TEXAN Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Bl. 74. No; 183 Ten Cenis Austin, Texas, Tuesday, April 15, 1975 ­ Sixteen Pages 471-4591 Fire Nears Saigon Former U.S. Base Outside Capital Blasted [SAIGON (UPI)—ConHiNMst artillery forces m just oyw 2t hours In a broadcast monitored in Saigon, helicopters resupplying South Viet­" tteato Sapn tka ever Sooth Vietnamese forces Monday took Phnom Penh radio said Monday night namese units with food, ammunition and anitff ^ht, InBibiiting at more' territory "around Xuan Loc, 38 Communist-led insurgents pierced the medicine. • American air base where earlier nalesnortheast of Saigonin thesixth day city's northern defenses and battled to Helicopter crewmen also tossed loaves [ the d*y saboteurs ble-w^iSaath Viet-of a batOe which may decide the fate of within "several hundred"'yards of the of bread and cases of instant noodles to s biggest anxMntiaa depot the capital Itself. French embassy in the heart of Phnom homeless civilians left behind with only ; attack itt Ohgn artillery. the FIELD OFFICERS SAID South Viet­Penh. Bat early Tuesday theradio began the clothes on their backs. Thousands of aadmost aeonate gas in the namese forces had. enlarged their broadcasting atits usual time with ho in­the refugees, were Roman Catholics wfio Vietnamese anny, t^me hons defense perimeteraround Xuan Loc. But dication of a major change in the situa-had fled from northernmost Quang Tri |ter saboteurs crept iaside tter North Vietnamese forces still had the' i-tion. The radio asked the people to re­province, now under Communist control. Ken Boa antase H devastated city sanxxmded and were main calm and assured residents of the Nine miles to the west, a force of s northeast of Saigon and toncfced off still hitting the .defenders with mortar refugee-swollen city there would be con­North Vietnamese soldiers cut vital ; that shook the capital itself, and artflleiyfire. tinual supplies of rice.arid foocj^The Highway 1 near Trang Bom and con­ ssaa) the SHtoond ar^ XnanLoc is important as a key point radio gave-no report on -overnight structed deep bunkers around the area. ? attack caasedfigfai damage to one on one invasion note to the nation's military activity. MILITARY SOURCES SAID a govern-, at the Up wtase; iKck capital and itsdefense a morale boost to . South Vietnam's President Nguyen ment transport plane dropped a single the heaih|uarim for the Soath a nation hungry for a victory. Tbe Viet Van Thieu, seeking to calm his frighten­10,000-pound bomb on a suspected Com­ ; military cwiimiI Gang and tbe North Vietnamese already ed and panicky country, presenteda new munist troop position northeast of Xuan :the Gist time m the war that the control 19 of South Vietnam's 44 30-man "war cabinet" in ceremonies Loc Sunday. They also said five North lltaua gas kai ten piuvinuesand two-thirdsof its land area.. Monday and vowed hp would never sur­Vietnamese tanks and 14 trucks were oyed la the proviaces around The straggleforXuan Loc is also vital render. He called for negotiations with destroyed by air strikes. . to tbe defenseofBienHoa itself. Should the Communists on the ba£is of the 1973 South Vietnamese air force F5jets and : SOVIET-MADE field pieces are Xnan Loc fait, Ken Hoacould be next on Paris Agreements. 105mm artillery batteries pounded the I axvate to witkia Ore yards , tbe Commonist target list in any GOVERNMENT COMMANDERS at village of Hung Loc, five miles south of inwgeof 17 miles and are preparations for an assault on Saigon. Xuan Loc told UPI correspondent Xuan Loc whereat least 208 North Viet­ ! most feared weapons la the North In neighboring Cambodia, Khmer Charles R. Smith the North Vietnamese namese troops had built deep bunkers Roqge idds smashed through Phnom had pulled back rather than make an all-and installed antiaircraft guns. .PenhVdefenses Mondayand all but seal­out'attack against theelite paratroop un­The Communists also were sending »or orcnO damage at the Ken ed the city's fate as tbe first capital to its defending the city. mortar fire from the Hung Loc area into i bomb depot, rtkh is the largest air fall to tbe Communists in the ] But the province capital wascut off by a government camp atop a nearby Saath Viet-land and could be reached only by hillside. Refugees said the North Viet * GOVERNMENT DEFENSES helicopters. Communist gunfire • shot namese seemed to be holding out in good ; — fonr major deteriorated rapidly in the Indochina down one A37 jet bomber and . en­shape despite government air and ar­•Texan Staff Photo fay I: Saigon eaify Tuesday — *-war. New Year's Day, and Phnom dangered scores of government tillery strikes. . House committee hears ERA testimony. 1 losses were high Penh's fall — andwith it thefall oif Cam­ : was the seoond m*jor ammmatiim bodia itself — appeared imminent,, for the Soath Vietnamese armed perhaps only hours away. Resolution Sent "• put To Subcommittee for More Study • d.. nitrm imh!n\tiinvc .!• * ^ • By DAVID HENDRICKS ratification of the ERA. Rep. Chris Miller, D-Fort Worth, disputed several of torn ;> and Hilliard said the states would be forced "to yield to Bates' arguments including the effect the ERA would SYLVIA TEAGUE .PHNOMPg^ntmhniii (AP) airiifted^retal liberal courts", if the ERA was ratified. have on rape laws (she said it,would have none)and sup­ ^famaaacfts intotbeairfield to join 1,­ Texan Staff Writers THE FIRST WITNESS in favor of the resolution was port laws. She said the Texas ERA has had no effect on OW defeoder; trying to hold a line A resolution to rescind Texas' ratification of the Larry Bates, leader of the successful move to rescind child support, but the burden of support was givento the Equal Rif^its Amendment'was referred to a House sub­the ERA in the Tennessee House of Representatives. parent best able to bear it. committee after many hours of testimony Monday --He said Tennessee originally rushed to ratify the She also disputed his claim that the ERA would not qMrter cogflwt was rgiorted. There before the Constitutional Revision Committee. amendment because "being against the amendment (at require a woman to take her husband's namewhen they • The referral to a subcommitteefor further study was' that time) was almost like being against motherhood married and said there is only one state in the union recommended to the House panel by both the leader of and apple pie." '''' . which requires a woman to do this. fer&bf.CommunistJed Khmer the anti-ERA forces, Fort Worth Rep.;Bill'HilHard,.and • Bates said the vast majority of women didn't support .The next witness to testify wasLino Giaglia^theRex. . the leader of the pro-ERA forces, Austin Rep. Sarah the.ERA, a fact later disputed by Henrietta Rep. Tom G. Baker and Edna Heflin Baker professor at the Weddmgtoni ' Cartlidge, who reported that the latest GaHup poll in­University School of Law and a constitutional law ex­ii""y«gy •<: JflteTMgWilW newatntctKyvtWJ«K, BILLIARD 'and Weddihgton coordinated the dicated that 58 percent cf women in the United States pert". ^ N o w ^ m testimony for both sides. The testimony began at 1p.m. were in favor of the ERA. He said tbe question of whether rescission would be and continued without a break until nearly 8 p.m. After Bates called the women who support the ERA "ex­ allowed was left up to Congress by the Supreme Court r jTrt? 777 JST? , Dgtfa forces already have began an hour recess, the committee resumed testimony tremists whose scheme of life is different and who and for Congress not to honor rescission wouldn't make entering1faD«nFenhaixiihatas««-which was expected to last until midnight or later. believe family and home life are passe." sense. More than 1,000 people from acrossthe stateattended "THEY FEEL a woman should get away from the GRAGLIA SAID the apparent simplicity of the ERA * jr%i. the hearing, either to listen or give testimony. The children and fulfill herself in the workaday world, but was deceptive, and it "tends to treat as a simple ques­ edges of crowds in the Housegallery were rotated periodically to tion what is in reality many very difficult questions." Timing said Sihanock's retuni to (Related Story, Pholoi, Page 9.) give everyone a chance tohear. Many supporters of the' He described passage of the ERA by Congress as an ofterrified ^PtoamPrth torn exaein Pekingis , move to rescind the ERA wore pinkdresses and red and they can do this now under the present Constitution," he "act of legislative abdication," and said under absolute anted"indaysiadperhaps w white buttons which said "Stop ERA." Women against said. interpretation of the amendment, it would allow no sex iwns.? the move to rescind wore "ERA-yes" buttons and red, "They want to put children in vast day care centers discrimination and lead to results such as the elimina­ white and blue ribbons. similar to those in China, Russia and Cuba." These tion of all-women or all-male schools. ,The chairman of the House Constitutional Revision women "don't need men and are qjiick to bQast about Weddington said the principle that Texas and the Committee, Dallas Rep. Ray Hutchison, was continual^' it." Bates continued. "; voters of Texas endorsed was that people should not be Denies •iy forced to rap'the gavel to stop applause, which is Bates said the ERA would endanger every state law the basis of sex. discriminated against simply on ' against House rules* prohibiting prostitution and said the U.S. Constitution SHE ALSO announced she had received lettersof sup­ IN HIS OPENING-remarks, Hilliard described the already protects women. port from First Lady Betty Ford, U.S. Sen. Lloyd federal ERA as "unnecessary, undesirable and uncer-Hitting the "libbers" again, he said they had disdain Bentsen, D-Tex., and Rep. Barbara Jordan. D-Tex. tain." He said it was unnecessary because there were for women trying to rear a family and he called it Hermine Tobolowsky cited the long history of the "at least eight" different laws, executive orders, etc., "patently absurd" that the ideal situation'is for women amendment and said Dolly Madison and Abigail Adams IASHINGTON (UPI) -JoteaCtaB-him again ,in~Angust, 1972, when the which prevent discrimination against women. both to work and to raise children. had asked their husbands to include an equal rights remphatically denied at bisbribeiy It is undesireable because it would "takefrom women I Monday tbat he accepted «MU)W to organization of Democrats supporting former governor was. • setting up an • He also said, referring to protective laws for women, provision for women in the U.S. Constitution. more than it can give" and its uncertainty stims from that "women are on a pedestal — they like it and so do Robert B. Schoen, a professor of law at Texas Tech tmilk protects win a price softnrt President Richard M.;Nixon's re­the fact that itwould be left to the SupremeCourt for in-their men." University, said legalization of homosexual marriages : in 1971 while he was T^easory election. , . ;terpretation, he contended. ASKING THE QUESTION on many minds, can the was contrary to the legislative intent of the amendment "He brought up .the subject of con-'Hilliard also raised the issue of states'rights,and Legislature really'rescind, he replied, "What the and the ERA prescribes no new rights for any in­ did not," Goonally replied to tribntion from thejdairy industry, and ^ questioned how much federal control would result from Legislature glveth, it can also taketh." dividual. ated qoestions from defense at-specifically AMPI (Associated Milk' ^ Edward Benuett Williams, who Producers Inc.)," Connaliy said. "Isaid I him on the stand alter prpsruting an I wasnot interested, that AMPI had been Tof character witnesses indoding the subject of a great number of stories, 'Disastrous7 ' Bird Joinsoo and evaigelist KQy that they've had some bad public: •relations." v; 'he at any time. Wflliams asked . He said be and Jacobsen discussed °' %V*ces Projected by Regents Chairman teqoest money fram duef -.nulk (Htidocer contributions for two' or t" By JOY HOWELL ed the elimination and reduction of ser­vices Center, Telephone Counseling and mittee intended to make the University ,wiUess Jake iacobsen, a threedays, andfihaUy it was agreed that Texan Staff Writer vices and programs which he said would Referral Service, exchange programs more.responsible in its expenditures. b«s«r for mift producers who Democrats for Nixonwoald accept con-^University Regents Chairman Allan be automatic if the Higher Education and the Measurement and Evaluation lConoally solicited, acceptedand ; two milk "I'm not saying A&M and the Univer­ tribntions -from other Shivers stated Monday that a proposed recommendations ap­ Committee are .Center would be eliminated inaddition to sity haven't been responsible to tbe I cover op a bribe. cooperatives, bat not AMPI. budget cut by the House Higher Educa­ proved. Student services, research the Division of General and Comparative .Legislature, but there have been some, DID NOT," the formw Texas Oonnally went co to testify that he and tion Committee "would have disastrous prograrns, scholarships and personnel Studies, he said. questions in the pastasto bowthey spent " replied. "No such conversation ' Jacobsen met onOct 26.1973, but he said effects upon some of our general were hit hardest by the suggested The University outlined the-probable their $28 million i the current amount in • tooh pbKe ...Inever asked him for f that meeting was not for the purpose of academic institutions." ; v rearrangement of the University budget. dismissal .of more than 600"! fulltime the Available Fund)." he added. , ! at aqy time. coocpcting a cover-up story to conceal Speaking before thie House Ap­, Funding for student services such as members of the'faculty and staff and . Athens Rep. Head. Higher Comtally accept $5,006 from the pay«rff, as Jacofasiai testified. propriations Committee. Shivers detail­the Counseling"and. Psychological Ser-Fred more than 850 student employes. Education Committee chairman, i in May, 1971, and an additional L000 the following September? Shivers claimed the 10 percent across-'"emphasized the efforts of his committee the-board decrease in the categories of to cut out unnecessary expenditures. 1 did not," Coooally replied. general administration, organized "I think this university and A&M are ["Did he give yoa any money at any ae wbile yon were Treasury Taxes... . research and-special items would great universities. We are not trying to uy?" necessitate the action. In addition, the impair anyone's education — we're just ["No sir. he did not." Wdrfher The 20 million or so committee recommended the University-trying to cut the fat out of this budget," Americans who have usf $19 million put of the Available , he said. 4ALLY DID TESIlFr that F&ir skiesfaricjf wiarm Fund to pay for utilities! After bond With a sharp turn of his head. Shivers approached him on June S. yet tofile their income obligations are fulfilled, $11 million responded. took l.and told lum the duryindostryhad temperatures are ex­ "You enough of this tax forms must face could be expended out of the fund. In the money"to close the doors." 1,000 available for him to use for any pected Tuesday with (Relolad Story, Photo Page 3.) Austin Ntep. Gonzalo Barrientos, blitical candidate or campaign he the music-Tuesday, past, the Legislature has appropriated attempted! to get a commitment from winds from 5 to 12 ated. but tax rebates mean money for utilities payment to be used in Shivers to support Higher Education |"1 told him L«Sd nqt think I could do mph. There will be in­good news ,this year addition to Available^und monies. Committee recommendations for at at aa in good consaence/' Oonnally creasing cloudiness Odessa Rep. Fred Hoestenbach, chair­minority funds, including an officefor for those who still owe "I did not thiak 1^should particulate man, of the higher education subcom­minority affairs. Shivers evaded the .Tuesday night becom­ in fond raisfaig as a Democrat in a money. mittee on appropriations, testified point. administration, which is ing partly, cloudy ; favor of the recommendations because Jack Williams, president of Texas Tuesday midnight is >tdelicate,and ldid ootwant to he said they are an effort to trim some A&M(, outlined' similar effects of the Wednesdays The high-, the deadline. The t raiting money for Demooats while in; fat from the budget and "give the budget curtailment . |Reptddican admini$tration.' vJuesday will bp in the? Internal\Revenue Ser-^ Legislature some control over how the f . , "The impact1will be to cut $11 million •, '.'I thanked him very raoch, and lhat s ~ m1d-80s Iwith a" loW^M^ Available Fund is spent." -from our budget. All construction wi|l vice says any return I the_ conversation." « 1 The $19 million, allocated under come toa halt, arid therew^ll beasevere -Tuesday night-in theSfJf^3e;< carrying an April 15 capital improvements, spurred Shivers' curtailment in the quality of education iFOIXOWING WILLlAMS' detailed mid-50s. Wednesday's v'Vf;! dem&l that the money is used only for -we offer. Essentially we will have to E of Oonnalty.the trial—now. postmark will be con­ ; land acquisition^ He eftumer^ted other transfer moneV from academics to pay­ i its thirjl week — was recessed ontil.-s ^.high will be~ in'the sidered on tityie. (Story,' miorning. , ^ 4 v -I'* i uses such asresearch; repairs, a teacher' ment of utilities." he said. • a:mid-80s. ^ . r ^ Page*. 16.)/^ . enrichment fund and debt service. • The committee wilt vote on-the' |Ounfy said Aeobsoi came totalk fo( *v ; i ,Hoestenbach_ added, that the com-recommendations at 2 p.m. Tuesday. .. V *•< j. v: .i •* .fwesspg f-* "% SK~­ wm&iwmm '% "livU i a^Y-1 _ Ht. •$ 1 <1 Teaching Awards Honor Four m Trimble, Vick, Vrooman, Bentley, and Shivers (i-r) at award ceremony.. Suit Parr Still Judge • -SA38-DIEGO 3,19.MAY7,10.31 FIAZA BALCONES CAU J AUSTIN, TEXAS 78731 ntAva. HARWOOD TOURS 47S-9343 >2428Gvodafupe 452-0532 EXPERTS r ~ %' ' U""" nare andsports tournaments. ' , S Inside this building, the • 6.^: Opportunities for tt^vel'atreduced^! rates—skiing trips, for example. -.Jfc YoungAmericansClubhasasuper 7-$10,000 Accidental I^th'IraurahteV'' _ 8. Free traveler's checks^«•deal for you. ^ • .9. The YAC Newsletter.