out through exacting Danish crcrffemansljip and hand cubbed finishes. The,Hundevad Wall Sysfeitf by Carlo . J^rtsdn, Btclusjvely yflfh «w Sho^In Cehmark-Invest In " • 'comfbrti...invest wbeauty " kffiat 123 ©nmar mm* 2^^ 7 xia.' T-fT' . OrT r~l 6-^-Vi'-'r-, Nfor&i 10,1975, ^ , ,, 1 -... , , „ 1, Mi mm » A v. •MM M« •fF ¥^P£?F r-rvf*?? WTi-/ f 'i>7 Ww&$ •if# > ' < 'afcs.^ „* ^SSi PVj ->v mversit V*M"' L.IFSI.FR'** ^-X -' i^^/ASSt/iey •T**# •a**- MJVri at© ®exan: S«iK W9fw$m W"T$* ^V>< ;(£»*" iTHE&TEXAN t t "" » " * ' f jSe»35S& "* ^ '!.<•* }^.$g ts!tortcaU|) Etngeb in Controbergp lXS£b& S5H3 .r By ANN WHEELOCK * '. „;.,,, regent Prank Erwin, fairly sums up a' service; It has won several prizes and The observation was made in the Tex­ -' » "These (editorials in TheDaily Teiaui)%^ controversy ^ that has been with the If&aasiasfflSi® sweepstakes in: the ..Southwest Jour-an that "the state spends f?-8 maim a just don't fairly,represent anything like v ' University's student newspaper all of its nalism'Conference. '^' .' SdSSSs year on higher education, nearly as ^MhMV the majority view at "The University of"* 75 years; what is the proper scope of Publication; of a student newqiaper at much as the mmbI outlay of the prnyJr Si^^salfe *A(W* Texas. They ye gota little.clique"over „ Texan editorial comment the Univenrityibegan in 1889. The papfer. of Texas on chewing gum." ai=3f£gs there," Erwiri said, referringapparently <* Although The Daily Texanhas diligent- Yfe'CtrtNKT called The Calendar; ai^eared once that "In 1911. The Texan was SCTari} •••:••»*» £3?£r£sSS to The Texan editonafstaff. "Qnly"tW|S^ ,ly reported news and has served as year and then again, weekly,in1899-1900. criticized in the Texas House of iwnw» to five people a year are responsible' for j;' laboratory and a source of working ex»-It became "rae:Texan" in 1900 and Representatives by Joe Ed Wmfree far - MSsi WtBttSMaSinag* toiseditor^l business thatca^MA^tlierience for journalism students, its published -^eddyr'until 1907 when it an unfavorable review rfi^wgii hum1 ^ 525 -^ ' '-k if, j-,^gf';primary role and its fatein history have^ , became semiweekljr.: In 1913 it issued Martin Dies* book,"TheTrojanHonem •V 'This statement, njadeinlfi65 beea that of aid to the public eiye ' ;!daily.. Th6 •' firet'/four volumes' were America." The Hoostoa **ci*1•**"«* »i™ • "-••-••'•JlMgiaiM|i'"'' T''16 Daily Texan is.overseen by the ;/pubiidied as a pjrmrt£:ienterprise, unaf. charged "crazy ideas'* and Ikelcadif #1 :::,-m ,-Umversity System Board of Regents whoi:rjl filiated with -;.the .University, and of nazism. communism and g|j&Ss.flvss time] and' again .claim that lte Texan, X: afterwahl. was taken .umter the arm of the University. He iW'H tin* he ;tTEXAN .'reflects tew much on the Uitfversfty. And'' ;. the Students' Association, bat was still would rather see die University fl«»J wmmAi the question of censorship .oil The Texan ' .. independently student owned.— —-,a'-|j|^MB® than to see "America ruined irons >4*Ml .'