T h e Da il y T ex a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at A ustin Vol. 75, No. 187 Fifteen Cents Tw enty P a ge s Austin, Texas, Thursday, A p ril I, 1976 B usiness Office: 471-w ^ m ents: 471-4591 Katz, Walsh Face Runoff n Editor Race candidates short,” Katz added. A nine-vote difference between can­ didates Todd Katz and Mary Walsh Wednesday threw The Daily Texan editor race into an April 7 runoff. Texas Student Publications Board Place 2 at- large candidates Bill Chriss and Neal Graham also face a rematch. Walsh received 1,103 votes; Katz, 1,- 094; and candidate Mark Villanueva, 454 votes. "I just thought I would have been stronger than th at,” Villanueva said Wednesday night. He said he has not decided whether he will support either runoff candidate. Katz said he considered the outcome a “ good om en” but questioned the motivations of some voters. ‘‘I am very concerned about the number of people who vote along sexual and racial lines rather than making a serious inquiry into the platforms of each candidate,” he said. ‘‘I picked up some votes this way and certainly lost some, but I think in both cases voters who decide issues on these bases are selling themselves and their ‘‘We are both qualified, and I think the vote totals reflect that,” Walsh said. She added she hopes the candidates have am­ ple opportunity to meet with students before the runoff. Katz and Walsh each received ap­ proximately 40 per cent of the 2,736 votes cast. That turnout represents roughly 7 per cent of the University enrollment. Chriss received 790 votes; Graham, 618; Matt Harriss, 254, and William Sime, 119 votes in the Place 2 at-large election. Also on April 7, journalism and adver­ tising m ajo rs and com m unication students with fewer than 60 hours will in­ dicate their preference for the TSP Board’s Place 3 and 4 positions. The non­ binding poll will guide the board’s selec­ tions. Place 3 poll candidates are Peggy Wehmeyer, Joan Ftabinowitz, Larry P o s te l, Bud K enned y and Luke Hamilton. Place 4 candidates are Judy Spalding, Bill Ott and Terry Balagia. A student relaxes am ong the cam paign debris of runoff candidates W alsh and Katz. A Photo by M anual Ramiro* Teamster Pact Reached 2 Vi Hours After Walkout ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, IU. (UPI) - egotiators early Thursday reached len­ itive agreement on a national master eight contract and ended the first itionwide Teamsters strike two and a alf hours after it began. Tens of thousands of truckers pulled their rigs off the road early Thursday, beginning the first nationwide team sters strike in history and threatening to crip­ ple American commerce. it it it H o w e v e r, th o u s a n d s of o t h e r team sters worked under a series of in­ terim agreements reached at the local level. Negotiations on a new national m aster freight agreement continued in th is C hicago su b u rb , w ith L abor Secretary W.J. Usery meeting with both sides. Nurses Form 'Save Our System' BY FORD FESSENDEN Texan SUH Writer SAN ANTONIO - Student Round- ible of The University of Texas System :hool of Nursing announced creation rednesday of Save Our System (SOS), a ■oup charged with trying to induce the ‘gents to reconsider their decision to "organize the system. The Roundtable, a group made up of ■presentatives from each UTSSN cont­ inent, also approved a proposal from T-Austin students to raise $300,000 to fer the regents in exchange for a delay the reorganization. That was the nount Deputy Chancellor E. Don alker told regents the Univeristy astern would save by dissolving the irsing system administration and ab­ y i n g each component into a medical •anch or university. Rozanne Thatcher, one of the UT ustin students leading SOS, said an ac- >unt has already been opened in a local ink to hold the collected funds. The ioney will be held in trust and used for holarships if the regents reject the fer. Faculty m em bers speculated roup c o u ld g e t s u p p o r t fro m the professional nursing organizations but acknowledged they would have to go to “consumers” to raise the kind of money needed They said they have gotten some support from doctors, even though most nurses suspect the medical profession would like to see UTSSN broken up. The students were able to collect $500 in several hours from contributions and s a le of b u m p er s tic k e rs rea d in g “ Impeach Regent Joe Nelson, M.D.” Nelson was the principal advocate of the change. The group also plans letter-writing and petition campaigns to gain support for reopening the case. Letters will be sent to the governor, the Coordinating Board and to the regents, Thatcher said. Though stu d en ts have taken the leadership role in organizing the cam­ paign, faculty demonstrated their sup­ port for the student group by creating their own SOS, Support Our Students, at their separate meeting. The system wide m eeting is held twice a year, with each component sen­ to confer on ding re p re se n ta tiv e s m atters of interest the com­ ponents, such as curriculum and faculty affairs. However, all resolutions and to all recommendations on the faculty agenda were tabled because of the unknown future of the systemwide meetings. UTSSN President Marilynn Willman, whose post will be abolished when the reorganization takes place Sept. I, the meeting of joint faculty chaired and students which followed the Round­ table meetings. In response to charges that she knew about the reorganization long before it was announced and had been offered a lucrative position in the University System, Willman said Walker had in­ formed her of it only four days before the regents’ meeting. She also said there is a “good possibility” she would behaving the state if the reorganization comes about. Willman said she could not speculate on the likelihood of the regents reconsidering a decision, but said she “wouldn’t say there is no hope at all.” The UTSSN president said she talked with Walker about some of the details of the reorganization earlier Wednesday. She said he assured her most of the programs now in effect would remain so. As for a 6.8 percent salary increase Willman had slated for nursing faculty next year, Walker told her budgets would be reviewed within the next IO days, and he could tell her of its fate by then. Carriers at the local level were given the option of coming to term s on an in­ terim agreement or being shut down by the powerful union. The national m aster freight agreement expired at midnight local time. WALKOUTS BEGAN at midnight in the eastern time zone. The spreading strike could shut down auto assembly lines, halt food shipments and trigger food and gasoline shortages. Approximately 20,000 truckers stopped their rigs in Pittsburgh, and pickets were set up a Sears Roebuck Co store in Philadelphia. Teamsters in most of Ohio, New York City, Detroit, Indianapolis, Louisville, Ky., St. Louis and Burlington, Iowa, also walked out. “ We’ve signed several tem porary agreements tonight and four or five more carriers are in here now,” a spokesman for Detroit Teamsters Local 299 said. “ But for those team sters not covered by these agreements, they’re out on strike. We’re telling them to clear out and go home. Those (carriers) who haven’t signed are being shut down.” Dissident team sters held a rally in Detroit Wednesday night, vowing: "No contract, no work.” H O WE V E R , CHI CAGO a r e a Teamsters officials advised local union members, who are not directly covered by the national pact, to keep working while they attempted to work out interim contract agreements. One official said he expected 80 per cent of the 40,000 Chicago area truckers to work under in­ terim agreements. The strike loomed as a potential crippling blow to the nation’s recovering economy. The team sters involved haul 60 per cent of the nation’s manufactured goods, and the trucks are considered an e x ten sio n of in d u s tr y ’s assembly line. Industry officials say assembly lines will halt within the week if the strike persists. the a u to THE UNION, bargaining in Chicago on a national m aster freight agreement, Wednesday night sent out word to local leaders to negotiate their own local con­ tracts or “ shut ’em down by midnight.” A Teamster spokesman told UPI “ some employers reportedly have signed in­ terim agreem ents.” today Mellow ... P a r t l y c lo u d y s k ie s w ill p r e v a i l T h u r s ­ day, with w in d s fro m the south at 5 to 15 m . p . h . T h e h i g h T h u r s d a y will be in the upper 70s, the low T h u r s d a y night in the low 50s. T he high F r i ­ d a y will be in the mid- 80s. S u n ris e is at 6:20, sunset at 6:50. Convicted Rapist Gets Life Penalty A man convicted of aggravated rape of a University coed on Oct. 20, 1974, was assessed life imprisonment Wednesday by a jury in 167th District Court. Charlie Scott, of Austin, was found guilty by a nine-man, three-woman jury. The jury followed the recommendation of Asst. Dist. Atty. Charles Craig for a life term, rejecting a defense plea for a 5-to-IO year term. The victim testified she was abducted from a washateria by Scott. The panel established the penalty after deliberating for an hour and 40 minutes. Scott was arrested Feb. ll, 1975, and has been held in County Jail since, accor­ ding to the Austin Police Department. Final argum ents on the question of guilt or innocence, which began Wednes­ day morning, were over by 10:15 a.m. The jury returned its verdict in less than 45 minutes. In the separate jury hearing on penal­ ty, the p ro se c u tio n c a lle d seven witnesses and asked them about Scott’s reputation as a “ peaceful, law-abiding citizen of the community.” All seven answered that his reputation was bad. One of the state witnesses was Sgt. Jam es Huffstedtler, of the Criminal Investigation Division of the University police. No w itnesses w ere called by the defense on the question of punishment. Hardesty N ew Deputy Chancellor Former Briscoe Press Secretary Begins System Role Today By DANNY HOLLAND Texan Staff Writer April Fool s Day is not the most promising time to begin a new job, but Robert Hardesty feels the day’s significance is no forewarning of things to come as new associate deputy chancellor for administration of the University System. “ Well, he (Hardesty) ought to get off on the best foot possible, and All Fool’s Day is better than All Saint's Day, Secretary of State Mark White joked Wednesday while bidding farewell to the former press secretary for Gov. Dolph Briscoe. The 44-year-old redhead from St. Louis, newspaper reporter for the now defunct Washington Times Herald, speechwriter for former Postm aster General John Granouski, confidant of President Lyndon Baines Johnson and press secretary for Texas’ governor is ex­ pected to pool his broad experience to deal with press and politicians in his new position with the University System. “THERE ISN’T TOO much stability in politics,” Hardesty explained.“This (new job) offered stability, permanence and more money (his new job means a raise from $38,000 per year on Briscoe’s staff to $42,500 per year). I couldn't afford to pass it up — I live day to day.” The ability to grab an opportunity when it presents itself brought Hardesty (then on the White House staff during the Johnson administration) to Texas in the late 1960s to help Johnson compile his memoirs. Hardesty became chief editor of the book, “ Vantage Point,” which received a reported $3 million advance in a package deal with a series of CBS interviews of the former President. Nevertheless, “Vantage Point” didn’t sell. “ It (“ Vantage Point” ) wasn’t a critical success and obviously didn’t sell. Why? It didn’t have him (LBJ) in it from his point of view. It was accurate, but you didn’t come out knowing Lyndon Johnson any better,” Hardesty said. As a result of “ Vantage Point s ” failure, Johnson still remains an unpopular figure in American history, Hardesty contends, “ except for blacks. They knew what Lyndon Johnson accomplised. He was one of the great domestic presidents.” “ BUT WHEN IT came to the (Vietnam) war, there was no division in the country about whether we should be there. The only division was on how ‘hawkish’ we should be about it. Coldwater wanted nuclear weapons and Bobby Kennedy was going around the country making speeches defending our foreign policy,” he said. “ Everybody was hooting in the late ’60s about the domino theory, but the domino theory has already taken place. Of course I don’t know what it means (to the United States) if half of Asia goes Communist.” Bombings of Hanoi in the late 1960s, although a t­ tributed to Johnson's “hawkish” views of the Vietnam war, actually were promoted by the military — Gen. Maxwell Taylor in particular, Hardesty said. “ It wasn’t Walt Rostow” who led in promoting the bombings. “ He was in the State Department until 1966 and by that time we were already deeply involved in the war. There is no question that he (LBJ) supported what we had done, but Johnson and Dean Rusk (then secretary of state) were the cautious ones about bom­ bing. They didn’t want to involve China,” Hardesty ex­ plained. JOHNSON’S ADMINISTRATION was an era of ex­ perimentation. LBJ was the first President in a period of prosperity to show the people the “ festering wound of poverty and discrimination in this nation” Hardesty said. In 1973, Hardesty joined Briscoe’s staff which was still enjoying the Texas political shakedown created by the Sharpstown Bank scandal of 1971. “There is no question that the voters were looking for new faces and clean images after Sharpstown. Ben Barnes w asn't even implicated in the scandal, but he didn’t even make a runoff. People were tired of the Austin scene and as a result, we elected a new gover­ nor, lieutenant governor, attorney general. People were even shocked that Sissy Farenthold did so well in 1972.” Yet Farenthold bombed in her gubernatorial bid in 1974 because she filed suit against Briscoe the day she filed candidacy for office for allegedly collecting cam­ paign contributions illegally, Hardesty said. inaccessibility BRISCOE RECENTLY has been criticized by the press for his to reporters. Texas Monthly magazine devoted a majority of its February issue to the governor’s relations with the media and also printed a story concernihg the status of Briscoe’s mental health — a subject the governor brought up a t a press conference. “ I think it s pretty shoddy journalism. That article (concerning Briscoe's mental health) was full of inac­ curacies,” Hardesty said. Rumors had been floating around the Capitol press room that Briscoe had suffered a nervous breakdown, (See HARDESTY. Page 2.) Associate Deputy Chancellor Robert Hardesty. Taxan Staff Photo by Stanloy Farrar Adkins Asks for Money Student Government ' Spectacle’ Staged “ Funny costs money,” Ja y Adkins, U niversity Student Government president-elect, told students who gathered on the Main Mall Wednesday for Adkins’ “ public spectacle.” Surrounded by chained and bound student senators-elect, Adkins aud Vice-President­ elect Skip Slyfield made their plea for funds in response to the Board of Regents’ deci­ sion Friday to allow only op­ tional funding for Student Government. Adkins illustrated his point by juggling for the crowd. “ To ju g g le you have to have b a lls ,” explained Adkins. “ The regents have taken away Student Government’s balls.” a i m e d S l y f i e l d h i s criticism s at the Board of Regents and the “ lofty powers of this god.” “ Can fir e University presidents at will? the r e g e n ts Can the regents reinstate mandatory funding for I ne Daily Texan? Can they con­ struct useless buildings. Slyfield asked. The crowd responded with “ Yes, they can.” Introduced as the better half of the Art and Sausages ticket by Slyfield, Adkins charged, “ If they had given us our allowance we would have been under their thumb. If 18,000 students check op­ tional funding we will have the strongest Student Govern­ ment in history, he con­ tinued. As he led the ch ain ed senators-elect away, Adkins made his final pitch. “ In the words of the great Russian playwright and the navigator of the U SS E n t e r p r i s e , C h e k h o v S t u d e n t Government.’’ Student Government Vice- P r e sid e n t Lyn B re e la n d awarded himself a stick of Airwick Solid after winning the Student Senate’s Olfactory E n d u r a n c e A w a r d a t Wednesday’s Senate meeting. This meeting, the last of the o u t g o i n g S e n a t e , w a s highlighted by the nomination for, vote on and presentation of the Senate’s variation of Hollywood’s Oscars. Among the winners were: Neil Graham, for Best Actor in a Supporting R ole; the Interfraternity Council, for Best Guilt-Tripping by an Out­ side Organization; Bill Chriss, for Most Arrogant; and Steve Fuqua, for the Foster Grant Always in the Dark Award. President Carol won the Chip­ pie of the Year Award. Along with the aw ard s ceremony, the Senate voted to give the Consumer Affairs Committee $196 for Food Day r e l a t e d a c t i v i t i e s . The Sen ato rs a lso approved a resolution to condemn the Austin Independent School District for what it termed for a vi ol at i on of a c a d e m ic freedom . AISD refused to renew Socialist Workers’ P ar­ ty member Evelyn Sell’s con­ tract for the 1970 school year. The Appropriations Com­ t h a t m i t t e e a n n o u n c e d $21, 212. 68 had be e n a p ­ propriated by this Senate for . 75 projects. Only three pro­ jects were turned down all , year. Student Sen. Ira Bleiweiss motion to appropriate $500 for “ Project Square Down,” to hire tutors for freshmen, was tabled a t the requ est of Breeland until “ buzzards have Hardesty • • • (Continued from Page I.) and several reporters had told Hardesty they were going to file stories about the rumors, Hardesty said. in “ The g o v e rn o r w as Uvalde (his mother was ill) and I had been down there on a daily basis to work on the legislative program. He was recovering from a kidney dis­ ease at the tim e,” Hardesty explained. “ So I told him about the rumors and he went over (to the Capitol) so the press could see him. He didn’t blurt it out in the middle of a sentence and it cam e as no surprise,” he added. B r i s c o e h a s n ’ t b e e n “ all that inaccessible,” and if a reporter “ really wanted to see him,” the reporter could gain a few minutes of the governor’s time, Hardesty said. “ They (the press; want to see the governor, and I see their point of view. But his point of view is the people didn’t elect him to hold press conferences, and I see that point, too,” he added. The tightrope of conflicting interests which Hardesty had to walk a s B ricoe’s press secretary will come into play again in his new capacity in the University System. T he p o s i t i o n i nc l ude s transistor radios and chickens grow lips.” As Crabtree made her final speech to the Senate, Steve Coleman presented her with a fine spray of Lucerne Cream Topping. Asked how she felt about the year’s end, Crabtree said, “ It s relieving.” r e s pons i bi l i t i es f o r me r l y handled by Mike Quinn, who resigned in December a s in­ formation director. He will a d m in istrativ e formulate policies the University System, and and most impor­ tantly, act as a liaison with federal and state agencies. for WHY DOES THE Universi­ ty System, a state-financed and managed school, need a liaison in Washington, D.C.? “ We (universities) have got legislation going on all the time in the Office of Educa­ tion Now I am not a lobbyist, but there is hardly a time when there s not a bill that doesn’t affect the Univer­ sity,” he said. BARGAIN BOOKS 50% OFF Used Books or more OFF N ew Books 20% 3 0 % 5 0 % WE BUY - WE SELL Before you buy or sell, check our stock Laud.in I - : man 6 ll W. 14th 476-6897 AN ALTERNATE ROUTE Peace Corps Vista Ute Your Degree in a Different W ay Liberal Arts, Business, Nursing, Law Education, Engineering, Home Economics S ig n Up N ow at your Placement Office for an interview and a packet Peace Corps • Vista Representatives On Campus April 5-8 President-elect Jay Adkins addresses the M ain M all multitude,________ Student Bar Association To Hold Runoff Election for Three Posts Student B ar A ssociation elections ended Wednesday in runoffs for the offices of presi­ dent, v ic e - p re sid e n t and tre a su re r, G ary L an d ers, Election Commission chair­ man, said. Results for several to be o th e r p o s t s h ad reco u n ted and w ere not available at Texan press time. “ We had an above-average turnout for this election, with 721 students voting,” Landers said. ‘However, the votes in several elections were very close, within five votes and Music, Crafts Due At Winedale Fest V isito r s to the an n u al W inedale Sprin g F e stiv a l Saturday and Sunday will be able to see and buy the products of some of Texas best contemporary craftsmen for the first time. T h i s y e a r ’ s f e s t i v a l , traditionally a classical music event only, will be held at the U n i v e r s i t y ’ s Wi n e d a l e Museum near Round Top, in Fayette County, as it has been since the first festival in 1967. The festival will include the F i r s t T e x a s C r a f t s m e n ’ s Show, a mini-exhibition of the works of 20 weavers, potters, jewelrym akers, silversmiths and other artisans, along with c la s s ic a l and blue g r a s s music. A Germ an-language play will be p resen ted by the U n i v e r s i t y G e r m a n i c languages department. A $2 grounds adm ission charge covers events for all three days of the Winedale Spring Festival. Spring Festival. must be recounted.” Runoff candidates for presi­ dent are Jim Boone, 273 votes, and Jo r g e G u tierrez, 129 votes. Vice-presidential con­ tenders are Anne Wynne, 203, and Larry Campagna, 240. T re a su re r c an d id ates a re Ja m es Ertl, 180, and Martin Griffin, 168. Bill Liedtke, Tim Furlong and Martha Loveless were elected to the Third Y ear Ho nor Co u nc i l . T o m m y E sp arza w as elected Law Forum editor and Barbara Ann Linch, Peregrinus editor. Both Esparza and Linch ran unopposed. Recounts were necessary for midlaw class represen­ tatives and Honor Council and for senior c la ss represen ­ tatives, Landers said. The runoff election will be Wednesday. “ We will have candidates for at least three posts in the runoff,” Landers said. “ There may be six or seven posts in the runoff.” Law students also voted 361-81 361-81 to to a p p r o v e a p p r o v e J I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M i l l l l l l l i l l l l i l j g I NELSON S I I = £ I I I I z £ = I • GIFTS 4502 So. Cong roil Phone: 444-3814 Z U N I • N A V A J O • H O PI I = = I I = IN D IA N JEWELRY | Z OPEN IO a m. to 6 p.m. ‘GIFTS THAT I SCHE ASE = IM VALVE" CLOSED M O N D A Y ^enjorTand=Groduates^ The southwest office of Red Carpet Realtors is The southwest office of Red Carpet Realtors is accepting applications for a position in real es- accepting applications for a position in real es­ tate sales. A career in real estate offers great challenge and tremendous rewards. Business major helpful but not required. 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P a g e 2 Thursday, April I, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N map® U.S. M ay Intervene Lebanese Strife WASHINGTON (UPI) — The United States, apparently fearing Lebanon’s civil strife might spark a Middle Last war, sent special envoy to Beirut Wednesday and stationed a naval task force offshore to evacuate Americans if necessary. The White House denied there were any plans for U.S. military involvement in Lebanon, and other officials took pains to describe the various U.S. steps, for the record, as routine, precautionary measures. But some U.S. officials told UPI privately they regard the sudden dispatch of Dean Brown, a veteran Middle East trou­ ble shooter, as a direct U.S. effort to intervene diplomatical­ ly in the crisis. Secretary of State Henry K issin ger sum moned Brown from retirement for the Lebanon mission. The State Department said Brown was merely filling in for ailing Am­ bassador McMurtrie Godley, and Brown himself, arriving in Beirut, called himself “an analyst and a proposer of possi­ ble options.” But officials told UPI Kissinger decided the time had come for the United States to try direct mediation. They said three factors convinced Kissinger to take the step: . • The Syrian cease-fire initiative seemed to have lost any chance for success without outside assistance. • Lebanon has slipped close to anarchy. • In these circumstances, Syria might intervene militari­ ly, Israel would almost surely retaliate and a general Middle East war could ensue. Brown, though in retirement, was an obvious choice for the troubleshooting role. IN 1975, Kissinger appointed him to organize the Viet­ namese evacuation and resettlement operation. After that, he headed the Middle East Institute and maintained good contacts throughout the Arab world. In London, meantime, U.S. officials confirmed that seven 6th Fleet warships - led by a helicopter carrier and two destroyers — are standing by to evacuate the estimated 1,450 Americans still in the country. They said the carrier USS Guadalcanal has a complement of 500 Marines to provide _ evacuation cover. “They’re about one day from the coast, in a holding pattern,” one official said. “Our ships are carrying everything from blankets to baby bottles just rn case we need to take civilians aboard. We’re ready for anything. . At the White House, press secretary Ron Nessen said there were “no plans for any American involvement” in Lebanon s civil war. He was responding to questions about the campaign remarks of Sen. Henry Jackson, a Democratic presidential hopeful, that Marines could have been used to preserve the peace in Labanon. ★ ★ ★ BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - Leftist Socialist leader Kamal Jumblatt turned conciliatory Wednesday, and there were growing indications a new cease-fire in Lebanon was in the making. But he dashed hopes of immediate peace by saying “nothing has been decided yet.” During the day Jumblatt hinted he may be willing to accept a cease-fire if it meant averting an invasion by Syria. Reports from Damascus said Syria had massed 17,000 troops at the frontier and was ready to move in and impose a truce if its mediation efforts failed. “The military war may have ended, but the political war is continuing,” Jumblatt said. The comment marked a signifi­ cant softening in Jumblatt’s hard-line stand that the war would not end until Lebanon’s Maronite Christians had been decisively defeated on the battlefield as well as in the political arena. Strikes Threaten Economy Transit Walkouts Erupt in Major Cities New York State are practically without funds, and while full extent of the transit workers’ union demands were not known, it appeared they were seeking a increase and perhaps cost-of-living negotiated, deferred wage increases. In the 1966 walkout the loss to the business community was estimated at $1 billion, and wage earners suffered an es­ timated loss of $25 million a day. S .v .n of IO Houston polico officers found Innocent W ednesday of illegal w iretapping charges receive their b od ges from Police Chief B.G. "Pappy'' Bond. They had been suspended during their trial in federal court. Back to the Beat —UFI Telephoto Judge Rules Quinlan Has Right to Death TRENTON, N J. (U P I) - New Jersey’s highest court Wednesday put the fate of comatose Karen Ann Quinlan in the hands of her father, ruling he has the right to find doctors willing to remove her life-seeking respirator and allow her to “die with dignity.” “This was the decision we’ve been praying for from the time we entered the courts,” said Miss Quinlan’s father, Joseph. The 7-0 decision of the New Jersey Supreme Court said the respirator may be removed from the 22-year-old Miss Quinlan once Quinlan meets with family doctors and a hospital ethics committee and they agree there is “no reasonable possibility” of her recovery. AT A NEWS conference in Our Lady of Lourdes School, near their modest home in Roxbury, N.J., Karen’s parents, both Roman Catholics, said they would con­ sult with doctors Thursday. Quinlan said he wanted the respirator to be disconnected in the presence of the family and their priest in Karen s room at St. Clare’s Hospital, where she has lain since last April 15, weighing only 60 pounds. “We don’t consider this a victory,” said Mrs. Quinlan, her eyes filling with tears. “ We are going to lose our daughter, but this is the way we want our daughter’s life to end.” Chief Justice Richard Hughes, who wrote the opinion, said neither the hospital nor the doctors would be held liable on civil or criminal charges because the act would not constitute a homicide. State Atty. Gen. William Hyland said an appeal of the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court was unlikely. “The decision is highly compassionate, and probably represents the consensus of society,” Hyland said. New Jersey