Tv-^' m hWVt&i4f? J V 't "* Z * -* gsf *"T* > •WW;$tudenl Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin ffwn Ten Cents4"' Austin, Texas, Friday, April 18, 1975 Eighty-Eight Pages 471-4591 *--John B: Cow-f yon. At'some G^wne Twill-have more WfitK'a smiiefo)raially turned away and !y£secretiiry of the Treasury in the^ to say to you" ' , said, "No, no, I've said enough; I've said otf.^ministration. >was' acquitted* f^SHe then addedr-VI-hope as long as-I live' enough. I'm happy:'' v. Eursday of ^charges:that he-pocketed #• never, lose the* desire to participate in v Williams in a -legal maneuver; per­P,0Q0 for.infliiencinga jnilk price deci-... the political system." "» suaded vJudge George L. Hart Jr. to |pr o ; if > isljie jury of ei{$|,wpmen and four men --order separate trials on the bribery onnally embraced hiss wifein th^«fc .'found Coonally innocent on two counts of charges and an additional chargethat " 3om and Shook hands, with vhis # taking$5,000 payoffsfrom Jacobsen,' who Connally lied twice to the grand jury and and then told reporters:-~)Z&-Z ms$ representing .milk interests at the conspired to «>ver up tbeinegajpay­I'We don't have tyiy immediate plans:*/? time.. Tbe verdict came after the-jury jnent ­e haven't thought beyond* this' deliberated less than six hours. •r; Prosecutors declined to sayThursday. bment'V I % Connally, a three-time governor of whether they would press the remainingTexas and former secretary of the Navy; charges. ->. • _ i acquitting (ShmUy?HVjury^hOT6i I believe his version ofa tale of alleged once seemed destined for a presidential yiConnally was -the first of four Nixon •*1 bid 'j"Cabinet members charged in the post­ pbery and cover-up oyer that of bis v Before he and his wife, Nellie; left the Watergate, era to escape conviction do pief. accuser,. Texas lawyer -Jake o >1 son t nnally and wife Nellie after acquittal By Tbe Associated Press ; ^ had caused unconnted casualties and Shortly before ^aAman: toU of hisThe;:Communist-led, Khmer Rouge jolted tbe lives of its sevoi million peo­ meeting with, the South Vietnamese,:: swiftly set up headquarters in the rap­ple. There were no reports of Tesikance Secretaiy of State Henry A;' Kissinger ^ tured city of PhiMHn Penh Thursday and elsewhere. accused the So^iet Union aad t3iina > ~ invitedail mimstersand generals^"who PRESIDENT FORD said the United hdping to make "a mockery"of tbe 1973 ^ have not ran away" to meet and "help States viewed'tbe fall of 0ie Cambodian Pans oease£reagre«nent fay siqqdying'^E . formidate measures torestore-order." go^wne^kj-with, sadoes and com-,said1 itreceiyed•' :,}iv ^ A­ "" ^idLSen. JB^ge UcGovern, D.-S.D., The fate.or*'Prrante' Ijong Boret wa^ : .said Ui.nillit) ive)oldhim boifia^lliat^fighting sto(qi«cl in-Pink unknown,.tot unconfirmed rej>orts said v ConSmSst^led ^ be'able toPdi&at#j^ bonis. he aid othCTofficials, hrluding the diirf -i. -blocfcaiofairevadiatibnof Americans V«v»w$ after,the' gave'up amid tumultuous ' of staffs LL Getir Sak SutliScdchan, liad ^ m 'from wito surfoce^hairmissilesu}, NorthVict scenes of'reooocilktian and defeat -fled in -a'helicopter as thousands of The surrender ot. Ptmom Penh ap-. residents welcomed the black-clad . ­In Paris, tbe Vipti Cc^g' said Uie the fighting throughout Khmer Rouge with white flags, cheers ­ five years^bf war,tbat ~ and hugs/ • --revoMtiobary "wctory in Cambodia''4# sbould serye as a lesson to the Ford ad-s^ • In Saigon, opposition politicians said ministration to "stop -all military in-^^unless the United StatesforcesPresident : volvemeht and interference in South : •;g Nguyen Van Thieu out of office. South ­ Vietnam." Vietnam • may soon be faced with a •zim -j4* Phnom Penhjike situation. A lull settled Also m tbe Frendi capital, a member t your Mo. ^ pendb'ready. rfe ,,lJ:pre'r^istratron until'he pays the debt, ^munbeil and so forth." emphasized it is: important-to turn over . South Vietnam's military fronts, ;» of Cambodia's revolutionary PoUUmro^Jp| ^•Mtion-pSper chase ipr next , gets his bar card stamped and takes it to ill"itstudentbgbipgtosuinniaradiool, everything m as soon as possible/ H however. Jr. Oiau Seng, toU a newsconfmnce that|*icoftrses begtas'Kfonday.^" "* ' the Academic Centers where his ' 'iSjMfiinaMl' said.aiKlhasTnoiddawhatbe there's a doubt about anything,' tbe.stu-> • IN WASHINGTON, South Vietnam's^' in some cases there will be trials in'; f-The'registrar's dfflde'estlmates that of preregistratipn materials are located^ ^irants to take,hi-tte>bl)t be can wait and •dent should dieck with his dean or the foreign minister and its ambassador to : -. -Phham Pienh but "we will judge in a;i 1.23,000' to ^4,000 students who will "• At-this time a student should' hav6 ' ..... ^ . :^rer^^al|^ Preregistratioa bills will be mailed the no bloodbath in Phnom Pooh. negotiate a settlement in Pans with the • errors; Twoity itolSO students .:;^.^ndrproceed to..lUssacadeinlc advidng .j.summer. • ^ , :;|ast, wedc in July and must be paid by Viet Cong and North Vietnamese withno :•¥. SEIiG ALSO SAID ^ie new govera-^^iltura'incards withnocOurseslisted; " location/ There, an jdviser will'ad^se ^ If a straitf^te^s'beoi ^veii the Aug. 13. If the -bill;is not paid", prior conditions, Sen: JohnSpaikman; D­ ment wbuld be neutral attl no^aligned.^|i IS students will prnegister twice , , , , _ ; the student whether tbe courses he has Igimnaround. Goranson said tberegistrar's" preregbtratSon is canceled, and .it's a Ala., diairman of , the Senate Forogn > ~ but "vigilant** in its'attitdde toward the lifgi.candel their preregistrahon; 20 to 30 .chosen are appropriate and will sign the ^ pffice would like to hear about it He Uv try amin f-< ' Relations Committee, said. > :x ^ United States,-^;;® -, v _Jg (dents and adyise^sjrtll Use last fall's idean's course record card, < Kv.f ^ •.< 5 t, • -••..-•-••V , • pse8cbedule;;&f|?.;j';>;>^r.v^iv=i.^ hands of the registrar's office and the ^r |the hi guide Fall to Course preregistration Schedule, procedure available at:-is v-Up computer to.this pointy the :pnioAiiirev ?, J sbas< :i;-% Cloudy . f ^ ***** i j t Reindicts: 5i 4^^ (Univeraity Co-Of^The first step is to quired some skill — it takes practice.-M -r ? wJ«l ate and obtain one's; preregistration .. After the computer.cards are„torned in,* Friday will be cloudy/ warm and humid becoming Kleason ateriils. Thesesare available at* ;it'slutSc'that counts, ^ cooler Fridaynight and Saturday.Thehigh Friday will' ByFORD FESSENDENital advising locations, which <>. Goranson said the cardS'are sorted be 87, with thundershowersand southerlywinds 10W20 -Texan Staff Writer Though his trial for tbe murdor of two ;mph. Saturday temperatures should reach.the upper Mormon;missionaries last-October has Jq, ay through Friday., L ] over other students for crowded classes ^70s, and Sunday should be partly cloudy and mild. not yet begun, Robert iQeasen was rdn-r^iThe padcet contains a dean's course ; > and it is more likelythat a studentwho Is- dieted for capital murder Thursday _ljy;S| ecord ,.. > .i <• to avoid ihearing ona defense motian'to ..'S^ Ilal papers to be marked. " * Activities.across the nation marked World Food Day quash thie origin^ indictment returned >^;l i However.lt a-student wes money Thursday. (Stories, Pages 3, 10 & 14.) * ^ by a different grand jury last January.'--sg he Uniyerslty,' he "is" batted Chief defense lawyer & Roscoe Haley -C!» on w said the ; district attorney apparent^ | decided to reindict rawer than go9$ through witththe April 24;hearing. • Haley.said he^ brought the motion to . • quash because he felt the circumstances -' S , under, which Un original grand jury was-Sji idrawn up were "not accordingto Hoyle";1^ Jo Dra^/ Resource Experts 5'—"-rt T " ,and there was "some question on the'&§> legality" of the procedure," |76 Energy Parlev afe^vrtrtfld'beftiiund the c^erobceaiid add--cfe- a-:, .-„ -. ... "airpwt to University shuttle service ait? When a grand Jury is to be sdected, „ ipng, tte u^ptohomlc stePjA* ||tfc' •ft start and .closing of conference," $5,000 , commissioners art appointed to select a r,pay lor a^ropaSd;i?76eoergyMn-? . . ... -• ----. -• for "daily shuttle service to and from . : list of candidates: Tbe grand juty is then -B>s^^fe^ExiStud«tsJL aier®?prod 4, owiference (five days)" $2,100 for "VIR<-. appointed fTom this list: areasofthe worid.^' the document J" at? limousine service Cexdlusive of driversf"; In January, three of the five com?' Mpiiey for^jjp^S&i.-txttifor^ce.'gi HOWARD fALKENBERG, of th< ,i< 10 units" and $3,025 ior "round trip bus ' , -, missioners put themselvesOn the list and -" ' dided for April 26 to May® Speteerfirm. Mld -therproposed budgefr^Vi transportation for 900 to LBJ Ranch and-^ two of them ended up on the p«yi > ^tot^56t«^^?bMieT^"1256,000, prepared "within the last-few1';^' return. _-_i f ^5 £i Irom ja&c Magulre, fit-.'. "professional (fee'' -Meal .expenses include.a liy.OOO daily ;, there was no legal precedent to draw w­cutiv»di>^^o^^-^soclatloh^Jsaldi %"unallocated balance lunch for"'-conference participants, and ? in argumg. the-l^gality.if the cong im,atthet^vM0VwOIhopelbUy: figure whlch"lhclii'd0's" was return." --Both defense and prosecution agreed . , news media", for four days, a $3,000 . missioners' actions, but defease lawyers ': A3lEP0flTpre|^i|^;ini^;-..ine. -< , • £ 15 eachK badn^s ot fruit lorplgccpent ^ A hearing onanother^defrase motion to i Univ^ty EMsi^r Studia Jn:rooms of r^gistered-confaence par--;?'-supp^ss-ievi^encevfou^'iM -Kleasen^s' ..WOODSON,1 wr eoo^#, A|M)S0D for mepls ifV ticipants: (70() at'$S -«>ch1 and an,ad^<;<:-i^nie sdieduled for'Friday-has 'b^ai . tductodtT^as. yetbe^G^izcd fw ttterUunme^ } iFh' y ipw <• au <& •*&* >Zs5» «' Hours Vote Delayed 'M. m Council Orders Buses far M^nitylntpairedi -i . A** - Jr By STEVE.McGONIGLE ' wbo was ill and unable to at* "\» Ten Staff Writer tend the meeting, only si* 54 A proposed change in -'members were present Austin^ drinking ordinance ' ' The appeal for later drink-was postponed by City Council -tag boars, sponsored fay Govfe 1% Thursday to alkm alTsevm cilman Bob Binder, probably members to have a voice in «-wll:be; brought: before the the decision in whether toe*-' council at next: week's tend drinking hours to 2 a.m. •' meeting, provided the full .Because of the absence of -memberships in attendance. Owmrilman: Jeff Friedman.'^;5 Binder did>•: however i • Iflb TirfitliM f ALATULbbaII .' jsucceed in letting the"ccunctt Ito approve the acquisition of: fifteen busK and'five vans • specialty, equipped for the mobility impaired. The vehicle, which willcost $900,­000 toproduce,wili be Qnanc­ed mainly by a grant from the U.S. Department of Transpor- tation to thecity. Theyare ex- pected to become part of ^.Austin's mass transportation system sometime next year, Friedman's absence also caused the cbuncD to delaypublic, .hearing on' a citisen' group's appeal of the City^-Planning Commission's ap­proval of a permit to build an ^apartmen}. complex adjacent ; to Highland Park at 5001 Btdcooes Dr. Thehearing was : rescheduled for ,next Thurs­day. „ jmmm w§m%mh isirndor RUMS V!« J 71.-30 p.m. Fnday and ^7, 9:15 ft Saturday. Cabaret. Iha Minelli stars in this film about Germany before the lake-over by Hitier. Admisskm $1 for UT students, faculty/ and "staff; $liO members. Jester Center, Auditorium. Theatre Committee. ' ­ I " ^t ? a m. Saturdqv. the Saturday Morning Fun Club. CL-. 5"" wiB ;be l. *' t ^ -jT ? < ^ ?r5.*30-5.*45 jp.tn." Iriday. Preview el "DeCdmped! DeBauchedl DePorterj" Excerpts from the musical revue to be presented in the Tavern April 24, 25, & H-go on sale at the Union Infomtation Center art Monday,-April 21; at'12 noon, for $1 for UT sh/dents,^ faculty, and staff, $!.50 guests.^ , ^9p.m.^aturday. Concert: OM_Sate The Ne^York progressive country group wil^ play until 1 a.m. Ad­mission 50* for-UT students, faculty, and staff: $1 goesW .(three admiHed per U.T, I.D.). Musical Events ^ Committee. Wndayl?^nceit^Mui#Dfii r. "' — , w£Xlll!SSSSi£mSSSS Sondwidi Two graduates will speak, sho\ « film^nd exptaiin literqtuHt o|t one of Amerko's mAt Pdtagonip atthe tip of%th America ttyiogf the mviously urattenriptad Torre Egg#r^minionf -s ^^ . fc ' > _ • _ ^ _i"i" fc. A . .*. •_ ^ ^ ' Despite requestsby-two fireworks; betweenCowi- Southwestern Bell Telephone ciltnen Bud Dryden and companyrepcesentatives, the Binder after Binder moved to council rebised'to consider hold back the appointment of the company's 1974 financial >;certain election judges. Binder said he felttbeap­ whetber to grantBell a2|per-pptntments shouldbewittfaeM cent rate increase."Tte-&0 «ntil the coinicil.l^-ttje; op- vote backed City Atty. Don nortunitv to investigate ; Butler* argument, that It.. P0?-1?.. would be unfair for Bell te be able to presentdata to.the.^" council which thecity's legal 2" representativeand data con- sH"*m*&m time to evaluate:. Hearings for both:the tS.4| million request and the !' renewal of Bell's franchise were The seemioglyrotttineap-.pointmentof election of ficials for theMayVcouncil nmolf tanned .into an. exchange-of wmus «a^,anegatwnsjit • ouKaaJS. Uj^uOn rtj nf^ly­ ^ Vwroogdoihg on thett.parti'lSf?. The matter was settled bytbe council's decision to ask both tbe election judqes is . question aixl tfceir accusers to appear in an executivecouncil session priorto next, week's ; meeting. withBacaidi n*rt,grape juk^ lemon twist ^Handicapped citizens tiy out new buses. TOTBv Wemokt ^sHosmi 1^^,-WIGS n: WOW btlts AIEATHRSAIE* tie*,-«*«''•^•TSV *•»"#. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin; Texas 478-9909 mcmmsM .Gwnql heqn protest over construction permit. Businesses May SueiCJf j| for Street t&r-* By UJWV BQESCB ^ bigots. Tte rally harts." ^Iteaa SWT Writer . CityCuunal members have been iweivif% groap consistiig predominantly of prafcuniwatly negative reaction to thetaiK^. WiessnxBaidl |HU|KitT wmr onMirtn change. Cbicilman Jimmy Sndl said helw's® LMher|^Jr.BndCi«rdwesta( IH 35 win. lecoved around 2S calls and letters against-'f! consslt an attaraey Fnday on the possibilityof sung the city for flanging tbe street's same fnxnlSth Street. -Harm Jotasoo,aninsurance agentcn KingBodevard. said tte group will consult an at­torney to determine if (key; have legal grounds for a jaw, s«t "At {Us pomt, we «ton"t know what we're going to do." - Johnson said he has received calls "from all overtbe cit^ opposiag ttte name change -««* *»p "i""« «—«— name changes * other parts of the city. "We want tokeep thislow key and notstart ;a civil war," Joimson said."All IM like to do is back up three weeks and dear th* eaten •hr" Last week (Sty Cooncil voted to change the street's name. Many King Boalevard added e*pa»sesinstationery andadvertising." Jofenson stressed that oppostion to the change isbased on economicreasons. "At the: ~p§*OaBsMeiing the scope of 19th Stree£ this ­ council meetaag we were accused of "is'not a great rencthm," si Butler Claims Bell Donatioiisit V$­ Made With Customer The cost af Southwestern Batter said Tlnsday. • o^mitahit • wliictt IKCQVCd Bell -Telephone Compaay's' , According to the lin-74. money, fnan Bdl were the J.— _l?I M M M -•• * -' -M •. • aonaoons (o. vaiMHis -Austnl . figures given to Butlei-fay Bell Austin Symphony. Orchestra civic 'organizations' and -Division. Manager W.G. (¥2,4M ower " the last twpschoots actaaQy is borae by Bryant; BeU contributed more years), St. E3dward's Duiver­the' city's telephone. than WC.880 to numerous local sity (HJ60 in both 1S73 and ratepayers. Gty Atty.. groups.«Among those' ^S74) and the Austin:chapter f 8 TRACK SK& TAPE SALE 98 list: thecomtiTS action. .Thouj^i some have beengenuinely cdbcern-i ed with the econumic qaestioos. maiiy cao-Uiaed ''^acial ovettones,'' Snell said. .He s« the comal asproved tbe name change."just to satisfy'a minority groop." 1 ' r "There^s no rbom in Asdm for this to turn into a racial tlung," Sndl said. -The idea that tbe dmge win.cost ¥300.000 «s "vay moch exaggented," be added. The for new sgns on IH3S could nm from $40,000 to $2&,0M, depending an hciw imicfa^af .Oie. ,street's new name appears on the sipis. ,; ^CwMawBaib Emma Lou Iim said die; "^ "has recoved IS to20 lettersalnd calls reacting • to the name ch»ge. "Mast of the letts^ are against, hot most calls are favoraWe,V;ri>e V|sui. ' -"i -­ of the Jsaior Achievement Program($Z,446 in 1974)i.i "In essence,the conqxknyls buyinggoodwillwiththe^ratepayers' mdney,-''. Butl«-­^said.A,?.,>.^,,_.v.v,^.f.rt __ Tbe telephone, conyi^yalso espects to be able to deduct ­its large conUiliuUonS fnm the rate base which it ^presents to regulatory bodies,Butler explained, . However, in the vpcomiaq'hearingsbeto^theAUsfiq.City Council intoBdl'silper-V cent rate hike te 130mm artillery pieces had been moved Vietnamese unit in retreat down SS?S A iThursday nlght but yere dnven off by r by the Comuniststo theCa Mau region of "The remaining time is short," Miiih Highway 1northeast otSaigoa toa point 'ii'ipound troopa and helicopter gunshlps. the Mekong Delta;185 miles southwestof added. "Wfth the continuation in power only 23 miles from the capital. •%?/,, It was the closestattacklo thecapital 6f Thieu, very.soon Saigon willbecome Saigon. "r v "'-r; \'' Troops believed from the 7tb North 'since last January.: i.j.'iW.-tf another.Phnom Petal."; • . THEY SAID A navytransport shipwas Vietnamese Division and estimated at The Communists-us^d rocket- i • HE SAID THATif Thieu refuses to go, hit Wednesday by 130mm rounds which 10,000 men, routed a government forceofpropelled grenades and sinaU arms in "the people will make;him go ... and in killed or wounded 15 soldiers and sailors 2,500 men in the Xnan Loc sector 38 '5;;:i the assault on Phu Lam; on the western •that case, I may participate at the aboard the vessel. The ship, hit as it miles northeast of Saigon. The govern­;;.,|.edge of the capital, containingSaigon'sr people's request. I will play the role the entered the Nam Can naval base, ment still held Xuan Loc, a strategic J&fmaln military links with. the outside Vietnamese: people"want.me to play." . sustained 60 percient damage. . province capital, however. Slpi 1^,'vWorld. The gunships used spottlgits in tMx0a .Military sources said elements bf a i^yielping the defenders break up the at- North. Vietnamese troop: unit 'were I,v/lack, military sources said.1 * spotted just northwest of Gia Dinh, MeanwhUe, Gen. Duong "Van" (Big) which is10 miles northwest of Saigon. It .Minh demanded that President Nguyen -was the first time Communist regulars Bastrop Man Linked to Pot Seizure •C*V>. ^uVan Thieu resign before Saigon have been reported in that area'within jgjf-"becomes another Phnom Penh." Saigon's northern defense perimeter MILU£RSVILLE, Md. (AP) — Six persons have been arrested and Sv Minh, an arch political rival of Thieu, a " since the Tet offensive of 1968. charged with, conspiracy in connection with the largest marijuana Pl-said that if Thieu remained in power in-f: in Saigon, military sources did not say smuggling ring ever uncovered in Maryland, authorities said Thursday.K Saigon, South Vietnam would collapse, j., .how many Worth Vietnamese troops SISlSlft The operation allegedly brought 16,000 to 20,000 poundsof the drugfrom g|;" MINH, WHO LED the 1963 coup that-; were spotted north of the capital or in Texas to Anne Arundel County in 1974 in lots of between 300 and 1,500 ®e government of the late.Ngo y;-which direction they were: traveling. pounds each, authorities said. ii'Dinh plem; spoke at a luncheon he held; .; They were believed to have bome from :r|.,for reporters atThu Due,six miles nortti'/;> the neaby Plain of Reeds, a mariShy area One-of Uie suspects was identified*as a 38-year-old man from Bastrop/ of Saigon which has long been a Communist sanc­Tex. Authorities,said he was arrested in Texas, Wednesday night. « _ • "The present situation is not tuary. sflfl <&•£*??& hopeless," Minh said. "Non-Communist '.Other sources said North Vietnamese Senate Committee Cans Viet Aid Bill ' Vietnamese can still, negotiate a regulars were spotted at the northern WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate ArmedServicesCommitteeThUrs* relatively good political solution withthe edge of Gia Dinh province hear Hoc Mon day killed a bill authorizing a compromise $515 million in military aid for Communists withinthe frameworkof the district town, about 17 miles southwest —Ul>l Ttl*photo Paris peace accords. of Bien Hoa and about eight miles South Vietnam. • ­'Gunboats escort rice convoy towardSaigon, % ( "But the urgent problem'now 4sT that northwest of Saigon'S Tan Son Nhut air Sen. John C. Stennis D-Miss., chairman of the .committee,-told 3'"the government of President-Nguyen base, which is on the westernedge of the reporters of the committee's failure in a series of close'.votes to approve • additional-aid, and said: ; ; -/ ' sVf "That jlist leavesthematter disposed of as faras tliscommitteeiscbn­cernedi" . ^ • •; 'itp , Stennis however held open the possibility that the appropriations cam" -•*v i • -& "AT. >/i» • mittees might yet appropriate $300 million which was authorized' by By the Associated Press needs of higher education. " ; ^ a day of hearing! *s • contract form. It wasthe only bill on the Congress but never appropriated last year. [ labor's top priority agency" : ALSO; SENT TO the governor was a :-'AIl three of us voted for the ERA agenda which met with wide differences > bill was summarily rejected Thurs! Congress last year authorized $1 billion in military assistant forSouth bill that .would allow the state prison when it originally came, up for ratifica-of opinion by the senators.-It passed 6-3 f by the TensHouse. After less.than: .system to grant brief furloughs to con-•tion in1972 but have since become'aware to subcommittee. , " ' Vietnain, but only $700 million was appropriated. The remaining $300 ? otsmoky debate, it was tabled, victs for medical treatment and family • that this , proposed amendment to the As.the law stands, a patient can sue a million could be. appropriated that autiKKizatio&jf} n*3«A doctor for ^lpracticejxi^ the basisof an s Tens AFlrCIO voted at Its*July,;v; oral agreement The aimendment would Market Obtairi§''8th Consecutive'Gain 1W , convention to put the agency shop^v:, -{ M legislative Voundup protect a doctor from being sued unless -The stock - NEW YORK (UPI) at the head of its legislative''!# he has signed a warranty. : market Thursday registered its 00W JONESWEM6C Present law requires the U.S. Constitution may very well end up The basic soiatoriaiargument against agency shop Isone in which labor2 y approval of the State Board of Pardons doing fat-more harm than itdoes good," the bill wtus that it yrOUid open up the eighth consecutive gain. It was 30 laisstrials management haveagreed by con>S& and Paroles.' ; whole spectrum' ofi^law . -v. fn >1Yaeger said. 1 regarding the third heaviest trading session Clwrt }t I that nonunion employeswiU. be rer V-' Hie House passed and returned to. the. CREIGHTON ADDED, "Ibelieve that medical warranties. " • 819/46 in NeWjjrYoAi ^tOcti Exchange Bred to payan agency fee*equal to un-i Senate for action an amendmenton a bill; J there|i8:a great deal of siiiqtort in the SB 763, authored by Sen: Bill Meier of History.! "." '' b does, to tbe'-labor organiiationthat--that would allow insurance 'agents to :' •• S&ate for rescinding; the ERA. I am Euless, was approved 84):It would allow [presents them. charge.10 percmt interest when they • the State Welfare D^artment to sub­The -Dow Jones average, up hiqiefulthat the Housewill iact quickly in REP. R.C. NKHOIiS. D-Houston. a "carry" a client — that is, allow him to paissing the resolution so that we can get sidize the adoption of "hanl-to-place" around 13 points at one point, of the United Steelworkers, pay his premiums in installments to work on it over here in the Senate " children: those of mixed race or with gained 3175 to 819.46, giving it a |gnsored the bill, which he said was Senators passed to the House bills that physical and emotional problems. Sub­76.58-ppiht gain in the last eight 1 at"free riders "whoenjoy union--would: Physicianlabilities sidies would range up to the amount the i benefits but refuse to join. ?•?%'*; sessions. It was the highest close • Permitmunicipal judges to perform department would allot for foster care. Unions are required by federal law to ; marriages , /, •: {f" Bills relating to adoption, venereal dis­ since it finished at 828.85 on June SB 729, sponsored by Sen. Bill Patman ease, drug rehabilitation nt:?members and oonmembers^ •/ • L^alize ^icycle racing oh publib programs, of.Ganado, would require blood banks to. 25, 1974. his . physician liabilities and a proposed Con- Nidjols said, adding that roads, but only with approval from local report suspected venereal disease cases. Volume soared to 32,650,000 i has spentasmuch as$l£0Qp| sumerlnformationBureauwere sent to law enforcement officers in each-case;' " litratedisputesfor:workers whodo^-t . subconmuttees Thursda'y by.th^Saiate It was approved 6-0 shares from the 22,970,000 traded -• Require legal^counsel lot alleged > :A bill providing.fot state certification and was third Ptbdong. >. , ;* Committee on Human Resources Wednesday the , alcoholics:at'commitment proceedings; ' of drug refaabQitation programs by the Jt was&ssumedfrom the beginning th#:-'» •3 >The House tentatively approved bills Senate BUI 892, sponsored by Sen Texas -Department of Conununity:"Af-heaviest in'the'183-year History b had no hope a-specidl':iasures^ including bills that would; districttocontrol undergroipd water use Appit^Hiate fl.2 million to meet f to Harris ahd'Galveston Counties in^a^ Rallies, Abstinence, Vegetarian Meals er ntility b&ls.for Aedpltolicom-.i 1 effort to halt land subsidence, "i < p in Austin. ^ ' ' '}&§§ SENATORS SENT THE House a bill Mark World yFood Day' Observances .By The, Associated Press ators approved aiid seqt tb7 m allowing the state to take royalty understand what theJ' are getting .,,i dinatpr said was designed to "teach people how to ek -r£nnwijnlt in Stonstired without a public heating. Seguin, Walter Mtegden of Houston and --iai-i'level by a wide.variety of organizations including con-s ' ty in Evanston. Ill.; held seminars on personal nutri-­: fasted and sent the money, they would have spent onSenators approved and sent to the Tom Creighton of Mineral Wells :»i|sumer.gnoups~college'.students and charitable agW Uon, jardeAing, ecology, health'foods and on the s v food;to cha^^: Offlciate of Otterbeln CoU^e in pernor a bill requiring the Texas The House measure earlier this week ?cies -•»- ,4, "politics,of Agriculture." Columbus. Ohio, estimated about 400 students Would begeCoordinatingBotiratoreport The. drive,.wa».designed: to focus attention-.on ^ was sent toa subcommitteeof the Houde; Students at Westminster College, inSalt Lake City, join, in a vegetarian lunch and skip dinner in a fund-lore «ach legislativef: session on:the Constitutional Revision Committeeafter rproblems of hungerand nutrition around theworld and" Utah,:*scheduled an" all-da/ {.rogram that the coor-raising drive. „ , ATTENTION: SPECIAL +i >»T. , ^ FOR FINALS i i-.J, r^.yAy-••• •.