*1 TEXAN Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin i Vol. 74, No. 178 Ten Cents Austin, Texas, Tuesday, April 8, 1975 Fourteen Pages 471-4591 Hit by Bombs WttggS Resignation Pressure Mounts for President SiM? * : SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) -A : said two persons were killed and three peeled off and attacked the palace. recent months has been trying to camouflaged jetwarplane of the South Vwere wounded, but it was not known if Saigon radio announced a 24-hour organize a political alliance against the Vietnamese air force bombed the down­they were in the palace orjsurrounding curfew for Saigon and its three million president town palace of President Nguyen Van gardens. inhabitants, and there were massive A DOZEN of Ky's associates, in­ Thieu Tuesday, shattering windows In -THIEU IS undier intense political traffic jams as the people headed for« cluding his top assistant,, have been the modem fouvetory building. pressure to resign because of the collap­home. Schoolsclosed, storeswere locked arrested in recent weeks on charges of Witnesses said the U.S. -made F5 sing battlefield situation. with their shutters drawn and plotting to overthrow Thieu. swooped in at a 2,000-foot level over (be loudspeaker vans circulated through the (Ratatad Stacy, Poge 3.) Associated Press newsmen-Cari |>alace and dropped at least two and snarled traffic, advising residents that Robinson and Arnold Zeitlin reported possibly four 500-pound bombs. -Western sources said two F5 jets took they must stay inside until the curfew is that the presidential guard took up Nguyen Quoc Cuong, the chief govern­off from Bien Hoa Air Base 15 miles / lifted. positions in bunkers and army rein­ ment spokesman;reported Thieu and his ' northeast of Saigon for an air strike on Tan Son Nhut airport was sealed off, forcements converged on the palace area I family were notjtajured, Palace sources. Viet Cong positions. Thesources saidone with guards erecting steel barriers, and after the Tuesday morning attack. The only persons with passes could enter. streets were quickly deserted by persons Airport sources said some commercial en route by work. planes were still leaving the field, but At one intersection near the palacethey did not know if any inbound craft motorists abandoned their cars, leavingwould be permitted to land. . the doors open in their haste to flee. "BY^NOON the streets were nearly In streets, alleys and passageways in deserted, and thousands of soldiers, the heart of the city pedestrians paratroopers and rangers were in posi­scrambled for cover. A half-hour later, BylOUISE COOK tion around the palace and on the roof­traffic resumed and people emerged children was due in the United States in 1 ; Associated Press Writer the early hours Tuesday. Another plane tops of nearby buildings. from cover. Americans workingto bring South With 200 youngsters who have been There was no immediate indication if North Vietnamese-Viet Cong forces -Vietnamese children to the U.S. families adopted is en route from Vietnam. the bombing was the act of one angry have made no major move against _ have.adopted them pressed forward President Ford Said last week that the pilot or part of a larger plot to oust Saigon, but they increased their attacks Monday; despite the officialend of mass United States would spend $2 million to Thieu. Monday on district capitals in the ^evacuations under Operation Baby Lift airlift 2,000 children from South Viet­"I can see windows blown out on file Mekong Delta, the southern quarter of -Almost 2,000 children already have namese orphanges to America. top three floors of one wing of the the country still under Saigon's control. Jteen evacuated and are at or on their palace," a witness said. Others reported The exact number of children who SOUTH VIETNAMESE military way to new homes in the United States," have been evacuated is unknown. Unof­one bomb hit a sandbagged tent used by spokesmen said 10 delta capitals were members of Thieu's white-uniformed Britain, Australia and Canada. More ficial tallies showed more than 1,700 had shelled. They also reported a fuel center palace guards, but therewas no report of than500 youngsters'were en route to the left Saigon in the last fivedays. Officials six miles from Saigon was hit with 60 West Coast on Monday. casualties. in Saigon said Monday morning that the rocket and mortar rounds. scheduled quota approved by the South Soon after the bombing, small arms Saigon commanders were planning ! THE LAST OF {he large-scale flights- fire was heard in the vicinity of the con­defenses against an anticipated — Photo by Paul M. Lester Vietnamese government had been reach­ jtf Operation Baby Lift took off from crete and steel palace, but it ended onslaught by North Vietnamese-Viet ed. Saigon early Monday morning, andSouth quickly. Police cordoned off the palace, Cong forces that have gobbled up the Crabtree, Breeland Inaugurated THEY SAID ALL the evacuated .Vietnamese officials said further depar­ located in a walled park the «i» of northern three-quarters of South Viet­ tures will involve smaller groups. children had been scheduled to leave Ron Cook, chief justice of the Student Court, congratulates Carol Crabtree several city blocks, and 20mm antiair­ MS ; Charitable agencies, public service anyway and the massive airlift simply nam in three weeks against light with a handshake Monday after inaugurating her as president of the stu­ speeded the paperwork. craft guns were wheeled into position resistance. groups and individuals made plans, dent body. Vice-President lyn Breelond, also inaugurated, looks on. beside the walls. Robert C. Macauley, a New Canaan, iowever, to fly hundreds more children 'to the United States. Conn., businessman who put up $250,000 AMBULANCES AND fire trucks were to Qy 325 Vietnamese orphans.to the. .seen leaving the area. ? Alaska Gov. Jay Hammond proclaim­United Statessaid be; planned to bring an ed Monday as"Operation Airlift" day in . Opposition . politicians have been Witness Against Connally additional 1,000 orphans to this country: demanding that Thieu step down. Theyjconnectionwitha funddrive by theInter­ national Jaycees of Anchorage which is **Tbere are a thousand children over blame him for failing to halt the month- there with exit visas,and we've got 1,000 long Communist-led offensive that has seeking $130,000 to chartera plane tobr­ 3ng21? children from an orphanage parents lined up. Well get another captured three-quarters of South Viet­ plarfe," said Macauley, a paper mill ex­ Mentions Third ^operated by the Vietnamese-American nam, ban government troops and left . chiMrtn's fund. \ J.... . ecutive and president of the Shoeshine the military demoralized.The Viet Cong <$fteial8 saMf76,000 bad been raised .Boys Foundation,' whlchruns: II • also has demanded TBeu's resignation, -—WASHINGTON < AP) — Jake Jacobsoj "The only thing I dpn't have a' firm" ' - •legal gratuity. In:returri the governmentorpteuiages in Vietnam... Ajr mkiday on Monday testified Mooday he may havemadea recollection about is luiving given it to dropped seven felony counts of fraudin a ... . vJi&eaiitey• helped,^ finance a 'Pan his regime. third $5,000 payoff to former Treasury Secretary Connally," he said. San Angelo, Tex., savings and loan case. UNuistiTAINTY of flight plans American charterflight organizedby the The palace had been bombed before by Secretary'John B. Connally but that he Earlier in the trial, Jacobsen testified Williams read extensively from and schedules caused problems. Friends of All Children in Boulder, Colo. two government planes in 1961 in an cannot recall it for sure. that he handed Connally $5,000 payments testimony Jacobsen bad given under oath • "Itis worse thanbeing pregnant, this Mr. Fort met the in San Fran­ aborted coup against civilian President The testimony came hi a roundabout on May 24 and Sept 24, 1971, for Con­to the Watergate grand juiy and to the waltingj" said Elizabeth Manning, adop­cisco. Ngo Dinh Diem. . way during cross-examination by Con-nally's help in getting milk price sup­Senate Watergate committee. tion supervisorfortheCatholic Service Macauley, who has taken, out full-Diem was not hurt in the attack but nally's lawyer at -.Connally's bribery ports raised that year. IN ONE GRANDJURY appearanceonBureau in Miami. "Yon don't knowwhen page newspaper advertisements calling was ousted inamilitaiy revolt two years trial. Edward Bennett Williams, Connally's Nov. 2,1973, Jacobsen wasasked what.be %-jr it," said Maiming, adding that a for contributions to the Friends for All later and slain by his raptors. JACOBSEN, formerly a lawyer for defense lawyer, had spent the day of did with the $10,000 that be had been' ' /'massive jamof paperwork" isslowing Children, was asked whether .the South Retired Gen. Nguyen Cao Kywascom­the country's largest dairy cooperative, cross-examination in bringing out given by, Associated Milk Producers, things down. Vietnamese .decisMn. to end .the mass mander of the Vietnamese air force at acknowledged that records show he previous sworn testimony by Jacobsen Inc., for Connally's use. Offidals at Travis Air Force Base in evacuation flightswould affect his'plans. that time. He became pronier, with altered a safe deposit box in Austin on that Connally had not accepted the $10,-"I kept it," Jacobsen said then. "It is .California said. an. Overseas National "We're going ahead on the premise we as then Thieu president, but turned Dec. 14,1971,'and he recalled bringing a 000. in my safe deposit box."' Airways charter flight with about 380 can get more out," be said. against Thieu in a power struggle and in - briefcase full of cash to Washington. . WILLIAMS A1SO asked Jacobsen if be On direct examination Friday,denied that he offered to give evidence to Jacobsen testified that he had clung toHouse State Affairs Panel the Department of Justice against that story until he "finally decided to tell former President Lyndon B. Johnson to about making the payoff to Connally." . escape a fraud investigation. In the sworn testimony that proceeded"Yes, sir, I deny that," Jacobsen said. Jacobsen's guilty plea, he insisted that Williams' question about Johnson, Connally refused the money first whom Jacobsen had served aslegislative because he was a Democrat in a council in.the White House for two years, Republican administration and a second By BETH MACK commission were established. "This 'Texas hasbeen yery successful|h at­budgets and if the company must put followed a series of questions about a time when, out of Richard Nixon's Texan Staff Writer^ would result in more unemployment &- tracting utility bushiess, and investors anything itearns over the fixed rate into fraud investigation by the Department of Cabinet, he headed Democrats, for Nix­ ; The House State Affairs Committee wellasa lackof energy in thefuture," he are very suspicious.The situation isvery an equalization fund, the management Justice in 1972. on. ­ ieard testimony Monday night Cram op­said. < delicate." If investors take timeto study would no longer be responsible for the He asked Jacobsen whether the IN THE NOV. 2, 1973, grand juryponents of.fourbills proposing a Childs said it takes from ,five to ten policies of a new commission, the time company and would become dispen­ Federal Home Loan Bank Board had appearance Jacobsen was asked why he statewide utilities regulatory commis­years-;to build an etectric power plant lost cannot be made up in terms of sable." • recommended that he be investigated in had not returned the money to the milksion. /• "If. it takes five years to discover the enery lost Childsaid. "Isuggest wedon't . ]b response to questions from thecom­a series of bank transactions unrelated producers. mistake of reduced .construction, it will -The four•bills'dlffCT^in major respects^ rock the boat" , mittee, Brown said local commissions to the milk price support decision. "The reason I waited so long was that then take anotherfiveyears to build the WiiXIAM R. BROWN of to 'However, testimony was not againstany Houston typically take nine months issue "I DIDN'T KNOW.they'd made such this Watergate thing came along and I ^specific bill. but against establishment necessaryfacilities.By thenwewouldbe Lighting and Power Co. spoke "from the decisions. Boone'sbill would allow onlya. an investigation," said Jacobsen. didn't want to return it because of this," ,of a state utility regulatory commission; dangerously eating into our reserves." ^practical aspects of the electric five-month lag. He also said Houston Williams then elicited from Jacobsen Jacob'sen said then.A fixed rate of return to companies;as situation." He cited specific problems Lighting and Power spent $1 million in . .that .he had been questioned by the "I just left it in the safe deposit b6x > JOHN R. CHILDS, author of three well as a tithe lag in implementing with NavasotaRep. Latham Boone'sbill, advertising last year. HB 433 would Department of Justice in 1972 about and forgot about it in a little while,.'books on economic-management and a decisions by such a.commission would HB 433. State commission rulings would prohibit any advertising by utility com-kickbacks on loans from Texas savings frankly." \ .-member of state and national energy place severe limitations on an already take away the prerogative of manage­ • and loan institutions. ° Jacobsen is a lawyer who once had in­ 'commissions, said a cut-back in con­ adequate system of local utility ment, be said. . "In a $2 billion plant, $1 million is not Jacobsen pleaded guilty last year to a terests in nine Texas banks and savings struction would result if a regulatory regulations, he said. . / "If the commission has to approve all much for advertising," Brown said. single charge of paying Connally an il-and loan associations. today Warns of High Federal Deficit, •iz. ^-y^ •. -> *r ­» ** i*r v fir «:• ress for Tax Cut Bill LAS VEGAS, NevL / " ly turned, to.work on the energy bill. The a deficit of $100 billion is.gambling ,with y In Washington,Hottse^udget makers !rsaftertasession of ' House resumed work on rOutlne business the nation's economic strength."\ projected a red-ink Bgure of about $73.2 Democratic Pdlicy Committee,: and minor legislation. "* ^ -! Mfr. Fonl al$o rejMted forecasfi' df Mi/ • Mr. Ford's depression at home and disintegration Mostly cloudy skies are forecast fpr-Tuesday morning -emergoiicy abroad and said he sees cooperative1 With decreasing cloudiness intheafternoon. Winds will Vietnam and $222 v growth and development throughout the ^governmtet outlays will re«di 1968.2 m. and decided to.withhold judgment oo' million in military^aid to Cambodla. The world. ^ be northwesterly,atJ|0 toftp mph, witha highih the mid: i billlon, against revenuesof $2B5 baiiohJf'''^further military'aid to South Vietnamup** Saiate ForeignRelationsCommittee has v "My vision is we of peace," he said. {3*® major in-'^fejill ^reddent Ford addresses Congrea^N acte£ only on the Cambodia'portion, ' J!And my vision of Americans isof a peo­^come tto reductions voted for the calen^Vlhursday^v ~ ^ J G X •-recommending $82.5 million in emergen-^ ^ple who will i le whowiUretam theirself-respectand «infthe; Shivers Defends Power mi By DAWN TURNHAM selection. ^ ment on the firipg ofStephen 'dozen," Shivers said.'" done in Austin then it would, Refemng to theimpossibili­Neither the selection com­ Spurr as president saying • Some have said that the-a have to bedone inE] Pasoand ty of 41,000 students and 40 mittee nor the faculty-strident enough had been said but later regents rales must be changed' every student's term on the Faculty Senate members advisory committee shouid re-emphasized his point that so the new University presi­^ board would be a short term, ^'selecting the University presi­have the power to choose a the regents could not consult dent will be treated fairly,' Shivers said. v: '••'•-'•X dent, Regent Allan Shivers president or have v&o power all the students or faculty on Shivers said. said Monday night that in the selection. Shivers said. the firing of Spurr. Students servingasadvisers The only trouble in a ^gd nonvoters would also have someone has to have the -The faculty-student ad­"We can't let the faculty or presidential selection is the no purpose, Shivers com-; authority. visory committee does have students run the University In an informal discussion publication of applicants' mented. the proper place to make because there is no way they session with the Omicron recommendations and screen could," Shivers said. names in the news media.. Shivers also questioned the This causes candidates :to; -Delta Kappa Society at the applicants. Shivers said. -In replacing Spurr, Shivers Legislature's $24 million withdraw their names, Alumni Center. Shivers said it Shivers expressed hope that said, there was no problem in budget cut.This cut lost funds'* Shivers said. ^ ^ "was the responsibility and the two committees could getting applicants. "We have' for the new medical building authority of the regents and work together and reach a got more applications than we Placing a student on the in San Antonio-which was to 'chancellor to make die final mutual decision. know what to do with, and Board of Regents is highly un­supply doctors for rural areas decision in the presidential com-tomorrow could hire a it-i§ , that the Shivers first refused we likely, Shivers-said: If Legislature is so ;strongly stressing a need for,Winner Favors Shivers said. In discussing other Decentralized VOTE WEDNESDAY legislative matters. Shivers Medical Services said perhaps there was an ad­ FOR vantage to keepjng foreign Betty Himmelblau, winner students' tuition iow.