T h e Da il y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r at The U n i v e rs i ty of Texas at A u s t i n Vol. 72, No. 136 Ten Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, M O N D A Y, FEE - • X I * o g 'o * d a u l J a i u a o c r n j c u o T W Fourteen Pages 471-4401 P O W List For W e e k Not Given SAIGON (A P ) — Tho Communist sid# failed Sunday to give the United States a lust of the American prisoners scheduled for release this week in North and South 3 efnam or to fix a specific day, Time and place them ever, U.S. •pokesmen said. to nand banner-waving, There was no official re,rn n given. But the Communist side was embittered bv rock-throwing, .shouting mobs of South Vietnamese numbering in the hundreds who attacked North Viet­ namese compounds in the northern cities of Hue and Da Nang. Tile demonstrations apparently were ’acidy sanctioned by the Saigon government, but got out of hand. T H E U.S. Command announced Monday forces that the withdrawal of American from Vietnam w’as slightly more than 50 percent completed at the halfway mark of the 60-day deadline set for withdrawal and prisoner release. The announcement was an apparent prod at the Communists, who have released onlv about one-fourth of the American prisoners held at the time the cease-fire agreement was signed. for Chief spokesman the North Viet­ namese delegation. Bui Tin, told Associated Tress reporter Carl Robinson h® did not think the demonstrations would affect the American expected Tuesday according to U.S. reckoning. prisoner release. M aj ! -en. Daniel James, a top spokesman at the Pentagon in Washington, refused Ut tie the delay in the list to the troubles at Hue and Da Nang. Jam es said he understood that North 5 ietnamese and \ Set Cong represenfatives In Saigon told Maj. Gen. Gilbert Woodward, the chief ’ S represeutatU p on the Joint M ilitary Commission, that they w’ere having trouble communicating with their people in the field. Other sources expressed th® view that the Communists are “ playing games with us.” ★ if * SAIGON (AP* — The South Vietnamese delegation to che four-party Joint M ilitary Commission charged Monday ’hat North Vietnam moved Soviet-built SAM2 missile batteries into Quang Tri Province after the cease-fire hogan. >n violation et the peac® agreement. The pro\ :nce is just below th® Demilitarized Zone That divider the two Vietnams. The South Vietnamese side raised th® Issue at Monday morning’s meeting of th® chief delegates of the four parties, which el so ! ruled States, North Vietnam and the Viet Cong include th® “ The gm-emmem of South Vietnam ex­ pressed concern about th® positioning of S A M ; missile site*,- f victims in the air tragedy—but as a cesiu m of kindness, not as admission of Is ra e li guilt. A government press office statement said Ja c q u e s Bourses was th e pilot, Capt. qualified only as a co-pilot for the French jetliner and several propeller- Caravelle driven craft. The Libyan craft was a trijet Boeing 727 which, the Israelis claimed, was not listed on Boirges' flying perron. Israeli warplanes fired on the Libyan jetliner last Wednesday, forcing it to crash land after the airliner strayed off course and Israeli m ilitary positions along the Suez Canal. Of the 113 persons aboard, 106 died. Bourges was among the flew over Teachers Protest Panel Selection By B E T H B E N S O N l e t t e r to Spun- hut has not had a reply. A female professor in the Department of Art has lodge.! a complaint against the selection of the a1, m ale. all-faculty com­ mittee which has bra n appointed to help select a new chairm an t a the department Asst. Prof. .Janet B e rr y has written a letter lo Dean of the Colage of Fine Arts Peter Garvie stating her complaints about the election and the ".‘ election" of the five member committee. SI ® stressed that she was not “ in any w a y protesting the present committee," hut o n ly the way in which its members were chosen. Til rep of the com m ittee members were elected b\ the facui'y of the art department and two others were appointed by the dean. Thomas Reese. K e lly Fearing and Bill Francis are the elected members, while Robert I .evens and T o n nee Grieder were appointe! Ms. B e rn ’ said she is afraid “ women’s Interests will not be represented" on the committpo. The fact that, no students are on the committee ' is equally important,” she said. Twenty-five percent cf the faculty and at least 30 pert onf of tho students in the arr department am women, she emphasized. to She did, however, send copies of tier letter the Departm ent of Health, Education and W elfa re (H E W ) and to rhp Eq u al Employment Opportunities Com­ mission (EEO C ) to bp added as evidence the class action suits already filed in against the University. D EAN GARA I E h r i • f a ■ chosen bv a committee that w as a more represen­ tative body.' slip exp! lined, sinop that committee included both a woman and a student. she Ms. Berry sa iii feels President Stephen Spun- could exert his influence ov er G arvie to get a com m ittee n mod which would be more representative of the art department, Slip forwarded a copy of her In her letter. Ms. B e rry wrote that the vote tallies from the committee elections were not published and that she had heard rumors that the election had been rigged. Tile absence of women on the panel is part of “ a pattern at the U niversity," she said. Women faculty members are not appointed to serve on committees and their careers suffer for it, she added. MS. BURRA cited the lack of a woman on the the panel as representative of reasons the University is having difficulty having an affirmative action plan approve] by the federal government. Tile plan is designed to correct hiring discrimination against w'omen and minority group members. The University’s new plan is now being considered by federal officials after the original plan was rejected. “ no official comment" Reese, panel member, sa11 that there was the committee and pointed out that they had only met once with Garvie and that they “ haven't talked together as yet,” from Levers, associate art professor, said that the committee would represent the entire art department and nor just one faction. He said that it is not so much a question of having students actually rn the com mittee but their (students’) good thoughts." “ having access to and that committee’’ Grinder said that the committee is a “ search ‘lie proceedings will he “ ojien to participation from students and faculty.’’ He also said the vote tallies from the committee elec­ tions inc available in th® office of the acting chairman of the department. Prof. Ralph White, in Art Building 222. Francis said Sunday “ cer­ tainly" thinks that the committee would he ahie to represent fairly the students’ and the women's interests. that he Garvie anas unavailable for comment Sunday, as was Spurr. victims. A communique from the weekly Israeli to Cabinet session said: humanitarian considerations, the govern­ ment resolves its readiness to effect ex- gratia payments to the families of the victims.” "In deference A SPOKESMAN said the word “ com­ pensation" was deliberately not used because it would imply "Israeli guilt for the incident.” Ex gratia means "out of kindness." communique The Cabinet the government "took note" of a m ilitary in­ vestigation into the crash and chief of staff Lf. Gen. David Elazar's decision to shoot at the airliner. said The spokesman said the question of Ela z a r’s resignation never came up at th® Cabinet session and added that Israel’s top soldier has the government." full backing of “ the Tile Cabinet announcements suggested the government regards the incident as closed. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan is expected to make a sim ilar statement before the Knesset—parliament—on Monday. The statement reiterated earlier Israeli force ha I jetliner to declarations that Israel's air repeatedly signaled the Libyan land, but th? pilot ignored the warnings. N EV ER T H ELESS, Dayan has said the tragedy was the result of three fundamental errors: by the pilot and his craft, by Cair* airport which misled Hip pilot into thinking he was Still over Egyptian territory and by the Israelis for their misinterpretation of the events. Palestinian commando operations against Israel will be escalated inside occupied Arab territories as well as in the outside world, the semi-official Egyptian newspaper Al Ahram said Monday. The papier, quoting Palestinian sources in Syria, said a metring had been held in Damascus chaired by guerrilla leader A asir Arafat, mainly to discuss "Israel's crimp against the Libyan civilian plane." the "recent THE INTENSIFICATION of commando activity, Al Ahram said, was in retaliation campaign of for aggressions," an apparent reference to last week's downing of a Libyan jetliner in the Sinai Desert and he Israeli attack against guerrilla bases in Lebanon. Israeli Explosion Studied After Five Dead Bi J E R K A GRAHAM Texan S ta ff W riter caused an Officials Sunday still had not determined underground pipeline what southeast of Austin to break Thursday night, leading to an explosion which killed five person4- and injured ti roe. Henry’ Shepherd, a representative of the National Transportation Safety Board who cam e from Washington to investigate the incident, said the broken section of the pipe has been sent to Efouston to be studied by metallurgists, He said the pipe* broke “ all the way a r o u n d 1' The metallurgical analysis should he completed in two weeks, he said. circumference, the The pipeline carried liquified natural It broke about l l p.m . Thursday a the Phillips Pipeline Co. pumping station about IO miles south of Austin, near Bergstrom A ir Force Base. The injured and killed were all occupants of a Dodge van w hich stalled in a cloud of gas several hundred yards from the pipeline break. The five dead w ere identified as Mrs. Patty Grant, IO; her 2-year-old son Jason. Mrs, Judy Sherman, 21: her 6-month-old daughter Salina; and Jo ffro v Agneta. 25. ^ The identified as Mrs. Sherm ans husband. D eter Sherman, 25; M rs. Grant’s husband. Michael Grant, 26; and Grant’s sister. K a th y Grant. IO. injured were SIN O F the eight v ic tim s lived in the arca of the explosion. Agneta lived in Austin in the University area. Tile eighth victim, K athy Grant, is from Long Island, N .Y .’ and was in Austin visitin g her brother. Ile Grant and his s is te r are both in Brackenridge Hospital. is in critical condition, and she is listed in very serious condition. Sherman w a s transferred Friday to Brooke General H ospital in San Antonio, where he is listed in v e r y serious condition. The first sign of trouble Thursday night indicated came in AA est Texas—when pumping meters there had been a at Odessa .sudden drop in pumping pressure, reported lr .P.. Wright, mainline supervisor of the Austin pumping station. The Phillips company notified main­ the 14 tenance supervisors at each of pumping .stations along the 437-mile pipeline stretching from West Texas to the Gulf Coast. B R IG H T B V S notified and immediatelv called the Travis County Sheriff’s Depart ment. He then notified his crew and started for the pipline. The explosion occurred before they got there, he said. The eight occupants in the van were returning from an outing on I,ake Travis. When they approached the pipeline station in the area of Bergstrom Air Force Base. the vehicle stalled, apparently from the accumulation of the gas. Grant, the driver, tried to restart the engine. Rut when he turned on the ignition again iheio was a tremendous explosion, he said, and that was all he remembered. Two other cars also stalled from the gas. hut. the occupants escaped injury in the blast. The cars were driven by Mr, and Mrs. William H illers, who live in the area of the explosion. The explosion engulfed the whole area in flames, and then sent flames roaring more than IOO feet into the air at the leak. Firemen were unsuccessful in attempts to put the fire out Thursday night, and finally had to let it hum until the gas in that section of the line was exhausted. The flames finally died out Frid ay morning. Shepherd stressed that “ we are not a fault-finding agency. We are a fact-finding safety organization which seeks to prevent future accidents by finding causes of cur­ rent accidents.” The Travis County Sheriff’s Office and the Texas Department of Public Safety are also investigating the pipeline break. Two I niversify System administrators and one faculty member were appointed Saturday to the 37-member Texas con- stitutional revision commission. Hie appointees' names now go to the legislature, which has in days to accept or reject all 37 members. W Page Keeton, dean of the School of Law’, and Dr. assistant professor of government, wrere chosen from the Austin branch of the University Janice May. Also a painted was Dr. Peter Flawn, president of UT Ran Antonio and former vice-president for academic affairs at Austin. A FORMER member of rhe Board of Regents. Wales Madden J r . of Amarillo, was also appointed. He is presently a member of the Coordinating Board, T exas College and University System. T7ie panel was appointed by a six-m em ber commission made up of (kiv. Dolph Briscoe, Lf. Gov. Bill Hobby, Arty. Gen. John Hill,' House Speaker Price Daniel Jr., Supreme Court Chief Joe Greenhill and Presiding Judge John F. Onion of the Court of Criminal Appeals. Justice Other Austin residents to the committee former U.S. Sen. Ralph Y a r ­ include Justice borough; retired Supreme Court Robert W. Calvert; Mrs. Faye Holuh. business services for South­ western Bell Telephone Co. and an active labor organizer: and Mrs. Malcolm Milburn, former vice-chairman of the Texas Republican Party’. instructor ( AIA UHT and Mrs. Milburn were ap- vice-chairman, pointed rsepeetively, for the commission. chairman and T exas voters authorized creation of the in- committee last November when they weather The weather will be partly cloudy and mild, c learing Monday night and Tuesday. W inds Monday w ill be southerly, changing to northerly a f 6 to 16 mph Monday night and Tuesday. High Monday should be in the 60s. low Monday night in the 40s and high Tuesday in the 60s. A Tree for Freedom C ro w d s o f o eo p le, In clu d in g tho fa m ilies o f P O W * and M lA s , g a th e r on gro u n d s S a tu rd a y to witness the d e d ic a tio n of a " F r e e d o m T ree. ' h the C a p it o l s n o r in g all the P O W s M i A s and v e te ra n s of the V ie tn a m c o n flic t. Th- tre e a h e rita g e oak. was g ro w n rom an a co rn o f the D a v y C r o c k e t t tree a t the A la m o in San A n to n io , and paid fo r by the local S u p p o rt P O W - M I A s o rg an iz atio n . HAREX WH.K S . Revision Body Named 3 University Personnel Included structed (hp Legislature to meet in !'r '4 as a constitutional convention. The commission will study the present its recoin Constitution and must report rn oblations to the Legislature by Nov I. It will continue through the first 60 da\s of the convention as an advisor, group. Sunday, B hen four of the appointers were con tarted subjects which some cropped up were reform of the indicia t v, annual sessions of the Legislature and revising legislative pa;, scales. Dr. May said the present Constitution, which w a s wTitten in 1876, requires re visio n both substantively and nonsubstantivcly, legislative, ex e c u tiv e , especially judicial and local government areas.” the in Yarborough, stressing legislative pay scales, said, “ Our state legislators are paid less than garbage collectors. Wp ne®d t0 change so they can get a decent salary, a living wage. It shouldn’t, he lower than die salaries for schoolteachers, policemen and firemen the way it is now.’’ Calvert said Sunday that judicial reform is the main subject about which he has already formed an opinion. Keeton, though firs* stipulating that he bad no firm position on am suggested specific revision, said generally of thp Constitution, The whole business needs revision. I don't think thorp s ani- part f>f it that doesn t noel revision.” — UG. Pentecostal G rou p Investigated Student Lodges Complaint By J O E DAGA II Texan Staff B riter Edwin Price, assistant dean of students, is investigating a complaint that a student organization, the “ International Pentacvistal Fellowship,” violated University and state regulations by their activities on campus. T h o complaint, filed Wednesday by student Norman psychology ’he Poythress, includes an allegation that group’s activities violated Article I Section 7 of the Texas Constitution, graduate That section states that state property may not be appropriated for the benefit ct any’ religious set t or society. P O I T H R E S S ALSO charged the group with violation of two University regulation*-: first, that a student group cannot co-sponsor a religious activity with a group that s not faculty or staff, and second, that it literature without is first registering it with the assistant dean of students. to distribute illegal Poythress became aware of the alleged violations, he said, when attending a Feb. 16 meeting of the group. “ We will either dismiss the complaint or lodge it with a committee,” Prior said. I am in the process of investigating it. “ I talked with the Pentecostal faculty member and spokesmen for the group. The\ are going to put their reply in writing. “ I will then have the written comply and the reply," Price continued, explain hp would colleagues in the dean of students’ office. then discuss the mattei with nf IM E MAT I UR could ti en he referred to a student faculty committee, which would decide upon penalties violations are nidged to be true. the al leged if Poythress said he complained because various laws and I hey should he allowed ft “ They were viola! don't think tinue.” Mark Estes, the Pentaoosta! faculty member mentioned by Price, responded that the allegations Sunday' saving distribution of the Fph. meeting was done against the wishes the organization. leaflets af the 16 of first “ The th in g T fold tho group was that no literature was authorized and none should he p i -rod out," sari Estes, an in­ structor of architecture. Gaps also said thp leaflets, which individually he claimed were distributed bv members who had not heard Estes’ openin warning, did not mention the name of th® U n i t e d its Pen tacos tai Church, denomination or Location. As a group up did not condone rh# leaflet passing,” Estes said. Estes ^aid he personally witnessed Hi# the transa. don betw een Poythress and church member, end suggested Poythress may have asked for the literature. Estes >.'s) responded to the charge >f c< KS [ onsors h i p ie meeting was not sponsored af all In no by the United Pentecostal Church. instructor way was th® asserted. However, he said individual members could have mentioned the church by name. it mentioned.” Members of Ilia! church were present ” he v id. ■•hut membership does not constitute sponsorship." I IN M IA , Estf* explained the meeting was for "singing, testimonials and discus­ sion of a religious nature in the sense of 1 r a r| ° m : c of aw arere?*, solicitation. devoid / , ' a>s n worship service,” Estes added He said die organization would abide rhe student-facultv by committee is referred to that committee), rh® decision of (if the matter Estes said he will submit his reply to Price on Monday. written Visitation Battle Continues < f>)ko denied ? ; sa \ rig he told Wo'-t that although hp d is a g r e e d p h ilo so p h ic a lly w ith the pro* Seif-(J o’er rn ma lion nolicv R\ ! t \ V\ I U K By I I \NN I \KIN T o v a n M-aff n ritor rh*. Robert Cook?, dirt JmrffT Or,?. - rp^i lo-., <* sppnt m.>s* of a Jmvpr gwemmen t m ^:ng Sundav night denying chargee leveled a» him by Jo-t-t *.tudent govern- merit representatives concerning : assonate dean of students and tho rr»aj»r\s for ’ack of tim* tor of all men's residence 1 On tho self-de?emv.nation of hours halls, had put “ student against policy' proposed rtfcvntlv. student against M e lis s a Pr,arflana rcpt **seni.i tive.” students previou that aft it* Ms, Friediand continued with determ Student Committee which ha* first draft unanimous go to President Stephen Spurn a. V ce President for Student Affairs It ma id Brown for consideration. lent posal, if ,* Was w id ay wanted, he would sui ir proposal ’■ears. Howe* the rewTire charges that C<**ko, who is also ’n taking d( ;ini'ted t • officer I... ..... i • ,, \ goes o the ( o rn rn i 11 e e began patrolling the ng Accommodations cd a present limited visitation rights Jester halls to enforce a1’I po, icy. rho of Cooke categorically denied this, student Ie “ an active Saying government to he wanted The J ewrite w is requested by the Accommodations f omrotttoo for minor revisi ns. Ms. only or sn*..id go authorises ' ips to ne* cssarv dote; rn J .rut Ms. Fnedi. ■idcr t only ( 'o »ke a that of “ this govt to Tv po:im' afraid ration Cooke and to nd charged that id “ a few officers feel rnment who to stand u the thong earrw s t e e d that the e l f . p e o p l e w ere mg the worth cf they tratars'' if omnendation I et;, ugh weight with those to n, of this administrators to stop totally implementation of the proposals. The self-determination of hours re* e: v'e l l The Silver Feathers Indian Jewelry Trading Co. M t e ZN noir wrying its large st inventory ever. r n f I mu! reds of — 8 Drop Out of Race Graduate Place 2 Empty on Ballot Fight students had withdrawn from Student Government races by Sunday night. Pat Macken, chairman of the Election Com­ mission, reported. unopposed. those who withdrew their names fiom consideration include B u rh Brock and Daniel Eden, for Co-Op Board, Place 2; and for S’u(F*nt Senate, Mark Lucas, Engineering, Place I; Clark Hoffman and Larry Lehman, Egineering, Place 2. lack D, VVranischar, Humanities, Place 2; John Klein, Natural Nm onces. Place 4; Sam Stolbun, Social and Behavioral Sciences, F ice 4. and Julio Hagan, Nursing, also withdrew from the races ' it will be hard to take some nos name off the ballot after M ndny. Macken said. “ After Tuesday the ballot goes to the printers.” Place 2 for the graduate Student senator will be empty on the ■ nd can only be filled by a write-in candidate, since no enc filed fcr the position prior to the deadline last Tuesday. Candidates in the other three graduate positions are running ‘ Ute filing period is closed now so the only alternative the student has who wants to run is a write-in campaign.” Mrs. Rachel Bohmfalk, Student Government offices secretary, said. According to the election rode, candidates must meet specific notations to qualify as a write-in candidate. All write-in candidates are required to notify Macken to giv# their current Austin address and telephone number. lf a write in candidate is in a runoff election, his name will be on the ballot. will be held March 7. The general spring election, which will <3Iso include 19 referenda, Any runoff elections will be held March 14 and newly elected officers will take their positions on the first Monday in April. Atomic Research Furthered (Vnton A I diversity professor and an Center UT Experimenters Make Important Find cp*. . a . _ for Nuclear Studies through a series of very thin carbon foils.” . test" the limits of present atomic theories. ... . ■ »• Ternus Delays SUN Meeting Save M e rn b o r s of the I Diversity Neighborhoods (SUN) are trying to meet with City Transportation D i r e c t o r .loc the earliest date I emus at for ris ib le tim University area, Bill Parrish, SUN member, Sunday night. to discuss plans in improvements said Members of the group tried to meet with Ternus Friday but were earliest possible time he could see them was in three weeks. toll that the Fornus agreed to meet with SFN before March 15, bu! the group is trying to persuade him to meet earlier. SUN members met with Mayor Roy Butler Friday morning. Thev discussed the lack of action by ( tty Council on Thursday con­ cerning the street improvements. II ►J yr nd an Undergraduate re rn archer have discovered what appears to be a signifi ant experimental way to test theory of quantum electrodynamics—t he b a s i c theory for all atomic study. th" Dr. ( ’. Fred Moore and senior physics major Joe Bolger an­ nounced Friday that they have succeeded in stripping the oxygen atom of seven of its eight elec­ trons by "passing an oxygen beam from the tandem Van de Graaff accelerator located at the An X ray detector is used to "observe” the bare ow gen nuclei as they leave the last foil cap­ turing one or two electrons, Moore explained. Hie object of the experiment is to observe "hydrogenic oxvgen atoms —atoms like that are hydrogen in that they contain only one electron. Such new experiments will enable iesearchers to "severely . ; 1 . — - HOO '•»’ ' W TOK liiqo ,235*0 29s!oO v m DIAMOND alop _________ iS k SK W W T O ^.j-ULuKMgaUHfiii ... ff J i gj P V A 476-0178.. e e e e e e e M te e e te e e e e e e e e « 25% DISCOUNT r , ! r r A i i U T - ir a / l r - ® 9 rn rn |r n DRV CLEANING X SHIRTS WITH THIS COUPON (Good thru 3/10) D IC K EN S C L E A N E R S A N D LA U N D R Y 2418 GUADALUPF 23 Yp#fi In Th* Sam* Locator. -SKS siltier feathers in experim ent 2nd level Dobi# Man Mf „ \ V* N I I I l l d a n e c e n t e r u o h k e c e n t e r x s o b x e c e n t e r r o b x e c e n t e r g ON £ W u w ws a a ii « f *£ s u « ire f f a f f f f H i £ K u ii SM H U s £ K N *< U f f C l f f f f f f H £ f f u f f x f fa f f f f f f H £ f f U f f Ux s a s H h £ f f U I « | “ “ Honeywell. Suddenly, HO NEYW ELL PENTAX is 30% OFF LIST PRICE! HONEMAN Et I PENTAX SPOTMATIC Ila YOU MAY J4EVER SEE THESE LOW PRICES AGAIN! 