T w e n ty -E ig h t Pages Vol. 77, No. 63 News and E d ito ria l: 471-4591 Cowboys can’t run ’78 bonfire T he T e x a s C ow boys h av e been suspended from sponsoring next y e a r’s Texas-Texas AAM bonfire following dis­ closure that a Cowboy m em ber was responsible for printing a racially slu rr­ ing sign a t the bonfire site last week. T h e h a n d - l e t te r e d s ig n , w h ic h appeared on a local television broadcast the night before the bonfire, was painted on the side of a shack the Cowboys had previously used to ov ersee bonfire preparations. THE UNIDENTIFIED student was rem oved from Cowboy m em bership last F riday a fte r an internal investigation re v e a le d he had w ritte n the sign, George Bayoud, forem an of the Texas Cowboys, said Wednesday. The m a tte r w as then referred to the Office of the Dean of Students, which in­ itia te d its own d isc ip lin a ry action against the student in addition to cen­ suring the Cowboys, Dr. David McClin- tock, assistant dean of students, said. “ T h e T e x a s C o w b o y s h a v e ack n o w led g ed an d a c c e p te d th e ir responsibility for controlling the area of the bonfire and preventing such oc­ currences from happening. As a result, the Office of the Dean of Students has suspended the privilege of the Cowboys from serving as sponsors of the bonfire next y e a r,” McClintock said. IN PUBLICLY announcing the cen­ sure, Bayoud said, “ Although the sign was the a c t of a single individual, we recognize the organization m ust accept responsibility for controlling the area of the bonfire to assure th at such incidents do not occur. “ We a re distressed by the entire a f­ fair and in no way condone the act, for this does not reflect the attitude and spirit of the T exas Cowboys, who by oath are pledged to uphold the honor and dignity of the U niversity. We feel that under no circum stances should any group allow any form of discrim ination to exist. We, again, wish to express our sincere apology to a ll.” in McClintock said, “ The Cowboys from the beginning have acted with g re a t re sp o n sib ility th e m a tte r. T h eir leaders a re to be com m ended for having taken the initiative to bring about a resolution to the incident and having cooperated fully with the Office of the Dean of S tudents.” T H E Da il y T E x a n S tu d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin Austin, Texas, Thursday, December I, 1977 szz'sL xcg ‘o *j • o u I Fifteen Cents t Advertising: 471-1865 id Classifieds: 471-5244 I v t ‘ d m T i f f Park remorseful; return possible SE O U L , S o u th K orea ( UPI ) M illionaire Tongsun P ark ta contrite o ver his ro le in stra in e d relations between W ashington and Seoul and may go to the U nited S tates to face question­ the K orean bribery scandal, ing governm ent sources said Wednesday in The sources said there m ay be a breakthrough in the c a se by C hristm as P ark is the key figure in an investiga tion into alleged payoffs to congressm en and others in an a tte m p t to prom ote pro-Korean polices in Washington The sources said P a rk , who had lived in the United S tates for 25 y ears and considered the country his second home, “ felt sorry" that the scandal had h a rm ­ ed r e l a t i o n s b e tw e e n S e o u l an d Washington “ SHOULD HE change his m ind and decide to go to the United S tates volun tartly there is no reason why we should oppose it,” one governm ent source said Park was indicted by a U.S. grand jury e a rlie r this year on 36 counts of m ail fraud, bribery, and corruption c h a rg e s and U S. a u th o ritie s have sought to question him in the United States. The m illionaire rice dealer has said he would not want to go back to the United States to face investigators until there was a guarantee of fair trial. He also com plained that he had already been unfairly tried by the American press. SOUTH KOREAN legislators backed Park, maying the U S. dem and for his i etum was an interference in the coun­ try's dom estic affairs because P ark is a Korean citizen In Washington, law m akers threatened to cut off U S aid to the Seoul govern­ ment because of the deadlock over the Park issue U S and Korean officials have been m eeting in Seoul in an attem p t to settle the dispute U S authorities had indicated that they would drop charges against Park if decided to cooperate with the govern­ m ent in its investigation. P ark. 41, has denied any wrongdoing. Wishful thinking —Texan Staff Photo by Cartoe Oeorio law student Bob Santa Claus, alias fourth-year Intently as Mary Ann Wynette Adams, suggests a few Items she would like for Christmas. listens High on the ‘want’ lists this year are bionic dolls and Charlie’s Angels dolls, In addition to the usual re­ quest for bikes and games. Judge delays land condemnation Regents plan to appeal temporary injunction By NAN POWERS County Reporter A ttorneys for the U niversity Board of Regents decided Tuesday to appeal a recent sta te d istrict court ruling th at they cannot condemn two plots of land destined for donation to the city for a new Red River Street. Asst. Atty. Gen. Watson Arnold said his office will appeal 201st D istrict Court Judge Je rry D ellana's ruling on the tem porary injunction to the 3rd Court of Civil Appeals. The re stra in e r, granted Nov. 15, keeps the U niversity from exercising its right of em inent dom ain and condem ning the two pieces of land. THE FIRST PLOT, in the 2800 block of Swisher Street, houses Com anche A partm ents. The second plot, 2900 Red R iver S treet, houses the Clinical Pathology L aboratories Medical Association. The two plots a re included in a 1973 co ntract between the U niversity and the City of Austin. According to the contract, the city agreed to v acate Red River Street from M artin Luther King J r. Boulevard to E ast 26th Street and give the land to the regents. According to the civil law suit filed Nov. 4, the University wants the land for expansion purposes In return, the regents agreed to acquire an 80-foot public right of way, east of the present Red R iver S treet, from M artin Luther King to E a st 38th S treet and give that land to the city for constructing a new Red River Street. To acquire p a rt of the right of way specified in the contract, the regents filed a condem nation petition in County Court at-Law No. in October against Comanche Apts Inc. I According to the petition, the U niversity and the ap a rtm e n t com pany could not reach to an agreem ent on a price for the land on Swisher. Attorneys for the ow ners of the second parcel of land, housing the pathology lab, filed a petition to enter the suit since th eir land also would be condemned eventually. The is owned by Pelphrey, Rainey, H arle and plot Stew art Professional Association P rofit Sharing Trust. The tru st, consisting of 83 doctors and employes, was developed to provide a retirem en t fund for m em bers, Philip W alker, tru st adm inistration of­ ficer a t Austin National Bank, said As trustees, the bank bought the land as an investment, he'said The bank then leased the building and the land to the profit sharing association, which does business as th e C lin ic a l P a th o lo g y L a b o r a to r ie s M edical Association, whose back door a t 2900 Oldham St. faces the Comanche Apartments, Walker said. referring to the tem porary injunction. “ They do have a lot of authority in other areas, but we thought they shouldn't be able to do it (condemn the buildings) without a fight,” he added. T he O ctober condem nation p etition says the regents a re authorized to exercise their right of em i­ nent dom ain to acquire land they “ deem necessary and proper for carrying out the purposes of the U niversity.” It argues th at “ increased enrollm ent, crowding of the existing cam pus and the expansion of the Univer­ sity ’s role have created need for m ore land for the proper operation of the University " The U niversity Student H ealth C enter sends a por­ tion of the Clinical Pathology to Laboratories, including Pap sm ears and m ore com ­ plex testing, a health cen ter spokesm an said. lab work its However, the law suit argues the reg en ts’ purpose is not to acquire m ore land for University use but to donate that land to the city. This donation is illegal under sta te law, the suit contends. David Hilger, an attorney for Comanche Apts., Inc., said, “ We didn’t think they (the regents) had the authority to destroy those buildings, ” Hilger said No date has been set for a permanent injunction hearing in the ca se because the University plans to appeal the decision within the month, Arnold said. Minority recruitment holds top admissions priority By TOM SWINNEA Investigative Reporter Minority recru itm en t is the No. I priority of the Office of Ad­ m issions and R ecords, and the director of the office believes “ for anybody to think w e’re going to solve this (m inority enroll­ m ent) problem in a short tim e, I don’t think th a t’s realistic. D irector David H ershey is enthusiastic about the job his of­ fice, P ro ject Info and other cam pus organizations a re doing to raise m inority enrollm ent a t the s ta te ’s larg est university. A report by the N ational Association of S tate U niversities and Land G rant Colleges credits the U niversity with having the fourth largest M exican-Am erican student population in the na­ tion and the fourth larg est nonresident alien population based on fall, 1976, figures. A SURVEY by The Daily Texan of nine of the s ta te ’s IO largest universities shows T exas ranks third in the num ber of blacks enrolled and second the num ber of Mexican- Am ericans. in UT a t El Paso has the s ta te ’s larg est M exican-Am erican pop­ ulation They com prise 29.3 per cent of the total a t the 15,836- stu d e n t un iv ersity . N ationw ide, UTEP ra n k s second in M exican-Am erican population. The C entral cam pus of the U niversity of Houston has the larg est concentration of blacks in a predom inantly white un­ iversity. A total of 2,501 people, or 8.5 per cent of the 29,297 enrollm ent, a re black. Proportionally, Texas A&M cam e in last in the num ber of blacks and M exican-Am ericans attending school. The cam pus fall 1977 enrollm ent is 29,414. Of these. I l l are black and 244 a re M exican-A m ericans. This am ounts to .3 per cent and 8 per cent, respectively. OF THE BLACKS a t A&M, approxim ately 35 are on athletic scholarships, A&M Asst. Sports Inform ation D irector Jim B utler said. Stephen F. Austin State U niversity, with 10,751 students, had 142 M exican-Am ericans. While this is less than the A&M total, it accounts for I p er cent of the student population. Texas Tech U niversity lists 373 blacks in its fall figures, or 1.6 per cent of the total enrollm ent of 22,358, with 93 7 per cent of the school listed as “ w hite.” UT Arlington has an enrollm ent of 17,201. Of that num ber, blacks com prise 5 per cent of the total and M exican-Am ericans m ake up 2.9 per cent. SPANISH SURNAME student population has risen at the U niversity 20 12 p er cent in the la st two years, and black enroll­ m ent is up 37.34 per cent. The 12th Class Day E nrollm ent R eport lists 971 blacks and 2,842 Spanish surnam e individuals attending Texas “ We’re taking the University to the public,” Hershey said. “ When we sta rte d pushing for m inority recru itm en t back in 1972, we spent a year getting the internal office structure squared aw ay.” He explained that the office w as in bad clerical shape when he arrived A three-m onth tim e lag betw een sending in an adm is­ sion form and receiving a reply was norm al, the director ex­ plained “ Now th at tim e is down to IO days ” A fter getting the office in working order, priorities were assigned for m inority recru itm en t High schools with 30 per cent or m ore m inority enrollm ent w ere given first preference on re c ru ite rs’ lists. P rogram s within various schools and colleges also w ere coor­ dinated A task force now com bs the sta te looking for prospec­ tive students. IN ADDITION to the adm issions office, P ro ject Info, a student-staffed organization, provides “ a lot of ex citem ent’’ because “ they’re action-oriented,” Hershey said P ro ject Info, begun in 1968, is composed m ostly of m inority students who work a t recruiting m ore m inorities for the University. “ They’re the peer to peer contact that is vital in re c ru itm en t,” the direc­ tor explained. A third type of recruiting is done through various colleges The College of Engineering sponsors the Equal Opportunity in Engineering P rogram , designed to a ttra c t m inorities into the field There a re 445 m inorities in the school. This accounts for ll per cent of the college’s enrollm ent. The key to the success of EOE is money, D irector John Robottom said More than $77,000 was donated to EOE during 197677 by various corporations, he explained. R egents’ Achievement Scholarships and the N ational Fund for Minority Engineering Students contributed m ore than $9 3 ,0 0 0 last year. HERSHEY is quick to discuss quota system s. “ What is the quota7 T here isn ’t any How m any (m inorities) do we w ant7 As m any as we can get. A lot of people spend a lot of tim e on the dialogue (of quotas) when they could be out recruiting.” Hershey said the cam pus black population was 320 several years ago, and he is happy with m inority growth on campus. “ Are we happy with recruitm ent? Yes Are we satisfied7 No. If we continue in the next four years as we have in the past four years, we ll be very successful “ Then we ll still have problem s We need to deal with the mobility im paired student and the student older than average, as well as continuing education.” thursday Notters... Linda Waggoner, shooting against Temple, and the women's basketball team meet Pan American Thursday in the first game of the George West invitational. Story and photo, Page 16. President indicates Burns may be out WASHINGTON (U P I) - P resident r te r said W ednesday if he decides to 3lace A rthur B um s as chairm an of » Federal R eserve Board the new ap- intee would have to be acceptable to s nation’s business com m unity Adm inistration sources said C arter s m ade no final decision on Bum s, but e president’s com m ents during a news nference m ay have tipped off his inking on the m a tte r C arter said he did not believe business aders would re a c t negatively if B um s •re not reappointed to a third term as *d chairm an His c u rre n t term expires in. 31. “ I DONT believe anybody is m- spensible, a president or a chairm an the F ederal R eserve Board or anyone se ,” C arter said. “ I think th at if I should decide to aplace Dr. B um s as chairm an of the ederal R eserve, it would be incum bent i m e to get someone who is com petent ad who would arouse the confidence of ie A m erican people, the jsiness com m unity.” It was tim e C arter has ublicly m entioned the possibility of a BW chairm an. the first including to reappoint The business com m unity and some m e m b e rs of C ongress have urged C arter the 73-year-old B um s. But influential A dm inistration m em bers and som e of C a rte r’s closest White House aides a re against Bum s serving another term . Those White House aides a re critical of B um s’ econom ic policies and fear if the Fed continues its tight rein on the money supply, short-term in terest rates will rise so high that econom ic growth could be affected. ONE ADMINISTRATION source said C a rte r’s com m ents W ednesday “ could m ean the president is leaning toward B um s’ rem oval. On the other hand, he (C arter) m ight not have intended them to m ean anything.” B um s said Tuesday in New York he would accept another te rm as Fed chairm an, and would “ seriously con­ the board as a s id e r ” stay in g on m em ber even if he is not reappointed. Although B u m s’ chairm anship ex­ pires a t the end of Jan u ary , his 14-year term as a board m em ber runs through 1984. Cool... Thursday’s high will be in the lower 60s with a low at night in the lower 30s. More weather, Page 27. —Texan Staff P a g e I D T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ T h u rsd ay, Decem ber I , 1977 Student Senate campus capsules Waiting of 5:30 Line# had already formed p m a t Wednesday for Cotton Bowl tickets at Bellmont Hall At could be ex­ pected, students showed up prepared with games, sleeping bags, warm clothes and more funds lobbyists Th** Student Senate voted Wednesday to ap­ propriate HOO for the C ity Coost? Lobby Committer- in event the City Council acU on its proposed |7 50 electric turnxin fee The council is expected to vote on the proposal in January The $100 appropriation is to help students organize to lobby against the fee recommended by the Ele ctric U tility Commission Sen ato rs also a p p ro p riate d HOO to Brackenridge-Roberts Dorm itory i annual drive to buy Christmas gifts for 20 needy children Sharon Winer, a spokeswoman for the U S. Com m ittee for Justice to l.atin American Political Prisoners, presented an itemized budget requesting $250 to aid in publicizing speaker Hugo Blanco Blanco, a native farmworker of Peru, is scheduled to speak Dec 9 He w ill speak on American public awareness of the repression and the denial of civil liberties and human rights throughout Latin America After lengthy debate over whether to pay for Dally Texan ads to publicize Blanco s talk or hang a banner on the West Mall, the senators approved the full $250 appropriation Senators also voted to cosponsor Round-Up with the Interfratem ity Council “ We want to do what we can to help campus organizations and dorm s," Marc Luzzatto. vice-president, said In connection with the campus book sale appropriation, How ard Lennett, vice- chairman of the Co-Op Board of Directors, was present to explain why the Co-Op book prices are as they are The Co-Op Board of Directors consists of four faculty members, four students and the chairman What we need is input from you guys who are interested in prices of books. We don t know what you want or what your complaints are unless you tell us, Lennett said In addition to the swearing-in of newly elected Natural Sciences Sen Margaret Gregory Seth Reiner was elected to replace Doug MeGookey as natural sciences senator. McGookey will graduate in December After a quorum call which did not pass, the meeting was adjourned and the Health Center Advisory Board appropriation was postponed until next Wednesday’s meeting Bill Willms wins law school runoff B ill W illm s won the student senator runoff election in the School of Law Wednesday with 65 8 per cent of the votes cast Willm s received 63 of the total 96 votes cast to his oppo­ nent Robert Ware s 34 4 per cent or 33 votes The runoff resulted after no candidate won more than 50 per cent of the vote in the pre- Thanksgiving election Ware received 49 per cent of the vote in that election compared to W illm s' 26 per cent. Asked about the results, W illm s said his win was “ ab­ solutely a fluke, the stars must have been right “ He added that he was surprised because of the large margin of votes that Ware received in the first election Ware attributed the lack of a m ajority in the first election to five write-in votes that were counted in the total Election Commission Chair­ man Charta Deckert said the write-ins were for legitimate people and had to be counted. A large number of no-votes w ere ca st but w ere not counted Ware attributed his latest defeat to the lack of a cam­ paign effort He said on elec­ tion day he had three class reviews which prevented his participation j I , ■ gMtoi&dc*# ' M & .fc1 a, * d r .cr n A a A # J f jt y r y* Photo* by JHI a. Manlovo >yn » n » n ??n ??n Anyone in in Professional Careers in Jew ish C om m unity W ork it w e lcom e to moot with Rabbi larry Raphal, A s s i s t a n t O m a n , H m b rm w U n i o n Coilm gm in N o w Y o r k f o r a p p o in t m e n t T h u r t d a y o n l y couth. Hillel Foundation 2 105 Son Antonio 476-01 » n »n » n r>n ??n 2nd Beauty Works Cheese Tasting Seminar Friday, December 2 4:00 pm To bo held In the sportswear department 2nd floor There will be a minim al charge of I OO per person Join in the open discussion on the usage of wine and cheese given by a true connoisseur. Reservations need to be made by Thurs., Dec. I. Y a rin g 's - 2406 Guadalupe 16 oz. beer stein, $2.95 IO oz. coffee m u g, SI.95 LCD Elegance Thti W corVwHAVs display watch compo*** with models selling lo* Ttve than $160 The CommodWl IC H elegantly slim yet loadld with the -nest ask e dit* le o n e s Hours, minutes, w* light tor nght .aids month i date, extra large IC Display viewing and the alternating time dote mode A eui value but r shod supply through Christmas $ 3 9 1 5 + j I m R . C A L C U L A T O R 2021 G u a d a lu p e Dobie M all O p en Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 12-6 Free F orking W ith Purchase OPEN THURS!)A YS TIL 8 o f all H e a r t w a r m in g Gift S e le c tio n s K in d s Exquisite Dresses C u d d ly Sh a w ls Silky Blouses Dressy Pants plus B a g s a n d belts a n d scarfs a n d earrings a n d bikini sets a n d cam isole*. Jazz panties a n d petticoats. Knee sox an d w alle ts a n d m ore! The little store w ith mort' of everything 2322 Gwodolup# A id applications available Applications for financial aid for summer 1978 and the 1978-79 academic year will be available in the financial aid office beginning Thursday. Jesus Gomez, assistant director for student finan­ cial aid, said students are urged to pick up the applications before they go home for the holidays and submit the applications with a copy of their 1977 income tax return as early as possible in 1978. Applications for summer aid must be submitted by Feb 15, and the deadline for fall applications is March I The financial aid office at 2608 Whitis Ave. will conduct sessions to aid students with questions or problems For information regarding times of sessions, call 471-4001. Police to register bicycles University police will register bicycles in front of Gregory' Gym between IO a rn. and 2 p.m. Thursday Sgt Lyn Croshaw of the Crime Prevention Unit said more bicyles are stolen over the holidays than at any other time of the year. It is almost impossible to recover and positively identify a stolen bike unless it is registered. Croshaw said. An Austin city ordinance requires all bikes ridden on the city streets to be registered. RTF student receives award Graduate student Katherine Heyhoe has been awarded the Lynne Anne Baggett Scholarship in the University Department of Radio-Television-Film (R T F). A 1977 graduate of the journalism department, Heyhoe is majoring in R T F She is assisting Dr. Stanley J. Baran, associate professor of RTF, in his research on the impact of television on public awareness and acceptance of the mentally retard­ ed. She was selected as the student who best demonstrated the qualities characteristic of Lynne Baggett — academic achievement and enthisiasm. I of Texas at Austin is The Daily Texan a student newspaper at The I niversity -- ----- -- ---- ... — tv Station. Austin Tex published b\ Texas Student INihlications D ra w er!). University Station Austin Tex 78712 The Patly Texan is published Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday ^Thursday, and F r i­ day except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Dustin Tex Sews contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-45911, at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 I S * or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 136 Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made rn T S P Building 3 200 471-52*4 and display advertising in T SP Budding 3 210 471 I865t The national advertising representative of The [lady Texan is National M utational Advertising Service In. 380 Lexington Ave New Sark N S 1001, The Pally Texan subscribe- lo I nned Press International and New York Times News service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism (.ingress the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association THI DAU Y TK XAN SI HSI R IP T IO N R A T E S HNI- S E M E S T E R (F A L L OR S P R IN G ) 1977-78 Picked up on campus basic student fee Picked up on campus L T faculty staff Picked up on campus - general public Bv mail in Texas Bv mail, outside Texas within C S A T W () S E M E S T E R S (F A L L A N D S P R IN G ) 1977-78 Pa ked up on campus • U T faculty staff Picked up on campus general public Bs mail in Texas Bv mail. outside Texas within C S A $ 75 I 55 6 75 13 OO 14 OO % 330 1200 24 00 26 OO I SI MM KH SESSIO N 1978 I I OO Picked up on campus 4 OO Picked up on can ous general public 8 50 Bv mail in Texas 900 Bv mail. outside Texas within I S A ^ n d orders and address changes to T E X A S STI D E N T P C B L iC A T tO N S P O Box I R NO 146440 I'exas 78712 or to T S P Building. C3 200 I students faculty staff I) \uslin Central Texas CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION p r e s e n ts J O H N HILL Mr. Hill will speak on the death penalty and Gov. Briscoe's law & order package Dec. 2 at the Red Tomato at 11:30 a.m. The public is cordially invited to a tte n d . I Paid for by the Univ. Civil Liberties Orgamz.) k4 -9pm Happy Hours Y jig * - Thursday, December I, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e 3 I Carter says tax reductions take priority over revisions c 1977 New York Times WASHINGTON - President C arter said Wednesday he would defer his ta x - r e v is io n m o re c o n t r o v e r s i a l proposals next year to insure early enactm ent of “ substantial tax reduc­ tions .” With these rem arks at his 19th news c o n feren ce. C a rte r confirm ed w hat S ecretary of the T reasury W Michael Blum enthal and other Cabinet officers have been saying — that the urgency of stim ulating the economy with a quick tax cut next year required d eferral of a m b i t i o u s b u t tim e - c o n s u m i n g proposals for overhauling the Internal Revenue Code In a series of questions and answ ers on the Middle E ast, C a rte r applauded Egypt and Israel for agreeing to m eet in Cairo in m id-D ecem ber, urged Syria, th e L e b a n o n a n d J o r d a n deliberations and said the United States would be represented by an assistant secretary of state. to jo in ON THE SUBJECT of taxes, C arter used two som ew hat different adjectives to describe the tax-revision proposals that he would include in his 1978 tax package, “ com prehensive” and “ ade­ quate The latter, narrow er te rm near­ ly describes the tax revision package being drafted by the White House as it has becom e increasingly evident that “ tax reform was being laid aside for the sake of tax reduction It is certain th at the A dm inistration’s m ost far-reaching idea for tax revision, ending preferred capital gains tre a t­ m ent of profits on sales of securities, real e sta te and other assets, would be shunted aside likely The one proposed revision that seem s m ost the pruning to survive process is conversion of the exem ptions for tax credit, a into a change that would benefit low-income taxpayers at the expense of those in up­ per brackets individuals CARTER EX PLA IN ED the planned postponem ent of “ the m ore controver­ sial item s on tax reform ’ by saying “ they would be very tune-consum ing a n d h a v e v e r y l i t t l e m o n e t a r y significance Fiscal analysts in and out of govern­ m e n t q u ic k ly n o te d th e T reasu ry 's own Septem ber estim ate, ending preferential treatm en t of capital t h a t by gains for individuals would yield $3 67 billion of revenue at 1976 income levels and that by 1982 the revenue gain would be $5 7 billion These a re considerable sum s as federal tax revenues go. C arter said he hoped that Congress w ould fin ish in c r e a s e d le g is la tin g energy and Social Security payroll taxes this year so that his January budget and tax reduction proposals could be used to offset the loss of consum er purchasing power that m ight result from the two bills The size of next y e a r’s proposed tax cut and the tim ing rem ain unannounced Blum enthal and C harles L. Schultze, chairm an of the Council of Econom ic Advisers, a re reported to be in favor of a July I effective date with acting budget director Jam es M cIntyre said to prefer a later one BLUMENTHAL HAS said the overall tax reduction for individuals and c o r­ porations would be S15 billion to $20 billion a year The final figure rem ains undecided, aw aiting com pletion of con­ gressional action on energy and Social Security and a year-end reading on the vigor of the economy. Cairo support urged WASHINGTON (U PI) - President C a r te r u rg e d o th e r A rab n a tio n s Wednesday to follow Egyptian P re si­ d e n t A n w a r S a d a t ’ s " h i s t o r i c breakthrough” and m eet collectively or individually with Israel tow ard reaching a Middle E a st peace. C arter said he expects the Israeli- E gypt peace m eeting to begin in Cairo Dec 13 and announced that the United States will be represented by Alfred Atherton, the State D epartm ent’s top- ranking Middle E ast expert. But a S tate D epartm ent spokesm an said la te r th at the m eeting would s ta rt on Dec. 14, one day later than C arter es­ tim ated. ALTHOUGH SYRIA, Jo rd a n , the Soviet Union and the Palestine L ibera­ tion O rganization will not attend the talks, C arter said he does not anticipate or want a separate peace agreem ent between Israel and Egypt “ In the last few days we have seen I believe an historic breakthrough in the search for a perm anent, lasting peace in the Middle E a s t.” C arter said in a nationally broadcast news conference. “ I believe th a t this is a move the whole world looks upon with great a p ­ preciation.” It was first public statem en t C arter has m ade on the Middle E ast since Egypt announced plans for the the Cairo conference last weekend, and he credited Egyptian P resident Anwar Sadat with “ tru e leadership q u alities.” HE SAID there is still “ a very viable hope” that Middle E a st nations even­ tually will reach a com prehensive peace settlem ent, but in the m eantim e, the United States would be happy to see any Arab power try individual talks with Israel. “ Just say for instance th a t if King Hussein (of Jordan) said he would like to n e g o tia te d ir e c tly w ith P r im e M inister Begin (of Israel), we would support that enthusiastically and offer our good offices to encourage such an in­ terchange,” C arter said. He said the United States has not decided yet w hether to support UN S ecretary G eneral Kurt W aldheim ’s proposal for a United Nations m eeting of all Middle E a st interests On other topics, C arter said that legislation this year may lead to tax hikes but next year “ there will be sub­ stantial tax reductions.” He said he has no plans to back down on his key energy proposals but gave no specific indica­ tion of what the congressional energy bill m ust contain to win his approval. QUESTIONS ON the Middle E ast the news conference and dom inated C arter repeatedly stressed A m erica’s support for S adat's Middle E a st in­ itiatives, contradicting speculation that the United States feared Egypt and Israel would reach a separate peace agreem ent, and that the Adm inistration was displeased at being edged out of the diplom atic spotlight. urn Convicted Moslem extremists whisper to each other in Cairo prison cell. Egyptian tribunal sentences Moslem extremeists to death • 1177 New York Time* CAIRO - An Egyptian military tribunal on Wednesday sentenced five members of an extremist Moslem society to death after they were found guilty of murdering a kidnaped former cabinet minister last July, also plotting subversion against the government The court also sentenced 36 other convicted members of the Takfir Wal Hijira to prison sentences ranging from 3 to 20 years, the latter the equivalent of a life sentence. Another 13 defendents were acquitted. The sentences, which were imposed by a tribunal headed by Maj. Gen. Hassah Sadek. are subject to confirmation by # President Anwar ekSadat. The military prosecutors had sought death penalties for 22 of the defendants. Execution in Egypt is by hanging. THE TRIAL, one of the most publicized in recent years here, stretched over three months and was characterized by unruly behavior from some of the bearded defendants. The crackdown on the society has been the most dramatic part of the move by Egyptian authorities to head off urban violence after the price riots in January. At least two bombings of Cairo cinema houses and the murder of Dr. Mohammed Hussein el Zahabi were traced to the militant group, which attracted fundamentalist Moslems, many from rural areas The Takfi Wal Hijira society — its name in Arabic means Repentance from Sin and Retreat — considered nonmembers as heretics and was pledged to bring down the Sadat government for being "Godless ” Last July 3, the extremists kidnaped Zahabi, a noted Islamic scholar who earlier served as minister of religious endowments, administering the extensive property be­ queathed by devout Moslems. The kidnapers demanded the release of 30 society members from jail, a ransom of $500,000 and newspaper apologies from the government for having at* tacked their group The kidnapers claimed to have selected Zahabi, who was abducted from his home in Heilwan south of Cairo, because he had criticized the society In his writings. The scholar was found dead by police several days later, shot through the left eye in what was considered a ritual murder Several hundred members of the group, including the defendants convicted