-Thls en­ of Place 2 in the City Council courages . these SCOTT TAGUARINO election, was quoted in Mon­students to '' Smith come to the University giving —T«*onday's Texan "as saying she a good input. Shivers said: Shivers converses at Alumni Center as Claire Buie looks on. Texan Editor would work for centralization of medical and social services Scott is a qualified and campus-oriented candidate for in community areas. Himmelblau is in favor of Police Suspension Report Disputed Texan Editor. He ran before because he felt he was the most decentralized services'; The qualified and had the experience, integrity and competence Texan regrets the error! '1 The Special Community. Hernandez said. "We need February with Miles. He ver­said, but later he denied hav­ Relations Task Force issueda this information to help better-bally answered their ing done so. to make a good and strong-minded Editor. final appeal Monday to Austin the police-community questions. But a request for a Since the FebruaryScott is the only candidate that has shown his continuing P ThereISa ' Police Chief Bob Miles to relations," he said. written summary of answers meeting, the subcommittee answer satisfactorily Miles, does not have thg has been ignpred, subcom­has met with Lt. Bobby Simp­ desire and determination to be Daily Texan Editor. He not • difference!!! questions about police suspen­power to fire a policeman. He mittee members' said. Miles Sgt. Gilbert Miller son and only will be strongly opinionated, but wants to get more * mEMKKM: sion policies and procedures. dan only suspend him. A agreed at that meeting to without gaining further infor-1 The committee voted after suspended policeman can take allow to examine its students involved in the Texan through specific programs. MCAT Over 35 years « members mation, members. a report was presented by. its his case toa civilservice com­ of experience ' • suspended officers' files, they reported. -' •DAT and success • subcommittee on community-mission, which reviews the These programs include: police relations. '^suspension and sustains or • READERSHIP SURVEYS — to get directinput from students intothe : LSAT Small classes 9 Since November, four sub­overturns the decision. Office Postpohes workings of theTTexan. : GRE committee members have "The task force was only * • been trying to talk with Miles given the outcome of these Voluminous home 5 • TEXAN EDITOR OFFICE HOURS -—so students can meet directly :ATGSB study materials • J about disciplinary action complaints, such as one man Award Notification taken against 11 police of­resigned or one man was with the Editor to discuss their cortnplaints. : OCAT • : ficers during 1973. The com­suspended. We need to know By PATRICIA WARD Courses that are * The causeof the delay was a • MORE GUEST VIEWPOINTS — from both sides of an issue by : CPAT Constantly update^ mittee has sought to .deter­the determinants, and Miles' Notification of financial aid congressional examination of mine whether any discrimina­report is lacking in details," awards will be delayed until soliciting varied opinions. the Financial Need Analysis' • : : FLEX Make-ups for -• tion has occurred in suspen­Hernandez said. sometime this summer, Ben Services used nationwide to missed lessons • sion of police officers. • MORE SCHOOL AND COLLEGE NEWS — to make the Texan a truly Of 79 complaints against Stough, associate director of determine how federal funds student newspaper. iiCFMG "We need to know what it policemen in 1973, action was the University Office of Stu­will be distributed to students :HATIMFDBPS: takes to have an officer levied against 11. Punishment dent Financial Aid, said Mon­needing financial aid. • MORE INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING — by organizing an in­• THOUSANDS HAVE • suspended and what specific ranged from 30-day suspen­day. "We thought we .wouldn't vestigative team through the Journalism Department to work J RAISED THEIR SCORES • charges were levied against sions without pay to Students are usually get the notification out until 5 Call: Dallas Center « these li suspended officers," . reprimands. notified in late spring if they July or August, but we got the directly with the Editor. subcommittee chairman Ray met will Veceive aid., go-ahead from Washington The subcommittee in If you want to get involved in the Texan vote for Taglianho for Daily • for information last week. We have begun to class locations J process applications so it Texan Editor. . shouldn't' take quite,that long. The students need a strong, logical and independent voice on the "Usually we start process­ m Texan; Scott feels he can be that voice, ing arouiid March 15, but this Earth Drug Crisis Center year we are about a month EDUCATIONAL CENTER VOTE WEDNESDAY behind," Stough said. However, an announcement (2I4)>S0-C3ir tu» Monday by HEW Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger that Texas colleges could receive over $1 million in State Stu-• J DRUG SYMPOSIUM '75 dent Incentive Grants (SSIG1 ! M might provide: additional ? i scholarship funds. ; ' * : ' Tuesday (4/8) -A Discussion on drugs & drug abuse during pregnancy . SSIG scholarships will be lactation, Union South Room 110 -12 Noon available for approximately 4,165 studentsih Texas if a bill ' that matches state monies ' Wednesday (4/9) -An Exhibition of Funk & Flash —: Physical expressions of an ! with .SSIG funds passes the Legislature. emerging subculture. Union South Room 110-12 Noon >w.V*" Thursday (4/10) -Paul Watkins & The Flow People. Union South Rm. 110.-12 ""I*** <, Noon -Andrew Weil -Author of THE NATURAL MIND-BurdineAud. ££ -8:30 P.M. ma NOTICES from the [Friday (4/11) -Whip Inflation Now (WIN] A Roll-Yer Own Workshop -Union General libraries, or any f t South Rm. 110 -12 Noon ' -of the branches are of COjtLECTlBLB, A RECEPTION at the Middle Earth House; 1114 Manor Rd; -v3:p0 ficlal University com to 6:00 P.M munications requiring immediate attention. ^" >¥-nnuiy ''"re ' r •M*. i <-r , -c to certain majors Fonturirrf® t> is I.iM L.P.'s engineering majors"... JKKKY -JKKF WAI.KKR WILLIS ALAN KA.MSKY BAY. STKVK.VSON WILLIK NLI.SON Now 3.99 Nel MICHAEL Ml RPHhA Open Thursday tii! 9:30 P.M CORD SHOR 2268 GUADALUPE utitalltogetheriiiAirForc^ROT ShlTn^hH'rk-ard ntul .MaslG^Sh OTIS '•<1 >•« purchasr of 2.00 or more. wmmm mm, , ,' - 1 4 1 ' ' " * ' * \ i >" * ' Vietnam Dilemma Assessed Russians Soy Soyuz Unrelated to Joint Mission MQSCOW (UPI — The Soviet Union told the United States Monday the aborted Soviet Soyuz space launching Saturday "had nothing to do" with Loss Blamed on Thieu's Abandonment of Highlands plans for the joint American-Soviet space linkup planned for July. IAIGON, — pniiinmpnt intn fmm n„ono TV, tn .i. men and equipment into the South for a J; That is the question everyone asked as major offensive in the rice-rich Mekong then from Hue to Da Nang. They were by half the piaster fell The^official Tags news agency said the third-stage rocket of a Soyuz SAIGON, (AP) — How did it happen? .South fnr from Quang Tri to Hue in thett... far north, of. r dismay. The value of spaceship veered off course on launch Saturday, forcing two cosmonauts on the black market as many South Vietnam unraveled with un­Delta, and shrunken South Vietnam is followed by an estimated 900.000 Vietnamese made ready to flee. to make an emergency soft landing in snow-swept Siberia. Both escaped believable speed. counting its dead, its refugees and its refugees. The retreating troops from the Banks shu! their doors, the curfew was injury. Highly placed officials blame the loss equipment losses. northern cities and the Highlands got enforced at 9 p.m. instead of 10p.m., andof three-fourths of the country in the last The aborted mission, coming after a series of otherSoyuz failures, rais­ jammed up in the refugee columns and armed stationed on month on President Nguyen Van Thieu's After a month of retreat, almost half troops were the ed American fears for the safety of the joint U.S.-Russian space hookup. decision to the the South Vietnamese army is loSt, and were unable to fight effectively. roads leading from the port of Vung Tau abandon Central an estimated 100,000 people are dead. GOVERNMENT FORCES pulled out to Saigon to keep refugees and fleeing Highlands without a fight and the Chiang Kai-Shek Successors Criticize U.S. About 600,000 people in the area the o) some cities, like Nha Trang. and aban­troops out of the city leadership failure of the military. government still controls are refugees — doned the people, even though no North In the last few days, however, morale TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan revived old charges Monday that the Thieu has not said why he decided to Vietnamese attack developed, the dying by the score of hunger, exposure in Saigon has improved. The piaster has United States contributed to the loss of the Chinese mainland to the Com­abandon the Highlands, but analysts and malnutrition. sources said. Nha Trang, given up seven climbed in value The expected attack munists as it announced plans for the burial of Chiang Kai-shek. think he hoped to draw in his forces to days ago. was described by one official has not come. North Vietnam, its army intact, ismore positions. Instead, it The funeral committee, headed by Chiang's successor as president, 70 defensible moving planes and helicopters into aban­Monday as "virtuallyan open city There SOME WESTERN SOURCES don't touched off a chaotic retreat that panick­ are no North Vietnamese forces in there will, although the 19 North year-old-Yen Chiakan, said Christian services for the old Nationalist doned airfields at Pleiku, Da Nang, Phu believe it ed other commandsand the population at to our knowledge "' Vietnamese regiments totaling 57,060 revolutionary, a Methodist convert in 1933, will be held April 16, attended large. Bai and Hue and shifting its command government appeared in­ and control headquarters deeper into The Thieu men in the surrounding provinces out­ . by his family and the public. . -At the same time, many high-ranking South Vietnam. The expected assault in capable of exerting leadership. Calls for number the defenders about two to one. officers moved out of threatened areas the Delta, where one-third of South Viet­"Their plan does not seem to envisage the president's resignation grew louder. Arrests were made, and Thieu claimed Biochemist Warns of Vitamin C Dangers with their wives and children, leaving nam's 20 million people live, is seen as an attack on Saigon," said one source low-ranking officers without orders to an attempt to isolate Saigon from its there had been a plot against him. He "They don't want pictures of their tanks PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Vitamin C tablets kept in the kitchen or fight or plans to evacuate their men. food supplies. ordered formation of a new Cabinet. in the streets. They still maintain the bathroom for a year degrade into harmful substances, a biochemist told Sources said his supportamong the army charade that there are no North Viet­THIS NATIONAL soul-searchingoccurs the American Chemical Society on Monday. After giving up the Highlands, South was dwindling. namese in South Vietnam. They want'a at atime when North Vietnam is pouring Vietnamese troops were withdrawn Last week, the mood in Saigon was one "Vitamin C is stable in the pure state, when kept away from moisture popular uprising to oust Thieu. and oxygen," Dr. I.J. Wilk, a biochemist at the University of the Pacific "They'll probably accept a provisional Legislative Roundup government with the shots .called from in Stockton, said. "However, once a container has been opened, and is Hanoi " used frequently, degradation sets in." Western embassies, fearing the worst, In a year's time, when exposed to air and moisture, the potency of have begun evacuating families of Vitamin C is cut in half, and it breaks down into several chemical com­dilpomats and other employes. The U.S. Preferential Primary Bill pounds, some suspected of forming kidney stones, he said. Embassy quietly advises Americans' to leave while commercial flights are still available. Stock Market Records. 6th Straight Loss Units of the U.S. 7th Fleet, including NEW YORK (AP) -The stock aircraft carriers, are reported standing Back to Committee market, held in check by continuing I.Y.S.L DON JONES WHIIKE by off the coast in case they are needed V«Iim Prtfik II Iriistriiis to help evacuate the estimated 6,000doubts over interest rate prospects, CKtri II Hie so-called "Bentsen bill" (HB 679) to run again, we'll change it for him candidate for governor in the preceding Americans still in Saigon.recorded its sixth straight loss Mon­742.88 to create a presidential preferential again, but the best thing wecan do now is general election determines the number WESTERN MILITARY sources doubt day-in the second quietest session of primary in Texas was referred to a kill the bill," he said. of delegates sent to a party convention. that the South Vietnamese army could the year. Senate-House conference committee for Kubiak's motion to accept the Senate base withstand full by Ogg's law would the number of a scale attack thestudy Monday after the House voted not The Dow Jones average of 30 in­ amendments failed by a vote of 92-47 delegates on total votes cast in the par­North Vietnamese, who are now able to to accept the Senate's amendments to while the motion to refuse the Senate ty's preceding primary election. throw their troops from the central or dustrials slipped 4.38 to 742.88 on the the. measure. amendments and appoint a conference northern sectors of South Vietnam into heels of a 23-point loss last week. Also sponsored by Ogg is SB 571, which m.Mire Rep. Tom Schieffer of Fort Worth, the committee passed 91-49. any military thrust toward the capital orbill's House sponsor, spoke in favor of Rep. Ronnie Earle was the only would require candidates for a district the Delta. referring the measure to conference political party office that contains more member of the Travis County delegation The sources also believe the fact that committee because he found the Senate than one county to pay a proportionate voting against Kubiak's motion and for the U.S. Congress has not voted new filing fee to each county. amendments, particularly the "self- Convoy Protests Strip Mining Legislation acceptance of the Senate's changes and funds to replace South Vietnamese destruct" clause, "contradictory." subsequent referral to conference. SB 494 would establish election military equipment have a could WISE, Va (UPI) — A convoy of about 400 coal trucks moved out of the He said the bill "is not good law" and ••• regulations for district executive com­decisive effect on soldiers' ability andmountains of southwest Virginia Monday en route to Washington where its errors could best be worked out in University Journalism Prof. DeWitt C. mittees in counties containing two or willingness to fight.miners planned to protest strip mining legislation. conference. Reddick was congratulated by the Texas more senatorial districts. Sponsored by "The $700 million they got last yearA "self-destruct" clause, which was Garland Sen. Ron Clower. the bill ad­ State police said nearly 400 trucks left the Wise County Fairgrounds at 7 House of Representatives in a motion was only enough for ammo, petroleum tacked on to the bill by the Senate, states passed Monday. ditionally provides that the chairman of and spare parts, no replacements." one a.m. More trucks, including some from Kentucky and Tennessee, joined the proposal would be enacted as a tem­ the executive committee be the tem­ The motion commended Dr. Reddick source said. the caravsln along its line of march. ' porary law, expiring on March 1, 1977. for of to porary chairman of his or her district know United "a. half-century service "They obviously the Schieffer said it is "not a responsible convention. countless students and colleagues who States is finished with Vietnam." Tennessee Convicts Hold Hostages Eight Hours move to pass a piece of legislation for have profited from his gifts of inspira­ two years." tion. concern and thoughtful advice." NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) — Eleven black maximum security REP. DAN KUBIAK of Rockdale Sponsored by Athens Rep. Fred Head, prisoners looking for "some consideration" seized four counselors and made a motion to accept the Senate the motion described Reddick a UPI Reporter Says as eight other prisoners Monday at the Tennessee State Prison and held amendments and was joined in speaking "national leader in the journalism field, them at knifepoint for eight hours until authorities agreed to study their for them by Reps. Sarah Weddington of having received more than 30 national grievances. Austin and Jim Mattox of Dallas. The and statewide awards ... recognizing his three favored a rewritingof the primary contributions to professional journalism, ' Three of Ui^libstages — one counselor and two prisoners — were releas­ xAt Home' bill in two years, once the precedent for education, communication and humani­ ed at midafternoon, and a coupleof hours,later the convicts ifreed the rest NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — President a primary had been established in the ty-tion to her role. She occasionally takesaand surrendered themselves. state. ••• Ford is "down to earth, steady and not drink in public -r something other First innovative," Corrections Commissioner Heman Yeatman said a committee of in­Kubiak said U.S. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, The House Committeeon Businessand particularly UPI White Ladies were not wont to do — and she D-Tex., should consider it a "feather in Industry referred to subcommittee Mon­House reporter Helen Thomas told the found the heavens did not fall. quiry, including inmates, would be set up to look into their grievances. He his cap" to have the primary designed day a bill that could abolish "blue laws," nation's editors and publishers Monday. "If there is such a thing as a typical ^promised the 11 convicts they would not be prosecuted for the uprising. just for him. "If we're going to have a. which prohibit selling certain items on But Mr. Ford has already put his American family the Fords seem to bill with 'winner take all,' then for God's both.Saturday and Sunday. stamp on the Presidency, she said, and a come close to it." * sake, let's have it just long enough to more open, accessible and informal ••* Odessa Rep. John Hoestenbach, author help our senator." White House is emerging. of the controversial' bill, introduced Landrey told ANPA members that'a Weddington said all but one of the witnesses who testified against current "He still has to capture the imagina­"great domestic debate" appears to be Senate's 12 amendments to the bill had provisions which make it "against the tion of the people and to rally them to his shaping up over recent reverses of U.S. cause, if you are to believe the polls," been acceptable to the Senate sponsor, law to sell diapers on Sunday but okay to foreign policy. Don Adams of Jasper. The addition of buy beer." said Thomas. "He also sleepsat night — "In the past month, the foreign policythe two-year limitation had been opposed Representatives from small-town and that worries me in a President." of the United States has seemed to fall Addressing the l)PI breakfast meeting said. by Adams. retail outlets said if blue laws were apart," Landrey "The brilliant WASfflNGTON (AP) -House budget less than the total of probable spending In seeking support for the Senate's from at the American Newspaper Publishers , of Kissinger has repealed seven-day competition reputation Henry makers are projecting a government estimates it says it obtained from com­ amendments (not for thefinal bill), Wed­large stores would spell economic dis­Association convention. Thomas termed appeared tarnished. red-Ink figure of about $73.2 billion -a mittees directly handling legislation. dington asked representatives who, dis­Mr. Ford "a shirt-sleeved, pipebigger deficit than President Font says If the figure is adopted by Congress as liked bill because aster for them. smoking." belly laughing President. "There may be a great domestic the to concur the All witnesses agreed the problem was debate beginning on wlio is responsible he can tolerate but well below what he a guideline, therefore, it could serve as a changes made it "a better bill." "He puts his feet upon the desk in the no longer a religious one. "We can't get — Kissinger and the Administration or a says he. fears. from a high-spending ; brake on proposed expenditures — "If you wanted to giveSenator Bentsen people into the churches this way any Oval Office-and seems to be right at Congress. Congress that keeps interfering and will thought not as stiff a brake as Mr. Ford a bill, he would be pleased to get the bill home." i'':~ . longer," a representative from the not let him conduct a consistent policy." Mr, Ford returned to the spending, recommended and may try to enforce passed today, without going to con­ Also addressing the meeting were UPI Seventh Day Adventists said. theme Monday -to:-a Las Vegas, Nev., with vetoes. ^ • ference," she said. President Roderick W. Beaton and UPI Landrey, who has accompaniedspeech again insisting that |80 billion Foreign Editor Wilbur G. Landrey. Kissinger on four of his Middle East Mr. Ford's original budget submitted THIS LEGISLATION would establish Senate Action should be the limit for a Ford recommended .that cost-of-living 1 ,by "just about all'1 of the seven oil-meeting. , , ^ _'{ increases, both1 in' way of government, producing' and other -underdeveloped ? civilian and military personnel and in •tl feel strongly that the work program -i countries at the conference:, Algeria, ^ federal^pension payments, including to be developed bere should be concen-S j Iran, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela,.Brazil, Social Security, be. liipfted to 5 percent trated • on the specifics Of energy and $ gw,wi «vui,«vi u^iu^iiwi iu 9 '..-India and zsirc,Zaire. directly related matters;and not becpmeMost estimateshave bwn thata fujl cost.^-'Thfs appear*! bput the oil and Hiird diluted with'parallel discussions ofMother f|of livingIncrease w Hcase ?f A fee. United Styes, whose chief delegate they mayin ''Jfcfafetcid thatrawmaterials'were too big 'speech*. We.recognized the need for im-., ^aginative new initiatives in this areaand "i n.f--b —UPI TdapMo Vj "0«?e indeed' prepared to discuss these M Biplogy Chss Shoolout ptherjissuesjflsevvhere" i flollee reboH a graduate sti^ent (r), u, iptel ®v*r « failiijs aher ^lleged^ shots. .The teaclier, tirl Hf«rence not He suggested that tbe speclM se: He*, the specUl-session^ grade,li shtt q University of Houston biology •» ---• -".