-f'l^;'^> *1. fcmenainmentdiscounts•*-which : aii ... i ,i , Tbc~deaT"ismembeaslupin c^n moredtansave youthe member­.AmokmBismk'sYjtaigAmericans >"CU>(YAG).It'sforpeopieinAqstii atpart*ci|Mting mep^a,"1 -18-35andooKsjasttWdoOisa ^nonduIiar^iaryoaeEC: > '' jr. i-No-servi«-chai^checkingand -4. Preferredinterest ratesonlearntyou^ear JfteerWU 1 •-S 1:1, -W»h ^events, lik?parSes,'semi-^GetA MoveOru-Witk Us^ GSSSSSSS:: uesday,,ApriJ 15, 1975 THE JOAH^Y.TEXAN: :Shivers Lauds Bentley, Trimble, Vick,, Vrooman ; Four University ' faculty -The quartet chosen to said. "Both 'myself 'and the feel free to teach me, also." ;' members, selected from a receive the first of the annual Board of Regents feel this Bentley said 'his Reaching awards includes: Bernard. type of honor is needed on a approach5 "tries to simplify academic peers, were Bentley, teaching assistant in .much broader scale."; V;; what the book complicates* „honored with Student Govern­Spanish and Portuguese; John Shivers termed the awards "Everything in Spanish fits ment Teaching Excellence Trimble, assistant professor presentation "most in a logical pattern, and this is • field of more than 100 of their Awards at a Monday night of English; James Vick, worthwhile and, I feel, a how I try to teach my . ceremony in the LBJ Library. associate professor of momentous occasion." ' students." he added. t mathematics; and John : Former Student Govern­ Vrooman said the American Vnwman, assistant.instructor ment \Uce-President Bill educational System makes in economics. -v Parrish said the honorees Motorists students submissiveInstead of Regent Chairman Allan "made a concerted effort probing ahd called the awards Shivers, who presented the towards quality.teaching"and an effort to turn the academic four walnut plaques, called termed teaching excellence Benefit emphasis from research to ; the recognition "something "one of the to£ concerns of classroom teaching. that has been needed for a students." In Texas long time." Trimble said his job, as he Vick would like to see per­ "These awards are a saw it,-"is not just to pass sonal -contact, re-established %Motorists using autos solely to along my own knowledge and with students, despite the hln-'? for pleasure and not for.; delightful approach the " recognition of outstanding . enthusiasm, but to create a drance large classes often •transportation to and from faculty by students," Shivers climate in which students will • pose. work are eligible for-lower cdllision insurance rates in Bi(l Introduced Texas, Tom JaCksQn, automobile technician at the Texas Board of Insurance, said Monday. . • Although Texas does not offer lower-insurance, rates By JOAN HEGARTY don't have a dime,.he said. "We have taken pictures of for persons riding in cair pools ' GIVENS . The legislator described a before arid after,v' and as some states do, some local . Texan Staff Writer ^ few of his many supporters: a sanitary conditions improve companies are lenient in , While Texas women fight woman who crawled under a in pay toilet areas, the lockoffering lower rates, a'North • for equal employment oppor­pay toilet in an evening dress, salesman explained;Austin insurance agent said. tunities, Houston .Rep. Johnt a mother whbse daughter had "If you're going to ask the "If a motorist uses his car Whitmire is advocating one kidney and a friend who, public to come spend their only a few days a month to liberation from payjtbilets.., taken ill, had to spend "a con­money in your business faclli-' travel to and from .work r The sponsor of a bill that siderable amount of money ty, you should provide them because he is in a carpool, then.­ "Would prohibit pay toilets in : getting home." .v . with restrooms," Whitmire 1offer him thelowest passenger; any. public , area; -Whitmire John Marvell, represaiting skid, adding that they shouldinsurance rate," he said. ' " i. "'told the House Business and a regfonal lock firm that in­ be clean. For many students who use . industry: Committee Monday stalls and maintains hinges their cars for pleasure and do that mtos ^ a ..long ig. j-Fred Williams, from the «uid locks on toilet doors, said not drive them to work or Houston mayor's office, said • noted' problem and should not , many businesses try to keep school, the lowest passenger his city would go along with :be taken in a light vein.' out the "wino-type who wants insurance rate doesnot apply. the bill if it passes, but that it ' " THE PROBLEM is not a .tocome in the restroom,mess Jackson said the lowest "is in direct conflict with the ' passenger rate is only matter of economics or con­it up and tie up one stall all usual pay-as-you-go available to motorists over25, venience, but oneof necessity. day." philosophy." and then only if no operators When the moment of truth . Pay toilets also keep out under 25 are covered by their comes, it doesn't: matter if teenagers who would "hang INFLATION hasn't hit the policies. you have a 1100 bill if you around and smoke/" Marvell pay toilet business. "It's still told the committee. a pretty good: buy," Marvell HOMOSEXUALS and drug said. addicts have money to get in X The committee pointed out : N the toilets, but children don't, that it had refrained from L„ -.. \%0I -Wbitmire said, opposing the referring to the legislation as . fj •"screening" rationale for • "John's john bill" and sent it to ' LOOKING >: payment. a subcommittee. , FOR 1 TO PLACE A TEXAN f.. SOMETHING?! CLASSIFIED AD . CALL 471-5244 • If what you're looking for is a'challenge; and a chance to do something meaningful ; in human terms, consider the Peace Corps 7; Concerned about I \ • x-and VISTA. ^ 4 <•> -L. ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE? ; The' Peace Corps has 2-year overseas Then join the assignments in Africa,Asia> Latin America GENERAL AND COMPARATIVE COUNCIL and the Pacific. VISTA has; volunteer if you're in: assignments in cities and rural com­ -* munities across the U.S. The programsare -J if t" Plan II v Black Studies in engineering, health; education, Amer. Studies Asian Studies * business, math, science and many other Mid. East Studiesy lnternat;i Studies fields* See the, Peace Corps and VISTA Lat. Amir.Studies : "Archaeology: . ;^ , recruiters on campusat the West Mall and Social Welfare European StudiesBEB, Monday-Friday; April 14,15.16,17, Mex. Amer.Studies Ethnic StudiesT<... ­ and 18. ^ > 0 ^ 3* 1 f* 1 » ' 'JtJ/1 v'», v Come by GEOGRAPHY 116 Zs* f J rri. , Mon.. Apr.14-Tue., Apr. 15,2-5 p.m. HOW THREE MONTHS ? CAN PASS LIKE A-SINGLEDAY You're a girl, who leaves school and Austin for your, home base for the summer.. You just know you're gonna get back to Austin early in the summer to hunt for that new apartment. But ... it never quite happens. You blink your eyes and it's 4August. Then the rush and crunch of the last-minute lookers is on So try our solution to your situation. Take a few minutes nowf this Spring, to Come visit Tri-Towers. We're close, we're^ convenient we'rep^comfortable,^WeEoffer a^/ariety of apartments to suit a variety of co-eds ~ most with no restrictions on visitor hours. ThWh ybui can pick your Fall living.style now and use this1 summ^r. as it was mended -for relaxation," 1 . ,, , v R if " f. l,h tft J '•i'" : View f\-yr v f news conference while there. • , < . He said the proposed appropriation of Hie following on-gbing functions, ac­• University Research Institute. Jj-long; sniper attacks by Phalangist fighting. Finance Minister Khaled. tivities and programs would be totally • Annual renovation of facilities in­ ' nen oil the refugee camp; Palesti-Jumblat said he was quitting because eliminated if the budget passes accor­cluding undergraduate teaching: |h spokesmen said the snipers wound-"no strictaction has been taken"to curb ding to Shivers: laboratories. . |27 persons. the violence. Economy Minister Abbas • Counseling and Psychological Ser­. In addition. Shivers said many,: Common Market attered explosions and bursts of* Khalf quit in solidarity with Jumblat. vices Center, Telephone Counseling and programs and activities would face ma­|tomatic weapons fire could also be THE ROCKET attack,was thefirst big Referral Service, Reading and Study jor reductions as a result of the com­ard in several sections of the capital flareup in the city since mornings when Skills Laboratory (RASSL) and Career mittee's recommendations, including: ' into the night. government security forces moved in Choice and Information Center. • Cuts in the vice-president forstudent Allots Viet Aid Police sources expressed fear that the with armored cars.on the Phalangists' • international Office. affairs office, the student financial aids ket attack — If it came from the ' : suburb stronghold of Ein Rummaneh, • Student and faculty exchange office, the admissions office, the LUXEMBOURG (UPI)' -The nine nations are already sending individually np — would mark a major escalation i the main trouble spotwhere the fighting programs. registrar's office, the dean of students European Common Market.nations Moo-to Indochina. -' thefighting between the Phalangists began Sunday. ; , „ • Visiting lecturers. office, the equal employment opportuni­ day voted to send nearly $5 million In • Skirted the recognition issue by leav-' • Measurement and' Evaluation ty office, the personnel office and theanergency aid to South Vietnam but ing it up toeach nation, but indicated the Center; data processing and accounting office. ' turned down a U.S. govehunent request nine will not rush to recognize the.Viet • Art Teaching Gallery and University • Library operations would be reduc­that-they ask Hanoi for a cease-fire in Cong. ' Art Collections. -' ) : • Vietnam. ?. ed v " • Clinical Legal Education. -• Physical plant employment wquld be Israelis CelebrateDespite ArabThreat • Common Market spokesmen sara v • Urged both sides to respect the • Division of General and Com­reduced. — : peace accords, which appeared ..to put TEL AVIV (UPI) — Israel Monday put its forceson alertagainst possi-' foreign ministers of the nine rejected parative Studies, including Comparative • Police department-employment equal .blame for violations on both. ble Arab) guerrilla attacks during the nation'smemorialand independence this approach, because it implied a one­Studiies, Plan II program, American would be reduced. sided condemnation of the Communists, The U.S.. note had been kept secret un­Ethnic European many special day holidays. Studies, Studies, • Budgets of centers in favor of a call on both sides in the. til Monday, when news of it leaked out. Studies, Center for Asian Studies, would be cut. Israeli officials unveiled the country's first domestically produced , fighting to respect the 1973'Paris peace The spokesmen said it was delivered in Language and Area Center for Latin • Organized research would be f cur­ warplane, asupersonicfighter-bomber,as the nation prepared tptionor accords. , V : Dublin by the American ambassador American Studies, Center for Middle tailed. its war dead. John Moore. Eastern Studies and Health Professions The total impact of "all these changes l%e spokesmen raid 'ffie Ford ad- The reply by the nine, and the official A one-minute wail of sirens contrywide at8 p.m. signaled the beginning ministiation sent a surprise and secret Advising. on personnel would be .the dismissal of secrecy which surrounded it, softened • University of TeXas Press. 651 fulltime members of the faculty and|.of memorial services for more than 10,000 Israeli war dead since 1948. oral note to the foreign ministers Satur­any implied rebuff to the Administra­ • 69 graduate fellowships and, staff, the dismissal of' 855 student IFlags dipped to half-staff, cafesand movie theatersshut downand solemn' day as they met in informal session in tion. But it re-emphasized ihe difference scholarships. employes and the elimination of 350 -r Dublin. They said the note called for |assemblies and prayers were^held throughout the nation. : in approach to Vietnam by the United • 241 presently awarded minority, presently awarded student fellowshipsCommon Market emergency aid for States and its allies, who. have kept a scholarships. • and scholarships. South Vietnam, no recognition of the pained distance from Washington on the 'risoners Bombed in WWII Experiment ^ " Viet Cong and a plea that the nine use issue throughout the war. SYDNEY-(UPI) •>-A retired Australian Air Force captainsaid Monday their influence to ask North Vietnam to end its military operations. THE AID consists of rice, milk he and other Australian and American pilots bombed a Pacific island in powder, sugar and medicines and will go HUSH FOREIGN MINISTER Garret ^944 and killed an undisclosed number of American convicts who both to areas controlled by the SaigonFitzgerald; chairman of the meeting, jtolunteered for a World War II poison gas experiment. /: goyeniment and to areas'•under Viet- refused to . confirm publicly that the John Hampshire told UPI in a telephone interview there were no sur-. Cong control. Predicted for Summer American note' was. sent or a Common ; The aid will go to Vietnam in the name ivore.after a barrier reef island off the Australian coast was "carpfet Market reply framed. But the of the Common Market asa whole. In ad-By The Associated Press Estimates of the situation range from ' •ombed" with 360 gas canisters. • . .. j. spokesmen said the ministers, meeting . dition, many of the nine nations are sen-. Finding a summer job will be tougher "not particularly good" to "real grim." formally Monday, prepared an oral reply •I was .told later that prisoners serving life sentences in United States , 'dlng individual aid — sometimes more than ever this year for the millions of There are opportunities available, butwhich: • ­ Ji's had been brought to the island as volunteers in the poison gas test," than the joint contribution agreed here. high school and college students seeking many of the jobs have strings attached: e said. ';-;'-: • Committed the Common Market to . ' The aidwill be distributed by the Inter­extra money from vacation employment. would-be employes need particular . send $1.37 million in food and medicalaid national Red Cross and UNICEF, ttie Government and private analysts skills; they must be willing to start work enators Hint at Saigon Aid Agreement to South.!Vietnam immediately and spokesman said and had no political predict more than five million" persons early; they should be ready to accept another $3.58 million in help as soon as strings — only the instruction by the between the ages, of 14 and 21 will be low-paying positions performing manual WASHINGTON (UPI) -*• President Pord apparently won agreement ' possible. The total is only a fraction of ministers that it be "neutral, rapid and looking for work this summer. No one labor. rom key senators Monday for speedy consideration of his emergency re-the aid which the Common Market humanitarian." knows how many jobs will be available. THE ALWAYS-TIGHT summer jobluests for military aid to South Vietnam and contingency powers to help market has been further constricted this ! n any evacuation. Senate Action m year by the problems of the economy. High unemployment means adult { Sen. Clifford Case, ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations workers will be competing with Committee which met with Mr. Ford for 90 minutes at the White House, youngsters for many jobs; so will retired old reporters the panel was working to give President Ford "a degree of Intoxication people who need extra income. At the liscretion'Vin providing limited military aid to Saigon^ same time, inflation has boosted the cost s A bill to decriminalize public intoxication passed second community homes; adversely affected their programs. of education, meaning more students f . reading of the Senate by a 20-6 vote Monday. Similar legislation "A groUp home is a group of eight mentally retarded children hieves Grab Valuable Rembrandt '' ^'1 c -has been passed by 24 other states. will be trying to add to college funds. ' without adequate supervision;'Furtherniore, there isno way the BOSTON (AP) — Two men, one of '['a Provisions of the measure chatige a peace officer's job from' And recession has caused industry to cut state tan supervise 100or 200community installations,'" he add­ ffi&pne.of making a routine arrest to one of "taking an intoxicated back and get along with fewer employes. them carrying a pistol, stole a Rem­ed. ; '>'• '' . '"KV :­ person into protective custody to a public treatment facility or The New York City office of the State Leonard claimed the state is tryingto take mentally ill children brandt painting valued at |500,000 such person's home before jail as a last resort." away Jrom parents after the children turn 18. Employment Service found camp jobs from the Boston Museum of Fine for 150 to 200 youngsters last year. Asked The bill provides emergency protective treatment for: Arts during the noon, hour lull Mon­. * alcoholics and charges the six-man Texas Alcoholism Commis-' how many the agency would be able to day-, sion with creating regional programs for alcoholism treatment.' leQislotlve roundup place this year, a spokesman said: "I'd ! hate to guess." Laws applying to driving while intoxicated or to sale and' A museum guard wHo tried to stop THE SPOKESMAN said many camps possession of alcoholic beverages are not affected by'the* Asst. Atty/Gen. Tom Choate spoke in favor of the bill, saying the pair was pistol-whipped, and the legislation. : have gone out of business because of the •Tt protects the rights of the parents.robbers fired three shots as theyleft * "The basis for the bill is to help treat alcoholics. Many have"-recession, al though he was unableto give "Under statutory law a person has full legal rights at the age the building and fled in a waiting -symptoms of diabetes that go pntreated," an aide in Sen Bob : specifics. of-18, unless found mentally incompetent by a court of law," car. -Gammage's office said. Ganimage authored the bill. Choate said. > : : The Colorado State Employment'Ser­ '' vice said the competition for resort and Vperiod. Implementation in 1976 would only require about"fe.5 * No one wasreported injured by the If passed, ihe bill will be budgeted for a 12-year phase-in He added that parents under present law do not have legal park jobs has been increasing for the lastcontrol when the person is 18 unless the parent obtains a guar­ gunshots. The guard, George . million but by 1980 the program would require $17 million per dianship through the courts. two years and 1975 is even worse. >—OM T#«#pHo»o Monkouski, 66, was listed insatisfac-year, according to a Legislature Budget" Board projection. Recruiters who usually contact the of­ Stolen Rembrandt \ <*p tory condition at a Boston hospital After the first year, the state would carry most of the finan-fice in February or March have not call­ . Senate Affairs \ cial load. A small percentages would-come from local" and ' ed. Resort operators don't know whether federal funds. . <'•••'<"> r The Senate,State Affairs Committee Monday sent to the floor the tourists will come this year. Dow: Jones Average Leaps Over 800 a bill that woujd save Texas employers an estimated $400 "It's real grim," a spokesman said. ­NEW YORK (AP) -The stock million per, ye^r on unemployment contributions. Many placement officers are advising Humqn Resources marketrbrimming with hopes for an •mtNISMEIME SB 396, authored by Corpus Christi Sen. Michael McKinnon, students to settle for less than they ­ r .-t.^ sA subcommittee of the Senate Human Resources Committee, WwiWIItK -HWnlihk ' would allow .Texas employers the savings if Texas would comp-would have a few years ago. '. approaching economic'reboun'd, sup: ~vfteard'arguments Mdnday for iand against SB 395, concerning l ly with federal requirements. concerning unemployment in-FIGURING OUT how many students : ged ahead;again Monday in buying-rights of the mentally handicapped.,: . ^ >surance. --• . j v- will not be able to find jobs this summer •06.95 ' hthat-sWept the Dow Jonessindustnal^ \ ' Action on-the bill was defenred until next week.-V i jj.v; |f this is done, Washington Will fully finance the administra-•' is impossible. ­ , The bill, sponsored by Dallas,Sen;.Bill Braeklein, proposes in­ ' average to itk firstcloseabp\£800in/',! I ,., ..•iS'on ofthestate program, and Texas employers wbuidreceivea ^ Anyone who is over 16, out of woric and creasing mental community health set ' " " • ' nearly' nine pionths.1 7. percent offset tax credit.against the 3.2 percent federal in-looking for a job is counted among the Srolvement for the mentally retarded. , surance tax. The Dow average of 30 blue chips," -' , '% ' •, ,i nation s unemployed for the purpose of Homer Leonard Of'Austin, s 'as a concerned parent ^ The cpmrriittee also postponed until Wednesday a decision on commuting Labor Department statistics.;; jumped 17.45 to 806,-95, its first closfe*." w-and father ofamentaUylllchild.said These figures are seasonally adjusted so /­ I abovg ,800 since last July 24 and itsMi> that the terge -number of youngstershighest since-itfinished fit 616.96 laSjt ' entering the work ^prce each spring and Jsto 26. , ..J... ,L dropping out again In lhe fall won'jUils^ y Leonard favoi^d ;st^te;:schoo^ai?d felt the biiliVsupporfin^ vhis presentation, in time for'the meeting.