« . -v.-J ^ ... A. * Tl SR-16 'WBSL Calculators W: % ^ -i Order+your copy of the Reg. 89.95 M V > ~i Special 77.77 1976 in & * W& v -v You Save, 12.18 Tcxns InstnMNM^'^ electfonic ccJcubbors ^ ^ m Supply Department / ^ Ground Floor ^ * £ Simply check t m i v&re*!* msiiii yActufllsiie Cialct)l|pttr^Genwii<; •iWml li mmmmsmmmmmm '<'V S -rh-t EDITORIALS >age 4 Friday, April1 18, 1975' ft fr ** f If V W ^ 'v-4 t4-"psp !#% 'HH at the ca J»sk •%$% v Annronriations t ! f * House Appropriations Committee. il%X His book, entitled "The Politics of the Budgetary Process," might well6^a| renamed "Everything You Always Wanted-to Know About University LoTh,'^ I s bying Tactics, But'Were Afraid To Ask" (according to the pessimists, of t; 4 course). ^ * , ' , ». ~~'*r »,< ­f We quote from Chapter Three, Page 79:-v --* !? «?­&t £ ; i Make Friends: The visit.Parallel inimportance tothe heed for main-^ taining integrity is developing close relationships with members of the-a, k­ pgency's appropriations subcommittee, particularly,the chairman. 1? ' Now the chairman of that subcommittee is Fred Head, the daring knight^': I i 'who used his lance in an attempt to sever the University from part of itsj^ Available Fund. Maybe Head wasupset because nobody from the University /, came to visit him. Or maybe, though we shudder to consider it;-that partly, about the fund seeker needing to maintain integrity had somtlung to do witb|iM:» Head's intransigence. ~ _ c 4­ From Page 94: ^ ^ STI Tomorrow and tomorrow' If then are no results today, they canht^:^ always be promised for some remote future mocfm Qf Course, we do not mean to imply that University promises for better? V ^ minority.recruitment, better faculty salaries, better teacher-student ratios! . :fall underl&usigategory jusC becausesomeof those rabble routing le^isl^qr^'^^V 1 r ' -* Bucking a legislative rider for responsibility ^ tr1$ Hnr '* t -•' *­ down there were "ops^t about these items. > -' " „ J 1 ZfcrgrjSfiltir­ •>r J j£,;Frtm Page 102-i " _ A firing line 1 -Cut the popular program. A major strategy in resisting cuts is to? ^ J > make them in such a woj> that they have to be put back. ^ > -V/ '* 1 was (ise^t 5 ..Trom Page 104: -'•"7*"" ^ All or nothing. The tactic is to assert thatifacut ismad^fnt^^^E,|,I Wli yourtri program will have to be scrapped, ^ ^<\*-4:••i •>> ^ i f * , -« ,-cu _ — -­ Perhaps that's why regents put out tfiat poop sheet saying everything^*. To the editor: < 0 suggestions to> sfedent Government, ^ ^me jota The Doctors and mak at exeration on ,k™,( H,«'n„;™„u,Tm!,„w wi h„H,„ tko u°„w " The recent controvert* over the \ Union South 112 Once again a yety General. Hospital.. Others become cldent 'to be contrivedby tbeir captors. cent aboui theUiuversity wduld fall by the wayside without the fund.Maybe *£L ^des^gM be Solved by W ' special thanks to RudoltejArevalo and lawyers and ax^ue with great brilliance lt>eRuhtary junUlmteeneSelr ^ thats why they didn t mention that cuts might nave beenjnade in ap-;r -ing ^ system similar to those used in the', Held Wilson , " % 's apd Xorce, crying "Troth to Cense-susceptible to International (tfessareaad quencesj ; StHl^ -others become outcry against .thdr crimcs. tetters prostitutes, wait in tbe Dark Shadows written on behalf of the^e. prisoners ia ami. lake' up that a^e-old cry, "Let's conjunction with the international cam-Make a Deal!" Anid then therejre the ' paign to free political prisonerswin have poor parents who cry. "All My QUWren positive results. Letters shoold be sent p . fit —r -J, ,,*,£<•& -T' ~ ~ 9. and ^'personally can refill jpo instance' Previously..1 thoughf racism was the at-^ World outthereand it'salmost TheEdge 1730 Massachusetts Ave.v^-^^ when duplication occurred ^hejl^ ^^$^^555^2"^ 4 ^ WiahingtnnDXX p^Y'#V seardiing personnd records for a par-' ea on°ms rac^r eunue^roup, ratnw 'So As Tfe World Turns, everyone is \ DmIcIS. PwHral NTaVI (UCr Cf KriOlCSSOl,. ticular "last four" onaU Air Force Base on rtsjective standards of poiMnal quail-looking for The Guiding Light, but the 'f ^^LsVm,Ametkm ' fcf ZJ^-. rn*$. & .o^'over 5,000 people. „ » ^ I now really that the original mean-search isfraughtwith Jeopardy,and wbo t PiUq>,Allu»itlw GiMf ft*?S %fn" ' tttW'^ v m ,11/^1' , ,^tW>Ha»«Bs; ^has been alte^to read: "^racist isfaiows what Secret Stonnkbrewing for r JT^74^^TTT fcfWe agreed with Board of Regents Ch^nap Allan Shivers this week. f|< ^ prmleges for* chicanS'blacL^ -^ FWer To tte •• , Terryg |j|:;j 1; fivers iaid.Monday that Uje Student Government Teaching Excellence Vf ? Nominations^ women/V i S'. rA ImGrnS^^ In^e^dDayadvertiseme.it inlS 1Awards "area delightful ap{froach to the recognitionof outstanding faculty To the editor: 1 •> "" I suppose it is a tost cause toe*peci'tfl 'fe' J:__ ^ th»r­ rOS'lr* -• ^Shaw in the lK»nte-;econoinicaiMt­ mulutude of m,at whoever is in charge of tbisuniver­ -meref-•;'' sity's Vgari^ntnan biild^fond" ttiinks niuwHuu, .,,.,. . . • ;.-.:• v/>——-.-j—•— Thcy vfiflt lonff Qjj^b^d bdflr^Ixmstructinga hi^i-s iMMvAnlMr-ef Nominatipns and supporting docgSse^ -feg^at^news^^rs (funded,natoral-• hfa, pa^ng garage oh or near the UT taFinttaii «l Fiinlwi ition should be sent _ Cs l^aninte^t^sti^wtr« .-"rs jwdy).Ttey * The promise of plentiful park-a t ( luu auguw ue nan ip 3 . Tv i'v^ i'i r i campus. Tnepromise 01 piennfut par*-w Jarn^JL. IponeWyj ChaitnudS U scholarships based excludvriy qn .w thatsuch a oarage would offer could Faculty-student Advisofy'Cdm-M race and ethnicgroup, notacademic per- Dogs dressed up! s inittee for tbe Selection of a'Pterfdenir:-formdnce pr financial need. That's not -1 in achieving adnltbood is • of: responsibilities TW »«iv --.»«• wiu^wiuii ~v «™™* < If the powers>that be on Jhis campus ^panying responsibilities. Too many Student Members, Faailty-Stsdent A8-minorities ySARAT represents (4/14/75, -tw|sb to spend' mofley to alleviate the „ rvmen"' accept' the "rights'ahd * ' . viiory ( ,W>ly Texan»-Page15K, f> parking problem, periiaps they should " freedoms" of sexual and other l,CAnAT — " " ' •improvement^of.' sensual pleasures, lmf-not the awom^ " • • " ' sothatpeople fitid riding .those: L Itowr mEuqr' ai%tlabiHr^cioisA^:"r^ht4o­morebearable Tothe t «rcw, parking tickets" any wontan's having to fiKe the agow>­Today1 yon "are receiving with your fag to dress up their effort byin-^ Brad Kelly ;mgdecisk»i6f abortioh^ta^fShquld University classes end this semester on May 1.The City Council copy ofTheTexan diSupplemenientitled ttmidatingtheiToppositiwi withslander. sssli. wecaUJtbm^n^ dogs: ' il^'t^^ton^be,in$re • decent than:. h^tectlof , . w.makqr imen jirelff eiia­be^tti^^d^ted;dul)iren^ gi^'.haw .«nsdom uid : . . _ ... _ . . „ , ifer.ciantinence' tbiiiskiof The Y(«uu?andtheHestlelsareen^^ :the Chilean peode.Bereisacatewhete;¥aabortin^Vf^:^«iiifV^i^^j,j^ nual Seard) for Tomorrtof,.;.. immediate action can save Uvea. ^-y . ,8N«rt^«CI|^^&qr. \|mw« tteSMd tafimnKOoii .ill.It—.a '~'.V <• ^ V ' . mmi , we reame'i ture and' living cooditionK Top n^nys^HdiirresponsiUebhas ^een Tecefyed t^at politicaii re jSht dogs jtressed up like men. ttb <«nese we sMbldfatalk-See MalacUA%L igliMMs AlfrediO. mm :^ra^thientetifo8eGttiteirrex found-i 5*1 M&immm t&e white dominated stzitc­ • afl^bwiis p|ffi^|i|iiidar'Tlie political party--jjuresjare begmning, toaai, to nv ^vidHehdricks be aswell the sd Waadtig^l>.C£ scboolboard. ppini^^prejwice e^thif inSdiith Baza Unldacan­ wmwmwm W:poo tbe school m m BillScbtt.BaiTyl mm edominan •ry poiwlati t time, LaKazaX^^iiiunder ^ti^rrez^lp^D^w RgSMSS gjrifthastied Ja» wedt ^iri^n^ha^-vron DSARATiidlir couDdland-just t V0^C6* 6668**' mmts^Bciitoif; Iate-'60s -realized t they sbtakl tly.Guifi(erTexwa8 elected coon^ Myeinore. Tpey,waijfe udgr of ^Zavala Qoupty. * V mntirwouldne PMPi goyernme What has "impressed me inost about ,. q'ri^ » fl; |,W^j^ion yWiiImm - i&M p«i i minority stodents^aie readyfio it 'determibii ;ejdiibiteJm-mM a^thatmijlitH wmm ^rjefc^seafe-l Siw'S-fi' Chi; 'wmm uLs* fci * --»* r, ByGEOBGEF. WBA Napofeaasaid of tie Rrescfc kne io ^petite far = •MB* Ike -" RevolatibB is Irae of cipliaes aid deferred the gathering stiengtliof .... .. ...... CU^peu'i«.wjlrtluMjgjkatgiJ--idklaaa^ (say) a "model discrimaatlagia seeking -.TOheriw srifbautwfakb -nottiu Uie more troobliignties~ program/modei cities' agreements — pieces of;.deroonitlie nation can have a debate we shoold be having itadfresolt. KL4gtr Iwes' paper-j ^i^pwinaeful foreign poBcy. If abort thelimitsof detnoeratic day b;day with an even more Ttesobrietyaulpesinmsn yoo rememberLewistoeoA . , ttihrieBt iwiM:to ftc me\ ofFi'Mo^ri ililunaflricifit-Carrpn,s j»em: ,,HKita^ of 1 Csirtnger's critics see Mm > wMidb frustrates Oaif«s' > •frAwericm tt fteShart" yocfao*flttt ner­ r tftlthe pOot in^te faOon^ win ior '"model tities." .v also is broadly' cwr«ct;^ »iwiett liB lts naes; f A ship pijiiag the coastal ly, tm>e is not on the s»de of sorietiti law twi sliort;v.»«ii»»' >«< TOU watefsofJIrelaad picked *>a the bovgeasAdetiesoftte'^Bniea pilot to goide thestfp tfcroagfc fet TWalit>rnii regimes," * 1 1 "• -- UieUtacheioBslyrcky te^ Noaf­ * • ~ was appaOedto kun that OlMnraBsamei-socieUes, tie denoted totteui•iti fu • ftgm abort n^: m^di^MS^^^n9rat^aUom' have ;V Quest yleuipolnt ball, hitting rack: Glorybe to God,- 3*WSSsS^i.; Crossword Puzzler Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle' oiapri clitics ACROSS 43 SpreadsReverencelor u&t that if U.S. _ Unas nan pqBcjrisfnistrated, -ByHUNKHAU. _ or far debjhg Oversevehdweda be wwked with University Neighborhoods to stop 61 SouthCarton ass anas [aenrs (BihAMkiHiit later eflorto to obtain officialaction American apneas Bn"a SE ofHrfalmnst be to •• • . it *" . '• Corey _Hoffpanir, the original impeding the proposed extension of 6& dryingChristianDropsy :iau mSQ This is whir. JI C--£§,.• qb nrmua. ^vdes^gnar of the jgoject The two ^ 2Gtb-25th Streets across west cam-Science 335; Trn&g Bat Kissinger is fnqf & blockjed?;aware" Why was a Adaihastndnsbicyde tSe'iRhStreet ronte fed , ^devised a ramp meeting all safety ^ r;' ' pas on to MoPac. He claims there is 1214 11 IndianCultivatedMottoNote of 7 (aSir.)Man's Eafi "3^3 Hwnr fin tin •inaitiiilih :;«3itaia, whidi the contractor. ^:' '. ^^^^^^^^ nxxiey for tbe ramp. 7 ^ . „• nickname -3u r^a that he has rais- timated woold cost 18,000 to coo-'V:^ . Mr. Gdvin, that is not trae-Tbe 151718 scsleParadisePitchDanish land ® EC*!' EOu HGE ed and canaot fnlfQL Bis nop. Oace Ue bnlsc^n * si. costly florwerbeds and wall diqilac-95 Man'sDecayname teect, personal hmJmatnt wcreAa^'no;w|iirfiie _ -Cctlvi^ woald not approve' the ed lqr the ramp would pay for it Bat division 11 Shiub mthednrtmtacticsaswril WT hietai^ydirEd recommend 'alloa^iaB * and recommended the if hot, a man in your position that 20 Bssmrch 13 More recent aaau a^nr adg by UaUia lia ;; proposal berejected. genoinely supported this issue coold Z324 MiddayUncooked % fengw sbafaar ct : Ik ' thatThelhum&itythe plans beRotiagchanged. -and. 7taf-n*;to farm Colvni rejected the with a few phone calls wring $8,000 26 Showy 1619 PromentoryInstruments /* ceiiii aaa Fnatat ihr •fill out of a flower 22 ForaI\re'SK 36 FoodP">-44 Perch pietotbiBk that heespectshis ••••--W^^wpq^JlleswwhSle, the constrnc-MM^ ont of : . M LSS, ,, P22?-47 Roman road statecraftto of pro|ect -«• Oct a whteh -tkm lhtealens to bnild ftowwbeds-Mfe We are sbme.asking for•: beanscompared ' T 28 •Compass 27 Irritates Landsur-49 Lasso :tod a ^an wliei e the ramp dmild . to the massive sums being spent on 29 Body ol 30 Newspaoers-fWf^by 52 Bishopric con^^hJ^w ™ wa'ef 54 Female ruff tab' Ufa the Mth Oatey tion project which be,ntfk(ng placement(rftteran^ ^ ^ this project and on others socb as 32 3g Care lor 57 Sun god woman who was charged with more ^expensive and more of a ®;the ludf-million dollars for remodel-tarns 40 S'hO'hJJ 58 Symbol for Ost the 31 studentsGroup olin 34 HerSdrv „ vp|Ce(pU samarium witchuaft and was r;Jarenictafichasde. ' tag Taylor Hall. We are talking grattMl 41 Heavenly 60 Part of "to i. V? Qwfr.lhe phone Moodajr mMtdng''# 'about blood on the.pavement, Mr. bodies be" f 3335 36 Africa research Disagree-LearningRiver in is to 59°®v™ ®s','aye<1 no ihterest in poo-v u Colvin — it is only a matter of tim6 1 7 3 4 1 « 9 10 fteitar — ooLAsa jaiudhliuu of the xV'C«*attag .tte matt» fnrHitt. ln sog4:, t — and we are asUng that yon put v? 5 &6 forthe.rrsolatioa. 1 LBAestts todiersity." TMswas not trne. "..m^^wu^hesaid thfohehadseeh|r 7 safety first before walls. Please . 11 pfjyj 13 to the botton anddrowns, ttns apokgiaetolir. j^a cyi^t hreak tbe law at tbe in-f-1 help; honor Student Government's M IS <6 17 will be proof of her' ' oady wish we totetaSof^SlieliwSS -'IcraecBan that monnng and did not^!, ' resolution so that ttie needless con-434239 ment ChemicalExistsTrials ailsheis tobeghea a praper ptaas wia WaBam TOcas. tfirector fed cydists deserved soch con-^* struction will be" halted and a 45 compoundLet it stand ta 19 70 ir:w 71 Xs 23 bnHal; ifdielkiiiitscothesar^ • AklMjitidn. His only offered solntion w . reasonable solution worked oat 46 Man's name 24 7> ;X: 26 27 ;»v, 28 facend breathes, thbwin he how the ramp cwdd be ^ !.;'-iras for ."ns" 48 Spanish ti­ pn>ofafhergnitt, aadshe win 50 tleNahoor 79 30 •'y 31 32 I'M THEVICTIM OFASHORT rrcminiDantQr uuni IDOMUCHIWIH 51 sheepMakes lace 33 34 35 '.V >X' the«aterand bmned attiie ANP SAP UJVE'AFFAIR! 36 37 ~r40 41 ^ejfes» <\y.1 596162 5556 53 ScoHs Great VisionLances EntranceConjunctior AboundsDOWNout­ E:.D i«:m 43 3a f^r! 39 ksS 44 $45 ed for an' aBfrisstitatioBal, Cv. 43 46 47 48 49 SS SO rijAe. And a discussionconcerning theImages 51 52 $53 54 55 coagrnAaallf diminished of Law Enforcement Policy 2 cryArtificial' 56 s« 59 60 ' - ...... ^ rcoatiiiil) are" aaCnUaK W .language 61 1$ 6^. -plwtiy. he b heM^per­ ,FRIDAY; APRIL 18 -7:30 P.Mj mOaijHmtMXEXJH <4-l« •fSfr zj*-• 'tn -1,,-S3 UN6 DRWE UHBM taumiB OUR TEAM UJHOCOULO CATCH Pbfitkal iacs have tkeir •« -•/" a line nave wrmour |owa^p^sicsr'Klssiager's 'MH&vn&rr-'-i "V^." has provoked -a M"i.h|«»r"fiiljwi r11 Ilm MC«I—fa KtUraTilriiiiuiiand an acliit I matching force from I I, Ptytaq< rf 8Ui»Ttltiiiiw Kfa. lW,Uiini«lji rfT«m>" -% caBidws las '-i "i".-Wir ^1% p ihiQM«s.What U^wlchoblASfitiii,™ % :2 When sbndng Q 7; bradcinq body jm¥?\ i' -^ frprrf and chnanized 'sf:i -2^. SCT. S3, . a> ^ tPT ,-^ * Raised paw+ibo of-fec jgi_ %lrelchiit back * lea when stand and^4hebeg' smm --Firsf wave »»»akes -fJow heel J acrion^. sp«da| V «a| ^^rbs sKock. Second wave q\3 added " - Shock iandproj f Oefermin ^I^Thei Fashion Look for amMJff'm manm ItSitfflSOn-The-Go -Juniors " at 'smashing new style 'sweeps onto the ene ,..our modified bio dress look in the mxim Digfashln color. natural. Generous stftch mmlrifl;and.natural look cane buttons. )%ieari 100%,earthy-natural polyester >3000 Ml^^o YARING'S ON-THE-DRAG er town 2406 Goodolupa ¥: * m. t j'~ UT xSplits' for KansasiMeet Women Stars ^ «> "s *** > t, ' -, By KELLEY ANDERSON Southwest Conference team v College, and Sanger junior Texas Staff Writer • entered besides TCU, can CoHege&lp '§|| m Arrive in Austin " An yndersized Texas track definitely improve' on last By BILL scarr'A.; ' • team left Austin Thursday year's mediocre_. perfor--; • , JlV v . A'*''•> TensStaff Writer won Texas d£catblete*v'J>Jiv moniing to rendezvous with ihance. The Longliorns For Evomie Goolagong and Olga Morozova, the scene mast: Texas Coach Cleburne Price the 1973 relays. ~ Mathews dropped out of the have brought on deja vu.in Lawrence, Kan., and com­. "Our 440-yard relay team Kansas Relays deca'thlon' -A small room, the glare of television lights and the oftj pete in the KansasRelays Fri­ has to be considered one of the competition,Thursday with a. repeated questions — another press conference. day and Saturday at Jim favorites here, while our 880-strained. back' after finishing' THE TWO PLAYERS, both of whom rank near the top in' Hershberger Track. yard relay team .potentially seven of the 10 events/' women's tennis, arrived in Austin Thursday aftemoob tt Because of prolonged : in­ could come, close to;a world Mathews, a freshman'from prepare for this weekend's L'eggs Workl Series of Women's; juries the Longhorn entry list record," Price said. Rankin, had totaled .3,520' Tennis. at Lakeway World of Tennis. was curtailed to a bare .• -However^ the success of points on theffrst day.ofcoof-' • Goolagong, 23,Who will faceBillie JeanKing inopening roond minimum of 16, those who had ; both relays hinges on thecon-petition Wednesday/ his best action Satunlay, said it would be "a great thrill" to win,thethe best chance of scoring dition of John Lee, a member first-day effort, and' seemed 9100,000 tournament, wluch will feature the fw .top-ranked li < againsl.the Relays' stiff com­ of both, who has been assured of a personal record J rJi ' women players in the worid in badc-to4»ck matdies. . _ . I 1 petition. • :, bothered with a sorehamstr-in only hi?;second attempt atL v. Morozova, of the Soviet Union, who faces superstar Chris m While those 16 Longhorn ing and practiced hard the grueling two-day event v Evert on Saturday, acknowledged the difficulty of her first- athletes compete in Kansas, : Wednesday,for only the first. : The 6-3,190-pounder termed; round task. the remainder, of the Texas time since the Texas Relays. his injury "nothing serious,"' . {"CHRISIS NOT easy to beat She'sa player who's not miss­ team and Asst: Goach Bill Relays mark the second leg of THE ACC MEET, referred but explained that he was get-. ing anything," the 26-year-old Russian said. 'TO have to play, Miller will not be idle. They the Midland'^ "Triple Crown to by .the Texas team as.the ting muscle spasms'in his m y b e s t g a m e t o w i n . " . . . will,travel to Abilene for a • relays triumvirate. (Texas, "Snake: Relays," is a "pick back during Uie' 110-meter ; Goolagong characterized her opponent. King, as''one of the j. "closed invitational" meet at Kansas Drake), with only the up" meet, Miller said. "It's high hurdles event and discus-top players in the game. 2 p.m. Saturday at Abilene Drake Relays next weekend just a chance for our people throw and didn't want topush: ;"'I have, a feard match ahead of me, bat I have beaten her Christian College's Gray remaining.• who arenot,going to Kansasto it. While in high school,* pull­before," she added. Stadium. Price believes the compete."';' "' ed back muscle ODce sidelined "You've always got a chance for beating the top flayers,'' FOR TEXAS, the Kansas Longhorns, 'the only . .The unusual; nickname Mathews forah entireseason. Goolagong concluded! "For me, it often depends on bow Ifeel "Snake Relays" is° what the on that particular day." ''" : > Longhorn athletes call a meet Texas Entriei ^ If her mood is right, Goolagoag standsa good chanceof walk- South Side Motors that part of the team.goes to (WW»1 SNwM.Qtniwl ing off with ISO.OOO in first prize cash. instead of the Kansas or 440«YOT* Johh Let, Billy Jackson, " The first round will have Evert meeting Morozova at10:30 Overtpn^Spenct, Margin Nash (39.8) * Goolagong, Morozova talk withreporters. Drdte Relays. It "originated MfrTari i^Wyr.v Lee, Jackson, . Spenct. a.m. Saturday,fallowed bjr the King-GooUgongmatdiat Ipm. about two years' ago, javelin Naih*(NT); Xl - "]te Volkswagen Specialists Mli hlay: Glenn Gou. Jackson, Spence,­ thrower Marty Petermann Lee (3:11.3) •. said. "Last year the Baylor BiIbbw JMby taWyi Mark Klortower, . 2617 So. 1st St. Invitational was our "Snake Got* or Jackson, John Craig.: Reed : . Fischer (NT) .. .... *' 444-4529 Relays.'" • " f < HWU Bdsyt Craig; Jesse Maldonada By BOBBY STEINFELD ; — generally not appealing for story. At Austin Moto-Oross Texas.'. Klonower^Plscher motocross; racing, you In fact, the track was IDaySorvica onMost Repairs . Kkwk McGoldrick (2024), LeDuc (1S4-3) challenging^ but safe! . . probably picture rolling hills, But only 10 minutes from designed with.the spectator in Tarleton .State, Cisco Junior iraiu Marty Petermann 12240) ,"I THINK we did just that creeks and dangerous curves the University, it's adifferent hill: that mind, with a at Austin Park,"Biggartsaid. overlooks the entire track "I looked fora yearand a half where people bring blankets, for the proper location indrink beer and just relax Austin — one: that had nicewhile watching the races. ground, that would make' for "AMERICANS ARE usedto the best tiadL" sit-down sports, but in Located right off Highway motocross it's like the Euro­183 and the Colorado River it pean car races where people has perfect soil conditions. stroll around,drink a beerand The Colorado formed a delta watch the race from of sandy loam and clay,anywhere they want, instead providing a. naturally soft ofbeing confined to their seat ground condition for the like at a stadium. Americans riders* protection from think you must have three-cradles. ­inch cusion seats to beconfor-"THE PERCENTAGE' of table and have a good time," injury is low, bat with 200 Austin Moto-Cross Park racers we do get them," owner Lee Biggart.said. Biggart said. "But broken bones.are just petty injuries: "California is known as a You expected to getinjured atbig motocross state and a big least ooce per season out of producer of. tdp-ranked the 50or GO timesyou crash. I riders," Biggairt said, "but don't know of anyone whowe're trying to change that in iiS IS-. hasn't'injured himself once in a season.'' But the ridets keep aiming INSTANT CA$H bade, not for tlw expert prize jv4 for old gold high H money;of $100 for fiisl jdace, school rings. Ml but for the ride and excite­ \S <9 graduation rings etcv^ ment, Biggvtsaid. CHARLES LEUTWYLER '•MOTOCROSS has grown:: JEWELERS so fastand it'sa mostexciting sport for the spectator, because you can see. the XEROX COPIES riders'reactions, tbqrare not.5e Each : covered up like in car racing. v; In motocross it's 80 percent .... Over 20 of on« . rider and 20 percent machine : ? original only so it's always a good show," 4* Each Biggart'said." "Americans need infusions Lao>l or latter size, white or in new sports. Sports now are * ^ colored stock —. same pnca. thrilling^ but we have seenI Hi them over and over again," POSTAL INSTANT PRESS -i ( Biggart said."Motocross rac­ 1502 Lavaca ing is a sport fitting that P ^ mold." » t *1 m DAN2S tsfifi 1600 LAVACA 47*4423 5353 BURNET *D.„ „ 45*4619 SPECIALS GOODFRIDAY ANDSATURDAY OKH , 'I 6.29 *3.29 VAT 69 GOID A AT% 5*4.49 LAUDERS 3.69 CUTTY SARK MhMlSnldiMm % GAL 14.95 OLD CROW ­ In I*' mvvwwwmmm •iinnrTmr^iHiiiifcww^,, ... 14 GAL 9.29 RON RICO Sundae Regular '• IOKMIAMMICMIM .....v., % GAL ,8.99 1 i. REISKA VODKA .AprilJ lOhMlVdb : & GAL 6.99 EZRA BROOKS 7 YR. •*4.27 V BOURBON SUPREME n f' I m.3.69 ^ <» BENCHMARK ; .i„. -4.49 ANTIQUE hi- nh-mmiiihuiw*!, 1•04 i*3.79Regularhamburgeirsonly15Cphistax! KENTUCKY BEAU --^ s wn..n«.i»n..>..ww., ..y. .. ' -3.49 SOUTHERN COMFORT loopvirfri^i— ... •• .•"yv'T'nv" -5.49 Oned^on^Silnd^,April2W,11:00 REISKA VODKA "'•C ft -.2.89 SCHENLEY GIN % MNrfMiahMtti ..j.—...i. y , . x McDonald's® will be 20 years old this t. *h'r" good old 1955 price. .> Just 15*. It's j»2.99 --.t KAHLUA UQUEUR 1-^Sunday. It's our birthday, but the party's our way of thanking you for 20 great:mk 6.89for you! Sunday, from 11:00 a.m. to «., years. Don't miss it! Sunday, April V-TiA Ai^DENJA^ES ^ GAL 2.68 '^^dosing, youcan get a McDonald'sjregular ' tf-SJ D^RO>TTHERS ROSE 1 hamburger for only 15^ plus tax.The ^ 1.09 }same 100% beef hamburgers you -,- IS!lS.9iAM,,AGNE 1.69 always get at^McDonald's, but for the / SCHUtZ CANS " abreaktodaj!* I (a/ . 4CM* . . -U 6 PACK l.j39 !818 ilupe B NTINES^^t ,.6.BARI/PACK ^99 PABST CANS V Mall 12 PACK 2.39 LONE STAR APArie 1.0^ i • Superstars Win IM Track By BOBBY STEINFELD Director Craig Spirduso said the wind had to Texan Staff Writer have aided him somewhat in the finals. ; *V2S^-;: -As itstands, three teams are still in tbe ? running fortheSWC championship,with SMU and Tinas the favorites and Houston hanging an as «darkhorse. Bat the championship probably will be deckledat 1:30 p.mSatar--­day when theLooghoms meetSMU in Dallas.' Since Houston lost by 5-4 scores to both • Texas and SMU, the Cougars aren'tlikely to repeat as SWC champions. Bat through a mystical series of events, Houston cocdd poll off~an upset Bat theodds on thathappening are also mystical-' fc" H;-­ TEXAS K in the best position to win H all, since, the Horns have only the match with SMUmrtaimng andcoiiM possibly finishwith a'56-7 record, if they win all nine putches: againstthe Mustangs. ' • SMUisthe second favoriteto win theSWC?J? bat a Thursday matcb ioss by its top player " i George Bardie couH.hurt SMU. The • Mustangs took an8-l victoryover Baylor, bat after Bardie'sloss theirbest possUdefmish is R*. ; The Mustangshave the Texas match and a'.' ' makeup.match with TCU yet to be played, so even if they beat Texas Saturday, they could still losethediampionshipifTCU upsetsTex­as. However,Texas' No. \playerGaryPlock, who will be fating Hardie, doesn't fed there is any less pressure on the Homs to beat SMU. "WE'REST11X going tohave to beat them to clinch it (the SWCchampionship)," Plock said. "Wewant to betheonly team in thecon­ference to go undefeated." Hardie isa senioratSMU.and may possibly^ be playing his last important matdi what he.S, meets Plock. " • . •' ­ "He, (Hardie) wrote a letter to their-:"" newspaper urging the fans to come out and • support them and make a lotof noise," Plock said. Vitus tfiU probably be his last big test,-*5 and he wants everybody to root them on/'s-S-S But given the right circumstances, Plock and Harffie could besitting side byside in the stands for. file NCAA playoffs. But the events leading to that.situation are twisted and un-^v likely; ! • ­ • FOR HOUSTON to becotne the surprise-' winner of the SWC, SMU would have todefeat' Texas-by at least six matches. Then TCU would have to win three matches fromSMUj-But that's not all. Houston would then need to win all nine matches from Rice. But Texas Coach Dave Snyderfeelsthe SMU-Texas match: will decide the eham-­ "We figure it's going to take a 54 win,*' Snyder.said."It's all problematical.