•" —•-••• :?,has" been decided andredecidedby "In 1921, the papis1was iwivatdy own­within." *&£TE ^ students, faculty and administration. ". ed by the students and the studoit LATER THAT year Dies, chairmanofi.CENSORSHIP has been exercised on manner ^t kftrjte profits, for hiitaself. the U. S. House Un-American Activities ..'.The^DaBy Texan in numerous'ways. At-The student mam^eciinade as madias Committee, condncted an unest^itfian ­ times theprivilegesbf popularlyelecting $1^00 in a year or too/' Dr.Reavis Cox, of Uie University and The Duty Texaa.ff«scr TbeTeraneditor ^m&iidatory funding_ : editororTbeTexaninl921;said,inanin-Several persons intheposttnl reteed 1lSfafci§s »&&» ^gagg1*±MMI for the paper h&ve been denied. But in-.^,.1terview in l953: The annnal expenditnres: to the "conmmnistic infiaenees M *lhe v»^$l§Spa %NM evifably the overseers return to themai-^-nf T!m» liaily Twraniiaainngqnw.p»paMt -yllniversityrf Texas"and Un-Am«kan 7im; "ffe'belietfe #iat one bf the prime>.v§ the $a).OOOmark.The Texan .hadbecome '•• investigator ttes^Ber several enasne lllll "functions of a Universily is-the . unf^s?a (nsin^ss.; • ,.-v ,v refoences to"Red sjrrapaaaers,"' m •VMIBTMr jhindered exaJhinatiori of' issues bjr?^: LATER IN 19& an advisory (nard, invited by PresidentHomer P.Rainey to vsacCTwv students as well as faculty: that a free >icalled Texas Student Publications, iras « <*M9S WNS^'J _ . "put np.his facts or.Aut np.** Diespve .?>% ^ ?V manage all student the University a cfean fain of i^i* necessary condition—of such ex­pubUpatwosr AU prpflts were turned to Another attenqit at efitaria) nsbic- In the OId Tradition/ ^ •2ryat^g'S?gy>'f^": ^TTTJ;AM-B amination." the boarAfor improwing the publicatinis _ tion was made by the Board cfRegorts .. : -SspSSI; >'. juta^as^. ; v ^The .Daily . Texan has; even been, uuder-TSP. " in 19G> when they decreed|hat freeuff^ The Univ«r*lty's*tud«n» publk^tiom 4 hteihtr jjacclaimed, as .one;of the; most vital Although moist,editivial issues dealt campus distribution of. the paper halt student owned for..manvy«ar*:Antongth*m3 organs for legislative review in the state' with bT the OTfyTexans bordered an the Texan editors rtohmNi repeatedly tkit r - w«r» TIm Caltndar, which iuuad only one* of Texas " . •• .p trivial, TbeTocaneditorin1927 resigned off-campus circulation was curtailed eand The Tman,: which inw«d WMkty,bi-wMtdy F-'gaaa ^ *WTG2*73FZ • The Daily Texaii tias consistently wonr because he charged yioiatipa °t the in-because the newspaper was oftencritical beginning in 1907 and tlwn daily in 1913. , , IS?® ='the AU-American rating from the. violable r^tl^&eeilom of the press. of Gov. John Carnally and the T»r» i Associated Collegiate Press Critical Ser^ The d°ean ofIstodatS answered these Legislature. ^ ' j, JMce. Three times in the last 10 years it charges saying'^ci«:diould be no cen-That same year the Board of Regjenis T'GFI ,%has won the Patymaker award from the sorship but casesbf libdmight draw dis-formed a review bowl meant to scope pMM "MMa WWfA ciplinary actknL.:. v ' the validity of Texai eifitorial tuimmii Editorial tqpics inthe early partot the The board was