-tort the over-all picture. •* \SM&ZT Tuesday, April 15/ 1975 TH DAILY TEXAN Page 3 so )fia / /-;,<* v'&sbM* B 1 1" n mm lis Wm sw^. * «H68T?EDITORIALS Page 4 Tuesday, April 15, 1975 -(Editor's note: the following is a reprint of an article in the April 4, issne of the Christian Science Monitor). By ALINE WILLBUR Special to The Christian Science Monitor. Austin, Texas The capital city of Texas is an overgrown "small town." The downtown area still blends local businesses and office buildings with parking lots and homes with flowery front yards and steel-lace porches — a study in contrasts. It also has the lowest cost of living of anv city in Texas. Yet that charm, and low cost of living i! are threatened by the ''Ninth and 10th Street improvement plan": that would ram a pair ofthree^ane arterial streets through the hedrt of-downtown with the purpose of alleviating future freeway congestion. , ­ * f To the editor: Cutting off the:nose io spite the face has graerally been considered a foobsh J course of action. Yet that seems to.be The plan was approved by the Austin- City Council in spite of widespread citizen protest. s ? , The Ninth and loth-Streets project will connect busy Lamar,, Boulevard with Congress Avenue by widening anil mak­ ing one-way two quiet east-west streets, and at one point, slashing through a seven-acre park. , ^ ' At a time when so many larger cities, such as Dallas and Atlanta, are trying hard to revive their downtown areas by bringing into them trees, parks, malls and places-where people enjoy, walking, it seems ironical to many observers to , see Austin ready to destroy its natural asset for the sake-'of a growth in traffic that might not take place. ^ Austin is the fastest-growing city in Texas. . The Chamber of Commerce predicts -that the population, now 300,000,'-.will: reach fiaif a million by1&90 and a millioh by 202b.:Business activity has more than doubled since 1967, the highest ratecf in crease of any city in .Texas. Most of the newbusiness — Texas Instruments..1BP4, Wcstinghouse, for ex­ample — have settled oil the far north and northeastern edges of. the city on U.S. Highway-183 and North Ex­pressway.^ large Motorola plant is now coming to the northeast.' "Until now Austin has grown in clusters ' of new homes and shopping centers in a' succession of tnini-ci'tifesyThe explosive ' growth has .been occurring' in the peripherywheite newcomers live, work; and shop, leaving the'old Austin — the -Capitol and the-University campusdown-; town —:• intact fornewcomers to enjoyon weekends. , ^ 'i-•» •*$%}Strolling down Congress Avenue under ¥'a?cariopy.of oaks arid pecantrees, One.is T«xcm Staff Photo by Carol Sjlmmon* priorities firing line nose off trie when Stuart would be as good for the town? j sfaiart lost because of just such unkept promises, but he also lost because he the position taken taMonday s editorial ditjn'j have the money to advertise supporting the Higher Education Com­properly. To blacks he was a whitemittee on University funding: At a time .-/.lawyer, and to moderate women ite was when, the University has the worpt , ^another man. Staart lost vital b^ibdx^" student-faculty ratio of any ot15 largest es and the feminist vote all oveir town. University systems in^the nation, when They,simply didn't knovf the difference faculty salaries have ceased to be com­ p between Stuart Henry and Himmelblau. petitive with those of leading state un­-The campaign's major error was in notiversities elsewhere, i^ is not in the best :Coining out more forcefaily.Stuart lost /interest of Texas or Texans-to-slash riioraiiw o lnf nf .•spending for the University. Theremedy ynot.to vote. And finally, Stuart lost ' i In reference to the statement about -l°l^1SgUii^W^d^g ; ' because Friedman Jsafraid of him «rfS newspaper and should rightfully be con-.; prionties should be m improved ad-^his knowledge) and supported,, . ministration,:"not crippling the Univerai- cerned with covering. University:sports . feaJMnvnelhlau in Back cirdes (i.e.,-inside ;47 ^four years Pldlllt trf ^utThisletter isiTottir denigKiteSAC-YD ^ It'contiftue to -ejfjwuid. \Let*s not: destnqr whatcoverage th^seoiUier sports Stuart Henry iost,' so theJcampaign, ,1,. , , irymg. to ;..;5 :toe.'si»^ pagte.to indudeaU thes^rts. « -^'was "mismanaged." Thai is what I'v^' i fevor of a ''beral. i peop.tei^acfe^iiiiefe^^ikku uuu uy rrmaru nan ana vmep/p """i"7 'readings i- S > >^ been told by WiUarf Hall and Dale^.V-* Jimmy Lawerance two members of the most acAd" -Vietnam division Scotty.dovaars •I)J i.va r' , . (100 percent) second-guesstag-.-.^ * ' PE/Journallsm faction in Austin: student politicos?,'^*®^® / /', > L' f Perhaps, and perhaps every losingcam-Si»®Hardesty (Firing L&e,' April ^ |QCIfG VOU ^ paignmakesmistakes.butthecampaiCT'-'i^ .'1^168 much of the fact that North" _ s- * ' c 'The solution is not to reduce coverage ;of University sports but to expand.the , sports pages; and therefore, the coverage of national sports. Thgrfe are , several national sport events. I am in­terested in reading about, hut not at the , expense of the "lesser" University sports. The Texan ,1s a University not only protected from the blazing sun, • but also one walks alongside Stately, homes, rococo apartments, and simple cottages in a .variety of,Texas architec­tural .styles — from early Republican (when Texas was an independent republic) to late Victorian.' One also passes antique shops, an in­credible number of pedestrians, and. a glassy slope on which a String quartet • gives concerts on summer Sundays. Until the. Ninth and 10th Streets plan was approved, many young professional people had restructured many of the houses into offices, without marring the facade. They shared th'e neighborhood with people who had occupied their homes for 50 years. Togethei-they watched the steel and. concrete of the business district across the.escarpment of San Antonio Street and felt safe until the Ninth and 10th .project shattered their:Illusion.­ .-. The intense pressure from business in­terests and the city administration toget ihe project approved snowed tnat tney felt they could not be a "big city" Unless . they had a spanking new high-rise business district' downtown. In their view, the old neighborhood, still 51 per­cent residential, brands Austin as''small town" no matter what the growth of the city might be. '".; .. There now are six thoroughfares, providing JS7 traffic lanes, enteringdown­town Austin. Residents of the area, and those who maintain offices there, have united to challenge the City Councildecision,under the banner: of; "Old Austin Neighborhood." They elected Carolyn Bucknalh tenant of a stately 1882 man.-sion, as their chairman. They gathered records-environmental and traffic data in an effort to refute, the city's projec­wThe city insists it is not planning to tinything to the old downtown — just cut-ling -tnrougn it to Duild some needed roads which; the city says, will increase land value * ! That is what the OAN'r supporters fear most: the increase of land value,>Ap present, land in the neighborhood varie? from $4 to $5a square loot in one block tp $8 to $9 in another. -Zi If prices go up to $10, it will not be. financially practical to keep residences-in the area. ' The.houses will be destroyed to make room for parking lots and high-rise business offices, the residents say. ...' The local Heritage-S^ lists 83 ' architecturally noticeable homes con­ • structed.between 1850 ahd.l910-in the —tu... mnmthiin m area. They also report that more than 20 classic homes have been 4estroyed since ..... p Head: dead or alive By TODD KATZ ­ j Hep. Fred Head just made the Univer­ xsity System's10 most wanted list — join­ing such unlikely comradesasJoe "Open Record" Petony and. Senfronia "No Stone Wall" Thomp­ wson. ,,, How could this ' conservative East: • Texas Democrat fall 1 in with the radical .element? Head is a fiscal conservative and as such joins a > growing number , of • ft request for legislative appropriations/' Shivers also criticized Head for bis "total failure" to "request information about the iqatter from any knowledgeable University official." -Ah yes,.we know the feeling. In fact there probably isn't a dean, department chairman or student agency whose vieW hasn't been studiously ignored by the Board of Regents or sometop University Official when: budgets are drawn up or funditig requests considered. . • ••••'•; •••••• 'The Texan knows better than ijiost, since the Board of Regents thoughtfully Texans who areappalled at theSysteirfs^ neglected to consult Texas Student '^increasingly lavishcontruction program. Last Friday 'Bead and-the House Higher Education Committee dropped : utilities from the Austin and Texas A&M budgets — resulting .in a $19 million squeeze oik UT /Austin's Available University Fund. The total •projected •:savings to thestate ^approximately $30 million — will be distributed in Robin ' Hood fashion to about 20poorei' colleges. Regents Chairman Allan Shivers * reacted with characteristic conciliatory restraint by accusing Head of "a gross misunderstanding of r.^the;University's > * .• 1 competent' place'/The, secretary patiently tried to" re-explain the law, while trying to ignore Ms. Bisset's "mature" display of a-temper tantrum. At no time was any secretary insolent. •The, "befuddled" director quietly told v her,-that since this was her second time tocausesuch ascene; if die would rather copy herfile andcirculate it herself with .' no contactwith that office, that would be •.Acceptable.!-: Ms. Bisset chose, not--to. Whether her reasons for declining;!this suggestion were due to the lack of desire ;? to do the worit of circulating her file or pay for the postage or because she-was afraid she would be totally inept at eon-ducting her.oiyn interviews) she seemed satisfied, to let the obviously (to her) stupid clerics handle ij ' S" «?'-r • • -No one that-I saw was insolent to^s. . Bisset and in my opinion, those' people gave her morecourtesy and respectthan r she deserved. When asked to act like ar-v-;uuTech Longhorns lady when in that office, Ms. Bisset replied that, ''You are supposed Jo,be, working for me." T doubt tha^any amount of .money could induce we to take the abuse she banded out to these people, t don't know what grade Ms 1 -Bisset wants to teach, but it ought to be'' preschool or lower elementary Which would be in keeping with her maturity r %f it-%: |Tonya Lewis M Psychology $600 Eeyore smile and shake hands with enough oii't^ie*nara Nothing could be further from, t>.pay attention.Jo their books, and shelters,,'§To the editor: the right people/Anybody who bothered'^ truth* M any01® cognizant of the,a?£lem fro"1 confusiop taking place in. ,Tje-SiX'hundred dollars worth* of -keg ^to get dose to Stuart's campaign knowsC'^history of the Vietnam conflict would if outside^orld, when ite reportage is, f«pumps and loudspeakers, were stolen ^ f* that the emphasis in campaign strateg) j«V^was in personal contact with Austinites m [ accompaniedStuarf; asdid his wifeand' §!&. other,volunteers .on.other-occasions,.to precautions^. Periiaps.we. should Have fj'l numerous 'shopping malls, movie lines'? " " a profiti instead,of declining to ^and social functions* Eleven or12 swing „ -, -, accept ^contributions. .broke " , ' ?Ptalon 1,16 ^ty , . --—.j ...w .v.-even. Perhaps we oughtto have demand-^,* t % (and Stuart was thereevery dayh allthe' "• . Mlke Oloveil precincts-were thoroughly canvassed I -dictators and{Amer}can diplomats, W V1 ot The Tex­ an s-past excellence has not been^ap--'^; ed a $1 entrancefee instead of requesting since Lori state,office buildings, were-covered by/^4 ^' 4323 Sah Antonio St^/S^5oached Rodriquez was^j^a$l donationand havestamped hands to\| ^ed'tor\ Stuart, and we eVen went to a bowling'? |_ . many .years ago. The solelyguarantee that everyone paid. Perhaps alley. Just to meet people! We didn't, fi>^'OV®r,n9 WSGf SDOrti^ redeeming qualitiesare the consistenOyf^weshould have stationeda guard at each,|| ^however, concentrate on the students •«. ^.excellent photography ^nd cartoons^ keg to insure that nothing -was stolen, ^* nre ur: 5 because SAC-YD-(in particular. Dale ^ .. „ i\\ ' breaks myheattthat oppressloh isram-ffgr,But then itwould not have been Eeyore's ' t " Napier) promised^ lot of help and high"^' Women have been fighting for ade-pant in a pl?cewhere ideasare supposedySj^Birthday Party and .would have beenV percentages .in student boxes and sports coverage in The Texan for •«-} to have a free forum. Itis nowonder that^tf reministent of any of the numerous local!®! publications or-the student body before dropping mandatory funding for the newspaper last year — leaving TSP with the.-; pleasant-prospect of slowly going broke. - ^ Whatever charges are made about fread's committee — that it is self-serving, vindictive or harming quality education at the University, the fact remains that were it not for the well-documented misappropriation of one of the largest educational trusts in the i world" by Shivers, Erwin & Co. there • would be Absolutely no publicsupportfor .„i If any, of you know persons who took $umps or loudspeakers, whether ' maliciously or innocently (thinking they were getting a souvenir no one would miss), please return them. Pearl Beer has generously, offered to give a case of ­beer to anyone returning any ot the 'stolen equipment to 400 Nueces St.« with no questions asked. We realize that those who stole are a minority' and that most who attended were bqth gracious and generous guests;: ^Wehope that thisminority will not force ­the spon&rs of Eeyore's to discontinue < the party (a strong possibility) or to alter the carefree and casual • character •• -of the party by forcing the sponsors of Eeyore's to.guarantee that such in-1' '^Speaking of'utilities, knotted interim .cidentstdo nQt qcqurin the future. . Project might be to reduce the $19 ; Linda Lenchter, Jim Ayrts £ *mH"on utility bill projected for the next ^Sponsors, Eeyore's Birthday Party -\.tWo years. Some way might be found to ?#CUV toe To the editor:. , Regarding a story that appeared Mm-day, March 31 in your sports section en-, > tiUed "WeightUfters PlaceSecond." The 'tournament was held atthe University of -f --—* *-* -- Iowa, not Iowa State You Texas Tech " Longhorns should know better'" ? 'rify Bob Fo>ey ijk. Night Editor ; Daily lowan, University of Iowa. such a move. , , Si } x- In seconds one can think of the.short­comings — the Spurr firing,: the Bauer House, the HEW report, Frank Erwin's mouth and the Permian Basin duck pond. disaster among them — and realize that the Uhiversity was discredited Lin the eyes of Texans long before Head's com­mittee got a hold on the budget. Even in attempting" to counter the committee's implied charge of mis­management, Shivers fell Into the .same doublespeak .game that the System has been playing for more than 10,years. When asked about higher faculty salaries, UT policy-makers.-inevitably shrug their shoulder toward the Capitol and blame the body's tight-fisted at­titude on the "bad reputation" of "radical" studentsand professorsduring the late '60s and early '70s. ^ • Now, as Head puts the screws to the Available Fund, Shivers is pleased to speak of the "disastrouseffect on faculty salaries" the move will have. As Erwin has often told, us, the Available Fund cannot legally be used for v salaries. Faculty .salaries are. a line-item in the Legislature's biennial. budget: Head's committee, in fact,, budgeted more money for faculty salaries during the next two years thanthe Systemhad «sk­fed for/ B, f.t 1% v If Shivers& Co.isinterested in '.'facul­ -ty salaries, graduate programs, and , research projects" as his press release indicated, then there should beample op­portunity during the next two years to *'•< demonstrate the concern byfinding-ways .. ;toavoid cutting these programsin lieuof , the budget cut .-,. There are other potential benefits to the Head plan. -Regents and ad­ministrators will be saved the drudgery .. of taking bids on,approving plansfor and dedicating building after dreary .building. As an alternative, may we , suggest ttiat the regents begin visiting V two buildings a month — starting with the newest — to examing ways of im­ proving each structure's utility. ' • * * . $26,027 per day budgeted for ' water, gas and dectricityf Windows that "may be opened would be a start;! Another potential silver lining: low • -•level administratorswho normally spend ^ upwards to 10 hours a week lobbying for ; . -flew buildingsor giving VIP tours.of new facilities will nowbe ableto look careful-v iy at the quality of instruction offered to let's see, what are they^called? Oh ,^yes, undergraduates THE DAILY TEXAN EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR*:, l>ynne;BrockASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Eddie Fisher Claude SimpsonNEWS EDITORS tjf r"t n -s r.v.;;itathy KellySPORTS EDITOR . AMUSEMENTS EDITOR.;• • •" Vicky*1 Bowles FEATURES EDITOR CAPITOL BUREAU CHIEF ^ f ^ . > JSSUESTAFF^ ^-^^"--1 Issue News Editor; . General Renoriera " » '! 4 r" Mike Ullmann -Ga11 NewTAssistonte' VTn jgr* '"V Bill Scott News Assistants.. ,...S;;....Joy HoweH, Stew Olafson, because Stuart-would pull The yeart, and now that we have received agfanone of the colleges here at l?T Austin»stablishments people can frequent i%« reC0gn,ti endorsement The Text's eJowt KT.l An^n^Gul^r!g0tS5rMted,.,0n in 1,161)011 of foUege^U'ey. want that sort of atrriosphere.^ was lukewarm, however,"and SAC-YD • ^e, April 10) request Ihat ouif^fprMidents recently made hy Columbia^-Perhaps we were naive in not an? —.. .. coverage!*;reduced to just reporting theWUniversity. I dare authority ti neverhelpedStua'rtihparti^lar.other, anyone with authorityi^fticipatug that anyonewould steal equip^|^| ^scores :-;than puttbiehim on their slate.Thus, the ?ment that isof neither use nor.value, but^ Many people ard lnl^rested lnknowing for which Eeyore's has to pay. ^ more thanwho woni»hatvth^reJamor#-S« " w rHamM^s°Ma[or • n»f Bfeyore's ^sponsors TO- But Eeyore's 'sponsors neither anf^ titipatedjiorguarded againstthethefI Tiintrwn^ "' § If any* of you wece at the party and {lid £ atStuart Henry editor: -x, not contribute, or did contribute dnd terestedvin ,women's golf and tennis than s petent candidate running, including Jeff speechless from Msr Bisset's^A would like to dontribute more, or werftr-.,-­ _ .-a.'-,-v',* ---• w am sinrcuucH .• num " IRedman, then why did he pot spend a, /''Wtter. 1 was at Teachertplacfement the^not af thi party but like the idea thai iAM' 'lfttle more time on Stuart's race, es-J} chertsEfeyore's'itf hefd annually ona nonprofit '"^^iday that her "naive belief that Teacher I if^ < >•' jhor entirety oa the radio, fTV or reai ^Placement was originated for the pur-,, » pur-^f"! basis fpr no .more selfish reason than/$ fairly certain? Why did SACfX9 Awerlc^^pose of helpingstudents find jobs" was ^that spring,is here,we would appreClatefel '-^1: Friedpan campaign siphon off virtually' *' 0"'^-if destroyed. jWften the secretary told herggpyour ^onatioh. Contributions should b^^l Friedpai) campaig Pt0n, ASna,^rilP?a Editorial Assistant {.'