T h e Da il y T e x a n S tu de n t Vol. 74, No. 177 T en C en is N ew spaper a t The U ni ver si t y of Texas at A u s t i n A u stin, T e x a s, M on d ay , A p r il 7, 1975 Sixteen P a g e s 471-4591 UT Precincts Top in Austin Vote Turnout By M A R Y W ALSH T e xan S ta ff W riter An e stim a te d 15.000 stu d e n ts turned out for the City Council electio n S a tu r­ day. with a voter p e rc e n ta g e h igh er than the city w ide a v e r a g e . A ccording to o ffic ia l election re su lts. 30.6 p ercen t of the c ity ’ s re g iste re d v o te rs p a rtic ip a te d in the election while an a v e r a g e of 13 stu d en t b oxes showed a turnout o f 35.6 p e rce n t. V ictoriou s m a y o ra l c an d id a te J e f f F rie d m an te rm e d the stu d ent vote ' fan ­ t a s t ic ” and said ‘ ‘ it lent sig n ifican tly to the election of s e v e r a l good c a n d id a te s to the new council. S tu d e n t p r e c in c t c h a ir m a n an d m e m b e r of th e C o a litio n fo r a P r o g r e s siv e A ustin (C P A ), D avid B u tts said . They a re the b est vote to ta ls I'v e seen since the M ay. 1972. p r im a rie s when the stu d e n ts w ere fir s t re g iste re d and (F r a n c e s ) F a re n th o ld w as running for g o v e rn o r /' Friedmans take victory stroll, while Dryden talks with sympathetic supporters. Friedman Sweeps M a y o r's Race ^ By B A R R Y B O E SC H and M A R Y W ALSH T exan S ta ff W riters "T h e people of Austin have taken the c it y ,” M ay o r-elect J e f f F rie d m a n a n ­ nounced to a ju b ilan t throng of su p ­ p o rte rs a t his c a m p a ig n h e a d q u a rte rs S a tu rd a y night A record 72.623 Austinites g a v e F rie d ­ m an 54.5 p e rce n t of the vote o v e r his o p ­ ponent D r. Bud D ry d e n ’s 44 3 percen t F R IE D M A N e sta b lish e d an e a r ly lead a s the re tu rn s c a m e in, which D ryden n ever o v e r c a m e At one point, a fte r a s e r ie s of student and m in ority b oxes c a m e in, F rie d m a n h ad m o re than 57 p ercen t of the vote. Dryden re ce iv e d a lm o st two-to-one supp ort in N orth w est A ustin, w here he liv e s, portion s of N orth A ustin and s c a tte re d a r e a s of South Austin. F rie d m an , p r e d icta b ly , did w ell in s tu ­ dent b o x e s, often cap tu rin g 90 p ercen t of the vote He a ls o re ce iv e d h eavy support from E a s t Austin He outpolled Dryden in p ortion s of N o rth east Austin. The m a y o r-e le c t, who b egan h is coun­ cil c a r e e r four y e a r s a g o a s the so lita ry lib e ral v o ice , told his su p p o rte rs he will "w o rk for the citize n s and not for the co n cre te When a sk e d ab ou t h is fu tu re plans D ryden sa id . ‘ i ll continue to p r a c tic e m ed icin e and do m y c iv ic d u tie s when c a lle d upon T H E E L E C T I O N r e s u l t s sh o w e d F rie d m a n is " t h e p e o p le ’s choice, D ryden sa id I hope this (th e e le ctio n ) d oes not m e a n t h a t A u s t in wi l l n o t b e a p r o g r e ssiv e , good p lace to liv e .’ D ryden said . P ro m isin g to d istrib u te city s e r v ic e s " f a ir ly , e q u ally , and p r o p e rly .’ F r ie d ­ m an sa id , ‘‘W e’ re going to h ave a good co m m u n ity .’ He s a id he won “ not b e c a u se of a sp e c ia l in terest but b e c a u se of an in­ te r e st in Austin " J e f f F rie d m a n didn t win tonight. J e f f F r ie d m a n w a s n e v e r runnin g. D e m o c ra tic go vern m en t run by and for the citizen ry w as the v ic to r .” F rie d m an said . T h e new c o u n c il’s fir st few m onths w ill b e a tim e fo r “ re fle c tio n and e d u c atio n ” on the w o rk in gs of the city F rie d m a n said The fir s t thing th at w e’re going to do on the council is h ave c o m p le te b riefin g s an d t ot a l e d u c a t i o n by all c i t y d e p a rtm e n ts so th at when the budget h ea rin g s c o m e up. th is coun cil, at le a st, will be ab le to cope with the th ou san d s of m in or d e t a ils ,” F r ie d m a n said C ity M an ag er D an D avidson will c o o r­ d in ate the new c o u n c il’s orien tation p r o g r a m s. F r ie d m a n added “ I ’M LO O K IN G fo rw ard to se rv in g with the new m a y o r .” D avidson sa id . C allin g F r ie d m a n 's idea " a good o n e .” D avid son said . "T h e opportunity to brief the new council is a g r e a t one I think it w ill so lv e m an y p ro b le m s in a d v a n c e .” 4 Council Seats Decided; Runoff Set for Places 1, 5 A u stin ites w ill h ave a lib e ral m a jo rity on City Council tor at least a month and p e rh a p s two y e a r s , a s a resu lt of S a tu r ­ d a y ’s election . In P la c e 3, D r. E m m a Lou Linn won both the s p e c ia l electio n runoff and the re g u la r electio n s e a t o v e r opponent T o m ­ m y L a w le ss B etty H im m elb lau L ow ell L e b e rm an n and Jim m y Sn ell also won th eir r e s p e c ­ tive r a c e s with m ore than 50 percen t of the vote P L A C E S I AND 5 w ere throw n into runoffs. M a rg re t H ofm ann tra ile d B ob G ray in P la c e I In P la c e 5 Jo h n T revin o led J a y Jo h n son a fte r the fin al count M arcel R och a said la te S a tu rd a y night he would ‘ ‘u rg e the ch ican o com m u n ity to su pp ort M a rg re t H o fm an n ” in the M ay 3 runoff with G ra y 4k “ I doubt sh e ll e v e r re a lly u n d erstan d the ch ican o co m m u n ity like I do. but on the o th e r hand, I doubt Bob G ray w ill e v er u n d erstan d any se g m e n t of the Austin c o m m u n ity ,” R och a concluded. G ray said S a tu rd a y night he would con ­ tinue a “ low to n e ” c a m p a ig n , s tr e ssin g his e x p e rie n c e a s the key d iffe re n c e betw een h im se lf and H ofm ann Hofm ann s a id Sun day sh e w as op­ t im is t ic " about the ru n off but said she rtoday Humid... M o n d a y w ill be humid wi th t e m p e r a t u r e s reaching the low 70s a n d a 50 p e r c e n t p r o b a b ilit y of rain. w a sn ’t su rp rise d R och a en d o rse d her. "W e had an u n d erstan d in g all along, and I w ould h ave done the s a m e thing if he had been in the runoff. We g e t along v e ry w e ll.“ H ofm ann said P l a c e 2 C o u n c i l worn a n e l e ct H im m elb lau who re c e iv e d 51 percen t of the vote s a id h er p rio ritie s in o ffic e w ill d e al with "p e o p le s e r v ic e s ” U N IV E R S IT Y student p re cin c ts went to S tu art Henry but not a s h eavily a s p r o g r e ss iv e s e x p e c ted Im p o rta n t b oxes show ed 65 percen t of stu d e n ts supp ortin g H enry and 30 pe rce n t fo r H im m elb lau H im m e lb la u w ill r e s ig n a s v ic e c h a irm a n of the City P lan n in g C o m m is­ sion She p lan s to w ork for the ce n ­ traliza tio n of m e d ic al and so c ia l se r v ic e s in com m un ity a r e a s . LIN N W ILL be the lib e r a l sw in g vote a ft e r she tak e s o ffic e T h u rsd ay She handily d e fe a te d L a w le ss a fte r leading in the re tu rn s the e n tire evening L a w le ss c ap tu re d so m e N orth w est Austin b o x e s, but Linn show ed stren gth in all oth er se c tio n s of the city Linn c a p ­ tured 54 71 percen t in the re g u la r e le c ­ tion to L a w le s s ’ 38 66 p ercen t In the sp e c ia l ru noff. Linn won 58.68 percen t She a ttrib u te d her win to the stron g v o ter turnout in stu d ent p r e c in c ts and sa id she could h av e won the sp e c ia l clee tion without a ru noff, but only 8 or 9 p er­ cen t of the stu d e n ts voted. In the P la c e 4 r a c e , L e b e rm a n n overw h elm in gly won re-election over U n iversity c o u n se lo r S a n d ra W einstock. L eb erm an n . the only incum bent se e k ­ ing re-election, re c e iv e d m ore than 60 p e rce n t of the vo te , w hile W einstock ga th e re d sligh tly m o re than 36 percent L e b e r m a n n r e c e iv e d m o r e c ity w id e v o te s. 42,862 than an y o th e r c an d id a te in the en tire election In P la c e 5 m in or c a n d id a te s Paul S p r a g e n s and L e i P u r c e ll H a w k in s dep rived eith er m a jo r c a n d id a te of a m a jo rity and th rew the ra ce into a runoff. S a le s m a n and c o m m u n ity w o rk e r T revin o held a 4 o r 5 p e r c e n ta g e point lead ov er fo rm e r C oun cilm an J a y Jo h n ­ son m ost of the night h overing ju s t over 50 percent It a p p e a r e d T revin o m ight win the con test ou trigh t but a s m ore p re cin c ts rep orted T r e v in o ’s p e rce n ta g e dipped below 50. JO H N SO N had s a id m in u te s e a r lie r he did not w ish the r a c e to go into a runoff b e ca u se "p e o p le a r e tired of h earin g the h u lla b a lo o a b o u t p r o g r a m s in th e m e d ia .” T revino said his people w ere p h y sic a l­ ly and p sy ch o lo g ically p re p are d for a runoff and thought he had a " g r e a t ” ch an ce of w inning. O u tstrippin g h is c o n se rv a tiv e oppo­ nent by a two-to-one m a rg in Sn ell c a p ­ tured the P la c e 6 council seat w hich he won in the M arch 8 sp e c ia l election. SN ELL, who in the special election b arely avoided fac in g a runoff with h is opponent Ben Blond, won with 57 77 p e r ­ cent Blond c a r rie d 31.94 percent Snell took his a n tic lim a c tic v icto ry calmly, say in g he had not been too w orried, but w a s nevertheless happy that it’s ov er with now we c a n s ta r t lac in g the issu e s th at a r e in front of us a s council m e m b e rs in ste ad of a s c a n ­ d id a te s .” The city s t a f f b rie fin g s a lso will help the council " d e c id e w hat it w an ts to do for the future, " D avidson sa id A fter h is v icto ry speech . F r ie d m a n receiv ed a jo in t phone c all from U .S . Sen. L loy d B e n tse n . D -T e x as, and U .S . R ep J a k e P i c k l e . D - A u s t i n in W ashington, w ish ing him the b e st of luck in his new o ffic e C ouncilm an Bob B in der, often F r ie d ­ m a n 's only a lly on council issu e s, e x ­ p re sse d h ap p in e ss at F rie d m a n s e l e c ­ tion an d sa id . “ The people h ave won T H E NEW C O U N C IL will be “ m uch m ore lib e ral and p r o g r e s s iv e .” with p ro p o sa ls th at h ave been d e fe a te d bein g en acted . B in d er said He c h a ra c te riz e d the rest of the p r e ­ sent co u n cil’s term a s a " g r a c e f u l, dignified exit for th ose le a v in g ,' w ith probably no c o n tro v e rsia l is su e s com in g up The new coun cil ta k e s o ffic e M ay 15. Low ell L e b e rm an n . the only in c u m ­ bent retu rn in g to the sa m e coun cil s e a t , s a id he an d F r ie d m a n “ h a v e o u r d iffe re n c e s, but we w ill w ork to ge th e r CPA . a group fo rm e d to support lib eral council c a n d id a te s, had 600 vo lu n teers w o rk in g in s t u d e n t p r e c i n c t s an d stim u la te d m uch of the voter turnout V o lu n te e rs c a n v a s s e d e v e ry stu d e n t precin ct tw ice S a tu rd a y , and the e ffo rt w orked, a s re fle c te d by th e se vote to ta ls,” B u tts sa id . Of the lib eral c an d id a te s. F r ie d m a n . with an 83.2 p e rce n t a v e r a g e , re c e iv e d the h igh est m a jo r ity of stud en t v o tes. P la c e I ru noff c an d id a te M a rg re t H of­ m ann re c e iv e d 60.5 p ercen t w hile h er lib e ral opponent M a rc e l R och a won 20.6 percen t. The high p e r c e n ta g e c o lle cte d by the m a y o r-e le c t sh o w s th at the an ta g o n ism of a c e rta in few stu d ent le a d e r s a g a in st F r ie d m a n is ob viou sly p e r so n a l.’ ’ C P A . m e m b e r Ste v e G utow said S a n d ra W einstock. the lo se r in P la c e 4. won 70.2 percen t of the stu d en t vote while e n v iro n m e n talist S tu a rt H enry, who w a s edged out of P la c e 2. m a n a g e d to se c u re 65.7 percen t P la c e 2 w inner B etty H im m elb lau won 28.3 p e rce n t ap p ro v al from the stu d en ts while council incum bent L ow ell L eberm ann polled 27.6 p ercen t. H im m elb lau s in road s into the u su ally lib e r a l stu d e n t v o te in d ic a te th a t th ere s a re a l w o m en ’s c o n sc io u sn e ss on c a m p u s ” and prob ab ly con tribu ted to her sc an t l l percen t m a rg in of outrigh t victory , G utow said . H ad the stu d e n ts voted b e tte r for Henry we m igh t h ave gotten him into a runoff a g a in s t H im m elb lau . B u tts said Although C P A had orig in ally scheduled a "m u c h n eeded re st fo r S u n d a y , Gutow vow ed the o rg an iza tio n w ill sta y togeth er "th rough the r u n o f f ’ e le ctio n s It s too im portan t for us to fo rg e t it. We need one m o re c o u n cilp e rso n or evervth in g that w e ’ve d re a m e d of won t be worth a n y th in g ," G utow said . If we can get fiv e s e a t s (on the coun­ cil i we w ill have a c le a r m a jo r ity . Then we can m a k e so m e co n cre te c h a n g e s in c ity hall. ’ B u tts said I don t know if our e ffo r t (fo r the ru n o ff) can be a s intense a s it w a s this la s t w eek, m ostly b e c a u se of m on ey and tim e fa c to r s .” G utow a d m itted . Reds Hit Saigon Suburbs SA IG O N ( C P I ) — V iet Cong gu nners firin g fro m a s c lo s e a s eigh t m ile s o u t­ sid e the ce n te r o f Saig o n hit the c a p it a l’s su b u rb s e arly M onday in the fir s t sh e ll­ ing of the Saig o n a r e a in the C om ­ m u n ists' c u rren t o fffe n siv e F a r to the n o r t h e a s t . S ou th V ie t­ n a m e se troop s strik in g b ack re o ccu p ie d the c o a s ta l city of N ha T ra n g Sunday. O th er g o v ern m en t m ilita ry un its and po lice b egan b oard in g re fu g e e sh ip s and killing su sp e c te d C om m u n ist a g e n ts on the sp ot, an A m erican w itn e ss said The South V ie tn a m e se m ilita ry c o m ­ m and sa id the C o m m u n ists h it Nha B e , (R elated Story, P ho to, P a g e 3.) six m ile s so u th e a st o f the c e n te r of Saigon , with r e c o ille s s rifle and m o r ta r fire , w'hich h as a m a x im u m ran ge of about twTo m ile s. S p o k e sm e n s a id s ix p e r so n s w e re w ounded in the tw o-hour a tta c k which in­ volved ab out 60 rounds o f a r tille ry At the sa m e tim e. fou r U .S. h elicop ter c a r r i e r s c a p a b le of e v a c u a tin g a ll A m e ric an s fro m South V ietn am in tw o w av e s stood by o ff the V ie tn a m e se c o a st so u th e a st of the c a p ita l. The four huge sh ip s n o rm ally c a r ry a t o t a l o f 8 .0 0 0 c o m b a t - r e a d y U .S . M arin es. Sunday’s shelling of Nha B e. site of South V ie tn am ’s la r g e s t oil s to ra g e fa c ility , w as the fir s t a tta c k on the c a p ita l a r e a sin c e the beginn ing of the curren t North V ie tn a m e se and V ie tc o n g d riv e M arch IO. C o n t e s t a n t s Terri M a b r y a n d Larry Br is to w " g e t it o n " a t the Silve r S p u r D a n c e M a r a t h o n for the M a r c h of D i m e s ^ O f the I 8 c o u p le s w h o st ar te d t h e m a r a t h o n Fri da y, I 3 d a n c e d to t h e e n d o f t he confest earl y S u n d a y ra is in g m o r e t h a n $ 2 1 , 0 0 0 for t h e c h a r it y c r u s a d e . G a r y M a y a n d C a n d y W e l ls w o n t h e a n n u a l e v e n t Eckhardt Sponsors Grand Jury Reform Bv K AREN HASTINGS Texan Staff W riter The duty of protecting civil rights has rested too long on the shoulders of the court — it s time Congress reasserted its legislative power. I S. Rep Bob E c k h a rd t, DHouston. said Saturday at an American c iv il Liberties I nion fund raising luncheon. Eckhardt is cosponsoring HR-2986 — the Grand Jury Reform Act of 1975 — which he said w ill, in e f f e c t . "protect the constitutional rights and liberties of i' vi.ii; ii-* 'M til*1;; ! I'! ,f! I j. ll el [p.. A;! “I.L- I i'i ii; m •••ut Oto'tw V ’t Individual Instruction All m aterials provided Afternoon, Evening & Weekend sessions THE 5TH STREET STUDIO 119 E. 5th NOW O FFE R IN G CUSTOM MADE SANDALS i I i r t, j I . by Ed Stein For F u r th e r Det ails I liiiiiil ilit,:.,.in Call 474-13H4 Columbia Amorph* H d C il^ o v |'\iWurv^ O n April I Blit. The Daily T e x a n is p l y i n g a no t i n n f a mi l i a r t u n e . I n s e r t e d i n t o lite J exa n will he a p u b l i e a t i o n n a m e d O K UC)I R S F ! l l - t al on! lies in ii- l o n g e v i t y . T h e i ns e r t is a e n u r s e se l ec t or , d e s c r i b i n g t h e l op I JKK! I . I . co u r s es . Si n c e ii is be i ng p u b l i s h e d just p r e v i o u s in p r e - r e g i st r a t i o n , it will be r e f e r r e d lo agai n a n d a g ai n . It will be a p l a n n e r and a director. U t e press r u n of HT,MIO will be i n c r e a s e d bv » . 0 0 0 for O K L O I RSF l o be d i s t r i b u t e d m tlif« s u m iller. S o u n d s ni ce . 1' Blay it.'* Nor S h o w n TSP Interns are n o w m a k in g sales calls, lf you don't get one - give us a call at 471-1865 A no the r publication of Texas S tud e n t Publications Page 2 M onday, A pril 7, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN I pi J ." -! • lit!#.« Ii Iii! I April 14, Brom eliads: An introduction. Panel: R. L. Frasier, past president of the Austin Brom eliad Society and the Austin Orchid Society, and Duncan Peterson, past president of the Austin Bromeliad Society and past president of the Southwest Brom eliad Guild. Both Mr. Frasier and Mr. Peterson have spent months in Mexico, the home of the bromeliad, gathering specimens for their collections. They will discuss why the bromeliad is one of the easiest plants to care for, addressing them selves to the care, varieties, suitability and versatility. I'! 11 f t i ' l l ,;fc r : I ii ! l l I S ! ' : iCciiiili’i iii I I l l l i i S l liHF;!!,!'! V V * ‘ : • ; j-jj' ii | l| :!f:fl!: L II {Match intr K H t c K e r c r V * Wilderness/Whitewater Supply 2908 San Gabriel 476-3717 Jacobsen To Face Cross-Examination Reds Strike Phnom Penh Circular Attack Fails to Halt Food Lift PHNOM PE N H (U P I) - Hebei C om ­ m u n ist fo rc e s Sunday a tta c k e d th is besieged cap ital from all sides and ra in ­ ed rockets on its a irp o rt in a n o th er a tte m p t to sev er the city 's lone re m a in ­ ing supply link to the o utside world The governm ent also learn ed its d efeat Tuesday a t N eak Luong, 31 m iles down th e C o m m u n is t-c o n tro lle d M ek o n g R iver, cost it 5.000 troops and th eir co m ­ m ander. G en Lim S isaat — all cap tu red bv the rebels Rebel troops en tren ch ed five m iles from the city sent m o re ro ck ets th u n d e r­ ing into Pochentong A irport and lau n ch ­ ed sim u ltan eo u s a ssa u lts on v irtu ally all sides of the c a p ita l’s defense p e rim e ter, field re p o rts said. BUT T H E ROCKET ATTACK still failed to stop the A m erican a irlift w hich has becom e Phnom P e n h 's only w ay to bring in supplies. At lea st tw o ot the I S planes left w ith som e U.S. E m b assy per- Mutinous South Viets Seize U.S. Vessels VUNG TUA. South V ietnam (A P >— M utinous South V ietn am ese arm y of­ ficers and m en seized control of a t lea st tw o U.S. carg o ships bound for a refugee cam p on a tiny, isolated island and fo rc­ ed the v essels back to th is p ort n ear Saigon, a u th o rities said Sunday. Col. Vu Duy Tao, the m ay o r of Vung Tau and co m m an d er of th e m ilitary dis­ tr ic t 40 m iles east of Saigon, said the soldiers did not w ant to land at Phu Quoc island in the Gulf of Siam b ecause they would be cu t off from th e ir fam ilies. “ E V E R Y B O D Y WAS expecting to go hom e to tell th eir fam ilies how they are. and they w ere sen t instead to Phu Q uoc,” he said Tao said high ranking m ilitary o fficers aboard the jam m ed refu g ee ships had rem inded the cap ta in s th e ir m en w ere arm ed and did not w ant to land a t Phu Quoc. 180 m iles south w est of Saigon and clo ser to C am bodia than to th e V iet­ nam ese m ainland TAO SAID the two A m erican ships forced back over the w eekend w ere the U S S. G reenville V ictory, a U S N avy ship with a civilian crew , and the S S. P io n e e r C o n t e n d e r , a c h a r t e r e d m erch an t m arin e vessel He said the cap ta in s and crew s of th e A m erican ships w ere not atta c k e d The G reenville V ictory la te r continued on to N ew port n e a r Saigon Tao said he expected th e P io n e e r C ontender and oth er ships he did not n am e to drop anchor off Vung T au with at le ast 10.000 soldiers and re fu g ees dem anding to dis em b ark a fte r days aboard w ithout su f­ ficient food o r w ater. He said. how ever. he d idn’t have enough food, w a te r or sh e lte r for anv new a rriv a ls TAO SAID 50.000 refu g ees alread y had set up cam p s around Vung Tau. a re so rt city. About 350.000 o th e rs had com e through the town sin ce M arch 20 and had fanned out to the hom es of fam ily and friends in th e south, he said. Seven ships c a rry in g m ore than 20.000 people a re still w aiting to unload a t Phu Quoc, officials said news capsules sonnel. including C am bodian w orkers. The e m b assy — the lone d iplom atic m ission still o p eratin g in P hnom Penh w as reduced to about 30 o r 40 staffers, down from alm ost 200 ju s t a week ago. em b assy so u rces said ’ We have taken out ju s t about as m any people as we could and still function, one source said In Sunday s fig h tin g , g o v e rn m e n t troops lost 17 killed and 96 wounded. Rebel gunners also shot down a C am bo­ dian a ir force C47 gunship w est of Phnom Penh The seven-m an crew w as p resu m ­ ed e ith e r killed o r cap tu red . G O V E R N M E N T TRO O PS also ab an ­ doned eig h t m o re positions w est of the cap ital, along H ighw ay 4, and failed again to push back a new insurgent th re a t to the so u th east G overnm ent forces a t Svay Rolou. six m iles southeast of h ere, c a m e under h eavy a tta c k and suffered two killed and six wounded. D etails of the fall of N eak Luong began to trick le into the cap ita l. In addition to the lost troops and co m m a n d er, govern­ m ent sources said, the re b e ls seized 12 105m m a r t i l l e r y p ie c e s , 70 60m m m achineguns. 