-We just have to win." : SNYDER SAiD 'that using a large home' crowd to'rattle, the other team is something that Houston used against SMU last year. "They (SMU) see this as a chance to pull the trick on us," Snyder said. ' Most of the match-ups are pretty equal as far as Snyder sees. "They've got the con­ference champion in Hardie, but Gary (Plock) is playing well," hesaid. "I'd haveto give him an equal chance with anybody. "Stewart (Keller) has played real -well lately," Snyder said. "I just hope we can come up with some good' play on the court" Snyder summed things up by saying, "It'sa: tight situation for both teams." He'd better add another team to that, since Houston hasn't disappeared — vet. ~ " )V -loon Staff Photo by Joy Oarfwto UT's Plock reaches for a serve. •'? Shivers To Dedicate Texas' Disch-Falk Field Texas'$2i5 million baseball Stadium, Disch-Falk Field, will be dedicated between games of the "Texas-TCU doubleheader Saturday. Allan Shivers, chairman of the University System Board of Regents. ;wi]l preside at the ceremony. Attending"'will be University Ombudsman If you have beentreated un­fairly by a University ad­ ministrator or faculty member, the University Ombudsman is available to help you. Contact Jim Osbom, Union Bkig. 344, 471-3825, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. NBA Rockets, Boston $$$ SAVE MONEY $$$ T6 Meet in Houston DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS HOUSTON (UPI) — The |Houston Rockets return to IHofbeinz Pavilion Saturday I afternoon before a sellout [crowd to. try to slow the [Boston Celtics long enough to I dimb bade into a fading NBA [playoff picture. The Celtics, defending NBA I champion, easily won the first |two games of the best-of-Iseven series in the Boston •Garden. But the scene switch (caused some Rocket op­iumism and had Celtic Coach ny Heinsoim cautious. "Houston's attitudeis going >be/We goback to bur place 1settleaccounts.' It'sgoing be their crowd and their " l Hehtsohn said follow­ SEAHORSE CAR WASH l Automatic' v 6 Self-Service ' 1205 W. Koeaig 4543922^ ing Wednesday's 112-100 win. 1 FOR AMERICAN CARSl "Our trouble was trying to run with them wh6n we fell behind," Rockets guard Mike ­ NTERNATIONAL Newlin said. "We still tried to match them with fast breaks aid let me tell you something, CAR PARTS there's no such thing as a fast £025 Guadalupe .J**, 477-6451 break when you're behind. It's more likp a fast mistake " LOS 1727 E. RIVERSIDE DR. BEEF TACOS at.00 NOLIMIT Friday & Saturday uThe gold I wear money can't buy." .. •. Navy'Wings of Gold. They mean a lot to Lieutenant JimGwyn of Winston-Saiem, No/'.h Carolina. And they say a lot abouthim. too. Ability. Stamina. Determination. He's a Naval -Aviator (Pilot) andone of those specialmen who qualified tofly Navy. It all starts in Pensacola. Florida with the basics: the theory of flight, principles of navigation and Navy customs. From there,the Naval Aviator is trainedto pilot jets and prop aircraft...learn formation flying, take cross country hops, fly at night and by instrument. The ultimate testislandingon anaircraft carrier. That means a short runway andone that's moving.It s tough,but we teach youto handleit. _ -Pilots are only one of the-special breeds you'll find in the Navy's Aviation program. There s also the Naval Flight Officer (NFO). He and the pilot work as a team Once he's mastered histraining, hetoo isawarded hisNavy Wings of Gold. And don't forget, the Navy's a great place to travel and have some fun while building your future.Itsgreat for the family, too. .„ SEE YOUR NAVY OFFICER INFORMATION TEAM 21--. 26 APRIL — BEB. 24-25 APRIL — COCKRELL HALL Oft CALLCOLLECT 612-341-0224. YOU'LLFIND THAT . OUR NAVAL AVIATORS AND NAVAL. FLIGHT OFFICERS ARE FOR REAL The opportunity is for real...andso are we, NAVY THE SPIRIT 0F75 IS FOR REAL NAVY ;^ili V t " illlt! members, of the Disch and Falk families. The stadium was named for the late W.J. "Uncle Billy" Disch and Bib Falk, former Longhorn baseball coaches. Disch coached from 1911 to 1942 and Falk from 1940 to 1967 winning 20 Southwest Conference championships. Disch compiled a 512-180 career record at Texas and also won 20 titles. THETEXAS TUSTEXat SOSOBBB FREEDOM EXPRESS . 8:30 p.m.-midnighl Admission 50* t)T students, fatuity, and staff; $1 guests.­ The • Tavern is located behind Gregory Gym. The Superstars and the Pelicans took first place in the second annual Intramural Track Meet Thursday night at Memorial Stadium. The Superstars totaled 34 points doubling the score of the second place Wahoos in the men's division. In the women's division, the Pelicans com­bined for 72 points dominating the others. PEM. totaled 39.5 points while Littlefield combined for 38. Superstars' Don Johnson won the 100-yard dash posting a 9.9, and anchored the 440-yard relay to first place with a 44.0 time. -Johnson had the best qualifying time of 10.2 -coming into the meet. He blamed a slipat the i gun for his qualifying time being 3/10ths of a second slower, but Men's Intramural Asst. The Superstars also took first place in the 880-yard relay posting a 1:33 1 with the Wahoos,finishing second. The record set Tuesday night in the 440­yard dash by Ruben Gonzales of 51.3 was broken Thursday night by Bill Barnard, who posted a 51.1 Gonzales came in second Thurs­day. with a 51.5. The Pelicans took first or second or both first and second in seven of nine events. In the 100-yard dash Pelicans took the firstthree places with Nancy Macken's time of 12.9 be­ing the best. "The women have been a fine addition, helping to make a more successful meet," said Spirduso. "I feel it's a good format, and it's nice to get the men and women together. It adds more to the meet." w-:*y TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED CALL 471-5244 3,r V ' Km SfSis Pmm , A -' 3." WaMmfik •ii , "Pi ll^aamifactiireB delusively ** »i:, ' On the Drag is the University's main outletfor FRYE boots. We stock a tremendous inventory ,.jn both men's and women's,sizes, and we are capable of giving a true professional fit. So when you thinH FRYE boots, think THt CLOSET, on the Drag. Friday, April 18, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 V '.t .y ^ rt­ ^'.* ' SUSi mmm mm .1 i m*m v&sm 5 ® & By BHi TROTT . •*' « The Longhorns fire .leading ^materialized fe-' > -Texan Staff Writer second-place Texas : A&M by four TCU RETURNED, six starters, two walk-ons in hip lineup/ —'-"It's been oiir biggest probletn,&_ A couple of -tbings about this -games with six games remaining. <• ^including Tommy. Crain, one of the -Windegger, who will be retiring!'' definitely,'^ he^said. "Rubins^ * -lis. J-KV. T' I + : weekend's tbree-game series with Any combination of Texas wins of ^nation's: top power hitters )ast -from active coaching this season to Tomlin's having a fine year,' but , • TCU at Disch-Falk Field will be Aggie losses totaling three will ^season, but .the Horned' Frogs-are become TCU's athletic director,1' once you get pasrhlraJt's.pcettih; _ special for Texas, but there is one telinch the championship. only 11-7 in SWC play i-puts >mosti:of ithe blame for this _ obvious priority for the Longhorns. > "We need the sweep," third J "In a way I'm disappointed, but sseason'S'irbuble on the Horned Fr6g" To'rtilin, who quarterbacks the' "First of all, we want to win the ' baseman Kieth Moreland said. "But then in a way I'm not," said TCU ; TCU. freshman 'football team last' -•> Southwest Conference,"^ catcher -we're still playing it just one at a -Coach Frank Windegger "I thought T»vo« f fall and ispassing upspring training CnnV IVIoJomiw ««I ihnnoht ufct1*1 ?•/« Rick Bradley"said. "If we sweep time. We've only lost four games all < We would be a lot stronger, but we " for baseball, bps *set a TCUt TCU that'll be it. Secondly, we want lost our No, 1 pitcher to surgery and Rundown ¥ '• freshman record with a, 8-1 marlf,, to go in against A&M undefeated. that really hurts. ^ -"He also.pitcheda no-hittereasier in. The Texas-TCU baseball game V We could be undefeated, and that's "You; can look at the overall the year against Texas^Lutheran v; will bebroadcast on radio station Runt'' something that hasn't been done in a statistics and we're only hitting .238 Moreland 434 38 «"-4$v.'.4-College and has won;his last fourSui KOKE-FM (95.5) beginning at 362 7 17 !<• Stamp long time." 7:30 p.m. Friday and on KOKET asa team and the pitching stats are Pyka 37; 25 starts. - K 327 30 i Texas Baseball Coach Cliff pretty bad, too. You look at those Bradley....;..... 326 45 43 33' TOMLIN WILL START Friday AM (1370) beginning ait 1p.m. Gustafson never has been one to let ; and wonder how a team like thatcan Anderson^.. 325 44 39 IS night's opening game of the series / Saturday. Chjncon.......... 313 19 36 28 his team look too far into the future. even be over .500." r ; i ;V .. Soulier..;.;;.... .305 33 40 27 against the Longhorns' Jim. Gideon: ' ^ "A perfect record would be nice," * A combination of strong hitting Re)chcnb«ch.. ,305 22 43 40 (11-0,1.16 ERA), If Gideon wins he Hlbbett „ .294 14 15 9 he'said, "but the thing that Would year, and now we're within six and pitching has brought Texas this JJ] -.-will record his 34th career victory: Presto .:..797 \ 32 21 M really be nice is the SWC cham­games of a perfect conference far, but TCU hasn't been able to ;'Griffingi ..2W 14 14 .11 tying him for second on thealltime ,...323 327 403 273 pionship. Then we can be concerned season. Sure, it means a lot." come up with either. career ,win list with Burt Hooten, with other things." TCU, along with A&M, was ex­: CRAIN IS HAVING a good year, W4 HA » H U SO -now with the Chicago Cubs. • a .> , "A .11-0 1.16 70 43 25 S* WITH AN 18-0 record, Texas is on pected to challenge Texas for the : hitting .369 with four home runs, and Richard Wortham (9-0) and,Map-, < |r Wortham........:.;:...; 9-0 2.02 67 44 44 56 . the verge of its 50th SWC cham­SWC title this year, especially after second baseman Danny Twardowski Rayl............ <„..<...5-0 0.91 39 26 20 34 tin Flores (5-1) will start Saturday's pionship and seventh consecutive ti­the strong showing it made • last ! and outfielder Mark Hbrner are also 1.15 54 31 : doubteheader for .Texas, opposing Kainer .4-1 1.56 40 36 10 32 season. But "a really consistent having good season, but after that, TCU's Ricky Means (6r4) and Ed . tle, ap unparalleled domination of Moore... ......J .04 2.63 13 1$ 2 1 one sport in SWC history. Horned Frog team never quite production tails off considerably. In Relchenbach..1-2 4.3517 17 -7 ;-8 Owens (2-3). Major League •A I White Sox, 7-3 CHICAGO (AP) — Mike Hargrove doubled across two runs, and Jim Spencer tripled hometwo more ina six-run fifth inning, helping Fergie Jenkins "winhis firstgame in three' startsThurs­day as the Texas Rangers defeated the Chicago White Sox 7-3. Chicago starter Stan Bahnsen had surrendered only one hit until the fifth inning. But Texas loaded the bases on Jim Sundberg's single, a hit batsman and a walk, the fifth of the game off Bahnsen. Jeff Burroughs singled for one ran, then Bradley yells encovragement. ^ Hargrove doubled and, Spencer tripled for four more. Toby Harrah's single drove in-Spencer with the inning's sixth run.; ST. LOUIS (AP) — they stands- Jack Heidemann's tyases-loaded double capped a five-run sixth inning, carrying the New York Mets to a;,­14-7 victory over the St.'Louis'Cardinals in ah error-marred game Thursday. ; . . AmctkanUagu* National Uogu*. Hcidemann. acquired by the Mets from the Cards, in an offseason trade, drove in four runs as New York erupted for siX/' W 1 M.. 0% runs in the opening inning and five during its winning rally/.: 5 .714 ­ Boston 2 Detroit' 3 2 .600 1 Chicago..,.. S .1 .*33 ­ snapping a 7-7 tie. - ? ; . 4 Milwaukee...... 3 1 3 1 4 .571 St. Lools.... 5 .625 Baltimore 3 3 .500 IV* Pittsburgh ...vw... 3 2 .600*m ATLANTA (AP) — Cleveland....... 2 2 .500 Philadelphia....... 3 .429 .21* Carl Morton scattered nine hits Itor his'• 4 New York 1 ,6 .143 4 Montreal 2 5 2t6 3Vithird consecutive complete game victory and score 5 .375-2 Baltimore Grlmsley (04) at Boston Late games not included '• i p pos added five runs in the ninth to defeat the. Pirates 7-4 Thurs­ Cleveland O-0)r day night. Milwaukee Broberg (M) at Cleveland ttwnday't IwAsn 1;. G. Perry (2-0) New ,York 14. St. Louis 7; Kansas .City Bu>by (1-0) at Texas Los. Angeles 5,Cincinnati 4,11Innings Brown (04), n ^ Chicago at Philadelphia California tanana, (0-0) at Chicago Montreal at Pittsburgh Kaat (1-0), n , Houston at Atlanta , .1 New York Medlch '(M) at Oetroit Coleman (0*1 J/n ' *V *Uey,eOeew " Minnesota Decker (10) at Oakland ' . Philadelphia Underwood (14)atMon* Holtzman (1-0), n trea) Renko ((Ml) . ? ; AIDS TO PREREGISTRATION Pittsburgh Kison (1-0) atSI, LouisGib­son (0-1), n . • • rij.,* • -i"n'y GOLD-SILVER-US & San Diego Mcintosh (1-0) at Atlanta FOREIGN COINS*OU) Reed (0-2), n Mou^too Grlflin <(M> «t Atlanta-Reed • TEACHER EVALUATIONS (CIS)-, ; JEWELRY WANTED . (M), n •• 7\ V HIGHEST PRICES PAID ] Houston Griffin -(W) at Cincinnati Gullet* (l^O). n' -" ' Pioneer Coin C6. San Francisco Montefutco (1-0)at Los !• COURSE DESCRIPTION GUIDE S5SS N. tomor Rm CI U 4514*07 Angeles Raus(1<0)* n . . ; Only games scheduled . HOLE EARTHPROVISION CO i T '—i I * ACADEMIC OPTIONS HANDBOOR INNER FOYER OF THE 24th&SahAntoiiio TOYOTA UNDERGRADUATE LIBRARY (AC) DATSUN VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO t ... WITH THIS COUPON *'lV Pd for by Student Government . TOYOTA OR VOLVO 1 MAJOR TUNK-UP $16.S0p'ui parti fxts, ' Offer food thrv;M*y 3!«» . m* **• ^ J-K Engine Rapair-Brokn ElcdHcal < ' t Overseas Engine 1003 Sagtbruth, 836-3171 Public Lecture , ARABIC FOOD, DABKEH, BELLY DANCING & SENATOR w V J" +,v ARAB MUSIC by Hamza El-Din v i » >v , at the Z'f Annual Banquet of * 1 The Organization of Arab Students 1 CfviiA.' } " Saturday, April 19th, 1975 , VFW Hall (Veterans.of Foreign Wars) 500 VFW Drive 7:00 p.m. 1 r A* 1^ tv.'.JII. ^ v 4 Guest Speaker: Hatim Al Husseing of the Arab League " ^ V Tickets: Inner Sanctum -504 W. 24th The Shejk.Club,: 5555 N. Lamar, 452-6f88 Speaks out on the natural !-i I" "1 K H 1 f fc. I I I THE BRUSHY CREEK V-*1 *+ J-1 MX I I r,« **} m I >i» f°.r Family Style,Dinners .•'I I I JIf1Tues. .& Thurs.:Night ^ I, I s Staak terved Horn, Chickoni Boot \ INTRODUCTION BY 4 f,' « ^ ~ • *:'i l: I' r'/iX I,'* with Green Beans, Sauiago A Rlbt, Boant, • r~+i .1 m " V I Baked Potato A Salad PotaioSaladt T",If ^ \ ' v tr A->tYv ^aw I $4.95 i ^«$3.25 £ f ***• -MJ 4 ^ i ' 4 V I if, > w* I Xli: \ All YOU CAN EAT&$£ ! ; /*A , H SPONSORED BY: )r ^^ FRIDAY, APRIL 18,4:00P.M. rP;#ilSl \ THE ENVIRONMENTALPROTECTION pt Closed Sunday. AND IMPROVEMENT COMM. OF ACADEMIC CENTER AUDITORIUM I- all for n reservation$: «•: 'STUDENT 255-3253 §4­ \ V. •v j w MM ^RECEPTION ON 4th FLOOR OF\A.C! til West Main £?"AFTER PRESENTATION In Round Rock ' to ©20. Right on 620 If signal ! " WITH THIS AD ­ i>< «.* JjJU.. y•......... ... 1 M •***4 J*#­ By MARK McFARLANE; ; Te*an Staff Writer An early, injury-riddled edition of the 1975 Texas football eam.will be on display at 7 p.m.Saturday in MemorialStadium is the Longhoms hold their annual Orange-White spring game I climaxing the end of spring training t > -jj| I Players consider the game a-welcome end to the weekly'1 Brills they have suffered through the last five weeks. The team-pas. been .divided equally by coaches in hopes of making the, [»ame competitive fl would have to say we have had an average spring prac­ice;E Texas: Coach Darrell Royal said. "Far and away; we1 ild Be; ready to have our best scrimmage: We should be' 06r% much more, consistent. I'll tievery disappointed if we poq't Jook better." -' ' AT LEAST14 players — including 1974starters BillHamilton^•: tommy Ingram, Joe Aboussie and Brad Shearer — will miss V game fecause of injuries. Ailments also will keep notables uch as running back Kevin Scottrlinebacker David Nelson and afety 'Joe Bob Bizzell out of the scrimmage. ' '• "We have a lot of defensive people hurt," Royal-said. "You ilwaysh'ave a lot of people out in the spring. We have been es^ xialiy.hard hit at running back (Scott, • Aboussie, Rucker ewis, Pat Kennedy), and that makes a difference." 't' t The Orange offense will be led by quarterback Marty Akins, pllback Earl Campbell'and split end-Alfred Jackson. First-" jring lineman George James, Will Wilcox and'Billy Gordon Iso will start for the Orange offense. .I'C. 'S^ ("JACKSON (switched froih defensive back to split end) has' Hen—1 wouldn't say a surprise — but a pleasure thisspring,** oyal said. "Gordon (Center) has had a'good spring practice, hd Akins has worked extremely well. He (Akinsi^ias shown no jiStns of senioritis (lackadaisical attitude). (FAMILIAR PERFORMERS from last year's team — end Bck Burleson, tackle David McLeod, linebacker Iionell Joha- Bn and defensive back Paul Jette — will start for the Orange Ifense. (Sophomores-to-be Randy McEachern and Mark Covey will Tiarterback the White offense with first-teamers Gralyn Wyatt Bd Jimmy Walker playing halfback. Veteran linemen Rick hurman, Charles Wilcox and Bob Simmons will strengthen the Tiite offensive line.; ... "WE HAVEN'T HAD contact all'week, so we are rested and er some of our bumps and bruises," Royal said, '"niis week I ave been able to see positive changes in little things such as freaking the huddle. We also have changed our snap count, and Tis caused some problems. These things might not sound too nportsoit, but they are." Ends Travis Couch and Jim Gresham, tackle Earnest Lee, ihebackers Rick Fenlaw and SteveCollier, defensive back Ray­ mond Claybom and .safety Fred Sarchet will head the White defense. ' Akins, Simmons and Sarchet were elected 1975 football t-am Jcaptains Wednesday. Students' Attorney ' itudenti' attorney*, Frank Ivy and Ann Bower, at* ' available by appointment from 8 a.m. to 5 pjn. Monday through Friday in Room 3, Speech Building. Telephone 471­7796. TUSCALOOSA. Ala. tAP> — New York Jets quarterback Joe Namath said Thursday he has had no conversations with the World Football League wL, The University of Texas Longhorn Band 6 Sh^t^Band of the Southwest" Exclusivity Yours BAND-O-RAMA CONCERT Sunday/ April 20, 1975 3-5 p.m. Austin Municipal Auditorium Admission $2.0Q Adults$1.00 High School & Under Thursday, Friday and Saturday ... I a Hand .• \ V /y 0 \ Buy your shaving 7 supplies at the Co-Op#v Ms. Shop's non-aerosol " . r> -• Ms. Shop Ground floor Ia f V-o­ r>i 7 ,r r >w t V 'A^?->_­ Prepare for the sun... with a little help from the 'Mushroom* . ' C/Ak * r. ­ Defender reaches for Alans ins haMtndk Sports Shorts Goiters Fall Behind in AAII After firing afirst-day total about a reported |t miWnn. of 297 in the All-America package for Jttin&sg the Intercollegiate Invitational teagqe. Golf Tournament to put "Now this isist In sayin eighth place, the Texas golf someone migtt not base ta&t­team Thursday failed tomate ed with James C. . the top10 afterthe secondday. Ptwratfti saSi off Dos attorneys.of the 72-bole event. "1hope-they one Host Houston increased its cat talk to neanta96qp1ex­team lead to two strokesaver cept the Jets — and ttagr defending champion FW»fc» arenl tailing Fta mdbr 572-574. eonkraet.'* . Oklahoma State is tarback "AB*r 9%1 ra make at 588for third place,fattened swrnttettssanL^besaSitaaa by SMU (589), Arizona State interview witlh tt» Bfar­(593), Georgia (58Sk 7 mm^antNns. In the individual competi­stay in fnetftaffi langhftgjettion favorite Andy Rwn of into something teaMy.'" Florida shot a Stx-tmderfkar * * * 66, including a 31 on the tract N5W YORK SAP* -The-nine to tie a record set hp American* fessfcetkaSB former AAII champion Tbra Associativa*s seaniSKaat Kite of Texas-playoffs Ikegnk Sn&gr as ** # Ikiowrani Mmdbtr to Cta­taefcy afi Sl Eteutar (testsHufBnat An ttte vdmns war tte fitesa two, gaawes off fejfae gftnmgnar Tftirik 3Bte i WestwnE SKv^Sm vftaofr-tte S)SK«9^Ba&. 10 Snufey and 1Db»-Gmm StsBis Bbaaad Ulte ssctas ®atitimas 3n •antf'-HS---4b NOTICE!! saa«M4«4 University "f Texas Go tncoyilo „ yowr wasWniA« shaving solo. OLDSMCE SHAVING MIU6S Sale 1.50 OLD SPKE lovers SHAVINC WEHU • SOAP Sale .89 REVOLVING PAY AS SHAVING CHARGE UTVUE AS BRUSKS ACCOUNTS $10 BMNHTHLVl Sale 1.12"Wm j V ^' ^4 v, CUP SOAP -v-­ 1M Sale .25 Friday. April H, 1915 THE »AILY "IKtAN Page 9 . --A -»«V >g/r3jirrfr:« iV . • , -, , • • ~-• '••• K . ' :• •-•--J: • -l;,­ "aJife|>^.>j»gSwte TOVSPefos; garu^1 5*^ L2p* .v-_, — -w*3£*v . * -w '­ «aste of protdn:is the poor world's wasteof food prodnc­taoa potential. The •• obvious stepsn meeting theworidfood that potential — a potential represented by the smallin magnitude fanner and his family, who _ to tans Xmsv U^it is to the rich world's wasfe of pro-make up at least one-third of the homanrace.yshe wrote. -fSBte»5<«FBBaDer fein is "Ifce poor world's waste of Another probtemwith the agricdtml "It war green revolution was that it was not maximizing output wswe food production potential." lCX3K?tE7tBAUZr ill y • -"£ -rfv. in* v v Safe Ijists piw*ye •%."'/ »K, t1# JEtorfwna axCabCe Individual Instruction -All materials provided SGixtciratoo Afternoon, Evening& Weekend sessions THE 5TH STREET STUDIO 5th ) I NOW OFFERINGJ V CUSTOM MADE SANDAL w, .by Ed stein ^ ForFurther Details ^4J^m8 ^lO Friday, April 1$75 THE DAILY TEXAN 1 \ From Paint by Number to Drag Artist By STEPHANIE WARD He traces. • pictures from she made me happy," he said, blood pressure and an artery the students," he chuckled. "IHe perched on achair by the hundreds of patterns he ac­pointing to photographs taken burst in her heart. I went back guess I don'Hike the long hair window, his sky-blue eyes cumulates and uses bright, shortly after they were to being a lonely man and too much but most of them reflecting; the stories he told. warm'colors in his.designs.' married. "Weren't we a hand­knew Ishould leave the Valley -sure and are friendly in­ He would tell about a funny Kunkle some couple?" he grinned. talked that held so many memories teresting to talk to."incident and his eyes would enthusiastically, eagerly ' After her death he stayed in for me."disappear to slits ai\d when answering questions and shar­the. Valley and continued to Kunkle said it was time to they Would open again, they ing interesting' stories from work when one day in the Kunkle made three trips to do a little work. twinkled brightly. his past. / . ; . 1930s he saw an old girlfriend Austin before he finally decid­ "One more thing," the ar­ Henry Kunkle told how he "1was born in1889 and lived he had known in school. ed to live in North Austin with WIS tist was asked. "Has anyone Siilit j . came to Austin,: chose the most of my life in the Rio "She had recently lost her his stepdaughter and her hus­ever told you that you like likeGovernor's Retirement Hotel Grande Valley. I was bom in husband and she was sad and band. Jimmy Durante?" 'as his honiieand how he makes Austin County, Texas," he lonely like myself. I asked her ; a little extra money sellinghis mused. if we could correspond when "I lived there 13 years and He broke into a robust , paintings just north of the "Guess you could say I was she got home," he said. "We decided I needed a place of laugh, touched his nose and ., Drag. my own. I came to The Gover­said, "I wondered if you'd from a large family — I had wrote for quitesome time and Kunkle, 85 years, young, eight brothers and three I knew I had to see her. nor's and knew it was the ever notice — they sure do." showed his paintings that he sisters. We really had a good "She liked the idea but said place for me. With that he bent over his sells for $1 each as he retrac­time growing up together." the neighbors would talk if I "I really get a kick out of desk and began to paint. ed events that brought him He proudly showed a family went there," he grinned, "So here. portrait. "Four of us are liv­she came to see me and I Comfortable and happily ing today." knew she and I should be situated in the retirement A graduate of St. John's married. A few months later hotel at 2612 Guadlupe St., Lutheran College in Winfield, we were. Kunkle has lived there three Kan., Kunkle launched his "One Friday, I reallymonths. career as a bookkeeper, ear­wanted to do some fishing — I Room 310 is the artist's. ning $1.30 an hour. was some fisherman. So a Kunkle converted one corner He was a bookkeeper for 37 friend of mine and I took off of the room to a work area, years in the Valley. "Those early Saturday morning and where he displays about 30 were the happiest days of my left the women behind. small drawings. life. I loved my work," he "It stormed all day and we , "Mike to haveabout 40 pain­beamed. gave up and decided to gotings when I go outside to A touch of sadness clouded home. I was greeted at the • sell," he said. "That way, I the blueness of his eyes as he door by a neighbor who said,have a-better selection to' talked of his first wife who 'Henry, we just couldn't save choose from." died of cancer. her.' When Kunkle began his hob­"She was a sweet lady and "My second wife had high by, he started with paint-by­number sets. "I learned from ?