Wednesday, were subseqently rounded up by police. THOSE SENTENCED to death by the court were Shukri Ahmed Mustafa, 34, an agronomist who headed the society, Maher Bakri Zanati, Ahmed Tarek Abdel-Alim, Anwar Ma* moun Sakr and Mustafa Ghazi Among those acquitted were three teen-age boys accused of being couriers for the organization. Another 196 members are still being tried by another military court for belonging to the society and sup­ porting its aims Secret societies are prohibited under Egyp­ tian law Egypt welcomes peace efforts Geneva conference to begin Dec. 14 (U P I) C AIRO , E g y p t - E g y p t W ednesday welcomed both P resident that pre-Geneva C a rte r's suggestion Middle E ast peace talks open in mid- D ecem ber in Cairo and UN Secretary G en e ra l H urt W aldheim ’s call for another prelim inary peace conference The sem iofficial Al Ahram new spaper said th a t although E gypt d e c la re d readiness to host the talks as of next Saturday, “ it welcomes the date an­ nounced by P resident C arter a t his news conference.” C arter said the talks will open Dec 13 and a State D epartm ent spokesm an later said the opening of the conference would be Dec 14. Al Ahram also said Egypt is ready to take p a rt in the conference proposed by Waldheim. “ ALTHOUGH E G Y PT in sists on organizing the Cairo parley, it is not op­ posed to taking p art in any other con­ th e a im of m a k in g fe re n c e w ith p r e p a r a t i o n s th e f o r G e n e v a , ’ ’ new spaper said “ A cc o rd in g ly , E g y p t w e lc o m e s W aldheim’s call for a p reparatory con­ ference in New York to be attended by the concerned parties, Al Ahram said Israel has turned down W aldheim ’s proposal. E arlier, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat blasted Arab c ritics of his peace initiative, saying they only c a re about “ power and safety .” Sadat spoke in the Suez Canal city of Ism a ilia sho rtly a f te r Soviet Am­ bassador Vladim ir Polyakov delivered the K rem lin’s form al rejection of an in­ vitation to attend talks in Cairo. In Syria the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) tried to torus the splintered Arab world on opposition to Sadat Plans for separate Arab conferences rivaling S adat’s peace talks in Cairo went ahead in Libya and Iraq, despite Saudi A rabia's efforts to rally all Arabs around a m oderate position concerning Egyptian-Israeli developm ents to fire SADAT, REACTING from Syria, the PLO, Libya, Iraq and other Arabs for his trip to Jerusalem and his peace conference in Cairo, defended his initiative in a blistering attack on his Arab critics. When he visited D am ascus two weeks ago before traveling to Israel, Sadat said, S yria’s ‘‘P resident Hafez Assad told me th at tim e will prove me wrong. “ But I replied th a t I have the courage, in this case, to face my people and tell them that I m ade a m istake,” Sadat said “ We do not fight for the sake of fighting but in o rder to establish peace on e a rth ,” Sadat told a delegation from the Israeli-occupied Sinai. “ I prom ise you that I will c a rry my peace call to the very end. "IT WOULD HAVE been easier for m e to stay in my place, talking and attem pting to ... leave the problem to my successor. But I felt that God will summon m e to account if I did not work to spare future generations the ferocity of war. Before m eeting my God, I have to do my best for the sake of this coun­ try ” Final respects Vice-President Mondale and First Lady Rosalynn Carter leave funeral services Wednesday for Sen. John McClellan In Little Rock, Ark. Israel ready to sign news capsules separate treaty ® 1977 New York Tim es BONN — Foreign M inister Moshe Dayan, ending a four-day visit to West G erm any, declared W ednesday th at Israel would sign a sep arate peace tre a ­ ty with Egypt “ any tim e, any tim e ,” before or outside a reconvened Geneva conference. The Israeli foreign m inister m ade this statem en t in response to a re p o rte r's question a t a news conference here Dayan said his governm ent w as “ still optim istic and hopeful” that a peace agreem ent with Cairo could be reached “ There is a wide gap between the positions of the two p a rtie s.” Dayan rem arked, “ and th a t's why we a re going to a m eeting to try and bridge th at gap to d o w n g ra d e ASKED WHETHER the United States had a tte m p te d th e forthcom ing Cairo talks in which Israel will be represented, Dayan said he was not aw are of any Am erican pressure to “ m inim ize” the direct E gyptian-Israeli negotiations. Com m enting on Moscow's refusal to send a delegation to the Cairo talks, the Israeli foreign m inister observed that “ we don’t have to m ake a peace treaty with R ussia” and noted that E gypt’s relations with the Soviet Union w ere strained With a reference to the role of the United States and the Soviet Union as joint chairm en of the long-suspended Geneva conference on peace in the Mid­ dle E ast, Dayan said: “ With all respect for the cochairm en the problem is with the p a rtie s” th at have to m ake peace in the region. The Geneva conference was “ ju st a fram ew ork,” the Israeli m inister con­ te n d e d . “ W h at is so h o ly a b o u t G eneva’ ” DAYAN STRESSED Isra e l’s will to conclude peace tre a tie s also with J o r ­ dan, Lebanon and Syria whenever these countries w ere ready to negotiate with his governm ent. Egypt was in a position to m ake peace or w ar in the Middle E a st even if it was alone, Dayan rem ark ed , the other Arab countries even together could not do either without Egypt. The Israeli m inister said he doubted th a t Saudi A rabia would com e out against President Anwar el-Sadat of Egypt “ The big question of Sadat is his own people and his own m ilitary fo rces,” Dayan said “ If they support him, then I think he can go ahead” in the search for peace with Israel. SADAT’S VISIT to Israel was “ an im ­ is p o rta n t step — e v e ry th in g else irrelev an t,” Dayan said U.S. preparing human rights proposal BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (UPI) — The United States is preparing a new proposal on human rights for the Belgrade Conference on Euro­ pean Security and plans to present it Friday, U.S. delegates said Wednesday. A spokesman for the American delegation at the 35-nation meeting called the draft “a modest proposal,” but said it would strengthen and reaffirm several key points of the 1975 Helsinki agreement, which the conference is reviewing. He said it will also “encourage each country ’s citizens to engage in a dialogue with their government” — a reference to the unofficial Helsinki “ monitoring” groups in the Soviet Union whose members have been harassed and arrested. INS uncovers fraudulent marriages WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Immigration and Naturalization Ser- vice said Wednesday it caught nearly 5,000 aliens attempting to gain permanent residence status through fraudulent marriages during the last fiscal year. The INS said it found 301 of the aliens applying for permanent resi­ dent status had paid fees to U.S. citizens for marrying them. “ Marriages of convenience are a favorite ploy for gaining permanent residence status,” Commissioner Leonel Castillo said. A valid marriage to a U.S. citizen allows the applicant to live and work in the United States and eventually become a citizen, Castillo said There is no lim it on numbers as there are on other immigrants, he said The INS said it received 115,348 applications for permanent residence status based on marriage to a U.S. citizen. It questioned the validity of 36,000 of them and asked the appalicants to submit to interviews. Sun Day to be observed on a Wednesday WASHINGTON (UPI) — With a solar-cooled jungle hat nearby, a group of environmentalists, consumers and labor leaders Wednesday announced plans for a nationwide observance of "Sun Day” to rally citizen interest in solar energy. On May 3, a Wednesday, the groups said observances will began with a sunrise service atop Maine’s Cadillac Mountain, the spot where the sun s rays first touch U.S. soil. Stock market posts slight gain DOW JONIS AVERAGE 30 In d u s tria ls 8 2 9 . 7 0 C lo s e n C 1877 New York Times NEW YORK - Stock prices gradually edged into higher ground Wednesday under the in­ fluence of several favorable fac­ to r s , w ith g la m o u r is s u e s leading the way. The Dow Jones industrials, following a drop of more than 12 points on Tuesday, swung back into the plus column with an ad­ vance of 2 43 points to close at 829.70. At 10.30 a m ., however, the blue-chip indicator was down more than 3 points in an exten­ sion of the previou s day s decline T h e Da il y T e x a n Page 4 □ Th u rsd ay, D e c e m b e r I, 1977 With laughter all the way By RU— ll Baker NEW YORK — Never in the long span of humanity have so many spent so much tim e being entertained by so many who are dead Thanks to sound-recording and film technology, you can now pass entire evenings en­ joying the diverting company of the deceased .After an hour spinning the records of Jin n Hendrix and Jam s Joplin (both dead), you can switch to a statelier beat and hear Arturo Toscanini (dead) conduct the Sixth Symphony of Ludwig von Beethoven (dead). A Hick of the radio switch brings a song from Bing Crosby (dead) or Elvis Presley (dead), perhaps some jazz by Louis Arm strong (dead) or Duke Ellington (dead), or a nostalgic session with Glenn Miller (dead). On television you can always tune in “ The Maltese Falcon" or “ Casablanca" and enjoy Hum phrey Bogart. Sydney G reenstreet and P eter Lorre (all dead). Ju st the other night I passed an agreeable two hours enjoying Clark Gable, who, though dead, still m ade a splendidly swashbuckling rogue of the Old West. Afterw ard I switched back to the turntable and got into bed while Bruno W alter (dead) conducted the little night m usic of Wolfgang Amadeus M ozart (dead) and read m yself to sleep with the aid of Charles Dickens (dead). Many of the hardest working dead en tertain ers are those unsung and faceless laughers who toil nightly in television situation comedy These are the people whose laughter you hear after the boffolas on shows that have been filmed without audiences I don’t suppose all these laughers are dead, but a lot of them m ust be by this time. I know for a fact that a t least one is, because he is my Uncle P ark er, who died in 1941. He was fam ous in the family for his distinctive laugh. During the 1930s he traveled to New York and attended a radio show. Eddie Cantor, Joe Penner, or somebody like that — I don’t rem em ber — I was still very young. As Aunt Em m a still recalls, “ P a rk e r laughed himself half to d eath .” A recording of th at show with Uncle P a rk e r’s distinctive laugh m ust have been put in a studio attic and forgotten for years until the birth of television gave birth to the situation comedy, which gave birth to the so-called laugh track, which put poor dead Uncle P ark er into millions and m illions of A m erican homes. The laugh tra c k ’s purpose is to take the uncertainty out of com ic writing. Recorded snippets of ancient audience laughter are taken out of a laughter bank and put into the sound track of the comedy a fte r each gag, thus rem inding the home viewer th at som ething funny is afoot on the screen. And so it cam e about that Aunt E m m a had a m acabre surprise one night in the early 1960s when she turned on her television and heard Uncle P a rk e r’s unm istakable heehaw At that tim e he had been dead 20 years, but there was no m istaking the laugh. Aunt E m m a would doubtless have fainted dead aw ay — the approved social response of southern ladies of her era to evidence that your long-dead husband m ay still be alive — if it hadn’t occurred to her that Uncle P a rk e r had pulled a fast one on her. It took im m ense persuasion to rid her of the notion that Uncle P a rk e r had faked his death in 1941 so he could abscond to Hollywood and spend his rem aining days attending situation-comedy shows in solitude by the Pacific. After she finally accepted the explanation that she was simply hearing a record of Uncle P a rk e r laughing him self half to death a t Eddie Cantor or Joe Penner in the 1930s, she becam e a television nuisance. The set played all the tim e and in the m iddle of con­ versations, she would suddenly cry, “ Hush! T h a t’s your Uncle P a rk e r laughing on television.” I still pick up Un­ cle P a rk e r’s laugh now and then and lately — perhaps it is a sign of encroaching senility — I catch m yself calling it to the children's attention. “ H ear that laugh?” I ask. “ T h at’s your Uncle P a rk e r who’s been dead 36 y e a rs." The children think i f s absurd that a m an so long dead should still be laughing, and slightly alarm in g that I care about it even a little bit. And yet, w hat is so strange about being proud of the one person in your fam ily who has gained the eternal life granted by television? In his special way, Uncle P a rk e r contributes as much to the happiness of A m erica as any of the tireless host of the glam orous dead still laboring to save us all from having to spend evenings talking to somebody alive. c 1977 New York Tim es firing line Firing line letters should: Be typed and triple spaced. • Be 30 lines o r less. • Include name, address and phone n um be r of contributor. M ail letters to The Firing Line, The Dally Texan, Draw er D, UT Station, Austin, Tex. 7B712; o r bring letters to the Texasn office In the basem ent o f the TSP Building. The Daily Texan reserves the rig h t to e d it guest viewpoints and letters to the e dito r fo r p ro p e r length and clarity. editorials Taxing news from Bob Bullock Judging from his m ost recent actions, one might conclude Bob Bullock if running for governor against John Hill, instead of Dolph Briscoe And judging from the way h e’s conducting his business, if he were run­ ning, he wouldn’t d eserve to get It Most politicians use state money to issue self-serving press releases containing rem arks they made at luncheons or during speeches preten ding that their rem arks are news It s a com m only practiced indiscretion Bullock, though, has gone too far, using tax dollars to print and dis­ tribute relea ses which are purely for his personal and political gain They have degenerated to personal attacks on individuals who take stands against Gov Dolph B riscoe, whom Bullock is supporting for reelectio n Public officials are prohibited by law from using public funds for private gain And, Bullock m ay violate that legal and ethical mandate by Issuing press releases which have nothing to do with the com ptroller s o f­ fice For exam ple, he attacked Atty Gen Hill Tuesday after Hill issued an opinion on the constitutionality of House Bill 22 That bill provided proper ty tax relief to farm ers but is unconstitutional, according to Hill, because changes in property taxes require constitutional am endm ents Says Bullock of Hill s decision ' Comptroller iiob Bullock said Tuesday he is surprised John Hill can through the forest of find the door to the attorney gen eral’s office political boogeym en he would have us believe constantly surround him. “ Bullock laughed at Bill s contention made at a Monday afternoon press con feren ce that he is being forced to rule on the constitutionality of B B 22 because of persons trying to em barrass me politically “ The truth is G eneral Hill has shown he is fully capable of e m ­ barrassing h im self politically without anyone s help Questioning the propriety of Hill s decision, Bullock says, the attorney general of T exas, above all people, should know h e’s got to put the law of the land ahead of personal political gain C om ptroller Bullock, perhaps, should practice what he is preaching He should know his personal attacks, his informed reporting of when and why he laughs, many of his opinions and his loyalty to Briscoe have absolutely nothing to do with his duties as com ptroller You, as a taxpayer, are pay­ ing for Bullock's p ress releases with which he attem pts to settle his per­ sonal grudges and political deals. And, Bullock, who very badly wants to be governor him self som eday, should know that the people of this state expect a higher d egree of ethical standards from the people who lead their state —J L F., D M. Robinson’s death needs FBI investigation On Get 14, 1976, Frank J Robinson w as found dead in his garage in P alestine, the victim of a gunshot wound It s been more than a year since local investigators first ruled murder in the death only to have that ruling changed to suicide following a long, controversial Inquest At a p ress conference in P alestine Saturday, the Anderson County Voting D efen se Fund said a U S attorney prom ised an FBI investigation into the death of the F ast Texas civil rights leader Robinson s w ife Dorothy has maintained her husband did not kill him self “ No power on earth will ever m ake me think he com m itted su icid e,” she said Saturday Mrs Robinson arni the com m ittee contend several questions, which would prove Robinson did not kill him self, have to be answ ered S pecifically, why four shots were fired at the scene, with three of the spent shotgun sh ells found near the body and the fourth discovered near a fence beside the house, why there were no fingerprints on the shotgun, why there were no powder bums tai Robinson s bands or clothes if he fired the sh o t. who was in a white van seen speeding from the dead-end street w here Robinson's body later was found in hts garage; and why w as the weapon, suppos«H.ilv Robinson s, different from the shotgun he owned Mrs Robinson said her husband s shotgun had two ham m ers, yet the murder weapon had none We agree with Mrs Robinson and the com m ittee These questions need to be answ ered before a convincing ruling can be made Furthermore, Timothy S Smith, chairm an of the com m ittee, said at the press con feren ce that he received a letter shortly after the 1976 in­ quest which stated he would be ' next'' on the list Smith said he gave the letter to the FHI The F ast T exas com m ittee has offered a 65,000 reward for information leading to conviction of those responsible for Robinson s death We favor a speedy FBI investigation Until a thorough investigation by a third party rem oved from local politics, the questions concerning Robin son s death will rem ain unanswered - G F . D M T h e Da il y T e x a n Editor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editor* Assistant to the E ditor News E ditor F eatu re* E ditor Sports E ditor E ntertain m en t E d ito r ih o lo Editor C am pus Activities E ditor Consum er tail tor G eneral R eporters K.»\ t C ity E ditor News Assistants E ditorial A ssistant A ssistant E n tertain m en t E ditor A ssistant Sports E d ito r .......... Sports A ssistant ..................... Make-up E ditor Wire E ditor Copy E ditors I’hotographers Dan Malone ...................... ..........Krtc H arrison .................. ...... S te w McAdoo, l-aura Turn* G ary Fondler .......... ............ Liana F h rh eh ( am ie Chiles ............................................. Brad Buehholi Tom K essler Mike Smith Ginger Borgin ('Olin H unter Steve Anton. Bill I'o ck en ll feeling Janie Leigh Frank. Beth Frerkm g, M a rn e Gugenheim . K aren H astings. Christy Hoppe Nan Pow ers P ee Steer. Mike Stephens. Tom Swinnea ...................... Soma Ann P e re i Mike McDougal, l indy Benavides, Scott Awbrey, Michael P e r n , Bonnie Howell, Mark LXwley, Gregg Weinberg Jason Redwood Susan Rogers Jim Lefko Mark Goodwin Ken Orlolon Gordon Pike Mark W Davis. Tim Mahoney. Brad Moore. Noel Levy debra Kemgold. Jim Thom as .......... M D T **** ta TW Uaii> Twas a i* awat a IM Mbhw ar IM a r tt * « tM a rt* w tad a r* b m A w a* IM U a m rijn or tW Hoard a K r«aM * Ear Mvwrtmng aaa otfwrwraUaa ara P l* * I / R E . L ( x / f H l S IS ALL YOUR / A FIR M EN T I nervous PSYCHIC \ T PELUSIOW/ Of course advertising misleads By Nicholas von Hoffman WASHINGTON It s been about six months since Michael Pertschuk, the form er chief counsel of the Senate C om m erce Com m ittee, moved over the headship of one of Washington s most venerable and vulnerable regulatory bodies, the Federal Trade Com­ mission From the standpoint of the consum er, that hippopotam us-mouthed hero of every political speech, Pertschuk is the perfect man to This guy is straight arrow If anyone can put a stop to m isleading and unfair advertising it s he He s talented and untouched by conflict of Interest, dedicated and in­ telligent, but nobody can prevent advertising from be­ ing unfair and m isleading It is intrinsically kinky, and th*1 decades the FTC has consecrated to making it honest dem onstrate you cannot police the unpoliceable “ ALWAYS TELL the truth Tell a lot of the truth Tell a lot m ore of the truth than anybody expects you to tell Never tell the whole tru th ," wrote Jam es Rorty, an ex- ad m an, turned radical, in a 1934 book entitled, "O ur M aster s Voice Advertising Although Mr Pertschuk doesn t say it, and m ay not even adm it it to himself, some part of Pertschuk s heart m ust agre** with Rorty There is no other explanation for a promised FTC rule on the way hearing aids should tx* sold The "ru le would give purchasers a 30-day period in which to w ear a hearing aid and see if it helps them Evidence suggests that many consum ers, especially the elderly, need that tim e to m ake an informed purchase decision." says the com m ission chairm an. In other words he concedes no way exists to police the ad v er­ tising So. instead, the governm ent will allow the decep­ tion it c a n ’t prevent, and enforce a money-back guarantee for the deceived and the disappointed PERTAIN PERSONS, like the handicapped deaf, a re thus m ade quasiw ards of the sta te and extended special protections against advertising Pertschuk adm its as much when he explains that, "W e a re very much con cerned about advertising that is aim ed at the m ost vulnerable groups in our society, such as non-English I’m not prepared to say that ad v er­ speaking persons tising directed to 2- 3- or 4-year-old children is ever ap­ p ropriate Is it fair for advertisers to treat children as consum ers?" (P ertsch u k ‘s words are taken from an in­ terview printed in the Dot 17 V S News and World Report > It follows that the com m ission is entertaining the idea of banning -hildren’s advertising entirely. Again the only conclusion that can be drawn from such an ac t is that the FTC itself knows it is impossible to compel advertisers not to take unfair advantage of cripples and kids IN REALITY though, the rest of us are hardly in a b etter position to escape dam age from advertising The dam age m ay be inadvertent on the ad vertiser s p art or not, but it is antisocial nonetheless Take the television ads urging you to protect your fam ily and yourself from burglars or o ther baddies who m ay wander into your home The notion that any gizmo will m ake you safe is m isleading per se, but by broadcasting it over the a ir­ waves the populace is deluded into thinking there is a safe haven in som e m anufactured article If you want to be safe in your home, forget the gizmo and beef up the police force, or attack the causes of crim e, assum ing you know them Life insurance com m ercials a re another offender. They love to put them on during the pro football gam es, m m i-heartbreakers of the new widow closing up the country place she can ’t afford to keep, cleaning out John’s personal trifles from his desk down a t the office, Junior having to go to work at the luncheonette instead of going to college Leaving aside the desirability or lack of it of the undoubtedly expensive life insurance peddled via these tear-jerk ers, what are the social and political m essages such com m ercials put in the heads of millions not protected by Mr Pertschuk and the FTC? The view given is that society is indifferent, that in the event of death or some other tragedy no hope and no help will be forthcoming, so you better buy insurance. Buy, buy insurance — but money c a n ’t buy insurance superior to a social order built on mutual aid and com ­ munity Such com m ercials a re propaganda against try ­ ing to build one ADVERTISING strives to c re a te a perception of reality in which the individual sees him self as alone, frightened and without resources. We ve a b etter world with a bit of the proper kind of fear in advertising fear in women of being frum ps, fear in m en of being duds," w rote advertising m an Mark O’Dea som e years ago, but it s true today, or don’t you use Dial and don’t you wish everyone else would? Once they 'v e gotten you helpless and your soul turned to jellied Styrofoam , you’ll believe M cDonald's does it all for you. th at AWF m akes your weekend and the ad of those black kids sitting on a slum stoop in the ghetto is the one where they’re singing. “ Coke adds life. true Coke m akes living nice." « 1977 King F eatures Syndicate, Inc. The Students9 Association can respond better to its members m eetings a re open to all students, but few students can take the tim e to attend a full m eeting This will m ake it possible for students to review a m eeting in a few m inutes This would also help relieve the problem of “ lack of com m unication between the Students Associa­ tion and registered student organizations.” Student groups with interests in U niversitvw ide activities, such as the P an H ellenic Council, can select som eone to act as a liaison with the Student Senate, eith er to p a r­ ticipate rn all m eetings or to keep informed of Senate activities and com e when th ere is som ething to be dis­ cussed of p articu lar the group. These in terest rep resen tativ es should be introduced to the Senate so they m ay know who they a re and who they represent. These suggestions are a response to som e cu rren t Students’ Association faults as outlined in the SARO ex­ cessive fault report Hopefully they will help students to realize that the Students’ Association is of and for students and should be responsive to them . Through th ese m e a n s, stu d en ts would be ab le in fo rm them selves and p articipate in the Students Association to help m ake it the working organization of students it is m eant to be to to M c G o o k e y is a n at ur al s c i e n c e s s t u d e n t se n a to r . si Douglas McGookey TTT T a e ^ j^ o m rn u n ic a tio n and in form ation problem that exists between students and the Students Association that was pointed out in The Daily Texan survey last week This is the sam e weakness with the present organization that generated the Students Association R estructuring Com m ittee, the m em bers of which w rote an excessive fault report and then a new constitution that was designed to elim inate those faults The new constitution was narrow ly denied the two- thirds m ajority in the Student Senate it needed to pass. The senators who voted against the SARI’ constitution believed that students needs could best be m et by revisions in the present constitution, as opposed to thrusting a new, untried and unfam iliar organization upon students and the Students Association E nder the present constitution, inform ation can be m ade easily available for those students who a re in­ terested in the activities of the Students Association through a combination of several m eans Some th at I suggest are 11 Make college council m eetings open to all students Voting m em bership m ay be lim ited but participation Should not The SARO excessive fault report sta te s The councils seem to be m ore aw are of their con­ stituency " Making all council m eetings open will help to em phasize this advantage of the college councils 2> Encourage organizations within departm ents to send a rep resen tativ e to the council of their respective colleges, for exam ple a rep resen tativ e from the U niver­ sity Geologic Society should go to N atural Sciences Council m eetings This will help increase com m unica­ tion within colleges and also m ake it possible for clubs and organizations to p articip ate in council activ ities Si (a) E ach council should select a m em ber to attend and p articip ate in Student Senate m eetings The SAHU The Senate does not fulfill this (unction report states (liaison with college councils' at the present tim e S en ato rs a re supposed to a tte n d college council m eetings, but “ senators rarely atten d their council m eetings or know the m em bers of th eir college coun­ cils " This step will help to c re a te a m ore binding liaison between the Senate and councils (bl The ex ccssive fault report also stales “ It is recom m ended that a college council have the power to review in open hearings the perform ance of their respective se n a to r. and to initiate recall if the senator is found to be delin­ quent in his duties ’ Although there is no provision for this in the present constitution, senators do have an obligation to their councils, and council m em bers should encourage their senators to attend m eetings and feel free to criticize if he or she does not 41 The m inutes of the Student Senate m eetings should be m ade available to all councils, organizations, clubs them selves of and students S tu d en t S en ate S tudents A ssociation a c tiv itie s that want inform to In violation of law. freedom By Howard Hickman We don’t fund anything that we don't control.” —Frank Erwin, former chairman. Board of Regents. The issue of mandatory funding for The Daily Texan has for the last year been my cause celebre I have carried the case to three courts and expended hundreds of dollars of my own money in order that I would not have to pay a 75- cents-a-semester fee To a rational man such behavior, absent a reasonable ex­ cuse, would tend to indicate insanity or some other form of social maladjust­ ment (i e — an extreme dislike in being forced to pay for The Daily Texan or for the content of its editorial page ) It is the reasonableness of my excuse that is to be judged here today. But first some background is required, The Daily Texan is a branch of Texas Student Publications (TSP); which in turn is a branch of the Board of Regents of the University of Texas System; which in turn is an agency of the State of Texas. This relationship, according to an attorney general’s opinion, makes the Texan not only a state agency but also indistinguishable from the Board of Regents. To put in simpler term s, the Texan is as much as part of the Board of Regents as Allan Shivers. The Texan’s actions are legally those of the Board of Regents. The TSP is governed by a board of ll voting members — five appointed by the president of the University, four un­ dergraduates elected by some students in the School of Communications and two undergraduates elected by the en­ tire student body, including the School of Communication, The actions of the TSP are approved by the president of the University. The yearly budget of the TSP is ap­ proved by the Board of Regents. For the last two years for which figures are available, The Daily Texan turned a net profit of $216,274. Mandatory fees for the sam e period, if the present rate were in effect, would account for $150,- 000 (However, it should be noted that the time period for which the figures are available was during the time the Texan was optionally funded; the op­ tional funding was somewhat less than $150,000.) Further, the TSP pays $20,000 a year to an editorial manager, whose m ajo r function is to ‘‘see that no violations occur either of Texan policy or any other directions or policies of the regents and the TSP Board’ — i.e., is colloquially called ‘‘ce n ­ w hat sorship ” There are three m ajor contentions that I have at times used against the mandatory funding of The Daily Texan: I) The Texan does not need the money; 2 1 The mandator)- fees are used in viola­ tion of the Texas Appropriations Act; and 3) The imposition of a mandatory fee used to endorse candidates for public office and to influence legislation violates an individual’s freedom of association if that individual disagrees with the usage of his money for such purposes The validity of the first con­ tention can ea sily be gauged by reference to the above paragraph to The validity of the second contention — a violation of the Appropriations Act — requires two additional facts First, due to a ra th e r com plicated legal analysis, the budget of the Texan is sub­ the Ap­ the provisions of ject propriations Act. To loosely quote the attorney for the Texan, ‘‘everyone knows the Texan’s budget is subject to the provisions of the Appropriations Act. On that there is no question.” Secondly. Article V, Section 4 of the Ap­ propriations Act provides ‘ none of the monies appropriated by ... this Act. regardless of their source or character, shall be used for influencing the out­ come of any election or the passage or defeat of any legislative measure ” If there is a question as to if the Texan influence elections or attem p ts legislation, a brief glance at Tuesday’s Texan should lay such questions to rest. The third contention — freedom of association — is a fundamental right. It has long been held that, in the words of Thomas Jefferson, “ to compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he dis­ believes is sinful and tyrannical.” The Supreme Court of the United States most recently recognized this right in the case of Abood vs Detroit Board of Education. to The court stated in that case, ‘ One of the underlying principles underlying the court’s decision in Buckley vs. Valeo ... was that contributing