T h e Da ily T rya,nV a?010™ Student Newspaper at The University of Texa Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texa *o\il * Austin, Te x a s , T h u rs d a y , S ep tem b e r 21, 19; F ifteen Cents News and E d ito r ia l: 471-4591 D isplay A d v e rtis in g : 471-1865 Business O ffice and Classified: 471-5244 T w e n ty -F o u r Pages V o l. 78, No. 14 C o p y rig h t 1978, Te xa s Student P ublications, all rights reserved Protest of Raul’s raid leads to arrest on Drag P olice arrested a 25-year-old man Wednesday afternoon for posting hand­ bills calling for the murder of police of­ ficers involved in the Wednesday m orn­ ing arrests of six persons during a dis­ turbance at a punk rock club. Charges w ere filed Wednesday after­ noon against the six arrested in connec­ tion with the post-midnight disturbance at R aul’s, 2610 Guadalupe St. The unidentified man w as taken into custody in the 2200 block of Guadalupe for making what police term ed “ a terroristic threat” against Austin police officers. Officer Steve B ridgew ater, one of the uniform ed o ffic e r s in the Raul’s arrests, w as named in the hand­ bills. involved One of the handbills showed a drawing of a badge with Bridgew ater’s nam e and badge number in the center, and the word “ Kill” at the top. Below the nam e was a swastika and the words “ eat death scum asshole. A handbill found on a pole in front of the University Co-Op said “ Kill P o lic e ’ and “ No Huns, No Fun ” The suspect has not been charged and no bond has been set. Arraignm ent will be at 9 a m . T h u rsd a y , a p o lic e spokesman said. Phil Tolstead, lead singer of the Huns. the punk rock band playing at R aul’s during the Wednesday incident, was charged in Municipal Court with par­ ticipating in a riot. T olstead’s bail was set at $500 Bobbv M orales, bouncer at R aul’s, and Richard Jones, a U niversity stu­ dent, were charged with assault on a police officer. “ All I was trying to do w as break up a fight,” M orales said “ N ext thing I knew, I got hit in the head. Then this guy identified him self as a police o fficer,” he said. William Goss was charged with public intoxication and R ichard D orsett, manager of Inner Sanctum Records and Niccolo Barbaro, a University student, w ere charged with disorderly conduct. Bail was set at $157 for Jones. Goss’ bail was set at $43.50. Dorsett, Barbaro and Morales posted $53.50 each in bail and were released. Barbaro’s wife said his attorney had advised him not to talk to the press. Tolstead also m ade no com m ent to the press on the advice of his attorneys, Becky Beaver and Lynn Sanders. Goss, Dorsett and Jones could not be reached for com m ent. P o lic e entered R aul’s W ednesday morning in answer to a com plaint of ex­ cessiv e noise, according to a police report. B e f o r e th e p o lic e a r r iv e d , th e audience had engaged in shouting m atches with Tolstead and pretended to beat him up, Gilbert Conwoop, a w itness to the incident, said. Third black resigns UT racist, Warfield says By DEBBIE W O RM SER Dally Texan Staff The resignation of three black faculty m em bers within the past two months confirm s the University s national reputation as a racist institution, Dr. John Warfield, director of the African and Afro-American Studies Program , said Wednesday. “ It’s a reputation a ‘U niversity of the first class can ill af­ ford,” he said Dr. Douglas Daniels, assistant professor of history and the departm ent’s only black professor, announced his resignation earlier this week. “ The U niversity’s priorities do not lie in the area of Afro- American Studies, nor do they m ake much of a pretense of attem pting to benefit the Afro-Am ericans who live in the sta te ,” Daniels said. Two other black professors announced their resignations at the end of sum m er. “ I’m not com plaining about the history departm ent .. but the to black indifference pertaining U niversity’s attitude of people,” D aniels said. “ When you get large numbers of w hites in positions of power, they hire large numbers of w hites. “ The question is not one of finding qualified blacks, but rather of finding people who are qualified to recognize their m erits,’ he said. The problem of getting and keeping black faculty m em bers is indifferent attitude of U niversity ad­ com plicated by the m inistrators, Warfield said. “ Adm inistrators and others in the academ ic com m unity are not responsive to the needs of black faculty and students, he said. Dr. Gerhard Fonken, executive assistant to University P resi­ dent Lorene Rogers, refused to com m ent on the charges of racism and indifference, saying, “ Different people have different v iew s.” . Dr. Donn D avis, assistant professor of ethnic studies, and Dr. Larry Coleman, assistant professor of speech com m unication, resigned before the sem ester started, citing the U niversity’s tenure system and m inority recruitm ent as factors in their leaving. Daniels, who will begin teaching at the U niversity of Califor­ nia at Santa Barbara in the spring, criticized the tenure and sab­ batical system s in Texas. People in other parts of the country have sabbaticals for prim ary and secondary school teachers, Daniels said, adding it is inconceivable to them that the U niversity has no such system for voung faculty m em bers. Sabbaticals offer professors tim e to research and w rite ar­ ticles which contribute to gaining tenure. The recent resignations testify “ to the problems all faculty m em bers face, but those problem s are particularly grievous in the context of black professors,” Warfield said. “Once a black faculty m em ber gets h ere,” often as the only Afro-American in the departm ent, he m ust deal with the “ good old boy” politics which exist throughout the U niversity, War­ field said. politics of his school, he continued. “ He lacks colleagues in his field ” and is shut out from the f “ Everybody loses when black faculty m em bers leave the U n iv e r s ity ,” Warfield said, adding the students are hurt the worst.. “ U ltim ately, if w e can’t keep people here who can give a black perspective on our m ultiracial so ciety,” the students w ill m iss out on the diversity of experience associated with a college education, he said. “ All of the professors who resigned had a com m itm ent to teaching,” which m akes their loss all the more dam aging, he . said. The latest figures com piled by the the U niversity s Equal E m ploym ent Office show 1,641 white and 24 black faculty m em bers w ere at the U niversity in Septem ber 1977 _ There m ust be a regental and adm inistrative m andate if the U niversity is to recruit and keep minority faculty m em bers, Warfield said. “ Som eone in power has got to want it, he said. “There s no m andate” for m inority recruitm ent, Fonken said, but he pointed to the A ffirm ative Action Program , “a big, fat docum ent on file with HEW ,” as an exam ple of the U niver­ sity ’s com m itm ent. When asked to describe the contents of the docum ent, he said, “ Off the top of my head, I don’t recall what it says ” Discrim ination exists throughout the country, D aniels said, adding, “ I don’t have any answ ers, but it wouldn't m atter if I did when you are dealing with apathetic and indifferent people.” U niversity President Lorene Rogers and Dr. M ichael Hall, history departm ent chairm an, could not be reached for com ­ ment. Begin vows troops won’t move NEW YORK (U P I) — Israeli P rim e M inister M enachem Begin said W ednes­ day that Israel will not withdraw its troops from the West Bank of Jordan or the Gaza Strip after the five-year tran­ sitional period negotiated in the Camp David accords expires. R evertin g to the rh etoric of his h a rd lin e s t a te m e n ts b e fo r e C am p David. Begin also told a cheering crowd of American Jew ish leaders that no A rab f la g w ill e v e r w a v e o v e r Jerusalem again except from the roof of an Arab em bassy. “ I hereby declare the Israeli defense forces w ill stay in Judea, Sam aria (the West B ank) and the Caza Strip to defend our people and m ake sure Jew ish blood is not shed again. I hereby declare they will stay beyond five years, Begin said. r____ ___ o .......................... “ We bring you from Camp David a peace agreem ent with security and with honor,” the 65-year-old Israeli leader told a cheering crowd of m ore than 2,000 people jam m ed in the ballroom of the Americana Hotel “The fram ework we signed ... was actually a peace treaty.” (Related atory, Peg* 3.) His hour-long speech - his first public rem arks since the Camp David sum m it — s e e m e d a im e d a t r e a s s u r in g American Jewish leaders that he had fought valiantly to safeguard Israel s in­ terests and would never sacrifice its security. Perhaps thinking of the opposition by som e Israeli groups to the Camp David accords. Begin also called for Jewish n n i t v m m n la in in e that som e people get unitv. com plaining that som e people get “ cold feet at the first d ifficulty.” “ This is my appeal to you: alw ays let us stand together,” he said. Recalling the negotations at Camp David, he said President Carter and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat had put intense pressure on him to sign a docum ent condemning the acquisition of territory by force. He said he argued with Carter, rem in­ ding him that in the 1967 Six Day War that won for Israel the West Bank “ We w ere ... another holocaust.” threatened with extinction Finally, he said, he won out. “ We refused to give our signature to those w o r d s , ' ' he s a i d , a d d i n g t h a t nevertheless the two accords he did sign lead to perm anent with Sadat could peace. Raymond Zaplatar casts a stony eye on his granite model Wednesday. Kathleen Cabble, Daily Texan Staff Capitol artist’s inspiration Dome 1 fascinates'painter By PRENTISS FINDLAY Dally Texan Staff Sitting bare-chested on the northwest Capitol lawn, Raymond Zaplatar sw irls clean his watercolor brush, raises it dripping from the can of water at his right and flicks the rem aining m oisture at the mid-afternoon heat. in his Carefully m ixing colors on the crack­ ed plate left hand, Zaplatar glances at the Capitol building and back to the ragskin canvas propped before him. “ I’m doing this prim arily because it inspires m e. The change from very in­ tense light up front to the shading at the back of the dom e fascin ates m e ,” he said. Zaplatar has been working on a w ater­ color portrait of the capitol since Sun­ day. “ I’ve been working at art since I was a kid, but I picked up w atercolors last D ecem b er,” he said. Zaplatar, 22, is from Corpus Christi and was a com m ercial sign painter for five years. “ I w as into that trip for five years and didn’t like it. So m any people are into com m ercial art because they re afraid of having no security,' he said. Zaplatar m oved to Austin after retur­ ning from a trip to M exico. He has been in town for three w eeks. “ It got so hot in M exico I had bubble­ shaped blisters on m y legs. But Mexico is good for an artist. I f s inexpensive, the scenery is excellent , and the people have few er hangups. I did a lot of por­ traiture and had a good standard of living,” he said. “ I cam e to Austin for the libraries. I need to study m ore. I also needed to get away from the heat in the Valley, he said. “ I’m in the process of getting my work in som e of the galleries around here. The Parkcrest G allery has ex­ pressed interest in m y work. They take 40 percent, so it increases the price and m akes it difficult to sell your work,” he said. Zaplatar takes a break from his work and does a yoga ex ercise he calls the scorpion. He stands on his elbows a few minutes for relaxation. “The yoga helps my concentration, and my ability to block out noise. My painting benefits from yoga and vice- versa. he said. “ It’s a difficult trip, but I’m trying to earn a living on pure art. Art is about life My experiences with my environ­ ment and the people I m eet are what I try express on the ca n vas,” he added. “ If I hit a dry spell, I can alw ays fall back on sign painting. I m ake eight to ten dollars an hour at it, and can usually m ake enough in a day to last m e a week I can get $75 to $100 for a painting, but you have to be really productive to live only off your painting. I can m ake a quick buck at portaiture and I enjoy it ,’ * he said. “ I'm still experim enting with the physical aspect of getting an im age down After that, you can m ove into your own world ’ he said. “ The height of creativeness is not painting what you see, but what you fe e l,” he said. Abilene wets win battle; war not over yet By United Press International The Texas Suprem e Court Wednesday ruled against Abilene drys and allow ed the Alcoholic B everage Com­ m ission to issue perm its to legalize liquor sales for the first tim e in 77 years in the staid West Texas town. ABC officials within hours issued five perm its — two for sale of m ixed drinks, one for w holesale operations and two for retail beer and wine sales. The sta te ’s highest court said a district judge in Austin had no authority to block the perm its at the drys behest or to rule w ets lost a June 17 local option election on the liquor issue. Justices deliberated less than IO m inutes before ordering D istrict Judge Charles D. M atthews to rescind his order and leave disputes over the election outcom e to be decided in Taylor County courts. “ No motion for rehearing will be entertained.” Chief Justice Joe R. Greenhill announced. E lection contests by w ets and drys are pending in T aylor County, h ow ever, and the ju s tic e s noted Wednesday s ruling does not settle the dispute for good or finally determ ine which side won the m ost ballots. Drys claim ed a narrow victory on the basis of a July IO vote tally by Taylor County com m issioners counting returns from 43 of 44 ballot boxes in the precinct. Wets obtained a court order from D istrict Judge Donald ll Lane of Abilene to force com m issioners to in­ clude the other box in the tally and IO days later were declared winners bv 122 votes - 11,582 to 11.460 Lawyers for proponents of legalizing liquor sa les said com m issioners had no right to throw out one box despite a dispute over whether those voters all reside within the affected precinct. The Supreme Court m ade no ruling on the ballot o u t­ com e but said an Austin judge had no business review ­ ing the Abilene judge's action or tying the hands of the Alcoholic Beverage Com m ission “The only thing w e're concerned with is who under the law should be tending to this, Justice Jack Pope said at one point during the 90-minute open hearing. Lawyers for three opponents of liquor argued unsuccessfully for upholding the Austin judge s ruling that the Abilene judge had no authority to order a second vote canvass. legalizing Assistant Attorney General Max P F lusche urged the court to bar the Austin judge from interfering in the Abilene dispute. “ Neither the attorney general or the Alcoholic B everage Com m ission has any in whether P recinct I goes wet or dry, Flusche said That issue should be litigated in Taylor County.” interest ABC o f f i c i a l s e s tim a te d th e r e are 2ft p e r m it live granted in addition applications pending Wednesday to Terk Distributing Co., Skinny s, Inc.. Cir­ cle K G rocery, Outpost and the Sound Barrier. the 24. thursday C lo u d y... Partly cloudy skies are forecast Thursday, with a cnance oi thunderstorms in the afternoon. More weather, Page 23. Volleyball... The Longhorn volleyball team won its second straight game Wednesday, defeating Southwestern. Story, Page 13. Learning ... Crenshaw Athletic Club is not your average kindergarten. Physical coordination and group interaction are the primary courses taught at this school. Story and photos are on page ia i i . v T E X A N □ Thursday, September 21, 1978 i COFFEE SHOP a. Congress at Live Oak OPEN 24 HOU RS Special Hamburger, French Fries & a Medium Coke *1.19 SSS., offer expires Sept. 29, 1978 Take out orders available 443-0321 * I* Q U A L I T Y N E V E R L O O K E D SO GOOD Riristee FOOTGEAR 22nd & Guadalupe - On the Drag L A . You con M V * a Ufo by boing a blood pla sm a It only takos donor. I '6 hour* and you can d o n a t e e v e r y 7 2 hours. - ” -$6.00 C A S H ™ $6.00 DOLLARS CASH! ' I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC | P h o n e 4 7 7 - 3 7 3 5 1 S I O W e st 2 9 th lf you bring this ad in w ith you, you w ill receive a $1 .OO bonus after your first d o n a ­ Y o u w i l l r e c e i v e $ 5 .0 0 each time you donate. tion. Hours: Mon. & Thurs. I A.M.-6:30 p.m. Tho*. A Fri. I A.M.-2:30 P.M. I I I I I I I I I I I I I J r» 5 r» r* <> r1 } r> r EUC reconsiders nuclear overrun The E le c t r ic U tility Commission changed its position Wednesday and voted not to recommend a $47 million overrun on the South Texas Nuclear Pro­ ject included in the 1978-83 C ap ital Im p ro vem en ts Program. EU C had recommended earlier this summer that City Council fund the $47 million but asked to recon­ sider the motion when it was learned that another overrun was going to be an­ nounced in October and that the coal-fired Fayette Power Project needed ap­ proximately $31 million in additional funds The C IP . the c i t y ’s budget for major projects, is scheduled to be con­ sidered for adoption Thurs- day by C i t y Council. Included in the C IP is a request by the electric d e p a r t m e n t fo r $171 million in bonding authori­ ty — which includes the ad­ ditional funding needed for Fayette and the nuclear overrun. In addition to E U C ’s recommendation on the STN P overrun, the com­ mission recommended that the council, in setting up the bond election for the e l e c t r i c d e p a rtm e n t, separate on the ballot the Fayette Project and the remaining general system improvements. By separating Fayette out from the rest of the electric funds, the commis­ sion hoped to assure that funds are used specifically for Fayette and not on any other electric item. Union profits from Gras The Texas Tavern made ap­ proximately $4,500 from the recently held Friday Gras, Texas Union Director Frank Bartow told the Union’s board of directors Wednesday. The board also discussed the food services program, space allocations, Union fees in comparison with other un­ iversities and the possibilities of c o n t in u in g the f i l m p rogram of the fo r m e r Students’ Association . The Texas Tavern made twice as much as a regular Friday night during Friday G r a s , P e g g y P a r k e r , chairwom an of the board, said. She said all the liquor had been consumed by l l p m. More all-night events are planned soon, possibly at Halloween. Jim Taylor, the new direc­ tor of food services at the Union, reported some of the changes he wants to see in the food service such as the changing from the use of plasticware to china. The service is in the midst of moving away from mostly package foods toward cooking from “ scratch.” In other action, the board appointed a com m ittee to research possible solutions to the problem of the film p ro g ra m of the fo r m e r Students’ Association. At this time, the student activities of­ fice is continuing to support the program . — — 'N YOU CAN HAVE THAT LASTING IMPRESSION... w ith a m in im u m of m a in te n a n c e hairstyle from First Im pressions. Inv est a n ho u r w ith our creative co nsultants a n d see h o w easily you can look your best every day. First Im p re ssio n s 1 01 0 W . M a rtin Luther K in g 10*6 T u e sd a y th ro u gh S a tu r d a y 4 7 2 -5 2 7 0 SCAR working on association Stokes says decision hinges on fighting apathy The decision to bring back a restructured student govern­ ment lies with the students them selves, J i m Stokes, o r g a n i z e r of S t u d e n t s Concerned About Representa­ tion. said at a Wednesday meeting. “ Apathy among students is the thing we are going to have to fight on campus,” Stokes said. However, he added, " I think we can bring student govern­ ment back. A lot of people who were against it wanted the student government to start from scratch.” Work by SCAR has already begun, with the restructuring to concentrate in three main areas. SCAR w ill attempt to rebuild the Students’ Associa- t io n by s t r e n g t h e n i n g programs and appointments, by exerting a better lobbying effort and by encouraging a better relationship between students and faculty. A restructured constitution, which Stokes describes as ‘‘by no means perfect,” is another item put forward by SCAR in an effort to build a better government. The constitution is expected to go before a committee for more work. Mike DeStefano, an elected senator of the Students Association before its abolish­ ment, believes a petition with 3,500 signatures would be re­ quired to solidify a base for a new government. “ We have circulated around dorms and the Greeks, and it looks good. After we get a referendum, then we can start a good campaign,” DeStefano said. SCAR w ill work to display a booth at some area of the campus for opinions concer­ ning the Students’ Association and its rebirth. Stokes added the primary goal of the booth is to publicize intentions of beginning a new student government and eventually to hand out petitions to gain stu­ dent confidence. Football season is here again and. with the Saturday aternoon NCAA g a m e s and th e S u n d a y N F L doubleheaders, most fans find all the ac­ tion they want on their television sets. But some people aren’t content to just watch the games. They need to have a personal interest in certain contests and because of that need they often bet money on games. Now if some of you have found your interest waning in those weekend spec­ tacles and you’d like to wager a little money on a game or two, just to make things interesting, of course, you should remember a few things. First, N E V E R bet more than you can afford to lose. Even though this sounds hardly profound, many people every year must learn this sad but true fact of life. If you think you’ve got a sure thing and you want to bet a bundle, DON’T — unless you’ve paid the rent and have enough food in the cupboard to last until the end of the month. Sure things always have a way of going awry when you don’t have the money to lose. Another simple but often forgotten rule is that one should A L W A Y S have enough money to pay oft the bet. It s true that one never bets unless he feels he’s going to win. but obviously many people lose because there are so many bookies spending Easters in Jam aica. That brings up another point. Betting on football games in Texas is a crime and so, when you place a bet, you become part of the crim inal class. Although Mark Twain said the only true crim inal class in America is Congress, bookies can be considered part of the crim inal element. Being part of the crim inal element, bookies are capable of ripping the web­ bing between each finger if a bettor fails to pay up when he loses. This implied threat keeps most bettors in line. Bob Dvlan was quoting a bookie when he said. “ To live outside the law you must be honest.” Why people bet is as big a mystery as who’s going to beat the spread each week. Some sociologists believe that gamblers are masochistic because the odds are always against them, unless they happen to be bookies. Remember that when you place your next bet. But, all in all, betting on football games must be popular because there are very few bookies whose children are going to school hungry. Most people who bet say they do so because the thrill of winning something is as much fun as watching the game. The idea that someone w ill pay you money if you happen to guess right on a football game’s outcome lures many people into committing this crim inal act. One friend of mine says he bets on football games because he likes the high he gets when the game is close and he’s sweating out the end. “ It beats dope and it’s almost as good as sex,” he’s been known to shout gleefully after he’s won a close one. He’s also been heard on oc­ casion to whimper for days as he eats celery and peanut butter after losing a couple of close games that left him broke. “ When it comes right down to cheap thrills, you can’t beat the fun you get from watching some Austrian geek kick a field goal that wins a big bet for you,” he says. But he hastened to add that gambling is a sin and a crime. “ It s wrong, but it s fun,” he sighed. at The University of Texas at Austin, is d ITVxas^sVudonl Building A t Kill made in T SP Building 3 200 ( 471-5244) and display advertising in T S P Building e S f f i . ' S u S S m u t t e a n. Building 2 122, ar at th, news laboratory [Communication Inquiries concerning delivery and classified a d o r n in g Should ^ , " 'T h ^ a lio n a l adv, rosing , ,.,,rcsontal,«e iil The. Advertising Services to Students. 6330 N Pulaski. Chicago. Ill . “0646 <’oirnm «»c«U«» -«l The I>.11\ Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Tunes N e w s Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the .he Texas Daily Newspaper Association, and Southwest Journalism Congress American Newspaper Publishers Association CoDvricht 197H Texas Student Publications. Copyright 1T h k I)A1IiY t e x a n SU BSC R IPT IO N R A T ES ONE S E M E S T E R (FALL OR S P R IN G ) 1978-79 Pickt*d up on campus - basic student Picked up on campus - U T faculty staff Picked up on campus - general public By mail in Texas Bv mail outside Texas within I S A TWO S E M E S T E R S i F A L L AND SP R IN G i 1978-79 Picked up on campus - I Picked up on campus - general public Bv mail in Texas Bv mail. outside Texas within I S A I faculty staff SI A IM ER SESSION 1979 Picked up on campus - I T students faculty staff Picked up on campus - general public Bs mail in Texas Bs mail o u t s i d e Texas within I S A Send orders and address changes to r E X AS STU I) Austin Texas 78712. or to TSP Building. 13.200 $ I 00 400 9 50 10 00 CT, ...- v t p i h i i c ATKINS P O Box pi in mo 146440 ............................................ .t • N( „ I 65 165 7 AO 14 50 1550 330 15 00 26.50 28 50 FAST CASH in less th a n a m inute We LOAN on or BUY a n y t h in g of value. 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UHlvwsjJvn'OP A Longhorn Tradition Since 1896 ENGINEERING STUDENTS HAV IN G CALCULATOR PROBLEMS? t u t o r i n g I n d i v i d u a l i n m o s t a v a i l a b l e co u rse s. e n g in e e r in g f i n a n c i a l V e t e r a n s , a i d s , a n d m i n o r i t y s tu d e n ts e n g in e e r in g free a re e lig ib le for a ssistan ce . T u to rs n e e d e d for e n g in e e rin g r e l a t e d a n d a n d m a t h p hysics courses. $ 4 .0 6 per hour. Call or come by for complete details Taylor H all 150J 4 7 1 -7 1 1 2 EC J 2.4 4 7 1 -5 9 5 4 Follow the Ivy League Tradition in a Trench Coat Always a great classic ... traditional trench coat with zip out pile lining. Poplin that's water-resistant and comes in cashew and camel, sizes 7 to ll, 72 OO. N e w ly Rem odeled Bikers H e ad q u arte rs 5 0 5 W . 2 3rd St. P rom pt Exp ert Repair Service Tfncoe n&iJUf THE ENGINEERING TUTORIAL PROGRAM V IS A A M a *te rC h a rge W elcom e Ask about our tim e paym ent plan* a service of Pi S ig m a Pi e n g in e e r in g Society 2406 G U A D A L U P E O N - T H E - D R A G Thursday, September 21, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 Hussein gives serious thought to agreements Jordanian, Saudi Arabian support vital for overall Middle East settlement jo in the d ir e c t E ast settlement. AMMAN, Jordan (U PI) — King Hussein of J o r ­ dan agreed Wednesday to give serious considera­ tion to the Camp David peace accords, State I I I D epartm ent spokesm an Hodding C arter reported. He said Hussein had first bombarded Secretary of State Cyrus Vance with questions. The meeting with Hussein was described as the first “ crucial phase” of a campaign to win over the skeptical Arab world to the Camp David agreem ents. Vance’s Amman mission was dif­ ficult but he had powerful persuaders — arm s and money. Carter described the talks as “ thorough, friend­ ly, helpful and useful.” He said Vance had not ex­ pected to receive a clear Jordanian answer this early in his contacts and added, “ It was clear King Hussein and his government are giving the entire m atter their serious consideration.” Carter said there was no clear indication after the first two-hour session between the secretary of state and the m oderate Jordanian monarch w h eth er A m m an m ig h t negotiations with Israel. Even before Vance arrived, both Jordan and Saudi Arabia, two of the m oderate Arab states, criticized the Camp David agreem ents and the Saudis said they did not consider them a “ framework for peace” in the Middle E ast. There w as a growing swell of opposition in other Arab nations. Carter said the status of Jeru salem , which Jo r ­ dan and other Arabs want freed from Israeli oc­ cupation which took place in the 1967 Middle E a st war, had come up in the discussions. He said the “ central” importance of the issue to the Arabs was well known, but he declined to go into detail on how prominently it figured in the talks. Winning the support of Jordan and Saudi Arabia, where Vance travels Thursday, was seen a s vital in U.S. efforts to assure Camp David produced not m erely a separate Egyptian-Israeli peace but the basis for an eventual overall Middle CARTEE, SPEAKING in Atlantic City, N J , reported new progress toward an Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty. He said Egyptian President Anwar Sadat had agreed to immediate talks at the m inisterial level, with American participation, on such a treaty. Israeli Prim e Minister Menachem Begin, in a statement reminiscent of his hardline statem ents before the Camp David meeting, told Jew ish leaders in New York that Israel stood at a crossroads on the way to peace but warned he was ready to defend his homeland again st any enemies. “ I hereby declare the Israeli defense forces will stay in Judea, Sam aria (the West Bank) and the Gaza Strip to defend our people and make sure Jewish blood will not be shed again ,” Begin said. Begin said he had refused to sign any document condemning the acquisition of territory by force in spite of intense pressure by Carter. He added he would never allow the division of the Holy City of Jerusalem . THE VANCE-HUSSEIN talks took place in the m odern san d sto n e-an d -m arb le H ash im iyah P alace on the outskirts of Jordan The palace is on a hilltop facing the Jordanian capital on one side and Jeru salem on the other. After the first session of talks, Hussein and Queen Noor, the form er American socialite L isa Halaby, hosted a dinner for the American party. Queen Noor and her father, former Pan American Airways chairman Najeeb Halaby, are longtime friends of the Vances. Vance is also understood to be prepared to tell Hussein that the whole relationship between Jo r ­ dan and the United States will be affected by Jo r ­ dan’s decision. Jordan buys American weapons, receives U.S. m ilitary assistance and security support assistance, which helps finance the Jo rd a­ nian arm ed forces. IN THE PAST, King Hussein was also given special funds, funneled through the CIA, for a per­ sonal bodyguard and security. C a r te r m a d e h is d is c lo s u r e ab o u t the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty talks while speak­ ing at a political luncheon in New Jersey. Under the Camp David accords, the Egyptian-Israeli peace negotiations would not take place until the Israeli Knesset voted whether to remove Israeli settlements from the Sinai Peninsula. But Carter said Sadat offered to begin im­ mediate talks when the two leaders spoke Tues­ day. “ I asked him if we could start immediately deciding locations for the peace treaty discussions and he said ‘y es,’” Carter said. “ Can we start with our own am bassadors and American the thoughts and discussions already taken place,” Carter said, “ and he said, ‘Y e s.’ representatives, analyzing all “ So, we’ll commence this without delay,” Carter said. - C k Inflation soars Economic news mixed; prices, GNP figures rise WASHINGTON (U PI) — The nation’s economy grew at a more robust pace between April and June than originally e s­ timated, the government reported Wednesday, but inflation turned in its worst quarterly perform ance since 1974. The Commerce Departm ent’s mixed bag of economic news showed that the administration was on target in its growth pro­ jections. But it also demonstrated clearly that inflation, called the nation’s No. I dom estic ill by the administration, w as cutting deeply into income gains made by Am ericans this year. AS 'PRESIDENT CARTER was speaking about inflation to a steelworkers' convention in Atlantic City, N .J., the department announced that the G ross National Product index that m easures price changes increased at an l l percent annual rate, compared with the 10.7 percent rate estim ated last month and the IO per­ cent level reported in July. On the brighter side, the report also said the economy grew at an 8.7 percent annual rate during the second quarter, con­ siderably above the 8 percent rate reported last month before all economic data were assembled. The jump in inflation was the largest during any single quarter since a 12.6 percent increase in the fourth quarter of 1974, the department said. The administration has projected that inflation, a s m easured by the GNP price index, would increase only 6.5 percent for the full year. This forecast is now in serious jeopardy. CARTER TOLD the steelworkers his new inflation-fighting weapons will be unveiled soon. “ What we do will be fa ir,” Carter said. “ It will not penalize labor or any other group in our society.’ “ At the sam e time, it will be tough,” he said. The departm ent’s revised growth figures for the second quarter showed that the 8.7 percent rise in the G ross National Product was the largest quarterly increase since the 9.3 percent advance during the first quarter of 1976. THE GNP MEASURES the output of the nation’s goods and services and is considered to be the m ost accurate gauge of U .S. economic performance. The administration had predicted economic growth during in the 8-9 percent range. figu res m eant that governm ent econom ic the second quarter would be W ednesday’s planners were right on target. Those sam e strategists say that the economy should grow at a 3.5 to 4 percent rate during the second half of the year and finish 1978 with a 4.1 percent growth rate. The GNP during the second quarter stood at $2.09 trillion, up $4.3 billion from the estim ate issued a month ago. The departm ent also reported that business after-tax profits increased by $18.4 billion, 18 percent above the first quarter. Budget: Projected deficit well below original Carter projections WASHINGTON (U PI) - House and Senate negotiators used an age-old prin­ ciple of peacemaking Wednesday to arrive at a $487.5 billion 1979 federal budget. They fudged. The agreed budget for fiscal year 1979, which begins Oct. I, now needs final approval of each house. It would carry a $38.8 billion deficit, far below the $60.5 billion originally e s­ tim ated by President Carter for that fiscal year, $10 billion below C arter’s revised estim ate and $12 billion below the deficit in a target 1979 budget Congress approved last May. Much of the reduction com es from re-estimating the cost of program s. The House wanted to make room in the budget to distribute $2 billion to state and local governments for public jobs and works designed to create bolster local economies — on top of $6 billion allocated for this purpose in re­ cent years. THE SENATE insisted there be no ad­ ditional money for this, saying it w as an anti-recession program which has serv­ ed its purpose and now would be in­ flationary. For the past week negotiators were deadlocked on this one issue. The con­ ference was on the verge of disbanding and handing the dispute back to each house. Congress’ budget process, by which it has taken control of the budget from the executive branch in recent years, w as in jeopardy. Then negotiators rem em bered a tac­ tic which one U.S. diplomat used to call “ constructive am biguity.” THEY ADOPTED the sam e budget figures and agreed each house will in­ terpret them differently. The budget will contain an ambiguous $720 million. The House will say this can be used for public works. The Senate will say it is for various community and regional development program s including Sm all Business Ad­ ministration disaster loans. This leaves the public works issue still to be decided by the two houses in im­ legislation . The budget plem enting m erely m akes room for program s, which then must be enacted. Actually, every budget contains even than this because more “ fudge room only its overall totals for spending, revenues and the deficit are binding. Decisions in the budget on how to divide spending among different purposes are only guidelines. A lone man walks across New York’s graflltlcovered West Side Highway. The abnadoned lower Manhaatan roadway has become a giant outdoor gallery where the works of urban artists are displayed. Urban scrawl Striking Connecticut teachers jailed By United Press International Sixty-six Bridgeport, Conn., teachers who told a judge they would rather be jailed than be in their classroom s got their wish Wednesday and were ordered to join 182 colleagues serving jail term s for contempt of court. School strik es ended in Tacom a, Wash., and York, Pa., but little progress was reported in talks aimed at ending m ajor strikes in Cleveland, Chicago, Seattle and Bridgeport. A UPI tally showed walkouts by teachers in a dozen states idled 450,000 pupils — including more than 150,000 on college and junior college cam puses. AT BRIDGEPORT, Superior Court Judge Ja m e s Henebry sent 66 more striking teachers to jail for defying his back-to-work order. So far, 248 strikers have been jailed for defying the injunc­ tion. t e a c h e r s r e f u s e d Appearing in court in sm all groups, the to p u r g e themselves of Henebry s contempt cita­ tion by returning to work and chose, in­ stead. to join their jailed colleagues. Negotiators for the Bridgeport school board and the teachers’ union scheduled a meeting with a federal mediator in Hartford Wednesday. Striking teachers in Pennsylvania’s York City School District returned to work, opening classroom s for the city s 8,000 pupils for the first time this school year. A tentative contract agreement was reached Tuesday night. TEACHERS’ STRIKES idled 38,000 pupils in nine other Pennsylvania dis­ tricts. Two strikes ended in Washington state — one by court order and another by a contract agreement. In T acom a, 216 U niversity P la ce D istrict teachers accepted a new con­ tract and returned to classes. Everett, Wash., teachers returned to school under a court order that mandated $100-a-day fines for teachers who failed to return to work. But school officials said no progress had been made in contract talks that kept 55,000 students out of c lasses in Seattle — Washington’s largest school district. CONTRACT TALKS continued under court order in Cleveland, where striking teachers and non-teaching personnel have closed c lassro o m s to 101,000 students, and Dayton, where substitutes and adm inistrators manned classroom s for 37,000 students. No progress was reported. Chicago’s city colleges were shut down for a fourth week. School officials said they would cancel the fall sem ester for 110,000 students if teachers do not return to classes by Monday. Strikes also halted c lasses at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti and at two com­ munity colleges in the Detroit area. O ther s t r i k e s w ere rep o rted in Illinois, California, M assachusetts, New York, New Je rsey , Maine, Michigan and Minnesota. M a rk e t suffers seventh straight loss NEW YORK (UPI) - Stocks fell for the seventh straight day Wednesday when the Federal R eserve tightened credit and dashed a bargain-hunting rally attempt. Gambling issues tumbl­ ed in the active trading. The Dow Jo n es industrial average, up more than 5 points at one time, fell 4.41 points to 857.16, bringing its seven-day loss total to 50.58 points. It fell 8.58 points Tuesday. The e a r l y r a l l y a t t e m p t collapsed when the Fed, whose Open Market Committee met Tuesday, tightened credit by hik­ ing federal funds rates V* point to 8 Vz percent. DOW JONIS AVERAGE 30 Industrials Clos© at 8 5 7 .1 6 4.41 I i 'x Administration calls for halt to atrocities •1 9 7 8 New York Tim es WASHINGTON — The Carter adm inistration called Wednesday on N icaragua’s President Anastasio Somoza to order his national guard to cease reported atrocities against unarmed civilians in the strife that has beset the country since late August. A strongly worded expression of concern by the ad­ ministration was conveyed Wednesday morning to Somoza by U.S. Am bassador Mauricio Solaun, a State Department spokesman said. The spokesman added that the United States had also pressed Inter- A m erican Human R ights C om m ission of alleged atrocities in N icaragua. investigation” by for “ urgent the THE SPOKESMAN, Tom R eston, said the ad ­ ministration had based its concern on television and press reports of national guard atrocities against civilians during street fighting in several Nicaraguan cities. Both television and newspapers have carried reports in the last few days of sum m ary executions of JKJ I t O A l l V - - news capsules young civilian m ales in cities held by the rebels for a time — such as Leon. Reston added that Somoza had “ denied that atrocities have been com m itted” in a communication to the U.S. government. The American m essage relayed to Somoza was said to have paralleled a statem ent read by Reston at a noon press briefing. Restores statem ent said: We are deeply concerned by mounting reports of atrocities against un­ arm ed civilians by personnel of the Nicaraguan national guard.” The sa id sta te m e n t th ere w ere “ in c re a sin g allegations of such a c ts’ by the guard in its cam paign to quell uprisings over the last ll days. And the statem ent added: “ The government of the United States urges the government of N icaragua to conduct its own urgent in­ vestigations and to discipline and control its m ilitary forces in order to prevent further bloodshed and suf­ fering.’’ RESTON NOTED that the Inter-American Human R ights C om m ission, an organ of the 25-member Organization of American States, was scheduled to visit Nicaragua beginning Oct. 5, and he suggested that the its arrival date hemisphere group might advance because of the urgency of the situation. It was the second day in a row that the Carter ad­ ministration had addressed Somoza directly. On Tues­ day a State Department spokesman issued a statem ent urging the Nicaraguan government and opposition forces “ to avoid lethal actions again st unarm ed civilians” and to accept a cease-fire in the civil war, as well as mediation. The Nicaraguan government con­ tended Wednesday that rebel actions against govern­ ment forces had been quashed, and apparently the Carter administration believes this to be the case. Consequently the State Department disbanded Wednes­ day afternoon its special Nicaraguan working group that was set up last Friday to monitor reports of fighting in the Central American country. FBI m en disciplined a fter JFK killing WASHINGTON (UPI) - The FB I secretly disciplined 17 supervisors and inspectors shortly after John F. Kennedy’s assassination for failing to list Lee Harvey Oswald as a national security risk, a former F B I inspec­ tor testified Wednesday. Retired Inspector Jam es H. Gale told the House Assassinations Com­ mittee he had been ordered by FB I Director J . Edgar Hoover the day after Kennedy’s death to look into how the agency had fulfilled its respon­ sibilities toward Oswald. Hoover expected a special commission would be set up to investigate the assassination and wanted his agency to be ready. The Warren Com­ mission, established a few days later, concluded the FBI had not satisfac­ torily coordinated its information about Oswald with the Secret Service. The commission was not told of Hoover’s internal investigation and dis ciplinary action. Legionnaire's Disease con firm ed in Dallas SANTA F E , N M. (UPI) — The state’s chief medical officer said Wednesday his office was attempting to contact 72 New Mexico residents who attended a Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in Dallas last month. Health officials have co n firm ed th at two persons who attended the con­ vention suffered from L eg io n n aire s Disease. Six other cases were suspected. , “ We are calling the New Mexico residents who attended the convention to determine whether they have had pneumonia or similar symptoms, Jonathan Mann said. “ We have so far contacted about half and have determined that none of those are ill.” Mann said he hoped the remainder of those who attended the convention could be contacted by Thursday. “ We are urging anyone who attended the convention to call us or to con­ tact their physician,’ ’ Mann said. P a g e 4 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thurs day, Septem ber 21, J_978_ Kissinger reflects on U.S. policy By Tom Wicker NEW VORK - F orm er S ecretary of State Henry Kissinger recently deplored what he called the loss of nerve et the establishment that ran foreign policy rn then con­ the post-war period and spicuously failed lr. a w ith Sen D P ■ c o n v e rsa tio n Moynihan. D-N Y for tra n s c rib e d Public Opinion m agazine Kissinger went on to say \ letr.am in “ In every confrontation with the Soviet Union we could have had the up­ per hand. We had them defeated ir. t h e n a e d e f e a : e a A n g o l a a n d o u rs e lv e s Kissinger obviously was referring to 1975 when three Angolan forces were com peting for control a tte r independence the FNLA. led by Holden Roberto and long supported by the United States I N i . A under the direction of Jonas Sa vim bi which also received some Am erican backing in 1975. and the MPL.A. .ed by Agostinho Neto and arm ed by the Soviet Union. from Portugal — The NIP LA ultimately trium phed and organized the government rn power to­ day. But that cam e about only afte r powerful Cuban military intervention. which threw back a South African strike force supporting Savimbi. and a fte r the U S Senate on Dec 19. 1975. approved legislation preventing further co v e n aid to any of the forces in .Angola Is Kissinger correct, then, that rn .Angola the United States “ defeated itself" in a battle it should have w on' A remarkable am ole by N’athanie. Davis, the assistant secretary of state for African affairs in 1975. suggests that if so the reason was bad policy choices by the Ford administration, not a failure ct Amencan nerve W riting issu e of in the current Foreign Affairs. Davis offers strong evidence not only that at no point did we the Cubans or the have the MPLA in Angola, but also Soviets ‘d efeated that a 132 m illion CIA effort on behalf of the R oberto and Savimbi forces was un­ d e rta k e r. by P r e s id e n t F o ra an a Kissinger only afte r strong w arnings from Davis and others th at it probably would not work and m ight we'/, m ake m atters w orse against covert m ilitary D a v is c h a ir e d , fo r e x a m p le a National Security Council Task Force that recom m ended on June on .Angola 13 1975 in­ tervention Such a step the report saia re so u rc e s ana would co m m it U S prestige in a situation over which the nation had little control and where the it would cause outcome was doubtful increased the Soviet involvement by Union in response, it would mr. a higr. risk of exposure with adverse ettect on American relations with the MPLA in the event that group should come to power, and with a num ber of African and Third World states and it would n e c e s s a r ily .ev e. of in c re a s e violence with no guarantee of accom ­ panying success the from the m ilita ry The Task Force recom m ended in­ stead. a diplom atic option — inten­ sive private efforts with P ortugal, in­ terested African governm ents and the the A ngo.an Soviet Union to sh ift stru g g le the to political arena, where the Task Force believed the Roberto-Savim bi :actions, rath er than S o n et arm s, would prove dom inant But at the direction of the National Security Council staff, the T ask F o rc e re c o m m e n d a tio n w as presented to the NSC as only one of three options the others were a “ hands- off" policy or covert m ilitary interven­ tion Davis pressed his case with S ecretary Kissinger in num erous m em oranda But th e in th e p re s id e n t and the end chose covert then $14 million, secretary intervention anyway — first Sc m illion in guns and cash for the R o b erto and Savim bi finally $32 forces, million before the Senate called a halt At that point six m onths after the Task F orce report every one of its dire predictions as to the results of m ilitary intervention had com e true What might have happened had the diplom atic op- tior. been chosen will never be known, but Davis still thinks we would have done b etter at '.east to try that other course troops in Angola. D avis As for w hether the intervention was a m a mr reason for the later arriv al of Cuban is cautious but he does observe that ma- j o t interventions, by Zaire. Cuba and South Africa, all took place in the last half of 1975. and he concludes that “ the answ er seem s to be that the escalations m u t u a l l y c o u n t e r - p r o d u c e d escalations Bv Decem ber 1975. in any case, when the Ford adm inistration was calling for f u r th e r in te rv e n tio n and sco ld in g Congress for its lack of resolution and nerve which Kissinger apparently still was doing three years later in the Public Opinion tran scrip t . it was clear. Davis w rites, that a large and rapidly es­ calating m ilitary and financial com m it­ ment would have been necessary to have any hope of blocking an MPLA vic­ tor)’. Six months earlier, he had warned Kissinger that if we go in. we m ust go rn quickly, m assively and decisively enough to avoid the tem pting, gradual, that characterized m utual escalation But it was just that “ tem p­ Vietnam course that Henry Kissinger and ting G erald F ord th at Congress blocked, and for the lack of which Kissinger now com plains that to follow, tried we defeated ourselves in .Angola e 1978 New York Times The American dilemma, localized By G+rw Burd Michael Hurd wrote a provocative and pertinent column (Sept. 7. “ Buildings Don t Slake Reputations with a thought­ ful invitation to “ department heads, deans and the like to “hear your side of the story" on “ what have you done lately on “ improving the plight of minorities and m inority program s here.” I respond as one of “the like Some time back I created a new undergraduate course on J359) to enlarge the m inority concept “ Media and Minorities from racial ethnic groups to sex include age (youth, aged (women, singles, gays), class and lifestyle counter-culture, blue-collar> and the handicapped (physical and m e n u ’. . but this fall the c u s s had to be cancelled because it lacked minimum registration. My J321 course. “ In terpretation of l r - ban P ro b lem s/’ dealing with city crises, has failed to ne: registrants for several years. .And my new R eporting Minority Affairs” (J393) may face the sam e fate When I sought to incor­ porate this curriculum fru stratio n into my April IO Daily Texan piece on “ C om m unicating Urban R ealities." it w as censored out as “ self-serving Like others, my agenda also includes research paper> publications on minorities and work with m inority m edia in the community. This includes the National Minority R ecruitm ent Committee of Sigma D e lu Chi. the Com m ittee on the Status ct Women in the Association for Education in Journalism , student adviser for the National Federation of the Blind and upcoming minority recruitment for the Graduate Studies Office Courses and recruitment matter, but cam pus and state a t­ mosphere may be as important The recent d ep artu re of two black professors (one from the School of Com m unication add­ ed to the low morale of those of us trying to rem ind the U niver- sitv that we are in the center of the huge black and Chicano “ belt” of the Sunbelt festering with problem s in education. poverty, prejudice and racial inequalities Such alarm ist views are quieted, however, when public boosters. Uke the state trea su rer, recentlv announced the $130 million in state interest funds and b o asted’that "w e are the m ost fortunate people on the face of the earth We live in a Sunbelt state and have a very healthy economy N evertheless. Texas rem ains one of the poorer states and Austin and I T are in danger as I wrote April IO of becoming m ore isolated and irrelev an t in this urbanized state with increasing m inorities U niversities can help m inorities gain access to the respon- s I b 1111 v of dem ocracy and gain control over their lives instead of rem aining dependent on the establishm ent P erhaps as im por­ tant is that others becom e sensitive to m inority needs, unless we consider the public university to be in the business of p rotec­ ting citizens from social and political realities. How rep resen tativ e is the cam pus of the state s m an) publics0 Few dark skins appear other than from suntans. Students and faculty often feel alienated from decision-making Women and singles still face d epartm ental prejudice Sexual a t­ tacks increase Adult education declines Will the universitv in its search for status become a university of one c lass0 first class system How sad th at som e m ight see these questions as disruptive, disloyal, activist and threatening to the and high academ ic standards when historically, m inorities have been our reservoir of strength D iversity of cultural pluralism is feared, but as part one of the earlier m ajorities, the WASPS White. Anglo-Saxon P ro testan ts my fam ily has been in Am erica 200 years but I welcome the strength of m inorities to the chores, rew ards and enhanced reputation of public educa­ tion Gene B u r d is an a s s oc i at e p r o f e s s o r o f j o u r n a l i s m ac- :i e in minority p ro g ra m s on c a m p u s . Political atrocities plague Iran By Farid Zablhl On Friday. Sept 8. the shah imposed martial Law in Iran It covers the capital Tehran and l l cities Ab a d a n . I s f a h a n . T a b r i z . G o m . Mashhad. G hazvin. K a r a j. A hvaz. Shiraz Kazeroon and J ah rom the following Within two days after m artial law was decreed, thousands w ere killed and manv thousands wounded on the stre e ts by the »hah s army Many prom inent op­ position leaders have been a rre ste d The mam a] law is to last for six months, and a curfew from dusk to dawn has been imposed G atherings of more than two persons are illegal Strict news censorship has been im ­ posed All newly formed political p ar­ ties and civil liberties associations have been shut down All newly established civilian courts have been dism antled and military tribunals re instituted The Mehrabad airport rn T ehran, all public transportation, and vital services such as ambulances have been taken over by the military governor Under martial law, the shah has un­ leashed sweeping brutality and m urder throughout the country force, On Sept. 8. during the early hours of ■the day. the shah s troops fired on ■peaceful gatherings at Meidan-e-Edam • M e i d a n - e - S h a h b a z . M e id a n - e - Khorassan. Narmack. G haytarieh and Meidan-e-Jaleh. killing hundreds of un­ armed demonstrators J The Sept. 9 issue of the Guard.an (England) reports. “ In a bruta. display of m ilitary troops and small tanks opened fire at 9:20 a rn yesterday in M eidan-e-Jaleh at a spot where between 5.000 and 6.000 young people had gathered for a peaceful demonstra­ tion against the shah Men. women anc voting children ran screaming They re jailing us. thev're killing us On the sam e day. troops fired into a crowd of 5 OOO in front of the Iranian parhamen . mowing down scores of other vlctim * Killings also took place in smaller towns In Jahrom . 60 to 70 people were reported killed On Sept 9, the second day of the m a r­ tial law. the New \ o r k New W orlds Evans Johnson reported from Tehran “ In a cem etery 18 m iles from the city, weeping m ourners searched for the bodies of relatives killed in the fighting Friday that many children were among the dead It was reported “ One am bulance driver reports that he had to a transported 60 corpses m assive burial site south of the city. and one co rresp o n d en t re p o rted seeing m others with babies in their arm s shot dead ” By F riday night Sept 9 . at Behesht- e-Zahra, a cem etery south of Tehran. 3.- 897 bodies, all m urdered by the shah s troops on the streets, were received tor burial Four hundred w ere women The m ilitary governm ent refuses to allow the relativ es of the victim s to identify the bodies In addition, eyew itnesses report th at there have been cases in which several bodies w ere pned up and burned by the arm y com m andoes Some Tehran hospitals also issued death certificates for the victim s of the m artial law The figures given are as follows B azarganan Hospital. 600. 25- S hahnvar Hospital. 13. Jaieh H ospital, 6: Sma Hospital 140 Sevom-e-Sha aban Hospital. 20 B ahadon Hospital. IOO The shah returned to power through a CIA coup in 1953 Since then, thousands of people have been sum m arily ex­ ecuted by his firing squads More than 300.000 people have been in and out of prison in this period SA\ AK the shah > notorious secret-pohce force, was es­ in 1957 with W ashington> tablished direct assistance It is responsible for the m ost barbaric to rtu res, resulting in countless deaths and injuries Accor­ ding to Amnesty International s Annual the total num ber of Report for 1974-75 political prisoners reported at tim es is anything throughout the year 1975 from 25.000 to 100.000 ' M artin Ennals. secretary-general of A m nesty In ter­ national, reports rn the introduction to this book that Iran has the “ highest ra te and a of death penalties in the world “ history of is beyond belief to rtu re which Unlike the rhetoric of the present ad­ m inistration of the United States on human rights, it supports the shah s dic­ tatorial rule Since the beginning of the m ass m ovem ent against repression a few months ago. it has declared the willingness to send troops to put down anti-shah m ass uprisings As the Aug IT. 1978. issue of the Los Angeles Times reports, “ two I S officials have said that the current am bassador. William Sullivan, who served as am bassador to Laos during the Vietnam war. is con­ tinuing to urge the C arter ad m in istra­ tion to m aintain its all-out support for the shah If that support is continued and if the intensifying hatred of the shah am ong I r a n ’s M oslem c le rg y m e n , professional classes, form er politicians and students produces arm ed rebellion against the Peacock Throne, we will be faced again with the prospect of the shah s overthrow S ecretary of Defense Harold Brown already has been discuss­ disp atch of a p ­ ing propriate U S forces to the scene the P ersian Gulf and 100.000 U S troops are being trained for possible intervention in the Gulf. P resident C arter also has talked about having quickly deployable forces — air. land and sea. available for this and other contingencies in support of friends, the possible In view of friends of freedom the continuing bloody for Artistic and events. C om m ittee in Iran calls In te lle c tu a l F reed o m upon all the United States to call on the Iranian governm ent to im m ediately lift m artial law and resto re norm al rights to the Ira ­ nian people The pressure of protest from abroad, and especially from the United States, can help stay the hand of the official m u rd erers in Zcdnh: is a s t u d e n t in the College f E n g i n e e r i n g a n d a m e m b e r o f t he C A I FI firing line ‘Eat Death Scum’ in Probably the m ost im portant question to be answ ered by the Austin Police D e p a rtm e n t c o n c e rn in g T u esd ay s police actio n a t R a u l's during the prem iere perform ance of the Huns is. “ What w ere plainclothes policem en do­ ing it standard operating procedure for the APD to assign undercover agents to Austin bars and clubs or is this an isolated incident brought about by the publicized them es of the Huns i.e.. “ No Police. Legalize Crim e, and E at Death S cu m "0 the audience0 Is in p articular, Who lodged the “ disturbance com ­ plaint” against R a u l's 0 Was the whole incident orch estrated by the police departm ent via their undercover men or w ere private citizens involved in the com plaint0 The police reacted viciously .p a r­ ticularly the plainclothesm en) to artists t h e i r c o n s t i t u ti o n a ll y e x p r e s s in g guaranteed rights of free expression and to citizens enjoying their right of free assem bly; and yet it is well known that officers ’ patrolling the area near the Alpha Tau Omega house two weeks ago reacted passively to a situation where an innocent bystander was brutally a t­ tacked by persons totally unaw are of the inalienable rights of others The sudden convergence of seven p a tro l c a r s on R au l s is a so b er rem inder that the rights of A m ericans to to express them selves freely and gather as m utually consenting p arties to pursue their enjoym ent of liberty and happiness are tenuous rights indeed The Huns put on a good first half of their w ell-prepared ac t. let s hope we all can enjoy their whole set without the lunatic fringe of the APD and of the citizenry putting a stop to it simply because they do not understand what is Paul Wing going on in m usic today C elestial M echanics More y’all brawl The author of this b attle over the relative superiority of dialects is no doubt sitting back enjoying him self im ­ m ensely — if he is a lover of the absurd l e t t e r The debate, though entertaining, is certainly not