>n them what colors went well -> W together and what perspective ' is all about. "I practiced and practiced (LOX and BAGELS and finally felt I could do my by Alicia Moncoyo. own work." He now paints on Henry Kunkle prpudly displays his dirt work. 8-by-10-inch masonite boards THIS SUNDAY after coating one side with primer. I AT HILLEL sremony To Honor DISCOVER TA "That was my second, INTRODUCTION TO TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS 2105 SAN ANTONIO ie Scholars' not my fifth? official course for Regular Membership in ITAA s brightest junior and senior students at the-University 4 pm to 11 pm 5511 Paiiicrest NON-MEMBERS I be honored Saturday at the 27th annual Honors Day con­$2.00 I™ : oik Suite 103 ation. . April 23 &24 mWITHOUT LOX 11:00 AM Purple Tongue:Bacardi rum, Lorene L. Rogers, University president ad interim, "VVr I preside and speak briefly at Honors Day, which begins Presented by grape juice and lemon twist in concert. [2 p.m. on theMain Buildingsouth terrace. In caseof rain, JANE HENDRIX,MSSW »n »n *?>n »n 8ACAHMtRUM. ©1975 BACARDI IMPORTS. INC. MIAMI Fl ftUU BO ft IS1 PROOF. ! ceremony will be h61d in the LBJ Auditorium. Training Recognized by ITAA he title of "College Scholar" will be conferred on about i juniors and seniors who have attained at least a 3.5 Registration Limited Bde-point average. About 70 students who have "all A'.' For Information call; ords will be introduced individually by their respective TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS ASSOCIATES 452-3997 i addition tohaving the grade-pointaverage, to be chosen |a "College Scholar" a student must be registered for at 1st nine semester hours this spring in an undergraduate fiege, have been registered at the University at least once ring the1974 calender yearand have accumulated atleast |hours of credit, 30 of which must havebeen attained atthe John Ysneck — your host liversity.-• • FREE CHAMPAGNE families and friends of the honor students are.invited to the ceremony. A reception will follow on the South Sunday Brunch i addition to student recognition, the $1,000 Amoco Foun­ lioo Teaching Award will be presented to a faculty Tiber by Dr. Stanley Ross, vice-president and provost, Mary Kaltman's be Longhorn Brass Band will present music, and the • chimeswill be played by cariUonheurTom Anderson. Restaurant Marco's Lounge lNDEHSON& COMPANY Large Salad Bar Eggs Benedict Scrambled Eggs COFFEE ^nd Much More Brunch 11:30 Till 3:00 Reservations Please TEA .SPICES 7535 Hwy 290E Announcing the second of River Hills­928-0616 { Cascades super-charged summer TWO JliFFEltSOX' SQUA11H weekends! Saturday at River Hills — The R«tUuran( 41)3-1533 All-American Super-Jock Competition. Here's your chance to impress your friends with your athletic abilities. A chance to show them what a Champion ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••I looks like! THE EVENTS! •Water balloon toss • Over-the-shoulder tomato marksman­ ship test • 3-leg sack enduro •Beer can nose balancing • Mud puddle jumping M FREE PRIZES! FREE BREW! i It all starts at 2:30 PM. Look for the crowds at 1601 Royal Crest Drive.* MORE! MORE! MORE! Watch for other summer events coming SALE soon to River Hills-Cascades, theaction In co-operation with US Poster Company place, this summer! Efficiencies, one and two bedroom from $139, ; Thurs. -Fri. -Sat. ONLY all bills paid. "In case of rain, event will be rescheduled at a • •• Large special group ' " later1 date. • REGISTER FOR FREE ''V." JOCK T-SHIRT! I V • •••!• : f * -. X * ^ i I • ' VI'tfl. -r-y.' j£#-, • S !\uu^Largestselection of posters in AuJlin .ZIP. iSee our new line of$1.00 posters. #• Ground Floor " '1 ). * Friday,^April 18, 1975 THE-JMILY TEXAN Page 11 * . . , y J -'V' 11 r.& ' : M . I ^ 'JA 3 I .. - . _.tJ» -A - 'aA _i„ i .5 J.., Tt-? >>y •f n'-aSfv Workers SSfflK'-Vi Needed ; i,i !•: Guerrilla Players Fight for Survival . For Meal Celebrating Jive yeais of ' from , the Austin Community, have a-political message." -Malls.-shopping centers and Jones said. ' ^nightclubs. u -. performance in guerrilla with other: participants in­ •yj -"Another aspect of-the ".As street -.theater has theater, the Bertolt Brecht , volved from time to time. '• technique utilizes alienation, emerged since the 60s', theMemorialTheater Troupewill * "When somebody wants "People walk away feeling -shows have become largerstagea two-boordocumentary something dooeor a message n :'. they*"learned something* and longer. Jones, said the .benefit Sunday ?• for -conveyed, they come to usabdBy ANGELA NEVILLE rather than getting very in-:group stiU -does some tm­themselves. --we wijrt with them. TheseWhether to deUver mobde volved in the play." he con-provisations, but, for the most Presenting",a nostalgic^ people also usually take part meals or to ffispby cnlinaiy part, the .plays last, an hour; afternoon of "Five Incredible m the^performance,'? Greene tinned. talents through the prepara­ and longer. Years" Irani to 6 pan. in . • said. To accomplish this effect, tion of such dinners, the plays contain music and v sTwo otherguerrila theaters, Pease Park, thecast of S^riD Jones noted the theater is volunteers axe needed to bdp Mother Tongue and the Austin include members wbo have. based i on the concept that comedy bot lade a climax. t}ie Meals on Wheels program participated with tbe group anyone can act.''We've taken In the past, the troupe has Women .Workers Theater, in Travis County. , trere formed recentlyand alsothrooghoat its existence.^ in allkindsof pet^dewbo lack presented messages at, the-v"We provide meals for the Since ite : beginning, the confidence in their abllity and University Main: and West ; will perform Sunday.. elderly, the handicapped and 'troupe has stagedbene&ts^for show them they can act," he others unable to cook for- themselves," Barbara Hot-. other groups, using personal said. if H You Need HdpI®®? funds, dotations and goods The troupe members write ton. service worker, said Wednesday: "Our organizar flnotn second-hand stores as a all of their inaterial, using tbe " -;Ju»l Someone Who Will Uitoiif ' , meansof sopport."Rigit now tedoilqbedeveloped.byBer­ tion furnishes mwe than 140 ^ V Telephone 476-7073 ^-.vs we have|5among us," Cheryl : tolt Brechtin Gerinanydnring ' Xt Any Time ' persons with two meals each Monday, Wednesday and Greene, a group; member, World War IL"The (days are The Telephone Gounsding and Referrol .Seivire Friday." -. said. writtentoiBStrud^ndusaally '•-.ZZZzf by Zbcfc Bral -• • -=-v/ . Guerrilla or street theater, The program is "sponsored winch developed daring th£by Trans County, the City of. -- Ffoodwater bypass construction at Barton Springs; I; Austin, the Governor's Com­1960s in this country, beganas ^Ifyoa wannaget toheawenT you gottahear"JadaeBhte"! mittee on theAgedand "much a series of slfort im­ provisational{days performed support from the com­munity," Hnttoo said.'' wherever there was an ' audience. ion "Recipients payacconfing "The earliest plays dealt to their net income,up tp$U5 a meal," Sbe explained. "If with the Vietnamwar.women the person ismable topay, he suppression and U.S. in- or she receives; the meals far Goafanctars involved in the 'This type tf flooding oc­Deep Eddy and Northwest .volvement," Windell Jones, IT'LL SHINE free." ... • .. .• '• 'A construction of thefkxxlwater curs every winter and Pools opened Saturday while another participant, said. Volunteer"cooks work at the bypass tunnel at Barton spring," Jim Rodgers, Stacey is open yeaMouod. ..... The troupe got jits start WHEN IT SHINES various Meals .onV Wheels • Siring? Pool ire aiming for manager of;ZOker Park, said through people doiofe small kitchens underthesupervision early completion an My IS. Wednesday. "Withthe bypass, The majority of Austin's £ guerrilla plays against the of food coordinators from 10. Thar deadline had been SeptL wesboold be abtetodivert the municipal pools are expected war, and/an ad lioc group of a.m. until tbe food prepara-1. ; floodwaters. thus not haying to open around May 31, a . the theatw was formed, Jones! ; a^TlieOzark tion iscomplfte.Hnttonsaid.' The6-by 10-footgravel trap to dose the pool forso kng." ^okesman for the Austir;...said. dam is being buQtat the west Parks and Recreation Depart­-Now, the cast cooasts'of Mountain Darede\rils At 11:38 ajn. volunteer end of BaitonGreek. The box "We don't expect any ment said. i--M cabout 12 permanent menobos deliverers pMc np the meads problems in meeting the July culvert win be apptuximately and distribute them in a 15 completion date," he said. 961 feet kng and will ran designated:area to six ot along the north side, of the . While Barton brings is seven recipients, Hutbn said. pooL Sidewalks and rebating dosed. Anstinites can use Deliverers most he aide to walls also are being built. other natural spring "swim-, provide; their own transpora- Attending the Even the smallest rains ming holes" — Deep Eddy. tion, she contained. used to flood the pooL Trash 400 -Deep' Eddy Ave.. Summer Session? For further information,: and debris would build np, Northwest Pool at :Aidath contact Edna Youn^dpod, necessitating dosing the pod Street and AEbata Avenoeiand volunteer coordinator, for to twoweeks sortcould Stac^y Pool, 809 E-.live Oak '6416. \;v32 bedrained and deaned. WHYN0T THE OZARK n MOUNTAIN DAREDEVILS Includes 1975 Sounds best cm "If YouWannaGetlbHeaven" •The Best Food in Town 5 Day Maid Service , li RECORD TOWN \-i Sun i i-v Q2i euodsjm^ 6.98 US rf'V •ShuttleBusat .478-6119 ­ & • •»& •j-J-^S •-'% Front Door THE CLASSIC LEATHER THONG M SEVEN : n&si accepting contracts'} Reg. 16.00. Now save one-fourth on-the spirited ' r-: for Summer ^ sandal that has become indispensible for the carefree Texas way of life. Barely there in the " tste softest of leathers, with padded insole, here , for you in the most wanted colors for summer: €5k MADISON HOUSE White, Harness,'Navy, Red, Pink, Green, Yellow^. 709 W. 22nd St. ^ Sizes 5 to 10 in the Shoe.Salon, first level 478-9891 478-8914 Downtown and Highland Mali. Madison-Bellaire u.m Apts. --*; FOR FALL, MADISON HOUSE & "i SHOE STORE ••S }»• £5 DEXTER HOUSE -^05 E. 19th (Meals optionalat Dexter). ;::| 'I *ye *? •-> ^ tt ?>$ COMMUNITYPESIGN •» j •*"' V * i* » > y" K I s. * & Hi" f .ft.* . -f ^ )r< ?s M 1 I i Law Enforcement i ^.is-_ ^ i* JVlONl^^Wll^ll^3CpAM - g 1 I 5V f# ! Professor Oscar Newman, Department of Architecture, New York University " W-Zz# |:^|^.:PTOfessor Daniel Mandelker, Washington University (St. Louis) School of Law;>^; WM !^k?^Professor Peter Riesenberg, Department of History, Washington University-^ 1 ;|v gvfn(St. Louis) . SSSk^V--"--"II r -r i|^* Professor Harold Hymari, Department ofyHistory, Rice University, ^ouston^^7?^ |>t.p^Professor Cdrwin Johnson, University of'Texas School of La^?^ ^ ^ fr&x l RT it .'itU.T. law School Auditorium vilyi-K? Page 12 Friday, Aprjt 18, 1975 THE DMLY TEXAN ?<£•*>> •WW® s ll tf V f f U * *> { „ M'P/ fj&t. * J* "" v«l* -SV-3.0J" *\v*-t "4 * ^ f„asi "Tommy;" directed .by,; Ken and lover Oliver Reed, and little Tommy «* Vu ' film's major flaw is its moving into the ^ \f Russell; screenplay by Russell,.based takes them literally. " ( ' messiah ' bit, which becomes -j. bn the rock opera by Pete Townshend Several years and attempted cures metaphorically messy and stays uncom­ , oqd The Wbo; musical direction by -later,' young man Tommy; (Roger fortably on the other side of preten­ Townshend;. starring Ann-Margret, ; Daltrey) accidentally becomes the coun-. tiousness. The total sense of the bizarre Oliver Reed, Roger Daltrey andElton try's ' new pinball champion, is and outrageousfrom the early partof the Jobn;.at the Fox Twin.' miraculously healed and acquires a film is lost, and with it, much of the fun There's a word for Ken Russell's film' *®8S! , . messiah complex. His mother and step-RUSSELL HAS BEEN attributed ot VTommy" -: WOW!!! ;Russell, the'J "^t • father exploit him, and the throngs of with calling "Tommy" "the greatest love.-'em-or-hate-'em master of j, worshipers eventually turn against him. work of art the 20th Century has cinematic excess, has' found in Pete. produced," and until the end of theTownshend's and The Who's rock opera Sound incredible? Well, of course it is, movie, I never could have believed beac­ the ideal vehicle in which to exercise his but Russell twists it satirically in the tually meant it. But this shift in tone apparentlylimitless imagination. right places enough to keep us amused causes me to wonder. with religion, 3 Since 'Mommy" first appeared in jabs at pop culture, Worship of pop idols is a ripe subject medicine, advertising and other similar- album form in 1969, pop music has for satire, but toward the end of "Tom­ ly vulnerable institutions. become flashier and its staged concerts my" we're not sure what Russell's at­ more flamboyantly theatrical. The early BUT THE NARRATIVE is more func­titude is. Could he actually be intending concept^ of "mind expanding" havebeen tional than significant, providing linkage this thing as an allegory designed to pragmatized -into "anything goes" for between the series of show-stopping shake us into some sort of spiritual the sake of show. What better conceitfor turns by the film's "guest artists": Eric awareness? Russell — he of the visual hyperbole and Clapton leading a tribe of worshipers ina This is one case where ambiguity can­passion for expressing music in filmic, temple dedicated to Marilyn Monroe; not be construed as profundity. The terms? ''" J-Elton John as the pinball wizard, in the temptation is just to dismiss the ending "Tommy" is pop extravagance at its film's most technically dazzling se­as incomprehensible, and I say why not? quence; and Tina Turner, whose electric zeriith, and making the film must have When David Frost asked Rod McKuen in presence as the acid queen seems ready a television interview what "Tommy" been Russell's dream-come-true. Given to leap off the screen at any moment. the nature of the material, there wasvir­meant, McKuen-replied, "I thought it tually noway he couldoverdo itHis only With the exception of Oliver Reed, was just a really good time.CTff the risk who's embarrassingly out of concern would be tomake eachsequence place, the of sounding lazy — I mean ^jfolicRed more audacious than the previous one. performances are wickedly supercharg­ain't gonna mess with it, why sh&Hdwe? ed, and none more so than Ann-Margret, The philosophical muddiness of,"Tom- The result is a film which — for at least the depth she displayedin really the of two-thirds of its running time — is as who reaffirms my" can't impair fun brilliant as. it is ridiculous in its .excite­"Carnal Knowledge." A-M does flounder Russell's sensationalstyle and the"real­ ment aid headiness. occasionally, trying a bit too hard in her ly good time" most of the film has to Big Scenes, but she has a quality-of offer. Russell has utilized the visual, BRIEFLY, THE STORY is that of a forcefulness in the pathetic desperation aural and even tactile forces of the film young boy stricken deaf, dumb and blind that epitomizes her character, and she's medium for "Tommy" as probably noafter witnessing the murder of his father frequently very good. other directorcould have done. It'sprac­ by his mother's lover. "You didn't hear As long as "Tommy" remains a tically a perfect match between film *A«.J. semisurrealistic pop celebration with maker and material, and that doesn't it, you didn't see it, you won't say nothing..." scream mother Ann-Margret satiric overtones, it's a The Who's Roger Daltrey as tommy knockout. The happen very often. lilii ,r $}•* • -1"* ^3 nmm. Jack Nicholson sings as the doctor. new pinball messiah. na Turner electrifies as the acid queen »•• + 11 _V v J"*-i v~w « •> >f '*»<*•-if "V.'^'$»& -"*«£ «ft*tv*#£,s -> -1 .; .« ~,':frix fe»~J£»? -r*S * V'.'-Sx i^Ti11 J­ Ann-Margret: ''-l- w -i s. At Long Last Triumph ' Apparently relaxed;and enjoying her complexities of her role, wasn't he .tress to be reckoned with. VIt took me lunch, Ann-Margret seemed relieved terribly demanding.? "He jyas VERY • • about six months to recover from the that the first stop of her "Tommy" demanding," she replied, "which I idepression of playing Bobble," she said promotional tour had been a success; In LOVED. I always want to be stretched; When asked if the experience was worth fact, last month's '.'world premiere.­learn somethingng every dayday. . " : .'' It, she took a considerable pause bebefore' preview", of the movie in Dallas met "She was a "Yes," 1 , bit afraid of;pussell after fe^JVepIyine, 7V­ with fantastic audience response, and -& v seeing 'The Deviisi'^'t/ Smith -addeil. ^^"4-*' • the stat. herself had been:greeted at the / a "Afraid of what he might doto her head SINCE SHE MADE her screen debut, Inwood theater ln;a stylereminiscent of-But they never had any trouble." in 1961 — as Bette Davis'-daughter in* Hollywood glamour in its heyday, •l,( ,Frank Ca^a's "Pocketful of Miracles" 'i 'Which is not to; say the. experience "1 see my moviesone tim?," shesaid? Ann-Margret has more than paid the' -" - wasn't trying. One of "Tommy's"-most, w v? surreal sequences? otcUi^ when'a ^ „ "usually ina screening rooftii But Roger • 'proverbial Hollywood .dues -She's" • scope (Smith,, her husband).thought I should drunkeh, hysterical Nora hurls a cham- rotten oipyies;y see 'Tommy-with an audience, and I'm pagne bottle through her television set s,V^fwe Kitten With Whip" and "Hie : set. miten witn a "The/ ®he glad I did.,The:audience participation in The tube explodes with a torrent of soap ^dm'ts> "I'd Uke to' this mow? was really incredible. It suds, baked beans and chocolate sauce, some of them. But I don't think * reminded me of being on stage '[. , in which A-M writhes With orgiastic ever starts out to make a bad' ^, r ^ilm' ' The Ann-Margret seated across-from' > delight , added with a note of atone-?^.. me; however, was A softer copy of the "THOSE WERE REAL beans and \ explosively sexy singer-dancer who' !r .^#.^to.,.^v^,eoDq«ei!ed a decade of critical' regularly shatters Las Vegas records*1 j** slight groan We spent either six or scorn and staged an already-legendary and afarcry from the guilt-ridden,40-ish rn/IAimill (MWI LABMA**— 1.1—1 f.lt .. Nora Walker of "Tommy." Outrageous­ ly attractive, as one would expect, and looking younger than her youjig 33 years, However, the beans and the chocolate show-blz veteran. She is uistead a quiet0>j she is nonetheless evocative of the could be.washed off, andwhat wasequal- r> remarkably' sensitive. person who pro#, phrase Peoplemagazine used todescribe ly important for Ann*Margret, "I could , . jects the classic vulnerability that cries' her, "sftyx homebody." Her frequent, -V-leave the character at the studlo^I • out.for protection. She is also an actress" ' reassurance-seeking glances toward r j * couldn't do that with Bobjrie in 'Carnal i and performer continually, endeavoring ' Smith.helped convey a slight,^appealing Knowledge.' ; , <.ls, .ypW§ K to improve upon what she has already y.*&­ timidity -£ " A-M still, withdraws rfrom discussing \ ' accomplished dnd — with Smithtd guide~ >) / \ SO JUST HOW did^she" manage with '-'S^Jthe'role in Mike Nichols' film which X-& her — to. become the tops in her field, "Tomnjy" director Ken Russell' Con-f 'S'*earned her an Academy Award nomiria- With "Tommy she continues in the; Margret as Nora Walker. V-7 * i Si idle Vefim r ' I •Ai 11 ii t Friday, April 18 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN pa^eJ3' v 1*W-hif „Vr I ­ 4 st Hnmsass ,Y/S ^ r , •;. —inran afwir rallies protesting the Vietnam ""f promems^as proaucuon • 451-3760 war drew thousands;.' C distribution of food. Sparse crowd attends World Hunger Rally. Saying American aid tt the -^^out the world. form of foodstuffs decreased' from about$9 billion in 1972 to Committee; Considers Liquor Bill less than $4.5 billion in 1974 while 65 percent of the budget HALF PRICE went for military-ezpen-. Saies by Ouf-of-State Corporations Debated T; : ­ ditures, Strickland continued, . The' House Committee on continue selling beerand wine' Maloney said. \ ' Distributors of Austin, Texas "This country each year puts Liquor Regulation Thursday in their Texas operations. < Safeway operates its liquor Package Stores AssociationJEANS — SLACKS enough fertilizer on golf •referred to subcommittee a : As a. California-based cor­sales in Texas through a and-Texas Retail Grocers courses and lawns to Supply bill .that would allow out-of-poration, Safeway cannot sell separate; corporation,; Del Association si»ke against theENTIRE STOCK * the whole country of India." state corporations or in­alcoholic beverages in its 260 Norte Sales, that does not bill, which one: speakerBangladesh studentShMiqid -dividuals to .bold liquor sales Texas stores;. Alcoholic meet the requirement of hav-. described as a ''special-Bhuiyan told of people in his licenses in Texasi Beverage Commission (ABC) interest bill'^ proposed and ing 51 percent of its BUY ONE PAIR AT REGULAR PRICE country saved by American The measure, HB 1589, is statutes allowonly Texas resi-' stockholders living in ,the sponsored by: Safeway of­GET SECOND PAIR FOR HALF PRICE! and European aid foUowing sponsored by committee dent or corporations with . state, Safeway lawyer Bill ficers. • x^ natural disaster there. member Rep. .Robert more, than'51 percent of their! Claik of Dallas told the com-Dallas padcRge store owner Robert Forteey, spdeesman Maloney of Dallas and would istockholders. living in the mittee. Sidney S^alsaid the new law for the sponsoring Christian protect the how-endangered state to hold off-premise or Safeway's problems wfere could benefit "only the in­ Task Force for World Hunger, right of Safeway foodstores to! package store permits, prompted when an ABC policy. terests of people oat of state" shift placed the Safeway-Del and said current regulations Norte connection in jeopardy' have resulted in a "better li­and endangered' the chain's : quor industry" in Texas. : liquor sales license, he added. The Bottoms for all your tops • The president of'.the.retail Clark admitted that current Elliott grocers groups, Hobart ABC politices might regard Hidobe of Houston, said thethe current corporation set-up ON TIE.DRAG 2426 GUADALUPE GUYS AND GALS Texas residency law has kept as "subterfuge," so company ' "undesirables and people with 1AST DAY FREE ALTERATIONS officials are seeking passage Mafia connections" out of the of the bill to legaUze their li­ i liquor business. Hidobe ad­quor operations. mitted Safeway"probably has Officials representing the no connections," Mafia but Licensed Beverage accused the gigantic chain of . illegal business, practices / GROUP RATES against smaller operators. ' BIOENERGETIC Hidobe asked the com- EXERCISES DINNER "y-f- THEV TJ?1EC> 73 UNMASK HIM. > A FORM OF BODY mittee, chaired by Rep. Ben­ nie Bock of New Braunfels, to r«J® • SAUSAGE • RIBS PSYCHOTHERAPY "save grocery ToaBAU AE WAS fJEAU-Y SlfJ CEKE / the corner • PMaleSeW*INK >75 MARY MTTIGRIW 472-S034 store" by defeating the • Mm * KdJt • Brni , V-^ , f ? V r *J fcr ^ vSafeway4iack^ bill.: ^ S 7 ' — ^ 1 4 " In other action, the ccmi- SERVED FAMILY STYLE -tier xh?iv^ "fKts -fe Vou. , mittee approved HB632 to the full House. Thie measure would prohibit minors under ge.if fXcfced when ycxX'tiz I 18 years of age frotu entering. private clubs where liquor is, tat&blwjfely Korves*t". Af (jmv r PoH-ery 7-00 Worjnip SS-^2" TWO NOBEL , ^ a-** A —----x * CUft^9 University Baptist 'Student Ministry KINSMEN ^ RTF MAJORS: April 17-20 'si** s* -,',1/ 2* April 24-26 J%IT 8 PM t $1.50 ^. SPECIAL EVENING PREREGISTRATION ratch East Campus Lecture for Hall ^ " ry-vf FOR FAU. SEMESTER. 1975 *> (LBJ (jinl|tlfi -enter S Jvf* ^'5; . . Far Kasl parking,lot) • -v*& K .. J>r *>, lv.-*y* ^5-* ^ ^ iiW^4^7%, w&;-^ HPS SP/& •fej;' Monday Evening *•?<•%?; llf! Z1-2S %• i* " r 4W K ,-v rV<-^..w^v \*r •'"•.ft April 21 Ad cnatmd by Mlkm Manhall, AdvtrtUhq Major. <<£• «4, •< f, ? *,=&>> -l-L * *"* 7:00 -10:00 p.m.; / ^ J 5? 5 * «Y$r < V Get a COURSE SCHEDULE at campus bookstores, and see your departmen^bo^^i^isingl * schedules and deadlines. , ' " 3i n-,-Jf* ;vTWiijfcgj'R _ •CHANGES AND CORRECTIONS % BP-^ -, ^C-Fourth level Student Lounge -J- I ^ 1. SCHOOL OR MAJOR: PICK UP MATERIALS IN |ACADEMIC INFORMATIONt YOUR CURRENT DEPARTMENT. Go to tin of-{<11. MO ONE CAN PREREGISTER FOR MORE THAN 21 .-fic« of the Dun of th* school or eolloga to which': HOURS. %?~"you ira chsnging-AfMr changtaR. go to your new -.2. YOUR DEAN'S PERMISSION IS REQUIRED FOR LE8S itsif ' : < department to -'be advlsefl end complete ; , THAN 12 HOURS OR FOR 19-21 HOURS. Obtein perr­-v:prerefelttration -J mission before you see your advisor. £ ADDRESS CORRECTIONS:,If thfaddrae* Infor-: S«,CMA BUILDING k fc­ ;V^i'mition printed on your DEAN'S COURSE. RRST HOUR RESERVED FOR SENIORS ONLY -students t( IMPORTANT!!!!! RECORD CARD lslncorrect.fill out«nADDRESS' who currently have 75 or more hours of UT-Atistin credit. V ^'cORRECTION form -evallable In^departmenul TURN IN YOUR COMPLETED MATERIALS TO YOUR ,'office> or pg. ^3 ot the FALL COURSE; DEPARTMENT. DO NOT LEAVE THEM WITH YOUR SCHEDULE " AOVISOR, r • Coment-of-insfnictor cards will not he given until this time. < I OPTIONAL CARDS YOU CAN.REOUEST: . [BELIEVE IT OR NOT: I fan imvfrmt mmni/mmrJ •, ••BILU.NO:•: ADDRESS:;;Preregtetrationir-||&Onr 2,000 students who prareglster will make an error on| • K*#A • Some courses will fill completely that, evening. Come early! tip'% :bllli will • be mailed about July" T3 to yodr'permanent address. Mi.their cards. TAKE TIME TO FILL OUT YOUR CARDSI Turn In aBIJIIng AddnMa Card to have the billterit to AS t-S6~t Vv i£. CAREFULLY. ^ ) 1 Your piefegistration can be completed that evening if you require no your loCal addrasa.-" V' t , :>•; About IB.OOO of the 24.000preragfstering students Will turnI further asiistoaice from other University roffices.4%^% SI-OPTIONAL FEE CARD:' Use only to requeft optional In their cards on.the last day^of prareglstradon. Give us time I ti. OOtc rO. J>Oi jn. 1^1 Items This semester "aU optional fees are on a «o help you correct errors you might have mad*. TURN IN I «• tAt fTKnu >7wwi ' ' tUtrf# fexut p/ |5j?!5''':' POsitWe check-off basis.iv, C": 1 ' M V I .YOUR MATERIALS EARLY: • You must have 60 or more hours by the beginning of Rill Semester *'"3, ALTERNATIVE COURSE tyEOUEST'CARD: Use to noot/nty/ntm ttmHHtw tfijti. 1975 (and be a currently enrolled UT-Austin student) in order to be . -requeston* repiacemehtcoursaIfyourfirs^requesW .<£*/l/ MtJir . . at* unavailable.'DO NOT USE THE ALTERNATIVE v*™* tone* Anitr, QK YOU HAVE QUESTIONS,. SUGGESTIONS. COURSE, CARD TO REQUEST ALTERNATE [ C0MPLAINT8 ABOUT ANY ASPECT OF SECTIONS OR TIMES. You can request dnly ONE . V/tXrttoff. Tronsfer'^sfaden^ ^ther" UT-jCultVin^sc^ools. colle ALTERNATE COURSE.