30 30mm m ach in eguns and hundreds of sm all a rm s. G overnm ent forces re p o rted som e su ccess in pushing in su rg en ts out of a school they had taken a t Kompong Speu. 24 m iles down Highw ay 4 —UN Telephoto Casualty A C a m b o d i a n girl, w e a r i n g a d o g t a g a s a trin k e t, g a z e s b la n k ly in a re f u g e e ce n te r. P r e s id e n t Fo rd se n t p h o t o g r a p h e r D a v i d K e n n e r ly to V i e t n a m a n d C a m b o d i a to a s s e s s th e s it u a t io n . T h e W h it e H o u s e r e le a s e d s e v e r a l o f h is C a m b o d ia n p h o to s S u n d a y . Utilities: R ebels cut Highway 4 a t a point 12 m iles w est of the c a p ita l and fired b a rra g e s of 105 m m artillery ' into the nearby tow ns of Ang Snoul and Bek Chan. One civilian w as killed and eight o th e rs w ere wounded A utility regulation ad v o cate blasted House Speaker Bill C layton F rid a y for his re m ark s la s t w eek ag ain st the effec­ tiveness of a sta te w id e u tility regulation com m ission. Sources in Phnom Penh said Gen M eas. Dim. a p ersonal a ss ista n t of P re sid e n t Lon Nol. who h im self left the country for exile last w eek, d ep arted P hnom Penh during th e day for Laos. “ The sp eak er of th e House has con­ sisten tly stated th a t he would not tak e an active role in p rom oting any legislation He is now obviously going to use the of­ tion alleges, a fte r Connally helped AMPI win an in crease in the price support for raw milk from the Nixon ad m in istratio n in 1971. E dw ard B ennett W illiams, nationally known defense law yer, said in his open­ ing statem en t on Connally s behalf th a t Jacob sen's testim ony was the la t e s t in a series of lies designed to p rev en t his fu rth er prosecution and to co ver the fact he him self had pocketed the m oney when Connallv refused the payoffs. W ILLIAMS ALSO will a tta c k the ag reem en t under which Jaco b sen con­ sented to testify for the prosecution Jacobsen pleaded guilty to a single count of making an illegal gratuity to a public official, for which he could receiv e a two-year prison sentence. Before en terin g into the plea b a rg a in ­ ing a r r a n g e m e n t w ith W a t e r g a t e prosecutors. Jacobsen faced tria l in W ashington on two perju ry counts and in Texas on sev eral felony counts relatin g to an $825,000 bank fraud All ♦hose charges, which could have resulted in lengthy prison sen ten ces, were dropped when Jacobsen a g re e d to testify ag ain st Connally Lobbyist C harges Clayton With A b u s e of Position fice of sp eak er of the House to oppose public u tility regulation. Dr Mike Able. c h airm an of the T ex as Coalition for U tility R egulation, said. Able ch arg ed th a t C layton used his of­ fice to oppose the legislation when he used his staff, “ whose sa la rie s a re paid by the people of T exas th a t use utilities. to g a th e r d ata to use in his press con­ ference when he said I don t think that we will iind a change rn u tility ra te s through regulation But the m ost im portant indicator the speaker intends to use his office in favor of u tility m on o p o lies. Able s a id , is C layton's d isreg ard of F e d e ra l P ow er Com m ission and F ed eral C om m unica­ tion C om m ission data that prove T exas m onopolies have consistently been the m ost profitable in the e n tire country. p la n e of O p era tio n B a b y lift w a s d ue at T ra v is A ir F o r c e B a s e , and a third 47 V ie tn a m e s e O r p h a n s Reported 'N e a r Death w a s e x p e c te d a t V a n c o u v e r , B.C . SA N F R A N C ISC O (U P I * — T e a m s o f v o lu n te e r d o c to r s Sunday b a ttled to s a v e n e a r ly 50 se r io u sly ill. h o m e le s s V ie tn a m e s e in fa n ts a ir lifte d I rom the w a r zon e in the b ig g e s t su ch m e r c y m issio n e v e r . A n oth er p la n e to u c h ­ ed d ow n on U .S . s o il, c a r r y in g 81 m o re c h ild r e n fro m South V ietn a m O ffic ia ls sa id 47 b a b ie s w e r e u n d er h o sp ita l tr e a tm e n t and w e r e "un­ qu est lon ab lv n ea r d ea th T h ey w e r e a m o n g 319 c h ild r e n m e t by P r e s i­ A n tib u sin g D em onstrators Jostle K en n e d y den t F ord and his w ife S a tu rd a y night An e m e r g e n c y c a ll w a s is su e d in N o rth ern ( a lifo r n ia for m o r e p h y sic ia n s to v o lu n te e r th e ir s e r v ic e s to help th e ill ch ild r e n S o m e of th e ch ild r e n w e r e in fe c te d w ith c h ic k e n pox A n o th er A ir F o r c e WASHINGTON ( U P I 1 Law yers for fo rm er T reasu ry S e c re ta ry .John B. Connally will cross-exam ine s ta r prosecu­ tion w itness Jak e Jaco b sen Monday in hopes of shaking his testim ony th at he m ade payoffs of $10,000 to the oncepow erful Texan Jaco b sen told the seven-w om an, fivem an ju ry last T hursday how Connallv asked for the funds, which he said he delivered to the T re a su ry s e c re ta ry 's of­ fice on two s e p a ra te occasions. W hen W a te r g a te p r o s e c u to r s got suspicious. Jacobsen said he conspired w ith Connallv to try to cover up the payoffs. CONNALLY IS ON TRIAL for two counts of bribery. J a c o b s e n , a la w y e r - lo b b y is t fo r A ssociated Milk P ro d u c e rs Inc., at the tim e, said there w ere no o th er w itnesses to th e t r a n s a c t i o n s . B ut T r e a s u r y D ep artm en t reco rd s show he m et with Connally on the days of the alleged bribes, and bank re c o rd s added th a t Jacobsen visited safe-deposit boxes in T exas and W ashington banks on those d ates. The payoffs w ere m ad e, the prosecu­ W E S T O N . M a s s .! U P I )—Sen. E d w ard M K en n ed y . D -M a ss.. w a s a t ­ ta c k e d by a n tib u sin g d e m o n s tr a to r s Sunday but sa id la te r he w ill not h e d g e on h is su p p o rt for sch o o l d e se g r e g a tio n . K en n ed y w a s jo s tle d , poked w ith a sm a ll A m e r ic a n fla g and an u n id e n ­ tifie d m an g ra b b ed h im by the le g during th e row d y in cid en t in Q u in c y , w h e r e at o n e point h e w a s fo rced to jo g to th e s a f e ty of a su b w a y s ta tio n . T he se n a to r w a s not in ju red . H e w a s fla n k ed by a id e s and p o lic e a s he m a d e h is w a y to the sta tio n , w h e r e d e m o n s tr a to r s p e lte d th e d e p a rtin g tra in w ith ro ck s and b o ttle s. UT BLOOD DRIVE Sen. K e n n e d y is escorted p a s t irate d e m o n s t r t o r s DGG CLASSICAL LP’s — UPI T e l e p h o t o Reg. 7.98 List SALE 4.99 Net . . D.'utsxh*' t t H i m r m p h i ri ARCHIVE PRODUCTION BEETHOVEN WELLINGTONS VICTORY TCHAIKOVSKY 1812 OVERTURE HERBERT VON KARAJAN BERUN PHILHARMONIC DON COSSACKS SERGE JAROFF HERBEST V O N K A R A J A N BRAN DEN BU RG C O N C E R T O S L U D W IG VAN B E E T H O V E N S Y M P H O N Y & S O N A T A M EL O D IES Arranged by Friedrich Silcher SY M PH O N Y N O . 8 P : a?K> T r a n s c t l r ^ o n by F ra n z Ludwig van Beethoven K I C H VRD W A G N E R sym ph o n y IN C Bamberg Symphony - Gerdes I K I N f V l l l H i m H 1 MM I1I K H M W I m v D V K t l l 1%» MIMI. H iuriilo W lini, Piano SYMPHONY NG2 OR36 L is z * Iw i W M ’/ V MF- I 1 t tr rn H r U r c h iv APRIL 8, 9, IO at A C Foyer RO TC Rifle Range Jester Center 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Give the Gift of Life. Give Blood. This is our best C lassical Sale this year. SPECIAL ORDERS TAKEN BankAm erieard and M asterCharge accepted. One hour free parking with purchase of 2.00 or more. Open Thurs. till 9:30 P.M. 'Uaiven&jiXy 22 6 8 G u a d a lu p e Record Sho p M obiles tonight - Dobie Cafeteria & The Ark - 2000 Pearl A d v ertisem e nt created by Jerry Linville, A d vertisin g Major. Him M o n d a y , A p r il 7, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page EDITORIALS P age 4 M onday, A p r i l 7, 1 9 7 5 C o n t r o llin g w o r d s -we id s boe m m v th a t all toe m v pom e mme m r AMP, OCCF po (ye evucAWP awe boe 5PVCA1W, P e o p le a b o u t p e o p le - r n p e c t ic m V i c i 'u a h . 10OULP M tlT A M V co w WAC sc e a b o u t PfiATT A 0 O /T _ FBI-CIA CULT CF m in - B D C V P O & U S; peMAkF app ye epochW CHnSs€ to e s (p e a c e ■ U JRO U & WITH a t T h e T e x a n In resigning tr a m th e T ex a n e d itor s ra c e . law student Jo h n W atkins r e s u r r e c t e d an evil w ord that has been s c o rn e d in th e se offices only less than the w ord 'c e n so rsh ip " T h a t w o rd is “ a p p o in tm e n t.' a s in the a p ­ poin tm en t of the T exan e ditor W atkins con tends this y e a r 's elec tio n of the T exa n e ditor is rea so n to m o ve to w a rd s an a p p o in tm e n t s y s t e m We m u s t a d m it that — a t t e r seeing the original c a n d id a te s th ro w n out by L o re n e R o g e rs, a f t e r seeing the original w inner throw n out by the T e x a s Student P u b lica tio n s B o a rd and a f t e r seeing W atkins w ith d ra w and leave the c a m p u s with two r e t r e a d c a n d id a te s the idea of ap p o in tm e n t h as b e c o m e m uc h m o re appealing. But the 1975 election h o r ro r is not the only point of W atkins a r g u m e n t. He says, “ the T exan e d ito r no m o r e r e p r e s e n ts stu d e n t opinion th a n does the q u a r te r b a c k of the football t e a m . " that c o m p e te n c y would be insured by ap p o in tm e n t, th at philosophy is not im p o r ta n t as long a s The Texan is open to differing opinion and that c a m p a ig n in g is not a n e c e s sa r y quality of a good editor. We have alw a ys su p p o rted the election of the T exan editor We hav e done so not b e c a u s e th e e le c to ra l s y s t e m for the position is p e r f e c t but b ec au se th e a l t e r n a t i v e s a r e even less d e s ira b le . And though we do not e x ­ pect T S P to m o v e to w a r d s an a p p o in tm e n t a lte r n a t iv e , we would like to still questions of th e e le c to ra l s y s t e m that this contusing and a b s u rd 19<5 election h av e b rought to us. F o r one. we would h a te to see T S P m a k e the choice about who should run this n ew sp a p er. T he T exan ed ito rsh ip is a political one; it is no s e c r e t that so m e people — possibly the I n iv e rsity a d m in is tra tio n , th e a lu m n i or even the T S P Board — h a v e not a g r e e d with som e of the e d i t o r s ’ politics. Allow a s m a ll group of people - the T SP Board — to appoint such politics, and you a r e allow ing a s m a ll group to c ontrol T he T exan s ideas. We have seen T S P m a k e oth e r a p p o in tm e n ts , such a s th e s e m e s t e r ^ ' one for T e x a n m a n a g in g editor, and w e h a v e seen T SP re a c t to w a r d s p e r ­ so na lities. not n e c e s s a r ily c o m p e te n c e . We do not u n d e r sta n d W atkins — who w itn e ssed such a r b i t r a r y FSP ac tio n a t last Tuesday s m e e tin g w an tin g to give m o r e po w er to this group, of w hich a l m o s t half of the voting m e m b e r s a r e appointed by the U n iversity presiden t. Watkins says that the Texan editor isn t "th e voice of the students." b e c a u s e "only a handful of s tu d e n ts eve n b o th e r to c a s t ballots in the e d ito r elections. We a d m it past e d ito r elec tio n s hav e had low tu r n o u ts ; the c u r r e n t e ditor r e c eiv e d a p p r o x im a te ly 3.200 votes. But should Student G o v e r n m e n t p r e s id e n ts be ap poin ted b e c a u s e p a s t election m a n d a t e s w e r e low? Or should we app o in t s t a t e r e p r e s e n ta t iv e s , s ta te se n a to r s . etc ., for the s a m e r e a s o n ? As for the contention th a t c a m p a ig n in g is not n e c e s s a r ily a quality for a good ed ito r, we can only a r g u e th a t it is b e t t e r for a c a n d id a te to talk to tho u sa n d s of stu d e n ts, find out th e ir g r ip e s and d e s ire s , than to m in gle with the TSP Board alone and co nvince that 11 -m em ber body of one s c o m p e te n c e on g rou nds w hich m ig h t wholly ignore stu de nt involvem ent. Most c a n d id a te s w ho run for a U n iv ersity w ide office gain m u c h g r e a t e r a w a r e n e s s of the I n ive rsitv s d iv e rsity , an a w a r e n e s s which especially a id e s a T exa n e d ito r in d e t e r m in in g r e a d e r p rioritie s. W atkins m a y h av e been taking a sla p a t the e d ito r s election. But to us, he w a s slapping th e e n t ir e e l e c to ra l p ro ce ss, a p r o c e ss th a t is im p e r fe c t. It doesn t g u a r a n t e e the b est p erso n will win; ev e ry o n e doesn t vote; it r a r e ly suits ev ey one; if is m a n y tim e s confusing. But when installing a person to a political position, an elec tio n is the best p r o c e s s we know of It is only the ac tio n of c a n d id a te s d u rin g and a f t e r th a t p r o c e ss th a t d a m a g e s th a t p ro ce ss. W e only hope th a t th is e l e c ­ tion h a s not d a m a g e d the p r o c e s s so th at th e w ord a p p o in tm e n t b e c o m e s an a c c e p te d word A refreshing v ie w In p a s t e d ito ria ls , we have q u estio n e d Gov. Dolph B risco e s plan to str e n g t h e n the Coordinating B oard. T e x a s College and U n iv e rsity S y stem . The Coordinatin g B oard s e e m e d — and it still does — to be a n o th e r Board of R e g e n ts A n o th er appo in ted bo ard, a n o th e r u n r e p r e s e n ta t iv e board, a n o t h e r u n resp o n siv e board. But F r id a y . H a m P r o v e n c e — e d ito r for T e x a s N e w sp a p e rs. Inc., and c h a i r m a n of the Coordinatin g B o a r d —gav e a sp e ec h to the A ssociation ot T e x a s C olleges and U n iv ersities. His w ords w e r e encou rag in g ; H ig h e r e d u c a tio n is in d a n g e r o f p ricin g i t s e lf out o f the reach o f too m a n y T e x a n s. S t u d e n t s to d a y fe e l th a t th e y are being lo ad ed in c r e a sin g ly w ith co sts o f e m p ire -b u ild in g , c o m m e r c ia l profit, a l u m n i v a n ity a n d loose m a n a g e m e n t. I f th is tr e n d is not stopped, I s h u d d e r for the fu tu re . In all our race fo r p h y sic a l a n d fin a n c ia l w e a lth , are w e fo r g e ttin g th a t tea c h e rs tea ch s tu d e n ts ? For 20 y e a r s I h a v e been close to the sc e n e w e v ie w to d a y a n d it d is tu r b s m e to see the e m p h a sis a n d th e p re ss u re a n d the a r m - t w i s t i n g a p p lie d on b e h a lf o f e very m a te r ia l fa c e t o f our in s titu tio n s e xcept the te a c h e rs a n d the s tu d e n ts . T h e y , a fte r all, are th e o nly reason fo r h a v i n g in s titu tio n s o f h ig h e r le a rn in g . T h eStudent Newspaper D a at iThelUniversity y T e x a n af Texas at Austin E D I T O R ...................................................................................................... Buck H arvey MA N AG IN G E D IT O R ........................................................................Lynne Brock ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R S ..............................................E ddie F is h e r C laude Simpson NEW’S E D I T O R .........................................................................................K athy Kelly S P O R T S E D I T O R .............................................................................R ic h a rd J u s t ic e A M U S E M E N T S E D I T O R ..................................................................Vicky Bowles F E A T U R E S E D I T O R .........................................................................Janice Tomlin C A P IT O L B U R E A U C H I E F ....................................................David H en dric ks AMERICA -2 *t amp lye amp toe 5PUCATEP fflO C A W peopue people R A C IS M . failure of Amp amp u n se w AMP BACK TO pet .Vc W PR T MCWIOF CHAMAS rn F O U K S. ,> 1 0 6 , . about w e -'lATiCO \ AMP , 37UCATIOR. MMiwewr p e F R e ssa o . // firing line Student's file: open but empty To the editor: This semester the search for gainful employment led me to the University of Texas Teacher Placement Center On applying to open a file, I was informed that under recent state law. applicants may choose either an open or a confiden­ tial file I believe in the right to inspect my own file, and my belief is reinforced by the existence of such a law Therefore I chose an open file I then wrote to the placement office of my previous univer­ sity to have my records transferred. These records were received by I T's teacher placement service and returned, since that file had been compiled under a strictly confidential procedure with no pretense of choice open to the student. I now learn that CT S teacher placement center will accept no confidential papers in an open file and no papers available to the student in a confidential file Thus I am obliged either to forfeit unwillingly my rights under the law. or I can func­ tion out of two separate placement of­ fices, one of which is too far away to be optimally useful. The idea of a split file. or. God forbid, crossfiling, is unheard of, a technical feat not to be surpassed bymortal placement people. At first I was naive enough to believe that the Teacher Placement Center was originated for the purpose of helping students find jobs. The utter concern of that office with red tape and paper work. to the neglect of its proper respon­ sibilities. along with the immediately and consistently insolent attitudes of several of its clerks, and the befuddled, rather lame nonexplanations of its direc­ tor lead me to believe that the center in­ stead bears a striking resemblance to a department of a foreign (?) government set up to care for the veterans of a war which was fought over a hundred years ago The v e t e r a n s a r e long since departed; the department. I hear. still exists, being its own raison d'etre. For the time being. I am in need of the Teacher Placement Center’s services. As yet. I do not feel that I have received any During the turbulent '60s and the early '70s. the establishment admonished us to • work within the system" to bring about change Well, we have, and we hope th e y 'r e s a tis f ie d P e r h a p s now democracy, equality and justice will fin ally com e to th is c ity . Congratulations. Jeff, and the concerned and responsible citizens of Austin' Now it s OUR turn' Let’s not be bashful in ex­ ercising our newly won power to achieve change and reform! Let s bring Austin up to date! Susan Bissett Graduate Student, English Revolution plates. One must find the possibility that legislators are often immune from the very penalities which they themselves have p ro sc rib e d ( th e o r e tic a lly speaking), disturbing and extremely un­ democratic. Mark Sanders Geography T V person ality To the editor: If Mr Ego ( R ic h a r d G o o d m a n i doesn't like all the attention he receives as a newscaster. I suggest he wear a mask — which would also allow him to pick his nose anytime he desires. Tim Daniels Advertising State official To the editor: Having endured the annual late-March media barrage of warnings as to the horrible punishment which would most certainly befall those individuals foolish enough to procrastinate in renewing their automobile license plates. I was a bit abhorred to watch a late-model Chevrolet Monte Carlo bearing the plates "SO-55" pass unhindered by two patrol cars on 15th Street, two days after the deadline. U nless my m e m o ry deceives me. the "SO prefix is that assigned to state senators and represen­ tatives. Although seemingly a trivial matter, this deadline rated a front page warning in the April I Statesman, and failure to comply is subject both to citation with a fine of $12.50. and the addition of a 20 per­ cent penalty fee to the cost of the new I CONSIDER THE FALL OF DANANG TO BE AGREAT HUMAN i TRAGEDY!.. Pete Thurmond Junior, Anthropology Kress fallen To the editor: In Friday's Texan. Frank Fleming was reported to have said that Bob Binder was the best student body president in recent years. Surely, Binder was a good student body president, but rating Binder over Sandy Kress is a bit difficult to fathom Frank, Kress is the individual who requested the HEW report which details the extent of racial discrimina­ tion in the UT System Kress' ad­ ministration was the first time that students were able to sit in on ad­ ministration committee meetings. Dur­ ing his term, the Waller Creek Project was administered, the day care Univer­ sity center was opened and the District of Columbia intern program was begun He accomplished far reaching ca m ­ paign reforms. He lobbied the Texas Legislature heavily to support majority rights for 18-year-olds. It was Kress that drastically revamped the organization of Student Government by implementing the committee system which all future presidents will rely on heavily. Since the committee system takes a heavy load off of th e p r e s i d e n t by m a k in g the maintenance of ongoing programs the responsibility of committee heads, the president can pursue new programs As Kress was leaving office he realized the importance of Student Senate and president cooperation The programs he set up. he wanted to see followed through The University Reform Coali­ tion was reinvigorated and for the first time the presidential candidate ran on a slate with Senate hopefuls The slate was | tied to the various programs and policies | of the Kress administration It was the beginning of possible campus politics | which would run in groups and debate the issues. This was called (horrible) a machine Lee Rohn lost that election on that issue to Frank Fleming's non­ machine Greeks" Instead of having an enlarged day care program, the students gave $500 to Round-Up Instead of ha\ mg a student body president active in promoting minority recruitment, Weare blessed with one obsessed with the idea of a multi-million-dollar playpen with booze Instead of having an activist in the office of the president, the students chose a "practiiist" (sic), whatever that is. Students need to promote good student government. It is an institution represen­ ting 40.000 citizens, trying to protect their rights and promote their interests The one good thing that Frank did was in­ stilled in his amazing ability to keep his mouth shut Erwin McGee Big B u d d ie s To the editor: We found the article on the back page ot March 20 Texan very interesting. ( “ G i v e a d am n, give a dollar " i However, there was no address or phone n u m b e r listed for the Big Buddy program, ii someone was interested in doing either of the things listed in the headline Could you possibly recitfy this ’ Thank you Kathleen Lodde Doris Mitchell General Libraries (Editor’s note: The Big Buddy number is 474-2481.) IT HAS CRUELLY TRAPPED HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS , ~ \ / ' OF REFUGEES WHO TRIED UNTILTHE LAST MOMENT TO ESCAPE... To the editor: Whoopee! O happy days are here again! At long last, the “ radieo-liberal" J e f f F r i e d m a n h a s won th e helmsmanship of the capital city of Tex­ as! To the town’s conservative elite and the special interests, this must be like a Commie takeover or at least another P o rtu g a l; it m u s t c e r ta in ly be a traumatic event — indeed a tragedy — to them. Their w orst fears have been realized By now they must be crawling into their holes for a long hibernation or con­ templating a mass exodus to more con­ servative parts; Dan Davidson and Bob Miles are possibly drafting their letters of resignation, while the Chamber of Commerce is considering a government in exile There may even be a run on the banks I FEEL IT IS GREATLY DISTURBING FOR ALL MANKIND! THEWtetf£CNSI* GOT IN -SAND AP1 A n o th e r b o rin g co lu m n on h a n d g u n s By DAVID HENDRICKS A few years ago. the Detroit Free Press would each day run on its editorial page a picture of a smoking handgun. Underneath it would be the number of deaths by handgun shooting in Detroit ISSUE STAFF so fa r th a t year. ............................................ Sylvia Teague Issue Editor Above the picture Mary Walsh. Barry Boesch, Bill Scott General Reporters w ere th e w ords Steve McGonigle, Karen Hastings. Amy Cheng. News Assistants “ Handguns are made Jose Flores, Joan Givens, Patti Kilday specifically for the Ford Fessenden, Suzette Toledano purpose of killing ................................................ Todd Katz Editorial Assistant people." Bill Darwin Associate Amusements Editor ll D e t r o i t is t h e J Assistant Amusements Editor ..................................................................Tom Miller murder capital of the United States. ...................... Roe Traugott Close to 800 people kill other people there Make-up Editor ............................................................... DougBurton Wire Editor each year, most of them by handguns Laura Miller, Mark Meyer. Dale Napier Copy Editors since the usual circumstances, street or David Woo, Mike Smith P h o t o g r a p h e r s ... b a r a r g u m e n t s and d ru g r e l a t e d situations, lend themselves to using it a t the n ew s la b o ra to ry •• o m ire tho* ti flu T ex a n opinion* ex p ressed in Th*' ll " and a re not nee* im it a tio n B u ild in g V4i ie* • In q u irie s concerning delivery handguns. (•chlor o r th e w r it e r of th e a r m lid i , .Hied a d v e rtis in g should be m ade in TSP Building th** I 'n* v e rs ify ad rru n i ZOO 471 ",244 m d display a d v e rtis in g rn TSP Building By now. you are saying. "Oh no. 210 I 471-1#©< Kr l U Texan a student .. The I mv, The national a d v e rtis in g re p r e s e n ta tiv e "I T h e Daily another gun control editorial.” You are „t T e x a s .a \ ^ t< n >* bv Vl i i t n i v e r .n v S ta tio n A u stin ex.in i. N ational Kdueationai A dvertising se rv ic e Inc right. I admit it is an overworked topic, >0 la c in g ton Ave New York. N V 10017 7K I * The "natty Texan » published Monday Tu* I he t i.iiIv T ex .in s u b s c rib e s to T he \s s o c u ite d Press but gun control editorials are the easiest W ednesday Thursday and F rid a y except durum bi A as ru led P i , - In te r n .,lion.ii a n d P a c ific N ew s S e rv ic e The period'. S e c o n d c la ss postage pant to write the argument is the most clear­ and e ..an i . a m e m b e r in the Associated Col leg ta ie P r e s s , th e cut, the situation is so outrageous The .