•" — -••'logy professor qnd Cameron, (l), < i.Cameron, 32 (i), is placed in an amb'ulatlce.Cameron iJ£!Come! k?#*1 tow ron ana->:i*j A1 in .many side -->T the United Nations in September —'-—takel? a student in «lass before turning the pistol on him—11 " " • ' — Bruce H. 'Johnson, 27, were jp fair condition Monday'., . Alfred Shen; 25, was reported te J>e in tfitfcql condition night f fTueSdayJiAprifra.t 1975 THR rn Page 4 Tuesday, April 8, 1975 „ m fx&t m' W The editor speak out By WILLARD HALL all that was needed to carry the student vote. By SCOTT TAGLIARINO timid asSparr,are going tobe: Sadly I lament^the defeat of Stuart Henry. Wben But those endorsements are not enough. Where were In the coming year, this University will face two selection committee Mffats. among tearful and angry supporters at his campaign Henry's ads in The Daily Texan? Where was Henry very pressing and important issues.They will takestu­ Indeed, no one. i headquarters Saturday night, I could not believe the when we turned oh the radio and TV? dent input, an informed faculty and a responsive ad­ a presidential prospect who isnot i results as the last precinct came in; Himmelblau 52 What we did see and hear every time we turned ministration. These two issues are the •a»Wtinn of a the advisory committee. percent, Henry 40. A mere 800 voters won the election around was the illusively right-wing Betty University president to replace Stephen Spurt, who outright for Himmelblau. Himmelblau. Her media blitz told us that there was no was dumped last September, and the intrnthwH^ and Only in that committee can toe be ynwl What happened to Henry? Out of the so-called liberal difference between the candidates. She happened to be instigation of an effective minority recruitment and type oT student inpit, and auty through thatcommittee candidates, he was the most solid on the environmen­a woman and this confused voters into thinking she involvement program. can stadents believe that the selection tal front. He was the former director of the city en­was progressive like the other three women* in the type of fair and honest vironmental office and has lobbied for the Sierra Club race. She even came out with some pro-women soun­The selection of a president isa longand tediousone. Bsspntial also to ttns cit the Capitol. He went tothe troubleof speaking to the . ding ads to boot. Her husband teaches at UT and this Applicants from,all over thecountry should be review­ l University president, is thefeeling that minorities Student Government State Lobby and Environmental confused some voters into thinking she was University ed both by the selection committee ahd the stodent­ minority rpfrnitirwt h«» i~li»z, protection Committees about environmental lobbying oriented. faculty member advisory committee. invntvpfrent and iwnHwwl rf ttHstrategies. He worked against the Ninth and 10th And where was Stuart Henry during the Himmelblau all minorities in Texas be a top priority ofStreet "improvement" projects. Consistently he op­blitz? Why didn't his campaign managers arrange to Spurr's selection took over a year, and with the everyone concerned with thefataeof to uctttu&ou. posed all street widening proposals and supported attack her on the issues? Why didn't Henry come out reputation this University has received from its mass transportation as a more economical and con­on the tube and make itclear that Himmelblau was not habitual changing of University presidents, it will be Programs for the invoivemeat af bage Motes of venient alternative. as progressive as she tried to appear; that she worked hard enough to convince qualified prospects to even minorities in the Pnhiwity shanld start now. The re-Of all the candidates, Henry had the best working for Nixon's re-election; that she takes a pro-money consider coming to Texas. cent HEW report showed this school's admiuistiatioa knowledge of the city bureaucracy. The contacts he stand on all issues; that she illusively described what it has known for a loug «™». flat Hades and However, unlike Spurr'sselection, the processmust made while working for the city could have been a herself as a "conservative environmentalist" (notice cbkanos are not given a fair ckace. Stadeutsknow most valuable assetasfar asgetting thingsdone on the how the first word cancels out the second); that she be an open and honest one. Spurr only met with that while the jAniaiJuiiim does not cpealy dis­ University Chancellor Charles LeMaistre and a few City Council. i got so mad at Henry's efforts as city environmental courage minority enroDmeot, it does as littfeaspossi­ selected people before he was hired by the System, To complement all of his credentials, Henry comes director that she quit the planning commission ble to encoerage iL The process was closed and no one on campus ever across as a hell of a nice guy. One would have to say specifically to run against him? If Henry's campaign that his image fits beautifully into the classic Texas managers had done this, the election results would heard about Spurr until shortly before he was lured. In a recent Senate Finance OniuniUre „ Vgood ol' boy" genre. have been the other way around. President ad interim Loreae Rogers; asked flat 9SNL­ Despite this, students still came out awl dmmi ; Our feelings for Henry were reinforced when we The hardcore student polls reflect Henry's poor 000 a year for the next two years be set aside far •»­ their feelings. The campus overwhelmingly supported learned that West Austin conservatives considered campaign management. The Jester West poll, dergradnate scholarships for culturally and then-Law Dean Page Keeton. him the second most dangerous candidate on the ballot Precinct 430, went 80 and 90 percent for the other economically disadvantaged Yet, it was $fter Jeff Friedman. progressive candidates and only 67 percent for Henry: But as in most decisions on this rampno the revealed that it took nearly half off the HNJNB, ap­ j But where did Henry go wrong? Clearly he had all Tragic. propriated last year by the regents, to aikmatster the • student's choicewas barely considered.In theend, the program amtallv. the right credentials, appeal and backing. But alas, Henry remains a "good ol' boy" in rijost everyone's regents selected someonethey could control,and even ' ' * t ioth you and I should know all too well that talent eyes. Its hard for anyone who has met him to imagine he was not obedient in the end. The dollar figwre requested bf the Oamsity alone cannot get one elected. It's the campaign thai, that he would become embittered over anything, much System simply isn't enough, and acethe SSMjM a counts when election day rolls around. Henry's defeat less an election defeat.But hiscampaign cost him a lot. Now, we haveanother chance.Student opinionisday year figure Was an additional request to the can prbbably be attributed to poor campaign manage­of money and time, and such things come precious by day gaining more respect,if not by the administra­ Legislative Budget Board's item budget for the ment. „ , these days. With all of Henry'sattributes, onecan only tion, at least by local andstate government.Shufaik University, minority recruitment nay not even get All through the campaignit wassaid that thestudent hope that he will emerge again — maybe next time. as voters, are being heard for their legitimate com­ that mndL " vote would be the key to winning the election. Henry's But for now Henry's name certainly will become im­plaints by state legislators and local officials. But campaign certainly did not thumb its nose at the stu­mortal and go down with the other noble losers such as students, asfar asthe president'sselection isconcera- Encuui agingminoritieson flnscjaniiusHmtieuiaia dent vote, but then again, we never saw him in the Yarborough and Farenthold. At least after unproduc­y ed, will rely heavily on the advisory committee's en­a goal «nrTlii»Tranl SliWR.mi.M.1. 4£\ right places at the right times. Clearly, Henry's cam­tive council meetings we can have the satisfaction of dorsement, andespecially the threestudent members' every concerned student on this Texas is a paign managers must havethought that a Texan and saying: "If Henry were here, this never would have feelings. slate with many native minority attares,and the Committee for a Progressive Austinendorsement was happened " Students, after,seeing what can happen to a maw as state's topeducational iwdilutinw should reflect Bat hope from retreqt By ROBIN CRAVEY awl"faiunih |;|||in||jg||||||1| m The cool pine forest rings with IKe" flagratkm known as World War II. cawe. But One is ua cause. W^aisound of an'axe. In a little clearmg the Adolpb Hitler' unleashed on the world a -Janes, who launched American logs ready to be peeled are upon skids, moosttoos enL The need lor itr Tt ilil. next to a big hole in tlw red sand. The. him is mdenidie even tndqr-But it is' orange pine needle' important to remember t)katthe Genua carpet is covered people were readied far bsnaty a with mounds of dirt imp«ialistic World Watr L That n,ac­around the bole, a companied by the same certaiaty — square hole, just big Woody Wflson making the world safe for enough for a family the American Way — AimJiirf the . of five to hide in, to hypouisy necessary to fight most wars. exist in, for $ome America's retreat bom ienpne ia­dismal months un­dicates our loss of certainty. Sane Jeha known. Winthrep first preached aboard as^ag . The ring of the axe; the'logs curing; ship to a group of PtBitaas bound far the the hole dug by a man, a Woman. . Blassadnsetts Bay Cahay, we tan; children; these are all symbols of fear: believed that we had a a the In 1962, a family livingjn the suburbs world. Wintbrop's version of that mis- north of Houston was so afraid of thi^ sion was to create a Christian« atomic bomb; they bought a "piece of ty to serve as: piney woods tomakealittledoitonmto a "City on a Hffl." When the < and hide in. They weren't the only ones. revolted flhqr iliuie to esUbfisk a itee Imagine tbecarschokingthehighways repoblic to serve as a model for all hat we need is new leadership!' ^ 'New leadership — that's what we need!' out of town. Imagine the people naming nations. Then, as the hatha prospered Ajt over each other trying to reacheachlus and expanded, oar ptospeiitj became a haven of safety. Ima^nethe mandefen­justification of oar repubBc. Wie conceiv­u firing line ding'his belter With a gun, telling the ed a "Manifest Destiny" to mtual the .terrified hordes, "We have no roam." fruits of lberty across a coatineaL We The-atomic bomb did not drop. The even dabbled in the "white man's mangled bodies on the highways, the burden" nonsense,miyhg our fchaid of Gun stab victims in the hanky, tonks, the -. civilizatioatotiie etttireworld.;; cancer patients in the hospitalsreturned " TodaywehavenosucbBationalvisiBW. me time: f ' ^ ^ With special regard to "Saturday night complete Martin Luther King Boulevard, to the earth day by day. Life went on. Someubere, we fed ia oar hearts, we was a matter of no small disconcert pedals" the NRA wants to see them may we at least have an uncut, unbroken Not since the Civil War has war been Wat wrong. When weallowed II MIII fen: many of as iir the shooting con- banned altogether. avenue of traffic-named "King engagedonAmericansoilOur.soldiers to tara tdmrd a material justificationof ity to observe that Mr. David . ^Should Mr. Hendricks care to make Boulevard?" How about it, City Hall? If ; have gone "over there." People wholiv­our self-government, we lost ojprdream. lis theCapitol Bureau chief for-any effort to re-establish some degreeof it makes matters better, how about' ed through the war.agiiiiBt^ fascism in. We take no pride in beiag a nation of :Daily Texan. '(he obnoxious ig-editorial credibility, I suggest he begin "Martin Luther King Boulevard," IH 35 the 1940scarry memoriesof aunited na­pleasure seekers. •;.. . he displayed in his recen't i: by basing his conclusions on an inter­to the east and "Billie Jean King: tion and a booming ecobQmy.Forget the Inonei .'Another boring column on pretation of fact, not of ignorant specula­Boulevard," IH 35to thewest? I mean -men'killed or maimed. Forgetthe prison .although characteristic of •'••• tion. 1 ' '5 * David L. Nichols REALLY, City Council1camps for orientals and the persecutionTexan .-editorial irresponsibility, r/pj _ Captaia, UT Rifle Team -•* Robert Rodrignez Of draft resisters. People knew they THE DAILY TEXAN harder , seem typical of what I ­ i .• Advertistag were rightreasonably expect to read from ' |jdenfity crisis-?^'?; Uncouth When American soldiers were fighting tenant of a positioo of such great To the editor: • >'f » > To the,editor: , r -tzM and dyingin Vietnam, newsaccountsand EDITOR ..... responsibility. . . If there is any street in Austin, Tex.y' I wonder if the March of Dime's^* pictures of thewar's horror appalled us. .dispel the unfortunate misap-that has the knadc for making the news' realizes that the qualifications for being -We demanded an.end to the killing.' -MANAGING EDITOR . jnsioqsunderwhichtheillustrious;! this year it has to Be 19th Street Affor­a Silver Spur is io be egotistical and un-Instead, ourown troopswere withdrawn. • ASSISTANT MANAGING rHeuidrick?is so* pathetically labor­ding aview of the newly;8prouted Educa­couth? I only thought I resented this . :The Ullingwent on.< Now that a hestita­ ing} T am taking thfs timely opportunity ' tion Building; JesterHalls, power plants, group bf men (or boys if the one I talked in American ' NEWS EDITOR.:..;:. :tion war aid has K^FKDTY t therecord straight; my.rebuttals : ; libraries, soon-to-be completed sports with is typical 6f the group—heaven for-: precipitated an astonishingly rapid • SPORTS EDITCHT Rkhard Justice ' follow ea&4ttttatibn ftomthatar->-facilities, a new overpass spanning IH bid) bdng representatives of the tlnivei^ collapse of the puppet regimes; news ac-­ AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ! Vicky Bowles "s f< M-* 35,19th Street seems to be in constant Sity, bjjt after this weekfend I know I do.:"? J counts and pictures of--the people's final <• (Handguns)'J '')jave no hunting change with its environment When my.^date and-I went to' the Dance -> us intoJ .FEATURES EDITOR .1..:. Jauce TtenSh panic, are used -to' shame , and what littlesporting value they ; t The newest change, recently iriW Marathon about midnight {Friday nigh^ perpetuating the wari Thousands of-CAmOL BUREAU CHIEF........ v....v David Urids i can easOy besacrifice^."Ihave plemented bythe innovative Austin.City ' wewere met by six Spurs who obviously ^ -hostage children are bong brought toeverything from squirrel (with a Council, is the renaming of East 19th ~ did not have just coke in their cokecups. ^ America to gh>w up on hamburgers and iw: li rimfire) !to deer ^(wifh a .357 Street to that ;of 'Martin Luther King After listening to an off-cqlor "sym-,L coke and television r—theleastwecando -~ Issue News Editor: nj using handguns, and 1 have : Eioulevard. However, the change. effe^-pathy" sales pitchy there was no wajrwe to ease our consciences. General Reporters .....GaU Bunis. darteshhn m$it UyepnlybetweenIH35an^l EdBIuestein ' were" going to donate ihoney via the In the angryname-calling yearsof war News Assistants Joy BoweB. Steve households:^yith ^Jhandguns Boulevard, is inconsistent in -several name of the SilverSpurs.Since wedecid­protest/someof usgot the idea Oat war JBditorial Assistant r •far pro^tion,:(tro..oirt .'.of /•' Teqtects. Thename changehas^ariced ed not to go inside, Our illustrious Spttr is a mad contest in which innocent peo-: Associate Amusem the gui« endlupbeing used. , «tyections. primarily jgngm East Austin .ticket collector-felt he was-justified:to., v . pie are pitted against each other by in-' Assistant Amusements Editor memberof fbe fomily in an ai^ : ; residents; Nonetheless, problemscanbe , stopping to kindergarten naipe-caliing, sarte or greedy leaders.But why do ped-~ Assistant Sports fifitor.. t tiutkyd dt for protection ttbm foreseen'as well for the'' actual 19th i.e.my date isnow,afull fledge tightwad pie allow thnnselves to beled? inuitis. Make-Up Editor..^.....:.: Mr. Beubidoi must ' Sfi^resflait^travelersandvi^torit*^ OTdtO;topit^fthis^rcla'unedbWy;thereinj^ Wire Editor. bathroom-wall graffittfor the'University and ^tate govenntaent / datejs impotent. ' "'r Copy Editors.... ib^gical genius. ~ IftComplex f ( ' ., w • , v i'lsij't it'nlce to kiKfw thai not only ,War is the ultimate f? «""-j-"Debra Patterson. *Ma^ NRA people Iwtehaa ^ .•nje controversy Is to te reconsldered :' JMte'SUver Spurs giye dod's wdrd, but^ the economic, territoruiland Ideidogical Photographers; j^dop'kwant ftdc irdDi "t by the City Cou&cil this Week, t they are no^t blessed with thejinur itt disputes which men profess or deny Oa ty by reg^Iatmg rifle^.'* ;Arguments are good on both sidesv i judge one's'se^uial capacity? % therootof each man's personaldwisibu : inAbably vay few NBA njei—^ Residentsof 19th StreetSjHOULD haveii ^1 realize that a lot ofmUch needed'"to give his; destiny to war: ffissatisbc^ VHate handguns,!' Quite on the.c#r 1: fOjr.hp the renaming' Honrever, w|iy jtut? » money/ w^s ;colle)ited'-for the March of' tfon War pnminft a newJ ICUOllllllg; XlWVCVCrf 'W^.JU^Ir' ftite official representative,Nw , half a^stteet? Winete^j& Street has an iDlmes'through th^ ynfortuhate.name^v % sleepsaway fl»e doubtsand nrbUotts of •i lna at Ante. i>.| tibnonliandguna that, except-^ ,, to iqihold^. ^ dlfficijlcWito so*I * »th6'SHVer SpurS, bflt.1for one wptild like o-^a pettyJife"before tbeawesomecdmmitS ^ mik U|y1 turdayt night jmecial^," 4ha> nominally splitapart aseen. Will.i to see Future filarathohs sponsored by-irtent to survival Tbeshadowyproble^ ighandguhs^jafe' > ^Austln's renoWnedlath Street become^^ gii r ohtanlzatlon;;that'Sis:Capable of " which fiatrnt rnwi «ani«h fn r M)r,.|)ht thatiheir«aO «f«ipmrpmMUtrf'M AuM& warfare: / . , • . ^ %qMnedstoit^irtj-i ultfaSate'certainty ftat war Mn? jjmrl -O. y •;0. 'ii-i-.ii-*' -r>.*-iV.^--;.' '•.• > •' 'f­ §mmr ft...,,, _. LET US DISAPPOINT guest viewpoint THEMEN WHOARE RAISING MMSELVES Another candidate for editor By MABY WALSH neither this nor any other UPONTHE RUIN . Boescb and Mary Walsh. Hall board that to seek student in­support from the students I(Editor*! note: Walsh was country can remain an open immediately withdrew from put via a preferential poll will present myself as to the OFTHIS COUNTRY of the original candidates society and that when youme the race but re-entered when would be an "abdication" of TSP Board as a candidate for far Texan editor and is a Ta­see some agent of power try­ University President Ad their responsibility! No. appointment. While Barry staffer). —SAM AMKSJ77G rn ing to shut up The Texan, Interim Lorene Rogers purg­wonder the board chose only must choose his own course. I The administrator* have you have a duty. ed two candidates: Boesch safe, noncontroversial can­take this action, not for per­ a petted interest in implying — Ronnie Dogger and Walsh. didates to run in the preferen­sonal reasons, but because Ithat students are second-When students pick up Excluded from the race, I tial poll agree with Dugger that it is a class citizens and the stu­ballots for the Texan editor watched to see it develop. I Last week, faced with cer­ "duty." dent press is somehow sub­preferential poll they haven't read Willard Hall's astutely tifying candidates for the poll,ordinate to the administra­got much of a choice. On Jan. naive analysis of the situation an action not reviewable by-I ask the student to do tion. The main thing I two things: 30. 