Gov. Brendan Byrne called the decision “a sound ruling. The court said that if Karen could “miraculously” awaken today and realize she could never recover, she would choose to terminate her life. Doctors at St. Clare’s who originally refused the parents’ request to remove the respirator may feel differently now because “we assume that she is now even more fragile and nearer to death than she was then,” the court said. BUT, THE COURT said, it was giving new powers to the father as guardian because if the present doctors still dis­ agree, he may be able to find other doc­ tors “who may take a different view.” lawyer for the Quinlans, held a news conference im­ mediately following the decision and said Karen’s parents cried when he in­ form ed them of the d ecision by telephone. Paul Armstrong, Asked if the Quinlans would back down in their efforts to remove the respirator now that the court decision had been rendered, Armstrong said, “I can most assure you that that will not be the case. This is what they have wanted all along. This is the answer to their prayers.” HE ADDED that if Karen’s two atten­ ding physicians refused to go along with removal of the respirator, “The family most assuredly would look for another doctor.” President Organizes Panel To Probe Foreign Bribes B y United Pre ** International Strikes or possible walkouts threaten- »d the normal travel to work of millions if Americans Wednesday and posed a threat to the nation’s economy. Primarily, the labor disputes centered around money. San Fancisco city workers, defying a court order, went on strik e and thousands of persons lost their transpor­ tation. Buses, trolley and cable cars baited. MILLIONS OF New Yorkers, recalling the subway strike of a decade ago, got ready to walk or hitchhike if no settle­ ment came before a midnight strike deadline set by 35,000 transit workers. In a Chicago suburb, under the eye of Labor Secretary W.J. Usery, negotiators for the trucking industry and the Teamsters Union worked against a mid­ night deadline seeking agreement on a new document replacing a present con­ tract governing wages for an estimated 440,000 drivers. Working people in San Franc‘sco already were experiencing what New Yorkers feared Disregarding a city vote to put a lid on some municipal pay, leaders of the city’s so-called craft un­ ions called a walkout Tuesday night. HOTELS FILLED UP in New York City as the transit workers bargained down to the wire. New York City and •1074 U n lttd p r t s s lnt#rn«tlon«l Ronald Reagan went on national television Wednesday in an attempt to pump new life into his drive for the Republican presidential nomination. Democrats met in South Carolina to pick their delegates to the national conven­ tion. President Ford’s campaign committee immediately reacted to Reagan's speech bv saving there wasn’t anything new in it “that hasn’t already been repudiated by a majority of Republican voters.” In a 30-minute taped speech, which cost $100,000 to be aired on NBC, Reagan rattled off a list of the nation’s troubles — from unemployment to inflation and repeatedly blamed the Congress and the White House. “THE WASHINGTON establishment is not the answer. Ifs the problem,” the former California governor said. “Its tax policies, its harassing regulations, its confiscation of investment capital to pay for its deficits keeps business and in­ dustry from expanding to meet your needs and to provide the jobs we all need * * He scoffed at Administration claims the economy was turning around, calling it a common tactic in an “election season.” Reagan said that because of Ford’s foreign policy “our nation is in danger, and the danger grows greater with each passing day . ” “ REAGAN said there has been an ef­ fort made “to suggest that there aren’t any real differences between Mr. Ford and myself. I believe there are and these differences are fundamental. “One of them has to do with our ap­ proach to government. Before Richard Nixon appointed him Vice-President Mr. Ford was a congressman for 25 years. His concern was for the welfare of his congressional district. For most of his adult life he has been a part of the Washington establishment. “Most of my adult life has been spent outside of government. My experience in government was the eight years I served as governor of California. IN ADDITION to pouncing on Ford s domestic aud foreign policies, Reagan again attacked the federal government for taking over programs that belong to the sta te s and com m unities. He specifically cited welfare, housing and schools. Workers strike in San Francisco. —UPI To!*photo Reagan Broadcast Hits Ford Policies . . .. Reagan said that inflation is the cause of recession and unemployment and add­ ed “ We’re not going to have real prosperity or recovery until we stop fighting the symptoms and start fighting the disease. “There’s only one cause for inflation — government spending more than govern­ ment Ukes in,” he said. “The cure is a « »* balanced budget.” HE CHARGED that “the evidence mounts that we are No. 2 in a world where it is dangerous, if not faUl, to be second best. “I believe in the peace of which Mr. Ford spoke — as much as any man,” Reagan added. “But peace does not come from weakness or from retreat. It n n m o e f m m t h p restoration OI comes from the restoration of American miliUry superiority.” Ford s campaign committee issued a sUtement which said “this is former Gov. Reagan’s basic stump speech. There is nothing new in it, nothing that hasn’t already been repudiated by the majority of Republican voters. , i lr,I , _ D .o .- iH n n t WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Ford Wednesday ordered a Cabinet level task force to investigate overseas payoffs by U.S. firms and determine how much stems from corporate corruption and how much from foreign extortion. Suggesting some payoffs may be forc­ ed by “strong-arm practices” abroad, Ford said the panel headed by Commerce Secretary Elliot Richardson , j “ *n.« ....t ir o " lies would help find where “true justice” lies and provide a basis for regulatory policy. FORD’S ACTION followed disclosures by the aunties and Exchange Commis­ sion tnat more than 85 firms, ranging from blue jean manufacturers to aircraft and armament companies, have ad­ mitted or been charged with paying hun­ dreds of millions of dollars in bribes and questionable fees to promote sales in more than 30 foreign countries. The disclosures have sparked official investigations in some nations where the payoffs were made. “While the full dimensions of the situa­ tion are not known,” Ford said in a sU te­ m en t, “ r e c e n t d is c lo s u r e s and allegations indicate that a subsUntial number of U.S. corporations have been involved in questionable payments to foreign officials, political organizations or business agents.” He said the purpose of the Richardson Usk force — which also includes the Government-Planned Corporation Takes Over Rails alone to cover its losses. - news capsules— WASHINGTON (UPI) — Hundreds of freight trains rolled their last miles on bankrupt rails Wednesday as a government-planned corporation prepared to pull the Penn Central and six other railroads into one trimmed-down system. ______ The takeover at one minute after midnight — 12:01 a.m. EST Thursday — was the largest corporate reorganization in the nation’s history. No interruption was expected in freight, passenger or commuter traf­ fic. In fact, little immediate change was expected except for the shutdown of some repair shops and the abandonment of 2,800 miles of track, most of it lightly used branch line. Solidh's Love for Patty Hears! Cited by Defense ment subsidy would be offered and the agency would rely on letter rates The White House said Tuesday President Ford may agree to a modest federal subsidy for the postal service, and a presidential task force has the matter under consideration. Stocks Near 1,000 in Slow Trading DOW JONES AVENUE 1 3 0 Industrials NEW YORK (UPI) — A late afternoon rally Wednesday pushed the Dow Jones industrial average to the door of the 1,000 level in slow trading on the New York Stock ex­ .ie face of concerns over change in strik es at home and war in Lebanon. The Dow industrials, an 11-point loser the previous two sessions, gained 7.32 points to 999.45. The blue-chip average finished the first quarter with a gain of 147.04 points or 17.25 per cent — less than the 24.6 per cent gain in the com­ parable period last year. SACRAMENTO, Calif (UPI) - Steven Soliah, accused of taking part in a fatal bank robbery, fell in love with a “tormented” Patricia Hearst while she was an un­ derground fugitive, his lawyer said Wednesday. In an emotional opening state­ ment at the robbery trial, defense attorney Sheldon Otis said Soliah “did not know the deeply troubled nature of Miss Hearst, and the evidence will show she was a tormented person.” secretaries of state, defense, and secretaries of state, defense, Treasury, the attorney general and other top officials - “ is not to punish American corporations but to ensure that the U.S. has a clear policy” on the issue. “ TO THE E X T E N T th a t th e questionable payments abroad have arisen from corrupt practices on the part of American corporations, the United States bears a clear responsibility to the entire international community to bring them to a halt. “ Before we condemn American citizens out of hand, however, it is essen­ tial that we also recognize the possibility that some of the questionable payments abroad may result from extortion abroad.” He asked it to get the views “of the broadest base of interested groups and individuals,” and specifically directed the SEC to take part in the inquiry. THE PR E SID E N T said current federal law does not ban payments by U.S. com panies or individuals to foreigners or firm s although such payments could violate laws of other nations. liability However, criminal in the United States can result from filing false statements with the Defense Depart­ ment and other government agencies, he said. Recent disclosures of payoffs by American aircraft, petroleum and other firms to foreign buyers and agents have triggered political uproars in Japan, Holland, Italy and other countries. TortureClaim Investigated is NEW YORK (UPI) - The State D e p a r t m e n t i n v e s t i g a t i n g an American yacht captain’s story of the arrest and torture of his crew by Costa Rican narcotics agents, it was reported Wednesday. The ordeal of William Pringle, 31, of Santa Barbara, Calif., and his crew is described in the current issue of Motor Boating and Sailing. According to the article written by crew member Jill Bobrow, the 68-foot cutter “Clover” was en route to San Pedro, Calif., last July 7 when 20 nar­ cotics agents stormed aboard as it anchored at Puntarenas, on Coasta Rica’s Pacific coast. Bobrow said the agents confiscated all passports and physically and mentally tortured three of the crewmen while systematically searching the ship from stem to stern, allegedly causing $3,000 in damages. “The three were released on the fourth day after they were forced to sign forms they could not interpret and were threatened with death if they ever made public the atrocities they had suffered," Bobrow wrote. UPI Tai* photo Steven Soliah Accounting Office Predicts Postage Price Rise WASHINGTON (UPI) - The postal service’s financial problems are in­ creasing so rapidly that if it receives no government subsidy and hopes to break even, a first-class stamp would cost 19 cents next year and 34 cents in 1984, the General Accounting Office said Wednesday. William Anderson, a deputy director in the GAO, told the House Post Office and Civil Service Committee the 34-cent estimate was based on the “*elf-sufficiency concept” for the postal service — meaning no govern- Senate Vote M ay Kill No-Fault Insurance Plan WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate voted Wednesday to return to com­ mittee, and almost certainly kill, legislation to set mandatory federal standards for states to follow in implementing no-fault auto insurance. The bill, considered one of the most important pieces of consumer legislation to come before the 94th Congress, was recommitted on a 49-45 vote. Sen. Frank Moss, D-Utah, attributing the Senate action to lobbying by trial lawyers, told reporters after the vote he hopes consumer groups will pressure the House to approve no-fault legislation this session so the Senate can reconsider the issue. Thursday, April I, 1976 TH E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 3 By DAUN EIERDAM Will San Antonio drop the Big One? The word traveling north on IH 35 is that if the Alamo City does not rid itself of its 28 per cent share in the South Texas Nu­ clear Project, San Antonio may nuke it- self back to the Stone Agefiscally. Our southern sis­ ter's problems lay in spiraling e le c tric rates. In 1974, San Antonians paid two cents per kilowatt of electricity consumed. Then electric bills started climbing, due mainly to fuel costs, and citizens started to cut back on the amount of electricity they were us­ ing. Electricity now costs five cents per kilowatt, and conservation by individual bill-payers continues to rise as well. WHAT’S SO BAD about conservation of electricity? Nothing, under normal circumstances, but San Antonio faces anything but normal circumstances at the present time. The Alamo City currently produces 2,500 megawatts of electric power, but San Antonians only use some 1,400. The city is having some gigantic problems, what with 1,100 extra megawatts on hand and nothing to use them for, but these problems are going to magnify tremendously when the nuke Will the nuke explode in our faces? comes on-line in 1981 and pushes produc­ tion up to 4,000 megawatts. Now, San Antonio is not exactly in the forefront of the antigrowth movement. There are no environmentalists running around screaming about creeks and wastewater interceptors, and the city has taken some obvious steps to en­ courage expansion of both industry and population. An expanded utility policy would therefore fit right into the San An­ tonio picture, but when you’ve already got 1,100 megawatts on hand that you just can’t seem to get rid of, you start having some serious second thoughts. Correspondingly, some San Antonians are counseling a complete break with STNP, WHAT DOES ALL THIS bode for Austinites? Austin currently owns a 16 per cent share in the nuke. Other par­ ticipants include the City of Corpus Christi and the Houston Power & Lighting Co., the project manager. If one of the participants pulls out of the pro­ ject, the other three will have to find some way to make up for the slack. San Antonio may be able to sell out its in­ terest to some other party, another city or power company. But if it does not, it will work a big hardship on the remain­ ing participants. And that will mean that Austin is going to get more, a lot more, than it bargained for, costwise. But surely it would be a simple thing for the Alamo City to find another party willing to take over its share, thus reduc­ ing the risk that the other three par­ ticipants will be strapped with the total cost of the plant. However, considering the spiraling capital costs facing nuclear plants all over the nation, and con­ sidering other escalating costs related to the plants, that may be a very dangerous assumption. Let’s look at the South Texas plant’s recent history in particular: the total cost of the plant was estimated in Oc­ tober, 1973, to be $1,004,442,000. Present­ ly, costs stand at $1,126,000,000. This is an increase of $121,448,000 over two and a half years. Austin’s share in 1973 amounted to $161,000,000. Increased costs to us since that time come to about $19,000,000. Lots of folks think this is only the beginning, while others point out that since most of the plant is now under con­ tract, we won’t face all that much more in cost escalations. However, as Margret Hofmann pointed out in her report to a council work session Wednesday, “ ...un­ til it is known what percentage of the project is actually under contract, and what escalation clauses appear in those contracts, we will not know what can be expected in the way of future cost in­ creases.” ANOTHER AREA OF concern to the potential participant is that of fuel costs. The South Texas nuke is a light-water reactor and, despite the general op­ timism in the business community for nuclear power, the uranium it takes to fuel such a plant is not cheap, and it isn’t all as plentiful as one might imagine, either. Again, we must demure to Hoff­ man’s report: “ ... The South Texas Nuclear Project does not have an assured supply of uranium. Five months ago, Westinghouse, finding the purchase of uranium in the open market commer­ cially im practical, reneged on its uranium supply contract of $9.50/lb with the South Texas Nuclear Project, as well as with 26 other utilities with similar contracts. Westinghouse now says that it is 32,500 tons short of uranium to fulfill its contracts. It is almost certain that the South Texas Nuclear Project will have to compete on the open market for at least a portion of its fuel supply’’ Lo-Vaca, anyone? During the work session. Elec­ tric Department officials claimed that it is not likely that uranium would rise in cost above $50/lb and that, even at that price, nuclear power was still an attrac­ tive option. The Electric Department is convinced that the nuke, in combination with Fayette No. 2, gives the best of all possi­ ble pictures for Austin's electric future. This faith seems to be somewhat predicated on the department’s projec­ tion of a 5.8 per cent increase per year in the demand for electric services. It is not clear just yet whether that figure is pinpoint accurate, and Mayor Jeff Fried­ man has said that council will try to determine just that in future work sessions. On the assumption that the Electric Department is right and supposing the nuke is a vital part of Austin's electric future, how are we going to fare if San Antonio pulls out of the nuke and nobody else can convince themselves that the risks of going nuclear are worth it? Will the cost per kilowatt ratio still look so good? SUPPOSING THE NUKE is necessary for a better Austin, will we still be able edftorjois Deciding ACC’s fate It seems that every time a school board election pops up the debate over why University students should be interested heats up. Then every time an issue like the Harriet Wardlaw case pops up, students are infuriated, but naturally it’s too late to do anything about it. Saturday will bring another of those ill-fated school board elections to students, yet this time the choices are simple: either strive for more progressive educational leaders or remain oblivious to change. Places 4 and 5 are up for election this time, and the terms are six years so the deci­ sion is important. Running in Place 4 are Arthur Brown, Dave Mahler and Jerry Nugent. Place 5 candidates are Will Davis, Steve Ferguson, Ann Grant and Sandra Motloch. (For a story on their views and the issues, see Page 9.) PRIMARILY, TAKING an interest in the school board election should stem from an obligation to Austin’s children. In the coming months, the school board will be deciding on some crucial programs affecting them. Busing and other ways of ending segregation in the school system must be found. New programs for Austin’s growing bilingual students must be in­ itiated and goals for improving the system must be set. In addition, the school board, including those members elected Satur­ day, will in the coming year decide whether Supt. Jack Davidson will re­ main as head of the Austin Independent School District. Davidson came under increasing attack during the Wardlaw suit, and his attitudes toward progressive education remain questionable. PERHAPS THE ISSUE which affects the most University students is the fate of Austin Community College. Many education graduates have found ACC to be a perfect training ground for their teaching skills, and ACC’s night school has provided some UT students with valuable technical skills. Yet there are problems. “Because the ACC Board of Trustees are also the Board of Trustees of AISD, in the past its members have treated ACC as just one more school among Austin’s many,” Mahler explained recent­ ly. “As a result, virtually nothing has been done toward correcting the in­ stitution’s major problems, most of which — poor libraries, overcrowded classrooms, low pay scales — have been caused by inadquate funding.” MAHLER IS so right. If the school board does not soon re-evaluate its emphasis concerning ACC programs, that institution, despite its proved need and success, will fail. ACC was a great experiment and a bold move by the school board, but through its neglect the ACC experiment is going sour. As students of a large and profitable University, we should appreciate the struggle other educational institutions are involved in. Furthermore, we should be willing to help in any way we can to see that such institutions are successful and that every citizen is provided an educational opportuni- ty. In this case, help is simple. Vote in the school board election Saturday and show the AISD that students everywhere care about education. T h e Da il y T ex a n d it o r ."•wrr:.* #.rh* frrrr**. ?:•?... scott Tagiiarino MANAGING EDITOR................................................................. Nick Cuccia ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR.................................. Sally Carpenter NEWS EDITOR............................................................................ Patti Kilday ACTING SPORTS EDITOR...........................................Danny Cunningham ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR.............................................Chico Coleman FEATURES EDITOR........................................................... Karen Hastings GENERAL REPORTERS..................... Ford Fessenden, Danny Holland, Joy Howell, Ron Hutcheson, Beth Mack, Dawn Turnham ISSUE STAFF Assistant News Editor........................................................................Sharon Jayson News Assistants....................Naomi Hallman, Marcie Gugenheim, Kathy Fahy, Karen Barnett, John Unger, Debi Knapp, Jeff Meyer, Phil Ringman Assistant Features E ditor.......................................................................Gail Burris Assistant Sports Editor......................................................................... Tom Kessler Make-up E ditor...................................................................................Keith Hartnell Wire E ditor........................................................................................... Anne Garvey Copy Editors............................................................. Maurine Pool, Bill Cockerel, Mark Pierce, Gary Marshall A rtist....................................................................................................... James Detty Photographers...........................................................Mike Smith, Larry Kolvoord Campus Briefs Editor.......................................................................... 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But beyond that, people wonder about his inner political values. They have no intuitive sense of the man. A vote for Jimmy Carter is no doubt, to a degree, a leap in the dark: a vote for possibilities. But in the many words he has spoken over these last months one may begin to perceive clues to the inner man. In an interview with the Washington Post, for example, he was asked about amnesty. Carter has said he would par­ don all those who fled the country rather than serve in Vietnam. (Why he speaks of pardon instead of amnesty is not very clear.) He has also said that he found it hard to arrive at that position. He was asked why. “ IN THE AREA of the country where I live,” he replied, “defecting from the military service is almost unheard of. Most of the young people in my section of Georgia are quite poor.They didn’t know where Sweden was, they didn’t know how to get to Canada, they didn’t have money to hide in college. They thought the war was wrong. They preferred to stay at home, but still went to Vietnam. A sub­ them were stantial disproportion of black ... They were never heroes, and I feel a very great appreciation to them ... “So for a long time it was hard for me to address the question in objective fashion, but I think it's time to get the Vietnamese war over with. I don’t have any desire to punish anyone. I d just like to tell the young folks who did defect to come back home, with no requirement that you be punished or that you serve in some humanitarian capacity of anything Just come back home, the whole thing’s over ... “ WHEN I ISSUE the pardon if I’m elected president, my first week in of­ fice, I don’t intend to criticize the young people who left the country. I’d just issue a blanket pardon without comment.” There is enough of the man in that to distinguish him from his main opponent. Sen. Henry Jackson is an absolutely known quantity. He has been a liberal on domestic issues, as he emphasizes. But he was Richard Nixon’s first choice for secretary of defense, and he was a last- ditch supporter of the Vietnam war. On amnesty, Jackson says he would seek some way to get the young men back, but not unconditionally: “It would not be fair for those individuals who violated the law to be officially excused from penalty while others, often at the risk of life, accepted the obligation of service.” By ANTHONY LEWIS •1976 N.Y. Tim es N ew s Service BOSTON — At least this much is clear by now: Jimmy Carter is the most in­ teresting new political phenomenon this country has seen in a long time. His appeal crosses some of the old lines of party and ideology. He has coolly withstood the worst that critics could throw at him, and polls show his national support deepening. Lately, he has met and survived what have to be called tough audiences: small groups of the powerful and the articulate in Washington and New York. My im­ pression of one such occasion was that the listeners were struck most of all by how smart Carter was — sharp in his political estimates, informed on a varie­ ty of foreign and domestic issues. IN AN ARTICLE in New York magazine, Richard Reeves said he had found that “many national reporters believed he was the smartest politician they had ever covered.” Reeves, a skeptic, was evidently im­ pressed himself. So have been such other nonsoft touches as Mike Royko in the Chicago Daily News and Meg Greenfield in Newsweek. The sudden realization that Jimmy Carter has to be taken seriously is a little re m in is c e n t of John K en n ed y ’s emergence in 1960. Many established figures had written him off, too, as an outsider of insufficient weight. Then his ta le n ts as a c a m p a ig n e r m ade themselves felt. NOT THAT GOVERNOR Carter is similar to the Sen. Kennedy of 1960. He lacks the disarming Kennedy self- mockery, seeming more single-minded in his focus on politics. On the other hand, he is intelligent in not just the political sense: he reads more, and more widely, than any recent American politi­ cian. Some of the critical things said about Carter by unfriendly commentators have fallen of their own weight. The charge that he is a covert racist is hard to main­ tain when he wins heavy support from blacks. He is no more vague on issues than other candidates; he just refuses to give one-sentence answers to com­ plicated questions. His ability to attract voters of different professed ideologies, while novel, is not exactly a bad thing for a country that has been so divided. What remains to trouble a number of thoughtful voters — a substantial number, I would guess — is something else. A reader in Shaftsbury Hollow, Vt., Mrs. Frank L. Qktavec, put it well in a letter. “Carter’s virtues are apparent,” Mrs. Oktavec wrote: “ Intelligence, tenacity, competence. Still, he is an enigma — not because he’s waffled on issues but because he’s a specimen we’ve never known.” to hold the line when the cost of uranii rises even more? After expending ct siderable length on the problem of fo availability, the Hofmann report unve, this startling fact: “ ... In May, m com panies or agencies active I Australia, Canada, France and Soul Africa — the leading producers or pote tial producers (of uranium) outside i the United States — formed the Urania Producers Forum. They held meetini to consider depressed prices, ne( marketing arrangements and minimur price standards.” In short, then, there? now a foreign uranium cartel, similar t OPEC, just ready to reap the profit when the United States runs out of it own supplies. It is almost a certainty that San An] tonio is going to drop the nuke. There arf presently four solid antinuke!