.,?.Wit;"*«».4.,.^ " , Associate Amusements Editor •••••"vi,;t"1->"")—^;.'!Scott Tagliarino ,"V,V?Hi ^arwin Assistant Sports Editor.., ' """ Make-Up Editor L 3,"'1.'"'Kelley Anderson v Wire Editor ; Roe Traugott Copy Editors, Sally* Cart)«nter W»»Oeeald, MarkiPierce, sSr(«>»>• thw* H lite Univenlty •dmlnUtrjllon ot Ule Botni ot t ->'J • ' 1 -i ^---• *» "'^*1 -1.r<*.» * ' * :• .4-* * . 3SSSS"*3jss9aB W»W]!yTe*«i >studentnmpaptr^tTl»UnlMnlly duPul' TSP^ Bulk!!* ' !? lin!1 l?rW"« 7~,^rtMh. Dally all their volunteers: hhout a Idw that Msr Bisset did not like^sertt to* (and checks,made payable toJ-'' L£,x-probable .(every Ms.; Bisset threw her.books into the air^ ^Eeyore's BirthdayParty, The UnivertitfcT* Ntw« cwiLHbulIoM will be tmpltd by itltpfc** Wl. "KJi? Staled Collnlate PrnJ^ s 4S91) at the editorial otpce itew bludetii Publication* *<* Tfwufa.% and shouted "tipd damn* this is an in#'^of Texas,"• Calhourt Hall 20 f 3 mmsm guest viewpoint I You are what you eat By CHIUS SALEH, AUDREY that most Americans are nationally — and at least half upon publication of the list low price and demand a high EGER and DAUN EIEKDAM eating themselves to illness — of this number are children and the inclusion of his com­ quality. (Editor's note:; Saleh is in and death. For example (remember that Defense pany's product in it: "We We encourage all students Plan n, Eger is a psychology children — and particularly Department statistic?) have decided not to com­concerned with their health, major and on the TexPIRG adolescents — have the But American business isas ment." their pocketbooks, and withboard of directors and Eier-highest sugar intake and eat much to blame as any ad­Also included in the list are the millions of starving people dam is an Austin resident.) the poorest quality diets..In ministration in the current bacon. Wonder Bread, Gerber around the world to attend the Food is a pre-eminent issue 1969, consumption of candy world food crisis. Food prices Baby Food Desserts and events which TexPIRG and in the United States now, as it was 19.8 pounds per capita, are high because the which is prime grade beef, other organizations have has been for years throughout with 450 eight-ounce cans of American food industry is ... on grain "fattened that planned for this week and to the rest of the world. It is an carbonated beverages and 135 presently spending more than could otherwise be consumed help raise "food con­ issue which is clearly sticks of chewing gum. This $4 billion on advertising, junk by hungry people." sciousness" in America. political, moral and economic has resulted in 40 percent of and convenience foods, a cost An alternative to the food Check The Texan for events in nature. The nonprofit all Americans being which affects all consumers. industry which we heartily en­each day or today's Rag for a Center for Science in the overweight; In are President!' 1972, the food industry dorse food cooperatives week-long schedule, or call Public Interesthas designated • President Ford has overcharged consumers $2.6 such as the organizations TexPIRG at 477-3118. this Thursday as National. recently cut the food stamp billion in 17 different product whi<5h Austinites nowcan We leave you with a word to Food Day in ah attempt to program by $1 billion, yet lines. avail themselves of. The the wise: "You are what you guest vieuipofnt focus the attention of the nearly half of all Americans Junk foods supply little or cooperatives provide food at eat." American people oh these are still living below the no nutrients, only calories, yet issues. The Austin City Coun­poverty line and are not they provide staggeringcil lias likewise proclaimed reached by any welfare or profits for food manufac­Thursday as a "day of food food stamp programs. -A turers. A list of the "Terrible Letters to the Editor consciousness." _ shocking example ' 10" selected By the IRANIAN STUDENTS of'the foods were in repeating promises of safe-; : Defending,the movement in We of the Texas Public priorities of the present Ad­recently, and they represent ASSOCIATION ty and no harm to any citizen. Dhofar is a fight against im­Interest ResearchGroup ministration is revealed "everything that is wrong, Firing tine letters should: (Editor'KJiote: names have The Fascist regime of the perialism in general. Hie im­(TexPIRG) would like you-to through the fact that during a with the American food • Be typed triple-!paced. been Withheld by request < shah of Iran and the poppet portance ;of solidarity with join us this week in an effort 14-hour period the Defense supply." This list includes • Be 25 lines orless. The Texan reservesthe right to edit lettersfor aoseoffear of reprisals sultan Qaboos dire using th£ this anti-imperialist move­to raise food consciousness: Department spendsmore than length. Coca Cola (which costs more owardstfaeantbors lor thetr: .—IT; -most savage forms of oppres-ment and all the other libera-is sponsoring than milk)', the potato TexPIRG tbe entireannual budgetof the and • tndude name, address, and phone number of contributor. Ifamllies.) sion against the'people Of < tion movements inAsia; Latin numerous activities during United Nation's food product Pringles, manufac­Mail letters to The Bring line. The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT A disastrous situationis fac-Dhofar.' :Some of these America and Africa is ob­ Food Week; April 14 to 17, program; ' tured by Proctor & Gamble, Station, Austin, Tex. 78712; or bring letters to the Texan offices, |ing 250,000 people in the methods a|*: -•>!'— vious. which include: • World hunger is such that which costs "at least13 times basement, Texas Student Publications Building. villages of Dhofar,• where '1) Economic blockade of The brave struggle of the • Seminars and discussion over 400,000,000 people suffer more than real potatoes." A |^dea|m and: destruction the villages to the point of masses of people in( the oc­panels on the UT campus; from malnutrition inter-company spokesman' satin: tbeir survival. This utter starvation. This savage cupied Persian Gulf Who are. . . • Cable television coverage said result -of: the lis the policy deprives the people of fighting the immense forces of events to provide greater I acherouswar that the sul-any food and.does not alio# 1 of imperialism with its mili­public access;. -; ^ ; ' \ \ I IS HKROCKHEAD! HEUA LINOS? I JUST CALLED han of Ovnan an PORE CLEANSING & REFINING by VKto'rio de Sica. Adfaission $1 for UT students, faculty, and' :/-r' DOWN 'the reactionary authority aqd. REMOVAL OF BLACKHEADS. CYSTS & staff; $1.50 others. Burdine Auditorium. Theatre Committee. '1 Wampum their distorted information in­ . -2 Opera by BLEMISHES , : Verdi struments do not feel shame 8 p.m; .Concert: Janos Starker. The world famous cellist will 3 Chief ex­ •TREATMENT FOR ENLARGED ft S # perform, in the .last event of the Solo Artists Series." Tickets 50 ecutive E BROKEN CAPILLARIES ••£'$%• cents for Optional Seiyices Fee holders; $3JO others; availablein [DdONESBURY •MASSAGE OF FACE, NECK ft BACK Hogg Box Office. Performance will be in Hogg Auditorium. ,Di>tr. by United Ifcstan SradfcstT Cultural Entertainment Committee. •JAQUETiE MASSAGE FOR -PROBLEM SKIN •>, • A' <1 p.m. Great lecture Series: Dr. Harlan Smlth. The UT Professor ii • IONTOPHORESIS of Astronomy will discuss "An Astronomer's;View of the Energy ? .Problems of Planet Earth and Its. Inhabitants: Now and for the :' mwtt* SKIN RETEXTURIZING t,­ THEMT7EK. Foreseeable Future."; Alumni Center, 2210 San Jacinto. Uf'; MHZJXHm? HAIR REMOVAL BY Interaction and Ideas and Issues Committees. ELECTROLYSIS'OR WAXING msAtEAFt 8:30 p.m. — 12 midnight. Oldtime Blues with Memphis Picno­ • INDIVIDUAL MAKE-UP Rod. The veterdrt of the 1920's and 30's blues era will perform tonight and'Wednesday. Free. Texas Tavern. Musical Events Committee. Call 452-3500 for a COMING EVENTS free skin analysis. 4*5 p.m. Wednesday. Question and Answer Sess?on:George Gallup. The founder of the Gallup PQll will be available for infor­mal questioning before his speech at 8 p.m. tcinigtit. Free. Texas Tavem. Ideas.and Issues Committee. ; ­ LJ> is 8 p.m. Wednesday. Public lecture: George Galiup. AdmissionJ OH,H&SBEEN B, UK£ THKTB/BR. 50 cents for UT students, faculty, and staff wilh f."P7; $t others. aNceuaxms Reception to, fallow in Tinker Room, 4th floor, Academic Center; SORTEDCNTHE the speech itself will be given in Hogg Auditorium. Ideas and' EUROPEAN SKIN CARE '^•1 ALAS*mPKUN£. Issues Committee. ne$GOTAUTOF wewsmuiNO ^1,5403 Clay Avenue.'V JB:30 p.m. Thunday and Fridays Tavmrft Soul: "Freedom Ex­ ff ON1MBTUNPKA: ' at Burnet Road press." The Austinsoul bandwill perform.Admission SO centsfor Mon.^Fri.. 9a.m.-5 p.m.. appointment only. Uf.students, faculty, and staff; $? guests. Texas Tav»rn.Musical, P* (vents Committee. • . >;<.>'i. -WV:*...',­ ; V. ' j? ^ 1 rS--1 v SOMSOF7HECON­ TMClOSAtBI&IL Vrl Oir M X E 'maes,ANP msma&m umnpttimiinomnnnmBiimnin puuBt/zepBy I mzo/uficms! a discussion of Police Fctr^e and its alternatives WEDNESDAY, tAPRIL 16 — 10:00 A.M. Z ? 1 ^ (-ip* 4 r*^ > ?y • Dr. Wayland Pilcher, Criminology Department, Sam Houston State University 's ' • Professor Stanley H. Palmer,; Department of History, University of Texas at ,ItsArlington^ -*L .•mate's \ V, • Play It Cool This Season earn m\ to ~ Professor Bovd Lit(rell. Department of SSciology, University 6f Texas < in Gauze and Lace • 2AM- n?<>~ '' % i —r——?— •<= -X i. rf ZJUST 1 A WUttt 5^* Professor!Robert Dawson/ University of Texas School of Law u ^ Tg^-A-fr&sh-viawpQLpt for spring and summer, the natural look of gauzfe~1av1striy­,trimmed with lace on cufts, yoke and §&'?•'Professor Edniund Pincoffs, Department of Philosophy, University of Texas * ' mandarin collar and casually gathered at <-1 ** ' ^ ^ ^ the waist with wide sash.^f wrinkle-shy • ,r s i. -i• ... -d ; 'polyester and cotton. Sizes-5 to 13. 30.00 YARING'S ON-THE-DRAG f • r-y 2406 Guadalupe A » 15, 1925 THE DAILY TEXAN,Page tAN,Page 5 -Ak f ^ " ( * I / t> > ^ X «, Z > W *» sags W8m&» 4 ^1»>V . > lias®? IP • yv. "i u ' Hi r mw ""U*' ' > V f, m ( * ^ ft' V , Mm mmmam il« ii V Major League Scene •{'',' 1 V ? • *"$'«. S '•oX.-'jvr.j UT Plays Bears: Dodgers Beat Reds, 5-2 For Confidence LOS ANGELES (AP) -In the fifth inning Cey hit a-in two runs with a double and Ron Cey and Jimmy Wynn solo homer and ..one inning a single as the Oakland A's slammed long home runs and later Wynn unloaded his shot edged the Kansas City Royals•Mike. Marshall turned in a to make it 4-0. Wynn also' 3-2 Monday night. / , I' solid relief performance to doubled 'for a run in the Gene Tenace drewa Walk •pi p.i , lead the Los Angeles Dodgers seventh; from Paul Splittorff with two ' M I f\ to a 5-2 victory over the Cin­The Reds chased Dodgers' out in the second inning and cinnati Reds Monday night. starter Doug Rau in the topof scored on a double by Kubiak. The Dodgers roughed up the seventh on doubles by Joe Rudi doubled with one out starter Jack Billingham in the Johnny Bench and Tony Perez in the sixth and Billy Williams third inning of the nationally for one run a single by Dave and Gene Tenace walked, fill­televised game, scoring two Conception for another. ing the bases and setting the runs on doubles by Rick Auer-Marshall came on to quell stage for Kubiak's tie­bach, Dave Lopes and Bill that rally, found himself in a breaking single.Buckner en route to their first bases-loaded, one-out jam in victory over the Reds in this the eighth and worked his way young season. out of that one by striking out Texas Signs CINCINNATI HAD beaten Bench and getting Perez to Los Angeles in the year's first Kashmere's three meetings between the' ground out.ir-k-k. two teams expected to battle KANSAS CITY (AP) -Ken down to the wire for the Holtzman pitched a six-hitter Carl Etelcher National League's Western with last-out help from Rollie The'Texas basketball team Division championship. Fingers andted Kubiak drove gained a possible cog for the futuiie success of its program with the signing of the No. 1 substitute on Houston Kashmere's Class 4A state champion, basketball team Monday NAVY & ARMY TURKEY SHOOT Carl.Belcher, 6-8, averaged 14 points and 15.rebounds a game during Kashmere's un­! I April 14-18 •defeated 46-game season, f 1 stretching ,the school's un­ at the Rifle Range defeated string to-78 over the i i • South of the. ROTC Building last two years. .;Belcher signed a Texas ' ! 9:00 -11:30 in the morning letter of intentMonday, Texas i 1 Coach Leon Black"announced. * t 1:30 -4:00 in the afternoons Belcher, who is considered -' ' 25* for 3 $hofs '*Vl " the third best collegeprospect iiA i on. the Kashmere team, is y! free Hamor Turkeyawarded Daily ,; called "the best sixth man in high school basketball" ' by ' Kashmere Coach Weldon Drew !' sponsored by UT Navy & Army ROTC E" t W %<> * 5" 4# e Public Lecture To Cure the Government by Bribery" GEORGE GALLUP Founder/Chairman . The Gallup Poll, v ' ^jfMrtii t> Nr*' l»SS* Wednesday, April 16 : .y& 'w'UT I.D. 8:00 p.m.=k '-$1.00 Others £t\ i'* I-T/.fJ'i. L a % .... Hogg Memorial Auditorium ,, , , JUf ^Sponsored TexasUrtfori Ideasand IssuesComihittae ­ is <1*$* Total. mm TiTe lazy way to take care of your contact lenses. vf •You may not even be lazyf*^ and the'4 oz. size.Total* 2 oz. has Just very busy.Who has time fora ^ afre6, mirrored lens storage case, solution towet contacts,another for and the new economy 4 oz size , soaking, stillanother to clean them ^ tlf, save3 you 25%. , ; and maybe one for cushioning? Total® is available at thefjk ' •}lt gets pretty complicated to say^Ml^r'' campus bookstore or yourlocal jnothing of the expense. "X^¥, drugstore X ju* ' Now there'sTotal? The all-in-^ /• And we're so sure you'll t ^ one contact lens solution that does" likeTotal* that we'll giveyou your 4 <. It all.Total® w?ts, soaks, cleans and second bottle free. Justsend awk „ cushions your contacts. And you Ag Total* boxtop with your name, ^only have to use a single solution.^^/*® address and college name to: ^ ­ f TryTotal? See how much more + , Total, Allergan•• • comfortable your contact pharmaceuticalsJenses can be.And :2525pupont Driye; l ^cleaner. Anda lot Iryine, Califomi£T926i34 Tleasier to use. "/ • (Limit one per person. ^ ' There are two ®ffefe6^l^esirs'lp|li| /good ways to buy ''"';July^197ey^|t .^fotal®—the 2 oz.size s®!-my: h deai^ cushw* Ij-r» If f&rVi. fj mtwmsi TotaTmakaB conb^kmH|oasier: j.t' alfgu'hble at: The A's picked up what ' •• • By BOBBY STEINFELD , t proved to be the winning run Texan Staff Writer in the ninth on Phil Garner's • After upsetting Houston Saturday,.5-4,^Ao grabsecond place in singte, a stolen base by Allen •; the Southwest Conference, the Texas men's tennis]team hopes Hopkins and' Claudell to use Tuesday's dual match'against Baylor as a confidence Washington's single. . builder for; the LonghSrns' upcoming match against Southern That nullified a Kansas City-' Methodist University on Saturday which will most likely deter-., run in the bottom ot the ninth mine the SWC champion. , > on Hal McRae's bunt single, The Mustangs, who lead Texas by a point in.the SWC, playand error and a two-out single Rice this week and if the Owls and the Bears are blanked 9-0,by George ^rett. Texas must beat SMU ,6-3. If Rice wins one match, which is ;X\p i& vmm • more likely than Baylor winning a match since the Bears are PITTSBURGH (AP) winless, all Texas must do is beat SMU to gain a;tie for first in Rick Reuschel, Oscar Zamora : the SWC. and Darold Knowles teamed 1 ."We can't take Baylor lightly because they're young and up on a six-hitter and pitched rebuilding and if they get hot we have tobe ready for it,"Texas the Chicago Cubs to a 4-2 vic­Coach Dave Snyder said. , tory over the previously un­Baylor's Danny Dobbs, who made it into the second round of §0$ beaten Pittsburgh Pirates .the 1974 SWC Tennis Championships before he was eliminated,Monday night., , is the No!1 seedt followed by LydeilPickett, a transferstudent; It was the Cubs' fgurth Bruce Walter; Skipper Parker, a freshman from Waco; Chuck straight triumph since, their '.Dorrity, last year's No.. 2 seed and Julius Durilap, another only loss to Pittsburgh, on •transfer student. ' ' • ' '> ' opening day in.Chicago, when For what it's worth, Houston trounced Baylor 9-0 earlier in Reuschelrwas scratched from the season. ^ , a scheduled start because of the flu.; The Pirates had won "We've got to beat Baylor decisively to make SMU a good their first three games and match. Baylor is a weak team, but usually it's harder to get up were the only defeated team for a match like.this,' but we won't be worrying," Texas'. No:6 v in the majors. seed Bill Fisher said. • Jerry, Morales staked The Longhorn lineup will be the.same as' it was SaturdayReuschel to a 1-0 lead in the ^-..against Houston; Gary Plock will again play the No. 1singles; ' second inning when he. Boston Bucket •followed by Stewart Keller, Gonzalo Nunez, Graham Whaling, homered off . Pirate starter Dan Byfield and Fisher. Bob Moose.'The Cubs chased Boston Celtic*' Paul Silat leapt high for a baiket Moose with three runs-.br the against the Houston Rockets. The Celtic* won the Texas' No. 1 doubles team will be Nunez-Keller, with'Plock­' fourth-inning: spurt that in­NBA semifinal playoff game Monday night; 123-106 : Whaling as the No. 2 doubles team and Bylield-Pdul Weigand^ cluded four singlesplusa do» and lead the Mst-of-seven series, 1-0. playing No. 3. ' -, , , -- s\' ',f " 1 .s. Cincinnati 4!3 S1\ Oakland 5 4 171 IS3, — Boston 123, Houston 106." Boston leads KensasOty. 667 ' 1 Houston ......... 3 3 .900 Kappa Psl 17. ASCE 13, best-of-seven -serlesr 1-0. California:.; ,.>4V 3 3 ;SO0 .. ** S.Francisco ..... 3 3 .500 Mtdviite Club 17, Rexall Rangers 10 ' • Chicago SEAHORSE CAR •.•All Baba7, Texas Tornado.6 . Atlanta .......... 3 4 .429 3 4 4 .429 JVV . Crispy V, Barron* 9 -ABA Ployofft Los Angeles...... 3 4 .42* Minnesota • v 2 .333 3 Texas....... WASH Master Hitters 16, East St. Shulfle 15 ^ Mwdey'sflewee ... 1 4 J00 1 Automatic % ,Y" 40,900 Headmen 15. Unicorns 6 .1 • r. San Diego 3, San Franfclsco 1 • Meada/eOama^i""^-'6 Salf-Servics /\ ZBT 4/AT0 4 . Denver lis, Utah117; Denver leadsbest-Oaklartd O, Kansas City 2 \V. . Philadelphia 4, New York 3 .. Wom6ats'23. The Men 3 of-seven series, 4-2 Only game scheduled Chtcago 4, Pittsburgh 2 1205 W. Kornig , Section 33 11, Doombas 6. •. ' Los.Angeles S, Cincinnati 2 454-3922 Walters Until Dark. 11 Blfds S .. San Antyio 123, Indiana 117; Indiana -• Tuis^ey*! heheHe flklws leads best-of-seven series, 3-2. New York (Atotlock 00) at Philadelphia Boston (Lee0-2) at New York (Hunter0» > (Twlfchell 0-)) N 1) Chicago (Bonham 04) at Pittsburgh. California (Ryan 2*0) at Minnesota (Ellis 0-0) N (Goltz 0-1) The University of Texas Longhorn Band , Houston (Richard (H» at Atlanta Texas (Brown OO) at Chicago (Osteon 0-1 (Niekro 0>1) N ,.0T»cinnatl (Klrby 0-0) at Los Angeles Milwaukee-(Champion 14)at Baltimore ^Sutton 1-0) N ;v (Palmer N San Diego (Jones (MJ at San-Francisco Oakland (NorrJs )-0) at Kansas City(Caldwell 0-1) N • : , IFitzmoftt* 1-0) N 4 Only games scheduled Only games scheduled "Show Band of the Southwest" BAND-O-RAMACONCERT .