■m ow t ln u rria lisrn t (in g re ss an d th e T e x a s Daily epted tr. telephone ti 1 New s rofltributMtfP” will be a* (Texas Student Puhi Texas Observer yearly has written J VS! • it the ed ito ria l a lf* * perhaps the finest series of gun control editorials ever printed, but, unfortunate­ ly it seems to have become an exercise in futility. I could dazzle you with lengthy, boring statistics like more than 10.000 people a year are killed in the United States bv handgun shooting, more than 1,200 in Texas alone And like the number of handgun deaths in England is negligi­ ble simply because handguns are a rare thing in England. Although the crime situation is growing worse in England's larger cities. I still would feel safer walking through London’s Soho district at I a m. tonight than through the West University neighborhood. The reason I am bringing up the sub­ ject now is because of a number of handgun control bills which will be con­ sidered by the Texas Legislature. The bills’ sponsors are Dallas Rep Paul Ragsdale and Houston Rep Ben Reyes. Reyes has three bills. One would prohibit the manufacture, sale and delivery of poorly made, inexpensive handguns, s p e c if ic a ll y th e " S a t u r d a y n ig h t special." Another Reyes bill would in­ crease the amount of taxes paid by pistol dealers to sell handguns, and the other would add a $100 tax to the purchase of any handgun priced under $50. Reyes’ intent with these bills is to reduce the ready availability of a cheap handgun to anyone willing to buy one just to stick up a 7-11 store or a service station But the most comprehensive bill is HB 2089 by Ragsdale. His bill would not only prohibit the "Saturday night special" but also would require handgun registration and owner registration, regardless of the value of the handgun Ragsdale’s bill is more broadly aimed at reducing the misuse of handguns., While I like these bills, I personally don t think they go far enough I would like to see a bill enacted to prohibit ownership and manufacture of any kind of handgun They have no hunting value, and what little sporting value they have (at best, limited target shooting) can easily be sacrificed Perhaps the best legitimacy of purpose for handguns is personal protection. But in households with handguns purchased for protection, two out of three times the guns end up being used on a member of the family in an argument instead of for protection from burglary As long as handguns are being made and are idly available, people are going to be killed in needless numbers, just as American military arms sent to other countries, like Israel and India, are go­ ing to be used in a war. This may seem like an oversimplification, but it is large­ ly true But what I want is asking too much right now. and the Ragsdale and Reyes bills are reasonable steps towards this, designed to pass the Legislature with the least trouble. As lur as anyone can tell, there is no organized effort to stop these bills from passing The National Rifle Association no longer spews forth absurd scare lines like "The Communists want an unarmed U.S.. citizenry.*’ In fact. many NR A peo­ ple hate handguns They just don't want their kicks taken away by regulating rifles. So I e a r n e s t l y hope the Texas Legislature will realize the importance of these bills. Before each legislator votes I hope he or she keeps in mind two politicians who have come to regret their opposition to gun control Mississippi Sen John Stennis and Alabama Gov George Wallace 4 guest viewpoint Candidates view UT past; Austin present Scott T a g lia rin o , By W IL L A R D H A LL Most of us weren’t around 25 years ago. Allan Shivers was here He was governor of Texas. Now he’s chairman of the University System Board of Regents Dick Elam was here. too. He was editor of the Daily Texan. Now he’s on the journalism faculty In 1950, the big issues were minority enrollment, the Texas Union, the University chancellor and a loyalty oath. “The more things change, the more they stay the same.” That’s an old saying In some ways it’s true and some ways ifs not so true. Take the issue of minority enrollment; that s an issue that s remained pretty much the same. F’or example: In 1950 the famous Sweatt vs. Painter case went to the Supreme Court. The case began several years before, when Heman Sweatt, a black, tried to get into the Univer­ sity School of Law The case eventually became a test of the now defunct ‘separate but equal doctrine. Sweatt’s case was handled by Thurgood Marshall, now a Supreme Court justice. Price Daniel Sr., then state at­ torney general, administered the case for the University and lost Allan Shivers made political hay. On a recent return to the University, Sweatt quoted Shivers as then promising ‘ never to let a darkie darken the doors of the University of Texas.” But perhaps a bigger issue involving students in 1950 began with W. Astor Kirk, a black Tillotson professor Kirk. who was denied admission to UT in 1947, was accepted for graduate studies in 1950 The only hitch to Kirk s admission was that his instruction at UT was to take place at the University YMCA on the Drag Kirk didn't go along with the idea of taking courses off campus, so he quit He even offered to attend classes on a segregated basis,sitting in a separate part of the classroom. The administration said “ no dice. The Kirk issue touched off a storm of controversy among students Amid Communist paranoia and pressure from the Capitol, student assemblyman Selig Carr proposed a student referendum on the admission of Negroes” to the University Hopes for the referendum were shattered though when the Student Court un­ animously ruled that the referendum would be un­ constitutional. The appellate court, headed by a young Dean VV. Page Keaton, refused to hear an appeal. Keaton said the appellate court “had no jurisdiction” in the matter But Alpha Phi Omega (A PO ), national service fraterni­ ty. conducted a poll sponsored by the Texas Board of Stu­ dent Publications on whether "Negroes” should be ad­ mitted to the University. The results7 55.92 of the students surveyed at random favored ““admission (of W illard (T'S A 6iRL'S NAME CHARLIE BROWN ...I MET THE NEATEST LITTLE 6 t f l LAST W E E K ' DOONESBURY U )£ L L , YOU'P BETTER BE CAREFUL. CAREFUL •'CAREFUL / man, you1vc e a ­ r n SENSITIVITY U f OF A MACK TRUCK! H£yt sacr­ u m DONT iOU 60 FLY _ X / Ame? YOU'VE LEFT YOUR HEADU6HTS ON! JK S > m know, m r r n co u n try NEFDS 6 A COMPREHENSIVE PLANTCARE PLAN- TOKEEP A ll, 'P LA N TGARE OUT ic OF TNE HANDS HEY, MIKE1 OF HACKS MIST MY THs UKE YOUI BLOSSOMS, M IM ? \L I o 46 Break sud­ denly 48 Speck 50 Sailors (co l­ loq I 51 Chart 53 Females 55 Whipped 58 Gave prior notice 61 Sick 62 Liquid 64 Period ot time 65 Cravat 66 Mixes 67 Society girl (colloq I DOWN 1 Soft food 2 Ventilate 3 Plain m Russia 4 Appellation 7 3“ * 77 !^ 5 6 7 41 9 8 55 61 65 51 88 43 47 v.r TIME IS SHORT • SPACE LIMITED Y O M HASH0AH READERS THEATRE IN MEMORY OF THE HOLOCAUST EU RO PE GROUP $ 0 I / \ FLIGHTS O I V '•in. NP UT AFFINITY » GROUP PRICE rCJ * PLUS TAX NEW YORK/LUXEMBOURG May I 5 Aug 21 May 17/Jul 25 May 19/A u g 7 ■ .V.V. Ur, ; istv : * HOUND ruin May 22 Aug 20 May 29 Aug 8 May 29 Aug 19 AUSTIN/NEW YORK GROUPSs157w IC ABOVE DEPARTURES PLUS APRIL 12, 19, MAY 7, JO, 31 tra v e l c xPERTS HARW OOD TOURS 4 7 8 -9 3 4 3 • 24 2 8 G uadalupe to I I 37 57 67 57 X\ 58 SSS 63 53 66 78 33 39 38 45 50 49 48 77 76 W . 44 XA. m r 56 r7n » n ^■I'­ ll 37 31 36 47 46 Whatever the reasoning. Austin has a better chance of honest decisions, rational growth if necessary and more open leadership from the members elected Saturday Austin, at least for two years, is relatively safe from becoming a Houston or a Dallas or a San Antonio Our city is unique and will remain unique because the citizens have shown once and for all that they like it that way. 71 lv « 75 74 30 40 ■NX £88 35 But the stage is tentatively set Everyone in Austin will be waiting and wondering what effect the new City Coun­ cil make-up will have on the city’s mental environment. Yet. perhaps the new Austin make-up is not something new Maybe it has been here for some time Perhaps it just hasn't had an election or a promising slate of can­ didates to show its strength 54 55 56 57 17 TO TT-T However, the upcoming runoff election does present a test as to how progressive the new City Council will be allowed to swing If concerned citizens continue their sup­ port for Hofmann and Trevino in the May 3 runoff, both candidates should have excellent chances. Failure, however, may cause the council to stagnate or even shift to the right on many politically hard-core issues. 14 IP 888 Now. Friedman, the youngest mayor in Austin's history, leads the city. He leads it not because he represents just students and liberals, but because he represents a new direction for Austin. benches Plane! Small amount Man sname Man s nickname 59 Before 60 Bespatter 63 Note ot scale 36 Cover 38 Measuring device 41 Mexican dish 43 Cut 45 Pronibited 47 Stroke 49 Tail structure 52 Church 73 34 r?n P f I 4e|A 13 79 In the past, Friedman led a lonely fight during his two council terms against the money interests in this city. Manv of the fights were lost overwhelmingly yet his After Binder s election, issues like rising utility rates, the Ninth and 10th Streets expansion and the Wilding development were more openly discussed rather than passed by the council autonomously Even conservative members were forced to look into the issues before voting, and sometimes, although not often. Friedman and Binder were able to reason with the other five members and reach an equitable decision 476-0125 i ,w 16 15 In addition, the other council members who were elected, Betty Himmelblau and Lowell Lebermann. are more moderate than the conservative Drydens and Butlers of this town. They should combine to make the council, if not more liberal, at least conscientious of the wants and needs of residents rather than big businesses and expansionists HILLEL 2105 SAN ANTONIO TTT. 4 ij It is also a fact these liberal candidate victories, es­ pecially Friedman's, were not made possible just by the predominantly University student prec incts but by voters all over Austin. Friedman picked up majorities in most of the precincts citywide, including E ast and South Austin, and some West Austin boxes. voice for the liberal faction remained clear and strong It was not until the election of former Student Govern­ ment FTesident Bob Binder two years ago that the council became more balanced between liberals and conser­ vatives. 54 Xs 59 I,. 60 64 I 67 Distr bv I'rited Feature Syndicate. Inc N O W THERE'S AN ANSWER FOR TROUBLED SKIN - AND HALINA HAS IT. She knows what to do about everything from oily or acne-troubled skin to the dry and scaly skin burned by the Texas sun. Her specialW *ies inc,ucle: cleeppore cleansing and V [J. refining, treatments ‘for blackheads and p im ­ ples, hair removal by J waxing or electroly­ sis, and individual make-up. Her train­ ing includes 18 years of experience in Paris, Warsaw, and Vienna. OLP YOU KNOUF THAT 45% OFA U PRIVATELY OWNED PLANTS OO TO XI BBD INADEQUATELY FERTILIZED?! US % t The victories of Jeff Friedman. Em m a Lou Linn, J im ­ my Snell and the runoff spots for Margret Hofmann and John Trevino should not only be viewed as victories for a more community conscious Austin but should also be viewed as a rebuke of the kind of city counc ils Austin has had in the past An entire slate of candidates representing the same type of council we have had in the past was on the ballot, yet consistently they were voted down, and by fair margins. ES 44 R e v o lu tio n a ry rn The Texan welcom e* guest viewpoints, but each piece sub­ mitted must: • Be typed triple space. • Contain only 60 characters per line. • In c lu d e th e a u t h o r ' s phone number. • Be limited to a m axim um length of IOO lines. Submit guest viewpoints to Draw er D, University Station, Austin, TX. 7 8 7 1 2 or to the Texan office in the basem ent level of the TSP Building. OI Athena 5 Mountain lakes 6 Preposition 7 Born 8 Slave 9 F ictitio us na r­ ratives 10 Everyone 11 River in Scot land 16 Escapes 18 Roman bronze 20 Metal 22 Former R us­ sian rulers 23 Foreigner 25 Rodent 27 Man s name 28 Caudal ap ­ pendages 30 Seed co n ­ tainer 32 Equality A C R O SS 1 Dance step 4 M^ke amends 9 Novelty 12 River island 13 Patns 14 Beverage .5 Like Petter 17 Empower 19 Young shrub 21 Lamprey 22 Bind 24 Title of respect 26 Clan 29 Slumber 31 Short sleep 33 Ocean 34 Three-toed sloth 35 Tne sun 37 Scottish cap 39 Note OI scale 40 Soak 42 Obscure guest editorials Repeatedly in the past, students, environmentalists and liberal-oriented groups have questioned, objected and (ought against the business-oriented City Council but had always been shouted down at the polls every two years But Saturday, the truth was known, not only do students and progressive citizens want a change, the majority of Austinites want a change Answer lo Yesterday s Puzzle C r o s s w o r d Puzzler present By SCOTT TA G LIA RIN O Those who had any hope for the environment, the rational progress and the over-all future of Austin gasped a sigh ot relief Saturday as citizens voted into office a more progressive, more active and over-all more promis­ ing slate of City Council members blacks) to the main campus graduate school on an un­ segregated basis ” A slim majority of the students also favored admission of blacks on the undergraduate level Another issue in 1950 was over the proposed installation of an expanded and modernized Texas Union. Proposed expansion included new bowling alleys, more food facilities, a swimming pool, a barber shop and a notions counter Back then students were for the new expanded Union — even if it did cost $3 per semester A F T E R the facility was completed I guess that’s an example of how things have changed 1950 was the year the office of the University chancellor was established. Nearly everyone thought the new posi­ tion was a good idea since the University System was ex­ panding so and construction was going on all over the place. The faculty was even asked to aid on the selection of the new chancellor One issue of 1950 has completely disappeared. That issue concerned the anticommunist loyalty oath that students were forced to sign in front of a notary public each year during registration Editor Elam , who was an anti-McCarthyite, opposed administering the oath. In a public opinion poll, again administered by APO, 64 97 of the students surveyed said they favored abolishment of the oath It is noteworthy that the loyalty oath was passed by the Texas Legislature apparently to keep out one stu­ dent — a self-avowed Communist named Wendel Ad­ dington. Gov Allan Shivers signed the bill into law During the student elections of that year, the issues rose to their full intensity. The political enthusiasm of the students was manifested in an evening torch light parade followed bv ‘ stump speaking.” where the candidates gave their opinions and platforms and answered difficult and antagonistic questions. Lloyd Hand, candidate for the student president, was the first office seeker in the parade He made the sixblock trip around the campus on the hood of an ancient automobile he referred to as “my political machine. Ronnie Dugger, Texan editor candidate, was proclaimed “ in” by his supporters as a flying saucer, complete with occupants, was carried down the Drag proclaiming that men from Mars had arrived to insure his election Most of the questions at the “stump” centered around the admission of blacks to the University. Both Dugger and Hand said they did favor black admission They both won. Although appearances change, many issues at the University remain We. the students of the 1970s, must realize our activist traditions and work to attain the goals <>l our predecessors, as well as our own. \\ ill future historians call us the generation of apathetic cynics? Your guess is as good as mine. I certainly hope not I»l W I IN Guest Viewpoints H all A m i UNO W W" Q po you Call 452-3500 free skin analysis. / CARF?/ V :: :y * frankly tte n m porn my \ y PISTILS, HAMMIT! jf EUROPEAN SKIN CARE flfcfj/ 5403 Clay Avenue at Burnet Road Vlon. - Fri„ 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., appointment only. J UT?' Monday, April 7, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 T u e s d a y O s c a r C e r e m o n y To C o n t i n u e T r a d i t i o n A " By RORY ALTER Texan Staff Writer Tuesday night the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 4NYM ORF I AMel Brooks Film ga 1:30-6:30-8:15 Twi-Lite ■ v J Hr. 6:00-6:30, $1.25 ■ liv t'T u T TiE, STEAL A LOT" The True Story of ’Murph PIS the Surf' 1:30-6:15-8:15 Twi-lite Hr. 5:45-6:15, $1.25 © W A L T D IS K E Y 1 30 F R ie tlD S in COLOR IH U S COLOB hri A Magic Eye o) Hottywood Productions he ACrownInternational Pieties Release A ll Academy Award Nomination* Screenings CABLE CHANNEL 2 8:00 PM Mondays Beginning April 7 I 10-S:l5-t00 Twn-lit* Hr 4 4S-5:IS. S1-2S J 1500 S PLEA SA NT V A H E Y RD nnnn JUST OFF EAST RIV ER SID E D RIVE ‘H H ' J LLL Hwy. 183 A Cameron «836-&S8 REW TED PRICES TU. 6PM MON thru SAT__ GULF STATES DRIVE IN S o u T h s id E ^ 7 1 0 L Ben White » 444-2796f Reincarnation | TODAY THRU BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:JO SHOW STARTS DUSK mar. K E N D A L L RESTRICTED RD GULF STATES DRIVE-IN V S h o w TO W N U S A Q U A R IU S Theatres IV 1:30-3:15-5:00 - $1.25 6:45-8:30-10:15 - S1.50 C O - H I T] ...it's a family altair The Tempi# - israel from the pharaohs to tomorrow TRAN S + TEXA S st a rrjng S U Z Y TK •®* »•>•«! RICHARD HATCH SUSANNE BENTON w A CROWN INTONATION Al PICTURES REI EASE C The Occult - a look into darkness and beyond ,1:30-6:00-8:15 Twi-lite R Hr. 5:30-6:00, $1.25 CHIP N DALE ^ » Ona Hus Ona - with anomer *~l alternative in marriage PRO DUCTIO NS' I SCREEN I | THURSDAY rn B est _•, Bay alation - a prophetic ody ssev with Hoi imdseY BXAPE7D a * j She became a Ravaged Victim 2 Academy Award Nominations including Best Actor - Art Carney jEnter... I if you dare I the bizarre I world of the j psychosexual [mind. X * 1:30 6:15 8:30 Twi-Lite Hr. 5:45-6:15, $1.25 A l l N T I 21st & G u a d a lu p e Second le ve i Dobie M a li 477-1324 A BO X OFFICE OPEN 7:30 SHOW STARTS DUSK 1:30-5:45-8:45 Twi-Lite Hr. 5:15-5:45, $1.25 P IU S AT 10:30 O N LY •flillllllMIMIIIHIMIIHHHIIIHStHIHItltllliHIIII *\71Q E Ben White « 444-2296/ * M AN AGEM EN T DOES NOT RECOMM END PG FILMS FOR YOUNGER CHILDREN — Pat Collins, CBS-T V R \T STATES DRIVE IN Southside "The Best Picture of the Year." O P E N AT 7:15 $1 OO TIL 8:15 F IN E FO O D S \ or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service pi THE To w . Matinee Legra) is a laborer and a country beauty who marries the jealous Tomas. Although everyone is expected to work, he forbids her to go out and even nails the doors and win­ dows shut to prevent it Conflict enters in the form of a young male teacher sent from Havana by the party to help in the new literacy cam­ paign. Not only will he teach Lucia to read and wirte, but the party expects Tomas to put him up Reluctantly, Tomas agrees, but nothing can prevent the inevitable from happening — jealousy, accusations, recriminations. The energy brought to this film is what carries it along, but there are many other more concrete assets — the acting of a cast perfectly suited to each role, the photography and finally the narrative structure itself ★ * ★ “ Lucia” will be shown at 8:30 p m. Monday and Tues­ day in Burdine Auditorium. Admission is $1 50 lf Y o u N e e d H e lp 451-733* IN3S ATKOCNSCIN. r OPEN 7 30 SHOW STARTS HELD OVER held camera, an over exposed sequence reminiscent of the prologue in Bergman’s “ Nak­ ed Night ” ) to characterize the futile madness of Lucia's love. In “ L u c ia 1932,” the photography has the velvety look of more modern film stock. In this second tale, the bittersweet mood can be read on the face of Lucia (Eslinda Nunez). Cuba in 1932 is in the throes of a revolution against the dictator Machado. Lucia is a member of the upper class. She meets a rebel, Aldo, who is recuperating after be­ ing wounded in some rebel ac­ tivity. They fall in love She leaves her family to be with him and goes to work in a cigar factory to help with ex­ penses. “ LUCIA 196 . . . ” the third part of the film, is a complete shift of gears from the previous segments — it is a broad farce. Set sometime in the Sixties, it has the im­ promptu look of documentary footage This Lucia (Adela H IG H L A N D M A L L J ’ GULF STATES DRIVE IN n KOKE NITE BC N I IMH. CIRIC MA C O RPQ R AVION r/ 454-5147 NORTHCROSS MAU -a ANDERSON lane a BURNET RO 3 Bargain Matinees - 1:30 Features, $1.75, Mon.-Fri. -Playb o y Magazine X Streisand ((““ Funnv Funny G irl” ) for tho the 1968 Best Actress Oscar. • Just a few of the individuals who have never won Academy Awards in regular competition in their respective categories; Directors Alfred Hitchcock and Howard Hawks; actors Cary Grant, Charles Chaplin. Basil Rathbone. Paul Newman, Orson Welles. Robert Montgomery, actresses Greta Garbo, Gloria Swanson. Judv Garland, Irene Dunne, Raquel Welch Raquel Welch?! ★ ★ ★ (Tuesday: a look at this year’s Oscar race.) ‘J l i l L MICHAEL SARRAZIN ENDS TUESDAY I SCREEN 2 S I.5 0 TIL 6 P M FEATURES -1:30-3 30-5 30-7:30-9:30- ROBERT MITCHUM TAKAKURA KEN THE Y A K L Z A PANAVISION * ‘tomWetnei BrosO TECHNlCOlOfP’ R WarnerCommon.anon*Company W H IT T MMWll (M S ww Francis Fard tappalas SariPARTll $1.50 til 6 p m FEATURES -1:15-5:00-8:35- AhnwiPkfen in E n g l i s h 5 1 SO S I 25 7:30-10:00 - 2:30-5:00 $ I MIDNIGHTERS $125 I EVERT NIGHT Th* R U S S M E Y E R ’S (The V IX E N . Carlo Pooti production v\ cam llle 2 ooo « . . . Daniel#* Gaubert YA KVZA AN EYE DAZZLER SEX EXCITER* lim e c la s s — — Wtmmm I ...TK,,, r iN E M J A PARAMOUNT photogr»phy-and *11 th o * * m ir r o r * 713 C O N G R E S S - Put th is one in b ig A'tH' #>•»*** » t a»h i— — —— v 5 F IL M F E S T I V A L S T A R T S W E D lf .-...•.■M'MwnwMMiMiiHRmnimwmnHiiimuntmiuuiHinniiy s Mor day, Society -v * T H E Y C. «rrts.rn .-..a.