* on the San Antonio City Council, and there is a strong possibility that one of at least three other members, uncommitted at this time, will vote for a pullout. San An­ tonio doesn’t have much of a choice: they’ve either got to pull out or face default. We here in Austin do seem to have a choice, and while all the questions have not yet been answered (indeed, they’ve just been asked), Austinites would do well to look to their future and to question every aspect of involvement in nuclear power. The issue is not just safety now, but the continued fiscal well­ being of Austin. Pentagon's big defende By JACK ANDERSON With LES WHITTEN •1976 United Feature Syndicate WASHINGTON — With quiet efficien­ cy, the new Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has quickly solidified his con­ trol over the Pentagon and has won a bureaucratic battle lost by his purged predecessor James Schlesinger. Rumsfeld began changing the guard at the Pentagon shortly after he moved in. This is an exercise in political patronage that usually causes a great ruffling of feathers. But Rumsfeld is accomplishing the changeover smoothly, with scarcely a feather out of place. SIX TOP PENTAGON aides have been shown the door by Rumsfeld, and at least two more will soon be asked to depart. Five others have shifted jobs in a maneuver that has impressed the Pen­ tagon brass that their new boss will be calling the signals Six new arrivals have moved into the secretariat, and another is waiting in the wings. But what has impressed the Pentagon crowd is the way Rumsfeld neatly out­ maneuvered Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in a bureaucratic power play. to Robert K issinger was hostile Ellsworth, an aggressive assistant defense secretary, who was in charge of “ international affairs.” His office was commonly called “The Pentagon’s State Department.” Ellsworth sometimes clashed with Kissinger over foreign policy. This op­ position had the support of Kissinger's old nemesis, James Schlesinger, who tried to elevate Ellsworth to deputy defense secretary. Our sources say Kissinger quietly blocked the promotion, fearing this would enhance Ellsworth's influence on foreign affairs. STATE DEPARTMENT officials insist, however, that Kissinger simply didn t want another deputy defense secretary. He was opposed for efficien­ cy, not personal reasons, the officials said. Schlesinger hadn t been out of the Pen­ tagon long, however, before Rumsfeld quietly moved Ellsworth into the deputy secretary’s post. Rumsfeld was able to draw on his close personal relationship with President Ford to overcome Kissinger’s opposition. Indeed, Rumsfeld has also had quiet success in pushing other Pentagon pro­ jects that brought Schlesinger under heavy fire. A former Schlesinger man told us with some awe that “ Rumsfeld is out-Schlesingering Schlesinger.” The Washington-wise Rumsfeld, however, knows when to give ground. Unlike Schlesinger, who stood up to Senate Appropriations Chairman John McClellan, D.-Ark., Rumsfeld carefully appeased the crotchety old McClellan. This has placated the irascible Senate appropriations chairm an and has brought triumphant grins to the faces of a few generals and admirals. But the budget watchers in the PAE office have found themselves stripped of power and reorganized into near impotency. “The frustration level” inside the PAE, says a source, “is kind of high.” THE MEN WHO have left the Pen­ tagon, in addition to Sullivan, are Asst. Secretaries Jam es Cowan, Joseph Laitin, John Maury, Albert Hall and Deputy Asst. Secretary Vice-Adm. Earl Rectanus. Sullivan's principal deputy John Christie and Navy Undersecretary D.S. Potter are also on their way out. The defense research director, Malcolm Currie, censured for accepting gratuities from a defense contractor, is also on shaky ground. The six new arrivals, who have moved into positions of power around Rumsfeld, are Asst. Secretary William Greener, Asst. Secretary Frank Shrontz, Deputy Asst. Secretary Lt. Gen. Samuel Wilson, Deputy Asst. Secretary Tod Hullin, general counsel Rich Wiley and telecom­ munications director Richard Shriver. Eugene McAuliffe, the ambassador to Hungary, is waiting for Senate approval before joining Rumsfeld as an assistant defense secretary. Vote in school board election Saturday P a g e 4 Thursday, April I, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN * ^ ''vW M WM/. I, / 1Screw elections ... We like co ups b etter! 1 guest viewpoint South Africa: more than black and white issue southern Africa has some peculiar problems, among which are: I) white minority g o v e r n m e n t s w it h the Africans denied participation in the government, 2) in­ stitutionalized suppression of the Africans by these whites under the racist policy of apartheid — as in Vorster’s South Africa. THE LEADERS of these minority governments refus­ ed the plea of the world opi- to r e c o g n i z e the nion “ humanity” of the African. The United Na tions has agreed on paper to boycott these countries because of their “ undemocratic” and largely “ uncivilized” method of rule, but in practice most of these nations continue to sup­ port the white minority A f r i c a n s o u t h e r n governments for self-interests that sometimes go beyond arguments of economics. Op­ position to the white minority governments by Africans has been outlawed under many laws that send Africans to Siberia-like concentration camps such as Robben Island and to reservations. The Cubans and Russians after the Angola conquest are perhaps calculating that it would be safe for them again to support the just cause of the African liberation fighters in Rhodesia and the rest of southern A f r i c a against w estern-supported white minority regimes. And if they approach this aim with enough tact, the Communists would appear as the cham­ pions of freedom and the West as the supporters of racism and oppression. • B.K. NEHRU, India’s high commissioner in the United Kingdom, observed that the By KW AKU AGBOTTAH (Editor's note: Agbottah is a student in the College of Business Administration. He is from Ghana, which he visited in October.) I venture to write this because I am worried about what could turn into an all­ in engulfing r a c ia l w ar southern Africa unless the right steps are taken now by all the concerned parties. I am concerned about that region first because I am an African and share the sen­ t im e n t s of m y fe llo w A frican s, and secondly, because as a human being who has a stake in this world, I just do not want that part of the world pushed into an un­ necessary war because of the deliberate short sightedness of some other human beings. The situation in southern Africa now is the continuing pressure from the Africans to liberate their homeland from their oppressors just as the rest of the African nations have been doing since the wave of independence started in Africa after World War II. And basically their demand is n oth in g m o re th an the cherished ideal of all free peoples: government by ma­ jority rule. Unlike most state s, however, African firing line Mahler's the man To the editor: This Saturday, we will elect two people, each to serve for six years on the Austin school board. If you have children in the Austin public schools, or if there is a possibility of your attending Austin Community C ollege, or if you deem yourself a progressive who takes an interest in Austin’s affairs, you should vote Satur­ day. Unless you’re directly in­ volved with the schools, the school board usually passes by you unnoticed until iniquitous situ a tio n s lik e H a r rie t Wardlaw’s removal occur, and then you get a glimpse of the inner workings of the school board. However, the school board controls the education of our children, the pay of our teachers, and the progress of ACC; in short, the educational quality of the Austin community. Dave Mahler, running in Place 4, is our choice for the school board. He is a certified teacher with a BA in biology. Seven years ago, Dave far­ sightedly ’’put his money where his mouth was” and helped get Greenbriar, an started. alternative He has sin ce been both teacher and administrator school, P l V S I I * (earning a mere pittance) there. During his campaign, Dave has called for single-member districts, making the school board trustees more respon­ sive to the communities they serve. He plans to provide adequate funding for ACC which would make it a more viable institution. He is com­ m itted to im proving the bilingual education programs and to promoting a higher con­ sciousness of affirmative ac­ tion in AISD hiring policies. We believe Dave’s record of dedication demonstrates his personal concern for big and little people alike. It has been a long time since we have had the opportunity to vote for a progressive candidate of Dave Mahler’s caliber. We should elect him. Vote Saturday. Pat Cuney Chairperson, Students for Dave Mahler Gerilyn Farb David Mitcham Steve Coleman Wm. Chriss UT autocracy To the editor: Last Friday, like vultures, the regents swept down upon the cau cu s of acad em ic of freedom at The University of Texas. With only token input from faculty and students, the regents made a decision to decentralize the nursing system. Certainly it is not possible to say with any ac­ curacy whether this was a sound administrative move. This question needs many m o n t h s i n t e n s i v e cost/benefit analysis. But the regents seemed to think that a week was adequate time for nursing faculty and students to prepare reasons why the regents should postpone their vote. It is obvious that the most generous concession on the part of the regents to hear input from the faculty and s t ud en ts at the F r i d a y meeting was a sham similar to input allowed on other re­ cent decisions made by the regents. If the regents intend to rule the way they want, regardless of student/faculty sentiment and quality of education, why do they con­ tinue to play this thinly dis­ guised game? What is more important is how long will the students and faculty at UT DOONESBURY There goes the neighborhood/ and the taxpayers of Texas continue to a c c e p t this autocracy? John Rosato Graduate Student Nursing Administration Bless our bills To the editor: Federal Power Commission “ Statistics of Publicly Owned E le c tr ic U tilities in the United States: 1971,” gives this figure for the year ending Sept. 30,1971, for Austin, Tex. $8,902,000 - contribution to general funds of the municipality With “ other” contributions of $110,728, the total was $9,- 012,728. This makes it appear that Austin has the best city management and the worst city government in Texas. in Also, it seem s that the ed i to r i a l the Austin American, in the American Statesman, and in The Daily Texan are plain double-talk when they fail to point out that Austin’s electricity cost (city management) is the best in the state while showing that the average electric bill is the worst in the state. The city-manager form of government provides the basis for our excellent police, excellent firemen and ex­ cellent power plant operation. It does not protect us from in­ competence, ignorance, bad judgment, self-interest, dis­ honesty or plain naivete on our City Council — witness Crystal City, for example. Editors, too, must learn their city, and professional editors provide both the model, the philosophy and many of the community facts that a stu­ dent editor must otherwise discover at the expense of his own publisher and of his audience. Spare us the double- -talk, please. Judson Neff GOOD HAIRCUTS W e t C u t & B lo w Dry $6.00 478-6764 2408 San Gabriel ccm JUST CALLET* ANO SAID WE CAN TAKE WOW? CAST OFF TOPAWjJ Il r OKAY, (MUI, WE HEAR? YOU WERS60ING YOUNG LADIES, OUTD CAU POK- W Hfifc UP? NIA TO HUP GINNY, AND WE J WELL, WHAT PO YOU HAVE IN MINO? FU NP RAIS!N 6! SEE, IWB GOT ABOUT TWENTY KIPS HERE RNP IF THEY EACH CHIPPED IN A QUAR­ TER, TUE GOULD RAISE- UM...FIYE POUARSi CP APRIL N FOOL!! H A I H A IM A ! H A ! H A ! THAT WAS IN VEKV POOf?TASTE! * d ess 5 7 D aw n g o d ­ Crossword Puzzler iCROSS nests estm e n t oaks leaven ly iody (alay gib- D O W N 1 L a n d e d 2 N a rro w , flat board 3 P ro p a g a te s 4 E u ro pean c a p ita l 5 T h e self 6 O n e w ho shirks his duty asaH acaaa nan id a i i □ M S U a S L J u aEHBas ae qbd □3D@ BODDE a a a o a a s a a s aaaaa ans Baa s a c a u a a n a a Qua aaa aas sa uasH asos san aa nsaaaa a a l name aaaai raaa a aaa aaSB lonster ath ulflx d h e re n t of and la s se s igher than u rro u n d - l gs h e ones ere rabian eapo rt o le of cate b stra c t eing liver d uck o ss e s s e s lying m m a l ;ause to om bine lymbol for liver ite lle c t o ss e s s e d mdle >asure m p o rary ik s in ddle posit •to of cora te met le t of land ow ison sat L a k e sr green n of fruit a k e n s D I ----------- 7 D is p a tc h e s 8 In c lin ed 9 S ia m e s e n a - 27 C h a p e a u s 2 0 S ite of Tai M a h a l 2 9 S m all 10 G irl s n am e 11 T hings, in (ive Id w 17 Sym bol for tellurium am o un t __________ 3 0 In s a n e 3 2 P rofligate 3 6 For e x a m p le 1 9 C o n ju n ctio n 3 3 T orrid — 2 2 Dine 2 4 T eu ton ic d eity 2 5 E x c h an g e prem ium r< 2 6 For fear that 41 N o te of (a b b r ) 3 7 H in d ra n c e 3 8 W a te r bottle 4 4 0 L ocatio ns s c a le 4 3 A s ta te (a b b r ) 4 4 Organs of sight 4 5 G ro up of three 4 6 P o s s es s iv e Bronoun ratuity 4 7 _______ 4 8 C om pass point F em a le ruff 4 9 5 0 T ear i 2 3 V B 4 T 6 7 T “ 9 IO l l 27 Hr 19 21 36 — ? 32 12 15 l f i i 35 39 ! \ v 52 55 13 16 • iv 29 56 ii: 22 37 L r A n X 40 s i 56 14 17 Si « ■ 23 & 30 24 25 26 p J4 , : v 45 46 J8 v<;:: -,Y, 41 Y i* i 51 54 57 42 43 44 t i 50 47 4 f 49 SOUNDS GOOP! WHY PONT I JUST EX­ PLAIN WHERE SHE STANDS ON THE issues so that.. .FL FLL GET RIGHT ON IT ! A A lh - J t £ n n r HEY, SLUE?! NOTTO THE ISSUES WORRY- WE'VE GOT BLUE?! A GOOP MACHINE H0m! HERE. &MMS AGW: TERI1. N 11—i W—1 I \ i(p$/444d?m^ ICOHLM IA AVIATION announces Priority Service Between Dallas & Austin • Passenger Service • Packages Call Cohlmia Aviation in Dallas Collect for Jan ( 2 1 4 ) 3 5 1 -6 9 6 9 for complete information or write ll 22 Colorado, No. 303, Austin 78701 Soviet Union had always been anticolonialist first in word then in deed. This had profoundly influenced the at­ titude of the newly indepen­ dent world, making it much more sympathetic to the eastern bloc than to the western alliance, “ the wounds of whose domination are kept alive by its support even today of the remnants of colonial and racist power” (The Lon­ don Times, March ll, 1976). Now that Rhodesia is focused in the liberation spotlight, the West is working at what it believes is an advance of com­ munism. And if the black Africans are to be helped again to regain their rights by Russia and Cuba, then it becomes apparent to all why the West would feel threaten­ ed. Perhaps a lot of Americans would better appreciate the African situation is they can understand Africans. E x ­ perience in Africa has shown that Africans on the whole do not want to adopt communism or capitalism from either superpowers. The African society is basically a blend of socialism, communalism and capitalism. When new nations nationalize the industries of foreigners, it is not because they suddenly become Com­ munists — it just makes sense for any nation to want to have economic independence, and it is not necessarily com­ munism that makes people nationalistic. Also Russian guns and Chinese instructors do not turn nationalists into Communists. Africans do not intend to trade one form of domination for the other. IT WOULD BE NAIVE to think that the Russians and Cubans and even the West will give their help to Africans without any strings attached. in Africa has Experience shown, however, that the strings around Communist aids are easy to cut whenever it becomes necessary to do so. Egypt recently asked the Russians to leave. They left without a war. Ghana asked the Chinese and the Russians to leave, they did. It appears that the Africans, whom the West is trying to protect against communism, are not a f r a i d of the M a r x i s t ideologists at all. Or whose in­ terest is the West protecting in the Africa against the Com­ munists? The situation in southern Africa is simply the quest for freedom by a people on their own homeland. It should not be turned into a race war, or “ western w ar between d em o c r a c y ’ ’ and “ c o m ­ munism.” Black Africans do not desire to push the whites into the sea. No matter how long it takes, the African cause will be victorious even without the help of the Cubans and Russians. The sooner this fact is acknowledged by the parties directly and indirectly involved in this, the less blood that will be shed and the more secure the West would feel against the Communists; the easier it will be for understan­ ding and cooperation to exist between whites and the blacks; the West and Africa. THE BRITISH, the United States and all interested par­ ties may consider inviting all in i n t e r e s t e d p a r t i e s Rhodesia, for a conference to resolve the situation peaceful­ ly before time runs out. Jurisdically Rhodesia is still a responsibility of Britain, therefore Britain together with the Unaited Nations could send troops there to oversee orderly change of power to the majority. And this time I hope the policy makers would show enough foresight in their decisions. It could be tragic for both the whites and the blacks — es­ pecially the whites — if the West continues supporting the wrong and doomed side in southern Africa — and that in­ cludes apartheid South Africa. guest viewpoint Crucial issues candidate average pay to foreign countries many times the amount of taxes paid to our government, but he will offer legislation to ensure that the millionaires who run these corporations quit getting away with paying no taxes at all. Cor­ porate America has gotten rich by exploiting the country’s environment and its people for decades. If we do not awake from our slumber, it may indeed be too late. I AM THE FIRST to concede that Harris, for all practical purposes, has no chance to achieve the nomination of his party, much less actually be elected persident. That fact does not make it any less crucial that the students of this University and the citizens of Travis County make a clear statement of their rededication to the principles of in­ dividual freedom and compassion for fellow man (which are not mutually exclusive by the way). Such a statement can be achieved at this time only by a strong showing of support for Fred Harris. Therefore, I strongly urge all students to contribute whatever possible to the Harris campaign. A strong showing in Travis County would at least indicate that there are some free thinking and compassionate people left in this country. Probably Fred Harris will not be the next president. Perhaps it is true that a man who speaks to the real problems we face can never be elected in the United States, but we can at least try to make our voices heard. If not, revolution is inevitable ... By GENE NICHOL (Editor's note: Nichol is a third-year law student.) I write this letter for fear that the students of this University are unaware of the impor­ tance of the role we play in the upcoming Texas presidential preference primary. Never have we been presented with such a variety of candidates and philosophies, but never has the choice been so clear. Not since the last weeks of the life of Robert Kennedy has a candidate spoken to the absolutely crucial issues that face this nation and its people as Fred Harris is doing right now. HARRIS SPOKE at a fund raiser in Austin last week with a clarity uncommon in the political arena. More importantly, he voiced his support for the struggle of the common man in a drowning America. Life in the United States is dominated at almost every level by a group of supercorporations whose power and resources are truly mind stagger­ ing. It takes no great legal scholar to determine that the corporate laws of this country reflect only one major policy; that is, to give the giant corporations a free hand regardless of the ultimate injury to smaller competitors or ultimately the consumer. Harris, and only Harris, has demanded that these giants be either broken up or brought under the control of the American people. Not only will he seek to cure the fact that these corporations on the /The Tomato Italian Food & Drink Unique from Cellar to Saloon It’s a Nicea Place! Lunch & Dinner 16th & Guadalupe 4 7 6 - 7 2 0 2 This monlh aboul a million will do mil and bHV (Ms matazme. Nobody* perfect! Why are millions of Americans going to the d og s in their search for c h eap thrills? Read all about it in the April National Lampoon! What are the slimy, tight-fisted, pea brained moguls of organized sp orts up to in their quest for money and power? What are the greedy, hypocritical, p ea brained athletes up to in their quest for money and power? Learn all the answers in the April National Lampoon! Will Babe Ruth come back to the Yankees? Will Marshall McLuhan and Alvin Toffler sa v e hockey? Will our ath letes be properly fed and clothed for the summer Olympics? Does anyone care? National Lampoon takes a superficial, silly look at the nasty. Neanderthal world of sports! “ the magazine in the know for a nation in the lurch. National lampoon- At magazine stands and stores everywhere. Thursday, April I, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Cream politico! roundup Lo-Vaco Official Predicts Company May Go Bankrupt Lo-Vaca Gathering Co. will have to declare bankruptcy if the firm continues to absorb increasing losses based on costs of natural gas, a Lo- Vaca official said Monday. Lo-Vaca V ice-P resid en t Don Newquist said “buy-sell” in the arrangements made late 1960s and early 70s now are costin g the com pany about $3 million a month. And these costs must be reduced or passed on to consumers if th e c o m p a n y s t a y s in business, he explained. When Lo-Vaca’s supplies of natural gas were running low i v t* , uic a tw e e n IVW ana between 1968 and 1972, the firm bought gas from other companies, Dow Chemical, Amoco and Kerr-McGee Oil Co., at a price of 20 to 25 cents per thousand cu b ic f e e t (MCF). Lo-Vaca arranged to return an equal volume of gas at the same price, Newquist said. But the gas for which Lo- Vaca had paid 20 to 25 cents per MCF now costs about $2 per MCF. And Lo-Vaca, forc­ ed to pay higher prices to return the gas than the prices at which it borrowed, is losing $1.75 per MCF on the gas it is paying back. If Lo-Vaca continues its — — payments, Newquist said, it will cost the company more than $72 million. “If we pay back all of the gas at the rates w e’re current­ ly paying, we can’t absorb the loss,” Newquist said. Until Thursday, Lo-Vaca’s industrial m unicipal and customers throughout Texas were paying higher prices for natural gas to make up the $1.75 per MCF difference. But the Railroad Commission, responsible for setting gas rates in the state, ordered Lo- Vaca to halt repayment of the gas. A hearing to try to un­ tangle the situation will be - held Monday. Railroad Commission can­ didate Terence O’Rourke has said that cities “ victimized’ by Lo-Vaca’s deals with the three suppliers should de­ im m e d ia te $50 mand an mi l li on r e b a t e to c o v e r “fraudulent utility bills.” C r i t i c i z i n g L o - V a c a ’s “ banking d eals” O’Rourke said Lo-Vaca has engaged in a price contracting system that allows Lo-Vaca’s suppliers to make high profits at the con­ sumer’s expense. “It’s a bonanza; it’s a ripoff system that benefits three multinational corporations.” Mexican Immigration Proposal To Curb Costs, Claims Leman t o w o r k Changing the immigration to a l l o w M e x i c a n la w n a t i o n a l s in agricultural and dom estic jobs in the United States for six months of the year was ad­ vocated Wednesday by a can­ didate for the U.S. Senate. Republican Louis Leman told a n ews c o n f e r e n c e , “ Employment of Mexican nationals in agriculture and domestic jobs should exist without income taxes, Social Security, welfare, unemploy­ ment, minimum wage and overtime. The worker wants m _______ to accumulate as much money as possible in a short time and return home to his fam ily.” No employment of Mexican nationals in industry would be allowed except that permitted by present law, he said. A lower cost of living would be the benefit to Americans of a seasonal agricultural labor force, Leman explained. He said Mexican nationals would work for less than the U.S. minimum wage for part of the year because they could then return to Mexico and live t i __ ai___________________________ +1*4* “rather comfortably” for the remainder of the year. Leman admitted that there is a possibility of American laborers being displaced from jobs by his proposal, but he said he did not think that was a good possibility because of a large demand for seasonal agricultural workers. Small farm ers, ranchers and dairymen would have a “ much needed sou rce of labor” to enable them to com­ pete with the large farmers t h a t h a v e a u t o m a t e d A n n r o t i a h a K a c o li operations, he said.. Present immigration law, Leman said, virtually closes the border to Mexicans unless they leave their country per­ manently. O’Rourke also criticized the Railroad C om m ission for sanctioning the arrangements betw een Lo-Vaca and its suppliers, explaining that the commission did nothing to prevent the arrangem ents b eca u se they w e r e good political moves for railroad commissioners. Board Candidate Vow s N ew Viewpoint; Emphasizes Teachers' Professionalism derstand teachers. “ Mr. Nugent has not made much of an effort to find out what teachers need. In fact, if a student did as little in school as Mr. Nugent has done on the school board, he or she would fail,” Mahler said. “The quality of education in our schools depends on having experienced teachers remain in the district,” Mahler said, pointing out that half of the teachers in AISD had three years or less experience at the . _# i _ _ a end of last year. When asked why he was not e n d o r s e d by the A u s t i n A ssociation of T each ers, Mahler said there were only 20 teachers at the endorse­ m e n t m e e t i n g and t h e s e teachers were divided on en­ dorsing him. Mahler cited several ex­ amples of what he said was AISD’s lack of concern for teachers. One group of South Austin elementary school teachers, who complained to the ad­ a b o u t m i n i s t r a t i o n about o v e r ­ m i n i Q t r a t i n n crowded classrooms, was told plenty of t e a c h e r s w e r e available and they could leave the district if they did not like it, he said. transferred In another case, 85 teachers w ere to new schools with one week’s notice after AISD was found in viola­ tion of HEW guidelines in June, 1975, Mahlersaid. “As a teacher, I think I will bring a different and much needed perspective to the board,” he said. The Austin Independent School District often views teachers as commodities — like pens and papers — in­ stead of as professionals, Dave Mahler, a candidate for the school board, said Wednesday. “Teachers are the key to our educational system, and anyone running for school b o a rd m u s t u n d e r s t a n d teachers as clearly as he or she understands the system ’s administrative and financial problems,” Mahler, a teacher at the private Greenbriar School, said. Mahler said at press con­ ference in the Travis County com m ission ers courtroom that his opponent, incumbent Jerry Nugent, does not un- fJaco&UMi M E N S W E A R 2222 G u a d a lu p e O P E N EVERY TH U RSD AY Till 8 p.m. M on.-Sat. 9-5:30 e x p o s e vourself w TOP BRANDS - LOW PRICES a i * ' 1^800-447/4700 Answered 24 Hrs.Per Day 1 -8 0 0 3 2 2 / 4 4 0 0 lllinios Residents Meet and Beat Every Price! S P E C IA L! YOUR CHOICE OF: HAND-BREADED CHICKEN- FRIED STEAK, OR SOUTH­ ERN FRIED CHICKEN, OR MEAT SPECIAL OF THE DAY. SERVED WITH: CHOICE OF 2 VEGETABLES, 2 ROLLS, AND TEA OR COFFEE REGULAR PRICE $ 1.89 SPECIAL PRICE. . . let’s talk it over (^•SSkRSISS. 