1975 the Texas Student in his guest editorial: Rogers. the board went back would like to say to every Publications Board (TSP), "Rogers, the TSP Board on its previous decision and 1 > Consider the candidates worker on The Daily Texan, which oversees the affairs of and the regents are all well certify Barry with which you are presented.1 reftised to copy editor to editor, now The Texan, certified six can­meaning folks. If we get 10,000 Boesch and myself If you can support them, fine;till the holocaust, is that didates to run for editor of screaming students to charge Why? Did some board Go out and vote for them you are a custodian and The Texan. They were: Eddie the Main Building, we're go­members suddenly decide, Wednesday. practitioner of the freedom Fisher. BUI Garland. Willard ing to end up like a bug on a after assuring us that our cer­21 But if you feel, as I do, of the press without which Hall. Scott Tagliarino, Barry windshield. But if we act real tification was a "foregone that there is no real choice in nice and say pretty please and conclusion." that we lacked this poll because of the exclu-1 guest viewpoint all that... well then, maybe." the experience and abilities to sion of my candidacy, stop by Then, after the disqualifica­seek the position? Or did the a table on theWest Mall. Iwill tion of editor-elect Garland, board merely respond, in an be there to discuss myanother TSP decision was appropriate manner, to qualifications and, if yoij To the memory of six million Jews overruled by Rogers: there pressure trom the ad­choose, sign a petition sayingBy FHANK GILFORD physical one who is not Jewish, it'is best tiallv damage a European The responsibility of the was to be'no new editor's elec­ministration'' you want to vote for me. I will GSM is a It does not stop at the level forgotten. For the Jews it can cultural center. Americans tion. Informing the. board of The board had certitied present this petition to" the Holocaust does not rest solely •-> of physical and spiritual death never be forgotten, and it has could understand the her decision Rogers wrote: three candidates and as long board and make argumentsfttsfcy. April 8. is Yam of individuals, either. The en­already irrevocably altered significance of these cultural on the shoulders of the Ger­"Although I suppose there is as I felt a choice was for the appointment of the Haskoah. tie Day of the tire European Jewish com­mans alone: we are all im­nothing to prevent (a presented to the students. I the Jewish life style. centers, therefore they "students' choice," when theyHolocaust. It is a tune munity was destroyed, never However, what if it was not a respected them. He destruc­plicated. After Hiroshima and preferential poll), I would stayed out of the race appoint the editor next Mon^ > the memay of to be again. Here. too. the momentary lapse, but in reali tion of the Vietnamese Vietnam, who can sit in the only comment that it is an ab­However, the late and poorly day night.(mffioa Jews killed by human mind Feels from ty nothing less thanthe seamy cultural center of Hue during seat of judgment? The dication of the board's respon­reasoned withdrawal of can­With Austin city govern­ significance of sibility "taken I the years ISJ9-attempting to comprehend (be underside of modern the Tet offensive of 1968 cries the Holocaust and constitutes' a didate John Watkins once ment being by the. ue-Far some the tact that is that it happened, and it loss. A community whose ""civilization." out in contrast. potential erosion of the again strips the students of ,people." as Friedman says, I Ok? were Jews is important, ' roots in Europe go back could happen again. It is our authority which the board the power to seek alter­ see no reason why The Texan far oOmss the role of secular almost 2,000 years isno more We were the "good guys," The entire conduct of the duty to prevent this, not only cherishes and so rightly natives. editorship should beappointed satiety is more sigulii-ani. A dvtlizatiaa winch is in­ war smells of racist underpin­as Jews and Americans, but deserves." we fought in the name of But hot quite, in the form of through pressure from the ad­Mr most (Jews and non-Jews tegral to Jewish tradition is democracy and justice and we nings because it was a war as human beings. Because if, This is subtle, if effective, a petition showing popular ministration. £ which exterminated more afikeV the whole thing is now beyond eyen the imaghla-. were the judges at there is another Holocaust, pressure on TSP. After slap­ indewt So why am I "tion of American Jewry. Nuremberg. If we claim than human life. A civilization there may not be anyone left ping down two of their UHAT Pehold.you arebeautiful, what? HOURE my love. writing this? It is invariantto No cuuutiy. including the credit for all of that, for all was destroyed, and for to access the guilty. decisions Rogers tells the UMlTlNBTO Your hair Is like a ftock soflat we want forget flooded the labor market >. must accept responsibility for This year over 200 Univer­of goats moving down raaeafeer.iftor nothing ebe. United States (it would have that is worth, Hun ahn Sat mfllinn or one, what is wonld accept Jewish dropping the bomb on sity of Texas students spon­the slopes of Gifead. tte 4Boon? Death is the refugees. and England closed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Two sored canoe trips, selected altimate >—»»« condition, the gates of Israel. With no bombs dropped and two cities films, invited and hosted there is nulhing new about place to go. tbey stayed in are destroyed, another speakers, distributed pub­ Europe and perished. During marvel of hnrnan ingenuity. It OaL ,,IMas are equally licity, organized symposia, trrelevest, .and .who can the war, by refusing to bomb is quite democratic also, and staged art exhibits and trathfally comprehend a the railroad tracks leading to everyone dies regardless of cultural events to create the 4"00 5T01E Bke six million So Aisdnritz. the Allies again race, religion, creed or sex Texas Union program. The THIS FROM THE (SOLOMON WOULD \ to* Texas l^HAVE UNKRStOOOi J condemned Jews to death. Texas Union ProgramCoun­"S0N6 Of isp many However, that was during a Of course. America is still cil invites you to share this SOLOMON" of con-war. and a war in which the the pinnacle of hnman experience asa TexasUnion Union .far "good guys" wpo at that. So civilization. There is a better ,., . ,.lrvl committee member. To find SiaBBiS &emosteffiaentof thedeath all could be forgiven, and they example, however, perhaps * " » » out about the committees tmng*. omHhandle2,000peo­(the good guys I were yon beard about it once or 1 and interview procedure, at­ ple at cae toae. transformed into judges at the twice if you turned on the I tend one of the Orientation Committee IkecsapvaemAinore Nuremberg Trials in which news as aprelude to watching I Sessions. ^IkwnKve mechanical death, die Nazis were "punished." "AO in the Family." It was Thursday, April10, however. 1*ey striped their People are killed, and the called the war in Vietnam. Interviews ^ Wlimi of all icsfips of guilty pay the price: so wbat . 4:30 & 7 p.m. Iwna dignity and {Hide. else is new? Again we get Daring World War II, Texas Culture Room They were redoced to the back to the question of General Eisenhower ordered You must attend one of the two sessions to be (Mexican-American) lml-tf existence of an significance, is there any? If restraint in the use of heavy considered for a committee. Interviews wffl be Methodist Student Center aaimal. As often as not. it was a momentarylapse into arms when they coold poten-week of April 14. 2434 Guadalupe fte agiritnai death preceded the barbarism, then for everyone /"—• SCAREDY CATS GIVE . ffm THmtS.OXE! TP Mumrv urnvsmoHBUT :XVCP-mfe PtfmXKtSEOBtS&i rris 73NF TO BE BLOOD TOO! UT *> BLOOD DRIVE •+SJ.? |M __ r-'[l_3r':"5 uot on |6tM. dwationol-'-'' » "sSSSSr" iS '!.?.U tlCT-? I'm ~ET=«r ! 17 FMi 3j:6£SgSf*^ --5r.'n -T i 18 CNMM .•^'•^T'rtapwslor I ao swpoi r.'-i irt* -;7 0""? li.n-.n auBEP E^"?; -9 Vortical . UbbrJ 39 Test "10 NaBwmfal .29 Number .k._«0 Definite arti-. 11 GoHmound 30 Lilt with • tfe 42 Charity r 32 Simple 43 Strain for Z 5$J 33 Chinese -breath '44 Worttat *£ 24 orie'sbade r «\ pfcnlttticle 45 BtsHspric UT WILL EVEN TAKE 26 Critic 47 Bom 27 37 Teutonk: -49 The sett fi 50 Deity SYLVESTER'S BLOOD I April 8,9, & 10 8 a.m. -5 p.m. tDNTV 41 Rta 43 African«>­ V-: Super Separates in Shirtweight Chambray AC Foyer " N : -y. v Play it cool as you get into spring and summer gear .... sport the new season inR0TC Rifle Range CollegerTown's sprightly separates/ ail tailored to marvelous • proportions for erfect fit. 100%.tight cotton ia blye denim-r-natural muslin. Slacks, 15.00. Jacket; 1)?,00, Snap-front skirt, 13:oo. 'Patch' shirt, 14.00: Sizes 5 to 13. / .• ' J< Mobile.tonight ^ English Aire Party Room . . t YARING'S ON-THE-DRAG i > _ » ^ 2406 Guadalup* ' --4JS&SSA l x Tuesday, April.^ 1975 THE PAiyf.TEXA% Page 6­ m a f UT To End NonSWC Schedule With Cajuns Today McGinnis, • • •«*!• -r Sweep Doubleheader mi By ED ENGLISH The suspense involved in six pitchers of both teams for Moreland each had'two hit?' zolara'sfirstas.aLonghorniqTexan1 Staff Writer both wins for the Longhorns, a total of 30 hits and 32 runs. and scored twice. _ only his second pitching ' NEW YORK'(AP) -Julius It really wouldn!t have now. 34-4, was equal to that In Texas' last five outings, After that Gustafson called -appearance of the year • Erving"of thfe New York' Nets' made much difference who found only in studio wrestling. they have averaged over 15 the dogs off, that is until the ' ° The onlydifference between •' and'George McGiniiis of the Texas played Monday in runs a game. And the crowd often acted second game, when he remov-* the first and second games^ ^Indiana.. Pacerstwo Disch-Falk Field, the way the- r "WHEN WE weren't hitting ed all of Texas' starters ex­ "hometoWn 'boys' who made Longhoms have been swing­like a studio wrestling crowd, was that there were feweii the ball well, we had to do cept for Brizzolara and put in " good in a-big way have been doing everything short of put­ runs, less suspense and :a.], ing their bats lately. But for hew lineup named ting on uniforms and stepping some things we don't a completely — different punching bag cowinners of 'thethe record, Texas thrashed up to the plate. necessarily do (bunt, steal, designated hitter and all, USL. £ • American "•''•Basketball ' Trinity University, 22-4, and etc..)'" Texas Coach piiff Before Trinity was allowed - ' 1973 Most Texas jumped out to a 7-0 Assbei^fiori's Southwestern Louisana And no doubt either Trinity Gustafson said. "Now .'that to go salve its wounds, the lead in the first three Innings," • Valuable Player, award, theUniversity, 10-0 in a game or USL would have welcomed we're back to playing like we Texas reserves added four but the way Terry Ray pitch* league announced Monday. delayed 45 minutes because of the sightof anybody but a Tex­think hit more can. I we can more runs. ed, the Horns didn't need six in balloting by sports rain. as batter. The Horns rocked freely."" THE START, complete of them. Ray allowed only one ••'•Writers and -broadcasters, Shoe Shop *5ALE* And to go with the Horns' game and win were all Briz-hit and struck out, nine three from each of the free hitting, Gustafson also batters. Not a single:' USL league's 10 cities, Erving-and Texas Statistics We make and got some outstanding pitching SHEEPSKIN Batting player reached third base the' McGinnis received 11 'votes from freshman Tony Briz-' repair .boots At entire game, with only five .. ''apiece;1 giving the ABA the RUGS zolara and Sophomore Tjerry Anderson, If 9 Stouller, $$ 6 making it as far as second:' "'first co'MVPs in the league's shoes belts Ray, neither of whom are in 9 $coo Many «75C Moreland, 3b "I'M PRETTY TIRED, "eight years and the first in pro the starting rotation. Beautiful Colors Bradley, db, c.. 4 Ray said after stretching his b&sketb&ll-history. Reichenbach, lb . 10 leather The first game with Trinity Hibbett, rf 6 record to.5-9. "I had arpretty : It's the second consecutive •LEATHER SALE * almost resembled a close one Prokse, cf — 6 goods good layoff (from gaine ex-, year Erving, 25, las captured Voriowi kinds, colors -75* per It. Duncan, c 5 until the bottom of the sixth Pyka. 8 perience). But our siarters the MVP aWaird. A native of inning. At 3 hniAwEPicua that point, Texas Griffin, dh are'doing too good for me to Roosevelt, N;Y., which is only Stramp, rf-dh ' 4 Capitol Saddlery held a bare 6-4 lead with Trini­Pounds. If - a, short distance from the start." • •2 ty still much in the contest. Raper. Jb 0 The highlight of the second Nets' Nassau Coliseum, the 6­1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas' 478-930? TWELVE BATTERS later, Jacobs, c \\ game came in the third'inning 7 Erving finished second-to- Day, ss however, Trinity was still try­ ) Dinges. 2b when centerfielder Charlie • McGinnish — in scoring and­ ing to get the first out. Before Olvera. cf 2 Proske hit the longest home s was also among the ABA Zolkowski. lb TIME IS SHORT • SPACE LIMITED the inning was over, each of 4*, Teteb 770 37 3C run ever in Dlsch-Faik" Field..- leaders,in rebounding, three- those 12 Texas batters had Pitching -Proske came up with one put point goals, assists, blocked EUROPE scored, making the scbre 18-4. : 1Tcxon Staff ftwto l»y Zoch lyoN .» Hvfc K* ft* SO and catcher Rick Bradley and' shots and steals. Shortstop Balir Stouffer and Bmrolofp < 1*0). 4 \ i 9 rigjit fielder Wendell Hibbett Quicksilver McGinnis captured the UT third Keith Roy(5-0) 9 1 00t 9' GROUP | AFFINITY baseman on base and hit adrive to deejp. GROUP PRICE left centerfield that bounced T«xa»^printer^qryin In lubila. ^ ^SanivSleSiSteFLIGHTS O-IUPIUS TAX off the top of the scoreboard, lion as he anchors the Unghorn 440-yard relay team • per game fjg als6finished se­ 392.'feet away from "honte. The Semester is ZtS^AtSSSSi HOUND NEW YORK/LUXEMBOURG HOT plate. . PROSKE IS the third May 15/Aug 21 May 22/Aug20 Almost Over May 17/Jul 25 May 29/Aug 8 ..Longhorn to hit a home run in J4-5Tvi't May 19/Aug 7 May 29/Aug 19 . the hew stadium. Stoufferand" : Bradley have already done it. So "It looked like the: wind AUSTIN/NEW YORK GROUPSs157i0 £ HOUSTON (AP) -Jose Niekro in the fifth:befbre.MUt The Braves nicked winner Be Sure arid use Your . helped it," Proske said. "It Cruz took advantage 6f an in­May apparently flied1 out ^to, Larry Dierker, who hurled a ABOVE DEPARTURES PUIS APRIL 12, 19, MAY 7, 10,37. Free Student Coupon Book . felt pretty good when 1hit it. terference call agaiinst Atlan­ end the inning. But plate um­fouivhitter, fbr two runsin the It was an outside fastball. At CALL ta catcher Vic Correll with a pire' Doug Harvey ruled that fourth inning ona hit batsman TRAVEL HARWOOD TOURS Before it Expires this park, you take a good tie-breaking three^runhomer,. ,Con-ell's glove had interfered and singles by Darrell Evans, .tbard cutand hope for thebest. EXPERTS 478-9343 •2428 Guadalupe icajiping a five-hin fifth-uining . with-May's bat——-Mike' Lom-and Dusty 'Baker. ; I,sure wouldn't mind if they rally that" p^w^r'ed the : i-• qn.53HT-&SO rVT&V" moved the fences in." Houston Astros'tp' a 6-2 vic- The Sebring Cut ... Texas will conclude its non--tory over the Braves Monday —houi they stand conference schedule Tuesday night in the two clubs'openingDesigned to insure with a doubleheader against' game. Monday.'*.ABA Hayeffi W Ht. Gt manageability of the hair> „USL starting at 5 pjri. Ddaald • Cesar Cedeno's two^ut in> . Chicago 0 •A m -• shaped to fall in place Kainer and Jim Gideon are field single drove in the first Montreal 0 .000 0 Indiana,^ San Antonio W " '-' s^rt New York... 0 .000 0 Indiana leidi natiirally.'V -• kvvfrS * -v-^>ffive un^itteft^wisiffiphik. 0 .000 0 Denver 120, Mhv&foads best­' ' 1 • '•••"• -Pittsburgh 0 .ooor "0 of-7 series. 2-&. / -For men and women St. touis 0 0; »• / ^'Clncinpatl . 1 0 1.000 ­ Mondays Pro Hock«y ^Atlanta 0 : 0 .000 w V. Houston' a* 0 .000 V3 • /V';: WHA ; Hair Designers .•SanDlego 0/ 0 ,000. w BaHimore 4, Houston 2 ify San Fran .0, 0 .MO Los Angeles 0 1 ooo I. 415.W. 15th by oppointment 4744444 ^ • fTveedeVe Oam— ' Cincinnati % Los Angeles 1,14 tnningt N»w Yor* JMKllch 19-15) at Cl*v*landMontreal at St. Louli. N' ,(G.P«-^2(:13) ^Houston 6. Atlanta 2 MOCS (Slaton |3-I«)at Bo>ton (Tlant 12-13) HM»ON*b6 of ctnw Philadelphia CCarltop • IMS) at New Mtnneiota Pttltbbrgh at Chrcaga ppd.-snow.. Baltlrrwjra at Ottrolt. postpontd, uiow. t; i [ April Special ? Give your bunny , THE BRUSHY CREEK a break—--> i j HavdjthjE|Njp^L^J||fdr Spring n Family Style Dinhersi^?| buy her a pizza. ­ GOOD' THIS -MONTH ONLY WITH'COOKM', ' Let us l^rame oW Froist your hair Tues. & Ttrors. Night $1 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA Bar-B-Que J for $17.60 regf2B.OO ' Ham, Chicken, Beef j ' ' Steak served This pHce gboti on^'dn ^prt br. Maw-^dry s&ie* Sausage i, Mb*, Beans, J The nome of our new AAexicon with Green Beam, /-Potato'Salad a • I 2100-A Guadalupe •Restouranr is reolly Los Amigos, but Baked Potato a Salad : Cole Slow ABANA UNISEXHAIRSTYLING we're so. hard to find maybe it should 1910 E­ gg|yi74-232V&s&i $4.95 • be colled Lost Amigos: $3.25 We're right in th& middle of ; Downtown Austin or Congress and 8tn mm-­ •w. . r AIL YOU CAN EAT : ­ and still we're hard to find. But we're Monday-Saturday 11:00 a^m. -9:00 p.m. there—hidden away serving not only Closed Sunday superb traditional Mexican rood, but also at dinner tropical,specialrtes from Southern Mexico. .. call for reservations: i And finding us is wellworfhthe effort., i 255-3253 Onef hint. We don't sell eyeglasses i i . , 111 West Main Streot 1 802 Cbhgtess < j J • In Round Rock MS And when you're not catching the L ,. sv IH 36N to 620. Right on 620 at signal rays or hitting the books, why not j WltH THIS AD ~ j. eflRRtose cross The Bay to THE CITY (SAN FRANCISCO) and ride a cable car NEC(ovice$; 6a,auP6M>, or walk across thtvGolden Gate Bridge,' */0UUff Or eat some Sour Dough French Bread THAT at Fisherman's Wharf. Have you ever J <• ^ w. Round Up tee hiked in YOSEMITE, been to LAKE TAHOE, seen the sun set in CARMEL gambled in NEVADA, or swam at -V {;111," POINT REYES NATIONAL SEA­ SHORE' All this, and much much dfeAtls CONCERT & DANCE more-all within easy drivinq distance of BERKELEY. SSI Cal is offering one eight-week ses­ rjm &n for credit, beginning June 18th.' ||f| We are offering super-low-cost, non­ profit, co-ed, co-op housing owned Wednesday, April 9 7:30 ^.M.w dnd operated by students, for students. ROOM and MEALS for the eight ith^ ^ *4 w eksession: S235. RGOMand MEALS for the fifteen-week summer: S415. Five hours of work are required each KINDS week. • KEN TlHlHii We also have two-, three-, and four-T' ' ^ bedroom APARTMENTS with kitchen and bath, starting as low as S72 month­ PLUM NELLY ^ROCK RIVERaBOY ly per person. Rents are for individual private furnjshedbedroomsandmclude utilities. <3 -i§igf NEW ISO BAND « REYNOLDS SISTERS •' write for more^inf<£rm1>tion&%M| rr UNIVERSITY STUDENTS' 111 K\ •from CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION j 242-1 RIDGE ROAD, BERKELEY, CA 94 709! OA . -TELEPHONE: (Area Code 415) 848 1936 i psentfltibnyof the 197W6 Uniyersi^Sweetheart in VS ? Dolegiewicz: mm Relays Marked Homecoming tor Shotputter By The Associated Preis ' • By BILL TROTT this. It kinda gives me a me how I was doing and said I Canada's national track team. The New York Knicks, who squeezed into the National Texan Staff Writer chance to say liello to was looking good. It's OK "I'm in good shape, I've m Basketball Association playoffs on the final day of the regular The Texas Relays were a everybody." between us." been working out pretty good, season, hope to pick up where they leftoff when they starttheir7 peculiar homecoming for Dolegiewicz, who was At the time of his dismissal but this is really about the Opening round series Tuesday night against the Houston Bishop Dolegiewicz. A year offered an opportunity to the issue was more emotional. first time I've thrown this Rockets in Houston. -ago at this time Dolegiewicz return to the University in the At first Dolegiewicz refused year," he said. • In the other best-of-threeopening round set,which also begins -was one of the nation's top fall but refused, has tried to to speak to the press about the