t . , > * ' y W mm mm mmm Ullll SiS»llg»ift8S* 11,^ ^ ^ \ < V" i» •WtwtaktaMMa jL s'zM 'U2 ss'-js* »<• w ft t+TM H-J i TEXAN '" i"1 Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Ten Cents Austin, Texas, Monday, March 31, 1975 , No. 172 t Twenty Pages 471-4591 ommufiists Da Nang LeMaistre Vote: ^ Evacuation Halted After Attacks on Rescue Ships 'No Confidence' iGON (AP) — North Vietnamese troops were pois-, „ anchor off Qui Nhon, Nha Trang and other central ports refuses to end its military involvementand interference By BILL SCOTT fyed Monday to assault the few remaining government ,;j that also are crowded with refugees and threatened by in theinternal affairs of South Vietnam," rights? ^'enclaves on South Vietnam's central coast after, cap-',4i,the North Vietnamese-Viet Cong offensive. THE NAVY SHIPS are to join U.S. cargo vessels Texan Staff Writer Yes 3,723 -.turing Da Nang, the country's,second largest city. : isk-t Fighting was reported near Qui Nhon, South Viet-already evacuating people. Britain, Australia and Students gave University System No 347 Chancellor 273 " U.S. military sources sald the evacuationbysea of .v nam's third largest city with more than 200,000 persons. several other U.S. allies also promised ships.. Charles LeMaistre an No Opinion refugees from Da Nang had halted because thfe North = >v? It is 175 miles south of Da Nang and was once a major White House press secretaryRon Nessen said in Palm overwhelming vote of "noconfidence" in No votes 1,427 the March 19 Student Government elec­ 'Vietnamese and Viet COng were firing on the rescue; supply port for U.S. Army units. It was defended by two Springs, Calif., the President hasdirected the American 4. Do you favor the present optional fee tion runoff referendum, results released 'ships. _ South Korean army divisions that withdrew from South ships to "avoid hostilities" and withdraw if fired upon. funding of The Daily Texan? Sunday indicate. $ ; The three-week^old Communist offensive has :cap-' Vietnam after truce papers were signed two years ago. He said theships would be far enough offshore that "it is Yes 1,470 "The referendum ballots, which jiured nearly half of South Vietnam and left behind, n 4 r Demoralized government forces offered little not likely they would come under fire." were No 2,551 -"N destruction, panic' and an estimated two .millionAteresistance. Hanoi claimed the United States was using a not totaled during the election night hand No Opinion 301 refugees. , . , * ^ 5 TWO U.S. MERCHANT marine freighters sailed humanitarian pretext to try to save government troops count because of time pressures,-also No votes 1,448 \r refundable, a NORTH VIETNAMESE broadcasts condemned the . '." from the coast near northern Da Nang Sunday, carrying along thecoast and bolster the morale of the South Viet­show strong support of a 5. Do you favor refundable man­Aa evacuation as a "brazen provocation" and demanded .; more than 9,000 refugees, and it was believed they namese government and military. mandatory Daily Texan fee as opposed datory fee of not more than $.75 per that all American shipsstay away fromSouth-Vietnam, 'v;'. DESPITE FLAT REPORTS by Saigon military of­to the present optional fee system. semester for The Daily Texan? This fee -4 (Related Sloriei, Page 3.) Voters also narrowly approved the A Pentagon/ spokesman said in Washington that two ficials that Da Nang had fallen, Defense Department of­would be refundable the first 12 class therican Navy amphibious craft would arriye off-the. •:$; probably would be the last ones to: escape. ficials-in Washington said Sunday they still had no con-banning of campaign leaflets in future days of each Semester. The Texan would outh yietnamese coast:early Monday; ;buthe gave no t Opposition politicians in Saigon blamed President , firmation the city was lost, and their latest information Student Government contests and re­be distributed under the present system. a it r specificlocation; He Said the vessels "will stand by in; ^ Nguyen Van Tiiieu for the military rout and issued new •; .Was-that fighting was still going on there. The United jected a proposal for a controlled cir­Yes 2,621 culation system for The Texan. International waters offshore and await orders, What calls for his resignation. Some politicians predicted .States no. longer has any official representatives or No 1,145 An Alpha Phi Omega service fraterni­ rthey^will.do will depend: on the situation at the time:'*;' t Saigon itself will fall if he stays in power. " .observers in Da Nang. ' . ' -/ No Opinion 511 ty official, who coordinated the com- The spokesman also said there were reports that the' » ' South Vietnamese forces gave up tens of millions of . Hanoi radio said that many South Vietnamese troops No votes..! 1,493 ppterized tabulation, said the relatively 'J5outh Vietnamese were evacuating someof theeS-dollars, worth of U.S.-supplied weapons, vehicles and and civil servants crossed over to the antigovernment 6. Do you favor an individual subscrip­ high number of "no votes" resulted from tion of approximately $15 per semestertimated 100,000 military personnel trapped by the other equipment in the areas lost to the Communists. side, during the fall of Da Nang and that peopje poured sudden capitulation of Da Nang »' Military sources said no attempt would be made to into the.streets to welcome the Viet Cong. "hundreds of ballots simply not being for the Daily Texan? The Texan would be HE SAID the evacuation possibly involved Viet-retrieve the war materiel. '..•"••7. . itsaid inany government officers "mutinied, punish-marked darkly enough to register on the distributed to each subscriber's a computer." ' namesemarines who wereboardingships in the Marble The North Vietnamese Foreign Ministry said in -ed their die-hard commanders and. came over to the residence. Final results were: Mountain area just'north of .Da Nang that was once a broadcast statement thatPresident Ford'sorder to send , revolution with weapons." Other Saigon troops were Yes 272 large U.S. helicopter base beside the South China Sea. four Navy ships to evacuate people in Da Nang "proves "seized with panic" and subsequently wiped out or 1. Do you favor an investigation by the No 3,699 Texas Legislature into the funding It. appeared that the U.S. evacuation ships could clearly that the U.S. government still very stubbornly taken prisoner, Hanoi said- No Opinion 270 priorities of the University of Texas No votes 1,529System? ' 7. Do you have confidence in Yes Cl 3,823 Chancellor Charles LeMaistre? No 312 Yes 326 No Opinion 271 No : 3,337No votes..,.'..;-..... 1,364 No opinion 616 ambodiah Head To Leave Country 2. Do you favor the banning of leaflets No votes 1,491 in future Student Government elections? 8. Would you like to invite a South Viet­Yes 2,022 namese political prisoner as a guest lec­|PHNOM PENH (AP) -Communist-•*-*"Lon Not did not ask for an-overnight lifoliat Cham Carmon — his presidetpai have cut Off land and sea supply routes No 1,920 turer at this University? insurgents overran a government; stay,'"he said. palace — leave and that tbe-pa^cjlp into the capital. No Opinion 392 Yes 2,610 bsition six miles from Phhom Penh on . Kukrltsaid he expected more Cambo­turned into a hospital -or a.'refugee Insurgents continued to shell the air­No votes.. 1,436 No 1,028 Sunday in their drive against the dian leaders fleeing from PhnomPenh to camp," the general added: Sources said port with rockets and howitzers but did 3. Do you favor self determination by No Opinion 685 icapital's northerndefense line as Presi-come through Thailand. He said former Lon Nol is to be accompaitfedr by .26 not halt the U.S. airlift of rice, ammuni­dormitory residents on 24-hour visitation No votes 1,447 . dent Lon Nol prepared to leavethe coun-civilian and military men.: -* ~ tion and fuel. stry. . .. ° ' .(Related Story, Photo, Page 3.) MANY, CAMBODIAN officials are £. Field reports'saidabolit SO government .. hopeful that Lon Nol's departure wiU ^soldiersabandoned Prek Rangand swara ' Chlef of state Cheng Heng came through .create -a favorable .climate.-for "west across the Tonle Sap River at a '/-Friday and took a plane to Paris, negotiations with the Khmer Rouge. But Departure Seen as Favorable to Possible Peace Talks Israel Terms Egypt's Nonrenewal ^polnt si* miles north of the capitalsThe J;>Kukrit added, he do6s not want many observers. think that the military ^retreatswas followed by ari insurgent--iTfcailand to become a sanctuary for any sittiation^may. be beydnd repair and that ~ -mortar attackonvillagesalong Highway foreign-polltlcalleaders because others Lon Nol's exit may-do nothing to halt Of UN Lv. wai'^S^E1 -? By T%^ A«soSated Press; ' ^rael's fl^b^iciaV cdrfimetat on Sadat's speech; ^Sunday-along'tltenorthernironi^hip: *. Israeli Premier Yitzhak Rabin said Sundajr that Israel~$fould " "Israel will regard as a negative indication the nonrenewal of : take asa','pegative indication" Egypt'sannounced refusa}{o ex-the U.N forces' mandate, or the alteration of its tiinespan/' Jej^LonWol irtorea&'ffietftl! govambiit tend the tjiandate Of 'U.N;: peacekeeping forces in th«Sinai,rk.Rabin said it.was "vital that theUnited States pursueits peacfe-iV tftamojsaid.'; •.;-pr&ident While jibroad. A-highly.placed war planes^ bombed insurgent positions Desert for more than three months. t I, Seeking efforts in'the Middle East." 4} riNol senta' cable'tothe'' generalsaid military officers-hope to as elements of three brigades'-aid®a Rabin was displeased atEgyptian President AnwarSadat'san-'' Rabin's statement, at a special cabinet session in Jerusalem/"'5 ai Foreign Ministry askingfor permis-. use Lon .Nol's absence to work with paratrooper unit plugged up one defense nouncement in Cairo on Saturday that he will renew the U.N. ignored Sadat's announcement that he would reopen the Suez' 'J? |ion to land at Utapao-Air Base in Preittiei^-Long Boret to forge a. united ' gap-W&-peace force's mandatefor only three months. rather than thesix--Canal on June 5 after an eight-year shutdown. The Suez Canal outhern Thailand to get a connecting front,that Would bolster the government -f EIGHT PERSONS' were wounded'-in month periods the peacekeepers have been given by the U.N. Authority on Sunday ordered 24-hour shifts for its employes to Jto,Jakarta. Kukrit said an lndon^-: position 4n .possible peace iiegotiations '-the rocket attacks at the airport.which Security Council until now. ' ready the 103-mile waterway for traffic and said transit tolls' . .. .... —?oU 'With.the Khmer Rouge. „ is the'Only.Unk to.the outside world'for: •.-."The maintenance of the U.N. forces in their present form & would be increased 50 percent because of inflation. Tolls in-1967' >-f»to Jakarta. ' Sei, r & t "'^^Vthat ^th^aroita^Legy " iCaguered Pluiom^lPenh. The,.rd>eli part of the overall framework of the disengagement, were about$1 per ton for loaded vessels and 45 centsfor unloaded: agreements" separating Israeli and Egyptian troops, Rabhrsaidi vessels. 7 Vie in Editor Preference Poll , Seven candidates will compete in the 76. ' automatically be named editor, Grace " April 9 preferential poll for the Under the rules of the poll, any of the said "in all past preferential polls over /,editorship of The Daily Texan as a result eight candidate Qualifications may be the past three or four years, the winner, n -of a last-minute filing surge. waived by seven affirmative votes. as far as I can tell, has always been • . :Candidates for the post are Barry > Though the high vote getter will not named." . -.^Boesch, Willard Hall, Curtis Leister, "Scott Tagliarino, Mario Villanueva, yMary Walsh and John Watkins. The nonbinding poll, which will aid the "Texas Student Publications Board of .' Operating Trustees In selecting an' ^ editor, could finally resolve the two months of uncertainty which has left the final outcome of the editor's race hang­ing. • Swimmers . . . The TSP Board will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday in theTSP Building,fourth floort studio, to certify candidates'. The Texas, swim team,T jaw? , The poll was announcedafter Universi­lead by senior All­ty President Ad Interim Lorene Rogers ilsi refused March 17 to approve the board's Americas Bob Rachrier earlier decision to hold a second election and Dick Worrell, gavef6Uowing the.disqualification of editor- the University its highest elect Bill Garland. finishing varsity team of Minutes,of TSP Board meetings do not take effect until approved by the Univer­the year over the weekendfiit§ sity president, under the 1971 Trust in Cleveland with a 15th Agreement between TSP and the System place NCAA finish. Texarl Board of Regents. staff writer Ed English In a letter to TSP Board President Lee : Grace, Rogers said the board could, has the story on Page 11. Cloudy ... among its other options, hold a nonbin­SO.Sfold dihg preferential poll to "advise you in Monday's forecast calls Work^ft unloading airlifted 5upplie5. i« <; your appointment" of an editor for 1975-for increasing cloudiness throughout the day becoming warmer Mon­ infaster Deaths day night. Monday's high kt will be tn the mid-60s with M a low Monday night in^the low 50s. Winds Monday * will be southerly at 6 to 16 mph. .. R^Police, Chief George JicNally termfed:& the the scene "a bloody mess" ; • > v " i both John Spear, wholives acrossthe street Friedman ... jjoopis, police s^id , ^Irom the Ruppert houses said his $yeai> v; The. Texan ^endorses Jeff ;'old daughter delivered an Easter basket Ihe children'^ uricle' Jgl Police said^they recejyed a{telephone Friedman for mayor of in ,\he about 8 p m, CDT from a roan who the house liUotffilrtiMerikiff i^nftVri! hliCwtfo Aimn i '• 6all B o m man >A° ,..^rting.'-.Mrs. &s charged ^ith11 £0' :the( Cifry.of Austin. aid there' wer^ de^d "beople^ bi the* yuppert told the girl he^, famUy was oiice aid'/J* tuppert house i ) iftK • »«MiilngforEaate4li»««^«f^ptet^ (Editorial,' Paige 4.) 1 ' — » -»•' ^ « "»• vTH Another of Mrs Ruppert's (neigl^rSi:# " 'f Pn1lr«i In flOArulnb> cm Uip u-*. ........ .. %2M*B 'SIMM mgrngSBmsagm ^» ** 3$ Pre#-* < • T J? V-LA. * ywat #a4 l i • to -.x siderably more hard newsthan the%st Haldemanprogram last As in the lastshow, Haldeman insisted he wasjnnocoftof the" Wi '• i. •. ,. ... „ ; , , Watergate cover-upi butthistimehe gavea rare hintofhisper­/' ironicaiiy it began with clips of the Wlute House home sonal torment when asked if he'd ever considered pleading euil-A $10,000 "Recognition Anderson .is a former U.S. The gift, which Anderson board chairman; explained movies which he took in his days of power underRichard Nixon ty just to get it'0ver'with|and ^tart arieW afterwards Award" has been awarded to secretary of the Navy, designated for the law school, and closed with Haldeman'sgrimlj_expressed hope thathiscon-YES, REPUED Haldeman; who is appealing his convicUon that the awards were made to the University-School of Law secretary of defense and is part of a CIT program to recognize "a special debt to viction on Watergate cover-up charges will be overturned and: He said he has up.a $4W^)0Q legal tab for his Watergate by the CIT Financial Corpora­seo-etary'of the Treasury un­honor contributions of direc­the institutions of higher he won t go to jail. ^d^^laWfl^^on.the jrest:of my earningsfor the: tion to honor 1932 law school der President Dwight tors, officers and chief ex­our One home movie excerpt, taken when the 'Watergate-iit; rest of my life.'iSi^ o education from' wbich alumnus Robert B. Anderson. Eisenhower, as Well as a ecutives, of ifs main sub-directors and/ principal ex­V^'ecnnla^ j.f-beginning, was sheer gallov^hurhor. : l>fel jfgtiilfy>6uldnotbfe truthful or Anderson, who also taught former-member of the Texas sidaires. IT SHOWED the wife of Joliii my.jpart, and sa'l'cab't'jdo it" ft ecutives have received t|eir in the law schoolin 1933, isthe Legislature' and chairman of Walter S. Holmes Jr., CIT degrees. domestic adviser, grinning and hdlding up a newspaper;when The tw<^pa^ih^iewin P16 break-in at the office of Daniel Ellsberg'sP^chiatrUt:.fe:0penS:^Ofl|j6|r.,/orvFoOef V&lifjOFS American Los Angeles. • Association for ". Affirmative Action (AAAA) conference at Unlike we ' ' " ~ ~ (UstanMfi^in^Uwcurb:; the Joe-C., Thompson Watergate ta^es, ^io-itheipibperty lirieisHS feet Haldeman saying: Pickin' St Sippin' last Conference Center.. alottg 26th Street," Wilcox -• Nixon discussed the possibility of appointing J^G>nnally recognized by tlie University said. The conference is designed as vice-president long before scandal touched'Spiro' Agnew last ifor to provide affirmative action week-, thus^-assuring The sandwich vendors were because Agnew was frustrated ahd thinking of resigning during Salvation Sandwiches the-. -removed 'from the corner by administrators ' In higher ' education and business firms his first term. ''' right to sell'at that location. University police in • Secretary of State Henry Kissinger threatened ; to quit Physical ' the opportunitytogain andex­ ' University Plant •September but returned two "quite a few" times, "some major times and Som4 itiinor Director William' Wilcox weeks ago when they.learned • change infonnationl to assist (times)," while he was Nixon's chief national securi^adviser. produced a map which shows of the city propertythem in implementhig. their ' own programs..Approximate­• He thought W. Mark Felt, a former high FBI official was-the line 'of demarcation University Vice-Presidents-", ly 4,000 administrators have '.'Deep Throat," the: mysterious Watergate source for between University ahd city. for Business Affairs .James ' .Washington Post, newsmen • Carl Bernstein?;an4 /Robert property.,7 -" •' Colvin said the 26th Street ^— been invited to attend. reopening will not affwt the ; other sandwich locatloi^: ai .s '"'the Art Buildiiig and HOLY .Littlefield Fountain which ..' were s-also closed in 'CROSS |&5eptemt>er. V "There is no right of way on San Jacinto Boulevardor 23rd BROTHERS • Street. Even though: tee city. others Share a; fife of prayer »;iuses San Jacinto. it is a ^ •"Yip-: and work, for Christ, University street," Co}vin ex-^ as social • , A mere$2.50buys good music, alfthe beer teachers, [ -plained, . ;• •workers, cooks, etc.S b)oi> v > Salvation Sandwichesowner, £ you can , drink, and a better chance for a ^Roland DeNpie i»uld not bey A Formore infonnatwn. j. ,oW/, reached forcbmih^itSunday^* ^ progressive City Council? --^ ' . 1 write to: mm andpineapple juice. Provincial Office ­ MSIliEll3 SCHOLZ' — 1607 SanJacinto . Tuesday 8 p.m. , Vocation Dept. R: for old gold high P£~P»L Adv. pa, for by Student* for Margret Hofmann, Bi Pmak 'dmirpenon. ' St.y'E)dward's . Empyreal!• ^ school rings, |H s -• i* J ai ^ ndqtr^WW.lfth. ; >i". ^^ereity graduation rings otc^ CHARLES LEUTWYLER Justin, 78704 C19MJ i.,IWC:.MIWFL.gQUI^8OPROOf.-0O^€MftjO!'IS A TWDEM^K OF JEWELERS At 55950, the,new Advent/2 loudspeaker is ,7iI -meant tomake it possibleforpeople with fveiy limitedbudgets who usually wind up ®.iii &with inferioj-soundingstereo equipment^ i that only looks like the realthing, tobujfe something reajly wonderful. -'I.' .. . <1. . * • •. ' .' • v>''ifThe majorityofpeople who --tamplifiersandreceivers Abud-.for a fake woodgrain finish but 1#^®hop forstereoequipmenthave " getstereoSystem could then forareally graceful moldedcab-• x P l§|*300°r less tospend.Andmost ^ becomesomething thatmost : inet which will look new and 1^5^thern windupwith inferior-r people would bedelighted with . beautiful (given a little soapand ' p '-soundingequipment that looks for a lifetime. water everyso often)for yearsto a lotmore real thanitsounds&p^-:. • come. ' "• 5' /The Advent/2succeedsin meet­|?^—e Advent/2speaker systeni;^.'' ing thatobjective. Itd«jes sonot If you're wondering who Advent; Jjtli%j^waSdesigned tochange.thatsifefe only becauseitsdesign is the is tomake these claims^we sug---r-fl> A o* i.WvMation.i Advent was8urethej®5^?result of twenty yearsofexperi- ImMrn gest you ask aroundamongf«'«ft-$rt f? ence in thedesign of high-per­ fnends who knowstereoequipsJ#.' Igfprmancespeakers, butbecause ment. Advent isa leader in |^hatdesign includesbasic ' stereo components,and while?-;fp ' ^^peaker components thatare m they don'tdoalot ofAdvertising ' . •Mthose of^heusual low-cost i «ffi . smuchmore expensivethan and sell theirequipment only' s' through thefairlysmallnumber • I-^.speaker; Advent wasable to of dealerswho theyfeel hayethe -' ^ jfgmake that addedinvestment (in: knowledge anddisplay facilities' WM: ^drivers thatare actuallycom-.ytodo themjustice, theirprodr^i':; t gparable to thosein speakers of ;i ;uctsare bestsellers:Nothing%i>K A^twice the price) outof con-: they makeis*less thanexcellent, k^fidencein thenumber of jv < •: and theirword-of-moiith repur v J;^dvent/2's theycould sell.We: tation issecond to nobody*S. I'^Son't expect thatifieinferior' •/stuff will disappear, but wedo ; 'Because of the'Adven£^2 you^j /fexpect to s^ll alot ofAdvent/2's " can now, forbetween $275ahcCT ;,4:once people begin tohear and $350 (dependingon which ofthe . m ' #talk wouttfaem:-^ several excellent record-played I '""•y ^ ''• '•» : and receivers you buyit with,)..% buy acompletely satisfying f sfereoisystem. Nota"starter'yf";­ :system or.a compromise, buta^' *real and^continuingdelight / r| v- mm­ eiiBjpe.--' "... .­ M • lff its reglllkr pffedufing this m V week. Choose from silver, gold, jippfier, enameled, elephant ^air, ,turquoise, ^ strAuu ninety A •«.J ' « ^ T # f- K —t'v* WW \ ^^ge^Monday, Anarch 3T>tl975 THE'DAILYTfiE3pU-rV i-Va-'-j, ?,* —UPI Tcfepnoto Cambodian Tragedy A Cambodian government toldier tries to push back curious onlookers after the execution of d military policeman who robbed a Chinese shop. Military sources Sunday said Cambodian rebels continued to. mount pressure on Phnom Penh's fragile defense perimenter amid some reports that-govern­ment troops were refusing to defend the besieged city Rout /Immense Tragedy7 PALM SPRINGS,Calif. (AP)-Presi-, would come under Aire. But if they do, 'dent Ford considers the fallof DaNang, they would withdraw." South Vietnam's second largest city, to NESSEN : ANSWERED newsmen's be "an immense human tragedy," White questions 'in this desert resort where House press secretary Ron Nessen said Ford is vacationing as reports from Sunday. ->• . " Saigon said the Viet Cong on Sunday had But Nessen added: "It is the' denounced asa "d«eptivetrick"a U.S.­President's desire-that this,evacuation ... led^effort to: organise a: siralift of go forward." ' -»* refugees from Da Nang. The Viet Cong Ford ordered on Saturday that U.S. threatened topunish allactsof encroach-naval trajnspqrts and contract vessels •ment upon their sovereignty, according assist in ©«Matlop.of refugees fronrOa;-,; to a Community spokesman In Salgpn. Nessenwas ask^'Fort'sreaction over.: , thefallpfpa'Ningto^iitouriityforcesr. troops early Sunday "f ret#"don't hive,anything'to give ' AYING lie was reflecting you because the information we have is ilSiews;said the fall of Da very -sketchyh because-there are no Vang "has cruelly trapped many hun-Americans left in Da Nang," the pressSreds of thousands of South Vietnamese secretary-replied. — refugees who tried until thelast moment HE SAID that Ford !><»,-The case-was defeated.^ from Congress<"unscathed." ! ' /Another recurring issue is that of Paula Latimer, Universitylaw student women in combat and women and the iand ERA ^supporter, said, "Its draft. ^proponents were opposed to any Holman said ''Under the ERA, "young attempts to make any exceptions " If -women will have to registerfor thedraft was thought-"they (the modifications),' and would be drafted if the draft, is would lead to an eventual defeat for the reinstated.!' <, ,k. , whole-amendment" fallowed, t-A1dave> s • s'a ia, .< individual i Regarding. _ the specific issues cited; characteristicsare tobe thedetermining some will happen wlth-rtftiflc&Uon and "4-Jaqtor'^of who would i*drafted under,jome will not. The most oft-raised issue v the ERA. "It may increase the opposl-Js that of.uni&x toilets, to the reinstatement of the draft,' vf' Latimer said* "This iwould not be J""'J'•••tw/u- i '• '8ffec|ed ty-thl ^nendment as ihe right p"" ' ,\n Dnvacy fsgiiaranteed by the Subftme.