to an organization for the purpose of spreading a political m essage is protected by the F irst Amendment ... “ The fact that appellants are compell­ ed to make, rather than prohibited from making, contributions for political pur­ poses works no less an infringement on their constitutional rights.” The Abood case was concerned with the use of union membership fees for po litical p ro p an g an d a. The union member must pay the fee to maintain his job, while the student must pay the fee to attend the University In the realm of mandatory student fee cases, there have been only two where the freedom of association argument has been raised In both cases the Supreme Courts of Washington and Nebraska the student s freedom of association rights recognized It should be noted at this point of the three contentions only the second and third are issues capable of litigation in the courts Only the second contention has been directly addressed by any court The trial court stated that the provision of the Appropriations Act does not m ean what it says The two appellate courts upheld this decision on procedural grounds (For the layman, this is the excuse an appellate court gives when it does not want to address a controversial issue ) The freedom of association contention has never been directly addressed by any court In closing it is only fair to mention the main argument that is frequently cited as a counter to any attacks on the man­ datory fee for the Texan — the Texan has freedom of the press and to take away the mandatory fee would violate that right Despite journalistic rhetoric to the contrary, freedom of the press is not an absolute Like all freedoms it must coexist with other freedoms — in the present case, freedom of associa­ tion It is the balance of these freedoms with which one should be concerned In analyzing this balance, two points should be remembered. I) The Daily Texan is a state agency and the imposi­ tion of the mandatory fee is state ac­ tion; and 2) The Constitution subjects any abridgement of freedom of associa­ tion by the “ closest scrum ty.” The state must show that it has “ a sufficiently important interest and (has) employ(ed) means closely drawn to avoid unnecessary abridge­ ment of associational freedoms the state to The issue of mandatory fees for The to be Daily Texan still continues plagued by two unanswered questions — can the Texan continue to openly violate a provision of the State Appropriations Act with impunity? Can the State of Texas require a student through man­ datory student service fees to support candidates for public office or pieces of legislation that the student opposes? I believe the answers to these questions are a resounding “ NO!” I trust in order to receive a definitive answer to these questions that I do not have to appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, but, if necessary, I shall. H i c k m a n is a t hi rd-year law s t u ­ dent. T h u rsd a y, December I, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P age 5 - " * * r , W R I PEACE AT LAS! . . tVpil PAM' TOURISTS NEVES <50iN TO B N D a ' BILLY (TARTER WAV Our WEJPE '* France has role in Mideast By C. L. Sulzberger PARIS French policy today is by no means inactive in the Middle East nor is it as slanted along a preconceived pro- Arab bias as has frequently been thought by the outside world in the decade since the six-day war President de Gaulle then started to cold-shoulder Israel because it ignored his advice. While there are differences in nuance and also in diplomatic approach among viewpoints of the four big powers — the United States, the Soviet Union. Britain and France — since the dram atic start of face-to-face negotiations between Egypt and Israel, President Giscard d’Estaing believes “ Nevertheless, there is now an ap­ parent convergence in their attitude and this must be very carefully analyzed by all of them because it could help basic progress in a very fundamental way ” This leads one to suspect carefully discreet exchanges are under way among the four most concerned capitals external to the Middle Eastern cockpit. Moreover, it is apparent France is play­ ing a direct role in the area itself. The evidence is plain Prim e Minister B arre has just been in Damascus. Although his trip was arranged long before the recent events in Jerusalem and Cairo, fortune could not have provided a better moment for Barre to express restrained wisdom to Syria, where French influence is strong Likewise, Israeli P rim e M inister Begin is expected here on an official visit next year This again had already been arranged and it cannot take place before France’s legislative elections in March which makes the timing perhaps more fortuitous But again the prospec­ tive journey is a sign of more balanced French approaches to the Arab-Israeli problem than has been the case at times in the past. According to Giscard d ’Estaing who (even though the Fifth Republic has a prime ministerial system) as president is really responsible for foreign and defense affairs: “ My own opinion is that peace is desirable for everyone concern­ ed the Arabs and the Israelis But this requires a total settlement. The situa­ tion cannot be stabilized with anything less than that.” “ I think much progress was made in 1976 but this trend was interrupted by the necessity of national elections in both the United States and Israel. Since then the gradual progress has not mov­ ed in the same way.” Sadat's trip to Israel might have produced progress had it brought about a real dialogue with Israel; but this has not — at least yet — occurred The trip simply showed Egypt could establish normal relationships but not that Cairo could stimulate an Arab colloquy with the Israelis. It is evident that at this moment the Arabs are divided Paris, at least, worries whether this condition may foster a new competition in the Middle East between Washington and Moscow. Right now my impression of Giscard d’Estaing's analysis is that he feels a Geneva conference, as it had been en­ visioned, has become impossible and that some new variety of settlement for­ mula is needed. But the clouds of confu­ sion still emanating from the area with its sudden sp ate of international meetings gives me, at any rate (and I doubt if the president would disagree) a feeling that some weeks must pass before the new situation is clarified. Giscard d'Estaing acknowledges one basic fact: “Certainly Egypt has clearly exposed its own point of view and shown how far it is willing to go with Israel.” Yet, this being said, it is obvious the world does not yet know how far — or with whom — the other Arabs will go, how far the Israelis will concede (and to whom), and how successfully the Big Four external powers can coordinate their own policies and aspirations. Therefore, to sum up, what we still have in the Middle East today is not peace at no price © 1977, New York Times Let us sleep The University of Texas never ceases to amaze me: while all over UT, Austin, Tex., burglaries, murders, rapes and muggings are going on, arm ed guards prowl the P erry -Castaneda Library looking for harm less sleeping students to awaken. Well Regents, you have now progressed from the sublime to the utterly ridiculous. Students paid for the facility and reserve the right to use it for their study pur­ poses. In your wisdom surely you must realize that this often includes a nap during long hours of reading and studying. I consider the practice of armed guards awakening napping students in our own facility a serious infringement on our rights and I charge the regents with a grave error in judgment, bordering on dic­ tatorial control over harmless student activity. Virginia T. Stevens Plan II Not classy Jim Lefko’s article in Monday’s Daily Texan about the “ class exhibited by the Longhorn fans at the A&M game was a classic piece of tunnel vision journalism. I hope Jim ’s arm heals quickly; he surely must have broken it attem pting to pat himself on the back for being such a great fan As a form er A&M student, now completing my m asters program at Texas, I feel compelled to point out some of the inaccuracies and misrepresentation in Lefko’s article. Here are but a few: First, Jim ’s description of a “ battalion, fully arm ed” blocking the path of the APO mem bers conjures up hundreds of Aggies wielding M-16s with fixed bayonets, refusing to yield a single yard of Kyle Field turf to the dreaded APO Tell it like it was, Jim . There were 35 cadets (a company, not a battalion) “ arm ed” with blunt edge parade sabers (not standard issue these days) positioned as they are for every game at that end of the field for the flag raising ceremonies. They traditionally remain there until the team s start to come out of the dressing room. Watching the scenario unfold, I saw several “ class” (or should I say “ crass” ) Longhorn fans taunting the cadets standing at attention and unable to respond, with extended middle fingers not meant to say “ We’re No. I Lefko’s article also failed to mention that the Tex'as band continued to pl$y while the A&M drill team performed, that the Cowboys insisted on going toward midfield while a presentation was being made to a form er A&M student, that oc­ casional chants of “ A&M sucks” could be heard from Longhorn partisans, etc. ... And these are “ class” fans9 I won t attem pt to condone some of the stunts pulled by the Aggies during that game by any means. Anyone with the slightest bit of objectivity could see that there was some poor sportsmanship on both sides But Lefko’s cheap shot article lacked even a trace of unbiased reporting Phil Smith Quality needed D Scot Le F ran ’s letter refers to a “ ratchet effect.” That effect was in my mind when I wrote Monday’s editorial, but it wasn’t made clear. However, I think the effect operates on affluence People don’t care about their consumption, they care about their living standard Continued affluence requires us to use technology to allow a high living standard without high consumption Conservation requires no sacrifice when it results from an end to waste If we invest in durable and repairable goods and if we end popula- non growth, then we might have comfort without high consumption We have tolerated planned obsolence, inefficient design and throwaways because thev tend to increase consumption and jobs. Buildings, roads, and such aren ’t co n so led by their use. Stable population in combination with high quality goods will allow satiation of many needs Hard work and sacrifice are not needed for success but it requires the system to adapt to changing circum stances Barry Brooks Nonsense argument In response to Russell C. Eskew’s “ Delusions of Smallness,” a question - what are you doing in your article9 Having neither put forward nor even alluded to any epistemological base and hence without a moral s u itin g point, you will then proceed to pronounce absolute judgments concerning truth and value relative to the nature of man and religious belief!? That becomes nonsense language. Even with such a base your a tu c k upon Christianity is against a straw man Christiani­ ty neither denies the fact that moods and feelings are a part of what we are, nor does it call “ entanglements of physical nature” sordid — th at’s Greek, nor does it but affirm that people and their feelings are of tremendous significance So significant, in fact, are people and their feelings deemed, that for their sake of Christ volunUrily sacrificed his person, his feelings Consider whom you are crucifying. Bruce W. Ballard Philosophy firing line A bureaucrat’s speed limit Mr Pinedo, the title to your Tuesday article incorrectly referred to an on­ coming “ great depression ” The article should have been “ Bureaucracy and How to Lie With Statistics.” The No. I highway killer is driving while intoxicated. More than 50 per cent of all highway injuries and faUlities are alcohol related The No. 2 highway killer is mechanical failure No. 3 is driver imcompetence. Yeah, let s all drive 55 so that the drunks, the incompetents and the idiots with poorly maintained cars will not kill the rest of us The blanket 55 m p h speed limit is bureaucratic tokenism, an executive sidestep which avoids the real problems and their effective solution It s hard to crack down on the drunks because most bureaucrats are such good friends with the bottle Fifty-five saves lives because the modern car has been thoughtful­ ly designed to withstand a 55 m p h. im pact with a brick wall and not make ham ­ burger of its contents. Fifty- five saves gasoline because Cadillacs, Lincolns and other rolling living rooms get 30 per cent better mileage than at 70 Thirty per cent is a big improvement on ll miles to the gallon. The big solution includes such words as fuel efficiency, competent, educated drivers, heavy penalties for any form of intoxication while driving and sensible speed limits such as 50 m p h or less on urban throughways, 65 m p h on rural two lanes and 85 m p h on the rural interstates The big problem is that our bureaucrats have closed their ears, and our legal system functions like a clogged toilet. Mr Pinedo, you spout idealistic bull about Mankind, obedience to the Law, and of “ built-in” avenues for change. History has shown that Americans are much more resourceful and responsive than their bureaucratic brothers. Civil dis­ obedience does work, and I plan to vote with my foot. David E. Wendt Mathematics/Engineering Look who’ll pay Two ways to judge a candidate are by what they say they will do and who they say should pay the bill. Lee Yeakel feels that, if the state needs more money, the sales tax should be first increased and then extended to food and drugs A more regressive scheme of taxation would be difficult to imagine. Does Yeakel seriously believe that the sick are the best able to shoulder the ever in­ creasing burden of state spending9 Apparently so, and I for one am appalled. As Ana tole France might have said, Mr. Yeakel, in his m ajestic equality, would tax the rich the sam e as the poor for purchasing clothes, buying medicine and paying for bread Santiago “Jim” Coronado Third-year law A separate identity I think it is about time to view the Korean CIA scandal from the point of view of a Korean The bitter sorrow of “ being without nation” may be most deeply un­ derstood only by Jewish people who just regained their national identity (or na­ tion ) about 30 years ago. An existence without identity is not different from the ex­ istence of a slave who does not know who he is and where he cam e from. To the people who live in a human society, national identity is essential Look at the Palestinians What sort of activities or means do Palestinians (PLO) utilize to gain their national identity9 And how many Korean patriots were killed while struggling to regain their national identity after the prewar Japanese imperialists colonized Korea? If anyone thinks that South Korea and North Korea are the sam e because both are Korea, he is wrong as much as to think that the United States and the Soviet Union are the same because both are “ white ” The cultural, ideological, economic, political, social and educational systems are entirely different between South Korea and North Korea. The difference in these system s between South Korea and North is far greater than the difference between South Korea and the United States Two people in.the same race but from different systems may be almost impossible to live together, while two different races from the sim ilar or same systems may easily coexsist, as witnessed in the American society. To preserve and perpetuate the national identity that Koreans once regained, I think that Koreans must do whatever is necessary. "The goal should not justify the m eans” may be an idealistic idiom, but if that goal means the existence or sur­ vival of the society and the nation, the goal must justify any means As a Korean, speaking for myself and my family, I am proud of the Korean government and KCIA, rather than being ashamed of them, and I will continuous ly support the Korean government, no m atter what Americans will think, and I hope that all other Koreans in the United States can feel the sam e way I feel Sang - Shin Rim Graduate Student of Business Administration Who cares? I wish the Texan would find a replacement leftist for Mr. Lopez. I mean, it's bad enough that he injects his comic Sixties style tirades with such corny cliches as “ When one sees . . people’s teeth rot away . . . ” but then he also douses his ser­ mon with 20,000 exclamation m arks per paragraph. Ugh. Can we please get away from this soap opera display of mock righteousness? Of course, it may not be mock. But then, I really can’t believe that anyone could take himself so seriously. I can’t take him seriously. Even though this time around he puts in a token reference to “ . , poor whites . . .,” on the basis of his previous editorial master­ pieces it is difficult to imagine that he is as outraged about their plight as he is about the condition of the “ . . . dirt chicano, black or other ethnic minority.” Furtherm ore, who really cares if the poor are poor? If I was poverty stricken, I'd probably be upset, too, but since I’m not, I don’t care. If they want to come up and shoot all of their “ oppressors,” that’s fine. But in as much as the poor would oppress others in exactly the same manner if they had the goods, why bother get­ ting so worked up about them? In spite of a certain “innate goodness” attributed to humans, it s still every man for himself It s evolutionally illogical to give your prey equal footing So come on people, smile on your brother, everybody get together and try to kill one another right now. Steve Dong General and Comparative Studies Sing it right As an avid Longhorn fan for the past three seasons I have been faced with a con­ stant source of frustration that has continued even into the present championship effort. For two years, my frustration lay mainly in the ineptness and general ineffec­ tiveness of a once revered team. But this year, despite the perfect record and No. I ranking, I am still irked by the misunderstanding of what seems to be a majority of even the most loyal Horn fans There seems to be a steadily growing number of rooters who inevitably sing the words to The Eyes of Texas” incorrectly. In the third line, after I sing the words “ Do not think you can escape them ” my “ From night till early ... is constantly drowned out by “ rise so early ...,” obviously an offshoot from “I’ve Been Working on the Railroad ” I realize that this peeve of mine is perhaps of minor consequence to most Texas fans. However, I feel that a song so deep in tradition that instills such pride deserves to be sung correctly. If “ The Eyes of Texas ” is truly worth a touchdown advantage for the Horns before the kickoff, then it should be executed with the precision of a touchdown play And when the Fighting Irish limp off the field on Jan. 2 with that song ringing in their ears I would enjoy the satisfaction of knowing it was done right. John S. Davis Journalism Innocence abounds In regard to the letter from Louis Altman on Nov. 28 regarding the Cullen Davis verdict, I would like to remind Mr Altman that the “saving grace” of the American judicial system is that all citizens who are accused of a crime are held to be innocent until proven guilty Since guilt was not proven, we must then say that Mr Davis is in fact i nnocent and not merely, not guilty. Although this is but a m atter of semantics, it is important to suscribe to this concept down to the last letter if we are to live in a reasonably fair and just socie­ ty We should also be thankful to the 12 Amarillo citizens who adhered to this con­ cept and saw through the conspiracy which was perpetrated by a gang of “ charlatans, harlots and liars” who would rob Mr. Davis of his very life. Since guilt was not proven, innocence abounds. Kent A. Schaffer Psychology Dress up the Drum The other day, I noticed that the new “Super Drum’’ doesn t resemble a hat (complete with upturned brim) in much the same way the PiCkLe isn t shaped like Texas In keeping with this, I suggest that a burnt-orange nonfeather about 48 feet tall be emplaced somewhere around the brim — er, I mean, walkway. For those who think that a feather is not an apt symbol for the University (even burnt-orange feather), let me suggest the following formula. Longhorn-longbow (some bows were horn)-arrow-feather If this doesn’t sound plausible, just ask my friend Fletcher Michael T. Cobb P a g e 6 0 THE DAILY TEXAN □ T h u r s d a y D e c e m b e r I, 1977 South Africa: White minority affirms government race policy * i m New York Timet JO H A N N E SB U R G E a rly re tu rn s in th<* Smith A frican g en e ral ejec tio n W«*epartment of Public Safety represen tat Ives expressed support of the system , but Travis County Sheriff Raymond Frank re jected it Davidson said no fiscal note is avail able A sy stem in Omaha, Neb . however, a city roughly equivalent in popula­ tion to Uistm, costs $100,000 less to operate than Austin’s and handles more calls Three tv pes of system s are available the direct dispatch, transfer and relay methods. U N D E R T H E d i r e c t method, all emergency calls for departm ents are received and dispatched from a single location It would replace in­ dividual departm ent com ­ munication centers. The remaining two methods both involve taking em ergen­ cy calls but would either relay dispatch calls to the concern­ ed de par t me nt or take a m essage and give it to the department According to the report, the city of Nashville, which uses the transfer method, said the system is unsatisfactory and delays response times. Seattle, however, said its transfer system is working satisfactorily and Om aha, which uses the direct system , said its five-year program is a total success, the report said. C A R E E R C H O IC E A N D IN F O R M A T IO N C E N T E R Located in Jester Center 115A, 471-1217, the C a re e r C enter o ffe rs students c a re e r p la n n in g job hunting services and in d iv id u a l c a r e e r coun seling . MsnMS na hmi LCRA, city join firms in coal suit meeting Final steps toward a likely suit against Montana s high coal t a i will be taken by local and national utilities Dec. 9 in Chicago. City of Austin and Lower Colorado River Authority lawyers will attend the meeting with other utilities and discuss their nest step rn possibly filing suit against the coat tax. Both parties own the Fayette Power Plant now under construction which will use Montana coal when it begins operation in 1900 At stake for Austin and LCRA electric ratepayers is approxim ately $300 to 9400 million in taxes on Montana coal over the length of a 20-year contract. If filed the suit would set a precedent in contesting a state coal tax and could affect at least 12 other states imposing a produc­ tion tax on coal. City Atty. Je rry H arris said the City Council will be faced with the results of the meeting and will have to decide whether to file suit against the state tax sometime between the Dec. 9 meeting and Christmas. Previously, both H arris and LCRA General Manager Charles Herring claim ­ ed a suit would be likely by the end of the year. “ At this point, it looks like filing a suit is the only recourse we have.” Herring said recently. Harris said he “ anticipates a lawsuit will be filed by the end of the year. but I don’t know who all of the parties will be. “ We feel the tax is high and d is­ crim inatory,” he added. Montana's coal tax is the highest in the nation and alm ost double the second highest state tax. according to a study by the Council of State Governments released in 1976. Other parties involved in the possible su it are D etro it E d ison and C om ­ monwealth Edison, two utility companies. Soviet arms sales rise ' 1977 New York Times NEW YORK - The Soviet Union, according to qualified U. S. intelligence sources, has embarked on a m ajor cam ­ paign to sell arm s to Third World countries despite ef­ the C a r t e r a d ­ f o r t s by ministration to open talks on limiting such sales. The sources report that countries in the Middle E ast, Africa and Latin America are the prin cip al for Soviet arm s vendors who, it w as emphasized, are offering potential buyers, the most modern conventional weapons and not “ outworn junk.” ta r g e t s SOVIET ARMS sales in 1976 cam e to about $2.5 billion, ac­ c o r d i n g C e n t r a l t o Intelligence Agency statistics. Washington analysts expect that, if the present sales cam ­ paign succeeds, the figure for the next 12 months will more than double the 1976 total. The Administration hopes to open negotiations on limiting arm s sales with the Soviet in about two govern m en t weeks The view of one ex­ perienced source is that the R ussians will be willing to talk “ interminably” on the subject but that it is highly un­ likely that they will agree to any restrictions Moscow’s resistance to any agreement with Washington is linked prim arily to the Soviet U n i o n ’ s h a r d - c u r r e n c y deficits and its need to earn foreign currencies to finance further purchases of advanced industrial equipment from the United States and western Europe. Since 1972 the Soviet Union has bought $3.1 billion worth of oil-extraction equipment to be used in developing Siberian fields. One estim ate at North Atlantic Treaty Organization headquarters in Brussels is that a com parable investment will be necessary in the next five years if the fields are to be developed to the m ax ­ imum. AMERICAN AND NATO an alysts expect the Soviet sales cam paign to take advan­ tage of the present split in the Arab world between Egypt and the so -calle d “ re je c - tionist” states, Syris, Iraq, Algeria and Libya who con­ demn Israeli-Egyptian peace negotiations. The possibility that Egypt, the most populous and, until 1973, the m ost mi l i tari l y powerful Arab state , may withdraw from the confronta­ tion against Israel has already stim ulated interest in further p urch ases of Soviet Arm s among the other Arab states, according to the analysts Some experts contend that Soviet interest in such sales is prompted by the considera­ tion that over the next five years Moscow may have to buy oil from Iraq, Libya, A l g e r i a and S y r i a whi l e waiting for the expected flow from the Siberian fields. t o The Soviet Union is not only offering to sell sophisticated weapons at a lower price than for comparable that asked western equipment but is also p r o m i s i n g i m p r o v e m aintenance and resupply arrangem ents for One reason for Egypt’s break with the Soviet Union in 1972 w as the M oscow ’s f ai l ur e to send spare parts to repair aircraft and tanks. The Soviet Union now is promising buyers that it will p rovid e tech n ician s along with weapons. By BILL COCKERILL City Reporter By 1980 Austin residents will be able to dial 911 and get emergency assistan ce, if City Council follows through with a plan released Wednesday by City M anager Dan Davidson P olice, fire and m edical em ergency requ ests, com ­ monly called by dialing 911, is a relatively recent approach to quicker response time by cities Several cities have adopted the system , accor­ ding to the report City Council will hear the plan Thursday at its regularly scheduled meeting Council approval of the system is re­ quired by February, I with final i mpl ement at i on o c ­ curring by December, 1980. according to the report, COUNCIL ALSO will hear a report on the feasibility of requesting University police to help in p a r o l i n g city streets The report is schedul­ ed to be released Thursday morning c a p i t a l Staff reports on different types of emergency calling a n d s y s t e m s , the operational co sts and geograph ical scope of the project will be completed by the end of the year and will be presented to the council in January, Davidson said He has not gone on record as supporting or rejecting the concept of a 911 system . “ I think it is a good idea to look into, but I am not ready to recommend it until we get our staff reports in and can th em ,’ ’ Davidson evalu ate said Cities using the system in- c l u d e O m a h a , N e b . ; and Baton Nashville, Tenn Rouge, La. City Council member Ron Mullen, who initiated the re­ quest for the city manager report, said he thinks the time fo r the i m p l e m e n t a t i n g system is realistic. “ I WISH WE could go with it in 1979, but I think these are pretty realistic d ates,’’ he said Mayor Carole McClellan in August asked 17 Central Texas governmental agencies if they THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM 1978/79 PROGRAMS FOR AMERICAN STUDENTS ONE YEAR PROGRAM C ourse s taught in both Hebrew .md English Im , ulh ,><- sophom ores .md |umois REGULAR ST U D IES B A and B Si degrees for dlege lr luster students toward GRADUATE ST U D IES M aster's. Dr tora! and Visiting Graduate program s S U M M E R C O U R SE S g in i in I pi P LL A S I C H C I K D I S I R I D P R O G R A M For Application and Inhum ation w lr OHiee .I Academic A lla n s American frie n d s el Th.. Hebrew Univ 11 l e i i .‘> i t N. w V A N Y I OO?! 1 '*813 Add' CHABAD HOUSE-LUBAVITCH Come to a "LATHE PARTY" 1 m Sun.. Dec. 4 (1st night of Chanukah) 6:30 p.m. M enorah lighting. Latkas. Draidla. and mora C o m p la ta C hanukah Kits available at 91 OO 2101 Nueces 472-3900 Chanukah Dec. 5-Dec. presents U. T. DANCE TEAM A CH RISTM A S SHOW AIXD HANCK Directed and Choreographed by John Felix Performances range from disco to waltz and jitterbug to chacha General dancing includes an evening of disco, country, and ballroom Thursday, D e cem b e r 1st U n io n Ballroom , 8 p.m. to M id n ight Tickets 5 2 . 5 0 D o o r prizes A v tH M * ta ai M a P o l l i 'i Stw rlta am4 W att Mall IMAGES by Bob Elliott's IN PROGRESS NOW! Ic C A R T N E Y IO karat yellow gold $22.25 Birthday 2426 GUADALUPE OPEN IO to 6 DAILY FREE A L T E R A T IO N S W IT H A U J E A N S P age 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, D ecem ber I, 1977 Homemade will valid by Texas law legal questions tax on any incom e of the es la te like sav in g s acco u n t In te r e a t) Life in su ran c e, unless you give it to your a s ta te is usual ta x ab le and usually Iv not won I be needed to pay bills for your e s ta te Thus life in surarw e can often be used very effectiv ely to help any dependent vou have T h e re fo re you p ro b a b ly need a w ill, hut you should also co n sid er th a t th e re m ay be tax and in su ran c e asp ec ts th a t you should not overlook LAST Bl T NOT le a st Tex as Is one of the few s ta te s th a t allow s you to w rite your own will If you w rite down In your own h an d w ritin g w hat you w ant to happen when you die then and sign It and d ate it you h av e a will that is as valid as a n y fancy will p rep a re d by a l a w y e r We a r e n o t rec o m m en d in g that you fail to talk to an atto rn ey , since an a tto rn e y p re p a re d will could p ro b ate and sav e you tax legal expense H ow ever the point is th a t you can w rite your own will which w ill be t h e v a l i d f o l l o w p re v io u s in s tru c tio n s ) an d w hich will be b e tte r than not having a will until you ca n talk to an a tto rn e y about p re p a rin g a fo rm a l will to pro v id e for the efficien t and inexpensive ad m in istra tio n of your e s ta te ( l f you C o f t alth o u g h from $40 to m ore than $500 P r o b a b I y fe e s co u ld I SO. r a n g e T im e It probably could be E d itor's N ote: A new feature to tile Texan, Legal Questions, will attem pt to answer reader Inquiries concerning any sp e c ific legal problem A nsw ers t i e a r e p r e p a r e d by students' attorney's office Q U E S T I O N : I a m a Ap s t u d e n t g r a d u a t e proximately bow much would It cost me to have a will drawn up by an attorney? How long does It take** What documents ought I bring"’ BUI Dean A N SW ER C h a n c e s a r c your will m ay coal ISO (the fee some Austin attorney* a re advertising I However lf you (m o re large e s ta te have a th a n $ I OO OOO i o r a com plicated lls! of who g e ts what the fee for p rep arin g your will m ay even be higher than l&OO r a n h a v e several kinds of tax problem s Keeler a I E sta te Tax f e d e r a l tax on the total estate} , S tate Inheritance Tax (a la How ard Hughes I T exas lax on each h e ir 01 b e n e f i c i a r y a n d federal Incom e tax ( f e d e r a l Y o u r e s t a t e 25% O F F A I I . JE WE L RY ,! \( U'l hi! /'s I M ) a v* v I In ivarsity Keepsake D ia m o n d d e n i e r fifes Outlie Mall keepsake Diam ond Kings Mint VV eliding ll.md" P i e r c e d l ur K in g " , P e n d a n t * , Mi l e s of S o l i d ( * n l d I h a m , Dinner King". I I t la"" King" I Im* Perfect Jewelry ( r i l l h i l l s b i r r P i t h i n g milk F u n flflv o i lh* thihn ( m n t v p r e p a r e d wi t h a u t o m a t i c ty p e w riters in less than one th e a v e r a g e a t- h o u r, but tim e would tom ey s office probably be a week unless you a re in a h u rry and w illing to pay a p rem iu m fee Bring I h x u rn e n ti of title t i t l e s , and debt-deeds, deeds of tru s t s e c u r i t y c a r a g re e m e n ts, sa fe deposit box c o n t r a c t s , b a n k a c c o u n t n u m bers, full legal n am es and a d d re sse s of possible h eirs, tru ste e s, ex e cu to rs and any o t h e r o r d o c u m e n ts you h a v e w ith r e g a r d t h e p e o p le o r p ro p erty possibly involved i n f o r m a t i o n t o C O M M E N T . If you d ie w ithout a will in T exas, then law will govern who T exas g ets w hat, and those* h e irs m ight not be the people th a t you would p re fe r to g e t your p ro p erty E ven m o re im p o r­ ta n t m ay be th e ex pense of p ro b a te M ost p ro b a te e x ­ p en ses c a n be av o id ed or m inim ized by appointing ap in d e p e n d e n t a d m in is tr a to r , called the e x e cu to r o r e x ­ e c u trix , in the will The person then m a n ag e s your e s ta te until the bills a r e paid and p ro p e rty is divided a ll w ith o u t P r o b a te up C ourt su p erv isio n or expense ( e x c e p t s i m p l e s o m e p roceedings a t the o n se t) Ob­ viously not everyone th a t dies has th e ir e s ta te p ro b ated , but p ro b ate, o r an independent a d ­ m in istra tio n ( w ith an indepen­ dent e x e c u to r), is n ec essary in T ex as to c le a r the title to land, houses, c a rs , bank a c ­ counts. sa fe deposit box con ten ts and the like T h erefo re. if you d ie w ithout a will, your th e m se lv es heirs could find w ith your HOO c a r th a t they cannot even b u m o r junk since the title is in so m e o n e’s n am e who can n o t sign it off Y our h eirs m ig h t be forced to pay legal and p ro b ate fees ranging from 1300 to $1,000 to even be able to get rid of the c a r r T h e Da il y T e x a n CLASSIFIED ADS OPEN 8:00 to 5:00 MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY To place your classified ad, come by the TSP Business Office, TSP 3.200, between 8 am and 4:30 pm, Monday through Friday. Or you can call 471-5244,8 am to 5 pm daily. And as a con­ venience, the coupon below has been provided if you wish to mail in your classified ad. »' ...