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It was the theoretical prediction of this constant that ushered in the atomic age. But, according to Moore, little experimentation has been done to obtain evidence to support the validity of the constant. When the study of atomic energy was first initiated in 1913, the hydrogen atom was used in theoretical prediction because it was a “ two body problem"—one electron and one proton. This type* of problem, Moore said, is the simplest to work w'ith. Stripping the heavier oxygen atoms, however, will “ enable us to measure a system where the nuclear force is 64 times greater than with hydrogen," Moore explained. “ And there is nothing to say we have to stop with oxygen,” indicating plans a-e he added, underway to experiment with even heavier elements. Graduate's Death Ruled as Suicide The Saturday morning death cf T niversitv graduate Lauren Lane, 23, was ruled a suicide by Peace Justice James McMurtry after an autopsy was performed Sunday morning. McMurtry said the cause of death was one gunshot wound to the head with a .22 caliber rifle. Tne body w'as found at the 507-C Elmwood Plano home of a friend w'ho called the police about 1:30 a m. Saturday. Miss Lane, who lived at 70fi-A W. .30th St., was a 1972 graduate of the I rn versify School of Communication. She had been employed by the Austin Ameriean-Statesman and had been recently hired the managing editor of A P T . magazine. A ( lose friend of Miss Lane said he had spoken with her on Thur- sda-v' and that she seemed her usual self and was not depressed A rn 0 rn a e rn rn T H E C L I N T O N 3 0 I T A X INCL. LUNCH & DINNER SPECIAL Meat, Salad, Two Vegetables, Hot Rolls, Tea Served From 10:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. 89c BREAKFAST SPECIAL TW O EGGS, TW O PANCAKES COFFEE, TOAST & JELLY OPEN M-F 7-7, SUN. 12-9 P.M. 105 W 20TH ONE BLOCK SOUTH OF LITTLEFIELD FOUNTAIN SPEED READING COURSE SET TO BEGIN AT U.T. National Speed Reading Schools announces the for­ mation of speed reading classes this spring at U.T. to be held The skills taught in this course will enable a person to read any average length book in less than an hour and understand it better. In addit ion to rapid read­ ing the course also empha­ sises improved study tech­ niques, better test taking skills, and increased con­ centration and retention abilities. Classes are limited to I 2 students. Graduates of the course are guaranteed a reading speed over 1,000 words per minute with a definite increase in com­ prehension. For those who would like more information, without obligation to enroll, a series of free one hour orienta­ lectures have been tion scheduled. Attend the one most convenient for you. MON., FEB. 26 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. TUES., FEB. 27 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. WED., FEB. 28 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. THUR., M A R C H I 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. All meetings will be con­ ducted in Barcelona Room of the Castilian, 24th and San Antonio. A • • ^ LnLl)WJ|1|iBffiUl>l|l _ .u. Mishap Mars B y DOUGLAS PO O L E T ile lig h th e a rte d s p irit of the C a p ita l A rea M a rc h of D im e s “ M iles for C hildren W alk ” w a s m a r r e d S a tu rd a y afte rn o o n w hen th re e c h ild re n w e re s tru c k by an a u to w h ile p a rtic ip a tin g in th e w alk. All th re e re c e iv e d m in o r in ju rie s. T H E C H IL D R E N w o re a p ­ p ro x im a te ly 1.600 p a r tic ip a n ts w ho w alk ed to m a k e th e e v e n t a su c c e ss , d e sp ite th e in cid e n t. a m o n g A p p ro x im a te ly 1.150 tire d h ik e rs c o m ­ p le te d the 20-m ile c o u rse, a n d an e s tim a te d th e $18,000 is e x p ec te d fisrht a g a in s t b irth w a lk in for u se d e fe c ts, M a ry L ouise T indle, e x e c u tiv e d ir e c to r fo r M a rch of D im es, sa id S u n d ay . to b e ra is e d fro m th e the th a t re p o rte d to po lice W itn e sse s tra f fic along th e c h ild ren w e re stru c k a t 3:56 p .m . w h ile w alk in g south w ith th e E a s t F ro n ta g e R oad of N o rth TTI 35. T ile a uto. a light bitte 1962 C om et, occupied by two m a le s who a p p e a r e d to b e in th e ir it te e n s, a p p ro a c h e d from n e a re d th e g ro u p of c h ild re n it s w e rv e d , hit th e th re e and le ft a t high sp e e d , p o lic e r e p o rts sa id . th e n o rth . As H IL C H ILD REN ' w e re w a lk in g on tile th e w est ro a d w a y b e c a u s e side of th e fro n ta g e ro a d w as m u d d y a n d full of w a te r. th e ditch on T w o of th e c h ild ren . T a m m y R ow e. I? . 810'’ M aine D rive, a n d J e a n F lo re s. 12.6504 in ­ L ynda L an e , w e re ju rie s re le a s e d S a tu rd a y a fte rn o o n and fro m B ra c k e n rid g e H o s p ita l tr e a te d for m in o r T he th ird v ic tim , D oug W eeks, f 5304 M id d a le L a n e , w a s re le a s e d Sn: I y a f te r b e in g tre a te d for a h a ir lin e fra c tu re of his left foot. l l , Tile w a lk e rs e a rn e d m o n ey fur th e M arch of D im es b y sig n in g u p e s m a m " s p o n s o rs ’' th e ir hike. E a c h sponsor a s p o ssib le for a g re e d f >r e ac h m ile c o m p ’c e d by th e w alk er. to p a y a set fe e ARTH I R SW E E T . 14. and P. r k Mc- S h ea. 13, from B u rn et J u n io r H ig h , finished th e c o u rse to g e th e r first, r u n n in g the e n tire 20 m ile s in 2 h o u rs and 55 m in u te s. A lthough w a lk e rs w e re m o stly jut or ann1 se n io r high school stu d e n ts , a p p ro x im a te ly 200 a d u lts p a r tic ip a te d M r-, T indle s a id . th is y e o f Dimes Walk E a c h w a lk e r who tu rn s in ins m o n ey to the M arch o; D im es office by the M a rch IO d e ad lin e w ill b e elig ib le fo r p rize s d o n a te d by local m e rc h a n t«. T h e d ra w in g fo r the p rizes w ill be held M a rc h IT at R e a g a n High School. T H E P R IZ E S a w a rd e d will be a 1971 Pi * 850 sp o rt c o o ee , p o rta b le ra d io s. $50 and $100 sa v in g s b o n d s, a b a s e b a ll g love and a o n e -y ea r fre e th e a te r p a ss fo r two. 'D ie first 25 c e n ts of e v ery d o lla r ra is e d fro m th e w alk goes to tile M edical S c ien tific R e se a rc h F und of the N ational F o u n d atio n the M a rch of D im es. Tile N ational for c e n ts aud F o u n d a tio n local th e tire o th e r 37’/2 c e n ts s ta y s its e lf re c e iv e s 37 in C h a p te r of the M a rc h of D im es, M rs. T in d ls sa id . of of the F ie fa lite r in ju re d one c h ild re n said he felt th a t next y e a r ’s c o a rs e J ould be it m e a n s w a lk in g in c irc le s. H e a d d ed th a t he w ould not allow h is child to w a lk next y e a r u n le s s tile co u rse w ere c h a n g e d . re ro u te d , ev en if tho la rg e p a r ­ " N E T L H A P P Y alxiut tic ip a tio n an d s u p p o rt of the w alk, a n d th an k fu l th a t th e fh ree c h ild ren w e re n o t se rio u sly in ju re I." M rs. T indle sa id S u n d a y . A e wil c o n s t e r re ro u tin g w hen w e b e g in p lan n in g E v e r y y e a r 's p r e c a u tio n u s ta k e n " itll th is y e a r 's ro u te , w ith police and th # w a y ,” M rs. T indle a d d e d . IOO v o lu n te e rs along w alk. next Abortion Decision Coming? C o ntrove rsial A c tio n M a y Face Leoislators ’ ^ By \L ISO N SMITH S O Y S M I T H Texan Staff Writer Is T e x a s r e a d y for legalized a bortin! ? T his qu estio n could w ell b e c o m e the m ost ti n to avoid b itte r C apitol b a ttle of 1975—d e s p ite fa c t it. le g isla to rs a r e Ir v in g that, As one re p re s e n ta tiv e put if, p a rtis a n s h ip - lot of on p o litic a lly d a n g ero u s. I t o ffen d s a c o n tro v e rsia l m a t e r h ighly a f t si , M -A ., ^ * »> * * . , f e . a - A * ' * » “' ' * r v » s x '"“ 5 - a s * . • r ii m m & F W . [ M g — . c f e l f e R ' W f V 4'; ;;!' ■ H r J V i f ** ' g it? iv' ills ■• X. _ Smog Free Tr a n s po r t at i on Two ®* the n e arly 1,600 p a rtic ip a n t* in the C a p ita l A rea M arch of Dimes "M iles th e ir course Saturday, seemingly oblivious to the tra ffic for C hildren a ro u n d junior high school s tu d e n ts finishing the course. th e m . A b o u t I,SOO hikers finished T ex an S ta I I ’he to by H A K EN W IL E S. the 20-m ile walk, w ith two joq along Briscoe E xp la in s W a t e r S h o r ta g e B y D ANN LAKIN T e x a n S ta ff W riter A d d ressin g th e clo sin g T e x a s W a te r luncheon of a th re e -d a y C o n serv atio n A sso ciatio n m e e tin g F r i d a y , G ov. Dolph B r is e w sa id he lists " ho pro b lem of our s ale ’s wafer needs as the No. 1 p rio rity of tile s t a t” government re eo m m e d e sig n ed p re se n t d is tric ts , to I w he i h m i i t e d to v >se t h e iv m a u n r s e v e n sp e c ific L e g isla tiv e ti e loopholes the in m u n ic ip al w a te r ■f The gover “ c ooperation L egisl a tu re i n r e vi C ode th a t w ill p ro tect d is tric ts h o m es a n d them u tilitie s ." the ho w e lc o m e s m e m b e rs the of the W a te r D is tr ct u n e bu v e rs in new th eir for from e x c e ssiv e c o sts W A T ER D IS T R IC T S n T e x a s a re a m o n g th e m o st n u m e ro u s o f sp e c ia l d is tric ts in th e sta te , At p re s e n t th e re is little c ontrol o v e r th e ir fo rm a t! n a n d o p e ratio n , Tile g o v e rn o r's p ro p o sa ls in clu d e p la c in g a lim it ca th ? d e b t o f an y w a te r d is tric ts c re a te d an d th ? rev a vv of all w a te r d is trie t bond th e T e x a s W a te r R ig h ts C o m m issio n . issu e s b y He a ls o s u g g e s te d tile a p p o in tm e n t of In d ep en d en t c e rtifie d p u b lic a c c o u n ta n ts to a u d it th e b o k s a n d re c o rd s of tho d is tric t, a n d e m p lo y m e n t of a n ta x a ssessor-collect,' r by e a c h d is tric t. in d en o n d e n t B R ISC O E S P L A N fu rth e r c-d is fo r all con­ to he ta x p a y in g p ro p e rty w ithin re c la m a tio n d is tric t in w ritin g of purchasers of se rv a tio n a n d notified re sp o n sib ilitie s th e ir a th e w a te r p ro b le m s of W est th e High P la in s a r e a s h av e th e ir the p ro s p e rity and H e sa id T e x a s an d a lr e a d y been p ro b le m s will aff?.'* d ev elo p m en t of th e "-bolo s ta te Toe H igh P la in s a r e a tho la rg e s t a n d m o st p ro d u c tiv e s e g m e n ts of re co g n ize d , but now is one o f tlie ( /r e a l P la in s a r e a . ” H e a s s e rte d th a t th e o n ly lim ita tio n o f th e a r e a 's a s s e ts is w a te r. is p a r t o f T ins p a rt o f th e the s ta te “ n a tio n 's b re a d b a s k e t. T h e e ffic ie n c y of a g ric u ltu ra l p ro d u c tio n th is a r e a h a s c o n trib u te d g re a tly to ou r n a tio n 's foreign c o m m e rc e .” B riscoe sa id . in H E ( H A R G E !) th a t the w a te r p ro b le m is h a v in g a d ire c t b e a r in g on la te st d e v alu atio n of the d o l’a r b e c a u se A m e ric a n a g ric u ltu ra l p ro d u c ts w hich a r e e a s ily af- fertr>d b v w a te r s h o rta g e s a r e “ e x tr e m e ly im p o rta n t to o u r fo reig n tra d e the ro le “ T h e p re se n t a n d p o te n tia l for '.m e rm a n a g ric u ltu ra l p roduction c a n n it he o v e r-e stim a te d th e its b a la n c e of p a y m e n t q u estio n . L a s t y e a r A m e ric a had a deficit in foreign tr a d e of $6.4 b illio n ." h e said. im p o rta n c e to In " T h e only w a y w e c a n p o ssib ly hold o ur in is by se c u rin g an a d e q u a te w a te r own, m u ch T e x a s su p p le for th e f u tu re ," he c o n t i n u e d . le s s r e a liz e o u r p o te n tia l th e n e ed B R ISC O E E M P H A S IZ E D for looking a t th e p ro b lem in its to ta lity . “ We m u s t a d d re s s o u rse lv e s to*al p ic ­ solution m u s t u ltim a te t u r e ...a n d p ro v id e for a ll o ur s t a t e ’s w a t e r n e e d s ,” he sa id . o u r tile to on th e m o st C o m m e n tin g th e co n fere n ce , im p o rta n t l f . P . B u rleig h , b e n e fit of the T ex a s W a te r e x e c u tiv e d ire c to r o f D ev elo p m en t B oard, sa id , “ An a w a re n e s s for level w as g ain ed a s w e m w tile fe d era l govern* m o at rib est itself of th e w a te r p ro b ’e m ," th e need of u n ity on th e s ta te Tics t on v t of fed eral a ttitu d e w as e v id e n t from the N a tio n a l W ater C om ­ in N o v e m b er, th e m issio n w hich w a s re le a s e d he sa id . " T h e w a te r w orld is c h an g in g . T h ere used to be c o o p era tio n b e tw e e n s ta te and fe d e ra l th o u g h g o v e rn m e n t, b u t now U n cle S am is going to d ro p th e s ta te s like a hot p o ta to ." B u rleig h sa id . looks a s it f t .sun S tu ff P h o t o b y K A H I N W l i . i % W a t e r Wo r r i e s G o v . Dolph Briscoe fells the Texas W a t e r C onservation Association F riday th a t Texas* is having a d ire c t bearing on the d evaluation of the dollar in tho w a te r problem fore gn market. H e said the state's agricultural exports, g re a tly a ffe c te d by wafer the shortages, cannot be overestim ated state s w a te r needs are the N o . in the balance o f p aym ent question I p riority o f state g overn m en t.’1 a n d Gioyna Named 'Engineer of the Year Bv M5 RON S A R I MN aud R O B E R ! \ C l E L A M ) in ■several p ro fe ssio n a l g ro u p s an d o u t­ sta n d in g involvem ent a n d c o n trib u tio n s in e n v iro n m e n ta l e n g in e e rin g . a s p a rt of W eek. the U n iv e rsity ’s E n g in e e rin g Dr. E a rn e s t F . G ioyna, d e a n of the C ollege of E n g in e e rin g , has been n a m e d E n g in e e r of the Y e a r by (he T ra v is C h a p te r of P ro fe ss io n a l E n g in e e rs ( T S P E l. the T exas Srjciety of tile Jo h n F . N ixon, p i e s i d e n t of c h a p te r, sa id th a t G ioyna, a sp e c ia lis t in e n v iro n m e n ta l engit c e rin g , w a s chosen by a se v e n -m e m b e r c o m m itte e , s ix of w hom a r e th e rm riv ■ p.-e t re c ip ie n ts of the honor. 'F ie a w a rd w a s a n n o u n ce d S a tu rd a y n ig h t. G ioyna w as a w a rd se le c ed b e c a u se of his a c tiv e p a rtic ip a tio n in civ ic o rg a n iz a tio n s a n d fo r h is p ro fessio n al a c ­ c o m p lish m e n ts, w h ich include p a rtic ip a tio n th e for G io y n a is a m e m b e r o r p a rtic ip a n t, s e rv in g m ostly on in th e n atio n al ap p ro x innately 25 o rg a n iz a tio n s o r a g e n c ie s, He a ls o has se rv e d a s a d v is e r a n d con­ su lta n t to n u m ero u s s ta te , fe d e ra l a n d in­ te rn a tio n a l en* v iro n m e n ta l e n g in e e rin g . a g e n c ie s involved lev el, in In a d d itio n p ro fe s so r, G ioyna s e r v e s a s d ire c to r for R e se a rc h th e U n iv e rs ity ’s C e n te r W a te r R e so u rc e s its B u re au a n d E n g in e e rin g R e se a rc h to his d u tie s a s d e a n and for in of S ev ern I U n iv e rsity e n g in e e rin g s tu d e n ts a n d fa c u lty m e m b e rs a n d a m a jo r U.S. la st w eek, c o rp o ra tio n w e re a lso honored F o r IO y e a r s of s ig n ific a n t c o n trib u tio n s in (a e I1?!'! of e n g in e e rin g e d u c a tio n a n d th e E T . du P o n t de N e m o u rs re s e a rc h , Co. the D istin g u ish ed C or- re ce iv e d Inc. p o ra to A w ard at th e C ollege of E n g in e e rin g A w ard s C onvocation W ed n esd ay . a n d p a r tic ip a te s 'rile du P o n t C o m pany h a s five c h e m ic a l p la n t- in T e x a s w hich a c tiv e ly h ire T e x a s g ra d u a te s , o p en s its p la n ts for s tu d e n t in ­ spection c u rric u la r d evelo p m en t b y pro v id in g c o u n sel p e rso n n e l and fa c ilitie s, D ean E . G riffith , d ire c to r of co n iin u in g e n g in e erin g stu d ie s, e x p la in e d . G riffith sa id d u P o u f s su p p o rt of th e E q u a l O pportunity in fa c u lty d e v e lo p m e n t h av e r e s e a r c h a n d its w o rk P ro g ra m a n d in C iv i li a n Exchange Proposed M u jib Wants B engali and Pakistani Swap NA T O R E , B a n g la d esh (A P )—P r im e M in ister Mujibur R a h m a n p ro p o sed Sunday th at B a n g la d e sh and P a k ista n im m e d ia te ly sw a p th at h u n d re d s if P a k is ta n d o e sn 't a g re e , h e m ig h t dum p 300,000 n o nB engali M oslem s in the lap of the w orld c o m m u n ity . of th o u sa n d s cf u n w a n ted c iv ilia n s. He in d ic a te d ^ M ujib sa id B a n g la d e s h h a s no ro o m for Ute m e m b e rs of the U rd u -sp ea k in g B ih a ri m in o rity w ho h a v e told h is B en g ali g o v e rn ­ m en t they would r a th e r live in P a k is ta n . If P a k is ta n r e je c ts th e m , he sa id , “ th e w orld c o m m u n ity should p u rc h a se an islan d for th e m .” M u ]ib’s e x c h a n g e p ro p cal e n v isio n s the d issa tisfie d Bihari!-, slid liv in g in re fu g e e c a m p s 15 m o n th s a f te r B a n g la d esh w a r born of w h a t w as E a s t P a k is ta n bi the 1971 In d ia -P a k is ta n w a r , for as m a n y a s 100,000 B e n g a lis s tra n d e d in P a k is ta n by th e w a r. tra d e of “ T his c a n be do n e e v e n before P a k is ta n reco g n izes B a n g la d e s h ,” th a t th e c o u n trie s m u st be c o n d u cted a s th e sheik said a n y n e g o tia tio n s b e tw e e n e q u a s, w ith full re co g n iti n on b o th sid e s. in te rv ie w . M ujib h as s a id p re v io u sly in an Tile o ffe r w e n t beyond a pro p o sal a lre a d y u n d e r c o n sid era tio n to r e p a tr ia te a b o u t 6.000 In d ia, P a k is ta n a n d B a n g la d e sh b y P a k ista n i w om en a n d c h ild ren hold in In d ia in e x c h a n g e fo r lO.ooO B engali d e p e n d e n ts in P a k is ta n . M ujib said th e o ffer would not a p p ly to 70,000 P a l a c a rn m ilita ry p riso n e rs held ru le out d ie possibility f i a t th e 20.000 c iv ilia n a n d p a ra m ilita ry In te rn e e s m ig h t bp involved, India, alth o u g h he re fu sed to in S om e of th e m ilita r y m en , lie s a id , s ittin g u n d e r a m an g o tr e e an d looking re la x e d a fte r a day o f c a m p a ig n in g fo r n e x t w eek s g e n e ra l e le ctio n s, will be p u t on tria l on w a r c r im e s c h a rg e s “ v e ry soon. He did not sp e c ify w hen < r how m a n x . M ujib a p p e a re d a n g ry th a t c riticize d a b ro a d fo r d e ta in in g w ar e n d ed . In d ia and B a n g la d e s h a r e being long a f te r th e th e p ris o n e rs so "W hy isn 't th e w orld c o m m u n ity sh o w in g m o re co n cern about m y B e n g alis in P a k is ta n ? " h r a sk e d , ra is in g his voice an d w a x in g le a th e r-c o v e re d pipe. "T ile w orld c o m m u n ity should corno m s fo n v a rd to s e e how' they' a r e .” Ho sa id n e ith e r In d ia nor B a n g la d e sh w a s re q u ire d to re le a s e th e G eneva C onvention b e c a u se th e P a k ista n i p ris o n e rs u n d e r a s fa r a s he w a s c o n ce rn ed P a k is ta n h a d not e n d ed its h o stilities m a d e g r e a t c o n trib u tio n s e n g in e e rin g . in th e field H A m ong a w a rd s m a d e at ( l r stu d e n t m e e tin g . D r. W illiam E . Moi rn ro o m e r: th e H e n ry B e c k m a n R e q u ir e ,,. C o n s e n a - *ion A w a rd for th e m ost o u ts ta n d in g p alier, stu d y o r re p o rt w ritte n la s t y e ..r. M organ w a s a d o c to ra l c a n d id a te in M 1972, a n d w ro te a P h D d i s s e r t a i o n on the re m o v a l o f p h o sp h o ru s in a c tiv a te d sledge s y s te m s . thc in A rc h ite c tu ra l e n g in e e rin g stu d e n t MPI o ' l i m n F ra n k Z a p a la c J r . W right E n g in e e rin g A thlete A w ard for o u tsta n d in g sc h o la rs h ip a c h ie v e m e n ts. re c e iv e d a th le tic a n d th e G r a d u a te s Jo s e p h P a ciofti. Jo se p h k*. C h an . C h a rle s T o u ch e. G ary' B y la n d e r rn : re c e iv e d w a tc h e s {>■ l a w r e n c e S affo rd th e ir o u tsta n d in g s c h o la s tic a c h ie v e m e n ts T h e five s tu d e n ts tied fo r f ir s ' p la c e ho n o rs in th e O u tsta n d in g E n g in e e rin g G ra d u a te A w ards, sin c e a1] h ad co m p iled a 4.0 g ra d e point a v e r a g e fo r in e n g in e e rin g c o u rse s . th e ir la s t 60 h o u rs R ecognition of th c top 5 p e rc e n t sc h o la s tic a v e r a g e s in o v e r-a ll U n iv e rsity c a r s e s w is juniors m a d e to 1.34 stu d e n ts . S o p h o m o re s, a n d th is e lig ib le E n g in e e rin g F ellow s re co g n itio n . se n io rs w e re for w a s p re s e n te d H ie S o ciety of W om en E n g in e e rs Aw • ! for o u tsta n d in g le a d e rsh ip a n d sc h o la rs h ip of to V irid B la s rh k e w om en in e n g in e e rin g " G riffith s a id . A joint faculty'-.student c o m m itte e so ’e e P d Phil C rouse, Jo h n G ordon, K en M a rtin a n d Bill K n z m an n fo r the S tudent E n g in e e rin g C ouncil A w ard s. G riffith sa id th e r e c ip ie n ts of th ese a w a r d s "m u st e x h ib it le a d e rs h ip in ta le n ts c a m p u s w o rk ." th e C ollege of E n g in e e rin g to D istin g u ish e d F a c u lty A d v ise r A w ards w e re given to P ro fs. R ic h a rd R . E n s m in g e r F ra tik lin B. Jo h n so n . R o b e rt S. S c h e c h te r. S te p h en G. W rig h t, T erry’ J . W a g n e r, H arry I-. K ent a n d WAV. D ingle T ile selectio n for th ese a w a r d s w a s m a d e b y th e S tu d e n t E n g in e e rin g C ouncil, w hich is c o m p o sed of all th e stu d e n t so c ie tie s in tile e n g in e e rin g d e p a r t m e n t _____u c o n stitu e n ts W hen T e x a s haxdng e sc ap e d a b o rtio n th e U.S. S u p re m e C ourt re c e n t Iv law s. dow n to stru c k le g isla to rs n a r ro w ly g ra p p le w ith th e s a m e em o tio n al dei ision. T h e ir re sp ite , h o w e v er, w a s sh o rt-liv e d . Now law re g a rd in g a b o rtio n , s e v e ra l m o v e s h a v e been loosed in to b re a k th e w hole d e lic a te su b je c t w ide o p en : • A tty. G en. Jo h n H ill’s a p p e a l th e L e g is la tu re th a t th a t T e x a s h a s no th re a te n for a r e h e a rin g of to F e the S u p re m e C o n n d e risio n . • A standby’ H o u se bill p ro p o sin g Tortoni in c a s e th e c o u rt o f Texas* a b o rtio n la w d o e s r e v e rs e its d e cisio n . • A H ouse bill m a k in g it m u rd e r rn p e rfo rm an a b o rtio n a f te r fetal b ra in w a v e s a r e d e te c ta b le —a b o u t a f te r c onception. six w’e e k s M ost sig n ific a n t is HHT* aopoM w inch d e c