-' " ' ' -PREREGISTRATION, CONTACT REGISTRATION ',W?,$t-sQfir.9«rf*_f,1a>rtu mw ; SUPERVISION. MAIN BLbG. 16; 471-68SS. > departments must complete the change of maiorduring-thi" r>»t/toAkr/ I •* Mai*.H youM transfening_ to RTF and qualpfy|as, „ a senic , ( . senior in &rm*n/l,T.«m you must show proof of your status in order ;to be advi praregistered ^luring the first hour. ^ * A AAAi&aaii'ttjdfpAL »•fd-.w*/At r •Tnm t' A> ° j_—r „ jf ' I ' ' ^ * , vx i|Pag? Friday, April 18,-1975 THE DAILY TEXANft^^Sl iS dm -v UTr President Calls Coalition 'Separatist' Details Nonvoter Position By ANNA MARIE PENA • Legislature. -• Don Zacharias replied to a "Sbe's passing tfce buck Brown ^lso discussed the. By WADE WILCOX increase in room and board THE STUDENT regent is Texan Staff Writer < rates in university dorms. . Texan Staff Wriler.-: • ;f Th6~ seven • rejected question on whether similar putting it off oh other people, Special Services Projectfund-also the president of student (EdltorVnofeTlili I* the demands Included elimination demands.had been • made in-the only demand she came ,ed this year by a federal grant While the Texas Legislature At present no faculty government, and although the rKcond ia a'terles on racism of standardized admission the past • , nearto actively supporting is and specifically geared to aid may debate putting a-non­members serve as-nonvoting two jobs made it impossible voting student representative members, though Aben said for Say to keep up, "except|atll»e Uaivenity.) tests which USARAT con­''President Rogers has the hiring of minority low-income and minority University' President ' ad siders: culturally biased.:: dealt with those demands and. nurses." 7Soto said. -students in utilizing all of the on the boards of regents of he thought that "is a good during the summer," he ilnierini Lorene Rogers told Rogers suggested at the told the group specifically I •. The attibide the students resources of the University, state-supported universities idea." prefers a combination EUnited Students Against meeting the tests should be that, in .essence, there were are expressing; .by-; their with emphasis on tutorial ser­and colleges, Nebraska took The current student regent. president-regent rather than {Racism atTexasshe ccnld not de-emphasized rather than; seven she.could.not support. -demands was thatthe Univer-vices. this step several years ago. Jeff Say, believes the system two separate offices. lupporf seven of their eliminated. However, the other six she . sity does not want minorities Three students, represen­has been successful in Finally, Brown mentioned The ideal would be to have Idemwds because they rqtre-' 'THE OTHER four can and ha£ supported long here,:Zacharias said. "That's ting each of the three cam­providing student input to the Texas Achievement an alternate who could attend the of nt separatist tendencies. ' demands Rogers reportedly before this," be said. nottrue,'' Zacharias said. Scholarship Program, es­puses of University board decisions and in influen-meetings with the regular Nebraska, serve as nonvoting cing the university ad­"Yon convinced us so. well ^considers separatist include:, Qine. is.more financial aid "It is a highly complex tablished by the regents in members on the eight-ministration. regent could notintegratfe, and now you legislative lineitem budgeting for minorities. Zacharias. situation. There have , been 1974. The regents ap­ brant to separate," Rogers for a Division of Minority Af-. pointed out that Rogers had minorities in the past Whodid member board of regents: "Administrators now come Nebraska voters bad to ap-. rid at a meeting between the fairs; departmental statusfor gone: before appropriations. not'want toconiehere, Weare propriated MOO,000 over a Although they continue to to student regents with their prove an amendment to the four-year period. An ad­ i and University officials Afro-American and Madttb-. committee budget hearingsin. concerned with developing a lobby for full representation proposals, rather than state constitution beforea stu­ ditional $100,000 wasallocated 1 week. American Studies, funding for the Legislature to request sensible program which will on; the board, student leaders students having to go to the dent regent could be on the by former President Stephen at the University of Nebraska administrators," be said. board of regents. This was' part of her blade and chlcanonewspapers funds for financial aid for not be a' cruel hoax on Spurr. Brown said. at Lincoln seem satisfied with!to 13 demandsmade and the establishment of a minorities. ' minorities," he added. the present arrangement. .'the student coalition aimed grievance committee to hear Increased integration of ANOTHER ASSUMPTION Each year another $100,000 goes toward bringing a new STUDENTS ARE not allow­at improvihg educational coa­complabts of racist practices teaching assistantshlps and Zacharias pointed out is that litions at the University:and byfacftlty and administration. faculty was another demand the University gets all its class of minorities and keep­ed to vote on proposals or to LAKE AUSTIN LODGES ing them here, he said. introduce measures of theirattracting more minorities to On 'the question of she saidshecould support, but money from one source, "a own, but they are free to dis­Grand Opening Picnic & Pig Roast create a .realistic ethnic departmental status for' the she indicatedthe mainrespon­huge pot of money." . Information is being com­ oce. • ' : Ethnic Studies Program, sibility wasin the handspf-the He explained the University piled for responding to the cuss issues before the board, * featuring attend informal sessions of'WE HAVE not placed Thomas Collier of USARAT department (Chairmen. operates under budgetary HEW report (HEW specified the board and persuade other ioritles on the demands) said Rogers intimated that AS FOR HIRING more restraints basedon a'complex the University had 90 days to GREEZY WHEELS -LOU RAY regents they are all impor-first they-would ask. for a minority faculty, Rogers told Coordinating Board..formula respond). to submit student ant," John Herrera of department, then they would USARAT that the' University which determines hiiw expen­proposals. COUNTRY L0VIN' -ECC0 By Rogers' order, none of Student input was crucial,JSARAT, said. "We are not want aschool-and finally they, was a victimof supply and de^ ditures are appropriated. to say just give us would want the University. -mand. "There are a limited "We are proud of the the information pertaining to Wess Aben,editor of the Daily Sot, April 19 2pm-Midnight Adm. $3.00 the report is available for Nebraskan said, "in knocking i one and we're satisfied." USARAT representatives number of minority PhDs progress we've made in the \V FMWI ftQA.0 620 release. off $40 to $50" on a proposed "She's not Willing to com-said.that Rogers considered with careersin education.The areas of minority recruitment LAKE AUSTIN MANSnttO DAM dt herself to working on any the existing Ethnic Studies pool issmall, and the demand and retention,''. Ronald GtS pf the demands," Irma Soto Program separatist. is high," Zadiariasexplained. Brown, vice-president for stu­US 290 ROGERS ALSO said the According to the coalition, dent affaire, said. y. Rogers reportedly told the University had '••ac­Rogers added that tbere was Brown outlined the e»sting CAMPUS GUITAR at the meeting that complished a good deal" not sufficient knowledge to programs and efforts by the ny of the areas in the toward providing equal oppor­facilitate such a department, University to meet the needs SHOP i were out of her con-tunity for all students. and that many' tenured of minority students. ^ ol. They believe she.has,.if "These 13demands are the professors were required. THE OLDEST program is NOW OPEN BUVOS^ ot direct power, the powerto only ones I've seoi in this of­Rogers said she supported Project Info,startkl in1969-70 EN WHITE |inflsence the regents and the fice,.'' presidential assistant increased funding of Madeand as a student service and later I-rw to« •to' Mexican-American cultural gaining support from,the dean Specializing in guitar instruction. centers but that it was up to Of students as an effort for Qualified teachers in classical and the Texas Union Board. students, faculty and staff to acoustic guitar. Guitar sales and The final demand she sup­visit with high schools with ported was /the request for high minority enrollment. accessories/ guitar books and WEEKEND more minority doctors and The second program is classical sheet music. Special rilirses at the Student-Health Ethnic Student Services, Center. Rogers told the group which started in the summer rates for beginning students. that there were -not'any and fall of 1972. The center's EVENTS minority doctors in the area role as defined by Brown is to CARRY OUT SALE! r 477-3531 605 ft W. 28th who would be willing to work direct minority' students to at the health center. help with problems. 20% OFF ON ALL SANDWICH & Friday iIfS!iLAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM ANNOUNCES 1 with Ex-Students' p.m. Discussion PIZZA CALL IN & CARRY OUT phe Creative Process: A Summer Workshop in the Arts Assoc. President Wales Madden.ORDERS | AR TIST S FACULTY WooU? at UT and en doecti'd Small Cf«»f. 2 p.m. Bingo |ROBERT GRANT BURNS studies music ami Warnings" at Thp R11.* Theatt«< in Austin d.»nc«' at The JuI'mh} School 5:30 p.m. Preview of Cole Porter revue: (GOOD WITH COUPON ONLY) and Hram.j .it Baylor University, currently poetry consultant"'-; JFHHV WILLINGHAM. "DeCamped! DeBauched! DePorter!"SUNDAY -SPAGHETTI only $1.19/plate j to the Art* and .CM'>pos>T principl'1 111111st Te*as Commission on the •' Humanities has won many first place awards Dallas Civic Symphony and SMU 8:30 p.m. Soul: "Freedom Express." Admis­.tii forms bringing '.^lented »n music drama and poetry Orchestra. 1970 continued various^? "" country band. Admission 50c UT Exhibit at Dallas Museum of Fine Arts ppriod.cals "A GregYamin Enterprise"! LfCTURE SERIES H*| •'»hibit»»d in rii;jny craft shows across US V»v, Directions HI Tfi.iv Aft Ja;n« students, faculty, and staff; $1 featured in Contemporary Batik and Tie Dye REGISTRATION WmiH.1rithas Director Contemporary A'l j Methods.Estfu-t.es Apprec.at.on — S100 00 per per son (10% discount to^i guests. Museum Houston -'jHl i Museum members'. Registration is now or•''• ! The An Museums Role in the Creative jPOWELL SHEPHERD former instructor^™ Enrollment is limited and desrgned for . The Tavern is located behind Gregory Gym Experience The Visitor ""'Laurence Miller |||s| in Dance Drama at UT Austin, M F A . persons 18 and over Fee does not cover D'roctor lagutM Gloria A-t Museum AuMMrpllj i University of Illinois has taught directed and meals or lodging Information concerning Conceptual Art. Ken Havis artist and a,'-',|-"»t,|< Lookingfor BW choreographed numerous pieces m U S inexpensive meals and lodging is ' tHETEXAS Gallery Director. North Texas State University. and abroad co directed Small Craft on request America [Ji'ntor W.irnmgs The R,u Tlu-jtr.. g.ioM nrtjSL N<.n t.-l.nid.lhle dpp05it S20 s Afraid of Virginia '5121 i512) 452 9447 JoniMitchell,MariaMuldaur Randy Newman,Rolling Stones.Cat Stevens,or StevieWonder? THE REEL THE FIRST AUSTIN FILM AND VIDEO FESTIVAL THE RITZ THEATRE • APRIL 17-20 FRIDAY, APRIL 18 8:00p.m.-COCKROACHORANGEbyPaulaJaffa (Video) 8:15-DANCE A LA MOOGby Judy Dean (Video) 8:30 • MEMORIES OF PRINCE ALBERT HUNT by Ken Harrison (Video) . a 9:00p.m.-VIDEOLA:VIDEOSCULPTUREINMYLARbyBob Pacelliand Ruth Ramm (Video) SAN MARCOS• AUSTIN Uve• The Ritzeltei 9:30-THE ASTRODOMEby Geoff Winningham (Rim) INTERMISSION 10:00 p.m. -THE HEISTERS. directed by Tobe Hooper (Cinemascope) 10:30-GIANT, directedby George Stevens andstarring JamesDean SATURDAY, APRIL 19 -MORNING -FREE SESSION|£ f*,v* IOam-tpm-AselectionofeducationalandIndustrialfilms ^ fe" by local film-makers (Rim) SATURDAY, APRIL 19 AFTERNOON MATINEE^ The'Austin Symphony 2:00pm-BROKENSONG by John AndrewsandJim Nor­man (Video) announces ? > Orchestra COSMICCARTOONSbyGraceBroussard(Video) 2:30 -JUKE BOX by Bernard lechowick; aMissa Solemnis CARRASCOLENDAS show (Video) "i <-*%' I %ii 3:00 -TREE OF UFE by Bruce Lane (Rim) V. Beethoven TOY TRAINS by the Eames' (Rim)a iP'ii i INTERMISSION Conductor: Waiter Ducloux 3:30 p.m. • PETER, PAUL, AND MARY directed by Tobe Hooper (Rim) Tickets available at 4:30 -THE WINDSPUTTER, a feature produced by David"•/I r%% „ » . f House of Jeans, Ford (35mmRim) Choral Union: Morris Beachy, Director ,.Aust)n Army-Navy, SATURDAY, APRIL 19 -EVENING *#•>.?, •• ' 8:00pm• The RilzettesLive . -> UT Q>-Op, and Inner Sanctum. CRENSHAW by WhitfieldShell (Video) Hi 8:30- SIX LIGHTSby ChristinaPatoski : Friday, April18 MunicipalAuditorium^ 8:45v-LONE STAR CROSS-COUNTRY MUSIC SHOW by r Sheltervision (Video) «. v,;, *# THE BUIX CREEK PARTY . x* Pandora'sTraveling Troubadours (Video) •' Wmi?:0° DatesSanday, AprilZt 9:45'-FRIDAYNIGHT AT THECOLISEUMfayGeoff TtmasJlun-8 Ticket sale^ bdgin Wednesday, April9. Hogg PlqM:Au*tin, T«x«i.Outdoor^ inaoaw concartait*oq«1200 aera"ranch. Coinaioi RanchRoad • Winningham Office, TO-6 yveekdays and City FAric{load -r, GLASSWORKSbv BruceTaylor parking hjudetn»ar th»cono«rt 4 CV*V^5^V-S,^ 10:30-SOUTHERN HOSPITAUTY byTed Nicalaou nt»:Bear, foodfteoka# 11 INTERMISSION '' " '* Buf acbedulM: Jntar,Klnaolvirig, Co-op,7:00-7:3DP.M; TIdwtt:J7v00in advanea.:^at.th«qafa.^^#^jJ«C5!MlWiS)41^®fef:' • " • TOiSO-THEBLUESACCORDIN'TOUGHTNIN'HOPKINSby For mora iniprination,call (512)34S-5951 \ ' lesBlank IEBRXIEFTWAIKER.WAYLON IEHNINGS, kWHUE NtLSON (mdManda) The CulturalEdkrtuiiuiiciit 11:15-RODEOSCHOOLbyEaglePennedandRichardKidd Committee of theTexasUnion BULtCREEK PRODUCTIONS,INC II:30»-KIDBLUEbyWilliamFrawleyandBudShrakewith • DennisHopper andPeter Boyle „ «xcj } j ' „T!t i * t - Fridav, April'18, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page'l5~l ) Jj. i !HSP$ wmm, !A-* f) Mr Wi Food Price Hi le/^iifiHears Fido Biting Mote, ' iu.-uasi?,-• S>yr';_^u.v. 5 By MRHELE BRUNNER ) /balloon so muctibefore' It ivtrjtfldon't lower; durUg the last two to ihree r' Ton Staff Writer breaks. Itcan only goooe way} my prices:and my neighbor years everything Was Up'.*jl' .: A trend toward lower food or the other and it,looks;like does, I'm in had shape," he "Fortunately there have been * Enjoying It Less Pan prices, may be inunlneot, ac­prices are going to come said-" • a number of changes asof six If yout mailman has heen limping in late with'yodr Students representing aPart , posed to a merger would no*cording to an Associated down," he said. s Seiders said he think? the weeks ago.We will change the mail, chances are that man's best friendh&s"given him American University student support it, because "it hasPress story and several Be added, however;' that trencitoward lower{vices isa prices of 100 items either up plenty to bowl about. ,» y » n r lobby group met with Univer­now become evident that Austin grocers questioned "business is hit harder by the result of largersupplies, more or down," he said. "I'm just ,' Since July l ot last year,18 Austin postmen have heen Chancellor there will beN a sity System merger, Thursday. recession in Chicago. Inflation production and consumer ball park guessingnow, but I'd blttenby dogs..This isfive bites morethan theisreceived Charles LeMaistre Wednes­whether with the University«, The AP story reported that is not nearly as bad here."-resistance to high prices. say that 70 percent of the in the comparable period last year, according to Bill day to dl&uss the possibility Texas A&M University or "two major Chicago grocery (Jrosssaid that Austin Minit Mart's senior Austin price changes will be down Jotinson.assistantsafety officer for the mainPost Office. merger the Texas A&I University.^' of a betweenchains havecutback prices on prices probably will not come supervisor, Carl Sigert, "We ViU definitely see "flfehave been averagingahout abiteeverytwo weeks, System and Pan Am. The faculty at Pan Am, who thousands: of items, and in­down as much because not as reported that Minit Mart's lower prices,*' he said, and eech at 4 p in. Friday in the ' been working on new ways to After his protest of the employment bas been Academic (inter Auditorium. improve navigatica and boat' nuclear testing in the Aleutian Gravel's primary concern as Former Texas Sen. Ralph harbors in Alaska. He.is also Islands, three of the five teste senator! The ending of the . Yarborough will introduce chairmian of the finance sub­scheduled for Amchitka land-freeze act enabled the Gravel. committee on water Island were canceled. creation of new jobs. Gravel has been workingfor resources. His amendment to Alaska's The Alaskan Democrat was the Task Force Against Gravel strongly supportsin­land-freeze act created the elected tothe U.S. Senate in Nuclear Pollution in ternational agreements to Land-Use Planning Commis­1968, after Sierving two terms OurT.QI.F: Washington and-favors mak-. conserve Alaska'sfish. Hehas' sion, a panel i which would in the Alaska State House of Special Drink Prices from 4-7 p.m. ing solar 'power a viable cosponsored a bill es­. attempt to balance the state's Representatives.;FridayNight Featuring energy source alternative. tablishing a 200-mile U.S: natural resources and protl } live Music by iI CHICKEN RANCH 1 O'REALLY CLUB& BEER •I ,'Saturday Music by' GARDEN ' THETEXAS Got Si.00 highballs and $1.90 pitchers Friday Nite: , 1 of beer Friday and Saturday nights, April A SUPRISE SPECIAL THEAUYOU 18 & 19, at Smylie's. CAN EAT BAND 3UEST APPEARANCE , $V.OO Cover •Appearing Tontto ' Saturday Nlte: thru Saturday PLUM NELLY Now serving^ "NAME THE DRINK" CONTEST Sl.SOCovar;;, HOWLIN' ATr (Servedin fresh pineapple shell) .Sunday Nlte: '' L0NESTAR THE M00W% $25 GIFT CERTIFICATE REYNOLDS SISTERS 10NGNECKS & 9-12 P.M. TO THE WINNERI .,, m JONI MITCHELL The New Oso'Band BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN $1 at the door.:: B«er talcs b19in U a.n1. SHAWN PHILLIPS, ETC. . $1.00 Cover ;J * . ( jV.. ' • w««laiay». .. RARE PHOTOS ON • . SALE AT THE BUCKET 23rd and Pearl $1.00 PitcheiC?Jf GROUND FLOOR f 19th & Nueces • Across tfmStrmtfromTri-Towors•3hn frM pattinginGang* ~ Tho Tavrn ts toealmd MG USED TAPES 442-9968 DOBKMAU i>wt M.llw Tuot.ThMlra behind Gngory Gym. 472-1564 v 4­ . n *> r g t * -^ f V ' v * 3%% x <* ** V t YU. BLO v *jt<* The Cultural Entertainment CommittM « * -Cr"-of the Texas Union in celebration of ^ * >-the last day of classes offers to , \ Optional Fee Holders " s s ^ }-r-"• ik&sifc Qlbri I ' % J "» "" * ") -At;e%r : i^ ^ ^'4' V'^%­ J ' £% riZ. *Jy< , tS; cvl <~r?Z f f"# SALE ;'5jfe> ~t*v'l on the , * i . a#tiMfe 8:00 PM Thursday, May 1 *" ';New Pablo Jazz Line c j ' -5. -• %> Municipal Auditorium ,0m .A ?T•,'• . •. 1 ' » Ticket sales begin Tuesday/April 22/Hogg Box Office *1*^' 10-6 weekday»/$1.00 with Optional Fee t • for y Bus schedule: Jester, Kinsolving, Co-0p/7:00 A 7:oo PM t-IICT -B "* ' 1 LI5T % No cameras or tape recorders. . \^ ^ 1 * S ^ ­ ID'f must be presented at door. ' 'h-"" r TODAY THRU FRIDAY, Ami 2%> 1 ,#>-&• *1 *• v hi > U * t ' X* ^ ^ v t erf,^ ^ S> £ Lj t -Si-A r Page 16^ Friday^ A^ril 18/ THE DAILY TEXAN-i , , WW1 'W;t, -i Manager Denies^Assault Chargesdp'J ... By WIN BYERS '^9 take some pictures of;the CHELSEA STREET PUB company's no-pictures policy vAjGarbesir Vprp:jecbh%(^trucUon^I:ad^,]liIaolf::f: is. that it is "a competitiveanager for Granite the company's policy, and vep company and we 'don'i want \ FOOD -SPIRITS instruction Co;, this week. talked about10 minutes,!ask-; our competitors' to nied charges he physically ;ed bim'lf tie would accompany one of learn our.secrets,from pic­ ^tacked a KTVV hewsman' me to the-29th Street ^bridge tures in a trade magazine or i LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY ifraing to film work at the where he could take pictures. ­ n^ws show,'',Garbesi said. lpany's site at 29th Street He refused, and I then asked !Garbesi also pointed optNorth Lamar Boulevard: him to leave.' He refused, and ; that the company had been "AM teaking to reporters and a I .then considered' hliiiV NO COVER misrepresented in the past byvision cameraman at the trespassing " j'• photographers aspolluting the •SS truction site, Garbesi T. ~ "... ..i. • Shoal Creek area below the m fluin Mathews'attempt to ' led his reasons for deny-^'^ .; after-this that. , site. NOW OPEN fiiflj on the site Tuesday. : physically preventedj^him ^ Asked about pri&r alleged' HIGHLAND MALL :from taking pictures. Mm violations of the city's , wastewater ordinances, :.fp i>or about a year anda half *»•» «"i™» -****• ;.a|c have had an agreement: " "After he refused to leave, Garbesi admitted that the ™ 1 all newsmen that if they Mr. Mathews triedto takepic?, — T«*on Ml.ltatt by Zach lya* company had been cited for NORTHCROSS MALL ited to take pictureson oiir tures and I placed my hand Garbesi explains incident, to reporters. four violations in the past but site, they should clear it over the lens. He knocked it had pleaded not guilty. 1the city'spublic relations away and again tried to take Garbesi explained the com: pie from just comingin off the Granite's violations have all Both Locations open after Mall hours. Enter ffighlamA tment," Garbesi said. -pictures. I pushed the camera .' pany's policy of trot allowing street and roaming around on involved the charge of dum­ Wheh Mr. Mathews drove aside and JaM it to one side,"' Mall outside entrance next door toJoske's on1-35 »»«*• the media to film on site the site and possibly getting ping polluted water from a .• he gate I just happened to said Garifesfrdenying that he without; prior permission is hurt' shaft in the city's crosstown Hours: Sun-Fri 11 cum. -12 p.nu; Sat. 11 a.m. -1 -him and afted him, what cramrafaa>ffi£^camera into enforced for two reasons. The -' .V'" interceptor sewer being built anted. He said he wanted Mathews' eye.1"'"'.-' '•&:.% main reason isto prevent peo-"If someone gets hurt on Granite is building half of the Granite lustin Official 7,^ ; * ConstrucUon Co. is 1respond system, which runs from 29th. Street to Bull Creek. ' 'A ' sible," Garbesi said..: . -Asked whether the company s Garbesi noted*?that one of will take any ^gal action The Donna Reed Fan Club Presents the requirements for visitors against Mathews, Garbesi oriTRTslfe is that they wear said; "We; are prepared to hard bats. Mathews was not take any legalsteps necessary Go to Consumers wearing one Tuesday. to stop people from enteringThe second, reason for. the the site." lAiiy damages received from natural gas, an amount"in a-creased rate for gas. The suit {multimillion-dollar law suit cess of $20 million.".. will be filed because all ad­ b$! filed by" the City of Coastal States and a''sub^ ministrative ' remedies have Newly Remodeled stin against Coastal States sidiary, Lo-Vaca' Gathering been exhausted, Bishop said. as Producing Co. will be CO., supply natural gas to Bishop said he did not see lunded to customers, Asst. Austin's power plants, Austin paying any less for DOliR Tod Browning's 1932 Sty Atty. Jack Bishop said Austin's contract with natural gas as a result of the This Week Featuring ... nursday. < Coastal States and Lo-Vaca suit but "we hope to just keep psycho/horror classic (But those refunds will be "a calls for _ Austin1 to' pay 20.2 rates where they are." ".' way down the road," cents per" thousand cubic feet WUington Osterloh,public from Dallas , vV ' added. of gas, but because of rulings relations manager forCoajstal —ptus— Sun-Screwdrivers ICity Atiy. Don Butler ann­by the Texas Railroad Com­States in Houston, saidhe was ounced plans .Wednesday to mission allowing Lo-Vaca to not aware of the suit Mon-Tequila Sunrises Surprise Shorts [lesuit againstCoastalStates raise its rates, Austin is pay|. Austin's elecjtric rates have .. Tues-Rum & Coke early May to recover the ing almost$1.50 per thousand-climbed drastically since Lo-Wed-Cellins • " ifferencie between what the . The action comes from Vaca began , haying financial J Thura.-Any Highball AC AUDITORIUM fty's contract with Coastal Coastal States and LorVaca's difficulties and problems s/or and what thecity has curtailments of natural gas meeting its gas np^ly com-All 75c on Special Night dually been paying for supplies to the city and the in-mitmehts in 1972::The hitler Hour 7:30-9:00 p.m. Beer 25*-; electric rates are passed -,/ Any Highball 75* 7:00, 8:45, 10:30 along to consumers a$"'fuel Open till 2 a.m. No Cover Sun-Thurs ' r i f ki U hv§ • adjustment Costs in monthly 1523 T1NNIN FOIU> RD. 4444)711 utility bills. • .... j/il-n'dr-iiO'i-' Friday, Saturday, Sunday PETER NERO, WORLD RENOWNED PIANIST, COMPOSER AND CONDUCTOR, WILL BE INAUSTIN FOR ONE UNFORGET­pamn Near Free and Moon-Hill Present TABLE EVENING IN THE HISTORIC PARA­ —$1.25^ MOUNT THEATRE FOR THE PERFORMING A Saturday Night in Austin with ARTS ON CONGRESS AVENUE THERE WILL BE TWO PERFORMANCES. AT 8 AND10:30 PJM. SATURDAY. APRIL 19. Special Guest Sunday Night: TICKETS ARE PRICED AT $&50, $5JS0 -sit AND $4.50, AND ARE AVAILABLE AT RAY­ Brother Heumann MOND'S, U.T. CO-OP, TEXAS STEREO ON RIVERSIDE, JOSKE'S, KARA-VEL DOWN­ r: of the • , TOWN AND WESTQATE.1 HMmOWBI Church of the Coincidental Metaphor |Sat7;00p.m. Showingonly •MCSTMNSON Sat:, April l,9, 8:00 p.m. Austin Municipal Auditorium AllTickets $2.50 . :• Available at: Raymond's Drugs Inner Sanctum ­Joske's -Austin; Austin Premiere . ... cAustin' CONVENTION ffe-vt'saiaaE'*., SUNDAYo4PRIL 20;:;|ippg5 • ; i 'V.T, TrcshmanTield San JacintoCS, 21st .V-t ^7^. \ ' J' registration begins at 9am ; contests start at 10am Trizes will be ribbons baked goods mmm§SSt IMPiiS Tree admission j^No entry fee •"""Of­ ? M \ A,' T • l-T i.A -' •:: * • THEMiHHI •i, 11 ! «THEWORLD mm •Mini Q«»|iH omimaniMwi Unma. w Com< *w»w Yom»> fxmirnmi, dobro barmonjea iguitar unaccOmpaniedsinging >'4^ I. Fri., Sat., Sun. 7:30&9:30... .$1.50 Friday and;Saturday > 7, 9:15, 11:30 p.m. |April 18,19,20> : Batt* Hall ' ^ h-t ^ ^ -fivestringbanjo old time French tltfes A1,1:30 p.m. only Batt.