made up of 12 ei&tars af century i^u^r-"&ridently something major Texas daily newspopeis. Thej is wrong with.oiur student life, we need eyed such qoestkms as whetherHeTex­ enthusiiism. fvticoll^e spirit needs an should remainoatfee blanket tax,how PusfeSsd leadvship.' ..we'iieed.a collie song.. much control or responsibility the Initial Copy Resembles Present Day .water pressure aidheat areInsufficient r^ents shooid haveconcernn^ TheTfex­ < 3 Ztn^iT-~ ^ ' *li Jr A* V * i. JF'l. mBHall.Vtet's'nsunethe athletic Add.. an and whether The Texan *»«~M be ARF, J «iL * >J ""^'s P By JULIE AUBRANDO • 1 for 'iny.' interested freshman,V Has"1 littleNe^bdjs.'areruining our athletic reduced to ooly a Journafismbbontory.\ ; The date was Sept/ 24,19l3i and the 35-anybody/sold you a handbook yeti Whai men's slacks for |7a pair,and the CoOp, field by playing Ion It.ion. &tnday. . .too ^After two months «rf •crroHny n» Surprisingly, the «atof b yfe^riy suhfl/ 1• which was-on v^ember limghorn football squad ha^l aboa]^th6seelevator,ticketa?i' 3~ t-t wasKHi the second floor of the old '•• much noiseis beittgnuilleinthe librafy.: -board recommended no dap 'scription in 1913 was a bittffeep foiMh&V Main Buildl Building; advertised. eiidless--.whv shonldn't pmfpssnrs pay tiTirary'a afft^-tinp thg «~»jr ]it| ~ tlTY"INC .• A Im1,1H . I t '* Iocated on cam^ji^fines so pertiaps'they would returnboaia£;>t Jreedom of The Tex^i be « ^ ,•*% witlun a reasonable tune?. . we must^S Vmiir Mnnnt-T. . r. -,r. vcompetition saw,61 to rutf'^ supportalMeftcs with ourlibrary fines. >i ||HfT . .-Yf Illy ' ' '9Wm J '•• Vf • rL. > I L.I i.'s^»-. ^ET^r„' , : _... r.,< * ' * ' "u* 'fl wliyi"MJ* 'A .1 , , heen edtor of The Texas . yTednesday tnornlog when tlie liistisnie v Present ^^-llrtlvteisity.cel^br^wt youn^ man Am6!ig the list of reportett^jf first issue The'Ahiencan®^, .studentsstudents should giveave "HnHahakm**Hullabaloo" „non'ra.'jn»..«^ njiu.-.!«„„;•. Statesman atteiripted to convince the campus at nteht and let the citizens -1upserver. Harper's "•agazmr , of three books, had troulile with cen­ studeiits.-th&t. it .was most abreast' of ' • g^'Sgg'ryy-.i'l-fr'i-» »" -* f-»t ao~.be The ori^nal copy*' which i» bound and >' The ojigii^Vfipund copy of He,Texan £a™I,al^yf =•» -• -^^t-.campus . sorship^ A stateAnt bom the BoaMof Banki-ia bookworm. st£fc»tsdwuW cut classes %reseryed under glass In the Richard T; was JiJeSfentfed, to ^the^ Ufifveireity'^EJti J,L ?Thw fellmont, forwhofti BellmoOt Regentssaklthat editorialsinlbeTesan ^ go tf the ^S^ife Efallas.. Xet the iFleminglUniversityiWritings.Collation may not violate Sec. 4 Artkie 6of Basse "» IMSjs -(I"j;"-Universifylie divorced from politics." vreads tnore likeluie society page •• Bill 140. which prabibits the use af state j1913 staff rdunded. out-its first -STUDENTS OFTEN griped because contemporary,new?paperthan ^ptesent. -funds to.^ influence the butcome of aaj f^^^hg.the more'serious side'4'w* their.