520 E. Green Champaign, IU 61820 TOWER NO. 2 2120 GUADALUPE Page 6 Thursday, April I, 1976 TH E D A ILY T EXA N You'll Foam at the Mouth Over T h e Dea d ly T e x a n Treatment of the Spring/Summer Fashion Supplement O il SA U TODAY at the following campus • MAIN MALL, by Washington Statu# • COMMUNICATIONS PLAZA • PEACE FOUNTAIN CIRCLE • R.L. MOORE— morning only • JESTER CORNER • WEST MALL • B.E.B. PLAZA • TOWNES HALL— afternoon only and at • TSP BUSINESS OFFICE, 25th & Whitis • HEMPHILL'S BOOKSTORE PER COPY (Tax Included) another publication of Texas Student Publications Rogers, Faculty Senate Fail To Negotiate Council Re-entry By BETH MACK Texan Staff Writer A meeting between University President Lorene Rogers and a Faculty Senate committee Wednesday did not end the University Council boycott, but it was a healthy exchange of viewpoints, Dr. William Livingston, chairman of the Faculty Senate, said. The meeting was initiated by Rogers almost a month ago in an attempt to settle the boycott of the University Council which began after Rogers was appointed to the presidency. “Ultimately the question is adequate respect for the role of the faculty in decision-making processes at the Univer­ sity,” Livingston said. The committee will report back to the Senate next week and then will meet with Rogers again to convey the Senate opinion. “It is possible that the Senate could reach some accom­ modation by the next General Faculty meeting May 4, which would make them recommend resuming participation in the council,” Livingston said. ■ Dr. Donald Zacharias, assistant to the president, said of the meeting, “The exchange was of points of views which are very sensitive at this point. President Rogers is pleased with the exchange of the meeting and looks forward to further talks with the Senate representatives.” Items discussed at the meeting were: • The possibility of obtaining, from the committee ap­ pointed by the Board of Regents to study the University System, “some reaffirmation of the special nature of The IPI I J University of Texas at Austin within the University til :<•/ I : System,” Livingston said. conference to be held on campus April 12. g The committee will meet in Austin next week to plan for a , IF • The selection process and function of the new vice- , ; president for academic affairs. “Our views were close to identical (with Rogers) on tm issue. The function of the new office will be to handle the I day-to-day business of academic life,” Livingston said. W • The presidential selection committee appointed by .. mm Regents Chairman Allen Shivers. “ W e a r e also in close agreement on this, Livingston said. rn He indicated that, if the committee could give some indica- gg tion by the May 4 General Faculty meeting of the direction^ m would take, it could have a great effect on the decision of the j | General Faculty. • Improved mechanism for funneling faculty opinion into . the decision process at the regental level. Methods for doing this which were discussed were to es- m tablish a special faculty advisory committee to the presi- rn dent; to create an executive committee of the * acuity Senate to meet with Rogers on a regular basis; to expand the s p administrative committee of the University Council and gg charge it with the responsibility of feeding faculty opinion into the president’s office; or to set aside a time at the beg1”' ning of the University Council meetings for questions to the Dresident. No decisions were made on any of these topics. meeting was exploratory in nature and not intended for rn decisions. We made progress; how much is impossible tc gg measure,” Livingston said. rn Cosmetics Alcohol Permits in Jeopardy Agency Cracks Down on Out-of-State Owners BY ROBERT VERNON Texan Staff Writer Many hotels, restaurants, grocery stores and private clubs, if they are controlled by out-of-state corporations or are allowing their permits to be used by others, may lose their liquor licenses, accor­ d in g th e A lc o h o lic Beverage Commission. to The Texas Liquor Control Act passed in 1937 states a person must be a three-year resident of Texas to obtain a liquor permit. Also, 51 per cent of any corporation apply­ ing for a permit must be own­ ed by th re e -y e a r s ta te residents. its p erm it In 1969 the Legislature add­ ed a provision to the act mak­ ing it illegal for a company to su rren d er to another person or corpora­ tion. This makes it illegal to operate a business to sell alcoholic beverages under another person’s permit. “The Legislature was trying to eliminate subterfuge when they added that provision,” Luke Robinson, commission administrator, said. “When I came into office last October there were lots of reports of subterfuge,” Robin­ son said. Reports then in­ d icated ou t-o f-state c o r­ porations had gotten control of certain businesses and were doing business under other persons’ permits. ROBINSON SAID the com­ mission has been conducting investigations and is setting up hearings for businesses that are “ captively con­ trolled” by out-of-state cor­ porations or are operating il­ legally un der a n o t h e r ’s permit. “If there is captive control, we can suspend the permit,” he said. “The main question is will out-of-state corporations be allowed to operate in Texas directly or indirectly?” Hearings for approximately 30 to 50 permit violations are being set with more being added daily, Joe Darnall, commission member, said. “This touches about every national chain you can think of,” he said. Darnall said the commis­ sion was putting more persons into investigating reports and the resulting evidence. A con­ tributing factor in the sudden surge of investigations and hearings is the ability of the commission to perform more efficiently because of the re­ c e n t A d m i n i s t r a t i o n Procedure Act. “Our hearings process on any question, challenge or license is now more formal and thorough in preparation investigation,” Darnall and said. “We operate more like a district court.” LICAM INC., a San Antonio based company, is applying for a permit and must go through hearing procedures because of allegations that it is captively controlled by a California-based corporation. The attorney for the Licam company said there was no question the company is legitimately owned by Tex­ ans. “The company is owned by four Texans, and is not in violation of the Texas Liquor Control Act,” she said. Licam is a new corporation applying for a permit to sell beer and wine in a grocery store owned by an out-of-state concern. “If we are denied a permit, all businesses where the ma­ jor ownership of a company is out-of-state will be affected,” the attorney said. Such an action would mean businesses like Steak and Ale, Ramada Inns, Crossroads Inn and Safeway would not be allowed to sell alcoholic beverages on the premises. P e r m i t s ar e ob ta ine d for these businesses by Texas residents who allow the com­ panies to use them, the at­ torney said. REMEMBER OUR PREVIOUS WAREHOUSE SALES? WAREHOUSE SALE W i d e Selection of Discontinued Textbo oks & P ap erba c ks . REVLON 2 fowl Moon Drops Highest price prevails I MARY QUANT ]/i price I Jelly Babies Special Recipe N e w H a r d b a c k s $ 2 . 0 0 N e w P a p e rb a c k s . 7 9 Used H a r d b a c k s $ 1 . 0 0 Used P a p e rb a c k s . 4 9 J* Tremendous savings on new and used discontinued textbooks. I U n b e l i e v a b l e Discounts!!! 5:30 to 8:00 p.m. only I TEXTBOOK DEPARTMENT i At the W a l l h o u s e , in the al l e y b e h i n d the Univ ersit y C o - O p 8 wk pf' >' ' ? / „" i WfaM Committee Asks For Creek Plans The Waller Creek Coor- inating Committee is trying o o b t a i n p la n s Austin rchitect John Robinson drew sr “preserving, protecting nd enhancing the creek.” But the Office of Facility, ’tanning and Construction OFPC) refuses to let the ommittee view the plans un­ it Regent Lady Bird Johnson eviews them. Students saw he initial schematic plans ast semester. Conrad Kroll of OFPC an- icipates the plans will be ompleted toward the end of day. The regents then will tdvertise for bids if the pro- ect is accepted. The Waller Creek com- nittee fears the plans will “become bogged down,” so it plans to publicize the creek wiih tours and mini-cleanups and m ay p a r t i c i p a t e in Budweiser’s and American Broadcasting Company’s “Pitch-in Week.” If the creek project wins the committee must donate the $1,000 prize as a scholarship to the Univer­ sity. Meanwhile, the c o o r ­ dinating committee has walk­ ed the creek and discovered several places where pollution exists. Sunday’s cleanup produced almost two tons of styrofoam cups and tin cans, but the committee also has found petroleum residue and milky water. green plants and cut flow ers at discount prices It has been proven that plants and cut flowers are good for your health and peace of mind — except when you have to pay exorbitant prices. The Plant Shop is having a sale to help you furnish your apartment and home/office for much less than anywhere else and to brighten your days with flowers for you and yours. PLANTS at Discount Prices Scheffleras AW-BW Croton. ..............................................................................................................R o * 2 0 OO now only Chinese Fan Palm. .................................... Sellom. 12 m o t )............................. 0 . 9 I I O O .n d 20.OO now 1 2 . 0 O . n d Marginata 3ppp.4 -6•.............................................. Marginate Character, gi.nts............................. 125.00 now False Aralia ......................................................*‘9 tT ™ Miniature Date P alm ...................................... 10 ' S e to ffs few*......................................................... ROP 100.00 now Rea. 100.00now 6 Areca Palm ............................................... "* All .ix-inch pot. 36.00 R a g . 35.0 20.00 or 2 for 16.00 10.00 16.00 36.00 90 00 16.00 16.00 66.00 66.00 lentar n dwarf scft.ffs, m i . mass.ng.ana canos, marginate, ....................................... . 4.60 HANGING BASKETS ON SALE 8“ Reg. 10.00-12.00 NOW 7.50 SWEDISH IVY BOSTON FERNS IM PATIENS REMEMBER US EASTER AND MOTHER'S DAY PRIVATELY OW NED A N D OPERATED by Bobby and Madalyn Zimmermann ‘Jke P lant Shop FLOWERS at Discount Prices .................... 80* Long Stem Rosas Carnations.................................35* Daisies............................................ Daffodils..................................25- Tulips.................................... 55- .... Stock....................................25* .... Budget Bouquets.......................... Straw Flowers............................... Freesia........................................... 8.00/doz. 3.50/doz. OO/bunch of 20 2.50/d oz. 5.50/doz. 2.50/d oz. 2.26 2.50/bunch ...2 .50/bunch 346-6693 Sorry, No Deliveries - No Phone Orders 11-7 Thursday, April I, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 7 Open Mon.-Sat 10-6 See us at the Plant SH O W and SALE Sunday, Inside HEB on Far West Blvd. Take Mo-Pac North - turn left on Far West exit - VOTE ^ FOR it . i f Inflation Hits Campus Photo by Ron Ennb To pump up support for this wookond#s Toxos Roloys, Frank Hall, Tracoy Hall, and Lls Potts (r) distributo balloons on tho Wast Mall Wednesday. The spirit in­ flators were, naturally, orange and white. for Utility Rates Bill, Linn Claims low c o s t . D e c r e a s e s in revenue because of the reduc­ ed rate could be recovered from com m ercial and in­ dustrial customers and large residential users,” Linn said. Three advantages would result from the lifeline rates, inc lud in g a d ­ she s a i d , minis tr ative a d v a n ta ges because the rates are easy to imple­ understand, easy to ment and require no tax revenue. will help those who most need relief from spiraling utility costs, she said. Linn has not drawn up a scheme for devising lifeline rates and adjusting the rate charges nor talked with the City Electric Director R.L. Hancock about the lifeline concept. As part of her re­ quests to the commission, Linn asked the mayor’s com­ m is s i o n to d e v is e r a t e methods. THE RATES also may en­ courage cons er vation by providing minimal rates for minimal use of electricity and However, she said she would bring her recommen­ dations to the council next Thursday. Si##* 'Lifeline' Charge Would Cut Fuel By DAWN TURNHAM Texan Staff Writer City Councilwoman Emma Lou Linn recom m en ded Wednesday that Austin adopt a lifeline charge for utility rates to reduce costs for lower and middle income families. A lifeline charge would set a flat rate for minimum utility consumers and eliminate the fuel adjustment charge which escalates the consumer’s bill each month, Linn said. Currently, Austin utility consumers are subject to a fuel adjustment charge in ad­ dition to that charged for kilowatt hour usage, she said. IN TELEGRAMS sent to Gov. Dolph Briscoe and five state legislators, Linn urged the governor to call a special l e g i s l a t i v e s e s s i o n to scrutinize gas contracts, to allow the Public Utilities Commission to begin work in June rather than September and to consider the use of lifeline rates for natural gas and electricity. Linn also requested the Mayor’s Commission on Elec­ tric Rates to advise the City implement the Council to lifeline charge. Pam Giblin, commission chairwoman, said that group’s subcommittee is studying the lifeline charge to find a means of cutting utility costs for low income consumers. “ We don’t want to set up a n o t h e r b u r e a u c r a c y , however, and it is difficult to assess what level of electrici­ ty should receive the low rate and really help low income families, for some low income fam ilies are high utility users,’’ Giblin said. IT IS PROBABLY best the commission wait for Linn’s report and the sub com ­ mittee’s report, which should be completed in the next two weeks, and then draw up some recommendations, Giblin said. Because the city owns and operates its own utilities, it could implement the lifeline concept without state action, Linn said. “ Adoption of a lifeline rate would g u a r a n t e e e v e r y r es idential c us to mer an a m o u n t of e l e c t r i c i t y n e c e s s a r y to p r o vid e a minimum level of service at a Young Texans for Ford is having a moating with guest speaker Roger Wallace Campaign Manager, Texas State Campaign for President Ford Burdine 212 8:00 p.m. April I, 1976 Everyone is Inited The President Ford Committee, Howard H. Callaway. Chair­ man. Robert C. Moot, Treasurer. A copy of our Report ie fil­ ed with the Federal Election Commission, W ashington. D.C. 20463. EXHIBITION AND SALE •<«--» eat le l l< e l e r re p re d e c tie e * el I I A S T l I P I E C t S . n# Turqwo*** A S" **' i# « e tr v to m # to d a y t i N e c k la c e rn 9 95 a e c * □ J S a * * ! ’ t w o * « 9 0 M a t t i n g D ro p €a»»*ngs q p .« 'c a d o* Q 0 * p a « 95 O' A d d V to r S h * p p m g H a n d lin g N o C O D N V ' 0%*0 0 0 t% A dd Sam * U » Brown’s main concern is es­ tablishing priorities. “Building schools is a frac­ tion of the answer to quality education,” Brown, a com­ puter technician, said. Administration policies are another concern of Brown. “There is too much secrecy in the administration. I would keep the public informed on issues that are before the board,” he said. Brown feels schools should be more m e a ni ng ful so students won’t drop out and eventually become “welfare participants.” ‘‘More effort needs to be made to educate people to survive in society,” he said. Mahler, a teacher at Green­ briar School near Bastrop, stressed the importance of single-member districts, in­ creased support for Austin Community College and more emphasis on girls’ sports. “We must start dealing with concrete problems in the schools,” he said. Two such problems in the school district, he said, are the high drop-out rate and the irrelevance of schools for many students. Mahler said he is ‘‘com­ mitted to education” and finds it “very important to put an educator on the board.” Place 4 incumbent Nugent is seeking his first full term. He was elected in 1974 to fill an unexpired term. The most important issue that affects the immediate future is c o m pl e t i ng a desegregation plan for the dis­ trict, he said. Nugent said he is not in f a v o r of the c u r r e n t desegregation process but supports a magnet system. This system has magnet schools with special curricula which draws an ethnic mix­ ture of students. Nugent, an attorney, said, “The district needs to main­ tain a high quality staff.” Qualified teachers are impor­ tant, he said. Nugent also supports in­ creased funding for bilingual and special education. A 10-year school board s e e s v e t e r a n , D a v i s desegregation as one of the principal issues. The past board president wants to improve the quality of education in such programs A u s t i n S c h o o l s N e e d ANN GRANT *U. T. Degree in Elementary Education and Speech Therapy. ♦Post-graduate work in the f ie ld of I anquage-1earning d i s a b i l i t i es. ♦Teacher for nine years in Austin public schools. Vet ANN GRANT SCHAAL BOARD.places Md twhv Atm C rent, *905 as bilingual, multicultural and career development. He said he would like to offer different educational op­ tions to meet the needs of children with different goals. Davis also advocates in­ creased participation of minorities and women ad­ ministrators in AISD. Grant, an Austin teacher, believes high schools should better prepare students for college. Students are not lear­ ning the “three R’s,” she said. Grant said she opposes bus­ ing for integration purposes. She also questions the magnet school concept. “The magnet system is supposed to help in desegregation, but we still are not certain what’s go­ ing to happen,’’she said. “I don’t think we can let our children be used as pawns.” Grant believes there would be fewer discipline problems in elementary and junior high if teachers were schools allowed to paddle their students in front of the class with an adult witness present. The parents must be given a written reason for the paddl­ ing if requested, she said. Ferguson, an employe of the Parks and Wildlife Depart­ ment, believes busing for in- t e g r a t i o n be eliminated. He also favors the magnet school concept. sh o u l d Ferguson supports the ex­ pansion of bilingual and cross- cultural programs. He cites racial and cultural tensions in schools as a “ failure to prepare both students and te ac he rs of the cultural differences” between them. He believes South Austin has enough schools to meet its needs and can better utilize the ones it has. Motloch, a tax examiner for the Internal Revenue Service, believes single-member dis­ tricts are required for the AISD. The present system, us­ ing “ at-large” voting, is “very difficult to run,” she said. “There is not a good cross- section of representatives now,” she said, noting that South Austin has no members on the board. She wants fewer students in classes, allowing more in­ instruction. dividualized From the current 30-student average class she would like to see classes with a max­ imum of 25 students. More qualified teachers are needed for AISD, she said. The board has many respon­ sibilities, AISD Board Presi­ dent M. K. Hage said. It can set tax rates and establish educational curricula along with its other duties, he said. “The board determines the philosophy of the educational programs,” he explained. M arch Specials! These item s will be on sale at 10% off normal retail price during March at the Good Food Stores. Good Food Brand All Purpose Cleanser This cleanser Is safe, non-toxic, bio- degradeable and effective. Contains no lye or animal products. Works well in hard or soft water, hot or cold. | This is a low sudsing all purpose cleanser. (Low pH: 6.2 7.2) Arrowhead Mills Organic, Unprocessed Miller’s, Bran, IO oz. Pkg. Saffola Imitation Mayonnaise Contains no eggs. Barbara’s All Natural Sweet Treats Including: Fruit Nut Muffin. Butter Nut Cakes. Sesame and Peanut Crunch, Indecently Delicious __ Fudge. (These contain no white flour or sugar.) o ^ T h e ^ G o o d F o o d S to re s N a tu ra l Foods W ith four stores serving Austin. THE ONLY W AY WE KNOW HOW TO SAY THANK YOU IS BY G IV IN G YOU BARG AINS LIKE THESE ACADEMY'S 37th BIRTHDAY SALE FREE FREE FREE ONE BIC BALLPOINT PEN WITH AN Y PURCHASE Jest la Time far Sprint Paint ami Clean Up WHITE PAINT ladane er Outdoor C om pare at 15.00 Per Gallon Two Gallons for 5# OO Ivory Gallon Guaranteed Special Purchase 1000 LEISURE SUITS BeevtHvl Celery Reveler SSS.OO Valeo Only’I M I Metal or Wood TENNIS 'q BAGUETS 20 Typos Ie Cheese from $2.44 Two Player BADMINTON SET Compart at $3.00 Just *1.44 Choose from Tho Biggest Assortment of BASEBALL EQUIPMENT Bots, Bolls, Glovos at tho Lowost Prices Baseball C # e a t*$ 3 * 8 8 and up Ivy from the Biftest Selection LUGGAGE Says U p To 50% TENTS, TENTS w«».TENTS *9.88 and up Nylon or Canvas BACK PACKS Hundreds to Chaeta From With or Without Frames SUPER SPECIAL! C A N V A S PACK With Frame just $ 6 . 6 6 ZEBCO 202 ROD & REEL Both For *4.88 For Spring Gardening All Long Handle Tools at the Lowest Prices in Town HOE HIBACHIS Smoll, Medium, and Extra Large J SUPER SPECIAL DOUBLE HIBACHI| B u b b e r b o a t s Compare at $5.00 O N L Y*2.88 2,000 WESTERN SHIRTS Compare at $15.00 ONLY *7.77 Men and Boys CONVERSE BASKETBALL SHOES Compare at $12.00 ONLY *6 .6 6 Choose from the Biggest Assortment of METAL GAS CANS &V «• $1 44I • ■ ■ a n d up Cml ^ . . . 4103 N. INTERREGIONAL 8103 RESEARCH BLVD. ICE CHEST Small, Medium, Large, Extra Larga n i l 88 ORDER NOW' arty S I4 * post-paid REELOCK Available only by mail from The Williams Company 370 East 11th Avenue Denver. Colorado 80203 aum 4 6 M e a s lot demits, BACK AFTER 20 YEARS FIGHT I A |\ NIGHT 7:30 PW CITY COLISEUW APRIL 1st Featuring the BATTLE ROYALE • Soft Drinks • Beer $2.00 at Door $1.50 Pre-Gate OPEN TO THE PUBLIC TICKETS AT RAYMOND'S DRUGS Contestants and Bouts Belt No. I S I " 140 lbs WHALES MADDEN vs. 57" 130 bs STEVE GUNN Boul No. 2 S'10" 172 bs GEORGE CARAMEROS vs. S'10" ISS bs BRIAN STARTZMAN Bout No 3 S B" IM bs STAN STEELE vs. 57" 145 bs JERRY HUGHES Bout No. 4 4 0" IM bs ROB REED S'10" IM bs RANDY ROAN Bout No. 5 A T ' IM bs STEVE OWSLEY vs. VT 175 bs RICH ARMBURSTER Bout No. 4 lout No. l l A'3" 115 bs CHARLES PATILLO vs. 4'4" IOO bs MARK ARNOLD S I I " 17S bs REED JORDAN vs. 5'10" 170 bs DAVID JAMAIL Bout No 7 Bout Nu. 12 S t " ISS bs BILL MOREHOUSE 47" ISS bs MAURY FRUMKIN 57" ISO bs STEWART HAAS AO" IOO b s 'lu R l TIDWELL Bout No* I Bout No. t 4*1" IBS bs DAVID LUMPKINS vs. A T ' IM bs RANDY ARMS S T ' I AS bs STEVE MOLLER vs S T ' 15S bs RANDY CARTER ■ A SU i t A T ISO bs JOE GRIFFITH vs. S t" 145 bs DAVID MILLER Bout No. 14 AO" Its bs STEVE BIBLE A O" 200 bs RANDY SMILEY Bout Nu. IO Bout No. IS A O" 170 bs RICK CRAIN A T 205 bs MIKE OWSLEY S U " 170 bs MIKE CONEN A T 205 bs JOHN LOHMAN BATTLE ROYALE 6*0" 190 lbs KENNY MACALUSO 6’2" 21S lbs JAY MINTON S I I " 170 lbs DAVID SIMMONS 6'0" 172 lbs MIKE HOLLINGSWORTH Bout No. I i S t" 17B bs CHARLIE BARNARD S IO" 145 bs FRANK RILLING S IO" I M lbs JACK WOMAC 5*10" 190 lbs MIKE RYAN A 'l" 195 lbs MARK HOWARD Sponsored by Sigma Chi Fraternity Collect a set of Bicentennial C artoon^H Glassesl;;iv;I moRiled with Pepsi B ll _ I SS THIS WIEK: CASPlMl^li^iHH THIS WIIK: CASPER and HOT STUFF 4411 Saudi Lamar........................................ W2-205I 1715 GiMdalufM......................................... 472-1512 5400 luroat Rood.......................................451-3740 Taste has come to light. One third fewer calories than our regular beer, but all the taste you’d expect from Schlitz. It took Schlitz to bring the taste to light. THURSDAY 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. SIG N -U P FOR RAFT TRIP D O W N LOWER GUADALUPE. Sig n ­ up in Texas Union South 114 for an afternoon of excitement. Cost: $6 w ith ID; $6.50 for others. Recreation UT Committee. All Day. A PH O TO G RAPH IC R E V IEW OF HISTORICAL H O M E S IN AUSTIN. These photos were taken during several periods of Austin's growth. Through April 2 in the Communication Complex Exhibit Foyer. Ideas and Issues Committee. I p.m. Sandwich Seminar: THE C O O R S 12 noon to QUESTION. Steve Flores will speak on the Coors question, a discussion of the reasons for a boycott of Coors Beer. Texas (Mexican-American), Methodist Student Culture Room Center. Mexican-American Culture Committee. 8 p.m. Film: THE GODFATHER. M arlon Brando and Al Pacino star in one of the best films of the decade. Batts Auditorium. Admission: $1 with UT ID; $1.50 for members. Theatre Committee. 8;30 to midnight. LAURIE BAIER. Folk guitar. The Texas Tavern. Admission is free. Musical Events Committee. FRIDAY 12 noon to I p.m. G U IT AR W O R K S H O P /S E M IN A R W ITH PETER LANG. Seminar with Peter Long, noted folk guitarist, recording artist, and protege of Leo Kottke an d John Fahey. Dobie Center Conference Room. Adm ission is fro#. Musical Events Committee. CANCELLED. THURSDAY, APRIL 8 8 p.m. TEATRO C A M P E S IN O IN PERFO RM ANCE. The ten- year-old Teatro Campesino, "th e world fam ous Chicano theatre company which began on the United Farm Worker picket lines in Delano, California in 1965." Paramount Theatre. Admission: 50* for C E C holders; $3 w ith UT ID; $4 for the General Public. Tickets available March 30 through April 8 at H ogg Box Office, IO a.m. to 6 p.m. Jointly spon­ sored by The Texas Union in conjunction with the Center for Mexican-American Studies. April IO. BIKE RIDE TO S A N M A R C O S . About an eighty mile round trip rid# over hilly terrain. Riders will leave n om the Cam pus Park (24th and Speedw ay) at 8 a.m. Bring sack lunch and w ater bottle. Recreation Committee. Thursday, April I, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page ll Astros Outlast Montreal, 3-2 Minnesota Nudges Texas Rangers in 11 th Inning DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (UPI) — Larry Milbourne drove home the winning run with his third single of the afternoon as the Houston Astros nipped the Montreal Expos, 3-2, in IO innings Wednesday. The 25-year-old Milbourne, who is winning the Astros' se­ cond base job with his bat, boosted his spring average to .450 with nine hits in 20 trips. Milboume’s game-winning hit was a two-out single which drove home Jerry Davanon, who had singled and advanced on a sacrifice. Joaquim Andujar pitched three shutout innings to give the Astros their third win in IO exhibitions. ★ ★ ★ ORLANDO. Fla. (UPI) — Steve Braun doubled to the rightfield corner to score Larry Hisle from second base with none out in the lith in­ ning and give the Minnesota Twins a 4-3 win over the Texas Rangers Wednesday. Lefthander Bill Butler, who pitched the final four innings, got credit for the win. The fourth Texas pitcher, Mike Bacsik, was the victim of Braun’s hit. The three Texas runs came on solo homers. Catcher Jim Sundberg hit one off Twin starter Pete Redfern in the third inning; Centerfielder Juan Beniquez socked one off lefthander Mike Pazik, and shortstop Wayne Pinkerton clouted one off Butler to lead off the eighth inning. it it it VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI) — The Los Angeles Dodgers, receiving a strong pitching ef­ fort from Burt Hooton, hand­ ed the Cincinnati Reds a 6-1 setback in their final Florida exhibition game Wednesday. Hooton pitched seven in­ nings — second Dodger hurler to go that far this spring — gave up five hits and two walks while striking out two. The Dodgers collected four hits and used a Pete Rose error in the first inning to score four runs off Reds starter Pat Zachary. Dodger o u tfield er Bill Buckner continued his power- hitting by getting a double in the first inning, giving him 14 hits in eight games, with nine of them for extra bases. The Dodgers wound up their Florida exhibition schedule with a 6-2 record, the best mark of any National League team. ★ ★ ★ ST PETERSBURG, Fla. yilMltlHlllimiHlllllllllltNIUIIiHiMHIHHHUIItllltUlllltllllimil DEL P R A D O MEXICAN FOOD RESTAURANT I I SPECIALIZING IN ‘G R EEN ENCH ILAD AS E I § .CH IU RE U E N O .C A R N E G U IZ A D A *N A C H O S § .CHILI P A SH IA E N C H ILA D A S WITH WHITE CHEESE | .V E G ET A R IA N PLATES H O U RS DAILY 5:00 to 10:00 p.m. I i E CLOSED SUN. & M O N § 800 LYDIA ST. •nilllllllllllllHIN HHIim m PM nHIIM M IHIH I en DEL PRADO I E. 7th - 5 Blks A t t a y a c j f ss lltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliilllHlic • ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ E wl w■WwwOwe I W I S S ■ S S S * • IMPORT CAR REP AR.Ne 811 McPhawl 836-6596 WE ARE QUALIFIED TO WORK O N YOUR CAR Orwkmr L u R n n a S w f I m n I I J a • V e lv a • D a tsu n • T o y o ta • t u b a ru • M erced es B e n s H w y I S S 43 Yrs. T otal E xperience • Alvia Weed • Stovs Walsh • Pat Mackelroy Open Mon.-Fri. 7:30-6:00 (UPI) — The St. Louis Car­ dinals bombed Catfish Hunter for six runs in six innings, in­ cluding a three-run homer by rookie Keith Hernandez, and snapped the New York Yankees’ spring winning str­ ing at four games with a 6-2 win Wednesday. Hernandez connected off Hunter on the fifth inning after a walk and a single by Reggie Smith. In the first inning, Don Kessinger tripled.Then Willie Crawford doubled, went to third on a fly ball, and scored on a wild pitch. The Cards got a run in the third inning on doubles by Luis Melendez and Crawford. Evert, Goolagong Move To Slims' Quarterfinals PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Chris Evert of the United States and Australia’s Evonne the quarterfinal Goolagong advanced round of the $75,000 Virginia Slims tennis championship Wednesday with straight set triumphs. to Evert defeated Mona Schallau Guerrant of the United States, 6-1,6-3, and Goolagong won by 6-0, 6-3 from Janice Metcalf of the United States and set a record for the Virginia Slims circuit of winning 12 straight matches without the loss of a set. The previous record was held by Evert, who won ll straight matches without losing a set in 1974. Evert won the first four games of her match and dominated the first set by a decisive margin. Guerrant, who upset Russia's Olga Morozova last week in the first round at Boston, then rallied to win the first two games of the second set and led 3-2. Evert then won the next four games with strong deep hitting and scored with many passing shots. She took the match with an overhead smash. _______________ M EN S WEAR 2 2 2 2 G u a d a l u p e OPEN E V E R Y T H U R S D A Y Till 8 p.m. M o n , - S o t . 