^f31*^Congress ,from drafting women ' aWshaA.en.rw^would waste f^ombTiCpJfyTcd Xr J whiehflCcompanytiiem. tl^n^ed with^the Ihe -ConstiUh -T-a-,. W." ytJf tm VHMOW peera ui agree, tott«»ws'undei: Mie pnvueges^too. TOeyO,want-to b? .thejERA^.Th^i.lsa [porn®^Ungsta^q,*-" -—l"i -J '—' —ul —-J sSBSSsBs® By PETER ARNETT AP Special Coorespondent SAIGON (AP) — The militaryslippage by the South Vietnamese government • has been so unexpectedly widespread in recent weeks that informed western and Vietnamese sources believe a major ,Communist assault against thecapital of Saigon could not be adequately resisted. These sources,' who see the push against Saigon asinevitable, believe that President Nguygen Van Tnieu's power "base among senior military officers is being rapidly undermined and that political changes could swiftly follow more Communist successes. THIEU MIGHT be seriously challeng­ed, these sources believe, either by ger&rals who believe they can better ral­ly the will of the military forces to resist An AP News Analysis the Communists, or by other senior of­ficers who see reopened negotiations with the Communist aide as the only way to avoid complete disaster for South Vietnam. But whatever the future political course for Saigon, the Communist's northern offensive has already, reversed • the tenitorial picture in South Vietnam. • Before the month-long offensive * began,.the Communists controlled about one-third of Vietnam's 66,000 square miles, including just one.whole provincel NOW THEY control the bulk of the country, including 13 of the 44 provinces and 74 district towns. ,, Major cities have become easy prey for the Communist side: On Sunday, the second biggest city in the country; Da Nang, fell. Others along the coast are also crumbling. The fate of the port city of Qui Nhon is in the balance, and western military analystssee littlechoice for Thieu but to write off all the coastal enclaves, in-* eluding the attractive port city of .Nha Trang. If this happens,Saigon will virtually be the front Une. Many observers fear:that the defense of the capital might be as chaotic and fruitless as that of Da Nang in the far north. • The extent of the military debacle in the north is only now becoming clear. OF THE 52,000 soldiers in the foiur in­fantry and marine divisionsin the north, the 1st Division with its 13,000 men has . disappeared, only 4,000 Second' Division troopers have been4aved andtheyare on the water heading south in barges. The 3rd Division defending Da Nang has alsodisappeared, and only6,000 men remain of the elite marine division that fielded l3,000 soldiers. . ^ Two ra^W:gipups of about 3,500,men­have disappeared; ^ '• bi addition there--were thous&nds'Vofr local lhilitiaihen in the north who either threw-their guns, away and joined the ^.refugees or were captured. The earlier debacle in the central. highlands resulted in only 37 men sur­viving from the 13,000-man 23rd Infantry Division that was destroyed at Ban Me Thuot. ­ The South Vietnamese equipment losses so far are staggering: A total of 600 trucks, 400 jeeps, 255 ar­mored personnel carriers, 60 M48 tanks, ­150 105 mm howitzers and 60 155mm howitzers. Most of these were reportedly left • the traditional role of women, but they see the ERA threatening-this." "If rights are extended," Latimer con­ tinued, "there is not reason to have protections. The draftis in this category. Less than 1 percent of military jobs are in Combat, and less than' that are in the front lines. , "There is some goiid job training in­ volved, and women stand to benefit from the experience. We owe it tothe country as much as men do," Latimer said. "It's a right to be patriotic. We honor men, we consider them heroes; but we have not given women the same oppor­tunity," she said. The women in oppositiqn to the ERA see the collective effect of the draft and the legalization of homosexual marriages as destructive to the family system. • ... Under the ERA, she said, the husband and wife would be equally 'responsible for the children "Men and women both have roles," she said. "The male's is that of the provider and protector and that of the-female is the bearer and nur­turer ' "They are good roles and the way God planned things Humans try to twist things around to their own liking" Holman added, '"nie amendment is not going to make it afiy different" "Its demise depends more on social developments than -passage of the -amendment" she, said ­'• opponents' literature states that the- ERA would force a woman to work Latimer,said, the ERA would equalise the duty^of suppprt, but the duty of sup­port 'is^ ; in court. The court has previously refused to interfere ­in^^oing marriage. , '. -"To leriforc'e equal 'support, the housewife .wodlil ihaye. to be given jMononii^Jjriejkplained. V » *> ' 1 < . "• .the 'spouse worttnfe outside the homlnn­ behind intact. of men. They need to train 50,000 men to two. brigades of the airborne division. In addition to these were the hundreds make up the losses. The communists have arrayed against of vehicles used by militia and ranger With one-third of the Vietnamese army them in the jungled war zone just north forces and the scores of guns lost at destroyed and another infantry division, of the city five infantry divisions ai;d a militia outposis and camps in the the 22nd at Binh Dinh province on the possible sixth, and a formidable array of highlands and in the northern corps central coast, in danger of annihilation sapper, armor and antiaircraft units. region. from advancing Communist forces, The reasoning that led Thieu to aban­ THE EQUIPMENT losses were worth Thieu and his military commanders are don first the central highlands and then , tens of millions of dollars, but even the left with minimum of forces to defend the far north was that his forces were unlikely miracle of their complete Saigon. hopelessly outnumbered by the Com­ass.­replacement would be of little help to the Three infantry divisions— the 5th, 18th munist side. He is now also outnumbered South Vietnamese because of the losses and 25th — protect Saigon, along wjth at Saigon. Sihanouk Seeks Conciliation all8f With Khmer Rouge Rebels NEW YORK (AP) — Prince Norodom to Cambodia would hinge on acceptance 30-room mansion that once was the Sihanouk has put his once extravagant of himy by the rebels who are trying to French embassy in Peking. life in order and would like to reign again overthrow Cambodia's government. Sihanouk was welcomed in China by as a symbol of unity in Cambodia, People said on hand People the other the Premier Chou En-lai. who recognized his magazine reports. prince does not fear being killed by the possible usefulness as a figurehead ruler "Before, I spent too much timeplaying Khmer Rouge, "if that is the price of in Cambodia. Chou has bankrolled the with my mistresses," People quotes the having them liberate Cambodia." prince ever since, People said. 52-year-old prince, who lives in Peking, Sihanouk as Cambodia's ruler was People said Sihanouk despises his past as saying. "Now, I am like Buddha. I am criticized for living a corrupt, ex­and has taken to denouncing the presentfaithful to my wife. I have no love adven­travagant life. He was married six Cambodian regime for the moral declinetures, no sports cars and no dancing par-times, had 14 children and, said People, of Phnom Pehn. ties." once kept '•'scores of tall, shapely mis­ "Perhaps I encouraged a general joie Sihanouk was ousted as . Cambodia's tresses." de vivre," Sihanouk was quoted as say­ chief of state in a1970 coup. Oncea foeof Now, he liveswith his cun-entwife, the ing, "but orgies — never! Thecity is like the insurgent Khmer Rouge, the prince half-Cambodian, half-Italian Princess Pompeii before the volcano." acknowledged in the interview his return Monique, and their two children in the ' •%) •B IMil Texas Retains 55 mph Limit; . r:£l ' -'sKl .."31 ' *. ItaI House Approves Prayer Bill Last-minute passage of a bill exten­prayer or meditation for consenting state-owned lands without previous ajK ' ding the 55-mile-per-hour speed limit and students passed the Hwse by voice vote proval of the Texas Railroad Commis-: House approval of a silent prayer bill and was sent to the'Senate. sion and to give state law enforcement: highlighted activities last week in the The House also passed bills to prohibit officials a pay increase effective in Texas Legislature. the interstate sale of natural gas from September. Avoiding the possible lossof more than $300 million in federal highway funds, both the Senate and House voted to adopt a conference committee version of a bill Former Solon Aide to extend the55 mph speedlimit. Had the measure not been passed, the old highway speed limit of 70 miles per hour «§:! To Resign UT Post iSf [ would have become effective Tuesday. • -VX-1 In other Senate action, an article-by­artlcle constitutional revision plan and A former campaign aide toState Rep. -Although Head confirmed he,had ,r'i\ the presidential primary bill were Fred Head will step down from his visited with, Cannon, he.said, his vn ' I reported out of committee back to the specially created University post recommendation of McWilliams wasnot full Senate. ~ . because of "pressing business problems an abuse of power. The Senate State Affairs Committee , in Houston," aspokesman for University "I told him I had a perSon I was w^ll Voted to send Jasper Sen. Don Adams' System Chamcellor Charles LeMaistre acquainted with who would do a good jbbversion of the so-called Bentsen bill back said. • i-v for the University of Texas," Head said. 11' to the Senate after hearing-only four Jim McWilliams, who coordinated the In addition to his LBJ School xl;hours of .testimony. Like its counterpart public relations effort for< Head's Un­ a McWilliams holfls sTUraversity 'Sy in the House, the bill provides.for successful campaign er speakership of position, which alsowill beleft vacantby. winner take all method of choosing the House last fall,'was hiredfor aseven-the resignation. delegates to the national nominating con­month study of Texas higher education ventions. Cannon said McWilliams was qualified policy to be conducted from Feb. 1 to An attempt to salvage the work of last for the job and added, "Realistically, -"i* i Aug. 31 by the Lyndon Baines Johnson year's Constitutional Convention was when any powerful official comes by, School of Public Affairs. you listen." reported favorably from the Senate Head, chairman of the House Higher BUI! *)£ 1 Committee on the Texas Constitution, He termed the higher education policy, Education Committee and a member of following similar action by a House com­study "something we were delighted to the House Appropriations Committee, 1 mittee. If approved by the Legislature, do" and said he bad felt no pressure to J1 recommended the hiring of McWilliams the revised Constitution would go before hire McWilliams. ' 1IfSi to LBJ School Dean William B. Cannon. • the voters in November. Under the new budgetarysystem in the McWilliams holds a PhD from the I Houston Rep. Tony Polumbus' silent House, the Higher Education Committee University in education and was 1S* 11 prayer bill to give teachers the option of is given the power to recommend budget academic dean of Lee College In .providing classroom time for silent levels forstate£j>Ueges and universities. Baytown for five years. ERA? news capsules —— Cost of College To Rise 6 Percent the person/earning the money has com­ plete control. NEW YORK (AP) — Swept along "with spiraling inflation, tlje Under the ERA the duty of support nationwide average cost of college in 1975-76 will be 6 to 8 percent higher "would require either both the husband than in 1974-75, a recent survey showed. t and wife or neither one to provide sup­ The College Entrance Examination Board said that an analysis of port-, she explained. Another argument advanced by the op­reports from 2,400 colleges and other postsecondary institutions showed ponents of the amendmentis that itis un­that average total expense budgets will rise next year by about 8 percent necessary Holman said. "We don't need for studentswho.live on campus and 6 percent forstudents whocommute. the ERA — laws and executive orders provide for women to fight for equal op­ 3 Prisoners Flee Smith County Jail S:.l portunities-in jobs and education." She cited-several pieces of legislation TYLER (UPI) — Police searched from Texas east to Florida Sunday- of this type Including the 14th Amend­for three of five men who sawed througha quarter-inch thick steel platein ment/the Civil RightsAct of 1964 and the their Smith County jail cell and escaped. Equal Opportunity Act of 1972. Two of the men hired a taxi, for $50 for a ride to Dallas,100 miles to the In refuting' this argument, Latimer east. Officers said the third escpaee was possibly fleeing to Alabama or cited action under Title IX of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Florida. Deputies unintentionally gave one escapee a ride to the edge of "There is no step toward enforce­Tyler. ^ ^ 's ment, judging from the HEW record in the past," she said."The enforcement is Lester MacJdox Stars in Motion Picture sorry, and they have yet to withold LOS:^GfeLE$ (UPI) — Former Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox in his money from an institution for sex dis­ first actingrole the costar ina motion picture for television titled "The* crimination.":' s Kansas City Massacre." Maddox plays the role of governor of Oklahoma Regarding federal employment dis- in the year 1933, and the story involves the governor's efforts to capture enminationj: Latimer said,"Of military jobs, less than 2 percent are held by the "Prfetty Boy"Floyd gang which had been robbing banks in Oklahoma .women. Theyareseekingmen but havea and Missouri; Below, Maddox scolds.actor Phil Burns, who plays an waiting Jist for women to get in. Oklahoma highway patrolman. Latimer said-the.argument-that the 14th Amendment is. adequate^stemmed from the opinion that women arenot dis­ criminated against. "Urid,er the 14th Amendment, courts have deprived women of the right to vote, control their owp earnings and go fo law school." Aldpve said the court had "upheld the differential withholding of tenure and promotions and differential treatment in • ' the Navy" under the 14th Amendment. ,Why is an amendment needed rather-' than1 stat&tory revision?!,''' -, 'x . , Aldave said, "The amendment ihas generated enough controversy*If it Isnot ? passed, it will mean a defeatCfor ' women> rights becatijK.ojf.its,symbolic, significance. The amendment would enshrine the principles intotheCohstitu? tlon sowell-meanihe men dnhfttliut11 «i ­ -wit ir ftWMlWC octor> Philflurn 2k*i. 'KV t V :5 'raEDAn^;TQCM>r page;3a' HI -gdi : ""4if *" •Xv 1 fvge<4& A.%" ' -" ?1, -tf* i- EDITORIAL! -i$k Padje 4 Monday, March. 31, 19/5 kAKiV*jji " That headline should come aS no surprise. What other candidate could •• we endorsefor niayor? Couldwe endorseCouncilman Bud Dryden, a man : we have rarely agreed with, if everT'Sr how about Raymond Donley,"the perennial candidate who also happens to be a minister, a mobile home dealer and aformer adult moviehouse owner?Or how about BobGarrett, • the standupcomedian, who says,"I'm good... I'm real good ... you know why I'm good? ...well, I'll tellyou why I'm good... I was born that way." No, we endorse CouncilmsuiJeffrey M. Friedman — the University law / school graduate, the onetime "voice of the radical element," the one of two people on the short end of all of those 5-2 council votes — to be the . next mayor of Austin. ­ What may not be so obvious to you is how important this election is. • Dryden is a viable candidate; he isoutspending Friedman, and many feel the race is 50-50. And if Friedman dbesn't win, this city will not have the leadership it needs in this most crucial time. Austin is rapidly growing from a pleasant little town to a metropolitan area. How this growth is regulated will determine whether this city will lose its charm and environment in the process. Already, under the plutocratic leadership the city has suffered for the last four years — a • leadership Dryden has followed — the city has lost large portions of Bar­ton Creek to private development, has allowed public bridges across wild, areas of Shoal Greek and a major highway through Zilker Park and has planned streets and new developments that clash with the peace of old •91 J h tW 1 t t* j Domino theory < • /VWJ' P| |||fc:Uie e«Htor: igoal, I'll be satisfied to know everyone * '-/ To Mr.'Luis Delgado. f • can't be "chief;" someone has to play -4 So wtat's wrong with pushing mops^ the "indian." During the meantime, I'll . and brooms? What if you had to get to carry my cross .with a smile knowing ; jdm in a hurry and you'd have to I've tried to live clean and upright or wade through.debris-and.filth? ^believing and practicing fairness to all t ifwhen you get toyour destination I'll also rest with the assurance that at get settled on the throne and dist the end of my life. I will be a winner er there's no tissue there?!could go Rnby Gandre and on, with what ifs. Ann Landers Building Attendant once this in hercolumn. poce made tnisstatement m ber colanm/:r^T^;: #It'snotthe job that'slousy, j iSfJtSSSPJra'arS fcv Reliaion helps, job e. -Housework is':not lowly demeaning slavery. Good housekeeping To the editor: Is an art and when done^well it can.be.a |Si^I am writing about Leslie Spinks' arti Jource of pride and satisfaction ssfi'cle ui Pearl magazine, "Scientology — j.Some folks poke fun because janitors. i;«-the Rising Cost of. Salvation.'' I am a IT? T^ ^tion a^ncy- AviU ux) who once wrote^ Adjusters, Inc , and mi 1W0uld llke to state that without scien­ beCome 1116 nportance of our works as for the love 4'^^^dent'of Xsfirm ith which they ar^done" ' r" i neighborhoods.1; ; • We are not saying that Friedman will save the city from growth's ravages; he would be oneof many we would expect to help. We aresaying this: if Diyden is elected, then Austin will continue on the same path it has followed Roy. Butler down. Friedman has made mistakes. His nonstand on the nuclear power issue was dearly one of thV reasons we are to be blessed with our own atomic waste someday. And many of his recentactions have beenquite mediocre because of his political worries; his answer to our editorial questions a month ago was weak at best.. But — all in all — Friedman is worth a trip to the polls. He isgood. You want to know why h'q's good! Well, we're going to telhyou. First, his four-year council voting record is almost impeccable. Before Bob Binder joined hini on thecouncil, Friedman often stood alone onsuch issues as replacing Police Chief Robert Miles and kefiping th'e D^ag yen­dors.on the Drag.' As of late, Friedman has received iitile support on his tough financial disclosure and ethics law and his study for flat utility, rates. -:r-•. ;v.. Friedman was in Favor of later drinking-hours, he voted to halt the city's Utility rebate system that taxed the citizens for business' sake, he voted against the Ninth Street extension that rah through a natural greenbelt and exposed a neighborhood to traffic, he voted against the Wilding development, he voted for council pay, he voted to cut the budget While you were By BUCK HARVEY Many students travel to Fort Lauder­dale, to Padre Island or to Lake Travis for spring break. Me, I get Dallas. • But the week wasn't boring for me. I read the Dallas Mor­ning News every day -i and cherished thes society page and* Paul Chime. 1 ran roughshod over all of those new freeways?) and knew that this must be Joe Terhus': dream. And — best ^ •' "* of all — I had aninteresting timeviewing the Dallas City Council races. Up there, the majority of the conser­vatives call themselves Conservatives.It is a status thing. And the "lightest" group of all is the Citizen's Charter Association — an Austin Citizens League with money and peoplesthat has spent v ->$150,000 on its slate: v. . <<.. ;,There are few progressive candidates opposing the .CCA; Instead, the incum-g ..bent mayor r-a formersports announcer": — runs around passingantiporn lawsand screaming that he is ready to sell out to business. He doesn't: realize the CCA is the business Of course, Austin is different. We don't have anyconservabv.es; exceptfor aBen Blond or two. Last-time'I heard, Bad Dryden and Jay Johnson were moderates. And, damn, Bob Gray is now a basic liberal Unfortunately,. Austin .as -more like Dallas than you would think. In Big D, there arefew issues;everyoneis leaning.' toward the right. In Big A, there ate few issues: everyone is leaning toward the It too, ^m a mop and broom pusher, £ Scientology has enabled me to change »£ "despite the storm of protest from-" mtj'm ^iat you'd call a "gringo" or / bfe from a meaningless day-to^ay |University students " Not only does this ^hoi*y." I've had 11 years of super-" .^^dstence, to a life witha purpose anda^ p. remind me of the Sixties when Erwin1 sojy experience. Maybe I sound con-A ~ ^ used to call anyone who'disagreed with ited \yten Isay Icould handlesupervi-+3% I also'highly protest Spinks' in-{|| him a "liar" or a "Communist,but it as well -of better, than most Fve ?^inuations that Scientology is not a true alsolgnores the fafct that -there pre k *ved. I,..^o,..feel I've, been disrSj^/eligion and that it sayd nothing about bunch of us alums, too, lyho didn't think Jitaated against, more times, than I.-r.sthe "existence of a god. Obviously, her iSterling wapgood enough for the Umver-:-. 5,to remember EveiTthough having research on this matter has not' been $-1 sity. ~ '' „t toudfied, fvealways do myv"yery good, or else she feels^that thep And then all this stuff about Elrnin'^ ib well and.try to abidaiiy the Golden ? -Supreme "Court doesn't knOW what it's M love Jor the Universit>'< How does' "5, "to do taito othersas rwould have " , talking about Because in the early '60s, Erwin characterize hisyeSWof work for "'do unto^me^'' r^aidlesrof race,; 1 the SupremeCourt ruled that Scientology $1•the University? "Iwasted 12years doing' ..­olor drcreed,TJntil^»ch trnles, if ever, ( *is in faci a religion Besides that, the p itjjSO^I' thought four more, months* attain pr wfll be^owed a higher,.; belief m a god,isleft Upto theipdividual. 0. wouldn'tjmake any difference^ Erwin'' .SlTHEf'DAILY--.TEXANi ,A ~ X&J'fhJu' ' 'ft-vA i For, you see,v Scientology is non­denommational and does not tamper with a person's beliefs Any person can join the church, solong as he wants to better himself The church strives to make the able more able Leslie's whole attack on Scientology makes me wonder whether Sheever had the intention to help someone with the article It seems to rrie that she is only trying to stop people from gettingbetter. S&tt Gregory Vice-President Capital^Adjusters, Inc. Tales of Erwin To the editor: '' + I think you students might .want to know the kind of nonsense that that little man, prank Erwin', spreads around the state '' » In tonight's Dallas Times Herald, Erwin was qdoted as being ''delighted":, that Walter Sterling was confirmed/ • left, if not the middle;: As Gray said, who take the same action — are called, "It's hard to find issues." lobbyists.,.Surely, your average college Sure, there are issues in Austin. And / .stodent w^biild think Moore wasmad, and sure, there are differences in issues. But -1 ';$ui^5^uraverage college. student our candidates have blurred the issuesso well that only the closest campaign' follower knows who stands where. You know the average voter doesn't. Take an issue like the environment.. . Who is against the environment? The Grays, the Drydehs and the Lebermanns . are all for it. That is, except when a Ninth Street has to be extended through a park. The Hofmanns, the Friedmans and the Weinstocks, however, believe a street and a park do not ecologically mix. How many people know' thedifferences ' of the candidates? We will find outSatur­day. ' > : * * • Here is a quote from Sen. William T. ?> Moore for the 23,000 students that hve in College Station,, a town that happens to be.ih Moore's senatorial distrifet: --nv^ The Senate shouldn't vote to bust a'i| man (Walter Sterling) because .some • rabble routers at the University of' Texas, decide they are'going to' set • policies£ here* Students -are : always against!the establishment,'and that's probabty the 'way it.should be. If the man toaii been a member'of the Com­ munist Party instead -.of'the-John Birch Society, this group would probably be for him.' Surely, your average college student would not agree with Moore's logic on why.Sterling should be confirmed as.a University regent. Surely,'your average college student would be insulted at be­ing called a rabble rouser whenothers — firing line 1 of the Chamber of Commerce that attracts business with city*money, he , voted in favor of social services at last year's budget heanngsjjnd hehas 1 r, always been a strong proponent of Austin Tomorrow ­yi Except for that last item, Dryden has voted the opposite.