*^letters' t6i; the; editor ware not .issue of The, Texan.r, election or the passage ch-defeat of Univemfy affairs'. A'&turday Boani|?.'f;prititedX'Th^ Hlieii-'Texan Polity­ •" "Say Mr. -Preshman,' what^t^^C: ' legislative meaawrfc^^wgtnli' gripe <>f;R^oitstneetii^g wascdvertd by theV:5;answ^.for i^,'Irtters niuk deal >Perip?". quj6ries,one of the. front page was that editorialsappearinginTheTtat­ i « -«,• -J^--„,^r,r-^^wwP|^^^«'^W:afa^:cainirfji!iefetlife:fiBtoj^.Wife^^ieft"iif3nlawgt to the students headlines; —'—--» ' an bad theiirqiactttfbeing consideredas ^ ... •>... W. 1913 was aTeliUve!^ cial status was considered; prindpjdly,,v5i,.0f;theUnivei^tyi.^ implying attitudes and positions of theMSIMSG faculty aw»intmaits were:confirmed'' w tere&ted in .national politics, race, " University. J ]::i'• religion or a number of other subjects The handbook has since been rh amil: which the handbook says we cannot dis--. to allow The Texan freely to prat ar­, cuss m our editorial columns." itides that may mtlaenbe' tfaeuutimue of TEXAN Comment on national, state and loeak elections and the passage of hills. ' : affairs was slow in comingbut eventual­In his —30— column,^ Morris said «fly increased.. The Texan b^an to deal" The Daily Texain. "Ittetheli»tVictim«T.with the suffra^tte inovement and en- a dying political kingdom." Wiles anar­ g; couraged people to pay tlieir poll taxes. ticle of his on the consequences of the The Texan tiadibepin to brandi iwt. I: President's;veto «tf anatural gastrin was editortidly so.jtnioidi so that it moved a censored he left blank the space on the writer for Aa^de^ to say in 1927. page where the editorial had beea~~ "Regardlesofthe demand breadth of scheduled to appear, iitwti»n» this note: p obseryatidris 'printed; the press "The editorial withheld. Tlis eifitorial Texan) are not work-« 'lias been deemed too iMIiiiin iiir by " ing>61dy tb;pfaise." > the ^itqrial firector and. tike faculty„.QneTetan editonalist wrote timdess-j ' committee rhaiiiiian -of:pHas.r fy/in* the-late* ins;-The fwmalism of iitnPublications. Tk^ tm' University otgaitotinn tends to make „ ^tto withkld'unffl^B^l the student kse aO intBest in everyfliiug sideration. —Ed. except w^ik^Mr ^edit If sudi tq^cs J as^^Moobtnl,w|ththiarinter-. -A SIMILAR tactic ins used hy ISB3­national im^rt caimbtCbe candidly dis­1974 editor Michael Kafcm vhett the cussed inumveraftes'uid duirdies, then Board of Regents voted 'to strike "where? " guaranteed funding for The Doily Tfcxan ' The Texoii'j firsl 'Staff In the *30s Ttie 3%xemi)aidattention to . from the stodeot services fee in favora(: ' issues such as dissomainent, and behev^ ' Optional check-off funding. The bat red "unaninm^/^tliatTtiie U.& concur: :page oftheMonday.March16,1974. Dm-I with the League^of.Vtttions and not in-iy Texan appearedUank. withone single Texan. terfere m the SinosIapanese conflict. inscription, a WJ2 quote from Regent Frank Erwin: "We do not fnad uijllriwg.. that we do not controL" -s Daily Texan etfitors have been pop-, ularly elected except lor the years 19Q, ­ w 1963 and UH. Sam KiaA Jr., David :fg #! ^ «> ' W*S, „t gj, Michael McNeely and Yvonne s mayne Marsh were appointed .eAorsl'pl Replaces