- Th* ic e n t r y losephBicwt AssociatesInc presents! Secret ENDS TUESDAY p bizarre terrifying world of the psychosexual mind 12:00 $1.25 ENDS TUESDAY $1.25 til 7 p.m. • FEATURES • 6 :0 0 - 8 :00 - 10:00 April 7, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN ,. AVENUE AI AT 2 THEATRES S IWC niASAIIT vault to to 414-MJJ $1.50 til 6 p.rn • FEATURES • 1:30-3:30-5:30 7:30-9:30 Starring S U Z Y K EN D A LL with TinJ Airmont JohnRichardson (.aria Brait/luc Merenda Directed by Sergio Martino • Producedby AntonioCrvi Distributed by tosapb Brenner Associates Inc H INTtCHNtCOtON PLUS CO FEATURE CRYRAPE Festival Offers Diverse Styles of Jazz to g e th e r m uch b e tte r. The sev e ra l unison vocals on By TOM COLE so m e c h a rts how ever, could be effectively broken Texan Staff Writer up into th re e -p a rt h arm o n ies. (E ditor’s Note: This is the first of a series Rob L ockhart, who s a t in w ith the band on ten o r of two articles on the Texas Union Jazz saxophone and flute, co n trib u ted w e lc o m e d to the F estival held during weekend at Townes im p ro v isatio n al and en sem b le w ork of th e band Hall.) His ’ S p ain '' w as ex ecu ted with ju s t th a t fine weld Jazz w as on tr ia l in Austin th is w eekend. Six of coolness and funk th a t m ak es this c h a rt sing bands set up betw een the ju d g e ’s bench and ju ry it it if box of Tow nes Hall s mock c o u rtro o m au d ito riu m , and the Union M usical E v en ts C o m m itte e s firs t W e’re up to the P e te B rew er Q u artet, and I ’m all Austin Jazz F e stiv a l p resen ted exh ib its A through F out of su p e rla tiv es. This en sem ble is the nucleus of as evidence for the case of the m o st p ro g re ssiv e ’ the N orth T ex as S tate One O ’Clock Jazz Band m usic in th e city. —.held in aw e both by m usic ed u c a to rs and S atu rd a y 's hearin g p resen ted e n sem b les o ffering p ro fessio n als throughout the country. as com pletely po lar styles a s can be grouped u n d er E v ery th in g th a t 47 T im es Its Own W eight did the sam e heading of jazz The n ig h t's o p en er w as rig h t the night b efore, th e P e te B rew er Q u a rtet did S team H eat. T hey’ve polished th e ir soul-jazz-funk rig h te r The d ifferen ce is th e sam e as th a t betw een since I saw th em last. The e n erg ized A ustin and New Y ork —th e fo rm e r known for the polyrhythm ical ex citem en t of th e ir m u sic h as e a rth y sound of th e p e rim e te r, the la tte r as the sm oothed o v er its edges so th a t th e en erg y is c o n ­ c e n te r of m a in stre a m jazz. trolled The resu lt is im pressive. Lyle M ays on piano. M ark Johnson on b ass. THE AUSPICES of the occasion allow ed th e m to Howley on d ru m s, and B rew er on soprano sax, flute lay on a s e t heavy with jazz ra th e r than th e and ten o r sax a re am azin g ly gifted m usicians. So predom inantly R & B p ro g ra m s they a re a c ­ d ifficu lt y et relax ed a re th e ir im p ro v isatio n s th a t it custom ed to playing Mike B arn es ran off som e w a sn ’t a t all easy to judge w h ere the w ritten line lovely jazz g u ita r lines, and the rh y th m p lay ers had ended and th e solo began no difficulty feeling the swing of jazz in th e THE QUARTET plays Bill E v ans-K eith J a r r e tt rhythm ic funk of th e ir m usic. Q uincy Ja rm o n laid jazz , with e le m e n ts of a Chick C orea influence And out a fine A fro-L atin s ta e c a tto on congas. y et this is m uch too re s tric tiv e a qualification M ost of the polish shines in th e vocals. Phil B rew e r p lay s a lo t like a young Stan G etz, Howley R itcherson and B ruce V erne have finally got it like a Mel Lewis and Johnson even show s signs of to g eth er on how th e y a re going to sing a song w ith having listened to Stanley C larke and M iroslav reg ard to sty le, harm on y and rh y th m They still V itous Such a confluence of sty le s e x ists in the allow for a little ad lib vocal room but they sing Taylor Performance Scheduled Tom m y T aylor will bring his one-m an show. “ Woody G u th rie: Child of D u st.'' back to the U niversity cam p u s for one p erfo rm a n c e only, at 8 p.m . M onday in the CMA A uditorium T ay lo r’s show, w hich ran for th re e m o n th s at the C reek T h e a tre la st y e a r. w as sold out a t an e a rlie r p e rfo rm a n c e on ca m p u s in Ja n u a ry . The show, a re c re a tio n of G u th rie ’s songs and life from his childhood to a rtis tic m a tu rity , has 7 been w idely p raised T a y lo r’s pop u lar and c ritic a l a c c la im h as led to an invitation to p erfo rm a t the p retig io u s F rin g e F e stiv al of th e E dinborough In te r­ natio n al F e stiv al of the A rts la te th is su m m er. T aylor is planning a n ational tour fo r next y ear H is p e rfo rm a n c e is a p a rt of the U n iv er­ sity ’s P e rfo rm a n c e of L ite ra tu re S eries. Ad­ m ission is $1.50 -television- p m 7 G un sm o ke 9 S p e c ia l o f the W e e k — " A t the Top B u d d y G re c o " 24 T h e R o o k ie s 36 S a n d b u r g ’s L in c o ln — P r a ir ie L a w y e r , '' s t a r r i n g H a l H o lb r o o k , R o b e r t F o x w o r t h , C a t h e r in e B u r n s a n d W a lt e r M c G i n n l p m 7 M aude 9 Special of the Week — " M e m o r i e s of P r in c e A lb e rt H u n t " 24 S .W A T 36 M o v ie W h a t s T h e M a t t e r W ith H e le n ’ , " s t a r r i n g D e b b ie R e y n o ld s S h e lle y W in t e rs , D e n n i s W e a v e r a n d A gn es M o o re h e a d I I O p.m. 9 T h e C o u r s e of O u r T i m e s — " T h e S p a n i s h C iv il W a r " 24 C a r i b e 9 30 p rn 9 T h e H is t o r y o f M o t io n P ic t u r e s 10 p m 7, 24 36 N e w s 9 C a p it a l E y e IO 30 p m 7 M o v ie The Sw eet R id e . " s t a r r ­ in g J a c q u e l i n e B is s e t . M i c h a e l ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★★★■£ * * * * * Sun Theater 9 p.m. 7 M e d i c a l C e n te r M ANX THEATRES FOX TWIN u s ? Aiteoet live I4S4 27111— d a il y F m I u i * 3 OO 5 I S 7 3 0 -9 :4 5 p.m . 521 E 6th WIND* KLIER MARTIN BALSAM ANTHONY PERKES M NGRCKROMAN INESSA RfGGR* lACOUEi.Nl BKJ7 RACHELROBERTS IAN PIRRI CASSEL RICHARD ODM ARK MICHAEL YORK I SAN CONNERY a c a ra a m DUTCH SEA M A N S CA P i"IMMER ON l i t [•R H M l i f t i n ' Il e a * pwtistitwvtutf *tM*aumch I P G M 95 Peaked trawler cap. borrowed from a D utch Seam an’s pear bag. W ind and water repellent. Dark blue nylon. Sizes: Sm. ( 6 s « -6 ?i>); M ed . (7 -7 % ); Lg. ( 7 V 7 M ; X L. (7 ’j-7% ). i n FOOLS N O COVER 5O' TEQUILA 477-3783 914 N LAMAR TO P L A C E A T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D AD C A L L 471-5244 MOTHM b l i n The Semester is Almost Over T E X A S T A V E R N T R IV IA E X T R A V A G A N Z A So ALL STUDENTS ELIGIBLE! Be Sure and use Your Free Stu den t Coupon Book Before it Expires T O W inning team in Tuesday Afternoon's M atch M e ets Faculty All-Stars W ednesday N ight ] 4WRRBMM T e x a s Tavern THE TEXAS D ir e c te d by P re sto n Sturges. B O H O B B S * H om etow n Day TAVERN W ith Betty Hutton, Ed d ie B ra ck e n , and W illia m D e m a re st The m aster of c o m ic satire takes o n m arriage sex W W W m otherhood, a n d A ls o B u g s B u n n y in THE BIG SN O O ZE JESTER AUD. $1 7&9 $1 pitcher of beer 2 p.rn.-m id n igh t to persons from EL PASO P le a s e brin g Texas M A N N TH E A T M S 9 p.m. aBBBBBI (1944) C H N O ELG U D I LAURINBACA! A U S T IN ROCK BY ''T h e best in live rock and roll 7 nights a week. Open at 8:00 p m Music begins 8:30 Happy Hour from 8 to 9. THE MIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK NO COVf* TAVERN acK M ocoocxM N O D uctw ALBERT F M Y BEST ENTERTAINMENT VALDE NO COVER CHARGE TONITE THE BAND ra re ly slips into the d e g e n erate feed ­ back of th e com m on e le c tric band They listen and tune care fu lly . Though th eir p erfo rm an ce could p erh ap s b en efit from a g re a te r portion of im ­ p ro v isation al lines and less special e ffects, th e ir e ffec ts in te re s t w ithout annoying The ever-changing styles and m e te rs of th e ir m a te ria l a re alw ays im pressive. E ach com position is a se rie s of m etam o rp h o ses linked by a few b asic th em es, w hich nev er suffer from a b ru p tn ess or con­ fusion The band flows. The E le c tro m a g n e ts added to the w ealth of in­ dividual m a te ria l an excellent in te rp re ta tio n of W eather R e p o rt’s Boogie Woogie W altz ” It w as a w orthy trib u te to an ensem ble which stro n g ly in­ fluences th e ir m usic. The M o n d a y N i g h t C o m e d y S e rie s P re se n ts MILTON CARROLL THE TEXAS WMMMH’CIVKS j e w e l* •I»S K » ltt LIM Y NI Ii YIS i o« Steam Heat at Union Jazz Festival Tues., April 8 505 Neche* Tonight tm v°!‘ Tmm ■ ~v*kw* -T a s o n S ta ff Photo by D a v id W o o 477-0291 ■it if-it it it it it it-kit if _, *ATIMM KAUT [INTlllAlNlNi WNOWMT!’ it it it The E le c tro m a g n e ts p resented th eir own unique ap p ro ach to m odern jazz for the final se t of the p ro g ra m . T h e e le c tro n ic m u sic of th e E le c ­ tro m a g n e ts is a s fa r rem oved from the noty aco u stic jazz of the P e te B rew er Q u artet as the q u a rte t is from S team H e a t's Austin funk P e rf o r­ m ing m ainly original com positions such a s “ Nova S co tia" and “ B lack H ole,” the E le c tro m a g n e ts flowed into th e ir classica l-electro n ic continuum T o n ig h t * * * * * /Vow h a s the real thin g * J Enjoy X X X M o v ie s ** * B o o k s & N o v e ltie s * * J 9 :3 0 A M -2 :3 0 A M * * J Sun. 12-12 * S tu d e n t D is c o u n t * * M u s t be 18 to En te r 7 Rhoda 9 R o m a n t ic R e b e llio n — D e la c r o ix m a t in e e s S a r a z in , B o b D e n v e r a n d T o n y F r a n c io s a 9 C a p t io n e d A B C E v e n i n g N e w s 24 W id e W o r ld M y s t e r y — " S i g n lf D e ath " b an d 's e ffo rtle ss ability T h e ir m usic is em otional sexual; it shocks the listen e r by its technical m a ste ry but n ev er excludes him by seem ing to be over his head. An acoustic jazz in stru m e n ta l en sem ble th at can draw a s ta n ­ ding ovation from a sm all house in Austin can sa fe ­ ly be said to have reached its audience C o m in g ! T h u rsd a y , A p ril 10, at 9 : 0 0 P M . A p ro g ra m of D u t c h e x perim ental film s recently exhibited at the M u s e u m of M o d e rn A rt in N e w York The film m a k e rs th e m se lv e s w ill be available after the p ro g ra m for d is c u s ­ s io n F r e e 1 driver s lic e n s e 1 FOX TWIN 6717 AIHP04T H Y O 1454 2711 N O R D IC C A P * t t 95 Som e call it Swedish - others c a ll it th e G r e e k C a p . H ig h q u a lity , dark navy wool serge with black braid embroidered on visor and band. Sizes: Sm. (6*'«-6’» ) : M ed . (7 -7 % ); Lg. ( 7 V 7 M ; XL. (7V4-7M . Also available in blue twill w ith black braid $8.95. <9 1 ”1 W ID E IN T E R L A C E B E L T “the ‘la dolce vita’ for the 1970’s’.’ *9.95 All cotton braided m acrame in a fashionable I Vi" w idth. B uck­ le s a r e n ic k e l s ilv e r . S p e c ify color; W hite or N avy, and spe­ cify buckle: Anchor or Shin’s W h e e l S iz e s : S m . ( 2 8 - 3 2 ) ; M ed . ( 3 4 - 3 6 ) ; L g. ( 3 8 - 4 2 ) ; XL. (4 4 -4 6 ). ju d it h C H *!, tv* va * o r i m a ii ar. im* w arren beatty julie christie •gold if* haw S e n d c h e ck w ith o rd e r to R S U R F ’N S A IL illinois 278 C ity Island Avenue C ity Island, N.Y. 10464 M A T IN E S S DAILY r« o t u .. J OO 4 OO 6 OO I 0 0 - 1 0 OO p rn The Cultural Entertainment Committee in cooperation with CALIC O Productions presents KRIS KRISTOFFERSON RITA COOLIDGE and The year is 2024. a future you'll probably live to see. SATURDAY, APRIL 26 MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM 8:00 P.M. Special Bonus to Optional Fee holders! Lim ited N um ber o f $5.s60eats available for $1.00 an R rated, rather kinky tale of survival LQ/Jaf A BO Y AND HIS D O G ......gDON JO H N SO N S U S A N N E B EN TO N .. ALVY M O O R E Technicolor • „„ JA SO N R O B A R D S] y f SJI"? f l l M X I I i i 8 f S H U I B O M I M i g i l . i s s m 1. V I IIM HOGG AUD. BOX OFFICE 10-6 WEEKDAYS BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 7 Public Ticket Sales begin Monday, March Inner S an ctu m /P an ts South Riverside at BUS SCHEDULE: Jester, Kinsolving, Co-0p/7:00 & 7:30 p.m. A O M M J H ) J v n j _ n _ m i l jO H > ^ M o n d a y , A p r i l 7, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 7 UT Track Team Ends Relay Drought it up. No way We w ere all relay, costing them a shot at By KELLEY ANDERSON fired u p .” another school reco rd and Hie Texan Staff Writer F o r T ex as Coach C leburne rem o te possibility of a w orld Tw o y e a rs of re la y P rice, th e win w as especially standard. f r u s tr a tio n s a t th e T e x a s satisfying THE LONGHORNS 440R elays ended for the T exas "IT'S SU PE R ,” said P rice, track team a t 4 40 p m S atu r­ relay tim e of 39 78 broke the who had calm ed down som e. school reco rd of 39 9 set by day a s L onghorn s p r in te r “T h i s makes it all Lee. Jackson, D avid M cKee M arvin N ash, running T exas' and Don Sturgal a t the 1973 w orthw hile The 880 (relay ) anchor leg in the university NCAA cham pionships and is w as a g re a t d isappointm ent. d iv is io n 4 4 0 -y a rd r e l a y , I w as re a lly cu rren tly the seco n d -fastest o f c o u r s e coasted over the finish line in fru stra te d because I thought tim e in the nation to Southern school record tim e and a full we could get close to a world C alifo rn ia's 39 3 seven y a rd s ah ead of his record Y ou've got to live with "A fter w e got disqualified n e arest com petitor in the 880-relay la st night, we the rules, though ” It w as the first tim e T exas The T ex as 880-vard relay got to g eth er and decided we d la s won the event since 1969 team w as disqualified when tak e the 440-relay. And we F o r the Longhorn 440-relay d id ," N ash said ‘ W e’ve ta lk ­ Nash ra n out of his passing te a m of Jo h n L e e . B illy ed about 39 flat a s a goal this zone N ash c o n ten d e d th e Jackson. O verton Spence and y e a r, but w e’re ju s t getting judge had m isinform ed him N ash, the win w as sw ee t on the p roper lineup spot, and used to each o th er now retribution for a m ixup during P rice filed a fo rm al p ro test, Said leadoff ru n n er Lee. "I th e F r i d a y a f t e r n o o n had a c ra m p in m y leg, but I which w as disallow ed. p r e l i m i n a r i e s which d i s ­ The 440-relav fin ish had w asn ’t about to stop and give qualified them in the 880-yard WANTED JUST A FEW G O O D M E N FOR fa v o ra b le re p e rc u s s io n s on one L onghorn m ile r. R eed F isch er, who ran a 4:05.49 for the fifth in the open m ile and said he receiv ed an em otional boost from running a fte r the relay. “ It re a lly help ed to run right a fte r the 440-relay. I w as really psyched u p ,” F isc h e r ex plain ed . “ T h a t w in w as really g re a t.” BRIGHAM YOUNG S P aul C um m ings, who ran a 3:59.8 to win th e open m ile, had to run in shoes borrow ed from T exas — his w ere stolen only IO m in u tes p rio r to his ra c e " I guess som ebody found a good p air of shoes th a t f i t,” he said w him sically. Texas weigh tman Ji m M cGoldrick hurled the discus 200-10 for a new T exas R elay s record and first place, while te a m m a te D ana LeDuc w as second w ith a 184-3 to ss. LeDuc won th e u n iv e rs ity division shot put, throw ing 645 4 , well under his schoolrecord put of 66-8 s e t two CAMP COUNSELORS GOOD LIVE COLLEGE MEN ONLY f G ir l's C a m p C o u n s e lo r P o s itio n s F ille d ) CAMP LONGHORN on Inks Lake Fantastic Entertainment for the Whole Family on Prime Time T.V. “America’s Number One Camps FOR GIRLS • FOR BOYS • CHOICE OF 3 TERMS » June 7-June 3 0 | J u ly l-J u ly 2 4 | Be v e la * on - a p rop h e tic odyssey with Hoi Lindsey July 2 5 -A u g . 17 jy COUNSELOR INTERVIEWS O n* Flus O n* with another a ltern a tive in m a rria g e s — Texan S ta ff Photo* by David Woo Dave Roberts vaults ... a n d ties Texas Relay record, clearing 18 -1. w as enough to e le c trify the weeks ago. B esides these T exas p e rfo r­ crow d of about 12,000, the p e r­ m a n c e s , no L o n g h o rn in ­ f o r m a n c e s of a l l , s a v e possibly R o b erts’, w ere subdividual or relay team placed p a r a n d we l l b e lo w th e within the top th ree in an brilliance of th eir resp ectiv e event, quite a c o n tra st to the world record capabilities. 1973 R elays when T ex as won Probably the m o st d isap ­ several relays and th e team pointing w as S to n es, who cham pionships a t the T exas, holds the high ju m p w orld K ansas and D rake R elays re c o r d of 7-6% , a n d w ho PRICE EXPLAINED the jum ped only 7-1 for th e second reason for th e L onghorns consecutive y e a r to win the m ediocre p erfo rm an ce w as a open high jum p Stones a t­ lack of proper conditioning tributed his poor p erfo rm an ce work. to a so re rig h t a n k le and "W e perform ed w ell, but g usting M em o rial S tad iu m not a s w ell a s I h ad e x ­ breezes. p e c te d .” P r ic e said "O u r “ MY ANKLE hu rt like hell, basic problem is th at w e need and I h av en 't jum p ed in a s o m e c o n d i t i o n i n g w o rk m eet in th re e w eek s.” the out­ Some of us a re beh in d .” spoken Stones said w hile sign­ While the presen ce alone of ing autographs w ith a haughty several world reco rd holders addendum , " 7 - 6 V ’ (his w orld — D wight Stones. Al F e u e r­ record). bach. F ran cie L a rn e u . Jim The wind bothered m e. Bolding and D ave R o b erts — to o .” Stones continued "I h a te it. Wind is m y le a s t favorite w eath er condition in­ cluding ra in , sleet and snow B esides, I ’ve been w orking out p retty hard and I'm tired. T his isn t the season I w ork for I peak in late July and A ugust.” In F r id a y n ig h t’s f i nal event. L arrieu easily won the w om en's m ile run by about 60 y ard s in 4:46 08 H er w orld record is 4 28.5. As she w as heavily besieged by autograph seek ers a fte r h er race. L arrieu b eam ed: “I got a standing ovation a fte r m y race, but w hat it really w as w as everybody getting ready to leave A ctually. I'm so rt of disappointed in the tim e. But then in a way I ’m not — i t ’s my first outdoor m e e t, and I had m y firs t w orkout on an outdoor track Th* O ccu lt - a look into darkness and beyond by Director Tex Tobertson The Tem ple - Israel from the pharoahs to tom orrow UT ALUMNI CENTER THURSDAY, APRIL IO CABLE CHANNEL 2 8 :0 0 PM Mondays till 6 : 0 0 P.M. ,U = r ( Beginning April 7 ^ lltM M M M IIIN IM N N M IM M M M M IN M N M M M M N M N M IM IN M M IIR M IIIIIIH IIIIIIIIIIIIH IIIIIIIIM IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM IIIIillir f PKmjWES^T^JDOWmON] *ceOUBRO m E D G © * 0» M A F C Y H -TV MstACeiMAOeCHESW a V M onday.” JIM BOLDING, probably the le a st acclaim ed of the w orld reco rd holders present because he ru n s in an in­ auspicious event — 440-yard m edium hurdles — handily won the open division in th at event in 49 89, over a second off his 48 7 w orld stan d ard F eu erb ach won the open shot put in 67-1* 4 Feuerbach s best, and up until Saturday the world record, is 71-7. In San F r a n c i s c o on S a t u r d a y , h o w ev er, p ro fe ssio n a l sh o t pu tter B rian Oldfield putted the 16-pound steel ball 72-64 for a new world record. The only w orld-class p e r­ fo rm er who even cam e close to a w orld re c o rd p e rf o r­ m a n c e w as R ice-ex D ave R oberts. A fter pole vaulting 18-1 to tie a R elays record set in 1972 by K jell Issakson (a t th at tim e the world reco rd ). R o b e r t s f a i l e d on t h r e e a tte m p ts a t 18-8 WHEN ASKED why he had atte m p te d to go one and onehalf inches over his 18-64 world m ark he set only last w eek. R o b e rts resp o n d ed . I ve been com ing close to clearin g that height in p ra c ­ tice, so I thought I ’d try it .” R oberts also noted th a t the sp e c ia l P a c e r III v a u ltin g poles he brought w ith him w e re n 't stiff enough to propel him o v er the 18-8 height "T he poles a re a little too soft fo r an 18-8 vault. They bend too m uch But on the last try (a t 18-8), I think if I had w aited a little longer. I could have clea red it.” I l l e -sn Hum s wer W e have S E A L . W e 'v e m oved to n e w and b e tte r fa c ilitie s I S p e c ia liz in g in e n gine overhaul, tra n s m is s io n overhaul, b ra ke w o rk an d tu n e -u p s y< iu fiiu / 1006 WEST 12TH ST. ■7 ’>t 4 7 7 -2 7 2 5 COORS BEER. A ll b e er a t c o m p e titiv e j p ric e s Vt b lo c k n o rth o f j H w y 2 8 1 & 1431 in - | te rs e c tio n ______________l *> ■toil RED SEAL VICTROLA 6 ’ * List This Week On Sale ONLY $3v« List This W eek O n Sale ONLY $1” 69* List This W eek O n Sale O N LY $ 3 ” \nnerz san ctu m to o “AUSTIN'S EXCLUSIVELY CLASSICAL RECORD SHOP 5 0 4 W EST 24-th ST AUSTIN, TEXAS 7 B 7 0 5 5 1 2 -4 7 2 -9 4 5 9 Classical Music lovers, there are o n ly two stores in the en tire U nited S tates that are d ev o ted ex clu sively to classical m usic. O n e , In n er S anctum T o o , is Austin s o w n . Vi itll a c o m p r e h e n s iv e classical stock, it has the sam e low prices that have m ade In n e r S a n c ­ tum Records A ustin's best k n o w n popular music record shop. O n e u n iq u e feature we o ffe r is a used album exchan ge, l f you arrive by car. we h a v e a lot, with its en tran ce o n N u e c e s Street in w hich yo u m ay park free. Vie are o p en from IO o ’clock in the m o rn in g until IO o'clock at night. Please c o m e by and browse. I th in k you will he plesantly surprised. We're looking for certain majors to become Lieutenants. Joe Bryson Owner Inner Sanctum Records^ Inner Sanctum Too I SYMPHONYNQIinD ■ n a i r a g r a m m y ORCHESTRA. iw iO ta iS rp Pathatupia ) LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA M echanical and civil engineering majors . . . aerospace and aeronautical engineering majors . . . majors in elec­ tronics . . . computer science. . . mathe matics. The Air Force needs people . . . many with the above academic majors. And AFROTC has several d iffe re n t p ro ­ grams where you can fit . . . 4-year, 3-year, or 2-year program s. Some offering full scholarships. All offering $100 a month allowance during the last two years of the program. Flying oppor­ tunities. And all leading to an Air Force o ffic e r’s com m ission, plus advanced education. lf you’d like to cash in on these Air Force benefits, start by looking into the Air Force ROIC. C aptain Jim Cargill Russell A. Steindam Hall 115 47 1 -1 7 7 6 Put it all together in Air Force ROTC. P a g e 8 M o n d a y , A p ril 7, 1975 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N I M a rb le Falls RCAV ic t o r R E D THE SUDS SHOP Texas Baseball Team Rolls to 18-0 * !% m ,f .•fg W jp I • '§ , -» . f ft*.. ■sa y r'. I , ■ SKI Bm \1 - y ~ Cs -• I * liq*. -■ , By MARK MCFARLANE Texan Staff Writer There was a revival held in Waco over the weekend. Although the Baptists attend­ ed. it was the Texas baseball team, with inspired hitting, which was restored, as the SWC-leading Longhorns rolled to victories of 18-6.9-0 and 17-4 over Baylor The B e a rs entered the three-game series with a respectable pitching staff But after Longhorn bats finally rested late Saturday after­ noon. Texas had scored 44 runs on 50 hits (.420 batting average), including l l homers and six doubles, and Baylor pitchers probably were ready to take up a new sport. “ We obviously hit the ball well,” said Texas Coach Cliff Gustafson. “ I don t think you can criticize their pitchers as much as you can give our hitters credit.” IN FRIDAY’S first game, a “ mad dog” — catcher Rick Bradley — was released on Dutton Street P a rk , and before he was through six Baylor pitchers had been at­ tacked for five hits (tying a one-game SWC record), in­ cluding two homers, two singles, a double and eight RBIs. “ I liked the home run pitchers.” said Bradley, who broke out of a season-long bat­ ting slump. “ Coach Gustafson and I tried a lot of things last week. But he told me just to hit naturally and quit thinking about it.” GUSTAFSON’S advice and Bradley’s hitting must have affected the whole team as it collected 20 hits in the first game. With the score tied 2-2 in the third inning, the Longhorns batted around, scoring four runs on four hits. With one out, B la ir Stouffer singled through the m iddle, and Bradley hit a 370-foot two-run homer into the infield of a teenage ball park adjacent to the leftfield fence. Baylor took advantage of Texas starter and winner Jim Gideon. who was “ up with everything.” and collected 13 hits through the first six in­ nings to narrow the Texas lead to 7-4. IN THE SEVENTH, Texas put the game away, sending 12 players to bat and scoring eight runs on seven hits. With two runners on and one out. Baylor shortstop Duncan Shanklin booted a perfect double-play ball to open the door IN S A T U R D A Y ’S seveninning gam e, lefthander Richard Wortham had control problems, allowing the Bears seven walks but held them scoreless on three hits for his ninth win without a loss. Texas batters “ slumped'' from Friday’s offensive show but managed l l hits and nine runs, five of which came in the first inning off Baylor ace Dub Kilgo. Mickey Reichenbach, the only Texas player held hitless Friday, drove in two of the runs with a basesloaded single The Longhorns scored four more runs in the fourth before Baylor got its first hit of the game. Keith Moreland's R B I single tied David Chalk s career R B I record of 151. and Bradley then hit his third homer of the series for a 9-0 lead. E NTERING THE Baylor series. Texas had hit only 12 homers. In three games against the B e a rs , the Longhorns knocked ll roundtrippers. including six in Saturday's finale. Anderson went wild in the third game, collecting five hits (tying a one-game SWC record). including two homers and a double off the wall in left C enterfield to drive in a total of four runs Baseball Openers At A Glance TUESDAY. APRIL 8 A M E R IC A N LEAGUE 1 9 7 4 w o n -lo st records M o n d a y s G a m as A M E R IC A N leag u e Kansas City (Busb y 22-14) at C a lifo r­ nia (R yan 22 16 N O n ly g a m * sche du le d N A T IO N A L l e a g u e Los Angeles ( Sutton 19-9) at Cincinnati (Guliett 17-10) Montreal {M c N a lly 16-10. a* S’ l o u is 11-13), N A tlanta (N ie k ro 20-13) at Houston I D e rker IM O ), N New York (Meetich 19 15 at Cleveland G P e rry 21-13) M ilwaukee Slaton 13-16; at Boston ( Tiant 22-13) Minnesota (Blyleven 17-17! at Texas (Jen kins 25-12), N K a n sa s C ity (S p I i ttor f f 13-19 at California (Singer 7-4 or Tanana 14-19), N Chicago (Wood 20 19 at Oakland Blue 17 15 N Mans BtMUldul Colors $75C _____ “ — Texan Staff H a t * by David Wee UT's Wilson tees off in Bevo. Horn Golfers Win Bevo Classic Again Playing under threatening gray skies and high wind gusts, the Texas golf team easily defended its championship in the annual 54-hole Bevo Classic at Morris Williams Golf Course during the weekend The Longhorns shot 372, 44 stokres ahead of secondplace Trinity'. McClennan College finished third at 918 followed by Temple College 943, Texas Lutheran College 946. Southwest Texas State 962 and Southwestern 983. Texas also swept individual honors taking the top five places Texas Dale Blackburn won medalist, shooting a final round <2 tor a 216 score, followed by teammates Tim W'ilson 218, John Paul Scott 220, Gerald Anderson and Jon Chaffee 222 and Boh Muse 223 W iIson, last year's medalist, shot the lowest round of the tour nutrient scoring 68 Saturday, after skyingjOji^8hjada\^^^^ Temporary Undergraduate Library Hours (Academic Center) per Et Capitol Saddlery f i g 1614 L a v a c a Austin, T ex a s RBI AB 14 5 12 2 14 5 IO 13 13 6 ll 5 5 3 15 13 13 I 0 I 42 1 19 Total* Pitching IP H R ER BB SO 10-0) . G deo M core A o' 'hair, Fiores 5 Kam e' 15 6 4 2 4 0 0 0 11 3 0 0 7 4 7 4 45 7 22 3 2 0 0 0 4 CANDLE A N D CRAFT GALLERY H a n d m a d e crafts a n d gift ite m s ★ LEATHER SALE ★ colors - 75 Hitting Anderson, lf Stouffer, ss Moreland 3b Bradley c Re chenbach, lb Hibbett. rf . . .. Proske. cf Duncan, dr P y*a , 2b Dmges. 