la re ^ th e S u p re m e C o u rt h a s “ e r r e d ” in its ru lin g . A T e x a n I n t e r n r e f i v e W h at ju st b e c a u s e the a p p e a l b asically' c o n te n d s is th a t th e »'odirt h a s no rig h t ta m p e rin g w ith like T e x a s it d o e s n 't th e m . th a t c o n clu d es f e tu s e s a re h u m a n from eon cep tio n and th e r e fo re d e s e rv e e q u a l p ro tec tio n u n d e r tim 14th A m e n d m e n t. law s F u r th e r m o r e , it A lthough m y r ia d w om en’s lib e ra tio n is ts a r e v e h e m e n tly c u rs in g Hill, it s e e m s th a t th e a tto rn e y g e n e ra l is riot th e ir r e a l op­ p o n e n t. W tide Hill publicly’ sid e ste p s issue w ith a p o litica l “ n o c o m m e n t,” s e v e ra l le g is la to rs sa y H ill would “ b e p e rfe c tly h a p p y ’ to a b id e b y th e c o u rt's ru lin g . th e P R E S S ! R E M A I be co m in g , in p a rt, le g is la to rs s a y , from C ox. D olph B risc o e, "N o w ho h a s p r iv a te ly d e c la re d ra d ic a l a b o rtio n th is s e s s io n .” law’ will be p a s s e d th a t, R ep . S a ra h W eddington of A ustin w ho a rg u e d th e a b o rtio n c a s e b e fo re th e c o u rt, d o u b u th a t H ills a p p e a l will be su c c e ssfu l. “ A fte r c o n sid erin g the a b o rtio n q u e stio n th e c o u rt tim e , I d o n 't th in k fo r a long w ill re c o n sid e r th e c a s e .” she sa id . Should the S u p re m e C ourt c o n c e iv a b ly . rig in a l decision. M s. W ed­ its a b ill th e a b o rtio n re v e r s e d in g ’on v uld p ro p o sin g o u trig h t r e p e a l of law s. im m e d ia te ly push 'B e tte r not to th in k alxiut i t . ” m o an e d on e re p re s e n ta tiv e . "VYitll m y c o n stitu e n c y , d a m n e d if for I d o n ’t . ” it and d a m n e d I v o te if A M O RE subtle bill to co n tro l th e a b o rtio n two conservatixas q u e stio n is com ing from re p re s e n ta tiv e s . L a r r y V ick. R -H ouston, a n d J o e H ubenak. D -R o ^ en b e rg , I c ir m e a s u re xxoulj a m e n d th e h o m ic id e include u n b o rn c h ild ren xxdth to s t a tu t e d e te c ta b le b ra in xvax’es. “ T ru e, a xx-oman m ig h t not find out s h e Is p re g n a n t until a f te r th e six-w eek p e rio d .” s lid V irk . “ b u t t h a t 's not tile p o in t.” " I ’m net a g a in st xvomnen. I ju st b e le v e th a t the sm te h a s th e oblig atio n to p ro te c t life . no m a tte r how w e e k ,” he said. h is th at Assum ing a n tia b o rtio n bill p a s s e s . Vick h a s no d oubt th a t, “ so m e w o m a n n a m e d J a n e D o e” w ould a p p e a l a c a s e to th e S u n re m e C ourt. “ ATTER D E C L A R IN G u n . eons! r u t Una I. then h a x t to s q u a re ly face th e rig h ts of th e u n b o rn life b e g in s ,” he s a id . a n d d e fin e xx’hen “ T !mf s w hat w e 're try in g to m a k e th e m d o ." this the eouG would lax* N o xxord. p ro o r con. on th e a b o rtio n issu e , h a s esc ap e d th e S e n a te . C o n sid e rin g th e s ta lw a r t se c re c y of th e H ouse, th e m o re c o rs e t v a t I \ e S e n a te xxiii p ro b a b ly b a lk e q u a lly a t th e issu e. W hile th e court m u lls o v e r H ill’s a p p e a l re q u e s t, public s e n tim e n t o v e r a b o rtio n is jroxxm g la r g e r by* th e day*. J u d g in g fro m s h e e r m ail X’o lu m e , le g is la to rs a r e und*T c o n sid e ra b le hnm p'av.T an d lobbv p re s s u re . sh o w in g w a s te b a s k e ts h e a p e d high xx-ith a b o rte d s c a th in g fe tu s e s a n d re lig io u s c o n d e m n a tio n s haxT re p o rte d ly b e e n flooding the C ap ito l po st office. P A M P H L E T S ' filled w ith L l R ID l e tte r s ' I can see w hy m e m b e rs d o n 't w a n t *o x o te on th is is s u e ," c o m m e n te d M s. W ed­ d in g to n , w ho n e v e r th e le s s , p la n s to p r e s s th e issue if n e c e s s a ry . news capsules U.S. Increases C a m b o d ia n A ir Attacks HOM si A L U (A P )—The A m erican air w a r oxer Cam bodia was stepped up Sunday, and h ea v y bom bers w ere used for the first, tim e in nearly a m onth, m ilitary officials reported. Hie P a cific M ilitary C om m and's da ily sta tem en t said that. U.S* aircraft, Including B52s. conducted operations over C am bodia at the request of the Cambodian governm ent. Hie B52s w ere last em ployed over C am bodia on Jan. 20, according to com m and reports. Sources at increased a ir a c t i v i t y Sunday cam e in response to “ tho increase in en em y activity throughout m uch of C am bodia.” the com m and said the C o n g re s s m a n Denies Secret W e a p o n s C h a rg e s W ASH INT,TDN (A pt —A New M exico congressm an w ho paid $2,000 out of his own pocket for in Connation on tw o P e n t a g o n w e a p o n s p r o j e c t s said Sunday h i s a c t i o n s am ounted to nothing m o r e t h a n hiring research ers to com pile already-public data. Democ la t ie Rep. Harold L . Runnels sa id that in his opinion, press accounts of the privately financed study of proposed A rm y helicopter and tank program s have m ade it appear to be a “ cloak and dagger operation.” ' R u n n e l s , a m em ber of the House Armed S ervices C om m ittee, also said that to the best of his knowledge the m en who did the work for him did not work for tile D efense D epartm ent. He also denied that classified inform ation w a s involved. ‘ “St* Adnlinis,ra,ion of M anipulating Opinion A PLANT It t i n . N .J. (A P )—T elevision n ew sca ster W alter Cronkite accused the Nixon adm inistration Sunday of m anipulating public opinion so that “ to stand up and defend freedom o f sp eech and press is to appear antiN ixon.” Cronkite m ad e the charge in a sp eech before the 105th annual con­ vention of tho A m erican A ssociation of School A dm inistrators. The CBS-TV N ew s anchorm an said the Nixon adm inistration w a s lev mg to raise its own credibility “ by dragging down that of the press ” In m a te s Riot in C o u n ty J a il SAN BRUNO. Calif. (A P )—$gjt F ra n cisco County ja il inm ates set fires and sm ashed w indows in a six-hour disturbance Sunday over the quality of food and other jail conditions. Sheriff Richard Hongisto said virtually all the fa c ility ’s 600 prisoners t i r e s w ere reported in a w arehouse and on all IO cell pat u n p a t e o tiers Inm ates threw m a ttr e sse s, clothing and other item s out broken windows. THO fires w ere controlled and the inm ates re tu rn ed to their cells *> nightfall. It w as tho second disruption here in three xxeeks. N e w s p a p e r Says A rm y In vestigating Illegal Recruitina OKLAHOMA ( U N , O lla . (A P )—The A rm y is in v e stig a tin g 'ille g a l the N e w ’ mn,n recruiting station, The D aily O klahom an sa id recruiting p ractices . rl7 ns Munday in a story for its Monday m orning editions involving fraudulent enlistm ents bx While rn iii t a n authorities say such p ra ctices are infrequent but not uncom m on, The O klahom an said they acknow ledge a special probe in N ew O rleans, where recru itin g has taken a sudden is under war ut I1 and dram atic upswing. T h e D A IL Y T e x a n M onday, F eb ru ary 26, 1373 P a g * | T h e D a il y T e x a n Staff editorials a n d o pinio ns Council dodges Tho .Austin City C ouncil cut and ran T hursday night from powerful bus;: • v interests w ho w ant Consumers here to rem ain impotent and w ithout any recourse from shady b u sin ess prat tires and rip-offs. E ven liberal City Count ilm an J eff F ried m an , the self-styled father of con­ su m er protection in A ustin, refused to m ove adoption of a tough or­ d in a n c e though he had prom ised beforehand that he w ould. So, Instead of action on a consum er ordinance proposed by the T exas C onsum e Assoriat on and the Texas P ublic Interest R esearch Group, the council \'oted six to one to send the entire consum er protection "-UC to a three-m em ber study com m ittee which w ill report back to the council “ at its e a r lie st con ven ien ce.” O nce wain, Austin business in terests have buffaloed the alleged rep resen tatives of the people. Hie proposed ordinance declares unfair or d ecep tive business p r a c tic e s unlawful, d efin es those p ractices, estab lish es a city-countv • onsum cr protection o ffice to enforce the ordinance and provides tor c .nsurner coin soling and education. U nderstandably, represen- t it ii e s of num erous busau ss interests w ere on hand at the Thursday night hearing to dam n the proposal and dem and protection from con- su m ors. the council kindly obliged th em by attem pting to sw eep the issu e under the rug, The study com m ittee, w hile having som e m erit, m ust rem ain suspect sim ply because the council refused to se t a d ead lin e for a report back to the council. Fi n dm in slated after the session that he had had the votes liefore the hearing but said his colleagues chickened out because of the “ veiled ’brents by Hardy H ollers, former chairm an of the G reater Austin A ssociation .” The GAA is a group of powerful establishm ent business in te r e s ts . To his c red it, Friedm an voted against the study m otion b e c a u s e ‘'this is an e ffo rt to stall the issu e until after the City Council e le c tio n s,” P r e c ise ly . And that being the c a se , one w onders why F riedm an dido t try to head off this sham by m oving adoption of the ordinance. W hile he m a y h a v e son e acceptable tact Etal excu ses, the conclusion is inescapable that lie unwittingly abetted this stall by refusing to m ak e the motion for the ordinance. A fter all, sin ce when has J eff F ried m an grown ash am ed of m aking motions he knew wouldn’t tx? secon d ed ? A ustin deserved a stand by the City Council on genuine consum er protection. Instead, the city w as treated to a transparent attem pt to kill the issue before the com ing m unicipal election s. With elections approaching, one w onders what else the council will cop out on. Tdie best chance Austin has of en actin g viable consum er protection is w h ile the heat is on m ossbacks like Mayor R oy B utler and Coun- cilm an I G a Nichols prior to the April 7 election. B la t hope w as injured by Fhursday night s action. But the heat should stay turned on. Step toward recognition Tho United States took another step toward reality Thursday when the N ixon adm inistration agreed to estab lish liaison offices with the P eo p le's Republic of China. W ashington and Peking w ill set up inform al in the other nation’s capital to work on trade d iplom atic m issions and cultural affairs b etw een the two. I nders^andablv, am bivalence clouds this latest developm ent in the r a p p r o c h e m e n t betw een the United S tates and m ainland China. It is indeed a m ajor step toward full diplom atic relations, so n ecessary for international harm ony, but still sm ack s of foot-dragging. E ven one y e a r after P resident Nixon visited Peking, the United States refu ses to adm it to die world that Com m unist China e x ists and declines to d eal with the m ainland the way it d eals with other nations. But perhaps that Is asking a bit tex) m uch for the Nixon ad­ m inistration, to m ove rapidly toward norm alization of relations with die m ost populous nation on earth. N evertheless, the exchange of b a sion offices is sure proof that the U nited States is m oving tow ard it is a com m endable step in the international norm alized relations, a r e n a . Nonresidents get a break Tile t Gordinatmg Board, Texas College and University System, gave it redrew certain regulations nonresident students a break w hen g overn in g residency status for students at state-supjx>i1ed schools. I he board said a nonresident minor no longer has to support him self • o m p lc )cly to prove lie is independent of his parents. Tile hoard w ill now allow a minor to rec e iv e up to $600 annually and still be classified as financially independent and estab lish residency. Also recommended to the I legislature w ere two rule c h a n g e s which would m ake it e a sie r for m inors whose parents w ere once residents to pay resident tuition. even though Ha ir parents are now nonresidents. In the past, officials h ave bent over backw ards to m ake it difficult for a nonresident to attend the U niversity, and thus partially shut off a source of acad em ic quality. A ctions such as these by the Coor­ dinating Board m oderate past provincialism and help promote the I d iversity's potential as a m ajor national institution, not a regional university T h e D a i l y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w sp a p e r at U T A u stin ...................................................................... E D I T O R MANAGING E D I T O R A S S IS T A N T M \N \ Q 1 \ ( ; HI >IT< JRS NEW S EDITOR \S S I S T A N T ’n » T H E I I UT* >R . s p o r t s E l > r r o R .................. . . . .. .......... A M U S E M E N T S E D I T O R F E A T U R E S K I T U ) R .............. .................................. David P ow ell ............................ Tom Klein worth M arcia Aronson, ste v e R enfrew ........................ .. Karen J u stice *................... Quin M athew s ...................................... Kirk Buhls ................................ .. C icely W ynne ................ ................ Jane Chennutt ' u n f. k i n . J * B a r y , R a i l ) B e n s o n . Sharon Castleberry’. Nancy Tripp* Gayle R eav es . Alison .Smith J e rry G rah a m .. Alan T ruex . IVn King J r . . Buck H arvey . L aurie Loth M ark Y em m a Mike N orm an K aren Wiles. Jay M iller . C ay Edit- r .. R ep o rte r ............ News A- sistan ls E ditorial A. sis ta Am usem ents Ed A ssistant S; c c IS­ NT ake-up Editor Wirr* E ditor Copy E d n e Cl ''et • I I.e. t hj Ti e r D, 11 • !v< r T ile D a ! Iv T o r . d a y W e d n e s d a y copt h o lid a y and ex am per « W S e c o n d i la s s t t a i e N e w s o o n t r l’*'d!ons w p h ^ t m naU-.’T. n I C ’ ‘ I l i n s T h irxdnv F r i d a y .(Js A u k st th ; a l d af A ’.* n JU;-1. Tex i he ar •**!>•<.• bv tele :r t fc or at t h e n e w s l a b o r a t o r y !), at >'.<■ e r t c i s r i a l o f f w i i ishti! MT i a n d Texan of tho . V U - •Vt " » * « ■ ! ' e c n e e m t n * in J ’noTia ism Bud IU in a ’• t .-.Mi. duspiay advertlsin* 'n Journalism a fiv e r i l-Ji'27.. and < la " w i r irtia »m B ’’»t'tas IOT (4TI 5:‘44> . A,V!1 JU .J • ta ' !:n . . ! ad' * I He D ally . . f l . H f o of l'; N ’f»loran J : idneatlrsnal Ad V rk* ' n V f ir»n< ' ■ * ' 360 L e x io * ,r,» Axe. . N e w to T h e A sso. cm l* ! P r e* s. T h e N e w York T im e s N e w s Ser- 'cl T ' 1 P n ? 8 In te r n a tio n a l T elep h oto U T V iiV | e \ a n ta a m e m h er c f th e A s s o Si r a k e Tne th e S o u th w est J o u rn a ­ ; T f U C olleR iate Tri . . . lism C o n fe r e n c e and th e T e x a s D a lly N e w t s u b ie r t h t s rexnn P a s t 4 M o n d a y , F e b r u a r y 26, 1072 T H E I U n y T H A M s r Grass dilemma the By Richard C. Cowan T hope th a t T am n e v er a disinterested ob serv er of of A m erican politics, but I to m ain tain those a degree of d etach m en t even on issues w ith which I am deeply involved. So it is with m y present effo rt to influence th e form of the inevitable change in th e T ex as m a riju a n a law s. im p o rta n t tr y issues In th a t vein. I hope th a t you will p e rm it m e certain observations on th e dem o cratic legislative process. F irst. I have been v e ry favorably im pressed by the intelligence and the v a s t m ajo rity of genuine in terest of A guest v i e w p o i n t rem ain un­ legislators. Most, how ever, lite ra tu re on the extensive fam iliar with m a riju a n a although m ost h a v e somehow m an ag ed to shed them selves of the gro sser m yths dissem in ated by 40 y e a rs of " d ru g ed u catio n .” S I R VIVINO TITE OLD m y th s are th e ir progeny, a discursive fe a r and a profound an im adversion which will resolve itself in legislation which a " m o d e ra te ” piece of will at if its intent not its resu lt. least be hum ane in Is th e re Secondly, w hile a growing “ resignation to the inevitable” am ong these su p rem ely p rag m a tic individuals, probably th e vo ters s i l l oppose a ft m ajo rity of lo a reduction of m ariju an a possession m isd em ean o r sin ce probably a m ajority can define n o r "m isd e m e a n o r.” n e i t h e r m a riju a n a the well This of course creates a m o ral deh m m a leg islato r. To be for " re p re se n ta tiv e ” under those circu m stan ces m u st be an affliction to the conscience. informed Into th e ir a ren a a V ariety of bills have been introduced of which n eith er the b est nor the w orst have any ch an ce of passage. T he go v ern o r's own C ontrolled Substances Act will enjoy an em inence appro p riate 'n the vehicle Its source and m ay well be for change hut not w ithout extensive am en d m en ts. MY IN T ER E ST CEN TERS, of course, on th e section of th e govern E s bill d e a lirg is a good w ith m a riju a n a . B :e governo- an d a b 'e m an, but he Is subject to Hie fe a rs an d b iases of U s ag e. Accordingly, his bill w as w ritten by and for the d istrict atto rn ey s of Tex: s who seem r it to have sensed the* difference betw een persistence an d obstinancy. B irs e m en a re also noithet ti ;• leva len t n o r m oronic. B i cir fears, tom a re preyed upon by th e n arcotics police, and one Is rem inded of H annah A rendt’s p h rase "th e b an ality of ev il.” It com es from nowhere an d goes everyw here. B ie L eg islatu re th e biennia] b u rd en ; the re se a rc h done for th e governor is totally b iased ; and just as one com es to understand and be bored by old m istak es along com es a n opportunity ?o m arvel a t the new. struggh s tinder th a t None of this is happening In a vacuum . A dozen blocks aw ay, The U niversity sits the prize is proposed in ert while it the m a riju a n a bestowed by lottery* be ju s' a y ear. B :e to life from reduced p lay ers in th eir gam e a re stran g ely quiet, p erh ap s b ecau se sm oking m ariju an a does not offer any expertise on th e legislative process, even if it gives a certain insight into its m ore b izarre resu lts. THE EX I! YI SUON w hich Inevitably followed th e failure of “ confrontation” is not how ever a sufficient ex cu se for th e ir inaction. Storm ing the C apitol never h as been the an sw er and le tte r w riting is dull, if effective. Bur if those who are v itally affected by this legislation fail to inform th em selv es, (s ta rt with John K ap lan ’s book. “ M ariju an a th e New P ro h ib itio n "), a n d then act a s educated citizens, to influence th e g eneral public and the L egislature, then w h at rig h t will they have to condemn the governor and L egislature for an Im perfect u n d erstan d in g anc* a very im p e rfe ct law ? is m ore A U niv ersity tra n sie n t m inds. th a n books and is a It buildings and reso u rce the whole of society. B ie for u n iv ersity com m unity of this state, while b y no m e a n s totally coextensive with th e m a riju a n a consum ers, should nonetheless bo b e tte r aw a re of the h a rm being done by the law s. And Unless they have failed in all th ese com m unities should be able to initiate com m unication w ith the governor and L eg islatu re. th e ir functions While th e effect m ay b e political, the tru e function will be m u tu a l education. B io e stra n g e m e n t betw een the C apitol and the cam p u s h as been g reatly a g g rav ated by th e m ariju an a law s, so it seem s only ap­ law s p ro p riate should be occasion for a reconciliation. B io the sta te new ly en fran ch ised students of need the leg islativ e process. them selves wit!) the study of fam iliarize these th at to The public n eed s educating not just about marijuana b u t the lim itatio n s of the law w hich a re so g raphically dem onstrated in the failure of m a riju an a suppression. FINALLY, I know th a t th e governor and th e L egislature will Welcome th e intellectual resource of the university c mimuni y. let So, to study the m a riju a n a laws ft dialogue begin. L et each u n iv eisity and college quick ly organise colloquia in p a rtic u la r and the drug problem in general. It th e m iddle c la ss and th e inchoate elite m erg e with th e "d ru g c u ltu re .’’ H ere they should seek m u tu al u n d erstanding and a ltern ativ es to th e abuse of drugs—and ab u se of the law. is in th e u niversities th a t that th is will ho I do not expect th© sta irw a y to heaven, but if a free people does not p articip ate in the process of its governance, it w-ill v ery soon cease being * free. Richard Cowan Is a YaV graduate and a writer for YVilliam F. Buckley’s magazine National Review. He is in T exas lobbying for decriminalization of m arijuana. We w ere thinking, p e r h a p s one meatless day per w e e k . . . ? ’ Sanchez reefer madness By Steve Sim o n to in trum peted m ariju an a indeed a see a su rp rise l i k e B io D aily Tex An, w hich reform so ar It w as publication lias the p a st. print a series of liculately ill-conceived and tendentious a rticles on m ariju an a by one D r. Sanchez which a r e rem in iscen t " R e e fe r M adness" rhetoric which had so much to th e po ran ce of o u r do with p resent D raconican m a riju an a laws. influencing 1930 style the of third a rtic le Bias is evidenced both in the papers he Selects and those lie obviously refects for consideration, Sanchez’ is it m ost p a rticu larly notew orthy because flag ran tly suffers from the sin of omission. N owhere the series a r e the findings of P resid en t Nixon’* C om ­ m ission on M arijuana and D rug Abuse, the ( anadinn I /B a in Com m ission, the E nglish to be found in A guest v i e w po in t the s ’udy of m ariju an a en titled the B aroness V,'cotton R eport or recen tly report the A nteri ‘an C onsum ers published by I nion. B ig N ational Commission on M ariju an a and D rug Abuse studied a1! previous m ariju an a p a p e rs, funded m ore than 50 se p a ra te studies lo include e v e ry conceivable aspect of m ariju an a use, vet none of these findings a re represented in the a rticle s w ritten by Sanchez is widely recognized as “ M ariju an a R econsidered," by Dr. L e ste r C fin spoon of the H arv ard M edina School, which tho m ost responsible and thorough book yet on m a riju a n a , w as never m entioned nor w as the equally renowned book bv Prof. John the Stanford U niversity Law K aplan of School "M a riju an a : The New Prohibition.” entitled, the above m entioned FLY H IE R TII.W dew ing with the findings of com m issions. Sanchez devotes an inordinate num ber of lines to depicting r a r e hyperbolic a c c o u n t e< *.))( h n arro w scope as to be exceedingly mix leading and of little genuine value.