#/*>{ v\, ""V i < TOYOTA DATSUN VOUUWAGIN VOLVO SUNDAE APRIL 2b, 1975 WITH THIS COUPON r I -r* t 'ft > Mm' % jf*1 TOYOTA OR VOLVO 3-5.pm . ; MAJORTIIMMIP '916.50p/usp<,rf,: Oft* feed SIN Engine Repair Brakes SKtrical MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM OvmrsaasEngin* 100$ Sagebfush, 836-3171 r f. . .Qver 406. Musicians V \r -g • • 5 Bands & Combined Bands * ADMISSION:I^ -I"' * $2.00 Adults •5s 1 <^€es •v • to'trt. $1.00 High School & under YOUR THESIS; '>! ' §i'4 t» V V t a ^ ^ DISSERTATION, DR r «• » PROFESSIONAL REPORT R-I CAN BE COPIED WITH CONFIDENCE, &* 4 ' * ' •A tr*? ^ That's because -at Ginny's We offer more than just copies; We /offer our experience in^copying final graduatc,,school worjc, which means'that we ^appreciate your need for'high quality reproduction at'low prices. We will''guarantee that our 100% r cotton copies will meet reproduction standards of the graduate , school, provided that you specify that the work is for final 'M ^ ^graduate-.schopl copies, ;and that you allow us at least 24-hours­coR3f!n8> We, also offer,, a complete line of,Binding -Services! So'come bytSinny's and we'll give ydu quality'copies-" •> ^ ^ aw tfSji VJf for the.lowest prices. • • X fi t»V Dr. Harlanv Smith, Professor of Astronomy, \yill deliver the gbfthled-v ture in the Great Lecture ,Series' You Get More Fop Your Money At GINNY'S, program 'sponsored by the1 Texas ii-S Union ,UT Interaction and Mea® GINNY'S COPYMG SERVICE,INC. Issues Committee." Dr. Smith's leSl 42DOBIEMAIJL. ' Sre toPjc will be "An Astronomer'J 2021 GUADALUPE . k a ^the Energy Problems of AUSTIN,TEXAS 78705 /476-9171 Planet Earth and its Inhabitants: ( , T/C6,No,w and For the Forseeablp" v i * j- •itb 1^ \#10pen BDaysAWeek PP!',""mvmis'Su^ «2e V" P&T V i i mat f7 a.m^O^ppv) p.mj WEEmjtvi C Irt/SATURDAYS ' ^ J^int°,\;Joiif u'^S XERbX COPIES ^40FFSfiT« PRlWlNC^^^BOOKBINDING . m. m r-' SSSs $$S$ •rifrfrn .sfev^Jjc £• ^ * Vi, V^V ^"V'r* ' 1 * O A Z"1 >S 1 V^>?*sr,^ <>t .1' SKIttl ' \ s' David Chalk: . ' -^Texon Staff Photo by David Woo Texas'Amy Willcins eyes the tennis ball. \ -fir, !J<; A. —•' iifu i To Host Two Matches =:; Texas' womens' tennis-team'will host two Corley are possible singles players for Texas dual matches this week at the intramural againstSouthwestern. The.doubles teamswill ^courts. The Longhorns play Southwestern bp'Brbwnstein-Gilbert and Kurz-Corley. ^University at 3 p.m. Tuesday and host-:• Wednesday, Hagerman plans to piay her . Schreiner (Kerrville) at 2:30 p.m. Wednes-top singles players against Schreiner — Amy ' day. ,• ;: , Wilkins," Jo Ann Kurz, Mary Tredennick, • Becky Roberts and possibly Dring. .Southwestern has a weak team and Texas Kurz pulled a leg muscle a week and a half . Coach Betty, Hagerman has decided to play ago and has been taking it easv because sh? . her No. 5 through No. 10 players against will play : iii the state tournament in two them. weeks! Hagerman hasn't decided whether to ...;,•••: "I wantto givesomeof the othersa chance .. play her against Schreiner. ;;^ : • v .to get in some match play," Hagerman said. : Kurz will be iteamed with Tredennick in•'They aren't a real strong team. The top doubles againstSchreiner. Roberts and Diing. ;players will get their chance against will be the other Texas doubles team, t'r •Schreiner." ' -­ Texas will use the Schreiner match as a , ..Kathy Dring,, Debbie Brownstein^ Susan T warm-up for the Midland Tournament Friday Kurz, Paula Phillips, Laura Gilbert and Marty and Saturdav. v!; ;; :' ; ­ Shoe Shop SALE XERPX COPIES Each" ; We make bnd SHEEPSKIN Over 20 of one ,; original only XI '5,00. 4e BeautifulColors Each ; « •LEATHERSALE* Legal or leuer size, white or Vanoui kindi, colon . 75* p«f ft. colored stocksame price. POSTAL-INSTANT PRESS Capitol Saddlery .1502 lavaca 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 BONANZA STEAK IAJNCH Choice of Chopped or^t S]29 Ranch Steak,* salad/choice?^ of dressing & TexasToast; ' Good wholesomeAmerican food ; ' ?atright neighborly prices. '• 5209 Cameron Road ;Y a.r .. . 5 '•8005 Anderson Square Shop. Center No tipping please, tff • 916 Ben White Blvd. w Just leave usWitha snti tr % Relaxation Aids Former Longhorn to Hot '75 Start LOS ANGELES (UPI) -native, who still resides in baseman, I have more time to leagues. David Chalk, a soft-spoken Texas, figures to be the think about hitting." That does not mean he "I've always had a lot of Texan with a big future, is off Angels' third base future for prefers third base over, confidence in myself," he to a sizzling start, and be many years to come. In his doesn't seem surprised, rookie season with California shortstop. said. "Of course, there were times last year when I would After the California Angels' in 1974, the American League "In the spring, I was pretty slide down and sometimes six-game homestand — three club's first round selection in sure I would start at one of the wonder, but that's only wins and three defeats — to the June, 1972, free agent two. It really didn't make launch their season, Chalk, a draft started at shortstop and much difference to me natural when you're young." former All-America third finished at third. although I consider shortstop Chalk feels the Angels arebaseman for the Longhorns in Manager Dick Williams more of a challenge. going to surprise some people 1971 and 1972, has 10 hits in 19 tabbed Colombia's slick­ "I was a shortstop until two this year. at-bats. He had seven hits in a fielding Orlando Ramirez as years ago. The ball comes row, too. his regular shortstop in the back at you a little quicker at "1 definitely think we're go­ "I'm more relaxed this spring and named Chalk as the third but you have to cover ing to play over .500 ball," he year, and there's not as much third baseman. more ground at shortstop. remarked. "We're young and pressure on me,"he explained "I think the move to third inexperienced, we have Both positions require a lot of butsimply. "Last year I didn't base-has helped my hitting," agility and quickness." the pitching and the defense know if I had the club made. Chalk added. "As a shortstop, In his second year of pro and a lot could happen. This year I do." your thinking is more oriented David Chalk baseball, Chalk played 24 At 24, the Del Rio, Tex., toward defense. As a third ... as a longhorn. games at the tailend of the "It's true we don't have 1973 season with the Angels. much power, but teams have hamstring pull in his right leg In 1974, he hit .252 in 133 won before without power." UT Sailing Team throughout the second half of games and was one of two The Angels launch a six-game rookies (the other was Jim his rookie'year. road trip at Minnesota Tues­Sundberg) on the American Chalk says there never was day, returning to Anaheim Wiris JFK Regatta League All-Star team. any doubt in his own minij that next Monday night to face the The University sailing team, ranked ninth in the nation, won He was hampered by a he would make it in the big same Twins. the HUi annual John F. Kennedy Memorial Regatta last weekend at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis,' Md. Six other Top 10 teamscompeted in the fegatta, including No. 1-ranked Tufts University (Boston, Mass.), Southern California and Michigan State. < HALF PRICE Texas was down by nine points after the third race, trailing both Tufts and No. 7-ranked Yale. But the Longhorns won the fourth race to go ahead in the standings. JEANS — SLACKS "I thought they had achance to win," saidTexasCoach John Lohr. "Five or six teams could have done it. If there was a ENTIRE STOCK • breeze on the last day, I knew we could do well, and we did. "They're the best collegiate sailing team that I've seen in 10 BUY ONE PAIR AT REGULAR PRICE years of sailing," Lohr added. GET SECOND PAIR FOR HALF PRICE! Texas skipper Mark Hulings, a junior, piloted the nine-man crew to one first and three second place finishes. The Lon^torns did not finish one race because of a foul They were automatically withdrawn from the race and given-a 12th The Bottoms for all your tops place finish in that race. Other members of the Texas crew included Jim Tyree, Mary at Sue White, Chris Bandon, Marvin Beekmann, Gary Haralson; Mary Hulings, Christopher Pitcairn and David Brown. Bob Elliott's $3.00 OFF MEN'S AND WOMEN'S HAIR STYLES ON THE DRAG 2426 GUADALUPE GUYS AND GALS By Appointment THREE DAYSONLY! FREE ALTERATIONS (for new cuttomen only, please) v Regular Price 10.50 .v; Offer good only with Cheryl Sebring by El Lobo Texas Union 415 W. 15th Phorfe 474-1041 Ideas arid Issues Committee Presents A FINGER PROFESSOR A FAVOR. WALT ROSTOW treat the finger of your choice to a real favor... a custom-made John Roberts college ring... discussing, of its very own. "HOW WE GOT HERE: THE PRESENT WORLD $5 OFF ECONOMY" April 16 Dobie Library Tepr out this ad and take It to the John Roberts Ring Person on "RingDay" andget $5 credit 2 p.m. f 4th Floor, A.C. on purchase ot any Man's SilacSum ring or on any elegant Lady's Gold ring. SENIORS! DEADLINE TODAY! . M e ^ Pick up your Cap, Gown and Tassel now, at the. University Co^p. We can not guarantee delivery after April 15th. ALL FACULTY MUST ORDER THEIR CAP, GOWN, ANDI HOOD NO LATER THAN APRIL 10co DISCOUNT TO Ri 11REC1 SENIOR CITIZENS : Tuesday, April 15, 1975 THE..DAILY TEXAN Page 7 t _ * .. -,.v •hr. : -. ­ »'r® a -v -if* * *1\ffi'tii&ty % mV' ij0¥%nC,r ?,s£. £?**&*?? #%<> 4 >*%&$&•&%& A \l Columbia £%•*&% Epic fi **v h; b » - ' '-TTW ^ % -» > *v'> *" c <• « * * % * ^>siv ^ ^ * To Captivate Your Musical Desires! 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'7V,;';, ""'MM /'-$*£>>-#e-<-»®k fWomert^s New ERA |j ;::; f^r#:';£if$ ; '<-•'''-' By SHARON JAYSON;--rw ctftlV 1 scene;-'', v ~ ' •' '• _ t} At booths set upon the Capitol steps, both groups urged spectatorsto sign ' 5p W,K$k:: petitions and ihdex cards for legislators.. y. , . •mm s>:-To responding cheers of support, Jane Hickie, past president of Texas Women's Political Caucus,' asked repeatedly "Are you for the ERA? asHVortE? yi "This is theonly way that it's notgoing to continue to bea government of men. We've just begun," Hickie said. i;-A suffragette in Iowa from1919 to1971 Myrtle Bulkley,75,:told the crowd, BPUBCt i; "We had opposition, but we hung in there and we got the vote. if "I'M A PRODUCT of the 19th Century, and I'm proud to have my name ;? > addfed to the listOf wonderful women who first workedfor women'srights in :, this country," she addfed. ' Both Austin Rep. Sarah Weddington and Galvgston Sen. Babe Schwartz ,"K I appeared bnefly to emphasize their continued support.1 ;V: • "I don't understand all the energy being used' to defeat an amendment that has already passed. I don't understand what the fear is about or where the prejudice is from," Schwartz said. . -:' : " ' ; : Austin5en. Lloyd Doggett told the cheering crowd,','The sackof mail I've • gotten has; had some of the most nonsensical arguments I've ever heard, I even got a chocolate cake, and I don't like chocolate.'1­ • v.: University Student Government President Carol Crafitree read a Student • Senate resolution supporting Uie ERA and another resolutionsigned by stu­ P",. . League of Women Voters and Texas Fathers for Equal Rights offered sup­>j£port at' the rally. • rs.James Wilkinson,-a Dallas Texas Fathers for Equal Rights member ' favors the ERA to stop discrimination against fathers in divorce cases -Turn Staff fhato W Doml«• Rep. Weddington speaks to ERA rally Monday. of divorced fathers make up the remaining one-third, he said.":. >, Thirteen-year-old Greg Wheeler came to Austin with a Lubbock group • from TexasTech University. "Ithink women should have therights and get -A ...the saifie jobs as men. They used to stay in the house, but it's changed and , they should have the same rights," he said. : Molly Glaser, 73, of Houston. supports the amendment because"I happen ? to be one of those women that hasbeen discriminated against. I tried toget > a loan, in1942 to buildai' home but was refused because I wasa.second-class citizen,.a di\rprce« and a woman," she'explained.­ I m SMS? -Teion Staff Photo by Milt* Smirti AntiERA supporters discuss amendment. J*****-, mm , . „ . r I • • -T«an StoH Photo by Mik. Smith —Texan Staff Photo by Dowd Woo " 1%W ERA brings flood of womfen to rotunda. > -ProERA women rally at Capitol. r ' jk",. 4 P W1-'--­ i ~K >A!?' ^ * •*£. Z. 1 ^ Shuttle Bus' at Front v Door imp, :"I v accepting contracts *. iss ? ^ t' for SummerLgX^A­ MADISON HOUSE V -' 709 W. 22nd St. 478-9891 f, -By STEVE OLAFSON t Ethics," isan Organizationin San Franplsco :.5,.•->Texan Staff Writer . cV i-' -.v-advocating the , decriminalization of The decriminaliaition of prostitution will'. ' prostitution. •. ' t ' result in tetter relationsWps bietwiMn theTlife; organization is active in''helping sexes, two proponents of lessening penalties, •, prostitutes with legal defense, self-help for practicing the world's oldest profession. ; programs and raising community said Monday. , awareness;.Its membership is composed of ' "For the life of me," I'don't see why the: -.prostitutes, former prostitutes and sym­atate should be; concerned with who I'm pathlzers with chapters in Seattle, Mexico sleeting with," said Vern Bulloughi author City, Portland and Honolulu. ;cof the "Historyof Prostitution." "iwant to FOLLOWING the presentations by ; make all sexual behavior between consen-Bullough and Baur,. a panel discussion tlng adults outside the law," he said. followed in which decriminalization was op-TRACING the history of prostitution,., posed by Lanny Henniiiger of the UniversityBullough said that society's attitudes have Church of Christ and Lt. Roy Westphal of the Dallas vice squad. , Bulloygh said it was impossible to enforce , Henninger questioned prostitution's .tagprostitution laws equally and that it was at) as a'victimless crime because both-par­injustice to punish only the prostitute and ticipants-are dehumanizing themselves. hot her'male'partner. Westphal said decriminalizing prostitu­Bullough said decriminalization, of tion would .not result in a decrease in sex prostitution is a realistic alternative crimes, likening it to a hunter who gets an because veneral disease no longer comes, easy kill at a game.reserve. '. . exclusively from prostitutes but mostly • ENFORCEMENT of prostitution laws •from teenagers. Also, the consequences of was criticized by George Dix, Universityhaving sex have been greatly minimized professor of law, and Carol Oppenheimer, with modern contraceptives, Bullough said. Austin attorney, and law school lecturer. . Prostitution serves the needs of certain Dix said police violate ^ fundamental segments of society, and decriminalization values when they entrap prostitutes illegal­will free many victims of the prostitution ly. Oppenheimer cited the double standard laws, Bullough added. Freeing the police of of morality that was etiforced when both the impossible task of enforcing the laws man and woman participate in sex butdnlywill allow them more time to pursue the woman suffers the label of prostitute.hardened criminals, he said.. i~i Monday's discussion was one program of ECHOING Bullough'? sentiments was" a symposium entitled "Citizen Values and Joan Baiir, representative of COYOTE and Law, Enforcement: Policy'' which is spon­a 'practicing prostitutei COYOTE, ah sored by the Human Rights Research Coun­acronym for "Call ..Off Youc Old Tired' cil of the Universi^ law school. • •> \: INTKRMiTIO>'.-\L SKISi rORRElTIO\ -CENTER In a class by itself Dedicated to making YOU.... More Beautiful in ri'iiMHrlic iliwrdt rv... so why agL •L-i".. V'L ......... . » -• ' lirimn S'IIIIIS. pits, scars, blat'kheads, whilchcad^ ancf artU' l>|i!-viiiiilili«ins. JcncarK EZ llair removal frces., v, i^ : .v-v \ ' Yv' •' "V-*. 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"A TimeTo Dies" by Tom Wicker; Quadrangle.Book*; 34Z •"'massacre'"'" is painstakingIyexposedin'iA time To Die."" ^ lion, administered senselessly, and often vindictively, mostpages, *10., > J;, , , tJ v s -, As would be expected of a journalist of Wicker's talent, all that of these institutions mocked the notion of •correcting" their ' By MICHAEL TOLSON is"reported" — specific incidents,"statements, dates,etc. — is inmates." • Writer ' *1 accurate and to the point. But because Wicker was a partici­ \¥4rv*• «? 1 Texan Staff Writer',-f -<£ ^ vspa; This is explanation enough for Attica's explosion,.but there isttlca, situated in the quiet hills of western New York, isn't , pant, the book has a different tRpist than that of a post facto another facet to that second question. Why, when itrealty much of a town..Small, conservative, almost exclusively study of events. was a violent resolution necessary? white but not affluent, itis not thesort of environment befittingi Working under the paradigm of "history as a novel," Wicker THIS IS the muddy water, that gray area where blame musthigh drama. When in the late summer of 1971; it became the. meticulously traces the events of four days with a Certain be apportioned ih light of different viewpoints and prejudices. scene of a major prison uprising, the incongruenceof the locale literary allegiance,careful to employ fictivedevices togive the Surely, there is plenty of blame to pass around — the inmates* was asstartling asthe'event itself. Indeed,as those fewdays in book a dramatic flow. The most important ramification of this intransigence, the troopers' trigger-happy mentality, the prisonSeptember proved, it was an altogether strange setting for a personalized version of history is the vivid impression it gives officials* obscuring antagonism towards the prisoners — drama in which the integrjtyofAmerican society was placedon-as-to who was responsible for the death of 43 men. 4 Wicker makes us understand that all these were in some the line. \ _ ,/ * ; , -' Such a statement should be qualified. It is not through measure responsible for the failure of negotiation. Yet. this^s rhetoric and dogma that conclusions become visible, but rather : Like its brethren towns of. Bataviav Warsaw and Castlie, At­not enough. Finally the responsibility goes higher up. in the accumulation of revealing detail, the slowevolution and tica possesses nothing to fulfill, the exoticpromise of its name. Wicker writes: "For once the hand of established power in repetition of statements and positions: Of courseany inside ac­ By almost any standard.it U a dull place, a breeding ground for America had been seen directly at work.... At Attica, oneof the count.is going to reflect individual bias, and; since thequestion what has been termed tlie Vsilent majority;'' The kind of town richest men in the world, possessing as much of the power of of ultimate responsibility is the cruxof the issue, one must note which was, once considered the backbone of the American na­wealth as anyonecould, had been seen indirect command of the that "A Time To'Die"' is no different; infact, it is organized at tion; Attica Has now slipped in rank.to anachronism. It'sa place political and military powers of the state. At Attica, there bad least partially as a result of that bias. been a rare and chilling glimpse of the real thing at work — YET WICKER demands empathy. Through"his-perspective, power itself, as well as the agents of power." This man is of rriific«'*iu .n. -«ri 1 j retr°specUve journalist/commentator and pawn in a brutal course. Nelson Rockefeller. -ITWAS to Attica thatTom VVickei^came for uulHilK flvi ' power struggle.one can gain an insight into the Attica tragedy TO WICKER, Rockefeller posses "the most profoundestdays of negotiating; — a hectic attempt tosetUe peaceably the . hitherto unavailable. One dan see intimately the opposing responsibility for what was happening." Perhaps Rockefellerrebellion of 1,200 prisoners. Wicker — a Southerner straightout forces at work: , what was possible in the context of cir­couldn't have settled the rebellion without bloodshed perhapsof the hills of Thomas Wolfe's North Carolina, and yet whose cumstances, what actions could have been taken and the violence was inexorable; but what damns him in Wicker's eyesliicseui, (jusiuuii as a uuerai cuiummsi iorjnenew x oreTimes; proloi present position lib^al columnist for^el New YoHcTimes;; profound errors of judgment that were made. was the unwillingness to even try, his inability to consider theconsiderably denies that southernheritage ^was summoned Bee J " 1 * • -**-Because he was there, Wicker can point the finger of respon­human element involved and deal with the prisoners, for the Attica by state officials at the inmat^sViwuestS^-SMfe sibilit sibility with some authority, and although he usuallychooses to first lime in his life, as men. In this case, the governor'soffice t-t i-avoid v The liature of his role as a member... ..'