-ii’' ' Se* W# ■ -n mm WRITE YOUR AD HERE i I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I t I I I I t I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Use this chart to arrive Amt. Enclosed quickly at cost ( 1 5 w ord m i n i m u m ) e* et rims* Cest fief «re<4 I .13 2 .24 5 .37 L f 5 3.40 5.55 IO .41 f .15 f.74 20 2.10 11.00 l f .20 10.37 20.40 5.f7 4.2f 7.0% L M 2.21 2.34 2.47 4.01 4.32 4.54 4.44 I O f t 21.40 7.03 l l i f 22.10 15 14 17 ll l f Number of Days_____________ DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS P.O. BOX D UNIV. STATION AUSTIN, TX. 78712 M a il to: NAME ADDRESS C ITY___ PH0NL Two circus elephants stroll down a Florida beach W ednesday while a fellow show elephant waa free and hiding In Florida swamplands. These two and four others got beach time while the search went on Beachcombers —UPI Telephoto Senators urge adequate range for cruise missile in arms pact ( t i n t „ ( U P I ) tit a o ( if Aar W A S H I N G T O N rn l - T h r e e S e n a te A rm ed S e rv ic e s C o m m itte e m e m b e rs W ednesday said a new U.S.* Soviet s tr a te g ic a r m s p ac t m u st include an a d e q u a te ra n g e for the c ru ise m issile and a lim it on im p ro v e m e n ts in Soviet m issile technology Sen John C ulver. D -Iowa, joined by S en D a le B u m p e r s . D- Ar k . , an d T hom as M cIn ty re. LEN H , sent the W hite H ouse a six-point le tte r as U.S to n eg o tiato r P au l W am ke p re p a re d re tu rn to G eneva a t th e end of the w eek WARNKE HAS said the A d m in istra ­ tion hoped to conclude a new SALT p ac t iUa first knlf a1 1 07 ti in th e first half of 1978. They said the em erg in g tre a ty m ust: • P ro v id e for a long enough range for U.S. cru ise m issiles to account for ev asiv e co u rses such m issile s would be intended to fly. • D istinguish c le a rly betw een a ir ­ c r a ft ca rry in g c ru ise m issiles, and s im ila r a irc ra ft not c a rry in g cru ise m is­ siles • OBTAIN “ as strin g e n t lim its as p ossible” on im p ro v e m en ts in Soviet stra te g ic m issile technology. • C on strain the S oviets from develop­ ing in te rm e d ia te ra n g e m issiles, such as thp TTI oh I lf* SS20 And iOflfif rdfl06 the m obile SS20, and long ran g e m is­ siles, such a s the SS16. • N ot allow the th re e -y e a r protocol, w hich is to acco m p an y the tre a ty , from being extended w ithout “ a p p ro p ria te congressional a c tio n .” • PROVIDE FOR a th ird round of SALT negotiations to begin “ w ithout significant in te rru p tio n ” sh o rtly a f te r the second SALT ac co rd is co m p leted T he th re e se n a to rs said th e six points “ m u st u ltim a te ly be se ttle d in w ays a c c e p ta b le to U.S. in te re sts so a s to s tr e n g t h e n to broaden support for ra tific a tio n .” th e a g r e e m e n t a n d No. 3 5 Oobie Mall 4 7 7 9 9 4 3 r G R O K B O O K S I 503 W 17 L. - I 6 * on SAVINGS MN t KM ll r " m a g e s by Bob E l l i o t t ’s | 2426 Guadalupe I J A L W W J SVENS CLOGS Footgear now has a complete selection of Swedish Clogs, orthopedically designed and anatomically balanced Find out why every European owns at least one pair of Clogs, at Footgear. FOOTGEAR Geared to coni fort a lid quality 2 2 0 0 G uadalupe A u s t i n . Ifc x a s'8 7 0 5 H ours Mon T h u rs lOA -M - S P M J Kn Sat IO A M .6 PM F ree P arking at 22nd & San Antonio L \ \ _ V - \ _ V - \ _ V - \ _ \ - N - k . V. ENGINEERS APPLY YOUR EXPERTISE TO THE FIELD OF MEDICINE CLINICAL ENGINEERING MASTERS DEGREE PROGRAM • COURSE OF STUDY DESIGNED FOR APPLIED ENGINEERING WORK IN MEDICINE • SEVEN MONTH PAID INTERNSHIP IN ONE OF 12 CLEVELAND AREA HOSPITALS • SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE • GOOD EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES F O R M O R E I N F O R M A T I O N : CLINICAL ENGINEERING PROGRAM WICKENDEN 507 CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY CLEVELAND* OHIO 44106 PHONE (216) 368-4064 A S P E C I A L P R O G R A M IN THE D E P A R T M E N T OF B I O M E D I C A L E N G I N E E R I N G S C H O O L OF E N G I N E E R I N G / S C H O O L OF M E D I C I N E C A S E W E ST E R N R ES E RV E U N I V E RS I T Y Buy yo u r w a rm -u p s pants & tops by N e t W o rth a t the Co-op. R e g u la rly $21.95, now $17.50. Thursday, Decem ber I, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 Spend Christmas With Us! We have Norfolk Pines for your Living Christmas Tree and Or­ naments for TrimmingI iALSO: Animal Planters Baskets * Reproduction Tins * * Poinsettias * Bonsai Trees Christmas Cactus * and Begonias * y j V.’ J e ffe rs o n Sq W. 38th A Kerbey 4 5 8 -4 3 4 5 Mon-Sat 10-6 Sharp s shirt pocket calcu lato rs otter you a con­ venient calculator in a sm all package. EL-8130 Super Thin M an otters you an audible sound at e v e ry key input or silent Input, 4 key direct access m em ory, power conservation circu itry, autom atic power-off, %-key, square root key, overflow erro r check device, up to 400 hours opera­ tion w/signal sound, or 1,000 hours operation w/o sound from 2 silver oxide batteries, m etal & leatherette finish, & pocket secre ta ry ca rry in g case. 3495 Book thefts grow; security proposed A proposal requesting elec­ tronic security systems in four University libraries has been sent to the Office of Analysis and Planning, a library official said Wednes­ day. The system would detect an electromagnetic strip hidden in the books which would set off an alarm at the points of exit. Nancy McAdams, facili­ ty and program planning librarian, said The strip could be deactivated when the book is checked out properly Installation of the systems in Battle Hall. Undergraduate Library. Engineering Library and Main Library would cost n e a r ly $100,000 S in c e monitors earn $219 per week, the system would be cheaper in the long run. Thefts from Battle Hall Library have grown since the branch's two monitors were transferred to the new Perry- Castaneda Library, a Univer­ sity music professor said Wednesday No other security precautions exist “ I ’ve been unable to get many of the books I need for my courses because they have all disappeared. Dr Gerard H Behague said “ I ’ve had to rely on some of my collegues' materials because so much is missing." “ Books and m a te ria ls probably are being taken from Battle Hall, but I don’t know lib ra rie s . that it is any more than from other branch Virginia Phillips, assistant director of branch services said Phillips is conducting inventory of the music an collection at Battle Hall but said it is difficult to obtain an accurate count Many books are either nv spliced or mis- sh e lve d or m ay not be available at that particular time, she said Other branch libraries are losses because of suffering poor security, Phillips added “ The only thing we can do at this time is to encourage peo­ ple to check books out of the library properly.’’ Phillips said " It doesn’t hurt us. it only h u rts th e ir fe llo w students ” Or Harold Billings, acting director of General Libraries, admitted that a security problem does exist, but he w ould not e s tim a te the number of thefts How can we help but lose books.” Library Assistant Jane Daniels said “ We don’t have anyone watching the ex­ its Although library employes try to stay as visible as possi­ ble, the small staff makes it difficu lt to be thorough, Daniels said Last year the Architecture Library was inventoried and found to be missing about 4 per cent of the total collec­ tion $600 to be contributed to scholarship fund The C h ica n o B u s in e s s Students’ Association w ill make a special presentation Th u rsd ay of $300 to the Hispanic Scholarship Fund for u n d e r g r a d u a t e c h ic a n o students in the College of Business Administration The presentation will be m ade at 8 p m in the Graduate School of Business Bu ild in g 2 218. S eym ou r Schwartz, assistant dean of the college, will receive the contribution in place of Dean George Kozmetsky. Kozm etsky w ill match every student dollar raised by the group to make the total for the scholarship fund $600 The goal is a $25,000 endow­ ment now th a t’s entertainm ent. images L ' y t '9' , N M E Vatican fanfare Italy’s Bersaglieri corps band plays a military hymn In Vatican City while Pope Paul VI arrives In the General Audience Hall Wednesday tor his weekly audience. —UPI Telephoto FTC starts crackdown on energy savings fraud (U P I) - In WASHINGTON its second move in two weeks against the growing home insulation industry, the Federal Trade Com­ mission Wednesday authorized its regional offices to begin a crackdown on consumer fraud Offending firms will be told the FTC has ruled it illegal to “ make false or misleading energy savings claims, make claims without having a reasonable basis and fail to disclose any fire or safety risk in using a product which would not be immediately apparent to a user.” The companies also will be told the FTC has the power to seek civil penalties in federal court of up to $10,000 against violators. DISCOVER Reel K>m alo Quality Italian Food 1601 Guadalupe 476-7202 DISCOVER Quality Food & Service Reasonable Prices eP§L' Fbe3 K>mato Q u ality Italian Food 476-7202 1601 Guadalupe The areas of consumer fraud addressed in the move are similar to ones covered in a trade regulation rule which the agency proposed on Nov. 17. Under that rule, which will not be made final for some time yet, home insulation sellers would have to disclose the “ r ” value of the product — a rating of its ability to pre­ vent heat loss. In addition other provisions would be designed to help consumers know how much insulation is needed and understand the difference between types of insulation. The agency said some areas of the country are seeing a thousand-fold increase in de­ mand for insulation “ and certain types of in­ sulation are almost unobtainable.” » n » n » n » n » n » n » n Hillel Chanukah Carnival Sunday, Dec. 4th 4-7 p.m. Auction from 4 :3 0 -5 :3 0 featuring M ayor Carole McClellan as auctioneer FUN! FOOD! GAMES! Proceeds go fo /a ra */ S m trg tn c y fu n d 2 1 0 5 San Antonio ? 7 n » n » n * AN AFTER-CHRISTMAS SALE ^.BEFORE CHRISTMAS^ \ X K I W I / / > / ^ r ----------------------- LEVI'S A ll DENIM, CORDS * 1 0 00 FLANNEL SHIRTS REDUCED 20% WOOL, COTTON TIES O M e n t ir e s t o c k LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 25% OTT SOUK1) price I S U I T S SPORT Entire Stock 20-60%, Reg. 85.00 to 220.00 C o m p le te Stock Leather Coats 25% OFF Some Vi price DOWN FILLED JACKETS VESTS 2 0 % 0ft SHOES 20% OF. Vt PRICE SELECT G RO UP " f ^ C H n u ENTIRE STOCK SLA CKS 2 5% OFF W HAT A SELECTION N S • SHORT SLEEVE • KNITS Q a c w & w d . — 2222 GUADALUPE OPEN TILL 8 PM TH THURS. THRU CHRISTMAS E L 8029 Folding C alculator gives you liquid crysta l display, autom atic power off system , 1-touch % & square root keys, approxim ate result in excess of 8 digits, pencil ca rry in g case, & 2 silver oxide batteries. El-8029 clips to your pocket just like a pen or pencil. 3495 / P p m m 0 g O O D B S O O O O X * m B B B A B * o a e SHARP CORPCWATIO* SWEATERS REDUCED 20% G R EAT BUYS EL-8128 gives you a 5-key d irect access m em ory, %-key, square root key, overflow error check device, power conservation c irc u itry , automatic power-off, & liquid crysta l display. You get up to I,- 500 hours of operation from 2 silve r oxide batteries. in a m e ta llic finish w/pocket El-8128 com es secre ta ry ca rry in g case. 19.95 Page IO □ T H E DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, December b 1977 FBI director agrees to stay predicts crisis in 1980s Rostow speaks at Union; WASHINGTON (UPI) F MI FHI WASHINGTON ( U P I I Director Clarence Kelley, whom President Garter once said should be fired, agreed Wednesday to stay on the Job an extra month and a half so ( arter run find someone to succeed him At Administration request. Kelley said he will postpone his retirement from Jan I to F ib I5 while the President hunt* up a nominee to replace federal Judge Prank Johnson who withdrew himself from consideration Tuesday for health reasons Atty Gen Griffin Hell who said last January he wanted to replace Kelley as soon as possible, walked to Kelley's office across Pennsylvania Avenue to ask personally that he postpone his retirement It wa* most gracious of it wa* mr/st gracious of Mr Kelley to delay his per­ sona! plans. ’ fiell said in a s t a t e m e n t a n n o u n c in g K e lle y 's decision The bureau will cantino* to be w e|| * e r v e d u n d e r h is leadership " During the 1076 presidential campaign Garter said he thought Kelley ought to be fired for accepting cash gifts from high level KHI offic ials and for having KHI carpenters make and install window valanc es in his apartment "I don I have ait the rotor alation President Ford has," ( arter said in a Sept 7 Jfftti, campaign news roftferonce, but from what has been I would have I been revealed ye* fired K e lle y had President " I By B F N F L U S C H E The next quarter^entury will be the most critical erne in the economic future of this planet since the In­ dustrial Revolution Dr Walt Rostow professor of economics and history at th* I 'niverxity, said Wednesday Speaking at an economics sym­ posium sponsored by the Texas I mon Idea* and Issues Committee, Rostow said, “ We t*»uld face- a cataclysm in the limos," filin g a < IA study which conc ludes that oil production by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (O P E C ) will no longer be able to support rising consumption worldwide, Rostow named three ma­ jor ari-ax of concern SAUDI A R A B IA is the OPEC na Hon with the largest reserves but has no plans to increase production, he said The foiled States which is heavily dependent on imported oil, must find cither feasible forms of energy production to avert a major crisis Many other nations in the world are even more heavily dependent on im­ ported oil arid Rostow believes the energy crunch could cause deep so cial, economic and possibly strategic consequences ’’ Rostow also said some experts believe President Carter’s plan to reduce U S oil consumption to six million barrels per day by 1985 will not be accomplished Demand, which could be as high as 15 or 16 million barrels daily, could not be supplied in 1965 B E S I D E S T H E S E problem s, Rostow said Hie lead-time, the time needed between beginning construc­ tion on an energy production system and actual production, is greater than many imagine often amounting to IO years Although “ We must be* concerned with conservation as well as expan­ ding supply in the future," Rostow said some environmentalists are “ c arrying out guerrilla warfare” by blocking energy production. industry, Tradeoffs must be made, he said, federal between private government and environmental con < erns Even if this is accomplished, the supply problem will not be solved, Rostow said Merely building power plants will not be an ultimate solution, either, he said M ajor progress in energy developm ent com es only a fte r production begins and this comes only with continued research and develop­ ment, he said O T H E R G LO BA L scarcities such as food and raw materials also de­ pend on available energy sources. Rostow added These two factors also help shape the economic cycles the world experiences Rostow predicts continued high prices for food, energy and raw materials Despite this gloomy forecast, things should be better in the next century, Rostow said Although no new geographic frontiers, such as C a n a d a , A u s t r a l i a and the Midwestern United States exist to produce raw materials, he believes frontiers remain to be conquered, and t h e y w i l l be in s c ie n c e and technology Com m enting on the sluggish economy, Rostow stated a simple cause — shortage of investments — and gave several reasons why nothing is being done to stim ulate the economy effectively. One reason is that “ reigning economists do not focus on the problems of supply, Rostow said Another is that governmental agen­ cies are involved in all phases of food, energy and raw material production — Photo by Kirk Boykin Walt Rostow Committee rejects motion to pave field By M ARK D O O LEY Huff Writer The Parking and Traffic P o lic ie s C o m m itte e un* animously voted Wednesday against making the Freshman Field behind Jester ( enter into a (larking lot Subcommittee Chairman C J Holahan reported to the full committee that he and fellow subcommittee members J S Wilson and Laurie Hall, who studied th** problem for a m o n th , r e c e iv e d m uch negative reaction to the idea One individual who express ed opposition to paving Freshman Field was Hetty Thompson, director of the Division of R ecreatio nal Sport* IT WOULD be a “ serious mistake" to convert the field into a parking lot because ‘ it’s very clear that that is the only space available for out­ door recreational use,“ she said When told of the com ­ mittee’s decision not to pur sue the proposal, Thompson said “ I am of course pleased by that " J H obert o p p o s e d E d w a rd s, a teaching assistant zoology w ho p a v in g Freshman Field "strictly on a biological basis," also ex­ pressed pleasure with the out­ come of the committee vote E D W A R D S HAD sent a letter to the committee in which he argued that plants in h a b itin g and a n im a ls W aller Creek (which runs alongside Freshman Field) would be endangered by con­ struction of a parking lot A p a r k in g lo t w o u ld "decrease the aesthetic value of the newly constructed Waller Creek Hike and Bike T ra il," Edwards said Asst Athletic Director Bill Ellington said That s great news to m e" when told of the committee's unanimous vote, adding, “ I think our students need that field — that’s about the only place they have for outdoor recreation." T H E A T H L E T IC depart­ ment w ill continue using Fresh m an F ie ld for the javelin and discus throws because “ that’s the only place we have," he said. . I r i J * . a. Jt' s - Because the field s turf has deteriorated steadily for three years and is now in poor con­ d itio n , the D iv is io n of Recreational Sports has been studying possibilities for future use of the field for more than a month. " W e ’re just about to con­ clude that process and we ll . v n / I f A n n r i send our report forw ard," Thompson said. f n r i t r o r H She previously said resur­ facing Freshman Field with AstroTurf would cost ap­ proximately $175,000, but that resurfacing was just one of the alternatives being con­ sidered by R e c re a tio n a l Sports Mullen favors prayer policy change City Council member Hon Mullen Wednesday said he would favor holding the customary invocation at meetings prior to the official start of council sessions Currently the council meeting is call­ ed to order by the mayor and the in­ vocation is given “ If we want to have prayers, fine, but it probably would be best to have those prayers before the meeting officially starts,” he said Mullen added he was in favor of con­ tinuing the invocations at council meetings " I ’m definitely in favor of prayers at council meetings I go to church every Sunday and am a devout Christian," he said. "B u t I think it would be a cleaner separation between church and state if we had the invocation before the meeting started. I believe God would answer our prayers whether they are before or after a meeting starts," he said. Within the last month, at least three persons, including activist atheist leader Madalyn Murray O’Hair, have protested prayers being read at council meetings. Rite! jR o o iji W-F V 1, v .uni ;>1 in • the S t e r lin g Jew elry w ith t o u c h T o w le O ld M e e te r Stunning detent inrkrde smell Old Master cress $10 00 end OW Master littia ring $5.00 ($10.00 with hirsute*sa stone). Decorative and Devotional Crosses by Ballou II WHI RS University of Texas Seal Ring Available in sterling silver at an affordable $5.95 * P l H i n l Shop I st Nm * - 0\i Cp "UnCoeiit((j Excalibur Rolling Writer • byPcnkct Punt**!* offers .1 complete line of I kcniitYur •* Rolling W riter * Pens with matt fling Autom atic P e n c ils individually gift bolted of in boxed gift sets SM up 6% on SAVINGS Higher Rates on Rtsshook Sm-ings than Hanks or Savings & Ixrans & ; U N IV E R S IT Y 7234 Guadalupe 9-4 • Allendale 9-4 • Westgate Mall 10-9 Traditional designs for taste, h u n g on a de < hain. 14 karat gold, st silver and gold-tilled. 0* Th* Or** SNAP LOCK MONEY CLIP by Ballou “ I a sterling K e y R i n g fa sh io n e d for m en I IM I nKt-'f, on-campus place for a quiet, elegant lunch < a 1 "cholarU ».nnvcrs.iturn mer an excep ttonally e*Msi drink Buffet service Mond o thro ugh I IO pro IM I s accepted for busi- Friday, 11 .1 rn. ncs> expense \ er\ n o o n ,ilk price'-. Within walking di't.uue TF V A S U N IO N USO! lune he*- ■ ■ T E K A S UNI ON 11 a .m . to n o o n . Seminar: WHATEVER HAPPENED TO CAPITALISM? Dr. Timothy Ruafli Aeeociafe Director of th# UT Institute for Constructiv# Capitalism will discuss tha interaction of American enterprise with the government, environment and peo­ ple Texas Union 4.206. Economics Symposium sponsored by the Ideas and Issues Committee. Mooes to I p .m . Seminar: THE PERMANENT UNIVERSITY FUND (PUF). Bill Lobb and Bob Holland Director and Assistant Director of the PUF, will explain the fund, its in­ vestment and objectives. Texas Union 3.128 Economics Symposium. N o o n to I p .m . LUNCH WITH THE COACH. An informal discussion with Longhorn Coach Fred Akers of the A A M game. Buffet luncheon available in the adjoining San­ ta Rita Room. Texas Union 3.304 N o o n to I p .m . Seminar: CURRENT TRENDS IN SOUTHWESTERN ART — PART ll. Craig Cornelius of Southwestern Art Magoxine will show slides and discuss the evolution of Southwestern art and its standing in tho art world. Texas Union 4.1 IO. Southwestern and Indian Art Symposium sponsored by tho Fine Arts Committee N o o n to I p .m . Panel Discussion: ISSUES AND ANSWERS. Dan Malone, Editor of The Daily Texan, will bo interviewed by a panel consisting of Marc Luxiato, Vice President of the Students Association; Claro Buie University Ombudsman; and Clayton Crossiey, Daily Texan Ombudsman. Texas Union 4.224, Ideas and Issue* Committee. I to 2 p .m . Seminar: B U C K EC O N O M IC S AND M INO RITY INVOLVEM ENT IN EC O N O M IC S Dr Samuel Myers Assistant Professor of Economics will discuss minori­ ty involvement in economics. Texas Union 4.206. Economics Symposium. 3, 7 a n d 9 p .m . Film: W HO S THAT K N O C K IN G AT M Y DOOR Union Theatre. S I 25 UT, $1 75 others. 7 t a 8 p .m . Performance: UT SOUTHERN SINGERS Texas Tavern. 8 a n d 11 p .m . Performance: RRIFALi. $2.75 and $3.75 with CEC IO, $5 75 and $6 75 others. Paramount Theatre. Cultural Entertainment Committee. 9 p .m . ta m ld id p k t . Performance: DIXIE ZANK, solo guitar. Cactus Cafe Musical Events Committee. 9 p .m . ta m td n lp N t. Performance: TAXI, j a il band. Texas Tavern. Musical Events Committee. . It FOA ADDITIONAL INFORMATION C A LL 47 I-5 65 3B Thursday, December I, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page l l Great Debate Series to begin next spring People who have wished they could hear the other side when they were listening to a speaker may get that chance when a Texas Union-sponsored Great Debate Series starts next spring The Union’s Ideas and Issues Com­ m ittee is developing the series as "another means to get ideas out on cam­ pus,” said Steve Smith, cochairman of the debate series The Monday debate between economist John Kenneth Galbraith and Michael Jensen of the University of Rochester is an example of the type of debate the com­ mittee is hoping to set up. Smith said One debate is already planned for March or April and will feature newspaper colum­ nists Nicholas von Hoffman and James Kilpatrick, he added. "W e are bringing them (Kilpatrick and von Hoffman) as distinguished lecturers and will set it up as a debate,” Smith said. However, he added that the debate series will not undermine the distinguished lec­ turers program. "W e hope to have the same number of debates as distinguished lecturers,” Smith said. A debate last spring between evolution theory supporters and creation theory sup­ porters was a stimulus for the debate series, Smith said, though it was the overflow crowd in the Union Ballroom that sparked the idea and not the debate itself, 'i t pulled tremendous attendance, but it was pretty much a failure as a debate.” Smith said. Smith said he hopes the debate series will attract people, ‘i ’m ashamed when we bring in speakers and the ballroom’s only half full.” he said The committee also is planning an Infor­ mal Debate Series which would meet on a biweekly or monthly basis, Smith added "A t some of the eastern schools they have weekly debates ton> something that’s topical,” he said. University professors w ill be involved in the informal debate program. Smith said. "W e want to utilize more of the many talents we have on campus,” he said. Smith said the debate schedule will be ready in February, but the committee is currently taking suggestions for speakers for both series. "This is our only means to give everyone an opportunity to con­ tribute,” he said. Suggestions will be in the Students’ Association accepted Program Office, Union Building 4 300, through Dec. 9. Antinuclear forum begins; features national speakers The Texas Mobilization for Survival Coalition will hold a forum at the U n ive rsity Thursday and Friday to op­ pose n u clear arm s and n u cle a r pow er p la n ts. Speakers from across the United States will speak and hold workshops. The mobilization coalition was formed in Austin in September to achieve four goals: stop the arms race, ban nuclear power, ban nuclear the arm s and ch an g e priorities of government spen­ ding from m ilitary to social program s, R ick P iltz , a representative of the coali­ tion. said. The forum is being held to raise public consciousness about nuclear warfare and power plants, Piltz added. "There has been no real public protest of the prolifera­ tion of n uclear arm s or nuclear power plants,” he said. E n title d ‘ ‘Oppose The Nuclear Threat to Life,” the forum begins at 7:30 p m T h u rs d a y in B u rd in e Auditorium. Three speakers will discuss nuclear arms and the prospects for nuclear dis­ armament. They are Michael F la r e , author of "W a r Without End,” a book which analyzes U S military policy from 1970 through 1980; Natalie Shiras of the San Fran cisco M id-Peninsula Peace Conversion Project (a project to convert military in­ dustries to peaceful produc­ tion); and Steven Baker, a U n iv e r s ity g o vern m en t professor The forum continues at IO a rn. Friday with workshops on nuclear arms and nuclear power plants at the University Catholic Center, 2010 Univer­ sity Ave The workshops end at 3 p m with an hour break at noon After the workshops, at 3:30 p.m., there will be a panel dis- cu ssio n in B u sin e ss- Econornics Building 150. Speakers on the panel will dis­ cuss the problems with nuclear power, the alter­ natives and the politics in­ volved in energy. The pan­ elists will be Charles Wade, U n iv e r s it y a s s o c ia te chemistry professor; Pliny Fisk, University associate architecture professor, and Ray Reece, an energy writer. Two films and a slide show will be shown Friday starting at 7:30 p m at the University Christian Church, Fellowship Hall, 21st Street and Universi­ ty Avenue. The films are "Lovejoy’s Nuclear W ar,” a documentary on citizen action to oppose nuclear energy, and ‘The L a s t R e s o r t ," a documentary on the occupa­ tion of the Seabrook. N R., nuclear power site by a citizens’ group The slide show, "Atomic Power and the Arms Race,” is produced by the mobilization coalition. Ad­ mission to the films is SI Stock fall predicted Bear market seen into 1978 Merrill Lynch, which advertises that it’s "bullish on America." is predicting a bear market that will bottom out in 1978 when the economy peaks, an Austin broker for the national firm said Wednesday A low (bear) market when the economy is thriving, which looks like a paradox, results because the market anticipates the economy by 12 to 18 months. John Barclay said at the seminar in the Union Building “Introduction to the Stock Market was part of the Economics Symposium this week sponsored by the Texas Union Ideas and Issues Committee. The downtrend in the market will continue possibly through 1978 but hopefully only through the second quarter. Barclay said After the stock market crash in 1929, the market moved consistently up until 1968 when the Dow Jones average hit 1,000, but since then it has zigzagged, he said The market was higher rn 1967 than it is now, he added Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith, Inc , pays its economists $5 million annually to monitor the 25 economic factors affecting the market. Barclay said. Gross National Product, commodities and interest rates are the things economists watch, he said For ex­ ample, high interest rates will lower the market because it is more profitable to save than invest. "The Federal Reserve has reversed the monetary policy three times in the past decade,” he said The interest rate increased and stocks went down, then the interest rate was lowered, and now this year the Federal Reserve reversed the policy again and stocks are down, he said. What should a serious investor do in this fluctuating, now declining market0 The old theory of buying good blue-chip it aw ay for the stock and putting grandchildren isn t true now. Barclay said "You really have to be more flexible today than you used to be Buy good stock and sell it when you have to," Barclay said He suggested staying with conservative stocks and developing a portfolio by spreading investments out in a minimum of five companies Three factors to look for in stock when in­ vesting conservatively are an A rating by Standard and Poor’s Index, at least a 6 per cent yield and consistent dividend payment for at least IO years, Barclay said. Buying bonds is another conservative in­ vestment while the market is dropping, and U.S. government bonds are the safest, he said "Investing in stock is owning part of the company and investing in bonds is loaning the company money," Barclay said A person buys a bond for a set number of years and the company pays the person a specified percentage annually, he said If a person has saved some money and is ready to invest, he should go to a broker, Barclay said A broker can execute trade or totally manage the assets "You should ask to set1 the manager and if you ted hun what you are looking for want to speculate or tx' conservative," he said. "You should be a serious investor and find someone who can work with your objec­ tives ” " I can plug the purchase into a com puter in Austin and it is on the market in 12 seconds. I have had a complete transaction, selling and buying, in less than a minute," Barclay said Cat ‘litterture’ on display Although never claiming to be man’s best friend, cats have for centuries captivated the attention and affections of men A browse through the "Cats in Literature” exhibit at the Harry Ransom Center reveals the intrigue and regard famous authors had for cats "A lot of famous authors seem to have been ‘cat people,’ ” Lois Garcia, HRC research assoc iate, said Cats in literature do not seem to be as much an in­ tegral part of stories as dogs and are found more in poems, Garcia said Notables such as Ogden Nash. James Joyce. William Faulkner and Thomas Hardy centered their fables, poems and stories around cats Cat lovers can view original versions of the "Puss and Boots " fairy tale and the "Krazy Rat" cartoon, and a rare first edition of Lewis Carroll’s "A lice’s Adventures in Wonderland." opened to a portion about the Cheshire cat.’ the Among books, manuscripts and illustrations on display is a proof copy of T S. Elio t’s ‘‘Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats," a collection of poems, and Pablo Picasso’s drawings of cats included in "40 Dessins de Picasso en marge Buffon Scattered between the cat literature and art are bits of cat trivia, including "cat geography” and "cat words.” Famous national places nam­ ed after cats include the Catskill Mountains, Catsburg, Pa and Cattail Peak Words derived from "cat” include c a t su p , c a t a t o n i c and catastrophe One can also find out how the saying "letting the cat out of the bag" was coined. It dates to the joke pulled on country bumpkins who bought a bag at the market without seeing its contents They ex­ pected a pig, but when they opened the bag, a cat jumped out and ran for home. The exhibit, on the first and fifth floors of the HRC, will be shown until Dec 31 We’re More Than Pretty Face IMAGES by Bob Elliotts SHIRTS A U OFF 2426 GUADALUPE, On th * Drag PA C K A R D H E W L E T Tgj 195.00 $195.00 retail $20 75 downpayment $21.37 monthly for 9 months 10 67% annual percentage rate The Hewlett-Packard H P 29C calculator offers you continuous memory so that you can turn It off & back on & your program & data are ready for your instant use. Continuous memory saves your program. It also retains the data stored In 16 or its 30 addressable registers & the display register. You can w rite program s of 175 keystrokes or longer. Each function of I, 2, 3, or 4 keystrokes uses I step of the 98-step program m em ory. 29C offers you conditional branching, 3 levels or subroutines, Indirect ad­ In­ labels, rela tive addressing, dressing, crement/decrement conditionals, pause, In­ direct storage, register arithmetic. You can review, edit, even run one step at a time to check intermediate answers. Preprogram m ed functions include log & trig functions, rec­ tangular/polar conversions, mean, standard deviation 8. statistical summation, angle (tim e) conversions. Buy your H P 29C at the Co-op. Knee#i&ihfCo'ty WILM f a l l IAR Bf QUI The New Castilian The Castilian — more than a pretty face. While others may impress you with what they have to offer, after you move in, first impressions wear off. We are still working to improve what we offer residents. We’re still painting, fixing, remodeling" W e’re working hard for our residents. But then our residents are the best ... Wouldn’t you like to be one? A Privately Owned Residence Hall in the Heart o f the University C om m unity Page 12 □ TMK DAILY T E X A N □ T h ursday, December I, 1977 campus news in brief Dance team to hold Christmas show The UT Dance Team will present a Christmas Show and Dance to raise money for the team and to get students in­ terested in dance at 8 p m Thursday in the Union Ballroom Tickets are S2 50 A N N O U N C E MR M TS V O L U N T E E R S ort -aaOOrt lo s*®- part#* tor r.r■■■«**» tor M *1&MJOr «*M o r Ai attrtn| to orgor /• a parly may g r t , co"«aci to* SfeOott Vc#,'4### Sorbic#* ORtoa u rv x H-jOC g 4 30? or ca# ATI loss OCHART M IN T OR C L A S S I C S att praiOnL a put#*; ocfer# on Th# toOganou* i"XKxa»ona O' Soutoor' aor, « I p rn 'k/rtrtay .r Arr UuAdmg 8 Donor***# dana an®/ 'JVOCX# a# -a Wuaao Nor -.nott Molar* "taiyL and ne* *jp#r.nl#nT^ on eta pRyttca a#R ba aftown M R O IR V A L R T U O 'R S R R O O R A M «m pm •ant a a c ira by N uM rt Homo* a n ic c a !