2b is n o w open RUGS $£00 blast in the ninth. Texas is the class of the league." said Baylor Coach Mickey Sullivan “ They could probably beat most AAA teams (minor league). The Longhorns. 32-4 on the season, raised their SWC record to 18-0 with only six conference games remaining Texas A&M is in second-place with a 12-3 mark. Texas hosts Trinity at 5 pm and So u th w e s te rn Louisiana at 8 p m in a Mon­ day doubleheader at DischFalk Field Y ELLO W S E A GULL S H E E P S K IN V a rio u s kinds '4 r i# w S “ It was a small ball park. ' Anderson said I can t seem to hit home runs unless I ’m playing on the road With starter and winner Martin Flores holding Baylor to one run through five in­ nings, Texas jumped to an early 8-0 lead Wendell Hibbett. who said he “ w ouldst mind if the Disch-Faik fences were mov­ ed in” comparable to Baylor's small park, hit his second homer of the series, a solo shot in the fourth which would have cleared even Disch-Falk Field's fences. THE LONGHORNS con tinued their home run derby in the sixth when Charlie Proske hit a three-run shot In the s e v e n th , A n d erson and Reichenbach upped the team home run total to five R e ic h e n b a c h ’s to w e rin g homer cleared the lights in rightfield and probably landed somewhere outside Waco city limits. Moreland ended the madness with a three-run ELECTRONIC REPAIR Sp e cia liz in g in stereo, TV a n d tape repair MOls, S T A l^ , ST° ^10:30-6:30 478-9309 Th at’s what yo u 'll find at Al s Form al Wear. Se rvice that is tops! Exclusive brands su ch as After S ix and Palm B e a c h ? Su re . . . 50 styles! Fantastic selection . . . quick d elivery? Of course. Student and group d is c o u n t s? Naturally. Service? Read the headline again (A p r il 6 - A p r i l 19) 2828 G ua dalupe (On the D rag) 4 7 2 1697 Mon-Fri 8am -lam Sat 9am-12 midnight Sun lla m -la m FOR/VW L W M K Stud e n t Govt. {AMERICA’SJ FAVORITE PIZZA \ f / f w / ///•// / / / / / //r te b y / /A r t.. EXA M PLE Buy one giant Sau sage pizza J Large sausage pizza free with coupon (Tax and Drinks Extra) //// / Jm /y / ) tyffaiM m ( /////m w / te//y TO T AL $4.45 Antigua By Orange B lossom An island of gold. A warm glow. A handcrafted band in 18K gold. Beauty. Quality. Heritage. To symbolize your love. I/ t o AFP 4 fifu m r fo /a fa I tin With this coupon, buy any giant, large or m edium pizza at regular price and receive one pizza of the next smaller size with equal num ber of ingredients F R E E 1O n e co u p o n per visit, please O m a fro m $300 111 si iii 'n mils Orange lilosimm diam ond jvu vlvi - * R V alid Thru April 13. 1975 3000 Ouval 477-6751 8319 R esearch 837-0771 2800 Guadalupe 477 3697 840) B urnet Road 4 S1-7 57 1 2209 R iverside 447-6611 1710 W 444-6655 7237 Hwy. 290 East >' A L L A N D A L E V ILL A G E 57 26 Burnet Rd 9 A M 6PM Thurs. till 9 Ben White 928 1504 ON THE D R A G W ESTGATE MALL 2 2 36 G ua d a lu pe Be n W hi te at S o Lamar 9 A M 6 PM 10 A M 9 P M Thurs till 9 DAILY Monday, April 7, 1975 T H E DAILA T EX A N Page 9 Knicks Clinch Berth Trinity Eases To Relay Victory L o n g h o r n Ten ni s T e a m Falls A p a r t in Finals «__ _ round and finished in second champion Stanford By THOMAS K E S S L E R T R I N I T Y CO AC H Bob place with 13 points, far Texan Staff Writer McKinley felt the tournament behind the Tiger's 22-point After going into the final served as a good confidence round of the Texas Relays total builder for his team as it This was the final chaper in Tennis Tournament trailing enters the toughest part of its Trinity by only two points, a one-sided story, since Trini­ schedule. ty has now won every tourna­ Texas ended the competition We have several people with a big “ thud. while the ment in Texas this season, and that haven’t been playing too it has defeated every major Tigers did just the opposite in well lately," McKinley said. winning their fourth straight team in the state However, But all of them played pretty things may change soon for tournament well, and it really helped pick the Tigers, as they travel to Trinity won five singles and up their confidence two doubles titles, while Tex­ California this week to play One of those people is Jim No IO California and national as went winless in the final Timmons, who was probably not at his best during the ma­ jor upset of the tournament Rice s Ogi Mitra and Allan Boss beat Tim m ons and partner Bill Matyastik in the South on IH-35 - Exit Slaughter Creek Overpast opening round of doubles play. THE COUNTRY ESTATE RESTAURANT 282-2017 MEXICAN BLUE PLATE SPECIAL A ll you can ea t - LOST 3.25 NAME GOOFY. $100 REWARD Free M exican Punch! dose tthird with 12 points. The close Aggies were a distant fourth with six points. M A T Y A S T IK won the singles title in a see-saw match with Texas- G ary Plock Plock dominated the first set. 6-3. but the reversal took place in the second set, with Matyastik winning 6-1. The decisive set came to a tie­ breaker with Matyastik edg­ ing Plock. 7-6. Rice, playing for second place, and A&M (playing for whatever reason) met for the doubles championship with Rice’s Boss and Mitra win­ ning in straight sets over Charles E m le y and B ill Hoover, 6-3, 6-4 D a m n N ear Free and M o o n -H ill Present The all week. place. Anti all drinks will be half price during the entire opening week. A S a tu rd a y N ig h t in A ustin with RUSIYWIER STEVEFROMHOI2 BWSTEVENSON Sat Playoffs Opening Hound All Series Best-of-3 Tuesday ■ Go ma, Centare Conforonto New York at Houston, first game Wa,tarn Contaranca Detroit at Seattle, first game — Texan Stuff Photo by Zeds tyoll Hagerman Splits Victories 442-8569 or 4 4 1-8404 Country Style - just like going to Grandma s Grand Opening April IO 2°00M Anderson Lane, Austin, Texas Texas' depth was too much for SMU and University of Houston as the Longhorns dominated t h e i r own quadrangular women's tennis match during the weekend. Coach Betty Hagerman split her team in half to give more experience to her team, and it paid off. On Friday, the Horns No I defeated UH 6-0. while Texas No. 2 lost To SMU 1-6. J E v e rly M o n d a y A v a ila b le a t: R aym o n d s Drugs Rmiqo/ In n e r Sanctum Joske's - A ustin The lives of three Cuban w o m en in different periods of Cuban history dram atize the Cuban struggle for liberation and the participation of w om en in that fight. " It has taken four years to clear the print of this epic film for showing in this country, but the experience is m ore than w o r t h th e w a i t ... T h re e separate love stories (set in 1 8 9 5 , 1 93 3 and the middle '6 0 s ) e x p lo re in th e m ost hum an of term s the spirit of each ara in the developm ent of the C uban R ep ublic ... (it) stretches from battle scenes of alm ost unbearable energy to brittle forays into sophisticated society, from painfully personal studies to earthy and rowdy humor The power and ver­ s a t i lit y of t h e f ilm a re a r e v e la tio n ." S an F ra n c is c o In te rn a tio n a l Film Fe s tiv a l. 1 97 3 The nam e of our new Mexicon Restaurant is really Los Amigos but we're so hard ro find m aybe it should be colled Lost Amigos. W e're right in the middle of Downtown Austin at Congress and oth and still w e’re hard to find. Bur w ere fh ^ e ^ h id d e n away serving nor only superb traditional Mexican food, but also or dinner nopicol specialties from Southern Mexico. And finding us iswell worth the ettorr. One hint. W e don't sell eyeglasses 802 Congress 4 5 3 -^ 6 7 6 2. for T on Mixed Drinks J A ll Unescortedtodies i fr e e drin k I Ib o o o ie w ih H O M E C O O K IN G FR0M oklahoma FEATURING'. C A L R O B E R T S h MON 2 tor I on M IX E D DRIN KS - TUES 6 5 C H IG H B j HAPPY HOUR: ti-7 DAILY 02^>r1n &TINA Sat.Apr. ll* 8pm Reserved seat tickets available at West H a ll campus booth. General admission at a ll Pants South and both Priestley's Ottom an stores. 8 :3 0 p .m . Burdine A uditorium u n u m G regory Gym,UT Campus -vu*«* A Film By Humberto Sofas M o n . & Tues. l 6 5 2 8 N. L A M A R All Tickets $ 2 . 5 0 Comite UT Saturday both Texas teams won with No. I easing past SMU 5-1 and No. 2 shutting out UH 7-0. “ Our depth is fantastic,” Hagerman said. “ As you go down the lineup, the ability doesn't go down far " The weekend was indicative of that depth as far as Hager­ man was concerned. She was pleased with her No. I team's performance but also cited Eli'S unum V K April 19, 8:00 p.m. Austin Municipal Auditorium T he C uban Epic of Love & Re volution S’ Kurz backhands a return shot. CONTACT: JUAN AT D is c o u n t o n b e e r & w in e s - e x te n s iv e s e le c tio n NKW V O R K (A P ) - The New York Knicks, triggered by Walt Frazier’s 26 points, rallied for a 105-93 victory over the Buffalo Braves Sun­ day and, thanks to Kansas City-Omaha’s 95-94 victory over Cleveland, squeezed into the N ational B ask e tb a ll Association playoffs for the ninth straight year. The Knicks’ triumph in the nationally televised game and regular season finale, a vic­ tory spurred by F ra zier’s rousing individual perfor­ mance and a run of 14 straight points in a turn-around third period, gave New York a record of 40-42. its first losing mark in nine years under Coach Red Holzman Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and FViday will now be held at BLONDE COCKER SPANIEL, fresh v e g e ta b le s sm oked h a m roast b e e f chalu p as nachos, dips g u a c a m o le salad K -4 7-5. Timmons continually 6-4. drove into the net. and his frustration was finally releas­ ed in a 20-foot put of his rac­ quet. which wouldn't have made him a winner in the shot put competition in Memorial Stadium, either. Bv the final round, it was a two-team tournament, as both Bice and Texas A&M had dis­ mal opening rounds and went into the tinals with nine and five points, respectively. But Saturday. Trinity left Texas, and the Horns became a questionable second, as the Rice Owls pushed to within a point of Texas. However, the Owls were unable to surpass Texas, and they finished a / the importance of her second team’s matches. “ Our No. 2 team played SMU close and beat UH.' Hagerman said “ Anytime that a team can do as well as we did with all eight players. it s strong.'' Jo Ann Kurz. Texas' No. 2 player, felt that conditioning also played a key role in Tex­ as’ wins “ Were in good shape and were able to run down the ball We could get the shot and as a result, we were more con­ sistent." Monday. Texas will play Huston-Tillotson and Southwest Texas State in its final warm-up matches before zone competition Friday W om en Golfers W in Tournament The Texas women s golf team won the Texas Women’s University Invitational Tour­ nament in Denton Thursday and Friday with a team score of 486 Texas' Nancy Hager was the i ndi vi dual me da l i s t winner with a two-day total of 158. while the Longhorns' Deb­ bie Norton and Jan Rapp plac­ ed fourth and fifth respective­ ly Lam ar U n iv e rs ity ’s Liz Bowen came in second for in­ dividual medalist with a 160 total. Houston Baptist placed second with a 496 It was a good t o u r ­ nament,” Texas Coach Pat Weis said. “ The extremely cold and windy weather and poor green c o n d i t i o n s , however, caused our scores to be higher than usual.” The next tournament for Texas will be the University of Arkansas Invitational in F a y e t t e v i l l e F r i d a y and Saturday. LOWEST JET FARES TO EUROPE $ 1 .5 0 of any scheduled airline See how much you save via Icelandic Airlines' daily jets from New York to Luxembourg. Ju n e thru August, against lowest comparable round-trip lares of any other scheduled airline VALUABLE COUPON Under 21? T H EIR li t h o g r a p h 20"x30" S7.00 We also carry metal and wood DO-IT-i YOURSELF frames and ready made* frames. ■ I Apartment Shop 2nd Floor One hour free parking with purchase of 2.00 or more. BankAm ericard and MasterCharge w elcom e. ■■■■■■ m — ------------- P a g e IO M o n d a y , A p r i l 7, 1975 THE, DAILY TEXAN Rosam ond D ob ie FA RE OUR Gallery 2 nd floor FA RE $600 $846 The charming young lady pictured above is called “ Simone," but the careful signature in the lower right hand corner reads "Rosamond.” Who, we are asked daily, is Rosamond? Frankly, we don't know Nor have we found anyone who does. "Rosamond,” it seems, is something of a mystery. W e do know that the artist is a woman still in her twenties who is said to live somewhere near Big Sur. We have heard that she is strikingly beautiful, terribly shy, has spent several years in Paris, and is a Pisces. More than that we cannot tell you. W e can, however, say that Rosamond is an artist of rare talent. Her portraits of blossoming young women are softly sensual, romantic and tender without being sentimental. They are a tribute to the heart and a delight to the eye. Please come by and see if you don't agree. ‘TJnicorir Over 21? TH EIR Who Is Rosamond? $1.00 Off with this coupon E FA RE $410 YOUTH F A R E ages 12 to 21. for stays of up to 365 days Show proof of age Confirm within 5 days of flight Save $66 via Iceland ic1 of Prints, Paintings, Sketches, Needlepoint - whatever. mm OUR $476 CUSTOM FRAMING I® FA RE N O R M A L F A R E for stays Of 46 to 365 days Save $246 via Iceland ic’ Similar savings from Chicago' Enjoy lowest let fares to Europe no matter when you go or how long you stay Get details about all of Icelandic s fares ii tours S E E YO U R T R A V EL AGENT Fares s u b le t lo change and gov t approval ^To icelandic Airlines • (212I 757 8585 I N Y N Y 10020 630 Fifth Ave For local loll tree number dial (8001555 1212 ■ Send folders on o v e r / u n d e r 21 ta r e s ■ N am e — --------■ Street -------- I C ity— I State. ----------- Z ip . ICELANDIC A IR LIN E S Official Attacks Credit Policies The Federal Reserve Board, central bank o! the United States, should set up “ systematic guidelines on credit policies" and publicize its policies to receive public and congressional reactions, Andrew F. Brimmer, a termer Federal Reserve Board governor, said Friday. Brimmer, the first black to serve as a governor on the Federal Reserve Board, was appointed to the post by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1966 and served until 1974 when he resigned to teach at Harvard B E C A U S E the board influences public financing through the banks, Brimmer said “ It would be good if the Federal Reserve had to explain to the public why A is be­ ing favored over B ” Brimmer, who has been urging this public policymak­ ing for five years, explained that his plan has been propos­ ed in Congress twice in the form of two different bills, yet both times the Federal Reserve Board has taken a posi­ tion against the proposals. He explained the board fears such guidelines will leave the board open to political pressure and that special in­ terest groups will "parade in. trying to attain low reserve requirements for themselves. Brimmer favors the plan for exactly the same reason He said it s only fair for the public and Congress to have a say on whether credit would go to housing, business cor­ porations, local governments, hospitals or racetracks T H E H ARVARD economist explained that without such systematic guidelines, the Federal Reserve Board will and often does make mistakes in its credit allocation policies. The board has in the past inadvertently played favorites in extending credit to particular sectors such as strapped real estate investment funds, cattle feeding operations and indebted public utilities, he said Brimmer said his plans were revived and then defeated in a congressional committee earlier this year, and this marks the third attempt to implement my proposal in five years." However, Brimmer warned. Congress will yet impose the setting of public priorities on the board if the board refuses to take the initiative. Approximately 150 students listened to Brimmer s lec­ ture on “ Central Banking and Credit Allocation I* rida\ Experts Cite China's Break With Tradition China’s evolution trom a t r a d i t i o n a l p a s t to a technocratic society, her ef­ forts against the Japanese during World War II and the alleged inconsistency of her present leaders were review­ ed by China experts Lord and Lady Michael Lindsay in a lecture Frid a y at Je ste r KRMH PRESENTS DOOBIE BROTHERS AUSTIN M U N IC IPAL A U DIT O RIU M TUES., APRIL 1 5 - 8 P.M. RESERVED: $6.00 Ut I . . . . a ■ ■ ii A a mosta subtle way While mechanization is becoming rapid, reminders of the an­ cient past are being allowed to crumble away." said Lord Lindsay. “ While shrines and temples in places like Peking are b eau tifu lly kept up. the smaller ones in outlying com­ munities are allowed to fall into decay. “ In Taiwan, by contrast, most of the old monuments are beautifully preserved, with new shrines still being built. On the mainland preser­ registered in the department vation is a matter of political that they have filed in and expediency, the creation of an must not be on scholastic probation. The council is composed of these elected individuals in addition to four-at-large members elected by the coun­ T r a v e lin g U n iv e r s i t y cil in the fall, communication students will have an easier student senators and the time arranging departures presidents of all communica­ and arrivals through the tion organizations. Austin airport now that the Those wishing to file should Texas International Airlines return the application by noon strike has ended. Wednesday to the council of­ fice. CMA 4.124. TIA resumed flights at 9:06 Auditorium. The Lindsays’ presentation of slides taken during World War II and later visits to the Peoples Republic of China and Taiwan depicted marked changes during the relatively short time span of 40 years “ China s leaders have broken with their traditions in 15 Council Seats n to Students Eight students have filed for 15 available positions on the Communication Council; a student organization which helps with communication p o lic y d e c is io n s and programs, Dick Jefferson, council president, said Sun­ day. Three positions for each of the s c h o o l’ s a c a d e m ic departments — journalism, advertising, radio-televisionfilm. and speech communica­ tion — and three seats from general communication com­ posed of students with less than 60 hours will be decided in an April 16 election A city study to determine the future of 58 trees between 19th Street and Manor Road has begun and will be finished "hopefully this week. City Manager Dan Davidson said Saturday. The trees, ranging from one to four-feet in diameter, stand along a proposed right of way | HOT PASTRAM I SA N D W IC H ■ H o t p a s t r a m i, s t e a m e d p ip in g h ot w it h I just the rig h t am ount of seasoning Good •brough A p r il 15th m u st P R E S E N T CO UPO N *H H H V ! I - O RD ER r n ■ REGULAR 99' S A V I I S ™ | k ■ ' A l # W M B B % ■ I I HOT PASTRAMI SA N D W IC H | _ ho! ■< ■ lust the right amount of seasoning Good p astra m i, steam ed piping hot w ith 'b r o u g h A p r il 15th M U S T P P E ■ EA C H O R D E R SF NT iOU P O N A I Th mmW m ^ ^ I G U L A R 09' S A V I 75 J U M U A ^ % A ■ B t ■ ™ ^ ARBY’S R aym o n d 's No. I Raym ond 's No. 2 4411 South Lamar 1715 Guadalupe 5400 Burnet Road Conductor: Walter Ducloux Soloists: Choral Union, Morris Beachy, Director, Alm a Jean Smith, Soprano B u s sch e d u le s: Je ste r, K in so lv m g . C o op, 7 : 0 0 -7 :3 0 P M "A ll our people are back to work now with 85 percent of the flights resumed. We’re hoping traffic will pick up by summer so no one will be laid oil KT Mourning. an Airline Pilots Association representative, said a m Friday, although flights to and from Love Field in Dallas. Salt Lake City and three Mexican cities have been suspended. The airline will operate at 85 percent of its prestrike level, and there will be no rate changes as a result of the strike. Arville Roberts. TIA city manager, said Friday. for the relocation of Red River Street The relocation is a joint project between the city and the University. Though no specific halt orders have been issued to the construction crew, Davidson said no tre e s w ould be destroyed until the study is completed. Clearing for the right of way was scheduled to begin soon The plight of the trees was discovered last week at a meeting of the Citizens Board of Natural Resources and En­ vironmental Quality. Pilots signed a back-to-work agreement although they did not have a labor dispute with Served with baked potato and crisp s a la d , with a ch o ice of Geed wholesome American food at right neighborly prices. Correction Delta Sigma Pi business fraternity will sponsor the Putt-a-Thon for the Leukemia Fund rather than Delta Sigma Phi. as erroneously reported in Friday’s Texan. • 2815 Guadalupe • 5209 Cameron Road • 8005 Anderson Square Shop. Center P U C C IN I BELLINI BERNARD HERRMANN I PURITAN! SUTHERLAND,PAVAROTTI CONDUCTS MUSIC FROM S TRAVIN SKY SHAKESPEAREAN FILMS THE RITE OF S P R I N G CAPPUCCILLI. GHIAUROV JU LIU S C A E SA R (RO ZSA! CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA BONYNGE RICHARD III (WALTON) m rm W ITH M U S I C A N D L A U G H T E R BY BOWLEY, WILSON & JAMES from U p Your Alley Fa m e in Dallas S IR G EO RG SOLTI SALE THROUGH APRIL 12 ■ per record rG $6 98 list $6.98 PLUS SALE ON LONDON STEREO TREASURY 23rd an d Pearl -------------- nertwmw-...... — CO M PLETE SY M PH O N IE S O f HAYON v s 93 ' J ANTAL DORATI IY T SM 'H ILD E GUEDEN SINGS CHILDREN S SONGS FROM MANY LANDS STS tits ? ' J C Bach HARPSICHORD CONCERTO OVERTURE IN 0 Malcolm - Academy of St. Martln-in-lhe-Fields Marrlntt STS 15172 STS l i t W at the Texas Tavern. - T h u rs d a y , HAYDN - APPENDICES Oorati STS 15316 17 Haydn SYMPHONIES NOS 103 & 104 Oorati \ p r il STS 15324 M o o d u s I 2 n o u n . I .o n e c rl 7:311 p.m . F ilm : ' I -titer W illiam - . «l p .m . Nu E v e \\ n i t e r - I l eva- C a r n i v a l " w ith n in g w it h J o n a t h a n Y The Cultural E ntertainm ent C om m ittee o f the T exas U nion & Tile D epartm ent o f M usic W O R LD OF SPANISH GUITAR N arciso Tapas STS 16224 Beethoven STM NO 3 ("ERO ICA ) Vienna Philharmonic Manta* i STS 15190 Prokofiev CINDERELLA SU ITES STS 15193 Vaughen Williams SYMPHONY NO 8 PARTITA FOR DOUBLE STRING ORCHESTRA Boult STS 15216 Tchaikovsky 1812 OVERTURE CAPRICCIO R A U E N MARCHE SLAVE STS 15221 Stravinsky LE RAISER DE LA F E E —Complete Suisse RomandtAnsermet STS 15228 Tchaikovsky VIOLIN CONCERTO S T S 15763 Tchaikovsky SYMPHONY NO 4 S T S 15266 VIENNA CARNIVAL Vienna Philharmonic Boskovsky STS 1526* Beethoven EMPEROR CONCERTO EGMONT OVERTURE Katchen - London Symphony Gamba Brahms SONATA IN F MINOR TWO INTERMEZZOS Canon, piano STS '52*3 * Moran SERENADES - VOL 4 Vienna Moran Ensemble Boskovsky ST S 163C- •Mozart SERENADES - VOL 5 Vitnna Mozart Ensemble Boskovsky s t ; '5302 ‘ ROSSINI OVERTURES The Barber of Seville The Siege et Corinth William Toll and others <*S '530* 'firs ! release in U S A 38 S T S 15310 London Stereo Treasury, the only budget records imported from England Enclosed rn vinyl-lined inner sleeves, featuring London's exclusive ffrr stereo sound and the world s greatest artists: So lti, Karajan, M a r in e r , Yepes and many others per record. or 3 per s ^ v r e c o r d s ) I ur-dax I - r>:30 p .m . t r i v i a T o u rn a m e n t J{ 3(1 p.m . h o til N ig h ! (re c o rd - . d a n c in g ) \\ edne-da \ 2-3 p.m . M e x ic a n Song- -ling bx S a n to s B eve­ il p .m . I rix ia T o u rn a m e n t I hur-dax 12 n o o n . ( o n e e rt | JI:3 0 p.m . H elix d a n c in g . \ d m i—in n fo r I I LD. h o ld er- : S I giie-l-. .'»