-' . ^ Second; Friedman has been a fulljiroe member of the Austin City Coun­cil forJour7ears,.and he has alwayste^responsive to the student com­munity He called hearings about-the "controversial-University Street Plan, he has worked with the police department, hehas met with students repeatedly about panhandling problems.and other issues and he has . always been accessible. • -; fe t)ryden, .on the other hand;,has always;been a part-time member of '••o:->thevCQuncil.'.for the past four years. Maybe that is why he was always " • :c against council pay. In his four years* he never hired an aide, if only for • the reason that his office was never busy eaiough to need ohe. -* 'v;:-x;^tyden'-a8'iiiayw.would'bea' issuing debate about the subject: ("I'm,a;doctor,Hcnow the ptoblems;") . ;: show's a paternalistic attitude Austin doesn't need. He would be an exten­ n sion of the Butler years; he would be^a tool of the business community, j Friedman is far from perfect; but then again, he is far from being the •i lesser of two evils; His record shows his attitude about Austin, his law -background gives him the expertise to handle problems, his attentiveness towards the student community is ideal to us. We encourage you to vote for Jeff Friedman on Saturday. -; ;Would attempt to bust this man'in the ' 'next senatorial election. . ~ !.But:.'the question is this: Is your average college student an Aggie? 1 i J> . 'A typographical mistake changed the meatung of the lead editorial in TheTex­an before spring break. The editorial read:-"This editorial was written at 11:30:p.m;" It should have read: "This editorial 'i was written at 11:30 p.m. • Wednesday." . -The editonal was written late Wednes­day night, in prediction of the Thursday Senate'vote concerning the confirmation .-.of Walter Sterling. The way the editorial v-.;appearedFriday, -the first line looked -like a disclaimer. •• j K'. For those of you-who don't know; a • preferential poll isthe sameDemocratic, process an election is. | .4 The election of .the.next-Texan editor ' - will be handled by the APOs (unless they turn TSP down), it will be campuswide, <. there will be a specific list of candidates : ^liSfed oh'the ballot and the winner is the ; ^winner (unless the TSP Board pulls a .-'•."There-are two major differences with this poll. however. One, campaign spen­ding,islimited to zero. And two, there . -.will be no runoff. Whoever gets the most \ votes in the poll — right now there are Sseven applicants m will win outright.: .The poll (election) is in 10 days, i. • • * In pearlier column, I took you to the ^ s wrong pushing mops and brooms H y r i ^ The tmplementatfpn of this policy may But worst of all, Erwin seems to have _ HEW guidelines, is infringed by this act?*'" *Many^people in the past have arguedP ;- • This is ;i ridiculous -which .there posting scores isthe onlyfeasible wayoi> regime or a Thieu regime Well thin, distributinggrades'iWithout>undue:"has%fii'-SjwhytheheHaye,allthosepeopleinDa sle Can you imagine a mob "of 400\,";^ Nang in suchd hurry to getout' The peo­students (as in one of my businesi --pie of Da Nang trampled, oven dach classes), descending on a pfofessoi' in^'^ other, fought, clawed, and many died, search of grades? Pity the professor Who;/* trying to escape the>>advancing North has several large classes As tat as /" Vietnamese army If they didnit car?, privacy^. how -man/ people know -yourmv'they-wbuldn't try to leave;.The people og» Social Security number7 " , . • < h Austin. American-Statesman' sports pages and to socialized athleticepisodes. ..Now we return, this time to take a look . at the TV listings',.never before, a place . rioted for its one-liners and prose: Movie: "THE GOLDEN GIRL" (1951) Corny story, just.an excuse for singing,and dancing. 2 Star Musical. Movie: "MANHUNT IN THE JUNGLE" (1962) On safari in Brazil Who cares, '/i Star Drama. Movie: "KING KONG VS. GODZILLA" (1962) Yes folks, ihetwo •big ones battle it out. Turn,down the sound and make up the, voices yourself. 2 Star Monster. ­ • •fcv/'i.-'.l . While you were,away; two University?34 hirings made the news. Both arequite in­ teresting. ..... First, The Associated Press revealed that the University created-a job fpr a former campaign, aide of Rep. Fred. Head, who happens t# be the chairman of, the House Higher Education.Committeev and a member of the•>••House ; Ap-• propriations Committee;Sounds just like. opr University and our Legislature. ­ Second, Chancellor Charle^^LeMaistre appointed Dr.-Lanier Cox, a business-law professor, .to'Uie vacant positionof assis­ tant to the chancellor for academic, af­ 'fairs.' " • '• "•••• .i.. It should be noted that Cox.was one of a handful of General'Faculty-members who opposed that group voting no con-, . fidence in the chancellor last: fall.-Of course, LeMaistre isn't expected to:hire , someone who has no confidence in him.' But in .this case, LeMaistre's choices were limited to about five'out of 400. - mumsts They don't want.:the .Com­munists, and they are flocking toward ' Saigon, and the temporary security of Thieu " \ In the wake of the mass evacuation of Da Nang, all that the great.Ted Kennedy ;could say was that he did notapprove of President Ford's evacuation of the peo­pie of Da Nang, he felt thatthe President should have contacted ' the. United Nations first. If that waSn't the heighth of stupidity! Those-persons need to be . evacuated immediately and Kennedy wants Ford to wait for three weeks — or months so the U.N; can consider. It­.. We have seen that the pedple of South • Vietnam don't wapt'communism forced vdown their throats and have asked us,for help. It is time the Democrats-in .^Washington,vwoke up, and appropriated v money for* ( , • Medical aid \ • Arms and ammunition • The mining nf Halphnng Whi-Knr '> • • And the bombing of North Vietnam including Hanoi and supply routes to-the South Notipe^ I do not advocate the use of The North has broken thetreaty, andIt is time'We knocked them back lnto line. We cannot allow the 50,000 Americans who lost their lives to do so in vhh) We must not let the people of South Vietnam fall into the hands of the murderers of* the Nprth I Pa,Be M««ey v J Accounting *; T/'-'^ISiSUE STAfi m %*rfssi, SylyiffTeague » » t * ^ ^ _ ,;General,Reporters sg i /i* A ** Bill Scott» Mary Walslr, Parry Boesch wNewff A^sistai^ts^». ' * SteveJMcGomgle, Karen"Hastings JOae Flores Editorial Assistants'',.^,.Assistants'',.^1^ r , ^ iTo(id KatZi JtOWn Cravey Alsociate Annlsements Editor ,, ^ Darwin Js^kte-Sports Editor t'JL ipM| sags s *** > •^55 guest viewpoint Board of Regents, it's time "''' * By MAGGIE HERNANDEZ blacks and American Indians present effect of past dis­to but no action was taken.) minorities thatare benefitting . (Editor's note: Hernandez on campus will remain a crimination. ... Accordingly, The HEW report further from existing supportive ser­ is senator-elect in the token number. I say, YES, it within 90 days the policy must stipulates that: (Note: To get vices. Graduate School.:She isalso a is about time that the Univer­ be restated in a positive a .more complete list of • An annual report on the member of Chicano.Graduate sity of Texas administrators, manner which specifically stipulations and a rationale efforts made to recruitStudent Association.) the Board of Regents and the allows for corrective actions for each of them, please read minority athletes must be you Past segregationist prac­Texas legislators (and to overcome the effects of the HEW report.) compiled; this report must in­ tices at the University of Tex­ too, Dolph) stop merely past discrimination." I • A Universitywide recruit­clude the specific results of as as well as at many other listening to what needs to be welcomingly await such ac­ment program for minorities each effort.federally subsidized in­done in the areas of minority tion from the Board of be established. • A grievance procedure stitutions deemedit necessary recruitment, financial aids, i Regents especially since I • Validation studies for ad­must be established for to pass the Civil Eights Act of supportive services, etc., and have been hearing minorities mission tests be conducted by students alleging discrimina­1964. Although Title VI of the start implementing some of at theadministrative, faculty, program and race because tion on the grounds of race,suggestions. student have ex­Civil Rights Act of 1964 these Further­staff and levels these tests not been color or national origin. provides that anymore, to person who press similar concerns about found to accurately measure All the above stipulations by . 'Shell' : No person in the United believes it is not justifiable to the Board of Regents policy the abilities of minority HEW are long due. Minorities-States shall, on the correct past discrimination for the past four years that I students. on campushave forsome timeground of race,-color, or against minorities at the have been a student at the • Adequate steps be taken been making similarnational origin, be ex­University of Texas, I suggest University of Texas (needless to insure that there is no dis­demands, but little action hascluded from participa­that she (or he) take a few to say, they were only listened crimination in off-campus been taken. I am still waiting tion in, be denied the hours from her (or his) busy guest viewpoint- employment handled by the to see what action the Univer­ on vote benefits of, or be sub­ Guest Viewpoints schedule to read the HEW Office of Student Financial sity of Texas will take nowjected to discrimination report and to really think By DAN BOYD system, whether We have an didates seem intent on under any program or about what it rpeans. The Texan welcomes guest Aid. that the HEW report has been ­(Editor's note: Boyd/ is a equitable utility; rate sthic-viewpoints, but eachpiece sub­• The number of minority made public. Needless to say, attempting to keep" abortion activity receiving The Board of r Regents mitted must: student teaching assistants we must all be wary as to the law student*) ... ture, 'u hether local police from coming to Travis Coun­federal financial adopted an Equal Educational • Be typed triple space. and student research "new" policies that the Board The citywide turnout in the observe constitutional ty, not being impressed by the assistance. Council and Opportunity policy in May, * Contain only 60-assistants must be increased. of Regents adopt lest they be Supreme Court decision, byelection (22,000). was .much private contractors are giVen opposing' its in of the Health, • Better records be as "cunning" as the present recent special City restraints whether it appears (thrpugh therecent 1964, that states, "The Univer­characters per line. must practice investigation sity of Texas at Austin shall * Include the. author's kept to show the number of policies lower than in most local elec­public; subsidies to', encourage Brackenridge Hospital. And Education -and Welfare not either in discriminate phone number. tions, and only asmall minori­an even mor^ rapid rate of we also have a return Department, 1974) that not favor of pr against any person • Be limited to a maximum appearance from Bob Gray, enough has been done at the on account of his or her race, length of 100 lines. ty of the registered University ' growth are someof the major students took the time to vote issues that will be' decided,by who ran his 1973 campaign University of to Crossword Puzzler Texas creed, color or national Submit guest viewpoints to in that election. Of course, . this council. Drag vendors,, against Jeff Friedman by alleviate discriminatory prac­ ACROSS ( A state (abbr) involved . only origin." HEW has stated in Drawer D, University Station, f Writing fluid status MRNISZ. uay that election nuclear, power, park space, lambasting him as the"Voice tices in the areas of equal op­their report that "The Board 1 Japanese anna gdsbs HOD Austin, or the sashbicycle ..lanes,-. neighborhood ' of the Radical'Element." ' portunity policy, admissions, of Regents policy makes no 4 Pronoun Unusual aiaa macs Tau'a two seats on the'council and, TX. 78712 to DOWN Texan office in the basement for . unexpired-ferms % very. integrity, preservation of ; The;short of it is that there recruitment, studentfinancial allowance for correcting"the 6 Tells Container 'fflaaraa cnasay short duration. . histdhcal buildings and'many level of the TSP Building. 11 Pari olfur­Negative sassaa gnuur. are some clear-cut choices to aid, student employment, stu­ nace prefixThe stakes will be much; other issues which directly be 'made Saturday, and' as dent support sehices) place­13 Spoliation Courageous taaosd saaa lis SHEg nasa HLVS higher, however, in Satur­affect students have been'the students, we can either par­ment, housing,-athletics and DOONESBURY 15 Physician personday's election. There the' en-: (abbr) Muse of poe-scan asnij oancisubject of councilaction inthe ticipate in making the Greek social sororities. 16 Speechmakers try sos ciisuh tire council will beelected for . past and will continue to con­choices, or we can spend/the Although the Civil Rights 18 Teutonic Go gianaiH iraau a full two-year term. front them, in thefuture.'; next two years having all of Act was passed.In 1964 (over HEY,80B8Y~-WU KNOW, THE FIGHTING deity Organ of SuEfflg 32u msg Moreover, there will, un­•In 1970the AustinCityCoun­ DIPYOU sea JUST SEEMS TOGOONFOREV&T! 19 Artificial nearmg QduH the crucial decisions of the 10 years ago),-.we are still IMFIGHT IN NO, mi language Part of churcn uSI.­ doubtedly be a much higher cil made a1habit of either sort, described above being SOMETIMES ITUBHV&EMS 21 Pertaining to 31 nana struggling to correct past dis­THELOCKER. Chinese mile HEARD ABOUT SOHEWFWE(AU>BRIN5 ME the ear turnout in the remainder of allowing or refusing to give made by a council of Jay crimination at the -University ROOM THIS TT-SOUNDS' BLACKKIDS AND UW£ KIDS TO ­22 Pitcher Scoffs 32 Hall nickname River inItaly 35 Feared 48 Food pro- thecity, and if students are to parade permitson the basis of Johnsons and Bob Grays:It all of Texas. Until significant MORNM? PRETTY AWFUL! GETHER, TO MAKE THEM REALIZE 24 Possessive Was mistaken 37 Man's name grams ' protect their interests and political ideology.. Finally a depends on whether we are corrective measures are / / . KUEVEGOTVPUU TOGETHER! pronoun Forkprong 38 Took one's 51 City in Russia federal judge had to order the willing to take about 15 taken, the University of Texas 28 Before 39 Scottish have any significant impact 26 Units ; Spoken part 53 Among on the election, many students council to allow .students to ; Pronoun 57 Greek letter-.minutes and exerciseour con­will maintain its racist image 29 Winged ; Exclamation cakes 58 A continentwill have to vote Saturday demonstrate against the Viet­stitutional right. !••• and the number of chicanos. 31 Morays ; Let it stand 41 Comfort (abbr.) * ] who failed to vote March 9. 43 Surgical saw 60 Inquire. 33 A state ; Bridge term nam war. One member of that (abbr) ; Wife of 44 Height (abbrJ 62 Note of seated The City Council,has a ma­council, who apparently bad a 34 Grant use ol Geraint 46 Man's 64 A state(abbf)'jor impact on many facets of rather imperfect understan­I SAID, fF X ACTVAuY. tuts is fa 36 Tropical our lives: whether Austin, will ding of the First Amendment, Wl/FINPAtftTMiNft SRANPfWTHER'S * seek to control its growth" to is attemptinga comeback this JUCTREMEM0Q? THATWIRE0I68N6 prevent the urban sprawl of year. (The reference is toJay ONOUR PROPERTY! larger cities, whether we will Johnson, who is opposed by have an adequate transit John Trevino.pother can­ HOW OM,BUT ABOUT A I'LLOWED MJAMA ASK MY Letters to the editor PARTY? MOTHER. 1 firing line iettere should: 6EE, I AR&06IZE. I OlDN T / • Oe typed triple-spaced. ^ , EVEN THINKA8Wr TCE5f»S5W6. NAME WERE WN7U«F0RTnm&..: • Be 25 linn orIm.Th* T»kanr«i«rve« theright to editl«ttm-fof TRUFFLES! length. , > # • Include name, address; and phon« numbet .of cohlribulor.' Mail letters to The Firing Urw. The Dally TexQn^ Drawer D, UT Staiioii,.Austin, Tax. 78713; W bring letter* to th*-Texan offices^ basement, Texas Student Publications Building. sSlV? - Diatr. by WUAM u HS I A foot pampering casual with soft, cushion'insole and flexible sole \at savings to you! .yrdiow t f • PPink Blue I *1 " 1 I '% • White T & • BoneV^ Jli r., Ml M\ ivt:V3v I T, >A FT DOES IT FOR SHOES ** t T K VV ' I 6 V ^ * > & -^L* /f '# TI* RYKXIL-D ,' Monday, AAarcIv 31, 1975 T^HlE DAILY TEXAN PageS i'"1-v i"1­ \ r ' §£§& ^0£m$ sagtti sg3«s«i J*y/ J >v i"<•+ i I -JtA lip w si rtillii JilL. ^Uulk MIW m —­ _ *^ >r>* w^ '^tfyp' By ANGELA NEVILLE "The problems Ihaveencounteredhereare citg council uiropup Lade of vision has.not hamperedGustavo the average problemsany blind person faces ssa­ mm r. .> i?--­ i?* m SI Garcia's perception of himself and the world -'in adjusting toa newsituation," Garciasaid. around him. : •"I have no bitterness." When be was in high school, "which was a Two Candidates Withdraw The blind student from Colombia, working privilege forme because inmy countryonly Son his tyA in fecial education in the area of percentof blind persons graduate with a highvision, holds clear views'about handicapped school degree," Garcia said be became in­ persons and their relations with others. terested in how the. United States helped its From Place 3 Council Rdce "In general, a handicapped person is held handicapped population and decided he back not by the way he think* about himself wanted to come here to study. By BARRY BOESCH Berkeley United Methodist lignite coal.1 "V •' ; Mayor Roy Butler, Binder. but by bow others regard him,'* Garcia said. • Garcia said he plans to return to Colombia Texan Staff.Writer Church in South Austin, : Place?«:,candidate Roland' Councilmen' Jeff "Friedman "I'm certainlynot going tosit aroundand cry in May after he receives his master's degree While City Council, can­Dryden ;said_ fuel costs, and Gordon expressed support for ' and Jimmy Snell. Only Leber­about my limitations; I'd rather work." and probably resume his former field, high didates continued to address not -utility rates, should be putting school students on city Mayor Pro Tem mann. and Blind Garcia graduated fromcollege in Colombia school teaching. . the issues for Saturday's elec­controlled. Friedman said the boards, providing they are ap­Bud Dryden Voteds for the or­in 1970 with a BA in educational psychology "No matter what else Ido,1have definite tion, two Place 3 candidates present rate > structure was proved by their student dinance. and philosophy and began applying for a intentions of writing a book which examines withdrew from the race. designed during the Depres­bodies. : . Binder's plan, 'which would teaching position with the state schools. the institutions of the blind in Colombia and Pete Reyes and Philip sion to stimulateutdustryand is Place 6 candidate Luella apply only to elected officials. Student Parry announced their obsolete today. • ­ "I'm an expert in the negative interview. I urges legislation to improve the quality of Edgar called forthe elimina-received "no" 'Votes from approached the state secretary of education these organizations'," be said. withdrawals last week. " PLACE 1CANDIDATE Bob tion of the. wastewatercharge, Lebermann, Butler and for a teaching position and he said I couldn't The United States is successfulin assisting Reyes, considered the Gray said Friday that it would with lost revenues being made 'Dryden. Binder,' Friedman Ignores have the job berauseI was blind,"Garcia'ex­its handicapped persons, Garcia said, "spoiler" who threw the be unthinkable not to use the up from revenue sharing and Snell voted for, the or­ plained. "1 simply told him that "yes, that's because of the latge amount of financial aid Place 3 special election intoa final report of 'the Austin money. dinance. my problem, not yours.' I'm pleasedto say and the basic willingness of Americans to runoff, withdrew because he Tomorrow program as a , Southwestern Bel) officialsLimits that I got the job." help the disadvantaged. couldn't raise campaign guideline. ' Student Rides asked for a "yes or no" While loathing philosophy, sociology and In Colombia, handicapped persons go to the funds. Place 1 candidate Fred C. Transportation for students answer on their rate request, other courses, Garcia applied to the Inter­• Institution of the Blind "begging," he said, Candidates continued to ex­Young took reporters on a wishing to vote absentee will which would provide the com­national Institute of Education to attend and do not feel like they have the right to de­press their views to the public tour of a neighborhood near be provided Monday and Tues­pany an additionalv$6.4 graduate school in the United States. mand help like the American disadvantaged through candidate forums, his car lot on: Guadalupe day by Student, fcVoter Par­ miUioA. The' corii'pariy actual­ Accepted by the University in" 1973, Garcia do. Garcia hopes his book will show Colom­press conferences and press Street, citing '. the fteed for ticipation. The tears will ly needs $10 million, "accor­ left hisnative Colombia for the first tirrfeand bians what the institutes are accomplishing releases.' stricter enforcement of operate from Littlefield Foun­ ding to a company earnings came toTexas. Fearful of his lack of fluency and what services the public hasa right to.de-MAYORAL CANDIDATE building, health'and.fire codes tain from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. statement for 1974;" in English, be enrolled in a rehabilitation mand. m Horace Johnson called for to prevent unattractive and Absentee voting for the THE COUNCIL vptedcenter, which turned out to be "for people "Of the philosophers I have studied I par­legal action against Lo-Vaca messy neighborhoods. Saturday election ends Tues­ unanimously to postpone ac­ who don't know bow to tie their shoelaces," ticularly admire the existentialists because Gathering Co.. the city's gas Place 2 candidate Stuart day. As of Friday, around 850 tion until the new information Garcia said. After a few months, the Colom­they don't accept the conceptof destiny, like supplier; to force it to live up Henry reiterated" his support had cast absentee votes, down offered by the phone company bian left the center and began classes at the them, I believe in the individual making his to its contract. He also called for a city ombudsman' and almost half from the1973 elec­ can be analyzed by the city'sUniversity in spring. 1974. or her own life." • for restructuring of electric called for a centralized con­tion. rate consultant; Hess and rates so commercial users struction authorization policy Students who will either be Lim. * ' • -• . would pay half of what for Austin. Such a policy out of town or "are planning Bell attorney' Donald residential users are charged. would coordinate and combine to go to the lake" should vote irkirir*************•»»****•********* Thomas said if the city is not Bud Dryden, another the functions"; of 15 city absentee, Lukin Giililand of HEADMASTERS * grant, the $6.4 willing tomayoral candidate, called the departments, which Henry the.student voters' group said ' iriiliion increase, Belt will go UNISEX HAIRSTYLING The TURTLE Sez: * * problem of higher utility bills. said must approve separately Sunday. • to court. , For the big taste, try Tprtlt's Turtle * a high priority and said he proposals todevelop property.. City 'Attyi Don Butler said burger. Ham, Turkey, Swiss & Cheddar * would issue a statement on Place 2-candidate Betty Council Action SUPERCUTS & BIO-DRYS ~ * the city would be happy to go Cheese, lettuce, tomato, pickles, and a * utility rates this week. Himmelblau said 'at the Mon­In one of its. busiest to court over the matter. $10.00 & UP special sauce, served on hot buttered * Candidate for mayor Jeff day forum if a councilman meetings in weeks, City Coun­ Just two weeks after French Bread. * * Friedman said utility rates does his job properly, a city cil Thursday debated arid re­unanimously ..voting : to close REDKIN RETAIL CENTER * should be changed to protect ombudsman iff unnecessary. jected two financial dis­ramps. at Whole $1.95 MoPac Westover * the individual citizen, lie ad­Place 4 candidate Sandra closure ordinances, heard and-Road, the council voted 5-1 to Half $1.25 * vocated getting away from Weinstock blasted, opponent postponed action on a plea OPEN EVENINGS table action on citizen re­ 2405 Nueces * .the concept of the more elec­Lowell Lebermann for his from Southwestern Bell' for a quests to close rampsat Wind­ 1102 KOB41G LANE Inside Different Drummer * * tricity used, the cheaper it is. financial disclosiire.proposal. 