* A g *0,1 exam ple is the referen ce lo the studv by one D r. Talbott of "R e e fe r M adness" psychosis in V ietnam , A close exam ination of the T albott and T eague study finds it to be quite shaky and b ased on only th ree detailed cases described a s rep resen tativ e. Talbott in his own stu d y adm its th a t Up The firinp line to 65 percent of soldiers in V ie tn am have used cannabis a t least once a n d further that app ro x im ately 50 p ercen t of the can­ i n u s p re p a ra tio n s seized in V ietn am a re laced with opiates. Yet th e s e authors conclude that (hp reactions d esc rib ed were due exclusively to cannabis. M arijuana psychosis in the U n ited States is ind™d ra re . Dr. George D. T.urdberg. the associate pro fesso r of path o lo g y af UCLA M edical School, with th e aid of a computer and tw o colleagues, sea rc h e d the records of 701,057 consecutive adm issions to the Las A ngeles County—ECT,A Medical ('enter from J u ly I. 1961,‘to J a n u a r y , 1969. Their se a rc h rev ealed th a t Only nine a d ­ missions involved m arijuana. T w o patients recovered rap id ly , a third w a s diagnosed as a ('’irenic paranoid schizophrenic, the Ingested m a riju a n a and five fourth had patients had attem p ted to in je c t m ariju an a. itself tobacco, b a rb itu ra te s , th a t hospital ad m issio n s due A VARIETY of co m parative studies in- lo dicated am- a l c o h o l , tranquilizers w e re much phetam inos and more frequent an d the cases m u c h m ore serious m edically. B m N atio n a l Com­ mission on M arijuana and D ru g Abuse in addressing to m a riju a n a psychosis stated, " R a re c ase s of full-blown psychotic episodes bv been m arijuana. G enerally, the indiv id u als had previous m e n ta l disorders o r h a d poorly d e v e l o p e d a n d w ere m arginally ad ju ste d to the life situation." Consumers Union wrote, “ To th e extent that psychosis dees occur on r a r e occasions following c an n ab is ir e . they a p p e a r to lie a reflection of very special personality difficulties in tim subjects involved or ex­ ceptionally high dose levels.” personalities p rec im fa te d In v e is absolutely \d t > tim sta te m e n t th at “ obv io u s mental illness bas been associated w ith m ariju an a u se "—th ere n o m edical justification for m aking such a statem ent. " B ie The N ational Commission in occurrence of an y form of psychosis lhan heavy cannabis u sers is no h ig h e r incidence in the gen eral population. T h e is ex­ of psychosis from m arijuana u s e ceedingly ra re , a n d such re a c tio n s tend to occur in predisposed individuals.” s ta te s . AS TO THE undocum ented a sse rtio n that, m arijuana .sexual som ehow p re c ip ita te s prom iscuity, th a t is so much b u n k . There is not one sh red of responsible research th a t would b u ttre ss such a conclusion. Quite possibly, Sanchez h as confused alcohol w ith m a riju a n a . The "m ain lin in g " of m a riju a n a is indeed ra re , as Sanchez points out, a s the It should be " m a in lin in g " of choco!.-! e. pointed out that for all intent and purpose, m a riju a n a is not w ater soluble. is cause dam age, As to the thought th a t m ariju an a m ay the genetic som ehow N ational Comm ission sta te s, "N o reliable evidence exists indicating that m a riju a n a cau ses genetic' defects in m an .” Findings from studios of chronic (up to 41 y e a rs), heav y (sev eral ounces p er day) cannabis u se rs in G reece and J a m a ic a ' also failed to find such evidence. In Ja n u a ry , 1971, the N ational In stitu te of M ental H ealth, in Its rep o rt to C ongress entitled M ariju an a an d H ealth stated. " B le re is no evidence to suggest th at m a riju a n a use in hum ans cau ses b irth defects fe ta l d evelopm ent.” affects o r had failed re ite ra ted th a t to uncover A y ea r la te r, in its second annual report, th e ir the NIMH again re se a rc h a n y significant harm ful re su lts from sm oking m a riju a n a . In releasin g th e report, NIMH D irecto r D r. B e rtra m Brown said he now the elim ination of all crim inal favored penalties for sm oking m a riju a n a . A RE( ENT issue of Science News rep o rts th a t a national su rv ey conducted by two la p p and Stanford p sy ch iatrists. M artin that 25 percent Sam uel Benson, rev ealed oi all doctors have used m a riju a n a . Benson and Lipp conclude by say in g : " I f m edical au th o ritie s cannot convince physicians to trying or using m ariju an a, re fra in from seem s convincing a t unlikely." It m ight behoove D r. Sanchez to g et to know his colleagues a little b etter. the public larg e In depicting the av e ra g e m ariju an a u se r the N ational Commission stated , "T he m ost no tab le sta te m e n t that can be m ad e about Hie vast m a jo rity of m ariju a n a u sers— e x p erim en ters and interm itten t users— is th a t they a re essen tially indistinguishable from th eir tjonm arijuana using peers by any fundam ental criterion other than th eir m a riju a n a use.” It in the future, th e com m ents of Sanchez would be confined th e editorial page to w here they rightfully belong, all concerned would be b e tte r served. Steve Simon is the T ex as sta te d irecto r the N ational O rganization for Reform of of M ariju an a la w s. Language story distorted To the editor: _ Out "f a.Monishmen at tho distortion and in acc u racy p erp etrated by your re p o rte r the in foreign language req u irem en t for the BA Pica I degree, pie mil m e to set the record s tra ig h t the am endm ent of the a rticle on the Fit a, foreign ’hp opp {|( th e BA Plan I de; of chairm en that va s bine i a rts and sci c m siderablv fn and not only in receive gradua language com- > I prep plan affected U the proposal ee. and language depari men! accep ted by lite eom - .viencos faculties d iffers i. tile p re se n t req u irem en t, ’comm ending that students for beginning ion fi edi i IT is u ntrue that stu d en ts who en te r w ith two high school units in a foreign language have been required to tak e five Sem esters— five sem esters have b re n required only by students who have en tere d the U niversity with a deficiency in high school units, ti t F no language at all in high si he, I. B io la n g u ag e requirem ent BA Elan I foteign has been four sem esters beyond 406, unless tile student began a second language at the U niversity, in which c a se it has been four se m esters including 4i'6. The modified req u irem en t rec. m m cnds that stu d en ts should receiv e credit for 406 through advance'! for graduation e ith e r taking die rout e, placem ent or through w hether foreign languages or not. S tu d en ts who place out to he ad v ised of 406 on entran ce a re not to tak e the m ini-intensive UN a new course, but will proceed norm ally to 107. they had high school it p I E 408 will m ake -T ie for those students who cannot place out of 406, but who have had som e p ri r training In the FL, to receive credit foi 406 by proceeding with 408. which will qualify them for con­ tinuation in sophom ore courses. thie Obviously, is a m a jo r ch an g e, for it makes it p o ssib 'e for stu d e n ts entering 'i itll more than a b are exposure to a foreign language in high school or else w h e re to satisfy their BA degree Plan I req u irem en t in three se m e ste rs, without sa c rificin g the plateau of proficiency and u n d erstan d in g now achieved. A. Leslie W illson, IM *17 Chairman D epari m ent of Germanic Languages End Bakei To tho e d i t o r : Hey, why don’t you get rid of t h a t Russell B aker colum n? I t s really inane. You know w hat I m ean ? T ed I,sense© Band To the editor: has obviously Concerning the criticism of th e l/)nghorn R in d in T h u rsd a y ’s Texan, a u th o r Gravely Parch seriously m isinform ed. F irs t of all, he su rm ise d that the the cheerleader selection process so lely because it u as com posed of "the m ost dedicated Longhorn fan s,” hand w anted o v e r been fake to ■Yctual’y, for a t Ie cst the last fiv e years the band has chosen Hie c h e e rle a d e rs from 30 prepicked finalists, anyw ay. Thi* y ear lie hand Was a v o id e d (lie e n tire selection process. I u n d e r-la n d , in hopes of being able to judgn a g re a te r n u m b er o f qualified applicants for r e Ii) positions, a n d in hopes of fostering a closer working relatio n sh ip between the two groups. Mr. P arch also asserted, q u ite inanely, that the sp irit and dedication of band m em bers arisen from fear of lo sin g one * th e in th e band. Although I a m sure spot no ex p ert on inner w orkings of oi m usical organizations, I can be peasonab certain th a t once a d edicated bnndsm ; p asses his rigorous auditions, he is no mo: likely lose his position ch eerlead er. In o th er w ords, bandm er spirit arise s from the sa m e source as doi the spirit shown by any oilier Universi fan. than to is N ext our friend said th a t m usical talei and school spirit a re not prereq u isites f* becom ing ch eerle a d e r c ritic s. P e rh ap s ne but if the band, which m u st work close with the ch eerlead ers, is unable to critici: th e ir possible loca p otential problems-, then who is? inadequacies and B arch continued his spiel by ad v o ca te th a t the b an d w rite new fight songs. I begin with, band m em b ers compose vei few, if any, of th e ir pieces. They sim p play w hat the crow ds seem to enjoy. ( course, rep e a tin g ceria tunes is the elem ent of trad itio n , but r for th is y e a r I ha\ h e ard m ore new sele c tio n ! of d iffe rs sty les Ilian I have noticed in m y four yeai a t T exas. the b a n d ’s m usic, involved w ith Steven M. Kig» Senior, E le c tric a l Engineer]* C llq u e st e r To th e editor: h o r those few people th a t vague (leis.red the George W ashington a rt F eb . 22: I have been a p a rt of Hip Jo e clique, the Jeff Jones clique, the Bob clique and the Dick Bens n clinue. Rachel Wast I /KISO I and secretary, Student Govei Greek Life Changes By II NELLA PORTER Housing Styles Innovative Foreign Language Proposal Fights Inequities if On tho other hand. the student came to the University with two units of credit in the language from high school, then F T 406 could not be taken for graduation credit. The proposal, W illson said, is actually a reversal of a 1968 decision in which F L 406 was treated as a deficiency make-up course for a student who had no foreign language or who had poor instruction in high school, As a result of the no-credit the course, many status of s t u d e n t s themselves found coming up short on semester hours at graduation, Willson said. t h e c o r r e c t that, ‘‘To f o r e i g n language chairmen decided the student .should get graduation credit (as opposed rn University credit) for F L 406.” it Willson means is that no student will have to take five semesters of a foreign language.” explained. “ What IN ADDITION, tho prop, i ii adds a new course designation to the foreign language list, F'L -108, the new course, would be a “a kind to of mini-intensive discourage the better qualified students from going into F L JO», coin e “ If they have had mon an introduction to the lari we would put them in F L Willson said. 108, F L 408 would then lead Info sophomore courses whereas F L 407 would follow FTj 406. A third paint of the proposal calls for more specialization and more the alternatives preliminary’ courses. after “ After F’L 406 and 407, students have choice of four directions. There will be more specialized sections for students who have specialized interests,” Willson said. The proposal, which musf he Iv approved by Spurr arui affects BA Plan I degrees, originated in a student-faculty committee last fall. While living styles continue to change on college campuses, social organizations such as fraternities and sororities are also making a transition. ' In the past decade, fraternity and sorority houses have undergone many changes in their living arrangements,” said Evelyn Bennett, director of the Austin Panhellenic Council. “ This is tine for those mappers at the I Diversity as well as those at other colleges and universities in tho United States.’’ Today there are many styles of living arrangements available to the private social organizations. They vary’ trcm the large house sty ie to apartment complexes, co-operatives, and even to dormitories. On some campuses, fraternities and sororities are actually com­ bining. Some fraternities are initiating women and a new chapter, Phi Beta Omega, is open for coed membership. (hi campuses where thp social organizations are not large, campus dormitory space is often used, with each fraternity or sorority having an entire floor. For even smaller groups there may not be any housing arrangements at all, but simply a meeting place. IN TEXAS, the most evident living style is the traditional southern house. In tne traditional style houses, rooms are dormitory strip with community bathing facilities. Iii ere are various rooms for study’ and special gatherings and a main dining room where all meals are served. In the last six years, several organizations at the University have found it necessary to disband. However, representatives of both In- terfraternity and Panhellenic Council, governing boards of the organizations, believe that interest is again increasing. In the last few years the number of rushees and pledges has in­ creased. With larger memberships and buildings in need of repair, M ill M M M two fraternities and three sororities have built new houses and several others are finalizing plans for new complexes. Coping with the desire to live in apartments, some fraternities and .sororities at the University, such as Alpha Delta Pi sorority and Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, have built houses in apartment style. The members quarters offer living roams and kitchenettes although meals are still served in a main dining room. THE MOST innovative living style to evolve on this campus was begun two years ago by Alpha Omicron Pi (AOPi) sorority. When th? University purchased its property at 27th and Wichita Streets, the sorority decided to move into the Hardin North apartments. They now occupy one wing of the third floor and have an option to expand later. Although land is available elsewhere to build a house, we decided to expel iment with a new mode of living, as it is becoming the prototype of a new concept of housing on many campuses in the East and West. We are the first group to try this on our campus and we feel it is very successful,” senior Pat Dennis outgoing president of AOPi, said. Tile apartments are large, with two bedrooms for four coeds a kitchen, living room and two bathrooms. The wing also includes a large chapter room, television and study room and a kitchen. T ie coeds also have use of a swimming pool. hor those fraternities and sororities who wish to keep to themselves but who cannot take on the burden of a house, other meeting places must be found. At the University, black fraternities such as Alpha I hi Alpha (APhiA) and black sororities such as Alpha Kappa Alpha (AKA) use the facilities of the Texas Union or meet at private residences. However, APhiA has initiated plans to move to a house if their membership continues to increase. By JO E DACY lf Texan Staff Writer requirement at A proposal to eliminate ap­ parent inequities in the foreign the language University was clarified Saturday by Dr. A. I^eslie Willson, chair­ man of the Department of Ger­ manic Languages. The proposal, vv h i c h was passed by the arts and sciences faculty Wednesday, calls for credit toward a degree to be given for the first course in anv foreign language (F L 406). II THE proposal is approved by University Stephen President Spun-, students will no longer be required to take five semesters of foreign language to fulfill a Plan I bachelor of arts degree requirement. Students would then complete four the equivalent of only semesters of a foreign language. The about confusion the student the requirement arose because of the status of taking F L 406. If he had had no previous experience with the language, FT. 406 could be taken for graduation cr e ^Qn^ m Intercontinental Boeing 707 je t clipper service to London from Housfo exclusively for UT faculty, staff an d students. Return from Paris to Houston n on Ju ly $285 HONESTLY G e t to Europe — and back Longhorn Travelers, Inc. the care -fre e , reliable way, with PanAm and mmm You II be amazed at the wide range of engagement rings at Carl Mayer (And you'll be surprised at the special treat we have for all students.) Carl Mayer jewelers 813 Congress 5517 Balcones aith HOG FILL OUT THE C O U P O N B EL O W AND M A IL TO L O N G H O R N TRAVELERS 3111 M A N O R RD. AUSTIN, TEXAS 78723 Please send m e com plete in fo rm atio n on L o n g h o rn T ra v elers P a n -A m ch arter flig h t to Europe. N am e: .................................................................... A ddress: ............................................ For complete information call 4 7 6 - 6 1 0 1 EARTH SHOE STORE 24tn & San Antonio Longhorn Travelers is a bonded, professional full-seruce tm ? ! agency. on-tho-drag and al! over town by m a t n e i r r n av y or red with d ark p latfo rm ; or b lack with light p latfo rm . High-heel w ear tipped with an open toe! I Horns Pride Shows, 75-68 when you win on the road this late in the reason, ifs a big plus factor for character and pride," Texas Ouch Leon Black said, "ft Was not an artistic game, but it showed our character.’* to Al! three Horn seniors con­ tributed heavily the Texas victory as .lack Louis got the ‘H ens off quickly with nine p unts, and then B.G. Pi ester bons and Fine Groscurth took it from there. RI T IJH is - scoring did little but keep Texas e' en with the Owls, as file whole game v. as a series of Texas streaks and Rice streaks. N \ flier team led by more than six as neither team played consisted basketball. But the uneven moments of the b a s k e t b a l l game weren't unemotional for everyone a.s Rim Coach Dan Knobel, nicknamed the Silent K, got the Big T sign for a technical foul at the en.I of the first half. T just said ‘they're (Texas) snatching and grabbing'," Knobel said after tho game. Never­ theless, Harry Larrabee snatched fin opportunity and hit his free throve as Texas grabbed a three- point half-time lead. eight minutes After Randy Youngling scored to giv e Rim the lead at 56-54 with loft, a Ii o u t GrosourTi hit th re# straight Dug jumpers and then worked with Brosterho.us for another to put Texas up at 63-60. FROM THURK Texas stalled. or rather ran a delay game, and forced Rice to take the bad shots. Tho Texas defense almost shut down tho Owl offense completely, as only Rice's Perry Gaudet got inside for one reasonable shot. "Then you’ve got to have it, you’ve got to lake a decent shot and w e dido t," Knobel said. “ Texas lammed it in there and wouldn’t let us near the hoop. We just didn’t have the stuff it takes to push it through.” T E X \S CONTROLLED the hall in hie last few minutes, and Rice I vegan to foul Texas’ Larrabee, a junior who played like a Texas prideful senior, went in untouched for a layup and then added four free throws to give Texas the final seven point margin that was somewhat complimentary to the ‘Horns. “ It was a less than desirable effort, hut we had spurts of good basketball,” said Black, who was hampered with his substituting when freshman Dan Krueger twisted his ankle, "W e had some good performances. But we were from bping just a sharp.” little bit But Larrabee said it best. “ I don't know how good it was to watch,’’ he said, obviously feeling the attitude of the crowd, “ But we won, and that’s what we wanted.” W E RENT E L E C T R IC T Y P E W R I T E R S Statistics S.C.M. PORTABLE . . . . S.C.M. C O M PA C T LB M. .......................... .. . . . . . . .. I-Wk. $5.00 I-Wk. 6.00 I-Wk. 10.00 I -Mo. $12.50 I -Mo. 15.00 I -Mo. 22.50 AIS \S fist ?fMh By b i ( k ii u n i v I> van Staff \\ rit* r vims I KK 'STC )N—Th-'.-r. a b srtim? college basketball gam? hr ;p in Houston Saturday night, rt»oo:\ p t ’ national and was attention inmewhat exciting, Texas, u: fort un a‘el.'-, uasn 1 in It The ‘Horns wore Muck o\pr in A ;' \ C<*urt on the Rt rampuy S'-ros, town from tho Big (hm r, rn I rn! m a rontfKt tDv no otto emporia! ■ wanted to ; lay and n > one especially wanted to watch rn like tho Houston*Jacksnnvi]!p big one that the Cougars won b\ a point before a full Hofheinz Pavillion, the ’Horns played an unimportant game in front of .VK) unenthused people. But Texas did l#»at the Owls, 7' nv and because of the factors th,at nude the game irrelevant, th* lot ‘Horn victory was a tougher than it should ha\e been. "It was a bigger win than a ’or* of people realize, because v * -— GuiAYisT Jeu elry fashions, facto, fictions <■ Dell Af Shift*!!, Rf. Member An em ,*i (tem Society K I N G o r I H F Cr! M K l VC r D O M the Gems <>t On Monday excning. I cb I , Austin was favored with .1 brief vise from Paul Dc ha Ute! v cum' »r of Gems an i M inerals ■or ‘ire Smithsonian Institute in tom Washington, L f His men's on thr Smiths man and the historv ct that venerable institution were exciting to those assembled in the I rn versify of Texas < ifoiogv Building The Austin Gem an. Mineral Society and the Genic join1 gv Department at Mr De Saute! s vis I T To call him the King of Gem Kingdom would eleot cia men from Paul, \\ hi! * barged with the responsibility augmenting, of maintaining and developing the Gem and Mineral sections of th* Smith voman, he is quick to emphasize that tho most magnificent col I e , , on O' gel is and m m eral; in a 11 the w orld belong to \ in < ! ■ rs of I tee I lie Is/- v \mer y -t xjJ Dudes 'he Hope diamond, the irgevt true 'there of flawless >pt: a! quartz crystal, a single c m of over 7,000 carat weight, and so many thousands of un­ ique specimens we will probably n* er have time to see them ald he great halls of exhibit tor sour treasures are visited an- nuaii' bv millions of pf. e l ­ and with so many scores ot ex­ hibit (aves of gems it is still mind haggling to me that only M r of the total col levi ion is on exhibit at any one time. spectacularly Mr. DeSautels is author of illustrated three books, Gems of the Smithson on, The Gem Kingdom, and The Mineral Kingdom. When you want to add to yo«ir personal collection mr oar one) of (rems and Jewel re, visit one of our Sheftal lew tiers in A Mandate Village at " 6 Burnet Road and af G S S I rn vers i tv the Gua -ainee on R a g . lf you’ve been at UT for a semester or I more, you’ve probably had the roommate f v blues at least once. It s nothing unusual. /• . : VZ#’**- V .? > I ‘ 7 v*. It usually starts when you’re studying fo an exam or just quietly thinking about someone special. But somehow your roommates don’t get the message. One of them is playing “When I Was Seventeen’’ for the tenth time. Auntlier is casually thumbing through an old high sc hod annual pointing out all the football players she dated. And the third is prac­ ticing with her guitar. Sure, they’re all your friends, but some­ times it s nice to wake up and find your towel dry, the rap on your toothpaste and your apartment as clean as you left it the night before. At Hardin North Apartments we can offer you the hest of bot lr worlds. Because we have both multiple and single unit apartments. Singles for people vc ho uant their friends close but not too close. Down the hall maybe. So come by and see us, we’re only 3 blocks from campus. And bring your friends. Maybe they’re thinking the same thing. HARDIN NORTH H IG H RISE APAR I’- MEN I S You ought to take some time this time. 801 West 24th, three blocks from campus. 476-7636. |°1 HARDIN NORTH Page 6 Monday February 26, WZ T SK P i Ify TEIA X by kirk bohls •\I ?"