* profOMO' C Q a rm a n c Ans ‘id®** on "Womonoong al 8 p 'n 'n it*jar m Sutton Ha# 210 Tha putt*. • <-!» tod lo anend admission • 'roo Raeaehmantt ami bs aorvod D E F R A Y M E N T O# P E T R O L E U M RMOIM RRRIMO rn# pm son! « actum ai ? IO p m Ecdoy *n Watci Mali ’Q4W Dr jaw (-ontocur*'a art tpaa* on Eraser ttacncnng gonof a. acton H c aaoarcf in * g a r'/ar or ot i 'anc# concentrating on ma la id o' ■ homtcal a n g m a a n n g iCisnBKc raoMKch OR AD U A TR S C H O O L O f S O C IA L W O RK rr proaani a student aympoatu”. cm W< lion a n d Montti Heeflh' ‘rom S a m to 5 p m Thursday and ' ‘'day in ms towage ai ma ’•chout al Sac rn Mot* I a m a w grad us ta atudanta ant! apeak T KR A U S T IN U N IT O f R flC O R D IN Q AOR mad O' '-van' r t and TMS R U N O rn to record t o t sducaponai • att' « ' SPNC* 8 ttdRpMS to more mar ' I .OOO rn .dont* tome OI ar., am jnac## to tor- p tttt too* courts aor* oocouaa no o r* a mara to record to# matonoi tor tiam ! yow can noip toro hour* a ama* co# 477-9390 tor ar appoarnnonr S O U R AMO R A N O W IC H S E M IN A R rn ba prORontad by 'ha Oar. c a t Studont FOSoneMp at -otm '•'.✓aday rn to# bor­ dar LoutigP-Student Cantar jnnarwty CnnaSar Ctovch 2007 unmeiWy A rt judge Jim Daor of I20to Ootoct Cond aa# apoa* on p'saani ProO am a o' ma . ..dreary and Soma SoMton* * C L A S S IC A L C L U E att praaani two put#* jnoarwaia< Arcnaao»ogy actor** on a r c Rostering a Or### Vaaa at 4 30 p rn Thursday in Calhoun Hon 100 jo e* and Koran mon graduals studont* n archaeology ani! tpaa* W O M S N IN C O M M U N IC A T IO N S . IN C a p resell a r omomont —a * ng Chratm as party 'or ma dub *rom 7 to 9 p m Friday r ma party room o* C ar' aga Houaa Apttvnor a Coetus prctuma SOO at# ba la* ar S T U O S N T S A S S O C IA T IO N A C A D E M IC A F F A IR S C O M M IT T R R att aporiae# a o cfer* and aeon to w n by N mam Hay* MCO pf##-d** ‘ tor ocodomto #*an toe O ooa and O anfii! Room# of toe Academ ic Cantor T E X A S U N IO N * sponsor lunch arfto to* cooch on ntorm s diacuaaior aith Longhorn cooch Fm c Ako** ai noon Thur»day in Union Building 3 304 Aram i pa a* on t h * AAM game An option® a Dwhet unchoon a t ba a v a ia o a rn too adjoining Santa ''l a Room ID E A S ANO IS 8 U S S C O M M IT T E R ail! prs •ant a pa « discussion atm Dan Malone in Union Building at noon Thursday 4 224 O ar? fa u s t editor M alone win be nor .o w ed by a pan** of Marc Luzzatu . ca prssidant o' to# Stud#'’NT Assoc a tion C la re Bu a Un*v«r*ity ombudsman and Clayton Qtoaalay Daily Tenon om budaman T E X A S U NIO N F ILM C O M M IT T S t * C U L T U R A L Motor* -Who'# r - « Knocfeng rn My Doorr 'M 3 7 o n d 9 p m ’ hurtday ’n to* I RWT, * ami** S N T S R T A I N M S N T C O M M IT T S S w pr*##" FtoNW #1 8 and 11 p m Thumday at to# Parem ou" Thootr# Admooron a t i TS anc 53 75 am- C EC IO. 55 75 and M ’ 5 athort F IN S A R T S C O M M IT T ER a I co n d u e ti Southwestern and ndian Art Symposium at noon *,*urtd#y with a aammar on Currant Tr#nd* in Southwester' An — P o i ii ” O mg Cornell u* O' South a eater' An Mega/ na a-, snow anda* and docusa too evolution o ' aoutowestern an anc at standing to rh# art wortd m U'ton Bu ding 4 11O C H IC A N O C U L T U R E C O M M IT T E E att 'oatura • sam.nor on ‘Chicano Wrttor* And to# Cmaftve P'ocaas" at noon Thurt- doy >n U r 'On Bu'Wmg 4 410 Eaton* Ror- *#0. author Of Ram of Scorpions" anc 'Day of toe Swallow*" will mod sanctions from hor new novel and win dacuaa to# rom of to# chicano writer* and to# emotive proc### An -n tor mal d a cu o a o ' will loflow M U S IC A L E V E N T S C O M M IT T E E eW! pre­ sort Tai' a now Austin a it bond, from 9 p rn to rrvdrwflW Thurtday m too Tara* Tavern D « a Zonk, toto guitarist will per- •orm ►om 9 p .rn to midnight Thursday n to# Cactus Ca'# Bar Th# Southern Singers will ped or rn from 7 lo 8 pm Thu'sday in to# Texas Tavern union musical #n»rtainrrent is fra# for UT ID hoidai* M ER T IN O E S T U O S N T S ’ A S S O C IA T IO N P U B L IC IT Y C O M M IT T S S mu hold to* ast meeting pf th# sem#*i#f at 6 30 p rn Thursday in to# Texas Union Deans' Room O R A N O E J A C K E T S win boid a Christmas party ai 7 30 p m Thursday at to# Kappa Alpha Thais house Executives will moot al 6 30 p rn A U S T I N O F F R I E N D S T H E F A R M W O R K E R S « n Bellm ont nan 966 S T U O S N T S OF A N T H R O P O S O P H Y wi -nae! so discus* to# initial developm ent of r e eorto in its fourth ncamooon at 7 p rn Thursday rn Calhoun H all 2 1 Tha mooting is o p e ' to interested persons IN T E R -SCRV IC E C O U N C IL « meat at 4 C m Thursday to union Beld in g 4 300 A 1: -lam bert should abend and br og the synopsis O' r a t' organizations anc their s e t Vitos A M N E S T Y IN T S R N A T IO N A L a tt moot to com pote preparations for th# Artists tor Amnesty exhibit N 8 o rn Thurtday in Union Building 3 116 U N I V E R S I T Y O F T E X A S S P E E C H •TUO CNT A S S O C IA T IO N anil meet at 7 p m Thursday in Union Building 4 224 Bylaw s loran s c plans party plans fend raising plans and spring scn edue* anti De discussed N A T I O N A L C H I C A N O H E A L T H O R G A N IZ A T IO N mil moot at 7 p rn Thursday in th# Union s Chicano Culture Room. U N I V E R S I T Y I N T E R N A T I O N A L P O L K D A N C E R S win moat to dane* at 8 p m every Thursday in Architecture Budding 105 Dancing anti bo taught to beginners in toe first hour Everyone «t> Ant ftfWHMOTIM B#i.L A . - F t ‘V l it h .r te * AS A h-'m IWIt TKZRT • - Z - - ...X Advance tickets 2MO DI SCOW MT R&CCJZ&S, OOT WILLIES, H06£> AUD SaMFOt^OS SHOES PaRN. L a n e H O SIERY / jS M ilP IL L O Bo x O F F IC E a BT N IfeMT O F T H E P 6 A F - 0 R A V IN G e AT T H E POOR, 3 ,0 0 N o ts 5 - 1 1 7 5 4 mo r e s e g v e o s c a n ARE U.T. PEOPLE TOO Your fellow students invite you to "H O O K E M " over to H.E.B. for all your shopping needs at H.E.B.'s low, low prices. [BAKE SHO P _ HFB_____________ W E— EW b u h h i A V A IL A l i i U N I T AT: 2400 S. CONGRESS ____ A N D 2215 I. RIVERSIDE * 0 MIW PRICE Ranch Country BACO N Sliced I 2 ounce 7 9 * Steakhouie Boof Round STEAK Pound S | m 29 Froth Ground BEEF Pound 7 9 * Village Park Macaroni DINNER _ - With Cheese 7 'bou nce box Park Royal FLOUR 5 pound bag |5 3 * Plaza CRACKERS’ Pound box t3 9 * Gobhardtt (No Boant) C H IU (Plain) 15 ounco can 5 9 * Bathroom Tissue W ALDORF 4 roll package mK 13<®> LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! KB3EHK8HB Park Manor BISCU ITS ^ Regular or Buttermilk C S ^ C C EA H.E.B. or Banquet POT-PIES Chicken Turkey or Beef 8 ounce 2 9 Prices Good Thurs-Sat Dec 1-3 in Austin, Taylor, Round Rock and Goorgofown OPEN EVERYDAY SUNDAY HOURS: 10«i-8m HES!> everyday prices m • rn I Add To your good looks v Add to your good looks with a Texas style belt buckle. are LOW prices! J Available in silver, gold electroplate, and pewter. From $8 to $10 • A P P O r o t S h o p 1st floor HOW TO SELECT THE PERFECT I GIFT FOR CHRISTMAS Thursday, December I, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 13 G i f t C e r t i f i c a t e 4 - H * T T 5 ♦ n * = 3 8 2 , r - ' T r r y* f*A I i I ” i l l 4 K Make it easy this year w ith a Gift C ertificate from Eagle. Our com plete one stop Discount Centers carry everything you need to make this holiday season a truly merry one for your employees, clients, business associates and friends. All you do is choose the exact amount you want to give and the person you give it to can select whatever they want. From a turkey or a ham to plants, toys and clothes, Eagle has som ething to please everyone on your shopping list. A G ift C ertificate from Eagle, it’s the perfect solution to your gift giving problems. Fresh Meats Canned & Packaged tor I ^ from MATURA ' $s \\ma> u%m v vyv> wvwi BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST HEAVY MATURE BEfc F LB BONE IN ROUND STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEET _B FRESH OYSTERS IO O .' 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OZ BOX I • Cm xJ !HV All I V W r CRISCO SALAD OIL 6 A N D C O O M N G 4 n i >Z H H f GREEN BEANS 6 GHEEN GIANT FRENCH STYLE it . i J / CAN a I ■ w W I O • V # W Delicatessen r CREAM CHEESE A PHIL A D I I PHIA ’ •* PKG .56 .87 1.09 1.29 e n < ‘ > OZ < AN m \JsJ • 1 C O Z AH HOME STYLE SPREAD PRICES. P IM ! NTC)OH JALAPt NO r OSCAR MAYER WIENERS. A D IN N ER M E A ! OR B l I I ” » OZ C UP 1» MARIE DRESSING IOO" IS LA N D CIN N A M O N ROLLS PIL I PHONY HARVEST DAY BISCUITS BUTTI RMH K O H SW I I I MIL k t x ' VARIETY PACK GSC AR MAYE R< 5 VAHI1 III Si C O Z Pl Health & Beauty Aids PRELL SHAMPOO LIO U ID 11 O Z B U SURE A N TIPER SPIR A N T SCOPE MOUTHW ASH 5 OZ S iZ t I 8 0 Z B T I IB A C H . 1 6 1.64 1.71 1.13 1.41 .49 .79 .85 ' 1 ! > .t> Dairy & Frozen p LARRY’ S POTATOES A WITH i HEES! r CHICKEN BREAST 6 SW ANSON F H it I ’ .43 2.75 ?O Z CTN 1.88 r CHICKEN NIBBLERS i k , 2 . 1 9 ■t, o SW ANSON I R I! U f MINUTE MAID LEMONADE 4 7 I ’ O? P GLAD PLASTIC W RAP BKI 1 I HI ll I • “ # j e a7 Produce FRESH CABBAGE SOLID-t LAVOHY FRESH BULK CARROTS CRUNCHYGOOD BUNCH SPINACH C U R I F A N IX H IS!' JUMBO TANGELOS TANGY A N D DF L IG H T ! UL PAPAYAS G I! TOF THI TROPICS .15 A 8 UNCK .33 I,, .39 I Af l l rn 5 9 Oui Pw n PioiB .iion Pow y yuawiitfrtiH tin t tfmn* pm »» to tiottt Thursday. D«c*mtwi I ttuougn W»(lw 'to* J 19ff ( - ‘ 1V I J fly t ‘ A *,ti -i t*\ All (Cl (UMe-fvnnl (Pk« out dMcouwvd on 90V*WW#nf C o m to t iw J tMHTH L irin t A i l / m f W y it v t t t o n C o t n m iw ut V i t M r HOT ROLL MIX A PILLSBURY e n P O . O Z BOX m%JZJ r BIC SHAVER I r FUDGE BROWNIE MIX £> D U N C AN H IN ES r GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 3 OZ BOX 1.27 ... .69 STYLE HAIR SPRAY STYLE SHAMPOO ...what discount is cill about. FOR YOUR EAGLE GIFT CERTIFICATES SEE YOUR LOCAL STORE MANAGER FOR ORDERS OVER $100, Call: (6 1 2 ) 4 6 8 62 3 1 O ' * 0 1„ p worth VO pdte "el1^ ke your « e ..N ° V d *■>«' * f i o n d Ii ^ , 1 1 r : " c » » ' ■'***' — r * > °- * - s » " S \\staS « • ' C f i tx* c o ^ t o ^ ' l i f e * v * * gi p t.W M T WFR - —STT J r n I BIC LIGHTER DISPOSABLE ( ADJUSTABLE F . A M t .69 1000 STRAND ICICLES ’ 8 INCHES LONG MODEL W6-01G2 CHRISTMAS WREATH 16 INCH MODEL 1622 .29 3.97 BAG OF BOWS 36 ASSORTED COLORS MODEL 492 GIFT WRAP 4 ROLLS 36 MODEL 4362 O O■ 1.87 6 ’ SCOTCH PINE TREE ARTH IC IAI. MODEL 72 BB 07 J 2.97 1.99 JUMBO GIFT WRAP 36 MODEL KIO 5555 NORTH LAMAR BLVD. AT KOENIG, AUSTIN Mon.-Sat. 9-9 Son. 10-7 Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ T h ursday, December I, 1977 WE’VE GOT YOUR STEREO! 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M a n m i t * •» * t-* I f f F* tv m f r f f P f I CO m o p p e t un . , V ,\ two ECI Spectrum m r Pioneer S X 8 5 0 bOOt s ’ R” Brown said although the divers may leave after a year, "they contribute for the team while they’re here and they learn from others and others learn from them ” Belter, the only diver from Texas, said she did well in the AAU program under Brown and decided to remain in Austin “ Mike is good and I got along well with him There is nothing else like this pool. I ’m used to it now I go to other pools to work out and if s so different,” B E IT E R AD DED she thought Brown has done a really good job Just look at the people we’ve got — Teri ( York). Denise (Christensen I and the Swedes Christensen, who won the American Cup last summer, will not be able to compete with the team until next semester because of shin splits Brown said the diver will have to rest a lot. “ It’s all she can do,” Brown said, adding her diving may suffer a little because “ it’s hard to stay in shape when you have to rest.” By D EBO RA H K MANN Pi port a Reporter ’ international Texas' worn rn I diving team member* are not only level diver*.” but together they make an international team, with the majority of the squad recruited from foreign < ountnes Annie Liljeberg and Suzanne Wetteskog are national champions from Sweden while Ten York wa* a Canadian finalist in the 1976 Olym­ pic* Erin Better and Denise Christensen, both Amateur Athletic Union national champions, arc tile (wily American* on th** team Belter is from Austin and Christensen came to Texas from Tuc«in, Ari/ Coach Mike Brown said the five recruits on the women'* diving team are "international level" and should place in the national cham pionships " T H E Y ' R E J U S T that good ” Brown said In football the highest goal is to win the national championship or go to a bowl, but in swimming and diving, international competi Hon is the highest point and that’s what they're all shooting for,” he explained Brown said having foreign divers on the team benefits the program because ‘ they’re international competition and pointing for that’s what we want to do However,’ he added. " I f s a bit of a disad vantage became they don’t know what dual It s hard to get a Texas meets are all about team concept because if s different when you’re competing for a school and not a coun­ try American collegiate nationals are a whole new thing to them ’ BROW N SA ID T H E Olympic Swimming Center is a good recruiting aid, partially because of the IO-meter tower "There aren t too many schools with a tower, and no school has four three- and one-meter diving boards ” York who won the 1974 U S nationals and placed sixth at the 1976 Olympics on the 10- meter tower said she came to Texas because impressed with Mike she was "throughly (Brown), the program and the pool when I came down here for a visit last summer I wouldn’t go anyplace where they didn t have a tower ’’ However York said she is unsure if she will continue diving after the world championships next summer 'T V E L E F T A lot of things at home in Canada to come here for a year I'm not sure if I could stay here for three more I ’ll just take it as it comes,” she said Wetteskog and Liljeberg said they also may not return to the team after this year Liljeberg said although she is glad she had the chance to come to Texas, she will return in May to Sweden, where she plans to train to be a dental assistant I will also dive, Liljeberg said " I may go to the Olympics, but it depends on how my diving is.” Wetteskog said she is thinking about staying "Ifs so close to I had to travel an at Texas longer than a year the pool here In Sweden hour on buses and it was a public pool ” W ET T ESK O G SAID she is not homesick, ' but Annie is She has a boyfriend at home and knows what she wants to do in the future I - T v * a n S ta ff P h o to * by d e tw a P*tr»Qotd Liljeberg works on a dive In practice. Texas women travel to ‘fun’ tourney in defense of 1976 championship best recruiting year of anyone in the state Some people pas* them off because they’re a junior junior college, but colleges have been playing (women's basketball! a lot longer than senior colleges " I KNOW FRO M how they recruited that they’ll be a good team " Other participants in the double elimination, 10-team tournam ent are Wharton County Junior College, Texas A A I, S a i n t M a r y ’ s, Southwestern University, Sout hwes t T e xa s S t a t e, Angelo State and a group from Corpus C hristi known as WHSS Conradt said her team played poorly Tuesday night despite a three- point victory " It was our first perfor­ mance. and it was a poor one The thing that hurt us the most was we didn’t play defense, and we d i d n ’t rebound well " It gave us plenty of things to work on for the rest of the season.” Aller a light 67 W4 win over Temple Junior College Tues day, Texas women’s basket ball team heads to South Tex as Thursday for some fun” in the second annual George West Invitational Thursday through Saturday George West has a popula lion of about 2,INN), and the “ quite an tournament Is ordeal,” Head Coach Jody Conradt said after practice Wednesday T H E Y H A V E a real tug turn out everybody co rn el," Conradt said The girt* stay In private homes and it s real­ ty a whole lot of fun ” The n atio n a lly ranked Dmghorn* play Can American I niversity at 6 30 p in Thor* in George West High day School gym Texas beat Tyler Junior College last year to win the eight team tournament, and the Horns also are this year’s favorite " I DON’T know anything — - o d * Conradt about Can Am ." Conradt said "Bu t Tyler had probably the 10°o DISCOUNT A N Y T IM E T O A U UT S T U D E N T S A F A C U L T Y JU S T S H O W Y O U R U T ID IMAGES by Bob E llio tts THE SHOP FOR MEN & W OM EN r i i i i i i B i 2 4 2 6 Guadalupe, On thw Drag ^ To From Rene Rochester dribbles upcourt against Temple. —Texan Staff Photo by dabra Relngold The Great Holiday Write-Off . A t h l e t e ' s T h e m f o o t Gift Certificate Amount $ stor# Validation Signature by Store Address G ive our Gift C e rtific a te to your favorite athletes a n d they c a n c h o o se their ow n Christmas present* leisure fo o tw e a r And since w e re experts a t this, w e ll m a k e sure they select the right shoes hor the rig h t sport At the right p ric e from m ore than 200 styles of a th le tic a n d “No one knows the ath lete’s toot like THE ATHLETE S FOOT.” Targa by Sheaffer. _ Athlete's Fool NORTHCROSS MALL 4 5 8 - 3 4 5 4 UNIVERSITY SKI CLUB 1001 Brushed Stainless Steel Cpt "Mnit lenity (ia - Oft many needs — classes are offered days, evenings and weekends Western Stats University Collide of Law has a Whole Person Admissions Policy - applicants are screened for academic lf you are seeking a career opportunity — WSI) offers several ways rn which von can enter the legal profession Full-Time Students Can earn a J 0 Degree and be eligible to take the California State Bar Examination in 2 Vt or 3 years Part-Time Students Can graduate in 2V? or 4 years of study with the same degree as a full-time student by attending class an average of 3 times per week. 3 hours per class There are schedules to fit Considering a Career in the Legal Profession? I r■ uw I I I I I I I I I I I I background, personal aptitude general experience, maturity and motivation Applications are now being accepted for Spring Semester from men and women with two or more years of college credits To obtain catalog fill out and mail advertisement to either of our two campuses APPLY NOW FOR SPRING SEMESTER CLASSES START JANUARY 16. Although the cost of professional education continues to spiral. Clition a: WSC refrains among the most mode'ate in the at ion l l l l N State College Blvd Function CA 92631 Phone (714) 993 7600 Awd Name 1333 Front Street San Diego CA 92101 Phone (714) 231-0300 Western Stile University College of Lew Deft Cl8 State Street Cav Zip rn State University Fully accredited by the State Bar of California and by the W estern Association of Schools and C olleges Students eligible for Federally Insured Student Loans ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ LAST CHANCE to sign up for tho STEAMBOAT TRIP 150 OO MEETING DEC. I , U N IO N 3 .3 04 "IMPROVE YOUR SKIING" ALL PAYMENTS ARE DUE AT THIS MEETING FOR TRIP ON BUS AND PIANE. PAYMENTS MUST BE CASH, MONEY ORDERS, OR CASHIERS CHECK. NO PERSONAL CHECKS!! NOTE: There are still a few spats open! The Daily Texan Ombudsman listens to suggestions, complaints, questions and problems about The Daily Texan. lf you have served on the Texan staff for two semesters, you may qualify. Come to T S P. 3.200 for forms. application is the January 19 last day to apply. — —* Nordic rots NCIT 4 U O 6 0 I TOM ROBBINS %ls«r I i 11 e h h i k e * I m i 11 c r file r* ... Now y*w can M f (tow* on* of our amating EVEN COWGIRLS GET THI BLUES T-SHIRTS «*•** •* it Ow* »iM .'N t u t u I t , ■M f ll* waul*** u t • * * » • m * * » « l i f t * t , Cete w *« T h u m b * u p ) I v * n m to m k t « tro che* BO B O I**** Tito. *h***ptog Sum.) » M arnotto on col 1 0 0 % M M M | A t * ft * • **» trapping MMC*) • * *• > * » i I ’* 1 J I M i l l a I S II bead ** AGRI tu IHI DOOHESBOBY TANK MCNAMARA M I N I qf-x d PEANUTS Every day in the Texan ¥ ¥ * * * * * * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Olympic medalist Spooner remembers winning feeling By DEBBIE MAURER Sports R eporter The notion that no one ever com es home from the Olympic Gam es a loser is beautifully illustrated through the perfor­ m ance of C anada’s Hugh Spooner in the 1976 World Olympics in M ontreal Spooner, now a freshm an a t the U niversity and a m em ber of the Texas track team , represented Canada in the four-man 400- m eter relay team Although Spooner was excited by the opportunity to compete in the G am es, he experienced his g reatest thrill entering the stadium for the opening cerem onies. ‘We were the host coun­ try, and we entered the stadium last The crowd erupted, and a chill ran down my spine I cried .” Spooner said. ‘‘I FELT LIKE a winner before I even began my race ” A fter making the national track team as a teenager, Spooner placed fourth in the 100-meter run, qualifying him for a position on the Canadian Olympic track team . In M ontreal, the Canadian relay team had a two hour practice before the qualifying heat, and a t 10:30 they went into the stadium to set their blocks. “ I COULDN’T even eat b reak fast,” Spooner recalled. “ I look­ ed up and saw 80,000 people staring down at m e and I was scared to death. When I took off my sw eats the crowd im ­ m ediately noticed Canada w ritten across my chest, and the en­ tire stadium roared with thunderous applause. I ve never ex­ perienced anything like it.” When the gun fired to begin the heat, Spooner said he felt him self going through the motions of running, but he was too scared to rem em ber even moving The Canadians placed eighth in the heat, proceeding to the finals after a fourth place finish in the sem ifinals. THE MORNING of the finals. Spooner translated the words ‘‘Good Luck” from a Russian opponent and ran his fastest race ever Even though the Canadian team was ranked third in the relay. it was defeated by the United States, E ast G erm any and Poland, while placing eighth But Spooner said the finish didn t m a tte r — the Canadians w ere a winning team . A fter the Olympics, Texas track coach Cleburne P rice heard about Spooner through the Craig brothers, Paul and John, Cana­ dian distance runners a t the University. A fter taking a personally guided tour of the cam pus from gold m edalist Johnny Jones, Spooner decided to com e to Texas. Im pressed by T exas’ academ ic and athletic reputation, Spooner began to look forw ard to competing for the Longhorn track team “ CANADA GETS cold. Running for Texas will enable me to run year around, and ITI get a good education besides. “ T here’s a m utual respect among a th le te s,” said Spooner. “ Once you get to the Olympics it doesn’t m a tte r who you are or what you’ve done W hat’s im portant is what you do at the G am es, nothing else m atters " Spooner said it is impossible to idolize anyone because of all the competition. “ Everyone is equally as talented, it s anyone’s ball. “ When I was little I had dream s of becoming an Olympic runner. I never thought they d com e true a t the early age of 18. "Advent - A Time of Preparation, W aiting and Anticipation" December 4 Sister Celebration (an ecum enical service of Christian worship utilizing inclusive language) Liturgical Dance by FREE SPIRIT Sermon by Rev. Janice Riggle Huie Sunday - 4 :0 0 p.m. United Campus Ministry of Austin (M ethodist Student Center) 2434 G uadalupe Everyone Welcome I — Texan Staff Photo by dobra Roingold Spooner jogs in practice. Jk: VV ■* A '- SKI IN THE NEW YEAR! Aspen *245 Vail *225 Breckenridge *165 D o n t Miss It - ( all T o d a y 476-4866 Downtown 454-5765 Th. Villano 7700 W. Anderson In. 926-0146 Trocor CYCLO-CROSS SUNDAYS ■ ZILKER PARK 1 PM Thursday, December I, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 17 W" ■ er ^ e j r f r ' 1' e 4* I J “ S * BRITTONS . PRE •• CHRISTMAS SUIT SALE ■iJ ■ •• Select the Suit of Your Choice from a wide Assortment of Solids, Stripes, Plaids & Checks and Vested t and Nonvested Models S in Both Fall and Year-Round Weights •• .. 20% DISCOUNT I Alterations Free i- " ’ 1 , J ■ • Presented by Yellow Rose Veto Sport • Sponsored by: in co-operation w ith the City of Austin Parks an d Recreation Dept. Sanctioned by: United States Cycling Federation, Inc. • For everyone 12 years an d over. Two classes of com petition. Release forms are required. O btain forms an d other inform ation a t sponsor bike shops. • Sunday, Dec. 4 , 1 1 . • Sunday, Jan. 9, 16, 23, 30. • PRIZES EVERY WEEK! University Cydary Austin Bike Shop Turnip Enterprises Sweetish Hill Casita Jorge's M ad Dog and Boons Cothron's Bike Shop O at Willie's Python Patchworks Shiner Boor Good Food Stores Romic Cyclos Whole Earth Provision Co. Tho Athlete's Foot Tio's Shoo Service The Spoke Freewheeling Bike Shop Half Price Books Blimpie EyeMedia Earth Products j ^Brittons V s . ON THE DR AG 2 : J 4 6 G U A D A L U P E A 7 0 3 A ' : 1 ^ . j Page 18 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, December I, 1977 Hayes... Tech s Jones Stadium Freed man. a sentimental, fatherly man who has had unwanted thrust upon him was almost finished winding up the cable He stopped for a moment and stared regretfully into spare Them he turned to his inter viewer I wish you wouldn't write anything," he said “ I wish this Woody thing would just go away, so I could just go back to being anonymous and doing my job " So while others would be capitalizing on such an oppor tunny as the Hayes assault, Freedman prefers to go on be ing a man and let such pet­ tiness die “ T HE R E WILL BE no damage suit I could never take advantage of another man s misfortune he says I went down in a helicopter last year off the coast of Hawaii One man died The same day Woody hit m c, A n w a r S a d a t met Israel Menahem Begin in There are more important things in life than me and Woody Since the Israelis and the Arabs have made peace and Woody and I have made peace, why can't we forget it?