Dolegiewicz has been train­Tuesday night, the Detroit Pistons take on the-Seattle shotputters, placing fourth in put a lot of time between matter until it was reported ing for the 1976 Olympics in SuperSonics in Seattle. the NCAA finals and earning himself and the dismissal. that track coaches allegedly Montreal and is 20 pounds THE ROCKETS are in the playoffs for the first timesince All-America. But at this He's also donea lot of thinking searched athletes' rooms lighter than when he threw the the franchise was moved from San Diego to Houston in 1971. gear's Relays Dolegiewicz and taken a mature, responsi­looking for marijuana, a shot at Texas at 6-6, 300 They beat out Cleveland by one game for second place in the was representing the Cana­ble attitude toward it. claim Price strongly denied. pounds. Central Division. dian National Team rather "IT'S ALL just water under "AT THE time nobody was "I'M JUST trying to get my than the University of Texas. bridge now," he said. in The other opening round series pitsong team which has had a" the up the dorm and nobody sights set on the Olympics. It Last September things took disappointing season, Detroit,against aclub whichVasa major "There's no hard feelings or knows for sure who went in means a lot to me," said surprise, Seattle. a strange turn in anything like that. I was there," Dolegiewicz said. Dolegiewicz, the Canadian Detroit, with the fourth-best record in the league last year, Dolegiewicz's life. He became wrong, or at leastI think I was "But it's one of those things shot put record holder. "I'm fell below .500 and had to struggle to earn a wild-card berth." a victim of what many track wrong. There's a very fine where nothing can be proven, throwing about the same and athletes considered a drug SEATTLE, WHICH won its last seven games to finish four line defining what's wrong it's all hearsay." feeling good about it." games above .500, is in the playoffs for the first time. purge by Texas Track Coach and what's not in this case. After the fall semester Dolegiewicz finished second The winners of the two opening-round series meet the con-j Cleburne Price. Dolegiewicz You've just got to be mature Dolegiewicz returned to his in the Relay's open division ference champions in best-of-seven semifinals. Boston will take < and roommate Siggi Busha about these things." native Canada. He works in shot put with a throw of 64-7, were dismissed from the team Dolegiewicz spoke to Price on the New York-Houston survivor, and Golden State will play shipping and receiving along nothing really spectacular. the.,Detroit-Seattle winner. '. by Price for "disciplinary "Saturday at the meet. "We the St. Lawrence Seaway in But he was just glad to have The two other best-of-seven semifinals begin later this week; reasons," a catch-all phrase just said hello and he asked Montreal and trains with the chance to come back. coaches often use to implicate The KC-Omaha Kings open their series against the Bulls at; alleged marijuana use. Chicago Wednesday night, and the Buffalo Braves begin their set against the Washington Bullets at Landover, Md., Thursday NO CHARGES were filed, —tocan Staff. Hwi* by MUm SmMh night. and Dolegiewicz finished the -Bishop Dolegiewicz ' semester with a frustrated, BONANZA empty feeling. There aregenuine looks of puzzlement on the facesof playoff-bound National Hockey League players and coaches.'Everyone UTEP, Roberts Natned "1was Doth angry and sad," STEAK LUNCH is trying to figure out what it takes to win a Stanley Cup: Dolegiewicz said Saturday. "But things were really out of "it doesn't matter whoyou play," said Chicago Black Hawks Best at Texas Relays hands. wasn't Choice of Chopped or $129 my There goalie Tony Esposito. "You need an over-all teamefforti" s$ys Ranch Steak, salad, choice The Texas El~ -Paso Miners annual Relays. anything I could do about it. Al Arbour, coach of the New York Islanders. "Yon need good were the dressing named the outstanding Roberts tied Relays "It hurt a lot. I bated to ofgoaltending," says New York Rangers forward Derek Sander­ son. ' team of the 1975 Texas open vault reconl of 18-1 set leave Austin, I love it," he & Texas Toast. Relays, Texas Track Coach by Sweden's Kjejl Issakson at said. "I'm really happy they FIRST Of1 ALL,you need to win the first round. Eight teams Cleburne Price announced the 1972 Relays, before failing invited me so I could come set out to do so Tuesday night when the Toronto Maple Leafs Monday. on all three attempts,to clear back. It really means a lot to visit the Los Angeles Rings, the Black Hawks,travel to Boston, Dave Roberts, the pole a world record height of 18-8. be able to comeback here like Good wholesome American food the St. Louis Blues go to Pittsburgh and the Rangers are at vault world record holder, home against the Islanders in best-of-three series. wa? honored as the meet's at rightneighborly prices. outstanding individual per­$3.00 OFF Four teams areidle in the first round. The:Flyers,Vancouver former. Both selections were Canucks, Montreal Canadiens and Buffalo Sabresearned a bye MEM'S AND WOMEN'S HAIR STYLES • 5209 Cameron Road based on a balloting by the as divisional champions. They will take it easy until Sunday, • S005 Anderson Square Shop. Center "No tipping please. press corps covering the 48th By Appointment When second-round action begins., ?• (for new customer! only, please) • 916 Ben White Blvd. Just leave us with a smilel* 9 SEAHORSE CAR Regular Price 10.50 WHAT'S NEW ON THE DRAG? WASH , Offer good only with CJwryf jF mioiiionimBunnnmBinnaig 1Automatic 6 S«lf-S»rvice' Sebring by El Lobo WANTED 1205 W. Komig oases Mouse 454-3922 415 W. l5»h Phone 474-1041 JUST A FEW GOOD MEN FOR CAMP COUNSELORS poyncf^:;Wp '75 GOOD LIVE COLLEGE MEN ONLY (Girl's Camp Counselor Positions Filled) CAMP i--'f Skeet Range on Ranch Road 2222 s s LONGHORN at City>ark Road on Inks Lake Prizes for individuals and teams 'America's Number One Camps" p i xX ; ^^'nity and open divisions ^, FormoreinformaHoncaHthelFC Office 476-8616 • FOR BOYS • FOR GIRLS We really stand out in a crowdl^ • CHOICE OF 3 TERMS • Why ? .Because of our25 yearsof experience! | June 7-June 30 1 July 1-July 24 | July 25-Aug. 17 | Because of our.merchandiser..always NEW! . Because of our50 stylesinarainbow of colors! ? Willing to Work for a better * When you'reready to rentatux...AI's...on' >6v the Drag! ° I COUNSELOR INTERVIEWS |School of Communication? { by Director Tex Tobertson • • :V?1 •' • vJT' I UT ALUMNI CENTER [ ml*MAR Filing Deadline for Communication Council elections 2>2S Guadahtpa(On Tha Drag) is Wednesday, April 9 at noon. |r ^ ; | THURSDAY, APRIL 10 1 • fr. '; 472-1887 I till6:00 P.M. . I Application & Answers available in Communication Bldg. : jr-i"'. J ,y •• • "A" 4.124. - ; " ' '.V ^ ..ft.-' , -•' ' •• • ' ^ . * .. A The Electiort js Wed., April 16 . > Will BE HELD FOR of: CiTY LOBBY lift* COMMUNICATION ^" Municipal Facilities COMMUNITY AFFAIRS CONSUMER AFFAIRS Visit our Pro Shop fo£f|J§ ­ FINANCE HOUSING i'lfl BATA BULLETS-Poii^Th^soles, light," durable, and sale priced,at $13.50 . >TUDEtiT SERVICES UNIVERSITY POLICY > 4 , * TENNIS BALIS — Wilson & Dunlop Champion-> ? i ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION -? 4 r< l;f;^for $2-62/«"? ; . Al Onelustyyear ... m BLUE ST AR, "The synthetic Gut that puts ^ financial director feel in your game." $13.50 (24 hr.strlnginillf i-v>."v/.:< i t t parliamentarian •iNI- A STUDENT DISCOUNTS •&S. „ on Group Lessons^beglnning April 21st fi*$r ^ Wednesday april 2 9"IO , < Hiwrsday ' april 3 9"12 ^ -friday' april 4 ' 9-11 ] ' f V «monday vf ' april 7 9-11 • • day -vaj^riI 8 9" 12 i > sV J COME BY UNION SOUTH^ ROOM 112 7 days a week ^24th and Lamar ^> TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT <478-6268 ISife&i Editor Hopefuls Present Oil *. -3 »•••'» * _ ^ '*' V-> \ *<£ » -' r "•--II • 1v..f' * & *. ,-* ** ** £ e­ « » v« ^ --. » " \ i< P '>4 & if give them direction and not day for dropping courses — ^terests and that he will not '.'the dutyof a newspaper is to stories, people can see — land wait around for two different' thinks like that. bow. from any pressure from : false hell and print the news," not necessarily stories dealing Willard Hall The Texan: ' What, If TSP candidates have not met * sides of an issue to surface Also I would like to work-the administration or the TSP The Texan: Is the Texan only with minority issues — anything, will draw voters to and then pick the liberal side! through TexPlRfc and the om-i board responsive to the needs of ''well, a minority person qualifications and have not I believe he should kind of budsman's office — and I've;; the polls for the preferential been certified. I think that -The Texan:' Would-an minority students? How can wrote that." guide the City Council and already contacted these peo-' elected or appointed editor be poll Wednesday?Why should a there have been othertimes in the paper be opened more to And sooner or later, they'll student bother to cast a ballot the past when there have been give them direction. He pie and been assured of their. more effective in. both minority viewpoints, both on become completely blase for an editor who will ul­editors appointed by the TSP should remind them who the. cooperation — in this column representing student views the editorial page as well as .about the whole thing. Itwon't people were who elected regarding landlord-tenant timately be appointed by the Board. : and maintaining the jour­the news side? affect them so much them. He should remind them law, consumer issues, things nalistic integrity of The Tex­Hall: No, The Texan is hot anymore. Now, whenever you Texas ' Student Publications I: don't'believe that an ap-Board? .pointmnent of an editor in this that the student precincts like that. an?: " responsive to the needs of see a black face in the Hall: Well, first of all, I one peculiar case should set a such a Jester West elected, or/ I think a column like this ' Hall;. You need to look at minority students. As it newspaper, it really stands think the very nature of a precedent of always appoin­helped elect, the so-called would really help studentsand :;the situation with the manag-stands now. The DailyTexan out. And that's not right;"progressive" candidates by make students feel like the question like this helpS to in­ting editors. I believe that ing editor,who isappointed by is an homogenous newspaper that's not theway itshould be. newspaper was renting. to sure a'low voter turnout at the since the editor does have so margins of 80 and 90 percent. the TSP Board. You can of reporters who come from I said the last time I ran I polls. People say. Don't you much power with the student I believe another big issue' their needs, and it would also realize it's extremely impor-. white, Anglo-Saxon, Protes­ expect a higher voter turnout confronting us will be.witti the help out with our ultimate ' tant that the editor is elected ; tant, -middle class would use part or all of my • body, or representing student problem of funding. - salary to hire more minority at the polls?"And also, I think interests in the state, be Willard Hall problem of funding. I am by the students. In the past, backgrounds. students to work on my staff. against mandatory funding, I also think another issue students realize that probably: should not be appointed any I think this is because for so managing editors have run I think that by adding more more than any otherperson on and I like the present system going to be confronting the-much more conservative than The reason I would use that is other time in the future ex­lone in Texas politics, liberals minority students to the campus, the Daily Texan cept in just extraordinary have been in the role of the of.funding. editor is to immediately gain the editor. ' newspaper, we can.make it a to make it more attractive to editor is the principal power cases. adversary , as the lower, and I believe I have certain the confidence of the.students I also think that having an better newspaper. Eight now, . them, because some of those ideas for making the student assumes! the students don't have aS high an broker for the students. In Hie Texan: What are some it's been real easy to say once he • editor who's elected by the the ,only time we hear from other words, before anybody of the major issues you see "well, you're doing this newspaper more of.thg editorship of The DailyTexan. student bo^y makes people ; minorities is when there's a < income as a whitestudent and student's newspaper. Students are going to be.* ' they need more' money than in the administration or down developing in the near future? wrong," but once they're in a feel like that's their man up minority question. . The at the City Council or in the' Bow will you deal with them position of making decisions, One plan I have is forah ac­ wondering because of the there;' 'that, .is,...their. philosophy of this is kind of a the $15 a week that the Legislature, before they ever they, really find.it hard to tion column — telephone ac­different things surrounding' newspaper. condescending "And now; for/ students make for working on on .your editorial page? this election. - the newspaper. screw the students, they Hall: Well I think one of the decide what they're going to tion column — where people As is stands right now, the our minority view, here's always read what the editor of main issues will be the new do. can call in to a certain phone They're going to be wonder^ TSP Board is a fairly conser-Leroy, or Pedro," or This money would be used, The Daily Texan has to say. City Council Experience has -And also, I think that the line 24 hours a day and ask ing "Is this guy an.ad­vative body of people as well'' something like that . to also have more, women on . Now, if we had a liberal. shown' its when we elect ' first thing the liberals are go­questions on just about any ministrative hack? Is he a' as thejournalism department, I think minority students the editorial pages; womens' . topic; especially concerning lackey for the TSP Board ?" on progressive editor of The Tex-liberals, like we just did this ing to do is try and gain back believe it or not should be recruited to express; viewpoints the editorial an, I believe the extent to. past City Council election, the confidence of the more trivial matters, but matters And whoever gets to be editor Now, I don't like the words minority viewpoints — but not jtage. Right now, there are no which these peopie go against that they tend to, as soon as conservative West Austin which give students trouble, of The Texan will have to such as ; "journalistic in-, only minority' viewpoints -t-V "wfdmen'oii the editorial page, students interests will be they're elected, turn around community. like how to add and drop prove to the studentsfrom the tegrity." My mottois the mot­but also, to report 'on just ^ although they are fairly well limited. There have•' been and look at each other'and I believe that an editor courses, how to apply for »yery beginning that he to of the Civil War journalist;" regular news, because I think-'/-represented on the news side, other times in the past when say. "what do we do next?" should lead these people and,. financial aid, what's the last represents the student ink­William Story, and that is: their, background! can give Rlgbt now. there is, I believe, them an important insightone chicano on the editorial into certain University, city; page, "..i approved by the advisory, like his opinion was generally' this University and I do not and state affairs. ' i I intend on having at least idrino committee and after some in-accepted by any students on feel that they are being I think by doing this, two out oi five staff members put into the qualifications and campus if he was appointed by represented on TheTexan and minorities can attain, the with chicano backgrounds; ; The Tex4n:v What, ; if i myself as an appointed'editor; to the competency of that seven people. that through specific legitimacy they so deserve. one or 'two blades. That's out • anything, will draw voters' to ..that I was elected. by the president Even if he's elected, even . programs which some .have By them writing stories and of six staffers on the editorial the polls for the preferential .students. But my main emphasis a or poll Wednesday? Why should'a HieTexan: What are some would be on trying to get small group, befeels like heis not been fully developed, we with small turnout, a started in the past but haye haying their bylines on page. One woman, too. stndent bother to cast a ballot of the major issues you see students involved. I think that representing those.;views and must get these students back, for' an editor "Who will ul­developing in the near future. • strongly needs to can always fall back on them, involved in The Texan. timately be appointed by :Oe How will yon, deal with them People' a;St-should be.be challanged as to Seminar Focuses emphasized. . Texas-Student Publications on your editorial page? apathetic, they aretired of be-what kind of representation he ." •: Some of these programs- Board? '' Tagliarino: Some of the ing involved because they've has. /. would include reinstating the .Tagliarino: Students will go primary issues I feel we are been shut down,but I think the An appointed editor cannot Minority Report column, not to the polls for the preferen-' going to be developing in the recent City Council elections • do that; he could not say the fact that just that would On Minority tial poll because if they really future are minority recruit-and the recent elections in "students put me here."-This ' be: their only space, but the care, because when all this is ment ~ especially -with Student Government < have is what they wanted to hear, f fact that it Mr there for their i ^ c,? . „ .,,,r ,, over there will still be an budgeting coming up in the . shown that if students do get and this is what it is. This is ?*. viewpoint-We can cover other Programs preparing the "The Transition : Fromeditor of The Texan — if they Legislature; especially 'the involved, they can accomplish how they feel. An elected S things in the newspaper and minority student for the tran­College to Work'* will bereally care, then they should selection of the president in Scoff Tagliarino something; they can have vie-editor can do this. And I feel f on the editorial pages having sition from a school environ­presented Tuesday by Dr. working environ-. have some injhit -the next year will probably tories more than defeats. And that for the safety of the Tex-: to do with minority view-. ment to a Leonard Valverde, assistant ment will be presented this ' I. think candidates who are have that,selection; and just I feel that by pushing for stu-an and for the safety for the ' points, _ but atleast.. the. Minori-. professor .of educational -ad­ — I wanta wide range of opi­ running represent'the viewsof the general input of the dent interest and getting peo-political position of an editor, V Repprt woiild give them week as part of "Career Ex­ministration, and Billy John­ nion." the students-and want to be students into' the workihgs of pie involved, that this apathy it must remain elected. " space every week in' the ploration Week for v son,,assistant coordinator ofMinorities." , ' ; editor of The Texan/ and.'in-the University -such as . the 1 would push very strongly will be ended. . 7Uie Texan: Is The Texan . P?Per-And I feel that with the spedial'services ih the dean ofspite of all the controversy; I governance board andthe con­for an increase in minority ' ""— Would an responsive), to the needs of -1circulaUon of Texan, they Sponsored the' Career . .. The" Texan: by students office. M feel like, for all practical pur­struction around campus and' recruitment and in the elected or appointed editor be minority stndents? How can * would feel their views were . . Choice Information . Center, 'The Changing Role of the poses, the preferential poll is just the kind of input students representation of minorities mo>e effective in both ,the paper be open more to best . Te^esented by going, , the programs will include in-'1 Female" will be presentedan election, and that needs, to are.going to be jetting; t feel in aU facets of this campus. I representiiig student views miMnity-viewpoints, both on' The Texan.