worthy of the effort that h a s b e e n is in v e s te d My m otivated by loyalty. As an avoider of the pointless controversy spirit of it never lig h th earted n ess', ceases to am aze me that people enjoy a r g u in g so m u ch W h at k in d of em otional satisfaction do they get from c ritic ism 0 The pro-Greek and anti- G reek letters disturb m e p articu larly . except in BW because that could develop into a very bad situation Some of the independents won t be satisfied until Greek houses are outlawed, while as long as there are G reeks m ost G reeks will say. “ Anybody who's anybody lives in a Greek house.” It s so pointless to stir up ill feelings E veryone who has w ritten rn response to P e te 's letter has either missed the point or taken his opinion toward a word. phrase, or w hatever it is. as a p er­ sonal insult. I'm speaking out in defense of all dis­ l i k e r of “ v ail ” I ve lived in the South for 14 of my 20 y ears and have yet to becom e accustom ed to the sound of that celebrated word. It will forever fail to be harm onious to my ears In reply to R ichard DeWald. he may use language m erely for a tool, but properly used, it becom es an art. the a rt of com m unication. Two rem ark s (to p arap h rase a b i t > — “ R ichard DeWald is superficial and is to contributing the decline of com ­ m un icatio n and “ R ich ard DeWald sucks” — are not. co ntrary to his opi­ nion. identical expressions The la tte r m av suffice for persons of shallow m inds is for - thoughtless speech ’ but it is not one I would reserve for intelligent, m atu re discussion, except for use as an illu stra­ Becky Slaughter tion Electrical Engineering (th a t's what slang Enough of y'all All this arguing over who has the most pleasing dialect, or proper usage of the English language, has presented some unfortunate g ram m atical erro rs rn the reb u ttals of the past several days On Wednesday. Sept. 20. Mr Vanicek said. “ Us natives get along just fine with the word y’all’.” Surely he m eant. “ We That sam e day. Mr. C hrist­ natives man said. “ If it (the New England dialect was (sanctioned or m ore cor­ r e c t'. they (New E n g lan d ers' would claim th at’M idw esterners cannot speak E nglish c o r r e c tly .” This sen ten ce should be in the subjunctive case “ If it w ere ... ** ca rries m ore weight of con­ viction “ If it was " im plies uncer­ tainty as to w hether the New England dialect is co rrect or not. and thereby d efeats the purpose of the argum ent. These g ram m atical erro rs point out that this squabble over dialects is quite superficial It is a little like an architect complaining, not that the fram ew ork of a building is unstable, but that the color of the awnings is wrong I do agree that the English language lack of clarification suffers from a between the singular and plural forms of the second person. As Mr. DeWald pointed out. ” ‘You are good' m ay refer to one person or m any. ‘Y all are good m akes the distinction." But how about one m ore variation, like You are all good"0 This is clearly in the plural, and the regional usage takes care of itself. But what is wrong with regional usage anyway? I should find life terrib ly bor­ if we a ll sp o k e “ B r o a d c a s t ing E n g lish /' One final point concerns w hat I call ••Offsetting P en alties." Mr Wagener. on Sept 18. said that he could not use ••v ail" in “ civilized speech." Shame on you. Mr. W agener, and who asked you to use it in the first place? The following d ay . M r. W endt sa id th a t “ m o st (H ave you conducted a Y a n k ees.” poll0 ) com plain about the Southern dialect, then “ prefer Japanese over a true gentlem an's tongue. Are you say­ ing the Japanese are not gentlem en th ey h av e no se n se of a or gentlem an s decency0 1 rem ind you that some eight years ago. Gone Wi t h The Wi nd was perform ed as a play in Japan, and in Jap an ese of course. It was necessary for them to c reate a new word because in their language they had no proper translation for y all This is what being a gentlem an and respectful la n g u a g e sh o u ld be. of a n o th e r 's P erhaps you two “ gentlem en should Douglas Beckett em ulate it Graduate, Art th a t Car-pooling that car-pooling As staff m em bers of the C enter for Energy Studies, we are concerned about conservation and have decided to c a r­ pool To our dism ay, upon requesting a car-pool perm it we w ere inform ed that none w ere available and only after further inquiry w ere we told that we could go on a waiting list. With the park­ ing situation as bad as it is now. we are appalled is not en­ couraged In actuality it seem s that car- pooling is being actively discouraged by the fact that no new car-pool slots are slated, even though it is obvious by the existence of the waiting list that the de­ if The It seem s mand exists. University of Texas staff people are willing to m ake an effort to conserve energv as well as to reduce traffic con­ gestion. the U niversity Parking and Traffic officials would also be will­ ing to help Carol Rouse Librarian. Energy Information Service Donna Prest wood Research Assistant. Center for Energy Studies then th at editorials T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 5 T h u rs d a y , S ep te m b e r 21, 1978 Our boy in blue As h appens w ith ev e ry new tre n d , w h eth er it be in m usic o r m o ra lity , erro n eo u s in te rp re ta tio n s and m is u n d e rs ta n d in g s u s u a lly ab o u n d . And u n til som eone ta k e s the tim e to view m a tte r s w ithin the c o n te x t th e y a r e p r e s e n t e d , p r o b le m s a n d so m e tim e s c o n fro n tatio n s a rise . This w a s th e case a t R a u l’s W ednesday m orning. P unk rock, like all fo rm s of m u sic, is open to se v e ra l in te rp re ta tio n s. And, too, like all fo rm s of m u sic, th e b oundaries in w hich punk rock o p e ra te s a re lim itle ss. B ut th e re a r e a few com m on th em e s to th is form of m u sic , nam ely loud, high-speed, h a rd -ro ck in ’ and obscenity-laced lyrics. Funkers strive for audience re a c tio n through m ock violence. They would ra th e r an au d ie n c e w alk out th an ju st s it and drink b eer. Spitting and throwing assorted projectiles into th e cro w d fro m the sta g e and sp e c ta to rs re tu rn in g th e a b u se a r e com m on to punk p e rfo rm a n c e s. I t s all p a rt of the a c t ; th e m o re vulgar, abusive an d d is­ ru p tiv e , the b e tte r the show. If only A ustin police o ffic er Steve B rid g e w a te r had rea liz e d this, then th e W ednesday fra c a s could have been avoided. B rid g e w a te r’s acco u n t of why he handcuffed th e s in g e r P h i l T o ls te a d p a r a l l e l s H u n ’s e y e w itn e ss a c c o u n ts, w hich in itself is unusual. le a d B rid g e w a te r said he w a s a t R a u l’s “ on a loud- noise disturbance call I received.” He was standing inside the door, waiting for the manager, when Tolstead noticed him. Tolstead was singing a song which included the lyrics, ‘‘I hate you, I hate you,” along with graphic suggestions on sex. Tolstead, who while singing had pointed and screamed at the crowd all night, then turned to Bridgewater. After a short period of time, Bridgewater said he walked to the stage and told Tolstead to cut it out. This was Bridgewater’s first mistake. When Tolstead tried “ to kiss me and stuff,” Bridgewater said he started putting the handcuffs on the singer. This was Bridgewater’s second mis­ take. Clearly, Bridgewater overreacted. He had no business approaching the stage in mid-song and tell­ ing Tolstead to stop singing his lyrics. Freedom of speech and all that aside, what was Bridgewater trying to accomplish? Is he so insecure that a few curse words would rattle him? This was a song and Bridgewater took the lyrics personally. How absurd. What stupidity. If Bridgewater’s unwarranted, irresponsible ac­ tions reflect the prevailing mentality down at APD, then it’s much easier for us to understand why police billy-clubbed Chicanos last April during a boat race demonstration. Among my uncles was one who could rem em ber being born. I have heard him describe the blessed event, including the expression of rapture on his father’s face. This same uncle later fought with the Marines in France during the first world war and was shot right between the eyes by a German soldier, which made my uncle so angry that he im­ mediately drew his own pistol and dis­ patched the German to kingdom come. In the family, this uncle was famous for being an entertaining liar, and I never believed him for an instant, even when I was only 6 or 7 years old, but I rem em ber him affectionately still, perhaps because his fictions trained me in the a rt of recognizing bilge, which la te r helped me survive so many politicians. Most children don’t seem to have un­ cles like this anymore. Most children don’t seem to have uncles at all. Many are lucky if they have a father and a m other under the sam e roof. The American family becomes sm aller and smaller. If I were doing a sociological thumb-sucker on the subject, I would ti­ tle it “ The In cred ib le Shrinking Fam ily.” Grandparents are shipped South to shuffleboard and trout flies until they can no longer totter, and are then stored in nursing homes. Even three children is a crowd in one family nowadays, and people who have more are hounded m er­ cilessly by social thinkers for putting dangerous strains on the ecology. Have four of five children and you get letters written to the editor about you. It is like smoking in an elevator. This is by way of backing into the so­ called right-to-life issue. It isn’t a right to life that the anti-abortion lobby is concerned with so much as a right to birth. A right-to-life m ovem ent in politics would be an extremely radical fringe in a highly militarized superstate such as ours, because it would have to oppose the state’s right to take life for THE ACADEMIA WALTZ Saying ‘Uncle’ to families By Ru m «H B akar some collective purpose the state con­ siders good. The right-to-life movement does not oppose war, or even capital punishment, but only the destruction of fetuses. It wants laws to support a right to be born, just as laws already support the state’s right under certain circumstances to kill those who have been born. Philosophically it is a very difficult issue. Its resolution requires an a r­ bitrary definition of life at a tim e when both science and law are uncertain when life begins and when it ends. Is there life at the instant of conception? Does life end when the heart of a mindless body can be sustained only by perpetual machine operation? Tough questions to answer, except by a r­ bitrary redefinition of the words “life” and “ death.” The anti-abortion movement, making its case for the fetus, and hence for the family, does not have bright prospects. It is arguing for the obligations of the family at a time when the family is a declining American institution. More and more Americans now look to the government or private business to free them from obligations that used to be the family’s. Parents want government day-care centers for children. Old people want Social Security, insurance and govern­ ment medical programs to see them into old age. Very old, helpless people who used to be cared for within the fam ily, often with much agony to everyone, now make profits for private nursing homes. The family was once a m iniature society handling these problems, but in its present shrunken and fragmented state, it is neither able nor willing to take them on. Success for the right-to- life movement would result in more un­ wanted children, and while it may be better to have lived and been unwanted than never to have lived at all, it is like­ ly, considering the decline of the family, that the unwanted, too, will wind up in large numbers in the care of the govern­ ment. In this business I am saddened rather than opinionated. Unwanted children are saddening, but so is the decline of the family impulse, which has proceed­ ed sim u ltan eo u sly with the n a sty aggrandizement of the state. I speak, admittedly, from personal bias, having had the childhood enrichment of 21 or 22 uncles. (Girls didn’t run in the family.) They made up a small state all by themselves. One, who had wrestled professionally, taught m e about fraud. Another, who hadn’t worked for 25 years, taught me about leisure and the virtues of the Republican Party. Some taught me about the treachery of whiskey and some about the elusiveness of money and some about how to outwit large cor­ porations. Several even worked, some of them very hard, and one of them even liked it. One once held me on his lap in a dim room and showed me that the Ku Klux Elan was nothing but a bunch of bums in sheets. My uncle who remembered being bom is dead now. If he were alive, he would probably rem em ber being conceived. I am thankful they all were, although ad­ mittedly their multitude was bad for the ecology. © 1978 New York Time* BV BERKE BREATHED rn am.../mum 5 S T A ® lC '0(/f To Inc _ /r /M f, T W N - - ' 'T w fA ' im rn. mum, .HJS W L yak unW M ... fntiren. > ALfREDO f lW t . W H X DE) JOU I TOMM ( M M I IS 6 0 XT, mu ^ /MDW MISKIN OFF erne if Pie md kick SHOUTS. 4T PIA EAT H lM tf FILL CCK STUPID SON, - 1 h/fTHAIP. W E 6 0 H W . BLEVIN HALf BACK DKT HAS ml h m m oms ms. To ML UM MMT . m m m m Faneuil Hall: when trading is preserving NEW YORK — There are no ghosts in E ton’s handsomely restored Faneuil all m arket buildings; success has •iven them out. The recycling of these >0-year-old Greek Revival m ark et jildings may be the most spectacular m erican effort at preservation and ?development. The third and final part f the result, a stunning comm ercial amplex, has just been opened to cheers nd crowds. If there were ever any oubts about the undertaking, the day- nd-night crowds of shoppers, tourists nd pleasure-seekers has dispelled aem. The old Quincy Market, with its tanking brick and granite rows, has cen transformed from genteel derelict o s t a r a t t r a c t i o n of B o sto n s Iramatically renewed downtown. The completed project is a leading ex- imple of a national trend toward re­ long-neglected architectural ding a heritage. Skillful rehabilitation has created an outstanding urban amenity and even more skillful merchandising has filled it with fashionable shops, r e s t a u r a n t s a n d o f f i c e r s . Th e landscaped walkways are a festival of constant, colorful activity. And yet, success breeds backlash. There are a few critics who deride all this as a contemporary chic that is too high-style and high-priced, too oriented to tourism and novelty. It is not so much Boston, they say. as Boutique America. The sad fact is that, to be practical, preservation needs to follow modern m arketing techniques. And that can mean costly and transient trivia, that can make for gardens of trendy glamor. But Boston’s m arket is the best of the breed. It has careful design and quality control Above all, the buildings are still there, not bulldozed for some humdrum replacem ent. And the resu lt would probably have delighted Mayor Josiah Quincy, for whom the m arket was nam­ ed. He conceived it as the centerpiece of the most advanced city planning of his day. Quincy Market has traded for survival — jettisoning the Quincy name for the more hallowed one of the neighboring Faneuil Hall and aiming for popularity and profit. It is an entirely reasonable way to m arry past and present so that history and beauty may survive. We confess a nostalgia for the shadowed, seedy m arket stalls — as alien to the m arket’s current glossy wares as the serene old brick buildings are to the sleek new towers around them. The past is irretrievable; at least its forms re ­ main. © New York Time* t u p d a i l y T e x a n tor lagm g M 'h " _ .slant Managing E ditors Gary Penciler ....... Carole Chiles Marc ie Gugenheim. Janet Peavy * ............. MarR istant to the E ditoi as Editor ocia te N ew s E d ito r ........................................... pts Editor s and E ntertainm ent Editor — Mike Stephens Bill C ockerel j | m Lefko Marion La Nasa Jum a { ^ dures Editor )to E ditors jg es Editor npus A ctivities M ilo . .erat R eporters debra Keingold, Jim Thomas j eff Whittington Suzy i jampert S teve Dillon. Donald Howard U l8 s John McMillan J a y AIU "• ^ Tom Swinnea Issue E d ito r ................................................................ News A s s is ta n ts ...........................................Pant Opiela. P ren tice Findlay Judy Finer, Tim Martindale .. E ditorial A ssista n t.........................................................................Henrv TerreH E ntertainm ent A ssista n t........................................................... r u m e n s A ssistant Sports E d ito r....................................... ■ .........— * * a r o e M Sports A s s is ta n ts ................................................... Karen “ “ “ J * ? Rook* Vikki B am aart Brad Moore ,toTr ^ ,e ^ 1 m versitv or adm inistration the Hoard of Regents the Texas .n.. . r Student Public..lions Hoard "I Operating Trustees M ike Laur, Daily Texan Staff Huns’ Phil Tolstead Bridgewater puts on handcuffs. Huns’ lead guitarist struggles with Bridgewater. (top) continues to perform as Austin police officer Steve On letters Ko mg line lellc i > s h o u l d • Im- I s pod .md 11 iplr spared • ho ltd l i n o s r n • a d d r e s s i s s u e s n o t p o i s o n . l i m o s • include nam e address anti phono number id contributor Mail l o s s HO . Ii.ii .mior-- per lint lottoi s to rho F ilii* Em* texan. Drawer I). I T Station Austin Tx TH?12 tx h i in** l e t t e r s l o the Texan tdlice in basem ent of the TSP building Tho D ills Texan reserves the right to edit letters to the od dot lot pi i 'poi length anti .la r d s rho Dads On columns K d tto i I.ii colum ns should • ti*- Is p e d .int l 1 1 i p l e sp.M i d • III K R In n s .ll l o s s Mf I h a r a c te r s pot lin o • i i i . Iud. ti,o u r .nidi ess .„ u l phono n u m b e r ot c o n trib u to r M a il c o lu m n s lo E d it o n .d D e p a r tm e n t H r * D u lls non *** \usi in Tx KT 11 oi b . m K c o l u i n n s i o l l u M V x . t n o f f i i v inthe bas^ l e v i n . D r a w e r IV I I H u n t O I I I I . I sp b u i l d i n g l h.-D ills IVxun reserves the right to edit a c o l u m n s t m p l o p . i l e n g t h . o u i c l . n i t s Page 6 □ TH E DAILY TEXA N □ Thursday, September 21, 1978 ll More parking spaces may become reality negotiating widening of said. a less drastic the street, he the street may reach the state Supreme Court. Even if an agreement is reached on the widening of Red River, a challenge to the University’s right to acquire the land for the rerouting of The plaintiff, the Com- manche Apartments, asked the court on Aug. 29 to con­ sider the case, basing its re­ quest on an alleged error in the finding of an appeals court. Last year, District Court Judge Jerry Dellana issued a restraining order against the University’s acquisition of the land, but an appeals court held that he should have waited un­ til the awarding of payments to residents with condemned property had been made. On Sept. 12, the Supreme Court granted an extension of time to the University in responding to the plaintiff’s plea that the case be heard. Powell car held drug; chemist ‘Speed’-coatedtube found in floorboard ^@esa© lEsisas * • COMIC B O O K S - FANTASY 6. S C I E N C E F IC T IO N B O O K S * . . P O S T E R S • M O V I E I T E M S T U S S - S A T FROM IO To 6 • fcircHi£_-76 COPIES 4 NO MINIMUM INSTANT PASSPORT PHOTOS Mon.-Thurs. 8:00-8:00 Fri. 8:00-7:00 Sat. 10:00-5:00 kinko's 2200 Guadalupe (L o w e r Level) 476-4654 IQ TEST THE AUSTIN TEST CENTRE offers for a limited tim e free intelligence and personality tests. Your IO, personality and aptitude determine your future. Know them. No obligations. 2 8 0 4 Rio Grande Austin, Texas Sponsored by the Church of Scientology By j o h n McM il l a n Daily Texan Staff A major step toward the long-sought installment of ap­ proximately 2,000 University parking spaces may be achieved shortly when System administrators meet with the City Council to discuss the widening of Red River Street, U n iv e rs ity officials said Wednesday. However, a court case may still block the realization of the plan. System administrators will meet with City Council soon to r e n e g o tia t e a c o n t r a c t between the city and the University calling for the widening of Red R i v e r between 32nd and 38th streets to 60 feet, said Robert Hardes­ ty, System vice president for administration. Under a contract agreement reached about five years ago between the city and the University, the widened por­ tion of Red River would even­ tually connect to the south with an eastern rerouting of Red River. The U niversity was to f a c ilit a t e this move by purchasing the rights of way to the land between 26th and 32nd streets, later giving the land to the city in exchange for control over the portion of Red River bordering the cam­ pus. This section of the street, along with a part of San Jacin­ to Boulevard already con­ trolled by the University, would be converted into an in­ ner campus drive, enabling the University to install ap­ proximately 2,000 curbside parking places, James Colvin, vice president for business af­ fairs, said. Colvin said the inner cam­ pus drives represent the University’s last hope for a major addition to parking space. Last year, there were ap­ proximately 8,000 campus parking spaces. The Universi­ ty issued about three times as many permits as there were C parking spaces. S tu d e n ts w ould be transported from the parking spaces to the Main Campus by an inner campus shuttle system, Colvin said. In response to complaints by Red River-area residents that a widening of Red River Street to 60 feet would threaten their neighborhood, City Council last year re­ jected contractors’ bids for the project, said Homer Reed, deputy city manager. Since that time, the city and the University have begun Y O U CAN e t SPENDING THC NIGHT.. By MARY MCMULLEN Daily Texan Staff A chemist for the Texas Department of Public Safety testified Wednesday he found methamphetamine in the back of a car from which David Lee Pow ell allegedly shot an Austin police officer last May. John G. Franka told jurors in 167th District Court he dis­ covered a glass tube coated with the drug when the 1966 red Mustang was delivered to the DPS May 23. Austin police Sgt. Kenneth B. Williams testified earlier Wednesday a police investiga­ tion of the vehicle the day of the shooting produced evidence ranging from a quart of milk to spent rifle car­ tridges. No mention of controlled substances was made on Williams’ list of evidence seiz­ ed. Powell is being tried for capital murder in the May 18 shooting death of Ralph Ablanedo. His co-defendant, Sheila Margaret M einert, stands trial Oct. 23. t r a c e a m o u n t A GLASS TUBE containing a of methamphetamine, common­ ly called “ speed,” was lying on the left rear floorboard of the car when Franka first saw it May 23, Franka said. Defense attorney Jacques Darrouzet asked Franka why AMSTER MUSIC, INC. THE DIFFERENT MUSIC STORE ETHNIC AND ESOTERIC INSTRUMENTS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD. FROM ANKLE BELLS TO XYLOPHONES. 1624 LAVACA ST. AUSTIN, TX. 478-7029 Different Strokes for different folks from: HEWLETT JlDj PACKARD I- s ”lFt I Iii! I ite "'-A includes: 1. COMPLETE LIMOUSINE s e r v i c e ' 2. PRINKS AT "Lh TOUEY? 3. DINNER A T ' a U O R W V ' 4 . DANCING A T • S T A R S "corth a SPECIAL TABLE and ESCORT fr o m C A R ..-Y o u r NANVCb in "• YOO G ET '. 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FO R S C IE N C E AND E N G IN E E R IN G . The H P-31E-Scientific. $60. Trigonometric, expo­ nential and m ath functions. Metric conversions. Fixed an d scientific display modes, l ull 10-digit display. 4 separate user memories. Ask about our convenient Time Payment Plans Calculators Stroot Lovol VISA A MattorChargo Wolcomo FOK. /*\ORF /NFO - Cftcc 6 S Z .4 FREE I Hr. Parking w /$ 2 .0 0 Purchase OO Purchase I PHOME t KG I A\US»T BC IS YEAW. oft OV E f NEED NOT BE PRESENT UO»k .... \ - o f t I j City of Austin police investigators’ detailed inventory of the car’s contents days earlier failed to include the “ clearly visible’’ tube. “ I have no explanation,” Franka said. “ The first time I saw it was May 23 Also presented as evidence in the trial Wednesday were an M-67 hand grenade and a book on rifles. Officer Bruce Boardman Tuesday testified he saw a silhouette on the Mustang’s passenger side make what appeared to be a tossing mo­ tion towards Boardman and other policemen during a shootout with the Mustang’s occupants. The person ducked immediately after that, Boardman said. THE HAND GRENADE was found several hours later about IO feet from Officer Joe Villegas’ patrol car. Its safety pin had been pulled, but the safety clip remained intact, officers have testified. The “ Book on R ifle s,” bookmarked at the chapter titled “ Union of Soviet Socialist Republics” and pic­ tu ring a S o v ie t AK-47 automatic rifle, was found in the Mustang’s rear passenger seat, Williams said. Ablanedo {lied of gunshots from an AK-47 rifle. Used as the bookmark were two pages of a hand-written list of various weapons and weapons accessories. Defense and prosecuting attorneys agreed Wednesday it is Powell’s handwriting on the list. E M P L O Y E R S : C R E A T E N E W JO B S The Capital Area Manpower Consor­ tium has recently received funds from the Department of Labor, to be used for public service projects. These funds were awarded under Title VI of the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) and are available for the period of October 1, 1978 through September 30, 1979. We are seeking non-profit employers to oper­ ate these projects in the Austin-Travis County area. lf you are a public or private non-profit agency, you may apply for project funding by submitting a written pro­ posal prepared according to instruc­ tions detailed in the Request for Pro­ posals. lf your proposed project is approved, the Capital Area Manpower Consortium will pay the salary and fringe benefit costs of as many em­ ployees as you need under the CETA "Public Service Employment” pro­ gram. There are no funds available for administrative support costs. By pro­ viding the necessary supervision, your agency may establish public service projects and hire additional personnel to accomplish a specific objective within three months to a year at no cost to you for their salaries! Create the project you need and help CETA participants become involved in meaningful employment with your agency. Interested agencies should contact: Mr. Jim Shaw City of Austin, Human Services Department Manpower Training Division 100 E. 6th Street/The Littlefield Building Phone: 477-6511, Extension 2871 or 2872 Weekdays, 10-12 a.m. and 2-4 p.m. Candied sweet treats for your feet Regular 22.00 1 5 . 9 0 They’re in! At last the sweetest slides in town have just arrived. Specially priced just for you. A must tor the narrow legged pants and sleeker skiits. Hurry in before our supply melts. A. ‘Snappy Candied in Blueberry, ( innainon, oi Butterscotch. B. “( audio.' in Butterscotch, ° r f hocolate. HENRY JACOBSON’S OFFERS A Select Group of Short Sleeve SHIRTS PRICE (Golf and Tennis Type) TWO DAYS ONLY I bilcock ( enter hell land Mall, Northcross Ma 2222 Guadalupe (next to Texas Theatre) 9:30-5:30 Daily Thursday/ September 21/ 1978 □ TH E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page_7_ f y i l a w a n t s < £ > a n “HOME OF THE TACO SALAD” 311 W. 6th 477-8999 % E Y S personalized gifts cEtyGIfAVIfilG c E T C . Dobie Mall 472-5804 THIS WEEK ONLY G u n i t e S a x b y Jessica All long & short drosses............. $26.95 All camitoles $5.95 All blou$e$..................................$9.95 All skirts................................. 9S J*95 3307 HANCOCK 459-6683 ’TiI l l fee- (GUADALUPE LOCAT ION ONLY) DAILY SPECIALS ' T-Th-Sun. 11 am-9 pm J M-W-F 11am-4 pm Checking for cops... ...pedal to the metal... ...out of gas C a n Perkins 2 looks to see where his mother is (I) before trying out an electronic drag race game at an Austin skateboard park. Lacking a quarter, Cory nevertheless handles the controls as only a short person can (c) before collapsing Into frustrated tears ( ). Kathleen Cabble, Daily Texan Staff Committee eyes cost of liability insurance A joint committee of the Texas Legislature is expected to submit an in­ terim study Oct. 2 for proposed legisla­ tion to fight the rising cost of liability insurance between consumer and manufacturer. The Jo in t Committee Study on Products Liability met Tuesday in the Reagan Building to hear testimony and review manuscripts of prime cases in­ volving “ a pending crisis in the availability of being able to purchase liability insurance,” Rep. Gerald Hill, D-Austin, said. After final testimony next Wednes­ day, the committee will begin for- • mutating the interim study, which is expected to ask for 12 to 15 pieces ol legislation. Since its formation last November, H ill said the committee has been reviewing the general cost increase of insurance and how rates have risen above the market because of high losses. “ The problem is not that there is not enough insurance coverage available, but the affordability of insurance is high,” Hill said. Hill added that, in a survey taken from 1962 to 1972, professional in­ surance rates have risen tremendously. Liability insurance for lawyers has risen 170 percent; 177 percent for den­ tists. 439 percent for architects, 667 percent for physicians and 826 percent for surgeons. “ Of the cases that have gone to the courts, the big losses have been decided in the last three years,” Hill said. Another survey studied by the com­ mittee reveals that several businesses which require coverage cannot afford the high prices. “ Of the several small business responses we have received, 22 percent of the businesses could not afford to buy product liability insurance because of the high cost,” Hill said. Once the interim report is com­ pleted, H ill said, a series of bills will be submitted and discussed by com­ mittees. If there is an agreement, some representatives may sponsor legisla­ tion to alleviate the high insurance rates problem. SELICHOS PRAYER a prelude to i r a R ash H ashonoh a n d Y om Kippur come see w ha t it's all about! Sat. night Sept. 23 1:00 a.m. Chabad House ^ 2 1 0 1 Nueces 472- 3900, SOUP AND SANDWICH SEMINAR NOON NORDAN LOUNGE - STUDENT CENTER “POLLENS AND ALLERGY” BILLY E. W RIGHT UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH 2007 University Avenue TAKING THE LSAT? Join thousands of law school applicants nationwide in Amity’s LSAT Review Seminars CALL TOLL-FREE FOR DETAILS AND LOCAL SCHEDULE INFORMATION: 800 243-4767 Ext.761 Heil court* m**ti at tty* Driikill Hotel. U t E. 7Hi C I for Freshmen Business Representative ROSTEET’S THE : CHICKEN FRIED STEAK l a r g e c h i c k e n f r i e d S T E A K . B U T T E R Y B A K E D P O T A T O O R F R E N C H F R I E S . H O T T E X A S T O A S T , A N D S A L A D B A R O R S O U P ALSO C H O p STEAK DINNER R IB EYE D IN N E R (Tues. only, all day) •2.79 BONBNZB mOIN PIT 2815 GUADALUPE 478-3560 NO TIPPING 'COM E AS YOU ARE < r- i— R a d I O / h a c k ■ Out Front in CB by a Country M ile* SAVE 30% ON A MOBILE CB FROM THE SHACK TRC-421 by Realistic Winter’s Coming! For Safety’s Sake Get a Realistic CB Bargain Now! STEP UP TO‘70 SAVINGS! TRC-424 by R e a lis t ic SAVE ‘IOO ON AM/SSB CB TRC-448 by Realistic — y ^ E J k L f S t J C - c b (© J P A A M L le u O U T M O O SQ U E LC H H D 3 S s e e n o n n a tio n a l TV SAVE $30 Be prepared for stormy w eath er, pre gam e traffic and road hazards. W ith CB help is just a call away! LED modulation and channel indi­ cators. Plug-in mike. Add a speaker and use as a PA system. M ade in our own CB factory. 