*-Aud. |Fri. ft Sat t-^ * x accomnaniftdsinorinor > " ,1 «. "j'v five string baqjo bluegrass fiddle ensemble singin^,^ 1 1 -,s u -and ' * ' v Jf> tCxtiicjadiujM —traMttomCjxrformances Traditional^usic cWor)cshops throughout the ®L»ay^ » ^ * Mrs. Miller e fiist has already Mkrira ftt A*stm oom-been roentioned. The second, •ami(ir ntspenaiOedinR iiiasiri»n Hm Uni—iiity of Texas Law School : •iv"*'' •.''I'':' VANZITTI Directed by GhrBano Montakfo The Story of Two ItaSan Immigrants r Who Became Symbols Of RadfcaSsni in the Ifufiuii withSvbtiHes s 1920s a*** , x, . » - •> •' -B RSDAYONLY 8:00& 10:05 p f APRIL 18 1 ^ BURDINE AUD§' Student GorV $1.25 . •' § Midcey Rooney & Judy Garland^ I " , | Babes On Broadway ' ? J j,SATURDAY ONLY 8:00 & 10:05 $1.25^1 1 ytp*il19 Burdine Aud. ,2CUCENnj«r-K>X HAS made the gkatest mu$»c.\l EXRAVACANZA EVHt ROUCHT K> THE SOKENt •• M ' ­ m " As to themusic, theconceit seemed surprisingly well-opened with a rather pleasing suite^ to the cello, it received 'renditionof Chopin'sSonata fit . a somewhat backwards per­"G~ Minor, Op. 65. Though formance. from Starker. more like a collection of four Where.Brahms should be lush pia'no. pieces-which/were : and expressive, he played rewritten to include cello, the coolly with a decided bent sonata was altogether en­towards understatement.;He joyable and the performance; alsodelayed an'. annoying good but undistinguished. habit of insetting breaks into ; „The low:point of the • what should be continuous program was ushered in by. melodic ideas.-The Adagio the opening measures of the suffered most from' this ap­;third of Bach's unaccom-proach^' his choice "of tempo 'panied cello suites in "C" being a bK slow. As a result, Major. I cannot say that Idis­the entire movement lacked agreed with Starker's inter­any s&se of.' direction! The pretation. because there was last movement.. although none. If one were not familiar better, was marred by his with, the work, he might not susceptibility to rush: realize what great music this The last work ^on .the is. and think this merely a program and the best of the collection of sterile, boring; four. Bartok's First Rhapsody etudes to .be mechanically (19281. is an arrangement of. brought to technical perfec-the First Rhapsody for Violig " tion. This message was all to f and Orchesira.-Starker gave it clearly communicated to the a very fine performance"but audience. "" the changes involved in THE SECOND half of the rewriting the piece for cello program had me wondering if kill the-brilliance and he was k violinist as well; for character which dre both the Brahms, and Bartok thoroughly winning in the works areoriginaly for violin. hands of a first-rate violinist TheSiimata in "D"Major by like Isaac Stern. Brahms-is in actuality a . STARKER gave us one'ett^ transcription, by the com­core, the Roumanian Folk . poser. of his Violin Sonata' in Dances, aiso by his fellow countryman Bartok. For me, this was the pinnacle of the evening. The Dances • wereSTRAW HAT beautifully played and allow-ed him to go out in a flourish, PIZZA All in all, a pleasurable two gpame^hta wdmitwl 10 "taw Aether ''Fiitintf :»:.v ^ mined, v:admission jir|«» are hard to heat (current at theHigh^d^llCineira)-,' Alwut;^ time Astaire an* Rodgerc b oW^o9^ t^|a5h,: e Were reUring. as a team for RKO, with httle of the old-fashioned styleor n1™' Bwt evidence of what ™Jmus.cal can be is Bob Fore's :,9ra Cabaret (at 7, 9.15 and 11.30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Jester Auditoiium), oneof the very rarefilms which improveseves on the seventhor • eighth viewing. YET THE BIGGEST news from this particular weekendJs-the_appeai3nce of the authentic "ol(tstyle" musical in three of the most distinctive forms available. AstairsAstaire ^and Ginger Fred Ginger^ glisten through the 1935 "Top Hat, hours of music,.although not .will begin at 3 p.m. in PALACE What!would call memorable. Municipal Auditorium Ad- HAPPY HOUR 3-6 DAILY . m PITCHERS w BENEHT TONIGHT MUGS 6619 AIRPORT 1000 S. LAMAR 451-7326 • IH 35 AT KOENIG LN STREISAND 12:00# J 2:30 ^ 5:00,,^ ,. .^ 7:30-^ „. coitmncvB*xWGMc«*«' CAAN 10=00 ^ BARBRA STREISAND ** JAAAES CAAN 11:30 u n FUNNY LADY BARGAINMATS.EVERY DAY TIL1:30 P.M.-S1.25 f Vs-MANAGEMENT DOES NOTKECOMMEM) PCntMSKM T0UN6ER tliBIG 451-7326-IH 35 AT KOENIG LN. COMIC MASTERPIECE" {•KM "f CAPITAL PLAZA 452-7646 • IH 35 NORTH of— .'-'.-i 1:00-3:10-5:20:.' HMTDISNET PRODUCTIONS' 7:30-9:40 1 Hollywood Crash 'Course ' • * r^atei buffs will be «^«}TOr5^geoerally regarded as the bestof their * Down" number, Metro-Goldwyii-Mayer was discover­, ing it had a gold mine in a very .different tyj»eof musical duo — Mickey ' Rooney judy Garland. Theirseries of "backyard musicals," as Rooneyex­plained. in'That's:Entertainment!,' wel% usually geared to the idea of "Say, we could put on our own show! That'd be different!" " "BABES ON Broadway," (at 8 and 40.:Q5. pju,;'Saturday¥in: Burdine Robert E Lee' and Judy s impersotia­tioti of Carmen Miranda And speaking of thev ')Bra^li4n bombshell," the Miranda freaks .who turn out for every dioipng .pf.. llie Gang's All Here" can rekindte.Jielr, delirium for "Down Argenttoe Way-Cat 7:30 and 9:SC p.m, Sunday;in Bur-dine Auditorium),, a definittye 2Qth M n.. iaiiw> mneiital nnlnh Blen Centuiy-Fo* 1940s musical,,iyhlch also stars Betty Grable aind Don Ameche. This one features Miranda bumpingher way through "Ma Ma: Yo Quiero," which is probably best remembered,as the number LuciHe Ball parodied on "I Love Lucy." Remember the. episode when Lucy thinks Ricky Is homesick :for Cuba, so shefixes up the apartmoit Latin-style and ... oh, well.... :, Miranda made her screen debut in . this 1940 Technicolor Item; Her.instant . . .. _ .. , popularity is attested to by Garlands impersonation in 'Babes on Auditorium), directed by Busby: Broadway -one.year later.^ Berkeley in 1941, has Garland and Both Miranda and the Rooney going through their usual Rooney/Garland. movies were, big ;;r'6Uergetic paces, including the "Hoe favorites in the Texan movie poll.y.. : • -° " -' ••v-'-.-j... " .* ® To Present Benefit Concert The Univei&tj?; Uhghofn bands will present a beneflt concert Sunday to raise funds for. music scholarships. \ The "Band-O-Rama"' program, featuring morethan 400 musicians and five bands, mission is $2 forv adults'and $1 for children through high school. t • University Bands Director Vincent R. DlNino will con­ duct the Symphonic Band in "FestivalFanfare-March" by Roger NixaMUBI , ' . IKWafiSS PIUS -SHOWING ON SAME PROGRAM ^WOMEmNCAGES'' NOW SHOWING QUARIUS-4 AT BOTH RA: 2J0-5:10-7:2S-9:4S" THEATRES Laughing Kind, Admission is $2, and set-ups and ice will be provided. With a $1 corkage charge for each bottle of li­quor. No corkage charge will be, assessed for beer. TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD CALL ^ 471-5244 •SASH •_ BgFORy,-||| RECORDS & BOOKS M474-5294m ', aftor 5 •J Sun Theater 4 * 521 E. 6lh 477-0291 J * Now has the real thing J JEnjoy XXX Movies * JBooks & Novelties f * 9:30AM-2:30AM £ J . - Sun. 12-12" J J Student Discount ^ 1 Mustbe 18toEnter T *++1rk*ir+ie+$irtrkf 1FEA: 5^0-7:45-1OHM h ACADEMY AWARDS WINNER " BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS -Ingrid Berg!S!S!S f£s-'Bravol One o* the "One ofHie year's most movies of the yearl 0 c --$ elegantly entertaining,, Beetf,N Y Daily News ; l * ' r' v,v\-* * v movlesl So runl Donot /'A marvelously Intricate , miss the 'Orient Express', % whodunit! A joyous „ ^a first class thriller]" r«peri.nce! A hast-' , r'" ' ^ in am season!" i fv f'Baliclous] Shear old-t » —Judith CrfQt.NewYorft Magaziner ­ -/^'ashloned escaplsinl" " '1-BruC9 Williamson,P/ayboy 7%%. . . .. AuarrflWEiftfe^ ' i'^vJOWBELBUO S&SEnt? RMHELROBBITS - JEAMWBBECASSa mxmmun '42mm --fel' tuMtmoi _ mm RE-SJ SUNDAY ONLY^'7^7:30 & 9:30 $li25?1 ^ ARRIL20 ^aline AudX ' (( uucorrt 5ff nl35 TIL 1:30 fs:¥*nTCii:t>>ti t unexpected thrillerfrom ;V, ^£4iiiAciiRmiri»:v: P^g€ l8 Friday, April?1^WZ5 THEi DAILY TE5CAN , ---1 / -* / ~4 ? / . ji±L±r, . K „ Classic 1932 Horror Film f u at AC Auditorium ?^L * By PATRICK DEYDEN tt-midgets and others make a inherited a fortune, plotting could be heroically burned, In some ways "Freaks" is collective freak — or deviant With her lover the strongman bombed or shot from the Em­ like that final exam youdidn't character — worthy of sym­to" marry and then kill the pire State Building in a study for— it's shocking at1 pathy and respect. imp. *S vicarious purge of ear and un­ first glance but absolutely They are "just harmless The midget gullibly believes certainty. terrifying when you get your victimized achildren," by in the good intentions of the THE CHOICE is somewhat mind into it. cruel society. And they are normal woman, but the easier today. With pervasive Director Tod Browning ­ it1 «• human — no freak is bitter audience can see the dispari­social control and fluctuating •gathered an all-star cast of about his stigma, each is self-ty. They must either accept of should beliefs what be M sideshow freaks from around; sufficient and well-adjusted, the barbarism of "their own "right," everyone either has . the world for this 1932 horror and no freak is displayedas an kind" or identify with the been or will be deviant. At • film, his second sound feature inhuman object. freaks, overlooking physical some point everyone fails to after Dracula.." His Onfythe "normal" people difference. qualify as normal. In this waydocumentary portrayal of the; -represented by a beautiful The choice was too difficult "Freaks" could be enjoyed as daijy life of these circuspeo-aerialist and the circus strong for the initial audience of a defense of deviancy. % pie fnghtens the sguieamish, man-mock the freaks cruel-"Freaks," judging from the •»>" But it remains overallelse a but that s. just a.cheap thrill--v ly, forcing the identity inver­film's lack of success in 1932. horror film. Tension buildsThe psychological terror he sion that abnormal is good, In a time of tensions as great until Finally the "harmlesscarefully wrought makes the .normal is bad ,.,/ ' »>*' ^ ^ The Beach Boys Sef forAustin as the Depression and children" go beserk and iwt magazine BEST ENTERTAINMENT VALUE TONIGHT ffiDIKPKP&vif. "it is going to be a smash,2 FQR 1 ADMISSION WITH AD i think it will be one of the biggestSat.) pictures in a long, long timer X r "K-—Rene tbalU.qbc4v -£ - J!\--v" I «-. ^p^.^eamwMeijpnl'' lee grant -jack warden tony bill \ »M„hrobert lomwMiwuieu baaBjr 914 N. LAMAR 477-3783 -*riM*rkha(!dfytbert ^•tw»»pwil«iBoa •'£-Ti-r-R*aiM>A IVnii^^VaH ftfST«lttfO >^e#Hwaram bealty *«*i,hel«shby . MANN THEATRESV m­ 5TH WEEK IAITH FOX TWIN Feature 2f00-4H)5-6H)5-«K>5-10:10 p.m. 6737 tlVB NO ADVANCE TICKETS SOLD > .454-SI47 <¥J"«»BTHcnois mail • 1454-2711 H3T3IHI . , UMt siuimrr bd. f "Gene Rowlands.un­ACADEMY AWARDS leashes an extraor­ dinary r characterization." m Nora Sayre. £ \ NY Times .1Vv, "• im ppFALK/GENAmum Best Director Best Screenplay AdaptedFrom Best Supporting Another Medium Actor an -intensely tilj; involving.emotional: Biest Original Best Ait Direction-1 -, experience." ~ 7 Dramatic Score Set Decoration —Hollis Alport,-# SATURDAY 1 REVIEW/WORLD I • * -'®'(R| WlMv ^ 1:30^:15-7:15-10:15-; 0 i'JSVJS*' , , Twi-Lite Hr. 3:45-4:15, $1.25 *> Vlfc Starring Ellen Burstyn -Best Actress r " 1 f ^ " !-x \bursenseswill neverbe thesame. i —Am ^ 'iDQESNTUVEHKE _, , Cotumb^ Pkti^And Robert Stig^oodPres^a Rim By Ken RusseD ­ ANYMORE f :30-6:00-8:20-l 0:35 ^ o % , ' Tommy • Twl-Ute Hr. 5:30-6:00, $1.25 ^ •*firifTlini ^ i. B»11ieWioB««do>ihtRod.< Jack Nicholson Robert Powell PfeteTownshend :,-i.%!!if3o-s-i5-9oo * h TinaTumer*«>The Who iwS CI T*i41te«r_<45 5ils $V25 O 1:30-5:30-7^45-10:00 f|lf ' * -Twl-Ute Hr. 5:00-5:30. ,fi „ -* VJ AnamcProdutft Hany Domoc PeteTownshend Scm^iiay ByKenRussdlytnjiivcProtxwt Betyl \fertue Christopher Stamp Produced By Robert SUgaioodAnd Ken Russell -j f '0, DwartByKen Russell [Qri^Soundtrad(AlbUmonPolvdof feoadsl |atx)Tapes| ' THEATRES. f -s BOX OFFitf OPIMS IMS p.ia. Feature 1HW-3:1S-SJ0-7:4S-1IH)0 ' , ' I ' , 1j30j4(IS581I1Oi15", I oMnuun»unNMMt-Ba ^ / HiFOX TWIN 1 Reduced Prices Until 4 p.m. -SORRY, tyO PASStS •• • •,.t?sr «nra>ri(vo. • !iN# Advancp Tickets Sold —: Titlth On Sele I Hr. Befeis Times :V1:15-5:00-8:35 ^^1:30-5:15-9:00 %HWHMB4S4-271 »« j, •*»> ^^ ^ C52va-P^^, tV ^CT V1 -, ' •> , mmm sfo\K«aa^ 'Luv' Opens Friday O Henry Museum, 40? ET, Fifth Sty wiU-sponsora frte ftt-' •indoor literary and music, program, at 2_p.fl?. Sunday on theAt"'~** museum^grounds. -* «^ ^ Vi~, V > \ Murray Schisgai's comedy, "Luv," will ,: the first American College Theatre Festival open Friday at the Gaslight Theatre-; for her performance asPetra in "An Enemy Workshop, 316. W. Sixth St, for an extended of the People." She also has trained at the if run, with performances at 8:30 p.m. Pacific Conservatory of the Performing ArtsIIIV Thursdays through Saturdays through May to Santa Marie, Calif, it li. > >?.#,• .... 'Coleman isan assistantprofessorof drama ! Directed by Dexter Bullard, the play stars * at the University, where he hasdirected such Karen Seal, StephenColeman andRobert productions as "King John" as well as "A Edwards as the two naenand onewomanwho Comedy of. Errors" last summer in Zilker "pursue romance withFreueUanjargon." Park. Coleman also starred in. the recent Bullard is founder of the Gaslight .Theatre ggg*. °f "^ther Uxbridge Wants To 3 "'jpsfts±at£rsr=fifcsftt asappearing atSt Edward's University »2, 2~5lt^L.S Jfi Seal is a former student atthe University, For reservations andticket informationfor where she was named outstanding actressof "Luv," call thetheater box office at 476-4536. ft Iu ———television 1M*-.r: .. ?>wau street week. 7 Comedy: Special — "Joe and 36 Chlco and the Man • Softs'*. — < . •• " f- II{ I. . 24 Kofchek: TN> Nlglt£$tafk*r *•. 7 NBA Playoff 345amoTd and Son•-r-'p\ ^.9CBpitoK»aUKy-.~­ 24 Jylle:: My Favorite Things — 7 We II Get By?/S^£s ^ ^ Special Muopets and Peter Sellers *****ft Mr*»*****************•*••• *j«»^TRANS*TEXAB * OPIN IMS • $2.00 Til * PJA. * EXAS li: KA, 12-2-44-ft-IO NO PASSES £ SCrlA '* £'• IADIES1JIGN URTOOAY FOR OUR * CONTEST TO BE HEW TONITE AT «K>0 jENTRIES ADMITTED FREE TO 8K» FEA. $125* * VALUE ? VAIUE IN PRIZES mIST PLACL INQUJRE *J *TEXAS THEATRE, ************1 HELD 'iNo One Under: OVER -18 Admitted OPEN 7:30 iMnnrntM^jBas < Adult* $2.00 ''Thenwsting«nious andnovelerotic flfansofar. FLESH GORDON combines satire andeex withaR maimer of exotic : kw 't^fasy ^ —KevinSanders. ABC-TV Peter Locke & Jim Buckley Prexyt ; A MammothMm* Shst (4 w * r«j WOUIHAfiBjUSHUHW; NOT TO BECONFUSEDI-•, SUPER HEROES!:: THEORKIfNAL OfTESIBNSUe FUSHGORMMT. -~ «•,>>, ^ st ­ "?"s m 1' 1 hr Join-Julie Andrews 1 -36 Rocktord Files • fcSO pJ»C • • ' Lawn and Garden • 24 The Odd Couple 9 |km.. "7""v ' •. t The Black Amer ican Sun "24 Get Christie Love! v 36 Police Woman l(h90 jmu . •4 7 Movie: .^'The Mummy4' starring ^. Christopher Lee and Peter Cwhlog r-i' 9. Captioned ABC Evening News. 24 Wide World Mystery — A tat* of -j devil worship in English village • 36 Toinight >v "i•-v Theprogram,coordinated Austin' poet CharlesTaylor, wiU v feature1Austin writers reading from prigtaal works. Wdterson '• ~v".'the1 program are Taylor,', James Cody,. Dennis Brutus, Susan:•.: Bright, Susan Zwinger, ^inda McCrudden and Robert Burns. The Abelard String Quartetalso will perform chamber music ' * during the. program, and light refreshments wjll be.se^ryed. The progrartk commemorates the'8ist anniversary'of the , publication of the original "RollingStone,'' ashort-lived humor magazine published by WilUam Sydney porter when heJived in . Austin. _ ' ; V ^ -'V !• Formore information aboutthe anniversarycelebration, call the museum at 472-1903. < r' ,, ­ •' TCU Student To Play An American Guild of Organists exchange recital will be per­formed in Austin Sunday by Texas Christian University student . Rebecca Rambin. . ;; Sponsored by the University student chapter of the Austin ' Guild of Orgahistsi-the Concert will begin at 3 p.m. at the St. Paul Lutheran Church. ^ ^ ' -, ~*x, " •-' ""«" Wwfo by iqt IcoclUng Sunday's concert will be open to the public free of charge. ' StephenColemgiy Robert Edwards, Karen Seol in *Luv%, ,,:L NOTICES from th* Genera! libraries or any of the branchei'are of­ ficial University cam­. munications requiring immediate attention. TONIGHT^mw GREEZY WHEELS SATURDAY / ' STEAM HEAT SUNDAY-MONDAY STONE GROUND r07 Bee Caves Rd. 327 27-9°16^\ NOW! OPEN 145 FEATURES 2-44-1-10 REDUCED PRICES TIL t PJL ~«8£BU (MON THRU SAT) A MOST APPEALING 6TH ^v MOVIE! GREAT —VJncenf Conby/N.y.TJmes WEEK FLAMBOYANT... EMINENTLY SATISFYING. Richard Schkkel, Tone Mogaxi A THOROUGHLY ENTERTAINING ^.AND..ENGROSSING FILM! irrJehn Bwtin,Ausliii Citizen INAGE0R6E ROr HILL FtlM. SUStMSAMHOOMi^MWSOr KTOOOi ••Swnwj.i.Wl IIWaotbwK SrtMr6t0«6t BOY HOI-:0wulMust itHENRY MANCMt t*S«|* to Rnnlwfor Om ef fMT TREE SS0.M Hrtag Cwfifkotts to b« Ghfta *w«y,;Cantny #f Tim's Scrvk* ' (NOTHING TO BUY • PRESENCE NOT NECESSARY TO Willi OPEN kOO $100 til MS ^fc,S*,SRoWwdod S«t A Son U rr-'.l-'swi ii-i mms+As-ns ACADEMY WINNER OF AWARDS >.tM s«( •M« m> fM* & ^ , The Architect ^ gWfe1.''.-,-... ... tv. The Fire Chief MMERMA.M , A 'h ' mwmRAUL *1 WEEK SIEVE NEWMAN WUIAM M BtWMAlUEirS BOTE projuctpflpf OUNAWAYI EXCLUSIVE:} -RUN ^ Prawo WildeToRerelease By VERNON SCOTT "V HOLLYWOOD (UlPI) — Cornel Wilde isa maverick producer who writes, directs and stars in his own movies, but he can't beat the distribution system.. ' That is to say hecan't go from theater to theater hawkinghis • films-So he is at the mercy of distributors who sometimes leave him high, dry and furious. IN 1971: Wilde released "No Blade of Grass'* through MGM, the studio'sdistribution arm which since has withered and been amputated. :v _ Metro, then headed by^m Aubrey, had nofaith inthestory of famine in contemppraty England, according to Wilde who now is ta the process of rerdeasing his Umely film. Tbe picture is a definitive story of the world ecologicaltragedy," Wilde said. -."It's not just another science fiction caper or documentary. One environmentalist called it a prophecy. • "Now the story is coming true. People are starving to death in Asia and Africa. Wars are being fought for food. It's a peculiar feeling to watch things happen which were only im-apned when I made the picture. t , "MGM BRASS was afraid 'NoBlade of Grass' would frighten people. The studio wrote it off without giving the picture a chance to prove itself." -The traditional Hollywood test for unreleased movies is the .sneak preview. If audience response is enthusiastic, studios spend a:fortunerpromoting it, if not, it gets a distribution brushoff The first sneak of Wilde's fllm in Westwood, California,"was super. MGM dismissed it saying the college audience was kooky. A Hollywood sneak was ignored:because it was dlaimed the theater was packed with Wilde's pals. • i . * "Then I asked Aubrey to sneak the picture in any city he chose, " Wilde said. "He settled for Sacramento." "THE AUDIENCE wait crazy. Peoplehung arfaurid the lobby for 45 minutes discussing the Unpact of what they'd seen. It made no difference. The studio refused to get behind the pic­(we. ^S OF APRIL 30 United Artists will rerelease the {dcture in o,e Midwest through the same theater chain whidi revived "Billy Jack'' after that film had been declared dead, '... .. . . ... . . ^ ^ part of the rislc <>f being ^ indepmdent, ' As a»independoit prixlucer of eight niovks, I ve taken enormous financial risks. Sometimes Icouldn't sleepfor . months I was so-financially stretched "Still it beats being a line producer ata studiodoing safepic­tures. I've never made a film I wasn't passionate about. Ilook f;for the unusual, the difficult." Wilde's moist successful project was the criticaily acclaimed "The Naked Prey" which won prizes the world over. He believes "No Blade of Grass' has the same potential.; "I haven'tchanged a thing in the picture because toomuch of it has come true," Wilde concluded. "I want people to become as aware.of the ecological crisis as l am." *•****** *** »'•»» >M m»»M "THE FOUR Theatres SV THEATRE -VAUEYROAO JUST Off EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE SHOWCASE' REDUCED PRICES $1.50 HI.6 FEATURE TIMES 3-4-6^8-10 TIL 6 PM. MOW. THRU SAT. MIIT W.W.HI'S A . WIKT-TAUCM' MANS tl^O ta t » < MON-SAT AU SEATS S1J50 TU 6 PM' srjom* 1MES<' 2:SO-5;10.7ia5-9i4S ACADEMY AWARD WINDER BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS INGRID BERGMAN' NOW 4th WEEK! '1Michael Sarrdzin •Jennifer O'Neill ' |aoR Back in1957, sweet-talkingW.W. . lived in a'55 Olds, loved bubble gum,; Wm . Errol Fl5nnn, country music,fried chicken; robbing filling stations and agiri named Di»e.­A/;;:; . .. • ^ Not necessarily in that order. -Via -Wn M "f&tfr­ m $& BURT H \* V­ I * I Xr-T 1RV. C£ MCMAftO ^ siTOimm Piteibi Mm. CHAMBBtLAM Miii >(EAlfflf^lAEO«dPtnB,lfVtS UJWtrAmSWlH w<,?Bmi(UI*Jbfcl»i a wan '' Vtefmarteui?*'" \f4, IWOiMT IJlUcU [hWk.1; " "" -il.M.til, |V,*TIOiiXcwiffGRIMM'S FAIRY TAL^' j 1gg »ox orncc OMN 7,30' fl^k— SHOWTOWN '••-V?:yr2r.\^r-r SHOW STARTS AT F SiSS ill '->r> '3®^ r ? < V ' Til •u'V/ v*\ . ,Ti <» ^o.*'SW>'^* >••-! •" -» ,t?-J |-;,r-• „. • SfBta-st ._, English, Classics r s-i THE ALAMO NobleKinsmen RESTAURANT BUSINESS :: ,,, :*:?>? -W-k : .'•ft! m} jv-'TheTwoNoble Kinsmetf/V assistarit profe^rofEnglish" "Cantert>nry Tales," will be $1.50, although University stu­• one of Shakespeare's final at Uie University, noted that . portrayed by both faculty dent and faculty admissionplays, will be presented by the "Kinsmen's" absurdist style- members and students, with will be $1. No reserved seats '< : Departments of Classics and and controversial subject sets and music arranged by will be offered, though tickets tEnglish: atX8.ip.in. Friday, matter" may " have 'copr. University students. may be purchased in;»S RH' [f;Saturday and Sunday and 1 tributed towards professional Set in Greece, the play by calling Voony Franklin j SSSg? zj. J ApHl 24 to 26 attheBast Cam­inattention to it: * centers on two knights who 471-2291. s' pus Lecture Hall in the LBJ Abrams also explained that fall in love with the same Complex School of Public Af­scholars ;have recently; dis­Amazonian princess, NOTICES from fairs. • missed the. theoiy that the whereupon "their friendship General Ubrarias or/ _j£ "Kinsmen's*? production play had been eoauthored by turns to enmity," says of the brandies a** of­Wii maits only the second tune Shakespeare's ^accessor. Abrams. com­ ficial University that the. comedy has been John Fletcher. General admission will bp munications requiring revived professionally, accor­' • Characters in tiie comedy, immediate attention. 'by JeMphtnglofMter dingto the play'sdirector,*Dr. which is based on Chaucer's rJf Richard Abrams. Abrams, an 5"The: Knieht's Tale'' in Two Noble Kinsmen' Qbc) INTERSTATE 72 Concerts To Close Union To Host VARSITY 974-75 Season My$£€6nveft1i6ri : Sunday the Texas Union Musical Events Committee, in con­ Student soloists, will Campbell is recent winner junction with the Austin Friends of Traditional Music, will pre­ Ugii two concerts next of the $1,000 first prize in the sent the second Austin Traditional Music Convention at lisek by the ' University national collegiate piano com­ Freshman Field, 21st Street and San Jacinto Boulevard.' nphony Orchestra.-' ... petition of JheMusic Teachers . . The first convention, last November, drew more than 1,000 ValterDucloux will conduct National Association. • • 7 ; participants and listeners to an all-day series of friendly com­ concerts scheduled for 8 Friday's program will in­ petitions in five-string banjo, fiddle, guitar,' autoharp, man­ Sunday and April !S in clude. Concerto for Two dolin, dulcimer, harmonica, dobro, band and traditional song |>gg Auditorium. Pianos in "E"-flat Major by and dance. i Sunday the program will Mozart, featuring' Sara and The second convention will feature all these, plus an ensem­ felude Tragic Overture, Op. Dick'ran. Atamian, -piano ble singing contest, variousworkshops in traditionalmusic dur­ by Johannes Brahms; soloists; Concerto No. 2 for ing the day, and a free evening concert of bluegrass. and )ieme. -for Flute and Violin and Orhcestra in G traditional music after the'competitions. bestra by Charles Criffes, minor, Op. 63 by ProkoHeff, Registration for contestswill begin at 9a.m. on theday of the aturing Megan Meisenbach, featuring Laura kluRherz, event, and the convention proper will begin at 10 a.m. and run [itesoloist; Piano Concerto violin soloist. , until dark. Theconcert will follow an hourdinner break.Admis­Andthat'sthedueto . lin"B"-flatminor, Op. 23 The concerts tfiU close the sion and contest registration is free, theonly restriction oo con-Wm ' <"...Peter I. Tchaikovsky, 1974-75 symphony season and testants being a ban on electrically amplified instruments andJaturing Jeff Campbell, are open to :v the public free of. nontraditional material. (The convention defines traditional popularity. no soloist.' charge. music as a performancestyle that isneither pop nor classical.) Prizes will consist of ribbons and' baked goods. For more in­'ormaUon call 454-1125, 474-1074 or 471-5653. :ul-fm sc Choir Concert Slated ]Iimk. Llvt from the Metropolitan itJO pjn, "The Other.Austin" (opera, "Siege of Corinth'' by a pm. "Options" — Sex'educatlon in The annual springconcert of the University.Womeq's Concert IRossini,. wtyh'Beverly Sills In her schools [ Met debut (last broadcast of the 4 pjm. "National Press Club" — Choir and Texas Tttwbadours will be performed Sunday in the |season) ' Abba Eban speaks on Israel Music Building Recital Hall.[ 4>30 "The Arts Out There" dls­ lcusses the-art administrator The 3 p.m. concert will be open to the public free of charge. 3 "OptionV — On Homosexuali­ ty The women's choir, under direction of Ann Bunyan, will per­ ; 3 iwn. "University of Texas {Ausic \ and Musicians"features the Univer­form "The Nighingale" by Thomas Weelkes, "Adorainus Te, sity Wind Ensemble Christe" by A. Tenero, "Magnificat" by Niccola Porpora and Ipjn AustinCity Coundi (presented: 7i90. imr. NatlonaJ Public Radio live every Thursday)v~': "O Pastorelle, Addio" by Umberto Giordano. presents "Bicentennial Forum" with Judge Charles Wyzanskl 3 pjft. "Options" — Masters and The men's group, directed by Charles Smith, will sing "Oh Mldnlflit "Folk Festival U:S.A." Johnson talkabout their new bookon Come, Ye Servants of the Lord" by Tye-Grayson; "Mater features the : Scott Joplln Ragtime sexuality festival 4 pjn. "University.of Texas Forum" Patris et Filia" by Antpine Briunel, "Widerspruch" by Franz with John Silber,president of Boston Schubert and "My Horn Shall Weight a Willow-bough" by S p.m.' "Options'* — Range!!: A University and former dean at the Theory ofSe*. • . O^Versity. Johannes Brahms. WWWWWWWWll yy u u ynj'yiu y y ^ FAMILY FUN 'X/ TRACKS .. HttDAY >020 West Highway 290 AUB4GUSH Jo» Pafck's^Polka Orch«sfra ; fnmShim*.Tm SPEAKING . Rick St«ln ft Th«"AI|y Cat Band .'