24 percent rate hike and heard sor. 452-9078 In a Monday forum at the She called: the ordinance and delayed action on re­ * A A **A ************************** The council will consider "meaningless'1 'arid quests from Windsor Road the matter April 10. characterized it asag attempt area residents not to open the City Manager Dan Davidson to "hoodwink the public." Windsor ramps on MoPac recommended the. delay so he RONALD COLUNGA, freeway. could study the possibleanother Place. 4 . candidate, Councilmen Lowell Leber­effects of the closing. criticized Weinstock and call­mann and Bob Binder propos­ Windsor Road area ADVERTISEMENT ed Lebermann's proposal fair. ed the two disclosure or­ residents expressed fear that How much profit Place 5 candidate John dinances. Lebermann's opening of the ramps wouldTrevino said opjkinent ,'Jay proposal, calling for dis­ We all should create a larger traffic flow Johnson's plan' to take Lo-closure of sources of income, does the average U.S. through tns area. Northwestknow"them"better, for they play Vaca Gathering.Co. to court and not actual amounts, was Austin residents said the' ignores the realities of rejected 4-2. ramps were needed, and that CMNnplaiiymake on a vital role in every­Austin's energy problem. He THE ORDINANCE, which if they were closed it would said the city, is already in­would require statement from thing we do make their downtown drive volved in every possible legal city councilmen, the city each salesdollar? more difficult. action with Lo-Vaca, arid that manager, city attorney and the city should,consider other planning commission (checkone) A.•45$ B.•280 C.•120 D.•50 Goals Assembly energy'sources, such as members, was opposed by The Goals Assembly' of the —They helped to remodel a home } ' Austin Tomorrow program Andwhere for troubled youngsters in Leaven-,, finished its business Tuesday, worth, Kan, and to fix up a recrea­ deciding Texas Instruments tion center for school dropouts and to eliminate do profits|jo? feasibility reports from tie drug victims in Dallas. IHEM —Theycreated a million new jobs The World's goals document and to allow > rf you comparewfyat themajority of Americans the executive committee to in the.United State last year. 1 . think corporateprofits are,with the bottom line pour $325 million into AfostWanted 'write an introduction to the —They of the typicalcorporate financial statement, education eachyear andanother $144 final report. you willseethat thepublic hplds profound million yearly into the arts. Their Scientific The introduction will be dis­ cussed at a meeting Tuesday, misconceptionsabout thisvital subject total outlay for charity each year is Calculator with assembly members E'VB been hear­about $1 billion. theadjoining rnessagefrom theApril Reader's ing a lot about —They put $85million into a new allowed to participate. Digestsiumsupopinions andthefacts about "Them" lately. steel-making process that prevented The printing of;the final report and the design of the profits, ttshonws whathappenstothem.And it Often bad things. a steel mill in Pennsylvania' from About bowbig they closing down,saving 2000 jobs. formal presentation slated for shows.towthe profit potential cangive 5 day are. They've bejn cursed in the —They give federal, state and lo­Air Mail/United May 7 in Municipal innovatorstheincentive needed tocreateor t " Plus $6.50for local sales tax? streets, reviled in Congress, con­cal governments more than $41 bil­shipping/handling charges. Parcel Service Auditorium are all that re­ expand business.That leadsto more jobsand ' * demned in the press. They are often lion in annual tax revenues. delivery main for the assembly^ whose more earningsallaround. overestimated.' They are .seldom Who are "they"? Compare with local store prices. -work covered a period of two understood. and a half,years and included Profits. Thi money earned over/ .We all should know them better, and above the expenses of operating the participation of 3,300 Read on (eyenifyou checked letterD above). : Performs all disfunctions of higher priced calculators . . KcanteweU'toorththeinvestmentofyourtime. r ; and rhore for a lot less for their handiwork is everywhere " our American business andindustry. Austinites.•„ t _" * Thousands sold in hundreds of colleges. crs —though we may not realize it. If industry were not profitable, not' —They built a. factory in a riot-only would companies coon go out ' algebraic keyboard factorials Pollution Fees torn section of Watts, Calif, then of business—with dire consequences accuracy to 13significant logarithmic, trigonometric, The city will begin collec­gf helped it along until it' was a $10-to employesand stockholders—but a digits hyperbolic functions ting pollution fees.within two u,..._ w miUipn-a-year buanessoivncd large­great vanety bf social 'and humani­.12 digit display-10 digit memory storage and recall to three months, enacting an -est . mantissa;2 digit exponent ly by its employes." tarian acuvmes would simply go by ' scientificnotation ordinance which was adopted r'S , powers, „ t , rechargeable battery pack three years ago. •• -v: 'rbotf r '­ The city has not;.been enfor-­1 YEAFfTEXA'S INSTRUMENTS WARRANTY. ciri'g the:fee because: it does ADVERTISEMENT " ¥ ' ADVk RTIStVENT' not know who to charge, City •. ij-i' Send certified chqck or. money order for delivery within five days. No... -the board. It is a caiporationftion­ meet that demand by companies picture: But somehow we Ameri­dress that sells iif department stores COD's pleaje. Sflght delay In delivery if personal check sccompanies.order. Manager Davidson./said. It Unaed profitability that allows it ttf-seeking a profit. When the dryers cans remain peculiarly unconvinced. for $50, A woman examining it Our bank rofflritfi'ca: Town Bank and Tfuii Co. . / , . . . would not be fair io charge a regularly purmoney mro,say,public' started rolling out, who benefited? We buy.a house for 528,000,sell it for might conclude she could make the few people now when a large •>. TV or the local symphony. and at "^STONTECHNrCALTlNCr"" """" The companies—sure. But the big $40,000, then the next day condemn same dress for quite a bit less* than" -" number may need to be charg­ rhcsametimecreatenew technology beneficiaries were the consumers, someone' else's "pursuit of profit." that amount..Provided she could > .728 DedhafTi St.v Newton, Mass. p2159 * " ed, he added. ' ' andoewjobs, V first, because: their'demands were We blithely forget the realities of get the pattern "(one of hundreds Please ship Immediately via Airmail/UPS ____SR-50(sl The pollution ordirtarice wasProfit? are'not. as -some: people satisfied..and^ seojnd, business com-economics and competition. submitted by the manufacturers' Mamn ; passed in November, 1971, arid ^ 'seem tothink,dtitched in thehands/ petition quickly droveprices down. Let's look at-the profit picture on designers), she could indeed save is supposed to collect aof afw~cigar-smoking tycoons. 'if. Yet, while profitsare sointimately a common product—a woman's money. But this dress is on the rack . Address •* > : monthly fee from.industries •;< < There are-y> million: stockholders • 'tied to the lives of all,of us, the because the majority of women liave • causing abnormal amounts of siSyn thiscountry who count on them; c publicconcept of them issodistorted neither, the time nor the inclination-' >•••< waste. . ' MANUFACTURER'S workers whose reure-?as to be hardly a concept at all. For to maketheir own. -"r-'irient funds, invested in .stocks and , „ COST AND PROFIT $> example, polls indicate that the ma­ : Why dofsitcost J50? depend on them; 365 million. jority of Americans believe business Fabrics and accessories .... t 8.11 The box in the previous column ' y J vjile-irtsurance policies in fence in the. ."clearsabout 28 cents profit on every gives a breakdown of costs. 'And itw,-'iwm—.^United Staresthat depend to a great " " ' Design and factory dollar itearns. shows that a'$25.75 dress that pro->ji v " Adrertising, sale make the decisibn.Thai's whatcom­ ?zcn foods, kidney roach;Ws. double-est profit margins ate in business^' ! * markdpwi{s, freight,. petition is allnbout.And profit isthc AN AUSTIN WHERE THE DECISION i-'fcnit &brte w wondex'>inigs. Men -that manjr jjeOpleassume tobe maki'-,?>: .in the market-place do;!Stimulated ing "unconscionable profits" at iheS^f Store operations essence of competition. OF DRINKING UNTIL 2 AM. , ' Payroll;.. ' .; J>y. tlie-pro9«r oC:pijgfit^they .find " ' consumer's expense.;Supermarktts,'^; OR WATCHING ANY MOVIE Taxesn,Aarper_ra^blad^quieter a penny. on each sales dollari ln: ); Profit from sales Co-Reader'*Digc»t,PI«aMntVillffN.Y.'lQ570­ .^•5|tir condiporierslV enstomer • Pricct; 10—5o*;50.—$aj»oo—; NOT THE CITY. ,|S|f $0't 1000—*$20,-Pncti,£6r. lifter-: Selling price to qut&mti JISOM quaoUbei upon ttquftt. / y J ! is prepared by theeditors of The RetOet's W|>dt.ppl adv 'by^AC-yD, Uikln 6|llilafid^6wln h)ld WMt MWa change J — -"* ^ b~- Page 6 Monday, Mafch 3r/V1975;THE DAILY.TEXAN' " aSV',' • "• f "s-S • ?U>r-+:W. Concern for City Draws Increases Since a 22.7 percent in-. February was 1.6 million, up MusicianlntoCampaign "This drop is normal. Most stealing some vets from thecrease in veterans education, 11.5 percent from the of the veterans are finishing University because tuitionBy MARY WALSH has a chance to win He's a minorities are other political' allowances gained approval in November figure of 1.45 up their schooling," said Mrs. and fees are lower at ACC. > •»•::;=-Texan Staff Writer.; ; young, intelligent, strong in-concerns which motivated December. 1974, more ex-million. Martha Wingren, University But Beverly Stalnaker, . Poef. Songwriter, musician, divudual," he continued. Fromholz's-involvement in servicemen are taking advan­While the number of Administration Veterans University VA representative,tSteve Fromholz may be the Austin musicians and the council campaign. tage of GI Bill benefits. As of veterans returning to school representative. disagrees. "I don't feel thatfrealized dream of many . songwriters can best become to February, 74,548 veterans nationally is increasing, the GI "I would like see junior college enroll­fees area deterrent to vetsgo­ Austin politicians., an enter-; involved and affect politics by easi side blacks and cnicanos were enrolled for the first figure at the University is ment recorded the highest ing to UT," she said. (airier who chooses to become . . raising money-for campaigns, recognized as citizens of this time, 24 percent above last dropping. Currently, 2,006 jump, increasing 24.6 percentinvolved in electoral politics, Fromholz said city. I don't think they are year's February figure of 59,-students are enrolled under over a three-month period. The GI Bill recently receiv­^roniholz believes his; coh-"The drawing we 899. the GI Bill, down from the 2,-ed a two-year extension. "Of power anywhere in the state of Tex­Figures for Austin Com­ for Austin's future die-; have in Austin is a valuable as," he said. Steve Fromholz Total veteran enrollment in 229 enrolled last spring. munity even course, there is a differencein College are Is that, he use his reputa-.force in, political fund raising "It's not just Friedman that higher than the national programs between Austin to influence the outcome for the people webelieveIn," is the issue, it's the city of figures. Veteran enrollment Community College and UT, Baturday's City Council he explained. ( Austin and "the state of Texas. nas doubled in the college's but I feel that this two-year Plan Implemented n.^ •-Although he admltted he is The important issue is the first year of operation. extension could be pushing ave' a rMponsibility to •'just beginning to,be a little freedom of each of us td make more vets toward that Program Includes Personnel Investigation "Roughly one in every three ' to do what f believe bit political;" Fromholz .said what we want of our lives,"he people enrolled are attending vocational type degree," Stalnaker said. isai4 between Saturday he might seek public office continued. By ANNA MARIfr PENA cooperation of police officers and community under the GI Bill," said VA _ lets' at the Alliance himself someday. Austin musicians, already a Texan Staff Writer is required. representative David Her­A single veteran enrolled inWagon Yard. "There is a tie in Texas vital part of the city's A plan to improve police-community nandez. No complaints have come up since Miller a full time program receives a Last weekFromholz record­between country economy, become relations submitted to City Council by Police over his new Hernandez the monthly A music and could a took responsibilities which in­attributes $270 allowance. ed "get out the vote" radio Chief Bob Miles last week is being im­ politics and >athletics," he significant political force in clude handling internal as well as external rise to flexible junior college veteran with one dependentspots for, the League of 'said. '• the future, Fromholz said. plemented. complaints. programs and to the low receives $321 and those with Women. Voters,, the Student:: Fromholz tKinfe ''Austin is esteem which The program, outlined into four areas, in-come price. "The with "I hope a situation would to exist two or more receive $366 plus Action Committee and the growing too fast," and, if musicians are held is very ' Ciudes the development of jiolice personnel where no complaints against police officers Hernandez feels that Austin $22 month for each ad- perUnivereity Young Democrats, investigation. Assigned by Miles as personnel growth is not controlled, it good with the people who would be filed," Miller added. Community College may be ditional dependent over age 2. ''Getting out to vote, does "will take away the magic come to hear us play," he investigation coordinator, Sgt. Gilbert Miller "Our record has not been lily-white; of­ mean something to me that makes :lt. easy to live noted. described his duties as encompassing ficers have been suspended to or asked because if we don't vote, we here/. • ' : -• employe misconduct investigation. "Right now the establish­resign," he said, explaining that the chief won't be heard — and I want "if the lights get too bright ment views us (musicians) as "Misconduct includes the commission of a makes the ultimate decision asto what action EUROPE to be heard," he said. in Austin, if too m^ny people a disarrayed, misdirected -criminal offense, violation of departmental is taken against an officer, if any. here, will rules and-regulations; including alleged ICELANDIC & KIM GROUP FLIGHTS Fromholz said he supports move I move bunch of freaks. And we are-Officers are using more psychology than mayoral candidate Jeff Fried­away," he said, "v brutality," Miller said, CHARTER FUGHTS • STUDENT—RAIIPASSES just beginning to look at the brute force and classes in community man because of "the way he The need for a mass city we live in. But I'm not These responsibilities were handled by the EURAILPASSES • MAPS & MORE relations and sensitivity training are part ofvoted in terms of Austin's transportation system, an in­trying to hurt anything. I'm criminal intelligence division in the past. cadet training, Miller said. ecological system. • terest in longer drinkinghours trying to help," he emphasiz­Miller explained. "I believe Jeff Friedman and the problems of Austin's ed. "But the police officers were leery of "In some cases, when a supervisor finds a Call 478-3471 "I could become a radical criminal investigations," he said. "Ad­man isnot getting along well with thecitizens MERIT TRAVELProfessor's Wife Dies ministratively, these, investigations are best of an area, he's moved," he said. individual, but that entails a 2200GUADALUPE •SECOND L£VEl lot of violence that doesn't handled directly out of the office of the chief "When we receive a complaint, the chief The wife of Joseph A. Taylor, University journalism appeal'to me. If you want to' of police." wants us to question witnesses, go to the professor and director of the Latin American Communication live in this country, there is a Miller said Miles obviously saw a need for scene for evidence, question the officers and Program, died March 25 in Austin of a cerebral hemorrhage. the new division and :commented, "It was relay the information back to him." Lucille G. Taylor, 46, was the national director, of public system to liveby. You can live relations for Women in Communications, Inc., and editor of in it or blow it up, and I don't long in coming." » ' * , The fourth area of the program, the use of choose to blow it up," he con­He added that he wanted to do a fair and Matrix, its official quarterlyi Memorial services will be 4 p.m. nontraffic citations (issuing tickets) for djs­ impartial job, but that a willingness and Tuesday at All Saints Episcopal Church. ' ' cluded. orderly conduct,is being expanded. Joseph Taylor was attending an Inter American Press Associations conference in Mexico at the time of bis wife's THE COUNTRY ESTATE death, working to arrange summer internships:for, Mexican journalism students. His daughter, Emily, 7, noticed her THE INFLUENCE OF ^ ; RESTAURANT mother's illness and summoned help from a neighbor. Lucille Taylor was a partner in the Austin consulting firm JEWISH FOLKLORE South on IH-35 -Exit Slaughter Creek Overpass Compass Communications International and received a Texas 282-2017 ON MEXICAN CUSTOMS f Specialty Public Relations Association silver spur award in 1974. She also served as coordinator for the series Media 3 MEXICAN BLUE PLATE SPECIAL r « U jQShions Fine and unusual j Americas, communication seminars for Latin American and WITH i dresses, shoes, U.S. media, business and government officials; These AH you can eat -3.25 shirrs, and. seminars, cited by the.Inter American Press Association, were PROF. RICHARD SANTOS occewries awarded the Americas Foundation Prize. chalupas Under the professional name of Lucille Pierlot, she appeared i-'A fresh vegetables % :-Si in movies, television and stage productions in New York and nachos, dips smoked ham jbrmen Hollywood. She also was editor of the Overseas Press Bulletin guacaipolesalad roast beef aria women and Midwest director of public relations for Time, Inc., in Chicago. Taylor was also managing editor arid consultant for HILLEL MONDAY Free Mexican Punch! the Texas Municipal League publication, ;"Texas Town and 2105 San Antonio 7:00 p.m.: City." -• Discount tin beer & wines -extensive selection 476-9271 I 476-0125 Taylor is survived by her husband; a daughter, Emily (Bam-Country Style -just like going to.Grandma's 16l6lavoea Austin X bi); her mother, Mrs. George Pierlot and a sister, Mrs. Hal -»n »n Good. " . ' . . . ' •f? • a* ; ^ ft BACH ^ : 6 ORGAI^ CONCERTOS Deutsche \?bammcptwn :'r'S Direct Import/Factor ARCHIVE PRODUCTION -KAIfLRICHTfiR iSiPliflilit! y \ VICTORY wgm "HUBERT VQN KARAJANc\n.-two ducr Tbogmftrini&Vkilitic-jtMfowWBuaKhtt.Sfoloncclk) • » BERLIN PHILHARMONIC EdctirBcidvKjjrirr c~r "7 UIOWW^PBElBOVEIil * «\4' & > SYMPHONY & SONATA MELODIES RICHARD WAGNER t, vKornertflirO(thetter NARCISCQ. febnt kARA^AN.r BariJn PtitlKQnnorifc ­ « $ (-v> * ; ^ (• «^IhAt \ RECORD SHOP 2268'GUADAIUPE ft -T/-4 j<\*i it --*W '"'|^l|ii'1 ilW|'iii|"|l|ii^nWl'l|l II 'I , 1 j I rtf \i ^ Vf sSifiS i;r' mm -r-...hj "0 ^.^:-...,^.i.4^ r^~r m. ;•*?s ?£* ^r -i7<-» ._ **V•v " mm -r5* '> *vW ^ i-^ ,** ->— '%! 4 >"• 1 UT^Wins Tournament ®Nkktm Wins s x. Wflt, v.. a **' ' By JOHNNY. CAMPOS The Cougars' Vain/GiHen was the • Texas-finished the final r6und five un­ Texas Staff Writer Morris Williams' medalist, finishing der par, led by freshman Mark Bedillion • The Morris Williams-Intercollegiate with a one-over-par 217 — one stroke (69), Jim Mason (70), Dale Blackburn Golf Tournament held over-the Easter better than Texas' Randy Simmons. But (71), Ten Broeck (72) and Simmons. weekend turned into an old-fashioned the champion. was not decided until the •Texas Coach George Hannon said he HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S C (AP) -Jack Nicklaus, who one-on-one battle for the individual final hole of the tournament. was proud'of his team but expected them l)ad gone from .very.good to very.bad, found the middle groundchampionship afterhostTexas had cruis­Simmons had gone into the final day to win on their home course. with a solid but unspectacular 68. mastered Tom Weiskopf byed to a nine-stroke victory in the 17-team with a one-stroke advantage in the "I'd say we wouldn't have too good a three strokes and scored his second consecutive victory in the field. medalist race but could only manage a team if we lost on our own course," he Heritage Golf Classic Sunday. •The Horns finished the 54-hole tourna­72, while Gillehrwho had started the day said. "Most of Houston's wins have been Nicklaus, who entered Uiefinal round in a tie for the lead with ment witha team total of 885 followed by: two strokes behind, shot a tournament ­ at home, and you can say that about any Weiskopf. secured the 55th American tour title of his un­ the University' of Houston's 894 and ;low 69 for the final 18 holes. team in the state." 'matched career with a 72-hole total of 271, a tournament record North Texas State University's 912! -Gillen had caught Simmons on the 13-under-par on the difficult 6,655-yard Harbour Town'GolfTexas also won the Longhorn In­fourth hole and gone aheadon the eighth, Texas' winning total for tlie Morris Links. --.• -, vitational Intercollegiate tournament where Simmons bogeyed. Simmons then Williams tournament 'was-the highest ­The triumph put Nicklaus alone in fourth placeon the alltime over the spring break by a convincing 23 • caught Gillen on the twelfth hole and the' since Houston won it in 1970 with'an 898, victory list and, more important, sent Mm to Augusta, Ga., and:strokes over Trinity. Texas had a 36-hole golfers matched each other until the but Hannon credited the high scores to the Masters with two successive titles to his credit. Hewon thetotal of 575 and individually took six of final hole. the cold weather duringmost of the tour­ Dora! Open in his last start. the top nine places led by Jim Mason and Simmons three-putted from 70 feet, nament Nicklaus will skip next week's Greensboro Open, instead, heLance Ten Broeck who tied for top and Gillen parred for the championship. Saturday's best round was a 73, but the will follow his usual pattern of preparation for theMasters, the honors with 142s. The win helped Texas avenge an temperatures dipped to somewhere first of the year's major events, with four days of:practice atMason won the medalist honors by earlier loss to Houston on the Cougars' between 35 and 39 degrees, with winds the August National Course. V- defeating Ten Broeck on the fourth hole home course, ironically by thesame nine between 25 and 30 mph and a chill factor t Weiskopf. who once held the lead alone on the dull, drab dayof the playoff. of 15-degrees. finished with a par 71 and was second alone at 274. It was the fourth time in two yea.rs that the former BritishOpen champion has finished'second. But he hasn't won since his banner season of 1973 ' . , •. ,v • It was a two-man race all the way in the final.round-and that\S* Place Second only by courtesy of Nicklaus. He'd established a six-strokelead The University weightlif-with a brilliant 63 in the second round, then dropped back into a ting team placed second at the tie with a struggling 74 in Saturday's play. -. :t. • Weightlifters —UP1T»Uphoto Intercollegiate' Weightlifting Championships Saturday at Iowa State University in Iowa City, Iowa. • Homers Texas Past O's Montclair State University won the championship, follow­PAMPANO BEACH, Flal (AP) Jeff Burroughs stroked four Veteran Clyde Wright and rookie Jim Umbarger stopped-the ed by Texas and Michigan hits, including two homers, and drove in six runs to lead the Orioles onseven hits.Wright,'who worked six inningsand allow-State University.. Texas Rangers to a'11-1 exhibition victory over the Baltimore ed .six hits and (he lone Baltimore run was the winner * Six University lifters gar-1: Orioles Sunday nered points for the Burroughs, theAmerican League's-Most Valuable Player last FT. LAUDERDALE,"Fla.