21-153° _ CB WALKIE-TALKIE CUT 40% TRC-201 by Realistic 40 CH. CB WALKIE-TALKIE TRC-205 by Realistic 139Reg. 16995 SA V E *30 Stay tuned to companions w hen adventure takes you outdoors! Has delta-tun­ ing, battery meter, sepa­ rate sp eaker and mike, center-load antenna, ear­ p h o n e , m o re. W it h IO “ A A " batteries. 21-1634 Reg. 4995 SA V E *20 For fun.and safety w hen hunting, skiing, hiking 3 channels, 2 watts with Ch. 14 crystals — add ex­ tras for up to 2 more W ith LED battery indica­ tor, 8 " A A " batteries, wrist strap. 21-1630 SAVE 41% Reg. 9995 Check road conditions w ith this full-featured mobile bargain RF gain control, noise blanker and ANL, LED channel display, S / R F meter. Add an extra speaker for 4 watt mobile PA system with concurrent CB monitoring Has dynamic mike, universal mounting bracket. Look safe, feel safe, be safe1 21 1522 ______ _____________ ANTENNA/TRANSCEIVER SWR TESTER b y M ic r o n t a SA V E 4 0 % VISA C H A R G E IT ( M O S T S T O R E S ) For top CB efficiency! 3 range meter checks antenna or transmitter power output No external power required. W ith remote coupler 21 520 Includes 2 transistors, ad­ justable output level, push to-talk switch Requires 7V battery 21 1171 "r a d i o S H A C K 'S R E A L IS T IC A U D IO L IN E W A S E S T A B L IS H E D IN 1954. C B IN 1960 223 0 S. L a m a r 2 23 0 S. L a m a r So u th C ongress at O lto rf So u th C o n g r e e a t O lto rf V Z w * M a rtin Luther K in g a n d G u a d a lu p e C h erry C reek S h o p p in g C en ter 5742 M a n c h a c a W e s tg a te M a il 4521 W e s tg a te B lvd 2 17 4 H ig h la n d M a ll Across from P en n eys, upper le ve l Q u a il C reek S h o p p in g C en ter 9 434 P a rk fie ld 2002 W h e le s s Lane N o rth O a k s V illa g e U S. H w y . 183 A lle n d a le V illa g e 404 H ancock C en ter B e tw e e n S e a rs a n d D illards N orth V illa g e S h o p p in g C en ter 7731 B u rn e t Rd River Hills Sh o p p in g C enter 1915 E Riverside M A D I V I S I O N O F T A N D Y C O R P O R A T I O N SAVE 37% Reg. 2699!16995 The Department of Transportation endorses CBS as a traffic safety aid So play it safe! This mobile has volum e/RF gain control, LED mode and channel indicators, much more! S S B means “ single sideband — triple the number of avail­ able channels! Use as PA with simultaneous C B monitor­ ing 21-1561 ______________________ _________________ MOBILE PREAMP MIKE b y R e a lis t ic MICROPHONE HOLDER SAVE 4 5 % Reg. 2195 Powerful magnet keeps any CB mike securely in place! Easy install w ith adhesive b acking or mtg s c re w s . 21 1130 M o st item s also available at Radio Sh a ck D e alers Look for this sig n in your neighborhood Radio /h ack O E A L E R PFH ICE S M A Y V A H ' AT i n d i v i d u a l s t o r e s P age 8 □ THE D AILY TEXAN □ Thursday, S e p t e m b e r 21, 1978 Emission system altering costly Rape prevention concern loses strength since spree Tampering with the emission con­ trol systems on late model cars so they will run on regular instead of unleaded gas may save money, but it also can lead to prosecution under state or federal laws. One local dealership. Bob Miller Porsche-Audi of 9150 Research Blvd., named as the defendant in a civil action under the federal Clean Air Act. could be assessed penalties of up to $10,000 if found guilty. The com plaint, filed in U.S. District Court in January, alleges the dealership removed one pollu­ tion control device, the exhaust gas recirculating system, from a 1975 Audi 100LS in April 1977. Signed by an assistant U.S. at­ in the Land and torney general Natural Resources Division of the Justice Department as well as by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeremiah Handy of San Antonio, the complaint also asks the court to enjoin the dealership tampering with auto pollution control devices in the future. from The case has not yet come to trial. Representatives of Bob Miller Porsche-Audi declined to comment on the case. However, in their original answer filed with the court, attorneys for the firm denied the dealership had dismantled the device as charged. In a separate incident, a similar set of circumstances has led to the investigation of an Irving muffler shop by the state attorney general’s Environmental Protection Division. Under the Texas Clean Air Act, violators are liable for penalties of $50 to $1,000 per violation per day. Should a com plaint be filed against the shop, it will be the first such case ever brought by the state, an aide in the attorney general’s of­ fice said Wednesday. By JUDY FINER Dally Texan Staff Four letter words are used often in today’s society. Some evoke feelings of frustration and some evoke feelings of amusement. The word “ rape evokes feelings of fear and anger. One year ago, the Universi­ ty area was in turmoil over a man called the Choker Rapist, who was attacking females, e s p e c i a l l y U n i v e r s i t y students. After much unrest in the campus area, the man was caught. Before his apprehen­ sion, there was an upsurge in sales of protective devices for use on an attacker, and many self-defense courses were be­ ing offered throughout Austin. Now, a year later, without the constant reminder of a rapist on the loose, the subject has lost some immediacy. S E R V IN G YOU IN 8 STATES CUSTOm hl-fl SHOP EARLY! QUANTITIES LIMITED O N SOME ITEMS STORE HOURS T E a c RECORDER THURS, FRIDAY 11-7 PM I GD PIONEER Turntable IS? Receiver 10-6 ECI SPEAKER A A D TEAC's A105 front load cassette deck features Dolby and high density ferrite heads at an affor­ dable price. MODEL A-10S Pioneer Closeout! The P1115D belt drive turntable with auto shut oH. Complete with base and cover. MODEL PL! I SD Sansui's G-2000 Pure power receiver with big knobs features 16 watts per channel at ,lS 0/o THD. CLEAN) MODEL G-2000 Pioneer Car Stereo Technics by Panasonic Stunsail. e c i r r ECI's popular 3 way speaker with IO" woofer and super piezo tweeter for all the highs. Your ears will be convinced. MODEL SPECTRUM 3001 ^ p i o n e e r REELS ON TMK P J4 M IU OWNER TUMOR The P io n e e r KP5005 features AM/FM super­ tuner with cassette, lock­ ing fast forward, rewind and much more. Treat your dash! MODEL KP5005 Unbelievable sounds at an affordable price. This system features Technics' SA-80 stereo receiver with Sansui's SR222 belt drive turntable complete with Audio Technical AT910 cartridge with FCI's most pop­ ular 2 w ay speaker, model 2001, with 8” woofer and piezo tweeter for superhighs. Pioneer's RT707 features 3 motors and 4 heads with auto reverse playback for h o u r s of l i s t e n i n g pleasure. What a deal on a reel! MODEL RT707 Cerwin-Vega Speaker I Cfi p i o n e e r * Dual C E R W IN -VEGA PIONEER t u r n t a b l e V rM The Pioneer PL516 belt drive turntable features auto return, strobe with pitch control. Rotate thenight away! MODEL PL516 SONY TV AND BET AM AX SONY s so S .Z CD Q Cb O “ * C = *o Z MODEL 311R receiver with Dual's CS 1237 precision belt drive fully automatic changer This super combination includes Pioneer's popular SX680 A M /F M stereo and C erw in-Vega's famous M odel 25 speaker system. Bring the con­ Bring home those concert sounds with Cerwin-Vega's 31 IR certs to your home. high powered speaker system for crystal clear sounds. ERC RECEIVER x s f l _ g \ s y * * * t h » > 1 / The great AM/FM stereo receiver for the budget minded. MODEL 1405 SHURE CARTRIDGE Car Stereo Speakers BLANK TAPE 90 minute cassette ................................................. • 90 miinute 8 track tape ......................................... 1800' reel to reel .................................................. ^ 90 minute cassette ................................................ Maxell UDC-90 Maxell LN 8TR-90 Maxell UD35-90 TDK SAC-90 TDK 1-1800 1800' reel to reel $ 0 9 9 $ 0 4 9 • S C ” $ 0 4 9 * * *17” *16” *36“° Pioneer P16L SM" Door Mount Pioneer TS691 6x9 Dual Cone .. Jensen C9851 4" coaxial ....... *89 ACCESSORIES 25' Headphone Extension.......... Locking Slide Mount $"795 Sennheiser HD414 Model DSI IO ........................................................... 9 Total Sound Guard * 1 1 * * Preservation and Clean Kit .................................. ■ ■ Pioneer SE205 Closed Ear ........................ Open Air ........................... Audio Technica ATH-1 Open Air Majestic HD310 HEADPHONES Open Air .................................................................. *22” *47°° *29” $Q9S * Discwasher Disctracker liscwasner T.l. Calculator A.C. Adaptors .. C t Diamond Stylus MODEL ME908D *15 617 West 29th 472-5471 104 E. Huntland 454-5474 CUSTOm hi-fi DI5COUnT center AT WAREHOUSE PRICES! N O P H O N E QUOTES O X LAYAW AYS, PLEASE! STORE HOURS THUR. 11-7 FRI. 11-7 SAT. 10-6 St diff We< the; voh C off- 10 i for F COV eat boc vol fou I tw( St i vie ha' pai an re< SU ai: CT hs Bi si< SU er rn y< as rn ai H i i Officer Keith Leach of the Crime Prevention Detail of the Austin Police Department feels that the public is still in­ terested in rape prevention but it is not as traumatic as it was one year ago. There have been 125 rapes reported in the Austin area since the beginning of 1978. Interestingly enough, last year at this time, according to police statistics, there were also 125 rapes reported in the Austin area. Out of the 125 for 1978, 46 have been cleared by arrest, compared to only 39 cleared for arrest last year. Police officers credit an in- c r e a s e in c o m m u n i t y awareness of rape to the higher number of arrests In the area of self-defense, U n iv e r s it y courses w ere canceled because of a lack of interest. For many students, staying in top physical shape is not easy. “ It takes a lot of determination and you can t always rely on your physical self. Sometimes, you have to rely on your wit,” said Heidi Wakefield, crime analyst for the Austin Police Depart­ ment. At this time, the Campus im ­ E s c o r t S e r v ic e was plemented. This van will take unescorted females anywhere on campus. The University decided since it had the funds, invest them in it would something that would give im­ mediate protection instead of devoting time, planning and teaching that goes into self- defense courses which give no guarantee of efficiency, said JoAnne Evans, a University Police Department secretary. This school year, there have been no rapes in the campus area. Last year, two girls were raped on campus out of the 18,278 females who attend­ ed the University. The A PD and U T PD are getting away from the fact that self-defense is the only weapon to use on a potential attacker. Sgt Lyn Croshaw of the University police says, “ Be cool, calm down and assess the situation because every situation is different.” Leach said persons attacked should do anything to keep from getting hurt. The ma­ jority of rapers hate women. The attacker wants to bring women down to a level below him and degrade them. Leach says that the mort important thing to remember is that common sense is the best weapon a female can have to use on an attacker. Flag fund gets gas from beans Guess the correct number of beans in a jar and you can be Coach of the Day at the football game Texas-SMU Oct. 28. The contest will be spon­ sored by Alpha Phi Omega, a service organization that brings the Texas flag on the football field before games, to raise money for a new flag. As Coach of the Day, the winner will have dinner with the Longhorn football team Friday before the SMU game, participate in the pre-game activities and the post-game press conference and be an­ nounced as the Coach of the Day at the game. If the winner is a male, he will be allowed in the locker room at half-time, Neal Farmer, APO administrative vice president, said. E V E R Y B O D Y IS eligible for the bean contest except the organization’s members, an APO spokesman said. Guesses will cost 50 cents, and there is no limit to the number of guesses one person can make. A jar of beans will be at an APO table on the West M a ll next Monday through Sept. 29 from 8:30 a m. to 4 p m. Contest winners will be announced Get. 5. “ We’re trying to raise $5,000 total,” Chad Hinger, fund raising committee chairman, said. “ Approximately $3,200 of that will go for the flag. The rest will pay for a trailer to transport and store it,’ he said. SECO N D P R IZ E w ill be two 40-50-yard-line tickets to the SMU game. The four third prize winners will help run the current flag onto the field with the APOs, two at the SMU game and two at the University of Houston game Nov. ll. The current flag is 37 yards by 23 yards and is the largest Texas flag in the world, accor­ ding to an APO brochure. The new flag will be 40 yards by 22 yards. Thursday, September 21, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 Shoe Shop G e n u i n e W e m a k . and LEATHER VESTS repair boots LEATHER COATS •ho.. belts SHEEPSKIN RUGS $49.50 $99.50 $10.00 leather ★ SADDLES^ EN G L IS H WESTERN goods Capitol Saddlery VISA' 1614 Lavaca A u s t in , Texas 478-9309 Groups seek volunteers Students who saw an estimated 70 different booths on the West M all Wednesday may not have realized that they all had one thing in common: volunteers. Campus organizations and several off-campus groups set up booths from IO a m. to 3 p.m. to ask for volunteers for the various associations. For those students who have dis­ covered there is more to life than eating, sleeping and studying, the booths were a collage of the various volunteer organizations that can be found on the University campus. The dean of students office provides two programs, Services for Handicapped Students and Minority Student Ser­ vices. Volunteers help students who have visual, hearing or physical im­ pairments in the areas of reading, test and n o te - ta k in g , w r it in g and recreational activities. Age discrimination Steve Currier, coordinator of Ser­ vices for Handicapped Students, believes volunteer work is very rewarding and learning experience for can be a everyone involved. Volunteers help with the Minority Students Services’ welcome program which matches upperclassmen with in­ coming freshmen. They also compile a minority directory and plan and con­ duct a culture fair. The Student Health Center enlists volunteers to work in the medical reco rd s dep artm ent and guides students to different offices. The International Office provides an intensive English program for foreign students. They use volunteers to carry on conversations with students learning English. Several locations on campus have general information and referral desks. Volunteers w orking w ith a staff member man these booths. KUT-FM and KLRN -TV have an ex­ tensive volunteer program. Volunteers are needed in the following areas: clerical, telephone, tours, public speak­ ing, fund raising activities and the television station’s annual auction. Bruce Brothers, a K U T and R L R N volunteer, said volunteer work allows one to meet other people who are in­ terested in the same field. The newest volunteer group is the Student League, a politically oriented organization providing some of the same services as the student govern­ ment. Students interested in becoming a volunteer for one of these offices may contact Barbara Beach-Sallaway, coor­ dinator for Student Volunteer Services at 471-3065, or stop by the Student Volunteer Services Office in Union Building Room 4.302. 58-year-old man sues city A 58-year-old employee in |he City of Austin’s public works department has filed suit against the city in federal district court alleging age dis­ crim ination. Jam es W. Smallwood, who has been employed in the Building Maintenance D ivi­ sion for 21 years, said in the suit filed Monday the city engaged in unlawful employ­ ment practices by hiring a younger man to replace him as supervisor of the depart­ ment. The city also demoted him and cut his pay without due Help Wanted EVE'S RELAXATION RETREAT Hot Saunas Fast Cash 836-7461 PUNOGRAPHY Bruce A. M c M illa n For hours of injoyment (and outdoors too) keep your I on these out­ rageous visual puns — a sinful assortment of word plays for bold and lung alike. ASSAULT A N D BATTERY $2 45 at your bookstore A PENGUIN PAPERBACK process of law, according to the suit. THE PETITION names City Manager Dan Davidson, public works director John German and the City of Austin as defendants in the case. Smallwood is seeking an in­ junction against the City of Austin to stop the alleged dis­ crim inatory action. Smallwood was supervisor for the division until Oct. 3, 1977. On Nov. 29, 1977, the department docked his pay, according to the petition. “ Since then,” according to the petition, “ he has done nothing except arrive at work and s it a t h is d e s k .” Smallwood went to German and requested more work, but was told there was nothing for him to do, the petition said. THE DEPARTMENT also told Smallwood he would be discharged on Aug. 12 because of the lack of work for him to do, the petition continued. Sm allw o od file d a d is­ crimination charge with the Wage and Hour Division of the U.S. Department of Labor in Ju ly. He has been harassed by the division head since he filed the discrimination charge, accor­ ding to the petition. The divi­ sion later granted Smallwood an em ploym ent extension after he made the discrimina­ tion charge. The labor department told Smallwood in August it had been unable to reach concilia­ tion between the parties using inform al methods. Under federal law, the department is not empowered to investigate an individual age discrim ina­ tion case beyond the informal level. Smallwood also looked for another job with the city following his demotion, the petition read, but was unable to find another position because of his age. SM ALLW O O D ’S attorney, Jose Camancho, and German both refused to comment on the case. Smallwood and City Manager Davidson were un­ available for comment. JI IL UNCOMMON SCENTS, ETC. ft Rem,! 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O p en M o n d a y th ro u g h S a t u r d a y In essence, Tony & Ti la ~ FRESHMAN CBA ELECTIONS TODAY! ELECT THE BLOCK FOR BETTER REPRESENTATION PLACE I PLACE 2 PLACE 3 Y o u w o n 't believe how soft a n d supp le the leather is in this bouncy shoe f r o m SAS. See it in ca m el or n a v y calf. $28. WHATS 60016 on 191 8 E. R ive rsid e Dr. N o . 27 D o b ie M a ll T o w n la k e P la z a U p p e r Level SHOE STORES 2 3 4 8 G u a d a lu p e / 5 5 1 7 Burnet D o w n to w n /N o r th c r o s s M a ll/ W e s t g a t e M a ll V I S A and M a ste r C h a rg e accepted. LOW PRICES, FRIENDLY ADVICE, GREAT SELECTION, CONVENIENT EVENING HOURS AT TOTAL CAMERA ' smart See the Canon AE-1, the Single L e n s R e f l e x C a m e r a th a t’s changed the way fine cam eras are made. ca m e ra u s in g I t s a Canon's Central Processing Unit, something like a miniature co m ­ puter for incredibly fast response It has a two-step shutter release system and a solid state self timer These are just a few of the fea­ tures that make the Canon AE-1 so outstanding You can get your CanonAE-1 this w eek with the most popular normal lens the 50 1 4 at a fantastic low price at Total Cspp© I'Q The 50 1 4 Canon S S C (Super Spectra Coated) normal lens will allow you to take pictures under most lighting conditions even without flash th is y e a r * L o n g h o r n F o o tb a ll A t t e n d g a m e s w ith a c o m fo rta b le a n d d u ra b le Total C a m e r a s t a d iu m c u sh io n - O n ly ____ *1 50 unicolor COLOR PRINTING DEMO rn t o t a l color® a T he U n ico lo r F a c to ry R e p re s e n ta tiv e w ill be a t T otal C a m e r a to d e m o n s tr a te |ust h o w e a s y it is to m a k e you r o w n color p rin ts fro m color slides or n e g a tiv e s . Fri. 12-5, 6-9 S a t. 10-1, 2-5 OPEN EVEN IN G S TILL 9:00 PM C re e k sid e Sq u a re at Sh o a l Creek 3 0 1 0 W . A n d e rso n la n e Mon.-Fri. 9:30 AM-9:00 PM Sat. 9.30 AM -6:00 PM 4 5 8 -5 2 4 1 T erm s A v a ila b le — Q u a n titie s L im ited Canon AE-1 Camera with 50/1.4 SSO Normal Lens.. Sam e as above with 50 1.8 sc lens 3 1 4 88 268 88 KEITH ZIM M ERM AN DAVID HIRSCHFELD N a t io n a l O ra to r P re s id e n t Tex. & O k la . Y o u th G ro u p S tu d e n t G o v t. T re a su re r Sr. C la ss O ffic e r • Sr. H ig h D e a n 's List • 4 y e a r H .S . L e tte rm a n DANNY PRESCOTT • S tu d e n t G o v t. P re s id e n t • L e a d e rs h ip / S c h o la rs h ip • C ity S tu d e n t A d v is o ry C o u n cil WE STAND FO R... • Q u a lity E ducation • Stu d e n t Voice in E sta b lish in g C u rricu lu m • E x p a n d e d C o u rse Selection • In -d e p th Teacher E v a lu a tio n s • E x p a n d e d BEB Library H ours________ VOTE TODAY FROM 9-3 AT BEB 150 THE BLOCK FOR EXCELLENCE C a n 't B e A v e ra g e We Stand For E xcellence 8 ZIMMERMAN 53 HIRSCHFELD 53 PRESCOTT Paid For By Jonathan Levine, C a m p a ign Manager _______ EUMIG SOUND PROJECTOR SALE W e ’ve got a few 1978 model Eumig Sound Projectors at sensational savings We re closing them out to make room for the new models lf you re in the which will be arriving soon market for a great sound projector and a great 01 Q 8 ® price, buy now' Eum ig S-802 Sound Projector...........* 1* O O Q 89 Eum ig S-802D Sound Projector........ < £ # Eum ig S-820 Sonom atic Proj...........369 ^ Eum ig S-822 Sonom atic Proj...........469 # Eum ig S-824 Sonom atic Proj...........499 Not all models in all stores Quantities Limited 3 iT C v T A L l Hearne ra I Discount Prico* A Much Much Mora i&Q — !?■ V.;. -.T fL Shopper* Ohorqe 4 Page 12 □ T H E DAILY T E X A N □ Thursday, September 21, 1978 In the old days, it could take you 25 days to get Corned Beef and Cabbage.. on the table. A t Eag le, you can have it tonight at lower prices overall. Ladies in waiting. It used to be the task of the viligant family cook to “ corn" a brisket of beef, which meant curing it for 25 days or more in a fat of brine and spices. Nowadays, the old-fashioned flavor of corned beef can be enjoyed the same day the meat s brought home from the store! Lady Lee corned beef brisket comes moisture-tight with instructions on the package for ease in preparation. Our scientifically controlled flavor-cure process guarantees it to fulfill your hankerings for a New England boiled dinner or a Ruben on rye. And we guarantee our Shenson brand brisket too, to make the best oven-barbecued corned beef roast you I! ever taste. Give your kid a saucy number. Oven-roasted corned beef, a favorite of kids nowadays, is an easy alternative to the traditional stew with carrots and cabbage. And, it makes for tasty slices to slather cold with slaw To prepare in this fashion, rinse the meat according to package directions, pat dry and baste with your favorite barbecue sauce (the more mustardy, the better). Cook the beef under cover, allowing 25 minutes per pound three-quarters of the way done. Then uncover it, and let the outside get crispy while the inside cooks all the way through. Sound good? Team your corned beef with potato salad or whole ears of corn, fresh or frozen, and have some warm French rolls on hand for sandwich builders. Cooked any way. corned beef makes into wonderful sandwiches tile next day, and trimmings can always be K ground up into a flavorful hash, then topped with a sunny-side egg for brunching (or anytime munching). You won’t be disappointed. Eagle shoppers have been getting quality at a savings, for years. And that’s what discount's all about. /> A" > COFFEE-MATE CREAMER . $ CARNATION FOR COFFEE . . 1 6 O Z JAR 1 . 1 / P KRAFT JAR CHEESE A SPREAD 4VARIETIES . r O RANGE JUICE Ct CONCENTRATE LADY LEE. . S G Z J A R . O O 16 OZ CAN .97 Produce Delicatessen OSCAR MAYER BO LO GN A s lice d s v a rie tie s . m , . . . 1 2 0 / pkg I •HO 7 ^ 6 OZ PKG . / O LADY LEE BOLO GNA SLICED . Fresh Meats CORNED BEEF BRISKET ROEGELEIN.................... .LD CORNED BEEF BRISKET SHENSON OVEN ROAST ................. a CROSS RIB ROAST HEAVY MATURE DEEF DONELESS CHUCK 4 2 8 I I69 15 6 BONELESS TIP ROAST HEAVY MATURE BEEF ROUND........................ 0 0 7 ID JE* BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST HEA VV MATURE DF E f ............................. a, . 8 7 T-BONE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF LOIN . . . .. . . i t 2 . 2 8 BLADE CUT CHUCK STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF . .............. . 9 7 BONE-IN ROUND STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF .......................... LE 1 . 5 7 TOP ROUND STEAK 1 . 7 7 Fresh Meats BONE-IN SIRLOIN STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEET LO IN....................... STEWING BEEF BONELESS HEAVY MATURE BEEF............... FRESH BEEF BRISKET BONELESS HEAVY MATURE BEEF............. SMALL END RIB ROAST HEAVY MATURE B E E F ........................... BONE-IN RUMP ROAST HEAVY MATURE BEEF SIRLOIN CUT . . . . SLICED BEEF LIVER SK INLESS.................................................. GROUND BEEF B L B PKG O R MORE ....................... LD 1.87 a, 1.57 LB 1.67 LB 1.88 LO 1.35 10 .78 lo .93 WILSON CORN KING BACON SLICED WESTERN STYLE I THICK SLICED 1 VS LB 2 59 OSCAR MAYER BACON . . 1 LB PKT (THIN SLICED 12 O Z 1 7 6 I L B PKI LADY LEE BACON S L IC E D ............................................1 LB PKT LARGE END RIB ROAST HEAVY MATURE BEEF BONELESS TIP STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEF! ROUND , . . . I Ll 1.43 1.75 1.35 1.68 2.17 Canned & Packaged ILIPTON ..................IOO CI DOX2 TEA BAGS r KRAFT DINNER SHEESE 0 9 .27 Canned & Packaged Canned & Packaged Dairy & Frozen KRAFT DRESSING 1000 ISLAND J ................ 16 OZ OTI .67 t DEL MONTE GREEN BEANS FRENCH STYLE 16 0 1 CAN .O R A N G E DRINK Ct O R C H A RD ................................... 64 I r SANDWICH SPREAD <6 KRAFT 24 OZ IAI! . 6 5 . 0 c I . I HORMEL PLAIN CHILI REGULAR O R H O T .....................15 " p CAMPBELL'S SOUP Ct CHICKEN NOODLE -O' . r RANCH STYLE BEANS Cb .................................................... 23 r HUNT S KETCHUP . 7 3 . 2 3 A l . 6 1 , . 3 9 f STEWED TOMATOES LADY LEI 16 OZ CAN x UNCLE BEN S RICE 6 CONVERTED. . . 48 O Z B 1 . 4 5 ,* SPAGHETTI SAUCE MIX I A w a v s . . . . *1 7 < C 3 . 2 8 x NESTLE S QUIK <6 CHOCOLATE r SPAM LUNCHEON I OAF 1 2 OZ r A k< 6 FORK 3 2 0 / O v.2 . 5 5 n <- I . VV O r DUNCAN HINES CAKE MIXES ^ SVAtoC’ iES I oz BO ' . 6 6 u BIG TATE f POTATOES *■ *' M A S H F D . 16 0 7 D O X • 81 INSTANT ^ X SALTINE CRACKERS I h a r v e s t DAY 16< r INSTANT BREAKFAST Cf r ARN AT; ON * PH . 4 3 r JIFPT MUFFIN MIX I , ,, - r, r : TANG O RAN GE DRINK ^ y ^ r PEANUT BUH ER Ct WTEIX PAN p LOG CABIN SYRUP r KRAFT PRESERVES Cj M ti AWPF RRY I ... . . Household & Pet p GAINES BURGERS A i ........ . ... X DOW BATHROOM CLEANER . BRAWNY PAPER TOWELS : < • GRAVY TRAIN - 2 . 3 9 , . . 9 8 CQ .O O 5 . 3 2 f HEFTY TRASH BAGS „ SOFT-N-PRETTY TISSUE Ct 4PK DECORATOR p, 1 . 9 9 PKG . 8 5 Health & Beauty Aids „ 1 . 5 9 f PROLAMINE <6 20 CAPSULES / ■ . n a a I *+ , y . 2 4 CLOSE-UP TOOTHPASTE f DIAL ANTIPERSPIRANT 6 . 2 . 6 7 r Q-TIPS SWABS C> 6 4 OZ TUBE 1.16 4 OZ CAN 1 . 37 . PKG OF 170 . 84 ... 1 . 2 7 VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE ll' H BEADS REGULAR RBA O R MINERAL 1 5 OZ BGX A O Z . I . Z U 1 . 5 5 Delicatessen CREAM CHEESE PHILADELPHIA ................. 6 OZ PKG .61 I > LONGHORN CHEESE <6 KRAH SLH L D ...................... 1 0 O Z PKG , I . O O r CRACKER BARREL CHEESE, c c I . O O * KRAFT FX TR A SHARP 10 OZ PKG CINNAMON ROLLS PILLSBURY, . , ■ -9 OZ PKG . / O g r een CABBAGE SOLID. FIRM ................. LD .16 LD .47 BARTLETT PEARS U S NO 1 --- GOLDEN DELICIOUS APPLES EXTRA FANCY SMALL SIZE....................LD • V # M . YELLOW ONIONS U S NO 1 .......... LD .19 D A K ER S........................LD .25 RUSSET POTATOES U S NO 1 Oui Puce Piotection Policy guarantees these puces to be effective bonn Thursday Septem ber 21 st thru Wednesday September 27th 1978 Eagle Guarantees the Lowest Food Total ’ Purchase’ 25 different items or more worth $20 or more Only one item of each type may be used for the purpose of this comparison. Then take your shopping list to any other store of your choice Compare item for item, price for price You don’t have to buy anything a second time. lf the other store s total is lower W E L L R E F U N D Y O U D O U B L E T H E D IF F E R E N C E O F T H E T W O T O T A L S . HEAVENLY THERMAL BLANKET 72x90 FUS TWING DOU DIE DED 100°x VIRGIN ACRYLIC NYLON OINDING . . 4 9 7 SHELF COVERING SELF ADHESIVF NO p a s t e n o t a c k s WASHADlf TOO. . 18 1 DURACELL ALKALINE BATTERIES rw< SCENTED VOTIVE CANDLE 6 PILLAR CANDLE 5 6 1 .29 2.88 WHITE CANVAS GLOVES H I A W 6 OI GLOVES FOR WORKING O R GARDEN IN G.................... .94 12 TAPER CANDLES ASSORTED c o l o r s GLASS VOTIVE CUP .09 .87 FOLDING METAL TV TRAYS STURDY TRAYS IN ASSORTED DESIGNS 2 4 8 EACH.84 B IC LIGHTERS DISPOSABLE HRS: Mon.-Sat. 9 a.rn.-9 p.m. Sun. IO a.rn.