** Mike V reedman resumed winding the cable Then he began to talk about his son (Continued from Page IS I You've got lo lake me as I am You’ve got to lake Woody as he is Woody Is Woody Take him or leave him " The only resentment Freed man harbors against Hayes was caused by the roach a characterisation of him lo the press “ Woody described me ai a poor, little guy," said Freed* man softly " I assume he meant a pitiful guy, because I'm quite well off And I am 5 9 tall, which is a good height, so I'm not little " But h reed man is kindly And it seemed like he had been waiting to tell his story, bec ause after the initial reluc tam e. he had spoken in a vlr tuaily uninterrupted soliloquy for more than fifteen minutes In that m onologue, he diverted (K casionally from the Hayes encounter to talk of other more important things ‘•I M A R R IE !) A girl from Texas," Freedman said, fond ly (He is from New York I ‘ She was a ballet dancer We Uke each other very much Our love is greater now than It was at the beginning " Of his job. Freedman said that It was the ‘grandeur and the emotion’ that he Ukes best “ I actually got tears in my eyes when they played the Stars and Stripes today.' said Freedman “ And I try to bring the emotions of others to the s c r e e n An A r k a n s a s cheerleader was moved by the song today, loo and I was able to capture that This is what gives me satisfaction " T M K S H A D O W S we r t beginning to envelop Teias Rangers' Phil Esposito, (r), and Don Murdock celebrate a goal. —UPI Telephoto sports shorts Six Terps sue two newspapers ( U P I ) R O C K V IL L E , Md Sis University of Maryland basketball players have sued the Washington Star and the cam pus newspa(>er The Diamondback, for 172 million for articles concerning the players' academic difficulties The suit filed last week in Prince George I County Circuit Court, asked for dam ages for "invasion of privacy" and "inten ­ tional infliction of mental distress The players are John Bilney BHI Bryant Larry Gibson, Jo Jo Hunter, law rence Boston and Mike Davis Their attorney. Walter H Madden, said the academic records in question were protected by the Buckley Amendment, which spe< ifies a student's grades cannot be released without his con sent Bears fire White B E R K E L E Y , Calif Mike White, the California Bears head football coach for the past six years, was fired Wednesday by the University’s athletic director (U P I) Dirac tor Dave Maggard said he decided lo terminate White s contract after evaluating the total direction of the school s foot­ ball program Mississippi coach resigns OXFORD Miss ( U P I ) U n i v e r s i t y of Mississippi football Coach Ken Cooper resigned the post Wednesday after a group of his former players advised the school that he would never be a consistent winner " There was no immediate university response to speculation Looper would be offered a job as assistant athletic director, nor to reports Texas Tech Coach Steve Sloan was the leading can­ didate for Cooper s job Kingman signs with Cubs CHICAGO ( U P I ) - Baseball’s "Kong," the fitful Dave Kingman, found his island rn the sun Wednesday when he signed a five year contract with the Chicago Cubs estimated at 11- million and said, i ’m very happy and look forward to playing 81 games in Wrigley Field next season Kingman, whose up-and-down career has been marked by titanic home runs and frequent strikeouts, agreed to terms with the Cubs after negotiating with both them and the New York Yankees since the end of the season Mots acquire Maddox N EW Y O RK (UPI) - Outfielder Ellio tt Maddox, troubled with injuries since a brilliant 1975 season with the New York Yankees, was signed by the New York Mets Wednesday night to a five year package estimated at about 1800,000 Brohamer headed to Boston BOSTON ( U P I ) — The Boston Red Sox, whose fans were for $72 million worried before the major league re-entry draft the team couldn't compete with the rest of the league, Wednesday came to terms with their third free agent — Jack Brohamer. Oilers print playoff tickets HOUSTON ( U P I ) - The N F L league office has authorized the Houston Oilers to print playoff tickets despite the club holding only the slimmest of chances of earning a playoff berth A club spokesman said applications for playoff tickets to games on Saturday, Dec 24 and Sunday, Jan. I, were mailed to season ticket holders Those applications had to be returned by Dec 9 Vilas nets $300,000 N EW Y O R K ( U P I ) — U S Open champion Guillerm o Vilas has captured the 1300,000 first prize in this year’s Grand Prix tennis circuit of 76 tournaments, it was announced Wednesday. The 25-year-old Argentinian who also won the French Open ti­ tle. established a match record of 51 consecutive wins, the longest in the 10-year history of open tennis. He racked up a total of 1,947 Grand Prix performance points and is guaranteed top seeding in the Grand Prix Masters at Madison Square Garden Jan 4-8 Rangers blank St. Louis, 4-0 ST LO U IS ( U F I ) - Ph il Es po s i t o, becoming the second-highest scoring player in the history of the National Hockey League, Wednesday night scored a hat trick to give the New York Rangers a 4-0 win over the St Louis Blues Esposito scored his ninth, 10th and lith goals of the season for a total of 607, three higher than Bobby Hull. Qnly Gordie Howe with 786 goals in his N H L career has scored more than Esposito. Sabres 3, Black Hawks 2 CHICAGO (UPI) - First- period goals by Git Perreault and Danny Gare Wednesday night earned the Buffalo Sabres a tie for first place in the Adams Division with idle Boston after a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Black Hawks With Buffalo’s Lee Fogolin serving a tripping penalty at I 30 of the third period, the Black Hawks’ Jim Harrison tied the score with a 58-foot shot on the power play Barons 5, Maple Leafs 3 R IC H F IE L D . Ohio ( U P I ) - Mike Fidler scored the go­ ahead goal from a faceoff late in the second period Wednes­ d a y n i g h t to l e a d the Cleveland Barons to a 5-3 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs, snapping a three-game Baron losing streak Rockies 3,Islanders 3 D E N V E R (U P I) - Paul Gardner scored his 18th goal of the season in the last minute of play Wednesday as the Colorado Rockies rallied for a 3-3 tie with the New York Islanders. The Islanders struck first on leader Bryan NHL scoring Trottier’s 17th goal of the season, but Chuck Amason tied the score on a power play a few minutes later in the opening period Penguins 6, Red Wings 4 P I T T S B U R G H ( U P I ) - Pete M ahovlich, acquired only Tuesday, scored a hat trick Wednesday night to lead the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 6-4 victory over the Detroit Red Wings it it it Aeros 3, Whalers 3 HOUSTON (U P I) - The New England Whalers and the Houston Aeros played to a 3-3 in a W orld overtim e tie Hockey Association match Wednesday night. Larry Pleau’s goal at 11:40 of the third period tied the score for New England after Houston had taken a 3-2 lead on Cam Connor’s goal 26 seconds into the third period IT AFTER GRADUATION TACKLE SOME NEW PROBLEMS P E A C I C O R P S V I S T A ON C A M PU S Today ( A T E A C A-2340 I R E C O M M E N D ‘ A Great Restaurant < hol e r " T I K * A ■ I ” R e t! K>mato Q u a lity It a lia n Fund IM M lM M tl*l«i|»r I J ti U n i ' i i It 56 JI l l SS KITT TODAY’S nosswon PUZZLE FT is i— Every Day in th e Texan i«»"T T T T * ! MONEY-SAVING DISCOUNT F R O M ^ r ^ - COUPONS for every d a y of th e w e e k ! Clip a n d use! At all locations! USE YOUR DEGREE S IG N U P N O W FOR YO U R IN T ER V IEW Placement Office: Today - Jester Hall Business, & Library Science ROYALE BURGER MONDAY SPECIAL! preterit (h it coupon a n d * | * * p(u« , a * a n d receive I - SU PER ROYALE I - REG. ORDER FRENCH FRIES I ? ox. SDA V o id a tta r Doc 15 fW g SS3SSS3 C T S S S' > AAI J TUESDAY SPECIAL! proton ! th n coupon a n d * 1 1# p la t tax a n d receive SU PER RO YALE REG. ORDER FRENCH FRIES K g g g g S C T S g S S g g g g g f f g f WEDNESDAY SPECIAL! f« p ro to n ! thi% coupon M I O , , and m Pi** f°* and rocoivo I - FISH SA N D W IC H I - REG ORDER FRENCH FRIES 12 o i. 173(1 Void offer Dec 15 __ _g» m i - i 2 oi . r a n Void o h tr Dot 15 ES ES _r t t r a s s a a g g r j JP B W M B B W W M W W WE B: gji FRIDAY SPECIAL! J ^ p r o f nl Ihtt coupon C s and $%to | pius tan and receive I - FISH SA N D W IC H I ■ REG ORDER FRENCH FRIES F 3 1 - 1 2 o i . £ 7 3 3 Void offer Doc 15 K S X O S S g S X S S S X S S S g M THURSDAY SPECIAL! p t w n i (im coupon a n d * 1 11 plus fox and receive I - SU PER RO YALE I - REG. O R DER FRENCH FRIES I . n o i. 2B K I Void attar Dec IS N o D e p o s it R e q u ir e d ARRIVED IO k a ra t gold w /pearls & birthstones $88.00 CP'UHiveiAiUf &-0ji CP'li*iu v u U tyCa-0ft *599 OO A-2340. * ’/a-track, 4-channel w/Simul-Sync. * % HEADS (erase, record/sync, playback). *U p to 7 " reels. •Tape speeds: 7Vz, 3% ips. *Simul-Sync for multitrack recording & over­ dubbing. •M anual cue lever for fast search, cueing & editing. •Independent tape/source selectors for each channel. •Separate microphone & line input level con­ trols for mic/line mixing. * 2-channel play switch for playing ’/a-track stereo tapes. •Independent output level controls for each channel. •Front panel microphone inputs.. •Two stereo headphone jacks (front & rear. *4 large VU-type level averaging meters. let you fine-tune the Vernier controls speed of 33V5 & 45 rpm records. Thoro are tw o drive systems. One DC servo motor powers tho turntable. It has a frequency tacho g en erato r. A m in i­ controlled computer constantly monitors tho running speed. Any deviation — such as changes in cycle current or deaning brush drag — is instantly corrected. Tho other DC servo motor controls tho changing mechanism — pick-up tone arm movement. The main reduce chassis abosrbs vibrations feed back. A flo atin g chassis acoustic protects your stylus & record. Tho platter is isolated from motor vibration by a shock- to absorbing polyurethane drive belt reduce flutter A rumble. Vertical tracking force is set betw een 0 A 4 grams accor­ ding to the recommendation of th# maker of your stylus. Tone-arm cue control lets you raise or lower the arm a t any part of is viscous the dam ped to prevent d am age to the stylus record. The m ovem ent to 9 , y . U, ^ 1 3 4 b 9 5 !SSSS$gS?SSSSS SS3 SSS3 ? S ^ SATURDAY SPECIAL! l i M m m i M M m a SUNDAY SPECIAL! TWO SUPER ROY ALES w ith thin coupon and • I 11 pius fox Void ofter Dec. 15 TWO SUPER ROY ALES w ith this coupon and * I 1# Votd attar Dec. 15 GA 406 You can stack up to 5 records on tho tu rn ta b le a u to m a tic a lly changer. Tho selects tho record diam eter and speed foe •ach selection. When tho last record is played the system shuts off electronically. _ 'Ih U vtX 'tiU } d o -O p Thursday, December I, 1977 □ TH E D A ILY T EXA N □ Page 19 I SAVE *50 ( I purchase I before Dec. 30th I travel next summer iu railpass« s| tors I longhorn! I TRAVELERS I ♦76-6101 3111 Manor Rd. S | I S I I I TRAVEL WITH A FRIEND f I 3 week unlimited | I North Am erica § Airpasses as low os *299 illlllN N M H IIIIH IH IU H IIIIIIIH IN M IIIIIIM lF Shoe Sh op W b m alta a n d rep air boot* •boat baht loather GENUINE SHEEP SKIN RUGS Natural & Stout,tut Colors t i A Q Q 10‘ ★ SA D D LES* ENGLISH WESTERN good* Capitol Saddlery Aultm Texat 1614 L a va ca 478 9309 ARCHITECTURE & ENGINEERING STUDENTS 1978 Sum m er Jobs Available For Information Send N a m e (print) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ — -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Phone Sind immidkttiby to. S.S.T., 1422 Cloverleaf Dr., Ault in, Z ip N a m e Address Tm. 78723. Kupchak leads Bullets past Spurs LA N D O V ER , Md (U P I) - M itch Kupchak scored 26 points and Phil Chenier added 24 to p a c e a b a la n c e d Washington attack in a 116-105 victory over the San Antonio Spurs Wednesday night Elvin Hayes had 21 points and Keven Grevey added 15 for Washington, which en­ joyed a 26-5 margin over the Spurs on the offensive boards George Gervin led San An­ tonio with 20 With Kupchak hitting for nine points and Chenier and Tom Henderson adding six apiece in the third quarter, Washington went into the final stanza with an 88-84 lead Eight points by San Antonio center B illy Pau ltz , who finished with 17 points before fouling out of the game with 7:51 remaining in the final quarter, kept San Antonio within striking distance. 76er» 117, J a n 114 N EW O R LEA N S (U P I) - Darryl Dawkins hit a 15-foot jump shot with three seconds remaining Wednesday night to lift the Philadelphia 76ers to a 117-114 come-from-behind win over the New Orleans Jazz before the largest crowd ever at a regular season N BA game. The win, the loth in a row for Philadelphia, came before a record crowd of 35,077 — nearly 8,000 more than old N BA mark set one year ago in Sonics’ Marvin Webster scores over Kansas City's Rich Washington, helping Seattle edge the Kings, 86-84. —U PI Telephoto the Louisiana Superdome by the same two teams. Sonics 86, Kings 84 KANSAS C IT Y , Mo. (U P I) National Basketball Association By United Presa International Eastern Conference A ti en tic Division Western Conference Midwest Division Philadelphia New York Buffalo Boston New Jersey I W 5 16 11 9 ,.. 10 10 7 12 3 17 Pct. 762 550 500 366 150 Central Division W L 13 11 . . . I O 5 7 7 12 10 Pct 722 611 sea 545 524 389 Cleveland Atlanta Washington San Antonio New Orleans Houston aa 4V, 5 Vt 8 1 2 ’? OB 2 2 V, 3 3vy 6 Denver Chicago Milwaukee Detroil Kansas City indiana Portland Phoenix Golden State Loa Angeles Seattle Pct. 636 526 524 421 350 350 Pct 842 611 476 381 261 2W 2W 4'? 6 6 OB ♦ ★ 7 9 12 8 11 7 13 7 13 Pacific Division L W 3 16 11 7 10 11 a 13 6 17 — Gus W illiam s scored 24 points and Slick Watts hit two baskets in the fin al two minutes to give Seattle an 86- 84 victory over the Kansas City Kings Wednesday night in the first game of Lenny W ilkins’ second term as the Supersonics coach. W ilkins, Seattle’s player personnel director, replaced the fired Bob Hopkins as the Seattle coach earlier in the day and directed the Super­ sonics to just their second win on the road in 12 tries Seattle outscored Kansas City 15-2 in the final four minutes of the third quarter to take a 77-61 lead but let the Kings back into the game by failing to score a basket in the opening 6 30 of the fourth quarter. Celtics 98, Bulls 92 BOSTON (U P I ) - Veteran guard Dave Bing, replacing injured Charlie Scott, scored a season high 21 points and Dave Cowens added IO of his 12 points in the fourth quarter Wednesday night to spur the Boston Celtics to a 98-92 win over the Chicago Bulls. C o w e n s , who had 14 rebounds, took over in the fourth quarter, sweeping both backboards and leading a 10-0 burst that gave the Celtics a M S B JI f ^ l l l 'W i l q I ' I 'll I'I I H ............... > --- 94-84 lead with 3 1-2 minutes to play. Bing, given a starting berth after Scott jammed his hand Tuesday in a loss to Atlanta, kept Boston in the game with seven first-quarter p o i n t s J o h n H a v l i c e k dominated the second period by scoring 12 of his 14 points to lead the Celtics to 50-45 half­ time edge Braves 105. Hawks 93 B U FFA LO . N Y ( U P P - B illy Knight scored 32 points and logged six assists while two other American Basket­ ball Association refugees — Chuck W illiam s and WU Jones — hit th eir season highs Wednesday night to help the Buffalo Braves avast to a 105- 93 victory over the Atlanta Hawks W illiam s tallied 22 points, his top output in the NBA. and Jones added 18, including the basket that gave Buffalo its biggest margin. 95-68. with 8 21 remaining in the game Swen Nater netted IO points and grabbed a game high 13 rebounds and Jones pulled down IO. enabling Buffalo to win the board war. 53-37. With regulars' John Drew and Steve Hawes sidelined with ankle injuries and star­ ting guard Ken Charles, a former Brave, seeing limited action because of a sore knee, the Hawks were out of it ear­ ly Pistons 104, Lakers 98 D E T R O IT ( U P I ) - Bob L a n ie r scored 30 points Wednesday night and the Detroit Pistons rallied rn the final three minutes after squandering an 18-point lead to defeat the struggling Ixvs Angeles Lakers, 104-98 The Pistons, winning their second straight after dropping six in a row. had gone ahead 79-61 with two minutes left in the third period when the Lakers reeled off the final ll points of the quarter and then added four more in a row to begin the fourth period f l f i P I O N E E R S X - B 5 Q r n ' ■ • ' K I ’ ' . . . W I IM S I FR ED REG LIN ER ‘414 95 Demo car stereos & speakers (some n ew ) Pioneer KP-500-supertuner, cassette deck, $100 P io ne er K P -292,casse tte w/ tm stereo, $75 Pioneer KP-212-cassette deck, $50 Pioneer TP-7000-in dash 8 track w/am-fm, $110 Pioneer AD-304-car amplifier, $30 Sony TC-24A-in dash cassette w/arrv tm, $100 C raig 3521-in dash cassette w/am tm, $70 Craig S 680-powerplay 8 track w/am* tm, $110 Craig 3520-powerplay under dash cassette deck w/fm, $75 G m i e h e a r th e re ce ive r th a ts q u ie t a n d lo u d al the s a m e tim e . Extremely low noise level: it) •••■ M ic a r -a 'x -y * * V * * * ** * * * * • fSSOftftH i i i a i s i i ■ • • • ce il ■ l i c i t * 1 m i n i i i t i i M , -; % r i d loc people who, Riven a choice, would rather win than lose. with nppr tredit 11 VS downpayment 12 3S monthly payment for 6 months IO 2Tv- annual pert potage rate *79 95 retail I parti progt ammlng on your own with Texas instruments' Program m able 57 ll the selt teaching book "Making lra«ks Into Proyram m m g.'' TI 57 s program memory stores up to 150 keystrokes 6 different forms of branching make decision A. then brant h to the right program segment without In terr opting your program Use 8 memories to store 8, recall values, addition, subtrar Hon, multiplication, A, division of data to memory You get 9 levels of parentheses Store up to 4 trending operations 2 con loop features speed repetitive problem ditional solutions Single step A. back step keys make It easy for you to review or revise a program You can Insert A. delete program steps with the 57's edit functions C ome to the C o op A. insper t the T I Program m able 57 today without much discussion The m ajority of council members Goodman spoke with agree with the 30 per cent maximum, ‘ which is very pleasing news,” he said Wednesday Subdivisions which received preliminary approval by the Planning Commission with 37 per cent co n crete cover probably will be allowed to continue construction, Good­ man said “ If they can't even meet the 37 per cent specification, though, then I m in favor of turning them down and having them start all over again,” he added. The ordinance is part of the l*ake Austin Growth Manage­ ment Plan, with modifications added by the city engineering, resources, environm ental p l a n n i n g l e g a l departments and “ The ordinance considers Lake Austin as a unique geographical area which should remain in its natural s t a t e , ” D r M a u r e e n McReynolds, director of the city Office of Environmental Resource Management, said In 1976, while plans for the area were being developed, ‘ we asked for a voluntary slowdown of developers, which they did Now I suspect activity is pretty much up again,” McReynolds said The watershed ordinance is being considered separately from the overall growth management plan “ to get some sort of control out there quickly so we can at least get a handle on development. • The Lake Austin watersh­ ed is so big and undeveloped that we're at a point in technology that we really need a lot of data to see what effects development has on the environment,” she ex­ plained The two year interim or­ dinance will give the city an to understand opportunity what controls are necessary in development of the area, McReynolds added Russian dissident speaks at Union Soviet exile Andrei Amalrik said Wednesday a continuing struggle of dissidents eventually w ill lead to more freedoms rn Russia because more people w ill start demanding their rights Am alnk’s lecture in the Union Building was sponsored by the University’s Slavic languages department and the Public Lecture Committee Am alrik said exile decreases the effectiveness of dis­ sidents. but dissidents in the West still encourage action in the Soviet Union The Russian dissident was exiled from the Soviet Union rn March, 1976, because, he said, “ I spoke out on what I thought about civil rights Am alrik is the author of the book W ill the Soviet Union Still Exist in 1984 ’” Before being exiled he had been expelled from the faculty at the I niversity cf Moscow and had spent six years in prison. Since Am alrik s exile he has been writing and lecturing to campuses around the United States O N E OF the aims of Am alrik s civil rights movement is to instill respect for an individual s words and views. In the Soviet Union he could never do that, he said The civil rights movement is based on man s moral responsibilities and Am alrik said, “ One must have civil rights to have moral responsibilities “ Another aim of the movement is to search for common things among the Russian society so it won t be fragmented,” he said The Soviet Union tried to solve this problem artificially by collectivising everything, but this led to more separation, he added When asked about the possibility of war between Russia and China Am alrik said. “ War is very likely, but only God knows exactly when.” S. American nations discuss Amazon basin development B R A S IL IA . Brazil (U P I) — I>elegates from eight South American nations Wednesday f i n a l ro u n d of h e ld a ta lk s on a p r e l i m i n a r y regional pact to exploit and develop the Amazon basin, the largest river system in the world. The B r a z ilia n Fo reig n Ken McHam dies after long illness Ken McHam, a former stu­ dent g o v e r n m e n t v i c e ­ president and ardent Laetrile proponent, died of cancer Wednesday afternoon in Midland He was 28 McHam had been battling cancer by taking Laetrile among other procedures He lived in Austin before flying to Germany earlier this year for more cancer treatments Joining the fight for passage of the Laetrile bill in Texas this year, McHam returned from Laetrile treatments in Tijuana, Mexico, and lobbied the Legislature as “ living proof” of Laetrile’s success The bill passed He also serv­ ed as chairman of a com­ mittee opposed to Austin water and wastewater bonds which were defeated in late 1974 In his U niversity days, M c H a m served as v i c e ­ president of Student Govern­ ment under then-president Bob Binder (197M972). He also was assistant to the editor of the Daily Texan in 1974 He won the national debate championship for the U n i v e r s i t y d u r i n g h is sophomore year. He more recently served as to adm inistrative assistant Rep Senfronia Thompson, D- Dallas Services are being arranged by E llis Newnie Funeral Home in Midland, and plans should be completed by IO a rn Thursday, a spokesman for the funeral home said. M inistry said the delegates were expected to issue a joint statement after the final working session of the three- day meeting F O R E I G N M I N I S T R Y spokesman Luiz Lam preia also said the “ possibility ex­ ists” that the conferees would sign the prelim inary text of a proposed Amazon pact at the end of the final session. But he said it was more like­ ly the delegates would consult with their governments and adopt a prelim inary text at a second meeting scheduled for an unspecified date “ next year.” The delegates from Brazil, C o l o m b i a , V e n e z u e l a , E c u a d o r . P e ru , B o liv ia , Guyana and Surinam opened the talks Monday to lay the groundwork for a regional organization that would promote the exploitation and economic development of the shared resources of the Amazon basin. A R I O de J a n e i r o newspaper said Wednesday that a rift had developed between B raz il and other nations worried about the possibility that the pact could I be a blueprint for Brazilian J domination of the northern j part of the South American I continent. Jornal do Brasil also said ] Bolivia and Peru had express | ed specific reservations about sections of the Brazilian- ; prepared working document j that referred to the “ physical integration” of the Amazon j region. H o w e v e r , L a m p r e i a categorically denied reports of controversy at the con- J ference, saying the delegates “ at no time manifested dis­ the s a t is f a c t io n du rin g m e e t in g s . E v e r y o n e is satisfied with the text as presented by B ra z il.” The pact proposed by the Brazilian government over a year ago, is B raz il’s first attempt to play a major role in South integra­ American regional tion. Brazilian Foreign Minister Antonio Azeredo da Silveira, in an opening address, sought to banish fears of Brazilian hegemony, insisting on “ ab­ solute equality of all parties” involved in the pact. t GROK BOOKS 5 0 3 W 1 7 riHiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiirfi OM THE ERD DAY OF CHT*/STM A S - • B Y G EO R G E • . G AYE TO M E. . KASHMIR 50%UA//QUS OFF CLOrM=S FOR U N J Q U = - . . -------------- ---------- WOMTV i f i H KCE! DO M A L L . 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A P PR O PR IA TE EN E R G Y TEC H N O LO G Y IN A R EG IO N A L CO NTEST P U N Y FISK, Univ. et Texos Architecture School & M axim u m Potential Building Systems Cl FU N D IN G H U M A N N EED S THE SO C IA L CO STS OF M IU T A R IS M K EN C A RPEN TER Am erican Friends Service Com m ittee, end S U S A N RA LEIG H Peeples Com m unity Clinic PA N EL p4SCUi$»ON — 3 30-6 P M B U S IN E S S- E C O N O M IC S BLDG. 150, University of Texos "N U C L E A R P O W E R THE PRO BLEM S CHARLES W A D E Univ. of Texas Chem istry Dept. "T H E A LTERN A TIV ES A PPR O PR IA TE EN E R G Y T E C H N O L O G Y " P U N Y MSK U-T Architecture School "T H E POLITICS OF EN ERG Y* RA Y REECE Energy writer. "S o la r Comes of Age R IM S AN D SLIDES — U N IV ER S IT Y C H R IST IA N C H U RC H FELLO W SH IP HALL ( l i e f A University A ve.) $1 7 30 - "L O V E JO Y S N U C LEA R W A R , docum entary on citizen oction to oppose nuclear energy 8 30 _ "A T O M IC PO W E R A N D THE A RM S RACE " M obilization for Su rvival slide show 9 3 0 nuclear p ow er site by the CLAM SHELL ALLIAN CE, o citizens group "T H E LAST RESO RT," d ocum entary on this summ er s peaceful occupation of S EA B R O O K , N H., SPON SO RED BY STUDENTS FOR SU tV IV A L A N D THI WOALD O R D E * P R O G R A M Thursday, December I, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 21 Hutchison blasts Briscoe Republican candidate attacks government spending By G R E G G W E IN B E R G S taff W riter After announcing a s a ca n ­ didate for governor Tuesday, Ray Hutchison said W ednes­ d ay A m e r i c a ’s p o l i t i c a l p r o b le m s a r e c a u s e d by the “ n e g a tiv ism reg ard in g quality of life in this sta te and the nation ,’' T h e s t a t e f o r m e r R epublican party chairm an spoke before law students in the Tom C. Clark lounge dur­ ing a Student B ar A ssociation sandwich sem inar H u tch iso n a tta c k e d th e cu rrent political trend of pain­ ting “ gloom y’ pictures of the f ie ld s s u c h a s fu tu r e en erg y , th a t “ too sta tin g much governm ent spending created the ills the country fa ce s today in NO TIN G T H E s t a t e 's $3 b illio n s u rp lu s l a s t y e a r . Hutchison said one of his first l e g i s l a t i v e g o a l s th e elim ination of the s ta te tax on utility bills He favors reduc­ tion of sta te spending “ acro ss to the b o a rd ” as opposed single a re a cu tbacks. is B la s tin g G ov. B r i s c o e s l e a d e r s h i p p e r s o n a l i t y . Hutchison said the Governor s prom ise not to c a ll a special session w as a serious blow to controlling the L egislatu re The best lev er to control spen ding is to “ threaten to call a special session on C h ristm as d ay .” he said Highway versus education financing was mentioned and Hutchison stated the tim e has com e for “ p arity ” in d eter­ mining p riorities fo r spen­ ding He is working with S tate R ep L e e f o r ­ m ulating a new sta te plan for fund distribution Ja c k s o n in He asked for “ fa irn e ss” in second ary educa­ financing tio n . c a l l i n g th e 1 0 -c e n t statew ide ad valorem tax un constitutional b ecau se is c o llected unequally. it FO CU SIN G ON the need for all people to be represented in s t a t e g o v e r n m e n t w it h re sp o n sib le lea d e rsh ip , he called for rem oval of party labels in sta te ju d iciary e le c if tio n s H u tc h is o n elected , he would pursue a two c o n s e c u tiv e four y e a r term lim it on the governor s a id In response to a question c o n c e r n in g h is s ta n d on sin gle-m em ber leg islative dis tricts, Hutchison said he was w h o leh earted ly c o m m itte d since “ th a t’s how I got elected to the L egislatu re ” He was elected as a D allas re p re sen ­ tativ e to the T e x a s House in 1972 Although he is a Republican in a D e m o c ra t d om inated sta te , Hutchison said he does not think party punty laws would in crease his p arty 's ch an ces of su ccess, sin ce the system is untried Hutchison said he voted fo r the law in 1973 but had since changed his mind because “ it s not what the people of T e x a s want ” Concerning his role in P r e s i­ dent C a r te r’s energy program if e lected , Hutchison said the first thing he would do would be to attend governors con feren ces. “ I W OULDN’T be in Vien na. I ’d bt1 in W ashington/' he said But. he said , the m ost im ­ portant attrib u te a represen tative from T e x a s can have in helping to form a national energy policy is to have “ no personal connection with the (o il) indu stry,” “ We n m ! ad vocates for the s ta te as a w h o le," he said Hutchison favors deregula­ tion. basing this belief on a consumer s ta te g o v e rn o r’s e n th u s ia s tic In s u p p o rt r e s p o n s e to q u e s tio n in g . Hutchison supported right to work laws He summed up his views on the s ta te gov ern m en t and p ro b le m s c r e a te d by the cu rrent “ n eg ativ ism " in an optim istic fashion. “ If you unleash the energy and mind of man, no problem c a n n o t b e s o lv e d th e future.” Hutchison said in Humanities fellowships awarded \ University anthropology p rofessor and the publisher of the T exas O bserver have been awarded fellow ships for independent study and re s e a rc h for 1978 79 by the National Endow m ent tor the H um anities P rof R ich ard Baum an will re sea rch the Pennsylvania Q uakers, and publisher Ronnie Dugger w ill study form er Presid ent Lyndon B Johnson Fellow ships a re awarded to individuals in the field of hum anities who have m ade or d em onstrated prom ise of making significant contributions thought and to hum anistic knowledge, R e cip ien ts of the fellow ships m ay receiv e allow ances of up to $20,IKK) for a fuji y ear or up to $10.(HK) for six months of study Academic VP \ discuss roles D r W i ll ia m L H a y s , I 'in versify vice-president for acad em ic a ffa irs, will discuss the roles and resp onsibilities Of his o ffic e a t 7 30 p m Thursday C en ter Auditorium in the A cadem ic Sponsored bv the A cad em ic th e A ffa irs C o m m itte e of S tu d e n ts’ A ssociation , the p ro g ram will co n sist of a short address by Hays and a lengthy question and answer session with the audience ,. 1977 Mille* B r e o t o g C o . Towering 'tree' This moonlight tower with light bulbs added will become the “world’s biggest Christmas tree" Sunday. In Zllker Park, It Is sponsored by the Austin Parks and Recreation Department. Absentee voting starts in District 37-B race A bsentee balloting for the D ec. IO runoff betw een M ary Ja n e Bode and L ee Y eak el for the D is tric t 37-B se a t in the T exas House began Wednesday and will rem ain open until 5 p m Tuesday. Any reg istered voter in the d is tric t is eligib le to vote in the runoff even if he or she did not vote in the Nov. 8 election 301-308 . 320-328 . 331, 337 and 341-346 F o r those voters who cannot m ake it to the polling stations during the regular hours, 8 a m. to 5 p.m . on w eekdays, room 220 in the courthouse will be open from 2 p.m . to 8 p m Saturday and Sunday. The MSC, how ever, will not be open on the weekend. Voting stations at the M ethodist Student C enter (M SC ), 2434 Guadalupe St. and the County Courthouse, a t lith and Guadalupe S tre e ts , will be the only ab sen tee balloting p la ces open, County C lerk D oris Shropshire said W ednesday. Only voters from 32 of the 120 p re cin cts can p a rticip ate becau se it is not a countyw ide election . T h e p r e c i n c t s , th e s o u th w e s te rn in quadrant of the county include; 147, 148, 256, Turnout has been e x trem ely light a t the MSC, said Steve D arby, op erator of the ab sentee voting station. Only 50 or 60 people voted ab sentee there during the regular e le c­ tion, he said, adding th at he does not exp ect a large turnout for the runoff election. The N ovem ber election drew only 33,616 people o r 15.7 per cen t of the reg u lar voters, including 998 ab sen tee b allots, Shropshire said She also predicted a light turnout. Texas Instruments Tic7 Programmable w / — ---------------------- --— — making Tracks into Programming A step-b y-step learning gu id e to the power, e a s e an d tun ot using your TI P rog ram m ab le 57 Powerful Super D / \ t i i A r f i 1 1 Q n n a r Slide-Rule calculator that you can program directly from the keyboard. • Computerlike programming functions • 50 multi-key program steps store up to 150 keystrokes • 8 multi-use memories • Advanced slide rule functions • Statistical functions Retail *79.95 NOW ONLY $69.95 T I'* new Program m able 57 is an idea' calculator fo r high school or college students and professionals new to program m ing. T I s unique algebraic operating system allows you to m ove in to program m ing sm oo thly and n a tu ra lly —sim p ly key th e prob lem as you w o u ld state it. T h e sequence o f en try is le ft-to -rig h t as problem s are usually w ritte n . 6 d iffe re n t fo rm s o f branching m ake decisions and branch to ap p ro p ria te program segments a u to m a tic a lly w ith o u t program in te rru p tio n . 