() Ticket sales Begin Friday, April 4 I logg Box ( )ffice/10-6 weekdays S p on sored by e c o rc s e ! S/119 MHH Across horn Tri-Towers • 3 Hrs. Free Parking in the G a ra ge 3 Best of all are Frent and P ava­ rotti. Iv tic lovers for now and Lh irev* Bender T IM E M AG AZIN E I suggest you get a copy of this, turn up the v o lu m e and tell A lice < ooper to go to hell Marsh CHICAGO SI N T IM E S These marvellous new d isc s plus the com plete catalogs of London c la ssic s and operas on sale for only A Bucket of Laughs and Songs THE BUCKET O SA 13110 C S 6885 SPC 2 H 32 (Bernard H ernnann) is to film scores what W agner was to the Opera. Brown HIG H FIDELITY' Here is another m agnificent Bel Canto event by the Sutherland Pavarotti, B onvnge trio their finest to date and indeed one of the very greatest record­ ings available in such repertory. T in uit S A N FRANCISCO CH RO NICLE X X X Rated Funny Show M lin d a \ .50 with ( 'phonal Services Fee - O v "*7 1 | MADAM A B U T T E R F L Y FRENI. PAVAROTTI, LUDWIG VIENNA PHILHARMONIC K A RA JA N "K-W HAMLET (SHOSTAKOVICH I OSA 13H1 (3 record set) THE GOOD TIMES KOLL Tile Solo Artist* Scries T u e s d a y /A p r il 15 H o g g A u d ito riiim /8 ;0 0 P H I'v e got 916 Ben White Blvd. Sibelius SYMPHONY NO 5 KARELIA SUITE “ the king o f cellists” —1 Chicago Vmcrtcaii $ 1 4 9 TONIGHT A N D TOMORROW ONLY! Y lic C u lt u ru t E n t e r t a i n in c u t C o m m i t t e e oft* t i le T e x a s ( m o i l cellist TI A They had agreed to honor the picket lines of the striking ground employes. Mourning said Split shifts was the main point of contention in the fourmonth strike. The recent con­ tract provides eight hours pay for six hours work and $5 travel pay to employes who volunteer for split shifts. Roberts said dressing, and Texas Toast. *oi im **t Janos Starker The Lindsays' presentation was part of a regular lecture program bringing speakers of varied social and political views to the University The program was sponsored by the center for Asian studies. BONANZA EVERYTUESDAY NIGHTRIB-EYE SPECIAL vak Friday, April 18 Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 P.M. Ticket sales begin W e dn e sd a y, April 9, H o g g B o x Office, 10-6 w e e k d a ys For four years during W >rld War II the Lindsays worked with Mao Tse-Tung. Chiang Ching 'Mrs. Mao). Chou Enlai Chu Teh. Lin Piao and other present leaders against the occupying Jap anese forces. AWALS ffVjTUD ® CE075 M i s s S o le m n is B e e th o v e n squelch 3attem t t P TTI pts D t S tto O SO UC I I criticism, the power to cor­ rect mistakes is lost.' he said 892-2058 472-1582 451-3760 for information: 4 7 6 - 1 0 9 0 from Concerts West - J A M Productions The Austin Symphony Orchestra fone I 13f THERE S ALW AYS SO M ETH IN G G O O D C O O K IN G AT NOW ON SALE a n n o un ces Taiwan, preservation of the past is all-encompassing.” he added. Under Japanese occupation the people of mainland China enjoyed a greater degree of press freedom than under the present regime. Lindsay said. “ There is no freedom to live in the Chinese pattern of life that existed over the centuries before the Communists came to power.” he said. “ Communism there, has. however, done a good job in capacities in which MarxistLeninist-Stalinist doctrine is irrelevant Still, in cases City Study To Decide Future O f Trees on Relocation Site SAVE M O N E Y AT A ■ m m fit11 ttotally MI I f'flllP C ll/P fdoc­ I flP almost cohesive, trine is blindly followed he added "Change is the rewriting of history when situations are changed History then, is rewritten every few years, the Chairm an's teachings are revised and redesigned to con­ cur with the grand scheme as if planned all along This in­ consistency will one day be disastrous for China, because it ignores the need for deep thought and s itu a tio n a l analysis. Also this makes for suppression of criticism, a contempt for the intelligence of the masses by the party lf O n On Airline Resumes Operations Sally Carpenter, David Alaniz, Carol Bruneman. Cin­ dy Powell, Jim Lowe and Gail Burris have filed in the jour­ nalism department. Rick Potter is a candidate for general communication and August Toudouze for speech communication Council candidates must be _ ■ ■ rn i n n „on n noutsiders. n t^ i/ln n o impression THETEXAS T A V ER N S M 22203 B K X . **v .IBIIU vt *; * VTA L O N D O N R E C O R D S A R E IM P O R T E D FRO M EN G L A N D AND ARE THE FINEST D I S C S M O N E Y CAN BUY. iDilta records 2310 GUADALUPE * 478-1674 * Hours M-T 10-9 F-S 10-10 M ond a y, April 7, 1975 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e ll /»> 1 t looked extrem ely rocky for the M u d ville nine that day. The score stood four to six w ith but an inning left to play And so. w h en Cooney died at first, and B urrow s did th e sam e, A pallor w re a th e d th e features of the patrons of the gam e A straggling fe w got up to go. leaving there the rest, W ith th at hope w h ich springs eternal w ith in th e hu m an breast For they th ou ght if only Casey could get a w h ack at that, T h e y ’d put up even money w ith Casey at th e bat But Flynn preceded Casey, and likew ise so did B lake, A nd the fo rm er w as a pudding and th e la tte r w as a fake. So on th at stricken m ultitud e a death like silence sat, For th ere seem ed but little chance of Casey s gettin g to th e bat But Flynn le t drive a single to the w o n d e rm e n t of all, And the m uch despised B lakey tore th e cover off th e ball. And w hen the dust had lifted and th ey saw w h a t had occurred. There w as Blakey safe on second, and Flynn a-hugging third Then from the gladdened m u ltitu d e w e n t up a joyous yell It bounded from the m oun tain top and rattled in th e dell, It struck upon the hillside, and rebounded on the flat, For Casey, m ighty Casey, w a s advancing to the bat. Th ere was ease in C asey's m anner as he stepped into his place. Th ere w as pride in C asey’s bearing and a sm ile on Casey's face. And when responding to th e cheers he lig htly doffed his hat, No stranger in the crow d could doubt, tw a s Casey a t the bat Ten thousand eyes were on him as he r u b b e d ^ hands with dirt, Five thousand tongues applauded as he wiped thim on his shirt; And while the writhing pitcher ground the ball into *,s hip Defiance gleamed from Casey's eye — a sneer c u r le d Casey s lip. It s called Spring Break It extends from late February until m id-June, and the tem ptatio n of body over soul is m ore real than im agine, lf you don't believe the choice b etw een an afternoon on a tennis court of in a park is enough to m ake a student forget exactly w hy his parents are supporting him , just take a look at A ustin's parks, the University's recreation facilities or under m ost any tree right now. Students of all shapes and sizes comes for many reasons. Som e w a n t the com petition of an athletic event th at has escaped them since high school. O thers com e to escape the academ ic com petition w hich envelopes students. But for w h a tev er the reasons, boredom doesn t live here. Leave boredom for Dallas and its overcrowdedness. Leave boredom for Houston and its glass skyline. Leave Austin and its parks. On the U niversity campus alone exists the most c o m ­ plete athletics facility in the state W eig h tliftin g , jogging, handball, volleyball, sw im m ing, badm inton, racquetball, squash, gym nastics, tennis, w restling and steam rooms are open daily. There w ere 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 participant hours in the U n iversi­ ty Division of Recreation Sports last year and it is likely to be m ore during 1 9 7 4 -7 5 . The use of the three intram ural facilities. B ellm ont Hall, Gregory Gym and the W o m en 's G ym , w hich are open until 1 0 p.m. daily and 6 p.m . w eekends, decreases during Spring Break. But just try to get a tennis court w ith o u t a reservation. The crow ded facilities, and the necessary bureaucracy w hich organizes them , are m a k ­ ing Austin's park space m ore precious. Life in and around an academ ic institution quite often A nd now the le a th e r-co v ere d sp here ca m e h u rtlin g thro ug h th e air. brings out the best in people The inform al softball and A nd Casey stood a w a tc h in g it in haug hty gran d eu r there basketball gam es, and some are taken m ore seriously C lose by th e sturdy b a tsm an th e ball u n heeded sped — than gam es, som etim es brings out the w orst, the sloppy ’’T h a t h a in 't my style. ' said C ase y— " S trik e o n e ." the U m p ire said side For m ost, this w riter included, the years have left a From th e bleachers black w ith p eop le th e re rose a sullen roar, fine Like the beating of the storm w a v e s on a stern an d d istan t shore. pow der on w hat skills there w ere. The mind "Kill h im ! Kill th e U m p ire !" shouted so m e one fro m the stan d — becom es m ore honed, the body m ore crude lf M igh ty Casey stunned people w ith his infam ous strikeout then w h a t could be said of the thousands of situations w hich confront the m ore than 5 0 0 intram ural Photos: Carol J e a n Simmons softball team s each day. It s not high school, but w ho can go back to high school, except mentally? Story: Richard Justice H e signalled to th e pitcher and ag ain th e spheroid fle w . B u t C asey still ignored it and th e U m p ire said S trik e tw o . Fraud B ut one scornful look fro m C asey and th e au d ie n c e w as aw ed; Th ey sa w his fa ce grow stern and cold num ber of things — the service, the w ar, their college A n d they k n e w th a t C asey w o uld not let th a t b all go by again days or even dreams. Am ong the professors, one finds the m ost aw k w a rd T h e sneer is gone from C asey s lip; his te e th are clench ed w ith hate. shots, the high school definition of uncool — w h ite A n d n o w th e p itch er holds the ball, and n o w he lets it go. and the least outw ard A nd n o w th e air is sh attered by th e force of C ase y s b lo w frustration, as if perfection w as only a m em ory not out of Mark Yemma H e stilled th e rising tu m u lt and he bade th e g a m e go on; thousands of professors w ho take part are reliving a sneakers and green socks — Graphics: W ith a sm ile of C hristian ch arity great C asey's visage shone, " F ra u d !" yelled th e m addened thousands, and th e echo an sw ered lf the students are reliving schoolboy days then the Color Photo: J a y G o d w i n A n d it ’s likely th ey d have done it had n o t C asey raised his hand reach physically but practically. There are a fe w different dress styles and each tells a bit about the person's background. It s not accurate, th ey s a w his m uscles strain. H e pounds w ith cruel violence his bat upon th e p la te . O h ! s o m e w h e re in this favored land the sun is shining bright. T h e band is playing so m e w h e re , and s o m e w h e re hearts are light. A nd s o m e w h e re m en are laughing, and s o m e w h e re children shout. B u t th ere is no jo y in M u d v ille — m ighty C asey has S tru ck O ut. — E rn es t L a w re n c e Th aye r how ever, th at expensive w arm ups indicate the student is from North Dallas. To use the University's facilities cost a student $ 3 .7 5 t out of his $ 3 0 required fees. To use the city's parks cost nothing directly. And w hatever it costs is certainly repaid. Especially during Spring Break. P a g e 12 M o n d a y , A p r il 7, 1975 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N M on day, A p r il 7, 1975 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g e I FURN. APARTS. ■ FOR SALE C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R ATES '5 w o rd m in im u m E a c h w o rd o n * r I '0 E a / w o rd 5 5 * T ie s * 08 E a c f w o rd '0 s r - o r e • T ie * * 07 S '- d c " r a ’ e e a t * • —e * 8C C la s s ifie d D is p la y I cot * I i oeh coe t im e S3 25 I c c ! * I in c h 2-9 t'm e s S i 93 m o re tim e s $2 69 I riel- -es FURN. APARTS. I FREE STUDENT-FREE Misc.-For Sale D on t p a n ic ! W e ll fin d y o u th a t a p t you ye lo n g e d to r O u r s e rv ic e is fre e S. so is o u r tr a n s p o r ta tio n . So s a v e gas a n d tim e b y c a llin g N a n c y A & B F U R N IT U R E a n d A p p lia n c e s W e b uy and sen a ll n o m e fu r n is h in g s 1311 E a s t 1st 472-2303 S E R V IC E P A R K IN G T R A N S P O R T A T IO N a p a r t m e n t l iv in g lo cators B O W M A R M X -TS E le c tr o n ic c a lc u la to r 6 m o n th s o ld . u n d e r w a r r a n ty re ta -' SlOO S ell to r 49 95 475-1999 Habitat Hunters 6000 N O R T H L A M A R 452 9541 G R U M A N a lu m in u m ca n o e S2S0 A lso 3 5 h P m o to r IO h o u rs use *25 C a ll 477-3223 at t e r S:00. 345-1645 17 F T DEADON! SCHEDUl! M o n d a y t o n a n f r id a y T w axd ay T o « a n M o n d a y 11 OO a W r d n o t d a y Toyo n T a a td a v ll T K u 'td a y T o yo n W o d n o id o y 11 OO o a Endoy To yo n T h u n d a y 11 OO o OO CONTEM PORARY APARTM ENTS " T H E 24 F L A T S " T H E I L L U ST R A T E D C A R C o m m e rc ia l s ig n s p e rs o n a liz e d c u s to m s , v in y l s u r ­ fa c e s fo r a u to s 327-0598. } OO p ’ Summer Rates 2 b r *167 50 p lu s e le c t r ic it y E ffic ie n c ie s *99 50 p lu s e le c t r ic it y . S h u ttle b us c o rn e r 1515 P a lm a P la z a 474-4322 1950 T H E A T R E P O S T E R S A u th e n tic , c o lo r fu l *4 OO-*6 0 M u s ic a l, w e s te rn , a nd m a n y o th e rs 453-3784 S O N V T m N iT T iio S I c o io r T V . 4 m o n th s o ld W a ln u t c a b in e t 8 m o n th s w a r r a n ty le ft 451-3149 In th o o vo n t a* orrory m o d o ie on o d v o r lr to m o n ' im m o c h o lo no*i031 476-6134. 258-3385 A v a ila b le A p r il _____________________ U t. _ _ M I L A N O A P A R T M E N T S A B P , n ew re d u c e d ra te s on o u r lu x u r y e ffic ie n c y a n d I b e d ro o m , 2 b a th T o w n L a k e a re a C a ll to d a y 442-2736 _________ BEAT IN FLATIO N S T U D IO A P T F ir e p la c e . CA C H , ca b le , c o n v e n ie n t 900 E 51st *139 p lu s eler. 451 3464, 472-5129. G U I T A R S T R IN G S ETS S A V E 20% H O H N E R H A R M O N IC A S S A V E 10% Y A M A H A G U IT A R S S A V E 10% E F F I C I E N T I S’ C A ' C H . q u ie t n e ig h b o rh o o d . W a lk s h u ttle . Si 10-1115 p lu s E . M a n a g e r U T I W e st 10th 477-5074, 454-7618 AMSTER MUSIC 1624 L a v a c a F A N T A S T IC SUMMER lo c a tio n 1 B lo ck L a w S chool L u x u r i o u s 2 -2 , p o o l, su n d e ck, c a b le , shag L e a s in g s u m m e r o r th e r e a fte r *210, A B P 477 3J88 Pets-For Sale N O B H IL L A P T N o w le a s in g f o r s u m m e r L a r g e I a n d 2 b e d ro o m w ith d is h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l p a tio , p oo l and la u n d ry I b e d ro o m S160, 2 b e d ro o m S215 A il u t ilit ie s p a id 2520 L o n g v ie w (A c ro s s f r o m P ea se P a r k a t 25th a n d N o rth L a m a r 477-8741 A k C ~ M I N i A T U R E S c h n a u z e r p u p p ie s S a lt a nd P e p p e r M a le *125, F e m a le *100 441-6227 B E R N A R D S . P u r e b re d . *100, sh ots, C a n a f t e r 5 30 p rn 4 75-1973or w o rm e d 471 2897 N E W O N E B E D R O O M S S132 50 p lus e le r C lose to U n iv e r s it y M a n y e x tra s . 478 7633 d a y s 345-0568 n ig h ts Misc.-For Sale a r r cm p r i c e s b ra s s b ed *, « " con ~ to p desks g ra n d fa th e r clo cks S a n d y s A n S 506 W a ls h s , , . n r , c u N O W L E A S IN G F o r s u m m e r a n d f a ll I b e d ro o m I b a th 2 b e d ro o m I a n d 2 b ath C A C H , on s h u ttle b u s ro u te L a r g e pool, I i b lo c k s to U T L a w S chool 3212 Red R iv e r 477-2104. p a id for d ia m o n d s , IW P L a m a r . 454 6 8 7 ) A lc K E P DESK 478 8209 478 <146 S A I L B O A T 1 The 14 f t fun S K ' m i w t e ' * * " 5' i ’ “ " C ! ™ p r e c i o u s G E M S , f a c e t e d , r e a d y fo r m o u n tin g Q u a lity . p r e ^ I ' 0" 1 a m e th y s t, a q u a m a r i n e , e m e r a ld , cha m ood g a r n e t a n d a lu s ite , k u n z ite . epa. to p a z to u rm a lin e c it r i n e B y a p p o in t m e a t, 477 8914 G R E E N H O U S E 6 ' x JI N f w * 1 6 5 ^ 0 0 it y o u r-,e lf o r I'M I n s ta ll G le n , 447 546*. 0764 I ba g a r­ Rost 474 CLOSE TO UT D re w 1 bedroom F O R M A T U R E ST U D E N T S I a n d 2 b e d ro o m fu r n is h e d a p t Shag c a rp e t, d ra p e s , c e n t r a l a ir d is h w a s h e r, u n ­ d e rn e a th p a r k in g , w a lk to c a m p u s 477__ _______________________ 5282. S A N J A C IN T O A R M S 1709 San J a c in to A v a i la b le n o w J b e d r o o m . 2 b a th C A CH. w a te r , gas, c a b le p a id N o p ets *190 472-0706 472 4838 C O N V E N I E N C E a n d L u x u r y a t lo w s u m m e r ra te s 2 b d r m (*2 25 ), I b d r m 1*155) A ll h a v e c a b le , d is h w a s h e r, d is posa i a n d w a lk -m c lo s e t W ith pool, la u n d ry r o o m a nd A B P It m u s t be seen 311 E a s t 31st S tre e t 478-6776 F u rn is h e d b ills p a id , s h u ttle M A N A G E R 442-4124 W ANTED A p a rtm e n t m a n a g e rs . P re fe r s tu d e n t c o u p le s Send re s u m e s Box 1668 A u s tin T x 78767 LUXURY EFF O N E B E D R O O M on s h u ttle *142 50 u n ­ fu r n is h e d *162 50 fu r n is h e d W e p ay a ll u tilitie s The B ro w n s to n e 5106 N L a m a r . 454-3496 3 B E D R O O M , 2 b a th a p a r t m e n t Id e a l to r yo u n g f a m ily C o n v e n ie n t to U T . P ric e d f o r a f a m ily b u d g e t *205 *215 u n fu rn is h e d A B P S230 *240 fu r n is h e d A B P T h e S outh S h o re 300 E R iv e rs id e D r 444-3337 F R O M $135 See th e se e x c e lle n t n e w e ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n ts . J u s t a fe w b lo c k s w e s t of to w n a nd U n iv e r s ity W e p a y w a te r and g as A ll fu r n is h e d c a rp e te d b u ilt- in a p p lia n c e s C lo se to s h u ttle bus. B a r g a in at above re n t 1115 W 10th P h o n e fo r a p p o in tm e n t, 472-9228 T , E W ile y Co. NEED a GREAT PLACE TO LIVE? TRY THE BLACKSTONE APARTMENTS F u rn S ha re a la rg e ro o m a t s u m m e r ra te s *57 50 m o . o r ta k e a n e n tir e ro o m fo r *109 50 fu r n is h e d , a il b ills p a id M a id s e r v i c e o n c e a w eek B r in g y o u r o w n r o o m m a t e o r w e w il l m a tc h y o u w it h a c o m p a tib le one T h is s e c o n o m y and c o n v e n i e n c e a t its b e s t O N L Y 200 YARDS FRO M UT CAMPUS 291u R ed R iv e r 476-5631 A P a ra g o n P r o p e r ty 3100 Speedway V ILLADETTE 478-4096 S H U T T LE BUS CO RNE R I BR - $170 3 BR - $325 V e r y clo s e to c a m p u s a nd s h u ttle com p ie t e ly c a r p e te d CA CH b u ilt- in k itc h e n o u ts id e s to r a g e a v a ila b le pool a n d su n d e c k W a te r g as and c a b le TV p a id 302 W e s t 38th 451-3154 o r 451-6533 $135 C lo se to s h u ttle bus a n d te n n is c o u rts , f u l l y c a r p e te d , a ll b u ilt - in k it c h e n C A CH, p oo l o v e r lo o k in g cre e k , lo ts of tre e s W a te r gas a n d c a b le T V p a id 407 45th St 459 8614 o r 451-6533 1700 NUECES N e w e ffic ie n c y , c u s to m fu r n ., a il w ith b ig b a lc o n ie s f o r y o u r p la n ts . G r e a t loca t ion, g re a t lo o k in g S165 p lu s e le c t r ic it y M a n a g e r 201 - 478-9058 JE R R IC K APTS. L u x u r y o ne b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts w ith c e n tr a l a ir , c a rp e te d , d is h w a s h e r, la u n ­ d r y f a c ilit ie s , T V c a b le W alking Distance to UT 13 Block to Shuttle Bus FANTASTIC REDUCTION ON SUMMER LEASE NOW $105 to $119 Water & Gas Paid 104 E 32nd, M a n a g e r A p t 103 476 5940 4105 S p e e d w a y, M a n a g e r A p t 203 452-2462 l f no a n s w e r c a ll 345-4555 F a ll L e a s e N o w F IV E BLOCKS W EST OF C A M P U S N e w la rg e e ffic ie n c y liv in g ro o m , o ffs e t b e d ro o m a n d k itc h e n C able, w a te r , g as fu rn is h e d *130 S u m m e r *119. 477 5514 476-7916 R E D OAKS APTS. 2104 San Gabriel SI 29.00 L a rg e I b e d ro o m , d is h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l, T v c a b le , pool, s h u ttle b us, nice 2 b e d ro o m to w n h o u s e s S175 OO G a s a nd w a te r in c lu d e d N o w le a s in g s u m m e r a nd f a ll C a ll B ill H a r r is o n 441-7577 1302 Parker Lane CASA ROCA L A R G E 2 B E D R O O M , 2 b a th N ear L a m a r P la z a s h o p p in g c e n te r N o dogs F u rn is h e d *160 U n fu r n is h e d S U 5 p lu s e le c t r ic it y C A /C H 6 m o n th le ase 4416088 a tt e r 6 p .m . _______________ _____ E F F I C I E N C Y . *95 p e r m o n th p lu s b ills F u rn is h e d A v a ila b le A p r il IS C a m p u s a re a , c lo s e C a ll 475-1838 P O O L - A L L B IL L S P A ID M O V E IN T O D A Y KEN RAY AC P A I D T A N G L E W O O D N OR TH 1020 E 45th 452-0060 S h u ttle b us c o rn e r________ M o v e in T o d a y $139 A LL BILLS PAID THE ESTABLISHM ENT W a lk - P e d a l • S h u ttle RIVER HILLS V 442-1499 O n s h u ttle b us ro u te 17000 B u rto n La Canada Apts. 472-1598 BR O W N ST O N E PARK APARTMENTS A re c o n v e n ie n tly lo c a te d a nd p ric e d rig h t I S. 2 b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts lo c a te d on s h u ttle bus r o u te F ro m *142 50 A L L B IL L S P A I D 5106 N L a m a r 454-3496 A P a ra g o n P ro p e rty ASPEN WOOD U n d e r New M a n ag em en t S p a c io u s C o n te m p o r a r y L iv in g 2 p o o ls - c o v e re d p a r k in g S h u ttle - C it y bus ro u te s C o n v e n ie n t to a ny lo c a tio n I BR *149 2 BR $199 4539 G u a d a lu p e 452-4447 C o m e L iv e W ith U s! VIP APARTMENTS 33rd and Speedway W a lk U T o r s h u ttle a t d o o r S p lit le v e l lu x u r y liv in g B e a u tifu l 2 b r s / 2 b a th s p lus s tu d y D e s ig n e d f o r 3-5 m a tu r e stu d e n ts N e w f u r n itu r e , w a lk -in s , p oo l, c a b le T V Q u ie t, e le g a n t a tm o s p h e re K in g size I b e d ro o m a lso a v a ila b le L e a s in g t o r s u m m e r a nd f a l l D r a s t ic a l­ ly re d u c e d s u m m e r ra te s P le a se c a ll b e tw e e n noon 8, 7 p rn 177-7451. W I L L O W " C R E E K N o w L e a s in g I BDRM I BDRM *175 *220 A L L B IL L S P A I D D is h w a s h e rs - 2 L a r g e P oo ls S e c u rity M O V E IN T O D A Y 1901 W illo w C re e k 444-0010 I B E D R O O M *130 p lu s E. N e a r c a m p u s & s h u ttle C o n v e n ie n t to d o w n to w n P o o l, s to ra g e 407 W 38th 453-7963. 472-4162 B a r r y G illin g w a te r Co LANTANA APARTMENTS Quiet com plex - not a pa rt y place - now ready for leasing for S um m er and Fall. Walk to and from campus I-2-3 Bedrooms and bath for singles. All apartments paneled, shag carpeting, swimming pool, laundry room, study room, plenty of parking space and beautifully landscaped Lease now before rates increase 1802 West Ave, Phone 476-7473, 476-5556 MOVE IN TODAY M A R K XX 2 BR $184 454-3953 V I R G I N I A S C H N E I D E R D iv e r s ifie d S e rv ic e s . G ra d u a te a n d u n d e r g r a d u a te ty p in g p r in t in g , b in d in g 1515 K o e n ig L a n e 459-7205 B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D I B M S e le c to r, p ic a e lite 25 y e a rs e x p e rie n c e books th e s e s , re p o rts , m im e o g r a p h in g 442-7184 d is s e rta tio n s , D IS S E R T A T IO N S t h e s e s r e p o r t s a nd la w b r ie fs E x p e r ie n c e d t y p is t T a r r y t o w n 2507 B r id le P a th L o r r a in e B ra d y 472-4715 Just N o rth of 27th at Guada lu p e 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk 7f\tkAjJlA YES, we do type F r es hm an themes. O F F IC E h e lp in in s u ra n c e b ro k e ra g e fir m N ear cam pus *2 IO h o u r S end re s u m e B o x 4178 A u s tin , 78765 Why not start out with good grades! 