(UPIj — Scoring eight unearned Longhoms, finishing in thetop year, hit his homers, his third and fourth of the spring,,in the runs on four errors.'a split Texas Rangers squad, composed 10 places. . j-fourth with none on and in the fifth with two;on. He singled chiefly of rookies, defeated the New York Yainkees, 11-7, Sun­ The Teoc 360S. Tim Tong won the114-pound home a run in the Ranger's six-run sixth -x day. ' Following the leader. division championship for the £ .< Tom Grieve had three hits for,the Rangers,'including:his se­Steve Hargan, whosettled down after a three-run firstinning, second consecutive'year.'-»•_: cond spring homer, a two-run shot in the sixth.,' , " was forced out of the game in the sixth when he was hit in the Factory Authorized Sale Two yearsagoTEAC introduced the450, a . right wrist by a line drive off the bat of Eddie'Leon. • cassette deck so good a lot of open reel The diagnosis is that Hargan suffered contusionsof the wrist. decks are suddenly out-performed with things like'Oolby circuitry, enhanced by a DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Jose Cruz slammed three tone generator and calibration controls, Was $379.50 home runs, driving in six runs, to lead the Houston Astrropast peak Indicator light tape memory and au-. the Montreal Expos12-7 in an exhibition baseball gameSunday. tomatic shut-off. Cruz capped a five-run first inning for Houston with a three- Now $329.50 run blast off starter and loser Steve' Rogers. He hit a two-run homer off Rogers in Uie sixth and asolo shotoff John Montague Pandora's Box. We're not the only TEAC dealer,in town but we're the only Discount Shop. in the eighth. . Milt May and Doug Rader also homered for Houston, both with the bases empty. /limitedJtme on JkU Sale Don Emiliotequila j Larry Dierker pitched seven strong innings for the Astros allowing only two hits, one a solo homer in the fourth inning by J m] 1 ram«] rail t H Mike Jorgensen. • ''' *************************jr****** IteDi Halcyonic! |LEARN SELF DEFENSE j r-fnsKo&iv 38th & Speedway 477-0937 £• C1974yBACARM IMPORTS, INC.. MIAMI^FUTEQUHA SO PBOOF.-OONEMillO'lS A TRADEMARK OF BACARDI;* COMMNY UMIT^pJ X *-• < -* ---a-.— ... -j.v..... I' Paarson Instructor p«r/month & .? • Special |JT Student Rate "• On CR Shuttle Route • Afternoon and Evening Classes I American Karate | Association $ 454-9691 5 J + 1029 Reinli, Suite 6 fb«Mnd Montgomery Warden.* •X.«W i • Capital Phxa). J mmwm *••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ill: rf'Tne.University community is 40,600 srtono.?The input of this community ts essential for a betterAustitylwu! and in the future" V " ' > 1 ' . i % ^ i •> • ' -' 1Yl In 1971 In 1974 /Z1 Jeff Friedman made the amendment to the Parade Ordinance-that lessened, the iSC/ •Jeff Friedman made-the motion to create; "I'd like to see this incorrect category — 'students' — an Equal Employment Ordinance. 0:-m , *af • «:h . restrictions for obtaining a Parade: Permit. change. They are residents of Austin — citizens with . • He led the fight to keep social services in the same rights and opportunities as hon-students." v He made the motion to exclude the ; the City budget. t"3> "bounty provision" from the Austin Drug •i • He made the motion which funded thevs; :•» ife' jST : Plan. 't Peoples' Free Clinic and Middle Earth. ¥\ <• • He supported, and continue^ to support, • And Jeff Friedman made the first * m 1\Friedman lias a simple^ but. V extended drinking hours. ^ \ copies \ u> MM. *' -I— \flflinl , -v •.' ' ;T U«';•,*«. Ml,1M donation for rtgultrpricrtna .0*. 'WiiP v»»p» pnwms '/'u» i«m n ncthADMpkxaof wt C J 15 _ th« nutsmaller » ^ 7^* u* ia m «*» rif with aduii number 'W-' ui in'ui of fnf#diinti FREEi-'^lf' Oni coupon ptf vWv V 11 f *» c.if-.-j ima IM»« VAUD1HRU APRIC»; 1975 ^ ^ ' " " 1 imm m 2M0 GuoAihip*;.:,./.,.8*m«t Roodl &451-757{ , ---r-LM-is^T310w. Tickets: Raymond's Drug 1 & 2 '^rth 31' 19ATHE DAILY TEXAN Page 9 mm Canadien Bear Fight Montreal Canadien*' Yvan Coumoyer sprawls atop Boston Bruins' goalie Gilles Gilbert after Gilbert has just thwarted a Coumoyer scoring attempt. TheCanadiens won the game Sunday "night. Sports Shorts Finish 2nd The Texas-women's gym­ Smothers will. The Texas soccer team nastics team finished second in the regional competition of the Association for Inter­collegiate Athletics for Women on Saturday in Baton Rouge. Smothers was the only in­dividual who scored the need­ed eight-point ratingtd qualify for nationals^ placing first in the vault with an 8.36 score. She also tied for third in the dominated the selections of the Texas-Collegiate Soccer League All-Stai1" Team, as seven Longhorns were named to the squad. Those seven were Ben TheLonghoms lost theirop­portunity to advance to national competition, scoring 78.86 just behind LSlTs 79.74.. Southwest Texas. State' was third scoring 73.08followed by the University if Southwest Louisiana with 54.33. Even though ;-the Texas team will not make:ihe trip to Hayward, Calif., Thursday balance beam scoring 6.33. T^is willbe thefirst timeTex­as will be represented in national gymnastics competi­tion. V • Texas' Carey Congdon plac­ed second in all-around com­petition scoring 26.19. Congdon finished second in the vault scoring 7.63and also tied for tliiid in balance beam Bollinger and Craig Litton from the defensive line, mid­fielders Mimo: Alverez­C^lderon, Essey. Ghedessey and Pablo Taboada, goalie Aubrey Carter and center forward Greg Leiser. . North Texas State and Rice followed the Horns with five players each. NTSU finished second to Houston in theTCSL through nationals, Saturday for Texas' Marilyn scoring 6.33. championship. Ricewas third, ajid Texas finished fourth. THERE ARE SEVEN WHO CARE ABOUT... AN AUSTIN WHOSE POUCE FORCE CARES MORE ABOUT RAPES AND ROBBERIES in THAN MASSUNG MARIJUANA ,USERS AND STR^J^X VENDORS- Pd. pol. acw, py SAC-YO; LuWn Gilli!and, Erwin McGee Chairpersons jfforachan VHW­ ••i-'FT' OBI A Q •> Total. Hade especially for people ? M on their contact lensesl *T «N«­ • '"You really think youVe savingsize.Totallot,has a free,mirrored something.Like the time it takesfor^ft ^lens storage case,and the new econ- A ^0L proper Iras care.And the com ofc omy 4.oz. sizesaves you 25%; different solutions./ 3^'*v Total* is available af;thecampus But in thelong run you may wind > • bookstore or your local drugstore. :, up paying forshort cuts.There'sa And we're so sure youTl like chance your contacts will become ^ Total* that wellgive youyour second contaminated.They'll probablyfeefc/#. -.-j bottle free.Just send aTotal* boxtop uncomfortable and bother you.You't with your name, address and college ibay even get an eye infection.So why name to: jake chanceswith saliva? > • Ibtal, Allergan Now there'sTotal? The all-in-one ^ Pharmaceuticals : $w2at­ • contact lenssolution^that does itall. ' 2525 Dupont Drive TS$%­ Total* wets,soaks,cleans Irvine,California 92664 and cushions.And you J jonly have to use a single'; solution to get the whole . jobdone. W sfe-i J'£)} Inhere are two good\ ways tobuyTotal*— tfie*­ *l^jsactuidjhe 4 oz.^, *£!£•* . A,. „ «^ ~W* COSWSP -ST7** avattpbiaatii V R*T & > & JN -A H­ S^THE Di EXAN 11 Price Happy gjsjpite Lossf M^t ^S^ell^iqh r By KELLEY ANDERSONrRCAM tin Idcq »go mAra (han^ ill. -,A* a « i 5 Texan Staff Writer Before the spring Texas Track Coach Price believed'the finally might begin and perform way lackluster marked previous two school records and ^the Texas-J^ays Wednesday numerous 'other Texas season UT-KSU Summary ^jLWKwgh^S^t(ir&y. With .the bests and near school-record Discus —.I. JIrn McGoldflck/iTMai, State; 4tl2.3;3, RaM Fischer/ performances *against Kansas 202-3 (New me«t record.Old m&rk ot 191* 4 130* 9 by McGoldrick.in 1974)2cC«na LeDvc v • 120 HuWI«l—.l/-vancaRolandL' State March 22are anyindica­ Texas* 173*2; 3, Gary Gelkt' X&nus sat State/14.0: 2, Bill Kehmtftr,KiStates14.4;.X-Robert Pflmaaux. Texas, NltWMjM^furntr/Kintat SlaW' We'vehad soraeac^|s.^t tion, the Longhorns have Stale. 127-2. J; . High Jump.— l, Rlck.$lifeh Kansas Ur wind* 5 a aiding ­ returned,,froiri 'that un­ v-• State,. 6-10 (New meet record. Old mark -: 440 Oath — l,John tee;Texas* 47.9; 23 ^>r^ce *-sa^ And Price is very,happy. sat State, 6-2.'(Onfy.'ooes^fo,:cfeer a-'1 • Moehlbach, Kansas Statu. .49.!. (Ties, Kanut 3tate,.?:i2:5;,3,'.T«IS«HlB,K couldn't .have accomplished characteristic mediocrity. of 6-9 by Sllfer 1974) 2, Alan Moor*, Karc v -Bo& prlncf, Kansas StQtf*: 4»,5; 3-Chrl MarvinXaih, Texas, •iStati&i'liA T now," Price said in reference State. 23-4 % John Stack, Texat, 22-1;: 9,2; 2. Overtoir Spence. Taxasi 9,3; 3, the conditions were so poor* it v»; X Jimmy Mathews. Texas* 21-2j Hiawatha Turner; • Kansas State. 9.5; > not only to the Texas perfor­440 Relay -1. Texaf Uottn Lee. Billy Wind: 7.ft aiding; MAnrt in all tnt^.lnvnltMktmiiiit 7.-'l I mances but'to several key Jackson, Overton SpwiM. Marvin N«Ui) 00 Run -1, Jim HlnehllHe, Kuui '/X>4N-/:L Longhorn distance runners «.l; 2. KoiumStatokoifUMuetilbach,iState.. liSM-" ' • I .. ,.-..,Z:Uf\ HarHsoh/;Kansa4> Hngeiiandt' Glen Eggtand, Vanctf Rol4n& ^iawatha State. 1521. a ,John Craift Texas? , whp made a comeback after Turner) 4U (New meat record old \ 531 (Record Old by> Ltn-Harrison/. xiRobert.Prim«aMk,;oyettonSpwct,JoHif' prolonged, layoffs caused by mark of 4U by Kansas State If74) Kansas $M f411974) r 4 13.7, 2,Yxah»KSt6fr7( EUir MUe Run — i. Chris p*r«, Kansai^V^M -h Daha UOwUxts, *z<" in case you haven t noticed, a six-pack of Pearl 01; ,-' • JPearl Light costs less than other leading beers. And if you have >\ ^noticed, you're probably wondermgiwhy. \ *"Well it's because the savingl isjii the can. Not the beer. >t mean literally,the cam^vi^ rMt^ v You see, at Pearl, we not o e,aluminum, we also & r make our own cans. IF V F All our own cansMnd thatSkves us money^l'K H So, no matter how y go, the.savmgs fromour recycling"program and can plant wille ^ keep the price of Freedom of Choice? well below other leading , ''{a • ' brands of beerf ^ f M v - U'4 K a * L A M «<> ^ Frank Horlock' ­ •iI t*i yChairmanof theBoard JTM. * RF*H\ San Antonio, Texas flit's, T&HA V ^ J' r rfp UTl 5th -vJ,j_-By ED ENGJUSB^.v., -„. . J0r the 4#>-yard.medley relay. (3:26.0(>/^o^lUchner,BairdWLHagsteCte^broken in aU. fr Sixth. He did a great pressure job." -.event, the 400-yard-individual medley. • J*"1* TO** > ''?« -t «Ju* w#^enfor'Bob Ba^m/Jamlesi; were all named to the All-America team/r But the "goings on" up top didn't have ONE OF THE places thatTexas might Watson did not qualify for perhaps his " ti7,16Jexas team cllrtiaxedan e*-;S. ;Bftirdand GuyJHagstette. ^.k To make the All-America team, a' much effecton the Homs. Besides break­have picked up the needed ground best the freestyle.vf; JWmely successful aeasod inCleveland v MRachner'(bre3Stroke} j/and Balrd swimmer must placejamongvthe top 12% on event, 1,650-yard ing school records, Texas-was too busy . SMU was through the performance of However, the event was in good hands. 3ast week I?y finishing lgtfe iitthe'ffCAA' .(backstroke) jfrere'alsor-jn* on three 1 • placing in an event. keeping fen eye on.SMU, sophomore freestyler Ralph Watson. rtis..;Rachn$r.8etihe record in "We did much better than we ex­Freshman Jeff Knimwiede broke Wat­ "We went 'into-the meet, and we Earlier in the year, Watson led Texas to S6.9^^d':^^^,breastFoke pected," Texas Coach 'Pat Patterson thought we could -outseore them," son's school record in that event by a dual meet win over SMU and'eventual- andBai'rd set:tfe;r^rd'irithfe;: said. '.'We went up there hopii^ to score-;, breastroker Rachner said. "We looked ly was selected to participate in the around nine seconds. 7-^rtiecew,:. , one. point. Wefelt we bad the potential to:-, back after the meet and saw we could World University Games in Leningrad, Watson in the 400 individual medley f y Thelonghprasset school records in 10 score going up there, but we didn'tthlnk^'-have done better here or there and we -Russia. However, since, returning from and Ron Tyre in the.200-yard butterfly ,'flf the 12swimnjlngevents in which they >aiBachner,jhqwever, wasresponslblefor a, majqrjty loathe" Tex^s-ppintsiby-ed scoring in several events, too. , < records in their events. entered and ended tip with 26points. This the 200-yard breast was l/10th of a se­swimmer according to Patterson. l^ft Texas 15th,'one point'short of r.rinish^.thiw.^'the lOO^aiyi brekstroke -r . "If the nationals are.any indication of ; cond to finish second.": • . • "We're going toput Ralph in thehealth Patterson felt the outstanding show by .and fourth',in the 200-yard breastroke/ what is to come, we should have;a supete Meanwhile, SMU owed, its hold on its Southwest Conference^ Champ SMU,v • center and have him tested," Patterson, the Texas swimmers would serve as which finished 14th., J, * Ra'chner'q time/in the 100 of,S6.9 would Oljrmplc team. Last year.inihe iOfryanfe loosening grasp of swiniming supremacy said. "We're afraid hes*s-coming down more than a reward to a season.of bardihavebwlhetesttimeihthenationtwo; breastroke, a 59.63 would get ybu l2th;.; over Texas to diver Scott'Reich. with mono or Somethinglike that.I don't work by his team. Coming this close to ILAST YEAR; Worrell was quoted as , .years ago; -J-Vt > -'* >•" '• place. This year therewere 50swimmers^ "Scott Reich did asuperjob,"Patter­like his skin color, and he's been com­SMU with a team recruited to' swim in ^lyirig that:a ^mmer'S'yearwas'fa^ I WAS PRETTY happy withr under 60 seconds." - y son said. "He qualified in eighth place.If plaining of headaches the last weekand a the Gregory Gym pool makes the r.jilure/if hedidn't-da-well^'nationals: '•^^ijjwllureifhedidn't;dowelliat'nationalg.!'rfevervUiingIdy.."llacluiersai5."l was SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S John he had stayed there, .we would have half. recruiting outlook a lot brighter. "., this year^ Worrell set'the*school „ .This year, Nyorrell set'thfe sdhool record '/jlist happy tojget>iW the top six because Naber broke: three national records,% beaten them by three points. If he had "He didn't do'as well as he is capable ^ithejlop^^^.and^UQ^anl^ceestyle by, the.timM®f tomjrheat, there were "It's got to help," Patterson said. "It's while leading his,,team tohts^econ# moved up to seventh, we would have won of doing. He just,wasn't well." going to help on our recruiting a whole|l;j0.3) aW-helpedsetthe yftoolrecord tlhtes." ^ -}; ;Stntfgftt NgAA tijtle, Tdn rei«nl^^g| by one point. But instedd he moved up to WATSON HAD only qualified for one lot." rns Sustairy Mark f By MARK McFARLANE mondV foot.Gidedh;;Who struck out11 in who started and lost Saturday's first >V,Texan StaK. Writer the game, walked; jcaiterfielder John game, surprisingly came back to start .^/J;-v. ,v Superlative individual performances Sagehorn with one outin the ninth before the final game. For the first five inningsVi.W? ?;1 by third baseman keitb Moreland and striking out Mike Jaccar and Gene Han­he limited the Lcnghorns to only one • pitcher Jiin ;{Hfcbn; highlighted .Texas son to complete the horhitter, the 11th in -scratch bit as Arkansas took a 1H) leki: '--Hd baseball action during spring break as Texas history. . ; . • Miller tired in the sixth and retired for \ the Loo^ionis won nine of ten games iiK "Gideon pitdi^d extremely well" said the day. -IS eluding six conference games fromSMU Texas Coach ClifiE Gustafson. "He was Pyka, who led off with a triple, scored % ' and .Arkansas. real fast and had good control. I knew he Texas' first run after Mike Anderson \--s r Texas raised its SWC record to 15-0 by was working toward aperfect game but I; walked and Blair.Stouffer bounced oat. ^ , :sweeping series against SMU in Dallas didn't have to say anything. Re knew it, Anderson scored for a 2-1 Texas lead ^ -l ' March 21 and 22 and Arkansas in Disch-too." ^U,V after reliever Daniel Strange walked t,*, Falk Field Friday and Saturday. The The Mustangs hit only three balls out' Wendell Hibbett with the bases.Ioaded. Longhoms also improved' their season of the infield, one a fine drive which LONGHORN STARTER Floresf^r; ­record to 294, winning three of four rightfielder Mickey Reichenbach had to entered the ninth inning , with a one-^rj games from the University of Minnesota hustle to catch.. In.the seventh inning, hitter, but was relieved by Ray after giv­mm March 24 and 25 at Disch-Falk. Moreland was cau^it flatfooted on a ing up a one-out single to designatedIn the SMU series the Longborns hard grounder wbidi rolled up his arm bitter Ralph Bradbury. Ray gave-up figured to improve their ,300-plus team for an error much to the displeasure of another single before getting two outs-" batting average and score a bundle of the SMU players who yelled at the of­ and an apparent third. However,^ : runs against mediocre Mustang pitching. ficial scorer for a hit Stouffer dropped Pyka's forceoat throw I' /'However SMU pitchers "held" Texas to Morelandt. whp bad six hits and five to second, allowing Bradbury to score ; wins of 6-0,; 6-4 and 5-0. RBIs in 0)6 SMU series, wasted no time the tying run. 'rv . psfsm Gideon pitched his first college no-securing the recoid in the Saturday -. In the bottom of the ninth,-a deter-lf ' hitter and the second of his carter as bis doubldieaderl After/hitting a two-run mined Stouffer followed two walked. teammates scored six runs on only five homer in the first inning, he singled in teammates with the winning fait to right^1-­ •; hits;in the Friday SMU opener. the third for Us 220th career hit. and the field to make up for his error. ' -7~'k > "I was thinking perfectgattie from the new mark. . -In Saturday's first game, Arkansas J third or fourth inning," said'Gideon. "A "SURE the record-means a lot;" said dropped three pop-ups, including one inJ-^-vf . few of SMU's hitters, I was pitching Moreland, who will: put the ball in a the first inning which allowed thelJH around. They were swinging hard, but I trophy case with a collection of horse Lon^ioms to score twounearned runs onj-was worried more about walking people trophies he haswon."Ithought about the no hits.Two squeeze bunts, worked,to>*|than giving dp hits." record before and after I batted, but you perfection by Pyka and Anderson in tbe'5% :ORELANDt-vwhd: Saturday broke don't think about something like that fourth inning, gave Texas a 5-1 lead as?-S"| ; Texas' career hit record of 219 held by while you're playing." Wortham wpn his ei^ith game of the4j<'^ -.^.David.Chalki hit his first homer of the ,. Second baseman Garry Pyka also hita; . season, allowing tbree hits and one' mK??^' i ^/season, Friday, helping Texas'rtova . two:run homer in Saturday's first game earned mn. "' , seventh'inning 4-0 lead over the as the Longborns took a 6-0 lead before : Arkansas scored only four runs;ailing ^ Mustangs. : having to stop a late SMU rally in the eairned, on 12 hits in the three-gamej^' -Gideon lost his <&ance for.'a"perfect seventh inning.1 Winning pitcher Richard series. In comparison, Texas scored C-• V5 an££;1n'>ihe sixth inning when 'he l&unc-~ Wortham'gi^d^ftoHtt,'6ne run ana'rtins'oo'U hits irf the series' first J'l'pi'tiStjiitd leftfielder Mm-f^am--struck out niAb bejfore tiring jiftei*six lit Gid€b&; affected:by the weather in^l&Si?, hings: Terry Ray relieved Frosty Moore opener, raised his season record to*S-0, iMmmmrn in the seventh afler."the Mustangs had while scattering six hits. Hibbett drove narrowed the scbreto 6-4. Raystruck out .in one run with a triple and Proske andi ' • • • the potential tying run to aid the game. Duncan added two RBI each as Texaaih'i&-• "<5an nitr/m / AP\ nliL. In the Saturday nightcap, lefthander took a five-run fifth-inning lead. ;/ . .'-2-.^ Evaluation.*;' : Martin Flores strudc out 11 batters ^ooden and Hall aigree on ot» thingsfv 24 of the 44' points. Jack Givenis, a" through fiveinningsand allowed onlyone^r^»«»o«leii a lOth SCAA b^eU^<^an^?' ijthis game will be for the national cham^j ^ ^o^lp as a'retireit^t piresrat; ^ freshmanj wound up as the Wildcats' v. Mustang hitJ Ray pitched the final four 51VC Standings' piondiip, despite the comment of Coa^t -leading scorer with 24. inningst preserving the win and shutout ' llidr.game; 'aga^t' theV|^ytid^;T Bobby Kni^itof Indiana that it should be; ; "I thought maybe, he didn't start his, forFlores. Moreland hit his third homer W I hL -W 1: to. Texas 15 :i>iily for the tournament championShip^ir • 0 1.000 29 4 J7? ­ regulars,'* Wooden said with a smile. -of the series, and first baseman Doug TCU 0 4 .467 19 5 -792 to^up yrito. somev" "•J" *•>i'' .: )i*rv Kmght's previously unbeaten Hoosieps-: •: Texas A&M.. 6 .447 17 5 Then be added: "I was extremely im­Duncan had tWo RBI on two hits as the Baylor.:..... 17 m lost by two points, 92-90, to KentuckyJte Longhoms completed the.sweep. 6 .442 g. pressed with Kentucky,-the size and ; ­ r.'A j^ojial competition. " Arkansas .... 4 .400 10 10 JOO ; . Obach Joe B. , .i...... ^ strength. .. . OYER THE LASTfreekend Texasand Rice 5 .as 12 11/ J22 ­ r Monday's program opens with a con-f 5 Houston ...j. 4 .333 13 » J00 legendary Adolpb Rupp at Kentucky -Arkansas^would bayethad just as much Texas Tech.. 4 333 13 14 '•:.'i4l1 '• feisolatiqn game between Syracuse and-l "I don't know when I've looked at a luck playrng that; three-game series at-SMU 5 300 ! .too 20 ' • th^ yieara ago, now faces a'team fcitt-|gijLouis?viUe. Kentucky whipped Syracuse ..more awesome physical group'of basket--unwnrsBMn the North; Pole." It. Would have been ball Atonday Arkansas Nebraska 6-4; warmer. Competing i in sub 40-degree Riverside 9, SMU 6; Minnesota 4-3, Texas 2-9; Texas^•the Bruins 75-74. T* . Meyers' 'injured leg hurt after the temperature, 15-degree wind chill factor Tech 4-4, Abilene Christian 7-1. Oklahoma Ofyd. Rk« ts: -/• ^KKentacky starts a front line of. ' Louisville game "and we don'tknow how ' 95-79 while Louisville fell in overtime players." The UCLA coach said — 1$>10, CaK^ annouhcement after his -and 25 mjfc winds Friday night — that's Tuesday — Nebraska 4-4, Arkansas 2*$; Lamar 54, gffr&hmMjftick Robeyandseniors keyiii', X it will react." „ , right Friday night— and Saturdayafter-. Houston 1-1; SMU 1, Cornell 6, 10 Jnninys; Texas Mr MiGi^Yey;> M, and B^»j Gruyette, M.-: Minnesota 1-5;Tech 10-?, Trinffy5< TCU 4*2, Kfanwy ­ ,^'In answer to a question Siinday^ Hall noon, Tex&s pitching excelled vrtiai its' • 2*1'' • |®Gu^Jimmy Dan Connerdirects theacv l^saidf the Syracuse press worked-while ^ batting did,not^ lifting the Longhorns to r -Wednesday -A4M74, Minnesota M;£tanford1)l, :.teaming with.anoUier senior guards Kentucky had reserves in flie-'gaiiie biit -Wr 5-1 and 3-2 victories. k ',*•> -V SMU 0 r -•"liliqlogically; right now and have'. Thursday. —. Arizona 14, SMU2i f r-. .^ 'through the tournament,'? Hallleclan^l^ . not against veterans. • c>: Texas -capped-its.-three-game sweep' Friday — Texas 6, Arkansas 1; Rke VBaytoC 4;^ UCLA long has been noted for its with a ninth-inning win in Saturday's Houston S, TCch 2; Southern Illinois 15, SMU 7; A&MafI'lCoach Wooden's retirement .aiurojuee^ Wooden ^ front with Ail-American Dave Meyers TCU. ppd. rain. :ipentwillhavenonegaUveeffectonOur5 ' .'defensive press, but Hall said he will finale. Saturday — Texas 5a' Arkansas 1-2. Houston 5-6,-• -Marques^-Joihi^®^)s)^:rRftij|. Uke his chances in substituting, f Sfe; ^ Razorback lefthander Richard Miller• Tech t-0; Baylor at Rice 2, ppd.wet grrimds/AlMat­ ^team; What it does to • ^ swne :time,2Ae admitted ,the ^ ^Washington (6-9)? 'Tljt NoSiSf^er^i; . TCU, ppd. rain. -• •to be seen " -' ^^BruinsThis seasori haven't met teams -^Halph Drollinger, stands 7-1V ^ #vf l in The Assoclated j/. ^with :ine physlcal strength of. the Wild---i.> : In-'the hackCourt ate senior Pete /. 1 By THOMAS KESSLER -.UCLA, rated No; _ ___ Press poll, takes a 27-S record into the^Jtats.*^^5^^ jK^rrgovich and junior Andre,McCarter.