\> Amateur pele vaulter Bob Seagren, who will turn pro March 24 on the International Track Association circuit, earned his first dime as a professional last week, but it wasn’t at a track meet. And it was a bit more than a dime. Af tually it was more like $39,700 for two day s’ w rk at a real estate development at Rotonda West, Kl a. But Seagren didn't place himself in ,1 higher tax bracket by peddling land. He pocketed the cash instead at a decathlon of sorts in which IO of the most famous athletes of the world com­ peted in a supersport festival. The superstars participated in seven different categories of their own choosing although they could not compete in their own specialty. For instance, pro bowler Jim Stefanich could not enter the howling contest, former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier could not compete in the masochist event, and so on. Backstroke A g a i n Smokin’ Joe also should not have been allowed to participate in the swimming event because the festival directors nearly had their first fatality. In his “ fight.” against George Foreman, F ivizier showed a knack for getting Knocked down and ai the Supersport.s gala he seemed to have per footed the art of going down 'Hider pressure, or in this case, water. last last shank had been But after tho lust weight had been lifted and the “ aw-shucked,” Bob Seagren had won four events to rank as top dog of tec whole shooting match. F’or a guy who was playing against SlOO.OOO-a-voar athletes and a bowler who makes a $50,000 salary annually, the affair had a storybook ending. But to every story there s a moral. Seagren s supreme efforts just go to prove 'hat pole vaulters are the best athletes in tho world. Right? We-e-l-U, mu \l>e, hut maybo not, either. How about the best athlete in Rotonda West, Fla., on two days in February’ That’s more Uke it, but Seagren did display more over all balance, coordination, en­ durance and strength than any of the other nine. But it wasn’t all fun and games since they were playing for the real thing: money, not cokes. Ten points were allocated for a. first-place, 7 for second, and so on. The prize per point was $300. Seagren, who entered the competition as a late substitute for pro golfer Gary Player, tile early favorite who withdrew because of illness, plans to use the money to buy a house in Los Angeles. Had the world record-holder in th? pole vault waited until he earned that much through ITA meets he would have had to win 50 pole vaulting championships and probably would have been forced to live in to two-story walkup, or jump-up. The M 22.000 Supersports had more than its share of cut ups. Johnny Bench was disqualified in tho swimming when he decided to walk the final 30 meters. In the finals of that event, Peter Revson. the 1371 winner of tho pole position at th."1 Indianapolis 500, raced past Seagren to go to 1 he winner’s circle. Attempting to shew the world, or at least the Rotonda 500 (the number of fans that showed up), that race drivers are more athletic than your a cerago pedal-push ors, Revson also won first place in tennis. In the biggest surprise of the day, Seagren could military press 170 pounds while favorite Frazier could only lift 160 pounds and got wobbly knees then. Frazier explained that weightlifting would make him too musclebound. That's un­ derstandable enough, considering Frazier didn’t lift a finger against Foreman, the Foul Ball Strikes were few and far tor oasenall’s Bench in bowling, but thai event appeared to be right up his alley since th" competition was so bad. Johnny Unitas of the Baltimore ( ’'Its. ’or San Diego Chargers, uh pro football, who hadn’t bowled in 12 years, took second with one pin to spare over Elvin Hayes. The Big Ti ’ used his long strides to edge J pan Claude Killy in the 100-yard dash in 11.5 .seconds. The French import claimed $23,400 in the end despite not winning a single event. In other events, Frazier was struck out by the pitching machine in baseball hitting. Bench could always be spotted by wearing his cap backwards. Stefanich hit one tennis ball into a nearby canal. Leading with 49 points, Seagren was followed by Killy at 28, Revson and Rod Laver with 27, French 26, Hayes 24, Rod Gilbert and Stefanich ITG each, Frazier and Unitas at 12. The event could have been improved. Muham­ mad Mi couldn't have don? any worse than Frazier. A Roger Stauba h or a Bob Griese has to be more agile than 39-year-old Unitas. I he ton four finishers are supp sod to be invited back to the Superstar nMCt year since ifs scheduled to be an annual event, but even so. this year, it left a lot of people talking, comparing and analyzing. But more important, it left Seagren counting his money, something he plans to do a lo tt f from now on. Use Texan Classified Ads AH. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding C om plete A utom otive Service Across from Gulf Mart G L 2-0205 CLOSED SATURDAY The Only Indepedent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs \rldt's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET ROAD SER V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V EH IC LES IS O UR SPECIALTY 2105 Hancock Dr. No. I 453-1059 No. 2 452-0004 No. 3 Weekly Specials: Tu#». — 8 et Chopped Sirloin s 1 .0 9 W e d . — S I . 0 9 Th ur*. — 8 ox. Top Sir'oin s i . 7 9 5420 Airport Blvd. C K cken Fried Steak 1610 W . Ben White 442-0610 Private Rooms A Aavailable -I Ll Above item* served w” 6 Baked Pot ato s*i,d 4 t . „ , T0l,t. We're interested in your mind We're working on advanced communications satellites, unique land and undersea vehicles and an extremely wide range of R & D programs in many technical fields. Over the years we have had more successful launches of our spacecraft than any other com p any-m o re than 300 launches. We've developed all the FBMs for this country. And we're still deeply involved in these projects. All of these programs require a high level of mental ability and initiative. Graduates in Engineering, Physics or Mathematics who possess these traits are invited to contact their placement office for an interview appointment. We will be on campus February 27, 1973. Lockheed Missiles 8C Space Company (An equal opportunity and F/M employer) 1X A4UI Oulu X II* HU uy W o r k i n g the Baseline Texas Jim Baylcss hits a long backhand against Corpus Chris­ ti s Ken de Konig in a match Baylcss won 6-3, 6-3 Saturday at Penick Courts. Hogs Top SMU, Still in SW C Race losing, 76-75, to will have their own chance. By rile Awwiatcd P r ;‘ s Texas Tech basketball fans, on the verge of .seeing the Red Raiders win their first Southwest Conference pie since 1962, will ha\e to hold their balloons and keep their champagne bottles corked for at least a few more days. The league-leading Raiders, needing to vin only one of their last three SWC contests to clinch tho tide, lest thrir first charre Saturday by Texas A&M. Meanwhile, Arkansas, the only team with a shot at tying the h gh-fiyinj Raiders for the league clown, rode the ho* shooting of Martin Terry to a 103-96 triumph over Southern Methodist. f a l t e r i n g If the suspense doesn’t last the bm-od Tues lay Razorback.? will only themselves to blame since they tight, have UT Tennis Team Upsets Pan Am, Corpus record to 5-0 for the season. ‘T really surprised.” am Snyder said. “ I think there are ab .ut three teams left in the s.Lifp better than we arc. hut if looks as if there are about five tea nis behind that are nearly equal.” those A; d im also believes that he wasn’t the only one surprised by the wins. “ I think that the other teams w ilt take us more seriously now. Reform we were in the position of maybe being good, but no one was really sure. Now' at least, we ore a solid team,” he said. As pleased as he was by the wins, Snyder did not see cause for predictions of future success. “ It’s nothing to get cocky Just because you beal about. t em one time, doesn’t mean that you will beat them the next,” he said. “ But the kids had a Boydsfun leads Yearlings, 79-63 HOUSTON (Spi.) — Freshman Gary Boydstun scored 16 points in the second half, eight of them in a row, to lead the Texas Yearling? past the Rice Owlets, 79-63, Saturday in Autrv Court. B ydstun ended up with 22 points and Y e llin g Mark An­ thony followed with 19 as the Texas junior varsity moved ifs season mark up to 10-3. Don Sparker lead the Owlets with 22 When By ANTHONY STASTNY Texan Staff Writer tennis the University team defeated Pan American and Corpus Christi and Saturday on Penick Courts, the wins were both upsetting and surprising. Tile victories were upset* to the losers and a sur­ prise to the winners. Friday Both visiting teams were recognized among the state's best while Texas was “ hopefully in a position to challenge,” as ex­ pressed by Texas Coach David Snyder. But the ’Horns did more than challenge. They upended both the state powers. Friday. Texas upset Pan Am 7-2, and Saturday, it repeated the feat by downing Corpus, 6-3. The two dual meet wins raised Texas’ S p o r t s Shorts Peace in Baseball Sunday and let L ot* Trevino escape with tile victory and a in th® $52,000 first-place check J a c k i e Gleason Inverrary- National Airlines Golf Classic. services F R E E P O R T . Tex. (A P) - Funeral Jody Ramsey, 22-year-old baseball star for Pan American University, will be at 4 p.m. Monday in First Baptist Church in Freeport. for Burial will follow’ in Rest wood Memorial Park at Lake Jackson. R a m s e y was electrocuted Saturday when he and another player were working to pre pare soaked the baseball for upcoming games. school’s water field Tommy Simpson, who was burned along with Ramsey, said the drainage pipe they were holding did not come in contact with overhead power lines, but electrical current from the lines jumped about a three-foot gap to tile pipe. Simpson was in good condition in McAllen General Sunday Hospital. The Pan American baseball team will attend the services Monday. Baseball games Monday and Tuesday have been canceled and a memorial service will be held at 12:15 p.m. Monday in the Pan American in Edinburg. Clashes scheduled at that time were canceled. field house N E W YO RK CAP) — Baseball negotiators reached a three-year im­ agreement Sunday which mediately opened major league spring training camps. M a r v i n Miller, executive director of the Major league Baseball Players Association, and John Gaherin, chief negotiator for the club owners, said in a join* statement they had ‘‘...reached complete agreement for a three- year term subject rn ratification by the club and players. ’ ★ IM­ ★ PO RT LA U D ERD A LE, F i n . ( AP) — Forrest Fezler missed short putts on the last two holes In other games Saturday, Baylor beat cellar-dwelling TCL’, 80-73, in overtime and Texas slashed Rice 75-68. Sta n din gs a a m T r v n s T<*< h Vrk&nsas .. Baylor ... SMU ........ T n x a s .......... K W . . . . . . . TCL' ......... Thi« Week’* Schedule esday Texas Tf. h at Ark T. •<> At. Baylor. SM U a* Texas TCU at Texas Saturday Texas at SM U Ra\ Texas Ta^h Arkansas at R ic o ’ AAM at T< U Gene Tankersley playing a l Shoe Shop We make and repair bools and shoes * S A L E * SHEEP SKIN RUGS $ ” 0 0 v Many Beautiful Colors $ 7 5 0 f ★ LEATHER SALE ★ V a r in a * kind *, co lo r* - “ 5c p e r ft. PLACE Capitol Saddlery 4 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 The University Toggery s Big E O M. SAL (END OF THE MONTH) lot of spirit and detent you have to give Le? I think is forward for us. it .et .. rob. a ■■ , r But. the schedule ihead eon tains some st re- g oppc ■ - ’Horns will pin- Southwest T '\ at Penick Courts Tile Jay 1hen will enter the Corpus Chi -ai Tournament. ‘‘We will meet some of die I lest Ic , placers at Corpus," said Sn "and then of mu e Trinity on the 10th Somewhere in there, we'!' run ii to so:..; that’ll beat us.” I rn One thing that may have helped Texas prepare for the tough, day schedule, was tennis pro Cl f Drysdale, who worked ou* is Penick Courts. town for a professional exhibition match March 6 on behalf cf the Capital Area United Cerebral Palsy Fund. IM ' s i de “ He t Drysdale) has worked ouf with the team sometimes, just. to stay in shape I think,” said Snyder. ‘‘But it helps us more than it does him.” One player wdio pleaser Snyder w as junior Jim Bayless. “ He (Bay I ess) had some good v tis. lie is concentrating on his game more, and I thought lie exceptionally well ]>la > e d Saturday in keeping the ball in pin; ’ Rayless von his Friday Butches Th, f,-4 anrj Saturday I ’ C rpus’ Ken de Konig G-3, 6 3. v’risen Snyder also said that Captain "played well C'-o ho vox proud D a ti F r •’ >'• •• of for freshman Bill Fisher “ coming back after losing Friday and winning his Saturday mat­ ch.” Nelson won his singles match Friday 6-1. 6-2. but lost to Corpus’ Jorge Andrew Saturday 6-4, 6-4. Fisher fell to Pan Ands Dwight Edwards Friday 7-6. 2-6, 6-4. but won Saturday 6^4. 6-4. “ Even if we aren’t as talented as somp teams,” said Snyder, “ we ha\e a lot of pride, and that is very important.” is And a 5-0 season record something to he proud of, when it includes wins over two of the top teams in the state. Tennis S u m m a r y G r ;U ; r z Am, 7-:., fi-4 ii Whaling Texa*. >1 Adolfo do1 Pan Vn 6-3 6-3 Edwards. Pan Am, d BUI r. To v as - f, 2-6. 6-4 Byfielri. Tc'xas, A Sto\ f> Hrim- P a n A m , 6-3 6-3 Roberts Texas, d M 'es Bey* Pan Am 6-4, 4-6 7-6 . 7-,* 7-6 -Wha' .ie. Texas 4 Wade-Gon- ds-Karl. Pa- Arr d Baj Sass­ er. Tex-is, 3-,'. 6 - 4 7-6 I-To- .'U n , T e x a s . A Keimberg- inlds. P a n A m . 6-3. 6-0 T exas- C orp n x ( hr -! * J "rce Arrive--,. ( .-pus, a Ban N el­ Jim R aj less. Texas, d Ken Me Konig. son. T e x a s . 6-4. 6-1. cr. 6-3. 6-3 Willie A'ibnne, CC. d Graham W h al­ ing. 6-3, 7-5. 6-4, 6-4 B ill fisher, Texas d. Oscar Olea CC Bunny Byfield Texas, d Mick a1 Q .in* tin, CC. 6-3, 6-1. Enriflue Andrade, CC. d Tommy Rob- erts. T e x a s 7-6 4-6. 6-4 N e lso n - W ha I • *. T ex a s, A n b o n e , CC. 6-3. 1-6, 7-6 A. A ndre-v- B y b e ld - T o u i hon, T e x a s, v o n b y a «. fault. ' ■ W hy does a college student need life insurance? One good rcdson-it demonstrates financial responsibility. A growing number of emplovcrs are looking for this characteristic in prospective employees. There are m a n y o t h e r . mpor t ant reasons. They're all c overed in a ■-pedal booklet: “ W h y College Students are Buying Life Insurance.'' For a free copy at no obligation, write or call: Lloyd B. Harper No, 32 Doble Mall Austin, Texas Phone: 476-7486 i - > o u t h w e s t e r n L if e k l H a p p i n e s s i s w h a t w e s e l f f * UNCING T H E A D D I T I O N O F M E N ' S F D D f W E A R BY R O S S E T T ! OF ITALY D E S I G N E D F O R B R I T T O N S T O C O M P L I M E N T T H E E L E G A N T N E W L O O K I N C L O T H I N G a r' f * ‘ ’ EN G IN E & T R A N SM ISSIO N SPECIA! !ST BRAKES — TUNE-UPS — ELECTRICAL — C LU T C H N E W _ REBUILT — USED PARTS 11 « i u m i l l s u l l ' H I-PERFO RM AN C E PARTS SERVICE 477-6797 1621 East 6 GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE CASUAL AND DRESS SLACKS SELECT GROUPS OF CASUAL AND DRESS FLARED LEGGED SI ACKS BY LE V I, HUBBARD, AND HARRIS SIZES 29-42 2 W EEK SPEC IA L D A W E S BICYCLE $ 1 3 9 .9 5 • S C H W IN N • G IT A N E • V O LK SC Y C LE 4225 Guadalupe 4 5 3 - 1 0 4 9 VDIKSWAGDN ROHR PRICE CASUAL AND DRESS SHIRTS SELECT GRO UPS OF DRESS AND CASUAL SHIRTS BY A R R O W AND SERO SIZES I4'/2-I7I/j . SLEEVE LENGTH 32-35. USE YO U R « BAN K AM ERIC ARD * MASTER C H A R G E * A M E R IC A N EXPRESS ® CARTE BLA N C H E * DINERS CLUB e T O G G ER Y C H A R G E A C C O U N T 2304 G U A D A LU PE 477-7812 SH O P EVERY DAY 9 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. EXCEPT THURSDAY (9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.) § • • • • • • • # • « ? t r i t o n s T h e d a il y T e x a n Monday, February 26. 1973 Page 7 Texas Cold, Hot in Opening Series B v n i l C K K \1 I M \ \ Texan M all \ \ Tilt r th<* B e a rh u g i? of tho season. \ / R i c h a r d W o r t h a m . . . bruits S im H ouston, UNIVERSITY OMBUDSMAN Bus • i c n c Iv: >b f;< t two g am e s by no and 9-2 (' Hints. “ Wortham’s fast ball was ju s t to be t" i much contended w ith. He put our ears bel i; cam e tw o m er: 2U2 inches. He in second to SMU’s Sam m y W alker in the shot put. The ct h er reco rd s th a t w ere set w ere Wesley Smith of Louisiana Tech in the college division with a 25-1 jum p and Mike Pioit, Olympic bronze m edalist for K enya, ran a 1:48.5 880. long T ex as’ W illiam Gates won the high jum p with a n-5'’ leap, R andy L ig h tfu l took the 120-high h u r­ dles w ith a 11.2, Bill Sm alley won the polo v a u lt with a 15-6, R icky three- Y arbrough captui J m ile and P a u l C raig won the mile. the ' M u r a l Scores 114 S h H T B XLI, ( I t v , \ M n-ire H a ll 41. S a n J a c in to 20 D e lta -Stitin a Hi fin. ASOK 22 O sm ond B ro th e rs 44, P h a r m a c y 39 P s y c h o lin g u is tic s 48. G a lloping G our­ m e ts 19 A r c h ite c t u r e T r a m 42. S m ith ’s S m a sh - Trashmen 32, W I Speed. Tor f, t Ch 1 ’ N' I T 69. Hop kl- Sociology 33, Arm 30 A lp h a de- B EB’ers Swine 7*1. Anilins 37 Incognito 2t , R aErri Claws 21 Gentlemen's R 22 N O T IM E T O REST — O R REFLECT N o tim e to s a y - "W e ll r e a lly do it n e x t y e a r . W e m u st do It th is y e a r ." I T. .ll AV I-II L IB E R A T IO N PROJ FCT A il I n te r e s t e d c o n ta c t A h ta G olf!s tf rn 454 1270 c r S 1e \ o R o b in s o n 478-6572 OPEN 24 HOURS AS Y O U LIKE B O O K S T O R E 1608 LAVACA — 477-0363 IT M A G A Z I N E S NOVELTIES X X X R A T E D ------------- PAPERBACKS 8mm FILM E R O T IC B O T IQ U E 25c PEEP S H O W S " ) our P lea su re Is O u r B u sin e ss” W E FIX T APE R E C O R D E R S Hi-Fi STEREO REPAIR B H O a K D f f D G M S 2234 G u ad alupe 5134 Bur net Rd. Iff .manLe M aster C harge Bankamerieard E E Z W E S T 1 9 T H 4 7 6 4 3 3 8 r ■ 3 P O C A M E R O N P O 4 5 3 1 S S S ma *k P { p ra f .W it® •££ '■ - I * T H E PERFECT PLACE T O C O O L Y O U R HEELS. A F T E R N O O N S ARE S L O W A N D EA S Y. RELAX IN T H E A T M O S P H E R E O F A LOST ERA. English's Mercantile Co. 3 0 IO G U A D A L U P E 4 77 -0 45 6 u U N C H I I-.00 D IN N E R 5 : 0 0 - 1 1 : 0 0 m m m m m m * . *-i - -• EN* 1-mtM3 f ; - ; - ■ u/ : ’ / * . " SS M- ■*£« .I I-.- t I im rnmk 'vm- 'r a p f t \ .S C - N J f ip p l / f e l S S y A lo t of places Have trouble renting all of their apartm ents and suites* 7 T . ; 3 ,3 (particularly dorms) because they w ant m ore for them than w hat they'rfe really worth. _ ; W - w e learned a long time ago that if w e ch arer you a fair price you’ll live . J p r o u s . So le e ran hilt la st sem ester and wVte full again this sem ester . l ^ l - i t makes sense..; r We have home-cooked meals, covered parking, free group entertainm ent, twenty-four hour security, laTge living areas, tw o tbtgtly different « r x <_____ _ -__ -i ‘ A ■ » w r * d f f n ii i’ • « |v iro i\n \^ to , concerned management, aad one all inclusive pru a fend our prices don’t go up just because it’s a new sem ester Or because we ’rtt/’" , . fwiyiftg. to make up for shine empty beds . They don’t have to. _____________ i-i'n._____rm&te'Zm ri Si* ■ * rf! ? ■ ,/G . •; - ■' \ . 71' -x* v ^ ,; SU. ’’I 'u / A I n d r\*%A W -aff Im a m . A a tM h iu a 'ih i' * 7 0 6 N u e c e s / 4 7 7 - 9 7 6 0 J 2 7 0 7 R io G r a n d e A u s t i n , T e r f a s 7 * 7 0 4 7 6 - 4 6 4 8 b -I • ,y* Jmmnm ; % •' * $ 9 • J * ‘r- ■ ; •• * - A'- A? Page 8 Monday, February 26, 1073 T HE DAILY TEXAN r n BEER n BURGERS One burger is a feast. A simple place for good food (limited) & great Beer (unlimited) SPECIAL OFFER: * a | ■ ® rn S BEER' n ' BURGER 95c J regular $1.55 ■ W ITH C O U P O N ...makes a a newspaper worth a dime! ■ ONE PER CUSTOMER J Good 12 noon 5:00 p.m. SS R IV E R S ID E D R IV E & T IN N IN F O R D R O A D UT Students Help Shoot 'Pro' By SUSIE STOLER Texan Staff Writer Professional is the word for the Radio-Television Film (R T F ) department’s original film , “ Universal Soldier,** which Is being shot on location 30 miles on ride Austin. Professional actors, cameramen and faculty of the R T F department are involved in the film, which director Leo Eaton says is by “ professional. Hollywood standards, a big production.” Eaton, who has worked for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in London, m d is now an R T F in­ structor, explained, “ The R T F dei rim en t decided the best way for students to learn is to watch probe dennis.” Five soldiers remaining from rn American unit in World W ar I I are portrayed in the film. Two of the actors are Je rry Deloney, a professional from Los Angeles, and BUI “ The Moose” Moss, KNOW disc jockey. Character degeneration from the strain of battle oc­ curs, and relationships between the black sergeant and four white privates gradually dissolve. “ Plot is there, but the characters are more Im­ portant,” Eaton said. H illy terrain and a natural meek non - I«age \ . a community 25 miles northwest of Austin, form setting for the film which Eaton hopes w ill “ win a ma rn award.” “ The University of Southern California won an Cs. ar for Best Short Film one year. I think it's high tin--* the University won something,” he said. Besides competing for an Academy Award, Eaton mentioned entering the film in festivals such a - ih< •••* in Atlanta, Los Angeles, london, Venice and Cannes. Airing the film on television and for a one night showing in an Austin theater are also possibil ti s. ie added. Bad weather had hurt the scheduled nine-da' shorn Actors and crew normally arrive on location at 7 30 a.m. and continue until dusk, with a short break f< r lunch. lid. To help cover the costs of production. Austin mer­ chants have donated food, plywood, knives, uniforms and other supplies. Some equipment comes from KLU N television station. “ Tho production assistants went around persuading t merchants to contribute things. A local musician is compos.ag an original track, too,” Eaton said. Although tile main positions are held by nonstudents, 31 of the 35 crew numbers are students. “ Two actors are from the drama department, and o;n is a film student who happens to look right. The assi ant directors, assistant cameramen and ether assistants are students,” Eaton said. Ron Pohcyg in tractor in radio-television*film , 1* co­ pr • hiring the film with E a rl M iller, assistant director r charge of motion pictures at the University Com­ munication Center. “ We are shooting at professional speed and professional pace. Two days, we w ill shoot ail night, • r from 0 p.m. until it starts getting light,” the d “ This is the firs: time the department has attempted pr h' 'lion a I stuff, and I think its going to be a dimn good picture,” Eaton said Biii Lebermann To Run m.&rkroomQfA Th s > JNS Ay “ I have voted (rn over 90 percent of the roll call votes,” Lebermann said. “ And as you know every vote the council takes Is a roll call vote.” “ I w ill try to reach every qualified voter in the city of Austin,” Lebermann said of his campaign plans. “ I'v e maintained some af­ filiation with the University and I ’m interested in talking with students, but I want to serve all the citizens,” he said. the fourth lebermann, in­ cumbent councilman to announce: his candidacy, denied suggestions had council members that discussed the el wa ion among themselves to come up with a slate of candidates. refused Lebermann also to comment on Mayor Roy Butler’s political plans, telling newsmen, “ My crystal ball for repairs.” in is Intimate Booths Pizza & S u b s O Suds A, 11 o v e r town The Texas Conference of A A U P needs a part-time Acting Executive Secretary for immediate employment In Austin, preferably in own home. About 15 hrs/week, $233/month. Desirable but not required Q ualifications: A A U P exp erien ce; college o r univ. service; knowledge of law, Texas leg: ■ ire, Texas colleges: experience In public speaking. Typing neces­ sary. W rite givin g Qualifications to Box 5039, W est Austin P.O. fire One ire from the 030’s t ling a v T - D The Best Pizza in Town (Honest) “ I I HIGH FIDELITY'S VALUE GF THE YEAR SYSTEM « In Council Race C i t y I Dwell Councilman lebermann announced Frid ay that he w ill seek re-election to Place 4 on the City Council. Part of a first term is devoted a learning process,” Leber- “ That education w ill second term more to mann said make my effective.” T h e investor 33-year-old responded to criticism that he did , not take his position seriously. Lebermann has been absent from several council meetings j and more than 250 roll call votes. according to his opponent. John Trevino, a consultant end form ''” chairman of the Model Cities Commission. Ort Location T em Starr Photo by KAHEN WILES, and assistant Susan Cameraman Dick Kooris (r) H aver (I) inspect one or t the motion picture cameras on location near Lago Vista, where the radio-television-film department's original jar film, 1 Universal Soldier," Is being shot. The movie involves professional actors, and key crew positions are held by RTF faculty mem­ bers and 31 students. Jew ish Life Studied Israel,” Ms. Goldstein said. Israel and world Jewry. a Tile Jewish Liberation Project semester-long has begun to make campaign designed University Jewish students aware that “ Jewish survival is by no means guarantee! or secured,” a pro j c t spokesman said Friday. Jewish students Ms. A W a Goldstein said that many are unaware of the persecution cf Jews in various places throughout the world, or that hundreds af thousand of Jews in the United States have incomes below the poverty line. Tho University project is one of about 90 chapters nationwide “ committed to helping world Jew ry whether it be by building schools in Israel or by actually having to buy one Russian Jew in in order to relocate him Thousands of Jews are trying to leave Russia, Ms. Goldstein said. However, “ it costs $1,000 per person to obtain visas,” she added. She explained that expenses to resettle, clothe, feed and provide vocational for each training relocated person raises the cow to about $5,400 each, Ms. Goldstein said a main goal of the drive is to contact stud en Va “ on a one-to-one basis” to combat lack of knowledge about the 3 Problem Preps Preenaacy Poursours Service Student Health conter 101 w . 