y>» thoseyearis^ln l968 the Board of Regents voted to # 'tfl§^yMICBffilijE-''B '-.Heave the editorship of The Daily Tteon -,"j d >| »rote. "I find myself thinking op-' gUpimisticaUy thai some day the .J pprillnot be secand-dass at the Univers­ , i Sfty. that we wfllhave herein Aostma»­ diversity of h^her learning completriy free ofecooooficandpoliticalshackles." uiid that Others,defend the iibertvotThe Texaa .3, p^l^riai^f^elie:•rrtiaoHnltr:in^oiinWi«S;i on the groods of Voltaire's ^&bhmb philosophy:"Imay not agree with what , v7.7;3*£? •SC"^ .^~, '^k', ,-; v ,-x •».; , „ ^ >. -*EJL- V J--, .,..•» I' S.-.'SCs.'C r-i-rj-**§5^ >*yCUPV SUGAKR . HeGm is >(Bfcrt NMe: IkMm--City Ctudlui U«ll TtcTtm.«i -me ennftsare takes Iran Ltknai ai Mkr tf •t'm*r «f rtt state ss&fsscsc *-jr sgsssssj%ava-.h.^STjSSSS •Miiii» lu»iaaiff fcltwttlKBwi —< jmim'jwilii>>i­ . aificiMljN liNe hnrw IMmiiftT sssssssss jrssasssj cyrig&sgg .kbsbss­ nvtottkirRHiklkK-' «atMSr1iMawS *5""*' *—»,*MW«re*t-Hwfc •* c**^««Wt uo^-watBct «*y few? Had 2ttflMMK**«ria*towMMft • «Wfc-^«PWl oft TrtHm^ytoHhwt. 5<5| . KslSSsse: ,jT*.si=rg?sr js^aftgg ssssa^sa aftte to, kniMt xws raad^oe tawfe'tor so** ^ --' "LLJ^ Ofwiffipwui, t»fe jwair S atotftajtegwsataM^h.l.w-—»>-T^fmm iflni t -­ s gr £BsS&3&m 55" ty,airth»w.'w»a6Itt^ik.tea '. *>*» y^t nft ^«g| t*"jafe *«ny oo^saM jfetae:«e = wi^«»taM)MmtfiK: -SSw^lLSS^w **" «nih> »>t> iiwiwg, amtwltatilkaKftdinb.'nafcfe mjr fcSggSsS. w»j*. atatft «l 1>r Ifiiriimn Hiiiw Kiwi ij-. ^.IfeMt-; Swfe,SfcWR? 4MKtt wi ~wntt I^B Sii ­:»«;ttaliteaaiailke«ntt&»i %^WL fettMt MhkmIi " • 3^^^tMwwwwltiwi 'SSlK.-?­ '^a-v ^ ttaftlftam«Kafe«aiwL,ta da j.JSJ ^»^Tg^;»*fe5!wwfa mssmwwrt'h.iltes^AWk­ w#8y tattw m and hrttamaMfes^Mctn-ttoMk ^*v-C\J& ^ » >aa» a» ny wa l» ««***«^ «K>«nn^R-tfete ^twtw^ *ft«y ':" ma»t«| ttegmktU^ .iknc*H^«iNit«i«t If you're tired of "fast-foods,1? donn hlandness, your raoawute^ ba!(«'a«M9isSde*a0AQCtt» IIIIIM Himaiii'aMii'wiBiit.ai' bailieque,-TV dinners, let us prepare you a custom iwdc Twrfwirh ggad t6ffi«s tft^t wBlk»ta» "" —--ff^ir.ln.; ^ (just like the ones mom made)—full garnished and rrammrit fall of 338S?SKSSS55?5t SEaS5MS&SSMBS£-^ quality meats and cheeses. Don't rush out with your order—eatit at gSKSSgrSSi ^ your leisure in the comfort of the SamWitch shop's uBoBe-T««nT> atmosphere. v^.^.-r . -SSS2S5^SS5S! ­ 5 N-£i!S5^ n*^ >$te %« )m«M^ •*.-­ __ * .. , v „ -»«. -" " 4tM*i If yoa can t have oneofmoo^s good old homemade an^ikkig •wMfc t«w< t*y the SamWitch&hops. It's the next best thing. By the way—if your mom doesn't stuff sandwiches—faring heraba—well shew feet-' »>Biw^»iafcftjj\awri^iWt>%. ^eswet.*•!$<*w -lifciiSftwi igi^.' -• *• • -' > ' ' "~ JL* )WWIlftgWILiHO>»Mt^. 4Htl *«M*& WRK W«(. * f ^^iwwi^wtTfcwgiwirii^ "* JSrS-^ 5i&" •.V . ^5 ;-r=s ^Sssssffl^ 9®e >V»5 ­ YJ0^P^*JT ALAMO \+J~ "V-•^p • '* ^restaurant •j 'ii"1 '• =s&r-5 2^*1*"^ <4a»^k.' -»-" -'* .' ^^-.jiBiifcMfeg-|52te2f5f!^S^ ' V ^ ^ ^i•i •• i i *V; ^IwnrtMft|S^S5T5 S "WH>W8iN.*fc»RIWW>Wu MWB Wnilfcl I*­ aTnrnTi ' ? »»'*<»»b»Oa*~ MV.illaAMtat.ttMk.. ^« .