-. -• Texan Staff Writer ;£ finale against No 2 Kentucky, 264 -"We've played teams of similar style, Plock No. l v ; Kentucky's bench strength coiled make( Two. weeks ago, Texas tennis player Gary Plock was in ^ ^Wooden says he . didn't< make-his-an-i-' -• ---. . ,-but not as physlcally.endowed," was the -~ a big difference Hall used 11 men in his nouncemehfe to^'hype ottr players We*' coach his slump, but Newton's law that for every action there is an equal-­ way ^ the 64-year-old made ,win overSyracuse, when reservesscored : and opposite reaction came true again, and Plock is on a winning As Tech Falls streak that has brought him to the top of the Longhorn roster? ^ After.Plock defeated Oklahoma City University's All-America" r"St£ve Wedderburn in last week's Rice InvitationalTennis Tourna­ ™*ieu ment, Texas Coach Dave Snyder moved Plock into the No. 1 posi-' jSAM DIEG6f(AP)9^ lTany ^Itr^l^endai^^fiSiire Monday, night"•iwhai'^^^'rftink you will see us •tion.'Snyder's actions were justified as Plock romped over Texas college cOachlng kno\*s what it's like to-^ Kentuc^y nieete UgLA for the NCAA; with the emotion that we u. replace t;s?Keh , v*' j Tech'-s Stan Norris, 6-0, 6-3, and the Horns grabbed a 9-0 win in v«:regional finals against Indiana,•* tucky Coach Tuesday's match. * ......a i oonn^wooaen; .winner'.r-ot^hiiie^^lKSibi^^NiipM its C^lifdriM'trab"ijy .Hall, who ^^|^{||Ruj|$:fj iiaeot^l"titlesin xfar ^ 1402? years UCLA," lias k^upsetting previously unbeaten^Indlana • -But how does a hot and cold running tennis player turn a slump1 IF ^tudcy^wijl^ ^llBtopd^wn^after Mito-^/^92-90 last week 'V'1 i"i Into that kind of success? ®«.; i \t. Hdlsaldit didn't^mattef tohltiTwhlch "! just played myself out of it," Plock said. "I won quite a few Ji^^pWIikliiipBttlhni ofi"f.team met therWildcatssin-cthe vlinal, "I matches, and that gave me my confidence. All along I've had my \ahBBUncement are obvio^, /?H:?:ajthough he had earlIer 'saidfhe;would shots, they just didn't come together. Now they are." xi : Texas is 2-0 in Southwest Conference competition with itsother win a 9-0 rout over TCU. And this is where the Longhorns want to win every possible match. Wooden wbuld wait Until after the > v match up.with UCLA alongthe frontline. "Since they ,compile all the wins and losses to decide the coin 'M?ifi®l 8arne tov make his'^ahn<)uncemeiit, fi/ ''They'll have to matchup withus,"heCoach or thipp not going to have a negative ^jnslsted, VRick Robey (Kentucky's 6-10 ference champion, you can win all your matches 5-4, but if Association 6f! freshman) is the best'eentfer ta the final another ^eam is winning :8rl, 9-0,'you can still lose the con­four, 'and 'jBob Guyette is*-a strong fci ference,":Plock said. {The tebounder atforward^And I'ltfthe quick -' "SfeeUngat the. In other action in the Horns' win over Texas Tech, Stewart ;i**jforward; he added.' ' ^ Keller eased by'John Moffet, 64,6-1. Gonzalo Nunezshowedlittle Ailen-ofQld sign>ofi his stjll pulled stomach muscle by overpowering John playjnd expressed confidence In. • Clemenits, 6-1,6-1 '* „ ^ M#^»feTO«^^^%^*iXi|WH;!W^S|tKentud^s JimmyD«n ConnerandMike 't Graham Whaling handled Paul LeeLum, 6-0, 6-3.. ^Kctories OTeriti^^i»nsi|iH Flynn. Roth have excelledIn tournament|? Nunez and Keller teamed'up to beat Norris and LeeLum, 7-5, fe s® ^ were jbe difference in the,win X '^ky'„h*rlBSt|.^i8lif $e?-, ^ m eniueky^;rdeptfc|HS[i«u8ed: allgli w Mi* * •' m:Syracuse,'aiid ^ . ..va5W,,» .e-of-.thereserves^fr^hman-forwar^c '• ;b ov^rlod^Snjf "We'vjtjust got to'take them one ata tfine.V he ^|(^,/;I^li^ can continue to^run up the scores we'll right1 y*~ f where we ,want' to he when we play SMU and Houston." ndpy,"iyyarc]h.31Y]-1975THE TES^N Pag^ tg ms&smQiimi 1;v§ w Kellner Analyzes Conditioning .IiV%, WI CinemaVII1BlltM * "1^«i!^?l^aE MVAS *y-"T h®ads>" Kenner said, ideology in films, kellner Women are stereotyped as f 1 about anoint '^ w "IS" ®? Hollywopd-type either masochistic, sub- * to Ponglas drudgery of life mider the op-films. VThe cowboy jn missive types pr as those who ' •• tS?65*^ pressivealiens (capitalists)to Western films is symbolic of toy to get the hero to reform pnuosoptiyat the University, lifeod-collective farms. typical capitalist types the and pnt away his gun," • ly"06* 8yg"»f second ina . Filmsproduced inGermany hero ahcayscomes tosave the -Kellner pointed out -'?: : uke0VEr tttfr* -n.a^fjLu <* powerless and weak -During the 1950s and 1960s -t T^nrd Reich ideologically a»-homesteaders." Westerns When Americans felt ' ' by philosophy ditiotied Germancitizens to became popular during the ithreateoed by aliens/ science - K^lr 4t tte new system of McCarthy era when subirer-fiction films surged in pop­iJnfnfetmnL « government. Kellner said this~ sives were supposedly trying ularity. The danger is always trims as an ^n^tJe conditioning was achieved by bc.',ding a sPjrlt 6f of it -"^twoalism among German w^y — r'rV'""1 c't'«ns. Films depicted : mtf f. °e.w*i'y. glorifying scenes of German culture wh*dl instlUed P"*te- ingT^Ta ^ow" w -*jgJ«j*M>j^tttns children on .Erteadinghis analysis of ^••••••mmmmmrnrn r v_ ^The [Good Food StoresJ mNaturalFoods fioodl'8tefl^p9 'California Fancy ;• Broccoli : jUngeBttAcfc'V -V* 39# ea. 'Texas New Crop Straight Neck Squish • . '• ' '.V ',••• ­^California Romalne vldtnce • Large Head 5^-ea.-" • 35 CaBfotnU. L«rseStalk Celay.29^ea. •' :. Fresh,CIeamed*TriiamidSpinach,10? j^,oc.CdloB«g..: .390 ea. _ 7 ~ ft ^ p, --V IkeGood foodStores. Molrc TkaaJut GoodFood AllStoreJloars * - Nw «hn>Sat. lfeWAJC. -fe](FJi. , SK UMNmm.feMrJL 1. ll01WntS(li tlBiyioi 472-1942 ­ r2. 123East Nortfc loop atAve. F, 454-2676 i3.9Mnnt2MitPnil 474-2034 :..&>-•*»& ~ mmiotVMBmaaftA 4S3-4707 Unjyersity of Texas •O-'TJ m nSiladium 7-m to take over. Kdlner said, surmounted hv seeking wise l^y also experienceda com-scholars wbo^ave the townin eback iii the* 1960s when. the case of aliens attempting students wereforming protest to take over the town'. • rallies. ^Westerns provided In monster movies,; the justification forviolence," the monsters represent evil; The Woodrow Wilson Fellowship problems-are-overcome by recipient said. utilizing time-honored Westerns ' also .said .remedies such as crosses, something about attitudes silver tjullets and poisons,or toward sex."thecowboy can chants passed down through 'make it' with a' barTgirl or a -the.ages. -; 7. Mexican girl, but not with s Busin^snTO;!^HsK and ^pretty easteni schoolteacher. 'overly-aggressive people can BRIDAL SHOPPE '4013 Marathon You *-<. have the opportunity to view about ,125gowns. Thirty percent off on mothers' dresses. llniversityof Texa|J TC-rw**t.-/r- REQUIRED. . , PLUS#-' SK ^ NO EXTRA CHARGE for enorustings or firetfUrst stones in the custom rin ?; KEEPING YOU. .FROM ORDERING? Shilt St J'|T~ni[i imTTTT W% M %i v «r (# *4 : ; JEWELRY ,&JL flST FLOOR •••••HiMaiiiHIliS ••• •>• .;••• • •Jt.Oe . V tm. IF Y^OiL PLAN i TO ' GO V?-­ NYWHERE r&tf# "i <»l-V' ' ) WDTE' ABlliii 45 J . ;l£ smmtsam. r' } ¥ VI . WHEN:; TODAY & TOMORROW J f £Lct,\ ' JERK'S OFFICE, MUNICIPAL BLDGi, 8th & ^•?V*" COLORADO HOW: CATCH M RIDE FROM LITTLEFI^L^^OUNTAIN "BETWEEN 10 & 4 TODAY OR TOMORROV^ % m really identifr-with eanersiefc movies, Kellner saidJ^They " " " : glorify getting to the top,-at the risk of hurtmg others^'he explained Kellner-note^l an inconsistency because at'the 3 same time.-gaBgsters receive reprisals for what they do on . the way to the top. , The graduaie of Colarabia ' University said that Walt Disney films urged hardwdrk, i an American <. value; -'-'The ' • dwarfs m Snow White were ; singing about going-off-to' work ... they^ wete so happy •" about it" In the 1940s and 1950s when • Americans -raw c'trtvipg ^ ... attain consumer goods, films t were an image of the . American Dreamvf "Girl meets boy... ^irt likdisfof boy"> With money everything fei.'­happy ever after, after all, ' you . have a girl-apd .tno^ey..^' Who could ask for 'more?"- Kellner asked. • Kellner added recognize the need. for.films. "People need to escape, to lau^i,-live a more exciting Ufe. Films allow-people to identify with characters 'in i^imlimmpKiinily^^ffi,^ awa^ ^r^'5irtim0u ^P™vetsity standsat,S9,^&iup registratToii supervisor,in"tKe . from.fall,to,spring-semester :«>#>#y JOSE^.'JXORES > ^Te)caB Staff Writer, v '-were Vsadl' University'police offlcers will be among W teohniquea. „ J , „ members of the first <;lass of the nation's^ ^"Soj^many departments are^having A wUL" problems in thi$.area. In some places, the* b liilw C hi°,{ ^ vlcU?n appears to be on trial rtther than the -~ ^^i^Crowshaw ^ accused rapist She often finds her personal t and.Officers Clihriij. Wallace and Carolyn < Ufe being raked ovet thercoals^jn^n openStevenson will represent the^ tTnfverslt^/^rtroom.'f hesaid. • iW. ,«n^ V{-V^ police atthe sessibnsWhich wiU include per-„.f^,Lt.Jordan said hisxletectlvesJiayea good sons! testimony from an Austin rape victim^iworkingt relationshfp with Austin-, Rape and from theperson.convicted jotqssaultinf^ ^Crisis Center. • , ^ her. ? t i 1 Wolfrom said Sunday that while therehad-Kwen'Du8Ban of ihe Austin' Rkpe Crisis; been relatively few rape incidents on cam-,';>l „irr af^d ,wlth Jordan ,J' ;^ ; . puSj-the University police felt that iiqw -^ernt .good, ^bbUt A rape. S,ases* vestigative techniques and any other new. "T to be understanding, and . infnrmatibn on a crime such as rape should ^®®\^sM*eat.a?rjape^vlcr; -r be given highpriorityas'far as training was • concerned.-' VxLWhit the main problem seems to t>e in ilnvthefew^ we^ve .received handling'the Investigation goes. Howevpr,,,,',! _ . ,. ; wefeei ttat^there fcnSJj(ays room for lmvD/ ftie.^ooi of^are-in\^tfga%oni^ Wi­ i0f,mM53Ugatprs:wh0 -—"-r &or^ge;ol , r J — -—y». «ioi,i-ioaa w^ii ue umifed to apl o.; o£-i n-i ~ ; , ' • » proximateljr 40 police officers'; an'dTsfbeinr City Homicide DetecUve Colon Jordan, funded'by, a Govehior's Criminal Justice^ who has .been working on the idea of the Division grant to the Texas Police Associa­ school since last October, said last week tion. * r «' \B ^ W(: f l ^ p _m m . . •»•••••••_=••••••«•••.-- Spriiid aware of ^different, 3.7 percent over the1974 snr-OffitP rif thb R«ri«froW situations." ' . ing semester !l^ ROUND UP '75 •» V Delta Sigma Pi fWi Patt-A-Tliol Open to alt Campus omanizations, dorms and in-J^ dependent teams. |f^.T Pick upf Registration Forms and {Rules at TEXASP UNION SOOTH 106 in t Deadline for entries Monday; April.7. Any questions. -fe'->,caH 441-0773 or IF3 476-8616 i x \%^ **$£m : Llf>35' V-^ THERE ARE/SEVEN I i *^6 ^3" Jm* WHO CAREABOUT..; * l y* l#i AN AUSTIN WHERE PARKS AND TREEMte 1 ARE MORE IMPORTANTV THAN CONCRETE AND BUILDINGS. * ' Tt ti - SAC .s^&hdi IY D mtj-r­ * t -tji. i iFrom, the spring of 1974 to ; the spring of I975, ihere wa8 t anincrease oC 976 womai and 433 men Units showing,the largest gain in enrollment i< were the( School^tf Com» municatlon. and the -Colleges «f Business J Administration and, Engineering. *,""r " ^'Cqmjmjnlc^tioh-showed a ,.16,6 percent increasev white buSioeSsadininistratipnhad a rise of IB.5' percent and ejigtheerjijg K.p^nanf. v Colleges recopiingnaeclines, „ i»ere ^edijtcaiioii fine arts \ humahities.Mi^sing'iSanhacy ^ and social &n& behavioral sciences The greatest drops occurred in»the eduction' has continued to rige. Are there r (il y^i^Tpian% feS -5ietJJoyMrof^i<^alHco|Jlii^ 4 »as^st, youlirfc^electing yc^ieifitir^ vyedding paper troussea^i^^^# exan finest tradllional otthelatei|co|tMn$|" Ipqfory design. helassifieds OURUHLIMrrep SELECJJpN INCLUDES: "" • myrTAtH>N^^N0'AkNOiMC&fENiS'Jm ETIQUETTE BOOK ' PERSONALIZEO tiiAPKINS i K&£%i3¥=^a^«5^S®faS5!r * 'J1 i[lstyyear. 5th&Whiti8:I" Rgpl-S. ot|97Jl showed an enrolfinent, of 37,339 with a slight arOpiiS „ 1972 to?37,318 CS,t0i­largest iix sdiooist^M ­colleges in spring eiirollm^it ^ li-iare^ business.administca^cii,| 1,6,400; graduate, 5;92$; rniln^l ' 'sciences, 5,395, social^«rl&i .-.behavioral sciences^'4;$3,| ' education, 2,969, and cojfj-: .municatlon, 2,658. humaniUes, 1,656; law, ^53$;^ . ifHirsiffgr-OTO? ^Thduafe |»»alnefei Wa^tecturg; ^ 5^8; and graduate horsing,'9? m /* i fj,/v W* HI /•">« -?7>„ 5^ yfp -H ->vi , •», I ^ Pi ©&• // Smoking Clinic "Successful rf y ..•«e£>> < * , ? t7* & ' ^ & ***" * -#V *& ,; *• i 1: vfty ^ '/ ^ •sophomore; Jan Nieto said. limited to 12 to 14 persons. . helping smokersquit the habit clinics runs from 40 to 50 per­ a newjUnlveraity sweetheaAj"GIvens**;jftpeeSh 'Junior';' Follow-up studies revealed ;v'':kr H' V.Sk hnve been so successful that cent, he added. quitters have remained non-Participants keep diariesof' The/decision probably will,,;' Mjajiel1ne „ liartwell, the third,, scheduled for mid-and be a apough one,judgingfrom:;' marketing-junior; Karllyn He said he hoped to have smokers while most other when why they smoke April or early May, is full, enough people trained in two each cigarette. Subhabits in programs have a 25 to 30 per­the 16 aemifWaliats chosen . " Kdber, biology (premed) • Dan Nieto, director of the or. three months so several cent success rate, he said. the smoking habit can thus be The,semifinaiists wer$ Junior-. ««-«<-•» Melinda; McCloudj -department's Health. Action chosenon the basis of their communication junior^ clinics could be offered Austin clinics use the group identified. Services, said. simultaneously. therapy using applications. 'Those with the MarkeetaMcNattijournalism; technique, Doctors explain themedical .. The usual waitingperiod for Previous groups showed 60 group pressure, support and widest range of interests and -senior;-Karen Ojrler, gsy>;i consequences of smoking. enrollment in a clinic is six , campus activities were choiogy > (premed); to 80 percent of the par­discussion to help the smoker Audio-visual materials selected. > <-•»* sophomore r Susafl ^Reilly; supplement this and other in­Those chosen'tire:' Sylvia German ..-tptemed)i formation, he said. Bacon, communication'' sophomore; Cindy Roberts, Chooses Students Groups qf this kind "tend tosophomore; Frances Baker, .home-economics junior; and become cohesive quickly" elementary, education Martha Upchurch, a junior In because they "have a clearly sophomore; * Evelyn business.^ '|f>tw defined task," Nieto said. ,Bumstead, economics junior; 'Finalists will "This contributes to the in-' Claudia Clinton, journalism t be ''selected Ten; students have been Committee speech; Theatre Committee. Monday and Tuesdf^My^v^ dividual's ability to quit junior; Dee Dee Docljen, selected to positions on the • Claudio Cirulli, • MadelineClark, freshman smoking." sM 1877-76 Texas Unbn Program sophomore in elementary education A campus election 'April f . , • _ --— electrical in art, Recreation Committee. sophomore; Deirdre Fotescu, Council. engineering. Musical Events will ,choose the new • Sherri Zillgitt, junior in Cost of the clinic is$5. A re­ music senior; Lisa Germany;: sweetheart VijS . The will act Committee. the I students as zoology, University fund is made to everyone who chairmen of nine programing • Michael Barker, junior in Interaction Committee. attends all eight sessions. ScholarshipsOfferedforFjve committees and also will comprise the Texas Union Five scholarships are being who•has.demonstrated • some-Program Council. • offered in honor of Dr. Albert . of the same; 'qualities of Interviews were conductedSchweitzer, noted medical character which 'distinguish last week and final selections missionary and• winner of the > Dr. Schweitzer.". < • -­Nobel Peace Prize in 1952 "A < Applicants should write a" were made Friday based on • the' interviews. The outgoing L letter of application, including each, areopen to any junior or information about educational ^ <'v -Flying High-and Nancy Mowry, a' radio­ . The scholarships, ,of $150 council selected members : senior studentat the Universi­background, with itaention of .• television-film major,' as-­ major and minor subjects, • , Paul Covenet»«nioyi thespring weather whil^.fiying i ty. Application deadline is council coordinator. r Aoril 11 -fj&zr"*---v -;and statement of^interestsand % hit kite near tht.lntrgnniral ^ ,']rt ^ : , Students selectai and, the 4gJ Dr.: DewittC-Reddick, s objectiy«s, < itfcluding * committeeSf they will diafrv1/ THERE ARE SEVEN i .are:. « •:di( professor -qf, journalslm and professiodal and, career ,1^ U>nghorriBandMenibers ' terests » <. . chairman; of; the-scholarship ; • Bever1y. '•!i.aniderjs'i& WHO CARE ABOUT... Applications should'alBo in- Sx?' committee, said the,selection Sdect liiCheerleader^ • freshman in psychology, Afiw-v clude the -names -and ad­ is will:not rest upon a1 precise Amrican Culture Committee.' f dresses of at least four ti prescription of qualifications, ( -Ten new cheerleaders'for, and three for wome»);':choseb . • Larry Newman, graduate references,' two rotswhom 19V5-76 have been selected by outside the>:campus >B but on character, interest and • from student in business, Cultural n should be on the' University the Longhorn Band. area, graded •" fh« human concerns as ex-.. faculty. -Entertainment CwnhUttee. V v AN AUSTIN WHOSE RESIDENTS empllfied by the applicant. -< Cheerleadersforl?75-76are preliminaries andrthe • Julius (Jajr) L: J&ikiiis.i Applications should be ad­ DONT PAY HIGHER RATES Patat MunlrMtmir.f Pornt'M^nAnoirf semifinals on a 10-point junior in architecture^ Carol McDonald, Rne.iv ZetUeColeSalathe.donorof dressed totheAlbert Marsha Pavlethich, taTrola system. Fifty-ninewomenaind Arts Committee. ' ^3/ FOR ELECTRICITY the scholarship fund and an Schweitzer Scholarship'Com­Gibson, Lynne Culter, Ken 29 men tried out for the spots. • Mark Addicks, sophomore . THAN IBM AND OTHER INDUSTRIESex-student, at the University, mittee, in care of Ms:'Shirley Leonard, Jim Tucker, Jim The semifinals cut this in radio-televisibn-film, Ideasspecified "The award should Binder, 2608 Whitis Ave. amount to 10 men-and 10 Gordon, Mark Brown and and Issues Committee.: stsi be made to a young;person: Austin, 78712 Steve Brack. women, and the Longhorn • Arnoldo Mata, freshman —Trite-Band later made the final in electricial : engineeriijgi ,s Six judges (three for men selections. Mexican-American Culture > Pd. pof..a0v. by:SAC-YD; Lukin Gilliland, Erwin McGee Chairpersons i® GROUP RATE I OINNfft ^J& • w• iAuuoa* m • POTATO IAUD• IIANI ' *2Is W • OMON*fiaaf >111x0. rw( J4^ .; ' S*rv*d^unify jfyh MMmm< . lV,V ?330 S^npar-'444-64ey Cqstom CookfnB §i6: STEPPIN' IN STYLE « - Trenche is Antonio Hours $1 ^ We've moved to new and better facilities Spo&allting in engfne overhaul transmisston over/iaul brake work and tuna-ups. % wiH? 4-vs.* 1006 WEST 12TH ST. 477-2725 3d r 4 ||L ri J i* c*i, rt *£im ^ m jtov&P Wedn«*day Jrt, TeM^Union fcr a canoe trip ori^tKistLower:: Guadatope River Friday and Saturday, ^ md £ I April 5. Cost $8 for UT «tudents, fqml *9/ a"ff *taff; '$8.50 otherkt" Recreation " JP^" V' Committee. 1 a a-,-|||:; •• < AII Day, Third Wortd Photography Exhibit Foyer, Undergraduate library. Through April 12. Co­uponsored by the; Afro-American, Culture Committee and the Fine Arts Committee. % LeiMJii liinjSjiL w/(s)iyJU(o] ^ rAH Day\gxhibitt Recent WoHt* bv lee Bom' The M. -Austin artl»t will display" paintings and graphics. if K 3 Foyer, Undergraduate Library. Through April 5. fine s .jti •^Artji Committee. t , -1 \%M MM h Vr , 8:30-/p.m. Flamenco Guitar,,. Guitarist Matt r Kret*er will perform at the Texas Tavarn. f,mm.U-v i A C6MIN6EVEhlTS ( ^ • J™ n?fn Tuesday, Sandwich Seminar: Uonel I Castijlo. The statewide head of the Tejano Political Ac­liMgroup will speak on the activities of the organiza­lf.roj' The Cellar (beneath the Texas Tavern). Ideas CREEKS and Issues and Mexican-American Culture Com- v p "mittees. ^ \ '• ,2>4 p.m. Tuesday. Simultaneous Chess Tournt..: hjegK Bring your own bdard and play an expert. Tex­as Tavern. Recreation Committee. 5f#0#C HTVM 1 f li with Qribn B*dn$,%fi I *1 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday.'Austiit Jon Festival. We've got your fit. , ,r . ifofo Sah&iFpk p-is., JhMMtori* Safflt A ' Friday's program will inelude jthe UT Jazz Ensemble/ Slip into our apartments as you choose the life you lead.. ^tar«^ and ,47 Jimes lh^pWnvWejght; Saturday's f $3.25 t program.willfeatyre the'Pete Brevier Quartet front We've got styles to siilt your taste. s"" ~<"k J North Texas Stflte(Uniyersi5y)sSteamheat andthe Efoc-i And we'H fit not only your style but your budget—comfortably, " jj^UL'.YOO CAN SAT • tromagnefs. tickets will Be on litile Noon -5 Sim.1 v Wednesday, April 2,jn»he Unlonr'lnformatioo Center.; high-rise view of life at down to earth prices.Tickets, $l.50 forMt students, faculty and staff; $il iWfiSBti " S 9m MM il • Organizationallyeetinft. 'A &rjA~-\r , •fcV.vSli 1975i Sponsored oy th# MealCvents Wmmlttee, Texcti Unlbh South RooJ> hillJS vimm tmmm &fs&v m,yr; ,* >a\x>b; [.Y TEXAN pi fsssrs' h i •' -v • • • ;• f -& x^-f m ' 1.^' ^VICKYWWI^«^iINEVITABLY -gotin mewayofthedevelpp^Afavorably^lmpVeBsedSwlth -^cbmes up in anyconversation^ MY IDENTIFICATION repressed character 12 hours m?nt of other characters: "I" J\AsximiUan Scljfell'S perfor­taVmanwhbseimmense The program was only in. •prith that character does pre­a day, five days a'week,and I tend, to catch myself.trying-to <-mance in-thestarring role and j Isbased on whatbe production for three years vent me from getting certain had no outlet. Tasked thyself, introduce in , Certain qUite vocal in hi; disdain for terms *'pop-culture (1965-68), but it has continued jobs," he admitted, "but in 'why should I be miserable? characters :eleme'ntSt oii ; the i tArthur.Hiller'Sidirection.' The: , -phenomenon,'V Leonard in syndicated reruns and now terms of doing the workthat I I'm a hit; this is the first Spock'psychology pr attitudeaudiencesat the Village #2n' 3 Nimoy seems remarkably un-can be seen in virtually every set -out to do, theft's never steady job I've had as'an ac­where they lend themselves, Cinema IV that day was,tin iS-ly,"'affected. Although he is : aty: in the • country at any been a problem tor: Is this the -misery of because it was'successful and -turp, quite impressed by. the fu\, r known to millionsoffanatical-time.'How does Nimoy react "Here and there I get the success:'synciromerl-ve heard you want -.to-repeat your star in its midst.) • .>, : iCt' • ly loyal followers! as Mr. to this? * feeling that in the:3rst few about?' i's -successes. Inacouple of cases? THAT PEIUtiD following %{C * Spockof the ''StarXTrek" • "I'm very Oriental aboutit; minutes that-1 walk out into -Through^ the-psychiatric I gave very bad performances -his "escape'' from televisicm television series, most of I say; look at that.' the theater peopleape think­treatmentsNimoy was £ble to because I • had no( founda was, he said, "the most in­£•>. -whom eould not even begin to Where '.there .is'a cultural ing Spock or.-Paris of see hispfoblemwas a result* character; I wasjust bringing credible jrear of my -life. In­ ' * visoalize him in another role, phenomenon like that I don't "Mission; Impossible." Most of his repression. "All this certain elements to it." -spite of and because of Spock %.:£ ---tiaaoy has avoided two of an think there's a thing in the of the comments Igetare peo--stuff , that-wopid. have b«*n -What doesanactordoafter? there were gteat things £;.''r actor's greatest pitfalls. — world I can do either to pie who say; 'I didn't think I minute -normally became devoting somuch of himself io:|; available. With 'Fiddler1 I obsession with: maintaining .perpetuate it or to stop it It could see you In another part magnified, -and'there 'was no a character^for three'years?-fulfilled all my fantasies *''and"capitalizlinjg. on.that iden>: bas.a life of its own. and I did.' There's always an expression forit,so I justkept In Nimoy's'case, the answer the great vehicle, great • jrtZVS'1, % £fication and obsession with ••• "I..haven't performed as overlay, but I'm not really expressing it on the couch a was immediately. to go into crowds, great company." M -. J completely eradicating that Spock inseven years. I concerned with it • couple nights*^ .week," he two years on "Mission: Im­Nimoy's future holds a : t identification., thought there would be an "Each of us has todeal with said ' . . + possible/' placing Paris; a special tregt far Trekkies. t' • At St. Edward's.University -, afterlife,of :a couple of years, stereotyping in his own way. '•I CANNOT play a disguise expert loosely based-ParanibuntPiotureahasgiven , J during March to perform the.-and thenit wouldfade away; I George Reeves, who did character,sd lonjg without that on the earlier Martin Landau the go-ahead to Gene $iz"{ - « title role in Albert Camus' was wrong,.", he said. , .Superman, killed bimself. I'm character getting Inside my character, Rollin H&nd "'/• Roddenberty, --producer-and ­jf-"Caligula," Nimoyexpounded "It ("Star Trek'") has been; not about to kill myself over guts, becoming part of me or PLAYING a one-* writer of the TY series, for'a on manyaspects of his career, very,-very good-to me ina lot V Spock," he.said, me becoming part of him. dimensional -character .who--feature-length"fllmf<>fA,''Star .•> •?