9 - 5 : 3 0 AN ALTERNATE ROUTE Peace Corps Vista ’‘ IONLY ■ After Graduation Try an Alternative Route Peace Corps • Vista Representatives On Cam pus April 5-8 Sign up now at your Placement Office for an interview and a packet SENIORS Order Your C a p 6l G ow n Now! Bachelor's may be picked-up now. Delivery cannot be guaranteed after April IO, 1976 Master's and Doctorate may be reserved now. Sport in irtinq Goods % ’ Floor I grou ps including T he Ele ctrom agnets. 47 X Its O w n Weight, the J a z zm an ia n Devil, the UT Jazz E nse m b le a n d others. 8 p.m. both eve­ nings at the P a r a m o u n t T hea tre . Admission: $2.00 for U T ID holders; $3.00 for others. T ickets will be available at the Hogg A udi­ toriu m Box Office beginning Thursday. April 8 a n d at the P a r a m o u n t Ih e a tr e Box Office the evening of each the Musical Events C om m ittee. show. Sponsored by Larry Milbourne tags out Jim Dwyer in Astros' 3-2 win. — UPI Telephoto Baseball Owners Fear Rich Getting Richer NEW YORK (UPI) — If Andy Messersmith signs with the New York Yankees Thurs­ day as a story in the Wednes­ day morning edition of The New Y ork D aily News speculated, m ajor league baseball owners will feel con­ fident they’ve proved their point to the public. During recent negotiations with the players association concerning a new basic agree­ ment, the owners contended that the richer clubs — New York's Yankees and Mets and the Los Angeles Dodgers — would comer the market on top quality players. Should Messersmith sign with New York, the Yankees would thus have signed as free agents two of baseball’s top pitchers within a span of 15 months, and the owners’ posi­ tion will have been reinforced. the ON DEC. 31, 1974, Yankees signed Jim “Cat­ fish” Hunter, declared a free agent after playing out his op­ tion with the Oakland A’s in 1974, for an estimated $2.8 million spread over five years. Hunter won 23 games and lost 14 for the Yankees in 1975. Owner George Steinbrenner reportedly is willing to shell out $1.5 million over four years for Messersmith, Los Angeles Dodger righthander whose earned run average in the National League was se­ cond only to San Diego’s Ran­ dy J o nes . The h i g h e s t previous bid for Messersmith, declared a free agent after playing out his option with the Dodgers in 1975, was believed to be for $600,000 for three years. Messersmith had a 20-6 record for the Dodgers in 1974 and was 19-14 in 1975. The c u r l y - h a i r e d Messersmith, who became a free agent last Dec. 23 when a r b i t r a t o r P e t e r Si et z declared the reserve clause no longer bound him to the Los Angeles Dodgers, had agreed through his agent, Herb Osmond, to a contract. that S h o e S h o p W* make and ^ s a l e ^ SHEEPSKIN RUGS S T SO J Naturel I Beautiful Colors $ 1 A 0 0 I U ★LEATH ER SALEA V ariou s K in ds, C olors - $ 1 . 0 0 per ft. u p goods O B Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin* Texas 4 78 -93 0 9 at 7 p.m. in the G ateway A p a r tm e n ts R e c re a ­ tional Room . 1603 VV. 6th St. S ponsored jointly with the University A p a rt m e n t T e n a n ts Associ­ ___________________ __ a tion. 4-10. T h e Fine Arts C o m m itte e sponsors art exhib its in the Academ ic C e n te r foyer, which is open from 8 a .rn .-m idnight on weekdays a n d from no o n -m idn ight o n Saturday a n d Sunday. Sunday-Saturday, April PA I RIC IA T IL L M A N . Ms. T illm a n , a UT art stu den t, utilizes mixed m edia in her work. Sunday-Saturday, April SHELLEY S I M P S O N . Ms. Sim pson will exhibit her pencil drawings. Sunday, April 11-Sunday, April 18. WIN D O W S O F ART. Local stained glass artists will exhibit their works in the glass cases in the _____________________ foyer. 11-17. IDEAS AND ISSUES T h e Ideas a n d Issues C o m m itte e wiii present a sy m posium on the topic of m arriage du rin g April 12-15. Tuesday, April 13. Sandw ich Seminar: A L ­ T E R N A T I V E S T O M A R R I A G E . A represen tat ive from the U T Counselin g Cente r will sp eak a b o u t the new tre n d s in m arriag e a n d alternativ es to m arriage. Noon. Dobie C e n te r C onference Room. 2021 G u a d a l u p e . Tuesday, April 13. Evening Lecture: MA RI T A L KELA I IONS IN C O M M U N E S . R at K in­ caid. a noted authority on c o m m u n a l living, will pre sent a lecture on m arital relations in c o m ­ m unes. 8 p.m. C a lh o u n Hall UXJ. Thursday, April 15. S andwich Sem in ar: AS P E C ! S O F D I V O R C E . A panel discussion fea­ tu r in g a m arriage counselo r, a represe ntative from the Legal Aid Society, an d the Associate D irector of the Catholic Student C e n te r will e x am in e divorce from several points of view. Noon. Dobie C enter Conference Room . 2021 G u a d a l u p e . SPECIAL EVENTS W ednesday, April 7. Sem inar: I HE C H I C A N O M E D IA C O N F E R E N C E . A panel of "C h i c an o s Interesados in C o m m un ic ac io ne s will their u pc o m in g conference. Noon. discuss T e x a s C u lture Room (M exican-Am eriean). M ethod ist S tu d e n t Center, 2434 G u a d a lu p e . S p o n s o red by the M exican-A m eriean C ulture C om m ittee. Thursday, April 8. G re a t Lecture Series: I HE N IX O N I M P E A C H M E N T IN R E T R O SP E C T D a g m a r H am ilton, Assistant Professor in the LBJ School of Public Affairs, will speak on this recent in A m erican politics. 8 p.m. Dobie Room . 4th floor of the Academ ie Center. S p o n s o red by the UT Interactio n C om m ittee. W ednesday and Thursday, April 14-15. S E C ­ O N D AN N U A L A U S T IN JAZZ FE ST IVA L. T h e Musical Events C o m m itte e 's second a n ­ nual jazz festival features A ustin's greatest jazz t r a u m a Thursday, April 15. SALSA! Salsa, with its driving beat, r e tu r n s by p o p u la r d e m a n d . 9 p.m .-m id n ig h t. Free. RECREATION IO. RAF I T h e Recreation C o m m itte e sponsors in door se m in a rs an d gam es sessions a n d o u td o o r e x ­ cursions. A dditional events sp o n s o red by the co m m itte e are listed u n d e r “ The l e x a s I av­ e r n . " Saturdays, April 3 and I RIP D O W N L O W E R G U A D A L U P E Sign up for an afternoon of excitem en t f e x a s Union S ou th 114 during business hours. Cost is $6.00 for UT students, faculty a n d staff; $6.50 for others. Thursday, April 8. Sa ndw ic h S e m in a r: FLY F I S H I N G . Jim G ri z z a r d will discuss fly - fish­ ing techniques. Noon in T exa s U nion South 108. in S O T A . S t u d e n ts O ld e r T h a n Average is a n inform al organ ization , spo nsored jointly with the D e an of Stu d e n ts Office, which seeks to bring to­ g e th e r persons o ld er th a n th e average U T s t u ­ d e n t's age of 23. Fridays, April 2 and 9. SO IA H A PPY H O U R . Enjoy a n evening of cocktails a n d c onv ersa­ tio n with SOTA m em b ers. 5-7 p.m. at T he Red T o m a t o , 1601 G u a d a lu p e . Saturday, April 3, S P R I N G S H O P P I N G T R I P T O N U E V O L A R E D O . T his trip will d e p art from Littlefield F o u n t a in at 8 a.m. a n d return a r o u n d mid night th a t night. Sign u p d u rin g business hours in Texas Union S outh 114. Cost is $8.50 for UT ID holders; $9.00 for others. Tuesday, April 6. Sandwich Sem in ar: SEX R O L E C O U R S E S AT UT A U S T IN . D r B o n ­ nie F re e m a n , Assistant Professor in the D e ­ p a r t m e n t of C u r ric u lu m a n d Instruction, will discuss course offerings at U l . Noon in l e x a s U n io n South I IO. Saturday, April KL C O V E R E D D IS H S U P ­ PE R . .Students interested in a pot luck su p p e r s h ould call Frances Plotsky at the D e an of S t u ­ d e n ts Office. 471-1201. I he su p p e r will he held TEXAS UNION D u r in g the first two weeks of April, the Texas Union is sp onsoring a n u m b e r of events: the Recreation C o m m itte e is sponsoring two raft trips down the G u a d a l u p e Riser; the I h e a tr e C om m itte e is screening a Woody Allen film fes­ tival; an d the Ideas a n d Issues C o m m itte e is presentin g a sy m posium on marriage. F o r more in fo rm a tio n on U nion events, call the In f o r m a ­ tion C en ter at 4 ” I -3616 o r the Union "Info- F one ‘ at 4^1-474". AFRO-AMERICAN CULTURE T he Afro-American C u ltu re C om m itte e s p o n ­ sors plays, sem inars a n d films relating to the Black Am eric an experience. Friday, April 9. “ F O U R W O M E N . ” The highly acclaimed play written by G lo Dean Baker, based on the song by Nina Sim one an d p e r fo r m e d by the Afro-American Players. 8-10 p .m . in the M ethodist Stud ent Center, 2434 G u a d a l u p e . Admission is free. Saturday, April IO. SP R IN G S H O P P I N G T R I P I O N U E V O UA R E D O . Enjoy a day of j s h o p p in g a n d enjoyment south of the border. ; Cost is $8.50 for C f ID holders; $9.00 for oth- I ers. Sign up in Texas Union South 114 d u rin g ! bu sin e ss hours. THE TEXAS TAVERN T he T e x a s T a v e rn 's hours of ope ration are 9 a .rn .-m id n ig h t M o nday thro ugh T h u rsd a y ; 9 a.rn.-2 a.m . Friday; 7 p . rn.-2 a.m. Saturday; a n d 7 p . rn.-m idnight Sunday. All events, unless the indic ate d, are o therw ise M u sical Events Com mittee. Thursday, April i. EAU RIE BAIER. Folk gui­ tar. 8 : 3 0 p . rn.-midnight. Free. Friday, April 2. LIVE SALSA! Enjoy picante m usic with A u stin's salsa band. Alfonso R am os a n d his O rc h estra . 9 p . m . - 1:30 a.m. A d m is­ sion: $1.00 for UT ID holders; $1.50 for guests. sponsored by THE TEXAS TAVERN Saturday, April 3. H E I E R LANG. L ung is an acoustic gu ita r recording artist in the style of Leo Kottkc- an d Joh n f ahey. He will perform some of his excellent, original work in this in­ form al concert. 9 p . rn.-2 a m. A dm ission: $1.00 lur U I ID holders; $1.50 for guests. Sunday, April 4. MEET I HE SW EET HE A RT C O N T E S T A N T S . P a tro n s will have the o p p o r ­ tun ity to meet the c an d id ate s for U I Sweet­ heart. 7:30-8:30 p .m . Sponsored by the le x a s I avern a n d the R o u n d u p C o o rd in a tin g C o m ­ mittee. Sunday, April 4. M O O R E - HI LL TALENT SH O W . Residents of M oore-Hill tak e over the stage in the third event in the series of resi­ talent nights. 8 p . m . - 11:30 p m. dence hall A d m ission is free. Happy H o u r ail n ight long. M onday, April 5. H A PPY H O U R WIT H T O M M c G A H A . Singer/g uitarist. 4-6 p .m . M ondays, April 5 & 12. SOUL. N IG H T . Join DJ D a n Bailey 111 an d the Soul Night regulars every M o n d a y from 8:30 p .m .-m id n ig h t. Free adm ission. Tuesday, April 6. BELL Y D A N CIN G . Celeila, well-known Austin bellydancer. will perfo rm . 9-11:30 p .m . Free. W ednesday, April 7. A R M W R E S I LING T O U R N A M E N T . 4-6 p.m. Sp onso red by the Re cre ation Committee. W ednesdays, April 7 and 14. DISC O NIGH I. Join the T avern's Disco reguja rs every W e d ­ nesday for b u m p a n d boogie. 9 p .m -m id n ig h t. Thursday, April 8. SE C O N D A N N U A L I AV URN T R I V I A EXTRA V A G A N ZA . In c o o p er­ ation with R o u n d u p Week. the Texas Union once a g ain presents the most trivial experts on c a m p u s . Elim inations will be at 3 p.m. in T ex a s U n ion South room 7. Final elim in atio ns are 4-5 p.m . S tu d e n t All-Stars vs. Faculty All- Stars m a tc h is 9-10:30 p.m. Free admissio n. Friday and Saturday, April 9-10. SPACE O P E R A . Improvisational rock by recording g ro u p Space O p era. 9 p . rn.-2 a.m . Admission $.50 for UT ID holders; $1.00 for guests. M onday, April 12. H A PPY H O U R W IT H A N D R E S CA STIL L O . Mexican folk a n d p o p ­ ular m usic on guitar. 4-6 p.m. Tuesday, April 13. NF.D B R I D G E S . Blue­ grass a n d country blues on m a n d o lin , b ottle­ neck a n d acoustic guitar. 8 p .m .-m id n ig h t. W ednesday, April 14. Film Discussion: PF.NNY M A R C U S Ac R O B E R I HILL. T wo professors of film will discuss F ren ch a n d Italian c inem a, 3-4 p .m . Sponsored by the I heat re C om m itte e . W ednesday, April 14. P O N G I O U RN A M E N 1. Sign u p for the electronic po n g t o u r n a m e n t in T ex a s Union South 114 d u r in g b usiness hours. T o u r n a m e n t will be from 4-6 p.m . A d m is­ sion is $.25. Sponsored by the R ecreation C o m ­ mittee. P a g e 12 Thursday, A p ril I, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N the happy Friday and Saturday, April 9-10. L O V E A N D D E A T H 'Better th a n my P o te m k in !" raved Sergei Eisenstein after viewing Allen's h om age to Tolstoy a n d Dostoyevski. 7, g :4S a n d 10:30 p.m. Jester A uditorium . Sunday, April l l . S L E E P E R . Woods A l i e n s futuristic portrait. 7 a n d 8:45 p.m. Jester A uditoriu m . M onday, April 12. INVEST ICA H O N OF A I his film br,I Cl ITZEN ABOVE S U S P IC IO N h a n d y spoofs the thriller genre, while deliver- ing a stunn ing blow to “ law an d o r d e r " society. 7 p.m . Burdine Auditorium. M onday, April 12. LF B O N H E U R A poetic life, by to a n d sensuous hymn F re n c h director Agnes Varda. 9 p.m. Burdine A udito riu m . Tuesday, April 13. A STAR IS BO R N fuds G a r l a n d s best role as the star with the long ­ suffering h usb a n d . Jam es Mason. 8 p m. Bur- din e Auditorium. W ednesday, April 14. I N D I S C KEE I C a n G r a n t and Ingrid Bergm an are together again in the Stanley D onen social comedy. 7 a n d 9 p.m. Jester Auditorium . Thursday, April IS. I KIS (ANA. A m oralistic tale with (. atherine Deneuve, d escribed bs V in ­ cent Canby as " t h e quintessential Bunuel film of all tim e .” 7 an d 9 p.m. Batts A uditorium , thursday, April IS. HAMLET P e rh a p s the greatest rendition of Shakespeare's c h a ra c te r, p ro d u c ed by, directed by a n d sta rrin g L a u ­ rence Olivier. 7 and 9:30 p.m. Academ ic C e n ­ ter Auditorium. FILMS I H E D E C A M E R O N . T h e T hea tre C o m m itte e sponsors films each night at various locations on cam p u s. A d m is­ sion to all screenings is $1.(X) for UT students, faculty, a n d staff; $1.50 for m em b ers Thursday, April I. T H E G O D F A I H E K M a r ­ lon Brand o a n d Al Pacino star in one of the best films of the d ecade. 8 p.m . B atts A u d i­ torium. Sunday, April 4. THE C O N V E R S A T IO N . G e n e H a c k m a n portrays Harry Caul, a profes­ sional w ire ta p per who becom es the victim of his own occupation. 7 a n d 9 p.m. Jester Audi t o n u m . Monday, April 5. I his glorious fresco of medieval Italian life is Paso­ lini's personalized translation of B oc ac cios lusty stories. 7 p.m. Burdine A udito riu m . Monday, April 5. LE D O U LOS. A no-holds- b a rre d venture into the world of thieves, gun molls, police inspectors a n d stool pigeons, s t a r ­ ring Je a n-P aul B elm ondo a n d directed by Jean- Pierre Melville. 9 p.m. Burdine A uditoriu m . I he Tuesday, April 6. NOW. V O Y A G E R . famous forties tear-je rker wherein Pau l Hen- reid lights two cig arettes at the sa m e time. and h a n d s one lovingly to spinster Bette Davis. 7 a n d 9:15 p.m. B urdine A uditorium . Wednesday, April 7. BANANAS. Woody Al len's searing d o c um e ntary a bo ut re volution ar­ ies in South America, the first presentation of the Woody Allen Film Festival. 7 a n d IO p.m. Batts A uditoriu m . W ednesday, April 7. TAKE THE M O N E Y A N D RUN. Woody Allen's social c o m m e n ta ry about the fru stratio ns of prison life. 8:30 p.m. B a t's A u ditorium , Thursday, April 8, E V E R Y THING Y O U AL I O K N O W ABOUT SEX WAYS W A N T E D BU I W E R E A F R A I D T O ASK. The definitive guide to the joys of sex. 7 a n d 8:45 p.m . Batts A uditorium . SATURD AY M ORNING FUN CLUB The Saturday M ornin g Fun C lub screens a full-length feature film on S aturdays at l l a.m. in Jester Auditorium. I he shows are free. I O Saturday, April 3. 2().(HXMKX) M IL E S EART H. Futile a tt e m p t s to hardbo il a m ys­ te rror a n d havoc terious giant egg result w re aked by a V enusian lizard. Saturday, April IO. D E M E N T I A 13. F rancis fiction F o rd C opp ola's first thriller no less. film, a science i i i Call 471-4747 for a daily listin g of c a m p u s e v e n t s sports shorts McKay Pleased With Draft Rogers Undecided on Refeasing Report President Lorane Rogers had not decided Wednesday whether to release the faculty report on alleged irregularities in the conduct of University athletes, but a decision is expected by the end of this week. Although the report was submitted to her office last Fri­ day, Rogers “has not finished studying the report and will not make a decision until she is through,” Assistant to the President Don Zacharias said Wednesday. “I’m sure she will make a decision by the end of the week,” Zacharias added. The 40-page report was submitted by a three-man faculty committee composed of Dr. Ernest Sharpe, journalism, Dr. Charles Bonjean, sociology, and Law Prof. Stanley Johanson. The committee was created by Rogers during the Christ­ mas break when it was reported that several UT athletes accepted money from the Texas Senate last summer for work they did not perform. Prof. J. Neils Thompson, chairman of the University Athletic Council, conducted a separate investigation on behalf of the Southwest Conference and the NCAA, and his 300-page report was also forwarded to Rogers last week. Thompson’s report also was forwarded to the SWC and the NCAA. , Indiana's Benson To Miss Olympics BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI) — Indiana University All- America center Kent Benson said Wednesday he probably will by-pass the 1076 Summer Olympics because of an operation to correct an injury to his left wrist. Benson, who Monday night was named the NCAA tourney’s Most Valuable Player, said he would fly to California Friday for the operation. The 6-11 native of New Castle, Ind. said he had dreamed of playing in the Olympics since he was a youngster. “ It’s a big thing to me,” he explained. “I ve dreamed of playing in the Olympics. But I have to think of my future. There’s just no way.” Jane frederick Wins Pentathlon SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UPI) - Jane Frederick, 23, Goleta, Calif., broke her own American record in the women’s pentathlon for the third straight year Wednesday, scoring 4,732 points in a two-day competition at UC Santa Her previous record was 4,676 points set at the national AAU championships last year at Los Alamos, N.M. She started out the meet by winning the 100-meter hurdles in 13.1 seconds, the second fastest time ever run by an American woman. The American record is 13 flat set by Patty Johnson in 1072. She then recorded marks of 49-l%in the shot put, ^9V4in the high jump, 10-11 in the long jump and 24-1 in the 200- meter dash. She won every event but the shot put, which was taken by Pan-American Games pentathlon champion Diane Jones of Canada. Douglas SEC's Top Senior Player BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) - Center Leon Douglas, who led Alabama to three Southeastern Conference basketball crowns, has been picked by SEC sports information direc­ tors as the conference’s top senior last season. Douglas, the Crimson Tide’s alltime leading scorer, was tabbed by the information directors in a poll conducted by the Birmingham Post-Herald. Others cited by the information directors of the IO SEC schools were Tennessee’s Ernie Grunfeld, junior of the year; Vol teammate Bernard King, top sophomore of the season; and Alabama guard Reginald King, freshman of the year. Boston Teacher To Stage AH Fight BOSTON (UPI) — Boston’s Helen Hall seems convinced she ll be in the driver’s seat for the upcoming Muhammad Ali-Ken Norton fight, wherever and whenever it is held. The Boston schoolteacher says that outside of one signature, by Ali’s manager Herbert Muhammad, nothing has been finalized. But Hall promised a room-full of newsmen Wednesday that the contract for the fight would be signed in two weeks, and she’d be running it. “I definitely have the fight,” she said. “ We already have an agreement with Herbert Muhammad and as soon as things get straightened with (promoter) Don King, then things will get rolling.” There are several problems to be solved. High on the list is finding a location. Hall said she wants the fight in Boston but her main investor likes New York better. , NEW YORK (UPI) - John McKay, never one to be b a s h fu l w ith h is m any successes, sat in a corner of the cramped little hotel room with an expensive cigar and as priceless a smile. He had just completed the 10-hour ordeal of stocking the two incoming National Foot­ ball League expansion teams and he was quite pleased with his day’s work, it was obvious, by the way he talked of the 39 selections which would form the nucleus of his Tampa Bay Buccaneers. “Doug Swift — he’s only 27 — he’s started on a couple of Super Bowl championship teams,” recited McKay. “ Bob Moore — he’s 27 — he’s started for Oakland and you know how good Oakland is. These are quality players. They can play four, five, six, seven, maybe eight seasons for us. “WE PICKED a pretty good basic roster,” he added. “The players available were of a higher caliber than we had ex­ pected.” Sw ift was one of two linebackers McKay plucked from the Miami Dolphins (Bruce Elia was the other) while Moore was one of three Raiders with which the Buc­ caneers came away. McKay was not the only first year coach wearing a smile after the selections Tuesday. Jack Patera, the defensive the M innesota baron of Capital Draws Coaches Tonite FREEDOM EXPRESS at the B O O N D O CKS CLUB ■ * ... • —IAU Vikings who is credited with building the Vikes’ dreaded front four, also landed a few fo r h is S e a t t l e g e m s G oshaw ks LINEBACKER Mike Cur­ tis, a four-time Pro Bowl par­ ticipant and the MVP in the Baltimore Colts’ Super Bowl victory over Dallas, will spearhead the Seattle defense. Don Hansen, a five-year starter for Atlanta, and Ken Geddes, a three-year starter for Los Angeles, join him behind the line. Al Matthews, a four-year regular safety for Green Bay, will provide secondary stabili­ ty — something for which Ed­ die McMillan, a starter for all but four games in his three- ...uh tho i oo year career with the Los Angeles, will also be responsi­ ble. Seattle added former All- Pro tackle Norm Evans from Miami, wide receiver Sam McCullom from Minnesota, linebacker Ed Bradley and defensive back Dave Brown from the world champion Pittsburgh Steelers and run­ ning back Bill Olds from Baltimore. PATERA ALSO claimed the only two quarterbacks in the draft, Neil Graff of New England and Gary Keithley of St. Louis. “They are two, fine young quarterbacks,” Patera said, “But we are open. We have not even taken the field as a team vet. I can’t sav who r team yet. I can’t say who my starting quarterback will be. In addition to Moore, Tam­ pa grabbed two links of Oakland’s very potent ground game, Harold Hart and Louis Carter. Hart excels as a kick return specialist, as evidenc­ ed by his NFL-high 102-yard kickoff return against the Dolphins last season. MCKAY CAME up with the b est d efen siv e lin em an available — Pat Toomay of Buffalo — plus former Green Bay first round draft choice Barry Smith, a wide receiver; 12-year veteran defensive back Jim Kearney of Kansas City; and backup offensive linem an Dave R eavis of Pittsburgh. TEXAS U N IO N The University of Texas at Austin in conjunction with the Center for M exican Am erican Studies presents EL TEATRO CAMPESINO in performance of "El Fin del Mundo t i Thursday, April 8, 1976, 8 p.m. Paramount Theatre 50' with CEC Optional Services fee or Season Ticket $3.00 with UT I.D. $4.00 General Public Tickets go en sale Tuesday, March 30 Hogg Box Office, IO a.m. - 6 p.m. No cameras or tape recorders Present CEC ID's at door For CEC Tickets A 4th & Brazos (Behind Greyhound BusJ 478-0380 But) 478-0380 A [ • • • • • • • • • • • •El T w irp '. Fin d .l M undo' I. q u it. ph.ntw m .floric. full of m u .ic . n d d a n cin g „ j In w h i c h t h . principals sco re each other like c o n s plsyinQ tho dozens. — Th# U s A n g e le s Tim do, it would be to our advan­ tage to play them at the same time,” said Coach William Morris of Roman Catholic High in Philadelphia. ROUNDING OUT the squad ara Tyrone Ladson of New York, Mike O’Koren of Jersey City, N J., and Ron Perry of West Roxbury, Mass. The metro squad features an excellent backcourt, but little size. Clyde “The Glide” Austin of Maggie Walker High in Richmond, Va., and Jo Jo Hunter of Mackin High in Washington will probably start at guard, backed by Mike Lyles of Riverdale, Md., Chris Scott of Fairfax, Va., and Tony Ellis of Hyattsville, Md. NOW OPEN I 0 a m - 2 a m Mr. Peepers Bookstore " y o u r full service n e w s s t a n d ' ' 2 13 E. 6th St. Books • M a g a z i n e s • P a p e rb ac k s A l s o a C o m p l e t e A d u l t S e c t i o n 25c Peep Shows University Underwater Society presents an Underwater Movie by Al G id d in g s "TW ILIGHT REEF" 8 p.m. Tonight ULM 4.102 Admission Free CUSTOMIZE YOUR OWN PARTY g g m m m m m ------------ — _ at Lock. S t o c k & Barrel We will pro v id e s p e c i a l a r r a n g e m e n t s for yo ur gr o u p at s p e c i a l pric es. Tonite-Sat. TOW IES VAN ZANDT with M IC K E Y WHITE and REX BELL Sunday BENEFIT FOR THE CONTINENTAL WALK FEATURING THE JAZZMANIAN DEVILS Ar A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A - RALLY FOR SHERIFF Raymond Frank April I st, 8 Entertainment by the GARDNERS (m b. 606 Maiden Lane * 453-9038 ■JSM* ’★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A ROUND-UP /s Still Taking Applications for ROUND-UP CARNIVAL BOOTHS CALL 476-8616 from 1-5 pm For further information I.F.C. U T S IL V E R SPU RS in cooperation with ON ST A G E OF T E X A S P R E SE N T C a ll for In fo r m a t io n 451-7521 2 7 0 0 VV A n d e r s o n I.ane in The V illa g e u r n (GUADALUPE LOCATION ONLY) . THURSDAY & SU N D A Y SPECIALS WAYLON JENNINGS Balcones Fault & Uranium Savages P f/. Bugs Henderson & Hotcakes Sat. B rian Auger and the Oblivion Express Sun. Robert Palm er f) ti I CHICKEN FRIED STEAK l a r g e c h i c k e n f r i e d STEA K. BU TTERY B A K E D PO TATO OR F R E N C H FRIES. HOT T E X A S TOAST, A N D C R IS P T O S S E D SA LA D . ALSO CHOP s t e a k d in n e r M S M SIRLOIN HT 2815 GUADALUPE 478-3560 A L S O A P P E A R IN G A M A Z IM RHYTHM ACES Reserved Seats $4, $5 G R E G O R Y G YM T I C K E T S a v a i l a b l e A T : J o s k e ' s , Inner Sanctum, UT Co-op On Stage of Texas (Ticket Office) FRIDAY, A P R IL 2 * 8 P M Thursday, April I, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 13 LANDOVER, Md. (UPI) - With the recruiting season in full swing, the usual herd of college basketball coaches arrived Wednesday for one of the nation’s premier high school all-star games, the Capital Classic. Among coaches on hand for Thursday night’s fourth an­ nual classic will be Bobby Knight of Indiana, whose team capped a 32-0 season Monday night by beating Big IO rival Michigan in the NCAA championship game. Knight has signed two members of the U.S. All-Star Team, 6-11 center Derek Holcomb of Richwoods High School in Peoria, 111., and 6-5 forw ard Butch C arter of Middletown (Ohio) High. “ We could also be in ­ terested in several other players in the game,” said Knight. THE U.S. team, which wiil meet a team from Maryland, virginia and the District of Columbia, also contains two talented guards from Male High in L ouisville, Ky., Darrell Griffith and Bobby Turner, as well as Rich Bran­ ning of Marina High in Hun­ tington Beach, Calif. “ B ecause G riffith and Turner have been teammates so long and know by instinct what each other will probably THE DEADLY TEXAN IS OUT TODAY A LL OVER CAMPUS! • Buy One at any of the various campus locations only 25' PER COPY (Tax Inc.) ICs Hilarious! Thru Saturday MUDDY Cn M " W AHR* and Special Guests A n t o n e ’8 6H«and h w LAST d a y CARY GRANT IRENE* DUNN in THE AWFUL TRUTH DoRghtfvl, silly comedy that only Cary Grant can do thro r. Consiaorod by many to bo battar than "Bring­ ing Up Baby." DAILY 6 /7 :4 0 /9 :2 0 Adults 1 .5 0 Children 1 .0 0 4 7 2 -5 4 1 2 nonhero// / I X 454-5147 N O R T H C R O S S M A L L ! ^ a n d e r s o n A B U R N E T ] ^ — — - — r G E N E R A L C I M E M A T H E A T H E S CAPITAL PLAZA 4 5 2 -7 6 4 6 • I H 35 NORTH 12:45-2:30-4.15 6:00-7:45-9:30 I Gene Madefine M arty FeWman W i U ^ I C a h n B P bo^ ’I - 9 I 2:15-2:35-4:55-7:20-9 ^ OPEN l l C A E U a n d IG U E A F C E* played by IAMES BROUN and JAL CIAYBUHGM I INCA mm I W M ® * * * * H I G H L A N D M A L L 4 5 1 - 7 3 2 6 - I H 3 5 A T K O E N I G I N . . O _ _____ . J S .V fE S '5’ O' l2 - 2 - 4 - 6 -8 .IO O P E N ,,4 5 'b — ^ _ anon gouid DIANE KEATON .Mu I W ill, I W ill... For Nom ® - t i s i. o o R f A T P A U SEATS H a i theatre a l l s h o w s 7 1 * C O N G R E S S 4 7 2 - 3 8 2 1 I ACADEMY AWARD WINNER l l BEST DIRECTOR—MIKE NICHOLS m iBB? — j THE GRADUATE ^ / B it . ■mal H H l(nowledp||| 7 0 0 IO 15 TEXAS LADY 411W. 24th Tonite RON LLOYD No Cover Charge Homed-Cooked Food Served 11 am-2am 2900 Rio Oronde 476-6111 Tonight Jo# Bob's B ar & Grill# B and I W X S O U T H S I O e J J g g g ^ B B B b io i o fw a o ra l H j ^ j ^ M U R T ^ f f B ilic n u i CO-FEATURE THE STORY OF HOW SHE BECAME MKTV MARILYN MONROE BOWE J BURT CTBIX REYNOLDS SI RPI BRD p e n s BOOOANOVKtrS S H D U U T D l U n NOT SINCE ‘ROSEMARY’S BABY”...! Pray for the Devil Within Her before it preys on you! J O A N EILEEN C O L L IN S ATK INS RALPH . D O N A L D BATES PLEA S E NC E V . N “ T H E L D E V IL Z W IT H IN ' H E R ” Color prints W.» M a i > >oI PIUS CO-HIT AM AMERICAN IMTERMATIONAL RELEASE "Marie of Hie DraL t a t ll" Tie mn wit Wien himM S L IS TwMJN 9mm MSIIX* Jama$ Coburn Susannah York in "STRIDERS" TONITE THI OZZII MOON BAND $1.25 PITCHERS N O COVER A ll KNITS SUNSHINE'S PARTY 2610 Guadalupe THURS. CEDAR FROST hi. SHOES f formerly Hand A Mouth) 472-0078 CHIU’S Chinese Restaurant (k maturing Gen*!