-7 p.m. 5555 NORTH LAMAR BLVD. AT KOENIG, AUSTIN Draw planned for basketball All seats in the Special Events Center will be reserv­ ed during the upcoming basketball season, Women’s Athletic Director Donna Lopiano told members of the women’s athletic council Wednesday. This change will require students to draw tickets to home games, as is now done for football games. B u sin e ss m anager Al Lundstedt said students with the blanket tax will still be able to receive free upper- level tickets and pay $1 for lower-level seats. Non-student reserved seats will also re­ main at $4 for the upper and lower levels. Lundstedt said the decision for reserved seats on both levels was made because in­ terest in season ticket sales has increased and the men’s athletic department does not want to sell out reserved seats. "This year people are ask­ ing in the middle of football season when basketball tickets will go on sale and they want to be put on the mailing list,” Lundstedt said. "It (the student draw) will it rougher on the make students because they won’t be able to choose where they want to sit like before. It will be harder on my staff because w e ’ll be havi ng t i c k e t drawings all through basket­ ball season,” Lundstedt said. No decision has been made on when the tickets will be drawn during the season, but Lundstedt said whenever two or three games are held in the same week, drawings for all of them will probably be done at the same time. Season tickets will be drawn the first week in November, Lundstedt said. Women’s council to examine plan Because of circumstances beyond its control, the women’s athletics council decided Wednesday it must begin study of its five-year growth plan, the plan it has operated under for the last two years. "There are some problems that we didn’t anticipate two years ago,” said Dr. Robert Jeffrey, chairman of the council. Jeffrey said the main problem is that the current plan in­ cludes a large fund-raising program which "has not yet been in­ itiated.” "W e need to re-examine how to fund the budget without ex­ pecting the fund-raising revenues,” Jeffrey said. Donna Lopiano, director of women’s athletics, said the fund­ raising program has not begun mainly because of "time. ’ " I t ’s a very difficult thing to get into. It’s just now getting set up,” Lopiano said. The council also approved budgets for submission to AAU and the Olympic Committee for the 1979 AAU Diving Cham­ pionships and the 1980 Olympic Swimming and Diving Trials. The trials will be co-sponsored with the men’s athletic depart­ ment. Budget proposals include a profit of $1,000 for the AAL diving championships and $500 for the Olympic trials. Revised budget for 1978-1979 was approved and will not ex­ ceed the approved budget of $666,500 A proposal to add a second student to the council was con­ sidered but will not be voted on until the next meeting. i i I ■ I j I II * I I i I I i Longhorn Baylor. Trudie Richards blocks during last week’s game with — Texan Staff HEWLETT-PACKARD INTRODUCES PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS CALCULATORS FOR A STUDENT'S BUDGET. B U S IN E S S M O D E L S STA RTIN G AT JU S T $75* Now you can get the same quality, durability, and features of a Hewlett-Packard professional calculator — at a price you can afford. Introducing Series E for business. D E S IG N E D FO R STU D EN TS. Easy-to-read displays. Larger, brighter L E D display with commas to separate thousands make Series E calculators easier to read during long hours of study. Built-in diagnostic systems. Because you'll be working on many new and challenging problems, Series E calcu­ lators have diagnostic systems that tell you: I) when you’ve per­ formed an incorrect operation: 2) why it was incorrect; 3) if the calculator isn't working properly. Accuracy. It’s important in college. So we improved the algorithms to give you the conlidence that your answers are always precise and complete. FRO M BA SIC B U S IN E S S TO ADVANCED PROO RA M M A B L E . The HP-37E. Business Management. $75* Basic business/1malice. Gives Present Value. Payments and Future Value calculations simultaneously. Discounts, % ’s, mark-ups, and amortization schedules. Statistics with trend-line forecasting. 5 financial and 7 user memories. The HP-38E—Advanced Financial Programmable. $120* Solves routine and complex problems at the touch of a key —no previous programming experience necessary. Internal Rate of Return and Net Present Value for up to 1,980 cash flows in 20 groups. 2000- year calendar. 5 financial and 20 user memories. Up to 99 program lines. H EW LET T -PA C K A R D IS W IT H O U T EQ UAL. All Series Ecalculators use PPN logic exclusively. If you’ve never tried it, you’re in tor a big surprise. It lets you solve problems the way you naturally do in your mind. Straightforward. Logical. No worry ing about complicated hierarchies or parentheses. It s the shortest possible dis­ tance between the ques­ tion and the answer. S E E FO R Y O U RSELF. To help you select the calculator thats right for you, we've prepared a b ( X i k l e t entitled, "The Student's Choice...the Logical Choice!’ Pick up a copy at y our bookstore or nearest Hewlett-Packard dealer when you stop by to sec Series E hor the address, CA LL TO LL-FREE 800648 4711 except from Hawaii or Alaska. In Nevada call 800-992-5710. While vou’re there, be sure to look at our other professional calculators: the advanced programmable HP-29C and HP-19C with printer; and the HP-67 mag-card programmable. But do it soon. A Hewlett-Packard professional calculator priced for a student’s budget is something you can’t afford to pass up. HEWLETT .hp, PACKARD a ■ S u L ' L ’t s l e d i t I . i i i p i i i i i m h i d i n g .i ( . p i n .«! >1* s i . i i i . m d Ii i c . i i I . i m s C u i i I i i u u t . ii I S A A l a s k a & H a w a i i D i s p l . n s a r c phcMOgra|>hcd s e p a l . i t c h i i ’ s im u la t e a c t u a l a p p e a r a n c e sports T H E D A ILY TEXA N Page 13 T hursday, Septem ber 21, 1978 VJl i Longhorns struggle defeat Southwestern many serves.” By TOM BAKER Dally Texan Staff T e x a s e x p e c t e d its m a t c h w i t h Southwestern to be a breather, but despite a poor start, Southwestern’s women’s volleyball team gave the Longhorns all they could handle Wednesday night in Georgetown before dropping the match, 15-2.15-12 and 15- 12. The serves of Susan Pena, Nell Fortner and Leslie Shrode staked the Longhorns to a 7-0 lead while Rim Bindewald anchored front line play with two stuff blocks in the first game. Southwestern tallied its only points around three serves by Ala Pahoa before the Longhorns ran off the last five points, in­ cluding three by Leslie Shrode. "The first game was real good,” Texas coach Linda Lowery said. "We played more their game after that. We were not consistent on our serves and passes. We missed too The short Southwestern team led most of the second game, widening its margin to 10-5. But the Longhorns fought back on Nancy Renner’s five straight serves, a smash by P’ortner and a variety of dinks and off-speed sideline shots to go up, 14-11. Pahoa sealed the win with her last serve. "Southwestern hustled and got back a lot,” Lowery said. “ They hid away from the net, but we were dinking to the wrong areas.” The Longhorns controlled the third game with more dinks, off-speed and sideline shots for a 5-1 edge. Still Southwestern refused to fold, knotting the score at 6-6 on volleys between Longhorn defenders. After another run of six points, four on Pena’s serves. Texas was not threatened again. The Longhorns take their 2-0 record west for a Friday afternoon tournament match at seventh-ranked San Diego State. FBI begins investigation into Ali-Spinks promotion NEW O RLEANS (U P I) - Two F B I experts on white- collar crim e Wednesday began checking the books of c ompani es in promoting the heavyweight championship fight between Muhammad Ali and Leon Spinks, federal sources said. i nvolved At the same time, Louisiana I n c . , the local Sports, promoters, announced atten­ dance and gate receipts at the Louisiana Superdome fight were substantially below original estimates. Francis Mullen, F B I agent in charge in Louisiana, and U.S. Attorney John Volz con­ firmed the federal investiga­ tion was under way but declin­ ed to give details. "The only comment we can make is to confirm an ongoing investigation concerning the transactions about the fight,” Mullen said. "W e really do not know what we have yet.” HOW EVER, A source in­ volved in the investigation told U PI the agents were ac­ ting on a complaint filed by Jake DiMaggio, one of the white partners in Louisiana Sports. DiMaggio and promoter Philip Ciaccio Saturday filed a later $1 m illion suit — dropped — charging their black partners with skimming off fight profits. The source said the in­ vestigation was headed by Robert J. Isakson, supervisor of the white-collar crime sec­ tion in the New Orleans F B I office. "We're just getting into it.” he said. " I t ’s going to be weeks before we have it all sorted out.” TH E SO URCE said F B I agents were interviewing the investors of the principal promotion and were concen­ trating on three companies — Louisiana Sports, Top Rank, Inc., and Corporate Manage­ ment, Ltd. They also were attempting to determine the role of several New York banks in financing the fight. Final attendance and gate figures from Louisiana Sports showed 65,370 people attended tile bout, with 63,350 paid ad­ missions and 1,838 com­ plimentary tickets. On the night of the fight the crowd was estimated at 70,000 by the promoters. Gross sales for the fight were $4,806,675. That was about twice the previous record for a boxing match, but below the earlier $6 million estimate. On the day of the fight, 10,- 990 tickets were sold over the counter for gross receipts of $358,000, Louisiana Sports said. NORMAN at . Patterns \ ON THE D R A G ° 2346 GUADALUPE 4703411 ( Page 14 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ T h u rsd ay, Septem ber 21, 1978. ^ Injured Aune remains optimistic Longhorn quarterback still hopes for chance to play By KAREN ROSEN Daily Texan Staff As a sophomore in 1977, Jon Aune had reason for optimism. With the Horns victorious in their first three games and starting quarterback Mark McBath out for the season with a knee injury, the way seemed clear for Aune to emerge as Texas’ starting signal caller. He looked good against Boston College, throwing a school record 88-yard touchdown pass to Alfred Jackson and carrying the Horns to an overwhelming victory in their opening game. During the Virginia game he proved his rushing ability equaled his passing ability, rushing for 93 yards in IO carries and scoring two of the Horns' touchdowns. AND IN THE RICE game, Aune had time to perfect his passing and rushing skills. Displaying the same consistency he had shown during the previous games. Aune had impressive game with two touchdown an passes and 42 yards rushing. The statistics were building, as Aune had completed 50 percent of his last 18 passes for 226 yards, but the season came to an end the following week in Dallas. Late in the first quarter with the Sooners leading the Horns 3-0. Aune suffered ligament trouble and left the field limping, only to in the second come back onto the field quarter, confident he would finish the game. But Aune's dreams turned to nightmares when he collapsed while attempting to pass and was carried off the field. It was too early to predict how seriously he had been hurt and no one wanted to consider the possibility that the injury would leave him sidelined the remainder of the season. WITH SPRING PRACTICES underway and a new season approaching, Aune might the starting have been a contender for quarterback position — if he had been able to practice with the team. But he watched from the sidelines as his teammates began training for the new season and during the summer break underwent neck surgery to correct a ruptured disc. While doctors have given Aune the green light to start working out. the months of inac­ tivity have produced another obstacle for Aune — a new lineup of quarterbacks that leaves him on the bottom rung. Many football players would have given up hope of once again becoming a part of the team, but to Aune, his greatest battle lies in overcoming the handicaps that have plagued him in his attempt to prove himself as the Horns' starting quarterback. “ SURE I ’VE HAD A couple of bad breaks, but I want to continue working hard and play­ ing, if not this year, then next year.” he said. “ Coach Akers hasn't made up his mind yet as to what I ’m going to do this year. He’s put me on conditioning — running and lifting weights — and maybe ITI get out there this year. It all depends on what happens to the other quarterbacks.’ He has had to work hard at Texas since coming from Hillcrest High School in Dallas, competing with McBath for the starting posi­ tion and now fighting for a chance to prove himself. But Aune said it is competition that keeps him practicing and striving to earn his place on the team. “ I don’t think I would work as hard as I am now if I just had the position given to me," he said. “ Competition really helps you work a lot harder and concentrate on what you are doing out there on the field. C O M P E T IT IO N F O R T H E s ta rtin g positions has increased since Aune joined the team in the fall of 1976, and the dream of becoming an overnight success diminished when Aune found himself practicing as a training defensive back during his season with the Horns. first While coaches said the change was only temporary and that they would continue working with Aune at quarterback, the switch to a new position decreased the chances that his debut on the field was soon to come. (See AUNE, Page 16.) LOOKING FOR A CHURCH?... ... that has w arm th and openness dignity of worship reverence tow ard God ... that is rooted in the past challenging for the present hopeful tow ard the future THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH ... is looking for YOU!!! ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 27th and Whitis (next to Kinsolving Dorm) Ie ee Beginning a series of classes for inquirers Sun Sept. 24 th , a t 7 :3 0 p.m ., Guild Room, All Saints Parish Hall ALL ARE WELCOME 4 7 6 -3 5 8 9 Rev. C h n . Hine», Chaplain Rev. Armi,lead Powell, Rector 477-6839^ The Art of Image Making The RP )0 K X J JIM % \ a \ Last weekend, you missed the decisive play in U T. football. See it thisThursday at Pizza Hutf Were y o u m a k in g a lateral pass at y o u r date d u r in g th a t c ru cia l p lay? If so, w e ' v e got good n e w s for y o u . T his T h u r s d a y , let y o u r s e l f g o to Pizza H u t * for a p o w e r h o u s e pizza and a h e a p i n g h e lp in g o f U .T . football. B e g i n n i n g at 7 p.m . we'll be s h o w i n g the p r e v io u s w e e k e n d 's ga m e film o n o u r e n o r ­ m o u s 7 - f o o t TV screen. So if y o u got ca u g h t h o ld in g durin g t h e big play, t o u c h d o w n at Pizza H ut® this T h u rsd a y . -Hut. 1811 G u a d a lu p e only Aune, wearing knee brace, leads Longhorn quarterbacks in drills. Larry Kolvoord, TSP Staff Six stories, one plot: The Romance of Our Age isTechnology. _ — m — M E J * ! Rendezvous In Spain. a p p lic a tio n s sp ecialist. You re a so ftw are W hen you picked th is career, you never dream ed th a t one day you d rendezvous in B a rcelon a, Spain w ith tw o Navy destroyers. But w hen yo ur com p an y is Texas In stru m e n ts and one o f your cu s ­ to m e rs is the U S. S ixth Fleet, you learn to e xpe ct th e u nexpected. The d estroye rs are e q u ip p e d w ith TI co m p u te rs and they need new so ftw are fast You com e aboard and sail w ith the Fleet u n til your jo b is co m p le te d Not a bad a ssig n m e n t fo r a s o ft­ w are s p e cia list nam ed Susie You re glad you g o t in to technology. The Incredible Talking Chip. You re an in te ­ grated c irc u it d esign er at TI. You ve helped fin d a way to make a ch ip ta lk, so m e th in g no integ ra te d c irc u it has ever done before. First a p p lic a tio n : an e le ctro n ic aid that helps c h ild re n learn to spell The w o rld s firs t ta lk in g te xtb o o k And th a t s ju st the b e g in n in g The ta lk in g ch ip 's p o te n tia l is m in d- b en ding . You re glad you g o t into te chn olo gy. The S alesm an ’s Dream . You re a TI sales e n g in e e r You ve g o t w hat is p ro b ­ ably one of the m ost irre sistib le se llin g m essages in the h istory of salesm anship It goes like th is: Hold th is TI-59 S cie n tific C a lc u la to r in your hand Now. let s co m p a re it to the m ost p op ular c o m p u te r of the 1950s — the IBM 650 The 650 w eig he d alm ost three tons, required five to 10 tons of air c o n d itio n in g and 45 square feet of flo o r space And it cost $200,000 in 1955 money. ■ Now lo o k at th e T I-5 9 C a lcu la to r you re h o ld in g in the palm of yo ur hand It has a p rim a ry m em ory ca pacity m ore th a n d o u ble th at of the 650 It p e rfo rm s its p rin c ip a l fu n c tio n s five to 10 tim es faster. And it reta ils fo r u nd er $300 W ith a sto ry lik e this, the hardest p art of yo ur jo b is h o ld in g o n to your sample. Y ou're glad you got into te chn olo gy. The Joy Of Complication. Y ou’re in se m i­ c o n d u c to r design at TI You love it w hen people at parties ask you w hat you do. You say, th in g s co m p lic a te d . I make (Pause.) In fact, I g o t p ro m o te d rece ntly fo r crea ting som e m ajor co m p lica tio n s. W hat you m ean (but seldom explain) is th is: the m ore active elem ent g ro u p s (AEGs) you can put on a sing le c h ip of silico n , the m ore the average AEG cost goes dow n. In short, you m ake th in g s cheaper by m aking them m ore co m p lica te d. Your w o rk m ade it possible for a TI consum er p ro d u c t that sold three years ago fo r a b o u t $70 to sell today fo r $14.95 Your fu tu re lo o ks w o n d e rfu lly co m p lica te d. Y ou're at 30,000 AEGs per ch ip now and 100,000 is in sigh t Y ou're glad you g o t into technology. ^ g f | Outsmarting Smog. You ve always designed a ir- borne radars for TI custom ers. Now. all of a * * H r sudden you know yo ur next radar design is g o in g to stay at the a irpo rt. On the g ro u n d . It s on the g ro u n d that tra ffic c o n tro lle rs at Los Angeles In te r­ n ational A irp o rt have a problem . They can s e e '’ in co m in g and o u t­ g oing a irpla ne s on th e ir radar ju st fine, so long as the a irplanes are in the air. But w hen th e airpla ne s are on the gro u n d - to u c h in g dow n, ta king off, ta xiin g , p a r k in g - th e y are som e­ tim es im p o ssib le to see and co n tro l G round sm og o bscu re s them . You believe you have an answ er to the sm og p ro b le m . You dig o ut the plans fo r an a irb o rn e g ro u n d - m apping radar you helped design. You adapt the design so the L. A. c o n tro lle rs can use it to see th ro u g h sm og. It w o rks b eautifully. Today yo u r sm o g -p ie rc in g radar is w ide ly kn o w n as A irp o rt Surface D etection E q uip m e nt (ASDE). It s standard e qu ip m en t at L. A. In te r­ n ational and at the a irp o rt in Geneva, S w itzerland. O ther a irp o rts w ith sm og and snow p ro b le m s are expected to have it soon. You re glad you re in te chn olo gy. Oil Sleuths International. Y o u're a g e o ­ p hysicist. A good one. You c o u ld be w ith any of the big oil co m p a n ie s But you w anted to get w ith a com pany w hose sp ecialty is the same as yours. E xp lo ra tio n . That's w hy y o u 're at TI. in G eophysical Service. TI e xp lo re r ships. TI p h o to ­ g e o lo g ic a ircra ft and TI tru c k - and tra c to r-m o u n te d v ib ra to r systems are w o rkin g all over the w orld. They re fin d in g o il. And they re id e n tifyin g areas w h e re no oil exists, thereby saving huge losses in d rillin g costs. Also, Ti s w o rld w id e c o m p u te r netw o rk and its A dvanced S cie n tific C om pu te r is m aking 3-D re co rd in g and pro cessin g p ossible. T his e x­ clusive e x p lo ra tio n te c h n iq u e is the only p ra ctica l way to u nscra m b le “ n o -re co rd ’ areas on land and sea. Y ou’re a happy sleu th . Y o u're in on the b ig ge st h un t in h istory. And your team is o u t in fro n t. You’re glad you g o t in to te chn olo gy. not in technology yet, think it over, technology, talk to Texas Instruments, Sporting looks that are both functional and fashion If you’re If you are in Cam pus Interview s Sept. 28-29, Oct. 2,25-26,30 Nov. 3 Send for the 34-page picture story of TI people and places. W rite : G eorge B errym an, Texas In strum en ts C o rp o ra te S ta ffin g . P O Box 225474 M. S 67, Dept CG. Dallas. Texas 75265 See what TI is doing in: • M ic ro c o m p u te rs and m ic ro p ro c e s s o rs • S e m ic o n d u c to r m em o ries • Lin e a r s e m ic o n d u c to r devices • M ic ro e le c tro n ic d ig ita l w atches • C a lc u la to rs • M in ic o m p u te rs hardw are, so ftw a re and system s fe a tu rin g so ftw a re c o m p a tib ility w ith m ic ro p ro c e s s o rs • D is trib u te d c o m p u tin g system s • E le c tro n ic data te rm in a ls • P ro g ra m m a b le c o n tro l system s • Data e x c h a n g e system s • A dvanced S c ie n tific C o m pu te rs • D ig ita l se ism ic data a c q u is itio n Air tra ffic c o n tro l ra d a r and D iscrete A ddress B ea con S ystem s > M icro w a ve la n d in g system s > Radar and in fra re d system s > G u id a n ce and c o n tro ls fo r ta ctica l m issiles » W o rld w id e g e o p h y s ic a l services • Clad metals for automotive trim, thermostats, and electrical contacts • In te rc o n n e c tio n p ro d u c ts fo r e le c­ tro n ic te le p h o n e s w itc h in g system s • T e m p e ra tu re -se n sitive c o n tro ls fo r a u to m o b ile s and a p p lia n c e s • K eyb oa rds fo r c a lc u la to rs and fo r m any o th e r p ro d u c ts system s O T e x a s I n s t r u m e n t s I N C O R P O R A I L L ) An Equal O p p o rtu n ity E m ployer MI F T h e original windbreaker made in England o f incredibly lightw eight superfine co tto n poplin o f a silk-thin denier texture w ith 'Heleneu* knit collar, cu ffs and waistband, traditional Heel Eraser plaid lining, natural tan color, .16 to 4 6 regular and long, 5 0 .0 0 . Worn with cord u roy trousers by G len Oaks in butter-soft 50% co tto n and 50% polyester destined to mellow m ore and m ore with ea ch wearing, natural tan color, 2 5 .0 0 . 'iinuit’ C alters - PENLAND U NIVERSITY STORE HIGHLAND MALL CONGRESS AVENUE Hopes that Benson hopes to rebound with Bucks ... could bloom in the fall ■ ■ ■ and Auerbach plots Celts’ return to glory ___________ I - . , c » n i a m h D r 91 197R n THE DAILY TEXAN □ P age 15 WAUKESHA, Wis. (UPI) — Milwaukee center Kent Ben­ son didn’t enjoy his summer off from pro basketball as much as he wanted. It might be the best thing that ever happened the Bucks. to him and Last summer Benson, the Bucks’ No. I draft pick in 1977, stayed in his native Indiana and fished for bass. Then he went on to an injury plagued t h a t w as ro o k ie s e a s o n mediocre at best. “ He’s come in with a new enthusiasm and I think he's really gaining the respect of his team m ates.” Benson, 6-foot-ll and now at 230 pounds, was a standout at Indiana but didn’t fare as well for Milwaukee last season. He averaged only 7.8 points and 4.3 rebounds in 69 games, m is­ sing many because of injuries that the knockout punch Hareem Abdul-Jabbar delivered to his head in the season opener. included including This sum m er he played six b ask etb a ll, weeks in the California pro league in which he averaged more than 28 points and 12 rebounds a game, and came to training camp ready to fulfill the expectations of two years ago. “I’M VERY HAPPY with Kent,” Coach Don Nelson said Tuesday. ‘‘For the first tim e I had the opportunity to work six weeks individually with him. He played very well out in the summer league. Benson didn’t please Nelson last year, especially because he had declined Milwaukee’s request to play th the pro league last season. But he came on strong in the last part of the year and had a long talk with Nelson at Benson’s New C a s tle , I n d ., h o m e th is summer. “I HAD HIM come down to Indiana and we talked for a couple of hours man-to-man,” Benson said at team s Carroll College training site. “ I got a lot off my chest and he got a lot off his chest. We the fixed up our lines of com­ munication.” Benson finally realized what Nelson wanted, a total com­ m itment to basketball, and he complied. “ It was a good sum m er,” Benson said with a look that showed he really didn’t mean it. “ I didn’t get a lot of enjoy­ ment out of it. I played basket­ ball and that was about it. “ I fished but not as much as I would have liked, as much as I wanted to.” He is a passionate bass fisherman and even though basketball ruled his summer he managed to win $360 in two pro to u rn a m en ts, finishing second and fourth. fishing BUT PLAYING as much basketball as he did helped him get into the best shape of his life. “ I ’ve lost about 15 pounds and I feel much quicker. I haven’t gotten used to this weight yet, but I feel in really good shape.” Benson will sta rt the season behind John G ianelli, who took over last year when in­ juries sidelined Kent. Nelson figures both will be playing a lot and the best player will probably become the starter. Benson said he isn t worried about the situation and doesn’t care about last year. BROOKLINE, Mass. (UPI) — The names and numbers have changed but Boston Celtics General Manager Red Auerbach says he has the makings of another playoff contender in the mold of the once-powerful team. “ I f s over and Iv e got a year of experience. It was frustrating at times because I couldn’t play and nobody was more disappointed than I was. I wanted to do a job but you can’t when you’re sitting out with an injury. I got a lot of experience this summer and a lot of coaching in the summer league.” Nelson said Benson has been doing well so far and he might be the player who can help the team to an ever better season than last year, when the playoffs. the Bucks made “ He’s definitely a big key,” Nelson said. “ If we can get consistent performances out of him to play well 20 minutes a game it will be very impor­ tant.” “ We’re going back to the old Celtics tradition,” said Auer­ bach as he puffed on his ever­ present cigar and watched practice at Hellenic College. "Everybody has to play or they won’t be with us.” Among the new faces are Marvin Barnes, Billy Knight and Nate Archibald, obtained in a trade with Buffalo; Earl Tatum, acquired in a trade with In d ian a; free agent Chuckie Williams, and rookie Jeff Judkins. Auerbach, who almost left the Celtics because he had no input into the Buffalo deal, said he was elated by the ac­ quisition of Archibald and Knight. They cam e along with Barnes for Sidney Wicks, Ker­ m it Wa s h i n g t o n , Ke v i n H im I IM M You forgot to pack m ost of your clothes N But you remembered the essentials. ^ f a R ; ,:fe . -Mfcj:, K u n n e r t a n d F r e e m a n Williams. “ YOU SELDOM get a chance to get two superstars and th at’s what Knight and Archibald are. What can I say about Marvin? The talent is there, he just has to do it. I think the public will be in for a pleasant surprise,” Auerbach said. “You have to give to get. The only guy I didn’t like los­ ing was Washington,” he said. In ju rie s and dissension resulted in the Celtics turning in a 30-52 m ark last season, the worst in club history. Jo Jo White, who underwent sur­ gery for bone spurs late last season, said he was fit and ready to play. “ Heel fine. It still gets a lit­ tle sore but compared to last year, I feel far, far better,” White said. DAVE COWENS, who with White are the only two players remaining from the 1976 title team, said he was bothered by a bad back injured while w orking on his K entucky farm. t w i s t , “ I’m doing a lot of therapy and massaging and whenever I it g i v e s me a problem,” said the redheaded center. “ Unlike an ankle, a back injury stays with you. But I hope to be ready when the season starts. “ But I won’t forget last year. I don’t know if we’ll still fill the visiting arenas like we used to. But it has nothing to do with this year,” Cowens said. K n i g h t s a i d h e h a s recovered from knee surgery and A rchibald looked as graceful as ever after missing all last year with an Achilles tendon injury. Coach Tom Sanders, who took over at m id-season a fte r Tom my Heinsohn was fired, said time and action will tell if his players have recovered. “ I ’m p le a s e d wi t h the appearance of good health. Everybody tells me they re healthy but I won t know for sure until I see them play. It certainly appears as if Jo Jo and Tiny (Archibald) are all the way back,” Sanders said. NAVY NUCLEAR ENGINEERING A SECURE CAREER Salary Trend for Engineers in Industries Annual Salary by year since Baccalaureate Degree A B P B H . . ___ Upper D e c i l e ^ Upper Q u a r t ile ------ Had le o mmmmm Lower Q u a r t ile ----- ------ Lower D e c ile Navy N u clea r O f f i c e r M AY /AU G WRANGLERS MENSWEAR d e sign s the best fitting disco slack in Cone Best-of-Both* denim .This soft, brushed denim of cotton and Dacron* polyester keeps Its neat good looks longer. In velvet blue with no side se am s for waist sizes 28 to 38, S,M ,L,XL inseam. From W rangler W rapid Transit’** at your favorite cam pus storejGoneir denim I Iiiti • Now comes Miller c 1978 Miller Bre w ing C o , Milwaukee. W is Cone makes fabrics people Jive in; »Ou Pom '<-g *tere<} trademark 16 □ T H E nAfi.V T E X A N □ T h u r s d a y j i e g t e m b e r 21, 1978 ARE YO U QUALIFIED listed below: $ c. REQUIREMENTS: I BMY WEIGHT MUST APPROACH 2 M POUNDS (ONE-TENTH TON). 2. DRINK AT LEAST FOUR NIGHTS AWEEK. 3. DRINK AT LEAST TWO SIX-PACKS OR ONE FIFTH DURING A SITTING. 4. GET LESS THAN SIX HOURS OF SLEEP EACH NIGHT. front of shirt b ack of shirt These quality H an e s’ T-shirts feature white lettering on a bright red shirt. They are a v a ilab le in M en s sizes S (34-36), M (38-40), L (42-44), and X L (46-48). To get yours, send a check or money order for S4.50 plus S.50 for postage and handling to: Ask about our group discounts C .P.A. A thletic C o rp oration P.O. Box 12 N e e d h a m , M a s s a c h u s e tts 0 2 1 9 2 A llo w 3-4 w e e k s for delivery ORDER YOURS TODAY Andrew quits Indy 500 IN D IAN APO LIS (U P I) - Marie Andretti, who at age 38 captured this year’s Grand Prix world driving cham­ pionship, says he will not com­ pete next year in the richest race of them all, the In ­ dianapolis 500, which he won nearly a decade ago. In an interview with The In­ dianapolis News Wednesday, the former 500 winner said he w ill pass up the million-dollar racing cla s sic because scheduling conflicts he called to the attention of numerous officials were ignored. Next year’s Indianapolis 500 and the Grand Prix of Monaco are scheduled for the same day next May. ‘‘The first day of qualifying at Indianapolis also conflicts with Belgium,” the native Italian said. “THIS IS THE part I regret most. Indy for me holds a v e r y , v e r y d e a r spot emotionally. I have said even if I had to drive a wheelbarrel, I d drive Indy. But I ’m giving it up.” Andretti, now of Nazareth, Pa., will compete in a USAC race at Trenton, N J., Satur­ day. He said he was disap­ pointed the promoters at In­ dianapolis and Monte Carlo have not tried to resolve their scheduling conflict. “ They are penalizing a man like me who wants to do both,” he said. “ I ’m to the point w here if they don t want to do it, why should I? ” Andretti has driven in every Indianapolis 500 since 1965. He won the 1969 Speedway race. ANDRETTI SAID realizing his goal of winning the world title ranks higher than win­ ning Indianapolis. he said. “ I t ’s greater than In ­ dianapolis, In­ dianapolis is one event, this is a whole season. I can t com­ pare Indianapolis with the championship.” Still, Andretti said he was in no mood to celebrate because of the death of his teammate, Ronnie Peterson, in the recent Grand Prix of Italy at Monza. A u n e . . . (Continued from Page 14.) ‘ The coaches told me they needed depth in their backs so they put me in that position,’’ he said. “ They put me where they thought I could best help the team but I was also train­ ing with the other quarterbacks during workouts.’’ Reliving the past is often painful for Aune who now works out individually on a program designed for him by the coaches while the rest of the team works collectively to im­ prove its game. “I’M WORKING ON trying to get my speed back, concentrating both on endurance run­ ning and timed running," he said. “ The knee operation really took all of my speed away from me." He looks optimistically to the future and while he knows he will have to watch his team from the sidelines the first few games, Aune is confident about his chances to play soon. “ I have to keep working and see how everything turns out,’ he said. “ Maybe in the next couple of weeks I will get a chance to play, maybe not. Maybe they’ll just hold me until next year.” With Sam Ansley redshirted, the possibility of Akers having two quarterbacks sidelined seems slim. BUT AUNE SAID BEING redshirted is still a possibility though it has not yet been decid­ ed by the coaches and himself. . “ I guess if I am not in good physical condi­ tion they will want to hold me until next year,” he said. “ While the coaches make the final decision as to whether or not to redshirt me, they always ask me how I feel about it and we talk about it.’ He talks about next year as if it were just around the corner, but for Aune, the possibili­ ty of being sidelined forces him to look into the future and make some decisions. “ The competition for the starting position would probably be the same next year as it is now, but I would be a lot healthier,” he said. “ I know I would be in better shape — like I was last year before I was hurt. Sports shorts Golfers second The men’s golf team moved closer to the lead at All-College Golf Tourna­ ment in Oklahoma City. After Wednesday’s second round, T e x a s t r a i l s Centenary College by two strokes. The Longhorns had a second-round team total of 562, cutting two shots off Centenary’s first-round lead and putting Texas nine strokes ahead of third- place Oklahoma State. The six-man team, con­ sisting of Lawrence Field, Tom Cornelia, Bucky Sm ith, P h il Vescovo, James Spagnolo and Doug N elle, were among 18 teams competing. Field, who shot a 70, was in second place in in­ dividual competition, with a total of 137. The leader, R a f a e l Alacorn from Oklahoma State, shot a 68, for a total of 132. Case decided HOUSTON (U P I) - The Boston Celtics will give the Houston Rockets cash and the Celtics’ second-round draft choice in 1981 for signing free agent center Kevin Kunnert. a Rockets spokesman said Wednes­ day. The 7-foot Kunnert played out his option this year after playing with the Rockets four seasons. He was signed by Boston June 9. Management of the two teams worked out the com­ pensation without having to go to the office of the NBA commissioner. The amount of cash was un­ disclosed by agreement of- both clubs, the spokesman said. Pruitt doubtful C LEVELA N D (U P I) - Cleveland Browns running back Greg Pruitt was h o s p it a liz e d at the Cleveland Clinic Wednes­ day for a leg muscle injury and almost certainly w ill miss this Sunday’s key the a g a i n s t gam e Pittsburgh Steelers. Pruitt, who suffered deep contusions of his left calf muscle in the game against the Cincinnati Bengals two weeks ago, also missed last Sunday's game against the Atlanta Falcons. Dierdorf hurt ST. LO UIS (U P I) - The winless St. Louis Cardinals may be without their offen­ sive line leader, tackle Dan Dierdorf, against the Dallas Cowboys Sunday. “ Dierdorf probably will not be able to play,” said General Manager Joe Sullivan. Dierdorf suffered a knee injury in the Car­ dinals’ loss to Washington last Sunday. Sullivan told a Quarter­ back Club luncheon Tues­ day the team's misfortunes this year have been caused mostly by injuries. H I G H L A N D S P E T M E D I C A L CLIN IC, INC. w ish e s to a n n o u n c e the a s s o c ia tio n of T E R R Y P. RAY, D.V.M. for the p ra c t ic e of V e t e r i n a r y M e d i c i n e a n d S u r g e r y 1220 Parkway For appointments 476-1069 nrrrr* K S T ’ " » I * - * • * * •’ .....J ? .................. i I I VI « ( , f , ( .f I e => - § , { N I I Rotel’s RX-203 20 watt receiver will Put the concert hall in your Living room . In fact, at halt volum e it will probably be difficult to talk over the music. So why buy a 200 watt receiver you can’t use? A n d we guarantee that any distortion you hear is in your speakers or your turn­ table, because the RX-203 has inaudible dis­ tortion. (W e also have good speakers and turntables, just in case.) This e x c e lle n t receiver has outlets for a tape deck and either a magnetic or ceramic cartridge turntable. A n d our low , introduc tory price is unbeatable. Through Saturday. B w J ^ ^ S A V E $60 G O O D N E W S FOR YOU A B O U T ST E R E O 3 7 th at G u a d a lu p e 4 5 9 - 0 0 4 4 JAROSH HASH0N0H - 5739 Oct. 2 & 3 r r a Candlelighting — 6:59 p.m. Oct. I 8:00 p.m. Oct. Evening Service — 7:15 p.m. Oct. I Morning Service — 10:00 a.m. Oct. 2 & J SHOFAR BLOWING — 11:30 a.m. Oct. 2 & 3 m eals follow ing all services A ll J e w is h st u d e n ts a n d c o m m u n it y m e m b e r s n o fee re q uire d . a re in v ite d — Chabad House 2101 Nueces 472-3900 Greyhound Rx- The cure for college blahs. Ifs a feeling that slowly descends upon you The exams, the pop tests, the required reading, the hours at the library, the thesis they won’t go away But you can This weekend, take off, say hello to your friends, see the sights, have a great time You’ll arrive with money in your pocket because your Greyhound trip doesn't take that much out of it lf you’re feeling tired, depressed and exhausted, grab a Greyhound and split. It s a sure cure tor the blahs I 4 I • '• * J I x/V, .-u Greyhound Service To Dallas San Antonio Houston Waco , Laredo On«- W ay 13.50 5.65 ll.O O 7.15 15 95 15.95 Round- Trip 25.65 10.75 20.90 13.60 30.25 You Arrive You C an Leave 2:50 pm 6:40 pm 3:40 pm 5:15 pm 3:00 pm 6:15 pm 4:55 pm 7:40 pm 12:50 pm 6:35 pm Ask your agent about additional departures and return trips (Prices subtect to change ) 4th & Congress 476-7451 Greyhound Terminal C r -* GO GREYHOUND i s only one xray to make Quality Service & Parts For Datsun & Toyota Ftradition is still LA v s s j x y~ i "es K W T Call for Appointment 443-4122 Closed M onday a e r u The 1978 Cactus Yearbook is here. If you ordered a 1978 Cactus Yearbook, you may now nii-w it un 'A t the Texas Student Publications Business Oilice, IS P J.ZOU, at (he coroer of 2 5 th a n d WWtt^between 8:30 a .rn. and 4:30 pm. Mon -Fri. Photo ID required M ules laden w ith Blue M aguey p in a s on their w ay to Cuervo's Im Rojena p la n t Since 1795 we’ve gathered our Blue Magueys for Cuervo Gold the gentle way. Its the old way. And still the best. A t Cuervo ire know that there Cuervo Gold perfect. The way we've been doing it tor more than 180 years. That's why people still nu rf lire our fields of til Maguey plants. And why mules are still used to briny these precious plants to our distillery. the most important ingredient in C lient Gold. This is what makes Cuervo Gold truly special. N (at. on the rocks, with a splash of soda, in a perfect Sunrise or Margarita, Cuervo Gold will bring you back to a time when quality ruled the world. _ C u e rv o . The Cold standard sinc e 1795. C U E R V 0 . c ouu a „ p r o o f .Mr o R r e n » B o r n e o B v r h e r e i n . Red Sox fall, Yanks gain TORONTO (U P I) - G raig N e ttle s ’ ru n -scorin g sin gle with one out in the ninth in­ ning capped a three-run rally W ednesday night that enabled the New York Y ankees to salv ag e a doubleheader split with a 3-2 victory over the Toronto Blue Ja y s. Rick Bosetti slashed a two- run triple and two singles, backing the five-hit pitching of left-hander, Mike Willis, in his first sta rt of the season , to give the Blue J a y s an 8-1 vic­ tory in the first g am e again st Ron Guidry. Willie Randolph led off the ninth with a single and one out later, R eggie Ja ck so n walked. re lie v e d V ictor Cruz, 7-3, sta rte r Tom Underwood and p ro m p tly y ie ld e d an R B I single to Lou Piniella. Chris C h am b liss then sin g le d to center to score Ja ck so n , and N ettles capped the inning with a single to right th at scored pinch runner P aul B lair. Rich G o ssage , 10-10, allow ­ ed two hits over the final three innings to record the victory. Right-hander Ken Clay gave up both Toronto runs in the s e ­ John M ayberry cond when singled and scored on D ave M c K a y ’s double down the right field line. M cK ay moved to third on a wild pitch and cam e home on L u is G om ez’ field er’s choice grounder. when the Detroit T ig e rs dealt a co stly blow to B o sto n ’s A m erican League E a s t pen­ nant hopes with a 12-2 rom p over the Red Sox. The loss dropped the Red Sox two g am es back of the division-leading Y an kees with IO to play. R ozem a, 9-10, had retired 16 of 17 b a tte r s when J e r r y R em y got his fourth hit of the gam e — a leadoff sin gle in the ninth — and Jim R ic e spoiled the shutout bid with his 42nd hom er. The hom er broke up a strin g of 22 stra ig h t sc o re le ss innings for R ozem a, who hurl­ ed his lith com plete gam e. Whitaker doubled and cam e home on a single by Staub in the first inning to s ta r t Mike T orrez on his w ay to his 12th loss again st 15 w ins. Torrez h a s n ot w on a g a m e in Septem ber and h as lost six of his la st seven. D e tro it sc o re d six m ore runs in the seventh, three of them com ing on Staub s 23rd hom er. Ron L e F lo re doubled home two runs in the inning and Aurelio R odriguez singled home the other. W hitaker hit his third hom e run of the in th e s ix th a f t e r s e a s o n L e F lo r e w as in ten tion ally w a l k e d a n d R o d r i g u e z doubled. Tim Corcoran singled home a run for D etroit in the fourth a n d o n A la n T ram m ell’s double. s c o r e d In the opener, the Blue J a y s m auled Guidry for five runs in I 1-3 innings, sending him to his e arlie st departure of the season and his third lo ss in 25 decisions. Guidry, who had in a row, com ­ won seven m itted a throwing erro r that led to two runs in the first in­ ning. A fter Bob B ailor and B o set­ ti hit consecutive sin gles, Roy Howell bunted and G uidry fired the ball into left field attem pting to nail B o setti at third. The J a y s then chased Guidry in the second inning when B o se tti trip le d a fte r singles by Rick Cerone and Luis Gom ez. B o setti scored on B a ilo r’s triple and brought on reliever L arry M cCall. Tigers 12, Red Sox 2 D E T R O IT (U P I) - D ave Rozem a, backed by three-run hom ers from Lou Whitaker and R usty Staub, pitched a six -h itter W ednesday night Twins 5, Rangers 3 B L O O M IN G T O N , M inn. (U P I) — Dan F o rd had three hits and drove in two runs and D ave Goltz sca tte re d eight hits W ednesday night, pacing the M innesota Tw ins to a 5-3 tr iu m p h o v e r th e T e x a s R an gers. Goltz, 14-10, recorded his 12th com plete g am e , walking two and striking out three. s c o r e d T h e T w in s fo ur tim es in the fourth inning on four w alks, a hit b a tte r and in­ field sin gles by Rod Carew and Ford. All four runs were charged to loser S tev e Com er, 9-5, who walked six b a tte rs in 3 2-3 innings. M innesota went ahead 5-2 in the sixth on Bob R an d all’s single, two walks and F o rd ’s sa c rific e fly. The R a n g e rs’ R ich ie Zisk cracked his 20th hom er in the in Al inning, driving sixth Oliver, who had singled. J im Sundberg w alked, advanced to third on Toby H arrah ’s sin gle and sco red when Jim M ason hit into a seventh-inning dou­ ble play for the final T e x a s run. Brewers 5, Royals 4 K A N SA S CITY (U P I) - S al Bando tripled in the tying run and P a u l M olitor doubled home the gam e-w inner in the e ig h th in n in g W ed n esd ay night to give the M ilwaukee B re w ers a 5-4 victory over the K a n sa s City R oyals. IO The tr iu m p h sn a p p e d a s t r i n g o f s t r a i g h t M ilw aukee lo sse s in K a n sa s City and the d efeat reduced the R o y a ls ’ first-place lead in the W estern Division to five g am e s ov er C alifornia. L a r r y H isle op en ed th e eighth with a single and Bando tripled him home two outs later. M olitor followed with a double to left field, ruining the m ajor-leagu e debut of lo ser Bill P a sc h a ll, who had pitched 6 1-3 innings of three-hit relief entering the eighth inning. K an sas City sta rte r Rich G a le issued two bases-loaded w alks to give M ilw aukee a 2-0 f i r s t and the lea d B rew ers added their fourth run on a third-inning sacrifice fly by Jim Wohlford. the in D arrell P o rte r singled home two K a n sa s City runs in he first, G eorge B re tt doubled home another in the third and Al Cowens gav e the R oyals a 4-3 lead with an R B I single in the sixth. AMERICAN LEAGUE By United Prate International Eaat ai W L Pet New Y o rk ................... 92 60 606 Boston ......... 90 62 Milwaukee ................. 87 66 Baltimore ................. 85 66 Detroit........................ 81 70 Cleveland................... 66 84 Toronto...................... 58 93 .592 2 569 51 .563 6 1 536 10' 440 25 384 33 Waat W L Kansas City ............... 85 66 California ................... 8 1 72 Texas ........................ 75 74 Minnesota................... 69 82 O akland..................... 68 86 Chicago ............... 67 85 Seattle........................ 55 93 Wadnaaday*a Results Milwaukee 5. Kansas City 4 Detroit 12. Boston 2 Minnesota 5, Texas 3 Toronto 8-2, New York 1-3 OB 16 18W 18Va 457 442 ,441 .372 28 SERVICE SPECIALISTS Volkswagens, Toyotas & Datsuns Fully Equipped Modem Facilities Reasonable Prices 10% DISCOUNT on any service or repairs w ith this ad. SOUTH SIDE MOTORS ★ VW Bosch Ports it Broke Service ★ Ring & Valve Job ★ Tune-Up A Service ★ Complete Engine Overhaul ★ Transmissions it Weal Balancing ★ Front Wheel Alignment ★ Electrical Service it Muffler Service it Carburetors ★ Diagnostic Tune-Up Center 2617 S. 1st QOQ«f . 444-4529 444-2431 Announcing UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION'S SALE OF USED CARS National Car Rental • For Members • Selected GM Models Featured • Saturday, September 30, 1978 • IO a.m.-2 p.m. • 2110 Redwood • Credit Union Loans Available For further information, contact a credit union loan officer. U n i v e r s i t y CREDIT UNION Thursda September 21, i<>7fl n THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 17 — UPI Telephoto Yankees' Thurman Munson slides safely into second during 8-1 loss to Toronto._______ mmm, PERSONAL GOALS ARE AS IMPORTANT AS FIELD GO AW TO COACH FRED AKERS. FIND OUT WHY IN THE OCTOBER ISSUE OF UTMOST MAGAZINE. M uch of the football practice that the Longhorns engage in jcn't done on the playing field — it takes place inside the heads of the players. " V is u a liza tio n ," the techniqu of practicing a play or drill over and over again in your mind, is just one part of the mental conditioning program designed by Head Coach Fred Akers "Zen and the A rt of Football P la y in g " ex­ plores the mental stra­ tegies employed by the 'Horns to improve their individual games. Be- .ieving that all human beings are goal-oriented, Akers encourages each player to w rite down his goals and the various steps necessary to attain them , resulting in increased self­ confidence and a rise in the expectations a player has about himself. Learn more about the Longhorns' m ental m agic and its role in the overall gam e plan in the October issue of UTmost m agazine. THE OCTOBER ISSUE IS COMING WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. Watch The Daily Texan for details. most A REPRESENTATIVE FROM THE COLD, CRUEL W U U WOULD UREA FEW WORDS WITH YOH. His name is Jim Thomson, and he might he able to m ake that world look a lot friendlier to you, with an opportunity for a career at Reed Tool Company. Reed is one of the world's leading manufacturers and suppliers of drilling hits, tool joints, and fluid-end pump parts for the petroleum industry. If you're majoring in engineering and are in­ terested in field, process, design, product, or project work; or if you're majoring in business and are in­ terested in field sales, Jim Thomson would like a few words with you on September 25. Contact your placement office and set up an interview with Reed. It sure beats facing the cold, cruel world alone. West 30th and Cedar Streets / 476-4676 Serving University Faculty and Staff R££D TOOL COM PAS I U ) B o x 21 l l2 H o u s t o n , Texas ’ HMM ( 7 1 5 ) 9 2 6 5121 A Baker International C o m p a n y Aft / . /na/ < ) [ > / > o r t u n i l v h n i ' l o v c r Page 18 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ ThursdayiJ e p t e m b e r 2 1 J 978 j .r . finally gets some publicity HOUSTON (UPI) - If he played for a team which scored m ore runs, record-setting pitcher J R Richard would be a leading contender to win the Cy Young Award. If he threw his blazing fast ball and semi-blazing slider on either the left or right coast. Richard's mug shot would appear on magazine covers and T- shirts. But. alas, he toils for a losing team in a city that doesn't know to which part of the South it belongs. And through it all. the devoted Christian family man from Ruston, La understands his un­ derexposure and quietly wishes he and his team m ates were accorded more fame. “ The recognition has been very slow in com ing." he said. “ Very slow for the Houston area. I'd have to call it very poor. Guys like Cesar Cedeno and Bob Watson have been doing things over a period of years that have gone un­ noticed. And the year I won 20 gam es, I didn't get much recognition.'' IN 1976, RICHARD won 20 despite the Astros suffering a losing season This year, with the Astros in fifth place,’ Richard is 17-11 despite losing or receiving a no decision in seven close gam es. Said team m ate Enos Cabell, “ J.R . deserves to be considered as one of the best. He is. He has worked hard. There is not a pitcher that batters fear any more than J R ' His team m ates cheer him, but local sports fans treat him for a number of reasons with indifference. Only 5.710 spectators paid Wednesday night to watch Richard go after a prestigious pitching record and, on top of that, to see if 39-year-old Jim Bouton of Atlanta really threw his knuckleball as slowly as reported. Those who attended got everything they could have expected, unless they w ere u n r e a listic and expected a Houston win. Atlanta won 3-2 on Bob H orner’s ninth-inning double off a relief pitcher. R ichard had taken himself out of the gam e after his right forearm stiffened in the eighth. AN INNING B E F O R E , his strikeout of Horner on a hard slider lifted Richard to the top of a record book heading which reads, “ Most strikeouts single righthanded pitcher, National League, since 1900 His ll strike outs in the gam e boosted his season total to 290. one better than Tom Seaver accom plished in 1971. season, Although accorded three standing ovations and better attention than is often received from Astros fans, after the gam e R ic h a rd sag g e d a s he slumped his 6-8 fram e into a couch for a post-game interview. “ You can kill a horse if you work it long enough," he said. Of the perform ance, which drew a large group of local sportsw riters and sportscasters, he said, “ Maybe people are beginning to notice. “ I WORKED FO R it I ve earned everything I ve ever had. Nothing s been given to me. But I think I ve been blessed — I was never poor black. I I ve grew up m idd le-class black. always been am bitious, willing to work hard” Richard showed he had studied the list of the m ajor league’s great strike out artists. “ I feel very good about the record. I'm the first man, the first black man, the in m odern National League history to strike out 290." he said. fir s t righ th an d er But Richard has his faults on the mound, and local fans are often disap­ pointed when his pitches become wild. He leads the m ajor leagues in walks allowed, as well as strike outs. And he has uncorked 15 wild pitches this year. A wild pitch inning against Atlanta Tuesday, the sam e in­ ning he broke the record, cost him a possible win. in the seventh “ That’s the way life is. You do things to the best of your ability and hope for the b est," Richard said. “ I’ll be back throwing Saturday." Richard holds ball he threw for 290th strikeout and modern National League record. UPI Telephoto Phillies increase lead in NL East CHICAGO (U P I) - B ill Buckner batted in two runs with a single and a sacrifice fly to help Mike Krukow to a four-hit 5-1 victory for the Chicago Cubs Wednesday en­ ding a seven-game Pittsburgh P irates’ winning streak. Buckner’s single cam e in the first inning, scoring Ivan D eJesus who had walked and r e a c h e d th ird on M anny T rillo’s single. In the fourth, D e Je s u s w alked, reach ed third on another Trillo single and sc o red on B u c k n e r’s sa c rific e fly before D ave Kingman followed with a dou­ ble to score Trillo. The Cubs also scored in the second when Mick Kelleher sin gled , reach ed third on Krukow’s double and scored on D eJesu s’ single. Mike Vail doubled in the Cubs final run in the eighth P irates’ starter Jim Rooker took the loss, his lith against nine wins on a yield of eight hits and four runs. It was Krukow’s eighth win against two defeats. Phillies 4, Expos 2 MONTREAL (U PI) - Greg Luzinski cracked a two-run hom er and M ike Sch m idt followed with a solo blast in the sixth inning Wednesday night to lift Philadelphia to a 4-2 triumph over the Montreal Expos, moving the Phillies two gam es ahead of second- p la c e P ittsb u r g h the National League E ast. in Philadelphia led 1-0 enter­ inning when ing the sixth Garry Maddox lashed a one- out double against loser Dan Sch atzed er, 7-6. Lu zin sk i followed with his 32nd homer into the left field bleachers to make the score 3-0. Schmidt then hit his 21st home run, to the sam e spot, boosting the lead to 4-0 behind Phillies’ left-hander Randy Lerch, 10-8, who went the first eight in­ nings. Ron Reed finished for his 14th save. Tony Perez hit a two-run homer for Montreal, his 14th, in the sixth, after Andre Daw­ son had singled. Meta 7, Cardinals 6 ST. LOUIS (UPI) - A two- run single by Willie Montanez h i g h lig h t e d a f o u r - r u n seventh-inning rally Wednes­ day night and helped the New York Mets to a 7-6 triumph over the St. Louis Cardinals. Lee Mazzilli, who gave New York a 3-1 lead with a two-run homer in the fourth, led off the seventh with a walk off lo s in g r e l i e v e r G e o r g e Frazier, 0-3. Mazzilli reached second on an error and Tim F o li r e a c h e d f i r s t on a f i e l d e r ’ s c h o ic e b e fo r e Frazier walked Steve Hender­ son. Montanez followed with a single off reliever Aurelio Lopez, Henderson scored on a sacrifice fly by John Stearns, Dan Norman singled and Mon­ tanez scored on a sacrifice fly by Elliott Maddox off reliever Roy Thomas. Giants 6, P adres 3 SAN DIEGO (U PI) - Vida Blue got his first win in six for the w eeks, but failed seventh straight tim e to go the distance Wednesday night in a 6-3 triumph by San Francisco Giants over the San Diego Padres. Blue, now 17-9, had dropped five in a row and the Giants had lost 12 of their last 14 the g a m e . E rie en terin g Rasm ussen, 14-14, suffered his fourth straight defeat. Blue was touched for IO hits before yielding to Randy Mof- fitt with two on and none out in the eighth. The Giants, meanwhile, worked over five pitchers for a dozen hits, in­ fir s t cluding M arc H ill’s m a jo r - le a g u e t r ip le . Six different Giants drove in the runs. San Francisco scored two runs in the first on Ja c k Clark’s sacrifice fly and Mike Ivie s RBI single. The Giants added a run in the third on Clark s single and D arrell E vans’ double. Dodgers 8, Reds 0 LOS A N GELES (U PI) - Lee Lacy, in a 4-for-42 slump, collected three hits, including a pair of doubles and drove in three runs, while Rick Rhoden hurled a three-hitter Tuesday night to help the Los Angeles Dodgers rout the Cincinnati Reds 8-0 and cut their magic the N a tio n a l in n um ber League West to three. The victory put the Dodgers 8 1-2 gam es up over the Reds with IO regular season gam es remaining. Any combination of three Los Angeles wins and Cincinnati losses would give the D o d g ers th eir second straigh t W estern Division crown. Rhoden, starting in place of the injured Tom m y John, recorded his third shutout of the season to improve his record to 10-7. Lacy, whose average fell from ’ 302 August 19 to .262 at gam e time, had a two-run dou­ ble in the first inning and an RBI single in the second as the Dodgers sent nine men to th plate in each of the first two innings for a 6-0 lead. NATIO NAL LEAGUE By United Prose International East Philadelphia Pittsburgh Chicago Montreal St Louis . New York . Los Angeles Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Houston Atlanta W 83 81 . . 75 . . . 71 . . . 65 63 Waat L 68 70 76 82 88 89 Pct. .550 536 497 464 426 414 W L 92 61 84 68 83 69 79 74 68 83 68 84 Pct. .601 553 546 .51 6 450 447 OB 2 8 13 19 20 Vt OB 7Vt av* 13 23 23 Vt Wednesday’* Results Chicago 5, Pittsburgh 1 Philadelphia 4, Montreal 2 New York 7, St. Louis 6 Atlanta 3, Houston 2 San Francisco 6, San Diego 3 Cincinnati 4. Los Angeles 3 Philadelphia’s Ted Sizemore forces Expo Gary Carter at second base. _ UPI Telephoto MAMA'S pizza J ^ *1 0 0 CHALLENGE1, rf'"3 You can win $100.00 by eating a 20” J r 4 V (MAMA’S SIZE) Pizza in one hour J at M am a’s. Call or come by f o r i <£N A details on contest‘ Thick, rich hom em ade crust. Fresh tom ato sauce. Ingredients — all fresh vegetables: I | « Hamburger Sausage Pepperoni Black Olive Green Olive Onion Green Pepper Jalapeno Mushroom C anadian Bacon MAMA DELIVERS F ree delivery with $5.00 purchase Delivery Hrs: 5-11 Mon-Thurs 5-11:30 F ri; 12-11:30 Sat 12-9 Sun. Open: Sun noon-10 pm l l am-11 pm Mon-Thurs Midnite F ri & Sat 1507 Lavaca 472-3693 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I L S t e a k s French C u isin e Courtyard & Bar The most unique dining experience in Austin Open 8 a rn until 2 at night. 314 East 6rh St. (Free Parking Roar - S.W. Corner 7Hi & Trinity) Vernon P* esentt ni CommrtW® oUrt® „\tn W rta'nn' B C virtu'3' t m ru e ‘V o # * rn a on 'ea nu\e aho* 0ou$'aS’ SaXU w E *r Y \0 $ 1 n u c, , M .s e VvemW A3 s e * ® " " *' Tvck®P?'f5o ^ CEC b0,$3- oif\WedneS \tcket sa'esM R o*0"ice . r t e IO *'" a&e arts & entertainment THE DAILY TEXAN Page 19 Thursday, September 21, 1978 A t ZSTC Play depicts rural Texas in last of Jones’ trilogy The Austin Civic Theater opens its fall season Friday night with a production of “ The O l d e s t L i v i n g Graduate” by Preston Jones. The play is the third in Jones’ “ A Texas Trilogy,” dealing with life in rural West Texas. SET IN the mythical town of Bradleyville, “ The Oldest Living Graduate’ depicts in­ cidents surrounding a celebra­ tion planned to honor Col. J.C. Kinkaid, the oldest living graduate of M irabeau B. Lamar Military Academy Jones, whose two previous plays in the trilogy have been performed at Zachary Scott Theatre, w ill be on hand for Saturday’s show to talk with the audience before curtain time. J o n e s , who ear ned a master ’s degree through T r i n i t y U n i v e r s i t y ’ s playwriting program at the Dallas Theatre Center, wrote the series because he felt there was a void in American regional theater. The in­ cidents in all three plays, “ The Last Meeting of the K n i g h t s of the W h i t e Magnolia,” “ Lu Ann Hampton Laverty Oberlander” and “ The O l d e s t L i v i n g Graduate” are based on Jones’ experiences in West Texas. T H E P L A Y S w e r e presented at the Kennedy Center in Washington, in the spring of 1976. The trilogy made its Broadway debut that same year. Refreshments will be serv­ ed Saturday from 7:30 p.m. until curtain time at 8:15 p.m. to give the audience a chance to meet the playwright. A photographic exhibition by Douglas Showerman of Zachary Scott Theatre Center theatrical productions will be on display at the center throughout the run of the show, Friday through Oct. 21. For information and reser­ vations, call 476-0541. START YOUR EVENING VIEWING WITH THE CBS EVENING NEWS WITH WAITER CRONKITE Doug Kershaw, the old bayou fiddler, will bring a taste of his distinctive cajun/c ountry music to the Fiddling around Austin Opry House Friday night. Concert to benefit women from thp 1920s. country music from the 1920s. Soap Creek Saloon will host a benefit concert for “ Women and their Work” at 7:30 p.m. Sunday with guest musicians and poets performing a varie­ ty of entertainment. Some of those appearing will be Marcia Ball and her band, jazz pianist and singer Ernie Mae Miller (a week- night performer at The and r e c e n t l y C e d a r s highlighted at the In ter­ national Women’s Year con­ ference in Austin) and the women from Esther s Pool. Traditional music w ill be presented by the All Person Band, who will perform Irish dance music and traditional music including gospel songs, a shape note tune and popular During the evening, poets will read from lnterart Public Art’s new poetry anthology written by women in the Travis County Ja il. Women and Their Work is trying to “ create women’s culture in all aspects in Austin,” said Cherese Campo, a member of .the group. This a member of the group. Thi includes music, films, drama, poetry, creative writing and art, she said. Proceeds from the benefit w ill be used for future programming and for the ac­ quisition of space for perfor­ mances, conferences and ex­ hibitions. Admission for the concert is $3 at the door. ^ MO memorial SERVICE FOR GRANDPA WALTON IS ALL THE MORE POIGNANT BECAUSE THE FAMILY MAY LEAVE WALTONS MOUNTAIN FOREVER! Starring Ralph Waite, Michael Learned. Also starring Ellen i Corby. BLINDED b a r n a b y TRACKED BY A CUNNING KILLER! A BREATH- STOPPING BATTLE OF WITS AND SUSPENSE. Wounded by a gunman's bullet, Barnaby tries to escape capture and death in a deserted wood Starring Buddy Ebsen. Also starring Lee Meriwether and Mark Shera. Page 20 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ T hursday, September 21, 1978 DISCOVER ' C a t R e S T b m a ti) Q u a lity Ita lia n F o o d 1 6 0 1 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 6 7 2 0 2 and Mouse ...uneven but entertaining title ) th e in trig u in g is an c h a rac te r. He is a hard-nosed d e t e c t i v e w i t h h a r d - l i n e m ethods who keeps com pany a n d p r o s t i t u t e s w i t h counterfeiters. But th e diver­ sions into his personal life, revealing as they m ay be, ul­ tim ately in terrupt the m ore p r e s s i n g c o n c e r n s o f whodunit. Serge Reggiani and M ichele Morgan m ake a fine pair as the inspector and the widow. R eggiani’s w ise and w arm L echat nicely com plem ents b l u e - e y e d M o r g a n ’ s graciousness in their gam e of c at and mouse. The m atu re cam arad erie betw een the two is a fine ex am p le of how F rench actors and ac tresses, like F rench wines, age with quality. a The final revelations of the film ’s plot give credence to the well-worn prem ise th at the tru th is stran g er than fic­ tion. The tw ists are in tricate, the fa cts bizarre and Lelouche m a i n t a i n s c h a r m throughout. One can even th e p lo t fo rg iv e h im for deviations and his obtrusive cam eraw ork once the co m ­ plex solution to the crim e is found. As for “ cherchez la in ­ th e re fe m m e ,” evitable woman involved, but to discuss it would ruin the fun. the is “ C at and M ouse” is far from being, as another French idiom describes, the “ crem e de la c r e m e ” of m u rd e r m ysteries, but it is an enter- t a i n i n g d i v e r s i o n nevertheless. TONITE PRIVATE EYES PRO G RESSIVE ROCK S«pt. ll, 9 p m. $1.00 RAUL’S 2610 GUADALUPE T o n ig h t angel SUCHERAS BAND AFTER HOURS HAPPY HOUR (12-1) 50‘ OFF ALL DRINKS By STEVE DAVIS Dally Texan Staff “ C a t a n d M o u s e ; ” w r i t t e n a n d d i r e c t e d by C l a u d e L e l o u c h ; a t t he Vi llage 4; in F r e n c h with s ubt i tl es . Women and crim e have always m ade an exotic pair. All sexist and fem inist com ­ m en t asid e, c rim e can be c o m m o n p l a c e a n d u n ­ interesting under the execu­ tion of men. but when th ere is a w om an involved, a sen ­ sational dimension is added. The French, in their wisdom f o r d i a g n o s i n g h u m a n behavior, have an idiom for it fe m m e .” — “ ch erch ez la Where there is a crim e, es­ pecially m urder, one should “ look for the w om an.” the “ cherchez C L A U D E L E L O U C H ’S “ Cat and Mouse” is a clever but uneven m urder m ystery espousing la fem m e” principle. Based on a French bestseller that in turn was based on a tru e story, “ Cat and M ouse” has a plot like a jigsaw puzzle in dis­ array . A wealthy and philandering b u ild er/m o v ie p ro d u cer is found dead in his hideaway villa one afternoon. The death the m arkings of a has all suicide. But if no m urder was com m itted, then why a re five FACULTY/STAFF LUNCH WITH THE COACH Head Football Coach Fred Akers will meet with faculty and staff to discuss the team, the Rice game, and the upcoming gam e with W yom ing over a buffet lunch. TODAY & EVERY THURSDAY NOON-1 PM TEXAS UNION QUADRANGLE 3.304 p ric e le s s p a in tin g s — in ­ cluding a R enoir and Van Gogh — m issing from the villa at the tim e of the so-called suicide? The suspects are few, but th e f i n g e r of s u s p i c i o n decidedly points to the stun­ (M ichele ning new widow Mo r g a n ) b e c a u s e of h e r precarious y et bountiful posi­ tion. Her husband’s death is a virtual jackpot. WITH HIS dem ise, she is rid of a spouse and is now the owner of a v ast fortune. And if th a t w e r e n ’t en o u g h , sh e stands to collect $1.6 m illion in insurance for the th eft of the paintings. t h e r e , The police, however, led by th e u n o rth o d o x In s p e c to r Lechat, a re confused by the widow’s airtig h t alibi — she was in a P a ris moviehouse, m ore than two hours away from the villa, at the tim e of the death. F r o m f i l m erratically proceeds to un­ ravel clues and leads like a kitten playing with a ball of yam . U nfortunately Lelouch s screenplay, spiced with wit and sly hum or, dwells too much upon the ch a ra c te r of L echat in the film ’s first half and the baffling crim e is lost in the background. t h e TRUE, LECHAT (w hose in cid en tally , m ean s nam e, “ the c a t” in F rench and hence p * * 1 THE KEG DORM NIGHT Pitchers $1.75 Highballs $1.00 725 W. 23rd No Covor 477-5505 3 hr*, lr— parking in T ri-T ow r* g a r a g e IH F . T E X A S t a v e r n Tonight ST BEACH PARTY 3 DISCO Catch a wave with Annette and Frankie 8:30 $.10 *beer if you wear a bathing s u i t __ S EPTEM B ER 22 & 23 E D D IE ADCOCK & MARTHA Ilnd GENERATION also appearing PETER LANG S EPTEM B ER 24 JOHN FAH EY with PETER LANG ★ COMING ★ 9 28 BILLY COBHAM 9/29 TALKING HEADS!!! 