-what he has done'and what; ofvra^—financiily.andit's,; i BUT NIMOVS time with There is definitely a major impersonates vptheri; one-i Trek." Nimoy 'said^he is £ he hopes to accomplish — and created a lot of opportunities. ?the character Spockwas not changeinmy-pereonality as a dimensional characters was'^ definitely interested-.Jn u a revealed an actor land aman One can 'speculate what it -entirely trouble-free. A native result ofa-character. When I not, he quickly found, recreating' Spock-lor'the / of considerably,/more: would be like if -that image >of. the ptanet -Vulcan, Spock work I have totlyto make a satisfactory;, He:was,-frankly,v: movie, and recent' press i than beisgenerallyallowed to were>to:disappear; it might was the.ultimate stoic, a man commitment-tothecharacter bored > releases from";Paramount .Acttfr Leonard Nimoy > make it easier for me -to try with no emotionswhatever. In in the hope that I can find him "I just .couldn't do. it," he" have confirmed that William the second season of produc­without relyingj'on crutches said. "I was grinding out • Sbatner also will appear. : '.'Magic Show,";Henninghas a .that Simple:Idon'tpaniculart: tion, Nimoy began seeing a that are ,left:,-over from Another week, another hour. I Nimoy has followed in the contract with everyone. ly, need that kind of endear­psychiatrist. somebody else;" Nimoy said. really felt the need to get out -footsteps-of ^Roddenberry: in associated with hisshow, even ment '' , _ EVER LOVING ~"I had to sort it out for Occasionally,-' the/commit--and find out what feel cheated when they* say 'O.K., thisisa being nam­was a free agent" discover they've been ed Spock from Vulcan/'" No.w taking employment applications EAT AT"^" The year, that followed was "I AM FILING'suit against "tricked " STRONGLY opinionated ­ filled.. with. new acting ^ex­ABC for showing it''on the yes 'Serious about his profes­ for cooks, waiters, *aitce,S8es, bus' NIMOY SAID: "They are periences for Nimoy. In Spain Geraldo Rivera. sh6w.without sion — very. Leonard Nimoy persons, and dish washers.^.: tricks, but if they're he costarred in "Catlow'-'with a contract or waiver;J reahze is not a man to be dismissed H* presented properly they areil­ ?rs- Yul Brunner. He toured the there's a .feeling"of having lightly because of his por­ lusions. I feelthat wayabout a APPLY IN PERSON United Statesfor seven weeks, been given a behind-the-trayal of a character;thai has - character. Idon't like theidea as Tevye in "Fiddler on the scenes glimpse; butsi-happen attracted an. excess, of fan 2801 Guadalupe of people around the country MONDAY 3-5 P.M. • 472-3034 •v. Roof." In London he:made an to have a very heavy..-hangup' magazine coverage;.;.Spock seeing Spock break up.' The: 2900.Anderson lank, Northwood Shopping 108 W. 8th at Congress 472*0000 M • NBG world premiere movie' about protecting1 the^magic thing I. love to hear: from' was, to him, a serious and dif­ called "Baffled" about a race and identity of-a character. - ficult role,'one that -perhaps Center audiences is 'how did you dQf< car driver with ESP with "I have been offered alot; a :deserves a new perspective..^ that »' r''^ \i'--. • Si A-Susan Hampshire and was LOT, of money to appear as But for now, Nimoyhopes to offered >a British television ' Spock in various=:.given "That's my craft, that's njy' ^continue1 traveling'and' trying­. series based on the film, situations, ev^ncircuses, but I profession, that's MY magic. new roles; particularly . which he turned down. Then don't feel that that character A producer's supposed to Cyrano de Bergerac and EARN CASH WEEKtY -, on to ihe Globe Theatrein San exists or functions or protect me. Gene and I dis-Hamlfet, '-before: it's too BUSINESS! Diego where he starred ih SHOULD outgide -the 'Star . agree on this subject; it's just late " It's never too late. Blood ^Plasma Donors "Man in the Glass Booth.'.' (I Trek' environment," he said, v ' saw the recent American -Nimoy compareffBis ^itua^ ~Kts%p rw ^Needed ::r : Film Theatre version-oft that tion with that of Doug H^n-ij' t " ^' Men & Women" V --.play with Nimoy while he was mng, a magician .currently tiM pjn. 74 Bewltdied • STUDENTS •television 7 flew Price It Right • in Austin, and. he was' appearing on Broadway with 36 Newt i 9;Wdshington Straight Talk April 3 is the new'deadline for EARN $14 WEEKLY . ; \?-Outstanding Student ' and, c CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION 17 pm.7 GunvmoKe r fi-x j . 9;Speclftlof tht , Teaching Excellence Award ^ Austin : "nominations. Sponsored by the-Blood Components, orn V CBA Council, we seek to recognize"' , OPEN: MON. & THURS. 8 AM to 7 PMI \ .t 7 Maude jZ * TUES. A FRJ. 8 AM to 3 PM e* mv. 9 Special, of the individual achievement in both CLOSED WED. & •,, Ortamer That Remains: AJ>ortrait; -j ' HWlfc:. '-4J. 9l^«rry Partch" . categories. For mojre information Of • MYWAT. *3^5 »~$t iSSOfW.^th ••^^477:373^ Jl" SfcNCAjx Cilf«9«3a«W)l>W Ctnrrr contact us in BEB 65E. |i|bQihtps ( a leal. Centeri: ; •' ,t;A4k a Lawyer w/cheese vJ4"Caribe / Austin Advertisers MUST bRING. COUPON -­ coming ••.9 the Hllfory of Motfoft.PJctyn GOOD AU SPUING SEMESTER WHEAT BERRY• BREAD now | I available^pft dny sandwich r'J ' " 1 ^ i -v $r'rTM* ^ •m \ y IK^O pjm»i, H fi it" j ^ Wt ^ t /lAovl* "The Young Runaway<& OPEN DAILYt;JSs ."-.ijitarrtna Brdoke Buntfr ' ' v'l*"C»t)1|0Md.^eC £vtnl» Ntl jF ^3p3 fi; u.rt,ol; 30 ^ Itf •a*. f n ^ 'I-* BRASS PLANT MtSTERS ft 3.50 -Ndw 2.50 'A u -i lit' j f ® mt 3 { *r f tfin 'Mi • EDITION OF FR*ME0 PRINTS FOSTERS; BABY |THE Daily^Texan Mea ;iiWi-:­ H;fQ be published'orr^Tf IG BEN CLOCKS 9 & 3.99 ea. m PR1L » UBBEY GLASSWARE ._ y ., . . . . --T" •MU *** yj&iuef to$1 mo^smgi 5?f! RQ0ND4JP EVENTS IMri line. -5' fS" games! A 37,000 plus circulation and a massive1 I Lt-Ja » mmm • FRATERNITY CARNIVAL >WBOY BAR36QME d:Floor ;; mmm " \THO« DAM £ V. dlspla^iadv^r- Wa epfaV «TC •» C1 ty-sys. $ ">r*4 fA ^ ^ VVi iyu is* • m. !VAv«l ^ v p1SUZANNE SHELTON £iraracf©r ~faiter. Is inthose'moments of « Since' Ajwtjn, CiWc BaUet^iemph^slzes plfiyfui and •>intimacy when its lovers hug -jperfomjs only rd few Unj^r>iuMve.,Ilu(dltyi mirroring in or touch: Part of the problem. 'An Attn-iiitnii niAtmi^ lifi —-L >•• i-i.'jpAt~ ''• 4(each year, oner views'its her tpovemerit the Shifting may be thedancers'own in-Arogresis in (quantum jttfop$.•'> S '^'Shadowland1' loses some of 'labor which* was^evident Jn -An additionapselement r its force, but it is to Slavm's Justin Civic's Spring . Gala r' whichu "L impfoved„-."S ' '"Shadow-w credit that this woric con- Monday £jnd Tuesday In Hogg iafid'-was 'the Kogg ; tinues to grow in impact,^Auditorium . *7 * tAuditorium Stage ^Its/in-*The minor flaws' of .j1 A SPARSE 'but ^attentive timacy complemented ^-ihe "Shadowland" became 'more ^audience witnessed: a!radiantrsbaUet;rather4han;swaUowing :major in the remaining works company dajicing four new it in the Abutter of the on . last. week's• program.'works by artistic director Municipal Auditorium, yetthe These consisted of several Eugene Slavin, plus a fifth^ Hogg stage has* sufficient folkish ballets plus a more ex­'ballet Repeated_from last depth to facilitate the perimental work 'titled The program seemed ./silhoueUedfesectionsyof.ii!the "Helios." The latter, set to more successful in terms of * music by Carl Nielsen, revolv­dancjng than choreography, ed^around, a aentral sun but at least one of the works, i .^jS^dpwlat^g^ere'-Steve • figure, danced with impassive "Shadowland,'" proved im­ clarity by Barton. At his feet," v pressive ' "u « the;company's prone dancers Austin Civic Ballet has slowly extended arms and vdanced-"ShadowlandV; in the Yardnj^n ^itbei»'ck^wid : legs upward, becoming slan­past, most; recently in> last tableaux. Barton /excels in ting sun rays or tongues of summer's Ziiker Hillside per-partrieringj^ctih^ a flame - • formances, and on^ those ocr ; ' At times "the ballet : casions the ballet seemed in-/r ;uncluttered'-iinte!':"'rhoUSbr.^. '"Suggested an Aztec ritual,''its •• substantial, both inmovement»' hisdandng with;Elskes'lack-v hypnotic developmentand theme. But in last week's ed'a^ent itppo^it gained a,. reminiscent tof.lapt season's performances; "Shadiwfland" certain fayiplal>le.;mod ''Bolero.'' In tts• better,gained new depth and 'subtle-. suggesti^veifadoi^entioye moments, the dancers' ty, chiefly, due to changes in Choreographically,"Sha-movements welledolish,it could become a ExiledGroufcTo Perform Quilapayun. vone'.of .Chile's foremost .foItejgjgSdVeniment on a concert tour of Europe, groups, will give a concertatf) p.nj. Wednes?jsf?:Theirmusio is banned on Chilean airwaves, day^ui.Business-Economics Building: ISO... :^ft and.the group lives in exile in Paris. . Tickets for the evenf will be sold from 10 J -A-ilii . . " t a.m. to.5 p.m Tuesday and Wednesday in thel^ has becomethe Texas Union'Information Center, in Texalr most popular.folksinginggroup inChUeand : Union South.-east-of Gregory Gvm-Advan<^ ^ best known m^Latin America, Their £^tror tickets are f2 for students, faculty and stafff^ hlS®H\ /^ an?.J3ol,vla • $2.50 for the public At thedoor tickets will be<> *" . $2.50 for students,facultyand staff,$3forthk ^' psdu^Uy they ^dded the. music of the rest of public j 70^? Latin America totheir repertoire ( The group's music focuses on the social#-' The group is onits first tour of the United ( rcompaneros"jJellied or} •-and Musical EventsCommittees, . SV imprisoned by the current idling xnilitam-S Government Appropriations Committee, the1 |.junta in Chile \r^ La,tin American Potiey Alternatives Group, At the. time of the military;cpup in Chile, ,theJOepartment of Spanish and Portuguese the«roup waSr^pfle&nttagtteTWpuUit'trnll • Oiwajcww IMPORTS.,^'MIW;nstIOWUl? UMITf —L Si m&m 900mW^ In concert e,tlCKet5 Mond# Offlei/ WethWiitsSfud-^ MIBi kan-Amarkqn lasting,ballet in AustinCiVic's -• PITCHING woo while per­Austin Civic Ballet at its steps-appealingly. Among the necessary, because an repertoire forming a classical adagio, energetic and radiant height. more skilled male -dancers, orchestral score '.wds un­ "SCHERZO Italiano" the trio-traded comic antics. \But choreographically, the Mendez, Blackwell and Juan available. probably won't. A Hubner, who' has never danc­work was both hokey and Flores performed spectacular This prompts a question: tambourine-thumping peasant ed better, displayed a gift for messy in spots, long on flash leaps. Might the approximately $5,­dance to music byGottschalk, comic subtlety and ' timing. but short on substantive Providing accompaniment 000 spent on an orchestra be this ballet represents theleast Meadows is a more open and movement. for last week's gala was an better spent for guest imaginative aspects of direct dancer, projecting : ;The weakest sections were orchestra recruited from choreography: or, even : for * Slavm's choreography. The broadly, while Blackwell sup­those in which six haremgirls among members of the Austin publicity so that a larger movement occurs chiefly on a ported this silliness, in good and their men performed in­Symphony, conducted by the audience might view Austin 'horizontal-plane,-with careful­humor, adding a little tricate lifts in unison. Itis dif­talented Kelly Hale. An Civic Ballet performances?ly; balanaced'groupings,-^in­slapstick of Jiis own. All this ficult enough to coordinate 12 orchestra undeniably is a lux­Better yet, might not Austintersecting :diagonaisand mugging couldn't disguise a bodies, but it becomes more ury, and live music lends im­Civic Ballet spend thatmoneystatic regularity. Oniy.iin-the basically dull dance, but "Pas difficult when the bodies are mediacy to a dance perfor­to perform more often? Thefinale! -didthe-choreography . de Trois" at least was plea­mismatched, with some mance. Yet few members of work this company is doing,isbreak free with abandoned, sant. . .. harem girls stronger than •the audience.even noticed the worth watching. With a littleunison movement, butseveral "Cherkeska" was more their men. transition to recorded, music spreading of the wealth; more-of the: company.V'dancers perplexing. Closing the gala's "••"••'•THE BETTER sections of for the Drigo "Pas de Trois,'-' -AusUnites might. "17 were notable, throughout the programs, the Russian folk "Cherkeska" were those '• •lw6rk': ballet represented someof the featuring six lovely peasant; ^The women• of Austin Civic worst and best aspects of the girls and the all-male dances, WHAT ARE YOUR LEGAL Ballet project a winning ease evening. A rousing romp with including the sabre dance. onstage, particularly Teresa tambourines, harem girls and RIGHTS IN BORROWING Slavin made excellent use of Nation, Who is developing into sabrefights toKhachaturian's his males, several of whom a womanly dancer,and Hildry larger-than-life music, were technically weak but MONEY AND BUYING Varrington1 who combines an Cherkeska'". presented capable of performing simple almost di^tractingiy high' ex­ON CREDIT? tension with fragile -grace. • Amongthemen.Rodoifo Mendez moves well.andHank Blackwell is a-good-looking charmer whose technique con­ I salad dressing, .iettuc^ tomatoev anil tinues to mature , f; ">• picktes; Good Ihrouah April 3rd a ^ . MUST -.PRESENT-: COUPON WITH "Pas SW •'25-i.T • In de "Trois" • EACH ORDER v vVO • -:•A Blackwell joined >Garolyn Hubner and ShelleyiMeadows in a coy, catch;the-malc (yet • T^TS^T^iBTHA^lMGERllI I' 100% iHirebMfhimburgeribna large5 again!) trifle to music by inch -foaslad: bun. Witn MiracJe .Whip I salad dressing; lettuc^/'tomatoes and Drigo. The choreography was • -pickles. Gbod through'April 3rd. essentially static,; somewhat i; MUSTr PRESENTsiCOUPON. WITH EACHORDER similar to SlavinV double- Snow Queen section in"Nut-at 8:30 pm cracker," with the-women SANDWICH I with unison leg extensions sup .Good . . * 471-4811 in Austin ported by the central male. UohApHUSIh, ' .B.V''!1 MUST P-RESENT:COUPON WITH "W Mm ±.•'T- The difference here?waS the EACH ORDER ' f ift%!4. or 1-800-292-5409 toll-free dancers' personalities: v m\ .KtOWAK9T~SA*l3i'/v:.• -MW-: long distance ^stramTSATTDWICH" Jf BCBY. WCRK Hot pastrami, steamed piping hot with >...« *•«» «-«qht amount qf seasoning. Good «J6AN LEVINE throughMUST just thepa; rightApriPR! RESEAT. COUPON WITH -•^"• Presented in cooperation with bfaxhu ti rcaflgq,the »pK: DER..-. EACH ORDER K-SAVMSW • ; • IVENMRS MONA \MA: the State Bar of Texas > mammae THERE'S ALWAYS SOMETHING BUOM* TMWWW GOOD COOKING AT te rdGBH wvms tovhr r and ARBY'S iw d(BMa-T®' •;?-J^h-5, , »«r i>u'i im;,. . i 4411 Sonth Lamar 1715 Gnadalupe 47Z-1582 MOO-Bornet 4toad 451-3760 •fix* JERRY JEFF WALKER ftXNBY FniEDMAN it f •attiring ETS ON SALE 1 •INNER SANCTUM K f.USx • OAT;WILLIE'S >)• < Montopolis Bridge pson St t ^MS5UN 'i— -kfWARB.NA * -^vCS Morida ft )W-'easily nito'stmfr 'S ilh!" the" middle-aged instrumental in bringing Sh ••&£ S'APP in the Sahara audience who had danced and ^Hsher to the Sahara Hotel. siti •cr StHjl I'£.V~JSPiS1 "l8*!® slitoTrismiisic; "Oh,My U 4 -i^WrKhewoVed^non^the ^apa^'Any Time,""I'm -!tables co hlswav tothe staee WalW* Rrfflnri v«," "t^v 'T-"1 ADULt ADMISSION Si^O^I ­CHILDREN (UNDER 12) FREE V GULF STATES WtlVE-IH \. 1 JGUU STATES MltVE-lN Vl Soirrhsidt Shou TOWN USA * ^22S4JSSJSSS£SS*SS/^-"' at%IPar—i— ' BOXOFRCEOPEN 7s30 -SHOW STARTS OUSK 4 i «<*• mmwnmumtBBBmt • 'R* 5 " 5ft# f n K ifiiet, «y "NIGHT CALl NURSES" I +1 U2 Oifadorutx w&mm "fjifX;® jf j? < ,, Id ';-liO.'OWE'-WuiteKjli?; V-.WMITTEPI'. (•I "^L ' tmm® INTRODUCING ERICA GXIflN As VIXEN '"S<. f ^ft ^ RESTRICTED TO-ADULTAUD|ENCES~ IN EASTMANCOLOR iWPUCEDASPMECTED BYRUSSMEYER ^fANMPRODUCTIOH'?''^^ 'ENDiSftl:30-3:15-5:0C^$125 { TUESDAY 6:45-8? 8^1' SCREEN t Wv ' :p^S5«<6® ^ ? FEUJNI THE DEVIL *"* FELUNI THE LOVER. ,:t -• £^,< K? -FEUJNI" THE FANTASTIC rs ELUNIS AMARCORD4 "is an unforgettab >am^achM&'W niastBrWorfcf 5 J Bruce. Williamson ,r" YBoy, ^ * AM 10:00-*1 I.TUBpf v After the second'show -Fisher unwound inhis drew-ik,mnm humiliation'Qf^EUizabeth Taylor's affair .with Richard Burton when she wasMrs. Ed­ die Fisher. "Yes," he said with a depreca tory • grin, ?I've changed. I'm not-: boyish anymore. I've got a few gray hairs "I'M HEALTHY for the }' I? PrnW«,m .reclusive after'his "divorce" Aid!TmaTha8~to"woirk. "T"'!"7wTiW/iujpi .from Taylor, haunted by per-"I'd read Enrico Caruso's said ''Connie was the bestdfI sonalahdprofeSstonafaUure.^ autobiography ^ a leather-my wyes AlthoughIwasn't a' JEIvtis ft^slerawJ th?.B«ltles> £boundedition left me byMike good husband. I* wasn't • hoH y6dr <$mso ^rfi^erlfiy irtKeJn-fori' successful women, he !bad blown it all. ol» weight and life changes.' ( wouldn't have any contact; Bankruptcy.) An object of "I fought he was right • ^th-D^ie;it:it:*eraH'fi>r.': ridiculfete^etBS^ iMaboutjent^i^ingMtfiU Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service 5 t went; V >•!, ,% R lV .Student Health Center / \ , ' I* 105 W. 26th St. (4th Floor-SOutft) >­ .^nfidentioKcountdliiig with all o!f«rnqflv»s jJiUuu-; ed and referrals made~to appropriate ^sawricM'*Cbil" 478-5711, Ext. 26, for an appointment. Individual , t OLD FASHiONEDii— SANp^CHi^i|W, ,Wth .. , -, j Turtles's'kfttfeiiii 2405 NiieWPii h ' fUght Behind Whoh forth Provision J *******A*AAAA***A INTERSTATE THEATRES »i.WaBr3;pan,, Fw>. 1i«t-3:204:00 6:45^;WtttOQ j ^ QUEENOF1HE PRIVAHEYES jsia^^iZMOHiaeodiDriw—/ •ntxAs •< loWERIMG « INFERHOo IPUWAWAK! itorraTi iTPff,flwyww ,t KOKBNITI^, H««VJ *1.0| VJ til 8:15 nrr^s "It made sense. Ifpund I children^iigKWp^ffr^E' • wasn't the youngest man |n the group anymore. And soon Fi^er.Clgtpn;^^. Wrra^ Ibecame the oldest member too, With dauihtk^^me.^Bjn of the group." * ,andFhis prtlpBnS^d;^1^, BY THE TIME .he decided -despite a $tr^^r^ja^ion^p ­to return to work, the public with their1motheF^Jebbie1 no longer cared about Eddie .Beynblds. , ?«<>'"' Fisher. Recording companies ON HIS financial'position/ knew,him for a loser. They he said, "Imalje'ohe good tt­ * forgot the 1950s.and theJffieon-vestment after in? bMknnpf secutive gold records which cy.Icould l|ve oniha^InvesK earned *» million. . ment ifIdUmg^^SSIm -Such friends-yes. Frank drastically. " Slnatra ^Sinatra, Dean Martin , Sam--"Inever thou^t a^bui^sukh -Oe"" Sam. -"T noio/1* "• Thahk Gvd Cl There's Only One . Taco Flats ^ ^Pitcher5 The incredlbL tvnly 79e 4l,1 but true story 4-6 p.m. Hector's ; TACOFbATS' swel heist ta-his&ry! 'Sk mmmms ^AnTgftcd^lafa^cMic^Reteoaaf PARfliUlOUNTwsv •- • ' ^; ',•'. A', FKju; >sv . frenai.yqr W Wwittficeiimeerd a. TUBDAY, BUSINESS ' •/^CWLr.StATtSPRIVBBrV^' ^si ADMINISTRATION s STUDENTS " (\J10 i 7 i^5 ?' T-^" <*• * * i ^BBZPiW^S ^tmfrtTWCATHm 'M show At dusk '^s r r» jS< a^n,it9« - 'S«« Mrtctory' m rot FeaYUf« Jfmtt *-\ " '{gM" IK_ " MANN THCATMI v> ,S»flT6 P.itf. mm RES msp.M 7 s lauu-a^rusAdAff^XAUEr^RI 'ummLWiiatiwBF MCmtttiroMt .. . , Jlisr Off t*5T"mVEKIDE Og|tfE 444-3222 1 is £}}M til^6:p.m. HMMMWIK FIATURES OWHT-UCMELMK a->; liiMfCMAttSA KNAk KNQWWmj W * 'Iri'ifc !'3^1.50' "the 'laddcevita*' %jgsssm .warrenbeBlfy'^ VILLAGE 4 ?:-S 484*6147' *0RTHCROSS'M AU7u AVOEftSQNlAlK* BUIWET1R1&J S* Bargain MatinMt^^ll • /I-30 F»atijrfetl;75 Mon^i'^"#^! Tire. Be»|S Pictorevof, rthe Year" „ I' PW Qollfnt, CBS-TV ::v?«r5 1:3<£5;45-8:45 f ^^Twi-fat.Hr>;j;15-5:45$1A25 S Awdemy Award Nomination^ \(**£ LIVE HBREs 1:30-5:15-9.00 ^ Twi-uty Hr. 4 45-5 15, $1.25 rs 1 ](^3£l1i*' 1 twi-U»« Hr 5.45-6 15, j I 0 m |F«ahire TimM Vary -SMt«:DS)y| __M Pap*rforCo/»ctTlm« " JyVfl V.^ TflS J* I ®swai -i vtixfitr &• avhS). M dt^^?/'v3^' -1%?^' Ir v.73 fr-'-^-V' -^a:-."r:v­ w§i f* '/lfV» "T^y V^^1"^ W$H-C V { J ^ fj v ^ .^6 ^ r??.£W j, h-M% §By PAUL 8EUTEL I'pUftafaW^s tfae cura M3rant^;Hawn ^s; Beatty saraecloth With "Shampoo,?* however, ^k%lf*A»»1--«>»»4^,^'Aiii1imia**«la1, s,Of -. ^ingJocally.ai we^ox iwip. » "'"•« «wui «£*« »<« a"u •" ana uyde' and 'Shampoo' is rauiine Kael even termed thestarred the result was a t;"Actually, Towne and,J poltUcs," said Be^tty, who, all aspects .except the suf-,> exactly as I think,It should film "the mostvirtuoso exam­^critical atid commercial cannej up, "With, the Jdea^ for has been actiye in both for as rounding cocktailparties And be," he said "Of course Iin-Pie of sophisticated farce that 'Shampoo,'' while I was still long as most gossip colum-as Nixon is on the tube, evitahlv find mvwir American mrtvio motor* ham ~ "V.» »». ™ j^ib, au»w) uuictiuu will have a chancee lo see the complete fouracts of "Swan Lake" performed by the Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre,'^mpany „ ebut,under localsponsorshipofRod Kennedy .r.„_r,—.„.-KY..wa*!enneay at Municipal Auditbfiumat8:^.m:Monday Tickets ^repric^ at*4, $5 aml ieand willbeavaikbie at the Municipal AuditoriumfxHtofficefrorn noon to B b.ra: Mondav. end 1 j 47^57^l7^Ebtti '26Vfcr an appointment^Individ^il ' opMotrptnti Tuesday 1^5 p.m,/Tjuirtdav 1-S D 4 m . , / i»?'K :",nr >KUJlx^-.v 6528 N. LAMAR 453-5676 I f-vry ^for 1"on Mixed Drinks J I jf/i Unescortedfsxlies t free drink I "ifl'vrICliWVM WrV IImoWif j t on MfxtD'OKlNKS'w TUB: 6g^fM16ri»AU5ll HAPPY HOUR: f -7 OA!Ly -2 for V Tonightlj C j « fej-A, m , From the Greateit^SaHriat of-the American Soundly THE PALM BEACH STORY Directed,by PrestonSmrg&8 With Cliaudette Colbert* Joel ;Mc( [cCDrea/^ a Mary Astor, and Rudy y^'­ • be.-i Plus short axcerpt'fromWji ^ . . ^feQITCOSJELLO, J MEgT.-FRANKENSTEINJP^-' JESTER AUDITORIUM $1 rS?k .! \l% ii 1 . . „ . Beverlyly Hills hair- dreSser.. who-^performs, at- run In8 away with Jack J^den, M't.o's, married to if- t r ' '' * t-. ~ /r$V< V."««cappaicm vyueil qutssuun-•"6>« "-laooiiitauuil. me role 0ften, it's .iWhat the ed about "McCabe and Mrs of the critic in such cases is characters are NOT,doing in Miller." I wrote or rewrote one which Beatty does not en- movie whichwhich,, helps considerably more than half vy. " the movie vy; delineate them,V-: lie.added: .thescript during thefilming" "If I were a reviewer and: "For example,, the;pictur? is he revealed. He received no saw a film which breaks rules Warren Beatty, actor and producer set on election day,, but. none screen credit for his efforts. • and traditions, I would im­ mysetf.'How do I get my feet Obviously, though Beatt^' of the ctaracters vote?^evp BEATTY ADMITTED he mediately try to categorize 11 A«i»«iiiMC:n.e "'cu'aieiy «y u) caiegonze it on the ground and approach doesn't mind brppfclnp tb* ?y? * '. ^ed worUng vW'th director . or criticizeit asa result of be-.. this?' A-lot of reviewers had rules ' w » L.VP °rv *" "rr wc-,v uiioi a wi vl leviewers nffsfs(Pfigjr JPfrPS&intfst M§imm WMm SJgfflSStf ^QicGt Jiushiirgtic'Ballet 'Qieati€ ^ < i of fchalkovsky & te^ftorBography of Frankljn \ Probably the most popular ballet in history. * s XT ' ? i"V . > -> h, >. <" Young vibrant company of 40 dancers &^\ v'" '. Princrpals-^Toists^Cb^ps de BaMet y-fVvFour Acts—Lighted & staged With sets & costumes 5^tuC f' * 8P.MIT0MIGHT '$0* STI C^Af.v : AUSilNrMUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM r^r, 7 -r.^ K )i AUDITORIUM BOX OlFICE.OPENS ! n 12 MOON TODAY I 4 > ~V THE TEXAS TAVERN - Glass m" ..gf' '$ Pearlt ' .35 SchWi 1,-40| <:ui5'1 ^ l. c* iMichelob C& •45 A GOOD BUY Pitcher $1.65 : V»80 v f j'Ci Happy Hour Prices: ?eafl $1.25 pitchilt Schlitz $1.41); iill -g ^»CK;M Pi3PULAR ^Michelobi i $2.oq; mmm 'M, i W^nesda^Jarch 31-ApriJ I t ^ w pJm.Flamenco GuitaristMatt Kcetzer.Freei|| me -cateeonze it'? • >. nmhiem m firc»n o..„u r — vuvvguntw ii, ; -ima uiuuicui HO fcOlH "T «sr/\it1#l 1«a ...in J j .. . u»un wi |ng unable to categorize it," this problem at first with problems. Such is the stuff of he said. "I would be asking 'Bonnie and Clyde.' vigorous art. < r> ^ . ^4 5| ? % I tS§ The Cultural Entertainment Committee in cooperation with CAI.ICO Productions presents 1 r-Jgt. & 3w V.r and RITA COOLIDGE 1 —— SATURDAY, APRit 26 MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM 4Bii ' r 8:0Q P^M. _ Special Bonus to Optional Feeholders! . Limited,Number of $6.50 seats available for $1.00 HOGG AUD. BOX OFFICE 10-6 WEEKDAYS ­ I BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 7 > ;. ' • s Public.'Ticket Sales begin Monday, March 31 at Inner Sanctum/Pants South Riverside/Lariat Ranch Wear ! ;v." •• . .... :• BUS SCHEDULE: Jester, Kinsolving, Co-0p/7:00& 7:30p.m. w§ ( , Cultural Entertainment Committee 'Mh ": ^exas Union m cooperation with ' ; Mr. O. Productions ' ' -isents < i>> f" ^ >LIV Mb Ctwrlig Daniels Band i $ ivt »*•' -ortM<_'7-™7'-— -—--•­ kBt Halej beain Friday. March 21: Josko's. Innor Saocliim ' jR^oi^s^dMiflahar^nif^iElO and Schedule: Jflstar^KinsoIvinQi ^-0pk?:6qt*7:30 P.iyii *mi u S*«Li H /:•;CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING \ RATES^ FURN. APARTS. £ FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS, & FURN. APARTS. fl HELP WANTED JOB WANTED TYPING :l$ word nviumvm -t Each word on» Hmt^. ltV ,* li Each word 24 timf»> ^??s » Each word S-9 -J*: ARVARD ^T.JurtWjk«!7«,.) ;Each wdrtf 10 or am*timet.it mi .VILLA NORTH •tjNEW NEEPAGREATPLACE.TO , ^ Student ra)*«ach ihm V. \* " June '75 ' tp-xl 'i-±-Gu?