%*• %G s W /lYJ"T*rTrfirrrivfff sssa^s ^•Mfeli^ncM^Mik^ Ss?:t» Cente 7115 Burnet Rd. S.-», sp^sw -I 7'SC ^ SMCS « ?AIMMMMW!|imi ilMi 1006WBBST urost. B-lft; Special I^ication ^lon of Tfc^ D^TeM^ March 1% I^7S ^-jfe ,«t fe*WX»Wl tKU&MS? Itaw ttrtrflwm nsfjimi? te «» aflGto^ ERsdHh OatRr gnvtafe tdrth ^ayniwtl' '.felWMt-afe K>» H«a*eSS WBeeA^? »«w ilees ttw .Shy «w^*fc iK? mi«« 9iws«m«rf6aii off a xte*^ vurittd am& ittffaNjfcfcTHwwiuwft teOfcmftgtamfc gsfttSisift M wiSk Swoitl&ii TOri&ui? ifcttweSe; «& WMfc <*fr*te 8w tortftatt.w «* w*£ *i «**«teaastB«Bcs, % 5&'i Stb gtatarits ba«e 8ne ww»ft^Hg«ftfcgilWwih4; J»w «t«t 88iw (&«s tSe attabmtt «s«^ to jBflninihttanws aad «»S^te*KS..; "f "~r #te tea^t Wriftftg y a* :nt^ $ufr 9-)' wA<6iltelMiw»N so* often w^ totftwstm tfift stttiajig car tit» a Ibr s«K& ikiwiiMidfa -®*ar B99o«Kwma»iais u® to» A*?**!* fcwrtSJ--4fc«« Rdm.^|||h^ 0«WWSjJ5r. is4R uuaD^-Sa«~mQ5y «»q&9«S>, wn «ei' ***..**8 Sftp^fyy>, • • Wftoritens taite StBjsiite qj^ **> fe>«tb» sftatoite towV -^Sk^NMM^S^i^5^'­ tMfr *«ta* «»e mfeCTWUBKn *»s»uMte tn*w& <*» «m». •iwgj!»faates san«tt5% % &sft tit»ins8&i I ««idM «•*»#•»%, swwte*4M& 4te* tnamfens «# tt* C"«*!Ng «ki'vtefe stateofts — sit*wxeewywrnSiBrMi . SWfe fes 1>ife HMIWi. lUfe !b»ww% *««««&& ito ifc. snob})' wdt awnk «mwuitsgfiitltM>w)iii--ii^«e»wAwBAw* AJ* 5® «efetM(r, net '^3 ttHie . <#r aafricimift' Witt muto *ij>ui!«-0) sB«n£%mtts ifiss-(hrftoowst, is tfiott JWO «K * :' *1 Ww«l>w.iL4w.lMtociia^ vseSui&tm «nfl gnwjflfiuuu kS .awfe D»> ^wssi^jrtat. •>*Wl «*»*•«* Ofe W«4 «««e tfbt 8j«eflom SgsBfr tawdh »g> wUtaMtwdifidfaa»dbertHsW& ^tan» a* sadtusti*: ittk 9ft «R «w£*« « liwfewXwHB(yiB«anaa» jw»M»awBmgi^t -«•• A.«-m . . t.i".­ iftW»»»><* in—wi^ji nrt—iuL-w«» : t»»s o* tftfe MRJW-H» iMlt w« Kte «6ad««t­ ^ Kb l^t 4i)lifa. »»» •* »n^wi> wr « fe««. SCMNSMKVQUMONEY) It X our - . --V ^ Austin •&£ tffv> can < •/ -fi * <• ' i 'i Zi£*i*> '­ wmimm r ,-"T* a «•« Ljj-o OU lust -• k on. \V­III the TSP Basement **£>*d copygofs to vifdoacitsplaytarminab; rtt«K*4-v^g<< Country Check Shirt cj-s it-" -X ant I* i m»io»uiiniii; finally totbopiv^ea.•• •fcv"'' * ' "••• • ••-•••• .r,-.\£-". •. n;® if .'s » irrnaav _ ..; rv 1 * -~&£xW$l Editors Recall Issues Parallel to Recent Events \-h ".By ROGER DOWNING Owsw^ba lessobvious only recently, the abrupt Gr-C Dallas. --"i­f'*\ ^* M®®-«»P fi»st foro te ^ pls«^ the injg of University President • Maguire is the executive Texan came off the presses. Texan. Because of The Tex Stephen Spurr has been director of the Ex-Students' f j Seventy-five years and 89 anVantHfietnam war stand debated in The Texan Association TheThhbIsstill . agate came under Investigative journalism • BobHollingsworth, editor ; s4?'erts> tire .'r#m 4!i.e;B,iri of has not been foreign to Texany in 1949, is the vice-presidentk? and lawmakers. •; Regents. _ ' : editors. In 1X0Elam's Texan : and' general mahaeer of the Autlwadic news and lotsof: -'Frank E.