9/30 JOE ELY & MARCIA BALL S 2 S > 4 B A R T O N S P R I N G S R D . 477-47*1 ' O THURS NITE 25* BEER 2915 Guadalupe m em o: ATTENTION GREEKS! 1979 CACTUS YEARBOOK STUDIO DON'T FORGET YOUR APPOINTMENT LAST DAY - THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 - LAST DAY D e l t a S i g m a P h i s i g m a I iii Friday, September 22 - Monday, September 25 - Tuesday, September 26 A c a c i a Alpha U p s i l o n Pi \ I p 11 a P h i A l p h a A l p h a T a u < ) m e g a B e t a T h e t a P i D e l t a K a p p a U p s i l o n D e l t a T a u D e l t a D e l t a I p s i l o n K a p p a A lp h a K a p p a A lp h a P si K a p p a S i g m a " " I ' r P h i G u m m a D r ill. Pi K a p p a A l p h a S i , m a A l p h a E p s i l o n S i , A l p h a M u S i , m a C h i S i , m a A u S i , , n a P h i E p s i l o n S i , m a T a u G a m m a Wednesday, September 27 - s i u n i A p h . P h i C h i O m e g a L a m b d a C h i A l p h a O m e g a Psi P h i P h i D e l t a T h e t a P h i K a p p a P si P h i K a p p a T h e t a T a u K a p p a K p s , Im. r _ A l p h a X, I). Ila D e l t a D e l t a D e l t a D e l l a G a m m , Thursday, September 28 - Friday, September A l p h a C h i O m e g a A l p h a D e l t a Pi A lp h a U p s i l o n P h i A l p h a K a p p a A l p h a D e l l a P h i U p s i l o n D e l t a S i g m a T h e t a Monday, October 2 - Tuesday, October 3 Wednesday, October 4 G a m m a P h i B e t a K a p p a A lp h a I b e t a K a p p a K a p p a G a m m a Pi B e t a P h i S i g m a D e l t a T a u Z e t a T a u A l p h a STUDIO HOURS: 8:30-11:30 a.m. and 12:30-4:30 p.m. TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BUILDING ROOM 4.122 • ll APPOINTMENTS MUST BE MADE THROUGH YOUR GREEK ORGANIZATION. A U A P T u MUST HAVE / n APPOINTMENT TO BE PHOTOGRAPHED. P h o g g benefit (b e tw e e n Guadalupe and San Antonio The W om m ack Bros, (above) and Ithers will join forces this weekend for streets) from noon to10 p.m. Saturday, the Phogg Foundation’s annual fall and from 2 to 10 p.m Sun ay. equinox street dance. Music, beer and Proceeds benefit the Youth Emergency good times will flow on 23rd Street Services. In c.___________________ Art critic to lecture Leading New Y ork a r t c ritic P h y llis Tuchm an will discuss “ M inimalism and Its th e Laguna G loria A rt A fte rm a th ” a t Museum at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Tuchman s articles have ranged from in­ terview s with Andy Warhol to overviews of Alexander Calder and have been published in every m ajor a rt periodical, including Art- f o r m , Ar t in A m e r i c a , A r t N e w s , M etropolitan M useum Journal and Art Jo u r­ nal. As well a s being a re s p e c te d c ritic , Tuchm an also is an adjunct lectu rer in a rt history at H unter College, City U niversity of New York She is com pleting work on a PhD a t the Institute of the Arts, New York U niver­ sity, on the topic of “ M inim alism and the 1960s: Andre, Flavin, Judd, LeW itt, M orris.” The public is invited to attend. Admission is free. T h u r f d a y N t g h t S h rim p <6 S te a k S pecial ALL the SHRIMP & SIRLOIN STEAK YOU CAN EAT 5-10 PM Only * 4 50 Served with Salad Bar, French Frice, & Hot Bread A lso, N o w S ervin g C ocktails! > THE BRANDING IRON < I 6V46 Vx M il** Pa*» O a k Hill on Hw Share somefree %ibbjywith Cinderella T h e Magic Time M achine is having a fantastic birthday party. And You're Invited! Right now, you can enjoy free champagne with your dinner Sundays through I hursdays It's just o u r way of saying I hanks to you and "Happy Birthday" to us. So, come by and snare some free cham pagne with Cinderella and all the cither characters at the Magic Tim e Machine. We g u a ra n te e a happy ending. oOO E R iv e r s id e D r . Z444-3537 R e s e r v a t io n s re c o m m e n d e d a n d accepted Sun - n u r s OCR t i l TEXAS UNION FOOTBALL SPECIALS SAT.. SEPT. 23 SOUP, SALAD, SANDWICHES 4:30-6:30 DANITA RITA ROOM BEEIGN-TAMALES 3:00-6:30 UNION PATIO 3h00-6^30 DRINK SPECIALS TEXAS TAVERN, E A R L V ~ s Q I H D ___ __ ____________ _____ ___________ » a,A '7*IL OME.5fcTb• ^ U j > A © E H O E V O S R A N C H E R O S ^ B A C O N - UAM-HASHBWWNS N a 2 5 3 8 atM C kO O E U X JP in th z .' I c e C re a m m a d e d a i l y w i t h o n l y f r e s h in-season fruits a n d o t h e r real fla vo r s. S w e e t e n e d o n l y w i t h h o n e y o r f r u c t o s e . H o u r s N o w n - 11:30 p m . - E v e r y D a y (2 B l o c k s \ o r t h o f t h e F o o t b a l l S t a d i u m ) 2821 San Ja cin to • 4 77 -9 9 6 5 » to n ig h t SMOKEHOUSE Longest H a p p y Hour in Tow n Double Shots - 2 for I - 11 a m -8 pm Never a Cover Charge Now in our now building in Rivortowno Mall (right behind the Old Back Room) River^ J M IlM ilikklg) 4 5 4 - 5 1 4 7 NORTHCROSS M A U ANDERSON LANE 5 BURNET RO b0 Twi Im Show Adult* A Student* l l ! »2 25-Childien si Special Engagement* I«ciudad Special Engagement* I W P G (T L S 6 OO) 8 15 FESTIVAL H F A N T A S I I C ANIMATION I I ■ Pl— m n iN M A lllL D ■ UP IN SMOKE WOMAN ( T I S 6 15) 8 30 Q I NEVER PROMISED VOU A ROSE GARDEN P G (T L S 6 15) 8 15 THE M U H A II M Hi PINK PANTHER I Q ■ ^ ■ H 1 A BOY AND HIS DOG [R] (T L S fi 15) 8 15____________□ l D isco ver d S' T & & n N e R e 3 T o m A t o h Q u a l i t y I t a l i a n F o o d R 4 7 6 -7 2 0 2 1601 G u a d a lu p e R e a so n a b le P ric e s ShowTOWNUSA ^ y y j g ^ ^ a m w o n « 8 3 f> -8 S 8 4 ^ * UmuLiiw a o M g SoirrhsidE BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:30 3 C lint Eastwood THRILLERS as "D irty H arry" 'DIRTY HARRY" PLUS 'THE ENFORCER' PLUS “M AG N U M FORCE Each F e a t u r e S h o w s O n e T im e Show tow n West Southside North 'LOVE BAVARIAN STYLE" PLUS " H O W TO M A K E LOVE TO A V IR G IN " rM - IV SMOKE C H E E C H * C H O N G ( T I S 6 : 1 5 ) - 8 : 3 0 | ^ p> I HeveRi'Promised I p - ' >ouAHPSEQarpem ( T I S 6 : 1 5 ) - 8 : 1 5 TASTE crepes T h u r s d a y , s e p t e m b e r 21, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e 21 TERRS union PRESEWS — — — RENT A TV A u s t i n T V R e n t a l s 453-8041 aillllllllllllllllHlimiJJJlliHllllllllllllg l,t*s A m is S id e w a lk C a fe 2 U h A San A n to n io iS t e a m b o a t l ^ | S prings | * f)r e s e n Is * 5 - THURS Soap Creek Saloon TONIGHT r - GREEZY WHEELS THIS W E E K E N D URANIUM SAVAGES B e* C o v es Rd. 3 2 7 -9 0 1 6 WHAT NEXT! J I * rn MORNING ( * I = . = § La Promenade Center * | 459-4318S =7115 Burnet Rd. ^ SPORTS FILM SERIES Films covering the c o n te m p o ra ry w o rld o f sports, in clu d in g s u rfin g . T o d a y a t 7 :3 0 a n d 9 :3 0 p .m . T e x a s U n io n T h e a te r l l .25 w ith UT ID I U $ 1 . 2 5 w i t n U l * * * _ i t ­ * A T STRAIGHT TIME” Dustin Hoffman Stacy Keach Jeff Bridges R V T CITY Last VARSITY D a y ! M M GUADALUPE • 4T M *» 1__ Straight: 6:00, 9:45 Fat: 8:00 JlO T ROAD SHOW, LIVE 10 PM THURSDAY; SEPT. 21 CARMEN DEL RIO FROM LAS VEGAS LEE SHANNON KITTY LITTER RIKI ALTERNATIVE A NEW place to eat in Dobie Mall NOW ! New York Bagels * * Direct from Houston J The “Alternatives” S M O O T H IE S • FR ESH FRUIT • C R EPES D A N N O N F R O Z E N Y O G U R T • N E W Y O R K B A G E L S M U S H R O O M & S P I N A C H Q U IC H E • S A L A D S a n d a v a r ie ty o f o th e r g o o d th in g s A n A lte r n a tiv e to th e oth e rs On the second level - right a e ro ., from Ginny • Copying 9 a . m .-9 p .m . M o n .-S a t. 474-5643 WARREN BEATTY JULIE CHRISTIE GOLDIE HAWN $2.00 Til 6 Today BURT REYNOLDS SALLY FIELDS a funny love story. ‘H ouse Calls” s GLENDA JACKSON STARTS T O M O R R O W He m CowmitC* AQUARIUS-4 444.)]}! 150# HI4S4KI Vilify IO KO O TIL 6 TODAY n tit w a s the Deltas □ [a g a in st the r u l e s . . . th e ru le s lo s t! GOLDIE HAW N CHEVY CHASE , p r , Vr u ‘ BIG DOUBLE HORROR SH O W 1 :0 0 -4 :3 5 -8 :1 0 " H O R R O R H O S P IT A L " ^ "H O U S E B Y TH E H ILL" 2 : 4 5 - 6 : 2 0 - 9 : 5 5 TiilS TIM! THE FISH WINS) FILMED IN SAN M A R C O S ? t h r i v in g r e s o r t - Lo s t R iv e r Lake twas m r .’N mb*# W W M W K k ^ T * dmm 1:10-2:55-4:45-6:30-8:15-10:05 m u** CHEECH Y CHONGS n a t i o n a l L A M P O O N * a n i m a l u e v f c A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR" RESTRICT VILLAGE 4 ■ LAKEHILLS 2700 A N D E R S O N -451 8352 I 2428 BEN W HITE*444-0552 1:00-3:05-5:20-7:35-9:50 p r e s e n t s TONIGHT ONLY! In Jester Aud. 7 & 9 p.m. Only $1.25 Season Pass $15.00 u T a m n i n u A N T H O N Y PERKINS-JANET IE IG H -M A R T IN BALSAM . _ ava 1 / M A l P n \ ------------------ --------------------------------------------------------- WTM UNIVERSAL AMUSEMENT ADULT THEATRES »sl m Adult Monon Picture E nte rta inm e nt ^ 3rd Record Breaking Week H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG LN. 451-7326 H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG IN 451-7326 John T r a v o lta . E S _____ GKDQEwo* 2.50- 5 10 7:30 9 50 VILLAGE 4 2700 AN DERSO N • 4514352 ■ N A T I t N A I ^ H ™ L A M P e e ! » s ■ a n i m a l ■ueute 1 oo i os s .'o ’ is o so NtcK Nolte m u n i stop T h e B a in " ■ L A M P e e w . a n i m a l I ueutc 1 OO i OS •- 20 7 3r 4 OO ■ I HXM o / l I I HU I I I III IM H I .... ISSSi J i n n PG H W M O U S E 1:30 3:35 5 40 7 45 9 55 J in; WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS' lit'* S l j 9 t IM ‘Ti C J 2:45 5:10 7 35 9 55 (julep Space \*Wm c uQS . an i^Kiarried 7t W' man u n - w . (UL CLAYBURGH ALAN BA ~ TAUl MA/URSKV S 2:15 4 45 7 15-9 45 •. ■* WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS ih '-S C J S t >•<>■*• Cuter Space , ENOS ' to o aT' TE LAKEHILLS 2428 U N WHITE • 444-0552 RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5689 REDUCED PRICES UNTIL 6:00 M ON THRU FRI 2224 GUADALUPE • 477-1964 Matinees Daily No On** Undr * H ,Late Shows Friday & Saturday Sundays O I* " Noon Please Bung I O • ReciarrtU- * »• F A for to rep! Con Dar voti faci D ecu Lor mil vot Set vol me der stu Co I tar mi fat thi on we Page 22 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ T h u r s day, September 21,J978 H H FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS HELP WANTED HELP WANTED TYPING ZIVtET S INSTANT PASSPORT APPLICATION While You Wail Roy ce Studios 2420 Guadalupe 472-4219 Depressed? Anxious? Can't Sleep? Free treatment for people in w illin g studies of depression, an xie ­ ty or insomnia. to particip ate To see ii anytime at you quality, call 477-2087 L S A T / C P A C A N D I D A T E S : Score high with cassette home study Le arn at home, in less time, at lowest cost. Dont waste time and money in a c l a s s r o o m s e m i n a r . A m e r i c a ' s s e llin g p rogra m s. For free sample cassette and instant service, call Jim Dee at Totaltape, Inc. Toll Free: 1-800-874-7599, 1505 N W 16th Ave., Gainesville, F L 32604. la r g e s t T O K Y O S A U N A H a v e t r a i n e d o u r p ro fe ss io n a ls show you the health benefits and luxurious relaxation of a real sauna and moisture bath. Do something nice for your body. 8 am -iu pm, M onday-Sunday. 9501 N. I H -35 . 836*9965 T ak e Rundberg exit I block IM. on Service Road. 3‘ B U D G E T C O P I E S (u n c o lla te d loose sheets 48 hrs.) C o p y in g , p rintin g, b in d in g G r a d sch ool q u a lity g u a ra n te e d G I N N Y ' s C O P Y I N G S E R V I C E 44 D o b ie M a l l - 476-9171 7 am -10 p m w e e k d a ys, 9-5 S a t u r d a y s IO am -5 p m S u n d a y s (fo r self s e r v ic e o n ly ) C A S U A L L Y Y O U Creative Outdoor Portraits S A V E N O W R O Y C E S T U D I O S 2420 G uadalupe 472-4219 A R T ' S M O V I N G a n d H a u lin g an y a re a 24 hours, 7 d a y s 477-3249, 447 938V_____ H E A L T H W I S E D A Y C a r e , f r e s h v e g e ta ria n m eals, M o n t e s s o ri d evelop ed e n v ir o n m e n t N e a r UT, c a ll N ita Sm ith , _ 477-8593_ _______________________ I N F A N T S : 514 VV. S T C H I L D C A R E John, 454 8545 I ' a-14 y e a rs. 8203 S a m R a y b u r n , 837-6001 H A S Y O U R c a rp e t seen better d a y s "’ T h r o u g h o u r u n iq u e ste am p rocess, it c a n be b ro u g h t b a c k to life C o m m e rc ia l la rg e or a n d re sid e n tia l N o job too sm a ll 444-2785 G R A S S C U T T IN G , tree t r im m in g 20 y e a r s e x p e rie n c e A fter 3 p m w e e k d a ys, all d ay S a tu r d a y 385-7394 LOST & FOUND $100 R E W A R D for in fo rm a tio n le ad in g to r e c o v e r y of f a m ily dog. B row n, sho rt haired, b la c k tipped ears, nose, w hite f a c e , b e a g l e le g s , c h e s t C o l l i e Is., m a r k in g s N a m e Coby, 444 8109 lost Sept R E W A R D B row n , b la c k s t r i p e d G r e a t D a n e D o b e r m a n m ix N in e m o n t h s , 75 p d s R i v e r s i d e 442 5589.____ L O S T dog L O S T B L A C K c o n t a c t l e n s c a s e D i s c h - F a l k f i e l d p a r k i n g lot, J e s t e r , G R E , or E C b u s 837-5195. L O S T O R S T O L E N G o ld e n L a b ra d o r R e t r i e v e r , m ale, 24th an d San G a b r ie l a r e a , r e w a r d 476-5556 FOR RENT S O U T H . C o n c r e t e M I N I - S T O R A G E b l o c k c o n s t r u c t i o n , s e c u r i t y p e t r o l . $12 50 u p m o n t h l y 444-241 1, W o o d l a n d s A A A M i n i w a r e h o u s e . C O L O R T V ' S f r o m $30 m o n t h l y , B W *17 so, in c l u d i n g d e l i v e r y a n d s e r v i c e a v a i la b le S p e c i a l B o n d ' s , 476-3551 s e m e s t e r r a t e s c l a s s i f i e d a d v e r t i s i n g R A T E S 15 w o rd m in im u m E a c h w o rd one tim e E a c h w o rd 3 tim e s E a c h w o rd 5 tim e s E a c h w o rd IO tim e s Stu d en t rate each tim e I col x I inch one tim e I col x I inch 2-9 tim es I col x I inch IO or m ore tim es S3 75 *4 39 S3 96 Of ADUNC S C H ID U ll 2 00 p m Monday Tezan Friday 11 OO o rn. Tuesday Te*on Monday Wednesday Toxon Tuesday l l OO a m Thurtday Toxon Wodnoxday 11 OO a m. 11 OO a rn Friday Toxon Thursday "In tho event of error* modo in on odvortioomont immodioto no*i«o mutt bo gluon ot tho publisher* Oro rotpontlblo for only O N I incorrect insertion All claim* for od|uttmontt thould bo modo not lotor than 30 dayt oftor publlcotlon." S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y , S T A F F R A T E S 15 w o rd m in im u m e ach day $ 90 E a c h a d d itio n al w ord e ach d a y s 06 $3 15 I col x I inch each d a y s i OO " U n c la s s i t ie d s ” I line 3 d a ys (P re p a id , N o R e fu n d s) Students, fa c u lty and staff m ust p re ­ sent a c u rre n t I D an d pay in a d ­ v a n c e in T S P B ld g 3 200 (25th 8, W h it is ) fro m 8 a rn to 4 30 p m M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y Storoo-For Sale Call 892-1431 C -28 M R - 7 8 F M tuner, M C -2 3 0 0 M C I N T O S H M L - 4 C s p e a k e r s p re a m p , p ow er a m p P I O N E E R R E C E I V E R S X 434 and t u r n ­ table P L 1 5 D with S o n y s p e a k e rs S400 476-2779 P I O N E E R KP 2 5 0 u n d e r-d a sh cassette d e c k with P M ra d io $75 or best of er ____ ___________ ______________ 458 1468. Mutical-For Sale_____ T A K A M I N I F-360 12 strin g gu ita r. Still in box, S 170 459-7332 b o o k s , S H E E T M U S I C A N D m u s ic g u it a rs , a m p s, a n d all a c c e s s o r ie s ^ A lp h a M u s ic Center, 6609 A ir p o r t (n ext to S a ge ) 451-0645 F E N D E R M U S T A N G electric g u ita r e a r ly 7 0 s m odel M in t cond ition w ith h a rd shell c a se $160 443-2633 G I B S O N G U I T A R , like new w ith case, g re a t for b e g in n e rs. C a ll 454-8869 Pot*-For Sale K I T T E N S F O U R W H I T E eyes, one b lac k and o ra n ge w ith b lu e 458-1500 G O L D E N R E T R I E V E R S ! A K C , show, field, obedience, c h a m p io n sired, h ip s g u a ra n t e e d , e x c e lle n t t e m p e r a m e n t , ad ult shots, 442-4098 Antiqoos-For Sale R U E ' S A N T I Q U E S A n t iq u e s , q u a l it y w o o d f u r n it u r e , g la s s w a r e and m isc e lla n e o u s. P ric e d for tigh t budgets. Speedway & 43rd - 451-2614 2106 S. L a m a r - 442-9304 Homo»-For S a l* N E A R U T A N D L e e E le m e n ta ry , 3-1, rem od eled , C A / C H , $52,500, 711 H a r r is A v e 478-1421 ow ner/agent. H E M P H I L L P A R K A R E A T W O - S T O R Y N e w ly decorated, 52 ye a r old c la s s ic 3br, I i/a bath h om e on la rg e lot. W ith stone p a tio s , h u g e t r e e s a n d J a c u z z i in se p a ra te g a rd e n b a th h o u se H a rd w o o d floors, new carp etin g, b ric k firep lace, arch ed d o o rw a y s, d in in g an d b re a k fa st ro o m s a n d sm a ll b ase m en t, $92,500 C all D a n n y R o th at 477-9316 or P a t M a r c u m P ro p e rtie s 458-2235. P E D A L T O C A M P U S to Solid 3br h om e A real " s t e p sa v e r U T E n e r g y efficient b ric k co n stru ctio n w ith c e n t r a l h e a t a n d a ir . S h i n y h a rd w o o d flo o rs T a ste fu lly decorate d without loss of " o l d c h a rm . M d S M * , for y o u r p e rso n a l show J a y L ile s 474- 6896 W e can help you live in'O.'d A u s t in M c W i l l i a m s , J e n n i n g s C O N S O L I D A T E D R E A L T Y . & For S a lo -G a ra go H O U S E H O L D S A T U R D A Y , S u n d a y , 9/23 9 24, 712 B ro w n le e C irc le A n ­ lin e n s, fu r n it u r e , g la s s w a r e , tiq ue s, plants, and pots Mi*collanoou«-For S o lo __ E s ta b lis h e d 1945 In d ia r selection 4502 Sou th C o n g r e s s 444-3814 N E L S O N 'S G I F T S L a rg e s t jew elry. C lo se d M o n d a ys.___________ T V M E N T A L $15/mo. B la c k and white, free d e liv e r y . A p d c o T V R en tal, 459-3030 re se rv a tio n F O R S A L E W a te rb e d : k in g siz e stain ed fram e, h ead b oard , heater, p latfo rm , liner, m a tt re ss $100 or best offer. 476- 1993 L A D I E S S E V E N d ia m o n d clu ste r d in n e r rin g C O U C H F O R s a le S e m i-g o o d condition, S20 C a ll 837-5407 e v e n in g s $500 or best offer 447-9341 _____________ F O R S A L E Q U E E N siz e m a tt re ss and s p r in g s $30 345-7141 S K I E Q U I P M E N T : K-2 skis, D o lo m ite boots, m a rk e r b in d in g s, a n d poles M a k e offer C a ll after six 453-6189 F O R S A L E G E ru n n in g condition, 7811. re frig e ra to r, perfect a fte r 5pm call 447 MATTRESS LIQUIDATION Full Size Sat* $79.95 Wa or# everttecked with notionally known maHro*« »#t* at a fraction ovor dealer* co»t Firm and X-firm only, full (ii# maitre** AND foundation $79.95. Quean Size $119 95 King Size $149 95 Fir»t corno, flr»t »erve bad*. Quantities ar# limited and *alo end* when current stock I* depleted Taxat Furnitura Outlat 1006 So Lamar Lamar Ma*a O W N 9-9 1972 F I A T 124 coupe, excelle nt condition, A M - F M s t e r e o , 74,0 0 0 m i. $1300, n e g o t ia b le R a u l 8-5, 47^-7721 72 F I A T 124 S p o rt Coupe, 5-speed, AC, A M - F M , ra d ia ls, 52,000 m ile s, $1095 385- 0741. ________ '6 9 V W S T A T IO N W A G O N , 4-speed, nice, $795; V W van, 1600 cc engine, 12 von, g o o d b od y an d m otor, $695 385-0741 '7 6 H O N D A C V C C T 40 p lu s m pg, 4 -speed, rad io, new tires, $2595 385-0741 '71 M O B G T, clean, e xcelle nt condition N e w ra d ia ls, $1650, m u s t see to ap ­ preciate, 453-8166, keep t ry in g ...... '7 6 B U I C K R E G A L ' blue, 350 V -8, A M - F M 8-track, 38,000 m iles, tilt wheel, 40-60 seat, c ru sh e d ve lve t 472-6935, $4395 1971 O P E L 2-dr sedan, go od shape, new tires, $850 444-3970, le a v e n a m e ana n u m b e r 1976 S P I T F I R E ^ below blue book^ well e x t r a s ; m a i n t a i n e d , e c on om ica l, fu n 453-1340 ' 71 D O DG E D A R T , A T , P S, r u n s v e ry well $985 E v e n in g s , 454-1952._________ t i r e s ; n e w 1967 L I N C O L N C O N T I N E N T A L , a ir , a ll pow er, leather interior, $325 443-9567 or 453-7401. 1974 V E G A G T H a tc h b a c k , A T, A C , s p o r­ ty interior, radio, $800 or n ego tiab le A fte r 5, 441-5 71 ________________________ 1976 M I N I M O T O R hom e, fu lly $eli,, c° £ ' S le e p s 6, $11,300. tained, 2 ta p e d e c k s 443-5246 '6 6 P L Y M O U T H W A G O N , r e c e n t ly ov e rh au le d , go o d condition, go od m pgs. C a ll John, 474-1957. ________ __ 1971 F O R D C A P R I , A M / F M , go o d tires, e c o n o m ic a l c a r, ru n s good, $570, 4/z- ... 8087. ^ P O N T I A C V E N T U R A V6, A C , S ta rn dard, n ew b a tte ry , tire s, $1800 454-9705 atter 6. __________________ _____________ O R A N G E A N D W H I T E '73 O r a n T o rin o Sport, A T, A C , PS, A M - F M , d is c b ra ke s, $1900 n e go tia b le C a ll 447-6979 after 5 1959 A L F A S P Y D E R , ex ce lle n t c o n d i­ tion, reb uilt engine, new paint, clutch, b ra ke s, $1800 Geotf, 926-7657 _____ __ go od "72 P L Y M O U T H S A T E L L I T E tires, new sho cks, c a ll C h r is at 441168 or 454-8889 1971 V W S Q U A R E B A C K , au to m atic, AC, ru n s good, $600 454-1938 betw een IO am and 2 pm best tim e '74 B L A Z E R, four w heel drive, b ig tires, spe cial tool box, $4000 444-1138 1971 A M C M A T A D O R V-8, 67,000 mi. E x ­ cellent tra n sp o rta tio n c a r A C , P e , Ha, new tires, $900 D a n 327-2680 (9-5), 451- 3348 after 6 __________________ M U S T S E L L 1974 J e se n H e a le y g r e a t re c e n tly s e r ­ co n d itio n , n e w b r a k e s , item , v ic e d o n ly S4700 442-5342 a ft e r n o o n s 41,000 m ile s C o lle c t o r s ........... 1971 M O N T E C A R LO , r u n s go o d , 4 go o d tires, new b a tte ry , b r a k e s o v e rh a u le d , 471-3205, *1095 69 V W F A S T B A C K , cassette, rad ials. Su p e r d ep e nd ab le W ill sell th is week $700 or best offer, 474-7468, k eep try in g 1977 F I A T 124 S p id e r . 18,500 m ile s, ste re o M a y see at 1910 Ju stin L a n e lot _____________ d a y t im e 258-U17 p ast 6 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A 1970 new in sp e c ­ tion, license, ugly, but it run s. $250 or offer 476-3729 (e v e n in g s ) '76 F I A T 131 only 1200 m iles, m in t c o n d i­ tion, AC, p rice d well under book valu e 471-5151 ext 205, 477-7011 1973 M O N T E G O M X B r o u g h a m PS, P B AC, A M - F M , $1950 288-0991 H O N D A C I V I C 1973 excellent cond ition $1050 451-4129 75 D A T S U N B210, new tires, n ew clutch, A M - F M radio, n ew in sp ec tio n st ic ke r $2600 B e fo re 6 pm , 477 4481, after 6 p m 928 0993 T H E B R O W N L E E F E M A L E S T U D E N T S I vacancy left I room eft. (I block off W e s t C a m p u s ) . 2502 Nueces. Newly renovated, 9 mo. lease, $100 security d e p o s i t . $1 3 7 . 5 0 / m o . A B P . Private room with telephone connection, dou­ ble hot plate, refrigerator, t h e l a u n d r y r o o m b u i l d i n g , S T U D E N T S O N L Y , G R A D S T U D E N T S P R E F E R R E D . See or call after 6 p m O N L Y . 477-1379. i n Free Service P a r k in g T ra n » p o rta tio n HABITAT HUNTERS fre e a p t A s e r v ic e sp e c ia liz in g in c o m p l e x e s w ith a c c e s s to sh u ttle l o c a t o r Predating For Summer A Fall OohiB Mall Suit* ha i n i r e q 4 7 4 -1 j3 x L A R G E I A N D 2br, n ew ly redecorated, C A CH, $165-4195 p lu s ele c tric and gas, shuttle-bus, sh o p p in g center, 1200 E 52nd. M a n a g e r A p t 102A 453-6239.__ W A L K U T O ne 2 b e d ro o m re m a in in g . N e w ly painted, a b u n d a n t sto rage , pool, la u n d r y , 2408 L o n g v ie w , $250. B 8.G P ro p e rtie s, 459-0156. E x c e l le n t 2 b r, N E A R C O L I S E U M patios, trees, b a lc o n ie s A v a ila b le now. $260 plus E O ak K n oll, 620 S 1st, 444- 1269 S P A N I S H O A K S , lb r, C A C H , cable, V h b lo c k s fr o m shuttle, S175/mo. plu s E 458-5558 S U B L E A S E F O R 9 m o n th s ex cellent b d rm w a lk or take co n v e n ie n t shuttle to c a m p u s $165 plus E 477-6539 U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C Y . Sm all, f u r ­ n ish e d lu x u ry one b e d ro o m on shuttle 4105 Sp eed w ay, m a n a g e r no.203 458-4037, _ _ _ __________________ 345-4555 T R A V I S H E I G H T S efficien cy, SH O p lu s u tilities 444-8191. I M M E D I A T E V A C A N C Y , 2 B R apt close U T, shuttle, p a rk in g . AC, 702! z W. 23rd. $165 m o 472-4030 T e r ry .__________ __ _ _ _ S U B L E A S E I B D R M fu rn is h e d a p a r t ­ m ent P a r k c o P laza, 711 W 32nd St. $167 50 p lu s E. 459-1478, 472-1107 F U R N I S H E D E F F I C I E N C Y , *145 p lu s electricity. C all 478-5621. F O R R E N T L O V E L Y 2 la r g e b ed roo m stu d io on R iv e r s id e M o v e in im m e d ia t e ­ ly $275 m on th ly 444-6420. UNFURN. APARTMENTS D o All T h e se A d s D r iv e Y O U B A N A N A S ? W e Rent A p a rtm e n ts, D u p le x e s, H o m e s 24 H o u rs/ 7 D a y s / A ll o v e r A u stin R e a l W o rld P ro p e rtie s N orth 345-6350 C a m p u s 443-2212 F re e L o c a tin g S e r v ic e T R A V I S H O U S E A P T . 1600 R O Y A L C R E S T C h o o s e f r o m 4 floo r p l a n s . D i s h w a s h e r , carpeted, C A C H pool, p a r t y r o o m stop on R C sh u tt le rout e $ 185 to $270 I 8. 2br. g a r b a g e d i s p o s a l , 1st P ric e d fro m 442-9720 s e c lu s io n on L a k e Q U I E T S C E N I C A u s t in 12 m in u te s fro m U T L a rg e I and 2 br a p ts $225, $285 plu s electricity. No ch ildre n, no pets 1801 W e stlak e, 327- 0479 M U S T S U B L E A S E la rg e 2 b d rm u n tu rn in R iv e r p a r k A p ts $220 p lu s elec., on shuttle, 441 2491 before 8 am , e v e n in g s. A P A R T M E N T A V A I L A B L E W il lo w C re e k A pa rt m en t s, 2br, lb a u n f u r ­ nished C all 444-0010 or 444-0583.________ F R E E R E N T la st w eek S e p te m b e r No deposit. L a rg e lb r C A C H , cable, pool, d ish w a sh e r, n e ar T ow n L a k e an d U i shuttle M o s t u tilitie s p a id 441-4201 W e b u y j e w e l r y , j e w e l r y , e s t a t e d i a m o n d s , a n d o ld go l d . H i g h e s t c a s h p r i c e s p a id C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N L a m a r UNCLASSIFIED D i g i t a l C l o c k F i x T i n k e r s D a m 452-4406 H A I R D R Y E R * F i x T i n k e r s D a m 4 5 2 - 4 4 0 6 T o p SS for T X - O U t i c k e t s 472-6552 F r e e s a b l e - b r o w n ki tt e n 474-7819 4 S a l e 2 U T g e n a d s e a s o n 385 4076 N e e d e d 2 U T - O U g e n a d 385-4076 F o a m S o f a q u e e n S z B e d $ 4 0 472-3593 C o m p l e t e D b l e B e d $25 928-2065 l O s p b i k e l y r R a c k $ 9 5 n e g pm 47 6 23 7 3 ROOM AND BOARD W O M E N , L A R G E r o o m s , g o o d m e a l s I b l o c k f r o m c a m p u s L a u r e l H °*is e C o op. 2612 G u a d a l u p e 476-5154 or 478-0470 F E M A L E V A C A N C Y N u e c e s fo od *145 m o 474 4652 230 9 F e m i n i s t a t m o s p h e r e G o o d in c o o p ROOMS N I C E F U R N I S H E D r o o m sh utt le, w a l k to U T , s e m i - p r i v a t e b a t h $100 A B P 7108, e v e n i n g s UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES T W O B E D R O O M D U P L E X tor rent u n ­ f u r n i s h e d pets a l l o w e d C a l l 472 4617 a ft e r 2 p m , k e e p t r y i n g TO P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D A D C A L L 471-5244 ROOMMATES W A N T E D R O O M M A T E , l a r g e o n e b e d r o o m f u r n i s h e d a p a r t m e n t , s h u t t l e at d o o r $ 1 1 7 . 