„iclii7T^|^ALLERI Position. .Markun, „k )t , / -Share s largeroom forU4J0/mo,or -apartments available • Immediate ^*Lmw f ^ r-a-afts^si# Sacramento -St;, Camb. AAa,-­ take anentire «b«i for »ll2J0 fur-[rltnllr nrtshliortiood, -"sstoSrftW.apply in panon v ' • toCADUNti. SCHWM7^,*1 $132.50 & E. s?»3tCKpet,.d|lhwah«-, disposal, lots • -••••'' '• 02138 ^ Umdm/ l«mm Mby p**, vpantry„.._ nlthtd, all blUs p«kL'Maht Mrvic*One* ­ oUabinttspKe.pantry,walk-IncloMti, ««M.Bring ypurowmroommatBorwt rbso .• ----de^. Now folkw these mm , 108 PLACE ; •will match ^you:a cooipallbit bint. TMWTM&V ; CLOSE TO UNIVERSITY. brand new apts;.with:all the jabodies at MENTAL-HE ALTH i:• fMRjHhitfl.tudrpoin apartments TWi b economy and coowUehca at Its MISCELLANEOUS Dishwasher ^Disposal .i TRAINEE POSITION best. ONLY 3Q8 YAROS FROM UT 478-7633/ DAYS 1?r-"'T' l»«rilty -.1*la A* «l «w» iMd» ia « S' NOVELTY SHOP 3' • Thmtt, Lattwa imMpmMffv. • 4-Zssse« Mow »P*n nairt toCapltolColn Cdmptowfest business work lAiuBifv * ^ SWpcr njoolft ABp MM Guadalupe < it> i*"iu CuadatoM last Mtnut* Sarvlca__"Tht UnusualG}tfShoe"' . $M:tli«M.ne*lltnl iiitw MNc'tancy 5 Opfc)MM?io-Th^v DUVAL apartnttntc Jiisf':* Mr tioda ottlol FROGS x .4S2-l419or 4X3-2771 ^;i>5FrlSaf town and UnlvjriHv.W» p«ywaWr «nd ^ J I ...rijtS.'L. ... .... WOODS IDE 9B. All furnillMdt carpetKt .bum-In • DON'T FLY > *1 ' rt-} . LOW STUDENT RATES : •ppilancet.Ckarto tnuttiajbuuBwaalii Where your move matters VILLA •t above rant B^ 'crarycaptJonsdocikhthe eye: Be NELSON'S C1FTS. Zunl,,Nava|o and 472-«ta6 -" DgbleMall ,15 wordminimumetcher ..J JO KENRAY IIUW. loth : ' happy doin b thing you liMMsvtaikr. Hopl Indian (awalry;-46U Souths T» f * Eadi actional wordcacti days JOS Efficiency r.A Br . , ' Phone tor Congrats; .4444114: etc^iosad Sundays; - ,?URdMSHted*r: t llhe9days.SI.00 Shag carpet ; • T.E; WlltyCnJ APTS. flees,-5 days a Weekj free:puking,. "J .^ECROCKETT COMPANY \ cot;*) Inche*chd*r., ...,%2M APARTMENTS Shuttle • Ing to peoplfan ttw t*lep)ww.:N«w si-Mondays. * » '-tPrwpald^ tibtovnto}.-: , N*xt»A*Wlc»naTheeti*,>ralUiigdis­New furniture Pools Irlendly atmosphere, bonusel plus LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Baglnnar^ {SfMcnli;mui.t. show Auditor's salary; Call 451-»t}:behM*n:124. ' tance to North Loop Stopping,Center Summer Leases ; -• (undernew m^nasetrtent) ABP . 1 BEDROOMS ON 'ssesra-ms&R end-mby*!. Near >stwtttoJend-Aus»to .4305 Duval : 451-2343, " 5^'EL9,*^yu-!i2** ula™-Call on fensft.T»o bedroom fiefvoneaodfw»i SPARKLING CREEK ^urwu.Mnop. w w X°"NOJt»E>!!C^N )«»jst.»a,nts ride/ and X«IlW.i:,Druo, Dress shopt tor: dls* 1 & 2 Bdrm furn., covered' bet^Av*tlabirWash*jydlspo»et, door to dcorgvtagr No. 91$ drapes andJ furniture. "iwrhln'Within recreation: rm., planned ac-• AihtlhonlWlO%corTtmlssion.M^KVii .LEATHER BENCK spaclalUIng 'ln pR'NTING..and COMPLETE LlNE of FOR SALE llvltiSTon' site sewrlt^ of-* custom— made sandals; tags. and tJelts.^ -v Wd*»:pooLineld.service Bdeslred. bicycling distance to UT. Call Sales Co.j()10Vantao 4 < VJ LA h STARK TYPING. Specialty (Technical. betSrlfii' vExpertmcedth 1i.heMi.dliserfalloitt.PR't, «-*-5 Mow LEASING' **.-V::.. MOVE IMTOOAY R • Oram Auto-ForSale ALL BILLS : WSIL. C476­ JERRICK UNF. DUPLEXES LA PAZ *>$m FIAT 124. Dohc, new VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER plverstfled WHMteis. 0400u.; PAID f >Saryice^GradiiaHaMvndar6?eduate COCKTAILWAITRESIOrVVatter.App- APTS. ly inperson, jm[ Ea»t nt>betweennWd Summer Rates Now ^•C CHEVROLET, posJfracfion axle ^4? Luxury one bedrumn apartments'with 4 Monday.r Fridays I# •^elth ovordriVe transmlsslon, t WOOD Eff/7 BR/2 BR $110 UP j? central air, carpetatiL dlsfawasher, laun­EL CAWVPQ PRETTY & IBR -»l49 vp­ »^rebuHdaUe six cylindereogtat/two new Under New MaaabementlS^, ' dry facilities. TV csbte. r 6 blks west of Drag S ' '."2 BR-Jit? pSpedomContomporary •?&£. ^*8L» TMduplex 2408 Leon 476-34«7 quiet ;dlsstrta'lons.'ltheies ; i£fJS MAVERICK. 4 door. AC AT, 4-tcarina • ; '/> Bloat to Sliuttle Bus 4540360 ; ^59-570Q WAITRESSES/WAITERS 'neddadday Vbadnom duplex tor rant in a mln)eogt»phlngj;44a.>H4."' talking Distance to-UT 305 W.'39th 401 W. 39th ' otee inskle andout. <36-. Aystin' reililefitlal; .1-Oly bus routes and.ntsht. Apply .ln perm VTlio Old FANTASTIC REDlICtlON ;jieliiteortioobefore 3^ 4S2-4U7 NOWSIO8 ^S11» ' connections; Xflchen appilances fur­ ^ CMnUnWMUii ^ Brady.47J-<715..fc'.-.flK > SUMMER RATES $145 fiUXt »1»pluiWlE.Sll; 47 VWJWaanosticttssed ^*0^ 800^' *' Water & Gas Paid --iBr; Furn.' .MRS. BOOOUR'S TYPING^SERVICE. - ^Valge gOO. finpro»«ne»tf« S3ML:Asfclng *-. Luxury Eff/IBR)2 BR ROOMS :'Reports,.tbetes, dlisertatlomandHooks VW00.45MQ4; ^I49t. Be«>il»iil 2 i*vl ban* SERVICE WESTOFCAAAPUS-TEXAHrDORM.—1«m«Kes. Daily besloHer. W4«z.4n-tg». JV . M mature maid service,central air:Refrlaer»tars. t PARKING hot plates allowtd. Two'Moaur^from tcim mmMU. .130. Summer. 'TFtoe condtflon, $1295. CaH 3«-557(r or King sba T bedroom. also. > TRANSPORTATION 477*5514 474-7916 toctoir I7 -> --••'. Leasing forsummer and wi.Oftsttcai-1 i VTiew trrtanuau xii .ly. reduced summer rales. Please call RED OAKS APTS. tlfRF090 VAN a 44to^4Kf«ssL.""^ ,fr*":"**wu,sto^f flulef Omplex«n S«utNe>v, CREEK 6rs ^ ' mfSiltM J>*BR -SI70 3 BR -S&5 J -good grades!'.•••••'• tyi '' LARGE POOL ^ itamiHnuvsIbiohm mjUM. * v Texan Dorm-,:1905 Nueces i. ALL BILLS PAID iConneltosax >1C Steve m#mi -r-t bedroomHudto. ^Dally maldvservlce, centra) -afr. 472-3210 and'472-7677" Vfe tiMotofcyde-For Me ,«. extra nfck^ -Honda i^»50,ituns.'«7t-pg apt. locator service fec]I^Sh*g,b«ilHftk :• Retrlgerato.vri.%!^^^y^,^E^Iff._A_c^ Zafter5-00pm." -^ JOWhw^-TUrgePopl. ^SSio'b'us* Front ooor: -available Mr F»ll.' 'fa si ' ^Daulcalgullar teoons 45MM. j t ^finding. 1401 Mohle^rlve.47«j»l>. ?*: 'i?a@ bUls icingIn complexeswith Zs " " on the Lake jT>»nagert.4?7.-174(I^Ri very ^ oonypooftoundfy; ^ \%4400 Town Lake cifde ?.wn BSA VlctOrSOO. MOO. 127-3617 after :C '. ^WOVEIN TODAY ' *• to NOW^' C'^ V K ' „4WB&.s * * \ w 442-f340 r? ; C' jr§:iMABYL>SMAU.WOOO.TYPING; Lnt r liN im WinoeiCraefe' 'HLrmf?'. °Vt''f|l°^t ayiHable/ Terfn -. Leasing for peperv theses, dissertations, letters: 2 BLOCKS.UT . HONDO JMOTORSPOftT 3S0. S29S.. NOV»'LEASI»(J -RS LOST & FOUND wsterthargefBankAmerlcatdi-lfMnri IMaflw 6pjn. / .-• . . ^ -SUMMER ' ' , *»• UHami-. . ^ /g-». 3, IR SALE TZiwaM lMS, Low/nHeapeT ^ NEEDATYPIST-f We're asecretarlel Furnlshfed'Apartmentfand $115-$125 & SUMAAE R 1 BR-$145UPp -/LOST 5R-50 Calculator on NRot*RCbuSi' „ dcondHfoo.$39S^CaifOonafler5:^ iflar5:« 2 BR -$180 UP < rooms. j^V No questions asked, |ustithanks and 4r specla|lst.;..Resumevlettera,:fhese», *Mh45tL ••-Large1 bdrm& effs.large clos^v Mly -t FALL ,AC PAID IMSU 'v£ewl.: statistical, research papers, etc.­ nice re^ard.Call4474 .From $8Q/mpnth. ;^honda.®« SSS&,?Sf^S5: LOSTr GOLO end peart AZD quIll penM i, RATES# -DobieMall ,TAfJGLEWOOD:NORTH • KBKetoUT/noel>ll327-1151. .-.vy hour. Prlvatt hismKllonJ: ^ ^LOCATORS ' , ^ia&£ '-J -Large Eff -S129.50 v FEMALElMMEOiATE^Occupaney EXPERIENCEDTYPIST.Resumes, ifltar< too, at Pfckar^s Paradise.'4^fcj ;cytt duple* near -camput D^m^room. . papers,bus(ness1etter». ,$149»-' ; j-.Walk-Pedal-Shuttle . *100 plus elec. Debble, 47^26t»anytime. > T Call after 3 30 any day 4SM3M SBASIC.FOUC FIDOLE Inslroctlon. OyvN ROOM 3 bedroom,'} bath house, ? UNF. HOUSES TYPING SERVICE. Fast lervl'ce. jOrew Thomasoni47M079.--'"v v . Urge-living areav ammrlng service, Reasonablei-atesADellvery-available. •*.eoe»ew»iwuiV.'*PAitiwtoiis.rJ^ ^ HILLTOP $175J ; /'{tPlECEROGERS Orumvblaca. peart,' J •etc. (100 and * Mils: 4SMU7 Tom, c.MM^;44V5^u 'fc» ' ^Staj^carpetlng, yaid, ec^g^'Cyn^'vsSSv 1 BR Furnslhed 1 Yvonne* carport. -"THE 24 FLATS"M'Cascades , All Bills Paid : 2BEOROOM HOUSE.walking dlstante ; ^ Freshly refurbished, pool ' •ncampusiMt-W ipo;-ptusbills,cane by ? Just North 0fv27thP&IBSON3-G-Ampeg~V-2 4.irsS APTS.' Irastaef string Aria6 string. J^I^^^S^W^^FFWENCLES'; . :\->i. walk/ :ride, shuttle to campus < -30» East 30th orxaii477-831 andask tor OS Call 474-atl afler « -James or Leasel. : ^ v: r ^ V'CiUO • fve? . s f TNG:-54G»R im^S?^^5S!5ii?o!IS ;19poBurtonprive; >. "t V'v'rtg«onebtock., La Canada Apts. l^fc0W.Wth , 4721^4* JROOMMATE NEEDEO to live In 2-^i ^ f^707 Hemphill ParkBEAT-w.v -,ms.S3rB' : ­ :cT J* ' '• 2 BEDROOM 11 INFLATIONS^^ wr ALLBILLS PAID 34 « WE* RENT^fLBROWNST0NE^4 ? WAt1^ -ro rA«ADT.<:A ,.,PARKAPAPTAAPMTR '.»*» mamonttyMOdepositTTW HANCOCKlit WAt-K TO^CAMPUS^AIICTIKl #Ar# £Cu%:tMtfconv# oobL inSiiIflM West 25Vfc 47» *'"Your time is valuable •§51* NttfM?"' ' »4St-34^< FEMALE HOUSEMA .,,, THE COMPLETE ^ HQUSEMATE; Sharej'large Sf^v»f2pr, Our servlce ls free % • A paragon Property PROFESSIONAL' ; Need w-SL ml Pets-For Sole *WAve,A Cali«il)»,"v PARAGON ,^>3®br— ™ sassaassaaw^ r ^ FULLTIME W? . PROPERTIES^ -Move IN tooav^^" H TYPING"SERVICE ^si 472^210and 472.7677^ ONE.BED ,vjyaekdeys<.' !5SS3S»SS£3i furnis^D, ALL BILLS k f_W_Ii •^pqmSA. slit *r PAID. " j. 2.BR $184 JHtomes-FbrSole 472-4175 'U& rr *1v"* PUBLIC N0TIQS P 'EXTRA SPl •cao.aftord. jefckendr' «i<»sas!i efy-'-Bi onToonLekelrom SUA 4^^3J|foM'452-50'3^ pa ortmfuniislMd.^ • v VAULTED CEILING Finest Quality,:! E. RtversSe ne^l EPR Reasonable Prices ELEVATED BE0ROOM l?IVER It HALLMARK " aaVS^&SS Lobf Call on »s before sss^'Tssaa' /CH •" FR APTS? ^MOORE,!M»©» -you,get clipped.* u11 I *s W*WII w>«f ;HUHrw,MMHninrfV SissrssswiSz ^Announces the opentnoofanjpfftca ^ Mlsc.-For Sdle'::^SS^?5gSr^SR® -.PjMf^ conlentporan^furoHhii III W ^ 1301 Norwalk LanaJ-vr CMModk off shuttle buS route.'-4M-7m. Tefephone>47M2f7r,^i $135 FraAitm Water gasif cablepaid «000^wn ^»6FFIOEWcvV; alcove ' N^Lamar 4&-XB* or «Sl-44337centra-• ^ 7089 West 34fh^J 1 SM^-4B1»*N — • ^.Practlce-limlfed.to.MiFKeGyiMelfl SSorZvE -K 34 Pidperflef Inc.' " Motto .CASH FOR. RECORDS, t-tracKsV ''• Tff&OS&i 454-8239 -—n S153L. ABP. m ^ NOTlCEOPiV,:^T Ba E.Reside.44^ -. T „ _ " ) GINNY^H « INTEKTIONTO .aar PAID 4 ^ ™fi,bedroom .. •? BLOCKS TO CAMPUS:' J' 1 BEDROOM -S137 1"^ TPJj yp ENRELOAREA.fw»p.u<«i«trteodry^fEFFICIENCY -siis-^wWtflOC v Noticed hfraby.'gl^id tnit olu£or:; "OPYIN# kSt Wals>l. 47M20>. ^t^C • Very close kfcamousand thuttie. com-r h Srvigb Mww"^m " tefge^walk-in c^oseti. ;SMITH ' id/b/a;i'VALV©_ AND; ~ Ptetely ^pata^ CAVCHi built shuttle bus and tdhnto coorlsi £? ^rhlsh^gs^ Peaceful: ©oOf«v >EQUIPMeNT^ALESi:COMPANY/ INC. *• % tU8&«irR-2r^!«M le_Mair * 47W>171^ . .. ^ <£ 4S1-3IS4or4S1-AS33 tft^OVE m TODAY fRAVEL Home •a»Hempilii, Fort Wgrtjf1ToTl.1 BEGINNER system PVAJLLA tree number I-ooSt»2 1104 '• SW.-J3 ABORTION ^ALTERNATIVES!« Pr«.Htxim-'sm SA,LA,NO J>»t|» anddlstte»s«r?.H«lP Isasneer;es'«v»;^ kltctwaotec coordinated,'no big bilcofuesfor yotM1 pianh.ltoordraatldoMng} Sl&ptos ^MOVlNG?>vyE cart fnove you fast ^ Month experfences, ttfw cost. For brochure, p/ease Write: 'STUOem SaiofiofBeau­ jrnwMr T.liSR-MCalculator uiunew.pien>er^~ro«'; andrins%»cti«»i-rio^c*ii 437-flio" >J3r beftire4:0^«raftecn^o.^ ,s.t..,v vZSS ii ® JisWa>JtaulIrrv,Chev exan houses ur with plants. FURN. APARTS. AWTAST/C SUMMERJm ^FUV6R^-:i-$129.00-"' us nam No Law scbpol^jtv^urloils Pddi;^ •«-print or rare sundedc,Vcabi«; '/shyftfe-bos, toiwntidtfHrS'-$\7*j0Q. ,G4s Austlfk Mit>ded. :Nand le. bus' at.front d6^;7o«Jarja^ nt&jp­ pfw;iw SanGtbrieC'A Apt »« fr«eterpaid -m $^Sinc«rr'i^ane PFicie HOW KILL ^^edroom5)fi(t2 Batieis utllUlespeld, mtipoof WANTED, 'Apart mpnaagrn lecj^o^te.lhuyertin^^Lamari477<74i 'v7^-.)r .t > a> an Praferr-k enffjfetdi.: mm «SH agfe? Monday,#archil;J975 THE DAILY teJ&iii *tj*r ?WK»* f "W •§ « t, .a. i ByStE#EfMcG0NlGL?5, ^ Austin airports troublesare centeredaround <. ? Texan.,Staff Writer^ ^£fte main runway, where planes using the |Austin .Municipal Airport< Manager >Roy ^/busy northwest approach must fly; at low* |BayIess Sunday branded, Texas Mopthly.£-altitudes jiver IH 35 -> \ « {cmnoatpina'o.iihbmao. ihnt tt>« Safetyrisks atsuch low altitudes are sub^ - *fVi. ackfire on Posey By JOSE M. FLORES --however, he would not do so while the suit ' *' . Texan Staff Writer against Briscoe, is still in litigation. • Few law suits haye as bizarre an effect as "This is simply a misunderstanding of the William H. Posey's suit-against Gov. Dolph most , absurd sort. -I'm sure there is no ^gtantmiy tacreased 'by tfie presenceofhigh'•: T ^ jjfJectriealpwes along the highway which L-rrfe^ce^jjpli^it.the jamountr of availably Mr space /or ' p}ai^dlng^ate!t^eHS}i1Sffi^e^m;Anw^y^ ^&yl6sf^(^Mv^i6rewS8:OTy:t«rdOT|;er''' 4 . , , , ,J\?vith.the ^ir?s; 6ayingpilots who exercifea .;;,The magaz^ne's;Claims are without meri?v%^r(fta}.ataount,of cautiorfwouldhave no dif-: r _ _ ^ •~fp{jL Bayle^&JrftSl^the.E'ederal/Aviation'Adr&SfT_ „ _ ^ministfalioli.jwlilch sets minimalvsdfetyirfr^ »;TOe;maij'rOT^ay-alM lacfe an Instrument.' • ' ' the heavilj^usedr ' ia^ii;]i§fsaia;§; ; approach; .which is;. ~ William Alford described the AustinairpbrtV-^-a^^^ftrt/there.is a prevailing north wind,' 5 iil-town locations "4 high.risk, hasarilousi: p „ does have-vertical guidance controls. (,, environment" The safety expert, who is*%|\ Again, no great emergency exists because ' ' chairman of tjie Airline Pilot^^ssOciation'si^-flf uiis absence of instrument assifitancefor ^Airport Evaluation Committee,-also said the^»«planesi-Bayless said:*Besides; an ILSfor the ' ^ city'_S:airport."should be.clcfised to aircarrier-^^aorthwest approach should be installed in the ~ service" because pilots ''just don't want to?f|hexl fewmonthsi he added ,operate in there," l M i t Bayless also panned claims that the j Arftong' the problem areas of'the airportS^Tinways' smooth surfaces (asopposed to ^ discussed in. the article were: the amouqt-of^v^jgroov^d),: length and a.hump, in the-main ;y navigableair spdceforplcines. the number'ofSs&jrunway constitute-any threat to-safety.' :) approach aids for.pilots and .the condition of : . '-'The FAA said grdoWng the runways was * runways? 1\„,(flot_^^cessary when we repaved them less ; According to the1 evaluation, mostof the»S@thiifi (wo years ago," Baylesssaid " *> * jfc ByKEftMITFR%. and ? ' CURTIS LEISTER ­> -Texas .House Speaker, Bill -Clayton said Thursday he was not in favorofcre&ttngqsUte utilities commission'because :< he felt such-;acommission • would not-: effectively-slower utility rates in Texas • Clayton-said the rates m Texas were comparable with those in other'states IN SPITE OF Clayton's ; negative outlook; ten bills 1 have been introduced in.the Legislature this session designed to .strengthen the I' regidation oJ^?plibUc utilities. %•**> —JEivfiLOf4he.T!4lsJcalljtorcrea^ tion of-astatecommission. • The measure' with' the strongest backing is:Hpuse Bill -. 433-,-'sponsored, by Navasota Rep. Latham Boone, Deer Park Rqi. Ed .Watsoriandfour'bthere;.The • bill is the'product of a study , begun last May by an id'hoc — <* <# nt ^,} ~ V 'An almost:identical: bill'u; putes;between:companies^ being sponsored*in the Seriate • Establish safety stan­. by Garland Sen: Ron Clower dards for company-employes^ ^ and three others." t-• to follow:.-in their day-to-day ? equipment.^ppean /;sihalter^ - Senate 3iU4i$.and its coih-work. "• and iates can be loy^er ,and pamon bill in the House both •; • Review proposed "majot still' providea-''i^TOnabje" provide forthe^creation of a ' utility construction" for its ~'ybl:return on investment.public^ .u|iliti6S}s.(»itamission; impact on the environment: ; ;• responsible ,;for;«!regulating^ —?_ Review companies' ' rates charged by Texas telephone;'electric. gas and' water companies., UNDER PRESENT Texas law. the state's 900 city coun­cils regulate,utilities.In umn­corporated. areas; only gas rates are regulated by a public, body -(the. Railroad Commission) v irates for _telephone, electricvand water . 'seryice-are1set TJ»y tUe com­panies rntrastafe'^lohg^distance telephone rates also are un­regulated. • The.Boone or Clower com­mission, in addition to setting: rates, would­ • Regulate utility com­: ;group bf legislaibrsinterested panies' service standards, sin public utilityregulation.*; • Resolve . boundary dis-i-Vl. campus briefs^' . •* '?£&/*i-. - original cost, a cdmpaj^'s ih­.yestmeiit in property and. proposals-for mergers and for of! provisions designed to sales of property.rstnd minimize the mfluenceV&iit securities. Virility companieis ?iiiight be • Investigate transactions --able to use on the <»mniissioh. between utility companiesand Commission members:would affiliates, that manufacture be forbidden to own.'stock in utility equipment utility compaiiies r'-or, accept "any gift, gratuity or"enter­The commission would have tainment" from a uttlitycom­the authority to hire its own pany during their terms or staff, to inspect company during a period of five years documents and property, :.to .. .preceding their term and five subpoena company employes years following it. to testify before the^ commis­ Commissioners.-.v^ould be sion and to require utility required to "log all contacts companies to keep, their ac­ with utility lobbyists.* counts in a prescribed manner The major difference ^/vBotfc bills specify that the between: the-two bills .iscln commission value company their specifications' for -tfiie • property-at "original Cpst" makeup of the commission. (book cost), rather.than at in-The Clower bill calls for-'a ^ •*7»TUr n ft v \ L C i»r * . Latin History Seminar Set I Latin American ^cpnbljiics have credit ^.earned by ex-.MMOUNC1MMTI, iMKtlNGS1'"* aiid history will betheiocus of amln&tion-felferteaS to tlfe? 11*B UNON AnK>.JUWBCAN CUITUU UOOO DtfVl COORfitNATVM'/ COMMinR COMMITtlt will sponsor a Third will meet at4 p.m. Monday to-Texas seminars this week. Prof registrar for tUsSemester is5 >, World photo exhibit Monday through' Unlori South 106 to continue planning Peter Smith ot the history SaturdAy,in the,Academlc CenW p ro : Monday.. Forms sub-/ v for the spring,.1975/ Universityblood •foyerr * • department at the University mitted to the * Measurement •drive.' ' of Wisconsin^at Madison will and Evaluation Center' after; TiXAS UHWN nNt Am cxsMMirrn win, .. . SiMlNAtS . .. .. give an "Analysis of the Monday will be processed. at. r; '• sponsor an artexhibit of recent pain-DCMRTMMTOF. BECTttCAi. mOMtBKtNO Contemporary Situation in v,'.^ tings and graphicsby Left RossMon-will sponsor a seminar :at .2 p.m'. the end of summer.,Students :\v< ; d*y thr K202. Argentina" at4 p:m. Monday; Piaif;:^-. . ^semester: shoVid<'c6ntact the. s .Building 151. TKM IMtttCWiyCK COMKUtm • KMinMNT or KUatlCAL tNOMnuNO ^center or®aitachfa note to that?' .v'Li r .wtii sponsors Flamenco guitar per-will meet at 4 pjn Monday in '(I CreditJD«aclline formance .with Matt Kretzer from-Cockrell kail\1.202. to ?hear>, Juan effect to their petitions J >''Zy{' 8*30 toHp.m.'MondeY-WUhe.Tejtas •; Va|lhonrat dlscuss"AMltfo-Coded The jp^tition ..deadline to Tavern ^ Seismic Data Processor^/ 'y -' • CLASSlFltD. ADVERTISING >0^ t&w ifniV0nityofT0xof tifAvstin ^ -­ m & LiP ANID MAIL TODAY! WRITE YOUR AD HERE \U s-0­ ^ * V*" -{$ yf «s list* est h*. •rn-.-.-'yc* ; !•«> ^ V ^ oirnt BtuhsedlztL I"#) '1?!" w iP*-, M'-'P ^ , ™ « -OT STATION &£• CIO? STIN, TEXAS ;^2o mM' 4.00 10.50" • -*« W, v>&20 •v'j4I40n' im 22.40 3.40 m 1 2^-" \T.tO 12.60 SI#1 7M Hiso 4 ™ u y A**** w —'•nan Staff PtMto>r David Wa*. "over IH 35. ^ " viu ec-ioaii * elected on a statewide basisin' a manner similar. to the ' Railroad Commission. Boone's bill calls for a nine-, man commission, .with three members appointed by tfie specially created; .••public.:' utility .districts." » . BOTH BILLS.provide' that an assistant attorney general shall investigate utility com­panies' requests for higher rates "to assure that the in­terests of consumers arefully represented jp all matters before the commission."* ' The bills' also provide that any city may choose by pop­ -ular--voti'-ito-.j£tain_ita_ regulatory powers.overa utili­ty company/operating .within its jurisdiction. A staff member in CloWer's office es­timated, however, only about 10 per cent of the cities will -vote to rates. regulator their own .. •Briscoe, alleging . campaign fund raising . deliberate wrongdoing involved on the part of violations during last year's gubernatorial Mr. Posey," White said. .campaign; The. effect is that Posey may be Posey said he and his lawyer had been in jgiiilty .of the offense himself. ;i White's office checking Broscoe's campaign ^ Polsey^.a funeral, home operator frpm:; financial disclosure when he was informed of; Galena Park who vied with Briscoe for the the matter by White. 'a Democratic Party favor, said he had sent Posey said "it seemed strange" to him that r.»;| y "everything necessary" in theway of financial he had received no word from White until after disclosure to the office of Secretary of State ' he had filed the suit against Briscoe. • 7f[ ; Mark White Jr. as required under the law. White said Sunday Posey should have filed five reports on his campaign financing — two "*'• before the campaign and ttiree after — to be ^'separately scrutini2ed and correlated as } provided for under House Bill l. However, his / office has been unable to find any of these • ' reports in its files. There is only "a remote"possibility" that these reports haye been received and misplac­!• ! ;ed by his office,and his staff is'still looking for " them,;White said. ' f •" If the reports are not received by his office, \ White could refer the matter to.a district at­ toimey' for possible legal'actions White said, Kjtfr'' ' " White said the matter had come to his atten­tion jUst before Posey had visited his office, and his staff had been in the process of notify-m ing Posey. pr^ll '' ' "I thought thatsince he was present, Ishould , . inform him then and there," White said. ' n'i® Posey's suit claims Briscoe violated the, campaign disclosure law through tund raising -^ before he had designated his 1974 campaign f manager. ; Posey's* possible violation is that he may®, have named his manager but presented nothing to the secretary in the way of disclosing his finances. " THERE ARE SEVEN WHO CARE ABOUT... AN AUSTIN WHOSE TOMORROW WILL RETAIN ITS BEAUTY OF TODAY AND REJECT THE CONCRETE DISASTER OF A DALLAS OR A HOUSTON. Pdrpoi rbySAGjYD; Lukin-GiHiland. Erwin-McGee-Ghalrpercons'­ ALWAYS CLASS! FIED ADS THEy REACH THE VAST UT MARKET FIRST FAST AND WORK, ALL DAY/ If fM. mmm fi w *Tf&* 1y*> V«' -•** .,„ " -&1. $' *'•''W^^L-t* ? • •Vr/SitfT S*?l"TrJJ '''"J" 'i"*tS£^7i.,"i 7i r ^"4^# ­ f?«j4 r ,< '^»r"^,. ,i j» ?%*?? ~jr-t -Wr+--", tfp.S\rm rM bV> * ;.'.'yvyty,W.yr> . • aiim^ ss4? #»*«* iititi/i J V .,.V.,_":#2«L*?1 (&Y<­ ^'vST r*-. .^4? 1 fl'l^ I-V-. rte?, «•" -< •-i *1?* m ^ -• •. i4U ft. UjV-. ,, j b^t, * )} v'#l •n #|| < ^ J£l &~ ,vtg| ~ar •: _ .,-'r-- r% •v-«£i , &r*; r»^ i ' V ^ si. |£* k ^ i Wm > 4jMS3&flsj^n* |^K!.._ 2?55B l/r^cv-#. g«B ^ !2sfp^k ^ ^ nVJ,-s i sAS.% i„._,. MARCH-31st ... WESBEGIN w^s OUR LUCKY, aSfeSPRING CLEANlNG^SALE. * t •* v v Vir^*• RECORD TOV^I#HASf;DONE IT'S ANNUAL ,r Mr" r s>^ -' * **, M fmMi&c? • SPRING CLEANING IN OUR 13 STORES AND HAS p DOBIE MALL'l STORE. INCLUDED "ARE "./.'; J-'-i?-j»'*v»l"'^/:;^" -; OVERSTOCK RECENT^RELEASES AND DUST i _ _ __ _ ... -yu. t •» il>iv -,r «.~ <. * <• *, - %t COLLECTORS OF ALL TYPES. •m i era n% SAVINGS $* I ^ i-^ 4® | I ^ L'-.'»i:A.>i>dMfikn*% •*_«tjj.ii„ , f;off THf Mfl®. i/^r-«aci vr ,„,... si , ^ , Lfj-­ il&\ (-KL ( ^ON THIS GROUP^ML SELECTED j r _j ­ >: mw r> OF SPECIALLY TAGGED SALE ALBUMS W.0^ _-j»«¥ y|Ssi4i*(E«i( r -* t* /•? > >/* f y * ^ , ^*5 . t •^l/ 'i— 1 \mWr I 1^2* «r-y*i j /l* iV ifeHI.Si'!ltf" NOT • A dOW|Bj.6TE„ . . , l%$yjjjk;7 I* % ' •«£& C ,. SfOREWIDErSALl^|HOWEVEFtr'THE:SEl:iiT4iONt'''' -'":s"; ":* •i V 4 :V WILL BE OF^REGUtAR STOCK MERCHANDISE v^1 , i ;7rap.i? !i;v. -?•'"F"W1«I«J9¥. ^^rr/. i. «,-> ^ •" > -1>^> . •, ' ALL.GUARANTEED^ AND ALL AT A 50% SAVINGS /2L«£?#m WAf <-s2 Jl— L & _r i •? N •*/ * V ^ SStJ i lfN' s •1STICKERPRICL; MF6,LIST (STICKER PRICE ^ MFO.ilS ^ H i »«£* % f A w -ill E5 Jf ^ ^ r A.a,&\ { #Tfr ­ s ^siy» b3 .fB: . « , "MM: ft'x ; -' iH ^ 1 rf*!, W •> ^ < sm$Z" s, ' »M ____ v '* t, W * <•!«. m r-xTM'-- Al"'«3 w* %i % S' i^fv^r1 yji-5 ICAfiH IN' THE COVERED ILQIME_G v-cvm^ m