•••A.:;,--.-.of'the civiUanidbseryer ^•actss£!?k for themselves' theimpactof is where the buck stops. group was, at that point, vagueand undetermined. However, as iticism. is not diminished. ••* WHAT HAPPENED and why are the two questions we want the bizarre course6f eventsslowly unfolded,lie came to unders­"A Time To Die" is not a "dramatic" book, at least in the answered about Attica^ and these are the twowhich Wicker ad­ tand fully not only his immediate dutiesasimpromptu diplomat „sense of a minute-by-minute scenario.lt is a careful study of dresses. The first can be answered journalistically, and for the but also the importance of his involvement as a personal trial— men, values and human needs, framed by the context of Attica most part is; the other is a more complete issue, and despite a test of himself against his own exacting standards of perfor­and generated by the effect of such a visible catastrophe on a Wicker's implied jugments each reader must find his own con­ mance. ". 1:-. man who cares. It is the sort of bode which seems horribly out clusions. v.-,;.; */w; \ of place on thesuburban family's bookshelf. Yetthere, if The four days picker spent at Attica were among the piost Wicker is faithful to his liberaiity by his emphasis on the are to be changed, is where it most desperately needs to be. important and painful of his Ufe. There, he learnfed, in what he desparate condition of American prisons. They are despicable Wicker has written an intelligent and sensitive record of alater called a "visceral" sense, things about himself and the-places, sad examplesof institutionalized cruelty. Wicker terse­, sorrowful episode in the annals of our criminal justice system. society he wrote about which bad previously beenonly shadovirs ly summarizes: -; -. And even should Attica occupy only a slightly soiled page inwithin his intellect * r ' "The primitive dellveiy.of medical care was only one of American history, }he conditions which brought about its oo-. dS??erpus alM! "A TIME TO DIE" is nioft than a chronicle of a shiiheful1 .conations currertce, as Wicker pointedly tells us, "cannot-be ignored. that existed there (Attica) — and, in greater or lesser tragedy, it is an introspective examination of the way environ­ degree, in virtually, ievery American prison. Overcrowded, ment molds values and, concomitantly, the way one responds ; underfinanced, overaiged.designed for securityand segrega-' whenhisscheme of valuesischallenged. ' * *•. 'y What happened at Attica — the near-spontaneous revolt of 1,­200 inmates, the taking of 39 hostages, the delivering Of demands, the days of fruitless negotiation, finally the TONIGHT 8:30 -MIDNIGHT: JJ.28 N. LAMAR • PHONE 453-5676 "Noclie Mexicanan ~W NO COVER CHARGE J?tiDiaS'M6HT-fiUXadies 1 Free Drink i Conjunto Music HIOHBALLS $1.50 G5 d W°,°Hg,e HOME COOKING ^Xhoma FEATURING CAL ROBERTS Beer Prices Goo# 4 p.m. 'Midnight T^'ES [WON 71on~MIXED DRINKS ~ 65c HIGHBAUSi .7x1#.*217 S.a. Lamarminor NOiw COVERwvn 4/2-U14 *­ 472-4314 A A A AAA A•k A* **** AM ititlrlr HAPPY HOUR. 4 -7-OAay »2-fer1 •• TUESDAY FEED A FRIEND FREE 2 FOR 1 SPAGHETTI & m AProlect of U.T.SbidentGovenimMit|n«>i>nolStud«itsagd TpTngStnHpnt PnWipatin>^' *1.39 « " ''r J ^^. 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UJTS t , Values -3mm Attica Prison uprising — 1971 THE FILMS BULLITT WITH STEVE McQUEEN SUPER COPS TONIGHT 7:30 FREE & OPEN TO THE PUBLIC UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS LAW SCHOOL ^ AUDITORIUM WEAR * "GOLDEN OLDIE" WRISTWATCH AND YOU'LL BE THE STAR OF THE PARTY Amazing!Star's eyes move " from side to side « . MO Of. 60 times a mfnutel Gable's back and yoo've get land Or or W.C Fields... or khr IMP! 1W FMFML gift for old movie fans or put for ha! Wear one mi Mkk the conversation' you stmt abea yoor frisds see he* t* eyes mare hack and fatfc. Watch face la in leKUej cielet- Sviss ufOvmNnl gesiantees ouuilll tinekeeping. UnhcMk­ •Ue nNtepring.Shock resistant. H MA Mf«sh OB*.(W KV leolher hand. Miner hackgoarariee.Older wHOrfftlfiS r-a CLMM GABLE W.CHELDS n CHARLIE CHAPUN CUAD "GOLDCN OLDIB" IH SHIRTS Celerftil foces of stars printed on kigh qaofity csttea lee shiit to match watch faces. Only S4.9S each. Mv as Many of eodi star as you Gke; indicate size: SraaD. M»­fanprLaqe. Supply Limited—Mail He-risk Coupon Tatof! Desa LenCorporation P.OJox53M.6rand Centrnl Sta.iew York. ILY. 10017 I enclose my check or money order for S ($19.95 complete each watch and $4.95 each fir tee shirts, no exita (barge for handling or send itoms.cfaecked Mow. If not . may return them for a refund. Oldie Q6JUU •atOIKHO ••OGUT Wiislwolilies •naos •attnm ••••a* «$19.95 Mdo Oldie •GAIU •OHNKHO ••OFIHT TteSMr I 6$4.95 •RBDS Oaunm QLIOOP I Sb^'SMlQ*"IhipqQ r '-N,* I •: -•> : .k • V |H ».V--»•: 4*1 I • • I V '<•_ "J' f­ tuesday, April 15, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11 sa=*£?iL &^3G8I> S0Z £*&L~: •M **iawate" (ems. FredAsialre and .The Paramount also frill -cougje.of years without being one-third .—.-» • •••-**• • UMJMi. «»y. Drags, tke UDinRi^.Co-Op, ting company set up by the..' that," bemardoni said. "We , of these grand old building;if Admission t* tke 81n>Vd Shoe Stores down­Paramount. saw what might happen; • they are ever destroyed." town and Westgate Mall, and "OUR PRIMARY purpose however, if it was not ' The Paramount, built In wffi be acents per feature, Tens Stereo n Riverside was to revamp and revitalize revitalized, as evidenced by J915 by Ernest Nalle of •ffitiiBf lalt «nt tke «alM«c sfcmiwgs «8I in-Drive. one of the gretest vaudeville the fate of the Majestic in Austin, has undergoneseveral «M<|HIUt «f the clude s«tk. classics as TOE PARAMOUNT, open­theatersin thestate,"Bernar-Houston, sow^ startedour ef­.name changes during its ftM—tTlwfttTMiq, ra&M Khk." mtcteocrs ed asa troejtsodevilletheater doni said. "We believe that forts early to assure, its glamorous and not-so­ fte (task WIs ul "»Shjs,""^gniW-and in ms, has seen throughout Austin needs and deserves; future. gtamoroos history.: „ • ­yu»l gwas «ffl pfttr "A* America* m Puis." its M years a multitude of this kindof theater, onethat is "If the Paramount Originally conceived as the IMvlirte hnanl^ MhyB«'-«l*Ih9cBaE-vaudeville: and 'minstrel smaller and more Intimate succeeds, it will be a stepping Gaiety, then Changed to.the twi upewng at its fte ^utnKttra^bFtidiysod dams, starsand movies.: than the Municipal stone for other theaters Majesty, and finally, the * * -•. • cKkSSKS, —• ••• Ml» fUlillj}!. * .. Bernardoni, an Austin actor Auditorium, yet' can accom­the country. People Paramount, it was built as a 4CMB oBMBtf across BatT at MlatMira. SatMnfay.niu Nero,pianist,; and businessman, started modate a variety of perfor­will begin to see these grand theater for dramatic produce Ihe tkssie natal «TAe nearly four yearsago, withhis mances." , , oid buildings in a new light Hons. Through theyears ithas HftrtteJuii»>jo s—it t—cy perform two pun concerts, efforts to save the The acoustics of I,SB-seat-and perhaps realize their con­hosted.-such entertainers as [«M U^ii| b^ «K ef faring * MHQM Mend of economically threatened theater areperfect, according tributions to their aties. :Katherine Cornell, Katharine 1—'rl V liinl ruiiim ilia i 'ttassks: im >• .Austin landmark on Congress to BernardanL-"They're ab-; "It's more than just savings'Hepburn, Orson Welles,, the AVCOK. solutely the best in the city :a beautiful old buiiding,''Ber^ Barrymores, John Philip Along withStephen!*.Scott, -he said,..''particularly for nardoni said. "It'salso saving-Sousa.Mae West, Lillian Anstin businessman* and musical and theatrical perfor­the -downtown.. When ' the-.' Gish,-Anna Pavlova and Charles Eckerman, adver­mances.-No matterwhere yotr magnificent theaters-that : Claire Bloom. tising executivefrom San sit in -the-theater, yoa'r* woe built SO or so years ago . The ParamountVintricate-° : Francisco,:; kev set np guaranteed^good vifew and fall to the wreckersand a new : ly carved-stone and brick Paramount, Inc.,in1973 toes­excellentsovd. Infact, some parking lot goes up' in its facade, somewhat obscured tablish the Paramatmt as a of the best seats in the house -place, weall losesomething.":; fay the modem, brightly lit performing arts center for are in the balcoqy." ACROSS THECOUNTRY, a marquee, faces CongressAnstin and ultimately the Betnardoni sees the fate,of-> new interest is being taken in Avenue and is atakbng the few,^ Southwest. Thar (dans call the Paramount as a'majors old.: vaudeville and movie remaining original exteriors' for complete restoration of test for doxens of vaudeville ^beaters,and many havebeen of downtown Austin. the theater, which they hope theaters across the coontry; successfully revitalized, he -"We will continuefbran a>­to accomplish by the end of that lace being torn down, ife said. -„ limited time to show our film Broadway plays, individual longer just a moowi . the year. They have already "It's all a matter of : ,{"Economically peaking, classics Sunday through performers, chamber music, but that it has been re­applied to the Texas economic obsolescence," he it's a wise thing to do," B«^ . Thursday. The othernigitsof jazz and the like. -establidied asacenterforthe Historical . Commission -for said. "If a theaterproduces;it nardoni said."A city canredo the weekweirill hebooking "We're trying toget out the' performing arts," Bernankni i? lanftnaik stabs, stays: but if a building goesa^, an old vaudeville tbeaterat. major ; ballets, symphonies. word that theParamount isno said, ­.SsiSSs |AT 8:30 & 12:00 Hungarian Cellist To PeHoritfin Hogg Auditorium m -.... ... HungarianceBistJanosStarker will perform attpaoK'inita^-* of the Vienna Coaservato^&^f^t^^a#^ --^ . , cellist with the Bndapest Opera and Philharmonic Orchestras. AT day mHOggAnditorium, sponsored bythe Departmentof Music BRAHMS ADAPTED tbe work from his G M^jor Vkrfin Disillusionment with the political atmosphere of Central ' zzjs*\mms fairy tausi and iQaltural Entertainment Committee as part of^theSoki Ar; Sonata, for his friend Robert Hausemann, a teuowued cellisL Europe led him to emigrateto the United.Statesin IStt. Hefill- h f. tist Series. -' '•-•Ck; ;Thec€Uoworki Whichwasoqlyprinteduialimitededitioo,9(>on-ed the role of first cellist with the DallasSymphony Uk Metrr­usrtvr TheprogramwillmcludeSuiteNo.jinCMajorfn-unaccanK disappeared from theceOo repertory. pobtan Opera and then the Chicago Symphony tinder, the late ' 1 : SUtTK •ML paaied cello by Ba<4; Sonata in D Mjyor.Op.7S, tQrBarahnis* Starker whom criQcshavetalled"theking of cellists,"began Fritz Reiner. 'JEX AS -a V!; ^ SLtUM SooatainG miN, W?~R FMPM. ' ^ 2 Norlti Austin Opftiiltfi PiMiiit v stfirEMrpr junior lmqm Bisi6iH 7 MASH r • 9 The OtfMr Hair «r Mt Sky!^ Ctilna Mtmoir, Produced :wd. rT^r-i namM bir^Mrkr MadftMt • '' ­ MO¥l#: • H|D storvr tt»rrt»g DytaCiwcn irtd Hfyy *R--^ 7HMWfiPN«0 t ^ ^ : TI* ^ , 7 Barnftby Jom j; K XiWn: AcHon Biography •miliumnun niiiiC f *Pdfc* itory •-^usi -!4 * Consumer Smhn Kit *1 W: HIGHLAND MALL -Ji A* ,S NOW! * m» FlorMM T>i4lkfe.&iu«ns , iiwTbB .Pdtr Gram and 1mm­ '-„' M£l BROOKS' Ctp^oMd ABC EWa»nm[H .ktLnVtgu.tar Um ;i«ness 9GN UP IOC THE WEENY EATMG Z -CadtM AlhStM-BuMMTOnilc: ^ ''' ' ^JWghtSew UMtKW wfinttssta CHICKEN} , RANCH" -1 CLUB& BEERff ­ Today at • GARDEN-v I.. VILLAGE 4 HIGHLAND MAUL DOAK : 2 S AT .S SNEADK ' V • X . "R NO COVET 442-9968 ' SFAIUTGMTFMQOT 3615S.Coogre»sr> Dustin Hoffman >^****»AA*AAAAA* :} Sun Theater i HBLLcnnv^J* 5 ^ ^ * |Ml E-W.,, ^77-OMl * A Bob Fosse Film it 2|nieyXXXM0viOT| 1Boolci & Nov«itwi> |?:30AM.2:30AM t J -» J STUD^* DISCOTMT * RIVERSIDE $CA>H$ '«£.0^#oU F„E^T U5, «W' VH1AGE 4 AQUARIUS 4 AWK. IBlMHttMktD I Nbk«I«1| SSfe HmstaaiMHm SHOWTOWN amdSOUTHSIDE tu< KnOmOEQ«BB7JO.SHOWSrAaTSDUSK BURT n . IReynolds™ Reincarnation XSM W.W. AND H Of ^ W THE DIXXEhI M PptpriH |DA2VCEKIIVGS 'uf™ PfOUO I )lts{ i(QHH FrancisFard CgjpsU s {[| Jtnii tePflRTIll ^1115,1975THEDAItY WsKM Si-A" 11 \ •*?%•* /V*"% U. { r "• ' * ' "t t Aa.**,© t By SUZANNE SHELTON With-Garcia back in town However, on the tiny Ar­Sunday and the corps' •The climactic moment loit A WORD must.be said forft* of the finest aspects of and Brule growing in madillo stage the bones of footwork in the allegrosection dramatic intensity through , ABT's costume' designers, Austin Ballet: Theatre's, technical expertise, Hall rein-! Hall's choreography became was flabby, but Brantly faulty timing, with Owen particularly for Margueritemonthly effort at Armadillo; troduped his "Napoli'' pas de -obscured. With full corps de . Bright asthe principal dancer ..appearing to waitfor Clorinda Wright's filmy "Napoli"World Headquarters is its. trois, choreographed in-the "ballet onstage, the/dancers was pleasantly serene. ;.to collapse, but asa whole the costumes and Kathleen Gee's fluidity. New works come into: Boornonvillestyle. TerriLynn >appeared to be all but mark-, "Combat" 6ast has deepened dramatic garb in "Combat." SUNDAY'SSECOND ballet, the repertoire; old works' Wright, who p^ormed with ing in place, but in the sec-: its interpretation of this sen­These are costumers on a par : meilow-Dancere improve and the male dancers, poss&sesa' *tions with fewer dancers, the "I«Combat," featured ihuch-sitive work. with professionals: Inleayeforprofessional rare instinct.for,thu Danish work returned to its original, improved lighting, designed In the closing ballet, "Facade," those erripire­ careen, and other dancer? style, Jwhichcombines: fleet interest. by • Rob Dorris. This ballet '/Facade," Rosemary waisted, floor-length net tents never looks the same twice •teptato their!roles.' footworlc and melting There's a. fascinating mo­ Thomas was twiceas funny as for the neuter-cygnets are at and never fails to move its -:Sunday an ABT; dancer-carriage.1 The feet fly;the ment when, four dancers .— usualin theWaltz. A combina­least half the fun. tufned-pro reversed the usual, body appears charmingly iin-' Lisa. Frantz;'Jone: Bergquist, audience. A dramatic rendi­tion: Carmen Miranda and With Sunday's program, a battle between ar­ pattern and'came home to ruffled. ---•> Brule and Mary ClaireZiegler tion of Swan Queen, she amplified Austin Theatre mies led by disguised lovers, Ballet con­ dance. Ricardo Garcia,..a IN ADDITION. Wright has — stand upstage right, facing her well;worn role with even tinued to feed Austin's grow­Stanley Hall student who has a gift for timing which Hall's "Combat" features each other, in twos. The way greater comedic flair. A ing appetite for dance. That been on tour with "Disney on transforms a ' mere- pas de that squareswivels toface the Bergquist as Clorinda with heretofore hidden comic appetite can be critical andParade" and^ leaves this trois into.a dynamic;''three-audience and flattens" into a Ken Owen as Tancred; talent, Russell Easley, added voracious. As one Armadillosummer' to join Germany's way relationship. She is one line isintriguing, both visually In Sunday's performance Buster Keaton stoicism to the "We so t regular observed, •/jvfvL Hanover Ballet, returned to ABT dancer* mo never sur­and in terms of themusie. "Combat" seemed to offer barnyard mugging of the quickly become accustomed ^ I ;•.? the Armadillo stage in feits. ."'-f "Tchaikowsky Suite""moves more movement for the Yodeling Song, and Mary to good dancing and demand r X. "Napoli" pas de trois and Sunday's program evened in shifting planes and coalesce secondary dancers. The Claire Ziegler has by now better and, more." Luckily, I f "Facade." •' • " • with "Tchaikowsky Suite,"; ing groups, with a.signature choreography probably was made the roleof the milkmaid Austin Ballet Theatre seems I '5-It happens that Byron John­which seemed lovely last movement combining a unchanged, but somehow the charmingly her own. to be-delivering. s'"son of ABT has been injured, summer when^ it was "per­scissor jump and lift That ballet seemed more evenly: : and Garcia assumed his roles formed inZilkerPark. movement seemed ungainly distributed among the cast. T I l. with the ease bora: of e*­; perience.:A will-trained ^ , 1 Novelist Goyen To Lecture Tonight! 8 dancer .of open, chest and I I m^bertof'littleFoxes elegant carriage, Garcia has Novelist and playwright 3.204. ' • Country," "Hie Fair Sister" SjS books on the fifth'floor. for Social Research in New U'\ iit unscrupulous greed in da Sers as Addle, Gary A. While Austin Ballot Theatre • Goyen's lecture' on HIS FIRST NOVEL, "The York, a lecturer in the novel, BREATHLESS (1959) tunwif-tiie-century South" -Williams as Cal, Debrayoss ha# always been flexible, "Writing" at 3 ' p.m. in House of Breath," won the short story and playwriting at Directed by-Jean-Luc Godard lopen Tuesday asthefinal Humanities Research Center McMurray's. Bookshop Columbia, and he also recent­ '-A asr Birdie,John LeeSpanko as there are signs of late,that it With Jean Saberg and Jean-Paul Belmondo ctlon onthe University/ Oscar.DoogFranklin as Leo, 4.252 is : sponsored by the Award. The 25th anniversary ly taught a poetry course on is gaining consistency.On the English deoartment and the edition "The House of 74-75 Dr4ma Major 8erle£, MartiHatch as Regina, Skip heels of last month's satisfy­of Lawrence, Pound. and Yeats ; ll .''ft » far and away the most brilliant, mint intelligent and Humanities Research Center. Breath" willvbe released this at Brown University. [Lillian Bellman's "The Lit Slyfield as Marshall, Michael ing performance, Sunday's mm! exrtunf movie I have encountered... / am confident not it e. Foxes" >iirbe staged' Ray Cuohinghanf as "B6n, program was well; balanced The reception, will follow-in year by Random House and only that it mil mrvive the ,mall burden of my superlativeslgh April 28 with perfor-Christye JcShn as Alexandra and well danced, with a few-the Moseley -Room, the Bookworks., His' other byt that n will be revisited almost instantly by many of its • J\ — Humanities Research Center novels include "In a Farther CASH mxazmwxs, mimm viewers. ~ *i , lances at 8 p.m. in the : and Richard: Lineback as new faces in familiar roles. ' FOR ..Yorker i Theatre Room. ' Horace. RECORDS & BOOKS [According / to .director 1 . George Stallings .replaced ames Moll.of * the.drama, -Admission is $1;.50 Jfor Buddy Trevino as the gigolo-474-5294 H| ilty, thetateose drama by , students and |2.50 for nqn-tango teacher in "Facade," JESTER AUD. aft.-. 5 aBH > author of ''The Children's ', students. Tickets may be and while he has yet to four" concernsa southern. purchased from 10 a.m. to 6 develop . Trevino's sinister Uy, the Hubbards, which : p.m..weekdays;at the Hogg •seediness, he did add a com­ risen-: from, poverty 'to Auditorium Box Office: < ical note of annoyance. jffluence following the:;Civil < ; but nrmunnT ROCK 'N ROU TONIGHT * iO' •S Pat. • Damn Near Free and Moon-Hill Present [The University production NO COVER CHARGE TONITE rillleaturecostumes byGaye •.