5 0 a n d o n e h a l f b i l l s . U n d e r c l a s s m a n p r e f e r r e d 447-5802._____ l b r a p a r t m e n t R O O M M A T E W A N T E D on s h u t t l e $100 p l u s 11 E C a ll R i c h 478- 4279 a ft e r 8 p m . F E M A L E M A L E r o o m m a t e s h a r e ni c e h o u s e c l o s e U n i v e r s i t y s h u t t l e 35th w . C a ll H u g o , 478-6763, l e a v e n u m b e r s e e k s p l a c e J n W A N T E D ni c e h o u s e w i t h o t h e r s t u d e n t s R i c k , 458- S T U D E N T 1658 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E s h a r e b e a u t i f u l 3 b d r m ho us e, $165 a n d 2 bi ll s 441-7606 t o W A N T E D F E M A L E r o o m m a t e to s h a r e 3br h o u s e c l o s e to c a m p u s $90 p l u s u tilitie s, cal l 476-3242 T W O F E M A L E r o o m m a t e s to s h a r e 3/2 h o u s e N o r t h A u s t i n $130 p l u s 1 . bi lls C a l l 345-5335.__ I B D R M A V A I L A B L E in 4 b d r m h o u s e S80 m o p l u s b i l l s 705 E 53rd St 454- 0581, a s k for C y n d e K e l l y F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d ! S h a r e l a r g e I b d r m a p t R i v e r s i d e A B P , 1n ea r sh utt le, n o n - s m o k e r p r e f e r r e d . C a l l 444- 9123 E N E R G Y C O N S C I O U S p e r s o n to s h a r e l a k e h o u s e 3 m i 620 a n d s p e c t a c u l a r 2222 M a t u r e , li be r a l, r e s p o n s i b l e S U O p l u s I 3 837-7330 B o b o n l y S H A R E L A R G E 2 b d r m s t u d i o a p a r t - m e n t n e a r c a m p u s M u s t be s t u d i o u s a n d n e a t 458 4597 A R T I S T ' S T R O P I C A L p a r a d i s e S t a i n e d g l a s s CA C H , h a r d w o o d floors , 20 s h u t ­ tle m a t u r e g r a d S t e v e a fte r 5 S H O p l u s I 2 b i ll s 452-8324 H O U S E M A T E F O R Older, l a r g e t w o b e d r o o m h o u s e N i c e n e i g h b o r h o o d , r e a s o n a b l e r e n t 441-3488 B a r b a r a k e e p t r y i n g . R E S P O N S I B L E H O U S E M A T E to s h a r e 3 b d r m h o u s e w it h f e m a l e , I m a l e , s i 2 5 m o p l u s b i l l s 458 1528 I C O U P L E N E E D S l a r g e 3 b e d r o o m h o u s e a n d f e n c e d y a r d , pets, HOO C a ll 452-6217 r o o m m a t e S H A R E 3 B D R M s I OO m o p l u s pets, 452-5901 9 30 1 1 p m w e e k e n d s l b a h o u s e n e a r I 3 b N o n s m o k e r , n o I F M A L E F E M A L E s h a r e c o m f o r t a b l e 2- b d r m apt o n s h u t t l e r <>u,e c p 0 ° l j 120 bi ll s p a i d R o y at 471-1040 2 5 p m M - F H O U S E M A T E p r e f e r n o n s m o k i n g * 1 0 2 50 m o p l u s / b i l l s 2 B R m o s t l y f u r n i s h e d i b e r a l s t u d e n t Scott 476 0712 FOR SALE Motorcydo-For S a l* $500 1975 452-5058 w e e k d a y s . 1973 350-4 H O N D A 17,000 m i 360 C L H o n d a $650 8-4 261-6272 o t h e r __________ C H E A P M O P E D S N e w M o to b e c a n e an d P u c h m opeds, at low est p ossible price, $360 to $449, 451-3800._____ '78 H O N D A " C X 500. 3 m o n th s old, ex cellent condition, m u st sell. C an 442- 4183 1975 S U Z U K I 550 G T 24.000 m ile s new ly re b u ilt e n g in e , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . G re a t b a r g a in S750 471 5176, J im 73 H on d a 450CL, re b u ilt engine, $695 Atter 4, 258 7927 Jim r75 H O N D A 2 0 0C B b a c k re st lu g g a g e rack , 2 helm ets, m u c h m ore, excelle nt condition, *475 472 5188 1976 K A W A S A K I KH 2 50 B o u g h t new, F e b 1978 G o od condition, low m ile age. $500 282 35 3 3 _______________ __ '77 H O N D A E X P R E S S R u n s great, m a y need w o rk, a m a z in g g a s m ile a g e $ C a ll 474-9522 e v e n in g s 72 H O N D A 500 fo u r fa irin g, bags, c r a s h bar, lu g g a g e rack, *750, 444-1138 K T M M O P E D 1976 m o d e l G r e a t t r a n s p o r t a t io n , g r e a t c o n d itio n , c a n H e n ry at 472 2320.__ ____________ P E R F E C T S T U D E N T tra n sp o rta tio n . b e au tifu l 1970 B o n n e v ille T r iu m p h 650, 5,000 m ile s, 327 3313 - t T h O N D A 450 C L , re b u ilt e n gin e , $695 A fte r 4. 258-7927. J im T T H O N D A E X P R E S S R u n s gre a t m a y need w o rk , a m a z in g g a s m ile a g e S U ? C a ll 474-9552 e v e n in g s i 9 7 3 ^ IO N D A 350 C L M u s t sell this w eek B e st offe r 441 4117 m o p e d ; I T A L I A N Vespa, low ru n s gre a t, go o d condition, e x tra s. $760 444-4753 P R I C E R E D U C E D 1975 M o n d e C B i g now o n ly $325 G r e a t sh a p e C a ll 443 2709 after 6 4420 M f V e rn o n M U S T S E L L im m e d ia t e ly 1970 B M W R - 60 f o r $895 1975 B M W R-60 for $1795 w ith O ffe rs con- tra ile r H ig h w a y eq uipped w e eken d s sid e re d 453-5514, e v e n in g s Bicyclo-For Sole '7 7 H E R C U L E S M -4 m o p e d e n g in e $400 A fte r 4 pm, 478-6968 S a c h s P U B L I C A U C T I O N SAT., S E P T . 23 - IO ann U N I V E R S I T Y O F T E X A S A N D U N C L A I M E D A B A N D O N E D B E P R O P E R T Y T O H E L D A T S P E C I A L E V E N T S C E N T E R , 1701 R E D R I V E R , A U S T I N To be sold piece by piece or in lots to the highest bidder. A p ­ p ro x im a te ly 40 m e n 's and w om e n's bicycles, 3 motor­ c y c l e s , w a t c h e s , r a d i o s , typew riters, jewelry, T V s, c a l c u l a t o r s , m u s i c a l i n ­ strum ents, record players, cameras, books, umbrellas, f u r n i t u r e , h o u s e h o l d h o u s e h o ld a p p lia n c e s , and hundreds other items. I N S P E C T I O N 8 a m day of sale T E R M S - Complete payment d ay of sale Checks accepted with proper ID E ve ry o n e Welcome. J. C. Harper Auctioneers - 926-2180 Austin, Tx 019-0138 P A R T T I M E I M M E D I A T E O P E N I N G S 2, 3, or 4 s h ifts per w eek 5 pm-1 am . A p p - iy Stop N G o M a r k e t s 2805 R o g g e L a n e E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r N E E D E X T R A m o n e y ? T h e flow e r peo­ p le n e e d p e o p l e to s e l l f l o w e r s , T h u r s d a y - S u n d a y . H ig h e st c o m m is sio n paid d a ily, 288-U 02 M O T E L C L E R K . Sob er p e rso n W e w ill tra in A p p ly in person, 2 00-5 OO p m to F r e d R i b a r J r . R e t i r e d p e r s o n s w elcom e. A p p lic a n t s w h o w ant long term e m p lo y m e n t will h a v e preference. W e st W in d s M o te l, In te rsta te H ig h w a y 35 at A ir p o r t B lv d . in te rse c tio n.________ in st it u t io n a l C O O K S N E E D E D w ith co o k in g e x p e rie n c e C all Pei-50" 0 ®' ‘f° r a p p t, S h o a l C re e k H o sp ita l. 452-0361 E O E . _________________ O P E N I N G S F O R full tim e an d p a rt tim e d ie ta ry aides. C a ll 452-0361, Sho al C re e k H o sp ita l. E O E . _____ T R A N S P O R T A T I O N E N T E R P R I S E S In c now a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r s h u t­ tle b u s d riv e rs. R e q u ire m e n ts: 21 yrs^ old an d good d r iv in g record. A p p ly at 1135 G u n te r (off of U 47 b lo c k of A ir p o r t ) or call 928-2801 fo r in fo rm ation .________ A P T M A N A G E R , prefer couple, d e p e n ­ d a b le , u n e n c u m b e r e d , e f f i c i e n t , h a rd w o rk in g R e s u m e 2308 H artfo rd , 78701. 472-8648, 476-8922 ______ P A W N S H O P n e e d s d e p e n d a b l e e n e rge tic p e rso n for s a le s and g e n e ra l help. H o u r s a re fle xib le to school C all 458-6203 or co m e by 5415 N L a m a r P E R R Y R O S E T ru c k T ir e Center, 2201 A irp o rt, is lo o k in g for p a rttim e re p a ir s e rv ic e person, m o r n in g s or afternoons. A p p ly in p e rso n only.____________________ S A L E S P E R S O N P E R M A N E N T and p a rttim e p o sitio n tor m atu re , e n e rge tic person A p p ly in person, S e n io r D isc o u n t Center, 816 C o n g r e s s A v e .______________ P A R T T I M E J OB $4.25 per hour Division of W .E.A.I. between 9 am and I only. 459-6953 pm Cal B O D Y W O R K S M A S S A G E R S N E E D E D stu d y tim e a v a ila b le . T o p tram , W ill p a y 2906 San Gabriel 476-5136 V I C K I E ' S M A S S A G E N o w a cc e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s at A u s t in s finest. P le a s a n t a t m o s p h e r e - s t u d y tim e. O n ly neat, a ttra ctiv e and r e s p o n s i­ ble p e rso n s need a p p ly 3004 G u a d a lu p e , 474-5192 K E Y P U N C H O P E R A T O R Im m e d ia t e o p e n in g fo r k e y p u n c h o p e ra to r on I B M 129 an d key to d isc o p e ra to r. E x p e r ie n c e re q u ire d , e x ­ c e lle n t f r in g e b e n e fits , a p p lic a t i o n sho uld be m ad e to T C C , Inc. 3429 E x ­ ecutive C en te r D riv e , A u stin , 78731, or call 345-5700 ext 757 2J HA AA BU R G E R S D o y o u r e l a t e w e ll w i t h people? Do you consider q u ali­ ty in fast food restaurants es­ sential? lf so, please contact P e te at 2 J 's . R e w a r d i n g benefits, we offer hours to fit your schedule, advancement, o p p o r t u n i t y to e x p r e s s creativity and more. Apply now at 3918 N. L a m a r between 2 pm-6 pm. T O W E R R E S T A U R A N T Now a c c e p t i n g applications for parttime dishwasher and parttime help. Ap p ly in Pe1r s °n at 2809 San Jacinto. After 1 :30. ?7 t h STREET I I l/bdjtika A m yivuuj, M B A / J 4 T YPING, P RIN TIN G , B IN D IN G The Com plete Professional FULL TIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2707 HEMPHILL PK. Plenty of Parking 472-8936 Dobie M a ll Typing Tran scrib in g Typesetting Copying Binding T Y P IN G E R R Y SERVICE 9-6 M -T h 9-5 Fri-Sat • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A * * The Careful Type • The Fast Type Econotype Copying, Binding, Printing 0 IB M Correcting Selectee J a Rental A Supplies NORTH Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 453-5452 J 37th A Guadalupe S SOUTH Mon.-Fri. 8:30-6 • J Sat. 9-5 •E. Riverside & Lakeshore 443-4498* IF Y O U C A N S E L L B Y T E L E P H O N E Quik Type Introductory Offerl 6 5 e per page x A£ f . OO W. 28th St. ' 600 W. Suita 203B (upstairs) orn§r of Nuece* ic 2>th 473-1334 T hu rs., “pay \l v o u 'r e in te re ste d in t r y i n g out, ca 6633 a fte r 4 p m , a sk to r Jeff A b r a m s o n M E N T A L H E A L T H W O R K E R S T he R a n c h T re a tm e n t C enter of The B ro w n S ch o o ls h as o p e n in g s fo r people interested in w o rk in g w ith e m o tio n a lly d istu rb e d and m e n ta lly re ta rd e d yo un g m en. P a rt tim e and full tim e w o rk a v a ila b le , v a r io u s shifts. P a y s ta r ts in r a n g e of S2.75-S3.00 per hour d e p e n d in g on a s sig n m e n t, lf interested call 444-4835 betw een IO am -4 pm. $3/H R. P L U S C O M M . Afternoons and evening hours available. Route sales work, neat appearance and depen­ dability a necessity. F o r inter­ view , 453-1331 or 258-3349 between I pm-8 pm, M - F . HE LP WANT ED B U R G E R K I N G 2700 G U A D A L U P E F u ll an d p art tim e o p e n in g s on all shifts. A p p ly in p e rso n between 2:30-4:00 M o n ­ d a y th ro u g h T h u r s d a y only. jo in T h e W h a t A T e a m A t W H A T - A - B U R G E R W e offer m e rit r a ise s to $3.25/hr., fle x i­ ble hours, m o n th ly bonuses, g r e a t place to w o rk A p p ly in person, 6539 B u rn e t R d 6106 C a m e r o n R d , 9516 N. L a m a r , 2230 3810 E M L K , 2305 B u r l e s o n , G u a d a lu p e T Y P I N G , D R A F T I N G , illu stra tio n and re c o rd in g/ lectures, conferences, etc 477-1768 t ra n sc rip tio n of B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D I B M Se le cte e , pica/elite, 30 y e a r s ex p e rie n ce Books, d isse rta tio n s, theses, rep orts, m im e o ­ g ra p h in g , 442-7184. W O O D 'S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e A ll w o rk gu ara ntee d, re a so n a b le p rice s T y p in g 472- and typ esettin g. 2200 G u a d a lu p e , 6302. ________ E X P E R T T Y P I N G done on all typ e s of papers, d isse rta tio n s, theses, reports, _______________ _ etc P h o n e 282-4898 S O U T H E R N F R I E D T y p i n g T e r m pap ers, theses. Y o u n a m e it, w e 'll type it P e g g y or S u sa n . 451-3663 F R I E D RESUMES w ith or w ith o u t p icture* 2 Day Service 2707 Hemphill Park Just N o rth o f 2 7 th a t G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 T Y P I N G F R E S H M A N them es, reports, th e se s, d is s e r t a t io n s , 70*/p age C a ll C h r is after 5, 459-8077^_______ ________ T Y P I N G S E R V I C E , So u th T he se s, d is ­ sertation s, t e rm p a p e rs Pica-d oub le, 80* E l it e - S l.IO C h e rr y e M c C u llo u g h , 282-007CL____ _______ ______ __________ P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I N G b y e x ­ p erie nced le g a l se cre ta ry. N o job too la rg e or too s m a ll Q u a lity an d a c c u r a c y a s su re d Sl.OO/pg 478-3381 T Y P I N G T H E S E S , d is s e r t a t io n s , rep orts, etc. South 447-2536 afte r 6pm. N o rth 458-6465 a n y tim e D U N K I N D O N U T S 1/lpAtb. Ann* M B A (J 4 h a s a n e x c e lle n t o p p o r tu n it y a v a ila b le on its 4 am -10 am sh ift Id e a l fo r the s t u ­ d e n t w ith a fte rn o o n c la s s e s , M o n d a y th r u F r id a y , 614 C o n g r e s s . FRESHMAN THEMES 2707 Hemphill Park Ju»t N orth of 27th at G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 P A R T T I M E j o b s - b i g m o n e y p re fe rre d 9 p ro g r a m s . A m e n e . > ^ p r o g r a m s . p ro g ra m s C a ll J Inc. 16th A v e rf o U S F r e e L 80 0-87 L 7 5 9 r G a in e s v ille , F L 32604. T o ta lta p e , 15Q5 NVV F A L L A N D S P R I N G O P E N I N G S as a c a m p leader w ith the H o u s to n O u td o o r I S S an outdoor_s*ilih9 i n u i t " l i m to w o rk w ith ch ild re n n Interviews this I n t o r u i p w s t hi s r n E D * W C h e th w ith the E d u c e - ♦nr m o r e details. ti on P l a c e m e n t S e r v ic e to r m o re deta . C H E L S E A ST. P U B O P E N ll am-2 am H e l p w a n t e d W a i t p e r s o n , a v e r a g e *4 hr d a y or n ig h t fu ll o r p a r t t im e K itc h e n h e lp e rs, $2 65 hr A p p ly in p e r ­ son, N o r t h c r o s s o r H i g h l a n d M a ll. A U S T I N H I L T O N I N N E x p e r ie n c e d fro n t o ffic e p e rs o n n eed ed in for s u p e r v is o r y p o s itio n M u s t be n e a a p p e a r a n c e a n d c a p a b le of w o r k in g w ith S a l a r y th e p u b li c . S h i f t w i ll v a r y d e p e n d s on e x p e rie n c e P r e fe r e n c e w ill in be g iv e n to th o se s e e k in g a c a r e e r hotel m a n a g e m e n t a p p l y i n p e r s o n A U S T I N H I L T O N IN N 6000 M id d le Fiskv ille Rd. Need A Job? Look In The Help Wanted Section Of The Daily Texan Classifieds. A D D R E S S E R S W A N T E D im m e d ia te ly ! W o rk at h om e - no e x p e rie n ce n e c e ss a ry -e x c e lle n t p ay W rite A m e r ic a n S ervice , 8350 P a r k L a n e , Suite 127, D a lla s , T X 75231. ______________ E L E G A N T N E W O R I E N T A L b a rb e cu e r e sta u ra n t in W e stla k e H ills n eed s e x­ p erie n c e d p re p a ra tio n cook. G o od poten­ tial fo r ra ise s an d bonus. C h in e se food ex p e rie n c e d e s ira b le but w ill tra in . Call 327-2025 IS a cc e p tin g O N T H E H A L F S H E L L a p p lic a tio n s fo r 3 wait, bus, an d kitche n help position s. A p p ly after 2 p m 3300 A n d e rs o n L a n e F L O R A L D E S I G N E R , fu ll or p a rttim e P a y c o m m e n s u r a te w ith ab ility. 458-1311 for ap p o in tm e n t, M r. H ille n ______ _ M A D D O C K B e a n 's is lo o k in g fo r part- tim e co o k s P le a se a p p ly 512 W 24th after 2 p m M o n d a y - F r id a y H A M B U R G E R S B Y G o u rm e t, p a rttim e and fu lltim e p o sitio n s a v a ila b le $2.65- $3 25 p er hour. A p p ly in p erson at 1911 W. A n d e rs o n L a n e or 2200 G u a d a lu p e 4-6 T E A C H E R A I D E n e e d e d 4-6 p m Su b stitu te s fu ll and p arttim e. F r e e c a re for c h ild w h ile w o rk in g . 444-7870._______ W E N E E D c a r r i e r s fo r the A m e r i c a n S t a t e s m a n , m o r n in g a n d e v e n in g rou tes. lf in te re ste d c a ll 476-6404 I N L A N D E R S , 206 E ~ Bee C a v e s R d . p a rttim e c h e c k e rs needed, 4-9 s h in M -F , 8 h o u r shift on w e e k e n d s A p p ly in p e r­ __________________ son 327-1881 P A R T T I M E A F T E R N O O N c o u n t e r atte nd an t needed A p p ly in p e rso n only. H o m e S te a m L a u n d ry , 2301 M a n or Rd. w ith Y O U N G A D U L T e x p e r ie n c e d c h ild re n 6-10 y e a rs old. W ill co o rd in a te and s u p e r v is e all typ e s of a ctivities, M - F fro m 3-6 p m $2 65/hr 327-0369 for a p ­ __ __ pointm ent. c h ild P A R T T I M E E M P L O Y M E N T , ca re T u e sd a y and T h u r s d a y only, 9 am - pm M o t h e r 's D a y O u t p ro g ra m . C all Betty, 478-9387. A P P O I N T M E N T C L E R K , p a rttim e , 5 30-9 30, $3/hr. p lu s b o n u s C a ll L y n d a 474-6264 betw een 5 30 and 9 30 _______ __ N O W H I R I N G night b u sp e rso n in fine re sta u ra n t. A p p ly in p e rso n at 725A w 23rd C L E A N I N G P E R S O N needed ( p r im a r i­ ly h e a v y c le a n in g ) 5 h o u rs a m onth. P a y, h o u rs flexible. 443-7628 after 5 _________ P A R T T I M E H E L P w anted, gift $h0.P' S h e ra to n C re st Hotel. C a ll 451-5757, gift _______________ sh o p until 2 pm . a n d W E A R E w illin g to p a y $3 / hr b o n u se s fo r e x p e rie n c e d p e rso n s to w o rk M - F 6-9 c o n ta c tin g p re sc re e n e d clients^ F o r p e rso n a l in te rv ie w c a ll 458-6251 betw een 5-9 pm, N o r t h s id e office W E E K E N D A N D n igh t help needed, g o o d p a y . E x t r a h o u r s a v a ila b l e . P o ly g r a p h req u ire d . C a ll betw een 12-5 p m 454-6808, a sk fo r m a n a g e r. W A I T P E r Y o N S , C A S H I E R , d i s ­ h w a s h e r f o r new r e s t a u r a n t N o r t h A u s t in H a v e ow n tra n sp o rta tio n . C a ll B ill O sb o rn for appt 459-3261 w eek S T U D E N T G A R D E N E R F le x ib le h o u rs a p p ro x im a t e ly 15-20 h o u rs per C a ll 443-1714 after 2. _ _ _ _ _ T R O P I C A L F I S H sto re n eed s p a rttim e h e lp W ill w o rk a ro u n d yo u r cla sse s. 453- 2827 C H I L D C A R E N E E D E D , m u s t p ro v id e a n d t r a n s p o r t a t i o n ; n i g h t s o w n w eeken d s, e sp e c ia lly football g a m e s ; $1.25/hr 476 4725, 471-5057 ( m o r n in g s ) W O R K M O R N I N G S only W a re h o u se w o rk . M u s t h a ve ow n tra n sp o rta tio n . F r a n k G illip p P r o d u c e 836-6762 ___ __________ A C C E P T I N G A P P L I C A T I O N S tor p a r t ­ tim e n igh t w a itp e rs o n s A p p ly betw een 2 30-4 30 p.m . N ig h th a w k no 2, 1907 G u a d a lu p e D E L I V E R Y P E R S O N S d o o r-to -d o o r, h o u rs fle x ib le $3 .50-$4 .50/hr. possible. 454-5244.________________ _________________ T E A C H I N G A S S I S T A N T 8 30 to LOO w e e k d a y s w ith a g e s 2-6, s a la r y $225 m o n th ly, c a ll 476-0849 for in te rv ie w a p ­ p oin tm e nt. T H U N D E R C L O U D S U B S h a s p a rttim e o p e n in g s b etw e en 3 :3 0 p m an d '2 . 3 0 S a tu r d a y s , 2 30 IO S u n d a y s, p o s sib ly in p e rso n , 1608 m o r e h o u r s A p p l y L a v a c a 478-3281 N E E D P O R T E R 20-4 0 / hrs a L ig h t m a in te n a n c e call 442-6789 w e e k ___ _ B A R T E N D E R S ? K I T C H E N help, good w a itp e r s o n s w an te d for lu n ch shift A p p ­ in p e r s o n b e tw e e n 11-3 Q u o r u m ly R e s t a u r a n t H O I R e d R iv e r / S y m p h o n y S q u a re P A R T T I M E J O B S a v a i l a b l e H i " A u stin , B o o k b in d e ry , 2409 M a n o r R d T x. A S M A L L q u a lity lad ies re tail c lo th in g sto re n e e d s a m a n a g e r w h o w ill a lso sell an d a s s is t in b u y in g . T h is is an e xcelle nt o p p o ru n ity for an ex p e rie n ce d retail w e a r p e rso n S a la r y p lu s p e rce n ta ge C a ll C h a r le s S ik e s for in fo rm a tio n 452- 1610 W A N T E D P A R T T I M E (15-20 h rs ./wk) C le rk ty p ist for s m a ll c o n s u ltin g c o m ­ p a n y c lo s e to c a m p u s . S a la r y c o m ­ p etitive a n d h o u rs fle xib le In itia tiv e and re s p o n s ib le ou tloo k re q u ire d P le a se call 474-4526 in t e r v ie w R e s u m e a n d r e fe r e n ces re q u ire d . to a r r a n g e a n W A I T P E R S O N T O w o rk lunches, good tips, 10-15 h o u rs per wk, no w e e k e n d s A ls o e v e n in g d is h w a s h e r s 6-9 C a ll M a l o u f 's L e b a n e se R e s ta u r a n t 472-7590 llp m - 2 a m e x p e r i e n c e N I G H T A U D I T O R in o p e ra tin g either 250 N C R o r 4200 N ^ R - H o u r s S4 25 hr C a ll p e r­ sonnel L a k e w a y C o 261-2600 E O E L _____ D R I V E R S W A N T E D f o r D o m in o s P iz z a M u s t h a v e ow n c a r and be 18 y e a r s o W G o od p a y fle x ib le h o u rs A p p ly 404 W 26th H IO W L y n n , 2011 E R iv e rsid e . 4115 G u a d a lu p e P A R T T I M E D E L I V E R Y N e a t a p p e a ra n ce , a cc e p ta b le d r iv in g r ecord, l-5pm . M F 472 9273 t e x a s vs. A R K A N S A S Tickets wanted Will pay p re m iu m 476-0719 for a blue-eyed fe m ale F R I E N D S H I P T R O G L O D Y T E Send description of _futureR p la n s,h(t#and lite, c u rre n t c irc u m s t a n c e s P O B o x I im m igran t A m e r ic a n C h u rc h . P.O . B O I 7143 U T S ta tio n , A u s t in , Tx^ 7871/ in clu d e a p o stc a rd for a ck n o w le d g e m e n t and in te rv ie w a p p oin tm e n t tim e W A N T E D T X - O U T I C K E T S W I L L P A Y P R E M I U M 214 - 349-9909 in s t r u c t i o n , C L A S S I C A L G U I T A R b e g i n n e r s a n d a d v a n c e d . D r e w T h o m a s o n 478-0650 A U S T I N G H Q H ist o ric a l F a n t a s y an d S c ie n c e F ic t io n B o a r d g a m in g A ls o m in ia tu re s, food, beer. 609 W . 29th, 474- _____ _________________________ 9302 G I A N T S T U D I O sp a c e s a v a ila b le , g ia n t w in d o w s at the O ld M a s o n ic T e m p le on N W c o r n e r H w y in S m ith v ille V isit se co n d floo r e v e n in g s for in fo rm atio n . W A N T E D D E S P E R A T E L Y U T - O U tic k e ts P le a s e call after 5 p m 441-658/ 71 a n d M a i n ____________ U T O U T I C K E T S , need 4 W ichita, K a n ­ sas, 316-686-6945 or 316-261-5305 (8-5) C O S T U M E R E N T A L S N e w H a l l o w e e n c o s t u m e s , M s M c C le lla n d (m e m b e r A T A S ) , d a y s 477- 3738, n ig h ts 836-2733. _____________ s e l e c t i o n g o o d W A N T E D , F O U R g e n e ra l a d m iss io n tick e ts to T e x a s 'O k l a h o m a g a m e C a ll _________________ 471-5168 Y O U N G M A N 27 w o rk s o ffsh o re d r illin g s e e k s " c o m f o r t a b l e " apt h o u se 2 w k s out of m onth. M a n , w om en, couple, fa m ily , L ib e r a l C a ll 476-5891 D en n is. WANTED C L A S S R IN G S , g o ld je w e lry , old p o c k e t s t a m p s w a n t e d w a t c h e s , c u r r e n c y , H i g h p r ic e s p a id P io n e e r C o in C o m ­ pany, 5555 N o r th L a m a r , B ld g . C l 13 in C o m m e rc e P a rk , 451-3607 _____ B U Y I N G W O R L D gold, g o ld jew elry, s c r a p gold, old coins, antiq ues, p ocket w a t c h e s P a y in g f a ir m a r k e t P n c-* C a p ito l C o in Co 3004 G u a d a lu p e , 472- 1676 P h ilip N oh ra, ow ner MUSICAL INSTRUCTION P I A N O L E S S O N S o p e n in g s in p riv a te s t u d io n e a r J e f f e r s o n S q u a r e . E x ­ p erienced , d e g re e d teach e r F o r in fo r­ m ation, 451-3549 ____ ____________ P I A N I S T W I T H M a s t e r 's d egre e now a c c e p tin g students, U T a re a 478-4441 ___________________ after . P I A N I S T W I T H co llege te a ch in g ex p erie nce h a s o p e n in g s for new stu d e n t* 452- Y o u r h o m e or m in e (off K o e n ig ) 7932 UNFURNISHED HOUSES N E A R S H U T T L E , 3br, A C . carpeted, fenced, tre e s 345-7255, Q u a n t a s P r o p e r ­ ties N O R T H C A M P U S , on sh u ttle , 3br, lba, p a r t ia lly fu rn ish e d , $300 345-9442 t u t o r i n g HELP WANTED P H D . M A T H t u t o r L e t f o r m e r U T prof h e l p y o u m a k e t h e g r a d e B i ll D i e t r i c h , 4 4 3 - 9 3 5 4 . ____________ ___________________ B U G G E D B Y F r e n c h ’ G e t e x p e r t help, r e a s o n a b l e r a t e s F r e n c h M A pa t ie n t t e a c h e r C a l l C a r o l , 926-6318^___________ A C C O U N T I N G , M A T H , h i s t o r y , s o c i o l o g y , b io lo g ic a l, p sy c h o lo g y how to t a k e te sts, r e a s o n a b l e r a t e s 478 /9 6 6 i m ­ N E E D 'D E P E N D A B L E p e r s o n m e d ia te ly to p ic k up ch iid re n , IMght h o u se w o rk, 3-5 M o n - F r i P o s s ib ilit y of in c re a se in h ou rs, $2 50-.75/hour. 472- 6270, atte r 6, 472-4212.___________________ P E R S O N T O w o rk with g r o u p of school- a ge c h ild re n (2 15-5 30p m ) D r iv e V W 472 3437 b efore va n an d e x p e rie n ce d 17’ - 1 la m SERVICES SERVICES EARN EXTRA CASH As A Plasma Donor At Austin Plasma Center 2800 G u a d a lu p e s8.00 ‘ 1 0 . 0 0 1st Donation 2nd Donation 10.00 Bonus on 10th Donation 474-7941 G R A D A C C O U N T I N G student needed for real estate d e v e lo p m e n t firm 4 h o u rs d a ily fle x ib le $4 sta rtin g Send re s u m e to P O B o x 14871. A u stin T x 78761 P A R T T I M E , M E C H A N I C A L a b ilit y helpful W e e k e n d s and 1-2 n ig h ts per w eek 451-5102 Ic e C a p a d e s C halet t Faculty voting on nominee list - ( i 'm M A pT J Ik* n r n f p s s o r p rofessor of sp eech com n r n f p s s o r o f S D e e c h C0 IT1- munication. M Thiir^riay. September 21, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN Page, 23 Once the co m m itte e is selected, its duty is “to ex­ amine potential candidates and recommend reasonable choices to the p resid en t,” Fonken said. The com mittee is “ not limited in any way to on-campus candidates and they do not have to reveal any names of the people they dis­ cuss,” he said. 1978 United Fe I JUST WANT TO LIE HERE ALONE , AND BE MAP I A lone Group opposes nuclear funding ACROSS I Tourists' aids 6 Fat 9 Subsequent 14 Came to rest 15 T M 16 Coat 17 Printing ma chines 19 Tin alloy 20 Body part 21 A ndiron 23 Ratify 24 Feels angry toward 27 Insect 29 Incan 31 Expel 35 Entire 37 Toast 39 M ug w u m p 40 Illum ination source 42 — of Honor 44 — — avail: Useless 45 Lifeless: Ar chaic 47 C olom bian money 49 Oath 50 Spanish title 52 Struggle 54 Tw o 56 Enlisted 59 Reverberate 62 Letter 64 — — Is Born" 65 Metal alloy 67 Great skill 70 Tam s rela 71 W German tive city 72 Iowa city 73 Unkem pt 74 Stalk 75 M inus DOWN 1 Of the cheekbone 2 Straighten 3 N Pacific fish 2 w ords 4 Purloined 5 House pest 6 Cut o ff 7 Elderly 8 Chest 9 D w elling unit: Abbr 10 Meat vessel 11 Com m on shrub 12 Lab heater 13 Rod and — 18 Serves 22 Supreme being 25 Canucks or U N I T E D F ea tu re Syndicate W e d n e s d a y ’s Puzzle Solved Red W ings 26 Drug from orchids 28 — Aviv 30 A rt subjects 32 W orking ex tra hours: 2 words 33 Italian river 34 Think Ar chaic 35 S orrow ful word 36 Fabric 38 Try 41 Suggested 43 Bereft of 46 — la la 48 Asian in strum ent 51 Foreign — 53 Chaste 55 Smells 57 Makes less d ifficu lt 58 Garment 59 Declines 60 Canadian In dian 61 Hounds quarry 63 Building sign 66 Eyelid prob Ie m 68 Letter 69 W o o d DOONESBURY ..AND IF YOU MANT TO HEARTHS MOLE T W M STORY MEET W A T ME AT ZEI BERTS ZEIBER^. AT 12-30 SHARP! OOT IT. by G arry Trudeau INFU, OKAY I MUST HAVB YOUK (MRP, M X H , FELLAH. BUTI MR. REDFERN. MY DONT KHOU) IDENTITY MUST BB HOU) MUCH OF PROTECTED. THANE A STORY THAT _ TOO MUCH TO M U LEAVE ME it. * i Z \ / PONT (HORRY, THIS STORY M U WRITE „ ITSELF. IT UUU / ‘ INFORMED SOURCE, IS, NOT BAD-.. ROCKS N FL." HOU)UJILLI KNOW YOU? 7 - c a m p u s n e w s i n o r i e l - n Krueger to speak on interest groups „ r WOLTER PRESCOTT WEBB HISTORICAL. SOCIETY will hold an organizational Students for Krueger O I Although there is a great deal of debate among City Council members regarding when a bond election for STNP might be held, ACEE feels that the nuclear option should be brought to the voters as soon as possible, Humphrey said. The first may YouR OK UMCL& P A « AWAY AMP LE/W& YOO HIS AHTIQU& CPLLByCX\CM OF M!S&C>\JESS>.________________ wii=e c p m ay p a i r 0 9 P A N T Y H O S E I N Y O O K LUNCH &OX • _____ a i by johnny hart / T N E f/.C U R O E f//jE K Q \P N C Y E , T T H E W I Z A R D O F ID 3 LUFBBRKD TH' P IR A T E T O ^ E E Y O U R E E I P d 'l V p / H p A S H IP , I p p P L U M p p F T rip H lg 'H ‘Z & A s , IM Y o V fz NAME- W o w C O M E S Y e * ) w a n t t o P L U M P S T H S A N Y VAMO T j b y B r a n t p a r k e r a n d j o n n n y n a n YO C) O O T A v c T H fc UP L 4 N P TANK HFNAMiUlA M.0RMCTUR& MIRACLE G, J BUT NCA OVERNIGHT W U KEEPJ SEVERAL IF" X 1 ^ ? / / BUT TME CAMPS SUUPAY I GOTTA BC IN THAT LINEUP by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds I ^ ( UNO BSD, IHC BIACX*PECKER' \ _________ _______ _____________ ( f . - T J j MODIFICATION?. OF IME C lteW C J J. CHIMEL TFf.UKHrtlJE & ■■■ " \ r U Y * r d O . TAKING THE LSAT? WE OFFER YOU MORE only • A verage cla ss size l l students • Instruction by attorneys • C lasses m eet on cam pus • And m uch, much more We teach ONLY an LSAT c o u r se , so we a re the EXPERTS in this area. Call our Austin cam pus rep. at 474-9668, or w rite our national office: AND OUR RESULTS PROVE IT. Our student s m edian score is 652 The average score im prove­ m ent our students experience is a 72 POINT INCREASE. CLASSES NOW AVAILABLE FOR OCTOBER 14 LSAT II (Mitral Part IM Southfitld i l l BARGAINS P re v io u s ly O w ned M e rchandise THE SECOND OWNER 2100 GUADALUPE weather M IN N E A P O L IS C H IC A G O BO STO N NEW YOAK W A R M / / ' • / / o a l l a s \ • a t l a n t a n e w O R L E A N S l e g e n o RAIN s h o w e r s SNOW AIR FLOW During Thursday, rain and/or shower activity la expected In th* Pacific Northwest, portion* of Texas, southern Florida and from the Tannaaaaa Valley, northeastward through the Ohio valley, the Lakes area and Into moat of the Northwest. Clear to partly cloudy elsewhere. In Austin, ekles will be partly cloudy Thursday with a chance thunderstorms Thursday of afternoon. The high temperature will reach the upper 80s and the low will be In the upper 80s. Winds will be from the south at 10 to 15 mph. The tun will rise et 7:18 a.m. and eat on Thursday et 7:29 p.m. Sunrise Friday will be et 7:19 a.m.* CAMPUS INTERVIEW S Septem ber 28-29 SAN FR A N C ISC O \ n e q u a l o p p o rtu m 24 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursda ■September 21, 1978 Crenshaw Athletic Club A learning place for little people tudents wait for their chance in the pool A diminutive Cheryl Ramsey has a topsy-turvy view Samantha Cook (I) and Layla Schnepps get a instructor Kim Deck by Lynne Dobson