20th St. I Ch Ko. r South> Confidential counseling with all alternatives discussed and refer­ rals rondo to appropriate re; fro ­ es. Call sirs Young or Elaine Scrivnor 478-5711 Ext. 25 the next Several workshops are planned few months, over p r o v i d i n g “ opportunities for Jewish students in discussing and learning about Israel and world Jew ry,” Ms. Goldstein said. interested PART-TIME POSITION FOR ACTIVE OR RETIRED FACULTY MEMBER, SPOUSE, OR SECRETARY WITH ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE r r s r : J.a, a w, I 73 CACTUS ;/c- mm OUTSTANDING STUDENT AND GOODFELLOW SPECIAL CACTUS AWARD NOMINATIONS Are Now Being Accepted PICK UP AND RETURN NOMINATION BLANKS to JOURNALISM BLDG., ROOM 107 DEADLINE MON., MARCH 5 at 4:30 the CACTUS yearbook TS . A n o t h e r p u b lic a tio n o f I. T E XA S STUDENT PUBLICATIONS $69° A0 Ts a lot o f money for a she mo system. So rn $900.00. H gh Fidelity, Inc. has long preached ft a concept cf value to our customers and most people know not to pay too much attention to “ I st prices'1 but rather look at A e actual se' ria price whether it be "list" or otherwise. s no trick to take a $150.00 amplifier, call it a $250,00 amplifier and se'! it for $150.00. But we have aa honest $900.00 stereo system for $699.00 due to several fortuitous circumstances. Read on: The speakers; The R.T. Bozak C o. has fo r soma time been making a bookshelf speaker for $178.00, The B-301 is a three way speaker of relatively high efficiency with the famed B-199 A twelve inch woofer, a midrange used in their commercial sound systems and one of the smoothest tweeters ever made- It is noted for its high efficiency and high power handling caoacity with no honky ‘ horn 1 sound. The B-301 is row ava - able in a vriyl c a l 'net at a savings of $41.00 per pair at $157.50 each. The receiver: The Sherwood 8900 FM stereo receiver has been *• .-’"O' -o oraa- aa tic-. It r'o * .‘S per charnel and has an FM - i he un • goes A r $399.00 but Sh— ta* area o f Chicago has to reduce 5x fnsn cor FU I i en th es ta to Tho turntable; ( >.?*■ since September* the PE* 3012 has alreac 'se t a ; haring four precision features not to a r y O'-or $79.95 turntable: v a r ia t e pitch conter : f, stylus protection: rotating single clay sp'- d a: and CU jnirc! damped un and down. Volume Laying enables hi offer this fine automa­ tic record player with base, dustcover and a Stanton 500 A ca rf ric ga. The Guarantee: H A Fide-* ry, I” '., in its own service shop o.^ers a F a • ear rrotection i an at no cost. O u r sys'em O' crc A e fr e s t extremer,*, a genuine $200.00 savings and a guarantee un-mat lied in Austin. $699.00 isn’t so much more-/ for what you get! 710 LAVACA 476-5638 1806 W . 35th 454-5833 ■ ■ ■C*G> 6605 AIRPORT BLVD. 453-0688 SERVICE SHOP 476-3490 OPEN 9 A.M. - 6 P.M. DAILY THURSDAYS TILL 9 P.M. T h e D a ily T e x a n Monday, February 26. 1079 p a CPA Cl A p a r t m e n t s , F u r w T M A p a r t m e i m t s , F u r n . ■ A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . ■ ■ A p a r t m e n t s . T u r n . T y p i n g PONCE DE LEON Lory 1 * , Is ’. r e * ap ertrr* • c „ ‘ »e Fro - . I ! ' 0 , b s r a d . I. , v , ; i A . !» r '*'• 9 • 9 2207 Leon St. 476-5® I 8 Oak iheded livm g f a mrou'ei from camp .I a Oak Knell apartment* has , a racraa* on room, gas gr a*, f;.i k t- I ch 9 a , ca bi® /, ®nd o t $ of a g n i f I c# n t new complex, . W A L K T O C A M P U S S m a ll quiet S P A N K IN G N E W efficiencies and one carpeting. i These . ! fresh ly painted, beautiful new drapes. I all built In kitchens, p riv a te patios and C o H n u l up irtm ent homes are n e a r : balconies, pool, two bedroom one bath. ? ti attle bus routes, U T and Downtown. esp ecially Innsbrook, A ll bills paid. 478-5592 1008 W . 25 . they start at $129,001 1211 W . Innsbrook. bedroom s . B . . „ ...... shag love at _ Von w ill x nee 8th, 474-1107. TW O BLOCKS UT $ 42.50, all bills pa’d I bedroom epa'tm eots, C A ! H carpet od, c a c a , dishwasher, covered parking a rn dry. 2101 Rio G rands 477-8146 S T U D E N T cam p s 1804 E F F IC I E N C IE S - - next A ll details L a v a c a Included. 472 3228 from 6-8 p m. S ra n d new one bedroom apartm ents furnished c r unfurnished at Galewood A p a !! rn cuts. Located ju st off R esearch the Galewood A partm ents are B lvd ., iso to shopping and m a jo r thorough- < res. Co! rf I and bright, and starting — . plus at only $129.50! . oak traes. Located *> , , , o / J bourn Erst, » convenient to downtown r- , I L A R G E E F F I C I E N C I E S . $115 e lectricity, pool, a ir conditioned, car- panelling, no pets. I ! mtington V:!!a. I 46th at Avenue A 4.r»4-£90a 46th at Avenue A. 454-8903 O a t Knoll . L l , and Fd w ard*. 444 126om - 2 I th. I bedroom - 1 bath S ta rt $135-5190. sh Ale ;e b' c tv s, extra j large, shag carpet, dishwasher, range, I disposal, refrig erato r, large closets, prl- I I vo te patio, storage cabinets, cable, b lau n d ry room, poo! 451-3941 arg* two bm >n or efficiencies lo- ated rn Tov Lake. Convenient to hut Lo im-. Fr / d -vam e, and budt- s. Enter your balcony or patio through beaut.rut french doors. From $139.00 A LL E I S PA77! The M 'ano Apart- ments, 2425 Elmort, 442-2736. two and B E A U T I F U L N O R T H W E S T H I L U I . three b< d roo rn Spaclo s apartm ents, a va ila b le ) i unfurnished IC. ,I, Inun try, c.ui.ctcd, ( ’A/CH. k itc h e n bi Im p e ria l N o rth ­ w est A partm ents, It in. Fro m $15970 .345-2056, 476-4655. B R A N D N E W E F F I C I E N C Y apart- n u ■ ’ I "I a-ca. $125, a ll b ills paid. 476-5618. 472-8253. bedr iv j R O O M S E F F I C I E N C I E S one and two apartm ents. ; '•••J. b r ilt n I it-'llens, C A C H . j pen!, ric .fu ip sundcf-K w a lk to cam pus! j Ail bills c u d 311 least 31st 478-6776 bath two im F I j L A R G E 3 B E D R O O M lu x u ry apart- in - sh -'tie Student m anaged, m. it j S ta rt at $190. bills paid 454-9475. bcdrnoms -suitable : S E R I O U S S T U D E N T S —large two Shuttle. 710 < W . 14th. $195 plus utilities. 453- 3537. three. T A R R Y T O W N P' rson. r ol, bill INT-offlelency, m ature tie.- laundry, trees, patio, I, $95 465-7950. R I \SO N A D T .E ap artm ent now later, also rooms near U T . •me ess couple or " o m e n 476-3924. LA BAYA 45 F v f A /ar » R f th r : oney apartments id died gas and w ater paid. OO rn r i i on t ii bene 472-7658 from 8-5 • N K X !’ dry, p i A p artm ’T E D V A C A N C Y . Close to E x tra larg e ! bedroom, latin shuttle bus. Shadow Oaks s, 2404 Lo ng view . 476-0416 af- p.m. IU- 315 2833 T O P L A C E A T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D A D C A L 47 I -5244 F or S a l e H e l p W a n t e d r o N V E R T E D « I T Y B I S selfcnntAlned. Av . Carpeted So* le x a co by H o lid ay Inn North. 453-9552 7’ I I I ’S O V A R N A tiro*. trelleborg R O SS. titan! . N e w mitten, E x ti hors 454 6M0 or 454 * ti* '72 Z T'K1 185 E n d ire. L ik e new, •ally 150 milt's, perfect condition, $525 firm . B a r r y 4>1 CM" SOUNDEX fine stereo equipment • • J **it r si • - i#*t lo r - • rn 465 7307 441-787? V O L K S W A G E N B L S 1965 1800 Cai! afte r 3 30 p m . 926-0739 c r 926-6437. Pe T O P L I -S D A N C E R S , Zone, able and attractive, WOO OO plus per v, t'Ck. A rp y in person 4412 North L a m a r E N D W I M B I ’RT. V p rivate C E N T E R . ■ • -:t-n1 1 I-,-l ier for ado:» roenf*. Is c< inselors, '■ n ig h t" • omen. F o r In' rmatton atioiis for apl I tai UK A I c a ll 512 > 17-2787. cirl v dam HK. G IR IN S ’ A T L E A S T those of you who Is I Toking for I lented K ris with an ability to tun I a pc pie intel r.stlng w ork, good flay and tips. Ca I Dan - 478-443>> the Bo dy Shop m e n t a l h e a l t h w o r k e r s in s. The B r : hts opening* for men as m ental he • 1th w orkers to work w ith and train profoundly retarded bo> * end a know- rr.cn Ap; tech <■.' ut hr.. ■ r rn o d , • an’ s rn ■ ’ have ' " I *c. This Is no' e a s y work hut It ffer a challenge and valuable le-trrlng experience fo r the individual , pi t nr, I rise a c a rc e r in th® m ental befilth j ' eld This w o rk w ill be the 3 .00 p rn. - j r . tm p m sh ft. and w ill start at J I 95/ I hour F o r further inform ation, ca ll 478- 6662. C I V S S M ' i r n ADV K R T 1 *>l V o K V T ) > R uch W ord (15 word m in im u m ' * T ach Vddltlonal T im e ., ....... j Stm trru ....... J Ka-ti additional word .. ....... I on# tim e *7 r n .75 05 f o r -#cati\ # l**ue* in w o n !* ........... . . . . . . J I I no 15 w ord* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... $1.5 OO ..... .................... ....... *19 00 2* word* I rob im h ........... ........... ....... $42.00 2 col. ineh ........................ ....... *17.00 . . . $ I nil roo S rot. tm h ........... . 4 col. tnrh ....................... ....... *11 ’ OO C l a* sifted I)l* p l« r I colum n * one lnrh one tim e J 7 30 .... * I JO E a t h A dditional Tim# •No ropy change for fo n s r n itiM ' issue r a t e s ' D K VH I.I s ) ■'J ll E D I I r. M onday T r« * n 3 (in p ro. Tnesdn*- T e to n Monday, I I .OO I* rn. W ed n eid n y Texan I rid **. To#«day, l l OO a m . Thorn/tar To*im F rid a y Texan T harsdn j , Vt #dn#»d*y, 11 OO n m l l OO a.rn. thft f \ fi){ of e m ir« mud#* (n «n R ill e r l i 'f i n f ut, Im m ediate notiro must hr ris e n b r tho publisher* a rr responsible for nnlv O N I' In r o r r r r t Inseriron MI claim s for Rdjn*tm rnt« • bonld ho rn a d r not lit e r than 3" da> * after publication " • . L O W ST U D EN T R A T ES 15 word* or le u for 75c the Tint time, Se each additional word. Stri­ receipt d e " ) mu*! th o * Auditor'* • ad pay ta advance Journebim Bldg. 137 from I e rn. to 4:30 p.m. M onday through Friday. in F or S a l e U n true decor — *pac ou» epa'tm ent* oaded with ettra*. A I t ectric k tchen, frost free re*'-'gerato-*, pool, b ard room, good N .E location, ccnve-'a-t to shopping O I sci Doll. Tai Sh;-., 1400 PANTS * FRESH PANTS \ , i r D U A V V , Z 4 i ' s a I K 'L E S M A N . R etail clothing. 9 a m - East 51 st. 453-3306. 2 u r n . medium dressed, N urlt. rn. I long hair. well 476-5477. experience '67 O P E s porta ti Id ike. 4! OOO mr.es Need to sell. l f good tran- 50 4 .3-7064, STEREO PR H O L ID A Y H O U S E NO. I. 1003 Barton S p rin g s Road. P a r t tim e cashier to work noun r ms Startin g pay $! 60 hour. I Apply at 1003 Barto n Springs Road. : A T T R A C T IV E T A R I E A T T E N D A N T S m ust tie 21, m ust he experienced j CAH o r com e by W ate rlo o .Social Club. , I 7th and R ed R iv e r. 472-7136 full kitchen A P E O P L E planned com m unity with plush carpet, great location, gas grilles, beautiful pool, and A ll B ills Paid. T h e H a m le t Apartm ents, HOO R e mil, 452 3202 T W O B E D R O O M . 2 bath, C A/CH. ad bills paid One block from law school. 3212 R ed R iv e r 478 0672. ................................ ......... ......................... W E RENT AUSTIN Your tim© is va'uabl© Our services tree PARAGON PROPERTIES 4 7 2 - 4 1 7 1 T H O U S A N r ■51 ; room , color T V n jn g y g r y close to U n iv e isitv lo Im press tim ired, a ttra c tiv e girl for lounge, free park- re frig erato rs ,, u, tv in each I „ , $50/month — C a ll 478-3917 R E A S O N A B L E H e NT L A R O E S T U D IO A P A R T M E N T ! THE BRITTANY 300 Twincrest 45-* S P ’ 4 POSADA DEL NORTE 465-63 i 8 7200 Duval FIREPLACES E ffic ie n c y Apartm ents in front of you r fin place, In B I K E T O C A M P U S - B lg two Bedroom, two bath ap artm ents. P e rfe c t for several room m ates. Bool, shuttle st t> af front door. A ll B ills P a id . I.e Font. 803 VV. 28th, 472-6480 I for first class steam spn j these com p letely furnished new a p a rt- 1 of Hollywood, 478-0411 or I manta. All bibs paid. M exican m e j L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y , close to cam- f ours, firewood furnished, free T V ca-1 shag hie, on the sh uttle bus route. R e a d y to : carpet, all built in kitchen, pool, sm all m ove In $150. 4200 Avenue A. 454- 110 E a s t 37th St. quiet apartm ents. 6423. P l|s'. wood paneled. C A CH. C al! 47R 1382 A fte r 5 A weekends 472-4305 r F r EARN t E P A I R E D . t .ii line of ac- used The I 16 Kan Antonio 476-8421. instruments. C O N N any reasonable offer. C a ll 441-3507 after S A X O P H O N E , A L T O 6 p I 3972 VV. • 13 Tenon iF I sl 36mm B E L L A H O W E L L sound-on-film projector $‘<5 A C all after 3 30, 926 07>9 r r 926-6437. BL C p l ! TRADE VV v* 1937 P r**er * E t V n, tu Disney p- :r*. d.gest. I 14* S T A R D A N C E R sa ! / vin j Old. $100 C all R o 477 roe y e a r G I R L 'S rn af ac IO S P E E D r ’uegi q ja h ty /' impon/ Pts I new, rn list sell $85 1vt 412 7 i t 1 simplex B ra n d I M IR A N r'A SF,NS/ iR K 35mm C am era ’ E l S CSS A's-. v c " e K W A 8 st iperlor f fr>- ST- R KO M A B R A N T Z 2230 re ce ive r 1 Vial 1219 changer. V I 5 - IJ cartridge, .TBL-L55 speakers $1230 re ta il: $900 ai! in w a rra n ty, 464-6533. 68 I O R D F A L C O N , 200 c .1., six cy lin ­ 'ires, good m ileage, runs der, good \—. ' err., a r t N wivea’j fig re* v e ry well 453-0062 'G S FURNITURE, A M lQ U rS V R ocker*, couches, table*, prints, tr rk a , crrsser# I I i H E S V A T T ' 'O T T 490 A M P K E. MERCANTILE C O . | “ 8-CH54 1600 M ano r I $799. $50-$ I OO a W E E K I • sa 4"' o p p o r t u n i t y . Call 442-9361 PHONE W O RK W O M E N -GIRLS '/• 4314 best dee' in ti J a f and wee. sd ttronq vc c A p p ly after 6 •» 4 1 vfl VV E lim b m d F o r N E E D F E M A L E mode!* for our Independent shooting ses­ sion* inform ation w rite fu rther C apitol Cam era Club, P .O . Box 663, A ustin T V " 78767 OVERSEAS JO B S — summer or permanent A lira a, r ’■ope, S. A m erica, A frica, . A p rc’ esSiO"-?, $500 $! OOO rrronth- e*: e -r$ pa rj, s qnfstt* "'0 . Free In- 2SSO Te e- > f p L ’ . 'o TS I I *5! Aff. ® p i i si rn S l l I L U X U R Y 2 B E D R O O M , 2 BATH SU P ER S A R G E F U R N IS H E D A L L BILLS P A ID O N L Y $214 ® Pool with si ie ?t wa*6’•fail • Clubroom with wet bac • G a p s ® m o m - F o o t b ? • Door-to-door ga m age p’cU up • S u e d e d • Und#rqffCKjnd p a r m ig • Full compliment of appliances • Beautifully furnished F O U R B L O C K S T O T H E D R A G O n Shuttle Bus R o u te FIREPLACE - SKYLIGHT one bedroom studio, C A / C H , ca b ’s, $134 pip* electricity Sumrrer Rem* — Ju n e , A ;q st 900 E. 51st sw im m ing pool, shuttle at front door. W alkin g distance to Unit ersity C a v a ­ lie r A partm ents. 307 E a s t 31 st 472-7611. W A L K T W O B lo c k s to cam pus. L a rg e E ffic ie n c y and 2 bedroom apart- j ments. A-C. fu lly carpeted, pool, study room, p arty room. P ric e d (rom $135.00. AH bills paid. M a ana K a i. 405 E 31st 472-2147. PEPPERTREE S o * 'I -q r e v epprlm eri* S U M W E R R A T ES N O W A V A IL A B L E S*e '-ese pefore you choose! 304 E. 34th St. 472-8701 L I V E R O Y A L L Y 1 R ig h t on shuttle. huge closets, clubroom, pool, one arni two bedrooms from $145 with bills and cable paid T he Saxony, 1616 R o y a l -6631. L A R G E N E W A P A R T M E N T S N E V E R L I V E D I N F U R N I S H E D One bedroom, w ith lease $142 E ffic ie n c ie s w ith lease $122 plus gas and electricity also a\.Liab le two bedroom, two bath with lease $165 one bedroom, one bath T H E A V A L O N 32nd St lm erregional 478 4963 453-2228 Ute* away. L a rg e one and two bed-I room* with built-in kitchen*, carpeting In a and pool. S m a ll com plex gee t furnished, location 904 W e st A ve 477-3945. Fro m $135 living U T A N D D O W N T O W N are ju st min- 4 5 4 - 1 7 5 3 4 7 2 - 5 1 2 ? T O P C A F H P R I C E S pa d for diamonds, old g cif. C ap ito l Di.irnond Shop. 603 C om m d e r* P e r r y . 476-0178 I — -e A '4 / F k' f 3] 19“ 1 C O M P O N E N T S '« ’eo* only re :e 4f "- e ie *-'$ a 8 track *•:-.# a-et erat la d a b *-. i : o * .sp*•'i’on Speake'*. To be i* ?,9 5 farms. U N C I A M F D F R E IG H T . 6535 North Lamar V ? W eekday*. 5 6 each, C a th o- R E G I S T E R E D M ales and h e a vily spotte I » < !!. : 1612 I DA L M ATTON very pm ales 476 >678 or $50 S A N S Q U A D re a r i 'ton amp, speakers, hie n th new M-91E 1 .art and tun six months o!i> > O''.st. 4 1’ 5578 VV, tress or Waiter wanted A : ie moons LES AMIS CAFE App!y 4-6 p.m. 26m & San Antonio \ I N’T A1 tuner. S H URW< od am , *50. 441 5 e l to 1- Ut H A *aK 196.5 \ W B clean 3 s '431 ar 464-f 536 A K E R S Y S3'EM inch 2 w ay Bas try cornpre»ssion ne'* $ n ; 4: 4.4; 30W 50-22 OOO Hz, i, 6 In ch h'gh fro torn, hand Hushed :r a n s > trre e t dup L U B seeking serious stu -I light se cu rity duties. Com * room. M- st be 21 or over ole ii i p rn i all 472-8366 8 00-9 .30 A d s _......... . I i 1! 'TIS o '.! time. Hours ad- y ur studies, details 836- THE BLACKSTONE $64.50/ month rrent living ; fc'ock from C a m p c s |nd> c * a po .can;; trammed with co m p a' D e roommates 29 '0 Red R er 476-563! A Paraqon P'cperA/ MOD! ■ * lay ransp. 1, fur line draw in g cia sr nU ht, $7.80 each session n a t l" " , ('a ll 476 7914 after «. ' J r • I R I S end .R p jppb * r*-g atered A K * and dam larg e beautiful Enduro only 2500 • he n u s C all 385- A N O Sri Bi w f • ■acing if . grnr Bm 474 56 F E ! •IA L E R O O M M A T E to share effl cte n cy apartm ent. t.Tose to Campus, $65 t .Ti 478-5239 IA I R S JU i si y d e od top new paint w ire 'K ine $9% 476-4768. .O P E M .st s.--,I tm F E M A L E l l ’A N T E D . S h a re three bedroom, two bath house R O O M M A T E v i f* - J Near Bf n W hite, 447 2■•1 keep ’ t i t o 1: I E M A U E W A N T E D . S h a re tu n bedroom ap artm ent with R O O M M A T E $60 three gins Shuttle. 451-2609. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E N E E D E D for larg e 2 bedroom, 2 bath apt Shuttle, after : S. C a ll 472 3816 ■ ’ 6 1-.rn . 471-2831. i ih SNE mote iSii Bob 4 " I tv? U T O R A NT C L A IM E D F R E I G H T . 6535 N orth L a ­ m ar, 9 w eekdays. 9 6 S atu rd ays * CIRCLE STEREO it 17'\24 *125 $5(', used irs - carpet, one plec ripe pT- <■ 10’5” than on year. IU . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , first we i k M an h. H o is e near cam pus $t I p l is bi s 476 1186 T R K C K STP OO 41 P A P E deck 1544 Ji m speakers M A L E R O O M M A T E N E E D E D j M arch­ '. • un ti ir ta lue environm ent, $61 ’d; • m onth pi: s bills. C all 477-1054 2810 Salado 472-3816 after 5 phone 452-1040 A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . HILLTOP APARTMENTS $ 129.00 — up EFFICIENCIES ONE AND TWO BEDROOM APTS. FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED Beautiful decor, lame pool, parfy room hills of South Austin off Rlverr'de Drive Shuttle bus route LA FIESTA APARTMENTS 400 E. 30th 477-1800 Furnished, pool, laundry room, TV cable, maid service Two blocks from campus 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths $64.?0/perscn Bills Pa d I E S E T Swig d rum * V e r y ny rn br s and ar- <■39-4938 M A U E R O O M M A T E . O W N bedroom $100 per month. < nil 441-6769 between t i and 6 OO P rn , a fte r 10:00. 4 . E M A N S 2-door, 326V« v in y l roof radio/re i Us. UM E I JO Y M A T E W A N T E D to share 3 bedroom mobile home, F o r more I. irkp ’ v far*.-ry tach, $495 s •J 4 2371 o r 926-0.16 t'nt, d Cha gar r bA?tt off®!* lr. E rm a * : sn e n !: 38.5-5201. . ---------- ---------- ---------- •— --- ---------- Manager A p t. IG2 476 4095 S H A R E NTC E 3 bedroom furnished house with two rn ale students $58 00 1 pi .s bbls 1310 E . 52nd 451-4785. T u t o r i n g N E E D F E M A L E room m ate for 3 bed­ room ap artm ent in older house $6,8 75 -- --- -- j Plus bills. F r a n 476-5039 THE FRENCH PLACE 27C2 French Place I Bedroom Larqe 472-8790 lu» ry Apartment* S T A T d p r- -• IU T Q R JN G . A ll business math, -on. rnt'nn 4-1 v . r r a r .......n. 4... 4...... r d o m «I a t i - 'vv a \ * T r n T . « , m • ~ l A t r W AIS I E D own room share k- -.cr/bath, one block from cam pus Fum shed or Unfurnished W a 'n u t Paneling, Shag Carpet, st. 476-0947 C a ’ " d q e S a - Corns % - f r 5 « 19-3 >tt»' F r * ' C t CB350 H O N D A Cond '.lnn. " e l l G u lls 465-0065 green p e rfe c t la net! $695 4312 G E P . M A N B H ••'PH E R D M A L E , papers a v a :' role 4:4-1-7'’ $10 or b o -I offer L a rg e boned '72 C E L K ’A S T g reat condition, must sell A il standard equipment plus AC Call J if: i 476-263.’, a 'ter 6 p rn. 477-4607. ' C S M U S T A N G C O N V H R T I B L F . 802 VR. ii p ‘ ■ ‘-r ■ IM -I M rad ia'* ere ow nor sup- r f lo an, $1080. 477-4186 after 5 p rn. H E M IS T R Y - 44' 2;70 after 6 p m . In tro or O rg an ic C all H C A N bn easy S e le c te d a ss's $ ../month 472-5506 evening* • B E R A T , M A L K room m ate to share K<1 ’nr] " h« » . p r iv a te bed. and „ Fran ce. 327 17 Sib .............................. "T u ta n international Texan by Sw itzerland. A lg e ria , Quebec. I F E M A L E R O O M M A T E . 'p riv a e ~ ro n m : .shuttle, aval: : I.ti'. R iv e r H ill* Apts J , W : A H P - T om 38.V87S7 fro m ; b a ,h from I able M h • $78 33 total. 447-2522 S P A N IS H T I T O E IN G sM A e r " C h M ‘ by lr Spanish En*..:sh 4"* C O M P U T E R S C IE N C E and * M ’!stlo* A ssistant with acture m aterial, pro groin ming and debugging Call 454-2'64 before 11 op a rn. F o r R e n t E L E C T R O N IC C A L C U L A T O R S and typ e w rite rs W eekly-m onthly rates I’ en ta Up rob*) se availab le. D ay* 4.54- 1971; nights, weekends 345-1297 * I j t '• H. I. CONO I IM C Van. runs : • .-fly r .ug h: $225. 476-1*290 R o o m & B o a r d R I \ I -OK E M L E P r a c t ic a lly new, still I V co lo r T V . In w a rra n ty , com e h; 1 13 W e * ' 38th, N >. 104. $225. H O M E S T E A D C O O P has fem ale \ ju­ an es Double room* $85 478-1590 700 W e st 19th Street. ’ 72 K ’ '■ radio 4M-C>816 W A R R A N T Y rn ie s. r»w m n -4 - or.. $180n 837 OHO, 4.000 S I N G L E R O O M S, good food, w alk to ram p : « maid service. C A / C H $130/ month Ca', 477-8272 TO P L A C E A T EX A N C L A S S IF IE D A D C A L L 471-5244 Page IQ Mqpday* Feuruary 26, 1973 T H E D A IL Y TEXAN EL CAPITAN APARTM ENTS 1500 Reagan Hills Drive Large party roo^ large r )o!, shag carpet, G. E. kitchens 2 bedroom - 2 bafh I bedroom - I bath $ 134 up 465-3668 LA FO N T A N A $ 124.00 On© and two bedrooms. Furnished & Unfurnished Close to Hancock and Capital Plaza Shopping centers, Easy acct to IM 35. Students and famines welcome. 1220 and 1230 East 38IA Sireet 454-6738 small deposit W A L K T O C A M P U S e • rn- «ew *- aq c a r p e '- a c a b a 'C s , i iivln q room * and It''c h e r * 5 block* w e ;' c f UT on th u ti e route. e- • .es. $133 4- fie c t ' city. Summer Fates J I 19 BO. 2IC4 Sari G a b r el / a northeast 'n e a 4 o n on " a *• tile s re •» at -’ a Br-; a d " oor A r er'me-t* ' i'-ree c. bs, th re e p e e s, wet bar*, i r a q ta rg e t g, ai! r . r *« k tchen*, ro m $ 4*7.50 Al L E . S PA DI Broadmoor 1200 I cor 454 O N E B L O C K U n ive rs ity . 3 room m od­ ern $125. nil p.->id. rooms $60 up Ai so Lake house Mr. Bonnell GR6-1700. route. $125 E F F I C I E N C Y O N shag shuttle bu* full carpet, kitchen, cen tral A C and h e a t Casa Felice, 4204 S p e e d " aj 453-0060. Includes El. PATIO APTS. 28 0 R o G ran d * 2 b e droo m , 2 c a th — F in is h e d I bedrock c-a bath — for s .Timer L a ..rc-y, o c c , c a b a TV A b ' ca d Poo L a u n d ry $140 Bi! s Pa d. G R FAT O A K A P A R T M E N T S ear a*/ schcc a-d <-• am# I bet) room, 7 b an s r * Em. en is i Sr>q c a rr* ", cobia Sunback, pc-'. B 't twa -a 'r r a r rate* and spec a . Q »* r ca d month 477-3388 Poe pans: r g #-d plenty cf rcr-m. et S P A N IS H V IL L A N O R T H Located at Hw y. 2^3 and IH 35 One bedroom c*# b a *' end two bedroom. two bath w in shag carpeting, bi. ' in t 'm a r * and ft replaces. On sh jttia b i ■ r r *p I 909 Reroll 454 9863 Just North of 27th St GuadaLip# M .B.A . Typing, M ultilithing, B in d in g Tfi9 Complete, Professional FULL-TIM E Typing Service to the needs of U n ive rsity tailored students. Special keyboard equipment for language, science, and cngineer- .ng theses and d ss< nations. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 Hem phill T u rk IC ? East IG " St. 472-0149 t -errs: -j, PC Report* These*, P.R. < t'rome*. re; .me* M u lti1 filing, B t -a Everything Fiom A to Z $ 1 2 4 .0 0 A to Z S E C R E T A R Y ER V IC E 4 7 4 - 5 5 5 0 D u p l e x e s , F urini. Dissertations, theses, and rop< rt* 2507 B rid le Path . Lo rraine B ra d y , 472 -1715. 'T A O D V 'r m v v I A R I D T O W N , one bedroom M A B Y L S M A L L W O O D T y p in g S e rvic e e ia «t blis' * 12:' plns bills’ 4" r>' 10,,(i’ I 892-0727 - 50bi Sunset T ra il or 442-8545 I 2005 A rth u r Lane. T e rm papers, these*. 1 n, a overnight __________ (5), on 4it* k . - —— j dissertations, letters. M a s te r Charge honored. H o u s e s , U m f . I B E A U T I F U L T Y P IN G , these tations, misc. F o rm e r legal I M rs. Anthony. 454-3079. 5 M I N U T CS frnm cam pus. fully shaded « , J’i U y M ha? ed gain. M ust s afte r 5 OO p.rn a u l R J5Cll‘ CaU In beauti-1 P la c e R e a l bar-I B O B B Y E D E I . A FT! LD , IR M S r! ° W ner 4,2 5902 . . p i c a /elite, 25 >•• . < 7191 , ref rh- — ie. 443- H o u s e s , F u r n . Th* CROCKETT Co. isf n F U R N I S H E D H O U S E for rent. $120 per month, w a ter paid. 38th and Peck. C all 476-9361. three bedroom house, S T U D E N T S . P E T S , kids, O K ' La rg e fe n 'cd yard. I, near shuttle bus. A vailab le M arch $190. 255-2735, Keep ti > ink Fas' ef ‘ theme*, di FA M U L A I 3 ■ I B ad D u p l e x e s , U n f . Multilithing, Typing, Xeroxing AUS-TEX D U P L IC A T O R S 2 B E D R O O M , appliances, draperies and w a te r furnished, beautiful yard, A U ­ C H Quiet neighborhood, cle ar No pet* G rad uate students only 3214B Hem lock A ' " 476 4307 or 472-3476 I ’ 55/m-m'h R o o m s ROY W. HOLLEY: 476-7581 118 Neches PRINTER 476-3018 TEXAN DORM 1905 - 1907 Nueces F a ll, Spring Sem esters, $46 50 per mo. D a ily m aid service, cen tral air, com ­ p letely single rooms, parking, refrigerator, bot plates. Two Mocks from cam pus. Co-ed. RESID EN T M A N A G E R S 478-51 13 Also availab le remodeled Typesetting, Typir P ■•--£? Bin dir g T Y P I S T E X P E R T T h e s e s . S d e c trla . reports, professional r e f "I* Prin tin g , binding, Mrs. Tullos. 453-5124. briefs, I B M B C. W O O D 'S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . IO y e a r* experience. Law , thesis, dissertation*. etc. Prin tin g , bindings. 453-6090 JusF rth s t 07 & Guada! . c e THE PHOENIX 1930 San Antonio Singles $99.50 Doubles $54.50 vlt re ne. N e v .'/ ■ .rq e , f aro, end rem q e ra U - a owed. ra w c o 'o r TV, w e ’ <»--dryer. H o t a a / m aid, n’ »d, Free p i' ng o: a c ock * rn Campus. 476-9265 477-5777 FR IVA T E R O O M S for University men etui women. $75.00 a m c r 'h , iv/o blocks west of campus, 2411 R o Grande. Central heat and a r conditioning, kit hen facilities, ma:d service, rent or lease, alto RESUMES W it h o r w out pictures ; E R V IC E Ph o ne v dissertations, res-,mc*, p ru n in g j j or ; Charge. 442-7008, 442-0170. Ban kA m eri. ard / Muste elite these. I* V I V I AN B R O W N Pro fessio n al Typls Ii fields. Northeast arr-,!, ne a r A ll aoub e rooms eve -ace for $55 a I 35. 928-0991 month. Private rooms avaTabe north of campus. Call M a n g e r I E X C E L L E N T T Y P I S T ■ - fo rm e r sc -’n j to ry — all U T papers 5tK-/page. 831 ’ 2288. TYPING THE BS £ A \ ■ Typed, Printed & R Y SERVICE r $ 1 . 2 5 / p a c e ! r 5 A : U 42 D O BIE C E N T E R 8936 T H E M E S , R E P O R T S onrt la w no! Reasonable. M rs. F ra s e r. 476-1311 T Y P I N G five blocks " c s t of ca pus. T e rm papers, those*. Hon*, legal, other. 476-2407. .327-204! S E R V I C E . G rad uate V I R G I N I A S C H N E I D E R T Y P ! ' I dergraduate typing, printing, bindi 1515 K oenig Lane. Telephone: 465-72f and B E A U T I F U L P E R S O N A L typing - your U n ive rs ity work. Prin tin g binding. Close to U T . L a u r a Bud ' 478-8113 E X P E R I E N t f. I) T Y P I N G , de­ lations, themes, research papers M Peterson. 836 1818. E X C E L L E N T S E C R E T A R Y T Y P E S producing finest quality typing for r dents and faculty m em bers in et < field for 15 years, w ill lake moticuh Care to type law briefs re se arch p er*. B .C . reports, the ms, and d:-ser tions accu rately, observing prop er tot composition and spelling Late st mn I B M E x e c u tiv e carbon ribbon ty p e " -175-07 er. A il "o n e proofread. S T A R K T Y P I N G : Ex p e rie n c ed ti dissertations, P .R .'s etc P rin tln i Binding. S p e cia lty ; technical, Ch Stark. 453-5218 50 cen,s ppr Just North of 27th & Guaco! up YES, we do typi Freshman themes good grades! Phone G R 2 3210 and G R 2/07 Hem phill P a r k R O A D R U N N E R T Y P I N G S e rv ic e . electric economical. specialty. 327-1534. neat, fast, La s t m inute dcptnd; typln* M i s c e l l a n e o u s Zuni N E L S O N ’S G IF T S : com plete selection Je w e lry : A frican and M exican imports. 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. Indian P A R K I N G B Y M O N T H . $12.50. 2418 S a n Antonio, one block from Campus. 470-3720. EARN $'s W EEKLY Blood p!asm* dono-i reeded . Cash paid for services. P; /Le an in attendance. O p en 8 a.m.-3 pm . Tues., Thurs., Fri„ & Set. O pen \USTIM B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S , IN C ., 409 W e st 6th. 477-3735. !2 roon-7 p.m. V/ed. S K Y D I V E ! Austin Parachute Center For information please call 272-5711 anytime L E A R N T O P L A Y G U IT A R , M A N ­ beginner, advanced. D rew D O L IN Thomason, 478-2079. F R E E K IT T E N S , fa t and frisky, .even weeks old: tan, ginger, grey, calico. 478 9120, esp ecially evenings. U R G E N T A P P E A L F O R H E L P ! lim a involved: 15 minute*/ afternoon. W e «'# trying to form Minyans every afternoon f /e minute* before J "down a* H el to »a/ Kaddish for our Mother O B M . Even once a week or once a month will be highly aopreciated. Mo.-. the and Che m 476 4920. T O P L A C E A T EX A N C L A S S IF IE D A D C A L L 471-5244 E L E C T R I C B A R S g u itar lesson* Fred Scott 451-1591. W h y not start out w C B E F E M A U E R O O M M A T E share bedroi rn half apartm ent. rlcity . W e ek d ays a fte r 3 OO p m , 182. $S2, 452 476-7916 477 5514 1900 Burton Drive 477-3&7I or 472-2368. lf no an­ swer, call 258-1902. 442-9612 1906 S A N G A B R I E l * furnished room, No Pets, P r i \ ale entrance, bath, re fan, Spring fril l r.itur, water-cooled $8.)/mo, Bills paid 472 4781 Cable Ideas Explored 3y JO E DACY II Texan Staff Writer she said. One way of getting more input from private citizens on television may soon be through local cable television operations. for This possibility was one of the many television cable discussed by Ms. Anita Benda and Bernard Lechowick, radio- televisioivfilm iastructors at the University, In a Union sandwich seminar Friday. "Cable has for everybody," Ms. Benda explain­ ed. something The a d v e n t of relatively inexpensive videotape cameras, called parlapacks, coupled with public access to cable television could enable a citizen to express his opinion on his own program, cable Operators Recent Federal Communication C o m m i s s i o n ( FCC) rulings require to provide and help produce such programing. For Austin, which the instructors say ranks 106th as a television market, the ruling goes into effect iii 1977. By that time, local operators may be able to provide up to 20 channels, with one channel for educational needs, one for local government and cv. -al which could be leased by loc a1 g: nips. The FCC has also provided for two-way capacity so that viewers might even vote and give other feedback instant;!ne us y. if "B u t there input from the citizens then tho sam e people that buy time now will Is no campus news in brief do It on cable,” Lechowirft warned. He cited churches as prime examples of organizations which are already able to produce their own programs. The future of cable television Is uncertain, however, because of fierce legal competition between broadcasters, who fear they w ill become table operators who are prohibited from expanding their operations further. extinct, and At the expense of broadcasters, cable companies may charge a small monthly amount for each channel an individual selected, the instructors suggested. "Once we are linked to several cities (by satellite or antenna)," Lechowich said, "there are plenty of cable to television.” people fund Ms. Benda, h o w e v e r , speculated that to achieve all of take these possibilities would about 20 years. Marathon To Help March of Dimes B y SA N D Y BARRON Gregory Gym will come alive next month as marathon dancers try to outdo each other in the Silver Spurs second annual "They Stop Birth Defects, Don't *niey” marathon dance, March 30 to April I. Proceeds from the dance w ill be donated to tile Capital Area Chapter of the March of Dimes. Last year about *15,000 was collected at the dance. This year’s goal is $20,000, Craig Johnson, chairman of tile dance, said. Any campus organization can sponsor a couple, Steve Waldronn, president of Silver Spurs, said Sunday. "W e w ill send entries to groups around campus March I , ” Johnson said. "A $10 entry fee is required.” Contestants will dance threo-and-a-half hours, followed by 30- minute breaks. They w ill be allowed to sloop from 3 a.m.’ to 7 a m. each morning. The winning couple will be announced at 6 p.m., April I. Tile audience will vote for the couple of their choice by donating money to the March of Dimes in boxes with Ute couple's number on it, Taylor said. Sponsoring organizations are allowed to solicit "votes” from local businessmen as well 35 from the audience during the dance, he added. "The winning couple is the couple who Is still dancing and whose group collects the most m oney," WaJdman said. A LP H A KA P l'A P si will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Business-Economic* Building. Alumni Guest Room. ANTHRO PO LO GY C O LLO Q UIUM w ill be at 4 p.m. Monday In Burd lite 151. Dr. Ira Buckler will speak on ‘ Myth and Ethnographic Interpretation." F i n < \ HON f * ( D I M IL those interested In running for the Education Council will be heM through 5 p rn. Friday In Sutton Hall 117. Call 471-3223 for Informa­ tion. filir E L K TRH \L E N G IN E E R IN G S E M ­ IN A R Will meet at 4 p.m. M< ndt In Engineering Lab Building 102. VV. S Baddock J r w ill speak on A Synopsis of Houston Lighting and Power Company's Dig tai Supervi­ sory Control and Data Acquisition System.” I H I NC ll P l.! It w ill meet si 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Sn Lee Hall 208. Three French department faculty members will piesent, and comment on favorite poetry selections, They are Hrs. Michelle Dassonville, Jean- Plorre Cauvln, and Estelle Trepan- lcr. I \T iV VU ERK AN RTI W IEK COG I (HH H M will meet at 4 p.m. M in­ dex in Buslness-Economlcs Building IS I Phillip R u .sell. representative of Latin American Policy Alterna­ tives Group will speak on ‘‘Revolu­ tionary Serin! Change In Cuba.'* l f ATHEM ATIC!* ( O L L O Q U I’ >1 W ill meet at I p m. Monday In the Ptiys- lCs-M ath-Astrom m y B u ild in g 6,104 Dr. Eugene Wig "M athem atical Thermal and G terns." will sp< ik lei of Hun Transport s M IK O L S E A M I Ii N s i t H IE S I I < 'I I R E will he at 4 I .rn M rid Humanities Dr. Abbas Aryan Ary rn put, pre dent College of Translation, Tehro: Iran, will sp. alc on "K me A ; of Persian Literature." n u > ^ rifer, . SIG N L A N G t A .il ( ? ’ism j <)R yu (.IN N E R S will nu day In the Baptist Student Union • learn to enmmomenm v. Mb tCf- a, a 7 p rn ’ I i i \l I ■■■ In Bu'iness.Economir I T III I I I \N K ER SO N L E C T U R E , will he h* 1.1 ut M o n d a y lr. s Building 155. M Information ai rector, munlcation System , At Commission, will sp< ik lug Computer Systems Perform ance.” I Nit t UM |\ M U I is t TH IN will me • at 7 day in Union Building 3 of the meeting is Re It sclal Prejudice ” ‘iwartz, di- Telecom- UC l iner.' / n ‘‘Desi en- i Busine s A SS O t JA- r> rn. Mon- The tonic Siosity and Scholarships Open Applications four Alpha for Lambda Delta scholarships are being accepted until March 9, Lisa Olsen, president of Alpha Lambda Delta, said Saturday. Tile $100 scholarships are awarded to previously initiated members of the honorary fresh­ man scholastic organization who have completed at least 45 hours of course work and have main­ tained a 3.7 grade point average. Applicants must complete them application and make an in­ t e r v i e w appointment before March 9, the last day for in­ terviews. D o r o t h y Dean, student development specialist, w ill in­ terview all applicants. Applications are available In the Office of the Dean of Students ) in the Speech Building. D IS C O U N T RECO RDS STORE WIDE SALE! TODAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY Featuringo LL AMI RECOILS Open All Three Nights Til Midnight For Your Shopping Convenience tekmdmccrti* from caprin recon!* The Rock-Ola 8-track quartet The members of this quartet sound best separately. Leggins & Messina "Loggins & Messin* Deep Purple "W ho do w* think eref * RH* Coolidge "Th* Lady's not for sa!* Ct,uel | 8fTt -London Seasons" Now at Rock-Ola: the Quadruple Group. Four great specials, only $3.29 apiece. Get 4, be4 you 4get. a track tape stoat »|3 w jath R O P E ROUND TRIP DC-3 JETS CHARTER F M S Houston - London Brussels - Houston (46 days] $ Houston - London Madrid * Houston (62 days) Houston • London Brussels - Houston (78 da,s) 5 y G r University of Texas students, faeu’ty, and staff and their immediate P s b i d on a pro rata share of th* total charter cost (262 seats.) are engird C a p tot International A rrays, an A m ericas C ertified Supplemental A ir C arri** -hosa dem onstrated dependability has enabled it to be a U.S. Governm ent contractor. itll flight* . . . A N D W E WILL ALSO HELP YOU WITHs Eurailpasiei V W Adventure* Foreign Study Program * Auto Rental* & Purchase* International S tu d en t LD . Card* M o torcycle Purcha*e* Scheduled Airline Ticket* List of Hostel* Com plete Selection of M ap* Free help In designing your Itinerary P O. Box 7040, Austin, Texas 78712 2323 San Antonio St. IN THE C A STILIA N LO BBY 478-3471 -SEND FOR A PPLIC A T IO N TO D AY— S e r v i c e s W Y Engine parte and aefrlce. Engine work of all kinds a t reasonable prices Our aim Is to do better work for less money. And we sell original equipment engine part* a t discount prices: cranks, bearings, valves, piston and cylinder rings, mufflers, extractors, and •eta, clutches. A Community Automotive Cooperative Supplier. Overseas Engines *36-3171 XERO XING 4c single copy rate on bonded paper I.D.A. COPY SERVICE Reduction* A Bind'^o Sam® Day Service A t 901 W . 24th 477-3641 Open till 7 M on .-T W i.; Fri.-Sat. til 5 One Day Service A t 4007 Duval 451-1727 Student owned & operated I.D.A. PRESS Fast Printing Typing 901 VA 24th Quality W o r k Typesetting 477-3641 I.D.A. LECTURE NOTES O ver 40 Courses Available Quality Class Note* 901 W . 24 th 477-3641 T Y P E W R IT E R R E P A I R and cleaning. Salea-Rental* Experienced service. No rip-off price*. 4544*71; nights 345- 1297. T H E B U G IN N Volkswagen Shop. Major engine work, genera] repairs Good prices Free Estimates. 307 Red Riser, 478-4553. Come by. At TO M O R I L E * PO D Y W O RK - * vV.'ikV wagen and Foreign cat specialist. V ery reasonable prices. Free estimates. Scott 477-7747 Xerox or IBM 4c COPIES Reduction Capability to 24 x 36 Pictures, Multilith, Printing, Binding I Ii O GINNY’S COPYING r n st**- SERVICE 42 Dobie Ma!! 476-9171 Free Parking Open 75 hours a week L A W N M O W E R REPA IRS don# by factory trained mechanic* Buy-tall or trad# R aatorab a rata* Open till IO pjn. weekdays. Saturday IO a rn. • * p.m. San Jacinto 472-3233 ; S E W IN G minor alteration*. hem* and lippers Experienced, fait service, i Reasonable Student discount 837-01*1 W a n t e d E N I.A R G E R —a used, inexpensive type ric h as a VTVTTAR No. *3. 441-4468, N E E D PO W ER filter and flourencent reflector for SO gallon aquarium (36 X l l ) . 4549907 Dale, L o s t & F o u n d LO ST. LADIES GOI-D bracelet watch. Saturday-vldnlty Gregory Gym c-r parking lo t Reward-J15, M X H 8. PLEASE! Gov# me back "C hon" my 11 week c d black end silver Shepherd puppy lost Tuesday p.m. Hidden Val'#/ eras if f 6.20. Has leather firing around nee*. I Love-em. You' I love d amond reward— Ho question! asked. 475-3416. 4?5-36l3. white markings. Charley. I D S T S M A L L M A L E black poodle, Parker la n e area. South Austin. Reward. 444- 4507. LO ST ON C A M PU S male boxer/Ger front man Shepherd, hrown. scar right leg. "Sam ’* 461-4337. TO PLA C E A TEXAN C LA SSIFIED AD C A LL 471-5244 M E N T A L P A T IE N T S L I R E It ATTON Protect. Interested In patient ', rights or speaking out? Shari 471-7569; Je ff 476-8617. MONDAY F O U N D ; IR IS H Better. 447-2005. 1411 W. Ben White Y j I OST L E A T H ER cowboy hat with raw- hlda ti* string $25 reward. No ques­ tions. Call 477-2273. C a.m.-lO p.m. D aily Sun. 7 a.m.-10 Sun.-Mon.-Tues. Coupon Special Feed a Friend Free 99c 2 for I Spaghetti - with Meat Balls — 51.49 all day 2100-A G U A D A LU PE 474-2321 JOEY'S • FINE FOODS BOILED SHRIMP (W IT H G I MUOI A LL U C A N PEEL & EAT $299 per person W IT H T H IS C O U P O N DC-8 Stretch Jet TRAFFIC Shoo! Out At The Fantasy Factory Shoot Out At The Fantasy Fac­ tory; Roll R'ght Stones; Eve­ nin g B lu e ; T ra g ic Magic; (Sometimes I Feel So) Unin­ spired. T R A F F IC T?i* Low Spark of \ High Heeled Boys TRAFFIC The Low Spark Of High Heeled Boyi Hidden T r e a s u r e ; The Low Spark Of High-Heeled Boys; Light Up Or Leave Me Alone; Rock-n-Roll S t e w ; Ma n y A Mile To Freedom; Rainmaker. ALBUM Reg. 5.98 N O W O N LY 3 69 8-TRACK & CASSETTE Reg. 6-98 N O W J 9 9 O N LY 4 ' FREE Heartbreaker Wishing Well; Come Together In The Morning; Travellin’ In Style; Heartbreaker, Mu d d y Water; Common Mortal Man; Easy On My Soul; Seven An­ gels. CHARTER FLIGHTS TO EUROPE DALLAS-BRUSSELS-DALLAS M a y 2 8 -August 18 — 83 days — 280 You're on our own in Europe! W e arrange your jet air transportation from Dallas to Brussels and return. You have all the fun of planning! UT students, facul­ ty, staff members, and their immediate families are eligible. W rite (or call) today for free flight info. All air fares are a pro-rata sharp of the total airplane cost and are based %> load factor of the 240 seats allotted to this group. The price per on 10005, load factor of the person Is subject to lAcrea Parson Is subject to increase if ii! of the scuts on (" >pitol Inteniat’onrii it Airways DC-8 Stretch Je t are not filled. Participants must he student - the time they make application for tho charter and still re ta in their -in­ dent status when the charter aircraft departs the LLS A. Members cl the Immediate family may also take advantage of the flight. Beverly Bra'ey Tours Travel P . O. Bo s 7999 Phone 476 T ISI SOI W. 15th — S flite Kin Located in L a v a c a So. — Fre e Pa rkin g REM EM BER TH IS IS A STO RE W ID E SA LE! FEA TU RIN G 199 4.98 LIST 3695.98 LIST REG . 6.98 & 7.98 TA PES 4 99 iscciitii records 2310 GUADALUPE tiQI 478-1647 O PEN M O N D A Y - T H U R SD A Y IO A.M . to 9 P.M. FRI. & SAT. IO A .M . to 12 M ID N IG H T T h e D a ily T e x a n Monday, February 26, IOT P a n IX WATERLOO SOCIAL CLUB IV \ I I HI OO IS ( ll \Nt. I n; I -t. ! com mission crI by the Kindlct Poundaticn of W as! ii rt.‘ii, v ' .r o t prem iered last month. The work w as composed in memory of c >n<-nri pianist Je a n Casadcsua. D raw n from a book of ancient Egyptian and Sum erian verse, " P a le Is This Ck ..I P l J nee uses two tomb songs and five love poems. P in:.st.* n the o ra 'oz lo are faculty artists W illia m Doppmann and Oar • M artin. Under the direction of faculty artist George Frock, i -.re -n Corder, R ich ard Gipson and G erald W a lk e r w ill play in..re I in Kl pnvussion instruments throughout the piece. T ';p r “ ■•’! I'- " n prepared by M o m s J . B each y and conducted by W illiam J Moody, w ill feature Carol Moody and R ic h a rd Con ant as soloists Eldon B la c k w ill narrate. ©penning the first half of the program , the Concert B an d, conducted bv J . Robert Smith, w ill play the m arch, ‘'The B o ys of the Old B rig a d e " by W P a ris C ham bers; "C h o ral and A lle lu ia " by Howard Hams..-',; Vnlzi-r C a m p o re e " from Ch M arinuzzi's “ Suite S ie ilia n a t" and " L a Fiesta M exican *,” a M exican folksong symphUfiy bv Owen Reed. II. The concert is open to the public free of charge. CACTUS MOUNTAIN ( N O C O V E R Tonight at P ■ rJ V f / o J WEST SIDE TAP ROOM 24th and Rio Grand# MIXED DRINKS e J I . ! ’ S T A T IC S T H K A T K U S SPECIAL BARGAIN NIGHT — ADULT ADMISSION $1.00 of Science fiction fans will be pleased with Monday night's premiere the made-for- televisiom movie “ Tile Stranger,’* on channels 4. 6 and 36. Tile story of for a projected television series deals with an astronaut who crashes on another planet and becomes a fugitive from the citizenry. this pilot Starring in this film, which comes on at 8 p.m., are Glenn Corbett. Cameron Mitchell and Lew Ayres. 7 pan. 3, 7. ie Gun sm eke 9, I. 46 Special of the Week tv tonight By E R H L E IB R O C K Texan Staff W rite r In Ken R u ssell’# film , "T h e M usic L o vers,” which was given one of its too-infrequent showings on cam pus Saturday there night, s e q u e n c e is a stirring the depicting of prem iere T ch aik o vsky’s first piano concet to. The scene is th'1 newly-formed Moscow C onservatory; the composer is is a c ­ at companied con­ by servato ry's student orchestra. the pltno and the Tim setting, the depiction of the various ch aracters present and the m usic ct mib'ne in die film to form especially a powerful unique occasion. record of that B u t that was In 1871. and now i P . s only on film. Com­ p o s e s are si ll creating music, Orchestra Gives Superb Rendition arid student orchestras are still perform ing avant-garde remark, “ They did a good job on it.” works. S u n d a y , the U n iv e rsity Sym phony Orchestra ga i v the Ausi in prem iere of assistant professor of music. Gordon Goodwin’s for O r­ c h e stra ." " C O D E S T h c o rch estras Sm ith, w as prr- f o r rn a n c e , condue ted by Law re n c e ex­ in a work which ceptional long and obviously required Tile painstaking to composer w as rehearsal. heard Goodwin’s program notes give some idea of the type of sounds utilized on CODES: “ conversational interplay with tuned mem- v a r i o u s (drums)... The branophones counterpoint at times is so thick that the listener is aware only of the color of the forest (which) thins out periodically so that the details of the froes forming the sound complex can be examined...‘soft’ and ‘loud’ silences...a syncopated cluster of pitches that inch upward...a sort of East Indian drone...a static clatter of noles...” A n y n ewe paper descrip­ is no t h e music tion of substitute for hearing it, just as watching a filmed record of a premiere is no substitute for at lending one in person. Also on the program were e q u a l l y memorable per­ formances of Brahms' Syrn- phonv No. 3 and Mozart's Concert.) in C major for Flute and Harp. Tile high points of the Mozart concerto were the solo cadenzas in each movement, in which the excellent per­ flutist Sarah formance by Westkaemper was outshined by tile brilliant playing of harpist Denise Brooks. as you like it F IL M “ The Asphalt Ju n g le .” a John Huston film , will be shown at 7 and ;n Je s te r Auditorium. J p.m. W ednesday “ The Cocoanuts,” starring the " A V N E T O p e ra T h e a t r e " Laugh In ! 2. 24 T h e R o o k ie * I Cl. 7:30 p.m . I I I t T a k e s a T h ie f 8 p .m . 4. 6. ar, M o v ie : t M a d e fo r T V ) lit. 24 M o v ie : " T h e M u r d e r e r " 5, 7, IO Here's I,ucv " T h e S tra n g e 8 30 P in. l l B e v e r l y H il lb ill ie s 7 Pl I > a is I >a\ 46 I if>!;!