•, A Saturday Night in Austin with owen, scenery by Randi Uwflock properties^James' MwliMirtUTbliwDihrM in rocfctfnj gle and lighting by Susan . 'RAT Op«rt itftOO Mac begins 8:30 4 ENOTICES fromthe-810 9; v:v*. -&f, MADNESS i General Ubratln or dny —NOCOVEft [of the branch** ar» of-v 924 N UMAR Ificial University tom-; Imunications requiring', (hnipediat* attention. THEORI6INW-1SM80MG ANDOANCG * GOLD-SILVER.US COMEDY FEATURINQTHEINIMITABLE ; DANCING Of FflEOASTAWE ANDOMQER FORBtiN COINS*OU> ROSSISANDTHE UNMIS-^I Sat., April 19, 8:00 p.m. Austin Municipal Auditorium JEWHSY WANTED TAKABLE MUSICOF HIGHEST HUCtS PAID| KVMQBERUN. f PioneerXoin Co. I 90C APRIL All Tickets $2.50 15-21 SM.l«airK«Cllt4S10M7 stow Available at: Raymond's Drugs P.M Inner Sanctump,«f 3 LON&NECK NIGHT Joske's Austin „ FEATURING tvV ombs & Shears /t ' Unisex EVEREST tt$ci HA- TTi JLJm. X* WITH ,, jjfour Fovoritm BottM Smt for^:~7 J'j #}. CHELSEA STREET PUB •j «i^40< -ladites ft m LAYERS if ome On Down KRMH PRESENTS FOOD-SPIRITS & SHAGS f • RADIALS: THE BUCKET -^ 23rd and Peari 477-0433 -'Acranfrom HanHnNorth-3HrsFr««faridng LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NIG6TLY F«f PAUQNtt W DOOBIE . ^ tt NO COVER m AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM. NOWOPEN TONIGHT-8 P.M. HIGHLAND MALL % a c U , 4; RESERVED: $6.00 * **>F K * NORTHCROSS MALL +>v» _r i Ks :;NOW ON SALE ?* ' ** Both Locations openafter Mall hours. Enter Highland Raymond's No. 1 f ^J m* mm m. m ^ Mall outside entrancenext door toJoske's on1-35 side.^ -Raymond's No. 2/ Hours: Sun-Fri Il eum. -12 p.m.; Sat. 11 a.m. -1 turn. for information: 476*1090 j * • frofn.Concerts West -JAMProductions |1 ^ VW H J r, v.,.i J BF&Sdr*-*­ lf i N'Ot --' Theatre Committee The Solof^^ r i1 I ?announhe^7^ ; ^ e, ->, ' •" The Austin Symphony I Missa Solemnis I (Beethoven Coiiii J- . Utet -•Sp* iiSwt , .. -' fsPBa9.MtM ! ! ^Condpctd^yy^ltor /Duclbuxi'S®;: 2^ Room 3,200;f | ^&3tassb& A -v , ?t Tnesdajr/April15 H°^Andltorinm/SKH) PM .< ll If r : • :sa]es;b^in Frldayi Aprll.4 "wOfljce/10-6 wfeel^OTs' mmmmmA •• 3DOD80 c'vv ,.£^chCtritural EnteitaMmekC$Ix.> ; igHtp:/ana 9 p.nt Buraine Au f^mmittee ofttie Texas-Unloni. W't ^IP^artment ofMusic |||-fl.OO^r^tuddnts, Facility/Sioff Uiiloii $1.50-Members \ > & CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING sates FOR SALE FURN. APARTS.iFURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTSTTlFURN. APARTS. S FURN. APARTS. M FURN. APARTS. 15 word minimum : t. Eidt.Mr^ one .11: &y« £ Each w4 Htanci; -10 '< -> •* iffr EACH WORD 5-* JOB Misc.-For Sale HALLMARK FREE % % ^.•IhWLEASINdfJ DERRICKEach word 10 or more tents..* JO TOP. CASHPRICES peUOordlefraftdv iv «Pf4 ___ Summer Rates Jlow5 Stodmt rate each time :s' j0 4WgottClpMDi«wndSta^«?IN. . - SERVICE CUssifNdDhaiav -APTS. PARKING ~ y-through Aug. 3? Icot x 1 «acfe »lima S2.«3 STARFISH SAILBOAT! .Tilt U tt. tun £» IOC •**% > with 1 co* ii1 ncfcoo*tim* , ms f t ANTILLES, j;CONTINENTAL a,AJ^TS^ 81 1colx 1inch tenor mere rtme»&M 5IJD ^ TRANSPORTATION^ , afi CJc+raHa .t' central elr.carpeted,.tltil>i*p»'aw 2 BR -JIM ABP'g^p. Ill drf fnllHto. "Iy cable, t , _ mm Trailers »m «sni»« anrthna. -> -708West,34tf|^ aWalklng Distance fd UT.A ii?2204Enfield4>fr-2279t ^>hlAe *J?K PRECIOUS GEMS. faceted. reedy for --454-8239 Habitati ;-< Apts| >, ,^ ?10E.40th , oVi Bl6ck to ShyMIe Bu* ^­ mounting. Quality prestige ttoM. ••••,.-.i .. ...... amethyst aquemai lue. emerald. dla-BLOCKS TO CAMPUS • . 1807 So. Lakeshore FANTASTIC REDUCTIOSP °w* paniet andalaslta^ Jural*, opal. ••• FROM S13S AU.**BILLS PAID f.NOW LEASING FQR JUNE; ,4,t , *(0W LEARNS FOR JUI?E ON SUMMER LEASE4^ IMm, • . . Hunters j?' 442-6669 >CiS'!i.V* "Pafrtgwnelli»a, 1M%..'3ind, MaaagarApt. I«) 47MM0. v 472-2147 mjiM • '* x JACQUE C1JU;BR-$135 3' .IMui: I rwALK TO CLASS ^ 1 DD »1if *<" \QLD MAIN APARXMENTT I DK ^ $143 \ 'f w4tuw»rcal^>, i.nx ,»JKS4S55 tsisysLjs®. teasing for^fc^" Eltlcltnclet atld' one bedroom 1302W ?4th 1 47n»»» lmlta«on v Shutll. «xa «( front SZ-w ^a*»«tlnB. all burn-in kitchen. *n­ •"*d»y..s J* coo. WiUItntor «H«,OIID7fls, desk.Unwuol aressen.macMekjoniulil ' tm NOW LEASING '1" " Short dlsUDce to^ lntfafwraJ ^wd. ROLLTOP.DESKS* brass bads, arlcttr „ «Werpaid.fl0West2iitL4n4SWor4S1-FURNISHED, ALL BILLS standv s»dr-v SO W.M.. CT%t ? p^. -'' ^ »0r a Frprrtuw. Water,-pas*cable paid.<000 tef< FOR SALE BILLSw^U. FOR JUNE >5,4 N Lamar.*JMaor«5l45«~Central SA^KVO SUPER (.camera «/auto % ? 5 v, ^ ( Properties Inc. .. worn and regular or S«eerlpro$«clor. longhaveKT A \ r Jj * .. Thestts^PAID p? I ' ' ' Auto-ForScHft SONY TV-tSB Portable UW TV. UveaI y** 1 BR-$135 . 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TH^fe£^vv^NUECES CA/CH-aW.builHn kll^hea each apart*-^^ CO onl^ -eM;4 sltet betled racgal fires •/v dear^ sgS peracra.-17Sacre^«nodarw _ Gbnme a buzz at OHJ7t, 47^DS%^ot - ^BRILLIANT •? "• INUCV' Its lqw^ ...... Newelllclency.costom WouaHwIIti HVET. Perfectcondmoa4Z7hM)per^ ' y°*- .. poot trees. ^S^ BLACKSTONE®^^^^^®BLACKSTONE MfTtAf. .. .>, Wgbakonlet for your plants.Greet leca- P- IXCVV , t \ tloiy BteaHwMty^wSgjusayctrlcHy |.®rf lont«oce.'4 irmii uahn odUfmi naaacaa r acre. Many «Oier , ^ BnttiSl SSV2tf4Sl'4Sn. M ^V-,; APARTMENJSI; f VILLA M* 3 BEOROOM. 3 bath epertment. Meal' -lt7*r':inTERMED»ATE SMILEY . lor young family. Convenlew lo UT. miaaaMle; Ambassador nrrmiiih" PONCE -i Priced lor • family bodjet SMS -tils ' lofly MiiltJi. goodcwidWoa nmfflU i REALTY DUVALi? SHARE 2B!2BEFOR>S?:S-" 1 BR -$145 unlurnl»hed, ABP. SH0 -(MO turnlsheo. ad-VCl;- MONTH. ABP. The Soum Shore. 300 E.Rlverslds &l.,, .m* om. CADET. AMamaNc. SUM: A .r-587-2181 ^de LEON Or.4444117. . • . • • . I^ 5'-, nmec Gaod «endn(Da.rfta* radMs.' £ Sri' EFFICIENCY, wlth sleeptng alcove FOR JUNE w if ^ overlooking Toon Lake. Convenient to ESTATE SALE s^ UT^ " Economically jiriceH o1 xtrtfi. pw»E Managein? WestI9m.477-SB74 HILLS tSUMAAEK aus irtist. UH a#;xtf«»v w.' <•» Jk ^ vi . AMNG^"-0::v.v"VtEW?V. BREATHTAKING VIEW »J>ortfc Lemarv; ^«aMn^vlM^iao!S!lmM FANTASTICSUMMERkKatlonl Block -S MHW ICACIKIn;-JM. *aHy Sl> ma,n,enance TiOTtTtniiMrtt Onemamntiiaii^i "X.UTZ 2MB WOOL ACRYLIC >^r' ^ -**»<£<»*• J &-f RATES NOW} LEASING' KSSf'SoTwsSSS^SSS!' •;r^«SAyr? Toolit vai^kO-MmpinoB asfcbrtWMAMA WfeATHERLY 1 m Ii« •-"" '••A5USS^'%. -w i-e­ .START NOW ; i.«»B7<«s«mrtime. DOUBLE KNIT ACRYLIC Now Pre-Leasing Summer i2_^OROOM_-il37_v»^? SUNNYVALE •lOWLfeASlNfi'POR: jVNE 1st .S N9B HILL APT. Now. Ie«>li»» »w i"" TRiuMW M T»W tocf«des ALL SIZES 26"-38" ­ One Bedroom Funi, -'I ^Mdaner tar. Rates" \EFFICIENCY -sflS ll4tt11HOMQAXRnsZnmif7IH»IMdt wHw, (Across I StyvgfcCantetToo^euMiKeHB.sBS.-;-i.4v -"4 _fridty $125.m2 ,«S-«f5f*t­ rtd. ^ ... „. tomar. <7T«4l..>.|. -; j :CarpeL Paneled.' IM>«ua>Mi'«!inlnidl&]Mir;.gas andCAtlKI fe ,«Hhand Ave: *J-CsaT paid. *1WeSMBft. « ^,,3100SpeedWay.™ NOW LEASING For summer and tea IGENESIS ClWFtSr JK3BB5-C _ /-,wJWor^n-dsn,, W-m 4754J736 478-4096 bottom J bath,!bedroomlandItem. ' •IZJfZZ AHo *"•Pall -« T'^ •«&&„ SHUTTLE BUSCORNER C* Won U*rnie busroute. Laroe pool -" mbtocksto.tiruAsd^antftod ^ • --••—•'# EFFICIENT Rlvarr477^lM. QtlAO;.HAKMON lCAIlOON:» plos 'K$139 14ILLTOPiTANStEWOOlf.VILdTnORTH £?!SS7!?S2: ALLBILLSPAtO MtfSj WUUU L Efficiencies $110' WEST 'jri-6*Ce ^JW^KSSibath front SM0.|4S° APTS. ISSS'-^ tonDrlve« MANAGERIOIQI: COTHRONS.i ItfTEGRATBD AmpUfier, Jt,M ^ * V ^ BIKE SHOP HELP.FREE^ELP the Redcoats "NCHICHMESSUSE:- > 4HHMj we ,lst . .u! ^^^^^JiASfNG.FOlfJuNE! *•}"$( ' NOW LEASING TOR^ttNfe ist :? ,2StmK»IwS5^4S' ,^»M^,E»Gwr-.T»Agc iona,"*ia-1 ^FOORPUMPRML K: *T. " of AusHn. We 11 tmrAyAivE^ Mrt^Kfwar* ance ^ffiSfbOCJ'.'E ACE ^BaaB888es».,r^ " UAAAAER RATES^^E;LE«f6j|«w"' ^Rt^«V^^^ SU ROCA .;ASPEN fcnSaiW^^fey^qlll:*<-*"* -—*.v.n v.wwft#'.OVCH^l^fi^ LUXURY Efr/ISR/IB* ^ • S^^All^llfrlSKhm PALO BLANCO ibedroom, fully G^RTJAOGRALIDE: 8R/IBR < ^ SUMMER JMncloseh# beautiful FROM S135-'ar near school and :^W;OO.Ds£^» ^"Ml< bewrtiful |wlghborl»Ood.vLocaled »*^BSi5S"«rr^i EFFtClENCIESv S)48{00 »ea*aiKlficlosets,b« orpeted^^rtral eV dlsbweslier tl *JSbIWSo^SCTB*^,-.^fl i;br _ ,, 1*5erNewMa»eeteerrt p>M 5*rttoW^t»r^»Sirt«.«I.BJan. k MTWestAv*.* ..SSSSST®^ • -SSF8""®51^. 'I£47fc5812al&' ^SPaciousComemporary Ssg-'aMM-nw.-' ~ •g^geoBK-iswiei Y4r^» BEOROOM..Walk ta yI%7'tr 'O VL. 452:720^v-, ,11, ,1V, »•%&(& * poottrcowrwrparking "*-« scteoL studv • ..— deck. CA/CH. laundry sl^f-aS^SSS""^S^^SSi?SS^ PAH ASOH.IC-;STE WEQlystew.• iiprftPIRTO'R No petw SiimtiW S1MA50%of iBR ¥I« «st«j ^ »s.Sn«M7.Fau-ueslng ^ ii? SSp'aiJNueces. -an*n.CraetoadnKaL j°sn" mi.»a;^-• • »..-••>..... r, SSv 4SJ» Guad«Kipe Avaliabl*. -7 w 1 •JW^aWir^giaa y^r'V: All AMERICAN INDIUM «• <»R«*«•.•<*< w , C-peUvevn^uW ,fiSwumE in TSStiJSSJS^ •j mrmur vii»iy iw'' < -. i Villa a oo$»Barga«ii^>'' ' CS5SS^S0",# "'F^ . '**?v HE BEA FORMAT. 5^- *P^RTf^NT5 .1 ,, ^^^W_^*U,il»fcU-PAIO^ ««S ? HUGE 1 a.6PR0d^;iw-:oini^iwi:y j GWTARRESURRECTWN Kaowopig IF AL^WH^REOAPAR !«t1WiCiiedtue wWi lergest leleriloug BTLLSPAID ALL BILL? fi|j(HEa4FLATS'' AAAPV'YyA"'vII"«r;i;mw:«i>i• wi: . ^eMW.aStd^S ^:J>s«d;«»d;rere^.'g>>|»er»ila-.tl»eri;..v.»i LAI^AR^^WEN^CIRCIET ,G,3 OVR) 3JM £££&** ..•^T.VALUEroear.sempus.'Summer BR $140 Jhoer LMslnbfor JUnt It P1"* »<«ctrlcit».scampletety < I«r maximumsummed /L BR/2 BR $110 UPi *. i twnWiad, large an*,be*iMnv-double­ 6 bIKs West of ORAG I JFF F -UlS PahnaPlaO' '2^?*'«"°JR LAMLFAEANTOE.. BR-$165 vi% LA PAZ * «Hbr. 4ilraW«aWet S. —*-' * • ."^P'^'IIL^LOMVLEV^SEE FENOERPRECISIONBASS. SSS^^SSTSIFM, W^STMWMI^OSOUR Leon -4763467-TF.II W V 1 S«MW V*> -3K K fi**1** Manaoement that jearas.. First Month Fr»e om. nrt-Wmitase.Mika.44»M«R prices In TEXAS?^ ^ 5 «• R^.I. ->I„ » ^m^UPER VALUE:il, a » badrooms. i» j8 Centrally located HANCOCK III 5923953 p £2rtW2t ^ni4'** 'paStledITbar,aiBSQW C-o ctessical Mrtag «nh.V} OS«,MIJMWII. ^ { QUIET -Roomy -Pane) affer4^fnA|M.M3or 1 BR, 2double beds BUFFETvCURINET a«d c«S« «x^ A8M-",~ tszssssss&s* GUITAR GfVEAWAYiVcatDre R00WS PART Je«aitadnly;:C/,; 'EFF^'ittgiDOIEFK ' ^,syM/V\ER-RATES on-Vat trltniH NFimTION ilirfffiilail -eabte," L »»*»/. oas. pootfurn WI*lldren«.p*t«.4| :M DA V [OKMPITT «l^iada A'pfe.-e™ AAAKA^URR AWAITE y.Aii'T ^•MFLMCA »• AMSTERAAUSI,C JBAMCRL^NETHEORR^WAFUR^ lOHarttr FURN. APARTS. TUTIEONEENDTWO disposatt>; ^TRFE4STLIL wmm fadrmes VA-JAk>%'Si iJ.Jamil.-yr-^tkiS' ; ;JT6ASIN6 W^I^WfrWi. MS ; *£,n•»% •» -M«»•-'a"-l •tmms iskParker mmmsm *^*1 H^istttt ASA^OfH RSSGJ; iPWiiww HWCITY argel^R/2BR/2Ba ?£m&, ipK»iwpisa duplex for rent inaquletv Hemphill Pa "Vv" ^bedroom* in jit< " you get clipped. ­ • Northea*l,-;-Au*tln residential. Wright to Panel ;^ ;ne|ghborr»ood.'JE«ch duplex,offers target THE HAIRCUT • 3» fencedbackyardLcovered. perklng/ex-r • tra -storage room, -plus wisher, -dryerc-STORES connections. . K11chen,ap#1•nets •fjw-oon '477-OCJ TonPrepare Holmes Lectures GINNY'S 'THE COMPLETE isjg. OPYING PROFESSIONAL ?Unl versityt'-liaiir. -Prof: OlivBr/WendellHolmeS' -Student Housing day in the Texas Tavern. Admission CHABAD nova will meet at 7 p.m. Tues­ -hwatlwr,_»tove. Fen^d,-patio, carport, , 1BUS tMKM etOSATION COMMimi Will 2 8EDROOM.ca(T»)etl,C*/CH,di»-ERVICE Charles Alan Wright has been Devise. >. , is free. day at 311 E. 31st St., Apt. 206. for a discussion on Jewish and Chastdic FULLTIME** taundry roorn.,p#t» pwrmltttd, aWJfctt INC. appointed by. PfKident Ford <: The committee administers :-• U.N.I.T. and Mexican- wifh DavM sponsor^* discussion philosophy. 42 Ooble Mall ' American New Students, will "YPING SERVICE 476-9171 to an eight-year term on the a-fond used for the prepara-Steepetiw"The Therapeutic Value • mm STUOCMT BaANCH Will meet at 7:30 /•' 472-3210 and 472-7677 Free Parking . present a panel discussion en­of the wilderness Experience" at p.m. Tuesday at Hansel and. " '1--'•frJ-T. v 7a m.-10 p.m.M-F -~ ->• PermanentCommittee forthe tion of a history of the U.S. noon Tuesday In the Cellar Room of Gretel's* 409 W. 30th St« to elect of* §!§gf;: » ».ro. • 5 p m Sal., ~ titled "Is Apartment Living Supreme Court and for the Texas Tavern. ficers. Reports^Risurnt^^ t**AS UMON THEATH COaWMIIM will fTrPiNC :• (Th*««;;tJrtlBl'V:'?^S .CONFIDENTIAL CARE for. pregnant presentation d#a series of All It's Cracked Up To Be?" LSAT pnrAtAIKM sponsored by the A)( UnlWOTltyJirtdaf' UNF. APARTS. unmarried mothers.' Edna, Gltdnev -FURN. DUPLEXES at .7 p.m. Tuesday in Jester sponsor the film "The Garden of the Reading and Skills Study£»-Horn*. 230* Hemphill, Fort worm. Toll " (Niver Wendell Holmes lec­Finzl Control" at 7 and 9 pm Tues­Laboratory (RASSL) will meet at 4 V i'— *ra"~ butlnwi work-• Center West, second floor ' CMP J&Uit Minute Swvle*'' LAR(?E ONE BEDROOM apartment In;•?-/ lrw numbw MWWV2-1104.-• NICE1BEDROOM South Austinduplex tures. The fund wasleft by the day In Burdine Auditorium. Admis­p.m. Tuesday In Jester Center A332. qulBt west Atnlln compltx. «U5 ptol ABORTION / ALTERNATIVES! Preg­SISphis bills.»lATerrMf Hill4OT700. lounge. The discussion will sion Is SI for students, faculty and HA0MQ VfKMMCT sponsored by the late Chief Justice Holrties at ttectrlclty. 327-0179 *ftt^ Str?--* • --'. nant and dlstresMd? Help Is as near it staff; siJO for others. Reading and Study Skills HUGE 1 BEDROOM,-nMr carptV ffifcV Laboratory (RASSL) will meet at ,8rav^ <*5 PCI-Sal «vr telephone. Pro-Life Advocates. 510 his death in 1935. focus on students' housing JOB WANTED paint,: refrigerator;; and. sfove.' Large-, est 26th 472-4190. alternatives and what is in­OCPAKTMBU OfOeOUXHCAlSOBiCeSwHi noon Tuesday in Jester Center A332. Congress established the cedarjietlo, big yant one^lock tastof:: MOVING?. WE,can move you1 fast . meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday in Geology «AWCA1 STUoecr umon willmeet at 7:30 472-8936 DpblefiAall' Sld'i.3501N.' Lamar.Owen Circle.Steve without bruklnJ^ou^Cheaper'than you FOR SUMMeR. Responsible Individual committee in 1965. volved in his or her choice. P-m. Tuesday in Batts Hall 318. brer"- .Building 100 to hear Jane Anepohl care for house-plants, yant pefs. 451*6132 fi.» ^ -think. 454-71 to Representatives from the discuss "Living Benthic -'THE CROCKETT COMPANY?^;-SPACIOUS 1,BEDROOM with allluxury: EXPERIENCED TAX Consultant,: Austin Apartment Associa­Foraminifera of,the Texas Outer Business-Economics Building 363 to After t pm. 47S4ML., Former members of the nxruto will meet at noon Tuesday in The complete Kcr«f«rlal tervlc* . : feature^,. Pool/,close to stiuttlc, campus^ . tamHIar :fRS. procedure; specializes' committee include Or. Harry : Continental $helf." hear Shirley Hutchinson discussrVPIMO • tbejM, manuscript*, reports, $140 plus elec Three Elms Aperfmenta.. : professors'-tnd students',returns^' Free. LOST & FOUND Random, chancellor emeritus tion, women's co-ops, Inter-IOMMCI IttOKMAflON CtNTft will "The Government and Your Food 400 West 3Sth.4S)^4l, ^ .,'t estimates. 474-25«2. Hurryl ; meet at 3 p.m. Tuesday In Jester Supply: How Safe Is )t?" Cooperative Council and the *UTOMATlc^priNGmf*i#tter» and UJST WILSON softball glov*. By ESQ. of the University System, and Center A115A fo present a workshop 'BOOK-LOOKING? Let us help. No UT BONO ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 multi-copied orlglnalt iobligation search fbr out-of-print or rare -Friday 4/4.Call tns>m.4fUi». University's off-campus hous­on '.'Resume Writing/' the late Prof. Charles T. p.m. Tuesday in Batts Hall 217. XEROX COPIES • n«l (or 106 coplei boeki.. Call-36J-5J35:.or write Aciay u>ST STOCK Black, male Labrador, ing office will be the guest (per originals) ' _. • iBooks. Rt.fc Box 1731 Austin 7BB1.. natnr bandana./ Wednesday Hippie HcConnick of the University PRINTING and COMPLETE LINE of HELP WANTED I' CELEBRATE "The Week Of the Young -Hollow -Comanche Trails. Reward. 4S9-: law school. panelists. A question and SUPPLIES •; .. ; '' • 40301 4Sf0229.' ••• _--­ 5530 Burriet Rd. mil.. .miiTcn.'...... innjK Child." April < -thru -12. Vbtt Girting. answer period will follow the J*S&^OoySchoo^lW North Loop.4SI.jWM. , LOST CAMPUS .WEDNESDAY Bladt?^X 1TARK TYPING.'Specialty:-Technlcal. . lOam-Ipm --V.V CIRLlNti pAY SOWL./'Crwitivjeji-~v—•bkrydh>g shoes frr brown pepar^ Illuminating presentations: The vent is be­All Day Happy Hour beg. >5 Rewerd.,47M3P. .. ? :*perlen«dIhttfs,MuerlatlsnvPR't, ing cosponsored by .Ethnic nanuicrlbtv ttc; Printing/ bindings watchman at xonttrvctlon sight. -vffcbme vJsH LOST FEMALEBlade Lett whilechest'-C?v The Central Texas chapter at PIANO 'TUTJIHG :(iarlene Stark, 45*5211 P4V, % SIS: 'repairs' • teev Red cottar. esi2 Ave. Fi gl-pp. ^ Student Services. of the Illuminating Engineer­ VIRGINIA; SCHNEIDER.'Diversified/, , guareoteed wbrfc;-Hours 7 am-iram. LOST 4-ll-TS 2!st/Speetfway; Round EXPERIENCED SECRETARY, in* •ervlcaw,Gradual. and undergraduate terest.in crlmlnenvstice/ pefterel AndXpTOrlf pm: 474»l77f. Blue tens sunglasses wtttibrown plastfc • ing Societyhas beenestablish­ skiUv w i n l , * f o o GRADSTUDENTnow. acceptingdlents °^*^e frame Leatticrrcase. Reward. Sa?jsSnw?9''' Wndlo#:'-VIs:Koenlg' ^ p h typ reQ I f f dic efl KSnv . ed in Austin, far the advance­AOIOfeffACt COCK/VISTA will have Plus benefits^For appotntmeot callM*. ifdr.weefclyffif.weekly lawn.mowtog .this.r booths set up from 9 a.m." to $ pjn. • lOBBYEPELAFIELD.IBMSelectrlc, ;5lauflht»f>-"3!«5^Wl--v^^^\;?:.v^^y,c^;-Ceod.-^ low. rate£free' ettimeies: ment and use of theoretical Every Monday and Tuesday • ilca/e'l'e; 25 yean, experience. Hooks, ; Tuesday through Fridayon the West I UsertatIons,:.--'thesK»,> -/reports; PART'jTiME. Oepef>dab)e/ imnt have>':: WANTED and practical knowledge in Mall andat the Business-Economics car.'General noose person hefDer/some"".."! nlmeographlng. 44MI04. the science of illumination. Bunding to fill positions overseas oidMilwaukee .....'25* or $1.40/pKdm yardi^in schod tWs sumiper. Cail KB*;\i\ FEMALE /, PHANTOM/ROOMMATES and in the United States. Summer-v I, will handle calls, man, / IISSERTATIONS,/ theses,: reports' and' 335& for, appointment.; i. ,^1 MISCELLANEOUS Memberships are available nxAsuwoNCUuu«Attw1903 E Mvmkfo.River Hills Center 2707 Hemphill ParkV Ramsel, secretary of the willsponsor "OldtimeBlues Returns sons and/dancers. 404 w. 30ttK47fr7140;; j:vi/^3 >, 'l'5''u«ees47»fl904ft!j?Call Bob Yanei, "Loretta Productions.", . / ..r • s :• 20* or more OFfi UNF. HOUSES! society, at 452-7342. .to Austin"arithMemphis PianoRett Musicians welcome 'an^r^^ -.y /. ^t?^ *£% /: : C A I C? at 9:30 pjn. Tuesday and Wedhes*t %p/itka. Jnn^\>duy \ VALENTIN'S AUSTIN'S-newest ':T -v s • 2 BED, lbath. «54-4141afler3:IIB. nightclub now taking applications for -2 BEDROOM HOUSE-'SMI. JWt off cocktail servers. Apply inperson at 2SI» v Guadalupe. Lease, water pald.«S4-4470. YES, we do type San Antonio Mon.-throOgh.FrL 1:00 to . MMIE SIXEEHI& 2 r HANCOCK .CENTER-Delwood. 3 tefroonv quiet nefj^iborhood»rcoo¥}ent ­ 4 00.: ARBY'S ROAST [Freshman themes. 2'*' * Guadalupe Second Uvei Obbie Mall 477-1.124 ' .RELIABLE BABYSITTER With car ALTERATIONS ' JJT-E2S*S®«d garage. s|«S/moath phis Why not start out with , • "MUga£3i)t pm. Lively.3 year boyK ;Brlng us your alterations Jeans, ihlrfv bills. 327-0<2S. Vt -•.-r.:.;--^ > SPECIAL '441-1393 .alter good grades! "fe®. dresses, done promptly and expertly*-? AUSTIN EXCLUSIVE! *210:end 472-7677f|g| IF YOU HAVE a certaln talent that you p: BOB ELLIOTTS feel Isat least commercialIwould likekiT FURN. HOUSES Stamttt Florinda Bolkan : '.