*# C h in a r CmMse) DINE IN OR CARRY OUT WINE AND BEER 73IO BURNET RD. OPEN DAILY SUN-THURS rn A SAT 11 OOem-t 80pm ll 00 MOTI Reincarnation », 4 \ U t A Peter • v Proud %* ' MICHAEL SARRAZIN JENNIFER O NEILL MARGOT KIDDER CORNELIA SHARPE M ION IG H TER GLENDA IACKSON MICHAEL CAINE HELMUT BERGER T h e R o m a n t i c E n g l i s h w o m a n 1 :2 0 -3 :3 0 -6 :4 0 -7 :6 0 -1 0 :0 0 R ENE WILDER M IO N IG H TER ISABELLE ADJANI “BEST ACTRESS OF THE YEAR” —ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION —NEW YORK FILM CRITICS —n a t io n a l s o c ie t y q s * " ' i , c r it ic s -NATIONAL BOARD O f ENOS X ISABELLE ADJ AW rn a fttm by f r a n c chs TRUFFAUT p c t ° ° * y T H E S T O g j T V I L L A G E a 7>CO*NM*SON 4S! HSJ FEATURES- a 30-10 16 r I ^ ■ aw aro NOMINATIONS A I d e g e n e r a t e IP film , w ith d ig n ity s t a r r in g ICHARD DREYFUSS g RICHARD DREYFUSS -INSERTS”--jessicah a rp e r BOB HOSKINS • VERONICA CARTWRIGHT • STEPHEN DAVIES J -AT BOTH THEATRE 5:00-7:20-6:40 f f c For the price af a mmrk7 WM Ii fed bite a nillioo W J l i m REDUCED PRICES TIL *0 0 MON—FRI "VF% 4 T T E X A S . HURRY $1.50 HH 790 O R IN 6:30 FIRST HA. AT 7KW 6400 Burnet Road — 465-6933 Love in the greatest adventure o f all. SEA N CONNERY COLUMBIA PIC TUB ES J"J BASTAS P1CTUBES | * r w « AUDREY HEPBURN - "ROBIN A N D M ARIAN" a RICHARD LESTER to m ___ ROBERT SHAW g a • ..RICHARD HARRIS as R*rhard the L»on heart C STARTS T O M O R R O W ^ H A TW H TIDES *rlS-Uc15 She made lite more wonderfully precious FIATURI TIM*: 14 0 -2:45-4 :30-6: 15-4 * 54:50 F C H O E S I^ O F A ^ J U M M E H that w ill linger in your heart forever! A CINE ARTISTS OK PICTURES RELEASE (PG DOORS OPEN 1:30 $1.50 til 6:00 FEATURES 1:40-3:20-5:00 6:40-8:20-10:00 ONE WEEK ONLYI T R A N S * T E X A S BZZ The K in g o f the Cowboys B O T S O D E R S . s u n A PENLAND PRODUCTION Produced By TIM PENLAND Color By TectmeoKxa r n * TW A N S ★ TEXANT OPEN 12:30 12 :4 5 4 4 0 5: 15- 7 :45-1690 Reduced P r k t t til 5-JO (IlM L-Set.) 12200 Hh m cIi Dfflft-4536641 M S ACADEMY AWARDS ■ Including ★ B IST PICTURE ★ B IST AC TO R IlggH HBBBBi ★ B IST D IRECTOR ★ B IST ACTRESS ★ B IS T S C R EEN P LA Y - N ^ ■ 1 N i c h o l s o n aa e a s tm a n c o lo r IPG; An ATLAS FILMS Release # d b S S S S n b t Page 14 Thursday, April I, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN T H E G A M E S T E E N A G E R S P L A Y . Jester Auditorium 790 and 990 p.m. Admission: $1.25 A Service of the R-T-F D ept MVMDOOtOB AN I PC RELEASE JarMMfmt loom , fo e to rs * tore, ttmOamt* o f Urn. PIUS— “SWINGING WIVES"(R) ■ T R A N S t ^ E X A S | f i u ^ T ^ r T » T u r n r OPEN 5:45 • $1.75 til 6:15 FEATURES 6:10490-f-3« N M B SC R EE N S FHI muss, rn OOM vat* DOW MALI 477 1124 I The bronc buster and the kid were looking for a home THEY FOUND 208,000 ACRES OF TROUBLE! ■ m e te MMU el ft* M U * aba* j *%T.‘ " ""n rn. iv — Th* G*rnth*im Collector The im agination of Lewis Carroll created the fictional world of "Alice's Adventures in W onderland" for his young friend Alice Liddell. Feminist and former Playboy bunny Gloria Steinem leaves the N ew York Supreme Court Building in this 1963 photo by Ed McKevitt. Steinem had been served with a subpoena after writing an expose on Playboy bunnies. — Th* N *w York Journal American C o action Photo Collections Rich in History By STEVE SPEIR The increasing popularity of photography as a hobby recently inspired a tongue-in-cheek assignment for a beginning photography instruc­ tion class on campus. Their assignment was to take pictures of anyone they could find on the Drag who wasn’t carrying a cam era. In replacing baseball as the national pastime, photography has spawned a dozen publications and fueled a billion-dollar-a-year industry in photo equipment sales. The increasing value of the University photographic collections reflects this growing interest and recognition of what has become the world’s most popular hobby. The value of University photographic collections, including the notable Gernsheim Collection, has “ in­ creased tenfold since its acquistion in 1963, ac­ cording to Joe Coltharp. photography collection curator. Containing more than 150,000 photographs, 6,- 000 books and journals and 1,600 pieces of an­ tique equipment, the Gernsheim Collection is con sidered one of the m ost sig n ifican t photographic collections in the world. C o lth arp and r e s e a r c h a s s o c ia t e Roy Flukinger agree that the collection is now worth several million dollars, but they are reluctant to place an exact value on the holdings. “ The only way to arrive at an exact figure would be by placing it on auction. No one has money enough to buy the whole thing, and it would never be sold on a piecemeal b asis,” Coltharp said. In explaining this increase in value Flukinger said, “ An unprecedented boom in art circles has occurred. Art collectors and speculators have a c c e p te d p h otograp h y a s an a r t fro m . Photography has been the bastard child of art because it used a mechanical process to record an im age.” Flukinger said photography market prices haven’t settled. “ We have some 200 original Julia Margaret Cameron prints from the Vic­ torian era and several of her published albums. Three years ago a single print of hers went from $200 to 6500 at auction. Two years ago it climbed to $2,000 a print. Then last year it dropped to around $800 Now it has jumped back to $2,500 each in a recent auction,” he said. Prints and negatives by Ansel Adams, Cecil Beaton, Henry Cartier-Bresson, Bill Brandt, Man Ray, Walker Evans and Edward Weston enable the collection to trace the evolution of photography as an art form. While its main use is for information on photographic history, the collection is a valuable source for research in com m unication, history, architecture and literature, as well as science and technology. Helmut and Allison Gernsheim of London assembled the collection hoping it would be the nucleus of a British museum of photography, but when government support failed to appear, the Gernsheims brought it to America. In 1963, Chancellor Harry Ransom bought the collection saying it was a “ very logical comple­ ment to the University’s resources for the study of life in the 19th and 20 Centuries.” The collec­ tion is on the sixth floor of the Harry Ransom Center. The most valuable of the 500 cam eras in the Gernsheim Collection is an 1861 Thomas Sutton wet-plate panoramic cam era. A Norwegian collector recently paid $24,255 for the sam e model in a London auction. The cam era had never previously sold for more than $1,900. . Coltharp stressed that many factors deter­ mine value. A photograph might be lacking in ar­ tistic or print quality but might be valuable because of the historical or social significance of the image. “ You have to collect two w ays,” he said. “ We have a Contax 35mm that is a fairly common cam era from the 1930s that in itself is not valuable, but it assum es great importance because it belonged to the famous photographer Russell Lee. ” Pointing to an inexpensive plastic Brownie few snapshot cam era, Coltharp said, “ A cam eras here wouldn’t bring 25 cents in a age sale, but we need them to show the evolution of the cam era. . “ Our goal now is to try to fill in the historical and geographical areas where we are lacking, he continued. “ We try to determine what to buy and what to accept based on whether or not it will support research.' At present the collection is serving scholarly as well as popular publications. The collection recently provided Scientific American a picture of Queen Victoria and all her descendants, and the Encyclopedia Britannica received a copy of a photograph of an effigy of Edward II. The American Studies program at Yale Recently requested photos of mules for a pack animal study. “ We were able to send them 125 different photos,” Coltharp said. Research currently being done in the collec­ tion ranges from graduate students quietly working on their theses to an author from Toron­ to who is preparing a book on Lewis Carroll. The original collectors considered their most im p o rta n t find the r e d is c o v e r y of the photographic works of Carroll. These works in­ clude a picture of the young girl for whom he wrote "A lice’s Adventures in Wonderland” and other children’s books. Carroll (pseudonym for the Rev. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) had photography as a hobby, and his albums included pictures of Victorian era celebrities, among them literary figures such as Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Christina Rossetti. Coltharp considers any photograph taken after 1920 as contemporary and is interested in adding it to the contemporary photograph collection. “ We can’t recognize the great photographers of our e ra ,” he said. “ There are just as many great photographers today a s there were in the 1880s, but their work won’t be appreciated until it gets older.” He just recently obtained a portfolio of photographs taken in 1971 during the last m ajor antiwar protests in Washington. “ I knew these would be valuable from a historical point of view,” he said. The collection recently was given 72 snapshots taken in 1898 during the Spanish-American War. (Any such gift to the University can be used as a tax deduction and the University will provide a recognized appraiser approved by the Internal Revenue Service to place a value on the item s.) Many of the items received have been allowed to deteriorate by the original owners. “ It’s always a race between cataloguing and preser­ vation. P reservation takes precedent over everything else. The collection has to be accessi­ ble to the public and for research. It’s worthless to have Lewis Carroll’s original photographs and books if no one can use them,” Coltharp said. Flukinger believes that the value of the collec­ tion will continue to increase. “ This increase has hurt scholarship. It is hard to obtain m aterials now at these inflated prices due to a lack of financing,” he said. “ The University of Arizona has been endowed for $2 million a year for the next IO years to build a photographic collection. They used the first year’s funding to acquire all the negatives and work prints of Ansel Adams and Wynn Bullock,’ Flukinger added. “ But it will take them years and tens of millions of dollars to achieve a collection on the sam e scale with the Gernsheim Collection,” he explained. Some of the one-of-a-kind item s in this collection will never be for sale at any price. How do you place a value on the first photograph ever m ade? I f s priceless.” Lenny Bruce is arrested on obscenity charges and held in lieu of bail, April, 1964. The photographer w as Vincent Lope*. — Th* N *w York Journal American Collection — Th* New York Journal American Collection Howard Hughes at the Newark, N.J., airport, after com­ pleting a coast-to-coast record flight. The tycoon w a s photographed by Schurtz in January, 1937. The wife of an oldtime Texas cattlodriver chastizes Will Roger* after a 1928 speech in San Antonio. Regors had suggostod traildrivers on the way. 'fattened the herd” on tho w ay to market by picking up stray cattle A M a n She Didn't Like Th* G*rn*h*im Collector — Th* N ew York Journal American Collection Orson Welles, sleepless a n d unshaven, w a s snapped by Tommy Weber on the morning after the public furor he caus­ ed with his 1938 broadcast of H.G. Wells' "W a r of the Worlds." Thursday, April I, 1976 THE DAILy TEXAN, P a g e 15 •v^r-v V Latin American Book Collection It All Began With a Walk in Mexico # • • Am* rn rn OftffVrrU _ By WILLIAM M. SMITH One day in 1920, Charles W. H a c k e t t , a U n i v e r s i t y professor, and Lutcher Stark, a member of the Board of Regents, were walking in Mexico City when a volume in a bookstore window caught Hackett’s eye. HoH in 1AQ0 HiflV published in 1632. Diaz had been with the Cortes expedi­ tion when Spain conquered the Aztecs at Tenochtitlan (Mex­ ico City) in 1524. His history of the conquest is considered to be the most accurate of all the eye-witness accounts. “ This is a book which belongs in the library at the University,” said Hackett. The purchase was made. It was an original copy of Bernal Diaz’ “True History of the Conquest of Mexico,’’ Marine Cruise Applications Due Students interested in marine studies may apply to work on a five-day training cruise aboard The Longhorn, the University s marine studies ship. The cruise is open to undergraduate or graduate students of any major, although members are usually actively involved in or considering marine studies, Dr. William Behrens of the Marine Science Laboratory in Port Aransas, said. Students may receive one to three hours credit for academic work done while on board. The Longhorn will leave Port Aransas on May 24. Students may pick up applications at the Marine Science Institute in Sid Richardson Hall, Room 3.209, in departmental science offices or by contacting Behrens at the Marine Science Institute, Port Aransas, Tex., 78373. Deadline for the applications is Friday. THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA 2 ONE-ACT PLAYS THE LAST PARTY by Bob Bauer & THE AUCTION by Curtis L. Williams APRIL 2, 3, and 4 LAB THEATRE 8 :0 0 PM $1.00 General A d m ission Reservations 471-1444 “A far-out political fantasy featu ring pedophilia, sex in a bed of loose sugar and a chocolate-covered nude bathing scene.” h r,.. . VV til.,... - Ut v« B< “A z a n y lo o k a t s e n s u a li ty !’ ..x “ F a r o u t! D u s a n M ak av ejev is p re s s in g o n w h e re H o lly w o o d a n g e ls f e a r to t r e a d , a n d w h e re e v en th e a v a n t g a r d e s e e m s c o m p a r a tiv e ly s m a ll m in d e d . V. t» - n > f ’*• f \ " S w e e t M o vie joyously celebrates life I” arui survival ...painfully funny! How Long Can You Yo-Yo? — Sketch by James Petty yards backwards in 24 hours, jump more than 40,002 times on a pogo stick in six hours and break the continuous tuba playing record of 48 hours. Women will be invited to es­ tablish a record for throwing a 5-pound brick and men to destroy more than 3,773 bricks with karate chops in three hours. One of the less popular e v e n t s f o r s p e c t a t o r s promises to be the 29-hour 5- minute polit ical speech challenge. Nearby competitors will be trying to break the continuous joke-cracking world record of three hours 14 1/2 minutes. There will be no sound­ proofing for the 77-hour bagpipe blowing contest nor the 28-hour 45-minute brass band “blow in” challenge. There’s more. The 43,475 turns nonstop skipping challenge, the women’s roll­ ing pin throwing competition and the 154-hour 22-minute electric typewriting competi­ tion will be held. And by the end of it all, you should be able to yo-yo for more than 55 hours. LONDON (UPI) - If you fancy your chances of becom­ ing a world record holder in crawling, pogo stick jumping, beer drinking, tuba playing, brick throwing or walking backwards - start practicing now. For if your “sport” is too unconventional to be included in the Olympic Games in Mon­ treal next July, you may still be able to get your name in a record book at some very un­ usual competitions in an English park next August. For four days, attempts will be made to break as many as possible of those wacky records listed in the Guinness Book of Records, the annual publication which has become the authoriy on the smallest fish ever caught to the largest collection of beer mats in the world. The idea for the jamboree at Lingfield Park in southern England belongs to Douglas Mew, a London publi c relations consultant. The m e e t i n g of what promises to be some of the most eclectic, if not eccen­ tric, people in the world will cost about $500,000 to stage, and charities will benefit from any profits. More than IOO of the listed Guinness B ook’ s records will be attacked. So if you think you can eat three lemons in less than 55 seconds, swallow IK prunes in less than one minute 45 seconds, sink two pints of beer while held upside down faster than in 6.4 seconds or slip down 13 shelled raw eggs in 3.8 seconds, Aug. 27-30 should be important dates in your calendar. People will be trying to walk farther than 58 miles 167 Live Tonight: GYPSEE RIDER !No Cover 8-9 during Happy- I Hour. After 9 - 50* & Ladle*: •Free. Open 8 p.m. till 2 a.m. Co m ing Sunday Copt. Beyond 1477-3783 10th Bi term T h e C h a m b e r M u s ic C e le b r a tio n I," I , / VC; L -Hit i r ~ ! CLEVELAND QUARTET “On their way to international eminence” — Chicago Today Wednesday/April 7 Paramount Theatre/8:00 P.M. Admission free with Optional Services Fee Ticket drawing begins Monday, March 29 Hogg Box Office/10-6 weekdays Bus schedule: Jester, R esolving, Co-Op 6:45 P.M. Continuous service. Sponsored by T h e Cultural Entertainm ent C om m ittee of the T e xas Union & T h e Department of M usic t h a t t h l i t t i m e , 1 1 ITI € Si nc e S I ll P P the Univeristy’s Latin American Collection has grown to im­ mense size and contains some of the r a r e s t books and manuscripts of the early period of the New World. Heman Cortes, the con­ queror of Mexico, wrote to the king of Spain, Charles V, on Oct. 15, 1524, to explain the financial problems he had en­ countered in the conquest of Montezuma’s armies. That letter now is in the rare book collection at Sid Richardson Hall. Also in the rare collection is the first American medical treatise, written in 1592 by Dr. Augustin Farfan, a professor at the University of Mexico. The collection also contains book, g e o g r a p h y a written “Cosmographicus,” in 1524, by Peter Apianus the first which was one of e x p r e s wo r k s the m a t h e m a t i c a l l y significance of Magellan s voyage around the world. to But perhaps the two most famous books in the collection are “ Doctrina Breve, ” a Catholic Church document written in 1543, one of the first books printed in the New World, and a 1518 edition of S ir T h o m a s M o o r e ’ s “ Utopia,” brought to the American continent by the first Bishop of Mexico, Juan de Zumarraga. Besides the Cortes letter and some 450-year-books, the collection also contains much the c o r r e s p o n d e n c e of between Mexican officials and Texans leading up to the revolution in 1836. The per­ sonal documents of Moses and Stephen F. Austin are now in the rare book section, along with some of Jim Bowie’s the l e t t e r s c o n c e r n i n g political situation in Texas before the war. What Hackett and Stark started with the purchase of the Bernal Diaz book in 1920 has become one of the finest and most complete collections of S p an i s h A m e r i c a n literature and documents in the United States. The collection can be found in Building 3 of Sid Richard­ ( b e h i n d L B J son Ha ll Library). Doors Open at 8 W M H WM WBIPjMWJfKKUj LUIGI'S Restaurant 2100-A Guadalupe Pizza-Spaghetti-Salad-Sandwiches Beer-Wine Old time flicks ll a.m. to 7:00 p.m. A T T H E B A R 8 p m -1 2 2 Thurs. CHUCK A CURTIS Friday RICHARD MASON Sat. a n d Sun. PAT WETMORE LUIGI'S Ona cou pon per visit Otter expires April 2 ■ For*1.39 plus tax You can got with fbi* coupon • I Shorthorn Sandwich • I soft drink • I Salad “A BRESSON SPECTACLE’! But un. like any conventional film spectacle you've ever seen. A s t u n n i n g - l o o k i n g movie. T h e concluding sequence is one of the most beau­ tiful and strange the director has ever d o n e !” — V in cen t ( a nh \. S e r e I ark Tim es “ I saw it only once, Ina it has haunted me ever since. T h is him demands to he seen!" —Michael McKe nne y, Village Voice “A R E M A R K A B L E A N I ) P E R S O N A L V I S I O N A M ) AN U N F O R G E T T A B L E O N E ! ’’ —Judi th ( fist, .Xeii York Magazine ■AVA Robert Bresson’s ancelot A N e w Yoiker F i l m s R e l e a s e In Color r n . IN * ANNI p Sit MNA’ i NAi’’ , W ’ L j { ' P i . M TANNIS ’. ‘♦‘*4 t’Wj M S U j! A * N L A V ' S A N I W A S / ' i St t 1 HS* lf NT I VA' ' O f a n ; Tonight Bott* Auditorium $1 *80 Mam bar* UT ID Tomorrows Cobarot, Way Wa Wara Texas Premier M o d ern C inem a Friday & Saturday (X) April 2 A 3 Batt* Aud., 7:30 A f:20 $1.50 french with subtitles Friday, Saturday April 2 8 3 7:30 & 9:15 ^Burdina Aud. $1.50 ’remiare Showing S tu d en t G o r't Film s Page 16 Thursday, April I, 1976 THE D A IL Y T EXA N * b Rodeo Business— A Tough Life By MOLLY BABIN Above the arena, the air is thick and hazy with dust churned up by pounding hooves. The floating red grit dries your mouth and makes your eyes smart, but you don’t blink or drink after the chute clangs open, and a twisting, bucking bull rushes toward you. Fortunately, an iron fence protects the rodeo audience from the 800-pound bull, but pity the poor cowboy riding such an animal. At any mo­ m en t, he could end up beneath, rather than on top, his raging mount. Bull riding is considered the most dangerous of all rodeo events, and Eddie Turner, a youth performing in the re­ cent Austin Livestock Show and Rodeo, said he thinks only about “hanging on’’ when he rides. The eight top con­ testants who can keep their seats for eight seconds are awarded approximately $1,400 each. ALTHOUGH E IG H T seconds seem brief enough to endure the gyrations of a bull, for the rider it’s a lifetime. According to veteran rodeo rider Billie Peters of Austin, “A lot depends on the bull drawn.” Each cowboy rides the bull he picked in a drawing held before the rodeo. By talking with other cow­ boys familiar with the animal, “You get to know your bull,” and can then prepare for its particular habits, Peters ex­ plained. He added, “You couldn’t print most of the words used to describe certain bulls.” Some of the milder terms of bull description are, “lefty” “ righty,” indicating „ and which way a bull spins as it bucks, and “rank” bull for “a real bucking son of a gun.” Rodeos sometimes involve fa m ilies. P e te r s ’ entire father-in-law placed in the team roping, and his wife Donna competes in barrel rac­ ing. “In fact, I first met my wife at this rodeo five years ago,” Peters said. BESIDES BULL RIDING, other exciting rodeo events are bareback bronc riding, B en Jonson's EPICOENE or The Silent Woman 8:00 p.m. in Calhoun Hall 100 Thursday, March 25 W ednesday, March 31 Friday, March 26 Thursday, April 1 Saturday, March 27 Friday, April 2 $ 1 . 0 0 Sponsored by the Departments o f English and Classics and the College o f Humanities horse and rider running beside it. The contestant, riding his own horse, must leap down, grab the steer by its in­ timidating horns and dig his boot heels into the dirt. Dragging it to a standstill, a successful “bull dogger” can hurl the beast to its side within just a few seconds. Like most rodeo events, steer wrestling is beset by hazards. The cowboy faces the possibility of being gored or crushed by several hundred pounds of Mexican steer. The official rodeo program rules stipulate that the only outside help a cowboy gets is through “pick-up” men who rescue bronc riders from high-bucking h orses and clowns who lure rampaging bulls away from fallen riders. Apparently the rodeo cow­ boy’s perilous work is made worthwhile by the friends he meets, the money he can win and a well-deserved applause when the announcer cries, “Let’s give that cowboy a hand!” Town Prefers Cranking To Dialing Their Phones MOUTH OF SENECA, W.Va. (UPI) — When a fire breaks out in this pastoral valley, no one bothers to call the fire de­ partment. Folks crank up the telephone and call switchboard operator Gladys Richards in­ stead. She is ready to handle all emergencies — fires, impassable roads, the death of a neighbor’s relative. “They just say, ‘We’ve got a fire’ and I do the rest,” says Richards. “When someone dies, it’s my resppnsibility to find out when and where the funeral is and inform everyone.” That’s how citizens here — 260 by last count — have been handling crises since 1902, when they formed the North Fork Mutual Telephone Co. Everyone shares party lines — 20 families to a line — and Richards is the phone com­ pany’s only employe. Now, some are suggesting a drastic change: dial telephones. “I don’t know how much longer we can hold out,” sighs Bessie Kisamore. She and her neighbors have battled the public ser­ vice commission for four years to keep dial service from replacing the old-fashioned system. If it does, Richards will lose her job. Richards says residents who have resided in cities are the only ones who want the change. “The people who have lived in this valley all their lives couldn’t get by without the crank system. But someone’s always trying to ram city things down our throats,” she said. T O P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D A D C A L L 471-5244 presen ts tonight: Beer Bust Night $3.00 cover FREE BEER ALL NITE Music by Aullin's H e lln t Sa nd Going Country Edition Bar Brand Hiballs 75* Reservations 459-8851 831 Houston Rodeo cowboy trie* to rope a speedy calf. WRKma ....... — Photo by Sandy King c a l f roping, steer wrestling horse with barely discernible pressure from his knees, with and cutting. no hand reining permitted. a In the cutting contest, herd of cattle isloosed in the arena, and a horse, mounted but unreined, singles out one steer and prevents it from returning to the herd. The cowboy directs his sensitive However, steer wrestling requires visible brute strength and a different kind of finesse. After a steer bolts from the chute, it must be kept in a straight line by a “hazer” n Soap Creek Saloon APRIL FOOLS SHOW U K R A N IA N SA LV A G E presents THK ROLLING ID REVtll with THE STONE SAVAGE GROUP UN Til JAM O J 0 7 Boo C o v » Rd. . 3 2 7 -9 0 1 6 ^ i "CISCO PIKE" Starring Karen Black i Kris Kristofferson * { * Gene Hackman 5AC AUDITORIUM? M Sun., April 3, 4, & 5 Sat., ^ ^ F r i. & Sat.— 7, 9, 11pm Adm. $1.00 V Presented by Phi Delta Chi— Pharmacy Fraternity ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ THETEXAS TAVERN LAURIE BAIER Folk Guitar 8:30 p.m. • Midnight Free Pitchers off Pearl: $1.00 all night G A R D E N Spring Picnic 4 Benefit for KLRN Sunday, April 4 Swimming in our pool Dancing Picnicing under the trees Beef, Food, & Wine Available Live Music by — Steve Fromholz Joe Bob’s Bar & Grill Marsha Summertree T. Gosney Thornton Stepchild Jubal Clark Man Mountain & The Green Slime Boys The Milton Carroll Band and More! $4.00 at the gate for KLRN! 282-2017 Texas Tavern is located behind Gregory Gym n j 3 mi. S. of Austin at Slaughter Creek O verp a tt y e n UI u > .c< •.„.<** ,„atcoid10t at uoi- re .. cntc*®1' V s C" \ ,e eat'n • irse\1 do*" nd setY° ------------------------- (Si ■ NOW ROLLING! ---- PS 6b/"| S i d e m a n ’s Pa^V ’ priends; Cour?ll'mSenac •); O ^ n But Unshaven; S W em E B ’* \ F ee( U k e A D evil; » s ® s s r Ninety-N'n Billy The Kid Next u 0 o o r. [ m m . IV , t t i i f y f a l s o a v a il a b l e I*|*.®REEZY WHEELS Ps“ 7 f " it Tht Light !"♦»" c«w Standing R E C O R D S A T A P ES 0 Record Ibwn Thursday, April 1, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN P age 17 i i T h e D a i l y T e x a im C l a s s i f i e d A d s ' P H O N E 471^1144 MON. THRU FRI- 0100-6:00 AUTOS FOR SALE FOR SALE FURNISHED A P A R T M E N T S * FURNISHED APARTMENTS H FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T ™ FURNISHED A PARTMENTS reservation _____________ Mlscatkmaow-For Sola IVO . N E LS O N 'S G IF T S . Established Indian Largest selection jew elry. 4502 South Congress. 444-3814. Closed Mondays. ______________ _ _ _ _ _ BOOK L O O K IN G ? No obligation search out-of-print books. A r|a y Book Search. 