>( a 9 p L lfe In ll re Te M a­ 5, 7, 10 O'. Mn;-. n i l Cosh e ai d tip ut! ful M a ­ c h in e ii Movie: 9 IO p m T i C a n I PU : I " T I i o • 10:30 p rn. 13. r>. . h ne. ' a Soul I r, 1 1 :3 0 n a n . JR a I In*p;ht. I I M o vie.; M id n ig h t 0 Mi C n iso 12 M r st r h n i Trow hi lig h t S m a ck s: "Robinson o f C lip p e r Is la n d " ie: "hie ii Ho -b un! ' Marx brothers, will be shown at 7 anil 9 p.m. Tuesday in Jester Auditorium. Casting for a student film by Rick Cox and Chuck Hedges will be held at 7 p.m. Monday and Tuesday in the Motion Picture Center, 2621 Speedway St. Twenty-eight students are needed for the film entitled "'D ie Guns of Rich H alliday.“ ART ( aUfnmia prints, representing artists the California school, remain on view through March 25 at the University Art Museum. from Walter Falk will demonstrate' his style of watercolor miniatures from ll a.m. to I p.m. Tuesday and Thursday in the TexDIRG Gallery, Dubio Mall. MI SIC nm Choral I Ilion will pcrf mn K e v il s E a r l facu lty oratorio Is T his Good P r in c e " in a joint concert, v i ll i Hie Concert Band at 8 p.m. artist “ Pale W ednesday Ballroo m . rn Union M ain Tile Texas Brass Choir, directed by Wayne Barrington, will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Music Building Recital Hall. Country’ Dinner Playhouse. “ Never Too DRAMA Late,” Eddie Bracken, will form ed at 8:30 p.m. through Saturday starring be per- Tuesday the at “ The Night Thoreau Spent bi Ja il” will be performed tor the final week at 8 p.m. Wednesday the Saturday through Zachary’ Scott Theatre Center. at daily horoscope A R I L S ; T a k e r a r e b it sto ck c f y o u r a ss e ts to d a y Y o u m a y fin d so m e­ th in g u se fu l th a t is not Im m e d ia te ly o b v io u s to a c a s u a l o b s e rv e r. T A I R I * * : Y o u r ittiu id e to w a rd *o m * of y o u r friend-, m a y begin to p r o d u c ? e n m ity . E x a m in e so m e re c e n t d isp u te s to see lf yo u a r e n o t r e a lly a t fa u lt. G I . H I N I ; Y o u rn y be e x tr e m e ly c o n ­ rig h t no w . 1 in t m a k e a n y ra *h o r Ir r e v e r s ib le a n d un d ecid e d fused I o \ cs ih a t y o u m a y r e g r e t la te r. I \N< K R • Y o i; could fee! a s tra n g e ire to be (h e c e n te r of it a i f , ir vi>u) lh a tte n tio n today W h y not g iv e if th e o p p o rtu n ity a r is e s ? lr ; L H O ; Y o u had b it t e r keep o|c,sc tab s to d a y. T h e re to on y o u r po cke tb o ok w ill be so nip fine o p p o rtu n itie s t ike a loss if yo u a re no t a le rt. V l R l t O : Y o u should not h a v e dlffu-ul- to d a y In y o u r th a t bodes of ty s o lv in g k n o tty p ro b le m s T h e re ' o rt ti strut- sph ere f a ir ’J p o th e r 'd e ;,rin g m end is a L I B B A Y " U need to be a tte n d in g to r a t h e r u n b a la n c e d d o m e s tic re sto re to a ff a ir s rig h t no"-. T r y b a la n c e and e q u ilib riu m . S C O R P I O : B e c a re fu l w h a t y o u sa> to d a y T h e ta le m a y v e r y w e ll pro- g fee! v in e a bad *t.lng fo r u iio e v e r g ets In its w a y . S A G I T T A R H S : D o n t a !>out o ffe rin g a s s is ta n c e to d a y a t the ex p en se o f y o u r ow n project- Y o u 'll g et a h a n d so m e re tu rn fo r it. C A P R I ! O R N : A little d iff ic u lty w ith a lo ve d one co u ld bt* b lo w n a ll o ut of p ro p o rtio n to d a y b y y o u r In a b il­ ity ca u se s. see I-ook b e fo re yo u leap. A q I M i l l S : D o n 't cot * fu n d a m e n ta l r, jt nf .de to hand th a t yo u h a v e the fin a l sol It tost co uld hat' ti on to e v e r y th in g p °n th a t n e w e v id e n - e " i l l a p j e r to c h a n g e y o u r m ln a T IM I A : Nov. Is the tim e to w a x rd osophn al R e g a rd le s s of the sit tlon. th e re is a lw a y s a b rig h t side. T r y to find It. — M I K L A M R I N I P . J C I F O X T W I N I 675 ? AIRPORT BLVD, P ^5 4-Tx Til Mirthful! MagicalI^^Musical! //-YA WALT DISNEYS ALL:OON FIAT UHL SHO W TO W N U.S.A. T A S r G o ld !. H a w n I R F . " H I r i I H i I I I * I B E E ” " H I I •**. C H I I M H I \ " |ti S*,Ts A V D i>, HIH Ilium I ii I e a u ! I Hint " I o x I C O M M I X I " linn Alda V I l i m X ” T O K i l l B A R B R A . . . , S T R E IS A N D BOX a i n ' t THEATRE 521 E a s t 6th 472-0442 FEA TU RIN G . -HOV. I 11 A N i • I S L l I R Y I R I P A X T I I I I I I - I IN M J I K N X L I I I VIN M L M “ PLAYGROUND SU ZY” “ TOPSY TURVY LO VE” I l l in OO H O N O I ’ I' N S l> M I ) I ' :DO I :OO O N s | M I X ) $1.00 O F F W IT H T H IS AD C TECHNICOLOR ll Own « A>* r ? i i tv s, A dded "RUH, APPALOOSA, RUN” O P F N 4 P . M S « o r d F e a tu r e # a t 4:30. 8:5*. 9:10 OPEN FILM CAST AUDITIONS TO D A Y 7 :0 0 P .M . M OTION PICTURE CENTER 2621 SPEEDWAY A N Y O N E INVITED FFB FEST OF MUSIC — TO N IG H T — featuring RILL 8. BONNIE HEARNE E W IN G STREET TIMES CHARLES JO H N QUARTO JIM RITCHEY LYNN LANGHAM LARRY & KYM 8 P.M. till??? HARVEY WALLBANGERS $095 im a pitcher S A X O N PUB LH. 35 & 38th 454-8! 15 $1.00 'TIL 2:30 FEATURES 2 . 4-6-8- IO NOMINATED FOR 3 ACADEMY AWARDS NOMINATED FOR 3 ACADEMY AWARDS including BEST SCREENPLAY ROBERT SHAW ANNE BANCROFT at lo-d Randolph Chu'cb.'l a, 'lf,dy Jann < SIMON WARD YOUNG WINSTON "^ 4 T R A N S * T E X A S OPEN 1:45 • $1.50 T il 5 P.M. Features 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:15 Non-inat“ d For 4 Academy Award* Max von Sydow Liv Ullmann The Em igrants Techrucdoi*- From Warner Bros ® p o . TPA NS » TFX A 3 M M c: * SHI Wk., iu^ ... M- ©PFN 5:15 • $1.00 Til 6 P.M. Fealur# Time* 5:30-7:45-10:OO MCQUEEN / MacGRAW THE GETAWAY A SAM PECKINPAH FILM • FROM RRST ARTISTS P G ] m g s n I M O m 472-0436 j . j IXCLUsIvl Isl RUN SHOWING « TULES y jfi CENSORED iS t I MHI H \NI) fill PI I S \\ I I I OM K S I I O U S T S - V*> P r i c e W e d n c s d a v ; IN PERSON ON STAGE FROM 4 TO 12 MIDNIGHT IN O U R P E N T H O U S E ALL GIRL REVUE Ice Cold Suds. Etc. IOO0 Air Conditioned FEA T U R IN G TIGER and JO Y N O W O P F N ALL THE LATEST GOODIES. B O O K S - M \ 0 W I N I S N O V l l, l l I S IN T H E R E A D IN G R O O M ADULT b o o k s t o r e R i t z A r t s Tile Best and Biggest Stag Films in Town. XXX Rated 320 E. Sixth, No Lndcr 18 Admitted. 478-0475 Show Changes Every W ed. 16mm Feature "SIX WAYWARD GIRLS" Southwestern Premiere W ant’ to see some new faces? You will see them in this ex­ traordinary good film with a cast of seven lovely young girls! And 16mm Feature "ROMP AROUND" 1st Run Also! Open Daily at 12:00 Noon $1.00 Off Admission Price — Sun., Mon., Tues. With this Add Plus Student LD. Escorted Ladies Free M7ith Membership P I L a K i n g L e a r c d s p l e n d o r r i d s h o c k ! B r a v i i v cont l iv e d ,..m ag n ificen tly ai te d !' I lm e . V in te n t < ;*n b y N A “ I his “I * if' is d ra m a of the highest o rd e r! ' 1' ' ' " " \\ Mat ,i m o vie B ro o k has m a d e !” New \orV Mag*, in* 1 ‘ I his ‘ K in g I c a r’ is triu m p h a n t! Vn epit film ...an heroic film . ■ > > NBC-TV “ I he most n o ta b le ‘ I c a r1 o f o u r tim e . . . D y n a m i c ! ” - A r t h u r Kn ig ht ,S«turd«> Re\i«w “ \ m aster p ie c e !., .a s h a tte r in g d r a m a t ic e x p e r ie n c e . * Ch.rie, iHamlin, I. A. Times “ S h e e r pow c r ! . . . a w o r k o f art n o t to be m is s e d ." k,,;,, Kciu. Boston Globe *‘A film o f real p o e try and p o w e r !” . ,Jck K roll. Newsweek PAUL SCOFIELD . PETER BROOK'S «* * AT AW “AKL " £*f Kllf'S King Lear IRENE WORTH tip A U S T I N , , , , 2 1 3 0 S O C O N G R E S S A V E INTERSTATE THEATRES PARAMOUNT 472-Uil 7L? CONGRESS AVENUE ll OO TIL 2:30 I 40 • 3 20 5:00 6 40 ■ 8:20 - 10:00 r unny, n o b o d y thinks ribout a b o y when th ey say the w o rd " v ir g in " jacqueline B is s e t pf $1.00 T il 2:30 0 IS 4:10-6:05-8:00 9:55 J E R E M I A H J E S H N S D N [ E l m r o b e r t mmrms e s 4 M Ii Ii rn 4 Hi I i i M Mf H n I 4 Held Over lith Week D e l iu e r a n c e A JO HN BO O RM A N FILM . v F'om v. i” Rf os A Warner Communicaiions Company •' pl VMC .-.os ■ Pa n a . s on *■ «sx- R ' M * M M i N O M I N f T F D F O R IO I A C A I ? E L A W A R D S * B E ; S T P I C T U R E * c m m OD U S T I N UZ-5719 A V E ra te X i i . february 26, 1073 T H E D A ILY TEXA N Troell Film Unpretentious Emigrants' Uncompromising Vision po ti 'n of two receding points The condition of the famili es of view, those of the emigrants in the ship s hold heartlessly dream Tri- is the Swedish side— these a: p not immigrants, but “ The Em igrants;” starring la y IJIlm an and Max von Svdow; directed, photographed and edited by -Fan Troell; at the Texas Theater. B y RAX G L O E C K N E R Texan Staff W riter camerawork Ja n Troell's “ Tile Em igrants” feels petty is so honest, one applying l a b e l s of praise or damnation. The direction, rutting a n d not reminiscent of any name-brand precursors. Rather one might say R e ‘‘basics" revealed in films ti like are "Panther Panchali” revealed again here. In sum. the film makes an excellent new case for vicarious existence. are N O T IN G Tit \T Troell directed, edited and shot the vision, one might expect a somewhat narrow quest, of interpretation someone nipping the migrants like a dog con ailing his shei pish tho ravines of history. Happily, this is not the case. the around charges among The realism he presents Is alw ays distant enough for us to fee] about the characters, without sliding self-consciousness over cur heritage (i.e., a “ lusty, brawling film as big as this land of ours” .) into The brilliant compositions and col yr contrasts of his work are toned down and yet exalted by his ruthless cutting; something like Michelangelo knocking away all the marble which is not the statue. This ultimate frugality pays < if with very perceptible rhythms that approximate and sometimes equal heartbeats and seasonal cycles. At times, it really seen ? is trying to create that Troell a cinematic meter. Scenes generally begin in the midst of their action, progress and come to rest as simply and naturally as night falling. TI larger civilization always appear as effects sma I enough to personal circumstances, forcing personal decisions. to be appropriate trends of is from instance One such t h e discovery that these particular emigrants to Am erica will be the section of their first Sweden. This provokes, no* 3 starry-eyed acceptance of the mantle of destiny, but a rather embarrassed exhilaration at tim r bold foolhardiness. is film In short, tied the together by these self-supporting, inexorably progressing couplet:’, wearing away one’s rol0 as viewer as serenely as prevailing winds. O F this S O M E edit n I brilliance is not due to simply respecting tho unities. 'Hie final leavetaki.ng of the hcmestead is super I rn- accomplished by a and those of the older generation staying behind. After a few agonizing seconds, the emigrants’ vi' w pi Ives dom n in I—yes, they really are not retun ing—and the parents become left behind, the memory objects, a disappearing vision worthy of Wyeth. forever T R O E L L ’S images convince one that, like Fred Wiseman, he has enough extra footage backing each shot to make the viewer, if not moon-struck, at least content with the legality of this interpretation, After this is noted, about F' minutes into the film one can lean forward and ap predate the craftsmanship. Precious objects are never displayed; they are glimpsed as though oiip was letting his eyes rest on some favorite possession boff ie hustling off to work. Wood- grains, rural architecture, clean­ and shaven planks, a d u l t s clouds—all trailing presume the practical innocence cf a true whole-earthi mg. children T H E PLO T L IN E is at once as stable as motion and as quiikish as human naivete per­ mits. A cuff to the ear rings writh v i b r a t i o n s Throughout the crossing: it has bo:rome a leit­ motif. AC ROSS FROM H A R D IN NORTH LIVE ZILKE! SUNDAY FREE FOR LA D IES 3 HRS. FREE PARKING IN HARDIN G A R A G E T O N IG H T (3-7:30) $1.25 Pitcher H A PPY HOUR PRICES: 30c Glass (3-7:30) 55c Mixed Drinks present!; T O N IG H T Jester Auditorium 7 and 9 p.m. to the reduction of ruminates on retching p a s s e n g e r s protoplasm. People die because of malnutrition, old age. and time. Emotional instances are not necessarily resolved—they only conclude. Characters are seen as archetype#, rather than slotted as stereotypes. W hy finally it satisfying? is Perhaps because it/s free from the Alger implications we have the provided as consort for emigrants. IT P A Y S N O attention to the {•” : that :! is performing our heritage, and the journey comes down, not to the dream or the epic or even the quest, but to an action as dull and lyrical 3 S water reeking its natural level, or tile formation of birds with which the film concludes. One literate rn doesn’t have to b o appreciate tho symmetry of the V. \\> e • 0 « « B A C K u o o m amusement bar ^ 0 ^ SBM LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY NO COVER C H A R G E 2021 East Riverside Drive at Burton K N O It P R I M S I S ARLO GUTHRIE AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM MARCH 14 - 8:00 P.M. TICKETS: S5WS3 Tickets A vailable: RAYMONDS DRUGS No. I & No. 2 Main Lobby Community Nat l. Bank M O O N H IL L P R O D U C T IO N S TONIGHT ONLY GODARD'S GREATEST HIT KOKE - COUNTR Y WEEK KOKE FM Will Be Broadcasting LIVE from CASTLE CREEK ALL W EEK TONIGHT RAT CREEK MILTON CARROLL WHITEFIELD 4 SPECIAL GUEST TUESDAY MICHAEL MORPHY «nd Ms Cosmic Symphony A L V IN C R O W S & THE PLEASAN T VALLEY BO YS WED. - SAT. Such acts as Freda & The Firedogs, Greazy Wheels, Ewing St. Times, etc. O N LY LOO TONIGHT Jack Smith’s FLAMING CREATURES 963) F L A M IN G C R E A T U R E S Is that rare modern work of arf; It Is about joy and Innocence, lo be sure this |Oyousness, this in­ nocence is composed out of themes which are — by ordinary standards ~~ perverse, decadent, at the least highly theatrical and artificial. But this, I think, is precisely how the film comes by its beauty and modernity . . F L A M IN G C R E A T U R E S is a brilliant spoof on sex and at the same time full of the lyri­ cism of erotic impulse . . . . •— Susan Sontag Plus short: LO T IN S O D O M (1933) by J . S. W atson and Melville W e b e r 75' M O N E Y S A V I N O S E A S O N T IC K E T S A L S O A V A LABLE A f THE BOX O F F I C E . w i f PIZZA HUTS SPEC — W I T M E N U For raster Service— Phone Ahead ALLOW 20 MINUTES DINE IN 8 CARRY OUT PIHA HUTS Of AUSTIN 8 I I Guadalupe 476-0631 6411 Burnet Rd 454-4141 1001 Reinli 454-2477 2100 Riverside 441-0195 1212 S. Lamar 441-0829 WIP c A V J IPl i p T H E INZ/ \ H UTS OF A l S T IX I ITEM Cheese Sausage Pepperoni Beef Black Olive Bell Pepper Onion Mushroom Anchovy Supreme >/2 Ch. «/2 Sau. Can. Bacon Bacon Bits Jalapeno Green Chili Shrimp Added BEER—MILK— POP PIERROT LE FOH with JEAN-PAUL BELMONDO ANNA KARINA ITC A MAST! RPlECr. ONE OF THE MONUMENTAL FILMS OL C FR TIME I Hi DI I IMTIX I ROMANCE OF OI R DI CADI GODARD EVOKES DEVASTATING EMOTION/' (Gent Youngblood — lot Angela Fret Press) AX HIMSK AI AND HEAT TI! FL. BKI VT HI. I .SS STN'I F AD X F N !! RI A SI Pi RH COMIC! T F RN ABO LT LOVE AND REI RAINS IN THI HI AD ' (Renata Adlet — - Sew York Times) JEA N Ll C GODARD IS A ITI XI MAKI R XX ITH A RARE A BILITY TO Cd T I 11 ROI OH TODAY S TOI TH, THOR OUGH LY ( ONTi MPQRARY (At;rut- Knight — S •turd-i) Renew) CO LO R m ENGLISH TITLES BATTS 7 and 9:15 75* PRESENTED BY CINE-CLUB FRANCAIS A Se r v ic e o f The D e p a r t m e n t o f French a n d It a li a n THE DAILY TEXAN Monday, February 26, 1973 Page 13 End of an A m e r ic a n D r e a m for America A group of Swedes bound pause to bury one of the members of their group is Jan Trocll s The Emigrants,” which which has been nominated for four Academ y Awards. Brass Choir Plans Concert The Texas Brass Choir, a student ensemble made ti of trumpets, horns, trornb; ors and tuba, will perform I > > concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday in die Music Building Recital 1; • in a The choir will open the concert with J.S . Bach’s ” 0 Josh Christ, Mein Cohens Licht.” T h e choir w ill also pci form transcriptions of Bach, Prelude ■ m I Fugue in A Minor, and B e e t h o v e n , Allegretto from Symphony No. 7. The program also w ill include soler lions from “ King A rthur" by Henry Purcell, I d d K e n n e d y P r e s e n t i J TUESDAY - SATURDAY W H I T F I E L D Lunches Served Daily I 1:30-3 Dinner 5-10 p.m. Daily 441 3352 i ( o v e r F o r R e O d e n t * u p>] >.ri T u p * Sornrrj; • Steaks • Seafood Sandwiches Mixed Drinks JOSE GRECO AND NANA LORCA with the JOSE GRECO COMPANY of SPANISH DANCERS MUSICIANS AND SINGERS 8 PM M O N . M AR. 5 AUSTIN S MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM All seats reserved $3.50 $4.50 $5.50 TICKETS ON SALE NOW S C A R B R O U G H S D O W N T O W N & H I G H L A N D M A L L S E A R S I N H A N C O C K C E N T E R • U N I V E R S I T Y C O O P TICKET OFFICE 6615 N. LAMAR iAKikktSKAJHL e m u PH. 454-3681 FOR TICKET INFORMATION The tush scene alone is worth the price of admission. * - 'Y f '' ~r ~ "v j^ T h a t p a rt of th o a n a to m y c o v e re d b y t h e sta m p . O O O O O Q I A Commemorative Stamp v> ooono RUTH GEORGE SEGAL GORDON "Wlter.cs P«p p a?” Shows 2-4-6-8-10 A D V A N C E T IC K ETS O N S A LE AFTER 2:00 P.M. $I The M a r* Brothers Monkey B usiness :45 Mon. - Thurs. I $t UT Polite Slate Bicycle Auction U niversity polio* will hold tho last of two bicycle a.lotions at 2 p m Tuesday >n th* noPthu ost side of Memorial Stadium. in to Horn I! Th* 62 bikes to b* sold range one .speed fnom mod*is. All w w * *i?h«*r aban* donoet bv th mr owners or picked up as s’ W illiam \ police p,it Money w ill bo ; motors blk* so ; t’-at t v ■ amount r auction ■ proc r ‘•aba 11 parti. in I un us! cha I ’n th o r tiros to 90 take? po ire aurt! mina New Meter Rate Up IOO Percent Church Offers Experience' Members Participate in Encounter Groups B y FOF D A C Y FT Texan Staff W riter to It ’s hard imagine anyone v e n d i n g self-awareness, but Saturday, members of the First Unitarian Church of Austin were selling exactly that. A STO registration fee entitled the participant to join one three- ses-ion encounter group and one t w e s e s . s i o n experiential art group. About 30 persons attended tics first one-day "institute.” a* til* 4 4 T ti K C E L E B R A T IO N of Self." institute was called, was meant to give par­ ticipants what Chairwoman Diana La ham rails "a nire experience with some nm\ things that eould start a growth process within the person." The encounter groups included transactional analysis, a married couples group, contract setting and new modes of life and love. led hr’ experienced TI cy " ere professional counselors. in an analysis, said Transactional Mike Pankewich, the gourmet rook for Hie institute, is "dealing intelligent with people w ay ." In transactional analysis the Individual is separated into three entities—the child, the adult and to parent —corresponding Hic Sigmund Freud's id, ego and superego. T U E P U R P O S E of the group is to I iv "to understand those t’.dngs and the types of attitudes pm pie have toward one another," Pankewich said. T e married couples group in- on concentrated human in a different a re a - terartion exploring the potential for growth in their marriages. Also dealing with marriage, hut a hit more provocative, were the "new modes of life and love" groups, which explored the values of such concepts as cohabitation. like individual would Contract-setting dealt with how to the change. Role-playing and other forms of behavioral therapy were employed the person to make aware of how he or she could change. The other type of group, ex­ periential art groups, dealt with abstract expression that was intended to make the individual more ay va re of what was within him. In one of these groups, after in dance-motion and engaging breathing exercises, the par­ ticipants were asked to mold a lump of clay with eyes closed and the then completed represented each person. to discuss how figures The one-day experience went so P I N O C C H I O l l 604 W E S T 29T H ST A U S T I N , TEX. (i Block Vest of Guadalupe S t . ) ^ * 10 * * * * * * * * ^ H O T - F R E E | / O W S T n e u v E H Y 477-9921 well that Ms. Latham is planning to hold another “ institute" soon. "In a sense, I suppose what we’re selling you is yourself, or at least, a mature, not-too-way- to some opportunity and out explore yourself artistic media." Ms. Latham explained. "Yo u do these things together and you’ve got something nice occuring." Avoid Charter Risks! ew eSTUDENT FLIGHTS R O U N D T R IP from U .S. on S C H E D U L E D A IR L IN E S I IM, .ll \ K i Chi. Tax) $183/200* V IA K L M IC E L A N D IC from N ew York or on A ir Bahama from Nassau 'S t u d e n t fares lo ag e 30/Youth fares to ag e 23. A l! tares Su b ject to Govt. approve1. C A L L T H E E X P E R T S 478-9343 Harwood TRAVEL 2428 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TEXAS Th pun b 'c y d r i will b p solo' Tuesday afternoon at an auction to be held by U Diversity police on the northwest v d ' o t M e m o r ia l S t a d iu m , The 62 two-wheelers ’ iii b e so ld fo r a m inim - G oin g , Going, G o n e um $1 each and al! bids must in multiples of $ I This is the second biles auction by U n iver­ sity police, who last month sold 47 abandoned, stolen or otherwise unclaimed bikes. - T< v n S M K Photo by h SKI N ss im,s. Special Education Talk Set •se one of IJ lea i ic ation’s leading >r envoi! na fly will sp it IO a rn. Tuesday Mi "A f will Ic re I- Self on r duration i.gs,*’ is I -ur,* ms •i inn en!. and open that dogy at the aii1 Ii O’- of several problems of emotions]iv disturbed children. He was founder, and for 12 years director, of the Fresh Air Camp at die University of Michigan. The camp is a training center for persons working with disturbed children. On Monday, Mors* will hold a consultation with psychologists and diagnostic experts of the Austin tho Independent discussion include new concepts in the education cf disturbed children and the conflicts they create in classrooms. School District. Topics of of M DOE5 YOUR LAST NAME START WITH " B " , "G",nK " , o r " L " If .n thru yon -in- rntitlpii to buy our Mp\ii an I unit Huffot, which nt flinch I* ' I if), rcKlilnrl.i St 75, l o f t H N I X 7 "ii -.mil our cvcnint- I hi t Ic* t . which is I OH U N I X -the. So o it nil Ihi'> week tor ONE-HALF PRICE I OPFER G O O D PEB. 23 T H R O U G H M A RC H MUST S H O W Y O U R STUDENT O R STAFF ID . OFFER G O O D FOR IN D IV ID UA L O N LY Mi (use isiSuCasci 504 E. 5th St. 2330 N O R T H L O O P 476-4841 465-5449 E A R N C A SH W EEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed NOW ACCEPTING MALE & FEMALE DONORS C A S H B O N U S P R O G R A M S F O R R E P E A T D O N O R S Austin Blood Components, Inc. R E S T A U R A N T S O P E N : 8 - 3 p.m. Tues., Thur., Fri. & Sat. 12:00 N O O N - 7 p.m. W e d . MARK and MURRAY'S BIRTHDAY M o th e r E a rth a t FREE BEER — I KEG at 8:00 FREE ADMISSION TEQUILA SPECIAL 50c SHOT!! BOOGIE 'TIL YOUR PANTS DROP! with "ELIJAH" our favo rite PA R T Y TON ITE! W alen This Ad Each Week For Changa of twitiall 409 W . 6TH 477-3735 loth & Lam ar 477-3783 ■ ’'A • *• S SILLS Town and Country DAVID CROSBY lf I Could Only Remember M y Name $ I 2Mmi BILLIE HOLIDAY Her Last I lye Recording GRAHAM NASH JOHN MAYALL Songs For Beginners Back To The Roots and many more BUT HURRY QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED BEATLES » Introducing the MELANIE -■ Leftover Wine and many more BUT HURRY QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED ; y W H T Movin Toward H appineii . ^ ' I v, iv v . /LY ... ' i ’.V.. '-rn mf, * L V J 3 •■■■ ENTIRE STOCK OF ALBUMS ON SALE" SALE I 2.88 3.88 6.88 LIST 4.98 5.98 9.98 THREE DAYS OHLY FEB. 26 MON. TUES. WED. 28 27 Page 14 Monday, February 26, ID -3 T h e Da il y T e x a s RECORD TOWN DOBIE CENTER OPEN 10-MIDNIGHT MON. - SAT. 2021 Guadalupe 478-6119 FREE PARKING IN THE COVERED DOBIE GARAGE THREE DAYS ONLY FEB. 26 MON. TUES. WED. 28 27 PLUS ENTIRE STOCK OF TAPES ON SALE LIST 6.98 7.98 9.98 SALE 4.88 5.88 7.88