472-3210 and 472-7677 p a r t -t i m e S TU D E N T I M A R R I E D ) a d u lt c o m p le x V a r i e d m a in te n a n c e M a n a g e r r e lie f s a la r y a n d a p t 442-6789, 443-0743 H O L L E Y 'S - C O P Y S E R V IC E " ” A c o m ­ p le te s e rv ic e t y p in g , c o p e s p r in t in g b in d in g 1401 M o tile D r iv e 476 3018 I M M E D I A T E O P E N IN G S f o r 3-11 L V N . 3-11 n u rs e a id e P le a s e a p p ly a* F o u r Seasons N u rs in g C e n te r 2806 R e a l S tre e t R E S P O N S IB L E m a tu r e c o u p le w a rn e d to liv e m 2 b e d ro o m fu r n is h e d a p a rt m e n t, u tilit ie s p a id w it h c a v , in re tu r n to r n ig h t w o rk Send c o m p le te re s u m e to p O B ox D-2 78712 NEW ONE BEDROOMS M A B Y L S M A L L W O O D T Y P IN G Last m in u te o v e r n ig h t a v a il a b le T e rm p a p e rs the se s, d is s e r ta tio n s , l e t t e r , M a s te r c h a rg e , B a n k A m e r .c a r d B92-0727 o r 442-8545 _________ E X P E R I E N C E D A N D F A S T t y p is t Tneses. d i s s e r t a t io n s , p r o f e s s i o n a l r e p o r ts l a w e tc P r in t in g , b in d in g B a r ­ b a r a T u llo s 453-5124 T Y P IN G SE R Y IC i 7 ~ F a s t s e r v ic e . R e a s o n a b le ra te s D e liv e r y a v a i l a b l e C a ll M a r y 441-4742 MISCELLANEOUS A L S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . T h ese s d is s e d a tio n s , m a n u s c r ip ts a nd b u s in e s s t y p i n g P ic k u p 8. d e liv e r y s e rv ic e 4530171. 836-4117 a ft e r 6 OO M A R R IAG E M IN D E D S E R IO U S G IR L S , IN T E R E S T E D TO M EET HANDSOME H IG H L Y Q U A L I F I E D F O R E IG N S C H O L A R 28 K IN D L Y R EPLY THE D A IL Y T E X A N , P O B O X D - l, A U S T IN T X 78712 F R A N C E S W O O D S T y p in g S e rv ic e E x ­ p e rie n c e d L a w Th ese s. D is s e r t a t io n s . M a n u s c r i p t s AU w o rk g u a ra n te e d . P r in ­ tin g b in d in g 453-6090 $132.50 & E. $175 I B R F u rn s ih e d AH B ills P a id F r e s h ly r e fu r b is h e d , p o o 1 W a lk , rid e , s h u ttle to c a m p u s N O W L E A S IN G S T A R K T Y P IN G S p e c ia lty T e c h n ic a l. E x p e r.e n c e d theses d is s e r ta tio n s , P R S, m a n u s c r ip t s e tc P r in t in g , b in d in g . C h a rle n e S ta rk , 453-5218 C O C K T A IL W A IT R E SS o r w a it e r A p p ly rn p e rs o n i l l E a s t 8 th b e tw e e n 111 M on F ri N e x t to A m e ric a n a T h e a tre w a lk in g d is ­ ta n c e to N o r th L o o p S h o p p in g C e n te r a n d L u b y s N e a r s h u ttle a n d A u s tin t r a n s it T w o b e d ro o m fla ts , o ne a n d tw o b a th s A v a l a c le to w n h o u s e w it h p a tio , u n fu r n & I t u r n C A CH d is h w a s h e r d is p o s a l, d o o r to d o o r g a rb a g e p ic k u p p o o l, m a id s e rv ic e if d e s ire d w a s h a te r ia in c o m p le x See o w n e rs A p t 113 o r c a ll 4400 Ave B. 451-4584 Large E ft. - SI29.50 1300 W . 24th Dobie M a ll THE CRO CKETT COM PANY T h e c o m p le te s e c r e ta r ia l s e rv ic e T Y P IN G the se s m a n u s c rip ts , re p o rts , p a p e rs re s u m e s A U T O M A T IC T Y P IN G le t te r s a n d m u lti-c o p ie d o r ig in a ls X E R O X C O P IE S *3 00 f o r IOO co p ie s (p e r o r ig in a ls ! P R I N T I N G a nd C O M P L E T E L IN E of S U P P L IE S 453-7987 5530 B u r n e t Rd N O W T A K I N G A P P L IC A T I O N S f o r w a itp e rs o n 8. k itc h e n h e lp A p p ly in p e r ­ son a t M in e 8. C h a r lie s 1206 W 34th 451 4848 EFFIC IEN C Y PRE-LEASE NOW FOR SUMMER E F F I C I E N C I E S $148.00 FURNISHED A LL BILLS PAID SERVICE W A IT R E S S E S W A I T E R S • lu n c h & d in n e r A p p ly L o s A m iy o s M e x ic a n R e s ta u ra n t 802 C o n g re ss l-3 p m APARTMENTS NO W L E A S IN G I BR - $145 UP 2 BR - $180 UP STUDENTS R R C A T F I SH P A R L O U R W e need so m e p a r t- tim e w e e k e n d h e lp Jo b in c lu d e s g r e e t i n g c u s t o m e r s a n d d r a w in g b e v e ra g e s F u n lo b C a ll 258-1853 a tte r 4 15 p m d a n y a n d a sk f o r M r G o o d m a n S u p e r p la c e f o r s u m m e r 3 b lo c k s to U T in t r a m u r a l fie ld L a r g e y a r d w ith pool sh ag c a rp e * d is h w a s h e r a nd d is p o s a l S u m m e r ra te s n o w F u lly fu r n is h e d S160 P a r t ia lly fu r n is h e d *155 R e s p o n s ib le te n a n ts o n ly . 451 4352________________ B e s t R a te on th e L a k e S h u ttle B u s F r o n t D o o r 2400 T o w n L a k e C ir c le 442-8340 C lo se to c a m p u s , la rg e , o p e n -b e a m e d c e ilin g , f u l ly shag c a rp e te d CA CH, a ll b u ilt- in k itc h e n c o lo r c o -o rd in a te d , no u t i lit y c o m p a n y h a s s le s 4000 A v e n u e A 452-5533 o r 451-6533 R e p o rts , R e sum es, T h e se s, L e tte r s A ll U n iv e r s it y a nd b u s in e s s w o rk L a s t M in u te S e rv ic e O pe n 9-8 M o n -T h & 9-5 F ri-S a t TYPING E P A R T O R F U L L t im e s a le s m a n C a lio n V a ' e ty D ru g O re ss shops to r dis t r ib u t o r P ie r c e d e a r r in g s c o s tu m e le w e lr y . H o o k e m H o rn s K e y r in g s A u s tin o n ly . IO c o m m is s io n M a rk V I I Sa es Co 8Q10 v a n ta g e -3 C San A n to n io T e xa s 78230. 1-341 3865 STUD IO 2 BEDROOM J * SI 37 $115 472-3210 and 472-7677 U N U S U A L O P P O R T U N IT Y f o r a c h ild le s s c o u p le m a r r ie d f o r a t le a s t 2 y e a rs , to w o rk in a r e s id e n tia l c e n te r fo r a d o le s c e n ts A p p lic a n ts s h o u ld be a t le a s t 23 y e a rs o f age, f le x ib le a n d w illin g to liv e in a g ro u p s e ttin g R e n u m e ra H o n in c lu d e s s a la r y ro o m , b o a rd e x te n d e d t im e o ff, v a c a t ons, 8. o th e r b e n e fits C o n ta c t T h e S e t t le m e n t H o m e w e e k d a y s 9-5 836-2150 4318 Bullcreek Rd. O ne b lo c k o ft s h u ttle b us ro u te 444-7797 160! R o y a l C re s t D r iv e , lu s t o ff R iv e r ­ s id e D r iv e I BEDROOM E F F IC IE N C Y M E N TA L HEALTH TRAINEE POSITION I n t e r v ie w in g f o r 11pm to 7 a m o p e n in g s on in t e r d is c ip lin a r y t r e a t m e n t te a m fo r c h ild re n K n o w le d g e of c h ild d e v e lo p m e n ! o r e x p e rie n c e in p s y c h ia t r ic c a re h e lp fu l. *2 OO h o u r to s t a r t B a lc o n e s C h ild re n 's P s y c h ia t r ic C e n te r, 258-1728 C e n tr a l a ir , s p a c i o u s , p a n e l i n g , I a n d 2 b d r m pool, a t t r a c t iv e f u r n it u r e fre e T v c a b le gas a n d w a te r c a r p e t s m a ll c o m piex la u n d ry N e a r M e d ic a l P a r k T o w e r and UT S e le c t t e n a n t s A pt 106 M a n a g e r 452-5631 o r 451-2330 NOW LEASING lar g e F U LL T IM E T Y P I N G S E R V IC E HELP WANTED 474-171: M A R K IV APTS. RIVER HILLS THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL 472-8936 S145 475-0736 MBA, T Y P IN G , P R I N T I N G , B IN D IN G E F F I C I E N C Y w it h s le e p in g a lc o v e o v e r lo o k in g T o w n L a k e C o n v e n ie n t to U T E c o n o m ic a lly p ric e d *153, A B P T h e S ou th S ho re 300 E R iv e rs id e 444 3337 ^ ________________ E N F I E L D A R E A *100 p lu s e le c tr ic , on s h u ttle T h e P a r k v ie w , 1616 W e s t 6th. 472-1337 $ 1 0 9 .5 0 401 W 39th 459-5700 I B- TfyvjJiA j4nn E X T R A S P A C E y o u ca n a ff o r d T w o b e d ro o m 2 b a th on T o w n L a k e f r o m *160 A B P a v a ila b le fu r n is h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d The S outh S ho re 300 E R iv e rs id e D r. 444-3337 I B R 2 BR 29th. W e st o f D r a g 2907 w e s t A v e . Just N orth of 27th at G uadalupe 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk B O N U S R O O M 2 b e d ro o m . 2 b a th p lu s p a n e lle d d en F r o m *205 A B P T h e S outh S hore 300 E R iv e rs id e D r . 444-3337, S U M M E R RATES S o tta rf BEDROOM Page 14 Mo nd a y, A p r i l 7, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN $160 from $200 2 bedroom 2 bath NO W L E A S IN G SHARE THE RENT! 4 CAN SHARE 2BR-2B FOR S66.25 EACH PER MONTH. F U R N IS H E D , A L L B IL LS PAID V A U L T E D C E IL IN G E LE V A T E D BEDROOM N e w 8. b e a u tifu l, f u lly sh a g c a rp e te d a ll b u ilt- in k itc h e n E n o rm o u s s te p d o w n c lo s e t L a r g e pool w ith su n a re a C A CH, a c c e n t w a lls , b u ilt- in b o o k s h e lv e s , e x ­ p e n s iv e c o n t e m p o r a r y f u r n i s h in g s S h o rt d is ta n c e to the I n t r a m u r a l F ie ld F r o m *139 W a te r, g as 8. c a b le p a id 6000 N L a m a r 454 3238 o r 451-6533 C e n tra l P ro p e rtie s In c 1 H E A R T OF TARRYTOWN J B L C E N T U R Y -1 0 0 L o u d s p e a k e rs (2 ). E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , one y e a r o ld M a k e re a s o n a b le o tte r 471-2189 1414 A re n a D r iv e I BR *149 up 2 BR *180 305 W 39th 454-0360 L a r g e a p a rtm e n ts , f u l ly sh a g c a rp e te d , CA CH a b u ilt- m K itc h e n e a ch a p a rt m e n has it s o w n p r iv a t e p a t'O or b a lc o n y pool tre e s 1008 W e st 2 5 'a 4785592 or 451-6533 1900 Burton D riv e 442-9612 509 R io G ra n d e W e o p e n a t 8 a rn 1073 3 B M A R75 B e a u tifu l, p o w e rfu l, d e p e n d a b le lu x u r y . 476-7507, 447 2286 ____________________ N e il. A R E N A PLACE APARTMENTS LA PAZ EL CAMPO A L L B IL L S P A I D W A L K TO C A M P U S $125 COTH RONS B I K E 197! K A W A S A K I 500 E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tio n MSO or b est o ff e r M u s t s e ll 472-9842 e v e n in g s A ls o P re -le a s in g f o r F a ll M O V E IN T O D A Y 2 BEDROOM HILLTOP APTS. JCI C Y C L E CADDY $12.50 G R E A T D E A L S on n ew a n d used H o n d a m o to r c y c le s W o o d s H o n d a F u n C e n te r. 6509 N o r th L a m a r 452-2876 C a rp e t, P a n e le d P o o l o n S h u ttle 46th a nd A ve A 454 8903 TYPING FURN. APARTS. ABP 4305 Duval 451-2343 I & 2 Bdrm turn., covered p a rk in g , s w im m in g pool, recreation rm „ planned ac­ tivities, on site security of­ ficer, 24 hr. maintenance. O ne b lo c k o ft s h u ttle b us ro u te 444 4485 1221 A lg e r ita F r o m i n 35 ta k e O it o r f e x i t to A lg a n t a t u r n r i g h t one b lo c k $149 S P E C IA L T H IS W E E K O N L Y Motoreycle-For Sale The Cascades Two Bedroom Fu rn . 509 R io G ra n d e W e o p e n a t 8 a rn 1970 B R O W N N O V A 350 g oo d c o n d itio n , 3« 000 m ile s , *2800 837-6002 SHARE THE RENT! 4 CAN SHARE 2BR-2B FOR S66 25 EACH PER MONTH. FURNISHED, A LL BILLS PAID, One Bedroom F u rn . Reasonable rates You may drop tires off at COTHRONS B I K E 1969 V W BUS v e r y good c o n d itio n , *1200 o r b e t t e r o ffe r. C a ll 472-5195 474-1532 START NOW Punctures, Bruises, Blowouts, Slow Leaks. C u tla s s to u rd o o r. a u to m a tic , AC, p o w e r new o a m t lo w m ie a g e good c o n d itio n *1795 441-0092 ‘ 71 DUVAL VILLA APTS. Dobie M all Suite 8a SUMMER RATES PYTHON PATCHWORKS SEW-UP TIRE REPAIR 1068 V O L K S W A G E N sedan N e w nspe c d o n s t ic k e r E x t r a c le a n , r e l i a b l e t r a n s p o r ta tio n S ta n d a rd tra n s m is s io n *965 453-4603 _ K im b a l 476-528* F u rn is h e d I b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts D is h w a s h e r 4 D is p o s a l S w im m in g P o o l P a tio & b a rb e c u e v j b lo c k to s h u ttle bus in d iv id u a l s to ra g e B o o k s h e lv e s L a u n d r y f a c ilit ie s C a b le t v R e s id e n t M a n a g e r *186 p e r m o n th a b p o r *159 p lu s e le c t r ic it y 108 W est 45th 452-1419 or 453-2771 je w e lr y , r e n ta l 70 V W F a s tb a c k N eeds *650 454-6976. <59-0090 B A S IC F O L K f id d le in s tru c tio n T h o m a s o n 478-2079 108 PLACE 4411 M e d ica l P k w y ' i t F O R D C O N V E R T I B L E G a ta x ie PSP 9 G o o d c o n d itio n N ew tir e s R e c e n t b ra k e lo b *650 N a n c y Y o r k 4 4 ' 5922 ST S m a ll, f r ie n d ly c o m p le x Shag c a rp e t, d is h w a s h e r, s h u ttle b u s 2 b lo c k s 454-2070 VINTAGE HA LL ______ B ro u g h a m , f u l ly a c c e p tin g b id s 441- AC H a v e t h r e e e x t r a - la r g e e f f ic i e n c y a p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le im m e d ia te o c ­ c u p a n c y Q u ie t f r ie n d ly n e ig h b o rh o o d S hag c a rp e t d is h w a s h e r d is p o s a l lo ts of c a p m e t space, p a n try , w a lk -in clo se ts, m o d e rn d e c o r N o w fo lk s th e se a re b ra n d new a p ts , w it h a ll th e g o o d ie s a t re a s o n a b le p ric e s 2 b lo c k s s h u ttle , * b lo c k s c a m p u s G la d to h a ve yo u t o r a n e ig h b o r • i ik e to m a k e you fe e l a t h om e. G im m e a buzz at 476 9279 472-8253 o r 472 8941 404 4 502 W . 35th ( I b lo c k e a s t Of G u a d a lu p e ! I b d r m * to o ! T h a n x . (u n d e r n ew m a n a g e m e n t) 2153 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _______________ C O M IC C O L L E C T IO N E v e r y th in g 66-69 p lu s o v e r 1400 L ik e n ew C a ll M a u ry , 263 2683 b e tw e e n 5-7 p rn. i »65 F O R D T B IR D A lt p o w e r a ir, m u l l sen to d a y G ood t ir e s bra ises re lia b le tr a n s p o r ta tio n 452-9191 Now P re-Le a sin g S u m m e r Rates E ffic ie n c ie s S105 plus E le c ­ tric ity THE PEPPER TR E E PEOPLE SUMMER & FALL F u rn is h e d lu x u r y e ffic ie n c y a p t on c it y bus ro u te , w a lk in g to s h u ttle bus A v a ila b le n ow 4100 A v e A C a ll 452-1789 P e r fe c t 477-4111 57' c o u c h F o ld s o u t in fo s in g le Ded B la c k a n d w h it e h o u n d s t o o t h w it h w o od e n a r m r e s t L ik e n e w *150 452- 1972 F O R D C U S T O M 500 A ir p o w e r s te e rin g , a u to m a tic G re a t c o n d itio n SI 250 o r b est o ffe r 447-136* NOW FURN. A PA R T S.-! Leasing for HANCOCK III APTS. SCM A u to m a tic IO e le c tr ic t y p e w r it e r P ic a ty ne Used th r e e m o n th s L ik e n e w c o n d itio n *105 00 f ir m 258-5553 • t in n 3 0 d a y s a fto r p u W ie o n o n A free apt. locator service specializing in complexes w ith access to shuttle. ' 2 F irst Month Free A P A C H E S H O R E S 2 L o ts . A ll u tilit ie s , L a k e v ie w *5000 to r b o th N a n c y Y o rk 441-5922 . FURN. APARTS. ■ 452-5093 HALLMARK APTS. $135 708 W est 34th _________454-8239_________ 2 B L O C K S TO C A M P U S F R O M *135 A L L B IL L S P A ID E ff ic ie n c y 8. D o u b le e ffic ie n c y F u ll k itc h e n , c a rp e te d , la rg e w a lk -in c lo s e ts O r ie n t a l f u r n is h in g s P e a c e fu l c o u r ­ t y a r d w ith p oo l O n ly ste p s to s h o p p in g 405 E a s t 31st 472-2147 472-4162 B a r r y G illin g w a te r C o m p a n y MOVE IN TODAY V IL L A SALANO 1 BR -$145 2 BR - $165 454-6293 618 W. 51st EFFIC IEN C Y $119 S h u ttle bus a t fr o n t d o o r, p o o l, C A C H , sh a g c a rp e tin g , a ll b u ilt- in k itc h e n , te n ­ n is c o u r ts a c ro s s s tre e t, h u g e tre e s 4504 S p e e d w a y, 453 3769 o r 451 6533 EFFICIEN CY WALK TO CAMPUS L a r g e fu r n is h e d e ffic ie n c ie s b u ilt in k it c h e n a p p lia n c e s CA CH lo ts o f s to ra g e , s u p e r lo c a tio n , clo s e to g ro t c r y a n d s h u ttle bus a t fr o n t d o o r G a s a nd w a te r p a id 910 W e st 26th 472-6589 o r 4516533 2 B E D R O O M , 2 B A T H , *210 A B P fu r ru sh ed F u ll k itc h e n , la u n d ry a nd pool N e x t to c a m p u s Le F o n t. 803 W e st 28th 47? 6480 472 4162. B a r r y G illin g w a te r Co HAPPY BIRTHDAY CLOSE TO UNIVERSITY PAUL N IE M A N 478-7633/DAYS 345-0568/NIGHTS LO V E , CRUNCHY Manager 477-3586 WOODSIDE Just N o rth of 27th at G uadalupe 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk mp/'Xkb RESUMES with or without pictures 2 Day Service 472-3210 and 472-7677 N E L S O N S G IF T S Z u n i, N a v a io a nd H o p i I n d ia n je w e lr y 4 61 2 S o u th C o n g re s s 444 3814 C lo s e d S u n d a y s , M ondays. W here you r m ove m a tte rs E ff ic ie n c y - 4 Br Shag carpet Shuttle New furniture Pools ABP Summer Leases 2200 W illo w Creek Dr. No. 916 444-6757 A L L B ILL S P A ID Summer Rates Now E f t / 1 BR '2 BR SHO UP 6 blks west of Drag 2408 Leon 476-3467 TH R E E ELM S 400 W 35th F u r n -U n fu rn S u m m e r ra te s s t a r t *140 *192.SO A ls o le a s in g t o r F a ll 2 B d r m 2 Ba I b d r m I ba. C lo se to c a m p u s , s h u ttle bus E x tr a la rg e , sh a g c a rp e t, d is h w a s h e r, r a n g e , d is p o s a l a n d r e f r i g L a rg e clo se ts, p r iv a t e p a tio s , s to ra g e c a b in e ts , c a b le la u n d r y ro o m a nd p oo l 451-394! S I I 5 -S l 25 L a r g e I b d r m 8. e ffs la rg e clo se ts, f u lly c a rp e te d , c a b le , d is p o s a l, w a te r, gas, s w im m in g p o o l, fu r n is h e d , w a lk in g d is tar.e e to U T , no c h ild r e n o r p e ts 610 W e st 30 th 477-8858 L E A R N T O P L A Y G U IT A R B e g in n e r and advanced D re w Thom ason 478 2079 L E A T H E R B E N C H s p e c ia liz i n g in c u s to m m a d e s a n d a ls , b ag s, a n d b e lts 504 W est 24th S tre e t 477-6252 S U R P L U S E L E C T R O N IC S p r im e c o m ­ p on en ts, n e w a nd used e q u ip m e n t, to o ls, a nd k its C a ll R ic h a rd H e rn d o n . 454 1670 o r c o m e b y 5417 M o n tv ie w St fro m 5-9 p .m . w e e k n ig h ts o r a ll d a y S a tu rd a y A U S T IN T O D D L E R co op n u r s e r y has o p e n in g a v a ila b le E n r ic h in g e x p e rie n c e f o r c h ild r e n 18 trio s -3 y r s M e e ts M W F A M ’ s-SlS p e r m o n th 836-2345 o r 452 0906. I A M S E L L IN G O U T Z e n ith c o lo r G ib son g u it a r G*S s u rfb o a rd , W ils o n s ta ff c lu b s M I M 452-7400 RO O M M ATES O W N R O O M 3 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th house, la rg e liv in g a re a s , a n s w e rin g s e rv ic e . e tc $100 a n d t/« b ills 451-6137 T o m . Y vonne F A L L S E M E S T E R fe m a le r o o m m a te needed SR s h u ttle I h a v e f u r n it u r e C a ll J u d y 447 911? a fte r f iv e p e d a l . W A L K . C ru is e , o r s h u ttle if to c a m p u s *100 p lu s e le c F e m a le D e b b ie , 476 2683 a n y tim e H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D C lose in c o u n ­ t r y liv in g 2 b e d ro o m , la rg e h o b b y ro o m Rob, 836 6975 K e e p c a llin g O W N R O O M IN A P A R T M E N T T h re e b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s I m m e d ia t e ly . s u m m e r o r f a ll *75 00 m o n th F r a n k 454 4427, a fte r 6:00. L IB E R A L HO USEM ATE W ANTED *88 66 m o n th W a lk in g d is ta n c e U T 3 b e d ro o m , o w n ro o m , 13 b ills 477-4351 L IB E R A L B U T S E R IO U S s tu d e n t need ed im m e d ia te ly to s h a re 2 b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t *8 5 A B P N onsm oker p r e fe r r e d 472-8501 D a v id R O O M M A T E to s h a re house, C la r k s v ille a re a N o n s m o k e r, o w n b e d ro o m , E R T o m , 476 8815 LAR G E ONE BED RO OM W a lk to sch o o l, s tu d y a re a , c a rp e te d , d is p o s a l, c a b le T V , su n d e c k , CA C H . la u n d ry , g re a t lo c a tio n A B P *155 2812 N ueces. 472-6497 A lso s u m m e r le a s in g F E M A L E S H A R E H O U S E , fe n c e d y a rd N o rth A u s tin S82 50 N ic e a re a F a ir ly lib e r a l A tt e r 6 00, o r m o rn in g s , 452-5602 E F F I C I E N C Y *119 50 g as p a id W a lk to c a m p u s , pool la u n d r y N o p ets 709 W e st 26th 478-9170 FURN. HOUSES H E L P - F R E F . H E L P t h e R e d c o a ts A p a r tm e n t L o c a to r s 447 7705 We lis t o v e r IOO c o m p le x e s in c it y of A u s tin We a r e f r i e n d l y , e x p e r ie n c e d and k n o w le d g a b le G iv e us a c a ll 444-9377 O N E . TW O B e d ro o m , Sao P a u lo , one b lo c k s h u ttle P ea se P a r k , on E n fie ld Q uam 1 476 50 '?, 476-4999 PALO BLAN C O I b e d ro o m , f u lly c a rp e te d C e n tr a l a ir , d is h w a s h e r, d is ­ p o sa l, b e a u tifu l n e ig h b o rh o o d L o c a te d n e a r s h u ttle a rid c it y bus ro u te 911 B la n ­ co -174 1394 N E A R C A M P U S *90 *140 S in g le m e n C le a n, p riv a te N o t c o m p le x S p rin g • F a ll 1705 N u n . ox 477-7755 L A K E A U S T IN , q u ie t c o u n tr y liv in g 15 m in u te s c a m p u s d o w n to w n O ne b e d ro o m m o b ile h o m e *70, 2 b e d ro o m $120 a nd *130 327 189), 327-1151 B R IC K 3 I, C A /C H , tre e s , fe n ce d y a rd , d is h w a s h e r. H ig h la n d M a il a re a , fre s h p a in t, c a rp e t *235 453 0596 459-5210, 453 5778 T W O B E D R O O M , liv in g ro o m , d in in g ro o m , b re a k fa s t ro o m Fenced y a rd , p o r c h , a n d f i r e p l a c e *240 *200 d e p o s it 1503 M u r r a y 477-5292 2 1 F U R N IS H E D H ouse C a rp e te d re d e c o ra te d , 250 1 a F a s t S a in t E lm o F e m ed y a r d , d e p o s it, le ase *190 00 4423109 SERVICES Finest Quality, Reasonable Prices Call on us before you get clipped. THE HAIRCUT STORES 478 0022 477-0423 GI NN Y'S ^COPYING •SERVICE 'CK, P F '- INC. 42 Dobie M all 476-9171 Free Parking 7a m IO p .m . MA F 9 a rn. ■ 5 p .m . S at C O N F I D E N T I A L C A R E f o r p re g n a n t u n m a r r ie d m o t h e r s E d n a G la d n e y H o m e 2308 H e m p h ill, F o r t W o rth . T o ll f re e n u m b e r 1800-792 1104 A B O R T IO N A L T E R N A T I V E S ' P re g n a n t a nd d is tre s s e d 5 H e lp is as n e a r as y o u r te le p h o n e P r o - L if e A d v o c a te s . 510 W e st 26th 472-4198 M O V IN G ? W E c a n m o v e yo u fa s t w ith o u t b re a k in g y o u C h e a p e r th a n y o u th in k . 454 7846. 472-5713, E X P E R I E N C E D T A X C o n s u lt a n t , f a m i l i a r IR S p r o c e d u r e s p e c ia liz e s p ro fe s s o rs ' a nd s tu d e n ts ' r e tu r n s F re e e s tim a te s 474-2582 H u r r y 1 M O V I N G -5 W e h a u l in C h e v y v a n A p a rtm e n ts , d u p le x e s houses L o w e s t ra te s 442 0056 C a r e fu l w it h p la n ts B O O K - L O O K I N G ? L e t us h e lp No o b lig a tio n s e a rc h fo r o u t- o f- p r in t o r ra re books C a ll 263-5335 o r w r it e A r ja y B oo ks R f 8, B ox 173. A u s tin . 78703 C E L E B R A T E "T h e W e e k of th e Y o u n g C h ild A p r il 6 t h r u 12 - V is it G ir lin g D a y S cho o l 1404 N o r th L o o p 451-5983 G I R L I N G D A Y S C H O O L " C r e a t iv e e x ­ p e r i e n t i a l le a r n in g 1404 N o rth L oo p C o m e v is it us 451-5983 M A X S T E N N IS S H O P . G ood q u a lity a nd fa s t s e rv ic e K r a m e r ra c k e ts w ith n y lo n S3? C a ll 451-8525 E X P E C T IN G U N E X P E C T E D L Y ? C a ll V ic k i o r Ja n e a t 454-1795. T h e y ve been th e re a nd th e y U ke to lis te n A ll a lte r n a tiv e s d is c u s s e d . TRAVEL S U M M E R IN EUROPE U n i- T r a v e l C h a r te r s a t less th a n ' a re g e c o n o m y fa r e 65 D a y a d v a n c e p a y m e n t re q u ir e d U S G o v t a p p ro v e d T W A P an A m T ra n s a s ia 707 s C a ll to ll fre e , ISOO 325 4867 S U M M E R R A TE S D o u b le s $52 50 S in g le s $95 OO p e r se ssion T e x a n D o rm • 1905 N u e ce s D a i l y m a id s e r v ic e , c e n t r a l a i r . R e f r ig e r a t o r s , h o t p la te s a llo w e d T w o b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s C o e d R e s id e n t m a n a g e rs 477 1760 R o o m s a ls o a v a ila b le f o r F a ll. 2 BLOCKS UT F u r n is h e d A p a rtm e n t roo m s. and F ro m S80/month. 2800 W hitis 477-7558 P R IV A T E R O O M S T w o b lo c k s c a m p u s , c e n tr a l a ir M a id s e rv ic e , k itc h e n , co -e d 2411 R io G ra n d e 476 2551 W A L K C A M P U S . F u rn is h e d ro o m AC. r e f r ig e r a t o r , p r iv a t e e n tra n c e , b a th $85 2402 R io G ra n d e ( in r e a r ) 454-76)8 S70 M O N T H B ills in c lu d e d P r iv a t e ro o m 4 b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s C A C H , k itc h e n p r iv ile g e s s h o w e r 472 2789 J “ m o c ks CAMPUS W .c . r o u te . P r i j t e ro o m , s h a re re s t w ith 2 c o o l lo w k e y s tu d e n ts $55 s h a re b ills 2510 San G a b r ie l 475-9729 C L E A N , n ic e ly fu r n is h e d b e d ro o m in q u ie t h o m e fo r s e rio u s m a le s tu d e n t 608 B la n c o . 