263-5335.________ ___________ ___________ R O L L T O P D ESKS, brass beds, leaded glass bookcase, P e n b ro o k table. San­ dy's Antiques. 506 W alsh. 478-8209, 478- 3346. s w i m T U B E S . Sm all, m edium , large. tu b in g . $2.50 up. D a v id F o r r a fts , Underwood. Rose T ru c k Center, 478- 3412.________ Good q u ality m etal and - U S E D D E S K . nd m atching chair. chrom e office desk and $125. 444-2626.___________________ M U S T S E L L p a ir four-bolt Ansen Sprint mags (7x14), locks, a r shocks. Fits VW 1969 on, others. N ea rly new, best offer. 928-4461. S C H W IN N P A R A M O U N T 24” Reynolds 531 throughout. Choice of equipm ent. $325. 472-1779. H O T P O IN T 3 cycle washing m achine, 16 speed d ry er. $50 each, good condition. Dresser draw ers, wood finish, good con- dition, $20. 401 E. 35th. _________ _ D R A W I N G T A B L E , 3 6 x 2 4 . $35 . G raduating P h .D . cap and gown, $35. 459-8522.____________ ___________________ f o r m a t. K O N I- R A P ID - O M E G A . 2 ’A 90m m O m egaron, 120 back, « 7 0 ^ m m Om egaron, $170. E yepiece, $20. back w ith cover, $50. Tripod, $10. A ll fo r $450. Old Argus 35m m , $15. 4441-1556, 474-9904. A T A L A 10-speed, like new, $85. W ith JCI bike rack, $100.471-5972 a fte r 12:00 noon. C O M P L E T E 35m m S Y S T E M . M in olta 101-35, 58, 135 M in o lta lenses, 500 m lr r ir _______ lens, closeups. $390. 447-9248. A IR C O N D IT IO N E R , A d m ira l 15.000 B T U . Reconditioned, new fan, m otor. $130. 451-8570 a t t a r 8 :00 p .m . and w e e k e n d s . ________ ____________ P A R A C H U T E E Q U I P M E N T . P C harness com plete, m odified reserve and ( l l ) . container, T-10 9 TU , F re n c h e s N orth Star, 476-4407, keep t rying. K O D A K E K T A G R A P H IC and Carousel s lid e p r o j e c t o r s . N e w a n d u s e d . Reasonable prices. 477-3456.___________ 1 /2 ” V ID E O E Q U IP M E N T . D ecks, cam eras, switchers, and accessories. C all M a x a t 477-9762 fro m 10-6.________ 1 0 -S P E E D W O M A N 'S Schwinn Con- tinental, 20” , $65. Good condition. 476- ___________ _____________ __ 9723. CASUALLY YOU Creative Outdoor Portraits Save Vb now ROYCE STUDIOS 2420 Guadalupe 472-4219 WEDDING RINGS should be as Individual as you are. Let our goldsm iths help you create a tru ly unique ring. W e have a fine selection of d ia m o n d s a n d p r e c io u s s tones to challenge your im agination. H ave your made for you. T H E C R A F T S M A N , Tin' Hancock D r. 454-8162. 282 FURNISHED APARTMENTS PLANTATION SOUTH APARTMENTS • I t 2 Mr. • Peals • tern. ar UnfvrfL • L**Mry Reams Prices Start at S ilt 2700 Pleasant Valley Rd. 442-1298 472-4162 LET US MAKE Your Next Move Enjoyable Call us for FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE J.B. Goodwin Apt. locators 837-2030 (North) or 892-1745 (South) C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A TE S 15 w o rd m in im u m 5 12 E a c h w o rd one tim e l l E ach w o rd 2-4 t im e s ...................$ E ach w o rd 5-9 tim e s 5 09 E ach w o rd IO or m o re tim e s ...$ 08 S tudent ra te each t im e ...............5 90 S3.58 I col. x I inch one tim e $3.22 I col. x I inch 2-9 tim e s I col. x I in c h ten or m ore tim e s $2.90 DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d ay Texa n F rid a y ..................2 :0 0 p.m . Tuesday T e xan M o n d a y l l :0 0 a.m . W ednesday Texan Tuesday ... 1 1 :0 0 o.m . Thursday Texa n W ednesday. 1 1 :0 0 a m. 1 1 :0 0 o.m . Friday Texan Thursday " In the e v e n t of errors m a d e in an a d ve rtis em e n t, im m ed ia te notice m ust be give n as th e publishers are responsible for only O N E incorrect insertion. All claim s for later adju stm ents should be m ade not th a n 3 0 days a fte r p ublication.’' LOW S T U D E N T R A TE S 15 w ord m in im u m each day ... S 90 E ach a d d itio n a l w o rd each d a y s .06 I col. x I inch each d a y ..............$2.90 ''U n c la s s ifie d s '' I lin e 3 days S I.OO (P re p a id , No R efunds) S tu d e n ts m u s t s h o w A u d it o r 's re c e ip ts and pay in advance in TSP B ldg . 3 200 (25th 8. W h itis ) fro m 8 a m to 4:30 p m M u nday th ro u gh F rid a y . AUTOS FOR SALE Aute - For Sale 1972 V O L K S W A G E N Super B eetle for tale. 477-2744 or 454-1734. '73 engine, new clutch, 1968 VW Bug, adio. $900, best offer. 836-6921 a fte r 5, weekends._____________________________ (AGB 1966 $750 Springtim e C a f Fu ture Hassle. C all Dan 471-5858 dally, 453-7778 tvenings. 971 V W 411, good m otor (Porsche Vw, e arly cleaned), good fa m ily c a r (4 dr edan), 3500 miles, A C /A T , steel belted adials, com plete new brake job. $2195. 54-3991 a fte r 5:00 (w eekdays) 5UST S E L L or trad e for pickup 1969 aah. One owner. Good condition. 472- 248, 259-1890, Ben. 969 M E R C U R Y M O N T E G O (m e d iu m ), a to m a tic , PS, AC, ” 8 ," tudor, good con- lltipn $875 452-3476 a fte r 5:30.________ AUST S E L L 1969 Dodge cam per, com ­ pletely insulated, good tires, rad io, sink, e frig e ra to r, runs w ell. Call R ay, 476- 211, ext. 69, before 5.__________________ 969 V O L K S W A G E N . No dents, clean in- erior, grea t m ileage. 474-1642._________ IQ U ID A T IO N 1975 G ran F u ry , fordoor, ully loaded, liquidating first $2000. Good ondltlon. 442-0126. _ 974 C A M A R O . AT, AC, PS, P B , VB,.tape leek, etc. F irs t $3500. M ust sell. 442-0126. 65 F A LC O N Station Wagon, a u to m a tic ebuilt, clean, radio. A fter 5:00, 477-8238, __________ _ n ake offer. 54 VW B U G . R eb u ilt e ngine. New rakes, in terio r. G re a t condition. $550. 36-6840 a fte r 5, 451-7092 a fte r 2._______ 971 T O Y O T A CORONA, a ir, radio, 4 low m ile a g e , red, peed, new tire s , lean. $1495. 442-5281.______ ___________ 971 T O Y O T A COR ON A Deluxe. 2 door, low m ileage. ir, 4 speed, new tires, ______ lelow book. 472-8747. LASSIC 1955 Oldsmobile 98. Loaded, Ic, beautiful in, out. $1000 fir m or trad e own. 442-5523. 71 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A 1600. Best fer. 476-0465 after 6. Keep tryin g . M G B -G T AC. F M /A M , rad ials. E x ­ il e d condition Serious inquiries only. 1-6734 . 837-4026 a fte r 5 p.m. , VW D A S H E R A ir c ond itio nin g, A /F M . C all 441-0916 after 5, and on tekends. F IR E B IR D W hite over red, AC, PS, I C ID . $550. Call 471-1768 or 837-5481 for is, __________ tN D R O V E R . Long wheel base, 4 W D , Joor, S afari station wagon. 6 wheels, nting hatch, spares, etc. F irs t $2750. e 5-7 p.m ., 919 E. 46th, No. 202. 459- AP T R A N S P O R T A T IO N . '71 S u w r Ie. E xcellent engine. $900 fir m . 451- 1-4, a fte r 9. . F O R D P IN T O . One owner. 4-speed, A M /F M radio. $1950. 837-4341 a fter 6 I. r~F IA T 128. Leaving country. Clutch k needed $750 or best offer 474-5838 ______________ _____ ___________ ___________ I F IA T 128. Call a fte r 6. 247-2571 ~ ii VW K A R M A N G H IA . A ir con- oning, A M /F M 8 trac k stereo. $2000. I 443 8961. VW S U P E R B E E T L E . AC. rg d 'c . i tires and battery. 444-8756 w eekdays tr 5 and weekends. ST S E L L 1963 Jeep W agoneer. 4 W D, :, ps. O n ly 6 9 ,0 0 0 m i . G o o d rhanical condition. $995. Call 452- E M L IN 1970 D ep en d a b le . Needs y rep air. $400. 452-2011._____________ I K A R M A N N G H IA . Good condition^ a t gas m ileage, orange w ith black in- or. $1,295 . 441-4538. :A M A R O convertible 396, autom atic, negotiable. 477-6666 T O Y O T A W AGON. AC, 4 speed, ige rac k , radio, low m ileage, priced ll. 441-5355 L & L A U T O S A L E S AND S E R V IC E 3005 Bastrop H w y. 385-0741 /W new paint, ex. condition, 64,000 m iles, $995. $69 Saab 96, V-4, AC, $795 /W Stationwagon, engine com pletely rebuilt, $750 In t e r n a t io n a l T r a v e l # ! ! , equipped to tow cam per, $1,750 Ihevy '/a ton pick-up, 6 cyl., standard, f u l ly new paint, $595 AUTOS FOR SALE (£ nntmriilal (U r0 454-6827 FREE the 7 6 License Plate* w ith purchase of a ll Used Cars dur­ ing Feb. and March. n Triraqh Tt-7, .......$5650 — 74 ESE.?....... $4950 H U rt*4M Sot! T it srs r.'sfs rr....$4450 W 72 $2450 75 K S T . $3750 r n rn T m h W k i , S 74 BIS'............ $3750 OHLAND jo/OTA I f o r t k n o x M iqliiund M a ll U > « 4 C a f D a f t 454-6827 '70 V W , clean, runs good. N ight 452-7767, day 471-4341. Ask for J im ._____________ 1966 M U S T A N G , 289 engine, 3-speed, red, clean, radio, tape, $650. B argain. A fter 2, 442-0528. ______________ 1965 F O R D window van, 6 cyl., std., seats, carpet, paneling. Some rust, but m echanically sound. $575. 443-5844 a fter 5. FOR SALE 7 8 3 MotorcycU-For Sola 1974 H O N D A CL-200. Excellent condi­ tion. 5300 m iles. $525. Ask for Dave, 474- . _________________ 2 1972 K A W A SA K I 350, excellent condi­ tion, two helmets, $450 or highest. Call 474-8008 or 478-9974 today. ____________ K2400D K AW A SA K I '75, features saddle bags, windshield. $800. 471-418? ask for Nancy S. or 447-5874 evenings._________ 1973 H O N D A CB350. Disc brakes, sissy bar, runs great, new plats, adult owner. _____________________ *700. 451-2433. Storoo-For Sola F I S C H E R S T E R E O , s p e a k e r s , headphones. Tu rn tab le, F M , cassette, one unit. Reconditioned, 90 day w a rra n ­ ty. $300. 4 5 4 - 0 6 4 0 . __________ S U P E R B T U R N T A B L E Com bination: Thorens T D 125-II; Shore S M E low-mass a rm ; n o n d e ta c h a b le shell; Stanton 681 E E E ; perfect shape. Best offer. 441- 6244:_____________________ _____________ SA NSUI 350A, Dual 1215 W/SP14, both in excellent condition. C all W ayne, 472-1773 _____________ after 6:30. A R -X B 9 1 T U R N T A B L E , w /S h u r e M91 E D cartridg e. E xcellent condition, 6 months old. $115. 478-2310._____________ S H E R W O O D S-7050 receiver for $125. E xcellent condition, good sound. C all 459-3094._______ _______________________ TEA C 3340S four channel tape deck. Brand new. Andy, 327-0486, keep tryin g . SANSUI AU-7700 2x54W. Sensu! tuner1 TU-7700. Teec A-360S tape recorder. Ad­ loudspeakers. W a rra n ty , vent w alnut m oving. 3 4 5 - 4 0 8 9 . _ R E E L T O R E E L D o k o r d e r 7200. A utom atic reverse, sound on sound, echo. 8 months old. $260 or best offer. 478-4804. _________ _______________ B R A N D N E W : Unopened Dual 1225, $135, and 2 E C I 3-way speakers, $135. W arranties. 3 8 5 - 4 9 7 9 .________________ r e c o r d e r , P A N A S O N IC 8 - t r a c k p la y b a c k . G re a t c ond itio n. C all for details. 472-4729, keep trying, please. S H O R T W A V E R A D IO . Z enith T ra n - longwave, soceanlc D7000Y. Portable, A M /F M , w eather, 90, 75, 60,-49, 41,25, 19, 16, 13, m e te r, a m a te u r bands. B FO m a n u a l g a in A C / D C e l e c t r i c a l bandspread, external antenna connec­ tions, new $325. 451-6024 a fte r 8 p.m. Mu»icol-For Sola F E N D E R P R IN C E T O N a m p lifie r and Univox superfuzz. $145. 454-7234._______ N E W G U IT A R . Steel and classical. V e ry reasonable. All sizes. M onte W allace, 443-6088._______________________________ G IB SO N SG e lectric gu itar. E xcellent. Best offer over $200. D avis PA a m p lifie r, _________ __ *50 477-2713, 477-5421. N E W Y A M A H A FG-360. Rosewood back and sides, Spruce top, bourn* fin g e r­ board, top and sides. List *378, now *z35. ___________________ _ 453-3089 a fte r 4. B E L A T C L A R IN E T , S e lm e r Bundy instrum ent, excellent wood. E xcellent condition, w ith case. Asking only *100. Stu, 471-3021. _ _ _ M A R T IN D-28 with case. Four months old E xcellent condition, *550 , 477-5696 ________________ _ a fte r 5. M A R T IN D -12-28 g u ita r. B eautiful tone, two years old. $495. great condition, Donald, 452-3676, 837-6092.______________ G U IT A R Y am ah a FG 170 and hard case^ excellent condition. $100 A ter 5:00, 453-1824 ____________ Pets-For Sal* B E A U T IF U L DOG. E ig h t months old, fem ale, spayed, has had shots. Please call 444-1009 mornings.________ ______ Horn—-For Sola______ D O LL H O U S E . Two bedrooms, one beth, den. New paint inside and out, new roof, new carpet. Close to U T . Red C arpet Realtors, 444-2626. ________ ________ TH R E E T B E D R O O M , two bath home, large living area 1545 square feet, 3 blocks fro m shuttle $200/month with assumption or refinance. Owner ready to sell 444-7022_________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ For Salo-Gorago A R T A N D Y A R D S A L E ! 1706 S u m m it V ie w ( H a r tfo r d and E n fie ld ). A n tiq ue s, p a in tin g s , to o ls , p la n ts Sat - Sun., A p r il 3rd - 4th. f u r n it u r e , c lo th e s , M iscallanoous-For S a l* INVESTOR'S DREAM 50 a cre s - C ree d m o or 7 m ile s fro m c ity lim it. B e a u tifu l view , 2 ponds, road fr o n ­ tage on 2 sides, w a te r and e le c tric ity . S2000/acre. G enerous fin a n c in g Ideal fo r in v e s to rs grou p . O w ner, 478-8691 a fte r 4 w eekdays. ANABLEPS ANABLEPS fo r your convenience as of A p ril 1st w ill be located a1 507 W. 17th 477-7115 CARPET REMNANTS Roll Ends Calco Floor Center 701 West 5th 476-7562 Open 8-6 M on.-Sat. SKATEBOARDS Austin's most complete d irt bike shop also has one of the i n v e n t o r i e s of l a r g e s t skateboards and skateboard accessories in central Texas. W e fe a tu re H O B IE , H A N G T E N , W E B E R , B A H N E, A R R O W S M I T H , B A N Z A I , R O A D U L T R A F L E X , P O W E R P A W , R I D E R , C A D I L L A C , T R A C K E R T R U C K S and M O R E ! Come see us! A U S T IN S P O R T C Y C L E S 1708 South Congress 444 7777 I t ' F O O T tr i hull ski boat Outboard m otor, stereo and other ite m L Excellent condition $2,000. C all 474-7483. Page 18 T h u r sd a y , A pril I, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Apartment hunters: Before you lease the next twelve months of your life away, Spend ten minutes with me. River Hills Just off South 1-35 at 1601 Royal Crest 444-7797 The Cascades Just off South I-35 between Woodland and Oltorff 444-4485 T H R E E E L M 400 W. 35th Furnished - U nfurnished. I Bedroom , I Bath. 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Leasing for S um m er 8, F a ll. 451-3941 KENRAY A P A R TM E N TS 2122 Hancock Drive N ext to A m e ric a n a Th eatre, w alkin g dis­ tance to North Loop Shopping C enter and Luby's. N e a r shuttle and Austin tran sit. Tw o bedroom flats, one and two baths. A va ila b le townhouse w ith patio, unfurn. & I tu rn . C A /C H , dishwasher, disposal,"door to door garbage pickup, JisTred, w ashaterla -------- -- pool, m aid service if des!. in com plex. See owners, A pt. 113 or call 451-4848. compli • - SUMMER RATES NOW One and tw o bedroom apts, fro m $145. Tennis courts, pool, luxurious apts. 1200 W. 40th 451-3333 m a n c h e s t e r s q u a r e a p t s . $155 Furnished Large I BR, livlng/din lng , com plete G E kitchen, large bath, drapes, carpet, CH and a ir, laundry room, 6 m onth lease, $50 deposit, on shuttle bus route. W alk to Concordia College. Call today. CRES REALTORS 452-6437 D O W N S T A IR S one bedroom de lu xe « rf m en). N ear U niversity. C arpo rt, rried couple. $110. 909-B West 22/j . 472-8145. FREE SERVICE PARKING TRANSPORTATION HABITAT HUNTERS A free apt. locator service specializing in com plexes w ith access to shuttle Efficiencies, I Bedrooms, 2 Bedrooms, 3 Bedrooms Doble M a ll Suite SA 474-1532 E F F IC IE N C Y , $125 plus E . C arpet, pan­ el, pool. On shuttle. 46th and Ava. A. 454- el, pool 8903. FURNISHED A P A R T M E N T S * FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS Summer places at the lake. From $110. The summer places? Three o f Austin s nicest ap a rtm e n t communities. Pleasant Valley, London Square, W illo w cre e k The lake? Austin s own Town Lake. Beautiful. Serene. A n d only five minutes fro m the University. W ith shuttle busses at your °From $110, one b e d ro o m unfurnished, to $239, three bedroom s furnished, excluding e le c tric ity . A block o f f Riverside Drive. A block away fro m Town Lake. Pre-lease fo r summer or fall to d a y . A n d reserve your place at the lake. Pleasant Valley Estates London Square I 300 Pleasant Valley Rd. 2400 Town Lake C ircle 191 I W Jlowcreek Dr. 443.5341 Willowcreek 442-8340 444-0010 BALCONIES WINDOWS TREES B rand new I bedroom apartm ents under construction at 4205 Speedway. Leasing f a l l s e m e s t e r . f o r s u m m e r 8, fro s t-fre e Pro fe ss io n a lly dec o ra te d , no re frig e ra to r, self-cleaning oven, lu xu rious c a rp e t, w a x '* flo o r v in y l, w allpaper, rough cedar accent w alls, m arble lavatories, wood furniture, In­ dividual w ater heaters, vaulted callings. No pets. 453-1903 , HAVE IT YOUR WAY W IT H /W IT H O U T E L E C . IN C L. 1 BR $145 plus 2 BR $170 plus 40% POOL LA CASITA APTS. i c O O M r n 2900 COLE (3 BLK S TO LA W SCH.) 477-0708 327-2239 VIP Apartments 33rd & Speedway Quiet, elegant and secure living in two- level studio apartm ents designed for 3 to 5 m atu re students. 2 BR plus study or 3 B R, 2 bath, with e xtra storage & w alk-in closets. Also king-sized one bedrooms. In divid ually controlled AC. Pool, cable leasing for sum m er & fa ll. TV . Now Reduced sum m er rates. C ell 474-2212 or 478-4964 until 8: 30 p m. FURNISHED APARTMENTS r a n RENTAL LOCATORS Wa «•>•/ ta U n iv n i iy Stvdaati C d f M f SfcnffM or C h u r t Naif# n m a n Rod Car pot Realtors 837-4603 W U find you an apartment free. i_ S e f e c i 3507 N . 1-35 474-6357 Offices throughout Texas n e e d a g r e a t P LA C E TO L I V E ? BLACKSTONE APARTM ENTS Share a large a p a rtm e n t at $69.50/mo. furnished, a ll bills paid. M a id once a week. Bring your own room m ate or we will m atch you with a com patible one This is economy and convenience at Its best. Only 200 yards from UT c am - 2910 Red R iver b c o t v ^ 543' A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y CASA DE_ SALADO Now leasing 'o r s u m m a , and la ll W ain a WC a tw m ij. Blocks to campus or Luxurious I bedrooms. C A /C H , off street laundry facilities, sw im m ing parking, pool. 2610 Salado, m anager apt. 110. pool. 26 477-2534 I BR $107.50 No Lease Luxury apts., dishwasher, AC, pool, carpet, fully furnished. Shuttle bus 2222 Town Lake Circle, 444-2070. $117.50 ABP I BR A pt*. Efficiencies and P o o l, c o v e r e d p a r k i n g . Shuttles or w alk to U T. 2408 Leon 476-3467 5 BLOCKS W EST OF C A M P U S Sum m er Leasing. New e ffic ie n c ie s . Paneled living room, offset bedroom a. kitchen Cable, w a te r, gas (stove) f u r ­ nished $121 • $125 477-5514 476-7916 Red Oaks Apts. 2)04 San G abriel $100 Near U T. I BR apt. furnished and unfurnished. 1801 M an o r Road 451-8178 1-1 $148 PLU S E Laundry, T V cable, clean Preleasing tor sum m er Perco Plaza, 711 W 32nd 453-4991 2 BLOCKS TO U T Nice one bedroom a p a rtm e n t. Shag c arp e t, AC, P®oJ’ $137 50 W ater and g a t paid 474-5385, 258 3385 251 5555 ____________________ I BR, $185 Q U IE T A R E A near campos _ _ _ _ _ 911 Blanco 474-2555 FURNISHED APARTMENTS SPRING FEVER ENGLISH AIRE £n/o y the S u n s h i n e a t S w im m ing, Tennis, H andball, Putting Green, Saunas, Plain Ole Relaxing, Enjoy Your Life ALL BILLS PAID Call Now 4 4 4 -1 8 4 6 \ 1919 BURTON DRIVE Unhappy W ith Your Present Living Arrangements? a p p e a l t o ADARTMENT MnOERS SERVICE 472-4162 W e Have Apartm ents That W ill Appeal To You UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS I I'm R ic h a rd B a rk e r. re p re s e n t a n e w philo sop h y of apartm ent o w n e rsh ip in Austin one you should kn o w about. Because w e try to look at apartm ents through your eyes, in ­ stead of ours. Right n ow m y jo b is to make River H ills and The Cascades tw o of A ustin's most desirable apartm ent com plexes. W h ic h sh o u ld n 't be hard to do. They're already tw o of the most appealing. Both are q u ie tly situated in ro llin g hills, surrounded by lush green g ro w in g things. W ith shaded w alks, natural w aterfalls, Austin's finest sw im m in g pools, and specially equipped playgrounds for the kids. Both have about fourteen flo o r plans to choose from , and a m agnificent v ie w of the city. A ll at a very co m p e titive cost. W hat w e — the new ow ners and m anagem ent — have changed is the w ay w e look at you. W h ic h w ill change the w ay you look at us. C om e see fo r yourself. Before you sign the next tw e lve m onths o f yo u r life away, spend ten m inutes w ith me. just d ro p in at River H ills or The Cascades, or call me at 443-9593 and w e 'll arrange a tim e that's co n ­ venient for you. Double up. America. Three can live cheaper than one. Imperial Northwest's 3 bedroom/ 2 bath unfurnished plus electric would cost 73.34 each. Call 3 4 5 2 0 6 6 . FURNISHED APARTMENTS HELP WANTED HELP WANTED TYPING MISCELLANEOUS F R E E S T U D E N T S M a n y beautiful com plexes on shuttle to choose from. Free leasing for fall. Free service and even free transportation. Call Nancy in Apartment L iving Locators 6000 North Lam ar F R E E LA FO N D A Cook - Prep - Bus Apply Thursday 3-4 p.m. 2405 Nueces 345-1645 452-9541 R E A D Y TO W E A R S A L E S P E R S O N Experience preferred. M arve lous oppor­ tunity. M a n y frin ge bene,.its - W ork Downtown or Suburban. Apply ■♦N orth Loop store, Pent Lindgren. 452-5757. Y A R IN G 'S Ju st North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hem phill P a rk C A M E R O N A P A R T M E N T S C O M F O R T A B L E L I K E O L D S H O E S A N D L E V I S . P L U S : ( I) la rge (2) carpeted (3) UT shuttle bus (4) city bus line (5) 3 m ajor shopping centers (6) flexible lease (7) even pets and children are ok. What m ore can you ask fo r? I bdrm. $129, 2 bdrm. $140. Get in touch with m anager at 1200 E. 52nd St., Apt. 102-A, 453-6239. 'F l j R N T s H i ^ O R " 'U N F U R N iS H E D ]~ O n shuttle. I and 2 large bedroom. Capital _________ Villa. 1008 Reinll. 453-5764. W A L k T a w SC H O O L. Large I and 2 bedroom s, pool, la undry, d isp o sa l, CA/CH, A B P . Sum m er from $175, fall from $185. No pets. River Oaks, 3001 Red River.472-3914._____________ __________ A V A IL A B L E NOW . Clean efficiency, SHO. Bills paid. Block to_UT. 472-5134. Now leasing for sum m er. Efficiency and r o o m s _________________________ _____ C E D A R R ID G E Apartments. Off North Lam ar. Close to Highland Mall. One bedroom furnished, $145 plus electricity. New furniture, quiet, swim m ing pool. No children or pets. Call 459-7605 m ornings, ____ after I p.m. 454-3426. E F F I C I E N C I E S for rent. No lease, 2 blocks from cam pus. CA/CH, carpet, storage room. $130 - $135 plus electricity. 504 Elmwood, 472-0885. E F F IC IE N C IE S . Clean, modern apt. Shag carpet, frost free refrigerator, d is­ hw asher, d isp o sa l, w alk-in close t. CA/CH. Laund ry facilities on premises. Close to downtown and shuttle bus. $125 p l U s E 447-4947_ _ S P A C IO U S A P A R T M E N T S for U T students. French Colony Apartm ents. Five minute walk to IF. 1-2 bedroom fu r­ nished apartm ents Reasonably priced. 5506 Grover, Apartm ent 132. 452-2744. N IC E L Y F U R N I S H E D Rooms, efficien­ cies and apartm ents within walking d is­ tance to UT $84 and up. 2800 Whltis. 477- 7558. 2710 Nueces. 477-9388/ F A N T A S T IC L O C A T IO N . Near cam pus - Law School, L B J Library, St. D av id 's, IH-35. Luxurious 2-2's. All appliances, pool, sundeck, cable Now leasing. $260 up A B P . Great O ak Apartments, 477- 3388. _________________________________ NO W L E A S IN G . Sum m er/Fall/Spring. Fantastic location Near cam pus 8105 up Doris Apartm ents, 478-1580, 477-3388 2 B L O C K S UT L a rge I bedroom ap a rt­ ment. CA/CH, cable, parking, laundry. A B P $155 2101 R io Grande Call 477-8146 _ _________ afternoons, O N E B E D R O O M furnished apartm ent in old apt house W alk to classes, sw im ­ m ing pool 702 W 25th St $140 plus bills. Call Greg, 478-5231, Jim, 478-1983 E F F I C I E N C I E S , ciose to cam pus and shuttle Pool, storage closets, laundry, dishwasher, cable, CA/CH $135 plus electricity 305 W 35th 454-9108 2/1 C L E A N , w alk to UT. Pool $200 plus E Parco Plata, 711 W 32nd <53j 4 9 9 1 _ S U B L E A S E T H R O U G H S U M M E R Large one bedroom apt Close cam pus, shuttle. CA/CH, $150 plus elect 474-4648.. r j r n T T I s e d r o o a T a p t $200 a b p . W a lk to UT. 472-5134 L e a s in g for sum m er _________________ L A R G E O N E A N D TW O Bedroom s Disposal, dishw ashe r, CA/CH, pool, laundry, shuttle, A B P Summ er from $175. Fall from $185 No pets Versailles Ap artm en ts, 4411 Airport B lv d . 452-8385. A P A R T M E N Y n e i r 45th and Ave C. C i­ ty, shuttle buses close Living room, bedroom. $135 plus electricity. 258-1074. S U B L E T T I ti G A P A R T M E N T fo r Summ er Close to cam pus - 1712 R io Grande 2 bedroom, large balcony patio, living room, dining room, kitchen, bath in old house $200 month plus bills. 474- 5797. _ _ _ _ _ S P A C IO U S 2 and 3 bedrooms. 1200 sq ft. and up New ly redecorated $185 end up plus E Bonus for all leases signed before June I C a ll 444-1411 or come by 1201 Tin- nm Ford Road, Apt 113 Town Lake Area. E X C IT IN G JO B O P P O R T U N IT IE S A T N A T I O N A L L Y F A M O U S R E S O R T , W C T W O R L D O F T E N N I S A T L A K E W A Y We have job openings for bright, well- groomed people who are W IL L IN G TO W O R K . While a business background is helpful, we look prim arily for people with a genuine desire to work and grow, and who can demonstrate a gracious at­ titude toward our guests. We intend to hire a number of new employees to meet our expanding business needs. Those who qualify will receive training by working in a variety of areas in our resort hotel. Those who demonstrate dependability and m aturity w ill be retained and considered for promotional opportunities. We offer competitive ear­ nings, excellent benefits, w orking con­ ditions and career opportunities for peo­ ple who desire to live In the Austin area. lf you believe you are qualified, please call 471-1217 for an appointment, or come by the Liberal Arts Placement Office, Jester A l 15. H E L P W A N T E D BY TH E HOUR Average 3 hours daily. 6-9pm, 9-5 Sat. Start immediately, lf we get along, can use you all sum mer Pointing toward a career upon gra d u a tio n C all M r. Mounce at 837-4970 or 345-0794 R E D C A R P E T N E E D S YOU!!! Our business is good. We need additional sales people in our organization to help meet the demand. We offer a well balanced p ro g ra m in R e sid e ntia l, Commercial, Land and Investments, lf you desire a career in real estate, this is where you belong. Some of the advan­ tages are excellent training program, image, pleasant office, immediate ex­ posure to clientele through phone duty, walk-ins, TV & radio advertising and a client referral system that works. Open to both men and women, with or without experience • we train. M ake an appoint­ ment to hear the Red Carpet story and see the videotape "Opportunities in Sell­ ing Real Estate” by John Lumbleau, an outstanding sales trainer at the U nive r­ sity of Southern California It will cost you nothing - just a few minutes of your time Call Don Ferguson for a confiden­ tial interview • you will be pleased! 454-2546 R E D C A R P E T R E A L T O R S A S S IS T A N T M A N A G E R Y a rin g 's Suburban Store Previous retail experience required Good future Salary open plus m any benefits Apply: Y a rin g 's Downtown, 3rd floor, to Walter Young Y A R IN G 'S H O U S E P A R E N T S Unusual opportunity for flexible mature married couple with no children to live as house parents in a home-llke residen­ tial facility Position involves parenting 6 adolescent boys (14-18) tem porarily placed away from their own family. Situation exposes couple to v a ry in g therapeutic experiences and offers good learning e xp e rie nce s for those in ­ terested in social services field and seek­ ing chance for in d iv id u a l grow th. Benefits Include salary, room & board, ample time off and vacations Contact The Settlement Home, weekdays, 836- 2150. ________ _______________________ F L O W E R P E O P L E need people to sell flowers. Highest pay paid dally. 282-1102 R E S P O N S IB L E S T U D E N T wanted to help care for handicapped student. Call 474-7377. B U S IN E S S M I N D E D ? Student oriented business for sate or will consider partner with investment. A m erican M a 11 room Service Glen, 477-0764 O V E R S E A S JO BS S u m m e r / Y e a r - r o u n d . E u r o p e , S. Am erica, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields. $500 - $1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free inform. Write: Inter­ national Job Center, Dept. T E , Box 4490, Berkeley, C A 94704. S A L E S P E R S O N . Children's dept. Ex- perience preferred. Excellent opportune ty, m a n y f r in g e b e n e fit s . A p p iy Y a r i n g 's , H ig h la n d M a ll. S a n d r a R ichardson, 454-5206._________________ C H E L S E A S T R E E T P U B . W a it persons needed part time or full time. Apply in Srson between 11-12, or 3-5, et either lotions, Highland M all or Northcross Mall.