-vH MOLLEY'S COPY SERVICE. The com-Directed by Vttforto DeSica -BD ; .talk With you.' Musician, dancer. artlit, On the.Drag ^ comedian, etc. Call Bob Yanet Loretta .Ji,I426,Guadafupe 1 blete service;vice; typing, typesetting, rVj.-.yAi' ; ^ EXTRA NICEBrkA(Mx»e.>t.CA/CH • Production 474-7140 or. 404 W.Wh. ping. 1101'Mohw Ortve. 47M01I. ! RED CROSS WATER SAFETy inttruc-NELSON S GIFTS. Zunl, Nava|o and carpeted and MlntetLjaSwinORttk 401 tor orYMCA leader examiner.-Week of Hopl Indian lewelry. 4612 South Wllmes: 44SM5N^4.45M2IH.4S3OT0. guaranteedd copies, prmtlno, and bin- fenced In back yant dishwasher,newty. IfXPERIENriD AND PAST typist. Congress. 444.3114. Cloied sundayj. "Theses dl' «ertatlonsf professional; "f,"*"4-AuiMn. •Mondays:; SUMMER ONLY, t bedroomhouse. S12S report*.ia* .etc.Printing, binding.Bar-pkn etectrtdty. aw ahd;Salado. Mwi bera Tul'. 4, AS3*St24. ^ - LEARN TO PLAY. GUITAR. Beginner. praeiit idawcaiITMMI. and advanced. Orew Th6mason, '.47»-: 451-3760 AL*S.«r ^INGNG jgRVICIRVICE. Theses, dls-: -7079 . ...-/ ' /... / -•. . -/..• IL~ '3911 sertatkMV mtAcrlptims, crlpts and business-^ ^ WANTED: ^ TUTORING i-upTdellvei LEATHER «ENCH;.speclallilng m : Jj^lng. Pkk-ijp delivery service. S3fe Student Instructor.. In:-vocal'ana 1n­ S"tom rnede sandals, bafi. and lielts. strumentar music, speech. dance. and .-:S04 West 24th Street. 47M2S2. ' u MATH -TUTORING for most underarad art for finearts programInlocal church, 179 cents per page, Callw SURPLUS ELECTRONICS prime com­ vynl .work with chljdren Ingroups or In­ aiSiiraii PSS&ir.nnd.usedequipment tools.', TYPING SERVICE, Notary . Service. dividually. Hours tlexlble. Call SM-7964 and kits.Call Richard Herndon; 4S4-1670 4n : after 4 andon weekends or leave wordat ior. come by 5417 Montvlew St. from M: oy^o*_pooi^ store' lOvynTOWTij. ~ '47M7S7. Your'call will-be returned. /..:-, P-m. weeknlghts or all day Saturday. • MAKING IT? : N.EED A TYPIST? we-re • secretart*i: ik 'BUYItra U^.STAMPS: Collectlonvac-Expert tutoringcan helpuMath, Physics, EARN CASH WEEKLY IwuftTil specialist./Resumes, .letters, theses; UNUSUAL OPPORT1/NITY«for^sw ^^nJ^VPiylebljcks,-sheets, misc.- Elec Ei«1n. from Ph.D.rin.E.E, 4liv­ legal; Statistical," research papers, etc. chlldlMs couple. married for at least 2 -z*xi; 476-7063 eves. tingulshed teacher, start today; sleepPicK-Opand delivery avallable.-«W-»323;', years, to work ina residential center for: HAPPY 22ND BIRTHDAY fo a real' tonight. Reasonable rates. Very handy Blpiod, , Plasma Donors "The movieis ridi « adolescent applicants -should:be at bummer alias. Lucy.-. , . . ....... .... .. to campus. Parking.Now tfsyour move rial least pyear^of agfe fiexlbiea^wniing'-^ SERIOUS -GRADUATE^ desires house Call 472-7635.. The pass word Is HELP &•;:Needed 1 with snail revelations; ling, binding. 453^4090 tOllvjfcJnagtwpiattfng;Remoneraffoo'';*Jtflngpo»ltton.W}llcare#orpUi)tjmd Includes ialary/room, boaiU «xteoded ^^j^if*'f,«^cesproVKle^ jenke. |and DeSica's , , time off/:vacaHon«, &' other:beiwflfs:v:J>y^™fz^L2 *'ri *• -^ Men & Women 'A Brief Vacation*is Just North of 27th af ContactTheSettlemenf'Home, FOR RENT |sensitivity to in the best De Ska -•v-: Guadalupe, -r.Weekdays9-3;e3dr2l50. > UNCLASSIFIED , EARN $14 WEEKLY 1 women's feelings 2703* Hemphill. Parkj»-->-i^ CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION • style. After tins ­ ^MEDICAL TECH. DEG. .•Belly dancing Instructton. 472?3}44. ---l is impressive. TTie Peace Corps »-VISTA need yoo'tor Hawe ypu heard Quiet Thunder? FOOSBALL f f3m one misses jly;Se . v:/.overseas or US assignment.. Juiy*Sept: -Austin wui*"-'t-w placement: Apply,now. Livingellowance • '47VW bug. Good cond.SWQ. 471-7300^ TABLES :: fihn makes an OeSica all the i»;o-Plus :;'.many-v other :• behefits." .Cash,for,inadWcycles477-3002.-- For rent or sale. Excellent Singles/couples preferred. For !nform»* • * : quality and purchase option. Blood Components, Inc. htmorabieending . more!'' ition-see the. ACTiWi' Recruiters at the ? Good.TV-S35. 452-4663. cWest;Mall'and«BEB;,Monday^rldayi^ vNikkor 200mmf4 >|50.477-3S77 Call 441-3848 after: 6 pm OPEN: MON. & THURS. 8 AM to 7 PM to hiscareen** — New York April 14, 15, 16. I7« ft 18 iilu«\ ; c^pree klttenySlameseftBlk. 474-aw,-weekdays. TUES. & FRi. S AM to 3 PM — New York Times Dailv News . with or, without pictures! • in •••v."; : £ < -• 2 uay Service W«ntt>e»,helmet. 477-7A14. "" CLOSED WED. & SAT. 472-3210 and 472-7677 ' -ENGLISH DEGREE •* ; »x32 Trailer house: Alt. 4 (36-7141 j«. si" ': ,<.Peace Corps ft VISTA need you-for. . TRAVEL 409 W. 6th 477-3735 wo-'l" •Kirk-Leftgosee TVZ someday CI. • 'piacement. Apply now.Livingallowance 'Scuba.lanks -for, sale.44MQ77. \ overseas^orU.S. assignments Juty-S«pt.'-' jlui' .many otherbenefits." ROOMMATES ;other ^'benefit*.? riesi Patsuhwagoh.i450 47»-0tii : Singles/couples preferred.-For^lnformar*• --- LAST DAY lion see the ACTION Recruiters at. the^ Lost Watch.Greg. Reward! 453^)6W. • SUMMER IN- Wesi Melt, and; BEB. MondayFrfdey/ April 14, IS, M, 17. ft IB. ^,Free GermanShepherd F.? yr.451-4115. EUROPE ' Unl-Travel Charters at leis than Wreg. ^K.Sansul/KA-SOO Reverb SiO 3413577­ economyJare. 45 Day advance peyment-,Mens ,10sp bicycle 441-S400. requlred. U.S. Govt approved. TWA­ MATE-liberal, Dpen l.roe 2 bdr -/'* -•-. — * ---—­ 707'sTCall toll free,l­ 'Plex.'S^5.'CaU-andtalk.447.|634./ --A-'-vfe ^ClVIL'ENGINEERS »uPWh««t|e >1700 34M41I SQ0-32S-4lt7« - j..8edroomsulte 441-5400al ters. find ellowanceplui 01 WORLD CAMPUS How to Study Less ; benefits, singles/couples preftrrad. See.?-' ..the ACHON RecniHers at the WestMat|£ AFLOAL LEASH ABOUT WCRLD CAMPUS AFUMT FROM end BEB, Monday-Friday, Aprll14,15,g J4.ir.HI. * IS A COLLEGE THAT ; and Get Better Grades -r-^gOOMMATE^EEOED ? BROADEN HORIZONS Rtpmeatill CHAPMA* COtUCE v fNFIECD AREA rootnmate shart-two" JWATH SCIENCE OE6 ; -IT SAILS TO THEM -,0nM«(. CaUftraii ' m ed^?°Jn partment^lfurnlsrnlshed,.-Peace Corps needs you .lor oversmw No one could be dumber than I was in tilgti school. Theythrew _ ¥>» aSkionmenLjuly-Sept.placement.Must^f AND BEYOND vOH CAMPUS me out.of. three schools, and finally fust passed me with a Crni&'^h.'M'chael ^ '>» ^ apply.now. Living allowance plus CU because.I got too big for the desks. It took six years for me to benefits. Singles/couples preferredvse#"" frorpCmemaS EMA^SHARE^tdrge Duplex the ACTION Recruitersat the WestMall D*i&0at«:Wenesday, Apri 1 16 finish tour years ot study. PLUS! ' pluy^w»iHw-syit^ f.ncl.?fB Mondey-Frfdey, April IVIV i No one could be smarter than I was in college.I made Straight — •10. 17 ft 11. ^ -'n A 2, 4 and 7 P.M. rtALE ROOMMATE j>e*detf foe*' - A's — .not even one B — graduated Summa Cuni Laude and •ujnmeir bl6ck-vf ronvxompus^ti Uertiw: Belmont Hall, 204 finished four years of study in three and a haH years with no .JOF THE ORGANISM^ summer sessions. . 1:45^5:00-8:30 3:15-6:4510:15 r n» ^*^J,»Puttl« or (Vour buslnets sWlls are n»ed*d for ftill |1 And I didn't become a greasy jgrind either. What happened to n"-lime volunteer .'jwsltWns'.with;Peace aT.Janet 44HdW ^ •> C4rpsorVISTA2 Sp^2yrsWieasor my brain during theyears between higli school aridcollege? They f^i BHARE FURNISHED apartment^fS '.lyc.ln the U.S.;sher|tio your eilpertlse ^ " dtdnl find and remove any tumor. Yet, now I found time to play (ummer. rt block from campus:DU7rti,lJvinoallowanceprus'Otheriood = evefy aftemoon ol' evening and stjll make hothlng tMA A's, NIGHT MIDNIGHTERS M" EVERY iS'.Jf/month.v^BP.Female, artha. 476-5431 My college.newspaper wrote m? up! A copy ot the article is'in ir->" West Mall and BEB/ Mo^diy-Friday," EASYGOING FEMALE? own room; -; the book. Oo you want to get as wise as I did? You can. You've April 14, 15,16,17, it, -i l?®.',rfMrnished, carpeted, Ac, eR shutti Jv . > V -VOTE fx probabtygot a headstart on me; rmsweyoudidrit take^xyears CINEMA 5, FILM FEST CONTINUES and three-schools to finish four years ol high school. STARTS WED.! 2 DAYS ONLY! -HOMetCOlM DEft-V. ^ Now Ititouldrit expect you to read a textbook 'asthick and dry yfome ECON. DEG;' J »O0MMATE NEEDED tot 7*tt of Spr-Peace Corps ft vVISTA need -you for as some'Of that stuff youll have to wade through )n:ooilege..I tell ns^nd-SummeryjAMjsenior CUn overieetoi-u.s.asslgnment.july-sepl' :nBlneerina.' ContacTfaf^OM DavM : placement;Apply now.Living allowance inFOR.!? you how to dowhat I did in 64 pages. You canread it in oneeven-if :EMALB,ROOMMATE.nafdtd for fall'. Slus " many,.' other benefits, ing. Aivd I pufan interesting color cover on the book soyou could n Galvestdnz/CallKay; t44lHW^a:fes:/ ingles/couples preferred For Inform*-: tlon see Ihe ACTlON Recmlt^s at the took M it and dream when you didn't feel like studying. tf you're EMAL«/,ROOMMATpi'needeil.':Owni BENJAMIN F. JONisg :mALt KOOMMATE: needed/ 0wri// /w.5t Mell end BEB. Mondav-Frldav like me, that'smo^ of the time.(No niidie cover-^iwas ^fraldthe school papers wouldnt accept my ad.) , ' FOR So now we>0 got yourgood grades out of the way or wiH haveCOMMUNICATION COUNCllI# afler you read the book.-And we've got your, parents happy •ROOMMATE HEl,OEOiffreerenfj mmmmm because they thought that you never would graduate.:Oh, .youRTF REPRESENTATIVE wert smartenough ail right but theschool you.went to was just no ibMroomj/ifurn" SGHOi-AR§HI 'AVAILABLE^,; K good: " ' ' Now we've gotto makeyou happy. Showyou how toget aJobor tCESAR myr ELVIRAHELP WANTED ^ear:,sehol.arshlps.aVanableifor go into businessfor yourself after you graduate.So wecut athirty­ -i-.^technically orlented shjdents tf you jtfz.^ minute cassette on bosses, employees, bigcompanies andsmall, PART,pR(:Ui;t.tlm«>«leiperson;Catlf'i™,''ftW"ltWalc*(ttilus;are« second in good timeswhen Jobsare plentiful and bad timeswhen theyare' MADIGAN ¥*>1 'or'dn^t mm tS» * ROSAlli^^ trlbUtAr.^Plet'cad. Mrl' ngk -^ostume/i ^'chance for a tcholanhlo that nan wX 1 scarce.-,------• April-Special lewelry,--Hook'km iHofns Kay rings. -'toLbobks. fM^SSiSiiSniSS? ,t almost forgot lo tall:you. I made Straight:A"s:In:the bread Km 4^04:15 Wji 2:45-6^0-10;!5 Have the New Look for Spring department too. I work about one year In three, have bean Im many/businesses, among them real estate, stocks,commodities,: gotd. sdvtfr. and-breeding race horsds. I fly my own plane, travel SCRpEN 1 IAST DAY 12:10 A.M. us Frame-or Frost your'hair lail oviar the.world and jive in a five bedroom, three bath house in it ...... r. Atelville's classic tale of adventure ' the best estate section of. Miami.HELP WANTED %-*for $17.60 reg. 2B.0Q?%'S-Interested enough to read my book and listen to my cassette?. and cruelty on the high seas* i« prfcs good onty on short or You can buy both for$12.00 or either onealone tor$7.00. And.by the way, do you wonder how I got a publisher,to handle the book-: and ca*sette?:l -owp the company. BANA UNISEX HAIRSIYUNG# BILLY BUDD 1910 E. Riverside ^Overseas & Domestic Assrgnment& in ^^—^taeaiiwt tMktl to4i» ^ WOl S, Db«it^. rtam. fa 33156 I Hew ouete el Cwo^i -.MIO S».» SL S>. Kel.n. 33143 1 IAST DAY ***l*»»*A» »» kAkkkhA* „ Ss educa Strike HKdiPiMcatians /jpollege Council of Huniahitjes IM faWWM: MEMBERSHIP INTERVIEW I I D4#IM«t»C>SKn>, Hc^ismW-t Reacfct^rj»:<»ri ApHll4-17; 1 :T 8"' " ' yaluaWel xpsitRsszmsSg ~ |Si m Interviews ereOpen <* all o interested ii> McnMtiic refotm Hid represenUth&ted^rtmenl Wm0 it-)RW*W,H,11,11 L . _ _ t ^ ? ^ i i < M I M I ^ > i | Tu^a^,OT|^T[ -h Siffi^'4 $&&&&**>. v^M ByGINNYGREENE proprietajyscbools^isthatthey^ftoprfseflt a disclosure of assets to P>5-^ "%\ Three recommendations from a^t,'financially sound' TEiA.'Tto-insure-that5todentswin Special Olympics Feature ^ State Btard of Education com-. M"One problem," m continued, receive fefoiidsta the eventa school^ Jnittee will be^ presented, to-the -that"we.„ didn't... take, over this doses. k ." -, M.iegislataretohelp enforce existing program until 1972. So we inherited . John .Goeniple, .TEA. associate ;- Wtf «, t ^ tTexas Education >' Agency problems Ulat wm alleady'pre^t)f£c«n^c^im^-l^^ti^^T«Ilk^ IGamesforHandicapped relationsmvolvtagsJvdent.taiJigni m some proprietary schools." .-should "close the loopholes that ; . ¥|ti,.,r>lWl , iiA fcfriefuoda. » • , >,,,,„ L~»>I A visit, from Ronald track and field i •%% ,-prr -aii t ^The board's committeeon accoun^ r ... McDonald, an informal foot-Mwnilj f»lliiH ligBS MMk > A ^ane "ells, state board mem&er : tabihty, assessment and< evaluation i -•LiL. :s£s«s clinic conducted by three Jorf Aboasw. Mir Prrefcy \*OmulITJ©©™™ the }oth Congressional , met Friday and presented its fin-» ^^^e,~^L,.r!cePy' -r^°University, athletes, Medals. * ' ' ^ District, said Monday schools are dings to ti^e state board Saturday, ™ °Veu trophies-ahd=ribbons will ^abusing their obligations in many, vyellssaid The board approved sen-ha^g oMunds, as a result of a h^^ht thi>~ »»««» *.~H,••loses by refudng to refund mowy ' ding the three requests to the ««<:Sgecial Olympics for ^fheo a studentdrops a course They Legislature physkaQy and mentally I fire TexasL 1 David Spielman, "who last year /schools under are i The recommendations are as ed hjr Ans^ia MeBoiiM's proprietary institutions, which' in­ was releasedfromhisjobasa TEA follows: •» ' The Olympics, sponsmd hF iwImi ja>T RfaM".hili tfcr clude business and technical ; researdier, charged the agency r-.Av V .4 •That an investigator be allotted with mishandlingmore .-than-$54. the Texas Cowboys.in ikm"hot year, anuiifce•» to close a school immediately: when cooperation with the Aastin iCMfe • 'A million in federal and state-fundsTEA auditors released a report VI T* <"' *• TPA J heseessigns of serious violations of from 196? to 1973. He skid he based Association' fOr Retarded Hast month showing that some the law, giving hfm authority to: his accusation on state auditor's Children and the AnstinParks AmStmSpecial (Hjlifi'wfll Refunds proprietary schools were allowed to-"immediately restrict all-solicita­, and Recreatko Departmest.reports for .those years. operate despite,owing hundreds of tion, advertising .and enrollment on1: Guemple °eq>lahied Monday that? will take placefrom9:30ajn. V. "5f thousands of dollars to former the spot " to3:30 a.m.at VeteransFMd "Mr Spielman down't lavt an un^ students v.* That a system of financial and at McCaDom High Scfaooi. t -Xf ssS > "Some sqhools have already ex­curncular auditing be created,-re­dmtanding .of the system. TEA "Everyone is a wkaer at I 'Oit cMif for Mexico? allocates fonds to the school and v{ ^ a\-/x (<" r hausted their. funds by the end of the quiring the individual sqhool to foot -t they spend^ iL^He^^said SfetetnBan'ft the. Olympics," John Clarke, i ; year and therefore claim they can-bills for audits. » ^ -~ promotions chairman lor figures wmawviet^in errwras notpay the refunds,". Wells said. • That theschool owners;whether- Cowboy eventVsaidMoaday. he misread partial-payments for "But one of our main criterion for' individual or corporate; be required - "Partichntioa istlieiniDor­ total projectanbcatfoiis.??r:£ tant thmg. Everyuae wnim • at least a ribbon for par^ticipating and inedals are •Sfa Foe Mini^oniMSon.est & 3 given for first,'-second, and Midnight Deadline for Tax Returns Nears RE6ISTmUltl^iiuia|Ol1 third places," he said. '. . :^At the stroke of midnight Austin Postmaster Carll called, IRS public affairs of-"Automatic Application"for theamount of tax owed based PartirinanlK rawriM im mmm-lis Tue^ay the deadline arrives Hobbs reminded taxpayers.-ficer Chuck Bailey rqwrted Extension of Tune to File on available informatioa and fram 10 IDtt iriU compete in for Hiing 1974 income tax Pull postage is required, and Monday. He said the office Federal Tax Return." The to pay that tax when the exi \ ^ " taxpayers should make sure will probably be lousier Tues-form may be completed and tension form is " FOR SALE rKemnis shouldbemailed by -the destination and return.adr. day. returned, bymailfor^two-Though there is no"Say ttf 9 p.m Tuesday so they will be dressesare corrects ~ '• , month extension. „ ? get out of-paying taxes by­ fstnwk^jrraidnigh^ For,those who.-for whatever TUesday.night.thefa^ayer The-application ^ provide?' ­ H» local Internal K„aa«,. reasm. caii^ taw tt«t tax woaiw^ WAIJK TO CAMPUS who files for a timeextension 1 .. forms r^ady. > by midnight only, an extensim irf time to' MaM^ • Service offices'have .been avoids paying an additional |'swamped, with people not. JiKsday, there Is an al^r-• file the return, but not to'iny' five percent per month late taxes. Bailey said: The tax­ ,t prepared to meet the immi~;'^ * , T^"" filing fee plus six percent in­ payer is required to estimate' ».v , nent deadline. ^ Bailey said people who need' 5 <-*• J * „ terest '"JTt * ® time extension should go by Swami & • __ Approximately 800 people the IRSofficeat300 EighthSt l>| ff^MQ i ^bave come by and 3,000 have:; and pidc iq> Form 4888, titled "•Jill "ANTILLES ^APTS, .Swami Muktananda Paramahansa,-Indira ibdmiSUarp MAMIYA.I Gandhi's ; 66-year-old guru, TAKECOLLESE COUBSfS l*,V. H>| arrivedmDsdlasMonday.to • begm a week-longprogram of MUNOLTAL WIHIIE OWSUHMER VACitTlMI ' E«SMSFqKJUM,l meditation and counseling.' LlMMtl INYVALE v Wm\ DA ^ Michelle Periman of Dallas, NORTHHARiuS , CALCUUTO? , THE iPTS. pne of the-gum's devotees, iS; ESfABLI! -in Mfty Ommt-FMrl -sua said Muktananda is con­x&rcommitcollegM 1sm*. V P^ywrW.*4 LARGE EFFICIE sidered to be a Siddha, a -w-. -y* . • mxoMPun^«ri SOUPLUS BA I AVE. BV ' liberated; self^ealiied being; (JMLl Hindus believe the mere bA&'Scfntt'TbcNot^!^Vropi___ WSTSELLIY«||*C f.fir.&dcte"Sui^T^Nait6:!SteirapaiiUBUaustimulates meditation, caus­ ^"ffiUMMEK^| 'Mins BBOBTRAIKni." "•-°w fc'r-r *nrig-ffiTOT j 2BR-S150 ing a transformation < in the N"-.PORTS TOUR -_1 Op •—' lives of,hi^devotees, Periman:; ISendfor->6u^ *'.JjliBaeffir-V« v."' *-•>? ' K.Shte explained the essenceof .FRESittlAN AMD SOPHOMORE TRANSFER '!i': Student IDCard; mt­ andjenjoy Muktananda's teaching is -special rates'at.-' "^leditateon yourSdf.Honor ENGUSH1 • .Hilton HotelsL&i; f A&Z and worship your'own Being. WSTORYf .and Inns coast _ God dwells' within youtas GOVEHBllElrrJ V" D«r& Ewnm,CU>^> A»aJJt BUSINESS '.to coast,(Grad students lBtSa. Beverly Pave. Beyedy HiUs. CA 90212 • »NK SOtBtl iS /Zi #esterp followersi miny of iteunuvi IHs! Mtt mm i V'-./, whom have lived at his > > fiame • -• • • j. — -t.. " " ' I lortHlpitr.iifcMimaMR) - W0V { a&hram (monatery) in Ganeshpuri, India, Ptfteiah % * > If ! SPRING . 'II I'gtf said. $ AOORESS^ » ^ vtf:' ^ TOWN LAKI tsiss (..... .v_.i... .^iirougii Thursday, th> .CoUege_ .Class of t9_ 4K4B3 r-RAXJDGHl iwamiwfllboM:per^^ av«*l~Cnv' ^ UIT > TT; -2l>'^ (•fall prkc terviewsandconductmedita-T1-*; iir lit Uon' sessions ait < Camp v/ i " \ IXHILTOII HOTELS! Hoblitzelle inf Midlothian^ ' : they Wl near Dallas.. student market | ^ -e* A IS days a week w.»h! VI000 circu-IOIS r® inj ;°T tiori and 92% Oj • lation anu . . ISS fENT m ••• finsiiiaApy SMHOM readersh,P twicNLi IN PHW( H31VM m WALK TO . CAMPUS •w«r»rie«. ^ -_ -m [ !iS llW . " »£= -^ONZALES COUNT*-" «—*«»»> Cfcicw. VGON -i •i&J 4a& tWas 5-'OT' •••"•—»-kRTIES 7W*~ m Y« XJ *oi> MCKBX 14171 1-* m EVER FEEL: LIKI SPEND 10* «- 'SMILEY REALTY: " j®" SAVE $200 SCHOOL'S JUST 01 ' t "*i ->s „ FOR 85 w they tell DEALl ISTONE ONE OF ... r APTS. TEXAS' •• YN AS* || M sg. they sell "IOQWe 'iSNTS; Mmmm-a* 58 %they w«k. •rwa.or Uahre. Shuttle Bus — Fraat Di • BIUJS PAIOj i CAMPUS FURN. APARTS. * LONDOI THE BUS m'xM&'lnZ .Lusftm DOWNTOWI g Mr ORLEANS ' vi'APTS^-SEOROOM-S137 mi 1 & 2 Bdrms wpnnrtbwiNitni efpiciency-$115 'site tUrWMHMt|owr-2M\n In j SM3KWMI.4SHSA..:---cMAm. ij-l UKK.MH m Cj-D mm Bp'1 JP m