•StMqf'-'t'• .-.if.­ j-ifflicaoVARSITY THEATRE Band Hoof 3>8 p.m. ' 2400 GUADALUPE OM THE DRAG Marcia Ball 8:30-12 PRESENTS OUR WEEKLY FRIDAY MID-NITE SPECIAL , . NO COVER 217. S. Lamar -" ® V 472-1312 ,.mJ"HEAVY TRAmC'S^T 1 » at,Presidio Theatres mmmm t J S g ^ Boy" onrf His Dog" is clever and funny and NEW AND BETTER THAN BEFORE powerful and believable...'''' : „r Lisa Tuttle, American Statesman # l ean encourage everyone to experience, Boy -Vicky Bowles, The a future youll probably ?r live to see. 5th Week ; . , J**CtlARUON HESION> EMflE DUNAMfiUT • RAQUELIVELCH IUCHARD CHAMBERLAINawl MICHAELYORK asDAztagaaa ' CHRISTOPHER LEE-GERALD1NE CHAPLIN CMJVER REED^ «5rsSS?!!qFl Monday-Friday 5:45.7;50.9.55 th Saturday-Sunday':­VILLAGE 4 1:35-3:40-5:45-7:50-9:55 M-•igronsnsial LaUBBIOBBSBId VILLAGE 4 an R ral^d.rather kinky tale of survival AMfA -*3w m • » -' M0M>AY-ntH>Ar •OMinrs /i «•Mf te .; ruuraauu SATdWAT-SIMAf ; '" " ' .V LUARIM BALSAM .«B0 0VI*_ traueeami^ : -MID WH* ON111 Mm«T«H0ikT tAMilWMI , MTW0AT. OMIKf BURT ^Jii REYNOLDS SUNDlT amiss W.W. AND IIOVIB" = k-> THE DIXIE : ivar DANCEXINGS SAIURO«T(IO jf independently owned and operated by V. Davis. Serving the finest families in Central Texas for 30 years. Top rated in Mobile Travel Guide. serving Sunday LEBANESE DINNERS $2.95 and up (Traditional American Dinners. As Usual) 604 Guadalupe 476-5455 WW scramua llS^ajiiiieSwwrfjg^teMoll 477-1324 CINEMA 5 FILM FEST CONTINUES Academy Award Winner FH. and Sat. Only a» 1:30-5:00-8:30 PLUS! "A story commensurate with The Ml p5ESE5Sfm>NCa,*w m ,h« *T"." —New Yorker with Peter Kastncr and Julie Itijj. 3:15 6:45 1^:15 SCRSI2 Each fifan aa tipuiaN < Oovbie feature prices jnjyoGjOTo^te! SACCQ ^NZETTl 1:45 pjn.*1^ 6:00 p.m. iil THE YEAR'S I I I 1 —Juoith Crist. New York Magaz —National Board of Review] —Baltimore Evening News%J Washington Star News —Philadelphia Inquirer • —Detroit Free Press —Family Circle A MaJvtnvyorthProduction ABobFosseFam Dustin Hoffman "Lenny' .^ValeriePerrine 8^^ m 4:00*1" 8:00 A 10:00'l4® Ni6trr MIDNIGHTERS J125 tvav 1 12:00 The Murders that shocked the Nation. The Trial thatstfli shakes the World. SACCO&* I mNZETTII IT -i "**?$• illijf 'IIH1JTB1 1:1.T-1T I' .w .v.X• SICAL PROGRAM, PROVIDED Bt. l£Ji - -J-^ • •• ,':V ^ \ rn—1-Ml i " •Bfei-irnm, ,,T 'A--,,3 I *' ' - i~,t sassa 5lV>^t^^SCec^.Vj *L. H -* * ~ V •eeiSBS&SBaS! CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES ­ FOR SALE FOR SALE • FURN. APARTS.|FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS.IFURN. APARTS. B FURN. APARTS. IS word minimum Each word one time :...» 11 Each word 2-4 times j 10 Misc.-For Sole ;. J'; Each word 5-? times j .01 _ Musical-For Sale C $129.00 i ' THREE ELMS rv.'';: NOW LEASING *1 Each word 10 or more times..% .07 TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds, Larg»Ibedroom.'dishwasher., •' NOW LEASING FO&JUNE' ONE BEbROOM Student rate estb time . s to-ACOUSTIC 15$ SYSTEM. ISChbrain 4* old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop. 4019 N. TV cable,' pool, shuttle but. nice. 2 400 W. 3Sth Furn.-Unfurn. v. . r -FOR JUNE • El*; Classified Display. • -"-12"'s toil $749.00. Self belt offer. Lamar* 454-6177. . Summer rates start *140-1192.9) ON SPARKLING • JE* t 1 col. * 1 Inch one time J12S Perfect. W/covers.4S3-32>3. > •: bedroom townhogs« JI7S.IJ0. Gas and Also leatina for Fall. 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba ] ANTILLES • water Included. Now leasing summer CONTINENTAL 1 col. *4 inch 2-9 times......*}.#' STARFISH SAILBOAT! The 14 ft. fun bdrm 1ba. Close to campus, shuttle bus CREEK and tall. Cali.Btll Harrison.; lit|Sv>?: > col *>inch fen or more times S3.64 KIMBEL UPRIGHT Piano.. Reworked machine. Top .quality fiberglass, Extra laroe. shag carpet, dishwasher, |k' ;. Interior by Pearl Amster. Excellent con­aluminum-spars.:dacroh sail. $539 (list range, disposal-and relrlg. Large 2 BR -$195 ABP III All new furnishings, carpet |ir;;< dition. $350 delivered. 258-5559 mornings ••12 and evenings, after 5, , S&30), Trailers SU?. 453-1768 anytime. •' 1302•Pfirker;:• closets, private patios, storage cablnefs. 2 BR turnlture. Vtlltiln McydHW UT. Call 45I-3W4 cable laundry roorp and pool. 451>3941 -$165 OCAOUNC SCNDUIC BASIC FOLK instruction. mounting.-Quality prestige stones, CASAROCA-: 454-4094 PRECIOUS GEMSJ faceted."ready for 2204 Enfield47<-2279 FIDDLE 9l0E.40?n . OrewThotpason,. 47I-3079, amethyst, aquamarine, emerald, dia­ MlwJoy TMOT Fridsj..^. .ioo pun.. li> MARTIN-STYLE Japanese Flat-top mond, garnet, andaluslte, kunxite. opal, " ;NOW LEASING FOR JUNE NOW LEASING FOR JUNE Ttmdey T««m Wwdqy 11:00 OJH. Guitar. 1 year old. Great sound. G rover topaz, tourmaline; citrine. By appoint­ f; ytiifcu^n Tnon Twesdey %,llt00 mJ*. peg*. Cost $220, asking $150 with ment, 477-8914. HALLMARK> ALL BILLS BILLS hardshell case. Call 4S2-U7L IP-Thmtthy tmn Wedneiiey .11:00 •«. MEN'S HARSHI SANDALS from India. ' PAID DIPLOMAT Similar to Mexican Huarachesbut softtr APTS. Friday U*«a Thwndpy 11:00 «J(i. -Summer Rates NovV -PAID leather. Also water bultalo sandals, light and dark colon. Maharanl ISM San An- Eff/1 BR/2 BR $110 UP JACQUE 1 BR -$135 tonlo; on the Drag Saturdays. $135 2900 Cole CAMPUS GUITAR" . 6 blks west of Drag ' ; 1 BR -$145 (J Blks; to Law Sctv.1 • ..n»-Ae. ewipt »lj t eWie tai *n SHOP ROLLTOP DESKS, brass beds, wicker 708 West34th ' --Guitar Instruction . desk. Unusual dressers,marbletop nioht 2408 Leon 476-3467 1302 W. 24th : 476w»088 1911 San Gabriel 476-1927 24 unit complex fww> •> rtw p»WHhan w» na>m»« fat Acoustic Guitar Sale* and Repairs; stands,.-Sandy'y SO* Welsh. <78-8209. 454-8239 ' • Coviered Parking—ly ONt fammct*iiu«»»i»n AJiJufriw ht Accessories. < Books* . Classical Guitar GIRL'S 26" ten^peed bike practically NOW LEASING FOR JUNE ' CONTEMPORARY APAfiTMENTS Sheet' Music. Sale on" Student Guitars new SM call 4S4«W. 2 BLOOtS TO CAMPUS ~r NOW LEASING'FOR JUNE-1 • 40' Pool • S«5 ALL BILLS PAID than 30 dsyt oft** piAhaiiin." this"week *" "THE 24 FLATS" " • S1S0 & S180— Phone.477-353) 605«.i W. 2tth GAS REFRIGERATOR -S2S. Inquire Efficiency 4 Double ettlclency. Full ci."»»'-ln doseh. rear coftige MB West 9th. weekendi ni2U!i.rpe!eS', torg* Summer Rates ELGID ENVOY 327-2239 J »5 ^ • anytime except, Ttiurs^ Friday 12-5:30 Oriental furnishings^ Peaceful cour- Ij; LOW STUDENT RATES p.m. tyard with pooLOjiiy steps to shopping. 2 br SI67.50 plus electricity. Efficiencies 15 word minimum each day i.$ ., -40S East 31st 199.50 plus electricity, . EL DORADO 1 BR -$125 h Each additional wordeach day* i BEAT VlVl-TAR E-54 Enlarger with 50mm OJ-2U7 Shuttle bus cornier NEED A GREAT PLACE TO 472-4162 In, i tcot «|inch each day.„U...»afi Lens. Never used. silOor best offer.454. Barry Gill!ngwater Comp,ny 1515 Palma Plaza Unclassifleds" 1 line S days. si.< INFLATION 4936,. . 474-4322 1 BR -$125 up 2108 Saf) Gabriel 476-1172 LIVE? --IPrepeid, No Refundsi. GUITAR STRING-SETS RCA Black and white TV. Excellent con- TRY THE Auditor'! Students must show •SAVE 20% dltion. First SS5. 475-1953. Keep trying. W First Month Free 3501 Speedway ~~ NOW LEASING receipti»nd par in advance in TSP HOHNER HARMONICAS \tl (35!h & YASHICA ELECTRO GS-35. FI.7 • EFFICIENCY for Jurte 1st BLACKSTONE Bids. 3.300 whitls) lrom_« . SAVE 10% ASmm lens. Excellent for beginners. S80 Friday1* P^-'.VorvJqy through YAMAHA GUITARS ' HANCOCK III j 472-4893 ' 453-4883 or best offer. Call 478-4353. SAVE 10% APARTMENTS TWIN BEDS, mattresses.'box springs. APTS. r< : AMSTER Music .130. each. .Smith Corona electric Shuttle bus at front door, pool, CA/CH, 1624 Lavaca typewriter *129. 892-2109. shag carpeting, all bullion kitchen, ten­Furnished luxury efficacy apt. oh\ity NOW LEASING Share a large apt «l summer rales. bus route, walking to shuttle bus. SS7.50/mo. furnished, allbillspakt Maid DURST ENLARGER and darktoom set­nis courts across street, huge trees 4S04 iraf FOR JUNE Available now service once a jmeck. Bring your on FOR SALE -. Speedway. 4S3-37M or 4S1-4S33. upup_trayj£^LJ^ht,trayj " paper »70. After 7:00 Call 452-1789 roommate or we wiB match you wtttt a p.m., 47i compatible one. ThS% Is economy and THE STRING SHpp LONGHAVEN at Its best. ONLY 208 convenience . '-M Auto-for Sole -^The Sfftng Shop Is now open under new tion. 40,000 mileguarantee. S42 each. 137-EFFICIENCY 1 BR-$135 1 BR -$165 ^ YARDS FROM UT CAMPUS. BRAND NEW TIRES. Excellent condi­ '.management with 20% off. oh all 6002. -FREE 2910 Red River 47S-SOI 1*5 FORD WINDOW VAN, paneled, accessories. Handmade Guftansteel str-WALK TO CAMPUS 2 BR -$165 2 BDRM. • S2ST" A Paragon Piopeily carpeted, see to appreciate. Good condK *g guitars, and guitar repair, also^ SANKYO SUPER 8 camera w/auto Large, furnished efficiencies, SERVICE 3 BR -1345 built-in tioct««.2ll2 Nueces^477-6477 .. 1716 San Antonio . 385-8651 kitchen appliances, CA/CH. lots ot PARKING 916 W. 23rd LARGE POOL -ALL BILLS PAID loom and regular or Super 8 projector. 472-6573 *74 FIAT 124 Couper. 5-speed, OHC. 4764421 storage, super location, close to grocery AM/FM. New radlals. 53400. 472-0650. FOR' SALE; Kodak XL-55 movie and shuttle bus atjrtmf door. Gas and TRANSPORTATION NOW LEASING FOR JUNE " MOVE IN TODAY camera. GAP protector Best offer. 452-water paid. 9t0 West26th. 472-4589or 451-Best Rate' on the, cane STUDENT-FREE •63 VW, '69 engine. Good condition. S650-45X1. . Shuttle Bus Front Ooor 8343. Debi. ... 2S5-4292, 836-3581. Ask for Rick. LONGVIEW Oon'f panic? We'd find you that apt. 2400Town Lake Circle 1950 THEATRE POSTERS, Authentic you've looped for Our service Is tree & '69 PEUGEOr 404 station wagon. • For qrqge colorful. S4.00-S6 00. Musical, western. Habitat : so is our transportation. So save gas andRadlals. auto, air, 1ape,k trailer hitch. and i^any others. 453-3784. 1 BR-$140 time J&* calling Nancy. , reliable. S900. 452^406. : '5EH!" ESTATE. .-Tables, couches, APARTMENT LIVING 1968 OLDSMOBILE kitchen items, mattresses, tdoliclothes, WINDOW AIR CONDITIONER. -115 Now Pre-Leaslng Summer Hunters 2 BR -$175 ANNOUNCING LOCATORS CUTLASS. Good condition, runs well. 84,000 miles: $450. 6000 North Lafnar fans. etc. Sat /Sun. 5115 Duval. volts. 9000 BTU, S50.00 as is. after S. 472­ 2068. Rates l tree apt. locator 2408LONGVIEW 476-7688 THE 327-3122. CalJ eyenlogs. • service 452-9541 34S-144SEfficiencies S105 plusElec­,penalizing incomplexes with 1968 VOLKSWAGEN BUG. Goodengine. Pefs^Foir Sate BRILLIANT $425. 442-2997. . . . GENESIS CRAFTS tricity iccess fo shuttle. ' NOW LEASING FOR JUNE AKC GOLDEN Retriever'"puppies. 6 '67 FORD GALA-XY; Automatic. 8--weeksotd.>100. CaH442-9703 after 5 p.m. We have-a' complete line of macrame1 AC. Carpet, Paneled; Pool on Shuttle. NEW SU CASA cyllnder, 4-door, AC hew tires,good con­goods: }ute, macbeads: hoops, etc. we 46th arid Ave. A 203 W. 39th dition. S700. 442-4287.;"* : i DOG ANDCAT need good home(s).Both 4544903-NOW VILLA Summer-Fall Leasingmale. Dog — mixed, medium size good-assortment of beads, olive wood, Israeli. Leasing for -Close to campus, shuttle also have an excellent & inexpensive Alio Prv-leaslng for Fall 1967 VW BUG only $575. Any time after . «atured.Cat —beautlfglinarklngs. very Indian. Mexican, African, etc. Plus Extra targe 1 BR/2 BR/2 Bath 5.00 p.m. 4002V* Ave. B. loveable. Call 476-7740 orcome by 2846-6 many fine craft supplies for needlework, SUMMER ARCOS PONCE and 3 BR/2 Batn also avoOabie San Gabriel before April 30.: candles, batik.-deco & painting. Quiet atmosphere, pool water, gas IWS MUSTANG. AC .power steering, "dla auto, trans. Ne^ds [engine work. GREAT DANE puppies. Brlndle. AKC Dobie Mall 9am-9pm M-S ARENA PLACE & 1 BR -$145 and TVca&epaid Office hours Mbnday*Frtday W 475^510.1300. John, y-• r . ^icellenrBloodlines. .9 weeks. 2 left. 3301 SPEEOWAY 477-1980 SaturctoySwaay SttS; 45*8534 or. 452-9819. . APARTMENTS FALL de LEON Iffi..RENAULT, 4-speed, radiat tires. : 1414 Arena DrM 31.00Q miles, gets 35 mlles/gal Call 441-lbearoom-.-NOW LEASING FOR JUNE , DobieMall -SWf."").-', '. . -A GONZALES $140 Suite 8a . Homes-For Sale 2 bedroom 2 bath from $200 NOW AVAILABLE FURN1SHEO ONERO.307.rAC fOp.:A^/FNLtrr ;DUPLEX FOR SALE. Walk to UT shut COUNTY -Furnished, bills paid, shuttle _ 474-1532 TIMBERS IV BEDROOM .tle,"«nd Intramuraf (Iel27,500. SALE '6VVW GHIA. Body rough, enfllne * rang# wrfgertrtor. $27,500. FARMS AND 1 BR-$115UP Dishwasher, disposal, swknenteg pooL rebunt. $300, 472-5780-J; ^^ ^Elliott System, 4ST-8S78. Nights472-1466. patio, barbeqiA cable TV* Indrrtduel Opening Sept. 1st in the heart of the storage, bookshelvei. V* bkxXMshuttle '*5 M Katiet tlon. Power.-cold ac; COO; 47t-W2: ; PMA. Well-kept 2-1 near Eastwoods. By ABP t SHARE THE feENT! . 474-1836 476-0948 new efficiencies, decorated and fur­$147 plus electricity. if I«M PONTtAC Excel|envr7nec)i. comfK: f S MINUTES.UT LAW SCHOOL; LBJ, . RANCHES 1307 NORWALK University area, 2510 Leon St.! Stunnlntf bus. Laundry facilities. Rate thru Aug. owner. 472^t5X. . •• . 195acres, creek, deer, fish, tank, owner a, weiMcnoem decorator and 4S**m nished by IOtW.45tfi;, IW. SUNBEAM'ALPINE. Completely .financed $400 per acre. 81 acres, creek, 14 CAN SHARE 2BR-2B FOR equally xtras. famous artist.' Lots of rebuilt engine, dutch, etc.'Good knv ATTENTION PROFESSORS! 2 Story deer. $425 per acre. 175 acres.' moder­SUMMER RATES $66.25 EACH PER AAONTH. BREATHTAKING VIEW paint custom Interior; new inspeclioiv west pf Lamar. 3-1 no garage. ASH , LUXURY EFF/1 BR/2 BR nized home, well tank, pens, deer, $575 tags.' tm. «7«-l442.'' --• -rZ'-.ggjgjles. 454^70. After t, «l <294. . FURNISHED; ALL BILLS -APARTMENTS AVAILABLE. Call Rod NOW LEASING FORT SUMMER AND per acre. 80 acres, isolated, deer, owner FROM $135 PAIt). •• Wetzel at 4724N41 or Kathy Stephens at FALL \mAMC luliy loaded,-financed, $400 per acrtu Many other :v NOW LEASING 472*8253. Sea uiMor SUMMER 10t PLACE must sell Immedlatefv. tracts to choose from,-' . . ' -r RENTALS! .r Efficiency and I bedroom apti. bes^;-otter. <4l4gpi" • ._ „ Dishwasher, disposal, siinnntotf pool. SUNNYVALE I973\FIAT 128 standard air. 34 mpg. LAKE BUCHANAN SMILEY: ^ NOW LEASING FOR JUNE 1st • ^arbeque. ladtvlduat storage!» 8 *52f.«ac* inferior, only I7.0W mllen boo^hehres, cable TV, % block to SR Se^uded A-Frame $20,000.; Ttt wafer _ _ • tie bus. (at— !i & $1730. 4424129. . .» * * • . $109.50 1 BR-$130 iw»dry facUltfev Summer REALTY . SU2^lus « ­11 atSnS^air^w ''»o«*. So6»Jflslde finishworkto bedone. 587-2181 apartments. Just a few blocks west of t Br. Fum. $140 phfi electricity. ABP. tpwn and University. Wa pay water and IQt W. 45A fHcvonicr iuiiti. !Pontage. 2-Bedrpoms plus .2-sleeping See these excellent new etnciency Rates etedrtcttydr-— 1- 8«. All hirnlstinu. carpeted, built-in 2 BR -$150 MARK IV APTS. -• 4S2-1419 One block off shuttle bus route, tfl llff? E^iiern^^ appliances. Closetoslurtllebus: Bargain 3100Speedway 4S3-2771 I"] Prom IH-35 take «ltorf F-M-Tape dec*, customr«kk S2225.475-SILVER STOCK at above renL exitJp Aigartta, furn right one block. 1304 SUM/WIT 441-0584 475-0736 478-4096 Sheet' wlre^oufxt toit+ound, triangle, .. .SHUTTLE BUSCORNER wp.-' • 7 UlSVV.IOth -vrt SfcnoulhT'allant^S50pand square, full bead, solders-sheet and . • Phone for appointment 4724228^-­ T. E. WileyCa ^ -'-;v >3^.44*-lfc5»a*tWvanytijneweekends, i wire bezel-plains and shelf. Jewelry Now Leasing for June lit •" ' / HomesV J • tools and supplies, lapidary supplies, all 2 BEDROOM NOW LEASING FOR JUNE '977RENAULT 12 station wagon 2^000 type finished stones. miles. Good condltiotr. Front wheel Open 10 am-6 pm Mon-Sat. *• ALL BILLS PAID TANGLEWOOD VILLA NORTH SUMMER -477-5134 Shag carpet, dishwasher, snuttle bus 2 •)»**; VyCSedan .Oeluie > Rebuilt • BARGAINS GALORE ' ',j 'S592dr4S)4533. blocks. 4S4-2070:';-One Bedroom Furn., en#lner Clean, new' fires. 300o:mlle ; dJnetfe fur^ '' lV •warranty.' v-, • •? . $13,500 Bedroom/Hvfng room; denf ,v... v I. South-Austlri; lust off OHorf.'"2.J niture, jewelry, stereo, color , TV^ *, 8AF>%S1S-:' NOW LEASING FOR JUNE " NOW LE ASING FOR JUNE 1st typewrite, linftffngmachine, bookcase. Summer Rates are SHARE THE RENT" 4 CAN v , stai |ot>. iYbuiitengln6t^trresIciean.jaoaJrllrn>-.. "X,%7:i-«-• -sewing machine,. _ 3amp collection, pro--;. now in effect­ * 2BR-2B r gc^^r. linens, pictures, pots & pans. $30 off eacft apt. SHARE Fofe $66.25 • • 'West of.towa 30 miles, 2 bedroom, 2 . % misc._ EACH MONTH. Sli ROCA .ASPEN j ": Two Bedroom Furn. :: (under hew maoagement) PER i> ,VW Sqoare Back -Deluxe -.•cr»-Colir photos In office 4305 Duval 451-2343 FURNISHED, ALL BILLS KBN V:-i-ii ??Ih. axi«nlem, BlyOerden • E -RMxi"tengine-— ' -CONSOLIDATED'REALTY, 14 2 Bdrm turn., covered PAID. • 1 BR -$145 mUSQS**' new tires, super clean. Sat 9-6 Sunday 1-5 v jOOOmlle warranty. : . JACK JENNINGS W Lavaca 47448M parking;, swimming pool. Spacious Contemporary 2400 Longview .476-5812 ?-8W « yw Square Back ..New pilni; recreation rm„ planned ac-• . . Living ^ covered parking g^Oy^uW ,S0G0 mljes;ago: $>v*r ' FURN. APARTS. site security of­ 2 pools -IRKT tivities,. oh Shuttle • City'bus routes Krten n -For ficer, 24 hr. maintenance. . Convenient tp any location is?".? netft&BOld : ; JBR S140 • 2 BR $14S NOW LEASING FOR JUNE nuscri trlene RIVER IS39Guadalupe 452-4447 .tlrev Ring * valve lot, super cleans -Come UviVyith Us! . v v: iG»Nl '8SJ? 'Sfc??!""?^^"-anty, fairlynew '.i SEW UP TlRESlp v>ce»L ing. p v KENRAY~ 1900 BurtonDrive I* ' •»•) l**'vw Sedan-(oft white). Rebuilt CLEMENT/' » ' HILLS. LARGE EFF-$110 WILLOW 442-9612 ie.4» £ •. engine, new paint {ob, new tires; super ELVEZIA^' APARTMENTS One block off shuttle bus roufe 444.7797 4400 Ave?. A 454-1289 . "•|V-dean model3000 mile warranty ^ J "50 privt i«st otTJiiS: CREEK ' ' fame > .Next to AmerlcaAa Theatre, walking dis* BBVE y;»ance to Nortti:Lobp Shopping Center Now Leasing forJune 1*f • WTtj . 4 Beautiful Pools -v'and Luby's. vNear shuttle and Austin >BORM . Fastbeck Deluxe, ctedn.^lhif^oa.t-" VELTRoiC'1' -Summer " v-i1ranilf. Two bedroom flats, one and two : i i .. fbDRM Full time Maintenance t NOW LEASING FOR JUNE *'** &ii AtncDim 121$ AMRMI^ •1°6, "** -41 STRADA-:66 baths Available fownhfe/se wlfh patio, , 1 BfeDROOM -$137 . ALL BILLS PAtO . Large l & 2 bedroom, over­ OUhwashers-2 Large Pools Rates "•unfurn & 1 fi^rn^ CA/CH/ dishwasher, slzeawalk-lnclosets, beautiful I-. EFFICIENCY-$115 Security"^ SOUTH SIDE MOTORS del MONOO ',.y^ispolal, door: to door garbage pk^up. MARKXX MOVE.IN TODAY • courtyards.' near school and VOLKSWAGEN SPECIALIST -^CRITERIUM SETA Low as $105/ ?':vpool,.maid serviceIf desired, washaterla Verv closetocampuiand shuttle,com- I90rwmow Creek >444-0010 shopping $135& S15S, water & •'.>/ln complex. Sd« owners. Apt. 113 or call P CA'-CM, built-in ­45HS4I « , „ 2617 South 1st »" A| en • 6 .week session.1 4 Kltchtn. outsM. storage avallabla, pool 1 BR $140 .'MOVE iN TODAY, v M Now Leading (or june 1st ^ast'53rd „ 452-720} or Joe Gonzales t .VI 'TORIA BUT.Y L See or Call VinceOrtii. t VITTAB A BI.TU. 4SI-3IS4 or 451^533 ^ 2 BR $165 LA PAZ 444-4529 ' ' SPORT P 476-7636. -VAULTED CEILING r££L. ELEVATED bedroom Mwimwnj. c>~g*T~' ^OTHRONS BIKE VIP EL CAMPO 5^*?' k*4u<"ul futly SUMcarpeted, an -JET' EFFICIENCY,' 3815 Guadalupe '.' •1 BR. J140 ' . built-in kitchen. Enarmoui ttedv* , MOtOrcycle*For Sole ^ , 509 RioGrande t .v 2 BR fi)W£YAMAHA ;RD-j4o stfeat:' Low '. » TRY GROUP LIVING APARTMENTS 459-3953 452-5093 305 W -sits -ckaet. accent Larne walls, pool built-in withsun bookshelves, ere*.CA/CH. ex-. 401 W. 39th *-•: 33rd and Speedway-\0k $139 39th cofttemporary furnishings, i-i ,UB9#8e m educalfonal-v vVaik UT or shuttle M^tor Snii« uiv«i -?4% 'ALL BILLS PAID 454-0340 4S9-S70Q * .awrt distance to Ke Intremura! FMd. Jus t.; ii« "* cooperative community Lots of luxurv Hvlnok!)!S _\v v 1973: KAWASAKI 350. triple. Excellmiff'£iftO/-' campus, large, open-beamedv •••(ion leasing for lu«#: .M. ,> MOVE IN TODAY ' f.rt*n.s'3'-wahrjas(.cable paid.MOO "I ..v„> • make decisions 270 celllna. 'ully.si>ag arpeted. CA/CH, all v.- M. Lamar, fstiotor tfl^SxTcMral lag carpeted. CA/CH, *11­ • turnitura. walk-Ins, POOL Propertie* Inc. v OU /o off^I ZJr, •Jil lf u.c6lor co-ordinated,. rto't. ....... ^''^ ^ownlzatlo^. single and double "* t6lor «>-ordlnated. no>^ SS? lul ?"£: ele9*Irt, atmospfiri. AvwiurA r -VILLA Most of our Amerlcan ^i^ -^SJ!!:*va abl6,°Peftln9* for wom*nv warranty. Call 47E-2M0, ' Indian iewelry ^ sii27mo. 5oubie*707 Leasing forsummar and talf.Orastlcal-iBEDROOM CB^OP, HONDA.' Low mileage, under-. Kin# sin 1 bedroom also available: -f^-^.r.fummer room and board sl47/mor MARK V ly /educed summer-rates.' Please call 'SALANO 73 BENELLI 250. Low mileage* good cflfldltloiK Asking S39S. Call Blak^ 454-between noon 1.1p.m. 477-74S1. ' ' BR -$140 IBR-S145 -S155V^ % •?75ftr or Richard, 447*3678. •^1/3 OFF ^^ 2 BR $135 All Bead, ^ THE PEPPER,,, -L STUDENTS" 3914 Ave. D v.. 4S3-10& 618 W. 51st VEi 454-4293 r Pif*«» ">«•»"• *»» and ten^ coum. PRE-LEASING FOR AMY)!' .FURNISHED APARTMENT; SUAAAAER eyertooWM'creelt.lela o» ALL BILLS PAID • , LEASING FOR SUMMER' Now Ltiaslno for.June 1st ^ iEPr 8»•»« ca&eTV pMd.« giPENTON iascc-1600 THE. BEAD-1 TREE PEOPLE V ..PRE-LEASE NOW FOR : • •-NowLeaslnofor.June'lst K!&.carpeted., all built-in MtcMn. :res shAaaan are now leasing apartments Stereo-For Sale ^1, ;°44M •!. s. bedroom S1]5-S125' $175 MARANTZ 2270 Receiver/Amplifier.-1 clps, 1 2 3.Bdrm -8:tel^^BT...r-..T.lr., "4f2 477-3478 two Marantx Imperial? speakers. Dualv LargeJ bdrm & effs. |»»9«closet«,-tull»::-«'.,,','S-'.«r^i' 1 &R Furnished S apartments ni Il.Unll complex locatedon ToWnLeke.-g-t,!?, \ BR Furnish 12I?turnfable All Sills Paid , y f. Wt'rc stillcontlnuingour Sx sale. Come s 476-9279 • J^?11jmPfoved.cartrldge.Si^Ust .price ' In and swimming pool, (untlshed,'walking dls-: Fleshly.refurbished, pool. 1700 -fnr-Mti* mhIammI i-R ;**• the u, bestTe«sIndian jewelry at thr < : tallonsa forthU equipment Is over"5T«M ' ..mo tor entire system! Calim-fll ^ 1 •>••! .i# weci JI WW. , • Thank. -aof" ' .'nochlldfe,,ofpat>.«0West.stiHi: Wal|t, ride, shuttle to campuv; .Pfc RIVER I <77<«M . La Canada Aots. ' NUECES v * d mow 24th 4nis»» HEAT, i 5 New efficiency, custom lum^ til with BROWNSTONE fo cents 150 MAILLARD H^LyAAR^fHILLS V flig balconies lor your plants.Greet loce­ SS'lIi^Sla ^ & HEED J _ ^ J>n Shuttle^ bus route PARK APARTMENTS Now Leasing for June 1st .. »oa great looking, slfe pfus eMcMcnr- JERRICK -PANA FREEWHEEL ' ?;• la-Are. conveniently.. located and priced 1 Move In Today -Manager Ml -«MS| . . J BR, 2 double beds ^ 44M4M ^ I7ooo Burton * i if* ^'KITS : 1 & 2 bedroom apartments located : 1135 with water & gas V VI THE EXTRA SPACE you .on attord. Two rk^von shuttle bus route^From S142J0 ALL APTS.;: -? ' 5«^oomy» bathon TownLaketnm>MS % ^ w tpxiiry , ABp availablefurnished oruntwrfOshed. < • p*W.AS°N'C compacl sterea, lull siieiSs: Build any cluster i V5|D4K Lamar ^ ^ , 454-349« 476-1146 ' < V yvT^ff^-cen^alJiCtntral air, carpeted dlshwaslt»r,jaun. , 440044 Ave. B. -b a % < BILLS PAID 708 W. 34th -\M„. —J-U^-^LpxUry; orte bedroom apar)ments wilh ESTABLISHMENT carpeted, dishwasner^ , turntable, cassette recorder, AM/FM.. ^J. 14-28 Teeth 1(4.^ ""A PAr»9°" Property facilities, TV cable ttMSU . ' years on) Nancy, <77-3351 ^ :? B£.Droom %i-.jSsv' SUerr"er Rntes NOW'^/ ^Walking DTsYance to UT^Aj' Large 6(L-SI1S.(» -2 beth epertmeoL'Ideal I t yurff BSR 310 Turntable with Shure M*I6P^ ^ ,$17,955 spd Pedal-Shuttle . gfjS^na 'amlly. Comenlent to UT. TYPING ™n,h' rZ^Mtt£ifhr0U9h Au9-31 U®| % Block to,SfiuttlU^tt',r*"3,8^J"*™** S NOW SlflS to $119 1 :C'--V 1 BR^-$145 UPf^ .Water 8> Gas Paid " 5»rfM0^K*SS2N OIi/r • ' Manager Apt 193 <7<-S9<0 , " AC PAlo^ ^^ 1801 So. KeshoV#< -S"1T« ^EM^ger"^VMktl0ttb47^S•M.j Special:Rafes^'^ situmj Newr lara»xWtoni?y ,^Bo>.m8, Austin, X* 7>7*7;v , ;. -• • : ,.. --'offief . < store ;bedrooiri and kitchen. Cable. water/oas\ FANTASTIC SUMMER locetlon! Bkx* vcartier;? "^Bprey G)MlrHlwpfer.Co. r> IliJfor.Summer ..anid.-year-Leaseis '. 4jltk. Singles/couples preferred. For informa­Auction School, Dept.' C. Ft. THE HAIRCUT- y. tion seethe ACTION Recruiters at the Smitlj, Ark. 72901 —.Summer LOST & FOUND West Mall and BEB, Monday-Friday. ^FREE-HELP the Redcoats April W. IS. K 17. & II Term July .14 to July 26. Fjree STORES 47MB& ; • OMQ, For Summer Daily Texan -nt Locators.«NIH We Ust Catalog.? LOST 4-11-75 2HISSpeedway. Round ... ooiMiMladiytf AusiiiuWi Blue lens sunglasses with brown plastic' friendly, experienced, and on wire frame Leather case. Reward. sponsor a lecture by Leo Dickinson:Ct*W«C»U. GINNY'S CIVIL ENGINEERS 447-3006. • Applications are being ACnoM/vcacs com «w VISTA WIN HAVE on Patagooia. an eudio-vtsuaf lec-, LO BLANCO. 1 , OPYING '•-•"Peace Corps needs you for overseas LOST 4-9-75 Silver Seiko watch with accepted from persons in­recruiting booms set up fromt*JTV ture titled "Torre Egger" at 7:90 • ted. Central air.dbtraasher. «*. assignment. July-Sept, placement. Must silver band. Reward. Call 471*7828. terested in working for The to S pm Friday in front of tie P-ITL Friday in Geology BuHding100. jbeautlfutntighborhood.'ljDcaied LEFT OUTSIDE Business-Economics Admission is SI. t shuttle aadcity bus route.911 Btan ERVICE ' * apptynow. Uving allowance plus other JILL!-3ATTS HALL: one Daily Texan this summer. Building and s benefits. Sindnfcwptet preferred. See pair of gold wire rim glasses. Please call on the West Man. YtXAS UMON MAIS mil— MM wilt uM»i ' ' ' the ACTION Recruiters at the.West Mall INC. - 444-5740. The Texan will be published ED MM Of will sponsor ttw sponsor the film "Cabarer* at 7.9:30 and BEB. Monday-Friday. April 14. 11 |GE ONE BEDROOM. Walk to .study area, carpeted, < 42 Dobie Mail 4764171 It 17. S. 11 HAPPYHi five" days per week this film "Freaks" at 7. 