-™ threatened to did an investigative series on Dallas Times Herald and : Jt» was thepolicyset^lSOS-doaw^withtbe editorial wetbacks.c Xenima ovei^w president-of the AdvisoryV* 86 Texan EditorJ.C.To«nes page if we wrote anymorean-an investigative series on the Council: poliey of-truthfulness tiwar editorials," Kay poor condition of the.County • Elam is the assistantdean C $ ^J^eswaBsm has been Northcott,etfitorl9©^said. Jail. And Michael Eakin. of the School of Communica­with The Texan ever smce.. , Brwin also threatened to editor from 1973-74, did ah in-lion .^e Texan-became a withhold thenewCommmuca-vestigative series on the -• Ronnie Dugger 'editor CTwa^nCTspaeer earty in tioiOoropiex if theTSP Board Lutcher House, Bjg Thicket from 195951, is the author of ; its life. Edtor George Hin. did not have The Texan stop and Wilding development three books and p-UMy.r of mMI, wlitorialnol for the writing antiwar editorials Past Texan editors have the Texas Observer/ i. format—I 'Of ajonnahsm Nortbcott added, . , become noted writers,'^* William*Willie) MorriC'^ _ aeiwrtmeni and a print shop. -Andy Yemma. editor in reporters and lawmakers: ^'editorfromX95W6. is a New ^ rojuso deranged faatma^r 1970-71,, said that one of his • Lynn f-aiMir^n^ tw^mp 3 York writer, ,; ' -v and corrupt campos goals asTexan editorwas just noted-columnist for Thev • Nbrthcottfe the' editor of £'f;; politics. tosaveTheTfexan because the Dallas Morning News. . the Texas Observer -.'-4-The Union was an issue for regents we threatening notNichols became a jodge • • •Yemma'is a"r«»rter lor£=* Texan editors even i* 19» to renew the TSP charter. ' --a xeponer ior g;».v when then Texan Editor Max . The year IMS saw The Tex­3fs« B. Skeiton criticized a:com-an and its editor, Richard pnlsory Union fee.; Elam. fighting for the admit­jj,f * "At firstitseOTedthat 1337 tance of a black, Hetnan would chieQy beremembered Sweat; into: law. school and state legislator from VPL . ^ ^ ^ " 7'i as the year'which followed Because of his stance. Elam ^v. lSK and pceceded 193B. Then. had~ a*-cross -burned in his L'-fe; camle iffisw *Ji>i». By order of booor at tbe law school. theBoardofRegents'nieTex-Academic.excellence also an was to have a censor,:5o has hesa constantissue with iffer that, state and national The Texan. Editor Jack economic or political MaguireiV I94S-49, saw the qoestions were b^oo a the removal of University Presi­news and eifitorial columns," dent Homer P. Rainey. Yem­writes Gd Hodges, fffitoc-m . ma was faced with the 1SJMJ.-ti-i • •>?. Stlber and, . .:CONGRATULATIONS , Texas Student 'Publication <---on the dedication-of (hie new Communication torn, Economy Engraving Co^ 401W. 2nd x 472-3542 Levi's® Big Bell Bottom. Jeans ^ M450 •-i s ?*! mm && \ft '• Best wishes to the Communication Complex on the dedication of this outstanding facility. mgncrntJ Furniture & Equipment Co., hic^: ^y*.' ..iu: .-i.1.* . ."i jABEL„ 1 , J' STATI0NERS Office Outfit ^•••33^ Furnis1ii^^%W^iraciors ofofficeproducts, furniturer arid equipment tot The Univ ^^sSystemfwy 25years. ^J4t6 CONdlt^VENUE; Spec?al t3edication Section ot DailyTexan w r**^ ^ -V ,4 S t «» * ^ Levi's® Brush Denim Bells Brown •Tan •LtBlue •Navy »\ \ " SHOP ALL •|)lf5HJJlHp*AU•MORTHCROSS *UU.WESTGHE«Mt