-struction on how to prepare " Wednesday' by Beverly Lylebe emphasized. The. TSP they are going to get more. feel that groups such as Stu­an^| ' maintaining the jour-the editorial'page as well asi 4-Other points I would like to for a job interview, write a and Mary Allen of the Minori­ Board has said they~ will ap^. . -My policy will always be to-dent Government and those nalistic integrity of The Tex-the news side? ' see, especially on the editorials resume and choose the major' ty Women Employmentpoint the person who gets the represent as many people as'I sponsored*by the University f v • V. I' ; i . Tagliarino: I can only say-staff, would be minority • best suited for a particularoc--Program in Houston. most votes in the preferential can on the editorial page. I'll should 'be; increased. I will Tagliarino; I very strongly from the reactions I hive i -recniitment for a black or cupation. ; .A rap session on career ex­ . P01!-1 s A have' my opiriions -in the .push actively for the presiden­support an elected editor.The heard fromminorify students, chicano on the, Halso f : ' pectations jand a session onTherefore Idon't feelit's an editorials^ but: the rest of the tial candidate selected by the editor, I feel, needs to be by the recent creation of: .%£mbre in the news staff: I tee! ^ Programs will be presented "Qiqx^timities iforiMinorities. appointed -editor. If r'was-page the''letters to the"' ,n Jester 22111a.m. to advisory committee and elected. An appointed editor niinorify; newspapers on cam- we've had an increase in the ^ Entering Graduate ^School" elected I would never think of editor, the Guest Viewpoints would'not support anyone not would never be able to feel pus,.by the reaction of pesple j; communication school of : 12^ P-m^and repeated from :'will be ftpm2 to4 p.mrFriday in USARAT, that The Texan , these studentsand that wecan . 2 to 3:30 p:m. in Acadeniic Center <06. has not been responsive to the '^get them in The Texan if we 4 Austin Advertisers:" needs of minority students. ' .. show that we're willine to be* WANT ADS SOAPCBESS s coming. [fAv USE TEXAN i) Stlsu»i( it riMiv bring driver's.licensef •Mf" V ;f, * 8 a.nt.'S p.m. Oiiadolupe Mountolni QiffilrtB •Trip Sign-Up. 3«gis»ar In Texas Union South 114 A M "'­ " fMr th*.trip FHdaySwnHfiy, April 11-13. Camp%t fHday and Saturday nights, Fr*«. Muit COHagt/nom* Cwnpui EXAN i r jlfln lUc^tlon Co^nti^*? to be published} on ^4-5.-30 p.W.zTaVanTavmTHylnEklrflvoflBnia.Thallrit'raiiiti' in a,two-day contest.,Today the two top stud«nt fMifi^wiiljbi> against•d<^IoJhjirjitomorfoW,4» 8p.m,,the student Tuition,* will ijieer 9 "faiidty'teSirt.Fr*. Texos; Tavern. Idea* or 1 * s. •rih v* iri'Siti?.:' :'-t RoundUp It's cf ten gallon hat fOll of iun and {-COMINOEVENTS ROUND-UP EVENTS INCLUDe. g^m0s!^A37vOOOpluscircutarionan(|amasiive 92.%ir^aderihip among student*, fdculfy and TERNITY by WilUaM CalltHeTexds staff Wii(vififsure your advertis«rnerrt in thi*j,iediJ ' • i*. •io" cpmpletecoverdge of thrvasf UT markef/For,; MARATHON -rt#.r|k.^»Pfa^dy^ A' ^eeHrig to determine into »KfiiMt^t t0:itart' UsWarEyjinH ** x " pfano . East Sentiments Polled Firm To Sample Demographic Information By GAIL BURRIS visory committee last week to notified Strauss that, "It the Bureau of Business Strauss, Union Board review the methodology and Research. Voting for the University Sweetheart -the Cactusstaffandasan adviserfor Scot-. Texan Staff Writer chairwoman. seems to me that this is a continues through Tuesday in front'of the . tish Rite Dormitoiy: Her activities and Although the proposed the resultsof a private opinion A private research firm, in matter that is the direct Strauss said she thought the Main Building: • ' • -hpnors include Orange Jackets, Alpha Union East seemed to have sampling now being taken. conjunction with the advisory responsibility of the board." group was "distinguished and • • The polls will be open from 8:30:atm. tof Delta Pi sorority: the Dean's List and been dealt a death blow when group, will be in charge of the Strauss said she sought highly qualified." "As we said before, we are 4 p.m.'Students'must present IDs. Alpha Lambda Delta,-women's honor it was defeated recently by a poll. "The Union Board Will recommendations and com­Although she doesn't know committed to finding out what :• The five finalists are Claudia Clinton,-. 'society. : > •• " •* ' -referendum 3-1, it apparently have nothing to do with the piled a list of individuals with how soon the poll will be students want on the eastside . Madeline Hartwell, Karilyn Kober;Meiin-"McCloud, a junior journalism major still has a breath of life left in sampling," said Strauss. special expertise to serve on finished, she said the board of campus. The referendum da McCloud and Cindy Roberts.'; : ' /.'from Eastland, has served on the Ideas it. The board had originally the committee. agreed it must "move with didn't give us1 any Clinton is a junior journalism major and Issues Committee and the Student The Union Board of Direc­ requested President Ad That group includes Scott dispatch so the survey can be demographic information,, as ; from Burnet. She is a member of Kappa ServiceCommittee and has been named to tors appointed a special ad­and the poll will," said Janie Interim Lorene Rogers to ap­Atlas, former editor of the designed and completed Alpha Theta.sorority, Posse.AngeliFlight • theDean's List.She isa member of Posse. point the committee, but she Texas Law Review; Sinclair soon as possible." and Bored Martyrs. She is an Alpha Tau athletic recruiting, the Public Relations Blac, associate professor of Her main objective in con­ Omega Little Sister and was elected . Student {society of America and Kappa architecture and planning: tinuing with the opinion poll is • Austin AquaFestival Duchess in-1974, . Kappa Gamma sorority. Rachel Bohmfalk, secretary to "find out the opinion of this Police Seek Clues Hartwell,v a : junior majoring^ln:; , ^Roberts is a junior textiles and clothing to Student Government; and project, including what marketing, is from Houston .She belongs : major from Edinburg.She is a member of Earl Jennings, associate students want, what they ob­to Spooks, Orange Jackets and -Delta-• Delta Delta-Delta sorority and athletic director of the Measurement jected to, if they even want a Sigma TheU sorority and isan orientation ; • :recruiting. She was elected Texas Relays and Evaluation Center. building at all." adviser, Kinsolving Resident adviser and ; A Princess 1974, Miss Rio Grande. Valley Also, Mike Sklar, business She added, "This issue has For Missing Student athletic recruiter. She was elected a Gac^ -' •>• 1972-1974;'a fourth runner-up in the Miss-student; Dick Shocket, gone on for so many years, we tus Goodfellow andTexas,Relays Queenin.1*; « Texas contest And a hostess at the 1974 Austin police have dis­addresses found in the apart­9 and 160 pounds, with dark graduate business student; can't just stop here without 1974. . .',1.,--. • k . Southern Governors' Conference. covered no new evidence in ment for clues as to Morgan's brown hair and eyes. Alfred Smith, professor of more information to pass on Kober is a junior biology major frofa The 1975 University Sweetheart will be the disappearaace of Univer­whereabouts. speech communication and to future Union Boards. We Police report that Morgan Waterloo, Iowa. She has served On the amwunCied Wednesday night at the Rdund-sity business student Stephen anthropology;, and John know what happened; now we Morgan evidently left most had tried to call a friend. University ~ Interaction Committee, the Upi Western' Concert benefiting the Big. Morgan of Corpus Christi, Lt. Stockton, former director of need to know why." of his belongings behind, in­Grant Geistman, in Corpus Student' Government Lobby Committee, Brothers Association. . Joe Perry said Monday. cluding his wallet, watch, Christi between 10:30 and 11 coats, shoes and car. He may a.m. Wednesday but hung up Morgan was last seen have worn blue jeans and a when told Geistman was not Wednesday morning by his blue plaid shirt when he left. home. roommate, Brett Appiebaum, There were no signs of A statewide search bulletin at their apartment at 1201 violence in the apartment. will be issued by Friday if no' Town Creek Drive, No. 133. Morgan was described as 5-flew evidence is found. officer has Perry said an TUESDAY IS SORORITY been assigned to the case to Hartwell Clinton check telephone numbers and DISCOUNT TONIGHT ONLY! NIGHT AT SMYLIES THEGOOD TIMES ROLL The Faculty Senate Monday set up to inform them of vestigate it ^: "Faculty grievance may be WITH MUSIC AND LAUGHTER BY passed a resolution to ift~, future implementation'policy. The Senate also dismissed' lost in limbo forever," said vestigate the creation of a; Because of possible 'abuses the future of the faculty Ira Isoce, director of the new faculty rank (specialist)/ of the position,, and since grievance procedure whidi it Counseling-Psycholbgical Ser­ by the..University System knowledge 'of the role of passed several months ago vices Center. "I. doubt we'll SMILEW­ BOWLEY, WILSON Board of Regents. -Specialist was sparse, a comH and which is being reworked .„r have any grievance procedure The motion to fonrf'a c&£ 3 ^tt^^^^potatedto itf?;v in University Council, passed this year." ' > • & JAMES mittee to examine the* issue was proposed by Sociology CityCouncil Certifies With a sorority i.D. you can get $.65 high from Up Your Alley Fame in Dallas Prof. Gideon Sjoberg, who balls and $1.65 pitchers of beer Tuesday. also suggested the University CHICKEN Council adopt a resolution to Fii^fctlettion^^te We're open noon 'til midnight, and we're XXX Rated Funny Show RANCH stop implemention of the rank City Council canvassed and cilman picked one boxX • . CLUB& BEER located at 19th and Nueces. Come to until thecommittee certified Monday thte results _ •„ .. . A Bucket of Laughs and GARDEN . Smylie's and join the fun. researches it; a? of Saturday's elecUon and set tVle two figures tallied inall . Tonight: «. . Songs May 3as therurioffforPlaceS ; testprepncts. lieregents created the hew 1and 5.' Runoffs were forced in two RICK CASUAL & SMYLIE'Sposition without consulting . -'Hie council canvassed the races when no candidate THE KITCHEN BANC 19th Qnd Nvece*the Faculty Senate. election by, checking the; ..receivai SO. percent of the Serving the finest liquor in Austin THE BUCKET 23ird and PeaH ' • ("My purpose is opt to pre-, number ;oI: voters-on,the ^ vote. For place 1, Bob Gray Agon from Tri-Towm -J Hn. Fr*» faH0ng )n lh» Carag» judge.the category o.f-> NO COVER signature; isheet against; the frill face Margret Hofmann. specialist;" saidSjoberg, ex-. number of ballots cast in ran­For place 5, John Ttevino op-,, 3615S. Congress, 442-9968 plaining he:wanted guidelines • dom precincts.,' Each coun-. poses Jay Johnson. ' ******* i M S'SPLIT RAIL INN ' * J ^'TONIGHT'8i30 -MIDNIGHT: I |"Noche Mexicaria" * ••• announces ' $1.50 J" ' The Austin Symphony ' j J o J " * BrnfrimGood 4 p.m. -Midnight * i / ^ Orchestra v. -> COVERS 472-1314 J will now be held at c M.iss Solemnis T^irC: -.. s ;. ..^dConductor: Walter bucloux • Soloists: ; H .• V And, of course, there's^SaturdayHat -Choral Union, Morris Beachy, 4 I Saturday's. Unending, Ever Loviri' 'iwiruvvw*,*. Dinector^Alma Jean Smith, Soprano r £2 -'A.;;; |.Saturday's. ^ ONIQHT Friday.April 18 MunicipalAuditorium, i The all week place ^ ii -you've been looking for is •'••• -• ;r-< v- j. coming. And Saturday's will keep t _ Ticket sales begin Wednesday, April 9,Hogg :-**• —• S -^on com^n8 with onegood time after anotherl1'^4®^''* ^ * Box Office, 10-6 wectkdays l!i.SNEAD. f ? And one good meal after anpther; It's fresh baked biscuits, ^Bu«*ch*dul*s; Jattar.Xintolving. 00^,7:00:7:30P.M. steaks and hainburgers grilled to perfection, gigantic freshMFp Coyer v vegetable ¥ salads; crispy onion rings; and an entire menu Mic Cultural Entertainment JS-% ^ of home Q cooked hardiness.. Committee of tftic Texas Union But Saturday's is more than a restaurant. It simply and superbly alsp happens to ; ="• be a bar. Since it's Saturday's, it's total­ly unique. Bits of nostalgia combined | with contemporary j feelings. You'll v experience it for v; h \ tyourself when you sit at the long dark bar, ^ v Jhave a tall.cold drink, and take a leisurely -it : ^°ok around.you. And while you're looking, T I •*;/ listen. To one of the finest stereo' r 1systems you're ever goingto hear- And as if Saturday's isn't special enough, all drinks during the entire opening-week will be half price. That way, ; you can enjoy Saturday's twice as much; 5 Saturday's. • 111 ;; The all week :itmI Sill :(l ' 'iJt""i X v 4"*, „ v. , . .... ^ 2900 ^ Anderson L^ifvg^ustin) Texas. 1 vJjfS Tuesday,-April 8,11975 THE DAIL¥ TEXANj <»«•••»• FF ^VR«W^ V*I>~JR-* —.^A-I-MRX-J?YY^» "• '** <* *-^ -.-^ .O «">> •sM0§2&?^W— VM^ /•*** V ,V -if,~., J r ^iv**-; v ha. ^r>=*f.-& Gena Rowlands DeservesrOscar for ^Woman' 4 _ . ' • > r -i. * **4 .* i •'•* * .v•'•*••.•*..v. <•* ••. « -c ».-»*••** i.. *. i . v v ,•* .^ *. * Jj» • -?:"*•* .*^. •**"""£ ''*v '•' r «w.:*• .-jk :^. • .s .*•*•.» .-•• .w *.*>^^'-r« "-'^ "'v ' **"* ~ * -• • '^*'" ••»•,:-••• 1&1 j 'f, A fomaQ thf nervous. -thinM. • -•.:: : <: '•' -• "A Woman Under the we see her. She's too nervous,; things seem in delirium are ' course, slapping his audience ability to adjust? Influence;" written and too anxious, too emotionally things really, there, and in the face with a reversal* it Cassavetes doesn't tellna directed by John htghstrung. Cassavetes shows Cassavetes, in .'"A Woman is society that neeas nelp, not and the film, a study ia v Cassavetes;' starring us her symptoms from the' Under: the Influence," ob-Mabel. character as much as I Gena Rowlands, Peter outset; there's no elaborate "viously agrees. Cassavetes' ' When Mabel's family com-anything else,'suffers for it. ^ liijffll vFalk; at Northcross 6 foreplay, no buildup; Mabel's thesis is that there really IS a mlts her to a mental iastitu-Our understanding of Mabel;; I ' Cinema. mind and mouth are running conspinacy against Mabel — tion, it's attempting only to is restricted because we know^ By WILLIAM A. STONE JR. off in so many directions that an unconscious one. Mabel is cure the symptoms, not tlie only the whats and not the Texan Staff Writer she's forever acting on im­denied, ignored, stifled, op^. disease. The same is .true whys. When she returns home Halfway through an pulse, creating solutions for pressed and repressed by her when Mattel slashes her wrist after six months of therapy,' otherwise raw, immediate nonexistent problems, family (i.e., society); the and Nicfcputsa band-aidoyer her family hasn't changed .in n film, director John providing answers for irony is that Nick, et.al., are the cut. Cassavetes, is the slightest and we know it"a . mm Cassavetes conveys the pass-questions that aren't asked. guilty primarily of ignorance faulting, "symbolically, up to Mabel alone to adapt —" ing of time by flashing .the „ Her mental tapestry is — none of them is society's stupidity, and', with but we're unable to look for ^ words "Six Months Later' already so frayed that her premeditatedly ordeliberate-it, the humanistic pretensions any change or improvement a across blackened screen. family doesn't listen to or ly trying to destroy Mabel and of psychiatric care. It's la because we never knew her The message might have been accept her, it patronizes her. all of them fail to realize that nice, neat package and disease in the first place. \ conveyed a thousand more Mabel's schizophrenia is judg­their efforts to "help" ac­Cassavetes, using an up-front, Cassavetes has neglected one' subtle integral ways, but ed insanity by everyone complish exactly the opposite. expansive cinematography, of the most crucial .pieces to Cassavetes opted for around her. To Nick (Peter They're so obsessed with proves himself a capable his puzzle — the viewer is un-'.*•• bluntness, like a medium-Falk), her husband,she's "got rendering Mabel "normal" director. able to resolve or evaluate ' 5 weight -prize fighter who a nut loose;" to her oldest that they only promote and CASSAVETES: performs Mabel's future. ; V,% starts throwing roundhouses child, she's "too nervous." accentuate her less effectively •'• as Gena Rowlands, : abnor­ Still, the instant the bell rings. Mabel .is so so insecure, malities; they're so intent on screenwriter,though, because; something of an American; It is not surprising, depressed and paranoid that confirming Mabel to conven­his story andhis movie havea Guilietta Masipa.gives therefore, that we are made t she imagines a conspiracy tional behaviour that they flaw —, we're never told WHY perhaps the best female peiy | to know there's something against her, with Nick as themselves become tense, Mabel is the way she is. We. , formanceof the year.The role wrong wiih Mabel Laoghetti Grand Inquisitor. violent, irrational and, at know her symptoms and all of Mabel is. a demanding one,; (GenaiBaglands).the moment SOMEONE once said that. times, hysterical. Cassavetes, the immediate . causes, but of such incredible proportions, AS4-SM7 NORTHCROSS HAU who wrote "Woman," is, of we're never given a dueas to that {lowlands would have Peter Faflt, Rowlands in 'A Woman UnJtr Ifct ANOERSOM UNE & BURNET BO why Mabel reacts the wayshe done well just to endure'the' Bargain Matineas -1J0 hatnns, $1JS. Maa.-Fri. does. She'sa woman under the ordeal; instead, she gives it a (Camille' Set for Hancock NOTICES from the influence of an inhuman, un­life and a depth so real that General libraries, or any thinking society, obviously, giving her an Oscar would be • The Texas Union Repertory past offteleafivAuxkr. of the branches ah of­but what makes Mabel crum-analogous to serviiig Ham­Theatre Group Win present its Camille, detennlacs htr . Z Academy Award Noarinatiaas ficial University com­ble beneath the influence? ' burger Helper to a gourmet fourth production, "CamiDe, kOesocietVKte Bast Actress -Geaa Rowlands Mabel is different fromsocial chef. V:' Lady of the Camellias," flexade to Best Director....John Cassavetes munications''requiring victims whosurvive, but how? Wednesday through Sooday in trfocm. immediate attention. What's the root to Mabel's in­But of course, there's little Town Hall in HancockCtnter. Tickets for tte e«cat,wk*ckchance of ah Oscar for • Hie play,written fay Aiexaa-Sfflte at caw Row lands;• anyway" — • dre Damas and directed tqr oolybepwclasedataedaar. Hollywood wouldn't dare give' University gradtate drama bot resersaSaasmanrbeteie abc INTERSTATE 7?^ an award to its most deser-stndent William Barford, by caffing the TeutD^a •B ving candidate.' ' presents the conflict between V Pwpam OTtei: Return It would, afterall;beentire^ VARSITY • 7V*35 ly against precedent ment of society. The frivoloiis ty stadentrEaodty rtft Istatt; $1.?S til 3 p.m. . ("•. '• : D »«L_' STPFFT lUStortepab^ The Best Picture 1:40-Ja0-SK)0 M Cta'al Tte cast of the Year, i^0-&20-KkM Oofctnan Tke 2200 HacodiDIM ^-«5M6»I —Pat Coffins; kwOcVaim OPtN IKS CBS-TV Fta.^-44^-10 llifad Pricts a fell • 1^0-5:454.-45 TwUita Hr. 5:15-5^5, $1.25 Fl I FN Rl IHS| YM•: lUadk,] KRIS KRISIDFFERSON ® iSSt:. » /UCEDOeSNTUVEHBS orn i.«*stjN4«MK. •5 m. Mr. MHtll1US >4NYMORE 1-: M-ltN SouThsidt "Thep TwelveChain SU5'M7fja. AMdBmtoFAa riARRy&fONTO k00-t.-00-llh00 1J0^JW:15 Twi-Ute Twi-Uta O ITHANB* Hr. 5-J04M, $125 iM a I'Hilll'I'I'l S HOU ioun USA |M8» toWrM-MUD ATFO .LTO.PROOUCHON The Trot Story ^ PlWB^iOO $100 t» fcis (Mba-Sbt) m At S«rf ^.iholuni 6:15-9:15 DOfBt 7:90 SHOWSTMI1S 10M:1M.-J5T PARTI N DAVIS LOIS CHILES Hr. 5^15, HMl&SUt tura timm varysm PgpW.fBf'COnKt 9©©©O©®®0© «®©«®©©©®®© MiHBSCKEGII 21»» & Goodalupa Second Uvef DahWjUali 477-1 OTBI AT 7:15 SOUL NIGHT «NITE URNETZ7iiVf//7 $ijom&is flBCOtdSL ONE FOODS 8:30 pjm. ­ 12 AT 2 THEATRB PARAMOUNT KUS AT-10:30 ONtY ifyoirdare 1-25JU 7 RATURIS >IJ0:til;i>m. 1JO-3JO-5JO the bizarre '^fcOMHJO-KkOO4^ • fEAIURB 7J0-M0 world of the psychosexual m n-ifjr Soiuhvid afubre TODAY THRU : Reincan|ation H2!3Lwv FFLURSDW^VSTARRING SUZY KEMOIALL "Is gyg— 1:30-3:15-5:00 -$1^5 10S60* nM Peter • ° Proud M54J0-10:15 -$1.50 'SCREEN 2 FELUNI w mem mssm tnitngbh * •m ISk .; V* fir 12.