0r4S and 10:30 and 11:30 p m Friday and Satur­. TV. sun dedu CA/CH.1 Free Parking pjn. Friday, Saturday and Sunday day in Jester Auditorium. Admis­ t location. No pets. Summer *14 7im.-lllijm.Mj BIRTHDAY WANTED summer for the first time in in the Academic Center auditorium. sion is si for students, faculty and £nnNueces. *724497.Fatf 1 . tejn.-5pjn.Set. history. The paper begins Admission is si .25 staff; S1J0 for others. _ TEACHERS LOVE MIKE FEMALE PHANTOM ROOMMATE. IM voeis is sponsoring a TEXAS WON TtCATH COMMTTfi will HUTTLEs. 1 or 2 tarae bearoamsT • CONFIDENTIAL. CARE tor pregnant Summer. 1 will handle calls, mail, publication Jane 2; the last canoe trip on the upper Guadalupe sponsor the film "McCabe and Mrs. shed/UnlurnisM:-Capital vata -vwnerried ntoMm. Edna Gladner WANTED satisfy parents. Great solution! issue is scheduled for Aug. 18. Rhrer on April 77 The cost is S7-50. Miller** at 7 and 9: to p-m. Sunday In > IOOO Rejno. cwm Register at Betlmoni Hall UM. Jester Auditorium. Admission is SI IkmnWW. Fort Worm. Tow Entire west, Midweit and South ' Samantha. 471-4973. rl-aaMn-11 Tb be eligible for the paid ; 1 BEDROOM, new carpet. tOa. MWl. SOUTHWEST TEACHERS QUICK MONEY. Will buy used tapes mis UMON nwum IHIIBIM—em for students, faculty and staff; SI-50 . refrigerator and stove. Large ABORTION ALTERNATIVES! Preg-AGENCY Vintage . and records. Highest prices paid. 2226 staff, students must be COM—Hit will sponsor an Austin for others. nam MD distressed? HA H as mr as' patiot big yard, 1 block east ol mr Mepboae. PrfrUteMhmcetes. SIS 1301 Central Aye. N.E. Guadalupe (next to Texas Theatre). 472-preregistered the fall Symphony Concert a» 8 p.m. Friday TCXAS IMOW TICATSE ITHMHIU will • 1564 or 441-2517 after 6pm. for ; 3501 Cumar. Owe* Circle. WBUHH-OMW. , . ' ' ' ' Albuquerque. New Mexico tTlW Threads . inMunicipal Auditorium. Admission sponsor the Saturday Morning Fun t • . -•. / " Bonded, licensed and Member NATA 2405 Nueces 47641906 COLLEGE INSTRUCTOR, wife, beagle semester or be registered in Is 50cents for CEC holders. S330 for CUA at 11 a.m. Saturday In Jester SING FOR SUMMER. Nice 1 EXPERIENCED : TAX Consultant, "Our 2ttb year." 20% oc more OFF wish sublet furnished house/apt. near others. Auditorium. The film will be summer school. tantftiar IRS. mctdm. wdtn» campus for first summer term. 451-2847 tamaa*. Near UT. shag carpet ac, "Rocfcetship." Admission is free. WdWoi' aad Undents-Mono. Free [jnutMlar, gas pan.4NU1. SALE * after 3. Applications for all will sponsor an Austin Traditiwtal UT MUCSMG SCHOOl will sponsor a Spr­ WANT TO BUY electric potter's wheeL positions are available in the Music Convention at 0 p.m. Sunday ing Casual Dance from 9 pjn. to 1 BOOK-LOOKING? Let p. Boola. Rt-«. Bon lajgihimt AVAILABLE dent Publications Building. will Kind will play. Admission is S2 for _ .TAIN TERRACE, tw W. Mth. FOR RENT UT ID holders. GIRLING DAY. SCHOOL. -Oeatfecex- RrieMiat kerning." MM Nora Loop. iUXAnaiMnlkrllApHliact. O-S. Navy has a limited number, ol 2-GRADUATING? MNA1 ASSOCIATION will meet at 0 pjn. Ion WilTinnL'aillMsi (Her year scholarships available for 31st St. for a Come visit us. 4S1-SWX . ; technicalfy oriented students.; If you WITHOUT A JOB? 16' FURNISHED'TRAILER, sub-lease Self-Paced Class Saturday at 206 E summer S75 plus butane. Inquire mor­ coffeehouse free to the public. PIANO TUMINS. slS: repairs .have had integral calculus, are a second nings at back of Alamo Motel, SI 12 N. I , BEDROOM DUPLEX twuse tar •Boeremeed work. HnsMaHl am. ATTEND THE OtAMDNOUS will meet at 7.40 pjn.Fri­ V MawmnMf175 pkabtllv semester sophomore, and would like a Lamar, smallest trailer. • And » pro-11 pm. «7nm. day at 311 E. 31st St.. Apt. 206; to S Xttr H»e. ' . . • . Chance for « scholarship that pays tut-PROFESSOR'S HOUSE In Westlake light Sabbath candles and conduct JOB FINDING for [WW, SU5 SUMMER, t bedroom ^STOM DESIGNED pecpie uro. aa Noa books, fees, fend S100 a montti call Hills available summer lease. 4 services. Aids Writing Skills bedroom, IttnlrilHr.Iblock UT - 5»^IMB24 or 517-341-8777 collect im-3 baltis. 1300 months plus CHAkAP HOUK will meet at 11 a.m. and 22L .1**-CowP1® or, family only. Inquire [gum 300 E.38IK . mediately.. " -WORKSHOP 327-1961. . As more and more stndents, ed. "We are looking at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at 311 E. 31st St.,K SPECIAL! One bedroom.«•on Apt. 204 for a Talmud ctass and a • May rant. Su Cn> Apb. MS Saturday, April 26, <9-5 . . children of the age of televi­ourselves and want to be tun­ class in the Five Books of Moses. >»»-ROOMMATES For Details, Call sion, enter the University with •IRST MONTH FREE. Hancock III UNDERGRADS FURN. HOUSES ed in to solving the students' mil meet at 0:30 pjn. . Furnished tanry efficient? api. LIBERAL' BUT SERIOUS studentneed-; 452-1928 deficiencies in basic writing problems." Sunday in Communication Buildingto share 2 ImHuuw but route. Mk to Mlk bis. ed ImmecBatefy 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH for summer with 'e raw.. <>0» An. A: CalliCHTM.. apartment, sts ABP. Nonsmoker: Summer Job Oppor­between 4:30 & 8;30 p.m. option for spring. 4534)462. Avenue H. dills, the English department Some faculty members A 1.204. preferred. 472^501; D^rid. • -George McGee. is forced to take steps to cor­uMvasnr UMOOWATH SOCKTT will proposed helping tDIO APT. Fireplace. Urllgil tunities if you're into have meet at 10 a.m. Saturday at the cor­ i FALL FEMALE Roommate needed. c. , cable convenient." " 900I ESlit. SEVERAL EXTRA NICE Houses ' rect such problems. alleviate the problem by hav­ner of 26th and Speedway Streets to |phis'electricity. «SV3«< 47»19. travel and good pay -available May or June 1st, one for ex- go diving in Lake Travis. LAW SCHOOL. Large I ft 2 br. 2079. •hg and' Summer. Am senior -Civil VALENTINE'S AUSTIN'S newest available and work on a se­ jtOE CARPETED efficiency, full rnglneuiag. Contact 451-30M. David. nightclub now taking applications for BUYING U.S. STAMPS:. Collections, ac-units which deal IV. MAY 29/ITIN. AUG. 8 ti. walk-In closet 1 block law cocktail servers. Apply in person at 2511 cumulations, plate blocks, sheets, misc. CALL quence of IV. MAY 15/*T*H. AUG. 21 u SUO/month. 2700 Swisher St. See FEMALE ROOMMATE needed. Own San Antonio Mon. through Fri. 1:00 to PJ^JC. 2930; 476-7063 eves. IV. MAY 29/RTBN. AUG. 19 IV. MAY 22/KItN. AUG. 20 • No, Wor catt47M5Ml room. 3 bediuun apartment vrith 2 4:00. • -- principally with the structural (AM $20 for indepandent return between 22/45 doyij foreign students, sUM month plus AC. SERIOUS GRADUATE desires house level of the sentence. Voss ED FEA£ALE to take over contract Prefer foreign graduate student Cda RELIABLE BABYSITTER with car M-sitting position. Will care for plants and fUB TAX four blocks from campus. On 47S40HL •-. ? -• . .-F 11:45 an>3:30 pm. Lively 3 year boy. animals. References provided. K. Jenke. 471-5244 said. NEW YORK.. •UT 7. 101, tS. 17 v 47S+OQ. , . 441-13*3 after 5. <76-9342. 22. 2*. 31 ROOMMATE NEEDED; free rent "A general decline in GROUP RIGHTS 157 AM. Il/M|4 MIENCE and hnary -et low IF YOU HAVE a certain talent that you CAPITOL CAMERA CLUB annual rates. 2 BDRM (1315.00) 1 dishwasher; 112J0 ABP. Call Barbara feel isat least commercial1 would like to trading and swapping sale. All types students' verbal abilities is I'UISSJO) All have CA/CH. dn-taft with you. Musician, dancer, artist, photographic equipment. Bring yours. April; 2 bedroom; furnished, shuttle; 471-4HT. ' . •, Home fairly evident," Voss said."In ICAVf WITH A CtOV/WUM AOTOAY _ cable, disposal, and walk-in . comedian, etc. Call Bob Yanez. Loretta Everyone welcome. Farm & ft. With pool and Laundry room. It MALE. LARGE 1 BEDROOM. IF shut-• Production 470-7140 or 401 W. 30th. Savings. 1500 Lavaca. April 21,7:30 p.m. 1970, approximately 50 QIU nt t be seen. Voyageurs Apts. 311 E. 31 He. Summer. Wt spring, waft campus. FURN. DUPLEXES per­TtAVB U* plus ft elect. 477-1071. Kim. REO CROSS WATER SAFETY instruc­OVERSEAS JOBS • Australia, Europe. cent of those who tried placed OIHI} HARWOOD TRAVEL tor or YMCA leader examiner, week.of S. America, Africa. Students all |BLOCRS UT. AvaOable May Slh. FEMALE, house near campus, June t-U. Salary negotiable. Austin professions and occupations S700 to S3000 QUIET; CLOSE. Large 1 BR single/cou­out of lower-division English MM. 478^343 • 24JB GUADAUJPE ally large 2 bedroom triplex. fireplace, own bedroom, S00. bBts. 309A area. Call 47»S604. monthly. Expenses paid, overtime,' ple. Available June 1. S150.00. Owner­ . Responsibly adult, no pets. East 32nd. Mary. Terry. 47MWI. sightseeing. Free information. manager. 447-1177, 472-4563: courses. This year only about BARTENDER parttime to serve %\m plus utilities. 470-SUMMER; FEMALE; StSplus E.Large Austin's finest Tavern clientele. Must be TRANSWORLD RESEARCH Dept. AS, 30 percent placed out of the 2-2. Shuttle ER. POOL 47S«M0 or 4^ available at 4 pjn. See Mr. Overton Box 603. Corte Madera, Calif. 94925. 7121: course." Utwun 4:30 • 6:30 p.m. The Draft QUICK SALE IV) acres fenced. Water, UNF. HOUSES SHARE LARGE 2 Lake and House. 4112 Medical Parkway. windmill tank, liveable building. No Even though other univer­ shuttle front door. Oan room S197 ABP NOW APPLICATIONS for restrictions for commercial or houses, 15 minutes Call Fabio 442-5017. TAKING sis.000 cash. 20 miles Austin. Call after COUNTRY iCOTTAGE. sities offer English courses EARN CASH WEEKLY waltpersons & kitchen help. Apply in northeast campus. 1 Bdr. partially fur­ 6Dm or weekend 267*1317. LIBERAL BUT SERIOUS xtodents to person at Mike Si Charlie's. 1206 W 34th. nished. SllO/month. Call 037-3483. which concentrate on the share 3 bedroom ape. Rent«2jee/month MORNING AND AFTERNOON paper most elementary principles of Blood Plasma Donors ABP. 4724717 Oaudia. ­ routes in EtifieW-West Lynn area open |ust North of 27th at .SHARE LUXURY 34 house own room, for dependable individual. Car the language. Voss said the Guadalupe a« eartras. Northwest Austin, 4 fifles4F necessary. 476 6101. MISCELLANEOUS University does not have any Needed 1 Hemphili Park ; Route. W0 plus W bills. 451-CU7 Tom or PEOPLE'S COMMUNITY CLINIC has an immetSete opening for.Mb.super­ such courses because state Men & Women HOUSEMATE LIKE DOGS? Clean and visor. 20€0fcrsfwk.( Negotiable)Mostly . law forbids giving Credit for considerate. Now or summer. New 2 evenings with some weekentf hrs. MLT­ EARN $14 WEEKLY Bedroom duplex.Own room, smallyard. MT or equivalent requiredphis one year any course on a nooeollege S00J0 ft elec. 442497V evenings Mike.. experience. s2J7/hr. with possible in- BICYCLE POUND SALE level. Few students would CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION crease in June. Send resume to 400 w. In accordancevrith The University of Texas at Austin Parking and Traffic Ord, Austin 7»70s: ; : , Regulations, 1973*74. regulating the Impounding and sale of bicycles vmich constitute take a course for no credit, he PING, PRINTING, BINDING SPECIALTY Chemical Sales. Very high •anulS,nce00.th* <*«npw of The University of Texas at Austin. I will proceed to seel said. * Austin • . UNCLASSIFIED commissions, industrial and in-at public auction to the highest bidder for cash on the 3rd of May, 1975at 9:00 AM at V stitutional sales. Leads furnished. Call *pisch-Falk Field (baseball field) situation on 19th and Comal in the City of Austin. Decreasing emphasis on 476-5924 for appointment between 5-7 Travis County. Tex*s the fcllowingdescrlbed bicycles which have not been redeemed 'THE COMPLETE: ? Bipod Components, Inc. PROFESSIONAL Belly aandng toMmcHon. 4grau. p.m. -by the owners thereof. to;wit: -• mechanics in high school Ha»e you heard Quiet Tbunder? THE FLOWER PEOPLE need people to English classes could be part­OPEN: MON. & THURS. 8 AM to 7 PU FULLTIME Cub for med bicycles 477-30P. daily. sell noww.i 287-1102,10 i. Highest a.m. commissioa > 6 p.m. paid Make Color Stamp Speed Serial No. ly responsible for students* TUES. & FRI. 8 AM to 3 PM 'PING SERVICE Nikkor SOmmM J15*. *nRIC TYPING.'Specialty: Tedolcal. Purple wwdtheses. disMrtatioas. PR's, • Summer jobs out of state CXM . NO HIDDEN CHARGES % 69 Boys Sears27" Rep. Blue' ' . NONE 51246161340 1069 nuicrlpts. etc. ,Pf (Mtiia. binding . '• LOW SUMMER RATES Coaster Hazards ; fashions jbrmen lOspd^Franchtouriog S6S WW! f Start. ' ^ • SINGLES 7? DOUBLES-S42JO 95 Boys Sears27" Red, Coaster NONERent 2bdtml>0use4S2-2B77 4SM161 Fully turn. room, daily maid service, co-06 Boys . Sears27" Green *83 63829 /-.andwomen Tv Graduale and undergraduate Deccadrums4pceS7Soroffer 470-1369 005222 PGINIA SCHNEIOER ' Diversified ea. shag carpeted, lounge with color TV. 97 Boys Kalkhoff White NONE 10 Enumerated refrig. and washer-dryer, hot plates and Zt*printing, binding. tsiTKoenig *61 VW cheap. 447-7333 refrig. allowed. 1 block from UT. Lotsof • 102 Boys Brown NONE 10 >i Rnebndunusual Schwinn ' ~ 45f-720S. ••••••• Microwave ovens tree parking. ' 27" DH031304 may )>e <*eS^Shoe5>5hins OBYE DELAI^IELO. IBM Selectric Womw soltball players 442-0792. . .THE PHOENIX 103 Boys* Pwneys Brown 54524; 10. 312I4S6042 h,y /. 27* breeding grounds for bacteria, J"***. S.ytvs experience, books. UsedPolaroid&Kodakcameras477-5624 1930 San Antonio . ' —and ooaejgoriQ Htfwtbns; -theses, reports. Karen* Hippy Twenty First! Charley. . 476-9265 4 477-5777 104 Boys Tiger p" Green ;NON^JQ 01S6H according to Joseph Thiel of *"eoyaphing~442-7104. -. 107 Girts Superchlef White ;..,72932 NONE Napoleon .spoke no Russian. He lost.'" . 26" Coaster the State Division of Oc­ 3ERTATI0NS. theses, reports and 109 Boys Rep. Blue Unknown " Experienced typist:; Used Hre: G70-14 >12.472-0647 : . '' NONE'-C' NONE cupational Health and Radia­ 2 BLOCKS UT Coaster ». 47M71S. : y. : • Furnished Apartment.and 26" E225713 ytown.^07 Bridle l^ith. Lbrraine Electro Voice amp SOO 472-4015 . , 111 Boys Columbia Red NONE tion Control. ^ Y»S COPY SERVICE. The com-Sltar tor sale, s?). 472-5700 . • ; rooms. 119 Boys Brown Because the walls Coaster "'C' Schwinn- of NONE 10 EG396132 ervice; typing, typesetting. Garage sale everything. 510 W. 10th. Varsity27" microwave ovens never 120 Boys Mitutank White . From $80/month! NONE 10 T51S035 Custom bit bicycle S300 510 W. 10th . Seraph 27*' become as hotas conventional -Exc stereo system $300 510 W. 10th 2800 Whitis 121 Boys Schwirm-Brown NONE 10 LF05777 fPERlENCED AND FAST typist.' Varsity2T'-ovens, bacteria, may grow on Surprise! Becky. I love youi Wbde Schauff2T' dissertations.. professional 2 477-7558 ~, 122 Boys Orange 06315 -10 I. 7251773 the food that splatters on oven J. laa;etc. Printing. W«rmg.Bar-Honda4S0 veryfast S4S0 472-3363eve Frame • TMIOS. 4SJ-5II4. ; ; 127 Boys M6rrt27" :-Green 04320 walls, Thiel said. Female kittens 477-2220. ^M15142415099 ; 128 Boys Sears26M Green NONE 5 503473642/4013923 Male housemate on 47th. 453-2447. 129 Girls Sears 26" Green NONE S 503473760/444417 Bacteria counts on public SUMMER RATES 131 Girls 4#r9271 Just North of 27th atr AM/FM 0 track stereo >65.453-2447. ^ Doubles *52.50 • Singles S9S.00 Raleigh 26" Brown NONE 3 ' 3111711 microwave ovens often bear 132 Boys Columbia'' V 1616UMXO NONE M577272 Guadalupe Afghan Show pups 2P4HS3 «• 441-<633. per session 27" 5*.Coaster this out, he said. Texan Dorm -1905 Nueces . . 134 Boys / Huffy 27*' ^ Rep. ' NONE 3 •v NONE Auyin ' 2707 Hemphill Park 66 century 210HP476^S0 AMHSOHorta Dally maid service,, central-alri Another possible danger. Black Sman dog house. SO. 441-5444. Refrigerators, hot plates allowed. Two 137 Boys-rWar^ 27" Green ' 79426 10 D32732S blocks from campus. Co*d. Restdenl 140 Girls Black 3 NONE Thiel said, are bums from ex­ Sears26" % S2109 Duncan-Phyfe dresser. S9Q. 441-5444. . -. managers. 477-1260. Rooms also 143 Boys White NONE. 10 posure to radiation leaks. A Royal' Found sm brwn dog. CR.buSr47t-2401 r.: Asport 77" availaMe for Fall. 1281215 144 Boys Schwinn ;A study by Thiel's office showed •Yellow NONE 10 -KG0037554 YES, we do type : PRIVATE ROOMS. Two blocks campus, 27** that 13 percent of the 146 Girls Sears Black '50213 ' 3 3134283 central air.Maid service, kitchen, co-ed. 26" r;': UNF. DUPLEXES microwave ovens in Texas: :reshman themes. 2411 Rio Grande. 476 2S51. . 154 Boys -PenneySr -•.-Orange/. NONE 10 FILED v JUNGLE Why not start out with S6S-S90 ROOMS in older houses. Share 27**". < • Red >-'-J i, • manufactured prior, to 1971 bath, private entrance, refrig^ AC 1 155 Boys P®V9e°t:-Yellow-: NONE 10 364060 have defective doors or seals. ^ good grades' -27** : ;V< block UT. Nowand/or summer. 476*1700. ,472-3210 and 472r7<77 : U PRETTY': W0 E. 30th. •. • . ; 157 Boys Yellow^ -71023 10 ^ 1717 The six microwave ovens at DUPLEX J ROOMS .FOR. SUMMER. AC%S blocks 159 Girls ; ' Schwinn-' Red.-i>. NONE 3 University concession areas AH019449 STORE L*S TYPING SERVICE. Than. Oil- campus. Kitchen available: Coed. 2'bedroom duplex for rent, in b qi^et . Breeze 26' are cleaned daily and checked ertatlora. . manuscripts and business .Northeast Austin residential SSO/month. 2706,Salado. 470-0I44.: -. 162 Boys 'Western Orangeittv GILED10 fK 945074 I;-:-'..|^jng. Pick-op & deUveryservice. 036-SINGLE ROOMS, S49J0-S54.95/month. .Flyer 27" neighborhood: Eath duptex offers large monthly for radiation leaks, fenced backyard, covered-parking, ex­ June 1-Aug. 22 A/C Kitchen privileges, . 163 Boys Sears 27" Reo. 07166 10 247425297410' Allen Daniels of the Neelley EAT. ACCURATE and'prompt typtogl tra storage room. Plus washer,; dryer : community bath, early. move-Hi possi­Yellow cents per page. Cail 447-27P. • • .connections. Kitchen appliance fur» ble, near campus. 2414 Longview, 472-164 Boys -Fleetwing : White NONE 10 . M36170X2067^762 Vending Go. said. nished. S160 plus bilis.Cafi 920-2296. 3002. After 5 pm.;; 27** .v.. NURSERY IEEDA TYPIST? We're a secretarial 165 Boys Texas^ftangerBrown 72020 10V ' ' P706630 Thiel said the problem of peciellst. Resumes, letters.theses, sat,-statistical, research papers, etc. CONVENIENT UT. 2-1 carpeted, 160 Boys t 07060 , leaks is particularly serious Raleigh 27' Green 3 RA53769 fenced yard, maintained. SIB. Lease '• B192132 because a personbeing burned iefc-gp and delivery available.«37-3373. draped, bar. «m|rfe Closets.^storage.-UNF. APARTS. 173 Boys ; Rolltast Blue .NONE C ANNIVERSARY BYL SMALLWOOO Typing. Last -20*.* Coaster £-.v ilnute. overnight avallablb. Term S1SS.06-2044.:.,-v '-J. LARGE ONE BEpROOM apartmenTin ITS Boy* '.Sears 27*', White < • NONE-*10 .•i': * ~5024742578412S* might notimmediatelyrealize­ ,•176 Boys Gold •apers. theses, disseriationv: letters. 2 BEOROOM, cvpeted. CA/CH. dls-quiet west Austin' complex. S135, plus . Astra 27** NONE 10 1191495 MVorllMSft ^ ^ .. hwasher. stove. Fenced, patio, carport, electricity: 327-0479 alter S.: ' :; .* 177 Boys;*: ^AIIPro27" Grey NONE* 10 M36470X1207362S it.-Microwave ovens -V SA1E laundry room. Pets permitted. S169JO. - 178 Boys -Schwinn* Yellow NONE 10 . MG117132 evaporate surface waterso"a VP1NG SERVICE^I-Fast 'service, 453-5506. ... .• • • HUGE 1 BEDROOM. new carpet Hie." Versify 27" leasonable. rates.~ DeKvery: available.; paint, refrigerator, and stove.-Large ' 179 Boys" ' Unknown' Black NONE 11000954469 person's sensation of SPACES. NORTHEAST. 2-lft.'carpet : " IIMary.-'441'4742.> '• drapes. ' MIHns, pantry., .adequate -cedar patia big yard. One block east of ; 20". Coaster > IN PROGRESS RANCES WOOOS Typing Service. Ex-: ' Si 27" explained. . : • 181 Boyt , NORFOLK PINES $2.25 iranleed.Prin-: SPACIOUS,! BEDROOM with allhixury:' Yellow FILED 10-,V; HA021013T ing, bindk -2 CONTEMPORARY Trf4evel duplexes teatwes. PooL close to shuttle, campus. -. Thiel 'said he knows of no -i " ' J for rent.2Bdrm^2battt separate dining, 4140 plus elec. Three Elms Apartments ^ 182 Boys , Schwinn Green Rep;-? NONE ' .;V FILED ^... of PONYTAIL PALM - MVl area, fireplace, covered parking, con­400 Wes?35th.4S?«3M1. , : Brown cases microwave' food $2.00 venient location.-.1 year lease, 1summer ; 116 Boys Western FtyerYellow* . NONE 10 943036 W poisoning in Texas but said a ust North of 2>th ^t only. Availably May IS. After5,447-3J77. READY,MAY1. Roomy » BR with ex-27"-*•< * Rep. Blue .1-. f V * ALOE VERA, BAREROOT $2.00 trasS120plus1/5btUl. 1910^ Nueces092-, 187-Boys Schw,nn27" Rep Red " NONE 10 I DJS17678 &:#'£ courtcase involving radiation Schwinn*. 'Yellow NONE 10. Guadalupe • % exposure is in litigation. $ . .95 Steiber26" . -189 Girls J Blue. 04620 ' . HOHE'-'vfc®'-Microwave ovens also in­ Coaster-\ ail COLEUS -!39 ROOM & BOARD • 192 Girls ^ Hawthorne Red >'<. terfere with certain types of If 1 Coaster,.:.-i« NONE < . NONE 1 cardiac pacemakers, Thiel PARSLEY .193 Boys 'YefWw , .C NONE 10 ' HAO}US7 K30MAKING IT? , BELLSON" DORM for Mefi.ExtE.xcellenl *J9S Boys? Hully 27", ;RedIRED HJS -v ; NONE 10 ' Tsoizn/tmiMj saidj .v . y -„ s Eipert tutoringcan help.Math. Physics/"-. C'maid,...swlm^ 5 " CREEPING CHARLEY home-cooked meals. AC . 199 Boys."-S^iiwinn ] > <5reen 69463 DD2M16ming pool. Nwr taking reseivaTtonsatlons for ;^ . . / v . • Thiel urged anyufe wishing reservatk) tJESUMES temmer Girls Blue V L2V7II9 :to comment on his proposals­ -Ekc-Engln. trom Pt*-D. in.E.E. as­ .and fait. 2619 Rlo Gi^ande-476^ / AMF26 * O1- tingutohtdjleacher. SVart today; sleep-, £o«ter .-'^r *55?. »-S 30L T Roadmaster T„.„ "NONE -. { 70$ W. 29th .-with or without pictures tonight. Rea»»abia,fates. Very handy -' VOUR ROOM AND BOARD boll/ J^f* Royal IJnlOTyRMj. NONE -to pick-gp a copy of the draft •: Oav Servlc# .iocamcws.'Parkiog. Now irsyotirmove. ^4724210 and 472-7677 JKWaWhlirPytx^ay^btevc^s inside0,„ -1-1--4 • at his offipe'^at'-State Health Call 47I-7tlS.The pass word H HELP.--; the-fieH between a:00 apd l:4S AM;.- -OPEN SUNDAY'l .Department headqprters.... 10:30 -6:30 Friday, April 18, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 23 A \ T' ( "I m CUSTOMS DISCOUNhMEK ^r: ANNUAL ip -jar <^.v; Wehave the stock, add freight, insurance, im­ : —MAIL ORDER FORM-— 1 s ^ « •vA.-t mediate delivery and you have two days only Good thru April 19. 1975. Two Days Oafr at mail order prices. Bring in your mail order IMMEDIATE DEUVBtY catalogs and don't wait three weeks, buy now PAY TO TKEOBOBtOF VSD and have immediatedelivery at low mail order •r\ $ Custom Hi-fi, 617 W. 29th * Bio prices; -' CASH, CHECK, MQ BAC, TV's Trinitron f MARANTZ 4230P BSR 260 AX­ noma Hi GARRARD 70 with a '29'? walnut case NO lE (HIL PHONE QUOTES KV1722 8 RMS per cfpnnel in quad • ha, Atsfcaver,­ i Dofty built in ; Share millMm "New" Marantz stereo -quad units (MfiyCkaajjer ' Remote control 17" Color TV 1 Great ;Mararitz sound List $7MS UdSMLK UstSHJK Sony's Color TV Best Seller Sony's Color TV quality Case intluded in price (29.95 value) $9069 17"' screen with great quality TWO DAY >55 551 List $569.95 • --.List $529.95 with cose SAIE PUCE List $510.00 TWO DAY mo MV SAIE .PR,ICE SA0095 88 TWO DAYS w SAIE PRICE TtZy NOW $399' .. J77 ONLY '»••••»» - >•»•»»••• •»» J »» « « Wollensak. Also on Sale KV 1930R -New 19" Remote Control »>•m <>»> .ony -Great Color but in 19** Color List $679.95 sTtwia^569'^ • ••>!•»««>««>«»«>»»MO******** Record Changer n SCOTT AND SANSUI RECEIVERS -QUALITY AT :: Wollensak 8055 UNBELIEVABLE VOW PRICES 1 '• 8 track player Wolleiisak8075 /recorder • 8 track player Quality sound . Scott R33S Scott R36S SANSUI 881 recorderwftfc Dofty \ y Fast forward 1 Quality swnj tal counter 1 Digital coaster • AS tiie lealaras «f lb Turntable only • 30 watts RMS per chanoel Hydraulic cueing, all the great List $249.95 list $349.95 • It -watts RMS per channel • less than i%d&ortion • 63 watts RMS per chaaoel features the top Duals give , • Less than liS distortion • A great bay at rttiti1' • less thah'.QSH distortion • Qoatity receiver -low price Precision (hanger 95 • One of the Best Ust $299.95 List $249.95 List $529.95 List $259.95 ! •••••»««»» I TWO DAY $42244 •™° day SALE PRICE ™°?."! $179" $22995 SALE PRICE ^ Don't miss this sale -Friday-Saturday Sennheiser HD 414 Shure M91ED Pioneer TP 700 SANSUI 210 I: Cartridge Headphone ' 8 track FM car stere« SfereoReceiver r "Shure's Best Buy" ECI 1253V : Speaker System , • 3 way-'' speaker sysfer' [ • 12" woofer • 5" midrange ­ • 3" tweeter 3r "3 • What a sound "Sv-r "J" * • IfttNifN won't "Rated Hie' Best" by one ' consumer • Tracks from 'A to 1'A ' oj [ • Not exactly as pictured believe| testing agency • Great separation • 5 year exdnsivo ',• Quality f track > Great quality headphones ; worrnty 11• FM very clear, low ifistortiea * List $54.95 • Come inItake a > [ |• One of the best beys • Greet kpy at $179JK <' TWO DAY pair home I TWO DAY^f^S;,... 96 LIST : l*t$144.96e S ? list $17115 SALE J4876 SALE PRICE <• PRICE O $119,95 TWO DAY , >Q091 lit? MY '18" ] * 2 day sale price SALE PRICE If# saiema ^ee•»•••••'•»»<»»»»»»» CAR STEREO - PRICED JUST STEREO SPEAKERS -LOW AKAI GXC38 IN TIME FOR THE SUMMER CASSETTE DECK S wifh.Dolby - DISCOUNT PRICES Great Frequency Response ' VISION H-H ECI 120QW V AR 3A ,ia «3 • 3 way speaker systea • XT weohr^;.:K < (Can be used as full amplified Great smmI ' ' • Economlc cassette player J 'machine or deck. What a great machine! • Fast forward -eject ^,Come in for a demonstration.; Ust $295 List $59.95 HOW ON* CAl00 mf 36" M 59.90 BOWMAN 8 Track Player API* „ Pioneer AM-FM 8 Track BLANK TAPE SUPERMARKET Pioneer TS 692 6X9 In Dash 8 Track TP 7000 sCar Speaker Scotch 207 • 1800 foot reel to reel PRICED RIDICULOUSLY LOW • Economical for car • low noise, high output OHMCI . IDK-M tinette^ ~ • Quality.vsoond\t low priced • Push button AM/FM radio Lisr$7.99 MI 90 t-Track » Quality 8 Track sound <•" 1 ' List 30.95 HOW ' 1800 foot 2002 Magnet \ Ust $189.95 Ust$39.95g^ 0NLY-!«S reel.tered Low On Sale NowH0W0HSAII, 1599G Pioneer TS 160 Car Speaker * W ehete liiKk ^ ^L^,tr List $1.99 • 6K" door mounted •U»Mis^yg|b. NOW ONLY . List $3.99 •IdlWUI 109 SCOTCH J. List^$35'.prl^S 2fcr^." ifi|$|9lM Sentry 90 Minute Highlanderi Blank Cassette ^. Universal 60 3 pac t* s;r *28#o W 1 : /--VTS-CV-. ...» . t iJ.-: -i,-1! p-jt • ' Portable Cassette Retorde • 9C mlhiite Blank ^r'-r 617 1^ 29th at Rie Gnindel • Low noise,1 cassette1­ - visiq Frequency warning ' Great:reproduction'capability < m u. 472^71 for .radar units ® • Sound you. won't believe "i-ii^ ,• 60 minute cassettes Ust $2.99 J URF $39.9S low noise..^ fSALE Win; ON SALE NOW .•AC/DC ^-'j^ftOii^Sdfe.Now: :;fe¥ mm SALE PRICE