2-levels o f su brou tine elim in ate needless keystroke rep e titio n and e ffe c tiv e ly increase the size o f program m em o ry . E .ght m ulti-use m em ories for storing and recalling values, a d d itio n , su btraction , m u ltip lic a tio n and division o f data to m e m o ry . N in e levels o f oarentheses and th e a b ility to store up to 4 pending op erations a llo w you to handle com plex equations q u ic k ly and easily. c o n d itio n al lo op features for repetitive 'M a kin g Tracks In to p ro b le m s o lv in g . P rogram m ing’' - a new 2 0 0 page illustrated / learning guide w ith step-by-step instructions and exam ples is included. Solve repetitive calculations at the to uch of a key. Recall fre q u e n tly used in struction sequences. D isplay c u rren t results at any p o in t in th e problem so lution. Smgle-step and back-step keys m ake it easy to review or revise a program . E d itin g fu nction s a llo w fo r easy insertion and d e letio n o f program steps. M o m e n ta rily halt calculations in progress by program m ing in a pause, or a u to m atically single step through a program b y holding do w n pause key w h ile it is executing. B right, 12-character L E D display shows 8-digits plus sign in standard fo rm a t; 8-d ig it mantissa plus sign, 2-digit ex p o n en t plus sign in scientific n o ta tio n . D isplay provides either fix e d or fu ll-flo a tin g decim al w ith scientific n o ta tio n . M any advanced m ath capabilities are available d ire c tly fro m k e y ­ board including trig, logs, pow ers, roots, reciprocals, p o la r-rectangular conversions, m ean and standard deviation . m r . c a l c u l a t o r 2021 Guadalupe Dobie M all A T Open Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 12-6 ° free Parking With Purchase r Page 22 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, December I, 1977 I -$*.00 CASH f — I $6.00 DOLLARS CASHI | I I Yow con to v * a Me by I I botng o Mood pfoomo I d o n o r By M I R K M C D O U G A L S u r f W riter taboo Politics controls oil Third World subiect of research It o n ly I *'j h o u r i a n d you can • v or y 71 d o n a l o h o u r* t o e OI o d Y o u w i l l SS OO o a t h l imo you I donate lf you b rin g th tt a d in _ w i t h y o u , yow w i l l J roco ivo a $ I OO bonwo a fto r yo ur bro! d o n a ­ I I I I AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC | Phone 477-3735 | ■ 409 West 6th ■ Mown Mon A Thoro I A M 6 M p m Tom 4 M . I A M J JO P M J | tio n Oil industry investm ent policies of three Third World countries are controlled by more th a n cost b e n e fit a n a ly s e s D o m e stic political interests are involved This the oil R ather than em phasize pure profit ma* imization behavior, industries of Algeria. Iran and Mexico, which are ail state controlled seek to accom m odate dom estic political dem ands, w hether their origins are elitist or popular is the analysis of A bderrahm ane Mcgateli. an Algerian graduate student in finance and form er director of the explora­ tion and production section of Sonatrach, the Algerian national oil company His com­ m ents a product of his five-year research at the U niversity’s D epartm ent of Finance, cam e in a Wednesday discussion of oil in dustry policies sponsored by the Institute of Public Sector Studies, a section of the Latin Am erican Studies Institute Mega I eh investigated the sta te corporation from the point of view that political con­ siderations in developing countries m ay want to create new social conditions He evaluated the p e rfo rm a n c e of sta te co n tro lled In dustries according to their stated objectives The Algerian, who has journeyed to Iran, Mexico and Brazil during his research, said the objectives of each of the three countries state that jietroleum resources should be the in ­ b a s is of e c o n o m ic d e v e lo p m e n t, dustrialization, the acquisition and transfer of technology and a source of value added through related industry to the dom estic economy Hut basic im plem entation differences ex­ ist he says among the t h r e e nations as a result of political, historical and ideological variations M egateli used different investm ent policies for oil exploration and production policies for exam ples to illustrate these differences Algeria has the m ost evident deviation from cost benefit analysis After showing that the independence war the A lgerian oil e ffo rt, in te rfe re d with Megateli said that reactivation of known reserves and the extension of exploration was the goal of the governm ent in the Sixties To effec t m ore exploration, Algeria entered into joint ventures with French and international oil com panies whereby the Algerian govern­ m ent shared the cost of finding m ore oil Meanwhile, the governm ent m ade som ewhat costly joint ventures with oil service com ­ panies in drilling, geophysics and refinem ent Megateli said While in joint ventures with foreign ser­ vice com panies. Algeria established parallel services of its own m a te ria l,” he said that one of A lgeria's goals w as From a financial point of view the learning exercise was not so profitable, but M egateli said to become self sufficient in oil production, and the strong Socialist ideology supported such moves On the other hand, Iran let the foreign oil com panies take the high risk of exploration If oil was discovered, Iran paid its sh are of the exploration cost by forfeiting produced crude Investm ent policies for exploration w ere the decisions of the foreigners M e g a te li s a id th e M e x ic a n s , w ho nationalized their oil industry in 1938, far ahe ad of the other two states, had no choice as to exploration they had to do all of it them selves Thus, th ere w ere no tangible results from heavy investm ent until 1972, Megateli said After 30 y ears of exploration, there occurred m ajor discoveries in the south of Mexico. Although Mexico used to be against expor­ ting oil, preferring to exploit its resources for dom estic consumption, 1 Mexico hopes to ex­ port one million barrels a day rn 1982,” Megateli said Megateli said none of the countries in his study use cost-benefit analysis at the national level; instead, investm ent policies are d e te r­ mined from the top of the governm ent From the micro-view, although form al investm ent criteria a re known, not all are used. Soup s on. Our new selection of stoneware soup mugs: a natural for chill, soup, hot apple In 5 designs, from cider, gumbo, gazpacho. $3.25 each. Apt shop Co - Oft 3821 San Jacinto 477-9965 Diam onds the p erfect g ift H AL F P RI CE Highland diam ond G allery ha* found a way to m ali* your C h ris m a * a llftla m o rt tn|oyabla Diamond* m ao * ♦ha parfat I C h ris m # * pra*ant and right now you can gal * ham al h a l f PR IC E Highland D i a m o n d GaJlcrul Community N an Bank Building ll* Highland Mall Blvd S u i t a ZOO A u » t i n 4 $ ? < 4 6 l Get your own incredibly big picture of aTrailways bus Fat mo bi Ie Who owns this machine? Minnesota Fats? Fat Albert? Fats Domino? We aren’t really sure whose It Is, but It looks like transportation for a fat cat. —TSP 8t»fl Photo b * Lo rry Kolvoord Mental health symposium for women begins today A “ W om en and M e n ta l Health Sym posium ” will be p r e s e n t e d by g r a d u a t e students in social work T hurs­ day and Friday as p art of a course taught by Dr Janice Wetzel. The symposium is aim ed tow ard w om en,” said D r. Wetzel, assistant professor in the School of Social Work, “ because research ers have found that women a re m ore troubled in this area and a re more likely to be the client of T opics for professional so c ia lw o rk e rs.” professional the T hursday sym posium in Social Work Building 104 include: “ Why a F e m i n i s t P e r s p e c t i v e ? Professional C onsiderations,” from 9 to IO a rn.; “ Divorce, Widowhood and P aren tin g ,” IO: 15 to 11:15 a rn.; “ Middle- Aged Women and Society,” l l 30 a .rn to 12:30 p .m .; “ A ssertive T raining,” 1:45 to 2:45 p.m. From 3 to 5 p.m ., “ Sex D is c rim in a tio n and E m p lo y m e n t: T itle V II, Bakke and Beyond” will be d isc u sse d a t C enter. th e F a c u lty A discussion period will be held a fte r each topic and those wishing to stay the entire day may bring a sack lunch Wetzel said she is delighted “ s tu d e n ts a r e in te r e s te d enough in the field to put on th is s y m p o s iu m b e c a u s e w e’re agreed that not only people working in the social field but everyone should have som e knowledge about women and m ental health.” /J Longhorn helmet wall clock/ ,s M ack ami « ..» • > rn six pieces r f adv to assemble Paper the wall in your room with it. Glue it to the front of your van. Color it with crayons. Park it illegally to confuse campus cops. You'll find many handy uses for this life­ sized black and white poster of a Trailways bus. 325 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM . M F ; 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM . SAI. Austin: 4 8-4655 ^ #T railw ays UKE MONEY FROM HOME C lip out the handful of m oney fro m above. You can use the full $25.00 on the purchase of any suit fro m SlAX MENSWEAR through W ednesday, D ecem b er 7th. _______ •T w in Oaks •N o rth Loop Plaza •Southwood M a ll •H ig h la n d M a ll Menswear 9 JJ entertainment T h e d a i l y T e x a n Thur sd ay, De c em be r I, 1977 □ Page 23 Chicago taking films from New York City p> DOUGLAS E . KNEELAND t 1977 New York Timet CHICAGO — Deep inside Graceiand Cemetery on the North Side, among the ornate mausoleums and singular headstones (that bear such historic Chicago names as McCormick, Pullman and Palmer, a voice crackling over the bullhorn shattered the quiet of a recent gray morning • Quiet, please, this is picture," the first assistant director in­ toned “ Hold the work, hold the chatter “ William Holden. Lee Grant and a half a hundred other actors, directors, producers and technicians shivering in the chill wind sweeping in from Lake Michigan fell silent beside the new headstone and coffin banked with flowers “ Quiet, please, picture," the bullhorn continued, “ and roll, please." IN THE BACKGROUND, Lucy Salenger, managing director of the State of Illinois Film Office, beamed as her teeth chattered This was what her job was all about, bringing film production to any location in the state that she could convince a movie company was more realistic, more exciting, more economic or more hospitable than any other in the world She and representatives of the dozens of other state and city film offices that have been established in the last few years are engaged in an increasingly competitive struggle with the customary centers of the industry, Los Angeles, Hollywood and New York City, for a bigger share of movie and television dollars. “ For a relatively few dollars, a state can bring in millions of dollars," said Miss Salenger. a television news producer who moved here from her native Los Angeles five years ago with her husband. Marvin Zonis. a professor of Middle Eastern studies at the University of Chicago. MISS SALENGER estimated that the seven major feature films that have been shot in whole or in part in Illinois this year had injected $6 million to $7 million into the local economy And her office is operating on a budget of $63,000. Conceding that her office was not making a large dent yet in the number of films being shot in New York City, which she con­ siders her chief competitor for big-city movies, she added “ New York will always be New York, will always have that wonderful look But it s my contention Chicago hasn’t been seen yet. all its vagaries, varieties and neighborhoods and factory districts. It s great.” STILL, FILM crews on the streets are becoming a more familiar sight to Chicagoans. In the last two years, Miss Salenger said, 14 movies have been shot in the state, most of them in Chicago, compared with about three in the previous decade And many of those have been wooed away from New York and other cities by the aggressiveness of the new state film office The movie Miss Salenger was watching being filmed at Graceiand Cemetery the other day was Damien - Omen II, a sequel to the highly profitable “ The Omen," which starred Gregory Peck. Of the other movies filmed here recently. Miss Salenger said, “ A Piece of the Action." with Sidney Poitier, “ The Fury." with Kirk Douglas, and “ Looking for Mr Goodbar," with Diane Keaton, were all written for New York Other movies shot in Illinois this year were "A Wedding." the new Robert Altman work. which was made in suburban Lake Bluff and Oak Park and “ Stoney Island.” an independent production made by former Chicagoans about a neighborhood in the city Many cities and states have recognized the economic poten­ tial in what seems to be a growing desire on the part of the movie industry to find new backdrops for their stories IF WALTER J Wood, the former movie and television producer who is director of the Mayor s Office for Motion P ic ­ tures and Television in New York City, is worried about the competition, he does not sound it. “ This year has been a phenomenon, the biggest year since 1957," he said in a telephone interview We will shoot 41 films in New York City in full or in part " Those features, he added, would bring about $80 million into the cit v s economy. But Liz Brady, executive director of the State of California Motion Picture Development Council, which was formed only two years ago in response to the outside threat to one of the state's major industries, seemed more concerned “ The cobbler's kids are always the last to get the shoes," she said in explaining California s late entry into the film office competition. “ But we kept $27 million from going out of the state last year, she said However. Mrs Brady said that she was taking nothing for granted “ I'm lunching today with a producer who's talking about go­ ing out of suite.” she said, “ and I told him I d bite his tires if he went out." Book brings former prisoner to limelight c 1977 New York Times A M P L E F O R T H . England — In a modest cottage in the shadow of the im posing B en e d ictin e abbey here, Sheila Cassidy, the British physician who was imprisoned in Chile two years ago. is leading a double life of a prominent figure and would- be nun It is an awkward conflict Her autobiography. “ Audaci­ ty to Believe," released in last month and England for A m e rica n scheduled in March, has publication brought her back into the public eye at a time when she is trying to lead a monastic life, stripped of w orldly possessions and following a structured routine of prayer, study and manual work She was compelled, she said, to w rite ihe book, because I felt a great sense of obligation to the IOO girls I left behind in prison The proceeds of her book s sales w ill go to a new L a tin American center in London DR. CASSIDY makes an un­ likely heroine. Weary of the medical grind since her stu­ dent days at Oxford, she went to Chile in 1971 and joined a Chilean with whom she had worked in England She says she had no particular political vie w s but n e v e rth e le s s became quickly aware of the gulf between rich and poor When the military took over in a coup in 1973. she remain­ ed in Santiago, working as a doctor. “ I would definitely have stayed on if I hadn t been arrested," she said H e r a r r e s t , a fte r she treated Nelson Gutierrez, a leftist revolutionary, was un­ expected and traumatic On Oct SI, 1975, the Chilean secret police attacked her home with machine guns, murdering a Chilean woman and tak in g D r C a ss id y prisoner. SHE SAID she had been blindfolded and driven to an interrogation center, where she was stripped, tied to a bed and questioned on two oc­ casion s with the aid of electric shocks. For weeks, Dr Cassidy said, she was in solitary con­ finement, “ a different kind of torture," then transferred to a women's prison After she signed false statements say­ ing she had been treated well and after substantial pressure had been applied bv the • * *. British government, she was released after 59 days in detention, “ I was high.’’ Dr. Cassidy said “ Exhilarated to be alive and desperate to make known the plight of my fello w prisoners." For the next 18 months she traveled most of the time. lec­ turing without foe on human rights in Chile " I tried to tell the world about the Chilean situation." she said SHE WORKED steadily on her book between trips, living with her brother and sister in law in Devon “ I have a highly developed sense of mission," she said She described her book as “ a careful balance between everyday life, torture and re lig io n ." The title, “ Audacity to B elieve,’ is taken from the acceptance speech of the Rev Dr Martin Luther King J r when he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace _ -1. . £ it... 13 Ad I Mortin Witt' hue cho f*hftflf*n thp Why has she chosen the company of monks rather than nuns? “ I want to be a woman in a man s world," she “ I don’t want to be said equal I think women will probably be ordained to in my priesthood but not lifetime I ’m not interested in the women's movement. I don’t have the strength to fight for everything ” Six months ago Dr. Cassidy d e c id e d to stop p u b lic appearances “ lf I continued I would be burnt out," she said “ When I ’m rushing in the mid­ dle of it all. I ’m part of the process I ’m trying to fight against." “ IT’S NOT compatible with what I ’m trying to do study the monastic life and try to live it," she explained She es­ timated that she was about halfway toward her goal. She sleeps on a thin mat­ tress on the floor and has just given away her phonograph She bakes bread to make lunch for visitors DR. CASSIDY has never been married She said the prospect of celibacy does not dismay her Her Chilean experiences have taught her not to plan too far ahead, she said, and she is reluctant to reveal her pro­ jects for the future. “ Once you’ve seen people rush in with m achine guns, you realize that nothing is im­ possible,’’ she said IITOpera Theatre presents KO KF KT WA K ICS T H E O M JC IB 3LE Leonard Trea sh, d ire c to r folio Holme, m usical d irec to r i r r o i ' l A T ll ti AT 11 E December 3,5,6,a?7,1977at Span. Students $I. Nonstudents $2 Phone 171-1 I I I for reservations NOW OPEN! I N K l l A A S TAVERN Tonight in the Texat Tavern UT SOUTHERN SINGERS 7 to 8 p.m. TAXI Jazz Band 9 p.m. to midnight F r e e PEACE C O R P S * V IS T A NEED PEOPLE W ITH BRIGHT IDEAS SIGN UP N O W POR YOUR INTERVIEW: P loc*m *nt Officu: Today at J«*t*r Hall B u tin***, & Library Science Tomorrow at ln g in **rin g Inform ation Booth: Nursing * 3rd floor loung* (D *«. I ) O N C A M PU S Today & Tomorrow eft Nikon Christmas It s so m eth in g y ou ca n giv e to a n y o n e who's a r t is t i c ,c r e a t iv e ,o r j u s t p la in u ionder/ul! FIRST SHIPMENT JUST IN! THE NEW ECONOMICAL NIKKORMAT FT3 WITH NIKON SYSTEM VERSATILITY. Thur. - 8th - D O C M A T S O N 5 2 5 % B A R T O N S P R I N G S R D . 4 7 7 - 9 7 6 * * A-170 \ t ▼ ; Tomte SANFORD-TOWNSEND BAND Fri. TEXAS Bubble Puppy S a t . Erie Jo h n s o n ; Triple Threat Review ;jliJ..! J i >ta I JJukuu I ALU-l-u. i >’» i R e m e m b e r t r o l l e y e tti*?* a n d t h o s e s l e e p y w o o d e n f a n s ? The Old S p a g h etti W arehouse rem em bers. From our au th en tic old-tim e atm osphere right down to the price o f our fam ous Italian food, we’re always a little behind the tim es. ' X i i GH Erf; _ ' TM OLD '- I — I rf — 117 W 4th Street at ( d o ra d o 476-4059 T E AC A-170 * Dolby noise reduction. *DC servo-controlled motor. *lndividual-position bias & equalization selec­ tors. •Top loading format. •Separate variable slide controls for input/out­ put level adjustments. •Two VU-type loudness meters. •Front panel microphone inputs. •Stereo headphone jack. £ m M A •Digital tape counter. 5 1 6 9 Special Tonight! Ted’* Greek Night - *3.25 1. Athenian Roast Chicken Yi roast chicken stuffed w ith a delicious combination of herbs & cheese. 2. Ted's Famous Mousaka A Greek eggplant and m eat sauce souffle. Topped w ith a light egg & butter sauce. " A gourmet's d elig ht." A bo VR served w ith delicious homem ade roattod potatoes, Crook salad, A beverage. TED'S STEAK HOUSE 417 Congress - Downtown 472-4494 N EW NIKKORMAT FT 3 WITH LATEST 50mm F2 AI-NIKKOR LENS 27590 Here s the exciting new, entry into the Nikon system— a full-feature economical sir. The Nikkormat FT3 gives you the split-second certainty of automatic aperture indexing, combined with the rnatchless accuracy of Nikon center-weighted, thru-the- lens metering.lt takes all of the more than 55 multi-coated Nikkor lenses and most Nikon accessories for unlimited enjoyment! Its easy enough for a beginner, yet so versatile many a professional counts on it. Come in and see it to d a y ! C& ~ Oft Page 24 □ T H E DAILY T EX A N □ T hursday, December I, 1977 OSTI Inn-credible Offer. f " " " Buy one pizza, ■ I get the next sm aller size free. ■ —lim n k-'flVffrv -I' coupon arfVH’ you tm* OPK gae* tonga o* < • ♦ •>*'• *• * fliv# you an* (M il* of rte n a * a m i* * w » w** anus* a i. - -taal O' , i«»U* Q 9K3I . m. C at •4* *> ' i e«* u n <• typ# I ' <«' ,r*a »**••••■. *t.,« OUpU* m*t< guam ' '■»• * VaM fk*v D«i«<4*< I, l f lf B i OB ■ ■ • 'ZU P Jta a iim . • I ! IN N 4 1319 Research......................... 137-0771 M O I lu rn el Rd........................451-7571 1701 W. Ion Whit# ................ 444-4455 374 Landa New Braunfels 7737 Hwy 790 last 749 North LlJ/San Narcos 3000 Daval ...............................477 4751 ............... 477-4411 7709 Rivamda Pizza inn “WfcVe got a feeling you’re gonna like us. THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE PRESENTS ab 4? FIREFALL V*“ I vmi I V t fo rm a t »< t*> THURSDAY. D E t'KMB KR I I I (HI p ill H CH) I M Vt-Is St. "» A, S » ■ D A V ID BRO M B F KC, V U I tin* IVr1«H ilt.u h r ( I n k F R ID A Y . D K C K M H K H 2 a tnt p rn I h k,*t V- ‘ ■ V> THE NEW BRUBECK Q U A R T E R w ith DAVE B R U B E C K I wo lYftortn.nu t"> S U N D A L . D IC I M B I R 4 T M) & 10:00 p.m. I „ kris >< ’S V > 71 y . l t i l lit k r i s lo t b o th I U d a l l e n d D a v e H r u lie t k s h o w s A.’ id. V» 4) at H o g g V u tliltttiu to B o s O t t o I* IO b w e e k d a y ' 471 1444. N i l c h e c k s A c c e p t e d . C H I l l s r r q u t t f d tor m ire H e ir a m i lo t a d m is s io n to sh u ts , JOAN ARMATRADING I Im? Pert rn mane e Only FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9 8 VHI p rn In M s St. -s A SS 71 I A//CRI ATN ICH I 'MERIS CONCERT' GARY BURTON. JOHN ABERCROMBIE. RALPH TOWNER l w o l Y t l o m u m es SATURDCI, DECEMBER IO !* OO I I IH I J> in T k Ms So s S ' ' THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE All tickets available et Paramount Box Office 713 Congress/472-5411 SOUTHWEST CONCERTS PRODUCTIONS Arf Squires, t e n uttve P r o d it t t i Io n B e m a rd o n i & C hades tck e rm a n , Associate P ro d o c e n k 6% on SAVINGS 'SHI II U / T nm inilE/nl >j/ _ S T * 50^ I < ) A > 9 3 0 1 3 0 9RBlue. orrot .Ai JCI HAL t> IN * A ,. BOOKSTORE I I IS NOW OPEN 74 HRS.! { Ie Fulllength 16mm Color & Sound I Movie Theater. J ★ Bet* 25' Peep Show* In Austin. I | • Books • Magazines • Sex Toys • 8mm Films J Special Student Discounts! I 213 E 6th 478-0243 75‘ Hl-BALLS FOR ALL UNESCORTED LADIES ( Sunday-Thvrtday N it**) • Playing Thurs-Sun (No Caver) the F R E E s t i v i r i t n m d . T S t f Y D • Live Auditions Thurs A Fu 4 pm [• Happy Hour 2 pm-7 pm avaryday Most drinks 75* C t J L V V A %• mstumuMt O'bar 2 005 E. R iv e rtid e 441 -8 8 9 5 . Soap Creek Saloon TONIGHT PAUL RAY COBRAS A n d T h o 7 0 7 Bee Caves Rd. 3 2 7 - 9 0 1 6 ______ *--------------------------- I— d r <$ & AF *%, 'Ut% c p p p l A I COLLEGE STUDENT DISCOUNT! 10% OFF your meal with your college I D. card. You don t have to be a math maior to figure out what a big savings that is' ‘Discount applies lo individual guest, hocks mty tor toot! menu items %<$>% & & &> S I G) 2610 Interstate 35 at St. Edw ards & 376 H ancock Center Not good on W e d n e s d a y Me * lean fo o d a s genuine as o u r fa m ily pride IS 2226 Guadalupe 477*0486 *V4uJfirt*ji Premiere Sound Exchange ( enter I j , I.- th. 1V.T6 classic, so u r old records A taper, are still o f valu e M C ’s, the oldest sound .-s.-haii*. in the I im . -rutty ares, is s place s.here you can brin * those .lid albums A tap*-' that ar. *a th e rin * dust and trade them for new sounds. V e take pride i i i both t h . quantity A q u ality of our stock, p articu larly ou r fine -election of rare SIHI nut of print albums. VISO, we allow you to listen lo a product before you deal, sud ,f *..- don’t have what you sm it. we’ll even call you when it conies in ./ ^ .fte r I year-, it has come time to move. Around Dec. I we w ill no longer be in our fu n ky little store at 2226 G u adalu pe, but at a larger location, 2422 Guadalupe, site of th.- old Orange Vre ad s M e promise to still -ave you money by paying the highest prices in town for yo u r old records A tapes. 1 3 u t don’t wait till we m o *e to come see us. ^ c ’re w heelin A dealm right now at our 2226 store lf yo u ’re not fam iliar with M G ’*, get fam ilisr. I o u ll find it » your kind o f place' a sound etu-haiige Tonight Live In Concert TIFFANY JONES H O T R O A D S H O W - 10 P M T h u rsd a y, D e c. 1 Sensurround A F T E R HOURS Friday & Saturday AM STER MUSIC lf You Want Recorders, Recorder Music, Irish Tin Whistles, Latin Per­ cussion, Balalaikas, Sitars, Chim- tas, Caicos, Hand Drums, Talking Drums, Zali Drums, Osi Drums, Krimhorns, Kortholts, Bagpipes, Tablas, etc., etc., etc., You have to come to us. 1624 Lavaca St. 478-7331 S p o n s o re d by T h e C u lt u r a l E n te rta in m e n t C o m m itte e of the T ex a s U n io n in c o o p e ra tio n w ith the C o lle g e of Fine A rts I le p a rtm e n t o f M u s ic Empire Brass Quintet M o n d ay, December 5 Hogg A uditorium , 8:00 P .M . L i C Ticket sales Tue-Jas November 22nd Si CX) with C EC ID s (No fee receipts) G e n e ra l P u b lic Tickets w ill be sold at the door S-l OO H ogg Box O ffice IO-© weekdays N o checks accepted. Those who tail to present CEC ID w ill be charged General Admission. No cameras or tape recorders For further information please phone 471-5319. AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL O VERTURE Barber ADAGIO A FU G UE IN C MINOR Mozart SYMPHONY NO. 8 (The Unfinished) Schubert PIANO CONCERTO NO. 5 (Emperor’s Concerto) Beethoven Ju d ith Somogi, Guest Conductor Steven DeGroote, First-place d in n e r of the N an C lib u rn Pian o Com petition F rid a*. December 2 M unicipal A ud i lo c i USS T ick e t fair- begin Tu e sd ay, November 22 8:00 P M . H o g * B o * O ffic e 10-6 w eekdays SI (MI w ith ( E l ID N (N o fee receipts) B u- schedule: Je-tt-r, k m s o lv in g . C o - o p 6 :1 5 P M. C o ntinu ou s -c r*ic e p rio r lo and after the p erform ance Sponsored by the C u ltu ra l En tertain m en t C om m ittee of the Texas U n io n J A RAI P H BAKSHI FILM VUEAFCSt • An epic fantasy of peace aiMi magic. T R A N b * T E X A S 222t (m*4» u'n< St — I l l 1*4 9 PG ^ j STARTS TOMORROW Tonight in the Cactus Cafe Z A N K Solo G uitar 9 p.m. to m idnight Free D I S C O T H E Q U E 'THURSDAY NIGHT' L a d ie s \ / Beer C f lugging CONTEST WIN A FREE HAIR DESIGN try C oh ert SILU l, 3500 GUADALUPE, AUSTIN • 453 9831 G E N E R A L C I N E M A T H E A T R E S " I SI SO til 1:30 EXCEPT "STAR WARS" I C A P I T A L P L A Z A I H 35 NORTH * ' 452-7646 1:00-3:10-5:20-7:35 * 5 0 N O P A SS E S - NO B A R G A IN M A T. H I G H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG IN 451-7326 SURPRIS! HIT OF THI YEAR E W U t f l i t T p / W i ^ l:00-2:40-4:2S-4:05-7:45-*30 |H’ . 12:25-2:45-5:05-7:25-* . i d l ' f l A V l ^ k J J A M E S C A A Is. December 28-Jan uary 5 Includes: Round Trip air fare Eight nights hotel Tickets to: "A CHORUS LINE" Best musical of 1976 "THE ACT" A n e w musical starring Liza M innelli N e w Year's Eve in Times Square $ 3 4 9 for UT students, fa c u lty, a n d s ta ff. Register in Texas Union S tu dent Activities C e n te r. D eadline for Registration — M o n ., Dec. 5. A $ 2 5 deposit w ill reserve a space. For fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n , call 4 7 1 -5 6 5 3 . presents T o n ig h t O n ly ! LILY TOMLIN KEITH CARRADINE KAREN BLACK RONEE BLAKLEY SHELLEY DUVALL HENRY GIBSON BARBARA HARRIS GERALDINE CHAPLIN in ROBERT ALTMAN'S NASHVILLE "T h e funniest epic vision of America ever to reach the screen." Jester Aud. 1.25 — Pauline Kael 7KH) & 10:00 p.m. Thursday, Decem ber I, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P age 25 1 -MESSIAH- Austin Municipal Auditorium 8 p in Tues., Dec, 6, 1977 with Member, ot the Austin Symphony Orchestra ftclefs ar Sc ar brough a Auditorium dastl"* IS Congress I Tor rasarvations cat! 476-MT9 Saats 5.) J* S pom orm i by i ffy o t Austin Parks A fkacraation Oapt SF Austin Civic Chorus jimiiiiitiiiiiiiimil m m m STARTS TOMORROW Faotura tim** 1:45 1:45-5:45 7^5-9:45 P o l r l c l a A a p l l l a g o | Ste Springs it pre.ne mn Thura (no covar) $1 OO Highballt LASH LA ROO h i B Sat. GREEZY WHEELS La Prom#nod* Cantar 115 Burn#! Rd. 459-4111 llllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllll I ANUS BOND l l AIR AND NO INHIBI’H O N s V Isl Bl t si NI Al NUNNISH ANf I I I H A M N THRIV ES ON D I A B O L I C OR IT N I Al s i V I OR I IO N rim,. IM turnin' 1*1 SIDO' St MMF R HIS MN srrtnat [T0» HANI »T»»» I mo *•«..*. r n * * M U r n rn... >t*t* i. I -chihaiowh- tm* H«»*n Tty* o * r»„ • I BMX t»« MtXH •»».«* —TW imrt tm tttrnm *•» >»*•**•». <*• LALT.JB.AY niu s', in.., DOMiNiO'ui ST act.I *'MfP Hat' oh icxjaaiiii C U N I M U K H IN IMI « » « . s . . . WSMASttPJH • . SOI*’' C I N E M A ’ W E S T IIM J. (Nytu • TI—It. taw ll IM • MMU* m a s union p r e s e iit s W H O ’ S T H A T * K N O C K I N G I A T N Y D O O R * , ^ ■ ■ 3 «T: V j I Ti * M a rtin Scorsese* a u ta b io g ra p h k a l Aret - «arva« aa a th a tch book for "M o a n S tro o tt/ W H tto n a n d ^ „ diroctod by S cartoto w h llo a atu don t a t N o w Y ork y i • '■ - i i *i,r" ^ U n ivora ity S tarrin g H a rve y K aito l. * ' 'I -. /? " * Today 3, 7, a n d 9 p.m . Taxat Union Thaator $1.25 w ith UT ID $1.25 w ith UT ID * *. • ^ 'A X J * jJ . ► ► L f ►I # « • T . L - 454 5147 ZAPATA A COLORES Taotarot Weak day* a OO I OO I O OO A mystical quest for magical power in the spirit of Carlos Castaneda. Filmed in the Yucatan with an ail Mayan cast. A film by Rolando Klein P G R I V E R S I D E 1930 RIViRSIOE • 441-5689 STARTS TOMORROW! Sg#i«*i f ngagamontt I »cM#d MFN RY I t T l s W IN K LER * 5 : 1 3 / SA| , Y FIELD H E R O E S 1 * TWI till SHO* TIC.MTS 4 45 5 I V Ii Coni BOIT M i m e d c i * S ts7 H T od aya t 6 : 15-8 OO Twi Lite Show lickety b 4 S fa I S S I bO VSS The Other Side of Midnight Today at 5 :0 0 -8 :0 0 H * * TWI U t! SHOW TK H IT S * TO S OO S I ‘.0 J A W S p c ; Today at 5:1 5 7 30 Twi li t e Show Tickets 4 45 5 lb 51 50 THE THURSDAY MORNING MURDERS Today at 6 OO 8 :0 0 Twi-Lite Show Tickets 5 30 6 00-11 50 M P H i M M O M M M m _ ***, I Today at 5 :3 0 7 3 0 t ; Twi-Lite Show Tickets 5 :0 0 -5 :3 0 $ I 5 0 REDUCED ADULT & STUDENT PRICES I*T W I LITE SHOW TICKETS. LIMITED f SEATING DUBIK S C R I M S • Ait PMUIX. IO DOSH WRAGE DOSH MAIL Att UK WINNER Of ACADEMY AWARDS INC! UDINE, •if ST PK TURE FILM OF EXHILARATING BEA U TY... EXTRAVAGANT^ FUNNY. ‘Amarcord’ may possibly be Federico Fellini’s most marvelous film.' Vincent Canby. N Y Tim es lo t.I ii CONMAN Pii*Minty I RANCO C R IS T A l D IS F F I L I M ,,t I Im ■■ill 'I • • They're in love, on tile run, {getting famous and getting even. ■/i itll s' ENDS l f L Y f o h * \ § J j I ISONS naif.HT BOIT :a7.ah PETER FONDA SUSAN SAINT JAMES 1 46 3 4 6 6 4 6 7 4 6 9 4 6 PG FEATURES: SI.50 til 6 0 0 -S 1 75 aller MIDNIGHTERS: $1.50___________ I 4 6 4 O O 6 1 6 8 3 0 T 'T T Z Z z = ------------ \ STA R TS F R ID A Y — "FANTASTIC ANIMATION FESTIVAL' / "CARRIE' _ ------------------------- IT i m n i ^ H ART GARfUNKil AUN ARKIN ORSON WILLS E S FOH SAU FOR S A U F URN I S H E D APAR T ME N H F U tN IS H K D A P A R T M E N T S SERV ICfS R E S U M E A P A S S P O R T PH O T O G R AP H S fast service ROYCE STUDIOS ? 470G u ad a> up c 472 4219 O UTDOO R CASUAL P O R T R A I T S The " N e a t " G if t ROYCE STUDIOS 2420G u a d a l '/ p p 472 4219 I N D I A N J E W E L R Y rOOOObdldO o"«»a‘ .av#bia K M dcfob a t ( I a *|ic dORign t r p n pf re rr» tn# N o v a to fu n !, Hop and Santo D om ingo in d ia n * h a n tfw a d # H a n d - r a tte d ••a th a r good* b a tk a t* , p o tte ry and »ndpat"t<• i-a.d 7W4 B urton lie .va 444 ’ RA* 4*1 t i l l a n tra l P ro p*" t t a i in c Do A ll Theta A d ! O rtv a Vou B A N A N A S ? Wa ban* A j it m / b l t ■ C all U t R f A l W O R I ( ) P R O P f R T IF S i a m p u l 44) II M A p a ' tm # " l l N orth JAS AMO •p la te * Hom a* * B IC K H i W ) IT Of t A V R U S New a ttk t a n iia * paneled liv in g room , a b it a lt ta i b e d ro o m and k>k hen I I I ) and w ater g a t (*to « # IM I b e d o a k s A e t * 477 * i 14 2IBA San G a b rie l 4/4 /4 1 4 lu r m ih a il D IS C O U N T O N I M O N T H S R E N T V ik in g V in a Apt dishwasher CLH’ and u n tu t" baa, M o i I bt I * and e * tra * 8 9 0 0 c u l i m s f l a l d 8 3 6 2 6 3 9 ‘ 1 7 0 4* alae lr ( < ine rt wa k in ilo t a l * wa paling *wimmlng po g rt.* l* n c * to • p i w a il wale- ga* d tip u s a i W a n * UT No c h ild re n no p at* 6 1 0 W ,10th 4 7 7 * 8 8 S8 a a a a a * * • # • • • • • • • • < F r e e S a r v ic a Parking Tran*porfafton HABITAT HUNTERS f r o * a p t 1 av v -c e 4 * a » 4 N n y rn c u m p -e a e * w f h a. i t n t fo fh u r r /o h u a t o f ' V o w l o t t i n g f o e S u m m a * a f a i t 474-1537 t f thlk a # 0 ■ R# JI 4 l e a d I I CL >JR* ii* I I o > < RA TI 5 n D IN G r IS w o rd m in im u m I ach aru* 'I on# tim e I a rf) w o rd I tim e * I ach w o rd * urn#* I M h W',rrt 10 fir- Itu d a n t ra t# ea< h tim # • I tm h one tim * I ro t I (.OI w I inch I I tim e s I fb i « I n u h *, -I e t m o t* f l l I JO I ...I 1/ *1 I to I l l SI t i N • x i i 75 MAMIN* MMtOUtl , **■«* ■ t lo a n I m i * h tasaa N a » Aay A a ln t x h y I • »an I II >t4#y llM »t4«r I t M i A t4 « « 4 a » »*>4»y I a aaa th .,.*# *, J OO a I I OO a • l l OO a < 11 OO a ' I t OO a . Wi »♦*# Rf* •M#***»«Mi#v»4N*«t »mww4HNe*e r+4****m «*•«♦* to* $NR#d» OPA »Ko fivMi»«.OM Alf* •Alf CFN# «MitwAlm#n»« ♦Ho**. ) 0 4 « r* »Oo. p u M n o tic i WMrttAii 14 Aw*w •** IMI r»m4* RW* M ** »#»*+/%*• I T U D K N I I A l U t T f / ' . T A M A A 1 1 1 I t Rede# m in ) m u m • • ' A r t a r I *v I •< A a r tr t'i ' ' a MTO"! •# - A P a r t M l l Ot I «Kl » I im A aa* A (fay l l BR " U r n iassH<#d« ' >ina I O a r* I IV ap a id No R ef un d * ) W o d e n !* ta* u i l f a m i s ta t! rn / i i i*< * * • " ' a t u t ' # " ! i (J and p a r lo art f \ P B ld g v a n ,# iJ S ih A W h lf ls l f r o m • a rn 1 M o n d a y t h 'r tu g h I ' ‘f a r 4 IO o rn I /OO IO u * i f pop I n anent l i r a i Ar r 11 • ' I iran#* A N f l o u t W N I t i S la tt« n w a g 6 n zoo* 5 a 11Ivar sew 4/r i i i* t h /aor tan " K a AA V W < A M P M O B Ii I b o d y a 11A A a a p a i n t e x c e l l e n t m a t Aantr ai condition 11 IOO U t t i * * •Na* ii* ! * / ! D a t s u n o u o O t e n d ifle n C o u p * a s k in g 11 tot) COM AAI H A I I * 71 O O I K i t D A U T ir ln y l AAA m a in ta in * * ! In a * and shcxks 11*00 4 f t IO U * 1 * ic ily • ■i#;ie<< con dition N a a roo# O na o w n # * f i n n y * * AT 1*5 IMO T I V I U A U T It a lia n w a v AC l l AAar fc, 4 * * M * I or 4*4 W * * lit r td tfK i" I/ f * a ' A M I V ( a n ta t goad a n y t im e i/ t a p * Cai IWP, m a m i , a lly p* it ad 4*4 14/0 V W N U N * u r e a l nato a c tc titio n * i i * * I aha A U llin fe u d 4/4 a i / } r e b u f f a n g in a it lo / C o'o* a d " A p ii t i V O L V t ! IA H to* doc A l AT w M ta w b lu e in ta r hi# goo d i n o d ! I ton * 1 /4 * 4 / t MIO r a d io c io n «a*y IS m p g '» T O N / * A W D t u | l « m d a le » • C h e v ro le t p i n u p * h « r t bad t ib r a g i a n I yr ald. 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COPY 8 a m -1 1 p m M -F , 9 a m -O p m S a l M lpm 6pm Sun 2 1 4 W M L K 47 6 66 6 2 A L L B I L L S P A I D 3 B R , 3 8 A, I SSO i q ft - S350 2 B R , 2BA, 1000 sq ft - *265 I B R I B A , 680 i q ft * *195 l l / S m a l l c o m p ld x , good c e n t r a l f u r n i t u r e , l o c a t i o n , h e a v y w a l k in closet, C H - C A , cable T V , pool, h ik e A b ik e t r a i l 472- u m 452*7810. _________ a p a r tm a n tt, I i I A P G I R O O M v I vc 1 1 1 KO p iu t e le c tr ic a n d g a t. C A -C H , I M I h o p p in g CA A 4 i ! 4 J JA / U H N O b lr NP U R N on t h u t t ia * a n d 7 a r ga b e d ro o m * C a p it a l V i ll a IOO! datfM. M H IIM J I'/* SMUT T U lim y equipped kitchen, w alk in Cto ta l, tra a g a t w ater ab a T v F ro m l i t s 140* L on gview 477 »*)4 4S4-0IV TOC i 17"*! A p t i o u T f ro o m y I a m a r I I i f f I b r RI Rf W p ly * C tre e ! IBR t i f f p lo t I , rough t r o t * f r a t c o n 'in u O u t I y r old. 470S B A LC O N IE S . 