-00 $1.25 ENDS TWESDAT VILLAGE 4 ^(an Hrated,rathorMnkytaleof gurwhig A'iHt.WJtf ENDS TUESDAY ^ Wrmenf [krarWj«by.i;p>«^ RIvERSIDF ram wsmm INEMA'5 WIM FESTIVAL STARTS WEDI i.?. . r.. m DAILY SsSSStffr^C ®«U **gr* : .•?_;< -jV?; Ir^K ^afSSBi )£££& Jazz Offer Near-Flawless Performances a yet .He 1 ifctehHfc,gg :at a lasstme eadO? Idget this tight. D»Wi«I M wms revny <*­ fanltlessly interpreted the IhllV ri^arigAWbfttecad, it stands OK-M «ka wnjtady baOds the", nd uleuiity of the note » flat She listener faeaus cbff? d iuslnnwiil, the effect isin-The saxes achiev- The device ct baring the "lay in stricttime while theac­inliiimtats play non- i!i»IbbI rmhrilisfrmrnts at ap-: Js was wdl emrfoved Igr ae ifcyftmpUyers. As the set BiH Gim, Mitch Wafldns, nd Sfeaicer Staines an drams and bass in­teracted with the ensemble, the tantrfMHy faqtoiwitel Nov .and then, when a aeened tolack in^iratkm,<5m> feed'hmi an idea rinch would > a whole,succession of ad lib The hora ensemble displayed a wed periuMiuwy-on**Go i."The ang^emost consistent »of the hnss section is their in­. Sach qarited playing nmst be caieMly held«•check to insarea tight television * Woman •r* ­ ICBS Mew* Special — tf You Need Halp IW: Tfce End of «* Road?" • » Marin • M Marcus WMbr.MJ}.3t 11k Academy «nrii — Uve tclccast of the 47th Academy * Consumer Sanihal Kit .Wpae'.KX Itan ; t WKb. Yoga and Yon 7 Movie; -The Jerusalem File** dairies Brace Davison and Oonald nm»BU •Captioned ABC Eveotog Mem at Wide worid Mystery—Uegacr UBBBOa ij (ptiM nOOEB WBK06SL am FOXTWIN wm7 iiiniin v BlxJS ' mi um ' t-s i&_NO COVER CHARGE" .V.j-t r-jCaj ifs ' F"tt jy-ink. £5 Z H|L,HFAU5 -= ^LU.0ME COOKING r~ w --"" "> ^ r :> hi A ~ -• 70"' 11 v '2r r- Hiela(Uoevita' fortteSTOTsr K£LB!?OOKS COMIC MASTERPIECE. ensemble sound and avoid the effect of 10 individuals playing simultaneously. The Jazz Ensemble, however, realized both accuracy and the drivingintensity which characterizes them brat At one point the entire trumpet section soloed at once,and the effect was frightening. Just listening to them made me sweat like Freddie Hnbb&rd after a four-hour gig- The soloists were consistently good, with Paul Ostermayer on tenor leading the pack for sheer improvisation. He has long since left behind the safe sax domain of arpeggios and chromatic runs. Adding textures, cross-time figures, squeals and range to Us reper­ . toire of ideas, be blows phrases rather than successions of notes, lines rather than riffs. • * STAHCBOST FOLLOWED with a set geared more for the average listener . than for the purist Featuring vocalist Liza Farrow, whose style is evocative at Barbra Streisand and Flora Purim, their music leaps the barrier that com­plex instrumental jazz often seems to impose between the audience and the music^ Not that Starcrost is in any way tritely commercial — they're an in­ novative band. Seven of John Mills' compositions made up the bulk of Starcrost's set. Mills, the group's altosaxophonist, was exposed as a fine lyricist as well as arranged. His syncopated lines and choruses stay with you. They're good songs, not meaningless jingles or monotonous ramblings. A group can never realize its potential until it begins to perform original material, and Starcrost is moving rapidly into their full potential. One particularly pleasing effect was Farrow's use of her voice as a com­plementary instrument to the horn passages, especially with Mills' flute. Farrow has a superior ear for this sort of thing — I've never beard her miss an interval or sing out of tune. This is remarkable m itself, because standing in the middle of all those instruments it's just plain hard to hear. THE SOLOISTS improvised well, particularly toward the'end of the set. I've heard most of these guys solo better, but this band's second best is well worth bearing. As an ensemble, their progress is no less consistent with excellent past performances. "lodoctilna 'Foxes' Tickets on Sale Public tickets go on sale Tuesday for the Department of Lillian Hc31man's "The Little Foxes." 1 The classic drama of unscrupulous greed in the turn-of-the­century South will be staged at 8 p.m. April 15 through 26 in the Drama Theatre Room. Tickets may be obtained at the Hogg Auditorium Box Office from 10 a.m. to6p.m. weekdays. Admission is$1.50 forstudents and $2.50 for nonstadents. The production closes out the 1974-75 Drama Major Series. Tonight! The First Public Austin ShowingI Ossessione o»«i Directed by Luchino Visconti. Based on James Cain's novel. The Postman Always Rings Twice. ••• Cannot 6f rstfnf less than a masterpiece, so flawless isit in its conception and />rpv/i/a|<'on of character, so admirably controlled in its narration, and so consistent in its at­masphrre.'* Vrrncm JarrrtL, The Italian Cinema JESTER AUD. $1 7 & 9:30 COMINGf Thursday. April 10, 9:00 pm — A program of Dutch experimental Kims and the filmmaker* who made them—recently at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. FREE! The Solo Artists Series Janos Starker cellist "the king of cellists"—Chicago American Tuesday/April 15 Ho^Anditorhun/8:00 PM • ' ".SO with Optional Sendees Fee • Ticket sales begin Friday, April 4 » ^Hogg Box Office/lO-6 weekdays • * • ••.v.siys•' • ' " Sponsored by^"•i-..-. . The Cultural Entertainment Committee of the Texas Union & The Department of Music TEXAS TAVERN TRIVIA EXTRAVAGANZA K1GHLAND MALL ALL STUDENTS ELIGIBLE! ^® SIRBSAND& C.!'. • 4.W ^ j'-—t X N * f •» fr' 41 ^ -V * A< Winning team in Tuesday K) & ^ Afternoon's Match Meets Faculty All-Stars CiT Wednesday Night'fi^-.... t-t.1 hfiiMm ; • CAPITAL PLAZA The program moved from the easily digestible music Of* Starcrost to the hardcore jazz of 47 Times Its Own Weight. This band includes four of the finest instrumentalists in Austin. The feature thatsets them apartfrom other bands in the city is improvisation. Offering a standard bill of fare of ex­tended solos dramed by a short ensem­ble structure, this band spends by far the greater part of their performances in ad lib. John Treanor, Spencer Starnes, Paul Ostermayer and Mel Winters are all featured frequently, and the band reflects a unity obviously borne of many sessions together. The most an ensemble can expect, even a quartet,is the machine precision of careful rehearsal. Forty-seven Times transcends the machine metaphor; they're an organism, a living thing. Each subtle nuance of style is com­plemented and incorporated into the playing of every member of the quartet. They must be appreciated, not as a clever melding of individual talents, but as a single sound. AS A PREVIEW of his Saturday night performance, Pete Brewer was Ill brought on to combine his tenor exper­tise with that of the band. The three horns of Winters, Brewer and Oster­mayer weaved and fused a discordant passage on a Cannonbail Adderly tune and jumped into extended sololines for each of the horns. Brewer stayed on stage for a few numbers and left to allow 47 Times to finish out the program. » The ensemble varied their standard trumpet-sax-bass-and-drums fare with a bass feature entitled "Conference of . the Birds." Winters on recorder and Ostermayer on flute performed a fine lead-in to Starnes' accomplished bass solo. Starnes' technique, style and tex­ture easily surpass any other local talent, and he was in top form this night. The piece perhaps for its originality, was to me the most pleasurable one of the evening. Since six fine bands gave near-flawless performances, I guess I'd have to concur with the audience of the Austin Jazz Festival that the verdict was favorable. There was enough jazz in Townes Hall this weekend to choke a horse — but then I've yet to meet the horse who could really appreciate a B flat blues. lit IPETER NEROT WORLD RENOWNED PIANIST, COMPOSER AND ICONDUCTOR, WILL BE IN AUSTIN FOR ONE UNFORGETTABLE IEVENING IN THEHISTORIC PARAMOUNT THEATRE FOR THE PER­IFORMMQ ARTS ON CONGRESS AVENUE THERE WILL BE TWO IPERFORMANCES, AT A AND 1030 PM. SATURDAY, APRIL 19. ITICKETS ARE PRICED AT18.50, $5JO AND XJ0, AND ABE AVAILA­ BLE AT RAYMONDS U.T. CO-OP, TEXAS STEREO ON RIVERSIDE, J08KE-S, KARA-VEL DOWNTOWN AND WESTQATE. 'ST? The Cultural Entertainment Committee in cooperation with CALICO Productions presents ^ and , j,. SATURDAY, APRIL 26 ­MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM ! 8:00 P.M. n Special Bonus to Optional Fee holders! Tues., April 4 p.m. Texas'Tavern' !, Limited Number pf $6.50 seats available for $1.00 ^ ,SA r , , "J '•/-\ -' HOGG AtJD. BOX OFFICE 10-6 WEEKDAYS . BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 7 •71V ••• V • r- p Public Ticket Sales begin Monday, March 31 at ^ THE 'mwr Sanctum/Pants South Riverside^-^ J ^ « , /, "V i, 15^. \ »' BUS SCHEDULE: Jester, Kinfeolving, Co'-Op/7:OQ« 7:30 p.tn. 1 -** >»• v " / hj-JL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING . •. • RATES FOR SALE FURN. APARTS FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS FURN. APARTS TYPING IS word minimum Each word on* time . . % ,11 Each word 2-4 times »..S JO STUDENT-FREE ...... ._ .,c"l aEDROOW.-I_BATH.JtIW ABP lur- Each word 5-9 times .01 MiK.-ForSale Don'tpaftfctWe'U find you that apt, FREE Each word 10 or mora timet.;! .07' PRECIOUS OEMS. '-JacMM' ready lor .you'j'va longad for. Our servlc* Is tret 4 ... r*_ ?Ummer j-' .J,Just North of 27th at Student rata each Mm* JO mounting. Quality prestlge.stonti, to Is our transportation. So save gfes ami Rates ilR.< BarryCllllnBWeier ClauKled Display amethyst, aquamarine emerald. die-«time by calling Nancy. PARKINQ THE PEPPER ^ .Efficiencies $105plus Elec-•w.:--. j&i Guadalupe 1 col. x I inch one time ..-S3.2S . mood, garnet,andaluslte. kumlta. opal, Icol. Jc 1 Inch r»9 times......:«93 . APARTMENT LIVING * TRANSPORTATION^/" TREE PEOPLE! X i ' trlclty [MAHTED^'XpirtniVRtmansgtrs.' ^2707 Hemphill Parfcff topaz, tourmaline, citrine. By appoint­Pralir studtnt coupltt. Send ratumn. Icol. * Iinch ten or more timctf&M LOCATORS ment 477-0914. Barlm.AwsWn.Tn 7Pi7 4000 NORTH LAMAR Have three axtri*lari • GREENHOUSE 4'*lJY New lli5. 0o It 452-9S41 345-1OS apartments available «afe'SlK*^. . aa5F*"^J,BONUSROOM;3tadmm.I batti pka tyttAZ&L ! igurselt or,I'llInstall, dm,447-S444.477-. Habitat ssicupancy. Qutet friendly nelgbborftobd. ^^wUaddmFimWAaP.lIwSauni 1 '• I .-•! -• OCAOUNt SOCDUU . I • ' Shag carpelX dithwasher/dtsposatlotsx&'VAj; 300 E RIwraW. Or 44U». , CONTEMPORARY APARTMENTS *• 1$ * space, j>entryjwalk-ln closets. Titan Fridry ..1:00 MU'"' A&B FURNITUREand Appliances: We > .olcabinet t| •iM. • • -> -••• • • • • -v _ ,.,..ONEBEOROOManstnHtt.SIASQua. . MBA. '^ buy and tell ail home furnishings, nn ^YPIMG, PRIMTINO, BIND!NO r ma -....11:00 ** East Hti <72*2303, . ,f'"THE24 FLATS" ' Hunters r f^«f^6.PLACE itwttW. r-^;^ APAPTMFMTg 'glanif.454167.50 phis electricity Efficiencies feat at home. 1414 Aran* Driva ' EXTRA SPACE yMicaq.aHard; T«m Mday UND Ttwnday lliOOajft, 1bedroom slfiO llOOl Sell for 49.95. <75-1999 199.50 plus «l«trlclty. access to shuttle. • Gimme * bun «M2Aor ..bedroom/lbath onTownLaltafrom*M0. PROFESSIONAL 17 FT. GRUMANaluminum canoe. S2S0. •' ; " ^ Shuttle bus corner * i. i» A. 47W94I 404 & 502W JStfillbkickaanof ^be^r00fT' *•»"H-P-moKj, 10 hours uw. >7S. v . 1515 Palm* Plata >v l Cuadalupa) IMrm. tool Than* ^ 2b^th from S200 TnTS^^iS?«?^.240 fiirnlshad. APACHE CHORES 2 Lets All utlllttn. HANCOCK III 8, 5 ABP.ThaSouthShora.300E.RIvariMa ' TTHNC LalwvKw. tSMO for Both. Nancy York., < % DUVAL ' ABP. j. Rtportfc Returaes. Dr. 444^317. TUter U««•,:*$ APTS. i FALL4"' EFFICIENCY wlttt sleeping alcova :• Aft Untverelfyand 1­ \/II I A >l^SU/WMER RATES IBM ELECTRIC Typawrltar^ Partact ' iDobte Atoll 7 £umf*hed luxuryY efficiencyeffli apt; on city VII I MX LUXURY EFR/1 BR/2 BR ovarlooking Town Lake.,Convenient to: business wortc LOW STUOE"NT RATES oparajtoi} caniMt'on. Mflg firm. <774111— shuttle but. Suite #a * UT. Economicany priced. ftn ABP. i condition, an r bus route, walking to 1 CDAU #14e iast/Mnrti Service Ina 15 word minimum each day S JO tonly. Available k£^4f; FROM $135 17>*Southrerside, 444-; iliable now Each additional word each days jo$. 474-1532 JJ7. : -_OpanMMoihTIi4J­ -W couclt. Folds out Into slngla bad. V ;4I00 Ave^A Call4SMm ' 1 col. * i.inch each day..... VKE * 9-5 Black ,and whlla hoUndstooth wttH^i ?v 474-mi ENFIELDAIWEAujllOOpkisetactricon "Unclasslfiecfs" I fine 3 4ey* JtUtt APTS. (Prepaid. No Refunds) -'woodaararmrest.v^lke now. »|«:4S».# r shuttle.-Ttie Partratew. iM Wnt tK , : 3IS3 J T'47j-nj7;••-''y>r Students must show-Auditor's* ^x, (wider new management} 2V-*tfcy •' 472-8936 DobreAAall BWg. 3.200 (25th & WhltlsMroml plus onr I4B0. Llka new dill Awry, ? 451.-2343:. receipts and pay in advance In TSP 'COMIC COLLECTION. EwYttllno««» v VILLA NORTH •4305 Duval" $109.50 STUDIO APT. Fireplace. CA/CH, cable. SHARE THE RENT! Sae thesa aiceHent naw efficiency a.m. to 4:30 p.m.'Monday :|hrough. between 5*7 p m 1BR turn $150 . 4 CAN SHARE 2BR-2B FOR ' t 4 2 Bdrm furij., covered apartments..Just^ few blocks west of sfssrsis^5,tt r Friday. ' THE CROCKETT COMPANY WEDD1NG ORESS, White tatln with [ 144.25 EACH PER MONTH. pifklny/ swimming pool# 22? Alf EFFICIENCIES. CA7CH, qulet rv3K|?wf*"er*ta'w-™fc» tra^5Ue.l0. Ca1t472-55S3. WlU«otika^tp shuttle bus. Bargain tl0«i..47M07< iaca paart ij }Que, with full* »ength.i&\r 2 BR turn $165 , [e^eaJion rm. planned ac-neighborhood.. Walk rtertfte. lllVtlli FURNISHED, AlULJglLLS. ptusE.ManagerllllWiatlOth. PAID. tivltle^.or. site security^ of-­ GENERAL ELECTRIC~«00 Air con4' 1115W. tottf /. -wtj.-.'.-AUTOMATIC TYPING -letters and A»""-fleer, 24 hf. maintenance^' FOR SALE : dltlonar .window unit. Works wait, 'v ' 7°: , 4M-}an or appointment. 477^711 FANTASTIC SUMMER iocationl Block ;• •. good CTrtdlHon.SlOO. Call 475-mi. > t y f £ £ XEROX COPIES -«S%r HO copies T..E. Wiley Co.. -Law School. LoxoTious: 2-2, . pool, : GITANE to soaad blqrcla, ZU. brand -The -MOVE IN TOOA.Y * •sundac«t.':eablft shad-Le summer i; PRINTING and SKInfrE LINE of-. n*w, p«ld >130, till at >1* Also NEED A GREAT PLACE TjQ . or thereafter, ata ABP. SUPPLIES ­ Auto-For Sale -Frlgldatr* 17,7 cu. ft. frostfraa Coppar.: ^ > ^ W"® >,••:. . ;--S5IOBornct ML'. tona ratrloarator.S140.447*41,47»®41. 1m FORD CUSTOM SA'AIr, poMT , -, ­ sMtrlng. 'automatic. Great ctxMltlon. Ask for Rob -SUMMER Cascades" rawii?" >1.150 or bast offar 447-1m. PRO BIKE. 23W frama. 'SKdb BI^CK^TONE­ me block off shuttle bus ro(rta.'4*t4as.-?'. L. A\fV\rU MiS^SSSSS^riSS£f NICE, CLEAN '72 vaoa. LM mllaaoa. 1BR-Il49up iMMiscrlr^ * " •i: wmSS^ttM^KrSLhKZl?anun "nnwooo Donorn oractief*^ RATES Bt: A)gaiita> From lH-3S>tfkr OHprf £ APARTMENTS . from Pma Park at 2nh and North «fc-: Printing;-biadMg.- Goodxondltlon. 475^915a»tarSn.in,lji xlttoAlgarita,turnr|gM onablocjcw. TBR->IW. 477J741. -V^SKllt. Lass than 500 ml. Only OiO. B7W3. 1441. k . 30$ W. 39th f 40i.w.^»m VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER-Diversified CAB-OVER campar. foe:LWB: ptck-ua 'j-.4SM060 % NEW ONE. BEOROOMS. SlttSO plus 1974 AMBASSADOR Brouohanw fully > START NOW >10»J0 furnished, .all bills paU. M*M dp. Oose to Unlvmtty. Many extras. -Seryicas.Graduafe» andjntejradMrta Icabox/ stova, closat, bads, Jaclu;vf equip. Presently accepting bldt. 44K senica once is wnfc-arfng your 6wn .: 4W-7«Wdays-3«S«W/nlgl(ts.i. • CStt... 17M.C0. 4414043.47M»W, 44MT47 j u " klBEDROOM NOW LEASING ? roommate or.wewlllmatcbyou wttha >fv BARGAIN. '70 VW Fastbadu Naedt' BOBBYE OELAF1ELO. IBMSaMctrtc' x. »5t < MEWS HARSHISANOALS from India: ',; One Bedroom Forn. co^ipattWe ona. Thlt Is aconomy and :• NtMILEASINGFor.summerand falLt. Similar.fo MaxlcanHoaractws butsottarj % 'ALL BIJuilS PAID ,convenl«nee at Its best.~ONLY.MO b^l^M^om1aodlbetti.: SPff>e work^SA50. 454-6974 45M0Wl^^ pica/aUl^p yean emiariSfjTbSIS: taathar.-Also wWar buffaloundaM,'MoM* -iYAROS FROM UT CAMPUS; « • • -^ 1961 VOLKSWAGEN sedan. New inspect • and dark colors. M^iaranl lW4£an*-WALK TO CAMPUS ^ ?245. 2910 Red River 4744431 l1* bloSN!ut • dissertations, theses, reports, mimeographing.-442^1(4. tlon stlcker. Extra clean, rtliabia* tonlaontheDragSaturdays;.-' i$125^; Large apartments, fultv shag carpeted, .7 A Paragon Property . rJ> River. 4IMMt!*-«:,r. •' transportation. Standard trantm(stfon ^t MARK IV APTS CA/CH alt built-in kitatea each apart­ S99S>453-4403. , f ~ 4« ^Twa Bedroom Forn,? ment has Its own private patlp^or. 3100 Speedway MAILLARD^ IM4_ MERCEDES BENZ. 2)0S, A/C, U&!i v balcony, pool treas.1001w«ti5w.^7»-West 25^ ~ 475-0734 478-4096 HELP WANTED am/fm. radlals. Mint sail. Bast oifar <\ $ ^59130^451-4533. : VILLADETTE . SHUTTLE BUS CORNER over >2,000.452-4431. 47MI4).DOI 0ek-FREEWHEE© 15149 .v Central alr. spacious. panellng.-1 Wl!;r HOt-LEVS COPY SERVICE. A cim-' ­ mont. ' NOW LEASING -bdrm, pool anractlvafmiturc,free TV UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY for • sas f i1969 VW BUS. very gootf condl^on, S1200 -?-K,ITS'j^j SHARE THE RENT! 4 CAN icable, gas andwater,-cMMess eoupt^married forat iaest 2 or better offer. Call 47M191X r P<*x. laundnr.NrarMaonai Kar*Tower-'-: yearn, towork Inaresldentialcenter tor,p-. S66.2Stfeta r 19M VOLKSWAGEN VAN^ Tf«nsmit-!!rS"tidany cluster. 1HILLTOP SHARE 2BR-2B FOR „and UT. Salect tenants. Apt. 10» -adoiescentv /Appiicants iiiouW be at^ , -V EACH PER MONTH. ^Manager.45M«31«4IJ.jm -' \-"s3 :Just North.of 27th at slofr needs work, othenlrtsa «obd condl^ 14-28 Teetli f leasf23yearsofage.fiexai$950 or ,best offer 441^051 FURNISHED, ALL BtLLS St-jf 4318 BulWreekRdv -Guadalupe lomtoit to live Ina group settings Renumertllon ^ 1970 BROWN ^$17,955 5pd. APTS. ^Jg < inchidn salary. rOarn, board, extended!?, 2707 Hemphill Park 39,000 iwlJet, taOO. »37-1900 BuWon Drive tima off. vacattoRV k other benents-T BuHonc ? -'rl3* 44 MUSTANG. Originalowner; VBatAC' $19.956spcf. STUDIO r^^-Cpntact The Settlement Home.V^ f 442^12 PS.<>ew paint.$90000. eventngts­ ^*en»vers=fiiclW€(d^''^i 2 BEDROO. Jf't 73 OLDSH. 2 door, hartf top. Black on ,^•W black. $2500. .454-5943. VAULTED CEILING1. summer. 3 blocks to UT COTHRONS < ELEVATED BEDROOM •?$jI^MtSjfffBilLMyyaffwith.pooL « h o> •> r­ -$170 3 BR m RIVER -*hag.xarpet dishwasher, and disposal. '*9-PEUGEOT 404 statlon wiftgon. BR S3251^'ithw V MENTAL HEALTH" ^®^0lwMdbl'typiE^ AtL BILLS PAID _ _ RadWv auto, alr, t»pa. trailer Mtch. bp B:i LARGE POOL -^S"»»njr rManpw._ Fulif htfnlslwd flU,' TRAINEE POSITION Call before noon. 4ff-4w, ^ Urae pool withtuh area. CA/CK, ';,\l^ r 1ZSZ 1 for ilpm to Tame '64 DODGE DART station wagon,^ % j09RloGranttfe HILLS 4M4332 *£,,'«ccent > waits**••«.»*. buiiHnibookthefvet,uuimmuugunnvw.fx-ex-•» MOVE IN TODAYS^™Sffon5?n^,d IPsiWhy:^stort out with pensive' contemoorarv furhithingi. automatic. Economical dependable:^* oft shuttle bus reute; 444-T797.-: ^ ' — SfSA'SKUSSKaL aner.5:30pm.. _, ^wportoHon. S2J0. Sat W CanWffO^ rcrew Drive, lust oft JSRXW&g ssasKssgapsss, •»>' ' t ' ' • > tt-n* WsgiF*\ •M VW VAN-Naw angu»racent>r pan-lne.A 5 MABYL SMAUWOOO TYPING: Last ' e(led,carpet*d,pelntagM?47»W>4$.*f.:-; wm s '1BEDROOM -$137, f !NOW LEASING >• ty-lftj; , APARTMENTS .^ ,>l BEDROOM Next to Amerk«iaTheatre, waKing^*^ MOTORnLLilmesaiatman,canon^. „ EFFICIENCY;$115 OFF 1 BR -$145 UP-** tl «anc» to Norm Loop 'Shopping Center e MbSaf ^^ " Motorcvda^Of Sqlal ..... _ and Lub^s. Near^shuttle ind AusS' "-!=??• r.r^ aarrJngs. «oshime. K^ AwoSSAmerican iiTu^ .V"f vnt ; . cv AC PAlD transits-Two bedroom ftals.'an*Md ««•:' M0» North Umar. 45t-MHIAOTT carptted, «tt Viilt^ln kitchen; w^^*Sd%.'^!' TANGLewcx>D NOR\H baths. AvadaWefowntiouta wMi pafiok' *7* v-$135 h. Very clptyto camputand *huttta.&mir<^-c2 BR -$180 UP ^s;biitiHnd 1 msss?Fca/ch bus una tennts courtv Jewelry Nd, «l»;W Jmd sun aeck.Wj unfmn.-*. f turn. CAJCH, dHhwaihef;.. im KAWASAKI 500. Excsllant condK, disposat door ta door. gartiaga picMpb^ WAITRESSE&WAITERS -lunch lL AI^ TYPIHG SERVICE? TbM~5v tlon, >450or best oHer.MuStsell4I*»M2,% -MJJ* "" ^Slimor'ast^sjl »s f 4574040 •• evenings. -« ~ ^:^«sM9rw45,-vJ~ r jawy — . i " Shiftt)eb^.cor^A^v;-^,~ pool, maid service Itdesired. washaterla dlrwer. -Ap^L«.Amlgos:Maxlcan^-!