__________________ A R T H U R M U R R A Y S T U D I O now accepting men and women for full or part time work as dance Instructors. We train for free. A pp ly M onday - Friday, 2- 5 p.m. 45th and Guadalupe. No calls, please.________ ______________________ T E L E P H O N E P E R S O N ? I m ay be able to use by the hour from our office in the mornings. Call M r. prim arily Mounce, 837-4970, 345-0794._____________ A P P L IC A T IO N S now being taken for spring help. Cooks and cashiers. Flexi­ ble hours. Apply Taco Flats, 5213 N. Lam ar._________________ _____________ W A N T E C T iP A R T T I M E help in the even- ing. Good atmosphere, easy work. Call 474-1064 for Interview. ____________ F O O D W A IT E R S , W aitresses wanted for noon service. Apply in person after 3:00 M -F. Quorum Club, 912 Red River. ______ ______________ _ P R IN T IN G S A L E S . One full time com missioned sales position open with rapid ly gro w in g local com pany. P rin tin g sales preferred; some sales experience necessary. Call 477-3641 for appoint­ m ent_______________ _______________ N E E D T A L L , Clean cut, responsible person for part time plain clothes securi­ ty sales w ork in jewelry store. A pply at 314 Highland Blvd. I Highland Center, Suite 250. Position to be filled A pril 6. N O vT a C C E P T IN G ap plications for full/part fim e help at the A rm y/ N a vy House of Jeans. O nly at 412 Congress. A sk for Ken or Fred, 477-0118._________ P A R T T I M E lunch and weekend help needed. Apply at B urger King, 3427 Jefferson. N E A ? ; " P E R S O N A B L E , responsible salesperson needed part time for nights and Saturdays. Position open till 4/10/76. Apply 2158 Highland Mall. 452-0176. K IT C H E N H E L P needed. D a y time on­ ly. Steak and Ale Restaurant. 2211 W. Anderson Lane. Hours: 9:30 - 4 OO p.m. $2.20/hour. A pply in person only, 2-6 p.rn Pleasant atmosphere, advance- ment opportunities. t a k i n g T H E B A C K R O O M a p p li c a t io n s fo r b a r t e n d e r s a n d bouncers Apply at 2021 E. Riverside. M I K E & C H A R L I E 'S is now taking applications for cocktail person and host person, no experience necessary 1206 W. 34th between 9-11 a.m. or 2-5 p.m. B A B Y S I T T E R needed for infant and toddler. M o rn in gs or afternoons. 327- 2574, 471-1778._____________________ __ P A R T T I M E B A B Y S I T T E R needed for 2 infants. Call Dianne, 451-2326 or Clair, 478-2306. P U R O L A TOR S E C U R IT Y now accep­ ting part time applications. M u st have car, telephone, and weapon. M ust be available at 4 30 p.m. on F rid a y and Saturday. Call 476-7592 for appointment. S U M M E R - W O R K . Nationally known com pany interviewing college students. M ust relocate and have entire sum m er tree E a rn $840/month. Call 472-8977 tor interview. G E O M E T R Y T U T O R needed, vicinity R iver H ills Call 443-8791 after 4. _________ _ is RO O M AND BOARD ____________ _ FURNISHED DUPLEXES H Y D E p a r k Yard, pets, I f shuttle, quiet, convenient. A B P 4*3-463' FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS LO W C O S T L IV IN G for people who can cooperate to create a home. Apply now for sum mer, fall. Inter-Co-Op Council# 510 West 23rd. 476-1957. “VANTAGE POINT” Rent for Both Summer and Fall at Present Rates Save $$ ALL BIU S PAID 2 shuttle bus lines, SR and RC 2 saunas and gam e room 2 pools and club room Efficiencies, 4 sizes of one bedroom, and 2 bdrm and 2 bath units Now Leasing 1845 Burton Dr. at Woodland Ave. 442-6789 FURNISHED HOUSES FURNISHED HOUSES FURNISHED HOUSES TIRED OF THE COMPETITIVE RATRACE? M O U N T A I N R E C R E A T I O N A N D S C IE N C E : Colorado State U nive rsity's sum m er program for science and non­ science students offers wide variety of non-technical, interdisciplinary science- related co urses com bined with long weekends of white-water river trips, backpacking, survival training, rock- climbing, and sum mit ascents in the Colorado Rockies. June 14 - August 6. No e xp e rie n ce req uire d . F o r b ro ch u re w rite: M R S , B ox 4, P h y sic s Dept., C.S.U., Ft. Collins, Colo. 80523. T W O Y E A R S C H O L A R S H IP S A V A I L A B L E To Sophomores. Naval R O T C otters a cha lle nging and interesting career. C o m m is s io n in r e g u la r N a v y upon graduation. F u ll tuition, textbooks, education, and lab fees, plus $100 per month. F o r more info., contect Lf. Joe Ylitalo, 471-3282. F O R H E L P with an unwed pregnancy call Edna Gladney Home, Fort Worth, Texas, toll free. 1-800-792-1104. SERVICES B R O K E N W IR E , M E T A L F R A M E S , OR N O SE P A D S ON Y O U R G L A S S E S ? Diversified Unlimited 815 Brazos Room 1006-B (International Life Bldg.) for complete welding service O N T H E R O A D O R IN Y O U R D R I V E W A Y WI L L NOT R I P YOU O F F Mobile Car Repair W e charge 70% of garage rate by com ing to you. D on't tow It — Call us, 443-2719 G IN N Y 'S C O P Y IN G S E R V I C E INC. Free P a rk in g 7am - 10pm M - F 9am - 5pm Sat. 44 Dobie M a ll 476-9171 SO UND U N L IM IT E D ! M a k e your dance a sure success with our mobile disco m usic system s. Quality, professional service, lowest prices in Austin. 454-2088 451-5957 T H E F IN E S T S O U N D IN TO W N C O M E TO R E N E 'S M e n 's Hair Styling where experience m akes the difference. Blow dry hair cuts, SIO. 458-4066.______ P IA N O T U N IN G . $15 m ost pianos. S e ? vice and repairs also. R ive r City Plano Service. Dan Reed, 454-8386.___________ C U S T O M M A D E C O T T O N S ( m y material). D ra w strin g pants, shorts, bikinis, etc. V e ry cheap. Kathy, 472-3064, 474-7597._____________ ________________ P I A N O T U N IN G , $15 m ost pianos. Repairs, guaranteed work. References. 474-1779 RO OM S N E W M A N H A L L Women's Dorm Small, quiet, friendly, excellent food, double/single rooms, maids, parking, l a u n d r y , k i t c h e n e t t e , c l o s e to everything. Sum m er rates: $42 up week­ ly , 19 m e a ls . C a t h o lic / n o n d e n o m in a tio n a l. 2026 Guadalupe, 476-0669 r o o m / b o a r d , T E X A N D O R M Doubles $199 Singles $359 per semester 1905 Nueces. D aily m aid service, central air. Refrigerators, hot plates allowed. Pa rk in g available. Tw o blocks from campus. Co-ed. Resident m anagers. 477- 1760. F U R N IS H E D , all bills paid, Q uiet,w alk to UT. M ale or female. 306 East 30th. 472- 5134._________________________________ N IC E L Y F U R N IS H E D rooms, efficien­ cies, and apartm ents within w alking dis­ tance to UT. $84 and up. 2800 Whiffs, 477- 7558 2710 Nueces, 477-9388. _______ A c ( F U R N I S H E D bedroom in quiet home. City, shuttle bus. Private en­ trance M a le s only. 608 Blanco, 478-7900. RO OM M ATES S E R IO U S L A D Y needed to share quaint house near Eastw oods $150, all bills paid. 476-8299 atter 8 p.m._____________ 2 G IR L S to share 2 bedroom apt. 3 blocks campus. Fall, spring $94. 476-1782, 477- 3983;____________ _____________________ H O U S E M A T E . Hardwood floors, AC, 2 BD, fenced yard, Vi bills, w alking dis- _____________ tance. $100. 474-9816. L I B E R A L R O O M M A T E , 2 bedroom duplex. $57.50, v* bills. 478-1378 before 2pm or after 11:30pm. M u st like pets. _________ room mate for house, your own room. 451-3539. 2629 W. 45th. $75/month, plus VS bills H O U S E M A T E , $78 plus ’/S. Huge back yard, own room, relaxed atmosphere. 4505 Speedway, 453-8615. __________ Q U IE T M A L E , female to share house. Own bedroom, need to be able to respect privacy of others. $33 plus VS bills. 474- 2186, Joe, Pat. H O U S E M A T E . Students share house, responsibilities. Private room. No pets. $90 month, $25 deposit. Share bills. Near cam pus 2710 San Pedro. 477-2961. M U S IC A L L Y T O L E R A N T roommate needed to share beautiful 2 br. duplex. Fenced yard, trees, CA/CH. $80 plus h bills. 471-5616, 441-5641.__________ ___ F E M A L E M A T U R E re sp o n sib le to share furnished 2 bedroom studio. M ust love anim als. After 5, 441-6704. WANTED ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES Three pert time position* open with flexible hours. Commissions plus bonus. Cell now for en eppoint- ment. doce/IDA, 477*3641. | e | \ Cordless Voting OKd With Signed Affidavit Voters who have not receiv­ ed their new blue voter registration cards can still vote in Saturday’s school board election. County Tax A sse sso r- Collector Fritz Robinson said Wednesday that a registered voter can sign an affidavit at the polls swearing he is registered but did not receive a card. Lee Couch, an election ad­ viser in the secretary of state’s office, said. “The main thing is to inform the voter that the affidavits are signed under penalty of perjury.” m u s t V o te r s be registered to use the af­ fidavits, stressed Couch. Unregistered voters who use the affidavits will be subject to criminal prosecution, he explained. The Texas election law provides only for voters who have lost their cards or left them at home — not for those who have not received the cer­ tificates, Couch said. “The election code did not campus noms In brief contemplate the possibility of the certificate not being received by the voter, and that is what this new affidavit is for,” Couch said. Robinson said most of the registration certificates were mailed. “There are a few that are not in the mail due to redistricting.” Some voters who received their certificates mistakenly returned them to the tax assessor’s office, Robinson added. Those persons are still registered and can use the af­ fidavit to vote. Elementary School Fun Club Needs Volunteer Assistance Frid a y in Welch Hall 104W (room subject to change). The speaker for this series will be Prof. G e orge Buchi, M assachusetts Institute of Technology. D U A R T M IN T O# CO MPUTER S C H U C K will sponsor a lecture by Prof. M.V. Wilkes, U niversity of Cambridge, at 3 p.m. Th ursday in Painter Hall 3.14. D IP ART M IN T O I G I R M A N * LANOU A G K wilt sponsor a film and a lecture by Dr. Jam es Asher, San Jose State U nive rsity, on " A M otivational Strategy for Language L e a rn in g " at 4 p.m. T h ursday in Geology Building IOO. DIPA RT M IN T O I HISTORY will sponsor a lecture by Dr. A rchibald Lew is, U n iv e r s it y of M a ss a c h u s e t ts at Amherst, on "F r a n c e 's M edieval South and French Unity” at 1:30 p.m. Thursday in W aggener Hall 420. H A D IN G i m O N C Y is the subject of a R A S S L course at noon Thursday in Jester Center A332. VO CA BU LARY IM P R O V IM IN T is the subject of a R A S S L course at 4 p.m. T h u rs­ day in Jester Center A332. T IX A S U N IO N M A S A N D IS S U K C O M M I T T H will show a Te xas Relays film at 2 and 2:30 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union South 108. Adm ission is free. T IX A S U N IO N M IX t C A N - A M M IC A N CULTURE C O M M U T E ! w ill hold a sandw ich sem inar on "T h e Coors Q uestion" at noon T hursday in the Texas Culture R oom of the M ethodist Student Center. TEXAS U N IO N M U SIC A L I V I N T S C O M M IT T fl will sponsor Laurie Baler from 8:30 p.m. to m idnight Thursday in the Texas Tavern. A dm ission is free. TEXAS U N IO N THEATRE CO M M ITTEE will show the film "T h e G odfather" at 8 p.m. T h ursday in Batts Auditorium . A dm ission is S I with U T I D, S I .50 for others. U N IV E K IT Y CH R IST IA N CHU RCH will have a sandw ich se m in a r with R ic h a rd "C a c t u s " P ryo r at noon T hursday in the Norden Lounge of the U niversity Christian Church, 2007 U niversity Ave. M EETIN G S C A M P U S CRU SA D E POR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. T h u rs d a y In E d u c a tio n Building 330 for a leadership train­ ing class. OM ALPHA will meet at 7:30 p.m. T h u rs­ day in Education Building 364 for CLASSICS CLUE will meet at 3 p.m. T h u rs­ in the c la ssic s departm ent worship. day lounge. G A Y C O M M U N IT Y S E R V IC K RAP G RO U P will meet at 8 p.m. Frid a y in the apart­ ment of R. Valencias, on W est 51st Street. N A T I O N A L INTERVARSITY C H R ISTIA N FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7:30 p.m. F rid a y in E d u ca ­ t io n B u i l d i n g 4 . 1 6 A f o r a "coffeehouse without the coffee." H S A L T H C H I C A N O O R G A N IZ A T IO N will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Jester Center A.215A to hear Cervando M arline, U T Health Sciences Center, San Antonio, and Santos Reyes, director of the Center for M exican-Am erican Studies. STUDENT S E R V IC K CO M M ITT EE O E STUDENT G O V E E N M B N T will have its final m eeting T h u rsd a y at the T e x a s L a d y R e st a u r a n t on W e st 24th Street. THE I Y K O f TEXA S will meet T h u rsday at M a ry J an e 's for a joint meeting with N O R M L . UNIVERSITY S O A R IN G A SSO C IA T IO N will not meet T h u rsday but will fly on Satur­ day. UNIVERSITY SPELEOLOGICAL SO CIETY will in meet at 7:30 p.m. T h u rsd a y Geology Building IOO. U N IV E R SIT Y U N D ER W A T ER SO C IE T Y will meet at 8 p.m. T h ursday in Robert Lee M o o re Hall 4.102 to elect officers and v ie w the m o vie " T w il ig h t Reef." SEMINARS DEPARTMENT Of A ST R O N O M Y will hold two sem inars T h ursday in Robert Lee Moo re Hall 15.216B. The first, a variable star sem inar at 2 p.m., will have Claud Lacy talking on "R a p id Line V ariability in Be, Of, and Wolf- Rayet S ta rs ." The second, an ex- tragalatic sem inar at 3 p.m., will have Dr. Marie-Helene U lrich talk­ ing on "O p t ic a l S p e c tru m and Redshifts of B2 1225 D E P A R T M E N T S O F E L E C T R I C A L A N D M E C H A N IC A L E N G IN E E R IN G will hold one of their series of spring, 1976, power system sem inars at 10:30 a.m. T h u rsd a y in C o ckre ll H all 1.204. T h e s p e a k e r w ill be a representative of the Southwestern Public Service Co., and the topic will be power system instrum entation and metering. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS will hold two sem inars Thursday. The first, at 3 p.m.in Robert Lee M oore Hall 9.222, will be a relativity se m inar with Peter D yke m a talking on "T y p e V C osm ologie s." The second, at 4 p.m. in Robert Lee M oore Hall 9.236, will be a statistical m echanical sem inar with Dr. P. Allen, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, talking on "E v o lu tio n and Specialization." Dangerous Corners M apped by Police Congress Avenue and Ben White Boulevard may be the most dangerous corner in Austin. Congress and Ben White had 40 accidents in 1975, more than any other intersection, Police Lt. Alvin Devane said Thursdav. Devane explained that the traffic division makes an in­ vestigation if seven or more collisions occur in one loca­ tion. The department considers such factors as weather and road conditions, land con­ ditions and obstructions, engineering problems with visibility, sign placement or timing mechanim of lights and road characteristics which encourage drivers to run lights or speed, Devane said. Congress and Ben White is such an open intersection that “people's feet get heavy on the pedal,” he said. The d e p a r t m e n t u s e s t r a f f i c e n ­ “ s e l e c t i v e forcement” in problem spots to watch more closely for speeders, he said. Other intersections which had a high number of ac­ cidents in 1975 were 38th Street and North Lamar Boulevard (31), 45th Stret and North Lamar Boulevard (31), South First and Oltorf Streets (27) and Northeast Drive and Hi ghway 290 (2 7 ), sai d De vane. All these intersections are open roadways which en­ courage drivers to run lights, Devane said. ANDERSON A COMPANY COFFEE • SPICES TICA TWO JEFFERSON SQUARE 453-1533 1601 W est 38th Volunteers are needed to assist with a series of morning fun club activities in two Austin elementary schools. For information, contact Stu­ dent Volunteer Services, 417- 3305. A N N O U N C E M E N T S D W A HTM IN T O f C M IM IS T IY will sponsor a series of lectures at 4 p.m. through TUTORING E X - U T M A T H P R O F E S O R offers tutor­ ing in ail courses. Reasonable rates, all welcome. Bill Dietrich, 454-8417. UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES 1-1, N E W L Y R E D E C O R A T E D , sun porch, patio, fenced yard, three blocks shuttle. 4006'/! Ave. A, 258-6094 after 5:30 p.m. FURNISHED HOUSES E N F IE L D , 3 bedroom, yard, pets, AC, modern kitchen, E R shuttle. 1705 New- field. 447-7222, 453-4831. __ 2 B E D R O O M furnished house, 2 blocks to U T . W a s h e r y d r y e r . 478 -19 72. A va ilable for sum m er rent.___________ TW O S T O R Y H O U S E , backyard park; Couple or two girls. Thru sum mer. $225# plus. References. 477-5303. UNFURN. APARTMEN 1-1 $143 P L U S E. Laundry, T V cable, clean. Preleasing for sum mer. Parco Plaza, 711 W. 32nd. 453-4991.___________ N E A R UT. Rooms, $65 A B P . Efficien- cies, $95 plus electricity. See m anager at G a ra g e apt., 908 W. 29th. B a rh a m Properties. 926-9365. __________ I BR, $145 plus electricity. 4209 Burnet Road. Near new Seton Hospital. 454-8450. LOST & FOUND L O S T M E D I U M to large black long hair In t ra m u ra l F ie ld area. m ale dog, Reward. 452-0733._______ ________ F O U N D I D. B R A C E L E T with the name M IK E , found at freshm an field. Call 472- 4846 _______________________ L O S T B R O W N L E A T H E R wallet last Thursday on cam pus; all ID 's. Please call Nancy, 471-3646, 471-7188. FOR RENT T H E ? R A M P A R T A P A R T M E N T S now preleasing for Fa ll 1976. One and two bedroom apartments, furnished or un­ furnished. F ro m $139 plus electricity. 1230 E. 38Va. 454-0202._________________ C A R P E T E D O F F IC E S P A C E , parking, close to UT. $50 and up, ABP., Tri Towers Complex, 476-7636. WANTED U N F U R N I S H E D H O U SE , UT area, to begin rent in M a y or June, under $250. $20 reward. 472-4850, 443-9203._________ B U yT n G bT_UE J E A N S . Cut-offs and long in good shape 50*-$2.00 pair. Only on Saturdays, 9-11 The only time and day. 2405 Nueces (upstairs)._______________ T R A D E . New 17 function advanced slide rule/scientific notation for cassette tape player. 478-1972._______________________ S M A L L H O U S E / D U P L E X near UT or shuttle to begin rent in M ay. 476-3872. UNFURNISHED HOUSES N E A R E A S T W O O D S P A R K . Charm ing, s u n n y b r ic k ho m e , 3-1, C A / C H , fireplace, nice corner, hardwood floors. $360/monthly. $150 deposit. No pets. 452- ._____________ 1236. MOS W A L L E R . C onve n ie nt. L a rg e , clean, 2-1. Range, refrig. Quiet couple. Lease, $185. 478-5739, 472-2097._________ S M aT T h O U SE , partly furnished with large yard and garden. $85 month plus bills and deposit. Available now. 1702 S a lina (off E. M .L .K . Blvd.)__________ n T c I T l i T T L E H O U S E , stove, no refrigerator, suitable for one person. Nice location. Call Debbie, 454-1643. TRAVEL I N T E R E S T E D I N N O ­ F R I L L S L O W C O S T J E T T R A V E L ? to Europe, Africa, the Middle East, the Far E a s t? E D U C A T IO N A L F L IG H T S has been helping people travel on a budget with m axim um flexibility and m inim um hassle for six years. F o r more info call toll free 800-223-5569. E U R O P E — I S R A E L - A F R I C A — A S I A - SO U T H A M E R IC A . Travel discounts year round. Student A ir Travel Agency, Inc. 4228 First Avenue, Tucker, Ga. 30084. (404 ) 934-6662. TRAVEL E U R O P E ® 2 fu rc i m w i 800-325 4867 @ Urr.Travel Charters M B A , T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G T H E C O M P L E T E P R O F E S S IO N A L F U L L T IM E T Y P IN G S E R V I C E 472-3210 and 472-7677 A t o Z Angela Zarcaro Secretarial Service 109 E. 10th St. 512/472-0149 Austin, Texas 78701 RO Y W. H O L L E Y a u t o m a t i c t y p i n g T Y P IN G 8, T Y P E S E T T IN G C O P Y IN G 8. P R IN T IN G B IN D IN G 1401 M ohle Dr. 476-3018 T V M M r I I K i m * E R SERVICE Reports, Resumes Theses, Letters All U niversity and business work Las* Minute Service Open 9-8 M on-Th 8, 9-5 Fri-Sat 472-8936 Dobie M a ll Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Park Yes, we do type Freshm an themes. 472-3210 and 472-7677 _ ________ R E P O R T S , T H E S E S , D isse rtatio ns, books typed accurately, reasonably. Printing, binding. Off 24th Street. M rs. Bodour, 478-8113. V I R G IN IA S C H N E ID E R Typing Ser- vice. G raduate and undergraduate typ­ ing, printing, binding. 1515 Koenig Lane. 459-7205. E X P E R I E N C E D A N D F A S T Typist. T heses, d isse rta tio n s, p ro fe ssio n a l reports, law, etc. Printing, binding. B a r­ bara Tullos. 453-5124._________ C R O C K E T T C O M P A N Y . Typing, copy- ing, word processing. I B M M A G C A R D ll, M e m o ry Typewriter for automatic typing Typesetting, copying. Painting, and binding. 5530 B u rnet Road, 453-6385. T Y P IN G IN M Y H O M E . 60*/page for paper, 70‘ for theses. Call Gretchen, 452- 3469, 451-2 3 3 2 . ________ T Y P I N G . n e a t , reasonable rates. Call after 5:30 and on weekends. Bobbie's Typing, 30th and Duval, 477-8376. D IS S E R T A T I O N S, Theses, reports, and la w b r ie f s E x p e r ie n c e d t y p is t . Tarrytown, 2507 Bridle Path. Lorraine Brady, 472-4715. ___ ___________ E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IS T . All kinds of pa pe rs, v e ry re a so n ab le . E le c t r ic typewriter. C all 385-6649 after 5 p.m. E x p e r i e n c e d , ________ fast, dependable, I L L U S T R A T I O N a n d T Y P I N G ; Photography. Correcting Selectee ll, Leroy lettering. Reports, dissertat ons, and publications. Call Darlene, 478-1472. E X P E R I E N C E D , A C C U R A T E Typist” IB M Correcting Selectric. Term papers, theses, books. 60 cents/page. 258-5514. T Y P IN G ! flexible, reasonable. IO years experience. Bever- ly, 4 7 8 - 0 8 1 2 . ________________ W E H A V E plenty of experience typing dissertations and theses. Call Pat or Bill, 477-1152, Brackenridge. _____________ W P E R D O U B L E Space page, 90* per s in g le sp a c e page. M r s . B a r b a r a ______ ______ Boycks, 836-1573. T Y P IN G D O N E 6 years experience IB M typewriter. $1 per page 258-3123. P R O F E S S IO N A L - T Y P IS T . Correcting Selectric ll. Student rates. Term papers, theses; one d a y s e rv ic e a v a ila b le . M ic ke y Willett, 258-6828, 837-4762.______ T Y P IN G . Fast, reliable, experienced. All kinds Also automatic typing for m ul­ tiple originals. Bill Heaton Enterprises. 535 E a st Woodward, 443-1739. Just North of 27th af Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Park RESUMES with or without pictures 2 Day Service 472 3210 and 472-7677 UNCLASSIFIED Clock radios, hair dryers fixed. 452-4406. T I N K E R 'S D A M Fixit Shop. 452-4406 Belly dance instruction. 472-3344.______ Wedding Photography SSIess 451-0021. Stereo T V repair free est. 478-4419 A fghan pups, pet 8, show. *37-3954. Have van, move you cheap, 345-7650 Cly tan /Mitchell Prof'I Photos. 477-7065 28m m S M C T lens sToa 451-1956!______ Kustom B ass a m p . $250 447-2044 Pioneer TS25 car spkr $22 477-8389. Good used lOsp 22” $80 . 477-1561 ______ Schwinn IO speed $50. 472-8938._____ Colum bia IO speed, $35 . 472-8938. 1970 360 Subaru $400 385-7293 night. Person needs home. 478-6030 Cash for used bicycles. 477-3002 Klepper Kayack, $220. 474-8 2 1 0 .__ Double m attress for sale. 453-4026. Cheap room near cam pus. 472-3975. SERVICES W A N T E D Your Savings EARN 6% University onnvollv CREDIT UNION UT b e why m 4 SWH Find Your Car. Then Finance It FAST At U nive rsity CREDIT UNION Thursday, April I, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 19 I I TRY CO-OPERATIVE LIVING! Apply Now for Summer and Fall Inter-Cooperative Council, 510 W. 23rd, 476-1957 College House*, Inc., 2000 Pearl, 476-5678 Our apologias to Th* University off Texas and the Methodist Student Center for the ads which appeared in The Daily Texan on March 30 and 31. Some have felt diet the advertisement discriminated on the besit of sex. (Title 7, Civil Rights Act). In no way did we intend to suggest exploitation of women. We are interviewing prospective candidates for a career opportunity in the terne manner ae other compeniee conduct campus interviews. Th* Multi-Service Money Mort for UT Faculty and Staff William A. Solemene & Associates M y ste r io u s Case of tile Toilet Plunger Murder Chicanos In Media To Meet The first Chicano Media Conference at the University will begin April 8 at the Catholic Student Center, 2010 University Ave. The event is coordinated by Chicanos Interesados en Comunicacion, (CIEC), a University group of chicano students majoring in communication fields. The con feren ce, incor­ porating panels, workshops and lectures, will continue through April IO. “This is the first time that top chicano professionals in all areas of the media will come together to discuss problems, to talk to students and to meet with each other,” CIEC representative Irma Orozco said. “IT WILL ALSO provide an opportunity for chicano students to talk to these p r o f e s s i o n a l s and a s k questions relating to chicano- oriented problems in media coverage,” he added. Some of the participants will include Domingo Nick Reyes, Dr. Felix Gutierrez, Jorge Schement, Houston Post reporter Tony Castro and market analyst Juan Moreno. Reyes is acting director of the Institute for Hispanic American Life and History, Inc., and also works for the National Mexican-American Anti-Defamation League in Washington. He will present a paper on the “Marshall Plan for Chicanos in Mass Media.” f r o m Northridge California State University, has been involved in past chicano movements, and Schement is a PhD can­ didate from Stanford Univer­ sity. G U T I E R R E Z , Castro is an investigative reporter for the Houston Post and author of “ Chicano Power,” a book which receiv­ ed widespread acclaim. A specialist in business development and design, Moreno provides manage­ ment and technical assistance to Spanish-speaking clients for the Cable communications R e s o u r c e C e n t e r in Washington. OTHERS INCLUDE Rita T revino of WFAA-TV in D a lla s, F ra n k A graz of KTRK-TV in Houston, Eileen de Madero, speech professor at Institute Technilogico in Monterrey, Mexico, and Mar­ cos Ronquillo, director at the Centro Estudio Chicano in Notre Dame. The conference will cover topics such as stereotyping, writing for Anglo papers, “ selling out” and job oppor­ tunities. “ On April 8 we will have a press conference with the local media that will be open to high school, college and community organizations,” Orozco said. Opening speakers April 8 in­ clude Wayne Danielson, dean of the School of Communica­ tion, and Santos Reyes, direc­ th e C e n t e r f o r to r f o r Mexican-American Studies. Agencies To Study Needs O f Handicapped Representatives of campus, city and state agencies will meet Friday to discuss the transportation needs of the m obility-im paired a t the University. C o o r d i n a t o r s of t h e meeting, members of the Stu­ dent Government Students Services Committee, will use information obtained in the session to evaluate Universiy services for the handicapped and p ro p o se a l t e r n a t i v e systems. The group hopes to use such data in compiling its report on specific transporta­ tion proposals which could be initiated by the University alone and with the city. in Any mobility impaired stu­ dent or University employe or anyone the in te re ste d problems of this group is in­ vited to attend and participate in the discussion, comm ittee cochairman Erie Mayo said. More than 50 organizations have been invited to the public meeting at 2 p.m. in Jester Center A307A. INFO FONE Th# Texas Union "in fo fono" — 4 7 1 -4 7 4 7 — lists campos and Texas Union events, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. A new recording of each day's event is made b etw een 9 and IO a.m . weekdays. the crime the clue The crim e is the murder of M ort I allfurther. T he suspect is unknown, but the murder weapon has been identified as a toilet plunger. Right now, Mr. Sherlock H olm es and his trusted assistant, Dr. Watson, are investigating the T oilet Plunger Murder. Clues can be located in three of D obie’s shops that are marked with either a blue, green, or red colored coded Sherlock H olm es sign located at the shop’s entrance. Y ou’ll need a clue from a store with each o f the colors in order to solve the mystery. Rules, and entry blanks are available in all o f the D obie M all shops. the reward $250.00 Reward (first prize) $30.00 Gift C ertificate (second prize) Sherlock H olm es Hats (third, fourth, fifth, and sixth prizes) *So that Mr. Holmes and Dr. Watson can perform their duties as efficiently as possible, Dobie M all w ill be featuring an English atmosphere and entertainment to guard against homesickness in the pair. n O B X E MAUL * \ n p u t t h a * \ f t i l n u I In- p t f u n l I n Page 20 Thursday, A p ril I, 1976 THE D A ILY TEXA N