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E T H U G I I br a p a rtrr ant th u ttia , app ,a n -a t, cobia p o o l d a p o tf paid A va ab1* now I ‘ ta m o 4/R da0i NEW AN O U N IQ U E Ifiv, S U I SO IO HTS p lu t a U c 'rlc tty , I b lo ck* UT, p o o l la u r d ry m any w indow *. U n d tc a p a d 107 W 7Sth 477 TON S U B L E T E b d lC lt M C Y r t l f l A B P, N C *num a ro u t* C ontact C h ri* tia n Read THS Leon No )! IB R 7BA, 12)0 p lo t ala- in c tty p o o l la u n d ry 4 bloc k l UT IO) W 7 t t t i 4/A HJA __ _ ________________________ S U B LE T SdA C iO U S Abr ?ba vaulted caning, balcony, w .aka view m u tt*# ro u t* rn b l vee tid e e re * F u fn lifte d or u n f u r n l t h t d A B P D A O m o n t h A v a ila b le Januery I 4 4 )R i/0 I SOB E N F IE L D (a rg * p e n a lly tu rn apt w.*h an b lin paid i l l ) m onth No pat*. d epot ' and c re d it r tta ra n c a i, 7SS 2377 UNFURN. APARTM1NTS T R A V I S H O U S E A P T S . 1600 R o y a l C r e s t C hobie /ro m 4 Hoof plan*, I and I BH d i t h w a i h a r g a r b a g e d e p o s a l , < a r peting. 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K S ) E, isH t * a rd w a lk to cam p© * or th u ttia 104 I 4/4 17/2 I D r d No LU X U R Y E F F IC IE N C Y mea c a m p u t W a rw ic k A p t* No 402 c a ll 47* vt i t CK- ta * m anager fur MUST SU B LE A SE nitread CA LH A v a ila b le Ode l l *<*5 p lu t E 2 b lk * c a m p u t TSOI H em p h ill P a rk 474-101/ i o t a jtQJ w a t t Ava I br attic lane y C U T E E FR tu r m *h#ii di*h w a *!*a r lawn- d ry pool creak SIJ Paean G rova I I J I l ubtbdtd O at 1 474-4772 p lu * I EF F ie i e NCV N ICE el d ith w a ih a r w alk to H ancock M an SUS 450 IA H th a g c a rp a l pan­ th u ttia fu rn i» h e o CR H /O L EASE m a n! S huttle pool count ra ta B u rto n O rlv a 44) /ROI /ba »urm»hed a pa rt ta n n l* cobia OI* /tor to r a u ld ! ID* S T U D E N T N E E D E D a p a rtm e n t to ca m po * CA CH la b ia w alk thcrtti# to cam pus H IO p ig * a ac*- K its 4/4 3200 477'S2R2 40* E SOSO ( i o u N I C I . SP AC lO U t, Ib r . u n tu r n lih e d * 155, fu rn ish e d S IU piped In stereo C ell . 444 5003 a tta r 6 447945* IBR A P A R T M E N T , sm a ll St75 A BP stop RC Ode. 21. 443-5104 l i t ro u t* C onvenient, a v a ila b le MUST S U BLE AS E 2 1 * *tu d lo a p t CRH a lta r / pm 453 2734 E F F IC IE N C Y ROR I, H yde P ark, in u t ­ ile lo ll bad. ca rp e tin g behind p riv a te horn*. 4 m on lease S'50 a b p 454- J122 ROOMMATES R IV E R S ID E SAXO N Y Serious m ala student th e re larg e 7br. /b a pool. RC, sp rin g *#m a *t# r *125 p lu t E, 444 R JI) s h a r e /B d . IH T 50 ra nt V a ry clean, p le n ty space to r fu rn itu re C all M a rk b a to r* 5 p m 475 i i i * M A T U R E Q U IE T ro o m m a te a p a rtm e n t S m a ll 5107 50 i E, on th u ttia B ill 45I-R337 la rg e 2/1 fr ie n d ly c o m p !# * RE S P O N S IB L E R O O M M A T E !S ) To share va ry inexpensive near S A u stin hou*a beginning Dec IS Tom 441 5355 to th e re 2br, R O O M M A T E W A N T E D 2b* apt on P leasant V a lle y RO 1125, eve- yth.ng paid C ell M ik e 441-4411 F E M A L E SUI TE M A TE D u d io u t ^non­ sm oker to th e re nice 2br 2ba w ith on* tu lfe m a t# 444 7534 I ba duple*. I na#' H ancock Cantar *122 50 mo i n d i v i d u a l TO th e re 2br Dei C all a lta r 5 p m Stove 452-2445 L U X U R Y T O W N H O U S E , w l i t h e r ‘ d ry e r, tennis p o o l shuttle Two ro o m m a te * by De- 31 c a ll 441 042/ fire pla ce , /b d rm home clo*# l i b e r a l m a l e ro o m m a t* needed to r nice to cam pus $120 mo. 1 j b ill*, /u rn 1700W 23 Bonnie 454 2021 C o n v a n i a n c E C o p y i n g S O U T H E a s t R i v e r s i d e & L a k e s h o r e 4 4 3 - 4 4 9 8 N O R T H 3 7 8 . G u a d a l u p e 4 5 3 - 5 4 5 2 E A S Y P A R K I N G C h e c k o u r lo w p rie d * fo r v o fu m e c o p y in g IOO copies $3.00 ( f o r a rty a n g ia d o c u m e n t I open on S u n d a y * fro m 1-5 Econocopy A R T S M O V IN G and H au lin g any area 24 hours, 7 d a y * 477-3241 A L T E R A T IO N S , R E P A IR S , lip p e r* and custom m ade clothes T ry me Cell Paula. 45A 4047 P H O T O G R A P H E R W E D D IN G S " B ar M lt ib a h t . 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Tom bator# 5 OO 134 «230 FOR C H R IS T M A S give someone the joy of being tune Can F ra z e r s Fine Plano Tuning & R epair. 345-3230 in F E M A L E G R A D U A T E student naadt lu x u r y d u p le x , ro o m m a te /b d rm , 443- fire p la c e deck w ith view 457), th u ttia to s h a re N E E D HO USE M A TE S s a m a tta r N ice b ig b o u t* near cam pus 4 // 77H______________________________ f o r s p r in g /B R HOUSE a ero ** Stacy P a rk, near shuttle HO i b ill* com e by IRO* E a s t­ side a tta r 4 30 f e m a l e r o o m m a t e to^"th e re large Ib r tp rin g s a m a tta r 2412 Salado I U SO p lu t e le c tric ity 4Ti-774!. W A N T E D F E M A L E ro o m m a te to th e re d e a n and /b r 2ba house South O o rind e * 5 471-SIM fu rn is h e d ro o m m a te N E E D F E M A L E t p r in g ta m a tfa r Close E n fie ld s h uttle 2br ( u p s t a i r s ) f i r e p l a c e , carpe* hardw ood b e a u tifu l It3 7 50 mo, Vj bills, deposit E lle n 4S3-H07 b a . I N E E D f e m a l e th e r e 2br apt, Ja nuary SR/ SO p lu t E C all Sue 474 RRR) W alk u T to F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E i S' (Studant) needed sp rin g b a a u flfu l 3-4br houta, E n fie ld on s h uttle CA CH M lc h a iia 45R 34S3 i i * /AAR V E G E T A R IA N CO-OP tm o k e -fre * a ir Sing)# room s 3 b io c k t fro m c a m p u t P ra na House 47* 7105 2510 Rio G ra n d * F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w anted *har# house l i t h and Speedway B eginning Ja nu a ry C all Pam 453- 1*37 ___ __ m d Spaadv I D ) ABP _______ I t ! H O U S E M A TE TO share e x c e lle n t Ib r h outa close cam pus and s h uttle SIS p lu t _________________ ■i b in *. 4TF D O I f e m a l e TO th e re la rg e ib r a p a rt­ m ent Clos# * 0 law school and cam pus CR shuffle Spanish V illa g e HO Duncan Lane 474-3131_________________________ R E S P O N S IB L E N O N S M O K I N G /b r n *# r IF »107 SO fe m a le own room A B P Jan I M a ry A l^ -IR IR 454IMO B A S IC A P A R T M E N T m a t# needed b e g in n in g J a n u a ry H e te ro sp o rts m in d e d N ational Lam poon *a " Can t ro ' a jo in t to I tax# it or t« a v t it Lease on /tor /to* m N o rth AusMn tout w ill con­ sider re lo c a tin g C all M a rk . 137-4424 f e m a l e H O U S E M A T E needed now or Dec 15 at adc a '# student p re fe rre d SD Vs to. C all 4/7-I30B k e e p try in g ______ m a l e n o n s m o k i n g p r e f e r a b ly Chicano needed to share bad room tor spr ng ta m e s t# ' C los* to ca m pu s 47* 5014 R E S P O N S B L E R O O M M A T E I M ho©*# N o rth A ustin. H D pius n 0 M ust lik e dog* have own tra n s p o rta tio n 13* R IM M a n t e o f e m a l e hew s a n ta ie gra d u a te student or w o rk in g w om an t i OI I b . ' t 451 145/ N E E D E D F E M A L E to share fly in g ex­ penses south duplex own ro om SRO plus i to' * *47-5074 Keep try rig RE S P O N S lO lt RcXMAMATE to l N ' 1 fu rn ish e d /tor a p a rtm e n t » l)7 pius V* Et#c i f sh uttle Dan *5 /0 *4 3 L IB E R A L m a l e Suer# R vers de I to n in g Jan \ *77 so p iu t b t NR Ray 447 *44 ib r apt on i R O O M M A T E L A K E A u ttm c o u n try fir e p la c e w ash in g m a c h in e t#nc# Its X pius > 0 " s 2*3 i t i FOR RENT M I N I - S T O R A G E SOUTH C oncrete b o c k co nstru ctte n , se c u rity p e tro l $10 up m o n to iy Can 4 4 4 /a n W oodland G aadto n H E A l T H ~ v v lSE D a y ' C d r # ,“ fr e s h ve g e ta ria n meals, M ontessori developed e n v iro n m e n t N ear UT, c a ll N lfa S m ith 477-R513______________________________ R E G IS T E R E D C H IL D ca r# in fa m ily horn# Snack* and lunch provid e d Drop- in t w elcom e E xp e rie n ced w ith ch ild re n , 452 5175 LOST A FOUND R E W A R D ri-S R -52 c a lc u la to r, T a y lo r T room P ies* c a ll 454-2213. lost In LOST CORGI fe m a le R iv e rs id e and ih 35, b row n w ith w h it* m a rk in g s , 20 lbs N am ed Hlho, 447 5315. S IZ E A B L E R E W A R D fo r r t t u r n of b la ck c a t takan fro m C astle H ill, Nov K No questions Just please b rin g h im back 317-124*. a tta r I p m 477-17 a 774 t HELF WANTED N E E D E X T R A m oney? Th# F lo w e r People need people to sell flo w e rs Th u rs th ru Sun highest c o m m is tio n paid d a lly 78R-1102 _______ A P A R T M E N T M A N AGE R TuxuryT p ro ­ te c t 4 b lo c k s fro m U T c a m p u * No m a in te n a nce A p a rtm e n t plus u tilitie s plus sa la ry R esponsible dependably u p ­ per d iv is io n p#r»on re q u ire d No p et* or c h ild re n Send to p ro p e rty m a n a g e r 4307 M o u n ta in P a th D r A u stin , 707511_________________________ re su m e K IT C H E N H E L P w anted a pp ly in per son Steak N Ala re s ta u ra n t. 2211 W a tt A nderson Lane E X P E R IE N C E D SALES person to »#U clothes p a rt tim # noon hours store on the d rag C all 474-5477 LE F E AAME M A SSAGE Ti h irin g fu ll- tim e , p a rt tim e e m p lo y m e n t Bes* c o m ­ in q u ire 453 3214. 327* m ission In tow n DS4 __ ______ H IR IN G NOW fu ll and p a rt tim e cooks and wa /persons A pply In person Th# Fre n ch Onion R e stau ra n t anc B ar 2005 E R iv e rs id e R lv e rto w n * M a ll Y A R iN G S D OW NTO W N h a t openings tor 2 s h ifts in the c re d it d e p a rtm e n t On# 5-1 p rn M o n d a y S a fu rd a * and one I 30-5 JO p m M onday-S aturday w ith on# day o ft d u rin g the week Some office e x p e ria n c e h e lp fu l C o n ta c t J a n t t H u * to n 4 7 4 - 4 5 1 1 fo r a p p c n t m a n t M in im u m 4 m onths c o m m itm e n t re ­ q u ire d P A R T T IM E ave© "d w orn IO hours per week I D C ell *52 2751 10-12 noon only N IG H T PERSON to stoep to w ith dis­ tu rb e d boys ru ra l se’ tm g. reasonable b en e fit* C aii_! -85d-44d0 B A R T E N D E R FOR beer and w ine Cook i helper and ekpertenced w a rp e r SO" Apply l f person *12 R id R ive r S E C R E T A R Y w a n t e d " f u n i f m a social s e rvice agency needs a person who he* good o ffice *kin » and th * a b ility to w o rk w ith m any poopie O ffic e is a 1 p e rs o n o p e r a tio n a " d r e q u ir e * a rted'ca/ed in d iv id u a l C ontact M r E p k • tin a* »h# je w *h C o m m u n ity C ouncil of A u stin. 345-4*40 fro m 1-S M o nd a y th ru F rid a y CON SC < EN T IO U S COO FLE to md nag* »man UT com plex ,n exchange d- j a ” inter-C o-op Coun­ c il 4’ e :*5 ? P A R T T IM S ha*p p re fe ra b ly w th some snow edge of a ccounting A p p ly «• aloe N orth in te rre g io n a l Ask tor Bonnie HELP WANTED TYPING CHELSEA STREET P l B J u s t N o r t h of 2 7 th a t G u a d a l u p e 2707 H e m p h i l l P a r k t h * n e w m in i m u m Beata w a g # Kitchen hdip starting pay 8 2 6 6 an hour. W a i t e r & o p i n i n g * W a i t r e s s available Super pay, tu p a r in p a r s o n . t i p s A p p l y N o r t h c r o s s or H i g h l a n d M a ll. Part or full tim # , day or night shift h \s v d b a J ™ A * ,j H - M BA T Y P 'N G P R IN T IN G . B IN D IN G v T H E C O M P L E T E P R O F E S S I O N A L F U L L T I M E T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 472-3210 and 472-7677 C o m p tro lle r of P ublic Accounts n accep­ tin g applicatio n s the p e titio n ot fo r a ud ito r O ffices are located throughout toe state Q u a llfic a to n * g rad u a tion fro m an accred ite d Sen or c o ie y e w ith "a v e a in a c c o u n tin g M u tt m e io f m in im u m oI IR hour* of account ng in eluding 4 h ou r* of in te rm e d ia te a c c o il" in aud ting, 2 y e a -* of tin g, 3 hours accounting ex responsible aud itin g penence M ay be substituted fo r 30 "o u r* of college c re d it Apply a t 111 E 17th Stree’ A ustin Tx 7R744 CH R I S T I E ' S PART T IM E C ocktail w a it person Needed on F rid a y and S aturday nights. 5-10 p m S alary plus tip * HOSTPERSON F iv e n ig h t* a week M u st tie a v a ila b le on weekend* W orking h ou r* 5 IO p rn M u** apply In person C H R IS T IE S SEAFO OD R E S T A U R A N T H E L P W A N T E D B U R G E R K IN G 2700 G U A D A L U P E F u l l and p a r t t i m e o penings in person, a v a il a b l e . A p p ly 2:30-4 p .m . ACCOUNTANTS E N T R Y L E V E L M B A OR BB A N o w y o u ' r e r e a d y - Y o u h a v e y o u r d e g r e e * O u r clients c o m p a n i e s see kin g a g g r e s s i v e a c c o u n t a n t s w ith 0-1 y e a r s e x p e r ie n c e S a l a r y ra n g e 12K to U K . C a ll or send r e s u m e to: B i l l P h a r r & A s s o c . 6300 H i l l c r o f t , S u i t e 312 H o u s t o n , T x . 77081 P h o n e : A C 713 777-2 318 Like to Talk? W h y not get p aid tor it. id e a l for students and hou se w iv e s . 9 a r n . - 2. 20 p . m . , 3 :3 0 p . r n . -9 p .m . 47 4 -1 5 3 5 A T T E N T I O N M I D - T E R M G R A D U A T E S an e x c itin g c a rre r In Real E sta te a w a its you Real w o rld P ro p e rtie s Is an expa n ­ d in g c o m p a n y w it h y o u n g a n d te m p e re d w ith e x ­ a g g re s s iv e perience Sale* teasing and p ro p e rty m anagem ent C all Sharon Kboudi or Reg B ritta in fo r an appo intm en t. ideas 443-2212 1920 E . R i v e r s i d e D r . O U T S T A N D I N G C A R E E R I N O P P O R T U N I T I E S C O M P U T E R M A R K E T I N G • B B A or M B A • H igh O P A p refe rre d • I hrs of accounting • im m e d ia te openings C o n t a c t M r . M c A d a m s . B urroughs Corp, 837-3000 T YPISTS E a rn good pay F le x ib le hours between 8 a m and l l p m , p a rt tim e o r fu ll tim e u n til C h ris tm a s m in im u m 70 w p m . U n iv e rs ity o r R ive rside area Come by to r o rie n fa tlo n , in fo rm a tio n , Sunday Dec 3. 4 p rn 3701 G uadalupe No. IO* A C C E P T I N G A P P L I C A T I O N S P a rt tim e evening help 5 p rn -I a rn. 2, 3 or 4 sh ifts a week 52 50 hour A pply at 2805 Rogge Lane Sop and Go M a rk e ts An E q u al O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r P A R T T IM E help fo r Typing service th ro u gh C hristm a s 15-20 hours week F a m i l i a r i t y w it h fo r m a t s d esirable, 52 75/hour. C all 453-1455 leave message ty p in g __ __ P A R T T I M E h e lp . c h e c k e r * a nd sto cke r* A pply In person R y la n d e r* No 4, 3700 Jefferson T H UN D E RCLOU D SUB S. south now h irin g fo r positions jta r tin g Jan 3, m ust be re tp o n s lb le and f l e x il e , p a rt tim # In person, 20! E R iv e rs id e , A p p ly between 3 and 5 p m C H R IS T M A S CASH. M a n u fa c tu e r's rep seeking p a rt tim # salespersons. S i tra m M r H u n t 472-1 172 M W F m d evenings 2 p a r t T im e slaes c le rk s In novelties, 10-5 30 M -Sat cash re g is te r and selling experience helpful A p p ly personnel o f­ fic e U n iv e rs ity Co-op A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R tw e nty u n it com plex A p p ly fo r In te rv ie w by m a il o nly 4)05 Speedway A p a rtm e n t 203 7»75 j _ _ _________________________ fo r P A R T T IM E help Sat.-Tues 4-12 p m fo r b a rm a id For m ore In fo rm a tio n c a ll M ony P a rk e r or N o rm a E v a n t 772-44U W A N T E D D A Y T IM E food p ra p a ra t'o n person A pply a t 30* W 5th p e o p l e n e e d e d to r p e rt tim e in te r - v jew ing fo r opinion poll C ell to r a p p o in t­ m e nt 327-4101 T y p i s t s ” N E E D E D any hours betw e e n 8 30-5 p rn t il C hristm a s, good pay, depending on speed m in im u m W w pm U n iv e rs ity or R iv e rs id e ar## Cal 453 5452 or 443-44*1 N E E D M O D E LS Shoulder longer h a ir N a tu ra lly 443-1571 free shaping Cai length or Cai’ H i t •.......... O n e f r e e copy of a n y p a p e r w e t y p e a J you can a ff o r d low-cost ty p in g b y e x p e rie n c e d people who CARE about q u a .ity a I I EtONOTYPE = • I • • B ring us your thesis disse rta tio n I memo. brie f, re p o rt • I • J • • • J • • le fte r, paper , • • • I • J or w hat ever 37th at guadalupe 453-5452 M on-Thur 8 30-1 F r i 8 30-5 30 Sa* 10-4 I W F i E R ive rside at Lakeshore . 443 4418 • M on-Thurs 8 30-1 I • F ri 8 00-6 OO • Sat SO 00-4 OO I I . 15 « Sunday « # # • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • T Y P I N G E R R Y S E R V I C E f A l! u n i v e r s i t y a n d business w ork Spanish ty p in g Las* m inu te service F ree p arkin g Open 1 8 Mon-Th & 1-5 8. Sat 472-8936 D o b ie M a l l Just N o r t h of 27th a t G u a d a l u p e 2707 H e m p h i l l P a r k '}f\rvxha A m R E S U M E S w i t h or w i th o u t p ic tu r e s 2 D a y S e r v ic e 472-3210 and 472-7677 P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G service, d is ­ s ertations. m a n u scrip ts, rasumes, etc. C all a n y tim e , 444-1134. T Y P IN G , ETC! near cam pus. P atterson 477-2147 keep try in g Cheap, fast, accurate. O v e rn ig h t se rvice S u tl P R O F E S S IO N A L Q U A L IT Y Same day and o v e rn ig h t service c o rre c tin g s e le c trlc l l Helen 451-3661 ty p in g . IB M TH E SE S, d is s e r ta tio n s , T Y P IN G re po rts, 65*/page, near N orthcro ss M a ll, Joanle Tibbets, 452-8326 a fte r 5_30 p m. E X PE R I EN CE 6 A N D know ledgeable t y p i s t T h e s e s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , p rofessional re po rts, etc. /O '/page B a r­ b ara T ullos, 453-5124 _________ AC C U R A TE A N D p ro m p t ty p in g 75* per page and u p C all 447-2737 ____ B O B B Y E D E L A F IE L D . IB M S dld ctrlc, p ic a ,e lite 30 years experience Books, d is s e r t a t i o n s , r e p o r t s , m im e o g ra p h in g , 442-7114 t h e i s t , F U L L -T IM E P R OF ESS! ON A L ty p in g ta f i t y o u r budgat P ro m p t personal a tte n ­ tion to a ll yo ur ty p in g needs IOO E. W onsley, 836-7873 A L L W O R K g u a ra n te e d re a s o n a b le prices 707 W M L K , 412-6302^__________ T E N D E R L O V IN G cere fo r yo ur theses, d isse rta tio n s, papers Fast, p rofessional ty p is t (12 years e xperience) P a tric ia , 472-3555, 6-1 p m and weekends F R E E P I C K u p e n d d e l i v e r y . P ro fe s s io n a l re a s o n a b le ty p in g a t prices IB M C o rre ctin g S e le ctrlc. C all 243 1672 a lm o s t a nytim e , C ynthia S A T IS F A C T IO N G U A R A N T E E D perlancad. q u a ilfia d theses, disse rta tio n s. S e le ctrlc M rs F o w le r, 327-0101 t x - legal ty p is t also IB M C o rre c tin g Just N o r t h of 27th a t G u a d a l u p e 2707 H e m p h i l l P a r k ty\pAx/iA J in n Sure, w e do t y p e A F r e s h m a n th e m e s . 472-3210 and 472-7677 TUTORING T U T O R IN G IN a ll m ath, science and language* Also proo fre a d in g , near ca m ­ as Al pus 47/-: pus 472-2737. FURNISHED HOUSES B E A U T IF U L H A LF -H O U S E fo r ra n t. ideal fo r tw o A v a ila b le J a n u a ry . 453- 8101 a fte r 5 ROOM a n d b o a r d N E W M A N H A L L W O M E N 'S D O R M S m a l l , q u i e t , f r i e n d l y , e x ­ c e lle n t food, doubles, singles, l a u n d r y , m a i d s , p a r k i n g , r o o m / b o a r d , 19 k i tc h e n e t te , m e a ls . 2026 G u a d a l u p e 476-0669 TA K E OVER c o ntra ct. C a s tilia n sp rin g let Keep 550 deposit. sem ester. W in ______ R oberto 474 6615 a fte r 7___ W O M EN H U R R Y ! A pply now fo r s p r­ ing Co-op openings Share, save In te r- Co-op Council 510 W 23rg. 474-1157 P E O P L E P LA C E S ! Co-op* m a re , sa ve have fu n ! Opanings now sp rin g In ta r- Co-op Council, 510 W 23rd 474-1157 _ S U B LE A S E D O BIE sem ester, fe m a le only M id d le cam pus view can Debr a 478-1044 side suite spring flo or. __ FOR W O M EN Larg e rooms, good food. one block fro m cam pus Laura) House Co-op. 2*12 G uadalupe 474-5154 to d o u b l e ” ROOM (m e ld ) a l Dobie Center a va ila b le tor sublease at spring sem ester 478- 7*53 ROOM FOR re n t Co ed d o rm near c a m ­ pus Deposit paid, 472-27*1 _____ ROOM FOR re n t Co-ed d orm naar ca m ­ pus^ Depo s it pa a 474-1212 _______ N E E D P A R T tim e help b a rte n d e r p e r­ son F r day M u st have own c a r C a i 345- 4777 S U B LE A S E D O BIE doubts room ( m a l* : spec ai discounted ret# C all D a v id 477 5123 IOC PA R T T IM E tro y # ! agency T ic k e t a # ;1 v#ri#s and c le ric a l A fte r­ noons Good prese n ta tio n end c a r need #0 C a lM 5 8 « 3 l ___ to r N U R S E R Y P R I V A T E s c h o o l k in d e rg a rte n needs teacher fo r 3 y r old c l a s i l 30-1/ JO Also "eed fu ll tim e a j — by Garry Trudeau SAME AS LAST WHATS YI AR P m v TTUO/N6 V co sm o s Al ap BELIKE? BOCK. GRANOLA, HOETH in VO W # AIP K W T . I 1 ' A 1 5k J HD ,1 - ^ 9 nu BE A CELEBRATION OP- MORE CAREFREE OMS, BLH AT THE SAME TIME, A REMEMBRANCE OE IHE AGON* OF VIETNAM, THE RAC AL HATREDS IN OUR CTT1ES, and the Cla sh between se n - I p * WOU1., I FEEL QUILTY ALREAD! \ I KNOW! I'M PRETTY EXCITED MfSELE! , r i h i t (■ / % — « * t i * ' C3U I N U U U U U U U l t i l U H U I Ia . i i b i l l o t ! ] Q a i a u 24 Harbor 26 On the square 27 Chemical compound 28 W eathercocks 29 Diplomatic perceptions - Arbor 49 51 Bring charges against 53 Kind of eclipse 55 Water 31 Mount 2 words 32 Air antelope 33 Kills 36 Swine enclosures 40 Most pallid 41 Auction function 44 Discolored 4 7 Nobleman barriers 56 Spiced stew 57 Promenade 5 8 " — - chance!" 6 0 Marquee name 61 Otherwise 6 2 Tints 65 Which was to be proved Abbr l l 11 1 Light to urea 5 Refuse IO H ives 14 Of the U S A 1 5 Right-hand page 16 Woodwind 1 7 Restraint 19 Buck h e r o in e 20 C a p e ......... I* N S 21 Visionaries 23 Zachariah a nickname 25 "Jane 26 Sofa 2 words 3 0 Tug a tows 34 Glorify 35 Flower holder 37 Dupe Slang 38 Card game 39 Phantasm 42 Chin pagoda 43 Roman date 45 — freeze 46 Tropical tree 48 Seed integuments 5 0 Ocean beach 2 words 52 Busy bugs 54 Disfiguring I 2 I one 59 " for repairs" 6 3 Astronaut - — Shepard 84 Fluency 66 Ryun s torte 67 Indulges fully 6 8 Repose 6 9 Auctioneer a word 70 Commerce 71 — bien Very good DOWN 1 Author Charles — 2 Love god 3 Ancient Asian 4 Bakary item 5 Dazed state 6 Soak 7 Citric 8 Retail - establishment 9 Sweet stuff maker 2 words 10 Lodgers 11 Competent I 2 Fly upward 13 Female birds 18 Meat cuts 22 Palm cockatoo |15 II5 l l A 7 ■ 24 r I 29 23 .. I 44■ I *9 52 14 17 JO 34 J I 4) *1 55 6) 64 69 16 19 I IIO it I I I T 2 16 ■ I ' ____■ 47 " . ■ 51 f ■ 58 ■ 65 * ■ 64 r I61 r 26 27 28 31 32 33 56 57 60 A1 62 T H E WI Z A R D O F ID w a n t f9[)Y 4 W DXeT E&F S o b y B r e n t p e r k e r e n d J o h n n y h e r t THE f t AFB fC V F T E N - S f E f lS h*1 OX I T k ' l ^ H T How. I l l TW ENTY f ? L l N T E K o f n A in t E M p SALE 15% OFF SWEATERS and TOPS thru Saturday IC l l J TANK MCNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds OWW, 0056 JO WE'VE RUN OUI Cf PYING-JOCK 5®0EG TO PO A1? MOVES TO WHAT7 NETWORK W M T SET TD PE MUMPER or itbv Be hog afra/p V HOMO VATE FIGURE IT OUT 0 0 6 WERE MUST Be MILLIONS TRUE LITE jock 6T0RIEC> CWT THELE I V where me jock VOVMT PIE AT WE EWP7 7 OR GE! THI P. 0 2 6 POKNT EVE)) GET SICK. AT ALE. COLOR PROCESSING Kodak unum some on 1918 E. Riverside No. 27 Upper Level Dobie Mall AMERICA 10VT9 m o - JOCK MOVIES S iiA. ACCOUNTING STUDENTS Becker CPA Review Course N ow Starting for M ay Exam. Available Both Evenings and Saturdays For more inform ation, call 4 4 2 -4 8 8 9 11 m in i weather 3 3 . 2 4 3 0 0 0 2 9 7 7 2 9. 5 3 2 9 2 ' LO W I & r i; I U S E A T T L E e v e r y b o d y LOVES TO EOT AT s is W .2 3 r J © m a p a s m Aouva a a c a o s . b * N o W fc n « 5 otfOSLps s e t a A L s s M O o tH ie s COKE AND p u *e Ik! T H * u J ? * L OF AN (ROTOR. C jM D W t 'W B E yO kY S n o t St (V - 9 OO A B D » » * P -3 0 F R 1 -5A T 4 7 1 - l b 6 6 n \ . M I N N E A P O L I S ^ ■■■■■ 1 \ C H I C A G O * y 'ON C L7/E n e w yQ R k Flash flood watches have bean Issued for parts of Mississippi, Alabama and T e n n e s s e e as r a i n spreads eastward Into G e o r g i a an d S o u t h Carolina. Atlanta has dense fog and freezing rain has slicked highways I n d i a n a , In p a r t s of Michigan and Ohio. Local­ ly, skies will be clear to partly cloudy Thursday through Friday with mild a f t e r n o o n s and cool nights. Winds will be out of the north at 10 to 18 m.p.h. The high Thursday will be in the lower 60s, the low In the upper 30a. Sunrise Thursday Is at 7:10, sunset at 5:30. Friday the sun will rise at 7:10. Meddle initial F irs t Nam # State Zip School Phone Ll LENDMAN ASSOCIATES 7540 L B J F r e e w a y , Suite 930 I N am e of College or U n iv e rs ity C ity Degree I CAREER OBJECTIVE: I O Sales D M a rx e t.n g □ P ro du ctio n M g m t □ C h e m is try /Biology O E D P C om puter □ E n g in e e rin g (area of inte re st) — ---------------- - I □ F tno n cy G A ccounting □ Purchasing C Personnel I C A d m in is tra tio n □ A d v e rtis in g 0 O ther _ _ _ _ _ D allas, T e x a s 75251 I___________________________________________________________ UP W E A T H E R F Q T O C A S T I N E W O R L E A N S A / # m i a m i *— LEGEND --------------- W $ /A ffain U L l L l sn0a A R . ii . F ( . 0 w [ J S H O W E R S GRROURfES B a c h e l o r 's or M a s t e r ' s D e g r e e Attend LENDMAN ASSOCIATES First Annual (OLIEGE (RHEE (ODKREIKE in DALLAS January 13-14 Where you'll get every opportunity you'll need for a successful career in business or industry A t t h i c uniaue C a re er Conference, the firs t ever held in D a lla s exclusively *n r J itln o seniors and those c o m p le tin g advanced degrees, Landm an AccnriAtP*; w in brina together represen tatives fro m a p p ro x im a te ly IOO large ?J5?m afl^com oanres toTnterview for hundreds of en try and m id dle m a n a g e­ m ent ^pos i tions a v at la bl e in the D a lla s area and nationw ide. M A K * THE MOST OF YOUR COLLEGE EDUCATION AND TALENT Ow attending this com prehensive 2-day Conference to be held at a m a jo r thorough job search, get the in te rv ie w you By attending in is_cor k> w a n ! w iP h C V o m p T n W u w a S t ° a . l Pn o 'n e p . a c e , a n d o n e t i m e . You also g e t: • ln -d « p th train in g in pinpointing and solacing your bo«f job o p p o rtu n ity *. • Participation in program * w h ore you'll lo a m how to a tte M your a b ility * dofmo career obfocttvo* and ho w to h a n d k job in terview * NO COST TO JOB AFWCANTS T h u Danes College Career Conference Is paid for in fu ll bv A m e rica n in d u ltr y You pay nothing fo r p a n tic - pa* on except fo r your personal tra n s p o rta tio n , rneais and * lodging H otel accom m odations a v a ila b le a C onference site B ut if you wish, you are tre e to m axe yo ur own a rra n g e m e n ts To see if you q u a lity to attend f ill out and m a il m i l coupon (to insure p ro m p t re ply include stam ped, se• - addressed envelope), or ca ll Phil H artu n g a f (214 64 | I | I LENDMAN ASSOCIATES, 7540 L B J F r e e w a y , Suite 930, D a lla s, T e x a s 75251 I _ ________ | Nam e Address Perm an e n t H om e Phone 9591 I JI' I perspective T h e Da il y T e x a n P a ge 28 □ T h u r s d a y , D e c e m b e r I, 1977 U J T F J m I Chinese mix ancient customs with modern technology IM W *. Ancient Tien An Men Gate overlooking central square of Peking A currency exch an ge clerk perform* w a*** addition and com p lex p ro b lem * at the xaine tune. hand* altern atin g beiw.-en an a ba CUR awl a hand calcu lato r (hiU ide they are building a road b u lld o zer* op erate a few feet away from squad* of people h am m erin g n u ll* Into gravel "T h is astonishing m ixtu re of TOOD year old techniques with advances! 11170 techniqu e* Is one of the things that strik e s a Re le n t if ii' v isito r to fh ln a , Marian Sm ith said The p ro fesso r awl ch airm an of the astronom y d epartm ent recen tly returnesl from a trip behind the (Jre a t Wall organ)red by the S ta te D epartm ent IN TMF. SHAIMIW of P urple Mountain O bservatory the Nank tng Instru m en t F a c to ry produces s a te llite trackin g telescopes. awl the factory I* now building an to inch reflector that will be com pleted in about four years It will be one of the two-dozen larg est te le sc o p e * in the world C h in a s cen tu ry Of revolution* has left large age gaps in tech n ical field s Sm ith said nearly all astro n om ers a re in the to to 45 y e a r age group, trained a fte r the Com m unist revolution in 194W hut before theC ultural Itrvolutlon in IWM T h e re a re a few highly venerated SO to 70-year-olds, trained In the W eat or the Soviet Union, and a sprinkling of young people with m ile training, working as te ch n ically low level people on the sta ff “ U N IV F RSX U F S . closed in \ m have reopened in the past few years in Chilli, hut only to a fractio n of tile student body they used to hold and with a shortened cu rricu lu m amt no graduate school The Chinese student spends three y e a r* in colleg e, awl I would gue>* at least half of that tim e was spent in p o litical ind octrin ation and nonacadem ic work such as on a facto ry l in e / ' Sm ith said During th eir tour of the four m ajo r ce n te rs of astronom y, the scie n tists heard clo se lo 50 papers d elivered by their Chinese colleag u es O ften these papers w ere com plex and specialized — not in the visiting A m ericans fields. I he co n c ern . I think, is that much of the astro n om ical work tir ing done in ( tuna today tends to be divorced from o b ser­ v a tio n ." Sm ith said “ T H E IR TR A IN IN G p rep ares level, sop histicated an alysis They U k e problem s that a re well known in the W est and apply advanced m a th em a tica l techniques to push them very fa r in e x tre m e ly narrow d irection s to do high them "Y o u can do a p erfe ctly c o r re c t m a th em a tica l an alysis for a problem th at d oesn’t re a lly e x i s t ." he said. Astronom y m ay be insulated from full p o litical p ressu re in "M a o spoke w arm ly about m ainland China, Sm ith said astronomy. so there is a d eg ree of insulation Ju st this fall, th e re was an edict from the C entral C om ­ m ittee th at scie n tists should spend fiv e-sixth s of their tim e in their s cie n tific w o rk ." Sm ith said " T h a t im p lies there rem ain s one sixth for som ething e lse and suggests th e re m ay have been much m ore than one sixth In the past " HOW EX F R , the Chinese do try to find ratio n ales to m ake scie n tific th r o n e * con sisten t with M a rx ist/L en in ist philosophy For instance, the Rig Hang theory according to m ost a stro n o m e rs in the W est. the universe som ehow m aterialized to C h in e s e o u t of n o th in g T h a t 's v e r y i d e a l i s t i c m etap hysicians lhe\ e n c o u ra g e a s tro n o m e rs to planations for sa\, the red sh ift, or the Mig Hang c o m fo rta b le for them to say the universe was alw ays around .” to date on the C hinese sc ie n tists keep up Sm ith said find a lte r n a tiv e e x ­ It is m ore realize China h as a long way to go, Sm ith said. “ I A SK ED about sp ace trav el nearly every p lace I went and found alm ost no ov ert in terest am ong the young people or In this cou ntry scie n ce fiction alm ost Chinese astro n o m e rs p erm eates the so ciety , in m ovies and books. B ut these ideas w ere less p rev alen t in China, and in 1966 they w ere absolu tely term inated by the C ultural Revolution The Chinese don’t have the background of popular in te rest we have, and the energy of the society is put into solving im m ed iate p ro b lem s." The A m erican s cie n tists w ere fre e to "w an d er around by ou rselves and go every place we re q u e ste d ," Sm ith said. " T o get from one p la ce to another is not straigh tfo rw ard , for the Chinese as well a s foreign ers. We saw no in te rcity bus serv ice, and train s e rv ic e is lim ited They don’t have a m obile s o c ie ty ." AT EACH fa c ility the sc ie n tists visited they sat for the cu stom ary tea se rv ic e while the lead er of the group, D r. Leo Goldberg of the U S N ational O bservatory in Arizona, con­ ducted protocol conv ersation, usually about the w eather, with a rep resen tativ e of the R evolutionary C om m ittee. —T .xsn Staff Photo At one o b serv ato ry M ao's p ictu re w as alongside the knobs and Harlan Smith d evelopm ents in the United S U te s . "T h e y would like a g re a t deal m o re e x c h a n g e ." he said However, larg e sc a le exchan ges a re blocked as long as our relations a re not norm alized. " I don t know that there s been any m odern book published on astronom y in C h in a,’ Sm ith said. "T h e y have one jo u rn al that co m es out tw ice a y ear with about a dozen a rtic le s O ther m a te ria l is circu late d in short, sort-of m im eographed sh eets Chinese astro n o m ers a re s c ie n tific ad­ v an cem en ts taking p lace today in the United S ta te s, but they "w is tfu l" about buttons on the telesco p e control board. "T h e y a re m aking com puters on the order of six- to eight- year-ago vintage in this c o u n try ," Sm ith said. "T h e am azing thing is how they do it. T h e re ’s a g re a t deal of sm all industry, and very little la rg e. T h ere will be a person right off the s tre e t rn a room with a dirt floor and a bed in the com er, making sm all parts with a la th e .” In spite of this m ixtu re of old and new m ethods, Sm ith said m ost fa c ilitie s had equipm ent equal to the best in the world. T he o b serv a to ries they visited co n cen trated on asteroid s and s ta rs , solar re se a rc h and con n ections betw een solar activ ity and w eather on earth . Purple Mountain Observatory in Nanking, China. Below, primary school children dance in celebration of National Day Oct. 1 Story by Kay Ebeling Photos by Harlan Smith Art by Bill Petty