*^*'0S^n"?¥*?!P'>a,,d busiaess "> ln:cort»leiuS«eewnar«ia>nti»Miircali .:>R»tfa>»iiirofeoongi^-i^^v.» i;(j:;.t^«iKW*^jt4>W»anf.«atVfca.4n­ ITOVi BMW R75. Beautlti 4SF-4M. 't-' w Ji-t INOW. TAKIN& APPUCATIOMS for-1 Nan. , ,' -. dependable luxury.? 47A-7! EFFICIENCY -t­19IJI KAWASAKI OSO MptC'BnMU i S139 COCKTAILWAITRESSorwaHar^ASty. ALL BILLSP/f -.3^5 S!f^4.TJf,.hrtnW*-, WW NUECES r%ST/(6LiSHMENT " ' "NEW*^ _ ^ ^ijistNorth of 27th at^ '^Oo4e .fo. 4400 Ave B. 1972HONDA CB400.4 CyUMar;lgggag<^ rack; crashbar. ? helmeisiWSJ-'CalflR. MH% Mfc^«nr oBr'2*«fUM£ no' 451-4584 ONE^ NMr efficlency^ cusbfn 'furn^ all with .Brge Eff. • $129.50 MBanr and apt. 4mw,4g>wi.v. j,. „-r ™. 72 TRIUMPH SPrr*IRE, i*w;tlres. Wane-Ptdal-Shuttle BEDROOMS; IMMEDIATE OPENINGS forMl.EVNi&'4 J "aariw? ­ street. ti JOERRKK m%t75 32.50SrEl Re5PONSIBLEtnktuncoupie wanted DUAt12l4Tt..... A DTC VA }^RE-S^ED^N0wf-.:^0»||^ ' to llve:ln <2: b«droom fomlshad apar9. tridge.Bastof ter. I iUAAMER?:« ^ vlCLOSE TO UNIVERSITY,.^ : me«,;S^ya^7677 Brant.. V^.BKick to! Shuttle Bus VINTAGE HALL «reasonable o»fer.47f-21>l,. 4411 Medical Pkwv LANTASTIC REDUCTION ., ; BRQWNSTONE .. , TWSwWiifeaai' -p|YE# t 35 SPORTS PROGRAM,BR^M niadscomblnatliiit^n«adlcomblnatlo»t> r-'p. II I ejS •-1 /^|PABK APARTMENTS 4 • rpm.x-v;vv -l^^^'--Watej-ii-Gas:Pald--• • L-l-O W ^%f2M3?^S^Sg -STUDENT: PART-TIME"W< ^ £§£' ....32nd, Manager Apt, IM 47*4Nol wallers / waltr*ss4k.T fasti t'i-l -OrraJxrttle bus route «KuSr WOODSIDE help. Camsh K»chen»92-IWf.: m 5f~**^S3wr*#;4®.^, 17000 Burton „.«»* PART TIME.-DeperidabK, most Jiava K ta.' ' v •s ^^ AParegon fvopert* Where your movelmatter&;: car-General hotaapanonhetper, aom*. jpiSiJL tioo piSoilfe: yard in school IM>'t«;at,.Pickets.Parrtua/^L coWssj|^W!rf«30.Summ»>,l» ^ WOOD n^r.HeigManagement Finest Qualify,}? ACOUSTICIM systemHOBraln 4-irLfPun ^padowContemporary-easonablePrlcei; UMkRNXTOPtAY GUITAIt ;Uy|lt0*7v. 444-6757 Calloftu&bcfor^ ct«f*ractpwi(ino ;p>Mivuf£ vy you set dipped. Ruionable ra LEA-THERrBENCHrmciallil THEHAIRCUT »!tt>tratfc477 'Mil L'badrao^9t (SURPUiS^ECTMNtCSffllM cable/-pool. ^5 " £2 > fownboww < sits^io:;o« ALLJBILLS - " * "wmmSmm t PAID *cm*b£Si»JMontvtewSt.from»f GINNY'Si mm lfi^S»eciAiSr5SS$s 441-7577 |^08west,34tlii SummerRatesNow hiswee(K;PNL 302'Parkin' EH/1 BR/2 BR $110 UP NFLATIO , 2 "J >1 6 bjks^west of rag -t g|4-8L0CKSTO OkMPUS j f 2406 Leon i»li ASAROCA UT dr. shil3S ALLplLLS PAID ^ r* f{ i *• mmmm livlng-VBaautlfui; vmbzbaths Efffciency tudy. Oesigned for M mafurt r*onguftar,e-s surtb£diimMSM' WW«vcarpeled. large watk-tai ttNewfornlture. watk-ths, nanL r CW^Ntri«M>»4l^-JttWtfW Qu eleoanta Poo^oniy.stepatotho^pwg: ^ HA^MADE CRAFTK CSfldtiTaiS bedroom aifd omtsarian summer *atet^Piee*a CONFIDENTIAL .CARr-for POOH V7p4Tt^74S1 Kagy My l-l unmarried :mothart.r'SMna 'Giadney :THEOR ?FOOO opanat ^SBca GabrM. 47»C05l..,\-.-;.r5~ -THE STRING SHOP ' ; Hom«»-For WILLOW wove IHTODA »?;. " -vi Tho-fitfina -managamenttw ?XRE6^ -Or^3aM14t Utq 9MttBr9.'Md • Now Leasing lilils ROOMMATES TjWUi.cttfi­ FALvvSEMESTER'-NrttWeVratoSfr anca^rra mmm (fhlt^7MfL: mmM >jSCh06t*4 t £?XPERieNCeOrT«X>Co 1st or sburtte ^1^0^ Pet$-ForSa ^ r*" ^ t • t" ^ira AKC'MINIATURC MTUREMmauztt'i 1ff#j5n««l>Jn-Chev IKWSEIMTEjWAI^ED. uit^and mm •*oj«»'doir;>iit. ^#V-3 fto^Rt^|,B«WAusHnWTttl RBW83 msmmmBmsmm jofcSqlMkf 5®5« KWB tW.®?*tel«®a»EMATE^WANTE IngoaKtl fTWO •ThruA 6feltttoiP*M« 5^1 GtRUNS i'SSSSSsa ?^^>affiHirient; bMMffut nUghborfM SUsoiumwtr Ki-ForSoli , Walkibaiv ^.tTqP,pUKPRI MS..AII and bath for tli bMtranm. BR »«• T=y SinSi' Avalla «.month-month plusMIK mtmm: UNF. HOUSES RSATH.SMG •ftari; l^erai^ARer4:0Cor SSSSS$3S «7j;c*ii Mi •;» -> *-•: "?V­ K2-TS tf *s?j­ kaWSVSt* 5fW^ rt *=.-• ..Sste?:^-&5kfy ii-sm. ROOMS 200 TestedsAfter TB Contact!}Found Center Regulates c *t,f ' J " $65*$90 nower&ri. i'l By SHARON JAYSON . vsw!3\' .. m the bnkp« is wwrf yniH * a—^|f lanlli began. After she was notified • U.T.Room In houw or cempltK vov TaM Staff Writer ?foe from wfckfcthe in­Charlotte < Parker; -private or.sbar.cbath. Allhave.' of positive resolts' in March, Free Medical Care refrigerators hiw MUMnr. ASP. "i fections are bea^acqaired," microbiology assistant die contacted Parker. Parker disease ibdl, be added, hJ.Beriy, fKiiuiLM of the professor, immediately was then retested and notified '-v Because tubercnlosis dis­ ^IJOtfice 476-1700. j-.nt •*-Approximately 209 An article appearing in the Friday edition of The Daily 300 E. 30th pS# mtaAwjop fxdty, staff, of ICcrotaqtopr. i.wMI ease, distinct from tuber­Texan incorrectly stated that anyone meeting the Office • Thursday of positive results. . gradsatestodents ax tlicna jls winch destroy the About a dozen students from cnlosis infection, may be un­of Equal Opportunity poverty levels could receive free' health uncfergradBates were Suggested by Beny and detected for months or years, medical care at the Model Neighborhood Service Crater. the Class recently received tested for presence of Wbei^ health dgpjjtiueat officialsas KTery stadent in the negative from another possible cause of the , • Dr. John V. Sessum, director of Austin-Travis County jiUAAMER RATES results their , j;v OpuMRSSUC'. •-:•• r; • StagkttKH ' cnlosis infection Monday by Health Department, said the center, at1601E. Sixth St.", r \:~' "-'Lr'-;.->•• ' ' of the taber-nurmhiuiugycoarae most be latest tests,Parker said. "The infections may be an active '_per_MSSfOQ'--- the vState; Department ..of . (he case within an individual in serves only those persons who, in addition tomeeting the "i'-D'-; :Tcxm Oorm • INS Nuccts-stadent left flie University in » Dslljr maid tcraric*. centralalr. Health" after 'and the • local guidelines of OEO's poverty standards,' also live in' -,; BellHiwafaii, hot plain snowed. Tot a facalty adeatywdftcrted actneTB arid' of May and hasn't been on cam-flie department i , manager!. Mocks from campus-477-1744. co-ed-Roomi Resident alio member and a Conner stadent cases and cnviiuumeatal coa-semester-All 31 received . The third possibility, en-the Model Cities area and hold a Brackenridge Hospital pos since, so sheTnnst have came in contact with tuber-, Clinic card. Headded that the center has noUbeen recent- a«Oa«*farFaU. ' ;.;.;• ^-rvi—. tainiBation present inthe tab. :MguiR tenuis m Dots leszs. acquired it someplace other vviromnentalcoritammation.is­cnlosis bacteria. Last Wwmy. the fonner than the lab," Berrysaid."" anlikely since accidents^ ly expanded, as stated in the article, but issolvingslow­ ' OnlfarcblS, Wt,a stalest in a microbiology Labof about stadent, who nowworics in an IVeatmentindndes medica­seldom release bacteria in the ly, dropping and adding new programs as community • 2 BLOCKS UT "We want to find OHt" 30 dropped a test tabe coo-Aastia hospitallah, was tested air, Parker said. needs dictate and funds become available;: tion for about a year, winch Furnished^ Apartment and whether someone or tainingaboatoae-laarthofan before "her training will prevent the onset of the Although do evidence sup­Abortion counseling is handled by the center's Family porting any theories have Planning Service program along with maternity and birth sr *-' FronriS86/mdnth. Camp^Briefc^CampusBriefs ^\§t4been found, Jessie Yoas'of the control counseling. .2800WWtis^^U ^ health department's regional, ... Sessum said a new program scheduled to begin this tuberculosis control office, week is a mobile van service which will provide basic 477-7558 A said procedures in the medical services to rural Travis County. The van is not Battle of Wits Scheduled Today >»» I course -directly connected with the Model Neighborhood S5S»55SSSI5^S3S3: ' > a^t, filBKi'tn tin finafj tn •••ulala m iiibb •••>' aHugila "I" '' "i " m-r;; .microbiology lab MnwGfwat. wwi•.? As a IngkBcJtt of this year's ^to thefinals to match majon areetigftie-Sign-ap is day at 311 E.31st Stv Apf.m «or« i might have to be evaluated. Program, as impled in the article. Hoond-Up, the Tesas Union wits with the. Kacalty All-in Satton HaD 117. For more diuusloa on "Ifec Rmiafim on WAUCMim:FurMM rwm AC Mt.SiatL-' nj»»g Program Connci] is spon- Stars at 8 pji^ Wedaesday., informatkn con|tact Mrimrta MSRtoGnr' line" ir);«4ini COMITTB OF OOMCCKilfB AStAM * soringthe first anraial Texas F^acnlty trhia siyastar pan-r FigiU, 472-5818 .or Nancy wm>B «n meet af, 7:30 pjn. :0B; ladttdcil. Private: room. llMfrni tampat CA/ai : Tavern TriviaEztiavagma. elists win be Drs-Barton Tf«iicrtlw know their staff are invited to Tom McCnw of flie lostey P^n. Tuesday at The World 6f. Sund^,Monday, StaiAiess. Wen 12W» Street abd The students' attorneys, Frank g go to . department. Gaest hosts Art: ; ife Tmn at # pun. NorthLanarDouleiAd, Bower, pre: Sd»y.*»r»I7a*d«*ay«-T»ecoir Ivy and Ann lUesd^Mfednesday,Thursday CLEAIkrtc^yfMsMdtedreomta Tuesday for the'first rooad of fteauag and ttapudo win j RNMMMM wW meet at 2 pjn. ayaflofale by appointment from "RMloria . itPa, INgjInHaabia Btftimil Tuesday in Communication the competition. add cokrCHmnentaryfbr this 8 a.m. to 5 pan. Monday LWfOI,.; ^ v-..-Complex BoOdtag A XW to fcear The winning team in Tues­historically trivialV •"•"J Cna H «mifag a Jim Ryan read street poetry. -. through Friday in Speech and FViday will now t I facmtir firiilde lran? HMO HfCOVBBOT |jy BwMng, Room 3. Telephone. jL day afternoon's matchwill ad- UNF. DUPLEXES Tnridif «f home ef Or.-Larry Reading and'. -Study Skills 471-7796. The students': at­ 5I| be held at Communication Crehfcr. preleiwr el r Laboratory (RASSL) will meet at torneys vrii hande landlord* noon Tuesday in Jester Center AXIL Communication .Coancil '•! i,, NORTHEAST JOB WANTED sP?n* .,emptoyai* rights, tawtioci and wfll be sored by the Readtog and StudyH Skills Laboratory tRASSU:.wU| -/ i\ -Ibodiowifc I bath xni election April 16 SOUTH Applications are ava^abie in ,^> 6V -forsummeb: presenting tll«n"T|ie meet at 3 pin. Tuesday in -Jester the eoineil office. Com-" ' ~*lpjn.Tae9dayJnite CertvA332. ­ 3 bidrmvlM SM •er.cara tar AIMr«pm.'iOSWK. unuMunON gum wfll meet ^ A A A A A »** Cathy Snyder - mamcation Bnikfiqg A 4L134 ^ A k »* 4 p.m. Tuesday tn Btotem-. Loogmog'^l^ociates • andmastbeietamedhynoon Ccwbnto BwMfljB.lg lo (Bia«" '*:/ Son Theater * fintfpCaasfcr a field trip toHouston. and to seO'ticfcefs.fcr^the.bus.' V/ANTED Wednesday.Theonly fifp a "T^ff * 521 E. 6th 477-0291 J ^HIPUE BEAM taliMt mil M tative is tUte dflttdidifte be Iwffl i PRETTY sponsor roistered in the, department a sandwicti serrdnar 'arKh 4-Ww has the mm! thing J Hart Spraper discussing "tfi. DUPLEX which he/she will lepteseul "»aetat7JipLm.ToesitoyatHaauei The all week place. 2 btdrooRi duptac fOr rMl M a qntcf ; andGoatrs. J Enjoy XXXMovies* Norlh*«st Aaifl« rtsldcntial .and that he/she be free of Taevtay in CommmricationBudding" And all drinks will be half price , UNCLASSIFIED •M9M0M«8t meet aT7|Lm;Taeft-'; ; _ ^ A Lobby. ' "-.v> *Books & Novelties *• tiaJ ^dcyirtmwwd wttt» w».- scholastic probation. For during the entire opening week. : i tra sloriog room.1 plw.eesher, .dryer more iufwiualion contact flie + 9:30AM-2:30AM J '"cBMMtffoiB. 'flCltchn -flppiiBMCS Havc.yoii iMrd Qaitf lfeMdar? ~ Grand Opening ApriL 10 nilM. SMipta> Wlte. C«R f»m . conca office, CMA4J2(, or J Sun. 12-12 J call *71-5775. • 290dta Anderson Lane, Austin, Tex^s Quo Cllin.tLCTK 21LSCER PARIC 1 Mntnv 2 Ml^ * Student Discount ; if FkiMmOB. ZV uCM. Iffr wwcdc MMKItriL * Education Councfl Must be18 to Enter '* Fender Super-KnvvsinpiMMOIL' AAAAAAAAAAAAjT Kdncation Coiaicilwin hold :*« VW bo0.Good cond.JM.47W interviews for ttew masbea to 8 pjn. Taeslay, LAKE AUSTIN, gain tamftp BytaaU Sport stoev UW. 47SO*V.'' from 7 ml«nt#s - csmpos/drantnra. Ouv Want boy QU INTO gamim-mArt: Wednesday aid Tharsday in bodroow meiirn tomm A 2 bedroom Reg tsHpvt movie pn Sotton HaD 2Ul tadiau of SWand S1& 3ZMVC SM15I. TWJEPROOI^ nrlnp roowv Jteiwy . Reel to red tape ricordtrWW the coancQ inclade: advising coonv teHMtsi room.". Ftond- yvtt Sharv coaaflry home no» futBTW for ohicatiop majors, pnim-,. porch, and nrnten.SMA.saM deposit.. ISO Murray. 47M2tt. . tog education pragramS and . MGaiaxie needs mfflrs)RflSMC ^.v.;­ S03BWEST17.TH M FURNISHED Hon*. CtfptM* : ForUteyTlmwd wdtflgMMI • raisiag • money -for scholarships. Membership 1,^ Cheapest Beer in Town current cnrricalam and a Toes. & Sun. TRAVEL chance more NEWCUSTOMER -Spaghetti Gala . to become familiar with thedean's office COUPON inaki 5 p.m. -Midnight james and its function. Spaghetti -$1.19 a plate SUAAMER IN All interested jedncatioo : Wine W & 35c a glass ; i ki -,EUROPE 1'^ Vawtvo«c»a.«o-*4SHm^ i^TrartiaMilWsMlnawtfav: • Muj| " Pitchar V; $1.00 ecanomi tore. «S Pay adwoca^i inniiieil VJS. Govt wfrniid. TWA-- Shiner Pan-Am-Trwoasla IVvMM< tollfraarVi jewdcy Ktdieis Michelob -.35, $1.95^'• BREAD BAKEOFF . !' OimHiNewCvaoam Also serving Lasagna A.fp;. ' "" Sponsored by ; 1 i> LOST & FOUND '(valid thru Apr* 6, 1975) _ . tj. Spaghetti • The Mary E. Gearing Crown Shops " Fit., Sat., Sun eveningp >. 2801 Guadalupe ^ 4724(>34 Oub VJ^PtazaBiacones* LOST CQCKERSPAHIEL.Mood. IL 108 W. 8th *. o-„; -472-0000 *t«oor^r Mwerd smcaetoct 2900 Guadalupe Thursday Camival Event iGAY ACADEMIC UNION : V-T7? Highland Mall . «OnarmhCM«pfc»i>; ^IJudgmg at.4:30 ^SOUTH CENTRAl^^^P UNF. APARTS. regional conference LARGE-LUXURIOUS > Ckw baMm.' .1AustinUnivwnitK Saturday mn ot iMifcpthMSktx *waa. LARGE ONE BEDROOM In m , J.233?G*M>P*. Aprill2, 1975 ;. M' Damn Near Free and Moon-Hill Present Kagbiiulkwi I.-OO ajtt. Nominal lao ROOM & BOARD Ot iwi>i/ih)v women's and men's .reunites, open 7-' A Saturday Night in Austin with All Day Happy Hour *W"n*k. Focultr. student* mdmUstretk* etc. BELLSON^DORM tor Men. ExcalM t»ome"Hs Sat., April 19, 8:00 p.m. Austin Municipal Auditorium &REDKEN-; : / ; All Tickets $2.50 Combs & Shears COUPON v. Available at: Raymond's Drugs ' Unisex THE HWjWAIST^AFTEK vJf.V •: Inner Sanctum^ I iissr* •'Mr BO -IMS i'BIS -1933 r-'1 Joske's -Austin I' " —^ SOMETHING 1A*E& ®$S3 __sk m i jmp: RAOIAtS NO PROGRAM ON APRIL * *r li The ofLove&Rewcdutk)ft Th» H«m of thna 'Cuban.:' *om«n.in dMbnnt period* of , Cub»n. history.< dramatlia th» 4774M33: ftoEPAIUaNG Reg. Program Resuims; 4514786^ Cuban ttiuggla for llbarathsn -and ttw partdpation of woman -r.^T In that fight. ?-~ "It has takan four yaan to Btoiiin, ;i;S daar.tha print of this aplc film for showing in this country, but tha,mpwiaoca is mora than ; worth tha wait ... Thrak • r saparata lova stories (sat in 5 & Night 1896. 1933 and tha middle •. 'U-'80s) axplora in tha most -Biii£Eet| .A human: of terms the spirit of .-.V fach era, in the developmant of the Cuban Republic ... (It) ^'stratchaelrom battleacanes of EARN CASH WEEKLY ' almost unbeatable ' energy to • -brittia forays into sophlstlcatad; ' piood Plasma^Donors-1 /: • Society, from peinfulfy personal 5.-30 to8AfPJy|^ , , studies ... to earthy and rowdy­ • \ humor ... The power snd «ar­,/^satility of the1film are a'; r'f &, Women i^revelation," Sant Freneisco Film festival." sMEARN $14 WEEKLY , J • ^International- io^d Components, Inc^ lPEN:JftON. A THURS. 8 AM to 7 ftit " "DBS. * FlU.8AMto3PM{ 1CLOSED WED. ONIGHT '^^M8.-30'¥.m. [rWw:*rt, T! 477-3735^ raci^ef^ & i: ' ii. Ir* tljiu ' iT mm* 5tSE©2'r?*-*inmHiipor •:>.;/• >.• -•• :•+•<:• :.s -...»••» •< _.J.,.w -• •:.*» i • •••• • • .»• .*•» • ®7 . Kahnis prtf ictabihtyof the MoUon PicfaireAc^de^.For ernmple, mostly dreary year were "Towering Inferno" and "God-Perrine ("Lenny") and Gena Rowlands t"A Woman Under lovely eiltertainer, and "Saddies'?is a riotous mime — butin the last two years. The Stingy and The Godfather father II," and unfortunately the chance exists that neither" the Influence'1) Perrine and Burstyn were very good, hut I not because of Kahn. I'U-gowith^ Laddhere fopherontawken were jusUy selected best pictures of their years. But thetwo will win: The academy hasn't been overly generous in han-give them little fh*n<-Rowlands to be the frott-1 waitress in "Alice-" ' *• ' "• C'MX>Se *° :The Best-Director nominees are.John^Cassavetes ("A • French Connection'^ a:ludicrous notion, considering their " MlMt^e1lM^el the original), but I'm h^i% tteti^iio^e^Sfta^rg direction was nothing spectacular , ' ;KThe Conversation;7' Paramount; Francis Ford Coppola, . Express'.'), Dustin ."Hoffman ("Lenny"),Jack Nicholson -will be recogniz^forstaie fineacting. Astaire isanother. iMost of: the other Academy Award nominees are listedFred Roos, producers. ^, |f" % "Chinatown") and AlPacino ("Godfather II"),.. sentimental favorite — now.helsa great dancer andapret­"The Godfather, Part n,"Paramount; Francis FordCop-f!. This one's:hard to predict because there i. i»5t. ^ : ? ^ it i 'rOOKM UNOttMC nut lit-"Qrlfiatown^:—'John^A. Aionzo • • v*"Am»ceortl>'tMy i ' Cal'i Play" i Muno»ry ^ 'l^combe Lucttn" — Franct^.::--';­ : '-Tl»e Delu9e'* — Poland: "tinny^ r-Bruce Surteei^^^ v^'V^---\^*EarthquaKe'f:>^v-A1eKander^Colltten..K6^:-^-^^vav!f^5}?-?wre\-,-vdle;-.. • • w -Ronald Plcrct. Mddit L^lhe Truce''r-. Aroentlna ^UnjWorth ; ^he Godfather. Part ir' ''Murder;6n/;':ft*,<*l^?Expin^ Preston Afne^» FranK McKelvy ^ Prince*', tong score by Alan Jay ~ calleSf $?>! 5 s f t v'. ' -Dean TavoulaiisrW^^ ^ f. terner FreOerWk Lotwe adaptation by-vf The Towering Inloroo" — Thtodort Sodcrfeerg.^--",] .. . .. .••*7he To*erli|9.1nlerno*fli— Fretf"Koenekamp : ^-^ngeta G^aharh; George: R-Nelson * Angela Mocleyr Dougla* Camlty >< t, .Herman Lew^ i^.>^ r v ^ ^• ^ 'Alice Ooesn't Uve Here Anymore" — Robert ^ -' ;.-•! ^island-at,«,Jh* :Top/of >thethe "World'"World" r -^ Peter.' ^ I Phaotom of the Paradise" — ^ Yow ~ Gefctiell COtltfMC: Peter song Score by Voung Frankantttm^' -^JlichaM Rorfman;:.' X ­ i i ^ A T «-Ellenshaw.-John -.fr.::AAansbrldgf waiter ^#.-3 k* p^ul Williams adaptation byPaul Wil7tom»r^ 2-^ r:^Chioalown" — Robert Towne { 'Chinatown — Anthea Sylbert "> * 'Tyler/Al Roelofsj Halil Gausman ?S-sc w George Aliceson Upton v5* cr^ ' •* The ConvertaflonT — Frandi Fort Coppola -;.^Oal*y,Miller" — John Furneu "• •• • jj^Ihe.;Towering ,lnlerno".c—^C-Wm,mcr«berWilliam Creber.t -'t«. ^, „ _ x . ^'>1% 5^ ,;>7Day. For Night". — Francois Truffaut, JeanifC: "The Gotffethtn Part" H'f -Theadora Van LouJs R)chard, Su^nne Shiffman ^ * . '' RunKfe ; "'-"Hinif »nd Tonto" -P»ur MUimiky. JoU) < ' i5'1,5--TheGr»>l Gahtry""-Th«onf V AfdrMg* *V. "Anto"1*-A-l^aifi theWon»ft«y%4i4is!SC'! w \ Greeofekt v r 'AAurder on fte Orient Expreu" ~Tony Walton -.v ^r. Jfi "the Challenge t. A Tribute to Mocfero :S<­ AV> c "The list Blow~ ^ft V^-;, ^ Blazing 5addleste from film — music by John " •. '"Hearts and Minds ^ ^ > OtKMNALHtAJyUTICSCOtf , Jy# Morriv lyrics by MM BnxHu V Th» wild and tfieBraV*?^ ' ioldsmlll. - ;:ciili»»oii«^ 'bluingGreene^ SaMin"•*, %. o-steiwi JotM •>, ,it-• :S@Sfews!-1 "" " :^*The'Chinatown"GodtatherrPart—.Jerry Goldsmith IV— Nino Rol«."c«r-if-p E."11Loew^ ™' lyrics ,nm by nhAlan» ~ Jay* . .1 .i " " •{?. 1arti quite certam twit that several selected. "Chinatown"' is bound to; •• and may even be the bigwuMteroT^nii^^WwellvTOo t > ^ ^ hkePavis tribute to Fred Astaire a^so^e Old Qscar show > ancr.hV^ow toe^o^ettS»teS •anamg J._.?®veo 06 ?e,, WP11-Uft well, yoq'jnd lt doesn t always reflect the pubhc s views But I'm ffilm clips should prove entertaining ? ^'movie ran -^can't please everybody. ooe who erits everv vear f °{Lth'nes ^tte —xt ^°w the above as your 'scorecard Note th^ lirstvfew" Vv 5V W&. . 1 bet.I'm not the only-one wh6 grits his teeth every year ,-THIS YEAR'S HOSTS are Bob Heme, Sammy Davis Jr, awards presented(EdiUng.Sound,etc.),fortheyoftenes^'S;^'Theawards be telecast live at 9 p.m. Tanday oo^ .vabout r 3i£f ^ -» iik fcteaVJi ' r*}y*r i GwwHcKkman u TheComersotkm^ ^.TlS ^ •• ^ v** M jfes ?r~¥Xi nsss?& ^ • " V-~ .,'• ; J "J, frS ^-5J mwm v s ^ 54^ 'mmm JtA&&V f <•«.> ^.••;,>7fa"Oodfattieril iSSu w^i/ctSSmt iv.-ii-f.- PoUhw:?? *rM&>.£r&0pOlM .-.Nlchellan'.; ™v Ponaway ^ Astarrr Mwi T ^ 'Amafeord' IlSStt Sf jtpw mi •EH Mniili Ml ^ I i M I J*-1-t " * '" w j*h'V> /> * ^ ajz w, -f < > x^-r t* ^.,yV:v-.vyr'-N.->".7-'­ fnriTniii ifriiti iiiii iin'Mwi inn