478-7900 mhpn Morgan.a Morgan,a 21-yearStephen old University business m a ­ jo r, d is a p p e a r e d fr o m his Riverside a p a r t m e n t Wednes­ day and has been missing since then T h e 5-8, b r o w n - h a i r e d , brown-eved Morgan w as last seen at 8 a m. Wednesday by B rett Applebaum, his ro o m ­ m ate. A c c o rd in g to Applebaum, M organ’s “ keys wallet, c a r and shoes a r e all accounted for. W h erever he is. he's barefoot, and he has no m oney/' Morgan and his r o o m m a te live in the Riverside Cloister Apartm ents. “ When I c a m e home Wednesday, the door was open, and the re w as no sign of a struggle T h e re a re no clues The police have gone through the a p a rtm e n t, and they c a n 't find anything, said Applebaum. UNF. DUPLEXES ■ UNF- H0 U St* JOB WANTED 2 b e d ro o m d u p le x to r r e n t in a d y e l N o rth e a s t A u s t in r e s id e n tia l n e ig h o o rh o o d E a c h d u p le x o tte r s la rg e fe n c e d b a c k y a r d , c o v e re d p a r k in g , ex tr a s to ra g e ro o m P lu s w a s h e r, d r y e r c o n n e c tio n s . K itc h e n a p p lia n c e s f u r ­ n is h e d $160 p lu s b ills C a ll 928 2296 F O R S U M M E R R e s p o n s ib le in d iv id u a l to c a re t o r hou se p la n ts , y a rd , p e ts. A ft e r 6 p m 475-9605 WANTED C A S H F O R b o o k s 8. r e c o r d s Ja zz c la s s ic a l, ro c k in g o o d c o n d itio n 4745294 _ NORTHEAST 2 b e d ro o m , I b a th S190 SO UTH 3 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th $ 180 B o th h a v e f ir e p la c e , c a r p e tin g d ra p e s fe n c e d a re a R e s p o n s ib le p e rs o n s o n ly C a th y S n y d e r 454 9482 T R I P L E B E A M b a la n c e w e ig h ts w a n te d to b u y u se d 427-7554 ._. “ Some people think that he 's ju s t taken off. but we think it’s hard to believe that h e ’d t a k e o ff a n d l e a v e e v e ry th in g he o w ns, said M organ’s father. “ We've se arc he d the woods and the river n e a r the a p a r t ­ m ent, and we haven t found a sign of h im ,’ said Applebaum Police Lt. Jo e P e r r y a d ­ m itte d o ffic e rs w ere 2 B E D R O O M , I B A T H S ha g c a rp e tin g , y a rd , c a r p o r t . 453-9790 a ft e r 5. PRETTY DUPLEX . m p e d "< on this “ stu this case. M organ w e ig h s ap­ proximately 155 pounds and has a c res c en t shaped scar on his right shoulder He is clean shaven and is probably w e a r ­ ing blue je a n s and a blue flannel shirt. “ lf anyone knows anything they can call m e a t 442-6910, or th ey ca n c o n ta c t th e police,’’ Applebaum said. J. A T ests to e a rn cou rse credit by e x a m i n a ti o n in g o v e r n ­ m e n t and S panish will be g i v e n t h i s w e e k so t h a t students can receive results in tim e to p re re g iste r for the fall se m e s te r. S tu d e n ts and prospective stu den ts at the U n i v e r s i t y w ho m e e t th e eligib ility r e q u i r e m e n t s to tak e the tests can e a rn credit for Gov. 310L and for the first 17 se m e ste r hours of Spanish. The C L E P S u b ject E x ­ a m i n a t i o n in A m e r i c a n G overnment, a u gm ented with test item s pertaining to Texas Government, will be given a t 6:30 p in W edn esday . T he C o lle g e B o a rd L i s t e n i n g Reading Achievem ent Test in Spanish will be given at 6:30 p m . Thursday. Location of the tes ts will be on the a d m is ­ sion tickets which can be obta in e d o n ly at J e s t e r A u d ito r iu m T i c k e t O f f i c e from 4 to 6 p m. on Wednesday and from 3 to 6:30 p.m. on Thursday. F e e s a r e $20 for the government test and $4 for the Spanish test. P a m p h le ts co n ta in in g eligibility re q u ire m e n ts, te s t d e sc rip tio n s and sa m p le questions a re available a t the M easu rem en t and Evaluation Center, 2616 Wichita St FO UND H O N E Y B L O N D P a r t c o llie fe m a le n e a r L B J L ib r a r y V e r y g e n tle N o c o lla r 477-0225 T A N B R I E F C A S E w ith p a p e rs books 21st, G u a d a lu p e S u n d a y. M a r c h 31 SIO r e w a r d 837-0252 472 8087 1964 B M W R60 2 St,OOO 459-7555 S75 C u r t 45L6814. WIFE LANDS ONSTRAYING HUSBAND L O S T C O C K E R S P A N I E L . b lo n d N a m e G o o fy R e w a rd SI00 C o n ta c t 442 8569, 441-8404 441-5203 UNF. APARTS. LAR G E L U X U R IO U S O ne b e d ro o m S to ve r e f r ig e r a t o r , la rg e y a r d p o rc h re o d e id SISO O n O w e n C ir c le one b lo c k e a s t o f L a m a r b e h in d S id 's 451-6832 L A R G E O N E B E D R O O M a p a r t m e n t in q u ie t w e s t A u s tin c o m p le x $135 p lu s e le c t r ic it y 327-0479 a ft e r 5 1967 R e n a u lt IO $350 471-5993 T e a c h m e c e le s t nav B y ro n , 451-5416. H P 80 C a lc , 6 m o s $325 M ik e 472-3344 H i- F i s a le 2 b % -4 0 * * /*47-<074 m i l . M o s t r it e g u it a r g oo d c o n d U p r ig h t p ia n o 472-7502 G oo d c o n d 444 9333 $600 471-7300 A R X A T u r n ta b le $25 C h a r lie S p o rt sh oe s 475-0467 IIT 478-6073 W a n t b u y Q U IN T O g a m e 471-1083 A r t R e g 8 s u p e r 8 m o v ie p ro f 476 7986 837-7765 P o r t R o y a le le e goo d c o n d ,$70 451-6361 I w a n t G e r S h e p a rd p u p 442 7360 KNOW Los* bo b l& w h s h e p -h u s k y 478-5996 T e x a s tho firaHemir fpfl Pf Ste a k s e rv e d w i t h G r e e n Beans, B a k e d P o tato & S a l a d H a m , C h ick e n , B eef S a u s a g e & Ribs, Beans, P o ta to S a l a d & Cole S l a w $ 4.95 $ 3.2 5 111 W e st M a in S treet In Round Rock IH 3 5 N to 6 2 0 . Right on 6 2 0 at signal WITH THIS AD A u stin s h u m i d c l i m a t e represents a re a l challenge to the successful operation of the solar equipm ent. Holt said, since all previous solar hom es h a v e b e e n bui l t in d r y clim ates. This factor is e s ­ pecially critical to the solar air-conditioning sy stem , he added t a t e O p t i c a l BUREAU OF HEALTH HOSPITAL CAREERS COUNSELING The Election is Wed., April I 6 i”longhorn Special J O U A U rg e rs & Super-Bert Lincoln Medical Center (Dept. NI) P.O. Box 238, Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 GROSSMAN PURLISHERS B ld g 4 1 24 w/cheese SAVE 49' 525 Mad'Son Avenue Ne* York, Nv 10022 MUST BRING COUPON G O O D ALL S P R IN G SEMESTER WHEAT BERRY BREAD now available on any sandwich 1 Texas Union M exican American Culture and A fro-Am erican Culture C om m ittees 3303 N. Lamar OPEN DAILY 10:30 - IO P.M. P resent | I c a ll fo r re se rva tio n s: 2 5 5 -3 2 5 3 S " Attention: Dr. A. N aseem. M D. ALL YOU CAN EAT M o n d ay-S atu rd ay 1 1 .0 0 a.m . - 9 :0 0 p.m. Closed Sunday ASSISTING the builders on the projec t is the University s t e n t e r tor E nergy Studies, which is supplying in fo rm a­ tion on available solar equip­ ment. engineering ex p e rtise and clim a tic data. Willing to Work for a better "A FREE information on world wide oppor­ tunities of medical education, training and financial assistance for aspiring physicians and allied health professionals. MOS A D ivisio n of The V ik in g Press in t e r n a t io n a l STUDENTS s t u d e n t s ORO o r g Ak a n iz a t io n INTERNATIONAL m eet at 7 p m M o n d a y in C a lh o u n H a ll IOO to s h o w a f i l m f r o m I n d ia " T a x i D r iv e r A d m is s io n is fre e . a n d a ll in te r e s te d s tu d e n ts a re in v it e d to a tte n d STUDENT ENGINEERING COUNCIL * meet a t 7 30 p m M o n d a y m C o c k re ll H a ll i 2>4 to e le c t n e x t y e a r s o ff ic e r s WAR RESISTERS LEAGUE * meet at 7 p m M o n d a y a t 4106-B A v e G SEMINARS ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING w s p o n so r a s e m i n a r a t 4 p rn M o n d a y in C o c k r e ll H a ll I 202 A J C h a p m a n F l u o r C o r p o r a t io n , w i l l d is c u s s P ro c e s s P la n t E le c tr ic a l E n g in e e r ng TEXAS UNION IDEAS ANO ISSUES COMMITTEE w il l s p o n s o r a s a n d w ic h s e m in a r w it h T a d D a v s o f B ra c k e n rid g e C l i n i c d is c u s s i n g v a r i o u s n e w m e th o d s o f b ir t h c o n tro l, a t noon M o n d a y in th e A c a d e m ic C e n te r Josey R oom A p p lic a tio n & A n s w e rs a v a ila b le in C o m m u n ic a tio n ASSOCIATED DOCTORS OF OPTOMETRY P aper S3 50 B a r-B -Q u e E stim ated co st of the house now stands a t around $65,000 plus the cost of solar equip­ ment. according to the pro­ je c t's a rc h itec t. Joe Holt. And as of now. Holt said he has no idea w he re the equipm ent will come from or how m uch it will cost. Filing Deadline for Communication Council elections is Wednesday, April 9 at noon. The new book edited by Robert O m stem C a sh f o r u se d b ic y c le 477-3002 1 C\ r HOP in Austin A llS tltl s 5 specifically ftor use in humid clim ate . Secondly the savings association w an ts to m ake home ow nership p r a c ­ tical again by lowering utility costs SOFT C O N TA C T LENSES N O W A V A ILA B LE AT T S O for F a m ily S ty le D in n ers . . . . Tues. & Thurs. Night aa e School of Communication? CALL: 452-5735 (Or. Can of Fool Pow der Fleeted M ayor o l E cua d orian Town) 1 0 sp d $ 7 5 V n tu ra $ 75 B a ss$ 60 928 0591 I THE BRUSHY CREEK I 1 I e BAUSCH S. LOMB ▼ BY APPOINTM ENT ONLY 66 D o d g e D a r t $550 472-4744 F la m e n c o g u it a r le sson s 453-0698 B E L L S O N D O R M f o r M e n E x c e lle n t h o m e -c o o k e d m e a ls AC. m a id , s w im ­ m in g p o o l N o w ta k in g re s e r v a tio n s fo r s u m m e r a n d fa n 2610 R io G ra n d e 4764552 8 5 30 TEXAS UNION FINE ARTS COMMITTEE w ill sp o n so r a w e s te rn s c u lp tu re e x h ib it M o n d a y th r o u g h A p r i l 19 in th e U n d e rg ra d u a te L ib r a r y F o y e r TEXAS UNION MEXICAN-AMERICAN CULTURE COMMITTEE a nd th e A fr o - A m e r ic a n C u ltu r e C o m m itte e w il l sp o n s o r th e f ilm ' R osas B la n c a s P a ra M i H e r m ana N e g ra " at 7 and 9 p m M on­ IN AUSTIN MORE! 6 6 G a ia x ie n ee d s m tflr$ 3 0 0 475 8448 H i in t e n s it y la m p f o r s a le 454-7977 R O O M & BO A R D TEXAS TAVERN w ill sp o n s o r " A n E v n in g W ith J o n a th a n W i n t e r s " c o n c e r t re c o rd in g s , f r o m 9 to l l p m M o n ­ d a y A d m is s io n is f re e There s morn R e el to re e l ta p e r e c o r d e r 476-7986 S h a re c o u n tr y h o m e n o r th t C A PITA L PLAZA OFFICE P R A G U E - V e r a C ze rm a k jum ped out of her third-story window when she learned her husband had betrayed her Mrs C zerm ak is recovering in a hospital after landing on her husband, who was killed. $200 475 0142 F e n d e r Super R e v e rb a m p 67 V W b u g HUMANITIES COUNCIL w ill sp o n so r a f a c u l­ ty fire s de f r o m 7 to 9 p rn T u e s d a y a t th e h o m e o f D r L a r r y G re ts k y , G e r m a n a n d Y id d is h p ro fe s s o r S tu d e n ts in t e r e s t e d in a tt e n d in g s h o u ld sig n u p in G e o lo g y B u ild in g 116 c r in G r e ts k y 's c la sse s , . d a y in t h e A c a d e m i c C e n t e r A u d it o r iu m A d m is s io n is 75 c e n ts fo r s tu d e n ts f a c u lt y a n d s ta ff Si fo r o th e rs TEXAS UNION MUSI CAL EVENTS CO M M ITTEE* s p o n s o r m u s ic a t noon M o n d a y In th e T e x a s T a v e r n A d m is s io n is fre e TEXAS UNION THEATRE COMMITTEE w ill s p o n s o r th e f i l m " T e x a s C a r n iv a l a t 7 30 p m M u n d a y in th e T e x a s T a v e r n A d m is s io n s fre e ALCOHOLICS A N O N Y M O U S BEGINNERS MEETING * " e e l a t 8 15 p r- M o n ­ d a y in th e U n iv e r s it y P re s b y te r an C h u rc h , r o o m 210. BLOOD COORDINATING COMMITTEE w ill m e e t f o r a f in a l '>m e fo r th e s p rin g 75 U n iv e r s it y b lo o d d r iv e a t 4 p .rn M o n d a y in T e x a s U n io n S outh 108 A ll in te r e s te d p e o p le p le a se a tte n d INDIAN AND PAKISTANI STUDENTS w I m e e t a t 7 p rn M o n d a y m C a lh o u n H a ll IOO to p la n spec a l R o u n d -U p C u lt u r a l P re s e n ta tio n s c a le a n d P le a s e c a ll D a w e s G a la x y , ex co n 475-0127 a ft 6 30 LOST & FOUND VISITING LECTURER SERIES w ill p re s e n t P ro f P a u l B a r t l e t t , o r g a n ic c h e m is t, T e x a s C h r is t ia n U n iv e r s i­ ty , d is c u s s in g " T h e C h e m is tr y of S in g le t O x y g e n a n d D io x e ta n e s " a t 3 30 p m M o n d a y in W e lc h H a ll 104W ANNOU N C I M INTS CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT DISTINGUISHED H a v e you h e a rd Q u ie t T h u n d e r 7 ^ K L H 32 s p e a k e rs i- family of five a re getting ex­ cited about living in their new home. L A M A R Savings Associa­ tion conceived the project for two reasons. Tiem ann said. F irst. L am ar felt it had to take the initiative in develop­ ing s o l a r e n e r g y s y s t e m s w h ic h cou ld be a d a p te d Construction of Texas' first solar heated and cooled house in th e h ills n o r t h w e s t of Austin should begin within the next two months, the ho m e's future owner said Friday. Tom Tiem ann. a law yer for L a m a r Savings Association which is the sponsor of the solar home, said he and his Course Credit Ex a m in a ti o n s O f f e r e d B e lly d a n c in g in s tr u c tio n . 472 3344 Z IL K E R P A R K 3 b e d ro o m 2 b a th F ir e p la c e , p e ts $225 2307 L a C a sa 447 5464 a f t e r 6 Stephen Morgan campus briefs UNCLASSIFIED L o n g m o r ^ ^ A s s o c ia te s J Austin To Host Texas' First Solar Energy Home UT Student Missing ROOMS ROSAS BLANCAS PARA MI HERMANA NEGRA" 8 a .m . - 5 p m . M o n d a y - F rid a y R e s e rv a tio n * for “ C a m i l l e / ' R eservatio ns fo r th e p lo y by A le x a n ­ dre D u m a s , to b e p re s e n te d a t 8 p .m . W e d n e s d a y S u n d a y , A p ril IO - 13, can b e m a d e in th e T exas U n io n P ro g ra m O ffic e , U n ion South Room I 14, or by c a llin g 4 7 1 - 5 6 5 3 . T he p la y w ill b e in T o w n H a ll in H anco ck C e n te r. Tickets a re S I . 2 5 for UT s tu d en ts, fa c u lty , a n d staff; $ 1 .7 5 fo r th e p u b lic. "A m o s t im p re s s iv e film w h ic h I | exposes th e c ru e lty o f ra c ia l d is c rim in a tio n A.C. Auditorium 7 5 c UT LD ./ S I .OO Others Tonight 7 and 9:30 p.m. T h e a tre C o m m itte e . 8 a .m . - 5 p .m . S ig n -u p for B e g in n in g Rock C lim b in g . S ig n up by W e d n e s d a y in T exas U n io n South Room 1 1 4 fo r a con densed w o rk s h o p on b e la y in g a n d re p e llin g on F rid a y a n d S a tu r d a y , A p ril l l 8i 1 2 . Six instructors w ill te a c h . Leave F rid a y a t 6 p .m .; re tu rn S a tu rd a y n ig h t. Cost $ 6 p e r p erson. E n c h a n te d Rock. R ecreation C o m m itte e . 8 a rn - 5 p m . M o n d a y - W e d n e s d a y . C a n o e T rip G u a d a lu p e M o u n ta in * S ia n -U p . Sign up by W e d n e s d a y for a Low er G u a d a lu p e River C a n o e Trip on S a tu rd a y & S u n d a y , A p ril nd 1 3 , a n d for a G u a d a lu p e M o u n ta in s c lim b in g trip F rid a y S u n d a y A p ril 11 - I 3 . Cost o f th e c an o e trip is $ 8 fo r UT s tu d en ts, fa c u lty , a n d s ta ff; S 8 .5 0 for others; c lim b in g trip is fre e . R e c re a ­ tion C o m m itte e . A ll D a y . W e s te rn S c u lp tu re E x h ib it. The th e m e o f th e O ld W est in s c u lp tu re . F o y e r U n d e r g r a d u a te L ib rary. T h ro u g h S a tu rd a y , A p ril 1 9 , Fine A rts C o m m itte e . i ------ A n g w i c h S e m in a r:- Birth C o n tro l M e t h o d s /' D r T ad D avis of B ra c k e n rid g e C linic w ill discuss v a rio u s m e th o d s o b control. Josey Room 4 th floo r, A c a d e m e C e n te r. Id e a s a n d Issues C o m m itte e . J 2 n o o n . N o o n C o ncert. Texas T a v e rn . M u s ic a l Events C o m ­ m itte e . O ne lusty yesur in fla p ja c k s ain ’t hay- A nd w e’re c eleb ratin g o u r firs t b irth d a y w ith d aily su rp rise s. 7 & 9 : 3 0 p rn M e x ic a n Film F estival: “ RosgL B la r Kas p q n aj jh H e rm o n a N e g r o / ' T he film , tra n s la te d to “ W h ite Roses for M y Black S is te r," is a la v is h p ro du ction e x p o s in g th e cruelty of racial d is c rim in a tio n . N o English su b title s A d m issio n 7 5 ‘ for UT s tu d en ts, fa c u lty , a n d s ta ff; S I p u b lic. A c a d e m ic C e n te r A u d . M e x ic a n -A m e ric a n a n d A fro -A m e ric a n C u ltu re C o m m itte e s . 7 .3 0 p .m . f i lm ! ’ T e x a s C p r n iv g L l M is ta k e n id e n tity a n d s w im m in g m a k e up this e a rly 5 0 's c o m edy w ith Esther W illia m s a n d Red S k e lto n . T h e p ro g ra m is o ffe re d in co n ju n c tio n w ith R o u n d -U p . Free. T ex a s T a v e rn . SALE PRICE 9 - J 1 . 3 0 p m . A n E v e n in g w ith J o n a th a n W in te rs . A w a c k y a u d io e x p e rie n c e f e a tu r in g th e o rig in a l liv e concert reco rd ing s. Free. Texas T a v e rn . ___________________________ _ C O M IN G EV EN TS f lA M A & t t fc A M Y Q M 1817 South Lamar, Austin, Texas O p en 24 h o u rs D is c o u n t 38th & Speedway WOOD GRAINED CABINET ADDITIONAL T u e s d a y & W e d n e s d a y . Texas T a v e rn T riv ia E x tr a v a g a n z a . The T u e s d a y a fte rn o o n contest, b e g in n in g a t 4 p .m ., w ill pit tw o top s tu d e n t te a m s . T h e W e d n e s d a y n ig h t c o m p e titio n , b e g in n in g a t 8 : 0 0 p .m ., w ill p u t the w in n in g s tu d e n t te a m a g a in s t a n a llstar fa c u lty lin e u p consisting of Ors. R ichard Pels, B urton S p iv a k , a n d T h o m a s M c C ra w . Free. T e x a s T a v e rn . M onday, A p r i l 7, 1975 THE D A ILY TEXAN Page 15 The Human Rights Research Council of the University of Texas School of Law Presents A Symposium “Citizen V a lu e s & Law E n forcem en t P olicy ” . ALL EVENTS & FILMS AKE FREE fV w " EACH PROGRAM EXCEPT “ THE CITIZENS RIGHT TC' ’ AP R IL IT. IS AT T H E C H A R L E S 1. I R A M A S A l DITORO. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS SCHOOL OF LAW. Thursday, April 17, The C itiz e n s R ig h t to K n o w PROGRAM 2:00 p m. Friday. April l l , Ju ve nile s and Ju s tic e 10:00a.m . Dean M onrad at the LB J School Mr. T o m Susman, C ounsel to the United States Senate S ub-C om m ittee on Adm inistrative Prac­ tice and Procedure, prim arily responsible for draft ing the Freedom of In form ation Act and A m end Paulsen. University of Virginia School of Law Professor Michael Zuckerm an. University Pennsylvania D epartm ent of History of ments. Mr. Peter Petkas, Staff Director, U nited States House of Representatives, Sub-C om m ittee on G o ve rn m en t In fo rm a tio n and Individual Rights Assistant Professor Dagm ar H am ilton. L yn d o n Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs Professor H ardy Jones, D epartm ent of Philosophy. U niversity of Texas Ms. M o lly Ivins, C o-E ditor of the Texas Observer Professor Roy Mersky. U niversity of Texas School Professor M ark Y u d o f, U niversity of Texas School of Law 2:00 p m Final round of the Geary-Brice M oot C ourt C o m ­ petition, a m ock appellate argument on The Right to T reatm ent,” the Honorable W illiam W ayne Justice, U nited States District Judge for the Eastern District of Texas, presiding. Monday, April 14, P ro s titu tio n 2:00 p m. Professor V ern Bullough. Departm ent of History. C alifornia State College (Northridge). “The H istory of P rostitution." of Law . , David Kendall. First Assistant A ttorney General ot Ms. Joan Baur, representative of C O Y O TE , an organization in San Francisco advocating the de crim inalization of prostitution. Friday, April 18, M e d ia : Im a g e s o f Law E n fo rce m e n t P o licy Professor George Dix, U niversity of Texas 7 30pm Robert W. Schenkkan. Director of C om m unica tions Center. The U niversity of Texas at Austin Richard A. Blum , form er Program Executive at C olum bia Pictures Television and an active w riter-producer; D epartm ent of Radio Television- Texas School of Law Mr La nn y H enninger. U niversity C hurch of Film, The U niversity of Texas Assistant Professor David M. Kellner, Department of Philosophy, University of Texas Christ. Austin Professor Douglass Parker, D epartm ent of Cias sics. U niversity of Texas Monday, April 21, C o m m u n ity D e s ig n -P la n n in g f o r Law Ms. Carol O ppenheim er. Austin attorney and lecturer at the U niversity of Texas School of Law. E n fo rce m e n t 7:30 p m. Professor Oscar New m an, D epartm ent of A rch i­ tecture. N ew Y o rk U niversity Lieutenant Roy W estphal. Vice-Squad. Dallas Police Departm ent. W ednesday, April 16, P o lice F o rc e — V iolence & Its A lte rn a tiv e s 10:00 a rn. Dr. W ayland Pilcher. C rim inology D epartm ent, Sam H ouston State U niversity Professor Daniel M andelker. W ashington U n ive r­ sity (St. Louis) School of Law Professor Peter Riesenberg. D epartm ent of H is­ tory. W ashington U niversity (St. Louis) of Professor H arold H ym an, D epartm ent of History, Rice U niversity, H ouston Professor Boyd Littrell, D epartm ent of Sociology, University of Texas Professor C orw in Johnson, U niversity of Texas Professor Robert Dawson, U niversity of Texas Tuesday, April 22, A d d ress by fo r m e r S p e c ia l P ro s e c u to r Professor Stanley H Palmer, D epartm ent H istory. U niversity of Texas at A rlington 2 00 p m . School of Law Professor E dm und Pincoffs. D epartm ent Philosophy, U niversity of Texas Mr. Paul Hernandez, spokesman C om m ittee fo r Justice, Austin School of Law for of the J a w o rs k i, presently Senior Partner of Fulbright & Jaworski, H ouston (Mr. Jaw orski’s address is through his own courtesy and as part of the Orgain Lectures of the University of Texas School of Law.) ADVISORY BOARD TO THE SYMPOSIUMS FILM SERIES A p ril A p ril 8 9 A pril 14 A pril 15 A p ril 19 A p ril 22 A p ril 23 A p ril 25 A p ril 26 8:00 P.M. The Producers, Speakers T o Be An nounced 7:30 P M. The Pentagon Papers and Am erican Dem ocracy (Conversations W ith D aniel Ellsburg); The Ugly Am erican; Dr Sam uel P opkin, Professor of G overnm ent, U niversity of Texas 7:30 P M. Klute; Blue Angel; Joan Baur, Representa tive from C O Y O T E 7:30 P.M. Bullitt; Super Cops; Sergeant Roosevelt Sampson and Senior Patrolm an Jack Sparkm an of the Austin Police D epartm ent 7.00 P.M. M etropolis; 1984; Mr. Brooks Landon, Doctoral C andidate, English D epartm ent, University of Texas 8:00 P.M. A ll the K in g s M e n ; Dr. Norm an Brow n, Professor of H istory, U niversity of I exas 7:00 P.M. Farenheit 451; The C om m ittee; Dr. E d­ ward J. Taborsky, Professor of G overnm ent, U niversity of Texas 8.00 P.M. The G etaway; Mr. John Albach, Texas D irector of the N ational C ouncil on C rim e and Delinquency, form er Staff Director of the Texas Legislature s Jo int C om m ittee on Prison Reform 8.00 P M On the W aterfront; Speaker To Be A n ­ nounced Asst P rof M arshall Breger. U n iversity of Texas S chool of Law P rof R oy Mersky. U niversity of Texas School of L a w Y o f. D avid Filvaroff. U niversity of Texas S chool of Law P rof Douglass Parker. D e partm ent of Classics. U niversity of Texas S heriff R aym ond Frank. Travis C o u n ty P rof Reynell M Parkins. School of A rchitecture. U niversity of Texas P rof Joe B Frantz. D e p a rtm e n t of H istory, U niversity o f Texas Prof E d m u n d L Pincoffs. D epartm ent of P hilosophy. U n ive rsity of Texas Assoc. Dean B yro n F u llerton, U niversity of Texas S chool of Law Dean Elspeth Rostow. D epartm ent of G o vernm ent. U niversity of Texas Mr. Giles G a rm o n . A d u lt P ro b a tio n D epartm ent. Travis C o u n ty P rof M ichael S harlot. U niversity of Texas School of Law M r G eorge H angs Jr.. H R R C B oard M em ber, 3rd year law student T he H onorable Jo h n L H ill. A tto rn e y G eneral o f Texas M r Joseph Jacobson, D irector of H R R C . 2nd year law student Prof R J a m e s K a u fm a n n , D e p a rtm e n t o f English. U niversity of Texas P rof Irw in Lieb. D epartm ent of P hilosophy. U niversity of Texas Dean Ernest E S m ith. U niversity of Texas School of Law Prof D onald W eism ann. U niversity Professor of the A rts and C om parative Study. U niv of Texas Prof Charles Alan W right. U niversity of Texas S chool of Law Prof M ark Y u d o f. U niversity of Texas School of Law This program m ade possible by a grant from the Texas Committee for the Humanities & Public Policy, P. O. Box 19096, Arlington, Texas.